The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, October 22, 1909, Page 10, Image 10

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The Commoner.
VOLUME 9, NUMBER 41
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North pole literature was enliv
ened by the statement made by W. P.
Miller, photographer of Dr. Cook's
Mt. McKinley expedition, corroborat
ing the aflldavit made by Edwin N.
Barrlll, another member of tho Cook
expedition. Miller Is now rt Seattle
while Barrill is at Tacoma, Wash.
Barrill's affidavit states in effect that
ho was tho only person present with
Dr. Cook on tho date wacn ho claims
to have reached tho suannlt of Alt.
McKinley; that ho did not in faft
reach tin mmmlt, ana tho nearest
point to tho summit reached was at
least fourtoai miles distant fron. the
summit of that mountain, the eleva
tion at no timo exceeding 10,000
feet. Barrill's affidavit also brings
into question a number of tho photo
graphs which Dr. Cook has given aa
representing the summit and other
high -altitudes of Ml. Murf inlay.
'Pcpeka, Kansas, a chosen as the
next meeting placo for tho anuu.il
convention for tho , Disciples of
Christ (Christian church).
An Associated Press dispatch from
Chicago follows: "Two Italian chil
dren, identified fiom photographs as
Tomasso and Grace Vlviano, who
were kidnapped from St.- Louis
August 2, last, and who have been
sought sinco by the police of many
cities, were found early today wan
dering aimlessly on the .north side of.
the city by Detective Stephen Parodi,
ox mo, unicago Avenue police station.
The children when found were sit
ting on a curbstone at North Hal
stod and Roes streets. Both were
weeping, tho little girl, who is less
than four years old, sobbing bitter
ly, and Tomasso, her cousin, who is
seven years old, trying to comfort
her. Detective Parodi took tho chil
dren in his arms and asked them
where tfioy lived. Tomasso said that
he did not know. Remembering the
Viviano case, he asked Tomasso If
his name was Viviano. The boy nod
ded his head as if to confirm his
identity. The detective hurried the
children to the Hudson avenue sta
tion, and later they were taken to
the north side headquarters station
at Chicago avenue, and Police In
spector O'Brien took charge of tho
case. Photographs of the missing St.
Louis children wore procured from
the central detective bureau, and In
spector O'Brien was convinced on
comparing them with the homeless
foundlings that tho recovered chil
dren were the long-sought victims of
the St. Louis kidnapping, which had
taxed tho ingenuity of tho detectives
in many cities for may weeks. To
masso, tho older of the children, was
asked by the inspector and Captain
Kehm where he and Grace, his
cousin, had been since they were
taken from their home in St. Louis.
The chUd could give no intelligent
answer. He said he did not know
where he lived and could give no
account of his abandonment. At
the Chicago avenue police station it
was stated that the boy appeared to
bo in a dazed condition and tho little
girl was too young to give any com
prehensive statement concerning her
self. Inspector O'Brien notified the
St. Louis police tonight of the re
covery of the children and their par
ents in St. Louis also were notified,
and are expected to arrive here to
morrow morning to reclaim them.
Meanwhile detectives are searching
Italian sections of the city in an en
deavor to learn who abandoned tho
children, and whero they had been
ilnce their mysterious disappearance
from St. Louis last summer. The
police beliovo that the kidnappers
had tho children secreted in a se
cluded section of the city and turned
them loose when efforts to extort
ransom had failed. Captain J. M.
Schoppe and Sergeant Adraveno, of
the St. Louis, police department, who
know the Viviano children, arrived
here tonight and made positive the
identification of tho boy and girl
found today. The children were
taken to a hospital to await the ar
rival of relatives from St. Louis to
morrow morning. St. Louis, Mo.,
Oct. 15. Grace and Tomasso Vivia
no, cousins, who were found in Chi
cago today, were kidnapped from
their home here August 2. They
were last seen with Samuel Turissi,
and since then ho has been sought
by the police. The girl is three, and
the boy five years old. Pour hours
after the children disappeared a spe
cial delivery letter signed 'Mouth
Shut,' and written in Italian, was re
ceived at the Viviano home. The
letter demanded a ransom of $25,
000. The parents were overjoyed to
night when they learned their chil
dren were alive and made arrange
ments to leave for Chicago."
Athens cablegrams say that King
George may abdicate the throne of
Greece. The king feels acutely his
abandonment by the great powers in
the matter of Greece's aspirations
for the annexation of Crete.
when driven to bay by tho Highland
Park marshal and a posse of citi
zens. A companion of tho robber,
who had driven him to tho bank in
an automobile, was captured imme
diately following tho robbery of the
bank, forcing the principal perpetra
tor in the daring daylight crime to
flee on foot. Ho engaged in a run
ning duel with Town Marshal John
Sheehan, who was the target for
many bullets from the fugitive ban
dit's revolver, one of which went
through the sleeve of his coat. After
running several blocks and failing to
drive back his pursuer, the robber
ran into a shed, closely followed by
Sheehan. When he saw Sh'eehan
enter the shed with his revolver lev
eled at his head, the fugitive put the
muzzle of his own revolver in his
mouth and fired a shot which result
ed in his death almost immediately."
According to the New York Trib
une Edwin Hawley and B. F. Yoa
kum, chairman of the executive com
mittee for the Hock Island-Frisco
systems, and James Speyer, the New
York banker, have obtained control
of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas
railway.
Six lives were lost on upper Lake
Erie in the wreck of the freight
steamer, George Stone of Cleveland.
The Ohio state brewers in conven
tion at Cincinnati congratulated one
another that the temperance tide in
Ohio and throughout the United
States is "receding."
A petition is being circulated in
New York City asking President
Taft to grant a pardon to C. W.
Morse.
Dr. Frederick A. Cook brands as
false the affidavit of Edward M. Bar
rill, tho guide who says Cook did not
reach the summit of Mt. McKinley.
There is some talk of a suit for
porjury.
A Clarion, la., dispatch carried by
tho Associated Press says: "Dr.
Theodore Roosevelt, a dentist, shot
and seriously wounded a burglar
who was trying to enter his home
last night. The wounded man gave
his name as C. Burns, and said he
formerly lived in Des Moines."
Thomas Thorp, an aged prospec
tor, was arrested at Albuquerque, N.
M., because he shouted, "Where is
Taft? I want to kill him."
The south was visited by another
severe storm October 14. Thirty
seven lives were lost and great de
struction was wrought in West Ten
nessee, Alabama, Georgia and por
tions of Arkansas and South Carolina.
Here is an Associated Press dis
patch from Norwood, MaBS.: "A
meteor weighing more than 200
pounds fell on the farm of W. P.
Nickerson, on Brook street. A man
employed on the place found a fence
broken and a large hole in the
ground. Ho notified Mr. Nickerson
that someone had been breaking
fences and also that rabbits were
burrowing. Mr, Nickerson investi
gated and had the meteor dug out.
It resembles iron slag, being the
color of slate, rough and corrugated
on the outside, but of solid forma
tion in general."
A Chicago dispatch carried by the
Associate J Press says: "A fashion
ably dressed bandit, who arlv fhia
afternoon robbed the savings bank of
' " "ion-4" - m Migmana
Park, 111., an aristocratic village on
the lake shore, twenty-five miles
north of Chicago, committed suicide
by shooting himself in tho mouth,
An Oklahoma dispatch carried by
the Associated' Press says? "The
Central State bank, with a capital of
$200,000, was organized today in
the place of the Columbia .Bank and
Trust company. The latter institu
tion's assets and liabilities remain
in tho hands of the state banking
board, which took charge last week.
The quarters of the Columbia bank
will be occupied jointly by the state
board and the new bank temporarily,
the board continuing its payment to
depositors. The deal to have W. L.
Norton continue in control of the
Columbia fell through Saturday
night, it waB announced today, and
liquidation of the institution was de
cided upon."
Before Federal Judge Pollock at
Leavenworth, Kan., the Cudahy
Packing company was fined $97,
777.50 for violating the internal rev
enue laws by failing to place stamps
of proper denominations on packages
of oleomargarine.
Senator Chauncoy M. Dopow, re
turning from Europe, says that war
between Germany and Great Britain
is inevitable. "Germany," says the
senator, "has been poking the noses
of her ships into commercial ports
that heretofore England has regard
ed as her own. England seems to
have been asleep. Awakening, she
attempted to get back what she had
lost. Falling, she has begun pre
paring for a conflict and the situa
tion, to my mind, is serious."
The libel case against Charles R.
Williams and Delavan Smith of the
Indianapolis News came up before
Judge Anderson at Indianapolis. The
government was seeking to remove
the defendants to the District of Co
lumbia for trial. "Tho court said
that it did not wish to civo nn im
pression that it had formed an opin
ion In the merits of the case, but
that it wished to point out the trend
of the argument towards its. further
enlightenment as to whether or not
this was probable cause for indict-
Melancholy and
Mental Depression
Also Known as Low Spirits and " ,,.
Blues" Are Almost InvarluMv
Caused by Indigestion and '
Stomach Derangement
Chronic melancholy is a symptom
frequently encountered in the vic
tims of dyspepsia- and indigestion
Defective blood nutrition or anae
mia appears to be the physical state
with which the great majority of
cases of melancholy and mental de
pression are connected, and to which
all modes of treatment are directed
Powerful and permanent and de
pressing moral and mental emotions
act as effectively in arresting healthy
digestion and alimentation as the
eating of injudicious food, or the use
of nourishment under circumstances
such as the respiration of impure
air, or indulgence in intemperate
tendencies, which render proper as
similation of food impossible.
But while depressing mental emo
tions may cause disturbed digestion,
on the other hand, dyspepsia may,
in turn, cause mental depression, so
that cause and effect may bo trans
posed. Melancholy or "the blues"
should not be regarded as a distinct
and independent affection, as it is
almost invariably traceable to, and
dependent upon, some disorder of the
digestive system.
The victims of this distressing con
dition present not only the usual
symptoms of indigestion or nervous
dyspepsia, but also a long train of
symptoms of a peculiarly melancholic
and morbid character, such as ex
treme increase of nerve-Sensibility,
palpitations, strange internal sensa
tions, which simulate many other
diseases, together with an exagger
ated uneasiness and anxiety riiefly
concerning tho health. They imag
ine they have all tho diseases known
to -Pathology, and are great pessi
mists, prone to look on the dark
side of life. They are easily an
noyed by small things, which if their
health and digestion, were good,
would never bother them; and they
feel constantly irritable, have dark
forebodings, and fear the approach
of some imaginary evil, impending
disaster or calamity.
If they experience indigestion
pains in the heart region, they think
it is heart disease: uneasiness in the
chest means consumption, while tho
various other fugitive aches and
pains distributed over vthe system
they imagine to be symptoms of some
fatal, organic disease.
Every one of these morbid symp
toms depend upon a disturbed state
of the digestion, and for tho removal
and cure of this condition, there is
no better remedy in existence than
Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. They
get right at the seat of the trouble,
cure the dyspepsia, and remove the
cause. Every particle of food in tho
stomach is thoroughly and properly
digested, with the result that the
blood, which owing to a long-continued
indigestion, mal-absorption,
mal-nutrition and mal-assimilation of
food, is in a thin, anaemic condition,
is rapidly built up, and improved in
quality this improvement progres
sing along with the increased power
of the stomach to properly digest
its food through tho aid-giving and
toning-up properties of these power
ful little digestive tablets; so that
the melancholic and depressive symp
toms disappear along with the dys
pepsia. Don't allow yourself to be over
come with "the blues," but secure a
box of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets at
once from your druggist for 50 cents,
and begin taking them; also send us
your name and address for free sam
ple package. Address F. A. Stuart
Co., 150 Stuart Building, Marshall,
Mich.
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