, - S. L. Davies went to Omaha . , tfucsday night. Judge Wilhite ws in Stella thc first of the wcek. Hugh Boyd of Humboldt was ' in , this city oil Sunday. . Dr. R.P.Robertsdentist over Kings Pharmacy. Mrs. Dela Pettit of Verdon was I ( in this city Monday. Let every one attend thc pri- maries tomorrow night. Hal Stofer was down from Sal- em , Monday on business. J. H. Dietrich of Verdon spent - Monday here on business. C. B. , mId came down from Dawson Monday on business. . . . . Dr. A. . Walker left Tuesday for a business visit to Nebraska , City. S. R. Van Valkenbcrg and _ . . . . . . family of Rule spent Monday in . , . our city. ,1' Mrs. Emma -rvIo11tang of Reserve - serve is visiting her sister , Mrs. Ed. Nolte. ' R. S.1vIolony of Humboldt was a business visitor here the first of the week. . Orra and Mary E. Snyder of Salem were business visitors here the first of this week. On Monday of this week E. N. Rupert and Joe Harper 9f Shu- bert were in the city. Mrs. Frances Martin returned from Lincoln Sunday where she spent , several days. The Journal claims to have laid in scads and scads of new mat erial. By the way , who pays the fright ? N. C. Johnston returned Tues day from Superior , Nebraska , wHere he attended the funeral of - ' ' a relative. Hal Harris and wife went to Reserve where they will spen4 several days with the latters par- ents. . ' . Arch Cook and little 'daughter were Missouri Pacific passenger s for Stella Tuesday , where they will visit a few day. . Mrs. N. B. Judd of Dawson is spending this week . with hcr I daughter , Mrs. Geo. Crocker , in i I this city. I Steve Miles returned home the first of the week and will accept a position in the First National 1 , bank at this place. ' ' . ' Mrs. Robert Henderson of ' Rule was in this city Tue day ) yr , and in the afternoon . started for t Verdon to visit with relatives. ! t / : Mr and Mrs. Frank Knicker- .r becker of Savannah , : Mo. , arrived S i here Saturday for a visit with hr their son Louis Knickerbockcr and family. . Mr. and Mrs. Cass Moore spent I , Monday in this city. Mrs. Moore t has been in poor health for some It time , but reports that she is im- t i provmg. \ ( ( . ! ' . , r 1 Elder J. H. Berry of Humboldt will \ preach at thc Brethren church next Sunday morning. His subject . ject win be "Can Christianity as practised hy the modern church save the world ? " All are invited. l\lr. Berry is an aggressive thinker and interesting as a speaker. There win be no even- ing sermon on account of the union service at the M E. church. Most every man has an ideal way in which to spend his declin- i ing ycars. A reporter heard a ; busy man say : the first of the weck. I uWhen I get old I am going to spend my time in a chair on the shore , reading books that I have been to busy to look at , and look- ing out upon the broad sweep ot the ocean. On last Tuesday evening : Mr. and Mrs. John Lichty entertained the Brethren Sunday school at their home at a lawn part ) ' . Light refreshments were served and all spent a most pleasant evening. Mr. and Mrs. Lichty are splendid entertainers and about one hundred and fifty teachers and pupils were present. l\irs. Elizabeth Quinlin of Stella and l\lrs. Thomas Beauchamp of Howe ; were guests of their brother , George Story the first of the week. Will Beauchamp also spent a few days visiting in this city but left on Tuesday for Colorado. If the mother who wrote us the pathetic lette r about thc slot machines will kindly send us her . name we will be very glad to pub- lish the commuication. We want this name merely as an evidence of 'good faith and not for the purposes of publication. ' If you wish to know what glass- cs will do for the headache and nervousness call and have them fitted by Dr. Hutchison who will be at Dr.Walker's office on Saturday May , 57 , He will not be back again until August. : Mr. Kruse and wife left Tues- day for Lyons , Neb. , where the former has a position in a drug store. l\Ir. Kruse has been in Kerr's drug store for the past several months. Hiawatha claims to have a barking dog that talks through the phone like a man. That's nothing , we have a talking man that barks through the phone like a dog when the girls are slow. Dr. Emma Lawrence has open- ed up her office in the second story of the Jussen building , for the practice of medicine. Thc many friends of Miss Lawrence predict for her a lucrative prac- tice. Last Sunday morning at the Christian church Rev. Cronen- berger preached on "Repent ance. " ranUla Leyda and Willie Firebaugh sang a very pretty duet. duet.A. A. A. Walker of Salem was on our streets l\londay. ' , , - - - ' " " - ASH 0 E MESSAGE " . GEORGE B..B OLT : ' I ODD INDUSTRIES OF PARIS. The Members of the Ragpickers' So- ciety Often Find Rich Prizes in Their Search. The ramHsser de suit is the hum blest member 01' the ragpicker's' corporation. lie is generally . a laborer out of work , and collects whatever he can find and judges salable , from a scrap of paper or an orange peel to a dilapidated stove. Take old boots , for exam- pIc , says the Pall Mall aZl1tte. However bad , they have a market value , for they always contain in thc instep one sound piece that t can serve again , and generally two or three more at the heel and a1 the back. Old provision tins , again , are full of money ; the lead soldering can be removed and melted into cakes while the tin goes to slake ehildren's t.oJs. There arc about BOOO ( ) of this class of night birds in Paris. Another quaint night bird is the "guardian . " 'l ' he " " angel. "guardian angel" is II person attached to the establish. ments of some mastroquets-Iow barkcepcrs-und certain public houses for the purpose of looking after the safety of drunken cus- . timers. Hc accompanies them tQ their himes , defends them in case of need , as often as not has to put them in bed , and leaves them only when they are without the reach of miscHie He earns about . 50 cents a daJ' Cases are also on record where grateful drunkards have remembered the "angel" tn their wills. To return the compli- ment , the "angel" has invested some of his funds in the purchase of a barrow , the object of which is but too obvious. ' An important night bird is the member of the guild des patter moui1lces. He deals in tobacco manufactured from stumps of cigars - gars and cigarettes picked up in the street , and holds assizes on thc 'PlaceMaubert , the statue Etienne Dolet , twice a week at three a. m. ; on these days the square is called I the "tn n llrQ" nor uu . f . . n..ra , 11 ' . . . . . - . , . . . . . . . - - . . . . - . . " ' , ' ' . - " ' . \ 1 We're busy as never be- fore selling new Spring Shoes , and our patrons are enthusiastic in their praise of the way we've prepared for their spring needs. Particular striking are the new styles of Men's , Women's and Children's Low and High Cut Shoes. There is simply no limit to the Shoe selection we offer our patrons this season. The best advertisement for our Shoes is the perfect satisfaction they give , and our Shoe service this Spring will be such as to make us more popular than ever. , . rrbe industry is quite renlune'ra 'tire ' on a modest scale , of course , and would be even more so were ' it not for thc government ' , which. stepped in with characteristic greed and on the grounds of tlh' monopoly it holds proceeded ht tax the tobal''o tollectl'd with so much painstaking 'are. Nature : has made many kinds of bombs in the shape of seed pods which open with great forte and projects the couteuts to a considerable - I'able ! distunce. There is a seashell . shell which explodes with H fOl" midable noise und suggests a veritable dJnHll1ite bomb. , Not long ago a young lady wandering - dering ou thc shore of Mobile bens picked up a handful of shells left I by the tide. Among them were , the shells of a small marine snail , : the largest of which were not i more thun a half inch iu diameter. She dropped them into her pocket und forgot all about 1l1l'1l1 until some days afterward she noticed un unpleasant odor which came from her wUI'drobe. On taking the shells from her pocket one of them dropped on the floor and exploded . with u sharp noise loud enough to be heard in an adjoining room. She tried another with the same r'esult. The shells were then cx- . amiued by a scientist , who found the mouth of each flrnily closed b.r a membrane of greater 01' less thickness formed bJ the drying of tIre allimal's slime. This had Iu'ob- ably occurred soon after removal from the moisture of the bpach. and thc inhabitants of the shell dying the gases of decomposition had entirely filled their space. On exerting a little pressure a loud explosion was produced , the shell fragments ring in all directions. Out of a dozen shells only two failed to explode. The conditions most successful in making the experiment - periment seemed to be removal from the beach in hot , dry weather , which caused the slime to be exuded ill greater quantities than usual and dried it up rapidly. . . . . . < . . . . . . _ . . .