Loup City Northwestern J. W. BURLEIGH, Publisher. LOUP CITT, • • • NBB&ASKJl Wellman’s Persistency. The indefatigable Walter Wellman has established wireles telegraph con nection between the Arctic regions and Washington preparatory to em barking on his hazardous aerial polar expedition. Interest in the venture will increase as the time approaches for the final launching of the airship from the station off the north coast of Norway in August, the ill fate o:C the Andre expedition preparing the public mind ominously for another plunge into the silences of the Arctic. The Wellman expedition is, however, equipped doubly. The dirigible bal loon and wireless telegraphy w%re not available to Andre, and it is with the aid of these two inventions that the intrepid Wellman hopes to return. Andre made the trip one way. Well man, the man, becomes for the mo ment a prominent figure among the daring adventurers of romance and history, whatever wisdom may lie in his venture, and however profitless or profitable the undertaking may be, says the Detroit Free Press. The present expedition will be his third. Fired by ambition and moved by a spirit of geographical adventure, Well man abandoned temporarily his work in the newspaper field as Washington correspondent for western newspa pers, and in 1894 ventured north, re turning with valuable information. In 1898 he made a second expedition and cue uuuuuants ui rntua jusci land, locating many new Arctic islands. He returned from these ex peditions broken in health and almost incapacitated for active work. A man of his indomitable courage and per sistence is not to be stayed by ordi nary obstacles. Instead of seeking comfort and ease, he applied himself once more to his newspaper work with 'the one ruling passion urging him on, to gather enough funds for a third and perhaps successful venture. Though suffering bodily from the effects of his former experiences in the frozen north, Wellman devoted the past seven years to enlisting capital, amassing funds from his own savings and preparing for what may be the denouement of his life work. With this sort of courage and faith behind his new expedition, and the valuable experience gained by his previous dashes for the pole, Wellman's ven ture promises well. Even a moment’s reflection ought to .show Bishop Fallows that the so called extravagances of the rich are not without their compensations. We need not defend the giving of $50,000 banquets or the purchase of $10,000 gowns in order to realize that these Are proceedings which put money in circulation. If every rich man lived as frugally as did the late Russell Sage, for instance, a great many lines of business would find themselves fallen upon evil days. It is better, from the standpoint of the ordinary citizen, that the millionaire should spend his money foolishly than not spend it at all. The ethics of the mat ter is another thing. . The writers of the Russell Sage obituary notices are almost a unit in declaring that his great passion was money-making, a fact which distin guished him from almost the entire body of his fellow countrymen.—Chi cago Inter Ocean. No, in his passion for money-making he was like two thirds of humanity. It was his passion for keeping money that distinguished him from the rest of his fellowmen. The development of Alaska has been one of the wonders of the age, and it is certain to proceed still more rapidly when the network of railroads planned for the territory shall be com pleted. The days of the Indian courier and the dog team as the chief means of communication are fast disappear ing. The Yukon river is navigable for many miles and has afforded means of access to the interior, but it is frozen over a large part of tin year and does not reach some of the more important areas. Several big steam railroad lines in Alaska have been mapped out, and before many years it wili be pos sible to visit and travel about the "Seward purchase” in drawing room cars and with as much comfort and even luxury as the tourist in any oth er part of Uncle Sam’s possessions can command. Every American girl is a queen, and no doubt the European crowds that gather to see the daughter of a presi dent reflect that every man in pros perous America Is a sovereign. A New York specialist says bridge whist is responsible for much of the nervous prostration that is being re ported. He must be so situated that he needn’t care whether he is popular or not An electric railroad on which the run from New York to Chicago can be made in ten hours is projected. The sleeping car porters are not likely tc look with much favor on such an en terprise. His majesty’s ship Euryalus, return ing from the maneuvers, made an in teresting record in coaling, according to the London Mail. Twelve hundred and four tons were got into the bunk era in eight and a half hours, an aver age of 141.6 tons an hour, the best hour giving 165 tons. Seeing that the Euryalus is a training ship, and tha' the work was done by boys, this is 4 splendid record. Mr. Sage was uncommonly “tight’' Now for a test of his will. CHAPTER IV—Continued. Ahead of the steel layers were the Italians placing the cross ties in posi tion to receive the track, and here the forman’s badge of office and scepter was a pick handle. Above all the clamor and the shoutings Virginia could hear the bull-bellow of this fore man roaring out his commands—In term3 happily not understandable to her; and once she drew back with a little cry of womanly shrinking when the pick handle thwacked upon the shoulders of one who lagged. It was this bit of brutality which enabled her to single out Winton In the throng of workers. He h«ard the blow, and the oath that went with it, and she saw him run forward to wrench the bludgeon from the bully’s hands and fling It afar. What words emphasized the act she could not hear, Dut the little deed of swift justice thrilled her curiously, and her heart warmed to him as It had when he had thrown off his coat to fall to work on the derailed engine of tne “Limited.” ‘‘That was fine!” she said to herself. VMost men in his place wouldn’t care, so long as the work was done, and done quickly. I wonder if—oh, you Startled me!" It was Mr. Somerville Darrah again, clothed upon and in his right mind; otherwise the mind of a master of men who will brook neither defeat at the hands of an antagonist nor disobe dience on the part of his following. He was scowling fiercely across at the Utah activities when she spoke, but at her exclamation the frown softened into a smile for his favorite niece. “Startled you, eh? Pahdon me, my deah Virginia. But as I am about to startle someone else, perhaps you would better go in to your aunt.” She put her hand on his arm. "Please let me stay out here, Uncle Somerville,” she said. “I’ll be good and not get in the way.” He shook his head, rather in depre cation than refusal. “An officer will be here right soon now to mase an arrest There may be a fight, or at least trouble of a sort you wouldn't care to see, my deah.” "is it—1s it Mr. Winton?” she asked. He nodded. “What has he been doing—besides being ’The Enemy?’ ” The Rajah's smile was ferocious. “Just now he is trespassing, and di recting others to trespass, upon pri vate property. Do you see that dump up there on tne mountain?—the hole that looks like a mouth with a long gray beard hanging below it? That is a mine, and its claim runs down across the track where Misteh Winton is just now spiking his rails.” “But the right of way; I don’t un derstand,” she began; then she stopped short and clung to the strong arm. A man in a wide-flapped hat and cow boy chapparajoes, with a revolver on either hip, was crossing the stream on the ice bridge to scramble up the em bankment of the new line. “The officer?” she asked, In an awed whisper. The Rajah made a sign of assent Then, identifying Winton in the throng of workers, he forgot Virginia’s pres ence. “Confound him!” he fumed. “I’d give a thousand dollars if he’d faveh me by showing fight, so we could lock him up on a criminal count!” “Why, Uncle Somerville!" she cried. But there was no time for reproach es. The leather-breeched person mas querading as the Argentine town mar shal had climbed the embankment, and singling out his man was reading his warrant. v/vuviui / w am*. *>anau a CApi CMtJU hope, Winton submitted quietly. With a word to his men—a word that stopped the strenuous labor-battle as suddenly as it had begun—he turned to pick his way down the rough hill side at the heels of the marshal. For some reason that she could never have set out in words Virginia was distinctly disappointed. It was no part of her desire to 3ee the conflict blaze up in violence, but it nettled her to see Winton give up so easily. Some such thought as this had possession of her while the marshal and his prisoner were picking their way across the ice, and she was noping that Winton would give her a chance to requite him, if only with a look. But It was Town Marshal Peter Big gin, affectionately known to his con stituents as “Bigginjin Pete,” who gave her the coveted opportunity. In stead of disappearing decently with his captive, the marshal made the mistake of his life by marching Win ton up the track to the private car, thrusting him forward and saying: “Here’s yer meat, Guv’nor. What-all 'ud ye like fer me to do with hit?" Now it is safe to assume that the Rajah had no intention of appearing thus openly as the instigator of Win ton’s arrest. Hence, if a fierce scowl and a wordless oath could maim, it Is to be feared that the overzealous Mr. Biggin would have been physically disqualified on the spot. As it was, Mr. Darrah’s ebullient wrath could find no adequate speech forms, and in the eloquent little pause Winton had time to smile up at Miss Carteret and to wish her the pleasantest of good mornings. But the Rajah’s handicap was not permanent “Confound you, seh!” he exploded. “I’m not a justice of the peace. If you’ve made an arrest, you must have had a warrant for it, and you ought to know what to do with your pris oner ” “I’m dashed if I do," objected the simple-hearted Mr. Biggin. “I al lowed you wanted him.” Winton laughed openly. “Simplify it for him, Mr. Darrah. W« all know that it was your move to stop the work, ant you have stopped it—for the moment What is the charge and where is It answerable?" The Rajah dropped the mask and spoke to the point. “The cha’ge, seh, is trespass, and it is answerable in Judg9 Whitcomb’s cou’t In carbonate. The plaintiff in this particular case is John Doe, the supposEtble owneh of that mining claim up yondeh. In the next It will probably be Richa’d Roe. You are fighting: a losing battle, seh.” Win ton’s smile showed his teeth. “That remains to be seen,” he coun tered, coolly. The Rajah waved a shapely hand towards the opposite embankment, where the track layers were idling in silent groups waiting for some one in authority to tell them what to do. “We can do that every day, Misteh Winton. And each separate individual arrest will cost your company 12 hours, or such a matteh—the time re quired for you to co to Carbonate to give bond for your appearance.” During this colloquy Virginia had held her ground stubbornly, this though she felt intuitively that it would be the greatest possible relief to the three men if she would go away. But now a curious struggle as of a divided allegiance was holding her. Of course, she wanted Mr. Somerville Darrah to win. Since he was its ad vocate, his cause must be righteous and just.. But as against this dutiful convince ment there was a rebellious hope that Winton would not allow himself to be beaten; or, rather, it was a feeling that she would never for give him if she should. So it was that she stood with face averted lest he should see her eyes and read the rebellious hope in them. And notwithstanding the precaution he both saw and read, and made an swer to the Rajah’s ultimatum accord ingly. “Do your worst, Mr. Darrah. We have some 20 miles of steel to lay to take us into the Carbonate yards. That steel shall go down in spite of anything you can do to prevent it” Virginia waited breathless for her uncle’s reply to this cool defiance. Contrary to all precedent, it was mild ly expostulatory. “It grieves me, seh, to find you so determined to cou’t failure,” he began; breakfast, the clank of steel and the chanteys of the hammermen on the other side of the canyon began again with renewed vigor. The Rajah threw, up his head like a war horse .scent ing the battle from afar and laid his commands upon the long-suffering secretary. “Faveh me, Jastrow. Get out there and see what they are doing, seh.” The secretary was back in the short est possible interval, and his report was concise and business-like. "Work under full headway again, in charge of a fellow who wears a billy cock hat and smokes cigarettes." “Mr. Morton P. Adams,” said Vir ginia, recognizing the description. “Will you have him arrested too. Uncle Somerville?” But \he Rajah rose hastily without replying and went to his office state room, followed, shadow-like, by the obsequious Jastrow. It was some little time after break fast, and Virginia and the Reverend Billy were doing a constitutional on the plank platform at the station, when the secretary came down from the bar on his way to the telegraph office. It was Virginia who stopped him. “What do we do next, Mr. Jastrow?” she said—“call in the United States army?” For reply he handed her a telegram, damp from the copying press. It was addressed to the superintendent of the C. & G. R. at Carbonate, and she read It without scruple. "Have the sheriff of Ute rounty swear in a dozen deputies and come with them by special train to Argentine. Revive all possible titles to abandoned mining claims on line of the Utah Extension, and have Sheriff Deckert bring blank warrants to cover any emergency. “DARRAH, V. P." “That’s one of them,” said the sec retary. “I daren’t show you the other.” “Oh, please!” she said, holding out her hand, while the Reverend Billy considerately turned his back. Jastrow weighed the chances of de tection. It was little enough he could do to lay her under obligations to him, and he was willing to do that little as he could. “I guess I can trust you," he said, and gave her the second square of press-damp paper. Like the first, it was addressed to the superintendent at Carbonate. IJut this time the brown eyes flashed and her breath came quickly as she read the vice president’s cold-blooded after thought: “Town Marshal Biggin will arrive in Carbonate on No. 301 this a. m. with a prisoner. Have our attorneys see to it that the man is promptly jailed in de fault of bond. If he is set at liberty, as he is likely to be, I shall trust you to ar range for his rearrest and detention at all hazards. "D." CHAPTER V. Virginia took thi first step in the perilous path of the strategist when ■" " I WINTON WALKED BACK TO THE STATION AT THE HEELS OF HIS CAPTOR. and when i:he whistle of the upcoming Carbonate train gave him leave to go on: "Constable, you will find trans po’tation for yourself and one in the hands of the station agent. Misteh Winton, that is your train. I wish you good morning and a pleasant journey. Come, Virginia, we shall be late to ouh breakfast” Winton walked back to the station at the heels of his captor, cudgelling his brain to devise some means of get ting word to Adams. Happily the technologian, who had been unloading steel at the construction camp, had been told of the arrest, and when Winton reached the station he found his assistant waiting Jor him. But now the train was at hand and time had grown suddenly precious. Winton turned short upon the marshal. “This is not a criminal matter, Mr. Biggin; will you give me a moment with my friend?” The ex-cowboy grinned. "Bet your life I will. I ain’t lovin’ that old b’iler-buster In the private car none too hard.” And he went in to get the passes. "What’s up?” queried Adams, forget ting his drawl for once in a way. "An arrest—trumped-up charge of trespass on that mining claim up yon der. But I’ve got to go to Carbonate to answer the charge and give bonds, just the same.” “Any Instructions?” “Yes. When the train is out of sight and hearing, you get bacl; over there and drive that track laying for every foot there is in it.” Adams nodded. "I’ll do it, add get myself locked up, I suppose." "No, you won’t; that’s the beauty of it. The majesty of the law—all there is of it in Argentine—goes with me to Carbonate in the person of the town marshal.” "Oh, good—eucculently good! Well, so long. I’ll look for you back on the evening train?” "Sure; if the Rajah doesn’t order it to be abandoned on my poor account" Ten minutes later, when the train had gone storming on its way to Car bonate and the Rosemary party was at she handed the incendiary telegram back to Jastrow. “Poor Mr. Wlnton!” she said, with' the real sympathy in the words made most obviously perfunctory by the tone. “What a world of possibilities there is masquerading behind that lit tle word ‘arrange.’ Tell me more about it, Mr. Jastrow. How will they ‘arrange’ it?” “Winton’s rearrest? Nothing easier in a tougn mining camp like Carbon ate, 1 should say.” “Yes, but how?” “I can’t prophesy how Grafton will go about it, tut I know what I should do.” Virginia’s smite was irresistible, but there was a look in the deepest depth of the brown eyes that was sifting Mr. Arthur Jastrow to the innermost sand heap of his desert nature. “How would you do it, Mr. Napoleon Jastrow?” she asked, giving him the exact fillip on the side of gratified van ity. “Oh, I’d fix him. He is in a frame of mind right now; and by the time the lawyers are through drilling him in the trespass affair, he’ll be just spoiling for a row with somebody.” “Do you think so? Oh, how deli cious! And then what?” “Then I’d hire some plug-ugly to stumble up against him and pick a quarrel with him. He’d do the rest— and land In the lockup.” (TO BE CONTINUED.) Build Road for Princess’ Benefit. Old Khedive Ismail’s expensive com pliment to the then Empress Eugenie 36 years ago—the construction of a fine carriage road from Cairo to the pyramids and the Sphinx of Gizeh bo that she might drive instead of riding a donkey—a as been copied by the present khedival government for the princess of Wales. For her a carriage road has been built from Bedrasheen to the pyramids and ruins at Sakkara. This road, like the one made for the empress of the French, will be serv iceable to ordinary tourists hence forth. There is even a trolley line from Cairo to Gizelu. From Nation*s Capital Interesting Gossip of Men and Events at Washington—Promotion for President's Faithful Assistant—Social Revolt Planned by Wliite House Bride—Other Happenings. WASHINGTON.—The first Oklahoma man to receive a federal appointment since the admis sion of the new state into the union is Maurice C. Latta, the president’s favorite stenographer, who has been made assistant private secretary to succeed B. F. Barnes, the new postmaster of this city. Mr. Latta has been an assistant of Pri vate Secretary Loeb for about five years, so the appointment does not mean much to him aside from an official title and an increase in salary of $1,200 a year. Util his elevation to the post mastership Barnes drew the $3,000 salary, while Latta did most of the work. The new assistant secretary is a modsst retiring chap. He is over six feet in height, smooth shaven, has strong features and a gcod eye. Latta was a clerk in the general land office in Oklahoma when John Addison Porter, private »v/i a moiuvuv luv/iviuicj, vaucu wu (jvv retary of the Interior Bliss for one of the latter’s expert men to help out with the heavy White House mail. Latta was summoned to fill the gap, and his work so pleased the White House officers that he was kept there. President Roosevelt began dictating his speeches to Latta, and he liked the tall, silent man so well that he began using him as his regular amanuensis. When the president had to read and study at night, in the preparation of a speech, he would have Latta at his side taking notes. Latta always accompanies the president on the latter’s trips about the country. Whenever Mr. Roosevelt delivers an address of a public character Latta will be found within a few feet of him, taking notes of the speech. These speeches, of course, are always prepared in advance. Latta holds one copy in his hand, with a notebook and ink, ready to record interpolated re marks or changes in the original text. Latta’s copy becomes the official re port of the speech, which is preserved at the White House. ALICE WILL TRY TO RETAJN RANK. According to Dame Gossip the coming winter will see changes In the time-bound etiquette of social life in the capital that will cause consterna tion among the old-timers. It seems that Mrs. Alice Longworth has already declared herself, and her social campaign as a matron is already mapped out. Needless to say, absolute independ ence characterizes her attitude. One fruit of her trip abroad is her new-born conviction that a married woman should retain her “rank” as her father’s daughter, and not fall to her husband's level. As the case now stands, Mrs. Longworth is one of a throng, a mere ant in the social hill, and she ranks not as the daughter of the head of the nation but as the wife of a minor representative in congress. She must be subservient to tradi tion, and her duties are mapped out by social laws rigid as those of the Medes and Persians. vvnen Mrs. Longworth returned from her honeymoon she calmly declined to make or to receive calls, alleging that the season was practically over, and that she dates her new position from the beginning of the next congressional term. Mrs. Longworth will emancipate herself and incidentally all the others in Washington society who do not approve of existing conditions. The gossip is that she has determined to set up as the social leader, and to hold a court which will equal in importance those of her stepmother, Mrs. Roosevelt, or of Mrs. Fairbanks, wife of the vice president. Last winter Lady Susan Townley, wife of the first secretary of the British embassy, set the ball a-rolling, and she attained a sort of success in her as pirations. Lady Susan is the daughter of the late earl and sister of the present earl of Albemarle, and she stod on her rights. She refused to be rated as the wife of a small diplomat, and in many houses she succeeded in getting the place oi honor at the table. Mrs. Longworth will, of course, recognize the pretensions of Lady Susan, and in acknowledging such a precedent will get her own case up for trial. HE PAID THE PRESIDENT. There died at the Georgetown University hos pital the other day a man who for some time has enjoyed a unique distinction. This man was Wil liam R. Padgett and on the last day for many months, up to the time of Lis fatal illness, he was a regular caller at the White House with the war rant for the president’s salary. Padgett was an employe of the treasurer’s office. President Roosevelt gets his salary the last day of each month In the shape of a check. The president’s salary of $50,000 a year is divided, into eight checks of $4,166.67 each and four checks of $4,166.66 each. Two months out of every three the president gets a check for the larger sum and the other month he gets one-cent less on his check. This has been the custom for many years and a mistake was never made but once. That wa. during the second administration of President v>iv i viuuvi. vuv ujvsuiu »» uv_u uio vu^vn oiiuuiu uavc UCCU fT.lDD.Ol lUG DOOK' keeper made it out for only $4,166.66. When the books were balanced at the end of the fiscal year it was found that the president was due one cent by the government. The officials, with great solemnity, made out a check on the United States treasurer for this amount and forwarded it to Mr. Cleveland. Because it was the smallest sum a warrant was ever drawn for upon the government it was kept as a souvenir and was never presented. If the former president desires to do so at any time it will be promptly cashed. Padgett was for a long time a sergeant in Battery A, Fourth United States artillery, and served in the army at different points. He served in the marine corps prior to enlistment in the army and went all over the world. NEW DEPOT NEARING COMPLETION. The new union station, which when com pleted, will be the finest in the country, is fast nearing completion. The engineers in charge of the extensive operations have attacked the diffi cult problems that confronted them from three different points, and are working on the terminal depot, the north approach and the south approach at the same time. The extensive tunneling, bridg ing and filling necessary for the approaches is well under way. The concrete foundations for the buildfhg, which are about 45 feet deep, have been placed, and the material for filling in be tween them has been delivered. The granite and brick work of the east end of the building is al most finished. The amount of material and the extensive ex cavation necessary in the work of construction is extraordinary. The filling within the limits of a j 9 « i a aaa r\ r\ i • _ _ uic ici lutuai aiuuuuio iu svv,vvu tuuit jatuo enough to cover an acre lot to a depth of over 550 feet. To fill the plaza and raise adjacent streets to the new grade, about 1,000.000 cubic yards of materia' will be required. If all this filling were deposited on an average city block the sides belnk kept vertical, It would form a mound 450 feet high. If al! the material which will be moved to prepare the site for the coach, engine anc shop yards—about 2,500,000 yards—were similarly deposited, the hill woulc be as high as the Washington monument. To excavate this vast amount of material would require the services of s steam shovel, moving an average of 25,000 cubic yards a month, from nine t( ten years. To move it to toe place of deposit would require about 70,000 trains, of 12 cars each. Should these cars be coupled together in a straight line thej would cover a distance of over 600 miles. PRINTING OFFICE OFFICIAL OUSTED. The man who was the immediate cause or me issuance by the president of the order declaring the government printing office and all placet where workmen are employed by the governmen' to be "open shops,” has been discharged from th< public service. He is W. A. Miller, and for thi past six years has been assistant foreman of th« bindery in the government printery. While the charge against Miller was insol ence and insubordination, it is generally believet that he was ousted through the efforts of th« labor organization which he defied. Miller first came into public notice in 190! when the employes of the printing office demand ed his discharge for alleged arrogance in conduct but primarily because he had abandoned mem bership in the bookbinders’ union. Miller was suspended at the time, but the president directed tnat ne oe reinsLaiea, auu suuacqucuuj wuuw that in the future not only the printing office, but all departments where work men are employed, should be “open shops.’ , , . . . Miller said at the time of his suspension that he simply had refused to be coerced by The unions, and that ha had turned out $1,500.-000 worth of work without complaint --- rirwvwMTnnnnnnnnrirrT'irMVTOorir Lack of Opportunity. "Some people,” said Uncle Eben. “prides deirselves too much on bein’ good on Sunday. De truth is dat dar ain’ enough business transacted on dat day to give ’em much chance to be tricky.” Britons Knew of Glass. The Britons, even before the Roman invasion, understood the making of glass, albeit their achievements ap pear to have been somewhat primitive and restricted to a few types of small vassals and beada. Blew It Out. Little Margie, aged four, was playing on the lawn, says the Philadelphia Record. Suddenly It became very cloudy and windy. Running into the house, she exclaimed: “Oh. mamma the wind blowed the sun out!” Heels Studded With Jewels. Women whose Jewel caskets meta phorically run over with precious gems may yield to the fashion, which is re ported to have caught society’s fpncy In Paris, of studding the heels of dain ty supers with gleaming stones. 1 mSS LEOPOLD,.SEC’} LIEDERKRANZ, Writes : “ Three Years Ago My System Was In a Run-Down Condition, i Owe to Pe-ru-na My Restoration tc Health and Strength." (Qyfiss Ricka [Eopgyjpf IVTlSS RICKA LEOPOLD. 137 Main street, Menasha, Wis., Sec'y Lied erkranz, writes: “Three years ago my system was in a terrible run-down condition and I w broken out all over my body. I bega to be worried about my condition and i was glad to try anything which wonl . relieve me. “Peruna was recommended to me a ; a fine blood remedy and tonic, and i soon found that it was worthy of pra ise. “A few bottles changed my condition materially and in a short time 1 was all over my trouble. “I owe to Peruna my restoration to health and strength. I am glad to en dorse it. ” Pe-ru-na Restores Strength. Mrs. Hettie Green. R. R. 6, Iuka. Ill , writes : “ I had catarrh and felt misera ble. I began the use of Peruna and began to improve in every way. My head does not hurt me so much, my appetite is good and I am gaining in flesh and strength.” Australia’s War on Rabbits. Australia is now going to make war on her rabbit pest scientifically, hav ing raised $75,000 for experiments on Broughton island, off Newcastle, writes Consul Goding. Dr. Danvsz, of Paris, will be in charge, and it is pro posed to infect rabbits with such con tagious diseases that will spread among their kind, but do no harm to other animals or humanity. Transmission of Facial Characteristics lit would appear that the transmis sion of facial traits subordinate to a definite law, that is to say, that an cestral facial expression and appear ance are more often than not trans mitted through the female members of the family, who generally do not exhibit the same characteristics to the male offspring, and that the younger generations show, as a rule, all the facial conditions and signs which were present in a remote an cestor.—North American Review. Facts About Alaska. Alaska is an interesting region. In area she is twice as large as Texas, with California thrown in. but her resident white population numbers only about 30,000, though in summer she has from 10,000 to 20,000 more whites. In fur, fish and minerals she Is rich. Since her annexation she has furnished $50,000,000 of furs, $60,000 000 of fish and $70,000,000 of minerals, chiefly gold and silver. Her output 1 of gold, which was $9,000,000 in 1904, was $M,000,000 In 1905, and will bo fully $26,000,000 in 1906.—Leslie’s j Weekly. Butler’s Stolen Fee. The late Hon. Joseph Q. Hoyt, for merly of Boston, when a lad attended a circus and his silver watch was stolen. The supposed thief was ar rested, and was defended by Benja min F. Butler, who proved he did not take the watch, and never was at the circus. During the civil war Hoyt was in troduced to Butler at a dinner at the Astor house, in New York, and the latter remarked: "This is the first time 1 have had the pleasure of meet ing you.” “Oh, no!” said Hoyt, who then re lated the circus incident. “Was that you, Hoyt?” asked But ler, and, being answered in the af firmative, Butler laughed and said: “That was an awful good watch, Hoyt That 1b all I got for defending the thief.” SALLOW FACES Often Caused by Coffee Drinking. How many persons realize that cof fee so disturbs digestion that it pro duces a muddy, yellow complexion? A ten days’ trial of Postum Food Coffee has proven a means, in thou sands of cases, of clearing up bad complexions. A Washn. young lady tells her expe rience: “All of us—father, mother, sister and brother—had used tea and coffee lor many years until finally we all had stomach troubles more or less. “We were all sallow and troubled with pimples, breath bad, disagree able taste in the mouth, and all of us simply so many bundles of nerves. “We didn’t realize that coffee was the cause of the trouble until one day we ran out of coffee and went to bor row some from a neighbor. She gave us some Postum and told us to try that “Although we started to make It, we all felt sure we would be sick if we missed our strong coffee, but we were forced to try Postum and were surprised to find it delicious. “We read the statements on the plig., got more and in a month and a half you wouldn’t have known ua We were all able to digest our food without any trouble, each one’s skin became clear, tongues cleaned off and nerves In fine condition. We never ure anything now but Postum. There is nothing like iL” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Road the little book, “The Road tc Wellville.” “There’s a reason."