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A SUDDEN COLD. \\^ nSI^^ ; >'< ' :;.;^ Miss Helen Sanerbier, of 813 Slain St., St. Jo?oph, Mich., writes an interesting letter n the subjoct of catching cold, which cannot fail to beofvalnoto all women who catch cold easily. PEN WISED 1 SUDDEN COEDS. It Should Be Taken According to Directions on the Bottle, at the First Appearance of the Cold. St. Joseph, Mich., Sept., 1901.?Last winter I caught a sudden cold, which de- ; veloped into an unpleasant catarrh of the head and throat, depriving me of my appetite and usual good spirits. A friend who had been cured bv Peruna advised me to try it and I sent for a bottle at once, and I am glad to say that in three days the phlegm had loosened, and I felt better, my appetite returned ana within nine days 1 I was in my usual good health. ?Miss Helen Sauerbi?r. Peruna is an old and well tried remedy , for colds. No woman should be with- ( out it. ,V * ; 1 ] i~2s\iv\cr Taa TTq i? i When Mr. Volney Streamer was 1 visiting Mark Twain at his Redding home, a short time ago, he remarked on the picturesque appearance of a windmill in the distant landscape. It was not a windmill, however, but the tower of the Congregational Church at Redding Centre. When the clergyman of that church came to see Mr. Clemens the latter told him that one of his guests had called his church a windmill, adding, "I think that was going a little too far!"?The Lounger, in Putnam's and The Reader. Too True. "No one understands me!" he groaned; "no one on earth." It is the old story wrung from many a tortured, youthful heart. The sufferer is generally mistaken, but the pain i9 no less poignant. Yet in i tnis instance tne man s compiamt was < true. Nobody on earth could under- J stand him. For he was an announcer of trains at the Union Depot. ? Cleveland Leader. / | Village Degeneracy. 1 The human population of country villages, most sad to see, is every year rendered less intelligent than it ' was 100 years ago. All the enterprising, intelligent young men and maidens are "fished" away, drawn by baits and hooks to the great 9 towns; only the dull and relatively a incapable are left in the village to * marry and produce a new generation, c The village population necessarily be- 1 comes made up of a dull stock?inca- 1 pable, as appears from official reports, of being educated beyond a very low 9 Btage. In some districts seventy per t cent, of the children are thus un-in- I telligent, though not unhealthy or t irmbccile.?Sir E. Ra>> Lankaster, in f London Telegraph. J Not Improbable. a well-known scientist was telling a young woman about a series of experiments he had been recently making with the microphone. "The mi- ^ crophone," he explained, "magnifies sounds to the ear as the microscope magnifies objects to the eye. The footfalls of a centipede heard through ? the microphone resemble a tattoo on (, l kettledrum. The dropping of a ( pin is like the report of a cannon." ? "That is verj interesting and odd," c ?aiu luc 5111. "This arternoon," resumed the sci- ' entist, "I caught a fly and studied its '? note, which resembles the neighing of t a horse." 1 "Perhaps," said the girl, "it was a Horsefly."?New York Press. WANTED TO KNOW | [ The Truth About Grape-Nuts Food. J It doesn't matter so much what ! you hear about a thing, it's what you j know that counts. And correct , knowledge is most likely to come ( from personal experience. "About a year ago," writes a N. Y. < man, "I was bothered by indigestion, especially during the forenoon. I ( tried several remedies without any permanent improvement. "My breakfast usually consisted of natmeal, steak or chops, bread, coffee and some fruit. 1 "Hearing so much about GrapeNuts, 1 concluded to give it a trial and find out if all I had heard of it was true. I "So I began with Grape-Nuts and 1 cream, two soft boiled eggs, toast, a 1 cup of Postum and some fruit. Before the end of the first week I was ' \ riH <->f thp aridity of the stomach and I felt much relieved. "By the end of the second week all traces of indigestion had disappeared and I was In first rate health once ( more. Before* beginning this course of diet I never had any appetite for i lunch, but now I can enjoy a hearty meal at noon time." "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle i Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new *ne appears from time to time. They re genuine, true, and foil of human interest. ? k THM SENT SICK TO I IMITEM ISM , lawyers Present No Evidence, Hoping to Gain Trial by Jury. i WHITE'S SLAYER CAREWORN Despite Writ Requiring His Presence t in Pennsylvania, Justice Decides * Quickly?Last Hope Rests uii Bankruptcy Action. a White Plains. N. Y.?By an abrupt a and sudden switch around in the Supreme Court at White Plains Harry K. g Thaw was whisked back from his re- -v cent quarters in the Westchester f County jail to the place he hates most * in the world, Matteawan Asylum for ^ the Criminal Insane. T After an absence of five months f ^ Thaw reach Matteawan late in the af- [ * ternoon. There he will stay until t one of two things happens, either the p granting of a lunacy trial by jury or F his removal to Pittsburg to testify in f his bankruptcy proceedings now pending. If neither of these two things fi happens. Thaw, so far as his legal a and physical status is concerned, is ii back where he was the day Justice 1< Dowling committed him to Mattea- n wan last January. At a conference Thaw's new law- n yers decided that what they wanted f' for their client was a lunacy trial by ^ a Sheriff's jury, and not a single-bar- c reled hearing before Justice Mills, a Accordingly, as soon as the case was y called at White Plains they took the c step which caused the immediate tl abandonment of the present proceedings and left Thaw free to apply to the Court of Appeals for a jury trial, on the ground that Justice Mills' re- T fusal to grant them such a trill was unconstitutional. The resort to this expedient sent Thaw back to Matteawan for the time e being, but it offered the only chance ^ Df securing a jury trial for him. There was also a suspicion that n Thaw's lawyers planned to get him a into the custody of the Federal au- it thorities, and shunt him off to Pitts- t' burg. o As soon as Dr. Baker, acting super- r< Intendent of Matteawan, stepped out 3f the court, a Federal process server M 3erved him with a writ requiring him to produce Thaw at Pittsburg for the bankruptcy hearing. Colonel Asa S Bird Gardner, representing the Attor- t' riey-General's office, will go before U. b 5. Judge Archibald at Scranton and^ represent that Thaw is a lunatic in Ci custody, just, as he did when Sheriff 0 Lane, of Westchester, was similarly w served some days ago. 0 It is almost certain that an order tvill then be issued against Dr. Baker requiring him to produce Thaw at Pittsburg and eventually it is prob- F lble that Thaw will go to PennsylYa lia. In the meanwhile his lawyers will ale their appeal with the State Court ^ )f Appeals at once, so they say. 111 Thaw looked ill and worn. His ^ mother, his brother, Josiah, and his j*: sister, Mrs., Carnegie, attended the learing, and after Thaw had left for Hatteawan they went to the j3.il and j-* ;ot his papers and personal effects. b( 6? tt BIGGER NAVY FOR BRITAIN. ci m Jig Army, Too?Cabinet Sees Light in the Near East. C London.?One of the first of the q ar reaching effects of the European xisis is that the Britoh Government las decided definitely to abandon its lollcy of a reduction of armaments. g< Naval construction on a large scale a rill be resumed immediately and the pi ,rmy instead of being further reduced hi nil be increased. The matter was g< onsidered at a meeting of the Cab- w net, and while no official announcenent has been made the foregoing 1 tb ^ay be accepted as accurate. te This news will be particularly un- b: welcome to Germany, for victory in cc his competition must go with the ongest purse. On the other hand, Ci hi3 fresh burden put upon overtaxed lurope raises appalling questions. ?he process of increasing expenditures st or armaments cannot go much fur- s^, her without a collapse of the nation- E 1 finances in more than one country. al : u trrr r wd mvrn fcOTt D11\I7 XVlUJUHiXV #' til JUJL/ **. E Tcnnessean Gets Extreme ' Penalty cr For Offering Fifty Quail For Sale. Memphis, Tenn.?Following other gi levere penalties imposed under the p< ecently enacted law to protect game lirds in Tennessee, R. F. McMurty, q >f Sumner County, has been fined J2500 for trying to dispose by sale T >f fifty quail. The birds were trapped, according o Game Warden King, who made the Lrrest, and killed by blows on the q lead. Many young quail were among ty he number. McMurty got the ex- gi ;reme penalty of the law. r fc DIES OF FOOTBALL INJURIES. si S. 'ennsylvnnia High School Flayer "Was w Kicked in Head in Game. Cannonsburg, Pa.?William M. Potts, the football player, who was i njured in a game here on October 3, s dead. He was seized with convul- p sions for the second time, and an . jperation brought no relief. Potts, who was twenty-one years p Did, played on the scholastic team. tj. During a game with the High School eleven lie was kicked on the head. SERVIA CAPTURES ISLANDS. es M Drives Out Austrian Officials "Who Si Seized Points in the Drina. b< Belgrade.?The Pravda states that ^ Servian gendarmes have recaptured ihe islands in the River Drina which were seized a couple of days ago by Austrian customs guards. The populace at Shabatz boarded an Austrian steamer at that place, in seized the flag she was flying und di burned it. ei Among the Workers. The recent Scottish trade union congress passed resolutions in favor si of old age pensions and in favor of di compulsory intervention in labor dis- H putes. hi The Stereotypers and Electrotyp- to ers' Union has been greatly increased hi during the last year, in which seven m new locals were formed. The mem- of bership is 3500 in ninety-two locals, and the treasury holds $20,000. The government of the city of Liege, Belgium, not only does all it tj can to prevent idleness, but it en- w courages the working class to obtain homea. HE FIBMEPT AGAIN Arizona Town Burned For Second Time in Two Years. joss in Property is Estimated at $1,000,000?Fifty Acres of Houses Destroyed?Dynamite Used. El Paso, Texas.?For the second ime in two years the town of Bisbee, V.riz., has been swept by fire. The 3ss is estimated at $1,000,000. Fifty | icres of the town were swept clean. The fire started at the Grand Hotel ind spread rapidly. The Angelus iotel was dynamited in an effort to tay the flames, but a strong breeze vas blowing up the Canon and the Ire was rapidly carried forward. The )pera House, the Women's Toggery, he big Fair Store and many other big msiness houses were burned. Bisbee is built at the junction of 'ombstone and Brewery gulches and he houses extend up the sides of tho nountains surrounding. Owing to he floods this summer many water lipes were broken, the firemen were lowerless and the fire had to be ought with dynamite. Scores of volunteers were overcome ighting .the flames and many women nd children had narrow escapes. It - 1 1 i -""J A numVtAw r\ P norpnn O 5 Utile veu tuai tt uumuci uj. jytiouuo Dst their lives in the work of dynaliting, as many are unaccounted for. Coming when the Bisbee copper lines had been operating half time or many months and when the city 'as staggering under a heavy finanial load as a result of the flood damge and the fire of less than two ears ago, this fire may result in the ity abandonment for a new site on tie plains near by. MIDDIES FAIL TO PASS. wer.ty-four Forced to Resign?Serious Shortage in Brigade. Annapolis, Md.?The Naval Acadmy authorities have called upon venty-four midshipmen for their res ^nations. Tnis announcement was iade following a meeting of the cademic board on Saturday, when , was found that fifteen members of le new. fourth class and eight secnd class men had failed to pass the jgular September mental examinaons. At the regular examination in [ay forty-two midshipmen were )und deficient and were informed lat they would be re-examined in eptember to give them air opporinity to complete their studies. All ut the twenty-four were passed. There are already a number of vaincies in the academy, and the loss f those who are now forced to resign ill seriously reduce the membership C the brigade. DEATH OF DR. D. C. GILMAX. irst President of Johns Hopkins and 1 the Carnegie Institution. Norwich, Conn.?Dr. Daniel Coit ilman, the eminent educator, forlerly head of Johns Hopkins Uni?rsity and the Carnegie Institution, ied suddenly at the home of his sisir here. He had only recently reirned from Europe, where he spent le summer. He had been in feeble ealth for several months, and had svered his relations with most of le institutions and educational soeties with which he had been conjcted. i UT FINGER OFF TO SAVE LIFE. nick Work With Pocketknife by Vir? J ~ D Iffon Kir Cna Ttp giiixa raiuiui JUAHVU Winchester, Va.?Bitten on a finir by a rattlesnake, William Piatt, farmer living near Winchester, ailed out his pocketknife and xcked at the joint until half the finjr had been severed. His quick ork probably saved his life. Frank Haines, another farmer of ie same neighborhood, who was bitn, had to have an arm amputated 7 surgeons and is in a precarious ndition. in a da Shuts Off Asiatic Immigration, Reduces European. Ottawa, Ont.?As a result of a rerictive immigration policy adopted ime time ago immigration from urope to Canada has been reduced most half. The arrivals irom tae nlted States have slightly increased, i the first eight months 117,533 uropeans entered Canada, a de-' ease of 100,000. American arrivs numbered 40,956, an increase of ght. Japanese and Hindu immi ation has been practically sus;nded. OLFORD COURT HOUSE BATTLE wenty-flve Thousand Persons Wit ' ness Reproduction. Greensboro, N. C.?The Battle of uilford Court House was reproduced f United States cavalry, infantry, late militia and a gatling gun. The ?sult of the day's battle, like that >ught in 1781, is in doubt, both des claiming the victory. Colonel H. Miner commanded the British, hile Colonel J. W. Craig command1 the American forces. About 25,50 persons witnessed the battle. Woman Drowned in a Vnt of Wine, j Mrs. George Colier, of Occidental, al., visited the winery on her husmd's ranch and climbed to the edge ! a large vat, partly tilled with wine. | robably through being overcome by le fumes, Mrs. Colier lost her bailee, fell inside and was drowned. Birthday Fete Kills Centenarian. Miss Sarah Morse, one of the oldit women in Brooklyn, died at the ethodist Home, In Park place, on jnday. Officers of the institution Jlieve she died from the effects of e celebration of her 100th birthday iniversary on September 29. She is been ill since that day. Smaller Traffic in Coal. Some seasonable increase is noted + r>rtoi inrlnctrv nlthnne'h nrn I lUC VUUl lllUUU?.i J , M. v-w ~0 ? rction and shipments are still small than a year ago. General Eppa Hunton Dead. Brigadier-General Eppa Hunton, a irvivor of the Confederate Army, ed at the home of his son, Eppa unton, Jr., at Richmond, Va., in is eighty-sixth year. General Hunm, although a vigorous old man, id been blind and deaf for many onths. He was known as the hero ! Ball's Bluff. Spring Wheat Sold. It is estimated in the Northwest lat forty per cent, of the spring heat has already been sold by term's. THE CHAMPIOI mm ?Cartoon by 1 TORTURE CHILDREr Charity Agent Reports Harrov Illinois?Stabbed With Forks Broken Also Among Criir Many Sold For MoneyRelates Instances of ] Parents and Pi Chicago, 111.?How the wards of the State have been abused and tortured was the subject of a sensational recital by the Rev. Charles Virden, agent of the State Board of Chari* ? - -? ? * _ o ties, to tne aiace ^oniereiiue ui v^uoiities, held at Rock Island. His paper was entitled "The State Visitation of Children," and said, in part: "During the last two years I have personally handled approximately 550 special cases. Most cf the children are well cared for when placed in family homes. The bad cases are exceptions. For example, I have found thera tortured with hot irons, stabbed with toasting forks and scissors, limbs broken, hair torn out by the roots, lashed until black and blue from head to foot, faces cut and scarred and eyes blinded. "Numerous other cases of crime against children in the form of assault have been prosecuted, and in the three years of my incumbency ten of these offenders have been sent to nrt/i i>nmarniio "toll Lilt? yCililCilliai J auu uumti V LLt> JMA* .commitments and fines have been imposed. Many Children Sold. "There has been a wholesale traffic in children in Illinois. I have a receipt in my possession for a child who had been sold for a stipulated price. "One of the most distressing cases occurred in Quincy, 111., where a child was taken from its mother, a young girl, when less than an hour old, placed in a market basket, absolutely nude except for a covering of an old piece of quilt, carried about the 3treets and offered to any one who would accept it. The infant finally was given to a woman who had been a pensioner on the county for a number of years. "The evidence showed that thle was at least the seoond child that had been sold from this institution. WORLD'S RUTI ^ -4 JJ .A DM A nruisn scientist annuucrs ai oi^ oicaiuc London.?Henry E. Armstrong, professor of chemistry at the City and Guilds of London Central Institute, addressing the annual meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute at Middiesborough, said it was difficult to keep calm when he reflected upon the ruthless way the world's stores of timber, iron, coal and oil were being used up. It made .the scientist shudder to see the indifference displayed in all civilized lands to the inevitable consequences of such waste in the nowise distant future. No comment was provoked by the fact that the steamers Lusitania and Mauretania devour daily a thousand SIGNS OF A C A Close Observer of Nature Tells W New York City.?"There's no use talking, it's going to be a hard winter, no matter which Bill is elected," said the wise young man who had just returned from his vacation in Pike County, Pennsylvania, with a luxuriant crop of tan and freckles. "I forgot I ever knew so much about the country until I got out there again. I was born and raised in the country, and I'm proud of it. "How do I know It's going to be a hard winter? Well, here are some of the sure signs, and I surprised the farmers when I sprung my knowledge on them: "A heavy crop of nuts. You never saw the like of the butternuts, hickory nuts and chestnuts that there are going to be in less than a month now. "A big fruit crop and an abundance of wild grapes; the woods are full of this little wild fruit of the vine, and Wills Husband a Dollar in Four Installments. Chicago.?One dollar, payable in 1 monthly installments of twenty-five I cents, is the bequest given Andrew 1 Heckler by his wife, Catherine E. Heckler, of Portland, Ore., whose will was filed in the Probate Court here. In the will Heckler is referred to as "the individual who married me in 1905 in San Diego, Cal., and who got from me thousands of dollars and when he could get no more deserted me." The estate consists of personal property. Women in the Day's News. Mrs. Norman E. Mack, of BufTaio, N. Y.. confessed that she would like to vote. Viscountess Molesworth started a jam factory on her estate near Mins ter-on-Sea, England. In the Luxembourg Gallery, in : Paris, the works of only two women sculptors are represented. Miss Ruth H. Northrop, of Norwich, Conn., has won the scholarship 1 offered by the Norwich Art Students' Association. The work she submitted . consisted of three groups of animals and figures modeled in clay from life. I ff OF THE iffir Jerryman, in the Washington Star. I WITH HOT IRONS. ring Cruelty to State Wards ii 5?Hair Torn Out and Limbs tes Against Little Ones? ?The Rev. Mr. Virden Persecution by Foster iblic Institutions. ? The saddest part of it all is that tlier< is no law in the State of Illinois pro hibiting the sale of a child." In speaking of other specific case: the Rev. Mr. Virden said: "A girl of thirteen years, commit ted by the Juvenile Court, was mad< a household drudge. Our State agen found that she was being beaten witl o VinraonrhJn TVio ?rir1 W99 rPmnvPf and placed in a good home, where sh< was given a chance for education anc religious training. Burned With Hot Knife. "A girl, having only one paren living, seven years old, was in th< home of a family at Alton, 111. Th< evidence showed that this child was covered with bruises. Her face wai burned, her hands were hacked witl a red hot knife and the sight of one eye was destroyed. The foster moth er, charged with having inflicted thes< wounds, was fined for' assault anc battery, and will be tried under th< cruelty act. "A girl was the victim of her stepfather's attacks for ten years, aftei she was seven years old. Her stepfather was sent to the penitentiarj and the girl sent to a good home. "Two girls, aged five and ten, were forced to beg on the streets for theii mother, who kept a disreputable re sort. They are now in good'homes. "A girl thirteen years old did the washing and ironing for a family ol seven. She had no school advantages. An Investigation showed thai she wore her foster mother's old clothes and shoes; was overworked am* pppplvpd no salarv: that her life was insured in the benefit of the mother-in-law in the home. The child .was returned to the home, on trial upon the cancellation of the life insurance policy, and promised that she was to receive new clothes and $2 a week. 'I protest against the insurance of the lives of these children.' I LESS WASTE. rs' Coal Consumption-No Substitute Yel or more tons of coal while crossing the ocean. This extravagance was gloried in as an engineeriijg achievement when it ought to be anathematized. The public comforted itself with the belief that science would discover a substitute for coal, and therefore felt no compunction in recklessly destroying the capital won from the sun in past ages, but science could not at present support the illusion. T>rnfoaonr A rmatrnnir earnpst.lv urged serious scientific study of economical methods of fuel consumption, outlining the direction such study ought to take. OLD WINTER. hat is Coming in the Way of Weather they will be delicious when the frosf touches them. "Heavy husks on the corn. The farmers say that is a sure sign. "Wasps and hornets building theii nest nearer the ground than usual. "The cricket and katydid orchestras working overtime; that's a sureenough indication of an early winter, too. , "Dame Nature is a good and thougbtful provider for all the little folk of the forest and field, you know; that's why there is such a big crop of nuts and wild grapes and fruit?sa that the squirrels, the mice and the birds won't go hungry through the long winter. I tell yon what, there is nothing hit-or-miss about the indications I have mentioned. All you have to be is a close observer of nature to know what ia coming in the way of weather." Sending 800,000 Return Postals South to Get Work For Aliens. Washington, D. C.?The distribution of aliens is to be promoted by the Bureau of Information of the Department nf f!ommercc and Labor. Sec retary Straus has issued orders to start, the work at each immigration station, and the bureau has begun the enormous task of getting in touch with farmers, manufacturers and other employers in the South to learn what help they may need. This work will require the sending out of $00,000 return postal cards. The World of Sport. Yale defeated Wesleyan by sixteen points to nothing in her opening football game at New Haven, Conn. Steffen, the Chicago quarter back and captain, is said by many experts to be as good as the famous Eckersall was two years ago. American lawn tennis experts defeated their British rivals, and will go to Australia to play for the Davis Cup. Beals C. "Wright defeated F. B. Alexander In the finil round of the tournament for the national lawn tennis championship. / } i . ; T , . * : ;r , ~ won mob mST British Houso of Commons Be- < i i i i siegeo oy Lunuuii ounrageuus. i, i Workingmen and Women Assemble ' at the Call of Agitators and IJush ( the Doors of Westminster. London.?Tho climax of the suf- ' fragette campaign was reached when 1 an enormous mob hemmed in Parliament and stopped the traffic in all streets leading to Westminster. For j more than three hours the crowds rr/~\r\rl r* o f ?t V Tvi + Vl fho nn. 1 DV^UUXCU gwv/u UUbUi VUt/ ITAVM %MV Jfv J lice, interfered with theatregoers, broke windows and disorganized things generally in the centre of London. The heroine of the day was Mrs. Travers Symons, formerly secretary to James Keir Hardie, the Socialist and Independent member of Parliament, who reached the door of the House of Commons by strategy. The I House was solemnly debating a bill to prevent children from cigarette smoking, when the woman dashed past the doorkeeper to a position in ( front of the Speaker's chair and . shouted shrilly: "Leave off discussing children and talk about women.". Three officials seized Mrs. Symons and carried her out bodily. She was then led to the outer door and dismissed. As a result of the coup an order was issued that hereafter women should not be admitted to the 1 building on any pretext whatsoever, 1 and in the future the historic grille j will not screen feminine spectators. The appeal issued by the suffra- v gettes a few days ago for 50,000 per- t sons to help them "rush" Parliament was the most successful stroke yet. 1 Not less than twice that number re- ? sponded to the call, and nine-tenths o- these were young people who came I to see the fun. There were also a a few hundred of the unemployed and ~m their sympathizers. Parliament was in a slate of siege. A close triple line of police was c drawn around three sides of the t square fn front of the building. The t ~ yard within the gates swarmed with | : police, and 200 guarded the terrace ? In the rear against assault by water, t . which the women twice attempted. , A small fleet of police boats also pa- B trolled the -Thames approaches. v All the mounted police in London t and suburbs had been mobilized at i; this centre, and loads of hay were t t unstacked in the streets for the j } horses. The whole police force, to? i gether with cavalry, infantry and , 3 marines, numbering more than 5000, 0 3 was kept busy in all directions with c i 'buses, motor cars and cabs, mostly h 5 filled with sightseers trying to thread d their way through. a ! Twenty-four suffragettes and ( I twelve .of the unemployed were r, i placed . under arrest. Many persons fainted in the crush, a few were ? - trampled upon and taken to the hos- h pitals. E Mrs. Panlchurst, Miss Christabel r Pankhurst and Mrs. Lawrence were summoned to court for inciting a s breach of the peace. They coolly re fused to obey the summons, but 0 agreed to surrender themselves at 6 0 o'clock in the evening, which they ii ? did. v llKUTHJiKS JtlUJKummu. g I d L{ Bodies Found by Neighbor?Crime ? J Laid to Tramps. ^ > Oswego, N. Y.?When Charles a > Ward, surprised at getting no re- A i sponse to his knocking at the house i of his neighbors, John and Peter i Bohli, at Ingalls Crossing, this counl ty, broke in the door and entered, - his investigations disclosed the fact 0 ' that the two brothers were dead. A Their bodies lay on the floor of the a kitchen, both with several bullet ti wounds in them and the heads bat- n tered in, evidently with an axe, w which lay beside them. The rifled ' empty wallet on the kitchen table and the ransacked trunk upstairs in- D ; dicated that robbery had been the li . motive, but there was every evidence 1 . also that it was not accomplished ft until after a fierce fight. t< , The crime is laid to .'tramps, and Is q . believed to have been committed several nights ago. Both the mur- ~ - iered men were past fifty years old.. i , Hard working and frugal, they were I [ thought to have accumulated several thousand dollars. TWIN SISTERS LAWYERS. , fii ' Win the Honor of Practicing in the 0( U. S. Supreme Court. ^ Washington, D. C.?Twin sisters, . Misses Ethel A. and Florence M. Colford, of Washington, D. C., were admitted to practice at the United States re Supreme Court. They are the j ' youngest women ever admitted to i " A 1 I Of practice oerore tuai iriDuuai. duw ? are pretty. Their ability got for them W , an endorsement from the Department . of Justice for the honor granted them , by the Supreme Court Justices. i th The Misses Colford were graduated jn two years ago from the Washington University School of Law with honors, ' and last year they took a post-grad- & uate course. They have been prac- re ticing law with their uncle, E. Clar| ence Colford, and have attained already a reputation. W ! They were born in Halifax, Nova [a: Scotia, but came to Washington when ? in , young. ' ?? en Mother of Twenty-three Here. fa< I Mrs. Alice Damp, mother of twen ty-three children, all or wnorn are | _ living, arrived at New York City from " the Isle of Wight, Englaud, with 11 eleven of them. R Shot Sons and Killed Himself. || At Goldsberry, Mo., D. O. Seaman, r. a farmer, went to the district school, I" called out his two sons, aged ten and 1 twelve years, shot one of them dead, i mortally wounded the other and theu I shot and killed himself. The cause j] of the tragedy is not known. Maine and Alabama Leave Azores. Ponta Delgada, Azores. ? Sailing B on the last leg of their cruise around the world, the United States battleships Maine and Alabama left herf J for New York. _ | Prominent People. g Tt is reported in New York <;uy that John W. Gates has ordered of Tiffany fifteen gold finger bowls to cost $6000. Professor William F. Warren, dean of the Boston University Theological School, resigned, and the office was offered ' > the Rev. Dr. Frank J. McConnell, of Brooklyn. Thos. P. Fowler was elected head of the New York, Ontario and Western Railway Company for the twenty-second time. Mr. Fowler is th* m dean of the railroad presidents io I New York and vicinity. J / I i 1 .> tt yyl A Permanent Rose Scent. Steep rose petals in water until they are aoft enough to be macerated easily. Mix in a fevr drops of atta^ , of rose and a little ?um. 'This is a very suitable mixture t? snclose in amulets or charms, lor it is sweet but not sickly, and it keeps Its sweetness, and, if run into a llttld fancy mold while soft and allowed to set and harden there, when turned jut it wili make an ornamental as well as an effectual perfume for a box of handkerchiefs or some other ?et possessions.?Girl's Realm. TTmr T.nnor tA Stov Jimson ? "Where's your wife? haven't seen her often lately." Weed?"Oh, I sent her away on a ittle vacation." Jimson?"So? Where'd she go?" Weed?"To the Thousand Isles." Jimson?"Stay long?" Weed?"Yes. I told her to take a veek to each island."?Judge. ^ . : DRAGS YOU DOWN. ' -Jp iackaclie and Kidney Trouble Slowly /. Wear One Out. Mrs. R. Crouse, Fayette St., Manihester, Iowa, says: "For two yeara Smy' back was weak / and rheumatic. Pains ran through my back, hips and limbs. I could hardly get v.about and lost much sleep. The action of the kidneys was much disordered. I began using Doan's Kidney Pills, and the result vas remarkable. The kidney action >ecame normal, the backache ceased md my health is now unusually food." t Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. roster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. '.i . Dogs of Luxury. The appearance of little dogs as bjects of luxury goes back to the nost ancient times. Documents are lot wanting to show that Greek and loman women had pet dogs which hey idolized. Even men, particular- < y among foreigners, were not shamed to walk the streets of Rome trith pet dogs under their arms. Pluarch relates that Julius Caesar, seeag one day In Rome some strangers hus loaded with their dogs, asked hem ironically whether the women f their country did not bear chilIren. Tertla, the daughter of Luius Aurellus Paulus, was so fond of ier dog that in the-moment of bid- < j, ing farewell to her father, who was bout to leave his country and his amljy to wage war against Perseus, 1 Ling of Macedonia, she frankly adnitted that the sadness imprinted on ier face was due to the death of her /f et dog Persa.?London Globe. An American Wife. Little Ethel is the young daughter f a contractor in Philadelphia. One f her sisters has recently entered . x v ato an international marriage. Ethel -*V ;j ras asked the other day by one of lie teachers, "Who did the ancients' "" ay supported the world on his shoulers?" "Atlas," answered Ethel. Quite right," said the teacher, "and rhat supported Atlas?" "toh," an- > wered Ethel, "I suppose he had an Lmerican wife." Japan's Maritime Position. From its ownership in IS35 of \ ^ .23 per cent, of the world's sailing eets, Japan has taken her place mong the nations of the world a3 snth instead of seventeenth, and ot' owns 2.32 ,per cent, of the r.^ orld's sailing tonnage. With refer- 7*1 ace to steam tonnage, reckoned in 1 et register tons, the share of Japan \ i 1885 was 0.88 per cent., while in \ 907 it had grown to 3.33 per cent. \ l 1885. her rank in steam was fourjenth; now it is sixth.?Nautical azette ? One of the Essentials : the happy homes of to-day is a vast md of information as to the best methods promoting health and happiness and ghi living and knowledge of the world's st'products. Products of actual excellence and asoftable claims truthfully presented * ? ? i -ii-! 1 x- u la wnicn nave att&:neu wuriu-wiue :ceptance through the approval of the relI-Infonmed of the World; not of indiduals only, but of the many who have e happy faculty of selecting and obtaing the best the world affords/ One of the products of that class, of lown component parts, an Ethical medy, approved by physicians and contended by the Well-Informed of the orld as a valuable and wholesome family icative is the well-known Syrup of Figs id Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial ects always buy the genuine, nianuU.? +Ur? Prtl!P?n T?Icr Qimm Pa ^iuiuu \jy cue vainL/i iua J. t^jiu^r w?j ly, and for sale by all leading druggists. Hale's Honey < of Horebonnd and Tar 'I Clears The Voice Sold by Druggists Pfkc'a Toothache Drops H Cure In One Minnie j pi! Throat and Lungs 111 Deed just the protection against cold |Hl M and disease that is obtained from V^N Hgl Piso's Cure. If you have a couth IflM ESI or cold, slight or serious, begin talc- Nil ing Piso's Cure today and continue i[j| SjH until you are well. Care the cough ISB |I>1 while it i? fiesh, when a few doaes K1 ^?itm> miv L? ill (Kit YOU will need. Famouf for half a ceo- Kjfl 3jW turr. Pleattnt to Utie. Free from MH opiata Mid harmful ingrtdeoti. iBBI '*Kl ^ all druggists', 25 ct*. gQl / A A