IBB III BRIEF NEWS N0TE3 OF INTEREST FROM VARIOUS SECTIONS. ALL SUBJECTS TOUGHED UPON Religious, Social, Agricultural, Polit ical and Other Matters Given Due Consideration. Sidney's water works system will bo completed nt nn early day. Tho corner stono for tho $80,000 school building In Beatrice lins been laid. Mr. and Mrs. Peter L. Hork of Uumt county celebrated her golden wedding last weok. Ground has been broken for tho million dollnr court bouse that Doug Ins county will build. H. C. Smith shipped over twenty eight carloads of the choicest apples from his fruit farm near Barada, this fall. Chnrles Zobol, employed with tho Burlington as a brldgeman, fell twenty feet from a bridge east of Dlller and was badly hurt. L. K. Koplln, who conducts n snloon In Pllgor, was Jirrested for selling liquor to minors. Ho pleaded guilty lo three counts nnd wns lined $75 and costs. Tho fees collected by tho vnrlous state c moors and state departments during tho blonnlum just closed, amounted to a grand totnl of $3G1. 092.21. O. E. Congdcn, n hotel man nt Wil cox, was found guilty of selling booze, or rather giving It to his guests by placing It on tho tnblo with tho bill of fare. Tho work of constructing n now bridge ucross tho Platto river at Loulsvlllo has been commenced, nnd it Is expected to be ready for tralllc within three months. Miss Jennie 12. Ferguson, of Friend, has been appointed administratrix of an estate valued nil tho way from $110,000 to $175,000, left by her father, tho lato Ephrlnm I. Ferguson. Farmers should all havo telephones. Write to us nnd learn how to got tho best service for tho least money. Ne braska Tolephono Company, 18th nnd Douglas streets, Omaha. "Uso tho Doll." Giover Morris, who was cnlled to Steele City with a pair of bloodhounds on u robbery case, returned homo to Beatrice, having succeeded In running down a man named Campbell. A lot of goods woro unearthed. The Dlnlr Tolephono company has nsi-cd tho railway commission for por mission to put In a 10-cont toll rate betwen that town nnd Herman. Free scrvlco has been maintained between tho two-towns up to tho present time. Thomas Oliver of Fairmont, whllo In the 1mm doing his chores, got too near a team of mules. Ono of tho.n resented tho Intrusion and adminis tered to him a box In tho ear, nearly aovorlng that member from his bond. Tho corn show held In Nebraska City . four days was a big nuccesa. There were over ono thousnnd ex hibits besides those of the mnnu fnclurers, and Eaglo hall was crowded .vlth throngs of people during tho day and tho evenings. Coroner Norcross of Miller and Jury held an Inquest over tho body of Mrs. Agnes Allen, colored, finding ac cidental death from nn overdose .f chloroform, self-ndmlnlstcred. Tho woman had been 111 for some time, and used tho chloroform to relievo pain. A speclnl meeting of tho members of the Johnson County Farbers' Insti tute has been called for Tuesday, De comber 29. At that time there will bo present threo government experts to confer with tho people of that locality. There will bo an expert In tho grow ing of cerenls, ono on tho soil, nnd ono on good roads. J. H. Edmlster of Kearney was tak en to the Lincoln county Jail nt North Platto by tho Deputy United States Marshall Sammons to begin sorbin; time under sentence of tho federal court. Edmlston Is tho real estate speculator who was convicted of nt tempting to dofrnud tho government through Irregular land entries at North Platto. A 3,200-pound steer wns sold In the South Omaha yards last week for $9.40 per hundred. Ho notted tho owner, O. W. Perloy. $300.80. This Is tho largest prlco over paid for nn animal which was not sold on a pedi gree. Tho animal was sold largoly on account of Its exhibition value. Tho steer was 5 yonrs old and of tho Shorthorn breed, but not thorough bred apparently. Tho largo fox squirrels on tho sixty ncro normnl campus at Peru have become so numerous as to cause those Interested to fear that thoy will destroy tho birds' nestB. Prof. H. 11. Dnncnnson of tho department of bi ology after continued Investigation says that they do not damage tho ucsts other than what little damage may result Incident to their skipping about over tho trees. Harry C. Lindsay, state librarian, has (lied his biennial report with the governor. It shows n total of 5S,17;5 volumes In the llhrnry. Two years ago thoro woro 54,072. Tho librarian purchased 1.752 volumes and received 1,749 by donation and exchange According to tho reportB of tho ro cordor there woro filed In Otoo county during tho month of November nine mortgagos amounting to $27,000, nnd sevon released to tho valuo of $14, 945. On town and vlllago property thero woro filed slxteon mortgages of tho value of $12,115.22 and fifteen roleasod whose valuo was $4,01G.8fi. NEXT GERMAN AMBASSADOR. I Kai6er Selects Count Von Bernstorff for Washington Post. Berlin. Count Johnnn llolnrlch von Bornstorff, who recently had repre sented the Germnn government In Egypt, has been selected by Emperor William to succeed the lato llaron Speck von Sternburg as ambassador to America. Countess von llernslorff Is n daughter of Edward Luckemeyer of Now York. Count von Uornstorff was assigned lately to Egypt. Ho wns first diplo matic agent nnd consul general at Count Von Bernstorff. Cairo, but was raised to tho rank of minister plenipotentiary early In 1908. Ho Is tho fourth boh of Count At brecht von BernstorfT, who wns u dis tinguished contemporary of Blsmnrck and ho wua born In London In 1802 while his father wns Germnn iimbas Bador to tho court of St. James. Tho now ambassador began his dip lomatic career In 1899, when ho was mndo attache nt Constantinople. From Turkey ho was transferred to tho for eign ofllcc in Berlin, after which ho advanced from ono grade to nnother, serving in Belgrade, Dresden, St. Pe tersburg nnd Munich. He wns coun cilor of tho embassy and first secre tary In London in 1902. While In England tho count camo especially under tho notlco of Em peror William as a result of his worlc ( In ameliorating tho existing bad feel lug ngalnst Germany. Ho drew up n; series of lucid and comprehensive dis patches on tho sltuatlou. After four years' service In London ho wns sent to Cairo. In tho German diplomatic scrvlco this post Is re garded as a Btopplng stone towards advancement. Count Ernst von Bernstorff, tho founder of tho collnternl branch of the family, nlso had an American wife. Ho was married In 1801 to Amerlku Itlcdosel, Baroness Zu Elsonbach, who was born In Now York in 1780. Tho now ambassador to tho United States Is a man above middle height, of slight llguro, and wears n blond mustache. Ills knowledgo of English' Is well-nigh perfect and he Is known as a successful utter-dinner speaker and to bo a witty conversationalist. HAMMOND SEEKS CABINET PLACE Mining Engineer Would Head Com merce and Labor Department. Washington. FrlondB of John Hays Hammond, tho millionaire mining en gineer nnd publicist of Mnssachu setts, will ask Mr. Tal't to make him u member of his cabinet. Mr. Ilnm- JOHN HAYerMMMOW mond's preference is understood to bo tho department of commerco nnd lnbor. Ho has Ideas on tho subject of making this department u renl help lo the commercial interests of the country, particularly tho manufactur ing Industry, nnd many of his friends would like to boo him have an oppor tunity to carry his plans Into effect, Mr. Hammond wns active In tho re cent campaign. Ho took hold of the work of making useful' the National Lengue of Republican Clubs, and It is generally understood that ho bore tho expenses of this work out of his own prlvato fortune. He Is now planning to maintain pormnnent licndqunrterH of tho National leiiguo and to Increaso Its membership and Influence during tho next four years. Many Languages Spoken. Accorded to tho aecoptod authorities thoro uro 3,424 spoken languages in tho world today; or perhaps It would bo more accurate to say dlalocts. Of ,thls numbor 937 are Asiatic, 578 Euro pean, 270 African nnd 1,021 Amorlcan. 'By far tho greater number of these be long to savage and semi-savage tribes and untfonu. t DIET HEALTi By DR. J. T. ALLEN Pood Spcclaliit P I i Author of "Eating for a Turposc." "The yVcfct Gospel of Health." Etc. (Copyright, by Joseph 1). Dowleo. SIXTY DAYS ON PEA NUTS AND LEMONADE. On October IS, 1907, I began an ex clusive diet of peanuts and lonnn ado nnd subsisted on that alone for CO days. Whnt did you do It for? Do you still Jlvo on ponnuts? How should peanuts bo tnkon? Have you changed your mind about tholr food value? Theso nro some of the questions that I tun frequently nsked. Such wns tho novelty of my experi ment, which wns undertaken us a scientific demonstration, that tho av erage person refused to consider It seriously. Tho newspapers treated It largoly as a Joko oxcept that tunny of them reported toward tho end of the tlmo that 1 had died a result which many were expecting. For several years I had been test ing tho relative values of food by living for a tlmo on ono ulono nnd recording tho results. Incidentally I had reached tho conclusion, for rea sons which 1 shall give In u later nr tlclo, Hint ccronl starch Is tho only element of vegotnblo food Improved by cooking nnd Hint cereal starch Is unnecessary In our diet, nnd fre quently Injurious, particularly In the case of Infants and children. I had found that cooking Injures tho most important element of food, albumen, from which tho cells of bruin nnd brawn nro built, nnd precipitates, to a largo extent, tho mineral elements, sulphur, phosphorus, mngneslu, potash, otc., so ossontlnl to vigorous, healthy life, so that they cannot bo nbsorbed Into the blood. I had come to believe nlso nfter much Investigation that fruit should form u largo part of our diet, nnd I had been proscribing In certain cases a dlot of uncooked pea nuts and gluten, uncooked, In small qunntltlcs with fruits, eaten separate ly, nnd had seen remarkable Improve ment In some cases. Ono dny It was reported In nn Aurora (111.) paper (I lived in Aurora) that a girl had died from cntlng pea nuts nnd nt tho same tlmo tho chair man of tho. local board of health at tributed a caso of polBonlng to eating peanut enndy. To prevent nn undeslrablo counter suggestion on tho minds of those who woro eating peanuts by my advice, moro limit to defend my own theories, 1 stated my view of theso cases, call ing nttontlon to tho groat difference between cooked and uncooked pon nuts, nnd to show the firmness of my bollof In tho correctness of my con clusions, I said that I would bo will ing to llvo for CO days on uncooked peanuts nnd havo the results care fully recorded dally by the board of health, and glvo my body for dissec tion nnd analysis, If I fulled to survive tho experiment,. I had lived for several days on pea nuts, on npples, on primes, on starch, on nothing, nnd 1 know that by fasting for n fow days, when tho Indications required It, I should havo no ill 111 culty In performing tho feat. But my friends begged mo to desist, urging that I was losing my professional dig nity nnd many of them accused mo of Insanity, which I wns, they snld, deliberately fostering by this strango freak! I had studied on my theories of feeding till I wns half gouo and now I wns going to finish tho Job! The outcome, however, fully justi fied tho confldeuco with which tho ex periment was undertaken. 1 lost 17 pounds In weight but continued my usual work throughout tho entire period, nnd In fact did n greatly In creased amount of mental labor, nocos sltntod by tho Incrcnso In my corre spondence, lntorvlows, etc., nnd on tho ovenlng of tho sixtieth day I gave an address In tho G. A. H. hall of Aurora on dlot and mornllty, spenk Ing for three-quarters of an hour, nnd followed Hint with n 20-mlnute talk to an nudlencn at the Coliseum on tho relation of diet to strenuous endurance. Of course tho peanut Is not a com plcto dlot and to keep in good condl lion I fasted at Intervals throughout tho CO days n totnl of about eight days. Probably tho oxtouslon of the experiment lo 120 dnys would not havo reduced my weight to the point of physical collapse. My height Is 5 foot 1114 Inches and my wolght when I began was 105 pounds. i Wo llvo by whnt we eat; and tho chnractor of our living depends upon tho kind of food we eat and tho way wo eat It. "You can make n man good or bad," says Bishop Fallows, "neeord lug to tho way you feed him." "Tho building of bruin-cell and mind stuff," says Dr. Alexander Ilnlg, the distinguished English authority on diet, "lies ut tho root of nil the ; problemsof life." Tho mind Is the mensuro of the mnn; what u man thinks ho becomes But tho mind manifests through tho physical, nnd the character of the physical determines the character of the mental an certainly as tho mental InfluoncoH tho physical. Tho body in the oxprosslon of the mind, much is a hnllillm: Is the expression cf the thought of the architect who dcsbt'irl it. And you can no more lul' 1 ,i mind, h. autiful. enduring bod with int good food than nn nrchllt-ct i.'-t lurid n beautiful temple wlthmit 1 and marble. "A crook In the mind make a cnv'i In tho body." You cannot meet i stranger without forming some Im presMon of whnt he Is. You uncon sciously recognise In physical form nnd quality of bmly the ehnrnetor of the mnn; and the trained physiog nomist, 'phrenologist nnd physiologist will undertake to rend your charac ter, pretty accurately, from Its bodily expression. Now that body Is mate rial nnd the material Is food. Tho Eskimo In built of blubber, the Scot of onlmonl, tho Japanese of rice and beans. But tho Eskimo could not becomo u Scot by eating ontmenl and barley menl for n thousand years. Food Is only tho material; tho mind Is the measure of tho mnn. The Scot who has given us so much theology, metaphysics nnd science Is the product, primarily of tho mental stimulation of "lniul of brown heath and shaggy wood, Until of tho mountain nnd tho flood." So when we say that you nro what you eut, we do not Ignore tho fuiidit meptnl Importance of tho mind. It is still true that its it man thluketh so Is hit and that as it mnn outoth so he thluketh. Wo havo heard so much lately of the influence of tho mind upon the body, that It is perhaps time that the pendulum of thought should again swing to tho other side, the Influence of tho body upon tho mind, and In tlmo wo may arrive at the happy medium where truth lies, the knowledgo of tho Inter-relation the essential unity of, body nnd mind, tho metita -physical constitution. Scientific authorities agree that vitality Is it llxed quantity that each Individual Is born with it certain store of vital form, nnd Hint when the stock Is exhnustod ho dies. Vitality Is ox ponded In work, In restoring normal conditions when sickness occurs, In defense against disease, and lit carry ing on the normnl. functions of con verting food Into blood, throwing off waste and poisonous matter. Thero Is no menus of estimating tho extent of nny of theso expenditures, hut we know thnt tho energy spent In digest ing nnd eliminating food is consid erable. We know that It Is Impossible to do oue's best work after a heavy meal. Now If n large por cent, of the energy ordinarily expended In dlgos Hon, Including elimination, can bo snvod without loss of nutrition, n gain In working capacity, In good feel ing, In length of life, must result. Tho practice of n simple dlot shows re mnrkablo gains In theso respects. Tho sovero mental work done nnd tho mental ulrnln sustained during tho period of my ono-slded peanut diet, indlentos that tho nvorugo poison ovor-ontu nnd eats too mnny kinds of food. Tho llrst effect of sickness Is loss of appetite. Nnthro then uses tho vitality commonly used for digestion to repair the defect, to restoro nor mnl health conditions. Hero Is Indi cated tho natural euro. Wo know what elements different foods contain and what tho body needs; and upon this knowledgo Is based it simple, rad ical euro of the ono fundamental ills ease, defective nutrition of which nil "dlsenses" nro but symptoms. This Is tho cure which the omlnont Dr. Hulg has said ho has been "convinced by experience nnd experiment hns lain nil tho tlmo t our doors whllo wo havo been uslm; drugs as pallia tives." Somo Important fncts woro devel oped In contribution to this sclonco of radical euro by tho peanut oxporl ment. llundrodn of letters woro rccolved during tho test from people who but for nn accidental discovery of tho peanut diet, "would havo been wear ing a wooden overcoat," whllo others asked "how to eat peanuts to avoid tholr bad effects" which suggests tho Important fact that all foods nro, un der cortaln clrcuinstnnces, polsonoiiB, nnd tho moro concentrated, obviously, tho moro virulent when misused. With it docronso In tho dally footl supply comos nn Increaso In strength with loss of weight. Tho vitality or dinarily expended In convortfng food Into blood nnd eliminating the waste, often excessive, cun bo used In ex traordinary mental work or In euro, oven of deop sented chronic dlsenso. The fact that appotlto Is always lost Immediately on the advent of sickness or montal derangement violent four, linger, Joy, etc. Indicates that upon the regulation of diet, which Implies fasting its well us dlotlug, must he basod tho true scloiitllle euro of tho ono fundamental disease, malntitrl Hon, understanding that the term "nutrition" In Hb widest sense In cludes normnl supply of air, water, sunlight, food, exercise, nnd right mental conditions. Oregon Mushroom Breaks Record, W. B. Steele, who llvos nt EnBt For lyfirst nnd Ivon streets, near tho ond of the Ulehmoiid car Hue, brought to the Orogonlan recently u mushroom which ho declares holds tho record for sl'o In (his particular variety of fun gi. It Is 1 1 Inches tall and tho cap is a trlllo over 9 Inches In diameter nnd 28 inches in circumference. In stead of one nlghl, It roqulrcd four and nn equal number of days for this mushroom to devolnp. It grow in tho garden of tho Steolo homo. Mrs. Steole hays lie calls It Toft becauso It Is so big tied strong and so much superior to all. Portland Oregonlun, Gas Pevcr Replacing Steam. Gas engines are rapidly replacing the steam engine In smullor fac tories. They glvo twice as much powt-r for the same quantity of fuol. THE AWAKENING By ELIZABETH JACKSON ICopyrlKht, Ford In her llttlo rose-colored boudoir. EHeo paced slowly tip and down. Hor broad, low brow was Bllghtly puckered and nround her eyes were unmlalnk able signs of tears. "But they nro only surface tears," sho told herself, with n llttlo sigh; "not henrt tears not tho kind of tenrs that Lund ski wants tears wrung In agony from the soul." She said tho words over again lo herself, smiling ns sho did so. It seemed such n far-away possibility If It wns one nt nil. "And for this very lightness of henrt, my career Is to bo ruined!'' sho cried nloud. Sho stopped before the open window nnd looked Out moodily Into tho night. The slurs seemed to havo lost their glitter and the radiance of tho moon wiib hidden lu the mist of n cloud. Below, tho trees hung dark and mo tlonless, not n breath stirring them or tholr huge, fantastic shadows. The pervading calmness exasperated her. It suited bo exactly her own mood. Go Home Till You Become a Woman." Neither was It tho calmness that fol Iowa a raging storm, elthor of tho ele ments or of u soul that torrlblo calm uosh or despair. But It wns Just tho poiicoful quiet of mere living nnd tho sweet Joy of It. Sho rested her arms on the window ledge, lotting hor gazo wnndor dream ily. A deep, long drawn sigh breathed Itsolf upon tho ovenlng ulr, seoinlng to reach straight on to tho slurs that woro resllng so quietly, for thoy bo. gun to quiver and to throw out daz zling lights. Thulr glenm caught her und bIio clnpped her hands, laughing gleefully like a child. "Dear llttlo stars," she cried to them, "did that breath reach way up there, to you? And whnt uro you telling mo lu rottirn? Ah, I know you nro trying to send somo mcssngo und I cannot uuduiHtand, for I have no soul!" NohoiiI! could It, alas, bo true? And fnst boforo hor mental eyo hopes and fears camo crowding. All her life contored urouiid her am bition to sing In grand opera. Sho had worked and studied, and sung, with ever that point in vlow. Then camo that glorious day whon sho hnd sailed for Europe. Sho wns going to tho grent Luiidskl, success nnd fuino! lie had been pleased nt first, sho know, and had great hopes for hor, but Intoly sho seemed to fill him with only exnsporntloii. Ho was to bring her out lu IITrovn tore, nnd tho date of her debut hnd been set. But that day ho had shown plnlnly thnt he dospalrod of her. "Ah, iniideinolsollo, mndeiuolHolle!" ho cried, "your voice yes" ho shrugged his shoulders ami threw up his hands. "It Is clear, It Is sweet, II Is stiong, but It doosn't touch hero" and ho pointed to his brenst. "It Is cold cold, all Ice, Imh! you freeze mo. Coino, put n llttlo warmth Into li," ho cried; "let your soul ring out! lot Mnnrlco know by tho very dopth of your voice how you lovo him!" Then suddenly ho turned to her. "Havo you novor loved, mademoi selle?" ho asked, softly, us though ho might bo stepping on somo snored ground. But her laugh rang merrily. "Loved! Loved? No never. Why, I novor hnd tlmo to think " Sho stopped suddonly. Thogrny oyoa of tho now tenor seemed to bo looking Into her vory soul. Sho brushed hor blind across hor brow and luughed again, but not so heartily, ftuAuuuiztxmuzuixi mm m I Pub. Co.) Tho afternoon wore on, her ln structor becmuo moro nmi more Im patient with every note. Finally, with nn outward pushing gesture, ns though to drlvo her from him, ho cried: "Go homo till you nwaken, you nro asleep! Go homo till yoit becomo a woman; you nro n child I Go homo till your very soul enn cry out to Mnnrlco In tho lower, till you feel nil tho depth, all tho misery nnd nil the glory of Leo nora's grent love. Till you can not only lovo with her, but bate with hor, die with her. And when this comes to you, come back to me, nnd then wo can glvo to the world a living, brcatlw lug, palpitating leonorn, not a crea ture hewn of Ice." But It was not of Lmulskl bIio wna thinking now, hut of tho gray oyoa whoso glance she wns beginning to long for, yet drend. Ah! thoso eyes were wondrous gray, but his hair waa curly, undeniably. How sho hated curly hnlr on it man, und his sho would even hnvo termed kinky, hnd bIio not fell at times eo strangely curious a desire Just to (ouch It. Thoro surolyt wns some chango coming over hor.j thnt sho should look so eagerly ln every crowd, wherever sho wont, JitBt to catch it glimpse of it strnylng lock of golden kinky hnlr. Ami nil t his glorious voice! Sho had only heard It once, but Its tones were always ringing In her onrs. How she longed to slug out lu nitswcr to it the day she heard him. They woro to practice together on the morrow, und now, It wns not lo be. Ah, Hint must have been u pang of more than meie disappointment, that struck so sharply at the thought! The moon sank deeper In Its hiding! place ami a strango mournful stirring came from the trees. Tho night wnu changing but still tho girl mused on.' Suddenly out of (ho darkness, on the rising breeze, cnnio a voice, sing ing beneath her window. Only one could slug llko thnt, nnd as the words of Mnnrlco cnnio to hor In it voice full of love und longing, she caught her breath and listened trem blingthrilling and iih tho Inst nolo wiib curried to her, sho dropped to I he floor, overcome, then poured forth her answer. Her voice wns low and unsteady nt llrsl, hut gathorlng volume by tho Vory weight or tho lovo It must carry, rung out Into tho night, tolling In tho words or Leonora of n groat, strong und solf-sncrlllclng lovo. And (ha wind which wns rlBlng to n Btorm, curried It to tho listeners bolow and wovb nround Its nolo of triumph a sad mournfulncBs, us of coming sor row. As tho Inst words died away, a cho rus of brnvos and oxclnmntlons nroso. Ellso did not hour them or under stnnd their significance Sho wns ulono with (his now beauty, hor faco hlddon In her hands. Finally sho was aroused by a knock. Ho had como to her, ho wns thoro nt I ho door. Oh, tho Joy of It! Yot how could sho open It with that throb In her thront and her heart beating ho wildly? Timidly hIio crossed tho room and turned the bundle. The grent Lundskl enmo lu flrat, then followed it womnn, nnd than the. tenor, bis gray eyes full upon hor. Hor own dropped. "Mudoinolsello, mndomolsollo!" tho grout Lundskl cried, "wo glvo you our heartiest congratulations. I hardly thought tho llttlo ruse would work so well. Wo woro coming ovor to got you" to prnctlco it llttlo to-night, na our tenor snyB ho must leavo town to morrow. Wo saw you against tho roso light, standing so still In tho window. '8lng,' said 1; und how ho sang, and how you sang! It fairly struck mo dumb. Ah, how much good n llttlo scolding does sometlnics. But horo, you hnvo not yot mot our tenor's wlfo 1 urn forgetting myself. Lot mo pro sont Mademoiselle! whnt Is It? Aro you 111?" "III? Yes, yes," sho answered, whlto to tho lips; "but do not bo nlarmcd: to-morrow 1 will como to you and bo the 'living, breathing, palpitating Leonorn.' " French Apparatus of Value. A now electrical apparatus, which Is designed to facilitate tho dispatch of postal letters, has Just been Installed In ii Paris post olllce. It consists of nn "endless" roll or linoleum, 200 foot ln length. This, in revolving, rubs against 32 .electric bobbins opornted by n powerful distributor. When tho current Is switched on, tho linoleum roll descends Into tho letter box, tho contents of which are attracted lo tho linoleum by the electricity, nnd com miinlcnted by the bobbins. The let ters are thrown Into u truck, nnd car ried by means of n miniature railway through the public room to tho sort lug olllce. The saving lu tlmo Is said to bo considerable, nnd tho npparntuB Is almost nolselcKH. Large Legacy for Academy. According to Sclonco, tho Berlin Academy of Sciences has received u legacy of 30,000,000 murks (about $7,500,000), being tho entlro fortuno of a millionaire named Samson, n Berlin banker, who recently died childless at Brusseis. Real Mean. Mndgo How Ih It you don't speak to Edith any more? Dolly Sho won threo of my engugo munt rings from mo pluytiig bridge. Puck.