SUCCEEDS IN CANADA At Ssiemlisg tad successful Amerl eat farmer. Lew Palmer, of StaveJer, Ai*a. patwd through the city today. 9tr Palmer came from Du lath, Minn, J*« t«* jeara ajn. and brought with ham tour cow* and three horses—and that waa hia all He homesteaded in Use Btareiey district and today bat acres of land |2 ttM worth of im t emeata. U Perrheroa horses. made f'. ♦* out of bogs last year raised f ••• bushels of wheat. I.W* bushels •f oats. 13 acres of potatoes and If teas of tmferns His farm and stock is worth tM.Mf. and he made it all in tea years —Earhcwpe.—Advertisement. A Better Plm “The prof,!* past door play the (mpbcphoae laressaatly * “•it ! they eeem kind-hearted. They ha*» oSered to loan a* any records We tike ** should prefer to borrow some of »« dual like, aad than cat them ef weejntf* for a few days" SCALP ITCHED AND BURNED KJ South Scioto St. Circlet ills. Ohio — Ij litti* girl's trouble first started os her head In a bunch of lit tle p-mptes fcH of yellow lucking mat ter and they would spread in largo fi»c«s In a »brt time they would <■> a I'»er scalp was awfully red and Interned and the burning and itching •eru so Inseaae that she would scratch ard rub till it would leare ugly sores the sores also appeared on her body, and her cfcti og irr. • a:»d th. m so th.it I bad to put real soft cloth nest to beg body. She would lie awake of rights and wa> very worrisome. At Lae* she was torturei uuh itching ard bertueg I tried d.*-e. et remedies with no ben- : • !;f ttM-n’tos 1 had given up all t ■f her ever ge*- eg r.d of it. then 1 < ci. : o*d to try Cat .cars Soap and > i. • m - at The second application rare r»: ef In a short time she »as <*• r-ly cored 'Signed* Mr*. Alice BMa. Xov *. 1512 C. icara Soap and Oin'aent sold th'* ..'boat the » - rid. Sample of each . ; Skta Rook.. Address pot F- sard :.ji —Adr. T'e be«» Dances. I' > Sendsf the remarkable eran r i»t was ask'd after his successful Pi.ilsdetphta muos what he thought af the new dance* -What do I think of the new da*»r«**“ said Mr Sunday, with a laugh. "te'eiL let me tell you a story. A ye-eng man and a girl in evering drea* tai Is a conservatory A foun tain trackWd and gargled in a marble, basin before them Palms drooped their kmg leave* over them "The light waa dim Distant music sounded softly. .-.dden jr the yneng man. overcome b* the girl s beauty seixed her in bis arms and crushed her madly to bis Irian * »by, )fr T reran loo.’ she said, porting her watte hand on his shirt bosom and posting him coldly away. >oo forget yourself This sort of thing len t proper -here ' At' saytng. she took bis arm and they sect out cm to the ballroom floor aad indulged in a matins ~ Of* H.maetf, C«fOT<« Yu.«rrt U bad b*a lunch *itb a trirnc at Mtnti i A* they left the reotaurant a aeed).looking Brr.diiant »;prus*i*d M »» Vander bilt asd fc* id owt fcl* band "Cast you tiff ax* a few pennies, lad;*' to |toaded *1 m buttery and a tot keodowa apart myaelf ” Mm Vat.dern.-i bad coughed cp a quarter before tbe f«t] Impact of hie remark struck ber. ttoc ato began to laugb *1 * puee 1 should bare riren him a dollar ato < baerrad 'At least the Ban * as brute * , At If:33 P M. "* '» why doea tbat young cab ■fay oat so later* I tollere t.ea pleading w;tb Mabel fur a good-tight bias *• 1. i: tbat hi tbe only way to ret nd of h.t_ authorize her to to dt»w *L~ Washerwomen :a Alabama are com pelled to regtster itosr name* with the city toaith o* pafax-tts. HER WOTMER-IN LAW P-x-eu a Wise. Goad Pneod. A yew*a* wofeta out la U iMBi a * *e. good friend a. her mother-ia law. Pokes aot w iihstaaSiag. She writes: 1 *as greatly troubled with my stomach. compieijoa was blotchy aad ye *ov Afer meals 1 oftea suffered sharp paias aad would bare to lie 4u«a- Vy mother oftea told me tt was the eoft* 1 drank at meals. Bat w be* I d gu:t coffee 1 d hare a eerere besdarbe. 'While riritlag my mother la lav I remarked that she always made such good taffw, aad asked her to tell me bs-'W She laughed aad told me It was » easy to nabs gasd 'coffee- wbea jroa SM Post urn *1 begaa to aso Post am as sooa as I g * home aad aow »« bare the same good coffee' tpoerami ererr day. and I bare bo more trouble ladigwtkta 1* a n ag of the past, aad my com fsesloa has cleared up beautifully 54 y rrai f mother * offered a great 4«al «Ah her sto-igrh. Her dorter tc44 her to lea** off coffee She thee took tee but that was Jus* as bad "FV taally eras iadaeed to try Poet •m whv k obe bat used for orer a year. Kb* trawled during the winter ewer the greater part of Jova. netting, soasnhm* she had aot been able to go for years. She says the owes ber Present wood baaitb t« Poetem " Xame ff<«s by P tisa Co.. Battle Crwfc. Mich Read “The Road to Well tO*.' la tigs. mast be well a soluble pov dsr A «ea*po«ofu] dteeolws quickly la a .-up ef hot water aad. with rruam aad oagar. makes a delirious brrrrage TW mat per cup of both l lads Is “Theew's a ffsasna* tor Poetum —aold by Groeera MniTMTHEM Of TERROR" ——— ** M m ■ f — — /*>v* ss»a Jinx max KE T n of Terror" of the militant suf frage! of Great Britain haa now been In progress for slightly more than one year. The record of Its first twelve months shows that Mrs. Johns chose the name well. On tlir night of April 3. 1913. this woman, one of the most aggressive of the leaders, speak ir g in Glasgow, borrowed from the French Revolution that appellation with which to christen the new frenzy of militancy, come t< life -.bat day She added that the militancy of the past wo.yl be "the merest pin pricks compared to what ' will happen at once all over the country " ■: e tam<‘ day. in London, officers of the Women's ial and Political union turned to the Boer war for a ; ‘ ras». and dec'ared that what was to be done “would .-tasaer humanity.” Yet another leader announced that human life, we have resolved, will be respected no longer " Throughout the army of the militants, in short, there ffam-d fresh fury on that day The reason was that Mrs. Pankhurst was then sen tenced to per.al seryitude for three years for inciting the destruction of the country house of Chancellor of !t exchequer Llo d George. The suffragettes rioted in , Old Hailey after Justice Sir Charles Lush pronounced r-t.'ence and then went from the court to begin their reign of terror. The Initial act of the militants was the defacing that aft-moon in the Manchester art gallery of five paintings by Leighton and other famous artists. The initial act of the authorities, in preparation for the reign, was the issuance of a general warning by Scotland Yard to own er* and tenants of property, and the taking of unusual precautions by the police throughout the United King dom Since then, according to the published records, not a day. and for days in sequence scarcely an hour, has parsed without militant damage being done to person or t property. or without danger or fear or inconvenience be rg caused to some of the public The activities of the militants have ranged from throw r.g pepper on Premier Asquith and a dead cat at Augus tine BirreQ. chief secretary for Ireland, to burning the Midland railway sheds at Bradford with a loss of $500. ""d and attempting to blow up part of the Bank of Kr.eland They have endangered hundreds of lives; they have done direct property damage and caused indirect losses to the extent of millions of dollars. The mlli'ants in their campaigns have used fire, ■rr.h?. mines, hatchets, hammers, revolvers, pokers. *nives. bludgeon* stones, tar. paint, riding switches, rse whips, dog whips, umbrellas, foul Emelllng chem icals corrosive chemicals, barbed wire entanglements for police, besides using as weapons their fists, nails, teeth and feet. j a* militants nave burned wnoilv or partly, country mansions in charge of servants, who escaped only by being awakened by the flames: castles including Balll s nrmm Alberuchile and Lisburn; unoccupied country h-'uset, s< rr.e owned by peers and members of parlia mer.t railway stations, railway sheds, railway oars, • jrrhes factories timber yards, hayricks, exhibition t Rldirgv conservatories, race track grandstands, cricket grandstands, football grandstands, furniture, organs, 'aji- sines, paintings. boat houses, racing shells a Car negie library, town corporation structures, college and ► huol buildings 'including a Cambridge laboratory), and an empty hospital They have attempted to burn the Royal academy, Ridings ai Harrow school, aeroplane sheds of the army flyinr corps, and a historic church. They have plotted, m < rdlng to the Daily Mirror, to burn Iondon by simul taneously firing all the big timber yards and cutting the t<-:. ehon« and telegraph wires surrounding. They have with bombs destroyed or damaged shops, railway stations, railway cars, churches, country houses, conservatories. the Royal observatory at Edinburgh, the Liverpool cotton exchange and the Trade hall at Man chester They have destroyed with a bomb an empty - ar attached to an exp-ess train, endangering passengers in other cars and they are charged with having tried to »t-< k 3n express by obstructing the track. They have placed bombs which failed to work or were • ur,d before exploding in streets, shops, tube stations, cast;es a public library, a tennis club, a theater. St Paul's cathedral and the football pavilion at Cambridge. They have sent bombs through the mails, addressed to Reginald McKenna, home secretary, and other prominent me:, one of the bombs badly injuring the hand of a mail s '-er they have exploded mines In attempts to blow up Holloway prison, and to breach a canal to cause a flood; •bey have plotted to blow up bouses of members of par liament they have scattered dummy bombs broadcast, both To advertise their movement and to terrorize. At one time the London papers declared that "every day brutes Its bomb." and instructions on the art of handling unexploded bombs safely were printed daily. The> have pummeled Premier Asquith, dog-whipped lord Weardale. horsewhipped Holloway prison physi cians. hurled apples in court at Justice Lord Salvesen, thrown hammers at a Judge in Old Bailey, scattered J+AZIS'D VI77T7Z-&&S £f iOTVECJf * flour over Thomas McKinnon Wood, secretary for Scot land. and over John Redmond, and have painted Red mond's statue green; they have covered the earl of Derby's statue with tar; they have harassed cabinet min isters at meetings; they have plotted to kidnap Chancel lor Lloyd George. Justice Lush (who sentenced Mrs. Pankhurst) and the children of Winston Spencer Chur chill, first lord of the admiralty; they have threatened Home Secretary McKenna with death, and are categori cally charged with having tried to throw over the cliffs into the sea the late Sir Henry Curtis Bennett, a judge Sfho had sentenced many suffragettes. They have rioted Sunday after Sunday in Trafalgar square or Hyde park and have marched, now’ shrieking, now singing "The March of the Women,” to Downing street in attempts to besiege Premier Asquith's official residence. These riots have meant serious affrays with the police and many arrests. They have ruined or injured thousands of letters in hundreds of mail boxes throughout the British isles by the use of corrosive fluids: court proceedings showed that in ten weeks in London alone they destroyed or damaged 8.445 mail packets in 565 boxes. They have smashed tens of thousands of windows in cities and towns all over the kingdom, including the win dows of police stations. i ua.c eiasueu lamoos paintings ana smasnea curios in museums; they have torn up public flower beds, ruined putting greens on golf courses, wrecked furniture in newspaper offices, caused disturbances in the house of commons, punctured hundreds of automobile tires, fired a huge Crimean war cannon at night and fright ened the whole city of Blackburn, ruined library books by cutting the leaves, stamped hotel bedding with "Totes for Women.” thrown chemicals of foul odor at town councilors, wrecked taxicab interiors, interrupted meet ings of learned societies and political parties, and daubed white paint over much of the interior of Bir mingham cathedral. They have plotted to damage light houses and to attack every theater and music hall In London simultaneously by scattering a pungent powder over the audiences to cause sneezing and skin burning. They have interrupted many services in Westminster abbey. St. Paul’s cathedral. York minster, Glasgow cathedral, and other churches by chanting “God Save Mrs Pankhurst,” and before being ejected they have sometimes fought, shrieked and lain on the floor kicking. They have defaced tapestries and paintings during the progress of elaborate receptions in the West end of London, some of them given by peeresses, so that fright ened hostesses had to engage numerous detectives as guards. They have scattered suffragette leaflets upon the king and queen, and have harangued the royal pair in theaters and on the street; they have attempted to mob the royal carriage, they have caused discord in Buckingham pal ace. the queen becoming furiously angry with ladies-tn waitipg who espoused the militant cause, among the res ignations from the court entourage being that of Lady Shaftesbury: they have obtained the private telephone number of the king and have got him on the wire, to his exasperation; they have caused cards for court presenta tions to be changed in iorm and have made extra precau tions on court days necessary. They have hurt the London season and the tourist trade and thus inflicted extensive loss of business upon shops and hotels: they have caused large sums to be spent for guards for country estates, historic castles, railroad stations and tunnels, churches, museums, shops, municipal buildings, and Shakespeare memorials- they have caused the regatta at Henley and the golf cham pionships at St. Andrews to be “as If they were in a state of siege, so the cables said, because of the numer ous guards; they have caused wholesale closing of pub lic buildings in London and other places, including Wind sor castle, Tower of London (jewel room), Hampton court palace, British museum, and cathedrals, museums and art galleries generally; they have forced each cabi net minister to have three detectives as constant guards and they have made the police “nerve racked,” again in the words of the cables. SEA BATH TAKEN AT HOME Said to Be Beneficial and by No Means Expensive for Those Who Like It Various sanatoria ar.d private hos pitals are using the salt rub." and It JS becoming so popular that some Turkish bath establishments are ad vertising it as a special attraction. It is just as good for well people as sick ooes. is the most refreshing of ail baths and rubs ever invented, only When the Cuckoo Arrives. Sussex alone of English counties has one fixed and unalterable day for the arrival of the cuckoo. This is April H. the date of the "Cuckoo fair," st Heathfleld. where an old lady who ha* charge of all the cuckoos lets them loose from her basket The old la said to be of very irascible disposition, and allows only one or two cockoos to escape if anything has happened to ruffle her temper. What ever truth there may be in the story. Healhfield. though now partly spoiled excepting a dip in the sea. and is matchless in its effect upon the skin and complexion. With ail these virtues it is the sim plest and most easily managed of all similar measures, and can be taken at home easily, and is compara tively inexpensive. Put a few pounds of coarse salt— the coarsest you can get, sea salt by preference—in an earthen jar, «and pour enough water on it to produce a sort of slush, but not enough to dis solve the salt. Tlr.s should then be by prosaic, “natural gas" works, still ■ possesses a park, whose romantic hid den ravines and wealth of foliage would furnish an ideal retreat for the "wandering voice” of Wordsworth.— London Chronicle. Sounded Personal. “Our porter got mad at an innocent question.” “What was that?” “I asked him if there were any train robbers left in this part of the West" —Kansas City Journal. taken up in handfuls and rubbed brisk ly over the entire person, but anyone in ordinary health can do it for him self very satisfactorily. This being done, the next thing is a thorough ducking of dear water, preferably cold, and a brisk rubbing with a dry toweL The effect of ela tion. freshness and renewed life is im mediately felt, and the satiny texture of the skin and increased clearness and brightness of the complexion swell the testimony in favor of the salt rub.—Family Doctor. Pianos Made Mouse Proof. Pianos are now made mouse proof A recent invention closes the only means of entry hitherto left open The opening under the piano pedal nor mally leaving an opening sufficient for the mice to enter, when the pedal is elevated, is closed by a simple cur tain effect that works automatically with the release of pressure on the pedal. When the piano is not in use the device automatically closes ths opening by which the mice can reach the interior to work their destruction • \ HOME LOOKED GOOD TO HIM i Boston Man Return* From Tunis After m Thrilling Experience With Arabs. There never was a man who showed more happiness to touch foot on native 9cil than Percival Roberts of Boston, j graduate of Oxford college. England, : and an alumnus of the Harvard law ; school, who arrived at Boston from Naples. Mr. Roberts had hurried to Italy after having been chased on ! camel back by wild Tripolitan bandits, wbo swooped down cn him and his 1 party's pack camels and household goods when they were camping on the border of the desert south of Sfax. in the interior of Tunis. Italian soldiers had driven a flying squadron of untamed Arab horsemen and cut-throats across the Tunis bord er. and when the pack of infuriated savages caught sight of the Roberts party It charged the camp with wild . yells and blazing rifles. Roberts embarked on the first ship , the desert he could locate in his frantic rush for a conveyance and swayed and rolled on camel-back over the dry sands of the desert for ten miles before he could make his geta i way. His three friends, two French j men and an Englishman, got off in dif : ferent directions, ail aboard the swift i racing camels which had carried them I into camp. ______________________ Language Not Likely to Last. Mistral, the great Provencal poet, whose death was announced lately, has been likened to Robert Bums for ; the work he did. But Bums' task was child s play compared with Mis ! Thai's. The Scottish poet found his language fully grown and completely a'.ive; Mistral had to create his means , of expression. Provencal had lost ev ery resemblance tc a literary tongue, and the new poet-patriot had to mold ! it afresh, to re-create and to build up or. the ruins left by the vineyard and j the farm. "Gar Provencal," said Mis tral. was a country lass, ragged and wild " She is now a wonderfully beau- i | tiful creature: but it is doubtful j whether all the genius of Mistral can f keep her alive. The educational re ' former in France does not like such irregular beauty. Not Oot of Place. Twamley—Wouldn't girls look funny ! if they had mustaches on their lips? Sammy—I guess they have them j there pretty often, but the lights are generally turned too low to see if they look funny. Practises Watchful Waiting. “How often do you cut your grass?” "Every time my neighbor has his lawnmower sharpened." Nc man can talk quite so eloquently as his money. JUFansDrtnk JttDomaiisVrinl {fvert/hodjisVnnk * ' a-and keenly >t- quenching average rs. ill liar**— Kin tmn. >MPANY Not That Stingy. "Hogan." propounded Schmidt, “If a hen unt a half laidt an egg unt a half a day, how long vouldt it dake a hen to lay half an egg?” “A hin," promptly responded Pat. "wud scorn to short change her own er by layin' half an egg. An' nobody but a tightfist wud iver think av such a thing."—Judge. First Thing in Nature. Every investigation which is guided by principles of nature fixes its ulti mate aim entirely on gratifying the stomach.—Athenaeus. Certainly women have been known to stop talking for the purpose of thinking. Anxious Moment. Lucille (earnestly)—Karl, I want to ask you one question. Karl (also earnestly)—What is It, sweetheart? Lucille (more in earnest than ever) —Karl, If you had never met me, would you have loved me just the same?—Life. Well Paved. It’s i. good thing the way of the transgressor is hard, or It wouldn’t stand the heavy traffic.—Philadelphia Public Ledger. A Brick. Hez—I’ve often thought what a dan* dy partition a donkey would make. Silas—Walls have ears, you know. Let’s Have a Porch Party with V It’s the ideal offering to guests or family, especially after dinner. It’s the hos pitality gum — so perfectly packed that it stays perfectly fresh and clean. It costs al most noth ing: but people like it better than much more cost ly thing:s. lit relieves all “over eaten” feelings—re freshes the mouth— cleanses the teeth beautifully. FVFUV Chewit after Ej ? 11 every meaL PACKAGE TIGHTLY SEALED! Remember—the new seal is tight and dnst-proof! It’s best gum in the best Be SURE it’s l Look for \__L