Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 7 Jul 1910, p. 2

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H 4. * v * ^ \ . * ,' • • T^v. • W< '-.V^ife:,- • -s^-V *-.,'• i- • » • • • '""• * * > PWTO S eopvR/CH TED BY cjjrfrD/nsT, wammc G3o (HLADQK oopyfr/GJhTMr mA./=nrr£ft<,on HEN the Supreme court of the United L./. 1 \| j VBg sit with full membership provided no || deaths occur during the vacation period and provided also that Associate Jus tice William H. Moody has so far re­ covered his health that he can join States enters upon its fall term it will and esteem. Some one has said that Governor Hushes, while in the main his colleagues on the bench. Governor Charles E. Hughes of New York state will bo welcomed to mem­ bership by the individual members of the court with full hearted pleasure conservative, is a man who believes that the laws Khnu»d he interpreted in the spirit of "1910 rather than in the spirit of 18:10 The criticism on the Judgments rendered on occasion by the Supreme court has been to the effect that seemingly some of the members live in the past, and that objection has been inade to allowing new lights to strike the "laws of the anqients." The Supreme court of the United States Is said to be the most dignified body in the world. Ft looks it, but it must not bo taken for granted that these judges, from the vet «ran Chief Justice Fuller down to the youngest man on i.*io liOi times of relaxation when they give full vent to their sense ms-ŝ smmam ̂ ewer r/i/sT/cjF f-1/lLf.Q. A//D OUST JOB ILJRTOM •:ms( -w : .. 1 WA.. - T/sSr/cr /// Dff/CVAJL ft03£\5 * * . 3 . ' 1111 1 " J"11 1 ... " ' •• . • ' 1. ... . . . 10 I I II " " i l l M I • IMWT --' ,:j| 9KM- STATE H'A'PPENINCSS K//JIS7~JL JL STKUJL/ of humor. Justice John M. Harlan, who is seven­ ty-nine years old, has a rar$ humor and be likes to give it play. Justice Edward D. White of Lou­ isiana, who has been pro­ nounced by many of the leading lawyers of the country to have a "judicial mind" not excelled In the United States, has hard work at times to ke^p" from giving vent to his humorous concep­ tion of tilings as they appear in court. Such a proceeding would be dubbed undignified, and so Judge White manages to control his flow of wit when in court, but when the tribunal Is not In session he gives his mood full play. Judge Oliver Wendell Holmes, son of one of the most distinguished American scholars and one of its rarest humorists, has a great deal of the fun of his father in him, but self-confessedly he tries to hold its expression in check on many occasions because it might be said that he was trying to make Oliver Wendell Holmes the second appear as Oliver Wendell Holmes the first, and this the present justice modestly holds, to be Impossible. Not long ago a lawyer went to the residence of one of the associate Justices of the Supreme court, a married man and one who the "lawyer thought was the staidest of the staid. The vis­ itor had gone to see the justice to get some ad­ vice on behalf of a person who he know was a family friend of the one of whom he was seeking advisory help. It seems that the man's wife had died, and whfye the husband was a kindly disposed and most, excellent man generally, his father-in-law and mother-in-law insisted on taking the chil­ dren who had been left motherless. The wid­ ower did not want to part with his children and neither did he want to make a fight which would bring the children into public notice and show that he had had a breach with his wife's father and mother. The lawyer who was calling on the justice eald, "What would you do if your father-in-law and mother-in-law on your wife's death tried to get your children away from you?" The answer came quick and sharp, "I'd tell them to go to the devil." Now it happened that the justice's wife was sitting at his elbow and the lawyer at this strong expression from the judicial minded one looked With trepidation at Mrs. Justice, expecting to see her overcome with mortification at her hus­ band's outbreak. The visitor was relieved and also somewhat surprised when Mrs. Justice said. "I'd tell them to go to the devil, too." The household court being thus unanimous, the lawyer went away and gave advice to hi& client, and the presumption is that within a day or two the father-in-law and mother-in-law went to the deviL The justices of the Supreme court put on their robes in a room which is across the main corri­ dor of the ca^itol from the courtroom. In order to reach the bench they are obliged to cross the corridor and this they do in procession, the clerk of the court leading the way like a pioneer and being followed by the chief justice and the asso­ ciate justices lu order of rank. It is OA the stroke of twelve, noon, that this procession takes up Its way, and as it is known that noon is the hour for the court opening the corridor Is always filled with people win want to Me the judges file by. Just before they appear sa«mm Ol/CT/Cr MrfJL/bV In the doorway of their robing room four a t t e n d a n t s t a k e u p their places in the cor­ r i d o r a n d s t r e t c h across it two thick silken cords, thus making a passageway through which the procession moves. It is the most dignified looking proceeding possible and the Jus­ tices look neither to the right nor the left, but conscious that there are scores of on­ lookers, each one b o w s , b u t b o w s straight ahead in , or­ der that there may be no discrimination in courtesy between those of the public who are standing on the right and those standing on the left. It is a per­ fectly impartial bow­ ing proceeding and while it is dignified it strikes some people also as being awfully funny. Every Monday, as soon as court assembles, it is the custom to read decisions on cases which have been considered and on which the court Is to pass Judgment. If the decision of a great case Is expected the courtroom always is crowded and the members of the bar, newspaper men and others who have been present before on like occasions, look anxiously to see which Judge is to read the Important decision. If any one of three or four justices is to read it there is a dis­ tinct sense of disappointment, because nobody except the reading judge is likely to hear the decision. In other words, some of the Judges of the supreme court have such weak voices that not even the men closest to them can catch what they say and everybody must wait until the deci­ sion can be read before knowing what it means. This inability or perhaps lack of desire on the part of some of the Justices to read out loud, is a great trial to the newspaper correspondents who are anxious to telegraph the news of the decision at the earliest moment possible. There are other troubles which beset the correspondents as well as those which come from the poor enunciation and the weak voices of some of the justices. Legal language is the hardest kind of language for the layman to understand, and the result Is that when the decision Is read the first part of occasionally makes it seem certain that one side has won the case, while the tail end of the deci­ sion may reverse everything and give the case to the other side. There was one striking Instance of this in a great case which was decided three years ago. The city of Chicago was trying to effect changes in its street-car system. The street-car compa­ nies held that their franchise was good for 100 years and that the city could not oust them from any erf their privileges under their franchise. The case went to the Supreme court and waB of tre­ mendous interest to all the cities in the United States. Moreover, the speculative interests of the country were awaiting the decision with the keenest anxiety and Interest, for if it went one way it meant that certain stocks still would be of great value, and if it went the other way it means that they would be worth little. The decision was read in the Supreme court by a Judge who had a good voice. Everybody had made up his mind that if the Supreme court decided that the railroad companies had a hun­ dred years' franchise they had won the case and that the city had lost. This was regarded as the crucial feature of the w hole controversy. The newspaper correspondents from the great cities were in attendance at the court when the decision was read and they were- ready to dispatch messengers instantly to the telegraph office with a brief dispatch saying either "The companies win," or "The city wins." This was all that was to be sent out at the first Instance, for the situation was understood in every news­ paper office in the country, and a single tip as to which side won would be sufficient to release long stories of the railroad controversy, and other stories already written of what the victory meant for the companies or for the city. In the very first part of the decision the statement was made that the Supreme court had flecided that the companies had a franchise for 100 years. Instantly some of the correspondents sent dis­ patches, 'The companies win." Two or three correspondents were held in their seats by a cautionary word from a veteran who had done long service in the Supreme court. He said, "Wait." In a few minutes, as the reading went on, it became apparent that the court had decided that while the companies had a franchise for 100 years they had practically no rights under it. On the strength of the mistake which was made in send­ ing out some of the first dispatches on that day stocks went up and then when the truth came out they tumbled so fast that they hurt their heads. When the justices led by the clerk and the chief justice enter the Supreme courtroom every­ body stands. When the judges have takon their seats the court crier, after the manner of court criers since <\he time of the patriarchs, declares that the high and honorable court is in session and that justice is to be dispensed. Just before taking their seats the justices bow to the assembled throng an^ the throng bows back. tVhen the court crier's voice has died away everybody takes his seat and the proceedings begin. The Supreme court sits in the old senate cham­ ber of the capitol. It is the room where Webster, Hayne, Clay, Calhoun and others fought their bat­ tles. The gallery is a tiny affair capable of seating only about thirty people and the wonder is how when Webster delivered his great oration in reply to Hayne there could have been present the great crowd of which history tells us. It was in the Supreme courtroom that the elec­ toral commission which decided the Hayes-Tilden contest held its sessions. The fifteen members of that commission occupied the seatn of the Jus­ tices and it is said that during the progress of the hearing the little room was crowded literally to suffocation and that many people were overcome. It is an historic chamber and it is one of the places to which visitors to Washington bend their steps. Iu the membership of the Supreme court there are two veterans of the Union army and two vet­ erans of the Confederate army. John Marshall Harlan, who Is a Republican, raised the Tenth Ken­ tucky infantry and served in Gen. George II. Thom­ as' division. He rose to the rank of colonel and his name was before the senate for confirmation as a brigadier general at a time late in the war when his father's death compelled him for family reasons to retire from the service. Oliver Wendell Holmes of Boston graduated from Harvard college in 18C1 and at once entered the Union army. At the battle of Ball's Bluff In October, 1861, Holmes was shot through the breast and for a long time it was believed he could not possibly reeover. He did recover, however, and went back to the front, taking part in the battle of Antietam, where he was shot through the neek, and again his life was despaired of. Once more he recovered and went to the front, only to be wounded again at the battle of Fredericksburg. Justioe Edward Douglass White was born in Louisiana and he served through the Civil war in the Confederate service. Horace Harmon Lurton, who was appointed by President Taft to the vacancy caused by the death of Justice Peckham, entered the Confederate service when he was only seventeen yaars old and he served three years. He was with General Buckner at Fort Donelson when the Confederate commander surrendered to Gen­ eral Grant. Lurton was Grant's captive and it is not at all probable that the northern soldier had any conception that this youthful prisoner was one day to be appointed to the Supreme court of the United States by a Republican president CITY MAN A8 A "COME ON.' The average city man thinks the farmer who buys a "gold brick" in need of ft guardian. Yet thousands of these same city men have paid for "bricks" which any farmer would have known were the commonest kind of brass. There are all sorts of them nicely prepared for cit£ men. Now it is a Bcheme to buy fruit land on the Pacific coast. Our city friend is told he can make $1,000 an acre from the start. A few days ago I found a young man almost on hla way to the bank to draw $800 for such a scheme, says a writer in the Metropolitan. He had a guaranty that in five years he would be drawing $3,000 an­ nually from his "farm." Next is some co-operative Bcheme for growing peaches in Texas or oranges in Florida. You do not work. You simply buy stock in the enterprise, pay for it, of course, and then sit in the shade and draw your dividends. You sit in the shade--no doubt of that--and the dividends draw like the memory of evil deeds. Alloy of Wonderful Power ';W is ttotarkable Qualities That Caused It r Given the hla me of "The V- devll'e Touchstone.' • . r 1 " There has always been a popular no- tfetti which connected his Satanic majesty wi&'fire, and so, when Wels- bach, the inventor of the gas light mintlip. discovered a new alloy which, when roughly rubbed with a file, gave out flashes of fire, the new fire producing metal was dubbed "The Devil's Touchstone." This new metal Is an alloy of iron with certain rare earth-metals--ceri­ um, etc. As Is well known, these met­ als have such a strong affinity for oxy­ gen that they bum with great energy even in the open air, writes Prof. John Phin. Magnesium, which is used for photographic flashlights, may be cited as an example of this. And pertain metals, such as potassium, etc., which are near akin to those Just named, actually take fire when they are brought Into contact with moisture, so that the modern chemist finds no difficulty In "setting the Thames on fire," or even in causing a piece of ioe to burn. When sharply rubaed with a file the new alloy gives off such a shower of sparks that they literally make a flash of light similar to the sparks from flint and steel, but of tenfold bril­ liancy and energy. These sparks are capable of setting fire to substances upon which the sparks from flint and steel fall harmlessly, and some very Ingenious devices have been Invented whereby on opening a small metal case, the raising of the lid causes a small file to pass over a piece of the new alloy and produoe sparks which Ignite a lamp and thus furnish a fl^me which will light gas, _ candles and cigars. Joliet.--Believing the present sys­ tem of city government is Inade­ quate and antiquated, leading mem­ bers of the Joliet Commercial club, led by President F. A, Hill, have set the ball rolling to secure the commission form. Official announcement was made by President Hill that a committee would be appointed next week to start an agitation, circulate a petition and assist in every way to elect commission­ ers under the new law at the next spring election. Prominent business men and officials high in local municip­ al government expressed themselves as favoring the commission 'form and have pledged their aid in the cam­ paign. It is the first boom launched in Joliet for Jhe new plan and the en­ thusiasm that followed its reception is deemed significant of success. Champaign.--Champaign county Re­ publicans who attended the first meeting of the year voiced strong­ ly their approval oi the tariff bill and the Taft administration. Congress­ man McKlnley, chairman of the na^ tlonftl congressional committee, pre­ sided and was Indorsed by his neigh­ bors. Congressman Martin B. Madden defended the tariff law as the best ever passed by congress and declared that a Democratic house means rule by the south. Resolutions were passed ndorsing Congressman McKinley, Rep­ resentatives Adklns and Carter, Sen­ ator Dunlap and Mrs. Mary E. Busey, university trustees. Aurora.--George M. Crego, seventy- had but a twelve mile journey before the first stop on the way to Galena, and they wanted an opportunity to enjoy the beautiful scenery along the route. Their automobile drew up at the Citizens' bank at Lena, and there was a party of hearers ready for the speech-making, about 100 persons, mostly men, gathering tn bear their pleas. The meeting lasted about one liour, Mrs. McCulloch and Doctor Blount doing the talking. Both speak­ ers deplored the fact that so few women were present Quincy.--Phillip Schanz, bookkeeper and secretary for the Aldo Som- mer Drug company the past 37 years and a man who has always borne an excellent reptuation, is be­ ing sought by the police, a Warrant charging embezzlement having b^en placed in their hands. Schanz, who left here several days ago, presuma­ bly on a visit, has written the com­ pany acknowledging that he was short $5,200, but an examination of his books shows the amount to be still greater. The disclosures are creating a sensation. Joliet.--The engine pulling the Chi­ cago & Alton Hummer ran into a blind switch near here and landed In a sand pile near the tracks. No damage was done to the engine or train and no one was injured. The train was de­ layed three hours. Awrecking crew was sent from Bloomington. Waukegan.--Earl Purdy ct Highland Park narrowly escaped death at Fox lake when a motor boat pappoose caught fire while out in the lake. His shoutj drew attention and there was a rush to rescue him with motor, sail and row boats. Meanwhile the boat burned fiercely and Purdy was about to taKe to the water when A. <5. Brown took him off in a boat. Waukegan.--That James Dowie, reputed brother of the late John Alexander Dowie and reported claim­ ant to the Zion estates by deeds which he claims Dowie gave him, is as imposter is the statement given out at Zion City. Judge Barnes, Over­ seer John Lewis and Overseer Voliva join in saying that Dowie never had a brother. Blcomington.--The Chicago & Alton is seeking machinists, carpenters, foundrymen and other skilled mechan­ ics for employment Not in years has there been such a shortage of skilled mechanics. Sterling.--Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Jackson of New Bedford celebrated their sixty-sixth wedding anniversary here. They have 82 descendants. Sterling. -- Harry Johnson, eleven years old, of Erie, was drowned while bathing in the Mississippi river near Port Byron. Pekin.--R. V. Howe, aged fifty-one, one of this city's best-known residents and for eight years circuit clerk of Tazewell county, dropped dead while on a trip to Peoria of heart falhire. Joliet. -- The engine pulling the Chicago & Alton Hummer ran into a blind switch near here and landed in a sand pile near the tracks. No dam­ age was done to the engine or train and no one was injured. The train was delayed three hours. A wrecking crew was sent from Bloomington. Pekin.--R. V. Howe, aged fifty- one, one of this city's best known residents, and for eight years circuit clerk of Tazewell county, dropped dead while on a trip to Peoria, of heartj^l- ure. Kewanee. -- William McMeekin, a pioneer of Henry county and father of William McMeekin, editor of the Oarva Standard, is dead, aged eighty. Springfield. -- The Chicago city ordinance classifying theaters of eight years old, owner of the Ho­ tel Bishop and one of Aurora's men on the price of admission, was upheld by the supreme court in a decision reversing the judgment of the circuit co»irt of Cook county and remanding the case with directions to sustain the city's demurrer and dismiss in­ junction proceedings brought by the Metropolis Theater company and nu­ merous other theatrical companies and individuals. Justice Dunn dis­ sents from the opinion of the re­ mainder of the court. Waukegan.--Earl Purdy of High­ land Park narrowly escaped 'death at Fox lake when a motor boat pap­ poose caught fire while out In the lake. His shouts drew attention and there was a rush to rescue him with motor, %ail and row boats. Mean­ while the boat burned fiercely and Purdy was about to take to the water when A. C. Brown took him off in ft boat. Kewanee.--Telegrams to relatives told of the - accidental drowning of Frank Maul, cashier of the First Na­ tional bank of Fresno, Cal., who left his home here nine years PAROLE LAW LEGAL ACT OF 1899, PREVIOUSLY KNOCKED OUT, NOW DE­ CLARED VALID. TRIBUNAL REVERSES ITSELF 8econd Important Deeleton Handed Down Holds Use of Bible in Schools of the State Is Compulsory Worship and Cannot Be Tolerated. Springfield.--Four hundred prison­ ers are ready for immediate release at the Illinois state penitentiaries at Joliet and Chester. This is the con­ crete result of the recent decision of the Illinois supreme court at Spring­ field, which held that the opinion which was declared last February in the Joyce case is not now the opinion of the court. The court, divided four to three, holds that the parole law is quite con­ stitutional; that the February opin­ ion, which was declared to be the opinion of the court by a four to three decision, is not now the com­ plete finding of the supreme bench, and that there are no constitutional differences which would invalidate any of the actions of the many ad­ ministrative bodies of the state which were directly involved by the Febru­ ary decison of the supreme justices. The chief effect of the supreme court decision, which will be followed Immediately by an official mandate which will return Joyce to the peni­ tentiary, is that the state board of administration of public charities, the railway and warehouse commission and the dozen other official bodies of the state, which were involved In the February decision, are now permitted, legally, to proceed with their func­ tions. Justice Dunn of Charleston wrote the February decision. The new de­ cision was written by Justice Orrin N. Carter of Chicago. The dissenting opinion wa* filed by Justices Dunn, George A. Gooke of Aledo, and James H. Cartwrlght of Oregon. The court changes its mind on all points raised against the law in Its first decision. UNjMUFEATED CHAMPION OF T^l r NORTHWEST* ' tL Ireland, Rifle Ohot, of Cetfan, • Wash., Telle a Story. Mr. Ireland la the holder of four world records and has yet to loee hU flrat match--eays he: "Kidney trouble ao effected my vision as to inter­ fere with my shoot­ ing. I became so nervoua I could hard- 1: hold a gun. There is severe pain in my back and head and my kidneys were terribly disordered. Dose's Kidney Pille fJI cured me after, I had M 1 • i ^ doctored and taken Jl y| nearly every remedy M £f. / \ imaginable without JP relief. I will give further details of my casogto anyone enclosing stamp." Remember the name--Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. THE BIGGEST. Rules Bible From Schools. The Illinois supreme court delivered a sweeping blow at all formn of re­ ligious services and iusti uctlon in the common schools of the state. The de­ cision bars from the. classroom the Bible, prayers, and hymns of every sort. Although the court frequently has ruled on the various features of this question it has never before gone squarely on record. The decision was written by Justice Dunn. Justice Cart- wright and Hand dissented, but their opinion has not been riled. Thef, tf&rision was given in a case brought.fey the Catholic residents of Winchester, Scott county, to prevent daily religious exercises in the schools of that district. In the lower court they were refused a writ of mandamus, but the supreme court reverses the lower court. The petition set up that the pupils were required each day to hoar read portions from the King James version of the Bible, then they recited the King James version of the Lord's prayer, and that they sang sac­ red hymns, one of which was men­ tioned--"Grace Enough for Me." "The exercises mentioned," the court says, "constitute worship. They are the ordinary forms of worship usual practised by Protestant Chris­ tian denominations. Their compulsory performance would be a violation of the constitutional guaranty of the free exercise and enjoyment of relig­ ious profession and worship. One does not eajoy the free exercise of re­ ligious worship who Is compelled to Join In any form of religious wor­ ship. "It is not a question to be deter­ mined by a court in a country of re­ ligious freedom what religion or what sect is right. That is not a judicial question. All stand equal before the law--the Protestant, the Catholic, the Mohammedan, and Jew; the Mormon, the free thinker, the atheist. "Children cannot hear the scriptures read without being instructed as to the divinity of Jesus Christ, the trin­ ity, the resurrection, baptism, predes­ tination, a future state of punishmente and reward*, the authority of the priesthood, the obligation and effect of the sacrHment8, and many other doctrines abiut which the various sects do not agree. "Granting that instruction on these subjects is desirable, yet the sects do not agree on what instruction shall be g*ven. Any Instruction on any one of tha subjects is necessarily sectar­ ian, b«cause, while It may be consis­ tent with the doctrines of one or many of the sects, it will be Inconsistent with the doctrine of one or more of them." She--What is Iho biggest fish story you ever heard ? He--Jonah and the whale. BOY TORTURED BY ECZEMA "When my boy was six years old, he suffered terribly with eczema. He could neither sit still nor lie quietly in bed, for the itching was dreadful. He would irritate spots by scratching with his nails and that only made them worse. A doctor treated him and we tried almost everything, but the eczema seemed to spread. It started in a small place on tlie lower extremities and spread for two years until it very nearly covered the back part of his leg to the knee. "Finally I got Cuticura Soap, Cuti- cura Ointment and Cuticura Pills and gave them according to directions. I used them in the morning and that evening, before I put my boy to bed, I used them again and the improve­ ment even in those few hours was sur­ prising, the inflammation seemed to be so much less. I used t^o boxes of Cuticura Ointment, the same of the Pills and the Soap and my boy was cured. My Son is now in his sev­ enteenth year and he has never had a return of the eczema. "I took care of a friend's child that had eczema on its face and limbs and I used the Cuticura Soap and Ointment They acted on the child just as they did on my ton and it has never re­ turned. I would recommend the Cuti­ cura Remedies to anyone. Mrs. A. J. Cochran, 1823 Columbia Ave., Phila­ delphia, Pa., Oct. 20, 1909." A Teacher in the Making. She was a popular young normal student, who had been to a party the night before, and as a consequence, was "uot prepared" in the geography class. The woman instructor, true to her method of drawing upon the general knowledge of a student rather than to permit a failure, after eliciting two or three inconsequential "stabs" from her fair but jaded disciple, asked for the products of China. The victim brightened. "Tea," she asserted, preparing to sit down. "Yes, and what else?' encouraged the instructor. The young woman smiled with sweet hopelessness. "Now you can mention others, I am sure. Just think about it." ' Tea," drawled the flute-like voice of the pretty girl, "and," puckering her forehead with an intellectual tour de force, "and laundry work."-- Youth's Companion. Other Important Decisions. Following is the substance of other Important decisions handed down by the Illinois supreme court: Woman cannot hold property she ob­ tains from her husband by false rep­ resentation. Failure to declare the true value of express packages is declared a viola­ tion of the interstate commerce law. John Connors and Edward Donovan, leaders of the marine firemen's strike last September, must serve a peniten­ tiary sentence for mayhem. The Shad Crop. Shad has been very abundant on the Atlantic coast this year; yet ex­ perts declare that had it not beea for the government hatcheries this fish would now be practically extinct here (or commercial purposes. Parasites of Insects. Since the Dutch philosopher Leeu- wenhoek discovered that the papa of the flea was sometimes preyed on by the larva of a mite. It has been well known that various small " in­ sects have their external parasites. A Hibernian Verdict. A New Yorker fs the happy employ­ er of an aged Irishman, who grows eloquent over the woes of the Em­ erald isle. Said the boss: "Pat ths king of England is dead." The old man was silent for a mo­ ment. Then he took off his hat "Well," he said slowly, "as a man he was a fine bit of a boy. As Eng­ lishmen go, he was as good as yes can make them. As a king, there was nobody on earth as could beat him. But still. I'll koep me eye on George." Oh, Mr. Wright! Wilbur Wright was talking to a Dayton reporter about the Daily Mail • $50,000 aerial race from London to Manchester. ."It was shocking, though," said the reporter, "that Graham White, an An­ glo-Saxon flying man, l«t himself be beaten by a Frenchman." Mr. Wright smiled. "Shocking?" he said. "It was more than that. It was a Paujhan." '>« Important to Mothers Examine careiully every bottle of CA8TORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of{ In Use For Over SO Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. To put up with the world humbly is better than to :ontrol it; this is the very acme of virtue.--Lamartine. Dr. Werce's pie-sant Petlrta en re oonsttpttlM. Snttlpttlun Is the aon of roatiT dlSNtm. Our# • «SM and you cur* Uw diMaae. Buf to Lake. A man is never so easily deceived as when he is trying to deceive others. Many who used to sm«lc« 10c cigars Bow buy Lswia' Singl* Binder straight 5c, Lowering the gas makes the world brighter--to lovere.

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