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Omaha Electric Light and Power Company ¢ &3 pointed to such a committee so it 1s sup- posed that the league forgot to mention the matter to the committee, CREIGHTON MEN GET DIPLOMAS (Continued from Firs: Page.)’ demning the grafters; turn your eyes toward the settimg sun, see San Fran- clsco arising from her ashes in jnajesty and glory, but marred dnd scarred by graft and ldot; look at St: ‘Louls, where @ short time ago, prominent men stood in the 'dock to recelve sentence to penal servitude bécduse they had sold the rights of the people for fiithy lucre. 4O, for Homest Monm “Go intb all the large cities—enter the halls of-leglslation in different states--fol- low the lobbylst to his private room, where rights and privileges are bought and sold, and then come back into the ranks of the common people and join the cry, “Oh, for honest men!" “‘Men in control of monopolies in restraint of trade and competition, crush out their competitors and secure control of the mar- ket and raise the prices upon the neces saries of life, which people must buy with money earned in the sweat of thelr faces, ot realizing perhaps, that overy dollar thus taken is a stolen dollar—an extorted dollar. y The man who, intentionally, takes from another his hard earned money without just or fair compensation, fs a thief, I aroused to the great difference between right and wrong. “Back to God.” “Sociologists and statesmen are today pleading with the people to go “back to the farm’ to the soil, “back to the simple Iite,” 1 join with them in their appeal; but if 1 were coining & rallying cry for the Amerl- {can people it would be “Back to God'— back to the God of our fathers—back to the God who guided Columbus across the stormy waste of waters—back to the God {Who gave strength and courage to the pil- |grims who landed upon the rocky New England shores—back to the God to whom in that long cold winter at Valley Forge— back to the God to whom Lincoln bowed In humility as he saved the life of the natlon —back to the God whose lavish hand en- riched our mines with wealth untold—back to the God who gave fertility to these boundless prairies—back to the God who shaped the rugged mountains and moulded the valleys—back to the God whose finger marked the way in which flow thek ri and streams as they sing on to the sea. Those recelving diplomas were: ers LAW, Hugh J, Boyle Thomag B. Murray John J." Boyle E. D. O'Sullivan M. Joseph Crowe Arthur W. Procter Benj. Cunningham Arthur E. Ryman Henry M, lagher J. Walter Schopp Juiius L. Greer H. W. Shackleford James H. Hanley Willlam H. Shaw Hugh H. Harper John J. Spillane . Jamicson Wm. P. Sternberg Peter F. Ward M. Lanigan B McDermott Ralph M. West . Moonan R. A. Van Orsdel MEDICAL, arles . Bolzell Willlam Ludden John L. Ballard Milton M. Mach Willlam G. Brown Harry Mitchell Washington prayed as his soldiers starved | THE 3 N R S R ? 3 } ? ? 3 Two Representatives Express Their Views on the Subject. DIFFER FROM THE SENATORS Jeremiah Howard Says He Hopes (he ‘ Legislators Who Defeated the | Initintive and Referendum | | See They Are Wr i | P | | Representatives James P. Connolly and remiah Howard of the Douglas county legislative delegation are outright in their | | knows of four other members, with a pos 0 1 % ‘tlv 1 & | =ibiltty of si yre, who support the | Each Foot Expertly Fitted. sibility of six more, who will subj i ‘A(I\.’H\ program. | “When we came home from I in, after OWN STORE § |the passage of the § o'clock law, we were [ ' | hailed as mighty gqod fellows by those | for whose Interests we had made our | stand,” sald Mr. 'Conndglly. Now we ought 3 |to be just as good fellows as then, even though we support the ini fve and ref- & |erendum. 1 have always by n tavor of & | that measure, and believe in 1 have talked w most of ‘the Doug nty | representatives, and can say that, includ- | ing myself, five will be for it. Two others | are difrident about committing themselves, but u need not be surprised if all of | the Douglas county votes line up with Bryan They will do this regardless of loeal blustering, as carrying out their own bellef.” Howard Replies to Senators, Jeremiah Howard of South Omaia \\\”I written W, J. Brvan in a strain differing ’[\ulu that of the three damocratic senators. ‘Je also takes “occasion to have a |{l\:u( at his colleague in the good old way | he used to hand it out at Lincoln. Follow- | ing 1s a copy of kKepresentative Howard's Jetter to Mr. Bryan SOUTH OMAHA, April 29, 1910.—Hon, W. J, Bryan, Lincoln: In reply to your letter of April concerning the initlative and referendum, permit me to say that ther is an old adage which =ays, erything is revealed by time Therefore 1 hope that the legislators who voted in the ne gative against the initiativ and ret dum have seen their error by this time If there ix any biame or shame atlached to uny mistake mad the last s ion of the legislatu » gladiators from Douglas county e to blams though the curlositles fi aster county a not blameless ¢ heir motto was pho- hibition and appropriations. I belleve in submitting matters concern- ing the people to the ple, therefore I will vote in the affirm although & man may become wealthicr by voting as certaln interests require, thercby lgnoring the wishes of the peo Character is better than wealth. Yours truly, JEREMIAH HOWARD, Democrats on Anxious Seat. Democrats not holding officlal position under Governor Shallenber and some that are on the governor's list in one capacity or another, are doing some ver serious thinking these days, and confc ences are going on continually at the Dahlman headquarte nd with President Flynn, who represents the mayor in his absence. Some of the old war horses are demand- ing a break-away from the Hryan pro- gram, by a public meeting or eclub m ings, where resolutions can be passed But the cooler heads are cautioning a waiting n cannot never game. They figure that Bry stampede the goverfor, who I been an enthusiastic Bryan man; and -that in any event Dahiman will be the bene- ficlary, whether Bryan and Shallenberger hitch up or pull apart for good and all. Also, the local democrats now flgure Mr. Bryan as a certainty in the senagorial race, and take his letter to the legislators as the basls for excuse for changing his mind. BIG SENSATION STIRS CHICAGO| (Continued from First Paga.) o'clock this mi the north side. Lee O'Neill Brown, democratic leader of the house of representatives at Spring- tield, shouted over the telephcne from his home at Ottawa: “Remarkable, these charges are remark- { able. You should ‘look this man White up. I don't know him very well, but I know his methods; 1 don't like to discuss them. Mr. White should remember in making these charges that I hold, and other mem- bers of the assembly hold his notes for small amounts—'touches’ these and some other notes will help to show what kind of man it is that makes these charges. “I will state flatly that 1 never recelved or spent a nickel in behalf of Senator Lorimer, one way or the other." At Springfield, Governor Deneen de- clared that & searching investigation of the charges s due the people ot Illinols [ ‘80 somewhere on ing to Grand Jury Will Investigate, States Attorney Wayman sent for Repre- sentative White in connection with the latter's confession 1t is believed that White will be asked to tell his story to the special grand jury | ordered to report next Monday. In stating | his reasons yesterday for desiring the | speelal Inquisitorfal body, Mr. Wayman | particularized the charges of John C.| OMAHA St BE MAY DAY Everybody for all time orm regards it as a matter ...(-‘ Senator Patterson of the Denver | we says y braneh of Eve dustries are pus. New we yming into the state rapidly and there is | ) lack of capital to develop the new en- | terprises which are contemplated or under | way | HEALTH HINTS AS THEY GO| | from Thought- | prospe ers ar Great Variety ok ful in the Pub- | nts. | —— | In order that the reader, too busy to keep in touch with the findings of medical high-brows, may not be left to work out his own physical destruction, the follow- | ing rules have been taken from articles | made impressively by the signatures. It Is not assumed that all of the rules may bLe followed at once: Breathe deeply. In this way the lung 4 is enlarged, oxygen more readily con- sumed purifying the blood, quickening the | cireulation and promoting functioning The fad for dsep breathing is honsens No benefit is to be derlved from it 'mal person will take into his lungs without consclous effort all the alr that is good for him, | Take a cold bath once a day at Twice would de §o harm. Avold the bath as enervating. ‘Take your dally bath as hot as the water can be borne, Cold water gives a danger- | ous shock., Moreover, it is not cleansing. Bathe every day A common error Is that of bathing more frequently than s necessary for purpose of cleanliness. Use tepld water. | Regularity of meals is essential to health. ake three of them daily, beginning with a hearty breakfast. Omit, until noon at least narily known as breakast. Then take half a sterilized ¢ cker and a sip of water. )‘ Eat when you are hungry, without regard | he ieast. | hot | the meal ordi- the hour, Never go to bed within three hours of having eaten. \ The practice of golng to bed hungry is foolish. Sleep comes more quickly and is more restful if just before partake of funch. Never drink water with meals retiring you Drink two or three glasses of water with each meal. Howare of low shoes, even in warm weather. The low shoe is desirable despite a pos- sible sense of chill. In high shocs the feet suffer from lack of ventilation. Wear heavy underclothes in cool weather, particularly over the chest. Many make the mistake of swathing the chest and throat. Adopt llght underwear for the entire year. Chew food thoroughly and eat sparingly. Take a quantity of food. Nature will climinate all that s not needed. No harm done by boiling meat, as digestion is a chemical process taking place In the stomach. Tea and coffee are poisons. There is no beverage more healthful than tea and coffee in moderation. Decline to use any but pasteurized milk. Milk raw from a healthy herd is the only sort fit for human consumption. Indulge In vigorous exercise. Pursuit of your ordinary vocation will glve you all the exercise you-need. Experience demonstrates that the veget- arian has the only sane theory. If you would keep well, follow a mixed diet, with meat as a staple. Take All fruits and most vegetables raw. The skins have a distinct value. {/Vegetables ‘and frults must be cooked. It is well to pecl them. The skins harbor deadly germs.~Philadeiphia Ledger. e e DEATH RECORD Osear J. Nelson, Oscar J. on, 21 years old, died Satur- day morning at the home of his parents, 1514 Ohlo street. Death was from pneu- monia. The funeral will be held from the residence, under the auspices of the An- clent Order United Workmen Sunday after- noon. Burial will be at Forest Lawn ceme- tery, | Country Home Burned. BOONE, 1Ia., -April 30.%(Speclal Tele- gram)—Bert Richards' big country home was completely destroyed by fire last night, It caught by a spark from a chimney. The members of the family were not awakened by the roaring of the flames until their beds were on fire. All of them escaped, but saved nothing but night clothes. There was no insurance, Rght Hand Torn O WEBSTER CITY, Ia., April 30.—(Special Telegram)—Frank Taylor, an employe at the brick and tile factory, lost his right hand in a tile machine this morning. The hand was torn from the arm at the wrist The Weather FOR NEBRASKA—8unday, fair. FOR 10WA—Sunday Temperature at Omaha yesterday: Hour. Deg. . Bl 3333333 1, 1810. NANY AT G. 0. P. DINNER Central Club Gathering, COUNTY DELEGATIONS COMING | / Gnge, Merriek and M'Cook Men Write Saying They Will Attend—State Officials Are to Re Henad, on Danlel J. Killen of Gage county, a pos- sible candidate fur the republican nomina tion for governor, has written tha Central Republican club that a Gage county dele- tion will be here for the annual dinner at the Rome on Monday ovening, May From Central elty also comes a request or reservations, uest &nd from McCook a The McCook republicans wrote like to | ask it the barquet Is an invitation affatr, and were told it Is not. ‘There 18 not a Chautauqua lesturer on the program,” said President Ryder,” and the fact Is indorsed by Secretary of Stato Junkin and others. Of course, there wiil | be men divergent oplnlons at the ban. quet, and it {s the mtentlon of the elub to give as many as possible a chance to be heard. Even should the two United £tates senators and the thre be kept away by theeir duties at Wush- Ington, all of thém will have enthuslastic freinds present, to care for their Intereste, since men will pe here from about every county in Nebraska. State Offlc congressmen s Coming. State Treasurer Brian, Attorney General Thompson, Rallway Commissioner Henry hhhh T. Clarke, jr., and State Auditor Barton, will be given a chance to talk and to tell of their stewardship and they all promise to have something interesting to say. Au- ditor Barton and Land Commissioner Cow Jes will also atteand, and will be llke'y to have somthing to say. Uplto-date, but one member of the state committee has sent in his excuse, and the banquet promises to be as nearly represen- tative of the republicansism of Nebraska as any affair ever held outside of a state convention. Because of this fact, many editors from the various countice are mak- ing reservations for place at the board, Fifty tickets are to be reserved for those who may come to Omaha withoutfirst having reserved a ticket, and on the day of the banquet an officer of the club will be at the Rome all day, to take care of late comers, WORK STARTING UP AGAIN AMONG HILLS MINES Several Properties Are to Resume and Busy Times Will Soon Atrrive, DBADWOOD, 8. D., April 30.—(Special.) | —Sinking will be resumed on the property of the Golden Crest Mining company in the Two Bit district some time this month. The Golden Crest {s one of the oldest prop- erties in this part of the Hills that has been considerably worked and has ylelded some good ore, the average value belng close to $i0 in the old days. This whs when the property was owned and man- aged by Fritz Weber before he sold it to the present company and was under ex- pense of mining, hauling and shipping besides treatment at the smelters. No ore runnipg under $20 per ton was shipped and the pecullarity of the ore was In the fact that it was never found in plade, It was of the siliclous nature and was taken lorado's numerous “Smte Will Be Well Represented at | tion | much | —— - — the Lucky Strike will work on a | targer scale than heretofore. They have | & thirty-stamp mill and have opened up the property fairly. well. fn the upper lev- | elx, but propose to go deeper. | Attorneys from Chicago representing Otto | L. Belskal and the other Chieako Interests | | that recently K over the Safe Invest ment Mining company's property near | Benchmark, in the southern part of the | | county, have been putting the affairs of | the company in shape to resume work this | spring. The company has a large camp near Benchmark, thelr ground being under | patent proceedings and has been developed | to some extent in ths blanket formation under the management of 1. A. Webb, for merly one of the heaviest owners. Mr i Webb still controls some Interest and is a afrector of the company, but has relin- quished the active management of the property. The company has a 1%0-stamp milll which was only operated for festing | purposes. It is the plan more thoroughiy | to develop the ground before attempting to | operate the mill and most of the work this summer will be on straight development lines. PARADISE OF SIMPLE LIFE A Country Without Army, Navy, Police, Treasury or Posta Syatem, They come together like the teeth of & d0g, do the frontiers of France and Spain, A "TTHE world today 1s at the feet of the younger man— the man of snap, vim and vigor. Our handsome new model Bourke twenty-five Suits, Raincoats and Overcoats are in harmony with his views—full of dash and style, and are talked about all over town. We also have the styles of quiet elegance for the man of conservative taste We would like to sell you your clothes this Drop in and talk It over Spring Suits, $18 to $40 Raincoats to $40 BOURKE our $3 hat- style, and is weather. All season and Ove coats, PRI is full bullt the new RRED—thaty] of class and to etand the block and between the teeth is a bone—such a very small bone that one wonders why it was not swailowed up long ago, and the | name of the bone I8 Andorra. H “The whole area of this lonely litt'e na- | Is something less than half that of | Greater New York," says a writer In the | Metropolitas, “and its entire population | does not equal that of one of New York's | great office buildings. | “For want of a better name the geog- | raphers have called it a republic, but the | Andorrans part their allegiance carefully | in the middle, as they do their hair, divid- ing it (the allegiance, not the halr) be. tween the pope and the French president “If Tolstoy himself had framed its gov- | ernment he could not have bullt anything | more after his own heart. The heads of | familles—the patriarghs of Scripture—elect representatives who several times each year saddle their mules g0 riding down to the 400-year-old par.jament house, where it nestles cosily in the mountain valley of Andorra la Vieja, to make such few and simple laws as the well being of their pas- toral constituents requires. “So slight are the expenses of govern- ment In Andorra, for all tod there are but four salaried officials, that a small poll tax on goats and sheep amply meets them all. There Is no army, cven of the small- est—for who is there to fight? There are no police, for the peasants do their own polloing. “When I was in Andorra,” says, “the prison—there is but one was used as & poultry house. There 18 no fire department, for the houses are all of stone. There 18 no coinage, for the people pay in kind, No postal system is there elther, for when an Andorran writes a letter, | which rarely happens, he entrusts it to some accommodating person who 18 going over the borders into France or Spain." NATURE COVERS THE SCARS Ruins of St. Plerre Deserted and Overgrown with Veget, tion, The city of Bt. Plerre, in Martingue, which only elght years ago was the pec- tureaque ablding place of 40,000 people, i3 fast being subjugated by the troptc wiider- ne The only inhabitants at present are the writer from the upper levels. The presence of & porphry cap and & fault led to the con- clusion that the richer ore lay beneath the ' dead, on the chance.of selling to' the hand- quantzite and it is with this jdea that the sinking 18 to be done below the 250-foot level, where the present shaft stops. The |bY Mount Pelee less than a decade -ago. shaft is well timbered and in good shape | The vegetation is encroaching upon the for sinking and Mttle preparatory work will have to be done. The property s owned by R. L. Ballle and assoclates of Detrojt, A. T. Roos, the local echemist and as- ayer, and Guy Bunce, son of the presi- dent of the Black Hills Development and Financial corporation, have established a camp in the Carbonate camp, near here, the scene of the rich strikes on the old Tron Hill property made in the early days The dumps of this and adjoining properties contain something between 30,000 and 40,000 tons of ore which will be run through ana extensively sampled, shipments being made from time to time to the smelter at Denver, The total cost of loading, shipping and treatment Is $11.60 per ton and it Is ex- pected that a fair profit can be obtained trom the ore, even at this figure. Deeds for the adjoining properties to the company are being made out to give a wider scope to the activitles of the assayers, Preparations are belng made by the Lucky Strike Mining company to resume work on its property on Box Elder creek southeast of here. General Manager Charles Allen has just returned from an eastern trip to Minneapolis and other points where he was In consultation wtih the officers ot the company on plans for future wotk, Although the detaily of the plans have not yet been made public it is understood that a few black people who dwell like ghouls in ‘the deserted places of the city of tne tul of tourists who come their way souve- nirs of the awful havoc that was wrought streets that once teemed with traffic and re-echoed the palaver and ribaldry of a laughter-loving people. Soon the whole of the moldering ruin will be overgrown to the verge of the sea, and the wietched sojourner eking out a living in the City of the Dead will be foiced to leave it Then it will have for fts most important citizen a deadly snake, the fer d= lance, which creeps into old houses In the West Indies as the cobra infests the ancient rulns of Indig. There is little likelihood that the city will ever live again, any more than the burled citles that lie smoth ered in the jungles of Yucatan, If St. Plerre had been a city of our own country it would have becn rebuit within & yedr or two of the time of its inclpera- tion. The fire and the earthquake could not forbld a city on the site of ruined San Franclsco. Though Herculaneum ang | Pompell were burled, a great city rose again In the shadow of Vesuylus, and even | Messina Is rebuilding. A city of 0,000 was razed to the foundation when Sfr Henry Morgan, the pirate, sacked and burned Panama three centuries ago, but a new town rose elght miles from -the eariler lo- cation. St. Plerre, however, seems destined 4o remain a city of the dead, and In a few years more it will be as though it had lain buried under the vines and ferns, abandoned to the lizard and the snake, for centuries,~Philadelphia Ledger. {ILEDBELR - AR TR by NERES DOUGLASE %Y EWELD “RETALL, 7 PERFECT LAUNDRY In every package re- ceived from us, Note the pleased ex- pression. You can wear it by calling [} SAUNDRY GO, TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER Ideal Form Journal. s | | J 3 : W B setger that money has been used in fur- 8| don't care what his’other name may be. | Clitford L. Cortman John' A Moran bty ; ’ \ . 3 ) o slation desired by the Chicago . By L) ofe remile ¢ e | s-| Rosweil §. Cutler Charles Morton thering legislation 8 B Bu l O h Pl f h 1:1:: cr:‘n"r‘plln ‘Srf.fl’.{?u :wrr;.': e ',“,l:,fi,) Dunshee John F. McAvin & Western Indlana Railroad company, but S ilt n the an of the ne-frioss ay on, | Emerson 1. J. Parmenter 4 »rds “for such other purposes.” R liea in aevelopini In the héarts of the peo- |Morris 1. Gordon Edgar J. Periey u}:id z&f‘::‘:‘" %08 60k dthec pirpopme 4 Have you heard of the “Oneé Hoss Shay” 6 . 1) ple the virtue of honesty, Dishonesty will | Charles T, Heyne Paul E. Rasmussen ¥ ey T s Kt That was bullt in such a wonderful way, e aclne continue until men become _thproughly [N F Jackson White allegations when he asked for the | % What Thinking Takes Out Of the brain, and activity out of the body, must be Put Back by Proper Food Or brain-fag and nervous prostra- tion are sure to follow. 1t you want to know the keen- est joy on earth——the joy: that comes With being well, try Grape-Nutgm “There's a Reason” POSTUM CEREAL CO, LTD, Battle Creek, Mich. DENTISTRY. Ray A. Alexander James B. Anderson Edgar G. Barnhardt Nathan H. Blakeley ¥rancis P. Cauley 1. F. McCarthy B. V. MeDermott Arthur_P. Maloney Lioyd L. Nelson Dantel C. O'Connor | Edgar P. Condon Anthony Parsons { Wiiliam ‘A. Delaney J, C. Patterson [Louis A. Dermody” A, F. Plankers C. H. DeWitt, jr. Wendell H. Priest Clinton Q. Dodd Jdhn P. Rosenwald John C. Farrell Eugene M, Edward T, Gaule William Thomas V. Golden Felix J. |Charles N. Greusel Wm. J. Schueider |T. T. Harris BE. R. Seasongood Squire O. Harris F. Shanahan L. Clyde Hilsabeck P. H. Kennedy Amesbury Lee eph M. Shramek mes F. Sigafoos erman Sugarmdn M. 8. Lombard James W. Thomas, jr. Ludwig F. Lubeley Guy W. Townsend John 8. MeAt 1 G. Wright BANKRUPT BROKER WILL BEGIN LIFE OVER AGAIN W. J. Yancey crifice Personal Estate to Satisfy Creditors of | Cotton Firm. MEMPHIS, Apri 20.—Sacrificing his | Individual estate to creditors of Knight, | Yancey & Co., W. J. Yancey of this city, member of . the Decatur firm, announced |today that' he was turning his personal money over to firms and individuals caught in the crash and beginning lite all over again. “I do thls simply because I through life with a clean slat | Yancey in a signed statement, | always tried to be fair, honest and upright |in all my business dealings and stapce 1 will carry out that policy, even ‘hough It costs me the fruite of years and ears of hard work." Mr. Yancey in considered a wealthy man. Just what his estate is he did not say. In this | grand jury and the “other purposes,” pre- sumably include the hearing. of White's story. EDITORS AIR THEIR VIEWS (Continued from First Page.) exposition. It was Just the reverse with us atter the Seattle fair." W, H. Cowles of the Spokane (Wash.) Spokesman-Review also elected to speak of prosperity Country “The west does is Prosperous, not want any disturb- ances, political territorial, n the far east, especially in China. Our country s shipping flour to China and the trade is growing bigger every y 1t is only & forerunner, in our ef, of a tremendous | commerce. The western country will watch | with jealous eve any developments in the political arena in the east which threaten |to check the growth of the trade with the orlent Qur country is prosperous and truit, our largest staple production, 1s in ex- cellent shape. 1t has escaped the storms which visited the mid@les west.”" Charles Samuel Jackson of the Portland (Ore.) Journal reverted to politics: “Colonel Roosevelt, now more so than ever, is Oregon's political idol, but the amount of talk which is heard about Mayor | Gaynor is amazing It seems that the people | have just begun to understand the New | York City exccutive. Our country Is being | developed upon an amazing scale. The iival | rallroad enterprises of ‘the Harriman and | | Hill interests are bullding into the north- | west and Opening up rich parts of the state of Oregon. “The orlental question, so far as it af- fects eoolle labor, is forgotten in our coun- or OFFICE OF THE WEATHER BUREAU, | OMAHA, April 30.—Officlal record of tem- perature and precipitation, compared with the corresponding period of the last three vears: 1910, 1900. 1908, 1907 Maximum temperature 62 9 13 w Minimum temperature.... 50 81 3 21 Mean temperature .. B 25\48 38 LTI A AR . S e A5 Temperature and precipitation departures from the normal at Omaha since March 1 and compared with the last two years: | Normal temperature . Deficiency for the day Total excess since March i, Normal precipitation . A | 1010...........74 .o J131nch Deficiency -for the day. 18 inch Total vainfall since March 1 26 inch Daficlency since March 1. 1910.... 4.14 inches Deficiency for cor. period 1900.... 2.45 inches Deficiency for cor. period 1908.... 2.70 Inches | T Indicates trace of precipitation, L. A. WELSH, Local Forecaster. Comet rises Mondsy at 3:106 a&. m. Comet rises Tuosday at 3:03 a. m. Always Does Good Thousands Take It in the Spring. “I have taken Hood's Sareaparilla when needed for a number of years,” writes James Hey, 3070 Amber St, E., Phlledelphls, Pa, “and b found that it does me good. I always take It in the spring with th sulte. "' 1 Have (hat Giced: Teshing e he morning and cannot eat. but after tak: ing two or thrue bottles of this medi- cine always feel like a different person and advise every one needing a tenie to wive 1t u falr trial Get 1t today In llguid form - lated tablets :ulol qu'.:‘: 9 e That it ran & hundred years to a day? Have you heard of that, I say? No 287 % in 1" Auto Seat Stanhope. Stanhope A Vehicle of Quality. Is Built in the Logical Way. (it is Built for Strength and Durability T I8 BUILT FOR BEAUTY, Here is where the ‘‘Racine’’ Stanhope puts it all over the ‘‘Deacon’’ and his ‘‘Shay.” It is built to wear and in spite of its strength, durability and beauty, the ‘‘Racine’’ Stan- hope is not beyond the means of the ordinary buyer. Hundreds of Satisfied Oustomers are using them. Why not you? Johnson-Danforth Co. 8. W. Corner 10th and Jones Stre t Entrance on Viaduct.