Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
Journal Gazette from Mattoon, Illinois • Page 2

Journal Gazette from Mattoon, Illinois • Page 2

Publication:
Journal Gazettei
Location:
Mattoon, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Organization Will Give Two Festival iit-Han SEWS AS HOUSE as It has no gearings, spring! or other devices which add no value to a washer whatever i' It is almort noiseless; "a baby can while you wash, 1 It sot tut expensive machine In the first place and will pay tor itself a Bhort time. After Friday June 1st Massage Parlors EXTRA I NEXT MONDAYrJUWE 4th Afternoon and Eveninn TSe Most Important! Mtzpcal Event In; Years I 60Supcrb Musicians--60 j'' w'' I'm" ii. in 'V V' IntrOdunng Vocat and Instrumental Soloists international reputation, including 7 Us 3 Virginia Llstclnann, I r. 'mc. Frances Doya if Alfred Shaw Herman Ccllstcadt Henry James Williams and ViilarJIskra, the only boy violin soloist In the world The me organization complet'd that now scoring a sensational success at "White City'Chicago.

THE ECONOMY 1915 Broadway, Mattoon, Hake Wash Day Easy for Your Wife Make the, burden of wash day- an easier on foryour its hi a her of back breaking toil. Save. all th' extra ex-fire starch Cut out pense soap et, all the muss and bother connected with wash day. How? by sending the fam-, Uy to us, We will wrath, stsrch and dry It, Iron It, toe, you with, and do It all for a charge so rea-aoitabla that you een't afford to do It at home, Come to the laundry and talk te we about It phone 200, 1 I. E.

Johnson Succestor Story's Steam Laundry. ii in in ii if eUL.il FINFROCK'S Ms wi We are offering this week the larg- eat ana moot Beautiful line of ham-, mocks eve brought to the city. ought frmithe Mat makers and sold to yea at pepular trices. STANDARD LENSTHS, WOVEN WtB. I jfc TAiT COLOIS.

I Sl.00 (IF TO S5.00 IT WILL BE A PLEASURE TO SHOW Y0U.THE8E PRETTY HAMMOCKS. LOOK THEM OVER, FInf rocks' Drug Store im -roadway. rled Itleble. ti wagon. The officer vow the did Dot mist a stitch; In the police matron's room Mrs.

Richie aald: "When I bad to rnn from my husband I thought the limit' bad 'neen reacbedj and I haven't cared since what became of me. I wag, married very young, to treat me cruelly and about six months ago tried to smpther me. I have' been working some, "but I bave found life a hard to travel. This house which they bave torn down was borne te me. -I didn't care what they did with) the oia oouse or witn me 1 "I Sialllai Ball Kllla Rr4 Blaakete A $1,400 stallion was gored to deatb by a bull, which Jumped from a field on a farm near IXaledonv N.

and rushed at the valuable steed. The bull bad caught sight of a red blanket in which the borse was wrapped, and before the racer could be liberated be bad been mortally wounded. CREW ALL DEAD INCASED IN: ICE Bussiaa Blockade Runner, Missing Many Months, Found In Tragic Incased in a shining armor of Ice and with the members of her, crew In various, positions froten stiff after ly ing for montbe in the arctlo, cold, the Russian blockade running steamship Soedabaya, which disappeared last autumn while awaiting orders in regard to the landing of. a cargo of arms at was recently discovered at Nlkoleyevsk, near the Amur river. It Is supposed that the captain of the ship lost his bearings while waiting for orders and 'hiding from the Japanese men-of-war and was caught in the ice.

There Is evidence that herculean efforts were made to get the ship away. The postures of the dead seamen tell graphically of the struggle with ter rible death. Some of the bodies were found on the Ice about the bows of the ship, as if they had been sent ahead with explosives to Wast a clear way. Everything aboard the vessel, above or below decks, was Incased in Ice. The arms, which were Intended for Vladivostok, were Intact, but It is thought are rhlnedl from rust The vessel was placed under waiting orders pending the result of the peace conference at add the sailors who perished never knew that the war had ended.

''v Btarsad UUad All Wlatcr. when the steamer Bradshaw made the first rounds of Isle Royaleln, Lake superior, two men were found who had been marooned on the Island all winter, They were D.H Bailey and 0. Hallneck, 'New Torkr students, who Intended only to spend a short holiday hunting and fishing, but some- bow they were forgotten, when the last boat of the season made Its call and were forced to spend all the long win ter on the lonely while anxious friends made diligent Inquiries and searched practically air Lake Superior without avail. The young men subsist ed by hunting and trapping and managed to nut la a good winter. When rescued they bad hair bangln.ira their shoulders and beards falling to their breasts.

,...4:, Twelve Mardereve Vim Tocetbev. Twelve natives sentenced to death for the murder of Hunt and Trooper Geprgo Armstrong, of he Natal police were, executed at and met death with wonderful stoicism. They were taken out Jn' two groups to a place where graves had been dug. Here a minister prayed with them and their eyes -were band- aged. When the word of command was uttered thirty-six.

rifle shots were fired at the same time. The bodies of the executed men were literally riddled. R4 Shirt Tfata. An Italian employed by the BlglFoor railroad saved a 'fast train bound for Indianapolis recently A heavy rainfall a creek to rifle, rapidly and wain awav a bflrt of the trestle near mowing uiai paniwaurr uum waa 6neVooktt'bw fjonne-f nttrt and used It Ms fJanper'SlgnKl W'flag the train whfth1 to save a' drUastrouit Week, i'v''f -'wiiJL. WWI i JawV'tM .1 IlllVSaVf fought natal, catan-h.

lie writes: The swelling i and 'serenes inside tny nose was fearf till I be gan' applying Bucklen' Amies. Salve to the sore surface; this caused the soreneee-aud awaOJlng to disappear, never to retarn." Bett in existence. 26c at OwIors Morton's and Rltter's drug storey SEWS BOY; UP IN COAL SACL filothcr Tronnces and Trusses la- corrigible Son and Wheels iL Hici to Police Station, 'WHAT WILL DE GANG TfilNK?" -Sleepy Tony's" Life of Decant Ltismt Ends Itaominionsly and He Moot lot OS Randall's bland For His Lest Dicsity. Antonio Varnolo, known Tony," a fourteen-year-old New Turk boy, who has given his mother no end of trouble for several ytars, was the recipient of one of the not proper trounclngs recorded ln the annals Of the neighborhood of his borne, 339 East One Hundred and, Fourth street And after" the trouncing came disgrace. Poor Tony wouldn't have mlnd- WBxaxao six to tb rouca btatioh.

ed the spanking which his mother gave hlnr tf the hod not added Insult to In jury. But now be bangs his, head In shame when be thinks of what "ds gang" will say when be "gets out" for Tony is a prisoner, in the Randall Island reform, school. The dlsgrace-tho insult which rankles In small Tony's bosom 1 that his mother after blm soundly tied him hand and foot sewed, him up In a coal sack, bundled blm on to a pushcart and wheeled him to the East One Hundred and Fourth street police station. And, worse and worse, she left his bead so that as the neigh-; bors crowded about to see what Varuolo's queer bundle was. they look ed into his drooping eres and laughed jong, joua auq acrisive laugnieri "Sleepy, Tony" has been leading the life of a gentleman of elegant leisure for the last two years.

His hard work Ing mother has bad a bard time of It with him) and' she finally decided to apply a drastic corrective. After pa tlently henring the many Irregularities Of her son she decided that, be would either have to go to School or to' work, so she laid her plana accordingly. On a rcceut night Tony cam home late and nonchalantly demanded supper. "All right" said hid mother, and she began to lay the table. As ber son par took of his repast bis mother, catching him unawares, bound him hand and foot and left blm until morning.

After the dawn bad broken she sorrowfully approached and, adjusting her eon In the proper attitude, thrashed nlm until her arms this that the, disgraceful. the police station wa made, and' Tohy' was humiliated before bis -ir said the sergeant at the sta-; tlion' after he bad viewed the queer, huddle Mrs. Varuolo's cart. 'I think that hoy ha a mother that 1 worthy of a better In beauty town there dwelt ft- lass, Her face was fair to The secret of her beauty lay, In Rocky Mountain Tea. i 't -f 'dk Morton.

For results, plnee ywt want. ad Jn Tb Journal-Gaiette. I Two Dazzling Festival Performances Afternoon; at Night at. 8:15 Special Note The Prices IS TORN DOWN Atlanta Woman Refuses to Move and Wreckers Demolish Honse Over Eer Head. PLIES NEEDLE UNCONCERNED Police Final! Have to Carry Her Away, Still Sewing aa if Nothing Unusual Had Happened.

Utterly Indifferent what was go ing on around her, Mrs. T. It. Richie, who now calls herself Miss Ellen Hampton! sat In' her home, 180 Luclle avenue, Atlanta. Ga.

while the building was being torn down over her head. She had decided she would not move from the dwelling, and. although she was repeatedly fluked to vacate, uhe stayed Just where she waa until only the floor rcmnlued, and she was. carried away 1 her chair, still sewing, Carpenters knocked off the weather boards. Shingles fell in showers about her.

sound of hammer aod'saw BMlaMr.earsCi4 stlOfie. eaj there, apparently oblivions to This frail, tired woman who did not care about a house tumbling down over her head was "once Miss" Ellen Hampton. She married T. R. KIchleat Greenville, B.

a According to ber story, be was cruel to her, and she fled to Georgia. In Atlanta she tried to get work, and after cooking in a pri vate family for several weeka she was left without employmentShe secured a room In a bouse at ISO Luclle avenue, where Sam Watklns. a carpenter, and his wife lived. The bouse was on a hillside, and the property was bought bit syndicate, which wanted, to grade the land for building lets. Watklns and bla wife did net want to move.

Mrs. Blchle did not care whether she moved or not only she was not going to any trouble to hunt a home or to move. The three were repeatedly notified, that the house was going to be' torn down, but still they did not move. --When the workmen began-to-tea? down the building Watklns and Ms wife took their furniture and piled it in the yard. They remained there two days and at tbcjr metis In the open 't- Mrs.

Richie did not move. She said she had only a very few things In the world, and she did not care whether they were damaged er not i She sat In, a rocking rbalr quietly sewing while the work of demolition SHH DID SOT HISS A MltCIL' going on. When a 'loose-shingle came too near ber head she moved her chair a trifle, brushed the dust frem her lap and went on The carpenters tried to avoid injuring ber, and every now and then some one would reason with her and beg her to get out of the But she sat there, sewing. When the tlj weatherboards; the rafters and Joists were removed and there retnulncd only the floor one of the workmen called the police And atked the otpcers td send after the woman. A patrol wagon was sent and Mrs.

Richie and ber few earthly possessions were taken to headquarter. She offered no resistance to the police, nor would she assist them. Two HflUceffica jlfifcad. no the ahilr and car. i.

r9.n!3p55 Admission rnctu'diafTeseTVeCiea Miss Hampton's will be (opted oyer iSnaw's snoe iigre 16th ana tsroaawav Corner Yak ltv Trwd-The New BreakfasfFooa Toasted CorriFlakes? Already cooked, 'but In entirely ady to eat, fferentfla- i you have vor from the been, using, lentos and prllu. alway xican Plm- 'ngarian pa- tock. As the tfami weather an-p roaches aidyou begin to feel like yol Wanted iced tea, let ns fix ylifup a blend and if you don I lay its the best tea you evl fused well treat, Try Pawpaw nnfermented grape Juice; absolutely pure and recommended the) healthiest warm weather drink made. CEO. S.

BOULWARE. PropI Dr.F.J.Babcock 7 Rupture Specialist and a Expert Truss-Fitter 2505 Avenue Special Hon Given to Fitt Children The latest and "most scientific instruments used satisfaction guaranteed. Consultation and Examinatj(mee OR. r. MOOREr -PHVSICIAnVnd iluROEOrT-" Office 1420.

Broadfctf Phone 391 'win MfcmtU mm twit tMwfc mvj tl yu.r Dentin, mmi 4. I itMM Kf r.rti.Mf.r TMtlMB.wUtla Ml "RmHml bum, tl, tmrm mil, TmuwkIui www Cw a lite me Sfor Grocery Coltae Ailrti sr CMietetE-e cueM I 4 CHlduiAIEIl'S KNLlMll tones and Hi. Orchestral Band i nn nir oh been allowed to remain in tht family forces out every particle of the and makes complete and lasting maam at wlaas aaw4Awa awJaa si. vwu wUa tsjrciv-Uw fctv UuUCi iJiV dVia. VMHartw 4Ua w.

awav. and whn the rre in rnmnla-tA EprCMFIQ AYLMMTS- aA. co.t OSTE1 'pt THIC PHYSICIAN. Graduate Under Founder Dr. JI, Klrksvllle, Mo.

A.T, Chfonio and Acuta Disease 1317 Charleston Ave, Phone 724 ban transportation from Mattoon to Urban Park and Tickets NOW on sal at Ioterurban Ticket Office SECURE YOUR. SEATS AT ONCeT. "A-Word to The Wise, Etc." rnnv inur LUiiliUlIUUw wLUUU JTUlwUH THEYbnST DISEASE III THE.70RLD Contaglou Blood Poison is the) worst disease in the world not only those who contract it suffer, but the awful taint is often transmitted to Inno 1 1 I i a BiiapnuK waose uvea sro Diitrawa aoa. Doaica ciseasea Decaase toe virus of Contagious Blood Poison ha JS.B uut uinetss IeontrnetdOotslonaBlie4 Poltoa is usually a little pimple or blister, hywina-e. towi nd by soma tnrewd then a tc4 rash breaks out, the mouth and throat ulcerate, the.

hair comes of butthadiaaoworaantatfaaar4 mma. annta 8. 8. 8. which I oonmno4, and oon out, Copper colored SpoU appear On inMthatraatnwatllIwi.se-Mrlt the limbs, pack and breast; and as the yen.

This some tim io and disease more thoroughly pollute the VXSoIIvbA blood, sore and nicer form and ii Bt. Louis, Ho. the trouble is not checked the finger tiail drop off, and the oft bone of th aose and head are destroyed. S. S.

S. roes down into th blood poison Hum Mave lHAM-lMa. to Dast ini At.2 s. and Aa thoroughly doc S. 8.

S. rid the system of the. vim that no slqs of the disease are ever seen in after yean, and posterity is born with a rich, pure blood supply. Book with complete instruction for home treatmoat and anymedical advice desired will be given without chares. li -pi --e iU ea-'Ii'-st'i'aKc Hi S0 kesi ESS- 3 SWBFT MATTONf" OPTICALJ 1 Si' Wi' I-1' hoom 27, 'Clndlty eppotlts P.

O. Flnsst up to date Mount-Ings and Prfme Guaranteed." i i i 1 Ey'Tsstd Fre.v'i!(:',';;' Office Hour 8 m. to m. 1 S. fATHEAL, Optician.

Ask your twer rs rmrour y's Best Hour,.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Journal Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
629,293
Years Available:
1905-2024