The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, March 03, 1910, Image 7
i POOR DEAL IN HIGH FINANCE Farmer Divided Profit* with the Sell ers of Dressed Meat, and l_o.t Money. ~ sklnc o' tb- i reseat prosperity '*f 5bt farmer, Ar.-emblyman Warren ilnt if Rtverrii r-la'» <J a little story rt Trenton the other day which would ■ ■'« t . incur..!'- tb. agriculturist is always f_- • • in- w.rh regard to bi.» finance*, - - tire ?r«.. Vr Fine said. he w. s on a train and ov rb- -urd the con " 'if two far::. - r- who were on their way to Tr»nton First they talked abe :t the dry spell th- y bad last s.r-.nser. then the game laws, and finally one of th*-tn r-uiark-d that he had heard that Josh Hankins had had his annual bog killing. Yarns.” returned the other with a b-i* f.!e “and he didn't do a gosh batted Thing hat bunko himself good an' plenty” Hew dtd he bunko himself?" jert- d the first, wood* ricgly. “He . is a g od i«riee fer 'em. didn’t he?" ' Yams.” answered the second, with f - g ■ k't whoV denwd trouble. He got a <wr% a good ftrl e fer 'em thet he «dd th*-r whole b'oon.in’ lot. an' didn't keep none for his own gatin’.'* ”Ye her kind o' got me. Bill." was the p irxSod response of the first. “Ye will hrt U-r come again.~ It is ns easy ter see at slippin* off * greased log" said Util. “He sold ah tb tn he^t at IF* a hundred, an' cow he U t yin them back fer his table tn pork chop an' scrapple lots »* *om .-tbits' 'ike i’.t cents a pound.”— !*bllad<-ipk:a Telegraph. IN AGONY WITH ECZEMA ~N'o tongue can teil how I suffered for fere year* with itching and bleed ing ecsema. until I was cured by the Cutieura Remedies, and I am so grate fa! I want the world to know, for What h‘-!p*-d me will help others. My body and face were covered with sores. One day it would seem to be better, and then break out again with the r.os* terrible pa.n and itching. I hate been sick several times, but B~-rer In my life did I experience such awful suffering as with this eczema. I h had made up my mind that death was •ear at hand, and 1 hapd for that new w hen I would be at rest. I had t'ied many different doctors and medi cines without success, and my mother brt ught me the Cutieura Remedies, in sisting that I try them. I began to feel te tter after the first bath with Cut-fura Soap, and one application of Cutieura Ointment. I *1 continued with the Cutieura Soap and Cutieura Ointment, and have taken four bo*tie* of Cutieura Resolv ent and consider myself well. This was nin«»* years ago and I have had no return of the trouble since. Any person having any doubt about this wonderful cure by the Cutieura Reme dies can write to my address. Mrs. Alt;*- Ktson, 5*3 Inn Road. Battle Creek. Uirt. Oct 1«. 5 5*0* ~ Weak Spot in Mi* Defense. \ religions worker was visiting a miners penitentiary, when one pris oner i« hook* way took his fancy This ISiMSisr tu a negro, who evinced a religions fi-rvor as deep as it was gratifying to the caller. Of what were you accused?*’ the ^ prisoner was asked I ley says 1 took a watch.” an swered the negro 1 made a good ftght. I bad a dandy lawyer, and he done prove an alibi wif ten witnesses, flea my lawyer be shore made a -trr-r.g speech to de jury But it m a'n't no use. sab* I get ten years." I don’t see why you were not ac said the religious worker. "Watt, aah." explained the prisoner, i- 1 wa» sbor* . a. t. jk spot 'l>out •sty htease «• y Uj ad «je watch in asf pocket."—Tit• Bits hsdiy School * Want Ad. it' r, is a church in Brooklyn that Iocs adopted a coieS scheme for en .urging its Stttdty school. It adver ts e* for hoy* and girls to come to It « the shop windows in the neighbor hood of the c hur h on- may see- pla cards. such ns are used for adverti sing entc rtaiamentj- of various kinds, that tear the legend: Wanted—Boys and girls to join our Sunday school" Below this are set lorth the advantage-* that will eotae u> the young talk who attend the dashes. Doing Tare Thing* at Once. A inan hurried into a quick-lunch :• Mac ran* recently and called to the waiter: "Give me a ham sandwich!" Yes, sir," said the- waiter, reaching tm the- sandwich "Will you eat it or . take ft with you?" f Toth." was the unexpected b-»t ob vious reply—1 mdies- Home Journal. a .*» xot tm rr .% mi bstiti ti: «|*P4I ..It Rail'. /*v. ry I* rut fo.Jili rr. |»li -tl: nn ■ 'ui r»m ummUwm. a»-unufla an* *• ui tar 2>. wir *nd Sfir. Om+ hiiouMl tssM.** <mre not to grov too wise lor so great a pleasure of life as laughter—Addison. Ire*' Sixgle Binder rtvc* a mai. what hr- i .lu, a tab, me&ow-tastiog cigar. Take from my mouth the wish of happy years.—Shakespeare. REALLY FUNNY. "Here's d ’ funniest joke I ever seen in a paper!" "Wot?” "IV weather mar. predicts warm and clear fer to-day.” THIS TELLS THE STORY. Uncle cam's Breakfast Food Co.. Omaha, Neb. Gentlemen: After using "Uncle Sam's Er akfast Food" for the past three w ‘ K- 1 felt like I must write and tell you what a mistake you make in not adverting your excellent food. It ought to be advertised in every newspaper in the country. 1 can nc* praise it too highly for the grea* benefit I have derived from the use of it. Have had stomach ard bowel trou ble for years, hut feel now this food is going to cure me. 1 recttmm' nd it to all my friends who have any stomach trouble, but some of them tell me they are not able to procure it from their grocers, say they never heard of it. Wishing you all the success possible, I am yours respectfully, VIRGINIA HFLWTG, Middletown, O. We certify that the above is a true copy of the origiual and was not so licited. U. S. BF. F. CO. Marriage. A game of chance in which the chances are about even. The man leads at fir.-t, but after leaving the al tar he usually follows breathlessly in his wife's trail. The rules are very confusing, if a masked player holds you up some night at the end of a long gun, it i- called robbery, and entities you to t< lephone the police, but if your wife holds you up for a much larger amount the next morning at the end of 3 iong hug it is termed diplomacy, and counts in her favor. In this, as in otli r games of life, wives are usually allowed more privileges than other outlaws.—Judge. Financial Less Thrsugh Tuberculosis. Based on the census of 1900, it is estimated by the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tu berculosis that nearly 100.000 children now in school will die of tuberculosis b-.-iore they are IS years of age, or that about 6,400 die annually from this disease. Estimating that on an average each child who dies of tuber ' ulosis ha? had six years of schooling, the aggregate loss to the country in was.ted education each year amounts to $1,152,000. According to investiga tions made in New York. Boston and Stockholm, the percentage of children who are afflicted with tuberculosis is much larger than the death rate would indicate. A Natural Question. James J. Corbett, in the smoking room of the Mauretania, praised the style" of Jim Jeffries. "It's a neat style." he said; “neat, quick, to the point It gets there like the remark of a little girl who said to the minister in the course of a quite interminable call; l»id you forget to bring your amen with you, doctor?'” Mournful Pleasure. Master—Since your wife died you have got drunk very day. You bad better get married again at once. Servant—Oh. s r, leave me yet a month in my grief. A scientist cla ms that hogs have o .Is. but he probably doesn't m«--an hc.se who occupy two double seats in a crowded railway car. Any woman can make an impres sion on a man who has either a soft heart or a soft head. „ It is < asy to see the silver lining of other people's clouds. The more you eat Quaker Oats the better vour health J will be. Practical experi ments with athletes show Quaker Oats to be the greatest strength maker. 56 STORK IS HEADED TOWARD HOLLAND AGAIN T>:Z/7KiAr/A:'5 «vat=-P4\3c;>^ tmnrMTii *y~ The Hague.—Holland Is again expecting an Deir to the throne, and ot course the people, who have Just heard the news, hope that it will be a boy. although such a result would cause the supplanting of the beloved little Princess Juliana. Queen Wilhelmina is in excellent general health and is seen olten riding in her motor car. lor she has become an enthusiastic automrbllist People have been remarking ot late on the wonderfully clear complexion of the queen Some time ago she adopted ft? practice, which comes from the West Indies, of taking lernor baths It is said to be a great invigorator ana a wonderful heip to the complexion NORWAY’S NEW ROAD Christiania-Bergen Rail Line Across Mountains Completed. Eastern and Western Parts of the Kingdom Have Easy Means of Communication—Event of Much Importance. Christiania. — The opening of the railway across the mountains from Christiania to Bergen recently by King Haakon was an event in the nis torv of this country of far wider iro- ; portance than any one not well ac quainted with Norway, geographically and topographically, would be able to appreciate. Norway is divided into three isolated parts by the Dovre mountain and by the broad and wild range of mountains that bear succes sively the names of Fyiefjeld and Langfjeidene. The overland route be- j tween Bergen and Christiania was. ] even more than the route to Trond hjem. a great hindrance to traffic pass ing as it does for a considerable dis tance over mountains of a height of 6,000 feet and more. Although Norway was united into one kingdom as early as $72 by King Harold Haarfager and has remained united ever since, the natural splitting up of the country into the western, northern and eastern districts has in- , evitabiy to some extent impaired the feeling of unity in the nation And the barriers which nature had raised between the districts have formed very serfous obstacles to personal co operation for the development of the economic resources of the country. The consequence has been that the progress has been considerably slow er than it might otherwise have beer.. Good roads were constructed in tfie principal overland routes in the be*vn ning of the last century, and <ney represented an Immense improvement on the ancient trails which h-.d been possible only on foot or oo horseback But a journey of several days in a carriage was expensive and entailed ' great loss of time and, it the winter time, severe hardships, in 1SS0 the railroad to Trondhjem was completed Thus the great barrier between the northern parts and the southeastern parts of the country were overcome I The highest point of this road does not He more than 4,000 feet above sea i level; but many people thought It could cot b.. kept open In the winter time. This fear proved groundless and the road turned out to be a very lucrative national investment, al though it has not as yet paid directly in the torm of dividends; it has done better than that by greatly accelerat ing the development of the Trondhjem district and of Xordland and Fin marken. In 1S72 investigations were com menced with the view of discovering the best line for a railway between Christiania and Bergen, and in 1S74 the storthing voted the first part of an eventual Bergen Christiania railway, the selection from Berg-'n to Voss But to the general public the contin uation seemed impossible and more like one of Asbjornsen's fairy tales than anything else, for the field ex plorations had more than confirmed the popular conception that the dif ficulties to be overcome were truly formidable The railway which has just been opened follows practically the line which the engineers traced in 1574 From Voss to Opset. a distance of about 50 kilometers (35 miles!, it rises with steep gradients from 339 to 5.100 feet. and. rising further to a max imum height of nearly S.000 feet, it passes altogv'iier a distance of more than 10J kilometers through high mountains, coming down to 4.S00 feet at Gjeilo And in these inhospitable regions it was found necessary to bore the Gn; ,-ehals tunnel, cot less than Chinese Adept Fan Makers Consul Pontius, at Swatow, Tells In teresting Story of Industry in Peng-Chow District. Washington.—Mr. Albert W. Pontius, the American consul at Swatow. sends an interesting report of how the Chi nese fans are made. Fan-making, be writes is o origin so ancient in south ern China that no one knows when it was started. Tradition has it that the first fans were mad« in the little vil lage 01 Peng-Chow. at Ampow. which is about three miles from Swatow. For hundreds of years only the women in the different villages through which the .naustry spread, were the fan makers. but so great is the demand Rctcatcher Issues a Deli London's New Official Offers to Cap ture One Thousand Rodents in Three Nights. London.—It teems that the grue some freemasonry which binds Eu ropean official executioners together causing them to intermarry and in herit the profession, is not without its parallel among ratcatchers. Hence John Jarvis, who has just been ap pointed official ratcatcher to the I.on don county council at a salary oi j $243.12 a year, is a ratcatcher by in heritance and instinct quite as much as he is by profession. Since 1803 each male member of his family has devoted his life to catching rats, and so it was with the greatest confidence that Jarvis issued a chal lenge to all the ratcatchers in the kingdom to catch more of the vermin : in a given time than any man living, provided that neither dogs nor ferrets were employed in the hunt Further more. he said that with the assistance of his uncle. Jfr. J. Dalton, he would | undertake to catch 1.000 rats in throe j nights. As Jarvis made these challenges he I fondled half a dozen tame white rats, while his seven-vear-old daughter at his side played with a couple of fer rets. “1 have no son to carry on the business." he said, "but Kit. there, and her younger sister both know pretty wel! all there is to know about catch ing rats. "The means I use for catching them alive is a family secret, known only to my people for the last four gener ations 1 won't tell you exactly what that secret is. but I don't mind letting you know that it acts very much in the same way as chloroform does on a human being. Over my back I fling a huge sack, connected with a trap door arrangement at my side. I wear noiseless boots and black clothes. “As I walk down the passages with a bull’s-eye lantern attached to my side the rats, scared by th e light, scamper past me As they run I can pick them up left or right hand and drop them into the trap-door. Gradu ally they work their way around to the sack on my back. My! How they fight! Sometimes when I fancy I have a hundred I find half of them are killed by the time I arrive home.” 5.211 yards long, besides a number of shorter tunnels. For IS years the engineers contin ued their exploration work, and mean while a notional determination was slowly forming that the task ol unit ing eastern and western Norway should be undertaken in spite of all obstacles. In 1594 the storthing de cided upon the construction of a rail way from Voss to Taugcvaud. and in 1S9S the continuation of the lies through Hallingdal to the junction point on the Christiania-Gjovik rail road. Roa. was decided As a preparation, transport roads had to be constructed and barracks for engineers and workmen built: 500. 000 kroner ($135,000) had to be spent on transport roads alone The Grave hals tunnel was constructed by a pri vete contracting firm: the rest of the work was done directly by the state The whole road was built exclusively by Norwegian engineers and work men The contractors on the big tun nel once made an experiment with Italian workmen, but they very scon proved so far inferior to the Norwe gians that they had to be sent home after a few weeks' trial The railroad, has a length of 492 kilometers (300 miles) and there are ITS tunnels, aggregating 36.SS2 meters (119.230 feet). The total cost amount ed to 54.000.000 kroner < S14.5SO.OOO). It has been necessary to put up wood en walls at many exposed points. There are three rotary snow plows of American system, these having proved far superior to other patents which have been tried. By their help and the wooden walls it Is believed that the traffic may be carried on as regu larly as on any other railway. now for these cheap fans, used as they are by the millions for advertising purposes, that nearly every man, wom an and child works all day and half the night at fan-making The -ndustry is almost confined to the Peng-Chow district, oecause here abounds a particular kind of bamboo especially suitable for the rigs and the handle of the fan. The manufacture of the fan is very simple. For the frame the split bam boo is repeatedly rived until each piece is sufiiciently slender and flexi ble. These thread-like pieces of bam boo are arranged in a row, attached to each otner by a thread passed cross wise througn the middle This thread is fastened to a semi-circular strip of bamboo giving the fan its shape. The ribs are then slightly heated and bent at the ends. The fan has now the pe culiar and characteristc shell-like shape at the top. Very flimsy silk gauze is then pasted on the face, and a kind of tissue-like paper on the back. After the handle is attached, the bor der of the fan is black varnished and the gauze is coated with a chalk-and water mixture. The handles are made of bamboo, various kinds of hard wood, bone ana ivory. The hand painting on the fans is cleverly done, in some in tances being works of art T.'he medium quality fan retails for 25 cents Mexi can (ten cents gold), better grades, one to tour dollars Mexican (40 cents to $1.60). The amount now exported yearly amounts to about $30,000. This fan trade of late has shown a decrease due to the importation of Japanese straw fans, which have met with a favorable demand. *___ tower Car Steps In Chicago. Chicago.—Chicago women have won their fight for lower car steps. Fifrv new cars for The City Railway Com pany. now being built in Philadelphia, will be constructed so that the plat forms will be at least one and one half inches lower than the present platforms. New Springs Cure All Ills Fountain In Town of St. Ives. !r. ■ Cornwall. Rivals That Sought by Ponce de Leon. London.—The folks In the quiet lit tle seaside town of St. Ives, In Corn wall, are planning great things for the future. They contend that they t will prove how- some of the miraculous ! cures of history were obtained by suf I ferers from physical ills. They have found a “radium spring.” which, they argue, is about as near that ^fountain of perpetual youth for which Ponce de Leon made certain researches as anything yet invented. By the same argument it Is Insist ed that any person suffering from any thing, from bad deb.s to chilblains, can take a swim in the spring and come forth ready to challenge the winner of the Jeffries-Johnson tight. St. Ives is iD the center of the ra dium mining district, and this spring, containing a large percentage of ratlio acr.it ity, was recently discovered in j the Trenwith mines. Norman White house, the noted chemist, analyzed the | water, and his report was confirmed by Sir Walter Ramsay. “I have found.” says the former, “that the springs exhibit radio-activity to an abnormal extent, even when compared with the waters of the most noted spas. In fact, the water of Trenwith is 26 times as active as that j of Harrowgate and about seven times I that of Bath." As a result of thfs sudden awaken ing the quiet residents of St. Ives con jure up visions of their town growing into a world center of health and longevity guaranties. FLUG TOBACCO IS CAT’S FARE Big Maltese Tomcat Rejects All Other Kinds of Food—Has No 111 Effects on Feline. Rising Sun. Md —For some time George Nesbitt of Woodlawn has been < missing piugs of tobacco that he kept lying acout the house. This remained a mystery until a few days ago. when, beneath the kitchen tabie, he discov ered a big Maltese tomcat that came to his home for shelter recently chew ing away on a five-cent plug with an occasional growl. Nesbitt caught the animal, which held the plug as if a mouse, and to see what effect the tobacco would have on the annual he confined it in a box and allowed it to finish its odd meal. The cat refused to partake of a saucer of milk placed within the box. but con tinued tc devour the tobacco to the last flake, after which it went to sleep, never even becoming ilL Nesbitt has tried the cat several times since with the new found dainty, which it never refuses, spurning ail other lood so long as it can eat to bacco. His Reason. Circus Manager.—“Why did 'he dog faced boy run away?" Side Show Proprietor.—"Hs must have heard me tell the new cook to prepare sausage for breakfast.” THE APPROVAL of the most EMINENT PHYSICIANS and its WORLDS VIDE ACCEPTANCE by the WELL-INFORMED, BECAUSE ITS COMPONENT PARTS ARE KNOWN TO BE MOST WHOLESOME AND TRULY BENEFICIAL IN EF FECT, HAVE GIVEN TO Syrup of Tigs ELIXIR OF SENNA THE FIRST POSITION AMONG FAMILY LAXATIVES AND HAVE LED TO ITS GENERAL USAGE WITH THE MOST UNIVERSAL SATISFACTION. TO GETITS BENEFICIAL EFFECTS, AL VYAKS BUT THE GENUINE Manufactured by the CALIFORNIA RG 5Y3UP CO. j FDR SALE BY ALL LEAPING T>RUGGJ STS I One she only; Recu lap price 50 $ per bottle C3SYD3crsz:rv.igjagtiig;,srv-.^-L'-r-r;—ty : . A Pause in Devotions. "Mabel!" called her father, outside her bedroom door. There was no an swer. so he called again. Still no re ply. He pushed open the door, which was no: complete ly shut, and reach ing for the button, turned on the lights. Then he saw Mabel. She was kneel ing at the side of her bed in her night gown. in the attitude of prayer—the attitude, that is. as to kneeling. But she had raised her head at the inter ruption and paused in her devotions to blaze at him with a face flushed with impatience: "Gee whiz, daddy! Can't a woman say her prayers?” Then she bowed her head again j piously, and daddy, properly rebuked. ! slipped noiselessly away. Opera the Great Leveler. At one of the Wagner operas a few days ago a woman nudged her friend and said: "Who is that distinguished man bowirg to you over there?” Her friend looked in the direction desig nated and smiled in a return greeting. "That's my butcher." she said. "I see him here Quite often. When 1 go mar keting in the morning we always dis cuss the opera. He's a German, you know, and really knows a lot about other things besides cutting meat.’'— i New York Sun. How’s This? W? ofT^r One Hundred Dollars Reward for ary caf» of c'atarrh that cannot be rural by Hail s Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY A CO,. Toledo O. Wp. the undersigned, have known F J. Cheiny for the last years. and believe him perfectly hon orable in all busmens transactions and financially able to carry out any obii£ratk»ns made by his firm. Walding. Kin van * Marvin. Wholesale Druggists. Toledo O HaTs Catarrh Cure is taken In ternary, acting directly upon the b.ood 3Bd mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. I'rice 75 cents par , bottie. <*>:d by all Druggists. lajtf nan's Family Pills for constipation. Ineligible. So you wouldn't let Bombazine Bill sit on the jury that tried the horse thief?f’ v "No,” answered Three Fingered Sam. "we do things fair and square in Crimson Gulch. Bill's a good man, but the fact that he runs the only undertakin' business in the county couldn't help prejudicin' him some agin the defendant." CUT THfS OUT And mail to the A. H. Lewis Medicine Co., St. Louis. Mo., and thev will send yon free a 10 day treatment of NATURE S REME DY (NR tabl“tsl Guaranteed for Rheu matism. Constipation. Sick Headache. Liv er, Kidney and Blood Diseases. Sold be all Druggists. Better than Pills for Liver llis. It's free to you. Write today. — Natural Supposition. “I am goiEg to burn coal here after." "Hereafter? I thought Old Nick would attend to the heat problem lor you tuen." Crosses are of no use to us. but in as much as we yield ourselves up to them and forget ourselves—Fenelon J Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief-Permanent Cure CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS c;«x fail. Purely 'equ able—set «urdy but gently on the Sver. Slop dinnet euro iadi CARTERS 3ITTLG IlVER B PILLS. Srfioa— improve the complexion — brigr.te* e eyes. Small Pill, Small Dote, Small Price GENUINE must bear swreture : ' ' KOW- KURE is rot a food ’—it is a medicine, and the only medicine in the world for cows onlv, Made for the cow and, as its name indicates, a cow cure. Barrenness, retained after birth, abortion, scours, caked udder, and all similar affections positively and quickly cured. No one who keeps cows, whether many or few,can afford to be without KOW KUKE. It is made especially to keep cows healthy. Our book “Cow Money” sent FREE. Ask yonr h>eal dealer fur KoW KLT.E or s. ud to the manufacturers. DAIRY ASSOCIATION CO. Lyndonville. Vt ■ he irs Turlock Irrigation Districtd m of California »dver The UNO of SUNSHINE and OFP.j! .quick TL’NITIES. Healthful Climate. A-l luiui„ ,,,. ABUNDANT WATER at low ratde °> Peaches. Apricots, Figs. Olives, Sw • d felt Potatoes. Alfalfa and Dairying pa v 1,. a na ter than $100.00 per acre yearly. Wri a J for illustrated booklet. ' ee na DEPT. B. TURLOCK B0AR0 OF TRADE. Turlock. 4ass of nATEilTC WRr.o»R.roiemnn,yjav®.for HHIpMI \in<iMi.i'.p. l-juk^ir-e question. ■ ^ ■ VP ent reiereuctti. .. W. N. U.. OMAHA, NO. ’a to**" - he expounded Common Sense Leads the most intelligent people tc> nse only medi cines of known composition. Therefore it is (hat Dr. Pierce's medicines, thf makers of which print every ingredient entering into them upon the bottle wrappers and attest its correctness under oath, are daily growing in favor. No Secrets. No Dbcbitjon. The composition of Dr. Pierce’s medi cines is open to everybody, Dr. Pierce being desirous of having the search light of investigation turned fully upon bis formulae, being confident that the be a ervj ■ these medicines is knomi the more R)C(>0 merits be recognized. Iit-e vuc u;uciai/ jours at midday. oysters at the for half an hour of the place where are at their best, of these, he walks ner half an hour, and finds ce where stewed cheese can be on. By that time it is three and he walks heme and be ork again, having had tis exer id his lunch and his digestive il. Also he has seen a bit of 1. which is useful to a delineator The Itinerary lunch may be Being wholly made of the active medicinal ji forest roots, by exact processes original with of a drop of alcohol, triple-refined and chetr ' stead in extracting and preserving the cr employed, these medicines are entirely fre by creating an appetite for either alcoholic01" Examine the formula on their bottlgune Dr. Pierce, and you will find that his “ Tht blood-parifier, stomach tonic and 0j not recommended to cure consumpr'\ ' , do that) yet dyes cure all those cr “tar>'_ °‘ stomach, torpid liver and brooch ^ which, if neglected or badly tn each. Read sumption. .rcl rooms are Take the “Golden Medi<' incorporators appoint you if only you give F- Stones, and It won’t do supernatural severe in its use for a r ingredients of which IS*. the Greek who Is endorsement of scee of death for killing non-professional Edward Lowry of South Don’t atxrebruary 19. 1909. has o> reversal from the supreme World’s' ' The case was reversed and __.anded by an opinion written by -iie* Justice Reese. The court did not pass on the weight f the evidence as to the defendant’s ..init or innocence, but reversed the _ judgment of the lower court on ac ; count cf error In permitting the coun 113 ] tj- attorney to offer in testimony a I and j written statement .-igned by a witness ' called by the elate. .^uuiuieuueu 10 a man oi inquiring mind and sedentary habit.—London Chronicle. A Peculiar Accident. A curious and serious accident oc curred at Liverpool, England, in con nection with work In the graving dock on the Canard liner Mauretania. A gang or men were engaged In bringing to the quay-side a steel plate ot the vessel's hull. Just as the operation was m progress the tidal chain snapped. This set all the ropes at taching the ships to the quay in a state ot dangerous commotion. Five of the laborers on the quay were knocked down. One, named Wilson, was struck by a rope with such force that he turned a somersault, and, fall ing on his head, was picked up dead. The other lour men were removed to a hospital. Appropriate. “Jobbing is so foolish over that pet dog of his He told me he was going to have a tree for it.” “Then 1 hope he selected a tree with plenty of hark"