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Show NEWS SUMMARY ΝΖ NOR THW!EST NOTE ΠΗΑΌΝῪ ΜΙΑΙΚΕΌ Αἰ: ΤΗΕ Way, | Prisoner at Least Had Change While Forest fires along the line of the Sixteen arrests have been tson, Mont., in connect {nter-Colonial railroad, between Monjumping shooting af rat treal and Quebec, Canada, are doing “Down in Alabama,’ said John D. ] great damage Fearhake, “there's a deputy marshal occurred there last week attempting to cross the river The Edwards cotton mills in joesn't let any such trifles as ex se, Mont., five per were Augusta, Me., will resumefull time be radition iaws stop him. Term of They were: D inti, his ginning Monday, July 20, in all de court was about to begin at one time, with full pay. ᾽ his ten-year-old son, G. Cu partme and a gentleman who was out on bail In the cricket match played at was reported to be enjoying himself tone and Rinaldo Peltoni, the latter Voreester, England, between the laborers ever in Georgia. Deputy Jim went | two Greek railroad Worcestershire team and the Phila after him. Next day he telegraphed Blacksmiths and machinists of the elphians, the Americans won. the judge I have persuaded him to Northern Pacific shops h ve resi med come.’ A few days later he rode into work on full time of nine hours. Four Serious forest fires are reported in town on a mule, leading his prisoner, hundred men are immediately affectthe Adriondacks and along the Mahone tied up snugly with a clothes line. The ed and it means full time for the en ver and Mohawkrailroad, and unless prisoner looked as if he had seen hard tire force of 900 men at the shops rain falls the loss will be enormous, service The railroad library maintained by One man was killed, a womanfatally “Why, for heaven's sake, Jim,’ said the employes of Southern Pacific |injured and damage amounting to | the ive, ‘you didn't make him walk at Sparks, Nevada, was destroyed by | $50,000 resulted at Monongahela, Pa al) the way from Georgia, did you?’ fire last week. As the building and/ when a boiler in the waterworks plant “‘No, sir,’ said Jim its contents were ured, it is an- exploded “‘T hoped not,’ said the judge nounced that it wil! be rebuilt at A strike has been called by the “‘No,’ said Jim, ‘part of the way I once Union Miners of Alabama, only tw drug him, and when we come to the Enos Peers mboweled atj|small commercial coal] companies hav Tallapoosa river, he swum *"—WonP Mont., ga cutting aff ing signed the wage contract by the en's Home Journal lying from his wounds His alleged miners at 55 cents a ton, ailant, Joe Painin, is in jail charged Information received at the state} Crossing River. BAD BLUNDER, with murder. Dave Solure, also volved affair, is by in the in-| department, is that “No, but you might feel hurt, ny,” replied the big stranger elbow. “That's my wife.” at Democ his was an acci “Sure, yes; but | meant not to break my umbrella.” The Grammar Clase. The head mistress of a certain pro vincial school was one day examining a fewof her select pupils in grammar, “Stand up, Juan, and make me a sentence containing the word ‘seldom,” she said, pointing to a small urchin. Juan paused as if in thought; then, with a flush of triumph on his face, replied: “Last week father had five horses, but yesterday he seldom!” All the agencies of the government are at work, through offical | to obtain evidence The Southern Pacific’s new line | from Mojave northward to Keeler,| California, a distance of about 130! miles, primarily for the benefit of the construction of the new water service Important to Mothers. carefully every and sources, of violations of the After a careful review of the crop] neutrality laws upon the Mexican bor ituation in western Canada, the lead-| ders preceding and following the raid s railways estimate the total wheat! at Las Vacas, Coahuila. yield in western Canada will be 125,Tabri Affairs are quiet again at 060,000 bushels, or an average of ersia. There has not been so much twenty bushels to the acre Last| ighting recently, according to a dis year’s wheat crop was 80,000,000 atch received at the state depart bushels, of which 67,000,000 bushels }ment from William ΚΕ, Doty, the Ame were exported, can consul at that place, A tiny Maltese cat has completed a When Adolphe §, Levi opened the tip from Holland, Mich. to San| door of his jewelry store and pawn Francisco, a distance of 2,500 miles shop in St Louis, one day last week, jin. a drawer of a bureau, wrapped in |he discovered burglars had looted the acking and shipped by slowfreight place and secured $900 in cash and | When freight hands opened the bu $15,000 worth of diamonds and othe reau the cat jumped out, and after be | jewels. ing given food and water, was in ex | The dead body of Mrs. Ada Reichcellent condition. ars of Dallas, Tex., was found in her The annual review of American com | apartments at Hot Springs, Ark., she merce issued by the bureau of statis. | having been murdered. One child, a tics for 1907 demonstrates again that girl of 7 years, is missing and is suptrade with the Orient is gradually but posed to have been kidnaped by the surely shifting from the Atlantic tc murderer. the Pacific coast. Nearly 50 per ceni A dispatch received from Asuncion of American exports to Asiatic coun | says that peace has been restored in tries moved outward through Pacific | Paraguay. Dr. Tmiliano Naveiro, the coast ports in 1907. former vice-president, who Was ap- dent?” Examine committee, celebration, umbrella over this wom an’s head you claim it le murder prominent men also had a part in the} An Accident. A “perfect lady” was charged in the police court with having broken her umbrella over the head of another “perfect lady.” “What have you to say to the charge?” asked the magistrate, “It was an accident, your honor.” “Do you mean to say that after smashing an Valhalla hous ¢ bottle of CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for tnfants and children, and see that it pointed president by the victorious revolutionary party, has assumed con; trol of affairs. To have the engine jump the track Bears the and see the fun was the explanation system from Owens Lake to Los An- | of 9-year-old John Sovick of Morea, Signature of > ΄ geles, has now a complete track in use| Pa., when arrested for placing a piece In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. for a distance of thirty miles north cf iron pipe and stones on the track ward from Mojave. just before the Pennsylvania railroad Opposites Gauss and Effect. Hight thousand dollars worth οἱ ilyer was due, “They say that there is more crime liquor was destroyed by special ofMrs, Artie M. Heaton went to a rescommitted in hot weather.” ficers, and eleven alleged bootleggers tuarant in Iola, Kans. conducted by “Yes; heat seems to conduce to were held in heavy bail for prelim, her divorced husband, Clint M. Heaton, wickedness.” hary examination as a result of the and shot and killed him. She then “Now that’s strange, that a close at- federal government’s first active day snapped her revolver twice at Mrs mosphere should cause loose princiin the suppression of the liquor trafElla Gill, to whom Heaton was said ples.” fic on the Nez Perce Indian reserva- to have been engaged. tion, southeast of Spokane. Nicholas de Mazo, aged 22 years, Try Murine Eye Remedy Judge ‘Shackleford, before whom shot and killed his fifteen-year-ola | for Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes. Steve Adams is being tried at Grand urine Doesn't Smart—Soothes Eye Pain. bride of seven months, at her sister's All Druggists Sell Murine at 50cts. The 48 Junction, Colo., on the charge of mur- home at Scranton, Pa. She hadleft Page Book in each Pkg. is worth Dollars fering Arthur Collins, ruled that the him because of alleged brutal treattn every home. Ask your Druggist. jocument purporting to be a confesment and because she had heard that Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicage. sion of the crime made and signed by de Mazo had a wife in Italy. '| Adams while he was confined in A happy nature is sometimes a gift, Daniel F. Keller, formerly a captain prison in Idaho, was not admissible but it is also a grace, and can, therein the United States army, recently fore, be cultivated and acquired byall. us evidence in the hearing. convicted of defrauding the governOfficials of the United States forest | ment through the use of stolen quar—Soulsby. reserve have closed all of the saloons termaster’s checks, has been sentenced FITS, St. Vitus’ Dance ana Ne at Grand Forks, a railroad and mining manently cured by Dr. Kline’ 6G ' Send for FREE $2.00 trial bott nd 5 ; camp just across the Idaho ling from | to serve two years at hard laborin the . H, Kline, L4., 91 Are Benes Phil iMielpuis Pa. federal prison at Leavenworth Kan, | | Montana. The closing of the saloons The physician of James S. Sherman Many a man is out of work be came as a climax of a reign of law | }the Republican nominee for vice-pres cause there is no work in him. | lessness that has resulted in several] ident, visits him twice daily. Mr | killings, although the men responsible Sherman is permitted to spend two Use Alle τ’sr ooteE: ase have not yet been apprehended Ourestired, ach ng, swe ting feet. 25c. Trial package | hours each day in going over « free. A. 8. Olmsted iis Ἐ y, N.Y. Convict Preston, who is in the Ne spondence, and the rest of the vada state penitentiary for murder, bis physician declares must be spent | Music isn't necessarily fragmentary | and who was nominated for the presi In rest because it comes in pieces | dency of the Socialist-Labor party Breaking all previous records over has declined the nomination. It is be Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. the long-distance course across the For children teething, softens the gunis, reduces fm lieved that he acted on the advice of Atlantic of 2,891 miles, the swift tur- | @ammation, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle his attorney, as he was willing to be a biner Lu tania arrived at Sandy candidate and stated that he fully ex | Hook lightship on July 10, at 2:11 a. One way to buy experience is to pected to receive the nomination. m the time of passage being four speculate in futures. Governor Norris of Montana has ad-| ¢; 5, nineteen hours and thirty-six dressed a letter to the commis ioner minutes of Indian affairs at Ottawarelative to The will of former President Cleve. | | yup JfFics αὖ xiv Senna Cleanses the System E ectually; Dis els Col eee aches due to Constipation; Acts “ονcally, acts truly as axat ive. ‘Boat pentonand ( hild- ren aoe an do det its"B eneficial Effects ways bu t 16 Genuine which has: thefil name oft 1e Lom- ©CALIFORNIA ic Srrup Co. by whom itis ῥα βεϊντοῦ, ρεμῖε-¢ on the rent ever package SOLD BYALL LEADING DRUGGISTS, one size only, regular price 50¢per bottle. the deportation of a large band of! land was probated July 10. It makes no disclosures as to the extent of his charges, have for years been roam-| wealth After some minor bequests ing throughout this state. The In| and the creation of a fund of $10,000 dians participated in the Riel rebel-| for each of the four children, the retat lion, aud with its supperssion came | mainder of the ¢ state is left to Mrs, to Montana. Cleveland George M. Morrow, a mine operato In a battle between revenue officers and leaser in +} Seven Troughs Min and a gang of moonshiners near Hind Creek Indians, who, while Canadian ing district, thirty miles west of Love-|man, Ky., Bud Hall, alleged leader of lock, Nevada, committed suicide atthe moor was killed and two that camp on Sunday, by shooting him-|cthers we badly hurt. This is the self through the head. Morrow was|second battle in a week, one moon from Aspen, Colo., where he leaves a! shiner having ben wounded in the wife and child \ orevious fight While celebrating the Fourth} Henry Kemmerer, Joseph Meyers, | Bert Badsen and an unknown man} ; were seriously injured at Ruby, a) small mining Camp near Twin Bridges,| Mont The men were firing a can-| | non made from a piece of waterpipe| ind it exploded John A. Hayes, and his A fire be lieved to have been caused by spontaneous combustion or a locomotive spark, and fanned by a brisk northwest wind, swept nearly a quarter of a mile of the habor front of east Boston, causing property loss estimated nearly $1,500,000. One | man lost his iife daughter,’ American shippers in Mukden have about 16 years old, were shot and/ made formal Ned by a mob that had gathered to| sul that the e Hayes and ] y al) chu iim that he i th t at near Culbertson, M uimed by Walt who lived in the Childish Realism Instilled Into Story| G. W. Winney, Medina, N. of Garden of Eden. Y., in- Realism rules the nursery. A cerPhiladelphia matron, who had pains to ineuleate Biblical es aS well as ethical truths in her vites kidney sufferers to write to hit To all who enclose postage ke will re ply, telling how Doan's Kidney Pills eured him after he had doctored and i had beenin two different hospitals for eighteen months, suffering intense pain in the back, | lameness, twinges | when stooping or | lifting, languor, dizzy spells and rhen- | matism. “Before I used ney Pills,” says ighed 143. boxes I plete ly Mr, After taking 10 weighed 162 and was cured.” i by all dealers. 50 cents lilburn Co., Buffalo, N. heard. the other day drawn “But what is there to ery about?” Doan’s Kia- | Winney, ren, howls of rage and grief down from the playroom. Up filteri: two file! ts she hurried, to find on the and Ethel voir es uplifted floor J hed upon Thomas aged nine, sat pe the table his mouth full and his eyes guilty asked “Whatever is the matter?” mamma ‘Bo-o-o!” came from Ethel; we were playing Garden of Eden. Bo-o-o! long “I | Then Jack, with furious finger pointor 12 ing at Tom, ejaculated through his “God's eat the apple !"—Bohecom- | tears: mian Magazine a box. HIS WAY OF PROPOSING. Y. CAN’T BLAME TOMMY MUCH. How many American women in lonely homes to-day long for this blessingto come into theirlives, and | to be able to utter these words, but because of some organic derange- ] |ment this happiness is denied them. Every womaninterested in this subject should knowthat preparation for healthy maternity is accomplished by the use of | Paraguay was from 100 to 150 persons, A long distance telephone line be Albert McVey .8 wealthy cattle dealtween Denver and Chicago was/er was shot while sitting with his pened on July 6 with a conversation! wife a window at his home in yetween Mayor Speer of Denve nd/| Pine Bluff, Ark, and fatally Injured layor Busse of Cl 0. 5 18 believed the shooting grew out faggart, chairman of the Nationa | of old feud son (f You Suffer with Your Kidneys and Back, Write to This Man. estimated || the About half the business part of] while 400 were wounded nd Forks, B. C., was wiped out by As a result of ar srious shootwhich started in the Yale hotel ing at Maspath, L. L, Clausen Wabalk » a.m. July 10. At least one|4 wholesale grocer, lies dead at his on is dead, the body of an un-/ home and thepolice are searching for known man being found in the ruins some clew for what they believe is Admiring Stranger—What a_ stun ning rider! Er—do you think she would feel hurt if I should toss her a kiss? NOT EVE'S FAULT THAT TIME. being sought loss of life in the recent revolution in | the officers the PROOF FOR TWO CENTS. c complaint Japanese to tf} , and which was Ing man! ; con railroa 5 τ ar s under the LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND ia. | Tommy, were you fighting with | that Carter boy?” Yes, maw.” “Didn't I tell you not to quarrel with anyone?” Yes, maw; but I thought all bets were off since you quit speaking to the | Carter boy's maw.” Mrs. Maggie Gilmer, of West Union, S. C.,writes to Mrs. Pinkham: “T was gygatly run-downin health from a we akne ss peculiar to my sex, when L a E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound was recommended to me. It | not only restored me to perfect health, but to mydelight I am a mother. Mrs. JoseἜΝ Hall, of Bardstown, Ky.. Writes Telepathic Thirst. News travels so fast nowadays as to render one almost speech! with wonder at the achievements of the wireless telegraph and telephone, says He—They tell me youre great at guessing conundrums She—Well, rather good. the Palmyra (N. Y.) Journal. One} He—Here’s onefor you: If I were to night last week we won a case af ask you to marry me, what would you whisky at the Elks’ fair in Lyons, and | say? the night we brought it home there were three church members, a town TWO CURES OF ECZEMA official and two members of the band | on hand to meet us on getting ‘off the | Baby Had Severe Attack—Grandfather Suffered Torments with It— car, Since our arrival many pecple Owe Recovery to Cuticura. whom we have hitherto believed re- | spectable have gone out of their re“In 1884 my grandson, a babe, had spective ways to speak kindly to us. | }an attack of eczema, and after trying Nothing to Be Thankful For, | the doctors to the extent of heavybills Elizabeth's mother did not teach her| and an increaseof thedisease and suflittle daughter much that she should fering, I recommended Cuticura and have learned about religion; nor did in a few weeks the child was well. He the father. L is to-day a strong man and absolutely The other day a guest said to the free from the disease. A few years little girl: “Elizabeth, does your fa- | ago I contracted eczema, and became ther say grace at the table?” |} an intense sufferer. A whole winter “What grace?” returned the girl in- passed without once having on shoes, nocently. | nearly from the knees to the toes be“Why, thanks for what you have. to || ing covered with virulent sores. I tried eat. | many doctors to no purpose. Then I “Oh,” replied Elizabeth, now en- | procured the Cuticura Remedies and lightened. “We don’t have to thank found immediate improvement and any one for what we have—we always | finalcure, M. W. LaRue, 845 Seventh St., pay cash.” | Louisville, Ky., Apr. 23 and May14, ’07.” | A Man’s Tact. Nobody but Mr. Henley would have | asked such a question in the first | place. | “Miss Fairley,” he said, “if you) could make yourself over what kind | of hair and eyes would you have?” “If I could make myself over,” said Miss Fairley, “I would look just ex actly as I do now.” “You would?” exclaimed Henley in honest surprise, and to this day he can’t understand why Miss Fairley thinks him a, man of little taste and less tact. “T was a very great sufferer from female troubles, and my phy n failed tohelp me. Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vege table Compound not only restored me to perfect health, but I am nowa proud mother.” FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills. and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid yeas irregularities, pesriodic pains, backache, that bearον feeling, flatulene y, indiges- tion, dizziness or nervous prostration. | Why don’t you tryit ? Mrs. Pinkhaminvites all sick women to write her for advice. |She has |health, guided thousands to Address, Lynn, Mass, SICK HEADAGHE | Positively cured by theseLittle Pills. They also relieve Digse tress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect remedy for Dizziness, Naus Couldn’t Fool Him. sea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste inthe Mouth, Coat A custom house clerk, who, prior | ed Tongue, Pain in the to his entry into Uncle Sam’s service, |Side, TORPID LIVER. was a schoolteacher “a good many They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. years yet,” as he proudly informs his associates, was standing on the corner SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, of Fifth and Chestnut streets one cold Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature day last winter, deeply engrossed in | studying a legend which appeared on a dairy man’s wagon, as_ follows: “Pasteurized milk,” etc His face wore a puzzled expression, but finally betraying evidence of dawn- fice | REFUSESUBSTITUTES. ing intelligence he remarked to a by- stander: “Ain’t these here Philadelphia milkAn Albanypolitician was discussing men a-gettin’ to be just as deceitful Pasturized milk, eh? the heart troubles that ofttimes draw | as anything! ‘cause I lived famous men unwillingly into court. | But they can’t fool me, “If these men,” said he, “would in the country, and know you can't paste in their hats poor expatriated | pasture cows a winter.” Abe Hummel’s advice, they’d have no inade Future Generations. difficulty whatever. There is a saying of Carlyle that “Abe’s advice, which he incessantly the greatest hope of our world lies in repeated to his clients, was: the certainty of heroes being born into “*Never make love to a woman it. That is, indeed, a slorious certhrough an ink bottle.’” tainty, but the reference might be en- Advice tc the Lovelorn. DIFFERENT NOW θμκέῤεμα Athlete Finds Better Training Food. TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth prepcrations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disinfecting and deodorizing toilet requisite of exceptional ex- larged Birth itself, we Yenture to cellence and econsay, not of heroes only, put of the omy. Invaluable generations in their succession, is the | for inflamed eyes, is the | It thing. ul hopef itely infin throat and nasal and | uterine catarrh. At It was formerly the belief that to leuarantee that the world will never stand |} drug and toilet beeome strong, athletes must eat grow old; that it will never still; that no halt is to be called in its | stores, 50 cents, or plenty of meat. by mail postpaid. This is all out of date now, and | eternal progress.—Christian World. many trainers feed athletes on the| well-known food, Grape-Nuts, made of WITH “HEALTH AND BEAUTY" BOOK SENT FREW wheat and barley, and cut the meat down to a small portion once a day “Three years ago,” writes a Mich. is such that we can’t man, “having become interested in athletics, I found I would have to stop | touch it; we make five LIVE STOCK AND eating pastry and someother kinds Large Trial Sample COFFEE Three-quarters of coffee grades of the top quarter of food. “I got some Grape-Nuts, and was soon eating the food at every meal, for I found that when I went on the track, I felt more lively and active. “Later, I began also to drink Postum in place of coffee, and the way I gained muscle and strength on this diet was certainly great. On the day of a field meet in June I weighed 124 105. On the opening of the football season in Sept., I weighed 140. I attribute my fine condition and good work to the discontinuation of improper food and coffee, and the using of Grape-Nuts and Postum, my principal diet during training season being Grape-Nuts. “Before I used G rape-Nuts I. never felt right in the ng—always kind of ‘out of sor stomach, But now 1 good, and after a br of Your like 5 er ret sB ney if you don't ne mu have felt that a heortul friend is like a sunny day, which sheds its brightness on all around: and most of us can, as we choose, make of this world a palace or a prison.—Lubbock. Electrotypes IN GREAT VARIETY FOR, SALE <AT THE LOWEST PRICES BY A.N. KELLOGG NEWSPAPER CO. eader of this paper desiring to buy anything advertised in its columns should insist upon having what they ask for, refusing all subétitutes or imitations. Grape-Nuts A DAISY FLY KILLER ee ΤΗΕ ΕΝ. in pkgs ver read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest, MISCELLANEOUS 73 W. Adams St., Chicago with cream, and a ( up of Postum, I feel like a new man, “There's a Reason.” » given by Postum Co., Battle Cr Mich. Read “The Road. to Wellville,” THE PAXTON TOILET CC., Boston, Mass, WIDOWS’oT NEW LAW < ptalneda ne. PENSIONS"yorhob |