I Congregational Church. The Congregational church announces the following programme for Kueter Sunday, and invitee the public to wo ehip with them. Morning service 11 o'clock. Organ prelude Mrs, W. S. Evanh Doxology Scripture The Visit to the Tomb Response rianctU3" Choir Hymn "Jeeus Christ the Sou"' Congregation Scripture The Visit of Peter and John to the Sepuichr Prayer. Response. Choir Announcements Offertory. . ..Mr. W.S. Evans Solo Tim Lord is Kipn" Lansing.. Mis Galley Sermon "Easter Ita Larger Outlook Anlhem "IVaieo Yo I he Father" Choir Benediction I'ostlude Kveuing prugi amine S o'clock. Orgnn prelude M:rf. V. S. Evans Gloria Pittri Invocation Hymn "Resurrection of Jesus Christ the Son" Cony relation Scripture i tio Burin! of Jesus Solo "Tho Endh'.srt Day" Johnson... Lester C. Dibble Scripture The Empty Tomb Response 'Sanctus" Choir Anthem "All Uatl" Choir Soh "Christ is Ris-n" . . M m. Eeaster Announcements Violin Duet The Alp Maid's Dream Ltbilzky Mishih Marion R-ed-r. Adna Liy Prayer. Lird's Prayer, I "hunt 1'lnnr Anthen "IleHiirrection" Choir Offertoiy Solo The Voire Tnuinplnni:" Stillts Mrs. R-ithbun; Chorus "Christ Is Risen Benediction I'ostlndu Mrs W. S. Mvans William L. Diuiilk. Minibter. Platte County Teachers" Association. Columbus iliuh school April In. I'.Hl. at 1:'H) p. m. Vocal Solo -Selected llnzid From "History in Primary (Jnidtfs" Jessy Maw, District Xo. S "School and Life" Gideon B rutin, District No. 10 Vocal Solo Selected Prof. O. Collett, ('oiuml.ii High School "Consolidation erf Schools" ..Prof. J. Englcman. Monroe Schools "Rural Life" Prof. J. Stephenson, Lindsay Schools "Domestic Science in Rural Schools". Elsie Adarup, Monroe Schools VoohI Solo Selected Prof. C. Otradovec, Platte Center Schools. Reading of minutt?n of Humphrey meeting. Roll Call. Eighth Grade Examinations Stntr Superintendent. Orabtree hnsde.n;n.-itcd April 20 and 21, May 11 and 12 :i the dates of the linal eighth urade exumina ttoriH. Do not gorget tho d.-ites, as this will be the only notice you will receive. Examination will be held at usual places. ImportHiU Blanks for the final report to this nflicH have hern fnrwarded t each teachwr. Please K-itvo a complete record of the work of the sehool ear. whether you expect to tench in the same district or elsewhnre AH reports should be forwnrded within one week aft-r the closing of school. Platte Ciunty Institute will .-ninono June 12, and rem-ua in tvi-bum live Ias No excu-es will lie granted, except to those who are in actual alteiei'inci- at a Bummer school duriMC the time the in stitute is in session. Teachcre' examination will tie held April 21 and 22. Tench, in whose certi- Ifeates expire dining the Miuruer should Commence work To: niienuin mi tho above dates. F. 8 Leerou.Countv Supeiinteiident. Omaha Will Visit Us. On hundred Omaha eapititii-ls. wholesalers and mannfitclurcr.s will make a tour through Neluat-ka May 21 to 27 on a ep -rial train. The route in cludes a visit to uooiit every station on the Union Pact tic r.ulro:id in Nehnn-ka from Kimball to Omaha, including all the branches. While out to boost Miioiesale and manufacturing Smsineus in Omaha, these parties have proved yreat Iio-ikii r:i in the pant fur the cities and towns winch they visit, cuirj ii. g as they ln a num ber of newspaper and mngs.ine writers who never fail to send iu boosts for every town and city which they visit; photographers and moving picture camera operators are always on these train. These men investigate every oppt r tunity and resource of the communities which they visit, have been known to spend several hours looking over live stock, piles of wool, hay, prize grains and city improvements. The cities and towns they will visit on this taip will be of more intimate interest to them, being an all Nebraska trip. Many of these men make careful notes about each town, returning with books full of information for their houses and their friends, thus making it not only a trip profitable to themselves, but one which some day will yield good returns to the towns and cities visited. Protection for Cranberries. The weather bureau at Washington has decided to establish four stations In the cranberry belt It is announced that one will be located at Halifax near one of the biggest cranberrv bops in the state. " Tlie bureau will arrange the sta tion so that in case of cold weather tha growers in the Cape, Cod district can be notified by telephone service to flood their bogs. Halifax corre spondence Bolton Transcript A BROKEN LIFE-PRESERVER Homer Davenport Tells About His Ex- perience in Learning to Skat on Rollers. When Mr. Homer Davenport was a boy roller skating reached Silverton. In his hook. "The Country Boy," he tells of his plan to learn without get ting hurt, as he thought falling about the skating rink was no joke. He bor rowed a pair of overalls of the stout est man in the village, and a long pil low from his mother's bed, and be lieved the game as good as won when he entered the door of the rink. I lowered the pillow into the seat of the overalls after I had put them on, and then got a boy to hold the pillow up againBt my back while I put my vest over it, and I dived out into the thick of the skaters. To my astonish ment, I didn't fall. I leaned back and tried to fall once to see how it would be, and I really couldn't. Pd been skating fifteen minutes when I did fall, but fell forward and slammed my hands on the floor. An elderly lady, who had had some troubles of her own that afternoon, Ekated up to me and told me she thought perhaps we went at it too fast; so we were leaning against the wall talking over the scientific points of It, when I "gave the audience a rare treat. While leaning there talking, all at once my feet, that were close togeth er, started, and rolled out toward the middle of the room. I don't think I bent a finger, but I fell exactly like a tree, and lo and behold! the pillow burst. It must have been five min utes before they got through laughing nil over the house. In that time the feathers were so thick they followed in a boiling streak after every skater. The manager declared a recess of ten minutes while they swept out the hall, and at this point came another big laugh, as three men had been sweeping twenty minutes and they haiin't got over three feathers out into th- street. Some fellow suggested sprinkling, so they did: but most of them were in the air. and wouldn't come down to be sprinkled, so they had to close the rink for the afternoon. The manager of the rink tried to collect damages 'roni my father, and I think there was a compromise made. Youth's Companion. Old-Time Squirrel Rifle. When Col. W. A. Toombs returned recently from the old homestead near Coiltown he brought back with him his father's squirrel rifle, which has been continuously in possession of the family since 1846. It is hand-made throughout and was of that full stocked type common among the hunt ers of Tennessee and Kentucky three generations ago. The barrel Is 47 inches long and is furnished with th finest level sights for long range shooting. Its original caliber was 120 bullets to the pound, but having been dressed out and re rifled several times it now carries 60 to the pound. The lock is of the back action type and it In as good condition today as when It left the maker's hands 70 years ago. The triggers are a man-el of workma'nship. They are of that kind known as "double" or "hair" triggers and are governed with a set screw which regulates them un til they will respond to the slightest touch. Madisonville Hustler. Ancient Greece. Three-fifths of tho interest which the modern Greeks take in themselves and that is much comes from their worship of their assumed ancestors, the Greeks of the historic period from Homer to Honorius. Every year we discover new things about this vastly interesting people ?ome broken bits of art. some fragment of a literature which has nine-tenths perished, or sleeps in undiscovered crypts or Egyp tian dustheaps or else some new theory of orign and pilgrimage, in vented and elucidated by ingenious scholarship in England, Franco or Ger many, and of late Tjv excavators from America. Vase-painting, for instance, a Greek art coeval with Greek tioetry 'older perchance, hut we know noth ing accurately of the beginnings of either and more persistent even in its fragments than the later art of the grand painters. Apclles, Polygnotus. Zeuxis, an dthe rest, of whose known work nothing remains. Mrs. Judkins a Veteran Deer Hunter. Mrs. Walter Judkins of Portland is a woman to whom the lure of the Maine woods is strong. She has just returned from her twenty-third season in the autumn forest, with a record of 28 deer to her credit. Mrs. Jud kins shot her first deer when a girl of fifteen -while in tho woods in search of partridge in her home town of Gilead. Mrs. Judkins during her twenty three years of hunting experience has tried many varieties of hunting cos tumes and has finally settled upon what she deems the most practical. She wears In the woods a stout gray sweater, a pair of very full bloomers, the stout huntsman's stockings and shoes similar in shape to a moccasin and waterproof, with top of skin and vamp and soles of heavy rubber. Kennebunk Journal. Proud of Fine Hall. The Daughters of the American Revolution are proud of the fact that they have completed their $300,000 me morial hall in Washington without a 'lawsuit or a strike." The furnishings cost $50,000 and the hall is all paid for except tho mortgage put upon it by Mrs. Donald McLean, and that is be ing decreased each year. A War on Wi.'d Pigeons. A great slaughter of wild pigeons took place all over the Isle of Wi'ht this week and it is estimated that quite a thousand guns were enrolled for the campaign, among them beln landowners, occupiers and shooting tenants who were publicly invited n take -part. ... - . , , The guns were stationed in woods and coppices over a wide area. Soxe big bags were obtained. The farm ers have suffered terribly owins to the depredations caused by the wild pigeons. London Evening Standard. " MUST THANK JESKR ASKING GIRL'S PA NOW EASY FOR THE SUITOR. Old Custom la Happily Falling lnt Disuse The Bride la tha One Whe la Now Taking All tha Chances. We've often wondered why It is al ways the bridegroom who Is rattled during the marriage ceremony when it's the bride who Is taking all the chances. Not that this question has anything to do with what we are going to talk about; hut neither has any thing else, and one must start some where. And really it is strange how cool the girl always is. Our theory is that this is because a person doesn't easily get rattled at the complications that fol low the business In which he is an ex pert. The tyro is the one who is nervous.- Getting married a man Is entering unknown ground. The girl. on the other hand, has the whole field plotted. Getting married is her busi ness it is the man's fate. Where the man falls down first is in the horrible ordeal of "asking papa." This old custom is happily falling into. disuse, but in many old-fashioned fam ilies It is still considered necessary. The conventional picture shows a timid young man, hat in hand, an-, proachlng an ogreish old person to whom he has to introduce himself. The young man fully expects to be killed, but he usually gets off with a few minor bruises. This is the way it is done in the funny papers and in some of our more conservative famil ies. In real life the man has an easier job. The girl casually announces at breakfast that she intends to marry Jack. Mamma screams: "What! Didn't I tell you I didn't approve of him?' "Yes," answers the daughter, cheerfully, "but that'll be all right. He doesn't approve of you, either." Papa doesn't even get a look-in. TO salve his feelings tho young chap con sents to call on him. "I suppose Mol- lie told you we were going to get mar ried," he observes, handing out a cigar. "Hope you and I won't let it interfere with our friendship." "Are you sure you love my daugh ter?" asks the old man. "Great Scott!" exclaims the young er, with a giggle. "You aren't going to get sentimental at your time of life, are you?" The father blushes and of fers to buy a drink. Sometimes, to be sure, it is an or deal for the suitor. He considers it a doubtful compliment when he says: "Can I have your daughter?" and the old man sajs: "No; but I'd like to give you a job with my firm. I hate to see such nerve as yours going to waste." There are so many come backs to the "Can you support her in the style to which she has been accus tomed?" gag that the modern suitor has his prospective father-in-law licked before the conversation is fair ly started. Life and its problems are simplified by a sense of humor. The "Dear Fiends." A prominent sportsman, who is president of an equally prominent club of fellow sportsmen, recently had a scrap with them and it became necessary for him to write them a let ter. His stenographer, in gay and lightsome mood peculiar to the mem bers of her craft, inadvertently drop ped an "r" and began the letter "Dear Fiends." The president, preoccupied with the subject matter of the letter, signed It without observing the omis sion and the communication reached tho club as originally written. The president pro tern is a man of gentle voice, beseeching manners and limpid humor. In sweet, almost girlishly sil ver tones he announced at a club din ner, "I have here a letter from our esteemed president, who is not with us this evening, and it becomes my pleasure to read the communication to you at this moment. It is as fol lows: 'Dear Fiends.' " Here he paused solemnly, but for only a moment. The club members, recognizing the situa tion, yelled one mighty yell, as men may at a stag dinner, and the scrap with their president was over. Thus may one touch of the typewriter artist make the whole club kin. Private Fortunes of Sweden. By order of the secretary of treasury a careful investigation the was made of the value of all estates of de ceased persons for the years 190C-1908, and a calculation based on these fig ures was worked out. indicating the approximate value of the total of the private fortunes in Sweden, says Con sul General E. D. Winslow. Stockholm. The result of this investigation gave the citizens of the kingdom credit for $2,197,000,000,000 divided among 1,238. r.00 estates, viz: la the provinces, 1, 022.300 estate, aggregating $1,180,000. 000.000; in the cities. 216,200 estates. aggregating $1,017,000,000,000; the pri vate estates in Stockholm were esti mated at $452,000,000,000. The average assets for each individual for the kingdom were $402; for the provinces. $260. and for the cities. $760. except Stockholm, where the fortunes were estimated at $1,425 for each citizen. Bargain Sale. "If you are looking for bargains," said the broker, "I can suit you. I can offer you some stocks at ten cents a share." "But why are they so cheap?" de manded the lady shopper. "You see, they have been slightly damaged by water." What She Forgot. A lady who had given a workman rgaged on some work at her house - ilass of beer, afterwards asked him ' h---::I:cd it. .1. is pure beer. I brew it myself, .ird i: Is composed oftaothing hut malt id heps." - -And hvater." Joined In 'the man. Ah. yes. certainly, and. the water. I had forgotten that." -.V. you didxit forge:, the water, rnn'am; maybe ltwerethe malt and l.wi- van forjgot." SOME ODD SKINS AND HIDES! Queer Pelts That Find Their Way Into American and Canadian 11 aaParVajv Among the skims and, aides which flad their way lato the American and) Canadian marketa are the boar skins,' which come from Mexico, and the hidej of the Mexican peccary, with fur or bristles of a pepper aad salt mixture In color, the beast being a savage look ing animal alive. Like deer skins, boar hides are shipped dry. The boar skin makes a heavier leather than deer skin and Is used for glove trim mings. Goat skins in large numbers are im ported from the various Latin Amer ican countries, including the West In dies; but the great sources of the world's supply of goat skins are China, Russia and the East Indies In . the order named. From those coun tries there are Imported annually mil lions of goat skins which are made into leather. 90 per cent, of which is used in the manufacture of shoes. Goat skins are shipped principally dry. From the countries to the south of the United States are brought annual ly some thousands of alligator hides, mostly from Mexico and the United States of Colombia, with some from Ecuador. These alligators are shot or are speared from boats. Alligator hides are shipped wet salted. If they were once dried they never could be softened sufficiently to be made into leather. To be kept in perfect condition in the hot countries the alligator must be skinned and the hide salted right away. The supply is still sufficient, but in the countries from which the hides are now mainly brought alllga-, tors are diminishing in number. There are too many hunters and too many young alligators are taken. Formerly some alligator leather was used for shoes and boots, but now it Is used chiefly In the manufacture of handbags and suitcases. Occasionally a few manatee or sea cow hides, which come from Mexico, find their way north. These hides are shipped wet salted. The manatee hide tans Into a very thick leather, cheap er than walrus leather but used like it for the making of buffing wheels for polishing purposes. From Mexico also come a few tiger cub skins, which are tanned and made up into rugs. Repulsed Their Hero. George Barr McCutcheon is noted for his shyness and retiring disposi tion, and some thero are mean enough to credit these not entirely unworthy traits to the fact that he figures that his "Bill Nye countenance" and "shining pate" are apt to cause a cold ness on the part of matinee girls and others who worship his romantic he roes, says the Now York Telegraph. The following story concerning him Is worth repeating. Two young girls were discussing him: "I just dote on McCutcheon. Don't you think 'Bev erly of Graustark is just about the swellest book you ever read?" Said Mame to Gert: "Indeed I do. I'd give anything for a photograph of Mc Cutcheon. and if I could only meet him, o-o-o-o!" McCutcheon heard tho young lady; he arose from his seat, donned his best "Graustark" smile, and then Said Gert to Mame: "If that bald-headed onion that's been making googoos across the aisle for the last half hour dares to speak to me I'll slam him on the map with my umbrella." And McCutcheon folded his tent like tho Arabs and beat It. Perchance if Mame and Gert cast their optics on this page they will realize how near they came to meet ing their favorite author. Ignorance In High Place. Funny Btories are current of high officials in England at the present day. Grant Duff answers for one. School boys ought to know that there is a town on the Persian Gulf called Bushlre, once great and still of high Importance strategically. A person age was sent there from India on dip lomatic business. In due time he for warded the items of his expense at Bushlre to the foreign office, along with others incurred. The amount was transmitted to him with these latter deducted. On inquiry he was told that the foreign office could not recognize 'bus hire. May one dare to Impute Ignorance to Charles Darwin? Certainly he was the first to laugh If, in after years, he recollected advising Sir Joseph Hoofler to write to "Wien," "that unknown place where they publish so many books. Where Is It, by-the-by?" When his fame was already worldwide, Darwin did not know that Wien is Vienna. Many Suns to Give Light. "During the day we say that the Eun shines; during the night we should say that the suns shine," writes a Boston correspondent of the New York Times. "During the day ono sun reigns over us; during the night many suns sparkle and scintillate up on us. The only difference Is that our sun of day is so much nearer than our suns of night; but there Is ono sun of night that, during our winter, far outshines the other sparkling sky gems. That sun is Slritis, whose dis tance has been estimated at 50 bil lions of miles, whose size has been conjectured to be as vast as that of seven thousand suns like our own." The Mean Old Thing. Mrs. Scrappington You provoke mo, till I am absolutely beside raj-self! Mr. Scrappington Then stand off a little way from yourself and see how ridiculous you look! Puck. Origin of Dollar Sign. "Pieces of eight" mean the Spanish. peso duro. or hard dollar, bearing the numeral eight and being the value of' eight reals. Our commercial sign for the dollar is supposed by some authorities to have reference to this eight, the ver tical strokes representing the Pillars of Hercules, which in the beginning were stamped on some of the Spanish dollars. According to another ac count the dollar sign is derived from. the stamp "SR," accompanied by twe j vertical siroaes. QUARREL IN PRIVATE MAGISTRATE LAYS DOWN LAW ON FAMILY TJLTS. In Spite of Better Manner Human Nature la Unregenerate Instinct for Privacy teen In Meat Degraded. "If you want to quarrel with your wife," so the magistrate's oracular words are reported, "you must do so strictly In private." Thus does the law champion the commonweal Mat rimonial quarrels it holds, no doubt, to be an outrage on decency, and cor rupting to the morals of the young. Tho point, perhaps, seems too obvious to be Interesting. Some instinct de manding privacy for these affairs la to be detected even in the most de graded. Even when the quarrel leads to physical violence in the street, hus band and wife are agreed In consider ing it a private matter with which neither tho law nor public opinion has any concern. The ministrations of neighbors and police are alike re sented. And why, you ask with indignation, do these superficial paragraphs con cern themselves with such ugly and sordid scenes? Purely for edifica tion. We are agreed that In the ex treme and brutal case the law and the public may very well Interfere, not only for the protection of the sufferer, but for the prevention of In cidents which are disgusting. But we do not maintain with sufficient ve hemence that all kinds of matrimonial quarrels are disgusting to the sensi tive mind. You have probably a right to think your husband a fool. You havo no right to call him fool before anyono else. Not for the sake of his feelings, but for public decency. Who, you inquire with Indignation. does call her husband a fool? Such language belongs to the same low stratum as black eyes. This Is a mere prevarication. People of education and breeding, do not. Indeed, call spades spades or husbands Idiots, but they imply with a virulence that far surpasses any mere unadorned speech. Of course it is not suggest ed that the wife is any worse than the husband. He also allows himself tones and phrases which are designed to sting. The old tale of Lord Braxfleld still has its moral. He was at whist, when his partner displeased him, and he broke out: "What arc ye doing, ye donnart auld " and then recollected himself with an "Eh, eh, your par don's begged, ma'am. I took ye for my ain wife." Manners have changed for the better, but human nature re mains unregenerate. Husbands and wives, when the weather Is bad or a train is late, still allow themselves counterchecks and quips quarrelsome which are none the less ugly for being decently wrapped up. What they do in private Is as the magistrate sagely suggests, their own affair. A word that cuts or a tone that burns in private can be privately cured with speed. You arc unwise if you cannot forget at leisure what was said in haste, so long as it was said without a witness. But the public sneer is another matter. An audience multiplies tho effect of everything. Siberian Wild Flowers. Siberia seems to have a set pro gram for her flowers, which are beautiful in variety and coloring. Sep tember gathers the bluo flowers to her bosom, and under her languid and caressing touch blossom myriads of dainty bluebells on long and tender stems. In the rocky soil of the hilltops blue scabiosa shares its playground with drak blue snapdragon, and in the shady spot3 of tho road grow, tall and hardy, purple bluo chrysanthemums. Earlier in summer yellow holds sway buttercups, daisies and violets, and after them red-pinks and very deep briar roses. Delicious jam is concocted from the seedpods of the wild rose. When summer comes an array of Jars and glasses and a big kettle Join hands with hat boxes and shoe bags and travel countryward. A tem porary stove is built of stones not far from the house, and here simmers slowly tho year's provision of pre serves and Jams and jellies, absorb ing at the same time great doses of sun and fresh air. America. Happy Idea. Two Jews had long been bitter ene mies and had often done each other all the damago they could. With one of them this enmity became a mania and finally he had a vision. An angel appeared to him and said that he could have one wish, his dearest wish, gratified, but with this proviso: Ros enthal, his enemy, was to receive twice or double the blessing conferred on him. "Veil." said Ikey, "If I wish for a million dollars, he gets two mil lion, and I don't vant that." After puzzling over the problem for somq time, a happy idea struck him. and putting one hand over one eye he said: "I vish dot I had one blind Astute Marplot. "You are going to Interest yourself In this reform enterprise?" "Certainly," replied Senator Sor ghum. "But I thought it was unfavorable to your friends." "It is. And I'm going to interest myself in It far enough to let me of fer suggestions that will render It im practical." A Trunk-Packing Hint. One girl who is something of a trav eler has for her trunk a large sheet of blue muslin. This is put in the bot tom of the trunk before the packing is started. When everything is In it is folded over the top of the clothes and firmly pinned with safety pins. With this precaution the girl Is sure to find her garments as smooth at the end of a trip as at the start Another of her packing methods If to 6tbw in the hatbox of the trunk atf the loose tisue paper that comas to the house. This does away with a mad search for tissue paper when naMHpg i8 to be done. Mwf9llaitL Just Received Our New Cadillac Torpedo which is the best car;on;the market today. The Cadillac is noted for its easy riding qualities, and is recognized the world over as superior to any motor car manufactured. All parts are interchangeable. Undoubtedly it is the best car ever brought to Columbus. Call on us and let us show you thatt 11)11 Cadil lac Torpedo. You will certainlyDadmire it. It is the classiest Torpedo car on the market today. DISCHNER AUTO GO. Corner 13th and M Streets Golumbus, Nebraska RECORD HARD-LUCK STORY' "Bill" Jordan Has an Experience That Caps All Stories of Mis fortune. You've heard all those funny hard luck stories, but this is one that hap pens to be true and caps them all. says the New York correspondent of the Cinclnati Times-Star. "Bill" Jor dan Is a teamster. He hadn't eaten for 24 hours and had been out of work for a week when he met a man who promised him a job. "Meet me on the corner of Fiftieth street and Lexing ton avenue at nine o'clock In the morning." said the man. Jordan was getting weak from hunger. He went to one of the Bowery pawnbrokers and traded his clothes for a worse suit and enough money to fill him with buckwheat cakes. Ho had Just called for the cakes in one of the dumps on tho Bowery where cash accompanies each order as a guarantee of good faith and had paid for them when are broke out in the restaurant. Jor dan managed to selzo three off the top and ran into the street, munching them, but his cakes and his money were Irretrievably gone. That was at night. He walked about all night and It was a bitterly cold night be causo he didn't have a nickel with which to buy a "flop" downtown. Jor dan is a self-respecting man and he would not beg. Pretty shaky from want of food and the all night fight against tho cold, he appeared at the corner of Fiftieth street and Lexing ton avenue an hour before time. While he was there the explosion took place In the Grand Central station. Jordan was shot across the) street by It and when he came to some time later he noticed people laughing at him. The entire rear elevation of that miserable old suit he had res cued from the pawnbroker had been blown out. He couldn't even walk on the streets until he had picked up some castoff newspapers and. pinned them across the gaps. And then he dared not sit down. He returned to tho corner where he had been told I to wait and stayed there for hours. 1 shaking in the chill breeze, waiting for the man to come to whom he had hired. In the meantime he volun teered his services to those who were clearing away the ruins, although he was almost too weak to do any good He helped carry out ono of the vic tims of the explosion. It was the man who had hired him. Aviators' Superstitions. A chapel in the department of the pharente-Inferieure. France, called Notre Dame du Plantln. has just been dedicated to aviators, and a medal with the effigy of this new Notre Dame is going to be struck and dis tributed to all flyers who ask for it. It Is a curious commentary upon our hu man weaknesses that the adepts in :his newest science or sport, who seem to brave everything, aro really rather superstitious persons. Santos-Dumont attributes his Immunity from accidents to a medal of St. Benolt, presented to him by Comtesse d Su, which he wears on a bracelet. Edmond Polllot always carries about with him a four-leaved clover, and is very fond of horseshoes, which he collects. Tabuteau, who holds several records, believes, like a Monte Carlo cambler. the number 28 is favor able to him, while poor Delagrange. who met with his death at Bordeaux, had a passion for the figure 13 for no other reason apparently than that he was born on March 13. 1873. YOU are going to -LOOK YOUR BEST in that NEW EASTER SUIT. There's no better time for some new PICTURES and they are ideal Easter remembrances for your friends. ELITE STUDIO "Thirty' CALMEST MAN IN WORLD News That He Hat Inherited Fortune Does Not Change McCluskey. U A few days ago the calmest man in the world arrived here, says the New York correspondent of the Cincinnati Times-Star. He Is John McCluakey. who, for his sixty years has been a farm laborer in Scotland. Some months ago his brother James died in this city, and left a large fortuae of several thousand dollars to the broth er he had not seen since they bade each other goodby In tho heather, 40 years ago. Andrew Wilson, an attor ney of this city, was named as the ad ministrator. It was his dutyto flad the lucky brother. "He was slicing turnips for the sheep on bis employ er's farm, up among the mist clad hills of Scotland," said Mr. Wilson, "when I found him. I bad traced his life from the old farm on which he was born step by step through the 40 years of ill-paid and often most unpleasant labor before I approached him. It was not difficult for he had held but a few positions in all those years. Every one In the countryside knew him. " 'Are you John McCluskeyr I asked. " T am,' said he without taking his eyes from the turnips and the knife. '"Your brother James is dead In New York,' said I. "'Aweel, aweel, all men must e'en die.' said John McCluskey. slicing away. " 'He left you a great fortune,' said I. T want you to come to the house with me so that I can establish your Identity and arrange for you to enter into possession of the estate.' " 'I'll talk to ye at sax o'clock, young mon,' said he. 'I'll be busy till then. Thay fortune will keep, but thay tur nips will not.' " DISEASE SPREAD BY INSECTS House Fly, Mosquito and Bedbug Are Chief Sources of Con tagion. A Texas physician has demon strated that smallpox, admittedly a filth disease, is communicated only by the bite of the bedbug. That yellow fever and malaria are com municable noly by bite of an In fected mosquito Is also an established fact. The typhoid scourge has its in ception in the filth that is distributed by the common house fly. Rats scat ter the bubonic plague, and tubercu losis is contracted generally through, breathing the germs that are carried In dttst. With these facts known it would seem an easy task to reduce or eliminate the hazard to life that is found in these dread diseases. Mosqui toes may be eliminated by proper drainage of stagnant pools or by oil ing the surface of such pools. They do not breed in considerable numbers save In dead water. Those that are not eliminated by precautionary meas ures may be shut out of the homes by proper screening. House flies breed in trash and garbage. Destruction of these breeding places will to a large extent do away with the fly. Those that are left can be shut out of the homes by proper screening. With knowledge of tho facts concerning the origin of disease the people are able to make plans for their safety. Con certed effort is necessary, however, and the civic pride of every communi ty should be enlisted in warfare against known dangers such as are found In the presenco of flies and ' mosanltoaa V