Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
S— e - g . IE—————— B it o SRR Council Bluffs GRAND JUROR INHALES GAS| Carelessness of George W. Jemsen Halts Work of Body. WAS ALMOST DEAD WHEN NU’ND‘ Fad Inadvertently Tarned on Gas After Tarning It Off--Deaf Ath- letes to Pull Off a Fileld Meet. The deliberations of the aistrict grand | jury, which reconvened Monday came to & sudden terminution, at least for the time being, yesterday noon, owing to the fact that ope of the members, George W. Jen- | sen of Norwalk township had a narrow escape from crossing the great divide by the asphyxiation route. Jeneen dld not show up at the morn- ing session of the grand. jury and when at noon the eause of his absence was in- vestigated he was found unconsclous in his raom at the Ogden hotel and the room fuil ©of gas. When first discovered, It was thought Jensen was beyond all earthly assistance, but after two physicians, who were hastlly summoned had worked over him for four hours he partialy regained consclousness. At the hotel it was stated that Jensen retired to his room about 11 o'clock Mon- day night. When the door was broken in shortly after noon yesterday he was lying In bed attired in his night clothes. The gas jet was found turned on. It is. be- lieved that Jensen must have got up be- fore daybreak, lit the gas and after turn- ing it off Inadvertently turned it on again for It the gas had been flowing from the time he went to bed Monday .night he would have been dead long before the time he was discovered. When Judge Wheeler learned ' of the cause of Jensen's absence from the session of the grand jury he at once issued an order adjourning the grand jury until next Monday. It s doubtful if Jensen will be able to serve at that time and another of the twelve members of the grand jury selected for the year will be called upon to take his place. Although only six members were present Yesterday morning the grand jury heard eeveral of the witnesses subpoenacd to give evidence concerning the two alleged road houses in the western part of the eity. OTTUMWA MAN PRINCIPAL C. B. Reed Succeeds Thomas as Head of High Sehool. The Board of Education at a speclal mesting helfl last night in the law office of President Tinley, elected C. E. Reed of Ottumwa, Ia., principal of the high school to succeed Prof. 8. L. Thomas, whose resignation takes effect at the end of the present school term. Mr. Reed is a graduate of Wooster, O., college. He taught in the Marletta, college for two years, was principal of the Marletta High school for five years ani he comes to Councll Blutfs from Ottumwa, | whers he has been principal for the last| two years. He is 34 years of age and married. The new principal will receive $1500 per year, being $100 more than his predecessor. Kindergarten teachers are to be placed | on the ‘same foeting rade teachers and henceforthi théy will receive an Increase of % a year untll a maximum of 310 iz reached. This ls something the Kkinder- rten teachers have been trying to securs for some time. Chairman Reed of the finance committee | reported that Treasurer Davis hud ad- | vertised for bids for refunding 7,00 of | the outstanding bonds of the school dis trict. These bids will be received by | Treasurer Davis up to 6 p. m. of Friday | of this week and it was decided that the | board meet that evening to open the bids. | Superintendenc Beveridge reported wita | pardonable pride that 1,662 teachers and puplls had a perfect record for attendance | this school year. They will be glven badges and a holiday as a reward. This | record, Mr. Beverldge, would compare withi any city in the state. | i The question of securing quarters for an office for the superintendent and as a permanent meeting place for the was discussed at length, informally. Mem- ber Reed favored using the tower room in the Washington Avenue school, In which the board formerly held its meetings. The rooms now occupied by the superintendent in the high school will be needed for class purposes when the schools reopen September. board nexi —_— Nash Case Under Advisement. Judge Wheeler took under advisement yesterday the case in which the C. B. Nash company of Omaha seeks a order to compel the city council to correct the records of its proceedings relative tc the proposed water works bond issue and | the case in which Angel Aita seeks an in- Junction restralning the city from cutting fhe Pettibone ditch through his property \ Marriage Licen: Licenses to wed were issued to the following Name and Residence. vesterday George W. Huff, Bellevue, Neb May Baldwin,' Bellevue, Neb Benjamin Dixon, Holdrege, Neb. Anne Wiley, Omaha. Patrick H. Tierney Julia €ooper, Omaha Chica "W Lenses reasent Consbert Kawws to Wearecs ol Glasses Jacob mlndlmu!l o Minor Mention The Council Bluffs Office of the Omahs Beo is at 156 Scott Street Both 'Phones 43. vis, dru CORRIGANS, Undertakers ‘Phones 148 Lewis Cutler, funeral director. 'Phone 8. Woodring Undertaking company. Tel. 39, | FAUST BEER AT ROGERS BUFFET. Stock pasiuted. 'Phone Pinney, Bell 21433, want reliable want ad adver- On sale, sheet pictures. Borwick, 211 So. Main St Biuff City Masonic lodge will meet this evening for work in the third degree. BAIRD, LONG "KER & BOLAND, Undertakers, 'Phone 122, 14 N, Main 8t. Mugarell, optometrist, moved Nutlonal bank building. W, A Groneweg left last evening on a business trip to Barry county, Missouri Pictures and Art Novelties for Gradua- | tion gifts. C. E. Alexander, 38 Broadway, Lawn Mowers—We nave the largest line of good lawn mowers shown in_the city. See our line, 8 to §15. - P. C. DeVol Hdw. Co. Dr. D. Macrae left iast evening for Du- buque to attend the meeting of the lowa State Medical society. He will return Frida Look for me—I am coming. Harry Wolft, the German detective, to the iMamond theater, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Patrick H. Tierney of Chicago and Julla Cooper of Omaha were married in this city yesterday afternoon, Justice E. B. Gardiner officlating. Willlam Jardine and R. M. Ronneau left yesterday for Fruitland valley, Utah, to take up homesteads on government iand in the Unita reservation Anton D. Gerspacher, proprietor of a Broadway grocery store, and Mrs. Eliza- beth Banther, also of this city, were mar- ried In Omaha Monday. Rev. Henry DeLong performed the mar- riage ceremony yesterday for George W. Huff and May Baldwin, both of Bellevue, Neb., and for Benjamin Dixon of Hold- rege, Neb., and Anne Wiley of Omaha. Mre, Mary Kelly, aged 89 years, dled yes- terday afternoon at St. Bernard's hospital. The body was removed to Corrigan's under- taking rooms and will be shipped today | to the former home of the deceased at | Waverley, Minn Mrs. Anna 8. Richurdson, formerly en- | gaged in newspaper work in Councll Bluffs and Omaha and_now a prominent writer for magazines iR New York, arrived in the city yesterday morning and is a guest at the Grand hotel. Mrs. Richardson after | a stay of a few days here expects to g | to the Pacific coast Miss B. H. Babcock of O'Fallon, Ill., a| misslonary of the Episcopal church at Korlyama, Japan, delivered an interesting | address on misslonary work in Japan last | evening at St. Paul's Episcopal church, be- fore the women of the auxiliary and the church guild. Miss Babeock, who is. home on furlough. will return to Japan in July. 8he is ¢ of the misslonaries supported by the women's auxiliaries of the Episcopal church. Field Meet by Deaf Boys. The annual field day at the lowa School for the Deaf will be held Friday afternoon of this week. A program of twenty-two events, commencing at 2 o'clock, will be puiled off. Superintendent Henry W. Rothert act as president of the aay and will he assisted by the following students: Clyde Hazlet, lose Davison, Thomas Thomas, Effie Johnson, Helen Kellogg and Vera Wykoff, The timekeepers will be Miss Jewell and Miss Loar of the faculty and the committee on arrangements, which will serve Jjudges, will be composed of Mesars. Michaelson, Overstreet and Hollo- way and the Misses Steinke, Fritz and Dunlap The following is the list of events: 100-yard dask:, boys; throwing the ball, large glils; “all-fours” race, small boye: hoop rolling, small girls; running high ump, large boys: nail driving ' contest, arge girls; hop, =kip and jump, large boys; jumping the rope, small girls; shooting the endultim, large girls: 220-vard dash, Jarge will hoys; shoe race, small boys: batting the bl "large girls! sack race, hoys; -yard | dash, small girls; three-legged race, large | bovs; -yard ‘dash, small bovs: potato | race, large girls; running broad jump, large bove: find the ‘marble, small girls: apple bobbing, small boys; tug of war (7th, Sth $th and 10th grades) boys; medicine’ bali | contest, large girls. Real Estate Transfers. These transfers were reported to The Bee | May 18 by the Pottawattamie County Ab-| stract company of Council Bluffs Leonard Everett, executcr, et al to George W. Ketchum, lot 12, Windsor add., w. d ) $ 60| Charles D. Campbell and wife to Amv { L. Blalicha, lots 8 and 8, block 10, Squires’ add.. w. d Mark L. Willlams and wife to Richard Z. Pollard, lots 9 and 30, block 8, Babbitt Place w. d 100 Emily Duncan et al to F. W Pouder. nY% nwi and ney %-74-3, q. c. d [J Pearl Deeds and husband to Ida E. Durfee, n43 feet of lots 6, 7 and 8, k 22, Mullen's subdiv., w. d...... A Lewis to Grant Lewls, lot 5, ck 3, Hughes & Doniphan’s add., | w4 ¢ 1 | 1. 8. Howe and wife toiLaura Lew! Burke's add., w. d Mortensen and wife to Charles T divig lot 11, block 1, Babbitt Place, w. d $)shathng Total, nine transfers Mrs. Noble Still Free. Although Mrs. May Noble, proprietress of the much discussed Riverside North Thirty-seventh, has up to date suc- ceeded in evading Sherift McCaffery or his deputies, who have an execution against her, she is paying the fine of $i00 which was assessed against her in the district pleading gullty to two in dictments charging violation of the mulct law and maintaining a place of il pute. court on her re made at the time by the county officials, i the judgment docket in the office of the clerk of the district court shows that Mra Noble's attorney paid another instaliment of the fine In the amount of $100, making $15 in all that has now the fact became public that not been collected by the the fine had ourt officlals. Mrs. Mary Burwell, BOONE, Ia., May 19.—(Special Telegram.) ~Mrs. Mary Burwell, octogenarian, one of the wealthiest residents of the state of lowa, 18 lylng at the point of death at her home in this city. She has been declining tor months, and her mind 1s weodering. — ot caty 1 | ot by p—— - - b e o4 Bepert Opaciem| @ wyes Coneatmton L] ’ -l"-v.-m- P Death is expected momentarily COMING R%l()THER Thousands of women have found the use of confinement of much pain and insures safety to life of mother and child, Thisliniment is a God-send to women at the critical time. only does Mother’s Friend carry 8oid by Ciuggieis at §1 .00 comiforts. Bo0YSuEaA SN co, women safely through the perils of child-birth, but. it prepares . = the system for the coming event, relieves ‘““morning sickness,” and other dis- F Is an ordeal which all women approach with dread, for nothing compares to the pain of child-birth. The thought of the suffering in store for her robs the expectant mother of pleasant anticipations. Mother’s Friend robs Not | movement it ame, w. " | Charles Woodbury and wife to John C. Hollster 1ot 3, block 4, hotel on | Although no mention of the payment was | been paid since | THE BE THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1909 Iowa PROHIBITIONISTS ~ PULLING A. C. Rankin and Others Say the Money Comes Easy. EXPECT TO SWEEP THE STATE Workers for Prohibition Are Soon to Hold Meeting for Organisation and Will Import Noted Speakers. (From a Staff Correspondent.) MOINES. May 19.—(Special.)— the constitutional amendment DES That like a clean broom is the statement of perance ferces, who errived in Des Moines vesterda from five meetings in smail county sents, at which he ralsed over $. He says the men of the state are more ©i thusiastic over the constitutional amend- ment prospects’ than over any in which he has been interested easily forthcoming and he saye the cam- palgn will take on proportions that will completely overwhelm the state and bring about a decided declaration for a constitu- tional convention to amend the constitution #0 a8 to provide absolute prohibition There I8 soon to be a meeting of the board, composed of flve men and women, representing the six temperance organiza- tlons of the state, at which time arrange- ments will be made for bitnging Into the lowa campalgn’some of the strongest tem- perance speakers in the United States. The workers refuse at present to disclose the, names of the campalgners, but declare they are among the ablest men of the country and will create a decided stir. It 18 proposed to have a fleld or advance man, who will g0 over the state making dates and advertlsing the appearance of these speakers. From the way the assoclated temperance organizations are recefving funds in thelr constitutional amendment certain lowa Is to be plunged Into a temperance campaign which may have considerable political signifi- cance. Reports that have gone forth that there was dissension among the temperance so- cieties in the combination are branded as untrue and are sald to have been started | by one organization which refused to affili- ate with the other organizations in a united tight for a constitutional amendment. i Just what opposition will be made to the | movement will assume has not as yet been disclosed. Optometrists Are Here. Four hundred optometrists are in Des Moines today for their annual convention, which extends over a period of three da: The principal topics for discussion are the new optometry law, its enforcement, stricter examinations, etc. Retail Merchants Meeting. The lowa State Retail Merchants' aeso- ciation commenced its eleventh annual convention In Davenport today. The pro- gram includes addresses by Secretary James Wilson of the president's cabinet, State Food and Dairy Commfssioner H. R. Wright and Fred Mason of New York. The session foday was called to order by President John T. Mulqueen of Councll Bluffs. Women's Clubs Meeting, The lowa Federation of Women's clubs commenced its'annual convention in Daven- port today. Several hundred women are present and the three days' gathering promises to be one of the most interesting the organization has ever had Newspaper Men Organise. Des Moines newspaper men are ning the perfection of a Press club will be state-wide in scope, admitting newspaper men throughout the state non-resident membership. The club is being modeled after the Chicago and New York Press clubs. Prefers Deafil to Useless Life 0ld Man at Charles City Commits Sui- cide Rather Than Become plan- that Burden. CHARLES CITY, la., May 19.—(Special Telegram).—Albert Jerome Churchill, 8 years old and a widower residing with his daughter, committed suicide this morning by taking laudanum. He left a note bidding his friends goodbye and say- ing he was tired of life and did not wish to become a burden on others. He re- cently gave all his property to a son SERIOUSLY HURT IN RUNAWAY Mra. Ch: en Sylvest Has Knee Dislocated CHARLES CITY, lowa, May 19.—(Special Telegram.)—Mrs.’ Charles Sylvester, wite of a prominent buggy manufacturer of this city, met with a serious runaway accident Sunday window curtain frames In | the buggy and started to run river. Mrs. Bylvester attempted to climb out of the bugey. She got her foot caught in the wheel between leg was twisted till it the knee socket and twisted clear to the side of the knew injury and will lay her up for six months. f Charles City the back of was unjointed at Woodbine College Commencement. WOODBINE, Ila., John Julius Aron. Hurt In Jull, Taken Home, been removed to the home of pis mother. where he is being cared for, but A4l in a serious condition Starsinger for Debate Coach. I0WA CITY; la. May 19.—(Special Tele gram.)—Vincent Btarzinger of Des Moines the coach of the year to has been mentioned as lowa debating teams for mext move- | ment is going to eweep the state of lowa | A C. Rankin, state organizer for the tem- | Money | | the chase and Dwyer was captured tonight, temperance movement and what form it | to | Her horse became scared at some | toward the | the spokes and her around | It s a very bad May 19.—(Special Tele- | erty west of San Antonio gram).—The twenty-first annual commence- | TULSA, Okl, May 18.—Tulsa and vicinity ment of the Woodbine normal school will | ¥&s \::’r‘"g‘p';;;lj, Houdburst early todey ik Ay . | o d by ha n torrents 5mk- place Friday evening, June 18. The| ¢or three hours. The streets were flooded, | graduates are but no serious damage is reported Stat certificate course Alice Lenora Lenz, Erma M. Mill, Evelyn M. Rice, | ™ - e e e Bessie M. Cowan. T . McKenzle, Flar e E. Jefferson, Milda o o ,C. Erixson, huth M. Dempsey, Ava Grace ress, Eva Arlll Brundige, E 2 Beker dige. EVa F. | the full confidence of the Well-Informed Shorthand and commercial: Dessia D, | of the World and the Commendation of Gish, Bert R. Atherton, Joseph E. Carr, | the most eminent physicians it was essen- Charles G. McKenzle, Charles F. Putnam, » Ada Stuart, tial that the component parts of Syrup College preparatory: Harvey Smith | of Figs and Elixir of Senna should be Kinney, Vernon S. Lawrence, John H b N 3 Hunt, John K. Greenfield, Hilda M. Aron, | X20™R to and approved by them; there- CRESTON, la., May 19.—(Bpecial Tele- [ The perfect purity and uniformity of pro- gram.)—Corbeft Porter, a young fellow i A - confined In the county jail here ged | duet, which they demand in a laxative with the theft of a bicycle, met with a | remedy of an ethical character, are assured serious accident Sunday, while exercising | o, S i on the tops of the cells in the sail, ln | OF the Company’s original method of some way he lost his balance and fell to | ufacture known to the Company only. the rock floor, ten or fifteen feet below The figs of California are used in the striking with such force he was vendered | g o . { Fi d Elixir of unconsclous for several hours. He has | Production of Syrup of Figs and Elizir of fowa succeed Frank H. Randall, who resigned to take up the practice of law in the west | Starginger has made an unusual record | a8 & debater while a student and as he | graduates this year his election s expected. Bryan Sbeaké in Des Moines| 1 Nebraskan Scores Congressmen Who Foster Their Sections at Expense | | of Whole Country. { DES MOINES, May 19.—William J. Bryan | tonight was the principal speaker at a farewell banquet to George F. Rinehart, former editor of the Des Moines Tribune. Mr. Bryan scored the congressmen 'who | fostered their own section of country at | the expense of the' whole. He declared that fully three-fourths of the people are democrats at heart. Among the speakers | was General James B. Weaver. IOWA BANKER IS REARRESTED Leroy Ware of Seymour is Paroled and Immediately Taken on New Charge. DES MOINES, May 10.—Leroy Ware of Seymore, this state, convicted of fraud- ulent banking In connection with the | Farmers and Drovers bank at Seymour, of which he was cashier, was re-arrested today after having been paroled by the state board and served eighteen months in the state penitentiary. The parole was granted on Saturday and kept secret until today. Evidence was submitted to the state board to show that Ware was made a scapegoat for the failure of the bank to the extent of §250,000 and that he was not responsible for the heavy shortage. The arrest was made at Corydon Ware's re-arrest was based upon an un- tried count of the indictment for making false entries. Two Convicts Escape. DES MOINES, May 19.—~Thomas Hatch and L. J. Dwyer, two convicts cscaped trom Fort Madison penitentiary this after- | noon by forcing the bars off the windows | in the new hospital building with a jack- | screw. An alarm brought every guard to but Hatch is still at large. Hatch was sent up trom Des Moines for larceny. St. Joseph Bar | to Investigate Judge Philips| Mass Meeting ol?wyen Authorizes Committee to Look Into Charges of Congressman Murphy. §T. JOSEPH, Mo.. May 19.—A mass meet- ing of St. Joseph lawyers at the court house here this afternoon adopted a reso- lution authorizing the appointment of a committee to Invetigate the charges made in congress recently by Representative Murphy of Missour! against Federal Judge John F. Philips of Kansas City. The reso- lutions were only adopted, by a vote of 3 26, after several hours of debate which at tim became acrimonious. The resolution, hs adopted, reads: Resolved, That a committee of three members of this bar be appointed to in- vestigate the truth or falsity of any and all charges made concerning the judiclal conduct of the judge of the St Joseph | division of the western district of Missouri, to the end that If the charges are found to be false that the name and honor of the judge ma be completely vindicated, and | [to the further end that if there be any acts or conduct not in keeping with the dignity and honor of the judiciary of our country, that such facts may be put be- fore the proper authoritles for such action as the nature of the case may require, and that the committee hereby appointed | be required to make its report to this body of its earliest convenience. The resolution of Representative Murphy also called for an investigation of the con- | duct of Judge Smith McPherson of Red | Oak, Ia., who sat upon the federal bench in Kansas City in the Missour! rate cases. | while Judge Philips of that court was tem- porarily engaged in the court of appeals, Mine Promoters Found Guilty Five Men on Trial at Kansas City Are Convicted of Misuse of | the Mails, | KANSAS CITY, May 19.—A jury in the| fed>ral court found E. 8. Horn, Frank H Horn, John E. Horn, Raymond P. May and F. H. Snider gullty of using the mails to defraud in promoting the Central Mining |and Development company of the “Twd Quecns of gold mines in Arizona late tods The penalty is a fine of $00 or imprison- ment for eighteen month, ¢r both. Notice was given for a motion for a new trial E. 8 Horn fainted in the court when the verdict was read oup room Hail % Texn HOUSTON, Tex., May 19.—A storm vi ited north and centra! Texas early toda extending as far south as San Antoni Hail killed many cattle and damaged proy Caftle. fore, the Californig Fig Syrup Co. pub- lishes a full statement with every package. . | Benna to promote the pleasant taste, but | the medicinal principles are obtained from plants known to act most beneficially. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine—manufactured by the Cali- fornia Fig Syrup Co. only, and for sale oy all leading druggists. l at | you will find that proof of nice discrimination — Formula and label unchanged—the Food Law now conforms to our high standard of excellence. CURTICE BROTHERS CO,, Rochester, N. Y. In the best homes— the better restaurants Blue Label Ketchup Delicious—A ppetizing—Satisfying Keeps after it is opened, Pure and unadulterated The natural flavor of red-ripe tomatoes, fresh from the vines, combined with the purest of spices, prepared in spotless kitchens. Endorsed by the United States Government in its every ingredient. Our kitchens are open to the m i and visitors are always with the dynamo all the way. To provide this ELECTRIC LIGHTED SEATTLE TRAINS Northern Pacific Specilal Commencing May 23rd, this well-known Seattle train will be electric lighted throughout 'stem by power from the locomotive. A train electrician is with each train Burtington Route 81300 single improvement in this through service—a brilliant and perfect light—required the shopping, wiring and installing of light fixtures of nine complete trains, comprising ninety-four cars that make up the complement of equipment between Seattle and Omaha, Kansas City From Omaha at 4:10 p. iness days enroute, Write or call for folders, berths, ete., and let me tell you J. B. REYNOLDS, City Passenger Agent, 1602 Farnam 8t., Omaha. and St. Louis. m. In Seattle 8:30 a. m.; in Portland 7:30 a. m. Only two bus- descriptive publications, rates, privileges, tourist tickets, about our through Seattle trains—Two daily. _— KIRY SUCCEEDS VAN CLEAVE! Dayton Man Nominated for President of Manufacturers’ Asssociation. MANY SUBJECTS ARE DISCUSSED Labor and Railroad Legislation, Free Trade with Islands and Ship Subsidies Are Con- sidered. 'NEW YORK, May 19.—John Kiry, ir., of Dayton, O., was the unanimous choice to- day of the nominating committee as a candidate for president of the National Assoclation of Muanufacturers to succeed James W. Van Cleave. Discussion of the labor problem was the feature of today's session. President Van Cleave protested against the possibility of special legislation in favor of organized labor, pleading for consideration of the subject on the ground that such legislation would constitute a menace to the coun- try's welfare The coming session of congress would scem a particularly favorable time to the labor leaders for the urglhg of leglalation to legalize picketing and boycott. Mr. Van Cleave declared “Reverses in the middle of a presidential term sald the speaker “usually mean that the opposing party witl He continued and of Un could s elecy the next president “Financial confidence |s there is an Improvement in most the important lines of trade wise labor legislation, however, quickly check this trade uplift Here a direct peril from the program which t American Federation Labor leaders promise to resume before congress in the coming winter F. R. Boocock, secretary of the can Anti-Boycott association severely arraigned the boycott, among other “ob. jectionable” features of organized labor and sald law and reason were labor's two best friends Rallroad Legisiation, The committee on interstate commerce presented a report emphasizing “‘the folly of recent anti-railroad legislation In many f our states, and especially the arbitrary cent-a-mile’ acts.” The report sums up the attitude of the committee toward the rallroads In the fo lowing language But while earnestly opposed to rash at- tacks upon the rallways and to everything reviving Ameri- to strike a popular fon.” In conclusion he said: “It meems to the writer that any laws that affects the trade relations betwcen the manufacturers of the varlous states is clearly an attempt to regulate interstate commerce, which can only be done by the federal congress. The tendency of these laws s to localise business and to bulld a certaln restriction or to in & measure protect the local manufacturer.” The report of the committee on merchant marine was read, urging that the follows ing resolution be passed Resolved, That the assoclation recoms else that may Interfere with their efforts chord to prove faithful servants of the public, we have always becn In favor of their regulation by the national government. This regulation like the bridle on a spirited horse, should be sufficient to preserve con- trol, but should not chafe, or fret, or hamper, or interfere with the free play of the muscles Speaking of the tariff revision the com- mittee deplores national extravagance as the cause for the $100,000,000 deficit, and the consequent necessity of increased taxation, It suggests that duties on crude materials and steel might safely have been further reduced to the advantage of the general manufacturing Interests. “The revenue in public opin- needed to restore the estimated $120,000000 mend to congress the passage of a bil! deficit could have been in considerable | like that under consideration In the last measure made up from moderate dutles | congress. and advocated by President Taft providing for suffictent postal compens tion to establish a swift and regular serv- ice in American steamships to the prinel pal countries of South America. and to the ports of Australasia, Japan, Ohina and the Philippine e A Horrible Death results from decaying lungs. Cure eough on tea and coffce, of which the consumer | need be hardly conscious, and by the in- heritance tax as recommended by the presi- :dtnl.' the report suggests. Free Trade with Islands. In an address entitied “The Upen Door | =Your Opportunity,” 8. L Scudder of the ! International Banking corporation of New | York urged the oclation to demand of | and weak, sore lungs with Dr. King's New congress free trade with the Philippings | pigcovery, 60c and $1.00. For sale by and Porto Rico. g 4 Co. He was followed by Thomas E. Durban, | Be2to" Prus | who spoke on “Desirable Improvements in Telew: Re-Elect Officers, !Interstate Trade." He attacked the ec-| Arp ANTA, Gi 19.~The nnia | centricities of leg! n In certaln states, | saying that “it seems that this has almost become a disease in the public mind, and anything that can be done by an average legislator to oppress a manufacturer seems convention of the Order of Rallw Tele graphers adfourned tonight after seleoting Toronto, Canada. as the place for holding the next convention. President . B. Per ham of 8t. Louis and all other officers were re-elected. Do You Feel This Way? Do you feel all tired out? Do you sometimes think you just can't work eway at your profes- or trade any longer P Do you have & poor ape- ke st nights usable to slecp 7 Are rves all gome, and your stomach too 7 Haes am- shead in the world left you? If o, you might es well put & stop to your misey. You can do it if you will. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery will make you a different individual, It will set your lazy liver to work. It will set things right your stomach, smd your bition to fory | | [ ) ur appetite will some back. It will purify your bleod. f there is any teadency in your family toward consumption, it will keep that dread destroyer sway. Even sfter con- b fiumd“tw:hmfimfim d: , broachitis, or bleeding st the luags, it sbout m’:‘fm-. of all oases. It is « remedy prepared by Dr . Pierce, of Buffal .N.Y..-In-.*b:bd.—lnan-llwhwipfih'd_hfl.. His great l:c:ou has come from his wide experience snd varied practice. Don't be wheedled by & penny-grabbing dealer into teking inferior substi- for Dr, Pierce's medicines, recommended to be '‘just ss L' Dr. i’ui:‘r.u’o'-ndi -: are oF XNOWN coMrosiTioN. Their every ings riated on their wrappers. Made from roots without sicobol. Contsin no babit- drugs. W Buffalo, N. ¥