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Show TKANS-PACJFICTHAD- WecKJy Persons Cure Pr. for Brain Fag. dent Jord in of Stanford university, Col'fortiU, Is a hard norker hlm-c!- f, and has hut little pittance with a person With Indolent hab:tir Ih spite of6 everything, however, the tasks Imposed on the yo.th.'F under his rare Here have proven too mart) for them. and there on or twy wjtild drop otit of the rate afcd were eoon forgotten by almost every bcdy at the, university. These fallings by the wayside were the iubje( t of frequent thought on the n. chief elertrldan part of John J of the unlvers'ty, whose misfortune It waa to have a friend drop out through Inability to maintain the pace. Ur. Lewhr set hlmailf to the task of Iferovcnng some way of giving back ward students such aid as would pre-"ithem from filling behind. That waa five yeara s?'b and IfLewln Js now ready to give the necessary stimulant In auch cases. Ills investigations !.. sp-m- l Ctronimo imane. r'-u!- si If, at.J - . 11b I 3 , fr'eo U of iml gn'iy p Ms . ?T Irr e of t and , a n 1. hut pm at othr Will ffurtt Leper. Miss Ella May Clemmons plater of Mm. Howard Gould, baa just sailed for China to devote the remainder of her Ufa to humble service In a leper settle-- r ?! MD more fright-tha- n that of where father Damien By Molokai, gave up his pii. And for what? The Impulse Is a purely spiritual one. She has become a devotee. " She believes that a divine obligation has been laid - upon - her to Immolate herself for the most wretched people on earth. In setting sale for the East she has no compunctions, no regrets. Not on her rich sisters account will It be any aicrlflce to her to leave forever this, hemisphere. Mrs. Howard Gould, rapt In the gayetles of Parle, which her- husband's i million , bring within her reach, holda no communication with the votary and allows It to be understood, that she has no sympathy with her war-strick- - e. ' .1 - , jc have mind. The Apaches led by Geronlmo sere known as the B E. a: or predatory wh o bostlles." ranged the territories of Aflzon and New Mexb o until, worn out In path e, Lieutenant General Sheridun order 4 the pursu.t, of the mercieapture and less chief and his followers. The expedition waaled by the kite George Crook, who effected a meeting with Geronlmo March 23, 1SSG, To the demand for an unconditional surrender the Apache chief declared that he would give himself up only on rendition that the bind, with Its fami'ks. v be sent East for a period not to exceed t ko years and them return 4a the 61R - BERKELEY- - MILNE, On the way the Indians a captain of the roval navy, calls for escaped and General Crook withdrew, more ample s .refaction than Mr. Astor his place bring tikin by General Milet has as yet coni (led. Then followed the famous pursuit of Geronlmo and Ills last capture by the Grant V Grandchild. present general of the army. Prlnccet, Gant h e.ne, to whom a bob was bom in Fans tho cither day, wat Americanizing Canada. Now tnat the tacadian parliament Miss Julia firnt Grant, the grand-- " has adjourned, after a sess.on of six daughter of Ulys.-e- s S. Grant and Julia Dent Grant. Miss Grant became the months, the newspapers of the d miin-loare calling attention to the leugta Uiinccss Cantudiz ne la.--t summer. of its session and are discussing nays The wedding wai In which It may be shortened. It Js adsoemnized In Newmitted generally that six months la port and was one rather long to spend In transacting the of the principal business of 6,000,000 people, and that events of the seaunless the members change their presson. The princess ent methods of doing business the Is a young woman of striking length of the session will Increase. The members themselves say that the The strong l.nea-- , chief fault la that they get only $l,0uu nents of the for six months work, and say that reproduced in their pay should be Increased or made .he face of hit proportionate to the length of the soft- sessions. This remedy, --"however, tied and beautified, would not be likely to shorten the of course, by her duration. pf.parllaroctit, A better plan sex- She has th9 is that suggested by John CharLon, hair and The Pnueess. ' brown M. P., whofsays that some way should eyes of her mothpr, Mrs. Fred Grant, be found to check the and her figure la tall, willowy and style of oratory that mistakes quan- slender. The Cantacuieoes trace their He favors the Intity for Quality. descent back to the Emperor of Bytroduction of the plan used In the for, although they are R11 zantium, American house of representatives of slanlzcd now, they are Greek, or Bylimiting the time for debate and then zantine, rather. In blood. dividing It Into five and ten minute allotments for certain members. Chicago ' Autocanj Automobile rules for a nickel each VOidotv of Lucum Mrs. Llscum is prostrated with grief have been added to the other Joys A country-visitor- s, over tho fate of her hustmndrthe hero --Chicago offers-t- o omnifirm three electric goods dry put of Tleu-Tslwho fell while leading buses Into commission last week. Seven more carriages will be added tt the line as fast as they can be turned out of the factory. The new carriages look like overgrown theater wagon them through the possession i.opplncs as an entre port for ' Ji'iuon of American goods in ,1 Grouped aroand Manila of distribution lies the 0104 popafated part. of kd.UiO.OlO of people form the n of Japan,' Asiatic Ratsla, .enh Cochin China, Slam, h Ind,a, Australasia, the Dutch n.iiis, etc., all of which irer to Manila, as a point bution, than any other great ,..l center, while such cities via. Shanghai and others are as v nila as Havana Is to the c.ty 11 p, , C', Gerom-mo- s a!(s will the-wor- ld. 4 . eL - X- a 0. .t u Vork lommerce of this seetlon, of ' M iii.la may be made a g eat o, -- T.a center, now amounts to .111 $2,000,000,000 Bo per annum, a:. annual purchases $1,200,000,000 p r jinimL or an average of $110,000,-- 0 a month. Practically all this vast 1 : . .wmh it sends to other parts of the irld is expended for the class of t M, tor which the people of the-i I: vi States are now seeking a mar-lCotton and cotton goods, breads,-, s. dairy products. piovislons, fadtureA of. iron, steel and the pioJuits of the farm and factory, arc di manded by the people of that part of tho world. In most cases the apparent dlsposl-- t on n for these countries to purchase f.um the people of the United States Tattir than from any other section or peerptc,. IhinaTwhleh In iSSOJook only 23 p.r cent of her Imports from the Initid States, in 1833 took 8.2 per cent of her Imports from this country. J. pan, which in 1S93 took only 6 8 per cent of her imports from the United States, took 14.4 per cent of her Imports from this country in 1S98. Our exports to China, which ih tha fiscal year 1803 were but $3,900,457, were In lsS9 $14,493,440. Our exports to Japan, , 1 wood-hjollc- . IIITTINO THE BRUSH, have convinced him that electricity Is a sort of elixir of youth; that It Is a sure cure for brain fig. and that it will nurture the mind of youth and stimulate the. wisdom of age. Mr. Lewin has ponderous and exact ways of describing Just how all these miracles may bs performed, but the young men at the university express the same Ideas when they refer to the treatment as "hlttlug the brush." They nnanlmously agree that by following the human tbs electricians Instruct brains ability to withstand tbs fatigue of labor Is vastly Increased. Those who have taken the treatment are also at one In the assertion that no barm comes therefrom. 1' . that the tt not only la tt .0 in that of X; which the people of the be able to make in pp.neS, while amounting to 1. .,ons of dollars, is, however, to that which ii m compared t ' oj of fH r - bumble ex-- 1 m m of EngUih a n ' -- 1. Vr Pall- - !.vs ago Is not 1 the V c a is of Sir t v rt (man bin-- ! r- tt . it the code, ' tent In thi constant fretting and a growing despondency over bH -- hie h s .. w the n v f TEARS. of Manll M o Dtelrlbatlnf for China aod Now Largo tsafoiw of VovtrUl d uu 1rtMluc 1 htirlui apulocy Mall Gan '.te a - iffiiMun to e it MUiio Berk rOURFOLD -- 0 f out-om- , SEVF. XltTHIN 1 Geronlmo, the Ap-- i be Kilcr, has t of become a raving maniac as a his being held In cayt.v at cording to a dispatch frail) V.n u. lnd T. With other Apxche brave- - h lias been aprlsoner at Foit S 11, f)! dioms for ten of the fourteen years sin 'ft their capture by the army. It is said that captivity wreiked increased Has May Fight Duet, It Is bol evi d by u any t, .d a drel e of the not unlikry to p ibe iJ- nt he half, Mi In- - li.s t I RURAL n y. - were $3,195,494, were $17,2o4,68S in 1899, and in the fiscal year of 1900 reached $25,000,000. To British Australasia our exports, which In 1893 . were In and reached the Hawaiian Islands cur exports in 1893 were $2,827,603, and In 1899 $9,303,470, while those of V,. fiscal year 1900 were $14,000,0C0 To the Philippines our exports In 1897 were less than $100,000, and in the year 1900 exceeded $2,000,000. Taking Asia as a whole, our exports, which in which In 1894 were $3,131,939, 1809 $19,777,129, 000 In 1900. To wind-jammi- 1893 were but $25,090,-trandchll- $16,222,354, In 1900 d, were In 1899 and amounted to or four times those of 1893. To Oceania our exports, which In 1893 were $11,199,477, were in 1900 In excess of $40,000,000. Thus our to Asia and Oceania, which In 1893 were $27,000,000, were in 1909 upward of $100,000,000, or four times those of seven years ago. That such fields still remain open to us in the Orient Is, however, shown by the following table, prepared by the Treasury Bureau of Statistics from the latest available data, showing the. value of the imports and exports of the Orient and the share of the United States therein: $48,360,161, $65,000,000, Si Mg' Imports. 221,5o2,305 Exports, t ifow lloU Ttvo BritUh Beautie. 110,81' cont-olic- one-thir- d red-gol- d ilrcjiporl a Republican adm'nTIfratlon THE WAR WITH SPAIN. that conceived and t.vecuted the idea of Its Beginning i(i4 Knillng from Our .jrighttDing the Lome of the farmer, Diplomatic KtamJpo$nt educating h.s children, increasing the The instructions given to ' Minister value of his land, compelling the ImWoodford for his guidance at Madrid provement of the roads, and bringing the directed him to lmpitss upon the gov- - him news of the markets and-o- f ernment of Spa!n th sinerne w,sh of weather, so ns to scaure him a better the United States to lend its aid In se- - j price for his crops by delivering his curing a peace honorabe alike to Spain j daily mail to him oa his farm. Every and the people of Cuba. A new admin-- j Democratic house of representatives Istration in the Spanish government s'nce the idea was first broached of encouraged the hope that, a change of carrying the mails to the rural The might he adopted. wh.ch would l.triQts lias declaied, against. It result In the purification of Cuba, but Forty-thir- d Congress, with a Democrat this hope was doomed to disappointfroimNpth Carolina as chairman of s, ment After long and patient negotia- the cofnmittee on postolfices and tion in the interest of peace, to the proclaimed the plan impossible evils whlih had so long pressed upon and turnel It down. Postmaster Gen- -, n. this country in consequence of tl in- eral HIssell, Postmaster General PosTmik-terand First surrection,' was added a serico of Incidents that rendered ncc"sary, on Grncmt Jones, in the Cleveland admin- April 21, 1898. an armed intervention istration, all took up the cry of ex- -t to terminate the humiliation imposed travagartie and impossib'lity of execuConsequently, little or nothing' by the condition of affairs. The brief tion. and brilliant period of war with Spain was done to give the farmers access to was followed by preliminaries of peace, the mails t.ll Cleveland went out of ' signed on August 12, providing for the olllce. over When iFirrt Assistant Postmasten relinquishment of sovereignty Cuba, the cession of lorto Rico and General Perry S. Heath took up thi other Islands belonging to Spain In the rural service under the direction of West Indies, together with an Island the president and the postmaster gen- In the Ladrones, to be selected by the eral, in March, 1S97, it was languishing United States, and the occupation of to the point of extinguishment, and in1 territory in the city and vicinity of a few months more would have been Manila, pending the conclusion of a starved to death, like Mr. Wanamakers treaty of peace which should deter- village delivery. The official reports of1 mine the control, disposition, and gov- the, postofiice department record that it was almost with surprise that Presl-- I ernment of the Philippines. -When the commissioners of the dent McKinley and those to whom he United States, sent to Paris to nego- Intrusted the administration of postal tiate a treaty of peace with the repre- affairs learned that there was such a sentatives of Spa'n, confronted the thing as an experimental rwral free-de- problem of settlement, it became evi- livery mail service in progress.. dent that the interests of the populaThey at once grasped Its possibilities tion of the Philippine Islands.the peace and advocated its immediate developof the world, and the consistent comment, and a Republican congress genpletion of the table of Mhe- - pacification erously secondeiLMheir efforts. Under undertaken by the government alike their vivifying touch it has grown undemanded a cession of the entire Phil- til there is now not a state in the union ippine archipelago to the United States. that has not felt the civilizing and eduAt the same time justice to a foreign cational influence of rural free mail foe and the magnanimous spirit of the delivery., anil not one that does not deAmerican people seemed to require a sire a further expansion of the service. lecognition of the actual expenditures On the 1st of June, 1S00, there- were of Spain in the internal improvement L200 rural services in actuaLpperatlon of the islands, and the sum of $20,000.-00- 0 and 2,000 applications for an extension waa agreed upon as a suitable comof the system in process of establishpensation for the transfer of this ment by special agent3 detailed for that great archipelago, whose extensive purpose. the The appropriations for the rural fref public lands, estimated at one-hawhole aiea of the islands, rich in mindelivery service have been increase! : eral wealth and forests of valuable from $50,000, in the fiscal year 1897-9then to $130,000 timber, will prove abundantly sufficient to $130,000 in lS:'S-9and lastly to $1,730,000 for to Justify this expenditure and to pro- in vide resources for a future goverfa-me- the present fiscal year, Three years experience ha3 shown j j post-icad- WU-sot - lf 1 (W 97,822,000 1900-190- nt 1. rural districts the malls can he distributed' ter the domt-cllof the addressees - or In boxes 'placed"wTihTn'T:ei;o5jTile'cifs'fance'bf the farmer's home, at some cross-roa- d or other convenient spot, at a cost per piece -- not exceeding that ol the free delivery In many of the cities of he United States. In the vast majority of communities where It has been tested the rural free delivery service has obtained so strong a hold that public sentiment would not permit Us discontinuance. It has been a revolution, and revolutions do not move backt ward. , It costs very little more than the old colonial stylo of postal service which it supersedes, and It invariably- - brings a large and compensating Increase in the amount of postal receipts turned into the treasury. But even if it does cost, more Than the obiolete old plan, ate not the farmeVs'cntitled to some of the bfncflts of the government which they help so liberally to support by their taxation? The country can well afford to continye and extend a system which makes belter citizens and hap-pi- er homes an (L contributes largely to the mental, moral and material advancement of the plain people. of mail has come Rural free to stay, and the Republican administration, wh'ch brought' it into being, will stay with it. that in Our Mall on the Ocean. es L Par-lamen- or-M- n, i y the-Briti- k rd 1 4d-p- g -t t . .old-tim- plexlon. Experienced beaux and Judge of beauty who could remember the Countesses of Dudley and Warwick, Lady Helen Vincent and the Marchioness of Londonderry In their prime, conceded that the young Lady Chesterfield surpassed them all,, and tor the present the daughter of the enormously rich ship ownsr of Hull are the leading beauties uf the moet tpwhlooable society of Great Britain. t jt , rr.n-ra- Ka-- It was ,0ne flLJJteJavor jtg clahus put forth M.l'bf.OOO ,r dlf9 American free traders who oppose .. by Asiatic Russia, fee the upbuilding of our fciatn legislation IsIhwU j 1hiliptnne shipping In the foreign trade Is the Hawaiian Islands one which pretends that the subsidies Mauritius pYrsla THE AUTOVAN. paid by Great Britain is meiely for the Celon ! of mails, and they endeavor nt eleven persons beside The driver, French Kast carriage Inam! hive a maximum speed of to the impression that it is a create 7rtl (Wl 1.066 S5 twenty dia. 44 6.68S.CO0 2, 482, COO n .. s an hour. purely business transaction, having no Ivoiea regard for the interests of the Br.t'.sh Totsl Asia and Jl.Jl4.0S7.OT0 MRS. LISCUM. tL163.I22.000 . thus subsidized. But the fa lacy Oivania ships Che Organ to Co. the Ninth regmient. U. S A. She is of this claim is apparent when we find v lx tt.Tiuusly now at Manila w.th Captain Ahern na lonqlderlni t, an eminent Briton, a member of b.uislrtng the band his wife. famous-fo- r his flgitat'on and 11 4 it tint C.'V frowns upon till Their Commercial and Financial Relation in favor of reduced charges for mail Fiifc-Ce- nt do n M, of that to Mother Countries. instrum at Telephone. J. Hennikr Heaton transportation other of 1. , ,;i fo.low the examp a J The American Toll Telephone the bureau An official publication the quotation in a let; following tnqke The n In Looked-up19:2. J. i8 as 0f styptics, issued some months ago, has recently commenced duuinesa-i- n on Postmaster Gento ler It shows that the colonies, protectorates. Cleveland, O., the scheme being to a Id: c b'essing, and, a few years ago. Said Mr. Heateral c people who are 1;; world of eratter automatic telephones of an lm" 4 belt- - PF-the number on: and dependencies Gtorz' I. of the land Lcuine, Macge TjM-- 1.16. They occupy two-fiftproved des.ri;tl)n When, however, I Introduced a ,Vld" u v barrel oigan s.'n'U-- i "4f, through Cleveland surface of the globe, and their popula-Go- n resolution on the subject on March 3) (1. 1, ('till to Lke tin have ir and other cities. the of entire people I r,v i one-thilast, Mr. H. H. Fowler, then Secretary crus a. id Mr wick lntcrru;, led by The Instrument beof the earth. Their total imports avto the Treasury, stated that already, the foods of Ps tempestuous w. ing introduced ha erage $1,500,000.00(1 worth of goods aneven at the present high charges, there dU a. novel sum fea V39t several more thm is a loss of 365.090 a year, or 1.000 nually, and of this turrs. It Is purel. cent IaMpurchased from the a day, on the foreign and colonial serCo Wed a Baron. mechanical, havlm mother country. Of their exports, vice of the British postoffice. Mi S3 Ikvsic M u do.i.ild of Gh'c no electrical con mo, which considerably exceed imports, 40 The difference between the subsidy-payinwhose engicrmimt to Ppron Uu.n'.b sections, and oper cent go to the mother country. British nation and our own Is per de Hirst h of M.mi.b, ! atin? entirely indeare annually expended in that the former loses about $2,100 090 ;, v. s an. 6ums Xrge nuunced lapendent of the telefu, it.elvtd Lor tie construction of roads, canals, rail- on the transaction, while the United -', 0 phone. The signal postal service, States, on the other hand, earns telegraphs, ways. to the operator U In Uhlcag . V h . etc., but In most cases the about $2 000.000 a year net, over exschool, made by a mechanical buzzer, which in Vur-.care pro- penses, for the carriage of its foreign she present annual expenditures can bp heard through the telephone. c?T duced by local revenues or ar repre- malls. The passage of the ship subThe coin Is placed on the horizontal from the Gnn ciia sidy bill now pending in Congress, sented by local obligations. a needed reform box. The coin drops, tripping the in the carriage of American malls, and CoveutGarden 1S97 were $753,000,000. and their exbuzzer, the spring of which has been Theatre In ispndon. penditures $745,000,000. While the pub- at the same time build up our shipe While fulfilling the lic debt In the more Important and ac- ping trade to , its previously wound by the act of pushing forward the tilde- .- If the coin Is h communities engagement aggregates tive of these a nickel It Is shown at the glass In the succumbed to anr. is represented by can large sum, it tt a but email coin it falls center, attack of nervous a!s railway9, public highways, har- Porto Rico The imports and exports of Porto through without tripping the busier, brocat hors. irrigation, and other rublic !m Mlsa Macdonald. The hole in the slid Is exactly the on by overwork, nrovementa intended to stimulate comRico for the month of May, 15;0, were size and thickness of the nickel, to and returned tpChkago, arriving merce and production, the railroads in each. about 100 per cent greater than !s that It Is Impossible to us a mutilated AugusL In Janua-- Ust she aexime( ia the British colonies alone for the corresponding month of the coin, Tbl It nt of tht atrongett fea- leading roles with the Castle Square operation 53,000 miles, and Is in no year 1S99. This is the poverty and disaggregating ture claimed for the device, elnc slot company, and wu expected .. she i tasiance assumed by or a charge upon tress to which the Democra'fe plat-for' ' u machine tr frequently thrown out of would Join tee Sax sald the Rcpubllcajas bad doomed wmpaBy the mother country. ai4ar hy being dogged. naxt autumn.., V oolonies. protectoraXee, de- - the Island.U26 gq eoni-jmn- M Rural free delivery of mull is the, offspring of theMcKiriToy administration of the prstothre department ItSi development front thejxaignificant be- -i an approprla-- 1 g.nning of 44 routns-antiomif $40,trHJ for the fis- - a! year which, clobed in 1837 to its present magnificent' proportions with tne rural r jutes nunn btred by the thousands and an appro- rmuon of tl.7a0.WKi voted lor lis further extei.s oj daring the present fiscal jcV , has ak Ken brought about by the MiKinlty govrnmcnt. A move mint to bruaden the free delivery of the malls was started by Postr:iurer General Wanamaker, under the Rcpujhean a Jm.n.stration of Gen ilarri-on- . It took the firm of villag. free delivery, and was more an extension of city del. very to smaller communities than a free delivery to farmers. Hut, limitei as waa, its scope aud successful though it was in increasing postal receipts ami postal futilities, it encountered Democrat c opposition; and when Mr. Cleveland came In, hie Ptmastcr general, feaung its effect in popularizing Republican principles and d.ssPnnnM.ng Republican literature.or- - 82.!77,0u0 1 VV 1899-190- S6a.217.000 278,706.000 109.955. 00 Scpubllrta. Fuller (tiled. ? The beautiful Gunning sisters a century ago, the lovely Moncrtaffe sisters forty years back, and now the handsome Wilson sisters, whose beauty Is the talk of English society, keep alive the tradition that once In every fifty years nature Is pleased to create la one family a group of physically perfect women. Two of the Wilson ladles, the young Countess of Chesterfield and Miss Louise Wilson, made their bow to the queen a few days ago; In fact, the countess was presented only this year, and though there were scores of fair young matron and debutantes at the drawing room, she aus.iy distanced them all by her marvelous hair; brown" eyes and matchless com-- I FREE DELIVERY. two-fifth- Panorama sEsdents and "spheres' ex influence." s which make tiplheuiul belong to Great Ilrita.n, their r (including the native feudatory states ol India) being considerably more than one-ha- lf the grand total of colonial population. Prance Is next ia order in number, area and population of cold onies though the area by France Is about that cf Great Britain, and the population of her colonies les? than one-- s ith of thoeof Great Britain. Commerce between the successltii colonies and therr mother countiles Is in neaily all cases placed on- - piaCMcallj the same I is s as that with other countri s, good3 from home couataloa xecelyme lu the va-.- t majority of case no alvantagcs over those fromeOthor countries In impoit duties, and other exactions of this character. We have g.ven to Porto Rico and Hawaii vastly belter tieatment than Is usual with colonies since we make the ratio of duty on between Porto Rico and the I mtej States but 15 per cent of tjiat with other countries, and even that but temporary; while In the case of HjwuI, which voluntarily neked aJmis i m, we have continued and enlarged the freedom of Interchange which already ex.steJ under reciprocity. pendencies E ff nn. It' m ae-Gc4- iCt About Net, railin' Hoks, sold in Omaha, Nebraka hogs May he Cist, atli.50 per head rnoie than oh-tsame date four years ago, yet the World-HeralMr. -- Bryan's personal organ, which is published in Omaha, rsserted very vigorously during the 1S?6 campaign that the prices of no farm products couTf advance without thff free and unlimited coinage' of silver. d, The state of South Dakota Js mak-t- n rearrangements to lUalf ' in November. |