The Daily Express. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 69, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 10, 1910 Page: 2 of 24
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THE SAN ANTONIO DAILY EXPRESS: THURSDAY MORNING, MARCH 10, 1910.
KNOX GUTS OFF HIS SON
BOY IS A HUSBAND AND IS
SCORNED BY I'ARENTS.
"Yes, Dad Told Me Yesterday He
Would Lot Me Shift for Myself,"
Says YounE Knox in Discussing
Attitude Toward His I5ride.
Famous Russian Escapes
Living Death in Siberia
PROVIDENCE, B. T.. March 9.—Stand-
ing teelflo tiie pretty T»r1do that his father,
Secretary of State Knox, has refused to
receive, Phliandor C. Knox Jr. tonight ad-
mitted that a» a result of his elopement
with Miss May Holer Lis family bud cut
blm off, leaving him dependent upon a
legacy and what he can earn bimsclf.
"Yes, dad told me yesterday In Wash-
ington that lie would give me no more
money, hut would let ine shift for my-
self," Bald (ho youthful husband tonight.
"However, I have enough Income of my
cwn to keep us until 1 get a job. My
grandfather on my motlier'H side left me
enough to giro me an Income of about
SKO u month, anil tl-ls I am not to re-
ceive from ray mother, who Is trustee of
the money, until I am of agP."
GIBI/8 MOTHER IS ANGRY.
The attitude assumed by the Knox
family in refusing to recelvn the brble was
the subject <>f severe strictures by Mrs.
Daniel Oilman, the young girl's mother.
"If necessary I shall go to Washington
with Principal French and my daughter
apd her husband to »eo Secretary Knox
about tills matter," she saJd.
TO DIIITB OUT MALARIA
AHD BFILD rr THE AY AT EM
TaJre the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTI3-
LESS CHILL TONIC. You know what
. you are taking. The formula Is plainly
• printed ou every bottle, showing It in
6lmply quinine and iron In a tasteless
form, and the most effectual form. For
grown people and children. 50c.
NEGROES STIR MUSKOGEE
G-lvc Battle to Street Car Crews and
Officers Are Called.
MTTRKOOEH, Okla., March P.- As a re-
sult of srveraJ serious fights between ne-
groes and street car crews deputy Sheriffs
wero placed npou all enr* tonight.
One negro woman drew a knife on a
conductor and attempted to stab him.
Other negroes Joined In tho flglit and the
conductor was badly lK»nten.
The woman was finally thrown bodily
from the car. Another street car WM
Stoned. A. S. Mcliafe. n negro worth $100,-
000. was arretted tonight while riding In
the white seetlon of a car.
The trouble started n week ago when the
traction company Blfloetf tho pay-as-y00-
inter cars on the line.
-CX
BARRY KNOCKS OUT SAHOR
Chirajro Fighter's Right Uppercut
Win* the Fizht.
OAICLAXTX CBl., March 0.—Cntchlng his
mm re bona rile g from tho rope*. .Tim Harry
of Cbleaeo sent a rlnht uppcrcut to Gun-
boat Smith's chin In the ninth ronnd of
their scheduled ten-round fight here to-
night and the sailor wo) knocked out In
bis own corner.
GENEROUS TO THB INDIANS
Senate Committee Adds $1,142,457 to
Appropriation Rill.
WASHINGTON. D. C., March 0.—The
Senate Committee on Indian Affairs add-
ed $1,142,457 to the Indian appropriation
bill over the amount It carried as passed j
by the House.
Of this amount H33.5C0 Is reimbursable j
and 1447,333 Is dye to the capitalization of
the funds of the Pottawatomie tribe In
Wisconsin and Michigan.
The House bill carried t8,/73,S63, ex-
clusive of an appropriation of 1330,000,
which Is payable from trust funds.
GUGGENHELMSIN ALASKA DEAL
Interested Person Admits It in Teiiti-
mony Before U. 8. Commissioner.
CLEVELAND, Ohio, March 0.—That a
combination with Guggenheim Interests
wan considered by the thirty-throe clajift.
ants to AlaskA coal lands was admitted
today before Fnited Ftntoa Commissioner
"William J. McGee by W. H. Warner, one
of the entrants.
Tho evidence was given at tho opening
of an Inquiry here Into the claims of four
of the original thirty-three clalraanta to
"patents to Alaska lauds.
WOMEN PLEAD *FOR RALLOTS
Dr. Mary Walker Furnishes Diversion
In Hearing In Now York.
ALBANY. N. Y., March 0.—Tho annual
legislative hearing on the preponltlon to
Bllmlnato the word "male" from that «e«-
Uou of the Constitution gorernlnif the
right to vote took placo tod.iy.
The various woman stiff™?# oraanlaa-
tlons and those opposed sent their best
tpeakera to favor tho ITllI-Toomba concur-
rent resolution to amend tho Htata Constl.
hitlon so as to let women vote.
For four hoars the Jndl.-lury Committee
of the Benafe and assembly heurd these
trguments.
Dr. Mary Walker, famous exploiter of
woman's rights to meu's apparel, fur-
nished the one break In tho i.rderly pro-
ceedings. fihe Insisted that she l>e heard
uotwlthstandlnK Ohnlrinan 1'hllllps untsea-
Bon that she "snbmlt a brief."
When she refused to accept this sugges-
tion the chalrmnn bnnifod his gavel and
Dr. Walker finally yielded to his anthorlty.
iSgE55SBS5
nicholas t8cha1kovsky.
NEW YOItK, March 9.—The many American friends of M. Tschalkovsky ex-
pressed today the greatest gratification over the acquittal of the Russian socialist,
who. during his visits to this Country, hnd become Intimately acquainted with lead-
ing financiers and statesmen. The efforts of his friends here to secure for him an
open trial Is believed to have been not without weight lu bringing nbout an acquittal.
Russian revolutionary circles on the east sldo heralded with Joy the verdict of tho
Russian court, but expressed the deepest concern for the fate of Mine. Ilreshkovs-
kaya, who was ordered banished,
AUTHORIZE A PATENT COURT
Senate Favors Appeals Tribunal In
That Division.
WASHINGTON, D. C„ March 8.—The
bill creating a court of patent appeals
was passed today by the Senate. It au-
thorizes a bench of five members.
Dynamite Is Used at Corinth, N. Y.,
Where Strikebreakers Are Ar-
rested by Village Police.
& i'U>
.CUIUi.'TH, N. Y„ March 9.—Emploj'es
uf .the, mills of the International Paper
Company hero went on strike today.
Nine armed strike breakers, brought
here by the International Paper Company
In the express car of a regular passenger
train, were arrested t might by tne village
police, charged with carrying concealod
venpons. They were locked up.
Twice this afternoon dynamite cart-
ridges were exploded on a railroad bridge
over which tho strike breakers must pass
to enter Corinth.
The damage was nllght, owing to s^ant
knowledge of how to handle dynamite,
and tonigtit the damage has been repaired
and the bridge is under guard by mllltla.
Company J* Second Regiment, New York
National (Juard, Is stationed at the mills
to suppress disorders in case strikers or
sympathisers resist an attempt to smug-
gle In nonunion men under tho cover of
darkness.
Several small parties of strikebreakers
have been dispatched from Saratoga to
the mills at South (ilen Falls, nine being
brought here tonight, and the main body
of strikebreakers IB still held for orders.
Four Htrndrcd Are Out of Work.
NIAGARA FALU3. N. Y., March 9.—
About 400 men were thrown out of "work
hore today by a striko of fifty paper-
makers In the local plant of the Interna-
tional Paper Company.
SAYS NO DEMANDS ARE MADE
President of I'aper Company Alleges
No Grievances Were Presented.
NEJW YORK, March 9.—A. N. Burbank,
president of the International Paper
Company, In a statement today declares
that no demands or grievances have been
presented by their employes. March 3,
he declares, a worker wa3 discharged,
when It was reported that he was taking
somo of the company's property without
permission. Th* other employes refused
to continue at work unless the discharged
man was re-employed and their places
were filled. The the strike was voted.
According to Mr. Burbnnk, serious con-
ditions prevailed last night and today in
the vicinity of the mills In Saratoga
County, armed men filling tho streets,
which led to an appeal to the Governor
for troops.
MINERS ANI) OPERATORS SPLIT
Rrfnsal to Grant Demands In Northern
Coal Field Presents Great Issue.
CINCINNATI. Ohio. March 9.—Refusal
to p-ant demands started the real fight
that has been browing between the op-
erators and miners of soft coal in the
ootnpotltlve field, cohslBtlng of Ohio, In-
diana and 'VTeatern Pennsylvania, at the
second session of their Joint conference
here today.
After the miners hnd formally present-
ed their demands the operators formally
CZAR'S CASE COLLAPSES
\S*J
m
wrniK
Only realized conditions of
perfection defy comparison.
Knox Hats
represent the coronation of
faultless attire.
Spring shapes now shown.
Gentleman's HiU
Frank Bros.
Frank Bros. Branch
ZELflVA OF
AN ARISTOCRAT WHO HAS
SHOWN POWER.
Educated in European Universities.
Made President by a Trick—Raised
Country From Its Debts to
Comparative Prosperity.
I
&
G
N
BULL FIGHT
NEW LAREDO, SUNDAY, MARCH 13
$2.50 Round Trip $2.50
On sole for trains leaving Han Antonio U:00 p. in., March
12, and 7:00 a. m., March 13.
Tourist Sleeper to Laredo
Saturday N Ight, the 12th
Berth Rate $1.00.
See tbe Noted American Ball Fighter
HARPER B. LEE
City Office 401 East Houston St., Phones 425
FAILS TO CONVICT FAMOUS RUS-
SIAN OF CONSPIRACY.
Woman Who Admits She Is a Socialist
Revolutionist, However, Is Given Six
Years in Exile, Which Is Con-
sidered Mild Punishment.
ST. PETERSBURG, March ft.—1The
trlnl of Nicholas Tschalkovsky nnrl Mme.
Breshkovakaya, on tho charge of revolu-
tionary conspiracy, ended today with the
acquittal of Tschalkovsky and a com-
paratively mild sentence of six yenrs of
exile imposed on Mme. Rreshkovskakya.
TschaikovBky's counsel was so pessi-
mistic with record to the outcome that
he spent the Interval when the Jurors re-
tlretl In planning an appeal. Mme. Hresh-
kovskaya's counsel lamented the fact
that she lacked four years of the age ex-
empting her from hard labor.
Tne collapse of the prosecution's case
was due to the utter discrediting of
Patuek, who himself is serving a life
term for murder and other crimes, and
the failure of the crown to present other
witnesses who could connect Tschalkov-
sky ;irid Mme. Preshkovsknya with revo-
lutionary activity, as charged in the in-
dictment. The woman, however, had
I )len« led grutlty to being a socialist
revolutionist. The Jurors found that the
business record Introduced amply ac-
counted for Tschalkovfiky's presence In
Russia.
Ho will leave In three weeks for Eng-
land.
Mme. Breshkovskaya's exile, as shown
by the experience of others, will be reas-
onably comfortable If money Is forth-
coming from either her or her friends.
refused them, and the remainder of the
day was spent in an open and general
discussion of the ense.
If one side or the other is not con-
vinced by the discussion, the matter will
be referred to the scale committee, which
consists of two operators and two miners
from each of the three States.
Road Breaks With Its Men.
BALTIMORE, Md., March ft.-Word was
received here thnt negotiations were broken
off today between the officials of the Dela-
ware A: Hudson Railroad and the conduc-
tors and trainmen of the road and that the
men soon will be polled as to whether a
strike shall be declared. The negotiations
looking to a readjustment of wages and
working conditions had been in progress
at Albany, N. Y.
COLDS CAI RR HEADACHE
LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine, tho world
wide Cold and drip remedy, removes
cause. Call for full name. Look for sig-
nature E. W. Grove. 25 cents.
ESTRADA IS WILLING TO QUIT
Any Reasonable Terms Will Be Affree-
able to Him.
WASHINGTON, D. C., March 9.-Gen-
eral Estrada, head of tho Nlcaragruan
revolutionary faction, is now ready to
accept any reasonable terms as a basis
for peace. Ho has sent to tho State De-
partment n, communication asking for
intervention by the United States nnd
tho selection of a provisional President
other than himself or Madrlz, and agree-
ment between the two factions for tho
early election of a President and recogni-
tion of the debts incurred by the revolu-
tionary party. The good offices of tho
United Btatos are requested to guaran-
tee© tho fairness of the election.
READ THIS.
COMANCHE, Tex., Feb. 17, 1910.—This
is to certify that Hall's Texas Wonder
cured me of kidney, bladder and rheu-
matic trouble nnd I fully recommend it
to those suffering In this manner.
ALEX ROBINSON.
All druggists sell Hall's Texas Wonder.
OKLAHOMA MAN SURRENDERS
Lee Howell, Himself Wounded, Gives
Up at Cathay.
CATnAY. Oljla., March 0.—Lee Howell
shot In the stomach during a quarrel with
Grant Harris here late yestprday. surren-
dered to the officers hero today and is now
In prison at Checotah.
Howell, it is said, shot nnd killed Harris
as soon as lie himself had been sliot.
Constable Wndsworth, who attempted to
interfere during the quarrel between Har-
ris and Howell, was budlv beaten with the
butt end of a gun.
If there Is one thing on earth that Presi-
dent Zelaya of' Nicaragua despises It Is
an American. Ho makes no secret of It,
either. Ho neglects no opportunity of lm-
presclng upon them that they are not
wanted. His motto Is: "Latin-America for
Latin-Americans," and when anybody sug-
gests the benefits to be derived from closer
intercourse with the United States, he
points sarcastically to Panama. Porto Rico
and Cuba.
Zelaya belongs to the real aristocracy of
Central America. He Is a man of about
60. of pure Castlllian blood, a Spaniard
through and through. A good friend, but
a relentless foe. with a warm heart and a
quick temper, which, once aroused, makes
him a devil incarnnte.
He was given the finest education Nicara-
gua could afford, and then, at 14. was sent
to Europe. He studied at La Sorbonne,
in Paris, and visited other European uni-
versities. At 25 he returned to his native
land, a man of great attainments, knowl-
edge and energy. He knew no restraint,
and gave his passions full play. In colder
climes he would have been considered a
• lebauche, but Latin-American morals can-
not be measured by the same standards as
those of Anglo-Saxon races, so he was
merely recognized as a leader of the pleas-
ure loving "sports" and "high rollers" of
Managua.
SECRET OF HIS POWER.
In his own way Zelaya is a patriot, ne
loves his country and Its customs and tra-
ditions, nnd be really considers that the
Introduction of American methods of gov-
ernment would be something in the nature
of a defilement. He knows that his fellow
countrymen are not capable of self govern-
ment, and that they probably never will be
unless God makes them all over again. In
this he has the support of all the best and
most conservative men In his country.
It Is the same all through Central Amer-
ica; the people cannot govern themselves,
they must be ruled; but they want to be
ruled by men of their own race ami reli-
gion. and not by unsympathetic strangers.
This Is the secret of Zelaya's power, Just
ns It was of Castro's, and is still of the
wonderful influence of the perpetual Pres-
ident of Mexico, Porfirio Pin?,. When Ze-
laya raises the cry of "Yankee absorption."
thousands of Latin-Americans from Peru
to Mexico will flork to his standard. He
is a man of endless resources, and will
fight to a finish.
Zelaya raised himself to the Presidency
of Nicaragua by something like a trick It
was a three-cornered fight, one of the can-
didates being Jose Samoa another being
Zelaya. Their combined votes over-
whelmed the third competitor, nnd Zelaya
became President. ITe has been President
for some sixteen years. If a white man
opposes him, he tokes that white inan,
chains htm by the ankle to a negro, and
throws him Into a daingeon.
REVOLUTIONS THE NATIONAL SPORT.
Revolutions against his authority there
have been, but then revolutions are the
national sport of Latlu-American peoples.
They could no more do without them than
Americans could without baseball.
Honduras, Salvador and Guatemala have
their own revolutionary parties, ami the
rebelo of one country think nothing of
going over the border and using the terri-
tory of the neighboring nation as a base
from which to attack their own govern-
ment. This leads to all sorts of interna-
tional complications, and made necessary
the establishment of a special arbitration
court between the various Central Ameri-
can republics, to which all such disputes
could be referred.
Now, Zelaya has got a pretty big revo-
lution on bis hands. It will hear compari-
son with the uprising led by Matos agiiinst
Castro, and to complicate matters further
two Americans have been shot after the
rough and ready methods In vogue down
there.
Perhaps the Taft Administration would
not look askance at on opportunity to
teach Zelaya a lesson. He has "rubbed it
In" a ibt too hard. The T'nlted States
Charge d'Affaires had to leave Managua
last April because he was hounded night
and day by detectives, and at times did
not rerelve the commonest courtesies from
the Nicaragnnn officlnls. It is even alleges
that his diplomatic mail was tampered
with and that he was refused admittance
to the President's palace on more than
one occasion when he went on official
business of tho State Department.
But this was only in keeping with Ze-
laya's policy of having nothing to do with
the United States. Fie expressed no re-
gret that the Cnited States should have
no diplomatic representative in his coun-
try: he seemed rather tc look upon the
Charge d'Affaires* departure as a good
riddance.
SERVICE TO HIS COUNTRY.
If Zelaya is overthrown there can be
no doubt that it will give tho country a
great setback unless ITnclo Sain is prepared
to step in and proclaim a protectorate and
lend his credit to build up the country.
Zelava, with all his faults, raised the
country from a debt-ridden Joke to a
prosperous nation —prosperous ns Latin-
American communities go. The per capita
currcucy circulation of Nicaragua is a*
1'igh as $22, while In the United States it
Is only $lf>
Zelaya has amassed a considerable for-
tune, but In this again he Is like Castro.
He is always ready to place his own credit
ot the service of his country, and he re-
cently negotiated a loan with English
bankers for more than $2,000,000 for public
Kg'
YOU CAN'T EXPECT
You will be agreeably surprised at its bene-
ficial result*. Your appetite will return
to be strong and healthy if the stomach
is too wpfik to properly digest your food,
and in order to overcome this weakness
you should begin each meal with a dose of
HOSTETTER'S
STOMACH BITTERS
and your food will be perfectly digested.
Try it today for Indigestion, Costlvenetts,
DiltousneHM, Colds, Grippe and Malaria,
Fever aod Ague. The genuine has our
Private htujjw 0wmg neck ot bottle.
Good Bye
Dear Old Winter Suit, I'll
Hang You Up 'Til Fall!
Spring suits are hanging on
our racks, the heavy-weights •
have been relegated to the
rear. The weather demands
lighter clothes and we're
ready to show you as classy
a bunch of
Spring
Suits
As man would care to see,
priced anywhere from
$12.50 to $40.00
The Suit
KNOX HATS
FRANK BROS.
SAN ANTOMO'S GREATEST CL0TEIERS
Alamo Plaza — Two Stores—Main Plaza
EDWIN CLAPP SHOES
works, giving his personal property as se-
curity.
Zelaya wants an interest in every indus-
try set up in the country. He loves money,
not for the money Itself, but for position,
and he Is a curious medley of profligacy
and business ability, of strength and weak-
ness. It is uot easy for Americaus to un-
derstand him.
Zelaya went to see the Rums-Johnson
fight pictures when they were exhibited in
Managua. Ho was disgusted. To him the
spectacle of two human beings pummelling
each other in a ring seemed degrading.
And yet there is not a man who more
dearly loves a bull fight or a cock fight.—
Louisville Times.
WILL ROOSEVELT RETURN
He Is Surrounded by 150,000 Square
Miles of Disease.
Questioning whether Theodore Roosevelt
can escape the sleeping eickness menace
or other fatal fevers that make Uganda
150,000 equare miles of disease, Capt. Fritz
Duquesne, in the Travel Magazine for
March, draws a thrilling picture of the
real dangers that surround Hwano Tumbo
on tho last stage of his hunting expedi-
tion in East Africa. Captain Duquesne
warned President Roosevelt at the White
House that the risks taken in hunting the
white rhinoceros are trifling as compared
with the sleeping sickness pejil in Uganda.
He says:
"I safarled from Klsumu to Lake Falls-
bury while sleeping sickness was raging
in the Usoga district, north of the Vic-
toria Nyanza. In every native village
there was death. Children sat around and
watched their parents stagger like drunk-
ards and fall to die before their huts.
The sights I saw left an Indelible picture
of misery on my memory. The vultures
picked their bones and paraded unafraid
through the villages. Lions and leopards
crept amongst the huts in broad dayllgnt
and boldly carried off the living and the
dead. Some villages were completely de-
ported, sleeping sickness having complete-
ly exterminated the Inhabitants. Hun-
dreds of white skeletons lay scattered
about, the skulls grinning hideously in
the glaring tropical sun.
"At one Ua.songa village there were
only twenty survivors out of 200 former
inhabitants. A woman in the uncon-
scious stage of the disease lay on her
back glaring madly at the sun while her
18-months-old child, which apparently was
not infected, tried in vain to reach its
mother for sustenance. Around about,
looking on in stupid apathy, eat the
emaciated remnants of tho tribal family.
"As I watched, a leopard, sleek,and fa*.,
crept with Its belly low to the ground
through the village. It caught a corpse
Inside a hut and was dragging It out
backward when I shot it. I little later a
lioness bounded into tho village and
snapped up a living child. T heard tbe
child screech, but too late to shoot the
man-eater. _
"Turning on the Rasoga, I cried, 'Do
something, run nway. leave here before
you all die!" And an old man said. "We
will then only dlo outside our village, for
the end has c.ome to the black life. Tho
white man has brought his curse. His
Muungu (God) is stronger than ours," he
concluded hopelessly.
"It is strange but true that with the
appearance of the whites in Central
Africa came the sleeping sickness. The
white with his safaris and trading cara-
vans brought natives from the infected
districts, thus spreading the malady which
requires only one infected being to be
Introduced Into a district. The poor na-
tive was not far wrong in blaming the
*"AtS'one time whites were supposed to
have a natural Immunity from the
disease, but tho supposition has been
rudely shattered by the recent death of a
number of white residents. Tho glosslna
palpalis, tsetse fly, will cost the wor d
millions in money and Uvea before it is
finally conquered. If It ever Is.
TRAIL A NEGRO WITH DOGS
Armed Posses Will Lynch Georgia
Black if They Get Him.
COTjTTMBUS, Ga., March 9.—Armed
posflea with thft aid of trained blood-
hounds this aftornoon followod the trail
of Love Randall, a ncRro murderer, for
fifteen miles across Slate County to-
ward Columbus, with the certainty of a
lynching If the negro was caught. To-
nlKht hundreds are still searching for
Randall. , .
Following a dlsoute yesterday with
Poland Kite, assistant overseer of the
plantation on which Randall was em-
pioyetl, Randall and his wife attacked
Kite, who was stabbed by the woman.
Early this morning Randall stabbed R.
A. Stratford, the overseer, as the latter
was entering the plantation commissary.
Stratford drew his nlstol. hut the negro
managed to gain possession of It and
shot Stratford to death.
Randall's wife, with a baby In her arms
and two small children by her side,
crossed the river today to the Alabama
fide There has been no attempt to harm
tho woman
<5,
Accept Reef Trust Evidence Offer.
WASHINGTON, D. C.t March 9.—The
Department of Justice will accept the
offer made by Pierre Garven, prosecutor
of Hudson County, New Jersey, to fur-
nish the Government evidence he has
on hand In tho beef trust cases, it is an-
nounced,1
IIKNIIY A. HODGE, Pres.
CHARGES 0. AtTHTJH,
San Antonio Ufe Insurance Co.
__ .. wmUffl' PPRPfls?
Procrnitlnntlon to Uw> foe nt
who rtTPains-
IWSTRANCH PBOTMCTIOW IB A
WISEI.Y ACHIEVED
The man who acts Is tho muter of the ninn
"perhapses" nnd "roayb«trt and are suca
the scourge of regret.
LET US TAKE YOU OCX OF TJI8
Intelligent and lndu«Moo»
too to «OV WASHER BIILDIVO
S.CI
Or TilK 1)H»AM»B« CM
opints oonmtptod yr"%
ILILDDIO, SAW A*TOJf».
INDICT ST. LOUIS CITIZEN
Former Police Relief Association Secre-
tary Is Under Charge.
ST. LOUIS, Mo., March 9.—Four In-
dictments were returned this afternoon
by the grand Jury, charging John M.
Healv, former secretary of the Police
Relief Association, with embezzlement
of J12,79»i of the funds of the association.
Healy has been under tlO.OOO bonds alncS
January.
The grand Jury Is still Investigating
the alleKed shortage in the police fund.
Fairbanks Is Ranqueted in London.
LONDON, March 9.-A company of dis-
tinguished Rrltons, with American resi-
dents, gave a banquet tonight to former
Vice President Charles W. Fairbanks
under the auspices of the Pilgrims' So-
ciety. The Earl of Halsbury presided.
UPHOLDS GHAVT CONVICTM*
California Court Hays Coffey's Pw
tenoe Muirt
SAN FRANCISCO, JWfWh
of Appeal* today xiphoid fWTVtftlnq
of formar Supervisor M, W, Coffay In
conneotlom with tho umft -llsaleBOTea si
the Rnof-eohmlta admlntrtration, Ceffajp
wa» sentenced to five yoam In Bar
Quentln.
Sunday School Leader Die*.
PHILADELPHIA, Pa- March
ferson M. Andrew*, iscretary of
Amerloen Sunday School Union, died «ud-
denly at hli home here today, aired St,
Asthma and Catarrh Cured
My husband was cured of asthma and catarrh and I
was cured after my doctor gave me up by using:
Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey as our only medicine.
MR. AND MRS. 11. 11. SAUNDERS.
This is what Mrs. Saunders writes after both her husband and her
self had been cured: "My husband has suffered from asthma and catarrh
for years, but by the use of Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey as his only
medicine he has found great relief. As for myself, I was given up by my
family doctor 11 years ago, but I heard of your medicine and began taking
it. By the time I had taken two bottles, I was able to walk out alone.
"I have recommended Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey to many people
since it did so much for my husband and for me. Since I wrote you
before I have bought a bottle for my sister-in-law; she is nearly worn-
out and the doctor told her she has Diabetes, but Duffy's Pure Malt
Whiskey is doing h?r much good." — Mrs. H. R. Saunders, 959 W.
Main Street, Galesburg, III.
Ministers of the gospel, doctors of medicine, nurses and people
everywhere unite in commending Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey—the only
perfect tonic stimulant, the one true medicinal whiskey.
Duffy's Pure Malt WHsfcqr
is one of the greatest strength-builders and tonic stimulants known to
medicine. It attacks the seat of the disease, drives out the germs and
assists in rebuilding the weakened tissues in a gradual, healthy, natural
manner. It is a wonderful remedy in the prevention and cure of con-
sumption, pneumonia, grippe, bronchitis, coughs, colds, asthma, malaria,
low fevers ana all wasting, weakening conditions, if taken as directed.
It is invaluable for overworked men, delicate women and sickly
children. It strengthens and sustains the system, is a promoter of
health and longevity, makes the old feel young and keeps thrt young
strong. It is prescribed by doctors and is recognized as a family
medicine everywhere.
whiskey. It l> ■old IJf SEALED BOTTLES
ONM, by nil reliable druggist), grocers and dealers, or direct, *1.00 m large bottle.
t^ook for the trade-mark, the "Old Chemist*" on the l*belf nnd be cure tho seal otaf
the cork Is nnhrokrn. If a dealer offers to sell yon sn-called Duffy's Pnro Malt
Whiskey In bulk, report same to as, and, when proven, we will pay you a reward.
Write Medical Department, The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, N. T., for fre*
doctor's advice and medical booklet containing testimonials and common sense rales
for health.
I
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The Daily Express. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 69, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 10, 1910, newspaper, March 10, 1910; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth433838/m1/2/?q=12th%20Armored%20Memorial%20Museum: accessed April 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.