Sixteen Laws Net Output of Illi nois Lawmii .a! K* M S" if* SUMMARY OF BILLS PASSED Com miction Rule Bill PMnd hi Last . Moments--Calling of Another Spe cial 8esslort Depends on Su preme Court. Springfield.--The extra session of lite Forty-sixth general assembly has . come to an official end. The last day was marked by a single incident, the resurrection and passage by the sen-- ate of the htiuse bill providing for the commission form of municipal govern ment. . «• ' > ThSirieasnre was brought to life ten minutes befSre actual business ceased. All rules Were suspended, the senate receded from its amendments'to the supposedly defunct measure there was a parliamentary mess, sad the bill was declared passed. The measure is admitted to be un- 'Constitutional by its own friends and probably will not receive the signa ture of the governor. The saving grace attached to the senate action is tfeat the legislature is upon record for the commission form of government. The net output of the legislative mills during the special session may b« summarized as follows:. Direct primaries--Two companion Mils passed, which to substance are the old Oglesby law^re-enacted with changes in the portions that were found unconstitutional by the su preme court. Income tax--Proposed constitutional amendment allowing congress to levy an income tax is ratified by Illinois. . Commission form of government-- Bill Is passed that is likely to be ve- Coal mlnos--Bills passed establish ing three rescue stations, appropriat ing for miners' Institutes and requir ing mines to be equipped with fire- fighting appliances. Cherry disaster--One hundred thou sand dollars appropriated for relief for Mffferers. 'Employers' liability--Bill for a com- tiiisslon of 12, six employers and six employes, to study the subject and to recommend suitable legislation. Fish--Bill amending the law to make ft conform to that of Wisconsin; af- ifects Lake Michigan fisheries. Field thuseum--Bill for an island site off the foot of Congress street, Chicago. Canals--Bill requiring the sanitary ^strict of Chicago to open and oper ate the lock between the Des Plaines river and the drainage canal at Lock- port, giving a connecting link. Economy Light and Power suit--Bill appropriating $10,000 for the appeal of the case to the federal courts. Charities--Board of administration met amended to facilitate the handling of funds. * Occupational diseases--Bill empow ering the* commission to employ ex ports. Sanitary districts--Bill amending the law In a minor section, for the benefit of East St, Louis. •-Libraries--Flaw removed from li brary act so as to give relief to cities between 1,500 and 2,000 inhabitants. Outlet sewers--Bill passed extend ing the act authorizing cities of 100.- 000 populaton and under to con struct outlet sewers, to all cities, vil lages and incorporated towns. ' Judges and clerks--Bill authorizing Payment of officials who served at Au gust primaries, 1908. " The full ist of appropriations made by the general assembly It• i*s fol lows: .flOO.WO 25,000 tn.ono Dougherty to Stay In Cell. ; In a conference with Mrs. JTewtoa C. Dougherty, Attorney Joseph Weil decided against making any move to fSree the convicted former superintend ent of-the ^Peoria public schools from the Joliet penitentiary pending the ruling' of the supremo court in the rehearing of the parole-]awe case. "We will raise no technical points," said Mr. Weil, "to aid us In our fight to free Dougherty, as we do not be- leive it would be either accessary or advisable. The whole case Is now be fore the pardon board. That body has heard all the evidence and arguments, and will pass on the merits of the case when it feels certain that it still has the power to do so." Mr. Weil said it would be possible to effect the parole of Dougherty through the act of 1895 by a recom mendation on the part of the parole board to the trial Judge and Gov. De- neen. This course, however, will not be followed. Dougherty has served four years and a half for the theft of Bums Mid to approximate $500,000. commission. 75.000 10 0(10 7.500 2,000 35,000 75,000 Cherry sufferers Mining- institutes .... Bmpioyers' liability Rescue stations -» Economy light appeal SeBsion expenses, contingent Committees Employes, clerks, etc Officers and members... Total .. $339,500 The items in the governor's call on which no legislation was passed at the special session are: Water way. Corrupt practices act. Election law amendments. Chicago harbor. Chicago subway. Practice act commission. Building law commission. Appropriation for express rate In vestigation. Whether there will be another ex tra session summoned by Gov. De- neen depends absolutely upon the su preme court. If the supreme court stands by its dictum in the parole board case there is certain to be an extra session to be convened about May 10, made necessary to amend the big charities statute, render It consti tutional, and authorize the state to lawfully care for the 17 state charita ble institutions and their inmates. State Official Wins in Court. The difficulties which have existed between W. S. Cowen, chief state grain Inspector at Chicago, and the so-called "Receiver's agent of the Chi cago board of trade, have come to an end. Judge Windes, In the circuit court, dismissed a bill in which asked that the state grain inspection de partment be enjoined from furnishing free reports of inspections. The bill had been filed by Robert Bebb, a receiver's agent, who con- interfering with Failure of the legislature to amend the election laws is viewed with alarm by some of Chicago's politicians and office holders. According to some, those now holding public office, and who, under the statute are permitted to remain In office until their suc cessors have been elected and have qualified, may, by attacking the valid ity of the election at which their suc cessor was chosen retain their jobs This situation would result. It Is •aid, should the courts find defeats complained of to the present law*: r , ' - \ i Incipient Slum Danger Shown. Prof. James H. Tufts of the Univer sity of Chicago, In speaking before the Ethical society In the rooms of the Henry Booth Settlement house !n Chi cago, pointed out the dangers of in cipient slums in the smaller cities of Illinois. Prof. Tufts, who is chairman of the City club's committee on hous ing conditions, showed photographs taken In East St. Louis, Alton, Qulncy, Freeport, Joliet, Jacksonville, Spring field and other, cities. He said that the fault of existing conditions lies in the Indifference of municipal authori ties to what is going on right about them, and the apparent Indifference of the well-to-do citizens to the housing of the poorer classes. He added that if playgrounds and parks were estab lished they would do mu&h toward* Improving conditions throughout the state. Dickinson Says No on Calumet. Drainage plans for the Calumet re gion in the southern section of the Chicago sanitary district are hit In a decision made by Secretary of War Dickinson. He has refused permis sion to the sanitary district to re verse the flow of the Calumet river. It was the Intention of the trustees to change the current of the river to drain the southern part of Chicago. Two plans of procedure are open to the trustees in this emergency. One is to take the subject up with con gress and obtain special permission. The other rests in a suit pending in the federal court. The estimated cost of the proposed Calnmet plans has been placed at 110,000,000 and is said to be essential to giving the residents of the territory concerned pure drink ing water. Deneen Signs Five Bills. Gov. Deneen has signed the follow ing bills: Senate bill No. 42, ^lich provides for mine rescue stations in Illinois. Senate bill No. 54, which provides for the payment of committees of the special session of the legislature. House bill No. 42, which provides for the creation of an employers' liability commission. Senate bill No. 50, to remove an ob struction and make navigable the con nections between the Illinois-Michigan canal at Joliet and the channel of the sanitary district canal of Chicago. Senate bill No. 19, which legalizes and ratifies the payment for services of judges and clerks of election under the provisions of the primary election law which was declared unconstitu tional, Has a Wan to Cheapen f^ood. Trusts and combines, "unfaithful representatives," arid those re':iHjnsI- ble for lax enforcement of the state and federal laws were grilled in reso lutions adopted by a Joint committor of the Farmers' Grange and Will Coun ty Trades' and Labor council, appoint; ed to investigate the reasons for the present high cost of living at Joliet. Remedies in the form of establish ment of a city market, the enactment of a direct primary election bill, a more strict surveillance of immigranta by the customs officials and the re vocation of legal protection for com bines whose evident intent is to stifle competition and control prices were incorporated in the resolution. GAJNjyASSi Of? SHOPS AND MILLS , ; # SH0W8 100,000 MEN iOL£. . ... , QUAKER CITY FREE OF RIOTS Labor Leaders Jubttant Over Number of Non-Unionists Who Have Quit . ^ --Gompers Planning Giant „ p- WalkO#^' k ; . - • '• •-£. Philadelphia, Pa.--The sympathetic Btrike called to help the cause of the street car employes who have been out for two weeks has developed an unexpected strength. ' Disregarding the extravagant claims of the strike leaders, who said that between 125,000 and 150,000 workers had left loom and bench, and disre garding, likewise, the claims of the police and Rapid Transit Company, who declared that only 18,000 had quit, a leading newspaper of this city Mon day made a mill to mill and shop to shop canvass and visited every affect ed part of the city. Its report was "100,000 men and women^ have joined the 6,000, motor*- men and 9eftjductors. More than that number, according to the talk of those already on strike, will be out to-day." The impartial investigators found that the "sympathetic strikers" were divided about as follows: Building trades, 30,000; Hebrew trades (clothing, etc.), 30,000; textile trades, 12,000; unskilled workmen de pending upon skilled textile unionists, 20,000, and miscellaneous, 8,000. These figures may be taken as at least fairly accurate. Certainly there were no less than 75,000 or 80,000 idle raifcjf upon the streets of the city. An automobile tour through all the Ken sington and Richmond districts in the northeast section of the town proved that conclusively. In that section alone there must have been 50,000 per sons on the streets who would not have been there on a normal day. Yet withal there was less rioting than any day haB witnessed since the beginning of the car men's strike. There was only one sizeable fight, and not very much damage was done In that. The leaders of the strike professed to be jubilant over the way that not only union but non-union workers turned out and behaved themselves. Chicago.--Samuel Gompers, presi dent of the American Federation of Labor, who has been in the city since Saturday, is planning for the calling of a general strike of street car em ployes in every large city in the coun try in sympathy with the Philadelphia car men, according to dispatches that reached Chicago from the eastern strike center. All Mqnday jnorning Mr. Gompers and otherlabor leaders were in con ference In his apartments in the Kais- srhof hotel. Repeated efforts were made to see the labor chief, but he would receive no one except his con ferees. It was rumored in labor circles, how ever, that the subject of a nation-wide strike was under discussion in the conference. Cleveland, Pittsburg, Omaha and San Francisco, it is said, will be the first cities to be given the general * walkout order, if the plans are carried aut. These were selected by the labor head because the Philadelphia com pany has large holdings in the railway systems of those cities. < Militia Endampment Date Fixed. Adjt. Gen. Dickson announced Au gust 20-27 as the date for the annual Illinois National Guard encampment for all regiments except the Fifth, Seventh and artillery batallion. The places for the various regiments to camp have not been assigned, nor has the time been named for the encamp ment of the Fifth, Seventh and ar tillery batallion. ftTwo regiments, it is stated, Will be sent out on army maneuvers in the course of the coming season, it is stated from the adjutant general's of fice. Neither the time nor the place, hovgb^er, has been finally determined upon. New Corporations. Articles of incorporation were filed In the office of Secretary of State Frear as follows: Parisian Hair Company, Chicago, $2,500; manufacture and deal in hair goods and other merchandise. Francis E. Matthews, Hal C. Bangs, Edwin D. Lawlor. Electric Advertising Company, Chi cago, $10,000; manufacturing and deal ing in electrical appliances and de vices. Saniue) I. Levy, Joseph A. Bergmanp, Pontius O. Nyberg: Chicago Industrial Applianoe Com pany, Chicago. $5,000. Manufacturing and dealing in gas fixtures, appli ances and devices. Garnet W. McKee, Lulu Bridgman McKee, Edwin Hed- rick, Jr. Pfaelzer Meat Company, Chicago, $10,000; wholesale and retail meat and prrivisujn business. Leo Pfaelzer, g^org^H. Crocker, Percy Elam. P. Hutledge & Cd . Chicago, $10,- 000; deal in country produce and gen eral merchandise. M. P. Rutledge, A. If. Rutledge, I. E. Vlckers. CUDAHY KNIFES 4 BANKER Son of Omaha Packer Finds Jere S. Lillis with Wife, Severely Wounds Him. Kansas City, Mo.--Jere S. Lillis, president of the Western Exchange bank, who was mutilated with a knife aarly Sunday morning when John P. Cudahy, son of the wealthy Omaha packer, came. home and found him with Mrs. Cudahy, was Monday re moved to his home. He will recover. His wounds, while severe, are not dangerous, but he will be scarred for life. Jack Cudahy, who was arrested by a policeman who rushed intf. the house after Mrs. Cudahy had appealed for aid, was given a continuance and will be tried on a charge of disturbing the peace next Monday. He is under $101 bond. Mrs. Cudahy, in an Interview, de clared that she and Lillis had been automobiling, had taken dinner at the Baltimore hotel, which was a common affair for them. He had taken her home and she had asked him to come Into the house. She said that they were seated in the library of the home, casually discussing common places, when her husband, accompa nied by his chauffeur, Johann Moss, had appeared from practically no where. They had attacked Mr. Lillis, bound and gagged him, and Mr. Cuda hy. whom she declares is of a jealous nature, proceeded to carve him with a big butcher knife. ' Dr. Hyde Placed in Jail. Kansas City, Mo.-Dr. Bennett Clark Hyde is a prisoner in the Jackson county jail, charged with the murder in the first degree of Col. Thomas H. Swope and Chrisman Swope, death of Moss Huj^on and attempts to poison eight persons, members of the Swope family, their guests and servants. He was committed, to jail Monday without bond by Judge? Ralph S. Latshaw the criminal court after arraigmrfent on the 11 indictments return urday night, by the grand ju was placed in a hospital ward." STOMACH 4)F HUMAN LIFE- . ALL ELSE SECONDARY The immense success which has fol lowed JL. T. Cooper during the, past year with his new preparation has ex ceeded anything of the kind ever be fore witnessed in most of th£ leading cities where the young man has intro duced the medicine. Cooper has a novel theory. He believes that the human stomach is directly responsible for most disease. To quote his own words from an interview upon ftis ar rival in an eastern city: "The average man or woman cannot be sick if the stomach is working properly. To be sure, there are diseases of a virulent nature, such as cancer, tuberculosis, diabetes, etc., which are organic, and are not traceable to the stomach, but even fevers can, in nine cases out of ten, be traced to something taken into the stomach. All of this half-sick, nervous exhaustion that is now so common, is caused by stomachic con ditions, and it is because my rem edy will and does regulate the stom ach that I am meeting with such suc cess. ' "To sum the matter up--a sound di gestive apparatus that is doing its full duty, getting every particle of vi tality out of the food by transferring It to the bowels in a perfectly digest ed state--this above all else brings health." Mr. A. C. Brock, chef of the Brock Restaurant, Market District, Boston, Mass., who is a staunch believer in Mr. Cooper's theory and medicine, has this to say: "I had chronic indiges tion for over three years. I suffered terribly, and lost about thirty pounds. I was a physical wreck when I started this Cooper medicine, a month or so ago. To-day I am as well as I ever was in my life. I am no longer nerv ous, my food does not distress me in the least, and I have a splendid ap petite. I am gaining flesh very rap idly--in fact, at the rate of a pound a day. I would not believe any medi cine on earth could have done for me what this has done. It is a remark able preparation, and Mr. Cooper de serves all his success." Cooper's New Discovery is sold by all druggists. If your druggist cannot supply you, we will forward you the name of a druggist in your city who will. Don't accept "something just as good."--The Cooper Medicine Co., Day ton, Ohio. WORTH KNOWING#^ > Simple But Powerful Prescription for Rheumatism and Lame Back* - This was previously published bei»" and cured hundreds, "Get one'ounce of syrup of Sarsaparilla compound and one ounce Torls Compound. Then gdt half a pint of good whiskey and put the other two ingredients into it. Us* a tablespoonful of this mixture before each meal and at bed time. Shake the bottle each time." Good effects are felt the first day. Any druggist has these ingredients on hand or will quickly get thin® from his wholesale house. Not Willing to Commit Himsalf. The teacher had called upon Fred die Broyrn to give an illustration of the proper manner in which to com pare the adjective "clean." "Mother is clean," said he faltering- ly, "father is--cleaner--" Here he paused. "And," prompted the teacher. Freddlia whs stilt silent and very thoughtful. ' t "Haven't yousOihe Other restive?" asked the teacher, smiling. "Oh, yes;" replied Freddie, "there's auntie--but I aint sure about her!** f $100 Reward, $100, lit NRdfcrs of this paper *81 be tt tNHt that there la at least one diemled disease that «ctense has been able to curt iu all its stases, fine that a Catarrh. Hall's Catsrrli fare !s the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Oamrrfe feeing a const!'uUo.isJ disease, requires ft constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure te taken in ternally acting directly upon the blood and mu(MUS Surfaces of the system, thereby destroying lb* foundation of the disease, and giving the patient Strength by bull'ttng up the constitution and assist ing nature to doin* its work. The proprietors have •o much faith in Its curat I v? powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that It tails M eure. Send for list of testimonials Address F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo. O- Sold by all Druggists, 75o. Take Hali's Family Pius for eoustlpsttoo. '^-^vA Briaht Idea. Yeast---It is said that the baya bird of India spends his spare timfe catch ing fireflies, which he fastens to the 6ides of his Qest with moist clay. On a dark night a baya's neat glows like an electric street lamp. Crimeonbeak--Say, there's ,a bright idea for . decorating that ke^fyole In my front door! OF TftB VIRTUE Of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound What is the use of procrastinating in the |ace of stick evidence as the following letters represent? ll>jot|ware i| sick woman or know one who is* what sensible i^asonlbav# you for not giving Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Coni» air For 30 ye testimonial letters as tnese--thousands of-them --they arft pound a trial r For 30 years we have been publishing suck genuine and honest, too, every one of them. Mrs. S. J. Barber gays: "I think Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound is the best medi cine in the world for women--and I feel, it my duty to l e t o thers know the good it has done for me. Three years ago [ I had a tumor which the doctor I said would have 'i' « Storm Episode. Two handsome young worsen,; be comingly dressed, slipped and f^U to gether in the slushy pool of the cross ing. They arose wet and angry. "Wring out, wild belles," commented an observer, such an addition of in sult to injury being condemned by all who overheard.--Philadelphia Ledger. FRIENDS. "O, well, beauty passes, you know." "Yes; a pity you didn't stop it on Its way, Isn't It?" HOW A DOCTOR CURED SCALP DISEASE "When I was ten or twelve years old I had a scalp disease, something like scald head, though it wasn't that. I suffered for several months, and most of my hair came out. Finally they had a doctor to see me and he recommended the Cuticura Remedies. They cured me in a few weeks. I have used the Cuticura remedies, also, for a breaking out on my hands and was benefited a great deal. I havent had any more trouble with the scalp disease. Miss Jessie F. Buchanan, R. F. D. 3, Hamilton, Qa., Jan. 7,1909." Kept with Barnum's Circus P. T. Barnum, the famous circus man, once wrote: "I have had the Cuticura Remedies among the con tents of my medicine chest with my shows for the last three seasons, and I Where Reslnol Ointment 1^ Krrisltiht It Is Considered a Boon-HfTHumanity* If the soothing aim healing prop* erties of Resinol Ointment were gen erally known it would be universally used to the exclusion of all others. It Is indeed a boon to humanity. W. 3. Cailan, Brooklyn, N. T. has An Appreciated Distraction. "So you think the automobile made life much pleasanter?" "It has foy me,'" answered the com fortable citizen. "1 drive a fast horse and my son rides a bicycle. The au tomobile has taken the minds of the police off both of us." Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use For Over JtO Years The Kind Tou Have Always Bought. cnnaren, ana see umt. to be removed by an operation or I could not lire more than a year, or two, at most. I wrote Mrs. Pink- ham, at Lynn, Mass., for advice, and took 14 wattles of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, and to day i bo tumor is gone and I am a perfectly well woman. I hope my testimonial will be of benefit to oth ers." -- Mm S. J. Babbsb, Scott, Y. ̂ , , Mrs, E. F. ETajes says*' "1 was under the doctor's treat ment fora fibroid tumor. I suffered with pain, sore ness , b loa t ing , and cou ld no t walk or stand on my f ee t any length of time. I wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for ad vice, followed her directions and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. To-day 1 am a well woman, the tumor was expelled and my whole system strengthened. I .advise alt women who are afflicted with tumors or female troubles to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." -- Mrs. E. F. Hayes, W*i ~ ~ Mrs. George May gays s ,f. fV' No one kn.<vaft. hat I have sut»> ered f rom le troubles* i euralgia pain* id backache.r y doctor sai<|,r lie osuld not give1 :me anything tjfrf cure it Througfi he advice of m riend I began " use Lydia B. kham's Vegtt-' scoa- i*ir< 1890 Washington St., Boston, Mass table Compound, and the pain disappeared. I contimied its ui»* and am now in perfect health. Lydia E. Pirikhanrs Vegetable Cota. pound has been a God-send to mar as I believe I should have been w$ my *na\e if it had not been for Mrs. Pinkham's adlric-e and Lydia E» Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.#-, --Mrs. George Mat, 86 4th AiO| Paterson, N.J. . Mrs. W. K. Honsti says s "I have bee t t ' completely enra* of a severe fe male trouble tar Lydia E. Pink. I him's Vegetable .Compound, andl .want to recom. Attend it to all sufi> fering womea.** Mrs. W. Km. Housh, 7 Easfe» I view' .Ave., Ci*/ J • cinnati, Ohio. '•* Because your case is a difficult one. doctors having done you no good, do not continue to suffer with, out giving Lydia E. Pinkham's Vejj.. etable Compound a trial. It surely has cured many cases of female ill* such as inflammation, ulcere tion. dig. Elacements, fibroid tumors, irregfci irities,periodic pains,backache,ete. Oi Fop 30 years Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy fox* female ills. No sick woman does justiee to herself who will not try this famous medicine. Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and has thousands of cores to its credit* - Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health free of charfre. Address Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn. Mass. Kansas Takes 1,000 Overland Care Our agents in Kansas have ordered for thia neason 1,000 Overland automobile*. Nebraska takea 750--Iowa 1,000--Texaa 20 Per Cent Recl-uctiott The Overland's success also due The English Way. ™ V 'VI imiUw k U i ^41)VW|UvU w vl 111 U& v • vl™ Do you think baseball will ever get® lands--to supply the demand for tflls a foothold in England?" "They play It some." "As strenuously as we do?" "Well. no. They serve tea between lnplngs, 1 understand." Called Her BlufT, "He's a brute!" "What has he been doing now?" "I threatened to leave him and he told me he would button my gown' up the back If I would hurry."--Houstoq Post. "PlBk Byf" to BSpldemte. Attacks the Eye* In the Springtime. Is Contagious and "alls for Immediate Ac- can cheerfully certify that they were ^ n soothe'IdyAppr/dM^ine • Breakers Ahead. "What makes you so sure that suf fragette .club is in for serious trou ble?" "My wife has Just joined it," replied Mr. Meekton. I,b00. Thus has the Overland--after one Its price. No other maker ever gave years'g experience--captured the farming states. It has captured the cities, too. New York City takes 1,000 Overlands this year. Boston taked 500--S.KH Francisco 6t0-- Washington 600--Philadelphia 450. Our agentB have contracted for 20 000 Overlands--for 124,000,000 worth of Over ly so much for the money. Yet we have cut our costs this year •bout 20 per cent through enormous in crease in production.- The Overland we sell for $1,000 this year Overland last Is bett year. of 50 miles an fto So with the $!»£ year. That's a larger sale than any oth er car commands. Yet, two years ago few had ever heard of an Overland. This sensaUonal success Is due to the creation of a remarkable ;<sr than the $1,1250 StJs a 26 H. P. car with a ape^ ? tiles an hour. * ; 250. $1,400 and $1,500 Over- lands. Each offers a fifth more titaa ever before for the moiiey. All prices inf lude Magneto and full moqey. include lamp equipment! 1 T The Simple Car The success of the Overland is mainly due to its amazing simplicity. A 10-year- old child can master the car In ftve min utes. Push a pedal forward to go ahead, and backward to reverse. Push another pedal for high speed. There is nothing else to do but steer. \ Any man with the sifiplest lnstruc- j tlons, can run an Overland a thousand-* miles and back. { There was never a car so"*T^usy to cartf for--so easy to keep in ord' Ask for the Story The Overland story is ont» of the est business, stories ever told. It tells how this car--the--<?reatlon of a mechani cal genius--has in rwo years reached the niost place In thisN field. And it tells about/ the car. Send us this ooupoa for this book. C«#l Co., Talwlo. Okie Idea Pkt«nt. IIUW Hi cal gen topnios y _ to-day The Willys-Overland Licensed under Beli Please send me the book Bombs Thrown In Lisbon* Lisbon.--Two bombs wehe hurled Into a room where a party of clerical candidates were dining, and the ex plosion killed two of the diners and wounded seyen others, including the priest who'was presiding. jBanks Is Checker Champlfi. Toledo, O.--Newell W. Banks of De troit, aged 22, won tne checker cham pionship of America and a !J1,O0O purse by drawing the final two f ames Monday of the seHeaof SO with iugh •ery effective In every cam which called for their use." When Tempus Didn't Fugit. Little Helen, during the three years of her life, had never been separated from her elder sister night or dav for more than a few nrfmrtfeS afatlmV; but at last the time came when thV^ sister went away for a whole day. The child tried every game and occu pation thSt she knew of, and a new one or two suggested by her mother, but they all palled. Finally she gave up and stood and looked sadly out of the window. Then she sighed deeply and said: "It's still the same old day, isn't It. mother?'•'--Woman's Home Companion. Freely and Frequently. Doesn't Smart. The diminutive chains of habit are seldom heavy enough to be felt till they are too strong to be broken.-- Stffriuel Johnson. When a baby talks without saying anything it attract*^ lot more atten tion than a man >is doing like wise. N Price $1,000. 2Sku p.--102 inch w« Um. One or two rtunMe »«ats or T« Tonne an at inutlleAiilMNlasitMfc/ No Deposits. think there's PfI.ES fl'RKD IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMKVr isjniTantpci] In euro anr CSM ©t iK'hiritf. Hllmt. JUeMiinK or Protruding Pile* in C to 11• or uioult refunded. 60a. Always bold In mind that even fail ure can be the alphabet of success.-- Wilson. PERRY DAVIS* PAINKILLER has an enrlable reputation of orerseTentj yearsasa reliable rem Mi y for lumbago, sciatica, pleurisy •UtcbPS. etc.. 25c. tbe and 50c. At all druggists. money In "Do you hens?" "Well, if there is they Iteep it well secured."--Exchange. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAT Take l.AXATIVK BROBIO Quinine Tablet* Druggist* refund money If It fails to cure, b-W UHOVK'b ilfiistttn la on eacti box. Ke lt doesn't take one long to become in expert fault finder. ,1ten'# Lung Baisam. tbe popular faintly rem- t cures where other remedies fall. All deal- BREAK IF THAT COUGH with 4 0gw, 0ft, ftc, 50c. §1.00 bottles. Every night watchman is entitled to fits day drenme bcandai is lue tatue oi loots who judge other people by themselves. It isn't every prodigal son who gets a whack at the obese veal. Mrs. Wlotlow'i toothlof Syrup. Fn-children teelbing. Boftens the gums, roducesin-M,Hon,allay » pain, cures wind ooilc. ttca boiue. The man wuo worsnips a woman will never develop into a free thinker. Lifting Lightest Running Dr. Detcbea's Relief for Rkeanstlsa relieves in six hours. Why suffer? 76a „ A crab-eating monkey in Slam swims like a fish MICA YOU ONLY BUY k SEPARATOR 0ME That is, n is the Intention of every farmer or ̂ alryaaa when purcbHh.np a para tor to fret one to last a lifetime. For thia reason, every point about the machine should be carefully ex amined before buying. • thorough Investigation. wUl Con vince you that the ^ National Cream Separator Is without question the best In the market, rt fldms closer, rr.n» easier, Is of simpler coimtrtietloa, aud can be cleaned quicker than any other snake. Send for Uiustrate^L catalogue contalnJiCg full particulars and scores of testimon ials, or ha<fe yo^/ local dealer demoxustrikte & National Ire* of all charge teryoo. THE NATIONAL DAIRY MACHINE COMPANY* Ooshon, Indiana Ghloafo, Illinois AXLE GREASE is the turning-point to economy in wear and tear of wagons. Try ^ r- * fe a box. Every dealer, everywhere - « STANDARD OIL CO* < (lis torpOr* ted) COUPON IN EACH MCM CATALOGUE MS 5 O- TREAT YOURSELF to the BEST 5 A V E T H E C • U P O N S £ & ! » . |r:; > 'J V! m* u Iffl' A\&k l̂ X** ft A M n Mi