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The Daily Herald from Arlington Heights, Illinois • Page 2

Publication:
The Daily Heraldi
Location:
Arlington Heights, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

COOK COUNTY HERALD. I wsston sets new record II PAODOCK. ARLINGTON HtlUHTa. ILLINOIS SUMMAfiY OF TUT MOST DEPORTANT NEWS. Sunday.

Freight handlers rejected offer for a wage increase of a cent an hour. John Quincy Adams Ward, one of most famous sculptors, died in New York. Archbishop of Boston, de nounced treatment of the Pope as Twelve prominent Nebraskans were accused of a plot against a murdered land fraud witness. Monday. With the opening of 138 saloons, Garry, ended a long drought.

Attorney General Wickersham scored in a New York speech. The United States Supreme Court upheld two decisions against trusts. Nine hundred structural iron workers struck and tied up big building operations in Chicago. Ex-President Roosevelt was warmly welcomed at Copenhagen, where he was a guest at the palace. Presidest railroad bill is said to be marked for slaughter and ad ministration forces, it is alleged, prac ticaily admit Its defeat.

Tuesday. President Taft dedicated a statue of Theodore Thomas in Cincinnati. Secretary Wilson said that the lack of scientific methods holds down crops and adds to living cost. The German kaiser sounded a warning against by students, and said ft will wreck the nation. The Massachusetts special commission reported that the high cost of living is due to increase in gold supply and to waste.

Although feted by people and royalty in Copenhagen, Theodore Roosevelt was chiefly interested in inspecting the home for aged women. Wednesday. Paulhan won a $50,000 prize for aa aerial flight from Londim to Manchester. Senator Dolliver said he will fight for reform from inside the Republican party, not as ally of Democrats, as both big parties are ruled by interests. Oscar Hammerstein quitted the field of grand opera owing to the exactions of songbirds.

The trial judge in Kansas City revoked the $100,000 bond of Dr. Hyde and ordered the alleged murderer removed to jail as evidence appeared to turn against him. Thursday. J. W.

Kern was nominated for United States Senator by the Indiana Democrats in State convention. Scientists were called enemies of religion in an address before the alumni of St. College in Chicago. The Belgian king and Roosevelt drove and dined together; a warm welcome was extended to the ex-President. Insurgents in the Senate and House attack administration's railroad bill, evidencing resentment at Wickersham.

Contesting the $525,000 Western Indiana Railroad award, John C. Fetzer threatened exposures in connection with bill E. D. Stokes, a boy in short trousers, appeared before the Senate committee and denounced the Depew wireless bill as a scheme. Friday.

Holland welcomed Theodore Roosevelt to the home of his ancestors and made him feel like one of the family. Two thousand five hundred Jewish families were brutally expelled from Kieff, Russia, despite promises. Insurgents in the Senate were defeated when the Cummins substitute in relation to part of the administration rail bill was lost, 35 to 29. A schedule showing higher freight rates from the western territory to the Atlantic to take effect June 1 will be filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission. The district attorney bought four girls as white slaves in the open market in New York as the result of months of investigating in which two college women assisted.

72- Year-Old Pedestrian Finishes Transcontinental Walk. Edward Payson record- breaking walk across the continent is at an end. At 8:35 the other morning he set foot on Manhattan island, crossing bridge over the Spnytendyvil creek. Cheered by thousands of persons and followed by a constantly increasing crowd, he walked down Broadway on the last miles of his journey to the City Hall. The feat which Payson Weston thus brought to a happy conclusion is unique in the annals of sport.

The original program called for the covering of the distance from the Pacific to the 3,480 ninety walking days. In tne face of rains and storms, in defiance of heat and cold, undeterred numerous minor accidents, and, in the last stages of the journey, trudging along in spite of a sprained ankle, the heroic old man has made it in seventy-seven IN GREAT GATHERING PLAN TO RAISE FREIGHT RATES. Notable Men of Nation and World Attend Convention Chicago. in AN EVENT OF HIGHEST IMPORT Every Protestant Church Is Represented in Step Toward Christian Unity. EDWARD P.

WESTON. days. Glorious as is this accomplishment from the point of view of sport pure and simple, it assumes the character of greatness when it is considered that Weston is 72 years old, and second, that no tempting monetary prize was held out as a rew ard for his feat. The transcontinental walk made by the aged philosopher and athlete as an object lesson to the youth of America of the beneficial results to be attained through walking. STANDING OF THE CLUBS.

the Pennant Hace in Baie Ball Leagues. New York .10 Pittsburg 8 Phila. Chicago NATIONAL LEAGUE. W. L.

3 Cincinnati 3 Boston 4 Brooklyn 5 St. Louis 8 i w. 4 4 4 4 L. 6 9 10 10 Phila. Detroit York.

Cleveland AMERICAN LEAGUE. W. L. 4 Chicago 5 Boston 4 6 St. Louis W.

L. I 10 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. W. St. Paul ...11 4 Indianap.

w. L. 8 9 Columbus Toledo 6 Louisville 7 Kansas 8 Milwaukee Saturday. The Hague took a holiday and welcomed Theodore Rooseveit. James A.

Patton and his associates were credited with $320,000 profits through sales of May cotton. May 28 will mark the resumption of the attack on the House of Lords and a general election is predicted. Premier firm stand halted May day riots in Paris. Anarchists and police clashed in Berne, Switzerland. Miss Ethel J.

Croker, youngest child of Richard Croker, was impersonated by another woman in a mysterious Hoboken marriage. Western railroads filed tariffs with the Interstate Commerce Commission showing the rise in freight rates of from 16 to 23 per cent, effective on June 1. vr. Denver 6 Wichita 7 St. Joseph.

6 Topeka 6 WESTERN LEAGUE. W. L. ..6 2 Sioux 4 3 Lincoln 4 3 Des Moines. 2 4 Omaha 2 GIRL IS A FIREBUG.

Anna Foy She with Desire to Burn Something. An abnormal twist in the psychological processes of Anna Foy, a pretty 16-year-old girl, is indicated by a confession to the police in Newport, R. that she is a fire bug. The girl, who was employed as a maid in the home of George W. Ritchie, told the police she was subject to violent nervous attacks, during which she felt she must set something afire, so she set fire to the Ritchie house.

In each case she applied the match in broad daylight and helped to fight the blaze after an alarm had been given. Twenty-one Grain The Shellabarger Mill and Elevator Company of Salina, announced the purchase of twenty-one elevators from the Peavy Grain and Elevator Company of Minneapolis and the Midland Company of Kansas. The latter concern is a branch of the Peavy Company. This gives the Shellabarger Company thirty-four elevators in Kansas. Stallo Get Search since the death of Alexander MacDonald, former oil magnate, at Long Beach, Cab, on March 18, having failed to reveal a will, Edmund K.

Stallo of New York has been appointed administrator of the $20,000,000 estate. Mr. two daughters, Helen, aged 20, and Laura, 18 years old, will inherit the estate as granddaughters of the deceased. CURRENT NEWS NOTES. The manufacturers of Gary announce they go before Governor Marshall of Indiana and counteract the charges of peonage made against the United States Steel Corporation by Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor.

The Great Northern Railway Company recently paid into the State treasury of Minnesota $147,699, being the back taxes, penalty and interest due the State under the decision of the United States Supreme Court. This rovers the amount due on the gross earnings for 1907. Accuse Two of Poisoning Bride. Louis W. Patterton and Mrs.

Emma A. Allen, his foster-mother, were arrested in Arkansas City, on a warrant charging them with having caused the death by poison of Mrs. Frances Kimmel-Patterton, wife of G. W. Patterton, a bride of a few months, who died suddenly last January.

Theater Lobby Collapses. Fifteen persons were injured, one of them so severely that it is believed he will die, in the collapse of a concrete and tile floor newly laid before the entrance to a New York east side moving picture theater. Fire In Big Brewery. Fire of unknown origin caused a lois estimated at $530,000 in the ulant of the Anheuser-Busch Brewing Association in St. Louis, and, for a time, threatened the entire establishment with destruction.

Five hundred thousand bottles of beer were destroyed. Princeton Mystery Cleared Up. The body of Linden C. the Princeton Theological Seminary student missing since Sunday morning, was found floating in the Raritan canal near Princeton, N. Representing every Protestant denomination in the United States, 3,500 business men, foreign missionaries and men of national and world wide note gathered in Chicago for the national missionary congress, one of the greatest religious events of recent years.

It was the climax of the national campaign of the missionary movement, in which con ventions have been held in seventy- five cities. The event which opened at 3 p. Tuesday in the Auditorium was the first gathering in the history of the country of representatives of all the Protestant churches. It is regarded as one of the greatest steps ever taken toward church unity. The accredited delegates were from every State in the Union except Nevada.

They discussed religious responsibility to the rest of the world and were to adopt a missionary policy for the entire country. The needs of the heathen were discussed by quch men as Lord William Cecil, brother of the Earl of Salisbury; Prince T. H. Yun, of Korea, and the leaders among foreign missionaries. In attendance were former Vice President Fairbanks, Governor Hadley of Missouri, former Governor Folk of that State, former Governor Hanly of Indiana and many United States Senators.

One of the achievements planned, as recommended by the local co-operating committee, is to increase the offerings of the churches in Chicago to foreign missions from $160,000, the amount given last year, to a quarter million dollars. religious responsibility to the Orient was the subject at session of the Chicago convention in Orchestra Hall. Rev. Arthur M. Sherman, a missionary to China, declared that the awakening of the Orient to the influence of Western civilization and the consequent inrush of American vice and morals placed the responsibility for moral future upon the American people.

Missionary W. N. Blair declared that 1,000,000 souls was the goal set for the results this year in the present revival in Korea. Attorney Mornay Williams, chairman of the New York State Board of Charities and Correction, declared that America, with all her money and power, must be judged for the outcome in China and Korea. Sunday evening fifty of the delegates to the national congress preached in churches in Chicago and the vicinity.

Rear Admiral Proctor, U. S. retired, addressed a large audience in the Christ Episcopal Church on the needs of foreign missions. Railroads to FUe New System of Tariffs with Commerce Commission. Freight tariffs showing considerable increases over the present rates from western territory to the Atlantic seaboard will be filed with the Interstate Commission, to become effective June 1.

This is the first step taken by the railroads which appears to indicate a purpose generally to increase freight rates throughout the country in order WEATHER COSTS $500,000,000. Warmest April Day in Eleven Yean and Chilliest in 30. One recent day was the April day in eleven years. The thermometer said 84 degrees. Friday, April 22, was the coldest April day in thirty years.

Temperature 26 degrees. The range between the two days was 58 degrees. This conflict of the gods of heat and cold, and the resultant extremes, will to enable them to meet their increased cost America a billion dollars in 1910 operating expenses. Already tariffs have been filed for western roads increasing the rate for the transportation of wool from Minneapolis and St. Paul to New York and other Atlantic seaboard points.

The present rate on wool from Minneapolis to New York is 54 cents per hundred pounds. Under the provisions of the tariff the rate will be 64 cents a hundred pounds, an increase of nearly 20 per cent. The rate to Boston will be proportionately higher. An increase also has been made in the freight rate on live hogs between Minneapolis and St. Paul and Chicago of cents a hundred pounds.

This is an" increase of about 12 per cent over the present rate. The tariffs already filed with the commissioners are for all the roads in Western Freight Association territory and the increase will become effective simultaneously on all of them. $12,500 FOR EYESIGHT. JoMepb Frank of Both in Brewery. Joseph Frank, a former employe of the Herancourt Brewing Company, got a judgment from the Supreme Court in Columbus, Ohio, for $12,500 for the loss of both eyes.

Frank claimed that the shellac with which he coated the interior of the com vats contained wood alcohol, which produced blindness. Oats, cotton, corn, fruit trees, vegetables, wheat and other crops were damaged in a sum estimated at $500,000,000. And reports received from all over the Middle West and South indicated that the extremely hot and dry weather will add much to the damage. Warm rains, which are not forthcoming are needed everywhere. Wheat and corn in Illinois are deteriorating, like in Missouri.

The situation in Kansas and Nebraska is pictured as worse than ever, being aggravated by the extremely dry weather. It is estimated that 3,000,000 acres of spring wheat have been up in four States and other grains seeded. Twenty per cent of the cotton crop will be replanted or abandoned entirely. BRIBERY CHARGE IN ILLINOIS. NEW LONG SMOKE RECORD.

Brooklyn Man Ijiar for One Hoar nnd Fifty Henry Schmitz, of Brooklyn made a new long smoking record in Philadelphia, when he kept an ordiuary cigar lighted for one hour fifty minutes, ten minutes and thirty seconds longer than the record recently made by Abraham Pugh at Phocnix- ville, Pa. Bier Head to Iletlre. At the conclusion of the next meeting of the board of directors of the Big Four Railroad M. E. Ingalls will have ceased to be chairman of the board and the executive head of the road.

Mr. Ingalls said he had been in ill health for some time and that it was for that reason alone that he was to resign. General la Injured. General Nelson A. Miles, U.

S. retired, was thrown from a new horse he was riding in Potomac Park. Washington. One rib was broken, he received a slight scalp wround, and was bruised somewhat on the shoulder and side. It is not thought that he suffered any internal injuries or that the scalp wound will prove serious.

PICK KERN FOR SENATE. Indiana Democrats Choose Running Mate in 1908 Campaign. Opening in riotous discord and closing in enthusiastic harmony, the Indiana Democratic convention in Indianapolis adopted Gov. proposition that it should indorse to next Legislature a candidate for the United States Senate, and named John W. Kern, who was the candidate for Vice President in 1908.

The opposition made a grim fight, under the leadership of Thomas Taggart, former chairman of the Democratic National Committee and himself a candidate for the nomination for Senator, but in defeat it joined heartily with the element headed by Gov. Marshall and John E. Lamb of Terre Haute, vice chairman of the National Committee, and another aspirant for the Senatorship, in a shouted acclamation of Kern as the candidate. Union Workmen Stnrt Store. The high cost of living has moved the union of Brockton, to establish a co-operative store, where the necessaries of life may be purchased at the lowest possible cash prices.

The movement is supported by practically every labor organization in Brockton. Dynamite in Fuel Woman. Mrs. Vetta Friedman. 70 years old, was killed by an explosion of what is believed to have been dynamite in the range of her home in Philadalphia.

Several other persons were injured and the house was damaged. It is believed that the explosive was placed in the fuel by enemies. Ten Burn to Death. Ten persons were burned to death, several are reported missing, and others were injured in a fire which destroyed the Rossmore house and annex, jewelry store, the Canadian Pacific Railway telegraph, and the Bell company offices in Cornwall, Ont. The property loss is $250,000.

Legislator Says Senatorial Deadlock Was Broken by Vote-Buying. An amazing story alleging bribery and corruption in the election of William Lorimer as United States Senator from Illinois was unfolded to Attorney Wayman in Chicago the other day by Representative Charles A. White of St. Clair County, made a confession to the public prosecutor that he received $1,000 for his vote. Charges that the breaking of the celebrated deadlock was accomplished by the wholesale buying of votes at prices ranging from $1,000 to $2.000, were accompanied by further allegations from White that he had participated to the extent of $900 in the splitting up of the a term he used to designate a alleged to have been collected for the defeat or passage of legislation.

The disclosures, which shook State politics to its foundation, were followed by immediate steps on the part of the authorities to start investigations. Senator Lorimer makes emphatic denial of the White charges, and says no votes were Minority Leader Lee Browne asserts that story originated as a scheme. Representative Robert E. Wilson, who is said to be the person who paid to White the money for his vote, says White's charges are false and denies knowledge of a or CHICAGO. R.

G. Dun Weekly Review of Chicago trade says: weather stimulates activity, but distributive branches recover slowly from the recent setback, and the curtailment in business generally is reflected by reduced payments through the banks and increased trading defaults. Allowing for exaggerated estimates it is clear that the late bad feather has been hurtful to various interests, but most indications encourage large hopes of good prospects in agriculture, although grain growers are confronted with declining prices. industrial position as a whole exhibits sustained strength in both production and new demands despite efforts of pig iron operators to lessen outputs. Transportation returns testify to enormous movements of heavy freight, and the aggregate remains good in general merchandise and raw material for factory use.

operations are still limited by a poor supply of raw material, and advance estimates of provision stocks in store indicate little change over a month ago. general merchandise dealings a fair business is apparent in dry goods, clothing, mllinery, silks, footwrear and food products, notwithstanding a smaller attendance of outside buyers. clearings, $267,301,374, exceed those of the corresponding week in 1909 by 6.8 per cent and compare with $235,642,956 in 1908. Failures reported in the Chicago district number twenty-eight, against fifteen last week, twenty-three in 1909 and thirty-nine in 1908. Those with liabilities over $5,000 number eight, as against four last week, seven in 1909 and nine in DOCTOR OPERATION Cored by LydiaE.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Galena, year ago last March I fell, and a few days after there was soreness in my right siae.

In a short time a bunch came and it bothered me so much at night I could not sleep. It kept rowing larger and fall it was as large as a egg. I could not go to bed without a hot water bottle applied to that side. I had one of the best doctors in Kansas and? he told my husband that I wouid have to be operated on as it was something like a tumor caused by a rupture. I wTota to you for advice and you told me not to get discouraged but to take Lydia E.

Pink vegetable Compound. I did take it and soon the lump in my side broke and passed R. R. uey 713 Mineral Kans. Lydia E.

Vegetable Com. pound, made from roots and herbs, has proved to be the most successful remedy for curing the worst forms of female ills, including displacements, inflammation, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, and nervous prostration. It costa but a trifle to try it, and the result has been worth millions to many suffering women. If you want special advice for it to Mrs. Pink ham, Lynn, It is free and always helpful.

500 KILLED IN BATTLE. Bombardment of Albanian Town by Turkish Many A dispatch from Saloniki says that 500 Albanians, chiefly women and children, are reported to have been killed in the artillery bombardment of Go- dauntz by the Turkish forces. The Turkish troops twice stormed Kacha- nik Pass, in Upper Albania, in an attempt to dislodge the Albanian rebels, hut on both occasions were driven back with considerable loss. Fears are entertained for the safety of the towns of Pristina and Prisrend, in northern Monastir, Albania. Railroad communication between Pristina and Uskub is interrupted.

NEW YORK. Cold weather, with snow West and South, has checked retail trade and dulled reorder business in spring goods, while the reports of crop dam- resulting from the return of winter have tended to discourage full business, pending clearer views of the ultimate crop outcome. Taken as a wflole, the reports from jobbing and wholeseale trade lines and Industries point to a slowing down rather than a quickening of demand, and the downward tendency of many commodities does not seem to have brought out much new business. Business failures in the United States for the week ending with April 28 189, as against 193 last week, 268 in the like week of 1909, 282 in 1908, 163 in 1907 and 139 in 1906. Business failures for the wreek in Can ada numbered compare with fifteen last week and ty-one in the corresponding week of PERFECT DUST BEATES beater can compare with II for durability or beating qualities.

New idea patented, bend ties. New idea patented. Bend 4Se for sample Beater and Big Unlimited opportunities for Agents. Inland Supply Ce. Dept.

1, Rushviile. Ind NEW TARIFF IMPORTS GROW. for F'dght Show Increase lligh 33 Per Cent. According to a government bulletin imports under the tariff an increase of 33 per cent in material, 26 per cent in finished manufactures and 3 per cent in foodstuffs. This statement is the result of a comparison of the import figures of the bureau of statistics for the eight months, Aug.

1. 1909, to March 31, 1910, with those of the corresponding months of the preceding year. (CHOOCS (OtLttB Macelester College is beneficiary to the extent of $2,500 by the will of the late Amanda H. Moss of St Paul. Courses in agriculture and domestic science will be given in the summer school of the University of Wisconsin this year for the first time.

Jesse H. Ames, of Shiocton, who graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1907, is professor of history in the River Falls Normal. The corner-stone of Carnegie Science hall at Macalester College laid recently, Prof. D. N.

Kingery officiating. An extended program was given. Prof. Moses Cobb Stevens, of Lafayette, aged 84, the oldest member of Purdue University faculty, and one of the best known educators and mathematicians in the Middle West, died recently at Tallapoosa. Ga.

One of the most highly prized scholarship honors at Columbia University has been awarded this year to a negro student. George W. Scott, 1911, a Southern negro, is the winner of one of the Curtis medals for oratory. Miss Ethel M. Arnold, a sister of prof.

Matthew Arnold, of Rugby, and of Mrs. Humphry Ward, lectured recently at Madison on "The Economic Position of Following the lecture she was granted permission to smoke a cigarette in Chadbourne guest room. Hazel Ford Brown, of Luvem, and Marguerite Record of Minneapolis, were named by the president of the sophomore class to carry the daisy chains on commencement day at Wellesley in June. In accordance with college history the honor of wearing the daisy chain is upon the prettiest girl in the class. Ureel Given New Enrique C.

Creel, governor of the StLte of Chihuahua and formerly Mexican ambassador to the United States, gave out a statement in which he says he has been appointed to the office of secretary of foreign relations, and accepted. Off Car; Killed. While returning from an amateur ball game in Pittsburg. Frank Benzor, aged 42, was brushed from a crowded car while passing another one and received injuries from which he died five minutes later. Two others are in a hospital in a serious condition.

Union Street ('nr Man Slain. John McGuicken, aged 36 years, of Philadelphia, a union conductor, was shot and killed during a fight between union and non-union motormen and conductors near the barn of the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company. Girl Who Sang Dead. Lottie Collins, formerly a well- known music-hall artist, died in London of heart disease. Lottie Collins was the girl who first sang that whimsical refrain in an English music hall.

Knth Bryan to Wed Again. The betrothal is announced of Ruth Bryan Leavitt, daughter of William J. Bryan, and Lieut. Reginald Altham Owen of the Royal Engineers, who is now stationed in Jamaica. Burned to Death.

Alone and unable to fight the flames on account of her crippled condition, Mrs. Minerva Collins, 57 years old, was burned to death in a fire at her home in Jackson, Ohio. Mrs. Collins was a sufferer from rheumatism. Oldeat Nan Dead la Colorado, Sister Eutropia, the oldest nun In Colorado, who crossed the plains to Denver by an ox team and established St.

Academy in Denver, died at Loretto Heights Academy. She was 80 years old. Tom L. Johnson, former mayor of Cleveland, Ohio, is in London. He is visiting Europe with the hope of improving his health, which has recently been poor.

The Kaiser's cousin, Prince Friederick Heinrich, of Prussia, has embraced Roman Catholicism, has ceded his entire fortune to the Roman Catholic church, and has entered a monastery as a monk. The Argentine consul, A. Geiger, was killed in Munich in an automobile accident. His wfife, who accompanied him, and also the Paraguayan consul, W. Korte, and the driver were severely injured.

The automobile dashed into a tree at full speed. King Albert has decided to giva $200,000 for a campaign against sleeping sickness, $100,000 to build hospitals in the Belgian Congo; $100,000 for a pension fund for Congo civil servants and $10,000 for a fund for the assistance of their families. Advices received at Liverpool recently state that the fighting between the natives and Liberian troops at Cape Palms, Liberia, continues, and is growing more serious. The Rev. Mr.

Speare, a native pastor at the mission in Cape Palmas, has been shot and killed, and the lives of the white residents are said to be in danger. The Russian Senate has rejected the appeal of eight school boys and school girls, aged from 16 to 17, of the town of Pospeheny, of whom six have bean sentenced to exile to Siberia, and the other two to six imprisonment on a charge of organizing a revolutionary association in 1907. Charles E. Coling, editor of the Live Wire, a publication of Winnipeg, was arrested and held on heavy bonds on charges of publishing and circulating obscene literature. The Live Wire is a new publication, which has exposed many alleged grafts.

The case will be fought to a finish by both sided. common to prkne, $4.00 to hogs, prime heavy, $7.00 to sheep, fair to choice, $4.50 to wheat, No. 2, $1.07 to corn, No. 2, 57c to 59c; oats, standard, 40c to 41c; rye, No. 2, 77c to 78c; hay, timothy, $10.00 to prairie, $8.00 to butter, choice creamery, 27c to 29c; eggs, fresh, 17c to 20c; potatoes, per bushel, loc to 25c.

shipping, $3.00 to hogs, good to choice heavy, $7.00 to sheep, good to choice, $3.00 to wheat, No. 2, $1.04 to corn, No. 2 white, 62c to 64c; oats, No. 2 white, 42c to 43c. St.

$4.00 to hogs, $7.00 to sheep, $4.50 to wheat, No. 2, $1.10 to corn, No. 2, 63c to 64c; oats, No. 2, 40c to 42c; rye. No.

2, 77c to 79c. $4.00 to hogs, $7.00 to sheep, $3.00 to wheat, No. 2, $1.10. to corn, No. 2 mixed, 60c to 61c; oats, No.

2 mixed, 43c to 44c; rye, No. 2, 82c to 84c. $4.00 to hogs, $7.00 to sheep, $3.50 to wheat, No. 2, $1.06 to corn, No. 3 yellow, 59c to 61c; oats, standard, 43c to 44c; rye, No.

1, 79c to 81c. No. 2 northern, $1.03 to corn, No. 3, 59c to 61c; oats, standard, 40c to 41c; rye, No. 1, 78c to 80c; barley, standard, 64c to 65c; pork, mess, $21.50, Buffalo Cattle, choice shipping steers, $4.00 to hogs, fair to choice, $7.00 to sheep, common to good mixed, $4.00 to lambs, fair to choice, $6.00 to $9.35.

No. 2 mixed, $1.07 to corn, No. 2 mixed, 57c to 58c; oats, No. 2 mixed, 42c to 43c; rye. No.

2, 78c to 79c; clpver seed, $6.95. New $4.00 to $9.00: hogs, $7.00 to sheep, $4.00 to wheat, No. 2 red, $1.11 to corn, No. 2, 61c to 62c; oats, natural, white, 45c to 48c; butter, creamery, 27c to 30c; eggs, western, 19c to Indignation and Stomach Remedy. The well-known specialist on indigestion and stomach troubles, Dr.

W. B. Caldwell, 202 Caldwell Building, Monticello, 111., will send, free of charge, a sample treatment of his celebrated Pepsin Syrup remedy for the relief and cure of these painful troubles by addressing him as above. If You Are a Trifle Senaltlve About the size of your shoes, many people wear smaller shoes by using Allen'i Foot-Ease, the Antiseptic Powder to shake into the shoes. It cures Tired.

Swollen, Aching Feet and gives rest and comfort. Just the thing for breaking in new shoes. Sold everywhere. 25c. Sample sent FREE.

Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. If Yon Have Common Sore If lines blur or run together, you need EYE SALVE. All druggists or Howard N.

Y. DR. FEMALE Seventeen the Standard. Prescribed arid recommended for scientifically prepared remedy of proven worth. The result from their use is quick and permanent.

For at all drug stores. Country Picnic of To-Day. Suppose you had been touring in am airship and had been spinning over Kansas in a light summer breeze. Suppose that you had noticed signs of activity as you approached the littlm town called Frankfort. Picture your astonishment, says J.

George Frederick in the Travel Magazine, on learning that there was an automobile fete- on that day and that several hundred farmers and their families were steaming their cars into town, until the streets of the town were quite blocked with autos? Your ideas of a backwoods Kansas town and the farmers w'ould have a rude jar, for here was Mme. Farmer In a becoming automobile veil and a stylish tailormade suit taking tea at an afternoon of working the butter churn, in a wrapper, or staring open-mouthed out of the window in a scared way when you steamed past in your auto. And there was her daughter, in the sweetest of summer gowns, talking of college days with a dapper youth with a fraternity hatband positively the latest thing off Broadway in neckwear? And that was ona- little unknown town in Kansas? A New York cable dispatch tells of the recent death in Paris of Baroness de Roques, mother of Mrs. Maybrick, who was confined many years in a British prison under a life sentence. The baroness is said to have died in poverty.

More than 2,000,000 packages of matches went up in smoke during a spectacular fire that destroyed the St Louis factories of the Diamond Match Company in St. Louis. Loss $250,000. On the plea that the hand rail on a Santa Fe freight car broke and gave him a serious fall, George C. Cound was awarded $25,000 by a at El Paso, Texas.

Men interested in the upbuilding of the navy and its maintenance at a high point of efficiency, gathered at Philadelphia for the annual meeting of the of the States. to Her. love, everything possible has been said and thought. She not to gende Blaetter. Comfort and New Strength Await the person who discovers that a long train of coffee ails can.

be throwrn off by using POSTUM in place of Coffee The comfort and strength come from a rebuilding of new nerve cells by the food in the roasted wheat used jo making Postum. And the relief from coffee ails come from the absence of natural drug in coffee. Ten trial will show an a for POSTUM.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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