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CEEEEEERETEre HOV SP ESE ENG NeeemeERRERIN MR ee oer cpemnytemngeges serene terpenes sapers SOREN TTE RCE RRTENY NEI RTT 2 THE SEATTLE STAK, .— oe 7 : rap | | ¢ THE SEATTLE STAR seit ne resins sens he FOUGHT OVER sich, $6 arenes! facten"| HY PNOTISM wife that he was glad to wee that he jheaven; we are aliens and forelxne | : had not yet lost hin power to ploare ers here, 1 have no more business e M bad baaanaetier a = . All went well until his wife recetved | to take @ volow in affaira here than ‘ BM, WELLS & 0, Peblaters, |this note | A WOMAN i waeid bere to go to Wngiand ana} AND CRIME coe : © ee iteruenn extogs Ganany | Dear Mra. Will you please attempt to participate in their gov . ask your husband to send mo just So sae eS Ue ernment, Heaven it my tom Bh © ¥, CHAAR, Ja little lock of his hair? We have | eee Hisixess Manager | att t taking lossons tn making One Man Had Bought Her for) re — totiowing announcement of a Woman aannen ae — that So many of the girls howling how Cngliah ie spoken tn F eopy | Vix conte yer week: | yA, him, and he sent it tol $3 and a New Hat. ya, le taken verbatim from the! for a Young Girl. va * ie per month delivered hi h 1th ht 1 4 th } 1 | marae stele ae tis te et it forme, Won't you | DANVILLE, Ih, May 4.—Jesse niga knee pire one «ards | CHICAGO, May 4—Mra, Nattle 1 aid Rene Pike 160. |i Yo this for me? It in so hard (Sutherland t* under arrest as the |who wants to practice in the bng- | Miller, & trained nurse, thirtythve | Stil Continues His Free Consultations at the OMees Ne 110T = + Third Avenue to got white hair for lilies of the slayer of Joe Albright Albright |lieh language and by weveral Amer- | years old, is under arrest for shoot Occidental Hotel, corner Third and Cherry Entered et the postoflice At Aeatile, Washing. | Valley.” |purehased Mra. Dalay Shepard from |jcana who wants de same in the |ing Charles L. Siebert, a real estate Jccidem a tel, © . @ + 4 ton, as second-class matte ‘This was a terrible blow, and the|her husband, Charles Shepard, at /Spanish language we will public Now |man, bécause he married Mattie Street, from 9 a. m. to 5 p,m. - #4 now eald about locks of hair In| Geneva, Ind, last fall, for $4 and «| York telegrams In both languoxe®.” | Leonard . .|that old gentleman's presence the /new hat, Shepard afterward regret “*-. apes . . ~ The celebration in honor of the | A ter —mic tits }ted the trade, and going to his form-| ‘The MePhorson (Kas.) Republican | Mifteen years ago, while Mra, Mil- THOI ISAN DS OF PEOPI E Washington volunteers will be a THER FORECAST jer home, opened fire on the inmates. |says that one “Sim Wright, who ts |let Was studying for her profession, i 4 aha : WEATH . | Three bullets took effect in Al- |locally noted as a mighty hunter, has she was taken I, and Hatt magnificent affair§ The citizens Sick | bright's body and one in Mra, Shep |antonished all tho #portamen by to- lard, of Lafayette, Ind., nursed her Have been saved from a prematur ung of Seattle have made up their) For Seattie and Vicinity—Tontght | Pard’s limb venting a new method of gettiog UP | thror * Mayo, who has devoted years to F 4. Prick 1 rat th Laat Christmas Albright came to} to wild Ho has train f | through her iliness, Mrs, Miller took ffering h ty. ALL PERSONS who r t thelr ' + pe. And. Friday occasional rain; souther- |b came to} to wild geese ¢ has trained an line yo. oe ebay tee suffering humanity ria BONS wh minds on that point, It only re ty winds. |arape Creek. After a time the twolold cow ge that she will rw him | nome aad lgvianed Spm ine ae ee former follies, and suffer in mind and body fro . mains for Mayor Humes and), Tho area of high pressure has | became estranged and Albright ask-| to t ind her as she approach . ; “ pen effects, should consult at once Mayo, who has no equal : Rwand tate Ie Idab 1 his friend, Sutherland, to inter the feedin The birds do | Pet ney tved tagether for tow in th rmanent cure of all ‘ “oth Nes Cc _|moved eastward into Rastern Idaho, |* < ane , e he feeding geene ne bire , rs i n the permane ure of 4 President Graves of the Cham: ee vameter, rea ings along | He did so and for a short! not take fright at a cow, and he ts are. Mrs. Miller is @ man ber of Commer@ to select the |the coast have fallen, The tem- tod Mrs Sheppard and Albright | thus able to approach them at will ihe die tien Mahe waste wan hans . Eye, Ear, Head, s perature has continued to rise |fesumed thelr retationahtp, She be-| Recently “Sim” and his cow crept | gg ? sappy : Thr Ps Members of the committee of throughout the Pacific slope, the |°ame weary, however, and again/up on one flock and “Bim” killed pi ig adic me? nf bse =~ HEE est, ~ MP 4 twenty called fo resolu- {highest temperatures reported thia|Albright called of Sutherland, In-| fourteen with two shots oy teat cane Oe Heart, Stomach, y rin u ie won ~tondh parte P Tet latatauaie took os brother of Mattle, said last night, “It Liver, Kidneys, ete t Cc morning being at Roseburg, Or. and *tead 0 erced @ bo ie wo sf Dect on “ - , a passed by the City Council joa” fium, Cal. 80. The lowest |Man to a dance Tuesday night. On| A grasshopper wanted all the wedle pr gos tee hen - gene and then the preliminary prepa- | temperature was 90, at Idaho Fails, |the way home Albright waylaid ty days of winter in gayly skat- | tracedinary 3 Taf adtention prot BROKEN tations can be commenced, | Light rain has fallen in the Sound |them. He attacked Sutherland with ver the frogen lake, while ®! hound Mrs. Miller to my sister,” fad om ced, land Strait reg rnd along the coast|® stone and dragged him from his| prudent ant improved each gloomy | +7 was not altogether surp It will take money, time and as far as Bureka, Cal jDueRy. peerinns knife | hour by gutting and storing I | said Mrs, Siebert, “to hear my hus DO W N i staniahdpenetascigeriae out and then, nce of the laway hen the summer was come |pang had bee ed by 1 n- | degrees int shade, the gr e! 7 ° rn 4 have a big undertaking on its/ stupidity, of a dilemma a man 1 Sutherland surrendered. The coron- | Hut the ant, who loaned money only | 4. siete sete cis 4 bre Are rejuvenated and restored to Health by this doctor's new method of hands, hut will start out with the now \s ip ee cade winniee peel by we Tat catdenees sebead bed, nyo pe pe gaa What were |her four different t and each| Treatment. Worn out business men, call for advice; especially you who A | 4 ene. § . bh adriana jolng net winter . ime , 0 back to he fer fro ower of endurance. cheering certainty of success. | well, tet me tell you. The man ts ee Ah, well! Pitch hay now ecg hirty Boon moc gp age og Abe devsi ee ee om om Apathy, Indifference, Nervous Debility, Th are ready to give the | Married, and he has @ wife who un- Shipbuilding Combin Ho the Nunkry Krasshopbed went (0 | power she had Over. me,” T aan mot LADIES ¢y diseases peculiar to women, can consult the surgeon in Pe F jerstands perfectly how to make him) |. the hayfield, where he dropped dead, | Pein to expl ‘. a md onfidence. No testimonials published money and to co-operate in every |toe the mark. He spends all of PPR og ened Rand N gotia. |fTOM © sunstroke, while the ant sat t trie te Se but pe ga ‘tact ‘ry DISEASES cured in the shortest space of time by Vegetable way with the committee to make | ‘te ‘et me say. in that process of | ot at, sending for the consolida-|0M the shady side ap dE ney i ee Remedies. No Iodine or Potash of Mercury used affair “ Nev jtoctng. Now, the wife went away | |. 1 of the Cramp @hipbullding Arinking ice-cold lemonade and read FILMS and all Diseases of the Rectum permanently cured by @ the, aetr ices Nevers ontt Ms nls fees [tn et ecm maton cn ices crs™aar "ears CAUGHT THE | swtiisbettte weiss before was there such unanimity | ¥! her mother in Cincinnati, ‘The | Pant, and tne lngllah Arm of Visit lin the dark, cold days of winter, or | TF eee rarer embrace many discases her ot i |husband decided that his health jm- |2r™ Sone ee ee vooking ty] 20% Will have to make hay while 3 MAYO'S CURES (oeicce, Nervous Ate sentiment behind any move- | peratively demanded we CY vers the amalgamation ef intercets had | the sun shines.—Laife FUGITIVE Epilepsy, St. Vitus’ Dance, Persistent Headache ment for a-celebration in this|Monros, Of course ne aiimit his {been Fecelved from the Enalish frm.| 14 nen the solitary resident Dyspepsia, Constipation, ete., are completely and permanently cured by city. The feeling seems to be|health—his motives were really no- |The capital of the consolidation. it) ce 4 coop in a little rear yard near | — this world's benefactor ir Fri dd Advi ble—eo he aranged to keep her in - Tenth and Painbridge streets, Ie the| READING, Pa, May 4.—Hiram ¥ Young Men Will Find Mayo Their tiend an ser. growing that the event should be | given the dignity ofa state re- ception to the volunteers. Seattle is the metropolis of the North- west and it is proper and fitting that the reception to the First Washington regimen: should be tendered in the name of the state, There must be no half way Preparations. Time will be re-| quired to get things in readiness. The program should include some one concluding feature of great brilliancy. Possibly a reproduc- | tion of the battle of Calumpit, with the Washington volunteers leading the charge, would make an effective spectacle. Again, it might be the best idea to have a grand ight reproduction of the naval battle of Manila upon the Sound, using ships in the harbor for the opposing squadrons and fireworks. instead of cannon for the pyrotechnics of battle. The great amphitheater of hills would | afford unsurpassed opportunities for the people to view the spec tacle. The -popuiation of the entire state of Washington could be invited to.come and enjoy the affair. That the railroads will co-ope- rate and will contribute liberally to the celebration fund is a fore- gone conclusion. So will the owners of boats plying upon) Puget Sound. There will bc no lack of money to make the cele- bration the greatest event in the history of the state of Wash- ington. _—____ ‘The news from Spain today indi- cates that there is a terrible row on fn the Cabinet over the question of which minister shall have the priv- flege of using the $20,000,000 just sent ver the waters by Uncle fam as a Phitippine present. The Minister of ignorance of the trip. Accordingly he wrote a number of letters—one | for each day of his absence—and in- | trusted them to his office boy to mail They were lovely letters—all about how lonely he was, how dreary his levenings were, how hard he was | working, how early he went home nights—you know the kind of letters j husbands write to their wives. Now, the office boy is a creature of ex- treme sagacity. He was not wholly in his employer's confidence. The employer is too wise for that. He merely mentioned, incidentaaly that the letters were te go one at a time, The office boy is economical calculated that one large letter ie leas expensive to post than seven small ones, so he put the seven let- | ters Into one large envelope and sent |them off. The wife came home un- expectedly. 80 did the husband. His health improved marvelously after a telegram his wife sent him. He Is tocing the mark more carefully than ever these days, but the econ omical office boy is in search of em- ployment. eens FLORISTS SAY ‘That finer Pelargoniume are dis- played this spring than ever before. “* ‘That the season attraction double-flowered ivy geraniums ts known an Mra. Parke: ‘That the fragrant-leaved rose ge- ‘anium presents a novelty In the hy- | brid perpetual clase, which has large and deep scariet flowers. That the “apple blossom” variety Mexican primroses. . That the most unique and beautl- ful of the foliage begonias is the }heart-shaped variety known as be- gonia goensis That the showy lychias pleaissima lis Known as a perpetual bloomer: it |fowers so profusely, whether grown lin the window or open ground. ar | That scarlet fir |fy are the most showy |satiatectory of lantanas. eee and most ‘That the dark, rich crimson carna- tion known as winter cheer contin- | ues to bloom throughout the spring: and that It is now uncommon fora | welldeveloped plant to show from 20 }to 30 blooms at one time Baptist Church ‘Trouble | OWENSBORO, Ky. May 4-—The | fy and yellow fire but would be large enough to pro | vide for @ great extension of bu ness, The authorized capital of the | Cramps ie $5,000,000. ‘THE PEACE JUBILEE Washington Looking Forward to Great Times. WASHINGTON, May 4-—-Wash- [ington is looking forward to great times this month Im connection with the National Peace jubilee, May 23, | and 25. | They may do all the killing they | want to in the Philippines; they can |ehoot and cut in Samoa, but official- lly there will be peace here during | those days The committee in charge expects greater crowds in the Capital City |during that period than have ever gathered here to attend the inaugur- lation of any President. ‘The features of the fret day will be the parade of the military and [naval organizations, West Point and Annapolis cadets are expected. In | the evening there will be a public jreception by President McKinley. ‘The next day will be another day of parades, several being on the pro- gramme. The feature of the tnat day will be the magnificent histor- fecal pageant ilustrating America’s accompliahmentas The culminating feature will be the “Jubilee Rev- elries.” “ALL SORTS. There are over 10,00 villages In Russia where no school exists. | see ‘The population of Queensland at the end of 1898 was estimated at | 449,000, | ore The British tobacco trade em- ploys today 121 women to every 10 men. is still considered the finest among | “ee The Florida season over. It is virtually has been @ most peraus one. | see | OM refining in western Siberia ts | [making fast progress and large sold abroad see Receipts from the aale of tea form more than one-half of the whole ex- |port trade of Formosa, oe The first electric railway itn |world built in Iretand, from Bush- |quantities a ‘War shakes his finger threateningly | refusal of several young membors |™!!l# to Glant’s Causeway at the Minister of Marine, and tell: him that the Spanish army need the money most. and that it would Mterally be throwing cash to the bow ‘wows to let the navy have any of it. ‘Thereupon the ministers scowl! flercely at each other and declare that they will “tell the king.” Who knows but what that alluring twen- ty millions will yet lead to a rough and tumble fights in whieh several Castilian dukes will lose al! of their remaining hair? _——----~— Mr. Gompers says that there is nothing s0 beneficial for a labor or ganization as a good defense fund When provided with one, labor can employ fine legal talent itself, and take a fall out of constitutionality. _—_—-_—-—— The navy department has felt it advisible to instruct Admiral Kautz not to let his letter-writing hand know what his official hand is doing _ The Anglo-American alliance chatter is not proceeding very en- couragingly along the Canadian tim- ber line. General Otis will please prolong the fighting until Uncle Joe Wheeler can get over there and enjoy a battle or two. _— New Use for Hair. A venerable, white-haired clergy- ‘man recently preached in the pariah of a friend. He had hardly got back to the vicarage from the church when the door bell rang, and a charming girl of eighteen asked to see him. He received her. talked about the sermon and other things, until finally she asked, dim- dently: “Oh, won't you please give me a lock of your hair?” “Certhinly, my child,” said the old gentleman, flattered at the request “I'l send it to you tomorrow.” And he did. They | of the Macedonia Baptist church tn this county to publicly apologize and express repentance for appro- | priating neighbors’ hens and having jchicken stew in the woods, hae caused a serious split in the congre- gation. The Rev. W. H. Dawson has resigned as pastor, and 41 members have withdrawn with their families The young men privately apologized and paid for the poultry, and the split in the church arose over the | question as to the sufficiency of this | action. | School for Blushing. One of the Inte novelties of Paris, that city of novelties, Is a school where blushing is taught. If there lis any place where blushing has be lcome a lost art, one would certainly hink it was Paris, but the Parsians, on the other hand, declare that it is a result of Angion nia and the in fluence of the American girl. The young woman who plays golf or rides a bicycle in “rationals” In the freest camaraderie with her r e friends is likely to acquire a self-polse which will make the flush of embarrass jment a stranger to her cheeks, and | the city where women are bicycling lon the boulevard with their bare knees exposed has felt the necessity of a reaction. The classic grace and simplicity of the early years of the century, with their accompanying | downcast eyes and simpers, are now lin vogue again, and the maidens who have forgotten how to blush are go- ing to school to learn the primitive art. They say it is y enough to droop the eyes and affect bashful ness, but to call up a mantling ¢ is as difficult as pulling eye-te How the crimsoning flow of blood to the red pallid cheek I# accom- plished in these fin de siecle schooin of deportment it is hard to imagine, vas it is that they have taken a of Du page out Maurter’s joke book and emulate the society girl who au |prixed her friends by always blush- Jing the the right time. “How can you age $t.7" asked the other girl enviously, “Oh, it is very easy,” the expert blusher replied, “I simp- see | Natives of Ceylon believe the cocoanut tree will not grow out of reach of the sound of the human voice. | fe | The shipyards in Great Pritain, all working together, could turn out a big steamship every day of year. “ee London's record of deaths by vio lence was 3514 last year, being 124 above the average of the preceding ten years. | | se The production of lead tn Color. ado was 50 per cent. more In 1898 than in 1897, and of copper nearly 40 per eent. more. see ‘The Boston aldermen whose enor- mous bills for carriege hire the Massachusetts senate han twice re jected have been appropriately dub. bed the “Rough Riders.” An Assyrian tablet in the cellar ot the British Museum has on it 9 rep resentation of the hanging gardens of Ba jon according to Herr Bruno Meisane If he ia’right, this is the firet testimony to thelr exister found among the cuneiforn tnecrip tlons.—New York Sun. one A white tiger was ahot lately in the Dibrugarh district of Asnam, ac cording to the Calcutta Englishman He was nine feet long and in the prime of life. The Caloutta taxider mist who prepared the skin that in eighteen years he had neith er seen nor heard of such a thing an a white tiger eee Three steamship lines plying be tween Australia and China and Jar lan are now calling regularly at che port of Manila, Philippines islands, These are the China Navigation on pany, the Eastera & Australian Steamship company, and the Nippon Yusen Kaisha (a lines Each of the ly good steamers, states vie Rev. C. H. Currens, a minister of Chicap Pres thos The bytertan On his return to his own home he |ly think of something that makes me |explains his attitude to the States pad five more requests of tho same einen a Sea AB tae blash.”* |" never vote; such matters do not *|motherly he the} the 1 of an interesting fam |ity that she has adopted in Leu of the company of any feathered fowls of her own kind. “Bpotty,” an she is called, has taken a maternal in jterest in @ flock of sparrows that |nest In a tree growing the yard. nd at all bourse in the day she can aceon @eratching the garden, sur |rounded by a company of tittle birds. which tndustriousty pick up the Jerains of food she thus provides for |them. If “Spotty” unearths a worm and none of her little feat ed friends happen be near | \abe fn cke at « xreat rate until they wh from the tree ¢ |dainty morsel. ‘Th jperwuade the spar ter under her wi ke a brood of chicks, but when t f scratching for food, she will sit complacently for minutes at a time with a whole | flock of the little birds nestled about her Hitadetphia Hee ‘SEEING THE COUNTRY Girl Only 15 Years Old Masque- rading in Male Attire. | ST Louie, Mo, May 4 Shane, aged 15, of Hridge' is & prisoner at the Four the attire d wecure hen cannot we to take shel She was arrested in a wine late last nleht, }down from Alton, It |>y gasti¢ht. For six months she |has roamed the country, visiting all important cities between the Atlan |tle ocean and the Missiaxippt river, jbeating her way over ralir working at various things }Office boy to a laborer tn gt When arrested she said it nly time her disguise had been de | She said jdied etx mor see the world room having run to #ee the city je and from an works that he ago. take when her parents she decided te « the heroine of ad as her mode a she secured t had her long a boy's, Return New Jersey she got a fob as boy at Millville. Finally ah: cluded to travel went xt Moe con A Slight Difference. “Yer.” sald Mr. J when a cer jtaln young girl's name had been | mentioned, "I know her to speak to, but not by sight.” You mean. cut In the prompt corrector, “you moan that you know jher by eight. but not to speak to. | “Do I?” asked Mr. Jon anxious. j ty: "Of course you a her so often that you know who she #, but have never been introduced that ian't it. 1 li to know her nearly every day can that t telephone You have seen never saw but I speak is the ~ THE DAM BROKE Cloudburst Wrought Havoc at Leadville. girl at the | PORTSMOUTH, May 4.—During a |cloudburat this afternoon at Lucas ville, tem mile rth of thia city Miller’® run broke its banks and | flooded the town When the flood was at its highest lightning struck the residence of John Kline and completely burned t Several members of the family were rendered unconscious, and their rescuers had to wade through water three feet deer The new steel county bridge was swept off the piers, and a large se tion of the Norfolk & Weatern rail lroad trac with a bridge, is wash ed out, delaying the trains All tele graph and telephone wires are down. Hall fell, covering the ground to a | depth of over two inche Ate Poisonous Meat. FRENDONIA, N May 4 Several families have been polsoned here by eating canned at pur |chased at a local market hree or four cases came near being fatal, J. O'Neil, one of the victims, sald that last night he had a sandwich In his pail made from some of the meat He ate a small piece of {t and soon began to feel very sick. He lay down on a bench and was soon unecn selous. A physician was called and by hard work of over three hours managed to bring him around three members of his family were laffected. Other families have been made more or leas sick from eating the meat i \, ® the | harge of masquerading in male was the| Kaufman, the fugitive embezzling lawyer, has been captured in Jersey ity, at the home of his mother-in- j!aw, after @ chase of three months. Kaufman is under sentence of nine months’ imprisonment for embezaling 1948.40 an guardian of James K. Hill, James E. Ruth became his surety jand paid the money, following tt up with a criminal prosecution for em- lement. Kaufman was appointed guardian | in 1888, when he was supposed to be a rich man, He was @ well known member of the Berks County Bar, and had been District Attorney. When his ward became of age Kauf- man did not pay, and on September | 17, 1894, the grand Jury found a true i against him, and he was con- vieted and sentenced to pay @ fine lof $100 and undergo nine months’ imprisonment. This was followed by an appeal to the superior court, | with @ decision against him, and he then appealed from the superior to the supreme court, and lost there. | He was sentenced by Judge Endlich After the supreme court went \againet him, Kaufman disappeared. BEDROOM POINTERS. Suntieht is good far everything but feathers. Away with hangings either above © below the bed. ee Heware of a dusty musty carpet; better aweetness and a bare floor. . | Do not fail to provide some means for ventilation during the night. : Keep the head cool while sleeping, bat not by a draft of cold air failing upon it, eee If a folding bed must be used con- |trive some way to keep it aired and wholesome. eee Let the pillow be high enough to |bring the head tn a natural position; no more or less. see Thoroughly air the sleeping room ‘levery day; place the beds and bed- | ding outside as often as possible. one | A dark, out of the way, unwhol some orner is no more Atted for a sleeping room than for a parlor. see A feather bed which has done ser- | viee for a generation or two ix hard- lily a desirable thing upon which to sleep. Women and Jokes. That species of humor sometimes Jeacribed as “rollicking,” which men mplain that women cannot see, is often more or leas in the nature of a practical joke; that is to say, it lies in the matter rather than the man- ner. It appears, for instance, in | much (by no means all) of the humor lof “Pickwick, or in the farcical ES on which the dramatists | of the restoration rely so largely, strong as they are also in humor of a different kind, The point, if we must say so, If not unfrequently ex- hibited in a more or less un dignified position. It may be freely and at once conceded that women are not amused by humor of thie clase y think it silly, undignified, and 4, so far as the last cerned, the prac- teal Je that amuse a boy are Joften enough, not only coarse, but cruel, and !t may very well be that |a woman refrains from laughing at the not so much becau her per- ceptions are dull in one direction as n in another indictment because they are ke ‘To see & human being made a fool of is too painful to be amusing Moreover, she often finds that the joke consists in some time-honored witticlam against her own sex, sup- ported rather by observation, and, if she has any spirit, she naturally resents it It Is a curious evidence strength of custom, by the bye, this nalvette with which wor are ex pected to join in Jokes against them- of the selves “by men,” as has been well sald in @ different connection, “in- jcapable of a deliberate insult But | because a woman does not laugh, it does not always follow that she does not see what she Is expected to |Inugh at A brother once com- | plained to his sister that sche could not see a Joke, and the eriticiam was, lot course, duly conveyed to her. | . I don't see any jok was th lreply. ‘Phere tan't any Jc I wee what amuses him, but you don't |really expe | Cornhill. t me to laugh at that?’ After July 1 the Lake Front park in Chicago will be called the U, 8. irant park. The change js mate by state law, enacted at the request of the G. A. R. ent ain ail ai iboats Stale ealliat bc ais inital i as ici casi Bs DON'T BE DISCOURAG failed to cure you. This 4 will cure you, Diseases of Man... neas, jon of memory aod seeking proper relief. nD, no matter how many tor will give you the benefit of his rip perience, and tell you exactly what your disease is, and if bis remed energy, tired, disce igestion, palpitation of the heart, urinary troubles and many symptoms not necessary to mention here, should no longer de REMEMBER YOUR DISEASE 18 APPIK doctors have Middle aged and old men suffering from nervous debility, from any cause whatsover, producing dizal- ented feeling, ine ING ITS LAST BTAGE, and if you continue to neglect it, the time must come when you will be past human aid. Complaints, painful, diMcult, too free quent, milky or bloody Urine, cares KIDNEY AND URINAR fully treated, Constitutional or Acquired Weakness of Both Seres Treatod Successfli THEY MEET JUNE 21 Women's Relief Corps at the Elk’s Hall. The Women’s Relief Corps will hold the annual meeting in Elke hall June Tl. At least 300 delegates of that organization will be present, and over 9 visiting brethren are expected. There are forty corps west of the mountains, and their membership ranges from % to 70 in each corps. Seattle has been the headquarters of | the corps for the past year, and Mra. Taylor, the department president, and her staff of officers are now at} work arranging their official work. They expect to have the largest gathering of that organization ever | held in the state. A Bogus Official. READING, Pa, May 4.—Several cigar dealers in this city have been visited the past couple of days by a man who represented himself to be a revenue officer, and attempted to confiscate cigars which he declared bore counterfeit stamps. When chal- Jenged to show his authority, he ex-| cused himself. So far as is known the impostor failed to gather in any clgars, cactelinieiineemencacmgracemaetent NEW STYLES IN BLOUSES Blouse of red silk with white spots. ‘This i# made with both tucks and box plait eee The yoke and the shoulder caps are cut in points. “ee The sleeve t» finished at the wrist | with a plain tur r cuff, . Cravat of black satin.—Le Costume emant. eee Mouse of dark blue silk spotted! with white, The blouse Is tucked lengthwise and diagonally, the diag- onal tucks appearing to continue on to the sleeves. eee The. plastron Is made of plaited white mousseline de je, and the cravat is of white silk edged with lace.—-Le Costume Elegant. eee Pretty Dlouse of old rose foulard, trimmed with bands of the same, silk embroidered in black. see ‘The yoke and the top of the sleeves are of white silk, arranged in hori- zontal and crossway folds, * Turnover collar and cuffs an¢ smal clravat of black satin.—Le Cos- tume Elegant. Blev Open the Safe. BLOOMINGTON, Ill, May 4.—The private bank of C. F. Shinkle, in this county, was robbed last night. The safe was blown open Eliaworth, with dynamite and $1000 secured. Five men were boncerned and have been traced to timber east of this cit There are hopes of capturing gang that has successfully looted a half a dozen banks in Central t- linols during the past year, President Deblois Re gens ALTON, Ill, May 4—Austen K, Deblois, for five years president of Shurtiiff college, resigned the presi dency this afternoon to become the pastor of the Frst Baptist church at them, This is believed to be the same | Higin, The resignation was tender ed at the meeting of the board of trustees and was acce It ‘# understood that Dr. A. A Kendrick will be recalled to the Shurtleff presidency, He is now the pastor of the St. Louis Immantel Baptist church, and was the imme diate predecessor of President De blots. MINUS THREE LIMBS A Difficult Problem Solved in Lebanon, Ind. CHICAGO, May 4—Wanted—1ly 16the of an eloping couple, aged @ and 52 years respectively. They ar@ William E. Bickford and Mrs. Bicke ford, formerly Mra. Amanda Wane lek, of Lebanon, In They have ia their possession t proceeds of the sale of @ 40-acre farm. Address all information to Capt. Colleran, chief of detectives, Chicago, or to son of missing woman. This giddy young pair were mated a week ago. It was an odd match, for Mr. Bickford, when, for hie country’s sake, in the civil war, he took up arma, he lost one of them, and the bride is minus her lower limbs. The people of Lebanon wt they heard o fthe match, did a lite tle problem in arithmetic. They figs ured Mr. Bickford as seven-eightha of a man and his better half as half @ woman or half a half of the couple made one. This was father confusing, but they worked ft out this way. If ono man plus one woman makes one wedded pair, then seven-elghths of a man plus balf a woman equal@ eleven-sixteenths of @ married cou ple. No Youngsters Need Apply. this An Alabama newspaper has advertisement: “To the Ladies—I am a widower ninety-seven years old, and I am looking around for a smart wife of about eighty years; one who knows how to work and would be willing to help manage the farm. No young girls need apply. I want a woman who has had at least sixty or seventy years’ experience, and 2 promise to make such a one happy, for the rest of life.” ‘The Pant Bayer Does well in this store, First, he always finds just what he is looking for, and that, nine times out of ten, is Pattern aud Price THEN HE GETS Quality aud Style Without the asking. That is the reason The Pai Bayer Comes here. Such pants with such features at $2.00 $3.00 $4.00 to $5.00 J. Redelsheimer &€0 Strongest Top Coat House In the State. ‘ First Ave., cor, Columbla St, poe a Sp ge ee a ae a _— M@aaw sean8 s Y ‘ t I } 8 a J