By Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Cdm lit j Mill Buck Dock, Minn.--"AdobI a year •go I wrote yon that I was rick and loould not do any of I my housework. My [sickness was called Betrofiexion. Whefe 1 would ait down I felt as if I could bo$ pound and did inst, m ?ov. told me and wiu. tmuui-iifr "' iirinn nt r.rni m BtAMi mDtnim Lectures cm *The World Movement* •4; OWYERSITY AULA THROiQED Modem CfVltbatlen la Compared With Former A§«s---&fie§ker la Hopeful for the Future" of M»nM|wdt .. BerlliJu---Before an audience , of tearnei men and officials ' of high mark, Theodore Roosevelt lectured Thursday in th® University of Berlin. Every seat in the aula was occupied, and many hundreds of requests for admission had to he denied. The dis tinguished American was Introduced sow I am perfectly | to Ms hsar®r» by the rector of th# MM vM cured, and have a I Mg baby boy." -- Mi* AJTNA AXSERSOK, Box l®( B&ck Mi-- ';. Consider This Advim. i iMO wnmwa should submit %ti a sSBfriU e&\ operatioc, which may m&va death, This snedieine for woroea baa for thirty years proved to be the most valuable tonic and invigoratorof the female organism. Women resid ing in almost every city and town in the United States bear willing test!, tnony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It cures female Ills, and creates radi ant, buoyant female health. If you are ill, for your own sake as well as lbs. Pinkham, at Linx^ Mms^ tmriUm all sick women to write her for advice. Her advice iafrett ftpd always help#ol» Persecute! your Bowels V '•.Mf €&RTEJt*3 LITTLE UVER * MW 10% mass sioksoagj; municipal, paving and sewer Ix>n4s. e% state and school war 10®/. • » /0 icfiMMiim nil Bcnsftt In Outdoor School ( before <0*0 National Assad- for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis recently. Dr. Henry Far- num Stoll of Hartford, Conn., said: "Every city should have one or more vf;. outdoor school.'* He recommended such institutions for ail delicate, so- called scrofulous or anaemic children, ' . and those with tuberculosis of the bones, who are now in ordinary schools. Doctor Stoll declared that twenty or forty per cent, of school children in iarge cities are infected fry* with' tuberculosis. By the.'-tpp _ of tu- " bereulin, It'was ascertained that W per vfe ;• cent, of the children from tuberculous j & homes were infected as against only 26 •vjL per cent, of those from supposedly £ ; healthy homes, It was also found that 50 per cent, of the frail children from ' healthy homes had the germs of the »-Vii dlsfaae, but 'thai"only 13 per cent of : JS thefdbust ehiidren 'froflfls'tlpdlaf; homes 1 > werethus atteeted, -; ' *". A,f , • Impowtgllon of Leechea#,;- u -...^i/l-^rililechts are enumerated by theJM- :«#* reau of statistics under its general head of animals, imported,, th©.total • j%±> value of the imports of this species ; in IMS having been fS,341; In 1907. $0,922;-In 1906. $4,494;,in 1 m, $3,862; in 1904, $3,t>S9; in 190g„ $8,240, and in ' 1902, tfe© commerce in Seeohas being Jftbus of as growing character . -t The totil . number of . leeches in- ported in the United States in the decade ending with 1908, is about $40.- 000. Leeches are imported fr«*> of duty. Snails were at osae time enu merated as an article of importation,' the records from 1894 to 189$ showing * snail* imported to thf extent of about $6,000, but the snail trade so dwin dled, showing only $24 of Imports In 1908, that the bureau discontinued its •tafteaa&ts of this article. • >?*•?• jsjfl I" If university. His uubject was "Th« World Movement,** and he spoke ia English instead of ia Gemaa m he at 05.© tils-; ^sitsadsd." B«gte^ing -wi® an eio*s«i«aft <»B2o®r the Qerman ra#e and its a«hiev«> ments, the lecturer aoon reached the main theme of his discourse, and re viewed the civilisation end culture, so far m we know them, of the earliest peoples and their cqntributions to the Modarn world. Be then continued: Modern Movement Begins. At last, a little over 400 yews a<n>, th® monmMit ft wosid eMi!- sation took up its Interrupted march. The beginning of the modern movement may fouchly be taken as errehror.l'rfn? with the discovery of printing, and with that serle* of bold sea venture® which culml- lltfM in t.h» jUaenwwr*- A#. * after these two epochal teats had begun to produce their full effects In Material and Intellectual life, it became inevitable that civilization should thereafter differ not only in degree hut even in kind from all that had gone before. Immediately after the voyage of Columbus and Vasco da Qtos there b^gaji a tremendous re* Hgious ferment; the awakening of intel lect went hand In hand with the moral uprising; the great names of Copernicus, Bruno, Kepler, and Galileo show that the mind of man was breaking the fetters that had cramped It: and for the first time experimentation was used as a check Span observation and thsorlsatlon. Since than, century by centut y. the changes have increased In rapidity and complex ity, and have attained their maximum la both respects during -he century Just past. Instead of being directed by om or tw»' dominant people®, a* was the cats* with all similar movements of tha past, the new movement was shared by many dif ferent nation*. From every standpoint It has been of Infinitely greater moment than anything hitherto seen. Not in one trat In many different peoples there has been extraordinary growth In wealth, In relation, in power of organisation, and mastery over mechanical activity and nature) rpmurcem, All this has fccon iwompanlal and gignitilsod by «n ten- mense outburst of energy and rsstleas Initiative. Tha result Is varied as It Is striking. Conquest of tha World. In the first place, representatives of this Slviflsation, by their conquest of space. Were enabled to spread Into all the prac tically vacant continents, while at the same time, by their triumphs In organisa tion and mechanical Invehtion, they ac quired an unheard-of military superiority as compared with their former rivals. To these two facts Is primarily due the further fact that for tha llrst time there Is really something that approaches a world civilisation, a world movement The •pread of the European peoples since the days of Ferdfnand tha Catholic and Ivan the Terrible has been across every sea and over every continent. In places the conquests have been ethnlo; that is, there has been a new wandering of the peoples, and new commonwealths have sprung up In which the people «atfrely or main ly of European blood. This la what hap£ ©encd In the temperate and tegioM of the Western Hemisphere, In Australia, lc portions of northern Asia and southern Africa, In other places the conquest ha* been purely political, the Europeans representing for tha most part merely a small caste of soldiers and ad ministrators. as isi most of tropical Asia and Africa and In much of tropical Amer ica. Finally, here a»d there Instances oc- eur where th«re has been no conquest at all. but where an alien people la profound ly and radically changed by the mars Im pact of western civilisation. There are of coarse many gr*««s be tween these different types of Influence, but the net outcome of what has occurred during the laJTt four centuries is that civi lisation of tha Europmn type now exer cises a more or less profound effect owr practically the entire world. There are nooks and comers to which Jt has not yet penetrated: tut there Is at present no Urge space of territory In which the gen eral movement of civilised activity does not wake Itself more or lees felt. This represents something wholly different from what has ever hitherto been seen. ie greatest days of Roman dominion jfluence of Rome J|rae felt ©vfor only ilatively small portion of the world's •urfaca. Over much the larger part of the world the process of change and develop ment was absolutely unaffected by any- : aid* for an mmmi, while and Shortcoming* were plentiful amony MSnWanfa Uttle aordidness of motive or •uch a (iuii iiiiiiiR, where across tills warp of so many Interests is shot the woof cf ;« rsiny purooses. dark and bright, strands soinher and bi are always intertwined; inevitably tl was corruption here and there 10 .#e Cttfl war; hut all the leaders on both aides, and the great majority of the enormous masse* of fighting • wen, .. wholly disre garded. and Wire 'wholly unlnWewsM' by* pscnnlsry coa«ide«fitions. ^ ';;.Waalth"and Pontics. .• Another striking contrast fa thtaeeeufci of mr>.odeTti civilisation as t^Mnpared with the later stages of thf Gra<eS»lMhi«t,or* classic civilisation Is •«- be n miSKta'th* relations of wealth and polltica. In. ctau»- •ic timee. a» the civilisation advanced to ward Its senith, politics became a recog nised means of accumulating great w«&!tb. Caesar Dra« again ana agam on the verge of bankruptcy: he spent an enormous fortune: and he recouped him self by the •««¥ which hs rsads of his polltlcal-miutary career. Augustus es tablished Imperial Rome on arm founda tions by th# *jm he made of the huge fortune he had acquired by plunder. What a contrast is offered by the careers of Washington and Uacoin! There, ws»e a _ . , =lil _ . few exceptions In. ancient days: bat the ethical, social, or political teac..«r, now f ot the Greeks and th# find echoes in both IsemSpphert*: and m ; jsomana, as their civilisations culminated, ever* continent. Frcm a new discovery la j money-making o» a large scale science te a new method c5 combating or j u Cjne of tht incidents of a succesnfu? applying Socialism, there ts m movement , career. Row all of this Is in sharp of w>te which can take pla&s in any part i contrast to what has happened within of the globe without powerfully affecting ; the last two or ftiree centu;1e*. During wetmm of people Sn Europe•. America, and i tim« there hft*'been a steady growth AB.8tra.Ja, in Aals. and AJriss. For weal , from the theory that money-making 2TJ°1 *5® *?>»>*«.?* » perinimwlM* ii, SWfciiC --' mile iir caoTCr cri?»n ever before, j So ttiuch for the geographical side of ] Ut mg «anda^ Jjss been' constantly «levateiS, and things whlcV; Wturt you do .here S Oermany. and wa also tarn to me what the far-oil com- ntonwislth of New SSRaland is doing. Whim a great Germka acieatlet Is warring against the most dr&ufed eiMutiiea of man- Mad. ersaturee of latin!teaimal ate* which the inicroscopa reveals to his blood, he may spend his holidays of study in cen tral Africa or in eastern Asia; and he must..know what Is accomplished in the laboratories of Tokyo, just as • he must know the details of that practical applica tion of science which has changed tha Isthmus of Panama from a death-trap Into what Is almost a health resort. Every progressive in China Is striving to Intro duce western methods of education and administration, knd hundreds of European and American books are now translated Into Chinese. The influence of European governmental principles i» strikingly il lustrated by the fact that admiration for them has broken down the iron barrier* of Moslem conservatism, so that their intro duction has become a burning question in Turkey and Persia; while the very unrest, fbe Impatience of Eurapea.fi cr Air.erie&n oontrol. In India, Egypt, or the Philip- ptnea, takes the form of demanding that the government be assimilated more close ly to what It Is In England or the United States. The deeds and works of any great th© preachings of any great uvnr nrTfs I irr NSAi «*!•* v« t GU1LTV AUVfilMAil F©»PS$ POISONING | COLONEL SWUHt. •hows Valwr^ofsStesI Car. That the steel ear is of gTfeat vahia aa a protectioii to passeng^s fc ' th# event of ooiUkion Wtus demoastratad In* a reoent clash of two trains la tnnnpl* Kaw Yiirb There was no such telescoping aa would probably have occurred With wooden cars, and the Injuries were merely such as resulted from the pas sengers being throws down by the -.shock of the collision. Friday the expansion of modern civilisation. 3ft".st only a few of the many and Intense ae- j , , _ „ . . . S ,;£!£T,Z 2l<SSUto«rSS I quest over natural forces. In Its searching | 1^5.^2,t, • Inquirr Imo about th. „«1 of thlnCT. ! ^322= « 'Steam and electricity have given the t race dominion over land and water such as it never had before; and now the con quest of the air is directly impending. As books preserve thought through time, so •he t^'egraph and the telejmotie transmit • ^ It through the space they annihilate, and • therefore minds are swayed ona by an other without regard to the limitations of space and time which formerly forced each community to work In comparative ImlaMAd . .*•_ to «V. ~II1:1 z~r mr with the brain. The machinery of the fac tory and the farm enormously multiplies bodily skill and vigor. Countless trained intelllgenosa are at work to taach us bow to avoid or counteract -the effects of waste. In the Realm of Intellect. The advances In the realm of pure Intel lect have been of equal note, and they have been both Intensive and extern*!va. Great virgin fields of learning and wis dom have bee® discovered by the tew, and at the same time knowledge has spread among the many to a degree never dreamed of before. Old men among us have seen In their own generation the rise of the first rational science of the evolution of life. The astronomer and tha chemist, the psychologist and the his torian, and all their brethren in many dif ferent fields of wide endeavor, work with a training and knowledge and method which are In effect Instruments of pre cision differentiating their labors from the labors of their predecessors as the rlfte Is differentiated from the bow. Th# play of new forces to as evident In the moral and spiritual world aa ta (ha world of the mind and the body. I rum i In <he the Jnf Mvlal Something Viaihl< **8bow me some tiaras. Want one for my wife." "Ves, sir. About what pricef" "Well, at such a price that i fcap gay: 'Do you see that woman, with Um tfera? She is my wife.* ** * ' - *• .Odd Fallows' Paper* .$/j ^IWght--He's going to call bla naw paper the Sausage Links. • Penman--Be in three Sectlona, pose.--Yonkers Stateaman, A cleair brain and Steady* dependable ncrv£B Gun via wealth aad fesn)* For their owner. - - Clear headedness and £ Strong, healthy body J I^fpend largely on the Right dements In R^ular fbq&and drin^, Coffee caffeliie^, A poisonous drug. Fostum is i^ch in the M •v> >>t? .1. y / > ' ? ««!'" «».»'i Fuml^ the vital That puts' ' 'Wlew fato body and brals* . l-i' jt*""'- i "iSlflMfS, ttilng that occu rred in the Roman «nu>ir •ad thosM communities the play of whose tafluenufi w«s felt ia action and reaction, and in inter-actton, among" themselves, were grouped Immediately around the Mediterranean. J*ow. however, the whole world is bound together mm never before; Use bonds are sometimes those at hatred rather than leva, hut they a«e !!••!• , ^MVwrtheleM. All tha Nations Linked. IVowning or fcnpeful. every man of lead- ssehlp In any - line ef theiq^t or effort, must now look beyond the halt* of bis Mm country. The student of sociology nay live In Berlin Or... St. Petersbwrg, Rome or London, or he may live in Mel- feoorne or San Francisco cr Buenos Aires; but In whatever city he lives, he most pay fcesd to the studies of men who live In «9*k of the other cities. When to Amer- yMJm One Danger of Clvllizstlan. One of the prime dangers of civilisation has always bean itu tendency to cause the loss of tha virile lighting virtues, of the fighting edge. When men get too com fortable atid^lead Uh> luxurious liven in ere Is always, danger lest the softness eat llko an acid Into their manliness of fiber. Tha barbarian, because of the very conditions of his life, is forced to keep and develop certain hardy qualities which the man of civilisation tends to lose, whether he be clerk, factory hand, merchant, or ex-en a certain type of farmer. Now I will not assert that In modern civilised society these tendencies have been wholly over come; but there has been a much more successful effort to overcome them than was the case In the early civilisations. TMi la curiously shown by the military history of the Graeeo-Roman period as compared with the history of the last four or five centuries here Irs Europe and among nations of European descent. In the Grecian and Roman military history the change was steadily from a citisen army to an army of mercenaries. In the days of the early greatness of Athens, Thebes, and Sparta. In the days when the Roman republic conquered what world It knew, the armies were filled with citisen soldiers. But gradually the cittsens re fused to serve in the armies, or became unable to render good service. The Greek states described by Polybius. with but few exceptions, hired others to do their light ing for them. The Romans of the days of Augustus had utterly ceased to furnish any cavalry, and were rapidly ceasing to furnish any Infantry, to the legions and cohorts. When the civilisation came to an end. -there were no longer citizens in the ranks of the soldier#. The change from the citieen army to the SHM? of meroanaries had been completed.-^ Modern Cltiians' Armies. . Now, the exact reverse has been the case with us In modern time*. A few centuries ago the mercenary soldier was the principal figure in most armies, and In great numbers of cases the mercenary soldier was an alien. In the wars of re ligion In France. In the Thirty Years* war In Germany, In the was* that Imme diately marked the beginning of the break-up of the great Polish kingdom, the regiments and brigades of foreign sol diers formed a striking and leading fea ture In every armya Too often tha men of the country In which the fighting took place played merely the ignoble part of victims, the burghers and peasants ap pearing in but limited numbers In the mercenary armies by which they were plundered. Gradually this has all changed, until now practically every army is s citisen army, and the mercsuary lias al most disappeared, while the army exists on a vaster scale than ever before in his tory. This Is ma among the military mon archies of Europe. in our own Civil war of the United States the same thing occurred, peaceful people hs we are. At that time more than two generations had passed since the War of Independence. During' the whole of that period the people had been en gaged in no life-and-death struggle; and yet. when the Civil war broke out. and after some costly and bitter lessons at the beginning, the fighting spirit of the people was shown to better advantage than ever before. The war was peculiar ly a yar for a priacfcK a war waged Y- '• * •WW--MI...I I. . I. ill 11*111 I ence is politics, but It is apt to be an In direct Influence; and In the advanced states the mterp suspicion that the wealth of public men Is obtained or added to as an thafi* ntiMlf f'«.rW»riS will them from public life. Spaaking generally, wealth may very greatly influ ence modem political life, but it Ip t^tac- quired political life. Optimistic for tha Future. " : Mr, Roosevelt called fcTOntl«"tC" the fact that hitherto every civilisa tion that has arisen has been able to develop only a few activities, Its field of endeavor being limited In kind as well as in locality, and each of these civilisations has fallen. What Is the lesson to us of tod*»y? he asked. Will the. crash come, and be all the more terrible because tf the Immense in crease in activities and area? To this he replied: 'personally, I (to not believe that Our civilization will falL' 1 think that oa the whole we have grown better and not worse. I think that On the whole the fu ture holds more for us than even the great past has held. But. assuredly, the drss.Tr,s c,i golden glory In ths fut".rs wit! not come true unless, hlgu of heart and strong of hand, by our own mighty deeds we make them come tri'e. We cannot af ford to develop any one set of qualities,' any one set of activities, at the cost of seeing others, equally necessary, atro phied. Neither the military efficiency of the Mongol, the extraordinary business ability of the Phoenician, nor the subtle and polish«d intellect of the Orssk availed to av^rt nation. We. the «<ten of today and of the fu ture. need many qiiaMtfe® ft we' are to do. our work ^e!!. We nerd firs? o? all and most Important of all. the qualities whiel stand at the base of individual, of family life, the fundamental and essential quali ties--the homely, every-drfy, all-important virtues, if the average man will not work. If he has not in him the will and the power to be a good husband and fa ther: If the average woman is not a good housewife, a * good mother of many healthy children, then the state will top pie. will go down, no matter what may be its brilliance of artistic development or material achievement. But these home ly qualities are not enough. There must. In addition, be that power of organisation, that power of working In common for % common end, iwhlch the German people have shown In such signal fashion during, the last half-century. Moreover, the things of the spirit are even more Impor tant than the things of the body. We can well do without the hard Intolerance and arid Intellectual barrenness ot what was worst In the theological systems of the past, but there has never been a greater need of a high and fine religious spirit' than at the present time. So. whila we can laugh good-humoredly at sem* of the pretensions of modern philosophy in Its various branches. It would be worse than folly on our part to ignore our Med of Intellectual leadership. ' Must Steer Middle Course.. Never has philanthropy, humanitarian- Ism. seen such development jut now; and though we must ail beware of the folly and the viciousness no worse than folly, which marks the believer In tha perfec* tlblllty of man when his heart away with his head, or when vanity usurps the place ©f conscience, yet we must remem ber also that It is only by working aloft# the lines laid down by the philanthropists, by the lovers of mankind, that we can be sure of lifting our civilisation lo a higher and more permanent plan# of well- being than was ever attained by any pre ceding civilisation. Unjust war Is to be abhorred; but woe to the nation that does not make ready to hold Its own in time of need against ail who would harm it and woe thrice over to the nation in which the average man loses th* fighting edge, loses the power to serve as a sol dier If the day of need should arise, It is no impossible dream to build up a, civilisation in which morality, ethical de velopment, and a true feeling of brother* hood shall alike be divorced from fals« sentimentality, and from the rancorous and evil passions which, curiously enough so often accompany professions of senti mental attachment to th® rights of man; In which a high inMerial development Is Uto things of the body shall be achieved without subordination of the thing* of th« soul: in which there shall b« a genu ine desire for peace and justice without loss of those virile qualities without which ao love of peace or Justice shall avail any race; in which the fullest development of scientific research, the great distinguish ing feature of our gsssisnt civilisation, shall yet not imply a belief that intellect can ever take the place of character-tor, from the standpoint of the nation as of the individusl. H Is character that Is the one vital possession. •K B««P Ufr-Slnce < - Wfght--PrKlbft0f'8 La Appeal c., . , * . - 3 ^ ' 5 . / ' V " V ' : MM-s*. was on Mtmdky found guilty of mur der irt the first degree and his ptinlsh- ment was fixed at life imprisonment. That he pbisohed &M wife's uncle, Col. Thomas H. Swop©, the Kansas Gfty millionaire, was the verdict reached by tha jury after titre* night* And j$Wo day#of deliberation,.' /s The physician will be sentenced in open courv.by .I^atshaw,. day of Friday. * The laW allows defease four days to flle a motion for a new trial. "Treat that prtstohttr the same A* any other," J^dge Latfh&w , $aid to. Oc»'ioty Marshal Joe E. Mayes. "Giro him few privileges and no luxuries." The custom of permitting prisoners to send out for their meals will apply in Doctor Hyde's case, but he must sleep la a cell. "I will file a motion for a pew trial and then take an appeal in the case," said Frank P. Walsh, chief counsel {or Doctor Hyde. The verdict came unexpectedly. Every attorney m ttie case had given up hope that th« jury, which had been Out since Friday night, would coma to an agreement. .When the annautanniUiwJhi^ th« verdict was'"'ready the"hews spread ' rapidly and every inch of space in the courtroom soon was occupied. , . ,-y; Little time was wasted in reading the verdict. The crowd heard it and at the marshal's orders arose and left the room without confusion. Judge Latshaw thanked each of the Jurors and they hurried home. * s "Oh, Clark!" cried Mi*. Hyde, as ; the Jury's verdict was read. ?&££ s&s*- threw her arms around her husband's neck and wept. As his wife patted him on the cheek Hyde sat motionless, staring at Judge Latshg^. When the words "imprisonment for life" ware read he showed the Srst sighs of 6* citement. Soon he regained posure, however, and worry, dearie,"" to Mrs. Hyde. Th* Handy Remedy for (Eruptta* Cattsed by Poison l¥y op Wood .' Poison is Resinol Ointment. I have used Resinol Salve for sev eral years. I was badly broken out with eruptions caused by Poison ivy. The itching was unbearable. My doe tor recommended Resinol. It did its work fine. Being subject to wood poi son, I now 'keep a .Jar of Resinol ob hand. I have told others of it who had like results. Jno. H. Kohl, Benton, Kan. As a mule is compelled to listen to his own vole?, we don't biaiao him for being a chronic kicker. oarsaparma Cures att blood humors, al§ eruptions, clears the complex: • ion, creates an appetite^ aid* digestion*, relieves that tiredl feeling, gi^es iH^or aftd vim. ^ 1 •/MS 'fce't It today. In. ustisM WpM farm _ tablets called Sarsatabs. 100 Doses fl. WESTERN CAMM IsMtsr ©f -SgifSfe tm of emigrants bsm tJM Oailed States C*s«d« wUi oobUBM." . PoUiosQwa--flysrid s T&tft toWsslwra Cuwda. and ws "hw* Is • PERRY DAVIS* PAI sruTS/rJeft 4w»« the pain and i inflammation frotc tttNysttisfns sad In wet bites. Sootfcos an# allays t.be swfn! Itching of noseaito M*«a. S5c, 85c and Ste feostit-.j. is what you are wortafeoui many wortfr While? . '• ' ̂ Mrs. Wmssows gmrtfctaff «nfl^na"i>*o mmt Twlrtft#-*fas.: -'Ihdimatioii.eSlaiiEitalc.noreaw'iQdevLie, JNsabottw. Never let natters coma to an opes rapture. m eras, f. they areatiil lowaoonrrl' ?r«o*he^o,o.. caa farmer® wlao made < t h e i r b o n a d u r i n g fl®M crop returns tfurtagr-MriuMea tatlae •tttecoostfy M»we«- Gemini strwrlw#, ?»»; ; RtMic wxi A ' htd In th* „ ,. ISO pte-eewtiiMi* at$3^e mnt acn» wtthin ««rt»fea e&mm. Ik&oota *n<& ekartihrn ta eve** ate j«> 'K •'i the rtcS«et,w«od<. w&tecma ltss^iw rates s«4 15 ' wits* HckM,<r« feothUnir nateriat For partieoiaraett seUJe*»" rtllwu rati Wm»-. write 4® S«g*% of tion, Ottawa, Can., m to Ot>venuneei AsaaW a*.S>»nH«a,«lf|liif»--alwWil *,|W.ia.iiwaw, mmm aa Tirwlirt M^., I><lm»llla «m. A. HtU, 1NNM., SHw»BiM».WIk (t; se address nearest roo.) <«) y-*&' !<tob«ir*ata* at my dnj stonsf Up C O L O R A D O . H O M E S T E A D S O N - M O F F A T R O A D F R E E T O Y O U for a Dime Ifhy speml a dolfa olCASCARBTS is «Hr»Pt«d--get C- Saves many ddmn mm*4 oa saadi i»M' that do not ewe, MOBeas nfiMr wi CASCARBTS. Boy a box WM--Wm week ' s t r e a t m c M -- p r o o f f t a C h e s a s r i l | : mi. #§ CAaeaaarrs Me a for a week's treatment, all drwnrisKi« h tb« world. Muuoa Is ftcres of land with riofe sotl, water and Sn« wimaM, on Road HomesMd Ml ined his 6<im' ' |)eBTer, Nonhwwt*™* PWidc Ejf .) Ib Bouts said: "Donft ; County, Colo. We have no land to sell--it's ab- 1 solutely free from the Government and now opes for settlement. Law allocs you to return hoaM I°2i9iml Doctor Hyde said: "I have not toft I foremonthH after Sling. Oa&BO bushelst® act* hoje. There -ill be another Wat- J TJSfc within ten minutes th was taken back to his cell. Mrs. Logan O. Swope was not in the tittwtwjflii when the verdk-t was read. ct now and get . ,iook, maps and . ten minutes the prisoner* lormatlon that tells bow to get this land frea. W. V. JOKES, Oaneral TrafBe XKaaagar Room 150 Majestic Bidg., PwnNttV OokiraiB MKAL E8TATA, LINK PURGED OF CONTEMPT 1 ' , ••• i Witness In Illinois Legislative Bribery' Inquiry Answers Question Pre- - - pounded by State's -Attorney. Springfield, 111.--Representative Mi* chael S. Link of Mitchell'was Monday' purged of his contempt of court when he went before1' the Sangamon county grand jury and answered the question i on ten seres.' smaii ana iui*© tracts, ra«r isnu. put to him by State s Attorney Ed: Wrlt*v-wmar urnu,Pmmm,omm^ - mund Burky in the legislative bribery rrEtKWA--Or. Cirar./. Tront Psetl s- now building: in Hrittsb Ct>l«nbte. be«v town between Kdmunton and. P*«c» Httpeft-- eenier of ttie lnuiouti ayricuitsml Balfcley valtay: tlw> ccnt«r or the ridjem coal <i»d mineral region of Irltlsh Columbia. Hallway wi.l soon be comi " t© fclkwa. L«ts selling ccw for 9180 to KOC wl' be worth ten times that much. Term* only 10 bats ce 10% mumtbly, no interest, no taxes, tor inforoiaUoo. North Owst IabAOaut*aW, Winch iildK-i Vwacouve*, B. C. rrai SCANDINAVIAJf SmLUQEMT* 1 NlEWHEM, lt> t.h« ch«lee«t spot oe the Paettte Coast. Fruit, nuts, dsirying and diversified fana- ins. Good soil, abundant water, ssre ero|>s.b!t»«U-fnl RurNmndingB, delightfui climate, good asifB-j bors, uear pity, schools and cbnrcbes. Inaepeodemco i ' Just Mamma and Willie tan* Laasoft In Olaolpllne for Uw »i cthtctlon of Foolish, Doting igm'Mm (No answiMRri "Willie!" ^ -, -Whatr "•<>?>*> "Stop pulling the iaoe cartatea." "ftut, ma, I atnrt goteg to tout them." ^Let them alone, ^Dyway." 4 (Willie gives th* ourtaina «a e*tra hard tag.) ^ > "You contrary bar. -iip* to whip jcnV j • "Naw." "Then dont i tfeose curtains again,' -Will if I want to." "Why, what do yon magin by taiktng to me like that? Qo to bedroom shut the door. Go r**ht is tl»e bedroom. I say!" lt - (Willie obeys and proceeds to ngk tbe paint off the door paaels.) •hall certainly fet. 9m atiok tf yon dont behave.* - .s'- ,-- ' (Willie kicks a ̂ llnter off the Arsss> tbg-table.) ' "Do you want to break mamma's (Willie kicks his mother.) "Papa, you will have to fetdb the •wfuh. lt% on the dock shelf la the kitchen." • . (Papa brings Um> stick. Willie erf- lapses on the floor, howling horribly.) "Hush, Willie! Ffcwr goodness sake, don't make so much noise. What will the neighbors think?" v (Willie howls as load at tie cga.) "listen, dearie, don't cry. Please dont cry. Mamma doesnt intend to whip yon. No, Indeed, mamma wouldn't hurt her aweet hoy for all the .world. Stop, darling, poor little frightened fellow J There, there, now.* "I'm hungry " "Bless his heart, he says ho la you, dear? Some bread and butter |rtth a little honey?" ^ *No, I want some chocolate*" , "We haven't any, Willie. Top ate tie last this alteram. Won*! an orange dot" . V.i4v.' ; .... - N o . " . . . _ r • ' "How about a nice dish of pineap ple with a big piece of sponge cakef" "1 say 1 want chocolates!" .' •Then you shall have some, dear. If you won't cry any more. Pspa, it seems too bad to make you go out doors after you have gotten comfort able for the evening, but I guess you'll have to run down to the drug store and buy a pound of tweets for mam ma's litUe starved lamw;--iiewack. - Cortvthcin8 Argument. In Judge Pollard's court in St Louis recently Mrs. Blanche Childress sought the law's rule against her husband for smiting her on the nose. "How did he strike you?" asked the Judge. "Show me." "All right,** replied the lady, and forthwith landed a terrific slap on Judge Pollard's features. "Enough." said the judge, aM fined the husband $&0. scandal In answer to t&e question; ' Did any person or persons in Saiigamdii county, Illinois, offer, or promise you any money, or other valuable thing in consideration of your vote in the Forty-sixth general assembly of thia state for a United States senator?" Mr. Link Is said to have replied "No." This was the only question put to him by the state's attorney, but Link is aald to have -told, the jurors and Prosecutor Burke that he would be glad to tell his whole story, but. for the fact that State's Attorney Way- maa at Chicago bad found'a Contra diction in bis testimony before the Cook county grand jury ahd bad threatened him with indictment ^ for -perjury if he told anything elsewhere. Following his determination -to delve Into the alleged "jack-pot" bri bery, State's Attorney Burke issued two subpoenas "duces treum" for John M. Glenn, secretary, and S. M. Hastings, treasurer, of the Illinois Manufacturers' association, together with the books of the concern. :\ ... 'j • i • •• mH'-'-'h A ACRK8 Park Reslon, - " 1.1dairy nock ooun - kiiace's Kamer "- on OHO TO 40,000 ACR Minne«ot«. "Perfe. uy" aays Kdiutr Wallace, "*W* _ . 'Dairyi»i«, the dally spot cash besiaess." Low prices. Exceptionally easy terms--43^0 to M.S0 per acre dowo, balance 8 to 10 yearly payments. tUrmer-lnveator, ••Opportunity " Is knocking your door. iSI WM B. OranaAi. urandriew, lows. wm e tbeta oS tin horss o' ^ ^ B r*e imi. PflH* Br.l &90imU. nptiisi lum hW4 i if OB BAUK--FIUOIIIDA--1W0 sciss, dry Pi ,M! vegetabieland; richest marl soil, earlieat ti yejfetab,^ UM.U. ,,VUV.« uw. w,., Sag secUon; KK.UOO.UU this winter, 70 acres tomatoes; neTls only small lots; w* guarantee to rent svsry for SI&JS0 yeSriy. Reqnest deseliption. <*• I* Miller, Box OS, Miami, Florid*. If OR 8AI.R or rent Spring City Hotel, Waukesha A lUfoiebed, eliwiitit. com^iodious. modern •*>m comn>odiou8, modern '!i» i adaiall*. crest money maker, alw proved farms lnj&lry belt, aoutbem Wieooniin. (CasM «iclrnst» > Writs Too Wisconsin. tthrreinentd, rnB6 si Imprc i Tuocsss Jones, aMg«a»|>, m'¥ AN IRRIGATED FARM IB JPeeosVsl-•O ley, Tex s. No trust, crops never fail, -flns climate, easy terms, Invest!**!* at_onee- I also have some Mlsaouri farms Wfils J • > a VS WITNESS KERBT Stenographer Who Told About Gl* vis Letter Is Discharged by • Secretary Baliinper, . Wssfaington.-HFYederick M. Kdrbyt the stenographer In the office of the secretary of the interior, who issued a statement regarding the LawJer memorandum on the Gl&vis charges to the president, was discharged Monday from the government service by Sec retary Ballinger. . Secretary of the interior Ballinger said that his action in discharging Kerby, and declaring him to-he' ^un worthy" was the only course1 left open l o h i m . « • , • i * m - * v.* , Rickard to ftefaree Flg^. ., >» San Francisco.--After an exceeding ly stormy discussion, in which Jack Johnson and Sam Berger were the principals, Tex Kickard was Monday mutually agreed upon as referee of tha Johnson-Jeffries boxing maj^^ext Fourth of July. - • ' < Body of Boy'lA Creelfe New York.--Tha body of William EL Rivers, the five-year-old boy who had been missing from his home in Flush ing since May 7, was found Monday floating in Flushing creek. One Hundred Fle* Sgds tn Ftamdsl Oakland, Cal.--Fire that destroyed an apartment house Monday morniag routed 100 lodgers clad only la their' night clothes. Four women were burned and bruised in escaping and a fireman was badly cut by failing gjagq. Disabled Steamer in Fort. Southampton.--The disabled steam er Kroonland of the Red Star line ar rived here Monday and wili be tied up for several days for repairs. The vessel broke a shaft at sea. B. mesly, jLewls- CHICAQO you witt agree you new ^ngfrNfi c4l|car good* - i K Tiger tastes good--be cause It is food. full fiavored, **• sweet. ' m •«#> Mi:-' (t{r JZ'/tii W»X y. 4-,/,. ;*,* . i'm-i FINE CUT i.# CHEWING TOBACCO 1s pat op fa air-tight, dngt-proof. pmUmm vvHiclt mt gold to ycm from a tin. wMi >m* originally packed. AIway* la. ,condition.' cheww »the tuminrP0"11 toeoo«o«y in wear «ad iHgaa ̂Ttf a boa. Everydohr, t»wy wlwi» STANDARD OIL CO.