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EXCURSION FARES TO Bl
Central of Ceoi
Account National Dental Assoc
tickets will be on sale March 29, 30
ham before 1 p. m. of March 31, 1999.
ham returning up to and including, bit
For further information in regar
service, etc., apply to nearest tick
Silliman Coll
^LrirN 1 Ul> ,
An endowed school for girls, under Presbytei
Handsome, roomy buildings, beautiful, well-sl
necessary equipment. Scientific and Classical
Music, Art, Expression, Physical Culture. Bo
atndents for $146.00. Next session begins Sept
For catalogues and information, address tl
I ToCAUFC
I from Ne
One Way Coloni:
March I to Apri
SOUTHER
THROUGH
OIL BURNING LOCOMOTIVES
PULLMAN TOURIST SLEEPEI
Rate Per Berth in Tourist Sleepei
Ask Your Agent for Inform
D. ASBURY, Div. Pass. Agt.,
Lake Charles.
JAMES H. AI'
HJEATING, GAS AN!
Box 2 Contractors' & Dealer
Tel. Main 3880.
rHE PRESBYTERIAN OF THE SOU'
1RMINGHAM, ALA., AND RETURN
VI/!
rgia Railway
Mornk "51 o it\i\n ?
mmm^uuiui Ji'niJiu l, jtfua. excursion
and for trains scheduled to reach BirmingTickets
will be good to leave Birmingt
not later than midnight of April 4, 1909.
d to total rates, schedules, sleeping car
et. agent.
fl^H Hn^BD^^MHbv9
egiate Institute
LOUISIANA
-Ian control. Healthful location In the hill country,
haded grounds. Electric lights. Steam Heat. All
courses lending to degrees. Special advantages la
ard and tuition for entire session given twenty-flva
ember 16, 1908.
he President.
U. H. BROWNLEE, Clinton, Louisiana.
IRNIA,'30.SO I
>ut/ Or/panc
i mm v i i v M Ilk/
sts Tickets on Sale
1 30, 1909, inclusive
VIA
/V PACIFIC
TRAIN DAILY
CHAIR CARS AND COACHES
*S LIBERAL STOPOVERS
New Orleans to San Francisco, $5.75
lation and Literature, or Write
J. H. R. PARSONS, Gen. Pass. Agt.,
New Orleans.
ri/ p |k| PLUMBING, SEWERAGE
I lYE-rl^l, DRAINING HHH k
> ELECTRIC FIXTURES.
V Exchange, New Orleans. La.
615 Carondelet St., near Poydras.
ril. Ma^ch 3, 1909.
Secular News
DOMESTIC
A New Trust in Chicago: Indictments,
charging the existence of a powerful
trust, directed against all of the
packing house interests in Chicago, are
now nssnrofl Althmicrh tnilO hille Ofrt nnf
expected for at last a month, it has become
known that the federal grand jury
has suddenly come upon the evidence
that convinced it of the existence of the
most powerful combination the government
has ever uncovered here. Evidence
has been presented secretly before the
grand jury which has included the following
packing houses in the combination,
which is to be alleged in the indictments:
Armour & Co., Armour Packing
Company, Swift & Co., National Packing
Company, Cudahy Packing Company,
Morris & Co. and Schwarzchlld & Sulzberger
Packing Co.
With a view to forming an AmericanJppanese
Society for the promotion of a
better understanding between the races,
as wen as tor educational purposes, about
eighty-five Americans and Japanese gathered
last week in the banquet room of
the Y. M. C. A., of Los Angeles, Cal.
After dinner a number of speeches were
made . The company included Japanese
women as well as men.
The President's Summer Home: A
movement has taken shape to secure
for Annapolis or vicinity the location of
the summer residence of the president of
the United States, which it is proposed
by the bill introduced by Representative
Dalzell to construct. The original
proposition was to erect the building,
MfhUh < 3 I/X AAoi *Orn AAA xxr i.
u uiuu 10 iu wol <pi>jv,vuv, at vvcai I'uiiii.
An effort will be made to secure its loca
tion within a short distance of Annapolis,
and it will be urged that Annapolis
possesses all the advantages of healthfulness,
society and scenery that are
claimed for the Hudson river. It also
has the advantage of proximity to Washington
and comparative quietness.
Against Palmistry in Michigan: *The
house of representatives passed, by a
vote of sixty-four to twenty-five, the
Stephenson bill, wliich prohibits the
practice of palmistry, clairvoyancy, astrology
or fortune-telling by cards or
other devices for money or gain. Representative
Gray, of Lansing, offered an
amendment, excluding spiritualists fronl
the provisions of the bill. The amendment
was promptly killed.
The Arkansas Anti-trust Law Valid:
Arkansas' anti-trust law of 1905, providing
a penalty of $200 to $500 for each
offense and forfeiture of the right to do
business In the state, has been upheld
in the United States Supreme Court in
an opinion by Justice White. A test case
was made by the Hammond Packing
Company, ot Chicago, charged with combining
with other packers to fix the
price of meat In Arkansas. The packing
. uuuijmiiy was nnea *iu,uuu li\ tne Arkansas
court. The defense was set up
that the law Impaired the obligation of
a contract, and, further, that inasmuch
as the packing company is an outside
corporation, its offense, if it had committed
any, was committed outside of the