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PAGE BIX

Rest

the Stomach

Nothing will relieve indigestion that

doesn't digest the food, itself, and give

the stomach a perfect rest.

You can't reasonably expect that

any weak stomach will regain its

strength and get well when it is

compelled to do the full work that a

sound stomach should do.

You wouldn't expect a sick horse

to get well when it is compelled to do a

full day's work every day of the week.

Your stomach must have rest

But it isn't necessary to starve your

self in order to rest your stomach.

Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is a perfect

digestant It will digest all of the food

you eat regardless of the condition of

your stomach.

Kodol

Dyspepsia Cure

for Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sour

Stomach, Flatulence, Headache, Water

Brash, Belching of Gas, Nausea, Gastritis,

Heartburn and all troubles arising

from indigestion and non-assimilation

of the food.

I had dyspepsia In Its worst form; was re

duced in weight to 118 pounds. After using two

and one-half bottles of Kodol, I was completely

cured and restored to my usual weight of 145

pounds. J. LUTHER JOHNSON,

Cleburne, Tex.

KODOL DIGESTS WHAT YOU EAT

[SrSSSSI makes the [$£SSpE

I trT.l or SO c.nt .!» I STOMACH SWEET, |aOo..CMcMO.P.S.A.

For Sale By L. L. TALLMAN

HEIRESS WORKS IN SLUMS

Nlargerie Palmer, Society Leader,

Renounces Fashionable Life

LEAVES COLORADO SPRINGS FOR LONDON

DAUGHTER OF GEN. PALMER,

GOES TO LABOR AMONG

ENGLAND'S POOR.

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., Nov.

13, —Heiress to millions. Miss Margerie

Palmer, eldest daughter of Gen. Wil

liam J. Palmer, has renounced the fash"

ionable world and became a worker

among the poor of th London slums.

She has entered the training school of

a big London hospital, concealing her

identity, it is said, that she might bet

ter pursue her chosen calling.

Miss Palmer inherits her philan

thropic instincts from her father, one

of the pioneers of Colorado. Gen.

Palmer always has been identified with

the growth of the state, and amassed

GOOD for OLD and YOUNG

a ugust Flower keeps the children healthy mni

strong-

Full of vigor and frolic the whole day long.

So when Mamma needs more they'rush off it

high glee,

And shout to the druggist: " Please give it tc

me 1"

Inability to get up brisk and fresh in

the morning, lack of appetite, pallor,

muddy complexion and poor spirits—

these all indicate a disordered stomach

and bad digestion—in adults and children,

too. They also indicate the urgent neec

of taking Green s August Flower regu

larly for a few days.

It's a reliable old remedy for all stomacl

troubles, never fails to cure indigestion

dyspepsia aud chronic constipation, anc

is a natural tonic for body ana mind. «

Two sizes, 25c and 75c. All druggists

For Sale By

HOCKETT DRUG CO.

millions in its progress from the ter

ritorial days. A large share of his

money always has gone to charitable

and educational work.

Gen. Palmer was one of the founders

of Colorado Springs. It was his desire

to build a town where whisky and

gambling should be practically un

known. When the town was laidf,out

each deed to lots contained a clause

forbidding the sale of alcholic drinks.

To Gen. Palmer the state is indebt

ed for Colorado college, which is re

garded as one of the best educational

institutions in the west. Soon after

the founding of Colorado Springs, Gen.

Palmer and his associates gave a tract

of land for a college. This was In

1874, when Colorado was still a terri

tory. In its early days the institu

tion had a hard struggle for existence.

For a long time it had no students

of college standing, and at one period

the college was so greatly in debt that

it was seriously proposed to close it

and sell the property to pay the debts.

Gen. Palmer, however, stood by the in

stitution and aided it materially.

Gen. Palmer is commonly known as

the father of the Rio Grande Western

road and always has taken a great in

terest not only in the property itself

but in the army of employes. He sold

the road a little more than five years

ago for $6,000,000. Just prior to his

retirement he distributed among em

ployes of the company $1,000,000 of the

earnings of the road in the shape of

preferred stock. He remembered every

body, from Col. Dodge, a high of

ficial, who received $100,000. to the sec

tion foremen, who received $2,000

each.

Be Charitable.

To your horse as well as to yourself.

You need not suffer from pains of any

sort—your horses need not suffer.

Try a bottle of Ballard's Snow Lini

ment. It cures all pains. J. If. Roberts,

Bakersfield, Mo., writes: "I have

usued your Liniment for ten years

and find it to be the best I have ever

used for man or beast." Sold by A. B.

Shelton.

'BARGAIN SALE' OF GRAVES

Competition in Grand Rapids, Mich.,

Brings Cut Prices.

GRAND RAPIDS. Mich., Nov. 13.—

The park commission will meet the

competition of outside cemeteries. A

cut in the prices of certain graves

has been decided upon. Seven hun

dred choice graves at Greenwood ceme

tery will be placed on sale at $10 each,

which is lower by $5 than the price

commonly charged in the city cemeter

ies.

The commissioners believe that the

•bargain price" will shut off the tend

ency to patronize the small cemeteries

of Kent county. The price of $10 not

only pays for the grave, but it pro

vides perpetual care.

THE EVENING STATESMAN, WALLA WALLA, WASHINGTON.

UNEARTH GIANT SKELETONS

Illinois Hound Rich in Relics of

- PreMstoric Days

SOKE PROVE TO SE EIGHT FEET LONG

DIGGERS BELIEVE THEY HAVE

FOUND AN ANCIENT BURY

ING GROUND.

QUINCY, 111., Nov. 13.—Excava

tions now going on, on the hilltop farm

of Mrs. M. Crabtree, eight miles

from Mount Sterling, Brown county,

are revealing a large number of pre

historic relics. Tne diggers are at

work upon a mound.

With the first day's work, the

mound began to yield traces of handi

work of past ages and the bones of

those who had wrought it and others

immediately joined in the search, still

going on. Thus far, several skeletons,

by actual measurement eight feet long,

and several pieces of remarkable pot

tery, beads and curious implements

have been taken out.

The bones crumble badly almost as

soon as they are taken In the open air.

They are so numerous that it is be

lieved a prehistoric burying ground

has been found, greater in extent and

more perfectly preserved than any yet

discovered.

Tjnder the bones of each of the

ancient dead were found pieces of

pottery, beneath the fragments of the

skulls of some of them vases, the

largest of which would easily hod

t«vo gallons. Underneath one skeleton

was a curious bowl, in the center of

which was the figure of a king seated

upon a log, and it is thought that

these bones may be those of a great

leader of the race that once ruled

this portion of the continent.

Strangest of all the articles found

with the bones were implements that

are apparently made of bamboo, some

of them evidently shaped for pur

poses of weaving. Vast quantities of

beads were found in the mound of a

strange material, almost white, and

possibly made from the best of pot

ter's clay.

[our bindery is complete!

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iSTATESMAN COMPANY!

Forty of the larger pieces found in

the mound were taken to Coopers -

town, where they are now temporarily

in the possession of H. C. Ren, post

master. Others will be taken there to

be kept until their final disposition

is decided. One of the pieces Is a

shell-shaped dish with a wolfs head,

the work on which leaves no doubt

that it was carved even the teeth of

the wolf gleaming from it, as ex

quisitely done as some of the ivory

carving of the Japanese, and some

of those who have seen the piece be

lieve it to be ivory.

STATE YIELD IS REDUCED.

Lea* by 5,000,000 Bushels Than Last

Year's Wheat Crop.

Washington harvested approximate

ly 27,000,000 bushels of wheat compar

ed to 32,000,000 bushels in 1905, ac

cording to W. H. Reed a member of the

state grain commission who is in Walla

Walla today on a short business trip.

"Accurate figures on the state yield

have not yet been prepared but I es

timate that the yield was close to

5,000,000 bushels less than last year,"

said Mr. Reed. "In addition to there

being a shortage in the number of

bushels a large percentage of the crop

tests light this year. I estimate that

approximately 50 per cent of Walla

Walla county's crop has been sold. In

the Palouse country about 25 percent

has been sold and along the Washing

ton Central the sales so far will not

exceed 20 percent of the total yield."

Notice of Annual School Election.

Notice is hereby given that the an

nual election of school district No. 1

of Walla Walla county, state of

Washington, will be held at Baker

Sharpstein, Lncoln and Washington

schools in said school district, on Sat

urday, the Ist day of December, 1906,

for the purpose of electing two school

district directors for a term of three

years.

The polls will be open from 1 o'clock

p. m. to 7 o'clock p. m. By order of

the board .f direct >rs.

Dated this 10th .day of November,

1906.

MARGARET CENTER,

School District Secretary.

r*

Had a Close Call.

"A dangerous surgical operation, In

volving the removal of a malignant

ulcer as large as my hand, from my

daughter's hip, was prevented by the

application of Bucklen's Arnica Salve."

says A. C. Stickel, of Miletus, W. Va.,

"Persistent use of the Salve com

pletely cured it." Cures Cuts, Burns

and Injuries. 25c at E. L,. Smalley,

druggist.

A Strength Builder B

After a wasting illness, there is

nothing which so surely and quickly ■ IB

builds up exhausted strength as 111

W The nutritious, tissue-building elements

of choice Barley-Malt in predigested HN^lK^i

«k form are almost instantly assimilated and I

taken up by the system. ■■■^^^^

Sol( J Dv all Druggists and Grocers.

. Prepared by

mm Anheuser-Busch Brewing Ass'n

Louis. U. S. A.

PEARY'S NORTHERN TRIP

Artcic Explorer Accomplished Wond

erful Results

WENT 300 MILES OVER KNOWN LINE

SCIENTISTS EAGERLY WAIT IN

TREPID MAN'S RETURN TO

THE LNITED STATES.

Many Arctic charts show in blue

the portions of the northern sea into

vl tc". explorers have penetrated by

sledge or boat, leaving still unexplor

ed water area white. When the next

charts are made It will be found that

Peary, by his explorations on the

coasts of the archipelago to the north

of Greenland and the latest sledge and

drift journey to the north of Grant

Land and Greenland, has extended the

blue over this part of the Arctic Ocean

on an average considerably further to

ward the North Pole than was done by

Xansen's sledge journey and the

Fram's drift in 1895 and by Cagni's

sledge journey in 1900 to the north of

western Asia and eastern Europe.

The American explorer has in fact

revealed a considerably larger area of

the unknown ocean to the north of the

eighty-sixth parallel in the American

Arctic than has been done by Europ

ean explorers to the north of their own

continent; so that while the largest

area of the unknown is to the north

of Canada, Alaska, and eastern Asia,

the area of the known that has been

pushed farthest toward the Pole is to

the north of northeastern America.

Peary's transverse or east and west

work along the coasts of the most

northern America lands is scarcely less

remarkable. It embraces over 600

miles of coast line, measuring from

headland to headland without follow

ing the numerous deep indentations.

Nearly half of it is entirely new coast

line which Peary alone has seen, and

these new shore surveys are at the

eastern and western ends of his coast

journeys: In his eastern journey he

rounded the most northern promontory

of the world as far as we know and

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1906

followed the coast in its southeastern

trend; in his western journey he trav

ersed the 220 miles of the shore line

revealed by Lieutenant Aldrich in 1576

and mapped the unknown northwest

shores of Grant Land, connecting Ai

drich's surveys with those of Sverdrup

thus completing our knowledge of the

great island to the northeast of Green

land. He also discovered new land to

the west, which he visited and found

to be situated in about 100 west longi

tude. It is doubtless an island to the

north of the group discovered by

Sverdrup and Is the most northern out

lier of the Parry archipelago that has

come to our knowledge.

Peary has thus extended his discov

eries some three hundred miles to the

north of what was, until he' went to

the north of Greenland, the threshhold

of the unknown in the Amrican Arc

tic; and he has surveyed and mapped

some three hundred miles of coast

lands along the northern edge of the

islands that he xplored beyond

Greenland and the American main

land. This much Is known from the

brief despatches in which he has out

lined his latest work; and few Arctic

annals will equal in interest the de

tails he will have to tell of these new

revelations of the unknown.