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KIDNAPED BOY RESTORED TO HIS PARENTS The Father Paid $10,000 Ransom at Cleveland, Ohio. VEILED WOMAN GETS MONEY Little Willie Whit la, of Sharon, Pa., Tells Pathetic Story of His Captivity?Was Not 111 Treated? Visited Several Places. Cleveland, Ohio.?After an absence of four days, Willie Whitla, the eightyear-old son of J. P. Whitla, a lawyer of Sharon, Pa., who was kidnaped, was returned to his father at lie Hollenden Hotel here shortly after 8 o'clock at night. The appearance of the boy was theatrical, for he suddenly stepped r% Dovna o vonnn frnl 1 ov / * o r li UUi Ch JL a UW CfcVWAAllV' LI V I l V .* vwt which stopped in front of the hotel, and slipped nervously into the lobby, where Mr. "Whitla sat awaiting him' according to instructions from the lad's kidnapers. The boy had a pair of smoked glasses fited in front of his eyes, and the ear tabs of a large tan cap were pulled down over his ears in an apparent effort to disguise him. At the Bight of his son Mr. Whitla sprang to his feet and darted toward him. ''My son, O, my boy!" he shouted, and took the child into his arms. The crowd cheered at the sight of father and son, and motioning for quiet Mr. Whitla climbed upon a table, and, with tears rolling down his cheeks, made a short speech. "I can't make a speech, my friends," he exclaimed. "My heart is too full. I can only say that this is my son who was lost and is found. I want to thank the people of Cleveland, the press and the police for their kindness and sympathy. I never could have stood it but for the thousands of friends that came to me." While his father was speaking Willie stood beside him clasping his hand as though fearful of being separated irom Dim cLgaiu, <mu cit mc tuuwiuoiuu of Mr. Whitla's few words the crowd cheered him to the echo, again and again. Scores of men and women rushed forward to grasp the father by the hand or to grab up Willie in their arms and kiss him. The boy told this story: "It was just a little while before the geography lesson began when teacher called me to the door and said there was a man there who wanted me to go with him to see my father. "I went to the coat room with teacher and she helped me with my coat, and then I went down stairs with the man. I don't know how old he was?perhaps as old as my papa. "We went out the front walk of the school building, and there, on State street, he put me into a buggy. f " <"?T>lv r>Tio mnn Hp was 1 IlCiU nao uuij uuv uAWMi ?- -?. ehort, not so tall as you. (Here he looked up at his questioner). He had a red face and a brown overcoat, and wore a mustache, cut short. "Then we drove out of Sharon, and I asked him where I was going. We crossed the river and took the road to Warren, and all the way I kept asking where my papa was. I wasn't scared at first. "Just before we got into Warren (it was almost noon, then), the man gave me two sandwiches to eat, for I was hungry. "We stopped just outside Warren and walked into town and I got awfully tired on the way. I can't remember just how we went away from there, whether it was on the steam cars or the electrics, but I think we went to Newcastle. ~\Ca slept th?re that night, the man who took me from the school building and another, younger man, w&o didn't wear a musiacne. "The next day we went somewhere else, I don't know where. The men told me that I was sick, and that if I didn't keep quiet and say my name was Jones, they would put me in a place where everybody had smallpox, and that I would die. "I thought we came to Ashtabula to-day some time, but I don't know. I can't remember much about it all, for I was awful tired all the time, but I heard the men say Asutabula lots of times, and once or twice they said Akron. There was a woman who had me some of the time, too, but I can't remember much about her. "To-night they took me to the corner of two streets and told me to get on a street car I saw coming and say I wanted to go to the Hollenden. "I told the conductor, and he asked me my name, and I told him 'Jones,' because that was what they said to me to say. XI J -* J 4. 1 1. ~ V !*. I i\u, iuey uiu uui uuri ma uue uit. They said they would put me with a lot of sick people if I didn't do just as they said. The only trouble was that in Newcastle and in another town which I don't remember much about. We slept three in a bed, two men and me. "They didn't let me see any newspapers," he added. "Well, did you miss mamma and papa?" asked Whitla. A big hug was the answer. The interviewing of the tired little boy, safe once more in his father's arms, was ended. The negotiations for the boy's return had been conducted in the afternoon by Mr. Whitla entirely alone. He received a communication at his home in Sharon telling him that if he wanted his son back he must come to Cleveland, and that here, if he fulfilled certain conditions, he would Son's Shot Kills Father. Orin Smith, who was shot by his son William, following a quarrel at Angelica, N. Y., died at the hospital in Hornell city, where he was brought following the tragedy. The son killed himself after shooting his father. A Suicide on Her Father's Grave. Miss Tillie Meyers, twenty-four, whose father died two weeks ago, was found dead on his grave in the Catholic Cemetery at Indianapolis, Ind. She had swallowed poison. STUDENT'S DEATH FROM HAZING j Indiana Youth Left Hanging by His Ankles to Sapling. Indianapolis, Ind.?Charles Stinteon, a pupil at the White School, in White County, was strung up by the ankles to a sapling near the school and left hanging so long that he died a few hours after he was taken down. Several teachers of the school have been driven away by unruly pupils. A few days ago a new teacher was employed. He was more determined than his predecessors and whipped several rebellious bovs sap his boy again. One of these conditions was that he visit a certain drug and candy store in the east end of Cleveland, where he should meet a representative of the kidnapers and complete negotiations with him. An important part of these negotiations was the payment of the ransom by Mr. Whitla. Mr. "Whitla followed instructions to the letter. Taking an early train from Sharon he came to Cleveland, got off at the Fifty-fifth street station of the Erie Railroad, and went to Dunbar's drug store, in St. Clair street, east of Fifty-fifth street. There he met a woman. She was heavily veiled and her features could not be recognized. "Have you the money and letters?" asked the woman. Mr. Whitla produced the money, $10,000 in five and ten dollar bills. These, according to Mr. Whitla, the woman proceeded deliberately to count. Satisfied that the money was right, she then asked for the letters, and Mr. Whitla handed to her the four notes which had been received by him from the kidnapers since the removal of his son. With the money and the only direct evidence against the kidnapers in her possession, the woman turned to Mr. Whitla anil said: "Your boy is safe near his home in Sharon. You have carried out your part of the agreement and you can trust us for the rest. Go to the Hollenden Hotel and register as William Williams. Then go to the parlor and wait for a message. Your boy will be returned to you before 9 o'clock." "But is Willie well?" demanded Mr. Whitla. "Wo 1<j nil rifrVit " sniri tVi p wnman and Mr. Whitla left the store to go to the hotel and follow out her bidding. News at Sharon. Sharon, Pa. ? "Our darling son Willie has been restored to us. He is hei'e now with me at Cleveland at the Hollenden Hotel, and we will arrive home at 12.33 to-morrow afternoon. Billy is in good health and longing to see his mother." Such was the joyful message received over the long-distance telephone by Mrs. J. P. Whitla at her home in East State street at 9.58 p. m., it being the first word received here that the kidnaped boy had been recovered. This was followed by a message from Mr. Whitla to his office, and the whole town was soon rejoicing. Like a flash the news spread over the town, "Willie Whitla has been found," and prayers of thankfulness went up from every heart at the recovery of the boy they all loved so well. INDICT MAN OP MILLIONS. Jury of Pittsburg Find True Bill Against Dallas C. Byers. Pittsburg, Pa.?As the result of the Grand Jury investigation of municipal corruption the court ordered indictments against the following men: Dallas C. Byers. millionaire manufacturer; F. Griffin, cashier Columbia National Bank; Councilman John F. Klein, Councilman W. H. Weber, Councilman Charles Stewart, H. L. Bolger, hotel proprietor. The association of Dallas C. Byers in the Pittsburg graft expose comes as a surprise, as his name had not been mentioned with any publicity. Klein has already been twice convicted on charges growing out of bribery by bank officials to have banks designated city depositories. Klein has also been sentenced to pay a fine and serve a jail term for contempt, declining to testify before the Grand Jury. WATER SUPPLY FLOODS CITY. Houses Carried Away and Parkersburs. W. Va.. in Fear of Famine. Parkersburg, W. Va.?Two persons were killed, three others probably fatally injured and many more slightly hurt, ten or more houses were completely wrecked and forty more badly damaged when the two large water tanks supplying the city with water burst. The dead are: Mr. and Mrs. Walter Waggle; the bodies were found in the ruins of their home. The seriously injured: Mrs. John Maloney, both legs broken, hurt internally; Mrs. Kate Karnes, invalid, badly bruised and shocked; Clara Jones, colored, hurt internally. The immense stream of water rushed down Prospect Hill, carrying everything before it. Houses were swept into the street and inmates thrown from their beds. MAX SLAIN*, BODY BURNED. Murdered In Secluded Spot at Spo. kane, Wash. Spokane, Wash.?With three bullet holes in his head and dressed as if for a wedding, the body of A. Lewandorki, a cabinet maker, was found Id a secluded spot on Fort Wright military reservation. His clothing had been saturated with kerosene and set on fire, doubtless to destroy marks.of identification. His overcoat lay 200 feet from the body, indicating that he had been murdered and the body carried to the spot where it was found. He cam? here a year ago from Chicago. Louisville Station Burns. The Union Station at Louisville. Ky., the local terminal for five of the country's leading railroads, was destroyed by fire with a loss o? $400,000, and within half an hour the Commercial Club had decided on the building of a new station. Fall Killed Carpenter. Albert Pierce, a carpenter, fortyfivp vpars of aee_ of Manasauan. was instantly killed when he fell three stories, striking on his head and breaking his neck. Pierce was at work on a new building at Spring Lake, N. J. Colorado Banker Dead. A. H. Turner, president of the Com mercial Savings Bank, died of pneumonia at Trinidad, Col., aged seventyeight. He was a native of New Yiwk. Prominent People. Mrs. Russell Sage is said to pay the heaviest tax of any person in the city of isew york. The Crown Prince of Siam has written a bo.ok of travels which has been published in hisnativelanguage. Guglielmo Marconi, the wireless telegraph wizard, is only thirty-five years old, as he was born in Bologna in 1874. J. Velasquez de Leon, a Philippine student at the University of Missouri, recently was awarded a Government scholarship in the United States by the PhlliDDine Government. KIDNAPERS CAPTURED -HOMEY RECOVERED Man and Veiled Woman Arrested in Cleveland, Ohio. BOY'S STORY REVEALS CAPTORS i f Miscreants Who Stole Little Willie Wliitla, of Sharon, Pa., Are in the Clutches of the Police, With $9845 of the Ransom Received. Cleveland, Ohio. ? The man who kidnaped Billie Whitla from his school at Sharon and the woman who assisted him in hiding the little chap were captured here. The police also recovered $9848.50 of the $10,000 paid as a ransom by James P. Whitla, the boy's father. The couple were caught just before 11 o'clock at night by Captain Shattuck, of the local police, and Detective Wood, of the Cleveland bureau. It is understood that Wood had been shadowing the man all day. The man and woman were walking hastily along Ontario street in the direction of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad station. Captain Shattuck grasped the man and said: "Where are you going in such haste?" The man broke from the police captain and fled. At the same time the woman made a savage attack u^on Wood, who was holding her. Shattuck ran after the man, who surrendered after two shots had been "v.?tv> tjq ofnmhlprl and fell men at uiui. iav as Shattuck fired the second time, and before he could rise his pursuer had thrown himself upon him. At the police station the woman fought savagely against being searched, but finally quieted down and accepted the situation. She appeared to be the master mind of the two, and did the talking. "You've got it now. There'll be hell to pay in Sharon when Buhl hears of this. It's the ransom all right." Neither of the prisoners would give any name and both declined tc tell anything about themselves. The woman was handed over to Matron Louise Love for examination in a search for incriminating evidence. The man readily handed over all the money he had?$58.50. The woman made a desperate fight against being searched. Another woman was called to assist tne matron. The two women threw the struggling one to the floor and searched her. Under her skirts, tied to hei body by cords, they discovered a bag. Opened, it was found to contain $979,0. The money was put up in separate packages, most of which contained $500. In her jacket pocket was some small change. In a box carried by the woman was found some clothing, new, and, shown from the sale tags to have been purchased in the Bailey Company's store, at Ontario and Prospect avenues, only three blocks from Central Police Station. It is believed that the kidnapers kept Billie in the old city pest house, now abandoned. It was searched, and nniiro anv thpv fonnd traces of re wuv> pvuvv >?w^ ? cent occupancy. The building is practically isolated in the far southeastern part of the city, and is an admirable place for the purpose to which the kidnapers put it. The boy said that his captors told him there was smallpox at his house, for which reason his father wanted him to stay away, and he also said that the woman was dressed like a nurse. This she no doubt did to deceive any one who should notice that the old pest house had tenants. The bulk of the money found on the woman was in the original packages as Mr. Whitla received it from the bank. "This is the money all right," said Captain Shattuck, after the matron had reported her find. "It is the money Whitla paid over to the woman in the afternoon. I am satisfied of that. There is no question, even though the numbers on some of the bills had not been verified already, as has been done. Why, the woman practically admits we have the right money. She said when we found it that we had the money and that there would be hell to pay in Sharon when Buhl hears of it." It appears that the capture was really brought about through information given by Willie Whitla to Mr. Whitla's friend, Charles Sankey, of this city, who returned with them to SharoD. Willie told of the signs he could see from the window of the room in which he was kept, and a detailed description of the man and woman. Telling of his arrival in Cleveland Willie said that the man took him to a house at 11 o'clock at night. They went to a second-floor room, No. 2. Immediately opposite this room was No. 17, and the man knocked at the door and the woman appeared. "Here's Mother Jonesy," he said. The woman then got supper, and soon after put him to bed. The woman was dressed as a nurse, and he was told he was in a hospital. He was mauen away 111 uie siuk. cupuuuru several .times while -there, but otherwise was well treated. The signs Willie saw from the window and which he remembered were the "Thorpses Hotel" and "San Corso," and he also saw a stone church. He was also able to tell the various street car lines that passed the house. He said that the woman told him before he left to tell his father and mother that she was middle aged, very fat, and pock-marked. French Strikers Bnck at Work. Af o moec mo. ' r> cr nf Pi fi 0 ft nf thp striking Government telegraph and postoffice employe' it Paris, France, it was voted by an overwhelming majority to resume work. Only about 200 of the men voted to continue the strike. New Steel Trust Planned. Plans for a new Steel Trust composed of independent concerns, with a capital of $300,000,000, were divulged at Pittsburg, Pa. WITCHES KILL BABY. Three Women Are Sentenced to Death in Havana. Havana, Cuba. ? Three reputed witches have been convicted of murdering a white baby in order to procure the blood and heart, wherewith to heal the sick. The women have been sentenced to death, and four others, convicted as accomplices, have been sentenced to from fourteen to twenty years' imprisonment. This is the second case of the kind, three women having been executed in 1904 for the same crime. ' 'itkiauSWiliiLfcDkil'Vari'-iif 1 . . I GOOD I" ?Cartoo7i by 1 THIRTY-TWO LI< WHERE ROO! Despatch From British East A pects For Big Game?i come to the F< Mombasa, British East Africa.? Mombasa is preparing already to welcome Theodore Roosevel^, and his coming has given a decided impetus to the interest in the present hunting season. The Governor of the protectorate, Lieutenant-Colonel Sir James Hayes Sadler, is arranging a program of welcome and entertainment for the [ distinguisnea visitor, dux m spite ui these arrangements the greeting to j Mr. Roosevelt will be more to the great sportsman, whose fame is well known to local hunters, than to the former President. East African sportsmen were highly gratified to learn that Mr. Roosevelt had refused the offer of the au<thorities to grant him a special hunting license that would have permitted him to kill game to an unlimited ex* tent instead of confining himself to the two elephants, two rhinoceroses, two hippopotami, etc., of the regular license. Lions and leopards are classed as vermin and consequently no license to kill them is required. The white population of Mombasa has heard much of Mr. Roosevelt's personality, and in a joking way frequent references to the "big stick" at-e being made. The rains are late this year, and a ViaoTTtr foil la PYnpctprl fthe reeular time for the "big rains" is from the end of January to the end of April). The prospects for good hunting thig season are considered excellent. Many of the settlers in the outlying districts, realizing the increasing interest in the prospefcts for sport because of the coming of Mr. Roosevelt, are voluntarily sending in information about the movements of game. According to a dispatch received here a record group of lions, numbering thirty-two, was seen on the Nandi plateau recently at a point about fifty miles north of Port Florence (the Nandi plateau is on the west side of* the great Rift Valley). Among them are three huge males. Four families of girafTes have been seen at Makindu, 200 miles inland from here on the line of the Uganda Railroad, and elephants have been seen at Elburgon, 475 miles inland on the railroad. MESSINA'S UN Estimated at 60,000 and I All the Bodies of th Rome, Italy.?The General in command at Messina, who is in charge of the removal of the dead, estimates the number of bodies still awaiting burial at about 60,000. Most of them lie several feet deep under the rub bish from fallen houses. The work of clearing the debris from the streets Is proceeding very slowly. Not more than 200 bodies are removed and buried on any day when the work is carried on without interruption for twelve hours. The prevailing bad weather is hampering the work greatly and often stops it, as the rain changes the debris iato soft mud, which the first sunny day hardens to the consistency of cement DR. LYMAN ABBOTT'S ON WHAT MA, Brooklyn.?"To be an ideal -w a sermon in the Central Congregal 1 represented in each individual mu "1. Discard all shoes the size oJ possible. t" - J. i. V i "2. ODC mubb 11UU tuuaiuui a of work. "3. To obtain red cheeks, the pass by paint and powder. 4. She must not be the servar are her servants. . S"5. She must not change her "6. Her home must be her palat love of beautj- and shown she knows 1 "7. She must be industrious motherly and a true friend." i Continuing,.Dr. Abbott said: "A woman's idea of modern in | ing and night. Her idea of modern else. J , "The ideal woman does not cc lieves that whatever concerns her i woman's family finds fault with he !' cooking. She blames the food, and "Woman was meant to be ma properly carried out there would t Russian Drugged and Left to Perish in a Roman Boarding House. ? mi u?J? ^ P ? Duo. Home, uaiy.? xue ouuj- ui a xvu^sian, Vladimir Tarasoff by name, was found in a trunk in a boarding house, locked up in the trunk, it is believed, for twenty-three days. A medical examination indicated that the man, who was about thirty years of age, had been drugged and placed in the trunk, and that he had died of suffocation. Two Russians visited him shortly before his disap nearance. There is no clew to their Identity. The Field of Sports. Miss Emily W. Scott, of the Westchester Country Club, has been nominated for the presidency of the Women's Tennis Association. The official repoit of the State Racing Commission shows that New York State's income war. more than $150,000 less last year than it was the year before. A new roller ykating record was established in the six-day relay race in Denver whenRisenhandand Burke completed 1519 miles and four laps on an eleven-lap track. The previous record was 1512 miles and eight laps. L_ - . - 77. A. Rogers, in the New York Herald, vmrn ' nT/1TTIHT1l\ JJ3S SJLljXl 1 JCjJ> 3EVELT WILL GO: tfrica Tells of the Good ProsGreat Plans For a Weiarmer President. E. J. Cuninghame, a ucred English big game hunter and field naturalist, who is to be guide to and general manager of the Roosevelt party, has1 been here for some time completing the preparations for the trip into the wilderness as well as the shooting and collecting excursions along tne line of the railroad. He fs selecting and hiring native porters for the expedition. He takes only experienced men who are known to be courageous and to possess great physical strength. The "safari" kit?in other words, the camp equipment for the work in the open?is arriving from London, and all will be in readiness when Mr. Roosevelt arrives. The railroad c&r used on the line as far as Port Florence by other distinguished visitors to Uganda, such as the Duke of Mecklenburg, the Duke of Connaught, the Duke of the Abruzzi, Joseph Chamberlain and Winston Spencer Churchill, is being refitted for the use of Mr. Roosevelt. Everything points to a successful stay in British East Africa and Uganda for Mr. Roosevelt. The natives are peaceful, game is plentiful and the people of Mombasa are waiting eagerly to extend him a welcome. TAME HUNTING, SAYS ANOTHER. Captain Smiley Says Many Hunters Have Made Lions Gun-Sliy. San Francisco, Cal.?Captain A. J. Smiley, who is said to have served with the Irish Brigade in the Boei ( war, says that the hunting grounds WUCID ^ATl^OlUWUb AVVwwv.vtv X,.M to spend his vacation are nothing but a huge game preserve, and that the hunter will have a tame time. The 1 captain claims to have hunted over 1 this ground many times, and he as- < serts that the lions have been shot at ] so often they have become gun-shy. j The Duke of Manchester, according to Captain Smiley, is said to have shot . over the country/ which Roosevelt will traverse without bagging any 1 game. Smiley says he has written to i Roosevelt suggesting that he go to a portion of Africa where elephants could be met in droves. BURIED DEAD. ; t May Take a Year to Find e Earthquake Victims. 1 The soldiers and workmen have to break this with pickaxes instead of 1 clearing it away with shovels. Of- 1 ten a week passes without any bodies 1 being extracted, and at the rate at ? ir\ rr Ar\r\e? m n vo WJL1HJU lilt? VYUia UCIU5 uuue *jlwtv than a year will be required before all the victims in Messina are buried. For some unknown reason the Government wants to keep this a se- ' cret, and an attempt to send the story ' by wire some days ago failed, owing to the activity of the press censor. It ] Is probable that the Government now ] realizes its mistake in recalling too , soon the greater number of soldiers ^ and sailors engaged in the work of burial. ' ( m in niaa?1? ana n?1 SEVEN RULES ! < KES AN IDEAL WOMAN | J 1 'oman," said Dr. Lyman Abbott, in :ional Church, "the feminine type ISt: ! I which makes walking well nigh im- ( ler hands when it comes to a question ideal woman must take exercise and it of the dreoamaker and milliner. They styles at the dictation of men in Paris. H '< !e." because in it she has developed a g j iow to create it. H , sympathetic, energetic,, enthusiastic, jj idustry isplayingbridgewhist mornlife is to be supported by some one , insider work unwomanly. She behusband concerns her. If the ideal r cooking, she does not blame the 1 I changes it. ' .n's companion, and if the idea were < ie no affinities." m ???aall Proof That He's Nearsighted Unfits an Oyster Bed Watchman. Trenton, N. J.?The Civil Service J Commission received its first request < for the removal of an officeholder I here. It came from an oyster grower < of South Jersey who objected to a i watchman, saying: "He isn't a good 1 watchman because he is nearsighted. ( A nearsighted watchman can't do the work. I know he is nearsighted, because if he wasn't he could see his , own father and brother stealing my oysters right along." The watchman 1 says complainant is merely sarcastic. * From Other Countries. Earl Grey, Governor-General of 1 Canada, urges forest preservation in I "< Canada. t Colombia has reduced the export rtntv on cocoanuts from $2 to $1 a t thousand for a period of one year. g A company has been formed, supported by English capital, to open ( five central sugar factories in Ja- ~\ maica. s In 190S the product of the fisheries of Canada was worth $25,500,000, a c decrease of $750,000 from 1907, occurring chiefly in Pacific salmon and . sealskins. from woman's ailments are in\ addresses here given, for positiv Vegetable Compound does cure f Tnmor Removed. Chicago, 111.?Mrs. Alvena Sperling, IX Langdon Street. Llndley, Ind.?Mrs. May Fry. Kinsley, Kans.=?Mrs. Stella Gifford Beaman. Scott, N.Y.?Mrg. S. J. Barber. Cornwallvllle, N.Y.?Mrs. Wm. Boughton. Cincinnati,0. Mra.W.K.Housh,7EaatTiewAv Milwaukee, Wis.?Mrs. Emma Lmse, 883 1st St., German. Chnnge of TJfe. South Bend, Ind.? Mrs. Fred CertU, 1014 S. Lafayette Street. Noah, Kentucky.-*Mrs. Lizzie Holland. Brookfleld, Mo.--Mrs. Sarah Lousiguont, 207 S. Market St. Paterson, N.J. Mrs. Wm. Soraerville, 135 Hamburgh Avenue. Philadelphia, Pa. ? Mrs. K. E. Garrett, 2407 Nort-a Garnet Street. Kewaskum, Wis.?Mrs. Carl Dahlke. Maternity Troubles. Worcester, Mass.? Mrs. Dosylra 0ot6, 117 Southgate Street. Indianapolis, Ind.?Mrs. A. P. Anderson, 1207 E. Pratt Street. Big Run, Pa.?Mrs. W. E. Pooler. Atwater Station, O.?Mrs. Anton Muelhaupt. Cincinnati, Ohio.?Mrs. E. H. Maddocks, 2135 Gilbert Avenue. Mogadore, Ohio.?Mrs. Lee Manges, Box 131. Dewlttrille, N.Y.?Mrs. A. A. Giles. tioanstowu, a. xjub. xkjluoi n. tniiiuui, iuo E. Main Street. Burton view, 111.?Mrs. Peter Langenbahn. Avoid Operations. Hampstead, Md.?Mrs. Jos. H. Dandy. Adrian, Ga.?Lena V. Henry, Route No. 3. Indianapolis, Ind.-Bessie v. Piper, 29 South Addison Street. Louisville, Ky.?Mrs. Sam Lee, 3523 Fourth St. South West Harbor, Maine. ? Mrs. Lillian Bobbins, Mt. Desert Light Station. Detroit, Mich. ? Mrs. Frieda Bosenaa, 044 Meldrnm Avenue, Gorman. Ore&nlc Displacements. Moiler, Ills.?Mr*. Mary Ball. Llgonier, Ind.?Mrs. Eliza Wood, R.F.D. No. 4. Melbourne, Iowa. ? Mrs. Clara Watermann, B. F. D. No. 1. Bardstown, Ky.?Mrs. Joseph Hall. Lewis ton, Maine.?Mrs. Henry Cloutier, 86 Oxford Street. Minneapolis, Minn.?Mrs. John G. Moldan, 2115 Second Street, N. Shamrock, Mo.?Josie Ham, F. D. No. 1; aox'u. Marlton, N.J.?Mrs. Goo. Jordy, Route No. 3, Box 40. Chester, Ark.?Mrs. Ella Wood. OolDft, Ga.?Mrs. T. A. Crlbb. Pendleton, Ind.?Mrs. May Marshall, R.R. 44. Cambridge, Neb.?Mra. Nellie Moslander. These women are only a few o the power of Lydia E. Pmkham's" diseases. Not one of these wome form for the use of their names i ing that we should refer to the do other suffering women to Vegetable Compound is a reliabl statements maae in our advertis truth, and nothing but the truth. Use Fresh Water in Making Tea. Some of the people never empt Dut the water in a tea kettle whe about to refill It. This Is a grea mistake. If the water is to be use for cooking purposes always stai with a fresh supply of cold wate when you are about to set the kettl an the stove. Another hint is this Never draw the water for the tea kel tie from the hot water faucet, n matter whether the water in the tan is heated or not. Water from the he crater pipes is never so fresh as tha from the cold. Naughty Boston! Let us not burst in ignorance. W ire New Englanders, plain person: :oarse, perhaps; not super-refined i naughtiness. We all saw Miss Hofl mann, and in her saw no harm. W ill saw Miss Kellerman; we did nc 3ee too much of her, and we treasur the recollection. We remember gratf tally Miss Duncan bounding an 3klpplng and leaping about the stage or posturing in classical attitudes.Boston Herald. Senate Again to Blame. Speaker Cannon at the last Grid Iron Club dinner in Washington stoo up for the Senate. . "A crowd of farmers were knoct tng the Senate one market day las mon,th when an old fellow of onl sne-horse power brain bustled lot their midst. " 'Well, byes,' said he, 'what's th Senate up to now?' " 'Why, ain't ye heerd, Zachery^ 3ald a young farmer, winking at th others. 'The Senate's went an passed a bill addin' two extry month to the winter.' "Zachary struck his forehead wit his red-mittened fist. " 'Do tell!' he groaned. 'Gosh dur the luck! An' here am I clean ou o* fodder.' "?Boston Globe. "But why didn't you consult you father and me before you were ma: ried?" "Because, mamma, I wa afraid you might prejudice m against him."?Life. LESS MEAT Advice of Family Physician. \ Formerly people thought meat nec sssary for strength and muscula (rigor. The man who worked hard wa supposed to require meat two o three times a day. Science has founi sut differently. It is now a common thing for th family physician to order less meat is in the following letter from a N 5f. man: "I had suffered for years with dys ?epsia and nervousness. My physi :ian advised me to eat less meat an< greasy foods generally. 1 tried sev jral things to take the place of m; lsual breakfast of chops, fried pota :oes, etc., but got no relief until ried Grape-Nuts food. "After using Grape-Nuts for th< :ereal part of my meals for tw< rears, I am now a well man. Grape 'tfuts benefited my health far mori ban the 5500.00 worth of medicine . lad taken before. "My wife and children are health er than they had been for years, ant ve are a very happy family, largel] Lue to Grape-Nuts. "We have been so much benefltec >y Grape-Nuts that it would be un jrateful not to acknowledge it." Name given by Postum Co., Battl< 3reek, Mich. Read "The Road t< iVellville," in pkgs. "There's a Rea ion." Ever read the above letter? A new >ne appears from time to time. The] ire genuine, true, and full of humai nterest. ' v ' ? l A new ited to write to the names and e proof- that Lydia E. Rnkham's emale iljs. I _ Painful Periods. Goshen, Ala.?Mrs.W. T. Dalton, Route No. 3. Chicago, 111.?Mrs. Wm. Tully, 465 Ogden Ar. I Paw Paw, Mich.?Mrs. Emma Draper. I Flushing, Mich.?Mrs. Burt Loyd, E. F. D. I No. 3; care of D. A. Sanborn. Coffeevllle, Miss.?Mra. S. J. Jones. Cincinnati, Ohio.?Mrs. Flora Ahr, 1362 Ernst Street. Cleveland, Ohio ?Miss Lizzie Stelger, 6510 Fleet Avenue, S.E. Wesleyyllle, Pa.-Mrs. Maggie Ester, E.F.D.L | Dyersburg.Tenn?Mrs. Lue Milliard. R.&.L | Hayfleld, Va.?Mrs. Maynie Windle. irregularity. Herrin, 111.?Mrs. Cbas. Folkel. Winchester, Ind.?Mrs. May Deal. Dyer, Ind.?Mrs. Wm. Oberloh, E. F. D.No. L Baltimore, Md.?Mrs. W. S. Ford, 1938 Lan?downe Street. t Bozbury, Mass.?Mrs. Francis Merkle,13 Field Str66t? Clarksdale, Mo.?Miss Anna Wallace. Guysviile, Ohio.?Mrs. Ella Michael, lt.F.D3. Dayton, Ohio. ? Mrs. Ida Hale, Box 25, N?tional Military Home. Lebanon, Pa.?Mrs. Harry L. Kittle, 233 Lelvraan Street. Sykes, Tenn.?Minnie Hall. Detroit,Mich.?Mrs. Louise .Tung,332Chestnut Ovarian Tronble. Vincennes, Ind.?Mrrf. Syl. B. Jerauld, 608 N. Tenth Street. Qardiner, Maine.?Mrs. S. A. Williams, B. F. D. No. 14; Box 39. Philadelphia, Pa.?Mrs. Chas. Boell, 2407 if. Garnet Street. " Plattsburg.Mlss.?MissVernaWllkea.B.F.D.l. Female Weakness. Wlllimantlc, Conu.? Mrs. Etta Donovan, Boa 299. Woodside, Idaho.?Mrs. Rachel Johnson. Bockland, Maine.'?Mrs. Will Young, 6 Columbia Avenne. >Scottrille, Mich.?Mrs.J.G.Johnson, B.F.D.3. Dayton, Ohio.?Mrs. F. B. Smith, 431 JOm St. Erie, Pa.?Mrs. J. P. Endlich, B. K,lX"No. 7. Bearer Falls, Pa. - Mrs. W. P. Boyd, 210f Seventh Avenue. ' 1 Fairchance, Pa.-Mrt. I. A. Danham, Box 153, Fort Hunter, Pa.?Mrs. Mary Jane Shatto. >. East Earl, Pa.?Mrs. Augustus Lyon, B.F.D. 2. Vienna, W. Va.?Mrs. Emma Wheaton. V Nervous Prostration. Oronogo, Mo.?Mrs. Mae McKnight. Camden, N.J.-Mrs. Time Waters, 461 Liberty Street. Joseph, Oregon.?Mrs. Alice Huffman. Philadelphia, Pa. ? Mrs. John Johnston, 210 Siegel Street. , (jnnstiana, ienn.?am. mary wooa, n.r .u. No. 3. Pecos, Texas.?Mrs. Ad* Yonng Eggleaton. > ' Granlteville, Vt.?Mrs. Cfcas. Barclay, R.FJ). f thousands of living witnesses oi Vegetable Compound to cure femal? n ever received compensation in any n this advertisement?but are wilful because of the good they may prove that Lydia E. Pinkham's . -;j e and honest medicine, ajid that the emente regarding its merit.are the For the Public Taste. y The following makes a very popun lar dish, the usual name given It belt lng "funny paper." Take three mothd ers-ln-law, two Irishmen, one Qer t man, one or two tough kids and a r coon; mix and stir well. A jag is e considered to add flavor. Sprinkle in i: a little sDice and ginger, and gapiisb t- with drawings. The addition of a o pinch of hardsense is advisable, k though not essential. Chestnuts ate it used for stuffing. The dish Is usually it roasted, though poaching la not uncommon.?The Bellman. Dissatisfied With Her Apartments. e "I tell you I won't have this room,* j, protested the old lady to the bellboy n who was conducting her. "I ain't E-j, agoing to pay my good money for a e pigsty with a measly little folding it bed in it If you think that Jest bee cause I'm from the country?" j- Profoundly disgusted, the boy cut d her short. "Get in, mum. Get in," he ordered. - "This ain't yer room. This is th? elevator."?Everybody's Magazine. , Learning Early. i-1 a Riinrtnv-sr.hnol teacher has been d telling her class the story of the good Samaritan. When she asked them what the story meant a little boy it said: "It means that when I am In y trouble my neighbors must help me." o ?Unlversallst Leader. e Deafness Cannot Be Cured bylocal applications as theycanuot reach tha diseased portion of the ear. There is only on? ' way to cure deafness, and that is by const! e tutxonal remedies. Deafness is caused byaij ri inflamed condition of the mucotls lining ol the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is ins flamed you have a rumbling sound oriitfpep feet hearing, and when it is entirely closed jj Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out and this tube re. stored to its normal condition, hearing will n be destroyed forever. Nine case3 oat of ten t *are caused bycatarrh, which is nothingbutas inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces We will give One Hundred Dollars for an j case of Deafness (caused bycatarrh) that cannot be curedbyBall's Catarrh Cure. Sendfoi r circulars free. F.J.Cheney & Co.,Toledo,0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. s Take Hall's family Pills for constipation. e Suggested as a new style of personal for newspapers: "Mrs. John Smith has gone to St. Joe to collect what is due to her from a friend who visited her a month last summer. She will remain four weeks." r Only One "Bromo Quinine" That is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look for the signature of E. W. Grove. Used the \Vorld over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 23p. r A Horseshoera of Saxony must pass a public examination before they are properly qualified. e Safe and Sure. [. Among medicines recommended and endorsed by physicians and nurses is Kemp'a Balsam, the best cough cure. For many - years regarded by doctors as the medicine - most likely to cure coughs, it has a strong j hold on the esteem of the well-informed! When Kemp's Balsam cannot cure a cough we shall be at a loss to know what will. 7 At druggists' and dealers, 25c. j Over 1300 miles of Sweden's railways ar? to be electrified, power being supplied from fii*? stations. a ? Rheumatism, Neuralgia and Sore Throat will not live under the same roof with " H ami ins Wizard Oil, the best of all remei dies for the relief of all pain. ' Some Paris cabs now bear the inscrip' tion, "English spoken." j Brow "s Bronchial Troches relieve 71 Throat itations caused by cold or use ' of the voice. In boxes 25 cents. Samples mailed free. John I. Brown & Son, I Boston, Mass. The female brain begins to lose weight at the age of thirty, but that of the male j not until ten yeare later. Your working power depends upon your I health! Garfield Tea corrects disorders of liver, kk'-ws, stomach and bowels; over- < i comes v. ipation, purifies the blood? f brings good health. ? Of those who die only about eleven per ' cent, are insured.