McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 20 Aug 1908, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

V *-r' -nrvnr- The McHenry Plaindealer Published by F. G. 8CHREINER. McHENRY, ILLINOIS. Castro needs a litttle primary in­ struction as to who we are. -£t mx War balloonists are beginning to make battle-ships look old fashioned. Persians now have the massacre fever. Oh, civilization is spreading, all right. If Anna Gould's marriage should turn out happily, how surprised every­ one would be! SPRINGFIELD'S FIERCE RIOT RESULTS IN SIX DEATHS FAMOUS SINGING EVANGELIST ' HAS PASSED AWAY. Terrible Race War Makes Necessary Calling Out of Nearly All of Illinois National Guard and the Troops Repress All Further Outbreaks• The world-wide steel trust is warned not to give cause for an alteration of vowels in it^hame. Springfield. 111.--Two more deaths on Sunday and one Monday from in­ juries received in mob fights in­ creased to six the fatalities resulting from the terrible rioting and race war There are some people who didn t ' ^at raged in Springfield Friday night even look at their money after read- an(j Saturday. William Donnlgan, the aged colored man whose throat was cut Saturday of the ten-dollar counterfeit bills. ing A celebrated ornithologist says that butterflies are the best actors in the world, and he was not speaking of summer girls, cither. A New York woman committed sui­ cide because she couldn't pay her rent Some people go to extremes In trying to fool the landlord. The board of education in Shanghai, China, has decided to punish the teach­ ers of schools who report that some of the students are too bad to be edu­ cated. A New York thief was arrested, hight. expired at 11 a. m. Frank Del- more, who was shot through the lungs on Friday night, passed away an hour later. Monday night J. W. Scott suc­ cumbed to a gunshot wound in the lungs received Friday night. More Trouble If Bowe Dies. Another death is expected momen­ tarily. W. H. Bowe, chief clerk in the county treasurer's office and one of the most popular citizens of Spring­ field, is slowly sinking from the effects of the bullet wounds and the beating which he received from a crowd of negroes Friday night. Bowe s friends Commander Peary knows now who the candidates of the great political parties are, but he will have to wait until next summer to find out who has been elected. Now that wireless telephone mes­ sages have been successfully trans­ mitted over 12 miles between Newark and New York, the future of wireless telephony seems bright. The newest and finest passenger steamer has a telephone in every stateroom, thus enabling passengers who are seasick to call one another up and describe in detail all their symp­ toms. Latest disclosures of the Inhuman treatment of prisoners in Yekaterni, St. Petersburg, are convincing that the worst had not been previously told about darkest Russia. But surely there Is no worse to come. tried, convicted, sentenced and started j haye warned the authorities that for prison within 24 °"rs- owever, ^ wjjj aVenged and the event he is permitted to take s t me a ou ^ ^ cause a redoubling of serving his term. i vjgj]ance by the troops' commanders. Evidence is not lacking that many citizens who were known to have im­ portant testimony regarding the mob and its leaders have been deterred from offering this to the state's attor­ ney because of threats of violence made against them anonymously. Loot from Stores Recovered. The gathering of evidence began in earnest Monday. Policemen in plain clothes were sent to search the houses of prisoners and suspects, and as a result the police station looked like a general store. Groceries, hardware, clothing, dry goods and shoes were recovered in great quantities, most of them bearing the price tags of the looted business houses. Naturally many arrests followed. Eighty prison­ ers were crowded into the small cell room at the police station. Troops There Number 4,200. With the arrival here Sunday of the Second and Seventh Infantry regi­ ments, I, N. G., and two squadrons of the First cavalry, all from Chicago, the entire National Guard of Ullinois, with the exception of the Sixth in­ fantry and the Eighth infantry (col­ ored) was on duty in the riot-ridden districts Sunday night. In all, 4,200 guardsmen are in the city. Private J. B. Klein, Company A, First infantry, killed a young man named Earl Nelson at Kankakee, and his case was considered Sunday by a regimental court of inquiry, which reported to Adjt. Gen. Scott that Klein's act was performed in the strict line of duty. Following is a list of the dead: The Dead. William Donnigan, negro, 60 years old, lynched by mob. Scott Burton, 65 years old, negro, lynched by mob. •John Caldwell, shot In stomach by mtlltla. J. W. Scott, 70 years ol<J, shot during rioting. Frank Delmore. white, shot in left si'le with rifle; employed at Windsor hotel. Louis Johnson, 17 years old, shot during rioting. Night of Wild Riot. From the early attack of the mob on the Loper restaurant in the busi- Pearv's last expedition northward Is being referred to as "a race to the pole." If only there was a general be­ lief that he will cover the complete stretch of the racetrack the game would be more exciting. This proposition to give every horse employed in the postoffice department a 30 days' summer vacation further il­ lustrates the comparative luxurious- ness of working for Uncle Sam even on a modest salary. He's easy. The shortest time around the world Is claimed to have been made by Lieut. Col. Burnley Campbell, who left Liv­ erpool on May 3, 1907, and on his re­ turn landed at Dover on June 13, 1907, covering the circuit in 40 days and 19*6 hours. Prof. George E. Palmer of Harvard university in a recent lecture said in substance: "The scientific world swung to Darwinism and then swung back; the religious world •wung over to the scientific position, and is swinging back." The queen of Spain has made a quick recovery, and has left her room, while the new baby, now aged three weeks, takes his first promenade in the gardens of La Granja. The first thing we know, the youngster will be riding a pony and driving his elder brother to do stunts over the garden wall. tricts and applied to the homes of the negroes, good and bad, without dis­ crimination. The night was made hideous with the volleys of gun fire by reckless men and the demoniacal screams and shouts of drunken men. athlrst for blood and destruction. The sum total of the night's work was the destruction of the Loper res­ taurant, the complete ruin of 25 or 30 small places of business on East Washington street and the burning of 50 houses in the residence district where the negroes had congregated. The story of Friday night runs in four chapters: The looting of the MAJOR GENERAL YOUNG. In Command of Troops at Springfield. Loper restaurant and the killing of a boy, Louis Johnson; the demolition of the stores and business houses of the negroes on East Washington street; the burning of homes in the black belt, and finally the wanton murder of a negro and the stringing of his body over a burning building with the inten­ tion of watching it consumed in the flames. Militia Fail to Stop Rioting. The declaration of martial law and the presence of 3,000 militia in the city failed to check the mob spirit Saturday. After smoldering all day, the flames of riot blazed up again at night, the lynching of an 80-year-old negro being the first act of violence. William Donnigan, once a friend of Abraham Lincoln, and for more than 50 years a citizen of Springfield, was the latest victim of the racial warfare resulting from the assault upon Mrs. Earl Hallam, a young white woman, by a negro Thursday night. Donnigan was brutally beaten by the mob, hanged to a tree, and otherwise mistreated. Late Saturday night the residence of Rev. G. M. McDanir«l, 1144 North Sev­ enth street, a colored preacher, was torn down by a mob. The preacher and his family were not in the house at the time of the attack. In the after­ noon they had beeit served with a no­ tice to clear the cJ^y at once. Wounded Kept in Hiding. The amount of fighting there was Friday night and early Saturday morning and the txact number of lowed to run through the city. The officials were afraid the rioters would break into the cars and kill the col­ ored porters. Guns were taken away from the members of the Springfield company of militia as they marched down the street- ; Desultory fighting was going on In several parts of the city while the main crowd, 10,000 strong, was tearing up the negro quarter. Prominent Man Beaten by Negroes. A sign of the feelings with which the blacks regarded all whites was given when William H. Bowe, chtef clerk in the county treasurer's office, narrowly esciaped being lynched by a band of negroes while on the way t6 his home early Saturday morning. With two companions he had gone to' the district known as the "bad lands"' to see the devastation wrought by the flames. As they were leaving a dozen negroes confronted Bowe and his friends and ordered them to halt. Bowe alone obeyed the order, the others running away. After probably fatally shooting Bowe his assailants robbed him of jewelerv, tearing a dia­ mond ring from his finger. Joe Farmer, one of the gang, recog­ nized Bowe and pleaded with the others not to lynch him. Only for this he probably would have been killed. Mayor Issues Proclamation. In an effort to reduce the crowds on the street to a minimum, Mayor Reece on Saturday issued a proclama­ tion requesting all good citizens to re­ main at their homes and not to con­ gregate on the streets, and thereby lend strength to the turbulent ele­ ment. Mayor Reece also requested all busi­ ness houses and stores, with the ex­ ception of restaurants and drug stores, to close their doors at six o'clock. The merchants promptly complied with the mayor's request. But while this plan for keeping peo­ ple off the streets was aided by the storekeepers, the citizens generally did not pay much heed to the execu­ tive's proclamation. Thousands of people not only from Springfield, but from surrounding cities, thronged the streets, and the appeals of the soldiers and police to disperse were in vain. Mark Houses of Whites. In the poorly-lighted residence sec­ tions in where there was a scattering of whites, the latter took the precau­ tion on retiring of hanging white clothes on the doors or the fronts of the houses to notify the rioters that the places were not occupied by ne­ groes. Most of the negroes and their fam­ ilies who were burned out or other­ wise made homeless by the mob were cared for in tents at Camp Lincoln, and a guard of troops was placed there to protect them. Mayor Hides and Flees. fn connection with the mayor's at­ tempt to quiet the crowd during the attack on Loper's place Friday night it was related that the mob became so threatening against the mayor him­ self that after he had been forced to Mueller's cigar store, adjoining MAP OF BURNED SPRINGFIELD DISTRICT. The meanest man in the world has been arrested in New York on the charge of cheating poets. He not only stole their songs, but also the money they sent with the verses in a prize competition. A man who would de­ fraud a hardworking union poet should be made to read all the poetry he re­ ceived. A well-known French physician has written a long article upon the useful­ ness of tears, but he fails to note the fact that they ofen procure for a wom­ an her own way when dealing with kard -hearted man. No woman who OSes her ability to cry aright will agree with the person who speaks of "useless tears." The following advertisement appears In a Hungarian journal: "Experienced person has opened a school for all those who desire to perfect themselves in the art of being humorous. Dry Intellectual humor taught, as well as ordinary witticisms of daily life. Demonstrations in practical jokes ii desired." Here's a great opportunity for the editor of London Punch. AfADJ.Si svmoti A//CHOJLAS cower mov%O CM ̂ 1 u ness district of the city Friday night, there developed rapidly as the morn­ ing wore on the most vicious race war that Illinois has ever experienced. The red torch of anarchy was car­ ried through the disreputable dis- Once every three years the Sunday | school field is surveyed at a conven- j tion which brings together delegate? from all over the world. The latesl j has but just closed at Louisville, Ky ' Figures given there aif so surprising | as to be almost incredible, if they 1 were not so well authenticated. Foi ! example, during the last three years there has been an increase in the membership of the Sunday school in , North America of 1,000,000 pupils tht ' mo^her dies, the farm, business, what- financial resources have doubled,' anc ! eVer lhe llUle Pro' ,ert>' may haW>en to Laws That Hurt Holland. Holland is not a poor country; as a matter of fact it is the third rich­ est, proportionately, of all Europe. Its I wealth is forcibly spread over its tiny 1 surface, for lawmaking has prevented ! undue accumulation and quashed the small capitalist. When the father and 1,000,000 additions hate fome by waj of the Sunday schools. The Wichita (Kan.) Beacon had evi dently mislaid its authorities on eti quette when a rush oider was received to tell the occasions on which to lift or remove the hat But edi tor ia . genius boldly and safely emergency in a way that may show omissions but is eternally right so fai as 5t goes. On the authority of th« Beacon you should lift or remove yom hat when mopping your brow, takini a bath, eating, going to bed, taking u( a collection or standing on your head There may be other occasions sue gested by the rules of propriety. be is at once cut up, smashed to pieces, flung on the market at any price; the proceeds are compulsorily divided among the children. wounded may never be known. The ambulances and livery rigs were busy all night carrying wounded men to St. John's hospital or their homes. The temper of the mob was terrific and the storm they started unquench­ able. The fire department was not allowed to make runs to burning homes of negroes. Men ran Into the street and grabbed horses' bits. Others cut the hose. The department had to content itself with holding flr^s from spreading to- homes of white men. Illinois Central trains were not al- Retort Courteous. Admiral Lord Charles Beresford'has sat in parliament on several occasions. At York, one evening, after having ad­ dressed a political gathering, a famous politician who had veered round on fhe home rule question approached him and said: "Admirable ppeech, Beresford; very good, indeed. I didn't think you could do It. You don t look like a statesman." "Perhaps not," was the bluff sailor's retort. "No more do you look like a weathercock." --Bellman. Loper's, his friends prevailed upon him not to go out again. He then was taken into the basement, it Is claimed, and a grating removed in the rear of the building through which he made his exit and evaded the mob. Many persons lay the blame for the beginning of the riot to the fact that after Loper had ^assisted the sheriff to spirit his prisoners out of town he left the automobile standing in front of his restaurant, and the machine acted on the crowds like a red rag on a bulf. The Rash Plumber. save foolish workmen from in­ king unnecessary risks," says the met th« ' ^uil(^er8 Journal, "is well-nigh impos­ sible." Almost every year some rash, thoughtless young plumber rushes out and does a job of work.--London Globe. Its Faulty Construction. "I sat away up in front," Mrs. Lap- sling was saying, "and yet I couldn't hear half the actors said. 1 tell you there's something wrong with the agnostic properties of that theater." New York's Hotel Population. New York cjty business men who are careful Observers say that the hotel population of the city is the greatest money spender and that the average of that population is about 200,000, while in the time of great business activity it closely approaches 300,000. Naming Him. "<Papa, what is the person called who brings you in contact with the spirit world?" "A bartender, son."-- Houston Post BLIND AND BROKEN DOWN He Wrote the Gospel Hymns of the "World and Traveled with D. L. Moody for Many Years. New York.^Ira D. Sankey, known as an evangelist throughout the Chris­ tian world, died Thursday night at his home in Brooklyn, but the news of his passing did not become generally known until Friday. Mr. Sankey was 68 years old. For the last five years he had been blind and had suffered from a compli­ cations of diseases brought on by overwork. But almost to the very last he worked at hymn writing. His tours throughout this country and Europe with Dwight L. Moody, the evangelist; brought him Into wide prominence. Sankey, it might be said, wrote the gospel hymns of the world. In China, Egypt, India, Japan, in almost every language known to man, Saukey's hymns are sung. He received a large income from his publications and leaves a considerable estate. Among Mr. Sankey's most familiar composi­ tions are "The Ninety and Nine," and "When the Mists Have Rolled Away/' His songs are said to have had a cir­ culation of more than 50,000,000 copies. He was a rapid composer and wrote book after book of gospel hymns. During the last five or six years of his life he was interested in preparing and publishing the story of the gospel hymns. At the same time he saved his wonderful voice for posterity by singing Into phonographs. The rec­ ords were sent all over the world. Sankey first met Moody at a Y. M. C. A. convention In Indianapolis. Moody was so charmed with the young man's voice that he urged him to ac­ company him on his evangelistic tours. Sankey explained that he was married and could not give up his posi­ tion. "You must come," said Moody; "I oan't get along without you." San­ key consulted his wife and they cast in their lot with Mr. Moody. They visited Great Britain from 1873 to 1875, and again in 1883, and made many tours throughout the United States. MAN AND WIFE MURDERED. Bloody Tragedy in Columbus, O., Mys­ tifies the Police. Columbus, O.--Arthur Neidlander, aged 34, and his wife, aged 19, were found dead Sunday, the former in a room above his grocery store near the western corporation line, and the wo­ man in the street adjoining the store. The man's body lay in bed. He had been shot through the left breast and there were two knife wounds in the heart. The woman had been shot in the side, the bullet passing through both lungs. The police have made one arrest, that of John Newkirk, aged 30, a painter who lives with his mother not far from the Neidlander grocery. He is said to have threat­ ened to kill the couple because their dog bit his mother recently. The crime, however, mystifies the police. FOUR CHICAGOANS DROWN. Launch Is Capsized in Dells of the Wisconsin River. Kllbourn, Wis.--By the capsizing of a pleasure launch on the Wisconsin river Thursday afternoon four Chicago people were drowned, as follows: Miss Mabel Ward, Mrs. W. G. Heath and E. G. Pfeiffer and his son Ralph. The launch containing nine persons, among them Mrs. Pfeiffer and daugh­ ter, was returning from a trip through the Dells. When near the dock the boat got into the waves of a passing steamer and capsized, throwing all the occupants Into the water. Enterprise, Kan.--William Q. Hinz, 21 years of age, of Milwaukee, Wis., was drowned here Thursday evening while bathing in the Smoky Hill river. He was an insurance man. FEUD ENDS IN TRAGEDY. The Old-Time Gospel. "Some folks," said Brother Wil­ liams, "is in favor er all de Gospel what don't interfere wid dev doin's, but des let de Gospel shake 'um up 'twel dey thinks de fall, chills hez hit 'um, an' dar dey goes--huntin' 'roun fer some er dese new-time religions flthat never could enjoy heaven, kaze dey don't believe in hell! But I sticks ter de ol'-tlme Gospel, kaze I got lots er fr'en's, what never will be no 'count 'twel dey is purified an' scorchifled by fire!"--Atlanta Constitution. Italian Kills Enemy, Wounds Latter's Father and Commits Suicide. West Chester, Pa.--Benjamin De Gildo of Philadelphia shot and killed Renjamin de Felix and fatally wound­ ed Pasquale de Felix, father of the murdered man, here Sunday, and then, to escape capture at the hands of an infuriated mob, committed suicide by shooting himself. The sensational shooting is said to be the outgrowth of a feud that had existed between the. Italians for a lon^ time. The bad feeling was re­ cently increased by the arrest of de Felix, the murdered man, on a charge of keeping a speakeasy and being identified with a counterfeiting plot. Offered Proof at Once. Few possess the quickness of thought and action characteristic of the costermonger's " wife who ex­ claimed: "She said I wasn't a loidy, she did, and the next minute I 'ad 'er 'ead in the gutter." To Get Brightness from Life. As the sun returns in the east, so let our patience be renewed with dawn; as the sun lightens the world, so let our loving-kindness make bright the house of our habitation.--SUeven- son. Thousands See Cyclist Killed. Paterson, N. J.--In the presence of several thousand spectators at the Clifton cycle stadium Sunday "Sonny" Bridge, a motor cyclist and former lightweight pugilist, was thrown from the motor cycle which he was testing and instantly killed. Engineer Killed in Collision. Barnesville, Minn.--Frank Goodrich of this city, an engineer on a Great Northern work train, was killed near Moorehead when his train collided with a switch engine. Missing Cashier Short $15,000. Guthrie, Okla.--State Bank Exam­ iner W. E. Gordon has discovered a shortage of approximately $15,000 in the accounts of Thomas M. Reynolds, the missing cashier of the Bank of Afton, Okla. The state banking board has offered a reward of $500 for the arrest and conviction of Reynolds. Big Fire in Spanish Village. Madrid.--Fire Friday destroyed 32 houses in the village of Castineira, province of Orense. Many persons suffered burns. - " AEROPLANE IS WRECKED' WRIGHT TRIE8 NEW METHOD OP DESCENT AT LE MANS. Frames of Machine" "Tom*--Accident Follows Some Remarkable ; Flights. - Le Mans, France. -- The Wright aeroplane suffered an accident Thurs­ day which will require several day* and possibly a week to repair. After two superb flights Wilbur Wright essayed a new and daring method of descent. He stopped the motor at a height of 75 feet and tried to come to earth on a gradual de­ scending glide. The calculations were not absolutely correct and the left wing of the aeroplane came in contact with the ground. This tore the frame of the machine. Mr. Wright was not injured. Mr. Wright said he did not regard the aceident as serious, and explained that these were only incidental ex­ periences devoted to acquiring com­ plete mastery of the difficulties of avi- tation and the execution of new maneuvers. Mr, Wright's first flight Thursday eclipsed all his former efforts. He made seven complete tours of the field over the tops of the trees. According to the official time he was in the air. eight minutes and 53 seconds. The aeroplanlst was incommoded by a 15- mile breeze, but in spite of this he showed greater facility in maneuver­ ing than he did when there was a dead calm. His landing was easy and suc­ cessful in every way. Mr. Wright's second flight, which lasted two minutes, was a novel one. The aeroplanlst soared and descended at will, executing bewildering turns. Suddenly, as viewed from the grand­ stand, the machine lost its speed and began Curving slowly toward the earth. AH appeared to be going well until it was tilted to leeward and the delicate frame-work struck the ground, with I the result that it was damaged and torn. Mr. Wright calmly stepped out and examined the wreck. He was quickly surrounded by anxious friends, to whom he 1 explained that there had been no accident in the air, but that he had merely decided to try a new descent. He shut off the motor at a height of 75 feet and endeavored to float downward. CONTRARY, INDEED. Kitty--Isn't sh% the most contrary thing? Betty--Why so? Kitty--She's been coaxing and ing me to go to her picnic, and I won't do it. SHOOTS BRIDE AND SELF. Louis Ryan of Bridgeport, III., At­ tempts a Double Murder. Clay City, 111.--"Something will hap­ pen on August 13." The foregoing statement is the sub­ stance of a note written by Louis A. Ryan, 35 years old, of Bridgeport, 111., who Thursday thrice wounded his bride as she struggled to escape from a room, the door of which he had locked, and then turned , his revolver on himself and inflicted a probably fatal wound in the head. The note was found in Ryan's pocket, following the shooting. The attempted murder and suicide occurred in a hotel at Noble, 111., seven miles west of here. Mrs. Ryan was shot twice in the left arm and once in the breast, but it is believed she will recover. Ryan shot himself in the left temple, the bullet emerging behind the right ear. His condition is critical. Before their marriage the couple lived in Delphos, O. £*he was Miss Minta Schaeffer. Several days ago Mrs. Ryan came to Noble to visit an a.j|nt and was later joined by her hus­ band. No cause for the shooting is known. WHITES AND NEGROES BATTLE. One Man Killed and Several Wounded at Adamson, Okla. McAlester, Okla.--In a general fight between a number of white men and negroes at Adamson, a mining town near here, late Saturday night, Harry Mineson, white, was killed, a number of negroes wounded, and Deputy Sher­ iff Wilcox was badly beaten. Accord­ ing to a report from Adamson, a seri­ ous race clash is thought probable. A sheriff's posse has been sent to the scene. J. C. Donihee, who was deputized by his father, a justice of the peace, to assist Wilcox in quelling the disturb­ ance, has been taken into custody by the sheriff. Baton Rouge, La. -- Bloodhounds have been sent from here to Burton, La., where a posse is in pur­ suit of a negro who attempted to as­ sault a 12-year-old white girl. If cap­ tured the negro will probably be lynched. Boston Millionaire Killed. Providence, R. I.--J. Montgomery Sears, the young Boston millionaire, was hurt in an automobile accident shortly after midnight Tuesday night between Apponaug and Norwood and died at the Rhode Island hospital. Mr. Sears was 33 years of age and a graduate of Harvard university. He was fond of all outdoor sports and was an enthusiastic automobllist. He World's Record for Whaling. Victoria, B. C.--The world's record for a week's catch fey any coast whal­ ing station was broken last week by the Kyuquot station, to which 26 whales were taken by the steam whaler St. Lawrence. The best catch known heretofore was 22, a record also made by the St. Lawrence. Turkish War Minister Dead. Constantinople--The new cabinet suffered a great lass Sunday in the sudden death of the war minister, Redjeb Pasha, from heart disease. Turkey to Have Embassy Here. Constantinople.--It is declared that the government proposes raising the Turkish legation at Washington to an embassy, and that Hussein Kiazim Bey will be the first ambassador. He Is at present Turkish minister at Bucharest. Stork Hovers Over Holland. Apeldoorn.--It is announced here that that an interesting event is ex­ pected in the Dutch royal family. Queen Wilhelmlna is now staying at the royal castle, Het Loo, uear here BABY CRIED AND SCRATCHED All the Time--Covered with Tortur- Ing Eczema---Doctor Said Sores Would Last for Years--Per­ fect Cure by Cuticura. "My baby niece was suffering from that terrible torture, eczema. It was all over her body but the worst was on her face and hands. She cried and Scratched all the time and could not sleep night or day from the scratch­ ing. I had her under the doctor's care for a year and a half and he seemed to do her no good. I took hei to the best doctor in the city and he said that she would have the sores until she was six years old. But if 1 had depended on the doctor my baby would have lo&t her mind and died from the want of aid. But I used Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment and she was cured in three months. Alice L. Dowell, 4769 Easton Ave., St. Louis, Mo., May 2 and 20, 1907." Why He Felt Sad. "Young man," said the stern old broker, "I find that you slipped off yesterday afternoon and went to the ball game. Don't you feel bad about it?" "Indeed I do, boss," confessed Tommy. "Ah! That's one consolation." "Yes. I felt bad 'cause the home team lost." Is Pe-ru-na Useful for Catarrh? Should a list of the ingredients *>f Pe- runa be submitted to any medical ex­ pert, of whatever school or nationality, he would be obliged to admit without reserve that the medicinal herbs com­ posing Peruna are of two kinds. First, standard and well-tried catarrh reme­ dies. Second, well-known and gener­ ally acknowledged toni-j remedies. That in one or the other of these uses they have stood the test of many years* experience by physicians of different schools. There can be no dispute about this, whatever. Peruna is composed of some of the most efficacious and uni­ versally used herbal remedies for ca­ tarrhal diseases, and for such conditions of the human system as require a tonic. Each one of the principal ingredients of Peruna has a reputation of its own in the cure of some phase of catarrh or as a tonic medicine. The fact is, chronic catarrh is a dis­ ease which is very prevalent. Many thousand people know they have chronic catarrh. They have visited doc­ tors over and over again, and been told that their case is one of chronic catarrh. It may be of the nose, throat, lungs, stomach or some other internal organ. There is no doubt as to the nature of the disease. The only trouble is the remedy. This doctor has tried to cure them. That doctor has tried to pre­ scribe for them. No other household remedy so uni­ versally advertised carries upon the label the principal active constituents, showing that Peruna invites the full inspection of the critics. S Products Peerless Dried Beef Unlike the ordinary dried beef--that sold in bulk 1 Libby's Peerless Dried Beef comes in a sealed glass jar in which it is packed the moment it is sliced into those delicious thin wafers. None of the rich natural flavor or goodness escapes or dries ouL It reaches you fresh and with all the nutri­ ment retained. Libby's Peerless Dried Bee! is only one of a Greet number of high-grade, ready to serve, pure food products that are prepared in Libby's Great White Kitchen. Just try a package of any of these, such as Ox Tongue, Vienna Sausage, Pickles, ' Olives, etc., and see how delightfully dif­ ferent they are from oth ers you have eaten. Libby, McNeill* Libby, Cbicifli

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy