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THE ARGUS, FRIDAY, JUNE '29, '190(5. T3 KweiytkMy Likes Gootf Batter WE are getting in No. 1 country butter every day, which we will retail by the jar ot pound at 17c per lb. FRESH EGGS, 15c PER DOZEN. NEW POTATOES, 25c PER PECK. J. SILVERMAN. Seventeenth St.. Rock Island Old phone 721 K. New phor.e, 5211. 611 a a o o f o o a a a o o v. . O O Mt : o o VI V M O N EY NEVER RUNS OUT WHEN IT COMES TO BUYING, SELLING OR EXCHANGING SECOND HAND GOODS I STAND ALONE. NOW THEN THE MOST BEAUTIFUL PART OF MY WHOLE LIFE HAS BEEN TO KEEP MY WORD, FOR I PLAINLY SEE IT HAS MADE ME MONEY AND FRIENDS. COME FEARLESSLY AND DEAL WITH ME. AL THOUGH A CRANK I LOVE TO PLEASE YOU JUST THE SAME. I ACTUALLY HAVE PEOPLE THAT TRADE IN MY STORE THAT HATE ME. WHY DO THEY TRADE WITH SUCH A MAN? PURE AND SIMPLE, THERE NEVER WAS A SPOT LIKE IT, THAT CAR RIES $10,000 WORTH OF SECOND HAND GOODS. SO NOW WHEN WE WANT ANYTHING WE WILL ALL GO DOWN TO JONES' SECOND HANDED STORES. ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. BOTH PHONES, THE OLD AND THE YOUNG ONE. I DON'T CARE WHETHER YOU READ THIS AD OR NOT. I AM STILL THE MEANEST MAN IN TOWN, AND YOU CAN'T STOP ME FROM WANTING TO BUY YOUR HOUSEHOLD GOODS, SELL YOU HOUSEHOLD COODS, STORE YOUR GOODS, AND MAKE YOU A LOAN ON HOUSEHOLD GOODS. HOUSE HOLD GOODS SOLD ON PAYMENTS. GOODS SOLD ON COMMIS SION. SO COME AND MAKE JUST ONE LITTLE DEAL WITH ME FOR A CONVINCER. I THANK YOU FOR READING THIS. WILL BUY MORTGAGES AND NOTES. MAKE SMALL LOANS ON REAL ESTATE. OPEN EVENINGS. J. W. JONES, 1623 2d Ave. ... a & & a o o ESTABLISHED 1884. C Ml ' V Ml V Ml Ml Ml F -j V" "O" G m CXXXXXXXXXX5COOOOCCOCCOOOCO When In Doubt Health Is life's greatest luxury. If you Davenport's most successful specialist men and women. 1X RAT EXAMINATION FREE. DR. WALSH CURES WHEN OTHERS FAIL. (IKRTOrS PFIBILITT, KloeplRsnrp- m-ntnl Illusions, catarrh, dyspepsia. acrorula. piles and kidney dls-usen. VVOHBX fnifferlng from norvoun pxhnimllon, headache. barkach. consti pation, neuralgia, palpitation of the heart, or any other dispute peculiar to the fex nhould consult Dr. Walsh and get the benefit of his vnet - perience. Voir KNOW that Dr. Walsh 1? the only upeclattst who ever remained In the tri-rities over two years You also know that he has been located in Iiavenport 11 years. Ton must know that Or. Walsh remains permanent ly because he cures his patients. a VlnilATlOX AD EI.KTKiriTV. Twenty years' experience haw nimlt Ir. Walsh a master of thene methods of curinf chronic diseases. lie uses nil forms of electricity, including Farad is tn. 'ialvanism. Cataphoreai. Sinusoidal, Static and High Frequency Currents. VAHICCM KI.K Is a frequent cause of nervous and physical decline. Why treat months with others when we can positively cur you In from one t three treatments? DR. WALSH'S PRICES FOR TREATMENT ARE WITHIN THI REACH OF ALL. TT1R ClCESTIOJI OP TOCIl IIRAI.TH Is n. vital one, therefor you rannot afford to place your case in the hands of those who have had little or no practical experience in the treatment of chronic diseases. v DR. WALSH'S large private practice and extensive experience as sur-Kon-in-chief of St. Antnony's hospital, together with the f.ict that he has cured hundreds who were pronounced incurable by others during the 11 years be has been located in la venport. proves conclusively that be specialist that you should ONLY CURABLE Pest of references and credentials, dreda cured bv tnaiL Hours 9 to 12 a. m., 2 to 6 and p. m. ofltce, 124 Weit Third stree., cxxxx?cxoooooooQoeo n ft'!- 12 "Hit 3 Ml ; "A j 0 n'J : f i oJ j 0 O ROCK ISLAND, ILL. ,5. Aft " ... mi mi v mi mi v.v Mi mi v. mi v v.; iy mi COOOOOCCXXXXXXXJOOOOOOC oooo Consult the Best i want health, consult Dr. WaUh, in Chronic, Nervous Diseases of mm. Dfl. J. E. WALSH, Formerly of Chins;?, K-Knrcift-ln-.'lilf vt Bt. Anthony's UonpttaL wraknesw of m'-n. fniltnc mniorT asttimti. bronchltta, ioid d!-A4c consult If you want to gt welt CASES TAKEN. If you ran not call, writ Hun- 7 to 8 p. m.; Sundays. 11:80 to 1:10 HeCullough lillvilng. ravnport. J K. o"i Dainty Will CoverlnJs For Spring. A shown by sample rolls In our exhi bition and salesroom, give every evi deuce of excelling past seasons In ev ery desirable way. Richness, harmo nious blending at colors and figures, trength and excellence of the paper fork itself all commend our wall pa PHTB to you. Anot her commendation Is our price, which are the lowest in the city. Paridon Wall Paper Co. 419 Seventeenth Street. MORGAN HORSE'S VALUE Why Our Government Is' Try ing to Restore the Breed. VERT USEFUL TO SMALL FAEMEES Xo Other American Steed Said to Have Shown Snme Recuperative VI tnlfty and Ability to Travel Spirit edly After Hard Spell of Work. Highly Irled an a Itoad ITore I'n ezcelled For Family I ae. Lovers of horses the country over, but particularly tlie farmers and light harness drivers of New Kugland, will follow with interest the results of the effort of tin? agricultural department to restore the Morgan horse to its for mer position of dominance, says the Providence Journal. 'As a. result of the craze it was little short of that for animals of heavier type, which, west ern horses were brought in to meet, the serviceable Morgan has been al lowed to run out until it has become increasingly dimcult to secure for gen eral use good specimens of the type that was the prevailing one in Now England towns scarcely more than a generation ago. Now, however, the un fortunate results of this change of taste are being realized. It has been amply demonstrated by costly experi ence that weight and strength are not thi? equivalents of the hardiness and all round adaptiveness which are the distinguishing characteristics of the smaller Morgan. These qualities, witli Intelligence and docility, made it pre-eminently the breed for the small farmer, who keeps only one animal for both farm and road work. No other American horse has shown the same recuperative vital ity, the ability to travel spiritedly to church on Sunday morning after an arduous week of haying, No other, iii short, has so thoroughly demonstrated its lituess for the responsible position of the only horse in the family. Tho westerner which supplanted it was lit teii to draw heavier loads on the level, but that was almost its only advan tage, and strength did not mean endur ance. Comparatively small powers of adap tation to varied conditions and demands prevented its perfect assimilation as a jronoral utility horse such as the small farmer needs. The New Imcland hills. moreover, end the short, sharp slope from the lowr meadow t the nam iia not tit the imported animal's tempera ment. A creature built for routine, it contrasted poorly with the nimbler, more versatile Morgan, whose brisk walk, even under load, rave evidence of its zest i:i work. Nor was it im-rely as a farm horse that, the Morgan was esteemed. As a road horse for the business and profes sional man, not seeking speed pri marily, but always willing to move along briskly ami always ready for a brush on the highway, it was highly prized, and as a family horse it was unexcelled, its docility being ah impor tant factor. Descending frjm the famous Justin Morgan, foaled in H'Xi, it was no unimportant factor in devel- oping the farm horse in the east from the ungainly heavy footed animal with which the coast farmers of lifty years agi were apparently content. Hardly is the development of any other menus of locomotion, the trolley or the auto mobile, more striking than the progress that has been made in improving the character of the ordinary farm horse. Hut in New England progress began to move in the wrong direction when the sturdy Morgan was replaced by the heavy but strength wasting westerner. And it is now the aim of the govern ment to correct the error that was made and to restore the type that was iu danger of vanishing because of a too belated recognition of its merits. At the interstate horse and automo bile show held in Rutland. Vt., recent ly there has been brought together one of the most complete collections of standard bred Morgans that New Eng land has seen for many years. Special efforts were made to have this breed well represented because of the most perfect types for breeding purposes at its experiment station in IJurlmgton, for which the sum of $.", kw I was re cently appropriated. This reinstate ment of the .Morgan will riink as one of the conspicuous services of the de partment of agriculture. Millionaire Who Sleep on n Roof. John Farson, millionaire banker of Chicago, automobile enthusiast and horse show promoter, is the foremost advocate of fresh air in tho west, says a Chicago dispatch. He applies his teachings to his daily life. A few weeks ng:. on a sultry night, Mr. Far son arose from his bed, made a tour of the house, found an army cot and dragged it out on the roof garden of his home, and there he remained until dawn. The next day he had an awn ing erected over the garden, and it has been virtually his home since then. There is no attempt at style in this roof garden home. Everything Is plsln and simple and practical. A few chairs; a table, a settee, a few palms and the $3.r0 array cot comprise the furnishings. JenVe .Tame, Attorney. Jesse James, son of Jesse James, the outlaw, was enrolled the other day in the circuit court as an attorney at law. says the Kansas City Star. He passed the examination June 0 before the state board of examiners in Jefferson City and made the highest grade iu a class of thirty -seven. His average was 91. lie said recently: "tn two weeks I will quit the pawn broking business and will devote the balance of my life to the practice of the laTv." PAGEANT ON THE HUDSON- Pinna For Ilndson-Falton t'elcbru ;tIoi at ew York. Detailed plaits for the proposed Hudson-Fulton celebration iu 1109 were re cently perfected at the meeting in New York of thej executive committee of the-eonjuiission In charge, says the Nev I York Times. ' The plan, hu'ludesa uavul parade, n land parade, oratory, the. dedication of i memorials, the establishment of a park I at I u wood with a "memorial there and , the establishment of a state park at Yerplauck's point: The plans for tho naval parade include representation for the navies of the United States, Great T.ritniu ami the Netherlands, tha merchant-marine, excursion boats and yacht clubs. There will also be fac simile reproductions of the Half Moou and Clermont. The government of Hol land, is requested to furnish the re production of the Hudson vessel and the American steamboat interests the Clermont. JJotb. ships, it is proposed, should proceed north to Albany, stop-, ping at various points for local cele brations. The land parade, it is proposed, sha-l Include regular and state troops. Grand Army of the Itepublic posts and civic societies. Kivorsk'c drive from Seventy-second street to C!aro:no it is the proposed route for this parade. The laud parade would bo held on the sec ond day of the celebration. (.): the third d:iy would come the dedication of the memorials, including the Hudson Memorial bridge from I u wood to Spuy ten Duyvil hill. The committee also urges that the city connect the propos ed viaduct over Pyckman street so that it will join the southern end of Inwood hill and Washington heights. Tlie city of New York is asked to take seventy-live acres of the northern part of Inwood hill for a public park, to Ije preserved iu its present wooded condition. A municipal museum or a group of statuary, it is suggested, could ho erected on a part of this land. Thy proposed state park at Yorp'a nek's point wou'd require twenty acres. ThH wotdd be directly opposite the state reservation of thirty-four acres on the Stony Point battlet'.eld. The last of September, l;i;i:. is sug gested for the celebration because thr time would be more appropriate tlui:: the exact dates, figured old style. Hud son lirst landed in New York Sept. "J, 1;!!. old style, and Fulton's Clermont trip is placed at Aug. 11. 1S07. Hy lx urtng Hudson's landing new style the anniversary would fall on Sept. Monday. Sept. . l!Mi:). is recommend ed as the oflicial date for the beginning of the celebration. A S:illoon It li i 1 1 11 . F.nginecr I'.alderaucr of Salzburg has invented a balloon railroad, experi ments with which are now being made in tlie neighborhood of that German city, says the New York World. A stationary balloon is fastened to a s'ide running along a single rail fas tened to the ski.? of n steep mountain which ordinary railroads could not climb. The balloon is to float thirty live fM-t over the ground, and a stee! cable connects it with the rail. For going up motive power is furnished by hydrogen gas. while water poured into a large tank at the upper end of the road serves as ballast for the de scent. Suspended from the balloon is a circular car with room for ten pas sengers. TORTURED BY ITCHING SCALP Eczema Broke Out Also on Hands and Limbs Suffering Intense Doctors Said Too Old to Be Cured -An Old Soldier of 80 Years Declares: "CUTICURA TREATMENT IS A BLESSING" "At all times and to all people I am willing to testify to the merits of Cu licura.. It saved me from worse than the tortures of hades, about the year 1900, with itching on my scalp and temples, and afterwards it commenced io bre.'tk out on my liands. Then it broke out on my limbs. I was advised lo use salt and water, which I. did, to no effect. 1 then went to a Surgeon, who commenced treating me with a wash of Imrax. This treatment, did me no good, but rather aggravated tlie disease. I then told him I would go and see a phy sician in l'.vic. The reply was that I could go anywhere, but a case of eczema like mine could not be cured; that I was loo old (80). I went to an eminent doctor in the city of lie ami treated with him for six months, with like results. I had read of the Cu ticura Remedies often. 1 was strongly tempted to give them a trial, so I sent for the Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and I'csolvent and continued taking the Resolvent until I had taken six bottles, slopping it to take the I'ills. 1 was now getting letter. I took two baths a day, nd at night I let the lather of the Soap dry on. I used the Ointment with great effect after Mashing in warm water, to stop the itching at once. I om now cured. . "The Cuticura treatment is a blessing and should be used by every one who has itching of the skin." 1 can't say any more, and tbank God that He has given . the world such a curative. You can use this letter as you please. A very much lefriended man. Win. II. Gray, 3.03 Mt. Vernon St., Philadelphia, Pa., August, 2.-1905." . ntnprt External and Intertill Titnwit r mny Humor, from Pimplrt to Scrofula, from Infancy to Ace, n.n.MlnK of Cntlrura Soap. SV., Ointment. .Vie, Kcanlr. fnt. sOc (In form of Chocolatt Coaled PI11. Wc. per U1 of )(, may be had of all drunrioa. A iirgleaet often corca. IVtter Itrni a Chrm. Corp., Sole Prop., Borton, Maaa. W Uaiicd Free, " How to Cure Plafiguriog Humors." Says Julia Marlowe" Don't Surrender to Hysterics. Maintain Even Poise. 1 ' i By JULIA MARLOWE. One of America's greatest actresses. "If you were giving advice to n be ginner what would you say was the surest way to command success." I am asked that question frequently. To it I reply: Patience alove and be yond everything patience unending, undying patience, and the close, keen, constant study gf nature. That is the great thing to be nat ural. It remains art, of course, but it is the art which conceals art, and your reproduction of the genuine quality be comes so real after constant and thoughtful application that the human nature in those who are watching you, and especially iu those who sit away up aloft, responds like a heart throb, and you get your reward. I'.ut, no matter how great your suc cess, the study must stiil continue, and it means study to a point, particularly in modern plays, where you are aide to express thoughts and motions without the heip of the author's writ ten liMcs in ether words, where you regard the phrases as a mere sugges tion, a slight outward expression of the soul underneath. You must work until you are able to command a per fect blend of thought and emotion in every role you undertake. With that will come the perfect mode of expres sion in voice and gesture, tho result being nature or its exact counterpart. Again, I am oftcu asked if I really feel that I am the character I an im personating. I say. not at all. and you ask how I explain the real tears shed in some of my roles. Surely this la quite simple. When you weep over au affecting passage in a poem or tale it is with sympathy, not because you ihink you are the person whose 'sor rows are set forth and that you are suffering under the given conditions. I urging upon that thought. I believe, is the whole secret of what the con vincing actor must ever aim at the creation of sympathy. He will not achieve that by any surrender to hys terics, but by constantly maintaining a sane and even poise, feeling deeply, to be sure, and exercising the utmost tact, tenderness and delicacy in illu minating his lines with action, gesture anil expression. Maintaining that attitude, all that he does is necessarily spontaneous to the JI LIA MARLOWE. outward eye. And by the same token he will avoid that insufferable violence to the feelings which Stevenson de clared wns the last distinction between melolra!ia and true tragedy and which, it may be maintained with equal force. Is the last distinction be tween bad art and good. Not for the sake of mere action should a plaj-er move about the stng, and no method is to be less commend ed tbaji that which results in the per petration of fluttering gestures, swift alterations of expression and which de generates into mere grimace and rest less change of jtosition. I find that the best effects I make I suggest, not do. Experience has taught mo that in the plays of Shakespeare we shall not go far wrong If we let the Jines have the center of the stage and allow them to betray the poet's meaning. We cannot help him by a multitude of gestures nor by the creation of Intricate byplay. The best we can do. and all we can safely try to do. is to aid him by ten derness or impressiveness of voice and by allowing something of the beauty and power to suffuse our eyes and shine in our countenance. I would have a beginner to hug to himself the thought that it is hotter to do the wrong, thing strongly thnn the right thing weakly. Doing so he may err, and err gravely, but he at least will err with some conviction and sin cerity and will know, what a blessed compensation there Is in the lines of that oriental poet who said: It is better to be a crystal and ba broken Than to remain like a tile upon the. house top. In Ed Gffn'tabl. Golddust Maid. Gail Hamilton and Choir Boy are named by Geers as can didates for the M. and M. stake at Cleveland, and he should be able tc pick one that will be in the money. Golddust Maid Is a hard going, big mare, but she improved n lot with Geers last summer, may go ahead an other season and will be bard to beat if she starts. Choir Boy is a wonder for speed, but last summer he wa un reliable, his best race being won on a day when the stable did not think he had a chance. Lake Queen has not shown anything to warrant starting her In such a lot of horses. "Actors, "Be Natural ;-r.-t . " T I : - 1 ocxoccoeooocccocccccocooccc Let Us FurnisK Your HOME IF YOU DO, YOU'LL HAVE MORE STYLE, MORE COMFORT, MORE SATISFACTION, PRETTIER CAR PETS AND RUGS; A BETTER RANGE TOCOOK ON, THAN IF YOU BOUGHT AT ANY OTHER STORE IN THE THREE CITIES. COME IN AND PRICE THE THINGS YOU WILL REQUIRE; YOU'LL READILY SEE THE GREAT DIF FERENCE IN OUR FAVOR. FURNISHINGS FOR THE HOME ARE BOUGHT NOT FOR A DAY, NOR A WEEK, BUT FOR YEARS AND YEARS, SO BE SURE YOU II AVE FOUND THE BEST BEFORE YOU BUY. YOU'LL FIND IT HERE. We Are Waiting to Show You J Davenport Furniture & Carpet 1 Conipafiiy, 123-125 West Third Street. 0 Opposite Masonic Temple. GOOOOCX5GOOOOOCOCOOOOOOOOC50 75.000 Assorted !oLik Cartridges Sioch's Tilt: OLD RELIABLE GUN S'lOIlE rXVOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOCXJ 8 a 8 tX3CX50O0O00O03C 3 $ You in Debt? i.GCe000000GO0000O0000C90000 If you are, is certainly causing you some worry and annoyance. Now, wouldn't it be convenient to have all those old bills p.iid up and h.ive all your accounts put into one? Wouldn't you feel easier to be able to satisfy one man when payday comes, which ycu know is impossible when you have a half dozen or more places to pay? Let us pay your bdls get a new start. We'll advance you what you need, quickly and quietly, on your furniture, piano, horses, wagons, etc., without removal and give you plenty of time to repay your loan. Reasonable terms, prompt service and business like treatment to all. Hadn't you better see us today? Fidelity Loan Co., Mitchell & Lyndc Block, Room 33. ROCK ISLAND, ILL. Office hours 8 a. m. to 6 p. m. and Saturday evenings. Telephone West 514. New Telephone C011 CXJCCCOOOOCeOCCOOGCOSOOOOCCrc o 1 D s O o KOCK IS LAN U SAriNUS JJANK , ROCK ISLAND, ILL. t O Incorporated Under the State Law. 4 Per Cent Interest Paid on Deposits. Moner lianed on Personal Collateral or Ileal Estate Security. OFFICERS . DIRECTORS Phil Mitchell. Piefddent. H. P. Hull, Vice I'rcslJeot. P. Greenawalt, Cashier. 8 o o Began the business July 2, 1R70, and occupies S. E. corner of Mitch ell A Lynde's building 8. cccocccccccoccccccoocococcoococccoooooooooooooooocoo m r,rV in ii mm quality. First in xvorkmfmship. Tirat in A" F. M..Llzcn & Co.. Clinton. Iowa. Distributors. coocoooooooooocxooooooooooc AT Are Xoooooocxoooo O K. R. Cable, P. Grcenawall William II. Dart, Thlj Mitchell, H. P. Hull, L. Simon. K. V. Hurst, II. 8. Cbl, John Volk, Solicitors Jackson A Hurst. 1 1. .i " " .. . u . ij 0