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THE CAMPAIGN IN NEW YORK
Murphy Charges That Money Has Been Demanded by
Independence League. Ihmsen Denies Statement.
A New York dispatch says: The
startling development in the pres
ent political campaign in this state
came today when Charles F. Mur
phy, leader of Tammany Hall, pub
liciy charged that money had beende
mandede by representatives of the
Independence League in considera
tion of the withdrawal of their can
didates in certain districts, and the
subsequent serving of Mr. Murphy
with a subpoena to appear before
the grand jury in “John Doe’’ pro
ceedings and testify as to his
charges. The subpoena was issued
by District Attorney Jerome, after
a conference with Judge Otta A.
Rosalsky, of the court of general ses
sjons, who, Mr. Murphy intimated,
‘had given up money for the en
«lorsement of the league.
What Murphy Charges.
In his statement Mr. Murphy
<charged that certain Independence
League managers had demanded
money for the withdrawal of their
candidates in congressional, senato
rial and assembly districts, where a
third ticket had been put in the
field. He added, however, that Wil
jiam R. Hearst, the independence
league and democratic candidate for
governor, knew absoltely nothing
of what was going on in this con
nection.
The independence league head
muarters here tonight made a posi
#ice denial and said if anyone con
nected with the organization had at
tempted to ‘“‘hold up”’ candidates
they would be glad to know of it.
Max F. Ihmsen, who has charge of
the independence league headquar
ters, gave out a formal statement de
nying Mr. Murphy’s charges. The
statement says:
The Charges Ave Denied.
“The managers of the Indepen
dence League at the Gilsey House,
so-called, are not ‘holding up’ can
didates for cash. If anyone, even
remotely connected with the league,
attempted such a thing we should
be glad to know the facts.
“1 dioubt if any candidate of the
jeague has as yet contributed one
<cent to the league’s campaign fund.
“The Independence League, which
was promoted by W. R. Hearst, held
jts state convention at Carnegie Hall,
in this city, September 11, and
Dawson Drug Co.
Wholesale and Retail.
—————————————————— e ee—————————————————— T T
Drugs, Chemicals and Pharmaceuticals.
Patent and Proprietary Remedies. Druggists’ Sundries.
Paints and Qils. Window Glass and Putty.
Selling Agents for
THE WORLD-RENOWNED EYE-GLASSES
: e A AL 0-is et A M
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CrysTAUED LEns
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Price $l.OO $1.50 $2.00 $2.50 $3.50 $4.00 $7.00
. . . . ‘ ».‘a"’/-..’;“;?fi“;‘,a@.
S@ 3 Distributors for Colgate’s S
P «\'fig St} Perfumes, Talcum Powder, S
b Bok (ol il FMYASELINE
: \?\gfifify % loilet Soap, R
" NCOLPZ‘:::,;C]G' 54 V 1 ) ‘:%
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Dawson Drug Co. s
named a full state ticket, with Mr.
Hearst and Lewis Stuyvesant Chan
ler heading it as governor and lieu
tenant governor, respectively. Sub
sequently, the league named a com
plete judicial ticket for the first ju
dicial district, which comprises New
York city and county. At Buffalo,
on September 26, the democratic
state convention nominated Mr.
Hearst and Mr. Chanler for governor
and lieutenant-governor, respective
ly, and indorsed John H. Whalen for
secretary of state, who had also been
named by the independence league
convention.
“Mr. Hearst's campaign through
out the state has been made under
the joint management of the demo
cratic and independence league state
committees.”
SAM JONES’' BIG INCOME.
His listate Valued at a Quarter of a
Million Dollars.
Rev. Sam P. Jones left an estate
estimated at $250,000, consisting
largely of valuable properties in At
lanta, Cartersville and other points.
Property belonging to Mrs. Jones
was sold not many years ago for
$BO,OOO.
Mr. Jones did own a splendid
Kentucky farm, but sold it because
his evangelistic work prevented him
giving it the necessary attention.
Those in a position to speak author
itatively say that for many years Mr.
Jones’ income was from $35,000 to
$40,000 a year from his evangelical
and lecture work.
His life insurance was fully $75,-
000, and this, of course, will go to
his estate.
Henry E. Jones, of Tampa, Fla,
writes: “I can thank God for my
present health, due to Foley’s Kid
ney Cure. 1 tried doctors and all
kinds of kidney cures, but nothing
done me much good till I took Fo
ley’'s Kidney Cure. Four bottles
cured me, and I have no more pain
in my back and shoulders. I am
62 years old, and suffered long, but
thanks to Foley’s Kidney Cure I am
well and can walk and enjoy my
self. It is a pleasure to recommend
it to those needing a kidney medi
cine.” Sold by Kendrick’'s Drug
Store, Dawson, and H. A. Wall,
Bronwood.
The Dawson News Wednesday, October 24, 1906.
DAWSON’S LEADING DRUG STORES:
INDIGESTION ;A CRIME.
Don’'t You Want a Keen Appetite and
Perfect Health Once More.
It is a positive crime to suffer with
the ills of indigestion, such as head
ache, backache, sleeplessness, nau
sea, and distress after eating, with
despondency and nervousness, Now
that the guaranteed Mi-o-na stomach
tablets can be obtained from Daw
son Drug Co. and People’s Drug
Store.
Use this remedy, and keen appe
tite, vigorous digestion, strong heart
action, pure blood, nerves of steel
and natural strength and health will
be restored to you quickly.
Mi-o-na is entirely different from
all other remedies that are recom
mended for the cure of indigestion,
for it strengthens all the digestive
organs and is not a mere digestive.
Ask 'the Dawson Drug Co. and the
People’s Drug Store to show you the
guarantee they give with every 50
cent box of Mi-o-na. The remedy
will not cost a penny unless it cures.
Wounds, Bruises and Burns.
By applying an antiseptic dressing
to wounds, bruises, purns and like
injuries before inflammation sets in
they may be healed without matura
tion and in about one-third the time
required by the old treatment. This
is the greatest discovery and triumph
of modern surgery. Chamberlain’s
Pain Balm acts on this same princi
ple. It is an antiseptic, and when
applied to such injuries, causes them
to heal very quickly. It also allays
the pain and soreness and prevents
any danger of blood poisoning. Keep
a bottle of Pain Balm in your home
and it will save you time and money,
not to mention the inconvenience
and suffering such injuries entail.
For sale by Dawson Drug Co.
An Uncertain Obituary.
A Georgia man has written the
following on an oak slab which
marks a supposed grave in a mead
ow: “This spot is sacred to the
memory of a. faithful animal—a
white mule, born 10 years ' before
the civil war, and went through that
war on a rush, from Bull Run to
Lee's surrender. We ain’'t certain
that the mule died here, but when
last seen the faithful critter was
grazing on this identical spot and?
trying to kick a lightning-flash back
to the clouds.” ;
To Cure a Cold in One Day. i
take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab
lets. Druggists refund money if it!
fails to cure. E. W. Grove's sig-‘
nature is on each box. 25c.
People’s Drug Store
Successors to Bell Bros.
YT Our large stock of Jewelry makes
'ROYAL*
(¥) it possible for us to save you Nick-
A els, Dimes and Dollars on every
géb(\f WE INVITE YOUR “@%fi
R Y oNS (f 5 653 7AN
N F A
S ) INSPECTION. b G
XXXXXXXXX!XXXIXXXXXIIXXIIH“XIXIIXXIYXXXXXXHXXXXXXXXX!XTIXIIX!ZXXX[Ieflnnxmerxnxmexxxxxxxmmflummx
Table and Household Silverware. We can suit you
in quality and price. Knives, Forks, spoons and many
odd, artistic pieces; both sterling and quadruple silver,
BRISTLE BRUSH GOODS T
We are unloading a very large @fiw
S %Sy
stock of Tooth Brushes and
: g
Hair Brushes. You should take Wébwwfi,fi s
. ; ca BRI,
e RSBy,
advantage of the low prices at e ;g?-:@gg
‘ , . S Se T S
which we’re offering these goods. | &%Ei};{
People’s Drug Store :issis
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
TO THE FRONT AGAIN.
Says Yuca Is Likely to Become Rival
to the King of Cereals. Tre
mendous Yield Per Acre.
Now comes Dr. Wiley, of the
United States department of agri
culture, and tells the farmers of the
United States what'may well set
them to thinking; for he says under
the conditions to be found in most
of the lowlands of the countries
which stretch from the United
States 5,000 miles southeastward
yuca yields from 16,000 to 60,000
pounds of roots to the acre yearly,
and about one-fifth of that may be
made into food fit for mankind. That
ghould give 3,200 to 12,000 pounds
more than the average crop of corn
furnishes. But what is this yuca
which is likely to become so formid
able a rival of our king corn?
Yet strange as it may appear, this
rival to corn grows quite as well as
corn and gives a generous supply of
flour, even so far north and as far
back from the tempering gulf stream
’as a line through the middle of
‘North Carolina, of South Carolina
and of the gulf states. In all that
region bordering the warm waters,
including all of Florida, yuca gives
14,000 to 24,000 pounds of roots to
the acre in the year, and the flour
or starch, with the other ulements‘
they carry, are not so far in value|
from those in potatoes and thel
graing commoniy used as food.
In scores of tropic lands, through
thousands of years, millions of peo
ple have filled with yuca such places
in the economy of man as in colderl
countries have been filled by grains
and by tubers; for yuca has given
to summer climes many million
pounds each year of food that was
as good as wheat. And yuca h_asl
long been giving to people of the
lands of frost millions of pounds of
nutriment that is palatable to the
most dainty appetite, that builds up
the puny babe, restores strength to
the invalid and sustains the super
annuated, and now gives us spirits
to warm them withal and lighten
the burden of the da,v.'
In the countries south of the
United States are 5,318 million
acres. If a quarter of those acres
should be made to yield an average
of 3,750 pounds of food nearly likel
our wheat flour, for example, they
would give very nearly five millions
of pounds. That would be little
more than enough to give to each
human being on earth nine pounds
lof food for each and every day he
‘could possibly eat.
l RULER EATS HIS WIFE.
'Empvror of Annam Serves His
! Spouse on the Table.
‘ Advices from Marseilles, France,
zsa_\': ‘““According to advices which
iarrived here today, Emperor Thanh
'Thai, of Annam, has crowned his
wild excesses by killing one of his
Iwives and, after cooking her, serv
ing the body upon the table and
lcompelling the members of his court
ito eat the flesh under pain of death.
| The king has been diverting himself
| with other amusements. Some of
{his wives he has annoited with oil
and fire, while other women he has‘
stripped naked and cast into dens
of lions, where they were devouredl
before his eyes. At his last act, he
was taken in charge by the French |
government and locked up. He has‘
been adjudged insane by Dr. Du
]man, of the French colonial staff.”
+ Worth 25 Cts. in Cash to Dyspeptics.
If you suffer from Dyspepsia in’
any form, gas belching, bitter taste,
offensive, bad breath, dizzy spells,l
sour stomach, heart pains, nausea, |
’gastritis, loathing of food, pains in
the stomach, then they will disap
pear in a short time after taking
Tyner’s Dyspepsia Remedy, made es
’pecially to cure dyspepsia, indiges- |
tion and all stomach troubles, even |
(of the worst cases where doctors'
and other remedies had failed or‘
where the™patient could hardly swal
low food without great distress. 6
| Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy helps
‘digest your food. It expels the gasea’
and sweetens the breath. It cures
sick headache and colic at once.
Sold by all druggists at 50 cents a
bottle. Coupon good for 25 cents
(in cash) toward purchase of Ty
ner’s Dyspepsia Remedy sent by writ
ing Tyner’s Remedy Co., Augusta,
Ga.
Prairie Chickens Gone.
The year 1905 sees the almost to
tal extinction of the prairie chicken
in lowa, Minnesota, and all the east
ern half of Kansas, Nebraska and
the two Dakotas. This game bird 18
disappearing as did the buffalo. At
one time they were so numerous as
to be very destructive to the corn
crop unless it was husked early in
the fall. |
$2,000 worth of ladies’ up—to—datel
dress goods at cut prices this week. |
McLain Bros. & Co. |
| B
|LEPER IS DOOMED T 0 DI
‘|FEAR OF THE DISEASE ;\l{()l’SHi
A WHOLE COMMUNITY.
Leper Who Was Buffeted Abo
Over the East Finally Landed
Back in West Virginia.
Almost crazed with fear, whig
has grown upon them day after d:
lduring the weeks that George Ra
child, the leper, has been kept i
their midst, people of Pickens, V
Va., have organized, it is said,
carry out a plan to put the lep
to death. Unless the authorities i
terfere there may soon occur one
the most disgraceful events in t
history of that state.
Pickens is an isolated villa
about thirty miles from ElKkins, t
county seat of Randolph county.
will take the sheriff hours to read
there, even by special train. T
‘nearest available military compal
is at Weston, forty miles away.
{ B 8 L Cunningham, who is €
lployed by the state health author
’ties to look after Raschild, Wir
Governor Dawson that the lep
lmust be moved at once, becausé
| fears violence will be done. D
'Cunningham’s message gives 10 0l
ler details. Governor Dawson imm
{diately wired Prosecuting Attorne
C. W. Harding and Sheriff Macdo
ald at Elkins to protect the leper
Governor Dawson states that
entire militia will be called out
necessary to protect Raschild’s lif
| Several company commanders ha
;bcen notified, so that if ne»(*essa.
,there will be no needless delay !
starting for the scene. .
' Raschild is the leper who ¥
‘buffeted about the country ab
'two months ago. He was smug!
on a B. & O. train at Baltimore %
left in Parkersburg. West \lr.£:ltfll:
authorities then took charge Of i
case and Raschild was ('arfledh
Pickens, where, it was alleged,
had a residence.
How Animals Doctor Tluu:l-‘""csl;
Man might often take from th
lower animals a lesson as to !
care of himself when ill. All sor
of animals suffering from feve’ '
little, lie quiet in dark, airy PP
and drink quantities o©f wale
When a dog loses his appet® .
knows where to find dog Bras®
acts as a purgative and e'.nce
Sheep and cows, when ill, See;eri
tain herbs. Any animal St of
from chronic rheumatism k_ee;psci .
as possible in the sun. ”b 99115
panzee be wounded he has Vo
to stop the bleeding by a DPlaf
chewed-up leaves and grass