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Council Bluffs Minor Mention The OGownoll Binffa Offies of e Omaha Beo s o6 18 Doott Wiresh Both Phones 63 Degis, &rugs, ¥t Bdle—Modern house. 726 Oth A~ CORRIGANS, undertakers. 'Plone 148 FAUST B AT ROGERE BUFFET Wdedring Undertaking company. Tel, 333 + Lewis Cutler, funeral divector. 'Phont 37 Baird & Boland, undertakers. 'Phone 122 '3n Sidney H. Smith, 213 B'way. ‘Phones es this monih at %&W Hroadway, “A_marriage license was lssucd yesterday to Fred Scnuning, aged 24, and Anna ki Wander, aged 2, both of Minden, Ia. Rev. N. C. Parsons, a returned missicn- ary from India, will speak at the Swedish Baptist church on North Seventh sirest this evening, Diamonds—special Lo Judge Green has completed the business of the term of district court at Glenwood and was, In the city yesterday on his way 1o his heme In Awdubon. A bullding permit -was lssued yesterday to C. C. Norgaard for a two-story brick store bullding at Tv‘r&nty-unrd stroet and Broadway to cost $5,000. The regular mnllng zrodmel gircle, will be as there will be initiatory work, The fumeral of the Iate Mrs. Mary S vier, 1506 Ninth avenue, will be held is ffernoon mt-2:30° o’clock - from the h Avenue Methodist church and burial will be in Falrview cemetery. Rev. 8 Grant Lewis will conduct the services. The commissioners for the Issane terday recommended to t:ie Biate Boar Control thay John Lennon of this city be discharged from the state asylum &t Clar- inde as cured. Lennon was committed on August ii, 1908, and on January 2 of las year was paroled in care of M. J. Keily. The epplication for was filed by Mr. Kelly. Members of Abe Lincoln post, Grand Army of the Republie, and of the Woman's Rellef corps will hold o joint soctal sgesion @is eveniig in Grand-Arimy hall in the of Palm grove, held this evening .- of Young Men's Christian assoc'ation butlding. | ‘The cleaners and dyers of Omaha and Councll Blufts, who organized themselves into an assoclation February 8, elected the following officera . A, Bchoedsack, glmgent; H. C. Behrens, vice president; . 8, Rothery, secretary; Guy Liggett, treasufer. Willam G. Schmidt of this city has filed in the district court a petition asking for the appointment of a guardian Tor his fathor, Henry Schmidt, who owns & small farm in Garner township. The extreme age and mental and physical weakness of the fathen who is 82 years of age, are al- 1 s reasons for the iication. In the absence of his son, it Is stated in the petition, that Schmidt senior disposed of considerable personal property for mueh less than its value. S The fuperal of Mra. Elma Donahue, wife of Patrick Donahue, & Dartt , who com- mitted fllemo Wednesday afternoon at hi home, 918 Avenue B, by shooting herself the head with a revolver, will be hel afternoon a o'clock from the residence. Rev. Marcus P. McClure, itor of the First Presbyterian ehurch, will gonduct the services and burial will be {n Walnut Hill %Ome(er)u After making an investigation, ‘oroner Treynor decided that inasmuch s it was evident the woman taken her own life, an inquest was not necessary. Attorney Charles M. Harl returned Ko-» terday morning from Greeley, Colo., where he took the deposition of 'i; . B, Petriken for use in the trial of the civil suits of George F. Castle of Britt, ‘Mabray Mikes'" st local business m. N. A Cuwo'{ attorney for“lxt kes,” was represented by !A Colorado . While attorney in taking it 1s possible that the suit f:i fisa that brought by Joseph W. sen o~ nominee, Mich., may yet be tried at thi term of distriet court as originally plann the present expeotation that they probably go over to the The trial of H. V. Battey, former cl of the district oourt: of " PovAAt S county, asslgned for Waednesday before Judge 'Woodruff and a jury in the district court of Cass county at Atlantie, to g0 over r # case Involving the ownership of @ oulf, had the right of way. County At- torney Hess and Attorney Emmet flnluy, counsel for Battey, returned home Wednes- day night, but’ will return to Atlantie to- day. drawing of the jury, arguing a demurrér which the defense Intends sub- mitting at the outset of the case and other preliminaries will occupy the balance of the week and that the taking of evidence ‘Wwill not begin before Monday. Ia., and other Causes ‘The spir.t of a publica- tion is an actual thing. Jt assimilates the personal. ity of an editor, the genius of a publisher, the talent of artists, a past of honor- able progress, a future of enlightened intent—and it stands a living reality, discernible both by the people who compose it and the public for whom it is composed. Competitors cannot du- plicate this spirit behind the work, because it is not & matter of type appear- ance, nor page size. The spirit of THE LADIES' HOME JOURNAL is a well-known thing to the women of America, and without doubt it exerts a helpful influence upon the advertisements which are received into ts company. ¢ Perhaps you think this reasoning is fine-drawn and fantastic. It is not, and its vindication is to be found in the advertising success of our clients who He is a wise advertiser who finds the cause, and then, reversing the pro- cess, works again to a still greater effect. The Curtis Publishing Company Pniladelphia : New York Chicage Bostos eirculation of “T.I::ufll“' HOMB ap S & unique power, embers are requedted o be present | | Lennon's discharse Council Bluffs. R At WOMAN DIES IN CONVULSIONS Doubt Whether Mrs. Alex Wishart ‘Took Poison to End Life. MAY HAVE BEEN IN HYSTERIA Wife of Unlom Pacifio Night Wateh- Expives ddenly Following Hedted Quarrel with Her Husband, Mrs. Minnfe Wishart, aged 3 years, wife ot Alexander Wishart, employed as a night watchman at the Ufnlon Pacific transter yards in Council Blutfs, died In convulsions | shortly after 10 o'clock Wednesday nignt at her hom:, 1637 it Brondway. The | suddenness of her death and other circum- stanoes connected with the case caused some of her friends to' suspect she com- mitted sulcide by taking strychnine. Dr; A. P. Hanchett, who was called to attend Mrs. Wishart, was unable yesterday to say that she had taken polson with sul- cldal intent or whether her death was due to hysteria spasms. | *“When 1 called on Wednesday night I askel ‘her If she had taken poison or anything to Kill herself, and when satd she hAd not I took her for it. She appeared to be a woman suf- fering from hysteria spasms. Convulsions from Sirychnine and from hysterla are almost exactly allke. Even had I knowr that she had taken strycinine, 1 could not have saved her when 1 arrived; the poison, it any was taken, had already been assimi- ated and nothing could liave saved her.” Coroner Treynor stated last evehing that he would not hold &y inquest. “Clreum- stances surrounding the case were auch that It was likely the woman had taken poison with sulcidal intent. To ascertain whetheér Mrs, Wishart took strychnine, an autopsy would be necessary, and we would have to send the viscera away for exam- ination. 1 fall to see what good could be accomplished by putting the county to this expense,” suld Dr. Treynor. Couple Lived Unhappily. Friends say that Mrs. Wisnart and her husband had not lived happlly for the iast yomi aod had was admitted by Mr. Wishart yesterday. Owing to these quarrels Mrs. Wishart on niore than one occasion left her husband and -went to the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Johnson, who Hve in Atlantie; Ia. After being away for a thort while the husband always Induced her to return_home agaln. About a year ago she commenced suit for dlvorce, all cruel and Inhuman treatment, but they pstehed up their troubles and she with- drew the petition. » Wednesday afternoon Mrs. Wishart and her husband were down town shopping and on returning home are sa!d to have had a bitter quarrel. Shortly after her husband left for his work at the transfer depot &bout 6 o'clock Mrs. Wishart tele- phoned tq, Mrs. G. C. Jensen, & ne'ghbor résiding at 153 Bast Broadway, and asked her to come over to the house. Mrs. Jen- @en lfistead sent Mer litle ddughter. ‘Abdut 8 o'clock the little girl eame home and told her mother that Mrs. Wishart was siok. When Mre, Jensen reached the Wishart home Mrs. Wishart was having a oconvul- slon, but as she had frequently had very severe nervous spells, Mrs. Jensen did not attach any serious importance to it. As Mrs, Wishart. continued to get worse Mrs. Jensen called Dr. Hanchett and notifid Wisbart. Dr, Hanchett gave Mrs. Wishart some medioine to quist her, but she died shortly. after he left the house. Woman Expeeted to Die, Mra. Jensen suspect thap Mrs, Wishart had taken polson was thai Mrs, Wishart said before the dpctor and her husband reached the house: “I'll be st peace. Everything will be all right now. I know 1 am going to die, I want to die.” “L don't know whether Mrs, Wishart killed herself or not,” said Mra. Jensen yesterday afternoon when sgen at the Wishart home. When I went to the hou last evening I thought she was having a nervous spell, but she got worse and dled in convulsions. The doctor gave her some- thing (o ease her and she seemed to get better for a while, but after he left she got worse again. Just before she died she called her husband over to the hed and asked him to forgive her for what she had done and sald God had already. She sald she had taken something and that we would find a bottle. I think she was d lirous wnen she sald this. We have searched every nook and corner of the house, but we have not been able to find any bottle or anything else that contalned potson.” The husband sald he did hot know whether his wife had taken poison or not. She told him, he sald, she had taken some- thing. “We had quarreled before ¥ went to work last evening, but it was nothing worse than usual. My wife was & very nervous spells,. We had been married about seven years and until a little over & year ago we werevery happy. For the last year, however, we have hot gotten along very well and we had frequent quar- rels.” Mrs. Wishart leaves besides her husband & young son. The body will be taken this morning to the home of her parents in Atlantle where the funeral will be held. LODGE Applicatt Made by Olson, Morgan and Younkerman, "The ety councll met yesterday afternoon and took a trip’ about town In two auto- noblles for the purpose of assessing up completed cement sldewalks in the con- trects of B A. Wickham, Peter Nelson and the Miracle Construction company. Fotlowing this an adfournment was taken to next Monday evening. On the way back to the city hall a stop was made at the Elks' club house on First avenue, where Councilman ~John Olson, candidate for the republican nomination for mayor; Coupcilman Carl Morgan, candi- date for republican nomination for council- man-at-large, and Councilman Oscar Younkerman, candldate for the democratic nomination for councllman-at-large, signed applieations for membership and deposited with Secretary Wise their checks covering |the amount of the Initiation fec. Councf- man J, Chris Jensen stood sponsor for the three counclimanie candidates for “antlers' and will present their applications for membership at the meeting of the lodge tonlght. Labor May Use Boycott. MARSHALLTOWN, Ia, Feb. 10.—(Spe- clal.)~It is declared today on good author- ity that the labor unlons of the city, es- peclally those employed in the Iowa Cen- tral shops, are golng to take up the cause of the striking telephone operators and will start & boycott on business men If they refuse to take out their telephones. A committee of union men will visit all busi- ness men and request that they remove the telophones from their places of busi- nuss. A bit it dsinty Jewslry from Leftert's for & Valentine; nothing more sullable; 75 cents upy » she | word | slekly woman and frequently had severe | |plan he had In mind. Mayor Maloney 0 Democrats May Try to Get Convention s | City Now Has Place for Big Meeting | and Feels Entitled tc State Gathering. i | | Prominent local democrats are seriously considering making &n effort to scoure | tho state convention of thelr party for | Council Bluifs this summer. The matter | probably will be brought before the Com- mereit] club soon with a view to making an organized move to have the convention held Rere. It ia the opinion of several of the leading democrats in this city that Couneil Bluffs can get the convention, if It goes after it in proper time and in earnest. J. J. Hughes, secretary of the Board of Education, 1s the Ninth district membor of the democratie state central | committee, and he favors golng after the convention. He expressed himself yos- terday as confident Councll Bluffs could | secure the meeting {f the proper effort was made. “A state convention is a big thing” #aid Mr. Hughes, “and heretofore Council Bluffs has not been in shape to entertain | a gathering of such size. Heretofors it had no hall or byllding able to accommo- date a gathering of 1,000 or more dele- gates, not to speak of the usual erowd of outsiders who atténd muct conventions. Councll Bluffs, however, 13 now in good | ghape to handle & coavention crowd. The | new Auditorium would muke an ideal co vention hall, and 1f the hotels of this eity | should be overtaxed Omahn could take care of the overflow. I can see no reason why Council Bluffs should not make a bid for the convention, and I belleve it can be brought here. Couneil Bluffs has not hiad the democratic state convention for many years, and we are now in ex- cellent shape to issue the Invitation pro- viding the Commercial club and business | men will take hold of it and do the right thing " Under the primary law state conventions must be held not earller than the third Thursday and not later than the fifth Thursday after the primary. The primary will be held this year on Tuesday, June 7, and the limits for holding the stato conventions of both parties will therefore be June 3 to July 7, inclusive. The state central committee of each party decides the date and location of the convention. The expense atlendant on entertaining the convention, It is estimated, would not exceed $500, and it 18 not believed there would be the slightest trouble in raising this small amount. Proposed Slate Road in Iowa Good Roads Convention Will Discuss Means to Bring Projeot About. Council Bluffs will have a ropresentative delegation at the Good Roads convention to be held in Des Moines March 8 and 9. Mayor Maloney recelved a personal lstter from Governor Carroll urging him to at- tend the convention and requesting h.m to appoint five delegates from this eity, In his letter Governor Carroll said: It is important that your city shbuld be represented in order that you ¢an be heard In the recommendations and sugges- tlons which this convention will make to the session of the general assembly In the proposed good road legisla.ion. You .are urged to appoint at %east. five delegates to represent your eity n tnis convention and to bring to the meeting the ldeas of your community upon this im- portant subject. In compliance with the governot's re- quest Mayor Maloney vesterday appointed the following to represent Council Bluffa ut the convention: H, A. Bertschy, H. A. Searles, Frank Children, Harry Van Brunt and W. H. James. “The firet named four | are enthusiastic automobllists and active workers for the cause of good roads. M. | James s president of the Pottawattamis | County Rural Letter Carriets' assoolation | and s probably the moet ardent advoocate of good roads in this section of the coun- try. A delegation will also be appointed by the Commerclal club and the Board of Su- pervisors will name a delegation from the county at large. Colonel W. ¥. Baker of this ecity will be one of the supervisors to attend and he will be one of the active delegates In the convention. One of the principal matters to be dis- cussed at this convention is the proposed state Toad- to be bullt across lowa from Davenport on the east to Councll Bluffs, The people of Council Bluffs are greatly interested In the project. ‘Mayor Maloney and the officlals of the Commercial club have assured Governor Carroll they will co-opérate with him in every way they pos- sibly can and that he can depend on the support of the people of Council Bluffs and vielnity. Mayor Maloney will attend the convention and take an actlve part In the proceedings. Some time ago he was asked to submit plans for ‘the bullding of the proposed state road and in response to this request from the governor he sent him-an outline of the favors a plan whereby each county and township shall bulld its part of the road and pay the cost out of the county and township road funds. He will advocate this policy In the convention. Towa Notes. HARLAN-Orville Comstock, & pl tarmer of Lincoln township, is degd home near Tennant, la. HARLAN—The Shelby County Fine Stock exchange will hold its annual banquet at Anderson's hall In this cil{ Fobruu‘{ 19, Prof. C. F. Curtls, dean of the agricultural Gspartment of the lowa State ocoliege at Ames, will be the chlef speaker at the banquet. HARLAN—Mrs. Olaf Hansen, wife of & Jackson township farmer, died very sud- denly Tuesday after rllurnlnx from & plrl‘z held at the home of a friend. She wi years of age end leaves & husband and six hildren, ©Funeral services were -held at the home yesterday. HARLAN—Henry Simon of Exira, Ia, and Mabel Kohl, were married at noon yesterday at the home of the bride's father, Solomon Kohl, In this city. They will live on & farm near Atlantic, In. Rev. G. L. Springer of the Evangelical church officiated at the service. HARLAN-—Yesterday, just about noon, a colt kicked Ben Dickenson In the face as he was at work in the barn at his home north of town. His father brought him to town immedict medical examina- tion showed that all his front teeth had been knocked out and that one of his jaw bones was broken. HARLAN-—Hans Jesperson, & resident of Harlan for some yeqrs. died at his home on Court street esday momln(, He was 66 years of age and was born fn Den- mark in 1843 Funeral services werc hold at the Latter Daj nts ohurch, by Rev. N n of the Danish Lutheran ehurch. Interment was in the Harlap cemetery. HARLAN—C, R. Benedlct of Shelby has nouncement for the office the die- . rud H. - At- . Bened! nd T. n at his this city are both didates republican primary it is )il Cass _county will have a Mr. Benedict has been ochief Towa leglslature for several sessions / ¥ AHA SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1 1910 Model License League. The Natlonal Model License league is an organization whose active and ' associate members are men Interested directly and collaterally in the legalized . manufacture and sale of alcoholic bevernges. It exists for the avowed purpose of advocating the enscument of laws designed 1o take the liquor question out of polities and to put the lawbreakers out of the liquor business." The model license law was formulated at a meeting of ten men in Loulsvile in Oc- tober, 1907, and was submitted to the trade and to the public at a convention held in Loufsville in January, 1%05. = The latest neeting of the league was in St. Louls last week. The league's officlal “solution of the liquor problem” comprises four prineipal olauses as follows: Permanent licenses, automatic suspension and cancellation of licenses for law-breaking, limitation of leenses in proportion to population, and moderate iicenso fees. The first clause Is the most radical of the four, and Is the most difficult to advocate successfully in view of the fact that it Is so readlly branded as an attempt to perpetuate the Mquor business. The league officers say that the autowatic renewal clause has but one object and that is to take the liquor dealer out of politics by making him inde- pendent of political licensing boards. It is contended by the league that when- ever a man's right to enter and remaln in business is subject to a great extent to the good-will of a politictan, that man must necessarily take an active interest in politica. It is suggested that the licensed liquor men who violata the law do so for profit, and that if Jaw-breaking is made unprofitable these offenses will cease. Much stress is lald on the desirability ot passing no laws except those that have the loyal support of all citisens. In other words, If the law Is fair to both the dealer and his customer, neither will have any desire to break it. The theory of the league Is that the op- eration of a model license law would pre- vent the comtinuance of an undue number of licensed places by giving full play to the law of the survival of the fittest. Ac- cording to this view the number of per- manént retallers would adjust itscif, If too many licenses were issued the surpius number would be forced to withdraw for lack of patronage. If some ylelded to the temptation to violate the law they would be forced out of business by the operation of the mandatory clauses compelling the suspension and cancellation of the licens:s of law-breakers. The league holds that if the retaller has political independencs and a profitable business which he can retain so long only as he conduocts it sc- cording to law, he will be most anxious to obey the law. The handbook recently published by the Nquor Interests contains a summary every argument that may be advanced by the anti-temperance people. It claims that nowhere else can such cleaniiness be round as in the brewery and distillery, and says that the dalry people ought to visit an up-to-date brewery for an objeot lesson In keeping, things clean., Every bottle 1s sterilized In very hot steam, all water Is filtered and distilled and the be:r is then pastuerized to catch the stray germ that might otherwire survive, Then the bottle is made alr-tight and goes to the con- sumer abcut as germ free as anything can be. Since a London committee of #clentists deciared beer to be a food th: brewers. olaim to offer the cleanest food on the market. This book also clalms that in TItaly, where men, women and children drink wine st thelr meals, there is less intem- perance than in America. Ex-Ambassador White 1s quoted to this effect, and he de- clares that he found the same true In Germany, where everybody drinks beer. The book also claims that the men engaged In the manufacture of beer and ‘whisky are the best pald workmen In the country, and offers statistics from the census office to prove lts statement. The liquor inter- ests claim to pay in state and federal rev- enues the annual sum of $260,000,000, with an added $70,000000 for taxes. They claim |to represent an Investment of nearly & blllion dollars. The capital tied up in the manufacture of spirituous and malt liquors amounts to more than $00,000,000, and tbe retail busines represents the rest. It 18 declared that while nearly 13,000 re- tallers and some 700 wholesalers were put out of business by restrictive legislation last year, the government figures show a heavier consumption of liquors during 1909 then during the previous year; and that the temperance legislation simply is restricting the number of dealers but not the number of consumers, However, the previous year people of Paris alone drink more wine than the entire, population of the United States, But Parislans drink lttle beer. There are sald to bu over 6,000 differente kinds of in- toxicating drinks known to humanity. The American Indians are belleved to be the only race that wds found without its In- toxicants, but what they lacked In the generytions before the dlscovery of America they have made up since, contrib- uting their full share to the consumption of the 60,000,000 barrels of beer consumed annually in the United States. The inerease in beer drinking In fifty years amounts to 2,000 per cent. The city of Munich, famed in European history, possesses the largest saloon in the world. It supplies r to about 12,000 peo- ple every day, and on hollday occasions as many as 16,000 quench thelr thirst over Ita bars. There are wooden seats without backs for 1,i00. All the steins are carefully washed with bolling water at night, and stacked away for the next day. .Before being served each man helps himself to a stein, takes It to a stream of water which is kept running all the time, washes it with such degree of care as sults his taste, and gets it filled with & bumper from the royal brewery which was founded by Lud- wig the Severe, in the thirteenth century. The profits go toward the maintenance of the Munich hospitals. King Kdward might do a large liquor business ff he were so minded. He main- tains a distillery, and if he would label the product to show that it came from his place, he could not begin to fill the orders he would recelve. But he makes whisky only for the royal family. He s not much of a whisky drinker himself, but some of his relatives are very fond of the produect of Brother Edward's still-house. An American actress has broken the rec- ord for fancy drinking. After 2,000 years Cleopatra's concoction of vinegar and pearl kas a rival. ‘It happened that the owner of a world champlon hen was a friend ot the actress, and he told her he was going to express her a ten-dollar egg from Kan- sas City every day for a month. Of course such an egs could not enter into the unseemly scramble of a commonplace o #o ‘another friend provided her with & quart of fine old sherry taken rom a Spanish monastery in the Philippines, which was so valuable that it sold at auc- tion for $200 the quart. This egg and sherry, used as a morning appetizer, cost $18 every day for a full month. The latest-thing s the drinkless drink, guaranteed to get around all prohibition laws. It is John Barleycorn in tablofd form, the very essence of whisky impris- oned in a little gelatine tablet. One can take his cholce, chew it like a cough drop or dlssolve it in a little water and drink it. A beer tablet that will keep for six months was invented recently, but putting 0ld John Barleycorn himself into a tablet is the newest thing. % Central America probabiy will enter the tleld an important producer of spirit- uous liquors. Eperiments indicate that. a tine quality of spirits can be made from baranas that are unfit for shipment. Each bunch of bananas will yield 4 gallon of spirits at @ cost less than that of manu- facturing whisky in the United States, which would seem to indicate that distil- leries can be made a very profitable in- vestment in banana shipping ports. Mr. George G. Brown, vice president of a local Heense leagie, 1s one of the best known distiders and wholesalers in Ken- tucky. He has been an active member of the Presbyterlan church for forty years and has made a careful study of the Bible An regard to the use of winé and strong drink. Recently he complled & type- written pamphlet glving the full text of every verse In the Bible that contains the words “wine” or. “strong drink.” In the heading the declaration {8 made that while the Bible condemns intemperance, it not only fails to advocate prohibition, but com- mends and commands the temperate use of alcoholle beverages. Some of the verses used to emphasize this claim are as fol- lows: “Therefore God give thee of the dew of heaven, and the fatness of the earth, and of corn and wine' Genesis ome! offer the third part of an hin of wine, for a sweet pavour unto the Lord." Numbers 7. “Go thy way, eat they bread with joy, and drink thy wine with & merry heart, for God now accepteth thy works. Eccleslastes ix, 7. L “1 come into my garden, my sister, my spouse, I have hered my myrrh with my spice, I h caten my honey-comb The per pai We don’t ‘“‘char THAT accounts touch with all the leathers so-and-so at so-and-so,” 322 South wait for some bankrupt stock. isn't it a pleasure to know that these prices prevail here on clean, regular sized shoes, and at any and all times of the year? Omaha lady TODAY does a0t have to wait until some factory cleans up its odd lines, samples, jobs, obsolete styles, etc., to buy STYLISH, service giving shoes at $1,95 and $2.45 r — neither does she have to Now e”” basement shoes —we don’t deliver them—we don’t ay extra rent for the basement— for the PRICES. **A few steps down brings the prices down''—a few steps down puts you in you see worn; all the styles you read about; unexpected, unlooked for economy. We will not fill these columns with stereotyped claims, such as, ‘worth but will leave YOU to be the judge when you try on a pair of our 16th Street Bleached Flour Case Goes to Trial Exceptions Alleging that Pure Food Law is Invalid Are Overruled by Court. NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 11.—An attack on the constitutionality of the national pure food and drugs act as embodied In excep- tions taken by counsel for the millers in the po-called “bleached flour'” case proved tutile insofar as the decision of the United | States district court here goes. Judge Foster early tonight overruled the execep- tions, argument on which had extended throughout the day. Attorpey Plerce But- ler, appointed aw special counsel in the ca by the Department of Justice, led the fight in behalf of the government. Just what course will now be pursued by the millers has ndt been définitely an- CHICAGO, F secrets better than me o] of Police LeRoy T. Bteward, who announced today that in order to prevent confidential was the panic vear, and probably that with my honey, I have drunk my wine|information from “leaking out’ he would fact was not taken into the reckoning. Advices from the wine producing coun- tries of the world indicate that last year's output of wines amounted to 3,560,000,000 gallons, of which France and Italy pro- duced two-thirds. The wine output of the United States represents only 1 per cent of the world's vintage. It is said that the with my milk: eat, O friends, drink, yea, drink abundantly, O beloved.” Song of Sovomon v, 1, “Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomach’s sake and thine often infirmities.” First Timothy v, 23. BY FREDERIC J. HASKIN, Tomorrow—MAKING OF WATCKES. BOOM GAYNOR FOR PRESIDENT Missouri Democrats Want New Yorker for Leader Two Years Henoce. HAS NEW YORK ANOTHER TILDEN ry Watterson Will Ask Question st Banguet at Springfield and Augustus Van Wyek Will Answer “Yes” ~Mayor Gaynor 1s the eyes of NEW YORK, Feb. 11 likely presidential timber In some Missourl demoerats. letter today inviting him to atiend a din ner in Springfield, Mo, on April 15, the 167th. anniversary of the birth of Thomas Jefferson, and the -invitation Intimates that he is looked on in Missouri as the national lewder of democraoy for 1913. The mayor has not yet signified his as- sent, but it is tnderstood that arrange- ments are under way to launch his boom whether he attends or mnot. Those ac- quainted with the movement here say that Colonel Henry Watterson has been asked to propose the toast, “Has New York an- other Tiiden?’ and that former Judge Augustus Van Wyck has been asked to answer “'Yes. “The people of thie secdon are much interested in the splgndid work you are doing tor the cause of good government,' the invitation reads, “and we will be pre- pared -to give you a cordial and enthusi- astio welcome. “Missouri democrats -are already antie- {pating a victory in 1912 and many are be- #inning to belteve that New York will furnish out national leader.” H. H. Hughes is the leading epirit be- hind the movement gnd among other sign- ers of the letter Hal C. Young, Lee Savage, Waiter B, Roberson, Ed V. Wil- Mams, W. ¥. Mitchell, T. J. Delaney, Colo- nel L. 8. Murray and L. H. Jewell v.um“:-‘-nvuma Thirty-Sixth Bomb Exploded in Windy City Building on North Halsted Street Owned by Louis and Julius Frank Damaged. CHICAGO, Feb. ll.—Another chapter in the series of Chlcago's mysterious bomb throwings was added tcnight when a bomb way exploded in an empty building In | North Halsted street, owned by Louls and He received a Jullus Frank. The bomb filled with dyna. mite had been put in the bullding through & hole made In the floor and had been set off by a fuse which extended out doors. The windows were shattered, but no one was hurt. Whether the firing of the bomb was the result of labor trouble or of recent chargea of graft In the police department or whether it had some connection with the alleged “gamblers’ war”’ the police were unable to decide. This is the thirty-sixth bomb which has been set off In Chicago within the last two years. CINCINNATI, Feb. 10.~The house known | %3 the “Hanover pool room,” near l.lw-‘ renceburg, Ind., was blown up by dynamite tonight. The bullding was completely wrecked and the watohman had & narrow escape for his life, The house was wall known among the ‘“sporting fraternity” throughout the country. It was understood to be operated by Cincinnati racing men. SHRADER IS AN INSURGENT | Rapld Oty Attormey Anmounces He Will Contest Comgresmman Martin's Semt. RAPID CITY, 8. D, Feb. 10.-~John F Schrader, an attorney of this oity, today announced he has decided to becofie a candidate for congress as an “{nsurgent” trom the Black Hills diatrict to succecd employ & woman stenographer, 7 SSS. circulation are the circulation , and the natural result. No amount of rub) expected from su of the uric acid impurity, down and attacks the disease at,its of the uratic matter and stre; Rheumatism in every form. 8.8.8 joints, cools the feverish flesh, gent! matism from the system. B8.8.8. which have been, its use. Special boo! Nationalized in 1863, Charter No. FOLLMER ' LOSES HIS SUIT District Court at Lincoln Turny Down Anclent Murfin Claiin fo¥ Fees, (From a Staff Correspondent,) LINCOLN, Feb. 11.—Special Teleg: — In aistrict court today a decisol rerdered agnlnst the claim of former Land Commissioner George W. Folimer for $1,600 attorney’s fees pald out of his owfr pocket to Captain B, J. Murfin of Lincoln in the Boyd county land cases. The legislature has turned the claim down for several sessjons, but last winter gave Mr. Follmer permission to sue the state, LEAD, 8. D., Feb. 1L.—(Speclal.)—Leaving a fareweil note to her friends, Mra. Jessié Graham, aged %, took aim with a revolver and fired three shots at herself and then tell uncomscious on the floor. Nelghbors, investigating the shots, summoned a doctor, who thought the woman dead. Closer ex- amination, however, showed that not one of the bullets had touched the would-be suicide and that she had merely swooned from fright. Each of the leaden missiles was found Imbedded fn the wall nearby, and Mrs, Graham has now changed her mind about dying. DRIVES OUT RHEUMATISM ‘When the blood becomes overcharged with uric acid it uonunu-uy‘ grows weaker, more acrid, and poorer in nourishing qualitios. muscles and joints, instead of nootvlng filled with the ‘The nerves; their necessary nutriment from the sharp uratic impurity with which ains and aches of Rheumatism 0 ing, or the application of external icines can have any direct and curative effect on the blood; the mogt to treatment is temporary relief from the There is but.one way to oure Rheumatism, and that is to cleanse the blood B.8.8, is the pro; ains and aches, r treatment, because it goes head, and by filtering out every lo ning and enriching the blood, cures . changes the sour, acid-burdened blood to a rich, healthy stream, which quiets the pain-racked nerves, muscles and removes the cause and drives Rheu- aches inherited cases as well as those uired, and good results are always experienced from on Rheumatism containing many valuable sugges- tions for rheumatic sufferers and any medial advice free to all who write. 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