The IcBenry Plaindealer. HcHENRY. ILLINOIS. " The tariff of the Indian railways is lowest of any in the world. California sent east 4,000 cars of lemons. during 1907 One way to beat the dealers who are threatening (o put the price of tomb stones up is to get cremated. ROUT KURD RIDERS COS8ACK8 WIN PITCH&Q BATTLE, THOUGH OUTNUMBERED. DESTROY THREE VILLAGES Every yachtsman knows that the season for splicing the mainsail and taking a reef In the jibsheet is at band again. Secretary Wilson says that the pub lic can not tell fresh eggs from stale. Fortunately the grocers always put a label on the basket. F.obber Tribe* in Persian Territory Severely Punished--French Re pulse Fierte Attack of Berbers. Tifils. -- The Russian troops which recently Invaded Persian territory in the vicinity of Lenkoran .for the purpose of punishing Kurdish raiders of the Russian garrison at the Frontier post, Belesuvar, April 13. act ed with a promptitude calculated to overawe the tribes of the first class near Belesuvar. The fight which ensued assumed the proportions of a pitched battle. The Russians were greatly outnumbered, but they pressed the battle with great vigor and routed the Persians, inflict ing a loss of 34 men killed and 50 wounded. The remainder of the tribes men broke and fled. The Russians lost one officer and seven soldiers wounded. . Cossacks Destroy Village*. The "population of the world could.! The cannonade set fire to the vil- be contained in Delaware if they were j lage of Belesuvar. the uestruction ,of as congested as the popple in 11 New i which was completed by the Cossacks MISSING CROOK ROBS- BANK ESCAPED CONVICT LOOTS BANK AT CHAUTAUQUA, KAN. Bandits Secure $3,000 and Depart for Osage Hllis with Pone in Pur suit--One I* Recognized. Dr. Wendel says that men are more beautiful than women, and it may be true, but men don't spend their time in paying one another1 Compli ments. John D. Rockefeller advises people to save money.. People with plenty of money, declares the Nashville Ban ner . f ind i t mighty easy 1 to g ive such j advice. i York city blocks, at the rate of 1.200 per acre. A woman in Ne^.- York lias been sent to jail for husband-beat ins This is another strong illustration of the prejudice against allowing women to encroach on masculine prerogatives. Now that the Spanish master of the horse has given orders that King Al fonso is not to be photographed while wearing the Andalusia-n costume, as it does not suit him. which daring ama teur photographer will be the first to get a snap? Almost all the world's supply of black diamonds comes from a compar atively small area in tli^ central part of the state of Bahia. Brazil. The stones are found in gravel and con glomerate formations. They are used for rock drilling, and of late years their value has been greatly en hanced. King Edward took half a dozen American rocking chairs along with him to Biarritz. Sitting in one of them, with his feet in two others, on the hotel piazza, swaying gently back and forth with one of those six-dollar cigars caressed between his lips, he ought to get a little comfort, even if he is a king. A plaster cast of the diplodoccus, a prehistoric reptile, which is one of the treasures of the Carnegie museum in Pittsburg, is to be sent to the emperor of Germany. His majesty should be assured that, despite certain stories, the snakes seen by the Pittsburg spirits are not quite the size of thic lS-by-70-foot creature. A prominent doctor in Hungary has discovered that almost all modern ail ments are due to the habit of sitting. He suggests that clerks and type writers should stand at their work, but should recline at full length on the floor for a few minutes every two hours. This would make business life much more picturesque. A distinguished Dutch doctor states ttat hypnotic suggestion is the best cure for all human ills. The majority of persons will agree that this treat ment will be effective when applied to the purely imaginative disorders ol oar friends, but the serious and real ills from which they themselves Buffer will need serious and real treatment. Just at present the child is receiving a lot of attention, and varied are the methods suggested for his "bringing up"--"mental suggestion" and "vibra tions" being among those recently put forward. But in the end it will not be surprising if the advice of that wise man who said "8pare the rod and spoil the child" will receive general at- tetion. Dogs in Mohammedan countries have even mora freedom than with us. not because Mohammedans love them more, but because it is impious to kill or moler.t an animal, however mean, that A."ah lets live. But there is no bitterer insult than to call a Moslem a dog. "The Swiss Family Robinson" is not admitted at the Turk ish custom house because It tells about a dog named Turk. after a ruthless house to house search for the Russian arms stolen during the raid of April 13, Pressing their advantage, the Rus sians bombarded the neighboring vil lages of Kodzhabeklu and Zariah and razed both. The non-combatants suffered great losses. Home of Robber Tribes. The theater of war is in the moun tain range of Karadagh, which wedges in the Russian boundary, and is the traditional kingdom of robber tribes | which boast thousands of fighters t armed with modern implements of war and organized with a semblance of military discipline. The robbers had cut the telegraph lines in order to hamper the mobilization of an expedi tion which Persia is assembling against them at Tabriz. The Russian expeditionary force now on Persian soil aggregates 400 Cossacks, a squadron of sharpshoot ers and a battery of machine guns. It was intended to send a much larger force there, but a phenomenal flood of the Aras river hinders the concentra tion of reinforcements from Baku and other points north. French Repulse Berbers. Colomb Bechar, Algeria.--A French column posted on Talzaza hill, which commands the plain of Tamet, was attacked fiercely at daylight by a number of Berters, who, with nomad Arabs, have b«n concentrating for some weeks past on the western fron tier of Algeria. Although surprised, the French force rallied and fought desperately, not only beating otf their adversaries, but pursuing them for a distance of six miles. So hot was the pursuit that the Arabs, in their headlong flight, aban doned their dead and wounded. Several green flags of the prophet also fell into the hands of the French. This French victory was costly. Twenty-eight men, including an offi cer, were killed and 100 men, including ten officers, were wounded. The losses were greatest in the Foreign Legion. The Berber losses were much heav ier, no less than 125 dead bodies be ing found by the French troops. The French pursuit was stopped by darkness. ALDRICH BILL TABLED. "To be dunned ' is a phrase more familiar than pipular. Yet "to dun" can claim an ancestry equal or supe rior to a good many of the sprigs of nobility that frequently land on our shores. It Is said that the verb orig inated in the name of John Dun, a bailiff of Lincoln, in the time ' of Henry VII. of England; that it became proverbial to say of any one who was slow to pay, that the creditor must "dun him," that is, »end Dun after him. The Cotton chapel, connected with St Botolph's church; in the little old Lincolnshire town of Boston, England, waa restored some years ago, largely through subscriptions from members of the Episcopal church in Boston, Mass. It is now in need of some furth er repairs, and the mayor of the town has written to the mayor of Boston to solicit aid. There is something very human in the relationship of such places, says the Youth's Companion, one the aged mother in the old coun try, the other the strong, prosperous daughter in the new. V ' , Farman, the aeronaut, has made an other aeroplane flight, circling more than a mile and a half in two minutes and a quarter. This is the best of three successive flights and beats all records. The test took place at ISKV, France, and seems to be the latest and most notable achievement in the flying line. Doubtless it will strength en belief on the part of the enthus iasts that the problem of aerial navi gation lias been solved. But it will re quire more than a machine capable of staying In the air two minutes and » to ai&ice aeroplaning useful. * House Committee Votes to Lay Aalde Currency Measure. Washington.--The house committee on banking and currency Friday voted unanimously to table the Aldrich financial bill. It also was decided to give a hearing to Representative Vree- land of New York, who recently intro duced a financial bill which is looked upon as a substitute for the Aldrich measure. The discussion In committee was brief. The only point debated was as to whether or not the committee should make a formal report giving its reasons to the house for its un favorable action, and the conclusion finally was reached that no reasons should be given. Consequently the committee's report will be a mere statement of the action of the com mittee. Theater Panic Averted. Saginaw, Mich.--The Bijou vaude ville theater here was emptied in two minutes Friday night without a panic when the building was filled with dense smoke from the explosion of a gasoline lighting plant in an adjoining building. Flames were leaping 60 feet in the air as the audience emerged from the theater, but cool heads prevailed and the exits were kept clear. Father and Child Drown. Neodesh, Ark --A1 Anderson and his twoyear-old child were drowned In the Fall river here Sunday afternoon. Anderson with his wife and child were in a boat above the dam when he lost control of the boat. Dr. 8imon B. Conover Dies. Port. Townsend, Wash --Dr. Simon B. Conover, who during the administra tion of President Hayes was United States senator from Florida, died at the hospital here Sunday morning of old age. State Police for Chester. Chester, Pa.--Following early morn ing scenes of wild disorder during which two men were slightly injured by bullets and others were beaten by crowds, a request was sent to Gov. Stuart Thursday asking him to send two cqmpanies of the state police to this city at once to preserve order. The governor granted the request. Widow of Famous Clown Dies. San, Antonio, Tex.r-Mrs. Marcella Rice, widow of the famous' circus clown, died here Thutffdity. Coffeyville, Kan. -- Two men en tered the Citizens* bank at Chau tauqua, 25 miles west of Coffeyville, Friday, and after forcing Cashier C. C. Walterhouse and' Del Easley, a busi ness man, to enter the vault, locked them in, secured all the currency in sight, amounting to about $3,000, and escaped into the Osage hills across the line In Oklahoma. Four posses Started in pursuit and as the roads were muddy it was believed the rob bers would be captured. The robbers secured but half an hour's start. The robbery was one of the most daring ever executed in this part of Kansas, the scene of many daring ho!d-*ips on the part of the Dalton, Starr and other gangs of outlaws who from time to time have made their rendezvous in the mountainous coun try of near-bv Oklahoma. Cashier Waltemouse had scarcely opened the bank at Chautauqua in the morning and placed his currency on the counter ready for the day's business when the two robbers en tered. The only other : erson in the place was Del Easley, The robbers, both of them ^ell dressed, made their way leisurely to the cashier's window. One _of them was a man well known about town, and when he commanded Walterhouse and Easley to throw up their hands, the latter two took the matter in the light of a joke. The serious intentions of the robbers were realized a moment later, however, when they both drew revolvers, and, pointing them their victims, or dered them to get into the vault. Without further ado Walterhouse and Easley complied. The robbers quick ly slammed the door shut, and then leisurely went about their business of Cashier Walterhouse irUited positive ly that one of the robbers was William Tenant, aged 23 years, formerly of Chautauqua, and who recently escaped from jail at Nowata, Okla., where he was being held on a charge of horse stealing. Tenant some time ago bor rowed a small sum of money .from the bank, and Mr. Walterhouse said that when Tenant entered the bank Fri day he supposed he had come to renew the note or to take it up. HE WONT BE HAPPY. h TWO KILLED AS BURGLARS DISTRESSING TRAGEDY OCCURS IN COLUMBUS, O. Sons of Grocer, Mistaken for Crim inals, Are Shot to Death by Two Policemen. CLAPP IS MADE CROW CHIEF. Minnesota Senator Honored by Mon tana Indians. Washington. -- Senator Clapp of Minnesota, chairman of the commit tee on Indian affairs, is now a "Heap Big Indian," chief of the Crow tribe. He was given a great surprise Thursday by Chief Plenty Coos and his fellow-tribesmen, who have been witnesses before the Indian committee for the past three weeks. The chief marched into the committee room at the head of the band and through an interpreter phlegmatically informed the senator that the treatment that had been accorded the Indians was highly appreciated, and that an appro priate gift was due the white chief of the committee. Chief Plenty Coos then took from one of his followers a huge war bonnet, which had been the chief's insignia of rank and worn by him whenever he went into battle. He said that he was now a man of peace abd that the bonnet was of less value to him on the reservation than it would be to the senator in congress, and therefore he wanted the senator to take it. Senator Clapp was "completely flab bergasted," according to hia own de scription of his emotions. He took the war bonnet and thanked the chief. The decoration would create a sen sation in the senate chamber if the senator should decide to wear it there. It is made of eagle feathers, a band of which goes entirely around the head and droops almost to the feet. Plenty Coos and his band started for their reservation home in Mon tana Friday. Brutal Crime in Kansas. Manhattan, Kan. -- W. W. Hut- ton, principal of the high school here and a well-known educator, was waylaid by three men, beaten into in sensibility, robbed and thrown under the wheels of a train Saturday night and was rescued after one leg had been cut off. The robbery occurred in the Union Pacific railroad yards, through which Prof. Hutton was pass ing on his way home. The robbers escaped. Battleships Are Separated. Los Angeles, Cal.--Sunday night for the first time since leaving Hampton reads, the battleships of the Atlantic fleet were separated. In four harbors, a few miles apart, they lie at anchor in divisions of four and these positions they will maintain until next Sunday morning, when the 16 fighting craft, again united under the flag of Admiral Thomas, will get under way for Santa Barbara, the next port of welcome. Iowa Jurist la Dead. Boone, la.--Judge David R. Hind- man, aged 74, ten years on the bench of the Eleventh judicial district, a well- known lawyer and jurist, died Friday as a result of the bursting of a blood vessel. Drainage 8cheme Knocked Out. Madison, Wis.--The supreme court Friday handed down a decision which in effect makes impossible the forming of a drainage system out of 35,000 acres of land known as the Horicon Marsh. Entombed Miners Found Dead. Hazleton, Pa.--After two weeks of Incessant toil rescufers Thursday night came across the bodies of Michael Tokael Tokash and John Waschenick. who were entombed in the Jeddo No. 4 tunnel April 4. 8even Lost in PralT'ie Fire. Forman, N. D--Louis Orian, wife and five children, whose farm build ings were destroyed Wednesday after noon by a prairie lira, are missing and are believed to have p^rishetf in tike I llampft Columbus, O. -- Mistaken for burglars, John and William D. Frank, sons of R. O. Frank, an East side grocer, were skot and killed early Sunday morning by City Patrolmen Heinz and Casey. The latter has been suspended pending an investiga tion, but the former remains on duty. Shortly before the shooting burglars were discovered by neighbors In the grocery of R. O. Frank, at 1221 Par sons avenue. Both the owner of the store and the police were notified about the same time of the burglary. The two young men who were later shot, another brother, Albert Frank, and William Yoerger, hastily armed themselves and ran to the grocery. Patrolmen Heinz and Casey, who were already on the scene, were watching in the shadows of the building when the party came up and each mistook the other for the burglars. According to the statement of Yoer ger, W. D. Frank, who carried a small rifle, raiged it and fired four times at Patrolman Heinz, who then drew his revolver and shot and fatally wounded the young man. Patrolman Casey ordered John and Albert Frank to throw up their hands and the latter says they did so and that the shoot ing of John Frank was unjustifiable. Patrolman Casey declares that John didn't throw up his hands, but instead drew a revolver and had aimed it at him when he fired. Both the young men lived several hours after they were shot. SENDS FLEET TO AWE SULTAN. BACON MAY SUCCEED TAFT. Secretary of War Wishes to Retire About July 1 Next. Boston. -- Th«^ intimate personal fftends of Assistant Secretary of State Bacon, formerly of Boston, have received information which leads them to believe that Mr. Bacon will become secretary of war about July 1 A fin 11 r Italy to Make Naval Demonstration in Turkish Waters. Rome.--An Italian squadron, under command of Admiral F. Grenet, has set out for the purpose of making a demonstration in Turkish waters. The squadron comprises 19 warships, carry ing 7,000 men. It has been decided, if it is deemed necessary, to occupy a small island off that coast, but it is hoped here that Turkey may see the error of her way and give full satisfaction, so that more energetic measures may be avoided. The difficulty between the two na tions arises out of the refusal of the Turkish government to permit the in stallation of Italian post offices in Turkish territory, while at the same time other foreign nations have es tablished and are conducting post of fices there without interference. FUN FOR FLEET CREWS. Men from Battleships Have Gay Day at- San Diego. San Diego, Cal. -- After two days of pageantry on eea and land there was a restful lull in San Diego's cel ebration in honor of the American of the officers, including Rear Ad miral Thomas, were entertained at a picnic some 30 miles in the country. Boat races on the bay during the morning, a baseba,ll game in the after noon, 'fr^e lemonade and fruit, horse back rides, trolley excursion^ and sight-seeing tours occupied the atten tion of the 2,000 sailors who came ashore on liberty. All of the 16 vessels of the fleet at anchorage off Coronado were thrown open to visitors from ten a. m. to fige p. m., and the excursion launches run ning out to sea had all they could do to handle the interested throngs. At night there were fireworks. THE CALL OF THE SOIL. DAY8 OF FINANCIAL 8TRE38 MAKE FARM LANDS LOOK RICH. A staff contributor of a southern newspaper has taken up the question of the return to the farm of many who had forsaken it for the glitter 01 ths city. He says: "It is a well known fact that the history of this Govern ment shows that those men who have heen most successful in life and who have left their impress upon its peo ple and Its institutions as statesman, soldiers, financiers--have as a rule been those whose youth was spent on the farm, and it is to such as these that there comes with overmastering power THE CALL OF THE SOIL. More especially does it come with re doubled persuasiveness, greater pow er and sweeter pleading to the man of affairs when the clouds of financial unrest begin to darken the sky; when the cry of panic causes people to lose their wits, and act like stampeded cat tle; when with reason or without reason there ajises before him the specter of ruin, grinning in his face and waving its gaunt arms in threat ening gesticulation. The pitiable state into which some men were brought by the recent finan cial flurry, which happily is now passted, suggests these reflections. Some were ruined and a very few be came insane because of their losses. Two or three took their own lives. It is when such times come that the statesman, the great financier, and the man of affairs becomes tired of the struggle. He lays down his pen, turns from his desk and listens to the CALL OF THE SOIL. There are hundreds of cases throughout the United States of those who have money in the banks and are looking for investment in lands. No investment is better or safer. Take, for instance, the lands in Western Can ada that can be bought at from $10 to $15 per acre which yield a revenue equal to and often greater than their original cost. Those lands make a certain investment. During the past two months large investments' In these lands have been made, some In tending to use the lands for farming purposes of their own. Others to re sell to farmer friends. The agents of the Government of Canada located at different points throughout the United States have in their possession par ticulars of districts in which there are free homestead grants of 160 acres ea<;h accessible to railways, markets, schools, churches, &c. These are val uable lands. These agents will be pleased to give information to any de sirous of securing, and will tell all about the railway rates. &c HE COULD BE TRUSTED. THE LIVING What to do with the living room is a problem that confronts eTery house keeper. The living room should be In fact as well as in name a living room--a livable room. It is the room in which the most of our time at home is spent, the hours we have for leisure, the time we have for play, the place where- we entertain our friends and it is absolutely essential that the walls and furnishings of the living room should be harmoniotis in color, suitable in texture, and durable in material. The rich, soft, solid colored walls are the ideal walls for the living rooms. They make a better back ground for pictures, throw the furni ture out in better relief, are less dis cordant with rugs an i carpeting, and indicate a higher degree jf taste and . culture than do the colored mon strosities which wa paste on when we apply wall paper. Who ever saw roses climbing up a plastered wall growing out of a hard wood floor? Yet, that Is xwhat we suggest to the Imagination when we paste paper covered with roses on our walls. They are thither artistic nor true. Roses are all very beauti ful, but they were never made to climb up interior walla and they do not grow from hardwood flooring. The set figures of wall paper are also tiresome and equally disagreeable and repeilant. The alabastlned wall is the only correct form of a tinted or solid col ored wall. Fortunately it is the only clean way, and more fortunately it is the only permanent way; the only way that does not involve the end less labor in the future. In lighting the walls some thought must be given the color. Light colors reflect 85% of the light thrown upon them. Dark colors reflect but 15%. Lighting bills can be saved by choos ing a color which will reflect the largest degree of light. In north rooms use warm colors or colors which reflect light. In south and west rooms sometimes the light can be modified by the use of darker colors. Dark greens absorb the light; light yellows reflect it; browns mod ify it, and so on, through the scale of colors. The color scheme of a- room not only is dependent upon the color of the carpetings but it is also dependent upon the light of the room. CONCERNING THE OLD MAN. BAD FLOODS IN SOUTHWEST. Robert Bacon. next, succeeding Secretary Taft, who is understood to be desirous of retir ing from- the cabinet at that time. The determination of Secretary Taft to retire is said to be quite definite, and is understood not to be dependent upon the outcome of the national con vention. Mrs. Jessie Call a Suicide. Chicago. -- After Easter services, Mrs. Jessie Llewellyn Call, daugh ter of former Gov. Llewellyn of Kan sas, and well-known in Chicago as a versatile newspaper writer, ended her life by taking prussic acid in her room in the Newberry hotel, 225 Dearborn avenue. She left a letter saying that hopeless illness Induced her to kill herself. Alleged Kidnapers' Aid Taken. Wheatfleld, Ind.--Everett Merrill, wanted by Chicago authorities for be ing implicated In the Lillian Wullf kid naping case, for which Kidnaper Jones and wife are now serving imprison ment, was arrested here Saturday. Merrill was wanted on the charge of attempting to collect ransom money. In Memory of George 8mith. Washington. -- Memorial services were conducted in the house of repre sentatives for the late Representative George Smith of Illinois. Killed by a Copper Cent. Laporte, Ind.--A large copper cent, swallowed 60 years ago, caused the death Friday of James Hticking, 67 years old, a farmer. The coin became encased In the lining of his stomach. Recently an abscess formed and poi soning ensued. Two Little Girls Cremated. Worthington, Ind.--Two little daugh ters of William M- Watts Were cre mated Friday evening in a barn by a blaze Uiey started while playing. IfV6d They two miles north of town. Riyers in Texas* and Arkansas Doing Great Damage. Fort Worth, Tex. -- Clear Fork ftnd Weft Fork are raging tor rents and the water is the highest for 20 years. One man lost his life in Clear Fork in sight of citizens whe were unable to rescue him. People are leaving lowlands for higher ground and several had narrow escapes from drowning. Little Rock, Ark. -- Reports from the Lower Arkansas river say the levees are breaking in many places on account of high water. A mes sage received here from the peni tentiary told of a break in the levee above the state farm. Hundreds ol convicts rushed to the break and aided in closing it. The levees opposite the farm will have to be cut in order to save them. Insane Man Kills Three. Warrensburg, Mo.--F. O. Hawes, 22 years old, while temporarily insane, Sunday shot and killed Mar shal James Ryan and Night Watchman Basbanhn, and mortally wounded Night Watchman R. P. Pollock. He was shot and killed himself by a negro porter for a local hotel. The shooting took place in the Mis souri Pacific railroad station. Howes was the son of a Johnson county farmer. 8tampede of Elephants. Los Angeles, Cal.--An explosion and fire at the Standard Oil com pany's plant at Riverside Thursday afternoon, caused a stampede of ele phants belonging to a circus, result ing in one person being killed, another fatally injured and several injured. The elephants are at large. Uncle 8am In Polar Congress. Washington.--The American govern ment Is to participate in an interna tional polar congress to be held next month in Brussels. Herbert. L. Bridg- man of Brooklyn, N. Y., has been desig nated as the American delegate. Osaka Bankers Ask Economy. Tokyo.--At a meeting of bankers at Osaka, at which the chief trade cen ters were represented, resolutions were adopted asking the government to ob serve greater economy in the consider ation of financial measures. Pastor Commits Suicldei Woodbury, N. J.--Rev. George W. Tomson, pastor of the Woodbury Presbyterian church, committed sui cide Friday, and subsequent develop ments involved the names of at least three wompn of this place. 8enator La Follette Better. Washington.--Senator La Follette of Wisconsin, who has been confined to his room for two weeks by illness, is much improved, and expects to be in attendance up§n the sessions ot the senate in a few daya. Youngster "Made Good" Before Temp tation Was Put in His Way. A train from the north pulled into the station at Charlottesville, Va. An elderly man thrust his head out of a window of a day coach and summoned it little colored boy. The following col loquy ensued: "Little boy, have you a mother?" "Yassuh." "Are you faithful to your studies?" "Yassuh." "Do you go to Sunday school?" "Yassuh." "Do you say your prayers every night?" "Yassuh." "Can I trust you to do' aa errand for me?" "Yassuh." t "Well, here's five cents to get me a couple of apples."--Success Magar zlne. FROM SUNNY ORANGE GROVE8. The Twice-Told Experience of a San Bernardino, Calif., Man. From Sunny San Bernardino, In the midst of orange groves, writes Lionel M. Heath, of 158 Eighth Street; "For fifteen years I suf fered with p&ins in my back, frequent calls to pass the se cretions, dropsy, rheu matic aches and other symptoms of kidney trouble. I could get no relief until I used Doan's Kidney Pills. They cured me five years ago, and this is twice I have publicly aald so. The cure was thorough." Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. !®J A man whose boy comes home from school and wants help on his lesson realizes that a little learning is a dan gerous thing. Garfield Tea, th# herb medicine, in sures a healthy action of liver, kidneys, stomach and bowels. Take it for consti pation and sick-headache. Write Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y., for free samples. We prepare ourselves for sudden deeds by the reiterated choice of good or evil.--George Eliot. Lewis' Single Binder Cigar has a rich taste. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. Let him who would move the world first move himself.--Socrates. THECOMEANDSEESIGN SHOCK. George--Something Is preying on my mind. Mrs. Sharp--Ah, "something" mere ly wanted a light lunch, I presume. How's This? Ottt On* Hundred Dollars Rewsr4 for at MM of Catarrh that cannot be eunl by Halli Cttarrh Cart. F.J. CHENEY & CO., Toisdo. O. We, tbe nndertlgned, have known F. J. Chenejr for tbe la«t IB years, and believe bins perfectly hon orable In all business transactions and financially able |o carry oat any obligations made by bit firm. WALDIKU, KIM.NAN & MABTIM, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Half* Catartb Cure Is takes Internally, scrttag directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sanl fr«a. Price 71 oenU par bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family PUls for ooostlpaUoo. The Poet's Error. "Of course," said the poet's friend, "he has his faults, but he's a true poet. He gives his life to the service of the muses--" "Yea," put In the critic, "but seems to make the mistake of supposing that Bacchus Is one of the muses." Important to Mother*. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and Bee that it Beara the ST* //&/> . /r Signature In Use For Over JfO Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. Whenever we -will what is good, wa are better becauae we willed.--How- son. This sign is permanently attached to the front of the main building of the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine •Company, Lynn, Mass. What Does This Sitrn Mean ? It means that public inspection of the Laboratory and met hods of doing business is hones tly desired. It means that there is nothing about the bus iness which is not "open and above- It means that a permanent invita tion is extended to anyone to come and verify any and all statements made in the advertisements of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Is it a purely vegetable compound made from roots and herbs -- with out drugs ? Come and See, Do the women of America continu ally use as much of it as we are tola ? Come and See. Was there ever such a person as Lydia E. Pinkham, and is mere anr Mrs. Pinkham now to whom •woman are asked to write ? Come and See. Is the vast private correspondence with sick women conducted t»7 women only, and are the letters kejfc strictly confidential ? Come and See. Have they really got letters from over one million, one hundred thousand women correspondents? Come and See. Have they proof that Lydia E. Pinkham's \ egetable Compound has cured thousands of these women ? Come and See. This advertisement is only for doubters. The great army of women who know from their own personal experience that no medicine in the world equals Lydia E. PinkhamV Vegetable Compound for female ilia will still go on using and being bea» eiited by it; but the poor doubting suffering woman must, for her own sake,be taught conlldence.forshe also might just as well regain her health* .ife. .Ui,