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Show r jMAKE BURIAL FEAST HAPPY WOMEN. Ill Mrs. Pare Wife of C. B Pare, r. pro ru taent dent ' resi- Gla- Ky.. sgow. says: "I was s u tt e i I d g com from plication of kidney troubles Besid-a bail hark. I had a great deal c trim Lie with the e o i e nous. v !i"h weie exceedingly Souietiniea excessiie and times seamy The color and pasaaes were accomtiuined with a sc, tiding ser.sutii ti. Dunns Kidney Tills soon regulated the Uuiney secretions, making lln-i- color normal, and bauished ihe in flu ut in,-- r ion which I can Caused Ihc scalding sensation test well, m hack is strong and sound, and I feel much belter in eveiy way." For sale by all dcalcis. price 50 mi FOSTER Mll.liUHN V BEST CALLING FOR WOMEN. Ctcbsb Writer Lauda the Benefits af Mort.cullU'-e- . United Service Toast. drink to Uk ui.bm uf men end trains. To th Hag uf tin re i and white and t hie. Co tin khaki ni.U yt i and gold fend l..ti k. And the llnec htioi.g arms of the aw v W," io Lot u , iiwe'j bet us di ink how! -. out biot hers that guard tin stua- - -The msm on the I tnige, the men at the guns. And the gallant mai hi In all of these, sons. Columbia s sailing ,i a naM-n1 Let i t If H l,OW SW V !i i Alai dunk !o e, wnba.oi. our work, cur to the wonun we serve for sweethearts motheis iteie's how' to the Intro: ed and gallant Let dead. hare Ana .a ii foot of taith they stamped "I'. K." s soldier in the us Let itiam tills glass toast To evtry army met nary mess: Dele's how To onr ai.d nist--is- . mu-3- . - wrilei f j j 4 r First Newspapers Published In England Were Written. The earliest English newspapers were not printed, but simply written. For the benefit of those who wished to consult them they were exhibited In a public place, each reader being called upon to pay a small eoln called a gazetta, hence the word 'gazette. The earliest English newspaper was the Weekly News," first published In 1622. 'In the seventeenth century several newspapers were established, sr.d In the eighteenth century we had and allied the famous publications of the sort. The first daily appeared In 1 792, It Is also Interesting to note that the first serial story was Robinson Crusoe, which began to rim In the London Post'" on Oct. 7, 1719, and concluded on Oct. 19, 1720. Had Family of Sixty-two- . To the conscientious father who spends sleepless nights In worrying as to how he Is to provide for half a dozen children It Is appaling even to think of the responsibility of a And yet. on the family of sixty-twevidence of the Harleian manuscripts, tnia was the precise number of the offspring of a licot.ish weaver. Fortunately the daughters were a very Insignificant minority, and the sons, reached manhood, of whom forty-sifound excellent friends in the neighboring landowners, one of whom. Sir J. Bowers, adopted a batch of ten, while three other gentlemen followed bis philanthropic example and also took ten apl-- ce under their charge Soft Foods Injure Teeth. Too much cooking of food and the ana of soft prepared dishes have much to do with getting people out of the tiabit of chewing. Those who live on Coarse foods requiring thorough mastication have the perfect teeth of white and hard and even. The Hood supply Is perfect on recount cf the stimulation given by thorough . . exercise of tho jaws. j x Give Battle to Bulls. In the SpanixJi town of Alflnden, in the province of Saragossa, four young peasants who bad been drinking Jumped into an inclosure where four bulls were kept for an impending fight. Two of tl.e men managed to set out again; the other two were killed by the infuriated animals. BY PROXY. What the Baby Needed. suffered from nervousness and Iieadaclte until one day about a year go It suddenly occurred to me wbat a reat coffee drinker I was and I thought may be this might have some-'hDto do with my trouble, do I Uiifted to tea foi awhile but was jot better, if anything worse. At that time I had a baby lour months old that we had to feed on a fiottle, until an old lady friend told me to try Pastum Food Coffee. Three months ago I commenced using Pos-tuleaving off the tea and coffee, jiud not only have my headaches and xiervoU- troubles entirely disappeared, since then 1 have been giving jdenty of nurse for my baby, and have a large, healthy child now. I have no desire to drink anything liut Postum and know it has benefited tny children, and 1 hope all who have children will try Postum and find out tor tpemselves what a really wonderful food drink it is. Name given by .Postum Co., Batte Creek, Mich. Beth to? and coffee contain quantities t a poisonous drag called Caffe ine that direc.t'y affeets the heart, kidneys, stomach and nerves. 1 ostum Is rnadi from cereals only, scientifically blended to get the coffee flavor. Ten days trial of Postum in place of tea or, iv ffee will show a health secret 'worth more than a gold mine. Theres w reason. Get the book. "The Road to Well- Lie." la each phg 1 g - tut j ' d . cau-r- d flag, The flag is of the regulation style, stars in its and has twenty-threIt has been given a field of blue. prominent place in the home of Mr. TeleBarnard. Worcester (Mass.) gram. Wanted His Share of the Fun. I remember, said the Major, Jim O'Hara of Company A, j Chio. Jim was always in the right went war trom tbe through place, and stert to finish. At Jonesboro he was on Ihe skirmish Une, and when the regiment came up for the charge he was down behind a stump busy as a bee banging away at the enemy. Here the Instinct of discipline showed itself in Jim, for the first word he said when he realized that he was not in Company A moving into a charge was The Major, where is my company?' Major pointed to a clump of bushes and Jim, without a moment's hesita- tlon, hiked right along the line, hot with musket balls and grape shot. As Jim was giving full attention to the enemy in front he was accosted by a Seventeenth corps man, who asked to what company he belonged. Jim answered promptly, Col. Dan McCooks brigade, Fourteenth corps,' and tbe Seventeenth corps man said, Give mo a chew of tobacco, Jim handed out his tobacco, and after the other had helped himself he said, conversationally, We are not in this thing. I saw you fellows were, and not having any tobacco. I got nervous thinking about your luck and I thought I would come over and help you just to relieve my nervousness, you know. I am all right now,' and he stayed with us and was in line when we went over Gen. Govans works and captured his entire brigade. Then he tviok another chew ot tobacco and went back to his own command with the air of a man who had done a good job and wasnt ashamed of it. Chicago Inter Ocean. e fifty-secon- Imttie-scarre- j - nan! and Rev. Dr. Campbell along with a number of others. In the skurry that followed the en- trance of the confederate soldiers, the candle was overturned, and the baseWhen ment plunged Into darhness. fresh lights were secured, the rebels made a search of the house from basement to garret, to find the flag they thought was in the house, but they were unable to locate it. The reason the rebels did jot find the flag," Mr. Barnard said to a reporter of the Telegram, yesterday afternoon. "Is that He daughter of Br. Campbell grabbed it and concealed it in the folds of her peltlooat. and returned it to me on the following day, when I took it to my office in Ninth street and hid it between the leaves of a law hook. "After Richmond had fallen. I came east, bringing the book with me. among other things, but It never occurred to me to look there for the j j New Yo: k Times is BEFORE DAYS OF PRINTING. d - , e. -- eye-lll- d f. . Heavy Rain Following Battles. In the civil war heavy downpours of rain immediately following a battle The battle of Big were frequent. Bethel may be mentioned as au early instance.' This battle, fought in Eastern Virginia on June 10, 1861, was Wants Old Medals Returned. soon followed by a copious rain. In accordance with an act of Conrains attended Gen. McCle- gress, passed at the last Ression, prollans campaign in Western Virginia in viding for the Issue of new medals of July, 1861. His troops had four sepa- honor to those who now hold the old rate engagements on four days, an I medals, which are to be retired and before the close of each violent rains destroyed, the War department at The battle of Rich Mountain. fell." Washirgton, has issued a circular ToiJSht on July 10, was one of these, t the attention of the public to cajng tiol tas followed by one or two rainy flRt aud requesting the molders Ttie engagements. mp(lals ()f honor lssne(1 Mnder thP '.hieh took place iu that part of tbe j B(.,s of 18(i2 and 1863. to forward their country later iu tke same year, were 8n(, tuv. Knots bv also e ich follow'd quirk! by rain: nia,t to the MUUarv Secretary, Battle of Carn (ax Fc.r, Aug 10. tbe M,P(!al8 and rpplaop .C1 uni; battle or Cheat Mountain. Sept. bonKnola of tt,p 11(,w-- dodgn. Her13 and 14. 1861; imttie cf Green Brier, eafter all new medals will be issued Oct. 3. 1881; battie of Alleghany Sum j from the military secretary's office op 1861. None are of Dec. these 12, init, due proof of the identity of the persot. as classed great battles but the firing j in whose ,)phaIf the medaI(1 arp was apparently sufficient to bring for. ram The first battle of Bull Rim was plied fought on July 21, 1861, The day was if it is true that male mosquitoes do 'irtrht Ard dear all through, but the not bite, a good many of them have o of 'dreoclHr rain. 'ay h en but out of business bv ''Jike. if ; i ' j j li ink to Uk la..d that we love to u- With our bent r Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of C ASTORIA, a safe and aura remedy for Infante and children, and eee that K tbe Signature of Beer a Bee For Over 30 Yean. The Kind You Have Alweye Bought, on Minister. the very highly conservative ministers who still exist in A Scotland. preacher of another church was to occupy his pulpit and they were discussing the order ol I may service. Said the preacher: No, we object to giva out a hymn?" Well, I may give out a parhymns. 1 do not object to paraaphrase? phrases, myself, but the people do not "I may use the Lord's like them. prayer?" 1 have no conscientious objection to the Lords prayer myself, was the reply, hut the people would aot stand it Chicago Newa. Restrictions He was one of The Tibetans are the strangest people on earth. the To bold life sacred ami I" law the are creatures most ey an, s,u,posed to obey And as they think they s(TUj,(lHSv. of animal, ajr ,je reborn in anv shape or they are kind to living m-f- il gul'-her- i ' tn-'i- i i i lift on Klr:ni iMnnry Ex perittuce ami I ntlergoen a Uantloui C hiinge. Mrs. E. Doherty, of No. 115 Coates street, Mobeily, Mo., i today a picture of robust health, and yet five years ago, site death from progressive barely vDd Opponents Fraternized. emaciation. Tta itpoiter site told the and Mississippi : he north and the south lint united following 'dslory In IS I b gan to have distressing in one and tiiat sentiment attacks of indigestion that continued for you find written here: "Liberty ami twoyems. My stomach was constantlyIf union, now and forever.1 " sore and burned as if it wuxoufito. Thus spoke (!ov. John Bates in became finally bo delicate that it wouul Faiieml hall when the metiiomhle ban not retain even plum water. My inability quet and tendered by Ed totake fod reduced my vveigkltoniiiely-eigli- t ward Y. Kinsley post 113, 0. A I! pou tids, and faint ues- and dizziness was lo Lafayette post, no. of New Yoi k kept me in Led most of the time I exand a del gallon of distil really srnrviugto death nml besides I was ( oiiferioiate The doctor was soldiers bad reached its extremely nervous. most inter'sirg stage, and when the perplex, 1. Ho gave lue tonics which governor said il.ese words be struck did me no K xul, and prescribed exercim; the keynote of he great occasion- - a which I was too weak to attempt, reunited country represented beneath oOno duv when I was so faint and the roof tree of the oh caudle of lib cbillul that I could do not bingbut crouch rty by some of the best citizens of down on the fl sir by the fire, nty father the north ami some of tho bravest and brought me a b x of Dr. Williams Iltil: .most chivalrous veterans of the lost pills for Dale People. I found on trial cause dmt they would May on my stomach unIt was a gathering such as Boston like everything else. 1 really felt belter never before saw and may not see Hf1( r three doses ami I kept oil using again for many years a gathering of Food began to lasts well and to gray haittd nun who sought earn down. Tho pain ami tho burning ami at other's lues in ihe awful days of the in tho pit of my stomach civil war. each lighting for a principle last well t away altogether. My Weight he believed to lie right, but who iatf began to increase until it reached night Hied to outrival one another i.i Kid pounds and my neighbors, who were convinced that I was wasting to expressions of Inotlerly love and loyalty to a common country, from wno.se death be foie, were astonished at tho heart is swntly tiding away the last change. I resumed my housework and have lmrdly lmd occasion to call a doctor remaining Daces of sectional bitter-nss Boston Globe since. I have recommended Dr. Wil-- , PaniV Pink Pills to several friends, and i ' Ends Civil War Romance. I say to the pulu, thin ones particularly, war If you want lo get strong and well tak A real romance of tlic civil wherein a member of the Dr.'Wil'ianis'Puil; Pills for Pale People, First Minnesota loved ami These pills cure stomach trouble by lougl't for and then ipiat reled with their tonic net ion, building up tho fli-- ! and parted from tiis Minnesota sweet- gestive ot pans and enabling them to do heart, away back in the earlv '60s, tho work that nature intended them to lias ended hai pily, and Chester, ci. do. They are sold by all dealers, or will Ditrfee and Sarah A. Salisbury have bo sent post jmid on receipt, of price, fifty been marired. tents a box or six boxes for two dollars Mr. Durfee over forty years ago left and a half, by addressing Dr. Williams bis sweetheart to fight for his coun- Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. A try. When the war was over he re- diet book giving useful information will turned and made plans to marry the be sent free on request. sweetheart he had left at home. There Strange Effect of Diving. arose a differ nee hi tween the lovers, A professional diver says that one however. They quarrel: d, and the deof the strange effects of diving is the jected lover went wesi to grow up invariable bad temper felt while workwith the country and to forget his ing at the bottom of the sea. As sorrow. California was chosen as Ins heme. this usually passes away as soon as He married. His sweetheart was aiso the surface is reached, it is probably due to pressure of tbe air afTecting the married, and it was thought that the had healed the wounds of their lungs, and through them the brain. years The exhilaration and good temper of first love. Four years ago Mr. Durfee came the mountain climber are contrary east on his way to a reunion of his feelings, from an opposite cause. old reglnmnt at Gettysburg. Stopping Deafness Cannot Be Cured in Minneapolis, he met Mrs. SalisVy locsl applications, as they cannot reach the his youthful bury and recognized portion of the ear. There U only one way to deatueaa. and that la by coneMlutlona! remedlea. sweetheart. Old times were discussed cure Deafutaa la ca Hed by an Inflamed rouditlon of the mucous lining of the huetachiau Tnbe. When this and the old love was resurrected. la Inflamed you have a rumhllua sound or ImCertain affairs had to he arranged lube perfect hearing, and when It te entirely closed. Deaf la Ihe reault.aud unleaa the lntnuiniatlou can be yess by each, but as soon as possible the talen out and this tube rent-- , red tn ll normal condiold soldier moved to Minneapolis. The tion, hearing will bo destroyed foreter: nine caaea out of ten are by t atarrh, which lo nothing wedding, which took place last week, but an Inflamed condition of the inucoua surfaces. We will give Oue Hundred Dollars for any case of was the realization of the youthful Deafness icau-e- d by catarrh) that cannot be cured dream of happiness. send for circulars, free. The bride and by Haifa Catarrh Cure, F. .1. CllfcN fcY A CO., Toledo, a bridegroom are each 58 years of age, Sold by Drure'o- - Tv. Take flail' i Family I'll '.a for constipation. but they feel that they have just begun to live. Pew Rhinoceros Are Left. The Indian rhinoceros is nearly exGeneral Asboths Warning. There are two specimens in Gen. Asboth commanded the post at tinct the London Zoological Gardens and Ricnzi. He simply signed his name two on the European continent Very Asboth, despising Christian appellafew are left in a wild state In India tions. He had a yard full of hounds and Assam, and unless special measand curs. He had a long, pronounced, ures be taken for their preservation white, drooping moustache and lots of will soon disappear. When he stood he was they discipline. tail and slim, with a prominent seal Mother Grays Sweet Powders for Children. ring on his left index finger. Some of Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse Ren Asboth 's braves who had dared In the Children's Home In New York, cure to disobey orders for the sake of ap- - Constipation, Feverishness, Bod Stomach, petite, left a nice quarter of mutton Teething Disorders, move and regulate the on the general's mess door knob. Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 80,000 test25c. Sample When the hapless culprits were ar- imonials. At allK Druegists, FREE. Address S Olmsted. Leltoy.N Y. raigned, Gen. Asboth with becoming Animals That Count. dlgniy dismissed the guard, then said in his customary way: Evidence that animals can count Boys, you are here for stealing has been collected by Signor Mancial. sheers. Now, orders are orders. Horses in the collieries at Hainault Mind, don't never let me catch you have a regular number of daily trips, stealing something again." and invariably seek tbeir stables alAs tney were about to depart, how- ter the thirtieth. A dog remembered ever,. that great seal ring went up sigthe twenty-sixtburied bone a short cilcantly by the side of his nose as time after digging up twenty-fivgad Birds count their eggs; magpies count "But, boys, dont never let them only to four. The latter is true also bite Grant's Shadow you." sheeps of monkeys. in National Magazine. Write MURIXB EYE REMF.DY Co., Cblceso, tt your eyee ere kio or Inflomed, end pet octtlleCe ice ami free ample MURINE. U curea all ad) of Sons Veterans. At tbe Twenty-thirNational EnNo National Russian Drama. campment of the Sons of Veterans, It is curious that in a country to held in Boston during the G. A. R. Encampment, William E. Dustin of overflowing with loyalty, despite the Nihilists, very lew of the stage perDwight, 111., was elected commander-in-chieGen. R. M. J. Reed ,of Phil- formances have any national flavor, adelphia was appointed chief of staff. but so it is. An American resident The next national encampment will of some time in Moscow says that he held at Gettysburg, Pa. The report during all his stay there did he see of Adjutant General Congdon shows but one play with Russian characters, that the order consists of 708 camps nor did he hear one stage song apand 27,103 members, this being an in- peal to Russian sentiment as the crease of 66 camps and 1,968 members Bowery Girl" or Dixie Land appeal to popular sentiment In this during the last administration. i Commandant Reed of the National country. Reserve of the Pennsylvania National Favorite Remedy Dr.me David Konnedyw end rvM Aliepfaylci of BrUhtV Guard, consisting of Sons of Veterans, cured botU. feUed." Mr. JL ?. Uluer. buivtilll. O. in his report stated that there were reseven regiments of infantry of the Reduced Fares for Children. serve in bis state. The movement tow n council of Douglas, Isle of The was a new one, and is practically a Man, which owns its own street cars, of In the ten order. branch military school children between 8 and States, mostly in the West, the work carries 9 a. m., noon and 2 p. m., and 4 and S the branch has of organizing military p. m., for half a cent each. been carried on successfully. to Western Ghastly Ceremony a Shock of the All Creatures Sightseer of Land and Air Invited to a Share the Repast Spread. '.Mas.-achu-el- ts has discovered the only proper Flag Hidden in a Book, While looking over some things calling for a woman to pursue. It is impossible, lie asset ts, for the aver- which he had brought with him from age woman to pass an examination the southland the other day, William call "stiff" without doing C, Barnard, Oakland street, Barnard-vllle- , that we lierself sudoos harm, both physically found between the leaves of a and mentally, though she may come volume of Blackstone a flag that was through a winner. Ami it Is just as saved from rebel hands during the impossible for her to adopt any pro- civil war. The flag had not seen the fession that requires much study and light of day in forty three years. whole weeks, months, yea, and years, - Prior to the outbreak of the war, to be spent in an office wi.hout be- Mr. Barnard was employed in a mill coming 8oo tier or later as mad as the nt Richmond, Va., where he and others proverbial March liaie, or, at the used tn meet at the home of Rev. Dr. her figure Alexander Campbell, a native of Scot-la- i least, without altering in the d, a union sympathizer, greatly for the worse, llut In digging, planting and sowing she paints .basement of his home in Knicht roses on her cheeks, rounds her limbs f treet. and brightens her eyes. The preltl--- t The house was situated betwee.i women this writer has ever seen, the river and Hollywood cemetery, as well as the strongest, mentally and and the flag occupied a place over physically, were found among those the fireplace in the basement. few British women who spend thcii One night the boys In butternut, lives In the open air, while the plain- suspecting the union sympathizers est fares and clumsiest figures were were meeting at the home of Dr. observed among actresses. Campbell, surrounded the house and, forcing an entrance, caught Mr. BarAn English that horliciil'tire BODIES CF DEAD TIBETANS TO ANIMALS. BY Mr. Doherty &fe! a- ! ONLY A SKELETON C20U0HING A STOVE. - i Conis per l ux CO., Buffalo. N TTSld' MV FED in gts td a pray During the morning service is repeated by the lamas for the minute insects which they have swal-- I lowed inadieitet llj in their meat and redrink, and the formula insures the link of these microbes in heaven. Sometimes, when a iatnas life is de-- j spa red of, the monks will ransom a yak nr a bullock from the shambles and keep him a pensioner in their monastery, praying the good Buddha to spare the sick mans life for .he liie Yet they eat meat freely, ransomed. all save the Gelugpa, or reformed church, and square their conscience with their appetite by Hie pretext that the sin re.-t- s with the outcast assassin, the public butcher, who will be born in the next incarnation as some tandemon. talized spirit or agonized That, however, is his own affair. But it is when a Tibetan dies that his charity to tho creatures becomes really practical. Then, by his own tacit consent when living, his body Js given as a feast to the dogs and vultures. This is no casual or careless gift to avoid the trouble of burial or cremation. All creatures who have a taste for these things are invited to the ceremony, and the corpse is carved to their liking by an expert, who devotes liis life to the practice. When a Tibetan dies he is left three days in his chamber, and a slit is made in his skull to let his soul pass out. Then he is rolled into a ball, wrapped in a sack, or silk if he is rich, packed into a jar or casket, and carried along to the music of cor.ch shells to the ceremonial store. Here a lama takes the corpse out of its vessel and wrappings and lays it face downward on a large flat slab, and the pensioners prowl or hop round waiting for their dole. They are quite tame. The lamas stand a little way apart and see that strict etiquette is observed during the entertainment. The carver begins at the ankle and cuts upward, throwing little strips of flesh to the guests; the bones he throws to a second attendant, who pounds them up with a heavy stone. I passed the place as I rode in from a reconnaissance. The slab lies a stones throw to the left of the great northern road to Tengri Nor and Mongolia, about two miles from the city. A group of stolid vultures, too demoralized to range in search of carrion, stood motionless on a rock above, waiting the next dispenser of charity. A few ravens hopped about sadly; they, too, were evidently pauperized. One magpie was prying around in suspicious proximity, and dogs, conscious of shame, slunk about without a bark to them, and nosed the ground diligently. They were always there, waiting. There was hardly a stain on the slab, so quick and eager are the applicants for charity. Only a few rags lay around, too poor to be carried away. I have not seen the ceremony, and I have no mind to. My companion this morning, a hardened young subaltern, who was fighting nearly every day in April, May and June, and has seen more bloodshed than most veterans, saw just as much as I have described. He then left ill, dug his spurs into and rode away. Edmund Candler in Chicago Tribune. er e, A Happy Horse. Said the man whose equine acquaintances outnumber the humans he knows Intimately, and who seems glad of it: "There is a wise old horse belonging to a grocer in Wentworth avenue, and he might appropriately be called tue childrens friend. The store .s close to a schoolhouse, and this horse triend of mine spends much of his time standing in front of the store when his wagon is not in commission. He has a habit of standing with his forefeet on the sidewalk gazing into the store. At such times the children fairly swarm on him. They jump into the wagon and hold the reins; they climb on top of and walk underneath the kindly animal, and he looks down upon them, and is often rewarded for his good nature with bits of sugar and candy and other tuings that horses like. There are few happier faces in town, if you know how to read horse faces, than this of my four legged friend. May he live long and always be happy. Chicago Inter Ocean. CULTIVATE SENSE OF TASTK. Said to Have Good Effect on General Health. Taste and smell are two senses we do not cultivate enough; indeed, hearing. as we Know in the case of the blind, can reach an acuteness which the ordinary person'is absolutely deficient in. Both taste and smell have great uses. Probably we should not see people living in dirty and Insanitary conditions so blissfully were the sense of smell a little more developed; while taste, especially in women, is often stigmatized as greediness. The gourmet, to use a French word, is not a gormandizer, but a man whose taste is aesthetically and exquisitely trained. It Is said that the Marechal Due de Richelieu, who was a great gastronomic connoisseur, possessed so fine a taste as to be able to distinguish whether the breast of a chicken was cut from the side of the gall or not. In the same way can tell a vintage instantly. Women rather despise taste; they eat and that is all. Yet taste was certainly given us for a good purpose, and no one can order a dinner intelligently who has not cultivated his palate. The food one likes and enjoys always agrees with ones health better than any other, and the faddist who would reduce ail diet to uniformity would in time wreck the public digestion. Its Possession wine-taste- Saw Benefit in Army Service. Houston of Oklahoma City was once a private soldier of the United States army and in his will, disposing of a large estate, he bequeathed 9130,000 to his nephew on the sole condition that the young shall serve at least one full man term of not less than three years in the United States army, during which he shall have reached the grade of noncommissioned officer, and that his certificate of dischsrge shall read, Sylvester 'Service, honest and faithful; charIn making this beacter, excellent. quest the testator said: I know that after such service my nephew will have had enough experience of the world and disciplinary training to insure the proper disposal of what has taken me a lifetime to accumulate." Cause for Pity. We hear much about broken hearts in this world, but the list of brokenbrained geniuses is greater. Almost every day we have to pity the man who carries hi3 ntind in a sling. Tole do Blade. Cured Her Rheumatism. Valley, Pa., Oct. 31. (Special.) There is deep interest in Green county over the cure of the little daughter of I. N. Wbipkey of Rheumatism. She was a great sufferer for five or six ears and nothing seemed to do her any gcod till she tried Dodds Kidney Pills. She began to improve almost at once and now she is cured and can run and play as other children do. Mr. Whipkey says: I am indeed thankful for what Dodds Kidney Pills have done for my daughter; they saved her from being a cripple perhaps for life. Dodd's Kidney Pills have proved that Rheumatism is one of the results of diseased Kidneys. Rheumatism is caused by Urie Acid in the blood. If the Kidneys are right there can be no Uric Acid in the blood and consequently no Rheumatism. Dodds Kidney Pills make the Kidneys right. Deep WASH BLUE Costs io cents and equals 20 cents worth of any other kind ot bluing. Wont Freeze, Spill, Break Nor Spot Clothes DIRECTIONS FOR USE around in the bjater . At all arise Grocers. Codfish Ate Lobsters. As throwing some light on the disputed question whether lobster fry ar9 eaten by fish, the finding of two fairly large specimens of the Crustacea lo the interior of a codfish Is of consider able interest to the fishermen around the water front who discuss such matters. The lobsters are about four inches In length, and one of them had apparently been occupying his quarters for some time, as his shell was quite soft from the cods digestive operations. The other lobster had been a recent acquisition, evidently, as his shell was as strong as most of his kind. The lobsters were accompanied by a crab when found. The discovery was made In a restaurant on the water front. Gloucester (Mass.) Times. TEA There is nothing that costs so little, both money and work and that goes so far if it has the chance. Cooks Perquisites. restaurant cook arrested for stealing provisions in London, was found to have concealed on his person three apples, a shoulder of mutton, a pound- of butter, a pound of sausages, half a pound of jam and 3 A - package of cocoa. Excellent Opportunity to Arrange for Your Reception at SL Louis, During the Fair, Free. If you intend going to the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Missouri, opeued by President Roosuvelt April 30th, 1904, it will be very much to your advantage to correspond with Mr. F. H. Worsley, No. 41 1 Dooley block, Salt Lake City, Utah. Mr. Worsley has arranged to have all s his parties met at the St. depot and escorted to their lodgings, which will be reserved in advance. Information relative to passenger ticket limits, hotel rates, rates and all other necessary information asked for will be cheerfully given free of charge. This will especially be of benefit to those desiring to travel with Utah parties or In parties of four or five. School teachers will also hear something to their interests by writing above party. lA-ui- stop-over- Relative Value of Iron Ore. cents worth of iron ars when turned into bar iron is worth $5. If you make it into horseshoes ft is worth $10. or if into table knives cents worth of Seventy-fiv$180. iron ore manufactured into needles is worth $6,800, and when converted into The Pullet's Indorsement. some kinds of fancy buttons is worth ' There goes another one of my about $30,000. If the iron is made brothers! exclaimed the pullet as the into watch springs the product la head of the commissary department worth ten times more than buttons, of the invading army reached in and and when turned into hair springs it We used will sell for the enormous sum of seized a cackling chicken. to be a family of 12, and Im the only $400,000. one left. I thoroughly agree with what Gen. Sherman said about war! Yonkers Statesman. Seventy-fiv- e e TEA TEA Tea is fine; that is, fine tea is fine. Tea thoughts are fine; that is fine tea thoughts are fine. A Dry Salt Bath. That salt possesses tonic qualities Is well known, but it has remained for a woman suffering from nervous prostration to try a dry sea salt rub with beneficial results.- - She soaks a coarse wash cloth in a strong solution of the sea salt, then dries iL After her cold bath of a morning she wipes oft the moisture with a towrel, then rubs with the salty wash cloth till her skin is in a glow. She says she has found this to be far more invigorating than the usual bath in salt water. tea" Coffee is fine too: but fine has a different meaning in coffee. Write for our Knowledge Book, A. SotUlUng Company, 8nn Francleco. Valuable Engraving Discovered. Messrs. Christie, London auctioneers, recently received what is technically described as a first state with untrimmed margins of J. S. Smiths engraving of Reynolds portrait of Lady Catherine Pelham Clinton." It had been folded and creased in all directions, and was received through tbe mall with an illiterate note, with stamps for its return If not found worth selling, the owner evidently thinking its value not more than a few It was auctioned off for shillings. nearly Great Britain, Germany, Denmark, Portugal, Norway and Sweden, Bulgaria, Russia, and Italy. The sultan may be succeeded by a brother, and the king of Spain by a sister. The emperor of Austria, the king of the Belgians and the king ol Roumania look to nephews, while the ruler of Holland has no visible successor at present. Honor for Maryland Man. Col. Charles Chaille Long of Maryland, scientist, soldier and diplomat, will shortly receive from the general assembly of his native state a gold medal of rare beauty and costliness In testimony of his services to science and valiant conduct in central Africa and Egypt. TEA Was ever a wicked man was a royal indulgence two-hundr- ed years ago. Tisyet or woman especially fond of tea, do you think ? Snapshots of Workers. European inspectors take snapshots of men engaged on public work. The Bid for Sympathy. in some cases, are more eloThe editor of this paper went to photos, than any report could be. One quent Roanoke yesterday, and one of our showed a group or thirty men on a compositors is ill; and even the offica road paving job. Two of the thirty devil is down in Roanoke betting on were at work. the races, so being short of help, the Ask Your Druggist for Allens force is obliged to go to press a little recentI tried ALLEN'S short of news, but watch for another supply It paper. Martinsville (Va.) News, ly, and have Just bought has cured my corns, and the hot, burning Toor grocer return like btthliUiiffs Beet. your money if yoa aaal Foot-Eas- TEA So much goodness dwells in a little dry leaf I Graders Find Rich Ore. the Alaska Central miles inland from into what seems to valuable deposit of copper and gold ore. E end itching sensation In my feet which was almost unbearable, and I would not be without it now. Mrs. W. J Walker, Camden, N. J." Bold by ail Druggists. 25o- - Ferjury Statistics. of Tibet, who has 600,000,000 subjects, and the schlsmatlo pope of the Mohammedan world, who reigns at Morocco. The current notion that perjury is sne of the crimes that are on the increase is not borne out by the figures Just issued relating to the German In 1882 the number of persons convicted in that country of perjury was 1,607; in 1902 It was only 1,293, the decrease having been steady from year to year. Allowing for the great growth of the population, this means a decrease of nearly 50 per cenL tn two decades. Plso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as a congh cure. J. V. O'liaiss, 323 Third Ave. Mr. Window's Soothing Bjrrnp. ForehllSreo toethlnc. coftroa lh v'ltvs, roouoM W KoobutUA, SABuaUua,eUyepoln,cuewl4ei)liu. Heads of Great Religions. There are five great religious heads on the face of the globe. They are the pope of the Latin church; the schismatic or orthodox pope of the Greek church; the father of the faithful, ruling at Constantinople: the pope N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jun. 6. eni-pir- t- 1900. Very Bashful Man. A brown-eyelasa of this community received a very unique love-lettSunday. The letter contained a proA The graders on railroad, fourteen Seward, have run be an extremely ! I- $2,800. FOOT-EAS- Next Occupants of Thrones. There are fifteen thrones in Europe, gnd eight now promise to pass from father to son. The latter are those of a posal, but was anonymous. sisted the knlgbt was too Marion (Ark.) Reform. She faint-heart-- in- Robs Hit Employer. Paul Relmers, a German decorator, was so fond of reading his Bible In working hours that the foreman took it away from him, and found, between the leaves, a large amount of gold leaf. Relmers had been stealing V 1- - l |