Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Feb 1907, p. 2

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rLtanm "'Lip ^1# .4. • i<»D« secrets of til# we dare not mention to ouhelvet SSeanetlmes the unwritten law ha? + *tten form of expression. ' ' 4 Lemons have advanced, ill price. An­ other proof of tfeeir popularity til* Mason. " ; The reign of political bosses ends %Mflu voters think and act on inde­ pendent lines. When your money and friends ha: departed It is just the right time get up and go to work. i r* . V'?. Prefoably It was a fortunate thing that the shah of Persia left np pro# He left 800 wives. »r volcanoes getting lively, Motmt Etna shows an inclination to Into the running also. > If words and actions were More they were uttered * million mistakes might be {avoided. 1 Honesty and poverty may be disa­ greeable companions, but they are bet fiar than fraud and wealth. V'®to rapid locomotion ot Jb| land, tea and air will soon make-war impossible and peace imperative. The necessity that corners and >, presses us into desperate action is •often the salvation of our career. ..4', .a- * Delaware will retail the whipping post. She finc>« that the offender still dreads the smart of the paternal lash. French telephone girls are now re­ quired to answer to a pall, "I hear." But the main question still remains, will they heed? Russia claims to be in worse condi­ tion than It was a year ago, although at that time it thought it was holding tfae world's record. Cyclists in Roumani£, to facilitate Identification, are compelled by law to have their names on the lamps of their wheels, so as to be legible at The undertakers in several eastern cities are doing the best they can to make the increased cost of living less burdensome. They've raised the price V tit funerals. $ • There are 4,680 Smiths In the 4cm directory. But if the London directory is like most others this does not give a clew to the number e# Smiths in London. ' Science now scares us with the dis­ covery that there are 3,000 colonies of microbes on a single pin point. Here fp a chance for someone to invent an antiseptic pin wash. , liThe fact that it is more scattered fgi^its manifestation prevents the rail­ way wreck from being recognized as * more deadly institution than the le or the volcanic eruption. . • Count Witte says it cost him $25,000 -Id go to Portsmouth, and that he only received $9,500 expense money. It is evident that American commercial travelers can teach foreign diplomats something. Professor Posner, a well known sur­ geon of Berlin, declares that surgery It making such progress that ulti­ mately doctors will be able to replace an arm or leg. It takes a foreign wi> surgeon to go this limit. A tunnel under the English channel is opposed by Great Britain because it Would be too handy for foreign in­ vaders. Ifs a poor rule, however, that toes not work both ways. Why mm not France make a similar ob- Jectton? *" - ii ' ... ' •• Consul General William H. Michael tells of the growing sentiment among the coolies of India to go out into the occidental world for. the purpose of earning higher wages. They have been arriving in large numbers in British Colombia all this year, though the Canadians object to their presence# ••r- * \ v A Hungarian count who has become « naturalized citizen of this country is willing to dispose of his titlp for • cash consideration. As the majority Of recent purchases of ancestral bric- a-brac of this sort have made unsatis­ factory bargains, it is more than likely s that this latest offering will remain J a drug on the market. •* She Will N©t Continue Her Direct Teeti- 'f • rhony Until Tuesday--Declare^ »White Pursued Her Her Marriage. «j&y -jca- : -bt "'""wv <- •. "V...• > ;, a iifeW ^Yoftf.--"BVetyn ^sfeslbit 'Thaw of Thaw's oiler of probably will not, as had been expect- ied. return to the stand Monday morn- Ins when the trial of her husband for the murder of Stanford White is re­ sumed. " C The strain of the last few days, in which she has been made to live again the hours when, according to the con­ fession she has sworn that she made to Harry K. Thaw, she was the victim of the architect's caprice, has told se­ verely on the young woniih, and Sun­ day night it was stated that the pris­ oned had cogne to her rescue and de­ manded a respite for his wife. Chance for Mrs. Thaw to Reco Upon her visit to the Tombs Sat; on'the grounds which she related Thursday. On Monday she may be called upon to finish the relation of the events which it is claimed by the defense brought on the explosive impulse in the dis­ eased brain of the defendant and caused the filling of Stanford White. While Friday's testimony was lack­ ing in the personal quality which made Thursday's recital so dramatic, so impelling, enthralling and pathetic, it served to clear away some of the doubts and inferences which remained, from the incomplete details as to the fullfextent of the revelations she claieab to have made to her husband. There . were repetitions, too, at the. «r MM WW THAW AND INSANITY EXPERTS WATCHING HIM IN COURT. In the Upper Panel Are Character Studies of Thaw as He Sits in Court. In '. the Group Below in Foreground, Reading from Left to Right, Are Dr. . Austin Flint, insanity Expert; Assistant Jury Commissioner F. P. 8 imp- • «on, and Dr. Carlo McDonald, Insanity Expert. The Woman Shown at Left in Background Is Evelyn Nesbit Thaw. Bad telephone service in Gotham ' It' excused on the ground that so many of the girls in the exchanges are en- gaged. This appeal to sentiment is not likely to carry weight in the busi­ ness world. All the world may be a lover, but as far as telephone wires are concerned, the public prefer, him to ring off until it is a case of "ring Oft." „ The Society for the Advancement of ^ Science has discovered that a human frame shrinks one foot every 200,000 years. If it's no worse than that, we juardly need worry about the fit of our ttlothes. * day' Mrs. Thaw told her husband that she had suffered greatly during the ordeal when her association with White was laid bare and Thaw com­ municated the fact to the attorneys. He told them that his wife was in bad Bhape, and requested that she be given an opportunity to recover herself. Attorney Delmas then set about to so rearrange the plans of the defense that Mrs. Thaw's presence in court as a witness would not be required until Tuesday. If this plan, does not miscarry, Mrs. Thaw will not be recalled nntil Tues­ day and her crass-examination by Dis­ trict Attorney Jerome will begin Wednesday, a day later than had been anticipated. Juror 6teele Not Well. Another development Sunday that startled those directly concerned in the case was the reported illness of a juror. Visions of a mistrial were soon dispelled, however, for it was ascer­ tained that the illness of the juror was not such as threatened to inca­ pacitate him. Wilbur F. Steele, 60 years of age, a manufacturer of gas appliances, has contracted a • severe cold, but it is expected he will be able to go into the jury box when the trial is resumed. The other jurors, all of whom were reported in good Condition, took a drive in Central park. Thaw rose Sunday after what he de­ clared had ,been a restful 'night, in good spirits and with a hearty appe­ tite. He did not attend service in the chapel, hut spent the morning with the newspapers and in reading the many messages whidfc were brought him. Of these one read: "Be Brave." Wife Continues Her Story. New York.--Evelyn Nesbit Thaw again Friday was the central figure at her husband's trial. She was still on the stand--her direct examination unfinished--when the usual week end adjournment until Monday morning was taken. Picking up the threads of her life's story where she had dropped them the evening before, the girl wife of the de­ fendant--always, she declared, telling her story just as she had related it to Harry Thaw from time to time-- brought the narrative' down to her wedding in Pittsburg, on < April ,4, 1905, and their return to New York following a honeymoon trip in the west. She declared she had heard White call to her on the Btreet once after this and that on another occas­ ion when Bhe passed him in a cab she noticed his cab tarn around and fol­ low her in the direction of a doctor's office, where she was going to have her throat treated. May Finish Story Monday. Mrs. Thaw had taken up the story at the time of her return from Europe in October, 1903, following her refusal V It is explained that the robber who fceld up a train in Virginia recently got nothing. That is unfortunate. He jfcould have got five years at least. The expeditions of the Duke of Or­ leans to the Aretlc regions indicate that royalists feel that they are left out in the cold. ^ It is estimated that from January .1 * |(E» September 1, 1906, a total of 9,895 tons of toys were sent from Germany to the United States, as against 8,716 tor the same period the previous r. . ' recommendation of a Llmtrar- pffiliese diet for consumptives looks tep toward a remedy based oa an scents. ! At this season of the year it seema easy to keep the garden fires from growing weeds tfr. **"' • 853**? suggestion of counsel, and incidents which had not been gone over in the first years of Mrs. Thaw's acquaint­ ance with Stanford White were brought out in completion of the life story. Jerome in Hot Protest. District Attorney Jerome, whohad throughout silently listened to the young wife's statements, sent a thrill of excitement through the courtroom late in the day by jumping to his feet and vigorously protesting against "this defamation of the dead." "Tg ihare no... limit." ha exclaimed Btie of him II In the same it JustljWrFltsgeraldh«W that the dis­ trict amip^^i|HpBattDn was a good one. and he thftqfkt the defense should lay a broaderJoatodation to afro* Insanity before .proceeding along the lines suggested by Mr. Delmas' Question. "We will prodeed to do this "as soon *8 possible," announced the attorney. Mrs. Thaw declared that""" Stanford White, during the year which followed her experience in tfceroomaifthe mir­ rored wa^ls, repeatedly sbught to have tier visit Mm alone. Wouldn't See White Alone. "I tdld Harry," she said, "that Mr. White had begged me, had pleaded and cried and scolded, and done every­ thing he could to make me come to see him alpne. I refused and he told me I was cruel and that I was as cold as a fish and not a htunan being. 1 told Mr. White I didn't care to trust him." - After her return from Europe, and during the months she would not see Harry Thaw "because of the dreadful things Mr. White and his friends told me about him," she declared Thaw ac­ cused her of improper delations with the architect. "I told him It was a Me and Qttkl had not," sho testified, with an ^n phatic show of feeling. The defense had Mrs. Thaw tell of another incident which has been cited in her life--her acquaintance with "Jack" * Barrymore, the actor. Mr. Barrymore was in> the courtroom one day during the early part of the trial, at the instance of the district attor­ ney, it was said. Mr. Delmas asked Mrs. Thaw Friday to tell what she had told Mr. Thaw of her acquaint­ ance with the actor. . » Jack Barrymore Prip&sed. She said she had first • met Barry­ more at a party given by Stanford White, the year following her* intro­ duction to the architect. "I thought him very nice," She frankly said, "and one day at Mr. White's studio he said, 'Evelyn, will you marry me?' I said, 1 don't know.' He asked me a second time, and again i said, 'I don't know/ and everybody laughed. Mr. "White told me I would be very foolish to marry Mr. Barrymore, and my mother said so, too, and we all quarreled, and the upshot of the whole thing was that Mr. White said I ought to be sent away to school, and I was, to New Jersey." , v More of Thaw's Letters. The day began with a continuance of the reading of the letters from Harry Thaw to Mr. Longfellow, writ­ ten after Evelyn Nesbit's revelations to her suitor in Paris. There were others, too, which Thaw had sent the attorney to deliver to Miss Nesbit, who, at the time, would not see him. Mrs. Thaw followed these with a re­ lation of her experiences with Stan­ ford White and Hummel concerning the alleged affidavit which she made charging Harry Th%w_ JpM* k§vt*g ;LS! SLAYS MAN SHE SAID WRONGED LIFE. .. ruleo by queer power Told Her Friends She Was Uaablt to Resist Doctor's Influence . < and That He Jilted v tM : . 3 ̂ s 'M ̂*' < KansasMo.--TTnab ie t o r e s i s t the strange power which Dr. E. H. Merwin exercised over her, according to statements she made to friends, Miss Maud Slater Saturday shot and killed the physician and committed suicide. The bodies were found in Dr. Merwip's -office. A revolver was in the woman's hand, and the police say there is no doubt she shot the doctor and ended her own life. The tragedy has brought to light a strange story; Friends of Miss S'ater say she and Merwin had been sweet­ hearts f for four yearB. The girl told Miss Leah Thomas that the doctor had wronged her. Miss Thomas says that Miss plater told ke.r she was unable to resist the power of Dr. Merwip's will. When­ ever* he summoned her to his office by means of this influence which she' believed almost superhuman, she said, she was utterly without the power to resist! After having visited the doctor, Mies Thomas said, Miss Slater reproached herself bitterly, and declared she would resist him in future, but each time she was unable to do so. >a • "She went to his office last Wednes­ day," said Miss Thomas, who was a close friend of Miss Slater, "and upon her return tore her hair and became almost insane in ranting against him. She said she had a plstol -at home and that she was going to kill him." Miss Slater told her' friends that she and Dr. Merwin had been engaged and that he had broken the engage­ ment Dr. Merwin's friends tafee a different view of the case. They say the physi­ cian had been ^annoyed by the girl, who telephoned him and wrote letters to him frequently. The doctor him­ self said some time ago that Miss Slater, .through jealousy, had caused to be polished an announcement'oft his engagement to another woman, which had no foundation. WORKS \ Scollan,, £eneca man, who in his own gives tl to Do&n's E ?IBtfor his back and ki airs. Goetci h i s 4aug .h t« i rv says: "Father had a severe at­ tack of kidney trouble and lumbago, which caused him much suffering. He began taking Doan's Kidney Pills and was soon cured. We always keep them on hand. My husband was cured of bad pains in the back by taking only part of a box." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a bent. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Ti •" U" 1 ' ' 1 A PIANO IN HIS LUNftS. ; V rtp SO 0HT H GERMANY ANGERED BY MAYTi. Relations Strained by Financial Dealt and Offensive Language. Port au Prince, Hayti.--The rela­ tions between the governments of Hayti and Germany are strained, owing to the refusal of the German bankers, Hermann & Co., by direction of the court at Port au Prince, to re­ turn to the Haytian® government large sums of money alleged to have been obtained fraudulently. Among the alleged transactions of Hermann & Co. with the Haytian gov­ ernment was one which is said to have have proved favorable to the govern­ ment. This was concluded by the Haytian minister of finance, the Ger­ man legation and Hermann & Co. Th» German minister demanded that this transaction, as well as others, be an­ nulled, but the Haytian government, in terms that the; German minister deemed offensive, refused' to acqulsece. The Gferman minister at the same time demanded the withdrawal of the phrase objected to. "This also was re­ fused. Fears are entertained here of grave plications ensuing. 4 * JAPANESE DRIVEN FROM TOWN. THAW GREETING HIS MOTHER ON ENTERING COURT. "to the aspersions that are to be cast upon this man? Your honor well knows I cannot, under the law, contro­ vert any statement this witness might make against the memory of Stanford White." „ In tones bitterly sarcastic, Mr. Jer­ ome spoke of "this tattle of the ten­ derloin," and declared that the court had the right to limit such testimony "until competent evidence has been adduced here to. show that this man is, or was, of unsound mind. We don't know whether this defendant ever was insane." he concluded. Court Curbs "Defamation." The question which called out tike vehement protest from the district at­ torney was addressed to Mrs. Thaw by Mr. Delmas, and its purport was whether or not Harry Thaw had at any time told her about "other girls who had met a fate similar to yours at the hands of this man." "What man?" snapped Mr. Jerome. taken her from her mother against her will, and with gross cruelty. Mrs. Thaw told how she had been induced to answer some questions about her­ self and Mr. Thaw at the time, and had ben told the stories about, bis "cruelties to girls." Stanford White had told her, she declared, that it was necessary to take drastic measures to protect her from such a person and that Harry Thaw must be kept out of New York. e3 She denied that she had ever signed any papers in Mr. Hummel's office, but said she remembered having signed some papers for Mr. White in "his of­ fice," the contents of- which she did not know. When she got frightened about the papers and demanded to see them she said Mr. White took her to Hummel's office and there they burned a paper which had her name at the bottom of it. She was not allowed to see what the paper contained be­ fore it was destroyed. Miss La Follette Not Engage<{. Washington.--Senator La Foliette Monday denied the announcement of the engagement of his daughter, Miss Fol» La Follette, recently made from Madison, Wis., and widely circulated. ., Anti-Pool Selling Bill Passes. Little Rock, Ark.--The Amis anti- pool selling bill, prohibiting betting on horse races, passed the senate Monday afternoon by a vote of 27 to 2. The measure is almost certain to be passed by the hopMfc \ Shea's Second Trial Resumed. Chicago.--The second trial of Cor­ nelius P. Shea and his associate lead­ ers of the great teamsters' strike of 1905, started last Friday, was resumed Monday before Judge K&vanagh after a recess of two days. \ r Columbia Gets Stanford Professor. New York.--Nathan Abbott, dean Of the faculty of law at Leland Stan­ ford university, was chosen a mem­ ber of the law faculty of Columbia university at a meeting of ttM trntr fees Monday. . t ; 5# Veteran Freezes to Death. Leavenworth, Kan.--William Hig- ley, a veteran of the civil war, 63 years old, was found frozen to death within the soldiers' home grounds at Leavenworth Monday afternoon. Canal Company Incorporated. Albany, N. Y.--The Panama Con­ struction company, Incorporated to finance the Panama contract, bid for by William J. Oliver of Knoxville, Tenn., filed articles of incorporation Monday with the secretary of state. Mrs. Longworth Improving. Washington. -- Considerable im­ provement was shown Monday in the condition of Mrs. Alice Longworth, wife of Representative Longworth- of Ohio, who has been confined to her home for several days with grip. '•< <^jjiulM» Visit Each Other. - .. Paris.--King Edward and Queen Al­ exandra Monday exchanged visits with President Fallieres and Mme. Fallieres, but did not make any pub­ lic appearance. Later they rode in an automobile to Versailles. ; v , Sends Nurset to Chicag* " ' " Minneapolis, Minn.--Dr. Mai&m X. Mead, registrar of the Hennepin County Graduate Nurses' associfttlon To Hold Negro National Fair. Mobile, Ala.--A negro national fair will be held in this city in Noyejaiher, 1907. A feature will be^t)}^. fStkj^dtlon of Inventions and 'j*? negroes. Many letterf of enconifego- ment are being r has sent six nurses to Chicago in jrtt-l ponse to a call for assistance. ' Daughter of Lady Grey Dead. Ottawa.--Lady Grenfelt, eldest daughter of Lord and Lady Grey, died at the government house early Mon­ day morning. She had been suffer­ ing from typhoid fever but was aaid to be recovering when she had a re­ lapse. Remarkable Human Curiosity L!v(n| op the P#$iflc Coast. Of all the musical curiosities thai Nature has produced lately one of thf oddest is a man with a piano fin hU lungs. On the Pacific coast there >1* a man by the name of Pearson, his native state is said to be Arkansas but he now resides in a small Wash ing ton t own , who can , w i thou t an j undue effort,. send forth remarkable melodies which sound like the musk of a piano with a melodeon acoom paniment This lung piano, as it has been termed by the owner, is1 partly a gift of Nature, but Pearson has cultivated the use of the extraordinary instru­ ment very carefully and thoroughly, until now' he is able to play several familiar tunes with wonderful expres­ sion and technique. Friends of Pear son say that his services are invalu­ able when church fairs, bazaars and country entertainments are on hand. He makes an excellent barker, and his tuneful voice penetrates the fur thermost corner of a meeting house ot tent. He says that ether people could perfect themselves in the, same ac­ complishment if they tried it andprao- tteed it regularly. MIX THIS AT HOME. Railway Laborers Ordered Away and Whites Will Be Arrested. , Woodburn, Ore.--Much feeling was engendered here by the Southern Pa­ cific laying off white men employed , on the railroad section at this point ! and replacing them with eight or ten j Japanese. The feeling ran so high t that 50 Americans called at the sec­ tion house Saturday night and warned h the Japanese to leave town. There ] was -no violence and the Japanese promised to leaf^e, and Sunday morn­ ing they departed for Portland with- in the limit specified. A. Schwabeur, the section foreman, refused to work with them and resigned his position. Warrants will be sworn out Monday for the arrest of the ringleaders pf thfl crowd that drove the Japanese out. " Noted War Correspondent Diss. London.--Sir William Howard Rus­ sell, editor of the Army and Navy Ga­ zette, is dead. He was 86 years old. He was a famous war correspondent and served on the J^ndon Times ^t the battle of Bull Run. ^ \ y •; ' Robber- Breaks Woman% Neete. Memphis, Tenn.--Mrs. Mercedes Donovan was felled by a robber Sat­ urday night with a blow which broke her neck and killed her while she was returning from a shopping tour. ; ( Fire at Female College. ^ Cleveland, Tenn.--The music room and a section of the dormitory of the Centenary Female College here, were destroyed by fire. All the students es­ caped. Twenty-five pianos were burned. The loss is about $75,000. !> Dswey Cases Finally Dismissed^ Topeka, Kan.--The supreme court has finally dismissed the cases against Chauncey Dewey, the millionaire ranehman, and Clyde Wilson and W. J. McBrlde, charged with taking part In the killing of the Berry family. Editor Kills a Gambler. Pendleton, Ore.--John P. McManus, editor of the Pilot Rock Record, shot and killed Robert Estes, gambler, in the Pullman saloon on Main street Saturday afternoon. No motive v is known for the shooting. Mrs. Sage Gives Aifother Million. • Troy, N. Y.--Announcement that J^rs. Russell 8a«« had given $1,000,- BW Willard school for was made at a meet- 0^0 to the 1 girl/i in this of tte Mayor of Kingston Is Dead. Kingston, Jamaica.--Charles ?att» mayor of this city, died Sunday after­ noon at the public hfctpital, as a result of injuries sustained at the time of tbe earthquake. He was SS years old ahd ot Scotch descent Valuable Prescription Which Anyoht •; '5 >wn Easily' Prepay.; "'* " tli^iPbllowlng simple mixture is said to readily relieve and overcome any form of Rheumatism by forcing the Kidneys to filter from the blood and system all the uric acid and poisonous waste matter, relieving at once such symptoms as backache, weak kidtieys and bladder and i?lood diseases. Try it, as it doesn't cost, much to make, and it said to he absolutely harmless to the stomach. Get the following harmless ingredi­ ents from any good pharmacy: Fluid Extract Dandello^, one-half ounce; Compound Kargon, one ounce; Com­ pound Hyrop of Sarsaparilla, three ounces. Mix by shaking well in a bot­ tle, and take a teaspoonful after each meal and again at bedtime. This simple mixture is said to give •prompt relief, and there are very tew cases of Rheumatism and Kidney troubles it will fail to care perma­ nently. These are all harmless, every-day drugs, and your druggist should keep them in the prescription department; if not, have him order them from the wholesale drug houses for you, rather han fail to use this, if you are af­ f l i c t ed . ; , ; Saved by a Song. A boy was amusing himself hy hatching the birds that were "flying around him. At length a beautiful bobolink perched on a rough bough of aa apple tree near by. The boy picked up a stone, and got ready to throw it at the bird. The bird's throat swelled, and forth came the song; "A-llnk, a-link, a-link, bobo- ling, bobolink, a-no-sweet, a-no-sweet, I know ft, I know it, a-link, %-link; don't throw it, throw it, throw it" ( And the boy did not throw the stone, but dropped it 'on the ground. "Why didn't you jBtone him, my boy? You might have killed him and carried him home." The little fellow looked up and re­ plied, "Couldn't 'etm he tang to."--* Puck. . ' Home Seekers and One-Way Settlei*' Rates. On the first and third Tuesday of each month the Iowa Central and Min­ neapolis & St. Louis railroads will sell round trip excursion tickets to points in the North, Northwest, South, South­ west and Southeast at a rate of one fare plus $2 and less, with liberal stop­ over privileges. On the same days the roads will sell one way settlers' tickets at the low rate of only $2 more than half fare to points in Eastern Colorado, Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, Indian Territory, Oklahoma, Texas, Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, etc. Call on local agents for particulars or address, ( , „ ,, \ B. CUTTO, G. P. * T. A* ' Minneapolis,, Miniu .. v. « a Bafety Clutch. - A father sent his son to a drug store the other day to buy some antiseptic tablets. He wrote as follows: "A small bottle of antiseptic tablets; no carbolic acid! no iodoform? possibly what the surgeons use when perform­ ing an operation to purify a bowl of water." The druggist wrote back: "Cannot sell what you want to a min­ or; the adult must call In person and sign the poison register." $100 Rmrd , $100. Ttantftwa at thteMwrwui be CataOfe. jESt'S «• cur«MWnSi*»M>' betas • -- tmutir. AND ^ X ' " W l ) ' ' ^ . tftkaft |a* •ora ii -to as Texaap^" ; ARB MILBSAPART. It is Winter in Northern Texas while the Gulf Ott|8t country is enjoying sunshine like that of May. In fact the Gulf Coast knows no Winter--every month is. a growing month. Texas produces wheat like Mfnne° sola, corn like HItoeis, and more cot­ ton than any oth$r. two ftottthern States combined^ Ajifl no pat#& thit great State surpasses hr -opportunity and possibilities the Gulf Coast Coun­ try and the region down by the Rio Grande. Artesian water was discovemi flt» or six years ago oh the great King Ranch, near Corpus Chrlsti. As titae went on the Artesian Belt was extend­ ed until It now covers the territory from Robs town, sixteen miles west Of Corpus Christ!, to Raympndville, and hi being extended monthly'with every in­ dication that a " satisfactory flow will be obtained in all territory not covered by tlie systems of irrigation on the Rio Grande. One of the most successful planters on the Rio Grande is Mr. John Cloener. who owns six thousand acres near Hi­ dalgo, on the S. L., B. & M. Ry. From thirty-three acres pf Bermuda onions Mr. Closner last year (1906) shipped thirty-five carloads of as fine onions as were ever grown. This crop alona netted him $15,000. Two crops of corn can be grown on the same land each year along th# Rio Grande. Rice, cotton and numer*> ous other crops, as well as a great variety of fruit can be grown just as successfully. At a dinner recently given some visitors, a Gulf Coast agri­ culturist set fifteen (15) different •va­ rieties of vegetables before his guests. A comprehensive book of Eighty pages, profusely illustrated and fnlly descriptive of the Texas Gulf Coast may be obtained by addrMBing John Sebastian, Passenger Traffic Manager* Room 1, La Salle St. Sta., Chicago, or Room 1, Frisco Bldg., St. Louis. ' ; T»" ** T' .r *> I , ' _ .Vf*: Some valuable farthings were §bl(l at Sotheby's auction rooms (London) recently. A Charles II. pewter farth­ ing sold for $50, arid an Oliver Crom­ well farthing, in copper for $45. Paint Buying Made Safe White Lead and Linseed Oil need no argument, no advertising to maintain them­ selves as the best and most economic­ al paint yet known to man. The difficulty has been for the buyer to be always sure of the purity of the white lead an^pil. We have registered the trade mark of the Dutch Boy painter to be the final proof of quality, gen­ uineness and purity to paint buyers everywhere. When this trade mark appears on the keg, you can be sun that the contents is Pure White Lead made by the Old Dutch Process. SEND FOR^BOOK "A Talk oa Mai" ilfiinhiblt taftmit. HMoailwiiiiBtNkiNt. rxto upon reqaaafc NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY in wkMuvtr cf tJU foUaw ing MtU* It MMft OhtOMO. Haw York, Cincinnati. <MpbU (John burgh [National lead A OU Oo7j mt SICK HEADA0HE Positivelir enaei %r these Uttle PUls. TbeyslsotettrnW*. tieMtraaiX)9rspeP«hk.tn* 4!gMtioasik& too Bobcat ApeTlMStTein- JrfwrsrsiWr BsA .Caste ta tbs Vanllt, Ossted intbeBMhv Punty'VlRfStabie. smallwil mim. smaBflCL Must Batr Fao-Simiki Signature mm soBtTimcs. r« K> rwHtfjf ,n» mm* UMlf an, mm trm. VMM (irw an and MDIItM. " No, Alphonso, yon cant always tfll bow much a girl wants you to kiss her by the strenuous objection's** wta {> «ramriut tea • * \

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