a. t 4 v m A r !KE SPII COW Jl?jmL L. J. IMMOM, HARRIsON, The Virginia peanut ;rut h dis solved. It never amounted to shucks, anyway. Tie London Chronicle has settled again the Venezuelan dispute. This daily 'aenllug" in England convince the Britons there are no grounds left. "It la our duty to give the Sultan time," says Lord Salisbury; but mean while what about the Armenians, to whom time signifies the probability of extermination? But one sugar plantation in Cuba is said to be left standing. A rations are scarce in Havana, it would be well to put tax-gatherer on the retired list and send them back to Spain Still, in case of trouble with any for eign power, it is some satisfaction to know that the Blacktail Buck Battalion of Washington County, Idaho so call ed because of the fact that every mem ber of the company can hit a black tall buck at 3(i0 yards every time is ready for immediate service. The slaughter of men, women and children In Turkey from religious fanat icism will cease when the sultan's au thority la destroyed, and not before. England has 50,UOO.xio Mohammedans In India, more than three times the number found In Turkey, and not one of them is molested on account of relig ious belief. Forest fires cost Pennsylvania last year $1,000,000. But this Is a small Item compared with the $1.2no.ooo,OiJ which the State Forestry Commission says has been lost in forty years by the burning of young saplings In Pennsyl vania. There are other losses con nected with the wasteful destruction of forests, but these are enough to point the moral. A French submarine boat recently in rented is intended to carry passengers without geaslckness, or, In time of war, to explode torpedoes under the keels of hostile ships. It Is driven by an electric motor, has lins and other queer appliances, and is entirely invis ible from the surface of the waves. It is claimed that a roomy passenger Bhip can be built on this pattern to cross the Channel forty-tive feet under water. England in its Isolation is a sort of Ishmael among nations, but the down fall of the British Empire is not quite so near as some of the prophets think. England's money has disarmed enemies and bought allies In more than one exigency when the world seemed to lie arrayed against her. That country is almost as wealthy in proportion to the rest of the old world as it ever was, and it Is fully as resourceful and auda cious. Western youths no longer go In great numbers to the older Institutions of the East for a college education. They go to their own State universities or to the great Michigan university at Ann Arbor. The young men sent from the Mississippi valley to Harvard, Tale, Princeton and the University of Virginia are usually the sons or rela tives of men educated In those institu tions. The West is not always up In the latest Paris fashions, nor does It go wild after the latest fad of European capitals; but It keeps Its schoolmasters busy. Come West, young man, and get a liberal education. There Is a measure of consolation even for the rude man who, in the se cret operations of his Intellect, curses the woman with the high hat who sits In front of him at the theater and keeps him dodging from side to side In his efforts to catch a glimpse of the pro ceedings on the stage. He knows that the eccentric movements of her occiput are made in an effort to establish a line of vision through the field of female plumage between her and the perform ance. By the middle of the third act be reaches an absolute state of felicity over the knowledge that she, like him, will go home supremely Ignorant as to whether she has been in attendance on a tragedy or a Humpty Dumpty panto mime. An exchange calls attention to the fact that a man weighing 150 pounds can travel rapidly on a "safety" bicycle only one-seventh as heavy as himself, while the vestibule train must carry at least twenty times the weight of Its pas sengers. For equal rates of speed, and to carry the same weight of passenger, the train Is fully a hundred times heav ier than the bicycle. Since the latter is eminently a practical machine It fol lows that if the train be not now pro nounced unnecessarily- heavy It proba bly will be so esteemed a few years hence, with the result of earnest scien tific effort to reduce it It may be Im possible now to say how the reduction Is to be effected, but science may be trusted to find the way. Lord I-elghton's death removes a cu rious personality from the Intellectual life of London. Aa Sir Frederick Leigh ton, the President of the Royal Acad emy of Painting, the eminent painter occupied a lofty place and filled It very gracefully. His annual speech at the Academy banquet was almost as im portant a function as the ministerial prvauMiBoeiMiit at Greenwich. Lord Latgatoa was a delightful host In bis teraty stndlo-noat la Holland Park Koad, vkara h had united tha wonders C ircfeltoetm and pa atia on a r CaswJ ami hi the happiest manner. It a aaid of him by a witty Amer ican that be cuuld do everything ad mirably except paint which s rather hard on a painter at the heatj of his profession. He was handsome. and distinguished in manner, and leaves thousands of friends. An architect Is reported to have offer ed for a named sum to build for a great man In Rome a villa so eontructed thai no one outside could ee anything that passed within Its walls and to have re ceived the reply that he could have twice as much for a building so con structed that every Roman citizen could see all that took place inside It. It now looks as If the Idea of the great man I about to be actualized, at least In jiart, by means of the processes initiated by Roentgen. Xot only w hat passes insld the house, but what exists and is goinj on Inside tbe liody, even to the niarrovi of the bones, may be ex poed to tb gaze of the curious by means of tbe new photography and its scientific eon sequences. The war cloud between England and Germany grows smaller each day, evi dently not because the Emperor hug any less sympathy for his Iutch cous ins In the Transvaal so much as bis discovery that he cannot make an alli ance as against England, and that if he should go to war alone against his grandmother he would be overwhelm ed in speedy order. He could not get his troops to England, and England would not need to get her troops to Germany. If his handful of vessels went out upon the ocean to try conclu sions with the huge British fleet ha would soon have no vessels. For this reason, and because Russia has not consented or agreed to help Him, and liecause the French are saying that they do not Intend to Interfere letween England and Germany, the Emperor Is climbing down from his lofty perch and Is giving it to be understood that his original warlike dispatches were simply expressions of personul opinion growing out of bis Irritated state of mind; tiiat his Irritation has now pass ed away; and that the relations of Ger many and Great Britain are again cor dial and everything Is lovely which Is letter after all than fighting or mak ing faces at each other. The early reports of the astonishing Investigations made by Prof. Roentgen of Wurzburg seemed almost Incredible, but there Is little reason to doubt longer that the German scientist has made a discovery of prime importance In the world of science. Since the news reach ed this country a number of American students have Is-en Investigating and experimenting for themselves as to the practicability of photographing the In terior of opaque substances and the result of their efforts' more than con firms the Importance of Prof. Roent gen's discoveries. Prof. John Trow bridge, of Harvard University, and Prof. A. W. Wright, of Yale, have both succeeded in photographing with the the cathodlc rays, and Edison announ ces similar results from his own Inves tigations. Prof. Trowbridge, with Im perfect apparatus, has succeeded In photographing not only the bones of a human hand but the graphite In a lead pencil and two dimes through an Inch of wood. He also succeeded In photo graphing coins In a pocketbook througl. three thicknesses of sealskin leather. The explanation of the phenomenon by which these remarkable results are ol talned is not easy to make clear. A Edison says, this new work of photo graphing through opaque sulstanoes is not an Invention but "a new develop ment In the field of physics," which Is now In Its Infancy and may yet grow to be of Incalculable practical Impor tance. The medium by which the pho tographs are obtained the so-called "cathode rays" are the rays of energy emanating from the cathode or part of a galvanic battery by which the elec tric current leaves. Roentgen's discov ery was that a .sensitized plate placet) near a cathode ple will lie, affected by the cathode rays when the latter arJ passed through substances opaque tdj ordinary light. If a sensitized plate be placed In a camera onscura, and In front of It there be suspended an objerl Impervious to Ugh1 rays, there Is shown on the plate a shtdow due to the sun rays. Substitute for the sun's rays the. rays of energy frcm a cathode and let a wooden Instead of a glass plate be, placed Wore the sensitized disk and the cathode rays penetrate the board as the sun does glass. The experiments, important as they may be In their prac tical application, have an additions value as demonstrating the existence of a force which has long been known only in theory. This force Is Itself bui a form of energy, or, as Edison term1 It, a "dlsturlxince of ether" arm logon! to the ethereal agitation or vlbratlol which Is known as electricity, and a little understood as the motion of ethei which results in what we call light A Hone's Teeth. At 5 years of age a horse lias forty teeth twenty-four molar or Jaw teeth, twelve incisors or front teeth and four tusks or canine teeth, between the mo lars and Incisors, but generally miss ing in the mare. At birth only tha two nippers or middle Incisors appear, and when a year old the incisors are all visible of the first or milk set Be fore reaching lhe third year the per manent nippers have come through; a year later the permanent dividers next to the nippers are out. At 5 tha month la perfect At 6 the hollow under the nippers, called the "mark," has disappeared from them and di minished in the dividers, and at 7 tho mark has disappeared from the divid ers and the next teeth, or corners, aro level, though showing the mark; at 8 the mark disappears altogether. Hampton Belle I wouldn't allow t horrid man to kiss me, would yon i Newport Newa Olrl Of course not; J don't know any such. Norfolk Pilot ELEPHANT OX THE RAMPAGE XDia a Grata leeper aod Tear Dawi "Buildings. FRANK SCOTT IS HER SEVENTH VICTIM ( lU4 "Gypes" feat V4 let Kui as) Bnprea. Chicago, March 25. W. H. Harris big eleghant Gypy became unmanage able at its winter quarters on the west side yesterday afternoon . and before the could be got under control killed her keeper, tore down a frame building and created general excitement, w hich drew thousand of people to the scene. Harris' circus is quartered at the cor ner of Robey and Jat-kson streets, in a s:x-etory brick building, and Gypsy oc cupied the greater part of the first floor. Her regular keeper is Bernard Shea, but be is at present encaged (I a music halt in Omaha, and the animal was tempo rarily in charge of Frank Scott, a lion tamer. In the afternoon Scott, against orders, ttolr Gypsy out for a walk in the alley. Gypsy did not seem inclined to top at the boundary of the alley and Scott gave her a jab with an iron book. Tbe beat became enraged and throw ing her keeper from her head, proceeded to pound him with her trunk and suc ceeded in killing him. Mrs. Harris came to the rescue with a pitchfork. She was knocked down, but pluckily recom menced the battle and the beast ran to ward the end of the alley. Here was standing a Urge crowd, and many were the bruises received in the scattering which took place when the elephant started oat of the alley. Gypsy did not go far, but went back for Scott, who, in the meantime, had been moved into a wooden building just opposite tbe ele phant's quarter). The animal knocked in tbe whole side of the building in her efforts to get at the man again. During this time Harris had sent for fifty loaves of bread. The animal quieted down somewhat while she was eating and alter the hail finished walked into the barn and the heavy door was shut. The door bad no sooner been cloed than the elephant shattered it and ran out again. By th :s time every street! in the vicinity was crowded with excited people. Three wagon loads of police came to tho rescue, but did nothing fur ther than keep back the crowds. The elephant had her own way for aboil four hours, when she went back to her siall and allowed C.aude Orton, ahorse- trainer, to chain her. Harris has owned the elephant for five years and has had no trouble with her before, Frank Scott's right name is unknown- Although he bad beed with Harris cir cus for six years no one knows anything of him except that he went under an'at- umed name, XOT HEB riHTS VICTIM. Omaha, Neb , March 26. Bernard 6hea, the former keeper of Gypsy, the elephant which created so much trouble In Chicago yesterday, was seen last night and will take the first train for Chicago in tbe morning to assume his old position. In an interview he stated that Gypsy is only another name for Empress, the original old Empres, the first elephant imported into this coun try, and that the killing of her late keeper, Scott, makes the seventh victim of her vicious character. The first was Harry Cooley in 1870, at ForepaugVi winter quarters in Philadelphia, then George West had the life cruehed out of him in 1874, travelling on the road with Robinson's show. "Jimmy the Bum" was the next man, at New lbe-iia, La., in 3882, followed by William Devoe, with O'Brien's show at Pouhkeepsie, N. Y., in 1880. Patsy Hulligan was the sixth victim and he had his arm torn out at Cincinnati in 1894 and died two days afterward. Mr. Shea has been Gypsy keeper off and on for the past ten years and saye he has never had any trouble with her. Hall for Million. BiTTi, Mont., March 26 Mrs. Hul da Queen Davis of Tehachapi, Kern county, Car ' yesterdey cieated a sensa tion among numerous claimants of the noted Davis estate, by filling a petition in tbe district court asking for a revoca tion of the alleged forged will of Andrew J. Davis, tbe dead millionaire, and de manded a distribution of the entire estate among herself and two daugh ters, alleging that she is the surviving wife of the deceased, who never was be lieved to have been married. The plair. tiff alleges in ber petition that they were married in Carroll county Arkansas, August 16, 1842, and have two children, May Isabel, now Mrs. Morrow of Fres no, Cel., and Laura A., now Mrs. Cal bonn of gsn Francisco. It is stated by Miles J. Cavanangh, the woman s attor ney, that when the gold fever broke out Davis left her and went to California. After a few letters she heard be bad been killed and she married a man named Williams and also moved to Cali fornia, where she found traces of her first husband, who soon came to Mon Una. After the death of Williams she married George Snell, who is also dead. After the latter's death she determined to demand her alleged right as the wife oi uavii. KII'iKl by tu. Cart Chicauo, March 25. While Christian Warner and Robert Scott, employee ol the SchuU Baking company, were cross log the Fifty-third street railway cross ing of the Rock Island road in a covered wagon this morning, the wagon wn struck by a southbound passenger train. Warner was instantly killed and Scott fatally Injured, The gates, it U claimed were open at tha time, and no dangei signal was displayed. Hugh O'HriU, the gatetender, was arrested. SaueriM at l' el aktsa. Wasadsotok, March : 7 Mavroyeoi B -y, sua o the suban of Turkey's Greek physician, who since 17 baa lie n Tur kish minister to tbe Untd Mates, but who has now been re-called, according to report from Cont'autinopla, wet doeeted with Secretary 'lney for a con siderable time yeeterdx morning, this being diplomatic day a the state de partment On the 3d of December apt the senate parsed a resolution acking tbe presi dent, with the usual qualification, "if not incompatible w ith i - public inter est." to communicate . y information to bis ptie-etiiou an to j -get cruelties wmmilted on Armenian in Turkey and whether these crue, ties had been com mitted on persons who had declared their intention of becoming Aoierirun citizens or b-caue of their being Ohrisiiana. The president was also aked to inform the senate whether the United States bad expostulated with turkey in regard to u.ese matters, or proioee to ait in concert with other Chr tftian powers in regard to the same. On the 11th of December the pregi dent sent a response, which included I reifirt irom Mr ureshain, then secre tary of state, in which it was elated that no information had been received as to cruelties commute ) upon citizen of the United Statei", mid that con sequently no "expostulations" had been addressed to Turkey. Secretary Ores bam further stated that the United States had declined a proposition o particulate in an investigation ol the alleged cruelties by "a Turkish com mi-siun" for the reason that the United SU ei was not a pariy to the Berlin treaty of 1878' which provides as part of what is known as "tbe Euroiean con cert" as follows: The sublime porte undertakes to carry out without further delay the improvements and reforms demanded by local requirement in lhe provinces inhabited by the Aru-fniaus and to guarantee their secun y ag.tinst the Circacsinns an Kurds It will periodi cally made kno vn the fe:s taken to this effect to lhe power which will uperintentl their application " ACTION BY COM. i . Alter some discussion ti .louse and senate adopted, more than t month ago, the following concurrent resolution on the subject, upon which, as far a known, the president has taken l action : Resolved, liy the nenate of the United SUtes, the house of representa tives concurring, tat it is an impera tive duty in the iuterept of humanity to express the earnest hoe that the European concert brought about by the treaty referred to may bo giveu its just effect in such decisive measures as shall stay the hand of fanaticis .. and lawless violence and as shall (ecu to the un offending Christians of the Turkish era pi re all the rights belorr-ing to them both as men anil Christiu . and as ben eticiaries'of tbe explicit provisions of the treaty above recited. Kesolved, that the president be re quested to communicatu these resolu tions to the governments of Great Brit ain, Germany, Auuti'-a, France, Italy and Russia, Resolved, Further, that the senate of the United States, the house of r. p reftentatives concuirintr, will support the president in the mo"t severe action he may take for the protection of Amer ican citizens in Turkey ami to obtain redress lor ibjuries committed upon t! a persons or property of ?uch citizens. At the state department the usual reticence is observed and Secretary Olncy declines to give any information either affirming or denying 4he rep irted recall of the Turkish minister. Mav royeni Bey himself ftalun thac he is en tirely ignorant of any action on the prt of his government to recall him, except as he hears of it through the news papers. Mr. Alexander W, Terrell, tbe United States minister to Turkey, has been xnxioug to obtain leave of absence for some time, but the threatening state of the Armenian situation has made the granting of his request difficult hereto fore. Should the situation become less critical it is probable that Mr. Terrell may be granted leave of absence and it is regarded as likely that Mavroycni Bey may then be given a release from his official duties in Washington at tbe same time, with an opportunity of visit ing Turkey. Innuauao father. MitusviixE, Ky., March Z7. A case of the most inhuman treatment of father to a son came to light yesterday afternoon, when Elbert Herndon, eleven years old, was brough here by o min ister and revere! other gentlemen. For two years the boy had been chained to tbe floor of a stable and only on a few occasions was he allowed the freedom of the lot, and then it mas under the guard of some member of the family. The boy lived with bis father, William Herndon, atom two miles from Jeffer son town, two years age he ran away and when his father found him he said the boy should not repeat it and, it is claimed, securing a chain, he welded it to the boy's leg and fastened tbe other end to the stable floor. The chain wes not more than two feet in length and for two years the boy re mained a prisoner. He secured a horse shoe, pried tbe staple oft and ran to Jef- fersontown withe ch-;n still dsngling to his loot. .d llraaii Washington, March 27. Secretary Hoke Smith has approved land grants to railroads embracing hundred of thousands of acres. They are: North ern Pacific railroad, 587,647 seres in the Bismarck, N. D., land district; Northern Pad dc 'railroad, 20,824 acres In Washington state; Northern Pacific railroad, flOMM acres in Montana; Northern Pacific railroad 41,621 acres In Idaho; Southern Pacific railroad 8,8(4, in California. Voice of the Wnttra Wind. Voice of the western wind! Thon aingewt from afar, Rwh with tbe music of a land Where all my memories are; But in thy song I only bear The et-hti of a tone That fell divinelr on niy ear la days forever flown. Star of tbe western skrl Thou ln-ainet from afar. With luster caught from eyes I kDcw, Winnie orha were each a star; But, oh, thte orbs t.o w iMly brigtit- No more et'lipue thine owu. And never shall 1 find the light Of day forever flown! -E. C. Stediuan. Outlived Pain. In the long atruggle to atntuuge my woe 1 aettrvhed the sleeping lout I; each little pain. Each childiuh trouble I endured again. And aa 1 watched the long prM'fition go Great wonder were wirhin mv aul, for lo, Eaeh one hud lnu a grief of death full fain. Or so I hud lv wonted to complain And with my tears attest it to lie so. Whereat within my hreant began to rie The hoe, no sooner born than thrunt away. J hat I, through tear, might learn to mile again; And looking hark with diailliiHinned eye I'lHjn uiy coiitpHTed Borrow amiling ay, almotft incredulous. "Thia once win pain fcoizalteth ('. Cardoza, iu the Cosmo politan. Mjr Little Oirl. My little girl i united Within her tiny Ixii, With amU-r ringlet erratod Around her dainty head; She lie no calm and stilly. She breathe wi soft and low, She call to mind a lily Half hidden in the now. I ki your wayward trewie, My d in may little ipieen; I know you have careawti 1'roni Hooting form unweu; O angel! let me keep her To km away my care. Thi darling little sleeper Who hit tny love and prayers. Samuel Minturn I'-k. When the Dot la Done. Darling, when the shadow fuil, And the day is dune, When the crimson veil i draw n ( i'er rite ullltken Hon. Through lhe mention, moiat with dew, Hwift I hie away; All my hour of pleasure come ith the clime of day. A the perfume from the flowers Grow more sweet at night. Aa the dew drop softer glow In the pale moonlight. Bo. the hour of care all paused ifh the sunken un, Joy come springing to my soul hen the day is done. t For thy pleasant face I greet And thy smile I see. When acroa Che dmvy field I have come to Uiee; When I hnaten home, my love, ith the mnking aun, All my sweetest pleasures come W hen the day I done. Daniel J. Donahoe, In Boston Trans enpC Old Time. Iive to think of old-time day brightest an the beet: Roses in the roughest ways joy from east to went! Moon wns rming right on time, with a lot o lUin, Aa' sweet girl done the milkin' where the cattle CTottt the bnns. Love to think of old-time days the sun- hiiie In the dell Hie milk-white daisies blossomin', the chime o village bells: file iMnls that sung kits sweeter than these new-time birds can sing, Foeiiuiiden with the red li and the lover with the ring! Love to think of old-time days goin' all too fast: Ive was always sweeter then, an more Inclined to last; AJ the world looked brighter, an' the blossoms sweet Bpread a shinin' carpet for the fallin' of Ix)ves feet! 1ove to think of old-time days; hut the day to be. Brill will beam with beauty an' blessed ness for me; For still the blue aky's bend la', and still there's light and song; !The Lord's love ia uuendin', an' be'a lead in' ua along! r-Fraok L. Ktanton. Heavenlr Meaaengera, How many weary hearta, Tired of tliia life's alarm, Find their sweetest comfort In the clap of childiuh arms? Messenger straight from heaven Are little children sent To teach ua to love tne Olver Who our treasure to aa hath lent God help the sorrowing mothers And fathers all over our land Whose children have joined the chorus Sung by the heavenly band. Oh! the little cribs are empty, Once mt full of happy life, While we are left in this weary world To toil In Its hurry and strife. But when onr work I over, And death has brought Its calm, In heaven, once more around our neck Hhall we feel the childish arms. And then how sweet tbe tfcongbtl How glad we are to know Once more we'll hear oar darting say t "Mamma, I love 70a so!" -Boston Globe. rm atoiM Wrtakla. The hajig-aooght for device to remove wrinkles has at last been invented bj a Philadelphia woman, who Las se cured a patent upon her clever inven tion. The arrangement ooojifts of tws. bowed arms of watch-epring steel, end ing in chamois pads. The arms fit around the back of the bead, dra in the flesh bck until it is itmioth. When worn during tbe night it is claimed that the device is very effectual. SMOOTH WIKE FEMC1N0 TOK FAKatHO There i no question but what moots wire fencing is bound to take the place ot all olher styles of fence for farm purposes. The progressive and suoceawful farmer hal already reaiixed this and is making prepar ationi to profit by the use of it. Land u t.KvaluHhle to not be able to pasture evwj field a soon ai the crop can t- removed, It ha been demonstrate.! in manv wayt that thee pasture will, inside of 1 w o year pay fur inclosing the field with acloe meal smooth wire fence itself. Beside it k-e;a stock healthy and sct-ius to be the only tru( method of keeping the hog cholera mt your herds. The DeKalb Fence Co., of DeKalb. III., whose illustrated card appe trs In anothet column of this paper are turning out thi best and most substantial line of sm tott wire fencing yet presented to the furminj community, and at prices too, considering quality and durability, which brings tun kind of fencemg within the reach of all Free illustrated catalogue can be obtained by addressing DeKalb Fence Co.. Hi! St., DeKalb. ill- Tortoise shell or ebot y toilet art-;Iei with eilver deco ation retire to bt treated very carefully when they an cleaned, as ammonia and silver powderi will ru n the finiih on shell or ebony Small blunt sticki covered with chumoii come for cleaning such articles, ant. after the cleaning process they sbO'iU be rubbed with a dry chamois. Statu or Omit, City or Toledo. ( M Lrcs t'otsTT. " Kkavk J. Cnasar makes oaili thai l. it the senior partner ol the firm ol !'. J t hkney A 1 o., doing business in the V.tt of Toledo, County and Mate aforesaid , that said firm will pav the sum ol IAVI IM'NDIJKI) l 1 1. 1. A h for each and everj cast; of Catarrh that cannot be cured J the use of 11 o.l's Cataksh Cmr. F HANK J. C1IKNKY. Sworn to before tne and subscribed :i mv preenee, tins Ith d.i)' ol I)w -etuber. A. D. ltsi. ska L j W. OI.F. A "', .Votary I'uh'As, Hall's Catarrh Cure is takrn internally, and aets directly on the blood and mucxu surfaces ol the system, fend lor testuuu nials free. K. J CHKNKY A CO.. Tol-do Sold by Druggists, 75e. Kerosene oil may I entirely removed from light carjiets, rug, or woolen goodi by covering the oil spot thickly wiUj buck wheat Hour and letting it remain twelve hours; then brushing it off ant applying fresh flour until the oil hal disappeared. FOK IiKONCHIAL AMD ASTHMATIC C'JH PLAINTS, "Hmu n't Uronrhial Trochrt" hr remarkable enrative properties. So! I on!) in boxes. Between trying to understand what a i X ray is anyhow and the agitatioi over the rumored return of the buitU the fin de sieele woman's mind is hor ribly perturlicd at the present time. I know that my life was saved by I'iso't Cure for Consumption. John A. Milbtr, Au Sable, Michigan, April Zl, Wjb. The woman w ho wouldn't stop to loot in a window when its wares are ex. posed will almost break her neck tryinj to peep through the cracks when tht shades are drawn. To prevent the hardening of the suIm ii taneou tissues of the scalp and the ohlit erationofthe hair follicles, which caust baldness, use Hall's Hair Hen ewer. Unless you wish to ureeent the ar pearance of sudden and appalling atten. ta ion don't rush from the baliooi sleeve to its very contracted opposite. Watch two women who have bees holding forth about a third when ths latter steps into the very car in which they are riding. Description fails al this point. fT All Fiu....,,1K.dfrr,t)yor.gh-,Cr.: fo-rve Kettorer. N "hat after thrfirMWiuc M u- vl., tier.. 1 rti! 1 j ri lt's. ftU ( M i-, html I'r Kliot.t,,! ArchSl.,l'lnU . IV The modern baby is not Unitht anr. thing. It just lives like a little animal until it is 6 years old. Here is when mothers of today are more sensible than those oi generations past. ra. U'lrialr.w'. iLuw.... u . .... ren weiuiiif, soitens me r,im, reduces lnfUuv mation.alisrspaiu. cures wind colic, iie bottle. - "-'inmii cTscr ior rniio If you want to teat th v.bi.nr. superstition put your shoes on the tab! and see if you won't get into a quarrel ueuore long. Morgan County, Col. Mnrirmn TMintv vrw . Uer'-Don-l Til',-. i-"V.C ? LP.8 Do.se.sls , of you. fiUMi ZXuhi ,ZnhJi From thel-nth. Mnr..f.,S.r!r. J"" eus Ouid any eeltoi rf a' s,VCTlflTr Ohio luclfle0. are aa hmin' I. the count. v its ri.,.o...... ..."j. " VaaJlLamaMM i, ,o7(.., ZZa' T.T us climate as ....7 it ";.M T In the worl.i. You IXrly "U,,M CuUU,,r to "Wreeiaii tlon Is coonorstlt. .nw-......!.:. "' " Last year's yields axe beyond iiell'ef Th Ink nf - . ,v a' till aVrn. Halt ttaarlaww ttowin,. one man nede Si.mo from tilr-i & ir3 .uT;.- "heat, a . -pfc- a . "ee alone. The prlee ot last! range frnra ... to are a much as ma sum , . arre -fr.'';v.'i..V TBS