*>*»<• • t e* *V +- i <- :v^*- - ^ <:>•;•/•': •<;'-*^-?V.,. .'• 7-; '? i^v'cV; Y'"X^f'. ;\. _• • • ' " • ' • " ; ' m" • •*». v:. (*;•-->.• ..' •-^•',;*•• "IS ~>1 SENATOR OUSTED BY U. S. SENATE 116 CAM SHIPPERS ILLINOIS ASSOCIATION DECLARE8 WAR ON FRAUDULENT VETERINARIANS. MEETING IN SPRINGFIELD Would Check Practice of Making Worthies* Certification* of 8tock--Warning to Owners. William E. Lorlmer. LOWER BED Vote of 55 to 28 Declares Bribery Was Used. CULLOM IS WITH MAJORITY Joins Those Against His Colleague and May Be Chosen to Fill Va cancy When Own Term Ends. RESOLUTION THAT OUSTED LORIMER FROM SENATE. The Lea resolution, adopted by a vote of 65 to 28, was as follows: "Resolved, That corrupt meth-- ods and practices were em ployed in the election of Wil liam Lorimer to the senate of the United 8tates from the state of Illinois, and that his election therefore was invalid." Washington, July 16.--The senate of the United States struck William Lorimer of Illinois from its member ship Saturday. After two years and almost three months of the bitterest ods and practices were employed" in fighting, by a vote of 55 to 28, it rel- corded a finding that "corrupt meth- his election and "that his election was therefore invalid." Culiom Against Colleague. Senator Culiom. who was defeated for renomination in the April pri maries in Illinois because of his vote for Lorimer a year ago, voted against him in Jhe final test. He gave out a statement explaining he had become convinced that the election was at tended by corruption. Other senators who voted for him last year, but changed to the other side, were Briggs of New Jersey, Cur tis of Kansas, Simmons of North Carolina and Watson of West Vir ginia. Brljw and Curtis are BepuWlcan#; while Simmons and Watson are Democrats. Jones Votes for Lorimer. The only senator who voted against Lorimer last year and voted for him this time was Senator Jones of Washington, one of the five majority members of the investigating commit tee who reported In favor of the Illi nois senator. Eighteen of twenty-five. senators who have taken their seats since the Lorimer vote was taken a year ago voted against Lorimer. Most of the new senators are progressives, who took the places of reactionary Repub licans and Democrats. 8olemn Scene at Voting. The voting of Senator Lorimer's light to retain his seat was a solemn proceeding. There was a deadly silence In the senate chamber while the roll was being called. When the announce ment of the vote was made there STRIKERS SET SHIP AFIRE was no sound of approval or disap proval. While the vote was being taken Mr. Lorimer sat in his seat In the back row on the Republican side of the chamber. His face was flushed and for the first time since he began the long fight he seemed to grow ner vous. He appeared dejected and de pressed. No one spoke to him while the roll call was in progress. Lorimer Leaves Chamber. When the announcement of the vote was made Mr. Lorimer, no longer a senator, arose slowly. He braced his shoulders, threw his head in the air, allowed a strange smile to come over his face and walked heavily to ward the door. As he reached the door Senators SmOot, Crane and Bailey and Representative Rodenburg of Illinois shook him by the hand. When Mr. Lorimer reached th« outer floor of the chamber he found a crowd waiting to express sympathy During his final speech Mr. Lorimei reiterated his intention to keep up the fight. Just how he will do thia was not made clear, but it is inferred that he will continue to organize hia friends throughout Illinois and en deavor to regain his political power. He has declared repeatedly during his speech that as long as his strength holds out he will devote himself to spreading what he terms the truth regarding his case throughout the nation. Dixon Makes Denial. After Mr. Lorimer sat down"Sena- tor^ Dixon of Montana, Roosevelt's campaign manager, arose to deny the charges contained in affidavits pre sented by Mr. Lorimer relative to alleged promises of money to Taft delegates if they would swing to Roosevelt. Before the roll call was started Senator Tillman of South Carolina asked permission to explain his vote. He sent a statement to the reading clerk which was read. Senator Till man voted for Lorimer last year and did so again in the final ballot. He Is running for re-election in his state and has serious opposition, but de clared he would vote against Lorimer. Senator Tillman wept while por tions of his statement were read.. Culiom May Get Vacancy. Governor Deneen has the power to appoint Lorimer's successor, but in view of the fact that he is in the middle of a campaign it is possible he may allow the place to remain vacant until January, when the leg islature convenes. Discussion of the possibility of Sen ator Cullom's election to serve out Senator Lorimer's unexpired term has been revived as a result of the senior senator's vote against Lorimer. Senator Cullom's term will expire on March 4 next year. Lawrence Y. Sherman Is slated to succeed him. If at that time Senator Culiom should be named for the Lorimer vacancy he would serve until March 4. 1915. Flrat Ousted for Bribery. Mr. Lorimer is the first senator ever ousted because of corruption In a senatorial election. W. A. Clark of Montana resigned from the senate to escape expulsion and afterward was re-elected. The elections of other senators have been investigated, but charges against them have not been sustained. Springfield.--Members of the Illinois Btate Veterinary Medical association, who held their midsummer meeting In Springfield, have declared war upon fraudulent or careless veterinarians who make worthless certification to the health of livestock, about to be sent out on Interstate shipment. State Veterinarian J. M. Weight is In direct touch with other state veter inarians. It 1b the desire of the mem bers of the association which met here to bring about If they can in time some sort of a universal certificating plan, or to adopt some other means of check upon veterinarians who in bad faith make worthless certificate of the health of anlmalB. Every now and then the attention of the Illinois state livestock commission ers is called to a case wherein an Illi nois shipper, equipped with a shipping certificate which he thought good, who has had livestock held up in some state on discovery that proper certi fication of the condition of the live stock commission has not been made. All these cases come to the attention of the state commission after tho wrong has been done. Instead of before the shipment has been started, as Is required. The commission had the complaint of a northern Illinois man who sent hogs out from this state on their way to Canada and who com plains that the hogs now are held up in one of the northwest states for lack of proper certificates. He did not certify properly through the state commission and now the hogs are be yond the commission's jurisdiction. It is the elimination of this evil that the members of the state association desire. Up to this time it is not wide spread In Illinois, but it exists In a sufficient number of cases of interstate shipment to make it a menace to the fair and ' square practitioners of the profession. The association members attribute the evil to two kinds of veterinarians in the state--to one class that enter tains gpod intentions, but is negligent of the law's requirements, and to an other class that will make any sort of a certification upon the receipt of a fee. Some of the fees for such certi fication, too, it is said are large. The state livestock commission's part in seeing to a proper certification of livestock intended for interstate shipment, is not complex. The pros pective shipper first notifies the com mission of his intention to ship. A blank notice, from A, as it is called, then Is sent out for the shipper to fill and return. It contains brief Informs tlon relative to the number, kind, des tination and such, of the stock. Then the commission sends out blanks, forms B and C for mallein and tuber culin tests and certificates, respect ively. If both are needed. New Building Dedicated. Springfield.--With Governor Deneen and others of the state officials on the ground as speakers, the new state bio logical laboratory, a mile north of the fair grounds, was dedicated. Immediately after the talks the Srst demonstration of hog serum produc tion was given under the direction of Dr. A. T. Peters, the laboratory su perintendent. The governor, Secretary of State C. J. Doyle, Treasurer Edward Mitchell, Auditor McCullough, President Law rence Y. Sherman of the state board of administration, Dr. Frank P. Nor- bury, alienist for the board, and Fiscal Supervisor Frank D. Whlpp of the boafti, made up the party of state officials. Governor Deneen, first called upon to talk, spoke briefly of the work the laboratory has accomplished. Follow ing him were Mr. Sherman, Secretary of State Doyle and Doctor Norbury, all of whom spoke extemporaneously on the laboratory. Following the talks, Doctor Peters directed the first operation in the new serum rooms of the barn building. With the assistance of Assistant Su perintendent Schwarze and the men who do the actual operating, the first serum Was drawn from the tail of an inoculated hog. The laboratory group of buildings la not quite finished. It Is expected, however, that they will be within a few weeks and that all equipment will have been installed. The new build ings are being erected at a cost of $20,000. When complete the group, standing as it does on a hill, will be one of the city's interesting nearby points. Since the law was enacted authorizing the laboratory, Doctor Peters and his men have been handi capped with inadequate and cramped quarters in which it was necessary to (lo the work. THE How Proposed Parcels Post Bill Will Affect It. MEANS MORE BOYS TO CITY What Young Country Lads Go Through Before Swallowing Their Pride and Getting in Line--Why German Mail Hauls Are Cheap. Bafety Committee Makes Headway. The safety committees of the Illi nois Central are doing great work, and while this method of looking after and remedying evils that arise is still In Its infancy on that road, the effect Is being largely felt all over the sys tem. The slogan of the safety committee is "Safety First," and this is being adhered to in every way possible. An ferror an employe may make is called to his attention, so that he may rectify the error and not have a recurrence ot what might be fatal to him and others. The committee is composed of sfficials of the company and employes whose duties call them in place? where they are most apt to see things that are not up-to-date in modern railroading. The committee not only has the du ties of watching for errors among the employes, but is In duty bound to give suggestions to officials, as well as to the men, about anything that is being done, even if according to a rule of the company, that may admit of Im provement. Anything that may in any way endanger the patrons of the road is a subject for immediate Improve ment and the member of the safety committee who first recognizes a de fective car, building or any other property is the first to report the mat ter to the proper authority for remedy. This division will have twenty-five on its safety committee when all have been chosen, which will surround the road and its patrons with a safeguard which will mean much to all con cerned. Guardsmen Vfln From Regulars. Members of the First regiment Illinois National Guard, added anr other victory to their credit when they defeated teams from the Twenty- third U. S. A., in a competitive shoot. Ten companies of state troops and two companies of the "regulars" were represented in the competition, which was won by the machine gun platoon with a total of 369 points. Company D was second, with 363 points and Company K of the Twenty-third in fantry, U. S. A. infantry, third with 352 points, and Company L of the regu lars fourth, with 347 points. The event was a company three-man shoot, the range being as follows: 200 yards slow fire, 200 yards rapid fire and 600 yards slow fire. All the mem bers of the competing teams are en listed men. "Governor's Day" was observed at Camp Lincoln. The booming of the governor's salute by the big guns on the parade grounds announced the executive's arrival at the south gate, where he was met by a battalion of troops under command of Major Davis and escorted to general headquarters, dhere officers of the First regiment and the regular army officers called and paid their respects. The governor then reviewed the regiment and dres* parade followed. Governor Deneen and other state officers and wives and the regular army officers were guests of the First regiment at dinner. The governor appointed Wallaca Clark of Chicago a member of his mili tary staff, with the rank of colonel. IIo also appointed the following offi cers of the national guard as members of his staff, they to bold'the rank they now hold and retain their position In the service: Lieutenant Commander Charles O. Y. King, Illinois Naval Reserve, Chi cago Captain Thomas B. Octlgan, Seventh infantry, Chicago. Major Ashbel V. Smith, Artillery Battalion, Waukegan. 30,000 Miners In 8tate Idle. The mining situation, as far as thfc amount of work Is concerned, at the present time Is probably the worst it has been for many years. There is- very little mining done and it is esti mated that at least 30,000 miners are out of employment. There are over 100 mines that are not in operation and present prospects appear to be that there will be very little mining done within the next few days. The state headquarters have been com pelled to pay out thousands of dollars to men affiliated with the state orgaiv izatlon who are out of employment. Many of the miners, who have bee** idle because of the inactivities of the mines, are being employed on farm# and other occupations. Managers of Seamen's Syndicate at Brussels Charged With Being Re sponsible for Outrage. Brussels, July 15.--A crisis In the seamen's strike was reached at Ant werp when seamen set fire to the steamer Zeeland as Bhe lay in her dock. Managers of the Seamen's syndicate who. it is believed, are in a measure responsible, were placed un der arrest. Quarantine Against Havana. Havana, July 15.--D. R, H. Von Es- Aorf, of the United States marine hos pital service, has been informed from Washington that orders have been is sued that all passengers from Havana lor the United States shall be sub ject to seven days' detention. SHOOTS TWO STRIKERS DEAD Referendum by Modem Woodmen Nicaragua Returns Knox Visit. Washington, July 15.--Nicaragua has sent Senor Salvador C. Ramirez as a special envoy to return the re cent visit of Secretary of State Knox «a his Central American tour Strikebreaker Arrested, Admits Kill- Ing Two He Says Asaulted ^ Him With Blackjack. Cincinnati, O., July 15.--Elmer Pat- nolde and Joseph Weermeyer, two strikers, were shot and killed by Wal ter ^Itzwater, said to be a strike breaker, during a quarrel over the era in this city. Fltzwater was ar- long continued strike of shoe work- rested. He claims self-defense. ALLEN JURY FAILS VERDICT Members Unable to Agree in Court Massacre Case Are Discharged From Service. Wytheville. Va., July 15.--The Jury in the case of Claude Allen, one of the members of the Allen gang, charged with the assassination of court officers at Hillsville, Va*. report ed that an agreement was Impossible. The jury was discharged Saturday and another venire was ordered sum moned. A referendum vote in the state of Illinois on the increased rate of Insur ance in the Modern Woodmen of America was brought a step nearer when the state arbitration board, pro vided for in the Donahue bill, held a meeting in the city of Springfield and took up consideration of plans for the balloting. The l»oard consists of Su perintendent of Insurance Fred W. Potter, Superintendent of Public In struction Francli G. Blair and State Treasurer E. E. Mitchell. No final decision waB reached by the board as to the manner in which the details of the vote shall be con ducted. The board organised by elect ing Mr. Mitchell chairman and Mr. Potter secretary. The head officers of the Woodmen organization have a plan for conduct ing the vote on the rate Increase, their Ideas being embodied in a set of reso lutions recently passed at a meeting of the executive board of the head camp. ' The law provides that plans for calling the referendum must be approved by the state arbitration board- Would Lower Boat Rates. Members of the state railroad and warehouse commission are expected to Issue an order settling a question in which a complainant desires to have lowered the shipping rates of a steam boat company. The case is one of the first which have come under its juris diction since the recent increase In the state commission's authority with relation to common carriers. The case is that of J. W. Barwell vs. the Hill Boat line, which operates between Chi cago and Waukegan. New Corporations. Secretary of State Doyle issued cer tificates of Incorporation to the fol lowing: American Safety Valve company of Illinois, Chicago; capital, $300,000; manufacturing and dealing In electri cal and other machinery. Incorpora tors--N. P. Bigelow, L. T. Walker, Channing L. Sentz. A. Sitron ft Co., Chicago; capital, $150,000; manufacturing and dealing in clothing. Incorporators--R. j. Cup- ler, Ella Graham, Nathan B. Ochoen- brod. Auto-Refrigerator company, Chica go; capital, $600,000; manufacturing and dealing in metal, wooden and com position articles. Incorporator! Charles Gilbert Hawley, John R. Lefevre, Edward F. Wilson. Chicago Electrotype and Stereotype company, Chicago; capital, |10,060; electrotvplng. stereotyping and relief line engraving. Incorporators--George T. Schuster, Frank J. Welch Frank J. Welch, Jr. Dixon Grocery company, Dixon; cap ital, $6,000; retail grocery business. Incorporators--L. W. Newcomer, K. X Reed, M. Hamilton. Character studying In Chicago last night, I came upon McDowell's coffee line--an attenuated string of hungry, hopeless men, out of money, out of luck, out of everything worth while in this world. Many of these men would work if they had a chance but the city is filled with unfortunate, ablebodled fellows who haven't the chance and while they look for means ot sustenance, they become tempo rarily bad citizens, objects of charity, some o^ them criminals. For a man will steal when he is hungry enough or sandbag when he is in desperate straits. Law doesn't mean much to the poor devil whose stomach is emp ty and whose body Is weak from ex posure. Oftentimes arrest means a jail which is better than no shelter at all. And as I observed this line of men, I could not but wonder how much longer and more desperate It would be under the parcels-post, mall-order system--the system that would drive so many more country men into the metropolis, there to swell the misery and labor dlsaffections! There are already too many people in the cities. As upright, honorable Americans who love the flag, we should work for legislation and con ditions that will turn the tide from the city to the country towns. We Bhould build up the small town and encourage small farming around these towns, for from such environment spring rugged, Intelligent sons and red-lipped, healthy daughters to take the place of the really great men of the nation. We have too many bread lines as it Is; what we want is more country folk and fewer city folk. The parcels post will give us more city people, driving the country people into the moil of the metropolis. The par eels post will deliver for the mall or der houses supplies for every house hold at moral and financial loss to that household and In so doing will starve out the country merchant, crowd the country mechanic into the city, put traveling men off the road, send the country doctor to be a city grafter along with thousands of such ilk now skinning the people in the cities. The parcels post will close the lawyers' offices in rural towns, throw the stenographers out of situations, discharge all but a few of the preach ers, discourage the music teacher, en tice the farmer's daughter to the cities, steal the manhood of country boys for city mills--and, In a word, ruin the country town! You don't believe It? How much more business can you lose from your village without sacri flcing a merchant or two or a dozen? Are the merchants of your town get ting rich from their stores? Suppose the parcels post enables the mall or der houses to secure one-fourth of the business now enjoyed by your home business men. Doesn't it stand to reason that the town will be injured? The mail order houses are now do ing millions of dollars of business in the country towns. Wouldn't the towns be more prosperous if this money went to the home merchants? And as the country town is being injured the lure of the city appeals more and more to the country boy-- and as he goes in countless numbers, the bread line grows longer and hun grier, hope burns to the empty brazier, leaving only the ashes of despair. Parcels post, as advocated, is simply another method of distribution, an other way of serving the people. Now we get our supplies by freight through the local dealer. Under the proposed parcels post we would cut out the dealer and let Uncle Sam take our taxes and pay for service which will enable the mail order houses to ship us anything, anywhere, up to eleven pounds in weight for the same price-- Just as a two-cent stamp will take a letter anywhere In the United States. The friends of parcels post point at England and Germany and say, "See how nicely it works!" But wait. The average haul for mail matter in these parcels post coun tries is 40 miles, against 540 in the United States. And the man just out side of Chicago would pay no less for the transportation of his quart of prunes or his dress suit than the gen tleman who lived in Oregon and like wise bought from a Chicago cata log. But it costs more to send these articles to Oregon I Who pays the av erage difference? Oh, Uncle Sam. And you pay Uncle Sam--or help to j>ay him. It now costs about 24 cents to send out the average-sized catalog of the big mall order houses. Under the par cels post law the catalog would go for 7 cents. Tttls would mean more catalogs. More catalogs mean more orders, more orders mean less busi ness for the home merchant and all the evils that follow. Germany owns her own railroads and makes no charge for carrying the mails. Note this big advantage. Vil lages under 4,000 do not have any free delivery service at all but pay about $4,000,000 to the post office de partment annually for the privilege or having a box at the post office, the only possible relief from a very poor service. Under the proposed parcels post, the United States would cut off the farmer's present mall delivery service, the carrier carrying only stamped packages. The fanners, too, would pay a large share of the enormous amount of postal deficit, probably from $10,000,000 to $20,000,000 in its entirety. And the farmer's son. fairly well content to stay on a farm near a growing town where he can see a bit of life, grows restless and ill at ease with nothing at "the Corners" except an agent or two for mail-order houses, a tobacco shop, a restaurant and a milk depot. He wants to see some thing of life. He yearns to go to the city and become famous. He knows he can do because he feels strong and capable and able to hitch hia wagon to a star--and here'B wishing him luck, if be goes. But we cannot all be famous. Some of us must be plain hev ers of wood and drawers of water--and there is that bread line! And the vicissitudes and trials the boys go through before they swallow their pride and admit failure, are tor turing. The boy who comes to the city to succeed should have a good physique, a good education and a good mother. He will need all three. And If the country town is injured by the mall-order-parcels-post propa ganda the high schools and colleges of the country towns will suffer and go under--where, then, will the poor boy get the proper education to help him in the city? To be sure, he can come without training. The city is filled with men of this kind today. They live in the tenements and exist after a fashion, rearing a progeny of which the least said the better. The place for the poor man is In the country and legislation that forces him to the city is corrupt and inex cusable. The senator who votes for parcels post is no friend of yours and he is a downright menaoe to yonr children--for upon them will fall the consequences of this unfair system. The editor of the Constantine (Mich.) Advertiser says: "The census returns indicate that the large cities are Increasing In pop ulation while the small towns of the country are barely holding their own or decreasing, so that it i? evident that the drift of population is toward the large cities. Population always fol lows trade. Too much centralization, ei ther in government or In cities, is a bad thing. Village life and the citi zenship developed by it constitute the only hope for the perpetuity of the free Institutions of this country. Th« most grave and serious dangers that now menace our future, result from the overgrowth of the large cities and the consequent degeneration of the av erage citizenship of the nation. On the plaoe of the plain people, whose coun try environment has made them stable, steady handed, self-reliant and inde pendent in thought and character, we would have the volatile city multitude a floating population anchored to nothing, owning no real estate or property, and blown about by every breeze of popular prejudice or passion --ready for any rash experiment, so cial or political." Do you realize the truth of thess statements? Do you know what the life in the cities is doing to the once sturdy physique of Americans? Do you know the percentage of lives lost through ills directly traceable to the close contact of life in the metropolis? Do you realize how this will in time write its own blight upon your chil dren and your children's children? Awake, you sleeping people of the pleasant, peaceful communities. Sher idan rides today to warn you of a greater danger than that which beset you in the days of a different kind of war! Awake and kill the parcels-post bill --for it is at your very throat. To day--now--is the time to act! BYRON WILLIAMS. Finance Stella--rIow do you suppose will finance a-third r^rtj : Bella--Don't know; I can't inAt father pay for one. I say the degree of visloii tt '• dwells in a man is a correct massure of the man.--Carlyle! If your diction ts a lltil® off Oour^e of GartleM Tea will do you pood. A truthful fisherman always know where to draw the line. OF W W1MFN Proves That Lydia E. Pinkw ham's Vegetable Com- pound Is Reliable. Reedville, Ore.--"I can truly recom mend Lydia E. Phikham's Vegetable Compound to all women who are passing through the Change of Life, as it mads me a well woman after suffering three ve&rs." •• - Mrs. MARY Bogabx, .Ry-vdville, Oregon. New Orleans* La. -- "hen passing through i ^ Change of Life i was ibled with hot flashes, Tv'i.-'f-k and dizzy spells and tache. Iwaa notfitfor thing until I took Ly- d?r_ EL Pinkham's ir Kie Compound which pv-ved worth its weight iw sold to me." - Mrs. GAS- Blondeau, 1541 Po- h^nia St, New Orleans. ishawaka, Ind. ' Wo men passing through Hm Change of Life can take nothing better than Lydfe &. Flimham's Vegetable f OTOTJOIUKL I am recoBK roenaingittoallmyfrioMi Iwause of what it las clone for me. * '-Mrs. ChaS. Baiter,, 628 E, Marion Sfc, Mi^hawaka, Ind. •Uton S tation, Ky.-* "For months I suffered from troubles in consequence** mr age and thought I eould not live. Lydia E. « v > ! r h a m ' 8 V e g e t a b l e Compound made me well m«i f want other suffer®* women to know about it." Mm Emma Bailky, Altoa Station, Ky. *w. Dak.-- "I wae passing through Change of Life and felt wmj bad. I could not sleep and was ir«rf nervous, Lydia E. Pinknam's Vegetable Compound restored me to perfect heaMl a n d I w o u l d n o t b e w i t h o u t i t " F. M. Thorn, Deiaem. No. Dak. Iteisem, Resinol Ends Skin-troubles jO ESINOL Soap and Resinol Ointment stop itching and burning instantly and quickly clear away all trace of eczema, ringworm, rash or other distressing skin- eruption. WEARS DOWRY ON HER BODY Professional Dancing Girl of North Africa Turns All Her Savings Into Jewelry. The distinctive thing about the Ouled-Nall, the professional dancing girl of North Africa, is her jewelry. She ha8 so much of it. indeed, that there is no gold to be had in Algeria. Ask for napoleons instead of paper money at your bank in Biskra or Con stantine and you will meet with a prompt "Impossible, m'sleur." "But why is it impossible?" you nat urally Inquire. ' Because we have no gold on hand, m'sleur." Is the polite response. "Where is it then?" you ask, scent ing a robbery or a defalcation. "On the Ouled-Nails, m'sleur," the cashier courteously replies. And he speaks the truth. Every centime that a dancing-girl can b o r r o w o r e a r n g o e s t o w a r d p u r chase of massive silver,4etfelry, ank lets, bracelets and the like, and this In turn is exchanged for gold pieces-- whether French napoleons, British sovereigns or Turkish liras she is not particular--which, linked together in a trelllsed armor, clanking, clashing and shining, envelops her lithe young body from neck to hips. When her portable wealth has attained 6uch di mensions it is usually the sign for the Ouled-Nail to retire from business, go ing to her husband with her dowry about her neck.--Metropolitan Maga zine. BmIqoI 8o*p (Xc) and Betlnol Ointment (90e) •old by all druffgUu or by malt, postage paid, on reoel ptor price. Send to Dept. 2R, lieel- ool Chemical Co., BalU--- M . l Make the Liver Do its Duty i Nine times in ten when the liver li right the stomach and bowels are rigfrL CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS gently butfirmly cot pel a lazy li%'?r to do its duty. CARTERS MSlTTi r 1 PILLS •tipation, In- digestion. Sick Head&che, * and Distress After Elating. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRKX Genuine must bear Signature Biggest Man in Civil War. "The biggest man of the Civil war," as he was called by his neighbors, died recently at Washington, Pa. Wil liam P. Bane never wore shoulder straps, although his term of service in the Union army extended from June, 1862, until the close of hostili ties, and hia title referred only to his height. When he enlisted in Com pany A, Twenty-second Pennsylvania volunteers, he weighed about three hundred pounds and measured a trifle over seven feet four inches In his stockings. He was 'lanky" in build and became known as Big Pat Bane. Writing of him, the Washington (Pa.) , Observer says: "Circus day was the gladsome day for Pat, and no one in all the crowds in town on that day got nearly as much enjoyment out of the occasion as did the Greene county giant when groups of children and their elders, too, gathered abont him to gaze up into his face and ask him strange questions of how it felt to be a giant. It was the same way at the national encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic, when Pat usu ally led the parade." A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY. In this of research &nti • 1 (x'riuient, aU tm ' Is ransacked by I plnussof man. Science tiaa Indeed E2aa#gttintstnai» ' In the past i-eiitii rv. ami aiuon# the-by uo le&st !mportAtU--di>CLfVe*rles to lii^r.^-lnt' Therapl.'n, which btu. been used w>th great successl» French Hospitals and that It ii wcnlt* the tuienuwa of th.'so who suiter frum kidney, bladile.:' n«»rr©» diseases, chp^nic weaknesses, ulcers, skin vrui>tlc4k plies Ac. there fs no doubt. In fact Itse^iuseirideM frooi tlie t>lif stir created imungbt specialist#, '.bat TIIKH A FION Is de*tlned to cast' uu> oblivion w| those questionable remedies that wen torsueEly t|j§ reliance of medical men. It Is of course impels atble to teil sufferers all w- shouns like to tellUMMI In this short article, hot those who would like St know more atiout this remedy that lias effected M / maiiv--we might aimost say, Bt:racuk>«s •ho it Id fend adtirvssed envelope ftf FKEH book to I)r. LeClerc Med. t,'o.. HatvrstockRoad. Hampxtcajlt London. Kn* and decide !. . 1 ln iu&e;>«a «hiu«ta( New French Bemedr ' TllKKAPIOS" So. 1. S«K» r So. 3 Is what they require ant! hare been by arogguts av Boekuian SiL. N«w sbm. Ill he and unha.pt>!I)ess Thramoa is soldhT oinaggis mall $1.00. t'oagera Co.. " DAISY FLY KILLER t?»cta -*cd kill* aO • clean or- umaW »3'«alML c h e a p . L a s t s M l i t < i a s e « . M a d e • aan't spJ Uor(% ever; w.ll act »otl 11 u r« »:iy thl04. sold by d«tl«r»a ; seat prepaid forSk kJtKou) soKsat,. ue jniuii . a. % Laying a Foundation. Little Bobby (the guest)--Mrs. Skimper. when I heard we were goin' to have dinner at your house I started right In tralnln* for It. Mrs Skimper (tho hostess)--By saving up your appetite, Bobby? Little Bobby--No'm. By eatln* t square meal first. iri'AIR BALSJ 4# lb* luLrar i*al ci Vails to £Mitu>r« Qn| Uikli to its TouthXUX f*nwB( hair ffeilLQiC. tlOllKi U liiOMriON s MFtiOfi SONS A CtX. Trn, K. *• W. N. U- CHICAGO, NO 2»-19t2. tKAli ESTAtK 320 AGRES «prv*ed I sad in la. »lJUuu»cre I onsi.nl is »l«f 1«0 A.. I MILES FROM JTPHKRSON. Inn, nrlce lit ttt mu *rlts for SSJcr'l»T JOHN" TOWELZ. McFheraoa. Ka* H>* jim br owner Oarya a Kirtu: -,'H miles fivns tola J