May i OI3 BARNUM AND JENNY LIND. SAVED BY A GHOST, Bootlegger io Trouble Again A case of assault and battery was tried before a jury in Justice Stan­ ley's court on Wednesday, in which Mert Everest w.i* thedetend.ini and Orley Kellow the complaining wit- j uesa. It seems from the evidence ’ that Everest went, with two other persons, to Kelluw's home looking fcr trouble, and after calling Kel low out Everest committed the uMault upon him. It took the jury oulv a few miuutee to bnug in u verdict ot guilty, and this morning j Justice Stanley passed sentance. upon him He was fined $20. At tlie April term of tlie Circuit , C- r', Everest wa* indicted tq*»n j ; count* by the grand jury, one for bootlegging and tlie other fur selling liquor to minor* He pleaded gyil io tlie first charge and Judge Gallu'.vay fined him $3Ul)and 20 days in jail. The jail sentence waa eue- pt.ided pending good behavior, but j as he failed to comply witii this, it is more than probable that lie will be committed to the county jail Curious Story of a Spector and tl.e Lonely Yorkshire Moors. ABSOLUTELY PURE The only Baking Powder made from Rr.ya! Crape Cream of Tartar Makes delicious home-baked foods of maximum qualify at minimum cost. Makes home baking pleasant and profitable The Kill Kare Klub It is not often that we bear of a gl ost saving a man's life. There is. however, an liistunce. aud it seems to lie tolerably well authenticated, aud materialists will hardly know how to «■ count for it. Here is the story. It is of the Yorkshire dales aud of u good many years ago. A clergyman whose duty lay in that wild country, where a strong race of men ami women lived principally on b.icoii and oatcake, used to ride or walk to visit the people. He had been raising a subscription in a time of scarcity and had to be out late at night. One evening on his outward Journey he suddenly became aware of a figure moving beside him, and in the gloam­ ing he recognized his brother, who bad He was too died some time before. awestruck for words, and after keep­ ing by his side for some distance over the lonely moor the figure disappear- ed. He noted the time and the vision, but nothing occurred to throw any light upon it. However, some years after he had taken the duty at a Jail in another part of the country one of the prisoners ly­ ing under sentence desired to make a confession. After telling him of a lot of crimes he said: “1 wor very near once taking your life. sir. It was in that bad year, and I heerd as how you went carrying money about in those lonesome dales. I hid behind the big bowlders of the brown moor. I snw you coming up aud waited till you should be near enough, but that night you were uot alone." This is a startling tale and the stronger because the vision or what­ ever it was was seen by two people. The anecdote occurs in an article twen­ ty years ago in Macmillan’s Magazine by Lady Veruey. T ower s F ish E sand P ommel S lïcker I How ths Groat Showman Socurod th» "Swedish Nightingale." How Norse Sea Kings Enriched« Nautical Vocabulary, 1 The site of Iranlstan. with its Moor­ ish towers and minarets, was engraved upon the letterheads of P. T. Barnum and was the one thing which attracted Jenny Lind when he wrote seeking to engage her for an American tour. In fact, she confessed that it was this pic­ ture that determined her coming to America. Jenny Lind contracted to come to America in 1849, the “Swedish Night­ ingale” agreeing to sing at 150 concerts for $25,000, all traveling expenses paid. After she arrived in America Jenny Lind asked Mr. Barnum when and where he bad beard her sing, and upon receiving the answer that be had never had the pleasure of seeing her before in his life, she asked, “How did you risk so much money on a person whom you never beard sing?” “I risked it,” gallantly answered Mr. Barnum, “on your angelic character and reputation, feeling that you would please the American public.” Then began a campaign of advertis­ ing to prepare the people for the ap- penrance of Jenny Lind. Two hundred dollars was offered as a prize for an ode entitled “A Greeting to America,” to be sung by Jenny Lind, and the award was won by Bayard Taylor. No singer who has ever appeared In the country has secured more enthusiastic welcome than Jenny Lind, all because of the genius of P. T. Barnum.—Joe Mitchell Chapple In National Maga­ zine. When we say a ship Is bound fa certain port or homeward bound, are using, not the past participl« we might think, of the English ten bind, but of a Scandinavian ». meaning to prepare, to get rw> word which in the form of ‘•lx>u«"i lives on in northern dialects. “Billow’’ is probably a Scandlnav word which survived in one of northern or eastern dialects, which. preserve so many Danish words, made its way into southern Eujlig the sixteenth century and waa a literary standing by its use by 8 m ser and Shakespeare. "Wake" for the track of a ship j another Scandinavian word presen« in dialect. Its original meaning, t Professor Skeat tells us. was that■ an opening iu the Ice, especially ti passage cut for a ship in a frozen lilt or sea. and then, from being apply to the smooth watery track left by fa ship after its passage through the let it came to lie used when there wim ice nt all. This useful word Is oneg the nnutical terms which the Fmn have borrowed from the English, a though it is not easy to recognize It« first in its French form of oualche,!« It is still used on the Norfolk broth with its original meaning of an op« place in the ice.—English Review. the German Government to friends obtain for the Headlight t Rustling for «ir *cr.‘ era ia •« ■ " ::ier of invited guest* were den Post, not a SocialiBiic paper, and published tin’s statement: “Behind present. The usual delicacies were •tent: : 1 I * veil for dinner, that part of the other siMicns ¿t tlie B'ue and all tins fabricated was talk stands program living admirably carried, < iray. together 1 < : the Spanish eitner a cla’a reaction or, more I out to the great delight and satis . r Veterans, and the Indian War sickening still, tlie sheer lust of I SPIRIT AND DRUG TAKERS, \ invited to at- faction of all present, for it was, rriiue are hereb gold.” It explains how army and a repast that did honor to tlie mem I the ir.eman»! ¿er\:ce at the navy six’ieties are sprung up to Physical and Psychic Changes That hers of tlie Klub. A number of isti.in Church. Friday. May 30, preach war with the unconcealed Grow With the Habit. hriioruu* toast* were given after at iu a m By order. Two marked changes are noted in all financial assistance of financial the dinner, after winch Mrs F. W. spirit and drug takers. One of them is C E. R eynolds . firms, and ln.w armor plate sub­ physical and Is noted by changes iu the Commander, Christensen rendered some excel sidized tierman newspapers con­ face, eyes, tone of voice, manner of leut music, I). 1. Ahrode rendered Corinth Poet Tillamook, Ore. duct crazy Campaigns of hatred 1 walking and general expression and an amusing recitation, and Mrs ABANDONED INFANTS, against France aid England, and control. The heart Is Irritable and de­ Albert Plank read a paper on ‘‘Ore­ Saloons Are Under Ban how these same firms sold war The "Baby Post” Once Did a Rushing ranged in Its action. There are muscu­ gon.’’ Then tlie gentlemen under­ munitions to foreign countries lar feebleness, nutrieut disturbances, Business In England. took to show tlie ladies how to work j Salem, Ore, May 6—Calling- at- thau to tlieir own dear fatherland. There once flourished in England a with insomnia, and uuusual emotional perfect button holes, the judges pro­ I’tention te an opinion rendered by regular "baby post,” the rates of post­ excitement or depression. The general nouncing tlie one worked by Rev, Attorney-General Crawford holding age being fixed on a strictly business health, conduct and appearance, as Grass Seed. 1). A. Mackenzie the best, who was (that local option elections in cities basis, according to distances traversed. well ns capacity, of the person are awarded the prize This was fol­ niuat be field on the first Tuesday I The curious Institution enrae into ex­ changed. lowed by some stereopitcan views after tlie first Monday of November Prime Ped Clover Seed.... 22c. lb. istence in connection with the found­ A second change of symptoms noted 22c. Alsake ............................ ... by Mrs. l„ I.. Baker, at whose home of each year. Governor West today ling hospital in Guildford street. When is the psychic one. The person is bold, Timothy ......... ...................... 7c. tile dinner party took place. this charity was first established it assertive, egotistical or the opposite. notified tlie officials of Crook County Imported Orchard Grass.. 22c, was understood that its operations His former manner of hopefulness or and those of Metolius that the sa­ Domestic ................................ 18e. He. Imported Italian Rye ....... would be confined to London and its depression Is altered. Where he was loons in that town are being con­ English Rye........................ lie. Industrial Fairs. environs. But the people of the coun­ frank before, he is now secretive, un­ ducted without warrant of law. Clean Muskete Seed............. 2Uc. » try towns and villages heard of it and truthful. unreasoning, has little respect Last week N. C. Marra. field work­ Metolius held a local option elec­ All this is prime seed. showed a decided disposition to share for his words and statements, incurs er for Industrial fairs, in company tion and voted "wet” in February A lek . M c N air & Co. in its advantages; hence the “baby obligations, asserts or denies emphat­ witii Superintendent Hue), covered of this year. It held it despite At­ ically matters of no consequence. His post!” the county pretty well in their en­ torney-General Crawford’s opinion, All over the country there were men I general appearance and pride of char­ deavor to arouse an effort anil en­ rendered at tlie request of tlie Wo­ and women who entered vigorously I acter are lowered. These symptoms may be unnoticed in thusiasm in behalf of industrial men’s Christian Temperance Union, Two choice young registered j ‘ II 1- into the business of carrying chil- I fairs for the children of the county, ‘ . ttiut lIlul an vit election on that 'late would stein bulls. Price $100(1) and dren to London and depositing them the early stages, but later they are the fairs to take place this fall. be illegal. . Recently the members $125.00. Also 85 acre rand). $4800.00, at the gates of the foundling hospital. prominent. Both the physical and They met the people of Beaver of the organization took the sub- terms to suit. B. B. Goff, Forest The charge was 8 guineas from distant psychic are intimately associated with lixT.li.ies like York nnd Monmouth, each other, yet from the very begin nnd vicinity on Tuesday and ar- ject up with Governor West, and Grove, Ore. down to a guinea from places situated i ning there may be marked differences ranged for a meeting which will fortified with this opinion of the within thirty to fifty miles of the me­ ! in the prominence and intensity of tnkt place on the evening oi May ’ Attorney-General he has directed tropolis. The unfortunate infants were either one or the other, indicating the 12 at the Beaver School house, at the District Attorney and Sheriff of borne oil horseback in panniers, two to direction of the most active degenera­ which time necessary committees Crook County and tile officials of each pannier, or in wagons Hued with tion.—Dr. T. I). Crothers in Alienist will be appointed. j Metolius to close the saloons on the straw, for which the charge was some­ and Neurologist Ox Wednesday evening a mass ground that tile election was in- what less. meeting was held and committees valid. Accommodating. On your front porch can be lit I Naturally abuses grew up in con­ appointed to look after the work of nection with the traffic. But. even The most nccommodatiug people In every night until midnight Special Bargain. apart from them, the mortality among the world are tailors. You’ll have to and register not over the schools of that locality. fifty cents per month the "posted" babies was terrible. Thus, hand it to them. They’re always will­ On Thursday evening a meeting For 30 days, will oiler for sale on the meter. out of 14.934 received at the hospital ing to help you out all they cnn. We was held at Hay City and necessary best 92'•a acre Dairy faun in Alseu in four years, only 4.400 lived to be are reminded of this undoubted truth committeea appointed Valley, Improvements up to date. T illamook E lectric L ight AND "apprenticed out.” being a mortality of by the experience of a friend of ours F uel C ompany On Friday evening a meeting Price, $05 per acre G. T. Vernon, last Wednesday. He got measured for more than 70 per cent. W ill S palding , Mai h ~" i r. was held at Nehalem and com-1 A Is.»., I )r,.,rnn ■ Eventually parliament passed a a new suit When the ceremony was ud’lrcs appointed to look niter the, measure abolishing the practice, and over he smiled aud said in bis winning Crop news is even better than in »oik (or the schools in the north the "baby post" ceased..—Ldudon An­ way: “I'll be frank with you. I can’t 1912 when the $lfi, ( KM ),( O).O.)0 line end of the county. Everyone seems pay for this suit until the latter part swers. of next month. Will that make any to think tits industrial fairs are a was reached Another of the same difference?" When Buttons Were Unknown. good thing, and they certainly are, kind will be satisfactory. “Not the slightest difference. You’re Ilow dlolnts to the derivation of "Numny Dumny." gram! piano: lias studied tlie subject extensively weal her. the idea. Bout, an end or extremity, In his "Highways aud Byways In 1 . ......... *21.070 77 ......... (’•8,310 and boater. to push, show that the Devon nnd Cornwall” Arthur II. Nor­ 2 The last will and testament of the .. 308,710 *0 St K 4*0 ( S atisfaction G immnteed button was originally a push piece, like way tells of a fragment of antiquity 3 ......... 2M.Ä.5 *3 iß, (IM) l lute J 1‘. Morgan, filed at New 4 ......... 1(111,200 the buttons of our modern electric that still “lingers In the neighborhood *4 7C,4«> ) York. Monday, proved to tie an .'. ooktor T bis M ark 5 . 17*,48O *5 bells The Normans probably conceiv­ of Redruth, where the country people KL’.iN) 1 elaborate document of 11,(KM words. (I ......... Br2.n«> 87 . 43. 71V ofExcmiNCE ed the idea from the rough knots of when they think they see a ghost say, 7 1 ».«75 *,* 35«, *78 ' It declared reverendy his faith in their furniture, on which most likely •Numny dumny!’” and he adds, "I N i Christ nnd urged.hi* children tode- . Ill J, UK) 01 171.*75 15.50 EVUYWHEKS they liung their garments. Once in­ leave the riddle to be solved by any 9 . ’215.150 m 2.385 i fend the doctrine of tile atonement A . J. Town Co. troduced. buttons came rapidly Into one who is curious enough to under­ 10 139.835 1(5 451. *10 1 It devised $«iO(l.(XX) to tlie cliurch, common use. 12 . ......... 1'22.000 take a useful piece of practice in un­ T owfb 188,473 i arranged for making hie great ait 11 ....... ’22$00O IK) . 410,620 raveling the corruption of language." 13 ......... 41,’2I<5 101 The Old Man’s Hint. 107.505 ; collections available fur tlie people, The phrase Is probably a corruption 10 ......... 177.340 10Y ai *. 7> M l mid after large provisions for tlie Mother (at 11:30 p. m.)—What's the of "In nomine Domini.” the Latin for 17 ....... wi.*X) HI 1*7 740 1 widow mid daughters left the bulk matter, John? You look disturbed. "In the name of the Lord," a phrase so iJ . l(k>. 705 114 Ail. 250 Father—I thought I’d give that familiar In the devotion of the middle ’20 ......... 104,7*0 116 154, hl) ! of his great fortune to his son, young man calling on our daughter a ages.—Excha nge. 22 . . ’214,*70 11* . 402.7 :o , J. P. Morgan Jr. Many faithful vigorous hint it was time to go, so I 23 ......... 600. *70 1’20 180. 136 ■ employees also were remembered 25 ......... walked right into the parlor and de 2.9«) 123 33,135 ’ Precaution. One of tlie worst mixture of offi- JU . 150.**« 127 libenitely turned out the gas. 400.040 That was a wise washerwoman who, 27 2.025 I2W 43a, 700 i rial and business crookedness for Mother—Oh. my! And did he get on being naked why .she had married 2S 1.049. mo 1A) 1(H) i tlie sake of keeping up tlie war angry? such an ugly man. said: 29 3.UH.2A) 131 . 121 36(1 fever between (lie French and Ger- i Father Angry? The young Jacks 34 ........ 21» 1,370 1.44 "I prefer a homely husband that 294.370 napes sakl "Thank you! ” — Boston | man peoples as u money in.ikitig 3S ......... 155 435 137 202.050 stops at home and wrings my clothes •W Transcript. ... (W-i *75 IA» 134. UNO l venture lius just been brought to rather than a handsome one who stays 37 ........... 1*8 940 14'2 xn.tno l light in tlie German Roichstug by away and wrings my heart."—New w ......... 21A*0 145 125, ¡05 Made Over. York Tribune. w .... zn n «> ’47 ............ ■207 500 ' Liebknecht, the Socialiet lender. “lie la a self made man. isn't he?" He produced irrefutable d«H.'iiinent- 41 278.610 151 322.120 “ He was." fai ......... 374.7110 152 Her Willingness. 122.120 ary evidence allowing a secret re­ "Then he Is." ♦41 132 UUO 1.54 105. *30 lation existing tietween tile great "You must have been dreaming of "No. the woman he married didn't 47 4(1 * 125 159 ¡ML (M3 one proposing to you last night. ' Krupp gun works ot Germany uud IS like the result be had accomplished, some .. . ol.tfaS 101 U07.IUI Laura." 4«) . I7H-4« 182 and she has made him over."—Hous 142. AZI ! certain otticiers of tlie German "How Is that?" 91 .. .. Iiki>41<’ liC 1 • i Army and how tlie German gun ton Poet. 52 ......... 1*8.(445 DM “31 by. I heard you for a whole quar­ 199. HI l makers had secretly hired agents 54 ......... i«M,*7U 171 135 Ml 1 to bribe “ ter of an hour crying out, ‘Yea!’ "— Flia- An Eye For th« Main Chanca. French piqwrs to print 54 ......... 213 , TOO 173 9t> 2*5 Sam -Will you keep our engagement gende Blatter. news that wonld tend to intimne 02 ......... All 225 178 1*7.7«m ** ret for the present? I.nln—Alt <4 38U 1») 1*1 221,050 the auger of Frenchman against Iron Jawad. 87 ......... right But where's the present?—Lon 43œ 1*2 1*7. Germ ins. The Reichstag voted an 0 ........... 178.400 1*5 He—Ever notice what a heavy face don Telegraph. It*. 340 official investigation at once, and uO .. . Kit 350 IA) Mrs. Rtrongmlnd baa? She—Yes. What 1*4 71« 0 . 3OK0I5 191 • thump tbere’.i be if her countenance 250. M> on all sides the press indulged in Instinct. 71 ......... 471*10 BH 1*4.71«) •leniincistiuns ol the men reapons Without any previous training a child fell!—Boston Transcript 72 ......... t»,*73 1W 137 U5o aible tor these practices Also it will , hew the end of the first lead pen­ .4 ....... « # ’ 43® h* 07.975 wa* shown how ti e French britwrs Literal. 75 cil It attempts to write with.-Atihi 1.451 *15 231,043 7U ......... KMU) ■on Gloite. ■Is that your wife's picture In your nought to have published in Feance «retch ?” Conteot >nta are »'.lowed iq.il) bw the statement of large orders for, "Sure. SWs the woman tn the caan,- Tell a man that he la brave and you subscription they or their machine guns and in that way toj — Baltimore American. help hUu tu bwcvUM su.—Carlyle. A 15 Watt Mazda Lamp i Glr'TS OF THE VIKIHH WHIRL OF THE WORLD. What Would Happen if We Crtihg Into Another World. We are spinning through spict ii the rate of more than a thousand ralla a minute. What would happen «« we to meet another world inovitge the same speed? In the first place, the heat genenki by the shock would be so great th both worlds would be transformed IM gigantic balls of vapor many tlmeatti size of the earth today. This, howirg might not happen If the Inside of th earth is composed of solider and cold« matter than scientists believe it tote. Although there is small chanced any such aerial collision biking ptq scientists have already calculated tk probable results fairly accurately. 0» has expressed the amount of heat IM would be generated in this way. It would be sufficient, he says, to mdt boil and completely vaporize a maud ice 700 times the bulk of both thee# lidlng worlds—an lee planet 150.IM miles in diameter. Scientists have often considered tk possibility that the end of the eartl would come nbont in this way. Certain it is that planets as great I the earth have been destroyed by ca ing into collision with other huge te tes.—New York Press. Colonial Fireplaces. The early American fireplace » merely a cheap provincial copy of Enal llsb models of the same period. Tl application of the word "colonial" pre-Revolution architecture and <1« ration has created a vague Imprenk that there existed at that time fa American architectural style. As (| matter of fact, "colonial'’ architect« is simply a modest copy of Georgll models, and “colonial" mantelptec were either Imported from England I those who could afford It or were * produced In wood from current I llsh designs. Wooden mantels were deed, not unknown in England, w the use of a wooden architrars to the practice of facing the Orel with Dutch tiles, but wood was in England nnd America only I motives of cheapness, and the a trave was set back from the ope., only because it was unsafe to put • inflammable material so near the dr*' Exchange. Dreams. Dreams are excursions Into the lint of things, a semideliverance from » man prison. The man who dream« t but the locale of various phenomen«’ which he is the spectator in spit« d himself. He is passive and tmperxos»1 he is the plaything of unknown ribo tions and invisible sprites. The man who should never from the stage of dream would kt* uever attained humanity, properly * called, but the man who bad ok* dreamed would ouly know the tnindk its completed or manufactured «t»" and would not be able to under»«* the genesis of personality. He w”* be like a crystal Incapable of cces^W what crystallization means—New I* leans States. Got Cold Foot. Weeks was a queer genius and •» always telling Ills friends that * would put an end to himself Ono» ceedingly cold night he vowed * would go out and freeze to destk About midnight he returned, shlrsrti and snapping his fingers. "Why don't you freeze?" Inquired •• affectionate relatbe. "Well, by Jove." replied the r*es* suicide, "when I freeze I mean to t»M a warmer night than thia for It!”-®* Surpriaad H»r. Mrs. Jnggsby—I wri very much prised at the condition In which J* came home last night There you go again. I’d be willing • ■wear that I came home perfectly •* her. Mrs. Jaggsby—So you did. TWI? what surprised me. —Illustrated Bta Too Cool. She-Wore you cool when the bo*» began to fly? Major Run—I * cool that 1 shivered like ■ leaf —I** Orleans Times Demur rat Good material I* half tbs wart’- From the German. ,