Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 Oct 1911, p. 2

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1 ' '• • - ' . ' * m&m " - • , , , ; V«l j--> ,.•- •. •r- i jr * < ' , • Be McHenry Plaindealer licHENRY, by F. a 8CHREINER. ILLINOIS Warships are nearly always loaded. Aviation Is not yet above the cbanca at accident. Feminine fashion is doing its best l Improve on nature. Wrestling is not a popular sport, because it is lawful and humane. The new comet has no tail and a tailless comet is a sorry spectacle. "Paria has decreed that the corset •Hist go." Yes. It will go where It •anally Is put A beauty expert says that happiness Is the best cosmetic known, but will It remove freckles? Somebody has Invented an "avia- floo cocktail." but the aviation &-cent Cigar is slow is appearing. New Jersey driver named Ham. Loiuis of eggs. Smash up. All that was lacking was a cup of coffee. The young men who are trying to fly from coast to coast are having their ups and downs--mostly downa However Kimmel isn't the first man to come home In Buch condition that his own mother couldn't recognise The Chinese admiral finds fault with American women's skirts, but he is mum on the subject of tight •hoes. Thomas A. Edison says the present «*7 fashions in women's clothes hurt his eyes. Tom always was a sensible feller. Thomas.A. Edison says America Is •head of Germany In aviation Tbe wndertakers of our fair land second the motion. A German has Invented an artifi­ cial sponge. This variety, however. Will not expect you to buy smokes drinks for it. Five people have been poisoned by canned mushrooms. Tbe only BBT^ mushrooms, it appears, are those that we aever picked. Wit A Western man killed himself be­ cause his wife asked him to wash the dishes. We wonder why be didn't put Ml his hat and "beat it." > <v It may take one man ninety years to count $1,000,000. but when a man has that much money he can afford to hire men to count it for him. -What New York imports chorus •: girls It gives them French of Spanish names. That's probably because most them come from hated Chicago. Jin ericas husbands may be bores, a fair Anglomaniac tells us. but " they are not professional husbands. : as a good many foreign noblemen are. Paris Is promising us a revival of the hoop skirt With woman Just •merging from tbe bobble, it Is a case of Jumping from one extreme to an­ other. A census of the birds Is to be tak­ en; but so fast does fashion slay that ft Will be necessary to count the ladles' bats If records are to be ac- CtttttC. "".V't Arithmetic is taught in some schools fey means of baseball averages. Tom SSdison suggests that geography be studied by means of moving pictures. All that remains is to teach reading and spelling with a phonograph. 'A... Toronto clergyman avers that 4tlsslng Is a neglected art We pre­ sume that he speaks of conditions in Canada. Young men of America are fully as brave as their forefathers. 0am of our aviators claims to have encountered an air serpent cavorting higher and yon in the atmosphere And we had been led to believe that avia­ tors were sober young men. A Massachusetts parson has re­ 's signed his pulpit to become s coal ,, dealer. Sometimes we think there Is ^ 1 a bigger field for coal dealers than parsons. A pure food authority says that a bottle of pop contains 1.000,000 mi- crobes. Now it is uBd«y«to<j(^ why the Can in the bleachers sometimes mani­ fests an uncontrollable longing to thnow It at the umpire. FATAL RACE JOT WHITES AND SLACKS CLASH AT COWETA, OKLA--TROOP8 '• ORDER NEGRO IS LYNCHED BY MOB TAFT EXTENDS TRIP ADDS TWO VIRGINIAS AND OH* ER STATES TO HI8 TOUR.' I NOT MUCH TO HOLD ON TO NOW Two Are Dead and Several Wounded in Battle on Streets of Town- Trouble Results From Insult to Man and Woman. Muskegee, Okla.--As a result of a war between whites and negroes at Coweta, a town twenty-live miles north of this city, two men are dead, sev­ eral others wounded, two probably fatally. Company F of Oklahoma National Guard was ordered to proceed to Co­ weta. after it had been reported that the citizens of ked Bird, an exclusive negro town, fully armed, were march­ ing on Coweta. The sheriff of Wagoner county ad­ mitted his inability to cope with the situation. A negro, walking along the street, brushed into Tally Swarney and Miss Louise Green, both whites, shoving them off the sidewalk. Swarney struck the negro, who was . later arrested. Upon his release from Jail the negro, armed with a knife, attacked City Marshal Hurt, who shot him in the leg. Simultaneously, B. J. Beavers, a j prominent attorney, who was passing by, was shot through the head by a negro named Ludreth. Beavers died instantly. Another negro named Williams shot at Marshal Hurt, but missed. Ludreth was shot and killed while officers were attempting to remove him to the coun­ ty jail at Wagoner. A posse had formed and had attempted to lynch Ludreth. Negroes later shot * Del Thompson and a boy named Oliver, both of whom are in tbe hospital here. All negroes were ordered oif the streets of Coweta while the whites made raids on hard­ ware stores and confiscated all fire­ arms and ammunition --atrfawt &A ^l«aw rrvViuwii vviinvV iw wiwr f«is Opening of Campaign-*"? Returns to Capital Nov. 18. «. Las Vegas. Nev --President Taft's notable "swing around the cir­ cle," now ending tts fifth week, will not end in Washington Nov. 1, as first contemplated, but will be extend­ ed until Nov. 15 or 18. The president will travel 3,000 or 4,000 miles more than at first intended, bringing the total mileage of his tour up to be­ tween 16,000 and 17,000 miles and breaking alt known records of presi­ dential travel. The regular itinerary of the orig­ inal trip will be followed, to Pitta- burgh. where President Taft will pass the entire day of Tuesday. Oct 31. Then, instead of keeping on to Wash­ ington. Mr. Taft will go direct to Mar- ganstpwn, W. Va., to pass Wednesday. Nov. i. From Morgantown he will go to Hot 8prlngs. Va., to rest for Ave days, starting west again in time to vote at Cincinnati. Following tfa® Cineinanti trip, Mr. Taft probably will go to Hodgenville. Ky., to participate in the dedication of the Lincoln farm memorial. There are two or three tentative dates in Ten­ nessee following this and then. It is expected, Mr. Taft will return to Washington In time to prepare bis message to congress, which meets the first Monday in December. ALDRICH HAS REVISED PLAN LOYAL ARMY IN REBEL TRAP Three Thousand Chinese Soldiers Hemmed In by Revolutionists-- Fleet in Distress Off Hankow. Nanking.--A complete demoralization of the imperial army in the vicinity of Hankow is imminent aa a result of (revolutionary successes. Kwang Chow, 60 miles north of Hankow, is in the hands of the rebels, and several Intermediate towns have been captured. Three thousand imperial troops who were fleeing northward from Hankow have been cut off and are hemmed in by strong rebel forces with no avenue of retreat open. News is being brought into this city by couriers and refugees. Wire' com­ munication with Hankow is cut off. The imperial fleet in tbe Yangtse Kiang river is reported as flying sig­ nals of distress. The rebel shore bat­ teries are shelling the ^fleet from a well protected position and the sur­ render of tbe fleet is expected. A dispatch from Shanghai states that tbe rebels have captured Chang- sha. the capital of the province of Honan, and thousands of recruits have joined the invaders. A strict censorship prevails at Pe­ king, but the situation there is known to be critical. The government has Issued several calls for more troops and a large force is being mobilized within the city. Should the rebels continue their advance northward with no more effective opposition than has been offered so far an attack on the capital would be inevitable as the master stroke of the revolution. The rebels are strongly entrenched at Hankow. They have sufficient troops to send expeditions after the fleeing loyalists without endangering their own position. The failure of the Chinese fleet to render effective aid at Hankow has had a depressing effect on the Imper­ ialists. The rebels killed 300 loyalists in capturing the railway station and the government stores, but for some mysterious reason the fleet refrained from firing a single shot. It is ru­ mored that there is disaffection among the sailors and marines. New Scheme Provides for & $300,0C<V 000 Reserve Association With United States In Control. t Washington.--A National Reserve association with a capital of approxi­ mately $300,000,000. which is esti­ mated to be about 20 per cent, of the capital of all national and state banks and trust companies in the United States eligible for membership, is provided in the revised plan of cur­ rency reform, drafted by former United States Senator Aldrich, chair­ man of the National Monetary com­ mission. has been made public. The revised plan, which will be sub­ mitted to the monetary commission here next month, contains the prlpcl- pal features of the original draft with suggestions as to tbe relations of state banks and trust companies to the as­ sociation; a method of purchasing two per cent, government bonds now held by national banks and means to In­ sure the maintenance of adequate re­ serves by the association and to regu­ late discounts and note Issues. CXICAGO RICORfrHHAia s*s_/ jtaf « "X M A#®* Ov wr "The Chinese government has a weak hold on the army."---Cable Dispatch. MINISTER IN JAIL REV. CLARENCE V. T. RICHESON CHARGED WiTH DEATH OF AVIS LINNELL. WOMAN DIES FROM POISON Druggist Tells Police He Sold Min­ ister Cyanide of Potassium--Victim Is Said to Have Beert Engaged to Accused. TELLS OF $100,000 "FUND" Lieut. Governor' Morris on Stand In Stephenson Inquiry Names Robert •I. Shields as Receiver. Milwaukee, Wis.--"I have been told by Mr. Cook, partner of Edward Hines. that approximately 1100,- OO'J was paid by Hines and Senator Stephenson to certain men. one of whom was Robert J. Shields, to be used in the election of Senator Steph­ enson." said Lieutenant Governor Mor- rip at tbe Stephenson query. He said Mr Shields went to Wash­ ington and saw Senator Stephenson and came back with a check. ' KATE SHELLEY NEAR DEATH lows's Heroine in Precarious Condition and Doctors Give Up Hope for Her Recovery. Bone Io. -- Kate Shelley. Iowa's heroine, is in a precarious con­ dition at her home near Moingona. She Is bedfast with Bright's disease and doctors have given up hope for her recovery. Miss Shelley saved a Northwestern train years ago by crawling across a tottering river bridge and rushing to Moingona. where she gave a warning as the train was pulling out JUDGE 6R0SSCUP STEP1 OUT Federal Jurist Closes His Judicial Ca­ reer as His Resignation Be­ comes Effective. A Boston woman beauty doctor has discovered that the way to be beautl- fnl is to make faces. Now the true In­ ward meaning of Mother Nature In that strange feminine Impulse is fully •xplalned. judge Petit has ruled that Reno dl- verces are invalid in Illinois, but peo­ ple who have them need not be expect­ ed to hurry into the courts for the ^ purpose of having things righted. What do they care for a little old thing like a ruling? Chicago.--Peter S. Grosscup is no longer a Judge of the United States circuit court, as his resignation which he forwarded to President Taft be­ came effective at once. Immediate naming of Grosscups successor is unlikely, as the appoint­ ment would have to awatt ratification at the next legislative session. More­ over, the seat on the bench Is in­ volved in the coming change of the federal judicial system, abolishing the circuit court's original powers and making its jurisdiction purely appel­ late. U. S. STEEL CANCELS LEASE Contract for Great Northern Ore Beds, Biggest Property Controlled by Company, Is Nullified. New York.--It was officially an­ nounced that the United StateB Steel corporation has calncelled Its con­ tracts for the lease of the Great Northern ore beds, one of the biggest properties of that kind controlled by the company. Boston.--A cell in Charles street Jail holds Rev. Clareuce Virgil Thomp­ son Richeson, pastor of immanual Baptist church, Cambridge, charged with the murder of Avis Llnnell of Hyannis. Mass. Miss Linnell, who was nineteen years old and a student at the Con servatory of Music, was found dead In the bathroom of the Young Wom­ en's Christian association home here. The arrest of the minister was made at tbe home of Moses G. Edmands. fa­ ther of Richeson's fiancee. It was made without a warrant on Informa­ tion substantiated by the police that the minister had bought cyanide of potassium shortly before the girl died from that drug. Tbe warrant was is­ sued after the pastor was lodged in a cell. After a brief hearing in municipal court RIcheson was held without ball for further examination October 31. the date set for bis wedding with Vio­ let Edmands. Deputy Superintendent of Public Watts said he received word from Newton that William Hahn. a druggist of Newton Center, had sold cyanide of potassium to Richeson, whom he knew well, on the night of October 10. Miss Linnell's death has caused a sensation because of several mysterl OUB circumstances. She is believed to have been engaged to Rev. Riche­ son. but It is said the engagement was broken and the clergyman later became engaged to MIBS Edmands Richeson has steadily refused to dis­ cuss the case. The minister ia a na­ tive of Rose Hill. Va.. and has lived in Liberty. Mo., Carrollton. Mo., St. Louis and Louisville. He is thirty-five years of age Liberty. Mo.--Clarence Richeson for several years was a student st William Jewell college here, and was expelled In 1906 in his senior year, when h$ was detected cheating in his examinations. While in college he figured in one sensational Incident, when lie refused to leave the home of a young woman, who is said to have Jilted him. until two o'clock in the morning. ROOSEVELT SILENT IN 1912 Four Die From Powder Blast. Ottawa. Ont. -- Through a very bad explosion at the Curtis Powder company's plant, near Regaud. Que­ bec. four were killed and several in­ jured. Kansas City girl stole $5,000 which gave to the man she loved, and he #6ent It on another girl who "peached" on the one who did the stealing. It •eems useless for a girl to steal $5,000 for two such people as the fellow and ilia other girl. Oppose Tobacco Trust Plan. Washington.--Information obtained at the department of Justice points stroijgly to opposition by the govern­ ment to the plan of dissolution which the American Tobacco company has proposed. A Connecticut man has succeeded In bis cow drunk by feeding her 5 penir apples. The scientific value of fifa experiment has not as yet been ex­ plained. •-J|Vladles' muffs will, according to adr notices from the fashion em­ poriums, be much larger during tbe coming #inter than ever before. This feeing the case, it may be necessary (or the young man who takes a girl out In a'cab or an automobile to hire an extra vehicle for the purpoM of transporting har mult Alleged Train Bandits Escape. Kansas City, Kan.--Six prisoners, convicted of robbing a Missouri Pa­ cific passenger train between Leaven- worth and Kansas City, overpowered the Jailer and escaped from the county jail here. Racing Driver Is Killed. Mason City, la.--Billy Pearce. driver of the Colby motor car. was killed at Sioux City. A tire pave way and the machine went Into the fence, killing tbe driver instantly He had driven for ten years. He lived here with hla father. Edison Wins Nobel Prize. Stockholm.--A Nobel prize is to be conferred upon Thomas Edi­ son. the famous American Inventor, for his scientific achievements. Madero Plans Visit to United States. El Paso, Tex.--Francisco I. Madero. president-elect of Mexico, IB planning a visit to the United States to discuss Mexican affairs with President Taft, provided the meeting can be arranged at a time preceding hla inaugura­ tion: Letter Indicates that the Colonel Will Keep Out of Next Presidential Campaign. Richmond, Va.--The part which former President Roosevelt will take in tbe coming national campaign probably will be one of silence This became publicly known through a let­ ter which he wrote to Congresman i Hampton Moore of Pennsylvania, pres­ ident of tlie Atlantic Deeper Water­ ways association, declining an invita­ tion yto address the convention Col­ onel Roosevelt emphatically declared- "From now on I wish to avoid mak ing any speech I possibly can avoid " TIIIB 1B interpreted to mean that Mr Roosevelt wished to refrain from giv ing utterance to any opinions which possibly might be misconstrued in con nection with tbe presidential cam­ paign. Ex-Congressmsn Mudd Dies. Philadelphia.--Sydney E Mudd, for­ mer congressman from Maryland, Is dead here. He was a member of the Fifty-flrBt and Fifty-sixth to Sixty-first congresses. H. L. 8wlft Dies on Trip. Chicago.--Herbert L. Swift, presi­ dent of the Sterling Lumber and Sup- pi 3 company, and brother of Louis P. Swiit, tbe packer, died suddenly on a Chicago & Northwestern railroad train near Milwaukee from heart disease. Rams German Battleship. Kiel, Germany.--The German battle­ ship Hessen was rammed by the Nor­ wegian steamer Argo. The damage to the battleship was very slight. Tbe steamer's bow was crushed in, but she returned to Kiel unaided. New Coffee Advance In East New York.--A general advance of two to three cents a pound on all of the cheaper grades of coffee will be declared by retailers in this city wlth- ia the next ten days. Banker Sentenced to Prison. Pittsburgh. Pa.--Jacob W. Hill, for­ mer casWer of the First National bank of Fiast Brady. Pa., was sentenced to serve five years In the federal prisen at Leavenworth. Kan., for violation of the banking law. Wealthy Woman Dies. St. Joseph, Mo.--Mrs. Caroline El­ liott, seventy-eight years old, wealthy and a member Of the noted Rozelle family of Chllllcothe, O., died her*. Her father waa an extensive woolen manufacturer. Hobble Skirt Booms a Town. Portsmouth, N. H.--The hobble skirt is proving an important factor in an industrial boom In this city. To the increasing popularity of the hobble are attributed the largely increased use of fancy shoe buttons and the Vastly increased business of the but­ ton factories here. "V NOTED FLYER KILLED ELY'S ATTEMPT TO MAKE DIP RE­ SULTS IN HIS DEATH. Aviator, Who Was First to Land on "Deck of Battleship, Falls at Macon, Ga. Macon, Ga.--Eugene Ely, noted aviator and the first man to alight on the deck of a man-of-war in a heavier than air machine, was killed at the fair grounds here, when bis biplane failed to rise from a sensa­ tional dip and fell 160 feet to the ground. Misjudging the distance Ely started his downward glide too soon while running at a mile a minute and was unable to make the rise. When the machine crashed to earth the aviator was burled clear of it by nearly a hundred feet. He was unconscious when reached by his mechanician, Frank Collin, and died ten minutes later before he could be removed to a hospital. Ten thousand horrified spectators witnessed the fatal plunge. Before running his machine out Ely asked his assistant mechanician, Ed­ gar Turner, for a note book. The book was handed him and in it he wrote the address of Mrs. Ely in New York. Handing tbe book back, he said: "If anything happens to me wire my wife. There's her address." POSSE SEEKS EX-CONVICT Ellsworth Authorities Believe Charles Marzyek Killed 14 Persons In Three States. Ellsworth. Kan.--The theory that one man slew 14 persons In three states within six weeks received sup­ port in a statement made by Mrs Min­ nie Vopat, divorced wife of Charles Marzyek Marzyek, who is an ex-convict is sought by the county authorities in connection with the murder of Ave members of tbe Williajp Showman family here. Mrs Vopat said Marzyek has been In Colorado Springs, where the Wayne and Burnhara families. B1X persons, six weeks ago were killed, and is ac­ quainted In Monmouth, 111., where Wil­ liam E. Dawson and his wife and daughter were slain recently. As a possible connection between the Ellsworth and other tragedies. Mrs Vopat Baid her former husband was convicted Of forgery in Colorado Springs a few months ago She said it was not Improbable that be had been In Monmouth lately. WILSON GREETS BREWERS Secretary Delivers Speech of Wel­ come at International Congress Despite Hundreds of Protests. Chicago.--Secretary of Agriculture James Wilson braved the accumulated wrath of prohibition workers and tbe prayers of church people throughout the country, and delivered his speech at the international brewers' congress here. a* In spite of hundreds orpf(Jrfe^ts that had been aent to President and to tbe secretary himself, calling on him to refuse to appear at the con­ gress. Mr. Wilson welcomed tbe mem­ bers of the organization and made bis speech. To the nonexpert auditor it consisted merely in assuring the tnter- pational visitors the same courtesy the United States has received from the European countries from which some of them come Southern Corn Show Postpom Atlanta. Ga. -The southern a?rn •bow will be held here December 6%o t icclyaive, Instead of November j?l -- J. J? SKIN AFFECTIONS ARE OFTEN CONTAGIOUS! This Time for a r. '"TIB a wise man," said Robert ; son, "who knows when to ask tions. The other night 1 inside the railroad station whet. Irish cab driver came up to mo asked me how soon the skin and its millions of porag j eame in. I told him and he said thank are open to every form of contagion, from the accidental cut, sore, scald or burn, or the appearance of bolls, car­ buncles or felons, to the more serious diseases of the skin. It is not neces­ sary to more than suggest that every family and every one, carry, ready for immediate use, the world's great standard Bkin remedy--Resinol Oint­ ment. This ointment, indorsed and recommended by thousands of physi­ cians, nurses and experts, remains the standard of standards. It is scientifi­ cally compounded from natural ingre­ dients, each one, and all together, particularly adapted to the skin. It |s put up in screw-top opal container!, selling for fifty cents and a dollar, ac­ cording to size. Resinol Ointment la as easy to apply as cold cream. It la utterly impossible for it to harm the most delicate skin, for it contains only the highest grade of remedial agents, without even a trace of mercury or lead, or any other poison. The oint­ ment is sold by all druggists. Sam­ ple sent free if you will mention De­ partment No. 51. Resinol Chemical Co,, Baltimore, Md. Grapefruit Greenery. Effective greenery for the dining room table may be made by planting the seeds of grapefruit. Sow them thickly, and in two weekB, if the earth is good and has been kept moist In a warm place, the little shoots appear. Two weeks more and the leaves un­ fold, and very soon there Is a mass of rich, glossy green, which is not af­ fected by gas or furnace heat.--Subur­ ban life, yon and went away. In about 0v« minutes he came back with the saig* question. 1 told yon not more than five minutes ago,' 1 said. *1 know it,' he answered cheerfully, "but it's not me th't wants to know this time. It's a friend of mine outside th't has to wa|ch his horse# and can't come ift an° ask yes himseif!"*---YoungTi Magazine. . Not In Vain. Noah righted Mount Ararat. "At last," he cried, "the mountain resort with an ocean view!" Herewith he felt the voyage waa not Sn vain.--Puck. Hoods Sarsaparilla So combines the great cura­ tive principles of Roots, Barks and Herbs as to raise them to their highest efficiency; hence its unequaled cures. Get it today in usual liquid form M chocolated tablets called SartfltBbs, for the trmtnimicof Chronic Ulcers, successful. _. ' mall 56 J.J.„ Sfe S'ael. Rheumatic Pains quickly relieved Sloan's Linimeiit is good for pain ci any sort It penetrates, without rubbing through the muscular tissue right to the bone--relieves the congestion and gives permdhent as well as temporary relief Hare's Proof. A. W. LAY of Lafayette, Ala., writes " 1 had rheumatism for five years. I tried doctors and several different remedies bui: they did not help me. I obtained a bottle of Sloan's Liniment which did me so muc good that I would not do without; lor anything." THOMAS L. RICX of Easton, Pa writes: " I have used Sloan's Lint ment and find it first-class for rhett matic pains." Mr. G.G. J ONES of Baldwins, L.I writes:--"I have found Sloan's Lin iment par excellence. I have used it for broken sinews above the knee cap caused by a fall, and to my great satisfaction I was able to resume my duties in less than three weeks aftei the accident/-' SLOANS LINIMENT "is an excellent remedy for. sprains, bruises, sore throat, asttoiau No rubbing necessary--you can apply with a brush. At a#f cteaforo* Pirkto, 2Bom, 30o» A Sloan's Book on Horses, Cattle, Sheep and Poultry sent free. Address Dr. EARL S. SLOAN, BOSTON, MASS. • Quick Aefcien. "They tell me you took a flyer In Wall street." "Yes," replied Mr. Lambkin. "For a little while I was considerably ahead." "How much?" "Can't say. Before I had time to it Up SSSrkSt nnH wiped me out." SPOHN'S DISTEMPER CURE will cure any possible case of DISTEMPER, PINK EYE, and the like among horses of all ages, and prevents all others in the same stable from having the disease. Also cures chicken cholera. And dog distemper. Any good druggist can supply you, or send to nifrs. 50 cents and $1.00 a bottle. Agents wanted. Free book. Spohn Medical Co., Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind. His Losings. "What did you lose on that wrest­ ling match?" "About nine-tenths of my respect for the human race." The Wretchednesa of Constipation Cam quickly bt ovarct CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetable --act surely and gently on the liver. Cure Biliousness, H e a d ­ a c h e , D i z z i - - - , , . . . ness, and Indigestion. They do their mtt* SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PR1GL Genuine must bear Signature riDTPtfS ITTLE PILLS k WANTED--Connty Representative* fo» Success lland Vacuum Cleaner. Superior to any Cleaner made, either Hand or Power orBtalionarjr I'lant. Wo prove this In anjr contest. .Largest hotels using BurOM* Gleaners. Biggest kind of profits. HI 1«B» SUN Mrs.COMPANY. Ili Woo* SU, IV rtk; «if UHM (̂ ©|ic5)) Maine Gives Up Twenty Bodies. Havana.--Twenty bodies from the from the wreck to Cabanas fortress, petty officers' quarters and berth deck of the battleship Maine were removed About forty-five bodies have been re­ covered since the work of raising the sunken craft began. ^ X... vfcr Court Adjourns to See Boat Pass. Keokuk, la.--Court adjourned hens to watch the passing of the steamer Youcumb, the largest transfer boat on the Mississippi, en route from 4 Du­ buque to Baton Rouge. Lu. --_ 4 Is Made Wetlesley Head. Wellesley. Mass.--In the presence of a great assembly of educators and scholars. Miss Ellen Fits Pendleton received the keys and charter of Wellesley college, and by her ac­ ceptance of these symbols became the president of that institution for th« higher education of women. Four Die From Powder Blast Ottawa, Ont.--Through a bad ex­ plosion at the Curtis Powder com­ pany's plant, near Regaud. Quebec. torn were killed and aerani injure*. . ,v • " \ - s. jrf.r.'-"' * '"MM®,*. triUHUa Dn Pierce's fiortored by Women Whea • woman tpnb of her silent seoret suffering she trusts you. Millions have be­ stowed this mark oi confi­ dence on Dr. E. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y. Every­ where there are women who bear witness to the wooder- working, curing-power of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription --which saves the suffering sex from pa**, and suixwewsfully grapples with woman's weak" taesses and stubborn tils. IT MAKES WEAK WOflEN STRONdi IT HAKES SICK WOMEN WELL. No woman's appeal was ever misdirected or her < misplaced when she wrote for advice, to the WORLD'S DISRBNSAAR MKDICAL ASSOCIATION, Dr» R. V. Pierce, President, Buffalo, N. Y. pSellatm tattoo* mild natural bomret atormtmt am as m Vv L. DOUGLA *2.50, *3.00, *3.50 & *4.00 SHOES Men and Woman wew W.LDougla* *hoes because they are the best shoes produce - this country for the price. Insist upon kuv- ing them. Take no other make. THE STANDARD OF QUALITY FOR OVER 30 YEARS The assurance that goes with an estab­ lished reputation is your assurance in byymg W. L. Douglas shoes. > If I could take you into my large fadories at Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefully W.L.Douglas shoes are made, you KDtjIfj then understand why they sfs ranted to hold their shape, fit better and wear longer than any other make for the price ClimnN Th® genuine have TV. L Wumglm tS amme and price •laui|>e<l on bvttuiu ________ •If you oannot obtain W. I. !>ouglfts shoes in ONE PAIR jour towis, write for o»taI<~~ -- --«• -- --- -- troia faecoiy *o wearer WMBOUi !or oatmlog. Shoes' seal direct jfowOSBOEa wtfi siffsxsss-£& ***&*' " " J

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