Z.> f, , . }'4 t .. •: -IV*1"'*' -• -(' ••*• T *• *' w••.>.. >*t* -t if«t.. .•: vmx? V?: . ftf* Mc pi ^ y^yipi^ J pn^ ~|lf A.llflffilyy TtAa*^T «"** <' •» ">y \f? BY LENINE AIDS fled Cross Role Assumed by BolstwvRc Messengers to :.'\*7 Cross Borders. FAKE I S. PASSPORTS USED "Agents Ciwry Letters Concerted In |; ^ Their Neckties In Their Efforts to Spread Communist Propagan- '.- to All Parts of World. Xondon, Feb. 8.--Bolshevist agents Intrusted with messages regarding sensational widespread red plans have been for a considerable time traveling between Berlin and soviet Russia on false credentials, it Is stated in official j quarters. The'credentials they carried l; described them as delegates of the American Red Cross mission In Berlin to conduct Investigations regarding . the exchange of German prisoners ' from Russia. Lithuanian authorities discovered . tb® Illicit traveling and a number of ; arrests followed. Two men who carried Red Cross passes admitted they were working for the communists. One woman, similarly equipped, who worked from Dvlnsfe, said she had been instructed to deliver documents to persons she did not know. Most interesting of the captures *were two men en route to Moscow by way of Berlin. They carried letters •concealed In their neckties. One of •them was a German and a member of 'the Independent socialist party of Ger- 'many, and the other was a Swiss belonging to an extremists' .organization •called the Socialist-Democratic Organization of Young People in Switzerland. The German carried a letter from the head of a Spartacist organization , In Germany to M. Tchltcherln, Russian bolshevik minister of foreign affairs. The letter indignantly denied the report that German Sparta cists were counter-revolutionary to the Russian bolshevik!. It declared that Karl Radek (the > bolshevik propagandist who recently left Berlin) could testify to the writer's communist sympathies. 1 It was said further by the writer that he was arranging with the Russian bolshevist ZlnovielT with regard to spreading rvmmunlst propaganda In all parts of the world by special •courier service from Berlin. The Swiss courier carried a letter from the secretary of an organization of extreme socialists In Berne to an editor of a red paper in Moscow acknowledging the receipt of bolshevik literature from Moscow, of which, he mid, he had made great use and asking further supplies. U.S. WARNED OF FARMERS' PLIGHT Senate Post Office Committee Told of Condition Calltf . s" Serious." r- HAYWOOD INDICTED WITH 36 Chiefs of Industrial Workers of the World Taken Into Custody When They Appear in Chicago Court Chicago, Feb. 8. -- Indictments against 87 members of the L W. W. were returned secretly before Chief Justice Crowe of the criminal court. The reason for returning the Indictments secretly was so the "wobbl'.es" could be taken Into custody when they appeared at ten o'clock In Judge Hugo Para's court for their preliminary hearings on the warrants sworn out by State's Attorney Hoyne when he first began his drive against the reds. Chief among those Indicted are William D. ("Big Bill") Haywood and Thomas Whitehead, secretary of the organlza- . tlon. TILLERS OF SDH MAY STRIKE Declare Work Too Hard and Return ° Too Small--Complain of Baaa^ Comfort and High Wages of ^ the City Dweller. Washington, Jan. 31.--Decreased farm production next year and a consequent increase In the cost of living, due to dissatisfaction of farmers, was predicted before the senate post office committee by James L Blakslee, fourth assistant postmaster general. More than 40,000 answers to 200,000 questionnaires sent to fanners, he said, Indicate a condition "disquieting and portentous of disastrous consequences." A report summarizing the contents etf the farmers' answers, prepared by George L. Wood, superintendent of the division of rural malls, was read by Mr. Blakslee. Asserting that the farmers were tired of receiving low returns for long, hard periods of toll while city dwellers lived In "ease and comfort with high wages and short hours," the report said that replies received indicated that hundreds of farmers had resolved either to quit the farm entirely or greatly decrease production. Complaint was made in a majority of the replies, the report said, of the .high prices paid by consumers as compared with the low return to the farmer, indicating an entirely disproportionate profit for the middleman. Many farmers, the report said, drew comparisons between "the hours of labor required of the farmer and his compensation with those of the urbanite of which the farmer bitterly complains, setting forth the soft and luxurious living of the latter as compared with the hard and bare living of the farmer, who is no longer willing to toil and produce for the striker, the profiteer and the short-hour, highwage man." Inability to obtain farm labor was another complaint of the farmers, asserting that the shortage of farm labor was "causing great antagonism on the part of the producer toward the city dwellers." The report said that the great demand In the cities for labor with high pay and short hours Is driving the farm hired help and the farmers' boys and girls to the city. "The high cost of wearing apparel, of staples not producel on the farm, of,farm implements and fertilizers, all of which seem to have filled the faAner's mind with discouragement and resentment, is certain to result in the curtailment of food production," the report said. Extension of the rural parcel post service to make It easier for the farmer to sell his products direct to the city consumer was advocated by Mr. Blakslee as one step toward correcting the condition indicated. . ^ 6 MOO.OOO WORDS IN DEBATE •eurtd Volume of Treaty Speeches Fourteen Inches Long, Eight Wide |. and 8even Thick. Washington, Feb. 3.--Urging economy In print paper. Senator Smoot of Utah told the senate that senators lhave uttered no less than 6,300,000 k^words in speeches on the peace treaty. He showed the senate a bound volume .of the peace treaty speeches. It was jl4 Inches long, 8 inches wide and finches thick, and contained 3,000 ;pages. This doesn't Include the Innumerable newspaper articles, editorials, letters and petitions read into the record during the consideration of the treaty. And the end of the treaty fight is not jin atght ' Raise for 8teel Workers. Toungstown, O., Feb. 3. -- The Youngstown Sheet and Tube company, largest independent steel company in this city, employing nearly 15,006 men, will grant a wage increase of 10 per cent to its employees, effective Febru tary 1, it was announced by President Jagies Campbell. Minnesota 8tudents Die of Flu. Minneapolis, Minn., Feb. 3.--Eight students at the University of Min nesota died of influenza. One hundred and fifty students at the school are 111. There are 2,000 cases of inflnwn^ |Q Minneapolis at present. 20,000 Jewish Chi'dren Orphaned Paris, Feb. 3.--Recent statistics gathered In central Europe show that 20,000 Jewish children have been orphaned In eastern Galicla alone as the result of deatkf aUrlbutqbJ# to wars and pogroms. THE BUSY COMPLIMENTARY JSfSIDEDtTIAL CANDIDATE J-t I'" i WASHUWg^frA* HITS SOVIET SCHEME WAY TO GET LIQUOR Samuel Gompers Denounces Plan •vM Russian Government HELP STARVING -- WILSON President Urges Congress to Make Loan of $150,000,000 to Relieve Poland, Austria and Armenia. Washington, Jan. 30. -- President Wilson on Wednesday asked Secretary Glass to make another appeal to congress for authority to loan $1H0,- 000,000 to Poland, Austria and Armenia to relieve their desperate food situation. The president wrote the secretary that It was "unthinkable" to him that the United States should withhold from the stricken people of those countries the assistance which would be rendered by "making available on credit a small portion of our exportable surplus of food." Labor Leader 8ays Constitution Provides for Compulsory Labor- Stop 8trikes With Arms. Washington, Jan. 80.--Writing Mi the current number of the Federatlon- Ist, official organ of the American Federation of Labor, Samuel Gompers condemns bolshevism "completely, finally and for all time." We do not have to wait for Information about the form of government existing In what Is called soviet Russia. All the information necessary to passing of judgment on bolshevism as a system of government and as a state society is at hand from authentic sources. "The plea of those misguided persons In America who say 'wait for facts before passing judgment' Is nothing more than an excuse, which, It is hoped* will gain time for the Russian experiment and enable it to spread to other countries." Quoting from the new bolshevist constitution, Mr. Gompers points out, while the fifth Pan-Russian congress declares for a dictatorship of the proletariat and the poorest peasantry, a great portion of the peasantry is disfranchised, and the largest bolshevist estimate of the proletariat calculates them as only one-fifth of the number of peasants. Mr. Gpmpers quoted as the most direct information a dispatch from Russian trade unionists to W. A. Appleton, president of the International Federation of Trade Unions, which declares that bolshevists have spilt up the reserve funds of trade unions, throttled the labor press, killed labor organizations, split up trade unions as a class and put down strikes by force of arms and plentiful executions.** In all concepts of freedom within the American nation," Mr. Gompers said, "one fundamental principle Is that any Involuntary servitude, that Is. compulsory labor, shall not be enforced upon the working people." BAN ON PUBLIC FUNERALS Flu Death L!st In Chicago Reaches 192 for 24-Hour Period J|q4, lhg( Friday. Chicago, Feb. 2.--Public fmefals and wakes in connection with deaths from Influenza and pneumonia were barred, and the funerals and wakes limited to relatives and close friends, numbering not more than ten, by order of .Health Commissioner Robertson. Two reasons were given by the official : "Congregation of a number of persons, and especially In a house or around the body of an influenza or pneumonia victim, helps to spread the contagion. There are only 175 hearses in the city, and these are being used to capacity, while the number of funerals is causing a strain on liveries." Anarchist Escapes Police. Rome, Feb. 3.--Enrico Malatesta, the anarchist leader, Is reported to have disappeared. Diligent search is being made for him by the police, who hold a warrant for his arrest on a charge of Inciting class hatred. Kolchak Escapes Reds. Honolulu, Hawaii, Feb. 2.--Admiral Kolchak Is n-ported to have escwed from the bolshevlki and to be In hiding in Manchuria, according to a Tokyo dispatch to the Japanese newspaper *Nlppu Jlji here. . ^ f Big Drop In Flu at Chicafk Chicago, Feb. 2.--The number of •tew influfriM cases recorded set a new low record lor the disease since the epidemic reached its peak last week, according to reports received by the British to Sell Vessels. London, Feb. 3.--One hundred an<k eighty-three ships which the British admiralty Is seeking to dispose of are now lying at Devonport Of these 84 are to be sold and 90 are to be disposed of in some other nanner. Death Takes B. J. Reynolds. Chicago, Jan. 31.--B. J. Reynolds, vice president of the United Cigar Stores company, died at his home In Evanston. He was sixty-two years old. Mr. Reynolds was born In Baltimore. He came to Chicago 15 years ago. Harry New Is Sentenced. Los Angeles, Cal., Jan. 31.--Harry S. New, convicted here of murder In the second degree for shooting Miss Freda Lesser, was denied a new trial. He was immediately sentenced to #«FV» not law than ten yearaT SHARE IN PROFIT AND DEFICIT Eastern Knitting Mill to Qo 80-80 With Its 1,200 Employees Plan Accepted. Wakefield, Mass., Jan. 30.--A plan contemplating an equal division of net profits or net losses annually between the company and Its 1,200 employees, and containing provisions by which the workers may lake over control of the business, was announced by Wlnshlp, Bolt A Co., owners of the Harvard Knitting mills, engaged in underwear manufacture. The employees whtf, in recent years, have received an annual bonus of 15 per cent, agreed to accept the plan. MEREDITH SAYS New Secretary of Agriculture Cost H.U«sb Cure. •i. DISCHARGE ALL IDLE HELP Bureau of Internal Revenue Gives . Rul?s on Whisky Sales. Physicians Can Prescribe Intoxicants If Needed by Patients---Six . Quarts Limit..,. \ :,v,. was^wliton, Jap. 31.-^«i&lM^$J which Intoxicating liquors may be obtained for medicinal purposes and detailed regulations governing their sale were made public her® by the bureau of Internal revenue. Announcement also was made that the bureau had compiled a system of permits, providing a definite and fixed channel through which all intoxicating liquors must move and by which hereafter the government will know the location of every gallon of distilled liquor within the nation's boundaries, except that stored In private homes. In setting forth the ways in which liquor may be procured, Commissioner Roper took occasion to Issue a warning against profiteering In its sale. The commissioner declared that exorbitant charges for liquor for medicinal purposes "certainly places the dispensers thereof in the class with profiteers and they will be Investigated." Both the physician who prescribes and the pharmacist who sells liquor, the regulations provide, must have a permit which may be obtained from the federal prohibition director. Other details follow:, "Any physician duly licensed to practice medicine and actively engaged In the practice of such profession, may obtain a permit to prescribe intoxicating liquor and may then Issue prescriptions for distilled spirits, wines or certain alcoholic medicinal preparations for medical purposes for persons upon whom he Is In attendance In cases where he believes that the use of liquor as a medicine Is necessary. "In no case may spirituous liquor be prescribed by one or more physicians In excess of one pint for the same person within any period of ten days. "Physicians may also obtain permits entitling them 'to procure not more than six quarts of distilled spirits, wines or certain alcoholic preparations, during any calendar year, for administration to their patients in emergency cases, where delay in procuring liquor on a prescription through a pharmacist might have serlooa consequence tp the patient" WHAT THEY OWE UNCLE SAM Interest on U. 8. Loans to European Countries Now Amounts to $325,000,000. Washington, Jan. 81.--Accrued interest on loans to European countries totals approximately $325,000,000, according to a table submitted to the house ways and means committee by the treasury department. Great Britain owes the ty|08t Interest, $144,440,837. Interest owed by other countries Is: France, $94,621,749; Italy, $54,256,589; Russia, $16,832,662; Belgium, $11,465,278; Czecho-Slovajrta, $1,6(58,083; Serbia. $917,299; Roumania, $609,873, and Liberia, $548. 2,000,000 In U. 8. Navy. Washington, Feb. 2.--Mobilization of an army of 2,000,000 men would be possible within five years after passage of the senate army reorganization hill, Chairman Wadsworth of the sen Ate military committee said In report. Dublin Acclaims Sinn Fein. Dublin, Feb. 2.--When the new municipal council, composed mostly of Sinn Felners, met for the first time it was greeted with the greatest enthusiasm by huge crowds as the flag of the republic was hoisted^ Italy Rail Strike to End. London, Jan. 31.--An agreement on all the principal points at issue has been reached between the Italian cabinet and the leaders of the striking railway men, according to a, News dispatch from Rome. DECLINES AID TO EUROPE Qlass 8ays Peoples ^Overseas Mud Meet Their Own Problem of Sinking Exchange. Washington, Feb. 2.--Europe, 16 so far as the United States government is concerned, must rely upon her own resources in retrieving financial equilibrium. - This was the interpretation here general!* of the letter Secretary ol the Treasury Glass has sent to a committee of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, which sought a government expression on the proposed international conference of financiers and commercial leaders to discuss Reconstruction problems. In a blunt statement of the facts aa he sees them, Mr. Glass declared "the American government has done all, that It believes advisable and practicable to aid Europe. The conference," he added, "would serve to cause confusion and revive hopes,« doomed to disappointment, of further government loans." Shave Freshmen's Heada, Stirling, 111., Fen. 3.--Seven Sterling high school boys were arrested here and bound over to (he April gran;} jury under $1,000 bond each, which they furnished. They hazed five freshmen, shearing off their hair. Many Strikes In ArgentTna. Buenos Aires, Jan. 81.--Argentina has been the scene of numerous strikes In the last few months. In general these are attributed to the high cost of living, particularly prohibitive rents l-fur poor famines. . ^ Put Up Swiss Neutrality. - Item, Feb. 3.--The Swiss govern rnent'has addressed a note to the League of Nations asking that the question of Swiss neutrality be the first one dealt with at the meeting of the council of the league. " Rob Iowa Bank of $12,000. Bulley, la., F«rf>. 2.--Robbers entered the Sullx State Bank about two o'clock in the morning and obtained $12,000 In securities and bonds before being frightened away by John watchman. Favor Hoover In Michigan. Lansing, Mich., Feb. 2.--Petitions to place the name of Herbert Hoover on the Democratic ballot at the presidential preference primary April 6, were received by the secretary of •tot*. hectares Useless Employees and Midt diem en Must Be Released From Nonproductive Work That They May Beoome Producers. Washington, Feb. 4.--Reduce the number of middlemen and encourage their return to the farms to help increase production of food. That Is the toessage brought to the c&pltal by the new secretary of agriculture, E. T. Meredith of Iowa. Mr. Meredith was sworn In amid clamors for his Immediate attention to the problem of reducing the cost of living. He had been inundated wltli telegrams and letters from all parts of the country asking what he Is going to do to bring down prices. The secretary, a tall, iitke man of nervous, intense energy, with black wavy hair, black, piercing eyes and black, close-cropped mustache, slightly touched with gray, was running through these messages and expressing amazement that they should be addressed to him. "There must be a general feeling that the cost of living Is essentially an agricultural problem," Mr. Meredith observed, as he added another sheaf to the stack of. messages. "It is, of course, related to agriculture, but no more than to many other lines of activity, and I am tempted to believe that the solution of the problem lies more In the hands of those Interested in distribution and nonproductive enterprise than in the hands of the farmers." The secretary said the farmers will produce their utmost "if given satisfactory conditions." "What is the matter irtth conditions?" he was asked. "Matter?" Mr. Meredith ejaculated, his eyes fairly blazing^. "It certainly does not spur a farmer to greater production to be obliged to sell his prod-, ucts for half or less than he later sees them sold for at retail. "The dairy farmers wonder If they are treated squarely when they receive 85 to 40 cents for butter, and see It retailed at 85. "The poultry men wonder why, when they receive from 40 to 50 cents for eggs, they retail as high as $1 a dozen. "The hlg growers wonder if they are not in a 'hazardous' business when they buy fencing and all other suppiles at greatly Increased prices and then see their product fall 50 per cent and sold by. them at an actual loss In answer to a demand on tne part of the rest of the population for a reduced cost of living." "Business men," he continued, "must see that no useless employee Is retained to add to the cost of distributing what the farmer now produces. Useless employees must be released from nonproductive work that they may go into productive work. "Let us enjoy in America as highly developed a system of distribution--, and let this Include all the professions, doctors, lawyers, teachers, as well as retailers, transportation, etc.--as we now have, but let us cut out the, useless member, the surplus one here and there, and give him an opportunity to become a producer upon the tarih or in the factory. "If the entire country, all business and all labor, does not recognize this as a common problem and do those things which give the farmer a fair compensation for his effort^ conditions will not improve.".' M M I i m i i m i l M I I M M W RED ARMY PUT TO WORK Lenine Decree Orders Soviet 8oidiers to Engage In General Labor, Activities. Washington, Feb. 4.--The Russian bolshevik army has been put to work, according to a press report of a decree issued by Lenine January 15, received by the state department. Under the decree men of the soviet army hereafter must engage in general labor activities. BELIEF TRAINS GO TO VIENNA Budapest Also to Get United 8tatee Supplies' Now en Way ' . From Paris. Paris, Feb. 4.--Two'trains of "American Red Cross supplies, valued at $585,000, left Paris for Vienna and Budapest. The supplies Included clothing, surgical dressings, drugs, condensed milk, flour and foodstuffs. Find 8ure Cure for Flu. Paris, Feb. 4.--The only sure cure of the influenza exists at the famous Pasteur Institute, where doctors are now perfecting a vaccine called "type B," which Is expected definitely to rid the world of influenza epidemics. Seattle Owns 127 Miles of Track. Seattle, Wash., Feb. 4.--Seattle's stret railway system, said to be the largest municipality owned In the world, now includes 85.71 miles of double track and 11.38 miles of single track, a total of 127.09 miles. Kill Fifty Mexican Rebels. Laredo, Tex., Feb. 4.--Fifty rebels were killed and 25 taken prisoner at Oaxaca, in the Mexican state of that name, when a rebel band, commanded by Albino Carrllo, a former federal officer, attacked that city. Lebaudy Estate Totals $5,600,000. London, Feb. 4.--Announcement is made that the net value of the estate of Jacques Lebaudy in England has been fixed by the probate court at £1,570.000. Lebaudy was shot and M|ed by his wUm r :: From Illinois ii Springfield has 2,276 corners. An enterprising city engineer counted theai. The total expenses of the liiiuuitf State board of health for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1883, were $0,101.31. When Mrs. Elizabeth Huber, eightytwo, pioneer of Shelby county, died recently she left 60 descendants, all of whom are alive. Dr. C. St. Clair Drake, director of public health, himself became a victim of the influenza. For three days he Wafi seriously ill. Plans for a community high school and two new grade school buildings are under way as the result of a campaign started by the Woodstock parent- teacher societies. A half-cent reduction in elevated fares within the city of Chicago was made by the state public utilities coinmission. The roads were directed to sell two tickets for 15 cents. Journeymen bricklayers have notified Aurora contractors, beginning April 1 next, the scale for bricklayers will be $1.12% Cents an hour, or $9 for an eight-hour day. The present scale is $1 an hour. Thomas F. Holmes of Benton, general superintendent of the Chicago, Wilmington and Franklin Coal company's mines, .one of the best known mining men In Illinois, is dead at St John's hospital in Springfield. At a sale of blooded Poland China hogs' l^ld at Champaign 45 hogs brought more than $20,000. Four young pigs of a litter of six were sold for $10,000 and an offer of $10,000 was refused for the mother. Climbing to the top of a tree for the purpose Of attaching a rope to pull it down with, as it had been partly cut, C. H. Klotz, street commissioner at Mount Pulaski, was killed when the tree collapsed with him, pinioning him underneath. Fire which started In the paint shop of the Remmert Manufacturing company at Belleville destroyed the plant and spread to the Roesch-Kohl enameling works, an adjoining building, and destroyed it. The total loss was estimated at $150,000. 0 After being bound for eight days in the ice floes of Lake Michigan,' the freight steamer Sidney (J. Neff entered the Chleago river and docked with all of her crew safe. On board also were seven men who started across the Ice to the stranded steamer and who had been missing. M. L. Kuhns of Nilwood has filed a petition in bankruptcy in federal court at Springfield, giving assets nearly twice as much as his liabilities. But here Is the joker: The assets--$4,348.- 86--are In debts owed to him which he cannot collect. His liabilities are listed at $2,711.15. A farmer living near Litchfield has ttfrned over to the police several bolts of dress goods and a large number of women's garments he found cached in a culvert in one of hl$ fields. The loot Is thought to have been stolen from a train in transit by professional thieves. Judge Roscoe J. Carnahan, aged thirty-nine, judge of the county court of Stephenson county, Is dead at his home at Freeport after a brief illness from Influenza and pneumonia. He was a lieutenant of Company L, Tenth regiment, Illinois National Guard, andS prominent 1^ Masonic circles. A Chicago theater announced that It had opened a smoking room for women. The manager said that the "women drove him to it," He said he found that girls were smoking in the washroom, the boudoir and even in the lobby. The women smoke more cigarettes than the men, the manager said. The smoking room was outfitted at a cost of $10,000. Frank and Ernestine Sards of Bullpitt, Christian county, didn't think much of demands of Internal revenue collectors that they pay $1,300 as floor tax on a quantity of liquor In their possession. They refused to heed,the demands. The collector straightway confiscated a $5,000 building they owned In Bullplt Had sold It for $1,400 to cover the tax* "V Judge Louis Fltzhenry, in the United States district court at Qulncy, sentenced Fred Wolf, aged seventy, to pay a fine of $10,000 and to serve a year and a day In Leavenworth penitentiary, and his son, Paul, to pay a fine of $5,000 and to serve two years In Leavenworth. They were found guilty of conspiring to defraud the government on army contracts. A jury at Springfield Ium decided that a father must pay his daughter for housework when he agrees to do so. The case was that of Mrs. Pearl Thomas against J. G. Peterson. -Mrs. Thomas said she worked 30 weeks as housekeeper for her father, with the understanding that he was to pay her for the work. She figured It was worth $150, but the jury made it $87.- 60. Chicago has 150 skating ponds for the children of that city, and is endeavoring to find 450 mere. The firemen flood playgrounds to produce skating ponds for the week-end. It's a satisfied board of trustees that governs the Baptist church at Carilnville. Why shouldn't it be? They removed 50 pounds of honey from the cornice of the roof of the church the other day. Bees had congregated there and left the delicacy as a sort of an offering to dlety, as it were. Quite a nice little offering, too, as honey retails around the 50- cents-a-pound mark now. Because the Wabash railroad stopped the course of a creek near Bluffs, causing a flooding ofr his land, Orion Woodson has filed suit in federal court asking $7,000 damages. The division of sanitation has investigated the pollution of the Desplalnes river by the village of Desplalnes, and has turned the data over to the division of waterways, department of public works and buildings, with the recommendation that action be instituted against the village for the purpose of enforcing a less offensive and more sanitary means of disposing of village sewage. if*. ' Ieuans Hot water , Sure Relief " • COLD ON CHEST AND SORE THROAT ENDED OVERNIGHf Vett Get Action with Mustarim Drives Out Pain In Half the Time : H Takes other Remedies -- ifa ' v . die'.Quickest Pain ' ; en Earth. • '5/ ' ^ f- ISftope coughing almost inatantf^f' mEt tore throat ana cheat colds over night* Nothing like It for neuralgia, lumbaos^ neurttla and to speedily drive away rhe«» matte pains and reduce cmoUen Joints. Mustarine is the original non-hliateriiuf. prescription that takes die place but H io times as efficient as Qrandrnother'a ol4* fashioned mustard plaster. Us» it fw - tprains, strains, bruise®, sore muscti stiff neck, spellings, sore, painful frosted feet and chilblains. Be »ura Begy'a Mustarine in the yellow box. 8. C. Wells * Co., L* Roy, ft. T. •X MUSTARlNf I 9 cfvNHOT 16799 DIED In New York City alone from ney trouble last year. Don't a yourself to become a victim neglecting pains and aches. G against this trouble by taking COLD MEDAL The world's standard remedy for 1 livar, bladder and uric acid trout Holland's national remedy since 1( All druggists, three sixaa. Quaranta Laak far tfo urn* Cold Madal oa «vaty kat aad accept! Do You Know Where It IsT Will pay you cash for information that wtB lead to the purchase of gOod walnut timbas or logs. If you know where It ia, write St 170 Union street. Freeport. Illinois. Wheu a man begins to be bis own worst enemy he can gef a lot at fre* assistance. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured by LOCAL, APPLICATIONS, aa cannot reach tha aeat of the dli Catarrh is a local disease n-eatly influ* enced by constitutional conditions. HALL/1 CATARRH MEDICINE will cure catarrh. It la taken internally and acta throuj" the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of 1 gyatam. HALL S CATARRH MEDICI1 Is composed of some of the beat tonic* known, combined with some of the best blood purifiers. The perfect combination Of the Ingredients in HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Is what produces such woa* derful results in catarrhal conditions. Drugglata 75c. Testimonials .free. F, J. Cneney 4b Co., Props., Toledo, Obttk Only a wise girt selects for a hup band a man whose mother didn't knap ' ~ how to cook. / GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWEIL Constipation Invites other troablM which come speedily unless quickly checked and overcome by Green*! August Flower which is a gentle laxative, regulates digestion both la stomach and Intestines, cleans and sweetens the stomach and alimentary canal, stimulates the liver to secreta the bile and impurities from the blood. It is a sovereign remedy used in many thousands of households all over tha civilized world for more than half a century by those who ^ave suffered with Indigestion, nervous dyspepsia* sluggish liver, coming up of food, pal* pltation, constipation and other Iop testinal troubles. Sold by and dealers everywhere. Try a take no substitute.--Adv. • If we always prepare ourselves fCf the worst that may happen, we wttl never be. disappointed. A Lady 9f Distinction, fa recognised by the delicate lng Influence of the perfume she use* A bath with Cutlcura Soap and hot water to thoroughly cleanse the pore* followed by a dusting wltb Cutlcura Talcum Powder usually means a clear; sweet, healthy akin.--Adv. A rural editor refers to his mo the* ,In-law as the "queen of terrors." 112 Milliau used last year* to KILL COLDS HILL'S CASCAWWIiyiNINI *JtOMfDfc Btaadard cold remedy faff M --ia tablet form--aaia, am, aa opiates--breaks up a cold in 14 hours--relieves grip in 3 dara. Money back if It fails. The genuine bos baa top with Mr. picture. A* Atti Kad HOTa GRACE HOTEI* : CHICAGO: Jaihana Boaiawd and daik Street Booms with detached bath $1.00 and fl-50 par day. Rooma with private bath HJ0 and SUE Opposite M Once -- Near AH Tkaatns and Staffs Stock yards care run direct to the dootw & clean, comfortable, newly decorated hotat, A safe place for your wife, mother or sistoai fataata for Sate: To aell, buy or obtain pate eats write Patent Newi, SB. Washing'on, For Irritated Throats" tain a tried and tested remedy oat acta promptly aad effectively and i BO Opiates. You set that remedy by aa PI SO' ? •; • K-'v'AJ'.