Iowa State Bystander
Friday, March 9, 1900
Des Moines, Iowa
Page text (machine-generated)
STATE BYSTANDER.
VOL. 6.
IOWA STATE BYSTANDER
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY BY THE BY
STANDER PUBLISHING COMPANY,
BIRTH AND LOCUST STREETS, ROOMS
210 AND 211 MARQUARDT DLOCK.
IOWA 'PHONE No. 899
OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE AFRO-AMERICAN
PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION OF IOWA.
OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE MOST WORSHIP
FUL UNITED GRAND LODGE OF
IOWA, A. F. & A. M.
TOKENS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
One year.....$1.50
Six months.....75
Three months.....50
All subscription payable in advance.
J. L, THOMPSON, EDITOR.
J. H. SHEPARD, MANAGER.
Send money by postoffice order, money
order, express or draft, to THE IOWA STATE
STANDER PUBLISHING Company
Communications must be written on one side of the paper only and be of interest to the public. "Brevity is the soul of wit," remember.
CITY NEWS
School election Monday March 12.
Miss Blanche Allen is convalescent.
Miss Sophia Bass is some better this week.
Mrs. M. N. Bell of Phoenix. Arizona expected in the city next week.
Get your winter coal at 1007 Center street. Iowa 'phone 255.
Have you heard Mattie Johnson, the Evangelist, she would like to have you.
The interest in the meeting at the A. M. E. church is increasing with each evening.
Invitations are out announcing a ball to be given by the Gold Leaf Social at Painter's Hall, March the 15th.
Mrs. C. H. Richardson and daughter Zoe of Clive, spent Sunday in our city, the guest of their relatives.
Mr. Wm. Bailey accompanied the members of the legislature Wednesday to Chereokee, he reports a nice time
The members and friends of Class no. 1, of the A. M. E. Church are preparing for an interising entertainment about the first of April.
Miss Lizzie B. Reeves left Tuesday morning for Hot Springs. She also expects to visit New Orleans before returning home, and will spend a month or six weeks on the trip.
Mr. N. Middleton, who is employed at the legislature, accompanied the legislators to Chetokee this week stopping a day over at his hom in Webster City.
On account of the illness of her daughter Cora, Mrs. A. O, Smith had to give up her position as janitress of the Federal Building, for a while, so that she can spend her entire time by the bedside of her sick daughter.
Mr. Joseph H. Shepard, whose time expired as court bailiff last Saturday has delivered up the keys. Mr. Shepard was the best known and most popular court bailiff that Polk county ever had. He was punctual, honest and performed his duty with satisfaction to all concerned and with credit to his race.
The Rev. Mrs. Johnson of Chicago, who we have been expecting visit our city and conduct newival meetings, came last week to commence her work; last Sunday evening the house was crowded to its utmost and many stood up others turned away; she is a good speaker and a logical reasoner with one aim firmly set and that is to earnestly and honestly preach the truth, every body should hear her.
We have it from a reliable source that a former Des Moines lady will come to the city in a few days and wed one Polk county's thrifty farmers. It is also reported that an East Side lady is soon to wed a gentleman from out of the city.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Harris and sister, Mr. and Mrs. L. Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. J' Phillips and Mr. Lilly of Sayborville mines left this week for Washington state to make that their future home. The Bystander wishes them success in their western home.
Mr. I. E. Williamson has brought suit in the justice court against Mrs. Dinnozo, the wife of Martin Dinnozo the proprietor of a restaurant at 314 Third street, for charging him more than the usual prich, which is contrary to Section 5008 of the statutes. The trial is set for next Tuesday. It is claimed that this is another of the drawing of the color line.
At the reception given Company M Seventh U. S. V. of the Spanish-American war, Captain Brandt's Company, by private Q. D. Early Monday evening a social club was organized. First Lieutenant E. G. MacAfee was elected president and private Q. D. Early Secretary. All members are requested to meet at Sargeant Brown's shop Tuesday night March 13, to finish the organization.
The H. B. S. Reading circle met with Mrs. G. I. Holt. After a very interesting programme the club adjourned to meet with Mrs. H. Lewis Thursday afternoon, March 15. Programme: Afternoon with Paul L. Dunbar. Life of Paul Dunbar, Mrs. Holt; Reading from Dunbar, Mrs. Wilburn; Current Events, Mrs. L. Denney; Oracle Mesdames Lewis and Palmer; Music, Instrumental, Mrs. Hamilton.
We have saved many doctor bills since we began using Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in our home. We keep a bottle open all the time and whenever any of my family or myself begin to catch cold we begin to use the Cough Remedy, and as a result we never have to send away for a doctor and incur a large doctor bill, for Chamberlain's Cough Remedy never fails to cure. It is certainly a medicine of great merit and worth.—D. S. MEARKLE, General Merchant and farmer, Mattie, Bedford county, Pa. For sale by all Druggists
When in Muchakinock, Iowa stop at MRS, ADDIE JOHNSON'S RESTAURANT for good meals or short orders; also Ice Cream, Prompt attention given to all orders.
OBITUARY.
Died at 11:57 p. m., March 8, 1900; at the name of his parents Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Hughes, 2014 Center street, Mr. Albert Hughes, of catarrh of the stomach, at the age of twenty-seven years, eleven months, and eight days.
The deceased was second boy in age of the family. He was educated in the public schools of Des Moines; he was well known and a host of friends will mourn his loss. His father and mother are both living, as are two brothers and two sisters, namely, Mr. W. H. Hughes, Mrs. William Coalson and Mrs. Walter Birney of this city, and F. B. Hughes of St. Louis. A telegram was sent Mr. F. B. Hughes, and he is expected to arrive in time for the funeral. Services will be held at the home of the parents at ten o'clock Sunday morning, and the remains will be intered in the Woodland cemetery.
CITY ELECTION
As the opposing candidates for the election to various city offices of Des Moines for another two years, is beginning to grow warmer. John MacVicar heads the regular republican ticket and Jerry Hartenbower, leads the citizens. The latter ticket was placed in the field by the anti-republican Mac Vicerites, who claims that the unfairness and fraud practiced by the Mac Vicar republicans at the primary, the gag, and bluff methods used in the convention; also gangs of repeaters they voted, and then would not consider the contest which was filed in the convention led those who was opposed of the method to organize a citizen ticket. Now comes question what must the Myreally republicans who have these grievences do? Must they acquiesce or must they vote the citizen ticket? That is the question.
The Bystander as a Republican Journal, can see no good reason why it should not support the regular re publican nominees, even though the nomination may have been secured wrongfully. First, there would be but little consolation in voting for a
democrat for Mayor: Second, the colored man has no grieveance from his standpoint, because the republican party nominated our man for Market Master: Third, the citizen ticket did not extend us the coutesy of endossing Mr. Blagburn. Fourth, there is a principle in this, and we must not act to hastly, be calm, cool and conservative. While we may receive but little from Mr. Mac Vicar, we would perhaps receive less as a race from the other man.
WOODSON FOR DELEGATE TO NATIONAL REPUBLICAN CONVENTION.
Last week Attorney Geo. H Woodson, who has been working very hard, took a trip up to our city, for a few days rest. While in conversation with him, he expressed a willingness to be a delegate from the sixth Congressional district to the National Republican Convention which will be held in Philadelphia. There can be no better qualified or more worthy man in point of service for the party in his distrlct among the colored people and but few more worthy among the white republican then Mr, Woodson. The colored voters of the sixth district are entitle to at least one delegate and the republican mangers of the district can pay no more de serving compliment than when they meet in their caucas to select Mr, Woodson as one of their delegate which would be the highest honor ever yet extendd to a color man in the state.
THE CITIZENS TICKET
A committee composed of citizens of different political parties organized themselves together and named a ticket to run against the regular republican ticket, and on last Saturday the democratic party held its convention and endorsed the citizens ticket in toto. While of course the citizens ticket is made up of both republicans and democrats and they also endorse quite a number of the republican nominees, they go to the people sanguine of electing their ticket.
FOR SCHOOL DIRECTOR
The name of Mr. P. C. Kenyon, the well known printer and book binder will be presented to the voters of West Des Moines next Monday for one the directors, Mr. Kenyon does not seek the place on his own accord, but by the earnest request of many of the leading citizens and business men, by his long years of resident in the city and business experience will make a most excellent member of the school board. He will make no distinction of race or nationality and is sociable and congenial with all classes.
FOR TREASURER OF SCHOOL BOARD.
Mr. James C. O'Donnell, one of our popular and highly esteemed young business men, has announced his name as a candidate for Treasurer of the Independent School District -Des Moines, West Side. Election Monday March 12th. Mr. O'Donnell came to Des Moines in the year 1878, where he has been actively engaged in business since completing his school duties, and has for the past several yers held a position of trust with the Marquardt Savings Bank where he is now engaged as Paying Teller. His qualification for the position to which he aspires is beyond question, and his many friend all over the city are working hard for his election, and respectfully solicit your support.
FOR SCHOOL DIRECTOR.
In this issue of the Bystander the name of Louis C. Kurtz is presented to the voters of the Independent School District of West Des Moines as a candidate for one of the directors. It was not Mr. Kurtz's own desire that he came out again for director for his second term, but his friends urged him to announce. Mr. Kurtz is a well known good business young man; was born in this city 33 years ago, and attended the schools here, and later went into the hardware business with his father.
His past term just ending on the Board entitles him to a second term, for he has made an efficient member of the School Board.
NEWTON NOTES
Miss Lulu Fine was indisposed last week.
Misses Mae Mayes and Bertha Green of Marshalltown arrived in our city last week to make an extended visit with relatives and friends.
Mr. J. B. Lueus of Grinnell was an over Sunday visitor with his niece Mrs. Fred Green,
Lawyer Woodson of Muchakinock was in our city attending legal business this week.
Miss Eya Craig of Grinnell departed for her home Wednesday morning after spending a few days with her many friends in this city
Little Helen Hudson has been on the sick list for several weeks.
Mr. George, Lucas of Evans was a Newton visitor last week.
Dame rumor says we are to have a wedding soon.
Rev. A. Ford of Washington, conducted the funeral services assisted by the pastor.
The Industrial Circle will have their 5th anniversary March 12th.
Mrs. Arobie Price is very ill with consumption.
Rev. Ford filled the pulpit, Sunday morning and preached a powerful sermon, subject, "He Careth for Thee." At night Rev. J. Bass, the pastor, preached one of his strong, earnest and pathetic sermons and one young man was connected with the church.
Mrs. Raspberry is very sick with la gripe.
For a city of 30,000 there is considerable mortality and average of about two per day for the last week or more.
After transacting some private business business, Rev. Ford returned to Washington.
DAVENPORT REPORT.
Sleighing has been very good here for two weeks or more and every body is getting their share.
Mr. Bert Chesterfield who has been confined in the hospital in Rock Island, is some better at this writing and is expected to be brought home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Chesterfield in this city.
Quite a number of minsters is looked for here next week to attend the executive board, which holds in the Third Bapist Church.
Rev. M. J. Burton left for Marshalltown on the 5th to spend the week there with his family, he will return on the 10.
The Dorcas Club of the Bethel A. M. E Church gave a Rabbit Social at Mrs Basey, 618 Harrison St., Monday Mac. 5, Mrs. J. S. Roberts is captain and Mr. Roberts is Secretary.
The Ladies Missionary Society of the Third Baptist Church, met at Mrs. Hughes on Urrison St., on the 5th. Mrs. F. Baker is President.
We had one of the worst streets Mon. day night, that we have had here for years and the cars were stopped.
In thirty days Davenport will start a new Gas Plant; when done it will be no doubt the finest in Iowa it will be built on the modern plan.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Stewart of west 10, St. are the recipients of a fine baby boy, Mother and child are doing well; Mr. Stewart is coachman for J. P. Van Patten.
CLINTON
Mrs. Wm. Emerson confined to her home by illness, we hope for her speedy recovery.
The social and apron sale given by the stewardess last Friday evening was a decided success, a good time being indulged in those present and a neat sum was realized.
Those on the sick list are reported better.
What may have been a severe accident was fortunately averted on last Saturday night when Edward Aikene, cabman for E. A. Hughes cab line, while turning a corner struck the curb, throwing him from his seat to the ground; it is fortunate that he escaped with only a shaking up.
Thomas Philson of the Candy Kitchen is confined to his room, threatened with pneumonia.
The choir of Bethel Church gave a sacred concert to a small audience on Sunday evening.
This was visited by the worst storm of the season, Mhunday; early in the morning snow began falling and continued with varying severity throughout the day which atnight turned into a disagreeable rain and the cars were forced to a
March 20th is the date set for the spring election it is anticipated that Geo. D. McDavid will succeed himself as Mayor of this city.
Clinton was visited by the heaviest snow of the season.
There are quite a number of persens are reported sick list.
Mrs. J. T. Culberson has returned from Kookuk.
A. M. Daymon is in Peoria for an indefinite time.
Curtis, Cljde, and Genevieve Bush are isdisposed.
The music class of Miss Estella Bush is increasing steadily each week. Persons who desire to send items should send them to the correspondent.
MUCHAKINOCK NEWS
B. F. Cooper went to Oskaloosa, Wed
ensday on business.
Mrs. W. J. Jackson left for Des Moines
to visit her Mother and Brothers
R. E. Shelton's baby died Thursday.
H. B. Gibson's daily use Thursday.
Geo. Harris, of Des Moines, made a flying trip to our city this week, on account of the illness of his Grandmother's sickness.
Mrs. Alice Massey spent several days in Ottumwa last week.
Wm. Braxton is able to be out again after several weeks of illness.
D. Timberlake and wife of Hoeking Valley, are visiting in our city.
The folling named persons attended the show in Oskaloosa Saturday night: Miss Portet, Mrs. London, Messrs. B. F. Cooper, and J. Wilson.
N. B. McDowell has returned from St. Louis, Mo., where he visited several days and reports a good time.
AFRICA IN THE NEXT CENTURY
Dark Continent Is Undergoing a Wonderful Transformation.
From the Forum: The twentieth century Africa promises startling contrasts when compared with the Africa of the nineteenth century. With an area four times as great as that of the United States, a population of 150,000,000, a soil and climate capable of infinite variety of production, a rapidly expanding commerce, and the greatest known supplies of ivory, gold and diamonds, its development under the modern methods which are now being applied to it is practically assured. The home of the oldest civilization, it is the last of the continents to yield to the touch of the newest civilization. But yesterday enveloped in darkness of mystery without and ignorance within, it is today illuminated by the searchlight of modern methods, and as its importance and attractions are being recognized, with this recognition must come development. With 2,000,000 Europeans scattered over its vast area, acquainting themselves with its natural conditions and requirements, with the steamer, the railroad, the telegraph and the telephone carrying light and knowledge and civilization to its darkest corner, Africa cannot long remain unknown or unknowing. It was only after the explorers—Livingstone, Speke, Stanley and others—had discovered, through persistent and heroic effects, that there existed vast navigable water ways above the falls near the mouths of the great streams which flow from the interior that European nations awoke to the physical and commercial possibilities of Africa, and then, in a twinkling, the dark continent was seized upon and divided up and became, as by magic, a vast European "hinterland." Between 1884 and 1898 an area two and a half times the size of the United States, and containing a population of 100,000,000, was parceled out by an agreement of the European powers. At present scarcely a foot of African territory remains unclaimed.
AS TRUE AS GOSPEL
Speak well of your friend, of your enemy, say nothing.
He who says what he likes will hear what he does not like.
A man's manners are the mirror in which he shows his portrait.
If cheerfulness knocks for admission, we should open our hearts wide to receive it, for it never comes inopportune.
Countess Miranda de Canavarroo, the California convert to Buddhism, has left the San Gamita convent in Ceylon and appealed to her American friends to return home.
The Right Rev. Louis de Goesbriand, bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of Vermont, during his life possessed large wealth, but avowed it his wish to give it away and die a poor man.
He left only $2.12.
No.40.
A Baby's Cry.
A moderately intimate acquaintance with infants enables one to distinguish, almost from birth, three cries—the healthy yell, by which the child exercises his lungs, the fretting of moderate discomfort, and the acute cry of pain, the latter two including at first hunger, thirst, and dissatisfaction. By the end of three months the nurse or mother should be able to distinguish the fretting of actual physical discomfort from that of restlessness, and the sharp cry of pain from the less acute announcement of thirst, hunger, etc., while anger imparts a characteristic quality to the cry. If the baby is comfortably dressed and properly fed he will be less likely to be fretful and crying.—Dr. A. L. Benedict in the January Woman's Home Companion."
A Point in Carving Etiquette.
The adept carver will not ask the guest of honor which is his or her favorite piece. We will give the one we would honor the cut of fish next the tail, that nearest the head being next choice; the emperor's muscle and oyster of the turkey, with a bit of brown fat added as a tribute to palate discrimination; the tenderloin of steak, the hock of the leg, the tenderloin with kidney of the saddle (with some brown fat); the loin of the hare or squirrel, the rib of the sucking pig. Other guests will express their preference promptly when asked, that none may be kept waiting—Ella Morris Kretschmar, in the January Woman's Home Companion.
Louisiana Rice Is Red.
The rice planters and millers of Southwestern Louisiana are having some trouble with the crop this season. For some unaccountable reason a considerable percentage of it is red. This is not the first season that red grains have appeared among the white, to be sure, but never before has the proportion been so large. An examination by chemists has shown that the red rice is equally nutritious as white. The value of the article as a matter of food is not in the least injured by the red grains. But the fact remains that the colored grains injure the sale of the rice they appear in.
Humors of Examination
The humors of examination papers were further illustrated by Dr. Halg Brown, who, in speaking at the City of London college upon the responsibility which rested upon examiners in weighing fragments of knowledge, said that the question, "What are the Chiltern Hundreds?" once received the reply, "Small animals which abound in great numbers in cheese." The inquiry, "What is a cherub?" elicited, in its turn, the answer, "An immoral being of uncertain shape." — London Chronicle.
The Population of London.
Last year's statistics show that the population of London is 4,484,717. For every 1,000 inhabitants there were thirty births and 17.7 deaths. The number of infants who died in their first year was 158 for every 1,000 births. During the period extending from 1887 to 1896 the mortality was lower than in Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam, Berlin and Copenhagen; but in 1897 it increased to such an extent that it is now very little lower than that of most European cities, Rome included.
Slaves in New York State
Immigration officials say that many foreigners in this country are living in a condition of abject slavery. At Avon, N. Y., there is a colony of 270 Italians who are under the direct control of one man, who hires them to farmers and fruit growers and takes most of their earnings, while those who perform the labor get little more than enough to eat, and are housed in buildings little better than cattle sheds.
Plum Pudding the Rage in London
A plum pudding craze has broken out in London. One firm sold 600,000 pounds of puddings three weeks before Christmas. Surprises are now enclosed in these, ranging from buttons, gold sovereigns and half sovereigns to thimbles and diamond rings. One pudding ordered had in it a diamond and opal brooch worth $500, enclosed in a silver box.
Centenary of Electricity
"Electricity as we know it" is just 100 years old. In 1799 the Italian scientist Volta gave definite form to the method of producing the current, and it is from his name that we have the term "voltmeter" to describe the instrument which measures the force of the current, and "volt" as the unit of that measurement.
Subscribe for the Bystander.
are
The passion play will be enacted at Ober-Amergau twenty-seven times during the coming summer, the first performance occurring May 24. A new auditorium accommodating 4,000 persons has been built.
During the volcanic eruption in the Hawaiian islands last summer the smoke rose to a height of between five and six miles, and then drifted away to the northeast. At a distance of 600 miles from Hawaii it settled upon the surface of the sea, and was then carried back by the northeast wind to its place of origin, where it arrived a fortnight after its original departure, and covered the entire group of islands with its heavy pall.
It is strange now to recall that, as a girl, the late mother of the German empress was exceedingly anxious to marry Napoleon III. Indeed, the marriage was nearly arranged, but Queen Victoria and Prince Albert strongly disapproved of the proposed alliance, and their opposition carried the day. Had Princess Adaldea of Hohenlohe become empress of the French the whole face of Europe would almost certainly have been different.
The recent trials at Indian Head, on the Potomac, of the armor made for the Russian battleship Retzivan, building, in this country, seemed to show that armor-plate of the Krupp form made in America has the advantage in the endless contest between guns and armor. Five-inch projectiles with a striking velocity of more than 2,000 feet per second in penetrate more than two inches in a five-inch plate, and the projectiles were broken in pieces, while the plate was not cracked.
A correspondent of "Figaro," writing from Madrid, gives a very favorable account of the present condition of Spain, which he says "is making rapid progress toward recovery, after a series of cruel disasters." The tendencies to disorder have subdued; the danger of revolution has passed; under the influence of a well-balanced budget, public credit is improving; the personal worth and practical wisdom of the queen regent have "made her the one fixed point around which all the wishes of Spain and all the sympathies of Europe gravitate"; and her son Alfonso, who will ascend the throne in two or three years, gives fine promise of intelligence, courage, and virtue.
It is noticeable that all the great generals, either of the past or present have been known to the public and their soldiers by some familiar nickname. Lord Roberts' sobriquet of "Bobse" is the most popular name to conjure with just now in South Africa just as "Le Petit Corporal" was the watchword for Napoleon's legions Frederick the Great was dubbed by his soldiers "Our Fritz," and the duke of Wellington, who gained the confidence but never the affection of his troops was known as "Old Nosey"—an uncomplementary allusion to his most prominent feature—just as "Stonewall" Jackson and "Marshal Vorwarts" expressed the most noticeable characteristics of Jackson and Blucher respectively.
It is estimated that the state of Maryland lost $3,000,000 during the past season through the ravages of the pea-louse, which, Prof. W. G. Johnson of the Maryland Agricultural college says is an insect new to science. It belongs to the well-known group of the aphides, or plant-lice, and on account of some change in conditions has become suddenly abundant, appearing for the first time on the cultivated pea. It is of a green color, and only an eighth of an inch long. It snakes the juices from the leaf and stem, and the plant dies. Not only in Maryland have growers of peas suffered, but in New Jersey, Delaware, New York, Virginia, North Carolina and Connecticut also. Fortunately the pea-louse has many insect enemies, which played havoc with it before the close of the season.
By the action of the senate in ratifying The Hague peace treaty, the United States now stands before the world as a nation no less ready to practice than to preach arbitration. Its promptness in accepting the invitation to The Hague, the eminence of those who represented the country, its commanding position as one of the great powers of the world, and the government's well-known advocacy of the principle of arbitration, all tend to invest the action of the senate with peculiar significance. By it we have now shown our good faith, and other nations may follow. The aim of the treaty, stripped of complicating details, is merely to make peace easier and war more difficult. It cannot compel peace, for it leaves each nation free to choose a course for itself; but it seeks to render the resort to arms the last resort.
In a Brussels street traversed by an electric tram-car it has been noticed that the trees on one side of the way begin to lose their foliage early in August, the leaves turning brown and dropping off. But in October the same trees begin to bud again, and sometimes even blossom. Meanwhile trees on the opposite side of the street are unaffected, losing their foliage late in the autumn and budding only in the spring. The cause of the anomaly is supposed to be leaking electric currents, which stimulate the growth of the trees affected.
Don Stewart, a farmer 30 years of age residing near Albia, committed suicide by cutting his throat with a razor. He had been brooding over imaginary troubles and recently was adjudged insane. The commission withdrew the information and the mother of the deceased had been entrusted with his care. Stewart leaves a wife and several small children.
The coroner's jury investigating the death of little Hazel Rogers, of Fox Madison, who shot herself recently returned a verdict of suicide. Grave suspicions were entertained of for play. According to the evidence, the child deliberately fired a bullet into her heart.
The farmers of Marshall county pro- pose to take measures to better pr
W. Gillis and wife were badly burned by the explosion of a lamp. The burning oil was scattered over Mrs. Gillis' clothes and she went screaming from room to room. The neighbors hearing her cries ran to her assistance and extinguished the fire. Her face, head, arms and back are terribly burned and she will probably die. Mr. Gillis was not so badly burned as was his wife, yet he is in a serious condition.
Archbishop Hennessey died at his home in Dubuque on the 4th, after an illness which had extended over a period of several weeks. Archbishop Hennessey was born in the county of Limerick, Ireland, in 1824, and came to the United States when a mere boy. He was educated in St. Luke's University, completing his course in two seminaries, and came to Dubuque, Iowa, where after a successful term in charge of a parish he was consecrated bishop September 13, 1866. He was elevated to the archepiscopal dignity September 17, 1893, and was the ruler of the bishopies centering in Davenport, Dubuque, Omaha, Lincoln and Cheyenne, beyond whom the only appeal was to Rome. Archbishop Hennessey had thus been a bishop for thirty-four years, and in all his career there was no appeal from his decision. When he was created bishop there were but twenty-seven priests in Iowa, and when he died as archbishop there were 293 priests in the archdiocese alone, besides 120 in the Davenport diocese, which was divided from the Dubuque diocese in 1881. There are now in his diocese two academies and archdiocese, of 15,000 schools, with 15,000 an orphanage, an industrial and reform school and two other charitable institutions.
At Des Moines a few days ago Howe & Miller, attorneys for Mark Chiesa, E. Romani, J. D. Hagerman and S. Nenderman, saloon men cited to appear and show cause why they should not be punished for contempt of court, filed demurrers to the informations that it is claimed will not only quash these four cases, which were brought by representatives of the anti-saloon people, but all the contempt proceedings instituted by J. D. Laws and will render inoperative about 6,000 injunctions granted prior to 1897. The saloon men maintain that the law, under which the old injunctions, those of 1895, were granted, was not re-enacted and provision was not made in the new code for the continuance of the old injunctions, so that in reality they have gone out of existence and no violation can be charged on their account. They are taking the ground on which the anti-saloon people fought when they attacked the old consent petition granted prior to the enactment of the old code and which they maintained and the supreme court has held was invalid. They are so confident as to their positions that they propose to rest on the demurrers and to appeal to the supreme court in the event that the lower court holds against them.
Tom Tuttle, 19 years old, whom the authorities at Chariton have in custody on the charge of implication in the brutal assault which was made on Miss Anna Hemming recently, is said to have made a confession implicating Frank Sandahl, who is also under arrest, but refuses to make a statement. The former says that Sandahl pointed the girl out to him and he was to receive $1,000 to kill her, one-half the amount that was to be paid to get her out of the way. It is suspected that there are others implicated in the case. Tuttle says Sandahl told him to knock her down, but that he need not kill her unless he wanted to; that he himself would finish the job. Sandahl denies the story, but both men were positively identified by Miss Hemming; Sandahl was shown to her and she stated absolutely that he was the last man to attack her as she was losing consciousness. Our counselor, a teen she possibly identified as the two girls she now in jail. The town in greatly excited over the arrest. There was little or no clew to work on, except that she and her mother by adoption never lived happily together. The girl's father by adoption, whose name is Peter Larson, deeded her considerable real estate not long ago. It is said that this act intensified the feeling between her and mother and deserved her the motive for the despair may possibly be found in a desire to have the real estate revert to Larson, as would be the case in the event of her death.
A. I. Breckenridge, for several years secretary of the Perpetual Building and Loan Association at Waterloo, has been arrested, charged with embezzlement. His shortage is claimed to be nearly $20,000. Wine and women are the alleged causes of his downfall. Section men going to work from Cedar Rapids found a heavy steel rail across the Northwestern track between Ebler and Ryan, removing it before the arrival of a train. It was evidently placed there with the intention of wrecking a train and the matter is seeing carefully investigated.
The coroner's jury investigating the death of little Hazel Rogers, of Fort Madison, who shot herself recently, returned a verdict of suicide. Grave suspicions were entertained of foul play. According to the evidence, the child deliberately fired a bullet into her heart.
The farmers of Marshall county propose to take measures to better protect themselves from hunters. A mass meeting of farmers and land owners has been called to perfect an organization, the object of which will be to better enforce the statutes relating to trespass by hunters.
The Farmers' Bank at Farmington was robbed of about $5,000 a few nights ago. It is said that the thieves left several thousand dollars in gold and silver, taking only paper money. Before leaving the bank the officers set the time lock on the safe to open in the morning. The lock shows no indications of having been forced, and the single door of the bank was locked as usual, so that the manner of the robbery is a mystery. Suspicious characters, who left Farmington suddenly after the robbery, are being pursued, but it is not thought they will be captured. No suspicion rests upon the cashier, as the money was in the bank when he left.
There was another jail break in O'Brien county a few days ago, being the third one within a year. William B. Tate, who had been in jail for a couple of months on the charge of burglarizing a freight car on the Milwaukee tracks at Sanborn, saw out of jail and made his escape in broad daylight. Tate belonged to what is known as the Daley gang, which has operated in the vicinity of Sanborn for several months past. Their business was robbing dry goods and clothing stores, and selling the goods to the railroad men and others at greatly reduced prices. Some time ago the gang came to grief and the ringleader was sent up, from Clay county, for three years.
Word from Independence states that Dr. George W. Appleby has been released from the insane asylum and that he has returned to Bristow to resume the practice of medicine. Dr. Appleby, while in a temporary fit of insanity last January, took a little babe from its father's arms and dashed its brains out on furniture in the office of Dr. Hobson, whom he was visiting. Shortly afterward he said he knew what he had done, but was unable to control himself. The authorities took him to the hospital, where he remained for a little more than a month. It is probable that action will be taken against him for murder. Dr. Appleby practiced medicine in Belmond for several years and bore a good reputation.
In a vault beside the remains of his predecessors, Bishops Loras and Smith, at Dubauke, lie the remains of John Hennessey, the first arch-bishop of Dubauke. The obsequies occurred on the morning of the 8th and were of the simplest character. There were no flowers and no ornaments whatever, even the high altar being stripped of everything except what was necessary in celebration of mass. The same order was carried throughout the church, nothing appearing except black and purpure drapery. There was also an entire absence of music, only the voices of hundreds of priests being heard in the Gregorian chant. This was in accord with the dead prelate's wishes. The ceremonies were conducted by Cardinal Gibbons.
Judge Fellows has rendered a very important decision in a liquor injunction case which closed all the saloons in Winneshiek county except in the city of Decorah. The case is M. L. Hill vs. Thomas Kane, a saloon keeper of Ossian. The point decided is that the board of supervisors in canvassing the mulet consent petitions did not properly perform their duty. The supervisors' record shows that in their canvass they scrutinized and certified to the findings in the several wards in Decorah, but made no certificates as to findings in the several incorporated towns of the county, which the court holds they should have done. This leaves the saloon keepers in West Decorah, Ossian, Calmar, Spillville, Fort Atkinson and Jackson Junction subject to injunction as was Kane, the defendant in this action, while those in Decorah are safe. The time has expired in which the board of supervisors may act in the premises, and there appears to be no relief except in securing an entirely new consent petition.
Twenty-three Des Moines saloon keepers and owners of buildings occupied by saloons have been notified to appear in the district court to show cause why they should not be punished for contempt of court, for alleged violations of injunctions issued against them in 1895 restraining them from engaging in illegal sales of liquors or permitting their buildings to be used for this purpose. The injunctions were based on the old Preeminent decision of the supreme court in which it was held that the first saloon consent petition secured in Des Moines under the Martin law was insufficient.
Compete Boers to Abandon Fourteen Miles of Trunches.
OSFONTENIN, March 8 — Lord Roberta's forces attacked early yesterday morning. General French turned the northern part of the position of the Boers, who fled, leaving a gun and large quantities of forage and tentes. He is now in pursuit. The Boers on the north bank are also evacuating the position.
LONDON, March 8.—Lord Roberts wired yesterday morning from Osfontein and in the evening from Poplar Grove, fourteen miles eastward. By an application of the elementary principle of strategy, the Boer positions, fifteen miles long across his path, have been emptied and their holders have been obliged to retreat in confusion consequent upon hasty withdrawal. Nothing was done by Lord Roberts to disturb the symmetry, the deadly ingenuity, of the Boer trenches in front of him. He marched out infantry estimated, from the commands named, at 30,000 men, and sent 10,000 horsemen and horse artillery in a bold sweep around the Boer left, whereupon the Boer center and right became untenable. Fifty British fell when the cavalry came into contact with the Boers. The correspondents differ as to the enemy's strength. The Daily Mail's representative thinks the Boers numbered something more than 4,000. The Daily News' man estimates them at 10,000. As these figures come from observers at headquarters, it is clear that Lord Roberts's force was over wieldingly superior. He can scarcely have fewer than 45,000 immediately available.
BRITISH BUDGET PASSES.
Measure Provides for Raising of $300,000,000 War Funds.
LONDON, March 6. — Public interest centered yesterday in the budget, with its proposals for financing the war, which were adopted by the house of commons. The chancellor of the exchequer, Sir Michael Hicks-Beach, estimated the deficit in the revenue this year and next on account of the war at £00,000,000. He provides for it by obtaining £12,317,000 through increased taxation, by saving £4,640,000 on terminable annuities, and by borrowing £43,000,000. He adds 4 pence to the income tax, 2 pence a pound to tea, 6 pence a gallon to spirits, 1 shilling a barrel to beer, 4 pence a pound to tobacco, 6 pence a pound to cigars, and 1 shilling to the stamp tax on brokers' contracts for the sale of produce on a large scale. Nearly all financial experts assert that the war will cost £100,000,000 rather than £00,000,000.
FAMOUS THEATER BURNED.
Home of Comedie Francise, of Paris, is in Roins.
PARIS, March 9.—The Theater Francise, the historical playhouse of Paris, and the home of the world-famed Comedie Francise, is a mass of smoking ruins. Only the mere outside shell remains standing. The dome has collapsed and the interior is an utter wreck. The magnificent ceiling, bearing the allegorical painting by Mazerolle, the ceiling painting by Debufe, the younger, of "Truth Enlightening the World," which adorned the foyer, and a number of other mural tableaux and works of art, together with a portion of the invaluable library of manus ript, perished in the names of the theater, was saved and removed to the ministry of finance, which faces the site of the theater on the Rue de Riviol.
HE YIELDED TO THE HOUSE.
President Has Not Changed His Personal Views.
WASHINGTON, March 7.—The Post
says:
"President McKinley, in conversation with callers at the white house yesterday, reiterated his belief that the people of Porto Rico were entitled to free trade with the United States. He made it clear that his views had undergone no change since he wrote his message to congress. He still adhered to the sentiment therein expressed. At the same time he said he was unable to subscribe to the theory that the constitution followed, argue that the Porto Rico government have free trade, and necessary legal right. When he found that the house deemed it the part of wisdom, the president explained, to impose a small tariff upon condition that the revenues so collected shall be returned to the island, he had been constrained to yield to the judgment of the house."
PORTO RICO.
Senator Davis Introduces a Bill for Free Trade With the Island.
WASHINGTON, March 7.—Mr. Davis, of Minnesota, has offered an amendment to the Porto Rican bill in the senate. Its effect is to have the tariff laws of the United States applied to Porto Rico upon foreign imports, but allows absolute free trade between the United States and Porto Rico. He also proposes a new section the provision of which extends the constitution of the United States by doing implies that it cannot be extended to the Philippines or other territories, except by legislative action.
To Pension Queen Lil.
WASHINGTON, March 8.—The senate committee on foreign relations authorized the reporting of the amendment to the diplomatic appropriation bill appropriating $20,000 to be paid ex-Queen Lilliankali, and providing for an annual donation of $10,000 to her as long as she may live.
Secretary of War Visits Cuba
HAVANA, March 8—Secretary Root arrived yesterday on board the United States transport Sedgwick. He was received with a salute from the Cabanas fortress. General Ludlow was also on board the Sedgwick.
NEWS FROM THE CAPITAL
SENATE
Washington, March 2. Pettitier secured the adoption of a resolution calling on the president to establish in Manila since American occupation and the amount of liquor sold there. A resolution was offered by Turner, of Washington direction, to the president the amount of money expended in payment of travel pay and commutation of subsistence to those officers and men reimbursed for their services. The reward was paid with regard to the enlistment of soldiers. Adopted. Senator Penrose called up the Quay case and Hoar addressed the president's support of Quay's right to a seat in the body.
HOUSE
Within two hours after the reading of a special message by the president, recommending the immediate release of the money collected upon Porto Rican goods since the Spanish evacuation of the island, amounting to $100 million, to the Porto Ricans, in the house to-day, the house had passed and sent to the senate a bill to carry out the reconciliation, the bill because plaused no limitation upon the president's discretion in the use of the money. By a vote of 100, the Aldrich vs. Robbins conjected election case.
SENATE.
HOUSE
These bills passed the house: Raising the salary of the turkey and guards at the state prison to prevent the maintenance of gambling houses; authorizing the approval by the governor of sales and mortgages made by executors and administrators; and solders' homes and reports of sales and mortgages made by executors and administrators. Soldiers' Orphans' Home at Davenport from $1,300 to $1,600 per year; prohibiting other plaques in government houses; other plaques in government houses in cities.
SENATE
Des Moines, March 5. McArthur's resolution memorializing Iowa congressmen to support the passage of the bill were passed as follows: Reducing official bonds of prison wardens and guards; providing for the payment by the prison for escaping from the penitentiaries; correcting medical practice to act to meet the decision of Judge (gamble, who is discriminated between classes of physicians).
HOUSE.
The house voted to adjourn over Wednesday for the purpose of visiting the Cherokee as an audience for the sine adjournment on March 17. Blake introduced a speaker, Blake Robinson, the commissioners, without pay to the Paris exposition to make a report on matters of interest to the material resources of the Cherokee.
SENATE
Des Moines. March 6—Among bills introduced was one by Fitchpatrick authorizing the establishment of a home for inebriated individuals, and that the home will be recorded in order to protect the innocent purchaser of property subject to lien under such leases came up and Bolter offered an amendment to the bill that the amendment stated speeches were made, and the amendment was still pending at time of adjournment.
HOUSE
Lyman introduced a bill similar to the one already in the senate to repeat his request to the governor to legislate assembly assembly legalizing the contracts of building and loan associations entered into prior to interest. The motion to reconsider the vote by which the Byers bill for the erection of one school was carried in the house this morning by a vote of 53 to 33. After a fight which lasted all day, the bill provides for one additional school to be erected in 1601. It is to be provided for the Cedar Falls normal, under section 2709, and one trustee additional. The assembly one week after the passage of the act. Any incorporated town or city in Iowa will become an applicant for the location of the school.
SENATE.
Des Moines, March 8. The senate passed the bill, which would allow the state shall be kept open until 7 o'clock in the evening, and the senate would be allowed both morning and afternoon sessions was devoted to both morning and afternoon bills. The bill had the table.
HOUSE.
STEYN TAKES FIRM STANDS.
Says Boers Will Fight to the Last and Europe Will Be-Astonished.
LONDON, March 9—A. G. Hales, the correspondent of the Daily News, who was captured by the Boers Feb. 9 and released a few days ago at Bloemfontein, telegraphing from Sterkstroom.
Tuesday, says:
"While I was a prisoner at Bloemfontein I had an interview with President Steyn. He said the burghers were determined to fight to the last and that the struggle in the Free State would be child's play compared with what would follow in the Transvaal. He predicted that the capitulation of Pretoria would be preceded by events which would astonish Europe."
Hoe Prisoners Number 4.460.
BEER PRESSMAN
CAPTOWN, March 5.—The railroad is now repaired northward from Kimberly to Riverton. The engineers are pushing the work rapidly. The Boer prisoners captured at Paardeberg total up 4,660. About three thousand of them are on their way here.
Within the last year an ancient grave was discovered near Rome and opened. It was found the skeleton of a woman with a complete set of false teeth, displaying admirable workmanship, and wrought out of solid gold.
DES MONES, March 9, 1963.
The senate judiciary committee decided to report for passage the bill Senator Hazleton to bill judges compensation and their expense during court away from home. At present the district judge who travels a good share of the year receives no special compensation for it Hazleton's measure is to allow them the actual amount of travelling living expense while former homeowner is 800 years. The bill has the support of the lawyers and while some opposition has developed, it is expected to pass.
The house appropriations committee voted to report for passage a bill requiring all students of the State Agricultural College who are not exclusively studying in the agricultural departments to pay tuition, whereas all tuition has been free heretofore. The committee voted to cut the appropriations asked for the for the college from the $127,000, and to provide the support fund for the biennial period instead of permanent. The appropriations committee recommended for passage a bill to appropriate $50,000 to erect monuments to Iowa soldiers on the battlefield of Shiloh, and to appoint a commission to locate the position of Iowa regiments at Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge. The committee also reported a appropriation of $21,000 to finish the state historical building. The committee voted to raise the per capita support fund for the Mitchellville reform school from $10 to $12 per month.
the supreme judgement contest is getting interesting. New candidates are developing with great rapidity, especially so long before the state convention. Seven candidates are now being talked of, and most of them are coming to the convention on day or two several candidates have been in Des Moines, and the legislature is considered an especially fertile field to work. The candidates announced are: M渊 McClain, of Iowa City; Judge M. T. Mee, of Centerville, a candidate last year; Judge Z. A. Church, of Jefferson, Greene county; Judge J. C. Murray, of Monroe, Colonel Charles, Clark, of Cedar Rapids. All of these men have announced their candidacy. In addition, L. C. Blanchard, of Mahaska county, will probably be a candidate. Judge Robert Sloan, of Keosquan, one of the defeated candidates last year, is being mentioned, but has not definitely announced himself in the field. Judge James Davis, of Koookuk, who also in Des Moines a few days ago, an it is rumored that if he does not lay the federal judgement, for which he a candidate, he will be in the list supreme judge aspirants.
Senator Hazleton, or Pottswaltz, has secured the passage of the following resolution by the Senate: "That the governor be and in hereby authorized to appoint in commission such number of delegates as may seem to him proper, and to empower the same to investigate in behalf of the state of Iowa the financial, commercial, manufacturing, agricultural, horizons, social and social moral or religious condition, and interests at any exposition of this or any foreign country; the food, mines, manufacturing and commercial resources and prospects thereof; the breeds of domestic cattle, food and cereals grown therein, and to make arrangements for such investigation shall be prosecuted without charge to the state of Iowa for services rendered or expenses incurred."
Another evidence of the fact that the Duluth & New Orleans railroad will build its line to Des Moines during the coming season is given in an item from a paper of that city stating that grading outfits have arrived there preparatory to the work of grading the new road. The rails for the construction of the road will arrive in Nevada and Des Moines early in May. It is the intention to commence construction at both ends of the road. The official officials则表明 that passengers to the state rail the first week in September. There is every prospect at this time of their doing this.
BOERS DRIVEN FROM DORDRECHT
They Are Now Retreating Through Cape Colony.
DORNEDECHT, March 6.—General Brabant has scored a complete victory. The Boers are in full retreat with their guns and wagons and are being pursued. Following Sunday's success General Brabant again engaged the Boers yesterday with advantage, holding the position captured Sunday. There was some smart fighting Sunday morning, the British losing five or six men and capturing the Boer fort, thus vastly improving their position. The Boers fought tenaciously, contested they retreated suddenly, carrying off their guns and wagons. A mounted force pursued them but as yet the result is unknown. British casualties during the two days were thirty wounded and twelve or thirteen killed. The Boer loss is unknown, throughout the country, including and sewed fatigue the colonials have behaved spendidly.
MANILA, March 4.—Colonel Anderson with the Thirty-eighth infantry, employing the insurgents own tactics, ambushed the enemy near Battalans. Through spies Colonel Anderson learned detachment insurance would pass as a reward. The postposed his soldiers concealed among the trees lining the road and when the enemy arrived the Americans volleyed unexpectedly, killing twenty-four insurgents, wounding thirty and capturing some. Some of the men were also killed. The effect of this blow has been salutary. The enemy in that locality are dismayed.
A "may-cure cough medicine won't do. If it will "perhaps" do its work, it's worse than worthless. If it's good, it's worth ten times its price. Do you know where to draw the line between the good and the bad? This testimonial should help.
"I had a bad cough for six weeks and could not find any relief whatever. My little girl read about Ayer's Cherry Pectoral being such a wonderful remedy for cough, I bought a bottle. It relieved me at once. Before I had taken a quarter of a bottle my cough was entirely cured. I think it is the most wonderful cough mixture ever known." L. HAWN, Mewington, Ont. May 3, 1899.
Your doctor or druggist will hear us out. Three sizes: $1.00 size, cheapest in the long run: 50c. size, just the thing for a cold that "hangs on" : 25c. size, for an ordinary, mean, disagreeable cold.
The early bird is now skirmishing for nest material—worms next.
Thirty Days' Trial Absolutely Free.
We offer to each new student enrolling at the beginning of the Spring Term, March 30th, 1988 thirty days' trial FREE is either our thirty day's trial for the department and Typewriting Department.
This offers a magnificent opportunity to test of the most thoroughly practical colleges of admissions at once for particulars: President admits at once for particulars: President
address at once for particulars: President
Hirsch, Charles C. In.
Some politicians make better prom-
than they do laws.
Send for Choice Headers
Walter Baker of Co. Ltd. Dorchester, Mana.
mail free. Mention this paper.
Pork packers should always be happy
they have a killing time.
MARCH AND APRIL
are the Most Biagreable Months of
the Year in the North.
Pimple Ounce for Consumption is the best of all
gum care.-George W. Lotz, Fabucher, La.
gust 28, 1886.
Gossip is the only method of adver-
ing some folks try.
EXCURSION RATES
Midnight Conference at White House on Puerto Rican Bill.
Frankly Confesses He Woe. Mistaken
When He Wrote His Message Recommi-
dency Free Trade with the Islands
—Lodge Addresses the Senate.
At the white house conference the Puerto Rican question and the reel-procity treaties were fully and freely discussed. The president frankly told the senators that he was satisfied from fuller information and more mature reflection that the recommendations of his annual message for free trade with Puerto Rico were ill advised, and that he is now earnestly in favor of the enactment of the house bill providing for a tariff of 15 per cent of the Ding-lew law rates. The people of the country will soon come to see the matter in the same light as he does, the president said, and they would as frankly admit that a duty is better for the Puerto Ricans than free trade.
SENATOR LODGE ON FOREIGN POLICY
Massachusetts Senator Supports the Administration.
Washington, D. C., March 5.-Senator Lodge delivered his speech in the senate in support of Senator Beveridge's resolution on the government's policy in the Philippines. He strongly deprecated the attempt of the opposition to make the question one of party politics and made a vigorous plea for the retention of the islands. The success or the failure of the undertaking, he contended, affected the American people as a whole.
Mr. Lodge said in part: "The questions involved in the future management of the Philippine islands and in our policy in the far east are of a nature to demand the highest and most sagicious statesmanship. I have always thought with Webster that party politics should cease at the water's edge." The Philippines should be an American question, not the sport of parties or the subject of party creeds. The responsibility for them rests upon the American people, not upon the Democratic or Republican party. If we fail in dealing with them we shall all alike suffer from the failure, and if we succeed the honor and the profit will redound in the end to the glory and the benefit of all."
The senator criticised the policy of the opposition in making a political issue of the question, and pointed out the impossibility of adopting the plans proposed to end the struggle in the islands. He said:
"I hope and believe that we shall retain the islands, and that, peace and order once restored, we shall and should re-establish civil government, beginning with the towns and villages, where the inhabitants are able to manage their own affairs.
"Taking the colonies as a whole, a very large minority, if not half, of people whom the continental congress proposed to govern were utterly opposed to the revolution. Did we ask their consent? Not at all. We crowded the revolutionary government on the legalists at the point of the bayonet, and when the revolution was over
He had to accept the government that hoped upon them, or go into exile, which many of them did. Therefore, if we test Jefferson's phrase by the face of the government when we see he was engaged in setting up himself we find that it does not in the least meet the fantastic extensions which it has been sought to put upon it in the interests of the Filipinos.
"Jefferson himself was the greatest expansionist in our history. He acquired a vast territory for the United States. Did he ask the consent of the 38,000 white men at the mouth of the Mississippi, or of the Indians roaming over the wide expanses of the Louisiana purchase? Such an idea never occurred to him for a moment. He took Louisiana without the consent of the governed, and he ruled it without the consent of the governed. It was not a question then of 'all' or 'some.' He never asked the consent of any of the governed, either to take the territory or to rule it afterward."
When Mr. Lodge concluded, the death of Representative Harmer was announced, and the senate adjourned. The house held a brief session Wednesday. At the close of the morning hour the death of Representative Harmer was announced by the speaker, and out of respect to his memory the house adjourned.
Harrison for President
New York, March 1 — A special from Washington to the Times says: "Former President Harrison's opinion about the Puerto Rico bill and the war in South Africa have been discussed with amazing interest here. His selection of just this time in which to utter implied criticism of the administration is regarded by politicians of his party as not accidental or blundering, but intentional, and possibly uttered after the mature consideration of the prevailing opinion in Indiana and the approach of the conventions to nominate delegates to Philadelphia. The thousands of republicans are talking about his backbone with as much reverence as the backbone of Mr. Cleveland was formerly referred to by democrats.
To Amend Her-Pannesfoto Trusty.
Washington, March 9.—The senate foreign relations committee believes that they can so amend the Hay-Pauncefete treaty as to make it acceptable to the American people and the senate without destroying entirely the principle of neutralization. Senator Davis has prepared an amendment, and it will be taken up for consideration at a special meeting on Friday. As the Hay-Pauncefete treaty is modeled on the convention of European powers in relation to the Suez canal, it is proposed by Senator Davis to add another article from that convention and make it apply to the United States in relation to the Nicaragua canal.
Puerto Rican Starving.
Washington, March 9—Acting Secretary Meltklejhan has received another appeal from Gen. Davis, military governor of Puerto Rico, for assistance for starving Puerto Ricans. Gen. Davis' letter depicts an awful situation on the island. He says that workmen are their families, being without money to live, are drifting into towns and demanding food. In a report which he transmits it is said that many people are bordering on starvation. In the center of the island there is nothing for the poor to eat, and the officer reports that unless assistance is given there will be an outbreak of lawlessness, and sickness will prevail.
Ceremony Over a Treaty.
Washington, March 9.—The ceremony of exchanging reference of the Samoan claims treaty took place in the diplomatic room of the state department Wednesday afternoon at 2 e'clock. Lord Pauncefoe, the British ambassador; Herr Von Helleben, the German ambassador, and Secretary Hay represented their respective governments. This was the last day on which the exchange could have been made under the terms of the treaty.
Money for Lilimahalo!
Washington, March 9.—The senate foreign relations committee has recommended the incorporation in the diplomatic and consular appropriation bill of an amendment providing for the payment of $29,000 to Lilimahalo, lake queen of the Hawaiian islands, and that she be paid $10,000 per year during her lifetime in relinquishment of her claims against the crown lands of Hawaii.
Remey's Second Chosen:
Washington, March 9.—Rear-Admiral H. McCormick, commanding the Washington navy yard, has been selected for duty as second in command of the United States fleet in Asiatic waters.
Chicago Board of Trade
Chicago, March 7.—The following table shows the range of quotations on the board of trade today:
Articles.
Wheat— High. Low. Mar. 7. Mar. 3.
May .. $.66% $.65% $.65% $.66%
July .. .67% .66% .66% .67
Sept .. .67% .67 .67 .67 .67
Corn—
May .. .35% .35 .35 .35
July .. .35% .38% .35% .35%
Sept .. .35% .35% .35% .35%
Oats—
May .. .23% .23% .23% .23%
July .. .22% .22% .22% .22%
Pork—
May .. 10.67% 10.60 10.60 10.62%
July .. 10.72% 10.65 10.65 10.67%
Lard—
May .. 5.90 5.87% 5.87% 5.87%
July .. 5.87% 5.95 5.95 5.95
Short ribs—
May .. 5.85 5.82% 5.82% 5.82%
July .. 5.87% 5.85 5.85 5.85
Honors American Competeen
London, March 3—The Goldberg
price of the Royal Academy of Music
has been awarded to W. R. Maxwell of
New York.
FRANGE IS READY FOR WAR.
Troops in Algeria, Touquis, and Madagascar Are in a Position to Repel Aggression and Fleet Has Selected Points of Safety.
Paris, March 9.—Your correspondent learns that extreme tension exists in the Anglo-French relations, and that French official circles are considering the probability of war.
An important official, who possesses the confidence of the ministry, told your correspondent today that it would be useless to longer deny the fact that Great Britain aims at attacking France. He added that it had been evident for some time that the English press was obeying instructions in making the most of every trivial offense given by the French press, while ignoring graver insults from the press of other countries.
Moreover, all of Great Britain's late preparations are known to be solely directed against France. Every step that England has taken has met with a corresponding precautionary step by France. It was not weakness that made the French yield in the Pashoda dispute, but moderation, though apparently all moderation was blasted in England's present temper. France is now and has been for years prepared and ready to resist British aggression. The correspondent remarked that these were somewhat startling statements, and added that he did not wish to cable anything that was likely to produce bad blood.
The diplomatist, in reply, said: "I have put the case none too strong. Remember, we do not wish for war, but England's disposition is too evident to be misunderstood. Consequently, we have made all the necessary precautions to avoid being taken at a disadvantage. Stores and ammunition have been accumulated in the colonies in sufficient quantities to enable them, though isolated, to maintain a long campaign.
"There are 30,000 white troops in Touquin, and 50,000 in Algeria under Gen. Gallien, who will be able to deal with any expedition England may send against them. In Madagascar there are nearly 10,000 troops, and more will be sent there shortly. These will occupy strategic positions, from which the whole British army will be unable to move them. Everything is ready, and we can now fold our arms, awaiting England's frat move."
The correspondent again said that he disliked to send news of this character lest it prove mischievous, whereupon the official answered:
"We don't mind the publication of the fact that we realize England's public opinion; we have taken every precaution, and are now quite prepared to meet her hostility. The publication will do more good than harm. English opinion has misunderstood French moderation, and you had better acquaint it with the true state of the case.
"The French fleet possesses safe refuges, from which, opportunity offering, it will be able to cover movements against England's weak points, which are perfectly known, should war be declared. Stranger things have happened than seeing the tri-color in London and Cairo. Remember, however, that we do not wish for war unless it is forced on us."
PLAGUE IN SAN FRANCISCO.
Health Board Announces Outbreak in
Chinatown. Which Is Granted?
San Francisco, Cal., March 9 — The board of health late Wednesday night announced that a case of bubonic plague has been discovered in Chinatown, and called on the chief of police to put a blockade on the Chinese quarters. This was done. A cordon was placed around the building in which the death occurred, and no one was allowed to leave the quarter or enter it. The result was that many cooks were missing from hotels, restaurants and private houses the next morning, and even the street-car lines which intersect Chinatown were stopped. The Chinese patient who died showed swellings of the glands in the groin, but these swellings did not differ materially from those found in other cases of suspects found to have died of other diseases. Experts who have had experience with the plague do not believe this is a genuine case of the plague. Conditions here are all against its spread throughout the city, but it would probably find many victims in Chinatown, where the authorities have never been able to enforce the sanitary regulations for any length of time.
Victoria, B. C., March 9—Genuine bubonic plague has made its appearance under circumstances which point to the imperative urgency of watching every avenue of communication with the oriental hotbeds of the plague epidemic. It is by the Nippon Yusen Kalsa steamship Nanyo Maru that the "curse of the east" has gained its first foothold on American soil. She arrived at Port Townsend from Honolulu on Jan. 30. The Nanyo Maru is still held at the quarantine station, just over the sound. Up to a fortnight ago there had been seventeen cases and three deaths among her people. William Head station also has cases of berberi under recovery, but the identification of the disease as berberi is here positive and complete.
Det Mozot, March 2.—To-day the occasional circumstances in connection with the failure of the hospital for the illness at Mount Pleasant, were recalled by the introduction in the report of a bill by Salazar Ribera, reimbursing the hospital from whom money was taken while Dr. Gilman was superintendent at Mount Pleasant. The bill asks for all constitutional amendments and other special questions to be voted on at general elections, and Wallace introduced one providing that township trustees shall purchase guide posts and wallace permitted to pay travel expenses was passed. Buchanan's bill, taking the building and loan management out of the auditor's office, permitted to separate department was favorably reported. **HOUSER.** The house passed several bills among the bill, as among the马萨什own from being deprived of their pensions and the Eaton bill consolidating the miscellaneous parts of the state library and the historical records.
Washington, March 3.—The senate held a brief session, adjourning early on account of the death of Senator Virginia. Ross, of Vermont, spoke in opposition to the seating of Quan, and Teller spoke in support of the seating of Patterson, the senate bill. Patterson introduced and the senate passed a resolution instructing the secretary of state to adjourn the session in the courthouse, and the senate then led Lieutenant Colonel Corbin, now adjoint general of the army. The resolution also calls for other interment upon General Corbin's military record.
HOUSE
Hay announced the death of Epes, of Virginia, and after the adoption of resolutions of respect and sympathy, as a further mark of respect the house adjourned.
BREAK
SENATE
Washington, March 8—Mason entered a motion to discharge the committee on foreign relations from further consideration of his resolution expressing sympathy for the president's address in opposition to the Porto Rican tariff bill. Foraker, in charge of the bill, replied. He declared it to be the most liberal and generous proposal for a territory of the United States.
HOUSE
House unseated (Gaston A. Robbins, a democ-
ratician) and seated in his stair William Adrian, republican,
by a strict party vote. House adopted a rule
that each month for the consideration of private
pension bills.
BOERS DIDN'T MAKE A STAND.
Entire Force, However, Succeeded in Exceleration.
LONDON, March 9.—The Boers appear to have made no stand whatever, except that while in retreat they twice repulsed General French's cavalry with rifle fire. As no report has been made of the capture of prisoners, the enemy probably got away with their entire force. General French is still following them and keeping between them and Bloemfontein.
PETROHIA, March 6.—Via Lorenzo Marquez.—It is officially stated here that on Sunday last there was heavy fighting at Dordrecht, that the British were repulsed with great loss, and that the federalers captured three cannon.
LADYSMITH, March 9.—The Boers are entrenching at Biggarsberg. The scouts report that all the Natal Dutch farmers have fled from the surrounding country.
The evacuation of the northern districts of Cape Colony is now nearly complete. The British are in possession of the railroad crossings. The Daily News makes the following editorial comment: "It was rumored in London yesterday—and we have some reason for believing the rumor to be correct—that the two republics made informal and unofficial overtures for peace on the preceding day. Unfortunately, the conditions suggested were of such a character as to preclude the possibility of leading to any result. Terms of the agreement before the war, in order to avert it, are impossible after the war, with all the sacrifices it has entailed."
IMPRISONED MEN DOOMED.
Certain That Fifty- Two Lives Were Lost in Explosion.
FIRE CREEK, W. Va., March 8. —The rescuing parties continued working hard at Red Ash mine yesterday in removing debris and searching for the bodies of the victims of yesterday's explosion. The scenes of distress among those hunting their missing friends are as appalling as yetesterday. It is important to note the number of victims or to identify all the bodies that have been recovered. Conservative estimates by the mine officials place the number of killed at fifty-two, while others believe the number of victims will reach sixty. A report from the rescuers tonight was that thirty-four victims had been removed from the mine, twenty-nine being dead and five alive. The number and others estimate that there are at least thirty-nine miners still entombed.
JOE WHEELER'S VIEWS
SAN FRANCISCO, March 9—General Joseph Wheeler favors giving the Philippines a territorial form of government. He says:
"I believe the people are ready for a certain kind of self-government. They can move to power to make laws under such a system of government as has been adopted for our territories. The municipal governments are all in the hands of the natives and they get along without trouble or friction. Under a territorial form the islands could be best controlled."
Bad Wreck of Freight Train on the Minne
State Central.
Oklahoma, March 6. Twenty stock men and railroad employees were injured, two probably fatally, in a collision between two Illinois Central freight trains near Broadview, a few miles out of Chicago. The injured: Joseph Hobbs, Marcus, Iowa, may die; Frank I. McCall, brakeman, Freeport, Ill, may die; E. E. Farwell, Manchester, Iowa; J. B. Counsell, Dyersville, Iowa, left thigh fractured; Ed. Wager, Pringhar, Iowa, scalp wounds, fracture left arm; Charles Peters, Matlock, Iowa, head cut, arms and leg bruised; H. B. Emerson, Manchester, Iowa, scalp wounds, right hand broken; J. J. Collins, conductor, face and head cut, arms bruised; J. A. Clark, Elmhurst, Illinois, nose broken, head severely cut; Joseph Bernard, Anton, Iowa, right wrist broken, scalp wounds, back bruised; J. H. Dunne, Marcus, Iowa, left shoulder and knee dislocated; H. D. Spear, Dubue, Iowa, brakeman, ankle broken, head cut; S. M. Wixell, scalp wounds, both leg bruised; H. O. Booth, Sioux Falls, S. D., left foot cut, H. O. Booth, Sioux Falls, Peter J. Baadte, Matlock, Iowa, both feet broken, head and back bruised; G. P. Stater, Sioux Falls, S. D., hand and feet cut; J. W. Bryant, Cleghorn, Iowa, left leg cut, right arm broken; W. B. Brazell, Otto, Iowa, bruised about head and body; Thomas McMahon, Quimby, Iowa, three ribs broken; E. A. Wilkinson, Quimby, Iowa, right hip dislocated, chest and back bruised; The collision was the result of a peculiar accident. The two trains were running about a mile apart. While climbing a steep grade the coupling in the middle of the first train broke. The rear section of the broken train immediately started down the back grade and in a minute was beyond control. It struck the engine of the oncoming freight with a terrific crash. Both trains were on their way to Chicago from Western Iowa, and were made up mostly of loads of stock cars with caboose and passenger coaches for stockmen. All the passengers were asleep in the day coach, and the first intimation they had of the danger was when they were thrown violently from their cots to the floor of the car.
ROBERTS FACING THE BOERS.
Occupies a Position to the South of Moder d River at Osfontein.
LONDON, March 6.—A dispatch to the Daily Telegraph from Osfontein, dated Sunday, says:
"The Boer front covers eighteenth miles to the south of Modder river."
STERKSTROMP, March 6.—Stormberg was found evacuated when the British entered Sunday night.
LONDON, March 6.—General Baller's revised list of casualties from February 14 to February 27 gives 93 men killed, 684 wounded and 25 missing.
OSFONTEIN, March 7.—General Joubert is reported to be in supreme command of the Boer forces here.
COLESEBerg, March 7.—The British advanced camp is now at Oorlogsport river, several miles beyond Achtertang.
LONDON, March 6.—A dispatch to the Standard from Osfontein, dated March 4, says:
"Lord Roberts' army now occupies a most advantageous position. The Sixth division is posted on the right and holds all the kopjes for five miles south of the Modder river. The seventh division is in the center, immediately south of the river, and the ninth division is on the north bank of the river. the cavalry brigade is on the river, the infantry is mounted infantry on the right front. The country around consists of wide, grassy plains, broken only by ridges and isolated kopjes. A body of the enemy has taken up a position on one of the latter, a flat-topped hill to the north of the river, five miles beyond General French, who to-day took out horse artillery and shelled them. Another force, 4,000 strong, holds an isolated group of kopjes south of the river. The British mounted infantry. Their position is surrounded on all sides by level plains, over which the Boers must make their way in order to reach the river. As a consequence, their situation appears precarious in the extreme."
ACQUITS MINE BIOTERS.
Sury Benders Verdict of Not Guilty in Case of the Carterville Man.
VIRENA, III, March 6.—After being out only seven hours the jury in the case of the nine Carterville miners charged with the killing of five negroes on the streets of that city last December, rendered a verdict of not guilty. The scene in the courts room after the reading was one long to be remembered. The wives and children of the defendants had been hurriedly called and many were overcome with joy at the acquittal of their loved ones. The case occupied six weeks of the court's time and 121 witnesses were examined. There remain four other indictments against the defendants.
He who is up to snuff never sneezes when other people take it.
TO RELIEVE MAFEKING.
LONDON, March 6.—Mafeking is to be relieved as soon as the British force already on the way to Kimberly can raise the siege. This force is described vaguely as "strong." The Kimberly Light Horse is mentioned as a component part. In view of the fact that the Kimberly Light Horse is under the control of the De Beers company, Lord Roberts's visit to Kimberly probably had to do with an arrangement with Cecil Rhodes to use this company of troops.
---
Ben Nevis and its Observatory.
In the current number of Knowledge Mr. Bruce gives an account of "Ben Nevis and Its Observatory." The object of this observatory is to study the height of clouds, their speed, direction and constitution, and to learn as much as possible regarding temperature, winds, etc. It is a true scientific instinct that leads us to sound, as it were, upward, just as we sound downward and explore at the bottom of the sea. The reasons why Ben Nevis, of all places, was most suitable were: (1) Because it was the highest mountain in the British Isles, rising to 4,406 feet; (2) its summit was in close horizontal proximity to a sea-level station at Fort William; (3) it was situated in the track of the southwest storms, which influence so greatly the weather of Europe, especially in autumn and winter.
Buffalo Intelligence
New York Cor. Pittsburg Dispatch: A big bull buffalo had an injured leg, and it was operated on with cocoa and antiseptics, a few days ago. It was not an easy task for the veterinary surgeons, because a buffalo is a powerful animal, and he does not like any one to take liberties with him. But the operation was performed and the buffalo evidently felt better after it. Now the great creature goes willingly to the side of his cage when the surgeons approach. He knows them and remembers that they relieved him, and there is no sign of anything but pleasure on his part when he sees them.
Photographic Rock.
On the ranch of Paul Miller at Bradley Flat, near Hot Springs, S. D., is a ledge of rock which seems to possess all the properties of a photographic plate. When the rock is moist it will show after a thunder storm a clear photograph of the surrounding trees and bushes. Gradually pictures so taken seem to fade out, being renewed by each new thunder storm, though the same objects are not always reproduced. The rock seems to be a combination of flint and sandstone and is of a dirty red color.
Studying Action in Central Africa.
Probably Aesop is not as much read in our own country as he used to be, but there is a chance for him yet in central Africa. The report of the London Missionary society relates that at Kawlmbe an "Aesop class" is conducted by the native teachers on Sunday afternoons. "Sometimes," says the report, "the lessons they draw are very good and helpful, and contain more Christian teaching than the fables themselves would warrant."—Birmingham Post.
A Big Price for Stirrups.
A pair of iron stirrups were sold for $15,000 at the Forman sale in London. They were made for Matthias Corvinus, king of Hungary, and are partly plated with silver, parcel gilt and chased, each of the outer edges having an exquisite border of translucent cloisonne enamel on gold, six inches high and six inches wide. The work is Italian of the end of the fifteenth or the beginning of the sixteenth century.
Big Salaries.
New York Press: Speaking of big salaries, the biggest on record was paid to George Gould. For ten years' work his father gave him $5,000,000. The amount went down as "for services rendered." That was at the rate of $500,000 a year. The highest salary ever paid a railroad president was $75,000 a year that went to Sir William C. Van Horn when he was president of the Canadian Pacific.
Heavy Fire Losses of a Year.
The losses by fire in this country and Canada continue to be very heavy as compared with last year. In October the total loss was $12,046,000, a little less than in September, but $4,500,000 greater than in October, 1898. For ten months the aggregate losses make the enormous total of $111,654,000, or $15,000,000 above those of 1898 and nearly $20,000,000 more than in 1897.
Island Without a Taxgatherer.
Louds island, on the coast of Maine, near historic Pemaquid, in the Lincoln county town of Bristol, is one of the few places on earth where there are no taxes. This island, otherwise known as Muscongus, was overlooked when Maine became a state, and was put into no town or county.
Bare Copper Colns.
There is a premium on copper cents from 1793 to 1814, inclusive, and from 1816 to 1857, inclusive, the rarest being 1799, which sometimes brings $25, and 1804, which has sold for $25. Others that have brought $1 or more are 1793, 1795, 1796, 1809 and 1811.
The First Motor Bus
The first "motor bus" has made its appearance in London. It has seats for twenty-six passengers—twelve within and fourteen outside. The journey is between Kennington and Victoria.
Abinul Hamid's Dyed Halt
Sultan Abdul Hamid's hair never grows white. It is dyed as often as is needful, for, according to Turkish court etiquette, the sultan's hair must always be black.
Human Sacrifice in India.
From the records of the Madras high court it appears that the practice of offering human sacrifices to idols is increasing in southern India.
Thursday Silks
cents for Fancy Taffeta of many popular kinds — corded, Plisse, Pompadour, Hemstitched—all have beautiful colorings and have sold at prices from $1.15 to $1.50. We also include plain colored Peau de Soies al. Values from $1.19 to $1.50.
cents for 10 pieces of plain Black Taffeta Silk—21 inches wide—our regular 75c grade, 85c in most stores.
cents for our regular 89c quality Black Taffeta Silk—20 inches wide—They were going fast under our great selling of yesterday.
cents for all silk Black Satins and Peau de Soies—We sold this grade at a special sale for 78c once before—our regular price is 98c.
Thursday Hosiery
13 cents for Ladies' Black Wool Hose—double heel, toe and sole—a well made 25c grade—2 pairs for 25c.
13 cents for Ladies' Black Cotton Hose high spliced heel, double toe and sole—sold everywhere at 25c—2 pairs for 25c.
25 cents for Ladies' Fancy Hose—striped across, drop stitch up and down with ribbon effect, French foot with white heel and toe—Hermsdorf dye—high spliced heel, double sole and toe—a fine 35c article.
39 cents for Ladies' grey Wool Ribbed Vests—reduced from 75c garment as pants to match are all sold.
75 cents for Ladies' All Wool Black Union Suits—3 styles, button across and button down the front—well made—wide laps. They are regular $1.50 and $1.75 garments, and warranted perfect.
75 cents for Ladies' All Wool Black Tights—the kind that sold regularly at $1.25—perfect.
Do Not Overlook Our Elegant New Millinery. If You Are Not Ready to Buy Visit Us Anyway and See What is Worn and How to Wear it.
no organic symmetry in the narrative that is ingrained with oath, and the blasphemy that bolsters an opinion does no make it any more correct. Nay, of these expletive argues a limited range of ideas, and consciousness of being on the wrong side, and if we can find no other phrase through which to vent your choking passion.
Again, profaneness is a mean vice. It indicates the grossest ingratitude. According to general estimator, he who repays kindness with contumely, he who abuses his friend and benefactor, is deemed pitiful and wietched.
And yet, O profane man, whose name is it you handle so lightly? It is that of your benefactor. You, whose blood would boil to hear the venerable names of your earthly parents hurled about in scoffs, jest and abuse, without compunction and without thought name of your Heavenly Father.
Finally, profaneness is an awful vice.
Once more, I ask, whose name is it you so lightly use? That name of Ged—have you ever pondered its meaning? Have you ever thought what it is that you mingle thus with your passion and wit? It is the name of Him whom Angles worship, and whom the heavens cannot contain.
Profane man and woman, though the habit be ever so strength, when the word of mockery and blasphemy is about to leap from your lips, think of God, and instead of the rude oath, bow your head in silent prayer for mercy, deliverance and forgiveness.
The Rock Island Wall Map of the United States
Is the best offered to the public. It is very large and specially adapted to school purposes. Every teacher or geography and every business office should have one. It will be sent post paid to any address on receipt of fifteen cents in postage stamps or coin.
Address, JOHN SEBASTIAN, G. P. A., Chicago, Ill.
If troubled with rheumatism, give Chamberlain's Pain Balm a trial. It will not cost you a cent if it does no good. One application will relieve the pain. It also cures sprains and bruises in one-third the time required by any other treatment. Cuts, burns, frost-bites, quinsey, palms in the side and chest, glandular and other swellings are quickly curbed by applying it. Every bottle warranted. Price 25 and 50 cts. For sale by all Druggists.
Subscribe for the Rystander.
For its exercise or manifestation trust demands an object or being to be trusted.—Rev. T. Jefferson Danner.
Better a very little real faith straight from the heart than a vast amount of vague belief.—Rev. D. C. Garrett.
A secret of blessedness in work is the conviction that we are doing the work that God wishes us to do.—Rev. R. J. Kent.
The Bible exhorts us to that patient continuance in well doing that is necessary to the building of Christ-like character.—Rev. J. R. Shannon.
Progress is not blind, and now, more than ever, the evolution of the race should be guided by intelligent fore-sight.—Rev. G. D. Smith.
With the right conception of man's being here, not for happiness but for worthiness, suffering itself is an angel in disguise.—Rev. Ira Billman.
All human law is based on the conviction that the punishment should in the crime. The common sense of justice requires that—Rev. Dr. Crowe.
95
INTEMPERANCE
AND PROFANITY.
I will endeavor to touch upon a few of the crimes that are the outcome of intemperance, either directly or indirectly. Intemperance in itself is a crime, insomuch that it robs so many families of their support and homes; next to that comes falsehood, profanity, gambling, robbery, arson, suicide, and adultery.
These are only a few of the many vices and crimes that are committed daily through the influence of intemperance. A drunkard is a moral light-house, serving as a warning to the young to avoid the wreck of all that can bless humanity, or endear one to those around him. He is a constant illustration of the tremendous power of the appetite and of its degrading influence, when the intellectual nature and the sentiment are brought under the tyrannical control of the lower instincts.
When the manor woman with a mind capable of unlimited development, and a soul of vast capabilities and noble aspirations, the noblest specimen of the handwork of the Creator is made an abslive thrust down from her high possibilities to a situation far below the brute transformed from an immortal being in the image of his Maker into a fallen spirit, a demon, a fit inhabitant of the regions of darkness and despair; how utter is the ruin, how great the condemnation.
Be temperate, whatever a man might have been, let him yield to the demon of strong drink and it requires no prophet to tell what he will be. He inevitably goes down, manliness fades out of his nature, the token of honor, intelligence and intitility vanish from the face that is flushed from excessive debauchery, and with electric speed hastens on the downward path. In his sober moments he often curses the instruments of his ruin, but he is powerless to escape the evils that encompass him becomes worthless idler a miserable number of the ground. In the busy hive of human toil there is little indeed that he can do, and has little inclination or ambition to do even that. An outcast from all that is pure, high and holy, he may sometimes turn a solemn thought to the grave where slumbers those whom he once loved and whose love for him endured while life remained, bua memory stings him as a viper's deadly fangs. Reflection is bitter to his soul; his brain benumbed with poison no longer thrilled with thoughts that wander through eternity; and he, whose genius once irriddated the land and whose eloquence charmed the listening multitude, cracks his maudl jokes, moistens his lips with the burning draught and stupefies himself until his pain and sorrow is forgotten.
Oh, it is a fearful thing to see men and men on whom God has set, with his own signet, the impress of intellect and genius, debase themselves to this hell of sin, shame and misery, and yet men laugh and dance as they tread this downward path, and only waken to their danger when they find themselves lettered with bonds they cannot break, and sunk into wretchedness from which they cannot escape. Let those who have not entered upon this dangerous road flee for their lives from a path so full of peril, and let those who already find themselves entangled in the terrible snare, cry to the Mighty God for deliverance, and hasten to escape, ere it becomes impossible. So much for the drinking man or woman.
NOW FOR PROFAITY.
Profanity is a brutal vice. He who indulges in it is no gentleman. I care not what his stamp may be in society, what clothes he wears, or of what culture he boasts. Despite all his refinement, the light and habitual taking of God's name betrays a coarse nature and brutal will. Profaneness is an unmanly and silly vice. It certainly is not a grace in conversation, and adds no strength to it. There is
.95 for assorted lot Flannel Waists in polka dots and plain reds, blues and greens—Some unlined and some lined—Odd lot left of our $3.00 and $3.95 waists.
.50 for $5.00 and $7.00 Winter Skirts—There are 27 only left—some are black and some blue in cheviots, brocades and broadcloth
cents for $2.50 Wrappers—33 in the lot—sizees 34, 40, 42—all perfect, fine colors—Bargains if you take these sizes.
cents for Outing Flannel Gowns—pink, blue and cream—regular $1.00 grade, but slightly soiled.
cents for Children's Gowns of pink and blue striped Outing Flannel—regular 50c value anywhere.
cents for Ladies' grey Wool Ribbed Vests—reduced from 75c garment as pants to match are all sold.
cents for Ladies' All Wool Black Union Suits—2 styles, button across and button down the front—well made—wide laps. They are regular $1.50 and $1.75 garments, and warranted perfect.
cents for Ladies' All Wool Black Tights—the kind that sold regularly at $1.25—perfect.
SHORT SERMONS.
ALBIA NEWS.
The A. M. E. Church people will star revival at their church, onMarch the 4th.
Mrs. Thompson of Ottumwa spent a few weeks in our city, the guest of her daughter Mrs. W. A. Searcy.
Mr. C. G. Tolson who has been quite sick at his home in Hockling, is much better at this writing.
Mr. E. Tolson, Albert Anderson, and Ollie Tolson of Hockling spent Sunday in our town.
Dr. J. M. Wilson.
His wonderful cures are attracting the attention of many. The afflicted are flocking to him fo. relief, and are being cured of their most stubborn diseases. The blind receive their sight; the lame are made whole. Dr. Wilson USES NO drugs or instruments, and cures the largest per cent of patients ever known. Many of his cures surprise medical profession.
WILSON'S INSTITUTE OF HEALING Fifth and Walnut streets. Seeberger Block. Des Moines, Iowa. Iowa 'Phone 263.
AS TRUE AS GOSPEL.
There is always compensation. Our angels go out that our archangels may come in.
Unhappy is the man for whom his own mother has not made all other mothers venerable.
It is poor wit who lives by borrowing the words, decisions, mein, inventions and actions of others.
What an absurd thing it is to pass over the valuable parts of a man, and fix our attentions on his infirmities.
Virtue will catch as well as vice by contact; and the public stock of honest, manly principle will daily accumulate.
A greater value should be set on having received instructive and useful lessons than of possessing great store of wealth; for the latter is transitory good, the former is durable.
There is scarcely a generalization for one sex which does not apply equally to the other, so perfectly alike in nature are men and women. The difference is only in circumstances.
Why the Leaves Turn.
The common and old-fashioned idea is that the tints of autumn foliage are caused by frost. Stated briefly, the causes are these: The green matter in the tissue of a leaf is composed of two colors, red and blue. When the sap ceases to flow in the autumn and the natural growth of the tree ceases, oxidation of the tissue takes place. Under certain conditions the green leaf changes to red; under different conditions it takes on a yellow or brown tint—due to difference in combination of the original constituents of the green tissue, and to the varying conditions of climate, exposure and soil. A dry, cold climate produces more brilliant foliage than one that is damp and warm. This is the reason that our American autumns are so much more gorgeous than those of England.
It is better to be generous than harsh, better to be true than false, better to be brave than to be a coward. Blessed beyond all earthly blessedness is the man who in the tempestuous darkness of the soul has dared to hold fast to these venerable landmarks. Thrice blessed is he who, when all is drear and cheerless within and without, when his teachers terrify him and his friends shrink from him, has obstinately clung to moral good—thrice blessed, because his night shall pass into clear, bright day.
Broad Vestibuled First-Class Sleepers DAILY-
Great Rock Island Route
Leave Chicago on Big 5 at 10:00 p. m.
All the best scenery of the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevada by daylight in both directions.
These cars are carried on the limited trains of the Great Rock Island Route, Denever and Rio Grande (Scenic Route), Rio Grande Western and Southern Pacific.
Dining Car Service Through. Buffett Library Cars.
JOHN SEBASTIAN, G. P. A.,
Chicago.
NOTICE OF EXPIRATION OF RIGHT OF
REDEMPTION.
To (Being the
to person in possession of the real estate hereafter described) and to Mary B. Weeks, guardian. (in whose name the same is taxed.) You and each of you are hereby notified that on the ninth day of December A. D. 1890 the following described real estate to-wit: Lot three hundred and eleven (311) Mann's second addition to Lake Park, now included in and forming a part of the city of Polk, Moines and all within the county of Polk and state of Iowa, was sold for the then delinquent and unpaid tax of the year 1895 to A. H. Kelsey, that the undersigned is now the legal owner and holder of the certificate of purchase issued in pursuance of said sale and that the right of redemption will expire and a deed for the land be made unless redemption is made within ninety days from completed service hereof.
LOUIS MORGAN,
Owner and holder of certificate.
A. R. De Fluent, editor of the Journal, Doylestown, Ohio, suffered for a number of years from rheumatism in his right shoulder and side. He says: "My right arm at times was entirely useless. I tried Chamberlain's Pain Balm, and was surprised to receive relief almost immediately. The Pain Balm has been a constant companion of mine ever since and it never fails." For sale by all Druggists.
Gold Basis for India
London, Aug. 10—In the house of commons Tuesday the secretary of state for India, Lord George Hamilton, in introducing the Indian budget, said that after careful consideration the government had deliberately concluded that a gold star-hard was required in the interests of India, and that they would not be deterred from prosecuting this policy by all the means in their power.
P. D. Armour Has Recovered.
Chicago, Aug. 10.—P. D. Armour has sent messages announcing his complete recovery from the illness that kept him away from his office for several weeks last spring. He went abroad in May, and he writes to friends that he now feels better than at any time within the past five years. He will return Oct. 1.
Agree to a Conference
Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 10.—President Simon Burns of the Glass Workers' association received a telegram from President Chambers of the Manufacturers' association announcing that the manufacturers were willing to meet the workers in conference to consider the wage scale at Pittsburg, Aug. 15.
Senator Beveridge Returns.
Victoria, B. C., Aug. 10.—Senator and Mrs. A. J. Beveridge of Indiana returned from Manila by the Empress of Japan Tuesday. The senator absolutely refuses to express an opinion upon anything connected with the Philippine campaign, and most especially declines to discuss Gen. Otis.
Look Was Missing.
A drill sergeant was unpopular among his men. They found him to particular. One day he had on hand a party of reruits whom he was putting through the funeral exercise. Opening the ranks so as to admit the passage of the supposed funeral corlege among them, the instructor, by way of practical explanation, walked slowly down the lane formed by the two ranks, saying, as he did so: "Now, I'm the corpse. Pay attention!" Having reached the end of the line he turned, regarded the men with a scrutinizing eye for a minute, and then remarked: "Your 'ands is right, and your 'eads is right, but you 'avent' got that look of regret you ought to ave."—Youth's Companion.
The Stuart Kinney of Scotland.
To be king of Scotland for many a lay implied that the monarch ascended in childhood, and came to an unnatural death while in the prime of life. Thus James I, ascended the throne when he was 12, and was murdered. James II, was 7, James III. 9, James IV. 15, and all were killed—the last two in battle. James V. was only 16 months old when he became a king, and his daughter, Mary Queen of Scots, was 8 days old when she came into that hard heritage. She was a widow at 18, she married Darnley when he was not yet 25, abdicating a few weeks after she had married for the third time. Her son, James VI., thus became king when he was 13 months old.
JUSTICE FOR RED MAN
18 THE MISSION OF MR
RICHARD C. ADAMS.
Who Represents the Delaware Tribe-
Heartless Syndicates and Corporation
Would Deprive Indians of Home
That They Are Entitled To.
(Washington Letter.)
Richard C. Adams, a full-blooded Delaware Indian, who represents his nation at Washington, is a lawyer of superior intellect and acquisitions He is devoting not only his life, but his fortune also, to the work of having justice done to the red man. He has written some good poetry and has also compiled a little history of the Delaware tribe, which he has on his tongue's end. The Delaware Indians were once one of the most powerful tribes on the North American continent. When first met by the white man they claimed and controlled all of the territory between the Hudson river and the Potomac. Under the spreading elm tree at Shackamaxon, 217 years ago, they sold to the founder of the state of Pennsylvania, William Penn the vast area within its borders for a nominal sum, and largely as an act of friendship and brotherly love which they entertained for the white people at that time and have ever since. But the Delaware have been forced much against their will and their interest to cross the continent, unwilling but always yielding graciously, having at most confidence in the promises that "this move will be the last," until now but a handful of them are left, where they have purchased homes in the Cherokee nation, Indian Territory. And here, where they were assured by both the Cherokees and the United States government that their rights and interests would be protected, they find that their very homes are now being covered with applications for mineral leases by both Cherokee citizens and citizens of the United States—wealthy corporations—who claim the protection of the United States government and deny the rights of the Delaware Indians. They have no money left in the hands of the government, and, if deprived of their rights in the Cherokee nation, they are paupers. If they win in their contention, they are rich. The Cherokees are rich; they have a large fund in the hands of the government. The Delawares, Mr. Adams claims, have an interest in this fund, but have no means of obtaining any portion of it to defend their rights. Through the efforts of Mr. Adams and
BROOKLYN
RICHARD C. ADAMS.
John Bullette the Twenty-fifth section of the Curtis bill became a law. It provides that before any allotmen shall be made of lands in the Cherokee nation, there shall be segregated therefrom, by the commission heretofore mentioned, in separate allotments or otherwise, the 157,600 acres of land purchased by the Delaware tribe of Indians from the Cherokee nation, under agreement of April 8, 1867. This Mr. Adams claims, has not been done, although it has been demanded. The questions as to the rights of the Delawares are now in the Court of Claims. If their contention is sustained, that the lands which the various mineral syndicates desire to secure possession of are Delaware lands, the Cherokees cannot make the leases. But the Delawares fear that these leases may be executed by the secretary of the interior without awaiting the decision of the court.
"We are now trying to secure our last little homes in the Indian Territory and protect them from the grasping greed of heartless syndicates and corporations," says Mr. Adams.
Supplies in Philippines.
Handling rapidly large quantities of supplies is, therefore, a very important part of military duties. A steady process of government transports hurry across the Pacific loaded with necessities for the troops. When the supplies reach Manila, they must be hurried over the island of Luzon. Many men are required for this work, but men cannot be spared from the firing lines or garrison duty. Besides, the handling of supplies is not very dignified or pleasant work for the American soldier. The Chinese coolies have therefore been employed for this labor, and very hard working and useful little fellows they are, too. Stripped to the scantiest attire possible, they put their shoulders to heavy bundles and, busy as ants, make up in numbers what they lack in size.
A Sure Sign
Jenks—That baby of yours ought to be a good tennis player later on. Jones—What makes you think so? Jenks—Oh, the way he keeps up his racket.
SPRING THINGS
There are 35 complete businesses here under one roof and every single one of these 35 separate stores is about ready or is getting ready for its Spring business.
This has been an opening week of Dress Goods, Walat Goods and Silks. The collection is the greatest thing Des Molles 'above every aw.
The new Spring Lace an pretty Trimmings are here in all lavishness, newer, handsom er and first to you have even, Youngers, to have before.
The Millinery Department is getting ready for its Spring opening. Two good sized armies of busy fingers are working like beavers (swiftly but intelligently) getting ready for this beautiful show. But the harbingers of Spring are now all over the store, and the daily visitors find much that is interesting. There is much that is new and beautiful to see—much more that it is profitable to any.
The Literature of its columns is equal to that of the best magazines. It is interesting to the children as well as the parents.
INTER OCEAN is a WESTERN NEWSPAPER, and while it goes to the family THE NEWS OF THE WORLD and gives its readers the best and ablest discussions of all questions of the day, it is in unity with the ideas and aspirations of Western people and discusses and politics from the Western standpoint.
0—PRICE ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR—$1.00
THE INTER OCEAN is a WESTERN NEWSPAPER, and while it brings to the family THE NEWS OF THE WORLD and gives its readers the best and ablest discussions of all questions of the day, it is in full sympathy with the ideas and aspirations of Western people and discusses literature and politics from the Western standpoint.
THE DAILY AND SUNDAY EDITIONS OF THE INTER OCFAN
ARE THE BEST EVER SEEN IN THE WEST.
THE INTER OCEAN'S NEWS IS EXCLUSIVE
Price of Daily by mail ..... $4.00 per year
Price of Sunday by mail ..... $2.00 per year
Daily and Sunday by mail ..... $6.00 per year
We carry a stock of goods valued at $1,500,000.00
We receive from 10,000 to 29,000 letters every day
We own and occupy the tallest merchantile building in the world. We have over 2,000,000 customers. Sixteen hundred clerks are constantly engaged filling out-of-town orders.
OUR GENERAL CATALOGUE is the book of the people—it quotes Wholesale Prices to Everybody, has over 1,000 pages, 16,000 illustrations, and 60,000 descriptions of articles with prices. It costs 72 cents to print and mail each copy. We want you to have one. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS to show your good faith, and we'll send you a copy FREE, with all charges prepaid.
MONTGOMERY WARD & CO.
Michigan Ave, and Madison Street
CHICAGO
The Affairs of Europe
are faithfully portrayed in the original and exclusive cable dispatches which THE CHICAGO RECORD prints daily from the leading capitals of the old world. This magnificent special service is in process of being greatly extended so as to include every important in Europe; and it is supplemented by the full regular cable service of The Associated Press.
The Chicago Record, alone of all American newspapers outside New York city, now prints original and exclusive cable dispatches daily from the leading capitals of Europe.
MIOUX CITY.
Rev. T. A. Clark has been on the sick list since his return from Des Moines.
The young people's meetings are quite interesting. Mr. Charles Watkins led the meeting on last Sunday afternoon.
Messrs. L. D. Robinson and M. N. Nelson of Boone, Iowa, are in the city.
The entertainment given by the carpet committee at the church on the 27th was a financial success.
Mr. G. C. Carr has moved his barber shop and printing office to 313 Nebraska street. Mr. Carr promises very pleasant quarters for the accommodation of all who wish to give the Searchlight a call.
Louis Smith of Yankton, S. D., is visiting in the city.
The musicale rendered by the choir on Sunday evening was a rare treat.
The choir with the addition of a few more voices will give a grand concert at the Peavey Grand opera house.
The choir is under training now.
There will be a Four Thumb wedding given by the Sunday school shortly.
Miss Mary Blair was called to bedside of her mother, who is very sick at their home at Port Pierce, S. D.
Quarterly meeting was well attended. Presiding Elder Bundy is expected in the city before long to hold quarterly conference.
The infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Austin was baptized on last Sunday evening.
Mr. R. Herns is on the sick list.
Mr. E. A. Comley left for Winnebago City, Minn., on last Tuesday.
Mr. A. Ross has been on the sick list.
BURLINGTON
Rev. and Mrs. Jas. Higgins received an invitation to attend the reception and banquet tendered to Bishop B. W. Arnett and wife by the Fourth Episcopal district at Quinn chapel March 6. Also the reception to Mrs. B. ... Arnett March 7 at Bethel church by the ladies of the Mite Missionary society, and regret their inability to attend either.
Mrs. Preston Irving of Sheridan, Iowa, was in the city for a few days last week, looking the picture, of health.
Rev. White of St. Louis, Mo., is at the Baptist church conducting revival services.
The fifteenth anniversary of St. John's A. M. E. church occurred ast Sunday March 4. In the morning, Rev. Jas. ruggins preached from the text, St. John 17: 14-15. At 3 o'clock the services were very impressive, a short discourse by the pastor, and the reading of the mortgage by Mr. S. L. Tigg, which he handed to Brother Wm. Emanuel, who burnt it. Mr. S. L. Tigg also read the note, and handed it to Mr. G. W. Brown, and it was also consumed. Mrs. Jas. Higgins read a paper on the anniversary of the church. Mrs. Edward Allen read a paper on the "Duty of Members to the Church" which was very instructive. "The Relation of the Sunday School to the Church" was well rendered by Mrs. Julia Folks. At 3 o'clock the chair rendered some excellent music under the direction of Mrs. Grace Morris Allen. And a short discourse by the pastor.
$1
Bright Angle lodge, No. 2193, held a social and entertainment Wednesday evening at their hall. Mr. A. L. Drew received the first prize, $12 on a suit of clothes, and Mr. A. Pleasants the sack of flour.
Quite a merry seig., party went out last Friday evening. Among the number was Mr. and Mrs. Archie Mitchell, Gertie Taylor, Cora Brooks, Jennie Brown, Sophie Bird, Ida Palmer.
Mrs. Parthene White who has been at Mercy hospital for several weeks, has fully recovered and returned to her home on Main street.
It is a noble act on the part of the colored people of Omaha to secure the permanent property of the famous Abraham Lincoln car.
Mrs. Jane Ross of Jionmouth is in the city, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thompson. Charlie is all smiles; he is the father of a bouncing baby boy.
Friday Night class of St. John's A. M. E. church is increasing in interest. Miss Lenora Cooper is secretary and Mr. Edward Allen treasurer. The pastor, Jas. Higgins, is leader. Bishop B. W. Arneth has notified the pastor, Rev. Jas. Higgins, that he will pay a visit to Burlington before his time is out.
Evans, Iowa, March 3, 1900.—Rev. Tate preached at the Baptist church Sunday morning and evening.
A very sad accident occurred here Tuesday morning at 12 o'clock at the mine, No. 5, which is about two miles from Evans. A young man fell from the cage back into the shaft, which is over 100 feet deep and was killed. He was sent to his relatives in Carckas, Kansas, Wednesday. T.e. miners' aid turned out in the procession. The corps was carried to the station about 5 o'clock and was sent to his parents. He leaves a father and stepmother and a host of friends to mourn his loss. Psalm of life. "Tell me not in mournful sorrow, life is but a happy dream; and the soul is dead that slumbers, and things are not what they seem."
Those who are on the sick list are Mrs. Duke, Mrs. J. James and Mrs. Willis.
The queen of Iowa tabernacle gave an entertainment here Saturday evening.
The Y. M. & C. club gave a ball in Burrows' new ball Monday evening.
Burgess I. Ganes was entertained by a host of friends Sunday afternoon, where they were entertained by music and sentimental songs, sang by Mr. Ganes and others.
Miss Lottie Branch left for Sheldon Tuesday.
Dr. and Mrs. McMames left for Des Moines February 28.
The queen of Iowa tabernacle club is open if any one wishes to join.
The H. H. of R. club is open. Send in your applications. Also the Old Fellows' club is open, so all three of the orders are open. Don't forget to send in your application. Subscribe for the Bystander.
KNOXVILLE NO. 125
Mrs. M. Kay, who has been visiting
her mother of this city, departed for
her home in Indianola.
Mrs. Edward Jeffers and niece, Miss
Jessie Jeffers, departed for their home
in Quincy, Illinois, where Jessie wri-
visit for a while.
Mrs. Lizzie Mofield of this city is
very low at this writing.
Lloyd Russell of Company D, Fifty-
first Iowa, who resided at Columbia,
Iowa, departed this life February 27,
1900. Thirty of Company D boys of
this city were in attendance and 11
of Company H from Chariton met at
Columbia Thursday to attend the funeral.
Mr. W. P. Bird is on the sick list
this week.
Miss Hullie M. Bird of the Western
college, Macon, Mo., is taking a course
in music. She likes her teacher and
room mates very much. Success to
Miss Bird and the rest of the students.
We would like to hear from Ot-
DUBUQUE
Last Sunday was missionary day. There was a fair attendance at the morning and evening services. Mr. Ed Martin is visitng in Burlington.
Mr. J. C. Mills met with a severe accident last week which laid h.m up for a couple of days.
Mr. Taylor Peden is in our city.
Mrs. Norris read a very interesting paper last Sunday evening at the church.
Mrs. Rober, who has been ill, is improving.
A sociable will be held at the church Tuesday evening.
A pound party was given last Friday evening at Rev. Johnson's for his benefit. There were quite a number present.
The club will give another entertainment soon.
NOTICE OF EXPIRATION OF RIGHT OF REDEMPTION.
You are hereby notified that on the ninth day of December, A. D. 1896, the following described real estate, situated in Polk county, Iowa, to-wit; Lot fifty-nine (59) in Harrison (1984) was included in and forming a part of the city of Des Moines, Iowa, was sold for the then delinquent and unpaid tax of the year 1895 to M. E. Miller; that the undersigned is now the legal owner and holder of the certificate of purchase issued by the plumage, the above mentioned sale, and that the right of redemption will expire and a deed for the land will be made unless redemption is made within ninety days from the completed service hereof.
GEO. HARNAGEL.
NOTICE OF EXPIRATION OF RIGHT OF REDEMPTION.
You are hereby notified that on the ninth day of December, A. D., 1896, the following described real estate, situated in Polk county, Iowa, to-wit: Lot twenty-seven (27) in Forest Glen, being included in and forming a part of the city of Des Moines, Iowa, was sold for the then delinquent and unpaid tax of the year 1895 to M. E. Mauk that the undersigned, a legal owner of the certificate of purchase issued in pursuance of the above mentioned sale, and that the right of redemption will expire and a deed for the land will be made unless redemption is made within ninety days from the completed service hereof.
GEO. HARNAGEL.
NOTICE OF EXPIRATION OF RIGHT OF REDEMPTION.
To Amy H. Eustick:
You have received that on the 9th day of December, A. D. 1896, the following described real estate, situated in Polk county, Iowa, to-wit: Lot thirty-two (32) in Harrison Park addition to University Place, now included in and forming a park. Price of the Moose Mines property for the then dwelling and unpaid tax of the year 1895, to E. R. Bennett; that the undersigned is now the legal owner and holder of the certificate of purchase issued in pursuance of the above mentioned sale, and that the right of reedemption will expire on the land for the land will be unlawful redemption is made within ninety days from the completed service hereof.
ORIGINAL NOTICE.
In the District court of the state of Iowa, in and for Polk County: Isabella Broadstone, Plaintiff, vs. Chas. W. Broadstone, Defendant. To the above named defendant: You are hereby notified that there will be a petition on file in the Clerk's office of the District court of Polk county, Iowa, on or before the 15th day of February A. D. 1900, by the plaintiff (Isabella Broadstone), asking to be divorced from you on the ground of willful desertion, without the knowledge and consent of the plaintiff, and that unless you appear thereto and defend before noon of the second day of the next term of said District court, which will commence at Des Moines, Polk county, Iowa, on the 5th day of March A. D. 1900, default will be entered against you and judgment rendered theron. J. B. RUSH. Attorney for plaintiff.
CHURCH AND CLERGY.
The Rev. J. Wilbur Chapman is to write the life of D. L. Moody.
Bishop Edsall has just completed a highly successful mission at Jamestown, N. D.
Tomkins Avenue Congregational church of Brooklyn raised over $27,000 for missions during the year.
The death roll in the Congregational ministry in Great Britain was unusually heavy during the year 1899.
A congress of the history of religions will be held at Paris, France during the first part of September next year.
The receipts of Plymouth church, Brooklyn, for the year make a total of $38,000, of which $17,000 is from pew rents.
The annual council of the South African churches was held at Graef Reinet, and owing to the preoccupations of the war, only thirty-eight delegates attended.
Since his resignation from the Church of the Pilgrims relief from care has conducted to a marked improvement in the health of the venerable Dr. R. S. Storra.
MUSCATINE NEWS.
Dr. Peter Tounley has changed his residence from East Seventh street to Chestnut street.
Mrs. Alice Maxie is quite sick at the home of her mother, Mrs. Peter Tounley.
The infant daughter of Mr and Mrs.
J. D. Lamb has ben quite sick, but is better at present.
Rev. Gordon is making astrenuous effort to pay the indebentness of $480 on the A. M. E. church.
Mr. Charles Lee treated members of the D. Y. W. Y. K. club and other friends to a bobsled ride Thursday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Peason dined at the home of Mr. and Mrs. I. Seay of South Muscatine Sunday.
The smallpox scare has just about died out. The schools have been closed for two weeks.
The D. Y. W. Y. K. club held a masquerade room at Appel's hail in South Muscatine last Tuesday evening. Two prizes were given; one for the best dressed person was awarded to Miss Gertrude Lee and the booby prize awarded to Evelyn White. An interesting musical program was rendered. There will be adebate at the A. M. E. church Thursday evening. Subject, "Resolved, that the United States should not grant divorces." Affirmative, Miss G. Leet and Mr. L. Barnes; negative, Mrs. G. W. Parson and Mr. Abe Seabrooks, after which the stewardess will serve refreshments.
Mrs. Dora Price, after a visit of three weeks with her mother, Mrs. G. Patterson, in Iowa City, returned home last week.
Miss Cora Thomas of Albia is in the city, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Neason Cair.
Mr. Sawyer Lamb, who has been ill, is better at present writing.
Mr. Kenyon Moore, formerly employed at the Commercial hotel, is now working at the Hotel Grand.
There is a rumor of a wedding to take place soon.
The Misses Greenway are reported sick at their home on Pine street.
Mr. Forest E. White is kept quite busy now he has a class of 15. He is teacher of mandolin, guitar and banjo. He has some fine compositions for the guitar which he hopes to place before the public at an early date.
The many friends of Rev. Searcy are pleased to know of his recovery from smallpox.
Mr. Edmund Lee has returned from Muchakinock, Iowa.
The Bystander is all right, only the Muscatine subscribers do not get their papers regularly, and it is causing dissatisfaction.
All subscribers that have not paid up their dues, please do so at the earliest convenience.
$2.75 BOXRAIN COAT
PURE
SEA
SEAFS ROE
SEND NO MONEY. Cut this ad, and send to us.
Send your height and weight, and measure
inches around body at breast, taken over
inrest under neck,坐 under arm, and
will send you this coat by express
immediate and try it on at your nearest
amine and try it on at your nearest
coat, represented and the most wonderful
value you ever ask or heard of, and
pay $0.00, the pay the express agent
$2.75, the bank $2.75, and express charges.
THIS MACKINTOSH is latest 1000
style, easy fitting, man-made
waterproof fabric, Durathorn
Cloth, full length, double brushed,
fabric, waterproof seamed, Suitable
for both Rails or Overcast, and guaranteed
durable wear, any other house. For Free Cloth Sample
of Men's Mackintoshes up to $5.00,
and Men's Mackintoshes up to $10.00,
coats up to $10.00, write for
FREE SAMPLE BOOK No. 80k. @ Address
SEARS, ROEBEK CO. (inc. CHICAGO,
Iowa), Roebek Co. are thoroughly reliable - filling!
THROUGH FIRST CLASS PULLMAN
SLEEPERS BETWEEN CHICAGO
AND SAN FRANCISCO
AND SAN FRANCISCO
Vita De La Cruz Drive, Feb. 25th by the Great Rockie Island Route, leaving Chicago at 10:00 p. m. daily, Des Moines 8:35 a. m.
Omaha 1:30 p. m. The Colorado Rockies and Sierra Nevada are crossed by daylight in both directions, making this the grandest scenic trip in the country. The Broad Vestibulated Sleepers and are carried on limited trains with Dining Car Service throughout and Buffet Library Cars. Direct connections to and from Southern California. See your agent for berth reservations and folders or address.
JOHN SEBASTIAN,
G. P. A., Chicago
SEND ONE DOLLAR
Will weigh 600 lbs. by using all weight furnished,
will weigh 1200 lbs. by using all weight furnished,
Platform is 1025 inches, resting on adjustable chill
bearings, has Denton steel pivots most sensitive,
large wheels; they are nicely painted and ornamented
large wheels; they are nicely painted and ornamented
will be twice the cost in one season by weighing the
grain he sells and uses. ORDER at OCC before the
address. Address: Sears, Roebuck & Co. (Inc) Chicago, Ill.
(Sears, Roebuck & Co. are thoroughly reliable. - Killer.)
Please announce my name as a candidate for Treasurer of the Independent School District of Des Moines West Side. Election Monday March 19.
J. C. O'DONNELL.
AFTERTHOUGHTS.
Many a man wouldn't be nearly so lucky if he depended on luck.
One's admiration for oneself is largely due to the limitations of mirrors.
It is when we become rich or famous that we find out where are the friends of our youth.
Don't abuse the world because it abuses you, because the percentage is always against you.
The shrewd man does not openly condemn another for being an ass; nor does he cry him down; nor yet shun him; for he knows that the ass, though a little slow of movement and comprehension, is a very convenient beast of burden, and, remembering work of his own that should be done, he profits by his knowledge.
NEW SOURCE OF GUTTAPERCHA
A German Says the Trees That Produce
It Will Grow in the Philippines.
In a monograph, just published in Germany, it is shown that the Philippines are among the few places on earth in which the trees from which guttapercha is procured will flourish. The value of this statement is not to be underrated for two reasons: One is that guttapercha is an indispensable material for the making of submarine cables and golf balls; the other is that the trees in Sumatra and Borneo, from which the chief supply has hitherto been drawn are almost entirely exhausted. The cause of this exhaustion lies in the primitive and destructive methods which were formerly employed for gathering this valuable commodity. The natives who never have any thought for the morrow have ruthlessly cut down whole forests of trees, so that they might scrape the guttapercha, which is nothing but the sap from inside the bark. This wholesale destruction carried on for years has greatly diminished the annual crop, but the discovery that these trees grow and can be successfully cultivated in the Philippines offers hope that a new mine of wealth has been found for American enterprise as soon as the islands are pacified. While the chief use of guttapercha is, of course, for the isolating covering of electric wires, a large quantity is used for the manufacture of golf balls, for which no other material seems so well adapted. Its hardness after having been submitted to the proper pressure, and its toughness make it the only golf ball material yet discovered. The amount of cable laid since 1856 is some 41,833 knots, representing a cost for the cables alone of millions of pounds sterling, and as the prospects are that during the next fifty years many more cables will be required and laid, the demand for guttapercha is almost unlimited. The wealth which guttapercha in the Philippines holds out to American enterprise is in proportion to this demand.
EGG MEMBRANE
Used as a Substitute For Skin Grafting
For Surface Wounds.
New York Special Chicago Tribune: Medical science has discovered that the hen's egg provides an admirable substitute for human flesh to graft on human open wounds. The substitute is the delicate membrane that immediately lines the inside of a hen's egg. The German surgeons first found that this membrane can be successfully used as the nucleus for granulation of open wounds. The surgeons of the Seney Hospital in Brooklyn were the first in this country to adopt and practice the Germans' discovery. Consequently Edgar A. Garbut will leave the Seney Hospital, Brooklyn, and again take charge of his laundry. Garbut, 36 years old now, fell from his bicycle two years ago and so severely injured himself that as the disease of the bones advanced it was necessary to remove the bones of his left arm, his shoulder blade, and the left end of his collar bone. While Garbut rallied, the surgeons soon saw that the wounds left by the operations would not heal on the surface. Garbut's wife, his nephew and a young man in his employ offered of their cuticle to graft on Garbut's wounds. But on December 10 the last one of the surgeons in the Seney Hospital remembered that the German surgeons say that the hen's egg provides a substitute for human cuticle in such cases. So the Seney Hospital surgeons procured some fresh eggs and from them took the membrane that lines the shells, and pieces of membrane were planted on Garbut's wounds. So a new skin was formed. The egg membrane did not form any part of the new membrane skin, but simply was a "starter" for it.
Forget His Native Tongue
Andrew Lawson, a Norwegian cooper was struck on the head by a falling block while at work on one of the pliers of the Atlantic Transport company, New York city, on Sept. 5, 1898. He lay like one dead in St. Vincent's hospital for two months. His life was despaired of, but finally he rallied and regained a part of his lost strength. Lawson is in a normal condition in every sense, with the exception that he has forgotten all about his former life and companions, and has no remembrance of his native tongue. Try as he will he cannot converse in the language that he learned in Norway. His wife is instructing him as she does their four-year-old boy. Lawson speaks the English language only imperfectly. The case has attracted the attention of scientists and specialists.
Buffaloes in Australia
Buffaloes and elephants are by no means approaching extinction as rapidly as is commonly supposed. Imense herds of buffaloes roam about the vast northern plains of Australia, but bloodthirsty blacks are also numerous in that region, and buffalo-hunters carry their lives in their hands. Also, according to the latest number of the British North Borneo Herald, large numbers of elephants occupy the jungles to the south of Sandakan bay. It is suggested that they could be turned into a valuable asset for the colony if decoy animals were imported from India and the natives were taught how to construct "kedahs," or trapping enclosures.
Value of Birda
A French naturalist asserts that if the world should become birdless man would not inhabit it after nine years, in spite of all the sprays and poisons that could be manufactured for the destruction of insects. The insects and slugs would simply eat up our orchards and crops.
wri HPS ROO a I RE i ee elle
pe ee ene ee eae
" er Re omm eete e oeen i een 3 ‘ . ' emer
Se eencteneee rater a ee ey TN TAVOR ocr oo rT UT boomin an a orig oN
" $teoeeeee TOSSES SOROOE HES [U0 rs am tree cm | ROSEBERY IN FAVOR. SHARE RIVER VALLEY | Oe Put Wetter:
‘ec Te RON pe oh NS eR Sen oe ee we = 2 | steamer to ope the “Bi . inate s gar om PAY SAAD OV ERIE S" ‘wild: forms’: epterre: oe
a ) Glaverdaie’s Ady Pa ares cars bad Cabs en vreead-| way AGAIN BECOME BRITA ron z sin Re | Sen aeitmtreri Bee
: AU i $ VGRtIFS tem to avold & jon Of any kind, ER TAIN'S RICHEST FARMING COUNTRY IN | "07 ve
fa and 0 halt dosem lookouts were @is- PRIME MINISTER, | anna es ee aie 2
Overrientes Cee ee ibar batt ber onli soeea to tke ete im 1 Rig terreno iy
'W0A, vy Revert Bonner’s a or salle spread 1¢ gentle | Has the support of That Beotion of |g Oo iy aa a min :
eee oan eee peg aight Dreese, the “Black Cat” glided | the People That is Opposed to. the | * complste Wrulem of tertestlen Be: | sanity. | Out big ning becuse
‘HAPTER ) ee Se ee War | Aenet $00" .Semth Abriens | prevaiie = cae sae ef the Unites Siettand woinen neglect their bee
Cl it. Bterne and h a water. ees Farmer Repabitos, Frets East and Weet Gemparea, | Until the breakdown tomes, The best
Having gone thus far, Rob would not
ave been a true boy had he not look-
of forward to this great change in his
Rte without more or leas eagerness and
Dleawure. And Rob was a true boy. He
‘was & good boy, and a good scholar.
We was the best runner, the beat foot-
ball player, and the best swimmer in
the circle of boys in which he was
leader. ‘The blood of splendid health
coursed through his veins. He was
sturdy, strong and handsome, What
boy such as this would not hail with
delight 2 life in South America, with
prospects of adventures in wild and
mysterious places.
~ Mra Cleverdale #0 far entered into
is hepes and plane, that at last she
became aot only reconciled to the part-
Ang, but pleased at it, It meant so
much for the bey she dearly loved. She
Believed that her own life would not
be long, and she was giad of this op-
portunity for Rob to find a home where
‘his future was assured,
‘And at last the eventful day came.
Mra, Cleverdale had a friend, a lawyer,
‘who undertook to get Rob safely off.
“He goea te Rio de Janeiro on the
Ualted States and Brasil mail,” sald
the lawyer, Mr. Brown, “At Rio be
changes and takes another ship, For-
‘uaately, Iam acquainted with the cap-
tain of the ‘Vigilancia,’ which sails
Bext week trom here. I will take Rob
to see him, and then wo can rest as-
sured that he will arrive safely. There
{a no better aallor or better man affoat
thea Captain Baker of the ‘Vigilan-
ain”
So Mr. Brown took Rob to meet Cap-
tain Baker. The captain of the Vigi-
ancl” was a fine, hearty man, every
finch a sailor, and every inch a geatle-
man. He won the boy's heart at ence
by his kindness,
“Bea't you worry about this young
gentleman, Mr. Brown,” he sald. “He
and I are going to be very good friends,
Za a
“are
We oe ——
. 2 eS Se a
; ea SSS
Zia
a a & eae SS
= =< Be SA =
= ; (ess SSS
ff ot =
—
iL Ii ==
iy | Hh Bi Uf jy
=
3 MVEA
We are going to enjoy every foot of the
way from here to Rio, and there he
will be placed in good hands for the
rest of the trip. He's all right. We
‘sail on Wednesday. Don't forget.”
Se on Wednesday Rob found him-
self om board the “Vigilancia” with his
mother and Mr. Brown to see him off.
Mra, Cleverdale could not help crying
‘© little, but she laughed gayly tmme-
diately after, and the memory that Rob
took away with him was his mother
and Mr. Brown laughing away as if
they enjoyed the occasion. This helped
Rob very much.
On Wednesday the big sbip left ber
dock and steamed away.
It was 1p the winter time, and Rob,
closely muffied in a big ulster, steod on
the deck watching the sights as they
went down the East river, and down
the bay. After the panorama of the
passing docks he became interested in
the grand view of the harbor, the Sta-
tue of Liberty, which looks so ditfer-
‘ent when viewed from the city; the
forts, with their ugly looking guns, the
taking on of a pilot and his departure
—all these things Kept Rob interested,
so that even when he thought he was
Jeaving bis native land, perhaps tor-
ever, he waved aside the sorrow, and
told himself that soon he would be a
‘man with money enough to come back
it he wished.
Captain Baker was very kind to Rob,
and, with the exception of a few daya
of seasickness, the boy enjoyed the trip
to Rio de Janelro—a distance of nearly
seven thousand miles—very much.
At Rio, Captain Baker introduced
him to the captain of a ship of the
Royal Mall Line, which was to go to
Buenos Ayres. This was the final step
of Rob's long journey, and it was here
that his troubles were to contmence.
‘There were few passengers on board,
and most of these wero natives of Bra-
ail or the Argentine Republic, travel-
Ang on business. There was one pas-
senger, however, who soomed to take @
great fancy to Rob, and who at once
struck up an sequaintance with him.
‘This was a young man about twenty-
five years of age. His name was Lem-
Bel ShaERe, ORS Be was appareaty «
mixed English and Spanish parentage
He was quite handsome and well Gress-
ed, with black, plercing eyes, and s
firm look about the mouth. Reb was
giad te be friends with Mr, Starne, fer
the sail to Buenos Ayres would . have
deea o long and lonely one without s
friend to talk to. The captain of the
“Reyal Matl” was not so friendly as
Captain Baker, and Rob fell in with
Mr. Starne most of the time.
‘Mr, Starne waa much interested in
Rob's prospects, and his coal-black
eyes glistened when Rob, in the inno-
cence of his heart, told what « splendid
offer Mr. Horton had made him, But
Mr, Starne, while getting all Rob's
atory out of him, sald nothing about
his ewn business on board the “Royal
Mail.”
The ship stopped at Montevideo, in
Uraguay, and then entered the River
de La Plata.
It was on a black and moontess night
when Rob and Mr. Starne were stand-
ing near the rail chatting. The few
passengers were distributed far, away
frem them, and the crew were busy.
‘There was no one near enough to see
in the darkness, just what was going
on im that pertion of the deck.
Mr. Starne was bending over the rail.
“Look down there,” he sald to Rob.
“See that splendid phosphorescent
lght.”
Rob leaned far over the rail and
peered downward.
Suddenly he felt a clutch from be-
hind. A hand was clapped over his
mouth, and, without being able to cry
out or to make a struggle for his life,
Rob was shoved over the rail, and went
down like # log Into the foaming wa-
ters that churned around the speeding
steamer.
CHAPTER It,
The Rescue on Board the Black Cat.
not the enly thing afloat in La Plata
River that dark night. Hidden from
the men on the swift steamer by the
thick blackness of the night, and the
fact that she carried no lights, was a
schooner, which was feeling her way
across the broad expanse of the eatu-
ary, within hailing distance of the
steamship that passed her unwittingly.
This schooner was a peculiar craft.
‘She was not so pecullar in appearance
as in action. She was a low, narrow
craft, built for speed, and carried a
tremendous amount of sail. As has
deen sald, there was no light shown on
the schooner. She ran the risk of be-
ing struck by a passing vessel. But this
was only a chance, and her captain
knew that if lights were show there
was almost » certainty of being run
down by government boats.
‘Across the stern of this vessel no
name could be seen in the brightest
daylight. But still she had a name. It
was “El Gato Negro,” or “The Black
Cat”
‘The crew of “El Gato Negro” was a
mixed lot of rascals, some being Span-
Ish, born In South America, some being
Freneh, some Portuguese, and some na-
tive Indian, “The Black Cat” had a
bad name among the officials of Ar-
gentina, and she was, In reallty, the
fastest and most successful smuggler
in the werld.
She was entering the river, even now,
with a cargo of rifles and ammunition,
and also of rum and tobacco, on which
there {s a heavy duty in Argentina, and
was making in the dark for a certain
spot where the contraband cargo could
be landed without fear of detection.
The language spoken on board the
“Black Cat” was something beyond
printed words to describe. It was cer-
tainly a jargon of English, mixed with
Spanish, French or any other lan-
guage that came handy. The men were,
toa man, a desperate, cut-throat gang.
Captain Torrevo, of the “Black Cat”
was on deck peering at the lights ef the
steamer, which was passing a short
@istance ahead of the schooner. He
grinned with satisfaction as he thought
how lucky it was for him that the
i ‘ ne
“ Mthe captata had taken: yr
tom to avold 0 cellisian of any kind,
fads half dosen lookouts were dis-
tributed throughout the schooner, With
but half her sails spread to the gentle
night Breese, the “Black Cat” glided
easily and nolselewsly through the
water.
‘The Royal Mail was now far up the
river, and her lights could just be dis-
tinguished; they flickered, then were
gone. The “Black Cat" was crossing
the path of the steamer, net more than
three minutes after she had passed.
“Hist!” came a ery trom & lookout
in the bow. “Me hear cry—cry—see?
Listen!” .
“Ho! Me hear um!" sald another
lookout who had stralned bis ears
“What um be? Man in water?”
“Him over there!" shouted a fellow
who was as black as the night itself,
“Hark! Hear de same sing over?”
Captain Torrevo bad rushed forward,
and was listening intently.
Faintly there came to his ears the
words, “Help! I am drowning! Help!”
“Boy in the water,” sald the captaia,
whose ears never decelved him on the
water. “Hey! Port there! Hard!
Stand by there to rescue! Lower away
& boat!”
Men sprang to obey the captain, and
im an instant there was a small boat
resting on the water, with feur
swarthy and almost murderous looking
men in {t—for what? To rescue a hu-
man being from drowning. These mea
would take the life of another as quick-
ly as look at him if his life was meces-
sary to thelr own safety. But the cry
for help that came from the black wa-
ter of the river had found a response
in their own hearts, as it might bave
found in the hearts of the maniiest and
most courageous of the sailors on «
man-of-war.
When Rob struck the water, after
his sudden plunge frem the deck of the
‘Royal Mail,” he went down deep into
the river, amd for a moment was bereft
of his senses. But this was simply for
the moment, and up he came again to
the surface, te battle bravely fer his
ite. He saw the receding lights of the
jteamer, and cried out as lustily as he
ould for help. But the steamer had
yone too far for his voice to be heard
yn board, and it was heard instead by
he men on the “Black Cat.”
Suddenly Rob, whe was aot trying to
wim, but simply te keep himself
fioat, which he was able te do, heard
he plash of oars near him. Then be
jeard the voice of a man calling out to
im:
“"Hoy! ‘Hoy! Where him be?”
“Here I am!" sheuted Rob. “This
ray! This way!"
A few strokes of the oars brought
he boat nearer still, and then the boat
yas allewed to drift, while s man
teed In the bow ready to selze the
ersen who needed help as soon as he
ame in reach.
“Light, quick!” said this man in the
ow. A
Suddenly a gleam lit up the dark-
ess, and the rays of a small lantern
ere turned on the water. Rob.was
yen about ten feet from the boat. He
t once took a few strokes toward it.
le was seized in the strong hands of
1¢ man in the bow, and in a moment
jore was dragged into the boat.
His life bad been saved—by smug-
lore,
The lantern was extinguished, and
n instant later a light was displayed
nthe deck of the “Black Cat.” To-
ard this the men rowed, and in about
ve minutes more Rob, shivering,
ey with soaked clothing, and ready
>» shout and laugh and cry all at once,
‘om bis mixed emotions, stood on the
hooner’s deck.
(Te be continued.)
Deing Penance fer Sins.
In former times persons guilty of
grievous and notorious offenses were
required to make open confession and
further to make satisfaction for the
scandal given by their bad example by
doing penance publicly in a white
sheet in thetr parish church, says
Stray Stories, The sheet was used to
show clearly to every one which was
the offender. The last time that pub-
Ne penance was done in an English
church was on Sunday evening, July
30, 1882, when a man named Martree,
in the Church of All Saints, East Mar-
tree, made an open confession of im-
morality and promised to perform the
Penance thus imposed upon him by
‘the vicar. No white sheet was used
on this occasion. The last case in
which one was used appears to have
been one in St. Bridget’s church, Ches-
ter, in 1851. But on that occasion the
penance was not public, the church
door being locked. In the previous year
however, public penance in a white
sheet was done in a country church in
Essex and a similar thing occurred in
Ditton church, near Cambridge, in
1849,
‘etiiiiinea atin aa ed Sica Ga
In the meteorological section of the
British association Mr. Rotch gave an
account of the work done at the Blue
Hill meteorological observatory, Mas-
Sachusetts, by means of kites during
the last year. The maximum height
attained was 12,440 feet in February
of this year. Tho fact that the in-
crease of altitude obtained this year Is
smaller than in former years seems to
indicate that the extreme height to
which the kites can rise is being ap-
proached. The attempt of the United
States weather bureau to secure daily
records with kites at sixteen stations
was unsuccessful for forecasting on
account of light winds, which pre-
vented dally fights at all the stations,
but many data were obtained simul-
taneously In the free air and at the
ground.
‘ROSEBEBY IN FAVOR:
Po Rane ns ETRE er
MAY AGAIN BECOME BRITAIN«
PRIME MINISTER. |
[oes
ins the Sepport of ‘That Section of |
the People That Is Opposed to the
‘War Against the foath African
Farmer Repabiles
Sentiment In Great Britain is degin- |
ning to aet in toward Lord Rosebery,
and Sf present indications hold good he
may eventually become prime minis-
ter again. Lord Rosebery's recent
speech In the house of lords has
brought him into high favor with
those who are not exactly satisfied
with the way in which the war ts be-
ing carrled on in South Africa. Some
of his friends are stoutly urging him
for the portfolio of foreign affairs in
Lord Salisbury's cabinet, while others
are shrewdly hinting that he might
serve the country to: better advantage
in Lord Salisbury’s place. Just at
present Lord Rosebery Is doing effect:
ive work by reason of his strong per-
sonal influence coupled with his judi.
cious exercise of the privilege of free
speech in parliament, and he is satis-
fied to remain where he is, but If It
decomes necessary to make some
change in the administration of affairs |
he will probably yield to popular pres- |
sure and accept the premiership. This |
description is given of Lord Rosebery:
‘Tn person he is a little man, with cul-|
ay
tivated tastes and a fine presence, al-
ways paying great attention to his
dress, but never a fop.
He fs the fifth earl of bis name, the
title having been given to his ances-
tor in 1703, He was born in 1847 and
succeeded to his title when barely past
hig majority. In 1878 he married Han-
nah, the daughter of Baron Roths-
child, and heir to his Immense prop-
erty. Twice in succession he won the
derby—in 1894 with Ladas and In 1895
with Sir Visto, In the same years,
1894-95, he was prime minister. Lord
Rosebery's oratorical gifts manifest-
ed themselves at a very early age, and
‘as a member of the house of peers he
has often been called upon to put
these gifts to account. His many pub-
Iie services outside of parliament have
won him great thanks. Especially did
he accomplish good things for the city
of London while chairman of the Lon-
don county council between 1889 and
1892. He has been Lord Rector of the
universities of Aberdeen and Edin-
burgh and has done much for educa-
tional interests in Scotland. His
Sdeas are in the main very liberal, and
while he has been often accused by his
opponents with dealing more in word
than in facts, In practical life he has
deen very effective, putting his ideas
to good use. For Instance, the ten-
ants of his large estates, both in Eng-
land and in Scotland, have much cause
to rejoice at the enlightenment of
thelr landlord.
Gules ‘Séeedhad ae
A Portland woman wagered a box of
ehocolates with her young man and
Jost. One evening when they were on
the way to a whist party, she produc-
ed the candy. During the evening the
young man thought that to pass the
chocolates around would be a nice
thing to do, but the young woman
earnestly protested when she saw what
her escort contemplated, told him the
chocolates were intended all for him,
and even threatened not to like him
any more if he gave any of them away.
He concluded to run the risk of in-
curring the lasting displeasures of his
best girl, and invited the company to
help themselves. The confection look-
ed too tempting to resist, and so the
acceptance was general. Then a very
remarkable scene ensued, which would
give a man from the street the impres-
sion that a.new social diversion had
been Introduced in the shape of a spit-
ting contest, The chocolates had a
soap filling, and the whist party came
to a premature end. The innocent vic-
tims have not yet forgotten and forgiv-
en, while the young man is cogitating
whether it would be safe for his future
happiness to ask the young woman ta
leave her happy home for tsim.—Wake-
ville, Me., Mail.
eee: adie a als le aa
A minister in a town not a thousand
miles away, on a recent Sunday sur.
prised his audience by reading the fol
lowing announcement from the pulpit:
“The regular session of the Donkey
club will be held as usual after the ser-
‘vice. Members will line up just out-
ide the church door, make romarke
and stare at the ladies who pass, as Is
thelr custom. Any member known to
escort a lady to church like a man,
and sit with her like a gentleman, wil
be promptly expelled from member-
ship.” ‘The effect was marvelous—
Penfield (Pa.) News.
RWARE RIVER VALLEY:
SNARE RIVER VALLEY
Sa Peo en SE
RICHEST FARMING COUNTRY IN
THE WORLD.
A Complete dystem of Irrigation Ber
eves the Amsisty Abset Main That
Prevalla in Other Farts of the Unites
aieeRast and West! Compared,
| We are permitted to publish an ex-
tract trom a private letter written by
‘& gentioman who has recently been
devoting his time to the personal in-
veatigation of practical farming by ir-
rigation in the west. His vivid por-
trayal of the advantages of that sys-
tem will no doubt interest our readers.
He saya:
“There in a vast, an immeasurable
difference between farming in the east
‘and farming in the west. If the farm-
ers of the east could only be made to
understand the advantages enjoyed bY
their western brethren, I verily belleve
there would soon be no land for set-
tlement in the great Irrigation states.
‘The Irrigation farmer has absolute
certainty of crop, and certainty of I's
perfect maturity. He never plants
that he does not reap, and when I say
reap I don't mean the reaping of scat-
tered stands’ of halt matured grain
auch os the eastern farmer cuts at the
clove of a dry season; but the reap-
ing of flelds that frequently average 58
bushels of wheat to the acre—every
grain of which has reached the perfec-
tion of development. There Is no
anxious scanning of the sktes for the
‘cloud no larger than a man’s hand’
and fervent prayers that it may en-
velop the heavens and send down wa-
ter to the thirsty fields. The irriga-
tlon farmer never thinks about rain.
He watches his growing crops, and the
day and the hour molsture 1s needed,
he is out with bis hos flooding his
fields with water from canals that
skirt them.
“Bverything grows in the west that
grows anywhere else In the United
States north of Tennessee. Potatoes
frequently yield 500 bushels te the
acre, and barley is growm far better
than any raised in ‘the east. The
fruits are delicious, I never saw any
to compare with those grown In Idaho,
where apples, peaches, plums, cherries,
pears, apricots abound, and where
there are thousands of acres of Italian
and German prunes which I am told
have made fortunes for thelr owners.
“To my mind, Idaho ts the best wa-
tered and most’ inviting arfd state In
the Union. I made a careful investiga-
tlon of the great Snake River valley
in that state, along and tributary to
the Oregon Short Line Rallroad, and
saw there evidences of prosperity such
as I have never seen elsewhere in the
United States. This wonderful valley
fs sald to contain over 3,000,000 acres
of arable land. It 1s threaded with
great Irrigation canals in every direc-
tom, and there are vast tracts awalt-
ing only the touch of the farmer to
make them productive. The sun doesn’t
shine on finer or more fertile land,
When I saw the happy homes, the well
filled granaries, the sleek, fat stock,
and the smile on the face of nature
reftected In a smile of contentment on
the faces of the farmers, my heart
went out In pity to the thousands in
the east who are struggling along from
year to year, toiling against adverse
climatic conditions, and never know-
ng how soon a drouth will wipe out
the profits of prosperous years.
“Lands can be had in this Snake
River valley almost for the asking,
but they are going, day by day. The
Oregon Short Line is making extra-
ordinary efforts to bring the advan-
tages of Idaho to the notice of eastern
farmers, and 's flooding the country
with conservatively written descriptions
of the state, Write to the General Pas-
senger Agent of this Railroad at Salt
Lake for printed ‘matter about Idaho,
and read it carefully. It will be a
revelation to you and I sincerely be-
Meve will end in your removal to the
west.”
Se Nene Ee eed. ee ee
stand ina Kentucky town when poi-
tics are under discussion by colonels.
‘A bad memory is one that retains all
the bad things, according to its cultl-
vation by a bad man with @ bad mind,
SHORT SERMONS.
Diverce in this country Js increasing
two and a half times as fast as the pop-
ulation —Rev. George D. Smith.
Ged works through human instra-
ments, threugh the natural laws that
he has instituted. —Rev. P. C. Yorke.
I believe we ought to get much pleas-
‘ure out of this life in the way of inno-
cent enjoyment —Rev. Dr. Holderby.
Concerning modern trusts, there are
many men of many minds, Seme de-
fend and some denounce.—Rev. ©. F.
‘Wishart.
‘As much glorious work has been ac-
complished in the past year as in any
year siace the coming of Christ.—Rev.
Dr. Ward.
We should banish unkind and un-
charitable thoughts from our hearts
and keep them out during this year.—
Rev, J. R. Henry.
Faithful work with tenacity of pur
yore, which is but another mame for
good luck,will insure you better things.
Rev, J. L. Updegraph.
All kinds of socialism means the oft
ganization of a world in which every
man shall be born with an equal In-
herltance.—Prof. George D. Herron.
‘Sorrow is a soul tonic. Our grief ts
@ur grandeur. Pain is disciplinary.
‘The great and good of all nations have
‘Deon men of sorrows.—Rev. Ira Bill-
man,
‘We sometimes talk about a minister
who caa draw mon to his ministry. It
fa mon who draw men. Let the men of
‘the congregation awake—Rev. H. i
Tess,
‘Onde, barley and tye origimatte S
‘Od tote Gong the, Wedlverce.
Ream." Dhe first noted apecies of wheat
‘were brought trom Persia. ~~ fi
- Que Increase of Toseally.
Much discussion has been aroused
lately by the slang. increase ef ine
manly cerns liv! tng le the cause
secigaed, In the ruah for money,
menand women neglect their entth
until the breakdown tomes. The beet
way to preserve the health ia by &
faithful use of Hostetter's Stemack
Bitters, ‘Tt cures stomach ills #abh aa
constipation, dyspepsia and bilious:
ness
ees: a
Hogs, like humans, often aque
when they are not hurt.
when they are nok beet es
Blood Humors
Are Cured by
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
a aawaye tae
Ut Purifies ihe"springaba tle
the Blood, acer
rain st
“Eruptions tha’
Cures MV eteappetred sincn
All Eruptions. ioe fee
Bye rer
Sete eat
The pecan con
a alert
Eradicates Hooes "Sureapartis
Scrofula, sine ct any age
Bicone, Meant Hops,
Dom
It Purifies
the Blood.
Cures
All Eruptions
Eradicates
Scrofula.
Near King William's Town, Seuth
Africa, isa nunnery under the direc-
tion of the Sisters of Saint Dominio,
A blacksmith whom they exmpleyed
was in the habit of going on a spree
occasionally, and neglecting his work.
Some of the nuns, under a competent
instructor, learned the art, and mew do
all the Uiacksmithing {hat Is necessary
te keep thelr horses well abod, and
their vehicles in good order.
ius Base he Oe
Is the charming title of s charming
dook from the facile pen ot Mr. Sam
T. Clover, the well known author and
newspaper editor. The “Glimpses” are
particularly pertinent just now whea
‘80 many people are considering about
going to the Paris Exposition, and
many people will be glad to know that
the Chicago, Milwaukee @ Ot Peal
Rallway has purchased an edition of
Mr. Clover's work for distribation. Im
sending your address for a copy please
enclose six cents to pay postage. “Gea
H, Heafford, General Passenger Ageat,
id Colony Building, Chicago, I:
Is an auburn-haired girl a “reddy”.
maid article?
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES ée not
spot, streak or give Your goods aa un
evenly dyed appearance,
Portable houses are made in Venneo-
ticut for shipment to Venezuela. Four
handy men can in three hours erect
one of the domiciles, ;
For Sale Cheap.
Tdeal stock and timber farm; 160
acres, mostly hardwood without hills
or waste land: one-half mils from Mis-
sissippi river; freight and passeager
Stenmiboats: railroad stations mary
good log buildings; well; thirty er for~
ty acres cleared; unlimited hay and
grazing: excellent soil. Bear, moose,
deer, fish plenty. Work for beginaer;
high wages all year round im neigh
dorhood, which is excellent. Bag
speaking, mixed nationalities. Apply
or write to owner, Proprietor et Glebe
Hotel, St. Paul, Minn,
‘EMILE CONSTANT.
‘Tell the truth whether you bave an
‘cudlanéa cr ack
Ral lemch Mtr tg! fle Sh
‘rca rotund tho tosey th fale to oot.
io. EW. Grove's siguature on cao bee
The average salary paid tu Methedist
preachers in the United States lass
year was $473.35.
Within the past four years the
gregate of fresh gold mined shreugh
out the world 18 placed at $900,000,¢00.
9
MAN’S MECHANISM
Delicate Machinery That Needs
Constant Care.
‘Avot Canta cod Rectan wa Roe
ary as for Any Other Kind of
Machinery. Wow to Keep it
be Working Gree”
Brine case Ee cee
ne litle actew Jn the big machine gets
atte leone and, the" itole appareas
mr balts and vatunss © Pet
i ticitur engineer ean tel by the faeat?
adit cheine Wost there's ictew lesee
cuenta <onspaton onl cenive
ion. Ye Clove the wit delicate methane
lsot of art and must ber removed male
ful fwithoic orbs tor ancl oaty
Leable iaeatee oheud Soran ak
SEEN Sahay® cathartic” wich Yeu
Senet nets Caney,
Shoat“ agrecsbis, nstural and ettective ef
BPtandiver
‘Gateatate Bre the only antneptlecathare
aig abe not ony make the ee Healy ns
hore sbatustond inthe ewe rare:
Exrtherntentnee but Sai germ of
Shay Une Nod" bserafare prevent a8
Suytasd iy Cascareta to-day, You'l
aaah a Sees
Bae hab dor tha wt Stes. Fone
agua idea tnd‘ or wh oan for
Bild sega for bezier Ad, re Sti
Sediee Paulie ary ce. chieest
"This is Toe CAECARET tabe
Fenulne Caacarsta, beats “the
Biegle Setiere igo ct ‘Le
atte let petere you Stee
YF and beware of frauds, imites
‘iinet tnd sunsuduten
What sound is sweeter than the
prayer of alittle child
C Ever use it? Youshould.
BROOKLYN
HON. GEORGE KERSTEN, OF CHICAGO.
Hon. Geo. Kersten, a well-known Justice of the Peace, of Chicagol
"I was afflicted with Catarrh for nine years.
located chiefly in my head. I tried many remedies
I applied to several doctors, but they were not able
learned of the remedy, Peruna, through the daily new
taking the remedy for 18 weeks I was entirely cured.
cure permanent, as it has been two and a half years sin
"I was afflicted with Catarrh for nine years. My catarrh was located chiefly in my head. I tried many remedies without avail. I applied to several doctors, but they were not able to cure me. I learned of the remedy, Peruna, through the daily newspapers. After taking the remedy for 18 weeks I was entirely cured. I consider my cure permanent, as it has been two and a half years since I was cured."
Any man who wishes perfect health must be entirely free from catarrh. Catarrh is well-nigh universal; almost omnipresent. Peruna is the only absolute safeguard known. A cold is the beginning of catarrh. To prevent colds, to cure colds, is to cheat catarrh out of its victims. Peruna not only cure catarrh, but prevents it.
All families should provide themselves with a copy of Dr. Hartman's free book entitled "Winter Catarrh." This book consists of seven lectures on catarrh and la gripe delivered at The Hartman Sanitarium. It contains the latest information on the treatment of catarhal diseases. Address Dr. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio.
DIPHTHERIA
AND
SCARLET FEVER
ARE
DANGEROUS
BUT
PERFECTLY
HARMLESS IF YOU USE
MUCO-SOLVENT
Scarlet Fever and Diphtheria both begin the same way,
in a sore throat; doctors are frequently unable to
diagnose them correctly until the disease has
developed. MUCO-SOLVENT causes the sore
throat and absolutely prevents derya-
ment by destroying the germ.
Our book "Chats with Mothers"
contains information
that every parent
should know.
SENT
FREE
At Druggists, or we
Express it prepaid
on receipt of price,
$1.00 per bottle.
MUCO-SOLVENT CO.
356 Dearborn St.
CHICAGO, ILL.
of the Peace, of Chicago, says:
"For nine years. My catarrh was
ed many remedies without avail.
they were not able to cure me. I
rough the daily newspapers. After
was entirely cured. I consider my
and a half years since I was cured."
All families should provide themselves with a copy of Dr. Hartman's free book entitled "Winter Catarrh." This book consists of seven lectures on catarrh and la gripe delivered at The Hartman Sanitarium. It contains the latest information on the treatment of catarrhal diseases. Address Dr. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio.
Try Grain=0!
Try Grain=0!
Ask you Grocer to day to show you a package of GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it, like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. $\frac{1}{4}$ the price of coffee. 15 cents and 25 cents per package. Sold by all grocers.
Tastes like Coffee
Looks like Coffee
Insist that your grocer gives you GRAIN-O
Accept no limitation.
DO YOU COUGH
DON'T DELAY
TAKE
KEMP'S
BALSAM
COUGH
COUGH
CURE
Curees Colds, Coughs, Sore Threat, Croup, Influenza, Wheezing Cough, Brenchitis and Asthma.
A certain cure for Consumption in first stages,
and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use atonance.
You will be the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Large bottles 29 cents and 49 cents.
HERIA
THE SLEEPING GIRL.
CASE OF EVA ROCH BAFFLES MEDICAL MEN.
A Year Age the Young Lady Slept for Twenty-eight Days and More.Recently for Fourteen—Patiently She Awaits the Coming of Death.
The medical profession not only of Montreal, but of the whole province, is deeply interested in a case which is believed to be without a parallel in the annals of medical science. The central figure is known as "The Little Sleeper," and her case is an extraordinary one.
Miss Eva Roch is the sufferer around whose sick bed so much interest centers. She is 22 years of age, and is the daughter of Brian Roch, a foreman employed in the city water department of Montreal. She is dying; the family physician has abandoned all hope, and says that at most it is only a question of a few days before death will have claimed the young life, so much of which has been spent in suffering. When Eva was 5 years of age she became afflicted with a peculiar disease, commonly called softening of the bones. She spent nine months in one of the city hospitals, being treated for this disease, and at the end of that time she was not one whit better in health than she had been on entering the institution. Mrs. Roch, who, with her family, is a Catholic, decided to take her little girl to St. Anne de Beaupre, from which so many miracles in the way of healing have been reported. The journey was a painful one, for every bone in the little sufferer's body ached, and she could not put a foot to the ground. The journey was apparently without result, but Mrs. Roch's faith was great, and three times the ordeal was accomplished. Then there came visible results, and save for a slight limp she was as healthy a girl as could be found in the Dominion. This continued only until Dec. 23, 1898. On the morning of that day she fell into a strange, unnatural sleep. It lasted all day and all night. The next morning the usual expedients were resorted to in order to awaken her, but without avail. She slept on. The days lengthened into weeks, and on the twenty-eighth day she awoke. But what sad havoc her strange affliction had caused in her constitution! She was very weak and she was blind. Gradually the sight of one eye was restored to her, but the other has remained useless.
All sorts of physical troubles followed in quick succession until the anniversary of the day she first fell asleep came around. On Dec. 23, 1899, Miss Roch again fell asleep. All the conditions of the first long sleep repeated themselves, save that the sleeper was much weaker than in the former case.
THE
EVA ROCH.
Her sleep on the last occasion was only half as long as on the first. She awoke on the fourteenth day. But, though conscious, she does not speak. Her little iron bedstead, with a crucifix at its head, stands in the parlor of the little home and on it lies the patient sufferer in a semi-reclining position. Nothing passes her lips save a very little soup and a small quantity of water. Of her recovery there seems absolutely no hope, and death is daily expected.
Fish With Langs.
Two species of fish have been lately discovered in Africa and Australia which are possessed of lungs. They form the connecting link in the evolution from fishes to the next order of creatures. The reason that these fish are provided with lungs is that they are found in streams which dry up entirely in the hot summer season, leaving the fish in the empty beds of the streams. This period of droughts often lasts for six months of the year, and during all this period the fish lie quiescent in a kind of sack formed out of the clay of the river bed. The fish are asleep in their queer earthen houses all this time, but they breathe and are kept alive through their lungs.—Chileago Chronicle.
Queer Superstition.
The inhabitants of the Andaman Islands, not far from India, have some strange superstitions and traditions. It is their belief that the first human being fell into the water and was drowned, being transmuted thereby into a whale. The first man's wife and grandchildren went hunting for him in a small boat, but lo and behold, the whale came along and tipped the boat over. The wife was turned into a crab, and the little ones became lizards. All fish and many birds, they believe to be ancestors who have been changed in form. A species of fish which has a poisonous prong in its body, they say, is the form into which murderers are transmuted.
Courage without conscience is little better than cowardice.
G. P. R. Immigration Literature.
The Canadian Pacific Railway Company has just issued two excellent immigration pamphlets for 1900—"Western Canada" and "British Columbia"—which contain a great deal of useful and accurate information about the country west of Lake Superior, and are of special interest to those who contemplate settling either in the Canadian Northwest or British Columbia. Large editions of these pamphlets are distributed gratuitously in Great Britain and the United States, as well as throughout the Dominion, and are eagerly read by those who are seeking a new home and desire to know something of the best country in the world in which to find one. For pamphlets and further information address J. Francis Lee, Genl. Agt. Pass. Dept., 228 So, Clark st., Chicago, Ill.
Facts are too dry and hard for people desiring soft things.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That
Contain Mercury.
NONE SUCH
Nothing hobbles the muscles
and units for work like
SORENESS
and
STIFFNESS
Nothing relaxes them and makes
a speedy perfect cure like
St. Jacobs Oil
TOWER'S
FISH BRAND
POMMEL
The Best
Saddle Coat.
SLICKER
Keeps both rider and saddle per-
fectly dry in the hardest storms.
Substitutes will disappoint. Ask for
job. Fish Brand Demol Sticker.
It is entirely new. It not for sale in
your town, write for catalogue to
A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass.
WORK WORRY
WASHED BY THE
STERLING DUPLEX
WASHING MACHINE.
Has double "washboard" rubbers, runs easiest,
lasts longest, does faultless work. Most practical
clothes washer made. Don't drudge. The modern
methods. If it's not at your desier's write us.
THE EUREKA CO., Dept. R., Rock Falls, Ill.
There is nothing that will so COM-
PLEXLY THAT you can frown your HOME in
pole of HEALTH AND BEAUTY as you
SELECT WALL PAPER.
We carry ALL the latest designs at pop-
ular prices, from $50 to $100 per piece.
Our large trade show catalogue has
the complete line IN
CARLOAD LOTS,
ALL grades surprisingly low.
A full line of Examples per piece,
all charges perpale,
FREE upon request.
Our Spring Catalog
of 1,000 pages, illu-
strating some of the latest
COLORS, will be
cent perpale upon re-
sale, and you pay part of the ex-
pensive charges,
and The
wholesale prices on EVERYTHING you EAT,
WEAR and USE.
PISO'S CURE FOR
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Blood Compass Syrup. Threat Cards. Use
in time. Sold by drugista.
CONSUMPTION
Sore Hands
CITICINA SOAP MEDICINAL TO LEX
Red, Rough Hands, Itching, Burning Palms, and Painful Finger Ends.
One Night Treatment
Soak the hands on retiring in a strong, hot, creamy lather of CUTICURA SOAP. Dry, and anoint freely with CUTICURA, the great skin cure and purest of emollients. Wear, during the night, old, loose kid gloves, with the finger ends cut off and air holes cut in the palms. For red, rough, chapped hands, dry, fissured, itching, feverish palms, with shapeless nails and painful finger ends, this treatment is simply wonderful, and points to a speedy cure of the most distressing cases when physicians and all else fail.
Sore Hands 8 Years Cured.
Pain So Intense Would Nearly Twist Fingers From Sockets. Hands Puffed Up Like a Toad. Water Ran Through Bandages to Floor. Had to Walk the Floor Until Would Fall Asleep. Fingers Would Peel Like an Onion. Doctors Could Net Cure.
Eight years ago I got sore hands, commencing with a burning sensation on my fingers and on top of the hand. When I rubbed them, you could see little white pimples. I felt like twisting my fingers out of their sockets. I had high fever, and cold chills ran over me, and so I kept it going until I was tired out. Nights, I had to walk the floor until I fell asleep. My hands peeled like an onion, the finger nails got loose, and the water ran out, and wherever there was a little pimple there the burning fire was—that happened at least ten times. I am running a blacksmith shop, horse-shoeing, and I would not shut up the shop for anybody, but it was hard. My hands puffed up worse than a toad. When I drove horse nails, the water from my hands ran through the bandage, on to the floor. My customers refused to look at my hand. I had a friend take me to the doctor; he gave a solution of something to bathe my hands. I went to another doctor, I think, for a year. I found your advertisement in a Utica newspaper, and I got the CUTICURA remedies. As soon as I used them I began to gain, and after using a small quantity of them I was entirely cured. I would not take fifty dollars for a cake of CUTICURA SOAP if I could not get any more. I would not suffer any more as I did, for the whole country.
Feb. 21, 1898. CASPER DIETSCHLER, Pembroke, Genesee Co., N. Y.
Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humor
consisting of CULTURE SOAP (25cc), the cleansing of the skin of crusts and
scales and soften the thickened cuticle, CULTURE OINTMENT
to instantly allay itching, inflammation, and irritation, and soothe the
heal, and CULTURE RESOLVENT (50cc), to cool and clean the blood.
A SIMPLE BLEM is often sufficient to cure the most torturing, disgusting,
and humorous, with less of hair, when all else fails. Gold
OTHER DRUG AND CREAM, Corp., Sale Prop., Boston, U.S. "A. A. "Hair," free.
Millions of Women Use Cuticura Soap
Exclusively for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleaning the scals of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, in the form of baths for annoying irritations, inflammation, and chalings, or too free or offensive perpiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many native antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women, and especially mothers, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and other baths, especially for children. CUTICURA SOAP combines delicate emollient properties derived from CUTICURA, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients and the most rich washing of flower odors. No other medicated soap ever compound is to be compared with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to be compared with it for all the purposes of cleansing and emollient properties in ONE SOAP as ONE PRICE, VICE TWENTY-FIVE CENTS, the BEST skin and emollient soap, the BEST rest oil and mild baby soap in the world.
Woman's Kidney Troubles
Why trifle with health when the easiest and surest help is the best known medicine in the world?
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
Is known everywhere and thousands of women have been cured of serious kidney derangements by it.
Mrs. Pinkham's methods have the endorsement of the mayor, the postmaster and others of her own city.
Her medicine has the endorsement of an unnumbered multitude of grateful women whose letters are constantly printed in this paper. Every woman should read these letters.
Mrs. Pinkham advises suffering women free of charge. Her address is Lynn, Mass.
A Permanent and Painless Cure For
Granulated Lids
Guaranteed. Write for information to Dr.
Polasky, Eye & Ear Surgeon, Des Moines.
OX BLOOD 3 weeks' FREE Send 20 stamp
treatment for particulate
TABLETS Bloody Blooded
Rheumatism, Female Disciss.
W. A. HENDERSON, Clarinda, Iowa.
by the author of Peck's Bad Boy and His Pis
Over 200 pages of "laughs"; 25 full-page comic
pluures. The funniest outfit. Paper covers Escl. cla-
sure. 500 for retail bookbills, and new dealers,
of sent postpaid on receipt of price by
JAMIESON-HIGGINS CO., Publishers,
324 Dearborn St., Chicago.
DR. ARNOLD'S COUGH
CURES COUGHS AND COLDS.
PREVENTS CONSUMPTION.
All Drugsists. 250.
PENSIONS
Get your Pension
DOUB! E QUICK
Write CAPT. O'PARRELL, Pension Agent,
1425 New York Avenue, WASHINGTON, D.C.
GREGORY'S SEEDS
For gardeners and florists. The new 1500 catalog describes all the
plants. J. H. GREGORY, MON., Harbord, N.
POTATOES $1.20 a Bbl.
Large Bowl, POTATO Grower, in Americn. Priceon $1.20 Bup. Mountains stocks of Grant, Clover and Farm Sords. Read this notice and 10c for catalog and 11 RARE VALM SKED CLOVER
SARLERS.
JOHN A. SALENB SKED CO., LA CROSS, WIRE, was
DROPSY NEW DISCOVERY; gives quick relief and cures worm cases. Book of testimonials and 10 DAYS' treatment FREE. DR. H. H. GREEN'S SONS, Box R, Atlanta, Ga.
LAMB'S Throat Candy, one of the best confections for vocalists, public speakers, &c. Send 10c to Lamb Mfg. Co., Ottawa, Canada, for sample bees.
W. N. U., DES Molnes, No. 10—1900
[ep nese nC Ocala rr alata Oi liana " fee, Seelam ud im
Ss oP ee ee eee EG OERS Ce HOR Tereaal ine ech SRM EERE SC Beata ee rite Oe Va MNS nL Ney oC
Re See HOUR HINN Fercn ae oo rena es “ $i : z ae * ea
Towa State Bystander,
DES MOINES, - - IOWA.
RACE ECHOES.
The Odd Fellows have mor
lodges in Georgia than in any oth
er state in the Union,
eee
Several colored bakers and flou
makers are employed by the Nati
onal Biscuit Company of Philadel
phia, ;
eee
The Negro has one clerk, on
preesman and two book binders it
the Government Printing Office,
Washington, D. C.
eee
Jackson Jones, a colored miller,
who has been in the employee o!
the Milling Co., of Wesley Bost
& Sons of Columbus Kans., for
several years, is said to be one o
the best Millers of that state.
cee
Couty Clerk John M. Wright o
Topeka, is president of the County
Clerk’s association of Kansas. This
is the first time a Negro ever held
this position, and is a compliment
to the race as well as Mr. Wright,
eee
The town of Brooklyn, Ill., op-
posite North St. Louis, has popu.
lation of over 1,000 aud all the
offcers of the burg are volored.
The town hae most of the modern
improvemente~three good chuches
asplendid two-story schoolhouse,
a city-hall and electric light.
eee
The corporation clerk of West
Virginia is Phillp Waters, an in-
telligent and porgressive colored
main, who last month wrote 105
charters, a record breaker, 43 for
domestic corporations and 62 for
foreign corporations. His office is
in the Capital buildings at Char.
leston, and he is so far as known,
the only Negro corporation clerk
in the country.—Afro-American,
eee
At the concert and reception
given in Washington, D. O. in
honor of the eightieth birth-day of
Miss’ Susan B. Anthony, Mr.
Joseph H. Douglast, the distingu-
ished young violinist appeared on
both programmes, Mrs. Carrie
Chapman Catt, the riew president
of the woman suffragiste, person-
ally congratulated Mr. Douglass
on his wonderful talent.
eee
The French postoffice depart~
ment has issued a singalar order,
to the effect, hereafter mourning
envelopes, that is envelopes with
a black border on them, will not
be mailable. It is not that the
government does not sympathize
with such cases; but it is found
that such envelopes are easily
tampered with. They may be
‘opened and afterward sealed again
all traccs being covered up by an
application of black ink.
eee
MAJOR TAYLOR'S HOME.
Major Taylor purchased a house
by proxy for $3,000 cash right in
the residence district of the 400 of
Worcester, and there is a large~
sized scandal in that neigborhood.
Tne Major sent his lawyer to do
the buying. The house was pur-
chased in the right name of Tay
lor—M. C. Taylor--who was de-
scribed, to the real estate agent as
an American born citizen of the
United States and eminently res-
pectable. The agent wanted to
sec his purchaser, but was put
STATE OF IOWA OFFICE OF AUDI
TOR OF STATK,
ANNUAL CERTIFICATE
OF PUBLICATION,
Des Moines, Iowa, March 1, 1900.
Whereas, The Alliance Hail & Cy.
clone Insuranee Company, located at
Austin, in the state of Minnesota hat
filed in this office » sworn statement o:
its condition on the thirty-first day o!
December 1800, in aceordance with the
provisions of Chapter 4, ‘Title 9, of the
Code of Towa, relating to insurance
Companies; and wheras, said statement
shows that said Insurance Company
has complied with the laws of thi
state relating to insurance,
Therefore, In pursuance of law, I,
Frank F. Merriam, Auditor of State o!
the State of Iowa, do hereby certify that
said Insurance Company is authorized
to transact the business of Fire Insur-
ance in tho state, by agents properly
appointed, as required by law until the
the first pay of March, A. D. 1901,
Ifurther certify that the statement
shows—
Ist. The actual amount of paid-up
Capital of said company, Dec. 31, 1809,
to be mutual.
2d. the aggregate amount of the
Assets of said Company, Dec. 31, 1899,
10 DG. eeeessersesssesee +o 66,104.88
3d. ‘The aggregate amount
of liabiltties of said Company,
including the amoun required
to safely reinsure all outstand-
ing risks, Dee. 31, 1809, to be.. 0
4th, ‘The aggregate Income
of said company for the year
1809, £0 DO. eeeseecsseseeeee ATH IOBAL
sth. The aggregate Expen-
ditures of said Company for
the year 1899, to be... ......890,186.72
In Testimony Whereof, I have here-
unto subseribed my name and affixed
the Seal of my office the day and date
above written.
FRANK F, MERRIAM,
Auditor of State.
STATE OF IOWA OFFICE OF AUDI.
TOR OF STATE,
OF PUBLICATION.
Des Moines, Iowa, March °1, 1900.
Whereas, The American Fire Insur-
ance Company, located at New York in
the State of New York, hes filed in this
offiee a sworn statement of its condi-
tion on the thirty-first day of December,
1809, in accordance with the provisions
of Chapter 4, Title 9, of the Code of
Iowa, relating to insurance companies;
and whereas, said statement shows that
snid Insurance Company has complied
with the laws of this state relating to
insurance,
Therefore, In pursuance of law, I,
Frank F, Merriam, Auditor of State of
the State of Iowa, do hereby certify
that said Insurance Company is author-
ized to transact the business of Fire
Insurance in the state, by agents prop-
erly appointed, as required by law, un-
til the first day of March, A. D. 1901.
I further certify that the statement
shows—
Ast. The actual amount of paid-up
Capital of said Company, Dee, 31, 1899,
10 V0 eee eeeeeseeenee +248 $00,000.00
2nd. The aggregate amount
ofthe Assets of said Comp-
any, Dee, 31, 1899, to be... .$1,397,233.36
3d. The aggregate amount
of Liabilities of said Company,
including the amovnt requir-
ed io safely reinsure all out
Standing risks, Dec. 31, 1899,
tO De. eee eee eens eevee + 81,065,493, 15
4th, The aggregate Lncome
of said Company for the year
1899, to De... see ee reese eee 932428,31
5th, The aggregate Expen-
ditures of said Company for
the year1899, to be........... 776519.87
In Testimony Whereof, I have here-
unto subscribed my name and affixed
‘the seal of my office the day and date
above writlen.
FRANK F. MERRIAM,
Auditor of State.
Ivis very hard tostand idly by and
see our dear ones suffer while awaiting
the arrival of a doctor. An Albany (N,
Y.) dairyman called at a drug store
there for a doctor to come and sec
his child, than very sick with croup.
Not finding the doctor In, he left word
for him to come at once on his return,
He also bought a bottle of Chamber-
Jains Cough Remedy, which he hoped
would give some relief until the doctor
should arrive, In a few hours he re-
turned, saying the doctor need not
come, as the child was much better!
‘The draggist, Mr. Otto Scholz, says the
family hae sines recommenced Cham
berlain's Cough Remedy to their neigh
bors and friends until he has a cons.
tant demand for it from that part of
the country. For sale by all Druggists
Grenee Frei Bikta Sic.
The Orange Free State flag is a sim-
ple rectangle of vivid orange. An
Orange tree in full fruit is the most
distinctive feature of the arms of the
Orange Free State. Beneath the tree
are on one side a lion and on the other
@ number of oxen. An ox-wagon sim-
ilar to that on the Transvaal arms and
three suspended horns complete the
whole. “Spes Bona—good hope—is
written underneath the arms of Cape
Colony, the chief feature of which is
@ lion rampant. A figure of Hope sur-
mounts the shield, the “supporters of
which are a couple of native animals.”
STREET CARS IN ENGLAND.
London Deolsion That Would Canse’ Ar
tontshment in This Country.
| A London magistrate has just made
from the bench a statement which, 1
it fa ever duplicated by a competent
court in this city, would or might have
‘consequences terrible even to imagine.
‘It seems that on one of the urban rail-
ways there had been a crowded train.
A woman had tried to foree her way
into @ compartment already fully oc-
cupted and her efforts had excited »
mild protest from one of the pas-
sengers already seated. The protest:
ing remarks were taken amiss by the
woman’s husband, a fight followed and
then an arrest of the pugnacious hus-
band, It ts not a matter of any com
sequence whether he or the other mag
was at fault for the scrimmage; what
4s at least Interesting is the fact that
the magistrate before whom the case
came formally announced that nobody
has a right to enter a railway carriage
which is already full, ‘Those who
take tickets at tho starting point,
he sald, are entitled to seats
and tickets taken at intermediate sta-
tions are subject to there being room
for the holders. If the company issues
tickets in excess of the number of seats
provided the holders may bring an ac-
tion for damages, wait for the next
train or demand the return of thelr
money. Persons in a carriage which
fg full have a legal, as well as moral
tight to prevent others from en-
deavoring to enter {t and the sooner
the public understands this the bet-
ter, as no one has a right to incon-
venience passengers already in their
places. Such is the English law, accord-
ing to this Interpreter of it. Patrons of
our own elevated and surface cars are
not likely even to ask if there ts any
such Jaw in this country. ‘They are s¢
well habituated to traveling in cruel
discomfort that the impulse to make ef-
fective protest against it has been lost,
PERSIAN RUGS OF IRISH MAKE.
Deft Weavers on the Old Sod Tarn Out
1 Perfect Imitation.
Just a year ago some manufacturers
of artistic textiles touring in Donegal
resolved on establishing a place for
the making of hand-tufted carpets of
the description generally known as
“Turkish” or “Persian.” ‘The pecultar-
ity of this fabric is that from its na-
ture it must be a hand production, The
tufts are tied by the fingers in knots
in longitudinal warps, which are
stretched between two long parallel
beams, The carpets are made to the
size and shape of any room. The de-
sign fs placed in front and the girls
from three to a dozen, according to
the size of the carpet, select the colors
Indicated row by row, which are tied,
then bound down by “shoots” of wool-
en weft drawn across the entire width
and beaten firm by small iron-toothed
hammers. There is interesting variety
and pleasure in the work, and it is
such that individual skill and work-
manship come largely into play. Alto-
gether, it {8 just such an industry as
4s suited to the rural districts of Ire-
land. No steam power fs required and
there 1s therefore no handicap on the
commercial side by the absence of coal.
The first year’s experiment with the
Irish girls has proved that they are ad-
mirably adapted for the work. The
girls show a nimbleness of fingers and
sharpness of eye for color and form
that have quite astonished their teach-
ers and they take to the work with a
spirit and cheerfulness quite refresh-
ing. So convinced are the promoters
of its ultimate success that they have
Planned out a broad scheme that will
spread the work all over the west of
Ireland and give employment to many
hundreds of girls and boys.—London
Furniture Record.
Mendicant Students.
Concerning the poorer students of
Russia the Saturday ‘Review says:
‘Their mendacity is passive rather than
active. Unlike the mendicant friars,
they never ask, but they know much
will be given them. They know, too—
strange fact in a strange country—that
the university is open to all, irrespec-
tive of means or position, Thus the
university becomes the poor Russian’s
golden opportunity, for here, as else-
where, there are many posts, for which
graduates alone are eligible. A stroll
through the streets of Moscow during
term time furnishes abundant evidence
of the popularity of the university. The
uncompromising military blue and
green uniform which stamps the stu-
dent, and which he can never, save
under dire penalties, exchange for
Plain clothes, is to be met with at
every turn. A few rich students are
caught sight of driving; the many are
on foot.
ie dina ee
New York Correspondence Pittsburg
Dispatch: How f:+ can a cat jump
without hurting itself was partially
exemplified in Brooklyn. A pretty
white cat ran up a tree to get away
from a dog, and at last crawled out on
a small branch at least sixty feet above
the ground. The branch was not much
More than a twig, and the cat could
not turn around, She sat up there on
the swaying limb and meowed. At last
the twig tke, and down came the
cat. She alighted en the ground on
her feet, looked around for a moment,
and then bousded away. Which shows
that a sixty-foot drop does not hurt
a Brooklyn cat, whatever it might do
to cats of other places,
Anilaified Alcohol.
‘The solidifd alcohol which a Berlin
firm has been sending out in a tin ves-
sel intended to serve as a pocket lamp
and stove, is reported to consist essen-
tially of 62 per cent of alcohol, 20 of
soap and 18 of water. A similar prod-
uct is readly made by dissolving
scraped tallow soag é warta alcohol.
WA Yea perear to forest ute Mac
‘a
geri eine stout Seater” eS
ESP ES Spee SY ah
Suse ara, PUD, ate
puvcde ee iy, eeu cette
a eee aa be tee
inl oo eau cuted We hn
2 enema rea
| NEW DISCOVERY.
| O. K.
Danduff Cure and Hair Renewer. It
will postively turn gray hair back to
original color. Price S0 cents per bot-
tle. I also keep the Burnett's Pile
Cure, a great wonder, price 50 cents,
G. W. BLACK,
Oskaloosa, Iowa.
TRUSSES, 65¢, $1.25 AND UP
EE
nD
Va SE=GH-
Line oO Cin re on P| 2
conarameroarenat |) S
seria fai ae iB
aManee THE RED ta ee
SR ta ata noe ot Rey
XaP cur and. send to uewith OUK SPECIAL PRICK samed,
wrett ae ace barium etacebeg ee
se sogr a ol dry orden. ach ac
fate lt aaa te Sadat
aR aTe IP sand ‘elthor truss co you with the under
HESS oe tier tga hao
Telail at three thmen our price,youcan return itand We
aa Feet ine GiTALOGUE TMM 2h4ze
seer ercsaaea ef 1G
Horne taoerag na ten gt tn ts 80,
a a SEARS, ROEBUCK ‘& Co. CHICAGO
EVERYBODY
KNOWSTHAT MUNGER'S LAUN-
DRY is the best in the city, Try them
and be decided.
220 THIRD ST.
PRONE 579.
50 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
Traore MARKS
Desicns:
znyongntie ane ot ts
eee te penal coce
erica damaee pes
Pavonts taken through Munn @ Co, recelve
"Scientific Himerican
tt .
Ahandsomely flastrated weekly. Tarzest cit
iin Ges lena
36 1Broadway,
IUNN & Co,2er- New Yor
A tig
q Blut.
3 Ste) 85
RS i| ifs
‘ atta 3
5 zeal 8:
i zl $35
= sist Fe
4 Bee
oy | Bact A
I y 3
M: 3 F
Als ¥
INT 3
pene
Hens
is Shoe j
2 og ac HoNS 3
Ws -E z
[=e 2
ah
SNS ete
+N Sd
BY
BN Et
RAY & HARKINS, 1007 Center St,
is the best place to buy coal.
22, Ne MONEY
Sa ED cor rms an. ovr ana
am Es fend to us, stato. your
eS ere
Bl game Gre ote
=< 4 cen at ©
: Bg Sehuctlse
wv tetalncand tt
| ees
Peay
RM Sst
rem yr:
pss a ee REV of. py ii
ERD
Pare need
fee BY suanitteretotes
This Circular Plush Cape Syn titothnent
EORa Attar Ruri Set cena ery
rsoaien si Meet eae ba ara ack
geaeay dnbrion hth atten
peel ait nested i wade
eg Ro taht Ca Caen“
K & CO. CHICACO
eee ee EES Aarti sau
ORIGINAL NOTICE.
In the District Court of Iowa, in and
for Polk County.
A.C, Fisher, Plaintiff, va. P. Fisher
defendant.
‘To the above named defendant: You
are hereby notified that there is now
on file the petition of the plaintifi
above named in the office of the Clerl
of the District Court of Iowa, in and
for Polk county, claiming a’ divorct
from you on the ground of adultery
and that unless you appear thereto and
defend before noon of the second da:
ofthe next term of said Court whict
will commence at Des Moines, Iowa,
on the 5th day of March A. D, 1000, de-
fault will be entered against you and
judgment rendered thereon.
A. L. STEELE,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
INDUS . i
Tat aro pot ad weed Tne wih 1,90, tad wa wilzsazes i FEM
mmPLOVED FLLLOR GEN OuaLt by Hg 0K skied teocemie, ,
tine, Non camermineluatyone searest lets a°Pah en Bee a a ame
atari eee eT aida
sevet tte $0 Syste oe OP —
eh Cree Lees tuo et house tC A o
SRUMNIATIGe Tub Naateacees Sertde bromine Tiuctraton MRE woos
Shon eMet te Sacrtes dues anee te Rome iid enarier SG
Shed oak or aint ne deured, pers cd yal fu as “i, | Seen
sgt nente caklee Ht Ge VEY LATEST STYLE, THE PARLOR fomtk oD. :
EE aUT ee Mehvks todos jong, inehes wideand watgus 00 ak AN es A
Be aan ee LE canes ance a es | ae)
Bucy cana vor Momasay bare uplety Tene Sly Spratt NG
rivera Suet fete of Oeteacal ated weal an
geal Rea, Fete ocpumrcene rete ay =
ey ~ P
SHITE erat ea cate St Metin fetaipa Es
Seden"THE PARLOR GEM action conaiaiect the ee 7 Al
Etruel HEP ARLOR GEN caiyueatnaueiucn (4 an
Sree Aerts ated With Hamwond Couper wa (Merce “ay ;
Gefitea apo bent oleae eateries toe a
Se ee eee pee encima rte abd tncst | Aare Ma
Petter iavalven ofimtiel Ma Ss "
Geiterin cies, THE PARLOR CEM ct rc’ iio
Roan frameze ae erect andthe Went orpen nar I :
oreo publ sane \ ee Danii
GUARANTEED 25 YEARS. Siteqy.tazton oo ds Mla :
mee wiles binding yearpucrantee, ty the =a NSHOS Fun
Hea cota ame Try ip one month and ve wil Sd 5 eG i :
Rena yourinonsy i pousrenok pericty eaated, OQ NRE os a |
Troldemanewii'he get a'385-50. ONDER gi & AGH }
SE ORCE DONT DELAY. i y 1 N]
QUE RELIABILITY IS ESTABLISHED [700 see ie i
‘OUR RELIABILITY 1S ESTABLISHED Baas anercane 5
Serial prniserrmignioraggr eens ren ey ee
ESRI CR Rh rch! ail eee Ff SS !
Redfermantrchance tank, Rew Vor: er ey IRL awd Ss ul
flied gr epprewecompényis chica. We Gl SUES Tl Se ay
irate mer amg im corneas Sg) (ee. femme ay ea r
fi mploy nearly £00) peo. aie ceace, Sa Ne eee
EL SInP!* BREE onan Uv $2808 bed et .
BL jplboneaetcteteettnion tn micalntrument at towect wholesale prices, Write for fee
FAO eae em ana SN insteementataoguss AUR sua, Meebo & Cm ee torngh alst
GEARS, ROEBUCK & CO, (inc), Fulton, Desplaines and Wayman Sts. CHICAGO, IL
TANKS! |
'
¥ :
Water Tanks, Pine, '
Cypress or Steel.
For stock, reservolr tanks, thresher tanks, elther round, square or half round, oF |
any size, for all purposes, at lowest prices.
Only the best of material used, Kretchmer ports havea, reputation.
Do not compare my work with the cheap good-for-nothing tanks wkich |
the market is fooded with, Freight is only a small matter as tanks can |
be shipped knocked down. Send for catalogue and price list.
Manufactured by E, KRETCHMER, = RED OAK, IOWA, _
Also a full line of beekeepers’ supplies. = Send for catatogue and price list. |
YyTH FOUR ORDER cutee
SEND-NO MONEY eee arian dl $
SLADE AU CAME URDIT SENG MAQHNE copa cakeceemcee DN
Se Reem acca Bake|@
mietiisbinr cr fil alec eta er ae ww
Krust win OF; 54 Special Ofler Price $15.50 aie me ie
Hioscmmiomnet aie one aCe A:
Eien teinieccmianrauct em atone }
‘$lojeo au 06, sissde sadn al (diz deseriped In Oar Pree Retag AQ anes i
Machine Catslogue, but 615.50 for this DROP DESK CADINET BURDICK Is. i
Bemed colon, miter gts sures Am 2
EWARE O TONS yer fll vl
Kees ‘uerretetiesuiierommcneciee il : it
THE BURDICK Hayscee ers fe r= |
SS SS ae re A | ‘I
a a a, Hine ed OE a
sO crs nS a |
] 7 “oO ‘SOLID QUARTER SAWED OAK BRO? FESE CARINET vim ratbot,
SS Set nctorern neta ed
VI i crates ik lpm te ead ten
hall || a oe
dia MM PMD Se te stn octet eet tng sence
fag ‘hae adjustable procure ct taproved she errr, puter ocd
i i css tare re eae eaten ee
2211 IN) eee cnc Suet nee Sees pmcecteee at
211 IN] useage sccmn ces eer eee sens eet taran ae
BU SSO see sice eh tor ewnaeercrs paces arts,
Sere | aria cnc tis rtnias mocetneacerieert
om IT COSTS YOU NOTHING tenesterenieihtnenine, cepare ae
onmarare, caving mab ee eerie Rear wa as ha Re
Sb cbt Toh GIT ee iar nena te eet ence ee
SEBEL Lye hactece bar arta een sean -
meee. Adres, SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.: Chicago, Bi"
WANTED SEVERAL PERSONS FOR DIS
ttlet Opin Manaxers inthis slate to Fep
reaent me in their own and strvoundrDe Cou
jes. Willing to pay yearly 800, payable week-
ist" Desirable einpioyment with uousual op
feiraldrenied amp euvelope."S. A, Park
adc ‘envelope. 8. A, al
So Onion Dalldine, chiosso”
Biave you ever used. a
DAVIS’ MECHANICS SOAP?
= UNQUESTIONABLY e
“Tho Greatest Dirt Killer.”
” 200, a Bow of 3 Cakes.
Tif not kept by your dealer, send
us his name.
Sond 100, for large full-sized cake,
Its greatest
7 ages
yA Mechanics,
Machinists,
Printers,
Painters,
Farmers,
a :
S Riving airy
Yap 1) Memfows.
er 3 is 4] rewores “aie
Poy We RE | cuca but
ba: rae At Wer th Seciccrntes
Fg A NA eine
oy ¢ [us ees
aq For Tollet:
Agents wanted
DAVIS MECHANICS SOAP RE aenIs
>E. M. DAVIS SOAP GD., Makers, ;
bh CHICAGO.
Subscribe for the Bystander.
«.) MERRICK’S
PURE NON-ALCOHOMO
SET Steed aro pure and econom-
Geo Ed foal, Scientiially
mee compounded from the
a a Puro Frutt Juices.
ES “Aq ‘They retain thelr dell
a Waleed Cato aroma, which I
pi DA easily lost in alcohol.
‘VANILLA 9 fe or tiqula favors.
Ca coef Freetrom alcohol and
BRICK & COW alt poisonous ingredi-
ee
DELICATE, DAINTY, DELICIOUS.
ONCE TRIED, ALWAYS USED.
(a Hon, a delichtfnl toilet prevara-
udieforbaanurine thocompesion. ee
‘aiamamelis Lotion, for chapped hands
‘Naomi Face Powder, the best on the
market; contafning no mineral poisons,
vchitonay and preserves the teeth soothes
Heals asia hardéas the gums.
AGENTS WANTED,
‘MANUPACTURED BY
G. G, MERRICK & CO,
32-38 Clark St., CHICAGO, ILL,
PARLOR CAR SERVICE TO CHIC-
AGO AND DES MOINES.
The GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE
has improved the equipment of its day-
light service between Chieago and Dee
Molaes by the addition of Parlor Cara
to its trein, No. 1., Westbougd, leaving
Chicago at 9:00 a. m. daily except Sun-
CHURCH ANNOUNCEMENT.
‘The Corinthian Baptist Church —situated om
ith St, between Crocker and School Sta,
Teanga s 1 4%; Sunday School; at i
O'clock Prescling. at7 P.M.
‘Rev. S. Bates, Pastor.
St, Paul A. M. E.—Corner of Second and Center
Siceete Preaching at (0:0 em Sunday
School at 3 o'clock; Epworth League at’
D.m. preaching até p.m. F. J. Peterson,
Dastort
First Afrlcan Baptist Church—Comer School
goa 8 wrwarta "Kev. J." Underwood pastor
Preachine 1038 a, m.; Bunaay school B39 ps
By Mrs. H, b. Noble, Superintendent:
Young People's meeting 7 p. m, preaching
TO p.m.
Domn's M._B.—East Second and, Dea Motngs
aan pin Sunday Sohod at tan
Brager and Giass meeting, Wednesday Bp. m
Altare welcome, "Rov. & W. Holines, pastor,
24 Des Moines stacer.
SECRET ORDERS.
North Star Lodge, No. 8, A. F. A. M.—Meets
‘hint Thursday in’ eich month at Masoale
Hall-wast Second ana Walnut. J. Diag:
burn, W.M.i G. H:Cloggett secretary.
Xing Solomon Commandery, No. 0—Medis
Second and Fourth Thursday in each month
‘at Masonic hall. Frod Jackson, BM. 0.;G. H.
Gieggett, Reo.
Churlty Lodge, No. 218, G. 0, 0. of 0. F.—
Sleets First Second wna tinira Puseday eech
Month-at’ Odd Fellows ball-on West Sixth
and Walnut streets, D, Burns, N. G.; F.
Brown, 2.3.
Naonil Gout, No, S-moute Second, Monday
neweh ‘mouth at Masonic hall, Mis. 3-2
Shepata inatoay sir, Prod Sacxeon bere
A
Mt. Olive Court, No, 4—Meots First, Thursday
‘ofeach mouth at Masonie hail, Mri, Susad
penis matron; Mrs, Flora Majors, secre-
tt
Knights and Ladies of flonor of the World No
“Yi Victoria ‘odge—moeta every” Monday
creping av Weber Hall, cornet’ of TUnte
Gentersireats, Mrs, EA. Wood. Progr,
Hee eee eitinan Besretany
Suds $19.15 qgp SEND ONE DOLLAR
° HU rsncesi caret
) ee BR
a ka Beate aul
ns oe era
(BANYAN por
UCTS) Higueiaiites
PRS BES Na eter r ariay ae
soit XORTE, andoreot te hntodony ete ed
soda mere and cect ihe een tet
ak Se ii aE 918.76, a ree ce
corte acetate aoe
fiteedplusd: screwed and plated.” PAINTED En bout
ossible mariner, thoroughly rubbed out with pumice
Prater treet be he
SOSA rama ae aaanare
Erimedandasiabes, Walon: about istae
Sepes Row. Gon T Wail Fok shoe,
ponies tmeariere eect eae od
PELLET Ae iieaven kee ties oes
crac ore Onan
te~ We want you to subscribe for
the Iowa Strate BystanpER.-@@