Columbus Journal R. S. STROTHER, Publisher COLUMBUS, - NEBRASKA RACE RIOT NOTES. The grand jury at Springfield, 111., returned indictments against six more alleged leaders of the mob. At Kan kakee, Private Klein of Chicago, who killed Earl Nelson, was released on $10,000 bail. One more death, that of J. W. Scott, was added to the fatality list of the Springfield (111.) riots. National Guard patrols were fired on twice from am bush, but no one was hit. Gov. Deneen issued proclamations offering rewards for the arrest of the murderers and urging all citizens who had informa tion about the rioting to present it to the grand jury. Gov. Deneen ordered home all the state troops in Springfield except the Seventh infantry and First cavalry. Negroes were in great fear of renewal of attacks. Arrangements were com pleted for surrendering Private J. B. Klein to the civil authorities at Kan kakee for trial on the charge of kill ing Earl Nelson. Abraham Raymor and Kate Howard were indicted at Springfield as lead ers of the mob. PERSONAL. A son was born to Senator and Mrs. A. J. Beveridge of Indiana at Man chester, Mass. Cashier N. A. Alston of the bank of Stevenson, Ala., disappeared and it is alleged that he is short in his accounts from $20,000 to $24,000. John D. Rockefeller gave his cousin. Miss Gertrude Rockefeller of Okla homa City, Okla.. $50 as a wedding gift Miss Annie S. Peck, the mountain climber, for whose safety fears were felt, returned in safety to Lima, Peru. Rear Admiral Robley D. Evans cele brated his sixty-second birthday and went on the retired list At Lake Mo honk, N. Y., he received numerous calls and telegrams of congratulation, and was given a big reception and lov ing cup. Edward Cotteringham, treasurer of the Union Traction company of Lin ton, Ind., accused of embezzling $5,000, was arrested in Ottawa, Ont Alfred T. Wimberly, Kentucky man ager of the Bankers' Life association of Des Moines, la., and a well-known insurance man, committed suicide in Louisville, leaving a note saying he was tired of life. At Utica, N. Y., Representative James S. Sherman was formally noti fied of bis nomination for the vice presidency at the Chicago convention last June. The notification was made the occasion of a general holiday and the residents of the city, irrespective of party, took part in the tribute to a fellow townsman. Omer K. Benedict, editor of the Ok lahoma City Times, was arrested on a charge of criminal libel preferred by Gov. Haskell. GENERAL NEWS. Injustice to Judge Landis, misstate ment of his position and misstatement of the facts on record are charged against Judges Grosscup, Seaman and Baker of the federal circuit court of appeals in the government's petition for a rehearing of the appeal of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana, filed at Chicago. Of $10,000 in decayed- greenbacks sent to the treasury department for re demption by O. D. Earl of Morrillton. Ark., all but $25 was identified and a check for $9,975 was mailed to Mr. Earl. Fearing the banks were unsafe, Mr. Earl buried his savings in an old pail in 1904. Having been defied by the Indiana state executive board of the organiza tion, President T. L. Lewis of the Uni ted Mine Workers issued from head quarters a letter advising all miners on strike in Indiana to return to work immediately. The regimental championship rifle shoot of the United States was won at Camp Perry for the third successive year by the Sixth regiment of Massa chusetts. Persian revolutionists captured Ain-ed-Dowleh. who had advanced on Tab riz at the head of 1,200 government troops. Seventy miners were entombed by an explosion in a mine at Wigan. England, and it was feared most of them were killed. Three firemen were killed and a fourth dangerously hurt at London, Ont., when the floors of a burning building fell upon them. Capt. Baldwin trained three signal officers in the handling of his dirigible balloon and then turned it over to the army. Dr. Joseph Eichberg of Cincinnati was drowned in Big Tupper lake. New York, while trying to land a large pick erel. The home of Wofford Tweed near Marshal. N. C, was destroyed by fire, and his wife, their three children and Mrs. Murray Tweed were burned to death. Fire destroyed the Kaatskill House in the Kaatskill Bay district of Lake George. N. Y.. and three cottages. T. W. Burgess, a blacksmith, was in the water more than 20 hours in an attempt to swim the English channel and gave up a mile from the French coast Fire In the town of Gore Bay. Mani tou Island, destroyed 15 business houses and the lighthouses. (NEWS NOTES FOR THE 8 BUSY MAN & Most Important Happen- H !; ings of the World S J5 Told in Brief. 8 D. McCreary, aged 65, a coal mer chant of Louisville, committed suicide in a Doanung no-use :JBiLiexigton, sy. Mrs. "Jack" Gardner and Mrs.Enilly Crane Chadbourne are not to be pros ecuted on a criminal charge by the United States government Jn connec tion with their alleged attempt to smuggle $80,000 worth of art goods into the country. One man was killed and four per sons injured , when an automobile turned turtle in San-Francisco. Fourteen horses were shot to pre vent their being burned to death at Carroll, la. William Finney, a colored patient in the insane asylum at Peoria, 111., who was attacked by a white lunatic, died of his injuries. Theodore Norman of Avon-on-the Sea, N. Y., removed a piece of glass three-quarters of an inch in length from his forehead, which, unknown to him, had been imbedded there ever since he fell downstairs with a bottle in his hand 26 years ago. The bride of a week of Prof. Ru dolph Spitzer'of Sternberg, Mecklen-burg-Schwerin, threw herself from the top of the Bismarck tower at Herings dorf, Prussia, falling 1,200 feet to the bottom of the cliffs upon which the tower is built Mrs. Mary Cassidy of Chicago, who killed her husband and wounded her self, ended her life by leaping from a hospital window. The Belgian chamber of deputies adopted the Congo annexation treaty, assuring the annexation of the Free State and the end of King Leopold's misrule in Africa. Announcement was made that a cor poration is being formed to be known as the Commonwealth Fuel company, embracing 153 Illinois coal mines with in a radius of 59 miles of St Louis, supplying practically all the coal con sumed in St Louis and in East St Louis. After drugging three watch dogs that guarded the summer home of Frederick W. Woerz, a wealthy New York brewer, burglars entered the house at Belle Haven park, Conn., and stole $6,000 worth of jewelry and $100 in money. The National Editorial association elected W. H. Mayes of Brownwood, Tex., president and decided to meet next year in Seattle. The Pennsylvania pure food law of 1907 was declared unconstitutional in a decision rendered by Judge Martin Bell in the Blair county court. The Lusitania lowered her own trans-Atlantic record by nearly four hours. Rev. George S. Fitzhugh of Virginia took out a license to wed Lulu V. Frazier, ten years old, explaining that he intended to marry the child to make her his heiress. The Southern Indiana railroad, owned by John R. Walsh of Chicago, went into the hands of a receiver. James S. Sherman, Chairman Hitchcock and other Republican lead ers, conferred with President Roose velt on the New York situation and it seemed settled that the party must renominate Gov. Hughes. President Roosevelt received the members of the team which piloted the American automobile to victory in the New York-to-Paris automobile race. United States troops stationed in Yosemite park were called out to fight a destructive forest fire in Tuolumne county, Cal. John Pedman Reid, said to be a wealthy American, committed suicide in Bournemouth, England. The design of William C. Potter for an equestrian statue of Gen. George B. Custer, who was killed in the battle of the Little Big Horn, to be put up at the Custer home in Monroe, Mich., has been accepted. Two companies of regular troops broke out of their cars at Atlanta, Ga., and started a riot that was not suppressed until soldiers had been summoned from Fort McPherson. Mrs. Wardwell, the quarantined leper, widow of Gen. Wardwell, es caped from her quarters at Tomb stone, Ariz., and is supposed to have boarded a train for California. The Minnesota Democratic state convention met in Minneapolis and after a scene of indescribable tumult, caused by the mention of his name and which continued for 64 minutes. Gov. Johnson was nominated for re election. Edward H. Hacker, a traveling salesman employed by the McCall Pat tern company, and his young wife, to whom he had been married only ten months, shot and killed themselves in their New York home after a quarrel. The American battleship fleet ar rived at Sydney and was given an en thusiastic welcome. Hague diplomats expect that Hol land will declare war on President Castro of Venezuela to vindicate the national honor, and work on the war-., ships meanwhile is being rushed. The ten-year-old daughter of John Stoltz, residing ten miles west of Armour, S. D., committed suicide, using a double-barreled shotgun to commit the deed. Thirteen men were seriously in jured in lower Detroit river, when a charge of dynamite exploded under the drill vessel. Destroyer. OBITUARY. Dr. A. E. McBeth of Battle Creek, Mica., prominent Republican politi cian, president of the common council and a veterinary surgeon of state wide reputation, died suddenly of apoplexy. John J. O'Brien, 37 years old, mem ber of the St Louis city council and wealthy boiler manufacturer, is dead. William Seibert, 88 years of age, one of the organizers of the Republican party, and a delegate to the first na tional convention, died at Pittsburg, Pa. John V. Farwell, pioneer merchant and philanthropist of Chicago, died, aged 83 years. Capt Charles K. Jackson, 71 years old, a great lakes sailor for more than half a century, died at his home in Algonac, Mich. t Dr. Albert J. Bushong, a famous baseball catcher about 20 years ago, died in Brooklyn. Roilo B. Oglesbee of Laporte, head of the Indiana banking department and well-Known over the state as newspaper man, politician and histori cal writer, died of heart disease, aged 48 years. MYSTERY IS SOLVED ARREST.:. MADE FOR ROBBERY. FROM SUBTREASURY. FORMER TELLER IN THE TOILS m. - -. Had Been Suspected from Start, but Succeeded in Satisfying Officials "" of His 'innocence. Chicago The mystery of the theft of $173,000 from the United States subtreasury a year and a half ago, one of the largest losses the govern ment has ever suffered in this man ner, is believed to have been solved by the arrest at an early hour Sunday of George W. Fitzgerald. Others are believed to have been implicated in the crime, which for months complete ly baffled government secret service men. Fitzgerald was an assorting teller under Assistant United States Treas urer Boldenweck. Suspicion at the time of the theft, February 20, 1907, rested on him, but so plausible was his story and so intense his apparent interest in discovering the real cul prit that interest ceased to center in him. Much work was done on the theory that the crime had been perpe trated by a colored man. Meanwhile Fitzgerald was discharged from the government employ for culpable neg ligence for allowing such a theft to be consummated under his very eyes. The money stolen had been used and was tied up in packages, some of which bad been marked for destruc tion at Washington. Any of them would readily- have passed anywhere except for their large denominations. None of the bills was under $500 and some were of-the $1,000 and $5,000 denominations, the $1,000 predominat ing. The theft created a sensation throughout the country and congress at the last session was asked and re fused to release Assistant Treasurer Eoldenweck from liability, although it was promised that congress would again consider the matter at its next session. REPORT ON PANAMA CANAL. Commission Finds Highly Satisfactory Condition on the Work. 'Oyster Bay President Roosevelt made public a report submitted to him by a special commission consisting of James Bronscn Reynolds, Samuel B. Donnelly and Henry Beach Needham, regarding conditions in Panama. The commission wac appointed April 25, last That the president is pleased with the report is shown in a letter which he sent to each member of the com mission on Friday. He expresses par ticular pleasure over the fact that the committee upholds the administration of Colonel George W. Goethals, chair man of the Isthmian Canal commis sion, and the president has had a copy of the report mailed to Colonel Goethals, requesting that the recom mendations made by the committee be put in immediate effect so far as possible. GREAT FIRE AT STEAMBOUL. Fifteen Hundred Houses Destroyed in the Turkish City. Constantinople. Fire broke out Sun day afternoon in the Stamboul quart ers and with a brief period a terrible conflagration was raging. A strong wind carried the flames at great speed and for six hours they swept over the section, destroying 1,500 houses and shops. The fire was still burning at 9 o'clock at night, but the wind was decreased considerably. TWO-CENT FOREIGN POSTAGE. Postmaster General Issues Order Ren dering New Rate Effective. Washington. An order was issued by the postmaster general putting into effect, beginning October 1 next, the postage rate of 2 cents per ounce, ap plicable to letters mailed in this country for the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Letters un paid or short of postage will be dis patched to destination, but double the deficient postage will be collected. Farmer Stung to Death. Columbus, O. John L. Stansberry, aged 37 years, a farmer who lived near Dublin, died within twenty minutes after he had been stung by bumble bees. He was stung six times and within three minutes he became un conscious and was beyond aid when a doctor arrived. Indictments at Springfield. Springfield, 111. Twenty more in dictments, making fifty all told, were returned by the special grand jury of Sangamon county. The latest batch of accusations includes five indict ments against Thomas Marshall, and twelve other negroes'. Indiana Miners Win Strike. Terre Hause, Ind. The strike in the bituminous coal field is officially end ed by the announcement that the ope rators' association has agreed to the demands of the United Mine Workers of District No. 11. A Special Session Later. Des Moines, la. Governor Cummins has decided not to call a special ses sion of the legislature until after the big republican conference here August 25. That he -will after that is prac tically certain. Forest Fires in Montana. St Paul, Minn. A special to the Pioneer Press from Helena, Mont, says: Forest fires have broken out anew in the Little Belt reserve of central Montana and much valuable timber is being destroyed. Free Use of Mails. Washington Hereafter all pension ers will be alowed the free use of the mails to return their pension vouch ers, as the result of an order issued by Postmaster General Meyer, amend ing the postal regulations. I NEBRASKA NEWS AND NOTES. . Items' ,fr Greater or Lesser Impor--tance Over the State. Brown county has a political orator in the person of a thirteen-year-old girl. '" A pioneers' association for Cuming county has been organized at that point The Fullertca chautauqua this year was the most successful over held there. The chautauqua tent at Pawnee City was wrecked by storm. The loss is $750. ... The Cass County old settlers' picnic was laregly attended. Gov. Sheldon made an address. Fred France of York county was badly gored by a. vicious cow. He was nearly exhausted when rescued. Mr. and Mrs. O. Yockey, pioneer residents of Gage county, celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary. . A young man named Bryan was ar rested at Arcadia for bootlegging. He will be tried at the next term of court The Seventh Day Adventists in Ne braska will hold their annual camp meeting at Hastings, commencing August 27. James Martin (colored), a trusted empolyee, swindled a Nebraska City firm out of $600. He paid back $400 and left the town. F. L. Ziegler, a traveling man out of Lincoln, attempted suicide at Hold rege by taking laudanum. Physicians saved him by heroic work. Fred H, the Beatrice horse driven by Fred Rabare, won first place in the 2:10 pace at Coffeyville, Kas. The race was for a $1,000 purse. Charles Hagen, who was killed by a freight train on the Omaha railroad about three miles south of Blair was 41 years old and a baker by trade. The state railway commission has compiled a set of figures, giving -as its guess that railroad legislation has re sulted in a saviug to the state of over $6,000,000. The management of the Gage coun ty agricultural society is making ex tensive preparations for the fair, to be held at the driving park Septem ber 21 to 26. A final quietus has been put to the proposition to have Merrick county build a big drainage canal at Clarks, the County Board of Supervisors hav ing refused to make any appropriation for carrying on th2 work. The 1-year-old daughter of John Mecher living ten miles northeast of Lindsay, drank tho contents of a bot tle of fly killer which had been knocked to the floor in the wash room and died a few hours later. The Otoe Canning company has be gun packing corn. The pack this year does not promise as large as that of last year, because of the high water during the month of June and the cold weather in the spring. The Morton-Gregson Packing com pany at Nebraska City has closed down its plant for repairs and Govern ments Inspectors Hugh E. Hervey and M. Johnson have been transferred to Kansas City, and Dr. B. O. Hull to St. Louis. During a thunder storm at Prague the barn of V. J. Futin. containing three horses, was struck by lightning and burned to the ground. The same storm killed six head of cattle belong ing to Frank Koranda and destroyed some stacks of wheat The Merrick Coiinty Agricultural so ciety was given substantial encourage ment when the County Board of Su pervisors met and voted an appropri ation of $150 for the annual county fair which the association holds at Clarks in September. John H. Repd, who was arrested at Wymore and bound over to the dis trict court on a charge of bootlegging, escaped from the officers. He asked to see his family before being taken to jail, and while the officers waited at the front door of his home, Reed escaped through the back door. An ordinary life policy in the Mid west Life cf Lincoln. Nebraska, for one 25 years of age would cost $20.91 for the first year and $16.40 a year thereafter. Payments after the first year could be paid every quarter at a cost of $4.35 a quarter. The Mid west Life is an old line company and is furnishing safe and sound insur ance, good for all time at a rate which is within the reach of all. Agents wanted. Write fcr particulars. Joseph Currier, a tramp, who in company with L. E. Truscott, was stealing a ride on a Rock Island box car loaded with iron tubing, was badly crushed in the yards at Beatrice. In switching the engine struck the car pushing the tubing to the end in which the men were riding. Currier was so badly injured internally that he may not survive. Thomas F. Costello, ex-Union Pacific conductor, has filed a suit at Grand Island for damages in the sum of $20, 000, making the Union Pacific the de fendant, and alleges that he was per manently injured by a rearend colli sion in Omaha, in 1904. While his train was puling into that city on the down grade another freight crashed into the rear of his train. When the rural mail carrier drove to the water tank of Alex Farris, near Murray, in Cass county, to wa ter his team, he was surprised to find the little 2-year-old child of the family in the tank dead, having accidentally fallen in and drowned. Railroads from the east of Omaha have decided to reduce the oil rates from the east to Omaha between 3 and 4 cents per hundred pounds. The railroads maintain that although this rnts nnite a fieiire in their revenues. the reduction was made on their own volition and will affect a large volume of business. Peter Jobman, a prominent jfarmer living eleven miles northeast of Beatrice, in speaking of the corn crop, stated that there were fields in his neighborhood that would average from twenty-five to thirty bushels to the acre and others that would not yield more than ten bushels per acre. County Attorney Singhaus of John son county has, upon investigation, found that there are several estates subject to the inheritance tax which was not paid and has filed petitions in fourteen estates which will probably produce $4,060 to $5,000 of revenue for the county general road fund. II STATE CAPITAL MATTERS OF INTEREST TO ALL CITIZENS. BOARD REDUCES UNO VALUES Total Assessment of Lands Less than that Placed Upon the Same by County Assessors. Terminal Assessments. A letter, received by the state board of equalization from Phil B. Clark, county clerk of Knox county, indicates a very common error into which sev eral county officers in different parts of the state have fallen that of sup posing that the counties have the privilege of taking advantage of the terminal assessments for municipal purposes within their counties. Mr. Clark writes that since the board has been slow with the work of equalization under the terminal tax law the county board of his county has estimated an 'addition of about $30,000 under the criminal tax law and added it to the. tax tolls of the county. Asnwers are being sent out to coun ty clerks where this error has been made that the assessment of terminals locally is for municipal purposes only, and that it will not add a dollar to the amount distributed to the county by the state board for county and state purposes. The board has been slow about get ting at the equalization. of values in the several cities and towns under the terminal tax law, some of the mem bers cf the board having been out of the city the greater part of the time since finishing its work of equaliza tion of general state assessmnts. Total Land Assessment The total assessment of lands, as equalized by the State Board of Equal ization, is less than the total value placed upon lands by the various county assessors of the state. In some counties the state board increased the land values and in some counties it made decreases, in order to equalize between counties, but the aggregate assessment is less than that made by the county assessors themselves. The county assessors are responsible for the valuation placed on all property except railroads, which goes to make up the grand assessment roll. The law requires the State Board of Equalization to pass upon the work of county assessors and to equalize these returns between counties so that every class of property may bear its burden of taxes. The board must see to it that the actual value is placed upon every piece of property. It is not the duty of the board to in quire what relation one class of prop erty bears to another class, but to list each at its true value. It is not the duty of the State Board of Equalization to maintain a certain ratio between the value of railroad property and the value of lands, any more than it is the duty of congress to maintain a ratio of 16 to 1 between silver and gold. The law specifically prescribes how railroads shall be assessed and the value placed upon this class of proper ty by the State Board of Assessment is, in the estimation of a majority of the board, the true actual market value. In the case of the Northwest ern, officials swore that the road could be reproduced for $3,000,000 less than the value placed upon it by the state board. The Union Pacific, which one member of the board thought was as sessed too low compared with the other roads, was valued on its main line at $107,000 a mile. Farmer Fined for Selling Bad Eggs. Gooley Griffie, a farmer who was charged with selling bad eggs at the town of Broken Bow, has pleaded guilty and paid a fine cf $10 and costs. He was the first farmer to be made the subject of complaint by the state food department. His arrest and prosecution is taken as an indication that the food department intends to begin with the farmers to prevent the sale of bad eggs, but a prosecution is pending against an egg dealer of Dawes county for selling to the pro- ) prietor of a restaurant a case of eggs , that contained many bad ones. Food Commissioner Johnson has refused to rule in regard to who shall candle eggs, the farmer, the retailer or the wholesaler, but the effect cf prosecu tion against farmers will be that farmers will have to shoulder this responsibility and expense. Grocery Stores Being Inspected. An investigation of the grocery stores in Lincoln by the rood depart ment shows that many or the stores keep their wares in dirty praces, ua eanitary and unfit Commissioner Johnson has ordered a general clean ing up and he still has his inspectors at work investigating the eggs sold here. Committee Will Not Interfsre. The executive committee of the democratic state committee will not call a meting to hear both sides of the controversy between Edgar He ward and Chairman Dan Stevens of the democratic congressional com mittee cf the Third district. It is un derstood that the committee conclud ed that it was not within the purpose and province of the state committee to go into the personal differences of two democrats. The contrbversy grows out of charges of Howard against Stevens. Plenty of School Teachers. . State Superintendent McBrien re ports that he finds a sufficiency of teachers for the public schools of Ne braska this year. He says that in the west and the northwest some of the county superintendents are asking for teachers, but in the main there are plenty everywhere. The superintend ent has issued a circular to the cou- -ty superintendents asking them to fret the results of teachers' examinati n to him as quickly a? possible so th t certificates may be issued before t opening of the school. SHE WAS NO HASBEEN. Smoking Car Just the One Old Woman Was Looking For. "Madam," said the brakeman as the train stopped at a village station and a little old woman started to enter the smokiag car. "the car back Is the one you want." "How do you know?" she tartly asked. "Because this is the smoking car." She pushed past him and climbed up the steps, and after taking a seat she pulled out and filled a pipe, struck a match on tho sole of her shoe, and after drawing a few puffs she said to a man smoking a cigar across the aisle: "That young feller out there don't know half as much as he thinks he does." "How so?" was asked. "He took me for an old woman that had never rode on the cars before, and told me this was the smoking car." "And yon wanted this car?" "Why, I never ride in any other not unless my pipe is broke, my to bacco all out and none o' you men folks will lend me a cigar." ECZEMA FOR 55 YEARS. Suffered Torments from Birth In Frightful Condition Got No Help Until Cutlcura Cured Him. "I had an itching, tormenting ecze ma ever since I came into the world, and I am now a man 55 years old. I tried all kinds of medicines I heard of, but found no relief. I was truly In a frightful condition. At last I broke out all over with red and white boils, which kept growing until they were as big as walnuts, causing great pain and misery, but I kept from scratching as well as I could. I was so run down that I could hardly do my work. I used Cuticura Soap, Oint ment, Resolvent, and Pills for about eight months, and I can truthfully say I am cured. Hale Bordwell, Tipton, la., Aug. 17, 1907." "I cheerfully endorse the above tes timonial. It is the truth. I know Mr. Bordwell and know the condition he was in. Nelson R. Burnett, Tipton, la." QUITE SAFE WITH HER. One Secret "Tootsle" Surely Never Would Pass Along. "John, love," said the young wife, "you oughtn't to have any secrets from me." "Well, Tootsie?" "You go to lodge meetings, and you never tell me anything about them." "They wouldn't interest you, dear. I don't mind giving you the password, though, if you'll promise never to dis close it to a living soul." "I'll promise never to tell It to any body." "Remember it's to be repeated only once and very rapidly." Til remember. What is it?" "Aldaborontiphosclphorniosticos." "What! Please say it again, a lit tle slower." "Have you forgotten the conditions already? I said 'only once and very rapidly.' " (Tearful pause.) "O, dear! I wish you hadn't told me!" ONE EXCEPTION. Easy Edmund It's one uv de frail ties uv our poor human nature dat no matter how much a man gits he wants more. Drather Sitdown (thoughtfully) Oh, I dunno 'bout dat. Not in a police court he don't Largest Rock Crusher in Operation. The largest rock crusher in the world was recently thrown Into opera- i tion in a cement mill at South Pitts burg, Tenn., and it crushes all the rock used by a 4:000-barrel plant The machine has an hourly capacity of 800 tons and 60 per cent of the product is in pieces four Inches or less and 30 per cent, in pieces two inches or less. The crusher is 19 feet in height and weighs 425,000 pounds. The hopper is 20 feet in diameter. The operation of this machine alone requires 29 horse power. FRIENDLY TIP Restored Hope and Confidence. After several years of Indigestion and its attendant evil Influence on the mind, it is not very surprising that one finally loses faith in things gen erally. A N. Y. woman writes an Interesting letter. She says: "Three years ago I suffered from an attack of peritonitis which left me in a most miserable condition. For over two years I suffered from nerv ousness, weak heart, shortness of breath, could not sleep, etc. "My appetite was ravenous, but I felt starved all the time. I had plenty of food but it did not nourish me because of intestinal Indigestion. Med- j leal treatment did not seem to neip, I got discouraged, stopped medicine and did not care much whether I lived or died. "One day a friend asked me why I didn't try Grape-Nuts, stop drinking coffee, and use Postum. I had lost faith in everything, but to please my i friends I began to use both and soon became very fond of them. "It wasn't long before I got some strength, felt a decided change in my system, hope sprang up in my heart and slowly but surely I got better. I could sleep very well, the constant craving for food ceased and I have better health now than before the at tack of peritonitis. "My husband and I are still using Grape-Nuts and Postum." "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from tirr.e to lime. They are gc"'ine, true, d full of hums, interest. as) A GOOD OLD FRIEND. aaaVTrSiFHil The Gumpot Well, you fellows can say what you like about the editor. For my part, I always stick up for him. FIna Y. M. C A. Building Planned. A Young Men's Christian Associa tion building that cost to build and equip more than a million dollars is to be opened in Philadelphia this fall, with Walter M. Vood of Chicago in charge as secretary. An effort is to be made to recruit the membership to 4,000, so that the largest possible number of boys may have the bene fits of the new structure. Philadel phians are proudly pointing to the eight-story building in Arch street aa one of the three finest Young Men's Christian Association homes In the world, the other two being the Twenty-third street branch, in New York, and the central building la Chi cago. Progress. "Yes," said Mrs. Malaprop. "mf boy is doing first-rate at school. I sent him to one o them alimentary schools, and his teacher says he's do ing fine. He's a first-class sculler, they tell me, and is head of his class In gastronomy, knows his letters by sight, and can spell like one o' these deformed spellers down to Washing ton." "What's he going to be when he grows up?" "He wants to be an undertaker, and I'm declined to humor him, so I've told the confessor to pay special intention to the dead languages," said the proud mother. Harper's. European News Disseminators. A French statistician calculates that there is one newspaper published for every S2.000 inhabitants of the known world. In Europe, Germany heads the list with 5,500 newspapers, of which 800 are published daily. England comes next, 3,000 newspapers, of which 809 are "dailies," and then comes France, with 2.SI9 newspapers, of which only one-fourth are daily or published twice or thrice a week. Italy comes fourth, with 1,100 papers, and is followed by Austria-Hungary, Spain, Russia, Greece and Switzerland, the last having 450 newspapers. Alto gether, Europe has about 20,000 news papers. Honesty No Bar to Fortune. It is a mistaake to think that vast fortunes cannot be built up by honest methods. They can and often are. There are thousands of men among whose riches there does not minglo one particle of the sweat of unre quited toil, on whose crimson plush there is not one drop of the heart's blood of the needlewoman, whose lofty halls are the marble of industry, not the sinews and bone of the toiling masses. Dr. Madison C. Peters. Omaha Directory Tjruifuij'njTjtrLn.nnnnniinrrii -- - Wttoleial acd retail d.tl.rt in vrrth!n;t for Gratleaan'atabla. including rin In- ported Table Dclicaeiet. If there ia any little Item yoa an anabte to obtain in yocr Hone Town. writ aa for prices on tame, aa we will be (ore to hare It. Mail order carefully filled. mpoittkw np pgatews tn .Smi A.an v., aAn,ipe VtHBW wnfc rvww ,-nvfcww.j AND TABLE DELICACIES I ammmmrr Rtftt rn r wwi rMinani - w rv-w -""""""IGUOCin e4T i COUKTNEY & CO.. Omha. Nekr. Visitors to Omaha at Ak-Sar-Ben or at any other time, are invited to make their headquarters at BRANDEIS Boston Store OMAHA Largest store west of Chicago. You are always welcome here. Free ' waiting rooms. Baggage checked tree. Save money on everything. OMAHA THE IRIiHTEST SPOT OH THE MAP A GOOD PLACE to Invest your money where, vou can get from 6 to 10 Or Improved Properties Write Us How Sluch You Have to Invest HASTMOS mm HEYDEM 170 Fmrmmm Si. Omwamm, , tin. Jlalley & M:irh. Tin- DENTISTS .Til noor. i .ixi on lHix-k. cur. K : til rvMi and rarnam Mi. Ou.ill. Xeh. Host ruulniM-d Rental othce In th- Mlrt'lU Wt I.at.M appliances. Hij.'hir ail.- rntKtry. Iti-anj- ! itii-.-s. RUBBER GOODS b" mall at cut prices. Send for free catalogue. MYERS-DILLON DRUG CO.. OMAHA. MEBR. nFJlUI 11(1111 P. QTDDAGC Pfl UmAIIA llUUL C6 O I UllrlDL UUi SHIP YOUR llfflft! to the Omaha mar- WOOL ket to get better returns. Kef., any prices and quick bank in Omaha. KODAKS FINISHING ETerythlnir for the amateur. Lnnn-twbolewileatcclcta the West. Send for catalogue- Mall onleni a rpcclalty. THE ROBERT DEMPSTER CO.. Be. 1197. Omaha. M. Spiesberger & Son Co. Wholesale Millinory The Best In the West OMAHA, NEB. FARMER'S ELECTRIC LIGHT PUNTS For Power and Light. Send for circular and prices. Agents for Ham tastes Ecrae EcgM Starters. ORR GAS ENGINE STARTER CO. 1113 Famam St.. OMAHA, NEB. Field Glmesee, Blaeeolant aad Telescope. Warn Optical Co. We test cres for siuht. uitl iIt di- Scnbe glastipft when nettled. Kjrrjcla""i and specta cles properly flltrd. Consult tmnrst. WurnOptlral Co. SMIk.MlCiracrlStaaaeraraaaitttmu.O&AHa.XKB. asiJOHN DEERE ohaha For Booklet "How to Raits Better Crops. .(O A r?k aaaaw w&aieiai. a vff sa $ 3E Vi 4