t ryiTf if mw ifwrswJji asr THE WORLD OYER LATEST NEWS FROM EVERY LAND GREEK CAMP SHELLED INSURGENTS ARE BOMBARDED BY FOREIGN FLEETS Some of the Shells Fall Into the City of Canea and a Number are Said to Have Been Killed Flag of Greeoo Still Flies Over the Place Greek Camp Is Shelled Later reports as tothe bombardment by the foreign fleets of the insurgent camp near Crete are to the effect that the English men of war opened the bombardment and the others followed The Kaiserin Augus ta fired mellinite shells The commander of the Greek man of war Hydra cleared for action in case the necessity should arise Some of the shells1 fell in the town of Canea raising clouds of dust It is rumored that several persons were killed and wounded When the firing ceased the Greek tlag was flying over the insurgent camp News of the bombardment of the insur gent camp near Canea by the warships Sunday caused tremendous excitement in Athens Ifr is said great damage was done the Christian camp and that several were killed and wounded by the shells A Paris dispatch states that the powers have accepted the proposal to grant au tonomy to Crete Even if this is true It would naturally at once be followed by an ultimatum to Greece This probably ac counts for the rumors on the bourse re garding an ultimatum MAY BE A BIG STRIKE Would Involve Fifty Thousand Men In Chicago Building Trades Paralysis of building operations for an indefinite period this spring in Chicago and Cook County and an immense strike in the building trades involving 50000 men are not improbable contingencies Unless a disagreement is settled which sprang up recently between the Masons and Build ers Association and the Bricklayers union members of both organizations believe Chicago will witness a greater labor con flict than that which was waged in the building trades for nine weeks of 1887 That strike which affected thousands of workmen in a dozen of the building trades was the result of a quarrel between the Masons and Builders Association and the Bricklayers union The question of a general strike has been discussed at the last two meetings of the union Some members advocated it If the 4000 union bricklayers engage in a strike it will force into idleness all other building crafts Plasterers hod carriers lathers carpenters and the rest can do nothing while the bricklayers and stone masons Tefuse to work and will not try under the present system flf the present differences are unsettled by April 1 arbi tration will be suspended and strikes which must become general will follow RAIN CAUSES FLOODS Rivers in Kentucky West Virginia and Ohio Are on the Rampage Reports received at Cincinnati Monday show that as a result of thirty six to forty eight hours rain the rivers are on a ram page all through eastern Kentucky West Virginia and eastern Ohio Great quanti ties of logs ties and many hogs and cattle have been carried down on the currents Considerable anxiety is felt over the rapid rise in the Ohio River The stage is forty five feet and indicates the danger point The river reached forty five feet shortly after noon Monday and was rising seven inches an hour Residents along the river front were moving out Reports from all tributaries tell of flood WILL QUIT L A W Cyclists of Western States apr Are Forming a New League The bicycle men of Butte and other points in Montana have determined to join with Colorado and far western states in secession from the L A W A meeting will be held in Butte shortly to form the Montana branch of the new organization The cause of the secession is the refusal of the older body to allow divisional option as to Sunday racing as only that kind can be made to pay in these states Colorado Utah Wyoming Idaho Montana Nevada Washington Oregon California Arizona and New Mexico are expected to join the new league Smoking Is a Bar Mrs Louise Pitt Yoeum Dolores County ILansas superintendent of schools has ressed a teachers certificate to Prof Vic iorC McGirr principal of the Rico public schools because he smokes Mrs Yokum takesthe ground that a person who smokes is disqualified to teach in public schools because the teachers in that state are re squired by law to instruct children against -the use of tobacco Great Chess 51an Dead A dispatch from Paris says that Dr Steiuilz is dead at Moscow Wm Steinitz was born at Prague in 1836 ile -won the chess championship of the world in 1866 and since thenhchas won it sev eral times last month being defeated by iLasker losing the championship for the dast time Catholic Preaches at Harvard Jtev Father Fidelis James Kent Stone jdfSSt Josephs monas ery Baltimore ipreached in Appieton Chapel at Harvard Sunday evening in response to an invita tion from the university faculty This is he third time that a Roman Catholic has mreached in the Harvard chapel Judge Seymour Dead Augustus Seymour of Newbern N C Judge of the United States district court of the eastern district of North Carolina died tin New York Friday of cancer of the ach NO WARSHIPS TO GO TO CUBA 1 RURAL FREE DELIVERY State Department Dinfes Gen Lee Has Called for Them It can be stated on the best authority that so far at least there is no reason for ap prehension that the case of Dr Richard Ruiz who was found dead in his cell in the jail at Guanabacoa Cuba will lead to an international complication The matter was brought to the attention of the state department in the latter part of the past week through complaint of some of the friends of the doctor in this country The allegation was that the man had been imprisioned beyond the period allowed by the treaty for an American citizen to be kent in iail without the lodgment of charges and that he had been murdered by his jailers Consul General Lee was immediately di rected bv cable to investigate the affair although it appeared from his dispatches that he had already hail his attention di rected to the case The official reports of the Spanish officers are said to show that Ruiz committed suicide while in jail but this has not yet been communicated to the department of state Meanwhile Consul General Lee is investigating the matter and the state department is awaiting his report In the absence of this the department officials feel no apprehension of any com plications and all stories that warships have been called for by Gen Lee or that this government is making ready to take forcible measures in the case are without foundation Dr Ruiz was a naturalized American citizen He studied and practiced dentistry in Philadelphia for some time and returned to Cuba about the beginning of the present Insurrection The charge upon which he was arrested was conspiracy in having par ticipated in the derailing of a train carry ing Spanish troops as a result of which three Spanish officers were captured by the Insurgents MET A HORRIBLE DEATH Grip of a Cable Car Catches a Work man in a Conduit John Lagalle 26 years old a track re pairer for the Brooklyn Avenue Cable Railway Company Kansas City met a horrible death Sunday while engaged in work in a cable conduit Lagalle was re placing a broken pulley wheel and was busily engaged when surprised by the ap proach of a grip Catching Lagalles clothes the grip doubled him up and hur ried him along through the narrow con duit Thumping against the sides his body smashed three large pulleys before he was finally dislodged and wedged beneath the cable The car passed on with the grip man innocent of what had happened When Lagalle was removed his head was cut open and his body was horribly muti lated He lived but a short time WILL APPOINT HANNA Gov Busnnell Settles the Ohio Sen atorial Matter Gov Busnnell of Ohio gave out the fol lowing statement to the press Sunday night -When Senator Sherman resigns to enter the cabinet of President McKinley J I will appoint to succeed hirif Hon Marcus I A Hannaof Cuyahoga County to serve until his successor is chosen by the Seventy-third general assembly of the state 1 trust this will meet with the approval of the people- A NEW HARRISON BABY An 8 1 2 Pound Girl Arrives in the Ex Presidents Family A baby girl weighing 8X pounds was born to Mr and Mrs Benjamin Harrison at Indianapolis on Sunday morning Mother and child are doing well Mr and Mrs Harrison were married in St Thomas church New York April 6 1896 The ex nresident is in his 64th year An Iron Mountain Holdup News has been received at the marshals office in Muskogee I T of an attempt to hold up a train on the Iron Mountain road at Watova When the north bound ac commodation train took the siding at Wa tova two masked men entered the coach and compelled Conductor Wallace to hand over the few dollars in silver that he car ried At this juncture the regular pas senger train pulled in It had been the in tention of the robbers apparently to hold up this train but the alarm had been given and a crowd of armed citizens gathered so quickly that the outlaws sought safety in flight New Scheme of Huntingtons It is stated that Collis P Huntington has a corps of engineers in the field making a preliminary survey for a railway from the port of Alvarado south of Vera Cruz Mexico to the port of Salina Cruz on the Pacific coast and that if he can secure an advantageous route he will ask the gov ernment for a concession for operating the line in connection with the Pacific Mail steamers thus doing away with the Pana ma route Double Connecticut Tragedy When he awoke Sunday morning the 10-year-old son of Postmaster Chapin of Falls Tillage Conn found the corpse of his mother in the dining room and near by the body of Charles Mead son of Rev H H Mead Near by was a discharged revolver The supposition Is that Mead killed Mrs Chapin and then himself Roloff Flees to Cuba j It is reported Gen Roloff the Cuban Against whom an indictment was recently secured jn New York for his alleged con nection with a filibustering expedition andt whose baii bond of 2500 was forfeited by his non appearance when his trial was called in Baltimore last Ayeekjiias gone to Cuba Reaves a Big Fortune A dispatch from Rome says that Mrs Hickson Field of New York mother of Frincess Brancacco the queens lady in waiting died Thursday night She leaves an immense fortune Daniel McCarthy Hanged Daniel McCarthy a printing honso em ploye was hanged in Chicago Friday for the murder of his wife last May in a fitof jealousy He was strangled to death Experiments Demonstrate It wortfd Cost 40000000 a Year i The postmasters and patrons at every one of the forty four postoffices wheie rural free delivery has been in operation declare in favor tit the plan The senti ment in favor of the adoption of the com prehensive scheme is unanimous represent ing opinions given both by the head of each postoffice and patrons The obstacle however is the tremendous cost involved When the experiment was first contem plated it was roughly estimated rural free delivery to cover the whole country would involve an annual expenditure of over 20000000 but experience already had shows 40000000 is a conservative figure The cost was found of course to vary with the character of the country where it was formed sparsly settled regions nat urally heavily increasing the expense The maximum cost of delivering each piece of mail matter was between 9 and 7 cents at Hartsville Ind and less than 7 mills at Greenfield Franklin County Mass The average cost per letter is a little over 8 cents in these rural deliveries There are many places however where the delivery of mail is impossible and these aggregate a large portion of the country The least difficulty in the general adoption if the scheme is in the eastern states though a number of western points like the country adjacent to Denver Colo show comparatively small cost The offi cials believe the service can be advantage ously established in a number of well set tled regions Postmaster General Wilson has not yet drafted his report but it is be lieved he will demonstrate the value of the continuance of the experiment for a year To NEW BREED OF CATTLE Kansas Stock Kaiser Develops the Dream of Cattlemen Gen W W Guthrie of Atchison Kansas owner of a large ranch in Chase County and a stock farm in Atchison County has just made public the result of an experi ment in stock breeding covering a period of eight years He claims to have de veloped an entirely new breed of cattle which has been the dream of stock raisers for years and which for the present he has named polled Herefords He has succeeded in developing an animal with all the main markings of a Hereford but which is with out horns He began his experiments with the belief that a strain of cattle could be developed from the Hereford that would meet more satisfactorily the requirements for beef and milk and he is confident that his experiments have been successful He never abandoned the idea that horns could be bred out of the Hereford strain and now after years of experimenting he has a herd of twenty seven heifers and two bulls that are polled Herefords The new breed is somewhat larger than the Here ford and with sparer hips but retains the natural markings Gen Guthrie believes that the new breed is superior to the Here ford as to beef quality and is convinced that they will meet his expectations as to milking qualities NUN IN A TRYING PLACE Become an Heiress She Must Renounce Her Vows Miss Carrie Taylor Jewell a young and beautiful nun who was for two years an inmate of the Convent of the Sacred Heart at the corner of Taylor and Maryland Av enues St Louis has been placed In a try ing position by the will of her late uncle who died in New York a short time ago leaving an estate of 5200000 The young woman is made a beneficiary to the amount of 25000 provided she will renounce her vows and leave the Catholic church The will was made seven years ago and at that time the girl had not taken the vows of a religious as the nuns of the Sacred Heart order are known Woman Suffrage Killed After four hours of sharp and sometimes bitter debate the woman suffrage bill was killed in the lower house of the territorial legislature at Guthrie O T The measure was defeated by a vote of 11 to 13 A majority of the Populists opposed the measure Fatal Gasoline Explosion Eight people were terribly burned in the Polish quarter in Cleveland by an explosion of gasoline Five will die AIARKET QUOTATIONS Chicago Cattle common to prime 350 to 550 hogs shipping grades 800 to 375 sheep fair to choice 200 to 450 wheat No 2 red 74c to 7Ue corn No 2 22c to 24c oats No 2 15c tu 10c rye No 2 33c to 34c butter choice creamery 19c to 21c eggs fresh 15c to 16c potatoes per bushel 20c to 30c broom corn common short to choiei dwarf 35 to 80 per ton Indianapolis Cattle shipping 300 to 5525 hogs choiee light 300 to 375 sheep good to choice 300 to 400 wheat No 2 S3c to 85c corn No 2 white 21c to 23c oats No 2 white 20c to 22c St Louie Cattle 300 to 525 hogs 300 to 375 sheep 300 to 450 wheat No 2 88c to 90c corn No 2 yel low 19c to 21c oats No 2 white 16c to 17c rye No 2 30c to 32c Cincinnati Cattle 250 to 500 hogs 300 to 375 sheep 250 to 4o0 wheat No 2 S9c to 91c corn No 2 mixed 22c to 24c oats No 2 mixed 18c to 20c rye No 2 35c to 37c Detroit Cattle 250 to 500 hogs 300 to 375 sheep 200 to 425 wheat o 2 red 87c to 88c corn No 2 yellow 2icto23c oats No 2 white 19c to 21c rye 35c to 36c Toledo Wheat No 2 red 87c to 88c corn No 2 mixed 22c to 23c oats No 2 white 17c to 18c rye No 2 34c to 30c clover seed 465 to 470 Milwaukee -Wheat No 2 spring 75c to 76c corn No 3 18c to 19c oats No 2 white 17c to 19c barley No 2 2Sc to 31c rye No 1 34c to 35c pork mess 775 to 825 Buffalo Cattle common to prime ship ping 250 i 500 hogs medium to best 300 to 400 sheep common to prime natives 300 tp 450lambs fan to extra 450 to 550 New York Cattle 300 to 550 hogs S350 to 425 sheep 300 to 475 wheat No 2 red 83c to 84c corn Nor 2 31c to 32c oats No 2 white 21c to 23c butter creamery 15c to 21c eggs Weat ern 15c t 20c STATE OF NEBRASKA NEWS OF THE WEEK IN A CON DENSED FORM University of Nebraska Observes the Anniversary of the Granting of the Charter Under Which that Great Institution Is Conducted Charter Day Exercises The University of Nebraska celebrates in a more striking way each year the anni versary of the granting of the charter un der which that great institution is con ducted This year as usual on February 1G the buildings were all thrown open and the public invited to come and get ac quainted with what is going on every day inthe way of work and to see the appa ratus and appliances in its prosecution In the forenoon occurred a reception to the orator of the day Dr Carter at the resi dence of the chancellor In the afternoon the gymnasium exhibit by the young women of the University was gone through with The drill of the university battalion on the campus was as great a success as could be asked the evolutions being gone through in a creditable manner The gov ernor and his staff received the cadets and expressed themselves as being greatly pleased with their work The charter day exercises ended with the even ing gathering at the Lansing theater to hear the address of Franklin Carter Ph D LL D president of Williams College Chancellor MacLean announced that at the meeting of the board of regents on February 15 such action had been taken as would make it the custom in the future to confer degrees twice a year instead of once as has always been done in the past Those students who complete their work in such time as to make it more convenient will hereafter be able to graduate and re- ceive their degrees at the charter day cel ebration instead of at the regular com mencement time in June Such action has been contemplated for some time and is in tended to do away with the hardship that has made it necessary for students who do outside work in order to make their ex penses while in the university to stay for several months waiting for the regular commencement day when they must be present in order to receive their diplomas and degrees Nearly all the state societies sent communications commending the action of the regents in establishing the school of agriculture and the dairy school A letter was read from ex Regent Yictor Rosewater expressing regret that he was unable to be present Dr Carter addressed the assemblage on Thoughts on Univer sity Work and was well received MRS ANNA SOPHER ACQUITTED Charge of Manslaughter Against the Woman Fails to Hold The trial of Mrs Anna Sopher at Ne braska City charged with manslaughter on account of the killing of John Kicker last November in a house of ill fame kept by her has come to an end It took the jury thirty minutes to bring in a verdict of acquittal Rieker with two companions attempted to enter the house forcibly after being denied admittance when several shots were fired on them from an upper window one of which struck Rieker kill ing him instantly The Sopher woman and a piano player named Spencer were immediately arrested and narrowly es caped lynching at the hands of Rickers friends the following night Spencer was tried for murder at the December term of court and convicted of manslaughter He is now serving a ten year term in the pen itentiary Make it Self Sustaining An effort is being made by Secretary of State Porter assisted by others to enable the office in his charge to become self-supporting This is to be accomplished by means of a bill now pend ing in both house and senate to increase the fees of the office to some proportion with the expenses There are many states in the union in which all the departments are self supporting and from some of them a handsome profit is derived The biennium appropriation for the secre tary of states office for the ast term 18 000 was all expended while the receipts were only 167712 leaving a loss of 16 82288 The bill which has been introduced provides sufficient revenue to be raised from fees to more than make up this deficit-Prepare for Spring Farming The preparatory work of fanning has already begun in Nuckolls County The winter has been most favorable There have been but two weeks of anything like cold weather one period about Thanks giving and the other from January 23 to 31 at which time the meicury reached 10 de grees below zero No snow has fallen but the ground is in prime condition owing to the heavy late rains The outlook in this county for a big crop is better than itflias been at this season since 1891 Makes Converts of Every One The union revivals still continue at Holdredge and the interest is uuabating Every class of business and profession has had members of its ranks added to the great army of Christian workers One evening last week the meeting was led by two lawyers recently converted and they both made earnest eloquent pleas to their unconverted friends to join the ranks of the Christians About 325 have been converted since the meetings started Accommodation Train Wrecked The regular train of the Chicago St Paul Minneapolis and Omaha Railway met with an accident between Ponca and Newcastle Saturday the passenger car and one empty box car being wrecked and burned Seven passengers were on board but all escaped injury excepting Mike Waters a traveling man whose feet and hands were badly burned Burglars Take Clothing Burglars broke the glass front door to P G Shanstroins clothing store at St Paul and stole a lot of ready made clothing un derwear and fancy articles The loss is estimated at from 200 to 300 The rob bers got onto a hand car with their booty and escaped over the Union Pacific tracks The men have not been traced Twenty Two Cars of Corn By far the largest shipment of grain from that section of the country went out of St Edward one day last week It was a special train of twenty two cars Not withstanding this shipment from six to ten cars are also shipped daily 1 - - - Sullivan Gets the Judgeship Goyernr Holcomb has appointed H 31 SuJHvanf Broken Bqw to succeed Wilijam L Greejtes judge of the Twelfth judipial district of Nebraska One of the strongest coinpetrs of Sullivan was W D Oldham ot Kearney Important Case Decided The supreme court has handed down an opinion in the case of William J Bryan and others appellees against Elmer B Stephenson and others appellants This is the celebrated gold bond case which was won by Bryan in the district court of Lancaster County and appealed to the supreme court by Stephenson The ap pellees Bryan and others as residents and taxpayers of the city of Lincoln instituted this action to restrain or enjoin the ex ecution and delivery by the city mayor and city council of certain funding bonds amounting to 531500 to Stephenson The trial resulted in a judgment in favor of Bryan and the sale of the bonds were per petually enjoined One of the mainpoiuts contended for by Bryan was that it was stipulated that these bonds should be made payable in gold This was the principal ground upon which he brought his action in the lower court Following is the syllabus The clause when the same shalMiave been authorized by a vote of the people contained in section 66 subdivision xxi article i chapter xiii a Compiled Statutes under heading Cities of the First Class means authorized by a majority of the voters of the city A proposition to authorize the issuance of funding bonds was submitted to the electors of a city pursuant to the provisions of such section of the statutes at the same time and place as the general city election Held Under the facts shown to be but one election that the presumption is that all the electors voted at such election and the proposition to work its adoption must have received a majority of all the votes cast at said election The decision of the lower court is affirmed The important feature of this opinion is that it lays down a line of judicial finding that plainly foreshadows the opinion of the supreme court on the vote for the constitutional amendments last fall The decision distinctly holds in opposition to Judge Maxwell that a proposition must receive more than one half of the votes cast for any candidate at said election Planing Mill Burns The large planing mill of F L Pade Son at Hastings burned to the ground It is not khown how the fire originated but it is thought there must have been some fire in the engine room and as there were always plenty of soft wood shavings around it is quite likely that the fire started from a spark in the engine room At the time of the lire there was considerable lumber in the large building The entire loss is estimated at 9000 There was not one dollars worth of insurance on it Industrial School Boys Give Trouble The boys at the industrial school at Kearney seem inclined to give the new officers a little trouble Monday afternoon four boys walked off and failed to come back and Tuesday night four more tried to get away They have all been captured however and this may save a general at tempt to escape as there has been a well developed scheme among the larger boys for some time to get away Will Have a Skunk Farm An enterprising York County farmer living east of York named Henry Nabor has started a skunk farm He will go intc the raising of the little pests extensively and there is a good prospect of his coming out ot the venture financially successful The skins bring a fair average price and the fat is sold for 1 a pint It is supposed to be a valuable external remedy for many ailments Steal Three Fug Dogs Two men went to Fairmont in what ap peared to be an emigrant wagon and camped near that town It is said they had a contract to furnish pug dogs for some large cities When they left they stole three dogs The officers followed their thirty miles but failed to overtake them One of the dogs returned to his master Columbus Man Loses His Voice Hub Murdock a grocery man of Colum bus has almost entirely lost his voice be ing unable for the past five weeks to speak above a whisper His affliction is are minder of an attack of the grip nearly twe months ago He has consulted eminent physicians with but little success and is at present trying electric treatment Thief Rings Alarm and Is Caught Mr Crissman Jiving one half mile outl of Harvard was awakened the other nighi by an electric bell connected by wire froa his chicken house and caught the tliieJ with a sack partly filled with the choicest fowls of his Hock The thief was marchec to town and turned over to a constable Womens Band Gives a Concert The Ladies Silver Circle Cornet Band ol Nelson gave a concert the other evening and a crowded house greeted them The program as carried out exceeded all ex pectations and the band is receiving th compliments of all for its efficient work Organized a Tecumsch Gun Club Twelve sportsmen at Tecumseh havt organized the Tecumseh Gun Club anc elected the following officers President Dr F L Lewis secretary W S Jones treasurer C E Ferguson Weekly shoot Will be held by the club Married wQman Adjudged Insane Mrs Nellie Babcock of Hastings was be fore the board of insanity and after acarc jul examination was adjudged insane anc ordered sent to Lincoln r Months Without Term of Court Judge Greene has adjourned district court at Loup City until April 20 Tin makes eleven months without a term o district court in Sherman County Nebraska Short Notes The second Papillion wolf hunt was j repetition of the first one Not a wolf wa captured Hebron Republicans will hold an electioi March i to decide whom they want fo postmaster Reports from all over the state indicah that an increased acreage of wheat will I put in this year The sheriff has taken possession of tl i Norfolk Cold Storage Company on claim aggregating 6000 It is expected the com pany will settle up and continue n busi ness Prof Loux of the Craig schools has re signed on account of ill health and wil seek a milder climate Mrs A L Goodrich of Oakland droppei a hot iron with which she was curling he hair and it struck her eye It is feared sh will lose the sight of the eye A second raid was made on the place ii Gering which was supposed to keep intox icating liquors Thistime the officers fouiu nothing of a contraband nature Munn Davis a former residentof Wahoo was recently murdered in California by couple of half breed Indians who took hin nut tn hnv him n mininrr Mnim - - 0 jx wi J jarsfewBu S rSilFim Never go from a warm atmosphere into a cooler one without keeping the mouth closed so Miat the air may be warmed in its passage through the nose before it reaches the lungs Never strain the voice in the effort to speak while hoarse Wait until the hoarseness is recovered from or tlie voice may be permanently injured or difficulties of Vie throat produced Never stand still in cold weather for any length of time in the oxitdoor air especially after having taken active ex ercise and never stand long on the ice or snow or where the person is exposed to cold wind Many believe in withholding salt pep per etc from the sick This is wron Whatever is done toward making the diet desired and appreciated promotes its digestion Water and air are food stuffs Wa ter acts as a carrying agent to trans port foods to the different tissues The oxygen of the air is need for the tis sues and fluids of all forms of animal life The food of a person doing ordinary work should be proportioned as fol lows Four ounces of proteids or albu jf minoids four or five ounces of fats Iri crease this as the necessity for work or heat increases eighteen to twenty ounces of starches and one ounce of salts A mustard plaster ought never to blister the skin If it burns too much an extra piece of muslin can be placed between it and the body and can be removed when the patient becomes ac customed to the heat Mix the mus tard with equal quantities of flour and ground ginger It has been found by experiment that tea retards digestion An infusion of 1 per cent of tea causes a perceptible delay a 3 per cent infusion will delays the digestion sometimes as much as twelve times the normal period a 10 per cent decoction arrests the diges tion of all starchy foods The eyball rests in a cushion of fat by which it is surrounded on every side When the system becomes great ly emaciated through diseases this fat Is absorbed and the eye sinks further into the head thus giving the sunken appearance so common in disease Butter is highly recommended as a food for pulmonary and other invalids Therefore if butter is agreeable to the Individual and occasion no gastric or in testinal disorders It would seem an Im portant adjunct to the present dietetic treatment Then too if it is an ad vantage in this condition why not in other were facts are indicated THE SCENTOGRAPH The Smellinjr Machine la One of tie Wonders of the Moment A machine which he claims will take its place by the side of the phonograph has been invented by Louis Kramer a Missourian who moved to Bingham ton N Y about a year ago It Is used to receive and magnify odors of all kinds and is called a scentograph A patent is to be applied for but it has been already practically tested It will take a liquid heretofore regarded as odorless and distill the most delicate perfume A drop of perfumery or es sence placed on the receiver will pro duce an odor that would in a very short time cause symptoms of SMEILIXO MACHINE tion The grocer might utilize it In detecting adulteration in goods while It has been suggested that bank paper can be tinctured with a special scent imperceptible to the ordinary sense of smell but which could be easily de tected when placed in the scentograph lessening liability of counterfeiting It is also claimed that the machine -will be popular in homes hospitals sick rooms where the air can be kept per meated by most delightful fragrance The machine is about twelve inches square and eight high Mr Kramer says It can be manufactured for 50 It Is thought he will have no trouble in obtaining financial aid for organizing a company to place is on the market as soon as the patent is granted At Loag Banftp As the following is published in the Army and Navy Journal it may be copied without offense to the military profession no doubt Father are generals brave men asked Johnny Yes my son as a rule was the an swer Then why do artists always make pictures of them standing on a hill three miles away looking at the battle through an opera glass - - Flawing Strawl The straw plaiting industry of En gland gives employment to about 50000 women and 4000 to 5000 men 4 -A v