Newspaper Page Text
H Un Stops Lameness Much of the chronic lameness In horses ii due to neglect. See that your bone ii not, al. lowed to go lame. Keep Sloan's Liniment on band and apply at the first sign of stiffness. It's wonderfully penetrating goes right to the spot relieves the soreness limbers up the joints and makes the muscles elastic and pliant. Here's the Proof. "" Mr. O. T. Roberts of Resaca, Ga., R.F.D. No. I, Boa. 4J, writes! " I haw need your Liniment on a bona for mo ney and effected a thorough cure, i al io removed a ipavin on a mule. This spavin waa ai targe ai a guinea egg. la my estimation the best remedy for lanie- aeu and soreness la 'I'Mn HI l'Gibbt, eiLawi)i6, KasE., . ' H.t.n. No: j. 'wrltei-i-" Vour l.ial--1' ment Ii the brat that I hare ever wed. I had a mare with an abscess on tier neck and one, 50c. bottle of Sloan's Liniment entirely cured her.' I keep It around all the rime for galls and small swellinp and for everything about the stock." Sloan's Liniment will kill a spavin, curb or splint, re- . duce wind puffs and swollen joints, and is a sure and speedy remedy for fistula, sweenev. founder itLjk'. m and thrush. Price m. and $1.00 loan's kook hereee, entile, isP mm panltrv eeas Sr. Earl 8. Sloan, Boston, Mass., U.S.A. NO MASSUER FOB SENATORS After Pretraoted Debate the lUm Was ttrleken From the Legislative III. " Washington, Mar. 25. The senate after a protracted debate decided to cat along without a professional nuaseur la the senate bath rooms. On motion by Senator Hale, the Item waa taken out ef the legislative bill aad an amendment by Scott (Repabll oaa, W. Va.,) abolishing- the salary adopted. The bill was Use adapted. hrlnere' Temple In Oklahoma City. Oklahoma City, Ok., Mar. 15. The hriasrs lodge of Oklahoma Otty pur ekased ,for $150,000 the Baptist White Temple, one 01 tne nnes; caurouee in the city, and will convert, It UK iartners' temple. HEALTH CERTIFICAfES NEEDED efere Horses end Mulee Can Oat Into Kansas They Must Be k Healthy. Topeka, Mar. 24. J. H. Msrcer, state, live stock commissioner. Issued a manifesto to the affect that ao nor horses or mulee will ba per mitted to cross the state Una without a certificate of food health from the live stock officials of the state from which they oome. This order will go lata ettec.t.Ajfl1.J. ..... Tell .Some Sick One '" 1U It laFraa Hit rails. will yon do en net of Humanity? Will yon vllaomaejca friend of this, my ssstnrkable offerf Tell him or hen, that von have learned of a SMdlrine so certain that Its maker dant ear to the etrk. "II la absolutely end unoondiHoueJtj bee UU fells." . And yon. no ooom, aireaor inowoi uw. IP's RestoteUre and lie noeularltr. For vears It has twen the standard mo. edr for Womarh. Kidney and Heart allmeaa averswhefe In America. ..... When tin ' Inside" or controlling asms of Meartltat oreans betln to fall. It la Dr. Shooe's iaetoratl ve that hes eulrklr rltallred. and etrens thmed. and brnutht these nerves and orsaui back to health esaio.. I do not dose (ha Stomach, nor stisaulats ma Heart or Sidneys-ear that Is all wrons. Dr. Shoos I Restorative soee direct to the MUM of these atlments-the fnlltnt. talterlne. tMOe or oontrollint nerves. And berela ilea Ilia keynote to my oncosce. " When these nerves are again made well and strong, then that Is Ike aartala and of all suok ejj, iiuos To Be II U a treat eetl.fartlee that t am tf only physlelaa able to tar to the euSerlns Sick, Take my prvecripUon for full so daye. and U It tells to hci you. the anUea aaaenae at ajuAt not yours." ' ' Then why ihiildtht ttcXtektmny thane on any other tnttiicine, who maker dart not ear ttjvtt ai I do bf tits rtmarkatlt offer i 1 . , -. I ales have a Rheamatat eeaedy and chat iwmenr la oovered bv the eaaee Identical Me , na pe" eroSecOte Haa. - aValdeB. von are tree an eosanlt sea )oaS as fm would your home phyetdan. Mr advice sad tee book below are reuie and withonlaoea, Fnraaosewofdarrwo frees see will etaaf a sesjii eerlom aeaent I have helped tfcoaaaaee open tuenaaada by any anrale areerrlpttoa of peneoei edrloe atan. My best aSort la auali wans your simple raaueoi, . .... i ,1 So let me send yon an order at ose. Taka aasajeeeene to eooie eick friend. . A Ktl will brlnjr the opeortonttv. ' Ivnu BavaahrMandtniatwonardfw Set waMSMeaaeonvesueatlreator ska at iay test. Bat Srss. ask me kit the order, roe eil dnat SSali are not authorised et ai ve the as (ley leet. So wrtte ma no and save all delaya. a. SMaa&er tel trmonrw never oomi. Addrwa Sr . t boon, B01 n Healna, k lk - aa aaeu sees laat Co 1 ft! TrrrHa . Ka 4FWoasa o I e tf 1; 1 KoKea g,.iOatttsaaaars e. t Oa kieusaaJaaaJ Sloans Liniment 11 . o if i tu arlln fOioi ; A THE SOUTH POLE i V tM" Sir Ernest Shackelton Lands in New York, . EXPECTS SCOTT TO SUCCEED Man Who Penetrated Fartherest South , Will Receive Gold Medal at '.. President Tsft's - Hands. New York. Mar. 2. "I wish Amer ica toad luck If It foes after the South Pole; but I hope and feel fairly sure that England will get tbere first." , Sir Ernest Shackelton, the recently knlahted jouna llentenant who got within 111 miles of the long sought Antarctic bottom of the earth express- ad this sentment when be resetted New York on the Lusltanla. "Will you capture the South 'Pole yourself?" he was asked. He laughed at the frankness and lm petuoslty of New York Journalism and reolled "Maybe; but I rather fancy that Scott'll be the chap. You see 1 can t start until after he's bad his try, and that'll be a, year and more..i .if'Scott. (that's Capt. Henry Scott) haa been given a government grant of 20.000 pounds to go after the pole and he's going to startt In June. Of course he'll take ' my route, which extended to. within a little mora than 100 miles of the pole and I rather think he'll go all the wsy. ;' - - ' ', "The next American expedition will go by some other route (Sir Ernest took It for granted that such etiquette Would be followed) and so it will have harder time, ..than Scott. I pick Scott to win." We mlscalulated a bit, but we ehould have got to the South Pole," he said. "When we got within 111 miles of It at Latitude 88.23 we needed Just 50 more pounds of food la take the four of use there and back. We didn't have It so we had to retrace our steps." Sir Ernest asked that bis com' oaalons be mentioned. "There were three of us sailors," lie said: "Jameson Boyd Adams, Frank Wiiu and myself, and one surgeon, Dr. Frio Marshall." He compared North polar explore. Uon with South polar dashes and said the latter were harder. The base of supplies fn the Antarctic must be much further away than In the Arctic; the temperature Is lower, averaging 62 below . terq In winter; there Is not, within 500 miles of the South Pole, a single trace of animal or marine life which could help sustain eiplorers. Furthermore, there Is no trace of hu aa life at all. "We did find evidence of tin and of coal," Sir . Ernest continued, "that would indicate that vegetation once existed In the' region. But that was ages ago. But I doubt If these miner als will ver be worked on the nlw southern continent, which we christen ed Antarctica. Still we planted the British flag here and there to claim the continent. Sir Ernest described this continent as, an Immense ice covered pieatue about 10,000 feet above the level of the ea as far as he traversed It. After a reception at the Transporta tion club Sir Ernest and Lady Shackel ton departed for Washington. There this evening 'the explorer will receive from the hsnds of President Tsft the gold medal awarded to htm by the National Geographic society for his southern dash. He will also , meet Commander Peary and will be given a luncheon at the British embassy. , ANTIDOTE " FOR MENINGITIS Dr. Flexner ef Rockefeller Inetltute Anneuncee Hie tueeee to Modi-'- ;' eal Men,. . New York, Mar. 15 Dr. Slmoa Flexner ef the Rockefeller Institute Who. has, bean, laboring, for years to AM aa asUdote lor spinal montlaiUls kA sA, least succeeded la perfecting a. aerarn, that, la th early sUgea of t dlaaasa Is es elective , as : the ostites la , .which haa swept the -fear from death from eMptterln. .. "This was learned when medical seen all over the city were discussing the statement made secretly to a privets gstberlag pt physicians by .Dr. Flex ner this week, that after receat experi ments, la New . York hospitals It hss been conclusively proven that the new aeruss waa aa almost certain cure of the dilates, - . - It le stated that out of 115 cases ef the allpeat treated with the serum before the third day of tae advance ment at aha dlsesse 1ST recovered. Lis gives a mortality ef K.t per cent where formerly the percentage of deaths waa from Tl to 80 per cent PERU AND CHILE' DISAGREE The American Charao at tantiago Has , Taken Charge of Peruvian Legav , tleavt-Peeple are Excited. Waehlagton, Mar. It. Advices to the state department eay that the Aaserieaa charge at Santiago, Chile, has taken charts of the Peruvian lega ttea. The Peruvian minister to Chile erlthdraw owing to the Chilean gov srameat recently expelling soma pflesta frost the coeatry. There Is great axcltemeat la Chile anal Peru srer the iaeMeaL ' NO RAIN HAS FALLEN IN EAST ERN HALF SINCE JANUARY. Usual Time ef Spring Floods Passing . , and Farmers are Experiencing ' Need of Warm Rains. . Muskogee, Ok., Mar. 24. Oklahoma la experiencing a drought this year at the season when floods are expected. There haa aot been a . rata at conse quence la the eastern ball of the state since January. . There waa a heavy fall of snow February 18, which melt ed Immediately and soaked the ground. There haa been no rain since that time. Ordinarily February and March are very wet monthe and farmers have great difficulty in finding the soil dry enough to plant crops. This year ex actly the reveres Is true. , The farmers have not nad a aay 01 bad weather to Interfere with their work and the have practically finish ed planting their early crops and have prepared the sou for all their planting. It will require rain now, however,, to bring up the crops already iplanted, and those now being planted will nqt sprout until there Is mora moisture In the soil. .. . Warm rains are needed and needed badly to bring out the pastures. At this sesson the grass Is usually high enough to begin pasturing, but on ac count of lack of rain It Is not aa now, and will be very slow about coming on unless there is rain., ine. equinox, which la usually expected . to , bring stormy weather, has passed without rain, and the farmers are beginning to worry about the prolonged dry weatn. eft - " COULD NOT CONTROL AVALANCHE ut Great Northern le Censured for , Refusing to Psy Men Sufficient - Wagae for .Rescue Work., , Seattle, Wash., Mar. 24. The coro ner's Jury Investigating the Great Northern disaster at Wellington March 1, In which SO lives were lost, brought In a verdict that the avalan che resulted from causes beyond hu man control. The, Great Northern Is criticised for having paid the laborers engaged In clearing the track but 15 cents an hour, without board. Because of the small wages, 35 men qilt work when their services were most needed. The Jury censures the railroad for not re taining sufficient men to clear the track regardless of cost. AN OFFICIAL CALL FOR CLUCKERS The Stste Fish and Game Commis sioner of Missouri Wants Hene . to Hatoh Phesssnt Eggs. -, Jefferson City. Mar. 24. Jesse Tolerton, state game and fish commis sioner, baa advertised for a bunch of old hens of a motherly disposition. He has some 600 Hungarian pheasant eggs and ha desires the hens for the purpose of hatching them. Pheasants WIN not hatch their eggs In captivity. ,. ff Mr. Tolertou's efforts to raise Hungarian pheasants proves success ful he will soon be able to stock ths entire state with them. Left on Whole Body -Boy of Five a Mast of Itching Eruption and Hit Screams were Heart-Breaking Bandagei Stuck to His Flesh. - CUREft BY CUTICDRA . TWELVE YEARS A(0 "1 ) 1 ! -i . U "Mr little eon. a bey of five, broke with aa Itching rash. Three doo- aors ptwscnoea I or him, but be kept Srttlng Worse un . we eouid ao. dress him any mora. They Anally advised me to try certain snedloeil college, but 1 1 s treatment did o faod. At the time was Induced to try- CuUcura be waf so bad that X had to cut his hair off end - nut the Chitlcura Ointment oa him on bandaswa. aa It was Impossible to touch him with the bare hand. There wee not one square Inch ef skis on his whole body that waa not affected. He was one mass of sores. The bandagee used to stick to has sain and ia removing tbesm It used to take the akin of with them, and the scree ma from the poor child ware beart breakintv I begaa to think thaS fce Would sever get well, but after the seo Ond application of CuUcura Ointment I been to see signs of Improvement, and with the third and fourth applications toe sores rommanprd to dry tip. Bis eerie pealed e twenty tinea, but M nally yMded to the treatment. Xow ran say that he la entirely cured, and a stronswr and healthier hoy you never saw than he Is to-day, twelve yaara ar more rinca the cure was effects. Rob ert Vat tarn, lug- Forty-eighth Bl Chicago, 111, Oct. a, ,908." , , -, ,, ' Mniions'of prefer Cntlcura NOT AN INCH OF HEALTHY SKIM eul floap to ell other skia scans for preaorW inf. purifying and bewututng tba akin, scalp, hair and hands, for raahea, ItebinsS and eaeflnra, red, roof h hawta, dry, tbia end faUtna hair, for infantile eruptions Snd ak n bWm.jbee end every purpose at the tiei, kih end nurearr. Cuucura Soap anal Cuucora Plalaasns are invsluatue, . Cetwn an (tart, P Oeis etelnset reset ae . : .- , rrt (or a m ajne as r - 4 t ' iwr vi ef roi. e--.I -a a M'.. v- . bfisf a ca Cera aw x.lfliwtn. a-iee- Hut er-w.w4 f-. " e-fe 0---w est tswi ea aeaeeaae ate seas, easts en aaak -.Vla'7 A CHiGAGO FIBE BURNED TWELVE Were Trapped on Sixth Floor of ! Buildings EIGHT OF THEM WERE GIRLS fire Departmet Slow In Responding and 20 Minutes Before Water ... Was Turned t o:; On..- Chicago, Mar. 28. Trapped on the sixth floor of the L. Fish Furniture company, 1908-1908 Wabash avenue. eight girls and four men were burned to death, while thousands of horror stricken, helpless witnesses looked on from the streets below. Two more persons are missing and it is festad their bodies will be found In the ruins. Ths causes of the Are and the condi tion of the building will be subjected to the most rigid Investigation. The place had but one old, rusty Are ea- cape In the rear, while the front waa so cluttered with signs and. steel cables that firemen could not raise ladders to assist the perishing .oc cupants. r It also Is charged that tba Bre department waa unusually slow In responding and that It was SO minutes after arrival before any water was turned on the fire. What the spectators saw of the Are will hsunt them forever, but the most horrible story will never be told as It actually happended. as all the partici pants, are dead-charred bits of hu manity, some not yet Identified. The crowd swayed and many fainted as little Ethel Llchtenstein, with tne flames burlng off her garments and hair, leaped desperately from the sixth story, crashed through an immense class norte cochere and became a cornea on the stone pavement. But of the spasmodic struggles amid chok ing smoke and fumes, and the roaring furnace of death on the sixth floor, where 12 were burned to death, none Is left to tell. Julius Jesche, aged 17, who started down the Are escape, choked and rell four stories, but escaped with slight bruises, is the only one who can give any sort of account of his companions who perished. When he dashed out of the room, he said, a thin curl of smoke was creeping through the floor and the panic-stricken girls and men were ilaahlnr here and there seeking an avenue of escape. He swung out on the Are escape an slipped down to the Afth floor safely, a vast volume of heat and , flames swept out and enveloped him and be beard a scream. Through the smoke ha. could see the white face, of little Rnsla Bureke looking down at Dim, Their the flames swept out over bar and she fell back to he incinerated. CALIFORNIANS MOB EVANGELIST tated Women Who Attended Dancss Were In a Class With Immoral Women Then (.eft Town. . Portervlllei Cel., Mar. 25. A riot which lasted until early in the morn ing started In a church here, when Leroy Clark, an evangelists, stated that any woman who attended a dance was In the same class with immoral women. - , - A boy started the riot by hitting the evangelist with an over-ripe egg. Clark fled from the church and was pursued by a mob, which pelted htm with ess until he took reruge in a hotel. The mob refused to disperse and Sheriff Collins waa Anally compelled to swear in SO deputlee to drive the people to their homes,. Clsrk was waited upon by a delega tion of prominent cltliena who re quested him t leave town without da lay.. . Sadrls Templeton, alleged to have thrown the irst egg, waa arrested and money Is being raised by popular sub scription for his defense. '' A BLACK HAND MAN KILLED Colorado berlfrs Peese Ordered Him te Threw Up Hie Hands . . , When .He Took Money. , 4 ' , Pueblo, Col- alar. 15. Aa unknown black hand operator was shot through Us heart and killed In a tight with a sheriff's posse headed by Under Sharif Warrea Hill. A companion OS es pad ea horseback hot Is believed te have Veen wounded- The sbootlag followed threats made by letter to Tony Baatuao, ordering him te place tl.got In a can at a petal several miles beyond the county pool fans. . He compiled with the demand aat when Ike two men. were taking the money from the en a, the eherira pose, ordered them to throw np ttett hands. They refused and opened Are ea the posse. - At the Arst return vol ley one ef she Mack nana men roil devad.. . : . ' r . ' A i,0oXOM Plant itme. Fairmont, W. Va, Mar. tl. Pleat of the Haaaletoa Canning eempaay at Hamletoav Tucker county, waa totally destroyed by Are. The roes. It U re ported, will reach I1.0OC.0OO. Tae pleat was the largest of Its hied la West Virginia. aile tor Home June- Iff ' London. Mar. it. Theodore Kooee volt will sail from Senthamptoa lot ease aa June It, Passage waa a gaged yesterday. . t.' J-0.B-K-D.ana not mer.lv petebed P '"'"fijffiij uTnetroo oonkl not be ered- earewiuttaiivoa naveuewi. duinon In a dar than I or enone else ,on.'u1r.n,1oS tandyonwIlleaalamtslUnsvoulnetniUi. Or. I. K. Caanadaye lOOt . ... .. a Emtia WOU '? insrov iuibi . -v . , -r- GEORGE Ii L i tL . Shoer of etc,-1- ,oI fi. t.J J eavy saaMiLrsij. .r" ::z -,mmmtmLLkLtLmjm r 1 1 ii 11 1 . ' . " ' "1 I now have a first class general blacksmith and ':.:-..! i.' , carriage man. f, -..-( Phone 263. Brick Shop, Spruce St.. Abilene, Kanaai, JAMES A- TUyiS NATHAN E. GISH Funeral Director ) f":v; 'MxIADf aWWaWA.',, v. " V- Ji ' t.er5evjeev ffJL. I Pfompt aaul CloiueMaia faetrHosvI I h-ii'teio wajr nsneoaiabia. J. A. TOFTS,;- 6 r-n -v, ! - 1 M. 0 , il- ; Ueeetae Ne. 881. ' ,c y,f ., f.-'-r -. f- Office Phono No. 219. Residence Phone No. 8SS . Residence Phone No. S44. Offl'e Pbtwo No. ait. ABILENE, KANSAS. THE NEW COMMITTEE NAKED REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS HAVE MADE SELECTIONS. An Attempt in Democratic Csuous te Ask for a Committee en Commit tees Was Votsd Down. Washington, Mar. i 2a,-rThe new house commltee on rules will consist of the following members,: , . - , Republicans: John Daliell, Penh- evlvanla: Walter I. Smith, Iowa;-J. Sloat tfassett. New York; Henry S, Boutell, Illinois: Sylvester C. Smith, 5aiaornia: George ; P. Lawrence, Massachusetts. - - . ? . '. u i Democrats: Champ Clark, Mis souri: Oscar Underwood, Alabama John J. Fitzgerald,. New Yorlt, Linoola Dixon. Indiana. This committee, when elected by the house, will supersede the commit tee composed of Speaker Cannon, Dal iell, Smith of Iowa, Republicans Clark and Fitxgereld, Democrats. . , The flght on the old committee waa made by. Insurgents Republicans be cause Speaker Cannon dominated it. The prediction is that . Cannon, , will dominate the Republican members ef tha new committee. John Daliell la picked for chairman. The Democrats selected their com mttteemen In caucus with 140 mem bers present. Harmony waa the watch- ward ef the caucus. Thetus 91ms of Tennessee, set out to startle the dove of pesce. He presented a rwaoinuun Immediately after the caucus was call ed to order by Chairman Clayton In sirnetlneT the new Democratic : mem bers oa rales te use their efforts to hxlsr from the general committee a raaolatloa providing tor the electlos of a committee oa, committees by the house. This .committee is ta ns ' ' T" i -a. a. - nnatsiltatPa nf T SB IMlllia CUUltll I LLTWB) Ralney, of .Illinois, promptly maae a point of order that tne;caucus was called arl'marily to select members ef the new committee oa rules ana uar tnn auatalned the hoist or order. aims anealed from the decision, aut withdrew th appeal whea assured he could bring kis resolution up inier. Thla he did but it' was snowed under. The selection of tie momners os too committee oa roles wss -j y nsiiot without nominations. The vote re sulted: t .-. : - J u . ,r'- Clark. 125; Underwood, 101; Diaon, i; FlUgerald l. Gladstone's Memory.' Gladstone's power of memory waa always one of bis greatest assets. Ia bis last years ha often lamented that It was aot what it had been; bnt even so K came triumphantly out of some remarkable tests. Ia kis eighty-third year heeet khneelf U recall Maasaali ede ra the death ol Napoleon, which, aa a yoang man. he had traaalated Into Kngllah.., He had entirely forgot- tea hie owa version, out sy amt or hard "digging" or -Basing ap,- as aa called It, he wrote dewa 14 of the lag Italian Uasa. Two yaara later he g.tTed to write treaa atesaory a easa tote Hat ef all Ua man was had beea Mo eahlset eollaagiwe, aad aaoBer ! a ef the Te. , Vy iwlllwrltei Itkatwllloon- era awrimeo. oomo in "-". r 7 n, .riune me toKlaf - tWalta. Me. "'' Pa f JaW'a-ma OD otnvmr asva. -..rfcrew Of BCfem f SNYDER, " cY- i ' aa Trac e and n nv.joO tj it. Horses evh ) 3 , .f,.WS Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets are safe, jure and reliable, and have been praised by thousands of " women ' who' hive been restored -to 'health through their gentle aid and curative properties. Sold by O. B. Northcrait db Co, , v Heavy, impute blood makes a mud dy, pimply compleiion, headaches, nausea,. Indigestion. Thin blood makes you weak, pale, sickly. Bur dock Blood Bitters makes the blood rich, red, pure restores perfect health. . -',., ".'' Stubborn as Males, are liver and bowels sometimes; seem to talk without cause. Then there's trouble- Lose of -Appetite-1-Indigestion,- Nervousness, Despondency,-Headache. But such troubles fly before Dr. King's New Life Pills, the world's best Stomach and Liver remedy. So easy.- gSo at J. M. Olelssner. ' ' " Low Fares To California New Mexico Arizona Mexico i . One way Colonist tickets on sal daily to April 15, 1910, Inclusive, from ABILENE, KANSAS Only a few points shown below. For fares to other points and Infor mation as to the liberal atop-over nrivltavaa .-m-J .J -.I ' - - ; , yi see the undersigned. Los Angeles M5.00 SIMS $25.00 125.00 125.00 (25.00 125.04 $25.00 -25.00 ......25.00 ..... $25.00 ,....$25.00 $21.15 J 5.00 f 85.00 $25.10 $25.00 . $25.00 $25.00 San Francisco . . . , San. plego Pasadena , Redlands .'. , Sacramento. Santa Barbara Monterey . ., Prescott Phoenix Flagstaff Tucson Blsbee Ooldfleld ........ Toaopah Dealing ......... Silver City ....... Chllhnahua Quarts as Mexico City ..$25.00 Through tourist sleepers to Lea An geles, Baa Francisco aad Baa Diego, dally. F. S. Sails, Art A. T. 8. F. Ry. Abilene,