WAR SPEECH — WILLIAM HOPES SOR PEACE. BUT IS PREPAREO FOR WAR. - A ONLY TWO FACTORS GIVING FAINTEST HOPE OF AVERT ING CENERAL CONFLICT Austria and Russia Are Negotiating, and France and England Are Using Utmost Endeavor. K«-r is The German emperor made * war .peach to the people of Berlin in which be eapressed the hope that if he wa> unable to induce bis oppo nents to maintain pence he would wield the sword and show his ene mies waat it means to provoke Ger Bat) lie emperor has summoned the r« irfa.ia* to meet at the Royal Palace wad bear the decision of the emperor and the Handesrath. and if neces-aiy to vote a war credit. Kite thousand persons assembled ta front of the palace and cheered the emperor and empire. During the denwiti-1 ralion Emperor William ap I penreci la a window and addressed its subjects a* follows: Fateful Hour Falls, i :aleful hour has fallen for Ger ms t" Knrtou* people everywhere are com prying us to our just defence. The sword has ir-eti forced into our hands “1 hope that if my effort* at the laat hour do nc: succeed in bringing our opponents to see eye to eye with us and in maintaining the peace we aha* with God. help, no wield t ie sword that we shall restore it U its sheath asala with honor ‘ W ar would demand of us an enor mous ancrif.ee in property and life, hot we should show our enemies what it means to provoke Germany. tain any accurate knowledge of what military operation are going on in Sort la. All code telegrams are re fined. In short all Etfopean nations are becoming isolated from each each other by railway and telegraph. Many American travelers have been help up by the suspension of interna tional trains. The withdrawal of three famous German yachts from the Cowes re gatta is significant. The include the • trperor's Mettor and Krupp's Ger mania \li countries 1 ik-• Iy to be involved in wer have prohibited the export of u an> prod icts. and ail the stock ex KAISER WILHELM William. Emperor of Germany, really will decide whether the pres ent war will be confined to Austria and Servia or whether it will be a European conflict. ■ hang* -s in England and Scotland are cosed. The European state banks haw- ra >ed their rates and the Bank of England rate has been doubled. American Officers Recalled. Geneva. Switzerland.—A number of American naval officers on leave in Switzerland have been recalled on or ders from Washington. The Swiss government has ordered a partial mobilization and the troops are ready • i defend the neutrality of Swiss ter rtory. FRONTIERS OF DISPUTING NATIONS. And now I commend you to God Go to chare:: and kneel before God and pray lor Ills help for our gallant army." Mart>a< Law Proclaimed. k decree proclaiming martial law and Lie prohib turn of publication of neaa o! the movements of German troops and aar material has been is sued. The proclamation announces mili tary measures on the frontiers, the armed protection of the railroads, postal and railroad services except for military purpose* Lndnti There are only t wo factors that g»»e the faintest hope of avert lag a general European war -first. Russia and Austria are engaged again in direct negotiations; second, both Great Britain and France are using their almost endeavors in favor of pence. CM the other hand Russia has or dered a general mobilisation and Ger many has declared a state of siege, which is undoubtedly a prelude to. if tt dues not cover m bilUat:on. France has not ye* mobilized. but cabinet councils, which have been in neswhm. issued d»ere»s establishing a moratorium and taking other action, which could ualy he determined upon the eve of aar Unofficially the French army » being virtually mob Code Telegram Refused. t'omuukra'km across Europe has We* rut off and there Is a universal appitrai •<* of the censorship, with the result that it s Impossible to oh Eritor.* Calmly Face War. fxmiior. — Facing the most perilous epoch in their history since they shivered before the spec;re of Napole onic invasion, lie English people are Uie calmest nation in Europe. .They have ft !t the decision that whether Urt-at Britain was to be drawn into a genera: European war was hanging in the balance: they believe it is a prob anility ra'her than a possibility. There is no mistaking the fact that «Mb the excepTion of a minority of peace advocates whose voice is hardly heard, and seems to carry little weieh!. the nations mind is recon ciled to war. I ner® have been no demonstrations, no flag waving, no music hall patriot inn. >ur there is apparent among all classes a sober and grim determina ticn if the government declares that the nat:on's interests and obligations require it to lak® up arms side by side with Russia and France, to see •he business through to the bitter end. The belief of the average man is 'hat the existence of the whole of Europe as an armed camp, nervous and jealous, could have but one cul minaticn and if the hour for a general settlement has struck there will be no flinching. New York Stock Market Clcses. New \ ork - Stock exchanges irj many cities in the I nited States, in eluding New York, closed as a result I cf the European situation. -Watchful Waiting - Takh Japa's a'tttade n the crisis ; Bar hr described as one of watchful waiun* "* Should Great Britain be War iBioised ia
to extend its influence in Ana. A xm »cn has been made here ■hat Japan aid the Tailed States si u vhane etsaj m« diation in the Btipropean crisis. The ljrst Japanese fleet is lying ia Tckio bay. The second fleet is en gazed in Icrpedo practice oft the coast of Korea. Rig.-. Rut^ia. Martial law hss : en proclaimed over Bolderaa and the month of the Prina river and its vicinity. Pup*.i Ordered ts Leave. London - AD forms, papi.fi at the hsc l> traie'K* pasfOj <»S-h* tram* i loaded with German euJClir* solasj aaird Lie French frontier The hrh*re» and t*t «h»’ t^ea were dearly |OiM ne4 >«i«b«* r—. j*evaiLd in ail the town* ia the district where it was understood the -choota were to be convened into military hospitals. Try to Rush Cordon. ! arc -Notwithstanding the order ©£ the government prohibiting an an ti-war meeting, called by the revolu tionary labor organization, thousands of workingmen assembled and tried to rush u>e errdons of police in order to enter the meeting places. Tierce wrimmag?* entaed. and 250 of the rioter* were arreatcd. FOR THE BUSY MANj — NEWS EPITCME THAT CAN SOON | BE COMPASSED. MANY EVENTS ABE MENTIONED ' * I — Home and Foreign Intelligence Coi* deneed Into Two and Four Line Paragraphs. WASHINGTON. Information from democratic lead- j ers in congress th^,t adjustment might , be expected abou tAugust 25. led President Wilson to begin laying J plans for his vacation. • • • An amendment revolutionizing the j conduct of the government reelama- | tion service was ritten into the irri gation btH in the house by a vote of 178 to 40. • • • Money from the federal treasury | will be deposited in national banks throughout the country again this fall : to facilitate the movement of crop* 1 •nd promote business generally. * • * Members of congress are hearing j from their constituents, urging them to get through with their legislative ! business as soon as possible and come ; home to look after their political ; fences. * • • President Wilson has nominated Clarence W. Ashford of Honolulu to be first Judge of the first circuit court, anil William E. Edings, also of Hon olulu. to be judge of court of the sec ond circuit in Hawaii. • * • Secretary Bryan, with the approv al of the president, has urged mem bers of the foreign relations commit tee to take favorable action on the twenty new peace treaties sent to the senate last week. « • • Congress passed the last two big general appropriation bills of the ses sion. the sundry civil and general de ficiency measures. But two supply bills, the Indian and river and harbor bills, remain to be passed. . * • * \ new breathing spell was vouch safed the homesteaders of the semi arid west through amendments made In the house of representatives to a senate bill to extend the time from ten to twenty years in which to make water right payments. • * • Satisfied that Paul M. Warburg of New York will be confirmed as a member of the Federal Reserve beard following his appearance before the senate banking committee. Presi dent Wilson will proceed immediately to choose a successor on the board to Thomas D. Jones, whose nomination was withdrawn. DOMESTIC. The two Australian tennis cracks were victorious over their German op ponents at Pittsburg. Efforts are being made by the T*nited States to influence General Carranza to bring about an immediate armistice in Mexico. • • • ‘‘Home Run" Baker of Philadelphia has pounded his way into a tie for the batting leadership of the American league. • » • With a crack four inches deep ex tending from rail to water line in her starboard bow, the Red Star liner Zeeland arrived at New York bring ing a story of a collision in a dense fog in mid-ocean. » • • The Boston. Cape Cod and New York canal, connecting Buzzards bay with Massachusetts bay and enabling coastwise vessels to avoid the dan gerous passage around wreck-strewn Cape Cod, was opened. • • • Two thousand girls, members of the bathing suit-makers' union of New York, have decided that a higher wage scale must be paid. The execu tive committee of the union at New York voted to call a strike, the de mand for an increased wage scale having been refused by the employers. • • • The convention of the western fed eration of miners went on record in favor of amalgamation with the united mine workers of America. Action ta ken by the cconvention provides that a joint committee of three from each organizaztion shall prepare a plan of merger to be submitted to the mem bers by referendum. • • • The failure of federal mediation to bind the ninety-eight railways west of Chicago and 55.000 members of their engine crews nearer agreement on the question of increased wages have been announced in Chicago. • • * The seamship Huron of Detroit, sailing from Cleveland to the sea through the north channel, with sixty j passengers, mostly tourists, ran j aground in a dense fog cn a shelving rock a few miles from the lighthouse at Clapperton island, twenty miles west of Little Current. Ont. m m m Thirty-seven Indictments changing murder, arson and riot were returned by the grand Jury investigating the riots and destruction of five acres of the Bache-Denman coal syndicate at Prairie Creek. Arkansas. • • • Announcement was made at Phila delphia tlirt a delegation representing through national associations, more than 1.000 wholesale houses which an nually handle products, approximat ing $2,0(10,000.000. will be received by President Wilson to talk over busi ness conditions. • • • The cruisers South Dakota and West Virginia, eVch with a subma rice in tow, sailed from San Francisco for Honolullu. 2.200 miles distant, on what is said to be the longest towing voyage ever made of a submarine. J A tour of South America this whi ter by the Chicago American league baseball team is contemplated by Charles A. Comiskey. • • • Fred D. Warren, for fourteen years editor of the Appeal to Reason, a so cialist newspaper at Girard. Kan.., re signed because of ill health. » * • A resolution reaffirming belief in a supreme being was adopted by a standing unanimous vote at the con vention of the Loyal Order of Moose at Milwaukee. * • • The transport Hancock has sailed from Norfolk. Va, for Guantanamo, Cuba, with 100 marines to add to the force mobilized there for possible de velopments in Haiti. • • • The wildest scenes in the wheat pit of the board of trade at Chicago since the opening of the twentieth century were precipated by Austria's declara tion of war against Servia. • * • War in Europe would threaten the mining industry in Pennsylvania and adjoining states if even a majority of the subjects of those countries likely to receive a miltary call responded. • • • Stage coaches of four of the larg est transportation companies operat ing in Yellowstone park were held up by two men near Gardiner, Mont. The 165 passengers on the stages were robbed of $3,000. About 7,009 members of the Inside Iron Workers' union,-in New York City have gone on strike, demanding a wage increase of 20 per cent, a fifty-three hour week instead of sixty or sixty-five hours. • • • The Chicago divorce prevention bu reau or the municipal court has open ed its doors as the first branch of a court created solely to fight the di vorce evil. The divorce prevention bureau is part of the court of domestic relations. * • • The supreme council of the Loyal Order of Moose, meeting at Milwau kee. decided that when an adjourn ment is taken here it will be to meet in Baltimore September 7 at the time of the Star Spangled Banner celebra tion. when the new Moose home will be dedicated by Vice President Mar shall. * • * There is no foundation for much of the agitation about business condi tions in the Vnited States. George M Reynolds, president of the Continen tal, and Commercial National bank and John Shedd. president of Marshall Field & Co., of Chicago asserted in their testimony before the federa commission on industrial relations. • • • Vpon recommendation of the receiv ers of the Metropolitan Street Rail way company of Kansas City, Mo. Federal Judge Hook ordered an in crease of 1 cent an hour in the wages of the employes of the company. The increase will affect about 34,000 men and will cost the company between $110,000 and $125,000 a year, accord ing to the estimate of the receivers. FOREIGN. Fifteen coal miners were kiled at Dortmound, Germany, by a fire which broke out in the Hansemann pit, • • • The powers of Europe, following the formal declaration of war by Austria, will try to localize it to Austria and Servia alone. • • • Madame Henriette Cailaux of Paris was accquitted by a jury in the court of assizes of the wilful murder on March 16. last, of Gaston Calmette, editor of the Figaro. • • • Every military preparation short of mobilizzation has now been made in France. The principal railroad sta tions anti ai! the signal boxes and switches are being guarded by troops. * • • Yuan Shi-kai’s government at Pe kin. lenient for a while, has become so severe that the summary execu tions of sentences to death or exile for political offenses are again nu merous. • • * The British Transport Workers* federation of London is planning the organizaztion of a special aerial transport workers’ union. It predicts general employment of aeroplanes for this purpose. * * • Inquiries at the tourist agencies in London show that American trav elers have not been influenced by the war scare and continue to book con tinental tours, trusting to escape in the event ot conflagration in Europe. * • • The maneuvers of the British im perial troops in South Africa have been canceled and the soldiers order ed to return to thoir posts in conse quence of the critical situation in Eu rope. Special precautions have been taken for the protection of the ports i and the naval station at Simonstown. • • • With nine other cardinals. 200 arch bishops and bishops from all parts of the world. Cardinal Farley of New York is* attending the International Eucharistic congress being held at Lourdes, France. • • • Nestor Wilmart. Belgian banker, railroad man. newspaper proprietor and sportsman, was sentenced at Brussels to ten years' imprisonment and JSOO fine on a charge of swind ling the public out of J3.40fl.000 by overissuing shares in the Ghent-Ter neuzen railway in 1912. • • * The merchants of Havana have ad dressed a petition to the American le gation requesting that arrangement* be made with the American govern ment to allow warships on the way to Mexico to stop at Havana. • • • Two IxjRdon suffragettes belonging to the British nobility. Ijidv Barclay and the Hon. Miss Edith Fitzg. raid, were arrested at Buckingham palace, where they made persistent and un successful attempts to present to King George a letter written to his majesty by Mrs. Emmeline PankhursL BANK TAKES LOWER ACTUAL VALUATION DECREASE OVER $3,000,000. ARE NOW UNDER STATE LAW Fcur More Nebraska Eanks Have Quit the National System and Become State Banks. Lincoln.—With no report from Gage county the records of the state board of assessment show that the assessed value of state banks has decreased $324,347 and the assessed value of na tional banks has decreased $3S2,235, a total decrease of $706,582 in the as sessed value of all banks in Nebraska during the past year. As the assesed ! value is one-fifth the actual value of property the total decrease, actual value, is $3,532,910, with no report from Gage county. If Gage county this year reports the same as last i year, $104,767 for both state and na tional banks, the total decrease will be $3,009,075 actual valuation. The number of state banks has in creased during the. year and vet there is a decrease in assessed valuation of such banks. Both state and national banks are assessed in the same man ner under the state law. They are assessed on capital stock, surplus and undivided profits. Under a decision of the suprem ecourt, as interpreted by assessors, banks are allowed to de duct mortgages from capital stock, and this is alleged to be the principal cause of the decrease in the assess ment of bank stock as reported by as sessors. Real estate owned by banks is assessed separately and as mort gages are deemed to be an interest in real estate, they are deduced front I capital stock. In some counties no | deduction was asked for by banks. New State Banks. Four national banks have incorpo rated under the state banking law as j follows: Citizens State bank of Diller, capital '' stock, $25,000; A. H. Colman, presi dent : Thomas P. Price, cashier. Citizens State bank of Cedar Rap • ids. capital. $25,000; Robert Allertcn. 'president; A. C. Thompson, vice pres ident: James A. Gleason, cashier. Security State bank of Spalding, I capital, $30,000; H. Allerton, pres | ident; A. C. Thompson, vice presi dent; John P. Dunning, cashier. Sargent State bank of Sargent, cap ' ital $20,000; Andrew F. Philips, pres ident; Clifford S. Umax, cashier. The Fort Calhoun State bank is a new bank filing incorporation papers I with the State Banking board. The bank is situated in Washington coun | ty and has a capital of $50,000. The i incorporators are: Henry Rohwer, William Sievers. Jacob J. Sierk. Wil liam P. Cook. William Sierk, C. A. Schmidt and Lee Smith. Date Set for Rate Case. Lincoln.—The state railway com j mission set October S as the date for 1 hearing of the South Omaha Stock ; Yards company in the matter of yard age rate# The complaint for a re , duction was brought by the Xebras 1 ka Farmers' Co-operative society. R. j B. Howell recently asked for a phv I sical valuation in connection with | the complaint, but the commission has not granted the request. The state railway commission has canceled the date of hearing on dis l ti'.lery products from South Sioux ! City to Omaha. Distilleries no longer exist, so the hearing is not necessary. Will Delay Valuation. Lincoln. Neb.—Officials of the en gineering department of the state, rs.il | way commission are not likely to be 1 teen on the streets of Omaha and rearhy cities and villages within the rear future, making a valuation of the property of the Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Railway Co. For the state supreme court, which has had under consideration the question of the railway commission's right to compel such a valuation did not rule on the matter previous to summer adjournment. That means that the opinion will be stayed until fall and that after it is rendered there will be the customary legal delays for filing of motions for rehearing and other turns in the litigation. Has Hard Task Ahead. •T. S. Baer, c’erk of the district court, has been quite busy for the past few days making up lists of judges and clerks of elections, who are to serve at all general and special elections, and primaries for the next two years. These lists are made up from names submitted by the county chairman of \ tim parties polling the highest and second highest votes in the county. Takes Trusty Back to Iowa. C. McClaughry, warden of the Iowa state reformatory, called at the office f Governor Morehead for the purpose of securing papers for the return to the reformatory of Frank Johnson, a trusty, who had been working on the roaJ in the Ames prison camp with ( a couple of dozen other prisoners. Johnson had been sent up for at tempting to blow the safe of the Green Bay Lumber company at Har lan. ia. He was serving a sentence of ten years. He is now in the hands of the chief of pol-'ce in Grand Island. Getting Ready for Encampment. Lincoln.—Work has begun upon the new ritle range at Asiil&tfd in prepa ration for the state encampment of the National Guard next month. General Hail has been successful !n securing from the War department about $50,000 in the aggregate for the expenses of the encampment and be ginning at once the fund which has been set aside for improvements will be expended in putting in inciner ators, wells, ana other improvements necessary to the needs of the en campment. NEBRASKA IN BRIEF. A new high school building is being erected at Exeter, at a cost of $40,000. Lightning truck a stack of wheat on Peter Younger's farm just east ol Geneva. .7. H. Arends and son, Harvey, ol Syracuse, have returned from a trip to Canada. Andrew Hatfield of Palmyra has sold his grocery store to Grant Fier ling of Humboldt. Charles Richardson, who lives near Hastings, was kicked by a horse and sustained a fractured leg. The wheat yield in the vicinity of West Point is averaging 20 bushels and oats 40 bushels to the acre. Smallpox has broken out in Hart ington. three families in town and one in the country being quarantined. Rev. S. \Y. Witts nra< ker of Hor ton, Kan., has bec-n elected pastor of the Baptist church at Nebraska City. John Coitisb. a Spaniard, is in jail at West Point, charged with burglar izing the farm house of Joseph Geiser. All arrangements have been perfect ed for the three-day base ball tourney, to be held at Eustis August 12, 13 and 14. The $2,000 barn on the Henry Ben sel farm, south of Cambridge, burned to the ground when lightning struck it. A Dond issue cf $2,000 for the addi tion of two large rooms to the high school building has been approved by the voters of Ayr. A young child of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Paulsin, living near Lindsey, drank carbolic acid by mistake, and died several hours afterward. Sheriff Aldrich of Fallp City has caught the negro. Louis Brown, who is alleged to have held up and robbed William Rossler at Salem. The large catholic church six miles east of Garrison burned and is a loss af over $12,000. with $6,500 insuranoe. The origin of the fire is unknown. Warner Brand of Fontenelle suf fered a fractured ankle and was other wise injured when he was pinned be tween a wagon and a corn crib. James Bellows was found dead in a pasture rear his home, five miles southeast of McCool. It is supposed be was a victim of the excessive heat. The Peru Canning company ex pects to start operations August 1 and is now employing many laborers. The tomato acreage near Peru is large. Miss Minnie Sehiote. 14 years old, of West Point, shot herself in the left leg when she was playing with a .32 [ caliber pistol that she believed was ! empty. An enterprise has been undertaken | by Merrick county, at Clarkson, j which, in the opinion of many, will re ; volntionize the bridge question cn the | Platte river. The Nebraska territorial pioneers j will hold their annual reunion at | Omaha September 30 to October 3. and all Nebraska pioneers are invited ' to attend. S. F. Gairardet has sold his general merchandise business at Weeping Wa ter to John and Henry Crozier, who have sold their coafectionerv store to G. H. Olive. Lieutenant Governor S. R. McKel vie has left for a trip to New York, Philadelphia, Boston and other east ern points. He expects to be gone until September 1. A large barn belonging to D. N. Burroughs at Beatrice was destroyed by fire. Several tons of hay were also' burned. The loss is estimated at $1,500, with $700 insurance. Joshus Peek, a young farmer living four miles southeast of Burr, was struck by a bolt of lightning during a recent storm and paralyzed from the waist down. He will recover. Lightning struck the plant of the Nebraska corn mills in Beatrice, which was totally destroyed by fire to gether with 50.000 bushels of corn and a large amount of cereal products. The power and engine house of the David City water works was partially desreyed by fire. The fire is sup posed to have started from the ex haust pipe. Estimated damage is about $2,000. r-quai sunrage, national probibltien, the recall, a constitutional conventicn, municipal home rule in matters of taxation and a minimum wage law were strongly approved by the pro gressive state convention at Lincoln. There was a large attendance of contestants and proponents at the hearing in Grand Island by State Rail way Commissioner Taylor over the proposed change in train service by the St. Joseph & Grand Island rail way. James Coon sustained an ugly gash in the head and was severely bruised about the body when a derrick used in hoisting brick and other material on the new theater building now in course of construction at Beatrice, fell upon him. A large barn on the farm of Edward Fram. seven miles west of David City, was struck by lightning and burned to the ground. Eight hundred bushels of wheat. 300 bushels of oats aftd 200 bushels of corn stored in the barn was destroyed. Fritz Drewell of Brock lost about thirty-five acres of wheat by fire, caused by the burning of a straw stack. Work is progressing rapidly on a new stone crushing plant at the Ile son quarry, a mile and a half west, of j Weeping Water. One of the two ' crusher heads that are to be installed is already in. the 125 horsepow er steam engine is partly installed and a, part of the frame work up. The plant is to have a capacity of 500 tons daily and is to be in many respects one of the most unique plants of its kind anywhere. It is reported that a new bank will be opened at Auburn. The town has four banks at present Mike Dudzinski will have to wait awhile before he collects that $7,500 judgment given him by the district court of Douglas county. The Gagne bin-Wells Engineering company, against whom the judgment ruts, nr>g appealed the case to the teprerne court. The company was building an ice house near Carter lake and the plaintiff was employed as a carpenter. He fell thirty-five feet on acccoiut of an alleged defective scaffolding and was seriously injured. V IN SUCH PAIN WOMAN CRIED ; Suffered Every thing Until Re stored to Health by Lydia EL Pinkham’s Vegeta ble Compound. Florence, So. Dakota.—“I used to be very sick every month with bearing uuwn pains ana backache, and had headache a good deal of the time and very little appetite. The pain3 were so bad that I used to sit right down on the floor and cry, be cause it hurt me so and I could not do any work at those times. An old wo man aavisea me 10 try t,yaia nnK ham’s Vegel-able Compound and I got a ■ bottle. I felt better the next month so I took three more bottles of it and got well so I could work all the time. I hope every woman who suffers like I did will try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.” — Mrs. P. W. Lanseng, Route No. 1, Florence, South Dakota. Why will women continue to suffer day in and day out or drag out a sickly, half hearted existence, missing three-fourths of the joy of living, when they can find health in Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound ? For thirty years it has been the stand ard remedy for female ills, and has re stored the health of thousands of women who have been troubled with such ail ments as displacements, inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irregularities, etc. If yon want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (Confi dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a Woman and held In strict confide Me, The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE ~ LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetable —act surely and gently on the liver. Cure Biliousness, Head ache, Dizzi- - . , ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature Menace to the Nation. Of the 75,000 deaths from cancer in the United States in 1913, about thir ty thousand were deaths from cancer of the stomach and liver, 12,000 from cancer of the uterus and other organs of generation, 7,500 from cancer of the breast, and about 25.500 from can cer of other organs and parts. It Seems That Way. Hen—Landsakes, Mariar, take that benzine can away from the fire! Mariar—What's the matter. Hen? Gettin' superstitious? On His Way. Bore—Well, old chappie, what’s go ing on? Old Chappie—I am! Posted. "Is he a credit to his family?" "No; a debit.” Lots of men follow the races be cause they are unable to get ahead of them. - Ten smiles ft>r a nickel. Always buy Red Cross Ball Blue; have beautiful clear white clothes. Adv. Fools stagger about where angels fear to tango. Rome. N. Y., is to have a city plan ning commission. Granulated Eyelids, Eyes inflamed by expo sure to Sun, Dust and Wind ^ _ quickly relieved by Murine EyeBeniedy. NoSmarting. just Eye Comfort. At Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Murine Eye SalveinTubes25c.For BookoilhcEyeErecask Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago How to Get Your Hogs Vaccinated Free Fill in carefully the coupon below, cut out and mc.il to us and we will inform you how to get your hogs vaccinated absolutely free, either with serum only or the serum and virus treatment. The serum and virus we use is “government tested” and we use the government method” of vaccinating, and send the very best experienced veterinarians or specialists to do the work. Send in the coupon below together with this advertisement and we will tell you how to get your hogs vaccinated free and serum furnished free without any money or other obligation except to spend a little of your time. Frer inform at ion on vaccinat ion and alia ’seaxs ofhoj*. Don’t delay! Don’t wait until your hogs are dying! Write at once! Remember we have treated otier on: million ko/u COUPON Guarantee Swine Veterinary Co. (Stock Yards). Sioux City, Iowa Gentlemen: Without obligate m-- pk*« inform me '••ram furnished /Y h°SJ vac“u::::ed /** and the Below is a description of my hog*. .Pigs weighing under 25 lbs. .Piss weighing 25 to 50 lbs. .shoats weighing 50 to 75 lbs.. ..shoats weighing 75 to 100 lbs. .hogs weighing 100 to 150 lbs. .bogs weighing 150 to 200 lbs. .bogs weighing over 200 lbs. WNLU Boat Office. Shipping Station. ..