4 M ( IN MEMORY OF SUBMARINE DISASTER. r m j J C&j Jf i - . NPuAvrVkflBVjkflHvCP' sK ' The above remarkable piece of sculpture la to be erected In St. Peters burg, Russia, to commemorate the flooding of the submarine "Steregustshy" Un which several sailors lost their lives. It is the work of Constantino Isen-Jfaurg-Nlkisoroff. a noted Russian sculptor. SIOUX INDIAN WAIF "Lost Bird," Adopted by General, Becomes a Bride. .Ittle One Was Found in Dead Moth er's Arms After Battle of Wound ed Knee, Nearly 20 Years Ago. Omaha, Nob. N'lneteen year ago last winter, when the battlo or Wound tod Knou wns fought in South Da kota, JtiBt over the Nebraska lino, on (the Pino Hldgo Indian reservation, between tlio Sioux Indians and the govornment troopB, there wan a Blnughter of ImllaiiH, both meu and women. The Indians wero surprised early in Jtho morning. As the soldiers rode down upon it, intending to capture vlthout n fight, some Indian, by acci dent, discharged his gun. This was the signal for a contlict, and tin sol diers poured volley after volley Into the topees, where but a moment be fore the Indians had been sleeping. Among the Indian sun Ivors was n IIUlo girl. Tlio soldiers named her Elnta Umnui, Sioux for "Lost lllrtl " This child, n babe a few months old, was found clasped in the arms of its dead mother, who had been killed by n soldier's bullet, both wrapped in a blanket and lying In a tepee. Gen. L. W. Colby or Beatrice. Neb.. Ens in command of the statu mllitln int supported the regulars. (It loved jby the fato of tho Iiu'iiin mother he took tho little girl to his camp, and whon opportunity offered sent her to pis homo at Beatrice, where, after jtho cIobo of tho war, she was christ ened Margareta Elizabeth Colby and logally adopted. She was a bright child and was given every possible at tention, clothed In rich apparel and treated as ono or the ramlly When old enough alio was sent to the public schools, and then to n finishing school In Washington, D C , where she lived with a sister of Gen. Colby and be camo quite, a fnvorlto In society. . Having finished hor education she returned to Beatrice, and a couplo of years ago went to Portland, Ore , whore sho has since lived with her foster mother, who moved there. Now comes the word from Portland that tho Indian maiden has been mar rled to Albert Chnllvat, a French Ca nadian, who has Indian blood in his veins, and that sho and her husband (will reside in the Hudson Bay coun try, whoro Challvat's father has a vast tract of land. RICH JEWS PLAN BIG COLONY (Millions Behind Settlement to Be Lo cated In Mesopotamia Jacob H. Schlff to Help. New York. Details of tho contom pin ted establishment In Mesopotamia jor the largest Jewish colony tyo world ever has scon havo been made public Jioro. Announcement was mado or the combination In support or the project or international Jwish organizations 'Which novor havo acted together he Ifore. That tho now movement has financial resources la excess of $100, 000,000 and that tho country which it is proposed to turn Into a Jewish .colony will support a population of 10,000,000 are Indications of tho ex tent of the enterprise. Men in this city who nre Interested In the latest movement townrd tho establishment or a .Jewish colony said credit Tor having united the various rorces in suport or tills elaborate plan should be given to Jacob 11. Schlff and Israel Xungwlll. Private advices from London tell or a meeting of tho Jewish territorial organization, at which Mr. Zangwlll, Sir Andrew Wingate, Meyer Spiolmnn, and others declared that in the settle ment of Mesopotamia Is to bo round the solution of troubles which have beset tho Jews slnco they were dis persed rrom Palestine. It Is proposed to send at once an expedition or exploration through .Mesopotamia for the purpose of gath eiliig Information which will guide tho propagandists of the colony Idea According to the best information ob tainable 110.000,000 will he required to piovlde it ligation works for ono section of Mesopotamia. Child In Culvert Three Days. Pittsburg. Absent from homo ror throe days and searched for by citi zens of half a dozen towns, Mlrhael, the six-year old son of Michael Slnco, a miner employed at Clinton mines, was found lying unconscious at the bottom of a culvert near his father's home. The child had been without food and water all this time, but will i ecover Little Miko had been playing about the house, when suddenly lilb mother missed him. She searched, but noth ing could be found of the missing one. The alarm was then glen, and tho 100 miners employed at tho Clinton mines joined In the hunt, and the dual result was as btntod. White Population Scanty. The white population of northern Australia is but ouo to eery 700 square miles. THE PRESIDENT AT WORK. rbutunli ioijrUIU by Vlluudlint, Wmliinrfton, I). O. Recent photograph of President Taft showing him at his desk In the ex ecutive offices of the White House. SLEEPLESS WONDER Jersey Inventor Has Been Awake for 15 Years. Albert E. Herpln of Trenton, Gets Rest Only by Sitting In Chair Seems to Be In Perfect Phy sical Condition. Trenton, N J Albert 12. Itorpln,, Trenton's "sleepless wonder," has turned Invonfor. Ho says IiIb wakeful ness has made his fortune. He hns Invented a process for undcrglazo photography, by which ho assorts that he enn reproduce portraits of schools, churches, etc., on chlnawnro at about tho same cost as placing a photograph on paper. The new process docs not consist of placing photographs on ware and then varnishing, as It Is done In some cases, but tho waro hi fired In enamel kilns, making It prac tically everlasting Photographs on chlnawaro bavo been In use for mnny years, but aro usually lound to be too expensive, especially when only ono pleco of ware Is made. Herpln snys that tho new piocess will take Its place. Herpln Is known as a "sleepless wonder" According to his friends ho has not slept In 15 years. Hu rests at night like other mortals, but -ho says that his brain Is always active and that he raiely closes his eyos. Some tlmo ago he was offered $2,000 to demonstrate his claim. Ho was to remain awako two weeks, being con stantly wntched dining that porlod by physicians. Ho accepted tho offer, but when the date for tho demonstra tion arrived the physicians failed to put in an appearance. Herpln says his affliction began 15 years ago, when his wife died. Ho sur fored greatly from shock then and asserts he has never slept slnco. Tren ton physicians who have watched Her pln during these years say his story Is true and declare ho Is suffering from a strange malady which brings with It constant sleeplessness. Physi cally Herpln seems perfect and Is able to work as hard as the average man. For a time this "sleepless wonder" was employed by tho city street clean ing department, but ho soon got a bet ter position, and Is now considered wealthy Herpln troubles only about one thing; that Is, he says there aro many women who desire to marry him. He shows his friends daily tot ters he receives from members of tho fair sex proposing marriage. "Doesn't your affliction affect you mentally or physically?" a reporter asked Herpln. "No. sir,' the Inventor said. "It Is beneflcinl to me. Why, I can work a week without even resting, and you see I have an advantage over most men. I thought out my inventions by resting nt night In my big armchair, and several nights I thought of nothing else. Usually I try at night not to let anything worry me, so that I can get mental rest, but it's useless Tor mo to attempt to sleep, for, you see. 1 have attempted to do so mnny times. Slop Is but a habit and any ono can do without It. Or course, rest Is sometimes necessary In order to keep tho physical man in shape. but sleep does not necessarily have to accompnny It." Herpln is always In good humor, and when seen coming from his home in the mornings looks as refreshed as if bo had had a good night's sleep. Frog Fasted for Years. Ashland. Vu. It. II. Gregory of this, city has demonstrated that the theory! of n frog living without food or water Is beyond a doubt tho truth. Gregory made an experiment after reading a magazine statement that frogs had' been known to Uvo hundreds of years while sealed in a brick wall. Securing a frog, Gregory placed It In tho hollow of a treo and sealed it with cement. Yeais passed and tho mnn forgot the frog. Gregory was a mere boy when the creature was shut out from llbeity. A few days ago tho tree was broken. Gregory had his attention called to the hollow, tho cement breaking with tho fall of tho tree. Removing tho cement; tho frog leaped out as live and hearty as when It had been sealed it up. THE POWER OF THE TONGUE Sunday School Lcison for Jane G, 1909 Socially Arrancd for Tills Paper LK8HON Ti:XT -James 3-1-12. Mom- 01 y VlTRfH S-10. (lOLUn.S Ti:.T-Vliov kwppth hi mouth mid hi toman-, kruputh his soul f I oiii troubles 1'iov. 21:23. TIMI2- It Is bfllovpil tho epistle was written betwrcii A I). 40 mid Go. PLAOn Hi'IIummI to bo at Jerusalem. Suggestion and Practical Thought. Philosophers have strlicn to discov er what faculty most clearly separates man fiom the brute; as, that man is the only animal that laughs, or the only animal that cooks, or tho only an imal that stands upright. Most think ers, however, agree that tho power of speech, with all that has grown out of It, Is the clearest and most Important distinction of mankind, and the surest indication ol tho superiority that God has conferred upon tho human race. The passage wo utu to study Is ono of the finest in tho Bible, and Is the crown or all writings upon the sub ject. Vs. I, Uii. Why did James urge his leaders not to be many masters (teachers, as in "schoolmnsters") ? I. Because the young church met that danger continually (seo Acts 15:21; 1 Cor 1:12; 11:20; Gal. 2:12). In tho Jewish church the runctlon or the rub bl was jealously guarded, but tho lib erty or prophesying (teaching) In Christianity was liable to become li cense. And "the more tho Idea pre vailed that faith, without correspond ing obedience, was all that Is needful, tho more men would eagerly press for ward to touch." Alford. This thought Joins our present lesson with the last. To lllustrato perfect speech, to what does James compare tho tongue? To a horse's bit or bridle, which, though small, turns and governs tho whole body of tho great animal; and, similarly, to a ship's holm or rudder, which, though so small In comparison with tho great ship, and so weak In comparison with tho florco winds, yot turns tho ship, in tho face of the winds, whithersoever tho governor (It. V. "stoersnuin") llsteth (R. V. "willeth"). Even so (llko tho bridle and the rudder) tho tongue Is a llttlo member, and boasteth groat things, "vaunts great words, which bring about great acts of mlschlor." Alford. What Is tho point of tho compari son? The power or the tonguo In the guidance and direction of life our own lives and those of others. And "wo aro never to forget that tho 'tonguo' includes tho 'pen.' " Deems. What is tho uoxt comparison used by James? "The tongue that world of of Iniquity Is a flro, sprung rrom the fires or Gehenna. It is a llttlo fire, to the eyo; but a llttlo flro can klndlo a great forest. So the tongue can ruin the whole body nay, the whole llfo, in Its revolving course rrom tho cradlo to tho grave." The tougue is called a world or Iniquity because "all kinds of ovll that are In tho world are exhibited there in mlnlnture." Barnes. What Is the point or this compari son? It pictures the destructive power of the tongue, as the first two compari sons pictured tho tonguo's guiding power. Llttlo words, mere puffs of air, aro Insignificant us small sparks; but as tho flame .and smoke may spreud ovorywhore, so the baneful ef fect of evil speech may penetrato all lire. What Is James' 'next comparison of tho tongue? To an untamed beast; all other living things have been mastered by mankind tho four divisions of anl iiu1b, according to James' rough zoology, namely, quadrupeds, birds, reptiles and fishes. But the tonguo is an exception. .'o man can tamo It; only God, who made It, can keep it under control. "It Is an unruly (rest less) ovll, full of deadly polBon," and so to bo classed with tho animals most hated and feared, the serpents. What Is the point of this compari son? As the first emphasized the guiding power of the tongue and the second its destructive power, so this comparison emphasizes its unre strained power. If tho tonguo cannot bo tamed, are wo to ultimo for our ungoverned speech? Yes, as James hlmsoir says (v. 10), "These things ought not so to be." "If we bo truly Christ's, though 'reviled' by tho unruly tongues of others, we shall, llko him, 'rovllo not again' (I Peter 2:23). And as the whole body Is tho Lord's to bo sancti fied to him (I Cor. 0:19, 20), so partic ularly must tho tonguo bo kept from 'evil-speaking, lying and slandering,' nnd used rightly for tho sorvlco of God. Thus may wo truly offer 'tho calves of our lips' (Hos, 11:2), moro acceptable than tho blood of victims slain on a thousand altars " Elllcott. Why does James drop comparisons whon ho comes to his last point? Bo cause there aro no comparisons In na turo to man's Inconsistency In speech only contrasts. Thp constancy of nature was as well known in Jnmcs' day as In ours. But tho tonguo Is sadly dlfforent! "Out of tho same mouth procewloth blessing and cursing!" What Is tho point of this contrast? Evil Bpoech has been pictured aa (1) influential, (2) destructive, (3) uncon trollable, and now finally as (4) un natural Men . . . aro mado after tho similitude of God. "Tho naturo or man is to adoro God, and to lovo what is Godlike in man. Evil speech contra dicts your naturo and your dostlny; to speak ill or others makes you a mon stor In God's world; got the habit of slander, and then there Is not n stroma which bubbles rrom tho hoart of nature, thoro Is not a troo that sllontly brings forth its genial fruit In Its appointed season, which does not rebuke. i M. "J "J. ''."A"'"' L XMMr3SSgjriii.5fti..Qj-JittfAB- & . J S m A ALCOHOI.-3 PER CENT AYegetable Preparation for As similating llie Food and Regula- ! VI ling the Stomachs and Bowels of Of vc l :i i m Promotes Digcslion,Chccrful ncssandHcsl Contains neither Opium. Morphine nor Mineral Not Narcotic Kwpt tfou Drsiftiaym&i H Itmfhtt Sd A'etMh Sails .. VllM SfJ Ipptmini - Jii O'rhna ttSU HomSttti ttmbryrrnt Yitter V 3? .1 ll A perfect Remedy forConstipa lion . Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, N'orms.Convulsions.Feverislv ness nnd LOSS OF SLEEI Facsimile Signature of Tnr Ckntauh Co'ipany. NEW YORK. &! Si ;i?" (5J iSr i tt. T .T TO ?. Guaranteed under tho Foodand, Exact Copy of WiceTi His Kick. "My wlfo has no Idea of propor tion." "Whnfa wrong?" "Sho had a $200 gown made to match a $10 dog." Milwaukee Jour nal. Iron Ore Fields In Finland. Though Finland has been regarded up to tho present tlmo as being ex tremely poor In Iron ores, recent re search has proved tho existence of oro fields In South Finland (Nylund). and above all In tho Ladoga luko district. which seem to bo worth tho expense of mining. For resoarch purposes a company has been formed. Continual Doubt. "How many children have you?" Bald the tourist, affably. "I dunno exactly," answered tho tired-looking woman. "You don't know?" "Not for certain. Willie's gone flshln'. Tommy's breakln' In a colt, Georgle's borrowed his father's shot gun to go hunting' an' Esmeralda Ann Is thinkln' of elopln'. I never know how many I've got till supper time comes, so's I can count 'em." As the Boy Saw the Lesson. Prof. Charles Zcubllu of the Univer sity of Chicago was dlncusslng at a dinner the greatest paintings of tho world. "The legends that aro beautiful and immortal," he said, "have In them turths that we all, according to our kind, take home. This is true in likeness of immortal works of art pictures, poems, songs. For different peoplo they have different messages, For instance, in my native Pendleton some of the mothers used to cut the children's hair. They did It with shears and a bowl. The operation was often painful, and the result was never elegant. "In Sunday school a Pendleton teacher once told her pupils tho trag ic story of Samson and Uellah. Then she turned to a little boy. " 'What do you learn, .loe, sho said, 'from tho Samson story?" " 'It don't never puy,' piped Joe, 'to havo a woman cut a roller's hair.' " Cincinnati Enquirer. ,j.J!i!li:'.l..!'.i,jLlll,l..jL,.l'li'ii,';:sZ iln.i.m'.iiri:...i...'V i: TTfm'rrvM-irmnfrfrJTnfi Appetite Calls For food which promotes a prompt flow of the digestive juices r ' -- r- TTI BH i thy delicious brown. "The Taste Lingers." Popular pkg ioc; Large Family size 15c. ForInfantgdChildron Tk Kind You Have Always Bears the Signature of in Use For Over Thirty Years GASTORIA TMI OINTkUM COMMfCT, MiwvoimorTT. Tlio way of tho can't-guess-hcr la hard. iA-wi-,' Single Buuli'r nli.iuht 5c citfiir. You pay 10c for ciku not no good. A girl never likes to admit she waa kissed unless she wasn't. Mm. Wlmlow'n Boothtnur Byrnp. Forchll.lP'ti leetblDK. notttnn tti a Kiimt, rodurmt li tlamuutluu, slluya pain, curtu wind cullu. 23c IwtUu A girl always likes to say "no" tho first time a man proposes, Just to find out what he will do next. There in no need to xiiffcr with Horcmts nnd stiffnc-iH of joints ,uid munch'. A lit tle IIunihiiM Wizard Oil rubbed in will limber them p immediately. A Poor Memory. "Have you forgotten that you owo mo seven dollars?" "Dear, dear, I had forgotten. My memory Is miserable but wasn't It only JC.3D?" Fllegendo Ulaottor. Quito True. Marian, a llttlo three-year-old, in I very stubborn. One day, when she was frotful. her mother, wishing to engage her mind, attracted hor atten- ' tlon to a cow In a vacant lot and asked what it was. . Marian replied, "boss" (horso) and ' stubbornly refused to give in. Her mother, wishing to got a correct an swer without scolding, usked: "What eats grass besides a horse?" "Morn boss," was the quick response. De lineator. 1 Logical Reasoning. A certain young man's friends thought he was dead, but he was only In a state of coma. When, in amplo time to avoid being buried, be showed Blgns of life, he wus asked how It seemed to be dead. "Dead?" bo exclaimed. "I wasn't dead. I knew all that was going on. And I knew I wasn't dead, too, be cause my feet weio cold and I was i hungry." "Hut how did that fact make you think you were still alive?" aoked ono , of the curious. i "Well, this way: I knew that If I i wero In heaven I wouldn't bo bun- 1 gry. And If I was in tho other place ' my feet wouldn't be cold." in addition to supplying nour ishment. Post Toasties is a most delicious answer to appetite. It is, at the same time, full of the food-goodness of White Corn, and toasted to a crisp Bought w(fu I a rV W iiis ?.- 4"W A