Wisconsin Weekly Advocate
Thursday, October 13, 1904
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Page text (machine-generated)
MY FOX TERRIER.
A Jittle demon, in defense;
Brave as a lion he.
I wish I had the courage
Of this atom on my knee.
A little universe of love;
Unselfish as the sea.
1 wish I did by others
As he has done by me.
A little lump of loyalty,
No power could turn frém me.
1 wish I had a heart as true;
From fear and favor free.
A little fountain full of Faith,
Forgiveness, Charity: <
1 wish I had his patience
And trae nobility.
A little flash of fire and life,
Whate’er the summons be.
1 wish that I could face the world
With half his energy.
A little white fox terrier,
In whose brown eyes 1 see
The little windows of a soul,
Too large to live in me.
—Harry W. French in Independent.
w Curious Condensations.
x, 8, OL aol ee eee e
—In many villages of the Tyrol the
use of red parasols is prohibited, as, they
irritate the grazing cattle.
—A fan that gives out instead of a
cooling breeze a blast of hot air has been
invented by M. de Mare, a Belgian.
—A water reservoir at Manchester,
England, is sinking, and the cause is be-
lieved to be coal mining, nearly under it.
—The longest continuous stairway in
the world is that which leads to the
tower of the Philadelphia city hall. It
has 598 steps.
—Some burglars not only stole the sil-
ver plate from a house in the suburbs of
Lendon, but carried off the owner's
burglar insurance policy.
—Colorado will soon beast of a town
by the name of Radium, which is to be
located in the heart of the uranium belt,
on the Grand river.
—Half a century ago a little more than
one-half of the population of England
lived in towns. Today the rural popula-
tion is only one-fifth of the whole.
—There are 67,000 more men than
women in Michigan and the state does
not like to be reminded that there are
more Michiganders than Michigeese.
—Because it contained an article on
the Darwinian theory of evolution, a
Russian archbishop has suppressed the
Georgian almanac.
--Heather is decaying to such an ex-
tent on Yorkshire heaths and Scottish
moors that sporting lessees and flock-
inasters are seriousiy concerned.
The people of Portland say the gov-
ernment building at the coming Clark |
and Lewis exposition will surpass the:
one at St. Louis, and that the main ex-
hibition building will “establish a prec-
edent.”
—Oklahoma now has the greatest
broem corn producing district in the
country, and will produce more this year
than Kansas and Illinois combined. It is
estimated that the crop will amount to
about 25,000 tons.
—Shepherds started the fire which, in
the last week of August, caused a dam-
age of 8,000,000 francs on the island of
Corsica. It lasted three days and de-
stroyed many vineyards, orchards and
other valuable grounds.
—Crowning the German system of in-
dustrial education stand the great tech-
nical high schools. Their name and fame
have gone out into every country where
men are interested in the application of
science in industry.
—By means of an accidental short cir-
cuit in one of the junction boxes in an
electric main in Melbourne, Australia, an
alarm was sent in to every fire depart-
ment station, and 1500 calls were re-
ceived at the same instant in the head
telephone office.
—Two votes were cast in Georgia in
1860 for Lincoln. One of the yoters,
Unele “Billy” Bowers, is still living in
Franklin, Ga., and is nearly 80 years of
age. He was born in Georgia, and went
to the place where he now resides when
he was 3 years old.
—America_ is to manufacture type-
writers for Syria, the machines being fit-
ted with a new alphabet of fifty char- |
acters, which was arranged recently by
Selim Haddad, a Syrian artist and in-
ventor. The actual Syrian alphabet con-
tains 630 characters.
—The only Persian newspapers which
resemble those published in other _coun-
tries are those issued in India and Egypt,
which copy English modeis. The few
papers published at Teheran contain little
besides the Shah’s proclamations and pic-
tures of prominent officials.
—Some of the leading French states-
men, including Rouvier, Combes and Tro-
uillot, have given their sanction to the
socialistic scheme of granting every per-
son aged over GO a pension of $72 a year.
This scheme if carried out would cost the
country $60,000,000 a year.
—For military purposes a census is
taken annually of the number of horses
in France. The census of horses this
year showed that there were only 90,147,
against 91,016 twelve months before, a
decrease of 869 in a single year, which is
likely to become accentuated.
—The Australian government has
adopted a _ nickel-in-the-slot | machine
which is quite novel. When a stamp
cannot be bought conveniently a person
ean drop a letter, along with a penny, in
a box, and the legend, “One penny paid”
will be stamped on the envelope.
—The Japanese, always keen sports-
men, used to take most of their game
with goshawks and sparrow hawks. The
only dogs they used were spaniels, which
flushed the game. But now they are
taking to dogs, and many good animals
are being imported from England.
—When a brigade of mutinous troops
took the city of Liuchufu, south China,
the other day, they pillaged and slew for
forty-eight hours. So great was their
booty that they compelled 4500 of the in-
habitants to help them carry it to the
hills, where they joined the rebels.
—Reporting on “Little Italy,” one of
London's most erowded districts, the
health officer of the district says that the
Italians are “generally superior” to the
English persons who are their neighbors.
They also take more care of their chil-
dren, among whom the death rate is low.
and they are sober.
—The fact that about four million
deaths from fevers, mostly malarial, are
caused in India every year indicates the
stupendous importance of the mosquito
“ Professor Almon
ex. Fraliqua's .
ah Le
Aw Ge* ns
Bc Los Si
r THE 7)
RENOWNED FRENCH E
REMEDY for Lost Power &
Restores Health, Power, Energy, Tired Nerves,
‘Vim, Vigor. A Full Manhood. Stops seminal
losses and drains, $1 per box, @ boxes for $5.
Sent secarely sealed free from observation.
1G-NA-CO CHEMICAL Co.
#P. O. Box 763 Milwaukee, Wis.
problem. It has been proven that people
dwelling in houses situated a mile from
the breeding grounds of the anopheles
variety of mosquitoes are practically free
from malaria.
—The largest dam in the state of Colo-
rado is being constructed for the Cascade
reservoir in the San Juan country. The
wall will be 105 feet in height and the
water stored will reach a depth of 100
feet. The dam will store 3,071,000,000
eubie fect of water, or 500,000,000 feet
less than the famous Cheesman dam,
which stores Denver's water supply.
—As is doubtless well known civet is
one of the essential ingredients of neariy
ull the high-class perfumes made, s¢
there is always a ready sale for it in the
market, The Abyssinians put this civet
in small cattle horns, As are packed
in cases, It is sold by the ounce, the
price ranging from 5 to 10 rupees ($1.60
to $3.24) per ounce, according to purity
and color.
—A modern battleship costs probably
ten times what a Constitution or a_Vic-
tory cost a century ago, yet its life of
active usefulness, even barring destruc-
tion in a sea fight, is comparatively brief-
So rapid are the adyances in the science
of naval architecture and armament that
within ten years of her launching a Mas-
sachusetts or an Oregon has become a
relic of the past, and is doomed to speedy
oblivion in the junk yard.
THE DIFFERENCE.
A thousand men as one are slain—tis
naught:
No human brother must by thee be slain.
‘Fis well’ ‘tis il! It is as we are taught:
‘This act is Glorious War; that, Murder
plain!
A thousand men each side—they meet, they
clash.
They Klil-for private vengeance all un-
rain:
Thon diest—if thou slay in anger rash!—
One act, 1s Glorious War; one, Aturder
plain!
—Edith M. Thomas in Collier's Weekly.
A LARK.
(Salisbury, England.)
A close gray sky,
‘And poplars gray and high,
The countryside along;
: The steeple bold
Across the acres old—
‘And then a song!
Oh, far, far, far,
As any spire or star,
Beyond the cloistered wall!
Oh, high, high. high,
A heart-throb in the sky—
Then not at ail!
—Lizette Woodworth Reese In Lippincott’s
Magazine.
TRAVELS OF PRAIRIE CHICKENS.
How the Birds Have Adapted Themselves
to Conditions.
SS
An Emporia man advances the theory
that prairie chickens are so scarce about
Emporia now because they migrate west
every spring to hatch their young. This
sportsman was out trying to find some
the other day and failed, although he
went clear to the Flint hills,
All the farmers along the way told the
same story. Each said there was a big
bunch of chickens on his farm until
spring and they then disappeared. The
farmers thought it was something strange
that the chickens should go west to hatch
their young, and are looking for chickens
to come back next winter.
As a matter of fact, prairie chickens
are not among the migratory birds, but
the chickens in this part of the country
seem to be adapting themselves to condi-
tions. This country is being settled up
closely and put under the plough, and the
birds want wilder territory where their
young will be sater than in a well set-
tled locality. Then in the winter the
birds come back to the cultivated country
because there is plenty of food in the
fields.
Last year the attention of sportsmen
was attracted by great flocks of chickens
that came in from the northwest in the
duck season. It was the first time they
ever saw chickens migrating. A flock
was seen near Americus which was said
to have had 400 chickens in it. Last
winter there were a number of flocks of
chickens within four miles of town,
which was an unusual thing. The birds
were supposed to have come in from
western Kansas to get the benefit of the
plentiful supply of kaffir corn, which
the chickens relish—Emporia Gazette.
The Pelican Made a Mistake.
A strange thing happened in_ St.
James’ park the other day. A pelican
was sitting on the rock which forms its
usual roosting place, apparently asleep,
and a gull was swimming close by the
water.
Suddenly the pelican darted out_ its
huge bill and picked the gull up bodily.
Up went the bill into the air and the gul
disappeared into the long pouch. The
swallowing capacity of the pelican was
overtaxed, however, and one could see
hy the moving pouch that a life and
death struggle was going on inside. _Ul-
timately the bill of the pelican was low-
ered, the gull tumbled into the water and
swam away shaking its feathers. It
then coolly perched on another rock a
few yards away from the pelican, look-
ing none the worse for its exciting experi-
ence—London Chronicle.
; Ibex with Gold-Coated Teeth.
Partienlars were given in several Lon-
don papers recently of sheep, when
killed, being found with gold coated teeth
ewing to their having cropped short
grass in gold bearing districts of Austra-
lia. ‘The story was not new, but it has
called forth the following information
from Ajexandria:
A British army officer in Cairo, Capt.
Timins, states that when he was ibéx
shooting in the Sinai peninsula, in May
and June last year, he bagged two fine
old rams, and one of the first things
that he noticed when skinning the heads
was that all the sides of the back teeth
were coated with a bright metallic sub-
stance of the color of Australian gold.
Capt. Timins asked his “shakarri” the
reason of this, and was told that it was
due to the ibex feeding on a certain
shrub.—London Daily News.
————_-—___
But She Got the Coin,
“Oh, Henry,” exclaimed his wife, as
she threw her arms rapturously about his
neck, “I do leve you so! Don't forget
to leave me £5 when you go to town thts
‘morning, will you, dear?”
- “And this,” muttered Henry, softly dis-
engaging himself from her fond embrace,
“this is what you might call being hara
pressed for money.”—London Tit-Bits.
The Cholmondeleys.
Lord Rocksavage, whose coming of
age was celebrated last week, is the heir
of that remarkable family which has so
puzzled the North Americans since the
return of a New York traveler who said
that he had met a family who spelt their
name C-h-o-l-m-o-n-d-e-l-e-y and pro-
nounced it “Brown.”—London Free
Lance.
—_—_>—__—_ :
Effacing Spots on Tables.
A woman's magazine recommends salt
and sweet oil for highly polished tables
or trays that have got marked by hot
plates or pitchers. Mix the two into a
thin paste and leave it on the mark or
ring for an hour. Then polish with a dry
cloth and the mark will have disappeared.
—New York Tribune.
“HOORAY FOR GEORGY.”
I.
White man dunno whar I at:
‘Hooray fer Georgy!
Bale er cotton en a beaver hat:
Hooray for Georgy!
Banks er banks er ‘taters sweet;
Punkin’ ple en “possum meat.
Banjo chure fer de daincin’ feet:
Hooray for Georgy!
ul.
I raise my voice, en L sing my psalm:
Hooray fer Georgy!
I fills de cup, en 1 drinks my dram:
Hooray fer Georgy!
Mister Winter say he comin’ on,
But I fries my meat en I grinds my corn:
Bare. - ain’t been lynched sence de day
po"n:
Hooray fer Georgy!
“—Atianta Constitution.
—_——_——
A LOOSE ENGINE.
of: the day—onme “S50m Aner Neat
tion, bringing passengers from the Lon-
don express, the other from remote coun-
try towns, conveying those who desired
to catch the up-train at the Junction for
Vaterloo.
=e man who had alighted from the
down train looked round him with a
smile of dawning recollection. Clatworth
again after five years! Curious that
chance should have obliged him to get
out here, on his way soutn, and return to
the Junction to retrieve an important
package he had left behind there.
A feeling of satisfaction stole over
him at the difference between his past
and present self. In those old days,
when his commercial traveling had ne-
cessitated a fortnight’s sojourn at this
dead-alive village. he had been of, little
account, either in his own or any other
world.
‘Then his chance had come, and he had
taken it. Five years of rough-and-tum-
ble life in every quarter of the globe,
with a success at the end of it that
landed him high and dry on the level of
prosperity, had nearly effaced all remem-
brance of Clatworth.
As he crossed the line to the strip of
geranium bordered gravel that formed
the up platform, odds and ends of rem-
inisconces began to piece themselves in
kaleidoscopic fashion through his brain.
‘There was the stretch of dusty read that
led to the pound and the mill; across the
fields rose the tower of the old church,
embowered in trees.
He was about to overtake some recol-
lection that evaded him, when the train
care in, the engine pulling up just op-
posite to him, and as he moved toward
the carriages he was suddenly arrested
by a face that brought back vividly, like
a-bolt from the blue, the most unpleas-
ant experience of his carecr.
The engine driver, leaning a little over
his brake, was looking him full in the
face with astonished and uneasy recog-
nition, and, as the traveler took in the
sunburnt features, the dari. menacing
eyes, the strong, brown hand that seemed
to twitch toward him, he remembered
everything.
‘There had been a quarrel between this
man and himself over a girl—Eppie, the
village belle. The young commercial had
interfered with their courting. had cap-
tured Eppie’s truant faney with his af-
fection of superiority and town ways,
end, after persuading her to throw the
other over, had played fast and loose
with her himself.
It had been a fortnight’s interlude of
mock sentiment and passion to him, a
lifetime of desperate love and grief to
her. When he said good-bye to her in
the mill lane, and she realized that he
liad failed her, she gave one bitter ery.
and, in answer to it, some one had run
aeross the adjoining field, had leaped the
intervening hedge, and had struck him
down with one swift, savage blow.
He had picked himself up and gone
away with a curse in his heart, not dar-
ing to risk a fight, for the disearded lover
was mad with jealousy.
And now, for the first time, they were
face to face again.
For an instant both were silent; then
the engine driver said, hoarsely, “What
are you doing here?” And-the other,
with a contemptuous smile, said, “How’s
Eppie?”
The driver's furious gaze flickered, and
the traveler intuitively Icoked past the
engine, across the station yard, to a
patch of green, where, at a cottage door,
a woman, young and comely, stecd with
a child in her arms.
‘The blazing sunlignt shone full on their
faces, gunting in the goid of their hair,
enhancing the clear white and red of
their cheeks; they looked the embodi-
ment of spring and summer, of child-
heod’s and womanhood’s health, ment:
and physical, in its perfection.
And looking back into the driver's
eyes, the traveler read the intolerable
suspicion and jealous fear that flashed
into them, and unaerstood what had
happened in those five years. His mo-
ment of revenge had come; he had
neither waited for it nor counted on it,
but he would take advantage of it to
the full.
“I was coming along to the Junction,”
he said, “but I'll wait for the next train.
Then I can have a talk with Eppie about
old times.” And he deliberately turned
his gaze toward the eottage door on the
green.
The driver's hand fell like a sledge
hammer or the brake, and he seemed as
if he would leap from the engine; but
the guard had given the signal of depart-
ure, and the train glided slowly out of
Clatworth, while the words “Curse you!”
smote the air like the lash of a redhot
whip.
The traveler smiled, carried his bag
along to the parcels office, and stayed for
a word or two of converse with the por-
ter, reminding him of their acquaintance
tive years back.
“I remember the old place well,” he
said. “It looks just the same as it used
to—little changed, any more than the
people.”
Anc he went toward the level crossing,
where the gates still barred the footway
from road passengers, though no train
was due.
“What's the matter with your boss?
said the station master at the junction
to the stoker of the Cltaworth train.
“He seems to have gone queer—says he
must get home for a bit, and he’ll be back
to take the 5:15 out. even if he has to
run the whole way. Is it——?” with sig-
nificant pause. =
“It’s to do with his wife.” said the
stoker, slowly. “He sets creat ctore be
him until his cottage came in sight, and
‘he sttimbled out ot the van like a man
who had had too much strong drink; but
the porter laid a detaining hand on him
and pointed toward the waiting room,
round the dour of which a group of peo-
pie clustered, peering and whispering.
“What's up?” said the driver, huskily.
“You remember that commercial chap
us was hanging around here five years
‘since or thereabouts? He came back this
afternoon and missed his train somehow,
so he went across to the parcels office
and put his bag in, and stopped there
along of me, it might have been a couple
of minutes or more. I never thought to
warn him of the loose engine as follows
you up to the junction—twasn’t as if he
was a stranger; he must ‘a’ known well
enough. He could see the gates was
back. He was looking over his shoulder
as he set his foot on the line, and I
shouted out to him then, for I could see
the engine round the bend, and he nodded
back, with something I couldn’t catch;
and then, before I could get to him—it
was ali over!” The man lowered his
voice. “He was cut right in two,” he
said, “and he’s in there. Best not look
at him. 1 think”—he hesitated—“I think
Eppie’s wanting you, She saw it happen
and ran across here to know who ’twas.
And I wouldn’t tell her. You'd best tell
her yourself. She said it made her feel
are and nervous about you, and she'd
he glad when the five-fifteen brought you
back. She'll be main glad to see you be-
fore your time.”
The engine driver, shaking like a leaf,
went across the green to the cottage door.
It opened as he reached it, and Eppie’s
arms were around his neck. “Oh, Jim,”
she said, “if it had been you! Thank
God, it wasn’t you!”—Mrs. Heren-Max-
well in The Sketch.
' FARM AND GARDEN.
NN OO
Sudden Rain.
They flash upon the window-pane
From skies grown swiftly dark—
The wild, keen lashes of the rain;
‘They make my heart their mark!
Even so can tears—tears not my own,
The very daylight blind:
Across my heart the griefa are blown
Of all my human kind!
Edith M. Thomas in Smart Set.
Corn Fodder.
A writer in The Farmers’ Review says:
“The way that suits us best is to cut the
corn when thoroughly matured, chock it
aud husk it when dry. The stalks are
then stacked and shredded from time to
time through the winter. By leaving the
stalks whole until time for feeding, their
aroma is better preserved, and the shred-
ded fodder is then more palatable. We
use shredded fodder mixed with dried
brewers’ grains, and steamed for the
horses and colts which ure running out,
along with one feed of hay a day. By
using shredded fodder for cattle once a
day, we saved one feed of hay, and
found that it did not decrease the milk
flow. The top and bottom of stacks we
cut for bedding, and it makes most ex-
cellent material for that purpose.”
Deep Plowing.
Experiment has shown that deep plow-
ing on some soils is the reverse to bene-
ficial. It is safe to say, however, that
there is no soil but would be benefited
for the growth of most crops by being
deeply stirred by subsoiling, which, loos-
ens, without turning out, the subsoil,
and the deeper this is done the more
benefit received. Aside from any addi-
tional plant food that may thus become
available, the mechanical condition per-
mitting excess of moisture to rapidly set-
tle away from the surface, where at
times it is so detrimental and its reten-
tion in reach of the roots of the crop,
at a time when it is absolutely necessary
for the proper perfection of the samé,
are both of sufficient importance to make
very deep subsoiling much more general-
ly practiced than it is at this time.
Farmers cannot too strongly have it
impressed upon their minds that all plant
food is assimilated in a liquid form. No
matter how much plant food there may
be in the soil, if from any cause it is
unavoidable, then it may as well not be
there for any benefit it is to the crop.
Fertility is important, but not always
of first importance, while the control of
moisture is. In all stiff clay soils, which
are especially benefited by disintegration
by frosts, or by sunshine and rain, the
turning over of the same to any depth
will be beneficial; while light sandy soils
deficient in depth would not receive any
benefit and might receive temporary in-
jury by turning over say to a depth of
ten inches. Careful thought and ob-
servation will usually guide the farmer
toward the proper treatment of his soil
for the crops he expects to grow.
When to Build a Creamery.
The creamery swindles that are now
being worked in various parts of Mis-
souri when they have been exposed will
probably make communities really adapt-
ed to dairying overcautious about engag-
ing in the business. Prof. R. M. Wash-
burn of the Missouri agricultural colleze,
who has had_ wide experience in tite
creamery business, gives the following
information that will help communities
to determine whep it is wise to build a
creamery.
“Wherever the milk from at least 400
cows can not be guaranteed within a
radius of five miles,” says Prof. Wash-
burn, “the creamery had better not be
built. The cost of making a pound of
butter will be about 6 cents, and no
farmer company can stand such expense.
If 500 or 600 cows can be secured in the
five-mile radius, the cost of making a
‘pound of butter can be reduced to 3%
or 4 cents, which is a profitable basis of
business, and the creamery will benefit
the community. A good little creamery
that can handle this amount of business
can be built and equipped for $2000. or
$2500, if the company will let the ‘creaw-
ery proprietors’ alone and buy an outfit
of some reputable dealer. If a cheese
factory is for some reason preferred, for
the same number of cows it ought not to
-eost more than $1000 or $1200. As a
‘rule it is best for the farmer to send_his
milk to 2 creamery already established,
even if he has to haul it farthnr, as this
will help to increase the output of the
plant and lessen the cost of making a
pound of butter, thus enabling the con-
cern to pay a higher price for butter fat.”
The Guinea Fowl.
It would be a good plan for all poultry
raisers to have a few guinea fowls about
their premises. They are hardy, good-
natured and beautiful. It is well to keep
them as tame us possible, and always
have them about the home, as they make
an excellent “watch dog;” their shrill ery
frightens away hawks and other murder-
ers. The poultryman’s greatest enemy in
the south is the sparrow hawk, and, our
neighbors have lost as many as a dozen
chickens a day by hawks alone, while we
never lost but three chicks from that
source and we believe all credit due to
the guinea.
‘They live and prove profitable for eight
or ten years, and no farm should be so
erowded but that it could make room for
at least one pair of guineas. They de-
stroy a vast amount of insects, and clean
the fields of seeds that would otherwise
go to waste, costing almost nothing to
raise, and no better meat ¢an be found in
the poultry line, unless it be turkey.—
Poultry Herald.
Guinea fowls are not appreciated on
the farm; they are not only geod for the
purpose indicated, but they have an in-
trinsic worth that entitles them to a place
in every farm barnyard. The young
fowls come about as near an edible prod-
uct as prairie chicken as it is for an ani-
mal to approximate another in this re-
spect. The eggs are generally set under a
chieken hen, that the young fowls may be
kept tame by being raised about the
house or premises, but the writer has a
guinea hen that this year has raised two
broods of young, one of thirteen and the
other of ten, that are gentle and come to
call with the other fowls. A peculiarity
of guineas is that they continue to follow
the mother hen until they begin to lay.
They may take up with another hen, or
even a rooster, while the mother is sitting,
but as soon as she comes off with young
chickens they will go back to her. Filial
love is a commendable trait. but in this
instance might well be dispensed with, as
the guineas are liable to trample the
young chickens.—St, Louis Globe-Demo-
erat.
Winter Poultry Directions.
In order to get early ezgs some extra
feed in addition to the ordinary ration
generally given by farmers is needed. As
a rule the trouble on the farm is that
after corn is gathered there is an over-
abundance of grain lying around, and in
consequence the fowls became too fat.
All farmers have hay to spare, at least
they should have, and a few pounds per
week fed to hens will greatly increase
the egg production, Clover hay is best,
but any kind is good. Feed as follows:
Cut into as short lengths as possible (14
to % inch) and in the evening fill a 2-
gallon bucket full, cover and place on
the kitchen stove and allow it to boil as
long _as there is fire. When the morning
fire is built allow the hay to heat again;
then drain off the water and wix with the
hay three quarts of wheat bran, or
enough to make is crumbly. This will
make nearly two gallons of feed, Give it
to 100 hens as a morning feed. Remem-
ber, this is for cold weather and for
fowls that are at liberty on the farm.
In the evening late supply what they
will consume of corn one day, and oats
next, and x on. Be sure to give plenty
fresh water every day, and on very cold
mornings it is a good idea to make the
water shghtly warm. If you do not, it
will freeze at once and be of no service.
Be sure the henhouse has good, tight ends
and sides and always front the house
to the south. The warmer the fowls are
in winter, without supplying artificial!
heat, the more eggs they will lay and the
earlier they will become broody.
If eggs are wanted for hatching pur-
poses do not have too many cocks. One
made to fifteen hens for the farm is
much better than two, if all run togeth-
er. Dispose of all hens that are past the
profitable age, which is, generally speak-
ing, three years, and do not expect fer-
tile eggs from cocks four to six years old.
It is best to use either one or two. year
old males.—North Carolina Experiment
Station Bulletin.
Pruning Fruit Trees.
Begin early in the life of the tree to
shape it. A young tree should consist of
u_ central leader with the main branches
distributed evenly about it, forming a
well-balanced head. “On no account
should a tree be set with a decided fork
im the trunk. The point at which a limb
should be removed is just at the upper
part of the shoulder which will be at the
base of each limb where it joins the main
trunk. If we cut closely, the size of the
wound is increased without to any ap-
preciable extent decreasing the size of
the stub. If the cutting is further from
the tree, the scar is still the same size.
and a long stub is left over which it will
tuke a tree years to grow.
If possible, avoid removing large limbs,
and the best way to do this is to begin
when the tree is young and prune it sys-
tematically and carefully. If it is neces-
sary to remove a large limb, use a saw,
cutting it a short distance from the bot-
tom first, then saw down from above,
and the limb can be removed without
fear of splitting off below. Large wounds
should be smoothed over with a knife,
then covered with gum shellac dissolved
in-aleohol.
In a general way, summer pruning
promotes fruitfulness, while if wood
growth is desired, prune in winter. The
explanation of this is that great growth
and great fruitfulness do not go together.
A plant must reach a certain degree of
maturity before it will produce fruit and
an abundance of plant food at the time
the buds are forming is desirable for best
results. Now, if by summer pruning
part of the branch is removed, the
growth is checked, and as the part re-
moved lessens the demand for plant food,
it can be devoted to the production of
fruit buds. If the tree is allowed to go
into winter quarters undisturbed at the
end of the season, the roots and tops are
in a sort of equilibrium, or balance each
other. Now, if during the dormant period
a considerable part of the top is cut off,
a strong pressure of sap is brought to
bear on the remaining buds and a great-
er supply of nourishment is furnished
for growth of each. ‘The result is that a
large growth of wood results, and when
the time comes the following season for
the formation of fruit buds, plant food
is not abundant and few blossoms are
produced.
A Puzzler.
Bishop Henry C. Potter tells a story of
a clergyman out west who addressed a
Sunday school class, says an exchange.
After a short discourse he wound up by
saying in a very paternal and condescend-
ing way:
“And now is there a-a-n-y little boy
or a-a-n-y little girl who would like to
ask a question?”
Getting no response, he repeated his
query, and then a shrill, piping little
voice, in the rear of the room, called out:
“Please. sir, why did the angels walk
up and down Jacob’s ladder when they
had wings?”
“Ah, yes, I see,” said the nonplused
preacher. ‘‘And now, is there a-a-n-y
little boy or girl who would like to an-
swer little Mary’s question?’
ee
A Polite Reaues:.
The Japanese proprietor of a tea ep
in the east end of London has been much
annoyed by the incessant howling of his
neighbor's dog under his window while
he was trying to sleep. There came a
night when his patience gave way. He
raised the window, stuck his head out,
and called to his neighbor in terms that
indicated that his English environment
was gradually undermining his native pe-
liteness,
“Mist’ Jones.” he said, “will you do the
kindness for request the honorable dog
that he stop his honorable bark? If you
don't, by gosh, I knock his head off!"—
London Tit-Bits.
a
Salvation with Food.
Fourteen-year-old Emma. who had
gome home from her first day's school-
ing in elementary physiology, was ques-
tioned by her parents as to what she had
learned.
“Papa,” she complained, “I don't think
I lige physiology.”
“Why not, my dear?’
“Well, teacher was explaining diges-
tien to us today, and she said we had
to mix salvation with every mouthful of
food.’’—Harper’s Weekly.
Why He Changed His Mind.
“We have an Invitation to float do
White river with a canoe party,” nla’
Nevada contractor to a Nevada lawyer.
“I'm too busy to go—couldn’t think off
it,” replied the lawyer. }
oe tell me,” continued the contrac-
tor, “there is a bar about every half
mile.”
“A what?”
“A bar.”
“Every half mile?”
“Every half mile.”
“How long does it take a canoe to
travel a half mile?”
ee ao minutes.” eae
“I mi arrange to go," Sa. e law~
en need a reste, ell the bors to
hold the place for me. I'll be with the ‘
if I don't break a leg.”—Kansas City
Journal. {
————_-—__—-
|
Cure to Stay Cured. 1
Wapello, Iowa, Oct. 10.—(Special.)—
One of the most remarkable cures ever,
recorded in Louisa County is that of
Mrs. Minnie Hart of this place. Mrs.
Hart was in bed for eight months and
when she was able to sit up she was!
all drawn up on one side and could
not walk across the room. Dodd’
Kidney Pills cured her. Speaking of!
her cure, Mrs. Hart says:
“Yes, Dodd’s Kidney Pills cured m
after Iswas in*bed for eight month:
and I know the cure was complete for;
that was three years ago and I hav
not been down since. In four week:
from the time I started taking them I
was able to make my garden. Nobody
can know how thankful I am to
cured or how much I feel I owe
Dodd’s Kidney Pills.”
This case again points out how,
much the general health depends on
the Kidneys. Cure the Kidneys with
Dodd’s Kidney Pills and nine-tenths
of the suffering the human family is
heir to will disappear.
a
Vouthful Savings.
Harry and Charlie, aged 5 and 3 re-
spectively, have just been seated at tho
table for dinner. Harry sees there is.
but one orange on the table, and immedi-
ately sets up a wailing that brings his
mother to the scene. “Why, Harry, what
are you crying for?” she asked. “Be-
cause there isn’t any orange for Charlie.”
When baby Alice first saw a cow with
a bell around its neck, she thought it 80
funny that nothing could induce her to:
leave the spot. She stood ae te
cow until it slowly walked away. en,
when the bell began to ring, she turned
delightedly to her mother exclaiming:
“Oh, mamma, does the cow ring the bel!
when she wants the calf to come to sup-
per?”—Little Chronicle.
——__-—__—_.
THE UNITED STATES WILL SOON
KNOCK AT THE DOORS OF CAN-
ADA FOR WHEAT.
A Crop of 60,000,000 Bushels of Wheat
‘Will Be the Record of 1904.
‘The results of the threshing in West-
ern Canada are not yet completed, but
from information at hand, it is safe to
say that the average per acre will be
reasonably high, and a fair estimate
will place the total yield of wheat at
60,000,000 bushels. At present prices
this WHI add to the wealth of the farm-
ers nearly $60,000,000. Then think of
the immense yield of oats and barley
and the large herds of cattle, for all of
which good prices will be paid.
The following official telegram was
sent by Honorable Clifford Sifton,
Minister of the Interior, to Lord
Strathcona, High Commissioner for
Canada:
“Am now able to state definitely that
‘under conditions of unusual difficulty
in Northwest a fair average crop of
wheat of good quality has been reaped
a is now secure from substantial
damage. The reports of injury by frost
and rust were grossly exaggerated. The
wheat of Manitoba and Northwest Rer-
Eeeee will aggregate from fifty-five
to sixty million bushels. The quality ‘3
| good and the price is ranging around
one dollar per bushel.”
| Frank H. Spearman, in the Saturday,
Evening Post, says:
“When our first transcontinental
railroad was built, learned men at-
tempted by isotherman demonstration
| to prove that wheat could not profit
ably be grown north of where the line
| was projected; but the real granary of
| the world lies up to 300 miles north of
the Canadian Pacific Railroad, and the
“day is not definitely distant when the
United States will knock at the doors
of Canada for its bread. Railroad men
see such a day; it may be hoped that
statesmen also will see it, and arrange
their reciprocities while they may do
so gracefully. Americans already have
swarmed into that far country, and to
a degree have taken the American
wheat field with them. Despite the
fact that for years a little Dakota sta-
tion on the St. Paul Road—Eureka—
“held the distinction of being the larg-
est primary grain market in the world,
the Dakotas and Minnesota will one
day yield their palm to Saskatche-
wan.’
/
Reducing Fat by Taxation.
The British Medical Journal suggests
that “as luxuries should be taxed rather
than necessaries a superfluity of fat,
which is mostly the result of luxurious
living, ae not unfairly be regarded 1s
a fitting object of taxation.” One mu-
nicipality in Sweden already taxes super-
fluity of fat.
. +.
.
—The eel has two separate hearts.
One beats 60 the other 160 times
minute.
MAGNIFICENT CROPS FOR 1904
Western Canada’s Wheat Crop
This Year Will Be
60,000,000 BUSHELS
AND WHEAT AT PRESENT IS WORTH $1 A BUSHEL
The oat and barley crop will also yield
abundantly.
Splendid prices for all kinds of grain. cat
tle and other farm produce for the grow!é
of which the climate is unsurpassed. :
About 150,000 Americans have settled ‘7
Western Canada during the past three
ears.
2 Thousands of free homesteads of 160 acres
each still available in the best agriculturs!
districts.
It has been sald that the United States
will ee forced to import ee eda
‘ver ears. Secure a fa
and become one of those who will pro
duce it.
\efermation ‘Superintendent thos
odtaly Se, pemnatten, to Seesteeess ciaeeck test
T.O, Qurrie, Room 32, Callahan Bldg., Milwaukee, Wis
GOSSIP FOR THE LADIES.
---
A. Lucky Boy.
I've got my parents and three aunts
5 Uncle Ned. and Jo.
I've got my picture and these units
And Uncle Ned, and Jo,
been, and they're all
- Elizabeth Lincoln Gould in Good Housekeeping.
The Woman of Thirty.
When one knows the age of a woman one knows the woman. The very fact that she permits you to know her age exposits her character. She no longer masquerades. She has lost a certain un certainty, an evanescent delicacy, that was irresistible charm. Women, like philosophy, are divided into two classes, the knowable and the unknowable. Also like philosophy, it is the unknowable woman who is the speculable. Therefore to get her at her highest capacity, she must be unmarried and about 30.
The married woman presents certain inescapable tell-tale data. She has children, and those children have apparent ages, two facts which go far in determining her annals. If she is unmarried and is not "about 30," she is under 30, again a definite fact. Being "about 30" is indefinite. She may be more or less. No one hazards a guess. There is a delightful vagueness in being "about 30." It has nothing to do with dates; and many of us who from our youth up have felt no attachment for dates can forgive the unattached their confessed indifference—The Reader.
A Woman's Happiness.
An engaged girl, who went away for the summer, bore the separation from her lover very well as long as his letters to her were filled with loneliness and despair. Thus the first part of the summer was joyous and gladsome. Whenever she would get a letter that was particularly miserable she would put on her shortest dress, with open-work stockings, and, with boisterous spirits, would go out onto the piazza and flirt outrageously with the attenuated old professor, who, having lost his memory, still continued to visit the resort. She would also go to bed on these nights singing a song, and with a happy smile on her lips, after having re-read her lover's letter. It happened, however, that, as the summer wore on, her lover's letters grew somewhat less despondent and gave occasional accounts of little pleasures that had come his way, whereupon the girl got a grouch, and, failing to see the old professor, went for long walks alone, and noticed every time her mother's hat was on crooked, and began to find fault with her lover, and tell him that his melancholy letters had spoiled her summer.
Moral--A woman's ideal of happiness is only fully realized when she knows some man is unhappy about her.-Cincinnati Times-Star.
The Summer's End.
Our grandmothers were firmly of the opinion that the only proper way to pack white things for the winter was "rough dried." Under this system they can be dumped into anything and stored away with no trouble.
But the trouble comes in the spring, when they must be gotten out in a hurry, looked over and sent to the laundry before they can be worn.
It is just as well to have them ironed now, as carefully as if they were to be worn tomorrow, and put away already for wear. Nor will they yellow by this process, if properly put away. The paper and white wax used in packing them will be yellowed, but the garments will come forth fresh and white in the spring.
When the articles have been carefully washed and ironed begin packing, with a basis of supplies consisting of plenty of white wrapping paper, white tissue paper and thin cakes of white wax. Stuff the sleeves of frocks and shirtwaists with tissue paper, to prevent mussing. Fold and between each fold lay several thin slabs of the wax. Then wrap the whole garment in white paper, and close each edge, so that the air will not reach it. Tie firmly, and put away in the drawer or trunk where they are to repose until next season. No housewife need be cautioned against putting away things with even the least spot upon them. The tiniest stain will "set" and spread past all eradication.
Draperies, muslins and cretonnes and such things, should have the dust beaten out, even if they do not require washing. Most of them do, however, and these should be carefully ironed and rolled around a thick round stick to prevent creasing. They should then be wrapped in white paper as the gowns have been and put away.—Selected.
Relaxation for Women.
In this busy world of ours—or rather in these busy cities—rest is absolutely necessary to the society woman, the housewife or the woman of business, for all women are high strung and need to put on the brake once in a while or trouble invariably results.
Any stranger visiting our shores is impressed with the extreme nervousness of our people, which is shown in the many attitudes they assume within a short space of time and the difficulty with which they keep their hands still for more than a few minutes at a time.
Indeed, it is not uncommon to hear women complain of being so tired out and so nervous that they simply must find something to do, being unable to sit still for any length of time. Such a state of affairs is deplorable, and bodes ill, not alone for the women concerned, but for the future generations as well.
Rest is absolutely necessary to each human being; how else can we expect to be well poised, clear headed and self possessed? Extreme nervousness is akin to dementia, and the women of today must call a halt and put a stop to the pace that kills ere it is too late.
It is advisable that every woman should rest each day for a short period. It is not necessary to sleep, but it is well to retire to one's own room, remove all tight clothing, don a lounging robe and lie down. Relax all the muscles; let go, as it were, feel all the tension under which you have been holding yourself slacken little by little, and shut out all care from your mind.
There are those who claim this cannot be done, they have so much on their minds, their burdens are so heavy, and so on. Dear Woman, your burden is not so great but someone else has borne as heavy a burden before; you are not alone in your trouble, and you can forget it if you will, for it is your duty to be superior to all outside influences.
Learn to take rest in activity, and you will learn a health-giving secret, and you must learn this if you wish to be well. By lying down for even fifteen minutes each day and relaxing (it is possible to lie down and fret arid worry quite as much as if standing up) much benefit will result, for this gives the tired, nervous woman time to collect her wits, and ap-
pear fresh and in her right mind when evening comes and brothers, father or husband return from their daily labors. There are many little ways in which a woman may rest at other times. When waiting for a car at a station, it is wise to sit down squarely on the seat and calmly wait; not on the edge of the seat, fidgeting until the car arrives. That is the way, and the only way, to overcome this nervous, fidgeting affliction that has taken possession of our women of late.—Health Culture.
The Earliest Influences
It is supposed that every mother wishes her child to be perfect. She may have it so if she will observe the natural laws of life. Inheritance and environment are the keys to the situation.
First, let her realize that the child inherits personal appearance, disposition, characteristics and disease from its ancestors, either remote or near, and she will try to bring her own personality to its highest standard. Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes was right when he said we must begin to train a child two hundred years before it is born, but much may be accomplished by its own parents, if they do their duty.
The expectant mother is exceedingly susceptible to all influences, and through her impressions, a child may be affected. At no other time is she so easily impressed; good or bad, beautiful or homely objects leave their indelible impress upon her and her unborn child. The ancient Greeks knew this, and those beauty loving people took pains to surround the woman with objects of grace and loveliness. Believing also in the laws of heredity, they made a law which each year compelled the most beautiful young man and maiden to marry, and thus perpetuate their beauty.
Intellect is transmissible from parents to children, but it is not a proved fact that real genius is. It requires a special effort of nature to make a real genius, and as if exhausted from the effort rests for several generations. Shakespeare, Milton, Socrates, Buffon, Aristotle and Plato did not transmit their magnificent genius to their offspring but in one way we may explain this by saying that none of them had brilliant wives. Sons inherit their intellects from their mothers, and the wives of the men mentioned may have lessened the qualities transmitted by them.
Those women who have been celebrated for their mentality have reflected the genius of their fathers. Hypatia, Madame de Stael, Arete and George Sand were all the daughters of philosophers. Walter Scott, Burns, Ben Johnson, Goethe and Byron were the sons of women famous for the brilliance of their intellect and language. Within our own circle of acquaintances we may not similar inheritances. We know that none of the great statesmen or literary men of our own times have brilliant sons, but many of them have daughters far above the average mentally. This explains sex-intellectuality.—Maude Murray Millan in The Pilgrim.
Arcady at Home.
I may be writing to someone who has a home remote from her own kith and kin, a home apart from neighbors, with long intervals of silence and brooding. There are such homes. Fortunate it is if in them is a cradle in the living room, if little feet patter up and down the stair, and if there are friendly cats and dogs that make themselves a place beside the fire. A mother can never feel herself an exile if her children are around her. One such lonely woman wrote me not long ago, "I stand at the door, and listen to the sound of hoof-beats until they die in the distance, and know that I have seen the last of my husband for the whole day. He waves his hand at the end of the lane, and is gone. He likes this big new country, with its great spaces, and he lives in the future when we are all going to be rich. But I don't care for a big, empty, level landscape. I pine for the hills and the sea. I long for the dear people in the little home village, for the gossip and the familiar faces, and the church fairs, and the little things that happen. Nothing happens here. But, thank God, the children are rosy and healthy and grow like young colts. Won't you tell me what to read when winter days come, and I feel as if I were on the edge of nowhere? You live in God's country and don't know what homesickness means."
You may imagine that it is a pleasure to correspond with a sister who is far away and discouraged, who in some of her low moods can hardly enjoy her children's company. In her case, as in that of many another, loneliness and home-sickness are aggravated by continual drudgery and the pressure of routine. Husbands have over wives the decided advantage that they go out for a daily change of scene, and return at night to an environment that greets them with cozy comfort and a smiling welcome. Office, shop, ranch, farm, field, whatever place of toil a man has, he goes to it daily, and in due course he returns. Out on the ocean the sailor may toss in a wild gate, but he does not lose heart, for somewhere on the shore, where the lamp is burning and the kettle sings, there is a home, there is a wife, there are babies.
Heart's desire is always satisfied when one goes home, but not always does heart's desire incline to stay there. This is why, when you stand on the wharf and wave good-bye to the friends who are to cross the ocean, you need not waste a sigh on them. They are going away for a good time, and will return to their Arcady by and by. Your sympathy must be for the ones who stay at home, abide by the stuff, and accept the monotony of the daily grind. Margaret Sangster in Woman's Home Companion.
A Weekly Sermon.
Despite all efforts to lift housekeeping into the realm of high art, the average woman hates it. She may not say that she hates it, but she does. Back of her spasmodic, zeal in the cooking class and underlying her scientific roasts and artistic ices, is a deep and abiding distaste for the whole business. Yet there is no work in the world more healthful. There is no work that will drive away the blues or dissipate ill-temper like sweeping a room or washing dishes.
I know one woman who says: "When I am so nervous that it seems as though I should fly into a thousand pieces I go into some closet or cupboard that needs overhauling and proceed to set it in order; and when it is done I have more than the orderly shelves, boxes and bags as a reward for my work. My nervous fit has disappeared. I am clear-brained and strong-hearted again. The doctors are wise to recommend light housework to their patients."
But I've never heard my friend say that she would like to put cupboards and storerooms in order once a week, or even once a month, or that she would like to "do up" the daily breakfast dishes.
Chief among the charges against housework is that it will not stay done. Rooms do not stay swept and dusted; pies disappear, while the appetite for the same remains. The laundry basket yawns and the darning basket likewise. The housekeeper who has set her house in order, who has replenished her larder
with good things, is tempted to cry out,
"If this could only stay so!"
It does not, however. Housekeeping, like history, repeats itself, and because of this never-endingness women early learn the rhyme:
A man works till set of sun.
But woman's work is never done.
Admitting that the last line of this immortal couplet is true, how about the first line?
So far as I have observed, a man's work does not stay done any more than a woman's. The bookkeeper adds his columns today, but other columns confront him tomorrow. The editor lays his pen and scissors down tonight only to take them up again tomorrow; the real estate man and the book agent have use for their eloquence day in and day out. Hod-carrying and selling dry goods, teaching and making shoes seem to flourish the week round. As for man's work being till set of sun only, how many of them study, write, post books over hours, then begin again next morning and do the same thing over again? In truth, I do not know of any work in the world that is done once for all—not even the undertaker's.
Was it Josh Billings who said that it is just as well not to know things as to know things that "ain't so?"
Proverbs and their kin are said to be the crystallized wisdom of the ages, when, in fact, they are half the time neither wise nor true. The above quoted couplet plainly belongs to the class that "ain't so."
And there are plenty others that should be accepted with the "grain of salt." Every day we hear someone say, "He who hesitates is lost." when the truth is that nine times out of ten it is he or she who hesitates that is saved. The impulses of the average human being are not so infallible that one can always trust oneself to follow them, and the sober second thought is often a great improvement on the first.
"A penny saved is twopence earned," is another bit of precious nonsense. What folly it leads one into sometimes. The woman who pins her faith to this saying will walk miles to save a penny on a yard of muslin, not taking into account the expenditure of nerve force that is of more value than many nickels. "Economy is the road to wealth" only when it means a just estimate of relative values. A man may delve and save through a lifetime and die poor. It is he who sends his money broadcast at the right moment who wins.
"Whatever is worth doing at all is worth doing well" is another one of the sayings that will bear investigation. Household tasks may now and then be slighted. Exacting as these demands are they may sometimes be set aside. It is the wise housekeeper who knows when this can be done. Better a little dust on the furniture, or a little comfortable disorder in the sitting room than go to bed with throbbing nerves or sacrifice the cozy chat with the children. There are some things for which absolute spick-and-spanness do not compensate. In sewing there are times when a good long stitch answers just as well as many fine ones. That work is well done which is done according to the requirements of the occasion.
In these days of increasing demand upon brain, nerve and heart, the woman who knows how to practice the noble art of slighting with wisdom, judgment and conscientiousness has mastered a valuable knowledge.—Charlotte Perry in What To Eat.
Points for the School Girl
About Preserving Her Health.
The girl who has spent the summer out of doors, as nearly every girl has, comes back to school feeling tired.
The confinement of the schoolroom brings about a muscular reaction that is very depressing after a summer of sports. Her spirits, too, feel the strain and the difference between outdoor life and life of the books and atlases is very pronounced. She gets up in the morning feeling listless and goes to bed in the same manner. It is a severe test upon vitality this sudden change from outdoor life to indoor life.
And it is not only the girl student who feels this change. It is felt by school children of all ages and by every child who has spent the summer in the country. The child who has lived in the open will have a tired, stuffy feeling indoors.
But to return to the subject of indoor life. The student who has been away for her vacation and who now enters the schoolroom, and who feels the reaction of indoor life, must begin her treatment by taking care of her lungs. It is the cramped up things that make all the mischief.
And the housewife who lives indoors and who feels tired and who is growing wrinkled and old and fat, can restore her youth and her health by changing the air of the house.
Remember that the trouble is caused by several things.
First, the sudden change from being out of doors to being indoors. The muscles have been given plenty of work to do and now they are idle. They do not work easily. It is just like letting a machine get rusty and out of sorts.
Secondly, there is trouble with the indoor air. There is not one room in a hundred that is ventilated properly. To ventilate a room as it should be ventilated there must be a transom over the door and the window must be left open. If there is no transom, there should be two windows in the room, and both should be open.
If possible keep windows open on opposite sides of the room. Open them wide so that there is no draught. The air will not hurt one. As for the dust, never mind it.
If there is a little room with only one window in it, be sure to open the window both top and bottom. This makes a circulation of air. Fresh air comes in at the bottom of the window, while the air one breathes rushes out of the opening in the top. This is a very good arrangement for the small room. A lattice door is even better. For the air will play through the slats and the windows will keep a fresh supply always moving.
The school girl can usually manage to have a window opened in the schoolroom. As for the girl's own room it will be to her interest to keep the air nice. Fresh complexions depend upon pure air to a great extent, and one can almost tell by the looks of a girl's face and by the light in her eyes the condition of the room in which she sleeps. A close, heavy dusty room will always make dull eyes and a nasty skin.
Coming home from the country is trying for many other reasons beside that of being cooped up in a closed room. One misses many things which one gets in the country. And the principal thing is the change in diet. In the country one may not have had fresh meat, and one may have had poor tea and coffee, but one had plenty of fresh vegetables. Corn on the cob was plentiful, and one had stringbeans and spinach and plenty of other green things, not counting the fruit which one picked up under the trees and ate between meals.
This miss-or-hit diet somehow did not give one indigestion. Indigestion comes when one gets home. And, though the roasts are done to a turn, as no country roast ever was done, and though the steaks would melt in the mouth, while the country steak was leather, and though the city chickens are tenderer and more plentiful than the country fowls, still one does not feel right! The trouble is a vegetarian trouble. More fruit of all kinds is needed. Less shell fish, less rich meat, less of nearly
everything that goes on the family table, and a great deal more of the country diet. It was skimping on everything except raw fruit and fresh vegetables. But it was long on beets, on onions, on turnips and on potatoes. And these are the very things the complexion and the spirits need. Don't break off abruptly. But give them up gradually—if give them up one must. Now, the school girl who feels the change from the meadow to the schoolroom, or the city woman who feels the difference between the piazza and the parlor can still keep to her old diet. She can still throw open the windows and she can still dress in loose clothing. She can keep the same style of dress which she wore while away—loose, comfortable, light and pretty—and the result will be very apparent in her improved spirits.
The city woman, home from the farm, misses the scents of the country. She misses the sweet odors which were so invigorating and she feels the needs of the spices which were wafted into her windows at early morning.
The city woman can supply herself with these sweet scents if she will cultivate the rose jar. If she will keep great pots of pot pourri in the halls and in the rooms. Each morning, after the rooms are dusted, the tops should be lifted off the jars and the rose leaves stirred. In the big jars there are all kinds of pulverized grasses and these will give forth sweet smells and send them sweeping through the hallways.
The school girl can have her jar of pot pourri, and so she can always obtain a sweetly scented room.
But the schoolgirl must exercise, so she can keep her muscles in good shape and her lungs full of air, even though she is no longer in the country.—Brooklyn Eagle.
MONGOOSE SAVED MAN'S LIFE.
Remarkable Story from India of Little Animal's Fight with a Cobra.
One sultry afternoon a gentleman who was staying in India was lying in a hammock swung on the veranda of his bungalow. He was whiling away the time eating fruit and biscuits, when all at once he saw a little sharp-nosed, bright-eyed creature all covered with smooth fur and looking something like a bandicoot rat and something like a squirrel, come creeping slyly along the floor. He threw it a bit of banana, which at first startled it, and it acted as though it was going to run, but pretty soon it seemed to think better of it, and turned back and snapped up the morsel. The gentleman grew interested and gave it some biscuit crumbs, which it ate, by degrees becoming more familiar and inclined to make friends. Just then some one approached and the creature ran away.
Then the gentleman was taken very ill with a fever, and one day when he was just beginning to recover he sent his servant away, and composed himself to take a nap. Just as he was about to doze off into dreamland he saw a horrible sight. Describing it, he says:
"Creeping into the room from the veranda, coil after coil, was a huge hooded cobra, the deadliest snake in all India, more than 7 feet long, and as thick as a man's arm. For a moment I was fairly dumb with horror, and then, although I knew it was no use, I instinctively called for help; but my voice was so weak that it couldn't even have been heard in the next room.
"On came the snake, rearing up its horrid spotted hood angrily, and blowing out its head, as it does when it means mischief. It had already got to the foot of the bed, and was just preparing to crawl up when I heard a skirr of tiny feet across the floor, and I saw my squirrel-rat friend, little Tommy. The brave little fellow never hesitated for a moment, but went right at the cobra like a tiger, and gave it a bite that drew blood like the cut of a knife."
The upshot of the matter was, Tommy and the snake fought a duel, and upon its victory depended the life of the sick man. Again and again the rat-squirrel attacked the reptile, biting and biting, and always escaping the enemy's blows, until at last the rat-squirrel actually bit off the snake's head. But just as this happened the snake in its floppings knocked some glass off a table and the attendants in the house, hearing the crash, came rushing in.
As it turned out, the little rat-squirrel was a mongoose. These creatures are the greatestests serpent killers in the world. Thus this gentleman, by making a pet of the little mongoose, had found a friend that actually saved his life.—Pearson's Weekly.
Trees of Many Fruits.
Many people who live on city lots long for fruit trees of their own from which they can gather fresh fruit instead of being dependent on the markets, but, owing to cramped garden area, they feel that an orchard is an impossibility. Mr. Vaughn of Pasadena was confronted by just such a problem, but he has cleverly found a way out of the difficulty. On the back of his town lot he had room for six fruit trees. He planted navel oranges and peaches and plums, and when they had become strong and sturdy he grafted and budded other varieties into them. The operations were all successful and now Mr. Vaughn has numerous varieties of fruit that ripen at all times of year and furnish an abundance for table use. On one naval orange tree Mr. Vaughn budded a tangerine, a grape fruit, a lemon and a blood orange, making with the navel orange itself five kinds of fruit on one tree. They all bear profusely, and the fruit is of extraordinarily large size. The peach trees were budded with numerous varieties of early and late peaches, as well as apricots and nectarines. These trees bear from the first of July to the first of November. The plum trees have been induced to produce many kinds of plums. If all the fruit raised from these six trees came from individual trees of their own kind, it would take something like a five-acre ranch to accommodate the orchard.—Country Life in America.
The large terrapin ponds of Frank C. Lewis at Hunting Creek were destroyed by the great storm Wednesday night. Mr. Lewis is the largest terrapin raiser on the Chesapeake bay and annually ships hundreds of the finest diamond back terrapins in the world to the large hotels in New York, to the United States Senate's restaurant at Washington and to his customers scattered over the entire country
The terrapin are put in still ponds, boarded and wired in, and lay their eggs in the sand. Many young terrapin are raised in this way, and altogether the industry has been a most profitable one. The terrific wind brought in the huge tide and completely flooded the ponds and drowned nearly all the terrapin. The animals were driven from the ponds and killed by the tossing of the choppy sea. Some were driven ashore and turned on their backs, and when the waves would beat over them finally died from exhaustion. The number of terrapin killed is about 1500, valued at $4000.—Onancock correspondence Baltimore Sun.
How Battleships Are Protected.
The thickness of armor on modern warships is truly astonishing. The side armor of a first-class battleship usually varies from $16\frac{1}{2}$ inches thick at the top of the boat to $9\frac{1}{2}$ inches thick at the bottom. The gun turrets are often protected by armor from 15 inches to 17 inches thick.
No Time of Day
[“If anyone ever reaches the north pole he will find no north, no east, no west, only south, whatever way he turns. The time of day is also a puzzling matter, for the pole is the meeting place of every mer'dian and the time of all holds good.”]
“What will they do?” said the midshipmite,
“With the north pole, if they find it?”
“Run up the flag,” quoth old Jack Tar,
“And set the watch to mind it.
“Every man Jack who round his back Against the pole to shore it
Will find, when he attempts to tack, South—only south—before it;
No north, no east, no western way;
In fact, no proper time of day.”
“No time of day!” said the midshipmite.
“What could be more complete?
All times of day must be all right
Where all mer'dians meet.
"So there will be, beyond a doubt,
Na proper time for 'turning out.'
Or knocking midshipmites about,
And, in that blest retreat,
No time the galley sweets to lock,
But 'plum-duff' all around the clock!"
Adele M. Harward in St. Nicholas.
A Voluble Vowel
"Ungrateful people! Oh, dear! Oh, dear!" piped a small voice. "It is too bad! I am not going to stand it much longer. I'll just leave the English alphabet, I will, and go over to France, where they do try to pronounce me, even if it is queerly."
Helen, who was just starting for school, looked about her. Who was talking? There was certainly no one in the room. "Hello," she cried, trying not to feel scared.
"W-h-e-r-e are you, and w-h-a-t's your name?" stammered Helen.
"I am the fifth vowel, and the way I am treated is perfectly shameful. I could excuse the baby calling me 'oo,'" went on Master U, with rising passion; "but when men of letters are careless, it is too much! Letters, indeed!" spitefully. "They are hardly men of consonants. I should transport them to Siberia, or at least to Russia, and then they'd miss the vowels! But it's just because we are a small family and useful that we are so imposed upon. Sister E is really the only one of us they treat at all decently, she always works so much for them. And sister O they respect a little, though when I'm with her they turn and twist us in all sorts of ways, especially if G and H join us."
"But what do they do to you?" asked Helen, much interested in this long speech.
"Do!" screamed U. "Why, they slight me! I'm only safe in books, or when they call the roll, that is to say the alphabet. Please spell 'duty.'"
"D-u, doo, t-y, ty, dooty," said Helen, glibly.
"Oh, of course." bitterly. "Now spell tutor.'"
"T-u, too, t-o-r, tor, tootor."
"Yes, you are just as bad as the rest. Never give a fellow half a chance!"
"What do you mean, anyhow? Can't you explain?" asked Helen.
U paused a moment, and then said firmly: "Of course I can. Take the word 'mute.' You've heard of that, I hope. Oh, you have! Well, do you call it 'moot?'
"Of course not," said Helen, with a laugh.
"Then you have no right to call duty 'dooty'; or, when my double first cousin W is in a word with E, you certainly shouldn't say 'noos' for 'news,' which ought to rhyme with pews. Do you understand?"
"Why, yes!" said Helen, admiringly.
"It really doesn't seem fair, when you put it that way, does it? I must try and thing of U more." smiling.
"I only ask justice," said U, plaintively; "and as for thought," holding his head up proudly, "the highest classes in England and America always respect me, and linguists and elocutionists honor me," with emphasis.
"Tell me something about your family—do!" urged Helen.
"Ah! I'm glad to see you are interested in us," said U, graciously. "Well, let me see! We'll begin with brother A, as he's the head of the house. In the first place our pedigree is a long one—'way back to the old Romans, you know.'"
"To be sure—the Latin text!" cried Helen, anxious to show she knew something.
U nooded. "A, I and O are the strongest of us. They often stand alone. But sister E is in everything nearly—quite intrusive, I think. However, as I said, she is quite overworked, and can't help herself, poor vowel! But, to go on, brother I is an egotist, always strutting by himself, when he gets a chance, and swelling into capital. E and myself never have a chance to be big, except when we lead a sentence or begin a proper name. Then, there's sister O, the most emotional creature when she's alone, always surprised or shocked or sorry or glad. And now for myself," complacently, "I'm very dependent, you must know. G guards me a good deal, and Q rarely quite me—he! he! See?"
Helen looked rather dubious for a moment, and then brightened. "Of course!" "I hate some of the consonants, though." U chattered on, with a pettish air. "N is always making me unhappy or uncomfortable; and with R—rough old thing!—I get rude, rush about, and run into some trouble or other always. It's fun sometimes to be with F; but people are often very disagreeable when I walk out between D and N—ha! ha! I have to laugh. You know I'm the last vowel in the alphabet, for W is only my double first cousin, and Y is a kind of foster brother of I. But it's awfully dull down there with V W X Y Z; they hardly ever go with me."
Helen nodded thoughtfully.
"And now," continued the letter, brightly, "before I leave—" but as Helen listened eagerly, the scene began to change. She found herself in a schoolroom, with her head on a desk, listening to a chorus from the reading class, led by the teacher. "Not dooty, but duty; not tootor, but tutor; not noos, but news; not stoopid, but stupid."
"You'll catch it, going off nodding like that!" said a familiar voice in her ear, which sounded very like that of Mabel Lawton, her deskmate. "But where is U?" cried Helen, eagerly. "Where is you!" mimicked Mabel, smiling. "Oh, my eye, what grammar! Why, here I am, of course," with a convincing pinch.
This rouser was effectual, but Helen never forgot her two minutes' dream.—
A. J. Backus in St. Nicholas.
When Salt Was Money.
Many, many years ago salt was so hard to obtain, but so necessary to have, that Roman soldiers were paid part of their wages in salt. Now the Latin word for salt is sal, and from that came the word salarium, meaning salt-money. Finally the soldiers were paid only in money, but the term salarium was still used to designate these wages. From this old Latin word comes our English word salary. Do you see, then, why we say of a worthless fellow that he "is not worth his salt?"
A Distinguished Bedroom.
The house in Portland, Me., where Longfellow was born is now a tenement in the poorest part of the city, mostly inhabited by Irish. A correspondent writes
us that a few years ago a teacher in Portland was giving a lesson on the life of the poet. At the end of the hour she began to question her class.
"Where was Longfellow born?" she asked.
A small boy waved his hand vigorously. When the teacher called on him his answer did not seem to astonish the rest of the class, but it was a cold shock to her.
"In Patsy Magee's bedroom," he said.
—Youth's Companion.
BEAST AND WIRE.
New Diversions of the Animal Kingdom in East Africa.
The animal kingdom in British East Africa looks upon the 2190 miles of telegraph wire strung through that region as an innovation to be utilized. The wires arouse curiosity and stimulate experimentation. A number of genera and no end of species are trying to find the adaptation of the telegraph to their special purposes; and so the routine of the telegraph business is more or less crowded with incidents of an unusual character, some of which are mentioned in the latest official report. This speaks of monkeys as incorrigible. Many of them have been shot and thousands frightened, but they cannot get over the idea that the wires are merely a new facility for their athletic performances in mid-air. They have ceased to pay much attention to the locomotive, and even the shrieks of the whistle are not permitted to interfere much with the fun of swinging on the wire. Three wires are strung on the same line of poles for 584 miles between the Indian ocean and Victoria Nyanza, giving an opportunity for more complicated performances. The Kikuyu forest is mentioned as a place where monkeys, in their evolutions, sometimes succeed in twisting the wires together.
The gentle giraffe is also a source of annoyance. He sometimes applies enough muscular energy to the bracket on which the wire is fastened to twist it around, stretching the wire and causing it to foul with other wires. The hippopotamus is also a nuisance, because he rubs up against the poles and sometimes knocks them over.
These creatures, however, do not steal the wire. Thievery was the greatest evil with which the telegraph builders had to contend and the evil has only recently been suppressed. When the copper wire was stretched northeast from Victoria Nyanza through the Usoga country, the natives cut out considerable lengths of it; and at one time about forty miles of wire were carried away and never recovered. Passing caravans found also that they could help themselves along the way by cutting the wire and using it in the barter trade. The temptation was great and not always resisted, for wire would buy anything the natives had to sell. A great deal of energy was expended in stamping out wire stealing and it now seems to be a thing of the past.
Fifty-nine offices are receiving and sending telegrams in British East Africa and Uganda. Wires connect the seacoast with Albert Nyanza, where Emin Pasha was so long cut off from the world by the Mahdists. Telephone messages are constantly being sent between Mombasa on the coast and Nairobi, 328 miles inland, and the telegraph business last year amounted to 42,759 messages.—New York Sun.
Tramps Stay Away from Mountains
"You never saw a cat bathing in the sea. You never saw a tramp in a mountainous country. Each spectacle is of equal rarity." The speaker, a geologist, smiled.
The speaker, a geologist, smiled.
"I know what I am talking about," he said. "In quest of geological truths I have traveled the country over many times, and I have yet to find a tramp among the mountains. Tramps avoid mountains as they avoid soap.
"Hence New Hampshire, Vermont and the other mountainous states are singularly free from petty thieving and from all such troubles as hoboes cause. And hence, in those states, it is never necessary to lock the doors or the windows.
"Tramps avoid mountainous districts because the walking is all uphill there and because the farms are few and far between. A fertile and flat country with the roads good and the farms close together suits the tramp."—Louisville Courier-Journal.
A Philanthropic Joke.
First a halfpenny and then a gold piece gave considerable amusement to a small crowd in the Rue Dounou, Paris.
The former coin was placed on the pavement and lay untouched for an hour and a half before it was picked up by an old lady, who carefully placed it in her reticule, despite the derisive cheers which were accorded her by those who were watching.
An American gentleman then placed a 20-franc piece on the ground, and as pedestrian after pedestrian passed without seeing it, they were startled by the uproarious laughter from doors and windows. They stopped short, looked confused and then hurried away with indignant glances at the merrymakers.
The louis was at last picked up by a bent and feeble old man, who hobbled off with his treasure amid enthusiastic cheers.—London Daily Mail.
Small.
"How small have you felt?" she asked anxiously.
"Well," he replied, "I have felt as small as a man in the presence of the head plumber."
"That isn't enough."
"I have felt as small as the Prohibition nominee for vice president."
She shook her head.
"Or as a man whose wife catches him in a lie."
"That isn't anything."
"I have felt as small as the man who made a righteous complaint to the president of a trolley line."
She shook her head sadly.
"That isn't anything to the way I feel," she said. "You know I have never been to Europe, and I've been talking with a girl who has just returned."—Life.
How to Open a New Book.
If books were rightly treated when they are newly bound there would be less likelihood of their backs being broken afterward by rough handling. The covers should be opened one at a time and laid as far back as the table upon which the book is resting; then gradually all the leaves, a few at the back and a few at the front of the book, should be laid upon the covers. The book will then be in condition for ordinary wear and the covers will not break away if not abused. When called suddenly away from a book which you are reading do not lay it face down on a table nor throw a handkerchief between its leaves, but have a book marker handy and place it between the leaves, closing the book.—New York World.
Save Your Old Walnut.
If you have any old walnut furniture keep it by all means. It is becoming rarer and more valuable all the time. Most of the pieces are ugly, because when walnut was in fashion taste was at a low ebb. An old bureau, table or chest or drawers may be made a thing of beauty with a little expenditure. In the first place the wood must be scraped of its disfiguring varnish and brass or glass knobs put on. Some pieces may have to be entirely remade, but this is frequently done with mahogany and other valuable woods.—New York Evening Post.
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EDITORIAL PARAGRAPHS. |
“I know of the bravery and character
of the Negro soldier. He saved my life
at Santiago, and I have had occasion to
say so in many articles and speeches.
The Rough Riders were in a bad position
when the Ninth and Tenth cavalry came
rushing up the hill carrying everything
before them. The Negro soldier has the
faculty of coming to the front when ue
1s needed most. In the Civil war he came
400,o0c strong, and I believe he saved
the Unicn.”—President Roosevelt.
—_—_—_———_——_——
Regular
Republican
:
Convention
From the report of the Committee on Credentiais
to the REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVEN-
TION, which was unanimously adopted by
that convention, June 22d, 1904.
Your committee report it to be their
final judgment that the convention which
elected sald John G. Spooner, J. V.
Quarles, J. W. Babcock and Emil
Baensch as delegates at large, and
thelr alternates at large, to this con-
vention from the state of Wisconsin
WAS THE REGULAR CONVENTION
OF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY IN
WISCONSIN, and that the delegates
elected by it are the regular elected
delegates, at large from the state of
Wisconsin to the republican convention,
and, as such, are entitied to seats In
this cenvention.
NATIONAL REPUBLICAN TICKFT.
For President of the United States—
THEODORE ROOSEVELT of New York.
For Vice President—
CHARLES W. FAIRBANKS of Indiana.
a ee ne eee
Presidential Electors.
At Large-CHAS. E. ILSLEY,
Milwaukee.
At Large—A. R. HALL, Dunn.
First-—JOHN L. SHERON, Green.
Second—J. M. BUSHNELL, Columbia.
Third—JAMES H. CABONNIS, Grant.
Fourth—FRED W. LORENZ, Milwaukce.
Fifth—FRED W. CORDES, Milwaukee.
Sixth—C. S. PORTER, Dodge.
Seventh—H. A. BRIGHT, Jackson.
Eighth—E. M’GLACHLIN, Portage.
Ninth—GEORGE BEYER, Oconto.
Teath—M. D. KEITH, Forest.
Eleventh—EDWARD L. PEET, Burneit.
STATE REPUBLICAN TICKET.
Governor—
EDWARD SCOFIELD of Oconto.
Lieutenant-Governor—
GEORGE 4. RAY of La Crosse.
Secretary of Stae—
NELS P. HOLMAN of Dane.
State Treasurer—
GUSTAVE WOLLAEGER, JR., of
Milwaukee.
Attorney General—
D. G. CLASSON of Oconto.
Railroad Commissioner—
F. 0. TARBOX of Ashland.
Insurance Commissioner—
WILLIAM C. ROENITZ of Sheboygan.
Antwerp has passed Hamburg during
the past year, and become the first port
on the continent of Europe. Even in the
old world this is an age in which nothing
stands still.
Michigan has produced some tall men,
but now breaks her record by announcing
that she has a 20-year-old youth who is 7
feet S$ inches tall and wears a boot 18
inches long.
The population of Germany has in-
creased $81,000 during the past year. It
is now 59,495,000, and has increased
45 per cent. since the close of the Franco-
Prussian war.
Some of the new troiley cars at Cleve
land have a speaking tube running from
the rear platform to the front so that the
motorman and conductor can talk with
each other easily.
The Czar has a brother, an uncle, four
first cousins, ten second cousins, thirteen
third cousins and a great-uncle. The first
and second cousins are allowed to use the
title “imperial highness.”
——
The Vermont State Society of the
United Daughters of 1812 has recently
come into possession of a piece of shell
from a British ship which fought in the
battle of Lake Champlain.
—————
The Peruvian government is about to
establish a national musecm of natural
science at Lima. It will be divided into
three departments devoted respectively to
animal life, plant life and minerals.
=S——
The town of Babylon, L. I., has begun
suit to recover the value of clams taken
from Great South bay, adjacent te the
town of Islip, during May. Babylon
claims riparian rights on the water front.
———
There are a large number of rich Chi-
‘nese bankers in this country, but, as a
aie they have confined their operations
to Chinese colonies in the larger cities.
One has now opened a bank on Walt
ba
| ‘The buildings in the burned section of
‘Baltimore have all been renumbered
since the great fire and none of them are
numbered 13. People seem*to be super-
stitions and have used 1244 when 13
‘should have been used.
_
Inrigation plans already outlined in
California, Oregon and the Dakotas will
‘imvelve the expenditure, in round num-
bers, of $27,000,000, and reclaim a mil-
lion of acres of land, capable of support-
ing 2 population of 500,000.
————
It is fortunate for all concerned that
the reported quarrel among the promoters
of a Milwaukee airship has occurred be-
‘fore the ship is perfected far enough to
take the contestants above terra firma to
experience disastrous drops.
_——
A Bayarian electrician has found that
an electric current will drive worms from
the ground and has invented a machine,
composed of a series of brass electrodes,
which can be placed in a garden and se
drive all the crawling things out of it.
‘The baby czarowitz greatly outranks the
German crown prince, for while the lat-
ter is only a lieutenant the former is al-
ready a colonel, and of a Finnish regi-
ment at that. In fact, his command
nearly lived up to its name at Liao Yang.
——
A number of game cocks in express
shipments have passed through New Or-
leans en route to the cocking mains of
Matamoras. It is said about $10,000
worth of these birds are shipped into
Mexico annually from the United States.
—_————
About 60,000 water wheels are used
for manufacturing in the United States.
yielding 1,300,000 horse power, or oue-
quarter to one-third of the whole power
used. Of this total 250,000 horse power
is used by the 2000 mills in New Eng-
land.
A church of solid coral is a curiosity
of the Isle of Mahe. This island, rising
8000 feet, is the highest of the Seychelles
group in the Indian ocean, and its build-
ings are all from square blocks hewn
from massive coral and glistening like
white marble.
It has been decided to remove the ac-
eumulation of smoke and grime from the
exterior of the Masonic temple in New
York. Six scrubmen are now at work
with brush, soap and water, and hope to
cover the 60,000 square feet of wall area
in ten weeks’ time.
A novel scheme to induce birds to stay
with us all winter instead of going south
is suggested by a well-known New Ensg-
land ornithologist. He thinks that if
there were a general building of bird
houses, suitably arranged, they would be
used as places of shelter.
The longest telephone line in Germany
is 742 miles in length and runs between
Berlin and Paris. Then follow Berlin
and Budapest, 612 miles; Berlin and Me-
mel, 593 miles; Berlin and Basel, 577
miles. The line between Berlin and
Frankfort is the most used, 485 communi-
cations being trausmitted daily.
The acknowledgement of Prof Orth of
Berlin as to the superiority of the United
States weather bureau, and similar frank
compliments from the chief of the Berlin
fire department concerning the American
“fire laddies,” ought to convince some
doubting people that some superior things
do not bear the brand “Made in Ger-
many.”
The Prussian war department has de-
termined to establish a sausage factory
at Spandau for the purpose of supplying
the garrisons in that vicinity with a
product made from who®some materials
at the smallest possible cost. If the ex-
periment proves successful other factories
will be established at points where large
bodies of troops are quartered.
It has long bee known that a boat sail
shaped something like a Japanese um-
brella would practically do away with all
danger of a boat’s capsizing, as the force
of the wind on it would have no tendency
te incline the boat. But no such sail
had been found until last summer, when
an English inventor made what he terms
a “cyclone sail.” It resembles a huge,
flat sunshade pierced with holes and tilt-
ed slightly to one side of its handle,
which represents the mast of the boat.
————
Coal Dust and Lung Diseases.
Some very surprising results which
have attended a series of investigations
made by a medical man in the mining
districts of upper Silesia, Germany, are
about to be made public. Ameng the
many illnesses prevalent in his district
lung diseases oceunied propcrticnately a
very Jow place, and consumptive per-
sons on coming to reside near the coal
mines recovered their health after some
time without undergoing any special
cure.
These facts he is prepared to verify
by statistics. The cures are attributed
by him to the coal dust contained in
the atmosphere, which, he alleges, has a
drying and disinfecting influence on tu-
bercle developments in the lungs. The
probability of this statement is increased
by the fact that the well-known lung
remedy, creosote, is derived from coal
tar, and it may possibly be present in a
erade state in the coal dust in the at-
mosphere. It is now proposed to creet
a sanitarium for consumptives in the
district referred to, in order practically
to test the efficacy of the new cure.—
London Standard.
<i Daweh RS Se
—Eighty per cent. of Portuguese peas-
ants can neither read nor write.
[Ra , SS
eae ey Ny
Ws: “0! ScGTy ie
aes . int id
Cocoanut Loaf Cake.
Oream half a cupful of butter with
two cupfuls of powdered sugar, and
when very light add the well-beaten
yolks of six eggs and a cup of milk.
Gradually stir in two cups of flour
with which have been sifted two tea-
spoonfuls of baking powder and a
quarter of a teaspoonful of salt. Flavor
the batter with the juice and grated
rind of a lemon, and beat in two cup-
fuls of grated cocoanut. Last of all,
fold in quickly and lightly the stiffen-
ed whites of six eggs. Bake in two
loaf tins in a steady oven until a straw
run through the thickest part ‘of the
cake comes out clean. When the
enkes are cold cover them with an
icing flavored with a few drops of es-
sence of bitter almond. While icing
is damp, strew thickly with grated
cocoanut.
Witte an Wikies Rereek.
Into a bow! sift two quarts of white
flour with a teaspoonful of sugar and a
half one of salt. Into a scant pint of
scalding milk stir a teaspoonful of but-
ter and add a pint of boiling water.
When this is lukewarm stir-in a gill of
lukewarm water in which a half-cake
of compressed yeast has been thor-
oughly dissolved. Make a hole in the
flour and pour in this liquid, work to
a soft dough and turn out upon a
pastry bread. Knead for ten minutes
and set to rise in a bread pan for six
hours, or until light. Make into loaves,
knead each of these for at least five
minutes and set to rise in a greased
pan. Throw a cloth over them and
stand for an hour, then bake.
Rweet Apple Pickles.
Select smooth apples below medium
size and have them uniform. Peel care-
fully and leave the stems on. Allow
two quarts of vinegar, four pounds of
light-brown sugar, one ounce each of
ground cinnamon and cloves. Tie the
spice in little cheesecloth bags and
some sticks of white cinnamon. When
scalding hot put in enough apples to
cook well. When they can be easily
pierced with a broom straw skim out
in a stone jar and cook the other ap-
ples. Pour the hot vinegar over the
pickles, turn an inverted plate or
saucer over the jar and tie up securely
with white muslin.
Home-Made Yeast.
Three large potatoes boiled soft; a
small half-cup of sugar, quarter-cup of
salt. Pour the boiling water from the
potatoes on the sugar and salt, mash
the potatoes soft and mix all together.
When lukewarm add a yeast cake dis-
solved in a gill of warm water. Cover
and let it stand over night. In the
morning beat it hard, take a large cup-
ful out, cover and put it in a cool place
to use instead of a yeast cake in the
next raising. Then add a quart and a
pint of water and milk to the remain-
ing yeast, but no more salt or sugar.
This will make five lerge loaves of
bread.
Dill Pickles.
Make a brine so strong that an egg
floats upon it, then add to the brine
half its quantity of fresh water. Wash
the cucumbers and put a layer of them
into a crock, cover this layer with
grape leaves, then with a layer of dill,
using leaves and stems. Continue in
this way until the crock is full. Fill
the jar with the brine, tie a cloth over
the jar, then piace on this a plate and
lay a weight on this. Every fortnight
take off the cloth, wash it and replace.
Rice with Tomatoes.
Place a cupful of rice well washed
in a double boiler, with two cupfuls
of boiling water, adding a level tea-
spoonful of salt and a salt spoonful of
pepper. When the rice is done pour
in a scant pint of hot, cooked and
strained tomatoes, that have been well
seasoned with salt, pepper, butter and
a little sugar. Stir the rice and toma-
toes well together, arrange as a gar-
nish around roast beef or pork.
Shewtiae Giemsian
Only beef stock is required in mak-
ing a first-rate barley soup, if the grain
is allowed to steep in it for some time
before cooking. One-quarter the quan-
tity of cold water should then be add-
ed, with a few kernels of allspice, and
the simmering process conducted al-
most imperceptibly. Diced raw pota-
toes are thrown in about half an hour
before serving, the cooking being then
hastened to a gentle boil.
Various Custards.
Cooks with a little experience can
produce a variety of custards by vary-
ing the flavors used, leaving the body
of the custard the same. Oranges cut
fine (often being peeled and seeded)
can be used, simply adding them to a
good custard; so can canned or fresh
fruits, chopped almonds, grated cocoa
nuts, chocolate and macaroons.
a alle Ai a i
Soak gelatin in sufficient cold water
to cover before adding it to jellies or
creams.
To remove any ordinary stains from
ivory knife handles rub with emery
powder.
Yacht mops are great conveniences
for dusting the bare floors to univer-
sally used now.
Before boiling milk always rinse oat
the saucepan with cold water to pre
vent the milk from burning.
When making mayonnaise sauce se
lect a very cool place for the purpose.
If made in a hot kitchen it is apt to
separate in the process.
O fo /\| Dont nist toLuck
ne sina) SSS SS
Pee ee) laatcr and bunaa
ao Re oa i material, but come
Seg where you know the
peek eee grades and prices are right.
WAUSAU LUMBER AND COAL CO.
’Phone North 60. North Milwaukee, Wis.
DUCHESS IS RESTLESS.
American Girl Who Married English
Noble Plans New Travels.
The young Duchess of Manchester is
experiencing a return of the trav-
eling fever and instead of settling quiet-
ly tor the winter at Tandaragee in
London, as she had planned, purposes
starting soon for Cincinnati to visit her
parents, where she will be joined a little
later by the duke, when both will set
out for a trip through Japan, India and
‘Egypt, reaching England next May.
— ‘The duchess knows this ground well,
having traveled it all betore, but it will
‘be new to the duke. As a side attraction
she has a most striking enterprise in
view, no less than to penetrate to Lhassa.
The duchess long ago, after experi-
menting with other faiths, fixed on Bua:
dhism as the only acceptable religious
formula; and is consumed with the pro-
verbial zeal of a convert to worship at
the shrine of the grand lama. She in-
tends to exert every influence to secure
a safe conduct to the hitherto forbidden
city.
The journey will be impossible until
next spring and even then fraught with
great risks. But the duchess has seen
Lord Curzon on the subject and he has
promised to make inquiries as to whether
her wish can be gratified.
The duke, though not enthusiastic
about Buddhism, regards the undertaking
as rather interesting and warmly seconds
his wife’s efforts to achieve it.
YOUNG CONVICTS AS FARMERS.
Instructed in Useful Trades While Un
dergoing Punishments.
An interesting experiment is at present
being tried with youthful criminals of
from 16 to 21 years of age. Each class
or grade is kept apart from the others,
and wears 2 distinctive dress, according
to whether it is penal. ordinary or spe-
cial. The last grade is the highest, and
contains those whose conduct is most
satisfactory.
The most important point of the code is
employment in association in workships
or in outdoor labor, such as farming, gar-
dening, ete., so that while the subjects
are undergoing punishment they are also
being specially instructed in useful
trades and industries.
Special attention is given to their edu-
cation by instruction in the ordinary
subjects of the elementary education
code, by lectures and addresses, and by
‘their being provided with books.
Before the prisoner's discharge _ ar-
rangements are made with some philan-
thropic society or benevolent person to
aid in supervising his future.
At the Young Convict settlement at
Bostal, Chatham, these experiments are
achieving very successful results.—Lon-
don Chronicle.
.
Good News.
John Sharp Williams, leader of the
minority in the House, tells the following
as illustrative of the humors of the spoils
ayatent in office,
“Years ago. hefore the passage of the
civil service act, when every congress-
man’s life was made a burden by the
importunities of constituents seeking
office, a friend of mine, then representing
an Alabama district in the House, was
approached by an old acquaintance who
desired a clerkship in the treasury de-
partment,
“The congressman informed the man
that but a day or two before the head
of that department had advised the
statesman that there were no vacancies.
Nevertheless the constituent of the Ala-
bama representative persisted in his ef-
forts to obtain the coveted clerkship and
for weeks haunted the quarters of the
congressman,
“One evening, just as the menaber was
sitting down to dinner he was a little
vexed, to say the least, by the announce-
ment of his servant that the persistent
applicant for preferment at the hands of
the treasury department desired te see
him,
“On entering the drawing room the
congressman said:
“Well, what's up, now?
“*Good news, sir!’ exclaimed the office-
seeker, in great excitement, ‘I think you
ean get that place! A clerk in the treas-
ury department died this afternoon!’—
Tarper’s Weeklr.
Snake Culture in Australia.
. acer
Snakes, according to the pee
popular notion, should be killed at sight
‘as utterly useless and positively danger-
ons creatures, but in Australia they are
now being systematically reared for the
sake of their skins, which have a con-
siderable commercial value in London.
Parix and New oYrk. Snake skin is the
fashienable material for slippers, belts.
bags. purses, card cases, jewel” boxes.
dressing table accessories, ete. Rabbit
trappers supplement their means consid-
erably by catching young snakes and
extracting the poisonous fangs. The
blacks are also expert snake catchers.
To them the suake is_an agreeable ar-
ticle of diet—Tonden World.
Longevity has been characteristic of
vice presidents in the past. Adlai Ste-
yenson, for instance, is 69, and Levi P.
Morton is 80. Millard Fillmore when he
died was 74; George M. Dallas was 72,
John Tyler was 71, Martin Van Huren
was 80, Elbridge Gerry 70, George Clin-
ton, who came from Ulster county, where
Judge Parker lives, was 72. Aaron Burr
was 80, Thomas Jefferson was 88, John
Adams was 90. These vice presidents of
the United States are examples of the
longevity e¢ those who have held that
office, though, of course, there have been
a few vice presidents who did not atttain
old age. The youngest vice president at
inauguration was 36, the oldest was 69.
An Italian named Luciano Butti has
perfected a photographie apparatus ca-
pable of registering the incredible num-
ber of 2000 photographic impressions per
second. The most minute and least rapid
and casual movements of birds and in-
sects on the wing, which have hitherto
defied science, can, it is claimed, be reg-
istered with accuracy, thus opening a
new world of natural observation to or-
nithologists. The films used cost £2 per
second for the 2000 impressions.
PENINSULAR
Stove Pipe Enamel
This is one of the “little-big” things that go to make up
a perfect paint stock. A coat of it renews old stove pipe
effectually—covering the ravages of rust and doubling the
life of the pipe.
On new pipe it makes rusting.impossible, the highly
enameled surface is impervious to dirt, and the glossy finish
exceedingly attractive in appearance.
It does not burn off and make the house untenable for
half a day, and the cost is very small. Try it.
MILWAUKEE PAINT & VARNISH CO.
193 THIRD STREET.
The American Steam Launy
Our wagons speed all over town,
All hours of every day,
Depositing and picking up
Big bundles on the way.
We've got the best machinery,
And expert help galore;
We make your linen glisten and gleam
Like sea-foam on the shore!
We do not slight an article,
However coarse or fine;
Oh, everything’s immaculate
On The American Laundry Line.
And so we bid for patronage,
At least a wholesome share
Of collars, cuffs and shirts and gowns,
And rumpled underwear.
Wee the pace and from our point
ur banner shal] not fall,
We fling it to the breeze and reach
Going higher than them all.
Laundry left before 8 a.m. can be
called for at 6:30 p. m. same
day, Saturdays excepted.
— es
END OF A LUCKY SCHOONER.
The H. Curtis, Which Never Lost a Maza,
Goes to the Deer Isle Graveyard.
ee ee ee ee
A remarkable old vessel was recently
consigned to the, marine graveyard at
Deer Isle, Me. This is the schooner H.
Curtis, which in more than half a cen-
tury of seagoing never had a serious mis-
bap or lost a single man.
The Curtis was built at Deer Isle in
1850, as a brig, and at that time was
considered an immense vessel—too large,
in fact, to be handled conveniently, car-
rying 225 tons dead weight. None but
the most experienced men were allowed
to go in her, and she was queen of the
Maine West India fleet. She made many
yoyages from Bangor to the West In-
dies, carrying pine boards out and bring-
ing back molasses, sugar and rum. Dur-
ing the war she was engaged in carrying
stores for the United States government
to Virginia ports, and had many narrow
eseapes from the Confederates.
In 1866 she was rebuilt and changed
into a schooner, since wnich time she has
been engaged in coasting between Maine
ports and New York and_ Boston. A
dozen of Deer Isle’s best sailors have at
different times been in command of the
Curtis, and they all made money in her.
She was what is known as a lucky vessei,
and it is with regret that the Deer Is-
landers see her laid away on the beach.
In the course of two or three seasons
all that is left of the old vessel will be
choped up and sent away to the big
cities for firewood, this sort of fuel being
in great demand on account of the many-
eolored flames it gives out.
Senator Vest’s Hard Luck Story.
Senator Vest used to tell a story of
good luck and hard luck without a coun-
terpart. He says: “One day while I
was a member of the Confederate Con-
gress I lost a month's pay somewhere on
the streets of Richmond. Just as the
woman in Scripture who lost a piece of
silver called together her friends and
neighbors and sought diligently until she
found it, I called my friends and wen*
with them on what seemed a hopeless
search through the snow covered, dimly
lighted streets of Richmond. The chances
were a thousand to one against success,
“We hadn't been out fifteen minutes
when a young lieutenant in our party
stooped down and picked up my lost roll.
I was in high glee and wanted to treat.
We were piloted to a cafe which, pend-
ing some repairs, had a ladder of about
a dozen rungs instead of stairs. We al!
climbed up. considering it a great lark,
all the while talking about what a lucky
fellow the young lieutenant was and pre-
dicting great things for him. As we
climbed down again the young lieutenant
fell from the ladder and broke his neck.”
—Saturday Evening Post.
>.
A Great Grapevine.
The finest grapevines in Eurepe is at
Auchmore house, Lord Breadalbane’s
Scotch residence. It is double the size
of the one at Hampton Court, and some
times produces 4000 bunches of grapes
ie a season.
COAL! COAL! COAL!
- Get Your Coal from
B. M. GLASPY,
| 2609—13 State St.,
| CHICAGO.
Best in the City.
WANTED-- AGENTS
We want 100 agents in every
city, tewn and hamlet in the
U.S. for the Wisconsin Week-
ly Advocate. It will be do-
voted to the interest of the
Negro race and will contain the
news of their sayings and
doings throughout the world.
50 Per Cent. Commission
———-ADDREss———
WISCONSIN WEEKLY ADVOCATE
: MILWAUKEE, Wis. R
| “Betis Starting on Your Trevels
“eo. Burroughs & Sons
PREMIUM TRUNKS
YALISES, SAMPLE CASES, Ete.
424 % 426 East Water St. Milwankee.
bed 50 YEARS”
bites obec, EXPERIENCE
Sas: Trave Marks
Desicns
Copyricuts &c.
Anyone sending a sketch and deseripticn may
quickly ascertain ovr opinion free whethe: arr
invention Jp probably patentable. ‘Communtea.
tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents.
sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Munn & Co. rece!ve
"Scien tific charge, i the
A handsome'y filustrated weekly. J.arcest c'--
culation of any scientific journai. Terms, $3 a
year four months, $L Sold byall newsdealers.
MUNN & €0,2679r0sx=. Hew York
Branch Offien. @5 F St, Washmaton. D.C.
WANTED—NURSE GIRL FOR FAMIL)
of two. Children attend kindergarter
during the forenoon. Apply office of Ad
vocate, 79 Fifth street
Value of Crown Jewels.
The eight largest diamonds in the world
are what are known as crown jewels,
and their weight is given below. Some
of them are in an uncut state and others
are carefully cut and finished, so that
there is a wide difference in their value.
The Kohinoor, the smallest in weight,
has been thus reduced by cutting and is
much the most valuable of the lot_and
has been estimated at $2,000,000, None
of these mentioned is estimated at less
than $500,000. The list is as follows:
The Basie een gate of the Portugal jew-
els, weight 1: carats; Kohinoor, be-
longing to the English crown, 103 carats:
Star of Brazil, 125 carats; Regent of
France, 136 carats; Austrian Kaiser, 159
carats; Russian Czar, 193 carats; Rajah
of Borneo, 367 carats.
——____—_
| King’s Collection.
The King of Denmark has a very valu-
able collection of birds’ eggs, which in-
cludes specimens of nearly every kind in
existence. The collection is considered to
be worth about $70,000.
JAPS FLANK RUSSIANS.
Kuropatkin's Army Worstel in Four Days' Fighting.
Gen. Stackelberg's Cavalry Cut Off and in Danger of Capture by
Tokio. Oct. 13.—9:35 a. m.—Field Marshal Oyama, reporting from the field Wednesday afternoon, expresses satisfaction at the progress of the operations and fighting between the Taitse and Hun rivers. The center and right armies made substantial gains. While the left army was desperately struggling to envelope the Russian right Field Marshal Oyama dispatched two telegrams, the first of which said:
"The state affairs in the direction of Mukden is as follows: On the morning of October 12 the central column of the right army at 5 o'clock occupied Lokoulin mountain and the northern heights of Pacheatzu. The left column of the right army occupied the northern heights of Shaotakou and continues to pursue the enemy's central column. The right army succeeded in occupying Maerh mountain. The central army, beginning operations from midnight October 11, reached the heights extending from Sanchiatzu to Sankaushi mountain, on the northwest, and is probably pursuing the enemy. The left army continues to attack the enemy along the Sebili river and at Lungwangmino and Wulichieh since last night, but has not yet attained its object. At present, aided with reinforcements, the left wing is trying to envelop the enemy's right flank by means of a rear engagement in the direction of Penshsuhu and the fighting continues. Judging from the above state of affairs the operations in those directions are proceeding favorably toward the attainment of our first object."
The second message is as follows:
"In an engagement at midnight on October 11 we captured two field guns and eight ammunition wagons. Maj. Gen. Murui was wounded and one colonel was killed."
Russians Almost Annihlated.
Field Headquarters of the Second Japanese Army, Oct. 11.—5 p. m.—Via Fusan, Oct. 13.—During the night the Japanese occupied the hills held by the Russians, on the right and center of the line, the Russians falling back a distance of three miles. The Japanese infantry advanced within 1500 yards of the Russians' lines at noon and defeated the Russians in a fierce counter attack, almost annihilating the attacking force, who made three charges. The Russian artillery was not silenced despite a fierce shelling all day."
Kuropatkin Again in Defense.
Tokio, Oct. 12.—12 p. m.—Field Marshal Oyama has taken the offensive. A general advance of the main strength of his army is now in progress. Kuropatkin's advance has been checked at every point, and he has been forced to take the defensive. Terrific fighting between the two armies is now general over a wide area between Liao Yang and Mukden. A titanic struggle, which, it is believed, will decide the engagement, is believed to be in progress, between Yental and the Hun river. Flanking movements attempted by the Russians at two other widely separated points on the Japanese right have been checked after fighting of the greatest bitterness.
A strong force of Russian cavalry, and infantry, which crossed the Taitse at a point thirty-five miles east of Liao Yang for the purpose of attempting to cut the Japanese communications with the Yalu has been isolated, and a report of its capture is momentarily expected. It has been completely cut off from the force supporting its rear.
Sacrifices of Life Appalling
The frontal attack upon the Yentai mines has been repulsed, but heavy fighting is still going on. In this part of the field operations it is estimated that 100,000 men were engaged. The battle raged incessantly, with unparalleled fury, for three days and nights. Positions were repeatedly lost and won by both sides. The sacrifice of life is reported to have been appalling. No official estimate of the losses on either side has yet been made. It is admitted in official circles here that the fighting now in progress is on a much larger scale than that at the first battle of Liao Yang, and that the losses on each side will be infinitely greater. The city is in a fever of patriotic excitement. Already it is claimed that the Russians have been defeated, and that Kuropotkin is in retreat.
Hospital Trains Crowded.
Mukden, Oct. 12.—11 p. m.—With steadily increasing fury the main forces of the Russian and Japanese armies are still fighting around Yentai. The night of the third day of the engagement has fallen upon the field, and the battle continues with unabated bitterness. Terrific fighting is now general along the front of the Japanese right and center. All that is certain is that Kuropatkin has found the Japanese lines impenetrable. His swift and terrific blow has failed to shatter Oyama's defense at any point. The latest reports received here are to the effect that the Russian army is now on the defensive, fighting desperately to stem a forward movement of the main strength of Oyama's forces.
The losses in the three days' incessant fighting have been enormous on the Russian side. The Japanese losses can only be conjectured. Hospital trains crowded with Russian wounded are pouring into Mukden in a steady stream. Nearly all of the wounded are being sent farther north. It is inferred from this that the tide of battle is threatening to turn against Kuropatkin, and that there is possibility of another Russian retirement, which will this time not stop at Mukden.
Stackelberg's Command in a Trap
It is persistently reported that the major portion of Gen. Stackelberg's command, consisting of one brigade of infantry and 2000 cavalry, with several guns, has been completely cut off south of the Taitse river, and that its capture is imminent.
The mission of this detachment was to make a desperate effort to cut Oyama's communications with the Yalu river. It is believed that it has rushed into a trap.
The brunt of the Russian attack is delivered at the right wing of the Japanese army commanded by Gen. Kuroki. At two widely separated points Kuropatkin has launched strong divisions.
The severest field
The severestighting of the engagement has taken place at Bensihu, on the extreme right of Kuroki's position. Here a Jansen
Here a Japanese detachment for more than twelve hours held back an overwhelming force of Russians. Knicki Repels Terrific Attack on Right. The fighting was of incredible fierceness. Repeated infantry attacks were repulsed by the Japanese. The losses on both sides were enormous. After defending their position devotedly the Ior-
THE SEAT OF WAR.
MOOKDEN
RIVER
GHA
ROAD
BENTYSIAPUYSS
SHAMPINYAIDZE
SIENCHUANG
YENYAI
YENYAI
MINES
TA PASO
RAILROAD TO
THE GREAT
LIAO PLAIN
LIAO-YANG
RIVER
TAITSE
OLD IMPERIAL ROAD TO
FENG IWANG CHEW
SYRWANTUN
N
W
E
Latest dispatches from the seat of war in Manchuria show that the Japanese repulsed the Russian turning movement at Slenchuang and checked Kuropatkin's advance along the whole front, extending from Slenchuang west to a point several miles beyond the railway. Having done this, the Japanese began to advance toward Mukden, heavy fighting taking place north of the Yental mines and Yental. The battle is now in progress in that region.
anese were re-enforced by a strong detachment and the Russians withdrew. A large column of Russians reached Ta pass, east of Yental mines, on the evening of the 9th. In the night a terrific attack was launched along the entire front of the right wing of the Japanese army. Fierce fighting raged during the night and the Russian attack was repulsed.
No fighting of importance has yet occurred in the district occupied by the left wing of the Japanese, to the westward of the railroad. An immense Russian column is engaged in the frontal attack on the Japanese center, to the north of Yentai. In this part of the field of operations the fighting has been continuous since Sunday.
Reports received say that the fighting around Yentai was of incredible fury. The Russian infantry, exposed in attacking to a sweeping force of the Japanese artillery, lost heavily. The heights to the north of the railroad station were alternately taken by Russians and Japanese after most terrific infantry fighting.
Both Armies Show Amazing Spirit.
In one of the assaults Gen. Danielloff was severely wounded, but refused to leave. The spirit displayed by the troops of both armies in this fighting was amazing.
The Russians advanced again and again to the attack, raising their voices in song above the screeching of the shells.
The Russian advance in this direction has been completely checked, and the Japanese have now taken the offensive. The Russian troops are fighting with desperate valor to retain the positions which they have taken. The battle here has developed into a close artillery duel and the firing in incessant. Here the fighting has raged all day and is still in progress.
Fought with Bayonets.
St. Petersburg, Oct. 13.—6:10 p. m. Private dispatches sent the night of October 11 from the headquarters of Gen. Bilderling, whose corps occupies the Russian center, describe the bloody and desperate character of the fight along the railroad north of Yentai station, where, on Monday, the Russians repeatedly charged the Japanese trenches at the point of the bayonet, the fight continuing into the night. The Japanese reserved the fire until the Russians, at the double, were almost upon them. An instance is given of a regiment getting within a few yards of the Japanese trenches, but recoiling before the murderous volleys of the Japanese, then coming on again with reinforcements literally under a shower of shrapnel, and finally succeeding in driving out the Japanese. But the Japanese artillery fire was so withering that the Russians were unable to remain in the trenches. That night the Japanese artillery bombarded the Russian center, preparing the way for a general counter attack, which Field Marshal Oyama ordered for Tuesday. The Japanese offensive extended to their extreme left, Gen. Oku's army being for the first time engaged. At nightfall Tuesday the Japanese had forced back the Russian right, but the center held fast, although a few positions had fallen into the hands of the Japanese.
The latest newspaper reports say Gens. Rennenkempff and Kashtalinsky encircled the Japanese right, crossed the Taitse river and came out on the Feng Wang Cheng road, the Japanese retiring before them. The news from these mixed columns is three days old.
A special dispatch to a newspaper, dated late last night, says the battle continued desperately along the whole front, the most severe fighting being transferred to the eastern front.
Another newspaper dispatch, dated from Harbin, today, says the tide of battle is with the Russians. Upon the basis of this dispatch "extras," with flaming headlines announcing a Japanese retreat along the whole line, were sold by thousands.
St. Petersburg Far from Cheerful.
St. Petersburg, Oct. 13.—5:15 p. m. The war office up to this hour declares that no additional reports have arrived from the front. Gen. Sakharoff's report only brings the story of the battle up to the morning of October 11, when no decisive results had been obtained by either side, although he makes it plain that the Japanese had assumed the offensive and that the Russians had not been entirely successful in defending their positions. The atmosphere at the war office is by no means cheerful. The failure to receive news of the Russian left wing might possibly be interpreted as tending to confirm the Tokio report that the Russians operating against the Japanese right had been enveloped.
Await the Baltic Fleet.
Chefoo, Oct. 13.—7 p. m.—Local Russians confirm the report that the Russian battleship Retvizan was recently hit by a shell from one of the new big Japanese guns, but they claim that the damage done was slight. Two sailors were killed. Another shell burst near the Russian gunboat Giliak, killing her commander and injuring others. The Russians admit that the new Japanese guns furiously threaten the harbor, docks, etc. They believe, however, that the squadron at Port Arthur will remain inside the harbor until the arrival of the Baltic fleet.
FREIGHT CARS THROUGH TRESTLE.
Engine and Crew Safe—Temporary Structure Gives Way.
Toledo, O., Oct. 13.—Six loaded coal cars on the Wheeling & Lake Erie railroad went into the Maumee river shortly after noon today, when a temporary trestle gave way. It replaced the span carried out by the ice last winter. The engine crossed safely and no lives were lost.
ISAAC R. BAER DEAD.
Civil War Veteran and Pioneer of Menomonee Falls Passes Away at Age of 73.
Menomonee Falls, Wis., Oct. 12.—[Special.]—Isaac R. Baer, aged 73, died of paralysis at his home in this city. He was a native of Waterloo, Seneca county, N. Y., and came to Wisconsin in 1843, settling in the town of East Troy, Walworth county, where he attained his
PETER H. HARRIS
majority. In 1859 he married Miss Mary Clason of Beaver Dam, who survives him. Mr. Baer came to Menomonee Falls in 1859, and enlisted in Co. K. First regiment, Wisconsin Heavy artillery, and served to the close of the war. He was for years one of the prominent merchants of Menomonee Falls and was appointed postmaster during the Harrison administration. About ten years ago he relinquished his business interests, turning the same over to his sons. The funeral was attended by a number of the G. A. R. men.
PATRIARCHS ENCAMP.
Wausau, Wis., Oct. 12.—[Special.]—The first business meeting of the fifty-seventh annual session of the Grand encampment and Patriarchs Militant, I. O. O. F., was held this afternoon. There is a large delegation present, representing all the principal cities of the state, and one full canton of patriarchs from Janesville, the latter giving a military drill on the courthouse square.
The meeting was presided over by Grand High Patriarch D. W. John of Marinette. The grand scribe, L. O. Holmes of Baraboo, stated that the past year had been a record breaker in point of new members admitted. The total membership of this branch of the order in Wisconsin is now 2765. The grand treasurer's report shows the order to be flourishing financially. Tomorrow new grand officers will be elected. Mineral Point is the most prominently talked of town as the place for holding the next encampment. The Rebekahs are also in session.
TYPHOID IS EPIDEMIC.
Disease Becomes Prevalent at Port Wash ington with Seventy-two Cases.
Port Washington, Wis., Oct. 12.—[Speciai.]—Great uneasiness has been caused in this city by the typhoid epidemic. Up to the present time seventy-two cases have been reported. The family of A. D. Bolens, editor of The Star of this city, has suffered greatly. Five children were taken down at once. Dorothy Bolens died Saturday night. Other deaths from the disease are: Bertha Werner, aged 19 years; Elsie Gieeneisr, aged 16, and Eleide Peterson, aged 13 years. The state board of health has been trying to discover the cause of the disease. It was at first thought that the milk was the cause of it, and one milkman was prohibited from delivering his goods. It continued to spread, however, and one of the doctors said that the end is not yet in sight, and that the epidemic had just begun.
DENIES CONSOLIDATION.
Manager of Wisconsin Traction Says, However, That the Merger May Take Place Eventually. Appleton, Wis., Oct. 12.—[Special.]—H. D. Smith, manager of the Wisconsin Traction, Light, Heat and Power company, denied the report yesterday to the effect that a movement was on foot to consolidate the interurban lines between Green Bay and Fond du Lac. Mr. Smith says he has heard nothing relative to the proposed merger, but that no doubt the lines would eventually be consolidated into one.
Green Bay, Wis., Oct. 12.—[Special.]
—The Knox Construction company of this city, which built the interurban line between here and Kaukauna, claims to know nothing about an alleged merger of the lines between here and Milwaukee under one management, which, it is rumored, is now being planned. Local officials of the company deny that such a thing is contemplated, so far as it affects their line.
WEDDING A SURPRISE.
Marriage of E. Schnederman, Burlington Banker, to Miss Lyman of Syracuse at Chicago Was Unexpected.
Racine, Wis., Oct. 12.—[Special.] There was much surprise caused in clubs and social circles here today, when it became known that Edward H. Schnederman, cashier of the bank at Burlington, Wis., had been married to Miss Mildred Lyman of Syracuse, N. Y., at Chicago. None of Mr. Schnederman's friends knew of it until a telegram was received here today. For several years he was local agent of the Goodrich Transportation company, coming to this city from Milwaukee. Mr. Schnederman attended the annual convention of the bankers of the United States at New York and arrangements were then made for the wedding to take place at Chicago.
MAY FORM NEW LEAGUE
Dropping of Rockford from "Three Eye" May Lead to Organization Including Beloit and Janesville. Janesville, Wis., Oct. 12.—[Special.]—The dropping of Rockford from the Three-Eye league, may result in the formation of an interstate league with Janesville. Beloit and Rockford as a nucleus.
TEMPERANCE TOPICS
Thousands of Lives, Characters and Fortunes Are Annually Wrecked Along the Gilded Pathway, Having Its Beginning in the Wine Room.
Wine and other physical exhilarants, during the treacherous truce to wretchedness which they afford, dilapidate the structure and undermine the very foundation of happiness. No man, perhaps, was ever completely miserable until after he had fled to alcohol for consolation. The habit of vinous indulgence is not more pernicious than it is obstinate and pertinacious in its hold, when it has once fastened itself upon the constitution. It is not to be conquered by half measures. No compromise with it is allowable. The victory over it, in order to be permanent, must be perfect. As long as there lurks a relic of it in the frame, there is imminent danger of a relapse of this moral malady, from which there seldom is, as from physical disorders, a gradual convalescence. The cure, if at all, must be effected at once; cutting and pruning will do no good; nothing will be of any avail short of absolute extirpation. The man who has been the slave of intemperance must renounce her altogether, or she will insensibly reassume her despotic power. With such a mistress, if he seriously mean to discard her, he should indulge himself in no dalliance or delay. He must not allow his lips a taste of her former fascination.
Webb, the noted swimmer, who was remarkable for vigor both of body and mind, lived wholly upon water for his drink. He was one day recommending his regimen to one of his friends who loved wine, and urged him with great earnestness to quit a course of luxury by which his health and his intellects would equally be destroyed. The gentleman appeared convinced, and told him "that he would conform to his counsel, and though he could not change his course of life at once, he would leave off strong liquors by degrees." "By degrees!" says the other, with indignation; "if you should unhappily fall into the fire, would you caution your servants to pull you out by degrees?"—Great Thoughts.
The internal revenue laws of the United States provide that—
"Any person who shall carry on the business of retail liquor dealer without having paid the special tax as required by law shall, for every such offense, be fined not less than $100 nor more than $5,000, and shall be imprisoned not less than thirty days nor more than two years."
The government officials contend that this law has been violated in this manner:
The express agent in a Kansas town would be the selling agent of the Kansas City dealer. He would receive from the dealer, say, a dozen cases of whisky, each containing four quarts, the case valued at $3.50. Each case would be addressed to some fictitious name. It would not be shipped in the express agent's name, because he would then be an out-and-out whisky dealer. He has always in his express office a half dozen or more cases. When anyone in the town wished to buy whisky he would go to the express agent who would say:
"Well, there's a case here addressed to So-and-So; he has not called for it, so if you pay the express charges of $5.50 I'll let you have it." The agent would keep 50 cents for his commission and remit $3 to the dealer, who, upon receipt of it, would ship another case under the same name to the agent. Thus the express agent was really the agent of the dealer, and the more he sold the more he made.
The government has at last taken hold of the matter and directed that the war upon this species of business begin, and many extra revenue inspectors have been sent into Kansas and local option counties in Texas to gather evidence.
Temperance Notes.
There are nearly 2,000 women saloon keepers in the United States. New York leads with 348, Ohio has 337. Illinois has 196, and Pennsylvania 183.
In California there are only twenty voters to every liquor dealer; in Louisiana the proportion is even greater, there being one liquor dealer to every fifteen voters. Illinois has one liquor dealer to every fifty-one voters. The proportion is smallest in North Carolina, where there are 124 voters to every liquor dealer. In Utah the proportion is one liquor dealer to every 114 voters, which would seem to indicate that the Mormons, whatever else their faults, are not greatly given to drinking liquor.
There are 650 towns and cities in the State of Illinois in which prohibition has been enacted into law. All the State of Iowa but twenty-five cities is still prohibition. There are 300 prohibition towns and cities in Wisconsin. Indiana has 140 prohibition towns. In Kentucky—wonderful to say—total prohibition is the law in forty-seven counties; in thirty-five there is but one license town each; in nineteen counties there are two license towns each, and in eighteen counties license is unrestricted. The whole State of Tennessee is prohibition except eight cities of 5,000 population and over. North Dakota, Maine and Kansas are the only three States in the Union which are entirely prohibition.
THE "TURF" CAFE
DINNER BILL Regular Dinner 25c Dinner 11:30 to 2 p.m. and 5 to 8 p.m.
Sliced Tomatoes, 10c. Radishes, 10c.
Cucumbers, 10c. Green Onions, 10c.
Lettuce, 10c.
BEAN SOUP.
Boiled Trout and Mint Sauce, 25c.
Boiled Leg of Mutton, Egg Sauce, 25c.
Roast Pork and Apple Sauce, 25c.
Short Ribs of Beef with Brown Potatoes, 25c.
Fricasseed Chicken, 25c.
ENTREES.
String Beans. Green Peas.
Boiled and Mashed Potatoes.
Apple and Lemon and Custard Pie.
Rice Pudding.
Coffee and Tea and Milk.
Anything ordered not mentioned on this bill will be charged for extra.
MONROE BROS., Prop's.
194 THIRD ST.
MONON ROUTE
NORTH OR SOUTH
Always ask for tickets
via the
MONON ROUTE
THE SHORT LINE BETWEEN
Chicago,
Indianapolis,
Cincinnati,
Louisville
Six trains daily between Chicago and
the Ohio river.
For folders, rates, etc., call at any
Monon ticket office or address
FRANK J. REED,
Gen'l Pass. Agent, Chicago.
S. B. JONES,
C. P. Agent, 232 Clark St., Chicago.
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No. 2832 State St.. CHICAGO. ILL.
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This wonderful hair trade is the only safe preparation in the world that makes kinky or curly hair straight as shown above. It nourishes the scalp, prevents the hair from falling out or breaking off, cures dandruff and makes the hair grow long and silky. Sold over forty-five years and used by thousands. Warranted harmless. It was the first preparation ever made for hair extensions and for imitations. Remember that the Original Ozonized Ox Marrow is put up only in fifty cent size. Do not be misled by substitutes that claim to be just as good—but always insist upon getting the genuine, as it never fails to keep the hair straight, soft and beautiful, giving it that healthy, life-like appearance so much desired. A toilet necessity for all those who want to keep their hair perfumed. Owing to its superior and lasting qualities it is the best and most economical. It is not possible for anybody to produce a preparation equal to it. Full directions with every bottle. Only 50 cents. Sold by drug-gists and dealers, or send us 50 cents for one bottle, postpaid or free. Send three bottles, express paid. We pay all postage and delivery charges. Send postal or express money order. Please mention name of this paper when ordering. Write your name and address plainly to OZONIZED OX MARROW CO., 76 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Illinois. Agents wanted everywhere.
---
Beware of Impostors
of different professions soliciting money in Wisconsin for purposes unknown to any person in that state and for use elsewhere. Driven out of other states they are overrunning this. We think it an imperative duty on us as being the only negro paper in the state, to protect its generous philanthropists. From now on, we shall warn the mayor and chief of police of every city in Wisconsin against such adventurers.
The Oliver Typewriter ..
GILFORD
TIMES
Philadelphia, 1899. Eurls Court, London, 1899. Omaha, 1899. Paris 1900 Venice, 1901. Lille (France), 1901 Buffalo, 1901.
It is displacing old style machines everywhere, and holds first place in the estimation of the majority of leading representative business and professional men. Write for Catalogue.
484-436 Broadway, Corner Mason Street
MILWAUKEE
CHICAGO,MILWAUKEE&ST.PAULRY
THE QUEER BEGGAR BOY.
‘One day the queerest beggar boy
He came to our back door;
He was the raggedyest one
I ever saw before.
My mother told him, “Come right in
And sit down here and rest,"”
And gave him lots of buttered bread,
And cake, and turkey breast.
‘And then she gave him my oht coat,
Aud hat that's almost new, :
And then she said, “Poor ehild, poor child.”
And gave him p'aythings, too.
Tout ‘stead of being happy, then,
And nice and satistied,
As Pa ‘a’ been. that beggar boy
Jus’ cried, and cried. and erled!
—Louise Morgan Sill in Harper's Magazine
New York Every Day.
zation was named the Keg faspeccors
union, and has received a charter from
the American Federation of Labor.
Mrs. Denman Thompson, wife of the
famous actor and author of “The Old
Homestead,” died recently in West Swan-
wey, N. H.. after a long and painful ill-
ness of cancer. Mrs. Thompson was 69
years old, and leaves three children.
Louis Wunn of Oakland, Cal., who
was returning to his home after a_trip
abroad, died suddenly on-the steamer Kai-
ser Wilhelm der Grosse, ou the passage
from Bremen to Southampton. His bedy
has been landed at the latter place.
Former residents of * Michigan have
organized a state society in New York
city. John T. Newcomb was elected
temporary chairman and arrangements
were made for a dinner to be given Janu-
ary 26, when the society will be perma-
nently formed.
Notice of a 5 per cent. adyance in prices
abroad has been received by diamond im-
porters and cutters in New York city.
‘This makes the eighth similar advance fu
two years. The present advance applies
to all rough goods and the cnt stones are
expected to follow promptly.
President Nicholas Murray Butler of
Columba university has informed the
trustees of the institution that $2,000,000
is necded for the college hail, the univer-
sity hail, and the Jaw school, although
nearly $5,600,000 has been donated to
the university the last three years.
Some of the very rich New Yorkers
have private theaters in their out-of-town
establishments, and that of Mr, and
Mrs. George J. Gould at Georgian Court,
Lakewood, is perhaps the finest. Mr.
and Mrs. Franklin Q. Brown have one
of their own also at their Dobbs Ferry
place,
A special train in the new subway,
carrying a party of more than 100 news-
paper men, made the distance from the
Brooklyn bridge entrance to Ninety-sixth
street, a little more than seven miles, in
ten minutes and forty-five seconds. The
air in the long tumel ix seemingly as
good as it is at the surface.
A company has been started in New
York city to insure eyeglass wearers
against loss from tle breakage of their
lenses or frames, On the payment of $1
the company agrees to keep frames in_
repair for a year and to replace glasses’
not more than once. It will cost $1 to oe
new the insurance after each loss. 3
Samuel Kronberg has begun a suit in
the supreme court agaiuat Mme. Marcella’
Sembrich Stengel, the opera singer, bet-
ter known as Mme. Sembrich, to recover
$2595. The plaintiff claims this amount
is due him as his percentage of the re-
ceipts from concerts arranged by him at
Tos Angeles, San Francisco, Portland
(Ore.), Seattle and Spokane.
Mystery surrounds the identity and the
injury of a man who was found uncon-
scious on a New York Central train at
the Grand Central depot, the man hay-
ing been shot through the head. He was
put on board the train at Purdy’s Station
by several men, who immediately dis-
appeared. Arriving at the Grand Cen-
tral station the man was found to be in a
dying condition.
Charged with forging the name of
former President Grover Cleveland to a
check for $25, Charles H. Ilston, a
Swede, has been arrested in Philadel-
phia. It is alleged he tendered the
check in payment for storage charges on
his household goods. The police ex-
pressed the belief that he was formerly
employed in some capacity about the
Cleveland home at Princeton.
One hundred drinking basins for cats
and dogs have been padlocked to lamp-
posts in various parts of the city. The
nucleus for the fund with which they
were purchased was donated by Mrs.
Fiske. They are attached to trees or
lampposts by strong chains, fasteued With
a padlock. Arrangements have been
made for the sireet cleaning department
to keep the basins cleaned and filled with
water.
Angry because of his attempts to force
his undesired affections upon her, and de-
termined to repulse him at any cost, she
declares, Mrs. Rosa Barbadi, 22 years
old, shot and killed Michael Rago,
in an east side tenement house. Mrs.
Barbadi made no attempt to resist ar-
rest and was taken toa police station car-
rying her 2-year-old baby, which she
held in her arms when she fired the fa-
tal shots.
‘The engagement of Max Heinrich, the
singer and composer, to Miss Anna Held,
the German philanthropist, student and
musician, nas been announced from San
Francisco. Miss Held is at present the
guest of Madame Helena Modjeska at
Arden. Miss Held is no relative of the
actress af the same name. The mar-
riage will take place during the holiday
season at Green Dragon, the home of
Miss Held.
Mr, and Mrs. Clarence H. Mackay will
probably give the finest affairs of the
winter in the way of dinner cotillons and
opera suppers xt the Waldorf-Astoria.
The dwelling of Mrs. Mackay’s -aunt,
Mrs, Frederick Bronson, on East Thirty-
third street, is now being put in readiness
for Mr. and Mrs. Mackay, though they
will not close their house at Roslyn, L.
I., until the holidays. They will now and
again entertain week-end parties there.
Thieves haye long been looting the bag-
#age room at the Grand Central station
and defying the detectives. In three
mouths they have stolen seveaty-four
trunks, only one of which has been re-
coyered. It is thought the trunks con-
tained goods worth from $15,000 to $20,-
000. Only one arrest has been made, for,
in spite of the vigilance of railroad de-
tectives and the regular police, the
thieves have so cleverly carried on their
operations that the thefts could not be
traced.
James J. Van Alen has closed a lease
of Rushton Hall, a fine old estate in Not-
James J. Van Alen has closed a lease
of Rushton Hall, a fine old estate in Not-
tinghamshire, England, and will sail in
December to take possession, Mr. Van
Alen’s lease is for so long a team that
it is practically a life ownership. On the
estate is a game preserve of 150 acres,
which attracted Mr. Van Alen te the
an
en
ce. He will spend abont $60,000 in
re and his. friends believe that
when Rushton Hall has been fitted up to
his liking he will spend much of his
time there.
Marine underwriters in New York city
are putting up rates on steamers Carry-
ing railroad macerial for Japan. The
rate recently current has been three-
quarters et 1 per cent. This premium
has now been raised to 2% per cent. for
a steamer to go by way of the cape
with rails and locomotives on_ board.
This change in the insurance situation
has caused several of the China and
Japan lines from this port to announce
that they will omit Japan altogether or
refuse railroad material if the steamers
make Japanese ports.
Among the passengers on the Cam-
pania was Maj. Baden-Poweil, brother
ito Maj.-Gen, Robert S..S. Baden-Powell,
the defender of Mafeking during the
Boer war. Maj. Baden-Powell brought
with him two of the hexagonal kites
| with which he has been experimenting as
ja substitute for balloons in warfare.
| “The axes of these kites are twelve
feet.” he said. “I am taking them to the
St. Louis exposition, where I hope to ex-
hibit them. They were used with sue-
cess in South Africa in taking photo-
graphs of Boer camps.”
| James Henry Smith will give a grand
ball and other minor affairs at his new
residence, the old Whitney dwelling. _ It
is said that Mr. Smith's first function
will be a coming-out affair for Miss Stew-
lart, daughter of Mrs. W. Rhinelander
Stewart. Mrs. Havemeyer, who did not
entertain for some years before going
abroad, will be absent this winter again.
Mr. and Mrs. Ogden Mills will add tomthe
season's gaieties by one or two big
| dances. The ballroom in their house ex-
| tends over the rear of the adjoining
dwelling of Mrs. Mills’ mether, Mrs.
| Maturin Livingston.
| Mrs. Adair will set a new fashion this
| winter. She is coming over from Eng-
}land and is going to her Texas ranch,
| She is bringing over a lot of furniture
j and household belongings, which will be
‘put in the big farmhouse. She will en-
tertain many of her friends from New
York and Britishers who have a craze
| for the far west. Mrs. Adair values her
| Texas property at $1,000,000. Her son,
|J. Wadsworth Ritchie, who was for a
|few years on a ranch before he came to
| Newport, is likely to come over with her.
Possibly Craig Wadsworth, her nephew,
|may join the Texas party.
Se
| Prebiems that are causing trouble gen-
erally between those who walk and those
who ride in automobiies, may be settled
by chauffeurs bearing the recommenda-
Bou of the Y. M. C. A. Announcement
has been made by the West Side Y. M.
C. A. that it will shortly institute a class
of instruction for chauffeurs. After long
consideration and planning it was an-|
nounced finally that the association is to
have not only a class for chauffeurs but
‘a regular educational department for the
‘owners of machines. The work will be|
‘conducted by experts and the courses will
cover from three to six months.
| An amazing story of duplicity and re-
yenze, recalling the famous Barbara Aub- |
Langerman case, occurred in Jersey City,
whtn 12-year-old Lizzie Wooden con-
fessed in open court that she had commit-
ted perjury ir seeuring the conviction of |
Louis Golden, aged 21, and his sentence
to the Snake Hill penitentiary for eight-_
een months. “He was innocent,” sobbed
the gi:l, “and I onty accused him because
I wanted to get even with a girl that 1
thought was in love with him.” Young
Golden has been in the penitentiary a
month. The charge the girl made
against the young man was of the most
serious nature
Herbert Cassard, a mining speculator
of Baltimore, collapsed in the dining
room of the Waldorf-Astoria and died
soon after in his room. The cause of
death was fatty degeneration of the
heart. Mr. Cassard sat at the table over
his coffee, when he was seized with vio-
lent pains in the region of the heart. Be-
fore he could cry for help he was strick-
en. The guests were told by the waiters
that the man fainted and they returned
calmly to the consumption of food. and
the drinking of their wines.
—Sealing wax does not contain a_part-
icle of wax, but is composed of Venice
turpentine, shellac and cinuabar.
| Mrs. Elizabeth B. Custer, widow of the
famous Indian fighter, arrived on the
North German Lloyd steamship Bremen
after a trip around the world, “We visit-
ed the Philippines out »f patriotism,” said
Mrs. Custer, “but the China sea took all
the patriotism out of us. That is the
most terrible sea during a gale that it
| was ever my misfortune to be on. But
the Philippines are noble islands and the
United States should guard them zeal-
ously. A Russian cruiser bothered us a
great deal while we were on our way
from Hong Kong to Ceylon on a Pacific
and Oriental steamer. For twelve hours
the Russian bear waltzed about us, but
did not interfere with us beyond making
us feel uneasy.”
With an estimated record of nearly
15,000 marriages, the fifty-sixth anniver-
sary of the Church of the Transfigura-
tion, known far and wide as the ‘Little
Church Around the Corner,” has been
celebrated. Special services were held
and large congregations were in attend-
ance, including many theatrical persons,
paione, which the chureh is particularly
popular, Speaking of the many mar-
riages celebrated in the church, the rec-
tor, Dr. Houghton, declared that he turns
away many more couples than he mar-
ries; in fact, those whom he refuses aver-
age fifty couples a month. including di-
vorced persons and young people who are
unable to swear that their parents’ con-
ron has been obtained.
| Under the advice of Corporation Coun-
sel Delaney and as a direct result of the
fight led by Henry S. Redmond in behalf
of himself and other property holders, in-
eS ee ce ae ee ee
Miss Helen Gould, who for several
years has shown a_ lively interest in the
welfare of the railroad branch of the
Young Men’s Christian association, will
within a few days make a tour of the
west and southwest for the purpose of
stirring up interest in the branches of
the organization along the Gould system
of reads, meeting personally the workers
in that field and enconraging them.
Miss Gould has given generously to in:
stitutions for the carrying on of the work
of the association, and in other ways has
promoted its interests. Her coming trip
is expected to result in much good in
the improvement of the condition of the
men the organization seeks to reach.
Miss Gould will visit Peru, Ind.; St.
Louis, Mo.; -Hoisington and Horace,
Kan.; Denver and Colorado Springs,
Colo.; Las Vegas, N. M.; El Paso. Big
Springs and Dallas, Tex.; Pine Binff,
Texarkana, Hoxie, Little Rock and Van
Buren, Ark.; Palestine. Tex.; Coffeyville.
Kan., and Kansas City and Moberies,
Mo. At each association receptions. will
be held for railroad employes and citizens
interested in the organization. W. E.
Lougee and C, J. Hicks of the inter-
national committee of the Young Men's
Christian association and their wives will
be with the party. |
Mr. and Mrs. Carnegie wiil return
from their Scotch castle before the holi-
days and may give a grand ball during
the season. ‘The establishment of Senn-
tor and Mrs. Clark is not yet completed
and will not probably be ote this
winter. Both Senator Clark and his son
have wives to introduce to New York so-
ciety. Mrs. Vanderbilt's splendid bail-
room has been practically waste space.
A coming of age ball was given in it for
Alfred G. Vanderbilt by his father, the
late Cornelius Vanderbilt. Mr. and Mrs.
William Douglass Sloane wili be apt to
give, as usual, two smart affairs in their
beautiful ballroom this season. Mrs.
‘Astor and Mr, and Mrs. John Jacob As
tor have a ballroom that extends over
the rear of their adjoining houses and
also serves for the pitture gallery. Mrs.
‘Astor and her son and daughter-fo-law
will give two big dances in it this winter.
Clarence E. Dally. a young electrical!
engineer, lies dead in his home at Eas:
Orange, N. J.. a martyr to scienee. His
death resulted from experimental work
in connection with the Roentgen rays.
For seven years he endured terrible suf-
fering and underwent seven operations
which finaliy culminated in the amputa-
tion ef both his arms. Dally was burned
by the X-rays seven years ago because he
passed his hands before the rays contin-
uonsly in his preliminary work. He snf-
fered no pain from these burns, but his
hands looked as though they had been
sealded. Six months after the first indi-
eations of scalding appeared, Dally’
hands began to swell and fester. He suf-
fered in this way for two years and then
went to Chicago, where he was employed
by an incandescent lamp company. Can-
cer finally developed on his left. wrist,
and he went east for treatinent, intending
to return to Chicago. It was found neces-
sary to operate. The disease steadily
spread and finally beth his arms had to
be amputated.
Stage-struck Chicago women were aiso
victims of the swindlers who used the
name of Henry W. Savage, theatrical
manager, to lure them into a trap. This
came out in connection with the case of
Mrs. Albert M. Rihl of Philadelphia,
who was lured from Philadelphia with a
promise of an operatic engagement, only
to have $1500 worth of jewels stolen
from her in a cab in Central park. The
Chicago frauds in the name of Mr. Say-
age were perpetrated by a man calling
himself “Frank P. Cheney,” the
“nephew” of B. P. Cheney, a Boston mil-
lionaire, whose. wife (Julia Arthur) is
well known to the stage. The method
pursued was to insert advertisements in
the Sunday papers for chorus girls.
These advertisements were signed
“Henry W. Savage,” and were to the ef-
fect that fifty chorus girls were wanted
by him for the New York stage. A sea-
son of forty weeks at $18 a week was
guaranteed. Applicants were directed to
meet the representative of Mr. Savage at
the Saratoga hotel.
IS IT THE MISSING LINK?
New Kind of Monkey Is Found in Dark-
est Tava.
The Brussels Soir says a new animal,
much resembling a monkey, but much
nearer in habits and culture to man, has
been discovered in Java.
A merchant named Van Beuren hap-
pened to get lost in a forest and was
obliged to spend the night under a tree,
on which he discovered a giant nest with
a circular opening measuring eighteen
inches in diameter. This nest was occu-
pied by a family of animals much resem-
bling the ordinary monkeys, with.the dif-
ference that their heads were covered
with long, brown hair.
After his return to civilization M. Van
Beuren told an American scientist, Dr.
Werdehousr, of his discovery and they
returned together to the spot, where they
spent seyeral months studying the habits
of the animals.
Contrary to the custom of monkeys,
these animals, which the natives call
“asch perrizlz,” are very fond of bathing,
and the females usually adorn their
necks with collars made of fruit kernels.
They take good care of their little ones,
but seem to be little prolific and near ex-
tinction. The mothers rock their little
ones, singing like human beings in an
articulate language of very few words.
They eat fruits, birds’ eggs and fishes,
and like to be near a fire, although un-
able to light one. 2
Dr. Werdehouse, who classified these
animals at pithecanthropes, has been un-
able to capture any of them and had
not the heart to kill one eyen in the in-
terest of science. A scientific expedition
has been formed to explore the island
and capture one of the animals if pos-
sible.
Louisvilie Largest Bottle Maricet.
That Louisville is the largest glass bot-
tle market in the country is a fact that
is known io few persons, with the excep-
tion of those who make the bottles, sell
and buy them. <A congress of bottle
makers is being held in the city at this
time, though no eee place is desig-
nated and none willingly lets his com-
petitor know what he is doing. The
representatives of ten of the largest bot
tle manufacturing concerns in the coua-
try are in Louisville. and will be here for
a week or more until enough bottles have
been contracted for to accommodate the
entire amount of whisky which will be
bottled during the fall and winter. E. O.
Ward of Terre Haute, who represents
one of the companies, said last night:
“If there were any way to arrive at
just the number of glass bottles which
will be sold in Louisville during the next
two weeks, the total would startle eren
those who are in touch with the situation,
They will be all shapes and all sizes, all
shades and colors, with private trad~
marks and brands, and other just plain
glass bottles. The indications are that
the amount of whisky bottled next win-
ter will be unusually large. The first
indication of whether or not the whisky
business will be good during the ap-
proaching season is the amount of bottles
which the wholesalers buy. and this year
the prospects are for a heavy movement
—TJ.onisville Courier-Journal.
American a Real Papal Chamberlain.
Francis MacNutt has this week been
appointed one of the six Camerieri di
Cappa e Spada di numero in the pon-
tifical court. It is the first time this honor
has been conferred on an American—in-
deed, until recent times all the Camerieri
di numero (a title which might, perhaps,
be best translated as active chamberlain)
were Italian, and Mr. MacNutt is the
third non-Italian to be appointed. Sey-
eral of the archbishops of America _peti-
tioned the Holy See to nominate Mr.
MacNutt for the first vacancy, and the
holy father was graciously pleased to
grant their wish. Apart from the four
great hereditary offices which belong to
Roman families, Mr. MaeNntt’s new dig-
nity is the highest to which a layman
can aspire; it is a life appointment, and
requires constant residence in Rome.—
Tablet.
———_-—____
—Many Chinese temples have windows
made from the white mother-o’-pearl
found in oyster shells.
PATENT.
We'll live upon a patent fool,
And draw a patent breath,
Until ye a patent bed
We die a patent death.
Then after that we will be sure
To criticise and carp,
Unless on patent golden streets
We play 1 patent harp.
—McLandburgh Wilson In Life.
—_—_—_—_———_
AMERICA’S BEAUTY SHOW.
Traveler Says Pretty Girls Are Most
Numerous in This Country.
' ee en ee a ee
| An American gentleman who is a close
observer recently made a trip to Europe
—his first one. He traveled through
Great Britain, France, Belgium and Hol-
land. A few days after his return he
happened to walk through lower New
York city at tie noon luncheon hour,
jan he said:
“L saw more fine looking and oe
‘girls in one hour in New York than |
did in all the cities of Europe while I
was away. You can’t see such a sight
in any icinipenh city as this daily
American noon hour beauty show in
our large American towns. Women don’t
go out to business there as they do here,
‘and if they did they would not draw
attention by their good looks. I never
noticed it before I went to Europe, but
‘I tell you American girls are the most
beautiful in civilization. Our working
girls are well dressed. I just watchea
‘those stenographers and cierks going to
their luncheon. They are not only pret-
| ty. but tall and well developed, and they
hold their heaas and their chests up and
walk along with a free stride that shows
‘they feel themselves to be ‘somebody.’
‘They are independent and self reliant
Ba can take care of themselves. There
‘is an American girl type sure enough, a
finer type than has been developed else-
where. The American girl, besides being
handsomer than v¢r sisters of other na-
tious, is more intelligent than they and
knows the world better, and. this adds
fo her attractiveness. Oh, the American
girl is stunning, no mistake.”
be Tt is quite true that the American girl
‘is superior to maidens of other national-
ities, and all the world acknowledges it.
She is mere attractive physically. than
‘any other. She is also better educated
and has more liberty. She is brought up
to know that she cau protect herself, and
she does it.
This undoubted superiority of the
American girl comes wholly from su-
perior opportunity. It shows what the
whole female sex will become with lib-
erty and education, Women were scarce
in this new land in the beginning and
were made much of. Men could not do
erough for them. Whatever a woman
wanted she must have. She wanted an
education; colleges were thrown open
to her. There are today more American
‘women graduates of colleges than are
‘to be found in all the other countries put
‘together. Women wanted to be doctors,
lawyers, ministers and teachers of higher
branches. All these they are. Married
women wanted the right to own prop-
erty in their own names. This, too, they
have.
Qur country has the most abundant and
the best food of any land. American
women have been generously fed for gen-
erations. The American girl has the
‘noblest opportunity for education of any
of her sex. She kas been taught to fix
a high value on herself, to feel there is no
social station she cannot aspire to it. An
American lady recently presented at the
British court and the recipient of courte:
sies from the royal family itself formerly
earned her own living in the states. No
British lady of noble birth is more _pol-
ished and gracious than this American,
and none knows exactly what is what bet-
ter than she. Another American woman,
now the wife of one of the wealthiest
men in the world, was for many years a
teacher. The American girl is easily
adaptable and can suit herself to any
position. She can make her own social
standing. The highest compliment that
can be paid to a lady's external attrac-
tions is to say she is as handsome as an
American.
There is so much for this splendid
American girl to achieve and be that the
very vastness of her field is a temptation
to fritter herself away on many things,
even oftentimes on frivolities. If she
only lives up to her opportunity she will
present to mankind a new and nobler
type of womanhood than has ever been
known; thence will come the molding of
a new and finer race.—Colorado Springs
Telegraph.
HE SANG “GAUDEAMUS.”
A Tramp’s Passport Into a Company of
College Men in the Country.
“You know the old Latin college song,
‘Gadeamus Igitur’?” said the recent grad-
uate. ‘Well, I suppose that it comes
pretty near being a grip and pass word
with university men the world over.
Something that happened this month
made me urderstand how it stands for a
college man wherever you hear it.
“[ was on my vacation up in New
| Hampshire. Tramping through a little
mountain town, | happened to meet three
or four men of my own fraternity. — I
stopped with them that night, and in the
evening we went to a roadhouse on the
outskirts of the town for a little saenger-
fest.
“Of course. before we finished we sang
‘Gaudeamus’—you know it—‘Let us re-
joice, therefore, while we are young.’
When we came to the last stanza a voice
joined in from the doorway.
“We turned around. There stood an
old, dilapidated tramp. He came over to
us without any hesitation and said, in a
fine German accent:
“‘Verever you see a_university man
you hear “Gaudeamus Igitur.” Heidel-
berg, “73. Shake.’
“He was a Heidelberg man, too, I sup-
pose—a degenerated gentleman, for he
knew college ways and songs and he
showed that he was a well-educated man.
He got all the beer he wanted out of us
that night, and the price of beer besides,
which shows that_a colleege education
sometimes pays.”—New York Sun.
Bovine Fire Alarm in New England.
Fire broke out in the rear of Trachier’s
restaurant. Loss not over $200, mostly
from water. One of our citizens who has
liberally used his tongue and pen in de-
nunciation of the old “fog horn” alarm,
resulting in its removal from the present
electric alarm, knew nothing of the gen-
eral alarm being rung in until Mrs.
Cobb's calf, which had in some way be-
come loose, running up and down the
streets with a megaphone voice, gave one
yoeal blast with a B-r-r-r-r directly un-
der Whit's window, which brought him
out of bed to see the crowds rushing by.
Following the procession he heard the
alarm ringing and subsequently heard
the calf at his heels, but he declares he
never would have heard it had it uot
been for the een and at the next
precinct meeting will have an article in-
serted in the warrant to abolish the elec-
tric system and employ the aforesaid
yocalist.—Granite State Free Press.
——————_
Went Barefooted to Save Her Shoes.
A pretty blonde stenographer created a
sensation on Fifteenth street recently
during the storm. She had gone out to
lunch and when she left the restaurant
she saw that it would be impossible to
return to an office in the Mining Ex-
change building, where she was em-
ployed, without damaging her new white
low shoes and a pair of fancy stockings.
So she deliberately removed the shoes
and stockings and started down the street
barefooted.
Policeman Michael Horkans stood at
the corner of Fifteenth and Curtis streets
when he saw the young woman coming
down the street. She was followed by a
big crowd and was running to escape.
In her haad_she carried her shoes and
stockings. Horkans attempted to find
out what all the trouble was about, but
the young woman disappeared in Mining
Exchange building.
“What did you do it for?’ asked the
policeman.
“I had no idea it would attract any at-
tention,” replied the young lady. “i had
to get back bere in a hurry and I didn't
want to ruin my shoes.” On the desk
in front of her were the shoes, a pair of
white kids.—Denver Republican.
PEACE DOVE’S LONG FLIGHT.
Released. in Jerusalem It Is Caught in
Northern Sweden.
The carrier pigecn released on Easter
at Jerusalem has traversed a continent,
perhaps, seeking a land route to its home
in New York, whence it is to be sent to
the President of the Universal Peace
union. The following letter from Miss
Ackerman, our peace envoy to Europe
and Asia, explains how the faithful bird
was found and how it will be forwarded
on its mission,
Following is the message already re-
ceived perfectly preserved.
April 17, 1904.—Greetings from Jerusalem
to the Universal Peace Union.—Jessie Ack-
erman.—Any one finding this bird, which
was sept home today from the Mosque of
Omar, Jerusalem, piewee address ime Apollo,
Penn., U. 8. America,
— Following is Miss Ackerman’s letter from
‘London:
“Dear Mr. Love—I have such good news
‘that 1 can hardly wait to write it. A let-
‘ter is just at hand from the northern part
‘of Sweden, away up near the North Cane,
saying that the homing dove was found on
‘the 10th of May, and is safe in the care of
the writer of the letter, who asks what
‘shall be done with the dear little creature.
I write today to ask to have it sent to me.
“Fam unable to say the number of miles
traveled by the little messenger, that fra
ternized freely with a foreign flock, only
‘distinguished from ite kind by the red,
‘white and blue ribbon sewed on one leg.
‘The message was inclosed in the letter, and
'] send it on to you as a ‘relic’ of a pleas-
‘ing incident. Now, good friend, what shall
‘we do with the birdie? To whom does it
‘belong? As a terrestrial pilgrim, I cannot
well provide comfort for the wee alien, that
‘contributed much to my pleasure at sea—
‘so sweetly cooing the days away. For its
long, faithful flight it must be rewardea
with care and home, Whose is it ‘to have
and to hold?
“Sts snow white pintons spread to the
breeze are a fitting symbol of all that we
have woven in sentiment about it. May
the nations one day realize all that we
‘hope for them and the sons of men dwell in
peace and harmony.
JESSIE ACKERMAN.
“Lyceum club, 128 Piccadilly, London,
June 21, 1904."—The Peacemaker.
SOUR MILK A LIFE ELIXIR.
London Professor of Pasteur Fame An-
nounces the Discovery.
According to an interview with
Prof. Eli Metchnikoff of the Pasteur
‘institute in London, which appeared in
the October number of the Pall Mall
Magazine, the nearest approach to the
elixir of life is sour milk. Any one de-
siring to attain a ripe old age is recom-
mended by Prof. Metchnikoft to follow
the examples of the Bulgarians who are
noted for their longevity, and who con-
sume large quantities of this cheap and
easily obtained beverage.
Sour milk, states M. Metchnikoff, con-
tains a large bacillus, remarkable for the
great aes, of lactic acid it is capable
of producing.
This microbe does not exist normally
in the human body, and can be intro-
duced with great benefit to the health, as
it preys on the hundreds of thousands of
microbes which infest the large intestine.
It has been noted that there is a great
similarity between old age and disease.
The study of certain diseases has proved
that there is no difference between the
mechanism of senile atrophy and that of
atrophy caused by the microbe on the
person.
In fact. on the approach of old age, a
veritable battle is waged in the inner-
most parts of the body. .
Research is therefore being prosecuted
to discover some means of strengthening
the vital elements of the body on the
one hand and to weaken the aggressive
tengendy ot the harmful microbes on the
other. ‘hen this end has been attained,
Prof. Mechnikoff hopes to be able to
prolong life considerably beyond the pres-
ent average.
Vacation at a Seaside Resort.
On the beach; monsieur and madame,
just arrived from the city, looking at the
sea:
Madame—How beautiful!
Monsieur—Superb! ‘i
Madame—And how it rests you after
Paris.
Monsieur—Ah, yes; how far it is from
dinners and town!
Madame—And visits and the theater!
Monsieur—And from the club!
Madame—And from the shops and
dressmakers!
Monsieur—How beautiful!
Madame—Superb!
Monsieur—W hat time is it?
Madame (looking at her watch)—
What! feaee five o'clock. I must fly.
Monsieur—Where are you going?
Madame—To try on. 1 have ordered a
little dress at the English tailor’s on
Grand street, you know; the same one
who made for me last year this cloak
which you like so much. I must hurry;
someone will get my turn. And yon,
what are you going to do?
Monsieur—I like to loaf around the
club. to see if there is any bridge going
on_there.
Madame—Don't come in too late to
dress; you know that we dine with the
G's at the Casino.
Monsicur—That's a fact. The A’s will
be there, and they don't like to dine late.
Madame—You ought to get a box at
the theater: it will be polite to take them
there.
Monsieur—What do they give tonight‘
Madame—Oh, I don’t know; but they
say it is very well done.
Monsieur—That's the essential; all
right. ee
Madame (giving a last look at the sea)
—Isn’t this beautiful, eh?
Monsieur—Superb!—Figaro.
Pennsylvania Dog and Cow Story.
Ben Record owns a cow which he ke-
lieved to be one of the best milkers in al!
this country until a few weeks ago, when
she began to “fall off” suddenly. The
shortage became more and more notice-
able until the animal developed into a
third-class “stripper.”
Mr. Record also keeps a full-blooded
terrier pup, whose rapid growth and _port-
ly appearance has occasioned remark, al-
thongh the dog seldom ate anything that
was offered to him by the family. Both
mysteries were cleared up the other even-
ing, however, when Mrs. Record went to
the bara to milk, for there lay the cow
contentedly chewing her cud, while the
terrier pup. his feet spread far apart,
leisurely extracted the precious lactea!
fluid so much desired for making ice
cream or constructing pumpkin pies.
‘Since the discoverey the cow has become
reinstated in the good opinion of the fam-
ily, but the terrier takes his milk afte
‘it has been skimmed.—Punxsutawney
Spirit.
|‘ THE SILENT HOUR.
The clarion in the distance fades:
‘The echoes of the full-mouthed park
Fainter and fainter trayel back:
The western sky gleams through jhe ztados:
The shadow grows more deep, xi) Niece
The yvesper-bell Its gentle ¢:!)
Sounds throngh the ever-whispering
shades; 23
The peace of twilight ali pervades,
While where the blue hills rise and fal)
The far-off horn, forgotten, fades
—J. J. Frank in Lippincott's.
a
| ENGLAND WANTS ICEMEN.
People s:red of Lukewarm Drinks and
Spoiled Food.
The supply of pure ice in this couatry
for domestic purposes is not as abundant
or available as it should be, and it is
absurd that practically the only shop
where it may be obtained is that kept by
the fish-monger, who keeps it not for the
purposes of consumption, bur for the coo!-
ing of fish. The fisamonger’s shop does
‘not always represent an environment that
is, sanitarily speaking, satisfactory; yet,
when ice is wanted m sickness or in
health the only tradesman that can be
found to supply it is the fishmonger, ani
his supply is usually limited. It seems
ridieulous that in the English. summer
the demand for ice should not be sufficien.
to warrant the establishment of a special
agency for its supply.
We feel sure that if such a scheme
could be organized it would be widely ap-
preciated and would sueceed as soom as
the public realized how much better audi
how much healthier it is to have their
food and beverages kept cool during th:
days of a hot and seasonable summer, As
it is, they have ta be content with semi-
liquid butter and mawkish luke-warm
beverages which should be cold, especiaily
those which are aerated. A cheap ami
abundant supply of pure ice for domestic
purposes would give the housekeeper «
chance of keeping a cool storeroom iu
which meat, poultry, eggs and other per-
ishable articles of food could ‘he pro-
served. Not only would waste of food
be so prevented, but the ravages of the
putrefying agencies of hot weather would
be checked and the food saved from be-
coming unwholesole if not positively dan-
gerous. In fact, we imagine that uobody
will deny the very great advantages de-
rived from keeping certain foods cold in
the summer and preserving them in a
state fit for consumption and attractive to
the eye and palate; and yet practically ne
steps are taken to supply such an impor-
tant ant very evident need.—Londen
T.ancet-
| ECONOMY IN LITTLE THINGS.
Rockefeller’s Daughter Saves Gas an
Makes All Her Pin Money.
- Eternal vigilance in watching the
gas bills is the way to get pin
money in the household of John
D. Rockefeller, according to the state-
Inent of the oil king himself. Mr. Rocke-
feller, who makes a hobby of economy
in the little things of life, says “alway<
watchful” is the way his eldest daughter
manages to keep change in her pocket
This statement was brought out by Mr.
Rockefeller’s disgust with the way in
which members of a Standard Oil pariy
were spending money on a recent trip in
a private car. At every stopping place
Mr. Rockefeller’s associates put so muck
money in circulation that he was shocked
at what he termed profligacy and plainly
showed he disapproved of such actions.
At length some member of the party
spent such a large sum that the oil king
could bear it no longer and remonstrated
with all of them in no uncertain manner.
intimating that their display eventually
would react against the company.
“Why.” said he, “every member of my
family practices economy. It is the only
way to have money—the only way. Do
you know how my oldest daughter earns
pocket money 7”
There was no reply.
“By economy, sir; by the strictest econ-
omy, she earns every penny of it. Our
house in Cleveland is large, and we con-
sume a great deal of gas. Now. for
years we have kept the gas bills, so thal
we know almost to a dime just how muci:
the bills should go down in summer ani
fat how much they should go up in the
fall.
“Now. I said to my daughter, ‘All you
can save on these hills you can have fo:
your own.’ Every night after the gas i~
lighted she is on the watch. If a care-
less servant has turned ‘the burner tov
high she sees it and turns it down a bit
If a member of the family leaves the
room without turning out the gas she~
right there to attend to it. She is always
on the watch. a
“And you really would be surprised.”
continued Mr, Rockefeller, with patern:
pride, “how much my daughter saves fo
herself by looking after that one item of
expense.”
An Old Frigate’s Wheel.
The steering wheel of the steam frigate
Minnesota, which has been received by
the Minnesota Historical society, will ov
ecupy a conspicuous place in the uew
capitol as soon as the society moves intv
its new quarters, The wheel is con-
structed of oak and mahogany, is fou
and one-half feet in diameter, and i+
mounted on a wooden frame.
The steasn frigate Minnesota was cou
structed in accordance with an act 0!
Congress passed April 6, 1854, which pro
vided for six frigates for the Unite!
States navy.
The Minnesota in 1857, 1858, and 185:'
Was the flagship commanded by Samu
F. Dupont of the foreign squadrov.
which went on a special mission |
China, and was present at the operation~
of the French and English forces agair~
China, notably at the capture of the for'<
at Pehio river. After visitng Japan
India and Arabia, the ship returned to
Boston in 1859, where it was out of con-
mission until 1861.
At the opening of the Civil war i!«
Minnesota was put in commisson unde
Capt. S. H. Stringham as flagship of th:
Atlantic blockading squadron. It) wis
present at the capture of Fort Hatters~
and Fort Clark at Hatteras inlet, Nor!!:
Carolina, and was at Fortress Monro:
at the encounter between the Monit:
and the Merrimac, when the Merrim::
sunk the Cumberland and burned tiv
Congress, and the Minnesota wen
aground. The ship was also present «
the capture of Fort Fisher, January 15.
1865.
After the Civil war the Minnesota wa~
used from 1865 to 1882 as a trainive
ship, and was put. out of commission i1
1882. In 1895 it was loaned to the stat’
of Massachusetts for the naval militix
until 1897. Four years Jater the famou~
boat ‘vas dismantled, haying been so)!
to Thomas Butler & Co. of Boston for
$25,738.38, $10,738.38 more than the #)
praised value. The Minnesota society #1
plied for the steering wheel a year az.
and through the efforts of Senator Mo-~
E. Clapp and-Congressman F.C. Stevens
the society was made custodian of Ue
famous relic.—St. Paul Pioneer [’re-*
An Illustration.
Wife—What is meant, John. by th
phrase “Carrying coals to Newcastle?”
~ _Husband—It is a metaphor, my dev’.
showing the doing of something that -
unnecessary. i
Wifte—I don’t — exactly understan'.
Give me an illnstration—a familiar on°
Husband—Well, if I were to bring yor
home a book entitled “How to Talk.
that would be carrying coals to New
eastle.”"—London Tit-Bits.
THIS WOMAN KNOWS
Mre. De Long oe a ae ee
Pains of Rheumatism Can be Cured
Through the Blood.
Mrs. E. M. DeLong, of No. 160 West
Broadway, Council Bluffs, Iowa, found
herself suddenly attacked by rheuma-
tism in the winter of 1896. She gave
the doctor a chance to help her, which
he failed to improve, and then she did
some thinking and experimenting of her
own. She was so successful that she
deems it her duty to tell the story of her
escape from suffering :
“My brother-in-law,” she says,‘ was
enthusiastic on the subject of Dr. Wil-
liams’ Pink Pills as a purifier of the
plood, and when I was suffering extreme
pains in the joints of my ankles, knees,
hips, wrists and elbows, and the doctor
was giving me DO relief, I began to re-
fiect that rheumatism is a disease of
the blood and that, if Dr. Williams’ Pink
pills are so good for the blood, they
must be good for rheumatism and worth
a trial.
«J was in bed half the time, suffering
with pain that cannot be described to
one who has never had the disease. It
would concentrate sometimes in one set
of joints. When it was in my feet I
could not walk, when it was in my el-
bows and wrists I could not even draw
the coverlets over my body. I had suf-
fered in this way for weeks before I be-
gan using Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills.
‘Two weeks after I began with them I
experienced relief and after I had taken
six boxes I was entirely well. To make
sure I continued to use them about two
weeks longer and then stopped alto-
gether. For several years I have had no
reason to use them for myself, but I
have recommended them to others as an
excellent remedy.”
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills furnish the
plood with all the elements that are
neoded to build up healthy tissue, strong
muscles and nerves, capable of bearing
the strain that nature puts upon them.
They really make new blood and cure
all diseasesarising from disorders of the
blood or nerves, such as sciatica, neural.
gia, partial paralysis, locomotor ataxia,
St. Vitus’ dance, nervous prostration,
anemia and all forms of weakness in
either male or female. They are sold by
al) druggists.
Deep Gold Mines.
The deepest gold mine is still to be
credited to Bendigo, in Victoria, Aus-
tralia, although the time is oles when
the Rand, South Africa, will claim the
record. For the precene the Victoria
quartz mine, at Bendigo, has probed
deeper into the earth than any other dig-
ging after gold; work is now ee in
this mine at 3950 feet, a winze aan
been sunk 250 feet below the lowest level,
at 3700 feet. Amory its nel gntors the
Victoria quartz mine has the New Chum
railway, with work ae at 8856
fect, and the New Chum Consolidated,
8583 feet. The celebrated “180” mine,
the property of George Lanmsell, and long
the deepest gold mine in the world, is
being exploited at 8250 feet, although the
shaft itself is 200 feet deeper.—Engineer-
ing and Mining Journal.
ee
The Brain of a Jap.
The brain of Taguchi, the Japanese
anatomist, weighed 1520 grammes, and it
stands thirtieth in the list of brain weights
of men distinguished in the professions,
arts and sciences.—London Globe.
ee eee
_—There are 3000 words used alike in
French and English, without variation
{n spelling.
« DO YOU
So
COUGH
DON’T DE L 7
ral i MA PS
pa Ros PRONG
Ui eee —
qt Cares Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Croup, Influ-
i natal oe son a Bt Sage
and a sure re ivan¢ be Jae on
Yop te i eel eect ater fang he
bores 25 cente and 50 cents.
NORTH: SOU
THE }
IT EAST MEST
} ioe
Ly ee
a aco
| es ee
“ie
MEXICAN
ee
Mustang Liniment
cures Sprains and Strains,
KM IRE
al
me
R. T. FELIX GOURAUD’S ORIENTAL
D CREAM, OR MAGICAL BEAUTIFIER
eo gaye, Removes Tan, Pimples, Freckies,
£2), AP ea
Biecs fo Menen eisSiost
atais we [Spiess stood the teat
7 7 0f 56 years, and 1s
Ers9 ?} C/o harmiess we
*# Hapeeinnete
1) Acoeptbo countan
i IZ o feit of pimiies
AX _ ch A \ bai i to
EXPER ndy"of the baut
esi Ee Sou Radics
OW Nari oo ls
recommen
_Gouraud’s Cream’
ecu Aa cha ae pens
FERD._T. HOPRING, Payp', 07, reat Jones 8, B.
*RONDEAU T OA HELPFUL FRIEND.
Your bright idea I tried to use—
Too proad a boon lightly to lose!
The sparkling treasure of your thought
I bore away, and patient wrought,
The~gem in words of fire to fuse.
Alas! my dullard brain accuse!
Gone was the sheen of rainbow hues
That flashed, when first my fancy caught
Your bright idea!
Slow moved my wit in leaden shoes;
To curse my quill I could but choose,
And pace the floor like one distraught!
Ab! here's the secret, vainly sought—
I needed, to inspire my muse,
Your bright eye, dear!
~Margaret Johnson in Smart Set.
—_——____
it was at an ordinary small fishmon-
ger’s shop in the back street of a suburb
that I found him. Some kippered her-
rings, the midribs of a halibut, a piece of
ice and some parsley composed the stock,
and the odor was such as one expects in
such a place. He himself stepped for-
ward from a little glazed counting house
as L entered. He was a short, spare man,
with a dried-up appearance like the her-
rings, and a worried look about the eyes.
He was dressed unobtrusively in a fish-
monger’s apron.
“Yessir?” he said. “Kippers is cheap
too——”
fhank you,” I said, stopping him. “I
am not wanting any fish today. My pur-
pose in coming is to interview you, if you
have no objection.”
“Interview me?” He looked almost
suspiciously vacent.
“For ‘Black and White,” I said. “You
are, I believe, Mr. Tosh, by profession a
fishmonger, but you paint in your spare
moments, and you sent in a picture to
the Royal academy ?”
‘The little man gasped.
“How did you know?” he said.
“It’s our business,” I said magnificent-
iy. “The public likes to know these mat-
ters. so we find out. I may as well tell
you that, as a fishmonger, you’re much
more likely to make a hit with anything
you paint than you are as a mere artist.
Mere artists are too plentiful, and
they’ve been to art schools and spent
their lives in having opportunities of
studying. You, of course, never had any
opportunities ?”
“Not many,” said Mr. Tosh. “I——”
“You've always loved art, however,” J
interrupted. “Exactly; and even as a
child you used to paint?”
Mr. Tosh nodded.
“Do you remember if your father ever
beat you for drawing tipon the white-
washed walls of his cottage?” I inquired.
“No.”
“Perhaps your mother did?” I said
hopefully. “No? Well, it’s a pity we
ean’t work in any of these details.”
“My uncle used to beat me,” said Mr.
Tosh with a sudden inspiration.
“What for?” I demanded.
“Running away from school. He
brought me up.
“Quite so,” I said. “You were an or-
phan? It was your habit to steal away
from school into the woods and watch
the sunset, while you ought to have been
doing subtractions? It is to this that
you attribute your ability to depict
clouds and trees, and——”
“Figures are my subject,” said Mr.
‘Tosh in rather a hurt way.
“It doesn’t matter,” I said. “You
gained your insight into the human fig-
ure by watching the London crowds in
| the London streets. You longed to be
(a artist, and every day the yearning
grew stronger. But your uncle, a prac-
| tical man—himself a fishmonger—would
not hear of it. He apprenticed you to
his own business. You loathed it. You
were limited to the study of still-life.
The only drawings you were able to
make were of lobsters, and your inspira-
tions were drawn from——”
I had paused to see if Mr. Tosh were
assenting to my sketch of his early life
and struggles—whiech I wished to have
accurate.
“Haddocks!” he said, completing the
sentence for me, with the most cunning
wink. “That’s right,” he added, slyly.
“You’re the man for me. I wish I had
your imagination. I tell you what,
though. I'll give you a couple of guineas
if my picture goes at the price 1 want for
it”
I had never seen a man so changed in
a moment. The dull, vacant look had
vanished, and in its place was a preter-
natural sharpness.
“That's what Vl do,” he said, and
winked again.
“What do you mean?” I said indig-
nantly.
“Don’t you recognize me?” he returned.
“I thought you did. I—I——” He
dropped his head guiltily; but it was too
late. I had recognized him.
“You're James Brown, the fireman,
who painted a picture called ‘Hero Wait
ing for Leander’ for the Academy last
year; you're Morton Griggs, the post-
man-artist, who was boomed the year be-
fore for his ‘Cleopatra;’ you’re Rev. John
Pitts, the East End clergyman, whose
“Massacre of the Innocents’ was a feature
in 1900, because it was painted during
moments snatched while changing your
surplice in the vestry; you’re George
Jennings, bo’sun of H. M. S. Emerald,
who wielded an artist’s brush during the
long night-watches on the China seas,
and produced in 99 ’The Tussle of the
Triremes;’ you’re——” I pursued the
indictment as my memory served mé. J
had interviewed some of these men my-
self, but not until now had I recognized
that one and all were the same, and that
none other than the littie man in front
of me, “You're a fraud,” I ended up.
“In a sense,” he said sadly, “I am a
fraud. My name is Robinson, and I am
in reality an artist, and nothing else.”
“These various businesses——”
“Were assumed for the purpose of sell-
ing my pictures. I found it was the only
way. If it is a fraud to pose as a cler-
gyman or a chimney-sweep, instead of as
—what you have called ‘a mere artist,’
the publi¢ has encouraged it. It will buy
a fishmonger’s picture when it will buy
no other. I have a wife and family. I
ask you not to denounce me.”
“T must,” I said sternly; and though
Mary’s Lamb—New Version.
Mary had a little lamb,
It had a fieecy coat,
She did not care to raise it, se
She changed It for a goat.
She tried to lead it by, a string,
Ere she a word cot utter,
She learned a most eexteieee, thing,
The goat Rad turned te butt her.
__If hoopskirts do come in again how are
the people wie “v2 in flats going to pass
one another in the hall?—Somerville
Journal.
It is pretty hard for a bride to reconcile
| the sound of the wedding bells to the
rattle of the dishpau.—Philadelphia Even-
‘ing Telegraph.
a
| She—Did you meet with any cyclones
out west?
- He—No, but sne caught up with us.—
| Yonkers Statesman.
/ “He made a lot of money in that deal,
and yet he looks glum.” 7
“Yes, his wife found out in some way
just how much he made.”—Philadelphia
Press.
“Jimmie, Jimmie, don't you know it's
awful to say those swear words?”
“I was dus’ playin’ I was papa huntin’
for his coltar button.’’—Detroit Free
Press.
She—It must be awful to owe money
and not be able to pay it!
He—Yes—almost as bad as lending it
and not being able to get it back!—Detroit
Free Press.
Sue Brette—Do they charge your com-
pany full rates on the railroad?
Foote Light—Going out, they do. We
don’t pay anything coming back.—Yonk-
ers Statesman.
Young Wife—What do you think of
my. ene Charles?
Young Husband—Splendid! So eco-
nomical, you know. Why, they'll last a
lifetime.”—Boston Transcript.
Sharpe—The major says he lost a limb
during the late war.
Whealton—Yes, he was up a tree and
the enemy shot away the limb he was
sitting on—Kennebec (Me.) Journal.
“My dear,” said the learned man, “I
think that I shall write a dictionary.”
“What for?’ asked his wife.
“Then 1 can at least get_a word in
here and there.”—Cleveland Leader,
Demi——!
A woman thought the Man she loved
A Demigod in truth;
She married him, and found him out
A Demijohn forsooth!
—Town Topics.
Mamma—Jolnny, how many times
bawe I told you about pulling that cat's
tail?
Johnny—I don’t know, mom; but from
de way de tail is worn it must be a lot.—
New York Telegraph.
“Well, major, I notice that you're run-
nin’ for office again?”
“No, sir. It's the same old run. I
got headway on durin’ the war, and 1
Yaven't been able to stop myself since!”
~Auanta Constitution.
“Say, pa?’
“Weil, what vr
“Why does that man in the band run
the trombone down his throat?’
“I suppose it is because he has a taste
for music.’"—Town Topics.
Miss Rapidde (in dark hall)—O-o0-o-h,
merey! Who is that? »
Bob Gayleigh—Jack the Hugger!
Miss Rapidde—Oh, how you scared
me! Come right in here where we shan’t
be disturbed.—Town Topics.
Papa Beaneater—Thomas, tell James
to leave the carriage out for awhile.
Tommy Beaneater (who has just begun
to learn the meaning of words)—James,
father says Pa may omit the carriage
for awhile.—Baltimore American.
Orphaned.
Haye you heard of the nice motor-car
Which papa one time gave to mamma?
They went out alone
On ‘a ride of their own.
Do you ask if we're orphans? We are!
—Judge.
Biggs—It’s a pity young Swift doesn’t
take advantage of the mary good oppor-
tunities offered him.
Diggs—Yes; but I guess he finds it less
strenuous to take advantage of those who
offer the opportunities.—Kennebec (Me.)
Journal,
“They say,” remarked the observant
man, “that the darkest hour is just be-
fore the dawn, and”—_
“Gee whizz,’ exclaimed Laziman,
“that’s my brightest and happiest hour.
I'm invariably asleep then.”—Philadel-
phia Press.
“Beatrice will certainly look sheepish
this fall.”
“Because she is going to have mutton-
leg sleeves?”
“Not only that, but she is going to
marry a man with mutton-chop whis-
| kers.”"—Baltimore Herald.
Myrtilla—I_ never encouraged your
‘brother, but he bas proposed to me. 1
am sure he has no reason for wanting me
to marry him.
Miranda—No; he hasn’t any reason at
all; that’s what we all said wher he
told us about it—New York Telegram.
“He's got the most self-conceited, su-
perior airs about him.”
“Of course. He's a New Yorker.”
“But he’s the worst of all the New
Yorkers I ever met.”
“Yes, he only moyed there recently
‘from Hoboken.”—Catholie Standard and
Times.
“I'm thinkin’ seri‘us of going’ ter jai!,”
‘sighed Meandering Mike.
“What's the matter?”
“Wid beef, eggs, chicken, butter and
milk so high de best handout yous kin
git is bread and water, and den yous
have to beg so hard dat it is work.”—
Detroit Free Press.
- Mrs. Counterhop (with an injured air)
You told me before we were married
‘that you were the highest salaried clerk
in the store.
| Mr. Counterhop (equally injured)—So
‘Lam. I’m two inches and a half higher
than any other salaried clerk in the whole
establishment.—Chicago Tribune.
“Why don’t you ever want to go to 2
wedding?” snapped Mrs. Enpeck. “I
don't believe you've ever been to.a wed-
ding since you attended your own.”
“No,” mildly responded Mr. Enpeck.
“{ haven't. And,” he added, softly, to
himself, “I sometimes wish IT hadn’t at-
tended that one.”—New York Telegraph.
| “This is a queer-looking spoon-hook, —
said the customer.
“That, sir.” said the dealer in sporting
goods, “is the very latest. It is called
the ‘Angler’s Delight.’ ”
“What's the idea in it?”
“It is a combination spoon-hook and
rrockscrew."—Catholic Standard and
‘Times.
“Oh, yes,” said the first girl, “he’s a
real Italian count. May Gidday had
quite a talk with him.”
“Pid she? What did she find to talk
about?”
“Oh, she was real nice to him; told
him she was passionately fond of pea-
nuts and bananas and all that.”—Phila-
delphia Press.
a si = : oe - ii as
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
FARMER BOY SOLVED IT.
Suggested to Railroad Men How to Start
Their Locomotive.
er ee eee eee
An Ottawa man, traveling through
southwest Kansas, went from rare
to Anthony on one of the trains of the
new Orient railroad. ‘The cars were ail
paght, but the engine was a dilapidated
air. “Just after going down a grade
one of the side rods on the Ce broke,”
said the traveler to a Hei reporter,
“and the other side sree on a ‘dead
: aut Fe that after the ken — ‘was
en 0! Rafe oeg, ye move.
The traveling engineer, engineer, the
conductor and all the passengers took
turns going over the thing and trying to
devise a way to make it run, ee a
boy came out of the field where he had
been plowing to see what was going ov.
He crawled through the wire fence and
sat down on the bank and fanned himself
with his straw hat.
“If you'd back that last evn the
grade an’ let ‘er come down kerchunk,
that ’u’d start ’er,’ he finally suggested,
deliberately.
“The railroad man sniffed ee
uously, but the passengers sided with
the boy. Finally the conductor gave or-
ders that the rear car be uncoupled. No
Jess than fifty passengers, among them
the Ottawa man, took hold and slowly
pushed the car up the grade. Once at
the top the car was let go, while the
pessoas made a run to get on board
the m i yeeon of the train. The loose
coach gained momentum as it came
down nul, and in spite of the engineers
admonition to ‘let ’er come down easy,’
the emergency battering ram crashed
into the train with a tremendous thump.
The engine was pumped off ‘center’ all
right; in fact, the train was shoved some
yards on its way, and the engineer, in
order to avoid further risks, kept it go-
ing.’—Kansas City (Mo.) Journal.
ALL BROKEN DOWN.
No Sleep—No Appetite—Just a Contin-
ual Backache.
Joseph McCauley, of 144 Sholtc
street, Chicago, Sachem of Tecumseh
'rnion eawat Ce ee eee
‘—_ ere: ae eee
health was complete-
ly broken down. My
back ached and was
so lame that at
times I was hardly
able to dress my-
self. I lost my ap-
petite and was un-
able to sleep. There
seemed to be no re-
Hef until I took
health was complete-
ly broken down. My
back ached and was
yy # lame that at
\) times I was hardly
able to dress my-
self. I lost my ap-
petite and was un-
able to sleep. There
seemed to be no re-
ae Nef until I took
Doan’s Kidney Pills, but four boxes of
this remedy effected a complete and
permanent cure. If suffering humani-
ty knew the value of Doan’s Kidney
Pills, they would use nothing else, as
it is the only positive cure I know.”
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
im. Xs
——_—__
That Was Enough.
“It was on_a train going from New
York to Washington,” said Albert Barnes
of Toledo.
“Among the passengers was a newly
married conele, who made themselves
known as such to so great an extent that
the occupants of the car began to make
sarcastic remarks about them.
“The bride and groom stood the re-
marks for some time, but finally the lat-
ter, who was a man of tremendous size,
broke out in the following language at
his tormenters:
“Yes, we're married—just married. We
are going 100 miles farther, and are go-
ing to spoon all the way. If hag don’t
like it yoo can_get out and walk. She's
my violet and I’m her sheltering oak.”
ae the remainder of the journey
this couple was left in peace.”—Boston
Adyertiser.
eee Se eee
100 Reward, 8100.
The readers of this rope will be pleased tc
ine there Is at least one dreaded disease
Penal, vem able be cure tn an ie
mae and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cur
is the only positive care Som: known to the med
teal fraternity. Catarr! being, @ constitutiona
re, req & constitutional treat t
’s Catarrh Cure ig taken internally,
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces
the system, thereby Sectoying the foundation o'
ee ‘disease, and giving, patient strength b)
building Me the constitution and Seeing Dasur\
ip joing. its work. The proprietors have sc
= ith in ieee, powers that “is
lundred Dollars for any case that it te
Send for list of ee
- 7 FE. z CEENRE & CO., Toledo, 0
Hallo Pauly Puls are the best.
—_—__-___—_.
A Terrible Situation.
“T think old Kreezus has the queerest
wey of teasing his wife I ever heard of.”
“T thought he was fond of her.”
“He is, but he likes to get a joke on
her. You know she is sensitive about her
age. Well, he has let eer know
that when they were married he gaye
her a magnificent necklace of diemonds,
each diamond representing a year of her
age, and he adds one to the string every
time she has a birthday. Imagine how
the poor woman is torn between her
désire to display the necklace and_ the
fear that when she wears it everybody
will be counting the diamonds.”—London
Tit-Bits.
—_—-—__—_.
Country Shippers.
The attention of produce shippers Is
called to the character of the commer-
celal reports ee in the Evening
Wisconsin. ey embrace the complete
Milwaukee and Chicago giotations op
produce, livestock end provisions and the
closing figures on the New York stock
exchange each day. In order to keep
Renee daily subscribe for the Hvening
isconsin. ‘Terms, $1.00 for three
months Py mail.
THE HVENING WISCONSIN CO.
Milwaukee. Wis.
—It is proposed to build a small con-
crete church on the ry of one Pat-
rick, County Mayo, Ireland, for the cele-
bration of the annual pilgrimage mass.
The church will be almost 2600 feet
above tho sea level.
—_—-—__——_.
Do you_want to earn a little extra
mopee? Five to fifteen dollars per week.
Every household needs my preparations.
Good. rofits, — sellers. Write 8. H.
MEADOWS, Milwaukee, Wis.
—A German oe aT that while
the number of books published increases
greatly each year, only about one manu-
script out of 300 is accepted.
—
Piso’s Cure for nf rahe art cured me
of a tenacious and i stent cough.—
Wm. H. Harrison, W. 121st street,
New York, March 25, 1901.
CRD Seas
—The firemen in Chili are buried in the
evening, the torchlight bearers making
an impressive ceremony.
—_—___—_
Fe ey
Gammation aliays pals, cures wind ‘colic. 28
cents a bottle.
—One petrified tree trunk in Arizona
forms a natural bridge over a canyon.
—In Mexico hot tea is served in glasses
without milk.
Beige . ;
A cee .
{ aM > Ne eS AY
| MR cog a
hua Ro
aw OE * .
sae
\
: SS. ‘ |
4 NY
y \
ae
Br KK .
q at} fj
| \ Ny}
n\) §
rr :
"
| nw
ait
AR: Be Co |
/ Bo, are ie = a ae i
i at > ae pe i
eS |
Sie i
Neca @ j
. ’ °
Miss Gannon, Sec’y Detroit Amateur
Art Association, tells young women what to
do to avoid pain and suffering caused by
female troubles.
“Dear Mrs. Prvxaam:—I can conscientiously recommend Lydia Ee
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to those of my sisters euler wer
female weakness and the troubles which so often befall women. I suf-
fered for months with aera weakness, and felt so weary that I had
hard work to keep up. 1 had shooting pains, and was utterly miserable.
In my distress I was advised to use Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Cor2pound, and it was a red letter day to me when I took the first dose,
for at that time my restoration began. In six weeks I was a changed
‘woman, Fee well in every respect. I felt so elated and happy: at
I want all women who suffer to get well as I did."—Miss Guita Gannon,
859 Jones St., Detroit, Mich., Secretary Amateur Art Association.
It is clearly shown in this young lady’s letter that Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will certainly cure the sufferings
of women; and when one considers that Miss Gannon’s letter is
only one of the countless hundreds which we are continually
poniehing in the newspapers of this country, the great virtue of Mrs. Pink-
am’s medicine must be admitted by all; and for the absolute cure of all kinds
of female ills no substitute can possibly take its place. Women should bear
this important fact in mind when they go into a drug store, and be sure not
to accept anything that is claimed to be “just as good” as Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound, for no other medicine for female ills has
made so many actual cures.
How Another Sufferer Was Cured.
“Dear Mrs. Pixxnam:—I cannot praise your wonderful remedies
enough, for they have done me more good than all the doctors I have
“Dear Mrs. Prixxnam:—I cannot praise your wonderful remedies
enough, for they have done me more good than all the doctors I have
had. For the last eight years and more I suffered with female troubles,
was very weak, could not do my housework, also had nervous pros-
tration. Some days I would remain unconscious for a whole day and
night. My pelgibars thought I could never recover, but, thanks to
your medicine, I now feel like a different woman. =
“J feel very grateful to you and will recommend Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compouns to all. It has now been four years since
I had the last spell of nervous prostration. I only weighed ninety-
eight pounds at that time ; now I weigh one hundred and twenty-three.
“JT consider your Vegetable Sonepat the finest remedy made.
eee many times for the benefit I received from your medicine,
Iremain, Yours truly, Mrs. J. H. Farmer, 2809 Elliott Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
Remember Mrs. Pinkham’s advice is free and all sick women
are foolish if they do not ask for it. She speaks from the widest
experience, and has helped multitudes of women,
Hyp) Saez na ae eae ae ot ear t
Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co., Lynn, Mass,
at
gs J UNION FOR
men of sist $3.50 SHOES 2.
f SaaS W. L. Douglas makes and sells more men’s
Fa eS \ y " ees ae than — other manufacturer
ee Sat Be in cee Mein the world te because af that excellent style
Nya seeres ey Seay iting and ‘superior, wearing analities if t could show
i SR aed cs ‘You the difference between the made in my factory and
S ER Sem “those of other makes and the high-grade leathers used, you
SA aie i] Bia Would understand why W. 1. Dougias $8.10 shoes coat more
Ske Sa Ske to make, why they hold their shape, fit better. wear longer,
Nd a =e, 5 and are of greater intrinsic yaine than any other $3.12 ehos
Y by ro on the market to-day, and why the sales for the year ending
of Be ay f Tuly 1, 1904, were
S re) a. Je
oe ) eee $6,263,040.00.
“ Gy » ] EE idee oan re tor ite take norantatitute,
R aS Bem mpete| Sold’ by shoe dealers everywhere. Fast Color £ycleis wsed
5 ia ‘ SEZ Epa Exclusively.
e ENS 3G ee ‘Superior in Fit, Comfort and Wear.
s Rae ret BIG “I have worn W.L. Douglas $3.£0 shoes for the last tteelee years
y \ a Bs BEEN “andswear to nhers costing /iom HO (ofan er
2 NG Ci Sa Bee) B's McCUE. Dept. Coll, 5. Int. ltevenue, Richmond, Va.
Vie: Mes iz Ea” W. L. Douglas uses Corona Coltskin in his $3.50
. eee / ZE® shoes. Corona Colt is couceded to be the finess
| oe % Patent Leather made.
THE ten, \ey Za oS sx ron cararocus ervixe rere mstaverioxs
WORLDS Sone : = HOW TO ORDER BY MATL.
GREATEST SHOE MAKER W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
4 oe
Sale Ten Million Boxes a Year.
‘THE FAMILY’S FAVORITE MEDICINE
CANDY CATHARTIC
10c, aB
Se. 50c, vaCOR Dregeists
: BEST FOR THE BOWELS
, 4 =i
HAVE YOU A COUGH?
If you have, take SABINE’S VEGETABLE
couch BALSAM. It wili cure it. ‘The
eo ee eee
© Forbale by All Draggints.
F. A. Sabine Medicene Co., 300 12th St.,
Milwaukee, Wis.
=. <
“4 P!ISO'S CURE FOR w
La 1 on
Ca
re) in time. Sold by druggist =
“ CONSUMPTION
Gle’s Grbolisalve
Instantly stope the pain of
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Always heals without scars,
PDA PSM SE Ss back lvee Balle Wis
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PATENTS fic referescce
highest references
FITZGERALD & CO.,Dept U.,Washington,D.0
8 Uni... No. 42, 1904.
Ba WHEN wea TO ADVERTISERS
please say you saw the Advertisemest
in this paper.
WE CONTINUE TO WARN THE BENEVOLENT PUBLIC AGAINST
THE NUMEROUS BEGGARS FOR ALLEGED CHARITABLE INSTITU-
TIONS IN BEHALF OF THE NEGRO RACE. LOOK WELL TO THE CRE-
DENTIALS GF SUCH MENDICANTS AND INQUIRE OF SOME REPUTA-
BLE NEGRO CITIZEN REGARDING THE TRUTHFULNESS OF THEIR
STATEMENTS. i
PUSS as ican n= AR tie re ere PNA tee eens See oS
ee
a SC LE
Sherman's Magic Cream
for the Skin removes PIMPLES, BUMPS, TAN and
WRINKLES and leaves the hands and face soft, smooth and
beautiful. Price,
25 cts, per box, or 6 boxes for $1.00
—____—____—— Send all orders to——£
SHERMAN “3,72 see"
‘Open Day and Night. For Ladies and Gentlemen.
The Turf Cafe
Oysters, Game, Fish, Steaks, Chops and Every
Delicacy the Seasons Afford,
Banquet Rooms for Dinner Parties, Etc. Cuisine Par Excellent.
Table D’Hote.
NOTE—We have neither private rooms, nor ‘‘private” people, but cater to the
@eneral public.
DINNER FROM 5:30 TO 8:00; 35¢.
MONROE BROS., Prop’s.
194 Third Street, Milwaukee, Wis.
eS
eee.
&
Zz Fy
ts e
Why Suffer from Disease?
Robinson’s Alfalfa-Nutri
obinson’s Alfalfa-Nutrient
Positively cures Rheumatism, Locomotor-Ataxia, all Stomach,
Liver and Kidney Troubles and all Nerve and Blood Dis-
eases. Send us your name and address and we will mail
you absolutely free a ten days’ trial treatment of this wonder-
ful medicine together with a scientific booklet, ‘How to
Secure Perfect Physical Health.” Address
ALFALFA-NUTRIENT CO.
Room 8, 59 Dearborn St., Chicago.
If You Need Anything in Our Line Give Us 2 Call
Wh. LOCAN
Cash Feed Store “na cee
EXPRESSING AND MOVING
2807 State Strest, fae aRneas. CHICAGO, ILL.
G. Schiller, Jr. ===
.- WHOLESALE... se
Distance
Fish and Oysters | Phone 80
Green Bay, Wis. Seon
Packing House & Freezers, Foot of N. Jefferson St
| Not
ina
Trust
——
Calvary Baptist Church
221 Seventh St., Milwaukee
Morning service, 11 a. m.; Sunday
sehool, 1 p. m.; evening service, 7:45.
B. P. Robinson, pastor.
Luke 19:13—Be busy till I come.
is ara lastaialie it hs SES Se,
fees OOPULAR
make. You become a worker together
with God to make the child worthy of
his heavenly father.
All this is true also of our work in
reference to ourselves. God leaves us
something to do for ourselves. We
have powers, but we must develop and
use them. We have food for our
bodies, minds, and souls, but we must
appropriate it. We are not born wise
or learned or skilled; we must draw
out ourselves.
These considerations should teach
us, first, that all hdnest, true labor, in
field, workshop, office, store, study, or
schoolroom, or wherever our lot may
be cast, is dignified and consecrated.
ee 8 ig |i RAY
WE ERs
ame | i \
Ny ES
: =
Ss =)
SS
eS
Se
HE DIGNITY OF WORK.
By the Rey. James S. Stone, D. D.
“We are laborers together with
God.’—I. Corinthians iii., 9.
SO ee Ne ee eee 8
| sustained the apostles in their struggie
| against the powers of paganism. God
| was working out a purpose, and they
| were working with him in that pur-
| pose. So is it with every man who !s
| striving to do his duty.
| God made us in his own image. Our
mental and spiritual qualities, though
| inferior and finite, are nevertheless of
| the same kind, and after the same pat-
| tern, as the mental and spiritual qual-
| iues of God. We are his children, like
unto our father, and we are made not
| only to share in his love and glory but
| also in his work. He has done much,
but he has left something for us to do.
Thus the vast, sublime, and magniti-
cent wilderness, untamed and uncult!-
| vated, is of little use to human life till
fman has gone into it. He brings out
its powers, avails himself of its poss!-
| bilities, and works together with God
both for the beautifying of the earth
and for the bringing out of the powers
that lie within it. Hence it is that a
garden is far more lovely than the
wild woodland, and the rose cultivated
and trained much more beautiful than
| the flower that struggles recklessly for
life in the wilderness.
The man, therefore, that trims a
tree, thrusts a pene jnto the ground,
| gathers the ore from pbs puines purifies
it, shapes it, say, info the machInery
| that shall weave clothing or into the
| engine that shall speed him from city
to city—the man that gathers the light-
ning from the clouds and guides it
into the many uses now discovered for
-_electricity—is a worker together with
God. His labor, oftentimes irksome,
worrying, wearing, is yet divine. The
laborer in the field or workshop is in-
deed a priest, a mediator between God
and nature, a worker with the great
Creator for the uplifting and develop-
ment of humanity.
_ This truth may be applied fearlessly
in all directions. The lawyer who is
striving for justice and peace is work-
| ing with God. Governments and legis-
| latures that would discover and ob-
) Serve, law, rule in equity and judg-
ment, avert war, and advance the
prosperity of the people have in mind
the same purpose that God has. So Is
the physician fellow to him who went
-about healing the sick, alleviating
pain, and prolonging life. What is the
man doing who sells us our coal and
clothing and food, but helping God in
| his work of preserving our life?
God would have his children to be
happy. True, there are some people
who think we ought not to seek after
happiness, or at least we ought not to
_be too happy. ‘They think something
bad is about to happen to them if they
are unusually happy. Many of their
kind deliberately seek to make them-
| selves miserable. But it would be im-
possliita to prove, or for the most of us
_ to believe, that this is the will of God.
_ Indeed, the misery that is in the world
| to-day is here because men have re-
| fused to be workers with God for its
| removal. If man had always done his
duty there would be no poverty, dis-
tress, sickness, or sorrow. God would
| break no one’s heart. But man has
| neglected his work, or has compla-
| cently allowed evils to go on, upon the
| supposition that either the evils were
unavoidable or had an element of good
‘in them. The weeds will remain in
the wilderness and misery will con-
| tinue in the earth till man honestly
and faithfully sets to work with God
| for their elimination.
| So it is that when we do a kind
deed or say a loving word to one in
distress, sorrow, or need, we are help-
| ing God in his purpose to make that
weary one happy. You take up in
your arms a little child that is sob-
bing and crying over some tiny trou-
ble that has come into its heart. You
try to comfort the fragile soul, and
without thinking, perhaps, in a mo-
ment you are doing that which we are
told God shall some day do himself—
wiping away the tears. In a thousand
and one ways we strive with God for
the same end.
And it means so much more when
you do the work yourself. We must
have societies and bureaus to do much
of the benevolent duty ot g great ci
and they ought to pe ei $y Donel
but better far js i ‘or yoy to qa som
thing yourself. If you cannot person-
ally nieet thé péople that are in dis-
tress, you miss knowing either what
distress really is or the joy of helping
to alleviate it. If you knew the dis-
tress or the joy you would be eager to
give of your time and means to the
work in which God is interested.
The same principle applies when we
try to make other lives useful. Man
untaught and uncivilized is like the
wilderness untamed and uncultivated.
He may have a certain rugged beauty;
that is the best he is likely to have.
But do with him as with your wild
land; train, develop, educate, awaken
and direet imagination, intellect, and
NEED OF BIBLE TRAINING.
@y Kev. Witttam Fr. Merriti,
| Human life is a tangle of problems.
| But one thread has in it the secret of
| unraveling the mass; it is the training
of children. Find out what to do with
the little child, and you solve ali prob-
lems. The greatest thing that ever
happened to the world’s life was the
birth of a little babe; we still observe
the anniversary as our happiest day.
Yet we treat the child too often as his
world treated him. “No room for
him” as a child; no use for him when
he grew to manhood; only to be cut
off, killed, put out of the way.
The great need and right of every
child is a knowledge of the Bible. I
want to make clear three propositions
-—(1) every child needs and has a right
to the Bible; (2) the school does not
give it to him; (3) the church and the
‘home are the only institutions that can,
| give it to him.
| Every child needs the Bible. He
‘needs it for culture. The best minds
say so. Matthew Arnold and Thomas
HH. Huxley, agnostics, pleaded that the
Bible be made a part of the public
school curriculum in Great Britain on
account of dts Incghiparable value for
culture. ‘The child seeds it for form-
ing that most nected force, a social
conscience, training him In how to live
helpfully, not harmfully, with other
people. He needs it above all to se-
cure to him a sane and real religious
experience.
| Now, the school does not give this
‘knowledge. It can not. Once it did.
The curriculum in the Boston public
school in 1781 was made up altogether
of religious and moral studies. We
have separated church and state. It
is well we have. Our school system,
even as it is, is immensely better than
| that of Boston, 1781. But our schools
do not and, in the present status of
things, can not give definite knowl-
| edge of the Bible or of the Christian re-
ligion to the pupils.
So we reach our third proposition—
the church and the schoo! are the only
institutions that can train the children
in biblical knowledge. This empha-
sizes the importance of the church
Sunday school, kindergarten and other
means of religious training of the
young. No work is more important
for the church than this.
But, above all, such work of bibli-
eal training belongs to- the home, to
father and mother—both, for the fath-
er can not throw the whole burden on
his wife. You, fathers and mothers,
ean give your child the best part of
his education, and you have the sol-
emn knowledge that if you do not give
it he will never get it as he should.
John Ruskin said that the one essen-
tial part of his education was the
work his mother did in setting him
to learn chapters and verses while a
little boy.
THOUGHT AND LIFE.
ae ee ee ae ee
Right or wrong conduct is based
upon thought. As a man thinketh so
he acts. Believing the world is gov-
erned by eruelty and injustice man
himself becomes unjust. Believing
that social progress is largely a myth,
that evil is stronger than good, he
ceases to fight the battle of righteous-
ness from sheer desperation about the
issues.
In citizenship thousands of men and
women are evading their civic duties
simply from a profound disbelief in the
recuperative power of social forces.
Politics are corrupt and irredeemably
so, they say, business is a covert form
of brigandage, commercialism is polite
throat-cutting, “what's the use.”
- The remedy for much of our civic
fmaction 1s a reconstruction of our
faith in the final supremacy of right
things and forces. We shall never
have better things anywhere until an
increasing number of people think we
'ean have them.
MANKIND AS AN ASSET,
~ ¢ W. A. partlett.
n th Bylast of al] our talk of ye
1a mf what t should amma n
stamping out crime, one factor in a
Christian civilization seems to have
been forgotten, and that is the atti
tude of the church as oe by
Christ himself. We read that as he
looked out on sinning, sick and riot-
ous multitudes, he saw them with eyes
‘of compassion. That is the most diffi-
cult state of mind—to have compassion
on those who would seem to be candi-
dates for the penitentiary. Yet it is
the divine one.
Short Meter Sermons.
Greed is the foe of gain.
Liberty falls where the law fails.
Love alone can interpret the law.
Faith has a way of looking right
over the top of facts.
The men who make a noise in this
world are always the quiet ones.
i a
BARGAIN HUNTERS
Clothing to fit without being measured for.
_ . Prices less than you ever bought them for. Our
specialty is misfit and uncalled-for custom tailor-
made clothing. Tailors’ prices for full dress
or Tuxedo Suits from $30 to $50; our price from
$15 to$18. English Walking or good Business
Suits made to measure by best of tailors from
$18.00 to $35.00. Our price $8.00 to $18.00.
Every suit bears our guarantee label. All gar-
ments bought of us are kept repaired and pressed
free of charge for one year. To be convinced
see our window display.
MILLER BROS.
213-15-17 West Water St., Milwaukee, Wis.
Open Evenings Till9 P. M. Sundays Till 12 M.
22 EEE
One-Third Saving Sale
ee, Warranted Watches, Fewelry,
Silverware, Clocks, Opera Glasses,
Cpe Cutlery, etc.
C.J. DEWEY, 234 WEST WATER sr.
A. CLARK. J. CLARK.
When You Need Anything in Our Line Call on
CLARK BROS.
GROCERIES, SALT MEATS,
FRESH EGGS AND BUTTER
Cigars, Tobacco and Candies.
Tel. Douglas 2474. 3233 STATE ST., CHICAGO. ©
_R. SAVITZKY
THE UP-I0-DATE TAILOR
"Sak wales oie fo $48 and up
Pants to order $4 and up.
S. M. MINOR, ican, MISS C. S. BLACK, Manager.
LA MODE IMPORTING CO.
PARISIAN MILLINERY
Suite 6, Bradley Building
155 MASON STREET, - = MILWAUKEE.
TTS LT LE BY PT ET (AS OR
Gents, in Need of First-Class Goods at a Reason-
able Price Should Call on
Men’s Furnishing Goods
Hats and Caps.
Tel. Black 8974. 213-217 West Water St., MILWAUKEE
SRST A
SS aT TEE ET RE REE I aE) SE EE oe rn ee eer ee ae pe Se
PEONLES TAILORING CO.
‘Suits to. Order $15 00
| GNERELE For at AT HALF Said.
fis Aaa ee J. M UN KO |
eh PRACTICAL SHOEMAKER
aS a 125 2nd Street, Milwaukee.
; a fe ...REPAIRS NEATLY DONE... |
Sg ee See
En a
OE a Seen RENEE Neen seseceecnroneree ane ra t