P-,X " - . , m II Bit: til It t Mi 1 MSl. lw II lili.t&r C? 'J Op m - n II 1 St m m& jit Mi :?i4i IV. 3! v E4 1 P3 rT. -f-fc ifflRa' i n 1 1 1 1 1 ; hi nil i;i it II it i.i -. . . LIBBY'S Mince N J$ V I fat. Is oBr-tifcinraoth kitchesnrc employ a chef whoofeMi xpert in mak ingTntoce pics. He has charge of, making all of Libbjr's Mince Meat. Me ases tbefery choicest ma terial. He is told to make the best'M incc Meat ever sold aad he does. Get a package at your grocer's; eaovgfa for two large pies. You'll aerer use another kind again. - i;vrT UDoy Atlas oi uie woria. vita 33 aew nappe, site 8x11 inches; sent any where lotzo cts. in stamps. Oar Book let. "Hew to Make Good Things to I " ledfroe-rcr5T -V 1 :: UNy, JM & Littjf, -.:; .. - 'CHICAGO. ' " 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 II 1 11 1 1 1 ! 1 1 1 1 T EDUCATIONAL. . ST.aURTS ACADEMY Notre Dame, Indiana. Conducted by the Sisters of the Holy Cross. Chartered 18.".5. Thorough English and Classical education. 'Reg ular Collegiate Degrees. In Preparatory Department.- students carefullypreparedfor Collegiate course. Physical; and Chemical Laboratories well equipped. Conservatory, of Music and School of Art.- Gymnasium under direction' of graduate of Boston Normal School of 'Gymnastics. Catalogue free. The 47th ycar'will open Sept. 5, 1901. AMrrn DIRECTRESS OF THE ACADEMY, St. Mary's Ao&iny, Notre Dane. Irnllma. JM " INiJjiiv tJFvlk :: 4M".jteX9!p mm -"" a5VPJH ' .-?"-.. Wi - UmcSSjmr'' .r'ih5i:Mm 19 H b wabash pKtMKmLm BDM - ?dPBPjlVBIIHa Wsmu BBBBB1 a bl u . isamBaal IpaBSasasasaaaaw bT ttastlsowa raHs :-- ay-WjmSBP M B aadtsilwshon . ':.''VVrBBBK Rl j MUMPJ " 'MiBWi Pi IWf AW I "KPl pB 3tSVKf9 gives r PRI fi H MM potato K4BbhHEi9 EM pH W9MT WsCffyttVk "pvjMIW HMM MBiBBM BmWK H H . UatiMt,ara4iaa . M vCS.C8AK.C.r.aaT.A,T.IOnaj. EBJ BBTr.A.rAMa.A.i.r.JucaicAfco. fty FALLING HAIR Prerented by Shampoos of CUTICURA SOAP and light dressings of CUTICURA, purest of emollient skin cures. This treatment at once stops falling hair, removes crusts, scales, and dandruff, soothes irritated, itching surfaces, stimulates the hair follicles, supplies the roots with energy and nourishment, and makes the hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy scalp when all else fails. MILLIONS USE CUTICURA SOAP Assisted by Cuncuiu. Oixtment, for preserving, purifying, and beautify ing the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of. falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, Itchings, and chafings, and for all the pur poses of the toilet, bath, and nursery. 'Millions of Women use CcnQUKA, Soap in the form of baths for annoying irritations, inflammations, and excoriations, for too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many antiseptic purposes which readily sug gest themselves to women and mothers. No amount of persuasion can induce those whohaveonee used these great skin purifiers and beautifiers to use any. others. . Ccticura. Soap combines delicate emollient properties derivedfrom Cuticcba, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients, and the most refreshing of flower odours. Xo other medicated soap is to be compared with it for preserving, "purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. Xo .other foreign or-domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is 'to be compared -with it for all the .purposes of the toilet, bathV and nursery. Thus it combines, ;in Oxe Soap at Oxe Price, the best skin and complexion soap, and the best toilet and baby soap in the world. Cempfet External and Internal Treatment for Every Humour. Pte. ' - Consisting: CtmccxA. Soap, to cleanse the skin of crusts tv eTMlTeWlH scales and soften the thickened cuticle; Ccticura Oixtment. to (9ttaa THE SET Mflhe,lkttn world. Briti Dsno' Aim Chbmxcai. Cobfobaxioh, Sole Vkce isverii ' MverHseaetts , MisOy .njeatfea Tkis raer. IT W.N.U.OMAtlA Ne. 37-1901 WBwCoar TJMMsOooa. CmB JpJ la toe. Sold ay gypa. BPJ Cmmimrv'm SarriM fcT Father aal Mm. William Barrow, timekeeper at Gil- low's cabinet works, Lancaster, isng laohas: fceen; 1b the employ of the firm'tor sixty-six years. Although oyer, 80; years of age, he is still active; being invariably the first on the prem ises every morning and the last to leave at night. His father held the keys before him, having joined the house of Gillow's in 1801, so that the present year crowns "a century of ser Ylce"''byfathenind son. 3 ' ' - ." Jast m Spite Cmc. Mrs.'M. A. Radcllffe of Denver, Colo., who was arrested on charge of illegal voting, has been discharged by the court, .not -a particle of evidence being presented. It was a case of anti-suffrage spite, and the accusers were well raked over for their meanness. So the case of the first woman ever charged with illegal voting turns out a boomr erang. rt- jl ChsrlMtoM Wants the Liberty Bell. The managers of the South Carolina exposition, to be held in Charleston, opening next December, have asked to have the Liberty bell in Independence hall, Philadelphia, loaned to them tbr exhibition during the continuance of the fair. They plead that it would ex cite patriotic enthusiasm. - Consolntlon and Comfort. -Who Is it that does not wish to be out1 in the open air or alive in some field of sport, whether it be with the bat. rod or gun; whether we go coast ing over the hills and vales on the wheel or sailing over rough waves or into serene coves, it is all sport, and the springing muscles seem to need it. It is bound to happen that some mis hap will' occur. Thus it is that we have sprains, in abundance. Light sprains, sprains that cripple, sprains that give great pain, sprains that rob us of sleep, but sportsmen of all kinds have come to know that there is noth ing better than the old reliable St. Jacob's Oil. Have it with you for use; you may rely on its cure of the worst sprain and restoration to the com forts of life. Greatest Codflcb Catcb. What, is reputed to be -the largest catch of codfish in the Pacific waters is credited to the crew of the barken tine Fremont, which arrived at San Francisco last week with 177,000 of the fish stored away. Most of the catch was in Bering sea. Xa.dles Can Wear 8b One size smaller afterusingAllen sFoot Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot,sweating, aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. All druggists and shoo stores. 25c. Trial package tuna oy maiu iu- dress Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Your living speaks louder than your logic. all Don't ache, use Hamlin's Wizard Oil. Rheumatism, neuralgia and all pain banished by it See your druggist The value of your life may depend on your estimate of its leisure. instantly allay Itching, inflammation, and Irritation, and Booths ana ncai; anauuncuaa kesolvestio cooiana cleanse tne itiooa. A Single Set is often eolaciect to care the most torturing, dlsfig- Props., Boston. U. S. A. I Sold (with or withent Bill' I ingud Tabulating- Attach. I 1 meniitigypna7iaea.iteated. ana ttenairea. fazason Typewriter Ribbons for aQ Ha-1 I Pal caiaes, j.incn tTipers, carbon miner Hanwrna Tttw- I wrr supplies maa xunucare. 1619 i'arnam St., Omaha. - ; . F fit & yj President9 Vi to TafLe Step. The cabinet' sitting at Buffalo has, t decided anon the -character and scope of the bill for 1hepunishment of per sons who in the future may attempt to assassinate a President of the United States. It,: will make such attempts treason, punishable by death.j The bill will be drr.wn"so that not only the President but the Vice Presi dent and members of the cabinet shall be Included in the protection guaran teed by the measure. Federal courts -will be vested with r authority and power to deal with the offenders. Fed eral grand juries may indict them. If they should be apprehended and ar rested by the State authorities of the countyand district in which the crime happened to be committed the United wfla!Ki7& WW lpfl2CypallH K pi.-h wl Wltf af !" pa I FottmaEter General Smith. Secretary Oage. Secretary Knox. Secretary Wilton. MEMBERS OF PRESIDENT. M'KIN LEY'S CABINET SENDING AND RECEIVING TELEGRAMS AT BUFFALO. States marshal and United States dis trict attorney for the district would be required to assume immediate juris diction over the prisoner and case. He could be tried in the Federal district or circuit court. The cabinet ministers wero at first Indisposed to include themselves in the scope of the proposed bill, but were persuaded to do so by senators and representatives who happened to be In Buffalo. These membera of Con gress said that the measure ought to be broad enough in its scope and pur pose to make it thoroughly effective. Attorney General Knox was author ized to make a draft of the bill, which he will submit to his colleagues after their return to Washington. Later on it will be submitted to the President. Senator Fairbanks of Indiana has consented to introduce the bill op the opening day of the first session of the Fifty-seventh Congress. He says he has no doubt that it willbe passed. General Grosvenor of Ohio will be come sponsor for the bill in the House, and he says significantly in discussing its purpose, "I do not believe there will be much opposition to it" ACCUSED OF KNOWING PLOT. Man Arrested Who Offered to Bet Presi dent Would Be Killed. On the theory held by United States secret service agents that the city of Camden, N. J., contained one or more persons to whom the plot to assassi nate President McKinley was known, Ethelbcrt Stone, an employe of the New York Shipbulding Company in South Camden, has been arrested by County Detective John Painter. The 'direct cause of Stone's arrest was a re mark he made while engaged in a heated discussion with Oscar Hansen and Andrew Peterson, fellow employes, just previous to the receipt of news from Buffalo. Stone concluded his ar gument with these words: "I will bet $5 that McKinley will be killed before 8 o'clock to-night" When the news of the attempted as sassination was received a few hours later the remark was remembered and on Monday the employes told General Manager May about the matter. He asked the Camden police to investi gate it When taken before Prosecutor Lloyd after his arrest Stone admitted having made the offer to bet, but insisted that it was a joke. This story, however, is not believed by the detectives. A search was made of Stone's house at Ferry road and Seventh street and incriminating evidence, it is said, was secured. PBOOF HARD TO FIND. Assassin Falls to Involve Other An archists As events and circumstances begin to shape themselves the police of Buf falo and the men of the United States secret service who are there are being forced to the conclusion that Czolgosz acted without prearramgement with any living person when he shot Presi dent McKinley in the Temple of Music on the exposition grounds last Friday, says a Buffalo telegram. This, too, is tne opinion of Secretary Root and Attorney General Knox, who have heard accurate accounts of what Czolgosz has said to the police ana the district attorney in the several inter views he has had with those officials. While they believe, that he was en couraged to attempt the President's life by Incendiary writings and utter ances of anarchists possessed of great er intellectual resources than himself; they have been forced to the conclu sion in the light of all the facts that t PREDICTS DEATH ON GALLOWS. Assassin's Father Quoted as Saying; Son Would Be Hanged. In an interview Albert Lemanski, an aged Pole, who was a neighbor of the UOUK OK JOHN G. MILBURN. muSammummmuamSakuWmK I VpBBsBlpSCpaijBaaBSBSBSBSBBsHBSBSBsW'E SPSBB - Cabinet Decide have been laid before them that he acted entirely without consultation with a single person. Nevertheless these two astute lawyers of the cab inet are encouraging the work of the police departments of the country in running down every clew, every cir cumstance and every suspicious report that is brought to their attention. They are encouraged not so much in the belief that actual confederates of Czolgosz will be brought to justice as because they are confident that ratifi cations of the crime will be found in the groups that exist throughout the country and that perhaps some men and women who 'furnished Czolgosz with a motive, for attempting the lire of the President without actually en- Secretarr Hitchcock. couraging him to commit murder may be enmeshed sufficiently to warrant their indictment for conspiracy. ESISIA GOLDMAN'S WANDERINGS. Queen of the Anarchists Associated with Czolgosz. The much sought for Emma Gold man is now in custody in Chicago, to await such action as the authorities may decide to take against her as ac cessory to the crime committed by Czolgosz'. The story of her move ments during the last six .weeks shows that on the 12th of July (Czolgosz says the 17) she was in Chicago, where she had been stopping with the Isaaks. That night she was to leave for Roch ester with Miss Isaak, and on the way to the station she met Czolgosz, who talked with her for some time, Miss- Isaak says. Miss Goldman and her friend left that night and stopped at Buffalo en route. Three weeks later they were in Buffalo again, and went to the exposition, and Miss Isaak says they visited the Temple of Music. Miss Goldman is not heard of again until Sept 1, although the Buffalo chief of police says she was in .Czol- DRS. PARK AND RIXEY AT THE gosz's company in Chicago on Aug. 18. At the former date she was in Pitts burg, visiting one Gordon, an an archist agitator, and attending an an archist meeting, accompanied by a young man, said to resemble Czolgosz. From Pittsburg she went to Cincin nati, where she staid until Sept. 5, when she went to St. Louis and at tended several conferences with an archists. On the next day the attempt ed assassination occurred, and the fol lowing morning she went to Chicago to be near Isaak, she says, in his trouble. This is all that is known to the public. What evidence the authorities may have is another matter. Mean while in his confession the wretch Czolgosz has acknowledged meeting her here in July, and the police have some reason to believe he had been with her in other places. FKIEXD OF CZOLGOSZ JAILED. Street Speaker In Detroit Arrested for a Seditious Utterance. Tom Bawden, a Detroit single tax advocate and street speaker, whose de fiance of the police brought on the riot in the Campus Martius last May, has been arrested, just after he had de clared, speakins of Leon Czolgosz: "I Czolgosz family when they lived in De troit and for eight years subsequently, said to a Detroit reporter: "Leon Czolgosz was a regular devil. He gave his father no end of trouble. The old rr WHERE THE PRESIDENT LIES. wish to God that there were a lot of others juat such men in this country. Bawden was speaking, from his wagon on the campus. He led up to his incriminating remark by saying: "This man who attempted to assas sinate McKinley, like many other men believed that the people are oppress ed." After his utterance Supt of Po lice Downey ordered Bawden to cease talking, and on his refusal arrested him on the cbr.rge of disorderly con duct and Inciting trouble. Police Com missioner Andrews declares that all advocates of anarchistic doctrines will be driven out of town by the police, says a Detroit dispatch. SVRE ASSASSIN BAD AID. Fart of KesldeaU of Cleveland Certala 'of Plot. Public opinion in Cleveland, the former home of Czolgosz, is divided on the question as to whether Cleveland anarchists were concerned in the at tempted assassination of the President The police have utterly failed in their search for evidence of a plot and are convinced that none existed, at least in the immediate circle of Leon Czol gosz's friends and relatives. There is still a widespread belief that such a plot existed, says a dispatch from that city. Residents of the Newburg district, particularly the workmen who are brought into dally conact with the foreign element of the population, are unanimous in the opinion that the re sponsibility for the crime does not rest upon one person. The meeting places and the homes of the foreigners are said to be the breeding places for an archistic propaganda. They are stolid, uncommunicative people and it is little wonder that the city police have been unable to find evidence of a plot Makes a Marias Statement. The police of Danbury, Conn., have been informed by employes in the shop of T. C. Mallard & Co. of that city that Albert Webber, a fellow workman, has stated since the attempted assassina tion of President McKinley that he was an anarchist and in common with several others of the cult ia Danbury expected the attempt on the life of the President to take place during his visit to the exposition. An investigation has been started which has thus far elicited the Infor mation, the police state, that there are about twelve anarchists in the city. Officers went to Webber's house, but he was not there. Checkmated. "I never felt so cheap In all my life," declared the well-known busi ness man. "I am a great stickler for honesty and will not have anyone around me of whom I have the least suspicion; and when I find a man that I know I can trust I regard his hon esty as a valuable asset and pay him accordingly. The result has been that I have gathered around me a force of whom I am justly proud, from the janitor up to the cashier. The other day my old office boy left me, and I was obliged to hire a new one. Out BEDSIDE OF THE PRESIDENT. of the numerous applicants I selected a bright and honest appearing boy and put him to work. Then the old question arose. Was he honest? I am old enough to realize that appear ances are oftentimes deceitful, and I' resolved to test the boy in a mild way. So one night when I departed for home I left a nickle prominently dis played on ray desk. After reaching home I felt sorry for what I had done. I realized that by my act I had been placing temptation in the boy's path, and that there was little to excuse my plan; so I was very much relieved the following morning to find the nickel where I had left it. Then t saw that there was something there that I had not left, and that was a bit of paper upon which the money lay, and upon which was written in the new boy's hand the inscription: 'To be left until called for.' I've got a smart lad in that new boy. Too smart, I'm afraid." Wife There is a burglar down in the cellar, Henry. Husband Well, my dear, we ought to be thankful that we are upstairs. Wife But he'll come up here. Husband Then we'll go down in the cellar, my dear. Surely a 10 room house ought to be big enough to hold three people without crowding. folks were licking him with a strap all the time, but, on the whole. It did no good. Mrs. Czolgosz thought Leon was crazy. Ho was bright in his books but indolent. ' "Paul Czolgosz. tho father, always predicted that Leon would die on the gallows. His words were: 'Leon if 1 don't knock it out of you with a strap you'll swing some day.' "Leon was a vicious boy; He used to abuse the horses if he was angry and he delighted in torturing animals around the farm. When given a-severe drubbing he never cried The boy was a pervert, with little sense or right or wrong." Edwin Asa Dix. whose new novi "Old Bowen's Legacy," is proving reI iniscent of his "Deacon Bradbury" to many readers, has recently been draw-, aside for a few months from the oath, of fiction iy the preparation of ane'ab orate book to commemorate tne twen tieth anniversary -of the graduation of his college class, the class of 1881 at Princeton. The book, which was printed privately for the class, is a coEtly volume of over 400 pages.' SbmUI Ierixtf FUatS. ' From the ld00 report of the New Jersey Experiment Station we the following: Tha irrigation nracticed in the take has thus far been on a small scale. Plants capable of irrigating 6 to S acres are the rule. They have, how ever, clearly demonstrated two points first, an irrigation plant is a desir able adjunct to a farm; and second, that it pays. In most cases the water has beam applied by pumping, either flom a stream of from wells. The cost of these small plants is relatively large per acre yet in all cases they have 'proved profitable, because the water has been used for such crop3 as are liable to suffer seriously in case of short drouths. Of the eight small plants of which full, data have been obtained, the initial cost per acre for them ranges from $25 to $100, and, with the exception of one case, the water is applied by pumping; in four cases it is obtained from streams, and in the others from wells, and the re turns thus far have in all cases paid a large rate of interest on the invest ment The question of small plants and their erection and equipment has been well worked out, and one capable of furnishing water for from C to 8 acres can be erected and equipped for from 1400 to $500, depending on the location of the land in reference to situation of ths water that 13. whether the point to which the water is to be raised be high or low. This does seem a relative ly high initial cost as compared with that of canals and ditches or even of storage, but as used in intensive prac tice and for crops of a high commer cial value these plants do return a large profit on the investment The information thus far gathered indicates that irrigation is desirahle la the humid districts, and that small plants, while relatively expensive, are prac ticable and result in greatly reducing the effects of a deficiency in rainfall. Care or Tree from the Nursery. " Whether purchased direct from the growers, or ordered through agents, care should be taken that the roots or the trees are not exposed to the action of the sun and dry winds. The prac tice of many farmers of placing the bundles in their wagons and driving home without taking any pains to cov er them to prevent the drying of the roots has undoubtedly caused the loss of thousands of nursery trees. Wet straw and blankets should always be provided when notice has been re ceived that the agent from whom the trees have been ordered is to make a delivery, and, as soon as possible, the trees should be either planted or heeled in. When received in the fall, unless one has a cellar, where the tempera ture can be kept just above the freez ing point, in which they may be placed with their roots in the soil, it will be desirable to heel in the trees in some well-drained spot, where there will be no danger from standing water. A trench should be dug a foot or so in depth and about three feet wide, in which the trees should be placed with the tops inclined toward the south at an angle of about twenty-five or thirty degrees from the horizontal. The bundles should be opened and the soil thoroughly worked among the roots and pressed about them. It is always advisable to have the trunk and great er part of the branches covered, espe cially in the case of peach and other tender fruits, and whenever fruits have not been thoroughly ripened. Care should be taken to have no straw or rubbish about the trees, but it is a good plan to use evergreen boughs to break the sun's rays and prevent the alternate freezing and thawing, as well as the rapid thawing of the trees after a severe cold spell. A trench should always be dug to carry off any sur face water about the trees. Michigan Bulletin. The Hawaii Experiment Station. A United States Experiment Station Is in process of being establihed on the Island of Oahu, one of the Hawaiian group. The piece of land to be used 'begins in the suburbs of Honolulu. and is at that end only 100 feet above the sea. It rises gradually for a dis tance of two miles, and is at that dis tance 1,400 feet above sea level. The lower slope is densely covered with thickets of native growth, but the up per third is covered with a planted forest of Australian Eucalyptus, Aca cia and Grevilla species. The build ings are now being erected. One of the important lines to be taken up is that of the production of hay-making grasses. All hay is now imported and retails at $27 per ton in Honolulu. Another line to be followed will be an attempt to ensilo the tops of the sugar cane. At the present time all of this material is dried and burned. The cultivation of citrus fruits will also be gin, in an attempt to give the natives some product they can export at a profit. Poultry culture will also be investigated and stimulated. At pres ent there is a troublesome, disease among fowls that makes it difficult to raise chickens. As a consequence fowl meat and eggs are very high. Frolt Note. Peaches in many parts of Ohio are about half their usual size and unpal atable. Pears are reported a large crop in Jefferson and Harrison counties, Ohio. The prospects for peaches and grapes in New York state continue favorable but pears will be scarce. Illinois fruit prospects are poor. All kinds of tree fruits are scarce In New Jersey except peaches. Aphides are so numerous In Gloucester county that some fields of cantaloupes have been entirely destroyed. California reports state that decidu ous fruits are of good quality but the yield is below the average. Good rains have caused Improve ment In late peaches and apples in eastern Kansas. Tet for Formalin In Mllit. A new test has been elaborated for determining the presence of formalin in milk. Phenylhydrazin and a 10 per cent solution of soda is added to a small portion of the diluted milk. In the presence even of two drops of for maldehyde to 100 cubic centimeter cf milk a rose color will result In nor mal milk no color is produced. In de termining the presence of milk sugar, a small amount of sodium acetate is added in addition to phenylhydrazin and 10 per cent soda solution, as j the previous case. A rose color will re sult in the presence of milk sugar. .Feeding Wheat to Animals. Elaborate experiments in feeding wheat to farm animals and swine have been made this year at the Kansas experiment station, and also in otior states of the corn belt. The experts conclude that wheat has greater nu tritive value than corn, and may b; U3cd either crushed, mixed with oau or corn, or in connection with & straw in time of extreme, scarcity. iSomo outwardly handsome r.re dcicrmcd on the inside. people & METHODIST BISHOP GIVES PE - KU fTTITfTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT BISHOP GRANT, OF INDIANAPOLIS. 3 Bishop A. Grant of Indianapolis, Ind., writes the following letter: Indianapolis, Indiana, ) 3349 N. Pennsylvania Street J Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O.: Gentlemen "I have been using Pe rana tor catarrh and cam cheerfully reo ommend your remedy to anyone who wants at good medicine." A. Grant. Prominent members of the clergy are giving Peruna their unqualified en dorsement These men find Peruna es pecially adapted to preserve them from catarrh of the vocal organs which has always been the bane of public speak ers, and general catarrhal debility in cident to the sedentary life of the clergyman. Among the recent utter ances of noted clergymen on the cura tive virtues of Peruna is the above one from Bishop Grant Jackson in "Mythology." The Memphis Commercial-Appeal has been delving into the life of An drew Jackson with startling results. A correspondent writes to the paper that its legend "giving the pedigree of Jackson, running back many centuries to the Scottish kings, making of him a descendant of Sir Robert Bruce, is the boldest venture into the unknown past to be found in historic myth ology." Rose Dash IOO Years Old. A rose bush that has attained the age of 101 years is one of the interest ing sights at the old Salem homestead in Middle Haddam. The bush was planted in the year 1S00 by Mrs. Lu cilla Hurd, and it is stated on good authority that it has borne roses every year for 100 years. Mrs. Hurd, who planted the rose bush, was 94 years of age when she died. That Was Easy. When Governor Odell of New York was running for a local office some years ago he was canvassing a small town and endeavored to enlist the aid of a barber. He failed to do so, and as he got out of the chair he re marked: "Well, if you won't vote for me you have at least improved my ap pearance." The Democrat replied: "It don't take much to do that, does it?" Easy Come, Easy Go. The man who creeps along bent over, with his spinal column feeling in a condition to snap like a pipestem at any minute, would readily give a great deal to get out of his dilemma, and yet this is only the commonest form by which lumbago seizes on and twists out of shape the muscles of the back. This is commonly known as backache, a crick in the back, but by whatever name it may be known, and however bad it may be. 10 minutes vigorous rubbing with St. Jacob's Oil on the af flictt..! part will drive out the trouble and completely restore. It is a thing so easily caught, it may be wondered at why there is not more of it, but because it is so easily cured by St. Ja cobs Oil may be the very reason that we hear so little of it. Tough but Scholarly. Although Leopold, king of the Bel gians, is a notorious roue, he is nev ertheless the most scholarly of mon archs. and a man cf simple tastes withal. He prefers a briar pipe to the finest cigar and smokes rather com mon tobacco. Belgium, by the way, has no crown, so there is no coronation there, the sovereign merely making oath to protect the constitution. GOOD HOUSEKEEPERS Uso tho best. That's why they buy Red Cross Ball Blue. At leading grocers, 5 cents. Shaftrr's Cows in the Found. General Shaftcr owns three Jersey cows which roam at will over the Pre sidio reservation. Several times the animals have wandered beyond the reservation, but until the other day were found and returned by people who knew to whom they belong. One day of last week they failed to return to be fed and milked and a search party eventually found them in the public-pound, along with a lot of other beasts. The pouadmaster refused to .release the cows until his fee of $3 per cow was paid. It is nice to be handsome, but it is handsomer to be nice. TTTTTTTTTTTTWla fwwj DO YOU SHOOT? Ir you do you should send your name and address on a postal card for a WINCHESTE GUN CATALOGUE. h uiusrraies ana describes all the different Winchester Rifles, Shotpuns Ammumnon, rmd contains much valuable information. Send at once to vvmceater Repeating Arms Co., jrap8SKtt3&fr n'aiBTii in i rcrfxin3papgigpaTSBWawsBas?ssBSBaPBW i ME3Q PREPM3F0R ' S0Z000NT insuras your Teeth 2i At ill Stent, or by MaN for tht pilot. MAU & MCXEL, Mew York. - NA UKtAI CREDIT Writes His RecommendatJ ior tne ramous tatarrh Remedy, Pe-ru-na. Tb. AT wacr wTion viA .. nence fcesltated to give their testis tola n rnTir?otaT-i. tt.,i::. rUIl3. ' " -- ,u iurii nr . fal to nronrietarv motHi;,. . Hrattnn This romainc !? Wb. .... -uu..,0 11 ue most proprietary medicines. ""? Of Pn tT pmwi hon fAAiT crt 4iinil ; merits are known to so many peonil . high and low station that nnna I c.! tates to see his name in prim re&vT mending Peruna. . The following letters from n& who use Peruna speak for. themC.l Rev. EL G. Smith, pastor of the P I ujriwwu vuuibu, ui ureensDoro n writes: ' "My little boy had been suffeHr,,,. some time with catarrh of tKe Iot bowels. Other remedies had failed b" after taking two bottles of Penm' Z trouble almost entirely disappeared Fo this special malady I consider ltA 111511 u. ajrei-iut. net. su. u. Smith. ' Rev. A. S. Vaughn. Eureka Sn-?,- Ark., says: "I had been prostrated h congestive chills and was almost de-H- as soon as able to be about. I to menced the use of Peruna. I took fi bottles; my strength returned rapid! and I am now enjoying my usa:J neaitn. Kev. a. a. aungn. If you do. not derive prompt and & isfactory results from the use of vi runa, write at once to Dr. Hartmao, giving a iun statement 01 your eas and he will be pleased to give you ty valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman. President c .The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus.o Schmidt, Champion Kllle Shot. Private Schmidt, of Companv i Fourteenth United State infantrv. nor camped at the rifle range near JLurl Clemens, Mich., made a scor at sir:: ing at 600 yards that the broke th record cf the whole arm-. The laryl was a dummy man. Nineteen outd twenty of his shots took effect, ar or wnicn wouiu nave caused insfct death in a living man. while the w.-a-tieth shot would have inflicted a seri ous or fatal wound. Schmidt's achieve ment is said to be not only unparal leled in United State arm rifle shoo:- ing records, but also without nrei'rdeal in similar practice anywhere in C I world. An Ton Cslas Allen's Foot r.ie? It is the only cure for Swollen, I Smarting. Burning, Sweating Fee, Corns and Bunions. Ask for Alien 3 Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores. 2oc. Sample sent FREE. Ad dress, Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. Happy is he who lets himself orc no man and lets no man owe him. Dropsy treated free by Dr. H. H. Green's Sons, of Atlanta, Go. The greatest dropsy specialists in the world. Read their adver- lsoment in another column of tub. paper. A man soon forgets his faults when they arc known only to himself. lbs Home Luuutirr. There is no reason why the clothes cleaned at home cannot be ironed up to the same standard of excellence tha: comes from sending them to the Iaua- dry. All that is necessary to atu.n the desired object is the purchase c a package of Defiance starch at anyj grocery. Use it once and you will uc- (Iprst.infJ irhv rlnfhp?: irnripi! :t laundries have that mud. glossy ap-: pearance. All first-class laundries ue 1 Defiance starch. If there is no grocery in your neignborhoou that keeps it they will send for it on request. .Ma !e by the Magnetic Starch Co., Omaha, Neb. I Trrmf of TV. I Illp Brown's Great Kcrnei' f EpllRXrandal! NerrciusD!.M-.AMr- O. rHKLTS BROKS.jUr,lv. ftcwtmrjt, 3.1. PATENTS GUARaiiTtEO K, VYC-Bw.rc. -. ......-.,.., i ...... .. .- If 1 ki W k't'UI(k H.J. Cowglll. l:pprcn:iitte. ElM at '' P.C.. ISC!. Useful Guide 15ookgn;3tcc s KKtfc. nRODQVNEW oiscovEnr. v- BjbFPJwVab ouickrp!If ftml mrr - canes. Boot of tCKtlmoninls ncil 10 daTv tr if" ai nu. . h. k. Gctc.vs soss. u. a. Atiacii. c. KafSIctwl with sore cjw.ua Tkcpson' Eye Wa'sr F& IT'S FREE. sana i toth2 New Haven, Conn. m Defiance Starch is the cheapest laundry starch oncthird mere for the same money, and it's the best starch made, too the best in the world 16 ounces for 10 cents. If your grocer does not keep it send us his name and we will send you one trial package. At Wholesale by McCord-Braniy Co. and PaXton & Gallagher. Omaha, Nebraska. Worreflted Waterproof.pf? Mads to Etand hard ,r f 1 knocia end rcc5 r L ICV phsbsssssssssssbPA aW m L eioleVfra.EstCAmIrltlj,IUi. I I yFREE OJ Uar 4 FaBb si TrrafBrat of Dr. O. pfji S Illp Brown's Great Kcno'y tt ej sP