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6 THE ARGUS. MONDAY, JULY 30, 190G. onos for Licenses, Privileges, Permits, and for similar purposes required by the Federal Government or by States, Counties or Municipalities, will be quickly supplied by tin American Surety Company of New York. Ia using our corporate bond you save yourself from personal obliga tion to individuals; and, at the same time, offer the best and most acceptable form of security. Brewers, Distillers, Cigar, Snuff and Tobacco Manufacturers, Tobacco Peddlers, Liquor Dealers, and all others who are required to give bonds of the above description should apply to the American 1 Surety p1 Company of I2eiv York Capital and Surplus s4,800,000 Lndolph Reynolria, Atty-, Uu ford block Wm- C. Maarkrr. AkU MsxidIp temple Wnu It. lorf, Atty., Cbaae block. Molinei F.dvr. S. Skiamcr, Act, 1503 Fifth Atn is Homeseekers' Excur sions to the South and Southeast v:a southern railway In connection with QUEEN &. CRESCENT ROUTE. Tickets on sale the first and third Tuesdays in each month to all points in Tennessee, Ala bama, .North Carolina, South Carolina. Georgia, Florida, Mis sissippi, Louisiana, and to points in southern Virginia, except to certain commercial centers iu states named. HATE One first class fare, plus 'Z for the round trip. LIMIT Thirty days from date of sale. STOP-OVERS both going and returning. Excellent train ser vice. For particulars and literature write: G. B. ALLEN, . A. G. P. A.. St. Louis. Mo. S. II. ILRDVICK, Passenger Traffic Manager, Washington, D. C. J. S. M'CULLOUGH, N. W. P. A., 225 Dearborn St. Chicago, I1L TV. R. TAYLOR, General Passenger Agent, Washington, P. C. it P.nuarani of Persia bore the enviable title of the Just. The righteousness of Ids decisions was seldom called in ijuesti-vn. Tli is title Iim been confer red on several moaarchs. Tiinong them l-cing Ciisimir II. of Poland. Ferdi nand I. and James II. of Aragon. 11a-roun-al i:as hid of "Arabian Nights" fame. Khosron of Per.-ia. Louis XIII. of France and Pedro I. of Portugal. Children like Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar. The plea3antest and best cough syrup to take, because it contains no opiates. Sold by all drug-jof gists. There is One t f i h and Only One. You do not know that Soda Cracker until you know Uneeda Biscuit To taste Uneeda Biscuit is to fall in love with them. You never forget that first taste, and you renew it every time you eat Uneeda Biscuit 10 In a dust tight. 0 moisture NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY fUlflOflMO Dl AM flAV stinourio ruin uni expected 10,000 Will Gather at Picnic at Prospect Park August 16. IS FOURTH ANNUAL MEETING Program,. Nearly Completed, Includes Addresses by Grand Masters of Order In the Two States. The program for the annual Rock Is land and Scott County Masonic picnic, which will be be held at Prospect park, Moline, Aug. IS, has been practically completed, lacking now only the mu sical numbers and one or two special entertainment nnmebrs. The complet ed program will be ready during the week. The picnic this vear will, if the veather proves favorable, be attended by between 10,000 and 12,000 members and their families. At the third annual gathering of the association at the Watch Tower last year there were over 10,000 in attendance. The pro gram cf the day will include addressee and music in the afternoon, and a pro gram of sports and amusements. In the atheletic contests the winners will he awarded suitable prizes. The meet ing this year has added interest from the fact that the two grand masters of the grand lodges in.which the lodges cf the picnic association are members, will be present and make addresses. Chester B. Allen of Galesburg, grand master of Illinois, will make a brief address, while V. T. Cleveland of Har lan. Iowa, grand master of Iowa, will deliver the oration of the elay. The Duy'M I'rojjrjmi. The exercises of the afternoon will be presided over by C. C. Wilson ef this city, president of the association. An invocation will be given by Rev. V. H. Burrell. rector of Christ Episco pal church of Moline, and a member of Doric lodge of that c.'ty. The address of welcome will be by J. B. Oakleaf of Moline. (5. C. Wenger of this city re sponding in behalf of the membership from other cities. Following Mr. Wen ger, Grand Master Allen will be hear.!, and the oration of the occasion, deliv ered by Grand Master Cleveland of Iowa. Music will be furnished through nut the afternoon by the Moline Light (iuard band, and during the evening music will be furnished by an orches na. A moving-pict lire exhibition will he included in the program of the ev ening, and a number of special feat ure's are being secured fer the evening by President Wilson and the program committee. I.o.Irn Tsikiug; I'ltrt. There are VI Masonic lodges in the association, nine of them in Rock Is land county and four in Seott county. (The lodges are': Trio and Rock Island jof this city, Doric cf Moline. Eureka of Milan; Cordova, Port Byron. Coal Val- ley. Andalusia, and Illinois City, in 'Rock Island county: three lodges in Daveniort and one at Le Claire, in Scott county. The total membership of the entire association, according to the reports of July 1, 1905. was l.CS. arM ef that number over 1,000 are in this county. There has been a great j j increase during the year, and the mem- bership Is now over 2.000. ABOUT THE COURT HOUSE. COUNTY COURT. Rock Island county court, Judge E E. Parmenter presiding. Probate. Estate of William Hegarty. Petition for sale ef real est are to pay debts filol and summons issued. Estate? of John L. Drcnnen. Oath as aJn:ini-ti ator taken and filed. Bond of said Bert J. Drennen filed and ap proved and letters of administration Issued to him. George Wills, A. L. Martenscn and Charles Brown appoint ed appraisers. Estate of Newton J. Hubbard. Final report of administratrix filed. Waiver notice by heirs and distributers filed Said final report approved. Proof of Soda Cracker proof package. heirship made and order of distribution made and entered according to said proof. In re guardianship of Bernard E. Bruner. Bond of said J. M. O. Bruner filed and approved and letters of guar dianship issued to him. Real Estate Transfers,. Edward A. Guyer to Frank G. White, lot 8. block 17G, East Moline, $350. Clark H. Smith to Frank G. White, e2. lot C, block S. Village of Milan, 57S. J. M. Beardsley to Calvin L. Beards- ley, part lot 5, block C, Old Town Rock Island, $2,000. Arthur E. Peterson te John A. Schmidt, w CO feet, lot 11, Lincoln Heights, Moline, $1,400. Frank A. Anderson to Charles H. Saunders nw se'4 C. 17, lw, part lot 13, Eklund's sub-div., $1. Leverett A. Knowles to Moline Can dy Manufacturing company v,'2 lot 3, block 2, Old Town. Moline. $1. Samuel Nyquist to J. L. Oakleaf, lot 13. block 1, University Place, Rock Is land. $475. William Carlson to Frank Nomba- lais. eVa lot 2, block 1, Dimock & Bald win's addition, Rcok Island, $1,200. Charles II. Pope to Oscar Larson, lots C, 7, block ICS. East Moline, $600. Roxanna Willhite, by heirs, to Tho mas A. T White, lot IS. Adamsville ad dition. Milan, $250. THE HUMAN BODY. Composition of (lie limine In Wit lob .11.1 n Spirit AltlJen. The foundation of the human body Is f.)nip:s-d of -W b.nifs. covered with "22 voluntary musiles. Tho smaller Mood vessels are so numerous as to be beyond the telling, but we have no fewer than about 1,000 arteries through whh'li the' blood is always llowing under the government of the heart. The blood is composed of two constit uents, termed by physiologists ml and white corpuscles, numbering some thou sands of millions. Our house has something like GOO tiuy tele-graph wires, called nerves, coimecttHl with the brain and spinal cord, and these little wires are always throbbing with messages which they telegraph to the main office the brain. Besides these there are the sympathet ic wires, or nerves, numbered by thou sands, which help the former. The front of our house, the skin, has been measured up and found, if spreael out, to cover fifteen square feet. The ventilation, scheme by which we get our fresh air is built of such fine porous stuff that, if spread out, it would be fouud to caver a stretch of land big enough to contain a fifteen roomed house. We refer to the lungs which have hundreds of millions of air eel Is. To every square iuch of the palm of the hand are 2.500 pores, while the number of sweat glands in the skin generally is 2.rt)0.00O. Their function is to eleposit secretions upon the skin; hence the neees.-ity of a daily tub to wash this stuff away. o?herwise it clogs the sweat glands and prevents their proper working. GUINIARD, THE SPIDER. The Great Dancer of the Grout Uifi of the Uullet. The elder Vestris, who flourished In the middle of (he eighteenth century, called himself the "frail of dancing" and declared in all sincerity and with out rebuke that his century had pro duced but three supreme men himself, Frederick the Great and Voltaire. On one occasion when reproving his son Augustus for refusing to tlauce before the king cf Sweden at the request of the king of France he said that ho would not tolerate any misunderstand ing between the houses of Vestris and B jurbon, which had lived hitherto upon the most friendly terms. Madeleine Guimard made her debut when she was thirteen years of age and for nearly thirty years kept all Paris worshiping at her feet. This was a success of art and not of beauty, for Guiniard was so aggressively thin that she was known as "the spider." She discovered the great painter David, who helped Fragonard to adorn her house with frescoes. Indeed. Frago nard, for whose paintings today fabu lous sums have been paid, lost his com mission because be dared to fall in ljve with his patron. Guiniard bad a theater In her own house, and her en tertainments there were eleeined ex travagant in an age of luxury. Pari could not spare her to London until she was past her fortieth year. She Avas a sort of boudoir adviser to Mario An toinette, and so great was the esteem in which she was held that one of the most distinguished sculptors of the day molded her foot, and when her arm was broken in a stage accident a masj for her speedy recovery was cele brated at Notre Dame. Macmillau's Magazine. ' The Speculator Progress. Graball So you sent your boy around the globe for a little trip, eh? I heard he was dabbling some in stocks? Rit chieDabbling? He probably was at first, but when I discovered his pre dicament he was floundering In them! Puck. A Man of Ability. Tomson Johnson has no ability of any kind. Jackson No ability? Non sense. Why, he can nsk you for a loan in such n way that you thank your lucky stars for the opportunity to ac commodate him. London Tit-Bits. Complexion treatments are a neces sary part of the grooming of a well pre served woman. It is not so much a matter of how you look today, as how you will look tomorrow. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea does the busi-, lieves flatulence, sour stomach, palpita ness. Tea or tablets, 35 cents. T. H. 1 1 Ion of the heart, belching, etc. Sold Thomas' pharmacy. jby all druggists. 8!G SHOW ON HAND Ringling Bros.' Mammoth Exhi bition Pitches Tents in Davenport. CROWDS GO OVER FROM HERE Parade Is an Attractive Affair Some Notable Features Inside the Canvas. The greatest show on earth today, Ringling Bros', ajrived in Daveniort yesterday during the early hours of morning in a 5 cars. It was just after daybreak when the first train arrived over the Rock Island from Ottumwa It contained the tents, kitchen utensils etc.. which were rushed to the show grounds in the west end. The dining tent was put up for the big crowd ol employes who followed later and who enjoyed a well prepared meal after the grounds were put in readiness. Groat crowds of people witnessed the unloading of the wagons and the ani mals from this train and the ones that followed. . Intense interest was mani fested in the unloading of the elephants and few expected the simplicity with which it was done. There were five cars of elephants, numbering about forty and several cars of other animals not in cages. It took 14 large passen ger cars to transport the employes ol the show. Few spectators left the place of unloading until the last ca: was emptied. The It'll rnle. Ixng before the time of the parade across the river this morning the main streets were tilled with an expectant people. In transporting the wagons from the cars to the grounds all were nicely covered with canvas, so finally, when the parade was given, all was new. The parade left the grounds on Rock ingham road about 10:30 o'clock and passed through the main streets, taking over half an hour to pass a given point. The three cities have seen big parades before, but none anywhere near as large nor as imposing as the Ringling Bros', street exhibitions. The horses were refreshingly groomed, several hundred ef them, and the emblazoned .;ll:!ed wagons were all works of art The "!:Mnal dens for the most part, an exc'-ptitin to the rule with most circus es. were open and young and old were delighted. The people were dressed and wrapped in the richest costumes, n ary of which were of imported fab rics and true to the style of the people in the country they represented. The cavalcaele was an education in itself. The enormous troupe of elephant: and camels were ridden by their keep ers in richly 'trimmed clothes and on two of the larger elephants were golden thrones, draped gaily and in which sat women riders, clothed in the bejeweled costumes of the far east. The little ponies, one hundred or more in num ber, delighted the little folks. FrnturrN f tlie Show. When this afternoon's performance opened with a blaze and blare of the beauteous spectacle, "The Field of the Cloth of Gold," thousands of people occupied seats in the large tents and gazed with admiration upon the radi ant resplendent scene before them. All thn characters in this huge achieve ment, 1.200 in number. Ci0 dancing girls and 200 singing choristers, dress ed in medieval fashion, lent color to the unwinding glories. The spectacle is the most colossal ever produced under one canvas. A daring bicycle ride from the top of the tent to the end of a half loop and a leap into a net is a thrilling feature. There is a bewildering array of 'acro bats, horses and elephants in constant action. The elephants and horses are in their way as wonderful as the hu man actors. They do everything but talk. Pearl Souder. George Kealey and George Sudorf with their herds ef pachyderms astonished the audience by leading their animals through feats al most incredible. The performing elephants were as much a feature as anything. The act reached a climax when, upon pedestals they danced to the time of "There Will Be a Hot Time in the OU Town To night." The performance will be repeated tonight at S o'clock. A Tragic Finish. A watchman's neglect permitted a leak in the great. North Sea dyke, which a child's finger could have stop ped, to become a ruinous break, de vastating an entire province in Hol land. In like manner Kenneth Mclver, of Vanceboro, Me., permitted a little cold to go unnoticed until a tragic fin ish was only averted by Dr. King's New Discovery. He writes: "Three doctors gave me up to die of lung in flammation, caused by a neglected cold; but Dr. King's New Discovery saved my life." Guaranteed best cough and cold cure, at Ilartz & Ulle meyer's drug store, 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Try a little Kodol for dyspepsia after your meals. See the effect it will pro duce on -your general feeling by digest ing your food and helping your stom ach to get itself into shape. Many stomachs are overworked to the point where they refuse to go further. Ko dol digests your food and gives your stomach the rest it needs, while it3 re constructive properties get the stomach back into working order. Kodol re- Many Lines of Fine Suits Look in our corner window! The men's suits we are offering at $10.00 during our Mid-Summer Clearance Sale arc the very best $15.00 and $16.50 qualities this house has ever carried. They are excellently made, stylishly cut and will not last long at this price One-fourth off on all summer pants. 100 Negligee shirts, the $1.00 grade, Broken lines of 50c neckwear, 25c. Broken lines of 50c hose, 25c. Suit Cases $10.00 Case, now $8.00. $8.00 Case, now $6.00 Straw Hats, one-naif price. SS33EE2C33 Gun Tlnrrels. To brown gun barrels wet a piece of rag with ehloriele of antimony, dip It into olive oil and rub the barrel over. In forty-eight hours it will be -overed with a fin coat ef rust. Then rub the barrel with a tine steel scratch brush and wipe with a rag dipped In boiled linseed oil. To rebrown remove the old coating with oil and emery paper, then remove the grease with caustic potash. j" OOC CCCCOCGOOCCOCOCCOGOCOO I MIDSUMMER I PIANO BARGAINS o o o a o O It will repay you to investigate O n our prices before purchasing q Q elsewhere as we are making spe- Q j5 cial discounts on all our stock q O during this, the dull business b season of the year. We have 5 g lately added several new makes g O to our regular line of goods and o g making special introductory prices on the same. j Upright Pianos From 8 $150 and Upwards S o a n o R ;3 o 8 ') r o I Also a few of the D. Roy Bowl by estate stock left over to be sold at the appraised prices. New pianos returned from renting. Several good second hand up rights including three Kimballs, O little used. Our regular marked prices are much lower than any of our com petitors' on the same grades of goods. KIMBALL. SOHMER. HALLETT &. DAVIS. WINTER & CO. H. P. NELSON COMPANY and LAKESIDE PIANOS at WLBY' O o o o i Opposite Illinois Theater. Rock Island. cxxx5ccogocgoooocoocxxioooco j iney con i crack so quic don't crack so quick." !' Made with LINOCORD" buttonholes that hold. Full Shrunk, ii sizes if you want tliem. GEO. P. IDE & CO., Makers Troy. N. Y. 81 IIP L.EL.CRANE. 1801-1803-. 2nd.Ave.E0CK I5LAXD 10.00 $6.00 Case, now $4.50 $2.00 Case, now $1.50 nmmy Th at All Important Bathroom have often heard were ever to build I Roy i first and would not put all my money into the parlor with all its finery." That's good common sense sentiment, for the bathroom is the same time do it better than you anticipated it could be done lbr even more money. We hvc a booklet Modern Home Plumbing which .will show you how to arrange your bathroom, kitchen and laundry plumbing with $taidail" Baths and one piece Lavatories, tl.e best plumbing equipment in the world. Call, write or phone for a copy. It is free. I CIIANNON tia Wl - --. . i"i"i"i-r"i"i"i"i"i"i"i"i"i"i--i"i-i'- H. E. CASTEEL, President. I D. MUDGB, Vice President. J CENTRAL X INCORPORATED UNDER STATU LAW. Capital Stock, $100,000. Koor Per Ceat lattreat Paid a Deawalfa. C. J. Larkin, J. J. LaVelle. II. E. Casteel, Lv D. Madge, IL II. Cleaveland, Mary E. Robinson, E. D. Sweeney, H. W. Tremann, TRUST DEPARTMENT. Estates and property of all kinds are managed by thta department, which Is kept entirely separate from the banking huHlnetts of the com pany. We art as executor of find trustees under Wills, Administrator, Guardian ami Conservator of EMlates. Receiver and Attune, of Insolvent Estates. General Financial Agent for Non-Resident. Women. Invalids, and others. er ttii '"J.'J'.:;i 5oc. people remark, would plan my bathroom mest important of all the household. It's the Mecca of cleanli ness, health nd refine ment, and nowadays many homes are judged by their bathrooms. We would like to help you plan your bathroom a n J believe that we could surprise you by putting in a bathroom for you at a much less cost than you might expect and at the & DUFF A ttBlh Street. - .2ZJ H. B. SIMMON, Cashier. V If I STL V 1 TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK. ROCK ISLAND, ILL. II. D. Mack, M. S. He&gj, John Schafer, H. B. Simmon. I I