The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, December 18, 1908, Page 15, Image 15

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DECEMBER 18, 1908
The Commoner.
son, Alexander Graham Bell and
Representative John Dalzell.
The board of regents, of which the
presiding officer ex-oflleio, is presi
dent Roosevelt, Is constituted as fol
lows: Chancellor, Melville W. Ful
ler, chief justice of the supreme
court; Vice President Charles W.
Fairbanks, -Senators Shelby, M. Cul
lom, Henry Cabot Lodge and Augus
tus 0. Bacon, Representatives John
Dalzell, James R. Mann and William
M. Howard, Citizens James B. An
gell, Ann Arbor, Mich; Andrew D.
White, Ithaca, N. Y.; John B. -Henderson,
Washington, D, C; Alexan
der Graham Bell, Washington;
Charles F. Choate, Boston; Judge
George Gray, Wilmington, Del.
While President Roosevelt will pay
his personal expenses and those of
his son, "these are trifling compared
with the whole cost of the expedi
tion, which may reach $25,000. Con
gress appropriated $100,000 last
year to defray expenses of adding to
the collection of specimens of the In
stitution. Director Walcott was asked today
if he had contemplated an African
expedition before the president made
up his mind to go hunting.
MI heard of the president's plan
last summer. I was asked to co
operato wijth him, as we had long
wanted &" collection f rom ' Af ri'da in
Char eoal Purifies
Mr '
,U.-if.Kr
Any. Breath
Andiii'llts IPurest Form Has Long
BeeUv Known as the Greatest .
:M"A : ''fins'. Absorber "' '.
I'; c !-'. P'.i.. . -v a.i.. . ,.
Purojfwillow charcoal will oxidize
almost'.any odor and render it sweet
and pure. , A-panfui in a foul cellar
will absorb ' deadly fumes, for char
coal absorbs one hundred times its
volume in gas.
The, s, ancients 'knew the value -of
charcoal and administered it in cases
of. illness, especially pertaining to
the stomach. In England today char
coal poultices are used for ulcers,
boils, et$f., while some physicians in
Europe .'claim to cure many skin dis
eases by covering the afflicted skin
with charcoal powder.
Stuarts' Charcoal Lozenges go into
the mouth and transfer fbul odors at
once into oxygen, absorb noxious
gases and acids, and when swallowed
mix with the digestive juices and
stop gas; making, fermentation and
decay.
By their gentle qualities they con
trol beneficially bowel action and
stop diarrhoea and constipation.
Bad breath simply can not exist
when charcoal is used. There are
no ifs or ands about this statement.
Don't take our word for it, but look
into the matter yourself. Ask your
druggist or physician, or better still,
look up charcoal in your encyclope
dia. The beauty of Stuart's Char
coal Lozenges is that the highest
pharmaceutical expert knowledge ob
tainable has been used to prepare a
lozenge that will give to man the
best form of charcoal for use.
Pure willow and honey is the re
sult. Two or three after meals .and
at bedtime sweeten the Tireath, stop
decay of the teeth, aid the digestive
apparatus and promote perfect bowel
action. ' They- enrich the supply of
oxygen to the system and thereby re
vivify the blood and nerves.
Stuart's " Charcoal Lozenges are
sold everywhere in vast quantities,
thus they must have merit. Every
druggist carries them, price, twenty
five cents per box, or send us your
name -and address and we will send
you a trial package by: mail, free.
Address F. A. Stuart Co., 200 Stuart
Bldg., Marshall, Mich.
the museum," he replied.
"If the president wants his per
sonal expenses paid," said a member
of congress tonight, "I am willing
to vote for providing a' one-way ticket
to the darkest place in Africa. I do
not believe the house would give the
money for a round-trip ticket."
BOOKS RECEIVED
The Bank and the Treasury.
Bank capitalization and the problem
of elasticity, by Frederick A. Clove
land, Ph. D., professor of finance in
the school of commerce, accounts
and finance, New York University.
Longmans, Green & Co., 91 and 93
Fifth Ave., New York. Price $2.00
net.
Which College for the Boy? Lead
ing types in American education by
John Corbin. Houghton, Mifflin &
Co., Boston and New York; $1.50
net. .
Paths to the Heights. By Sheldon
Leavitt. Thomas Y. Crowell & Co.,
Publishers, New York; $1.00 net.
The United States in Scripture.
(Painphlet;) By Rev. J. W. Sandell,
Magnolia, Miss.- Price 25 cents.
The Law of the Federal and State
Constitutions of the United States.
With an historical study of their
principles. A chronological table of
English social legislation and a com
parative digest of the constitutions
qf the forty-six states, by Frederic
jesup Stimson.' Boston Book -Co.,
Boston, Mass.
, National and Social Problems. By
Frederic Harrison. The MacMillan
Company, New York;
Government by the People.' The
1'aws and customs regulating the
election system and the formation
and control of political parlies in
he: United States. By Robert II.
Fuller. The MacMillan Co., New
York. Price $1.00 net.
! The New Encyclopedia of Socral
Reform. Edited by W. D. P. Bliss.
Entirely revised and reset. Large
octavo. Price, cloth, $7.50; sheep,
9.50; half morocco, $12.00; full
morocco, $14.00; all net. Published
by Funk & Wagnalls Co., 44-60 East
23rd St., New York.
Incentives for Life, Person and
Public. By James M. LUdlow, D. D.,
Litt. D. Fleming H. Revell Co.,
Chicago and New York. Price $1.25
net.
Get Rich Quick Wallingford. A
cheerful account? of the rise and fall
of an American business buccaneer.
By George Randolph Chester. Henry
Altemus Co., Philadelphia, Pa. Cloth,
illustrated, $1.50.
The Young Malefactor. A study
in juvenile delinquency, its causes
and treatment. By Thomas Travis,
Ph. D. With an introduction by the
Hon. Ben B. Lindsay, judge of the
Denver juvenile court. Thomas Y.
Crowell & Co., Publishers, New York.
Price $1.50 net.
Lawless Wealth. The origin of
some great American fortunes. By
Charles Edward Russell. B. W.
Dodge & Co., New York.
The People and Their Property.
By Edwin B. Jennings. Broadway
Pub. Co., oisb iiroaaway, ew xurn..
Barham Beach, a poem of regener
ation. By Julia Ditto Young, of Buf
falo N. Y. Published by the Floyd
Genthner Press, 35 Exchange St.,
Buffalo, N. Y.
The Reward of Capital. By Moses
Franklin, Grand Junction, Colo.
Price 25 cents.
The Case Against Socialism. A
handbook for speakers and candi
dates. With a prefatory letter by
the Rt. Hon. A. J. Balfour. The
Macmillan Co., New York. Price
$1A Little Land and a Living. By
Bolton Hall. With a letter of intro
duction by Willam Borsodi. The Ar
cadia Press, New York.
A War of Words, between Presi
dent Roosevelt and J. Pierpont Mor
gan concerning railroad, tariff and
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that stretches true and ttVhr
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Made of materials selected and tested
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The Omaha WorldHerald
A11L.Y BDITI5D i-f NKVVSY l-l DKMOCKATIO
Our Special Offer
Publlshero' Our Price
Price. With The
Commoner.
Dnllr World-ncrald 4.00 W
Dally World-Herald, Kxccpt ShuAhj 3)8 35
Scral-Weekly Wprld-Herald. ........ .. XO lg
SEND SUHSCfllPTIOJVS NOW TO ,
THE COMMONER,, Lincoln, Nebraska vi
trust questions and the panic of
1907. Supposed arguments between
President Roosevelt and J. Pierpont
Morgan, who met in Washington
twice in 1907 to discuss industrial
questions. By Bonum Meritum.
Published by M. A. Donohoe & Co.,
Chicago, 111.
Roosevelt and the Republic. By
John W. Bennett. Broadway Pub
lishing Co., 835 Broadway, New
York-
ThP Maimet. A romance or the
battles of modern gianta. By Al
fred O. Crozler. Funk & Wagnalls
Co., 44-00 East 23rd St., New York.
Price ?1.50.
The Story of a Country Town.
By B. W. Howe, Atchinson, Kati,
Houghton, Mifflin & Co., Boston and
New York.
Released. A poem by Alice Liv
ingstone Eagan. Broadway Pub.
Co., 835 Broadway, N. Y. Price 50
cents.
The Mysteries of Crystal Science,
the Science of Higher Thought. By
J. Hazel Curtlss. Broadway Pub.
Co., 835 Broadway, New York. Price
U.Q0.
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