fin ) -ii. . Juirst ) Is there a place h''i ' \\l'i 1 c.ui get a s'J2ie U1C2J ? ' G'ish--Y > . sir there's a I'ncle Wclljy ' - - < s. ; rcst-jr'at 'round the raw nor where yo-i can KI > ' " * nWt Ji'-'nl Jhi : ; s de o' ( . 'hi'.r-o if you < I MJ * iv.sn.l its 5) : n' a leetle e p-n- sivr- . ' \ i e\ ! ! vf , 1 \ ( yfir " "i cet- = . br. iv 7 : ' " - : - ' - ' " > : " T : ; : ) : ' - . You P.in fiei AII en'ft Foot-Enno FREE \Vrlte to-dav to Allen S. Olmsterl , Le Roy , N. Y. . for a FUKi : snmpfe of Allen's Foot- Bas > e , a powder to shake Into your sksos. It' cures tired , sweating , liot , swollen , ach ing foot. It makes new or tight shoes easy. A certain cure for Corns and Bunions. All Druggists and Shoe Stores sell It 23c. 'Ir- > . * . ' l-y Jn V. a "Anliow. " ! - . ' . > \l.iiiipd War"ham Long , as their . ! r.-uable differences of opinion pru * 'nlly led to personalities , "I ain't pigeon fifed ! " "Xo. " said TufToId Knutt , looking at the open work shoes worn by his follow traveler ; "w'ci : je have them things on yer feet ye allus turu yor toes out. " Chicago Tribune. LATIRT : I-AKISIAX SIIKATII SKIKT Novell v. MA' rvliody lauglis. cvorylindv wants cne : { < Kj.i ! ) s | il at Coney islant ! . All the nipe in New York. Send 3 cents. Bcekin.-ni Novelty Co. , GS lieckman St. , New York. Too "Ycssir , ' ' admitted : \ waiter , " 1 shall be compelled to throw up my siUmUon here. " "Indeed ! What is the matter ? " "More than I can put up with. The governor insists on my eating mushrooms - rooms in the presence of customers to prove they are edible fungi. " London Tit-Bits. * VI3 BELL , GUA'S AXD TRAPS CIJISAP fi : buy Furs & Hides. Write for catalog lOo N. W. Hide & Fur Co. , Minneapolis , Minn. A IJIiii < ! lUau'jj Knnc. * 'My groatuiicie.vlio was blind , " < aatd a Frenchman , "once buried $ -1,000 Jn cold louis id < > r a pear tree in his garden lis ! neighbor saw him do it , and in tin ; dead of night came and stole the money , replacing the earth care fully. "Some days later my uncle brought fifty more louis down to the pear tree for burial. He soon discovered his loss , and , silently weeping , he , too , re- .placed the earth. "lie knew whom to suspect , and that Alight he called on his neighbor. lie -seemed thoughtful and distrait , and the neighbor asked him what oppressed his 'Blind. " " 'Well. I'll tell you. ' said my great- -unclc frankly. 'I have 3,000 louis hid away in a safe place , and to-day a ten- out paid off a mortgage , and I have anotii'-r 1,000 louis in cash on _ my hands. I don't know whether to seek out another hiding place for this money or put it where the other is.Vhat do you advise. ? ' " 'Why. ' said the neighbor eagerly , 'If your first hiding place is safe and you declare it to be so I should cer- lainly put this money there too. ' "My great-uncle said firmly that that was what he would do.1 It was the wisest course. Then he look his leave. "And when next day he went to the r < \-r tree again there , sure enough , was lilA lost 1.000 louis. all put back again. " ht and Hied. " 'Uncle George , did you do any fighting fin the Spanish war ? " 'T s , my boy ; I was fighting nearly all flic time. Those mosquitoes down in Florida , whore we camped , were the fierc est tilings you ever heard of. " "But weren't you in any battles , un- "O , yes : we iiad a few -little skirmisher over in Cuba , of course : but I though ! . you wanted me to tell you about real waj -cuid bloodshed. " Chicago Tribune. f "iforo Tronl Ic. ' "I wish my husband had sent me i riwstoflice order instead of this check , " said Mrs. Lapsling , as she looked at tin little slip of paper that had dropped out of the letter. "I suppose , now , I'll hav * to take it to MIP bank and repudiate it In order to got the money. " ttonier's Vlcvrjiolnt. "Was it a good game of ball ? " "Splendid ! The visiting team went all to pieces in thp first inning , and our boys bo.it Vin 27 to 0 ! " ETOT A MIRACLE 3nnt Plain Cauiu and Effect. v There are some quite remarkable a things happening every day , which T seem almost miraculous. tl Some persons would not believe that tlh tlu a man could suffer from coffee drinkIng - h Ing so severely as to cause spells of un f ; consciousness. And to find complete tl relief In changing from coffee to Pos- tlsi tum is well worth recording. si "I used to be a great coffee drinker , sir < so much so that it was killing me by inches. My heart became so weak I would fall and lie unconscious for an s < foour at a time. The spells caught me b ; sometimes two or three times a day. k " .My friends , and even the doctor , kP1 told me it was drinking coffee that P1h ; caused the trouble. I would not be S ( Hove it. and still drank coffee until I tl could not leave my room. "Then my doctor , who drinks Post um ftiimself. persuaded me to stop coffee C ( and try Postum. Afrer much hesitation b : I concluded to try it. That was eight ct 19 -months ago. Since then I have had but t.l few of those spells , none for more than 01 four months. 01t : t "I feel better , sleep better and am H batter every way. I now drink nothing K but Postum and touch no coffee , and to as I am seventy years of age all my tl : friccds think the improvement quite re markable. " ' "There's a Reason. " ai Name given by Postum Co. , Battle til Creek , Mich. Read , ' 'The Road to Well- vllle , " In pkgs. Ot : Ever read the above letter ? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine , true , and full of jfiuman interest. mm C05SSM I-'ri-sh Air. fL. jwsple only Knew what good health und good iirifs at rend sleeping with one's head under \\indow tent , one and all would do it , says a bulletin of the Indiana Health Department. Coughs , colds , pneumonia , consumption and all other diseases of the air j'ass- ages are principally induced by breath ing foul air. The window tent supplies fresh outdoor air to breathe and at Ihe same time permits the body to be In a warm room. The head is accustomed to the cold , and in very cold weather an ordinary woman's knit hood nuiy be worn to protect the ears and cheeks. During the night and when asleep the tissues are repaired and the brain and nerve cells are recharged with energy. Pure air is the great factor in repair work. Consumption and catarrh in their early stages can be cured by breathing fresh air night and day. Gold and silver nets and. trimmings are to be very much employed for evening trimming , especially silver , and the thin silver laces and nets will be much in evidence. All sorts of lovely sashes , arranged in many diverse lines , will be si factor of evening gowns , and often a simple evening frock will be decorated with a rich sash , or a brilliant frock toned down by one in black or some dark tone , although as a rule the evening sashes are light and brilliant. The brocade evening gown laid in deep plait about a pointed bodice and laced down the'back ' in quaint and awk- first wrinkle. Gray hairs may be tolerated erated , ; often their framing softens the" complexion , giving depth and brightness to the eyes that flash beneath them , an.l many a plain face has been glorified when crownetf by the sheen of silver tresses. The fading tints of a v.vll- groomed skin are easily concealed by the artifices familiar to every woman , but a wrinkle is obstinate , a disagree able , aggressive witness , that bears evi dence ot" age in unpicluresqtie language , as convincing as the family Bible. liJ : nmj IScaiity Iilv. To heal an open cut apply alum wa ter twice a day. A drink of warm saire tea will often soothe a restless child. Half a teaspoonful of lime water will usually cure colic and hiccough. To bathe tired eyes in water as hot as one can bear will give great relief. For a scald or burn apply immedi ately puherized cliarcoal and linseed oil. Orange juice with cracked ice can often be taken by a patient who can retain nothing else. To cure sleeplessness take a cupful of hot Indian meal gruel just beur.v retiring. Sip it slowly. Wiien tired out and hm:3i take a cup of hot soup for quick refreshment rather than tea or coffee. Never leave a patient's untasted food by his or her side from meal to meal. 1L will destroy the appetite. Bathn the face and hands of a fev erish person in warm water that ha a bit of common soda dissolved in it. Too rich food and not enough exer cise is responsible for many bloodshot eyes , while too little sleep often has the same effect. Egg shampoo is well enough , but it is said to make the hair dry. Nothing is better than soap and water , provid- of self-direction. She is a person of. im portance and she knows U. She qni''t- ly assumes that she is somebody. The assumption is warranted in fact and 'conceded in practice. The American woman is. up to the present moment , God's best piece of work , and there are no visible indications of outside im provements upon the product/ ' A beautiful shade of blue is being exploited in millinery. It is a very dark dye of Bcauvais , but there is niii-h more black to the present shade. ' "Dusky blue' ' might best characterize it. and yet there is great indication of the smoke cok r. too. The ( one is uni- vert > silh brooming and seems to go with anything. In the new velvets and vel veteens it is adorable. To render the hats vf this sh.xde more soft in tone the milliners are putting a covering of mousseline the same shade of felt or sjlk. Aii ear ; * way to wash and iron hand kerchiefs. Overworked mothers , try this way : Collect handkerchiefs and put a coupie of stitches through the cor ners of all. Wash in machine , smooth out each handkerchief and dampen silghtiy without removing stitches. Iron each one separately , or. if pushed for time , iron on each side of tiie bunch. < I MVII < > ' 'i'cj c' 11 o Chine. The sketch shows a charming model for a gown of silk , voile or crepe. Old rose crepe de chine was used for the NEW DESIGNS IK BLOUSES AED SHIRT WAIsf : I \\wLo JA Fri j-- m rwT " , - - ! 1 < " ' n ; -T-zSa -\v \ ! t C7"1 tf f 1t 1 old-fashioned manner has again ppearcd on the horizon of fashions , 'he gown is a revival of the styles of lie period of Louis XIII. and is made 'iili long tight sleeves and folds of eavy brocade , with no stiffening or acing of any kind about the foot of lie skirt. The latest examples in trains now bown are the squared ones , but al- carty comes the promise that the trainer or midwinter will have not only a ointed end but one extremely pointed ; D does the pendulum swing and then ack again. Certainly it is much eas- > r to change a square train into a ointed one than vice versa * and those aving their trains made long and inaro can have them modified later if icy desire. Very pretty negligees of kimono liape are developed of black or white sin-spotted foulard silk , with border nnds of light blue , emerald green or ? risc taffeta , or of wide ribbon divided i rough the center , the cut edge run n to the edge of the garment and then irned backward , so that the selvage Ige will supply a finishing on the up- Lvr side. When these negligees are in- nided solely for ue in sleeping cars ley are provided with deep attached nods to be drawn over the head when Ting to and from the dressing room IK ! with small bags about the size of lose carried to the theater , which are ssigned to hold the purse and any her valuables of small size. The Abominable "Wrinkle. Nothing is more fatal to a woman's ? ace of mind than the discovery of her ed the soap is a good sort and especial ly made for the purpose. Coffee burning on a hot stove cover , carried about a sickroom , will disin fect and purify the air and kill any unpleasant odor that may exist. An excellent preventive against scar let fever or diphtheria in their season is to give a child a small pinch of sul phur every night and morning. Never stand or sit with the arms folded. By so doing the shoulders nat urally slip fm'wfnl. the chest becomes Hat. and deep breathing which is one of the essentials to health and good looks is impaired. Itcnio * isig Color Milns. The despair of the home laundress is the garment which has become stained by a color which has run out of an other one when they were all washed together or when a moist garment has been worn over another and imparted its color. The garment should be put at once into a large vessel of cold water for twelve hours and then allowed to dry in the sun. Pritlso for lite American \Vomaii. The American husband is the best in the world and his wife the- happiest woman in the world , according to Rev. Dr. Charles F. Aked. pastor of the Fifth Avenue Church , New York , who came to.this country a year or so ago from England. "The American woman has less drudgery and more leisure than any other woman. She has more money to spend and better things on which to spend it. She has more freedom , inde pendence , more power of initiative and original , the effective hand work , in a i c bold design , used oh the bodice being e done in silk to match. The skirt was „ i long and trailing , and was finished by j a a shaped applied fold. The yoke and j undorsleevos were of white chiffon tucked in small squares and inset with n Chantilly lace. _ , Ss Si C nt Her 'IVtMli. i Young man. before y u marry , take particular notice of the teeth of your u intended wife. Aunt Peggy tells me a just now that the organs of mastica- ' tioi : are certain indicators. < f a wife's inclination t < roam or not to roam. "If \nu want a home body. " says the aged high priesios , "marry a girl whose teeth grow dose together. If the teeth are distinctly separated , your wile will jt go gadding about all the time. She may love her home , but she won't sta3 * there. She will want to be traveling. The greater the distance between the w teeth the greater her inHinatinn to wansi dor abroad. " New York Press. tln AVilJ V/IsKen JliiSkin. . : Buttermilk is one of the simplest Sl and most effective remedies for whit ening the skin. Bathe with it both ; ! : before and after exposure to the sun . y. and let it dry on the skin. This will also help to keep freckles away. j ej To ? . . yvhen nmk-ing undergarments fur the j men of the family use the ribbed bottom tom of old drawers for the new and ; j ( make the undershirts large enough at D ] the neck to slip over the head , thus ; saving the making of button holes. n CHICAGO'S SHOCKING CONDITION Fifteen Thousand School Children j Suffering from Hunger , i According to the report of a com- ; mittce which has been investigating conditions since May , there tire r > ,0 < JO ! children in Chicago frequently sent to school brcakfastless. while lO.CCo oth ers arc habitually hungry as the result of receiving insufficient food. What to do with these children is now the prob lem that confronts the city. The Board of Education says that it cannot le- j gaily furnish food , but is willing to ' provide ioo > ms and equipment to enable - | . able any philanthropic person , or or ganization , to relieve the distress. .Many are opposed to the idea of giving free meals to children at 'school , believing that the proper course is to enter the homes of the people where destitution exists and relieve it thc.re. They urge the argument that if the child who at tends school is underfed the same con dition , even perhaps to greater extent , applies to the younger children re maining at home. The problem is a serious one , and calls for quick solu tion. Some of the conditions found by the imesligating committee were most pitiable. Hundreds of mothers , the re port says , often go to bed hungry in order that their children may have something to eat next morning. This self-denial is habitual heroism in sev eral districts of the poor. Fathers out of work have been found who were regular beneficiaries of the free lunch counters in saloons , while their fami lies went lutugry. Children have been found on South Water street , faint with hunger , beg ging for dead fowl in the crates or for decayed fruit. They have been seen feasting on remnants of food from gar bage boxes in alleys and in a few in stances clutching at crusts of bread thrown away by other children at school. In 9-10 homes children were found be ing raised in places unfit for human habitation. The city is filled with de serted wives with large families. Chil dren were found who did not know the taste of butter and to whom the taste { of meat was but a memory. MYSTEEIOTTS OMAHA MURDER. Charles E. Davis Is Held for the Killing oi Dr. Rustin. After a five days' hearing Charley Edward Davis has been held on tha charge of shooting Dr. Frederick Rns- tin of Omaha early on the morning oC Sept. 2. Bail was fixed at $10.000 and \\vis furnished. Mrs. llice , who said * slit had a suicidecompact with Rustin , was a principal witness against Davis. Dr. Rustin was a married man in love with Mrs. Rice. lie was heavily in debt and believed the only thing for him to do was to commit suicide in such a way as not to invalidate his insurance. According to Mrs. Rice ha convinced her that she ought to kill him and then commit suicide. She tried , but her nerve failed. Then , she says , the doctor met Davis , who also wanted to die. The doctor , according to her. gave Davis poison with which to commit suicide , in consideration for which Davis agreed to shoot the doc tor that night. I Davis admitted everything ( even the taking of the poison ) except the agree ment to kill and the actual killing. Davis' attorney tried to convince the court that Mrs. Itice did the killing. - * . & OLLEfiES Hamline University , of St. Paul , has raised $10,000 for a gymnasium and ex pects to double this sum. Superintendent Ileetcr of the St. Paul schools and the school board will shortly take up the question of selecting four or five teachers to be sent to England on half or third pay to study the methods of the schools there. The Sons of Veterans at their annual convention in Niagara Falls have inaugurated - \ gurated a. movement tc enlarge and in crease the scope of the college established J at Mason City. Iowa , to educate the sons and daughters of veterans. At Reading , Pa. , it is announced that j the famous collection of butterflies and t moths belonging to the late Herman Stecker has been sold to the Field Mu- scum of Natural History , Chicago , by * Mrs. Stecker for $120,000. Members of the Minneapolis labor t union of electrical workers have sent in tI tc petition to the board of regents of the c University of Minnesota to establish for h them a night school for instruction in t practical electrical subjects. d For the first time in years there are no secret societies made up of high school pupils in Minneapolis , according to the innual report of Dr. C. M. Jordan , super ; intendent of city schools , made to the o Minneapolis board of education. tl : tla Sixty white pupils went on strike at a he Lincoln school in Topeka. Kan. They talked out and paraded up and down the a street , declaring they would never enter t ( ihc doors of the school again until the dt icgro pupils are excluded. It is feared dtl t hat the strike will spread to other ward tlv. schools. v. .Tames .1. Hill has made a gift of > "l .iX0 v.h Minnesota College. Minneapolis , for h he erection of a now building at-IIar- h ard and Delaware stre ° ts. P To ascertain how many > .tmenN of for- ign birth and tVK < \S rji.-y belong to < g the\Uni\er < ity of Minnesota , tl tlol .he immigration committee , authorized by if rougrefcs to conduct an investigation of ' he immigration problem in Kurope. Asia ai aid ind the United f ite , has sent to Pr" < I- d : lent Cyrus North " > p of the uiTer.sity , At Att's lanks for the use of every student in t's he institution. The same action itnkcn ti titl other schools throughout the country. tl j | 1-102 Columbus landed on th < i island of Guanahani. 103-j Roger Williams banished from Itostoa for heresy. 1701 A charter was granted to Yao ! college. 1710 An expedition of r.ritSsh and Pro vincials appeared before Port Royal in Canada. 173 , * ; Zcnger's Weekly Journal , Hhe s < r- oiid paper in New York , first ap peared , j 17 , S First legislative assembly ever held in Canada met at Halifax. 17CS Hurricane in Havana caused great destruction of life and property. 1770 Count Pulaski was mortally wounded in the assault on Savannah. 17SO Major Andre , British army otiicer , handed as a spy . at Tappan. > * 1781 The French and Americans opened their batteries upon the British at Yorktowu. 170. ! George Washington presided at the laying of the corner stone for tha AVhite House. 1S20 The first daily newspaper issued in tt'ie State of Maine First Sun day school in Texas established at San Felipe. 1SU1 Great earthquake along the west ern coast of South America. ISoO Business portion of Aiken , S. C. , destroyed by fire. 1S17 Slavery was abolished in tha Swedish dominions. 1S51 Great damage was done by a. storm which swept over Prince Ed ward island. 1S31 Thirty-two lives lost by the burn ing of the steamer E. M. Collins , en route from S'ault Ste. Marie to Clpve- land Howard college , in Alabama , destroyed by fire. ISuO Monument unveiled on Quppn < fen Heights in memory of Gen. Sir Isaac Brock. ISGO Gen. Geary was elected Gov < rnur of Pennsylvania. 1S70 The Italian union was establi i < \ , 1S74 President Grant delivered an ad dress to t'he Cherokee Indians at Vinita. I. T. 1S78 Marquis of Lome appointed gov ernor general of Canada Failura of the City of Glasgow bank. iSSO Clark university , at Woive.-trr , Mass. , formally opened. , 1593 Dr. William Lawrence conser-ra * ' d bishop of Massachusetts. 189S German Emperor and Empress left Berlin for Palestine. 1000 Strike in the anthracite coal dis trict of Pennsylvania ended by mu tual concessions. 1903 The British-Canadian case closed before the Alaska boundary tribunal. -190C Kentucky racing commission law declared unconstitutional. As an evidence of his friendliness to ward Great Britain the ruler of Afghanis tan has prohibited the priests from preaching a holy war upon penalty of having their tongues pulled out. He has also ordered that all Afghans who join the rebellious border tribes shall ha-3 their feet cut off. The British general , Willcocks , in command of the forcps in Northwest India , -Lad reached close quar ters with tlie Mohmand tribesmen. The brother of the ameer , who is trying to usurp the throne , is avowedly an anti- British. The Mohmands , who ar" tht chief cause of the trouble , are a Teat tribe half in Afghanistan and Iialf in British jurisdiction. British authorities ran hardly ask the ameer to control hia half when the British are totally uuabla to control those on their side of the bor- ier. ier.The The subcommittee of the American monetary commission created by Congress ms finished its study of the financial ystem of England after a series of confer- MICCS : at London with Lord Rothschild , he permanent secretary of fche treasury , ind other financiers. During the past veek the subcommittee has been sitting it Paris to study the French banking sys- cm. Senator Aldrich. with Prof. An- irews of Harvard , will proceed to Berlin o arrange for several Facial article on he- Gorman system , and other members vill return to the United States. A committee of the I > nse of Commcns ins reported in favor of changing tin lourK of the summer work day. TKb.'ll ! jroposps limt all clocks ia the Tnitod vingdom rfiall on a certain dat * each pring be advanced eighty minutes from he solar time registered at the meridian Greenwich. The effect will b < fo makaV 'vcrybody begin work earlier in the dav ind get through earlier , thus having mo 's inylight leisure after the da.v's work ii lone. In Che fall when tihe days shorten lie clocks will be set back again at sola ? imf. Both changes wonld be made is he night when most people are asleep.