WORSE THAN SPANISH BULLETS EVEN RANK UKPITIIMUAN NEWSPAPERS BEWAIL OUR NATIONAL DISUIIACK. Tho Stupid llltinrirrn of Those Laud Force Have Outdone From the New Yr.rk Times: In his ftattni'M through Mr Diew. Secre tary AlRer lhai "many staff offi cers from all the departments had been iroriiuled and irJnvd to the field." leaving a reduce.l force. This, of Itself, was a ureal blunder. Th trained men were needed In the departments, and not In the field, and the force should have been Increased. n"t reduced. It was much rn.re urg.-nt to have the work t prepnrutlon of the troops In the fit-Id thoroughly n-l carefully done ty men who kinw how to do It than It was to add to the oUi.-.-i In field fcrvlce. of wli m there t.us been no lack. Tin- buin t (tranches of the r !ce were thu Mlripped of the very offi cers "ho had spent their lives In them. Why? S far as motives can be in ferred from acts. In order to make place for political favorites, who have ihonn by the character cf their work that they were unlit for it. The very heM men would have been none too pood; Home very ir.ferlor ones were ta ken Instead. It was a characteristic kcc of rna hlne politics, and it cost Che nation thousands of precious lives Can Mr. Alger point to a single instance cf a man taken from civil life because ?t proved and eminent fitness as an arganlzer and administrator of difficult work in transportation or supply, and et to do that kind of work for the gov rnmcnl? Not one. The trained offi cials were ent nwuy incompetent poli tician were dumptd into the service; ble men. equal to the arduous task, were Ignored. This Is the jrravamen of the offense 3f Mr. Alrer. and the onVnse Is heinous. !Ie Hies to throw tho blame on field offi cers. r on the unfortunate volunteers, the victims of his own imbecility or worse. He should be ashamed of him ?!f. lie fays that if he could send Setalls to Mr. Depew they "would be wilder him." Mr. Alger speaks from xperience. The woik tf the depart ment hus bewildered him to the verge f Insanity. It has been far too much for his feeble brain. That would have been bad enough. His pursuit of sel .Ish personal and political ends has been worse. The two together have wrought so stupendous and shocking havoc In the army that. If he had any sense of lhame. he would flee to private life. Since he will not, he should be dis missed. CARELESS AND INCOMPETENT. From the Chicago Tribune: Secretary Alger's elaborate letter, addressed to Chauneey M. Depew. In reference to the work performed In the war office lince the beginning of the war with Spain, tan not be construed In any jther sense than an intended defense of bis administration of the affairs of his 3?rrtment I Impossible to con ceive cf any reason for addressing such a letter to a private citizen, and its bears inherent evidence of having been prepared with a distinct view to pub licationa fact going to show that the criticisms with which the press has teemed for a few weeks past have hit the mark. A thorough investigation should prove ust where the responsibility for all this suffering and crime belongs. When sick men are compelled to go for days In overcrowded vessels without necessary medicines and when even the ordinary nldier's rations are tainted and unfit Cor use. It is Impossible that the quar termaster, the commissary, and the medical departments and the secretary ef war should not be held responsible. The terrible shortcomings which the secretary endeavors' to persuade the public he is not responsible for. have not ceased since he wrote the tetter, Cases of gross mismanagement are re ported daily. They are not explained The persons responsible are not pun ched. Everything Is ignored. The sec retary is careless and Incapable If he ts not heartless. lie should go. DEFECTS OF THE SYSTEM. From the New Tork Sun: The many complaints of the war department and it. bureaus which are now appearing may be made to serve a useful purpose by calling official attention to remeai able deficiencies in our military sys tem. Perhaps many of them may be ottrihu table to the ouerulousness due to a morbid physical condition of the -iti a n.l more are outcries or ama teur observers shocked by hardships and sufferings incidental to war and Inseparable from it; but it Is obvious that there remains much which Is Justly rieaervinr of the most thorougn invesu gatlon. with a view to the readjustment of the system under which it was pos sible. PROBLEM WAS TOO BIG FOR HIM '' From the Boston Herald: We realise the magnitude of the task which Sec retarr AIer was called upon to per farm: we realize, further, that hs can In no way be held accountable for the failure of subordinate volunteer offi cers. anitolnted by state officials, to per form their proper duty. But having thus cleared the field, as it were, of ex traneous matter, the fact remains that Secretary Alger has not performed his duty as this should te performed by a secretary of war. and that It has been. in ouite a degree, good luck, instead cf good management, that has saved the armies of the United States from terrible disaster. A method much employed in trim ming autumn foulards Is to carry frills of Inch-wide ribbon 'round the silk to suggest a deep flounce and its heading, and to supplement a yoke collar, high stock epaulets and cuffs with two rows of frills In the same fashion. Foulards art now made with tight backs, show ing few seams, but the front is always full. . "Do what I would. I couldn't get him t propose." "He must be one of those Immunes we read about." Chicago Record. Directing the Handling of Our the Deadly Mauser Bullets. At the outset the secretary of war took an absurdly childish view of the whole problem. He Is now tremendous ly Impressed with the bewildering vast ness of the undertaking of which he la the responsible head, but l-efore war was declared and Immediately after his declaration, he exhibit d a light ness, not to say Jauntlners. of confi dence wholly different fron. that which he now displays. Voluntary reglmer according to statements then made by him, were to be brought Into condition for active service In a few days or a few weeks' time. It was Secretary Al ger who was the chief mtokesman of the cry. "On to Havana," and this at a time when a superficial examination of conditions would have shown him that, apart from our regulars, we had no troops that could be safely Intrusted with a work of this seriousness and magnitude. WAR DEPARTMENT DISGRACED. From the Chicago News: The secre tary's excuses do not alter the cold facts as to the mismanagement of Camp Wikoff. concerning which the war department has been Justly and severely criticised. Within 108 miles of New York, where there was an abundance of nurses, wholesome food suitable for -sick soldiers, with supplies of all sorts within each reach, the first comers at Montauk Point found the camp wholly unprepared for their re tention. The fever-stricken soldiers who were compelled to lie on the ground on their arrival at Camp Wi koff and to do without the commonest of ordinary necessities of hospital serv ice were probably not so "agreeably surprised" as Secretary Alger seems to have been. That conditions have changed for the better is natural, con sidering the circumstances, and espe cially since General Wheeler has been plated in command. Rut the early his tory of the camp will remain an In delible disgrace upon the war depart ment, of which Secretary Alger Is chief. DEPLORABLE INCAPACITY. From the Boston Globe: Though the war with Srain. in point of numbers killed and wounded, hardly amounts to the dimensions of many a single battle In our great civil war, yet at no period were the people's sympathies tiled with so many stories of camp sufferings as have come to them recent ly. PerhaDS this is but natural, con sidering the deadly situations with which our gallant soldiers In southern camps and in Cuba were confronted in the most pestiferous of seasons endured in the tropics, but that there was most woeful bungling by the war department Is painfully realized by all people wno have followed the facts, but chiefly so by the victims. If this ordeal of dally reading of sick ness, suffering and death and neglect is painful to those who had no friends or relatives in the war, what must it be to those who sense it most keenly in the fact of Its coming directly home to them. Patience and such toleration as one can command for these responsible. Is. perhaps, to be recommended for the present, but the fact that even as near home as Montauk the accommodations are reported to be wretched is well cal culated to make restraint from fitting comment difficult. NO EXCUSE. From the Boston Transcript: It was bad enough in the hurry and urgency prior to the opening of hostilities that our men were huddled Into Insufficient transport accommodations, and without adequate food or medical supplies, al though there was an abundance of both in the hands of the government: but what excuse can there be for the war department's unpreparednss at the close of the war, after plenty of time for securing and assembling transpor tation fleets at convenient points and for experience in fitting and handling troop ships? It Is a fact generally admitted that Secretary Alger ought not to have been at the head of the war department, even in a time of profound peace; in face of war he was about as incompe tent a man as could have been found for the place. When some rigid regular runs up against the negligence of some political favorite, he simply curses the Incom petent to his cronies, but submits with trained and disciplined patience. The time is ripe for an Investigation into the causes of the many unnecessary evils that have marked the handling of our army In this war with Spain, in order not only that the blame shall rest where It belongs, but also to take meas ures to prevent a repetition of those evils In future. CONGRESS SHOULD INVESTIGATE. 7rom the New York Commercial-Advertiser: Suggestions multiply for In vestigations of the war department, but they come from the wrong quarter. Secretary Alger Is going to Montauk to examine and try to reform the de plorable conditions that exist there, and the adjutant general is talking about a board to investigate the medical and other departments. This is not the way the British military administration was reformed after the shame and hor ror in the Crimea. Investigation was not intrusted to the horse guards. Par- Many of the English serge dresses worn on the beach are In colors of tan, gray, marine blue, cadet blue and Cu ban red. and a number of the red gowns are made up with ' gulmpes or yokes of tan creponshirred above the low-cut full blouse, which has deep, turn-down revers at the top. The small shoulder puffs are of red serge, with closely fitted forearm portions of tan color. Girdles and belt buckles in metal, set with a variety of gems, appear to be gaining In popularity. liament took the work Into its own hands. The war department can not Investigate Its own delinquencies. That is work for congress and a committee ought to be set at work early in the session. This should seek evidence, not from persons under suspicion, but from those who saw and endured the deadly consequences of. official delinquency. ALGER SHOULD BE REMOVED. From the Boston Traveler: Yesterday the steamer Olivette arrived In Boston harbor, having on board 192 sick, fam ished and fever-stricken soldiers, who only a few short months ago, at the call of the government, went to the front full of health, and spirits and patriotic ardor. All those vho saw that pitiful group will admit that if this is a sam ple of the condition of our soldier boys, that much of the glory which has fol lowed our arms on land and sea will be tarnished by the recording of the foul chapter of cruelty and neglect which has been practiced upon these men by an inefficient, and, we may say, even a corrupt, war department. And then we remember that never before In the history of the world have a people been so liberal in voting, thro' congress assembled, such large amounts of money, which. If It had been properly expended, would have provided the en tire army not only with an abundance of the necessities of life, but many of Its luxuries. As someone has very truly said, out of the money which was rais ed every common soldier might have had a porterhouse steak for breakfast, dinner and supper for an almost In definite period. With an abundance of money and food our boys were left to starve, and are even now starving, not only in Cuba Itself, but even on the shores of Long Island, where they have been sent to recuperate. And who Is responsible for this dread ful state of affairs? Russell A. Alger, they say. is the man. and the press of the country bristles with condemnation of him. We certainly believe he is guilty, but who Is responsible for his retention In office? Is it not the presi dent himself? Can he be alive to the horrors of the situation and the ineffi ciency of his own servant? Whatever have been the crimes of Alger, as long as he Is retained In office the president Is a subscriber to them, and if he does not dismiss him is It not evidence that he Is a partner in them? Let President McKinley listen to the voice of the people. The war depart ment Is suspected of being a bureau for the propagation and distribution of po litical pap. It has lost the confidence of the country. Put a new man in con trol at once. COUNTRY DEMANDS THE TRUTH. From the Chicago Chronicle: By ull means let there be a congressional in vestigation of the war department. It will be called upon to explain, for example, why the Santiago army was sent into a tropical climate "with uni forms better suited to the latitude of Fort St. Michael's, Alaska; why sev eral regiments are even now without shoes in Porto Rico, and why the camp at Montauk Point, which was projected weeks ago, was without water, food or shelter when the first detachment of invalid troops from Cuba landed there last week. There are hundreds of counts in the Indictment against the quartermaster's department. Nor has the medical department any great cause for glorification. It has made a good deal of noise in the way of denouncing line officers, but it hasn't cleared its own skirts by any means. It has utterly failed to stop the spread of disease in camps, and it has made a mess of the division hospital business. In actual field work It has been success ful, and that is the best that can be said of It. In short, while the line has covered Itself with glory while regulars and roughrlders and volunteers have fought in Cuba and suffered in camps like he roes the general staff has come out of the war with a record for inefficiency and stupidity that has probably never been equaled in modern times. The men in the ranks have not only been fighting Spaniards, hunger and disease, but they have also had to contend against the incompetency and neglect which have obtained in the war de partment at Washington. It Is an add ed glory to the American soldier that he has triumphed in the face of official neglect as well as foreign foes. But because he has thus triumphed it Is not the less desirable that an in vestigation should be made. Lives have been ruthlessly sacrificed upon the altar of bureaucratic imbecility. Gaunt spec ters of men fill the hospitals because of it. The mortality wrought by the Spaniards is not one-quarter of that due to the laches of men in high mill tary authority. The country wants these men located. The investigation should be complete and thorough. It should embrace every one directly and remotely implicated. from shoulder-strapped sons of their fathers pitchforked into staff positions at the beginning of the war up to the man who sits in the secretary's office at the war department. If the trail should lead to the White house itself the nation will demand that It be fol lowed up. WAR DEPARTMENT METHODS. From the Philadelphia Record: There has been little or no disposition in any quarter to continue the objections, at one time so serious and so widespread as to the purely personal system under which the operations of the war depart ment have been conducted. Mr. Alger has had his way; his friends have been promoted in the army, have secured fat contracts for transportation and military supplies from the quartermas Yellow is a color that appears to be gaining constantly in fashionable favor, particularly In the realm cf millinery yellow tulle, lace. Spanish blonde, crepe lisse and deep orange and rich olive yellow holly hocks, primroses, honeysuckles sprays and large yellow hearted water lilies and roses. Rev. X. S. Campbell, who established the first Afro-American Baptist church In Texas, where the Baptists now flour ish by the hundred thousand, died re cently at Lemarqua. . ... ter and commissary departments, and have enjoyed on every hand exceptional opportunities to gain glory and pelf. In the field and In the camps the soldiers have suffered: dilatorlness in moving masses of troops has been carried to the verge of criminal incapacity, and the wrong men have manifestly been placed in charge of Important and vital processes of preliminary organization. All this, and much more, the American people have seen and noted without taklnar serious thought as to the re sponsibility of the chief of the war de partment for the ensuing jrilschief and losses. War was a new and untried business for this generation of Am.rl- I cans, and no official's mistakes could be fairly scored at once to his Individ ual account. But. while there Is probably no sen- 1 timer of public resentment against the secretary of war strong enough to warrant the putting forth at this time of a special plea of defense, there un questionably exists a general popular desire that the proper authorities make careful inquiry into the methods of war department management in the brief Cuban campaign, as well as In the marshaling of troops into active serv ice. The people want to know and they have a right to know whether the defects of operation so clearly and so constantly indicated in the conduct of the department were due to mere offi cial Incapacity or to essential and in grained defects in our system of mill HOW SOLDIERS WERE DEFEATED. From the St. Louis Republic: We thought a few weeks ago that the rec ord was a bad one. Two hundred and fifty men killed outright; 1.400 wounded. The records have been slow of un folding. The obsolescent Shatter sent daily word of fevered hundreds and of men returned to duty back to corn ed beef and hard bread; with sallow faces, shrunken limbs and feeble stom achs, returned to duty only to die of starvation in one of its form they call- ed it fever. Names were hard to find. Years not months will write the obit uaries of the army that died at Bl Caney, at pestilential Siboney, at San Juan and In the red-tiled houses of Santiago. Even a hard man would say that the Tenth cavalry and the Sixteenth in fantry should have fared well after storming San Juan. He would have been hard indeed to have denied pro per food to the wounded and forced field rations upon the fevered. But Shafter and Alger did this, and more. Of the Sixth and Tenth cavalry, the Sixteenth infantry and the Twenty third, the Roosevelt regiment, the un trained Seventy-first from New York and the raw Michigan regiments, there is but a sickened remnant at Montauk Point. The truth can not be concealed the flower of the American army is a withered thing. When the deaths are known the country will not call the Snanish war a victory with trifling loss. We have suffered defeat through the office of the war secretary. CHEAP PLEA OF A POLITICIAN. From the Pittsburg Dispatch: The entire mass of the secretary's plea is riddled by the following considerations: First Considering the vastness of the task which he pleads, would a broad minded, vigorous man have organized the staff for that task by appointing to the great work men of training and ex perience, or would he have distributed the positions among senators and rep resentatives, and people having influ ence, like so many rations? Second When cases appeared which could only have been due to criminal negligence or gross incompetence, like packing sick and wounded men in the holds of transports, without medical at tendance' or medical supplies, or leav ing stores to go to waste at the San tiago wharf, while the soldiers, a few- miles away, were suffering for their lack, or furnishing rotten food to sol diers at home, would an honest and vig orous secretary of war have ordered strict investigation and punishment of whoever was responsible? Or would he have hushed up Investigation and indi cated that such abuses can go on with Impunity by the cheap plea that "this Is war?" Third Innate dislngenuousness ap pears in the plea. that It was at first supposed that all the sickness at San tiago was yellow fever, and that when the contrary was learned "it was at once decided to bring the army home as speedily as possible." The fact is, that for days before the appearance of the letters of Roosevelt and the divis ion commanders the war department had published daily bulletins, showing the exact number of both yellow fever and malarial fever cases. These let ters, too, are shown by the record to. have been evoked by the receipt and reading to those officers of an order to take the army away from Santiago and Into the hills of San Luis. All these facts are calmly suppressed by Alger. But what can be said of a secretary of war whose first act, when he received that earnest plea for the lives of the soldiers, was to dig out an extract from a private letter several days old and publish it, In the hope of Injuring a gallant and earnest officer who had joined in the protest? Was that the act of an official anxious to do the best possible for the troops, or was it on the grade of such infinite meanness as to make it gross flattery to call It petty politics? In one respect, however, the secre tary's apology is indisputable. The task- WJ as entirely too great ior Alger, it as about one-sixth as great as that -vlst VAvarA XT Stanton norfonnM: wi wl and to burden Alger with anything re quiring one-nunareain as mucn minu. a3 Stanton's was rankly overtaxing. It needed a man of broad mind and pure patriotism, and should never have been imposed on one whose most daring con ceptions never get outside the narrow ruts of cheap and selfish political deals. Chicago Post: "I shall not be gone long." he said, when he started for the north pole; "only a few days." Nevertheless, she refused to be com forted, for she had not been so long out of school that she had forgotten how long the days are up there. Ribbon trimmings will be much US2 -' in autumn millinery on both hats and toques. Ths Is a sensible fashion, since ribbon is not easily hurt by uncertain autumn weather. The wide directoire toque still remains popular. . Dl&AD LmiLIt CUICIOSI TllSS Exhibit In the Gu eminent Hulld injc ol'Hpecinl Interest. Omaha. Special An exhibit possess ing as much dramatic lnttrest as any In the Government building Is the col lection of photographs sent by soldiers of the civil war to friends at home, and which by reason of Incomplete address never reached their denization. At the end of the war the postoffice depart ment had on hand 6.000 photographs of this kind, which were placed on ex. hibit at the dead letter office in the hope that they would be Identified by visit, ors. In the years which followed 2.000 of them have been claimed by these for whom they were intended, and there were many dramatic and pathetic In cidents In connection with their dis covery. Wives and sweethearts came across the pictures of loved ones who had disappeared without a word, and It was possible by the index on the photographs to put them In possession of the letters which had been attached. For some time after the war these Identifications were of almost dally oc currence, but in the last few years such discoveries have been growing less as the ante-bellum generation has fad ed away and the soldier boys of tho civil war have outgrown their appear ance at that time. Although the collection has been ex hibited at all the recent expositions identifications of the pictures have been of rare occurrence, and the department has gtven up hope of locating tht greater part of those remaining During the last three months several of ths collection have been rartlally identified by people who Imagined they saw a likeness to some person they knew, but In only one case has the assurance been sufficient to Juslify the official In charge In surrendering the portrait. IDENTIFIES A PHOTOGRAPH. On August 13 Miss Gorman, daughter of J. J. Gorman, assistant superintend ent of the Omaha Street railway com pany, was examining the cabinet of war photographs when she came upon one which she recogni7ed as her father's. It had been sent In a letter from a mil itary camp at Indianapolis. Jnd . to his family at South Bend. Ind . shortly be fore Mr. Gorman's regiment was order ed to the front. He lefi shortly nftt-r-ward for the south, and had no oppor tunity to communicate with his friends for a long interval The letter had mis carried and the photograph had occu pied its place in the dead letter ex hibit for over thirty-five venrs Colonel Brownlow. in charge of the exhibit, has received the following acknowledgment from Mr Gorman: W. G Brownlow Dear Sir: 1 receiv ed today Irom my daughter the photo graph that she fovr.d at the Govern ment building at the exposition ground It i9 the same t sent through the mai'. when 1 was in the at my. I belonged to the Eighty-sixth Indiana volunteers, company D. and 1 am greatly oblige! for the return of the picture. J J GORMAN. The dead letter exhibit contains -a vast number of other relics which have accumulated owing to the haste and carelessness of the American people An an example of these traits there 1? a collection cf souvenir exposition postal cards which have been mailed at the branch office in connection with the exhibit, and which can never be deliv ered. Over 300 have been mailed in the last three months, an average of over three dally, containing interesting communications on one side, and on the other no address whatever Most of thes ar from people anxious to send word to the'r friends, but who ars In too nervous a stat to attend to tht detail of inscr'b'njr h? adire33 Most of them are signed "Father." "Brother" or "Your Loving John." and henc there Is no way of locaMng the senders. CONFISCATES A BOMB. One of the mo lnr5.!ng specimens in the postoffice cxh:b! is a bomb ad dressed to Senor Don Antonlu? Eulate commander cf the Vizcaya. Intended to be delivered to him while his ship was anchored in New York harbor Tha package excited the suspicion of the department, which was on the lookout for matter of that sort, and had used its privilege of opening anything in the form of a package addressed to parties liable to suffer at the hands -tt fanatics. The bomb, which had evidently been sent ty tome enthusiast In the cause of Cuba's freedom was made of a strong pasteboard box tnd contained enough dynamite to wreck a ship- The pack age. of course, never reached its des tination. Another interesting fieath machine was a revolver contained in a fco with the trigger fc conrected that the wea pon would te discharged in the direc tion cf the person undoing the lid. It had been designed by a rejected suitor in Baltimore. Md . whose proposals had not been favorably received by an heir, ess of that city He accordingly niai'ed her the infernal machine, which she ; opened without harm as the suitor hat? been a poor machinist and tne tnggei connection was not well adjusted A number of practical .1okes have alsc found their way nto the ccllectior. which the 'r.tended recipient was to acute to accept. The method usually is to send some ponderous riece oi freight, like a brtck. with the postac.. insufficiently paid The rerson foi whom it is intended is notified by the department that a package addressed to him is held fcr postage, and ths amount is usually forwarded to the supposed satisfaction of the joker The amount of postage collected on such goods sometimes amounts to several dollars. Under another case is a valuable por celain tray, containing a painted land scape burned into the surface with re markable skill. It is the work of a famous Russian, and is valued at sev eral hundred dollars, but was sent bj parties traveling abroad with an erro neous address. A curious method of sending money through the malls was adopted by a Georgia man who wished to remit $1 to the director cf the geological survey fcr a Manual of Topographical Methods. He pasted paper cn both sides of the ceir writing the address on one side, with the stamp, and the order on the other. The communication reached its destW nation. O " Dewey Americanizing; the Philippines. Wherever Battle Ax goes it pacifies and satisfies everybody and there are more men chewing m m R)ttftflQAU PLUG to-day than any other chewing tobacco ever made. The popularity of Battle Ax is both national and international. You iind it in Europe : you find it in Maine: you find it in India, and you'll find it in Spain (very soon). Our soldiers and sailors have already taken it to Cuba and the Philippines ! Are you chewing it ? Remember the name when you buy again. C) RAIMT r: WALLS & CEILINGS. CALCIMO FRESCO TITS VKFM FOB DAMI'IX COI Hit CAICII urn! locwdealir. let u know ul win put oo to tixm THE MURALO COIVIfMrt T . new WITH Tin: JOKEKS. Brooklyn Life- Clara Are you en gaged to Douglas for good? Gertrude It looks so. I don't think he'll ever be able to marry me. Chicago Record: '"He married into one of your best families, did he not?" "Not exactly: his wife married out of one of cur best families." Indianapolis Journal: "I don't believe they ever would have married If her father had not harpned to catch him hugging her." "Well, there has many a man been ruined by not knowing when to let go." Chicago Tribune: "You've kissed that young squirt gocd night and let him so. haven't you. Stella?" said a weary voice at the top of the stairway. ! There was an awful silence for a mo ment and then In a timid, hesitating voice the young man In the darkened hall below responded: i "No. ma'am; but I I think she's go Ing to." ' Boston Journal: A visitor to the Brit ish museum reports that he saw a coun tryman standing before the bust of a woman in a collection cf statuary. The woman was represented in the act cf coiline her hair, and as the visitor came up the countryman was saying to himself: Ncr, sir, that ain't true to nature. She ain't got her mouth full of hair pins." Brooklyn Life: "Who was Penelope, mamma?" "Penelope was a German woman, whose husband. Ulysses, was away fcr thirty years in the Trojan war. During his absence she had many suitors, but she remained faithful to her husband, and waited patiently till he returned." "Surely that must be a myth." i Chicago Tribune: "I'll be so glad when my husband comes back from the war. Do you know, I haven't had a good night's sleep since he went away." I "I don't wonder. The constant fear lest he might be sick or wounded and in the hands of strangers, thousands of miles away from " "Yes. yes, I was uneasy about that, of course. But you've no idea how I miss his snore." To allow steam to escape from tea kettles the lids are made with one or more perforations In the flange, and j corresponding holes In the rim, the lid : being also applicable to other kettles, j ipoon. She I fairly ran my legs off trying to ret a place in the chorus. He; And then, of course, further ef fort was useless. Indianapolis Journal. Cleveland Leader: He There Is a limit- trfc vrvthno vnn Irnnw ' n . n , . . . . . . . one uooKing ai ine ciockj iei, even this night can't last forever. General Booth reports that the Sal vation Army has 25.018 officers attached to 6,231 corps and outposts. There are also 33,662 local officers and volunteers engaged In social work. Note pads with silver or ivory covers ornamented with silver are more pop alar than ever as articles for the ihatelalne. It is the proper thing to wear silk em broidered stockings to match the gown. Very exquisite hosiery is worked In tiny rosebuds, violets or forget-me-nots. () () () if roo ennnot imccbtM Uili tnat.iLI from roof ! ol obUiiuus It. anion i j. ... '- . . . Modest. Quietly, and In marked contrast with some of Its contemporaries, the Chicago Great Western has Jut placed two roy al new trains Into tervlec bowi'cn Chicago and Minneapolis, grmi and gold In colors, with red roofs and trucks, and slmi'ly Aladdin Intnl. irs. The new trains are Pullman palaces, built after special doslariH orn In the Chicago Great Western general oiTU-os. The Interiors ure mahogany, richly In laid, and the furnishing harmonious carpets and draperies. The club cars of these splendid new limited trains are something entirely new and novel under the sun. They have fiat ceil ings and resemble rooms more than cars. They have high-tacked, luxuri ously cushioned setteeB at the ends and in the comers, like those In the new Grand Pacific bar, with a mahog any center-table. lamp-illumined, with ' rich canopy shades, and surrounded by easy chairs. The windows are diamond shaped prismatic glass lattice work, after the ancient German style. The club car has all the appointments and conveniences of tht metropolitan club. At the front end Is a conductor's room, with desk and lamp, where he can transact his ticket sorting unseen and undisturbed. The Chicago Great West ern has excelled Itself and contempo raries in the Introduction of these Im perial trains, but proposes to let them be discovered by the traveling public, hence their noiseless inaugural. O. A. B. and P. A. II. Means the Port Arthur Route Is the Shortest and Quickest to O. A. R. En campment held In Cincinnati. Septem ber 6th to 10th. Tickets on tale Sept. 2-3-4-5. Rates lower than one fare will be made from this section. Ask your nearest agent to ticket you via the Port Arthur Route or write Harry B. Moores, O. P. & T. A.. Port Arthur Route. 1415 Farnam Street (Paxton Ho tel Blk.), Omaha. Neb. The Touth A man has married the girl I love. I hate him. What shall I do? The SageCease hating him. and pity him. Then soon he will hate himself. "Gray green Is selling his pictures like smoke." "Yes: he has quit painting to please the artists and Is painting to pleaee the public." Chicago Record. A double safety pin. Invented by a. Pennsylvania woman. Is formed of a single piece of wire, with a T-head at its center, the ends of the wire being sharpened and bent around until they enter loops at the ends of the head. The Jewish Year Book estimates that there are In the world about 11.000.000 Jews, more than half of them under Russian Jurisdiction. "The ships our nation needs." says the evangelist, "are worship, fellowship and friendship. They are not men of war, but men cf peace." A citizen of Tiffin. O.. la cutting hla third set of teeth. Rebrash Reform Press Business Ass'n OMAHA. NO. 37-1808. 1 ' I wws fcHthk all Lit Uts. I I I Bert Coiwh Syrup. Tw Uol- Vm I IaI In time. He. h Orosirt.t. I I