loap City Noriiwtsteri cccp cmr I I I KEMAtiu FOR IRE BUSY MM HCWI EPITOME THAT CAN SOON CE COMPASSED MANY EVENTS ARE MENTIONED Hi»« and Fwp Inte —•*:t Cc . <—t Inta Tm and f oar LIm Pira-ra^-4 SxiaH Kmw. U» m»!t ap I«»JH Asjt.'.tu l&W.^ JT to Aattnt. «. . ■— ; n -A i » m:!r aai arrived in V«u. He was ewt at Ikt rtatjoa by Geom B. Kites. »«rfUri of ti« embassy. Ti* Ur lasatfer *.I1 be received by tbe em Jeroc a a day or two Tbe aewturextal piicrtmape of Cob Theodore RooseveA abd fc s Wile oa ▼tkt A bad bee* tie atraiioa of tte roogde to retrace by easy itapt tkrir kaciBxta trip from Speitia to rearn, ended abruptly at Genoa. Ss.trtbaA. twenty-loor boors ahead «t tbe orbecole that Lad been planned Tbr rhttr- n {dams was made la or der to itsd tbe c<«astaat]y :t< r«ased d» mmWLratium* Colonel Ro»#exeIt and bis *ife were »a. ajtltr.: a ••ag the Itud Tbe Spar b cabinet figolcM to nb»K of IVn and Enador tele grams ttpo tg those em.mm.-nts to •*V a ecmciLaAocy attitude toward twi ocher. Faertces battalions of Turkish troops at Omsff.aarinople have been ordered to Xortt AKai v where a re '••t bas brobs oat. Tbe rncMe is attributed to resentment aea ast tbe new taxes imposed and is cansine tbe pirnoi l* arri asntty Tbe Frtwl pnettnss: pt« com fort oat of tbe Roosevelt incident at -be Ttfkts Mr. RnoseveA win a«< Gifford J*aeeba» at Genoa oc April 11 “Af ter owr to’emew I sha'i bate nerthtac to say." n d Mr hurboL “and I thai. W turya u«d If Ptncbot bas ” Roose * eR said fee bad not beard from Mr. I*»rtot oinee at fend bee* in Africa. »bs be reretved a t< It cram from Mr Ptnrfeot at roprabans uaoaac t-t bas cantina vtstt to Gce*ia General. Italians base bestowed tbe title of peace apectV on Mr. Boaeteft A new anash on tbe rules of the bonne Is a prospt—t of tbe near fu ture Frank Skmta. a mission work s-, was ebot dead by one of bis Iff dot at J*r*t*bars. Pa. Tbe knri of tbe Mbcrtaa exile sys lem bas bee* mesotd by a declara tion ef tbe czar. E3pfet me* mere lulled by an explo sion of dynamite in a Texas railroad i-wdrsrtian ramp It Is Kke'y that tbere wfH be a eoo rr»-si-wwal .st-et-- jrunon Into the $m. M» nnb-treaanry shortage at St In bnnor of tfe' late Senator M bo o*. erturaing ^Tfce coort of toast re Had* ifee B.-gro iwldtc rt ««n gatltj la the Bruvu railroad* show commodity rate* • landslide la Mil sac t at the recreancy of doe to tbe seductions Okie districts hare r wage scale b^ui republicans endorsed Toft ud Senator Beveridge and ignored the PjTneAklrict tart? law. Th» republicans were victorious tu the nauciFtl election at Kansas City. Mo, electing a mayor, ten out of six teen members of the lower house of the council, and mine out of sixteen members of the upper body It was nearly a neck and neck race between the wets -.M drys in Ne braska towns A special grand Jury brought In an indictment against the Imperial Win dow Glass company. A joint resolution to provide for an international federation to bring ulti mate world peace and the settlement at difficulties between nations Lv an international court was introduced in the Missouri bouse by Mr. Bartholdi of Missouri The body of Justice Brewer was takes to Leavenworth. Has. lor bu nal. In an effort to bring about more uni form action, and support of his con servation bills in congress, the presi dent gave a “conservation dinner" at the white bouse. Nebraska towns, by the late elec tion. are "wet” or "dry" to about the same extent as heretofore. The Vienna newspapers are publish ing enrthy details of the Vatican in c.e- nt. but they make few comments. The situation between Peru and K uad r is becoming more and more critical. The Panama Canal company will have to pay the expense of its own fartifh ation This appears to be the opinion of the vanguard of the army experts. Nine hrtnd-ed coal m nes in Illinois closed d~wu until the wage question is settled The late £-e loss in Omaha will fig ure nearly a mi lior. dollars. The F- * .~h chamber of deputes voted to lay down two battleships in the pr« sent year, designed to equal the latest type added to the navies of Great vtrttain and Germany. Ttates for terms of federal court in Nebraska Lave beer, changed by con gressional enactment. The supreme court at Washington ded the Nebm-ka elevator swith law to be unconst tat local Mrs Com lia Woo!man of Helena. Mont, was fined $17^1 in tee I'nited Sta'es court at Trenton. N J, for failure to declare certain clothing wbirn she had brought with her from a trip abroad Havelock. 1-incoin‘s ‘ wet" suburb, went “dry" at tue late election. Two hundred drivers of taxicabs s-dd -nlv went on strike in Chicago. The strike was called Just before theater time and as a result many of the vehicle companies were in a quandry Washington. Senator Brown introduced an am* ad to ti.*- rivers and harbors bill cnlliog lor an appropriation of $75.<*“0 to be csed between Omaha and the ttioj-h of tie Platte on the Missouri river. If the foreign commerce of the fried States of the last four months of th* fiscal year are as large in pro porrion as during the first eight months it will lie a record year, ac cord.ne to figures prepared by govern ment expert in imports the year's record thus far exceeds that of any previous year, although the exports fo* the eight months are slightly loss than in the closing months of lfiOS. the high record year for exports Two American negroes on March ZC. last. were assaulted and wounded t.y Tie. ommardant at Parzos. Guatte mala. and liter the-y were thrown into prison and their friends refused per il -sion to dress their wounds The I'ri'-d States minister at Guatemala city, who reported the matter to the state department, has been instructed to jr.- st upon prompt and adequate redress. It will l entirely practicalile to provide adequate defenses for the Panama rasa! at comparatively mod erate cost Ti.ls is the conclusion of the Panama fortification board, some na« rr.'—rs of which have just returned from Panama. Tentative plans had been prepared for the probable amounts, and numbers of troops re quired for such defenses. The military court of inquiry which dur nc the last year has been investi ng nr the shooting up of Brownsville. T« x . finds that the evidence clearly sustain* the charge that the shooting was done by the Twenty-fifth infantry, colored The court is also of the opin ion that if the offi«-ers of the reeiment fcp.d performed their duties immedi *'< ‘ prior to the shooting the affray could cot have occurred. Personal. Charge is taade that rotten meat Is fed to o'd so diets at the state home at Craig Island. Nebraska. A mu-teen-year-old boy was killed in a peace fcght at Passaic. X. J. President Taft is declared to be ready to declare war on insurgents. Too noisy a demonstration spoiled the honeymoon trip of Mr. and Mrs. Rooserelt in Italy. A San Francisco burglar made a deathbed confession exonerating al leged innocent men. Speaker Cannon's automobile is to be cared for by the government. Col William F Cody (“Buffalo Bill”*, declared in New York that a dispairh from Cody. Wyo.. saying he had denied the reported reconciliation between himself and Mrs. Cody was without foundation. Congressman Martin says there is a big scandal in the disposition of Phil ippines friar lands. Mr Roosevelt. It was stated on ex cellent authority, has not the least intention of repudiating Taft. Bishop McIntyre and Archbishop Ireland bitterly arraigned each other Milwaukee elected a social democrat may or by a majority of 8.000. Twice the guest of the King. Theo dore Roosevelt, was for a time the prominent figure of Rome. State Senator Conger of New York tendered his resignation. J J. 1IU1. the railroad magnate, had an audience with President Taft. Mrs. \V J. Bryan baa hurried back from foreign lands to be present when the stork descends upon the home of her son. W. J, Jr. Tne expedition endeavoring tr climb Mt. McKinley, are aaid to be making good headway. IT IS It PRICE FIXER COLO STORAGE MAKES MONEY FOR THE SPECULATORS. TESTIHONY10 THIS EFFECT It Is Given Before the Committee Appointed to Investigate the Cost of High Living. Washington. — Formal testimony was given before the senate commit j tee investigating the high cost of liv ing that cold storage is the great equaliser of prices, while, at the same time, au informal declaration was made that cold storage is an im portant and controlling factor in pro ducing high prices. Pierre P. Garin, prosecutor of Hud son county. New Jersey, who con ferred at the capital ruth Representa tive Kinkaid of New Jersey and Sen ator Lodge in regard to pending leg islation to regulate cold storage, at tacked the cold storage system and praised the work of the investigating committee. John A. Kunkel of New York said that if it were not for the cold stor age method of keeping eggs they would sell as low as 2 and 9 cents a doxen during certain seasons and as high as 75 cents and $1 in other sea sons of the year. He told the committee many inter esting things about eggs. He said New York people demanded an egg with a white shell, while Boston used the yellow egg shell. He said that the latter was bertter than the white shell egg, in that it will keep longer. "The egg." he added, "is a foot ball from the time it leaves the hen until , it reaches the table.” John J. Walton of New York in op rosing the bill to prohibit the keep ing of food-stuffs in cold storage for a longer period than one year, said that limitation would be all right for eggs, because they had to be thrown away, anyhow, after they were nine months old. That was not true of butter, said the witness. He mentioned an instance of but ter which had c^me from the farm of Oliver P. Morton of New York, that had been kept in cold storage for three years without depreciation in quality. Mr. Walton said the Elgin loard was not recognized in New York and that the so-called butter trust was a myth. The makers of oleomargarine were charged by Mr. Walton with being partly responsible for the high prices. He declared they bought but ter to color their product and that their purpose was to keep butter higher to make a better market for their cheaper product. The witness said prospects for lower prices in the near future were slight. A revolt by New York last Febru ary against the 45-eent butter was given as a reason for the sudden drop of 6 cents in one day. Mr. Walton said the people woke up and quit us ing butter and that the sale fell off 30 per cent. New York.—Determined women marched through the east side and other sections of the city, where the kosher meat strike is on. to prevent the opening of the retail butcher shops closed Tuesday as a protest against the high meat prices. More than 100.000 families, it is figured, have put a ban on meat. DESECRATING AMERICAN FLAG. Women. Among Others, for Uphold ing Old Glory. Washington—The deserration of the American flag through its use in vari ous forms of advertising was the sub ject discussed before the house judi ciary committee by several members of the house and representatives of different organizations. Among the speakers tvere a number of women, including Mrs. Kate B. Sherwood, past president of the Women's Relief Corps. The bill introduce.! by Representa tive Goulden of New York providing penalties for the use of the design of the American flag in any form of ad vertisement was before the commit tee. The bill not only would prohibit the use of the flag for such purposes, j but it also provides that any person | “who shall publicly mutilate, deface. ! defile, trample upon or cast contempt, i either by words or act upon the flag, 'j shall be guilty of misdemeanor pun ishable by a fine of $100 and an im prisonment of thirty days.” Canada Will Prohibit. Quebec—Premier Gouin announced that an order in council would be is sued within a few days to prohibit the exportation of pulp wood. Hotel Men Vote for Boston. IjOs Angeles. Cal.—The Hotel Men’s Mutual Benefit association selected ; Boston as the place for holding its annual session in 1911. At Top of Mt. McKinley. Fairbanks. Alaska.—The Fairbanks ! expedition to Mount McKinley, the 1 tallest peak In North America. I reached the summit April 3. after a climb of one month from the base. . No traces of Dr. Frederick A Cook's ' alleged ascent were found. Iowa Man Killed in Chicago. Chicago—A man who in the rain J walked in front of a motor truck and was kilied, was identified as L. V. Babcock, a wealthy stock shipper of Waverly. Iowa. New York Central Wage Dispute. New York—The wage dispute be tweeen the trainmen and conductors of the New York Central railroad and the officials of the company is to be settled by arbitration. All points of differences will be arbitrated by E. E. Clark, member of the Interstate Com merce commission, and P. H. Mor rissey. president of the Railway Em ployers' and Investors' association. They will appoint a third arbitrator If necessary. A statement of this decision was given out following s [ conference. GETTING HIS IDIOMS MIXED German-American May Hava Meant Wall, But Nia Direction* Ware Somewhat Complex. Passengers on a New York street car were treated to some choice exam ples of Qerman-American Kngltsh when a stout gentleman with a robust voice started to relate to a friend his adventures of the previous night. "Twelf o'glock it wass when he come alretty." said the stout man. "und on de toor rap." "Hut." said his companion, "it was only about ten o'clock when he started over there." "Veil, twelf o'glock it wass when he comes alretty und on de toor rap. Vnd I tell him de dogtor he vant. he shouldn't go de frondt vay oudt. de side vay roundt und de pack vay oop, und chust as blain as dot. I'nd den de plame fool, he rap yet und vake efery pody de house in. Den 1 put myself my pants on und maype I don't pall him oudt. 1 call him a chumbp und a lopster—" "No." laughed his friend, "you sure ly didn't call him that.* "Call him dot?" snorted the fat man. "Stay, I call him eferything I can lay niy hands on." REAL CURES BEING MADE. Permanent Cures, Not Temporary Relief Result from Umted Doctors’ New Treatment. One of the great differences in the treatment used bv the United Doctors, who have their Omaha institute on the second floor of tho Neville block, corner Sixteenth and Harney streets, and the treatment used by ordinary doctors, is that the United Doctors treat and remove the underlying :ause of the disease, while the ordi nary doctor often only treats the symptoms. The result of the United Doctors' treatment is a permanent cure. The cause of the trouble is re moved and the patient stays welL A case which illustrates this point nicely is that of Mrs. R Lee of H06 Douglas street. Omaha. Neb., who was cured last year and now, after the lapse of all that time to test the per manency of the cure, she is still strong and well and writes as follows: Omaha, Neb., Dec. 9th, 1909. Dear Doctors: Fbr six years I was afflicted with stomach trouble and indigestion. Por several years 1 could not eat anything without great suffering and distress and was compelled to live on milk toast and I run down in weight to al most a skeleton. 1 had a pasty com plexion and bad color, and as several of my relatives had succumbed to tuberculosis I feared that the same disease was to be my fate. I began treatment with the United Doctors in January of this year and in three months from the time I started in 1 was a well woman and have re mained well ever since. I have gained in flesh until my friends hardly know me and am feeling fine in every way. f can now eat anything 1 want at all times and can sleep every night. 1 am sound and hearty and owe my present good health entirely to the treatment of the United Doctors, whom I cannot thank enough for what they have done in my case. Britain’s Rulers. Mr. Lloyd George is pleasantly proud of his nationality, but it is ama zing that ue had to go back to Queen Elizabeth and the Tudors to find his torical precedence for a Welsh gov ernment of Great Britain. On the other hand, England has often been ruled by Scotsmen. Of the last three premiers, two—Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman and Mr. Balfour—were Scotch. Mr. Gladstone sat for a Scotch constituency, and so does Mr. Asquith. Ireland has always been busy supplying us with governing men. The duke of Wellington, Lord Roberts, Lord Charles Beresford, Lord Russell and a dozen others immediately occur to one. It is odd to remember that it is cen turies since Great Britain had a purely English sovereign. The Tudors were Welsh. The Stuarts were Scotch. William III. was a Dutchman and the Guelphs are of German descent.— London Chronicle. Or Else Burn. Andrew Carnegie, apropos of his epigram about the disgrace of dying rich, said at a dinner in Washington: I “Why should any one die rich? ' There are no pockets in a shroud, and as for the man who'd like to take his money with him, why. even if he managed to do so, it would only melt.’* Shady Character. “Who is the man that every one seems to know?" “Oh. every one knows him. He’s our secret police.”—Fleigende Blatter. ABANDONED IT For the Old Fashioned Coffee Was , Killing. “I always drank coffee with the rest j of the family, for It seemed as If there : was nothing for breakfast if we did not have it on the table. “I had been troubled some time with my heart, which did not feel t right. This trouble grew worse steadily. I "Sometimes it would beat fast and , at otb*r times very slowly, so that I : would hardiv be able to do work for an he jr or two after breakfast, and if I walked up a hill, it gave me a se vere pain. "I bad no idea of what the trouble was until a friend suggested that per- i haps it might be caused by coffee drinking. I tried leaving off the coffee and began drinking Postum. The ) change came quickly. I am now glad 1 to say that I am entirely well of the heart trouble and attribute the relief | to leaving off coffee and the use of ! Postum. "A number of my friends have aban- i doned the old fashioned coffee and ; have taken up with Postum. which i they are using steadily. There are : some people that make Postum very weak and tasteless, but if it is boiled long enough, according to directions, it is a very delicious beverage. We have never used any of the old fash ioned coffee since Postum was first started in our house.1* Read the little book. “The Road tc A'ellville.'tn pkgs. “There’s a Reason.' ■ver rnrt the shave letter? A aew are aeaetoe^ tna uS tall ef kwu NEBRASKA HAPPENINGS. State News and Notes in Condensed Form. Two carloads of automobiles htw been sold at Hildreth this spring. Chief Harry Hauser of the Fremont fire department was unanimously re elected at the annual meeting. W. D. Woodruff, the Burlington agent at Dorchester, has received a promotion as agent at St. Paul. Neb George Shculta and family loft No braska City for Los Angeles, CaL where they will make their future home. The equity term of district court commences at Beatrice next Monday. Judge J. B. Raper of Pawnee City will preside. Thirty-six new members were re ceived into the Presbyterian church Sunday morning at Lyons. Rev. B. F. Pearson is the pastor. Secretary J. F, Hanson of the Fre mont Commercial chib announced that he will submit his resignation at the next meeting of the club. The firemen of Beatrice are making arrangements for a fair to be held in their new headquarters for one week, commencing Monday next. ice as tuiCK as a window pare ap peared on water Wednesday at Carle ten, but as it is dry it is not thought the fruit will be injured. Herman Newcomb of Cook has been acquitted of ihe charge of furnish'.ng intoxicants to an habitual drunkard in the Johnson county court. A lota! of 2.000 votes were cast at the election held in Beatrice Tuesday. This is the largest vote cast at any municipal election in Beatrice. Mr. ard Mrs. Carl Day hare re turned to their home at Weeping Water after a\ absence of more than four months it. touring Europe. About two-thirds of the old alfalfa in Custer county has been winter killed- All the last year's seeding has come through the winter in prime con dition. At the school board meeting at Fair mont. two new teachers were elected. Miss Martha Schaedel of Sutton ar.d Miss Harel Farrar of Fairmont, to positions in the grades. The Fremont minstrels have finally made arrangements to make their an nual appearance in Fremont. They are to put on their performance under the auspices of the fire department. At a meeting of the board of edu cation of Trenton the following teach ers were re-elected. Superintendent, O. F. White; high school. Mabel Kaup; second intermediate. Mrs. Cowger; first intermediate, Mary Baker; prim ary. Ora McCoy. The Dorchester council contracted with W. D. Crist of Omaha to take forty street lamps o: fifty candle pow er. which will cost the town $:>25 per annum. The plant will bo in opera tion about the middle of May. A meeting of the trustees of the United Brethren hospital was held in Beatrice. All of the trustees were present. The reports of officers showed the hospital to be in a pros perous and growing condition. The thirty-sixth annual convention of the York County Sunday School association will be held at York April 21 and 22. A number of prominent Sunday school workers will be pres ent and address the association. Carl E. Yoline, who recently was up before the courts in both Phelps and Harlan counties charged with selling mortgaged property, and who escaped a week ago from the jail at Aims, has just been captured at Hartley, Iowa. According to H. J. Lee. a leading Fremont business man. be got badly stung when he bought a horse from Arthur Johnson. Lee says he paid $200 for the animal and it turned out to be wind broken and blind. He is suing in justice court to get his money back. A. X. Johnson, state highway en gineer of Illinois, delivered an address on “good roads" before the commer cial club of Beatrice George B. Irving of Chicago, a representative of the municipal improvement association, has been secured to speak on civic im provement. Walt George of Broken Bow and Frank M. Currie of Broken Bow held a meeting at the Odd Fellows' hall at Westerville Monday evening, talking to the farmers on the proposed rail road to go from IjOUp City to Broken Bow. It has been suggested that this is to be an electric road. After an animated contest. Kenesaw has for the twenty-sixth time rejected the ofTer to go wet. Now and for the past two years Kenesaw has been making a solid and steady growth, keeping pace with the development of the surrounding country. Bonds for water works and electric light plant have also been voted. A good citizens’ banquet was held in the parlors of the Presbyterian chnrch at Lexington. Abont two hun dred voters gathered Ir. the auditorium of the church, from where they marched to the banquet hall and were served by the ladies of the d’fferent churches of the city. During the feast the music was furnished by the or chestra. led by David Rankin. Judge W. H. Munger of the Vnited States circuit court appointed a re ceiver for the Independent Telephone company of Omaha upon application of Ed son Rich, attorney for the Title Insurance and Trust company, holdet of two mortgages of S3.300.000 each The suit is understood to be a friend ly one in the interests of the reorgani cation of the company. Lysle I. Ab bott of Omaha is named as receiver and his bond is fixed at $35,000. On June 20 and 30 a district meet ing of the Degree of Honor will hole a two days’ session at York. All of the teachers in the village school of Silver Creek were re-elected at a meeting of the school board, as follows: Principal. George P. Me Grew; assistant principal. Miss Beu lah Ward; Miss Bertha Ward, gran mar root*; Miss Corrlnne Orchare intermediate, and Miss Jnlia Tern orlmary. Word was received that th $18,000 bonds for a new school horn voted recently were approved by th state auditor. William Crist of Omaha is at Do Chester and work will begin on th electric light plant A PENSION MEASURE SWEEPING BILL PROPOSED CY AN ILLINOIS MAN. IT BENEFITS THE VOLUNTEERS Retired Pay tor Officer* and Thirty Dollar* Monthly to Veterans Over Seventy Year* of Age. Washington—A pension bill of sweeping provisions. umK'r which all surviving volunteer officers of the United States army who served sis months or more would receive retired pay. according to length of service, and all honorably discharged enlisted men over 70 years of aye and suffer ins a certain degree of disability, would receive a straight pension of ISO per month, was reported to the house by Representative Prince of Illinois from the committee on mill tary affairs. In recommend:ny the measure, the committee's report says that although the volunteer troops "formed 9(5 per cent of the armies of the United States and achieved 90 per cent of the historic results." the regular of* fteers have received all the honors and rewards from the government and the volunteer officers nothing.'* The scale of retired pay fer volun teer officers, as fixed by the bill, is one-third of the initial active pay of the corresponding regular officers, for those who served two years or more, and for those of less time of service less pay in proportion. Officers who lost an eye or limb in the line of duty or incurred disability as prisoners of war would receive the full benefit of the act without regard to length of service. No officer who served more than six months would receive less than $400 per annum, and no officer may receive more than two-thirds of the present pay of a captain of the regu lar army. A private soldier over 70 years of age will receive the $30 per month provided he served more than ninety days and his phys cal dis ability (not necessarily of service origin) is such as to "require the fre quent and periodical care and atten tion of another person.” The report of the eomm.ttee in cludes an estimate from the secretary of the interior, which fixes the cost of the first year's operation of the pro posed law at $9,304,013. COLONEL COOPER PARDONED. Tennesseean, Convicted of Slaying Senator Carmack. Goes Free. Nashville. Tenn.—Colonel Duncan P. Cooper, convicted of killing for mer ctEaiir tv \Y. Carmack, and sen tenced to twenty years' imprisonment, was granted full pardon by Governor Patterson, just after the Tennessee supreme court had reaffirmed his sentence. Robin, son of Colonel Cooper, con victed with his father of killing Car mack. was remanded to- the lower court for a new trial by the supreme court. In the younger man's case the supreme court was divided. Chief Justice Beard reading a dissenting opinion. Mabray Man Released. Eeavenworth. Kas.—William Pow ell. a member of the Mabray gang, was released from the federal peni tentiary Wednesday on $10.(00 bond, approved by Judge Smith McPherson, before whom Mabray and his associ ates were convicted. Eleven Crushed to Death. Easton. Pa.—Eleven men, all for eigners. were crushed to death in the stone quarry of the Nazareth—Port land Cement company, near Nazareth. A premature explosion tore loose 5.000 tons of stone, covering the vie- j tints. Carnegie Foundation Spurned. Toledo. O.—The University of Wooster will not be made a benefici-1 arv of the Carnegie fund for superan nuated professors. This has been de- ; cided by the Presbyterian synod of; Dayton. A determined stand was tak- i en against accepting any of the money because Carnegie "had a string to the gifL" Jefferson Day Celebrated. Washington.—John Temple- Graves, former candidate for vice president of the United States on the lndepend- j ence league ticket, injected into the Jefferson day dinner a sensational 1 feature. Mr. Graves, -who was not on the program, had been requested at a ! late hour to speak. Ke offered to the democratic party in the coming cam- i paign the support of the Independ ■ ence league and its organiser. WH-1 liam R. Hearst. if the party would recognise the protestant principles of i the Independence league -— Apple Bill Not Liked. Washington. — No standardisation system for the apple crop of the Unit ed States, which fluctuates annually from 26.0P0.000 to 6S.000.000 barrels, will be provided during the present session of congress. Vroeman Candidate for Congress. Des Moines, la—C. E. Vrooiuan. for the past twenty years in charge of a federal office at Washington. D. C, announced at Centerville that he is a candidate for the republican nomina tion for congress from the Eight Iowa district. Mullen Will Get Office. Washington.—P. M. Mullen of Oma ha. who is receiver of the United Rates land office at Juneau Alaska vill be recommended for reappoint nent by Senators Burkett and Brown \Ir. Mullen has been a very effleien 'ffieer and has the endorsement oi Governor Walter E. Clark. es-Gover tor Hoggatt and National Committee nan Shackleford. He. who was for aerly state senator from the Omah: ■latrlct and engaged in the grocer -usines* in the Gate City, obtains appointment through Senator Millard. WORTH MOUNTAINS OFOOLD Daring Change o! life, says Mrs. Cbas. Barclay C.nmtt*vilK Vt. — “I was ? through th*Chan«jpcif lift' andsufrv-wa iTora norYousnoss amiothor mmuTinr symptoms, aini i can tnjly say that 1 •ydiaKjKnahMR'a Yopotablo Com pound has pro\t\i worth nKmntao.-.s of rvki to mo. as it roslorod my ivaith ami strove!tv 1 no w forgot to toil my frtomls «Mt I^fdiaK ltakton't « vvi.uvuiw r*> uvuif i<>r r.u* dunn? this trying period. Complete restoration to lie alt n means so tv vh to me that for the sake of other suffer in? women I art willing to make m» trouble public so you puhh.sh this letter."—Mrs, Otus. Bakclat, RFIX.CiTAr.ite vide. Yt No other miWM ter woman's >".< has received such trkissspread and un qualified endorsement. No other m*~i leine we know of has s:vh a record of cures of female ills as has Iv.i.a K I'inkhani's Vegetable Con jvuAl For more titan SO ye ars it has been curing female compiaicts such as inflammation. nice ration. local weak nesses. fibroid tumors, irrec . ar • s periodic pains, backache, Indices*:,- r and nervous prostration. aid it is unequalled for carrying women safely through the period of change of life It costs but little to try i.voha K. Ihukham's Vegetable Compound, and. as Mrs. Bare lavsays.it is "worth moun tains of gold * to suffering a omen. Trial Bottle Ftm Bar Mail IT y*« »s5fr ftc® Fr:>pr». Fit*. Fi£;'s* PVte1#** S T'~a* A-'V f'srf .v<.KTf>.* tiasrtSj pjn. F« *** *r- •* f.-f Srff » FMf» •i a .-«atJr T«Av»Ka»i*sMBp>i»». J:»** DR. *. H. MAT, MS Psrl StwU »?* Vs*. r.«a>r cmb:^ viu ia,>r Sal «m»a. Constipation Vanishes Forever Proapt Relief Cere CARTER’S LIVER hi Pat!, enboo— DC f'O. tS* ccwplexK« — knchcD Uhl.SMUOw.SMjrtn GENUINE noct br*r s^rjrwr ; PR P I" A Package r If 11 of “ Paxtine ” 1 Will Be Sent Free of Charge to Every Reader of this Paper. pAXTI N E I TOILET ANTISEPTIC Giro- one a sweet breath; clean, white, germ-free teeth—antisepticaliv dean mouth and throat—purifies the breath after smoking—dispels all disagreeable perspiration and body odors- much ap preciated by dainty women. A quick remedy for sore eyes and catarrh. A We Psxbae reader os aolred is a gUta?oes. Alfalfa and Dairyms pay in tor than tww r-r sore yearly. tBTnte for Illustrated booklet DEFT. *. TURLOCK BCIRO OF T«»DE. TnKtl. Cat WA CUIUU L"co,n* N,tv ■ U» Olilnll Maaafartarer oi COPPER CABLED LIGHTNING RODS