The McHenry Flalndealcr fublfshmi by P. O. SCH REINER. I^HENRT. ILLINOIS Preach the gospel of cheerfulness Wherever you go. Cultivate the outdoor habit all ytxa an, even though cold weather's com- RESCUERS FIND 20 MEN ALIVE IN MINE BUILT WALL AGAINST DEADLY GAS This time there is no one to dispute J Secretin? Wilson's word In regard to J the big crops. No matter how funny a topograph- j teal error is. It seldom amuses tha j proofreader who passed it. "Germany is getting our hogs now, •ays a Berlin dispatch Haven't no ticed any especial shortage of end- Maters. Under Direction of Experienced Miners, Small Band Makes Successful Fight for Life--Joy at Cherry Something to Reach the Heart of the Coldest, "A New York typewriter girl has es tablished a record of 73 words a min ute." says a Topelr* paper. Exactly; Uniting or talking? Overdressing, flirting and gossiping ore the three cardinal sins of women IK this country, and in. England a de sire to vote has to be added. What the scientists claim to know •bout the limitations of aeroplanes is fast about equal to what they claimed to know about steamships 100 years •«o. "An observing person can read a woman's character from the hat she •roars." says a writer. Then what horrible characters most of our saint ly women have* It Is now assured that the United States army will soon be well supplied with effective airships. This being the case, the navies of Europe are noth ing to us but the hugest kind of Jokes. Noblemen coming to this country should take a course in polite corre spondence before embarking. It may prove embarrassing to have some thtrd person write their love lettera for them. Cngland's greatest trouble is trying ' to make its reecipts equal its ex penses. There are many other lands that have the same trouble, and not • few individuals who find themselves op against the problem all the year •round. A summer girl has just sued for damages for breach of promise, claim ing that a seashore engagement she took seriously. This creates a prec edent which may have portentous re sults on that favorite pastime, the sea- aide flirtation. Cherry, 111.--Twenty living miners were resurrected from a chamber at the far end of tunnels of the smoking, stench-laden tomb that a week ago was the St. Paul mine. One hundred and one dead bodies have been brought up, leaving more than two hundred unaccounted for. One hundred or more of the disaster victims are believed still alive in the dark ramifications of the mine, and the search was continued. A priest who has been with the workers de clared communication had been es tablished with men imprisoned by a cave-in. A new blaze which started in the mine delayed the rescuers. They worked desperately, knowing that every minute might cost the life of some miner imprisoned in the third •eln. Taken from Mine Prison. Discovered by workers whose only thought had been to get out aa many bodies as possible, the survivors were carried in twos and threes from the little chamber of safety which they had built up with their own tools when escape was cut off by the flames, and explosions of that fatal day, November 13. Some were kept below for a time until they could become more accus tomed to fresh air. Nearly starved, and racked with the tortures of their long week's wait in darkness for rescue, when every min ute was hours long and when every hour seemed to bring them nearer to Inevitable death, the men were almost insane when brought to the surface. Their only food had been the scraps left in their lunch pails when they back the swelling mob. It was a hard fight. The-women shrieked and kicked and bit, frantic with joy and deter mined to see and embrace the first of the living to come to the surface. The soldiers had left their rifle* at the cars and were armed only with their bayonets, but these they used to form a solid line of steel about the shafthouse and the women finally gave in and were quieted. Owe Lives to a Hero. Mr. Eddy's heroism won unstinted praise from the survivors, who told how he gathered the man with him who were saved into one company. Acting under his direction they built their barrier against death and, en couraged through the long vigil by his cheerfulness and good counsel, they waited the more hopefully for rescue. They had no explosives and could do nothing to draw the attention of the workers except to knock on the walls of their self-constructed prison. Mr. Eddy was in as good condition as any of the rescued men, and after he had been taken to the surface and fed and had grown accustomed to the pure air which had been denied him for a week, lie told his story of the rescue. Water Saved Lives. It was not until the water was al most gone that the trapped miners realized how great was to be their suffering from thirst. When one of the men took a drink and discovered there was only a little more water, it became necessary to find something tp take its place. A mine generally is a damp lace, but none of the miners ever had eonsid- walled themselves in, and scraps of ered the black and slimy ooze from A distinguished scientist and phy sician, Dr. Felix Regnault, says there •re few men and women of full age --4ay 25 years--who have not yet contracted the malady that will final ly kill them. The trouble gets into the system some way and secretes Itself in some organ and there lies dormant until the conditions are ripe for its fatal activity. According to this Idea no one dies of old age. Someone has introduced in the British parliament a bill providing for levying taxes on land at the north pole, on the assumption that the coun try up there is part of the empire. But this gentleman, whether joking or serious, is not likely to scare up much excitement over the matter There •re questions of taxation much near er home in which the British people •re far more deeply interested. An odd point has arisen following the matter of air travel. A member of the Aero club in New York has suggested that as some persons might consider flight over their private prop erty as trespass, air routes should be legally condemned for the use of the <dr-traveling public. At the same time, property-owners would like to be sure when taking strolls in their private grounds that they would not be bom- terded with casual air tourists tum bling down out of the sky from defec tive airships. The storm which wrecked Key West and which may have wrought wide havoc along the east coast of Florida seems to have been one of the fiercest known for many years. The wonderful circumstance, considering the terrific destruction of property voted in the early reports, is the ab sence of casualties and fatalities. Property losses can be repaired in time, but human beings killed or In jured represent a loss which can not be made good to the community In Which it occurs. The remark that probably a care lessly thrown cigar was the cause of the terrible sewer explosion in New York City which sent 80 manhole covers into the air and destroyed win dows by the hundreds, is recalled by • dispatch from New York City tell- tag of the partial destruction of an •utomobile which was ignited by a cigar thrown upon "a streak of gaso line." There is much streaking of •gasoline, nowadays, and the careful ^disposition of cigars and matches is more important than ever. leather, eked out with bark scraped from the posts in the tunnels. Owe Lives to Two Heroes. The rescued miners owe their lives to Walter Waite and George Eddy, two of the mine "bosses," who led them into a side chamber of the mine, sealed , up the passageway and kept them in the inclosure until aid ar rived. The rescuers were Imbued with the greatest hope and volunteers worked at night in the tunnels with picks and shovels, attempting to dig through a cave-in which blocks the third vein. In this tunnel it is believed more than 100 men may be alive. The first news of the rescue was shouted from the bottom of the main shaft, 300 feet below the surface, by one of the Chicago firemen In the depths. The watcher at the top heard the shout, but feared some of the workers had become insane from the horror of the situation below. It was only after the fireman had shouted the glad tidings again and again that the watcher credited his own ears and spread the news to the men near-by. Awake from Grief Stupor. The nearest hundred or so men grasped the significance of the news and broke out into a great cheer, which swelled with ever increasing volume over the entire town. It car ried down the desolate avenue known as "Death Row," where 30 of the 31. houses mourned a husband or a father or a son. It was heard in every other boose of sorrow. It awakened from their stupor of grief the widows and or phans who gathered in little, desolate knots near the shafthouse waiting for each fresh cage load of dead, to iden tify, if possible, their own loved ones from the charred and blackened heaps that had been coming to the surface with terrible regularity all day long. 8ignal for Pitiable Scene. That cheer was the signal for one of the wildest and most pitiable scenes that has occurred since the fire was discovered. The joy of those whose dead had not been brought up gave them almost superhuman strength to fight to gain the entrance to the mine. The hope that arose in women who supposed they had identified their hus bands among the previously recovered bodies spurred them to join the fight ing throng, and for a few moments It appeared as if a riot would mar the work of rescue. 8oldiers Keep Back Throng. Soldiers and deputy sheriffs, al though nearly as excited as those who had kinsmen In the workings, fought The railroads seem to be doing the •nly fall plowing reported at the {present time from the new wheat joountry in northwestern Canada. But pfcow 1b not an evil visitation even Ken it comes early, as It adds to the tllity of the soil. MINERS SAVED FROM THEIR UVINS3 TOMB Cherry, III.--Pol towing is a revised list of the miners who were found alive and rescued from the St. Paul mine: THOMAS BAYLISS, tlniner. JOHN BROWN. J. BARANOFSKI. J. BROSOSKI. WILLIAM CLELLAND. GEORGE EDDY, mine JOHN LORIMER. FREDERICO LANZi: ANTENORE QUARTAROLE. THOMAS RICHARDS. BONFIGLIO RUGGERIO. WALTER WAITE, mine examiner. THOMAS WHITE. FRANK WAITE. GEORGE SEMRICH. JOHN SEMRICH. QEORGE SUBACUS. JOHN SUBACUS. FRANK ZENDERINI. FRANCISCO ZANNANNi. MARINES TO LAND AMERICAN FORCE WILL SO^N »N- VAOE PRESIDENT ZCLAYA'S DOMAIN. SATISFACTION IS DEMANDED Execution of Americans by Nicaragua Will Not Satisfy United 8tates. the cracks between the coal as any thing but a nuisance that interfered with the work of mining. Now, however, it became plain that this slimy, black ooze was going to be all the water that,was to be had. The men hunted carefully for each crack that produced the least bit of moisture and took steps to prevent the waste of any of it. In some places it came out freely. In others it was found necessary to build little dams to stop the drip long enough fcr the moisture to gather. When these little dams had backed up a little moisture the man whose turn it was to drink would soak a bit of rag in the black water and chew it un til it was perfectly dry. It became necessary to pound away some of the coal to get at more water, and it was this pounding that brought the rescuers to the chamber. So that the ooze saved the men's lives two ways. Subsisted on Bark. No task was harder for the en tombed men every minute after the few scraps of food from their lunch boxes had been consumed than to find uncertain to them that they would die of starvation if they failed of immedi ate rescue. Finally, when several of the men begun to gnaw at their shoe tops and one man had chewed up a plug of to bacco and swallowed the quids, a mi ner remembered that he had seen a boy chewing bark just as he entered the mine the last time. "Why not eat the bark off the tim bers in the' mine?" he asked. It was a good idea and the men be gan stripping off the bark from all the rough timbering they could reach. "Death Row" Gladdened. From the day the fire was discov ered one of the saddest spots In Cherry has been "Death Row." Here are 31 houses of miners, each -exactly like its neighbors. The families living in the houses had grown to be friend ly, and the 31 houses formed a soci able little community. When the fire took its toll It was found that a man or boy was missing from 30 of the 31 houses. Hence the new name for the street, "Death Row." When the first glad shouts from the mine announced the discovery of liv ing men in the mine, "Death Row" turned out en masse. Some of the widows had identified their husbands' bodies from the earlier heaps of dead, but every one rushed to see what had happened. And when the men and boys in some of the houses had been restored to their families, the wives remembered the widows near by who had sorrowed with them only a few hours before Many a widow on the row was com forted by a more fortunate neighbor, unselfish in her joy as she had been in her grief. Hard Task for Guardsmen. Every bit of grief in the world for ages seemed expressed on tne face* of the women who stood about near the mine shafthouse just before the res cuers found the men alive. They had been there almost constantly for a week. They had looked on the dead with fear and had turned away. Their men were not up yet, tiut they were dead. Then came that shout! News that some one lived! It electrified the women who only • second before had stood, with shawls over their heads, the personification of grief and woe. Every woman whose husband or son was in the mine was sure that if anyone was alive down there it was her man or boy. Screaming with joy, the women hurled themselves on the soldiers and deputy sfieriffs who stood closer to the mine. They fought to get to the mouth of the shaft itself, so that they might seize the first rescued miner. Hysterical women have no place about the shaft of a mine when half- dead survivors of a disaster are being brought up, and the officers in com mand of the soldiers knew It. So a wall of men with bayonets was thrown about the shafthouse and order was restored. A panic had been averted, by a narrow margin. It was not heart less. It was necessary. Washington. -- With formidable fleets of light draught United States gunboats and with rapid-fire rifles moving on Nicaragua on both the At lantic and Pacific sides, startling de velopments are looked for within the next few days, If not hours. No mere apology and compensation will be accepted from President Ze- laya as satisfaction for the shooting of two Americans by the president's orders. This information came from the state department Monday through an official who knows what he is talk ing about. It is probably safe to pre dict that the force of marines will be landed in President Zelaya's domain inside of a day or two and that there will be some real flgthing for the government of Nicaragua to engage in. The insurgent forces in Nicaragua may be recognized as belligerents as the first move and within a few hours. Thfe would put Zelaya in a sorry pre dicament, as such a step would carry with it the support for the insurgents of the American forces. This could have only one result--the triumph of the insurgents and the capture of Ze laya, with the fate of Emperor Maxi- millian of Mexico awaiting him. The gunboat Vicbsburg arrived off Corinto, on the Pacific coast of Nica ragua, and the Buffalo with 500 ma rines will reach there before Thurs day. The cruiser Des Moines has ar rived at Port Limon on the Atlantic side. The gunboats Dubuque and Paducah also have been ordered to the Carib bean sea. Preparations are being made for 400 marines to sail from Philadelphia Sat urday. This force will land in Nica ragua, if developments in the situation there within the next day or two re quire such a course. All will depend upon the action to be taken by the state department, which Is marking time pending the receipt of additional details of the killing of Groce and Cannon, the two Americans. The departure of the marines comes as a result of rush orders sent to the League inland navy yards after the ntate department received the prelim- fnary report of the slaying by Presi dent Zelaya's orders of the two men. Received Last Rites. Rescuing hands reached the ctikm- It had been inteaded to send the ma- ber of life too late to save one of the men who had waited the week through for aid to reach them. But the man, a French Catholic, died with a smile, for he died shriven. Rev. Father James P. Heaney was I in the vanguard of the rescuing party, 4 and when one of the entombed miners ; recognized his priestly garb he told i the father that a Catholic was ill unto i death at one side of the chamber. I Father Heaney hastened to the man's j side. It was a poor little Frenchman, whose zeal to aid the work of getting out his comrades and himself had been fatal to him. Crushed beneath a mass of falling rock he had received mortal injuries. Holding a torch over the dying man's face, Father Heaney said: "Do you give your soul to God?" "Yes," was the answer, in a weak voice. "I never will leave here alive." Father Heaney then administered the last sacraments of the church and a moment later the heroic little man had passed away. Put Duty Above 8afety. No greater hero has been developed by the fire than Walter Waite, one of the men found in the walled-in cham ber at the end of the gallery. Waite was stronger when rescued than many of his companions and llstenfd intent ly to all the conversation that went on as the men were bfelng prepared for removal to the surface. Some one said there were men alive in another little chamber, and that the workers nearly had reached them. Waite's head had been covered by a blanket, to protect his eyes from the light, but when he beard of the other entombed men he threw off the blan ket and struggled to his feet. "I'm not going out of this mine un til I get the others," he shouted. "I'm well enough to help get them out." The rescue squad explained to him that they were all fresh men and that he had been in the mine a week with almost no food and away from fresh air. They said he would be unable to do any good. "I'm strong enough," he persisted. "Let me help." When his rescuers insisted on his going to the top he refused and they used force to put him in the cage, which bore him aloft in spite of his protests. rines to Panama to relieve about 380 marines now on du4y there. STEAMERS FIGHT BIG SEAS One Reaches Port After Hard Strug gle, Other at Anchor In Dis abled Condition. St. Joseph, Mich.--Two of the finest passenger steamers of the Graham & Morton Transportation line, operating between Chicago, Hotland and St. Joseph, suffered a narrow es cape from foundering off this port. The City of Benton Harbor lies at her docks here, having reached port after thrilling fight of five bourn with a 60-mile gale of wind and snow while the steamer Puritan, a staunch boat of steel, rudderless and to more or less extent at the mercy of the seas, lies off New Buffalo, some 18 miles south of here. Tugs from South Chi cago are fighting their way across the lake to succor the disabled craft. Offi cials of the Graham & Morton Com pany here say the Puritan is in no danger, though her wireless is wrecked and communication with her is impossible. A few hours out of Chicago the Puritan lost her rudder, and from then on until her anchors were dropped as a last resort she drifted helplessly at the mercy of wave and wind. Blown far from her course she was steadily making shoreward when anchors were dropped, which followed a thrilling attempt on the part of the Benton Harbor to put a line aboard the helpless boat. In the heavy gale, however, this was impossible. Before a line could be securely fastened it parted and an Instant later the Ben ton Harbor's stern struck the Puri tan's bow, damaging the Benton Har bor a little. Fearing for his own ves sel, Capt. Simmons fought his way into port with the greatest difficulty. The Benton Harbor carried' a light passenger list, while the Puritan has about fifteen persons besides the crew aboard. A minister in Chicago, speaking of the Ideal woman, asserts that too fre quently one finds a ten-dollar hat on Ml ten-cent head. But that is a condi tion which, like death and taxes, is Sot confined to any sex, age or pre- jVtous condition of servitude. A western college professor who de clares that the average high school fraduate, hardly past his eighteenth irthday, has not the moral stamina jfcor the experience to meet the world f ingle handed as he finds it in college, lisys: "One or two years should inter vene between the high school and the Ipollege, in which the young man thould, in his home community, earn fcis own support, and thus learn the tfteaning of work, as well as the 'val- 4e of a dollar,' at the same time ao- ^ulrlng the power to say 'No.' " Hera's • loreiy opportunity tor argument Seven Years for Egg Thief. Mobile. Ala.--Miss Lillie Sutton of Ocean Springs, Miss., who was sen tenced last spring to serve • term of seven years for burglary, the theft of half a pound of butter and five eggs, has just given herself up to Sheriff McLeod and gone to the penitentiary. War Ship Captain Transferred. Washington. -- Capt. Albert Rey nolds, commander of the Montana, was given command of the receiving ship Franklin at Norfolk, Va. Hughes at Johnson Memorial. Albany, N. Y.--Gov. Hughes accept ed an invitation of the Scandinavian society of New York city to attend a memorial meeting for the late Gov. John A. Johnson of Minnesota, to be held in New York November 28. Wounded Hunter May Lose Leg. Napoleon, O --Ralph Hampton, 18 years old, will lose his left leg as result of the accidental discharge of fellow hunter's gun while quail hunt ing. The entire load pentrated ton's leg. Roosevelt Boomed for Governor. Norfolk, Va.--Theodore Roosevelt as a candidate for governor of New York in 1910 is the prediction Repre sentative W. W. Cocks of the Oyster Bay (N. Y.) district, who left here for New York, after attending the water ways convention. Pioneer Physician Dies. Effingham, 111.--Dr. W. W. St. Clair, a pioneer resident and the oldest phy sician in Efllngham county, died here, aged SI years. Land Owners to Build Levee. Qnincy, ill.--Owners of 22,000 acres of land on the Mississippi river be tween Lagrange and the South Fablus river, met here and took steps toward organizing a levee district. To build a levee strong enough to protect the land from overflow will cost from $12 to $15 an acre. Royalists Will Join the Pope. , Paris.--The royalists issued a mani festo announcing their Intention to unite with the Catholics at the coming general election In opposition to those candidates who are not in sympathy with the church's attitude regarding the public school. RECIPE FOR CATARRH. « Clone Hits Dexter, Mo. Dexter, Mo.--A cyclone struck thla town and demolished 15 houses and wrecked the Stoddard county fair buildings, including the amphitheater. Two women and two children were Injured. Several buildings were dam aged In Essex, a small town east of here. Ogle County Farmer Dies of Apoplexy. Dixon, 111.--Hiram E. Coffman, a prominent farmer of Stratford, Ogle county, suffered a stroke of apoplexy in this city and died in a short time. Plague 8preads in Ecuador. Guayaquil, Ecuador.--The bubonic plague is spreading. During the first two weeks of November there were #4 <t which 29 were fatal. Crook Shoots Out His Eyes. Newark, N. J.--Thomas Lennon of Jersey City, formerly treasurer of the Manhattan Lighterage Company, shot both his eyes out in a hotel here be cause of a shortage In his accounts. A warrant was out for his arrest Move to Revise French Code. Paris.--Minister of Justice Barthou appointed an extra parliamentary commission to revise the procedure in the criminal courts of France In ful fillment of his Intention previously an nounced. Salinas, Cat, Is Shaken. Salinas, Cal.--The heaviest earth quake recorded here since the shock of April 16, 1906, was felt in this city Monday. Buildings rocked and cracked for 15 seconds and people rushed Into the streets for safety. No damage resulted from the shock. Await Coming of Messiah* Winnipeg, Man.--Pentecostal saints from all parts of Canada and northern United States are in convention her They believe the coming of Christ is close »t hand. by High Medical Gives Prompt Results. The only logical treatment for ca tarrh is through (he blood. A pre scription which has recently proved wonderfully effective in hospital work Is the following. It is easily mixed. "One ounce compound syrup of Sarsaparilla; one ounce Toris com pound; halt pint first-class whiskey." These to be mixed by shaking well In a bottle, and used in tablespoon doses before each meal and at bedtime. The incredients can be gotten from any well stocked druggist, or he will get them from his^wholesale house. He who has conferred a kindness should be silent, he who ha* received one should speak of it DOCTOR YOURSELF When 70a feel a cold coming on by taking a few doMS of Perry Davis' Painkiller. It I s better than Qui ill n« sad aazer. The large 60c bottles are the cheapest. Not to make allowances weaknesses of others. for the Lewis' Single Binder gives the smoker what he wants, a rich, mellow-tasting cigar. Not to alleviate if we can all that needs alleviation. WANTS BER LETTER PUBLISHED For Benefit of Women who Suffer from Female Ills Minnea •offerer ((uticura^ m Minn.--"I was a great om female troubles which caused a weakness and broken down condition of the system. I read so much of what Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound had done for other suffering women I felt sure it would help me, and I must say it did help me wonderfully. My pains all left me, I Few stronger, and within three months was a perfectly well woman. "I want this letter made public to show the benefit women may derive from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound."--Mrs. JOHN G. MOLD an, 2115 Second St., North, Minneapolis, Minn. Thousands of unsolicited and genu. Ine testimonials like the above prove the efficiency of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which is made exclusively from roots and herbs. Women who suffer from those dis tressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to restore their health. If yon want special advice write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass® She will treat your letter as s trictly confidential. For 20 years she has been helping sick women in this way# free of charge. 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Shaw, th* W^li-ICnewn Agri culturist, Says About Its -- i • --•m 1 would sooner raise cattle in Western I Canada than in the corn belt of I the United States. Feed | is cheaper and climate better for the purpose. Your market will Im prove faster than your farmers will produce the supplies. Wheat can be grown up to the60th par allel (800 miles north of the Iut'-iiifitioaal hotiiiu- Bi'vl. your i'jicant !r.u<2 will be taken at a rate beyond present concep tion. ,Vlc hnve enough people in the United States alone who want homes to take up this land." Hnrly 70,000 American* will enter mid make their homes In Western Cimtulu thla year. 1909 produced another large CARTERS IVER PILLS. in addition to w lilcli tlie eattl exports was an immense Item. 1... raising, dairying, mixed fanning and gram growing in the provinces of Manitoba, Saahat- cbewnn and Alberta. Fine homestead and pre-emp tion areas, ae well n« lands held by rail way and land companies, will provide homes for millions. Adaptable soil, healthful cli mate, splendid schools and Churches, and good railways. For settlers' rates, descriptive literature "Last Best Went," how to reach the country anil other par ticulars, write to bup't of Immi gration, Ottawa, Canada, or to the Canadian Government Agent. C.a.Brrnirhtnr..4SO Qnincy ItUg.Ckln#*, 111. 1 W. II. lloin ra. 8(1 floor,Traction Ter minal Bldg., lnt1iana|r<iliH Geo. A. Hall, 180 td tit., Milwaukee, Wis. CARTERS ITTLI IVER PILLS. Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. --""1 -TRURMNW I I N I I I I I "II I R M I FROM "WINTER TO SUMMER Three Ideal Winter Cruises io the WEST INDIES twin-screw S. S. MOLTKE (12,5o5 tons)during January, February, and >larcl». Also cruises to the Orient and South America. P. O. Bo* 17B7 HAMBURG-AMERICAN UNI 41-45 BROADWAY - - - NswYouc Murder! On© gets it by highway meo--Ten# Ot thousand* by Sad Bowels--No dif ference. 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MO Mala Blrcet, Eltlaal, Jm. 9 Get More for Furs One shipment will convince ><>u that we pay the highest prices for furs -- from 20% to 40% more in f i hial cunta than any other house, to do not pad our price list to tempt the trapper, but Kiudo each skin bonestir un.l the highest prices poeslblo on this basis, .. We furuish traps, bait and other •applies at cost. Bend today for Free Catalog O and Market Eeporta and we'll give you absolutely free our "Trapper's Guide," ooatstnlng nearly 100 of VUIUUMM TIN ana Mcreta. Lttrgeat in the world iti out line. Fanstca Bros. ACo.,, 143 EhnSt.tSt, LOTUS, Mfc You Can Shave Yourself With NO STROPPING NO HONING KNOWT 0 i Mette WORLD OVER Paper-Haigers & Painters v... t<nr«Y4>MMfl vttnr btuineMi with BO M* You 0f«i greatly lnormtHe tra Investment by We PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cleanups and beautifies Ilia hail, I Promotes » luxuriant growth. I Sieves? jrmuts io H eg tore Gray I Hair to its Youthful Color* Cures ec&lp & h&\t falling. SOc, and .00 at. DaiggticU Cobb Fined for Assault. Cleveland, O.--Ty Cobb, outfielder on the Detroit baseball team, was fined $100 and costs Monday ffrr as saulting George Stanfleld, a night watchman In a hotel on the occasion of the Detroit team's last visit to Cleveland. Fire Damp Burns Six. Martins Perry, O.--By the oxploslon of Are damp In the Florence mine of the Youhrogheny and Ohio Coal Com pany, near this city, Monday, si* miners were fatally burned. OLD SQRES CURED A lien's UlcerineSalTe cures Chronic I. leer*. Mone S., rr»,M«'rof«loua t)lt"«r»,Varieo»e ITloers,Indent I'lcers,Mercurial IHrem.WhlteSwell-btir.Mllk I.nK.j'everSoros.»1I«W»er»*. »• Kw. By Mil Me. J.i».ALLBN,D«pt.A1 .8t.Paul,Mlna. fIVK DOLLAR DECORATED BHKAK-AST SKT FREE. Any lady unswerlnu tills ad- Tertlsemcnt can learn how to tret handsome set *«•. Address ttagfotrr A Co., 414 Bldg., Si. !*•*!», Mft. meUtag Alfred Feats" Prlae want one good worker In each TTcTTair^ml to the fl«t wort^jr arpl r«^ wm Mnd for customers to from. We utfer iTberal profits to our i*pr*»nt«tivo«. An«w«r omckly that »ou m»» SLttrei l^ew'u CO" 1 Atb, Chime*. 1,000,000 RAW FUR SKINS for siiv manufacturing and export ing tradtf. Skunk. Mink, Music* Mt and others. Top prices. for stvMiquotaiwns. A- E- BURKHARDT iBiaraattuwul for Merchant, CINCINNATI, O. APPLES, planted and cared for V/HIJ\#W11 5 years. Small payment r.LNV terms. Also farms and cheap land. Agents wanted. Write GEO. A. HOICK, 49 Labbe Ulovk, Portland. Oregon. PATENTS •J B.CRAI.IJE ft CO. Cma» Hid«.,Washington,D.O. Write at once for our free book. PATENTS NO CHARUE Bend sketch for free search and report, also < Book. H. P. UUN'YKA CO.. Washington, D. C. OBTAINED OR -j j|AD| PATENTS u .ffl i w«h ThompMa's Ey§ Water W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 48-1909. COUGHS AND DISTEMPER Amoiig horses, colts, mares and stallions cured with one bottle of Frazier's Distemper Cure, or your money refunded. One dose placed in trough or feed will prevent all cases. Influenza, Epizootic, Pink-Eye, Catarrhal Fever, Colds and all forms of Nose and Throat troubles cured in three to six days. 11.00 bottle holds three 50c size bottlen. At all <lrtif- ?ista, or express prepaid. Write for free booklet on the Horse. WMKLKY MEDICAl GO. 0«pt J, NAPPANKC, INDIANA