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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 17 Nov 1910, p. 2

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The McHeniy Piaindealcr Published by P. G. 8CHREINER. McHENRY. ILLINOIS Build, do not knock. Is It really autumn at last? If a hen 1b a bird, what Is a bird? Dynamiters are criminals of the low* it type. There were high fliers even bef< M days of airships. •OT^} tm a dirigible balloon there Is n»(; where to go but away. Trv.Q«nS> named !t the "d! rigible" balloon should try again. Fly paper Is not a good antidote for typhoid, but it may be a preventive. TOLSTOI IS LOCATED COUNT IS DISCOVERED IN MONAS­ TERY AFTER RENOUNCING THE WORLD. WIFE TRIES TO END LIFE Novelist's Disappearance ana Q»s«f» tlon of the Countess and Their Nine Children Is Attributed by Many to His Failing Mentality. An aviation meet is equal to an opera season for bringing a spell of bad weather. Those customs inspectors are be­ coming so expert that they cao actuc.1- $y smell jewelry. Cholera has gone to Siberia--of Its own notion. If It would only stay there In perpetual exile! Now approaches the season when the chauffeurs of balloons will have to take their vacations. That woman Joy rider who stole cab­ bages seems to have had one con­ cealed in her drum-major hat. This country has raised 1.096,000,000 bushels of oats during the past season, not Including the wild variety. New York expects to succeed Paris as a center for women's fashions. A terrible responsibility, as fashions now fun! The world need no longer remain out of Joint. Surgeons, it seems, can make new joints that rival the original ones. , A common bouse fly can go 35 feet per second. Why doesn't It maintain this rate ef speed when headed the Other way? Doctors are telling how they repair broken bones with tenpenny nails. Woman doctors should do wonders with hairpins. St. Petersburg.--In the old monas­ tery of Koselsk, In the province of Kaluga, Count Leo Tolstoi, the social reformer and novelist, who has re­ nounced the worid and who disap­ peared several days ago, was found Saturday by a searching party. Simultaneously with the finding of the count, his wife, overcome by the desertion of her husband, is reported to have twice attempted suicide by drowning herself through a bole in the ice. She Is in a state of oollapse, and may not recover. The flight of the count bas made a painful impression. That be should desire to spend the evening of his days in solitude surprises no one ac­ quainted with his career, but that he should deliberately desert the mother of his nine children is difficult of be­ lief even In the light of his well- known eccentricities of character. The suggestion of a failing mental­ ity Is accepted by many in explana­ tion of the count's sudden action. TRAIN HITS CAR; SIX DEAD Michigan Centra: Express Crashes Into Heavily Loaded Street Coach at a Kalamazoo Crossing. Kalamazoo, Mich.--81x persons were killed Saturday night when the Michi­ gan Central express struck a Main Btreet car. Twenty-six other persona were injured, some fatally. Three bodies were removed from the pilot of the freight engine so bad­ ly mutilated that recognition is impos­ sible. The names of the known dead are: Ward Abbott, James Breese, Hazel Hart, Miss Bertha Hensler, Harry Holtz and William Shaffer. All of the dead and injured with one exception lived In Kalamazoo and were passengers on the street car. That chauffeur who is going to drive •a automobile to the top of a volcano In Hawaii would better wait until he gets an airship. ALEXANDER S. CLAY IS DEAD In Oregon bear hunts are being made successfully with automobiles. But human victims saw their power of destruction first In five of the nine compete months of 1910 American Imppra have been In excess of exports/ We are buying more than we sell. / A Connecticut n^an heard a joke and hiccoughed for eight days. Possibly, like those Connecticut clocks, it was sn eight-day Joke In Los Angeles a pneumatic barber chair exploded and nurt a/man. Thus we see that excessive luxury carries its own punishment. United States Senator From Georgls Expires Suddenly From Can­ cer of the Stomach. Atlanta, Ga.--United States Sena tor Alexander Stephens Clay died sud­ denly In the Atlanta canltarium, to which he was taken ten days ago in the hope of that special treatment might prolong his life. The cause of ceath Is given as dila­ tion of the heart. Senator Clay has been In ill health for a long time, the physicians saying that he suffered from acute Indiges­ tion. It Is generally understood, Low ever, that his real ailment was can­ cer of the stomach. YOUNG FOR DOLLIVER'S SEAT That a dealer In decayed eggs has been lined $200 is a pleasing and In­ structive fact. The public gets the j pleasure and the dealer the instruc tlon. It is rumored that Wall street may hereafter be opened with /prayer. Prayer may not be what Wall street needs most, but it will undoubtedly help some. Postal authorities in Madagascar are arranging for the carrying of mails on island by aeroplane. However, It probably will be some time before the airship will succeed rural free delivery In the United States. Gov. Carroll Appoints Des Moines Editor as United States Sen­ ator From Iowa. Des Molne*. Ia.--Gov. B. F. Carroll has appointed Lafayette Young, editor of the Des Moines Capital, as United States senator from Iowa to succeed the late Jonathan P. Dolllver. Senator Young will serve until the next legislature meets, on January 8. It will be the duty of that legisla­ ture to elect a senator to fill the un­ expired term of the late Senator Dol­ llver, which ends in 1813. Mr. Young was born In Iowa in 1848. Most of his life he has devoted to the newspaper profession. FIND WIRES UNDER MAINE A Pittsburg man is In trouble be­ cause he thought It was cheaper to get married than it was to live singly and learned differently too late. A lot of other men have had the same experi­ ence To a cold and backward season In Europe, with serious insults to crops, have been added a number of destruc­ tive floods, the latest of which is that in the vicinity of Barcelona, Spain. America has enough weather eccen­ tricities, but the old world has been the worst sufferer this year. Divers Discover High Tension Conduc­ tors of Electricity Beneath Bat­ tleship In Havana Harbor. Havana, Cuba.--A large quantity of Insulated copper wire, such as is used for electrical currents of high tension, has been found by divers under and about the hull of the Maine. The wire now lies on board the ves­ sel Manuellta, presumably to be exam­ ined by authorized experts in due course. That four-toed horse found In the "bad lands" of Wyoming and reputed to be the ancestor of the present equine race, undoubtedly has great In­ terest as a scientific find. But as a show to attract the multitude he prob­ ably will not be In the same class with the "woolly horse" of earlier days. Two Shot In Mexican Riot. Gaudalajara, Mex. -- Cartes B. Carothers a real estate dealen shot and killed Jesus Loza. a fourteen-year- old Mexican boy, and woulded Pru- dencio Chavexl, a,-.gendarme, in de­ fending his home against a riotous attack by Mexicans Saturday. Carothers surrendered to the author­ ities and was lodged in the state peni­ tentiary. One of the scientists declares that In 100 years all the people of New York will be living underground. He must think they are going to so]v« th« problem of getting better air under ground before the Ippa^Jof another century. The crown prince o^tjiervla Is de­ sirous, according to a rfjjbe.nt report, of marrying a rich Amej^cku girl. After one has looked over the supply of Servian girls one wonders why the crown prince insists that the Ameri­ can girl must be rich. RFNF W WAR ON MUSE RULES MANY SUPPORT MOVE TO CHUB SPEAKER'S POWER. Harmony Is In Peril If Senior Mem­ bers of Committees Do Not Get Chairmanship** Washington.--It Is anticipated that when the house of representatives insets next month that the ques­ tion of taking away the speaker's power to appoint the committees will be taken up and the matter fought to a finish. This time It is not unlikely that the iiioveiueat wili receive the sup­ port of Speaker Cannon and his al­ lies, inasmuch as the next assign­ ments will be made by the Demo­ crats. Interviews with Representatives Murdock of Kansas and Norris of Ne­ braska indicate that they intend to lose no time In reopening the fight waged by insurgent Republicans last session which reformed the rules and deposed Speaker Cannon. Some members of the house believe that if the power to appoint commit tees is taken away from the Demo­ cratic speaker and handed over to the house membership all hope of har­ mony in the Democratic ranks may be abandoned. On the other hand It Is pointed out that harmony also would suffer from a maintenance of the seniority rule, as that rule would give to the south the chairmanships of all of the great committees and leave unrecognized the new Democratic membership from northern and western states. Under the seniority rule the chairmanship of the committee on ways and means, the most Important of all, would go to Underwood of Alabama, unless Champ Clark of Missouri, who Is now tho ranking minority leader, should fail to capture the speakership. THE NECESSARY mB. ",o! & ELECTION RESULTS mm a*, mar Arm, NATIONAL. 44 Bu= to the Aeri ki ho»Tf yield, tent that"# -what Jotm KenneSy of nsottton. jrom It "" Senate-- ifcow Republicans .»..***<•«. 61 Democrats 41 Republican Plurality .. it House-- , Republicans 16% m. -- JLTCTLUUVi Bl» www Pluralities Detn. 66 Rep. 43 Tfte Music Lover Must Csygh Up !f He Wants the Cpara Cssopsny M These Cough Up These. BLOWS UP WARSHIP AVIATOR HURLS BOMBS AT VES­ SEL AND SOON WRECKS IT. LYNCH INQUIRY IS BEGUN Governor of Texas, st Request of Secretary Knox, 8tarts Probe Into Execution of Rodriguez WAR EXPERTS ON THE SCENE Thrilling Demonstration Is Given st Baltimore of What May Be Expect­ ed From Air Craft in Time of War. San Antonio, Tex.--A dispatch from Eagle Pass, Tex., says that rioting by Mexicans took place across the river at Cludad Porfirio Diaz Friday. The residences of several Americans were stoned, including that of United States Consul Luther Ellsworth. No one was injured. Washington.--Complying with a re­ quest made by Secretary of State Knox, an inquiry was begun Friday by Governor Campbell of Texas 'nto the lynching of Antonio Rodriguez at Rock Springs November 3. Word to this effect was received e* the state department, andNintil the re­ sult of the inquiry is learned definite reply will not be given to the request of the Mexican government by Am­ bassador De La Barra that official ex­ planation be made of the incident. It is believed here that the Mexican government will be content with this course and will do its utmost to pre­ vent further hostile demonstrations against Americans. Fifty-one men arc In Jail in Mcxlco City for acts of vandalism during the riots, according to information re­ ceived by the state department from United Spates Ambassador Wilson. The ambassador says the streets are being patroled and he doos not expect further acts of violence. The Mexican authorities have furnished ample pro­ tection for the American embassy. Mexico City. Mex.--To guard against a possible repetition of the anti-Amer­ ican riots, the government Friday is­ sued orders forbidding bull fights next Sunday. Quiet prevails In this city. Special dispatches from Gaudalajara confirm reports of violence by a mob, actuated by the same unfriendliness toward Americans responsible for the demonstrations here. At Guadalajara mob of students and others started for the American consulate, crying 'Death to the 'gringos!'" The police prevented the rioters from reaching the consulate building, but after listening to Inflammatory speeches the crowd vented its wrath on American-owned property. It Baltimore. Md.--An aviator dropped bombs upon the deck of a battleship, as he circled in the air far above It and blew the water craft almost to pieces. One bomb went down the aft funnel exploding In the boiler-room and com­ pletely wrecking the machinery of the ship, beside ripping a hole in the bot­ tom. Another bomb struck the deck near the forward turret and disman­ tled two 12-lnch guns and killed every man in their crew. A third landed near the conning tower and put the ship's steering gear out of commis­ sion. All this happened "constructively" and at the aviation meet Where a thril­ ling demonstration of what airships may be expected to do In time of war was given by several of the aviators. Latham was the most successful, scoring several hits on the "battle­ ship," which was outlined on the grass. He fired six shots in all and scored 15 points. Drexel in his Blerlot followed La­ tham in the bomb-throwing contest. His first shot bit the deck. He was flying fast. Drexel's second shot was a fine hit. His sixth bomb struck the deck. His official score was given as 6. He made no bull's eyes. What the crew of the battleship could have done to the aviator while he hovered 200 feet above them was not demonstrated. DEITZ GIVES $40,000 BAIL He Is Released But Rearrested on Charge of Attempting to Sheet Man In Blow to Women In Arizona. Phoenix. Arts.--Woman's suffrago received a blow when the constitution­ al convention Friday defeated the Con­ nelly proposition to submit the qui tlon^a referendum vote. A Gotham contemporary says that a dead clerk in a county there stole the public funds. It must be a lively place for grelt where even the dead ones keep on stealing. 8ccond Posse After Outlaw. Lexington, Ky.--Jake Noble, who has intrenched himself In the moun tains to resist arrest for murder, will have a still larger army to face, a sec­ ond posse of fearless men start­ ed Friday to get him, alive. " A woman who has reached the age •f ninety advises her less mature sis­ ters In order to enjoy longevity to "swfnj and avoid corsets." The sufteii AIT sex will consent to swim or dive portunely, but as to avoiding corsets or being out of the fashion, it would sot do that even. If it enabled them to attain 4m age of US. 1 .z's ? s Refuse Request of Pope. Berlin.--The Tsegliche Rundschau will refuse the Vatican's request that Roman Catholic professors of the­ ology be compelled to take the tost oath against modernism. Girl Desd, Justice Held. Alva, Okla--The body of MIM op-^Mary Oates. clerk In the office of the county clerk, was found In a room back of the office of N. J. Miller, Justice of the peace, Thursday. Mil- lor Is under arrest. CHINESE MOB BURNS CHURCH Gentry Foils Rioters In Attempt to 8lsy Presbyterian Missionaries Who Flee. Hongkong.--Mall advices from Linchou, in Kwang-Su province, report that rioters have burned and demolished numerous buildings there, including the American Presbyterian church, hospital and college, and pro­ ceeded to Tsol Tuen Po, Intending to slay the missionaries. The gentry, however, assisted the latter to es­ cape In boats to Canton. Three battalions have left Canton to quell the disturbances. The British gunboat Sandpiper Is also proceeding thither. The mob was enraged at of­ ficials numbering their houses, be­ lieving this was an excuse to Impose taxation. Haywird. Wis.--Attorneys Zabel and Schultz, head of the Deitz defense committee, arrived here Monday from Eau Claire, where they received Judge Wickham's approval of the bonds of $40,000. The bond was approved and record­ ed after which procedure Deitz was notified that for a time at least he was again a free man. His wife and Clarence were overjoyed and quick­ ly bringing his overcoat. Clarence as­ sisted his father to put it on and stepped out on the porch of the Jail. However, his period of freedom was very short. Barely had the overcoat been placed on him. when Sheriff Madden read a warrant to him for the alleged attempted shooting of Pat­ rick McGln on May 8, 1904. and once more the famous Cameron Dam de­ fender was placed behind the bara. BUST IN MINE KILLS FIVE Eighteen Are Hurt in Explosion at Panama (III.) ColHery--Fifty Workers Are Rescued. Ssglnaw Publisher Is Dead. Saginaw, Mich.--Charles H. Peters, sixty-two years old, publisher and founder of the Saginaw Evening News, dropped dead of apoplexy Sat­ urday. He was one of the youngest drummer boys la the Union war. James F. Hunnewell Is Desd. Boston.--The death of James Ftoth- ingham Hunnewell, the author, was announced Sunday. Mr. Hunnewell was born in Charlestown In 1830. He wrote many books, largely of a his­ toric nature. Breaks Bone Buttoning Collar. Los Angeles, Cal.--'While trying to button a collar on a button that was tod large, Thomas Cawley, a boiler- maker. exerted himself too violently Thursday and fractured his oollar bone. Hlllsboro, 111--Five miners were killed and 18 were Injured In an ex­ plosion in the Shoal Creek Coal com­ pany's mine at Panama, a mining town In the southern part of Montgomery county Friday. Fifty men who were wording in the section of the mine In which the explosion occurred were rescued, ac­ cording to the mine managers. Alto­ gether. 350 men ware underground at the lime, but 300 of them were In no danger. The cause of the explosion Is not known. The dead and Injured wore burned by the flames of the explosion. The mine was not set on fire. G. A. Murray, chief clerk in tho mine offices, denied the report that SO men still were in the mine. Owing to the mutilation of the bodies, the dead have not been Identified. Illinois Riches Grow. Springfield, III.--The aggregate value of all classes of property In the state of Illinois, as fixed by the state board of equalisation Saturday, Is $6,- 599,106,928. This Is an Increase of |12S,160.fi78 over the aggregate value one year ago. Found Guilty of Murder. La Crosse, Wis.--Matt Ruegen, who shot and killed John H. Studler, June 17, following a dispute over wages, was found guilty of murder in the first degree Saturday. SAVINGS AREJAISM FAST REPORT SHOWS DEPOSITS IN-- , CREASE MILLION A DAY. Aggregate of Accumulations for Last Fisoal Year Passes the Four Billion Mark. Washington. -- Nine million Amer­ icans in moderate circumstances --the kind of people who keep savings bank accounts--saved an average of $24.77 each during the current year in spite of the high tariff and the in­ creased cost of living. These facts became public through the publication of a report by Comp­ troller of the Currency Murray. They show beyond cavil that the country is prospering, and that a share of that prosperity--whether a fair share or not--is going to places whor0 it will do the most good. A Deposits in the 1,769 savings banks during the year Increased to more than 14,000,000,000. The average de­ positor's account was $445.22, Just $24.77 above the average of the year before. There are 300,000 more sav­ ings bank depositors than there were a year ago, and the total of the de­ posits has swelled $367,000,000 during the year. These statistics, compiled in the treasury for the second time In the history of American banking, in­ clude also the reports from 7,145 na­ tional banks &uu 15,345 state and pri­ vate banks. State banking superintendents co­ operated with the national bank sys­ tem to make what is practically a uni­ form report of banking conditions In the country. Banking capital employed in the United States increased $80,000,000 during the year. Individual deposits in all the banks increased more than $1,240,000,000, and the aggregate as­ sets Increased $1,355,000,000. The banks, however, are holding about $31,000,000 less In cash than they did in 1909. 1SKNATS SEATS LOST. B EVE RIDGE Indiana HALE Maine BURKETT Nebraska KEAN New Jersey DEPEW .... . ............ New York Dick ................ Ofai« WARNER ....... Missouri SCOTT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wes t Virginia CARTER Montana GIVES HIS LIFE FOR OTHERS Engineer Turns Over His Oxygen Helmet That Mine Victims Msy Reach Surface. Delagua, Col.--The bodies of 85 men were found Wednesday In the north entry of the Victor American Fuel company, where the explosion originated. They were brought out slowly over the debris, but not all were Identified. Willis Evans, engineer of the Colo­ rado Fuel and Iron company at Pri- mero. gave his life In the rescue of four miners taken out alive. He came to Delagua with the rescue car of the Colorado Fuel and Iron company The rescuers worked their way along the entry fend heard the faint tapping of a pick on solid rock, the wireless call of the miner. They attacked tho fallen mass of rock that blocked the entry with renewed hope. When they tore through the cave they found four Slav miners alive at.d unhurt. They were 2.600 feet from the surface, and the passages were filled with after­ damp. The rescuers feared to take the Imprisoned men to the surface without helmets, and without a mo­ ment's hesitation Evans and onto of the other rescuers took off their hel­ mets and gave them to two of the res­ cued men and waited for the return of the rescue part.-. When the rescuers returned Evans had disappeared. The rescue party supposed he had followed them out without a helmet and went out with­ out searching for him. They discov­ ered ne had not reached the surface and another party was sent in after him. MAKE4J* OF NEXT CONGRESS. mo 1908--• Senate. House. Houm. R. D. R. D. SL D. Alabama 2 .. 9 .. » Arkansas ,. 2 .. 1 .. 7 California j 8 ., 8 .. Colorado 11.. 3 .. i Connecticut St ... 4 1 I .. Delaware 1 1 1 ,, 1 .. Floriaa, , 8 .. H .» t Georgia.... S .. 11 .. U Idaho | 1 .. 1 .„ lUinols I .. 14 11 It « Indiana 8 1 12 S 11 Iowa 2 .. I 2 10 1 Kansas t .. I ., I .. Kentucky 1 1 S # t S Louisiana 2 .. 1 .. t Maine 112 2 4.. Maryland ... 2 1 6 S I Massachusets 2 .. 10 4 11 t Michigan i .. I# 2 12 .. Minnesota 2 ., S 1 9 1 Mississippi "j 8 .. S Missouri .. X 7 » • 10 Motitmrffe 1 1 i .. 1 .. Nebraska 1 1 2 8 t S Nevada 1 1 1 .. .. 1 New Hampshire 1 .. 2 .. 2 .. New Jersey 1 1 8 7 7 2 New York j 1 15 22 28 11 North Carolina 2 .. 10 10 7 North Dakota 2 .. 2 .. 2 .. Ohio l l e 15 18 S Oklahoma 2 2 8 8 2 Oregon 2 .. 2 .. 2 .. Pennsylvania 2 .. 22 10 27 I Rhode Island 2 .. 112.. South Carolina 2 .. 7 .. 1 South Dakota 2 .. 2^ .. 2 .. Tennessee 2 2 8 2 8 Texas 2 .. 18 .. 18 Utah 2 .. 1 .. 1 .. Vermont 2 .. 2 .. 2 Virginia 2 2 8 1 9 Washington 2 .« 8 .. I .. West Virginia 1 1 1 4 1., Wisconsin 1 .. • 2 10 1 Wyoming 2 .. 1 .. 1 .. Totals 51 « M8 228 2tt 172 Majorities 55 47 .. Washington.--A majority of approx­ imately 55 in the bouse of represen­ tatives and a gain of at least eight seats in the senate are the results ot» tained by the Democrats at the elec­ tion. Indiana, Maine, Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Ohio. Mon­ tana and West Virginia are the states which have elected Democratic legis­ latures that will choose successors to Republican senators. The margin on Joint ballot in the Indiana legislature will not be great, but It is sufficient to insure the election of John W. Kern as successor to Senator Beveridge. Champ Clark, representative from Missouri and present minority leader in the house, is an avowed candidate for speaker of the Sixty-second con­ gress, and It Is almost ccrtain he wll« be elected to that position with very little If any serious opposition. in the contests for state offices In many of the states the Democrats were as successful as they were In the congressional field. In some In­ stances states which were formerly counted on as strongly Republicah, re­ versed the old order and chose Demo­ cratic officials. In New York John A. Diz, the Dem­ ocratic candidate, was elected over btlmson, Roosevelt's candidate, by a majority of 65,000. In Massachusetts Eugene N. Foss, Democrat, was elected governor after a hotly-contested campaign. New Jersey stepped into the Demo­ cratic column by electing as governor. Wood row Wilson, president of Prince­ ton university. Ohio re-elected Judson Harmon by €0,000; Connecticut, which was Repub­ lican In 1908 by 44,660, elected Sim­ eon E. Baldwin by 3,500. Massachu­ setts, which was Republican in 1908 by 110,000, chose E. N. Foss by 34.000; Colorado elected John F. Shafroth, Democrat, by 15,060; Iowa went Re­ publican by a majority of 15.000. Convict Stabs Official*. Concorn, N. H.--Armed with a knife which he had wrested from a "trusty," John Doe. a life convict In the state prison here. Friday attacked two prison officials, wounding one probably fatally and the other slightly. The victims are Deputy Warden Frank R. Bailey, whose condition is crttical, and Dr. Ralph E. Galllnger. prison ohyslHan and son of Senator Jacob H. Galllnger. Noted Vaudeville Man Dead. Chicago.--Charles E. Kohl, one of the most conspicuous figures in Amer­ ican vaudeville management, and one of the men accredited with raising that form of entertainment to Its pres­ ent plane, died at his summer resi­ dence In Oconomowoc, Wis., Saturday. Held in $21,000 Swindle. New Orleans.--Charles P. Converse^ charged with swindling the First N* tional bp nk of Dallas, Ore., out of $21,- 000 by means of worthless checks, was arrested la this city FYfr> Say- Elected to Office; Ends Life. Trenton. N. J.--John T. Wayman, Jr., who was elected to the city coun­ cil here on the Democratic ticket, com­ mitted suicide Friday by hanging. Financial troubles, it Is thought was the cause. Troops to Fight Epidemic. Lansing, Mich --Rmallpo* is re­ ported in SO. localities in 14 counties of Michigan and state troops were or­ dered Friday to act as quarantine guards at the state Home tor the Veeble-Minded at Lapeer. Mum:': Motorman Cork well Qoee Insane. Richmond, Ind.--B. T. Corkwell, the motorman responsible for the Klngsland traction horror some weeks ago, was admitted to the In­ sane hospital here Sunday. Harding Will Quit Polities. Columbus, O --Warren G. Harding, defeated Republican candidate for governor, who for 12 years has boen active In state politics, Thursday an­ nounced his retirement from politico. With his wife he will leave soon for a trip to the orient Gold ftueti to Australia. New York. -- Glowing accounts reached this city Thursday or wonder­ ful gold discoveries in the district of Tllgarn. West Australia Tne rush f tho fields ooatlnoes unabated. STATE GOVERNORS. Plurality. Alabama--Emmet O'Neal (D.) 60,000 California--Hiram W. Johnson (R.). 25,000 Colorado--John F. Shafroth (R.).... 15,000 Connecticut--Simeon E. Baldwin (D.) 8,500 Idaho--James H. Brady (R.). 1,000 Iowa-- B. F. Carroll (R.) 18,000 Kansas--W. R. Stubba <R.) 8,000 Massachusetts - Eugene N. Fobs (D.) TT,98? Michigan--Chase 8. Osborn (R.> 45,52? Minnesota--A. O. Eberliart (R.) 78,000 Nebraska--Chester H. Aldrlch (R.).. 5,000 New Hampshire--Kobt. P. Bass (R.) 7.000 New Jersey--Wood row Wilson (D.).. 80,000 New York--John A. Dtx (D.) 88,000 North Dakota--John Burke (D.).... 8,000 Ohio--Judson Harmon (D.) 82,067 Oklahoma--Lee Cruce (D.) 5,000 Oregon--Jay Bowerman (R.) 5,000 Pennsylvania--J. K. Tener (R.).* 20,000 Rhode Island--Ahram J Pothier (R.) 908 South Carol1 na--Coleman J. Blease <D.) flo.000 South Dakota--James H. Vesey (R.) 12,000 Tennessee--Ben W. Hooper (Ind. D) 16,908 Texas--O. B. Colquitt (D.) 180.000 Wisconsin--Francis E. McOocem(R.) 15,000 Wyoming--Joseph M. Carey (D.).... 5,000 Not ft he Reason. "So you want to marry my daugh­ ter, sir?" said the grouchy old **Ye-yes, sir," said the youth. "Do you take her for a fool?" "Ob--no-n-no, sir. That is not tho reason I want to marry her!" Reached His. Mrs. Crlmsonbeak--They say tho shortest way to a man's heart Is through bis stomach. Mr. Crlmsonbeak--Well, dear, your biscuits always do give mo heart­ burn!--Yonkers Statesman. From Missouri. "Oh, well, the landlady's heart Is an right." like a piece of It, then; she has fod us nothing but second-rate hash and liver during tho week that I have boarded here." Net a Linguist. **H*r French is execrable." •* Useerable?' Why, her French la as bad as her SpanlSh!" "I didn't know she ooald speak Spanish at alL" "She cant" •prtn* Wti«atsn ©so. Begcirts from other d istricts \ a {.hat prof- nee show*<totber excel­ lent results--sncis a* *,» 000 bashels of wtet from 120 acres, cr Kl-| btj.peraere. 86,86and#8 bussha 1 j i eld g were n«aa. erosas. As as 18f bushels of oats to the acre were threshed fro® Alberta fleJAsIn 1810. The Silver Cup at the ne«Bt Hpoust Fair w»saw»nS«a totb# A i-mfenirnent.fef tte ezhibktof strains,grasses a®« ItoJu-riAuf fields tor 1910 com« aiso from Saskatchewan MfinHoh" ia Western Csnafl*. . Free of lflO ami pr*. Amotions of JH.6© a<ires (at $S peyacrsjsrs to be irnd tine ckwicest districts. Schools convenient, ell* mate ©xeoileist, soli tho very host, »l!n ays close at bsnii, te a 1! A I n lumber cheap, rueieHBjr sua MMimsblc to price, wsto; easllv j>roeoife^» aatxea farming ssnrawh Vrlto ae to be&s. piaoo tar set* tlement, settlers" tow railway rates, descrlptlT*> tUnM,rat«S "I.ARt Bent West" {sent free on application I- and of Ik* r iBfornass- tton. to SDD'I of ImuigTation, Otliiwst, CH:.tftp fjac&*MAN Agent. (91) C.J. Bmsnktom. *18 fmilw Tnwiul iMr., la4>£ai>pbU«| *« JiJ.,*«!»•>* BmElASLE BARGAIN IN BtM. • FK.'I'-j SOCTHBBSf <;AluSF«B?IIA. Sta •rata susa sliaila rastcii w miles iv.vsnSi (roaa bonee, 8 largo 5>ar:*.e. Many «ti»rl»iMti!i SPRING*. 3W ACRCHA OMSIGE, LEMUM &RW£ lend. 2iCC in oro iu, Balanco pasture, Iucctm st /par ©8,000, Price 886,00 per aom, HnU os^K balance easy terms. Joseph Oolexnan. AgU, fio. iM si nit St., .Long Be&cb, Cal. ALABAMA PLANTATION BAEGAIIL 6,400 acres, i tulles from R. R. Fine residence, 11 bouses. Pays orer 10% from 1700 acres in cii.H>vat!aBL Mleal climate. Must sell, only 811.00 per aore. M ~ BAKN1R. MU8 ltd Birmingham WALiTHR Ala. ATMM, Sterns or Saskatoon City Property, for fall tafot* tatSon, write G. 0. Clar ~ ~ eforence, Royal Bank. ire, Saskattmi, Bo* ilia QEM) Sl.OO (stamps) leant, with license to oast C "Lnoas Inn Method*'(proven, 7R nse, MW feton. Ohio) of ourlng Ham and Bacon of wests ilia -Torksliirc-Smithflekl excellence. No paf«s^ ptmli iebei iheme. Otto volume, W pages; Bnaltsh, GenoaMfc Sps,nlsh, Warrea Russell; OhJa» LADIES ' BEAUTIFY YOUR FACC P«w? Denaa Bosette face bleach anf? frookie iwnona fersnsnle 10?-, tlMt. 15** Rates Are,,, (PMmgfc "IXfmtmmm SE.fiaS«nMMS.Wiaafei Utgton.DXX Books free'. Hlrffc PATENTS I & O'S 'ME. r>» A, IS/1 I Even MoUwt-. Little Bob was much distressed bo- cause tho birthdays of his sister Ade­ laide and Ms baby brother were going to arrive before his did. "AH the burfdays before mine," ho mourned. "Couldn't you make mine come ftrit, muvver?" "No,' interposed Adelaide, decisive­ ly, "nobody can change your birth* 4ay--not' fiyWfif mother!" BABY WASTED TO SKELETON "My little "6dn, when about a year had a half old, began to have sores con)o out on his face. I had a physi­ cian treat him, but the sores grew Worse. Then they began to come out on his arms, then on other parts of his body, and then one came on his chest, worse than the others. Then t called another physician. Still ho grow worse.. At the end of about a fear and a half of suffering he grew so bad that I had to tie hlB hands In cloths at night to keep him from scratching the sores and tearing tho flesh. He got to be a mere skeleton, and was hardly able to walk. "My aunt advised me to try Cutl- eura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. I sent to a drug store and got a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of the Oint­ ment and followed directions. At tho end of two months the sores were all well. He has never had any sores of any kind since. I can sincerely say that only for Cuticura my child would have died. I used only one cake of Cuticura Soap and about throe boxes of Ointment. "I am a nurse and my profession brings me Into many different fam­ ilies and it Is always a pleasure for me to tell my story and recommend Cuticura Remedies. Mrs. Egbert Shel­ don, Litchfield, Conn., Oct. 23, 1909." Its Advantages. "There Is one appropriate use of a good poker hand." "What is that?" "It will shovel in the money." DRINK WATER TO CURE KIONEY8 AND RHEUMATISM The People Do Not Drink Enough Water to Keep Healthy, •ays Weil-Known Authority. "The numerous cases of kidney and bladder diseases and rheumatism aro mainly due to the fact that the drink­ ing of water, nature's greatest medi­ cine, has been neglected. Stop loading your system with med­ icines and cure-alls; but get on tho water wagon. If you are really sick, why, of course, take the proper medi­ cines--plain, common vegetable treat­ ment, which will not shatter tho nerves or ruin the stomach." To cure Rheumatism you must make the kidneys do their work; they aro the filters of the blood. They must be made to strain out of the blood tho waste matter and acids that causo rheumatism; the urine must be neu­ tralise.? so it will no longer be a source of Irritation to the bladder, and, most of all, you must keep these aclda from forming in the stomach. This is the cause of stomach trouble and Xtoor digestion. For these conditions you can do no better than take tho following prescription: Fluid Extract Dandelion, one-half ounce; Compound Kargoii, ono ounce; Compound Syrup Semaparllla, three ounces. Mix by shaking; well in bottle and take ia tosspoonful doses after each meal and at bedtime, but don't forget tho water. Drink plenty and often. This valuable information and siWe- pie proscription should be posted up In each household and used at tho first sign of an attack of rheumatism, backache ot urinary trouble, no mat> tar how sHaht,

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