The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, June 18, 1909, Page 12, Image 12

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The Commoner.
VOLUME 9, NUMBER 23
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Edward Evorott Halo, chaplain of
ilio Unltod StatoB senate, dlod at his
homo in Roxbury, Mass. Ho was 87
years of ago. An Associated Press
dispatch says: "As an author Dr.
Halo's fame rests on his short sto
ries, such as 'Tho Man Without a
Country as an instigator of tho
social uplift, tho work of tho two
groat organizations, tho Lond-a-I-Jand
club and tho King's Daughters
will always add to his renown. As
n minister and pastor his half cen
tury In tho pulpit of tho South Con
gregational church and his preach
ing in many othor churches woro
prolific of wIbo spiritual inspiration,
while as a historian his writings
havo bocomo authorities. It was Dr.
Hale who, twenty years boforo its
consummation, prodictod a world
wldo peaco tribunal; it was Dr. Halo
who uphold Garrison and Phillips
in their anti-slavery work; it was
Dr. Halo, whoso bonovolent counsol
brought comfort to tho sick and
wounded soldiers of tho battlefield
of tho civil war, as a member of tho
sanitary commission, and it was Dr.
Halo who gavo to tho world tho fa
mous stanza: 'Look up and not
down; Look forward and not back;
Look out and not in Lend a
hand.' "
An Associated Press dispatch, un
der dato of Washington, Juno 10,
says: "Complete church emulation
Is a good thing and that there should
be In this country no invidious dis
tinctions in elections because of re
ligious beliefs wero tho keynotes of
an address made tonight by Presi
dent Tnft before tho congress of Ro-
Can't Do It
Heart afCoctlonn will not got wall of
themselves; nolthor do thuy remain In
active. If tho causo is not removed,
they contlnuo to grow In number and
soverlty.
They are tho oxitgrowth of exhausted
norvo force, and tho heart can not stop
to rest, as do tho othor organs, and
must contlnuo to struggle until com
plotoly disabled, and that's tho end.
On the very first Indications of heart
troublo you can stop all progress and
effect a cure by tho use of
Dr. Miles' Heart Cure
ft0,.1??? efCetit,V0 hGart remedy known.
It builds up, feeds and strengthens the
nerves and muscles of tho heart and
restores It to perfect health.
"I had serious heart troublo, for two
"US ln,y 1,fQ floomed t0 hang by a
thread, when my attention was called
foi1?1' MJ.,oa Heart Cure. I commenced
talcing tho Heart Curo and Nervine,
and In two months they restored mo
to comparatively erood health."
REV. W. A ROBINS. Port Elgin, Ont.
The first bottlo will benefit, if not,
tho druggist will roturn your money
man Catholic missionaries, now in
session In this city. After being In
troduced by Father Doylo, who re
ferred to tho president, quoting an
other, as tho 'great harmonizer,' Mr.
Taft, who had been applauded loud
ly as ho entered tho hall, was greet
ed by an outburst of applause. Ho
spoke principally of tho work of set
tling in the Philippines tho difficul
ties caused by the close relationship
there of church and government. Ho
expressed tho opinion that in the end
tho church would bo strengthened by
tho change there, as freedom and
toleration and tho separation of
church and state havo strengthened
tho church in this country.' Refer
ring to his visit to Pope Leo XIII
and the subsequent settlement of the
church problems in the Philippines,
ho declared that only a few extre
mists in this country had found any
oxcoptions thereto. 'But I venture
to say,' added tho president, 'that
if this visit to Romo had occurred
forty years ago it would have sunk
any administration responsible for it,
which only goes to show that this
country is broad enough for ell de
nominations to work together -for
the fatherhood of God and the
brotherhood of man and for all of
us to llvo here as American citizens,
and that wo should make no invidi
ous distinctions in elections, because
of religious belief.' "
The domocrats of San Francisco
have nominated. Francis. J. Honey to
succeed himself as district attorney.
The republicans will do likewise.
J. F. Harms has resigned as a1
meat inspector in the packing houses
of Bast St. Louis, 111. in a letter
written to Secretarv of AerHmiH-nr
Wilson, Harms demands an investi
gation of meat inspection methods.
An Associated Press dispatch says:
"Harms declares he resigned because
he could not tolerate the conditions.
Inspectors in charge of the bureau
of animal industry are too lenient
with tho packers, he says, and as
serts that no animus prompted his
letter. After assorting that 'U. S.
Inspected and Passed,' as it appears
on products of all tho packing houses
is meaningless because of the inade
quacy of the inspection, Harms Bays
in part in the letter: 'The inspec
tion at the National stock yards, Illi
nois, is costing tho people approxi
mately $100,000 a yeaT, and it is
not actually worth $1 to them. I
have seen from 1,200 to 1,500 pounds
ul iara spiuou on the floor and which
ran down into an open sewer in the
floor, the sewer outlet being quickly
blocked and said lard taken up from
the floor and out of the sewer, both
1a roofing discovery
IT'S FREE -ASK FOR IT
iBSSajsMKfefi
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vnnV, i;ir"7rY"r "".58" i" vico. ItCOBtS
VsDS$Z55? Affi
j5SSS3?mSKSyrana
t .4 n;.i ,"" !"V v"?" uKpcwhtAU KOOFINQ."
K?SJS.3KS
WE CONTROL THIS luucurmu ...JL ..T '""""?"
ThmiM.,fcui- '"':;:; i7.;.7""rw"w T. tt without cost
r nuko any arran5em.nL for ur roof. M Tu. tel ,u ffiffi&ta,Sri'?C,P,rta- Bofortt oa
pjo ot "Orcon Flag Ilooflne." It U adapt.d to anyYlnd ol a roof f Tl E&A,0. Wi" B,I mV 3roa 'r "-
don't do anjthlnc until o5 know abm.i 11,1. w?J. ,?.. ?t!?.I'?"l ? ' henhouio to inanilon. Don't watt-
of which woro unclean and unsani
tary from walking over and the
sputum and filth which naturally
finds its way into any sewer. Your
doctors, Clancey and Meadors, passed
the same to tho packers over tho
protest of the inspector on that floor
and it went to tho public markets
'U. S. Inspected and Passed.' Harms
citeB several specific instances of lax
inspection methods, declaring that
meat condemned by sub-inspection
has been later released to tho pack
ers by higher, officials in the service."
President Taft has presented gold
medals, tho gift of the American
Aero club, to tho Wright brothers.
The board of army engineers has
reported that the proposed fourteen
foot deep water project from St.
Louis to the Gulf would cost $128,
000,000 for construction, and $6,
000,000 every year for maintenance
and is therefore undesirable.
John D. Ryan has been elected
president of the Amalgamated Cop
por company to succeed the late
Henry H. Rogers.
Senator-elect Lorimer of Illinois,
has decided not to take his seat in
tho senate until after the house has
concluded its work on the tariff bill.
The Iowa State Manufacturers' as
sociation adopted resolutions en
dorsing Senators Dolllver and Cum
mins for the stand the two senators
are taking in tho tariff discussion.
Judge Speer, in the United States
circuit court ordered the sale of the
Savannah, Augusta & Northern rail
road on August 3 to satisfy a claim
of $280,500 by W. 'J. Oliver.'
The Porte has requested Great
Britain, France, Russia and Italy,
the protecting powers of the island
of Crete, to reconsider their decision
to evacuate this territory July 31,
next.
Five Russian students were sen
tenced at Dresden to terms of im
prisonment ranging from one to
eight weeks on the charge of havinc
spread revolutionary propaganda
r.mong students.
The federal grand jury at New
York began an investigation into the
methods by which the American
Sugar Refining company acquired
control of the Pennsylvania Sugar
Refining company.
Captain John M. Bowyer assumed
the superintendency of the naval
academy at Annapolis.
Emperor Francis Joseph took paTt
in the customary Corpus Christ!
procession.
The transport Thomas arrived.
from Manila, bringing the Ninth
cavalry, after two years service in
the Philippines.
A Nebraska postmasters' conven
tion in session at Lincoln elected the
following officers: President, E. M.
Sizer, Lincoln; vice presidents, B F.
Thomas, Omaha, first class; A. H.
Hollingsworth, Beatrice, second
class; J. H. Tower, Sutton, third
class; W. C. Cox, Waco, fourth class.
W. J. Cook of Blair was re-elected
secretary-treasurer. Tho nnmmiH-ono
selected to attend the interstate
postmasters' convention to be held
in Kansas City,Mo., during the fall
of 1909, is as follows: B. R. Sizer,
B. F. Thomas, J. R. Hays, Frank
McCartney, ' Lew Shelley, Carl
Kramer, W. J. Cook, A. H. Hollings
worth, C. H. Smith, M, A. Brown
Ira B. Tash, G. W. Sen reck, Dr H
C. Miller, G. A. Allen, Jacob Fisher'.
W. G, Dorsey, J. H, Tower, J. F
Griffith, A. A. Hyers, G. D. Crook,
T. J. Taylor, C. O. Turner, Jbei Ea
ton, Edward Harp, J. M. Palmer, A.
C. Monteba, W. E. Morgan, John
Lett.
Ed. Cullen, for thirty-five years
business manager for tho Robinson
circus, is dead.
The trial of Broughton Branden
burg, the magazine writer, now in a
New York prison on the charge of
fraud in connection with the bogus
Grover Cleveland-Taft letter, was
commenced Juno 15.
Ed. Callahan, former sheriff of
Breathitt county, Kentucky, was shot
and mortally wounded from ambush
while standing near his store at
Crockettsville. He is the last of tho
Hargis feudists.
Robert Bacon, former secretary of
state, will at the close of the present
year succeed Henry White as am
bassador to France.
A New York dispatch carried by
the Associated Press follows: "The
$230,000,000 suit of the Pennsyl
vania Sugar Refining company, the
so-called trust, was settled out of
court. The case had been on trial
for two weeks in the United States
district court. Terms of the settle
ment were not made public and
counsel for both plaintiff and de
fendant declined to discuss the
agreement other than to say that an
understanding had been reached and
that perhaps a statement would be
forthcoming. The plaintiff charged
in effect that it had been driven out
of business. Witnesses testified that
Adolph Segal, of Philadelphia, con
trolling power of the Pennsylvania
Sugar Refining company, borrowed
from Gustava Kissell $1,250,000, for
which he gave as security 26,000
shares of the Pennsylvania Sugar
Refining company, together with a'1
voting trust certificate for the same,
which was to run until the repay
ment of the loan."
At a meeting of the city commit
tee of the municipal democracy,
New York City, the following reso
lution was unanimously adopted:
"Whereas, eight out of the ten dem
ocratic congressmen of New York
City -"Fitzgerald, Harrison, Fornes,
Riordan, Goldfogle, Conry, Goulden
and Lindsay showed their recre
ancy to democratic principles by aid
ing Cannon in the organization of
the house of representatives; and,
Whereas, in defiance of the princi
ples of the democratic platform,
these men are lending their aid to
the adoption of tariff schedules
which oppress the consumer whoso
interests they were pledged to pro
tect; Be it resolved, that we de
nounce these men as traitors to
democracy, and declare that they.
have outlawed themselves so far as
election to any position of public
trust is concerned, and we pledge
ourselves, should any of these men
seek election to any public office, to
use our best efforts for their defeat."
Colonel Alexander K. McClure,
for years known the world ovej a
an American newspaper man, died at
his home near Philadelphia. For
many years he was edItor of the
Philadelphia Times. At the time of
his death he was an employe of tho
Pennsylvania supreme court.
Grace B. Guggenheim, the di
vorced wife of William Guggenheim,
head of the smelter trust, is suing
in a Chicago court to have the di
vorce set aside.
A Fairmount, W. Va., dispatch
carried by the Associated Press
says: "With the counsel table piled
with knive$, revolvers and other
a'r
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