J - ' . STATE DEPARTMENT DECIDES 70 INVESTIGATE ALBERS CASE ' _ _ I _ . . . , . . . ' . , . . . . ' , ' . . ' ' " . ' .i . . ; . , ' " " : : Pt ; $ c l' . ; ; , . " ' " " \ i t r ! , . ! ' . f ' , I t > , \ I , . . . . - - - - . . . . . . . _ - - . . . . . . . - - - , . . - . - - - . . . . . . . = -A - - . . . United States MinIster Merry. Map or NIcaragua , ShowIng Location c.l . Amnpala , Octotnl nnd Jalnpa. United States Gunboat Princeton , Minister Whom It May Convey to Nlc. aragua and Points to Which He Will Travel to Investigate Alleged , Outrage on an American CItizen. . ALBERS DEALT WITH UNJUSTLY. American Traveler Says Accused Man Is In the Right. It has been decided that 11 warship shall be sent to one of the Costa Rican I ( ports to convey American Minister Merry northward to thO nearest point on the coast of Nicaragua or Hon. duras to the place where WllIlam S. ' . . . Albers , an American citizen , and his ' r brother are confined pending 11 trial " on the charge of resisting legal pro. cess and of Insulting the president of Nicaragua. ' The gunboat Princeton , now at I _ : Panama , Is the nearest warship to Ocotal in the province of Segovia , i where Albers Is imprisoned. Dut the last.named town is seventy miles inland - land over a rough mountain' range from the coast and the trail is not I . passable by any vehicle. Amapala , on , the gulf of Fonseca , on the southern . - boundary of Honduras , appears to be the nearest port to Ocotal. The Port Limon company , whose agent Albers was , has sent a lawyer from Phlladel. phia. to Ocotal to assist in his defense. Cause of the Trouble. An American who has been travel. ing in C ntral America for the past few months engaged in scientific worle , has written a detailed account of the Albers case to friends in Daltlmore , which has reached here. He reports as follows : "The Limon compan ) ' , of which WIl. _ Ham S. Albers is the manager , is ( ) cated at Jalapa , Segovia , n'ear thc border of Honduras. This corporation is engaged in gold and silver mining and in raising wheat and tobacco and has made invemenls : in good'faith. "In March , 1905 , a company oj I1rmed men , alleging that they werE , sent by the government tobacco syn dicate , demanded of Albers that hE , " permit them to enter and carrr : awa ) his stock of tohacco under seizure. "Albers replied that he had no con traband tobacco ; that he obeyed thE law ; that he paid the government it full ; that he held regular official re celpts for all tobacco in his stores. "He furthermore said that the firs , man who tried to enter his door woul < be shot , but that he wouI'd permit tIH leader to inspect the tobacco in orde : tha.t his assertions might be proved This was done nnd no contraband to bacco was found. Permits Are Refused. "Following the search of the LimO ] company'G IJremises , the executive 0 Managua , the capital of Nicaragua issued a decree ordering that anyon' ' holding tobacco in stock should obtai ] a permit and that should he fall t , do this his tobacco would be confIE cated , whereupon several American holding tobacco applied for the pel mlts and were refused them. "These American holders , therE . upon , arranged to sell their tobacc 'f , to the s'ndlcate , with the exception c -r" Albers. Dut the treatment receive r from Albers , who had in his plac t American omployes who coulll hav his threats if necessal1 ' caused the syndicate managers to mil . represent and exaggerate the action of Albers when the ' reported it to th president. File Charges Against Them. "M a result , charges of resistanc to authority and "Iolent abuse of th . , . . . . . - " ' - - . . . . . - - . " . - - - . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Praise for Missouri Mule. ) In an address at the 1\lIssoul'l stat " fair Congressman W. D. Vandiver d , clared the 1\1issouri mule had made h : state famous the world over , lIe COI cluded his address b ) ' saying : "I tall ott m ) ' hat to the 1\IIssoul'I mule an stand at. 0. . respectful distance. TII only animal with no ancestor of hewn own type and no hope of posterity c any type , he maintains his impor ance in war nnd agriculture and d t _ l mands his price wherever men stru Slo tor supremacy , whether in PC\l\ ( I or war. " - - - executive , which Is a serious offense in man ) ' Latin.Amerlcan countries , were made at the court of the district situated at Ocotal. "Judicial warrants for arrests were issued and both Albers and his broth , er were talwn into custodY. " GOOD I CHILD STUDY CIRCLE. Parents' Association a Potent Ally of the School System. Mrs. Charles Schoff , president of the Mothers' congress , declares that the parents' associations organized in connection with the public school sys. tern form one of the most potent 11.1. lies of the s'stem in the country , ac. cording to the New Yorle Tribune The ChUd Study circle , composed 01 the parents in one school district , in stituted a 5cent hot luncheon , serve each day-hot chlclen soup , six gal Ions of it , served in turn by memberf of the older classes , and supplied ant directed by members of the Chih Stud ' circle. Another circle has quietly provldm shoes or stocldngs for children wh ( were kept at home for lack of them Still another circle , seeing the crowd cd and unsanitary condition of th ( school , went before councils all ! showed the conditions so clearly tha $25,000 was aIJprolJrlated and a fInl new building erected. In man ) ' oUte associations there are Rlmllar report : of large appropriations for school pur poses , Immigrants Seek the Cities. The volume of immigration durin 1 I the past four ) 'ears has never bee1 equaled , One million came to thi country from abroad last year , ani they are coming faster than eve ] What is to be done with tl1em ? Th ! tendency of late ) 'ears is to congrE / gate in the cities. In earlier days th tide of immigration spread out eve the country. A majorlt ) " made th fertlIe lands of the west their destim 1 tion. There they fixed themselve ! absorbed the spirit of our institution and "grew up with the country. " , generation ago , ag1lculture ; was th main source of national wealth. T ( day , manufacturing and trade mal , the greater demand upon the servic of our worlwrs , amI instead of th 10 open plains the cro\ded cities ar sought by those who come here t find employment and to better thel condition in IIfe.-Doston Post. Wonders to Be Seen at Home. Within vcr ) ' recent ) 'ears the Ame ican people in general have bee . learning as the ) ' never did hefore tlJ ; . wonders of their own country. The s went abroad for scener ) ' and to vie pl\ces of historical interest , unmilli ful that their own land contalne spectacles unrivaled elsewhere an relics of a civilization that Is prehl torlc , Places that only a few yeal ago had hardly a : vIsitor now attral many thousands annually. The Ye lows tone parle has become we 1m own , so also the stupendous canye of the Colorado , the terrific domes , the Yosemite , the imposing Sierr : rising abruptly almost from the s ( level to heights of nearly three mile America abounds with miracles of n f ) ture , grandly impresslvo or marvelo ! .e I ) ' beautifuL-Duffalo Courier. . . . . . . , . " . , - - - - _ - - - . . . . . . . . . . _ - - Schwab's Costly Dinner Service. :0 : Charles 1\L Schwab has placed I e. order for a carved sllverglIt dinn Is servlco at a cost of $150.000. Th . [ 1. splendid collection of slIver , It ts sal ; e will be the finest over made for Id private dining room. It is bolng mil. . Ie ufactured by a firm at Providenc Is n. L , which makes a SI1Cclalty of ela ) f orate sllvel'\rare. With the gold effe t. the set wlII maliC a most strlldng a e. pearanco. Antique lines will be fl g. lowed In the manufacture and elal : e rate hand worl , will be a notable f tor In the cost. - . DEATH HAS SHOCKED BOSTON. Patrick A. Collins Called Suddenly- Prominent In State Politics. Ma'Or Patricle A. Collins of Doston 'droPIJcll dead at lIot Springs , Vn. , 'Sept.f. . l\la'or Collins went to Hot Sprhlr > ' : . :01' his health auout Sept. 6 . with his famll ) ' . Twice Mavor of Boston , Patrick A. collins was twice elecled 1\Iaror of Doston. lIe was a 111.\\01' . b ) ' profosslon nnd was famous as nn orator. . lie had been In both brnncl1es of the stnte legislature , sen'ell In Con. gress three terms and was Consul General at London , lSJ3,97. ! 1\11' . Collins was born at l"ormo ) ' , Ireland , March 12 , 18401 , nnd four renrs later was brought to this coun. try by his paronts. lIis early education was secured in the puullc schools of Chelsea , l\Iasf\ .n4H:2I.R C Acter leaving sc)1001 he .secured position of 01l1ce bo ) ' and later became a journeyman upholsterer. As soon as he accum\1lated sufficient money Ite went to colleg\ \ ! and graduated from the Harvard Law School in 1871. Before Itls graduation he served n term in the l\Iassachui1etts House of Representatives and was a member of the State Senate , when admitted to the bar. He was elected to the United States Congress and served three terms. In 1893 he was appointed Unlte I States Consul General in. London by President Cleveland I\nd serred a full I term of four ) 'ears. On his return ho toole an active in. terest in 1\lassachusetts politics an in 1899 was a nominee of Democrau . for Mayor of Doston , lIe was defeat cd by a narrow margin and two yellr ! Io.ter . was elected 1\laror of the city. General Collins was ono' of Amer ica's great orators. Royalty Fond of Motoring. A distinctive feature of the mete industl' ) ' has IJCon the gellordus SUI1 port accorded to it by the sovereign ! of the world. Almrt from King Ed . ward , the Idng of Italy and tlte Idng 0 Spain , who are well.lmown enthu slasts , there are the German emperor who has four or five cars ; the Idng 0 the Delglans , who has three , and lhl czar , wlto at present has 01111 one , bu contemplates adding to his "stud. ' 'I'he Idng of Portugal and the quee ] of the Netherlands are also of th , company. President Loubet has a ca which he occasionally drives himsell and the prince of 1\1onaco , in additlol to a ver ' powerful car , has a motE cycle , on which he frequently accolt pIishes very long journe's. And , mos astonishing of all , the shah of Persl has now beco.me . IJOSSessed of tw Ilutomobiles , First Settlers In Kansas County. Mrs. D. F. Tilden , two sisters an two aunts were the first women to h cate in what is 110W Osborn count Kansas. They went there in 187 ( For a year or moro tlte governmeIJ stationed a half dozen sol iers at th 'I'ilden homestead to protect the won en from Indians. The year before th In ians made a raid down the Solomo valley and carried away two wome and it cost th\3 government $75,000 t rCicue tit em , It decided to talto n chances with the TUden family an stationed Hohllers there to prote ( them. Mrs. Tilden stilI Occulllefl : tlJ house which she settled in thirty-fiv ) 'ears ago.-Chicago Chronicle. r- 'n Eschewed Politics All His Life. Iey Charles W. Leighton , a citizen ( w Orrington , 1\1e. , was bom tltere slxt. . done ) 'ears ago , has lived there all h id life and has never voted at any ele ld tion or tal\Cn part in a political dl cusslon of any Idnd. He has been s' rs laboring man all his lifo , reads a new at Impel' regularly and is not by ar ! I. means a stranger to booles. In fac ll he is one of the hest posted men III his vicinlt ) ' . He declines to talto ar of part in politics hecause many rea 1S ago he saw two men engage in a fIg1 'a over politics. 'l'hey became and l' : s malned enemies , and Leighton the : 'a : and then determined that he nevI ItS would have anrthll1g to do with lJO tics. " Kansas In the Early Days. U1 Congressman CuIderhead of Kans er In giving some reminiscences , S\ .is that in his : roung' manhood he movi 'd , onto a piece of govl'1'nment land a ] a hullt , with his own hands , a cah n. 10xH. malclng all of the furnlturo ( ie , copt the stove. The settlers hud IItt .b. money , hut wore rich In all the clv et lUes of life. One of the settlers wi p' wanted a plnw had to have fourtel )1. of hIs neighbors sign the note wi 10. him , and then , if suit had heen broug LC' the price of the plow coul not Ita been recovered. - STATE AUDITOR OF INDIANA REMOVED' GOV. HANLY - I I .LJAf7Z.J ' . .c-.317Zk11/OT David E. Sherrick , ousted as sta to auditor of Indiana , was born in Hamilton co , mty , Indiana , near WestfIold , in 18GO. lIe SIJent most of his early life on a farm and Io.ter . became engaged in the insurance bnsiness , which he conducted until elected auditor of state in 1902 , to which office he was re-elected in 1904. EMBEZZLEMENT IS THE CHARGE. - David E. Sherrick of Indiana Placed Under Nominal Arrest. D. E. Sherrlclt , removed from the 0 [ . fice of auditor of state of Indiana by Gov. Hanly on his own showing that , he owes the state $145,000 which he Is unable to pa ) ' , was nominally placed I under arrest on the charge of em. bezzlement. The nrl'est followed Mr. Sberrlck's summary remo\'al from office br Gov. lIan ! ) ' . The governor , to whom Sher- rlcl , had confessed his shortage , had I repeatedly demanded a settlement and , failing to sechro it , insisted tho.t . . Mr. Sherrick resign. Shcrriclt refused to resign , and his summar ) ' removal followed. 'rhe governor appointed Warren Dlgler of Wabash as Sher. r rick's successor , British Railroad Statistics. A recent report shows that in the rear 1904 only six passengers were lellled br accidents on rnllways in the United I\Ingdom : , and that 34 wore injured. From statistics lOpt for the Ilast thirty ) 'ea1'S , ending with 1903 , it seems that an average of one passen. " gel' was Idlled in every 36,053OG-1 journeys and ono injured in every 1,100,527 journeys. Out of a total of 71.007 rallway employes , seven were Idlled and 114 injured during 190.1. The average for the preceding thirty rears was fourteen and 137 , respect. Ive1y. This comparison shows an ( > xtraordlnary improvement , for the lIumber of railway employos was rreater in 1904 than the average num. bel' in the preceding thirty years. Japan's Imperial Family. The imperial famlly of Japan is said to dwell together in harmony un. der circumstances that would cause domestic discord , if not disruption , In an ordinary American family. Her lI11'tjesty ' the empress is several years ohler tlan the mllmdo and though she is the only wlfo he has over had she is not the mother of the five chlld. Iren-the crown prince and four prln. ( > sses-of whom the emperor Is the father , In case she should becomc t.ko mother of a son , which , as she is ' ) f : rears old , is exceedingly hnprob. ahlo , the IIIcltimate , : children of thc fI1peror ! would have to stanJ aside , : -\ow they arc accorded the full honorE < 1ue to members of the hnperial fam. 11) ' . Plans School of Philosophy. Mrs. Elizabeth Jor , wife of exCon ! ; ressman Charles F. Joy of St. Louis has begun a movement in I..os Angel ( > s for the establishment of a schoo' of philosophy , the Institution to b ( located In 0. . temple of science to COSI $1,000,000. The school will be de voted to the study of phllosophy , ethIcs Ics and physiology , and Its mlssior will be to prove that , in nature , ther ( are no contradictions and that , at tlu base of all warring factions of mate 'c. rlallsm , sensationalism and Institut ro IQnallsm , there Is but one fundamen or tal and universal prlnciplo whlcl II. unites them all and absolutely accordl with science. Want Statue of Heine at Birthplace IS , Another attempt is to ho made tl Id Nect II. national memorial to lIein , ( ! d 111 the land of his hlrth. When an otfe HI vms made In 1897 to raise a memorIa In In his native cltr , Dusseldorf , It wa IX' curl1 " refused hr the government 01 Ie the Jround of his anti-German pre ; II , udlE'es , and'tho statuc found a hem 110 In New Yorle. nut t : e burHhers 0 ( ! n llusreldorf are bestirring' thomselve th a ain and are now dtfermlned t ht create such a bed ) ' of pu' : lc oplnlo : vo \ favor of the proposal that the gO\ l\n nt11I fInd \t \ difficult to veto II WORTHY OBJECT FOR A "BOOM. " - Eastern Journal Welcomes Efforts to Bring Back the Bicycle. A western organlzlltioll of wheel men is hard at work with the highly laud. able aim of starting another boom for the blc'cle. It is an exceedingly dlr- tlcult matter to create , a boom by IJUrelr artificial methods , but we sin. cerely hOl1o that this efCort will suc- ceed. The bicycle hoom is a boom which deserves to he boomed. Call It whatever ) 'ou l1ee-a ! craze or a fad- tho' pOlmlar interest and enUmslasm for the wheel which s\T'ept over the country a few ) 'ears ago was one of the haIJplest amI healthiest "crazes" that ever struck the American people , or any other people , and It cannot come again too soon or stay too long , I10w much those ) 'ears of bicycle activity added to the sum total of In. nocent human enjoyment , human vi. tallty and energy , It would be impos. sible to estimate ; but wo venture the stat'ment , without fear of contradlc. tlon , that no ether modern conrlvancE of human devising has contributed sc largely to these benefits as the wheel -Lesllo's Weeltly. Money on Its Annual Tour. Some New Yorl\Ors are wrltln about the loss of money by the banlCE of that burg as If they didn't leno'\\ what Is the matter. The money if coming south and west , as it dom every year at this season , to "move the crops. " It Is going Into the pock ets of the cotton.plcl\Crs , tlto harvest ers , the farmers and the country mer , chants , and into the bank accounts 01 the railroads that haul the produce It will return to the financial centorl as fast as It serves Its purpose of vro vlding the agrIcultural regions wiU the commodities which the crops buy -St. Louis Republic. Popular Writer's Retrospection. Maurice Hewlett is ono of the fO\1 writers of the day who possesses I unlverslly degreo. lIe gra uate ( from Oxford at the early ago of 19 but he says he never was 11 student To use his own words. "I have wast I cd my time , I dreamed , I tried to dl things too big fvr me and then Ulrm' ' I them up at the first failure. I dlll ently' pursued every falto god. I don't thlnle I was very happy and . am sure I was very disagreeable. doubt If I was ever a boy except fo a verr brief period , when by right should have been a man. " , Maxim Gorki In III Health. . A German journalist who had OCC ! slon 0. . few weels ago to attend a Ice ture Hiven by Maxim Gorli at th Finnish summer resort Kuolwla , wa . polnfullY impressed by the famou . novelist's appearance. His chest wa hollow , his e'es deep in their socl\Ot and bordered with darle blue shadow : IIfs whole aIJpearance was U1I1t of a " Invalid. Ills awlw rd movements an - gestures made a lady in the audienc exclaim : "Com me U est maladroit ! IIfs vol co was so weale that it coul hardly be heard in the bacl { part ( the hall. Pat Nickname for Earl Minto , Earl Minto , who is to succeed Lor Curzon as viceroy ot India , Is GO ) 'eal old and earl ) ' In lICe was a lIeutenal In the Scots Huards. In 1898 he wv appointed governor general of Canad , which position ho held until few monlhs ago. ItVo. . , while I Canada Lllat he was gi en the nlc : name of "Peppermlnto , " the orlgi : at or ot the nll.me heing a subordlnal 01l1clal whom his lordship had loctu cd severely for neglect of duty. H name Is John Elliott Gilbert and he fourth Earl an Daron Minto. - - - CHRONIO ERYSIPELAS Cured by Dr Williams' Pink Pille , Although Whole Body wes Affoctod. Eryslpelns or St. Anthony's fire ill r- most Ullcomorlnble dlsCtUio on account of the IHlrululr , the Jlnin Rlld the 11111. fIlUrolllellt ; it. 1/1 / nlKO n very J1'I\ve dls. order , ntonh'd ! ( nlwnYA hy the dnuRel' ot Illvolvillg vitHI orgnllll III ita 8/JrOlld. 'l'ho cnHO whloh fol1oWH w / 11 bo remi with Rl'cl\t illlor1I1 ; b > ' nIl RulTcrors liB it affcclm1 Hlo whole belly , nud refused to yleh ! 00 the ron\leIle8 \ ! prescrihed by the phrRicilln ( ! lIIlllnyect. MrR. 111A. / . Col. buth , who wnR the vlotlm of the nUnck , rcslllluR at No. 10 Wh lcr lJt.rcot , Now- ur > 'port , MnsR. , M 'a : "In .Tullo of 1110:1 : I WOR ! fllton i11 with " , hl\t nt Ih'Ht ' ' ' to 1 > 0 n foyer. I 'milt for n ph ' 8 ct\ll who llrollollllccdmy dlscuso chroulo er 'RlpJIIIS 11I111 Al\ld it wou1l1 be n loug tllllo bofol'e I Rot woll. II Iullllmumtloll hegnn 011 lII ' fnee nllIl sprolld nll over III ' hod > ' . 1\Iy oyl'Voro Bwollonl\llli flCOlllUil bulging out of tholr soeke ! . ' ! . I WIIR in terrihlo plight I\lId , mfforo < l the most lulellllO pl\lu Ulrough- out lilY bed > ' . 'rhe doctor Rnill my cnso wns n "er > . Revere 0110. Under his trCatmeut , however , the illfll\llImn. tfon dill 110t dlmlullll1 nllli the pnius which Hhot through lilY bOily incrcnsed In ReVet.It ; ) ' . After balug two lIIouth. ! uu- dol' hili cnre , wlU\Out IIIIY huprovoment , I lnnlAHcd him. . . Short1y nrtor thm , on the ndvlce of 1\ frloml , I llCHlI1I to tl\lO Dr. 'VllIlIlI1lS' Pluk Pills fa" Plllo P ollo } , two nt . .1do o three timcn n ( In\ ' . After the RCCOllll hex hnd boon uSClll'IA Iml'prlReel to IIOtlcO thnt the illllllllllllntioll goillg dOWll nnd thnt the JlllluH which \\Iwd to CI\IIRO 1110 so much uRony hl\ll ' . After - IUsap\IClU'ed. ter usinR Rlx llOxeH of the 1111 \ H I WILA up nnll\1'olll\l the hOl\RO nttom1inrr to my hO\\lIuholll dutlOR , 1\/1 well I\Ii over. " D , ' . \\\1111\11\8' \ Pink Pills fire 80hby nl1 d.nlera ill 1\11J(1\c1110 \ 01' l\1n bo ob- I\ined direct from the Ik.ViIlhuus lIc iowo 00. , Schouoctn y , N.Y. Contributors Honorcd. " \Ve announce the decrellso of the new maHazine , " sa's an edltor-"nlso our inability to pay Its contrlbutorsj but , In recognition of tI ell' services , wo have made honorary Imll.bearers o all of tho111 , and will glvo a funeral dinner , at whieh wo hope to sco them aH.-Atlantn Constitution. Britain and the Suez Canal. Theoretlcall ) ' the Suez canal is nou. tral. . } ) ractically , however , Oreat Britain - ain own.'J it by purchase of U\O greater . pl1rt of the certificates of Indebtedness. LUeowlso that sllme power has 11 strategic - egic cover nt each end of the canal. A Phrenological Point. Wo hll.vo novel' yet seen 11 cn.ptllin of n 'varsity crow who possessed n poorer or retreating chin , II. wealc or turncd.uI ) nose , a small neclc , or II. dlmlnutlvo brow or irresolute oyes.-lhrenolog-- ical Journll.1. Pines of Scandinavia. The longcst-llved trees in northern EuroIQ 11.1'0 the } JInes of Norway and Sweden , ut G70 years Is their greatest - , est porlO(1. Germany's oldest oalts I live only II. IIttio more than 300 years. Franco leads the countrIes of Eu. rope in theaters , havIng 384. Six Doctors Failed. Iiouth Dend , Ind. , Sept. 25th (8po. ( clal-After snrrerlng from Kidney Disease for thre 'ears ; after taldng treatment from six dlrrerent doctors without getting relief , Mr. J. 0 , Lau- dcmnh of this place found not only rellcf but a speedy and comp1ete cure In Dodd's Kidney PlIIs. Speaking ot bis cure Mr. Laudeman says : "Yes , I suttored from Kidney Trouble - ble for three years and tried six doctors - tors to no good. Then I toolt just two boxes of Dodd's Kidney PlIIs and they not only cured my Iddnoy , but gave mo better hoa.lth In genoral. Of course I recommended Dodd's Kidney PJ1ls . to others and I lrnow 11 number now I who are using them with good ro- - suits. " Mr. Lnudoman's case is not an ex- ception. Thousands give simllar ex- periences. For there never yet was 11 case of Kidney Trouble trom Back. ache to Bright's Disease tbat Dodd's Kidney PlIIs could not cure. They are the only remedy that over cured BrIGht's Disease. In a tox's run at Ulverscroft , Lei. cester , WQS recently tound 11 vixen and two cubs , thlrty.two rablts , pheasants - sants , pnrtrldgos nnl1 1\ wild Iluck. DON'T MISS THIS. A Cure for Stomach Trouble-A New Method by Absorption-No Drugs. DO YOU DELCII ? It menns a. dls. eased stomach. Are you n1Ulcted with short brenth , gas , sour eructa.tlons . , heart pa.ins . , indigestion , dyspepsln , burning po.ins . al1l1lead weight in pit of stomach , acid stomach , distended o.bdo. . men , dizziness , UAD IIUEA'l'll , or any other stomo.ch . torture ? Let us send :1ou : a. box : of Mull's Anti.Uelch Wafer. free to convince you that it cures. Nothing else liIcc it known. It's sure and very pleasant. Cures by absorption. IInrmless. No drugs. Stomach trouble can't e cured otherwise-so says med. ical science. Drugs won't do-they eo.t . up the stomach lIud mllko 'ou worse. Wo Imow Mull's Antl-llolch Wafers cure and we want you to lcnow it , hevce this olfcr. BPEOIAL 01'1i'Im. - ' 1'he regular price olMull's Anti-Belch Wafers is 50c. n. . box , but to introduce it to thouso.nds . of sufferers wo wllsond ! two (2) ( ) oxcs 'd upon receipt of 75c. a.nd . this advertise , 'S mont , or wo will send you a. . sample free \t for this coupon. LS D305 FREE BOX 114 ! a , Send this coupon with your name and address and druggist's name when n does NO'l' sell it , for II. free box of k. Ml's Antl-llolch Wafers to MuIl'6 . Grape 'l'onlo Co" 148 'hlrd Ave. , le Hook Isltmd , Ill. Give full addrebS r. o.nd w1'lto plainly. : Bold at all druggists , 50c. per box. Seen in many landti-gangplan1ua :