Plymouth Tribune, Volume 8, Number 10, Plymouth, Marshall County, 10 December 1908 — Page 7

UNITED STATES SENATOR FROM SOUTH CAROLINA PRAISES PE RU NA.

Ex-Scnator M. C. Butler. Dyspepsia Is Ofhn Caused By Catarrh of ihe Stomach Peruna Iiclitvcs Catarrh of the .Stomach and Is Therefore a liemcdy for Dyspepsia. llon. M. C. Duller. U. S. Sen ator from South Carolina for two terms in a toter from Washington, P. C, writrs to the IVruna Medicine Co., as follows: '7 can recommend Peruna for dyspepsia and stomach trouble. I have been using your medicine for a short period and I feel very much relieved. It is Indeed a I wonderful medicine, besides a gcod tonic." GATARRII of the stomach is the correct name for most casts of dyspepsia. Only ail internal cntarrh remedy, such as Peruna, is available. Peruna Tablets can now be procured Ask your Druggist for a Free Peruna Almanac fcr 1909. If Yoa Have a Rose Like Ose of Tfcess Let He Cörreet IL HAVE AN UGLY H2S2. A defarrred rare f Doils any face. It Is the first thin teen and !ast f-rKutten. Anybody can et rid of thar commonrlat loc' t.mfilT by havirx tba features marie to harmonize Moöern specialists have Jevted tuccfjiful nr. it. od for ImproviE and bc-auiir.vinn the .'ace. D?v. SAUN2EHS Says ANYBODY CAN EE MADE EEAUTIFCL. Dr. Saunders I a face ereclalttt with the latest and moat tmrres-ful method for treating the face He 1 considered the moat skillful specialist in thicars. If vou have aiy of the followlnir face blemishes eheck off Sam in list and tend to Dr. Saunders: frown Furrows. Red Note. lfonth-:o-No?e Line. Powder Marks. Flabhr. Wrinkly EyellJi. Factirr Cheeks cr Face. Wrir.kle. Iro1rtln Ear. Prvk PittlSKS. I.lo Malformatior-. Fear. Drooutrc Mouth Corcerj r!mB. Ftrrv Chin. Pli-hmarkt. Flabbv Neck. Mole. Hollow Cheeks. Euoerflnoas Hair. AU letters confidential. Address BR, -SAÜHÄS 1 48 State St., Rcccs 4C2-4-6, CLlzzzi Ir.cToae 2-. stamp far Free Booklet. It will be nt kt pialn envelope. It explains bow any faca can be beautified. HELP MST XIAVINO ivnMFw Cartel's Preparation II UM til TW Maaaara Remedy, at Pro, zil) mA for hMk "Keller Tmw W TBE5CU OKlb CO.. V. 24 t., A. Y. City leeberg Gardens. "We passed many icebergs coming home from Europe, said a Philadvlphian, "aod on one of them a garden Lloomed. "It tvn a beautiful sight. The great berg shone like an enormous emei-;M In the sun. nnd in one level recess, fenced in by pale green peaks, a yellow garden gleamed. The captain said that iceberg gardec6 are iot uncommon. Moss, It FCfias, is brought on to the bergs by animals' feet - The mow grows, it decays. It forms a soil for the polJen of buttercups and dandelions that are blown through the air during the brief arctle summer. "Soon the incredible spectacle presents itself of a great cold berg adrift in the oalt eea with yellow floweri Bp ringing from the hard, cold ice. 0lr "DltOMO QUININE' That ta LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for the Signatar of . W. GROVE. Used tha World over to Cure a Cold In One Day. 25c A Fly Stopped a Trais. In north Wales there is a section of Vlngle line worked on the e.ectric train rtaff system. When the signalman tried recently to draw a s'ff from the instrument In order to dispatch a train te was unable to do so. The failure of the instrument lasted for nearly Jivt tours. Investigation revealed that a Email fly had crept into the instrument and apparently, died while in the act of examining the delicate mecanism of one Of the contacts, leaving its tiny body as an Insuperable barrier to the postage of the electric current. CJreal Western Railway Magazine. Deadly Jnanlt. "Bicfcy, why did you strike Tommy?" "He called me a sarcasm affinity." "What did he mean by that?" I dnnno. That's why I slagged 'im. Chicago Trioune. Stamps up to the value or $.yU have teen issued Ij the government of Victoria, Austral. a. Keep It on Hand! Cougha and colds may aeue any member of the family any time. Mas 7 bad col J baa bees averted and much akkaeaa and aulfenog baa been saved by the prompt ose of Pno'a Care, fbere ia noUiinf t ice it to break opcoighr and colds. There ia do brooc uai or lung trouble that it rJi not relieve. Free from oiäales or harmful ingredieDta. Fio foe children. I"' it At all drogguta'. 25 eta. r Ü

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te.Iire' Surrender in Grant. Gen. Horace Forter was on Oeu. Grants staff in those momentous mial days of the tremendous struggle between the North and ihe South, and he was an eyewitness of the closing scenes. He was present when the surrender of I.ee took place, and It was he who handed Gen. Lee the pencil with tthii-h the Confederate leader corrected the rough draft of the terms of the surrender handed to him for his inspection by Gen. Grant. . In order to give the children of a Brooklyn (X. Y.) school, before whom he spoke a few years ago, a most realistic picture of the surrender, Gen. Porter arranged the platform to correspond with the room in which the capitulation took place, says the NewYork Times. In the center was a table to show where Gen. Grant sat while he wrote the terms. In one corner was a smaller table to show where Iee sat, booted and spurred, and with his diamond-studded sword hanging by his side. Three chairs were placed together to re-present the old-fashioned sofa I at o!ie side of the room, and the positfvns of the fireplace and of the windows and doors were all marked. To all intents and purposes Geu. Turtcr stood once more, after the lapse of so many years, in that small room of the brick house at Appomattox where the closing chapter of the war was written by the two chief actors, and as he described, w ithout any show of oratory, but in an easy conversational style, the surrender, to its miuutcsi details, including the small items of the orsonal appearance, the by-talk and the mmners of those who took part In the surrender. Its dramatic features were pictured before the eagerly listening children in a very effective and realistic style. The general held up In sight of hi audience, one after tvnother, a piece of the fln of truce sent by Gen. Lee to Gen. Grant, a slice of the famous apple tree and the Identical iencll with which Lee corrected the draft of the surrcucTer. He exhibited photographs of the. two tables used by the generals. The iucil,M said Gen. Torter, 'has not been rewarded properly for the part It has played. It should have been brevetted Into a pen." The nag of truce, Geu. Porter told the children, was an impromptu afTair, end was. in actual point of fact, the cleaner of two towels which a Confederate officer had shortly before bought for ?I0 in Confederate money. -That oilieer," said Gen. Porter, "was evidently abound to keep clean at any cost." There were other sallies of humor through the lecture. "I will begin my story," Gen. Torter said, "two days before the final surrender, when Gen. Grant reached the village of Farmvllle, on the Appomattox river. It was there the correspondence opened between Grant and Lee. "At noon on April 7 Gen. Grant and hi staff took possession of the comfortable piazza of the only hotel In Farmvllle. Au old army surgeou soon brought us word from the Confederates of a conversation in which Lee had said that his retreat had become a rout, that It would be wicked for him to shed the blood of his men any longer, and that he felt he ought to surrender. "That afternoon a long, lean, lank Confederate came up to the porch of the hotel. "'Who are you?' wc asked. Im a Confederate he said, 'and I reckon I am the only iwrtlon of my regiment that has succeeded In holding together. I own this hotel, and I stopped off to see how things were getting along.' "He probably had lK'vcr had so many guests before and at such reduced rates." Geu. Porter described the memorable froene that nipht, when the Union soldiers ou their way to fight Lee across the river marched past Grant, carrying torches and singing "John Brown's Ilody." Gen. Grant slept that night in the bed Lee ha4 occupied the night before. At midnight the answer was received from lA-e to Grant's letter advising him to surrender. Lee wanted to learn the proposed terms. "Grant answered the next morning," ald Gen. Torter, "making the terms libercl. Grant moved forward that night. th3 night of April 8, in order to get closer to Lee. At midnight, while in great pain from loss of sleep and anxiety, another letter was received from Lee. He sat up on the lounge in the farm house and read it by the light of a candle. Lee said he had not yet determined to surrender, but would like to meet Grant at 10 a. in. the next day and discuss geueral terms of peace. "Grant was a military officer and could not do as Lee suggested. So, after reading over Lce8 letter slowly, he said: "General Ixe still wants to fight To-morrow he shall have all he wants. The school children broke out Into loud applause at this siithnent. Alout daybreak on April 0," said General Porter, "I found General Grant pacing the lawn In front of the house, with his hands tQ his head. He wouldn't take coffee, nnd he refused to go into an ambulance. Mounting his big gray horse he Joined Sheridan, and had worked his way to within eight miles of Appomattox, when he was met by a galloping horseman with a letter from Lee, saying he had concluded to surrender. Grant dismounted, and from a grassy bank by the roadside he told Lee to meet him at Appomattox. "As General Grant got on his horse I asked him how his pain was. "'Do you know he said, 'that pain left me the moment I got that letter from Lee " Grant reached Appomattox at 10 o'clock In the forenoon and at once was directed lo the house where Lee was waiting to receive him. General Porter gave a very detailed description of the incidents of the surrender, reproducing from his personal notes all of the conversation between Grant and Lee in its exact language. He contrasted the appearance of the two generals. "Grant." said General Porter, "took off a pair of dark thread gloves and threw them and his hat on a table in the center of the room. General lie?, who was sitting at n table in a corner of the room, had removed a pair of fine buckskin gloves. The two men now presented a singular contrast. "General Great, only 43 years of age,

was in the fall vigor of life, of medium height, with no superfluous flesh. lis was slightly stooped. He had on a pair of muddy, wrinkled top bouts, and he was actualy dressed in the uniform of a private soldier. There was nothing to Indicate his rank, but the three stars on his shoulder straps. He wore no sword, no spurs, and was covered w Ith mud. "General Lee was sixteen years older than Grant, and his beard and hair were silvered. He was dressed In handsome, brand-new Confederate uniform. He wore fine new boots, worked on top with figures of crimson silk. He carried a beautiful long, straight sword studded with Jewels which had been presented to him by some ladles of England and sent to him by one of the blockade runners. "To look at these two men a stranger might have thought General Grant was surrendering to General Lee." Lee opened the conversation with a reference to their meeting years before In Mexico. He was evidently In a hurry to have the formal details of the surrender arranged and had no great relish for conversation. General Grant wrote a hasty draft of the terms of surrender and General Porter handed it to General Lee . "Lce," snld General Porter, "took out a large silk haudkerchief and a pair of steel-rlmmed spectacles, rubbed the spectacles with the haudkerchief and read the rough draft with extreme deliberation. He suggested an interpolation of one word. Grant agreed, and lie made the interpolation with my lead pencil, the very one I have here." The children cheered as General Porter held up the pencil, sharpened at both ends, and about half the full length. "That was not the most expensive pencil In the world," said General Ton ter, "but It got In a great deal of fine work that afternoon." General Grant had no Ink, and so hii secretary borrowed a bottle from Lee' secretary, and with it copied the draft of the surrender into its final and per manent form. 'General Lcc had no paper, and so ho borrowed a sheet from Grant, with tho Union army letterhead, and on it hii secretary. Colonel Charles Marshall, wrote the formal acceptance of Grant's terms. After the terms were agreed on, put in writing and signed the party moved cut Into the front yard. "I shall never forget how General Lee looked as "ho stocd w ith one foot on the step, about to mount his horse," said General Porter, "lie seemed oblivious to evcrj-thiug. He looked out blankly and did not recognize our salutes, lie seemed the absolute picture of despair." A 'War-Time Memory. The great church doors stood open wide, but not for reverent feet Of worshipers plow-gathering from village lane nnd street, But as to Zion's temple fled the Hebrew long ago, , Nor feared, within its sacred shrine, the onset of the foe So, from the field where brothers strove 'mid battlesmoke and flame. Borne gently lu their comrades' arm., wounded and djing came. Softly, through niullioned window-panes, the painted light, that day, Touched with an equal tenderness the blood-siained blue and gray.

And breezes sweet with breath of June through fisl and transept stole, Cooling the feverpf the brow, the passion of the soul. I But hark ! a so tnd of music low as zephyr in the trees! Some hand, to peaceful uses trained, has pressed the organ-keys, And higher now, and fuller swells the clear, harmonious strain, While dim eyes turn, and trembling lips hush the deep moan of pain. One hoars the lilt of mocking birds amid the waving cane, And one, the Northern robin's call across the fields of grain; Once more, there falls oa dulling ears by tender fancies wiled. The voice of mother or of wife, the laugh of careless child! The measure changed to bugle-blast, and tramp of marching men The trump?t-signal to the charge ptsfrd o'er the plain again! But suddenly alwve the crash and thunder of th chord, A single strons-winged melody among the arches soared. And fainting heads were lifted np, and weak hands beat the tim. And failing tongue and .breath grow strong to catch the air sublime, While friend and foe, as in th days that had been and should be, The, old "Star-Spangled Banner" sang dear ensign of the f e ! O I-and beloved! within who breast are scars of grass-growngraves With calm eyes lifted where on high that 6un-kissed emblem waves Teach to thy chillren's children still the song, whose chorus grand Joins voice to voict in one accord, and hand to clasping hand! Their rallying anthem let it be, that nevermore shall cease. Till Liberty's last triumph brinps "the thousand years of peace !" Mary A. P. Stansbury. Worth Reading-. The deer really weeps, ity eyes being provided with lachrymal glands. The Botallac min, ia Cornwall, runs for two-thirds of a mile out under the sea. In France the average span of life Is now seven years longer than' It was sixty years ago. New York, despite Its more rigorous climate, is 1KX) miles nearer the equator than is the British capital. In London there are 70,000 municipal employes; In England generally there are close upon 2,000,000. Iteliglous liberty was granted to the Huguenots in France in 15C2, and was followed by the massacre of St. Bartholomew in 1572. The Czar of Russia has a strong dislike to being photographed alone. He Is, however, quite at case when posing as one of u group. Window glass manufactories have been Introduced into China, and the product, which is a novelty there, is rapidly becoming popular. In 1800 the alue of all farm pro ducts in the Uulted States was $2,400,000,000; In 1900, $IJ 17,000,000, and ic 19(K, 17,000,000,000, a gain in slxteet years of nearly 1S3 per cent Great energy has been recently manifested lu the commercial utilization of the water powers of Mexico. In one case 11 minor streams have been diverted Into one body of water to drive a. great electric plant. Dr. Martha Hughes Cannon, formerly a State Senator f Utah, has gone to live In California with the Intention of helping the women of that State to get equal suffrage. Dr. Cannon Is de scribed as a powerful and witty speaker.

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One farmer recommends quarter pound doses of baking soda for colic In animals. There is no sentiment about a hen. She Is an egg nnd meat machine, and aothlng else. Pigs will fatteu rapidly when fed com alone, but the fattening will be it the expense of health and growth. Poultry manure Is worth not less than .$12 a ton. But if you store it where it will get wet. It will rot be worth much of anything. You can't count the wrinkles on the horns of the cow that has been dohorned so as to tell her age, mi it is a good plnn to keep a record book of your cows. Hercules cleaned the Augcna stablca" by flooding them with water from the river. You can clean and sweeten the atmosphere of your stables by flooding them with suullght. It Is an excellent plan to whitewash the trees, filling the cracks In the bark with Jime, so as to fill up many hiding laces of fruit pests, as well as to destroj many which are In hiding. It is claimed on reliable authority that corn-fed horses are more susceptible to weak eyes than those given other grains. Corn may enter Into the ration without any serious results, but it ihould not 1 made the entire ration. Kindness a ill accomplish more with the horse U m whipping. When ho shies at anything whipping will only scare him and make him shy worse th? next time. Never yell at nor jerk a horse. Treat him gently nud kindly. It is always better to give medicine to swine iu food. But if one wants to flrench, fasten a piece of rubber hose securely In a bottle containing the medicine. Throw the pig, put a stickIn Its mouth and allow the fluid to ilowly run down the throat. i - Next to the contamination spread by the stock bull, to which a good many cow keepers send their aborting cows without any disclosure of the fact, the fiaud of selling the aborted cow with the calf of another at foot is the chief means for the extension of the disease. Automobiles will never take the place of the heavy draft horses. There will always be a place for this class of work animals and just at the present time there is a shortage. It will pay any farmer to raise some good draft colts, but they must be good. Beginning a thing Is easy, but it is the stick to It that Is difficult. The ability to go on and finish a thins begun is tho real tet of character. In farm work or in other stations In life It Is the man who sticks to the things he has begun that is ahead in the race. The present cotton output of Brazil Is estimated at SO.OOO tons, and, according to reports received from United States consuls living in that country, the industry is increasing rapidly. Primitiv methods are still in vogue, however, and tho quality of the product Is poor. Wc are now cutting timber from tho forests of tho United States at tho rate of 500 feet board measure a year for every man, woman nnd child. In Eurofje they use only GO board feet. At this rate in less than thirty years till our rem-ilning virgin timber will be cut Time to change our methods. The government reports the hay crop to be 1.52 tons, compared with 1.11 tenyear average. Total production, estimated, 7,743,000 tons, compared with 03,077,000 last year. Average quality Is 4.5, against 00.4 last year. Bye estimated production, 80,921,000 bushels, against 31,500,000 last year. Quality Is better. How hard should the ground freeze before covering up the strawberry vines? Well, if it will hold a wagon up when driven over It you may conclude that It Is time to put on the mulch. Don't put on too much at first, however. Increase the amount of covering as the weather Increases In se: verity. A much more sensible nnd profitable type of agriculture will prevail than is general to-daj- when every quarter section farm In the country supports n herd of from thirty to sixty sheep. They "are large consumers of waste vegetable growths the byproducts of the farm and for this reason every landowner should keep a flock. Again let us urge you not to leave tho tools out to warp and rust in the winter storms. One winter's exposure will hurt them more than two or three years' use. Cleiiii them up and put them away In the dry. If you have no tool house put them In the packing shed. A coat of paint applied now wl1! add several years to the life of th woodwork of tools. If the farmer is in such straits financially that he must economize, let him go without socks and undershirt rather than scrimp on the price of seed corn or oats that he has to buy this season, lie woild be far bettor off at harvest tine or husking if he got good seed oats at 75 cents and seed corn at $3 than he would to take poor seed of either grain as a gift Economize If one must, but let it not be In seeds of any kind. The Chicago health commission has forbidden the sale of milk fronr ordinary tin cans. All milk must no v be delivered In sealed bottles. Nearly one-half of the Infant mortality of the city. Is supposed to be traceable to Impure milk. It requires careful washing and constant care to keep a tin can In good condition. Few people know how to wash a can and those who do know apparently do not like the Job. If you want any proof of this fact, take the cover off of any milk can that is being returned from any city atd uotice the nasty stench that meets your nostrils. The price of city milk is constantly advancing, so that farmer! hav hopei 'of getting money

enough topay them to keep it clean and In prime condition. Get Out o' the Huts. .The best system of agriculture is the one that will return the same net profits nnd the most plantfood to the soil. It seems hard for us to get out of the old ruts. Some farmers will dig 2cO bushels of potatoes from an acre f land and sell them for fSO nnd think they have reached the climax of profitable agriculture, but he is like the man who paid $0,000 for a farm and after having drg $3,000 worth of fertility out of it was obliged to sell it for ?3,000. Thero is no practical farming that does not maintain sil fertility. S a (Relent Feed for Winter. Wo are making a mistake when we neglect to provide an abundance of succulent food for our live stock during the winter. There is great need of succulent food in all rations and there Is something alout this succulence that the chemist cannot find that is of vahrv to the animals. Ensilage, turnips and mangels will make excellent succulence. One point we should study in tho feeding of live stock Is that of making the rations palatable. The matter of palatiblllty or the Individual appetites ef our animals Is a matter that ie seldom recognized, although It Is of great importance. In most cases animals will thrire better when they are fed a ration that they relish eveu though it is not theoretically balanced to a fraction of a per cent, than they will on a ration that is not agreeable to their appetites even if properly balanced. Of course we cannot disregard tho relative proportions of nitrogenous and carbonaceous material in the rations, but first we must be sure that the ration is large enough and then look U-IU palatability instead of splitting hairs over a slight variation in nutritive rations. Exchange. Heating Water For Cattle. The Indiana station made au investigation of the methods of beef production used by tho successful feeders In tho State. A list of 100 questions was sent out to 2,500 of the most successful cattle feeders In the State. In response to these inquiries 020 replies were received. While all phases of the subject were touched upon it is Interesting to note that In the matter of an adequate water supply 53 per cent of tho feeders use wells for the purpose of watering their cattle, 21 per cent used springs and the remainder depended upon ditches, creeks or natural ponds. In regard to the heating of water In winter, tank heaters were used by 30 per cent, a few of thoemainder depend upoa pumping water as the cAttle need It;-upon springs which never freeze up, or upon banking the water tanks with sawdust, manure or some other substance to keep them fro;n freezing. But taken as & whole the great najorlty make no provision whatever I? regard to warming the water in winter. Hate of Alfalfa Seed lue Alfalfa seed is sown at the rate of fifteen to eighteen pounds per acre. Some growers recommend a larger amount than this, using as high as twenty pounds of seed per acre, while others claim that ten to twelve pounds Ier acre is sufficient, says an Oklahoma report. It Is certain that In cases where the soil is placed In first class condition and the seed purchased 'has a high germlnatlve power good results can be obtained by using fifteen to sixteen pounds of seed per acre, but if these conditions are not met then a larger amount of seed will be required. The method of seeding varies in different sections, of the state, but whatever the method may 1 one should always aim to secure a uniform distribution of the seed. Any up-to-date grass seeder will accomplish this object, or an ordinary shoe drill can be used ad vantageously. Some drills are built with a grass seeder attachment from which the seed can be scattered In

frout of the drill ai:d the shoes or disc "'ars ago, provides In his will, filed In passing over the surface will give recently, material for a romance of the sufficient covering. Placing the seed says the New York Herald. The at a depth of more than one Inch i beneficiaries under his will believe the not advisable. The amount of plaut , patents he had taken out on airships food which Is stored up for the young 1 mil devices pertaining thereto, hitherembryo is limited, and when the seed to considered valueless, have become of

is placed in the soil with a layer of earth to the depth of one or two inches above it the amount of food Is Insufficient to carry the little plant above the surface, hence large numbers perish. As soon as the plant reaches the sunlight it Is able to collect new supplies of food from the soil and atmosphere. It has not been our practice to use a nurso crop with alfalfa. Milk Inspection. In speaking of milk Inspection, Chief Webster of the United States Dairy Department, said: "Its puriose Is tc protect the public against impure milk. Such may come from several sources. First, In the case of animals, we need a better Inspection, for they may be badly Infected with -tuberculosis and still the disease would not be apparent to the eje. Second, the handlers of milk need a closer Inspection, and when 6uch persons have a contagious disease they should not be allowed to handle the milk or any of its products. Third, there should be more sanitary Inspection of buildings and equipment. Fourth, the laboratory Inspection Is Important and should be placed In competent hands. It Is of the utmost Ira portance that the Inspection work be done by experienced and educated men. Politics should not adulterate the milk and Is most detrimental to the accomplishing of the most good. The police authority alone Is the least effective In this work, for jou can't make a man clean with a club; he must be educated However, it is best that the inspector be clothed with police power, for there are In some communities those who will heed nothing but pure force. The pollco power makes the work more effective in all cases, but is not always necessary. The larger ier cent of the milk sold in the smaller towns an cities Is not, perhaps, entirely objectionable, but Is not quite right." Mr. Webster would recommend thai all milk be pasteurized under official control until some better means cvuld be found. High class milk or certified milk is more or less costly to produce, aud the price is much above what tho majority of people can afford to pay, and pasteurized milk can be sold at a reasonable price.

VESSELS BEARING ROYAL NAMES i

BrKltlt Mcu-o'-AVar that Seem Doomed to III luck. Ono of the strongest and most ineffaceable of all superstitions in the roya" navy superstition almost as strong today .is ever it was is that vessels bearing the name of royal personages are doomed to ill luck, and strange a? it may seem there Is an undeniable his torical basis for this feeling, says Tit Bits. Some of the most terrible disasters ever known in connection with oui navy have concerned war vessels witfc royal names. Two vessels called the Koyal James came to disastrous ends One of them exploded, and some 80C officers and seamen perished; the othei fillip so named was actually carried out of the mouth of the Thames by thf Dutch under circumstances disgraceful to those in charge of the craft Then there is the forever memorable disaster of the Royal George, thai turned over and sunk in sight ol crowds at Spithead, over 1,000 souls among whom were 300 women, bein? sacrificed. And second only to this hid eous disaster Is that which afterward befell tho Royal Charlotte, which was consumed "by fire off Leghorn, over 80C of the very flower of our navy perish Ing with her. When iu 1 S: 3 the Victoria, a new vessel and the very triumph of modert invention, was rammed and sunk it sight of the whole fleet there was not a sailor, however matter of fact h( might be, who did not remember th dire fate of royalty named craft. Thret years later a schooner named the Roy allst foundered in a gale off Holyhead while In 1S01 a British bark, th Queen, was sunk and her captain and six men drowned. mmmmmmMssim Legal Information g The burial of a dog In an adjoining lot is held, in Hertle vs. Ulddeil (Ky.) KKJ S. W. 282, 15 L. It. A. (N. S). 790, to violate the property rights of a lot owner in a cemetery set apart for the burial of the white race, and for com etery purposes only. Baling of hay by a purchaser agree Ing o pay a certain price rer ton leu. hay and do the baling is held, in Drlgg? vs. Bush (Mich.) 115 N. W. 9S3. Z L. It A. (N. S.) 054, to be sufficient part payment to take the contract out of the statute of frauds. The destruction of a bridge by ex traordinnry flood is held. In Mitchell vs. Westou (Miss.) 45 So. 571, 15 L. R. A. (X. S.) S33, to be within the obligation of a bond requiring the build er to replace it If removed from anj cause, fire excepted, within a eertairj period. An attempt by a municipal corpora tion to prohibit loitering on the streets in so far as applied to persons conduct ii'g themselves in a peaceable, orderly manner, is held, in St. Louis vs. Glon (Mo.) 109 S. W. 30, L. R. A. (N. S.) 973, to Ik? an interference with the con stltutional right of personal liberty. Failure to enclose the elevator or w hich an employe was injured by the' falling of a barrel from an adjoining elevator oierated in the same enclosed siiaft is held, In Fowler Packing Co. v& I irnzenpergcr (Kan.), 94 Tac. OTÖ, IE L. It. A. (X. S.) 7S1, to be prima facie evidence of negligence, within the meaning of a factory act requiring owners or operators of manufacturing establishments properly and substantially to iucbüie or secure elevators, etc. Where au agreement by the owner ol laud with an adjoining owner not tc . sell, or permit the sale, upon the premises for a period of years, of intoxicat- . ing liquor, Is not contained in a deed or I indoiture In the chain of title, subsequent purchasers and assigns are held, in Sjoblom vs. Mark, 103 Minn. 193, 111 X. W. 7i0, 15 L. It A. (N. S.) 1129, not to Ik? bound thereby, unless they have such knowledge or notice thereof as to imply that the burden was assumed as part of the consideration; and the record of such an agreement does not constitute constructive notice. GET OLD AIRSHIP PATENTS. They Mar Make Heir- of Dr. Arthui de Doasiet Wealthy. Regarded as a dreamer during life, Dr. Arthur de Bousset, who died three . immense value through the recent de elopments lu aviation. If their be lief proves well founded those who cared for the aged inventor In the last years of his life will become wealthj. Dr. de Bousset, who was 7G years aid when he died, in the home oi Charles A. McCready, broker, with rrtlices In the produce exchange, was well known In this country and Europe is an experimenter In all things mechanical, but more especially through his work In aeronautics. In 1902 he obtained a patent In this country for a machine said to be more on the lines :f Zeppelin's device than any other, and the next year similar patents were obtained In Europe. None of these patents went beyond the model stage, but the aged man convinced some good mcchaulcs that the devices were practical. Subsequently, he made other Inventions, Including a propeller for boats, which, it was stated recently, is now being tested In a small vessel, and other improvements in airships, none ?f which'has been lMtented. All these papers, plans, and models he left with his friend, Mr. McCready. With hlni he also left a will, dated May 0, 1904. The estate, however, so lacked promise of value that it was not thought worth while offering the instrument Tor probate, and until recently the old -nan's models and patents were forgotten. Then with the work of the. Wrights the jtatents and 'papers were recalled, mechanics were called In to aass judgment upon them, and on their advice that the patents possess value the will was offered for probate. Spirited ftepartee. In making a sharp turn the rcaccml of a street car struck an express wagon laden with Jugs of whisky. Nearly all the Jugs were precipitated to the pavement, with the natural disastrous result The driver of the wagon alighted ind, pointing at the pile of demolished arthenware, said" to a bystander, That's hades, ain't it?" The spectator, who happened to be a minister, replied, "Well, my friend, I ilon't kuow that I would say that, but it's at least the abode of departed splr- .' ts." LIppincott's Magazine.

EARTHQUAKES IN AFRICA,

That Conntry IIa Long; Been Immune from Such Visitation. The fact that two earthquakes have been reported in central Africa is worth mentioning because, for all the white race has known, Africa has long beeu immune from earthquakes, excepting along its northwestern and north-central borders, which have sometimes thared the disturbances that have arUicted the Spanish peninsula, says the Xew York Sun. But since Mungo Park ushered in the modern era of African exploration nobody had ever heard of earth movements In the tropical central part of the continent. Two earthquakes, however, have occurred this year In the eastern part of the Kongo state, under the equator, affecting wide areas but doing little damage, for in regions whose peoples live in grass huts there is little damage tc be done unless life Is lost. On April 2 a region Some hundred of square miles in extent on both sides ol the upper Kongo and from 1,200 to 1,400 miles from its mouth was rather severely shaken for from three to tif teen minutes about 7 o'clock In ihe morning. The region included the lower parts of the Lomaml and Bazoko river basins, tributary to the Kongo and on its southern and northern shores. The vertical movement of the houses and trees was plainly visAole and the natives were badly frightened for such events were unknown to then: even in their traditions. On June 7 n much larger region em bracing nearly the whole administrativ! district of the Welle, in the extrem northeastern part of the Kongo State had a sharp earth movement lastinj only about twenty seconds. The whlt officials say, that the surface rolled it little waves from the northeast t southwest; that furniture in widelj separated stations was thrown about and that many thousands of negro hut performed a sort of dance that wai awesome to see. Not a single life wai lost In these occurrences, which, how ever, have deprived tropical Africa ol its reputation for immuuity from sels mlc catastrophes. PROVED BY TIME. Jfo IVnr of Any Farther Trouble. David Price, Corydon. Ia., says: "I Ras in the last stage of kidney trouble lame, weak, run down to n mere skeleton. My back was so bad I could hardly walk and the kidney secretions much disordered. A week after I began using Doan's Kidney Pills I could walk without a cane, and as I continued my health gradually returned. I was so grateful I made a public statement of my case, and now seven years have passed, I am still perfectly well.' Sold by all dealers. 50c a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Innocence. "Why," he asked, "do girls like sc much to display diamond rings od their engagement fingers?" "Well," she replied as she carelessly twirled the jewel on her third finger, "you know there is nothing like a shining example to stimulate one when he has a purpose In mind." Wheu she had time to speak agrin the cried: "0b, Fred, I hope you don't think I was trying to throw out a hint." 1 never suspected that you cared about me at all!" Judge's Library. Here Is Ittllef for Women. If you have pains in the baek. Urinary. Bladder or Kidney trouble, and want a certain, pleasant herb cure for woman's ills, try Mother Gray's Antra-lian-Iieaf. It Is a sare and never-raiiinjf regulator. At Druggists or hy mail f.u cts. S'ample package FUKK. Address. The Mother Gray Co., LeKoy, N. Y. Abanr4 Dellef About Hedgehog. In olden days the hedgehog was accredited with the possession of many wonderful powers. Pliny and after him Aellan and others have related how it would climb apple and fig trees, shake down the fruit and afterward fall upon and impale the fruit on its spines and carry them off upon its back. The belief that it was in the habit of milking cows during the night is likewise a very old one. TO CURE A ( OLD IX 0E DAY TV LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablot liruzlstt refund money If It falls to cure. B.W.UKOVirS 6l;nature Is on each box. Coalil Not Afford It. Improvident Citizen Would you like to subscribe a dollar or two to help out a poor old washerwoman In bed with rheumatism and the house full of hun gry children? Provident Citizen Sorry, old man, but I can't afford it Will jou come along with me to some lively show at the theater where we can forget these sordid miseries, and a nice little sup per after? New York Press. Mrs. Winslow'a Soothing Syrup for Cbll dren teething ; softens the sums, reduces In uaaimation, allays pal a, cures wiad colic 2 :ents a bottle. A Darkening Race. Where are the fair-haired people we used to admire? Look where we will, brown hair or dark hair predominates. There are some who tell us that the time is coming when the genuine golden-haired beauty will be as rare as the "copper" butterfly, and that to have a head like a wheat sheaf will be to proclaim aloud that the coiffeur's artful aid has been invoked . London Lady. If yoa wish beautiful, clear, wöltt clothes, ose Red Cross Ball Ulue. Large 2oc packige, 6 cen r y Ocean taute. The diameter of the Altantfc cable varies according to the depth of the water, the character of the bottom on whkli It lies, and the probabilities of Interference from anchors. It Is smallest in mldoceau depths. There Is Utile or no movement at the bottom, and It is important that? the cable should not have great weight. A heavy cable In deep water would be difficult to bring up for repairs if repairs were needed. In the shallow water a heavier type of cable Is used. These tjpes are known as "shore end," "intermediate," and "deep sea." The diameters of the commercial cables are: Shore end, 2 Inches; Intermediate, l"i inches; deep sea, 1 Inch. jxraxE 3

mum

Constinaiion

May toprroiatvctiily overcome ly prcjxr personal efforts viihJKc cs$i stance fcfthcoTK truly Ijencjirial laxative tenutAy, S) rap of Kgs and El'uir J Sctmi whicK enable ft one to form regular kabit$ daily $o that assistance fo nature may be graduaWj' dispcrSecWH vicn no (oner needed astAebestof remecJics,wKcn required, arc to assist taVure and not to supplant the natural functions, vhicfi must depend1 ultimately upon proper1 nourislintent, prepereJJortaHd right living -ncraM. Togetits beneficial effects, always buy the genuine manufactured ty ike California Fig Syrup Co. oxlx SOLD BV ALL LEADING DRUCCISTS aesac my. ruUr price 50f rrBott)e A Sale and Sure Cough Cure I taps ßata Does not contain Opism, Morphine, or any other narcotic cr hablt-formlnrj drtg. t Nothing of a poisonous or hannful character enters into its com,position. This clean and pure cough cure cures coughs that cannot be cured by any other medicine. It has saved thousands from con-. It has saved thousands of lives. A 25c bottle contains 40 doses. 4 ' At all druvgists', 25c, 50c tnd $L 2 Don't accept anything che. T 320 RES of Wheat Land in Western Canada WILL MAKE YOU RICH 50 bushels rer acre hate been croti-n. Crtieral rer a sc p-reatcr than in any other part of h-Continent. Under New Rejrulatkwi it U poible to secure a Homestead of loo acres true, and additional loO acres at $3.v per acre. "The development of th coontrr ha fiade marvellous strides. It is a rerelaion. a rec rd of conqurtt by sett'entrnt that is remarkable." Extract from crrtipondence of a National Kditor. who Tisited Canada in August last. The grain crrtp of 1008 will n t mar.y f.irmen f 20.00 to Z5.00 per acre. Graia-rauinr. Mixed Karin in and Pairjrinr are the princii .-! rndu-trk-. Climate is excellent: Social Conditions th best: Railway Advantages unequalled: SJmols churches and markets citmc at band. Lands m.v also be purchased from Piilway and Land Con. panics. FOR "LAST niiST WKSTM pamphlet, maps and information as t how to ft-cure lowest Railway Rates, ary to . D. Scott. Superintendent cf Immigration, Ci'.tawa. Canada, or W. H. Rogers. -d Floor Traction-Terminal Building, Indianpel'. Ind., anfl II. M. Williams, Room so, Law Bund.ng, Toledo, Ohio, Authorized Government Agects. F!eM uj rbr ou uw thf a advertiwiDeaL. ABfleng Positively cared by CARTER'S these Lattie mis. i They also rcBcre Dis CllTTLE tress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion awl Too Hearty Eating. A rcrTt rem IVER PILLS. edy lor Dizziness. Nausea, Drowsiness. Cad Taste In ti.9 Korth, Coated Tongue, Tzl in tie Side, TORPID LIYEB. They i J regulate tie Borrels. Purely Vegetable. SUALLPILL SUHL DOSE. Sl'iiifn'XL CARTERS Genuine Must Bear Fas-Simile Sigrture I f IVER PILLS. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. TOILET AHTiSEPTIO Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiscptically clean and free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. . germicidal, disin-N fecting deodorizing toilet requisite of exceptional excellence and economy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Urge Trial Szciple WITH "HEALTH AN0 CAUTr I00K ttNT MtC THE PAXTOM TOILET CO., Best:, Kxst TOIL "I tr!d til kind of bl x4 rmd1s Meli fall l do tu mir e"l knS I liat found tha right thinf at !. V-f face was fall of pimplaa al blarkbra,l. AH-r takln t'acarota they all it. I mm eotitlHainc th of them and rerommandinf tlicm to tur f rienli. 1 fal fins when I nta n iXa mrnin(. Hop to bar a elianea M rconiBQo4 Caacara.4." Fred C. WltUD, 7 Elm Si. Kswark. N. S. Best For The Bowels Plant. Palatable, fntrt. Tatt Good. To flood, ver Sirkn, Wrak'ii or tinpa. ltte. Sie. tSc. Never old in bulk. Tha ennmna tablet a Lam pad CCC Guaranteed to enra or yoar Boonajr back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 595 ANNUAL SALE, TEII f.!ILLI0II COXES

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S1GK HE

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candy CATruanc r

at this office, nt m We can give yot the EAGLE LINEN

PAPER and ENVELOPES It l fine and mill mit yom. Try It. Onr I)nh Hoard l.lor Holder making; men and .women $100 monthly. Kvcrv r.upjry owner buys at tight. fUmpj'e postpaid 30c silver. Wholesale Supply Co.. Vnldota.Ua. F. W. N. U. - - - - - - No. 50 19C8 When writing to Advertisers plea ay you aatv the Adv. la tbla paper. Hainicledwllk fere Eves, ose m

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