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til I 1. .H 3 if i--# i 's -t a" Ji uc'! 'S vi i 3 SUFFE ES Whole Foot Nothing But Proud Flesh t. :tf ''a Tried Different Physicians and All Kinds of OintmentsCould Walk Only With CrutchesOhio Man Says: "CUTICURA REMEDIES THE BEST ON EARTH" In the year 1899 the side of my right foot was cut off from the little toe down to the heel, and the physician who had charge of me was trying to sew up the side of my foot, but with no success. When he found out that wouldn't work, he began trying to heal the wound with all kinds of ointment, until at last my whole foot and way up above my calf was nothing but proud flesh. I suffered un-' told agonies for four years, and tried different physicians and all kinds of oint ments. I could walk only with crutches. It is sixteen months ago since I began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment for my limb and foot. The first two months the Cuticura Remedies did not seem to work, but I kept on using them both. In two weeks afterwards I saw a change in my limb. Then I began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment often dur ing the day and kept it up for seven months, when my limb was healed up just the same as if I never had trouble. *'It is eight months now since I topped using Cuticura Remedies, the best on God earth. I am working at the present day, after five years of suffering. The cost of Cuticura Ointment and Soap was only $6 but the doctors' bills were more like $600. You can publish my name and refer any one to write to me about Cuticura Remedies. I will answer all letters if postage is enclosed- John M. Lloyd, 718 S. Arch Ave., Alliance, Ohio, June 27, 1905." Complete External and Internal Treatment for erery Humor, from Pimples to Scrofula, from Infancy to Age, consisting of Cuticura Soap, 25c, Ointment, 50c., Resol vent, 50c. (in form of Chocolate Coated Pills, 25c per vial Of 60), may be had cf all druggists. A single set often cures. Potter Drue ft Chem. Corp., Sole Props., Boston. RS-MailedFrre," IIOTT to Cure Skin and Blood Humoifl." jrBUtl&CQUGftSYRUP f. Cures a Cough or Cold at onet^ Conquers Croup without fall. Is the best for Bronchitis, Grippe, Hoarseness, "Whooping-Cough, am for the cure of Consumption. Mothers praise it. Doctorsprescribe it. 3 Small doses quick, sure results.. FOfMtL. tUNG^TRGUBtE Cure hoarseness and sore throat caused by cold or use Of the VOice. Absolutely harmless. Railroads WILL BUILD DEPOT Great Western Will Get into Heart of Mason City. Special to The Journal. Mason City, Iowa, Jan. 6.Current romors in railroad circles today indi cate that the Great Western has se cured options on a block of land lying on the corner of Fourth and Main, senger'an Mies [J '3 from the postofficc and will undoubted ly increase the business of the road. T-he property in question has just been vaca ted by the Lamb Lumber company yard. The owners of the property re fused to release it, intimating that an offer had been made for it for rail road purposes. If the Great Western secures the land it will place it in a better position for business than any other road entering the city. HEAVY CATTLE'MOVEMENT Half Million Head Passed Thru Twin Cities in 1905. Nearly half a million head of cattle, en route from the west to Chicago, passed thru Minneapolis and St. Paul during 1905, surpassing all records ex cept that 1895, which still stands ahead by several hundred carloads. One rail road kept a record showing that 14,000 cars of cattle passed thru the twin cities between Jan. 1 and Dec. 15, 1905. Several carloads went later. The rec ord probably would be larger were it not for the shortage of cars on north ern lines and the diversion of some traffic to other roads that do not pass thru the twin cities. Sheep shipments also are unusually heavy. streets, upon which it will erect a pas-! Eice. The petition is signed by nearly, Fast Time to Havana. Will cure Poor Appetite, Belching, Heartburn, Indiges tion, Dyspepsia, Liver Trou bles, Costiveness, also prevent Chills, Colds, Grippe or Pneu monia. Always keep a bottle handy for emergency eases. Pt sale by your druggist, to whom apply for our 1906 Al manac. It is free and very in 1 teresting. r Saturday Evening, ELOPEMENT GIVES --INDIANS A SHOCK Ben Long Ear Runs Away with the Wife of Crooked Arm. Special to The Journal. Crow Agency, Mont., Jan. 6.Excite- ment prevails among the Crow tribe be cause of the alleged elopement of two of their number. Ben Long Ear, son-in-law of Chief Big Medicine, and a handsome young squaw, wife of Crooked Arm, are the principals in the romance. Both are graudates of Carlisle and have been in high standing with the government officials and their own peopie. The woman, it is charged, made a careful search for her hus band's savings. She found $300, he says, but overlooked several hundred dollars which he had realized from a recent'sale of ponies. She took her 18-months-old papoose with her. Mourns Loss of Papoose. While Crooked Arm is heartbroken, he longs and asks most for the return of his papoose, of which he says: "Some tune papoose make heap big chief." Long Ear's love for the young and handsome squaw is said to have been known for a long time, dating back to their college days at Carlisle. Long Ear leaves a weeping young wife behind him. Indian police have been scouring the reservation in all directions, but up to tonight have found no trace of the miss ing -couple. It is believed that they drove north to some point on the Nor thern Pacific railroad and will probably turn up at some western reservation. HEROES OF BENNfNGTON DISASTER REWARDED Washington,-Jan. 6.Kecognition of the extraordinary heroism displayed bv the officers and crew of the TJ.S.S. Bennington, when her boilers exploded, on July 21 last, is contained in a general order issued by Secretary Bone parte. Each of the eleven members of the crew has been' awarded a medal of honor and $100 gratuity. The gen eral order reads: "The attention of the department has been called to the extraordinarv heroism displayed by the officers and crew of the U.S.S. Bennington, at the time of the lamentable disaster which overtook that vessel while lying off San Diego, Cal., on the forenoon of July 21, 1905. "The crisis which occurred with such terrible suddenness and destruc tion as met by the officers and. crew with readiness and resource. Men grievously wounded forgot their own injuries and rushed back in the shower of scalding water, steam and ashes to rescue their more unfortunate ship mates. "Amid such a display of self-sacri fice and heroism it is difficult to select individual cases, but after a careful pe rusal of all reports, and in accordance with the recommendation of the com manding officer of the U.S.S. 'Ben nington, the commander of the Pacific station and the bureau of navigation, the department takes great pleasure in awarding a gratuity of $100 and medals of honor to each of the men named." PROMINENT MEN ON APPEAL FOR PATRICK Albany, N. Y., Jan. 6.Governor the aged millionaire, Willia Marsh freight depot.. This will 100 well-known personsAncludW law-, *^^Pfijl^^Jggffii,,^ bring the road into the h'eart of the yers, physicians and chemists, clergy- city instead of more than a half-mile men and laymen, and is based upon i the business and that are bound to ad- mSa CW r N ba Mark Twain), A. T. Hamilton, the well known alienist Dr. Sixty hours from Chicago to Havana, Cuba, is the record time just estab lished by the Chicago & Alton and the. Mobile & Ohio in connection with the! customary salute in the department, a Munson steamship lines. The first train i sort of nondescript any-old-thig. The left Chicago yesterday, carrying a large general almost snorted at the burlesque number of prominent officials and a 3a crowd of newspaper men. The new, i M^'M^^f^Mmblm^^m^ii lute and stopped McCoy, wan tram will leave Chicago at 3 p.m. everyi hrfe," said the general. "Nothing Friday, making connections the next hike that here day with the steamer at Mobile. TTio-o-hm has rpcpiv'pd a netition for the forcibly to the public. It is this fact that iiggni na receive a a petition io tne exercise of executive clemency tnej t^^g case of Albert T. Patrick, the JN-ew i 1 of the Bellevue medical and many other physicians and chemists Rev! Dr. Charles H. Parkhurst, Rev. Dr. Madison C. Peters, Rev. Dr_. Thomas Hughes, David Belascq. Lieutenant Colonel H. D. Borup, U.S.A. (retired), and Robert Erskine -Ely? director of the League "for Political Education. Governor Higgins said later that he did not know when he would act upon the matter, but that he did not expect to give a public hearing. He would give no intimation of his probable ac tion. BINGHAM LIKE AMES AS TO POLICE SALUTES Journal Special Service, New York, Jan. 6.General Theo dore Bingham, police commissioner, sur prised police headquarter!* this morning by taking a quiet stroll about the builcU ing instead of goi'n'g direct to his office. He soon met Policeman Matthew Mc Coy, who gave the commissioner the you to leartV the army sa- The general then illustrated the proper salute and McCoy followed his example and saluted properly. During his stroll the commissioner told several other policemen the same thing and made it plain that the army salute must be used hereafter in* the department. LID ON CINCINNATI AFTER TWENTY YEARS Journal Special Service. Cincinnati, Jan. 6.For the first time in twenty years the lid is on' here. Mayor Dempsey, following ~a communi cation from the Ministerial Alliance law enforcement committee, has or dered Chief of Police Milliken to close everv saloon at midnight, and stop gambling, using every police power, smashing in* the doors with axes if necessary. The order is an absolute one, and all the prominent down-town saloons ha'fe agreed to obey it. TKe last drink is to be sold at ten minutes before midnight and.the bartenders are to be out at the stro"ke of 12, with the doors locked an'd blinds up. Demsey has made no order regarding Sunday closing, but it is generally thought that Governor Pattison will order it.\ HASMSWORTH PICKS TITLE. Tendon, Jan. 0.Sir Alfred Harmsworth, the newspaDer rro,irUtor who was rreated a vls vount in the list of bono-? conferred on the letirerr.iMit of a jrovernmentj takes the title of A Iseoimt Norlhollffe. from Nwtli t'llffe. Isle of Thanet, where the new viscount has an estate. the Rule MGreatTrust Managers of the Great Life Insur ance Business of the Country Can Safely Challenge Compari son with any Other Business. PUBLIC HAS IPAITH IN INTEGRITY OF OFFICIALS Recent Investigation Has Shown the Absolute Soundness of the Companies, and Has Had an Ed ucational Value to the Public. BY HERBERT VANDERHOOF. Now that the life insurance investiga tion has closed, and the companies that were the special objects of scrutiny have cleaned their houses, it is probable that there will be a lull in the agitation over this subject until the investigation com mittee has made its report to the legis lature. In the meantime some amend ments to the New York law are being discussed, and it is said that one of the recommendations will be that companies be restricted to writing $1,000,000,000 of insurance. How such a restriction is going to bene fit/ the life insurance companies or their policyholders is not- explained. If a com pany is ably and honestly conducted it would seem that it mignt with perfect safety and propriety as well write two billion dollars of insurance as one. The contention seems to be, however, that the effort to write such enormous sums has developed a spirit of competition be tween the great companies, and that If this competition can be eliminated the business will be conducted more economi cally. That the zeal,, the pressure, the competition, and the strife for magnitude have resulted injuriously not only to those companies so engaged, but to other in terests also, there can be little question. The real issues presented for considera tion are how the injury can be best re paired, how the confidence of the public that has become unsettled can be re stored, what safeguards should be em ployed to check the tendency to extrava gance and waste incidental to mere mag nitude, what remedies are adequate to prevent injurious and wasteful competi tion in a race in which one company is quite as anxious to surpass another as to achieve substantial, conservative, and healthful results. Policyholders Not Alarmed. As a matter of fact, the average policyholder is not at all alarmed by the magnitude to which certain companies have attained and is not at all dis posed to worry over the safety of his risks. To many men the very magnitude of some of the companies is looked upon with pride and satisfaction, and this mag nitude is supposed to carry a certain degree of safety that the smaller com panies cannot provide. This idea is a mistaken one, of course, because the business of life insurance is conducted along such scientific lines that the smaller company can give the same assurance of safety that the larger one does. Out of all these months of agitation, however one fact looms up conspicuously, and that is that every dollar of insur ance that has been placed with any of the companies is absolutely safe. De spite the charges of extravagance and wastefulness that have been made, the life insurance companies have gone right along paying every obligation as it be came due, and at the same time have been piling up additional millions each year for the future benefit of their policy holders. And this is the fact that appeals most ma tek lnt waI1 York lawyer confined in Sing Sing ps-: his money for the protection of his wife on under sentence to die in the week! and children they will get it when their beginning Jan. 22 for the murder of houfr ofe I th recent nav the ground that there is reasonable vance the welfare of the companies and doubt of his guilt. their policyholders. This houseclean- The signers of the petition include! ins. therefore, is certain to result in Grover Cleveland, John G. Carlisle, s wit Austinschool,, consideration when ou a policy of insurance. He to know that when he has invested need comes. ..-i. no0vv?J-he,rft &* ^J mdeveloped-if/ investigatio^n -J.U than already been productive of reforms od former Supreme Justice and Necessity of a number of prominent members the Th business of insurancee Iabilit not XTT v^ir iT,.. rviai Plomone going to stand still. It has become one uel-i+Harwellof T? of_,ee Life,th th necessities oflife life and ic ahas be ^-0?tALL DAY ^SERVICE IN OUR-- TEA ROOMS** conducteid, ias thee Flint head' Unitew intrenche ir th heartsdh oStateesh tht peoplee. Therefore the country grows in wealth and population, the life insurance business Is destined to grow with it. With most people it is the only means that ever presents itself Joy which they can provide for their families in case of death, and this. con dition will always exist. It is well for the public to bear in mind that economy in management and .carefulness in the investment of the funds intrusted to them are the rule among the life insurance companies of the country. Extravagance is not the rule, nor as a rule are exorbitant sal aries paid to officials. The reverse is the case, and the life insurance com panies of the country, taken as a whole, can safely challenge comparison with any other class of business in the land as to the fidelity of their officials. The average man comprehends*- these facts. But there are other men who have never given the subject any consid eration, and who are likely to be misled into neglecting to take out a policy. These men should take second thought on this most important matter. They should realize the fact that the safest and best way in which they can invest their surplus earnings is in the shape of a life insurance policy, and that this money if they live will come back to them with considerable additions, while if they die their families will be freed from want. Simply a Saving. Money invested" in- life insurance is simply a saving, with the added benefit that if. assures a man's family from destitution in case of. his death. Many a man will say: "I don't need any per-, son or corporation to invest my money. I am perfectly capable of doing that my- self." Perhaps one man out of a hundred is, but experience has taught, that the other ninety-nine are not. The life insurance company is a trustee, and the money placed in its hands cannot be withdrawn at will. This is one feature that makes it safe and certain.- "With the money in bank, where it can be withdrawn at will, there are always arising opportuni ties thax look tempting and appeal to man's desire for gain. First one little speculation and then another, until there is no money in the bank, -and nothing to show where it has been invested. A crash comes in the stock market, for Instance, and the man with a few thou sands hastens to withdraw his money from the bank and invest it in the bar gains that can be snapped up on Wall street. The first thing that man knows he has a bundle of securities that default in interest payments and that are not worth 10 cents a the dollar. If hih money had been placed in a life insurance policy it would still be there, with the addition of several hundreds more that It would have earned. Advantages to the Young. To no person should the advantages of life insurance appeal with such force as to the young man starting in life. Then the rates for insurance are the lowest, and the few hundreds that he may be able to put away each year in a policy will come back to him before he has reached his prime, with big addi tions. The money thus invested by him may enable him to make a start in busi ness for himself, but even if he does not need it for that purpose the habits of frugality and industry that he will have formed in making his yearly pay ments will have the most important in fluence upon his character, aflare bound i have their effect upon hfs life. career in RE-lNFORCE $*$*SX5JS*SKS$*S S^^ S PRES. ROOSEVELT ON THE MASSACHUSETTS LAW THE DUKE OF ARGYLL* K. G. SIR ARTHUR 0ONAN DOYLE SARAH GRAND "It is Right that Men Should Respect Hered itary Reputations, if Unsullied," says the duke in defense of Clans. An Analysis of ManBy a Famous Woman Sarah Grand, the author of The Heavenly Twins," and other' well-known works, picks the masculine creature to pieces. In the Woman's Section Our White Sale Is Growing Better (From his Boston address, Aug. 25,1902.) "Hare In Massachusetts you have what 1 regard as, on the whole, excellent corpora- tion Jaws. I think that most of our difficulties would be In a fair way of solution It we had the power to put on the national statute books, and did put on them, laws for the nation like those you hare here, on the subject of corporations In Massachusetts. The Massachusetts insurance laws are a. part of the general corporation laws to which President Roosevelt refers. The in- surance laws are conceded to be superior to those of any other state, and the developments in the New York investigation have emphasized the wisdom and the superiority of these laws, so that insurers now see the advantage of placing their insur ance in a Massachusetts company more than ever before. The STATE MUTUAL LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF WORCESTER, MASS., is 61 years old and offers unsurpassed advantages and guarantees to intelligent insurers,. Full infor mation given by any of the Company's agents. C. W. AN TUVL, General Agent, 15-21 Loan & Trust Building. Augustus Warren, Geo. A. Alnsworth, F. W. Woodward, R. S. Thomson, Solon Royal, O. D. Davis, Ezra Farnsworth, Jr. "The lives of all your loving complices lean upon your health"and.health does not last. If you "need insurance, take it now. Much -of the drawing power of a Journal want ad depends on the way it is worded. It is always well to tell as much of the story as the reader will care to know. This brings him In closer touch with your proposition at the 4 outset, and makes his investigation more likely. 4 Mrs. Sara HallowelTs Unique Position in the World of Art.The American woman, who, as a Paris jury of one, has done more for American artists abroad than any other person. Photographs of the home of which Miss Alice Roosevelt will be mistress when she becojmef Mrs. Longworth. Fashions in Colors.Stories of especial interest and value to the housekeeperNew ways of entertaining at parties-Betty Blair's answers to perplexing questions. Defective Page by important shipments which have just arrived direct from the makers in lretend and other foreign countries. Monda morning will see these new white^goods prominently.displayed and low prices in force. Fine Table Linens Standard Household Cottons Exquisite Embroideries Snowy Under muslins ^Beautiful Lace Curtains Pure Linen Towels Men'sWhite Furnishing Goods No Pain Is so severe that it oannot be cured with Dr. Miles* Anti-Pain Pills. It is the only infallible remedy known for the relief and cur of everyykind of pain, headache, from any cause, neural gia, rheumatic pains, backache, side ache, menstrual pains, muscular pains, stomachache, toothache, etc. If you are subject to aches and pains f any kind take Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills Tou will be entirely relieved from the attack. They are pleasant little tablets, but they do the businessbesides they are absolutely harmless. "For a long time I have taken Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills whenever I have an attack of headache, and they inva riably ston the pain Jh a few moments. I always nave a package oonvenlent. TOMORROW, January 7 EDGAR WELTON ,C0OLEY GRACE WIEDERSEIM Always the Best and the Newest News The Sunda Journa package 1V and they never ail to giv(e me relief." M. MAB51AN. Belviderp, Ills. If first package does not benefit you.tell your druggist, and he will refund mone 25 doses, 25 cents. Never sold in RESORTS FLOMDA. MAGNOLIA Uora? Magnolia Springs, Fla. Ideal climate, dry. free from mosquitoes. Boating, fishing, shooting, golf, tennis and bathins. Pure water., Illustrated booklet. O. D. Seavey. ITOTIirCflAMBERIJNtOjffl Old Point Comfort Open U the year. For Booklets addr-ia On, F. Adam-, If-r.,FortraH Monrw, OVER THIS LIS It foils You Who Have Contributed to 3 ^fek'rSte 4'Clannishness"A Ever see a pair of Sound Magnifiers? They are so soft in ths ears one can't tell they arewearing them. And, no one else can tell either, because they are out of eight when worn. Wilson's Ear Dramsare to weak hearing what spectacles are to weak sight Because, they are sound-magnifiers, Just as glasses are sight-magnifiers. Theyurest the Ear Nerves by taking the strain off themthe strain of trying to hear dim sounds. They can be pat into the ears, or taken out, in a minute, last ascomfortably asspectacles can beputon and off. And, they can be worn for weeks at a time, be* cause they are ventilated, and so soft In the ear holes they are not felt even when the head rests on the pillow. Theyalso pro tect'bny raw Inner parts of the ear from wind or cold, dust, or sudden and piercing sounds. The principal of .these little telephones is to make it as practical for a deaf person to bear weak sounds as spectacles make it easy to read fine print. And, the longer one wears them the better his hear- ing should grow, because they rest up, and strength* n the ear nerves. To rest a weak ear from straining is like resting a strained wrist from working. Wilson's Ear Drums rest the Ear Serves bymaking the sounds louder, so It is easy to understand without trying and straining. They make Deaf people cheerful and comfortable, because such people can talk with their friends without the friends having to shout back at them. They can hear with out straining. It is the straiuing that puts such a queer, anxious look on the face of a deaf person. Wilson's Ear Drums make all the sound strike hard on the center of the human ear drum, instead of spreading it weakly all over the surface. It thus makes the center of the human ear drum vibrate ten times as much as if the same sound struck the whole drumhead. It is this vibration of the ear drum that carries sound tothe hearing Nerves. When we make the drum vibrate ten times as much we make the sound ten times as loud and ten times as easy to understand. Deafness, from any cause, ear-ache, buzzing noises in the head, raw and running ears, broken ear-drums, and other ear troubles, are relieved and cured by the use of these comfortable little ear* restore and sound-magnifiers. A sensible book, about Deafness, tells how they are made, andhas printed in It letters from hundreds of people who are using them. Clergymen, Lawyers, Physicians, Telegraph Operators, Trainmen, Workers in Boiler Shops and Foundriesfour hundred people of all ranks who were Deaf, tell their experience in this free book. They tell how their hearing was brought back to them almost instan^, by the proper use of Wilson's Ear Drums. Some of these Tery people may live near you, and be well known to you. What they have to say la mighty strong proof. This book has been the means of relieving thou sands of Deaf people. It win be mailed free to you if you merely write a post card for it today. Don*t put off getting back your hearing. Write now, whileyou think of it. Get thefree book of proof. Write for it today to the Wilson Ear Dram Co., 230 Todd building, Louisville, Ky. The Sunday Journal is the most 4 complete and satisfying Sunday $ newspaper in the northwest. Don't $ miss it next Sunday. SK$x3SSe3$S^ A Journal correspondent's visit to the world's greatest ditch The astonishing- things he found at Panama, graphically de- scribed and illustrated. Be sure you get the comic section. You'll regret it if you don't start with "The Roosevelt Bears" on their fun-making tour. A.* story of ancient and mod- ern clans by a distinguished Clansman, the Duke of Argyll. TwoCleverFictionStories "Cupid and the Chaparral"A story of Woal, the Widow and WoebegonesA charac teristic bit of fiction by E. W. Cooley. Illustrated by Will Crawford. 'The Box on &e Grand Tier"Wherein a great Russian tenor recovered the lost happiness of his youth, by Zona Gale. Oxforda story of the famous English university and the young Americans who have gone thereIllustrated by a Minne- apolis woman. .i-L hr awss a* i i i f COMPARE IT WITH THE OTHERS -&