rr9" Vv' * - * v- B sSKWR inSHSK' jrayawre^^ -a^.' I sf S&gMl Ihc McHemy Plaindealer . 4 ,- Published fey F. GL SCHHE1NER. VHeHENRY. ILLINOIS •;/,>! So far there are no fat aeronaut*. By the way, la It possible to play Dlf is Esperanto? An American bad the latest word regarding the best aviator. ft takes a pretty clever man to get •&M<! of a meter cf any kind. Aa yet the English language Is not the least bit jealous of Esperanto. Wireless has proven that It can cre ate Just as much excitement as an •aeroplane. When an automobile strikes a rail road train, the victims are those in 'the machine. Another way to attain greatness Is Jto be made president of a hay-fever mfferers' society. Pojii Ss fusing her cab horses, but no noticeable decrease in the pries of yoeats is reported. It Is easier to muzzle the canines than It Is to keep firearms out of the •hands of possible assassins. Don't think it's by accident that a woman hits the object directly behind Iter. She merely finesses her aim. Keeping cool would be easier If the fellows who have advice to give on the subject would keep quiet. A seismograph !s a very useful in strument It seems to keep all earth- quakes at least 2,000 miles away. Boston now attains notice as a port of entry for smuggled Chinamen. You •Imply cannot keep a good town down. Another sleepwalker haa walked out «f a third-story window. Slumber pe destrians should sleep In the base ment Boston boasts that it has the old est shop girl in the world. She should be ready presently for mnsical comedy chorus work. These New Yorkers who spend $6,000 a year on dress must be big imen in order to find room to hang all iKhe garments. "Powder and cream are a necessity jto protection for girls who fear sun- jburn," says a headline. We suggest •living In the cellar. Princess Mary of England haa learned how to run a typewriter. Now K ££,2X16 0; the dukes and lords would only take up honest toil! And now the peace advocates n^ll ted that the new gun which shoots jM.OOO times a minute Is the thing that la really going to stop warfare. ' The university professor who thinks mathematics and poetry are alike has probably never tried mathematics on a romantic girl In the moonlight A Maine man tells a story of a frightened deer Jumping into his lap while he was out driving in a buggy, la the gentleman aure that his spell- lac Is correct? According to a learned professor. the typewriter is the poetry of motion. Presumably be intended to add that the motion must be supplied by the fight young woman operator. An English woman is preparing to fly across the English channel and hack. Her manager should see to it that on the French side she doea not as the shops in Paris. That new gun will be but an addi tional argument for the agitators for a universal peace, also a weapon In the hands of some poor nation that not believe In that order of While the airship Is still in its ex perimental stage and ambitious aero nauts are meeting with accidents re peatedly, it is still evident that aerial navigation has become a permanent feature of travel. In Europe prepara tions continue to be made for regular traveling schedules in airships, not withstanding the disasters that have happened to some of these craft. A New Jersey man has discovered that mosquitoes eat plants. This is Mi Important natural discovery. It has hitherto been supposed, and with A good deal of circumstantial evidence . to support the supposition, that the mosquito was strictly carnivorous in Its diet and excluiiively nocturnal In H» oieaJ hours. Any hope to the con thury will be thankfully received by • bitten, angry and sleepy world of fcumana. Push-cart peddlera have formed a national organization. Perhaps they have discovered that the banana is one of the necessities of life and are going to do the regulation thing to celebrate the discovery. SIX DFAD III TRACTION COACH COLLIDES WITH CAR NEAR TIP- TON, IND, TWELVE PERSONS ARE HURT 8econd Smashup on Indiana Roada -Within Week--Motorman Who •lumped and Saved Himself Says, "I Guess We Overran Instructions." Tipton, Ind.--In a collision on the Indiana Union Traction road two miles north of this city Saturday six persons were killed and 12 others more or less seriously injured. This was the second disaster on In diana traction lines within a week, the first having occurred on the Wabash Valley line at Klngsland on Wednes day. In both cases there was a mistake In orders--one of the trains overran the station at which it was to stop and met the other on a sharp curve in a head-on collision. rrv >. ji _ - J -a ue uwtu: Baker, Joseph, mcftorman. Logans- port. Broo, Lewis, Kokomo, Ind. Holthouser, Dr. W. C., Brooklyn. Holthouser, W. H., Brooklyn. Raileback, Verdel, Hymenia, Ind. Walsh, D. F., 'Marshall, Mich. Dr. W. C. Holthouser, who was killed in the wreck, was on his way to Ko komo, Ind., where he was to have been married. His brother, who also was killed, was to have been the best man at the wedding. The bride to have been is Miss Nellie Coxon, daughter of the secretary of the Oreat Western Pottery company of Kokonjo. The collision was between a north bound limited passenger train and a south-bound freight The south-bound motorman had orders to wait at the first stop north of the crossing, it la said, but overran that point, thinking he oould iriake another switch. A clump of trees hid the approach ing can and they came together at a curve. The freight train plowed through the front of the limited, de- CjOlishhmQ Hja srooksr. fhc mote?- man and all the passengers In the smoking compartment of the limited were killed. The motorman and con ductor on the freight car jumped and were not Injured. 'T guess we overran the orders," said Motorman Dan Lacy, when he had fully recovered from the shock caused by jumping from his car. Con ductor Sejiree was equally dazed at the occurrence and could not explain why it was they had passed the switch. DAY OF PORK BARREL OVER President Taft at Cincinnati Declares for New Policy in River Im provements. Cincinnati.--Doom for the "pork barrel" and a new policy of waterway Improvement, under which congress would authorize prompt completion of a project when once undertaken, to the end that river transportation may prove a strong factor in reducing rail rates, were advocated here at the Ohio Valley exposition by President Taft The president said that the country is rouBed against corrupt control of legislative agencies, but that selflBh combinations of the representatives of the majority are equally dangerous. We have r&ached a new epoch in the matter of improvement of our wa terways. The public is greatly aroused by the confident and Just be lief that by a more symmetrical, rea sonable and prompt expenditure of money upon approved projects, rates for transportation may be lowered, and the business of the country en tirely benefited. As a country, we are all In favor of the most effective and economical ex penditure for the development of our waterways, but as members of a dis trict, and as representative.- of dis tricts, we are selfishly insistent upon our shares of public appropriations each year, however much that division of the spoil impedes the adoption of the effective and economical improve ment of our water transportation. The evil In the corrupt control of a congress or a legislature by private In terests is manifest and always called for condemnation. But there is an other kind of legislative abuse as dan gerous to public weal in certain of its aspects as corruption, and that is the selfish combination of the constltu- ences to expend the money of the gov ernment for the temporary benefit of a part or with little benefit to the whole. It 1b the duty of the majority and the minority to legislate always for the benefit of the whole people, and any enactments that look to the selfish exploitations of less than the whole at the expense of the whole, and with out benefit to the whole, is a species of legislative abuse that comes very near corruption in its effects, and is perhaps more dangerous than corrup tion, because those who support such a combination are generally bold in Its defense. A man found senseless on the •/' itreet with his pockets turned inside i ®ut was locked up by the Philadelphia t police as a witness. It is difficult to ;X |magine the injury to the inflexible trarse of Justice if this person should •scape from the duty of testifying that he did not know what hit him Incubator Baby Man Fined. Louisville, Kv.---Pines and costs ag gregating |242 were assessed Saturday by Magistrate Dacher against Dr. H. K. Snyder and his wife of Pittsburg, Pa., who conduced an incubator show at the state fair in which three babies died. New Regent In Persia. Teheran, Persia --The Mejlis nation al council Saturday elected Nasir-ul- Mulk, former premier and minister of finance, regent to succeed Azad-ul- Mulk, who died on Thursday. 'fl Now someone thinks he is about to Invent a noiseless cannon. What win ®e the fun of wnung war stories if |n the future we are not permitted to Jlpeak of the deafening roar of cannon And the rattle of musketry? m •i?-j A woman in Pennsylvania shot at a /^et dog and hit her husband. He disbelieved her account oi' the target Intended and had her arrested, but fher<? was everything in the clrcum- , |rtantial evidence to sustain her. If •he had shot at her husband, she ^•rould probably have hit the pet dog. Train Makes Fast Run. Logansport, Ind--Panhandle pas senger train No. 12. ariving here from Chicago Thursday, came from Kouts at the rate of 100 miles an hour, making 57 miles in 51 minutes. The train consisted of eight coaches. • • • • • • ' .f •: /' „•/ . ; BOSTON MAN ELECTED TO "HEAD THE GRAND ARMY. ?: Retiring Commander Pays High Trib ute to Confederates--6,323 Vet erans Die in 1909. Atlantic City, N. J.--The national encampment7 Grand Army of the Republic Thursday elected John E. Oilman oi Boston commander-in- chief for the ensuing year, John Mc- Elroy, the only other aspirant for the office, withdrawing his name prior to the election. In opening the business session of the national encampment the retiring commander-in-chief, Samuel R. Van Sant, of Minnesota, gave a compre hensive review of the work of the or ganization for the past year and out* lined what might be accomplished'for the good of the order in the future. The commander spoke earnestly as he expressed his gratification at the increasing fraternisation of the "blue" and the "gray.*" Whgn eojjJ tiisr* r?ft tiwsriS John E. Oilman. the southern soldiers and that the Union, veterans now realise that no men ever made greater sacrifices for what they believed to be right than their former foes, the commander was applauded. While the roll. of the Grand Army is steadily shortening, the commander in-chief urged that every effort be made to keep the organization up to its fullest possible strength. He quoted the figures showing that G. A. R. at the beginning of the present year had still 213,901 members in good standing, as against 220,600 at the beginlng of 1909. The loss dur ing the year was 6,781, of which 5,323 was by death. Commander-in-Chief Van Sant had commendation for the work of all the auxiliaries, praising the excellent work being done by the Woman's Re lief corps. Ladies of the G. A. R., Sons of Veterans and Daughters of Veter ans. FIND NEW BRIBE EVIDENCE Charles Luke , Now Dead, Is 8ald to Have Confessed to Getting $1,000 for Vote. Springfield, 111.--State's Attorney Burke of Sangamon county has ob tained information that another mem ber of the Illinois legislature received $1,000 for voting for William Lorimer for senator. The man who made this admission of receiving cash for his vote was Charles S. Luke of Nashville, who represented the Forty-fourth district In the house, and who has since died. Mr. Burke obtained the knowledge of Luke's admission some time ago, but it could not be used as evidence In any pending criminal case. It is pertinent, however, to the broader matter of Lorlmer's election now under investigation by the sena torial committee in Chicago, and may be used in that Inquiry. The admission was made by Luke, according to one of Mr. Burke's staff familiar with the matter, to Hugh V. Murray of Carlyle, now state's attor ney of Clinton county. The date of the conversation In which Luke made the confession was August 13, 1909, months prior to the publication of the White confession and the corroborative confessions of Beckemeyer, Link and Holstlaw. Luke is said to have told Murray: , "I got $1,000 for my votiQ^r Lori mer, and Beckemeyer was a tool if he didn't get the same." Luke was one of those present in the Southern hotel bathroom in St. Louis, and his widow gave testimony before the Cook county grand Jury that seemed to indicate that he had not been overlooked In the "Jack-pot" distribution. Chicken Thief Gets Ten Years. Mason City, la.--One of the most severe penalties for a minor crime ever meted out In Iowa was Imposed on Leroy Billings, twenty-eight years old. Saturday, when Judge Fellows sentenced him to ten years in the Iowa penitentiary upon his conviction of the charge of stealing chickens. Hobble Skirt Breaks s Leg. South Norwalk, Conn.--Because Miss Clara De Witt of this city tried to play tennis in a hobble skirt, she is In a hospital with a broken leg. Elgin, 25,976; Aurora, 29,807. Washington. The census bureau Thursday made public the following population returns: Elgin, 111., 25,976; last census, 22,433, increase 15.8 per cent Aurora, 111., 29,807; last census 14,147, increase 23.4 jler pent Toys With Arc Lan?p; Killed, Pittsburg, Pa.--Stephen Stuper, aged nineteen, employed at the Home stead Steel works, was Instantly killed Friday wblle fooling with an arc lamp. His hand came in contact with a live wire and 4,800 volts of electricity passed through him. Find Baby's Body in Basket. Peoria. 111.--Two school children carried home a basket they found 4n a weed patch Friday. When Its con tents were investigated by their moth er she found the remains of a baby. IKE MEW STYLES ARE SURF TO BE PLEAS!NG- - -- were ever marshaled for conflict than 1]# NNWVt unj/nr m W Ml W faSK ROCK I8LANO TRAIN QOE8 THROUGH OPEN BRIDGE INTO RAISTKG WATERS. SIXTEEN KNOWN TO BE DEAD Feared Others Been Waahed Away- Heavy Rainfall Causes 8mall Creek to Become Seething Torrent •--•Disaster Near Clayton, Kan. Clayton, Kan.--A terrible disaster :ook place on the Rock Island rail road two miles east of here Friday, when a fast train plunged through an open bridge and Into 20 feet of water. Sixteen persona were killed and 11 inju|ed. Moat of tne victims were oo- cupants of the smoking car, which was telescoped by the car following It. The stream which wrought the de struction is at ordinary times simply a dry arroyo, with no water, but with its banks 30 feet below the level of the railroad bridge. A tremendous rain had fallen during the night and the ordinarily dry bed was soon filled to the brim with a wild torrent. The bridge itself was quickly broken up and carried away. Shortly after one o'clock in the morning, while the storm yet raged, the fast Rock Island passenger train from Kansas City to Denver, travel ing at a forty mile per hour speed, rushed headlong into the gap and the forward end of the train took the plunge into the water filled ravine. The locomotive, tender and baggage car disappeared entirely under the wa ter, and the engineer, fireman, bag gageman and conductor were all in stantly killed. The smoker, which stopped on the brink of the stream, was telescoped by a chair car and many of the pas sengers killed outright Others were thrown into the stream and drowned. With the exception of the last Pull man the entire train left the track and the cars and coaches were piled In one big heap or rolled Into the ditch alongside the rails. The uninjured passengers made their way to the brink of the stream and rendered what v assistance they could, working by the light of the few lanterns which could be found. Other passengers as well as train men walked to Clayton in the search for help. From this place the news was telegraphed to headquarters and relief trains were started from Belle ville and Phillipaburg. Citizens of Clayton In wagons drove hastily to the scene of the wreck and, aided by bonfires which they lighted, worked in the storm amid the debris in the search for the dead and injured. The little stream lost Its water as rapidly as It had found It, and soon the ravine was practically dry. Down stream for half a mile the dead and Injured were found and removed * to the improvised hospitals. Nine of these dead were identified by letters and otherwise. Seven are without Identification marks. Ask Pardon for Walsh. Washington.--A petition for the Im mediate pardon of John R. Walsh, the Chicago banker now serving a tern* in Fort Leavenworth prison for Irregu larities in connection with the failure of the three Walsh banks, was filed Saturday in the department of justice by George T. Buckingham, represent ing the wife and sons of the prisoner. Accompanying the petition are a large number of letters from business men all over Illinois," the 12 Jurors who con victed Walsh, stockholders of the wrecked bank, and many others. General Brayton Is Dead. Providence, R. I.--Gen. Charles R. Brayton, the blind leader of the Rhode Island Republicans and the Rhode Island member of the nation al Republican committee, died here Friday. Newspaper Man Honored. Washington.--George H. Gall, for merly a Washington newspaper man, was Friday appointed secretary of the bureau which the Dominion of Canada is to establish in Washing ton. TUBS ROB ME§ OF $10,000 TWO PITT8BURG BROTHERS ARE H^LD UP AT CHICAGO. Merchants Were on Way to Wisconsin to Buy Tobacco When Robbed-- $500 Diamond Gone. Chicago. -- Harry W. and Max C. Chotlner of the Pittsburg to bacco distributing firm of H. W. Chotl ner St Brother, Incorporated, were held up and robbed of $10,000 In mOney and a two-carat diamond shirt stud valued at $500 at Qulncy and Jefferson street last night. . The hold-up men are still at large. The brothers were on their way from Twelfth and Halsted streets to the Brevoort hotel, where they are stopping. Being strangers In the city, they lost their way. While walking in Qulncy 6treet 100 feet east of Jeffer son they were seized from behind by two men. Max, who carried the money in his inside coat pocket, was hurled into a vacant lot and pinned down by his assailant, while his brother en gaged in a struggle with the other highwayman on the sidewalk. In the struggle Harry was robbed of his diamond. Gaining his freedom by wriggling out of his coat, he declares he ran down the street shouting "Mur der," "Police," "Help," continuing to the Union depot, several blocks away, where he met a policeman. When the policeman reacned the scene of the robbery he found Max lying in the lot In a semi-conscious condition. When Max revived he said that after he had been knocked down by one rob ber another attacked him, knocking the breath out of him. The money was theb wrested from his pocket, and the highwaymen ran. The Chotiner brothers tried to de posit the money In the First National bank, but decided to carry it, as It would be Impossible to get the money out of the bank until today. They had intended to leave Chicago last night for Janesvllle, Wis., to complete a deal for $10,000 worth of tobacco. HOW THE BALL CLUBS STAND Games Won and Lost and ths Per Cent Average of the Various Nines. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Clubs. W. L. P.C.I Clubs. W. Chicago ..91 43 .681|Clnc'nat! ..70 Pittsburg .81 57 .B87|St. Louis...86 New York.80 68 . 680|Brooklyn ..66 PhlldTla .71 68 61l!Boston ....48 AMERICAN LEAGUE. Phlld'l'la .95 42 . 8981 Cleveland .68 Detroit ...80 60 .571 Wash'ton .69 New York.79 60 .668|Chlcagro ...68 Boston 78 60 . 566!St. Louis...43 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Min'p'lls .166 69 .6401 Kan. City. 84 Toledo ... 89 74 . 546 Mll'a'k'e . 74 C'lumb's . 87 76 .B37llnd'ap,fs . 67 St. Paul.. W 78 .625ILo'l»ville . 00 WESTERN LEAGUE. Bl'u City.. 101 64 ,661!Omaha ... 78 Denver ...94 62 . 9081 St. Jos'ph. 68 Jjtnootn •- W .MI D. Wichita .. 88 78 .6SS|Top*ka ... 41 L. P.C. 72 .493 80 .407 88 .897 91 .846 76 .454 80 .484 80 .490 87 .807 T9 ~. 614 90 .4*1 96 .411 101 .871 7ft. .897 87 .488 tt .418 114 .814 CHAVEZ FLIES OVER ALPS Peruvian Aviator Hurt When Aero> plane Is Wrecked--American Makes Attsmpt But Falls. Milan, Italy.--Georges Chaves, the Peruvian aviator, Friday flew from Brig, Switzerland, over the Simplon pass and arrived at Domodossola, on the Italian side of the Alps. In alighting Chavez fell beneath his machine. He was Injured and his monoplane was destroyed. Henry Weymann, the American aviator, ascended at Brig In an at tempt to follow Chavez, but descend ed after having been in the air four minutes. Chanter Acta Against Diva. New York.--Announcement was made Thursday by Sidney Harris, at torney for Robert Winthrop Chanler, that Chanler has revoked the power of attorney, given by him to his wife, Mme. Cavalieri, the singer, in connec tion with' the vitenuptiaJ agreement. Countess III In Los Angeles. Los Anneles, Cal.--Countess Con stance Wachtmeister, former Uj-sosoph ist lecturer and companion of Mme. Btavatsky, is seriously ill at the home of friends in' this city. Christy Wins Wife Ba<Jc. Zanesvllle, O.--At a family luncheon Saturday Howard Chandler Christy, the artist, announced to relatives that an understanding had been reached be tween himself and Mrs. Christy and that the couple were reconciled. De Palma Smashes Auto Mark. Philadelphia.--Ralph De Palma in hlB Fiat racer made a new record for ten miles on a circular track here Sat urday, going the distance in 8:13 1-5. This beats his own record of 8: *8. RULE HITS LORIMER m SENATE INVESTIGATING COMMIT TEE DECIDE TO ADMIT MACK POT" TESTIMONY. WHITE RETELLS HIS STORY In Held I n $14,346 Gold Theft. Seattle, Wash.--Marius Johansen was arrested here Friday on a charge of complicity in the stealing of $14,345 from the sluice boxes of the Pioneer Mining company at Nome. Alaska, several weeks ago. Twelve Hurt In Car Fire Panic. Knoxville, Tenn.--Twelve passen gers on a street car on the Appala chian exposition line were Injured in a stampede Friday that followed the burning out of a fuse. Mrs. A. S. J. Dayis may die. She was trampled on. Lawyers In Bribery Case Clash Over the Admission of Evidence Which Is Expected to Widen inquiry. Chicago.--"Jack-pot" testimony and all other evidence dealing with alleged bribery of Illinois legislators to vote for William Lorimer will be admitted by the senate Investigating commit tee as the result of a decision it made, overruling Elbrldge Hanecy's objec tion to Charles A. White's evidence at the hearing Monday. Arguments on making permanent the ruling to admit "jack-pot" testi mony wore made, each side being al lowed twenty minutes. Upon the con clusion of the arguments they ruled that the question which precipitated It should be answered. They also decided that hereafter each "jack pot" question should be rilled upon separately. Attorney Hanecy's objection came when Representative i Charles A. White was on the stand. White had told his story of the alleged offer of $1,000 to vote for Lorimer for senator and had begun to tell the committee that in addition he was promised a share in the "Jack-pot" when Attorney Hanecy interrupted. Attorney Hanecy submitted that the "Jack-pot" evidence was irrelevant to the bribery charge. The cuiiiuiici.ee retired to a private room for deliberation and after ten minutes decided that Mr. Hanecy's objection could not stand. The deci sion Is taken to widen the scope of the inquiry to Include every action which in any way has bearing on Sen ator Lorlmer's election. White's story was practically the same as he told in the Browne trials. OBSTINATE SPREAD ING ECZEMA QUICK, . LY CURED i BOTH SIDES CLAIM CONTROL Roosevelt and Sherman Are Confident of Victory at New York Repub lican 8tate Convention. Saratoga, N. Y.--"We are going to Saratoga to beat them to a frazzle; do not forget the word, frazzle," said Theodore Roosevelt in a speech to a crowd which he made at Troy station Monday on his way to Saratoga. "\ came back from Africa with some trophies and when we get back from Saratoga we Bhall have some trophies." When Mr. Roosevelt arrived he was tendered a big reception at the rail road station Mr. Roosevelt went into conference at once with Mr. Grisoom and took up the task of swinging un pledged delegates into line. With the coming of Vice-President Sherman on the scene of the political battle, the old guard forces redoubled their energies to secure control of the Republican state convention and pre vent the progressives from naming the candidates and writing the party plat form. * Mr. Sherman had scarcely alighted from the train before he was in conference with William Barnes, Jr., who. frankly stated that neither side had a majority of the delegates and that the fight was far from set* tied. "Who is going to be temporary chairman of the convention?" Mr. Sherman was asked. "I am," was the reply; "that's what I came here for." WAGE WAR ON SUGAR TRUST New Action Against American R» flnlftg Company Is Ordered by At torney General Wickersham. Washlngton.irOrders from the at torney general to District Attorney Wise in New York to smash the sugar trust went out Monday and the ac tion will be filed there within a week. An amended petition, though much more comprehensive in its charges, has been prepared after a conference between the attorney general, Dis trict Attorney Wise, Special Attorney Simson and Mr. McReynolds. It charges the sugar trust with vio lation of the Sherman anti-trust law and the court is asked to dissolve the trust and issue an Injunction restrain ing the American Sugar Refining com pany of New Jersey from voting the Bhares of the subsidiary companies pending the redistribution of these shares among their original owners. The action will be In all respects sim ilar to that which resulted in the smashing of the Standard Oil company in the United States circuit court and in a general way It resembles the ac tion against the tobacco trust. It is learned that an investigation Into the sugar trust develops that all three of these concerns have been organized and were operated along parallel lines. Drowns Self In Water Tank. Mason City, la.--Securing two large stones and putting them in a gunny sack with a stone at either end and so as to weigh h«r body down, Mrs. A. M. Gaskill of Corwith Monday plunged in a water tank with the sack over her neck, and was soon dead. No cause is assigned. < Justice 8teele III. Denver, Colo.--Chief Justice Robert W. Steele of the supreme court of Colorado suffered a stroke of paralysis at his home here Monday. Racing Cup Autos In Collision. Mlneola, L. I.--In practise over the Vanderbllt cup course Monday,v the Lancia car, driven by Billy Knipper, was wrecked In a collision with the Marquette racer, driven by Robert Burman, and Knipper and his me chanician, Guishard, were seriously bruised. Kills Self (n Hotel. St. Louis.--L. H. Fratizell, general agent of an insurance company at Springfield, 111., drank acid and was found dead in a hotel here Monday. Mrs. Wm. G. Wood, New«pk. If. ft* writes: "Resinol Ointment cured an obsti nate case bt spreading Eczema on my little ten year old boy's leg, after various other salves had signally failed. The trouble had existed for six months, and nothing seemed to do any good until we procured a jar of Resinol, which quickly cured him. It has now become a household reme dy with. us. Ws also have Resinol Soap in dally use by the children, and their 8kin, health and complexion are perfect." Resinol Ointment can be positively relied on to stro instant relief .and quickly cure the torturing skin dis eases of infancy and childhood. For ecsema, nettle rash, chafing, disfig uring pimples and itching eruptions of all kinds, it to a prompt and sure remedy. Every family should be safe-gnarded with Resinol preparations--Resinol 4 AV - _ A 1 w VUIO UiQ HAIM uuuuiev that now and then occur; Resinol Soap - to use regularly for the toilet and bath, to keep the skin pure and healthy and preserve the complexion, Resinol Medicated Shaving Stick is also the best and safest to use, be cause it keeps the face free from erup tions and prevents infection. These preparations are sold at an drug stores. We send free on application a valu able little booklet on Care of the and Complexion. Send for it Resinol Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md. IN THEIR GOWNS. Papa--That was the supreme court of the United States .v0 just came out of. Tommy (aged seven)--Gee, pop I dere wasn't anybody dere but a lot of bearded old women dressed in black. NO HEALTHY SKIN LEFT "My little son, a boy of five, broke oat. with an itching rash. Three doc tors prescribed for him, but he kept getting worse until we could not dress him any more. They finally advised tne to try a certain medical college, but its treatment did no good. At the time I was induced to try Cutl- cura he was so bad that I had to cut tils hair off and put the Cuticura Oint mention him on bandages, as it was Impossible to touch him with the bare hand. There was not one square inch of skin on his whole body that was not affected. He was one mass of tores. The bandageB used to stick to his skin and in removing them It used to take the skin off %ith them, and the screams from the poor child were heartbreaking. I began to think that he would never get well, but after the second application of Cuticura Oint ment I began to see signs of improve ment, and with the third and fourth applications the sores commenced to dry up. His skin peeled off twenty times, ^)ut it finally yielded to the treatment. Now I can say that he is entirely cured, and a stronger and healthier boy you never saw than he is to-day, twelve years or more since the cure was effected. Robert Wattam, 1148 Forty-eighth St, Chicago. I1L, Oct. 9. l»09.w A Generous Gift. "You may say what you like against young ministers, but I have nothing but praise for our young pastor," the pompous Mr. Brown remarked, as he passed out of the church. "Nothing but praise!" "So I observed," dryly retorted the deacon who mused the plate.--Har per's. DR. MARTRL'8 FEMALE PILLS. Seventeen Years the Standard. Prescribed and recommended for Women's Ailments. A scientifically pre pared remedy of proven worth. The result from their use is quick and per manent For sale at all Drug Stores. Made Sure of Death. A student of a school in Shlnshu, Japan, recently committed suicide by jumping into the crater of Asama- yama. The tragedy was not discovered until three days afterward, when some documents left by the suicide near the crater were picked up. Important to Mothers ^Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infanta and children, and see that it Bears the Signature In Use For Over «£t> Y earn. The Kind You Have Always Bought. ia cuuureu, auu set* uisi it It is surprising, it Is often astound ing, to discover, now and then, what possibilities of rehabilitation there are in the most unfortunate of ua.--Alfred Buchanan. Hn. YV tmilow s Soothing Syrup. \ t>r child run ieeth!n«, softens the kuuis, reduces 1d» immalmn.iilnja man, care* wind oollo. Ke» bottlst Too much strategy can tangle itself more than it can fool others. Lewis' Single Binder cigar is neves dope4--only tobacco in its natural state. Woman's spbere now seems to fee the whole earth.