ssssssesBaMNiEMtfBafcS&i r iiJ t I. A1 ' - l-'l I. 'U i lit Columbns Wkm4mrijjZ!g2? "" to i President and Mrs. Taft celebrated , fat Washington" their twenty-fifth wed- BY THE TRIBUNE PTG. CO. COLUMBUS, FROM MANY POINTS EVENTS OP THE DAY HELD TO FEW LINES. DAW EVENTS BOILED DOWN Personal, Political, Foreign and Other Intelligence Interesting to the General Reader Washington. ' l James Keeley, general manager of the Chicago Tribune, swore out a war rant for the arrest of George O. Glav is, of Chicago, charging him with stealing books, documents and papers the Tribune's property, said to con cern evidence of "moral turptitude of a United States senator and other government officers." Senator La Follette of Wisconsin made protest to the senate commit tee on the judiciary against the con firmation of Guy D. Goff as district attorney for the eastern district of that state. Mr. La Follette complained that he had not been consulted on Mr. Golf's appointment, and that he sup posed this slight had been due to his. opposition to the Payne-Aldrich tariff bill. Investigation of "chronic titleitis," described as a disease of "rich, trust made women, is urged in a resolu tion introduced in the house by Rep resentative Sabath of Illinois, who would have the state department in quire why only two dozen American peeresses .have been permitted to take part in the coronation ceremo nies in London and to ascertain the amount this country is sending across the Atlantic annually to maintain the titles. Chief Moore, of the government weather bureau, has filed with the house committee on expenditures in the department of agriculture, a num ber of a voluntary commendation of the weather service which were sent him by western fruit growers. The commendations were based on the statement given out through Chair man Moss of the house committee that western fruit growers had filed with the committee charges that the service was of no value to them. General. President Taft discussed currency reform at a meeting of New York bankers. A tax on automobiles to make froood roads is the plan of Senator Simmons. Bruno Oscar Klein, composer, con ductor and teacher of music, is dead at his home in New York. Old and dreary Westminster abbey was transformed into a scene of light and beauty at the coronation. Lir Noble B. McKee, superintendent ot the Missouri school for the deaf, died of heart disease, aged fifty eight. senator Gallinger said Canadian reciprocity was the opening wedge that would pry loose the protection system. Sarah Bernhardt sailed for France after a tour of America. She said that she probably will return for an other tour in 1915. Sylvester Smith, former general manager of the Union Pacific railway and of the Denver Rio Grande, died in Chicago, aged 72. Approximately 20,000,000 gallons of liquors are shipped by express, principally from mail order houses di rect to consumers in prohibition 6tates. Habeas corpus proceedings looking to the release of Charles W. Morse, the New York banker, from the fed eral prison at Atlanta, will be begun In the United States court Dr. David Jayne Hill, who recent ly resigned his post as American am bassador to Germany, left for Kiel to present his letters of recall to Em peror William. It was held by the interstate com merce commission that a privilege savoring of a gratuity can not be or dered continued by the commission unless the original granting of the privilege rest" n some legal obli gation. William I. )unne, former American newspaper man imprisoned at Mont erey, Mexico, for participation in an alleged plot to kill Francisco I. Ma dero, and freed of the charge, arrived at San Antonio. Tex., bearing tales of horrible atrocities perpetrated upon m while in jail. Advices from Fez, Morocco, under date of June 12, state that George C. Reed of Weeping Water, Neb., the secretary of Moroccan mission of the Gospel union, is safe, but still a pris oner of the rebellion tribesmen in the mountains near Sefroo. President Taft nominated Robert W. Kemp as receiver of public mon eys at Missoula, Mont. Philip Bracken Fleming of Nebras ka, was the honor man of the gradu ating class at the West Point mili tary school. A committee said to represent the Gould interests have purchased the International & Great Northern rail road at receivership sale. At Cincinnati Edgar S. Cooke was declared not guilty of embezzling $24, C00 from the Eig Four railroad. The jury was out about three minutes less than two hours. Every common railway carier will be required, after July 1, 1911, to re port to the Interstate Commerce com mission by telegraph "any collision, derailment or other accident," result ing in the death of one or more per sons. Reports from thirty-two counties In northwestern Iowa, eastern South Da kota and northeastern Nebraska indi cate that the prospects for a bumper crop never was better. In those sec tions wnere wneai is raisea on a large scale the reports show that a good crop is in sight. Only in a few counties win ine narvcii ue iigm. J NEBRASKA. dinS anniversary. Talking to Yale students. Attorney General Wickersham declared against the Arizona constitution. The campaign publicity bill was cast aside in the senate. The United States has officially rec ognized the republic of Portugal. President Taft will be unable to visit Huron, S. D., during his west ern trip. The American medical association convention will meet this month im Los Angeles. The London public got a new glimpse of royalty in the second day parade of the streets. Fourteen secretaries of retail lum ber dealers associations were indict ed by a Chicago grand jury. President Taft sent a message to congress urging amendment to the pure food and drugs act. Under orders from Washington many mail cars are now being hauled behind the baggage cars. The house refused to concur in the senate amendment on direct election of United States senators. The senate is in such an ugly snarl that the fate of the reciprocity bill is hanging in the balance. Anselmo Braamcamp was elected president of the republic of Portugal by the constituent assembly. Testimony at the sugar hearing dis closed that Havemeyer was a silent partner of the Mormon church. Insurgent republicans and demo crats of the senate have formed a new combine to force tariff legisla tion. The Panama bond sale shows that Uncle Sam is in good health and the business men of the country convales cent. James Proctor Knott, former gov ernor of Kentucky, and prominent for many years in congress, died at Leba non, Ky. In an address at the Yale alumni luncheon the president spoke in praise of recent supreme court de cisions. Rear Admiral Hugo Osterhaus has succeeded to the command of the At lantic fleet, taking the place of Ad miral Schroeder. A storm which included hail, wind, lightning and rain swept central Kan sas, doing thousands of dollars' dam age to farm property. Ferdinand Edmund Duez, receiver for the dissolved religious congrega tions of France, was convicted by a jury of embezzling $1,200,000. Mrs. Mary L. Cox, formerly of Day ton, O., was granted a divorce from Congressman James M. Cox, newspa per publisher and financier of that city. Governor Wilson gave out a state ment expressing his pleasure over the success of the commission gov ernment movement in Trenton, N. J. Subscriptions to the British portion of the $30,000,000 Hukwang railway loan to China were opened and im mediately closed, having been over subscribed. Four members of the H. O. Mills paugh family at Westnort, S. D., are lying at the point of death from trichinae poisoning, due to eating raw ham. Rev. Dr. John Clifford of London, England, president of the Baptist world alliance took a "decided stand against any "unitey of organizations" among the christian churches. The death of Syed Ali Belgraml at Hardor, Oudh, from heart disease, aged 57, removes one of the most ver satile and eminent Indian scholars. He spoke a dozen tongues, and could read, write and think in twenty. Apparently uneasy over the grow ing habit of mineral water drinking by senators and their office staffs. Senator Lodge introduced and had adopted a resolution which is expected to check the practice. George Burns, Cleveland, O., aged fifteen, fatally shot his father, Seward Burns, aged forty-five, when he came and found his father abusing his mother. Senatorial reports of crop damage in the northwest made the Chicago market go skyward. The battleship Florida, now nearing completion at the New York navy yard, was ordered placed in commis sion on September 15. Her sister ship. the Utah, is expected to be completed on August 1. The reports emanating from Vienna of fatalities resulting from the recent hurricane were greatly exaggerated. So far as known, not more than twenty-five lives were lost. Edward Valentine Lee, under ar rest at Buffalo, charged with the theft of $46,000 from the paymaster's safe while serving as a clerk on the battleship Georgia at Havana last February,, married Miss Audrey F. Kelsey of Washington. After the ROOTS AMENDMENT WILL UNDOUBTEDLY BE DE FEATED IN THE SENATE. NEBRASKA IN BRIEF. News NeUs of Interest from Varloua Sections.' INSURGENTS WILL COME OUT Sparring for Proper Sort of Opening and Look to La Follette aa Leader. Washington. The Root amendment to the wood pulp and paper schedule of the Canadian reciprocity bill, which the administration has been fighting as fatal to the agreement, undoubtedly will be defeated before the senate adjourns. The wool tariff and the free list bills as the house passed them do not exactly meet the approval of the democratic force in the senate nor that of the republican insurgents, but they form the basis for the fight that is to bring Canadian reciprocity and the whole tariff question Into the open for a protracted debate. The extent to which the insurgent republican senators will be Inclined to go is expected to be made clear during the tariff discussion this week. So far only indefinitely out lining their course they have" indi cated that they favor all the valu able tariff reductions that- they can squeeze out of the situation. Some of them have asserted their readiness to put on to the recip rocity bill any amendments they think susceptible of successfully threading the executive and legisla tive channels, even in the face of the president's veto threat. There is a decided lack of demo cratic support, however, for the pro posals that the insurgents have hint ed at. Senator Bailey will fight for an amending of the Canadian agree ment to exempt from free trade the products of the farm, but while he will have some democratic and much insurgent support for this plan, it Is not expected to prevail. Senator La Follette is working on general amendments that he will of fer to the reciprocity measure and to the wool and free list bills. He i3 de termined to lead a hard fight for a general plan of revision of the more Important schedules on the tariff law. His action and his amendments and arguments are being awaited by many of the insurgents who do not care to open up a fight until they have had the opportunity of seeing what he proposes and the effect his arguments have. Meantime they are preparing for the fight which prom ises to be confined principally to In surgents and a few democrats. The direct election of senators will come up again early in the week. The house has voted down the Bris tow amendment, attached to the bill in the senate, and has asked for a conference on the measure. The con ference committee of the two houses is expected to be named within a day or two. The senate will also receive the territory bill, passed by the house early in the week. The territories committee approved the bill as pas sed by the house, admitting Arizona and New Mexico without the ap proval of their constitutions. Awaiting a clearing up of the po litical situation in the senate and more definite knowledge as to wheth er tariff legislation which the lower branch may originate will have any chance of passage by the senate, the house this week practically will mark time. Wok on the new postofflce build ing at Franklin has begun. Prof. S. S. Wolf, of a Lincoln bust- ness college, goes to Aurora July 1 to assume the presidency of Aurora college. George Geisler, of Burt county, 12 years old, was killed by being -thrown into a barbed wire fence by a pony he was riding. Neligh votel bonds in the sum of $10,000 for sewerage. Strong opposi tion was in evidence, but the propo sition carried by ten majorityr Former County Treasurer Fred Thietje of Cuming county with hia daughters, Erna and Laverne, left West Point for Germany for a four months visit. Mr. Thietje is a native of Schleswig-Holstein and will spend the summer visiting the scenes of his boyhood days. A big crop of corn is expected this year near Albion, Neb., according to F. M. Weitzel, banker of that city. Wheat is as good as usual while oats is a little below the average. Much is expected of the corn crop provided conditions are as good from now on as they were during the late spring and fore -part of June. The brick house on the Mooney farm west of Rulo, long a landmark in that part of the country, was en tirely destroyed by fire, and the loss is fully $5,000. James Mooney, jr and his sister Maggie were in Rulo to attend a circus. Their mother started a fire in the oil stove and went out of doors. Upon her return she found the kitchen in flames. Boone county has appealed to the supreme court from a judgment ob tained by four towns in the county for the return of half the road tax col lected on city property since 1883. The city of Albion obtained a judg ment for $5,466.53, Petersburg got judgment for $821.25. Cedar Rapids had a judgment for $2,265.80 and St. Edwards obtained judgment for $1,- Isaiib' s Prophecy CoBceniif Seuacherib tmUf2, 1911 mmm SpedUbr Anwiffd for This 1 LE88ON TEXT-Iaalah 37:14-35. MEMORY VERSES-33-35. GOLDEN TEXT "God Is our refute and strength, a very present help in trou ble." Pss. 46'i. TIME Probably, B. C. 701-697. toward the close of Hexeklah's reign. PLACE-Jerusalem and vicinity. The destruction of the army was probably southwest of Judah toward Egypt. THE MAINE EXPLOSION. Will Secret of Destruction of Ship Never Be Known. Tampa, Fla. "The secret of the destruction of the battleship Maine will never be known," said General W. H. Bixby, chief of engineers in charge of the work of raising the Maine, upon his arrival here from Havana. The destruction to the ves sel was such, says General Bixby, and the deterioration has been so great that it will be impossible to tell whether the ship was blown up from a force within or without. The great est force, however, was from the in side, indicating that the forward magazine had exploded. Whether this was from a sympathetic explo sion caused by a torpedo from the outside may forever remain a mystery. ceremony he returned to his celL Personal. The will of Mrs. Eddy, founder of the Christian Science church, was ad mitted to probate. Among lumber dealers secretaries indicted by the federal grand jury were two Nebraskans. Edgar S. Cooke denied that a cent had been stolen from the Big Four railroad by either himself or War riner. Woodmen of the World selected Jacksonville, Fla., for the 1913 con vention. Kainkaid was the only member of the Nebraska house delegation to vote against the wool bill. Horace Havemeyer, son of the dead sugar king, testified at the hearing before the house committee. Cyrus McCormick, of the Interna tional Harvester company, gave tes timony in the Lorimer investigtlon. Two aviators were killed near Vin cennes. France, and several others were mjurod. Former President Diaz of Mexico may decide to reside in Spain. President Hadly delivered the bac calaureate sermon before the gradu ating class at Yale. Madero was again acclaimed on his return to Mexico City. Chairman Penrose or the senate fl. nance committee says he can mus ter sixty votes for the reciprocity biilL Secretary Knox has been sum moned by the house committee to ex plain an expenditure of $5,000. Cholera Suspect on Ship. New York. The steamer Ham. burg, from Genoa and Naples, which arrived here, was detained at quar antine for observation. She reported the death at sea, six days ago, of a 5-year-old boy from an ailment symp tomatic, the health officers say, of cholera. The executive board of Centenary M. E. church of Beatrice has unani mously decided to ask the general conference to return Rev. U. G. Brown to the pastorate for another year. Rev. Brown has been in charge of the local church for five years, and is very popular with the members of his church and with the community at large., The prospect well which a number of Mason City and Litchfield farmers are now drilling east of Mason City is going down at a fair rate. The money, $2,500, was raised several weeks ago. S. R. Martin of Broken Bow assisting in the financing. When R. Keller, the driller, placed his machinery on the ground he discovered it inade quate to drill the well and sent for other machinery, which arrived and has been put to work. The promoters expect to strike gas. J. P. Whittingill. a tax ferret living at Owensboro. Ky., desires to get a job from the state of Nebraska hunt ing down delinquent taxpayers and uncovering propesty that has escaped taxation. He has written a letter to Secretary Henry Seymour of the state board of assessment asking for work and promises that he will not make angry one man in a thousand, and that the state will be surprised to see how much property that is unassessed which he will uncover. The Broken Bow junior normal lays claim to having the oldest student en rolled of any of the state junior nor mals, or normal schools, in the person of J. M. McCormick, aged 57, who also has a daughter enrolled in the same course. Mr. McCormick is and has been for years a teacher in the schools of Custer county. He doesnt have to attend the normal, but was then to brush up his teaching methods and keep as up-todate as the younger teachers. County Assessor H. A. Edwards of Hall count, is the. second county as. Bessor to file an abstract of equaliza tion. His report shows that the total assessed value of all property in Hall county has increased from $6,814,044 as returned last year, to $6,951,221 as returned this year. The personal property was assessed at $2,622,114 last year and $2,665,222 this year. Lands and improvements were as sessed at $2,984,137 last year and $2. 999.834 this year. Douglas county veterans will hold their reunion again this year at Flor ence, the dates being August 15 to 19. Seven men recently paid fines for violating the game laws of Nebraska. All were arrested by Chief Game War den Miller during a trip to northern The Importance of the event which forma the subject of this lesson la" shown by the fact that Its history is given In three books of the Bible, and probably referred to In another, oc cupying aeven or eight chapter, be sides the clay cylinder on which Sen nacherib made bis own record. It was a great crisis in Israel's his tory like the exodus, and return from captivity, a signal landmark, to teach and warn and encourage and comfort Israel in other great crises, and the nations and individuals of all times. Hezekiah, although the son of a bad father (but a good mother), began his reign with a thorough and widespread reformation and revival of the true re ligion, even while the Assyrians were invading the Northern Kingdom. He cleansed and repaired the temple, re stored the temple services, and pro vided for the support of the Levites and for popular religious instruction from the books of the law, thus bring ing about a great uprising against Idolatry. The result was most happy. "Heze kiah had exceeding much riches and honor." His kingdom was tranquil, strong and wealthy. But one constant danger threatened Judah the grow ing power of Assyria, whose overlord ship Ahaz had acknowledged, against the urgent protests of Isaiah. In 701 B. C. the great invasion of Palestine was made by Sennacherib, with a double siege of Jerusalem. Sennacherib sent an army demanding the surrender of Jerusalem. He may have felt that It was a mistake to leave In his rear so powerful a fort ress, while he had still to complete the overthrow of the Egyptians." The Assyrians, coming near to the walls of the city and speaking through Rabshakeh, the chief officer of Sen nacherib, made the contest one be tween Jehovah and the Assyrian idols, between the true religion, the one means of redeeming the world, and Hezekiah, and Isaiah, and apparently the scribes and elders, clothed in sackcloth, went into the temple and prayed from their inmost souls. Note how afflictions lead to prayer. Hezekiah saw before him captivity, suffering, probably death, the loss of his kingdom, the extinction of his line, the exile of his people. But above all he saw the fall of true religion, the dishonor of God's name, a relig ious and moral loss to the world. We should pray for temporal blessings, tew o1ia,Atri. . .iaa.9 . 1.... . .1... u, nimicici nc unu, uui ai wo I flBBaAftv J I i S I NEW STYLE. SPRAY STRAINER One Perfected by Prefeseer Stewart ef -Pennsylvania, Eliminates Trouble With SedimenL With spraying solutions, such as bordeaux and lime-sulphur, the prob lem is to get rid of the sediment. With the ordinary strainer there is sooner Strainer for Fungicides. or later a clogging of the sieve if placed at the bottom or the end of the receptacle. With the strainer per fected by Prof. J. P. Stewart of Penn sylvania state college no such trouble sm occur. The illustrations show, that the liquid must pass upward to HAVE YOU TRIED PAXTINE Th Qraat Tellet Germicide? Ton dct have te pay 50c or LM a pint for listeria aatlseptics or per oxide. Yoa cam make 1C plate of a on cleansing, genaicidal, healing and deodorlzlag antiseptic solmUoa with oae 25c box of Pastime, a sol able antiseptic powder, obtainable at any drag store. Paxtlne destroya germs that causa disease, decay and odors, that la why It la the beat awatb wash and gargle-, and why it parlies the breath, cleanse and preserves the teeth bet ter than ordlaary dentifrices, aad im sponge bathing it completely eradi cate perspiratlom and other disagree able body odors. Every dainty worn aa appreciates this and itaitaay other toilet and hygienic sees. Paxtlne la splendid for sore throat, inflamed eyes aad to parity moat aad breath after smoking. Toa cam get Paxtlne Toilet Antiseptic at any drag store, price 25c aad 50c, or by stall postpaid from The Paxtoa Toi let Co.. Boston. Mas., who will send Too a free sample If yoalvoald UM to try it before buying. ' OUT FOR BUSINESS. Cross Section of Strainer. the faucet. Thus the sediment is kept tway from this part, and there is al ways a steady stream. The liquid la poured in at the top, A. A hose may ae attached at the faucet Should tny solution remain with the sediment t may be saved by pouring boiling water upon it and using this water in naking the next batch of spray solution. Ebsbbb59bbbbbbbbb ' .Assam Bl seaeaeSasBBIPvHKSBsnmL VBseHK; bsbbbW&bbsbssbbT JaammN&r Bsa aVKBSBBBBBr 'W BBBBf i y COST OF RAISING CURRANTS The Arctic Explorer Say, can you tell me where I can find the North Pole? The Eskimo Nix. If I knew I'd nave had it In a museum long ago. HIRAM CARPENTER'S WONDER FUL CURE OF PSORIASIS. On Outlay of $15 Pr Acre Man la Able to Clear Not More Than $200 Keeps Full Record. The cost last year for labor and teams to cultivate our orchard was about $15 an acre. It cost us more the first year to cultivate our currants because they were planted on a piece of land which was full of quack, says a writer in the American Agriculturist. We cultivated that field 50 times dur- same time we should never let the de- j ng Bjx months. On those 13 acres of Hotel Partly Wrecked. Estes. Park, Colo. The Stanley hotel, built at a cost of $500,000. waa partially destroyed by an explosion of gas. Eight persons were injured, one seriously. Waif Gets Big Estate. Los Angeles, Cal. The 7-year-old waif of unknown parents gets the bulk of the big estate left by William. C. Hess, a retired farmer of Charter Oak, la., according to a decision of the court settling the contest brought by Hess' son. Mexican Women Want Votes. Mexico City A suffrage movement which promises to become a factor in Mexican politics was launched here by a woman's club, numbering in its membership many of the more promi nent women of the capital, under the new regime. In the petition directed to Emilie Vasquez Gomes, minister of the interior, more than 500 women who style themselves "friends of the people," demand the right to vote and hold office. They announce their rhrilra tV npActrlaitf anH rlnm rnel. J- w.w aw aa -sea w w w s,; n bo" dent Nebraska. A total of $25 and costs was assessed against three Syrian la borers who shot a prairie chicken on the railroad tracks nine miles east of Valentine, in Cherry county. In Antelope county Frank Fisher. H. H. Bradford, Fritz Hoenscbeit and Clar ence Hanson were arrested for con structing a fish trap of gunny sacks and chasing the fish into it. They paid $10 and costs each. The new Christian church at Brad sbaw was recently dedicated and is now being regularly occupied. The building was dedicated free front debt. Of the 660 state banks in Nebraska, all but about four have sent reports to the banking department showing their average deposits during the six months from December 1 to June 1. These reports will furnish the basis of the first assessment to be made under the guaranty law. The assess ment will amount to one-fourth of 1 per cent on the deposits. It is to be made in July. "Hank" Busey, of Beatrice, was ar rested on a bootlegging charge pre ferred by Officer H. Haydcn. The in formation that led to Busey's arrest was given by Dan Cave, who is at present serving' out a $100 fine for a like offense. Local men are planning for the holding of an agricultural exposition in Lincoln next winter in connection with the meetings or organized agri culture. It is the intention to have florists' products and an extensive display of apples and other fruit ia connection with the rest of the exposition. siro for earthly things overshadow the larger and more important spiritual interests; but rather, as in Hezekiah's case, the pressure of personal need should make more intense the desire for God's cause and kingdom. Then came a message from God through Isaiah. Hitherto Isaiah's mes sage had been one of warning to Judah, in order to make them so obe dient to God that the relief could come to them as a blessing. Now his message concerns the Assyrians, but also shows Judah why God comes to their help. The wonderful deliverance came when the angel of the Lord smote of the Assyrians a hundred and four score and five thousand. Just where this occurred -we do not know. But Sennacherib was marching toward Egypt. The deliverance was a deliv erance of Egypt as well as of Judah. The scene may well have been near Egypt. Whether it was by a storm, or pestilence, no one knows. It Is remarkable that the histories of both bis chief rivals In this campaign, Ju dah and Egypt, should contain inde pendent reminiscences of so sudden and miraculous a disaster to his host From Egyptian sources there has come down through Herodotus a story that a king of Egypt, being deserted by the military caste, when Senna cherib, king of the Arabs and Assy rians invaded his country, entered hia sanctuary and appealed with weeping to his god: that the god appeared and cheered him; that he raised an army of artisans and marched to meet Sen nacherib in Pelusium; that by night a multitude of field mice ate up the quivers, bowstrings and sbieldstraps of the Assyrians; and that, as these fled on the morrow, very many of them fell. A stone statue of the king, adds Herodotus, stood in the temple of Hephaestus, having a mouse in the hand. Now, since the mouse was a symbol of sudden destruction, and even of the plague, this story of Herodotus seems to be merely a pic turesque form of a tradition that pesti lence broke out In the Assyrian camp- There Is nothing In the Bible record that contradicts the belief that the disaster occurred in the neighborhood of Pelusium and the Serbonian bog In northeastern Egypt It was a place terrible for filth and miasma. A Per alan army was decimated here in the middle of the fourth century be fore Christ Napoleon's army barely escaped destruction here. The amount of the Assyrian lost was enormous, and implies of course a much higher figure for the army which was vast enough to suffer it; but here are some instances for com parison. In the early German inva sions of Italy whole armies and camps were swept away by the pestilential climate. The' losses of the First cru sade were over 300.000. The soldiers of the Third crusade, upon the scene of Sennacherib's war, were reckoned at more than half a million, and theit losses by disease alone at over 100,000 The grand army of Napoleon entered Russia 250.000, but came out, having suffered no decisive defeat, only 12, 000; on the retreat from Moscow alone 90,000 perished. ,But It was un der God's control and It was his sal vation that saved Jerusalem currants in the spring we find it necessary to keep one man on the field all the time. We can work it with only one horse now since the bushes are large. We keep an exact record of all work done on each field. Each man has his time sheet, and his time and that of his team are charged up to each field each night. So far we have not been able to secure more than $200 an acre, gross, on our bear ing orchards. We hope to get more. We hear such stories about some of the orchards of the west yielding from $S00 to $1,500 an acre that one is led to wonder whether their acres are av erage acres or not. I was in a four acre block of Twenty Ounce and Alex ander apples this year at Hilton. N. Y., and the fruit from it was sold two years ago for $6,400, or $1,600 an acre. and I judge it would make about the same money this year. This repre sents what is obtainable. Plant Overgrowths. After investigating, the cause of plant overgrowths, or galls, as they are more commonly called, the depart ment of agriculture has arrived at the conclusion that the gall is due to bac teria and is infectious, being readily transmitted not only from plant to plant of the same kind, but also to many plants of widely different fami lies. A bulletin on the subject shows that the growth is not only of itself Injurious to the plant, but also may form an open wound through which other parasites are likely to enter, such as the fungus of root rot, and the bacteria, which cause blight of apples and pears. Restriction on Cherry Culture. Cherries are expensive to gather and are not adapted to a distant mar ket, that is a market that is several days away. Perhaps this Is the reason why they are not raised more ex tensively on the Pacific coast, where they grow in certain limited areas with most gratifying success. Cherries do not thrive well beyond a certain limit of latitude, either north or south. New York. New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana. Michigan, Nebraska and Kansas are notably well located in this respect "I have been afflicted for twenty years with an obstinate skin disease, called by some M. D.'s. psoriasis, and others leprosy, commencing on my scalp; and in spite of all I could do. with the help of the most skilful doc tors, It slowly but surely extended un til a year ago this winter it covered my entire person in the form of dry scales. For the last three years 1 have been unable to do any labor, and suffering intensely all the time. Every morning there would be nearly a dust panful of scales taken from the sheet on my bed, some of them half as large as the envelope containing this letter. In the latter part of winter my skin commenced cracking open. I tried everything, almost, that could be thought of, without any relief. The 12th of June I started West, in hopes I could reach the Hot Springs. I reached Detroit and was so low I thought I should have to go to the' hospital, but finally got as far as Lan sing, Mich., where I had a sister liv ing. One Dr. treated me about two weeks, but did me no good. All thought I bad but a short time to live. I earnestly prayed to die. Cracked, through the skin all over my back., across my ribs, arms, bands, limbs; feet badly swollen; toe-nails came off; finger-nails dead and hard as a bone; hair dead, dry and lifeless as old straw. O my God! how I did suffer. "My sister wouldn't give up; said, We will try Cuticura.' Some was ap plied to one hand and arm. Eureka! there was relief; stopped the terrible burning sensation from the word go. They immediately got Cuticura Re solvent, ointment and soap. I com menced by taking Cuticura Resolvent three times a day after meals; had a bath once a day, water about blood heat; used Cuticura Soap freely; ap plied Cuticura Ointment morning and evening. Result: returned to my home In just six weeks from the time I left, and my skin as smooth as this sheet of paper. Hiram E. Carpenter. Henderson, N. Y." The above remarkable testimonial was written January 19, 1880, and is republished because of the perman ency of the cure. Under date of April 22, 1910, Mr. Carpenter wrote from his present home, 610 Walnut St. So., Lansing, Mich.: "I have never suf fered a return of the psoriasis and al though many years have passed I have not forgotten the terrible suffering I endured before using the Cuticura Remedies." Life without love is like a good din ner without an appetite. Lewi Sinzle Binder cigar in revet doped only tobacco in its natural atate. Most sharp retorts blunt language. are made ia Plum Clusters reed Brown Rot. Wherever plums hang in clusters touching one another, brown rot devel opment is favored, in susceptible varie ties. The spores are washed down by rains and any which came to lodge between two plums that touch are apt to be held there, and to find conditions favorable to growth. If one plum of a cluster is seen to be diseased it should be removed and destroyed at once, as others in the cluster are almost sure to go if the rotting ones hang long in contact with them. GOODP SHE IT IS a Care of Orchard Trees. If your favorite cherry tree is badly decayed, clean out everything in the cavity as carefally as your dentist would prepare a tooth for filling; then spray thoroughly with a 2 per cent solution of formalin, fill the cavity solid with cement and paint over alL Go over the young apple trees and cut off every water .sprout with a I sharp knife close to the trunk. Do it early and they will heal this season. HOSTETTER'S ST0MGH BITTERS It's Good when the stomach is bad. It's Good when the bowels are clogged. It's Good when the liver is inactive. It's Good in any malarial disorder. TRY A BOTTLE TODAY AVOID SUBSTITUTES HWn22Z2ES2l i.j