Fhe Leap City Northwestern 3 w nrai.u<;n. PuWtatnT LOUP CITY, - - NEBRASKA NEWS lltFli TOLD INTELLIGENCE MEr.t GATHERED COVERS WIDE AREA. 6BEAIEB OH LESSER IMPORT tnaluCea S>j! If Coir.g On at Watl* ir.gtsn ard in Otti»r Sections of the Country. Con {•*•«*. Tl< miir a ItfT vf Trill.* f»: « 't Til i rpeona ,n 'Jit* ui > was |a> t^r tie rr-aate. tc«* .— Lato r» ’atlac com ■ w j,i*r »c«i •a!'>rd i '! or in Ota.rjr .bio bleb oi l 04 lu»e Mac.- ywgrnive republi can* totitic wf*h the democrati. 11 liou-e V. _>* and Menu rom ■dttie wilt take no i united tain action ca cotton tariff tw bedule revision. 7 Be tweet and a an.- f«t«ar growers prutrv't^ acair.>! bo.se :iw - ;-»r bill before the senate Ilc-ame comiu.ttre Tbe house j a»-ed 173 to IT. a bill creatine a ttuicini/a l> ireau a tee Drparuonnt of «'o*ui«-r< r and Labor Pr»sld*ct Taft in n.« .nt*-d fto-.v* of lear.vlatnn to promote e .tioa) and eftf-‘*-tsrjr cn aor r-.ment •rn ne «4 a Ml. approved by the UfpjnaiMit of Justlcn, d« ‘.FL~< to brea* . p flrip V r * jxioia u4 twuhcrt. K«|wUrate live fiftieth anniversary ®f la&ioln’ft emancipation p*<« arnatioc a a* passed by the senate The tnre:rn affa.r* ncicittee of the aouee derided to report favorably res atj'ion direc'.ns fitat- de;urru.en: to upon immeilafe settlement by VVi.<«« cf claim* of Am- riean?. Hirer*, and harbor* committee de cided to report favorably Representa tive Kansdrll'm bill appropriating $:>.«•* for strengthening levees in Kisstscippi. Missouri and Ihio rivers. The senate Judiciary committee or dered favorably reported the employ ers' “ability and workmens compen sation bill as recommended by the Employers' Liability- commission. Representative Henry of Texas, wne kas a bill to change inauguration day from March 4 to the last Thurs day ia April introduced a resolution to provide for early action in the boose. ttWWfl. TW rrj territorial fOBW tiot radomd Hr»i4»ai T*!t for an mu; term Pour hundred union carpenters of Iw went on n strike for 65 nati aa boor. Go* R S Vessey t*lH’.rd Itf lit* lor Soatb Dakota's building for the faatan Pacific exposition. *v >rdr of bitter la Fertile were used by attorneys in summing up their ease in the sugar trial. The miners federation, after a long eotileresire. decided to aJiire all the miners in Great Britain to re-ume mrrfc Preasdeot Taft -eni to the s« n-te the nomination of Kdward P. Stark able to be roliertor of customs for I la nr ail r«jrt:."T Governor tbarlei B Avrwk cC North Carolina er convea tsos M !*<* Former Governor Bate* of Masra rtiurtti and others before the public health committee opposed the hill •mating a department of health. (•and Army veterans urged before Che public buildings committee i>ass age o- the Sutherland bill for a me ppna. .mpnilhenter a: Arlington Ka Ctttr*1 cametery. The democratic tariff wool bill passed the house Monday. Japan has secured no base on Mag dalena bay. Mexico. I-ricac * r a phowphe ms matches. Accord!:;s t<> a Ion-cast at Washing ton tl: • lower Mississippi floods will be the worst cn record. • : !• the avri* <• .Viral do. ann,. ut's actions in the Florida evt rgladt s case. So r< n.isays a majority of the republican national committeemen are favorable to Ta.t. Senator Pixels pronis-s "big speeches" by assed. 172 to 17, a bill creating a children's bureau in the department of commerce and labor. The fourteenth annual convention of the National Association of Re tail IJruegi-ts will be held in Milwau kee, August 2C-3I. Rear Admiral Nicholson assumed command of the- newly organizes “China squadron," and raised his Hag on the Rainbow . national ana -ate uaiins io me mimtifr of 3.000 or more will be ic teiTOKaiHl by the house money trust a' estimating committee. The East< rn S*ar Masonic home, an it-titution tor old members of Mason ic and Eastern Star orders of Iowa, burned to the ground at Boone. Funeral services for Galbraith P. Rodgers. the aviator, were held in Pasadena. Cal.. ar.d the body was sent to Pittsburgh, Pa., for burial. James Wilson, secretary of the De partment of Agriculture, delivered his first sp- ech in Illincis in favor of the re-election of President Taft of Cham paign. Senator Crawford's bill, looking to an international inquiry into the high ■ ost of living, was ordered favorably repotted by the senate committee on foreign relations. Comm: nder Spencer S. Wood of the navy. Admiral Dewey’s aide from P.*i<4 to l‘*08. will get no additional pay for those services, according to a supreme court decision. It is arainst the law for a lodge or club t > sell intoxicants in a county in Mis.-ot::i which ha voted out saloons an jrd.ng to a decision of the Kansas City court of appeals. Beatrice Anna Baldwin Turnbull, alleged daughter of Elias L. (Lucky) 1 Baldwin, has lost her long fimht in the ' ourts to get a share of the $30,000, ; ”oo estate left by the famous turfman. This Is what Madero of Mexico j says: "Whatever happens I shall be t found at my post. I shall not resign. Reports that have been published that I intend to 1< ave the presidency are untrue." As a result of the alleged insubor dination of Privates Frank Carroll and Prank Cunningham. Sergeant Clarence Britten, who is in charge cf the Yel lowstone National Park, asserts he was compelled to shoot both men. Senator Ashbur.-t. one of Arizona's first 'lumbers in tile upper house of eongres-. said he would soon intro duce a bill for the recall of judges, hut would not include the supreme court of the Pni’.ed States In its pro visions. Secretary of State Knox visited the country which gave birth to L’Ouver tiire. Dessalines and Christophe. the three great negro revolutionists of Havti. and at the presidential dinner gave some advice to the present-day negro republicans as to how to obtain prosperity through internal peace and international good behavior. Personal. Aviator Cal P. Rodgers was killed by a fall at Long Beach, Cal. General Grant, not in good health has gone south to recuperate. \Y. J. Bryan crltised both Taft and Harmon in his Des Moines speech. In the Vermont primaries Taft got 4111 and Roosevelt 245. I.ast words from Capt. Scott put him 150 miles from the south pole. The senate has just been enlarged by four new senators from New Mex ico and Arizona. Webster Snyder, one of the builders of the t'nion Pacific, died at Dallas, Texas. The daughter of Senator Ija. Follette is ntikirs some addresses in Xe j bra ska. Lasted States Senator Taylor of Tennessee died in Washington Sun day. General Leonidas Piaza has been elected president of Fduador. Governor Foss had his name with drawn from the Massachusetts ballot. Colonel Roosevelt discussed the rights of popular rule in a St. Louis speech. Emperor Nicholas will meet the Ger man emperor in Finnish water in July. Mr. Roosevelt says the president mistakes himself when he says he is a progressive. Senator Stone of Missouri placed the brand of party traitor on both J Harmon and Wi*on» r i TO MARK MERIDIAN ROAD FROM WINNIPEG TO THE GULF. NEWS FROM OVER THE STATE _ What is Going on Here and Thera That is of Interest to the Read ers Throughout Nebraska and Vicinity. Lincoln — Fire originating in the kitchen of "The Inn" restaurant on South Twelfth street did $40,000 dam age in the Funke block Monday morn ing. It was not controlled until it had been fenght by tiie entire depart ment for more than three hours. Ex tensa e damage was sustained by every tenant in the south half of the building, and water and smoke dam- i age extended north to the front. At | one time a large section of the entire block seemed certain of destruction. John Smailc Died in Denver. Fremont.—News has reached Fre mont of the death in Denver of John Smsftls, a brother of Cashier Will ; Sniails of the Farmers & Merchants | National bank and N. \V. Smails, for- | mer editor of tire Fremont Herald, i The deceased was a soldier of the i civil war and was captured by the i confederates in the battle of Bull Run. lie served two years in a rebel prison. Peculiar Joy Ride. Gretna—Two young men, Roy Dris coll and Joe Schmitt, starting out for | a joy ride in a tank here, were swept out into the current of the tiood and carried down stream, unable to control ' their unwieldy craft. They were res- i cued by George Humphrey, who threw I them a rope from the Elkhorn bridge and towed them to shore. To Mark Meridian Road. Strotnsburg—The Meridian road, ex tending from Winnipeg. Canada, to the Gulf, passes through Stromsburg. and at a meeting of the commercial club j a committee was appointed to put in place road marks made for this pur pose by the .Meridian roan association. ! Harbinger of Spring. Exeter.—M. S. Rasmussen, a rural carrier, brought a small grasshopper to town the other day. It was found and captured while out enjoying the sun. He is being exhibited us a proof 1 that spring is here. Mr. Bryan to Speak at Peru. Peru—W. J. Bryan has been secured to deliver the commencement address at Peru on the 24th of May. His sub ject will be "Signs of the Times." NEWS FROM THE STATE HOUSE. | The records of the secretary of state i | show that the state university ex- ] 1 pended for all purposes, except build ing. a total of $105,003.37 during the month of March. State Pood Commissioner Hansen , an room furniture needed at the peniten tiary. ‘ The state will not buy Havi land china for the convicts' dining table, but will probably replace gran iteware with aluminum trimmed with gold,’’ remarked Mr. Cowles. cuuie iroasurer ueorge s monthly report shpws that there was $570, 699.94 in the treasury at the close of j March, of which $295,758 is tempo I rarv school money and must be paid out to the different counties for the support of public schools some time in May. The amount on hand the first of March was $61S.624. Of the funds now in the treasury $5,740.37 is cash on hand. $504.262.9S cash on deposit in depository banks and $60,696.59 con sists of state warrants on hand. James Walsh of Omaha, who re cently tried to present to the governor a fine specimen of the Chinook salmon from the Campbell river, British Co lombia. and who failed through the ignorance of cold storage men who cut off the head and tail of the fish, suc ceeded in his second presentation. The fish given to the governor will be presented to the university museum to be mounted. It weighs forty-five pounds and was caught by Mr. Walsh last summer and has since been in cold storage. That Tom Davis, who slashed the throat of a fellow-convict, John Strong, intends to fight his case to the finish when he is arraigned and later tried was evidenced when he asked Warden Melick to summon Allen Field, jr„ to act as an attorney for him. Mr. Field was called and entered into conference with the pris oners. To prison otficers Davis re fuses to discuss the murder of Strong, and further than the statement made that he got Strong because Strong had threatened to kill him nothing will be said by the convict murderer. Governor Aldrich has received a re quest from ten members of a grand jury that convened at Alliance to in stitute ouster proceedings against Mayor Fred W. Harris and Chief of Police John B. Hunsacker and Night Marshal Floyd R. Donovan of Alliance. State Game Warden Henry V. Miller has received word that the grand jury of Saunders county has returned an indictment against Dick Sutton and his oldest son, Tom Andrews and Al fred Larson, for shooting and killing a deer near Wahoo last fall. The in dicted men have given bonds in the sum of $500 to appear for trial. BRIEF NEWS OF NEBRASKA There are said to be over 130,000 Catholics iu the territory of Nebraska. Mrs. Catherine Xeligh, the first white woman to settle in Cuming county, is dead. A Wesleyan endowment banquet was held at Arlington. Tuesday night, with an attendance of fifty men. A new public drinking fountain for the accommodation of both man *ud beast is to be installed at Callaway. Fremont is the first Nebraska city, with the exception of Omaha, to put the Bertilliou system of measurements into use. One hundred and forty-seven hunt ers in York county have taken out licenses tor 1913 since the first oi January. Mrs. Petersen, the aged woman w ho fell and broke her leg at Daunebrog. has since died. She w as ninety-three years of age. While working with a stubborn gasoline engine at Winside. Henry Waicker had the bones of his right hand broken. A tin shower was given to Mr. and Mrs. George Harris at their new home at Shubert by sixty of the young couple's friends. Alliance Elks will have a fair. April 15 to 20, proceeds to be applied to the building fund tor the contemplated hall in that ptaee. Frederick Sudman, one of the pioneers of western Nebraska, .died at his home at Chappell after an ill ness of one week. Jacob Sollenberger, aged eighty six years, died at York Sunday night. Mr. Solicitbergei had been in feeble health for some time. Nearly a hundred ministers and delegates were present at the Nebras ka conference of the Swedish Luth eran church at Axtell. just closed. Prof. W. C. Noll, principal of the Fairmont high school, has resigned his position to accept the position of principal of tjie McCool public schools April 11 and 12 are the dates set fer the annual conference of ministers in the Omaha district of the Methodist church, whiclt will be held in Fremont. The board of directors of the Stan ton County Agricultural society has fited the dates for the holding of the Stanton county fair this year as Au gust 27 to 33. Beatrice has aa aero club, which is devoted to the serious purpose of pro moting aeronautics, and the members of which have already produced sev eral machines which actually fly. Will Johnson, a former Hastings boy. who is now in the Pacific roast league had the distinction of being the first outfielder to be definitely piclted from the bunch of San Fran cisco recruits. Dr. H. H. Waite, city bacteriologist has reported to the Lincoln city coun cil that since his last report, a month or more ago. he has made fifty-eight tests of water samples, and has found most excellent conditions. A mule owned by George Meyers of Johnson broke one of its legs while playing in the lot. Instead of shoot ing him Mr. Meyers set the bones, built a box around the broken member, and the mule is getting well. An order has been placed for a Fertillion system outfit for the Fre mont police station. The city and the county will install the system to gether and both the police and sher iff's offices will have the use of it. Farmers and cattle raisers around Nebraska City are becoming alarmed over the shortage of hay. Many of the stock feeders will have to ship to market because it is almost impossible to get hay at any price near their homes. The Rev. G. L. Graham of Russell. Kas.. has been secured by the I’nited Brethren church of York to fill the vacancy in that pulpit caused by the death of the Rev. Mr. Arnold a few weeks ago. Mr. Graham will take charge about the first of May. Miss Amelia Wille. principal of the Greggsport school, while on her way home in company with Miss Stahlhut. was attacked near the postoffice by a man who ran up behind her, grabbed her pocketbook. threw her down and made his escape before anyone could come to her aid. Hereaner tramps win prooaoiy re ceive a pretty cool reception when they visit York, if the ruling of the board of supervisors is carried. It has been the custom heretofore to have meals and other good things handed to the fraternity charged to the county. The board will refuse to pay in the future and the city of York will either nave to pay these bills or send the "bo" on his way unfed. A temperance ticket will oppose the citizens ticket at the spring elec tion at Callaway. The weather observer at Wahoo reports that six feet of snow has fallen at that place since October 1, 1911. This is equivalent to nine inches of water. With no new cases of cerebro spinal meningitis reported in Nebras ka for three weeks, physicians of the state have now no fear that the dis ease might secure a foothold in the state. Martha, the two and one-half year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sherman, residing near Cortland, was severely scalded about the arms by falling into a boiler of hot water. As a result of a chicken incubator exploding in the house of William H. Hare, near Fairbury. a disastrous fire was barely averted. Mrs. Hare was awakened by the smell of blazing pine and on investigation found a sheet of dame rolling up the walls of the kitchen near the incubator. The little stove had exploded and the building was on fire. By hard work the blaze was extinguished. Plans for carrying out more goc-d roads work in the county during the summer will be made by members of the Dodge 'County Automobile asso ciation. E. H. Purcell of Broken Bow has kept a flock of 110 pullets over win ter. They were healthy young hens of a superior breed and had just ar rived at the laying stage. On opening the poultry house door one morning, Mr. Purcell was amazed to find his flock piled up over the floor, the greater part of them dead and others in a dying condition. It is believed they were poisoned. FLOOD IS TERRIFIC THOUSANDS OF SQUARE MILES ARE INUNDATED. MHT OF PEOPLE HOMELESS Levees Are Constantly Breaking and Around Cairo, III., tne Country is One Big Ocean. Cairo. 111.—Thirty •thousand persons homeless, 2.t>0!) square miles of coun try inundated, thirty persons drowned and a financial loss of $10,000,000 con stitute the result of a two weeks' flood iu the Missouri valley. These figures were arrived at by government engineers and officials of state levee boards engaged in battling the ravaging sweep of tile Mississippi river from points in Illinois to threat ened places in Mississippi and Arkan sas. Water is pouring into Arkansas through three new break in the levee south of Memphis. These gave way and several hundred square miles are subject to flooding. Railroad traffic in these sections is practically paralyzed. Hundreds of persons still are menaced by the tide of the river at points in lower Mis souri, northwest Tennessee and Ar kansas. They are marooned on house tops, in trees and on anchored rafts directly in the sweep of the river. Conservative judgment at Memphis last night was expressed in belief that the great majority of these flood prisoners would be rescued. The most dangerous jioint in the flood situation Sunday was at Gold en lake, the Arkansas levee guarding the pressure of the Mississippi. Had this embankment been breached it would have added to the tide already sweeping through northwest Arkan sas. At U o'clock at night the Golden lake levee held and as it continued to baffle the swirl of the flood danger in the southern part of the valley in creased. As long as the flood remains in the levees north the strain on the southern embankments increases. Hourly the danger zone works southward. In their upper reaches the Ohio and Mississippi rivers are practically at a standstill. This moans that the flood's crest now is exerted on the dikes from the Missouri line southward. There has been suffering among thosands of refugees gathered in the towns in the flood district. However, this situation cannot continue, be cause officials of the slate and federal government are working to carry food to the homeless. State and levee board officials in the districts south of Memphis have been laboring to top the threatened levees. Mississippi state officials think their embankment will hold. Never theless the menace to states border ing the Mississippi south of Memphis will not have ceased until the great river's rushing waters have hurled themselves into the gulf. Cairo at this time is an island city, surrounded by an ocean of water, the crest of which is ten feet higher than the average level of the city. In many places this wall of water stands twenty feet higher than the street Generous donations from all ]>arts of Kentucky are being sent to Hickman to aid the 3.500 flood refugees who have struggled into that city. Workers Want Free Speech. San Francisco. Cal.—With the events of the last week, the struggle between the employers of the Pacific coast and the Industrial Workers of the World, has narrowed. A manifesto issued by the San Diego Free Speech league says the league is making the tight to spread open shop propaganda. The question of higher wages and shorter hours has been eliminated, at least tempo rarily, in the northwest by the stand of the strikqps on the sole issue of recognition of the Industrial Workers’ organization. Sergeant Walsh Claims Record. San Francisco.—Sergeant Clem ents Walsh, aged 61 years, claims the record for the walking round trip from San Francisco to New York, having arrived at the Presidio late Sunday. The previous record, held by Edward Payson Weston, was eighteen days longer. Governor Wilson Robbed. Chicago.—Thieves, apparently with political affiliations, broke into the rooms of Governor W oodrow Wilson of New Jersey and stole a suitcase full of private correspondence and papers belonging to Governor Wilson. Mother Found Guilty. North Yakima, Wis.—Mrs. Eva Bet' lalon. on trial for the murder of her in an irrigated ditch, was found in an irrigated dittch, was found guilty of manslaughter. Riot Cases Are Dismissed. Albert Lea, Minn.—On the motion i of the county attorney “the Glenville riot cases" were dismissed in the dis trict court here. Nearly one year ago Dr. J. P. Freeman of Glenville was tarred and feathered as he left his , office for his home. Again Under Arrest. Chicago.—Alfred H. Monroe, presi dent of the Globe asscciation. was ar rested by United States officers on a warrant charging he was about to for feit his bonds of $5,0(H). Crazy Snake Reported Dead. Oklahoma City, Okl.—Crazy Snafle, the Indian responsible for the last rising in Oklahoma, died here Friday according to a report received from Vioeta. The old chief’s end came near Old Hickory, the stamping ground of the Creeks in 1908. Four Delegates for Clark. Milwaukee. — Latest returns from the state preference primary show Champ Clark will have at least four delegates to the national demo cratic convention. WALLS OF CHINESE CITIES Immense Structures to Be Demolished to Make Way for Modern improvements. Shanghai. China.—The decision to demolish the ancient wall surround ing Shanghai city is an interesting sign of the times as well as the pre liminary to an ambitious scheme of development. J Scores of coolies were at work, says the North China Daily News, with pick and shovel on that portion of the city rampart which faces the street leading to the old yamen. The Cojyri^fct. I'ruierwuod «£. I'Dtl* rwuod, N. Y. Fort on the Great Wail. ~a!l itseif is several times wider than the alley ways along which pedestrians and rickshas make their devious and difficult way in that part of the city. The space acquired by the removal of the wall should therefore, if used to best advantage, be of considerable value. It appears to have been suddenly discovered that the wall is useless as a means of defense and that it is an ugly impediment to the development and improvement of the native quar ters. The work was put in hand im mediately the order went forth from the town hall works department that it was to be executed without fail. The owners and inhabitants of shanties on the wall have been or dered to remove these, and any fences, material, etc., which would impede the progress of the work. An outcry might have been expected, since the scheme had been strongly op posed, but the order has been quietly accepted. In fact very little Interest seems to have been aroused by the work, even though it inaugurates a striking change. Two of the principal gates in the city wall of Hangchow have been removed. At Canton the republican government has ordered an investiga tion as to the population and the num ber of houses along the wall inside and outside the city. The officials deputed to the work are to report in a month, submitting a list of the houses and residents, together with a scheme for the demolition of the en tire city wall. RISE AND FALL OF MINE TOWNS Bubble of Popularity Frequently Is Quickly Punctured in Many Gold Camps. Vancouver, B. C.—"It don’t take long to puncture tbe bubble of a town's popularity,” remarked Paul C. Stephens, formerly of Washington, at the New Ebbltt. Mr. Stephens has been in nearly every mining camp which has sprung up in recent years in the west, Alaska and British Co lumbia. "The average person in the east," he continued, "does not com prehend what great gold mines there are in the small places of the west about which one hears but little. Take Nevada, for instance. I think the largest gold producing mine in the world is located there, near Goldfield, which yields more than $1.000,000 a month. In Colorado there are scores of mines that are yielding fortunes, but they are rarely heard of. Gold field, Nev„ at the time of the boom, grew into a city of nearly 30,000 popu lation. Today, with the fever gone, it has scarcely 3.000. Rawhide, which was another of the great gold •finds/ had at one time more than 20,000 peo ple, but there are not more than 300 or 400 residents there today. “The realty values of Goldfield have depreciated so much that property is worth comparatively little. Lots that were selling during the boom for as high as $50,000 are offered now for $2,000, and there are no buyers. It is almost sad to walk the streets of Goldfield and see the vacant business blocks that were erected by investors who were carried away for the mo ment by the gold craze. "In British Columbia, on tbe Frazier river, is a little place called Barkers ville, which is populated by perhaps 75 or 100 persons, mostly Chinamen. There was a time when Barkersvllle had 30,000 people in it and was a thriving mining camp.” TEETH WORTH SI .500 EACH Mao Who Lest Eight Is Awarded $12,000 Damages by New York Jury. New York.—It is very expensive to knock eight good teeth from a man’s head, as the Brooklyn Heights Rail road company learned In I.ong Island City, when a jury brought In a verdict of $12,000 against the company. The jury decided that each tooth was worth $1,500. The case was that of Axe! Home stead. an insurance man of Rrooklyn. He was about to board a trolley car In October, 1910, when he was struck and knocked down by another car. Thieves Burn Man’s Hands. New York.—Vincenzo Glardaneesco, explaining why he needed his burned hands treated, told Harlem hospital physicians that two men demanding money of him tried to set him on fire when he refused It THE TRUST Peking powd&& At Yon’ll be de lighted with the re W suits of Calumet Caking ^ Powder. No disappoints — no flat, heavy, soggy biscuits, cake, or pastry. Just the lightest, daintiest, most uniformly raised and most deli . cious food you ever ate. R«c«lYad ht£h«it rairtrd World'* M, Ptr* Feed SupoiiUor, vet CMcasa. taor. jagr There are times when we should be thankful for what we fail to get. To overcome constipation and resultant Ills, take tiartield Tea, a pure herb laxative. The woman who suffers in silence usually manages to make a lot of noise about it. Poor Fellow! “He has n8 control over his limbs." “You wouldn’t if you had had your leg pulled as often as he has.” Defined. Freddie—Say, dad, what’s morbid curiosity? Cobwigger—That’s what the fellow has who butts in ahead of yon and keeps you from seeing anything. Extra Inducement. Cohen, the clothier, followed a cus tomer out to his buggy. “Dot's a pretty fine horse you are driving,” he commented approvingly. “Yes, he’s a good one.” "How much would you sell him for?” “Seventy-five dollars.” “Mein Gott! is he silk lined?"— Everybody's. Demand for New Alloy. Although the early expectations of the wholesale substitution of alum J inum for steel and iron have not ma terialized. the demand for the new al | loy has grown enormously. FTom a I production in the United States of j less than 100,000 pounds in 1883, in 1S93 the output had grown to 350,000 j pounds. 1903 to 7,500,000 pounds and today it is in excess of 50,000,000 pounds. His Number. He gazed tenderly into her eyes as she spoke. "Life," she murmured dreamily, “Is, after all, nothing but a romance In which we are characters, moving hith er and yon as the supreme author of 1 our being directs." i “And in the novel of 7our life,” I said he tenderly, "where do I come in?” "You,” she answered with a smile. "Oh, you are—let me see—one, two, three—you are Chap Seventeen.”— Harper's Weekly. Shocked. He—Well, my dear, what did the landscape gardener I sent out from town say about making the artificial lake where we wanted it? She—He was most profane about it. He told me the site we wanted wasn’t worth a dam. A Tempting Treat— Post Toasties with cream Crisp, Huffy bits of white Indian Com; cooked, rolled into flakes and toasted to a golden brown. Ready to serve direct from the package. , Delightful flavour! Thoroughly wholesome! “The Memory Lingers** Sold by Grocers Poatnm Cereal Company. T.imita* Battle Creek; Mich.