&. .KSJ' 'ff '.V)Wf.r wye 'y-j - W-: Columbus Journal By COLUMBUS JOURNAL CO. COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA. News in Brief . Bound from Port Antonio, Jamacia, to New York, with a cargo of bananas, the frnit steamer Banes went ashore aear Jones beach life-saving station. The death of John A. Honer of Buf falo, N. Y., merchant, was due to chol era morbus and heart disease, and not to carbolic acid administered by his -wife. President Roosevelt unexpectedly -risked the submarine torpedo boat Plunger and spent fifty minutes be neath the waves, laahed to fury by a torm. Two men are are dead and three more in a dying condition as a result of the bursting of a sixteen-inch steam pipe in the Danville, III., electric light plant vester. The breaker, office, boiler bouse and engine house of the Pine Hill Coal company at Minersville, Pa., was de stroyed by fire today. L06S, $150,000, partly insured. The annual report of the Lehigh Valley Railroad company for the year ending June 30. 1905, shows a net in come of $5,392.88S, an increase of $1, 137.000 over last year. A train on the Long Beach division of the Long Island railway was wreck ed by a spreading rail near Jekyill isl and. Many passengers were injured, but no one was fatally hurt. The Atlanta city council proposes to begin impeachment proceedings against Mayor Woodward for his at tack on Mayor Dunne at the League of American Municipalities convention In Toledo. Thomas E. Waggaman, under indict ment for embezzlement, appeared in the office of the clerk of the criminal court at "Washington and gave bond In the sum of $3,000 for his appear ance In court. The monthly statement or the col lections of internal revenue show that for the month of July, 1905. the col lections amounted to $20,790,479. which is an Increase as compared with July. 1904. of $385,461. President Roosevelt, in accepting the position of honorary vice president of the Public Schools' Athletic League f New York, says crowded tenement districts are. responsible for the devel opment of vicious and unhealthy chil dren. Dr. M. U. O'SulHvan. senior surgeon In St. Vincent's and the Woman's col lege and fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, Ireland, is making a tour of this country studying hospitals, and from here will go to Melbourne, Aus tralia. Two deaths from cholera have oc curred at Lemberg. Austria, and sev eral suspected cases are under observ ation. The deaths occurred in the family of a river boatman who has been working in the Vistula district of Prussia. The Japanese have landed 3,000 in habitants of the island of Sakhalin at Decastrles, West Siberia, many of whom were women and children, and some sick persons, who were forced to march to the coast, causing them terrible suffering. While engaged in breaking up scrap iron with a sledgehammer at the Re public Iron and Steel plant of St Ixmis, George Jones was probably blinded for life by the explosion of an old cannon which his sledge struck The cannon was loaded. The delegates to the national Krieg erbund at Jolict. 111., had a stormy debate over a resolution increasing as sessments in the insurance branch. The resolution finally prevailed. Rates will be increased on January 1 next from $1.50 a quarter to $1.75. Former State Representative James F. Carey of Haverhill. Mass., was nominated for governor at the social ist state convention. Patrick F. Ma honey of Boston was placed in nomi nation for lieutenant governor and C. C. Hitchcock of Ware for secretary of state. The annual report of Brigadier Gen eral Theodore J. Wint. commanding the department of the Missouri, rec ommends that army chaplains shall not be allowed to perform marriages of soldiers unless previous permission Bhall have been given by the com manding officer, the enlistment of mar ried soldiers being discouraged by the war department Mrs. Naomi Aldrich of Frederick, Mich., after a preliminary examina tion, was bound over for trial before the circuit court charged with hav ing poisoned her two little sons, aged 6 and 8 years, with arsenic. Early in July. Mrs. Aldrich insured the lives of her sons for $50 each. The boys died during the week of August 6, un der suspicious circumstances. A dispatch from Baden-Baden says that W. K. Vanderbilt Is confined to his room at a hotel in that city. Don's review of Chicago trade says all lines of industry are well sustain ed. Railroad traffic is unusually high, while lake carrying makes a new rec ord. WllUsn Jobe. an alleged Ohio mur derer, is held at Kansas City. Joe RIcketts, 18 years old, an em ploye of the Pacific Express company, was found dead near the Wabash rail way station at 5ecatur, III., with his head beaten to a pulp. The murderer .escaped. A St Louis firm of architects was awarded the $5,000 prize for .the best design of a Chicago courthouse. Charles F. Ffister of Milwaukee, in dicted on the chnrge of purloining $14,000 from the Wisconsin Rendering Company, was victorious in a suit against the concern for $6,000. All records of prices of the" New York stock exchange seats were brok en on the 1st by the sale of a seat for $83,000, which, with the Initiation fee. makes the price $84,000. The seat Is said to have been bought by Frank M. Graves, formerly a financial writer I pna New York paper. The Cosmopolitan. The Cosmopolitan (New York) hows that it is fully able to live up to Its claim of being the magazine of timely Interest At least three arti cles in the September Issue ar dis tinctly of that nature. None of the other periodicals of the month con tains so interesting and important an article as that by Garrett P. Serviss on the "Artificial Creation of Life." Mr. Serviss describes in great detail the latest developments of Dr. Loeb's experiments with parthenogenetks creation, and also tells so far as may be of the English scientist Burke's work to create life by chemical ac tion. There exists no more fascinat ing subject than this attack on one of Nature's most impregnable secrets, and it behooves every intelligent read er to keep pace with It Enamel on Cards. The enamel on address cards Is produced by rubbing over the card a mixture of Kremnitz white, which Is a fine variety of white lead. When dry the surface is rubbed with flannel dipped in powdered talc and polished by. vigorous rubbing with a hard brush. Ole Bull the Patriot. Ole Bull, the wizard of the violin, is everywhere known. Ole Bull, the patriot, Norway's lover and beloved, is a character less familiar to the general public. A most fascinating bit of history is the record of Ole Bull's passion for his country and his share in Norway's development; and this is the subject of Margaret E. No ble's "Ole Bull as a Patriotic Force." announced ts appear in the Septem ber Century. "One of the world voices," Ole Bull is called, "one of those world-voices in which perfect command of a difficult technic is made, in its turn, only the instrument of a higher impulse the heart of a whole people pressing forward to the utterance." The recent secession of Norway gives timeliness to Miss No ble's paper. Laugh at Sultan's Jokes. When the Sultan of Turkey "com mands" a theatrical performance he orders a number of his own jokes to be interpolated, the court being care fully coached that they may laugh at his creations and politely ignore the more genuine humor. Everybody's Magazine, September, 1905. Comparison of the City of Today with the City of the Future is a cheerful exercise. And plenty of ma terial for the comparison Is offered in the September Everybody's. There Is, for instance, the intensely modern biography of James R. Keene, the great Wall street magician, whose contests with Jay Gould and with Standard Oil" are brilliantly describ ed by Mr. Lawson in a particularly absorbing installment of his "Frenzied Finance." It is a chapter from the very heart of the life of today, this story of a man, according to Mr. Law son, "of infinite strategy and daring." Japs Are Born Sailors. A Japanese marine officer has ex plained why Japan has such good sail ors. Most of her coast vessels are small, but there are a great many of them, and almost any man taken from a fishing village has had enough ex perience to enable him to become an efficient sailor in a short time. O. Henry, Champion of the Down Trod. O. Henry's "Unfinished Story" in the August McClure's was a stinging lash at the snug employers of girl labor at starvation wages. Whether the author had any deeper motive in writing his caustic little tale than the compelling force of the tragedy the conditions suggest, only O. Henry knows; but down in Texas, the au thor's native state, the official organ of the State Federation of Labor lift ed the story bodily from the magazine and accompanied it with an editorial giving it direct application to some department store owners whom they accuse by name. Remarkable Memories. Extraordinary memories, such as seem to have been common in the old times, are still to be encountered in India, where there are Hindu priests who can repeat the 300,000 lines of Mahabharata accurately. Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time, because it never sticks to the iron, but because each package contains 16 oz. one full pound while all other Cold Water Starches are put up in -pound pack ages, and the price is the same, 10 cents. Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chem icals. If your grocer tries to sell you a 12-oz. package it is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large let ters and figures "16 ozs." Demand De fiance and save much time and money and the annoyance of the iron stick ing. Defiance never sticks. Bagpipes From Norway. It Is a curious fact that bagpipes were invented in Norway and thence Imported into Scotland in a period when a portion of the country fell into Scandinavian hands. Word from Br'er Williams. "Yo got de gold fever, all right," said Brother Williams, "but you ain't got de diggin' principle." Atlanta Constitution. It is not so irritating to be guilty of aa error ot judgment; the maddening part of it Is the knowledge that some one is standing by ready to shout, "I told you so." Usually the son of a self-made man begin to descend the ladder from the point at which his father stopped climbing. Chicago News. Tn Norway there is a law which prohibits any person from cutting djwn a tree unless he plants three sellings in its place. NEBRASKA NEBRASKA BRIEFS. Valley will have an agricultural show September 20 and 21. Seventeen head of cattle were killed on the Rock Island railroad in Sarpy county. The city council of Tecumseh has ordered all dogs muzzled. The reform element of Falls City is making war on slot machines. A farm laborer slashed his employ er with a razor at Wood River and I escaped. The general store of Langhoist and Lathmann Brothers at Fontanelle was destroyed by fire. Joe Grave3 and E. M. Harding were awarded contracts for building the city hall at Humboldt. Reports from northeastern Gage county are to the effect that pinkeye i has caused the death of several head of cattle. Someone forced an entrance to the Derby saloon in Falls City through the front door and robbed the cash reg ister of $20 in silver. The 'proposed improvements on the Masonic home in Plattsmouth, which have been contemplated for some time, will be commenced in the course of the next few weeks. Mrs. John Gilmore was arrested In Fremont by the police. She wore male attire and was tramping across the country in company with a man who claims to be her husband. Inquiries are daily being received by H. Wiggenjost with regard to the un ion meeting of the brotherhood of Lo comotive Engineers which is to be held in Lincoln September 28 and 29. The work of laying steel rails be tween Lincoln and Beatrice on the Union Pacific, which has long been delayed, has been resumed. About 100 men are employed on the job. William Cook, the 19-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Cook of Beat rice was drowned in the Blue river. He, with several comrades, were bath ing when all at once he went under. A representative body of men own ing land on the Nemaha bottoms met at the court house in Falls City and proceeded to organize a drainage dis trict to reclaim the land on the bot toms from overflow. P. J. Butler of Lincoln, a paving la borer, suffered several broken ribs and lacerations by falling from a freiaht car on the Missouri Pacific tracks. He struck the handles of a v.-hr-o' narrow when he fell. Brown county is going to have the grandest fair in its history this fall, commencing September 27. to last three days. A grand premium list will be offered of over $1,000 for the different kinds of stock, grain and vegetables. Sheriff Page of Fillmore county captured Georce Baker near Nebraska City and brought him to Genera rnd placed him in jail. Baker is cnarjjed with doal:ng fc.rr horses ana tw buggies. Page has been on his track for- iVre weeks. Boulder (Colo.) dispatch: While returning from a picnic excursion to the Moat lakes. Mrs. Emma Cropsey of Hastings. Neb., was hurt in a run away accident. With Mips Charlotte Boyle and Mrs. Walter Chamberlain Mrs. Cronsey. was riding in a surrey. While going down hill the vehicle, which lacked a brake, ran onto the horses, which ran away and overturn ed the surrey over a twenty-one foot embankment. The executive committee of the State Teachers association held a meeting at. the Limlell hotel in Lin coln, at which plans were discussed for fie annual convention of the as sociation to be held in Lincoln next December. The following companies and lecturers have been secured for the program: George Crampton Con cert company. Dr. George E. Vincent of Chicago university. Dr. J. B. De Motte of Chicago, Dr. C. O. White of Ypsilanti, Mich. Dr. C. A". McKim. state veterinarian, and Dr. A. T. Peters of Lincoln were at Valley to inspect the prosrress of the experiment being conducted there with the horsetail weed. One of the horses is showing symptoms of pois oning, while the other sems to thrive on the wend. They visited the farm of Grant Burt, who has another sick horse, and pronounced the disease swamp fever. Mr. Burt has already lost five horses and many others have lost horses from the mysterious dis ease. Henry Wilson, the colored horse thief, who was arrested in Omaha ten days ago, pleaded guilty to the charges preferred against him in a special term of district court of How ard county, and was sentenced to three years' imprisonment in the state penitentiary at hard labor. He effered no defense whatever except to the statement of an ex-convict that he was a former inmate of the peni tentiary, which he insisted, was un true. In response to inquiries by the court he claimed to be a native of Co lumbus. O. Ralph Powell, 9-year-old son of Ex ciseman Powell of Lincoln, was drowned in Salt creek at Roca. The boy was playing around his father's mill and accidentally slipped and fell Into the stream. Coal contracts for the winter sup ply of fuel for the Kearney and Peru normal schools were awarded by the state board of education. Miles of Omaha secured the contract for the Peru school on a bid of $2.80 per ton in the bin for Novinger nut coal. George H. Dowing of Kearney got half the Kearney contract on a bid of $3.25 In the bin for Damfortb nut coal. LMcnjiive preparations are b!ng made for the third annual exhibition, of the Loup Valley Agricultural asso ciation wlrch is to be held in 0"? from September 12 to 15, inclusive. New buildings are to be erected on the grounds of the society and many Improvements added. Victor Alexander, a convict in the state penitentiary, killed himself In his cell by tying a cord around his neck and fastening the other end to the bars of his cell. He then sat down on his bunk with his back to the front of the cell and guards pass ing failed to see the slender cord. STATE NEWS THOUSANDS OF ACRES TAKEN. Many Entries at North Platte Since August 1. NORTH PLATTE Since August 1 about 90,000 acres of land has been tak en in this district under the Kinkaid act Nearly all of these entries were tak en by persons brought here before Au gust 16 by articles sent to the Omaha papers from here by land locators. All of these entries except about 10,000 were taken by strangers who did not see the lands before entry and were entered hastily on representation of land locaters that they would be gone unless entered immediately. A large number of persons were brought here by the advertisements, but most of the people went out to look at the country and of the number who went out but twenty entries have been made. Some of them have purchased lands in the agricultural districts and the others returned home without doing anything. Since August 16 there have been on an average of about 2,500 acres taken up per day. the number getting less each day. Quite a number of contests are being filed against entries made under the Kinkaid act since June, 1904. when the former entry men have failed to comply with the law. There are no farming lands open for entry in this district. There is about i,500 acres of grazing lands that are still open for entry. It is claimed that the state ments made that the cattlemen are trying to keep the settlers out is un true. Seward Citizens Indignant SEWARD James A. Dowding was charged with abusing the 13-year-old daughter of Charles H. Wullenwaber, and during the evening a party of about thirty citizens took him to the edge of the city and threatened to hang him. After thoroughly scaring him the participants of the hanging party let Dowding return to the city under the promise that he would leave Seward the next morning and remain away per manently. State Treasurer Mortensen has re ceived word that Seward county will send in a portion of the $100,000 issue of bonds voted to erect a new court house and that later all of the bonds, with the exception of a few thousand dollars, will be sold to the state treas urer. LINCOLN Sault & Assemmacher of Senaca. Kans., were awarded the contract for the Peru normal school library building by the state board of education for $20,222. F. C. Phillips & Co. of Lincoln secured the heating and plumbing for $7,300. AFTER THE LUMBER DEALERS. Farmer Grain Dealers' Association Taking a Hand in the Matter. LINCOLN Members of the Farm ers' Grain Dealers' association are go ing to assist in looking up evidence to show the existence of a lumber trust, so a grain dealer intimated in Lincoln. "Before these trust suits are over," said this man, "it will be discovered that the lumber business has been done along the same lines as the grain business. The members in the lumber association may not make any profit out of being members of the organiza tion and may not even know how much profits other make because of the association. As a matter of fact the members of the association are be ing worked by an inside ring that gets the big profits while the small dealer member is safeguarded against compe tition. I see where the Omaha deal ers take exceptions to the charge that they have something to do with the scalpers. Wait till the evidence Is all in in the case which Mr. Godfrey has started in Lancaster county and then see what the big dealers have to say. "The end of the lumber dealers' trust will be just like the grain dealers. If the Lancaster man digs up the evi dence he expects to, then the attorney general will use that evidence in go ing after the trust, and, you mark my words, he will get them. I don't know whether the farmers as an organization will take part in the suit, but some of the members will furnish some help and that can be depended upon." Number of Cows Poisoned. PLATTSMOUTH Some of the far mers in the western part of the county have recently lost a number of head of cattle from the effects of poison. A few days ago J. F. Deming of South Bend found two of his cows dead. hlle preparations were being made to bury them another cow was taken sick and soon died, with every indica tion of poison. During the day anoth er cow was taken sick in the same manner. The situation became so se rious that a veterinary surgeon from Ashland was sent for and he succeed ed in saving the last cow. The con tents of the stomachs of two cows were sent to Lincoln for medical examina tion. Horse Thief Arrested. BEATRICE Sheriff Trude received a telegram from Sheriff Page of Fill more county, stating that G. H. Baker, who is wanted here for steling three horses and a buggy, bad been arrested at Nebraska City by him. As Baker 13 wanted at Geneva for stealing a team several years ago it is more than like ly that he will be taken to Fillmore county first to stand trial. Sheriff Trude went to Lincoln to meet Sheriff Page and his prisoner. Baker was driving one of the horses stolen here. Alexander Campbell Dead. M'COOK Alexander Campbell, for merly superintendent of the McCook division of the Burlington railroad in Nebraska died here after an illness of about two years with pernicious aene mia. Prof. Keer Declines It. BELLEVUE Prof. Willis H. Kerr has declined an invitation to become president of Lincoln college at Lincoln, 111. He will continue to occupy the chair of philosophy at Westminster college. PATH OF ECLIPSE The eclipse of the sun early on the morning of Wednesday, Aug. 30, was visible in some partial stage over most of the United States. The line of total eclipse passed far to the north in Canada. The partial eclipse in the United States started a few minutes before the sun arose. In some parts of the northern part of the country the sun's disk was two-thirds obscured. In the above diagram the heavy black line marks the path of totality. GETTING INTO BAD HABITS. Injurious Small Actions Too Frequent ly Pass Unnoticed. I wonder how many women who arc "all nerves" realize that much of their trouble is due to certain little everyday habits that pass unnoticed, but are none the less injurious? For instance, the manner of sitting. The average woman assumes a strained and incorrect position when reading, writing and sewing yes, even when resting, says the Pittsburg Dispatch. Now, a good habit, like a bad one. is only repeated action; and a little thought on the subject would soon ren der it the most natural thing to as sume a correct position at all times, sitting, standing or lying down. Don't sit with the shoulders drawn forward, one shoulder higher than the other, and your head bent down until the shape of your vertebral column resembles the letter C. Another bad fault is slouching down in your chair until you are literally sitting on the end of your spine. Not only should "grown-ups" look to their own bad habits, but they should watch closely the small children with whom they come in daily contact and try to keep them from acquiring in jurious habits. Children should be prevented from their particular fail ing as much as possible at once, and it is worth while to give up a few weeks to the cure, just as you would if they were suffering from a childish disease measles, or mumps, for in stance. The problem is made particularly difficult in that frequently we find them established before we have real ly noticed them. Bennie's Bait to Catch Devils. Many years ago, in the village of Houlton. Me., there lived a young man named Benjamin Salmon, known by every one as a simpleton, who was always doing strange things. One day a number of boys discovered Bon nie perched on a fence behind a barn with a cotton string and pin hook at tached to a willow stick, fishing in a pool of stagnant water. This was great fun for the boys, but their jeers had no effect on Bennie. Joshua Smith, a revenue officer, who was passing, stopped to see what the fun was. After taking in the situation he addressed Bennie thus: "What you fishin for?" Bennie, without raising his head, re plied. "Devils." "Ah, devils, eh," retorted Mr. Smith; "and what have you on for bait?" With the same indifference Bennie replied, "Revenue officers, sir." Odd Things About Words. "Were you in the garden for the purpose of committing a felony?" asked the English judge of the small boy. "No, sir," said the boy; "me and my cousin were after the gentleman's fowls and eggs." Forfeiture of lands and goods and "corruption of blood" (less of hereditary standing) were for merly the penalties for felony. Ue fore they got their technical sense, however, "felon" and "felony" (con nected either with Latin "fallere," to deceive or "fell." gall, bitterness) connoted wickedness, anger, courage or melancholy, as the case might be. "The admiral began to laugh for feb nnv" savs Caxton. meaninc that he laughed, not feloniously, but reckless ly. Also a boil or whitlow was a "felon" and cholera "felony." Babies Mixed on Bargain Day. It was a bargain day on Sixth ave nue, New York, and twenty baby car riages, all properly checked, were ranged up in front of a department store while the mothers were inside buying things they didn't need. Sud denly a baby at one end of the line stood up, toppled over against the next carriage, and in a moment all tne carriages went over like nine pins, sending the kids sprawling Auto Opens New Fields. An automobile milk wagon which is running in Ohio and doing the work of two and three horses every day is one of the recent developments of the horseless age. Another is an automobile in the Congo Free State, where electricity and coal are not to be considered as power generators, and where, therefore, wood was mus tered into service as the only logical fuel. The wood burning car weighs a ton and has a maximum speed of twelve miles an hour. Sheet steel wheels with heavy pneumatic tire3 are used. The fifteen horsepower engine is inclosed in a bullet proof bonnet, as the vehicle is to be used in transport ing troops and is expected to be under fire at times. A third novelty in the automobile business is the arrange ment of an enterprising Yankee for a regular service of motor omnibuses to the pyramids. Giant Steamers. The world's merchant marine of giant steamers of over 12,000 register tons now includes fifty-six vessels, thirty-one of which are under the Knglish flag. OF SUN AUGUST 30. w The dense shadow of the moon swept over this narrow belt from west to east with the velocity of a cannon ball. The dotted line in the lower part of the map marks the southern limit of the eclipse. People living south of that line saw nothing at all of the eclipse. The star on the eastern coast of the United States, near Cape Charles at the mouth of Chesapeake bay, shows the place of- "first con tact," that is, the place which was the very first on earth to see the eclipse begin. about the sidewalk. It took a long time to identify them, for an attend ant had put them back Indiscriminate ly, and they were not checked like their perambulators. This thrilling incident shows that the only sure way to avoid similar catastrophes would be to brand each child with a num ber and hang a corresponding number round the mother's neck, like a bath room key. Boston Herald. THE HOTEL BIBLE. Landlord No Longer Provides Guest with Gocd Book. People are not so good as they used to be. The traveling salesman says they are not. He attributes their downfall to the scarcity of Bibles in hotels. "There was a time," said the drum mer, "when every hotel I stayed in supplied its guests with Bibles. They were not fine Bibles. Possibly they cost only 25 cents apiece, but they were all there and answered the pur pose just as well as an Oxford edition. Usually the Bible lay in plain sight on the table in each bedroom. If it wasn't there it was in the top bureau drawer and all us fellows knew enough to look for it there. And very frequently we did look. I read the Bible a lot tn those days, maybe just because it was handy. I'd come in tired and disgust ed with life, especially that part repre sented by the evening paper, which was about the only thing I had to read and when I got plumb sick of that I'd turn to the Bible. Some mighty good stuff I found there, too. I haven't come across many of those hotel Bi bles in the last two years. I've missed them a lot. I don't know who is re sponsible for their disappearance. I understand that some tract society used to furnish them to the hotels. If the missionaries really were back of the movement, and through some mis representation of facts have come to the conclusion that the game was not worth the candle, I'd like to advise them to set the good work going again for a lot of us chaps have backslidden since the Bibles disappeared from ho tel bedrooms. His Fatal Error. They were seated on a park bench in the gloaming. "Miss Wiggins Nellie, dear," he said, "will you marry me?" "Really, Mr. Goodwin er George, this is so sudden. But well assure me that you have no bad habits do not drink, gamble and the like, and I'll think about it." "I never drank a drop of liquor in my life," answered the young man, "I never play cards and regard prize fighting and horse racing with dis dain." "George." she said, "I er think you may hope." "And as for baseball," continued George. "I detest it. and" "What!" she exclaimed, "ioii de test our great and glorious national game? Then all bets are off. George; I can never be your wife." Astor's "Stately Pleasure Dome." The London Mirror tells or the ac tivities of our former fellow-citizen. Mr. W. W. Astor. in making a new home for himself in England. It seems that he has bought a property de- Ascribed as "the historic Hever estate I in Kent." and is improving it. It includes 2.O0O acres of land and a moated castle, nearly six hundred years old, where at one time Henry VIII maintained Anne of Cleves. On this estate Mr. Astor has put to work about one thousand men, with dbe ap paratus, and is making changes rated as improvements which the calculat ing natives estimate will cost him a million and a quarter pounds. He is building a lake, a model vil lage, roads, bridges and gardens, and is doubtless having a good deal of the sort of fun that Mr. Kipling In a re cent story has suggested as a suitable recreation for tired Americans. ' NWNWWNVW Mysterious Cannon Ball. A three-pounder "live" cannon shell of foreign make has been found in a field on the banks of the River num ber, near Hull, Eng. The startling dis covery was made by an old naval re serve man, who at once tooK the pro jectile to Hull and handed it over to the police. The chief officer of the Royal Naval Reserve Battery on ex amining the shell found that it had been fired, but it had not exploded. It is 8 inches long, 3 inches in circum ference, and copper covered from nose to base. He considered it dangerous, and took charge of it. No one seem? to know how it came there. Grand Trunk Terminal. It Is stated on what is said to be unquestionable authority that Kairn Island, twenty-five miles south of Port i Simpson and facing Tucketts inlet. is to be tr1 sie of Laurier City, the ! western te nnnus of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway. America Interests Japs. Japanese publications are full of American articles on all kinds of subjects. p w For Health and Economy use Calumet Baking Powder Best by Test" Used in Millions of Homes John Milton in Russia. The most popular author in all Rus sia is John Milton, whose "Paradise Lost" is read in every peasant's cot tage. "Paradise Ixst" is the booU most in demand in tiic village libra, ry At a fair in Moscow thero wer seen five or six different translations of "Paradise Lost," with illustrations at a few pence apiece. Milton is tc the Russian peasantry wiiat Shako speare is to the. Germans. Sphere Two English Golf Stories. Here are a pair of this season's golf stories imported from England. A golfer drove a low ball over a rivci and a salmon jumped at it with sucr vigor that it jumped right out on the bank and was secured with the goll ball In its mouth. Another player killed a lark with a golf ball In his morning round and another with tha same ball in his afternoon round. Function of Fish Bladders. The air bladder of fishes is the pro vision within their bodies which en ablcs them to rise or fall in the water According to the dilation or contrac ticn of the bladder they may regu late the depth in tho water at theii pleasure. Lesson for Women. Jersey Shore. Pa.. Aug. 2h (Spe cial) "Dodd's Kidney Pills have dona worlds of good for inc." That's what Mrs. C. B. Earnest of this place has to say of the Great American Kidney Remedy. "I was laid up sick." Mrs. Earnest continues, "and had not been out of bed for five weeks. Tiien I began to use Dodd's Kidney Pills and now I am so I can work and go to town without suffering any. I would not be without Dodd's Kidney Pills. I have good rea son to "praise them everywhere." Women who suffer should learn a lesson from this, and that lesson Is "cure the kidneys "with Dodd'tf Kidney Pills and your suffering will cease." Woman's health depends almost en tirely on her kidneys. Dodd's Kidney Pills have never yet failed to mako healthy kidneys. Hunter Death to Tigers. A traveler return from India re lates that Andarkoh. in central In dia, he killed four full-grown tigers with five shots in under six minutes, the first three being single shots. CUTICURA GROWS HAIR. Scalp Cleared of Dandruff and Hair Restored by One Box of Cuticura and One Cake of Cuticura Soap. A. W. Taft of Independence, Va.. writing under date of Sept. 15, 1D04. says: "I have had falling hair and dandruff for twelve years and could get nothing to help me. Finally I bought one box of Cuticura Ointment and one eake of Cuticura Soap, and they cleared my scalp of the dandruff and stopped the hair falling. Now my hair is growing as well as ever. I am highly pleased with Cuticura Soap as a toilet soap. (Signed) A. W. Taft. Independence, Va." Lake Turns Red. Lake Morat. in Switzerland, has the curious property, every tenth year, ol turning red, owing to the presence of certain water plants, which are not found in any other lake In the world. Plso's Care cannot be too Highly spoken of aa a couch cure. J. W. O'Bkiex, 22 Third Are. X.. Minneapolis. Minn., Jan. 8. l&CO. Feat in Telepathy. Tom I can read your thoughts. Clara I can hardly believe it. for If you could you wouldn't sit so fax away. Try One Package. If "Defiance Starch" does not pleas you. reurn it to your dealer. If It does you get one-third more for th same money. It will give you satis faction, and will not stick to the iron Parasite Destroys Cod! in Moth. A colony of codlin moth parasites imported from Europe and set free re cently in the apple orchards of the Parjaro valley, California, is clearing them of the orchardists' enemy i great style. "Thanks!" is Enough for a Nickel. A man gave a baby a nickel th:3 morning. The baby is a year old. and didn't say thank you. "That is the most Impolite child." tho man said to I the mother "I ever knew." Atchison Globe.