t . . . . ---.o.- - _ _ . = . = = ; . , . . . _ - . . _ - . . _ = . . . . i " " ' .I - - - - - = - - - , - - , " . , . - . . , A - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - ; . - , ' " . , . ' . , . - ' . , " . . . " - t ' ' " r The Valentine Democrat . VAI/ENTINE , NEB. ' - , ° ; , t M. RICE , - - - - Publisher I , I -Publisher , i i I I BIG PRIZE FIGHT FORBIDDEN. ! I . ; Jeffries and Johnson Not to "Scrap" ! I . in San Francisco. t . I /Governor James N. Gillett , of Cali : j fornia , has directed Attorney General : f U. S. Webb to take whatever action , may be necessary to stop the fight be tween James J. Jeffries and Jack John- son for the heavy-weight championship t of the world , which is scheduled to be fought in San Francisco July 4. The Governor was impelled to issue this order , by pressure from Washing ton. San Francisco is attempting to secure national legislation in favor of the Panama-Pacific Exposition. It has , been directly intimated to the big in terests of California that the proposed Jeffries-Johnson fight is standing in the way of such legislation. I Just now the law-abiding people of I the State are jubilant. The Govern- or's action gratifies hope long deferred. The sporting element of San Francisco , the two fighters and their friends are correspondingly depressed. The gen eral inclination among them is to con- cede that the fight cannot be held in San Francisco. There are now only two States in the Union-leaving California out of consideration-in which fights can be held. One of these is Utah , the other Nevada. The laws of Utah are inim- ical to prize fights , and the Governor of that Commonwealth has already ex pressed himself emphaticaly on the subject of the Jeffries-Johnson battle , to the effect that it will not be per- mitted under any circumhtances. The laws of Nevada , however , explicitly permit fights to a finish for purses of money. "I am running San Francisco. I am taking no order from Gillett or his j Attorney General. You can bet your I last dollar that the big fight will be pulled off in my town just as adver- tised. " Mayor Pat McCarthy , of San Francisco , skipping from depot to de- pot to catch a Pacific coast bound fly- Br , delivered this ultimatum in Chicago. , STATEHOOD BILL PASSES SENATE I Action Insures Admission of Arizona and New Mexico Union. r Two more stars , making forty-eight ti' ' In all , will be added to the American flag as a result of the action of the United States Senate in unanimously passing the bill granting statehood to Arizona and New Mexico. : The House having already acted , the measure went to a conference commit- tee , which will arrange the differences in the two measures adopted , and sub- mit for the approval of Congress and the President the act under which the territories will be admitted into the . Union. The Democrats had feared the Re- publicans would endeavor to postpone . the report of the committee , thus kill- I ' ing statehood for this session. But I - . they received positive assurances that delay would not be attempted and that f Congress would not adjourn without action. Thus has ended victoriously a strug- gle of years on the part of Arizona and New Mexico : : to be admitted as separate States. United , they could have re ceived statehood at the time this high privilege was accorded to Oklahoma. But the Arizonians objected to amalga- mation with the New Mexicans and strenuously opposed the plan. The terms upon which the grant is made may not meet with the full ap- proval of the residents of the terri- tories. They may feel that onerous conditions have been imposed in some respects , but there is not the slightest tloubt but that they will accept them and lose no time in qualifying for- the . . _ improved status which has been of- fered. THIRTY-FIVE PERISH IN FIRE. Crowds Stand Helpless While Flames Claim Victims. Thirty-five persons are believed to be dead in the fire-swept ruins of the Herald building in Montreal , Que. , which was destroyed : the other day. Many are said to have been carried to death by a water tank which crash- ed through the building when the fire started. Bindery girls and linotype men fell through the huge gap in the floors of the building and were quick . ly buried under machinery and tim- _ "bers. Crowds 'outside the burning build- ing could hear plainly the shouts of . the dying inside while the flames ware slowly making their way toward them , but practically nothing could be done to save them. All the members of the editorial department escaped . uninjured , the dead and dying : being confined largely to employes of the bindery. The flames were confined at first to the upper floors of the building , but . although all the available , fire appa- ratus turned out , it1 was impossible to control the fire , which was fanned by a strong wind. , Negro IH Killed : by POHMC. Robert Mathews a negro , was shot and killed by a posse in a swamp near Beulah , Fla. , following an attempt to attack a white girl 12 years old , daugh ter o ! C. E. Snowden. . .5 , JBIamc Janitor for Girl's Death. _ : } Alma Kellner met her death at the iand of Joseph Wending , missing jani tor of St. John's Catholic church , ac- -cording to a verdict returned by the , " . coroner's jury in Louisville. - - - - - - - - - - G:2i2:7 , - ; : ; : : - . = . J : _ . - , - ' ' ' , ' ' . . . ; . , . . . ' " , . . : ; . - . _ " , : , _ " . . .r ; . - - , ; > e , , : . ' , ' " . . ' - " ' - , d ' , . . < . 7"t' ' . - : . ' , ' : . . ; ' , - . - " . . - . . : _ _ - - ' _ - : ' _ _ . JEm © If' Truffle WZEH ttIsD RECORD Of M ITCHIS Of [ [ 110AT5THR000fl011TTtl [ - Sunday. Wild scenes followed the victory of Oklahoma City in the fight for the capital. Both commerce commission and rail- roads seek a speedy settlement of the rate fight. Frank Amberg , notable in politics and an old resident of Chicago , died after a brief Illness. The Italian police think Porter Charlton was murdered with his bride in the villa of Lake Como. Monday. A score of persons were killed when the fall of a water tank wrecked a building in Montreal. Charles K. Hamilton flew from New York to Philadelphia and back , 176 miles , in 207 minutes. A delegation of shippers called on Taft and thanked him for aid in checking the rate increase. British foreign minister said that Roosevelt submitted his Guildhall speech to him before delivering it. Tuesday. Two hundred persons were known to have been killed by German floods. The Harvester Company filed a brief denying all charges made in a Missouri suit. suit.A A crowd on the roof of the New York city hall wrecked an airship by grab bing the drag rope. Oklahoma had two capitals , officials conducting business in both cities claiming the honor. The conference report of the admin- istration railway bill was delivered to both houses of Congress. . The Associated Banks of Chicago appealed to Congress to suspend pay- I CAPITAL FIGHT IN OKLAHOMA. : Victory of Oklahoma City Followed by Riotous Demonstrations. Scenes such as have not occurred in Oklahoma since the rush of the "sooners" when the land was thrown open to settlers have followed the vic tory of Oklahoma City in the'elec - tion to decide the permanent location .of the State capital. Three cities were aspirants for the capital city. They were Oklahoma City , with 50,000 population ; Guthrie and Shawnee , cities of about 20,000 population. Each town had its cam- paign committee and the fight has been pushed for months. The ques- tion was voted on at a special elec- tion the other day , and it is claimed by adherents of Oklahoma City that the returns frou forty of the seventy i counties show Oklahoma City has I , won over Guthrie and Shawnee by 50,000 plurality. Guthrie was not willing to stand , by the decision of the voters , and Judge A. H. Huston of the District Court , on application of Guthrie citi- zens , issued an injunction against members of the State administration to prevent the removal of State offices to Oklahoma City. When : the result of the election became known Okla- homa City's supporters began the moving of the capital. Possession of the State seal was the first step sought. At o'clock in the morning an auto left Oklahoma City with one passenger , W. B. Anthony , private secretary to the governor. It is thirty-five miles from Oklahoma City to Guthrie , but Anthony made it in the dark in less than an hour. When he reached the outskirts of Guthrie he muffled the machine , drove rapidly to the office of the Secretary of State in the temporary capitol , where he seized the seal. CONSERVATION BILL : PASSED. T Land Withdrawal Act Carries 30" 000,000 Provision for Irrigation. With $30,000,000 provided for the completion of irrigation projects and various other amendments , the House bill authorizing the withdrawal of pub- lic lands by the President passed the Senate the other day without roll call. It is one of the measures advocated in President Taft's legislative program. Among the more important provisions rejected was an amendment by Sena- tor Beveridge specifically withdrawing from entry the coal lands of Alaska , and another by Senator Gore bringing the friar lands of the Philippines with- in the operation of the general land laws of , those islands. AntlfntnrcH BUI to the Fore. The House rules committee decided to give one day each to consideration of the Weeks Appalachian forest re serve bill and the Scott anti-option measure , to prohibit dealings in cotton futures unless an actual transfer of cotton is made. This probably assures a vote in the House on these two meas- ures at the present session. Canada's Revcnne $1O1,5O1O34. : Final returns show that Canada's revenue last year ; was $101,501,034 , breaking all records. Theresvas a sur- plus of $22,092,185 in receipts above expenditures. SheriJt Killed in Man : ; Hunt. While trying to arrest Silas Phelps on an assault charge Sheriff Haskins of Charlemont , Mass. , was shot and killed. 'An armed posse searched the woods all day for Phelps. ' , . : . . : u . .1 _ " . _ X \ " " . . . . - _ " ' > ' ' " _ J" . . . _ - - " " . _ _ _ _ - " " " " - - - . . . . . . . . . - - - - . . . , . . . , . . - - . . . . - - - - - - - ' " ' - - - - " " ' " ment of the corporation tax till the Supreme Court may decide pending cases. Walter Brookins ascended 2,083 feet in an aeroplane at Indianapolis , but failed to break his own record. . Wednesday. Fire destroyed the plant of the Han- sell-Elcoch foundry in Chicago , causing $300,000 loss. Professor J. Lawrence Laughlin , of Chicago , in a Drake University ad- dress , called Taft a failure. The Russian government ordered the authorities at Kieff to dplay enforcing their expulsion order against the Jews. The .defense in the Browne bribery trial in Chicago made a sudden attack on White in an effort to prove that his confession was the work of a black- mail plot. The officials of the United Wireless Telegraph Company were arrested by the government on a charge of fraud- ulently using the mails to clean up millions through the sale of stock. Governor Gillett , of California , or- i dered the Attorney General l to prevent the Jeffries-Johnson fight. Mayor : Pat McCarthy : , passing through Chicago , ex- pressed defiance of Governor Gillett and said Jeffries-Johnson fight will be held in San Francisco. Thursday. Italian divers failed to find Porter Charlton's body in Lake Como. The Kaiser was ill with an ailment of the knee and much anxiety is felt. Dr. Gustav A. Gayer , of New York , ended thirty-one day fast in good phy sical condition. Twelve were killed , 250 . hurt by autos in six months , in Chicago , says official police report. FOUR IN FUNERAL PARTY DEAD. Locomotive Crashes Into Coach Re- turning : from Cemetery. Three mourners , their pastor and their driver , sat in a funeral coach at Haverstraw , N. Y. , the other afternoon and watched certain death come W sh- ing on them at 50 miles an hour. With a screech of grinding brakes , a heavy West Shore freight engine , hurrying south to pick up a train at Weehaw- ken , crashed into the coach , scattering its occupants along the right of way. Four of the occupants were killed out- right. The accident happened at the foot of Graveyard Hill , in full sight of the returning funeral procession' which the wrecked coach was the first The watchman was eating a bite of luncheon in his little cabin when the tinkle of an electric bell warned him of an approaching train. Mechanically : he pulled the lever that set the heavy balanced gates in motion. Same eye- witnesses say the arms of the crossing gates , late in descending , blocked the coach after it had crossed the first of two tracks and held it prisoner on the rails while the terrified occupants sat paralyzed gazing at the onrushing lo- comotive. PENNANT RACE IS ON. ' Progress of . Buae Ball Clubs In Principal Leugrues. NATIONAL LEAGUE. W. L. W. L Chicago . . . .30 16 St. Louis . . .22 26 New York .29 19 Brooklyn . . .22 26 Cincinnati . .24 21 Philadelphia 19 25 Pittsburg . . .22 22 Boston . . . . .18 31 AMERICAN LEAGUE. W. L. W. L Philadelp'ia 31 15 Cleveland . . .18 22 New York . .29 15 Washington. 22 28 Detroit . . . . .33 19 Chicago . . . . .17 27 Boston . . . . .24 22 St. Louis . . .10 36 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. W. L. W. L. Minneapolis 39 19 Columbus . . .23 32 Toledo . . . . .36 21 Kansas City.20 31 St. Paul . . .35 22 Milwaukee. : . 21 33 Indianapolis 27 30 Louisville . . .22 35 WESTERN LEAGUE. W. L. W. L. Denver . . . . .30 21 Omaha . . . . . .24 26 Wichita . . . .29 21 Des Moines. . 23 2 ! ) Sioux City. . 26 23 St. Joseph . .20 26 Lincoln . . . .25 24 Topeka . . . . 19 26 Girl Victim in a ) "Htery. I Bound and gaggpd and with her feet and arms burned and mutilated , Miss : Mary : Delgado , 17 years old , was found half dead on the front porch of her home in Oakland , Cal. ! , unconscious from some drug. She was covered with her night gown and a sheet , snatched . from her own bed. Son Freed Murder Case. The coroner's jury investigating tho murder of James Hardy , wife and son , nearTan ! Cleve , Ia. , has reported , mak- ing no recommendations. Raymond Hardy , held as a suspect in the mur I der of his parents and brother , was re . leased. . . PIUIlJ'eN Ninety Feet in an Auto. Plunging in his . automobile through the open draw of the Superior viaduct on the bank of the Cuyahoga river , 90 ! ) feet below , Fred R. Blee , an automo bile cealeras instantly killed in Cleveland. Dicol from Her. Injiirie.s. .Irs. Pau-Muehle : : : dIed. in Kansas City from the effects of wounds in- flicted : by her jealous husband ' , who later attempted to ccrnznit suicide. , , ' . . . - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - The Senate passed the bill to admit New Mexico : and Arizona to separate statehood and a conference agreement I was foreseen. Delegations from all over the coun try with the West' in the forefront poured into New _ York to greet Theo- dore Roosevelt. The regulars in Congress went down in another defeat at the hands of the insurgents on a rule curbing the pofer of the Speaker. Friday. The body of Mrs. Mary : Scott Castle , divorced wife of a San Francisco law- yer , was found in a trunk drawn from Lake Como , Italy , by fishermen. The secretary of the American Su- gar Company and one other high offi- cial were convicted of defrauding the government in underweights on im- ports. The Continental National Bank is to absorb the Commercial National , thereby giving Chicago the second largest financial institution in the country. Saturday. Early returns indicated that the peo ple of Oklahoma have voted to remove the capital from Guthrie to Oklahoma City. City.Max Max Pam says Congress can force the trusts to obey laws by closing mails and interstate carriers to them. The daughter of a Long Island mil- lionaire died when parted from the chauffeur , with whom she eloped. Gifford Pinchot made a speech at St. Paul assailing the new tariff and special interests as the curse of Amer ican nation. Charles K. Hamilton dazzled New York with the most remarkable exhi- bition of aero skill ever seen in the western hemisphere. FRUIT CROP IS REPORTED GOOD. New England and Pacific Coast . States Will Make Up for Others. Splendid prospects for fruit in New England and the Pacific coast states almost counterbalance the poor show- ing of the central states'Where early frost got in some telling work , accord- ing to a report made public by the de- partment of agriculture in Washington on general crop growth. The condition . - of the apple crop Is reported to be more than eight points below last year's crop of 53.0 , as com pared with a normal condition. The ten-year average for apples is 69.8. In New England and on the Pacific coast the crop promises to be immense , but in such big apple states as Ohio and Missouri there will be only about ons- third of a crop. On the other hand , the peach crop , due to the excellent prospects in such states as Georgia and Delaware , prom- ises to be larger than last year , the condition June 1 being 62.0 , as com- pared with 54.1 last year and a ten- year average of 65.00. The central states will produce a poor crop , it ap- I pears. TO FLY FORECAST FLAGS. Rural Mail Carriers to Be Prophets by Proxy to Farmers. To extend the United States weath- er bureau service to the rural dis- tricts , hy ' making every rural mail car- rier a herald of the official predictions , is the unique idea of Representative McHenry of Pennsylvania , who has in- troduced a bill to that effect. Mr. Mc Henry proposes in his bill to have every vehicle in the rural mail deliv- ery service equipped with flags denot- ing the weather prediction for the day. day.The The rural mail wagons thus , in leav- ing their starting point each day , would fly : from their tops flags which would indicate to every farmer and country resident the opinion of the government forecaster as to what the weather would be for the next twenty- four hours. CANADA BARS CHEAP LABOR. Men Seeking Jobs Must Show $200 Before They Can Enter. Canadian authorities on the north- western boundary are rigidly enforcing a regulation requiring alien laborers , with the exception of Americans , ap- plying for admission to that country to have $200. The result has been , as shown by reports received in Wash- ington , that the great majority of rail- road laborers and those needed on large contract works , who have flocked from Seattle , practically have . been shut out. Some of the American railroad builders ! in Alaska have been enforcing a rule that only white men can work for them , all nationalities being ex- cluded except laborers from northern , Europe America , Australia and New : Zealand. : OPENS 1,182,816 ACRES TO ENTRY President Taft Seek to Stem Emi ; : rution Tide to Canada. _ I ' By approving the latest step in the reclassification of the national forests , and public lands President Taft in- creased the public domain available to tiomestead entry by -1,182,816 acres and increased the national forests 381- 094 acres. The reciassification is the government's nope of stemming , -the tide of emigration from the United States to the Canadian Northwest . " " . . _ . .JJ _ > - _ * _ k. _ . _ _ _ .V Jt - * - " j J ' . . -X _ - . . . - - , . . . . . - - . . - _ : : : : : : : : : : : : - - - - : - - - . . . . . . . a ' . ' , . " itMMtlillMIIMMMMI L Nebraska j ! ! State News i . .It4iil tll'il TERRIFIES TIlE SPECTATORS. Lincoln Boy ; Grabs Clutch Rope of a Balloon and Ascends. Cl/de Heckle , an 18-year-old Lin- coln boy , made a terrifying 6,000-foot balloon ascension recently , clinging for a part of . the time to the clutch rope of the air craft. He landed a half mile from the start in the mid dle of a shallow lake at a summer resort near the city. Adolph Wei- berg\ an aeronaut , who gives exhibi- tions at the resort by ascending and dropping In a parachute had made preparations foi , his regular trip , and young Heckle , with others , was hold- ing the ropes. The boy had asked to be allowed to make the ascent , but was refused. Just as the aeronaut , seated in his parachute attachment , called to his assistants to let go , Heckle , with a knife , severel the two ropes holding the aeronaut , and as the airbag leaped upward he grasped the clutch rope of the balloon proper , Weiberg , with his parachute , being left on the ground. For possibly a thousand feet Heckle went upward al- most like a ricket , clinging only with his hands. Then he managed to swing himself astride the clutch rope , and after an ascent of over a mile , came down without mishap. DR. SUTHERLAND RETIRES. Head of Grand Island College Will Be Succeeded Ly Dr. Garrison. It is announced that in another year Dr. George Sutherland , president of the Grand Island college , will retiro from the position and Dr. Garrison recently of Pella , Ia. , will succeed him. Dr. Sutherland has been at the head of the Institution for the last seventeen years and desired to retire this year. Dr. Garrison , however , pre- ferred to be with the institution in a lesser position at least one year be- fore assuming the responsibilities as president , and this has been agreed upon between the two and the board of trustees. Dr. Garrison , comes at the recommendation of Mr. Suther- land. ' The , new educator is a graduate of Yale. EPISCOPAL RECTOR IS DEAD. Rev. E. R. Earle , of McCook , Found Dead in Bed. Rev. E. R. Earle , the well known Episcopal rector of McCook , who has charges over several points in that section of the state . was found dead in his bed-room Tuesday afternoon at about 3 ; ; o'clock. He had been in ap parent good health. Heart failure is the given cause of death. Mrs. Earle was In Arapahoe visiting her parents at the time. Shot Pepper Into , Church. Small boys with air guns and red pepper created quite a commotion at the children's day exercises at the Baptist church , Wymore. The pep- per was shot into the open winodws with the guns and proved very irri- tating to the audience. An effort to capture the boys failed. To Sue Railroad Company. Six hundred trees , comprising an orchard between Fremont and Arling- ton , were destroyed by a fire which the owner , Maj. Ormsby , says was started by sparks from an engine. Ormsby says he will sue the railroad company for the value of the trees. Hardware Store Robbed. At an early hour Tuesday morning Dan Kavanaugh's hardware store In Fairbury was broken into and robbed of about $300 worth of merchandise. The robbers gained entrance to the store by breaking a lock on the back window. . Engine Spark Starts Fire. Fire which is supposed to have had Its origin in a spark from an engine did about $2,000 damage to the prop- erty and stock of the Emerson-Bran- tingham manufacturing company In Omaha Tuesday. Drowns While Seining. While with a party seining a small lake on the Loup river bottoms north of Cairo , Frank Dunlap , a young man , was accidentally drowned by getting out beyond his depth and being un able to swim. City Free to Own Plants. _ e At a special bond election held at t : Fairbury Tuesday to consider the " "V proposition of voting $115,000 bonds for the purchase of the city water t : plant , the bonds carried by a vote or d 413 to 56. i ] i' j ! e Normal Board to Chadron. 3 The state normal board left Tuesday afternoon for Chadron , where it will j meet and locate the site for the erec- ' tion of the new normal school. o ] ) c : Xew Bank for Gresham. Gresham is to have a new bank , known as the Gresham State bank , r ; fi capitalized at $15,000. Stockholders R are building a new brick building. a There is much talk also of a farmers' fj elevator company for this fall. s . p Sudden Death at Craig. a Monday : evening about 8 o'clock , airs. Eliza Miller : , of Craig , died sudit Ien y. She was 7 5 years old and was 11 born in Clearfield , Pa. c , , - - - - - - - - - ' - - TEDDY m. MARRIED - / LITTLE THIS WAS A VERY SHORT ROMANCE. - in New JIone -moon Alter a Short Honeymoon York They Will Go to San Francis- co to Live. aroused The one June event that has the social world , not only in the Unit- ed States , but abroad , was the wed- ding of Theodore # Roosevelt. Jr. , end Miss Eleanor Alexander , which was. celebrated June 20 , and the ceremony taking place in the Fifth Avenue Pres- byterian church , Xew York. This was the first social event that the former president of the United States attended after his arrival home , which was only two days before the wedding. A large number of promi- nent people attended the ceremony. ft _ _ Aside from the bride and groom , who of course were the real center of at- traction , the former president was the most sought person by all present. The date of the wedding was set so as to allow the groom's parents time to > get back to America. The matron of honor was Mrs. : Snowden Fahnestock , formerly Miss Elizabeth Batron. The bridesmaids were Miss Ethel Roosevelt Miss Jes- sie MIllington-Drake , Miss Janetta Alexander Miss Jean Delano , and .Miss Harriet Alexander. A great uncle of the bride , Rev. Henry M. Sanders , officiated , assisted , by Dr. Gordon Russell , of Crawford * X..J. After the ceremony the bridal parly was c-ntertamed at the home of the bride's uncl , Charles : ; B. Alexander. A portion of the honeymoon will be spent at the family home of the Roosevelt family on Long Island * Later in the summer the young ; coupte \vUl leave for San Francisco , where Mr. Roosevelt will be in charge of a carpet firm , in which he has been in- terested for some time. This engagement was the result ol a quick-moving romance and was only announced to the public last win- ter. The news was sent to the senior Roosevelt who Immediately placed ! ; the stamp of approval on the whole affair by sending his congratulations The bride , a little over 21 years oi . " age , Is of medium height , slender , and . very attractive appearance. Theodore Roosevelt , Jr. , possesses a very strong resemblance to his fa mous father , but is decidedly reserved , and is credited with being greatly les * democratic than older members ol the family. As a boy he enjoyed hij horseback riding and other sports of the . , . younger members of the . 'family ; He ' took but little active part 'in col lege athletics ; was always very stu dious and his romance with Miss Al- exander is said to have had Its begin ning in that they both loved music. He. once had va rather exciting experl- I ence , in company with two army of . ncers , in a balloon flight at Washing ton two years ago. washing/ Close friends of the family wer a : little surprised at the close of hij / college life two years ago , to knotv \ of his entering the actual business ' world , at the bottom , with the vien of mastering it all to the very top. During his business apprenticeshij he lived quietly in a moderate board- . . ing house. \ Many had their doubts a ; to : his following his seeming choseir career , but he is surely determined tc tvin his battle in this sphere. Subtle Flattery. Waiters Nos. 1 and 2 peeped out at the baldheaded man , then ducked be hind the screen. "None of him for me , " said Waiter No. 1. "He doesn't tip. ' "Same here , " said Waiter No. 2. "I'll fix him , " said Waiter No. 3. He took an order for soup. Befort serving it he showed the two muti. neers [ a hair floating on the surface- ; the soup. They marveled then , an& they marveled stiH more when at the end of the baldheaded man's dinner the waiter returned wtih a dollar bill. "Ninety-nine baldheaded .men in s hundred can be worked that way , " he = ' . . - said. ! "If the customer , doesn't see the > hair himself I call his attention to it and make him think it fell out of hiE own head. The fact that he had * nair : to lose so appeals to his vanitj that : he loves me for finding it and : ? ives me a tip big enough to cover the ost of a dozen plates of soup. " - Chi cago : Tribune. Just a Chance. ' . . 'Yes.ou offer the property low mough ! , Mr. Yipsle " } , said the real es- ate agent , "but It will be best for you o give some satisfactory reason " for vanting to sell. " "The reason why I want to sell Is- hat the property is all run down. It : loesn't [ brinarxme . 2 per cent on th ! ' noney invested in it. I'm not offering t at a sacrifice. I don't need the mon- jy. ! I want to get rid of it. but I ara isking all it's worth. " "f m - well. I'll list it for you. Mr. ripsley , " said the real estate agent. 'It's ' barely possible that the novelty If the thing may attract : some equally/ : ranky purC'h - Sf > r. " Dr. Carl Webber , still . practicing - hr ew lork : City , performed in 1SGG the irst operation for appendicitis. V s. There. ras no knowledge of stomach \ : cutting- t that time. The \ operation was per. \ ormed without antis ptics. The in- \ . . truments and appliances ' - were com- oratlvely . : primitive. The patient & i Ine and well in N-PW " r0-k to-day. - . Che".in . . . , , gt..m ma .rot be a nice { ht.b- . bjt most , people , . ? would rather see ou doing it tia : isea : to % Ta 1 tai . , . . . ' , " , < , - , : . . - i f i , w l 1 L 8 . i ( i ? ey " - 4 . . . . . i i if f ) I IV V I i , JI Mt M t 0 f 1 ! .