THERE IS SOME HOPE BUT IT'S HOPE THAT MAKETI c>, ; * ''' THE HEART SICK. - nittti the Murderer, Brvaklnff Down HI* Counsel to Make On* Mont Effort la Hta Bohalf—An Appeal to ba \y't Mad* to the'Coart of Lalt ■ Reaort. ■— ■■ ■ — *■».. Durant Breaking Dowd. Saw Quentin. Cal., June 4.—Theo ■flora Durrant seems to be breaking , -down. A member of the death watci was aeated at bis side last night look ing down upon him as he tossed ant tumbled in his restless sleep. Th< . ./ warden was at once notifh’d of the 1:5 change in Dnrrant'N demeanor. Or ders were issued to iQcrease the death \r: watch and maintain the vigil with gf greater care than boforc. Three men will watch him until he dies on the f' gal low a Durrant’s father carried to the con denned man yesterday the news that Sj-f, the United States district court had denied the writ of habeas corpus and "that the next light for life ifiust be made nt Washington before the su /; preme court. • ! • , A special messenger ■ Will liifrry < across the continent, but he cunuot reach Washington before next Wednes day. lie will have tl>Q gretvtest good fortune if he receives an audience from the supreme court that day. It Is probable that a hearing will not be granted before Thursday of’ next week; and on the following day Dur rant must die If the national tribunal f; does not exert its authority. At 11 o'clock this morning Durrant'a attorneys asked the circuit court for .permission to appeal to .the United States supremo court. If fills request Is granted they wilt be satisfied, for they contend that it will act as a stay of execution. W’KINLEY SPEAKS , ftth on Tariff and Reciprocity at a Philadelphia Banquet. " rmi.AnEi.PiUA, June 4.—The Inter national Commercial conference,which ; f had its inception in the* Philadelphia Commercial museum, under the aus pices of which institution the confer 1 ence was held, was formally opened ; yesterday afternoon at the Academy of i Music with an address by President -McKinley. Of the delegates them oelvea about thirty were representa tives of foreign, commercial bodies, principally of Mexico and Central and Month America. . The commercial leaders of the West* 5 «ra hemisphere assembled in the great exchange room of the liourse last ; Bight, at what was probably the most Botablo, banquet ever given on this oontinent The banquet was notable, s, Bit only iji point of members, nearly r\, t,SOO perkons participating, but in the >•> distinction of the chief guests, ■ The Chinese minister answered to ''ihe Orient" and then followed Pros fdebt McKinley's speech. In response ■ to the toast, “The President of the C Coiled States." He said, in brief: ,‘T must tell yon that from first to it*l I have beea deeply impressed with the seeaes witnessed in Philn ' - dolphia to-day. I have seen the re* markable spectacle of representatives aC oll the American republics, with *ho products of their skill and their ‘ , holt is one great warehouse. . The first great eonveutlon of these republics was organised by the matchless diplo macy of that splendid American, | •demos 0. Blaine. Seven years ago he Mrooghtthe governments of this eon -Maeat together and taught the doc : id** that general reciprocity in trade vequlrod reciprocity of Information. And it was his genius, with that -of jpoiny gentlemen I see around tth hoard to-night, that origin-! r1' wted the Bureau of Amorican cepahHcs located in this city, which 1 has already done much good, and l which, I believe, will yet play an lm Bortapt part In our trade relations with the governments supporting it. , - "The tariff law half mado is of no prac ticable u*8, except to indicate that in a little while a whole tariff law will Ap done, and it is making progress. It la reaching the end. and when the end oBitUs we will have business confidence -BN industrial activity. ' BW lowing the president. Minister If”* Mexico: Ferdinands of Costa i th* Argentine minister and Con gnoiman Dalsell responded to appro fcv priatc toasts_ w & 5§;V *PVnkS». Bead YllFMtCDtli • "Washihgtoh, Jane 4.—Speaker Reed. Mw every other public man in high aAtelal station, has received threaten* •*K letters from time to time, but has swver paid any attention to them. Yesterday, however, one was received '*fs«sh a nature that it seemed to netmnand more than ordinary atten “o the speaker's private seerc ^without Mr. Reeds knowledge, darned it over to the police, who, utter investigation, have come to the coni elnalon that it was not written b>- a ***k, but by some one desirous of perpetrating a hoax for sensational .pemposea ' •piss >n Iks KsUsr's r*n«s 'Bxnx.m, June 4.— In the trial of Uerr i Tausch, the former ehief of the eret political police, yesterday, a “vs pa per man nanmd Kraemer testi -, J that Von Tausch furnished most ■•f the definite information represent ing Emperor William to be very ilL According to tho witness von Tausch said he heard through his spies, every ! “H spoken in the palace. Cleveland Decline* to Asa ,3|s» _Yobk. June t.—A special to thi r 1 £ Mm )■. iTT --- --*-- Ml w -Martial from Caraccas says that Pre Mnnt Crespo has just received a letti from ex-President Cleveland dccllnln AS net as counsel for Venezuela pefoi -the arbitration tribunal. In the le 4nr, dated May 24, President Clevelan expresses himself as deeply touche wy the honor and compliment coi recent tender of tho pc . ■ but deellnee on the gronnd thi : S?? taken such nrominent part .JftjOgE ahout the arbitration treat ■ BSsMeypii from acting as ooun« Am/Venezuela. ; ft:; :■ ® INDIAN TROUBLES. Th» 8 foatlon. Arrardlnf to Dlifktflhfl la Still Vary Oravr. Milks Citv, Mont., June s.—bherif Oibb returned last night from th< - Cheyenne agency. He says the Indini situation is very grave, indeed. H< reports i*00 or more Indians off th< reservation and scattered in the hills Their war whoops can be heard fre quently and the dancing continues Old settlers look for trouble. The sheriff's posse, 300 strong,undei . command of Stock Inspector Smith and Captain Brown, are now stationed in small numbers in and abont the set tlements near the reservation to pro tect the remaining settlers and pre vent the destruction of property by the Indians Indian agent Stouch would not de Hrcr the prisoner, Stanley, up to the elicriff when called upon to do so, saying he was afraid, hut ho agreed to escort Stanley off the reservation Friday with the troops and deliver him to the authorities. The Sheriff placed Captain Stouch under arrest, but left him at liberty until he will be summoned by County Attorney Porter. The sheriff also lias a warrant for Captain Reid, who has charge of the troops from Fort Custer located at the reservation. Lke, Mont., June 3.--The latest ad vices from the scene of the Cheyenne Indian trouble are to the effect that Standing Elk has confessed complicity in the murder of John Hoover, the herdsman, implicating Philip Stanley, Sam Crow and Chief Red Bird. Cap^ tain Stouch, the Indian agent, will surrender the prisoners to Sheriff Gibb Friday, but it is not likely they will ever reach Miles City, as the settlers seem determined to lynch them. Stanley and Rod Bird, his wife, ware captured by Indian police while on their way to join the Sioux Indians at Standing Hock Agency, in North Da kota, and were put in the guard house at once, under a strong guard. In compliance wjth the insistent de mand of Agent Stouch, Chief White Bull bad ascertained and made known to the agent the name of Hoover's murderer as Philip Stanley, a Chey enne Indian, a member of his band. Stanley confessed the crime to both Chief White Bull and to his (Stanley’s) father, Badger. The settlors will commence to re turn to their homes to-morrow. It is certain that troops will be kept at Camp Merritt for some time, as the young bucks are not satisfied with the capture of tlio two Indians and may give more trouble. John Hoover, the person.kllled, was the son of Monroe Hoover, who resides at Everton, Dade county. Mo. He was a young man, who had but recently come to Montana. Ilia body was buried where it was found. . DEBS’ PLANS. The Oo-Opsrative Commonwealth to Ex periment VI ret la Utah. Denver, Col., June 4.—The Rev. Myron W. Reid, national president of the Brotherhood of the Co-operative Commonwealth, of which Eugene V. Debs and Henry D. Lloyd are the chief .promoters, said to-day: "Tho experiment wilt first be tried in Utah. Wo have chosen Utah cause the . Mormons have already" proved that co-operation in many ways can be made a success. Our idea is to establish co-operative commun ities of 1,500 people In each commun ity. We believe that in a community of 1,500, picked up as wo find them, will be discovered about the right ma terial necessary for the different vo cations. When the system has been made a success in Utah its friends can proceed to carry tho educational fa cilities into other statca” It is the intention to select a loca tion for tho first community next fall, so that the settlers may move upon the land and break ground for crops next spring. The region in Utah be tween tho Rio Grande Western and the Union Pacific railways is advocated by somo as the location of an ideal community, and others advocate a valley near Sonora, N. M. Tho head quarters of the brotherhood is at pres ent in Thomaston, Me., the home of the national secretary, N. W. Ler mond. The total membership has reached 1,844. juuac m/ tor uu nuea uitrisM* Is DIANA rous, Ind., June 4.—The Appellate court to-day affirmed a judgment in favor of an undertaker at Bloomington against John Soott, a wealthy man, who has declined to meet expenses arising from the burial of his wife. The wife had left her husband because of his alleged cruelty, and she depended for support upon the labor of a little son employed in a quarry. After her death and burial ‘the undertaker charged up the ex penses to her husband, and on refusal to pay the court below gave judgment for the entire amount. The Appellate aourt sustained this judgment and added 10 per cent damages. A Senate Sugar Investigation Asked For. Washington, June Senator Till man has moved that the committee on contingent expenses be discharged from the consideration of the resolu tion for investigation of the charges in regard to sugar speculation and that the resolution be brought before the Senate. CONVICTS CONQUERED. Mm TIm off Solitary Con fine man t anil A*roo to Go to Work. Shir Quentin, Cal, June 4.—The great revolt among the convicts at Ban Quentin is practically at an end Captain Edgar, the guardian of the prison yard, has the prisoners und$i his complete control and has won a signal victory over the men in stripes. Yesterday afternoon nearly loo men were released from solitary confine ment and are now willing to go tc work in the late mill t 4 t J \ r , - ‘ •£* ,{ . A PLEA FOR WOOL ■t :: i IIsd titan's Senator Talk* for Two Halid Hoora on the Subject. ! VVasmsoTox, June 3.—Senator Man* i tie addressed the Senate for two hours i to-day upon the subject of wool. He i declared that by reason of the enor i auu8 importations in anticipation of the enactment of the tariff law the wool grower would not receive much benefit from a protective tariff for four years to come. He asserted that whenever a tariff law is to be enacted the powerful manufacturing interests of the coun try, with their compact and effective organizations, are always upon the ground pressing their claims, while the farmers and wool growers and pro ducers of raw materials generally are an isolated and scattered class and were thus lacking in effective organi zation, The tariff bill as it passed the House and as now amended by the Senate, he said, utterly failed to meet the expectations of the wool growers and is regarded by them largely as a repudiation of the Republican pledge of “ample protection for wool.” He asserted that the McKinley law had not afforded the necessary pro tection to the wool growers and quoted statistics to prove the assertion. The senator quoted Senator Aldrich's state ment that the proposed senate rates would give from 10 to U0 percent mors protection to the wool growers than it had ever received under any fgrmdf tariff, and produced statistics to shbw mat the proposed rates were much lower instead of being higher. Referring to the large importation of cheap Chinese and other wool pro duced by like cheap labor, and which comes into competition with American grown wools at such rates of dutv which, Mr. Mantle said, afford no pro tection whatever, he inquired if this policy was not quite as hurtful to the American wool grower as Chinese cheap labor to the industrial wage earners of the country. "If the laborer himself comes,” he said, "he may perhaps be induced to ^cooperate with our own laborers for the protection of labor interests; he can be talked to and reasoned with,but the American wage earner cannot argue with a box of cheap foreign merchandise, neither can the Ameri can farmer argue with a bale of cheap Chinese wool.” RESPITE FOR DURRANT. The California Murderer Not to ttaeg for at bait Six Month*. Sax Francisco, June 5.—The attor neys for Theodore Durrant again ap peared before Judge Gilbert, in the United States circuit court, yesterday and applied for a writ of supersedeas for the purpose of staying the execu tion of the sentence, but this was de nied by the court. An application for leave to appeal from this decision to the supreme court of the United States was then granted. Although it is an" open question whether, in view of tho denial of the writ of supersedeas, the order of the court acts as a stay of proceedings. Attorney General Fitz gerald wired to Warden Halo to take no action in the premises, pending tho appeal. As the United States supreme court does not meet again until October next, this virtually means a respite for six months at least GAGE AND ECKELS TALK. Boss Bankers Addrsss ths Bankers' As soelatlon of Maryland. Ci mbkri.and, Md., June n.—Tim Maryland Hankers' association held its final session yesterday, and the exer cises were concluded with a banquet, at which Secretary of the Treasury Lyman J. Gage and Comptroller of tho Currency James II. Eckels were the principal speakers. Mr. Gage said: "Reference was made here this evening to my recent address in Cincinnati. Let me' repeat here the substance of tho conclusion of that address. Tho prophecy made then will be fulfilled. The promise I am certain will be kept The prophecy was that both bodies of Congress would soon put through an adequate tariff bill, and the promise was that the administration would be faithful to the task of putting the currency of the country on a sound, enduring and solid basis.” Wire Tapper* Caught. Denver, Col., Juno 5.—Two men giving their names as Charles Moran and H. M. Summerfield, aged, respect ively, 23 and 26 years, who have been posing as expert electricians in the employ of the Western Electrie com pany of New York, were arrested yev terday on a charge of wire tapping and swindling the pool rooms of this ond many other cities. Their rooms in the Burke block were raided and one of the most complete and expen sive outfits for wire tapping ever seen was found. The men say thev would not have taken 820,000 for their bus iness during the Overland races, which begin next Saturday. Olvea • 8,000 for the Lon of an Arm. Olathe, Kan., June 5.—William M. Forkner of Argentine, Ivan., obtained judgment for' 8S.OOO in the district court of this county to-day against the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fo Railway company for the loss of his left arm at North Ottawa, Kan., last July, 'while acting as fireman for the com pany. REV. J. D. KNOX ACQUITTED The Preacher-Danker Pound Not UnlUf of Charges Against Him. St. Joseph, Mo., June .V—The eccle siastical tflal of Rev. John I). Knox of Topeka, Kan., on charges of hypocrisy and fraud, was concluded here last night and resulted in acquittal. Mr. Knox appears to have been sustained on every point which he set up in his defense. The finding of the Manhat tan trial was declared to be unjust. He will return to Topeka at once and make a strong fight for appointment as consul to Mexico LYNCH LAW IN OHIO. A NEGRO ASSAULTER DEALT WITH BY A MOB. A Right of Riga and Terror In a Qnlel Ohio Town — Victim of the Mob Kicked to Death Before Being Hanged — Intenae Feeling Agalnet the Mllltln. Hnnjr by s Mob. Urban A, Ohio, June S.—“Chick” Mitchell, s negro, yesterday pleaded guilty to, and was sentenced to twenty years in the state penitentiary for a criminal assault oa Mrs. Eliza Gau-* mer, the widow of the late publisher of the Urbana Democrat. The town* people were' greatly incensed at the sentence, which they declared to be too light. At 2:30 o'clock this morning a mob of citizens attacked the jail to take and hang Mitchell, and was tired upon by the militia. Two of the mob, Har ry Bell and a man of the name of Hig gins, were killed and eight others wounded. At 7:30 o’clock this morning the fur ther enraged mob broke into the jail, took Mitchell out and hanged him to a tree in the court house yard in the presence of hundreds of women and thousands of men and boys. . Mrs. Gaumer was too ill to be in court yesterday, and the man was, therefore taken to her home for iden tification. As he entered the door she raised herself on her elbow and ex claimed: ' , “The brute! Hang him! How dare you face me, you brute?” In default of $1,000 bail Mitchell was looked up in the city prison, but on account of the feeling was removed to the county jail for safe keeping. Last night a mob gathered and de manded Mitchell. Governor Bushnell was called on for assistance by the sheriff, but he refused to order the militia from any other place. The crowds would not disperse. The excitement grew more and more in tense. Night inflamed the excitement and the streets were thronged. Yells were heard all around the jail. Finally, at 3:30 o'clock this morning, the mob attacked the jail. The militia fired on the attacking party and struck more innocent spectators than active law breakers. After the firing of the militia into the crowd Governor Bush nell was wired for more troops and ordered Company B of tho Third in fantry, at Springfield, to proceed at once to Urbana. At 7:10 o’clock the Springfield soldiers arrived, thirty-six Btrong and were marched to the jail. Angry citizens, incensed over the killing of their townsmen by the mili tia at 3:30 o'clock a. m., were further irritated by the appearance of more troops. Crowds gathered along the streets and greeted the soldiers with hootings and all sor.ts of insulting re marks. The excitement was grow ing so fast that another clash between troops and citizens seemed inevitable. Mavor Ganson thereupon took the responsi bility of urging tho Springfield com pany to return to the depot The or der was obeyed. No sooner did the crowd perceive this apparent retreat by the soldiers than their fierce demand for the blood of Mitchell grew stronger. The local military company had pre viously refused* to s, /e longer and went to the second story of the sher iff’s residence and tried to sleep. ' THE NEGRO LYNCHED. With no resistance offered, the crowd at once made a rush for the side door ‘of the ja.il. Two strong and deter mined men kicked it down in short order and gained admission to the cor ridor, the crowd following. There were plenty of sledge hammers, chisels and - other tools in the crowd and tho men went to work. The crowd got into the jail quickly. It did not wait to unlock the door to Mitchell’s cell, but burst the lock with a sledge hammer and the door soon flew open. Mitchell was standing in his cell and offered no resistance and did not utter a word. Some one in the crowd had a rope and it was placed over the brute's neck and the crowd made fot the door, Mitchell fol lowing ut the end. In going down the steps on the out side of the jail Mitchell fell down and the rope slipped off his neck. The crowd surrounded him and jumped on him like a thousand hungry dogs after one bone. J.UB Be)?™ was kicuvu, oeaien ana almost killed. The rope was again slipped over his head and a rush made for a tree in the southeastern corner of the courtyard in front of the court house. The end was thrown over a good strong limb and willing hands pulled the wretch up. The end was tied to the iron fence and Mitchell was left hanging thero in full view of several thousand people. The men who took part in the lynch* ing made no attempt to disguise them* selves, but it is not known who did thttwork. The person who attempts to find out, it is freely stated, will get into serious trouble. It is doubtful if Mitchell died from the effects of the hanging. His life had been almost kickt-d out of him when he fell down. It is the general opinion that he was unconscious when strung up His body was left hang ing for an hour or more, and the peo ple of the city flocked to see it. The feeling in Urbana against the militia is intense. Public opinion is to the effect that there was no occasion for the general shooting into the crowd, and that a little firmness on the part of the sheriff and other officers was only necessary in order to arrest the ringleaders and pacify the mob when it made its first attack on the 1aiL V.& Kansas farmer Murdered, Independence, Kan., June 5.—Last night James Pennington, a farmer living about three miles west of here, went fishing and did not return. A search was made this morning and his body was found in the stream. His head had been crushed. A neighbor, who had made threats against the murdered man, is suspectuil, and will bo arrested, _ If the landed surface of the globe ware divided and allotted in equal shares to each of its hnman Inhabi tants, it would bo found that each ' would get a plot of acres. HOW ABOUT ALFALFA? T°° Mnolt lea la Spot* Interfere* With It* Growth. What killed the alfalfa last winter? This is the question that is being vari ously answered, but by no means in a satisfactory manner, says the Ord Quiz. But even a more difficult ques tion is why it should be killed in spots. Fields and portions of fields apparently subject to the same conditions are in one instance bare and in another grow ing to luxuriant alfalfa. While the answer to the latter question must be made after an examination of each in dividual case, it must be remembered that there is an answer, for there is no* effect without a cause. The Quiz clings to the belief that the large amount of moisture last winter, freez ing in some cases a heavy coating of ice over the ground, is fruitful cause for much of the dead alfalfa. It is a fact well proven that a heavy coating of ice will kill well-rooted grasses. Even the hardy bluegrass cannot stand such an ordeal. Many proofs of this can be found in this vicinity. Mr. E. •T. Clements killed a patch of his blue grass lawn by allowing the water to flow onto it from his water tank last winter, forming, a heavy coat of ice. And there are other instances that may be cited. That such a condition is fatal to alfalfa is shown in the case of the writer's alfalfa. He has two patches on slightly sloping ground, so that the water cannot stand anywhere except in the dead-furrow. The Mi-uu(;esi grass last year was in inis furrow, but this spring the alfalfa is dead there, while elsewhere the stand is better than last year. It may be that the appearance of bare spots in your field may be explained by the forma tion of drifts last winter which had later partially thawed, thus forming ice spots. Pasturing the field is undoubtedly injurious or dangerous at the least. Cutting at improper times may also prove injurious. . One or all of these conditions may have conspired to kill your alfalfa. And the varying combi nation of them may explain the un sightly spots in your field. . , It must be remembered that last winter was a severe one on other crops that have to withstand the rigors of winter. Winter wheat looked well till: March, then it was found to be dead. Our farmers should not, therefore, be too hasty in condemning the growing alfalfa. It is too valuable a crop to be experimented with indifferently or meagerly. We believe it is the hay crop for Nebraska, and that when we understand it better we will have no special difficulty in raising it success fully. Happily the first reports of failures seem to have been exaggerated. Fields that looked at first to have been badly damaged have come out all right after all. Inviting Immigration. The passenger department of the Burlington has been moving to secure immigration into Nebraska, ahd will have an exhibit of Nebraska products under the care of an experienced Ne braskan at the county fairs next fall in Illinois. In speaking of the matter. Assistant General Passenger Agent Smith said: “We believe that the wave of Jmmigimtlon ts beginning and that Nebraska was never In better shape to attract settlers than at pres ent. What Is wantea Is all Interested to push on the wheel at once. We think that by ex hibiting onr products at the state and county fairs In Illinois we shall be able to Interest thousands of renters who are anxious to come west, and that wo can prove that Nebraska Is the best agricultural state In tho Trans-Mis stsslppt country. They want to come west where they can own their own homes and Ik; Independent of the landlords, and no state offers better Inducements than Nebraska." No Traffic Agreement Made. General Passenger Agent Lomax of the U. P. contradicts the dispatch from San Francisco that the Union Pacific and Southern Pacific have made a new traffic agreement whereby the two will do the Portland business independent of the Short Line and Oregon railway and navigation. Mr. Lomax says that the Portland sleepers will con tinue to run as heretofore and the old agreements in effect for San Francisco will remain in effect. A Nebraska Woman Kndft Hep' Troubles. Word was received at Litchfield that Mrs. Esther Ileisner, widow of the late Henry J. Ileisner, had committed sui cide at her home, eight miles southeast of Bloody Run, by cutting her throat with a razor. She had been sick for several days. The deed was done when the family was away, and she was found dying, with her ti mouths' old babe at her side. All evidence pointed toward suicide, and a verdict was so rendered by the jury. ■ imri* cam a mun nun Rushville dispatch: VV. H. Disney was robbed of 885 early one morning1 last week. He had come in from Terry at midnight, and says that when he went to bed he placed his clothing on a chair near a window , and that the thief reached in the window from the outside and grabbed his trousers, con taining the money. Disney made a grab for the thief, but his grip not be ing very good, failed to get him. Fred A. Archard, state examiner, has just completed checking up the books of the county treasurer of Stanton county and his report short's every thing to be in excellent condi tion. Mr. Archrrd found not the slightest proof upon which to found such a report as seems to have gone abroad that the treasurer is short in his accounts, and is at a loss to know where it originated. Bancroft dispatch: A family of the name of Frost was forcibly ejected from Indian land that lies within the Farley lease a few days ago by Indian police. Quite a few people censure Oapt. Beck for his actions in this mat ter, as Mrs. Frost came of Indian par entage and claimed the land as one of the tribe. OB m> aXecture Tour. Lincoln dispatch: Mr. Bryan left for ihe east on the 31st, to be absent until the last of June. During his ab sence he will run over into Canada and will lecture at a number of cities. He . begins at Indianapolis. Among other ' | cities to be visited are Cleveland, Buf falo, Toronto, Montreal and Ottawa, j Canada: Burlington and Rutland, Vt.; Troy. N. Y.; Charlottsville, Va.; Carth age, Mo.; Ottawa, Kan., and Beatrice, Neb. He will arrive home June 39, and will leave at once for Hastings, where he will participate in the, Me- , Keighan memorial services. I An Eye to Boslnou. | "I was directed to you as the leading huckster of this county," said Mr. Stormington Barnes. / “That’s what I am,” was the reply/ ^ "Ah’ by watching the corners closely X have built up a business in eggs and vegetables that I’m proud of.” "Of course. There are varieties of’, greatness. Just as 1 am a great actor you are a great huckster. I wish lo oser you an opportunity for an in* vestment that is right in your line." “'Tain’t la a show ticket, then.” "Of course not. I want to know how much you will pay me for the sweep* lng-up privileges after my perform ance to-morrow night.’’—Washington Star. ___ - More than 100 kinds of wine are made in Australia. Hall’s Catarrh Care Is taken internally. Price, 75o. Irish and French Canadians consti tutes 70 per cent of the foreign popula tion of New England. Is the oldest anil best It will break up * co’d qalcfear than anything else. It is always reliable. Try it The United States acreage in grain is greater than the entire acreage of the German empire. To Core Constipation Forever. Tjke^scarots Candy Cathartic. 10c or On ii C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. Greek wines nearly all turn to vine gar in summer. Can’t Sleep, Because the nerves are |_ . feverish and unhealthy condition. Nerve* are fed and nourished by pure, rich blood. Hood’s Sarsaparilla gives sweet, refresh ing sleep because it purifies and enriches the blood and builds up the system. HOOd’S Sparma Is die best—In fact the One True Blood Purifier. Coe’i Cough Bnlatim weak and easily excited and the body is in a Why? QOL Tn It OTTLE W W V If V V f of Hires Rootbeer on a'sweltering hot day is highly essen tial to comfort and health. It cools the blood, reduces your temperature, tones the stomach. HIRES Rootbeer >* should be in every home, in every office, in every work shop. A temperance drink, more hcaltir ful than ice water, more delightful and satisfying than any other bevciage pro duced. Mari* otii.r hy the Cbsrlea K. Hires Co.. Philadelphia. A pack* 1 age make* & gallons. 8ol>1 ev ery where. iiiiiiiii' »1 • JUiiiiiimmmuuiiiiUiUK You need Exerciser I " If business I men knew 1 how much i they need | out-door ex- I ercise there i would not be 1 enough Co- 1 lumbia bicy- | cles to go | ’round.” I | ...Columbia Bicycles... [ z Sj St.n4.r6 oMht World, f* tioo to til iiiko. r§ HOTF03DS, Moot toot, $60, $SS, $60, $4$. z Catalopie free from POPE MFC. 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