SON OF ADMIRAL EVANS Although Rear Admiral Robley D. Evans re linquished the command of the battleship fleet a short time ago. yet there is another member of the family in the naval service and at present at tached to the battleship Louisiana, with the fleet at San Francisco. This officer is Lieut. Franck Taylor Evans, the only son of the former ccmmander-in-chief of the Atlantic fleet. Resembling his father in locks, the younger Evans had made a very credit able record since his entrance in the navy, 14 years ago. He was born in Switzerland, while his father was attached to the European fleet in the TO's. September 6, 1894, he was appointed to the naval academy at large. Completing his four-years course in lnsirumua ai lue acauemy in ue was graduated from that institution. In April of that year, and just before the outbreak of the Spanish war, he was assigned to the battleship Massachusetts, commanded by Capt. Fran cis J. Higginson. He served on the Massachusetts through the war, taking part in the bombardment at Santiago, San Juan and in a number of engage ments in Cuban waters. He remained on the Massachusetts until 1899. when he was transferred to the gunboat Nashville. In 1900 he was assigned to the P.rutus on the Asiatic station. In 1904 he was assigned to Piesident Roosevelt's yacht Sylph as her commanding officer and remained on her until the latter part of 1905. when he was ordered to Newport News for duty in connection with the fitting out of the new 10,000-ton battleship Louisiana. When she was commissioned in 1906 he was assigned to duty on her. He made the trip on the Louisiana, when she took President Roosevelt to Panama, and also on the cruise from Hamilton Roads to San Francisco. He was promoted to the grade of lieutenant on July 1, 1904. "FIDDLER BOB” TAYLOR k 1 --- -!I Robert Love Taylor, better known throughout Tennessee as "Fiddler Bob," devoted his maiden speech in the I'nited States senate recently to an attack upon the Republican party and the execu tive. Sente of his similes were very effective, as when he compared the federal power and the states to the centripetal and centrifugal forces that rule the universe, and when he said this of the railways: "They are only one string of the harp of a thousand strings upon which our modern Orpheus is playing the triumphal march of federalism." Senator Taylor got his nickname of Fiddler Bob front the campaign he waged in 1S89, for election to the I'nited States congress. He had f»" Wvty-al-w;r i- nothing to aid him but his wits and his fiddle, but being a mountaineer himself he knew how to reach the hearts of the people of the hills. He set out for the mountain re gions carrying his fiddle and wherever he stopped he brought it out and a dance was organized right away. The young folks danced to his music while the older ones were won by his merry chatter. He was elected. His next am bition was to become United States senator and he made the run. He re ceived a telegram that he had been elected by a majority of one, but later he f received another that one of his supporters had changed his vote and elected his opponent. Taylor said nothing, but he made the run for governor of the state, this time having his own brother for an opponent, which gave to the contest the sobriquet of "War of the Roses.” The ancient fiddle was effective and Bob was elected. He was twice re-elected. His opportunity to achieve his final ambition offered itseli at last election and he ran for the senate once more, being triumphantly elected this time. Senator Taylor was born in Happy Valiev, Tenn., in July. 1S50. He gradu ated from Pennington college and in 18TS was admitted to the bar. He was an elector-at-large on the Cleveland ticket in 1SS4 and again in IS92. After retiring from the office of chief executive Mr. Taylor entered the lecture field. He is an attorney by profession, and he is also editor of Bob Taylor's Maga zine, a publication that reflects the character and the idiosyncrasies of the man. « OPPOSES REVOLVING DOORS Louis Lepine, prefect of police, by issuing the ordinance forbidding the use of revolving doors in restaurants, hotels and other public buildings capable at holding more than 100 persons, on the ground that they are dangerous in case of fire or panic, has again demonstrated that he is the wielder of the “big stick" in Paris. The order has aroused the indignation of those who have installed these doors at great expense, but the prefect is used to grumblings and mut terings. To use an American expression, he al lows their complaints to go “in one ear and cut of the other." That the edict will stand goes without saying. for the office of prefect is more important tnan that of a cabinet minister. He is appointed by the president and is answerable neither to par f > 1 iament nor to Paris. M. Lepine is supported by a small army in carrying out his edicts. He controls 50,000 troops. 32.000 police and 8,000 guards. He is a gentleman, a scholar and brother to a great medical luminary. Prof. Raphael Lepine. cf the faculty of Lyons, and editor of th* Revue de Medicine. Jt is a family of what was called in other days ' noblesse de robe," descending from generations of lawyers, doctors and government functionaries. M. Lepine was born in Paris in 1S46, became a lawyer and entered the ‘ad ministration" in 1ST” as sub prefect, and has risen through all the grades to prefect, to which he was appointed in 1*93. So well has he met the require ments of his strenuous office that every president since that time has re appointed him. He was in charge of Paris during the Dreyfus troubles, with its rioting and violent possibilities. NEW PRESIDENT OF PERU Senor Don Angusto B. Leguia. who was re cently elected to succeed Dr. Pardo as president of Peru, is said to be one of the best friends the X’nited States ever has had in South America The richness of Peru is proverbial, and for years Senor Leguia has maintained that every effort should be made to encourage the investment ol American capital in enterprises intended to de velop and exploit the resources of his country His liking for American methods is probably partly due to the fact that the large part of his early commercial training was acquired in the Sranish-American department of the New York Life Insurance Company. He was with this corporation for years, and Trim.".IN J_rfitfHBM wben he resigned his |>lace. in 1889, he had worked his way up from a clerkship to the man agement of all the interests of the New York Life in Peru. Since retiring trcim the insurance business SenorLeguia has been the managing director of the British Sugar Estates. Limited, which has several million dollars invested in sugar estates in different parts of Peru, and he is also the largest stockhold er in six other important industrial and commercial enterprises. Senor Leguia entered political life in 1903 as minister of finance in Presi dent Candamo's government, of which the present president of Peru, Dr. Jose Pardo, was prime minister. President Candamo lived only six months after taking office, and when the vacancy caused by his death was filled by the election of President Pardo. Senor Leguia was made prime minister and in trusted with the forming of a new cabinet. He retired from this office only a "ew months ago, in accoidance with a custom which requires a candidate f<*r an elective public office to resign before opening a campaign. Senor Leguia is 45 years old. having s'ten born at Lambayeque. in tho north of Peru, on February 19, IS*?. V Pleads for Barbers’ “Tips.” August Lambrecht has been a "prac-1 ticing barber” for 40 years. He says j that in time he has had a good | chance to study human nature and has come to the conclusion that the tip for ^ the barber is good ' all 'round.” This V statement was called forth by the re port that a Broadway New York shop where the barbers were not allowed to take tips had succumbed and given notice that the "no tip” era was over. ‘A gentleman,” he said, “feels that he is cheap when he‘ leaves a shop with out having given the barber a tip, and the barber himself does a lot of think ing every time he calls 'next’ and has nothing to show for his work.” Scotland Less Overcrowded. Overcrowding in Scotland is not to bad as it used to be. The proportion living more than four per room fell from 18.67 per cent, in 1861, to 9.56, in 1901. VICTIM OF RABIES EDIKS! TIME NEW YORK DOCTOR DOOMED TO DEATH SUCCUMBS TO HYDROPHOBIA. HAD BEEN TOLD OF HIS FATE Arranges Business and Personal Af fairs and Bravely Awaits the End —Asks Physician to Be Lib eral with Chloroform. New York.—Fulfilling the- terms of the death sentence pronounced upon him on Monday, when he was told he must die before Thursday, Dr. Wil liam H. Marsh succumbed to hydro phobia Wednesday afternoon. His last hours were eased and rendered unconscious by opiates administered by his physician, while his family hoped against hope that science might for once be in error. Not for a moment had Dr. Marsh however, deluded himself with false hopes. With the death warrant of the physicians of the Pasteur institute still ringing in his ears, he made his will, called his family and business as sociates into council and gave them explicit directions for the conduct of his business and personal affairs, after he should have gone from them, and calmly prepared to die, as he had lived, like a man. "You will die before Thursday noon. No human power can save you.” That | was the dictum of Dr. William L. ! Wheeler of the Pasteur institute, de | livered one Monday recently. It struck Dr. Marsh like a blow between the eyes, but lie stood up to it man fashion. ; "I have seen some pitiful sights, but 1 1 never have been so moved as 1 was by the calm courage, the splendid heroism of Dr. Marsh when I told him there was no hope for him.” said Dr. Wheeler. Returning with his physician. Dr. 1 H. M. Culihan. to his home in Brook lyn. Dr. Marsh immediately began to make plans for the futuie of those near and dear to him. Himself a graduate in medicine, he knew science had said its last word and his fate lay | on the knees of the gods. "I am not afraid to die. The past hides nothing that should make me ashamed to face the future,” he said Fulfilling the Terms of the Death Sentence. to his friends who called when the word went forth that one about to die was waiting for the end. His only fear was that the frightful convul- i sicns of the final stage ot rabies might prove too harrowing for his family to j witness, tile terrifying cries too heart rending for then; to hear. So he asked Dr. Oulihan to keep close when the period of delirium began and to be lib eral with chloroform, opium or what ever might avail to stupefy and to soothe. Faithful to his trust, Dr. Culihan hardly left the bedside of his patient! and friend until the end. From early Tuesday afternoon until he died Dr. Marsh was in a state of almost com plete unconsciousness, induced by sedatives. Death came gently and peacefully. None of those who sat in conference with Dr. Marsh until nearly midnight Monday would speak of the occur-1 rences in detail. It was in the library ! of his home that he had gathered them together—his wife, his sons and daughters, his son-in-law and his law yer. There was the will to be drawn up. and that done, with the distribu tion of his personal property arranged for. he turned his attention to the future of his children. Dr. Marsh was 57 years old and had lived in Flatbush nearly all his life, j He had traveled extensively in South ■ America and was regarded as a genius of invention by his friends. He is sur vived bv a widow, two daughters, one of whom is married, and three sons, the oldest of whom is a mechanical en gineer in the employ of the Panama ; canal commission and is at present on the isthmus. Find Tomb of Early Apostle. In restoring the parish church at Fordington, Dorchester, England, there was found a slab of Purbeck marble with a Roman inscription on it that is supposed to be part of the tombstone of Aristobulus. the first recorded apos tle to Rritain and said to have been one of the 70 ordained by Christ, MAN TAKES CLOTHES; WIFE PHONES POLICE HUBBY LEARNS IT IS WRONG TO NAB SPOUSE'S APPAREL WHEN SHE HAS ENGAGEMENT. Danville, 111.—Mrs. Edward Hard?-, 22 years old, and pretty, 'phoned po lice headquarters and asked for the sergeant on duty. That functionary answered. “What's that you say, madam?” he said into the transmitter. A response from the other end. “W-wh-what? Your er-er-clo-ciothes. Oh, yes. All of them? Didn't leave a single thing? Sure, madam, er-er, I mean yes, indeed, madam, right away.” -And the sergeant got red about the gills and called a waiting copper. The copper went to the streets as fast as his legs could carry him. and a few minutes afterward he came back Sre Appeared at the Police Station. to the station with Edward Hardy. 25 years old. Mr. Hardy carried a bun dle under his artn. a large bundle, and looked sheepishly toward the sergeant, who told him to open it. A moment later the charges made over the telephone against Edward Hardy by his wife were substantiated. It was proved that he had left home and had taken every stit—every one. well—all of Mrs. Hardy's clothes with him. and Mrs. Hardy just couldn't leave the house. That is why. of course, she telephoned the sergeant to apprehend her husbar.d. and then get the clothes back to her in as short a time as possible. She said she just had to keep a dinner engagement ir. an uptown restaurant in half an hour. Five minutes later a bicycle messen ger delivered the clothes to Mrs. Hardy's door. Twenty minutes later —20. ladies, count 'em—she appeared at the police station, where her hus band was still held. In another five she had refused his overtures for peace and domestic happiness and had sworn out a warrant charging him with theft, and in another five she was two blocks away and she had her clothes. "Let you off.” Mrs. Hardy said to her husband. "Net much. The jail for yours. Don't you ever think you can steal my clothes and leave me in the house so I can't even go to my work, and then get off. You'll certain ly pay for that, even if you won't sup port me.” HEN WAS A KITTENNAFPER. Tried to Adept a Litter and Battled with Mother Cat. Wilkesbarre. Pa.—An old lion owned by Alonzo Mauser of Grovania. near ht-.e, has the maternal instinct sc strongly developed that the other day. having failed to mother anything else, she tried to adopt a nestful of young kittens, and fought stoutly for their possession with the mother cat. For the last two weeks the hen har tried in every way that her brain could suggest to nest on every egg she found, but Mauser did not want her to hatch and repeatedly threw her off nests which she had made. He had a daily fight with her over the matter. The hen discovered the other day that the mother of a litter of kittens had left them for a few moments, and she promptly took them for her own. When the mother cat returned there was a batile until Mauser, attracted by the noise, arrived and locked the hen in a coop. Girl Sleeps; Eyes Are Open. Muskogee, Okla.—Apparently sleep ing with her eyes open, suffering no pain, but taking no nourishment and actually not sleeping, the case of Miss Dolly Smith. IS years old, has baffled local physicians. She complained ol feeling dizzy a week ago, and fall ing on her bed has not been able to move since. She lapses into uncon sciousness and appears to be dead. The attending physicians have re sorted to the old-time method cf bleeding, but no change in her con dition is perceptible. Three Days in r Quicksand. Alton, 111.—Buried to his waist in quicksand after he 1 ad been thrown into a pond by three r-^n, Tony Haas. 24 years old, stood in Ue water three days, according to hir statement when he was found wande r.g along an in terurban street car tu ck half crazed. Early the other day some logs floated near him and he succeeded in drag ging himself from the sand. He couid not ascribe a reason for having bee:; thrown into the pool. [ !SH Cl iUiiLJ M13S BEATRICE GRIMSHAW, WHO WRITES NOVELS. CALLS ON NATIVES OF GOARI-BARi. ARE FOND OF HUMAN FLESH Declare It Tastes Much Better Than Pork or Dog—Human Bodies Left in Branches of Trees to Decay. London.—From a letter just re ceived in this city from that adven ture-loving Irish girl, Beatrice Grim shaw, who writes stories of the South Seas, it appears that she has been enjoying herself in her own peculiar way in and around New Guinea, which is to be the scene of the novel she is new writing. Her letter, which is dated from the Gulf of Papua is, in part, as follows: “Day before yesterday we called at Goari-Rari, a notorious place, where Chalmers, the famous missionary, was eaten in 1902, and where a terrible fracas with natives occurred in 1904, resulting not long afterward in the suicide of Gov. Robinson. It is an island close to the mainland. Few white people have been there, and most of them were eaten—no one has ever stopped a night, and no white woman was ever there before myself. The governor, a friend of his, Col. An till, two missionaries, the governor's secretary, myself and six armed police from Port Moresby (natives) were the landing party. The natives were ex tremely excited and jumpy; nervous, one would say. They received us quiet ly enough, and accepted p.resents of beads, etc., but when 1 and two oth ers were in one of the houses, they came and held up a joint of cooked human flesh before me, laughing. It looked horrid ar.d smelt worse. I think it was ribs. “There was also a canoe full of, skulls in the river, and many skulls in 1 the houses. We were not attacked, however, and we walked all through the village, saw a general family sleeping house 190 yards long, divided into numberless compartments (the fiat system, evidently)—human bodies laid out in the branches of trees to decay, which is their method of bur ial. and sc.me s’range images. “We stayed all afternoon, and made c ur boys make afternoon tea for us in the middle of the village; nice china i Thsy Held Up a Joint of Cooked Human Flesh. and silver and cakes. The cannibals | crowded round in the wildest excite- I merit. They were all unclothed, with a pood deal of paint and feathers, and j had bows and spears and stone axes. I They seemed frightened at the tea ceremonial, evidently thinking it was j some piece of magic, which they be- j lieve in greatly. We went back to j the ship quite peacefully and alter- ; ward the governor (Judge Murray) 1 went ashore again and brought off the bones of Chalmers, the missionary. "When we were on shore, we asked . the people, through interpreters, how ! they cooked their cannibal food, and they said with native sago, and showed ! us some in rolls. Told by the gov- ! ernor that they must give up these I practices, they said it would be hard j to do so. for human flesh tasted much j better than pork or dog. "I was down at Thursday Island last week, and went down in a diver's dress among the pearl shell beds. The place swarms with sharks and alli gators, but I was told they could be scared off by loosening the wrist of I the dress so as to let some air out, so I chanced it, and came up all right, after a good walk at the bottom of a coral reef." Boy Laid Low by Rooster. Pottsville, Pa.—Charles, the three year-old son of Lincoln Horn of Don aldson. was attacked by a game rooster and so badly injured that he lies in a critical condition. Little Charles was taken into the chicken yard by an older brother, while the latter fed the fowls. The game bird attacked the boy with his wings and beak and knocked him down, inflicting a deep scalp wound, and then the rooster repeatedly plunged his spurs into the cb'ld's checks and face so that the little one's life is despaired oL KISS SAVES WOMAN FROM LIVING BURIAL !S ABOUT TO BE INTERRED WHEN LAST CARESS PREVENTS JRAGEDY. London.—A woman named Mrs. Carton of Tonbridge has been through one of the mc;t terrible ordeals ever Known. She fell into a trance after a short illness and was placed in a coffin in the belief that she was dead. She lay silent, unable to move cr speak, while preparations for her funeral were going on all around her. Mrs. Carton's husband, who is an engine cleaner, was distracted with grief when, a few days ago, he founu her apparently dead after a few days’ iliness. All arrangements were made for the funeral; a coffin was brought and the woman was laid in it. Then, just as the coffin was about to be screwed down. Mr. Carton asked His Wife Was Alive! to be left alone with the body for a moment. He bent over his wife to kiss her for the last time. The cheek on which his lips rested was warm. His wife was alive. The man. dazed with joy and won der, sent at once for a doctor, who confirmed his hopes. The doctor or dered her to be removed at once to the hospital. Her condition rapidly improved and she is now well on the way to recovery. The woman's story of her experi ence during the trance is extraordi nary. T knew everything which was go ing on around me." she said, "but I could not move. I could not even speak when I saw that they thought I was dead." Even when she was put in her coffin and it seemed almost certain that she would be buried alive she was unable to utter a word to save herself. She could not even speak to her husband as he bent over her. Only the touch of his lips on her cheek saved her SPENDS NIGHT OF TERROR. Aged and Thinly Clad Woman Win ders Into Mountain Wilds. Freeland. Pa.—A terrible experience fell to the lot of Mrs. John Klinger, an age;! Freeland woman, who wandered from her home during a driving rain storm the other evening and spent the night in the mountains. A rescuing party, headed by Bimgess Hartman, on horseback, followed the footpaths and main reads, and two members of the state constabulary joined the search. The weather was cold and wet. and when the woman disappeared she wore only a light shawl over her house dress. The search was continued all night without finding the woman, who. it was then feared, had fallen into a mine cave. At eight o'clock in the morning the ten-year-old grandson of Mrs. Kiinget l“ft his home in .Jeddo to attend Sun day school at Freeland. He had no knowledge of his relative's*disappear ance and was astonished to find her tottering on the railroad tracks near Drifton. She was then so far ex hausted that a physician had to be summoned and she was conveyed to her home, where she now lies in a critical condition. Rats Attack Two Babies. Philadelphia.—Rats attacked Mamie and Issie Jaffin. babies, as they ia> asleep at their home on South Second street early the other morning and hit them so badly that they were taken to the hospital. Mamie's foot and hand were lacerated and Issie's cose was injured. The children were in a back room on 'he second floor of their house. Ma mie was in a crib and Issie in a go cart. The rats got in through a pipe hole. Louis Jaffin, the father, was awak eced by the screams of the children. He sprang out of bed and ran to their room, expecting to find it ablaze. In stead he saw several rats attacking the little ones, who were doing theit best to fight them off. Jaffin picked up the children and ran with them to the hospital, where their wounds were cauterized. Large Sum Spent in Two Months. In a little over two months over $11,000 was expended by the Salvation Army at Toronto in relieving poverty, this amount being turned over by the city and the officers of the army gave their whole time without expense to the distribution of the money, ovw 600 families receiving aid. Found a Cure for Insomnia One Sufferer Testifies That Deep Breathing Helped Him. “I have been troubled with insomnia ail my life,” remarked the nervous man, "and like most people similarly afflicted I have tried all the familiar dodges to indues sleep. The results were never particularly satisfactory in the way of producing the desired effect until one night 1 thought I had actually found a sleep-inducer when I chanced to grasp one cf the rods at the head of my bed with both hands and practically hung the weight of my body on them. That sent me to sleep and it did the same thing for a few times, when to my extreme disappoint ment. I fdund it had ceased to work. I was as badly off as recently, until one,night, when I had a bad cough, as well as an attack of sleeplessness. I tried the well-known remedy of trying to send myself off into the land of nod by taking long deep breaths. What it did to me, and has done several times since, was not to only send me to sleep, but to stop my cough. Just why it did so is not of much consequence. That it did so is the thing that con cerns me most.” Simplicity Above All. The supreme excellence is simpli city.—Longfellow. Certainly. \ isitor—How do you do, Tommy! I've come to stay at your house a week, and I’m sure you ctn't even ; guess who I am.” Tommy—I’ll bet you one thing.” Visitor—What? Tommy—I'll bet you're no relation of father's.—Harper’s Weekly. Chinese Rice Paper. The rice paper upon which the Chi nese do such charming drawing Is a thin sheet of the pith of a tree. 1 This woman says Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound saved her life. Bead her letter. Mrs. T. C. Willadsen, of Manning, Iowa, writes to Mrs. Pinkham: “ I can truly say that Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound saved my life, and 1 cannot express my gratitude to you in words. For years I suffered with the worst forms of female com plaints, continually doctoring and spending lots of money for medicine without help. I wrote you for advice, followed it as directed, and took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and it has restored mo to perfect health. Tlad it not been for you I should have been in my grave to-day. I wish every suffering woman would try it.” FACTS FOR SICK W3MLH. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammat ion, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion, dizziness,or nervous prostration. Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. Products Peerless Dried 5eef Unlike the ordinary dried beef—that sold in bulk— Libby’s Peerless Dried Beef comes in a sealed glass jar in which it is packed the moment it is sliced into those delicious thin wafers. None of the rich natural flavor or goodness escapes or dries out. It reaches you I fresh and with all the nutri ment retained. Libby's Peerless Dried Beel is only one of a Great number c; high-grade, ready t« serve, pure food products that are prepared in Libby’s Great White Kitchen. Just try a package of any of these, such as Ox Tongue, Vienna Sausage, Pickles, r Olives, etc., and see how delightfully dif ferent they are from others you have eaten. Libby, McNeill & Libby. Chicago t-———-1 Typical Farm Scene, Showing Stock Raking in WESTERN CANADA Borne of the choicest lands for grain growing, stock raising and mixed farming in the new dis tricts of Saskatchewan and Alberta have re lentiy been Opened for Settlement under the Revised Homestead Regulations Entry may now be made by proxy (on certain renditions), by the father, mother, sun. daugh ter, brother or sister of an intending home steader. Thousands of homesteads of 160 acres ?ach are thus now easily available in these irreat grain-growing-, stock-raising and mixed Larming sections. There you will find healthful climate, good seighbors. churches for family worship, schools for your children, good laws, splendid crops, and railroads convenient to market. Entry fee in each case is flO.OO. For pamph let. -Last Best West,” particulars as to rates, routes, best time to go and where to locate, apply to W. V. BEBBETT, Mi New York Lite Buildiaf. Oaokt. Stint!*. PARKER’S „ HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beau:if»ea the Promotes a luxuriant growth. Never Fail* to Reatore Gray Hair to ita Youthful Color. Cure* scalp diseases a hair fa.un*. PILES ANAK ESiS *l'e«i urtaaa rallef. IS A SIMPLE CUKE, •l at drugiri«t* or ij mail. Simple FREE. Addreae. "ANAKESI8" Tribune Bide., Fit Yoml NOTARIES and JUSTICES handling DCM OI PJ vouchers should write for cash ? fcllWlV/ll offer to Tahkh A Whitman -O.. Washington, I). C. (Over 27 years’ experience.) WIDOWS’"111" N EW law obtained TiyymTftwAxmTO t>7 JOHN W. MORRIS. rENSIONS Washington, 1). C. “£S^ST«i'i Thompson’s Eye Water IFFIllPr QTIRPU eaileat to work a 1th and lUlHnliL SIHnbn nan*-, cijUiea LlcoAL W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 24. 1908.