Newspaper Page Text
S\;\'\\p g f\gs
and
E\\X\\‘?S Senna
Cleanses the System
] ectnally:
Dispels co\ds and Headaehes
dueto ConstipoXion;
. Acks naturally, acks Yruly as
o LaxaXwe.
Best §or Men Women and Ol
ven—Young and O\,
To get Ws beneficial effects.
Q\my?,, \3\2 \b\\?k .Gen\m\&
CALIFORNIA
Fic Syrup Co.
SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS
one size only, regular price 50°per bottle.
The management of the steam
roads entering Paris is considering a
proposition to electrify all lines for
some considerable distance into the
suburbs.
It is regrettable, to the Indi‘fmapo
lis News, that the seismozraph f[ails
tn register an earthquaie before it
.18 tco late to profit by the informa
tion. In these shaky days an instru
ment is needed that can prophesy
rather than record a fact.
d. H. GrßeeN’s Soxs, ol Atlanta, Ga., are
the only successful Dropsy Specialists 1h the
world. See their liberal offer in advertise
ment in another column of this paper.
Light From Flash of Powder.
Judge D. W. Bond of the Middlesex
Supérior Criminal 'C~urt, in charging
a jury recently in speaking of the
question as to whether the witness
had sufficient light to identify the
defendant by, referred to an old case
in England at a time when old fash
jomed black gunpowder that made con
siderabie l.ight when discharged was
used.
A wcman who hanpened to be pass
ing saw the shot in question fired
end identified the man who fired it
by the light of the flash. The pris
oner afterward verifiel her testimony
by his confession.—Bcston Herald.
What Hunters Teach Animals.
If proof were needed of the part
played by gportsmen in this educaticn
of the wild we have it in their curi
ous limitations when ccnfronted by
dangers of another Kkind.
No number of fatalities keeps these
game birds away from the telegraph
wires; no lengthening death roll
warns the- woodcocks and other fly
by nights to avoid the fatal lantern
of the lighthouse. Not ail the cen
turies of havoc have taught the larks
to build their nests out of reach of
scythe and sickle. Only the noisier
.menace of dogs and guns has brought
‘acguired experience. In this the true
sportsman has his consolation, for if
difficulty be the essence of sport
then that difficulty is likely to in
erease.—Pall Mall Gazette.
CONGENIAL WORK
. And Strength to Perform It.
A person in good health is likely
"to have a genial disposition, ambition
and enjoy work.
‘On the other hand, if the digestive
organs have been upset by wrong
fgod; work becomes drudgery.
““Until recently,” writes a Wash
ington girl, “I was a railroad steno
grapher, which means full work
every day.
“Like many other girls alone in a
large city, I lived at a boarding
house. For breakfast it was mush,
greasy meat, soggy cakes, black cof
fee, etc.
“After a few months of this diet I
used to feel sleepy and heavy in the
mornings. My work seemed a terri
ble effort, and I thought the work
was to blame—too arduous.
“At home I had heard my father
speak of a young fellow who went
long distances in the cold on Grape-
Nuts and cream and nothing more for
breakfast. i :
“1 concluded if it would tide him
over a morning’s heavy work, it
might help me, so on my way home
one night I bought a package, and
next morning I had Grape-Nuts and
milk for breakfast.
“1 stuck to Grape-Nuts, and in less
than two weeks I noticed improve
ment. I can’t just tell how well I
‘felt, but I remember I used to walk
'the 12 blocks to business and knew
how good it was simply to live.
“As to my work—well, did you
ever fecel the delight of having con
genial work and the strength to per
form it? That’s how I felt. I truly
believe there’s life and vigor in every
grain of Grape-Nuts.” o
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to
Wellville,” in pkgs. “There’s a Rea
gon.” ‘
_ Ever read the above letter? A nef
' one appears from time to time. They
!iumm BRY £ul) of Muimay
E ARG |R L
TAFT AND SHERMAN INAUGURATED
Took Oath in the Senate Chamber---King Blizzard Was in Control
at Washington—-Southern Troops Feature of the Parade.
Washington, D, C.—~ln the senale
chamber, which seldom before has
witnessed so impressive a ceremony
or held a more brilllant audience; in
the presonce of high dignitaries of
state and nation, and the ambassa
dors and representatives of practical
ly every country of the civilized
world, Willlam Howard Taft took the
oath of office as president of the
United States.
A blinding snow storm, which swept
over Washington, caused an abandon
ment of outdoor ceremony which
heretofore has marked the inaugura
tion of many presidents of the Unit
ed States,
The change of program was a source
of deep disappointment to thousands
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WiLLiaM H. Tapr
snowdrifts and slush of the capitol
plaza in the hope of witnessing the
taking of oath by the new president.
Mr. Taft was extremely anxious that
the original plans should be adhered
to, but, after he had arrived at the
capitol, he gave consent because of
the danger of exposure to the ele
ments would have entailed upon the
venerable Chief Justice Fuller of the
supreme court of the United States,
and the elder members of the sante
and diplomatic corps.
Mr. Taft’s inauguration immediate
ly followed that of Viee President
James S. Sherman, which wés carried
out in accordance with the original
program.
President Roosevelt entered the
crowded senate chamber arm in arm
with President-elect Taft. The ap
pearance of these two chief figures
in the day’s events was a signal for
a spontaneous outbreak of applause
on the floor and of cheers in the gal
leries. :
Speaker Cannon took a place on
the presiding officer’s bench by the
side of Vice President Fairbanks.
Prior to the entry of the president
and the distinguished invited guests,
the senate had adopted a resolution
of thanks to Mr. Fairbanks, who re
plied in a farewell address.
He then administered to Mr. Sher
man the brief oath of office prescrib
ed by the constitution and turned
over to him the presiding officer’s
gavel., Vice President Sherman made
but a brief inaugural address and
then rapped the chamber to order for
the further business of inaugurating
the new president of the TUnited
States,
Mr. Taft’s induction into office was
the same simple ceremeny devised in
the early days of the republic. He
swore to uphold and defend the con
stitution, to enforce all laws and to
protect the republic against all ene
mies, both foreign and domestic.
The cath was administered by Chief
Justice Fuller ,who was officiating at
such a ceremony for the last time in
his notable career as the chief pre
siding officer of the country’s highest
court. President Roosevelt, who be
came again a private citizen of the
United States when President Taft
had kissed the Bible in consummatio
of his oath, was quick to congratulate
his successor in office, being second
to the chief justice in exercising that
privilege.
When Mr. Taft had concluded his
address he was escorted to the wait
ing carriage outside the senate wing
and there was joined by Mrs, Taft
and by Vice President and Mrs. Sher
man for the return ride to the white
souse,
Ex-President Roosevelt walked out
of the capitol amid a cheering throng
and, escorted by nearly a thousand
members of the New York County
Republican Committee, was driven to
the union station several blocks away
and boarded a train for New York
and Oyster Bay.
oo The Parade.
More than thirty thousand march
ing men participated in, the great
military and civic’ pageant, which con
stituted the principal spectacular fea
ture of the presidential inagural cer<
emony, ‘By almost superhuman ef
forts, a passageway was cleared along:
the ceuier of Pennsylvania avenue,
however, and for nearly three hours,
President Taft..and Vice President
Sherman revieved the passing col
umn, Approximately twenty-five thou
sand ot these were soldiers, sailors
and marines of the military estabiisi
meuts of the United States, bodies of
the National Guard of many states,
with large contingents of spruce’ ca
dets and midshipmen from the Na
tional Mvilitary and Naval Academies.
Numerically, the inaugurate parade
was not so- large as that which’
‘tharched’ along historic Pennsylvania
avenue from ine capitol to tgxe white
house when Groyver ¢Cleveland, the
only democratic president’ of the Uni
ted Stales since the civil war, was
inducted into the office the first time,
In previous inaugural parades, the
midshipmen from the Naval Academy
at Annapolis and the cadets from the
Military Academy at West Point have
won the greatest popular approval ;
they were' no less favorites than for
merly among both residents and vis
itors, but in heart interest they were
eclipsed by the detachment of 3,000
sallors from the great fleet of Amer
jcan battleships now anchored in the
waters of Hampton Roads, just return
ed from their world-encircling, epoch
making cruise of fourteen months, As
they swung along in lively, happy
fashion, accustomed now as they are
to the adulation of thousands they
were evidently pl2ased with the deep
chested roar that greeted them from
the open throats of a hundred thou-
JAMES S. SHERMAN.
(sand Americans, their fellow-country
'men. In this way the American peo
ple, as represented in the nation’s cap
ital, express their pride in the men,
who, in time of peace, had won un
'dying fame in far-off countries.
| Among the state troops were de
' tachments of the National Guards of
| Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Maine,
| Massachusetts, Maryland, Missouri,
!Minnesota, New York, New Jersey,
| Ohio, Pennsylvania and Virginia.
!Some of the more distant states sent
several companies of their guard,while
Imcst of them were represented Dby
| regiments, and Maryland and Pennsyl
vania by brigades. is
Among otiuer noted military organi
zations in the parade were the Rich
mond Hussars, a cavalry command of
| Augusta, Ga., and the cadet regiment
Ifrom the Virginia Military Institute,
| pcpularly known as “The West Point
of the South,” which supplied many of
the high commissioned otticers tfor the
confederate army in the civil war.
| Following the military divisions
| marched the eivic organizations.
Some organizations were in line
’that never before had visited Wash
ington and their clever marching and
latiractive uniforms caught and held
the fancy of the throngs. Among
these were the *“Pickan.nny Band,’
composed of colored orphan boys of
South Carolina; the “*Sherman Scouts”
of Utica, N. Y., carrying at the head
of their line a huge oil painting of
their neighbor, Vice President Sher
man, and leading at the rear a gaily
caparisoned “Billy Goat;” an “Alliga
tor Band” from Louisiana; a *“’Fos
sum Club” from Georgia and a Taft
Club, 500 strong, from the same
state; the New York Republican
County Committee, 1,000 strong; the
Columbus (Ohio) Glee Club, 10v men,
probably the best political musical or
ganization in the country; an “Uncle
Sam Club” of Buffalo, each of its 106
members attired in the conventional
Uncle Sam costume; the Bug House
Hose Company of Long Island, Pres
ident Rooseveit’s neighpors, and many
others,
The Minneapolis Flambeau Club,
one of the most spectacular organiza
tions in the country, also appeared in
this division of the parade, and not
the least important feature of the civ
ic division were the representatives of
several camps of courederate veter
ans, now grim and gray, some of
Iwhom wore their old time uniforms
and carried their shotriddizd flags.
it was a tlumuliuous reception
lwhich the throngs gave the incoming
'and outgoing presidents, and it was a
cordial and heart-reit greeling which
they reverently accorded to that too
rapidly diminishing band of men who,
in tume ot war, were willing to lay
down their lives for the mnation and
in time of peace join with the coun
try in honoring the nation’s president,
The Ball.
President and Mrs. Taft were the
centers of interest at the culminating
feature of the memorable day—tihe in
augural ball, in the pension building.
The scene 11 the vast cavern of the
puilding, waich had been transformed
into a canopied court of ivory and
| white, was another of the brilliant
Ipictures which are quadrennially
| painted here by the gatnering of a
| vast -and brilliant assemblage from
'every section of the country. With
all tne color and movement of a mili
tary spectacle, with the softening In
fiuence of delicately tinted gowns and
the interest of a personnel seldom
equaled at a sociai runcuon, the in
augupal Lall holds a place umnique in
tne history making of the dsy.
While tne bail was in progress in
doors, a display of fireworks on the
monument = lou in the rear of the
white house marked tiae end of the
outdoor celebration. For hours the
thinly clouded heavens were alight
with screaming rogkets, with sun clus
ters that chali the brilliance ot
days, with fiery pras”’ and all the
rantastic creall ~of modern pyro
19211&!0,%@3 i i A b
FEASTS THAT LASTED HOURS.
Long Drawn Out Chinese Dinners—
When an Esquimau is Hungry.
Sir Robert Hart, the veteran in
spector@eneral of the Chinese cus
toms, speaking at a dinner in Lon
don the other day said that he once
in Pekin gat out a banquet that lasted
seventeen consecutive hours. There
were 120 courses, and he tasted them
all. ‘Mr, Ward, the American envoy
to China, who tried to secure an
interview with the Emperor Hleng-
Fung 1859, tells how he was en
tertained at a dinner that lasted from
noon one day until ¢ o'clock on the
evening of the day following. The
total number of courses ig not giv
en, but Ward mentions that he had
to give in after partaking of 138 dif
ferent dishes, “whereupon his hosts
wondered greatly"—presumably at
his abstemiousness.
Probably, however, the Esquimau
banquets last longer than any other
and the quality of food swallowed is
also proportionately greater. RosS
records that seven of his party of na
tives once ate continuously for thir
ty-three hours, during which time
they consumed 200 pounds of seal
meat. Europeans exposed to
the same climatic conditions act in
much the same way. Capt. Scott of
the Discovery, on his return from
his long sledge journey over the in
land ice of the Antarctic continent
did nothing but eat and sleep for
the space of three days and mizhts,
and even then he was still hungry.
Cemmander Peary ang his party re
turning famished from their futile
dash for the pole in 1906, slaughtered
a herd of seven musk oxen on Hazen
Island off the extreme north of Green
land. For two days and nights there
after they crouched inside their snow
huts, eating continucusly, and when
they had finished the pile of bones
outside was “as high as a tall man’s
chin.” : .
An Irreparable Loss.
The teacher of the primary school,
in looking round the room after the
children had taken their secats, saw
a new face. It pertained to a little
boy. She called him to her desk,
“What is your name, dear?” she ask
ed him.
“Temmy Hunter, ma’am,” he anw
wered.
“How old are you, Tommy?’
“Six, going on seven.”
“You don’t lcok over five,”” sheo
said, after a careful scrutiny. *I
shall have to ask you to bring me
a certificate of your age.”
“Bring you what, ma’am?”
“A statement from your parents.
You may stay here this morning, but
when you go hcme at ncon ask your
mother to write me a note, telling
me when and where you were born.
Don’t forget it, Tommy. You may
go back to your seat.”
After the noon recess was over and
the children had reassembled in the
schoolroom, Tommy presented him
self at her desk, flushed with tri
umph. The glow soon faded from
his little face, however, as he felt
in his pockets, one after another,
and failed to find the note his moth
er had written. He began to cry.
' “What is the matter, dear?”’ asked
the teacher.
“I’ve lost my—my excuse for bein’
born!” sobbed Tommy. — Youth’s
Companion.
Shelves in the Public Library.
At Washington, Distriect of Colum
bia, the public library is working
away from fiction by making other
volumes more accessible. In 1903-
1904, when no books except fiction
were on open shelves for direct ac
cess, fiction formed nearly 84 Dper
cent. of the total circulation. Gradual
ly during the last four years more
and more books from non-<fiction
clagsses have been put on open
shelves, and mcre and more guidance
has been given to readers requiring
assistance, with the result that the
fiction percentage has been reduced
to ©s.° The ‘effectiveness of open
shelves is shown by a little collection
of books of biography kept in one cor
ner of the open-shelf room. It com
prised abcut one-seventeenth of all
the wolumes of biography, and yet it
furnished almost as much circula
tion as all the rest of that collection.
—Collier’'s Weekly.
The principal European manufac
tories of perfumes are in ILondon
Paris and the towns of South France
and North Italy.
BB o __ CURED
' N Gives
Quick
‘ ' Relief.
Removes all swelling in Btozo
days; effects a permanent cure
in 30to 6o days. Trialtreatment
givenfree. Nothingcan be fairer
! write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons,
Specialists, Box B Atlanta, G?
e, .
P
2 <o
\ g ¢ 'fl“ii":.’.
1N
%M‘-‘ ‘n- s
‘..!l\\ & ‘E PAT :_,'J‘l»h
AR ; 2
99”‘“’\9
* S\ X
%,g
A AT ' Q
AN
G, A E?'o
For Pink Eye, Epizootic
' Shipping Fevgr
= W& Catarrhal &
Sure cure and positive preventive yno matter how horses at an
infected or “exposed,” Ligvid, given!;m the tongue; acts on the E
Glands, expels the polson%u germs from the body. Cures Distemp,
and Sheep and Cholera {p Poultry. Largest selling live stock rem
La Grippe among human beings and i+ a fine Kidney remedy. . 50c.
bottle; 85 and §lO a dezen. Cut ‘h%%“" Keep it.” Show to your
who will get it #or you. Free Modklet, “Distemper, Causes
Special mfin‘.a wanted. 2 7
« CKriemists and i
SPOHNMERICAL 60,, cCkoeerists anct, GOSHEN, IND
Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Columbus, Ohio.— ‘I have taken
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com.
~ - v
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S e l ‘
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ol SRR
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m{ friends what it has done for me.”
—Mrs. E. HANSON, 804 East Long St.,
Columbus, Ohio.
Another Woman Helped.
Graniteville, Vt. — *‘l was passin
throughthe Changeof Lifeand sufl’en-g
from nervousness and other ammyin;z
symptoms. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege.
table Compound restored myhealthand
strength, and proved worth mountains
of gofil to me. For the sake of other
suffering women I am willing you
should publish my letter.”” — Mugs,
CHARLES BARCLAY, R.F.D., Granite
ville, Vt.
Women who are passing through this
eritical period or who are suffering
from any of those distressing ills pe.
culiar to their sex should not lose sight
of the fact that for thirty years Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound,
which is made from roots and herbs,
has been the standard remedy for
female ills. In almost every commu
nity you will find women who have
been restored to health by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
It is regrettable, to the Indizmapo
iis News, that the seismozraph [nii3
to register an earthquaie before 1t
is too late te profit by the informa
tion. In these shaky days an instru
ment is needed that can prophesy
rather than record a fact.
oot S SN
V{rite and see what this will dojpryow. -
/ . /,
Gt %Mmajd/%)//eye/
NIACON. GEORGIA g
= The SOO Of Experts ===
wam n
eroman, _ 5 Guatpenderao.
W ' NEVE«BEYORN,
@ : ) ;
R
LA SRS ICKER
W\ & |
7 > \ : g }
(N ‘ tolearm e bodily
N {{ " comfort it gives in
A= the wettest weather
(RS || e seee
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: :§\ Afiufe z:lnd s_\;ge pre
\‘:"\ ' zen vlefan positive cur:
Ry, it D
Wl o Cricns and Colas
)/ ‘M“:.r’fi’ 50¢ and SI.OO at Druzgigt;
Ry Q 3 or prepaid. Write for free
¢ booklet ' Dr. Craft's Advice."
WELLS MEDICINE Cf)-. LAFAYETTE, IND.
METALLIC
HEEILLS
£33 &5 A
g T
‘ g Made of Steel §
5 For Miners, Quarrymen, Farmers §
¥ and All Men Who Do Rough Work.
g Will save you from sprained ankles and
chafed heels. They can be attached
to your old shoes and wil{make them good/}
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with them, or any cobbler can put them on
They will never break down.
Seud for booklet that tells f&/ £
all about them. Ji
A Unitod Shoe MachineryCo S
Boston, Mass. A
S { ““ A
pound during
change of life. My
doctor told me it
was good, and since
taking it I feel so
much better that {
can do all my work
again. I think
| {;ydia E. Pinkham's
{Vegetable Com.
{pound a fine remedy
for all woman’'s
troubles, and I
never forget to tell