Macon daily telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1905-1926, October 15, 1908, Image 8

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8 THE MACON DAILY TELEGEAPHi THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, IMS' LET YOUR HAT BE A STETSON Tom Hardy Forestall* tho Attempt to Draw a Weapon on Him by : Shooting Flret, Mr. J. Tom Hardy, oon of Officer Har dy, of tho pollco tore*, went to the offlca of Sheriff Robortfon ytaterday morning and aald ha wanted to giro hlmaatf up. having barn oompallod to shoot a nmo i hu place. In tho Rutland district. »ma nine mllee from the elty. Ha did »t know at the time to what extent the *fha facta In relation to the ohootlng, as near as could be ascertained yeater •firoor threemontha ago Deputies Wll- m, Xiyrd and other* arrested a number ’ negroes who were found gambling In _ house In the Rutland dfetrlot, and among them was Rich Freeman. The negroes were oonvlcte/1 end lined. Mr. Hardy being short of help on his place, R aid Freeman's line on condition that e would work It out on his place. Free gladly made the trade and waa rj. Then rama occasional disputes en Mr. Hardy and the negro, and sometfmas threats. Things want along In this way until Saturday night, Mr Hardy aald, when FYeern/tn. with a shot gun In his hand, Informed him that ht_ had served two or three terms on the gang, and If he hsd to serve another, It would he for killing a white man. Thue warned. Mr. Ilardy kept a look out for Freeman, and when early yester day morning there was another dispute as to the division of the crop of cotton. Hardy was reedy with a shotgun loaded with buckshot. The dispute continued, rhen suddenly Ffeemen threw bis hi iehlnd him as If to draw a gun, and . Hardy flred. the load taking effect in '* *s thigh. Inflicting only a flesh Later he was removad to the hospital. There he made the statement that he had been shot for nothing, and that he waa wnlklnr anay from Hardy when the shot waa tired. Pseeman Is well known to the sheriff's force. He has been In several scrape*, mod Is generally regarded aa a had negro. Mr. Hardy Is well known as a quiff, severe suffer! eg. Comfort of patients care rolls looked afler. A koine* P** c ^*bl« farmer, like, plea east Msiurluu— net a prison. Treatment entirely free We have the STETSON 1908 FALL MODELS. Nothing better; nothing more stylish; nothing more up- to-dafco. If you don’t care to spend so much for a hat, try our KNOX-ALL the best $2.00 hat on earth. Star Clothing Co. DAVE WACHTEL BUCKSHOT USED ON THIS NEGRO “The VICTOR” DR. WOOLLEY’S SANITARIUM OPIUM and WHISKY /rots soy haraiftol reset»«. Our thirty yttrt' crperlroce shows these diseases are curable. Irtlmtsaleo treated at their hornet. Oerbwek of particulars free. AUm> Dr.lt. 91. Wool ley Co. Atlanta. CSa. f SEND YOUR ORDERS TO Sam Weichselbaum & Mack P. O. Box 163 Jacksonville, Fla. Tho Mack Boys will give them prompt and careful attention. Note tho following. All express prepaid: ...noo •. .S3.R0 .. .§4.10 ...1360 ...14.00 .. |4.K0 ...|M0 ...1660 XXX Superior Rye. SI-60 gall. jug. 4 quarts Hlx year old Corn. 93 00 gull. Jug, 4 quart Mount Vb»non Hye. 14.00 gall. Jug. 4 quarts nur Chou o Hyr. 16 00 gall. Jug. 4 quarts Andcrsui Co. Bourbon, four quart* vvhtto MUU bottled In bond, four quarts lewis' o«, tour quart* jrs- k Jxibel, fnur quart* k year old Oora. foal quarts These arc only a few of our many good things. Rend ns a trial order. All the standard brands of BEER at lowest prices. Write for price list. SAM WEICHSELBAUM & MACK, Jacksonville, 71a. PniNCETON, N. J. Oct. H.-TM loot, won today's gnmc frern Villa Novo, 0 0. Casey, of Villa Nova, wriggled fr w - from a mass of playera In the second half and running 76 yards, scored a touch down, but It wss not allowed because liard, of Princeton, had been trlppe.l I’rlnceton'e tourii.lown by Read waa scored only after a aeries oftjlna plunges. PHILADKLP1I1A. Oct. H.-rtnneyWa- nla defeated Oettyshurt College football eleven today by the score of IS to 4. With all the regulars In fh* line-up. the first half resulted 8 to 4 In favor of Pennsylvania, but the substitute* who came In ott the second half played much faster football and scored three ‘ downs, two goals resulted. ANNAPOLIS. Aid.. Oct. 14.—The mid- ilpmen's football squad today nutclsued m representatives of Maryland Agricul tural College, the score being 67 to 0. Nason, at quarter, and Cobb “ Frank's Choice Old Corn Whiskey 4 Full Quarts , 12 Full Quarts 1 Gallon Jug ■ 5 Gallon Keg LONG’S PRIVATE STOCK RYE WHISKEY 4 Full Quarts $ 335 12 Full Quarts $ 8.60 1 Gallon Jug S 3.10 5 Gallon Keg $13.50,^ .. , Wo guarantee the quality. Un|Cl(r) A trial will convince you. fa* Exprcsa on above goods [j>.r » c p.*ioN« prepaid to any point on lines of Southern Express Co. tfWZ D. F. & C. P. LONG JACKSONVILLE, FLA. BEDINGFIELD & CO. (Incorporated) EDWARD LOH, President. Formerly of Macon, Ga. The names imply that everything bought here is the highest grade of all standard whiakitw, at lowest prices. Sand n* your orders which will receive prompt at tention. Write for Catalog 29 W. Forsyth St. P.O. Box 1098 Jacksonville, Florida MACON’S MILK MUSTJ1E GOOD Chief SanKary Inspector's Report Make* Remarkably Good Showing of Ma- con 1 * Milk Supply. In accordance with a resolution ei the board of health, the report of the chief sanitary Inspector on the condition et the several dairies furnishing the milk supply for Macon, and the results of his tests of the milk taken at random from the varloue wagons selling in the city, was published for the second time yes terday In The Telegraph. The report of yesterday ahowa a mark ed Improvement In the condition and In the quality of milk since the publica tion of the first report. Hpeaklng of this. Inspector Nottingham aald yesterday that the condition, taking them as a whole. milk supply. akhic of the sources of was aplendld. He Is delighted with the Improved condition. He nays seml-occa- islonal visits to the dairies, going when least expected, and as he Inspects the I cows and the dairy and the methods employed, tho premises and In fact every thing connected with the supply source, his reports embrace all that Is connect- |ed with them. He says further that the You MIJHT ORDER your FAIR OLOTHEB PROMPTLY to amid de lay, Bee Albert MrKny. Football Games touch- Cobb at right Dalton, of the "The little store around the cor ner" (Cherry and Second streets) Is where you'll find the best and largest selection and get fluent results, bert McKay. UNFORTUNATE ACCIDENT WELL-KNOWN CITIZEN Mr. Albert Munich Loses Thrss Fingers From His Loft Hand at Willingham Manufacturing Company, Mr. Albert Munach. n carpenter, em ployed at the factory of the Willingham Hash A Door Company, was the victim f » very serious accident yesterday. Mr Munich wa* working on one of t,„ machines In the factory tightening some «rar. when the wrench he was working with slipped and caused hts hand to be caught between two cog-whmla. Yhashlng It so severely that the first Mat Of the first. ^‘ second end third flngera of his left hand had In be amputated. A farmer on Ru (la.. W. A. Floyd by name, stye: "Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured the two worst norea I ever saw. one on un hand an one on my leg, It te worth more than Its weight In gold. I would not bo without It if I had to mortgage tho form to get lt. H Only 25c at all drug store. his reports embrace all that ed with them. Ho says furtl— consumer Is well pleased with the pub lication of the reports, and they aro now not afraid to drink the milk. The con sumer who gets hi* dally milk from John Smith t an read In tho reports Juat what the condition of John Hmlth's dairy »*. and what kind of milk he Is selling. Heretofore tho consumer took the milk on faith. The report published yesterday dhows some Interesting facta. There wero thir teen dnlrle* Inspected during the month, Of thl* number eight were pronounce*) good so far a* the condition of the dai ries were concerned. Of the number four were marked excellent, while only one came under the head of fair. The In spector say* that this one will .be good on the next report, he Is certain. . . During the month tho Inspector took 31 samples of milk from wagona found scll- *- ‘mes taking two wagon, but nt the streets, sometimes taking two ■ample* from the aamo wagon, but n different times. The law requires milk to contain i minimum of 3.6 per cent of butter fat. and a minimum of 12 per cent of total solid*. The report shows that of th« 31 samples tested not one waa under the standard. On the contrary, there were 2t sample* over the miindarrL C of the samples reaching aa high as 5 per cent. THE HOTEL LANIER MAY BE SOLD * AND CHANGE OWNERS TODAY and this only a shade. Of the condition of the milk a* found by the testing pro cess. 26 sampled were notod aa clean one tRs H |iext report will probably show even better conditions than this. Where Bullets Flew. David Parker, »*f Fayette, N. Y., a veteran of the civil war, who lost a foot nt Gettysburg, says: "The good Electric Ritters have done I* worth more than live hundred dollars to mo. I spent much money doctoring for a bad case of stomach trouble, to little purpose. I then tried Electric Bitters, and they cured me. I now take them aa a tonic, and they keep me strong and well." 60c at all drug stores. Proppr Way to Ride. ‘The fatigue of a long Journey of ... Ich peraon* often complain." said an experienced traveler. "I* quite unneces sary and romci from an unconscious ef fort to carry the train Instead of let- a ng tho train carry us. This Is In re sting the motion Instead of relaxing and yielding to It. In a railroad ear one should always rest the feet on the mil of the seat In front. If such Is provided, to keep tho feet off the floor lessens vibration that la conveyed to the body and prevent* Juat that much strain, In a Pullman, where footrests ara not usually provided, a bag will do as well footstool. If nothing else Is to ,b* Only a Few Dstalls Lacking to Con* dude tho Trade— Etheridge and Foop th* Now Propristoro—Mr, Nawcomb Remains In Macon. With tho ssttlement of a Cew of the details, which It Is expectod will be done today, one of the oldest and beat known hostelrles Jn the south will ebapfo hands. Built Jn 1163, and before the war the scene of all the social functions In dulged In by the rich planters of the middle section of Georgia, and of some of the most brilliant balls of the ante bellum days, and after the war had Just closed, the place where Jefferson Davis rested after his capture near Abbeville, and since the war acknowl edged as one of the leading hotels of the country, the change of proprietor ship of the Hotel Lanier Is of unusual importance. It has been under the management of Mr. J. A. Newcomb since 1667, and he has spent thousands of dollars In Its Improvement, always adding to and making It comfortable and bringing it to what ht wanted to be an ideal hos telry. For many days there have been ru mors and rumors as to the sale, but not until yesterday was anything like conclusive transactions had that would bring about the change In the pro prietorship. The new purchasers are Messrs. N. J. Etheridge and C. C. Foor, former ly of the Drown House at Macon, but later of the Jacksonville hotels. They have long wanted this house, and yes terday they succeeded In securing It The consideration is ndt known, but rumor has It that It waa In the neigh borhood of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars. As to what will become of Mr. New comb, that gentleman **ld last night In rsp)y to tne question of what he in tended to do, that he was a citizen of Macon and would remain as such. He has a number of Interests In tho city, and these will keep him busy for some time to come. It Is understood that the new pro prtetors will take Charge at once. They •re capable men. of long and consider able experience, and well and favor ably known to the traveling public They will keep the hotel up to its high standard of excellence, and their countless friends all over the country will be glad to greet them in their new home. Making""the BEST CLOTHES and LOTS of 'em, too. COME around at ORca. Albert McKay. Tht Parent and the Child. There Is another class of parent from whom tsachtrs suffer much, generally has but one child, and that child la generally a pitiful, conscien tious. earnest little creature. In sombor hair ribbons and comfort shoes. Very frequently this parent has been, In some prehistoric ngo, a teacher of mathematics In a high school. Now, a aplrltualltlsc seance at which Messrs. Freebie. pextolozzl. Herbart. Locke Spencer should appear and ex- thelr theories of education, and A Centrifugal Gun, Hariem haa a rival, of Maxim.: His nam* in Wm. J’atton an*l he ha* built & model of a gun to be disoharged .by eentrl/ugal force Inile&d of with explo sive*. - ill* fore* 6 supplied by a centra] wheel wb.Vh win be worked by a CJ-horse power motor when he builds a six-foot t un. But In hi* present ten-inch model atten turn hts wheel by hand and he * . marvelous things with It. shell or cartridge, but uses seems to do marvelous things wli Ho needs no shell or cartridge, but leaden bullets, the wheel firing them out as fast as they can be poured Into the gun. A -Times reporter • vouches for the feet that the gun put 400 buckshot Into a space nve-fighth* of an Inch In diameter In Jess than a minute. The target was 40 feet sway. Patten believes that his six- foot gun will fire 60.000 halt-inch steel so as simply to rain bullets into anything within rang*. War will yet be killed by its own ter- ir will yet be killed by Its owr . If Patten succeeds with this weapon and Maxim's noiseless gun does all that Is expected of It.-the era of peace will be brought nearer. It will not get her# In time to-Interfere with President Roose velt's demand for a fighting navy, but the more terrible that navy Is, the less chance will there be of any nation chal lenging !L—Brooklyn Eagle. . ^ Fill your bins now with Clinehfleld Coal and you will be Independent when the mercury drops. Order from i attempt! this 1 — It Is not : a* possible Until .. taxation on a railroad L_ .. .. ... .....—, tleed how tense Is the effect to resist the motion—all of which Is In direct ac-j cordance with modern Phyalml culture, which ha* dlucovered that true reposel^* goes further than mere non-action."— w»Y N,w York Pr*,«. dlvli CHANGE OF SCHEDULE IN LUMBER CITY TRAIN Make* No Connection for Points North * and Slope at Macon. An Important change of soJedL.. .. announced by tho Southern railway to take effect Dot II. r from Lumb at u— — ... The train from Lumber City, formerly arriving her* at 7:25 a. in., and making straight connection for Atlanta, will, nfter the ll\h, leave Lumber City at 6:«e Thla « effect here at 3 i:. Illriena.* Eaatman. 1 cSrhraa £THi!ffiSh vllle and othar pjrint* within a radius of 55 miles, who will atop and do their trad ing In Macon. Infteed of going on to AUanta nnd otter points m formerly. |— No change In schedule has bran mad on the return trip to Lumber City, tri train leaving at 4:M p. ro. ns before. Prisoner* of Spain. Of course, the pardon of Porte Ricans sentenced to imprisonment in the Hran-1 leh penal colony at Ceuta previous to our acquisition of the Islands would be an act of courtray by 8patn. as well as of trial t zxM 5S£ tmee*. Seventeen, at least, are politi cal nrleonerm against whom there Is no a ^raifle charge. Porto Rlrans asked the ■ndty service* of the United States to •ecure the release of these prtsonei^HBj Ceuta, and should the government J ply with tiu-ir request. It eould do so UUP as an apnllrant for the friendly consid eration of the Spanish government It 1 ■jsve: * Sp.niyi poMM.km Ih.r. MmuM b. imp In ftr-*nl.h prtoMW Mrvln, lln. for inn. ntinrlf* 10 Ihfow ott Mpaolril mW— Boston TianicrtpL^^HmH^ make Balloon Sanatorium*. sanatorium* will be the next J be packed Mom piazzas have bran tried | Actual!; result* for the weak lunged lato the basket of which tho Invalid c lng no* would with hie tubei n the dements permitted, d ■ to a!*rp by the ewa| the stare, <s*ul«l tft»r conch for mntttl fu Well. Ju*t * . KitSWMi That Is (he ~T**ffjr**** - * I end gtftsift? ara* bo!- ' '- • Sad.* The body! f w^lle Ton are sUtlnS *t which Professor James ehopld come In a car. should be as completely relaxed *fOi father understands lit* situation better than a mother can. The hoy I* Just — taring the world nf men; the fntherl readv moves and has his being In that world, and If the boy respects hi* father he Is apt to respect and si-crpt Ids opin ion as to matters whereof the father has had experience and tho son not. nAs to girls. It is reported by persons J a position to observe to advantage the stria nf this generation that many of them emerge from the contemporary pro cesses of education with Ideas, standards. ;.nd Intention* of their own. so definite nd positive na to bring the contem porary mother to confusion and dismay. The mother has her views and plans her daughter's next proceedings: wise ns. probably, baaed on sound exper- ■we; but the education of women has Ichanged very much In a generation, and perhaps It la not tq he wondered at that It should ho a common thing for such m disparity to obtain between the mothcr'fl ihopcs and the daughter's preferences as to strain maternal patience and mini nf feetton. At such crisis a father. knowB lng less about the particular mould In which It Is proper that girls should be rua. la apt to be less scandalised than the mother at the reluctance of his own girl to l*e run In It. Sympathising with both attitudes, he la sometimes able to temper both the mother's expectations and the daughter's reluctances, and so ease along the modification of tradition, land help to keep peace and love In the I family. No father wants to throw a daughter away. Mothers In their perplexity some times feel that It Is a choice between that and running away themselves. To see that neither disaster happens Is a worthy work of which ever no fallible a father may contribute very much, pro- vldrd he brings to the task a proper •plrtt of patience and humility. And contrariwise when the mother see# only with the daughter’s eyes and has no wlahee but hers, and la ready to be her door-mat and her drudge—in that wheel, too. a father can he an Important emke. ana make It turn In better accord with natural propriety.—E. 8. Martin. In Har per’s Magaalnc. Malaria Causes Loss of Apostlte. The Old Steward GROVE'S TASTE- t,E88 CHILL TONIC, drive* out ma- Marla and builds up the eyxtom. For | grown people and ohUdren, 50c. i ■ ,.jm Harvard to preside, while Pro fessor John Dewey looked In to make a few remarks, would never persuade that parent that her child'* Prosrea* waa not to be gauged by an ability to spell obsolete words and to worry her wey to complicated problems In long ’Islon. Why, she's been to school every day for seven monthe: rain, nor snow, nor sleet.hag daunted her. She has an umbrelta*a mackintosh, and a pair of rubbers. And yet. with all these elds to education, she cannot spell •pgfltllel."* The whole trend of education changed when the "three R’s” ceased to be Its war-cry, and It behooves tho modem mother to realize this change and to Adapt herself to It. For. the school And the home ere hut two agen cies In the training of the child, two powers which should work together for good: and the ideal relation between the two 1» that they should be aa one. It wad a very great Teacher who taught! that "no man can serve two masters." Then let the mother con form her rule and her Judgment! to the law* of her sister kingdom. Let her hold, for Instance, that the principle of self-activity Is stronger than blind, qbfdicnco ever was; that emulation, as a "pur to effort, Is the abomination of desolation: that a sound mlhd In a sound body Is more to be valued than riches: that a keen eye for color and form, a steady hand to guide a pencil or a tool, a mlml alert, eager and reasonable, a heart which feel# Its brotherhood with all living, growing things, a free, frank speech; a generous nature, and an honest tongue, are In themselves a Declaration of Independence and. a Psalm of Life.—Myra Kelly, In Her peris Baser. Heatfachee and Neuralqla from Colde LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine, the world wide Cold end Orlo remedy.r cause. Cbfi for fhil name. L signature R W. GROVE. 25c. Steel as I a te of th* most aco s la the ^bualntM Trad* Barometer, it accurate Indices of business of the United States Steel Corporation. Two months efter the panic thl* greqt Industrial or ganisation with an army of a quarter million employes and a pav roll of 1160,0*0,** mt annum was operating at «5 per ce*’ vt Its capacity. Early In Heptambar It ’•a* running Its plants at 6® per cent ol maximum and In that month, foe th* I’rat time since December, 1505. It shewed an. Increase in the nura- Shanghai Musical Taste, There la a town band In Shanghai, which, by the altitude of Its taste, has roused a "vague, but undeniable sense of dtssatlgfactTon In the breasts of the Inhabitants." It fa conceded that un der the present conductor the band haa m&dn striking progress, but as it has "hdvatced In technical excellence it haa shown n tendency to para out of sympathy with popular taste." Its pro- S nms in the public garden do not con- in sufficient "cheerful pieces/' and deal too largely In "classical airs." When th* home mail left China the po sition was that the band, Rose-Dartle- Uke. had demanded Information of a more .definite character as to the ex act need which they professed It was the desire of their heart to supply, and the editor of a. local newspaper had gested, by way of guidance, "some _ jvnls of old melodies—the operetta# of Gilbert and Sullivan, the early mu sical comedies, such as the 'Qclaha,' •The Shop Girl' and 'The Artist'# Model/ 'Offenbach and Audran.’ aa a means of allaying tho 'vague, but undeniable' discontent." It may be mentioned that the head and front of the band’s of fending, so far as "classical" music was concerned, seems to have been the per formance of overture# or popular selec tions from "Fra Dlavolo." "William Tell,” 'Martha" and "Cavalleria Ruaticana."— London Telegraph. “Clinchfield—The Coal of Quality." Mother and Teacher. As rare perhaps a# the dod-blrd Is the mother who takes an intelligent larger growth. Mrs. O’Rourke will send Tim and Pat and Biddy and Jim my and Mike ar.d Della, so that she may have leleure to take care of the twin# and the baby, and to do the washing; while Mrs. Fits-Jones will send Robert Albert Walter Jltz-John Fltz-Jones so - that she may bo—to quote Browning, and since he’s dead whatever he wrote must be consid ered proper—"safe In hsr corset lac ing", ere she sallies out to bridge. Occasionally the two powers for good and evil In the child’s world meet. A largo mother will drag a reluctant boy to school and loudly bewail herself for that she can do nothing with him. Ho ha# been dismissed as untcachnblc by another teacher. "He ain't, bo to speak, bad, ml*s He’s Just naturally ■ugly an’ stoopld Look at him now." and she directs the general attention to tho .writhing# of her victim. "Would you think I Just washed and combed him nn* came around—leavin' my house work, too— to ask you to try him? He don’t ap preciate. nothin' I do for him. Just naturally ugly and stoopld.” It may take a week to undo tho ef fects of this Introduction and to gain the little chap’s confidence.—Myra Kelly, In Tarper'a Bazar. Reason will not stand against the smiles and tears of a pretty woman— And cheap clothes are not proof against Heaven’s sun shine and rain. . j If you want to win a lawsuit—look out for smiles and tears—if you want a cheap “suit” to “win”— keep it out of the shine and rain. But—if you went to. feel perfectly safe—dry or wet—buy Alfred Benjamin & Co.’s Clothes. They are absolutely all wool—the product of New York’s best shops—and will appeal to tho rea son” and satisfy the tastes of the most exacting buyers. They are as good as their reputation—which is the best—and are backed by onr reputation. $15 TO $35. iSSlBdOJf/ Very Few Left. MKte Rankin, at the Cadillac the other day. hrard a group of young actors talk ing abont the decay of tha art of acting. "Gentlemen," said he, "your lamenta tion reminds me of a certain very Infe^ rlor artist who and a worse super, found in deep dish a bad utility man ... Jeep —, count of the death of Forreat and of that actor’s great services to the stage. Wlp lng a tear from hla eye, he said, solemn ly. 'Ah. yes; there are very few of us left'"—New York Telegraph. ’REPARED INSTANTLY. Simply add holi ng water, cool and eenre. 15c. per package at U grocers. 7 flavors. Refuse all rabwlratee. —GO TO- WESLEYAN The best instruction is tho cheapest. '' T i»i *!J ' WE PAY YOU TO SAVE OPEN NOW A— ' 'r;<V ' SAVINGS ACCOUNT We will furnish you with a bank book, a home savings or a pocket savings bank, and will, in many ways make it to your advantage. Save regularly, and see how fast the money will grow, with interest compounded. Commercial & Savings Bank E. Y. Mallary, President ~J. J. Cobb, Cashier Our coupon certificates of deposit are the most con venient, and safest form of investment. ~'l Oyster Season Now Open We are headquarters for Oysters, Fish and Fresh Meats. Oysters all the time. Your orders solicited. 3 Phones 242—951. ’’ W. L. Henry Co. Out of town orders receive prompt attention. Put Your Account Witt The American National Bank of Macon The Largest Bank in Middle Georgia! Capital $500,000.00 Surplus (earned) $300,000.00 Liberal Treatment end Courteous Attention to all. R. J. TAYLOR, President R. W. JOHNSTON. V.-P. L. P. HILLYER. Vice-Prea. OSCAR E. DOOLY, cishier. Th. Socl .11 it Movtment In America. 1 m’/nt°’ thiY 1 of**w°r-, C U hut rrrord orJrr. What ar, th, aim, of th, Iwdrr, of on lu boyk, •« »-h«“ th. Socialist movement In thl, coun- „ t im“ r Thul"oF^SS™ U rSJ try? Rnlan.t Phillip, expound, the,! JjJJJ* jjj* X3£ou, Th !S;a uSSSItralMj In nn Inlrrrrtlne nrtlo . uttllM "Hn-1 pK!u»VlS« JSSFvt ch?firmlSInlV?tl5S furling th, Ur.I Mae. which rppr.nrr of th, whL In fnct It la primarily be- In lUrprr'. Wrrkly. The Intricate mn-! cun th, tnuu-HlMlMlppI country hu chlnrrv of th, S«cl«lt«t party r.mv he I *-»» niUlnt money and rprn.llng ft lib- Mn>rrcl.tr,!. hr «>■». whm It I, l-u-n. 1 r.mlUr fur ImtrovrmrnU _nna w. nlme, M that there nr» nn In,, than nn« hun- JJtilnSK'hubMn,o*m>wdL In Jm! drrdSocUllBtwrTkly PnUhcnllnn, In ; u.'rV'-’r.'/^p^ctten*^. {U% America, which, with th, d,lllc, md tnni. In Auxuit it wu 1.XI.0M ton., n monthly mnmtlnr, drvntrd tn thn rr«. nin ,1 pm per cnt. Itctwcm pa gamin nf the .-nine, reach bct»-cu I Jinu.7 and Au»u,t IHTproiuctlcn ln- iww nnd thrm million reader. Work. JKVS’ anFin'tSw 1 'munL’IS-wi nf jng dny,nnd nl«hU on. ,-. u ndrrd .nd j (SrLcVUt n? ! An tmpi nt is that now steel Is exceed- ui sinning iiemtxr l: consumption of Iren and steel Is rxreed- the Ohlcagr* head- In# U»e current produoilon of the raw quarters. It has been fairly estimated * n< ? ®»lshed steel.--Charles F. that not only et election tfm«% but 1 ,n American Rev.ew of Re- •Ttry night In th# year between three I **** J and four thousand meeting, ere being voa vra-* - harangued by Socialist asltatera. Ho*. y * u i5KJd•» Drodue#r ' ui# th# farmers* vote and to nin control' of the labor movement by "boring from within.** together with a detailed ac count of the party’s demand*. Is I .auVfort. Germany. P _ on to American manufac turers of ptjvr • Metre end cuffs that, with proner effort, j ty might secure a larco trade in thri | B mw that) Tutt’sPills FOR TORPID UVER. Kasjr t# Remember—A*k Year Dealer J tbo.it It. A new a*ft drink Just being litre- | daced by Anh*us«r-nu»ch. . It is a as- I ’lghtful^^»p^rkUag.^refrushing borer- j ' us kale! aa it come* within all raniira- saepu ef V. * Government laws re- rarding the sale of raft drink*. A torpid Ihcr Jcrangca the whole todiatrv min ;.i«. uT bw! i rrod«« a=5SLjr3w7K:;xts- sick hudache, g^ win wurrnhw a general' DiApepiie, Co&tivenoss* Rheu- f»t a'nd.^MmimWI Sn'SpraTKa! sad mdlism, Sallow Skin nnd Pile*.. died man aoutj fs '■"i «|wi i"». aim 4 “lispne” which the 6 nu:;ij -Springfield i I There If no better remedy for these CC’^mon ul<ea>cs than Dtt. TLTFS UVER PILLS, as a trial wifl prove. Take No Substitute. A Whiskey Sour is a very palatable drink—especially so for a feverish stomach. It can be made in the home with very little trouble—dissolve a spoon of sugar in water—use the juice of a lemon—an ordinary drink of Clarke’s Pure Rye and cracked ice. We say use CLARKE’S PURE RYE because it is a a perfect whiskey—every safeguard is used for your pro tection. It is aged and bottled by the United States Government whose green stamp overlapping the cork is your guarantee. t .... _ ■< > 4 Full Quiutsj $ 5.00 Delivered 12 Full Quarts, 12.00 Delivered For sale by most dealers throughout the world, and all dealers in Chattanooga, Tenn., and Jacksonville, Fla. If yours refuses to supply you write us.; . Clarke Bros. & Co* ^ PBORJA. ILL. »■- .. v rartWattstafiteinJit Wv*' -