lie McHenry Plainflealer Published by P. Q. 8CHREINER. McHENHY. ILLINOIS OIL «J«4. IN 8TECL PLANTS. Geologists and other experts differ •a to the period that must elapse be fore the coal fields now actively mIn to* will show sign* of exhaustion, "Vast areas of coal deposits exist In Alaska, China and elsewhere which remain untouched, but approximately 400 years is the lowest calculation of the time required to consume the ooal deposits of America »nd England at the present rate of consumption. In the meantime vast changes In the production- of power for manufactur ing purposes are certain to take place. •StTMms in ail nana CM ihs vrcrld "ill fcs sfJHisi! for generating electricity, •ays Philadelphia Press. Problems relating to tie transmission of the feoxrent over long distances with a minimum leakage are engaging the at- j tention of electrical engineers. A solu- will surely h« forth com in£. A. Cen- Sory heuce the smoke nuisance in ottfes may not be understood, for the simple reason that ail power used in factories and heat for domestic pur- £c*es are likely to be supplied by wa ter-generated electricity. The produc tion of coal has already become so ex- pensive that experiments in the use 9t ell as fuel In steamships and war •vessels have made considerable prog ress Relative success appears to have attended these trials. KILLS 20 PLANT OF LOS ANGELES TIMES IS DESTROYED WITH MANY FATALITIES. HOMES MENACED IN PLOT The diamond Is pure carbon and the hardest substance In nature. It burns in a temperature of 800 centl- fprada, producing carbonic acid. All diamonds are not equally hard, and tier© Is sometimes a varying degree «f hardness in different parts of a targe diamond. Some diamonds glow In a dark room; some are (lorascent, Appearing milky in sunlight Dia monds are of many colors--pure white, yellow. Jet black, dark brows, light cinnamon, green, blue, pink, and orange, the diamonds of each mine having a distinctive character. An ex pert, can usually tell the mine by ex amining the stone. Most of the dia monds of today come from the famous JEQmberley and De Beers mines, in South Africa. The battleship Orion, which Great thltain launched the other day. is 4,000 tons smaller than the cruiser Lion launched a few days before, and Is slower; but Abe will throw a weight of shot and will carry an array of tor pedoes that will render her more dan gerous in a standup fight. The Orion la declared to be the most powerful battleship afloat But bow long will she to! Only oneasure thing can be predicted of the Orion; and that is, in it few years she will be on the scrap- tmtp and still more powerful fighters Win im carrying the flag in her place, la no end to the race in building Mofosant, who, with his mechanician weighing Is2 pounds, made an aero- plant flight near the English channel, la a native of ChWago, but he found that burg too alow for him. took in a few Central American revolutions and then beat the French at their own pne of sensational flying. He has Us raal spirit of Yankee Doodle. • Chicago professor elucidates the tfcaary that the small flat breeds the bad boy. We were under the impres sion that the main indictment was that it,does not breed them at all. good or bad. Also It may b* reflected that bad boys were known in abun dance J>etore small flats were dreamed oL • New York Judge has suggested that a woman attorney, like her mas culine colleague, should take off her hat when addressing the court Per haps this will be met by the excuse that a busy woman attorney has no time to tidy her hair--and that she looks much better in a hat, anyway. Infernal Machines Found Beneath Res idences of Two Bitter Foes to Or ganized Labor--Big Reward Offered for Captu|p of Perpetrators. Los Angele8, Cal.--At least twenty men lost their live* Saturday when the building occupied by the Los Angeles Times Publishing company was destroyed by fire. The fire was preceded by an explo sion and Immediately the building was enveloped in flames. The blast oc curred on the 6ecofid floor of an ad dition to the old building. This is of three floors. Within a few seconds the entire structure was a fiery fur nace. The havoc of the explosion was grpRiMit in t.h« mechanical depart ments. and the majority of the dead and Injured w*re members of these departments. Twenty-two Injured were taken to the receiving hospital. Within twelv« hours after the wrecking of the Times plant an at tempt was made to destroy the resi dence of Gen. Harrison Gray Otis, pub lisher of the paper, by means of an in fernal machine. The bomb was discovered In a suit case hidden under a bunch of vines near a bay window and was exploded as It was hurled Into the street by police officers. Little damage was done. Another Infernal machine was found earlier In the day at the residence of P. J. Zeehandelaar. secretary of the Merchants and Manufacturers' asso ciation. General Otis an J the other respon sible heads of the paper charge the Times building disaster and narrowly averted attempts at further destruc tion of life and property to labor union sources. The property damage is esti mated at $500,000. With equal emphasis the leaders of union labor here and throughout the state repudiate the accusation and have offered all aid In their power in the effort to detect the culprits. For twenty years, following a quar rel with the typographical union, which resulted in making the Times a nonunion paper, General Otis has fought unionism with every resource at his command. He has been ably seconded In this fight by the Mer chants and Manufacturers' association, whose secretary was the object of frustrated dynamiting. The president of the local typo graphical union issued orders that union printers may work in conjunc tion with the nonunion printers of the Times in any of the local newspaper offices in getting out the edition of the Times. The city council met In special ses sion and appropriated $25,000 for the purpose of determining the cause of the Times explosion and provided a reward of $2,500 for the capture of those responsible for the outrage. JOHN 1 MX FOB SOVEBNQB NEW YORK DEMOCRATS ADOFf . PLATFORM URGING REFORMS. Direct Primaries Favored, Pledget Party to Preservation of "Old Na tionalism--Denounce Tariff. WILL THE SOCIAL WHIRL COME Tu THiS* -Edward Laaan- Schner FOUR KILLED IN AUTO RACE Score Are Injured--Mismanagement Charged--Harry Grant Wine Van- derbiK Cup in Record Time. New York.--Four persona killed and twenty seriously Injured--several of them probably fatally--was the sacri fice on the altar of speed at the sixth Vanderbilt cup automobile race Satur day. Mismanagement and poor policing of the course were declared responsi ble for the slaughter. Many of the victims were spectators, run down when the racing autos crashed into the crowds lining the parkway. The race was won in electrifying fashion by Harry Grant, driving a 120 horsepower Alco. He defeated Joe Dawson, driving a Marmon, by the narrow mefrgln of twenty-five seconds. John Aitken, in a National, was only a minute and six seconds behind Daw son. LAUNCH UPSETS; 29 DROWN As barefoot dancing has been intro duced at Newport by a fashionable dancer, and the chief of police has or dered his own arrest, that resort Is at present challenging New Jersey for the championship In unusual happen- Cass. New York, the craziest city In the 'world, chews more gum things than any other city according to recent statistics. Does gum-chewing go from hand to mouth, and from mouth to brain? King Manuel of Portugal has been forced to hide in the mountains for the purpose of keeping out of the way ®f the Portuguese revolutionists. It Seems a shame to spoil the summer «f an absolutely Inoffensive young Mng in that way. Members of Battleship New Hamp shire Are Victims of Accident In the Hudson River. New York.--Twenty-nine persons-- all members of the crew of the battle ship New Hampshire--were drowned In the sinking of a launch In the Hud son river Saturday. That the list of dead is not much higher Is due to the bravery and per sonal rescue effected by Godfrey De C. Chevalier, a midshipman. One survivor said Chevalier himself rescued 16 persons who were In the water, besides Bavlng the lives of many others by showing them the best method of saving themselves. Sleeps on Track; Killed. Herrln, 111.--Adam Smith, aged for ty-one years, a prosperous gardener, was struck and killed by an extra car on the Coal Belt lnterurban Saturday. He was asleep on the track. Secreted in the bottom of his shoe was found $261 In currency. Somebody has Invented a bicycle to tun on the tops of fences. The me chanism will at once appeal to many •a distinctly superior to the aero- London shopkeepers are said to be Wy much shocked a{ the extrava gance of American women who pay $26 a pair for stockings. But It Is to IM noted that they are not so shocked tout what they are able to take the money- Rochester, N. Y.--The Democratic state convention Friday nominated the following state ticket: Governor--John A. Dlx of Washing ton county. Lieutenant Governor--Thomas F Conway of Clinton. Secretary of Stat sky of Kings. Comptroller--William New York. Attorney General--Thomas Carmody of Y ates. State Treasurer--John J. Kennedy of Erie. State --John A. Bensel of New York. Justices of the Court of Appeals-- Irving C. Vann, Republican, of Onon daga, and Frederick Collins. Democrat, of Chemung. Mr. Dlx was nominated by a vote of 434 to 16 for Congressman Suiser. All the other nominations were made by acclamation. The platform adopted pledges the party lirst to the preservation of the "old nationalism." It nondemns "all attacks upon the Supreme court of the United States. t It declares for sovereign state rights and "for the largest possible measure of home rule for all cities of the state." It denounces the Republican party for its government of the state. The declaration of principles declares that the Payne-Aldrlch tariff law was a "breach of faith" by the Republican party and responsible for the high cost of living. Only by a downward revision of the tariff, It is held, could the cost of living be reduced. It charges the Republican party with extravagance, especially In the creation of many needless public of- fices.#and pledges the Democratic par ty to retrenchment. Popular election of United States senators, an income tax, a parcels post and the preservation of water power for all the people are other things urged by the set of prin ciples. jnVci^i 50Ci*t 1 "i ' f J 11 SAYS OFFERED JOB FOR VOTE Bank Cashier in Senatorial Bribery Hearing Gives Damaging Evidence Against Senator Lorimer. Chicago.--Testimony directly con necting Senator Lorimer with an offer of patronage for a vote for him was. brought out Friday at the senate com mittee bearing in the investigation looking into the validity of his seat in the senate. Henry A. Sheppard, a bank cashier of Jerseyville. was the witness. His testimony brought out by the Interro gations of Attorney Austrian, for the prosecution, caused a sensation In the committee room. Mr. Sheppard said: "Mr. Lorimer told me that If I would vote for him he would get a friend of mine in Jerseyville the office of post master. It was the day before ne was elected. Lee O'Nell Browne took me to Mr. Lorimer and we had a talk. I told him I wouldn't vote for him un less he did as I requested. Lorimer considered a minute and then he said: " 'Well, if I am elected I will have a share In the Illinois patronage and I will do it.' That, was all there was to it" Representative Michael S. Link of Mitchell told the story of another vote cast for Senator Lorimer for which money was paid when be was called to testify. Link declared he was asked personally by Lorimer for his vote, and later was paid $1,000 in the South ern hotel at St Louls^by Lee O'Nell Browne. THE RACE FOR THE PENNANT A' Gotham bride who stepped he* feasband's face because he bought het m terse and buggy instead of an aut* moMIe wants to be up-to-date or notfc 1,000 Strikers Are Arrested. Warsaw, Russia --The police arrest ed 1,000 of the street car employes who struck for higher wages and aom- pelled them to return to work. As a re- sule 100 cars were operated Saturday. Dickinson Passes Harbin. Harbin, Manchuria.--Jacob M. Dick inson, t>* American secretary of war ; ien\ciarence R. Edwards, chief of the bureau of insular affairs, and their party pasBed through Sere Fri day en route from Peking for Moscow and St. Petersburg. Standing of the Various Clubs In ths Leading Baseball Leagues. NATIONAL, LEAGUE. Club*. W. I,. P.O.! Cluhs. W. L. P.O. "h!oa*o . .94 47 . 667ir,lno'nati ,.7J 7fi ,4S» Sew York.86 6<* .K»31St. Louis...59 83 . 415 PltteburK .83 62 .572 Brooklyn ..AO fW .411 PhtldTla .74 71 510IBoBton 50 9« .342 AMERICAN LEAGUE. PhlldTla .99 46 . 684' Cleveland .63 77 ,4«5 Detroit ...81 64 , 562Wa«h'ton .64 81 .487 New York.82 63 .Bfi7!Chicago ...64 83 . 485 Boston ....79 66 . 562|gt. Louis.. .45 103 . 303 WESTERN LEAGUE. Sl'u Ctty.106 58 , 647l3maha ... 83 80 . 609 Denver ..101 63 .6161 St. J'seph. 73 91 .444 Uncoln .. 92 70 .568ID. Molnee. 70 93 . 429' Wichita. .87 77 MllTopeka ... 42 122 . 254 Psrote 8ystem Is Favored. Washington. -- Such time-honored methods of punishment as the dungeon, starvation, silence, the soli tary cell, darkness and corporal pun ishment have been largely discredited In American reformatories, according to the report of the committee on re formatory work and parole made to the American Prison association. Missouri Has 3,293,335. Washington.--The state of Missouri has a population of 3,293,335, accord ing to the thirteenth census statistics announced Friday. This Is an increase of 186,670, or six per cent, over the population in 1900, which was 3,106- 665. Nicholas Monsarrt Is Dead. New York--Nicholas Monsarrt, president of the K. & M. Railway com pany, and formerly president of the Hocking Valley Railway company, died suddenly here Friday. Cadet Bodies Not Militia. Washington.--The war department Friday ruled that the cadet organiza tions of educational^ institutions are not properly a part of the organized militia. Biplane Beaten by Auto. Pougbkeepsie, N. Y.--Driving an au tomobile, his Flat "Cyclone," Ralph De Palma Thursday defeated Eugene Ely In a biplane of the Curtiss pattery at the driving park, circling the mile track three times in -.54 and :&6Vfc. respectively. Omaha Qeta Postmasters. Richmond, Va.--Omaha was Thurs day selected by the national convex tlon of postmasters of the flrBt class as the place for the next •""•"I ing of the nssoclstlafc News Note: The Newport social season has been so strenuous that many members of ths most exclusive circles have been forced to abandon their homes for hospitals and sanitariums. Several of the leading host* esses have fainted during the past fortnight while entertaining. BREAKS AIR REGORO WALTER BROOKIN8 FLIES 186 MILES IN FIVE HOURS 4» MINUTES. WINS $10,000 CASH PRIZE Young Aviator Surpasses AH cross country Flights in His Chicago to 8prlngfleld (III.) Trip--Out-Dis tances Special Train. PRAISE FOR LAFOUETTE CONVENTION CALL8 8ENATOR PI* ONEER PROGRESSIVE. Springfield, 111.--What is looked up on as one of the most remarkable feats In aerial navigation was accom plished by Walter B. Brooking. Ur a Wright biplane, Thursday, when be successfully flew from Chicago to this city, and In doing so he broke all cross country aeronautic records. With only two stops, neither of which was actually necessary, he made the trip from Chicago to Springfield, a distance of 186 miles, In five hours and forty-nine minutes, maintaining an average speed of 32.7 miles an hour, and won the $10,000 prize offered by a Chicago newspaper. Along the entire route, from Chicago to the state fair grounds here, hun dreds of thousands of people cheered the daring young aviator as he passed. As the great mechanical bird came to the ground here in the presence Of 40,000 people he was cheered vocifer ously for fully half an hour. Brooklns left Chicago at 9:16 a. m. He dropped out of the clouds over the fair grounds In Springfield at 4:45. Forty-seven minutes after Brooklns rose from the ground In Washington park, Chicago, the "Daylight Special" left the Park Row station over the Illi nois Central. A special car had been attached in which traveled Wilbur Wright, the airship Inventor; Roy Knabenshue, special representative of the Wright brothers; members of the Aero club of Illinois, and about forty newspaper men. After a flight of two hours and twen ty-eight minutes Brooklns came to Oil man. where he arrived at 11; 43. Brook- ins was far ahead of the train and he decided to alight and await the arri val of the train. The train arrived at Oilman at 12:15 and orders were given by the division superintendent of the railroad to hold the train until the biplane should re sume its flight. The gasoline and wa ter tanks were replenished, and after the engines had %een gone over care fully by Wright and Knabenshue. Brooklns resumed his flight. From Gil^aaa to Springfield the spe cial train and the aeroplane ran neck and neck, first one forging ahead, then the other, but never at any time more than a quarter of a mile apart. Brooklns was forced at 3:20 to de scend at Mt. Pulaski for fuel, only twenty-four miles from the state fair grounds. The landing was one of the most remarkable that has ever been seen In the history of aviation. Trees and fences surrounded blnV on all sides and with perfect control he picked out a spot, after soaring about In a short circle, scarcely more than half a block square, and landed square in the ce'Jter. The special train was held up, the aeroplane's supplies again were renewed, and at 3:45 he as cended again. From Pulaski to the fair grouuds a speed of thirty-live miles an hour was maintained. To Bury Belle Elmore's Body. London.--The coroner Issued an or der Saturday for the burial of the body found In the cellar of the home of Dr. Hawley Oippen and which the coro ner's ]u*y found to be that of Belle Elmore, the doctor's wife. Taft Signs Merit Rule Order. Washlrigton.--President Taft Satur day slgnfd the order which will place assistant? postmasters In first and sec ond class offices yd all their clerks under tbf^cl*sslflea services on Decem ber 1 dm t. ' m Cahteen Founder Is Dead. Washington.--MaJ. George M. Dow ney, U. f?- A., retired, originator of the army poet canteen, died here Friday after a week's illness. He was sixty- nine years old and had participated in three Indian campaigns. He was transferred to the retired list In 1888. Nlns Hurt In Car Craah. Detroit, Mich.--Nine persons were Injured, one probably fatally, Friday, wheu two street carB collided at the intersection of Dlx and Beotten are- ft Wisconsin Republicans Declar*"Payne Tariff Law Falls to Carry Out Party Pledge. Madison, Wis.--Sharp criticism of the Payne tariff law, a demand for the physical valuations of railroads and unstinted praise of Senator La Follette as the pioneer "progressive" are the principal plankB of the plat form adopted by the Republican state convention Wednesday. Indorsement of the state's strongly "Insurgent" delegation in congress and a slap at President Taft are ex pressed In the following resolution: "Wisconsin Is to be congratulated upon having representatives In the senate and house who remained truft to the people and to the national plat form of the party, notwithstanding .the efforts to punish them, for £?« do ling by withdrawal of federal patro nage." * On the tariff the platform says: "The Payne-Aldrlch tariff Is not a compliance with the pledge of the Republican party in its national plat form. The true basis of protective tariff is the difference between the cost of production at home and abroad, and we hold any increased cost of production of living of Amer ican labor should be accomnanied by compensating tariff duties. "The present tariff board has no power of investigation, and Is not re quired to report to congress. We fa vor the creation of a nonpartisan tariff committee empowered to ascer tain the cost of production lu this and other countries, and required to make frequent reports of the Information gained In congress. "Upon the information so obtained congress should proceed to revise the different schedules independently o* each other, according to true pro tective tariff principles." GIRL AND TWO BOYS SHOT Children of John F. Dietz, Wisconsin Fugitive, Fired On by 8heriff-- Youth Warns Father. Covdejrayr Wls., Oct. 3.--In a futile effort tp capture John F. Dletz, the "outlaw of Cameron Dam," three of the Dietz children were shot and two of the three wounded were captured. The other escaped to warn his father of the raid. Diets is charged with shooting a man in an election row September 1 and has defied the authorities. The sheriff expected him to go to Winter, and waited for bim at the side of a road. When the Dietz buggy ap proached, Sheriff Madden ordered the three occupants to throw up their hands, and when they failed to obey fired at close range. Dietz had stayed at home, having learned that the sheriff was near, and had sent his daughter with his sons, thinking the officers would n^t shoot if she was near. She, as well as the boys, was fTmed. Leslie Dietz es caped through a shower of bullets Fifty residents of Winter, many old- time friends of Dletz, have been sworn In as special under sheriffs and the city is patrolled constantly under lustructlons from Sheriff Madden, who fears the wrath of the defender of Cameron dam. Foreign Post for Hltt's 8on. Washington.--R. S. Reynolds Hltt of Illinois, son of the late Representa tive Hltt, who for many years headed the house committee on foreign af fairs, was Saturday appointed United States minister to Guatemala. Two Died In Fire. New Tork.--Fire that started In a stock of prayer books stored beneath the stairs of a ramshackle tenement In Hester street Sunday caused the deaths of David and Israel PesBler, brothers. B Twenty-Eighth Aviator Killed. Muelhausen, Germany. -- Aviator Flochmann, who was Injured when his biplane collapsed at a height of 150 feet, died Thursday without having re covered consciousness. This makes the twenty-eighth death this year. Painting Brings $200,000. Paris.--Rubens' famous painting, "The Bath of Diana," the pride of Brussels, was sold Wednesday to an American for |200,000. IV was for merly in the possession^ of Fratf Schuybert. DIETZ IS BESIEGED "OUTLAW OF CAMERON DAM" 8URR0UNDE0 BY P088E • lit QABIN. LOST SUPPORT OF FRIENDS Desperate Man, Through His Threats, Has Northern Wisconsin in Tur moil--Town of Winter Un der martial nuie. Winter, Wis.--John F. Dietz. the outlaw of Cameron Dam, in the wilder ness of northern Wisconsin, was Mon day practically a prisoner in his log house, in the center nt his clearing. His daughter is in a hospital at Ash land, desperately wounded; one son, is in jail with a^ bullet through his »rrr> 2.Sd snotbsr son is With tlifi father, and is also wounded. Meanwhile all northern Wisconsin fs in turmoil. The death of Dletz seems certain, for he has lost the sup port of his former friends, who sup ported him In the days wh^n he won fame by his warfare against the Chip pewa Falls Lumber company, a prop erty of the Great Weyerhauser Lum ber corporation. While Dietz is surrounded in his forest clearing, the town of Winter is excited, because Dletz has threat ened to invade the place and shoot every person involved in the shooting of his two sons and his daughter. The town is under martial rule, the sheriff having deputized about thirty- five men. most all of them friend^ of Horel, the man shot on election day. For two days the officers prevented the newpaper correspondents sent here from various cities from sending out anything of ths battle in which the Dietz children were shot. How ever. the rule has been so modified as to* allow the wires to be used al though there is a dead line around the village and the word is absolute that any person crossing that line will be shot. This is to prevent any aid being sent to Dietz. The officers do not fear the arrival of Dletz for they believe they have him surrounded. Dietz, In his woods cabin, is now unable to leave the house, for the woods about the clear ing are surrounded with officers, picked shots, who will try to pick Dietz off with a rifle shot if he moves out of doors. Dietz has his cabin stocked with enough food to last until spring. In the chance that Dietz escapes, however. Winter is kept under guard. All of the sheriff's men are crack shots, able to pick off a deer at a mile, but Dietz, his children and his wife are also dead shots. Dietz says he will die fighting, and the probable end Is his death by a shot of an officer. OFFICERS GUARD OTIS HOME Twelve Bodies Recovered From Ruins Of Los Angeles Times Building Wrecked by Bomb. Los Angeles, Cal.--Searchers in the ruins of the Los Angeles Times build ing, which was destroyed by an ex plosion and fire Saturday morning, came upon seven charred bodies at the foot of the elevator shaft Monday. The bodies could not be recognized. Five bodies, all badly charred, had been previously recovered. The man agement of the Times announces that It now appears certain that twenty- one were killed. It is asserted by physicians tp charge of the injured that probably none will die. though several may be crippled for life. Squads of detectives are constantly on guard at the home of General Otis and his son-in-law, Harry Chandler, general manager of the Times, and F. J. Zeehandelaar, to prevent further attempts to wreck the houses. 30 INJURED IN COLLISION Excursion Trsin Collides Head-On With Freight Through Blunder Latter's Crew at Laporte, Ind. Laporte, Ind.--Running 20 miles an hour, with its engineer unconscious of the blundering of the crew of a freight train, a Lake Erie & Western passen ger train carrying excursionists Mon day dashed head-on Into a string of freight cars on the main track. More than 30 persons were injured, several seriously. * The most seriously Injured are: • J. A. Davis, Danville, Va.; hurled through door of the smoking car, re ceiving gashes in the head, right arm and right side. Andrew Clossen, Grand Rapids; left arm cut off below the elbow; internal injuries. Nell Brooks, Grand Rapids; both feet crushed, internal Injuries. Michael Hassett. Pern, scalded, and other minor injuries. The collision took place within the city limits. Makes Nsw Wireless Mark. New York.--A new long distance record for wireless transmission Is claimed by the Marconi Wireless Tele graph company, which announces that the officials were informed In a dis patch from London Monday that Mr. Marconi, who Is now in the Argentine Republic, has successfully received signals directly from Glace Bay, N. H., and from Cllfden, Ireland, at the high power station now almost com pleted In the Argentine Republic. The distance covered Is estimated at 5,600 miles. 8hot by Jealous Husband. Vlncennes. Ind.--Menlo Moore shot and instantly killed C. Edward Gib son, a millionaire oil operator of Vlncennes,*at the Union station here Monday. Gibson was bound for the Bridgeport oil fields and had just bought his ticket when fired upon from behind. Moore took a train east and was arrested at Washington. Gib son is alleged to have Interfered in Moore's domestic affairs. Mrs. Moore Is a beautiful woman and a member of the well-known Padgett family of Washington. ' Munvon's •Soap - more soothing than Cold Cream; more healing than V any lotion, liniment or salve; more beautifying than any cosmetic. Cares dandruff ind steps hsk tnm hlltoS euL CI* UI-NTTVA A I ULI/BKA Choice quality; reda and roans, white facet or kofn* bought on orders. Tens of Thousands to select from. Satisfaction Guar anteed. Correspondence Invited. Come and see for yourself. National Live Slock Com. Cow At either cur.au.. sa.iosisfc.iu- >.Os»ia.m. iKES, ^atablitbed 18B. WIMTPn ™b)tlons men to a-rt aa represen;alive* ««(l 14.11 for the Union Central Lire Insiirsnea Company Ik Jo DaviesB, Stepteuson, Winmhago, '*."i K1 ^ .i1 .i T _ 1 u ,.. IV.m CyiiMlws Illinois. Ho experience necesaanr. Writ* M. E. 8CHRYTEB, General Agent, Polo, nl. mvBLHG TTPXWKITSB8, the marre! of today. A stand ard business machine for 126. Typewriter and Oont- yr.ny 3U:o'i. cat opportunity. Breryoasi ShcuK Inrentifate promptly. 8WrU»s r„. iUebtatcr.li.I. Firerr _ r wi felTS Not Strictly Orthodox. Police Justice--Young man, if hat la your, religion, if you have any! Chauffeur (arrested for overs peed lng)--Something like Jim B!udso's» your honor--never to be passed Da tha highway. OR. MARTEL'ft FEMALE PILLS. Seventeen Years the 8tandsrd. Prescribed and recommended for Women's Ailments. A scientifically pre pared remedy of proven worth. The result from their use is quick and per manent. For sale at all Drug Storea. Deposits in* English Savings Banks. Savings bank deposits in the United Kingdom amount to more than $1,119,- 295,000, of which the post office holda $778,640,000. Depositors exceed 10,- 000,000 in number. The people's total savings in all financial institutions aiSfc put at $2,433,260,000. Important to Moth era Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Bears the >7^ Signature ofC^^V^^2^ In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Alwaya Bought. Ssme With Political Pastry. Teacher--Now, Willie, which would you rather have, two-sixths of a pie or one-third ? Willie--One-third, miss. Teacher (sarcastically)--You would, eh! And why so? Willie--'Cause if you cut It Info sixths I'll lose more of the Juice. Woman-Like. "I bate him! I think he is the mean est man 1 ever met." "Grscious, Jeanette! What Is the* trouble?" "Why, he told me he loved me devot edly and I told him it would be impoa- slbly for me to love him in return. The poor fellow looked so downhearted £ told him to try and forget me." "Well?" "Boo-hoo! He--he did." The Weeds Return. "Confound these election beta, an/- way!" grumbled Harker. "Lose heavily?" Inquired his friend. "No, I won ten boxes of cigars and they were so rank 1 sold the whole lot to the corner tobacconist for a dollar.'" "Well, you made a dollar, anyway." "Yes, but that Is not the worst of it. My wife saw the boxes In tho window marked 'A Bargain, $2,' and bought the whole lot to give me as a birthday present." Good Advice, but A traveler entered a railway car riage at a wayside station. The sote occupants of the compartment con sisted of an old lady and her sou, about twelve years old. Nothing of note occurred until the train steamed into the station at which tickets were collected. The woman, not having a Mcket for the boy, requested him to "eorrie doon." The traveler intervened and sug gested putting him under the seat. "Man," said the excited woman, "it's AS shair as daith; but there's twa un der the salt a'ready!" A FOOD DRINK. Which Brings Daily Enjoyment. A lady doctor writes : "Though busy hourly with my own affairs, I will not deny myself the pleasure of taking a few minutes to tell of my enjoyment daily obtained from my morning cup of Postum. It Is a food beverage, not a poison like coffee. "I began to use Postum eight years ago, not because 1 wanted to, but be cause coffee, which I dearly lovt>d. made my nights long weary periods to be dreaded and unfitting ma for busi ness during the day. "On the advice of a friend, I fixst tried Postum, making it carefully as directed on the package. As I had always used 'cream and no sugar,' 1 mixed my Postum so. It looked good, -was clear and fragrant, and it was a pleasure to see the cream color It aa my Kentucky friend always wanted her coffee to look--'like a new sad dle.' "Then I tasted it critically, for I had tried many 'substitutes' for coffee. I was pleased, yes, satisfied, with my Postum in taste and effAt, and am yet, being a constant user of it all these years. "I continually assure my friends and acquaintances that they will like It in place of coffee, and receive benefit from its use. I have gained wajght, can sleep sound and am not nervous."* "There's a Reason." Read "The Head to Wellville" in pkgs. Ever read the above ietterf A new ene appears from time to time. Thfy are genulns* true, and full of human Interest. Ever read fkc above letterT A si* Cue appear* IrOH tlsM to tlwo. TWy •ire (easiat, Ul«, Mi (all •( klM> later**!.