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The Indianapolis News from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 12

The Indianapolis News from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 12

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Indianapolis, Indiana
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12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

12 workhig VOTES AT ALBAIiY MAKES TWO CONVERTS AMONG N-VV YORK to the constitution AUiJLVt. N. March ma; a qutet descent on the Capttot through tliaLt ardent disciple, Mr. Clarer.cs lUckay. She.

at least, something for the cause, aa J. Henry Walter, of and Orson J. Welmert, of Buffalo. Uo republican member of the House judi ary committee, promised Mr Mackay they would move to report the constitutional amendment h. the commute met In executive session to pana upon pending bills.

Vron her arrival Mrs. Mackay called on Coventor 'Hufhea and explained her mission. Governor Hughes Informed Mrs. Jliciir tr.at constitutional amendments require the Governor's sanction, b'jt went at once to a vote of the people if l-eijilHture acted- favorably upon '1 i.e. tiovernor supKeited that her nis should be devoted lo gaining- legis-la vn converts.

iiar-kay then had personal talks vlt.i trembers ot the s-enete and Assem-l i committees, which are con-t the women's suffrage question. )U-r decided converts were Assembty-rn i alters said Weimert- Chairman 1 of th Assembly Judiciary com jruve Mrs. Mackay no and neither did Speaker. Wads-wort MOTHER LOVE DIMINISHING. tc'entlst' Tellg cf Cost of Individual, isrri cf Modarn Women.

YOKK. March la "When the lnU. IJuHl Increases functional activity, the formative diminishes," Dr. Max G. fc-VMar-r, professor of Cornell University Lit School, told the women members of the fashionable Colony Club.

He lecture 1 orv "Woman Suffrage and the Path-f Condition of before the r. Sr-hiflrp described the nutritive, fi.r- H'lve I functional activities of cell 1 he nutritive, he explained, ftoreil potential energy -animalism, "i K.rtn.i'i-.e was activity by which prl.nhiisl divl-ioiis of ceils took place I re The functional was the use i.f eneri'V In action. 1 ft living organism of which wumn urti the cells." said Dr. i-1 i it i. "At fUcturbajice of correlation j.r'i t- Htiifiloiri conditions.

Women (to t.fi'omit: more active. They seem mitTrape. The sex Is alii overt 'lnleneu. tnbles ir a trc" fticl I'm decrease In the birth while other statistics show an l'irr-in In insanity snd nervous dls-e 'I i f. Ics.nn taitxht Is that the three 1 sjte have lcn disturbed.

it contend that mother love it with greater functional ao- v. It Is rnrer own law that Indl-W. liicreasis at the expense of i -i. lit there is a loss of i caiMi.t of rocr'Htlon with an lo-( It The law 1 r'l in three factors growth, de- nt nr. 1 The three a ntii- to to Kenexls.

f. .1 produce i of ir kind "in four lnys: the ele- I ttiT extreme, can produce but i k.ti 1 In a period of five years. tiro spfiuilnK too much enerfy to their functional burdens. I r- hbu.e of formative power the devotes to actlv-lv fjtu ro much b'HS p'tentlal energy i.m generative a'tivltles." lb. C.tCfD i 'n cuarasteoJ eiter- inate rats, mice, cockroacb.es, etc Hzzty tack If It '7 for use.

Detter tiaa traps, f.r it driTrs rata aai mice cut cf the ta dla. 2ei.kas23c; 16 ex. box $1.00. 1 everywhere or sent express prepaid ca receipt of price. nzit t.

a m- a a GIRL T0 BE BRIDE OF AOK ENGAGEMENT OF CLERGYMAN'S DAUGHTER IS ANNOUNCED. CAN NOT WED IN CAL FORNIA SAN FRANCISCO.1 March engagement of MUs Helen Gladys Emery, daughter of the Rev. John A. Emery, archdeacon of the Episcopal idlocese of. California, to Gunglro Aoki.

Son of the late General Aoki, of Japan. I has been announced. Both Miss Emery and her mother admit the engagement, but they refuse to give the date of the wedding, which must take place outside this State, where the marriage of Orientals and Caucasians Is forbidden. Aoki is member of one of the most distinguished Japanese families, and is said to be a relative of Viscount Aoki, who represented his country at Washington, lie is a brother of the Rev. C.

Aoki, who, has charge-of tim Episcopal Japanese mission in this city. Through the efforts of the latter Oun-glro Aoki was taken into the country home of the Emerys at Corte Madera to learn about and it was then he met Miss Emery. The prospective brldetrroom is engaged In the commission-business. I BRYAN'S DAUGHTER DIVORCED Degree la Granted Mrs. Leavitt by Judgs Cornish, of Lincoln LINCOLN.

March divorce was granted yesterday afternoon to Ruth Isryan-Leavitt, eldest daughter of W. J. Bryan, from W. H. Leavitt.

Mrs. Leavitt and her mother appeared In the court of Judge Cornish and both alleged that Leavitt had not contributed to the sup- port of his wtfe. There was no defense. The two children are given to Mrs. Leavitt i G0EEFJ -Q'liiiGliy iiicse TWO CUPS 8 cans Kvaporv or.

ated Milk. iLCZ 15c ean test fjl. Table 03C 2 cans Fancy Tomatoes lwr 3 cans new, pack Pineapple 2 1- new California Fvaporated r. Peaches 2 Ihs. new Dried Apples Iwv 3 pkg.

Uneeda, 4, r.iscuit. Full csn hest nmw Ot l'ark Ijjw ocsnyico. Tonr.w i r. i mm a a pack Mus- -sr. i(iBle l.rli SOU smm -mm AMD MUM "ir A ft.

JkjM aV kKIqM E2GS OIIFUL z2 cr in PcclLcb. Ml Grccers I cans Karly June JOc can Kvapor- ated Alilla on Walter inker's rn f' Ist 1 11 ncy 3 cans new trii r. i i Ifc any lt i. new J.lly ff white 4 Corn meal rr-fh baked Oyster 'r kors, lb I -w IV rl I 10 vf 1 TO BE BRipE OF 4 -if RUSSELL COLT MIS3 ETHE1 BARRTMORE. BOSTOT.

March 10. Miss Ethel Barrymore Is to be married 'here next Sunday to Russell Griswold Colt, eldest son of CoL Samuel Pomeroy Colt. president ot the United States Rubber Company and of the Industrial Trust Company, of Providence, R. I. V- I i I Colonel Colt, who is reputed to be worth several millions, Js much pleased with the match, and.

has announoed his Intention of making a large settlement on his son, who Is twenty-six "years of age. Miss Barrymore Is now playing in the Hollis Theater, and the ceremony la to be performed quietly in this clty. It js the intention of the actress to remain 'on the stage after her marriage. ownership. THE INDIANAPOLIS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1909.

-r- LORD GUTHRIE GIVES DECREE TO MR. STIRLING CROSS-PETITION OF AMERICAN WIFE 18 DENIED, HOMILY ON; SELFISH LIVES EDINBURGH, March 10. The sensa-tlonnl Stirling cross-dlvoroe suits were decided to-day by Lord Guthrie, who granted the husband's petition, awarded him the custody of his children and denied the cross-petition of Mrs. 8tlrllng. John Alexander Stirling, Laird of was married three years ago to Clara Elizabeth Taylor, an American show who came from New Jersey; Last fall croes-sults for divorce were filed, Mr.

Stirling naming Lord Northland and Mrs, Stirling Mrs. Alherton ss co-respondents. In giving his Judgment Lord Guthrie said the case had no legal interests and that it should not have any public interest. Moat of the evidence had been taken up with the petty questions of selfish and idle lives, which contained little or nothing romantic and little that was even mock heroic. Mr, Stirling, he said, in meeting airs.

Atnerxon, naa welcomed an introduction he should have shunned. Continuing, Lord Guthrie described the idea or a piot to get rid of Mrs. by forcing her to a guilty affection for Northland, but he thought that her letters to Lord Northland were indicative of guilty relations. Lord Northland's counsel lmmediatelv gave notice of an appeal. Both Lord Northland and Mr.

Stirling were present in court when the decision was rendered. WORKING GIRLS' HOTEL Week Will Pay for Board and Room In New York. NEW TORK, March new hotel for working girls, to be run under the aus pices of the Federation of Women's Clubs. win do openea lo-morrow. 'lne hotel.

wnicn is cauea tne city Federation Hotel. occupies the biff, old-fashioned three-story house st 43-464 West Twenty-eecond street. The bulldina has been remodeled inside. The hotel Is intended for work Ins-' rta wno maae small wages. ISO girl receiving more than 17 a.

week will a. niHe Thni MV fAll. Klv Mnn. Aam racn containing six beds. Un the second Boor are two rooms with six beds and two with four beds each, and one room on the parlor floor has four beds.

The girls will be charged ft a week for one of the Deas on me parlor floor and three good meals a day. Board and one of the beds on the two other floors will be given mem ior a weea. The hotel wtl be In charre of a matron. Miss Frances Van Duker. who will live In the hotel.

The financial part of the enterprise Is taken care of by a stock company within the federation. Mrs. iielle de Rivers, cresldent of the federa tion; Mrs. Clarence Bums, vice-president. ana Airs.

Adelaide url rnihaw are the com' mlttee in charge of the hotel. Ail tne a-lrls Itvinr In the hotel must be tn bed and have their lights out by 10 CIOCK. DIED. PLANNING WEDDING. Tic Fell Dead Talking to Fiancee Over th Telephone.

DAYTON. March funeral services for Charles -Tlce were being held in this city, yesterday, 1 It was learned that he was telephoning to his fiancee, Mr. Flora M. Bell, when he fell dead. Tlce was slvtnir instructions as to cer tain details of their wedding, which was to hav taken place that night.

They had obtained a marriage license that afternoon. Coroner 8 wisher ascertained that Tlce had relatives at Clears rirtnir. and that a legacy had been left him five years Bgo, since which time, relatives have sought his whereabouts. William F. Hamilton, of Galeton.

Pa- wrote to the mayor that he believed Tlce was his brother-in-law i and that his mother was anxiously awaiting news of her son. Mrs. Bell decided to have the hody burled In her burial lot at Fairfield, and If relatives desire to have the body removed later they may do so. MISS CROCKER CLAIMS GEMS Thinks $100,000 Necklace Recovered In Omaha Belongs to Her. OMAHA, March 10.

Another claimant has arisen for the $100,000 pearl necklace found In Omaha last week' and which was delivered to Otto C. Heinse. of New York, as having been lost by his wife. A request was received by the local police department to hold the necklace for Identification by Mies Jennie Crocker, of Ban Francisco. Hiss Crocker, who is a member of the famous Crocker family of that ciiy.

lost a peart necklace February 23 composed of fifty-three pearls of the water and even of more value than Mr. llelnie placed on the pearls i which he Identified yesterday. The Heinse necklace contained sixty-three The San I'Ysndsoo authorities were notified tha Hie necklace had been delivered to Mr, Heinse, tut there was no doubt of his poison III ALL WE EAT SAVE DULY POTATOES SO MRS. W. H.

COOLEY TELLS THE RAINY DAY 35 DOSES TAKEN IN A DAY NEW YORK. March 10. Mrs, Winnl red Harper Cooley told the members of the Rainy Day Club at their meeting in the Hotel Astor, that the "food goblins would ret 'em If they didn't watch out." She told them that the food adul terators neither slumber nor tarry, and that, while it was all right to take drugs under the doctors order, it was dangerous to mix up a lot of them "in our midst." as the bad food people wilt hand them out to us if not watched. To show how many opportunities there arc to take in bad food, Mrs. Cooley read a schedule of the amount of food eaten by one Englishwoman if she lives to be seventy years oto.

in staiioucs; are sruaranteed by a man. by the namk of Soyer, who, with a passion for facts and, perhaps, an antipathy to the female sex. compiled In her threescore years- and ten of life, according to the figures, the Englishwoman will eat 30 oxen. 200 sheep, 100 calvea, 200 lambs, ta nirs. L200 fowls.

300 turkeys. 260 pig. eons, 120 turbot, 140 salmon and 30,000 nvsters. "ThinK what a chance for typhoid germs! interpolated Mrs. cooiey.

-Mora Startling Figures. Also, she will eat 5,746 pounds of vegetables, 244 pounds of butter, 24.000 eggs, four and one-half tons of bread, an indeterminate Quantity of fruit and candy, and she will drink 3,000 gallons of tea and coffee. A IlVJkb k.W llivttuiin, must have been intended for men." eaid Mrs. Coolev. as she wound un the awful array with 548 gallons of spirits and forty-nine hogsheads of wine.

"If there is alum enough In a one-cent Dickie to kill seven frogs," asked Mrs. Cooley, "and if with a little more boracio acid it would kill a guinea pig, how many ptcKies will it taae to injure or uu a child?" That was such a stickler that no one answered- "Professor Shepard. State chemist Of South Dakota, has proved that in the day's three meals one may take in thirty-five doses of toison." continued the speaker, "and 14,000 doses in a year. Potatoes are pure and it looks as If we might nave to live on mem. Preservative Galore.

In sausages there may be found coal tar, dye and borax; bacon is cured with creosote (liquid smoke); maple sirup is made from glucose and hickory bark and contains sodium sulphite; pure oatmeal is eaten for breakfast with cream preserved with formaldehyde; blue points are preserved with powdered borax, and there is rorrnaidenyae pork and beans. is one of the worst thinas that is used, as there is poison tn the method of bleaching, and there may be alum in the baking pow der. 'So we can not saulrm out of the diffi culty by saying that we have everything pure our own kitchens, even If that was not selfish. The country Is In a ser out condition. The commission appointed by the President has reported that some chemicals are not harmful to food, thougn Dr.

Wiley has proved that they are. He is a man who could not be bought, and no one knows what he has suffered, for there is no doubt that the Board of Agriculture is against him. Applause. "But by taking pains and looking at the formulas on the wrappers and patronizing honest dealers, we can protect ourselves. Some canned goods are put up under better, conditions than they -could be in a Private kitchen.

It has been proved that things can be put up without preservatives, and we nna out me good manufacturers if we try." Mrs. weicn, or ixiioraao. was miroaucea as a woman who had voted for sixteen years. look at ner'." said irs. a.

m. Palmer, the Rainy Daisy president, "it hasn't hurt her at all." STUDY NATURE MORE TO 5 GET COLORS FOR GOWNS Mme. White Telia Why French Excel, and Says America Should Have Dressmaking School. March 10. Mme.

Elisabeth White la here with trunks of gowns im ported from Paris to attend the dress. makers' convention, which held Its first session to-day. One of tne creations dis played brought forth the question as to aprons netng worn on evening aresses, The madams exDlained: Oh. yes. that la another of the new lines you see tn Paris now.

It la a form of the church cassock. Now. here is an apron decorated with bugles, vegetable fioss and gold. This piece, including duty. cost X.

These aprons are worn both with full and plaited sides." "I hear petticoats are to be worn more this summer," somebody said. "On. of course, they are worn more In summer." Miss White replied. "Imagine the sight of a summer dress without them." An Interesting feature Is shown In the picture of the extreme Moyen Age. This1 dress can be worn lor afternoon or evening occaslona by lowering a second skirt of the same material aa the dress.

Miss White believes that America should have a college of dressmaking. "We have always been a year behind time." aald she. "The reason Paris dresses have been better than ours Is because they study nature more. Now let me ahow you this cloud gray. Here you will see flowers or blue or tne same snaae as the surrounding sky when this color cloud is seen.

French people study the woods and the birds and get their color combinations from nature, we never rouow nature, but pusxle ourselves trying to find out what colors match. "If we could have a colleare of dress making with branches in Chicago. New York and Boston we could get all the best designers and cutters together to teach American dressmakers to lead the world In making artistic dresses. CAVE IN THE ADIRONDACKS. Cavern Said to Rival Kentucky' Un derground Attraction Discovered.

SARANAC LAKE, N. March 10. Kentucky's celebrated Mammoth cave has a rival in a great Adirondack cave which has been discovered by CapC E. Thomas, of Saranac Lake, Mouth Adi rondack cave, on the top of a peak known as mountain. about three miles from Btandish.

In the opinion of Caotaln Thomas, it Is of volcanic origin. He and a companion went in about one thousand feet and expect to explore farther when they are property equipped. rney louna a succession of rooms, large and small. with passages radiating in every, direction, but all looking downward. To test the depth of some ot the great pits encountered the explorers dropped rocks.

They were able to count fifteen and twenty before the heard these rocks strike. An elk's horn was found and there waa no vegetation after going aev- enty-nve reel. WHEN A DOZEN ISNT A DOZEN PITTSBURG, March was a row at 48 Aurella street when Mrs. J. Wagner, of next came in with a dosen of, eggs and thanks and recalled that she had borrowed a dosen from Mrs, Mary Brown, at 46, some weeks ago.

Mrs. Brown announced that dosen eggs would not square matters. While she had lent her neighbor only a dozen eggs. they, were worth 60 cents a dosen at the time, while now the price Is 20 cents. MrsC Wagner announced that one dosen eggs was all she would return, and the fight started when Mrs.

Brown began to chuck the eggs at the borrower. i Later after the police had straightened -things out Alderman Young put bofFi women under bonds to keep the lf I 4'VTV II i in inn 1 A a vi ui i .1 a i Anty Drudge Lectures to a Class of Washerwomen. Anty Drudge The old way of washing takes about 2,000 rubs 1 on the washboard for the average small wash. Every rub is equal to a force of 10 pounds, so that you spend 20,000 pounds of precious life. What man does that in a day's work? "The new way you use Fels-Naptha soap and let the soap do the work.

No boiling water and but few rubs. Done in half the time and done Fels-Naptha can do the hard work; other soaps can't. Why not let Fels-Naptha do it? Follow the easy directions on the wrapper, and use lukewarm or cold water (never hot). Don't boil, or scald, a single piece. Look for the red and green wrapper.

Insist on getting it. NEW COLOR FOR HAV isMy EACH DAY IN WEEK NEW YORK. March 10. All you need to do In the future to tell the day. of the week is to look at the "lid" of the properly groomed man, if the scheme of 'a Broadway haberdasher Is adopted.

The colors of bats for each day In th week are: Monday, purple; Tuesday; a creepy shade of green; Wednesday, a riotous blue; Thursday, light brown; Friday, dark brown; Saturday, a slate color; Sunday, a rainbow effect. ELMORE REVISES HIS MONON WRECK POEM Bard of Alamo Make Three Change Which, Believes, Have Re- i vnoved All Flaw. fSpMlal to The ladlanapolta News. CRAWFORDS VTLLE. March 10.

After allowing' his poem, "Thej, Monon Wreck," to stand for a dozen years Just as- he wrote It, James Buchanan Elmore, the "Bard of Alamo," has at last Used the pruning knife in three as result of which he now. believes the poem Is without a flaw. Two lines In the original. which attracted much attention read: Quit, as cold as a frosen chunk With a lady's heart upon a stump. The bard decided, after years of ponder ing, that these two lines would have to go.

He thinks they are entirely too suggestive of the fate that befell Madame Van Rockey, an actress. who lost her life in the Monon wreca. in 1892, and whose heart waa left bleeding on the ttuitiD at tha foot of the embankment down which the train ot cars tumbled. The verse now reads; But there thsy lay on the crimson snow Their hearts hare eeased to ebb and Their, manrtal forma are cold In death The awful shock has drawn their breath. Another change the Bard has made is slight, but he believes it keeps up the sentiment of the poem much more satis factorily, it is maae in tne nrst line ot the couplet that read; And I hear him calmly for te say; "Cut, oh, cut, my ls awayl" Although as 'a matter of fact the man In the wreck did calmly tell the rescuers to cut off his leg and save his life, Elmore thinks it hardly sounds just like the truth when read in the poem.

By cnang-lng the word "calmly" to "moanlng.v he believes the right idea 13 much better expressed. In Its amended therefore, the verse reads: And yond.r in th. wrck I. see A man that's pinioned down by the kne And I hear him moaning, and to "Cut. oh, cut, my leg away." The third change in the poem is made In one of the first few stansas.

He has changed an expression "as fine as flies" to "as flames arise." This makes the changed verse read: A silence; fell upon the crew As if they knew not what to do. Then cam. sad and lamenting cries From a wreck of cars as Hatnsa arlsa. The poem, as finally corrected. Is one of the half hundred or more included in the contents of "Love Among the.

Mistletoe" and other poems, the third edition of Which Is lust off the press. The third edition contains 50i copies, and practically all of them have been sold by subscription. -This makes in all 2,000 copies that have been sold. The book was originally published In 1S99, the second edition appearing In 1908. nitre t'S it Counterfeits cf Fels-Napilia like ri pi nr? i 01-a-U Vnkb The Graceful CJew Gprinnr Gkirto These new Spring Skirts are of Panamas and fancy wSrsteds, and are tailored In fancy plaited and strap trimmed designs and gored effects; estremelv arraeefuf in their hanar.

and each price represents a saving to you were you to buy skirts of equal Prises, 53.00, S4.Q0, 05.00, 00.00 VE MAKE ALL ALTERATION 3 FREE Thli Is tha Start That Safes YGU BELGIAN SCHOOLCHILDREN HAVE TO BE NEAT AS A PIN Every Child Unabl to Go Home for Luncheon Must Carry It in a Ba. ket Instead of a Paper. LONDON. March 10. Interesting comparisons between Infant schools in England and abroad are made In a special report issued by the board of education.

In France and Belgium the child must be sent clean. Its hair must be well brushed, its shoes cleaned, its stockings drawn up. its linen changed on Mondays and Thursdays, and failure to comply with these regulations means dismissal. Th regulations about the children's dinners are more hygienic than In England. Every child who has to stay at school through the day Is obliged to bring Its food properly in a basket.

The baskets are kept neatly labeled on a special shelf In an airy "Our children," says the report, -are still bringing their dinners in dirty pieces of newspaper." Both France and Belgium are omitting reading, writing and arithmetic from the subjects taught in the. Infant schools. Skipping and ball games take up a considerable part of the school time. ROBBED HER ON THE ROOF. Masked Man Got $200 from a Model Tenement Rent Collector.

NEW YORK, March 10. While Mrs. Anna Schroeder, a collector for the New York City and Suburban Homes Company, was collecting rents in the block of model tenements bounded by Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth street and Avenue A and the East river, she had occasion to cross from one tenement to another over a roof. On the roof a masked man robbed her of her sachet, containing $juu. She says the man wore a rap such as is used by street car conductors.

Mrs. Schroeder pursued the man downstairs after he had taken her bag, but he disappeared somwhere on the way. Later, detectives arrested Harry Skinner, of 14S2 Avenue. A. on suspicion that he waa the robber.

Skinner's home is in the block of model tenements. He asserted his Innocence, and so far as could be learned the police had no evidence of his guilt except that ho once worked on a street i i CI I55ii itioiiiDniuAjt irluomr fmS)gl crJ. The cnlj part cl Fels-Xsplha sec? HID ill: I -sa 1 aa-CSSrb DVA -t tea tc Is Fels-Naptha Is a laundry soap, but it doesn't stop at that. It is also a way of washing clothes. Fels-Naptha soap and the Fels-Naptha wa together wrash clothes quicker, easier and better than they can be washed with any other soap or by any other way.

Fels-Naptha cuts out the washboiler, the hot water and steam, and all the hard labor. The Fels-Naptha way is so easy and simple, you'd think we wouldn't nave to urge it on womankind. But a pood many women seem to that Fels-Naptha is just soap, and if we didn't say something about it, they'd use it as they wouid use ''just soap." This would be like paying some one to do the wash and then do it yourself. ccsstertelt cssey, trt ivcrCIessJ Gfricily The materials of these waists are percales and madras. In beautiful colorings, with ruffs of same material -and collar ot white.

They are exquisitely tailored and as jaunty i as you please; all new; worth hO. Special for -Thursday and ljL2 Friday at, www merit elsewhere. 124 W. Waskingtea St. ONE DOG SAVES A LIFE; ANOTHER LOSES A LIFE Shepherd Brings Aid to Injured Boy, and Scotch Colli Killed In Line of Duty.

(Spwlal to Th. Indlanspolto Nm.) MONROE CITY, March 10. "Snip," a shepherd dog owned by Curtis Snyder, a farmer living near here, saved the life of Ival Snyder, Mr. Snyder's seven-year-old son. Accompanied by th the boy was coming home from a visit to his grandmother's when he slipped while climbing a barb wire fence and was badly cut.

the sharp barbs of the wire literally cutting his face to tatters. Th boy ran only a short distance toward his home before he swooned from loss of blood. "Snip" scented something wrong at once and began to bark In a peculir manner. Neighbors heard the dog and were led by bis barking to the injured boy's aid. -t NASHVILLE.

March lo! A Scotch collie, dog, valued at $75 and belonging to Ralph Fleener, was killed by an In. dlanapolls Southern freight train yesterday at Chitwood crossing while driving stock home. The dog succeeded In clearing the track of the stock, but 'was himself caught Just as he hurried the last animal across.1 Mr. Fleener purchased Ihs dog at the State Fair last year. PREHISTORIC'PUCK FOUND.

Skeleton is Estimated to BeOnly About Three Million Year Old. NEW YORK. March 10. A complete skeleton of a prehistoric duck, estimated by Dr. H.

C. Bumpus, of th American Museum of Natural History, to be S.0O0,-000 years old, has Just been acquired by the museum. The specimen is so well preserved that the" greater part of the skin of th head, body, and legs may be seen. It was found near Lane Creek, Wyo. "Mummies of, Egypt 1,000 or 4.000 years old," said Dr.

Bumpue, "are considered to be of respectable antiquity, and still more venerable are the mammoths found burled in the frosen tundra of Siberia and Alaska, but even the mammoths, tens or thousands of years old. are only tures of yesterday compared with the tlqulty of, this dinosaur mummy." 1 r- 1 If i I Just tha Thing for Thoro You Received" ,1. 21-221-Z2S E. Waaklagt.a St full sized, silver plated, of exclu-; sive rose pattern, in French the newest jtyle, made and warranted by Wm. Rogers Son, I 13 YCLT.3 If yon send ten cents and the top of ajar cf 1 C.mMnv'a txtraet el Be Genuint hat blue signature.

We want you to know br trial that it's the most delicious, and far-soing ex. tract: teaspoon ful makes cup of best beef tea: it's Jut as economical for cookinv. For 20 cents and a Liebig top we taail this fine fork, full size, to mf-tcb spoon. No advertising oa cither. Address, Dept.

CORNE1LLR PAVID ft 120 Hudson Kew York. lc: an Li ncsM is th watchword for a and vigor, comfort and beauty. Mankind Is learning not only th but tt-s luxury of cleanliness. SAPOI.IO. wh'h has wrought such changes, la home, announces her sister triumph HAND S-Al1 I FOR TOILET AND BATH A special soap which" energizes whole body, starts th circulation rl leave an xhllratlnj glow.

Ail ear and, druggist. Coffo may the cause of your Leave off and cs i There a reason." KIDNEY 'p" TROUBLE 00-t' kBOW It. If yr want sud remit "Utk by Dr. Kilmer. if? and collar b' mmU rr.

also paoiphlrt t.i!.n nni out If you hav. ki-ine r-3 1 1 1 I I1 1 KILLS f- I ltthlr.j. burnlni. mrh.r with pf r-. lion sr.

instantly p61Iy cured, tn th. pf ea.ru, by warm baths i CVTICVRA 60AP and snointinn of CUTICURA rrn a 1 UJl MnNT. This tr'Ummt la eiual7 ei for ml. rough i or r. jra to At-a Tcrir or Tfr cat t- r.nt.

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