acts gently yet prompt ly on the bowels , cleanses ike system eWectually , kissisfe one in overcoming Kabitual constipaTion ermanently. loget'As lenejielal ejjects buy tae < 5 en nine. ( anujacturcd bytne * . . . . m jum. .1. a > 4 M SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS-50 ! p rBOTTLL Some 'Jliiii s ( o Kcmemhcr. The fact that a parrot is green is no sign that he is not a bird of ripe experience. The great drawback about yellow Journalism is not that it is yellow , but that it is read. There Is nothing so wonderful but that it might be more so. Niagara , for Instance , would be far more marvelous -If the water flowed the other way. Jfany a man is modesty itself until his children are born. It is then he begins - gins to put on heirs. It may be true that money talks , but ft is so frequently tight that its con versation is hardly worth repeating. There is nothing that so destroys one's pride of ownership as the early morning call from the tax collector. John Kendrick Bangs , in "Success Mag- On IIIDignity. . The chief of the gang of burglars wa3 dividing the s\vag. "You played sick while the rest of U3 -7ore ( loins the work on that last job , iJill , " he said. "All you did was to locate tfap plant. Hero's what you set for that. " Bill counted the small wad and handed ii ba"k. "Kopp it , cap , " he said. "I'll be satis- with honorable mention. " .Send dealer's same and top from paimi carton of * * 20-Mulc-Tcam" Borax , aua - < % ! cents in stamps and % vo will mail illus trated booklet. ( ii'vind many uses fop "Borax la the Home. Farm and Dairy , " also this iocc dcsidn. 15 by 16 inches , on cloth I icady for working. FREE. .Address Taclfic Coast Borax Co. , Chicago. flnivk Ilfflex Action. Shocked and Grieved Parent Tommy where did 5011 g < 't those beautful littlt spotted oss ? You have been robbing . s aie bird's nost. yon wicked boy ! "Tommy I'm poin" to set the old hen -on 'm , innmma. and laise some pretty lit- rle birds , so jou can ] ) tit some more oi . Tribune. cin on your bat. Chicago Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for Chlld- svn teething , softeus the gums , reduces In flammation , all.iys pain , cuies wlud colic. a bottle. THE MUSSULMANS. \ Arc Xot Easily Disturbed 'IVIiilc SnyiiiR Tlicir Prayers. When saying his prayers the true Mussulman is not easily disturbed. Hans Doering. in his account of bi3 travels in Chinese Turkestan , writes : * Tt Is an interesting sight to see a "Mussulman perform his devotions. Through the piece of glass in my pa per window , I saw the interpreter spread his carpet in front of his house Just opposite the one in which I was .living. His wife and child sat quite rloe to him talking loudly with some visitors , but this did not in the least listurb the old man at his devotions. "In spite of the noise the melodious chanting of the Koran was qute au dible. The worshiper kotowed several tflmes and cried 'Allah , Allah , Allah ! ' then for awhile stood reverentially clasping his bands crosswise upon bis &reast , after which he joined in the conversation. " 'His wife then went through the same performance , doing exactly the r-ume as her husband.t This they do r every morning and e\'ening whether there are friend- ? with them or not. " SOMETHING ? OH EVERYBODY The New York Central employs 50- 0-0 men and betveen $3,000,000 and J > oCOO. < j0 ( i paid in monthly wages. Trained falcons to carry dispatches i-i time of war have been tested in the llyssian arnn- . Their speed is four tunes as great as that of carrier pig- "o-5. If the real estate of Manhattan Island were divided equally between Its inlubitants each individual would < wn ? .L'.02o worth , according to the as- sesscd value. I'rof. Carl von Noorden , addressing a number of prominent scientists at Vienna on the subject of "Food and Nourishment , " declared that the reason so many men begin to get fat immedi ately after they have married is be cause their wives give Them their favor ite dishes en every possible occasion. { London Standard. " \ egetnble milk" is used in Japan. 11 is made from the soja bean. The liquid is exactly like cow's milk in ap pearance , and in taste cai hardly be distinguished from it. To make it the beans are first soaked and then boiled in water. Some sugar and phosphate of potassium are added , and it is boiled down till it has the consistency of con densed milk. Alfalfa was first brought to Kansas by the late Harrison I'arkmai. of Ern- poria. Mr. Parkman first saw alfalfa growing in Chile. lie brought the seed i < > America , and in the late seventies he went to Kmporia to live. lie sowed alfalfa in a farm which he bought and the plant prospered. It was slow in gaining popularity in Kansas , but is now one of the State's most important fora so crops. In New Zealand everybody is bound ! iy lav.to take a weekly half-holiday , and there must be no shirking the obli gation. The Grand Hotel , Auckland , was recently crowded with guests , and f-evcral waiters , instead of obeying the law and taking their prescribed weekly half-holiday , remained at work on the promise of extra pay. But the authori ties came to hear of it and the proprie tor of the hotel had to appear in court , u here he was convicted and punished. The death of Gen. Stephen D. Lee leaves only two surviving lieutenant- generals of the Confederate army. They arc Gen. A. P. Stewart , ranking lieu tenant-general of the Confederacy , of Kiloxi , Miss. , and Gen. Simon Bolivar Uuckner , of Kentucky. General Stew art celebrated his eighty-sixth birthday anniversary on October 7 last. Gen eral P.uckner w.is a candidate for Vice President on the National Democratic ticket with Palmer in 1S9G. lie was eighty-five on April 1 last. The German Emperor has a well- 'Yjuipped pottery which brings him in S.'AOCO : i year. The Kins of Wurtein- bprjj owns two large hotels which yield bun a yearly income of some ? 10,000. The King of Saxony owns the famous porcelain factory at Meissen , and the Regent of Lippe Delmoid runs a large model farm from which lie sells butter and milk and eggs. The King of Servia is said to own a barber shop and an apothecary shop , in addition to which beholds an agency for mtotor cars. I once had a cat that did a rather remarkable ratting feat. lie stalked two young rats on the eaves of a low Hat stable roof , and caught one in the usual way. The other jumped on to an elderberry tree just below. Bob , how ever , not satisfied with the one , grasped it fiimljin his mouth , and then jumped headlong for the other. Either he was very lucky or extraordinary agile , for he fell to the ground with one rat still in his mouth and the other in his paws , and promptly killed them both. The Scotsman. "Instances of desertion from the army m Mexico are very rare and for the best of reasons , " said Senor Jose de Minaldex , of Nueva Leon. "The reason lies in the almost sure capture of the lugitive and the certainty that he will get not one but numerous floggings on his bare back. These lashings are done in the presence of the comrades of the deserter , and when the men see how great is the suffering of the miserable wretch who tried in vain to quit his military obligations , they are forced to conclude that it is better to stick to the army than undergo such a terrible ordeal ! " Baltimore American. The earliest mention of corn in Kan sas is found in the account of Coron- ado's expedition in lo41-M2. Prof. Wil- listen found charred corn in the ruins of prehistoric Indian pueblos in Scott County , estimated by him to be at least two and a half centuries old. In some af the rooms there was found charred L'orn to a depth of five or six inches. The first mention of growing corn in Kansas of which there is any record IB in the narrative of thv expedition of nourgmonr , commander of the French olony of Louisiana. Bourgmont found ' .he Kaw Indians cultivating corn on the ; > iesent town site of Douiphan in 172-1. A strange story comes from one of the Balkan states , where commercial norality is still in its infancy. At a recent banquet given at the house of .he prime minister a distinguished dip- unat complained to his host that the Minister of Justice , next to whom he , \.is r-itting. had taken his watch. The irime minister said : "Ah , he shouldn't uive done that. I will get it back for . ou. " Sure enough , toward the end of ho evening the watch was returned to t owner. "Aid what did he say ? " isked the guest. "Sh-h ! lie /docs not mow I have got it back , " said the n'lme minister. Philadelphia Record. TnriiJ" Ilei'oriiiisis ; L ncic. It is MTV comical to see the anxiety of some liop'iblicm politicians foi tariff reform. There is Uncle Shelby Moore Cullom. of Illinois , who has been Senator from Illinois tor the pas ! twenty-four years , : ud a member ol the House of Representatives for six teen years before iliaft now s.iys "Wt must have tariff reform. ' ' Unfit Shelby has kept his car cle.se to tin ground during all his long public ca reer and has fuithfu'ly ' voted for thu tariff bills ilnt h-.vo filtered ami pro tected the trusts and has been endorsed ed in so doing by the Republican party of Illinois , but now he wants reform of some kind. Your Uncle Siielby is too cute to say how much reform he is h.uikering after , bevill. . of course , leave that to the Republican National Couvcnlien. Iv.it ho wants a tariff bill promised "alter election. " Uncle Shelby probably does not c.sre whether "the principle of protection" is ana in endorsed by the Republican party , or whether a maximum ami minimum larilf. which would raise the tariff higher , is the outcome "after election. ' ' but he wants it uud"rstood that before election be is for reform of the boldest kind without specifying what schedules shall be abolished nr revised. Your Uncle Shelby is no belter or worse than the average Republican politician , and his bold pronouncement for tariff relorm "immediately after election' ' is a. strong indication that the nreat majority of the people of Illinois have been clamoring for tariff reform before election , and that it is the part of wisdom to try and con sole them with a promise for the fti ture. Can the people of Illinois be kept in line for the Republican party auain by promisesV What will they do t < Uhde Shelby and the other Republi cans who represent them if Their fav orite son. UiHo Joe Cannon , is reelected - elected Speaker atrain. and persists 5i appointing a srand pat Ways and Mc.uis Committee like the present oiu that laughs and gibes at tariff reform of the slightest kind ? Uncle .Toe is backed by all the power and money ol the trusts , and nothing but a political revolution v\ill unhorse him. In tact , nothing but a Democratic majority in Congress , continued for. nt le.tst. four years. Vv.iil reform the tariff. If the Democrats control the House of Representatives of the nex.t Congress and pr'ss a tariff ivform bill , your Uncle Shelby will probably vott in the Senate against it. I'.ut even if he. forced by public opinion , should rote for a tariff reform bill , there are more than enouirh friends of the trusts and combines in the Senate to defeat It It is safe to say that practically Bvery Republican in the Senate and House would vote against a Demo cratic tariff retorm measure , just as ihey have refused to consider the bills Cor reforming the abuses of the tariff That were before the committee at the session just ended. There was the bill to reduce the tariff rates that exceed 100 per cent. : ml the bill to abolish the duty oil wood pulp and print pa per were never reported from the committee that Speaker Cannon ap pointed and controlled. It is no good to try and fool the people with promises all the time. If they want tariff reform they must not Duly elect a Democratic House of Representatives. but a Democratic majority in the Senate also. The people ple of Illinois will have th opportu nity of defeating the re-election of Senator Hopkins this fall , if they re- illy want tar iff'reform , but they will have to elect n Democratic State leg islature to do so. There are over twenty States th-l : will have a similar opportunity. Hut will they do it ? Two years later they will elect thirty more United States Senators , and it svill need a majority of these to be Democrats to assure tariff reform. \ny reform of value that will prevent the trusts from charging Inch prices , jr from selling cheaper abroad than it home , will never come from the Re publican party , as now constituted. The voters who want reform will iavc to be steadfast in well doing , for ; t will take a long pull and a strong mil to force the trusts to give up : heir strangle hold on tjho American Jeople. American Deiiincrney. In view of the record of the Roose- elt administration : uul the Republican najority at the last session of Con- cress , the Democrats of the country lave reason to rejoice at the possibil- ty , if not the probability , of returning o the control of the Government of the Jnitcd States. Never was there a time in our na- ionai history when a practical appli cation of the principles of the Demo cratic party was more obviously or irgently needed for the reformation of ilw-cs. And since a frequent recur- ence to first principles is of the high- 'St ' importance we purpose to furnish L series of short articles reviewing the irlnciples of Democracy. For , unfor- unately , there was never a time when here were so many men calling theui- J selves Democrats , who seemed to knovi slittle of triem. and to be so at vail ance with them , as there are to-day. There are two great characters whose writings have been regarded as expressing the fundamental doctrines of the Democratic party James Madi son , the Fath'Mof the Constitution , and Thomas Jefferson , the author of the Declaration of Independence. No act or policy conflicting with the doc trines on which these two men were agreed can fairly be called Democratic , as that term is understood in American politics. Nor can any man whose con duct in public life fails to conform to such doctrines , be , with propriety , called a Democrat. MADISON'S Tiinoitv. In 17S9. M.ulNon addressed the Gen era I Assembly of Virginia a memorial and remonsiiaucc. in the course of . \hicli he laid down the first principles of free government thus : "All men are to be considered ns en tering into society on equal condition5 ? , as relinquishing no more , and , there fore , retaining no less , one.than an other , or their natural rights. "Equality ought to be the basis of every law. and is more indispensable in proportion as the validity or expedi ency of any law is more liable to be im peached. " Concerning the powers of rulers in general , he said : "Their jurisdiction is both derivative and limited. It is limited with regard to the co-ordinate departments ; more necessarily is it limited with regard to the constituents. The preservation of a free * government requires not merely that the metes and bounds which sep arate "ach department of power be in variably maintahud.'hut more especial ly that neither of them be suffered to overlap the great barrier which de fends the rights of the people. The rulers who are guilty of such an en croachment exceed the commission from which they derive their authority , and ? ire tyrants. The people who sub mit to it are governed by laws made neither by themselves , nor by any au thority derived from them , and are slaves. " And nine years later , applying the same principles to the Federal Govern ment , in the Virginia Resolutions of 179S. he siid ; : ' "ThK assembly doth explicitly and peremptorily declare that it vieus the power of the Federal Government as resulting from the compact to which the St.-ites are parties , as limited by the plain sense and intention of the in strument constituting that compact , niul as no further valid than they are authorized by the grants enumerated in that compact. " Then , adverting to the imperialistic pirit of those days , which has been re vived in an aggravated form in these latter days , he ad.led : "A spirit has. in sundry instances , ieei : manifested by the Federal Govern ment to enlarge its powers by forced onstructions of the Constitutional barter which defines them ; and in- lications have appeared of a design : o expound certain general phrases ( which , having been copied from the > ery limited grant of powers in the 'onner Articles of Confederation , were : Im less liable to be misconstrued ) so is to destroy the meaning and effect > f the particular enumeration which iccessarily explains and limits the gen- ral phrases , and so as to consolidate he states , by degrees , into one sov- M-eiguty : the obvious tendency and in- jvilable result of which would be to ransform the present Republican sys- em of the United States into an abso- ute. or at best a mixed , monarchy. " Xej ro Population in the Cities. In view of Senator Foraker's appeal o the negro voters to oppose Roose- ; elt and Taft in the campaign of 1908 , ind the manifest inclination of the icgroes to act in accordance with For- iker's advice , the Providence Journal jives some interesting statistics relat- ng to the distribution of the negro jopulatiou of American cities. From his it appears that Mound City , 111. , las the largest per centage of negroes n its population of any other city , the jercentage in 1900 l > eing 43. In some > ther cities , it is very large , as shown > y the following table : Per cent airo. Ill 40.o iVashington. D. C ' 51. s'ew Orleans. La 27. Ulantic City. N. J 23.5 ialtimore , Md 15. Svansville. Ind 13. ndianapolisInd 9.5 'olumbus. Ohio (5.5 ' ! t. Louis. Mo 0. Miiladelphia Pa 5. " ( Mttsburg , Pa" 4.5 ' 'incinnati. Ohio . 4.5 Cew York. N. Y 2. v .oston. Mass 2. 'hicago. Ill 2. ' . j l 'leveland. Ohio 1.5 ) etroit , Mich 1.5 ! j The number of negroes in Baltimore j j s 79.000 ; in Philadelphia , C.2.0UO : in j ; ew York. (50,000 ( ; in St. Louis. . ' 55.- ( ] 00 : in Chicago. 30.150 ; in Pittsburg , 0,355 ; in Cincinnati. 14,000 : in Boston , 1,000. Evidently , the negroes will be a trong factor in the coming election , Gil Ed BY Only Surviving Ex-President of the United States Succumbs to Long Illness. EM ) COMES UNEXPECTEDLY. Country Shocked by News of Demise of Democratic Leader Twice Elected President. G rover Cleveland , the only surviving ex-President of the United States , died suddenly Wednesday morning at his home in Princeton , X. J. While it was known that Mr. Cleveland had for the past three months been suffering from a severe attack of rheumatic gout and acute indigestion , his death came as a complete surprise to the country. He had been a sufferer from gout and aiabetes for more than two years. Early in 190G he was stricken with an attack of Indigestion , the result of diabetes , and for weeks was unable to partake of any except liquid nourishment. A CLEVELAND'S CABEEB HI SHOBT. Born at Caltlwcll , Essex County , N. J.r March IS. 1S37. Christened Stephen s Grover Cleveland. J ( In 1841 family removed to FayettevlIIe , N. Y. Served as clerk In a country store. In 1S53 was appointed assistant teacher of the New York Institution for the Wind. For four years , from IS.jo , assisted his uncle In preparation of "American Herd Book. " and had a clerkship In a law linn in Buffalo. Admitted to the bar In l r.n. Appointed Assistant District Attorney of Hrit- County Jan. 1 , ISO : ; . Defeated for the District Attorncyshlp of Erie County In IfcCS. Practiced Ian- . Elected Sheriff of Erie County In 1870. Elected Mayor of Buffalo la 1SS1. Elected o\ernor of New York in 1SS3 by a plurality of UOO.OOO. Elected President of the United States In 1SS1. Majority in the electoral college , 37. Broke all records by vetoing 113 out of 9S7 bills. Married France Folsom in the Whlta use June l' , ISSO. Defeated In campaign for re-election In Engaged in the practice of law In Now York. elected President of the United States la 1S02. Settled Venezuela boundary dispute la 1S05 After leaving White notice in l flG estaT > - Hsbed home for his family in Princeton , N. J. land married in the White House Miss Frances Folsom , June 2 , 1SSG. She was a daughter of his former law partner. In 1SSS he was a candidate for a second end term , but was defeated in the election of that year by Benjamin Harrison. After his retirement from public life he settled in New York city. At the national Dem ocratic convention held in Chicago in / June , 1S92. he was for the third tima named as his party's candidate for tha - - < ; ' < > % : r ' ' 4 & ? , , - \ * * - ' * ' " * < < $ * ' ' ! * * - : , > * - ' < : : ' " " - . H- - ' v. ' Y r3-i&V.1S--/r- . - - - > : . . \ Jg&g' < > ' < . % - \ - 't - - ' ' * ' * 'Sag- * , ' . * ' * ' " ' - , ' * ' ' - ' ' " > : - / : 2 . s v.- x' > * > 0 Vr , vi , % ' * " ' " V , \ , ; v v ' ' Xf S " - - x' * vx * $ fr" ' > % % < " ' | ? ยง * 3 # ; ? > . v , ' * ' ' "i y * ' ' % V1 ' , ' . . ' . .3&foUS'1 A ' . 's .ft EVv- A > % * ' -1 ' - ' \ \M " - . , . " ' ? : ' 1 ' A-J ' 5 ' , SJ - , ' , ' . . .Igafia fei.s "iipp OL.EVEr-A.JsTD . - . - I : n > sojourn in the South improved his health considerably. Early last year he had a repetition of the attack of Indigestion and for some weeks his condition was such that his life was despaired of. Mr. Cleveland made a splendid fight for life and won. In February last diabetes began to make itself felt again , and Mr. Cleve land became subject to spells of un consciousness , coupled again with in ability to assimilate food. Death final ly came at 8:40 a. m. Wednesday. Life of Cleveland u Busy One. Grover Cleveland , the twenty-second ind twenty-fourth President of the Unit ed States , was born March IS , 1837 , in Daldivell , N. T. In 1S41 the Cleveland catnily removed to Fayetteville , X. Y. , where young Grover received his first schooling , and where later at an early age ie served as a clerk in a small country store. Still later , when his parents set- Lied in Clinton , N. T. , he pursued his studies further , and -when only 17 he was ippointed assistant teacher in the New Fork institution for the blind. In 1855 Cleveland served a clerkship -with the law irm of Rogers , Bowen & Rogers at Buf- 'alo. It was in that office that Cteve- and began to read law. He was admit- : ed to the New York bar in 1859. Mr. Cleveland received his first public office vhen appointed assistant district attor- ley of Erie county. In 1SG9 he joined .he firm of Lanninff , Cleveland & Folsom. [ n 1SS1 he was nominated as the Demo- Tatic candidate for Mayor of Buffalo and vas elected by the largest majority ever riven in that city , although the Repub- ican State ticket was carried. In 1SS2 ilr. Cleveland ran for Governor of New Cork against Charles J. Folgor , then Jnited States Secretary of the Treasury , ind won by a plurality of nearly 200,000. lis administration was notable for the imple and unostentatious way in which ie conducted the business of the State. At the Democratic national convention leld in Chicago in July. 1SS4. Cleveland ras nominated by his party as its candi- late for the presidency of the United states and at the election in the follow- ng November was chosen to that office , t was during his first term that Cleve- i presidency and in the following Novem ber was elected. After his retirement from public office Cleveland lived with his family at Princeton , N. J. Five chil dren were born to Mr. and Mrs. Cleve land , of whom four , two daughters and two sons , are living. THE "WHITE HOUSE BHEDE. " Prances Folsom Cleveland Widow of the Late Ex-President. Mrs. Frances Folsom Cleveland , tha "White House Bride , " who is left to mourn the death of Former President Cleveland , was the youngest mistress the White House ever had , as well as the most favored by diplomatic society. Her grief is shared sincerely by a host MRS. GKOVEK CLEVELAND. of friends , many unknown personally to her , who were made in every State while she was in the public eye as wife of the President. Mrs. Cleveland is the daughter of Oscar and Emma C. Folsom , and her father was the law partner of : > Ir. Cleevland in Buffalo , where she was born July 21. lbG4. -v Miss Folsom became the wife of President Cleveland on June 2 , 1SSO , the wedding ceremony being performed in the Blue Room at the White House in the midst of a brilliant assemblaga