Loup City Northwestern J. W. BURLEIGH, Publisher. LOUP CITY, . . • NEBRASKA, Kisses in Kansas. Very romantic news is this that per folates in from the fields of Kansas, where the wheat crop is so great that it has made the ground sink down twe feet to sustain it. Hiram Skipworth. father of three beautiful daughters, is reported to have secured all the har vest hauds he needed by the simple expedient of paying them two dollars a day and permitting each man to kiss each of his daughters once daily Those who did not want the kisses could have three dollars a day, but it is pleasant to add that nobody drew more than two dollars per diem. How ever, says the Detroit Free Press, old Lafe Plummer, who lives about five miles down the big road from Skip worth, got all the harvest hands he needed, also. Lafe has but one daugh ter; she is 40 years old, angular freckled and has an uncertainty in one eye, besides that her nose is hesitant and her chin is shy. Lafe took the overflow from Skipworth’s farm, and after luring the sturdy harvesters to his field he would introduce his daugh ter and tell the affrighted laborers that unless they pitched in and worked their best he would let her kiss them Mr. Plummer's fields were harvested in half the time that was required for Skipworth’s. Great Night for the Onion. The onion has served as the basis for many quips and flings at the hands of the humorous paragraphers. And yet it is an extremely wholesome plant and one of high rank with the ancients, particularly the early Egyptians. For these reasons it is pleasant to note that the tabooed edible met with de served recognition at what was termed an onion reception and banquet in an interior New York town called Union, which in this case might plausibly seem a corruption of onion. It was ar ranged, says the Cleveland Plain Deal er, in honor of the sixteenth anni versary of the special guests of the evening and the onion was the center and scenter of attraction. The house was decorated with onion blossoms, an onion center piece graced the table and the bill of fare included onions and onions only—top onions, sliced onions, stewed onions, onion salad and fried onions. Needless to say, the guests, who departed at a late hour, went away breathing many encom iums of the fragrant bulb of honor. Far Too Speedy for Speech. The tremendous speed made in the Jnternational automobile race over the Ardennes circuit in Belgium is almost Jeyond conception. To maintain an iverage of nearly 70 miles an hour •hrcugh a run of 371 miles, which was he record of the winner, must have ueant a speed neighboring on 100 niles an hour for much of the dis ance. Only in this way could time ost on curves be made up. The race saakes very pat the story of a Boston niilionaire who recently visited one >f the young Vanderbilts at Newport,' jays the Springfield (Mass.) Repub fcan. The visitor was taken for a run n a big racing automobile. He stood he experience until the speed rose to ipward of 80 miles an hour, when, in "error, he tried to call to the driver Reside him to slow up. But instead of *>eing able to call he found, so runs he story, that once he had opened his ncutli he could not shut it, so vio ent was the blast. Fortunately the stretch permitting such speed was short. A Task for American Women. The editor of Harper’s Bazar, writ ing of the choice which women of fashion are compelled to make as whether they will be wives or moth ers, says that the absorption of Amer ican men in business interests tends to reduce the dignity of American fa herhood to a level with the paternity of the savage. “The supreme mission of the American wife is, therefore, to provide for the higher education of the American father. To win a man from exclusive attention to the sordid concerns of business, the dissipations of pleasure-seeking, and apply him to the infinitely profitable, infinitely en joyable work of participating in the care, the physical, mental, moral de velopment of his children, that is a cure which American women are everywhere, under all circumstances, able to apply to the root of the evil of race suicide said to be seriously men acing our nation. Let them be about it!” England has in its midst another agitation aimed at revolutionizing the style of men's dress suits. The movement will run along for a time and die out, just as others have done. Such crusades seem to be accompani ments of the silly season. F. W. Martin, or Beloit, Wis., has just paid 53,000 for Lord Bacon, the highest price ever given for an Amer ican-bred hog. It is a pity that Mr. Donnelly is not here to enjoy this tri umph. A practicable-telephone-in a rail way engine cab would be highly use ful, no doubt, unless the engineer had been on duty so many hours that he £ad fallen asleep. A sea cow 18 feet long and which cost $2,000 has been added to the New York aquarium. We suppose it is to furnish milk for the sea urchins there. A Paris banquet is not considered % complete success unless It gives rise to a few duels. The Age of Machinery. We live in the age of machinery. The thinking, directing mind becomes dally of more account, while mere brawn falls correspondingly in value r from day to day. That eccentric phil osopher, Elbert Hubbard, says in one of his essays, “where a machine will do better work than the human hand, we prefer to let the machine do the work.” It has been but; a few years since the cotton gin, the “spinning Jenny” and the power Icom displaced the hand picker, the spinning wheel and the hand loom; since the reaper and binder, the rake and tedder, the mow ing machine took the place of the old cradle, scythe, pitchfork and hand rake; since the friction match su perseded the flint, and tinder; since the modern paint factory replaced the slab and muller, the paint pot and paddle. In every case where machinery has been introduced to replace hand labor, the laborers have resisted the change; and as the weavers, the sempstresses and the farm laborers protested against new-fangled looms, sewing ma chines and agricultural implements, so in recent times compositors have protested against type-setting ma chines, glass blowers against bottle blowing machines, and painters against ready mixed paints. And as !n the case of these short-sighted classes of an earlier day, so with their imitators of to-day, the protest will be in vain. It is a protest against civ ilization, against the common weal, against their own welfare. The history of all mechanical im provements shows that workmen are the first to be benefited by them. The invention of ihe sewing machine, instead of throwing thousands of wom en out of employment, increased the demand to such an extent that thou sands of women have been employed, at better wages, for shorter hours and easier work where hundreds before worked in laborious misery to eke out a pitiable existence, it was so with spinning and weaving machin ery, with agricultural implements—in fact, it is so with every notable im provement. The multiplication of books in the last decade is a direct result of the invention of linotype machinery and fast presses. The mixed paint industry, in which carefully designed paints for house painting are prepared on a large scale by special machinery, is another im provement of the same type. The cheapness and general excellence of these products has so stimulated the consumption of paint that the de mand for the services of painters has correspondingly multiplied. Before the advent of these goods a well-paint ed house was noticeable from its rarity, whereas to-day an ill-painted house is conspicuous. Nevertheless, the painters, as a rule, following the example set by the weavers, the sempstresses and the farm laborers of old, almost to a man, oppose the improvement. It is a real improvement, however, and simply be cause of that fact the sale of such products has increased until during the present year it will fall not far short of 90,000,000 or 100,000,000 gal lons. Hindsight is always better than foresight, and most of us who deplore the short-sightedness of our ancestors would do well to see that we do not in turn furnish “terrible examples” to our posterity. P. G. FINDS VIRTUE IN OLD CLOTHES. Men’s Garments Shaped to the Figure by Age Catch Artist’s Eye. To the eye of the artist the gar ments of the modern man are only tolerable -when age has adapted them somewhat to the lines of the figure; to the average artist a new suit of clothes is an abomination. “It is not only that new clothes are more ugly than old,” said a knight of the palette who discussed the ques tion; “to my mind no one can be prop csrly easy or graceful in them. “I never feel that I properly know a man until I have met him wearing an old suit. Certainly no man can possi bly be his natural self in evening dress. “I have noticed again and again how different the same people are when wearing different clothes. I went, for instance, to a large family gathering some time ago, and for some reason everybody had donned full evening dress. What a differ ence it made! We were all on terms of intimate friendship, but somehow the clothes brought in an element of coldness and formality. We all felt It—even the women, although, of course, the fair sex are not easily per suaded of the merits of well-worn gar ments. But no man who has discov ered the ease and comfort of them will readily give them up. As for the artistic side of modern clothes, it only comes when they have mellowed by use!”______ WELL PEOPLE TOO Wise Doctor Gives Postum to Con valescents. A wise doctor tries to give nature its best chance by saving the little strength of the already exhausted pa tient, and building up wasted energy with simple but powerful nourish ment. t “Five years ago,” writes a doctor, “I commenced to use Postum in my own family instead of coffee. I was so well pleased with the results that I had two groce:*s place it in stock, guaranteeing its sale. “I then commenced to recommend it to my patients in place of coffee, as a nutritious beverdge. The conse quence is, every store in town is now selling it, as it has become a house hold necessity in many homes. “I'm sure I prescribe Postum as often as any one remedy in the Ma teria Medica—in almost every case of Indigestion and nervousness I treat, and with the best results. “When I once introduce it into a family, it is quite sure to remain. I shall continue to use it and prescribe it in families where I practice. “In convalescence from pneumonia, typhoid fever and other cases, I give it as a liquid, easily absorbed diet. You may use my letter as a reference any way you see fit.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read “the Road to Wellville” in pkgs. "There’s a reason.” Ww.M^ OlNOERlV Philadelphia.—Wildcat speculation followed or preceded either by defal cation or betrayal of trust, has been responsible for a startling number of suicides in Philadelphia among men of affairs and prominence in the so cial world. Beginning with the sensational fail ure of the Keystone National bank, in 1891, which ruined men whose rep utations were as untarnished as that of the president of the Real Estate Trust company, and which resulted in jail for two of them, Philadelphia has had an amazing series of financial scandals and bank wrecks. Bank de positors have lost millions, but the largest inroads of the wildcat finan ciers were made in asphalt and in Consolidated Lake Superior. In these two companies the public, largely in Philadelphia, dropped upward of $100, 000,000. In nearly every suicide caused by wildcat finance, attempts have been made to suppress the facts, as in the case of the president of the Real Estate Trust company, whose 6uicide was known to the members of his family, the coroner and the coron er's physician for 6ix days, and was even suppressed by Philadelphia pa pers. So determined were these two officials to prevent the news from be coming public that the physician filed a false certificate of the actual cause of death, ascribing it to cerebral hem orhage, but omitting to state that the hemorrhage was due to a bullet fired into the brain with suicidal intent. FRANK K. HIPPLE AND JOHN S. HOPKINS. The circumstances surrounding the self-destruction of Frank K. Hippie and of John S. Hopkins, cashier of the People’s bank, who killed himself in March, 1898, are strikingly similar. Both men occupied positions of trust, were prominent in church work, had a rigid code of morals for the govern ment of their employes, and were strict observers of the Biblical injunc tion to remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy. Neither would ride in a public conveyance on Sunday unless the exigency were imperative. Nei ther would countenance the use of liquor or tobacco in any form.* Hop kins maintained this attitude to the day he destroyed himself, although he was associated with the most corrupt cabal of politicians in Pennsylvania. The People’s bank was Mat Quay’s bank. It was while he was in control that he wrote the famous letter to a henchman that he would "shake the plum tree.” The difference between Hippie and Hopkins was in the amount of their stealings. The cashier of the Quay DOG RESCUED FROM A WOLF Desperate Fight on Prairie in Which Canine Was Beaten. To havti his dog attacked in broad daylight in an open field by a wolf and to witness one of the hardest fights he ever saw was the experience of the 19-year-old son of William Ben nett, who lives east of Elsmore. The dog was nearly killed and the wolf was beaten away only after repeated assaults with a club in the hands of the sturdy farmer boy, says the Iola Register. The story as told to Sheriff Richard son while he was in Elsmore-by Mr. Bennett. The boy was plowing yester day and the dog, which is a shepherd of fair size, as playing about the field. Suddenly the boy’s attention was at tracted from behind by the barking of the dog, and he turned to see the ani mal fighting full tilt with a large gray wolf. The fight was fast and furious and the animals went round and round, finally working their way (dear up under the plow handles. The wolf was so interested in its combat with the dog that it evidently did not take account of the fact the dog had a faithful ally in the person of its mas ter. The Bennett boy saw that the wolf was getting the better of the bargain, and seizing a club hammered the ani mal with all his strength. The wolf hung on with great tenacity, however, and it was only after a severe beating that it let go. After the experience which the animal had when it came in contact with the club it was consider ably cowed, and made off to the woods as fast as its legs would carry it. It made no attempt whatever to attack young Bennett. The dog was thorough ly exhausted and covered with blood, but it was not cowed, and a little later in the afternoon raised a great rumpus around a pile of rocks in the field near where the fight had taken place. An investigation disclosed a wolf’s lair in the rock pile and eleven young wolves. The game fight which the wolf put up was then explained. The dog had discovered the woifs den. routed out the wolf and the animal, for the purpose of protecting its young, had made the hard and determined fight which wild animals know how to make under such circumstances. Gold Surgical Instruments. A steel hypodermic needle is never inserted without leaving a permanent blue speck in the skin of the patient, probably because of the, perhaps, very small quantity of impurity—rust or otherwise—which it contains. The gold needle invariably leaves no mark whatever, says Leslie’s Weekly. Ap preciating these faots, efforts in which surgeons particularly have been inter ested, have been made for years to contrive a process for hardening gold so that It could be used for the blades of the instruments of surgery of all kinds. This is just what Dr. Vaughn has ac complished after 18 years of experi menting and research. His method consists of the employment of heat and chemicals; but the tempering process does not jnakean alloy of the precious metal. Pure gold tempered by this process remains pure; but the surgical instruments which Dr. Vaughn is now manufacturing, and which are beginning to be used extensively in hospitals and by practicing physicians and surgeons, are of 14 karat fineness, these being as efficient, but not as costly as instruments of the purest grade of the metal. Aside from its use in surgery, which is the feature of this new invention which appeals first, the perfection of Dr. Vaughn’s process is of world-wide importance in many branches. Carrying Out the Comparison. “Do you take me for an ostrich?” cried the fussy husband who has just found a cherry stone in the pie. “No,” replied the fearless young wife. “An ostrich can hide his head. You can’t hide yours because your ears are too long.” Men and Money. "Some of us,” says a Georgia phil osopher, "are just rich enough to be miserable, and others just poor enough to be resigned!”—Atlanta Constitu tion. FADED TO A SHADOW. Worn Down by Five Years of Suffer ing from Kidney Complaint. Mrs. Remethe Myers, of 180 Sout'. Tenth St., Ironton, O., says: -'I have worked hard in mi time and have been exposed again and again to changes of weather. It is no wonder my kidneys gave out and I went ail to pieces at last. For five years I was fading away and finally so weak tha; 'or six months I could not get outi of the house. X was nervous, restless and sleepless at night, and lame and sore in the morning. Sometimes everything would whirl and blur be fore me. I bloated so badly I could not wear tight clothing, and had t > put on shoes two sizes larger than usual. The urine was disordered and passages were dreadfully frequent got help from the first box of Doan's Kidney Pills, however, and by the time 1 had taken four boxes the pain and bloating was gone. I have beer in good health ever since.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y How Rhodes and Beit Met. Mr. Rhodes once told a circle oi friends after dinner the story of his first meeting with Beit. "1 called at Porges’ late one evening, ’ he said, “and there was Beit working away as usual. 'Do you never take a rest 1 asked. 'Xot often,' he replied. Well what's your game?’ said I. I arc g> ing to control the whole diamond ot; put before I am much older,' he a;, swered, as he got off his stool. That funny,’ I said. 'I have made up m> mind to do the same; we had better join hands,’ ” Join hands they did. Unlike Alfred Beit, Cecil Rhodes had small patience with arithmetical de tails. Once this characteristic in volved him in a difficulty. Pitching a balance sheet into the pile of papers before Beit, he exclaimed desperately. Here, you understand things; for heaven's sake tell me how I stand. ' Natural Color of Pure Water. It was long ago discovered that the natural color of pure water is blue, and not white, as most of 11s usually supposed. Opinions have not agreed on the cause of the green and yellow tints; these, it has been discovereu by W. Spring, are due to extraneous substances. Dissolved calcium salts, though apparently giving a green tint, due to a fine ■ invisible suspension, have no effect on the color of the water when adequate precautions are taken. The brown or yellow color due to iron salts is not seen when cal cium is present. The gre:n tint is often due to a condition of equilibrium between the color effect of the iron salts and the precipitating action of the calcium salts.—Scientific Ameri can. Habits of Wild Bees. There are about five thousand spe cies of the wild bees, all with interest ing ways of their own. Among them is a species whose females are verit able amazons, and carry more and better weapons than the males. Tin re ar.e the “cukoo” bees, who deposit their eggs in the nests of others, the progeny of both living peaceably to gether until maturity, when they sep arate. Then there is the tailoring bee. which cuts leaves with her scissors like jaws, and fits a snug lining of the leaf material into her cave-shaped nest. In a Pinch, Use ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE. A powder. It cures painful, smart ing, neivous feet and ingrowing nails It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Makes new shoes easy. A certain cure for sweating feet. 30,000 testimonials of cures. Sold bv all druggists. 25c. Trial package, FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N\ Y. Occasionally a man spends a lot of time at his club because there's no place like home. WOMEN’S NEGLECT SUFFERINGTHESUREPENALTY Health Thus Lost Is Restored by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Plow many women do you know who are perfectly well and* strong ? We hear everyday the same story over and over again. ‘‘1 do not feel well; lam so tired all the time ! ” More than likely you speak the same words yourself, and no doubt you feel far from well. Thecuuse maybeeasily traced to some derangement of the fe male organs which manifests itself in depression of spirits, reluctance to go anywhere or do anything, backache, bearing-down pains, flatulency, nerv ousness, sleeplessness, or other fe male weakness. These symptoms are but warnings that there is danger ahead, and unless heeded a life of suffering or a serious operation is the inevitable result. The never-failing remedy for all these symptoms is Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound. Miss Kate McDonald of Woodbridge, N. J., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: “ Restored health has meant so much to me that I cannot help from telling at>out it for the sake of other suffering women. “ For a long time I suffered untold agony with a female trouble and irregularities, which made me a physical wreck, and no one thought I would recover, but Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has entirely cured me, and made me well and strong, and I feel it my duty to tell other suffering women what a splendid medicine it is.” For twenty-five years Mrs. Pinkham, daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham, has under her direction, and since her decease, been advising sick women free of charge. Her advice is free and always helpful. Address, Lynn, Mass, nibADEkPniA Suicides wn© HAVE TALLIN IN THE MAELSTROM Or MONEY MAKING. ra^OT G50® raEW'WOO® DOME ERMDEtt) TTIHEOE? MWS> DS HIDE 5-®EEffiEKZ0ED) oc oooooo o ooooooooo oooooo bank got away with only $700,000, which he lent on worthless collateral to a concern called the Guarantors company. He foisted the securities off on the directors as of value and when exposure threatened, he prepared himself for death and eased his con science by writing a voluminous let ter of contrite explanation to James McManes, president of the institution. Then he went into the bathroom of his house, on West Spruce street, and put a bullet into his brain. Hippie always sought, in the employ ment of clerks, to bring in young men who were members and regular com municants in some church. He did not differentiate as to denomination. In addition to refusing to have as clerks any users of tobacco or liquor he was opposed to any of his employes reading Sunday newspapers or visiting race tracks. As there are no race tracks in Philadelphia, New York was the nearest place for those who sought that form of amusement. President Hippie learned about a year after the Heal Estate company was organized that one of his young men had visited Sheepshead bay and had won a five-dollar bet. The presi dent took him into his private office and prayed with him. He gave him a marked Bible, and then dismissed him from the company's service, so that danger of contamination would be avoided. FRANKLIN B. GOWEN, RAILROAD PRESIDENT. Unfortunate speculation without the defalcation feature brought about the self-inflicted death of Franklin B. Gowen, president of the Philadelphia & Reading railroad, and one of the most brilliant and successful lawyers in the Keystone state. He shot him self in December, 1889, but as the deed was committed in Washington and not in Philadelphia, the circum stances became knowm within 24 hours. The belief was general that he had been murdered by agents of the Mollie Maguires, in revenge for the active part he took in suppressing that band of thugs. The fact that Gowen had taken his own life was established the next day, and then began an investigation as to the possible cause. The moral charac ter of the great lawyer was above re proach. His life had been singularly clean, and his reputation never had been tarnished by even as much as the breath of scandal. He died without having made a will and when an ap praisal of his estate was made it was found that he had left but $450,000 in personal and real property of an estate which in his lifetime was estimated to be worth between $2,000,000 and $3, 000,000. He had been induced to in vest in southern lands, where it is be lieved he suffered great losses. The full particulars never were revealed, but there was no other reason to as cribe than despondent desperation brought on by investments which im paired a considerable fortune. WILLIAM M. SINGERLY, NEWSPAPER PUBLISHER. William M. Singerly, proprietor of the Philadelphia Record, president of the Chestnut Street National bank and the Chestnut Street Trust com pany, died under circumstances which pointed unmistakably to a death self inflicted. Cyanide of potassium is be lieved to have been the agent, but so far as the records of the coroner’s of fice go, that cause is not ascribed. Notwithstanding this official veiling no one in Philadelphia familiarwith the wild and reckless peculation in which Singerly was involved, and which re sulted in the failure of the banks in which he was interested, believes that he died a natural death. Singerly was a peculiar combination. He was born in Philadelphia in 1832. His father was a pioneer in street car transportation and made a fortune. In his young manhood Williaip M. Singerly developed a liking for conviv iality, which resulted in his income being cut off, and he was put to work as a car conductor at a small salary. This enforced employment brought about a reformation after he had pass ed his thirty-fifth year. He then dis played qualities of shrewd business ' sense which it was not believed he possessed. Without any previous knowledge of j newspaper making he succeeded in, j gaining control of a small newspaper called the Public Record. He changed its make-up and its general method of treatment of the topics or the day, and astonished the town by reducing the price to one cent. He became Democratic candidate for governor and made a canvass of the state in a special train. He had then gone into the breeding of blood ed horses and had one Futurity vic tory to his credit—the capture of $100,000 in stake and bets by Mor rello in the season of 1892. Spreading out still further, Singer ly went into banking and organized two institutions. Reckless loans drove him to the wall, and in 1897 both banks failed. On February 27, 1898, Mr. Singerly died suddenly in his home. The story was given out that heart disease had carried him off, aggravated by his financial troubles. After his death the community was startled to learn that he was in debt to the defunct Chestnut Street bank to the extent of $800,000, which he had borrowed on collateral security of $75,000. JOSEPH G. DITMAN, BANKER, DROWNED. Joseph G. Ditman, president of the Quaker City National bank, disap peared mysteriously and for two days | it w'as believed he had been robbed and murdered. After a drive through Fairmount park his empty carriage and the horse were found. Search for the banker continued for a month. Detectives went to all parts of the United States and large rewards were offered. Forty days after his disap pearance the decomposed body of the banker was found floating in the Schuylkill river. Ditman was brought up in the paper manufacturing business, and abandon ed it to go into banking. He discount ed paper for his old-time associates on the flimsiest sort of collateral. He sunk thousands of dollars in a silver mine in South Carolina. He went into the printing business to recoup his losses, and lost more, and in less than two years, through his wildcat specula tion, and lack of care, he was stripped of every dollar he possessed. His mind became affected and the suicide theory was generally accepted, not withstanding the judgment of the cor oner's jury that he was drowned by accident. BENJAMIN H. GASKILL, BROKER, THIEF, FORGER. Benjamin H. Gaskill was one of the most noted exemplars of fraudulent finance, who cheated his friends and then killed himself to avoid facing them. He was a thief and a forger, but this discovery was not made until after his death. In his lifetime Gaskill enjoyed the respect and esteem of his business associates. His reputa tion for probity was of the best, and his credit was gilt-edged. After his suicide a diary was found among his effects in which he spoke of himself as a Jekyll and Hyde. He wrote that he could not make himseir understood to sordid minds and that his aspira tions were too high for the ordinary mortal to grasp. CONGRESSMAN ADAMS, HIMSELF ONLY VICTIM. Robert Adams, Jr., familiarly known as “Bertie” Adams, former minister to Brazil, prominent as one of the orig inal explorers of the Yellowstone re gion and member of congress from the Second district of Pennsylvania, com mitted suicide by shooting in his apartments in the Metropolitan club, Washington, on the 1st day of last June. Wildcat speculation was di rectly responsible. He died absolute ly penniless, having dissipated a for tune of $300,000. He left a note ad dressed to Speaker Cannon, in which he said that as his personal obliga tions exceeded his resources he was obliged to abandon the responsible position he held in the house of rep resentatives. The congressman lost Nipple PRIVflif D/rmtr>« 'QDAtfS. OoMT/r money at cards, but the greater part of his wealth went in land invest ments and in loans on worthless se curities. He sent good money after bad in the hope of recovery. JOSIAH R. ADAMS, VICTIM OF POLITICAL ATTACK. Josiah R. Adams, a prominent club man and a lawyer and a noted figure in the most exclusive set of Philadel phia's fashionable world, killed him self in a hotel in .Philadelphia, six years ago. Adams was a man of rare culture. He took a liking for the ex citement of political life, and affiliated himself with the Quay machine. He was nominated for judge of the supe rior court. A bitter attack was made upon him by a local newspaper. He was accused of having conspired with another man to defraud the public by a get-rich-quick scheme, in which it was alleged that hundreds of persons w'ere induced to invest to their sor row. Adams made a weak denial to the charge, and withdrew from the ticket. He never recovered from the blow. On the day he shot himself he kissed his wife affectionately, left her, and in five minutes was dying from a bullet wound in the head. JOHN FIELD, MERCHANT, LOST MIND WITH MONEY. John Field, once postmaster of Phil adelphia, a member of the old whole sale dry goods house of Young, Smyth, Field & Co., shot and killed himself in Fairmount park while insane. He came from Ireland when he was 14 years old and began as errand boy in the house which he subsequently con trolled. The firm did an immense busi ness and in addition to branches in Baltimore, Cincinnati, Indianapolis and San Francisco, carried on a bank ing business in Saxony. It never was definite known how Mr. Field impaired his fortune, but the general belief was that it was due to speculation in realty, which he knew nothing about. This so affected his mind that he developed a suicidal mania. JAMES V. P. TURNER, RUINED BY BUYING LAND. James V. P. Turner, registrar of vital statistics of Philadelphia and a lawyer of note, shot himself in the stomach in Fairmount park in April, 1902. He was a member of the So ciety of the War of 1812 and of the Sons of the Revolution. Mr. Turner had been induced to invest in lands in the west, which he believed to be mineral-bearing, but which turned out to be worthless. He became despond ent and chose to kill himself rather than begin life over again at 47.