" The Leap City Northwestern > W. . PuMIghrr LOUP CITY. - NEBRASKA FOR IRE BUSY MAN \ NEWS EPITOME THAT CAN SOON BE COMPASSED. MM! EVENTS ARE MENTIONED Moot* are Foreign Intelligence Con ee'ted Into Two ane Four Line Paragraphs. WanMogtao I* rra iitl to a'uid (itilf any pre teat f r 'or- re inter* eu: ion for aut •*! res son*. • ae Chinese guvero m«t Ju- all receipt* from mar.: m» < *-on.- in* lud.ng the 15*1)1 huger .ndrm*:t.e*. to br dejcoslted •Mk tbe for«-i*c ‘cask.- to tbe- > redlt s' Cbtna s lureJgn debtor* Another mute looking to toe re Pat* of Clear *e* E Mors*. the former Xe* York tAer. from tbe Atlanta Penitentiary na» torerastel here by a conference lettrra Attorney tiaijl Hr kersbam and Morse’s counsel. H t Uougaerty and T H. Kctder. The nature of tb* jcropusiiiun na* not dis closed Tbe da age rone .a the use of *teel r»Ua. a* at present manufactured, ha* bee* tea* lied, declared President p g, Itellkrap. of lbe interstate tout -arree <-ontnii***on in a repor; to that tody K beaty. h cb .peed train* are j be run in safety Mr B. Uknaji de * fared a mure ■s-tontidr in e*l isattou into rail deferts mu*' be undertaken • HI a * ie* to retn*dyinit tbe twnklr. Tbe Italian lore ga oMre. in a mail repar - recited by tbe Italian eaibn* sy make* counter ( Siarftt of Turkish mut'latum of I alia* soldier* It al |eg«» -hat in reconnaissance* made ■ ■a Not ember t, by the Italian tropps hry< ttd tbe entrenchments ot Tripoli the uocta-* uf ftte Italian sol diers uere found; that one of these hadie* in naked, that all the um hm* and been tak-n a s ay from the other* *nd bat l-i-ee of the - ld.cr* had bee* beheaded alte; death General. liunie. r ttj Wisconsin irate killed T.>m deer tone* No* etc!*er II. The to* <-ran*T i* jUneing for a Campaign against the opium traffic. Statisticians ba>« figured that another dec knr in buarneas mill *oon be here. A iVtir cs ii toot ha 1! autWrity says lire same i* honeycombed uitb cor rupt ton. Okmulgee Oil. adopted tbe < olii m-i'« lotto «1 go*eminent by a large majority The Larimer committee will not take up the perjury charge* until tbe mala -teiuirj is concluded . There I* a bitter row In tbe rank* nf democratic, member* of the house *-eei ie. -ligation committee. Arb—y It Kaust. manager ot the fit Lucii* restaurant, founded by bia father. »a* declared insane. In tbe first itt*ta!lm~n. uf hi* auto biography Senator i-» foil otto de nc-nbes chars tcwta i of Ifeod and McKinley. clues'* a a bote! ;n Albert La-a. M*nn tciut a narrow o-c ape from death who* tbe aonse wr. destroyed by fire. On* man wa* r*-*ported miss ing. bn: no body has tier* found in tbe debris At Hillsdale Mick.. I tilled Slates Senator Coe I Crawford, of South inketr. deltered bis address iu the Interests ot tbe republican pregre** iie luocemen! and uf Sedauu t.J Fol |ene for the |eestd«nrr. * .* Head* id all railroad* operating in Mo*cjttrl. >* plymg to a re%ne#t of tlov •rnur Hadley, hate agreed gladly to abu -a common drinking cup* on pOOMKger trams.. |cro> luing ibe Slate Hoard of Health makes suck rc-oueat tormslly i « lidtur t j» . loiiUB • w iur r.'aus tua, *l«. land df*trn aggregating acres *r. involved in a decree *M*tIing paimis issued on thirty four -oid'ers additions! entries, an aouixs-d by the commir-sioncr of the get.ers land office Brand me suriaiisiu as the greatest menace of the ift. Bird S Ccder. detn m iate candidate for governor of New Voft against Odell In IfurS. said at ft Haul Ihel If the republic of the I a.ted ft tales -i* to remain great and decent. Me-taiiMh must be fought un «easing!:* “ Wilfred Stuart Sbeldor Dickason. r.>ged acton of a noble English Unt il* *a* hound oter to the grand jury' M the charge of stealing Jewels val ued at |: »is Ireti Mrs Olga von W ItnsteU. a **4*ety leader M Minnenp oils la default of St.ubO bail be was resumed to his tell. Mn hviber K Abbott mas elected pN'a--i'Hli«i Ism> W lltll of the Crest Non hern railroad denied a re port that he intended to quit the rail rood tmiKh- \ The irfitd Kypyls coupler* raiiie to •B eOU with trbai i J*ur delegate* wtill de fared to be a an stop of opinion ax to ^k.a; the government lor federal ad . After holding the officer* of < .'rand naafj. I tab. at bay for ttreutr font hour* John K Brown ubo shot bis daughter to death, and inflicted auuods upoa her hos'iaud from which be died later, sumend' led to ate sher iff Spenser Champ Clark gloried in the Ebis birth amt praised Coo Bartholdt in lesi itnonial M UMi* - r casks report!- of the Rock earrings bring bal freight te le •■•as* of op I*r. sident Taft is now engaged in writing his annual message. President Taft may urge a change In treatit - with Russia in his mes ' sage Hankers at New Orleans gave ap proval of the Aldrich currency plan. The prosecution will be held to nar rows i- limits in the second Hyde trial. Persia lias appealed to the powers o ,-taj tiie greedy hand of Russia. The River and harbor appropri , ations s year will be held to a low , limit. Pres d* u'. t'aceres. of the Domini can r« ublir. was killed by two eue . mi< s. A massacre of foreigners and i Mam hu> is reported at Sian Fu. , China A A Hayes, genera) freight auditor ! of tiie An h son. Tojieka Santa Fe railway, died at Topeka. The International Harvester com j puny has asked for g rehearing in the Missour order of ouster. W'u Ting Fang lias warned foreign ers that -he bombardment of Nanking may begin very shortly. | Postal savings banks will be estab lished op December 2l* at Hebron. Pierce .md Stiver Creek. Nebraska. The I nked States Steel corporation i contends there i- no ground for con . tinuing the bouse committee inquiry. Crown Prince (lustave Adolph of Sweden was operated on for appendi j c-itHis mnditlon is quite satis j factory. \ new counterfeit $."> silver certifi cate. i : ude imitation, lias appeared in circulation and the secret service sounded an alarm in man tv.o in mines aner uie , fire alarm had sounded at St. Hedges' !■. loo! .n Milwaukee, the building had been emptied of 500 pupils. The serious attention of the public bar again been called to the depopu 'atton question in France by the pub lication of official statistics Presidtut lamtis \V. Hill of the : Crea- Northern railroad denies a rc | lairt from Chicago that he intended to quit 'he railroad business. The Japanese crisis, threatened by the ijname minister's demand for wholesale cuts in the budget, prob ably will be averted. Hugo ion Tschtidi. one of the best I known authorities on art in Eurt'iie. | and Dr. Wilhelm J*n~en. the well [known German author, died in Munich Friday According to the reiort of the I'aiiac government there were 113 cases of cholera and fifty-five deaths in Italy from November 5 to Novem ber 11 inclusive. j Crging laws in the interest of farru 1 ers and the lightening of tneir burden of taxation. Governor Judson Harmon of Ohio addressed the national grang at Columbus. O. Frank Allen, arrested as a suspect in Pekin. 111., acknowledged to Sheriff Flengal that he is one of the men wanted in North Dakota for holding up a Northern Pacific train last July. Forty-seven carloads of cigarettes, i valued ar fl.00b.0O0, have arrived at Superior, Wi? . from the east by way of the Great lakes and will be shipped te Vancouver, B. C„ for export to China and Japan. Susie E Pressler. aged sixty-four, a pension agent of Toledo. O., was ar rested by Cnitcd State? officer? on an indictment return* d in Aberdeen. S. D . charging her with fraud in connec tion w ;h a land drawing in 1910. The Japanese Antarctic expedition aboard the Hainan Maru, which was forced to return to Sidney last spring after reaching 74 degrees south, has started on its second attempt to reach the south pole. a quarterly dividend ol per share was declared l>y the directors of the falumet and He< la Mining company. A new counterfeit »•> per share was declared by he directors of the Calu met and Hecla Alining company. Spokane shippers joined with the Ih-parttuent of Justice and the Inter state Commerce commission in an ap peal to the supreme court of the Cnited St3tes from the recent ad vance decision of the commerce court In the Spokane rate case. Mme Jerome Xa|>o|pon Bonaparte, widow of a grandson of Jerome Bona parte. brother of the first Napoleon, and a gn^nddaughter of Daniel Web ster. died in Washington after a long illness. She was seventy-two years old and *»t born in Boston, Massa chusetts At Chicago Judge (leorge A. Carpen ter granted the ind‘ctcd Chicago pack ers a delay in their criminal trial un til I>e<-ember •! pending proceedings for the defendants before the United States supreme court. Counsel for the packers will seek further delay when the federal supreme court re convenes at Washington December 4. when a motion for a stay order wilt he presented. Personal. Bird S. Coler says the spread of th* sot iulfst doctrine is a real menace. Col. Roosevelt is urged to make the race for president. Suffragettes of lmudon threaten to renew their struggle. The treasurer of an oil company • as arrtsted at Pittsburgh. General Reyes is held to be the dis turber of pence in Mexico. Former Senator John F. Dryden or New Jersey died at Newark. The l'. S. supreme court has ad journed until Hecenibcr -Ith. Knglish suffragettes are preparing another onslaught on parliament Norman K Mack says that Roose velt is an avowed candidate for the presidency. Mary Chamberlain, the victim- of the Kansas tarring episode, told her story to a crowded court room. Princeton has won the chumpion I ship of the big four rootbali teams of | the east. * More demands for the abdication of j the throne are pouting in on the Chi ! nrse premier. j A confession was made hv Henry Clay Beattie before Itc was put to death for the murder of his wire. W. A. Garrett, in an address at Ctal < af.o says anarchists are trying to pus i commerce court out of business. Chic;30 packers were granted fur ! tber days of grace to carry an ap peal to the supreme court at Wash ingtcp. WAN AND WIFE WITH TEAM OF TWENTY-ONE DOGS ' ! NEWS FROM OVER THE STATE I _ | What is Going on Here and There That is of Interest to the Read ers Throughout Nebraska and Vicinity. Fremont.—Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mason, who are driving around the ; world with a team of twenty-one dogs, arrived in Fremont Sunday, covering the fifteen miles from North Bend in I the day. They left Nome. .Alaska, in ! UKiS. Facing eastward, they propose to drive their canine team across America. Kurope and Asia, reaching Nome. Alaska, in 1914. and then driv ing to the Panama exposition at San : f rancisco in 1915. Their trip across Nebraska has been uneventful and Rood progress has been made, aecord ; >nR to Mason, who is a trim appear ! ing. sunburned young man. — Lett a Fortune to His Housekeeper. Seward—The will of the late Father ; William Murpliy, who was killed in an automobile accident, has been filed i for probate. The estate is estimated to be worth about $5ti.0t:J and the 1 bulk of it is bequeathed to .Miss Mary Barrett, who has been Father Mur phy s housekeeper for more than i thirty years. _ Serum Trsatment for Hogs. i . West Point.—Dr. G. .1. Collins dep I uty state veterinarian, of West Point, is busily engaged in vaccinating a large number of hogs for the farmers j °f this vicinity, using (he newly dis covered serum treatment. Dr. Collins slates that the remedy is proving ab solutely certain. Will Teach Domestic Science. 1 ecumsch—I’nder the direction of I Superintendent V. I.. Strickland of tiie city schools, the women mutual league lias completed plans for do mestic science instruction in the high school on the Crete plan. Both the ladies of the league and the high school girls are enthusiastic over the scheme. - I Found Money in Old Book. Franklin—While cleaning out the debris from the old postoffice build ing. Earl Kush found $25 in two tens and a five dollar bill between the pages of an old book that had been thrown away several years ago. There is at present no claimant for the money. David City.—Raymond Arnold, four teen years old. living near David City, was struck by a freight train at Ris ing City and seriously injured. The boy's foot will be amputated. NEWS FROM THE STATE HOUSE. Senator Robert M. LaFollelte wiil visit Nebraska about December 1. ac cording to information given out at LaFollette headquarters in Lincoln. The state board of agriculture is making more ground available for ex hibition purposes and the comfort of patrons of the state fair by grading down a hill north of the Moline Flow building. The cut is being extended north and the earth removed is being carried east to the race track, making a gentle slope on the entire east side of the grounds. State Game Warden Miller has been informed that the buck deer seen near Sterling Johnson county, went north and crossed the Platte river near the state iisheries at South Bend and then started east along the banks of the river. He believes it was the mate of the doe shot and killed near Wahoo several weeks ago and that both came from the Missouri river thickets in Potawattamie county, Iowa. The statute revision commission provided for by the last legislature is grinding away, the three commission ers putting in all their time at the big task set for them. It is thought at the present time bv Secretary J. H. Broady of the commission that it will be impossible to present, a com plete report to the next legislature although he believes the appropriation made by the last legislature sufficient to complete the work. Superintendent C. B. Manuel of the state industrial school at Kearney re ported 186 boys at the school Novem ber 1. Five were admitted during Oc tober and seven were let out on pa role. Governor Aldrich has issued a requi ! sit ion on the governor of New York for the return of Theodore Stanisics from 1'tica. N. Y.. on the ground that lie Is a fugitive from justice in Ne braska. Stanisics is under sentence to the penitentiary for aiding and • procuring arson. John C. F. McKesson of Uncoln has been appointed by Governor Aldrich a special deputy fire inspector in the fire commissioner's department. Secretary Marshall of the state board of horticulture announces that the winter fruit show of the associa tion at the state farm stock judging building. January 16 to 18, will be the largest ever held in the state. Tlio association is to occupy one-half of the second floor and the corn improv ers' association the other half. The fruit show will be a box show and a demonstration will be given of the western method of packing apples. Petitions are being circulated through Cherry county calling upon the governor to make an investigation of the murder of C. P. Sellers several months ago. Sellers was lynched one night and four men are now serving life sentences for participation in the crime. Governor Aldrich has been request ed by .^nes Yunek to find her little giri-|or whom she has been searching for five years. The governor replied by letter that he could do nothing, hut that the case looked like one wherein the mother might get her child by habeas corjhis. BRIEF NEWS OF NEBRASKA. A farmers' institute will be held at Brock. January 23 and 24. The Christian Endeavor convention will be held next year at Kearney. The league of Nebraska municipali ties will meet in Lincoln next year. John Ketter, a farmer near Stein auer. suicided by hanging himself to a tree. A farmer residing southeast of Hastings has harvested over 100 bush els of walnuts this year. The Burlington's new passenger station at Grand Island has just been thrown open to the public. The Congregational church at | Franklin is raising a fund for th# 1 erection of a J 10.000 building. -.Aurora will have another newspa per. articles of incorporation havin? been filed with the county clerk. Applicants for charity or the ex i plotting of schemes are now referred to the commercial club at Hastings. The big dam at Ainsworth furnishes more power than can be used by the city for lighting and power purposes at present. The annual exhibit of the Nemaha vallew poultry association will be held at Adams. November 28. 29. 30 and December 1. An explosion in a hot water heater at Hay Springs seriously scalded Mrs. i R. W\ Reid, who was thawing out the ; frozen pipes. Four cars of wheat, one of corn and one of hogs were shipped from Desh ! ler one day last week besides a heavy local shipment of brooms. \V. F. Janies of Nemaha county ; raised a sweet potato weighing over j nine pour-ts. It w as eight inches long and nine inches in circumference. The German t'or.gregationalists at Sutton have recently remodeled the church edifice and now have one of the finest in that part of the state. I_ I OWEN FRANK. Half Back, U. of N. Eleven. Nebraska's great back-field titan who has developed into a phenomenal punter and drop kicker. The annual harvest home supper given by the women of the Congre gational church at Ashland, was a success, over $60 being cleared. Governor Aldrich and State Treas urer George will make addresses No vember 27 at a reception to be given at Kearney by the state normal school. Nebraska's Cornhusker eleven ef fectually clinched the Missouri valley conference title at I*awrence, Satur day. outplaying Kansas to the tune ot I 29 to 0. ♦ The cornerstone of the new Union church of College View was laid Sat urday in the presence of a large audeince of members of the various churches of that place. The second annual meeting of the Nebraska State Irrigation association closed a successful session at Bridge port. with 223 delegates present, and the convention throughout was full of enthusiasm and interest. A movement is on foot among the merchants of Lincoln to have all stores open their holiday display De cember 4. Most of the big stores of the city have agreed to have their Christmas display in the windows on that day. On and after February 15 rural car riers are not required by the post office department "to collect loose coins from boxes for postage. Patrons are expected to keep a supply of stamps on hand and stamp mail before de positing in boxes. Miss Edith I^. McKeighan of Red Cloud, elected clerk of the district court of Webster county. November 7. has the honor of being the first woman elected to fill the office of district clerk in the state of Nebraska. Harry Bowlin, a Hamilton county boy, husked and cribbed 167 bushels of corn in a little over ten hours. He shoveled the corn and unloaded four times. Holdrege has an amateur sculptor who recently completed a statue of the goddess of justice. Rev. Charles McCaslin Is dead at Rose Valley from the effects of a stroke of paralysis received ten years ago. Home 3.000 acres of land around Salem have'been leased to a company that will explore for oil aud gas as soon as it gets some 2.000 acres now under lease. It is thought oil indica | lions are excellent. The Arcadian board of education ] has refused to allow the girls of the ; high school to play basket-ball upon the school grounds, contending that it is immodest for the players to ap pear in basket ball uniforms. .Mr. and Mrs. Louis Grunke of West Point celebrated their golden wedding anniversary at the residence on their old homestead west of the city. Fortunato Zancanella. an Italian cripple, hobbled all the way from Omaha to Lincoln to find out why the supreme court did not take up his damage suit against the Omaha StTret Railway company. .Miss Cora E. Simpson of Guide Rock has departed for the Pacific coast, whence she will sail for Foo Chow Ching to resume her work as medical missionary at the Liang An hospital there. BEAM IS BUBIED REMAINS OF WIFE MURDERER LAID AWAY. THE WORK DONE SECRETLY Only Immediate Members of the Fam ily and Eight Boyhood Friends Attend the Funeral. Richmond. Va.—By the grave of the wife whom he murdered July IS, the body of Henry Clay Beattie, jr.. was buried in Maury cemetery shortly after sunrise Sunday. There tvas a brief service at the residence, attended only by members of the family and eight friends who served as pallbearers, and then the proces sion moved through the silent streets of South Richmond. Rev. John .). Fix, who prayed with Beattie just before he was led into the death chamber at the penitentiary Friday morning, read the service of the Presbyterian church. ro guard against possiDit* auu^auw the exact hour of the funeral was kept secret until midnight and consequent ly there were no crowds around the Heattie home or cemetery. Police were on duty, but the hearse and sev en carriages had reached the grave before the city was astir. When the burial was concluded H. C. Heattie, sr„ left with Douglas, his son. and Hazel, his daughter, and two aunts of the murderer. The aged father's grief was intense. The pallbearers, boyhood friends of Beattie, were asked by him to serve. Several of them had testified in his defense at the trial and one was his best man when he and Louise Well ford Owen were married, exactly one j year from the date he pleaded not ! guilty of her murder in court. A florist’s wagon, completely filled with flowers, entered the cemetery gates just after daylight, and the mound of earth was hidden beneath chrysanthe mums and immortelles. After it became known that the funeral had already been held a tre mendous crowd visited the cemetery. Double ropes were stretched around the Heattie section, and two mounted policemen in addition to officers afoot kept the crowds back. There was no disorder, -however, and no attempt to take away the •'flowers. BANKER MORSE TRANSFERRED. Is Taken From Atlanta Prison to Fort McPherson. Atlanta. Ga.—Charles \V. Morse, the New York banker. Sunday ex changed his bare cel! at the federal ■ prison here for a more commodious | ward in the army hospital at Fort Mo- j Pherson. The change was ordered by j Attorney General Wickersham, who j recently made a special visit to At- J lanta to investigate the condition of [ Mr. Morse. The transfer was made j about S o’clock in the morning, Morse j making the trip of several miles in an i ambulance, accompanied by Major Baker, chief surgeon at the fort. ---- Endangered By Forest Fires. Santa Monica, Cal.—Joe Anchor, a rancher, his wife and four children are believed to have perished and many summer homes destroyed in a forest fire in Topango canyon. Sev eral hundred persons are making their way out over the almost im passable trails-and are suffering great- j iy President at Episcopal Church. Washington.—President Taft, who i usually attends All Saints' Unitarian church, because Sunday was peace Sunday, worshipped at the Episcopal Church of the Eiphiany. where the rector, Rev. Dr. H. R. McKim, preach in advocacy of the arbitration treaties now pending between the United States and Great Britain and France. Wreckers Blown to Pieces. Cleveland, O.—Six Florida wreckers were blown up Sunday while attempt ing to secure a floating box of ex plosive. part of the cargo of the steamer San Joachim, which went ashore November 22 on the rocks of Fort Atwood bay. Russia Opposes Blockade. Paris.—Russia informed France and the other powers that it insists on the neutrality of the Dardenelles as provided by the treaty of London in 1871. Help Up by a Lone Robber. Columbus, S. C.—A westbound At lantic Coast Lice train was help tip j by a robber who rifled the mail bags. The robbery occurred within two' miles of this city. Paid for His Protection. Chicago.—Lewis Levin, a witness before the civil service commission, which is investigating conditions in the police department here, on Satur day testified that he had paid $400 for alleged protection on the west side. Package of $10,000 is Gone. Winnipeg, Man.—An express pack age containing $10,000 was stolen from the offices of the Canadian Northern Express company at Kegina on Friday last. Insist on Resignation. Chicago. — James S. Templeton, whose attacks on the grain inspection methods of Illinois have raised a storm on the Chicago board of trade, made a formal demand that Samuel T. Smith first assistant inspector, resign. Blockade Bad for Commerce. Constantinople.—Neutral commerce is seriously threatened by the pro posed blockade of the Dardenelles by Italy and Turkey's consequent dfens Ive measures. DREADED MAN-EATING SHARK Voracious Monster of the Deep At tains Enormous Size and De vours Almost Anything. San Francisco, Cal.—This shark was caught in the vicinity of the Hawaiian islands. There are many species of sharks, this being of the “white" variety, known as the •man eater,” and therefore the most dread ed of all monsters of the deep. They attain great size, one having been caught 37 feet in length. The body is covered with a hard skin, and is gray ish-brown above and whitish beiow. These sharks often follow ships for days to feed upon any animal sub stance that may be thrown or may I _ ■ » Caught in Hawaii. fall overboard, and often their indis criminate voracity will swallow things indigestible. A lady's workbox was found in the stomach of one. and the ltapers of a slave ship in that of an other. Human beings are frequently its prey, a fact which makes bathing or diving in tropical seas a dangerous pursuit. This variety of shark is capable not only of biting off the leg of a man. but of snapping the body in two, and has been known to swallow a man entire. Its head is large, the mouth large and wide; furnished with ter rible teeth, which are triangular in form, somethimes two inches in breadth, sharp-edged and serated. When not in use they are laid back in the mouth, nearly flat, but when used in biting, they are brought up by means of muscles with which each tooth is independently provided. This s;.ark is often captured by seamen by means of a great hook baited with a piece of meat and at tached to a chain, as the shark's teeth readily bile through any rope. When the shark is hooked and hauled on board, great care is necessary to avoid danger both from the mouth and front the wonderfully powerful tail. MAY YET BE BRITISH QUEEN Little Daughter cf Russia's Czar May Be Wedded to the Prince of Wales. Ixtndcn.—It is rumored that Prin cess Tatjana. second daughter of the Czar of Russia, is the destined bride of Edward Albert, the young Prince of Wales They are second cousins, the maternal grandmother of the princess. Grand Duchess Alice of Hesse, being a sister of the late King Edward. They are indeed doubly second cousins, for Prince Albert's grand mother. Queen Alexandria, and Prin • • I cess Tatjana's grandmother, the Dowager Empress Dagmar of Russia. a~e sisters of the present King Fred- ' erick of Denmark.. The Czar Nicholas of Russia and King George of England, sons of these sisters, have always borne a remarkable resemblance to each oth er, accentuated by the similarity in the cut of their beards, and by the low stature common to both. The Prince of Wales is 17 years of age, while the princess is only 14. Slain Hermit an eHir. Boulder, Colo.—When Peter Stusse. a Swiss hermit, was found dead in front of his cabin at Spring gulch sev eral days ago. the hut was searched for clews as to his family connections. Papers were found showing him to have been for 25 years heir to an es tate in Switzerland that was worth $10,000 when it descended to him. Relatives have directed that the body be sent to his native land for burial. Cows Drunk on Hard Cider. Greenwich, Conn.—Seventeen cows belonging to Soren Jensen of Banks ▼Ule are just getting over a two-day souse. Apples that had fallen on the ground and were left to ferment were responsible for the cows getting drunk. The animals finally became fighting mad and Jensen couldn't milk them. OFFIOiAi INVITATION TO AMERICANS HOW ROBERT ROGERS, MINISTER OF THE ir.TERIOR, IN WINNIPEG ADDRESS, ISSUES WELCOME OF AMERICANS TO WEST ERN CANADA. During the course of a reply to an address presented to Hon. Robert Rog ers, the newly appointed Minister of the Interior of Canada at a banquet given at Winnipeg in his honor that gentleman spoke on immigration. The tone of his remarks was that he intend ed to pursue an aggressive and for ward policy in the matter of immigra tion. In part, he said: ‘‘The most important branch per haps of that department (Interior) 13 that of immigration. “If there is anything more than an other we want here it is a greater pop I ulation. and it shall be my duty to pre sent to the people in all parts of the world where desirable emigrants are to be found the advantages and the great possibilities of this country. We have received in the past a reasonably large immigration from south of the I international boundary, and in this | connection let me say just a word for i our American cousins who have found happy homes amongst us, and those i w hom we hope to w elcome in greater numbers in the years to come. There are hundreds of thousands of them in ; our prairie provinces, happy in the en | joyment of a freedom as great as they ever knew, and all contributing in a I material way towards the development i of Canada. We are not blind to their ' value as settlers. They come better ! equipped with scientific farming knowledge than most of our emi grants. and constitute without doubt the wealthiest class of emigrants any new country has ever known. As head of the immigration department it ' will be my privilege to offer them a ■ welcome hearty and sincere, and to so contribute to their welfare that un der the protecting folds of the Union ; Jack they will enjoy as great a degree i of liberty and happiness as tinder the Stars and Stripes. The Borden gov ; ernment cherishes nothing but the . kindliest feelings for the people of the great republic to the south, and will do all in its power to increase the I bonds of kinship and neighborly good i feeling that has so long existed. ! (Hear, hear.) “While w-e adopt a vigorous emi gration policy in that country, we will also adopt the same vigorous policy in other parts of the world. We will go to England, Ireland and Scotland, and every other country irrespective of race, creed or nationality, where we can find suitable and desirable emi grants for this great country. I think much good work can be done in those countries, and especially perhaps at the present time in England. Ireland and Scotland. Now. then, it will be my duty to stir up that policy in the most vigorous manner possible.’’ No Need to Hurry. Theatrical folks love to tell or a western manager, now' prominent in the business, who made fame and for tune as proprietor of a small variety house in San Francisco. The thrifty German haji accumulat ed considerable money, and was about to open a new theater. Several hours before the first performance the entrance was packed, and the manager in trying to reach the front door became hopelessly imprisoned in the crush. “Here, here." he yelled, “peeples, peeples, it’s me—it's Mr. Warner!” As no one appeared to take any no tice of him he again yelled at the top of his voice: “Vait a minutes, peeples. Vat's de use of pooshing lige dis? Take your time—de first two acts is rotten " Important to Mothers Examine carefully every oottle of CASTOR1A, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of | In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria Unfair Play. “Foul tactics." declared the* quarter back. “What's the trouble now?" demand ed the referee. “I tried a kick for the stomach, but this fellow blocked it with his face.” Dr. Pierce’* Pleasant Pellets cure con stipation. Constipation is the cause of many diseases. Cure the cause and you cure the disease. 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