Newspaper Page Text
HENRY M. PINDELL
r^ T 5
L^. y
iß^**
/ ,
JO«S9
F KwKf
NS|pF s
Henry M. Pindell, publisher of the
Peoria Journal, Peoria, 111., it Is be
lieved will be appointed ambassador
to Russia.
lAfcAitf BaDlI MfiAltD
CLEAN SWEEP IS MADE BY THE
FUSION FORCES IN NEW
YORK CITY.
Massachusetts, NeiA Jersey and Mary
land Go Democratic by Good
Majorities.
New York.—Fusion carried New
York City, electing John Purroy
Mitchel mayor by aprpoximately 75,-
000 plurality and retaining control of
the important board of estimate by
a safe margin.
Tammany Hall saw its nominee for
the mayoralty, Edward E. McCall, go j
down to defeat by one of the biggest I
pluralities ever given against a can- ■
didate of the organization, and it
looked as if Tammany might not even
save the New York county offices out
of the wreckage. The big vote for
Mitchel pulled through the Fusion can
didates for president of the board of
aidermen and comptroller. George
McAneny and William A. Prendergast,
against whom independence League
as well as Democratic organization
candidates were running.
Boston, Mass. —David J. Walsh
(Dem.) was elected governor by a plu
rality estimated at 50,000. The re
mainder of the state ticket was in
doubt when three fourths of the elec
tion districts hao reported.
In the Third congressional district,
Calvin D. Paige Qlep) was chosen
to succeed the late William H. Wild
er (Rep.) In a close race. With one
town missing, Paige had a major.ty
of 500 over M. Fred O’Connell (Dem.).
Stephen M. Marshall (Prog.) was sat
in the rear tn the three-cornered fight.
Mr. Walsh, who succeeds Governor
Foss, after one term as lieutenant gov
ernor, was elected to his present of
fice a year ago by nearly 200,00(1
votes, the greatest number ever re
ceived by a Democratic candidate for
that office.
Trenton, N. J. —Returns indicate
that James F. Fielder (Dem.) for gov
ernor, has a plurality over Stokes
(Rep.) of 20,000, and it. may go above
that figure.
The Democrats have elected five of
the eight state senators, which will
make next winter’s state senate, with
the holdovers, stand 12 Democrats to
9 Republicans.
President Wilson sent this telegram
to James F. Fielder: "My earnest con
gratulations. You did not need to call
out the reserves.”
Baltimore. —Based on returns from
this city, but which are regarded as
a sure indication of the final result.
State Senator Blair Lee (Dem.) has
been elected to the United States sen
ate to fill the unexpired term of the
late Isidor Rayner by an estimated
plurality of from 30,000 to 35,000 over
former Congressman Thomas Parran
(Rep.) and former United States. Sen.
ator George L. Wellington (Prog.).
Militants to Raise Army.
London, England.—Sylvia Pank-
hurst announces that a volunteer army '
to defend the Suffragette movement
is to be raised in tbe East End ct
London. She said; “Look at Sir Ed
ward Carson. We will have to do
precisely the same thing. We win
have to get an army, and now tbe I
chance of having it is com ng., Sir I
Francis Vane, an officer of tiie British ;
army who fought in the Boer war, |
and who is going to he our comnMn- !
der, is to be present and organize our I
first training corps.” *
Have You a Bad Back?
Whenever you use your back, does a
sharp pain hit you? Does your back
ache constantly, feel sore and lame?
It’s a sign of sick kidneys, especially if
the kidney action is disordered too, pas
sages scanty or too frequent or off color.
In neglect there is danger of dropsy,
gravel or Bright's disease Use Doan’s
Kidney Pills which have cured thousands
A PENNSYLVANIA CASE
WMrt. M. F. Heinly,
201 Second St., Roy
eraford. Pa., gays:
“I had such severe
pains in my back
and dull, dizzy head
aches I could hardly
do my housework
and I kept getting
worse. I had drop
sical swellings in my
ankles and limbs. I
happened to read of
Doan’s Kidney Pills
W and I began using
V them. I improved
■ right away and before long I was cured. I have
never suffered since.”
Get Doan’s at Any Store. 50c a Box
DOAN’S
FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y.
The oldest and best
Chill and Malaria
Tonic on the
market.
Pleasant At lead-
to take WSf
. ihk®. Stores
Perfectly /OHI Every-
Harmless where
AGUE A TONIC
IS wlbs
wTnlakinmle^
k>>rv*>givMHi
(VAMSV »UJL IwEIAM*
That Awful Recruit.
The. dignified serenity of a London
| recruiting officer was rudely dis
turbed the other afternoon - when the
sergeant major, not. without anxiety
Introduced his newest catch, a weak,
nonchalant cockney youth of seven
teen foggy winters, for the purpose of
being sworn in.
The R. O. put up his monocle. Dia
logue as follows:
"Aw—put out that cigarette.”
"I ain’t, smokin’, guv-ner.”
"You have a cigarette tn your fin
gers, hang you!”
"Look ere, cully; you’ve got. a Bible
in yer ’and, but yer ain’t saylft’ yer
prayers, are ver?” —Tit-Bits.
stomach Misery
GAS. INDIGESTION
“Pape's Diapepsin” fixes sick,
sour, gassy stomachs in
five minutes.
Time It! In five minutes all stomach
distress will go. No indigestion, heart
burn, sourness or belching of gas, acid,
or eructations of undigested food, no
dizziness, bloating, or foul breath,
Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its
speed In regulating upset stomachs-
It is the surest, quickest and most cer
tain indigestion remedy in the whole
world, and besides it is harmless.
Please for your sake, get a large I
fifty-cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin -
from any store and put your stomach ■
right. Don’t keep on being miserable ;
—life is too short —you are not here .
long, so make your stay agreeable. ;
Eat what you like and digest it; en
joy it, without dread of rebellion In
the stomach.
Pape’s Diapepsin belongs in your :
home anyway. Should one of the fam- ;
ily eat something which don't agree '
with them, or in case of an attack of I
Indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis or |
stomach derangement at daytime or (
during the night, it is handy to give ;
the quickest relief known. Adv.
A Distinction.
’ Does he ever have much to say?” *
"No, but that doesn't keep bim'from :
i talking a great deal.”
The bunko artist never wastes any
time on the hobo.
fflkiiHßne.ij — 1 mi —- । nrr.. -
| You Look Prematurely Old
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE. ALAMO t
TRAINING FOR PRETTY BOY
Tired Taxpayer Has His Own Idea of
What ‘-Handsome Harry”
Should Learn.
“My neighbor, Sam Jonesby, has a
particularly handsome boy,” remarked
the tired taxpayer, “and I am devoting
my spare moment to inducing Sam
to train the youngster for the prize
ring, in the interest of his future life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
Not that I feel assured the boy has a
great future in the squared circle, but
vecause Handsome Harry should al
ways be able to fight if he wants his
life to be something besides a bulky
burden. A homely boy with freckles
and bristly hair and knock knees can
learn to chew tobacco and spit through'
his teeth and get through life easily
without great fistic ability, but a child
ish cherub should have an early ■
knowledge of fist work, left jabs, i
hooks and right crosses and other
technical training of the fight game in
order to establish respect suddenly
and when it is most needed. Other
wise, he will be known as a sissy and
a girl-boy, and he will frequently be
forced'to break-his heart alone. Al
though no one would think it. now, 1
; used to be my mother’s darling, and
know what I'm talking about." Atchi-
: son Globe.
Telepathy.
I'Telepathy” is an instance of a new-1
| fangled word for an old thing. Bacon j
called it “sympathy” between two dis- ।
tant minds, Izaak Walton similarly ex- ■
plained Dr. Donne's vision in Paris of ;
his wife and dead child, observing that ;
| “if two lutes are strung to an exact j
harmoney, and one Is struck, the other !
sounds.” Scotch highlanders, who
would have been puzzled by the word I
"telepathy,” have long been familiar
with the idea for which it stands. An
drew Lang quoted the case of a pool
highland woman who wrote to her son
in Glasgow: "Don’t be thinking too
much of us, or I shall be seeing you
some evening in the byre.”
My father once had a curious tele
pathic experience. He was dressing
In his bedroom one morning when he
suddenly saw the face of a Scotch
servant girl contorted with agony, in
the looking glass before him. He went
downstairs to the kitchen and found
the girl writhing In a fit. upon the
floor, her face exactly as he had seen
It in the mirror.
SAGE TEA DARKENS GRAY
HAIR TO ANY SHADE. TRY IT!
Keep Your Locks Youthful, Dark,
Glossy and Thick With Common [
Garden Sage and Sulphur.
■ —- ' (
t When you darken your hair with
Sago Tea and Sulphur, no one can
tel), because it's done so naturally, so
. evenly. Preparing this mixture,
■ though, at home Is mussy and trouble
' some. For 50 cents you can buy at
any drug store the ready-to-use tonic
{called "Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur
I Hair Remedy.’’ You just dampen a
sponge or soft brush with it and
draw this through your hair, faking
' one small strand at a time. By morn
ing all gray hair disappears, and, after
I another application or two, your hair :
becomes beautifully darkened, glossy !
and luxuriant. You will also dis- .
cover dandruff is gone and hair has I
stopped falling.
] Gray, faded hair, though no dis-1
j grace, is a sign of old age, and as we |
{ all desire a youthful and attractive ap
pearance, get busy at once with Wy
eth’s Sage and Sulphur and look years
younger. —Adv.
Homeric Humorist.
Guide —In front of you is the na
tional capital.
Miss Gush —Oh, isn’t it angelic?
Mr. Grouch —Angelic? Why, young
woman, how can you speak of it as
being angelic?
| Miss Gush—Well, it has wings,
i hasn't it?—Florida Times-Union.
: Mrs. Winslow’* Soothing Syrop for Children
: teething, KoftenA the gums, reduces infiarama
, Uon,allays pain,cures wind coiic,2sc a bottleJWv
Undiscovered.
‘ You know there’s more in this
world than money.”
"I don’t know. If there is my wife
i hasn’t thought of it.” -Detroit Free
I Press.
Literal.
Did he strlira you in virtual temper- j
j ary abberation?"
No, sir; he struck me in the jaw.” '
The most effective, yet simplest remedy j
i for coughs is Dean's Mentholated Cough [
‘ Drops —sc at Drug Stores,
A Temperance Note.
T hear the temperature is going to j
take a drop or two.”
"Oh, naughty, naughty!”
French Market Coffee
is Southern Through
and Through!
Brought in ships from the coffee
countries through warm summer
seas to the southern port of New
Orleans, no cold climates affect, in
juriously, the delicate coffee beans.
Roasted and blended by Southern
ers, it is best adapted for use in tbe
Southern climate—no Northern roast
coffee can compete with it.
• Sold to Southern merchants for
Southern trade —blended, roasted,
packed aud shipped in the South —
— through and through. No
wonder it outsells all other brands
in the South.
Endorsed by the best judges in
New Orleans a hundred years ago,
and by coffee drinkers daily through
out the South. No wonder it has
Get MBSTEROLE Today
for Lumbago!
I It’s an amazingly quick relief. And
it’s so easy to use.
You just rub MUSTEROLE in
briskly, and presto, the
pain is gone—a deli
cious, soothing comfort
comes to take its place.
MUSTEROLE is a
clean, white ointment,
made with oil of mus
tard. Use it instead of
mustard plaster, Will not blister.
Doctors and nurses use MUSTER
OLE and recommend it to their
patients.
— 7ft* ti«minaton Cuba find the
—■ =» • Autoloader alwaye ready
J A
I 1
■ ITnxJTiMhi
AUTOLOADING
JWUr SHOTGUNS —
Vk ' ! ' A NY way you look at it, the Autoloader is the ■
I ZX highest development in modem shotgun ■
I S ' ' * design. It puts five loads at your disposal by ■
V i merely pressing the trigger. It puts the recoil lo utr/ul H
In V, work— to eject the empty and slip in the fresh shell.
-VW dll / saves the gunner’a shoulder—rids his sport of K
i V li I'/ annoyances—increases his shooting average.
VO Your danger is that in your enthusiasm over the ■
qssSSi autoloading principle, you may forget to insist on ■
getting the finest embodiment of that principle-the ■
Remington Autoloading Shotgun. J
The peculiar advantages of ll.e Remington are 100 many
to detail here. What you want to do is to get one ot the
r Remington dealers in thia section to demonstrate them M
'Vto you on the gun itself. -
-c Remington Arms-Union Metallic Cartridge Co. I
’ ' 299 Broadway 11 New Yora
(ru.4 odJ WHY NOT B « Y TH ' WA '
j UiasgK BEST MACHINERY ? ®gUfc.
mint WOODRUFF’S SAW MILLS
MILLS are the best
V*Y | HirT , lunilx- r makers.
FARQUHAR ENGINES are the best
pullers.
FARQUHAR CORNISH BOILERS are the best steamers. g AW MII b
rv FARQUHAR THRESHERS are the best grain
„ separators. MIRS
REEVES GASOLINE ENGINES are simple and
t most reliable.
manufacture WOODRUFF machinery, and are
Honthcrn jobbers for Farquhar machinery and Reeves
■ ‘ engines. We want an upportnnity to figure
a. with you. Write for catalogue and got price* and ▼
9^'-' save money by buying direct from manufacturers.
SHISGLK MILL WOODRUFF MACHINERY MFC. CO., Branch office, Atlanta, Gs.. Winder, Ca. KEKfEh immune fcSUNB .
- . - . -
AGENTS!
BIG PROFITS AND
BEAUTIFUL PREMIUMS
for willing theold reliable Japanese Oil (now
calledEn-Ar-Co Oil) and our other standard
Remedies. No Money Required. Write us
at once for terms NATIONAL REMEDY CO.
130 Charlton Street, New York City.
irwnTpanvKwvnvM tonic
FOR EYES
been called the National Drink of
the South.
There is a real treat in store for
those who have not yet tried French
Market Coffee. Buy a can today.
Try it. Be convinced of the ex
cellence and quality of this brand.
Turn back over a hundred years
to the days of Andrew Jackson—
French Market Coffee was even thea
the most famous drink in America.
Its history entwines itself with the
history of the old aristocracy of the
South. The Belles and Beaux of
New Orleans sipped it at midnight
for generations. To them no Mardi
Gras Ball was complete without a
cup of French Market Coffee. Think
what it means to you to be able to
serve this identical blend on your
table daily —for your own grocer
now sells it —in air-tight cans.
FRENCH MARKET MILLS
(New Orleans Coffee Co., Ltd., Proprietor*)
NEW ORLEANS
DIRECTIONS—We recommend that you
make French Market Coffee in your usual
way. If you find it too strong, reduce quan
tity until strength and flavor are satisfac
tory. French Market makes more cups
of good coffee to the pound than other
brands, thereby reducing your coffee bill.
They will gladly tell you what relief
it gives from Sore Throat, Bronchitis,
Croup, Stiff Neck, Asthma, Neuralgia,
Congestion, Pleurisy, Rheumatism,
Lumbago, Pains and Aches of the
Back or Joints, Sprains, Sore Muscles,
Bruises, Chilblains, Frosted Feet,
Colds of tho Chest (it prevents
Pneumonia). your druggist’s, 1
I'IUJI - "Vvi I
I.
land, Ohio, and we will mail you a jar,
postage prepaid. (57)
Dr. J. J.Gognox.ii well-known I letroit physi
cian says, "Musterole Is tovaioebu tn my prao
tice and my home.”
RAW FURS 410X8011.1 ns FREE
BOUGHT— Wrii« for it tocittjr
A. E. BURKHARDT
International Fur Marchant.
1 SISW IW. Cincinnati, O.
n F A r> n O th!" paper deeia-
H K A V tKb anything
■ ■’'advertised In HA
! eolumna should Inaiat upon having what they
I ask for, refusing all substitutes or Imitation*.
in 25c and 50c jars, and
a special large hospital
size for $2 SO,
Accept no substitute.'
If your druggist cannot
supply you, send 25c or
50c to the MUSTER
OLE Company, Cleve-