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Show Ilfrtlhi 111 !! Cl Mk Germany furnishes more than one fourth of tbs foreign-bor- s Immigration to thia country, 23 1 per cent; Ireland la next, with 13 1 per cent, and Eng land folio wa with 4 1 per cent, Mr. For efeiidraa WImI-w- W muiu JMiA AiMJf rf--' . ' tiMfH fill finUCi 'Z1?. pllWUHi ufw Prvaperaas IrWa Tew Tur-Ea- y Smyrna la tha amartaat town la ao far aa trade la concerned. It doea a bigger bualneaa than Constantinople. It la tbs headquarter of tha wool and of tha mg and carpet trade, SteShar Geer's Sweet rewders fee CUUne 8uon folly need by Mather Gray, anna hi the Children's Home to 5 ew York. Core s, Yeeerfchaeaa, Bed Btotaach, Taetkiag more aad regulate tha Bawala aad Destroy Worms. Over SB.OOO taetlnsoalala. At all droggieta, 23. Semple FEU, Ad drees Allen 8. Olmsted, Lettoy, HT Y. Dle-rder- X pMMawaaaMiMMaWie( Willie Say, that boy eliding down bill with me this morning got run over nod killed. Im glad it wasnt ma. Gee, wbat n lickin Id have got! May - - Smart Set. Pain Rheumatism. Conrentraled Medicine Hamlin' , Concentrated - OU. Wl-ar- d ' Frank Laahaway of Montague, Nr Y., who died recently, wore petticoat the laat forty yearaof hta life and was buried In them. lie waa once a bearded , lady in n abow, To Care a Cold ia One day. Taka Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. AS druggists ref uad money If It falls te enra. She George IL Ilanecll, now 88, baa been n deacon of the Fifth Avenue Baptist church of New York and ita treasurer aince ISC! a week add urcnv wit a rl to lBtroduo oar ae to nr, Poultry foods Send sip. JatebsaUa CelwiU,Parayaa,Ka Carnal Teems la Anstralla. Camel teams era now being uaed for the carriage and dtatrlbutlon of mining machinery on tha North Cool-gnrd-ta gold fields, weatern Australia. HAS A NOVEL ADVERTISING IDEA Philadelphia Tall o Seete LaadaA Pee- aaU e Peospeetlve Petfee. A Philadelphia tailor haa evolved A novel Idea In adverttatng, 11a eenda through tha malls, unsealed, whit boxee of paateboard, and eaekbox prove, on being opened, to contain aoroe alx or aeven peanut. The recipient of tbla cannot help but wonder, There la nothing hut hie own on the plain tittle box and within there la no card nor anything elee to (how him whence the odd packet came. "What fool Joker," he muttera. "haa been eroding me peanuta?" and he opens one to find, neatly folded In the empty ehall, a little poster reading. Tta BO joke. We make the beet fitNew ting elothea in Philadelphia. airing style now ready." Then follow the tailor's name. The mi's, as i proves, Lite b ,a mUy split, tuelr content removed, the advertisement Inserted, and then the sheila glued together ajaln to skillfully aa to defy the joint's detection. It is a novel Idea, aaya the Philadelphia Record, la advertising and It la making a good deal ad-dre- aa of talk. Homo Women. SOME EARLY A LUXURIOUS HOME FOR OLD IIISTOM SS FIRST OFFICIAL SURVEY OF OHIO ANO INDIANA LANDS, Cab gave MnaeSetd. Oee Toaobora Appolatod . ef tba tha Wise West ratal Military Aeaa ly, Bad Charge el tba (lark. ' la a recent article relative to the founding of the Weat Point Military Academy some Information of Interest wf omitted, notably the history of the first teachers of that famous Institution. The following fact have been supplied by Mr. Solomon Mercer of Coshocton. Ohio: The first teachers in the academy were CoL Jared Mansfield and CapL Barron. CoL Mansfield's father add family came from Exeter, la England, and were among the first settlers In Ntv Haven in 1639. Mr. Mansfield began his life as a teacher In New Haven, and afterward taught at th In Phlladel- Friend' Academy there to from phis, going West Point, he , taught where In the Military Academy In 1803 and 1803, and again from 1814 to 1828, Inclusive, la the meantime, however, he was nine years in the state of Ohio, holding the position, of surveyor general of the United States. While teaching In New Haven Mr, Mansfield published a book entitled This book "Essay on Mathematics. was brought to ths notice of Mr. Jefferson, who was fond of science and scientific men. The consequence was that Mr. Mansfield became a cap tain of engineer!, appointed by -- Mr. Jefferson, with a view to hla becoming one of the professor at the West Pblnt Military Academy, then estatv lished by law. Accordingly he anil Capt Barron, also of the engineers, were ordered to Weet Point, and the first teacher of the cadet In 1803. Mr. Mansfield wa there but a short Urn when be received an appointment to a new and more arduous field In th west, where the demand for surveyors was urgent He was mad of the United States, survey Tbs position was by no means sought after by Mr. Mansfield! who was a scholar and mathematician, and fond of a quiet and retired life, but h was Induced to go under conditions which perhaps were never granted to any other officer. It was agreed that whll he was engaged in the public service in the west his commission In th engineer corps should go on, and b b entitled to promotion, although he received but one salary, that of surveyor general la accordance with this agreement, he received two promotions while In Ohio, and his at West Point waa professorship awarded him on the recommendation of Freni dent Maaison In 1814, with ths rank and pay of lieutenant colonel. At that time but a part of the lands in Ohio to which tha Indian title had keen extinguished had been surveyed. For this purpose Mr. Mansfield arrived at Marietta in the year 1803, established his office there until the month of October, 1803, at which time his headquarters were moved to Cinda-sat- L -- n. , be-ea- rn pected ot a cruel murder, amazes all who see her by her remarkable calmness. She was calm when arrested, she was calm when the prison doors closed upon her, she was calm when confronted by the evidence. In fact, th girl It rarely mentioned without some reference to her calmness. It may be an exhibition ot -- wonderful nerve, or It may be the outward manifestation ot Innocence. Anyway, she la calm. , e readers This will remind' of Orpheus C. Kerr letters that infatuated firemen who fell in Jove with a wax figure In a hairdressers window. It wasnt her beauty alone that drew him, nor her lovely garment. It vast her calmness that quickened his heartbeats, Shes ao csm, he murmured, "to very cam. And when he rescued her at th risk of hit life from a fierce conflagration his first words when rewars: to consciousness stored Wasn't it beautiful to see her a standtn there so cam Cleveland Plain Dealer. , Wall Paper is unsanitary. are temporary, rot, rub o2 and scale. ALA B ASTI NE la a Pure, permanent end artistic wall coating, really foe the brush by mixing in cold water. For Sale by feint dealers everywhere. Buy la package and beware of worthies Kal-sotni- ne Imitations. ALABASTINE COMPANY, Omni Rapids, Mich. A party of Scotchmen arrived ia Hew eav the walls and of wh)h fork last week and on their first night will be a panorama. ceilng Is town chartered a cab and told the From the ground floor to th floor friver to take them to the barrel ot the German village the pictures will y it tauceC "The entrance leads to an oval ball feet long, which will form the part of this Immense faucet The Tails will be decorated to simulate a potto, made radiant by thousands of colored incandescent lights. Eleven fifty tube depict German life and scenes. ' Tha scenes of each eouatry will appear oa the canvas as one Is gradually carried to It. The stairway at the right of the building will be spiral and will lead through a grotto. "The third floor will be the French feature here will be a Mouvillage. lin Rouge. Wine gardens will be found everywhere. Stools end chairs will be in the shape of champagne glasses upside down. "A noted feature will be the Boulevard des Itallens, a balcony circling the building. Customs of French life will be seen on this boulevard, and tiny trinkets familiar to the Frenchman will be disposed of as souvenirs. "Tba fourth floor will be the Chinese village. In a Chinese harbor will be seen miniature junks, sampans and other types of Chinese craft A miniature reproduction ot the great wail ot China will be a feature. "There will be mandarin band and Chinese restaurants, where chop-sueand other Chinese dishes will be found. In th Japanese village will be found tea flelda, GeUha girls, tea shops and a Japanese theater. "In the Scottish village one may hear the bagpipe, feast his eyes upon miniature hills, lakea and castle for - which Scotland "The top of the building will be an Immense. roof garden, with a hoopshaped balcony circling It This balcony wilt be a bicycle path, so arranged a to give opportunity for racing at night Another feature will be an enormous searchlight ' - There will be a dancing pavilion and a continuous performance. An im- y POWDER IS MADE, The Health Department of New York has seised A quantity of cheap baking powder, which It found la that city. Attention was attracted to It by the low price at which It waa being sold In th department stores. Samples were taken and the chemist of the Health Department reported th stuff to be "an alum powder,? which analysis showed to be composed chiefly of alum and pulverised rock. The powder was declared to be dangerous to health, and several thousand pounds were carted to the offal dock and destroyed. It 1 unsafe to with' these experiment cheap" articles of food. They are sure to be made from alum, rock, or other injurious matter, powders, the high class, cream of tartar brands are th most economical, because they go farther In use and are healthful beyond question. . ed lng Rlcbast Hu la Tarkejw Hassan Pasha haa ths reputation of being the richest man and the most corrupt man la th Turkish government. He Is supposed, to be worth 340.000,000 or 850,000,000, all of which he has acquired while in the service of the government.- - He has great tn fiuence with the aultan. The latter considers him one of hla taost loyal and efficient officers and trusts him Implicitly. Da Imi FnI AcOa saA Bant Shake Into your shoe, Aliens Foot-Eas- e, a powder for the feet It make tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Corea Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot andi Sweating Feat. At all Druggists and1 Shoe Stores, She. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.f Valaa af plater Plaetaatas. As showing the fluctuations In prices of pictures a canvas by Gerome, for which the owner paid $17,000 some time ago, only brought 34,000 at auction lately, while a work by Degas, costing originally $500, has so advanced In value that ths present owner has already refused $18,000 for It. Cheer Kxeereloe Betea vie ths AtchUoe, Topeke A Sente r BeUwsr. On June 10th, 11th, and 12th, tha passenger rates following first-clas- s will be effective via above route from Ogden and Salt Lake City, Utah, to Missouri River and return ..... ..$32.00 39.50 Sts Louis nod return..... Chios go and return.. ,...44.50 Final return limit September 8th, 1902. For reduced rates to other points, and information regarding excursions on other dates than above, apply to C. F. WARREN, Gen! Agent A. T. & S. F. By. 411 Dooly Block. Sait Lake City, UL - Thn Peps' SvmI Tooth. His Holiness the Pope has a passion for sweets and is never without a small box of bonbons usually toms variety of chocolate drops in his pocket. Until his severe Illness In the spring of 1899 the Pope had hardly been ailing after his accession to the papal chair and he Is said to have declared that "since I have been Pope I have had no time to consult doctors, and so I have always been welL old-tim- In ths rapid progress of migration to th west, and the success of Gov. William Henry Harrison in treating for th purchase of land from the Indians by treaty .the public survey also plnk-and-whl- ta wwra soon necessary Serattfi Beeeeast Method The Countess Allda von ' Krockow writes from Germany to the Christian Register! "Germans find that it pays to encourage peasants to free their fields of stones; the property rises la value taxing value. The stones thrown into heaps by the roadside are purchased by the district road repairPoor men, who ing commission. otherwise would have to be supported by the almshouses, are hired to break these stones, and then are trained to the work of repairing the roadbed. The money to pay the men la made by auctioneering off to the highest bidder the crop ot the fruit trees that were planted on both aides of ths highway when it was built, and which are nourished well by the' manure that falls along the road and Is pushed at Intervals by a road tender upon their roots. The purchaser of the crop sees to it that hla fruit Is sot stolen. The road commissioners have that. jaqJbothflt-aho- ut the sale be by auction, it brings In considerable. Every burgher knows bow much, because the sales of highway fruit crops are published In the local newspapers. AmL-althou- Swt Star? ( Abereethy. Lang tells this story la Longmans Magaxtne: "As to asking for votes, one would feel like Abernathy (I think It was he) who stood for a professorship la Edinburgh. He hat to canvass a bailie, who waa a grocer, Th bailie had nn attitude dim. Ton hare come, young air, ia this creesls of your career, to ask for my vot for the chair of Toxicockol-egjsir, said Abernathy, 1 have come to ask for a pennyworth of your figs. Put them up, and look smart about it. " Andrew T 1-- 0. Yosrk. louse. . "The whatr asked cabby. "Barrel house, house of the barrel, pon, sura you ken It welL "Nothing but foreigners, said cab-to himself and be drove them to a isthakeller, , The Scotchmen were Indignant. They rode back to their hotel and complained to the clerk. The clerk said is had never heard of the barrel bouse. With a superior air one of the party ffiowed him a recent number of the Meekly Scotsman and remarked that (erbapi the barrel house was not compete yet; but It did surprise him that tie clerk should know nothing about t. The clerk retd the article In tba Meekly Scotsman which described the larrel house and then marched the )arty to thuhar to have one with him. He isnt sure yet but that some such filing may have been planned for New fork, though the fact that hla first lews of it should corns by way of a Scotch weekly paper has rant doubt The paper published a pictur ipon if this novel building and the following description of what It terms "New forks Latest Amusement" "A barrel of fun a veal barrel, but nade of brick and atone and twelve Tories high Is soon to be another of pew Yorks odd attractions. It la to. Ie on Broadway, In the theater region. The steps will be the spout ot the BAKING ed of New le - ALADAGT1UE a Un aqua Building Daalgned for City . A Celaa Voae Wens A young wopan of Brooklyn, sus- - The Oaly Durable Wall Cm tin Scotch Pm par Outlines HOW CHEAP ers in western Ohio and In the Indiana territory, which waa then an unbroken wilderness, although the French had established ths post of Vincennes. - Thera may bars been a settlement at Clarksville, on the Clark grant, but except thea there was not a white settlement ia Indiana. - It became necessary to extend he surveyed lines through that state, thea only a part of the great northwest territory. For this purpose Mr. Mansfield, In the month of October, 1805, undertook the flrat public surveying expedition In Indiana- Although the military sages in their centennial at West Point failed to mention the name of Jared Mansfield as on of the first professors, he has Thar art worn whs devote flak wfcsl Bns kesw duties teeny t whoa kaew wkat k Is Is drag left many monuments In the west oa alsag day afu day soSarin latesacly. The syap. reoord that can never be obliteratSssa are 0Jal ereakeeee, diaaisas, etabthty, baa ed or forgotten. If the reader will but lag dewe, alLgoae iealiag, sad ntddaa Nataaaa. Tba go to a certain point near Paoll, In saly sals aad yvanos cote W tbla la Vognlar'o obOvaUst Compound, bkk acts directly ae tka (teas, Orange county, Indiana, he will point from ' which CoL h. Liver, kidneys, aad vital argaaa el ths tody, It serve th Th operated in Indiana. Mm ad iatponuaa he the blood. It Iwpsrts Mansfield otroegtb, vitality, and vigour is aS asms hern which point referred to is where fhh princi" Imm eoaoea aoSar. pal meridian and base lines cross A boa eampk bottle vtli be out oa appheedse ts each other at right angles', from this St. JeeeU Oil, Ltd., haltiswn. point all ths public lands In the state of Indiana were surveyed. Jared Mansfield established both meridian and base lines and established a monument at their crossing every six miles from that point, better north, east, south or west. . Colonel Mansfield mad th first map of that part of Indiana which land duly recorded -- and th fra granted to the purchaser according to th survey he made. This was the I flrat opportunity be had to establish a' principal meridian and base line, aad tor thia alone millions of people have good cause to remember Jared Mansfield, one of the first professors at West Point In 1801 i The ' Horrcl House" HER Be. Btw m The ef Cellar Sseeseet The Are ie When Col. Beard of New York diej a few years since be left a delightful home at Poughkeepsie to be used for sgsd men of culture and refinement whobave been unable In their days of labor to tars a competency for themselves. It is known as the Pringl home. Is luxuriously fitted up and a Ideal place for those who are prlvtb vged to enjoy its bomelik surroundings. For a long time there were no occupants, but at the present time Mrs Conran, the matron, baa a family of six talented old men. The latest arrival Is Prof. Albert O. Laurlenra, musician of rare accomplishment The Polish count, Caslmir Podgovlskt, who was the guest of Paderewski ot his recent visit to Poughkeepsie, 1 f another of the sextet On the occasion of the visit ot th Euterpe Music club to the hom recently, Podgovlskt looked upon theri as his special guests. Being a thorough musician, he took down his oil violin and gave a nocturne with sweet touche. "The Cuckoo and the Wanderer" and "In the Mill " by Volk-rnunAs an encore be gave Gounod's beautiful "Ave Marla, with devotional effect Podgovlskl was at one time professor ot muslc and French at Smith College, Northampton, Mass. A third member ot the family is Philip Snyder, who was for years aa editorial writer on the Philadelphia rwi. He Is well posted onandthe cur-a rent hsppenlngs ot the day has room that Is a genuine sanctum, with and books of reference, typewriter desk, James McCluskey of Paterson la No. 4. He Is a Scotchman oy birth, a lover of Scottish writers and a great lover of Paterson. W, H. Foreman was once the dramatic critic of a New York dally. He haa lost his hearing, but his eye la still bright. He occupies the circular room that was once the pride of Col, x Beord. f pencer W. Cone Is the last of the alx occupants of the nome. He waa a friend for yean of Charles ATDana, amf delights In' telling anecdotes and Incidents la the great editors career. While the Euterpe were at tha borne, says the New York Times, ths coint exhibited his workshop, which Is fitted up with carpenters and He learned the tools. trade while la ths military' service at St. Petersburg. . ( gh When D Wolf Hopper Weat t Chores I attended church ,ouce upon a time said De Wolf Hopper In an uptown cafe the other day, "In a Rhode Island city, and heard a worthy clergyman named Whlcher get tangled op In his pulpit lines to a painful degree, while the heads of his auditors were bowed In tbeir efforts to suppress laughter until they looked like rows ot taaseled cornstalks bent by the kreexa. Mr. Whlcher Rev. Th was booming the Sunday school, or, rather, he waa chiding the congregation for Ua lack ot Interest In that church annex, and Uniting that they did not act as if moved by hla admonition, became slightly incensed. I never,' be shouted, as ue banged the pulpit with his fist, knew a church which had so many parsnts 'v with no children. Ban Catarrh Cars - It taken internally. Price, 73a - and four balconies ot this structure will be devoted to the customs, pleasures and characteristics of different nation On of the moat novel features ef this pleasure palace will be the elevators In the shape of immense wine bottles, with a capacity for carrying fifty or sixty people at a trip. Each floor will have a separate elevator. Stationed at the entrance of each of the ground floor will be a guard In the attire of the country to which his elevator will carry you. This guard will speak English and the language of the country he represents. Each elevator will bear a large transparent label, on which will appear in electric Ughta the name of the wine for which the country Is noted. On tha elevator tor the German village a 111 appear the label Rhlne Wine; on the one for France, Bordeaux, for Hungary Tokay. "On the ground floor will be cigar, ck&dy, florist and drug apartments, an la formation agency, telephone booths, S telegraph and cable office, and a Sjwspaper agency, The center of the fioor will be occupied byone of the largest fountains In the world. Water-Il- l effects. Including a miniature Niagara Falla, will afford Interest and floors Measure. ."The German village will be on the Rhejn Die Wacht am soiond floor. aad other popular airs of the FatWr-lan- d will be played by little German hinds and by orchestras In different Here will be parts of the village. Carman peasants and peasant girls txat singing, some dancing, some tell-lx- g fortunes, all dressed In th costume. Tiny kitchens, beer houses. Inns vfli be prominent everywhere. A miniature Rhine will be a feature of th village. Along the banks will appear miniature rastlea, some In ruins. A part of the village will be devoted to concert garden. as open-ai- r The stairways will be novel There v he two flights to the top, each epu to every floor. The stairs at the Itfi will be the moving stairway. Thia stairway will rise through a tunnel or na-tion- mens captive balloon, tn which trips can be taken to a height ot 100 feet about the roof garden, will he another feature. "Eight months will be fequlred to complete this enormous banel. Ground will be broken for the undertaking hortly.- - Male Taataa la Beaat Maidens who have passed their thirtieth year may now claim that they represent the moat perfect and advanced type ot maidenhood, and look down upon girls who marry before 35 as very much more akin to savages, for It is a well known fact that th sg ot marriage advances with dvlllsa-tloa- .' Everywhere th more mature woman la to the fore. Pises Cura is (he best medial ne we ever use foraUeffeettonsef the threat end huseWM. 1 ISOS (X Yeahurau. lad.. Islam. M Preaaealttaa Proved Tna A sensational case of coincidence lalam t Xowi tently occurred at Newport. Mr. Charles He visited a noted specialist,' and, Anstee, th ot the Potters after waiting an hour, had an oppor- Arms Hotel, proprietor had a presentiment that tunity to pay a fee and narrate his per h would die on the anniversary ot tha sonal misery ot Insomnia. The medi- death of hla wife, who fell and fraccal man listened and suggested on tured her skull a year ago. His friends remedy after another, with each and tried to laugh him out ot it, but h every one of which the visitor said he was found dead In bed at 5 o'clock a had unsuccessfully experimented. few mornings ago exactly a year aftFinally- - the specialist Wrote a pre- er hla wifes fatal accident pascription and handed it to hla n tient Hotod Ctttos. "What la It?? Inquired th latter. Chicago le probably tbe moet widely - "Oh, a bromide," said the doctor; "It known city in tbo 'United State will benefit you. . Noted for Its push and enterprise as "Rats!" said the other, degenerating well as belpg tbe Windy City. Into slang; "tried em all; they aint Milwaukee also has a world-wino good, further receding into had reputation on account of the quality aa grammar. as the quantity of Its annual prowell The doctor, evidently annoyed, bowed, and handing the man back his duction of beer. fee, destroyed the prescription and St. Paul, while possibly hot so genersaid: Theres only one thing left ally well known as tbe two former you had better fry sleeping cars." cities. Is nevertheless noted in many ways, and Is one of tbe popular Twin Light PImiIi Otw. Cities of the Northwest, Th discoloration of precious stones All three arq famous cities and their when they have been exposed to the air names combined form th name of for a long time Ie well known. Emeralds,1 rubies and sapphires are less sus- Americas greatest . railway, famous ceptible to atmospheric infir snee, but and noted the world over for Its superoven they, says th Tatier, ora not ex- ior management, elegant equipment, empt from change. If two rubles of splendid service and general adoption the same size and shade are kept for, of all the latest safety appliances for say, two yean; one tn a showcase and (he comfort and safety of Its patrons. the other In absolute darkness, an exIts electric lighted trains are noted amination of the stones at the end of that timq will Invariably show that th the world over. It is the short line between Omaha showcase ruby has become distinctly and In Chicago, and like superior articles color. The most sensitive lighter of all stones to variations In light Is of merchandise is, once tried, always th opal. This stone draws ita mar- used. velous rainbow reflections from nuTry it the next time yon go isst. merous little clefts, which allow tha I L. Downtno, light to pass and reflect JLln different Commercial Agent, Chicago, Milwaudirection Often the opal stands th kee A St. Paul Bailway, Skit Lake manipulation of cutting and polishing CityUtah. and all of a' sudden It splits. well, de |