S niimnwpwmam PAiNFUJSCIATICA EVESYSUPrEBER WANTS THE VEBY QUICKEST OUEE Mr Donovnn Thinks tho Bomcdy Used by IIlui ivith Such llcmarkublo Success tho 1 Jest Cured by Vivo Boxes Men -who have to do difficult and dangerous work on electric lines nt any hour of duy or night cant afford to have anything tho matter with their health said Mr Douovau You can imagine therefore how much I was alarmed one winters day in 1902 when I was seized by a pain just behind my right hip that made it difficult for mo to walk home It was so bad by tho timo I reached tho house that I was obliged to go straight to bed Did that relievo you No tho pain grew moro severe and kept extending downward along my leg I sent for a physician and ho soon de cided that I had sciatica In a few days tho wholo nerve was nffected and the least movement brought on terrible agony Did your condition improve under tho doctors treatment Quito tho contrary At th9 end of two mouths I wasnt a bit better and at times I feared that I wrould never bo able to leave my bed How did you get out again When I was lying in bed unablo to move and wasting away in flesh a friend visited mo and told me about tho won derful cures brought about by a great blood and nerve remedy Dr Williams Pink Pills He strongly urged mo to try them and I luckily had sense enough to take his advice Did you mend quickly Yes that was tho astonishing thing I noticed a slight improvement beforo I had quite finished tho first box of tho pills I could get out of bed while I was on the third box and I was entirely cured by the time I had taken five boxes Mr Joseph A Donovan is living at Plaistow New Hampshire and is line inspector for the Haverhill Newton and Plaistow Electric Street Railway Dr Williams Pink Pills are the remedy to use when the blood is thin asiu anosmia or impure as in rheumatism or when the nerves are weak as in neuralgia or lifeless as in partial paralysis or when the body as a whole is ill nourished as in general debility They are sold by nil druggist British Foxes Made Abroad The purchase of foreign fox cubs from importers of wild animals is at tended with serious dangers Wolves jackals and such like creatures are easily mistaken in the cub stage for foxes and now and then have been sold in England as veritable children of Brer Fox This is the true explan ation of those sensational outbreaks of sheep worrying during the past few years London Daily Mail Every liousekeeper sliould know that if they will buy Definace Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time because it never sticks to the iron but because each package contains 1G oz one full pound while all other Cold Water Starches are put up in 34 pound pack ages and the price is the same 10 cents Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chem icals If your grocer tries to sell you a 12 oz package it is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large let ters and figures 16 ozs Demand De fiance and save much time and money and the annoyance of the iron stick ing Defiance never sticksT Scattered Kindness There are lives of wearisome mono tony which a word of kindness can relieve There is suffering which words of sympathy can make more en durable and often in the midst of wealth and luxury there are those who listen and long in vain for some expression of disinterested kindness Frances Ridley Havergal Opening of the Uintah Indian Reservation The Uintah Indian Reservation in Utah containing 2425000 acres of arable land to be opened up for set tlement on September 1 1905 is des cribed in a pamphlet just issued by the passenger department of the Den ver Rio Grande Railroad company A valuable map showing the country to be opened up and the various routes by which it can be reached is punished for the first time in this pamphlet which may be obtained by addressing General Passenger Agent S K Hooper at Denver Old Castle is Ruined Rossbrin Castle once a stronghold of the OMahony clan on the coast of West Cork near Schull having with stood many a storm was almost com pletely demolished in a recent gale A breach made in the walls during a siege by Sir George Carew in Queen Elizabeths time proved the weak point during the late gale I am taking a new but I sincerely believe a just view of Nero I con sider him not only not a monster but not even a radically bad man in the ordinary sense of the term He was in its most original sense an esthete placed in an omnipotent position Mr S Phillips in Great Thoughts In support of her contention that an unlicensed dog on account of which she had been summoned was not six months old a woman in East Grin stead England produced in court the dogs birth certificate signed by a veterinary surgeon Popularity street is paved with pretty speeches THE NEWS IN NEBRASKA GRAVES OF SOLDIER DEAD Adjutant General Culver Issues An Order to the National Guard LINCOLN May 30 Memorial Day Is to bo observed as usual in Ne braska Adjutant General Culver of the Nebraska National guard issued the following order The annual recurrence of Memorial day reminds us of the passing years and the increasing distance that meas ures the time between the past and the present Forty years span the intervening space since taps was sounded at the burial of those who fell on the battle field of the last armed conflict of the war of the rebellion The army of the dead is being rein forced each hour from the ranks of the survivors until those who answer Here are but the fragment of that splendid army that decided that this nation should be kept undivided and its honor maintained unsullied It is fitting that the citizen soldier should march to tho bivouac of the dead with garlands of flowers and participate in the solemn rites of the day set aside in honor of the heroic deeds and sacrifices of those who have answered the last roll call Every member of the Nebraska Na tional guard should consider it a priv ilege and an honor to report for duty on this occasion and each company commander is directed to tender the services of his command to the Grand Army of the Republic and to co-operate with the local committee at the home station in the proper observance of May 30 The flags on the armory and all pub lic buildings will be raised to half mast from sunrise till midday in ac cordance with United States regula tions NEBRASKAN BLOWS OUT BRAIN A T Rush from St Edward Commits Suicide at Olympia Wash PORTLAND Ore dispatch A T Rush of St Edward Neb walked in to a saloon at Olympia Wash put a revolver to his head and blew out his brains In his pocket was a letter from his mother at St Edward urg ing him to come home and promising to send him a ticket Rush was a crippled barber and went to Olympia from Tacoma ST EDWARD J B Rush son of A T Rush was last heard of at Ta coma Wash about a month ago He is a barber by trade aged about 40 lame in the left leg with a scar on the same hip Senate Journals Compiled LINCOLN Secretary Wheeler As sistant Secretary Goulding and Miss Elsie Goldner have completed their work of compiling the journal of the senate and turned the copy over to the printer and their records over to the secretary of state James J Rob erts who is compiling the copy for the session laws has discovered that H R 244 which provides for the prevention of the killing of foreign game birds has a title much smaller than the body of the bill consequent ly there is a question as to its consti tutionality Want an Injunction LINCOLN The Knights of the Maccabees of the World have start ed an injunction suit enjoining State Auditor Searle from incorporating the name Western Maccabees and the officers of the new order from using any part of the old fraternal organiza tions name Verdict of Guilty BROKEN BOW The jury in the case of John E Chandler charged with cattle stealing after being out several hours returned a verdict of guilty James B Rhodes also mixed up in the cattle steal of last Novem ber went into court and pleaded guilty to the charges against him after withdrawing his previous plea of not guilty Farmer Breaks Neck WAYNE William Blecke a promi nent German farmer residing several miles northwest of Wayne in Wilbur precinct sustained a broken neck by being thrown from his wagon which upset at a culvert about three miles north of this city Company to Be Retained LINCOLN The Fairbury military company which was to have been mustered out of the National guard has secured a large number of new recruits and has come up to the stan dard required by law It has been de cided to retain the company in the cuard Samuel Bangs of Beatrice a car penter fell from a scaffold a distance of about twelve feet and was badly bruised up TAXES ON THE FRATERNALS Attorney General Rules That The Are Subject to State Assessment LINCOLN Attorney General Brown handed down an opinion at the re quest of the State Board of Equaliza tion and Assessment that it was legal and right to assess the property moneys or credits of fraternal and mutual insurance companies and kin dret associations Later in the day the board in pursuance of this opin ion decided to assess such property of fraternals STATE NOTES r A new bank is soon to be started at Holmesville A Chicago firm is endeavoring to get a franchise to put in a gas plant at York Rev J W Swan who has been tho pastor of the Methodist church in Plattsmouth preached his farewell sermon last Sunday Fire destroyed the residence of Hi ram Pamgborn in Glenover Gage county with all its contents Loss 1000 with 800 insurance The residence of James Root at Murray was destroyed by fire Th6 fire started in the kitchen Insurance 000 The value of the property was about 2000 Harvey Sunderlin aged 10 who was struck on the head with a ham mer thrown by a companion while practicing field sports in Wymore is in a precarious condition The report of the county recorder of Otoe count- for the month of April shows twenty six farm mortgages filed of the value of 45784 and twenty five released to the value of 35069 A recent meeting of the directors and stockholders of the First bank of Ames came to the decision to go into voluntary liquidation and close all ac counts It is understood that the fix tures will be removed to Wellington Colo An effort is being made to secure for Plattsmouth the forthcoming rifle practice encampment of the Nebraska National Guard This encampment will be held solely for the purpose oi rifle practice for the members of the militia A New York dispatch tells of the instant death under an automobile 01 Wilson Pardonner aged 12 son of W S Pardonner formerly manager oi the sugar factories in Grand Island and Norfolk who is well known in Omaha As the direct result of the agitation caused by the complications in regard to citizenship in the last West Point election forty one persons were ad mitted to full citizenship at the last adjourned term of district court ol Cuming county The new Methodist church at Red Cloud probably the most pretentious religious edifice in the valley is be ing constructed of cement blocks manufactured for the most part un der the direction of the building com mittee Incident to the commencement exer cises of the Grand Island college June 7 an effort will be made to secure 10000 in Omaha for new buildings for the speedily growing Grand Island college and 20000 in that city anc the rest of the state It has been decided by the county school superintendents of Cuming and Burt counties to hold a joint institute of the teachers of both counties a West Point instead of holding two separate institutes The date has been fixed for August 14 The Southwestern Nebraska Log Rolling association of the Modern Woodmen of America have deter mined to have their second as was their first annual log rolling held in McCook The event will be held some time in September Rogers Bros of Shelby who have the contract for putting down the well for the water works had a misfortune In drawing the pipe from a 200 foot hole the pipe came apart leaving about sixty feet in the hole They cannot get it out so they are out their pipe and will have to start an other well The United Commercial Traveling Men in session at Grand Island elected officers as fohows Granc councilor Otto P Tappart Omaha vice councilor M L Dolan Grand Island past councilor E W Getten Omaha secretary C J Lyons Omaha page E W Bailey Lincoln sentinel Frank Shilling Holdrege grand chaplain Rev N McGriflin Holdrege F S Kirchner of Liberty township Gage county brought in eight wolf scalps and left them at the county clerks office to receive the usual bounty The catch consisted of the mother and seven cubs Charles Pit tinger living west of town also de posited twelve scalps in the clerks of fice So far this spring fifty nine wolf scalps have been left at the clerks of fice in Beatrice District court was in session at Bur well for two days trying John Lohr charged with statutory assault on the person of Mary Kramer a 10-year-old girl The evidence showed that Lohr was working at the Speltz ranch and in the absence of Mr and Mrs Speltz went to the home of the Kramers who are German people and told them Mrs Speltz wanted Mary to come over and he took the girl to the house alone and there accomplished his pur pose The jury brought in a verdict of guilty after being out about three hours John Anderl proprietor of the Klon dike saloon Wilber shot himself at his home with a 3S caliber revolver the ball passing through his head from right temple to left inflicting a wound that is almost certain to prove fatal J B Keller a well-to-do ranchman near Grant was brought home from Lincoln in an insane condition and was taken to the Lincoln asylum Mr Keller was in the asylum some five 1 or six years ago and since his dis charge has been looking after his business affairs with good success un til the old ailmen returned JAPANS GOSPEL OF WORK Wealthy Youth Devote Themselves to Useful Pursuits The secret of Japans wonderful success said a globe trotter lies perhaps in this Whereas the richest and best born and most powerful of other nations young men give them selves over to frivolity and idleness the flower of the young men of Japan work work work In the pleasure cities of the world at Monte Carlo in Paris in Algiers in Ostend in Cairo you will find young grand dukes from Russia young baronets and lords from England all gambling motoring ski ing yachting dining and what not But do you find among them I dont mean now only but ever have you ever seen among them any of the young princes and earls and millionaires of Japan No indeed Those young men have been working in our universities working in our machine shops working in our chemi cal laboratories working working How well this speaks for Japans future What a warning it is to the rest of the nations of the world For if this noble energy continues in the youth of Japan from the lowest to the highest one of two things will happen either Japan will far outstrip the other nations or else the other nations young men too from the low est to the highest will have to aban don their sports and their dissipations and turn themselves resolutely to la bor for the public good He Meant All Right In connection with the annual spring exposition of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts which drew only the other day to so successful a close Philadelphians are hearing a story which is almost too good to be true though it arrives well vouched for According to this the young and de cidedly pretty wife of one of the un successful applicants for admission to the gallerys walls called upon a cer tain highly talented and well known member of the jury to plead her hus bands cause She Avas sincere she was eloquent the great mans heart was touched but what could he do for he remembered only too well the huge and glaringly colored canvas which had been turned down At last he said Madam go back and tell your good Husband that when he will send us in a picture as small and as charming as pretty and well painted as you There the story ends with not a word as to what followed the speech Philadelphia Ledger One of the Stages Over in New Hope Ark last week the farmers of Green county held a meeting of the Educational and Co-operative association for the purpose of electing delegates to the state conven tion to be held in Hot Springs Among the prominent men in attendance was Gen N Y Crowley of Independence who is making the race for railroad commissioner While the session of farmers was under way a New Hope maid with musical talents in the bud opened up a piano across the way and began that process known as cultivat ing the voice For goodness sake exclaimed Gen Crowley what noise is that Gently General exclaimed Will Burton of Caddo township who had just been elected one of the delegates That noise is from a young lady who is having her voice cultivated Cultivated huh said the general then it is evident the process of cul tivation has reached the harrowing stage Memphis Commercial Appeal Italys Industrial Advance Not many people in the United States are fully aware of how rapidly Italy is advancing in industrial impor tance In some way northern Italy has in the last ten years shown as promising development in an indus trial way as is to be found anywhere in Europe The never failing water supply of the snow topped mountains is being utilized by the electrical en gineers in a way which promises to convert northern Italy into a great in dustrial state Nowhere in Europe is there a population better fitted to aid in an industrial development The people are dexterous quick to learn and industrious and up to the present time the general wage scale compares favorably with that of any competitors which they have to meet The result of these favorable conditions has been for instance the development of the silk industry at a rate which sounds like statistics of American indus trial growth Scribners Misinformed A member of a temperance society heard of a man in the southern part of the city whose wife in popular par lance had driven him to drink The advocate decided to call on the inebri ate and his wife and to plead with him to give up drink The evening she called she did not find the toper at home but the temperance worker and his wife talked on other topics At last she asked the woman if it was true that her husband was driven to drink Driven to drink was the answer to the surprised white ribboners ques tion why no my man is willing to walk no matter how far he has to go to get it Philadelphia Ledger The Question I This is the cry That echoes through the -wilderness of earth Throuph soncr and sorrow day and death and birth Why II Tt te thr high Wail of the child with all his life to face Mans last dumb question as he reaches snace Whv Japan Mall fTctfywffawi HOTBEDS OF CONSUMPTION Penal Institutions in Many States Proved to Be Breeding Places of Tuberculosis It is the duty of the state to protect its citizens even those condemned to pass a term of years in jail The dan ger to the inmates of prisons from pulmonary disease has only lately been realized A short time since a man who had served a sentence in the Ohio penitentiary declared that to send him back meant death by tuberculosis Inquiry Avas made The head physician announced that the building was a hotbed of consump tion A prominent official stated that a ten years sentence was equivalent to condemning a man to death by pulmonary tuberculosis Dr S A Knopf the greatest Ameri can authority on tuberculosis was in vited to visit tho penitentiary With out hesitation he pronounced it the most unsanitary penal institution he had ever seen The output of many prisons is enough to convince of the truth of the above statements The sallow com plexions weakened bodies sunken chests of the ex convicts all are the stamp of murderous prison hygiene All the rules for combatting the great white nlague are reversed For sun light they are given darkness for fresh air a damp musty atmosphere for out-of-door life a weary in door grind a large part spent within the narrow confines of a single cell Is it not enough to take from a fel low being his liberty and appropriate the labor of his hands without forc ing him to live under such conditions Dare the state continue to condemn any of its citizens to such a death Shall the sentence in a public prison cease at its legal expiration or shall the poor victim continue to suffer from its dire effects until he fills a consumptives grave In this day of Anti Tuberculois agitation it would seem that public institutions whether asylums schools prisons or assembly halls should be the first to be brought under proper sanitary conditions It is useless hopeless to educate the masses in re gard to the cure and prevention of tuberculosis and then maintain at public expense hotbeds for the de velopment of consumptives to be fin ally turned loose in the community The Tonic Use of Water Cold water is the universal tonic The best time for taking a cold bath for tonic effect is just after getting cut of bed in the morning when the body is warm A cold bath should never be taken when one is chilled One not accustomed to cold bathing should begin carefully with water not colder than 75 deg F The bath should be short not to exceed a minute and for feeble persons not more than fif teen or thirty seconds when applied to the whole surface The bath should be immediately followed by rubbing and exercise for fifteen to thirty minutes There should always be good reaction that is the whole surface including the hands and feet should quickly become warm The Lath should not be followed by lan guor headache lassitude or other in dications of excessive reaction When one experiences such symptoms the indication is that the bath was too long or too cold or not followed by sufficient exercise For feeble very joung or elderly persons the water used should rarely be lower than G5 degrees to 75 degrees in winter The bath should be taken in a suitably warmed room As We Live We Are If we look down then our shoulders stoop If our thoughts look down then our character bends It is only when we hold our heads up that our body becomes erect It is only when our thoughts go up that our life be comes erect Physiology in English Public Schools Sixteen thousand English physi cians have signed a petition request ing Parliament to inaugurate syste matic instruction in the public schools of Great Britain in relation to the preservation of health especi ally in relation to the evil effects of alcoholic drinks It is hoped that this petition will be granted Slaughter of the Innocents A study of statistics reveals the ter rible fact that nearly one half of all the human beings born into the world die before the age of five years In the city of Stetten Germany nearly one half 473 out of every thousand die during the first year of their lives In Ireland Scotland Norway and Swe den where children are given better care have more outdoor life and more intelligent attention is given to feeding the number of deaths is only one fiftieth as many as in the city of Stetten being ten per cent Physicians are coming to recognize that the use of cows milk which is infected with the germs of tubercu losis is one of the most active of all the causes of death among young children This should be remem bered in the artificial feeding of in fants The milk should either be boiled or well scalded before being fed to the infant This rule should be universally observed for adults as well as for children and if applied will save thousands of lives annuallv A Safety Valve In the Ladies Home Journal a writer tells of an interesting visit which he paid when a boy to the j Autocrat of the Breakfast Table After breakfast Dr Holmes took the boy into a basement room which was fitted up as a complete carpenters shop and gave him the following ad vice which he considered would be of more value to him than anything ho had ever written You know I am a doctor and this shop is my medicine I believe that every man must have a hobby that Jo as different from his regular worlc as it is possible to be It is not good for a man to work all the time at one thing So this is my hobby This is my change I like to putter away at these things Every day I try to come down here for an hour or so It rests me because it gives my mind a complete change For whether you believe it or not he added with his inimitable chuckle to mako a poem and to make a chair are two very different things Now if you think you can learn something from me learn that and remember it when you are a man Dont keep always at your business whatever it may he It makes no difference how much you like it Tho more you like it the more dangerous it is When you grow up you will understand what I mean by an out let Every man must have an out let a hobby that is in his life and it must be so different from his regu lar work that it will take his work into an entirely dilferent direction We doctors call it a safety valve and it is I would much rather con cluded the poet you would forget all that I have ever written than that you should forget what I tell you about having a safety valve For a Cold The daily cold bath is one of the irost effective safeguards against taking cold Of equal importance is abundance of fresh air in the sleep ing apartment Upon the first symp toms of a cold deep breathing ex ercises in the open air or in a well ventilated room should be taken at frequent intervals In nearly all cases where this simple treatment is taken there will be no further de velopment of the cold and the symp toms will disappear A doctor con nected with a large institution for children recently tried this method ipon the inmates with surprising suc cess There is nothing he writes more irritable than a cough For a time I have been so full- assured of this that I determined for one min ute at least to lessen the number of coughs heard in a certain ward of the hospital of the institution By the promise of rewards and punish ments I succeeded in having the chil dren simply hold their breath when tempted to cough and in a little while I was myself surprised to see how some of the children entirely recov ered from the disease Let a person when tempted to cough draw a long breath and hold it until it warms and soothes every air cell and some benefit will soon be received from this process The nitrogen which is thus refined acts as an anodyne to the mucous mem brane allaying the desire to cough and giving the throat and lungs a chance to heal RECIPES Barley Soup Soak a cup of pearled barley over night and cook in plenty of water until well done but not mushy At proper periods add to it a portion each of minced onion sliced cabbage and okra diced carrots and turnip salt and enough tomatoes to give an appetizing flavor and color A little seasoning may be required Noodles with Cranberries Beat well one egg or more according to the need incorporating wiMi each a tablespoonful of cold warr and a pinch of salt Knead in flour sufficient to make a stiff dough Ttoll as thin as thin pasteboard Let it dry on one side and then on the other frequently turning it but do not let it become dry enough to crack when rolled Roll it very compartly with a very sharp knife cut thin slices from the end until all is used Let these dry thor oughly they may be prepared sev eral days before needed and cook in boiling salted water about twenty minutes Drain in a colander and give a dash of cold water to prevent pastiness Reheat and serve with strained cranberry sauce as a dress ing Any other fruit may be used Any of the various forms of macaroni may be substituted for the noodles Stuffed Potatoes Bake smooth po tatoes until just done Cut in halves lengthwise remove the insides- being careful not to tear the skins Mash season and return to the shells Have ready some slightly salted stiflty hearen egg to cover the top of each piece Place on a tin in the oven to brown and warm Creamed Turnips Dice turnips and boil until tender having salted them a while before draining Somewhat n ore than cover them with rich milk When boiling hot pour in slowly some braided flour gently shaking the ket tle to insure the even thickening of the dressing Cook a few minutes and serve Lanse Brod Beat one egg into one cup of milk Add alt and a spoonful of sugar Dip into it slices of stale bread and brown them nicely on a well oiled pancake griddle Serve while hot Squash Custard Prepare squash the same as for pies Bake in a shal low pudding dish without crust and serve cold i f f r V f H d