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Flesherton Advance, 9 Oct 1913, p. 6

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itl'S ^^- ( J^ [ r [deal In Waterman'. Ideals it is a notable fact that gold pns can be bad to suit every hand and character of writing. The more particular the wriwr ths grtmnt tht ealUlictkm in suitiag him. Back of Che wonderful rng of poiuti in Waterman's Meals, how- ever, an other essential features which hare made for fountain pen tureen: the famous ipoon feed, the ink-tight chamber, friction cap, Ideal Clip, practical shapes, pui* Para rubber, ths tiiei, types, etc. Avoid substitute*. *..*.'.( .;..! Sold by the Best Local Dealers L. B. Watermen Company, Limited, Montreal RADIUM CURE FOR CANCER . Sir Frederick Treves Declares Aspect Is Emphati- cally flore Reassuring than Last Year A despatch from London, Eng- land, says: In recording the- im- portant results of the year's ex- periences of the British Radium In- stitute, Sir Frederick Treves, the famous surgeon, in an address an- nounced tho discovery that radium emanations have, anyway, tempor- arily the same- properties as true radium. He said: "We have proved that for curative purposes the emanation within 24 to 48 hours of its being collected is as good as radium itself." It had boon further discovered, aid Sir Frederick, that water charged with radium emanations became 5.000 times aft strong at the trongest known natural water. Radio-active water has marvellous curative effects, especially in cases of rheumatic gout and similar affec- tions of the joints. Patients who were treated at the institute had to drink half a pint ofi this water dailj for six days a week over a perux of six weeks. Forty per cent, o these patients had shown marke< benefit, and in some instances two courses had apparently cured them Sir Frederick said that the Ra dium Institute was distributing the emanations to physicians whose pa tients were unable to attend the institute, and was Bending sealec tubes daily to all parts of the coun try. One gram of the institute's total of four grams of radium ha* been set apart for producing dailj emanations equivalent to 150 milli grammes of pure radium. The records in regard to treat- ment of cancer supplemented in an interesting manner the achieve- ments at- Middlesex Hospital by the same method, which was described in the cables a short time ago. SWEPT BY FURIOUS STORM Two Persons Killed and Traffic Demoralized Heavy Rainstorm In New York City By 'A despatch from Ne-w York ay : 'A rainstorm that re-ached almost cloudburst proportions dewendod on New York on Wednesday and began a record precipitation that flooded streets, tied up the sub- way, hamperod surface and ele- vated traffic in city and Huhurbii for everal hours, and caused iimin-enso property loss. Two persons wore killed nd several injured. Incom- ing trains from all directions were delayed, some of them several hours, as cuts and tunnels resem- bled rivers within canyons. Within the city the traffio congestion was such that the resources of the trail- Kit companies and the ability of tho police to handle the crowds were severely taxed. PRICES OF FARM PRODUCTS REPORT* FROM THE LEADINO TBAO1 CENTRES OF AMERICA. frlcw f Cattu, Cram, Chatu n Ons frtducs it Horns and Abroad. Broartsturts. Toronto, Oct. 7.- Flour- Ontario "heat' (lours. 90 per cent., made of new wheat., quoted at 83.55 to $3.60 seaboard; and at, $j.6i to C3.7U locally. Manitobaa first patAits. in jute bags. *5.40; do.. tsoondl. M.70; strong bakers, in jute bags. 4./0. I Manitoba wheat-No. 1 new Northern quoted at 88 l-2o. on track. Bay ports. and| No. 2 at 87 l-2o. Ontario wheat New No. 2 wheat at 84 to 85c, outside. Oats No. 2 Ontario oats Quoted at 32 to *>. outside, and at 351-2 to 36c, on track,' Torouto. Western Canada old oats QUOI. | ed at 39 l-2o for No. 2 and at J8c for No. 3. Buy i>'iru, Peas Nominal at 83 to 85c. ouUide. Barley - 52 to Me. ouUiide. Corn- -No. 3 American corn quoted no- minal at 75o, c.l.f.. Midland. Rye Priccu nominal at 60 to 62o per bushel. Buckwheat Prices nominal at 62 to We. Bran -Manitoba bran Is quoted at 22 a ton. in bags. Toronto freights. Shorts, 124, Torouto. Country Product. Butter-Choice dairy. 22 to 24c; inferior 20 to 21c; creamery, 27 to 29o for rolls and 24 to 26 l-2o for solidi. Eggs-Cae lots of new-laid. 32 to 33o per doien ; fresh. 28 to 30o ; and storage. 27o per doien. i li--,-,- Nw cheese quoted at 14 1-Zo for large and 14 34 to 16o for twins. Beans Hand-picked at 12.26 to $2.36 per biuhc-i; primes. $1.75 to *-. Honey Extracted, in tins, quoted at 11 to 11 l-2o per lb. for No. 1; combs. $3 to 83.25 per dozen for No. 1 and $2.75 for Poultry- Fowl. 13 to 14o per lb.; ohiok- ens. 17 to 18c; ducks. 14 to 15c; gee, 12 to 13o; turkeys, 18 to 20o. Potatoe-a Ontario potatoes. 70 to 76c per bait, and New Brunswick. 85o per ba. on track. Provlaloni. Bacon, Ion* clear. 16 1-2 to 16 3-4o DOT lb. in case lots. Pork Short out. $29; do., mess. $24; hams, medium to light. BM to 22c- heavy. 20 1-2 to 21o; rolls, 17o; breakfast bacon. 21 to 22o; backs, 24 to iJard-Tiexoe-s, 14c; tufbs. 14 l-4oi palls. 14 l-2o. Baled Hay and Straw. Baled hay-No. 1 hay ia Quoted at , $13 to $14. on track. Toronto; No. 2 at $12.50. and mixed at $11 to $12. Baled etraw $8 W $8.50. on track, To- routo. Bus-nest In Montreal. Montreal. Oct. 7.-Corn- -Amir'.caa No. 2 Tfllow. 82 to 83c. OaU -Canadian VV et- ern. No. 2. 40 1-2 to 41c; do.. No. 3, 39 to 39 l-3c; extra No. 1 feed, 40 to 40 l-2c. Bar- loy Manitoba feed. 60 to 50 l-2o; malting. 64 to 6Sc. Buckwheat No. 2, 66 to 67c. Flour- Manitoba Spring wheat patent*, firsts. $5.40: seconds. $4.90; strong baker*. $4.70; Wintor patents, choice. $5; straight rollers. $4.60 to $4.75; do. bag*. $2* U> $2.10: Rollod oat. barrta. $4.40 to S4.30; bags. 90 lb.. $MO to $2.12 M. Brnn. $2 fihort*. $24. Middlinge. $27. Moulllle. $28 to $32. Hy-No. 2. per ton. car low, $12 to $13. t'heeae- Finest westerns, 13 3-8 to 131-ao: finest easterns, 13 to 13 l-8o. But- ter Choicest creamery, 27 1-2 to 27 3-4c; ewonds. 27 to B7 l-4c. Kggo-Freah. 44 to J6c; slectd, 29 to Jlo; No. 1 (took. 27 to 28oi No. 2 stock. Zl to 22c. Potatoes, per ba~ car lot*. 60 to 65c. Dred hogs, ab- attoir killed. 13 W to 14o. Pork- Heavy Canada (Oiort mess. bbls.. 35 to 45 piuoen. $30; do., short cut -back. bbl.. 45 to 55 pieces. 29e. Lard- -Compound. tlrce. 375 Ibs.. 10 1-4 to 10 l-2c; wood pails. 20 Ibs. net. 10 3-4 to lie; pur*, tierces, 376 lb.. 143-4c; pure, wood paito. 20 lb. net. 15c. AILROAD and Toletrraphy Courses of the moit complete and modern kind taught right at your own home by Shaw's Telegraph and Railroad School, i Gerrard St. East, Toronto. Write for particulars and sample lessons. W. H. Shaw, Pres. ALBANIAN WOMEN FIGHT. Armed With Hatchet* They Fought Beside the Men. A despatch from Vienna nays : Women are taking an active part in the fighting in Albania, according to despatches received here from Avlona, the Albanian capital. Many Albanian Ama wins, armed with hatchets, fought heroically shoulder to shoulder with their husbands, sons and brothers during tho street fighting at Dibra recently, when 1,200 Ser- vians were killed and 300 taken pri- soners of war. ARE INCORRECTLY TRAINED -- - " - -- -. Day of the Lecture to Medical Students Passed, Declares Sir William Osier A despatch from London says : Sir \Villiain Osier, Professor of Medicine at Oxford University, in his address at the re-opening of the Modical School of Bt. George's Hospital denounced the existing system of training medical stu- dents, especially the lecture and examination features. Sir William contended that the work of the stude/its from the day they enter the school ought to count for more qualification and that the students ought not to be under the continual fear of exami- nation. He said the Chinese sys- tem of odiK'ntion which is directed to a single end, the pnssing of ex- aminations, shows perfectly the blighting influence of examinations and how they sterilize the imagina- tion. "The, groat chasm between educa- tion and examination is," he con- tinued, "shown by tho statistics of aspirants to the Royal College of iiurgeons. Half of the entrants fail, ye.t th<\se arc the very pick of the students. The lectures ought to be reduced. The day of the lecture is past. It ought to be an offence on tho part of a senior student to attend a lecture. "In tho case of inefficient stu- dents parents ought to be told after |a year or two they would never make decent doctors. There ought to be no written papers at th-e final examination. Watch the man handle a patient. Fifteen minutes at the bedside ia worth three hours at the examination table. The stu- dent n<>eds that the incubus of ex- amination should be lifted from his soul. Wo make the study of our profeAsion an intolerable burden by examinations and the enormous ex- pansion of the subjects of the cur- riculum." The address was greeted with loud cheers. , he the s.-iiiu-, ii, >1 In- he Carxiud. HARRT THAW PROTESTS. \Vaut8 U.S. to Demand Explana- tion From Canada. A despatch from Washiniyton says : Through Senator Oliver, of Pennsylvania, Harry K. Thaw made a protest to the State Depart- ment against his deportation from Canada, on September 10, by the immigration officials of the- Domin- ion. Thaw asks that the State De- partment demand from the- British Embassy an explanation of the treatment accorded him by the Canadian officials. He contends that such treatment was in viola- tion of the privileges guaranteed him as an American citizen in treaties between the United States and Great Britain. COMMFJT ON EVENTS GILLETTS PERFUMED LYE BRITISH OFFICER RESIGNS. Captain Onslow Relieved of His Duties in Australia. A despatch from London, En<j., nays : Captain Hughes Onslow, of the Royal Navy, whom the Admir- alty last year lent to the Australian naval authorities, has been sud- denly relieved of his duties. It is an open secret that there has been considerable friction for some time past between the British officers and the Australian Naval Board, owing to the manner in which the latter have interfered with the for- mer in the discharge of their du- ties according to th prescribed customs of the British naval ser- vice. The pre-sident of the board is A Complicated Affair. The proposal in Franco to tax unpro- ductive membern of the community, tnut in to say. celibates and ohildleee couple*. in-- mi. 'i--. if carried Into effect, to be a welcome addition to the revenue of a 'Btute euppowd to be straining its re- sources, though that I probably not the baeis on which it 1 founded. Dr. JacqueB Bertillon, the statistical expert, nays that there are in France at the present time 1.350,000 celebates. 1,800.000 families with- out children. 2.650.000 families with two I children, aud 2.400,000 families with only one child. It ia proposed to flx the "com- pulaory" family at three children and to ; tax every citizen who haa reached the ] air of forty-five without having three children living, or who reached the age of twenty-one. The tar to to be $6 00 per _ three. This tax would, it IB calculated, j^*""B*" . , yield about $100,000,000 annually to the etate. A little addition to it* Income for which the itate. will be truly thankful. i The Idea of a compulsory family may lead to a/wkrward reaulta. Many couples would willingly sacrifice much to have three children, other* may have con- scientious scruplee. But in the cae of a family of two muet a third be adopted, and If three la the minimum is there no maximum? If families are to be thus re- Kulated by the Btat -would It not be bet- ter to adopt a eliding wale according to Income? Think of the appalling pruepect for the millionaire who might t'nul that , he wan scheduled to bring up twenty children or more. Surely if the man with tl.OOO a year muet have three children the man with $50,000 a year should have 150. Taxes are usually arranged go that the ; man with a email income hue nothing to pay and the man with the 1 irge cfc* : bears hie burden. The minimum fi.r a family inevitably leads to the eume con- clusion for It la making children equira- lent to taxes. Again a married couple might, have five children before the age of forty-five a"<*. loee four of them. It might be deemed careless but euoh thinge have beeu known to happen. They would find themselves ! penalized equally with the couple without children. Then. too. in order to eocape ' the tax a poor parish priest would have Senator fence. Pearce, Minister of De- united States Markets. TRAFFIC SHOWS INCREASE. Over Ten Million Tons Through St. Mary's in September. A despatch from Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., says: The monthly statistical re,port of traffic through St. Mary's Canal shows a fulling off from that of August, but still is an increase ovr any month of last year. The total freight carried by 3,182 vessels for September amounted to 10,910,365 tons, against 11,489,442 for the month of August, carried by I 3,440 vessels. While the vessel paa- 1 sages locked through the American sido were 1,100 more than through the Canadian canal, the total ton- nage through the Canadian side ex- ceeded the American side by 1,645,- G95 ton*. Minneapolis, Oot. 8-fUvt-, celuber. 84 5-8c; May. 89 5-8 to 89 3-4o. Canh -No, 1 hard, 86 l-8c: No. 1 Northern. 835-8 to 85 5-8c; No. 2 Northern, 81 54) to 83 5-8c. No. 3 yellow corn. 68 to 68 l-2c. No. 3 white onte, 38 to 38 l-4c. No. 2 ry, 56 to 59o. Flour un<-han(ped. Hran m 100-lb. Hackv. for Mlmieuuoliti. $20 to $21. Duluth. Oct. 8. Close Limned. $1.423-4; May. *1.46 1-4; October, $1.41 1-4 asked; No- vnmber. $1.421-4; December. $1.401-4 bid. Wheatr No. 1 hard. 843^!c; \. 1 North- ern. 84 3-4; No. 2 Northern, 82 3-4 ;o 83 14c; December. 833-4c; May. 89 7-8o. Live Stock Markst Montreal. Oct. 8. Bust stei-rs offered old at $.SO. fairly good at $5.76 to $6. ami thn lower irradfw from that down to $4 per <nvt. Tns demand for butcher*' oo* WUB good at prioi-n ranging from M '" to 15.50, and canning stork to'd at 13 to I.'. 60 per owt. Kn shppp sold at J4.25 to $460. and lamb* at $6 to $6.76 j,or cwt. Calves mot -with a r*ady sale t from $3 to $10 ;n-li. as to (.in- and quality. Thre -vi- no change In the market for hog*, for which ill demand waa good, nn>l aa> of ...-It-rii-l lota were mad at $9.60 to $9.75. and rough, heavy otook lit $9 to $9.60 per cwt., weighed off car* Toronto. Oct. 7.- Choice butoherB' stpora old at 650 to $6.90; good. $6.25 to *6.50; medium. $5.90 to $6.20 1 common, $560 to $5.60; Inferior to common. $5 to $5.25; ohnico OC/WB. $6.25 to $5.65; good cows, $4.75 to $5: mdium <ows. $4 to 84.50; c. mmon cnw. $3.50 to $3.75; canneri and cut.tera, $250 to $425; good bullB. $6 to S5.M; o<,rn- mon in,",-. $3.75 to $4.75; teers. 900 to 1.100 Iba.. sold at $5.40 up to $6. and in some III-I.UM-,'. $6.20 wgt paid: atockers. 700 to BOO llw . $4.75 to $5.25; light, eastern itock- em were quotexl at $3.75 to $4.50. Choice veal calvm sold at. $9 to $10; <x.d, $8 to 9; medium, *7 to. $8; common, $5 in $6.50; rough eaetern vulvci, $3.75 to R Hhpop. light <vwe. 100 to 130 Ihfl., $4.50 to $5: eww, 140 to 160 II... . $4 to $4.25. Lambs, ewes and wethera selected sold at $675 t-o $720; buck lambs were bought ut a reduction of 75c per hend. Holes -Selects fed and watered Bold at $9.10. and $8.75 f <>.b. cars, mid $935 weigh- ed off < 1 1 -i at the market. CARNEGIE LANDS 30-LB. FISH. Proudest M MI In All Scotland Now Is the Laird o' Skibo. A despatch from Edinburgh says : Andrew Carnegie, despite his 77 years, is still a keen ealruon fisher- man. Ho was tho proudest man in all Scotland after eucceoding in landing the finest fish caught in the River Ship, in Sutherland, this sea- son. It weighed 30 pounds. VKRY LIGHT SKNTKXCE. Leniency Shown to Man Who Kill- ed Hotel Domestic. A despatch from Toronto says : Chief Justice R. M. Meredith sen- tenced James Dickenson, convicted of manslaughter in connection with tlifl death of Lucy Ives, whose neck was dislocated in a row at Smith's llnii I. to six months in jail. His Lords-hip took a very lenient view of the case in accordance with tho verdict of tho jury, which included a strong recommendation for mer- cy. Dickenson will servo his sen- tence at the Central Prison. Dickenson was employed as bar porter at the hotel and on the morning of the affray he was hav- ing his breakfast in tho kitchen when the dead woman slapped him ami persisted in annoying him. He warned her, but when the teasing continued ho lost control of himself and .struck or pushed her. She fell back striking hcf head upon a ta- ble, sustaining the injury from which ilio died. TEN YEARS IN PRISON. Sentence of Woman Convicted of Murdering Husband. A despatch from Saskatoon says : Mrs. Dora White, convicted of manslaughter for killing her hus- band, Qcorgo White, of Qovan, on June 2, was sentenced to ten years' confinement at Prince Albert peni- tentiary. John Goldspinks, con- victed of being an accessory after the fact, received a five years' sen- tence. REVIVED. Old-Time Health, Eating Grapr- Is'uts. "I had been sick for 10 years with dyspepsia and a lot of complica- tions," wrote a Western woman. "An operation was advised, change of climate was suggested, but no one seemed to know just what was the matter. I was in bed three days in the we-ek and got so thin I weighed only 89 Ibs. No food eeo.mrd to agre* with me. "I told my husband I was going to try some kind of predigested food to see if I could keep from this feeling of continued hunger. "Grape-Nuts and cream was the food I got and nothing has seomed to satisfy me like it. I never feel hungry, but have a natural appe- tite. Have had no nervous spells since I began this food, and have taken no medicine. "I have gained so much strength that I now do all my house-work and feel well and strong. My weight has increased 8 Ibs. in 8 woeks and I shall always eat Grape- Nuts as it is far pleasanter than taking medicines." Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Read "The Road to Well- ville," in pkgs. "There's a rea- son." Ever read ths above Ktltrf A ntvi oni pptari from tlm* to time. Th*y art nuln, trut. and lull of human Inttrstl. to the experimental Those not on the list to break his vows of celibacy. Or will the church be exempt? The proposal will have. one excellent effect in such a country as France.. It should produce gome excellent plays. Milk Production In Canada. If Canadian farmers fail to secure the best results in the conduct of the various brunches of their Industry it is not du to lack of effort on the part of govern- ment experts to provide them with infor- mation based on expert experiment. A re- cent bulletin. No. 72 of the regular series of bulletins of the Dominion experimental farms, dcala exhaustively with milk pro- 1 auction in Canada. Its author, Mr. J. H. ' (irisdale, director of the farms, has made milk production a matter of special study ! for many yeans and has included, among the subjects treated, orop rotations, dairy barns, breeding dairy cattle and feeding. ] care and management of milch cowe. These divisions show that milk produc- tion Involves many factors, and It has been the author's endeavor to treat of these as fully, clearly and simply as pos- sible so that the bulletin may be of value , to the general farming community. The volume is profusely Illustrated, and is now being issued farms' mailing Hat. __ ._, who desire a copy may obtain 11 on ap- plication to ths publications branch, de- ; partment of agriculture. Ottawa. Prison Rsform In Canada. It IB nnderstod at Ottawa thnt Hon. Arthur MeigJien, ths new eolicitor-genenl, j will undertake th work of prison reform In Canada. This la a work in which Can- ada has lagged rather than led in the; past. Some of the provinces have taken tt up. but the Dominion on the whole hai been content to follow th old methods in I'M peuitutiarlss. The old penologv had thre alms to punish the criminal for his crime, to pro- tect society and to strike terror Into the hearts of posnibl malefactors. The new penology recogniies but one Rival aim-- i to reform the criminal. Incidentally, It . may punish, protect and deter, but all > its energies are directed toward reform- ation. Uudor tho old scheme of r.hlngs, the criminal remained, practically all bin life. a burden upon his fellow men. The new system tries to fit him to bear his own burdons aud to be a help to society in- stead of a curae. It, teaches him first to rcwpeot himself and then to respect others I Lastly, It teachefl him to work in a way , and at a trade thnt will not brand him ! during the remainder of hi* life as a jail bird. The parole system, which has been In force In Canada for some years, has IKH a step in the right direction, but - thi<re are many other step* to take. Mr Ueigheu boa a groat work before him. THE CLEANLINESS OF SINKS.CLOSETS. BATHS. DRAINS. ETC IS OF VITAL IMPORTANCE TO HEALTH. OMPANY UMlTtf TORONTO ONT. JOHN R. BOOTH HI RT. Veteran Lumberman Sustains In- juries In Mill Accident. A despatch from Ottawa says : John R. Booth, the veteran lumber- man, lies at his home in a serious condition as the result of injuries received Friday afternoon at his plant, when a big square timber, part of the ruins of the mill which was burned down a few weeks ago. fell on him. His left leg was bro- ken, his shoulder badly bruised, and the left side of his face badly cut, especially above the eye. Mr. Booth is now in his 88th year. Tho accident happened about two o'clock while Mr. Booth was super- intending a gang of men tearing down the ruins of the timber mill recently gutted by fire. A team of horses w-as hitched on one big tim- ber, and was pulling it out and he stepped nearby a big square up- right. He had not been standing near it more than a momtnt before it fell. MUTILATION OF SHADE TREES Penalty for Destroying or Injuring Trees in Ontario. In legislation for the protection of Bhado and street trees, the Pro- vince of Ontario sets a good exam- ple for the rest of the Dominion. Under the Tree Planting Act of the Province of Ontario, trees planted or left standing on the public high- ways (*nd also on toll roadft) be- come the property of the owner of the land adjacent to the highway and nearest to such trees. Thus any company or individual destroy- ing or damaging in any way (eveni tying a horse to such, tree* without the owner's consent, is liable to ft, fine not to exceed $25 and costs, OB' imprisonment for not more than, thirty days, half of the fine to gat to the informant. Telephone com- panics, who, in the stringing f. wires, very often seriously injure) and mutilate shade trees, are apt' to justify themselves to the proper-1 ty owners by asserting their legal; right to do such 'pruning' because of established precedent. In thin case, no such practice, however^ long it has been tolerated by pro-' perty holders, becomes legally jus- tifiable, and such companies iara just as liable for damages the last! tirue they injure the trees as thejf 1 are the first time. However long a, wire may have been attached to a, tree, the owner, if he has property^ in the tree, can compel its removal. \ While even the owner may not' remove shade trees on highways without the consent of the munici- pal council, yet, on the other hand,' not even the- municipal council may remove any live trees without th consent of the owner of the pro- perty in front of which the tree> stands, unless such tree is within! thirty feet of other trees, and even! thim the owner must be given at 1 least two days' notice and can de-i mand compensation if he has plant- ed and protected such tree. ' The property-owner who is aware of his rights in these respects will! take greater interest in and greater care of the trees bordering the highway opposite his property. He will also have more incentive- to plant shade trees. GRAIN MOVEMENT HEAVY. Payments for Grain About Forty Million Dollars. A despatch from Winnipeg says: jThe unprecedented and rapid move- ' ment of grain through Winnipeg | again evidenced itself when the 1 manager of the local clearing house gave out his weekly statement. The figures indicate an advance of about 30 per cent, over the corres- ponding wr>ek of 1912, and an in I crease of 50 per cent, over the cor- responding week for 1911. Hank ers state that the advance will In- I marked and continuous throughout the month of October. The statement was as follows: Week ending October 2, 1913 $39,851,856 Corresponding week, 1912 30.561,513 Corresponding week, 19U 26,138,775 KOUBKD SH ICE BOXES. Yukon Gold Company's Employes Were First Bound and Gagged. A despatch from Dawson, Y.T., says : Two masked and armed men forced employes of the Yukon Gold Company into submission on Lovet Hill, three miles from here, and robbed the- company's sluice boxes of concentrated gravel valued at $'20.000. The men overcome by tho robbera were bound and gagged and thrown into a ditch. The company had planned to make the season's ck'an-up this week. Once in a while a man doesn't forgot his okl frieuds after acquir- ing wealth and fame. Constipation is an enemy within the camp. It will undermine the strongest constitution and ruin the most vigorous health. It lends to indigestion, biliousness, impure blood, bad complexion, sick headaches, and is one of the most frequent causes of appendicitis. To neglect it is slow suicide. Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills positively euro Constipation. They are entirely vegetable in composition and do not sicken, weaken or gripe. Preserve your health by talcing Dr. Morse* 48 Indian Root Pills

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