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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Jan 1910, p. 2

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The McHenry Plalndealcr Published Sy r. G. SCHREiNER. - -r > McHENRY, ILLINOIS yy If your beau wears his heart oh hfs ,"?X' sleeve don't wear pins in your belt. - Ift SayvJIle, N. T., a man died irons V being henpecked. Bat this ben waa , - ( poultry. ff^V Dr Wiley says that preserved egg* 7 •' are not fit to eat. Nor are those that * v» haven't been. Every good resolution helps a little, T.( though It may not last until it reaches %;the place named on the ticket. iy{ England and Germany may build v*.' their dreadnoughts, but the "United States has a corner on the Missouri 1^' mule.. i ' The trouble with those big deer the hunters shot 1b that they might have . • bee* so much bigger if they had got away. r i . ' • • Unfortunately, all the poets are . snowed in, so that they have nothing {, , to do but write poems on "The Beau- ti ' Sftil Snow." Queen Alexandra retains Tier beauty 'fcy simple living and by keep'ing her %.<*• ^'temper. Queens do not have to worry .about cooks, however. Now that flying Is practical and the north pole has been discovered the only thing left for the next year ap­ pears to be perpetual motion. As soon as the echo of the flew' t ' Tear's horns has died away on the • \ chilly air it will be time to begin agi­ tating for the sane fourth. A Connecticut town has a woman ' steeplejack. Woman is.literally equal- 111 ing man on every point, but this la the highest point of equality on rec- jerd. No matter what may happen to the heating plant, It Is always possible to •i be happy In the thoughts that you . don't live in the natural-gas belt with / the gas pipes frozen. i.* • A Baltimore judge has decided that V., you can hit a waiter if he spills'soup %:>)On you. But how about it, when he > doesn't bring your cup of coffee till ; your meat is stone cold? > * ^, The papers tell us that bank depos- Its are so general that there is "237 jli >, in banks for each of us." Tell it not $v .• among the hoboes, or there'll be a run on every bank In the country. ^ , The trouble with the modem wom- |ig („ an appears to be that the moment she %•>! „ marries she takes up a study in psy- ^ * chology instead of thinking about the washing and the baking and the rear- W% /log of children. When a man's wife has gone to the trouble of getting his favorite cigar from the druggist a man is a thorough grouch if he complains at the bill when it comes in later. Did ,he expect the lady to make-the cigars? A 15-year-old boy was arrested la |i ',/|I^ew York for speeding in an automo- ^ f ble at the rate of 30 miles an hour. - It developed that the boy had a chauf- • feur's license and that the car was his own. The modern speed Jugger- . ̂ naut is bad enough, but it is no won- der that the citizens of the metropolis 'y, are calling on the law for protection if to their lives when this juggernaut . Is allowed to be set in motion by chit V: dren. 1'* „ ~ It is gratifying 'to learn from the forestry authorities at Washington - that cutting Christmas trees is not a ^; - menace to the timber lands. It is ex- g|J* plained that though 4,000,000 of these P| J trees are used every year in the ||v United States they represent a growth I',. that is not material to the well being , of the forests. In fact, it is said the ' thinning out thus assured may be ' beneficial to the remaining timber. So a beautiful custom may continue to be £(> 7 indulged in without any conscientious ftlS" acruples. W." ^. . Moving pictures take* to show the $• f' *, meeting between Prince Ito and the *'• - Russian minister reveal every detail / of the tragedy of his assassination, ' and will be used in the trial of the as- 3 sassln. This striking departure in r : >" criminal trials, which will take place v ' In the east and not in the progressive west, opens up a new field in the con- PX" f \ duct of the courts. Already they are i\ crowded by the seekers after sensa- tiona! life dramas. They will enter £ • into serious competition with the theaters as free moving-picture shows. g Prof. Muensterberg knows more [v about why most of us do things than « we do ourselves and we have to thank him for some interesting surprises we < have enjoyed when he has explained motives to us; so when he says that "from a psychological viewpoint wo­ men become shoplifters because they have a duller moral perception than men and are less likely to restrain the so called "imitative impulse," we ttust believe it without question--at • least, from the psychological vlew- • point. Now Guam has had an earthquake The tittle island is manifesting a com­ mendable desire to get into the lime­ light, although it is slightly behind the procession in selecting earthquakes^ which have gone temporarily out of fashion. GIVES UP ITS DEAD THIRTY-ONE BODIES RECOVEftfltjD cars IN 'RIVER. ' SCORE MORE STILL IN CARS Casualties in Canadian Pacific Wreck Undetermined--More Than $0 Injured Are in Hospitals--Heroic Conductor Saves Eiflht Passengers. Sudbury, Oat.--The scene of Fri­ day's Canadian Pacific wreck at Span­ ish river presented an almost hopeless field of labor for the hundred or more men sent to clear away the wreckage and recover the victims' bodies. Three big dray loads of coffins were walUog Sunday to receive the bodies of up­ ward of two score victims. Thirty-one bodies had been recov­ ered Sunday and it is believed there are still a score or more in the sub­ merged cars. Two of the decked cars, the colon­ ist car and the first-class coach, whose ventilators were visible above the water, drifted under the bridge during the day and finally were sub­ merged, while thick ice has formed above them, making it difficult to lo­ cate them. The dining car is partly submerged in the river, and little re­ mains of the coach which took fire. More than thirty Injured were taken to the General hospital and the hotels of Sudbury. The number of bodies lying in the cars, may not be known for many days. Among passengers unaccounted for 4re Rev. Mr. Childhouse, Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., and Auditor Robertson of the Canadian Pacific railroad. The wreck occurred on a 200-foot steel bridge with overhead girders and a 30-foot embankment sloping down to the Spanish river underneath. The engine and three cars had passed sately upon the bridge when the forward trucks of the second-class coach jumped the track and struck an immense steel girder with such force as to snap the girder in two and split the car as if divided with a cleaver. The rear of the second-class coach swerved out to one side, pulling the colonist car, first-class coach and diner off the bridge into the river and tipping over the Pullman beside the track. In the dining car occurred one of the greatest struggles men ever made to save their lives. The first call for dinner had just been made and Con­ ductor Thomas Reynolds of North Bay was one of the diners. With him were W. J. Bell, a lumberman of Sudbury; David Brodie, police magistrate of the district of Sudbury, and several oth­ ers. In an instant all were in the water above their heads. Reynolds exhorted the passengers to hang on to the hat racks, chandeliers and other projec­ tions and, diving into the icy waters, he broke through a window and emerged on the outside of the car. By the merest chance the car had listed sufficiently to allow him to get up between the ice and the car. Climb­ ing up to the roof, he reached in and pulled Alfonso Rouse], six years old, of the Canadian Soo, and Police Mag­ istrate Brodie of Sudbury, a small man, through the ventilators. The others were too large. No ax was available and with almost superhuman strength Reynolds, aided by those in­ side, tore a hole in the roof, through which eight passengers escaped--all who came out of the water alive with the exception of Brakeman Morrison, who was at the rear of the first-class coach, and another man who managed to reach the surface. ' The first to come through the roof of the dining car was W. J. Bell of Sudbury. He is resting in his home, but 30 stitches were required to close his wounds. Police Magistrate Brodie has three broken ribs and his face and scalp are terribly cut. He Is con­ fined to the General hospital. Con­ ductor Reynolds was bruised and cut, but was able to return to his home at North Bay. The chef and waiters of the diner were trapped in a small compartment of the car, but %ere res­ cued. Tom Taggart Wounded. Natchez, Miss.--Thomas Taggart of Indianapolis, Ind., national Democratic committeeman for that state and for­ mer national Democratic chairman, was accidentally shot while hunting quail near here by his private secre­ tary, Harry Norton. Birdshot from Norton's gun struck Mr. Taggart in the face and his right shoulder. He was brought here and was taken to Indianapolis for medical treatment t*toe wounds are not fata).' ' - Nelson Knocks Out" Lang. Memphis, Tenn.--Battling Nelson celebrated probably his last appear­ ance in public prior to meeting Ad Wolgast in California next month by delivering a knockout to Eddie Lang, the Chicago lightweight, Friday night in the Memphis Athletic club's new arena. . Not less than $60,000,000 in money, to say nothing of other gifts, Is report­ ed to have been sent this year in the •hape of Christmas presents to the old world from the United States. Who says Uncle Sam is not the biggest and best Santa Claus in the business? Age doesn't creep, after all; it runs •like a lack rabbit. This is evident from the manner in which tapestries have grown old sintfe the passage of the tariff bill letting in works are more than 100 years old. Find Slain Woman's Head. Chicago.--The severed head of MrB. Jennie Cleghorn, whose mutilated body was found early last Thursday in a negro resort at 54 West Seven­ teenth street, was Saturday discovered by a boy in a vacant lot. Killed In Cleveland Crash. Cleveland, O.--A Cleveland & Pitts­ burg railroad train Saturday struck a street car, killing one passenger and Injuring four. The approaching train was hidden from the motorman by a snowstorm. •J?* It it is a poor wind that blows good to' nobody it is also a severe storm that does not in some quarters have a warming effect. Thousands of men find employment in clearing away the •now und in blocking out the lee crop who might otherwise have to faoe the cold weather jobless. ! > , '™" ", * "'.j-f' JOHN H WALSH IS NO. 6861 MANY LUXURUIS ^OT IVEIt TO OTHERS. '• ̂ Is Given an Easy Tack of CU| "Criminal News" from the • Newspapers. ^ o ^ '.tfiavenworth, ' ~ *Eve behind the bars of the fedcraP prison at Fort Leavenworth the pow­ erful influences that kept John R. Walsh out of a cell for two years after^ he was proved a felon have prevailed. John R. Walsh, convict No. 6,861, is enjoying practically every luxury that was enjoyed by Walsh, the possessor of $40,000,000 and an income that* could satisfy the wishes of any hu­ man being. From the moment that Walsh%" passed the threshold of the great na-^ tional penitentiary those influences^ were evident Walsh was not com­ pelled to pose for a "rogue's gallery" picture. His measurements were not taken for the Bertillion system. He has not been forced to eat of the coarse fare nor off the common wood­ en tables of the 996 other convicts. But of greatest importance, Walsh has not and probably will not be com­ pelled to sleep in one of the iron-1 grated cells during all of his five years' stay at the prison. Even in the matter of labor, Walsh has been peculiarly favored. While other federal offenders, including near­ ly a score of former millionaires and bankers, are handling brick and saw­ ing stone, Walsh will be reading the newspapers. His daily task will be to handle newspapers and clip "crim- inal news" to be pasted into a book provided for the purpose. It Works." me Down Here Let's S ee How TArr MAY INSTITUTE PROCEED* AGAINST NUMEROUS < . '• „ • -.5 CORPORATIONS. PACKER QUIZ ONLY STARTER 12 PERISH IN FACTORY FIRE Girls Among Victims of Blaze Philadelphia--Scores Jump from Windows. Il» Philadelphia.--The six-story build­ ing at 200 and 202 Chancellor street in the heart of the produce market, was destroyed by fire Wednesday, and a dozen persons, most of them young women, lost their lives. About 20 men and girls are in hos­ pitals suffering from burns arid in­ juries received In jumping out of win­ dows. There were 100 men, women and children employed by various small firms in the building, the inter­ ior or which was burned. The fire is said to have started oh the third floor, either from a slight ex­ plosion or the blowing out of a fuse in an electric switchboard. Those on that floor were thrown into a panic. The cry of fire was spreftd. When the excitement reached the three upper floors a wild rush for life ensued. Many of the girls were young and became helpless in the panic. The workers on the first and second floors and most of those on the third escaped, but those in the upper por­ tion of the building were blocked at the third floor, which was a. mass of flames. The stairway Was blocked with it solid mass of persons fighting for life. Some got through, others feH unconscious on the stairs and others rushed to the windows to jump. 1,000 SIGN AT WILMINGTON All Classes Are Pledging Themselves to. Abstain from Meat Until < Price Is Lowered. ' 4 Wilmington, Del. -- It is estimated that 1,000 Wilmingtonians already have signed the petitions agree­ ing to abstain from meat for 30 days, or until the price is lowered to a rea­ sonable figure. The petitions are being signed by lawyers, physicians and business men, as well as worklngmen. Local meat dealers are. becoming alarmed. Omaha. Neb., Jan. 21.--Fifteen thou­ sand men .in Omaha refusing to eat meat for one month is the number for which the labor unions of this city are striving as members of the Anti-Meat Eating club, which they have formed as a protest against the high price of meats and the exactions of the beef trust ARREST TWO BANK OFFICERS President and Secretary of Cleveland Banking Company Are with Perjury. ' Cleveland, O.--President U. Grant Walker and Secretary W G. Dun­ can of the South Cleveland Bank­ ing Company were arrested on Indict­ ments for perjury. The men are out on bail. The bank of which they were active officers failed recently because of loans aggregating $1,144,000 made to the Werner Publishing Company of Akron, now in the hands of a receiver. Begin Action In Cherry Cases. Joiiet, 111. -- Clark Johnson, as­ sistant to State Factory Inspector Davies, said he had filed an informa­ tion against the St. Paul mine in Bu­ reau county for employing ten boys under 16 years of age. Three of these boys perished In the fire last fall at the Cherry, 111., mine. "" \ Pined $500 for Killing Prisoner. St. LouiB, Mo.--Patrolman James O'- Hearn was found guilty of manslaugh­ ter in the fourth degree, Friday, by a jury and fined $500, the minimum punishment. O'Hearn in making an arrest hit Ralph Collins on the head. Collins died within 24 hours. Re-elected Head of MineffSt Indianapolis, Ind.--Thomas L. Lewis of Ohio was re-elected president of the United Mine Workers of America over William Green of Ohio, his only oppo­ nent, by 23,697 majority. Flour Trial Ordeifjit Columbus, O. -- Criminal action against the Washburn-Crosby Com­ pany for compelling retail dealers to maintain a high price for flour, there­ by killing competition, was ordered Saturday by Attorney General DeopaA. " * ^Persecuted" Is Arrested, f New York.--George B. Duffy, the, young man whose alleged" persecution by the police brought about the resig­ nation of Commissioner Bingham, was arrested Sunday on charges of disor­ derly conduct and fighting. To Recall HengelmuJIftr* Washington.--The formation of the new Austrian cabinet is expected to lead to the early transfer of Ambas­ sador Hengelmuller. Baron Hengel- muller's going is slated to take place in the next few weeks. • Gorges Imperil Bridges. r" C ;/ BloOmington, 111.--AH centr#xi!fif- nois bridges are in peril, due to gorg­ ing of ice at every structure, and at Lawndale and Mason City dynamite 4s being used to break up gorges that have formed. INQUIRY BEGINS THIS WEEK 9ALLINGER-PINCKOT QUIZ WU^ BE FORMULATED TUES6AY* f Taking of Testimony In Now Famo|A Case Will Probably Commence Next Friday. ' Washington.--The Baliinger-Pinchot Investigation will be formulated Tues­ day, when the joint congres­ sional commission has another meet­ ing. The exact time for the examina­ tion of witnesses and other prelimi­ naries will be arranged. All the surface work will be out­ lined, leaving the deep processes for future consideration. It already seems certain that not much can be accom­ plished until late in the summer, es­ pecially if the committee must adjourn and sit In Alaska, where a personal inspection of the coal lands in dispute aiay be made. Senator Nelson Will confer with Sec­ retary Ballinger, Gilford Pinchot, Griavis, Shaw and Price over the pre­ liminaries, and will report to his col­ leagues on Tuesday as to the time needed by the parties to the contro­ versy for the preparation of their briefs, statements and testimony. Many witnesses will be brought to Washington by both sides, and some of those who will testify will come all the way from Alaska. The impression npw is that the tak­ ing of testimony will begin on Friday. SLAYER HAS COLD HEART Alleged Murderer of Girl Spurns Offer of Forgiveness from Victim's Mother and Sister. Wllkesbarre. Pa.--Mrs. 8usan Lee, a Dowieite, of Zlon City, 111., and her daughter came here to forgive George L. Marion, the New York theatrical man, who, it is alleged, murdered her daughter here last August, but she was spurned by Marion, who declined to pay any attention to her. Mrs. Lee as a Dowieite believes in forgiving those who have wronged her. When Marlon was brought into court she advanced, extended her hand and murmured that she had come to tell him she forgave him. Marion ignored her and turned away and then her daughter, Miss Grace Lee, also extended her hand. "We forgive you "ind have come to help you," she said. Marion turned away exclaiming "1 don't know who you are." HARRY K. THAW A BANKRUPT Referee Decides That Trustee O'Mara May 8ell Slayer's Property to His Sister. Pittsburg, Pa. -- That " Harry Kendall Thaw is a bankrupt and that his estate is subject to the United States bankruptcy laws Is held by Referee William B. Blair, who hand­ ed down an opinion upon the petition of Roger O'Mara, trustee of Thaw's estate, for leave to sell the bankrupt's real and personal property to his sis­ ter, Alice Copley Thaw, at private sale. Trustee O'Mara now can sell to Alice Copley Thaw her brother's per­ sonal property, consisting of real es­ tate, scarfplns, books, and old pic­ tures, for the petitioned sum of $40,000. Big Firm Suspends. New York.--Following the sus­ pension of the firms of Lathrop, Haskins & Co., and J. M. Fiske & Co., as a result of the sensational drop on Wednesday of 63 points in the price of the stock of the Columbus & Hock­ ing Coal and Iron Company, President R. H. Thomas of the New York stock exchange shortly after the opening of the exchange Thursday announced the failure of the firm of Roberts, Hall & Criss, brokers, with offices at 52 Broad­ way. In a general way the failure of Roberts, Hall ft Criss represents $3,000,000; that of Lathrop, Haskins & Co., something like $1,000,000, and that Of J. M. Fisk & Co., $2,000,000, or about $6,000,000. Lectures In Seventeen Tonguee.v Paterson, N. J.--State Senator John D. Prince of this city, a professor of modern languages in Columbia uni­ versity, delivered a lecture at Lodi, a suburb of Paterson, in 17 languages. His audience was drawn from factor­ ies, where moat of the workers are foreigners. ••Chew" May Cost Life. Collet, 111.--In an endeavor to eut off a chew of tobacco John Carlin of Minooka, 111., Friday, cut an artery in his wrist and may die. INVESTIGATE PACKERS Grand Jury Will Inquire Into Charges , .That National Packing Com* :::y,- • > ^fefelngton.--The governiifeit ts' preparing to summon the Chicago beef trust to the bar of justice. Criminal prosecution Is contemplat­ ed and if the plans do not go astray some of the men responsible for jthe rapidly increased cost of living will he landed behind the bars. This information was obtained here in connection with an announcement that the attorney general has received a full report of the investigation which he recently ordered into the re­ lations existing between the National Packing Company of Chicago and Swift & Co., Armour'ft Co. and Morris & Co., the three concerns which joint­ ly control the National Packing Com­ pany. 1 Within a couple of weeks, or as soon as the details can be arranged, the at­ torney general will institute a grand jury proceeding in Chicago, the intent of which is to ascertain whether or not the National Packing Company Is a combination in restraint of trade un­ der the Sherman anti-trust law. Inas­ much as the grand jury proceedings are only resorted to where criminal proceedings are contemplated, the in­ ference Is plain, though Mr. Wicker- sham will make no statement that his hope is to land somebody in jail. That the beef trust is alarmed over the outlook is also evident, because it is known that agents of the trust learned that a report on its operations had been received here in advance of the information being made public. It was the fact that the trust had got hold of this information that brought out the story of the contemplated pro­ ceedings. Wade H. Ellis, assistant to the attor­ ney general, is holding himself in read­ iness to start immediately for Chicago if. circumstances, as shown by the re­ port, seem to require his presence. Until he gets that report Mr. Ellis will not know what his personal rela­ tions to the case are to be, but the de­ partment of justice is determined that the pending prosecution will not fail from lack of any or all the legal talent at the command of the government. ALLEGE THEY LOOTED ROAD Charged in Civil Bill That Three Prominent Chicagoans Obtained $850,000 Railroad Money. Chicago.--Purchases of millions of dollars' worth of real estate by the Chicago & Western Indiana railroad for a new depot and freight yards may be held up pending the Investigation by State's Attorney Way- man into real estate deals through which Benjamin Thomas, former pres­ ident of the road; John C. Fetzer and Charles II. Kappes, real estate deal­ ers, are aleged to have obtained $850,- 000 of the railroad company's money for their own purses. The three men, two of them repre­ sentatives of the railroad, are accused of obtaining titles to real estate sought by the railroad and then of turning the properties over to the road at prices far above the actual pur­ chase prices and putting the differ­ ence In their pockets. Sometimes, ac­ cording to the bill filed in. the civil suit Wednesday, the railroad was charged twice what the property cost Whether the charges against the three men will be taken before the grafid jury State's Attorney Wayman would not say. Denial of the charges was made by Fetzer and Kappes. The former said all his transactions with the road had been made in good faith. Flint, Mich., Leads in Postal Gains. Flint, Mich.--According to state­ ments of Eugene Parsell, a post office inspector, Flint, with an increase of 38 per cent, in postal business for 1909, leads all cities in the United States, Seattle being its closest com: petltor. Woman t.Md Shark Sen* ^ Hartford, Conn.--Miss Dara Griffith Thursday was fined $6,000 and sent to jail for 60 days for usury. She conducted a loan office here for D. H. Tolman. of Chicago, Tribesmen Slay 200. Tangier, Morocco.--Two hundred of the sultan of Morocco's troops have bene killed In a terrific battle with tribesmen, according to news received from Fez. The tribesmen attacked the government forces, defeating them sharply. The attackers fled, pursued by soldiers. > Shoots Three; Posse Sligfp, ; ̂ Magee, Mo.--Sheriff Hubbard erf Simpson county, Mississippi, was fa­ tally shot Saturday and Deputy Sher­ iffs Moore and McCarthy seriously wound jd in an encounter with a negro fugitive, who was killed by a caejnhQr of the sheriff's posse. \ \ Raid Home; Get Bogus Buffer. Chicago.--Joseph Wirth's home was raided Saturday by Internal revenue inspectors, who seized 4,000 pounds of oleomargarine, which they say was 11* legally manufactured. ' ^ tiConeelenee Fund In 8chooL York.--The New York board of education has started a conscience fund. Several anonymous contribu­ tions have been received from persons who said they had mischievously dam­ aged school property. <v: ' Push Patent Appeal Bill. Washington.--A free-for-all hearing on a bill creating a court of patent appeals, in which many attorneys throughout the country are interested^ will begin before the house judiciary committee January 27. Future 'Prosecution Depends m U. S ,„> • fvpreme Court Declsioir in Standard Oil and Tobatih : / ^ ' co Cases. , _ Washington.--If the suits pending In the United States supreme court are decided in favor of the govern­ ment the administration will at once institute proceedings against a large number of corporations organized along the same lines as the Standard Oil Company and the American TO- .bacco Company. This statement was made Monday on high authority as representing the Intention of President Taft. So con­ fident is the administration that it will be victorious in the Standard Oil and. Tobacco cases that agents of tbe department of justice are now at work making a thorough investigation 'of many of the corporations against which suits will be filed shortly after the supreme court renders its de­ cision. The prosecution of the beef trust is only the beginning of the campaign which the president is , preparing to wage against the trusts, it is declared. It is known that the president has had this program in mind for several weeks. It is also known that some ol • the most influential men in Wall street have beseeched the president to abandon his trust-busting cam­ paign. Many members of congress have sought to dissuade the president, but after deliberate study he has re­ fused to yield to corporation repre­ sentatives. There is a possibility that members of congress will attempt to head off the president by amendments to the Sherman, anti-trust law. There have been several conferences recently for the purpose of arriving at a decision as to the best method to so modify the Sherman anti-trust law that it would permit existing combinations to continue. No definite conclusion has as yet been arrived at. Some of the leaders are fearful that if the subject is once opened up to amendment, the law, instead of being modified, will be made more radical than at present, and for this reason they hesitate to risk the introduction of legislation modifying the law. Mr. Taft takes the position that no corporation which observes the law need be in the least alarmed, and -that if there Is any injury to business be­ cause infringements of the law are corrected, the injury cannot be per­ manent. Secretary of Agriculture Wilson in his testimony before the congressional committee which is investigating the rise In the price of foodstuffs in the Dis­ trict of Columbia, Monday declared that American farm products are sold cheaper abroad than they are In this country. He intimated that the trusts were to blame, but declined to go into any lengthy explanation because the in­ vestigation which he is conducting has not yet been completed. He also blam&d the high costlof living to this, together with the exorbitant profits demanded by the /retail dealers. He prescribed as one remedy for the evil, a return to the farm. Mor£ farm- ' ers, and more intelligent farming, he declared, would greatly remedy coa­ litions. •* Chicago.--The beef trust investiga­ tion is now under way before the United States grand jury. Subpoenas were served Monday by special agents of the district attorney's office on a number at employes of packing con­ cerns. BANKER ROBBED OF $28,000 Two Women Are Heid on $30,000 Bond Charged with Holding Up New York Financier. New York.--Warner M. Van Norden, president of the Van Norden Trust Company, was held up and robbed of $28,000 as he was leaving the Waldorf- Astoria. With the arraignment of Bessie Roberts, alias Kitty Dowdell of Chi­ cago, and Annie Williams, alias "Chi­ cago Maggie," Monday came the stQj-y of politeness that cost Mr. Van Nor­ den his pocketbook. Mr. Van Norden left the hotel and was about to enter his auto when he Baw two women walking along Fifth avenue. One of the women dropped a pocketbook and Mr. Van Norden po­ litely picked it up and returned it to the loser. There was a profusion of thanks and bows, and one of the wom­ en fainted suddenly and leaned on Mr. Van Norden's shoulder. The woman revived and the banker went home in his machine. The $28,000 was gone when he reached there. The women have been held in 000 bail for further questioning. Killed by a Glancing Bullet. ^ South Bend, Ind.--Mrs. Milford Price, 21, was accidentally shot and instantly killed at Bertrand, Mich., Monday, while returning home with her husband. Edward Hosteller was shooting at a dog and the bullet glanced off the icy ground, striking her in the forehead. Drink Bars Three Navy Cadets. Washington.--President Taft has approved the dismissal of three mem­ bers of the first class at the nival academy for intoxication. ' Alleged Dynamiter Extradited. London.--Prof. Martin Ekenburg, Swedish scientist, who, when arrested in London last fall, charged with com­ plicity in several bomb outrages in Sweden, became temporarily insane, was Monday committed for extradi­ tion to Sweden. • # - ftalse Aviation Meet Indianapolis, Ind.--By selling 75,000 tickets at $1 each Indianapolis busi­ ness men home to raise the necessary guarantee fund and get tba J910 intef> Rational aviation meet Why doe* Great Britain buy oatmeal of us? ? ^ Certaioly it seems like carryiig| eoals to Newcastle to speak of export* Ing oatmeal to Scotland and yet, every year the Quaker Oats Company send# hundreds of thousands of cases of Quaker Oats to Great Britain antf Europe. The reason is simple; while tho English and Scotch have for centuries eaten oatmeal in quantities and with* regularity that has made them thOf most rugged physically, and activ** mentally of all people, the American has been eating oatmeal and trying all the time to improve the methods of manufacture so that he might^get that; desirable foreign trade. How well he has succeeded woul# be seen at a glance at the export tb- ports of Quaker Oats. This brand to recognized as without a rival in cleat llness and delicious flavor. 51* ,1k iGOING UP! y X , ' t -J* - -v*- -v.-jr I* "Toil haven't any "No, I'm just waiting. I began by opening cab doors. Then I opened the* doors of motor cars. Npw I'm waiti*$; till the aeroplanes are ready." *• EPIDEMIC OF ITCH IN WELSH VILLAGE "In Dowlais, South Wales, about 4§» teen years ago, families were stricx- ; en wholesale by a disease known ate the itch. Believe me, it is the moat terrible disease of its kind that £ know of, as it itches all through your body and makes your life an inferno.. Sleep is out of the question and you feel as if a million mosquitoes wen* attacking you at the same time. t. knew a dozen families that were Ml' affected. j'V "The doctors did their best, but their remedies were of no avail whatr ever. Then the families tried a drug­ gist who was noted far and wide for his remarkable cures. People came' to him from all parts of the country for treatment, but his medicine mad* matters still worse, as a last resort they were advised by a friend to uBe­ th e Cuticura Remedies. I am glad to- tell you that after, a few days' treat ment with Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Resolvent^ the effect was wonder­ ful and the result was a perfect cujhfr in all cases. ; "I may add that my three brothe^ three sisters, myself and all our fam­ ilies have been users of the Cuticura. Remedies for fifteen years, Thomas Hugh, 1650 West Huron St, ChicaM»> I1L, June 29. 1908." f ; Childish Inference. Little Julia was taking her aft#* noon #alk with her mother. Her at­ tention was attracted for the first tint* to a large church edifice on one of tike- street corners. "Oh, mother!" she "whose nice big house is that?" f "That, Julia, is God's house," ex­ plained the mother. | "Some time later it happened that the child was again taken by th» church, this time on Sunday evening when services were in pFogre$|k Julia, noticing the brilliantly lightfB windows, drew her own conclusions. "Oh, look, mother," she callfd "God must be having a party." 'i. /xj Mi vh^ ui vapv Whiskers. A Roman poet told of the pride oijpt of the late Caesars took in his great whiskers. On some of the #wildwood Hill Billies 1 have seen beards soni* feet long, a switch of the loose enda hanging out from under the waistcoat Others braided the growth and tied it around the neck, while still others braided it around the waist, tying )t behind like apron strings. One told me he combed and plaited his every night, and put it away into a long; linen bag or nightgown, so as to ke It from getting all tangled up with wife and his feet--New York Press, i A Real Catastrophe. ^ Philip, aged four, is in the habit 4§f going across the street to a nelghborfia house for milk. One day in Deceqa- ber he returned home with an emp|y bucket and a grave face. "We cant get any more milk," he announced In a tone weighty with the important* of his message. "The cOw's dried up." And, as we stared in surprii£. at him. he suddenly clinched the mas­ ter with an observation, evidently ot his own: "They don't think that ^ she'll thaw out till aprfa^" llneator. -r INSOMNIA •" ' Leads to Madness, If not Remedied !p.:' ̂ Time. "Experiments satisfied me, some *>- years ago," writes a Topeka woman*' "that coffee was the direct cause of th* insomnia from which I suffered te^ ribly, as well as the extreme nervous­ ness and acute dyspepsia which ma4t life a most painful thing for me. k "I had been a coffee drinker slnoa' childhood, and did not like to think that the beverage was doing me all thia harm. But it was, and the time cam* when I had to face the fact, and pro- tect myself. I therefore gave up coffa# abruptly and absolutely, and adoptqfl# Postum as my hot drink at meals. ^ "I began to note improvement in m|h1' condition very soon after I took dtti. Postum. The change proceeded grad*?, bally, but surely, and It was a matter of only a few weeks before I found my­ self entirely relieved--the nervousness passed away, my digestive apparatus was restored to normal efficiency, au$ i I began to sleep, reatfully and peac*» • fully. "These happy conditions have «o|$> ' tinued during all of the 5 years, and J am safe in saying that I owe them en­ tirely to Postum, for when I began drink it I ceased to use medicine,?* Read the little book, "The Road l#*^ Wellville,"ln pkgB. "There's a Reason^ : Ever read the above Utterf A Hf eac appear* from time- to time. TfcOfp, • - •re gYaalac, true, aad tall »t kUMS' • *Y : <£». tf ?. <«' Vi-i .•it J p - • 3; A - I '**"^86 y •

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