Lav City NorOmrcsten J W BTILBCS ICtf CITY I I : 1 *• •• tirfc -h»l ««t at; i* br tsrcs-porard rfc*«» «■*» «f kwf tear *>* (MR. bat •torsa cat tbr* br purchased* It tm pwrHi tos t# lrW*nj* a Irt '«■ r«d r-tl _r**n* trr •-boot to bad • .* cai; d.frr>-Bl - eraart a leaK rtow-hes ran bate to»r> ad 'Of bjif rx» iret brrr *ftrr j* *aay tr- 'in. idto* adrirabl* toy tor mote :«aS j. ixa to boy a pis'* 0*0 Owe tiosi-l lionaaid perron* la W Tori t*r. aitrdoa!'*** litiac '<•> K*r. »«rh tar tbr uodrr *»h»T KrtrMrra »itr, OtOT- of *TM..W I* hr httilort Ittif. t n> ^Ii» tuorr r* . • -i'»f alo** tb- cJbio »L} • ttoa («**' r.«tiac :'«* w:s'-« m a k:-> art dor* But imply U' a jdefarr of a to-*' *r*k ran aatia *y a fet*s.ry Man War* May to la a Lick atatr ot d» itcaatlM. to: a octrki tkat .*«* carnal boat* for -rat* port afioe -toM to very t^tadatf Am rmaid rcatmiiorvy aa ooaaroa c^t m* Into to ►>«p toacro bU:.k-t» ■ ka* tor*. itt*-c,jd . V d* tor* J*r * to aa oirna 1. j< klly ako to«*-r ■ at to braaoty atoad tnakio* a to-:* at M It la y- d» t --d try a • orr >i»i 4-1.1 'tot kfe>« ail tto ««iai a r*litir'rd i of m*a ami ot.aoa a ill to out to fr-r*#- >M *'art • " Wr ilu.li (toy would yr*-f« r tkat tto r.aaa *h»T«- a.r» ^- ruj:i*d »u(*ir» *"»i tto tipapy ta tLai «i.- cirl* akra ’to.. *• •uarrvd and *nrt r» nag tto Lrllo* uf tto wa* nt -.Mf a>*a of Ala>ka Of.*- tto la*rot Urft rstimat'-s putt tLr trot* talar o( tto »«al a kwh may to- ciicr l M tto Hrkna; riwr din rut ak-:. at f ar toto TLa! daarS* r».* lL~ c»4d «dt.'-t t'oka • m frt«-ni«*Ei *oo*.n'sr». *u taakr a c-«»l akoa itr Of!,' utl r< porta arr 'otto- *fl«1 tkat dttriuy th ttrot total >rar towdlif lb* rr. nt tMorkaa «* *«ja' all *-i;ru*rt • a** tor* mi and (rotta'p* *u -..aid •a* (to fwrtdb- drbf Tto y«oag rrptih I* kbootd kavr full rr.-d:' for r*rrl '*-a* Manay-vpat tka* tar. and tL« iroyk of tto t'ltifrd ail! >;ii fMtkUr oansl. ait*. Itorr at. arr 'trfc’ay to rnb- (to olaad a fc -con oaf and ■'knmri I* V» York state to add rual auaia* '•* lb*- ia«f great tdwtris arWrk ftourtsfc there* \ taraa-r ta dig d>( a «HI a*-«r \-burn at-ark a d< poatt ahsrb t» *.«i*wd •« V a risk *e*a *d anthracite V« Y< there Is at Past as g<»jd a |ta»p <* lor e«ai as lor g 4d Peopte sPi n; b'sgs at present ton the ob durate young Juryman that any po -' al as; ira us be might have en ter*:lh-rl were .' eui.r-d It was to be crpeepd that Walter would consider tnu an > rv»y but all Riverton watched wrh *i-. b cur!oi-i:y to see what Edith would do. Jerry proceeded immediate ly to justify himself "1 . . t do otherwise. Edith." he said, manfully “I strained every point I o - I tried my best to find a flaw :n the evidence There was none. I could tut perjure m> self " “jerry U tiers", flashed the girl, "it was my broth, r you wanted to con vict!" "Mont. Edith!" he pieaded with a harassed look "I tried iny best to for I-A " ' sZAS-jCXTA • > get ijiit I had to give an un biased opinion " Jerry'" she exclaimed, wildly, dou l ever dare speak to me again. 1 ha’-- v«u' We are rot only strangers t« no-fort !i, but enemies." Edith.* he said, sadly, "nothing could make me your enemy." As time went on. W alter had a new trial and was acquitted His vindic tireaeas toward Jv*ry. however, did not diminish and he did his best to injure bis former friend. Still there were men who respected Jerry for his action. |tut neither tb*- animosity of Waiter and bis coterie, nor the appro bation of law ablders mattered much to Jerry. All he wanted or cared for was Ed : h and Edith's love. Hut she • at him publicly and with disdainful demeanor One day la early autumn, when base tali enthusiasm waxed high, when crowd: gathered and waited and stam peded in front of toe places where the scorws were shown, a crucial game was played at Kiverton The home team, the Etaiwart*. were to play against the Eiuns This was to be the game of games, lor if the Stal warts won It meant the pennant. All tilverton turned out to witness the gaxce and shouted for the Stalwarts A gay young crowd was on the grand stand behind the plate. Among them w-.-* Wal’er and Edith To their right, alone, was Jerry. 'Grand, gloomy and peculiar, the secretary sat alone.'" quoted Walter with a sneer and a glance at Jerry. Edith looked, but she did not sneer. She found herself looking surrepti tiously and longingly at the lean-faced, honest-eyed man who had squared his shoulders at society's disapprobation. There seemed to be some delay in the starting of the game. 'The umpire's sick, and they're look ing up another.” rec.vted Waiter after a tour of investigation. in a few minutes the manager for •be Stalwarts approached Jerry, who had played two seasons ago with the Stalwarts and was considered expert authority in all matters {icriaining to the popular game. After a short con ference Jerry left the stand and went down to the ground. “Oh. Jerry's going to umpire!" ex claimed some one sitting near Edith, whose interest in the game was now intensified. "The manager of the Lions won't consent.” said Walter, “to have an ex nieniber of the opposing team act as umpire." But the manager of the Lions knew of Jerry's proficiency in the game. He had beard also of his stancaness in the I>*deen case He took Jerry’s measure at a giance and announced that be was perfectly satisfied vitli the choice. It was a close game, and people were ’.ireathloss in their inttnsiiv and crazy in their cheering. At last came an aw ful moment. It was the last Inning, avi to that point the game was a tie. Then came a play that called for a dose decision It was so close that the spectators, and even some of the play ers. could not determine whether or not the man was "out.” Jerry de«-ided for the Lions. The ■■stalwarts were manly and abided stoic ally by the umpire's decision, but hisses, jeers and groans came from the bleachers and from that part of the grand stand where Walter and his friends sat. Jerry's decision in the Ledeen trial had made him unpopular only with a certain class, but now he felt that every one was against him. He knew he was down and out for evermore In itiverton. Angry groups were gathering here and there on the way out of the grounds. "You'd better not go down the street just now. Winters,' sutd the manager of one of the teams. "Y'ou know what era fools a bast-ball mob is made up of." Jerry's jaw came forward and he said decisively that be would go now. He went. There were mutterings as he passed out of the gate and walked down the street He walked alone until he was a block lrom the grounds. Then some one stepped up behind him—a girl—a every fair, tremulous girl, who said, timidly and softly: "Jerry!" "Edith!" "I am going with you. Jerry. If you will iet me. I've shut my eyes and my heart all this time, and something has opened them. I don't know enough about brseball to judge professionally of your decision, but a baseball friend sat right behind me, and when every one was mad and yelling at you this man said: 'By -! There is the man Diogenes was looking for! There's nothing so Hire nowadays as an honest man!' I wanted to hug him. but I’ll hug you instead, Jerry—if you will—U you will care." He turned to her with a wonderful light In bis eyes. "Edith, you are all I do care for!” Odorless Garbage Wagons. Boston, in the interests of health and economy, is being provided with odorless garbage wagons. One ol these wagons is already in use. It consists of a steel frame on four wheels, containing three cylindrical tanks which rest upon trunnions. In form the tanks are somewhat like milk cans, greatly enlarged, each tank having a capacity of one ton of gar bage. To the lid of each is attached a lever, which, in turn, is connected by a chain with a hinged portion of the footboard, resembling a treadle, upon which the men stand to empty their palls. As the attendant steps upon the treadle, his weight raises the cover, and when he steps off after emptying his load the released lever pulls the lid down again. The load being divided Into three parts, only one-third is eiposed at a time, and then only momentarily. Impressing the Public. "A statesman never looks really im pressive." said the student of human nature, "unless he has a distinctive beard or mustache or a bald head.” 1 suppose.” replied the suffragette contemptuously, "that you are trying to think up another silly reason why women should not go Into politics." The Real Home of Liberty "Yes aid the Knglishinan. who has 1 neeo eome years a resident of the .".America can fairly claim to be the freeest country on earth I used to thick Kngland was. I believed that In spite of your boasted republic v a' bast 20 different names, and even to day. in New York, at any rate, it is indifferently referred to as the Hud son and the North river. While Henry Hudson is universally * acclaimed as the discoverer of the no J ble river which bears his name, it is well known that nearly a century be fore Hudson’s successful exploitation, John da Verrazano, a Florentine, en tered the mouth of the Hudson and re ported that he had passed up the river about a league in a boat, not ven turing to sail his vessel, the Dauphine, up a river with which he was unfa miliar. A sudden squall Impelled him to re turn to his ship. Verrazano called the Hudson “the river of steep of hills.” This was in 1524. Some years later Verrazano's brother made a map of the region, and he named the mouth of the Hudson “San Germano.” In 1525 a Spaniard named Gomez, who came to America on an exploring trip, made a chart upon which he des ignated the Hudson as “San Antonio." When, some 80 years later, Henry Hudson, in his efforts to reach the East Indian possessions of the Dutch East India Company by a northwest route, accidentally ran into the llud : son. he promptly dubbed it the “Man hattes,” from the name of the Indians who dwelt at Its mouth. Hudson sailed slowly up the river as far as Albany, and his experiences with the Indians and his observations ol the surrounding country were so gratifying that he returned home with glowing reports of the new-found coun try. WILL WED ENGLISH COUNT — Mis Margaretta Drexei. Latest Ameri can Heiress Who Will Acquire a Foreign Title. Baltimore. Md.—Word has been re ; eeived in this city by cable that Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Drexei, who are in London, had announced the engage nient of their daughter. Miss Margar- r etta Armstrong Drexel to Guy Mon tague George Finch-Hatton. viscount Maidstone, and heir to the earldom of | Winihelsea and Nottingham. Appropriate Text. The large choir had attempted an elaborate anthem that morning, an an them with high flights for the so | pranos, thunderous roarings for the bassos and both vocal and physical ac robatics for the tenors, while the con traltos squawked along at a steady pace, each one apparently taking her choice of time and key. Finally ail ■ parts got together on the chorus, though the majority of the partici pants had started with a few seconds' handicap. Then it was clear sailing; j I on, up. came the jangle of sounds, to a terrific finale, ending with a fortis simo crash. In the stillness that followed the ! pastor came forward deliberately to ' the desk, where the Bible lay open to i the morning's text. Sweeping an ab stracted look above the hats of the congregation, he read in distinct and earnest tones; “And, after the uproar had ceased—’’ Truthful, but Vague. Sheriff—Is it true that a crowd has Just been dispersing and that there was a wholesale lynching bee out here? Truthful James—Wall, there's b en a ;ew fellers hanging about hyer. Follow this atfvlco. Quaker Oats is the best of all foods: it is also the cheapest. When suah men as Prof. Fisher of Yale Vnlrorsity and Sir James Crichton Browne, I.L.D.. F.R.S. of I.ondon spend th« best part of their lives in studying the groat question of the nourishing and strengthening qualities of differ ent foods, it is certain that their ad vice is absolutely safe to follow. Professor Fisher found in his ex periments for testing the strength and endurance of athletes that the meat eaters were exhausted long Indore the men who were fed on such food as Quaker Oats. The powers of endur ance of the non-meat eaters were about eight times those of the meat eaters. Sir James Crichton Browne says— cat more oatmeal, eat plenty of it and eat it frequently. 5$ COULDN’T SPEAK. They never speak ;\s they pass by. Tiny both keep mum; X-* r<*» <1 to ask the reason why— They're deaf and dumb. A Big Shortage in Seeds. From almost all sections comes the re C"rt of frightful shortages in s*-t-ti corns; also in some varieties of seed barley, ! oats, rye, wheat, lias, clovers and the early t.irieties of potatoes. Tliis is particularly noticeable in the ; great corn and oat and potato growing states. Thus: The great states of Nebraska and , Iowa arc suffering from a dearth of seed corn as never before. The wide-awake farmers in these and Other states are placing their offiers eariv for above seeds in order to be on the safe side, and we can but urge farmers to write at once to the John A. Salzer Seed C'o.. Box lv_\ Lit Crosse. Wis., for their farm seed and com catalogue. The magnitude of the business of this long established firm can be somewhat estimated when one knows that in ordi nary years they sell: KUMo bushels of elegant seed com. lAU.OOO bushels of seed potatoes. lO' -.Wt bushels of s« ed oats. Sb.idO bushels of seed wheat. 1W.000 bushels of pure clover and timo thy seeds, together with an endless amount of other farm seeds and vege table seeds, such as onions, cabbages. > .tr rots. pi as, beans, lettuce, radishes, toma toes. etc. There is one thing about the Salzer firm —they never disappoint. They always fill your order on account of the enormous stocks they carry. Send them s cents for a package of their gi> at *wn prize Corn and Catalogue. Ad dress. John A. Salzer Seed Co., Box Ba Crosse, Wis. His Soie Resting Place. A precise Boston teacher spent a quarter of an hour in impressing upon her class the right pronunciation of the word vase. Next day, hoping to reap the fruits of her labor, she asked: "Now, John nie, tell me! What do you see on the mantlepiece at home?" And Johnnie piped forth. "Father's feet, ma'am."—Harper's Bazar. Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain Mercury , ;w mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely deranee the whole system when entenna: it xhromth the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescrip tions from reputable physicians, as the clauuu:.' they will do 13 ten fold to the cood you can possibly de rive from them. Hull's Catarrh Cure. manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Ox. Toledo. O.. contains no mer cury. and is taken 1 ternally. arTlnc directly upon the Mood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buytnsr Hall's Catarrh t'ure be sure you get the Pennine It 13 taken internally and mr.de in Toledo Ohio, by F. J. Cheney A t'n. Testimonials free. Sold by Druse ists. Price. 73c. per bottle. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. The difference between slender and skinny women is a matter ot dollars rather than sense. riI.K« ITRED IN 6 TO 1 « HAYS. PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed t«» cure arv cns*» «d Itching. Blind. B**>» dine or I*r .trading ihie> m 6 to U days or money refunded. iOc It’s difficult to convince a woman that other women are as good as they want her to think they are. PERRY DAVIS* r.AINKlT.1 ER when thoroughly rubbed .n tv1i»*y»*n bin.:ns and spnms in y iut- or mu&cl.'s fivrc any cause. All druKkists, 2»,o5. al)c sin s. Large butties the cheapest Father Time was probably nursed In the lapse of ages. WOMEN 0: MIDDLE AGE Need Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Brookfield. years ace I was unable to do any kind of work ;rnd nnlT welched US rounds. My «ouMe dates TOOK TO T Hi Time that women may expect nature to bring on them the Change of l ife I got a bottle of T.vdia K- Finkham's Vegetable Com pound and it nt-tvie me feeJ much U tter, and I have contin ued its use. I am wry grateful to you f or the good health i am now enjoying.”—-Mrs. Loc^ioxost, 4U S. Xivingstua Stuxu Brookfield, Mo. The Change of Life is the most criti cal period of a woman’s existent*. and neglect of health at this time invites disease and pain. Women everywhere should terra m ber that there" is no other remedy known to medicine that will so suc cessfully carry women throach this trying period as Lydia K. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made frvm na tive roots and herbs. For SO years it h3S been curing wo men from the worst forms of female ills—inflammation, ulceration, dis placements, fibroid tumors, irregulari ties, periodic pains, backacLe, and nervous prostration. If yon would fike special advice about your case write a confiden tial letter to Mrs. Piukbam. at Lynn. Mass. Her advice is free, and always helpful. The Army of Constipation I* Growing Smaller Every Day. CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are responsible—they c only gi»e relie!—j they permanently^ core Cobs try*-. ban. M3-. lions use them for Bilioes ■ets. In4if-itim. Sick Headache, Sallow Ska. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE SMALL PRICE GENUINE must bear signature: Cured Right at Home br ELECTROPOPES. Nrw Tvt*nr?t. Galvanic insole*—Lcrper and ias;je shoes. Ino^onte ra:.-re bcxlr. "Fw wire*.” Positive cure for Rbetnnat s-a. Backache. K:daey and Liver WTpUiats. only |l-30. Your tnoaer returned ii cot M’JsLctm Guarantee signed w-.rk each sale. F>rtirpo.i« nuiUMf. 11 not a? your Dt^kSTs, scad a Jl.OC. Scste whether for man or wrc&aa. WESTERN ELECTRO CODE CO. SB Los Angeles St. Las Angeles. CsL BadBLOOD “Before I began nsing Cascarets I h.-d a bad complexion, pimples on my face, and my food was not digested as it should have been. Now I am entirely well, and the pimples have ell disappeared from n: v face. I can truthfully say that Cascarets are just as advertised; I have taken only two boxes of them.” Clarence R. Griffin, Sheridan. lad. Peasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken.Weaker, or Gripe. 10c. L*5c. 50c. Never sold ta bulk. The p*r.i* iac tablet stamped CCC Guaranteed tr. cure or your money back. S2? Hay’s Hair-Health Never Fails to Restore Grey Hair to It* Natural Color and Beauty. Stop*- i * i.» cm. and positively removes Dandruff. Is not » Dye. Refuse all substitutes. $-.o' -i - Houles by Mail or at Druggist;- CDC IT Send ioc for large sample Bottle ■ ■■■»■» Philo Hay Spec. Co., Newark. N. J.. U. S a. W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 13-1910. f> I ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT !h 1 ANegetable Preparation for As - j£l3 similat ing Hie Feed and Regula - £:J| ring the Stomachs and Bowels of . .... i " ““ iij|l Promotes DtficsHon.CheerFuI ?! ness and Rost Contains neither lt> Opium .Morphine nor Mineral Not Narc otic Afcr^ •roi-i »SA.'a,£ifrrtM* v s7?s~.. - \ >i /iWMk&b • j "* JmSmJ- i 5- ft&rrmimt - \ V Sit,* t r> Hirm SrtJ - I . a~s*js.9~- J Hr*&rcrrr'» /Tift fir • A perfect Remedy forConstipa >U tion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions Fevcrish ness and LOSS OF SLEET — Fac Simile Signature of The Centaur Cokraw. Si NEW YORK. |L NgGuaranteed under the Foodanj Exact Copy of Wrapper. CUSTOM For Infants and Children. | The Kind You Have Always Bought Thirty Years GASTORIA VHI QCKTtbK MMMTr, WlUMOim