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THE OMATA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, e ————————————————————————————————————————————————— JANTARY 13, 1901, LONG-EARED GENIUS OF WAR |5, meryer, o root sane mhere are o[ DOVERTY NOT THE CAUSE| ( Fichs " | & ‘y‘f{”, ”1‘41‘ on ¢ ,‘“,;,,',,‘.‘,',‘ | " % UR mirror will tell you the bitter trath. An Apprecistion of the Rear-Action Battery, | % [Hmupe o cretviink, Wellow fover ¢t | Why Pupils Leave Pablio Schools Before : e o ";‘;“::.:"‘”'"" fook younger thaa thelr Age, BUt you look far tee old Known as the Army Mule, $uthe 10 Hlvs, for N Never citeles &Y Do ) s i) now my Mule \ e same to him, for he ever catches any | Oompletion of Their Course = i Time deals fightly with the woman In good health, but (he wasting i of them, while the horse de b " As & Propétiing wer. | Sk band of sickness and discase spares neither your yowthful looks. beasty, mor GREAT FACTOR IN MILITARY SCRAPS| v 1o ‘turnish the propeliing power for | RESULT OF INQURY IN ST, LOUIS wmprlhm' | an 9 B 3 o - he Creator has endowed cvery woman with beaaty, and cvery woman in good The proud war horse — \ | is not in the mule when it comes to | health is beaatital and comely to look wpon. A clear, fresh, wholese Hix Conrage, ¥ L Intelligence | b e oney an " Jduention— POl 3 me look T s i n army crawls on Its|MORmey and Ressits in Edscation= [ is the resalt of the possession of good " ) Work o | a2 § Von Moltk o 1 Prepondernnce of Girls in High % Seant Rati in Va | nto h, as Von .‘“ ke : ..‘ ~k|"\ \,I::\:.I. | 4 vari [tne ¢ ¥ health, and no woman can be beautifal ‘ am i iomal Matters. : The dul geac, gnaning somete e | DR GREENE’. | * a battlefield it is drawn | | B8 The dull, dead, gnawing pain, the sense - 3 | aring horses; whe at | FrTp | Departing HE, B of ncrvousncss, = IORL Americas srmy ot ot lowly and pata. | In his annual report to the Board of i ep g ALTH and BEAUTY N o ul\::;'::“m":kl’ln“:l owression. | Ay RV UIRA cer in the Philippines who has r ot miles of stifiog hot | Education of &t Louls the president of k. alled Back by [y "“x: ';n A c" vcd.:sllesfi». the proverb about heaven g b 55 % patt X-111-6 torm dcos the work | that body presents facts to sustain his s - | id fecling, the shooting pains, the (1 e S St o, w2t ol sl s e work |k, 27 U L0 1% L' L [ aching head, the nain in the back, an | MMAKkes Health glves the vi t b xhid OPLEYS TOr Tts 10ut % LNG. J0nitey | public school pupils leaving school before § these are symptoms of a disorderca i R A A A mule 1s the type of toughn: Ho witt | the aTthat tie ot o LtieAnce conds system, and all these are beauty-Killers, and Happine S8 warfare, Sh muleship 1 b B e R ek LA L In the fourth. Afth and sixth grades and { producers of dull leaden complexions, e, iR R e RO e A ervura s would n re 1a AVKIE the, G 1o e ean 1ive on | older. the backward |<vuvl!k .|‘r«y“: ml:nr:w:‘ ¥ the cyes, humors, cruptions, blackhcads, lusfreless eyes, and other disfigurement ml o, contitiue \'. At 1 Wriy, il v ¥ Vork .k 18 nvy: r (\"‘lVV!;‘\:""T‘ what seems 10 be & [ . " . which divest women of their natural gift of beauty, pri Fous a8 6 oty-sated n r il u soldiering | Tt without saying,'" he says, “that | i ¥ Gl B sl Why be homely when you can be beaatifal and attractive ? high-kicking, sixteen-hand mule conld be [ (BFCEE W WN-mie led for &f " lder pupils are backward in their | Get good health and with it thosc looks and attributes which attract, picase, bought for $i5, and a good & r s ¥ tliives b he roadside. | et the reason for which may be sick and fascinate, It is within your power to do so. for it is within every woman’s power to be well and strong, and hence look her best, if she will wse Now a western fs A ) T B Most EReE £ | ness or slowness or lack of interest Dr. Greenc's Nervura to give her strong, vigoroas ncrves, pure, rich blood. & clear complexion, and thus restore the cnergics and vitality of sownd sixteen-hand mu! less than #r = ““- A h ‘H‘"“‘ . 'H” "',' 4, "]‘ | Certainly the older puplls, the |vv.|rl; 1 and perfect health, » . 25 for him, ar most any sort of spe ik st o Ehagbrh, . oup! e discontented pupils, do not wit 4 ;‘ " fuy foteh §ito, e Iy the paticoce of the mule is the fw"lj '(.(,:' ,.ln‘..,‘,.',‘. £ l,,‘,,l\"p’,l.\. h." wmet Good health means youthful good looks to cvery woman, and it behooves women to restore Since the Manila 1 mules have been shipy Philippine alene. Three times that many have been gent to Cuba and Porto Rico. Englist mule buyers have drained the and Omaba markets since ment of the | war, in leged unsoldierly behavior of a squad of | American mules in General Buller's com mand deliborately led a Boer ambush At ever tempt to retreat true, it is the first instance of ever recorded against the has his faults but he Is g faithful Just before it of the Span fsh-American ish buyers shi 18,000 1 from American markets. army buyers wepe equs busy. ‘It was 8 popular supposition the time that Uncle Sam was holding back to get his war #hips ready y8 an ¢ my officer. *He wasn't; he was buying mule 1 myselt bought 14,000 on contract d the Main, Investigation 1 the Phillp Army officials have expended more worry {n the transportacion of muies to the Phil Ippines than I the carrying of troops. Up to a year ago nobody had any idea that mule could stand on his sea legs during a voyage of forty-one days and trot down a gangplank in better condition than he trot ted up. The American mule has achieved this. Formerly in attempting to transport mules over long distances the beasts wer supported in their stalls by a ot of sling ke a hammock ed 1o them an opportunity to rest themselves. Thi process killed from 25 to 50 per cent of the animals and the rest were in a state of collapse at the end of the voyage. Thi plan has been abandoned and mules are now carried to Manila from Portland, Ore with a loss of not more than 2 per cent At Manila they swim through the surf a mile in landing and within a week are fit for work It has been discovered that between the mule and the Filiy sympathy. It 15 the same with the mule and the Porto Rican, the n or the Mex- fean. Any of these people can take a mule 80 worn out that he will show no sign of resentment if an American soldier tickles his heels, pet him a bit and talk to him in his own Jargon, jump on his back and trot him 100 miles. Before the advent of th American army in the Philippines the only » there is a subtle draught animal in use (excepting the donkey and the Chineso coolic) was the ox. The mule, of course, is slow compared with horse, but he team of oxen chain lightning beside The Filipinos consider him THE HARDEST WORKERS Have spells of ‘*‘tired feeling’’ now and then. This feeling is caused by some derangement in the stomach, liver kidneys or bowels, and must be removed before the natural vigor and buoyancy of spirits can be restored. PRICKLY ASH BITTERS quickly corrects the dis- turbance, purifies the bowels, helps digestion and sends the blood tingling through the veins, carrying life and renewed energy throughout the system. SOLD BY DRUCCISTS. PRICE, 81.00. ence of Job. He is somewbat stubborn 1 hard-headed, but he has a sort of mule | sense, ideal in its way. His ears are not & for nothing. He 18 as watchful as a cat. Any unusual sound awakens him. He | can tell the tread of the enemy at any | bour of the day or night and he is not \tul about Lifting up bis volce and warn Ing his superior ofcer A mule will speak out and tell you about A thousand things that a horse would let pass without saying a word | army man. “He's a bette man, who would re Never Gets Ratt A mule never tuition, but he ne says the old ots rattled. He has in er Jumps at conclusio atd he does not know the shape of fear. A mule can discover water two miles off and he always speaks up and tells the | driver about it. He will go without water | for days It necessary, but when he gets iin sniffing distance of it he halts and | I say, now, there's water over d 1 propose to have a drink, | or will he proceed ti'l he gets It. | A well tralned mule can bo ridden into a well ¢ He never breaks down | As in the case of the there is a tradition that py 1 people who once saw a mule team but 1o person can be found who has himself witnessed such an event When the back must be used in lieu of vehicles the mule is the only pack animal. | He will carry everything his master puts on him, and he will carry it forever, and glve no sign of complaint. He fattens on wading marshes and swimming rivers and | cl'mbing mountains. He is as sure footed as he is clear headed. A mule team can draw an ambulance six miles an hour for twenty hours and feel rested after eating a | bunch of hay and drinking a barrel of w up a tree. on a march wagon Lave collaps Nothing short of an earthquake will cause | a mule to run away. He listens to the roar of cannon without batting an ear The | | sound of battle has neither terror nor charm | for him. He stays where you put him, and | he raises the white flag never | The mule is an army classic, and the storles about him are as the legends of Samson. Th » I8 a famillar Lincoln story |to the effect that one day the loss by cap- | ture of a few mules and two major generals was reported to the president. “Well," sald Lincoln, with a shrewd twinkle in | his eyes, “I can make plenty of major generals, but I do hate to lose those mules.” It is properly understood among army | teamsters that the only ways to start a mule are to build a fire under him or to swear until the atmosphere is blue. Mule drivers, like poets, are born, not made On the whole, Missourl men are supposed | |10 handle a mule a littlo better than any- body else. When General Otis was in com |mand in the Philippines a raw Missouri recruit was set to driving a refractory | mule team. His appointment was unfor- tunat cause he had “hitched on to the Baptists' just before joining the army The roads were almost impassable, and the rest of the teamsters were literally bom- barding their charges with oaths. The | Missourian held his peace, albelt in im- | | potent rage. At last one of the wheel my | balked and fused to advance a step. The | driver used every endeavor to urge the | | beast along, but to no purpose. At last he | roared out solemnly: “Oh, Lord, you know | where this mule ought to be as well as | anybody The whole army knows where he ought to be. He knows where he ought 1 know where he ought to be, oh and if he doesn’t move in a minute | to Lord |1 intend to say so, by gum!"" | | Another soldier was assigned to team- | ster duty in General unston’s division. He presented himself apologetically before | his superior officer. “Cap he said, hitching his thumbs | awkwardly in his trousers pockets, “I wisht you'd 'p'int Bill Jones to drivin' them mules | “How's that “Yeh, can't you drive?" the devil's the matter, then?" ye sce, Cap'n, I ain’t half wicked akes a recklesser man than a ive a six-mule team." ertions are all from the view- point of the army mule's'stubbornness. No man who has had exp with him doubts his loyalty, his courage and his toughness. A WOMAN'S BIG O1L STRIKE, Mes. Ihrig of West Virginia is Now Making $7.000 n Week. Virginia oil developments of the 1 fe weeks have produced what the | operators are pleused to call an *oil qu She is Mre, Mary Ihrig, formerly of Sister- ville, now living in the Tyler county fleld, where her ven | we sresomo spirit and good averaging about $7.000 a week for a month Mrs. Ihrig W ty engaged in the hoo business at Sisterville and it was while living in that busy town of ofl and il machinations that she developed the | speculative fover { luck netted her forme Her shoe busiuess was not very success- ful and she began to dabble in oil. Several | small ventures are said to have nette her enough to make her confident and will ing to undertake tho development of the most uncertain “wildeat™ territory in the te cured control of a large of new territory in the upper end of Pyler county, and, regardless of the head- | ehakes 1 discouraging words of her friends, she went into the fleld for active operations veral months ago she con- racted for the drilling of a well on her Sho It A series of mishaps prevented the com pletion of the job until December 4, when the drill touched a pocket of ofl and a mall gusher resulted. The flow was avy a pretiy b down to about st, but has since settl barrels a with every | prospect that the output will be mai tal strike | Th the opening wedge in terri | tory that will prove to be very valuable. Mrs. 1hrig is preparing to put down other wells just n as FIREINE can be hauled to her prop The woman speculator | has fixed upon several spots upon whieh her agents will begin drilling as soon as possible. - She hus purchased a handsome home at Parkersburg and will likely direct her new interests from that place. after the fourth grade. Boston supplies free Books in all its grades, Chicago sup- | plies them in none. St. Louts' plan of sup- | should supply free books in all the grades. | state does not express the sacrifices of the | enrollment to population is in | in Pennsylvania and 3 the excuse of poverty Is often made a for criminal neglect on the part of a parent or a feeling of discontent on the part of a child.” Most probable among the causes for the falling off in attendance in the schools are: ‘First. a lack of interest on the part of the pupils, and, second, a lack, on the part of pare of un appreciation of the value of an education Thic inquiry into the question of school attendance and analysis of the causes of withdrawals,” comments the St. Louis Re “form a valuable contribution to educational resenrch. The degree of culture | and education in a community depends not plishment of single individuals but on the status of the people as a whole The longer the children of a community can be kept at school, the higher will be the educational development of the community. The statistics of Boston show amply that that city has made progress in solving the problem of keeping children at school. Even municipal officials share in the good work by enacting and enforcing truancy laws Such laws, It enforced, incline to prevent a child from falling behind other children of his age because of absence, and thus remove the principal cause of withdrawals “The lack of free books is also adverted to as a cause of withdrawals in St. Louls public plying them up to the fourth grade and not thereafter glves parents an impression that | the end of the fourth grade is presumed to be the limit of education for a working- man's child. This causes a sudden slump in attendance with the beginning of the fitth grade. It 1s doubtful, therefore, whether free books in the lower grades, where the cost of books is trifiing, are much better than no free books at all. St. Louls Above the fourth grades pupils have at- tained some knowledge of the proper ca: and handling of books, and the books would last longer. | School attendance 18 the basie principle | of school benefit to a community, and St Louls' schools should profit greatly by the and maintain their health by taking that greatest and best of all health restoratives, Dr, Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy. It will bulld up the health, clcanse and parify the complexion, restore brilliancy to the eye, make rich, red blood and strong, steady, and vigorous nerves, Dr. Greene’s Nervara will make you look and feel young and restore your encrgics. vivacity, and cnjoyment of life. MRS. KATE AUSTIN, 40 Jenny Lind Ave,, Somerville, Mass., says: 1 bad & pain in my side for seventeen years. I also suffered with terrible backachie and headache ; such an awful headache, and I had not a bit of appetite. T cried with pain from womb trouble, and was as “nl.- as a gl T was terribly nervous. 1 could not sleep for a bad rheumatism in my shoulder and arm | suf- fered everything; nobody but God knows how I suffered. I weighed 125 potinds. A friond recommended Dr. Greone's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, and 1 commenced to takeit. Twa so weak and run down that the first bottle did not do me much good, but I kept on, and the second bottle did me good and 1 hegan to gain. Aftor taking the Nervura I never had a pain in my side, nor any headache, and'I sleep well and have a good appetite, I don't beliove there is any medicine in the world s0 good as Dr. Greene's Nervura. It did me good right off and I bave had no return of my womb trouble. T had leucorrhona, but since taxing Nervura that has disappeared. 1 foal strong, and last summer was abla to do the work for fourteen in a family, and 1 weigh 163 pounds. 1 was so weak before, nobody knows how I worked, but T bad to work for my children. I sent two bottles of Nervura to my brother in Nova Scotia, and it did him lots of good. I recommend Dr. Greene's Nervura to every one.” Women have absolute confidence in Dr. Greene's Nervara, more so than in any othcr remedy, bee cause it Is purcly vegetable and a famous regular physician prepares it, which Is a goarantce that it Is perfectly adapted to cure. As an additional assure ance of cure, Dr. Greene, 35 W, 14th St., New York City, gives you the privilege of consuiting him withe out charge or cost, cither by calllng or writing aboat your casc. Il Health Destroys Beauty and Happlness. DR. GREENE’S NERVURA Makes You Well and Restores Your Good Looks. s aam i T M MR 2 Y ¥ 1 Ml school board's investigation.” Money and Results in best results. The bare amount of expenditure In any people for education. It is the per capita expenditure that best shows this. Thus, expenditures for school purpos: New York last year amounted to $28,052; and while this was a larger sum than was expended by any other state, it was only $4.03 per capita, while Massachusetts spent $5.07 per capita, Nevada $4.96 and California $4.00 The smallest per capita expenditure in any state was in North Carolina, where it amounted to 63 cents New York falls behind Pennsylvania in | the number of pupils enrolled. The per- centage of puplls enrolled to population in New York is 16.94, while in Pennsylvania it is 18.76. The highest percentage of school Kansas, in where it is Towa makes one of the best showings in the report. The total school enrollment fn that state is 554, 5.42 per cent of the population, and the percentage of teachers to puplls is larger than in any other stat there belng 28,604 teachers, against 288 in New York. It thus appears that while New York makes a big showing as regards money sev eral states lead it in per capita expendlis tures and enrollment, and achieve better re- sults, besides conducting educational work with more economy. In fact New York ac- tually lags behind in public schools, though its big school fund is so often much lauded, Monster High School. New York is to have another high school in the borough of Bronx, to be called the Peter Cooper HIgh school, which s to surpass all the other buildings in that part of the state. It Is to be built in what s known as the English colleglate gothic stvle of architecture, this seeming best adapted to modern uses and construction The exterior finish 1s to be of gray brick, gray stone and gray terra cotta trimmings. A striking feature in the facade Is the large central tower of rugged Norman as pect, nearly fifty feet square and about 175 feet high. It is not merely for the appear- ance, but 1s to be utilized to carry up the large ventllating shafts which conduct the ] students in proportion to the whole popula- | pensation for the hours he could devote to | Spr ton. One of the interesting facts revealed In the annual report of the commissioners of education, says the Boston Globe, is that it 1s not those communities that expend the most money for public schools that get the Restore Vitality, Lost Vigor and Manhood Cure Impotency, Night Emissions, Loss of Memory, all wasting =p diseases, all effects of sclf-abuse or excess and indiscretion. A Nerve Tonic and Blood Builder. Brings the pink glow to pale cheeks and restores the fite of youth. By mail 50c per hox, 6 bhoxes for %2.50, AINNKN with our Bankable Guarantee Bond to cure or refund the money paid. Send for circular and copy of our Bankable Guarantee Bond. NerVita Tablets EXTRA STRENGTH el 2 Immediate Results Positively guaranteed cure for Loss of Power, Varicocele, Un- developed or Shrunken Organs, Paresis, Locomotor Ataxia, Nervous Prostration, Hysteria, Fits, Insanity, Paralysis and the Results of Excessive Use of Tobacco, Opium or Liquor. By mail in plain package, $1.00 a hox, 6 for $5.00 with our Bank- able Guarantee Bond to cure in 30 days or refund money paid. Nervita Medical Co., Clinton and Jackson Sts., Chicago, IHl, by Kuh & Co., 15th a gl De gl St, Oma S, Davis, Counci Biufis, Tow Mass,, Dr Balliet deviive hools of Ger- A _BEAUTIFUL COMPLEXION FREE MME. A. RUPPERT'S WORLD RE- NOWNED FACE BLEACH AL- MOST WITHOUT COST KO MATTER HOW BLEMISHED THE SKIN, FACE BLEACH WILL MAKE IT PERFECT Madame A. Ruppert says: My Face Blcuch is Dot a new, remady, but people for years, and for dissolying and removing forever pimples, freck patches, biackhieads, cczem Aallowness, rc skin, and for brightening snd besutifyiog tho complexion It Lius no equal. It Is absolutely barmless to the most delicate skin. The marvellous improvement after a fow wppliontions in most apparent, for the #kin becomes as nature intended it should be, smooth, clear and white, freo from every impirity and blemish. It cannot faik for ita action is such that it draws the [ impurities out of the ski 4 does not caver them up, and iy invisibie during use, This I8 the ouly thorough uud permanent | way. | Diring this month, T will offer to alla <rinl bottls of my world renownsd Face Bleach, sufflcient to show that it 8 all that Tclaim' for it, and any reader of this can | gond me 20 cnis in stamps or silver, and T will send the trial bottle, socurely packed in plain wrapper, scaled, all charges repuid. 'n{ book ‘How to he Beautiful' will be mailed frea to all who will write for it." MADAME A. RUPPERT, 6 East 14th Street, New York Nme. Ruppert's Gray Hale Restorative sotunliy restores gray hair t0 its natural color, Can bs used on any shade of hair, red an tion nearly doubled, but during thi it. In the meantime he went to school some I ! nd 18 not & dye, und does not discolor th me high school teacher in Ger exhausted alr from the class rooms. and | period tho number of femalo collero | part of every day, it possible, and, graduat- | MY s i, WHEE 6f books, nd | SR nor mboff Perfectly harmies and | one of the corner :;u;ru' will l}';vm:u[n "’\*' students in proportion to the whole popula- | ing from tho high school, was eutered at | often a teacher i one of the unfyersities N dla T cliatoes "aemovne boller chimney, which the architect bas|jon yncreased more than six tim The the University of Indiuna, where it is need- | he @ eaching in Germany I8 better fuous hair in five tes, without disposed of aristically by this device with- | ool orifo ) (O (Bl i B B 1% aattl el ' n country, and miich of the 3 will not fnjure the most' delicate out marring the general contour or beauty | ¢ ) f ¢ i s ) would not bu tolerated in constantly growl ter, while the and at the o time supp elf. | Gern me. Ruppert's Egyptian Balm for sofi- of the ;;m:»l. 3 The ””;': """'” Of the | rojudice against higher education for| He is a fine debater and a splendid orator | \ attendance of 218 ook .afl-mu“g o fuce nd lands. tower he has also provided for use as [§oURCE B owing loss. - As the deserves all the luck that such pluck | the total t St 2,240 me. Ruppert's Halr Tonic positively labaratories for the sbecial work of the| TPEMR I8 constantly growing | i ) dencryos. 81l the luek that such pluck. | 24%1ich ot iy now | removes dundruff, all scalp disenses, stops result of these two facts combined the merit ¢ rogistrat r reached | falling bair, and'in many cases reatores faculty, the need of which ft was urged fs | (R0 08 TR N {hdefinitel®: 1 regl 9P tenoied | TR always felt but i rarely provided for. The | ueREOlY 08 FEE B8 e recently nferred in June. 1900, mak Mime, Ruppert's Almond Ol Complexion o e $400. d the work w o it 4 d ‘deare crred by the Soap, made of pure almond ol and wax ost Will be §46 and the work will DOt | iaiq that he was not at all troubled by the | Justice Marcus P. Knowltor ot rred by ihe | Delfgnttul for ‘the complexion and war- be completed until the spring of 1 Above | o roghect of women in college halls outnum reme court of Massach sists of 327 profe s, ot ranted not to chap the most delicate skin the basement will be five sto which i i e 1 asked to ba the orat HIRLS OF TR gRICLemSOER, Bhby ANl Of the above toilet praparations are will provide seventy-one class rooms in all AD8 TSR T8, TORTA AN LN THGHS next commencement i Kerr, Duggar Nash always kept in Stock and 0an be had Srom L 9, A8 o Alll young men were not having the advanta He graduated fr 0 RS ANERE ¢ S eur local agont. for school work, not Including those that | S2UCE AR EPE BOT B 8 e Riad th David Btare J A rintnder wtion for the N h €0, DidEEiAt will be used for stores, toilet lockers for | ¢y 0 WS 0 EHE BEC B0 L re having Y money 1% up OMAMA, NEB. teachers and other purposes necessary in | o ¥ 08 WOCR 4EORY Ll N ave th ver | 1 ‘ it n modern school house. There will be | yout ARG CECE L i ance at the| COmME * re Of thia | iy thre e mare biacke | twelve laboratories, with\ three lecture | ora"deh BOVE S ST coun i wdan, fe, bl rooms in connection with them. There will < "Herbert Putnem that Lbkaxies are |l eit b i e A be four large study halls, separate gym- Lucky . Col ¥ growin bor nore ray ha ! PLATR B nasiums for boys and girls. uditorium | In the matter of pluck the colored youth| jire librartans. He directs attent to th ¢0 wre at the sch will seat 1,800 people and will be used upon | Of the country have upon han ome oc- | fact (hat \iierews “ere dre ot bt 3 sl piptis, - for whom dhere all public eccasions The bullding will | casion set a good example to their white o o § pec tratned In t year nearl 00,000 was accommodate 3,000 puplls | brethren, and in no inst has the suc-| |ihraria given to schools and colleges of tho United Giels in High 3 . | cess that' followed patient flort been | A marb'e hust of Mrs. Christine G. § Brates.” Washington 'university, St Louis, William T. Harrls, commissioner of [ mora W ily deserved than in the case of |\ RE RN palion: el A S ML \in 10 1t by Robert B. Brookings and | education, has furnished some Intercsting | Willis O. Tyler, who was selected to repre i i t seve Samuel Capples; Chicago river had | unpublished tics, says the Woman's |sent the Uuiversity of Indiava at the state member B | o1 Brawn $1.080.000 and Farvard St Journal, that shows that in the high school I coutest in_Indianatolis. Born in| sl ach- | $1:311,612 $1om00 and Harvard §7i0.- | of every state in the union there are \ 17, Tyer lost both| OrS U od | pUbl ¢ venr wan 362,061,304, 1 raduated more glrls than boys—in some of . 114 child. The : {nef ( \ veurs 1t has hoen §258.- | them twice or three times us many. In the | began his str the hoy had no ide ol F 2 rage per yoar of about - | whole United States the public high schools | of simply cantenting himself with a living t L exped Lick ob- | 0.00 Gttt ! hilds n 1899 graduated ¢ boys 124 | but 1 ph K04 boaid Rood bie i, howo scho oW thitt | y.hyte, "ot delicatel 1o color, Withuu girle, This disparity 15 not owing to the |an education as | T o to obta v of h tedn areann W 0 Blemish et fact that girls are more capable than bo e i n by blacki l o 1 Fa el g ! fuscinatin n of i health ¢ because of the growipg tendency to take | shoe 1 Wity offered went to 1l the pr , o comes from an-Bkin Cream but because of the growing tend ke | red t and Satin-Skir Sarah | Maxim boys out of tchool In order that they may | the primary schools iud ihe he second hig Plummer, Wi “I had red e T e i 4 o e v sy f e ' hools. As he became « u biotch on my nose that [ could not erass o or which in‘"i few diys after using Satin-skin colleges are fast going the way of the high | tions, and swept, sorubbed, cleaned, beat the t what he iy thor= | 1t's o skin food [ can recommend to any scheols, and for the same reason. HBetwoen | carpets, and in fact found no work too la AR P, AT e N rds, Wt [ one wantl ear, compexion at (rifing 1872 and 1899 the number of male college | borious which would give him & falr com- | yva'ley mmar school masters, held in| in conter 00 | Sawaer: Mo, 'The Boston Blores o BN | |