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t Bryan un Weekly Papers. The principal address at the recent annual meeting of the Minnesota Press Association in St. Paul was not Dn th? program. William Jennings Bryan was in town, and, as he missed a train, had some time to spare, and w as prevailed upon to make a speech to the editors. He said in part: ''I want to say a word about the weekly newspaper; I want to make a suggestion. Our great daily papers are becoming more and more busiaess enterprises and less political factors. The trouble is, they are owned mainly by rich men, and as a rule, the men who have enough business sense to accumulate tne money rejuired to own one of them haven't enough editorial ability to guide the editorial department. Hence these papers are edited by 'hired men.' Such editors almost necessarily lack the conscience and personality of the country edttor. Therefore they also lack his influence. A country editor, known personally to his public, wields more influence through his thousand subscribers thaiTdoes a city editor, personally unknown, through Qis 100,000 subscribers. In proportion as we put character behind the editorial position we shall add influence to the weekly press. "The public musl. place an increasing reliance upon (he country papers for leadership in political affairs. Each party should strengthen its country press." ix Concrete Telegraph Poles. Concrete has been used to make fence posts for several years, and is now being employed experimentally in the production of telegraph poles. After a few years' service these may develop faults wnicn nave not oeen foreseen, but a tendency to rot will certainly not be one of them. The trial is being made on the Pennsylvania Railway near Maples, Ind., on the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chicago division. A mile of track is equipped with the new poles, which are from twenty-five to thirty-four feet in length. They are eight inches square at the bottom and six irches square at the top, but the edges are chamfered, so that the poles seem to be octagonal in section. Half-inch wires, running lengthwise, reinforce the concrete. The poles were set last autumn, and seem to have stood the winter well. They rest in a foundation of pounded stone, and reach down four feet from the surface. It Is reported that several trolley companies in the West have considered the propriety of using similar poles to carry their wires. VT, 1 Side Lines For Farmers. A Chester, Mass., letter says that the witchhazel industry has been active. Farmers of that section supply a local mill with hundreds of tons of the brush, which grows fast and returns $2 to $3 a ton. Last * year's crop produced 990 barrels of extract. Another use for formbr waste is in distilling from blackbirch brush a substitute for oil ofv wintergreen. For this the mills pays $3.50 a ton, and last season used 1558 tons of brush, obtaining nearly 6000 lb. of oil, which sells to druggists and confectioners for $2 a pound. Aside from being a substitute for wintergreen, it is used in rheumatic medicines, birch beer, and as a flavoring for mineral water. The mill has material usually to keep it running till June. Another oil which is Deing developed is distilled irom the ferns which grow in abundance an the hills. The properties are similar to those of witchhazel, with a pleasanter odor. It is called Fernia. ?The Country Gentleman. Fertile England. Save grapes, tobacco, olives, and some other fruits, we can grow in England all that can be grown in v France with as good certainty, and often in better quality. From our counties come beets that all the cattle breeders in the world clamor for. Incomparable shir* horses are still bred in the Cambridgeshire centres set up by Henry VIII. In Scotland ahd all over the north are farmers whose peculiar knowledge, extending from tubers to trees, is, as one may say, a girt or tne soul. Yet iungiana, which is over civilized, is not yet half colonized.?National Review. * Encourage Building Erection. Loaois are freely made by the Philippine Commission to the various provinces for the erection of public buildings on the island. ________ Indian Territory Condenses. The name of Cooweescoowee Couaty has been changed to Rogers. ? Kansas City Journal. Knocking the Bride. Recipe for fruit cake that will keep a year: Let the young bride make it.?Somerville Journal. DOCTOR'S FOOD TALK. Selection of Food One of the Most Important Acts in Life. A Mass. doctor says: "Our health . and physical and mental happiness are so largely under our personal con trol that the proper selection of food should be and Is one of the most im, portant acts in life. "On this subject, I may say that I know of no food equal in digestibility and more powerful in point of nutriinent than the modern Grape-Nuts, four heaping teaspoons of which is sufficient for the cereal part of a meal, and experience demonstrates that the user is perfectly nourished from one meal to another. "I am convinced that the extensive and general use of high class foods of this character would increase the term of human life, add to the sum total of happiness and very considex-ably improve society in genial. I am free to mention the food, for I personally know of its value." Grape-Nut3 food can be used by babes in arms or adults. It is ready cooked, can be served instantly, either cold with cream, or with hot water or hot milk poured over. All sorts of puddings and fancy dishes can be made with Grape-Nuts. The food is concentrated and very economical, for four heaping teaspoons are sufficient for the cereal part of a meal. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellvilio," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." 1 MISS LOVING TELLS Of ESTE3' WRONG Virginia Girl Testifies to Save Father's Life. THE WHISKY STUPEFIED HER Victim of the Fatal Buggy Ride Tells the Story to Save Her Father's Life, Who is on Trial For the Murder. Houston, Va.?Miss Elizabeth Loving, forced to the alternative of sacrificing her reputation or sending her father to the gallows, has made her choice. She went on the stand at the trial of her father, Judge William Tinvinc fnr tVio miir/lor r*f HTVion dore Estes, and swore that JCstes had assaulted her. Judge Loving killed Estes because she had told such a story. Since then it has been asserted that the story was false; that Estes did not treat her as she told her father he did; that she became intoxicated, and that to excuse herself she told the Judge the story which caused him to kill young Estes. There has been much speculation whether she would go on the stand and admit that Estes did not treat her dishonorably. That speculation she disposed of by her testimony. Only once in a recital lasting almost an hour did 'Miss Loving give way to her emotion. That waa when she told the jury of her confession to her father on the day following the ride. She broke down completely, sobbed convulsively, and for a time it looked as though she would not be able to go on, but with an effort controlled herself and continued her story, and later gained . courage enough to even fence with the Commnnwonlth'a nttnrnAV Her father was on the stand earlier in the day, being the first witness called when court met. His recital was dramatic. He to*ld of his love for his children, and after giving way to tears, he told the jury without a 3how of emotion that he ordered his buggy and took his shotgun to put to death the man who had mistreated his daughter. The Loving case is strangely similar to the Thaw case. But while >the defense is the "unwritten law"- combined with emotional insanity, the country doctors who were put on the stand did not talk of brainstorms or exaggerated ego, but in plain English said they believed that several attacks of delirium tremens through which Judge Loving had passed had 30 weakened his brain that for the time being he was insane. As inthe Thaw case, everything hinges in this trial on whether or not the jury believes that Elizabeth Loving told her father the story which he says she did, and which resulted in his killing poung Estes. The truth or raisity or the. story is not material, according to the defense. Wood Bouldin, the Commonwealth's attorney, a courtly, dignified Southerner, who, while asking Miss Loving the most embarrassing questions, was skilfully leading her away from her story, and apologizing for it, announced that he intended to prove by the witnesses of the defense that Miss Loving's story is absolutely false and that Theodore L. Estes was never guilty of an impropriety toward her. v HURLED FROM AUTO; KILLED. Benjamin F. Lord Dies From Heart Failure Occasioned by Fright. "D/v?+/v? Moe?a .fcMninc wij-hnilf" XJUOLWU, ifjiaco. a single scratch, as he, with three companions, was hurled thirty feet in the air when the automobile 1n which they were traveling was stn-ck by an outward bound Provid ce train at Woods Crossing, three mue3 above the Franklin station, Benjamin F. Lord, of Waltham, an advertising man, landed on the ground alive and died immediately afterward from heart failure occasioned by fright. His companions, Edward J. and Thomas F. Boyle, of No. 386 Commonwealth avenue, both merchants, were badly bruised, while the chauffeur, W. P. Roust, was severely shaken. They were able, however, to go to their homes, where they were placed in charge of a physician. The three survivors were unnerved by the tragic ending of the trip, and the effect of the shock upon Edward J. Boyle, who has been ill recently, was severe. JUDGE ATTEMPTS SUICIDE. r*-- " 5 % TT?wl I ."5uxi A' rauiiiiiu i>ai ajsutiuuuu u?u Called For His Resignation. San Francisco, Cal.?Overcome with grief and humiliation at the action of the Bar Association in recommending that he be impeached for gross intemperance if he did not immediately resign, Superior Judge K. C. Hebbard tried to take his life in his chambers at the Temple Israel. He wa3 saved from death, after he had pressed the barrel of a revolver against his temple, by a reporter, who took away the weapon. Ships Ordered to Central America. The cruiser Milwaukee was ordered to Central American waters on thf? receipt of disquieting advices from Nicaragua, Guatemala and Salvador. Degrees to Women. The degree of Bachelor of Arts | was conrerrea upon zi i young women at Wellesley College, Mass., aud announcement was made that $125,000 had been raised to meet the offer by Andrew Carnegie for a new library "juilding. Venezuelan Cabinet Resigns. The Venezuelan Cabinet resigned owing to the action of Congress in condemning the policy of the Minister of Finance. The Field of Labor. A recent ruling makes Fargo (N\ D.) unions eligible to membership in the Minnesota State Federation. There are 2,500,000 skilled laborers in Germany earning between forty-two cents and seventy-five cents a day." In Harrisburg. 111., there are eight ? iii- or tTia ltninn lohal n f thp mills USIU5 Hit ULl.u.l v.. Flour and Cereal Mill Workers' Union. All the road roller engineers are now in the Hoisting and Portable Engineers' Union by an international decision. '100KSHINERSK|LLEDIN RAID 200 Men Are Routed and 30 Arrested in Piedmont, N. C. Ten of the Mountaineers Were Killed in the Pitched Battle and Women n??iv?>n UVahi TTama Asheville, N. C.?In a pitched battle at Piedmont, a wooded and rocky pass in the mountains ten miles from this city, a small army of revenue officers routed 200 moonshiners, who were encouraged in the battle by their wives and daughters. Ten of the moonshiners were killed and thirty were taken prisoners, with several women and a half dozen children. Four thousand gallons of whisky were seized. The revenue army was led by J. Will Roberts, who had been planning the raid for three months. He received information that the moonshiners had gathered for the wholesale running of "mountain dew," and that the mountaineers were in such force they were prepared to resist j the revenue officers. Roberts gathered men from a dozen points and led them for the mountain. The moonshiners were intrenched, expecting an attack from the front. But under cover of the darkness Roberts led his men by a circuitous route up lue muuiudiu uuui ut? was auuve uue mountaineers. At dawn he sent a man under cover of a white flag demanding surrender, but the moonshiners, with derisive cheers, fired a volley over the head of the messenger. The battle at once opened, and from the first went against the moonshiners. They were bewildered at the heavy fire directed against them, believing that they had not more than a small squad of revenue men to deal with. At the sound of the firing women and children came flocking from cabins all over the mountainside, and the women were insistent that the position be held. It became untenable after an hour's hard fighting, and the main body of the mountaineers, comprising 100 men, succeeded in a quick retreat. The prisoners taken were isolated in an advanced post. Five of the revenue officers were wounded, but none was killed. In all fifteen wounded men were brought to this city and are now in the hospital. INHERITS FORTUNE, DROWNS. Unexpected Joy and Grief For Father Probably Crazed Randle. South Norwalk, Conn. ? After learning that his father had left him $40,000, Frank C. Randle deliberately drowned himself. It must have been that the conflict of sudden emotions, joy over his unexpected inheritance, added grief for his* father's death, unbalanced Randle's mind. -He was thirty-five years old, healthy, of good habits and popular in Winnipauk, his home. His father, Joseph C. Randle, died a week before. For forty-five year3 he was postmaster at Winnipauk. For more than half a century he kept the country store in which the postoffice is. Washington, Pa. ? William A. Breene, a day laborer, was so overcome by the news that he had inher itea an estate vaiueu ai ^iuv.uuv that he fainted. He died half an hour later in the hospital. TROLLEY KILLS TWO GIRLS. Sent Around Curve at Passaic, It Crushes Them. Passaic, N. J.?As the result of a trolley car turning down a street which it should have crossed, two young women were run down and killed here. The victims of the peculiar accident are Belle Krones and Annie Worksman, both twenty years old, and the daughters of merchants. The girls, who had been lifelong chums, were on their way home when they were struck at the corner of Passaic and Second streets. Captain Davis Acquitted. Captain John F. Davis has been acquitted at Ironton, Ohio, of the murder of Dr. Wayne McCoy, his family physician. Captain Davis had been Informed that Dr. McCoy was in the habit of calling on Mrs. Davis, and on unexpectedly returning to his home he found the physician and hi? wife together. In the fight which followed Dr. McCoy suffered fatal wounds. Heavy Damages For Wreck. The wreck of a funeral train on the Cincinnati. Flemlngsburg and Southwestern Railway, in Kentucky, has resulted in the filing of suits by the sufferers for $156,000, or $60,000 more than the original cost of the road. The Louisville and Nashville, lessee of the line, is also included in the suits. Warned of Fatal Collapse. ir'once sent warning 10 me uuuuing Department, of New York City four hours before the Walker street tenement collapsed, killing seven, but no measures for safety of the inmateswere taken. Move For Better Rails. Presidents of many important railways will confer with the heads of the United States Steel Corporation in New York City on the problem of supplying better steel rails. Old Man Drowns in a Spring Barrel. Frederick Erler, of Bernardsville N. J., was found drowned in a spring near the residence of John B. Dun3ter, by whom he was employed as a hostler. A large barrel had beer sunk into the gound around th? spring, and it is supposed that Erlei fell headlong while drinking from it i He was eighty years old. Bucket Shops Excluded. Mayor McCarthy and the police o' ] Providence, R. I., began a crusad< i to drive bucket shops out of the city Kirkman Out of Leavenworth. Hugh Kirkman, formerly lieuten ant in the United States Army, was discharged from the United Statet penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kan. u;~ VQQ ro for pm. HIS CJirilLCllV^CT VI -bwa bezzlement having been commuted by President Roosevelt. Zone Marriage Laws Reformed. To validate the marriage of a daughter of Judge Collins and similar weddings President Roosevelt issued an executive order reforming the marriage laws of the Panama Cana) Zone. v; A. '.'i ' I | Halcyon Days i] ^ '^p ?^art 6000 FELLOWS ALL, AND 9)*)n^a4nn I Iniuanti^u 4n Arfnnl A RaH i Away With the Individual Cli Residential Quads--Presen Wilson, is Dcmoralizi Princeton, N. J.?President Woodrow Wilson has Just instituted a most radical and complete reorganization of social life at Princeton University ?one that marks a departure from the other big universities and which will be studied with deep Interest as to its working out. In brief, It aims to absorb the various college clubs.Into what are termed "Residential Quads," where there shall be good fellowship and closer intimacy between faculty, upper class men and "freshies." The system will establish a real democracy, with each "Quad" occupying dormitories, dining rooms and rooms for social enjoyment in common. Instead of the rivalry and bitter feeling engendered by club elections and rejections, there will be unity and a desire for the common eood?true loyalty to the university." | President Wilson in one phrase summarizes the plan: "To associate the four classes in a generally or-1 ganic manner and make of the university a real social body, to the exclusion of cliques and separate class I social organizations to give to the i university the kind of common consciousness which apparently comes from the closer sort of social contact, to be had only outside the classroom, and most easily to be got about a common table, and in the contacts of a common life." The Board of Trustees of the university have adopted the main parts | embodied in the plan and it will probably be put into effect shortly. | COLLEGE SWEETHEART: Or. Hall Finds Eyes, Hair, Size, am tractions--i-cace =>uic Women Fai Boston, Mas3.?Precisely what it is?what attribute or physical characteristic?In the youth or maiden, the man or woman, that most attracts one of the opposite sex, is a problem of which Dr. G. Stanley Hall, professor of psychology in and president of Clark University, Worcester, Mass., has set out to find the solution. To this end he has taken a census of young lovers, with a view to learning what ia each case has most endeared to him or her the particular object of their affection. It was Dr. Hall who recently declared fifty .per cent, of college women failed to marry, thus contributing to race suicide. The complete result of this census of lovers Dr. Hall has not yet given to the public, but he has made known an abstract of what he has learned. With hundreds of lovers heard from Dr.. Hall states that the characteristics specified by them are, in the order of their frequency, I as follows: COLLEGE GIRLS AGREE Indiana Maidens Organize to Insist < --Swains Must Furnis Columbia, Ind. ? Young college women in Columbia, Jasonville and Hymera have formed what they call the "Young Ladies' Protective Societies," and plan to establish branches all over the States. The members will insist on knowing how prospective husbands are fixed financially, and will refuse to be courted by young men who cannot furnish a satisfactory rating. The young man who would woo a ? tiapmi ruiics vuma. A dispatch from Moukden says that Japan is preparing to force China to settle the timber dispute on the Yalu River. Pension For Employes. | Details of the plan for the pensioning of Federal civil employes were completed at Washington, D. C. Guatemalan Troops Massed. Guatemala and Honduras massed troops on ttfb frontier in expectation of invasion by Nicaragua's army. Prominent People. Andrew Carnegie met the German Emperor on the yacht Hohenzollern at Kiel. General Booth, of the Salvation Army, returned to London from a tour of Japan and Canada. fin'oornnr Sfruart- of Pennsylvania. began hi3 business life?a pretty successful one?as an errand boy at $3 per week. John Kendrick Bangs, the author, ha^ forsaken New York and will hereafter make his home in Boston. He will spend his summers at Ogunquit, Me._ * * 'X . >? ' 5 ' ' V"J n the Sign Shop. Sl%^ ;oon by BeiTyman in the Washington Star. EQUALS, AT ONE COLLEGE leal Plan of Social Democracy, Doing ibs--Lrv* and Cat Together at it Club Life, Says President ng and Unwholesome. Club life, as it exists to-day at the university, is demoralizing, says President Wilson, "not because there is in the clubs any cynical indifference to study, but because the social activities into which their members are natural!? and inevitably drawn are very many and very delightful and very engrossing, and study has to take its chance in competition with them. "These influences," he continued, "are splitting classes into factions and endangering that class spirit upon which we depend for our selfgovernment and for the transmission of most of the loyal impulses of the university. Tho 'polities' of candidacy for membership in the upper class club not only produce a constant and very demoralizing distraction from university duties in freshman and sophomore years, and inforce all 3orts of questionable customs, but they cut deeper even than that. "Group rivalries break the solidarity of the classes. The younger classes are at no point made conscious of the interests of the university; their whole thought is cpncentrated upon individual ambitions, upon means of preference, upon combinations to obtain selfish individual ends. They strive against this when they become juniors and seniors, but they do not strive against it successfully, and when they are freshmen and sophomores they do not strive against it at all. "The present system of our life is artificial and unwholesome." S TELL WHY THEY LOVE i d Even Feet, Are Chief Among At" :ido Because College I to Marry; Eyes, hair, size or stature, feet, brows, complexion, cheeks, form of head, throat, ears, chin, hands, neck, nose, finger nails and contour of face. Which is to say that more of those lAtffira ncof^rl howa frtlin/? thfi loved one's eyes or hair the chief attraction than anything else. The women replying to Dr. Hall's questions have also specified these charms ih the men they loved best: Regular teeth, broad shoulders and white teeth, and most popular among the men have been long lashes and arched brows. According to some of those replying, a retrousse nose, freckles and a long neck have been the chief charms. The voice cuts an important figure among the charms." With some it is a high voice; with others, a low voice. Even a lisp has been stated as a charm. Laughter, carriage, gait, gesture, movements of the eye, pose of head and shoulders have also been ononlfifi/1 in a rani foe I AAA V*4V * Vyovw. NOT TO WED POOR MEN on Husbands Having at Least $4000 h Documentary Proof. member of the society must furnish documentary proof that he has goods and chattels to the value of $2000, and carries a life insurance policy for at least $2000. With $2000 in available assets and $2000 in futures," the Y. L. P. S. girls will pay attention to proposals. The promoters of the organization say they have observed that the most frequent cause of unhappy marriages is poverty. PinoK l?a1 f in Wall Qfroof X AUWII Jl- VtV ?l It is said that niDety per cent, of men who get a living out of Wall Street are much poorer to-day than they were six months ago. Revolutionists Rob Bank. Russian revolutionists got $80,000 from two branches of the Russo-Chinese Bank on forged checks. Salvation Army in the South. The Salvation Army Citadel, the first in the South, was dedicated at Columbia, S. C. Baseball Brevities. The Hudson River Baseball League disbanded at Foughkeepsie, on account of poor attendance. Wallace, of the St. Louis team, is the first American League player to make fifty hits this season. Figures will show that Bill Coughlin has hit in more Detroit runs than any other member of the Detroit team. West Point has a classy shortstop in Pritchett. No big leaguer, has ai more finished style than the soldier, player. 0 w?v5v: *r7-/ % - I " CORNELL mi niloaH.jitA UlilL 0_l ucdpcidic ouuggie mm uuium bia Ended in Victory by 3 Feet Wisconsin Takes the Frcshmai Eights and Syracuse the 'Varsity Fours at Poughkeepstc. CREWS IN REGATTA, ORDER OP FINISH AND TIME THEY MADE. University eight-oared shells, four miles: 1. Cornell, 20 min. 2 2-5 sec. 2. Columbia, 20 min. 3 sec. 3. TT. S Naval Ar>nr1omv 91) min 13 4-5 sec. 4. Pennsylvania, 20 min. 23 2-5 sec. 5. Wisconsin. No time taken. 6. Georgetown. ( No time taken. . 7. Syracuse. Boat swamped.r Freshman eight-oai-ed shells, two miles: 1. Wisconsin, 9 min. 58 sec. 2. Syracuse, 10 min. 3 sec. 3. Pennsylvania, 10 min. 4 ; dec. 4. Columbia, 10 min. 5 2-5 sec. 5. Cornell, 10 min. 7 4-5 sec. University four-oared shells, without coxswains, two miles: 1. Syracuse, 10 min. 37 1-5 sec. 2. Cornell, 10 min. 40 sec. 3. Pennsylvania, 10 min. 49 sec. 4. Columbia, 10 min. 59 3-5 sec. i Poughkeepsie, N. Y.?Rowing fou miles in the twilight down a broad ening hill-ridged river, while 50,00 persons cheered deliriously, the 'vaT sity eights of Cornell and Columbi; fought such a battle as no two racin; crews ever fought before. Cornell won by a magnificent burs of speed in the last ten strokes, th nose of her shell sweeping across th finish line three feet ahead of the Ne? Yorkers. But' from the first dip o the oars at the head of the course un til the winning Ithacans dropped thei sweeps and fell back, half senseless in their victory, not twenty-five fee separated either shell, and at the eni the Columbians were so close up tha the great crowd on the banks though the triumph was theirs. Unusual picturesqueness was adde< to the scene by the fact that dark ness closed so quickly that the $lar of the great searchlight from th United. States monitor Arkansas wa thrown over the crews at the finis! to aid the judges in their decision. A gallant third in this wonderfu heart-breaking struggle rowed th< much-vaunted Annapolis team. All the way from the first mil post it had been anybody's race. Fron any part of the observation train a the finish it still seemed like any body's race, with the majority be lieving that a dead heat had beei rowed. Thus for the eighth time has Cor nell won the 'Varsity Challenge Cui in this the thirteenth annual contest Yet the "big race" was only one o three, the climax of a series of wate contests that held 50,000 persons oi the shores of the Hudson River fo; more-man tnree nonrs. The first contest for the Kenned; Challenge Trophy was the race of th< university fours. There were onl; four entered and the standing was Syracuse, first; Cornell, second Pennsylvania, third, and Columbia fourth? *"4 The second race was of the fresh men eights. It was won by the Uni versity of Wisconsin, and was thi first time the boys from the Badge: State have taken the Stewards' Cuj since 1900. The other freshmei crews came in as follows: Syracuse second; Pennsylvania, third; Colum bia, fourth, and Cornell, fifth. In the great throng that gathere< for the race Annapolis was a genera favorite. Uncle Sam did his best t< cheer his sailors. He sent three mon itors?the Florida, Arkansas and Ne vada?up the Hudson, and they cam< to anchor in the morning near th< line of the finish. Flags were brokei out from stem to stern and made j brave showing amofcg the gayly dec orated crart wmcn neugeu me wu below the bridge. FATAL PINE BEACH FIRE. Heavy Property Loss Outside James town Exposition Grounds. Norfolk, Va.?Six blocks of smol dering ruins mark the trafck of th fire which swept Pine Beacht Jayin low fifty hotels, saloons,; eatinj houses and stores, destroying $200, 000 worth of property, costing th< lives of possibly five persons, and en dangering the negro building, Insid Inn, and several State buildings with in the Exposition grounds. - An ex plosion of a gasoli stove in th rear of the Berkeley fci. .el caused th< fire. Larry Harrison, a negro, wasfoum mortally burned under the Hote Berkeley; a man is believed to hav perished in the National Club, M2.ry land avenue, and two women and i baby are believed to have been caugh when the walls of the Hampto] Koaas ien m. The Arcade, Royal Kamptoi Roads, Washington . ^c, Outsid Inn, Powhatan, Carolina and Berke ley hotels were among the larges buildings destroyed. Duke's Sister-in-Law Turns Gypsy. A sister-in-law of the Duke o Westminster is touring England as i gypsy. Only His Legs Left. After his wife had refused to com* back and live with him because o his drinking habits, George Kramer a quarryman, went to the barn at th< rear of his wife's house at Monroe Mich., and lay down on the floor an< blew himself to pieces with a stick o dynamite. All that was found o him after the explosion were his legs New York's Bad Roads. An expert civil engineer nas rt? ported that not 100 yards of any o ihe pavements of New York City an without flaws. Fundamental Conditions Sound. No one with ordinary sense be lieves the country is about to enter < period of widespread commercial de pression. Fundamental condition: are too sound for such a develop meat, and it is not likely the effort! of speculators to convince the people at large that there is to be a businesf panic will be successful in bringing investment stocks on the market. Ha3 an Encouraging Tone. All the news, outside of monetarj considerations, has an encouraginj tone. - * - - * - -v iit- - - >?>.<-> '[00 ? ,-| -J-.-. V . c'-v ?f The Local Reporter. * To a great eztent the success of every .newspaper depends upon the reliability ot its news. Whether the uwwo it yreiwuu) us ur ia itui> inuvio depends upon the reporter. It TrtH thus be easily conceived that in the realm of the press the reporter occupies an Important and responsible 1 place. Newspapers which attala highest success are those which cover the local field most thoroughly and truthfully and which present the news In the most readable manner.?rH. G, Rose, Kewaaee (111.) Star-Courier. . A Popular Recreation. . 8 wnere are you going, oanay: said one Scotchman to another in tha., story that Mr. Carnegie told at therecent peace congress in New York. "Doon to the club," said Sandy. "And wha foor?" "Just to contradeect a wee bit"?* Detroit News. - . ? i m.X .-'fl: FTT8, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervous Diseases pe* manently cured by l>r. Kline's Great Nerra Restorer. 22 trial bottle aud treatise free. Dr.H. R. Kline. Ld.,931 Arch 8t..Fhila., Pa. Crime in the United States cbsU. the Govenunent $140,000,000. H .%'* THOUGHT CHILD WOULD DIE Whole Body Covered With- Cubao Itch?Cuticura Remedies Cure at Cost of 73c. "My little boy, when 'only an infant o3'J three months, caught ' the Cuban Itchl Sores broke out from his head to ithe bottom of his feet. He would itch, and claw himself and cry all the time. He"could not . sleep day or night, and a light dress is aD he could wear. I called one of our best : doctors to treat him, acd his treatment/did ' not do any good, but he seemed to get worse. He suffered so terribly that xnjr husband said he believed hewwlifchave to n die.. I had .almost given uphope wHen-* lady friend told me. to try the Outic^irt a Remedies. I used the'Cuticura Soap and ? applied the Cuticura Ointment ^ao^ he ? once fell into a sleep, and he'^depfc wit? t ease for the first time for iTytJ-'months; 0 After three applications the sor<jf $egan to e dry up, and in just two vreeks fem the w day 1 commenced to use the Cutlpura Reiaf edies my baby was entirely well^Che treat* ' _ ment only cost me 75c., and I f^nld htcwt r gladly paid.$100 if L could.not tofe got it anv cheaner. 1 feel safe in savite that the t Cuticura Remedies Baved his lfi? He ?p j now a boy of five years. Mrs. Zarij Mfilaj t Union City, R. F. D., No. 1, Em&cb Co, t Mich., May 17, 1906." , The well known wild bearadealer,^ Herr Hagenbeck, of StelMteen, 13 e aendlng the contents >f a apologlcal e garden to Pekin for, the ChlffiiBe Govs ernmept., N. Jf.-?26 1 I ' I it*!" 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