mmRI MKglft IB ' $B!L M i Wlin.iH s: k D. h cifefi Doss e t fWftj iltH - I I IMMIIMIIIIIBMI 'fflBfr' JffaaxinT,; I ( $ VH I !! M J r -e-. - a jl m w -m tm w aerncss ; T !( LAND of Infinite nttractlon nnd of infinite clanger, a tup py hunting ground for the outlaw,, n land oi peril nliiinit prohlU llv (o the penceiul ihlndod settler That was west"in Canada ."') vcars ago Now wlnt country can point the Pharisaical finger? Thi' beauty, thu fascination, tho amazing poFslbllllles. t utilized ami ot to be, re- .nTSTradnxamuxam&uiFmjm.'gsj (ywirMofiiooF PUB C2 f night earn carry thou Kinds of bushels of ' Al' lerta Red" where not leig'tineo Hi' buffalo browsed and tlu white tall dour wandered tin dlstui bed It will not S y? -t: ..nirrx3attrai.mvti,muiaafl 8 Si l.1"A .- . .. (. b .v, JT'V5iiJlLJ'' XtfTIVWlVJ.'BBl MTV S93?rSii iJiiKir Ml!SaB mmmm SvMsS 'HSiV .. . :L.liJiU'tJU.J.J4ta slllOEIBilHn ? S,iy.Vl Sf' M'X CUk t?i aMTFa?aa N4 Tna-? fc, illM '. Aie'.Aif, KflNR .' . Ji A .pi "5m '"itivi .vw 'zti&riVtaii,VB,iyvititoi'vn','r.vi ." lKi 1 IS't 1 1. f M6' : w!wr,;?v v'? i f" S' Uwia '. -w Jo . . , s? rsA. -At i (. t . z$y&EJ for tlu'uu IndlanB'" iiHlt'd guaj? nouirr mtji fiouiiTjz poucjs "'Jthtj Olf :main. and with them and of them are ordered J and orderly living If the story of how this came about la thu story of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police. The mounted police! Don't you remember when you were a little chap, how you looked after tho uniformed man on the glossy bay as ho can tered through the park, and how you had no dearer dream of glory than to be like him? Even now. don't you feel tho old, boyish thrill at tho sight of n blue-coated, erect figure In the saddle at a crowded city crossing? If you do not. you arc n "grown up" saddest of labels and will journey no more to the Never Novcr-Never Land Hut for us "Incurable children." tho sight of tho mounted policeman still catches at those old lieartstiings. And If all this for tho blue-coated, brass-buttoned horfeman of the parks and boulevards what of that other horseman tho onewho rides atone wlih the stretch of endless prairies for his beat, with tho criminal who holds a life at less than naught, his quarry1? Sifrely evdn your dulled Imagination, poor, to-be-pltled .grown-ups, enn catch II ro faintly fiom the gleam of his scarlet coat. Recruited chiefly from the yotingennbns of well to do. and even titled, English families? tho North wof.t Mounted Police has long becnrfitin Institu tion where an English university man can work off the bubbling froth of a drop .of gypsy blood liofoio cettllng down ns head of a county family and warden of his church, In tho main a collec lion of young men for whom the Red (Sods call too wildly, men with n dare-devil dash In their make-up. who leave England becnuFO they are Im pecunious, or because of a row with their faml lies, or for sheer love of adventure Come with mo ,to Reglna or Edmonton and you will hear stones of men who. gavo the recruiting ofTlcor tho name of plain John Smith with something of a cynical smile and It was bad form for the re ci ultlng officer to notice this smile men who had :i habit of reaching for n monocle that wasn't there, of talking with the correct London pronun elation, and thrashing tho fellow-trooper who called attention to this fact And any story you ever heard of the heir-pro-sumptlve to an English marqulsate patrollng a r.OO-mllo' bcatnlong the Arctic circle can be out inatchrdron the written records of th,e force, and In the memory of any offlcor Fifteen years ago EngllFhtnqn of Kipling's "gentleman, ranker" typo made up fully half of the force, and the other half was yompoacdrqfywlld;lrlshn3cnltb all their country's love' of n ffght.'olif pfirlrismen hnd Indian lighters, the sllont,. steadyeyqd. linrd-rldlng men who gather on the frontier were the savage fall3 awayvhef6re the ragged vanguard or civilization And they have dono their work so well that thoy fast driving away their own excuse for lie thing of the past ns well Commissioner Perry's report states that the present ar rangement cuds on March 31. 1911 What nfter that? Their work Is done The spirit of advetnuro which brought tho men of 1874 to Red River Set tlement willliirc the hardiest on to still more dis tant fields The scarlet tunic will be seen no longer, except In the pages of some historical sourco book; but the work of these sllpnt. sternly oyed men will live forever, a record of tireless ness, fearlessness, unflinching courage and pa tlunce the making of a new and great empire Change has alivadv como to the mounted Tho dnvB when a scant '0 men were magistrates, doc tors, coi oners, explorers, surveyors, mining ro corders, crown-timber agents, revenue and cus toms olllcors. telegraphers, scouts, riders, drivers, boatmen, cnnoeinen, marines and sal'orr. dng-drl-vers, mall carriers couriers, public health ami 'inl-mal-quarantlne officers, prairie and forest-lire guardians, constables nnd soldiers for one third of the Urltlsh Empire aro pausing with every new mile of rnllioad The border "wolfer." Hie cattle "riiBtlor."' the whUky trader, the fighting Indian, the whole band of swaggering rufllnns who used to give zest to life In the "Territory" has largely passed away or'bepn crowded northward and westward toward the mining camps of Alas ka nnd the Yukon. The reckless daring, the ro bust hardihood nnd plcturesnueness of the force nccoesaiily have somewhat changed In the do- vc'opment of tho thoroughly civilized new north west Now the young lellows are getting th'ir breaking In nmong the settled districts, while the old stagers nre stationed to the north and wist whore- tlu-re Is still the "frontier" on the edge of untravcrsed wilderness For the purposes of the new order of thlugs. It Is a thoroughly competent nnd efficient force, n3 It-was in the days oi the Territory The mem bers must pass n physical nnd mental examination which guarantees that I came upon one of them In a moment of leisure studying n text-book on tho common law, nnd he showed me some examina tion questions which Implied thnt he must know how to conduct a cross-examination In open court so as to nvold what nre known In the law as "loading questions." And any lawyer will bo Im pressed when 1 say that every mounted policeman must know now to take a murdered man's dying declaration In such a manner that It can be pre sented as evidence In court The reason for this Is that ho combines tho functions of a policeman with those of a petty magistrate. And this arrangement, whereby the samo man 'could anesf you. nnd then try you himself, and finally put you In prison and be your keeper, waB nn Ideal nnangcmnnt In the days when justice was a justice or thu saddle, and all the more do sfrable for being summary Although there aro regular civil court In the southern portion of Canada now, In tho far north the duties of tho mounted policeman are still as varied as those of Gilbert' and Sullivan's PoohHnh Primarily ho are mm UIIVIUS J """ - "- " - ,,., .,, Af..l,nl l, ,!. nvm-uthlnn. thnt Inc The present northwest Is no more what It "w'ra "'7 n.w. ,...., ... " ' " , , '"K ... '...V .i.:J ,... wLnin... nf tn..inv I. .h ought to be done, and that It Isn't any one olso'8 duty to do And when some one elso leaves his was In 1871 than busy Winnipeg of to-day Is the old Fort Garry to which the first troop of the "mounted" camo 40 years ago Thev have made western Canada what it Is out or the lawless "tor iltory" an almost preposterous undertaking ono-qunrter of tho number of policemen In Now York to govern n country 250.000 square mllos larger than tho United Stntea! , , In vhort, the mounted police have brought RrltlFh law Into western Canada, and firmly es tablished It The homesteader can go Into -any of the provinces nnd tako out his claim, secure In the assurance that ho can work his land undis turbed nnd harvest his crop unuijured The homd-.-Header Is doing It by thousands, nnd tho Lnst West Is vanishing. Tho frontier the last fron tier of America Is, being prosaically plowed by tho practical man In blue ovoralls, wjio doesn't carrf even k hunllng knlfo. except tocut ofr.hls chcw""oT Granger Twist. ' w ' Tho Indian has boon reduced to his lowest terms When men of tho United Stnten were building the Union Pacific across the plains, they worp obliged to' employv Uncle -Sam's troops to guard Ulo builders. If tho ghosts of tho dead who dlod violently in that, first live-years' fight fpr tho west were to lino up along the right of way thero would bo almost enough of them to mark tho On a 30-mlle ride from tho North Saskatcho wan last fall. 1 met dozens of teams driven almost wholly bv Indians and hnlf-breeds Thoy were hanlli'g the long logs that were to bo drlvon twenty to thirty feet into tho sando of the Sas katchewan 10 carry tho falso work or tho Grund Trunk Pacific's stool bridge. Whnt a contrnst! Instead of hlndorlng. as was onco the case, the northern Indians are helping to build the rnllrood In tho construction of tho now government transcontinental line, the In dlnns aro employed wherever they can be used, tor the road is being rushed with nil possible necd consistent with good work The Indians are usoful, also, to the pathfinders ns guides; thoy know the forests of new Canada; they know the mountain fastnesses of the Peace river, and thev know nil the crooka and canyons or thu Coast Range In short, thu red man of today Is tho trusted guide and faithful survant of the path tinder He hunts lor the white man still, hut quite differently .Tom the way he uertl to hunt for tho '''Enfato0 the Royal NorthwuBt Mounted Po lice rivllUnliqn's house Is n order. Todny tho "e ' long AttWlfW rfle,! w' bQ ir Ip-fljfV -r- irnri . i IPS ' f I , ? V mw. i ,U . " T k tho sta- I mn Tff'l ftl N BE O RII1eutr Social, Aoricultural, Pollt- luiiinnu uinoi uiHiicrB-uivcn Due Co)adcraMon. mz&F- ALL SUCJECTS TOUCHED UPON r 1 NCWS NOTCS OF INTCnilST FROM ,t VARIOUS SECTIONS. escort "Are you ready American olllcer "Yob. sir," responded the policeman. "They're n bad lot Where 1b your Honed?" The trooper smiled faintly under his mustache. "Why, Scott's having his horse Mind, and I gurns Murray'o over getting a drink They'll be along In a minute " And when presently Scott nnd Murray ramo placidly on tho set tie that troop ol envalry sat on their horses and wntelud the band of Indians thev hnd ko cnrefullv guarded depart over the ellow praMe under the charge of three men The American oll'eer watched them dwindle to n dot acro'R the level Then his feelings found speech. "Well I'm dnmned'" he hiild And I he troop rode nwnv Again, old Plenpot nnd several hundred of nls tribe were making serious trouble u'ong the rail road tilt 11 under construction, ami the mounted po lice promptly rode out lo the Indian village with an ordet for tho tribe to brenk p-p and take the trail to the iiorlh. awav from the lino When the nnlleoinnn evnlnlneil (he order to film. Plc-ti-pot laughed nnd tinned away The other In dians jeered and tllfcliitrcfd their guns In the sir The two policemen sal sllll " "I will give you just 1T minutes to comply with the order," said the sergeant quietly. - When the 15 minutes were up. lie dismounted,' walked over 10 the chief's tepee, and with calm de liberation kicked out the key pole of the lodge, bilnglng the wiiolo structure down poles, war tmn nets, drying skins, kettles and all III nmlHcHnne our heap Plc-a-pot did tome deep and. rapid ,thlnklng A gesture to his young men would have sent 11 nun died bul'ets Into eaih of the quiet, unrullled men who were RyMcmntlcaiiy going tnroiigii tne camp. i F Ex-htinator Allen will' make (lie ad dress ut tho soldiers' memorial exer cise In Om.ilia, May 50th. At the lucent election In Lincoln the iinti-sa'ioon foicos wore success ful, mid thus tho town will remain diy. O. Petterson of Humboldt is In Jail at lteatiico awaiting trial on tho ehaiv' of xotlng Illegally at tho city election at Humboldt. Hliorlfr John L. Behlek arrived In Deatrlco fiom Marys vlll'u, kua, hav ing In custody Albert Craig, wanted there for alleged lino! legging. The Hi enian on Missouri Pacific freight train No. 1(11 In coming down Frcellng hill Just nbovu Uentrlco was taking a drink of water but of thu lion), when the rolling motion o.f the engine cuusod lilm to loso bin foot ing nnd ho fell off thu engine. His Injuries wero not serious. The supremo court him ufllrmod tho decision of tho district court of Doug- Ins county In favor of Maria Gugler against tho Omaha & Council Uluffu Street Railway company. Tho plain tiff wnR Injured by a fail from a street car which wns caused, hIio alleged, by the car starting us shu attempted to alight. Tho state board of agriculture will hold another boys' licro corn contest thlo year, offering prizes for thoso who giow the most' corn on n Blnglo acre of ground. A similar contest was held last year. Thero were over ninety entries nnd there wero eighteen ro-turnc.'- "., ' rl"? ""-. Tho dwelling houso occupied by William Losoy In tho eastorii4pnrt of ilurchard was btirncd to the ground with most of ItB contents. Flio firo originated from tlniup In the jjnnds of two small children, who were 'look ing for .some duUiIngJn.a..cloBot,m. Uffi"uMfo'rtbYy"or Uib inilldlrTgr' A Servian named Jncob Uceck runic, complaint In thd county court nt Hast- wym wrrw Ywy wrmf nmi vtiiiiiiwhwhmmj confronting nnye6 lSTnbcd of n. taxsv- slngla no- cntly bono- follow proper efforta to llvo In u hoilthful way, with hcvlHgt3thncif5 of rica and Elixir of Senna, whenever It Is re quired, i lt cloatif.23 tUc nystcm gently yet promptly, without Irritation undill tlioieforojualwayii I.avo tho preference or'all'wlnvwlsh tho beat of family laxatlvca Itjvo la not ft,qucnuon oLa Itjpn only, Uutjrpr peravfln 'llcial effcctfi, whlchiwlll The combination 1;an tho approval of pliyaiclano becauno It la known lo bo truly beneficial, and bocauno It lion given cntlsfnctiou to tho millions of well-informed families who havo uccd It for many years past To got Its bcnoficlnl effects, alwnys buy tho genulno manufactured by tlio California Fig Syrup Co. only. Treatment for Lump Jaw. Lump jaw Is due to n fungus which In Usually taken into tho animal's sys tem In feed consumed. Lump jinv Is llnblo to affect tho glands of tho throat or thu bones of tho hood, writes f ; Doctor David Roberto In American Cultivator. It Is not advisable to keep an un'mul thus nflUctod llngnilng In n herd. On tho other hand tt Is ad visable to either treat such an animal or kill It, as such animals Invito dis eases Into tho herd, owing to tho fnct thiit thoy arc so reduced In vltnllt'y that thoy havo no resisting power. A icinnrknbly largo per cent, of bucIi ensca can bo successfully troated Jf- taken in tlmo by opening up the en largement and wanhlng It. out with n " ' strong antiseptic solution, like flvo of carbolic acid In water, nnd putting' Iho i' aulmulR on., a tonic. In this, way the . ndltctcd anlmnl Is not only snve'l, but tho entire herd Is protected ugainst. . disease. . " .ti Enforced. Good Law That Should Do Antl-splttlng ordlnnncos"r-liivvu-;irn(I--. regulations In more than llvo-ulghtha ,, of; tUo. 'cities nnd.towns'olhp-wHmtrytj, W id'e not 'enforced as they ohoald 'be, alleges tho National Association for tho Study of Tuberculosa In u recent report. While most of tho turgor cities of tho United, Statoa. havo auclu.lawa.. op their books, In lli"6'g?trftm0ritj In gO!(inat.riene6ay. kicking out the key-pole' of each tepuo ,-llut the- In- ?,-'00 i" Gphl coin, sowed in his gar- illnno nf llio nnrt liwokt hn.l lonrni.il Hint isnniuir nr . montS nild ClnllllCll tlint BOttlC OOO Or l .......-wn. ma wi ( jwwk r f duty undone, tho mounted policeman takes It up and finishes It. When the mnll-carrler, who cov ers tho North Country on dog sledges, reaches tho most northern limit of his route, the mounted po liceman takes over the bags, , and goes GOO miles rnrt?:er north with them Not long ago a letter cajmo to rayihunds from tho Lefilngwoll polar ex pedition, in which the writer stated that he would tflkp.five dogs and a companion and travel 300 miles over tho Ice to moll the letter. When tho letter 'reached ltd destination, the envelope boro the stamp of the Roynl Northwest Mounted Po lice, 'who evidently nad received It nt one of their postB In tUo ftrctlc. and then had carried It by dog train from Ih'e Ice fields to railway connection It is nil In the day's work to them. Thoy will undeitnku anything,, trom minding tho baby to hnnglhgin rnhn, -wlfh equal placidity, and put It through without nicking an eyelash. Thoy havo dqno" their part to demonstrate that tho ono thing on this earth longcV than the equator Is tho arm of English Justlcet Lesa than three years ago a mounted policeman tracked a Yukon mur deror over 0,000 miles, caught up with htm In Mexico, brougnt hjm back by way of Jamaica and Hulirnx, nvoldlng Unjtcd Stntes soil to pro vent extradition complications, und hanged him within sight oi the scene or his crime. Thero has neVur been a lynching In Cannda. Put that down to the crodlt of the mounted police, who administered justice so successfully thnt there was never tiny tomptntlon lor tho work to bo ta ken up by prlvato enterprise. There wns never any parallel for the oxpertenco of Hl3iiiarck, North Dakota, where tt Is said the first 24 graves wore thoso of men who had died by vlolenco, 'Howard the Indians, the mounted police maintained a tra dition of Btorn vigilance which prevented anything like the costly Indian wars which thu United States waged up to u few years ago. Thero was never In tho history of Canadn n train robbery such ns still feature the headlines of United States newspaper! 'from tlmo to tlmo. Tho dos porado of every type hatj a healthy respect for the mounted iiollceinan and preferred to conduct his little enterprises touth or the bordur Canadians nre particularly lond of telling the newly arrived American about the troop of Amer ican cavalry a whole troop, mind yoit who ten derly utcorted a band of "bad Indians" bent on crossing the border, to tho Canadian boundary line Thoy wero mot by a single mounted pollco later Justice wns done by the mounted police, and Ple-n-pot never made that gesture He gave In. and in sullen silence the camp collected Its scrum bled effects nnd turned their ponies' heads north Not fo fortunate was thu attempt of Seigt Colo brook to arrest a fugitive Cree Indian named Al mighty Voice 'Almighty Voice had stolen n steer, and Seigt Colebrrok, with a half-breed companion, rode across tho prairie to an est him The policeman In structed the half breed to tell the Indian that they had come to arrest him, and that lie must go with them. The Cree replied: "Tell htm thnt If he ad vanccs I will kill him " Instantly the half-breed covered the Indian with his rifle, but Colubrook promptly ordered htm to do slst, for Almighty Voice must be tnken alive Then he rode deliberately forward upon tho muzzle or vu ,.. .. ..u, Buu. .., num.... , v.u Nebraska City und taken beioro Minnie of nrrM. A inlchtv Voice fired A venr In f .. . . - . . . ter, however, the Indian was surrounded in n pit where he bqd taken refuge. The police brought up their field guns and shelled the pit, killing Almlgnty 1 Voice and thus avenging Sergt Colubrook's death. I Tho outcome of this Incident rerved lo prevent se rious trouble with the Indians, who were all In a more or less sulky nod unsettled mood nt the time How grently the Indlnns have come to respeci tho Just nnd impartial administration of the law by tho mognted police was showu when one of Mecnsto'a band escaped fiom the guardroom at Macleod after having been tried by the police 011 n charge of theft nnd convicted When he returned to Mecusto's camp, the chief who hnd attended the trial at which U16 fugitive was convicted had been so deeply m pressed by the Impartial nature of the proceedings nnd by the fair administration of Justice thnt he promptly delivered him up ugnln nt the fort gate to tho officer In command Perhaps the greatest achievement which tho po lice ever undertook wns accomplished whqn thoy persuaded Sitting Pull and his bnnd of between five and six thousand hostile Sioux to return and surrender t'o the United Stntes authorities when they hud taken refuge. In Canudn nftor the memor able massacre of Gun, Custet nnd hta command Commissioners from the United States had visited Sitting Pull nnd had negotiated with the chief for his return and surrender, to no nvnlt. The pollco however, by Infinite tact and diplomacy, and be cause In their previous transactions they hnd won tho confidence ol the Indians of the northwest at length succeeded In Inducing Sitting null nnd his hostile braves to return peaceably to the United Stntes, an exploit or which nny body or men might be proud. When tho Hour war broke out, Englnnd callea for tho mounted police to help hur there. One-third of tlioiu, practically the pick ol tho rorce, went out Very few of them ever came back. Many were of fered commissions, and some accepted Wheruver there Is trouble, there the mounted police are tho answer to the problem, as they have been In west ern Canada ror 3D years, from tho tlmo or tho Rlul rebellion up to today The story of the mounted tins Its ehudows Men grew tired of tho loneliness nnd deserted nt times; men who had lost all -lovu, hope, ambition quietly went away Into the wilderness nnd blew out their brains. Thu life wns unsutlllng, men could not lenvo It and tako up clerical work or farming, bo causo adventurers nre not built that way. Hut, shadows and all. the story ol thu Cunadl'in mounted pollco Is one of the most, gorgeous talo-j blncu tho dnyB or the Spanish Muln And the rplr It of tho force Is bust embodied 'in thnt mussago found scrawled on thu oidera of n policeman Who perished tn n bll-uard while making his wny with dispatches to a distant post In his last momenta with numbed hand he bad written: "Lost, horse dead. Am trying to pubb ahead. Have done my best," 1 ) 1 1 . , -. -, 1 . . ' ' ' t ,i; of casus, thoy aro Ignored qr rPyei, looked'. Tho report 'covers in lo(aU lugR thnt lie had been robbed of $1,500 the enforcement of the nntl-splttlng -- a m rt iinii niiniir 1-- . 11 t rn . . &... jiu. mm uuuiik oiuinauceu 111 hu 01 tne mrgosi cuius In tbccauntryi During tho year 190j In tlicso S0cllles, 3,421 arre'bTs vveftT tnade for violation of tho laws regard ing Bplttlng-ln public places. Over 2.900. convictions wero secured nnd $4,100.87 wnB collected In lines. 1 moro persons In Kenesnw helped tliomRclvcB to part of It white search ing through his effects for a watch which ho wnB accused of having stolen. Deputy Sheriff Nollls recov ered $1,016 of tho missing coin. Tho persons who delivered It to him 'said they round it whoro It hnd evidently fnllon out of tho Servian's wngon. Probably tho hlghcBt price over paid In Johnson county for nn unpedlgreed hog, bought for market, was one day last week when L. A. Hanks, buyer nt Cook, paid Sam WIlBon, fnrmor and Btockman, $G9 for n singlo porker. Tho hoog weighed 090 pounds. Mr. Wilson sold Mr. Ilnnka four hogs that day that brought him $205. Luko Kirk of Syracuse wnB brought the commissioners of Insanity and do- clarcd lnsnno. Ho wna ordered to bo taken to the asylum. Postmaster W. J. Cook of Dlnlr' Is in receipt or a letter ndvlRlng him that ho had been recommended to the post master general for reappointment, Senator Hurkett concurring In tho recommendation. Over 500 teachers wore In attend ance at the Southwestern Nebraska Teachers' association, In soBston at Alma three days. Governor Shnlten- borger, J. L. MeDrlen nnd other promi nent men of tho Btate wero on tho pro gram. At a meeting of members of Com pnny F nt Madison it was decided to make format request or Adjutant Gen eral Hnrtlgnn to permit the company to disband, and in ncdordnnce with such decision Mayor Charles Frnser notified tho department at Lincoln of the action. Tho Mercy Slsto'rs of Omnha rormnt ly opened the Alliance hospital nt Alli ance under tho nnmo or Mercy hos pital, rlt will now bo In full chnrgo of these slstera with a compotcnt Btnff or physicians nnd surgeons nnd wilj supply the hospital demand or west ern Nebraska and tho eastern part of Wyoming and noutlicrn South Dnkota. In two weckB the fino new depot which tho Union Pacific httB built at Central City will bo ready for occu pancy. The new depot Is of brick, with a large center structure fronted by four massive stono columns, and has an nmplo wing nt cither end. A'l present Indications point to the building of a new alfalfa meal mill In Plnttsmouth. Fire destroyed four stacks of wheat and part of tho threshing oti'flt of Frank W. Unreal, near LInwoood. Tho Nebraska Stock Growers' asso ciation convention, which is held yenrly In Alllnnco In Juno, has been deferred until July 5, 0 and 7. and tho citizens' committee have secured $1, 000, with moro promised, to mnko tho thrco days a continuous celebration of such kind thnt It will bo the main event In northwest Nobrrfskn. A faro of 1V4 cents n mile, or .1 rents the round trip, will bo In ef fect from all points cast of the Mis rourl river to Omaha during the Northwestern Sncngerfest, which wlt be held thero for four days, begin- nlng July 20. , . Where She Scored. Sheldon Kcrrulsh tells this ntory on his cstcomed father: "Ono day a long tlmo ago, a number of children In our neighborhood' worn talking nbout tho bad habits 6f their parents. "'My father smokos 15 cigars, a, day said a little girl, boastfully tike. "'My father Bvvcarp something aw ful when supper is Into,' Bald another. "'My papa camo homo tight tho other night,' remarked a third. "It wub my Httlt Bister's turn next. '"You just ought to sco my papa read Cicero,' sho Bald, nm ,all tho other little girls retired In confusion,1! gladly admitting that Elstor,'hail ,won the prize." Cleveland Loader, , '"'- ' ' '. 1 The Flippancy of Uohn., , Mrs. Molt What la a sympathetic strike. John? Mott A Bypmathctlc strlko, my dear,, Is being touchy. for n quarter by a ueggui with n h'ard-ltick'Btory.' LL.il.: Ltp 1, Don't try to mold another to your Ideal, but remold your idoal accord Ing to whnt ho Is. MISCHIEF MAKER . .',,, A Surprise In Brooklyn. An adult's fcod that can snvo a baby provcB ltsolf to bo nourishing and easily digested and good for big nud ltttto folks. A Drooktyn man Bays: "When baby waB about eleven months old ho began to grow thin and pale. This was, at first, attributed o tho heat and tho fact that hl3,i tooth wero coming, but, In roaltty, tho poor llttlo thing was starving, his mother's milk not being sufficient nourishment. "Ono day after ho had cried littlorly for an hour, I Buggcstcd that myt wlfo try him on Grape-Nuta. Sho so'akcd two tenspoonfuls In a saucer with a llttlo BUgar and warm milk. This oaby ato bo ravenously that she fixed a sec ond which ho llkowlso finished. "It was not many days before ho for got all about being nursed, and has slnco lived almost excluslvo!y on Grape-Nuts. Today tho boy Is strong and robust, and as cute a mischief maker as a thirteen months old baby is expected to be. "Wo havo put beforo him other foods, but ho will have nono of them, ovldcntly preferring to Btlck to that which did him so much good hlo old friend Grape-Nuts. "Uso this lettor any way you wish, for my wife and I can never prnlso Grnpc-Nuts enough after tho bright ness It has brought to our household." Grape-Nuts Is not mnlo for n baby food, but cxperlonco with thousands of bnblce shows It to bo at.'.ong tho best. If not entirely tho best In uso. Being a scientific preparation of Naturo'a grains, It Ib equnPy effocflvo hb a body and brain but'der for grown-ups. Rend tho little book, "Tho Road to Wollvtllo," In pkgs. "Thero's a Roneon." Evr rmd the ntiove letter A new one niinenrn from tlnie tn time. They nrp genuine, (ijutr, 11 nil full of Uuniiut Intercut, , lr f i i rMlt -i 'ti'irl . , ,f t' ft YVV. t I i 1 I ' -, .& v J v fcttir- s. -m&ziaGBwi)Bmt immssmstrt iW i-is,. vV V-fljjuJr .& A . !. i(,. A v