a ■ f When | L I Buying I f Baking * I Powder | ,( For this is the g * baking powder a E that“makesthe ■ ■ baking better.” g g It leavens the % I food evenly g ■ throughout; puffs g S it np to airy light- S M ness, makes it de- g B lightfully appetiz- a 2 ing and wholesome. 5 Remember, Calu- B met is moderate in B B price—highest in g a quality. - »Ask your grocer for! Calumet. Don't take a B g substitute. g • RECEIVED HIOHEST AWARDS. ■ World’s War* Wood Exposition. • Chicago. Illinois. Psrls Exposition I Franca, March, IMS. 1 i’l save money when you hay 1 ■ cheap or big-can baling powder. Don’t I I ha misled. Buy Calumet. It's more I J economical — more wholesome — gives I 1 best results. Calumet is far superior la 1 1 sour miO(, and soda. • Plants Need Nourishment. A German investigator has discov ered that plants resist cold best when they are given special nourishment to keep them warm. For instance, to feed a plant sugar stimulates its pow er of resisting low temperature, much as like food acts upon animals, though In less marked degree. He Knew the Kind. The guide, in referring to the Egyp tian pyramids, remarked: "It took hundreds of years to build them." “Then it was a government job— eh?" replied the wealthy contractor. —Youth's Companion. If yon would strike a man favorably never hit him in the vicinity of the pocketbook. Only On* “BBOMO QUININE” That ts XAXATIVB BBOMO QUIN1NB. Iak>* for tho Signature of B. W. UKOVK. Cures * Cold In One D*y, Cures Grip In Two Days. 36c. Pay compliments if you will, but pay your bills first. Saskatchewan |u*w** In the Province of Saskatchewan, Western Canada Do you desire to get a tree Homestead of 160 ACRES of that well known Wheat Land? Is becoming more limited s valuable. W DISTRICTS ntiy been opened up for it, and Into these rail i now being built. The soon come when there e Homesteading Current, Saskatchewan, rites: "l came on boy d, March 18W, with about >h of horses and ruachin ust $35 in cash. Today I cresof wheat. 300 acres ad 60 acres of flax.” Not x years, but oniy an in* what may be done in Canada In Manitoba, iwan or Alberta. once for Literature, Hway Rates, etc., to . See Uoildmtj, Onuhd, *tWivka. It, 315 JxkM sTs?p3u8£ . Government Agents, or Superintendent of atioo, Ottawa,• u«u, ■. » SAYS SWOPE VISCERA WAS TAMPERED WITH Defense Springs Sensation in Trial of Dr. Hyde, of Kansas City. Kansas City. Mo., Fob. 24.—The bit terest wrangle of the third trial of B. Clarke Hyde for the murder of Col. Thomas H. Swope took place to day when attorneys for the defense complained that they had been de nied the right to examine the Swope viscera through their own experts. John Lucas, of the defense, made the assertion that the viscera had been ‘‘tampered with.” A proposition made by Prosecutor Jacobs that the viscera be submitted for examination to a commission oi experts, to be appointed by the court, was rejected by the defense after the court had offered to appoint such a commission. The wrangle started when the prose cutor stated angrily at the repeated inquiries by Attorney Walsh as to 'what became of the Swope liver.” ‘ This is ,i play to the jury.” shouted Prosecutor Jacobs "The defense well knows that the liver was reduced in examination to make the slides used by the toxicologists." When, after defense attorneys had made further, complaint at being de nied the viscera. Prosecutor Jacobs sprang to his feet and made the offer to submit to a commission what was left of the viscera. Attorney Walsh made the counter charge that the pros ecution was ‘playing to the jury” and rejected the proposal. WOMAN, 105, MARRIES YOUNG STRIPLING 86 Couple Add to Merriment of Festivities, Then Leave on Honeymoon Jaunt. Los Angeles. Feb. 24.—Pleasanton Leon. 86 years old. and his bride, who was Mrs. Marselina Elisalda. said by her family to be 105 years old. entered upon their honeymoon here today. They were married last night. Friends of the bride claim for her the dis tinction of being the oldest woman who has ever entered wedlock in this country Mrs. Leon, however, says she isn’t. Despite the assertions of her daugh ters. granddaughters. great-grand daughters and other members of her posterity that she is well over the cen tury mark, the bride declares that she is only 86—one year the junior of her spouse. Furthermore, she said she was opposed to women marrying their juniors. After the ceremony had been per formed and wishes for a long and hap py married life extended, the bride and groom took a prominent part in the festivities which followed. GOP PLUNGED WITH \ ILL-GOTTEN BOODLE Captain Sweeney Alleged to Have Lost Heavily in Wall Street Ventures. New York, Feb. 24.—Money which. It is alleged. Police Captain Dennis Sweeney, who is under indictment, took for police protection in his pre cinct was used to speculate in stocks, according to evidence which District Attorney Charles S. Whitman said to day had come into his possession. It was alleged that two large and active accounts in Sweeney’s name was found in stock brokerage houses on Wall street. It was said that the brokers would be subpoenaed before the grand jury early next week to furnish evi dence regarding these accounts. It is said that in the main Sweeney had been a heavy loser in his speculations. POLISH NEWSPAPER IS SUING AN ARCHBISHOP Milwaukee. Wis., Feb. 24.—Arch bishop Sebastian G. Messmer of the Catholic archdiocese of Milwaukee, and four bishops of the Catholic church were sued for $100,000 damages in an action started yesterday by a Polish newspaper published in Milwaukee. The four mentioned with the arch bishop are Bishops Joseph Fox. Green Bay; James Schwebach, La Crosse; L. F Shinneck, Superior, and Frederick Eis. Marquette, jilieh. Conspiracy to ruin the business of the newspaper is charged. The trouble is said to be largely the result of ef forts of tiie American Poles to obtain Polish bishops. SUGGESTS AN EPITAPH FOR JOHN PAUL JONES Washington. Feb. 24.—An echo of the controversy that attended the discov ery and disinterment of the body of John Paul Jones in France and its re moval to a handsome crypt in the United States Naval academy at An napolis. Md., was heard in the navy department today when an anonymous patriot submitted to Secretary Meyer what he contended was a fitting epitaph for the tomb of the naval hero. The epitaph follows: “Good friend *or Porter’s sake for bear To doubt the dust enclosed here. Blest be the man what got these bones. And curst be he who says ‘'Taint Jones.’ ’’ The reference to Porter in the verse is to Former Ambassador Horace Por ter. who' represented this government at Paris from 1897 to 1905. and through whose efforts the body of John Paul Jones was discovered and removed. W A NT SEP A RATE" PR ISO N FOR ILLINOIS WOMEN Chicago. Feb. 24.—Members of the Illinois Women's Democratic league have started a movement for the estab lishment in this state of a separate penitentiary for women. The institution as proposed would be entirely governed by women and would be separated entirely from the other state prisons. A part of the plan is to have a board of three women commis sioners directly in control and to have women exclusively employed as guards. SAYS THAW LAWYER OFFERED HIM BRIBE Superintendent Russell, of Mat teawan, Says He Rejected $20,000 Boodle. Albany, N. Y„ Feb. 24.—Dr. John U. Russell, superintendent of the Mattea wan state hospital for the criminal In sane. testified before Governor Sulzer'ii committee of inquiry that he had beer offered $20,000 if he would release Harry K. Thaw. The offer, he said was made during the latter part of 1912 by a lawyer whose name he could not remember, in an “uptown hotel" in New York city and refused. This testimony was developed during an investigation of reports that Wil liam F. Clark, secretary of the com mittee. recently had requested Dr. Rus sell to release Thaw on the grounds thftt such an action was desired by Governor Sulzer. The governor him self stated previously that he had au thorized no one to make such a re quest. Dr. James V. May, chairman of the state hospital commission, another witness, told of having been approached l«y Clark several days ago with the same request. Dr. May said he told Governor Sulzer of the incident, and the governor said he would not inter fere in the Thaw case and had not authorized anybody to say he would. TWO DEATHS CLEARED UP BY NEAR TRAGEDY Mystery of Demise of Sweet hearts on Wedding Eve Solved By Gas Discovery. Cumberland, Md„ Feb. 24.—The mys tery of the death of Charles Twigg and Grace Elosser, in a room of the Elosser home on the last day of December, 1910, which was the eve of the pro posed marriage of the couple, is be lieved to have been solved. Mrs. Marshall Willison and her sister, Mrs. Pearl Mangold, the present occupants of the house In which the Twigg Elosser tragedy occurred two years ago, were overcome yesterday by carbonic gas. The two women were rescued by a neighbor who rushed in and dragged them to the open air, where they were resuscitated. The theory of poisoned "kisses" was one of several thories ad vanced at the time of the double trag edy, but Mrs. Eouisa F. Elosser, moth er of the dead girl, believed it was carborfic gas that had killed the two. The case of the two women yesterday is regarded by the authorities as sub stantiating her belief. In the old Elosser home pieces oi brick had been in the chimney to less en the draft. An accumulation of soot had later completely closed the aper ture and the gas had overcome the two women. STEPHENS INTRODUCES NEW POSTMASTER BILL Nebraska Congressman Sub mits Measure to Do Away With Spoils, Washington. Feb. 24.—Representative /tephens, of Nebraska. today intro duced a bill in the House providing for the election of postmasters in sec ond and third class postoffices. The bill provides that the postmaster gen eral, at least one year befpfe there i! to be a vacancy in any second or third class office, shall report the fact t