I lOUil lust How Lloyds Takes Queer Chances on Po litical Results. BLACK HAND POLICIES 1 puny Has Taken Long Shodi tor l .vo Centuries ami Ha Nccr lie 3.. iliod on a Just Claim. I'.iiln . .'iut Dix'n Nut Full u II. k Sonne Ki Inronii'. .vow York City. Tba Insurant vsainst Mack Hand outrage and lotsm'ii resulting lro:u the election are not the only queer policies written by Lloyds, the English association of underwriters which will insure against almost anything, providing an adequate premium Is paid. Lloyds baa been In the Insuring business ever since ltiai', and there Is no record of It ever having de faulted on a Just claim. Designed originally as a society tor marine insurance and that Is still Its principal business it has Is sued policies against all conceivable kinds of risks. As In the beginning of Its career, Lloyds Is still backed by a group of men, much more tiuni 'Tuiio than lea Urst group, and cai-li one staud3 to lose more than d.d the wnolu of the original group. Kach IiK!..l.:i' oi ILn bociety niu.st uj .crilv Cj.OOU c.n his election. Th.s tuud makes up the reserve ng::lnst the legitimate business of Lloy.ls rfi:i;eiy, marine Insurance. All the freak insurance, such us tto policies against Black Hand 6at rages and American eieetio.i losses, is written by different groups or men who are members oi Lloyds. If a man thinks the Hlack Hand is go.ns to blow up his store and cause, him a loss oi lU'.UUO, he goes to the jJoytis agency, which communicates with the home ollice, and a group of say, ten members will b.nd them selves to pay $l,ul)U each In event of loss and the policy is written. .Nearly every stallion of import ance on the Kentucky breed. ng farmj u insured, some of them for as mucn as llou.OUU. Many race horses in training were insured until a few years ago, wnen a succession of loss- caused an advance of premiums to a.ticaily a prohibitive figure. The wuing blow came when James It. -ne's Highball broke his leg in the .: rurlong of a race and had to be Proved. Highball was insured r a very large amount. Kaco horses and valuable poio pon. ies are still insured, but the policies usually only cover possible losses while the animals are in transit. The .angers or the race track and of the polo field were found to bo too many for the Insurers. Lloyds makes a lot of money out of the vagaries of toe veather. It bets huge sums right along that it is not going to rain on a certain day. ttvery once in a while it does rain and it pays out a pretty sum. Pro prietors of race tracks frequently in sure against a rainstorm on big stake days. Halny weather will cut ma auenaance in half, but the money offered for the big stake must be paid whether 10,000 or 30,000 per sons witness the race. Recently a suburban real estate concern which spent 115,000 advertising an auction sale of lots, took out a policy against a rainstorm on the day of the sale. Faderewskl on his concert tours, takes out half a dozen different kinds of insurance, accident and health, and a separate policy on his va'ua ble ringers. Kubellk. the violinist, also koeps his lingers Insured on h:s tours. Caruso and several othar grand opera stars, carry Insurance against colds and other maiad es which elect only the vocal organs Practically all the wealthy owners of automobiles, not only insure their machines against damage by tire, theft, collision or other accident but also carry liability policies. If tr.e chauffeur run3 down and kills or In jures anybody, the damages which the victim gets must be paid by the liability company. Many business men in Britain car ry insurance all the year round on the life of King Kdward, as they did tor years prior to the death of Vic toria. Some Wail street stock speculator make It a practice carry insurance on the life of President Hooseveit. because of the market upheael which would follow the sudden death of the head of the nation. Lloyds will not issue its gambling policies to everybody, it must know the man and know that his regular business will suffer a loss in the event of tfle happening against wnich he Insures. WIRELESS TALK WITH IUIXOOV Terrestrial Station Keeps In Touch With Aerial Motor Ship. Berlin. Germany Wireless com communication has been established successfully between the motor bal loon of an alrgh.: battalion and a terrestrial wireless station. Several messages were exchanged in the course of an hour's flight. The Prolific Rabbit, in four years a pair of rabbltt could have a pro-teny of nearly l,. 600,000. A doe rabbit produces ai many as seven families a year, IK ! BE PHYSICIAN SAYS JELECTRIC CHAIR KILLS Dr. Irvine Dei-hire sing Sing Kvecu t( n l)lpute Dr. ShrnilyN Theory. Osslnlng. N. Y. Dr. It. T. Irvine. a ho was for seventeen years prison physician at Sing Sing, take Ismie with Dr. George F. Slirady, who has b'.eri quoted as saying that there Is i doubt In the minds of mlenttftV tmi ns to whether a man shock.' 1 by electricity, as carrlel on by the fate In executions, really dies. Dr. Sl-iady says the results of autopsl-- t.eM on persons killed In this man ner have not been convincing. Dr. Irvine, when told of the state ments of Dr. Shrady, sail: "I have been present and seen slx'y four per. sons put to death by electricity In this State, and there is no doubt In my mind whatsoeveer but what all those men were absolutely killed by the electric shock and that death is Instantaneous. The changes pro duced by the electric shock are such thnt resuscitation, In my opinion, Is absolutely Impossible. The amount of fresh blood found In the cranium In nil of these sixty-four cases I have seen In Itself would preclude any possibility of saving man. Then you have tho patechlal hemorrhages In the brain tissues. They change in the structure of the blood after the electrical shock. Any one of these, In my opinion, would nrove fMal, but when you have them all In each and every case, as I have no ticed In autopsies, death Is In mr opinion, unquestionable." Coroner Shrady Is quoted as say in?: "I do not Insist that electrocu tion, as now practiced, does not kill. I only say that a scientific doubt ex ists. If life exists In the hmlv nn,l apparent death Is onlv simtiend- cd animation, then the surgeon who examines the body kills that man in the autopsy and becomes the execi ticiU'r." nr:v mi:i.ti:i nv BYKOX. poem : Arotiits Man Vi'ho S!i- t Wif Aft' Listening to "Dun Ju;;n." Chicago. Quotations from Lord r.yvon's "Don Juan," read by his lawyer, brought about t!,c acquittal of Martin Sihleyer, on trial in Keno sha, Wis., o:i a charge of shootin;, his wife. The defense of Schleyer, as an nounced by his attorneys, George V Taylor and Calvin Stewart, was to have been the "unwritten law," but when th case came up a plea of In sanity was made and the lurv d elded that Schleyor was Insane when he shot the woman, but he had re covered his sanity. The Jury ae quitted him. Schleyer testified to his wife's conduct with a man whom he had shot at the time he shot her When the caso came to argument Taylor discussed local nolnts and emotional Insanity. Stewart paid no attention to the law, and not much to the evidence, but declared that Schleyer had been like the hero of Byron s poem. While the Jurymen brushed tears from their cheeks, Stewart read from Don Juan," and compared the character of Lambro, who had re turned only to find his home and fireside wrecked and his children turned against him. District Attorney Baker had made a bitter arraignment of Schleyer, but Stewart had reached the hearts of the Jurors through Byron's poetry. Schleyer was formerly a promi nent resident of Rochester, N. Y. ForGHT DEVIL FISH. Diver Killed Monster After Terrific Submarine Duel. San Francisco. Wrapped In tho tentacles of a giant devil fish, Martin Lund, a diver, fought for his life In the hold of the wrecked steamer Pomona, which lies In thirty feet of water in Fort Ross Cove, off the Mr1 tin County coast. A tentacle four Inches in diameter first gripped Lund's legs. Another encircled his thigh. He began to chop frantically at the rubber-llfce to:ir!s and at the same time signalled to the linr.-c above that he wished to ascend Cnable to free hlmslf in time two more tenacles twined about his neck. The efforts of the men on the surface to comply with his signal threatened to pull his hel met off and he was forced to signal them to desist. With only his left arm free he hacked at the tenacles until they were partially crippled, but he was bHng drawn toward the deadly beak when he saw the outline of the devil fish's body. Plunging suddenly toward it he drove his knife with all his force Into the head, repeating the blow until he hsd slashed It Into sections. The dyinr oc'opcs tightened Its ten tacles until the diver was almost crushed in Its embrace. Lund then cut himself free and was brought to the surface in a fainting condition. Cornstalks for Witter Mains. Medlcllne Lodga Kan. Experi ments conducted by the Metropoli tan Water Company with the rein forced cornstalk pipes have proved successful, and a company to manu tacturo them has been organized here, with Hon. Estabrook Aspinwall as president. It Is estimated that the pipe can be placed on the mar ket at one-tenth of th cost of cast iron pipe, and the new material will outwear the Iron. The supply of raw material Is Inexhaustible. Th compamy will be stocked for 16,000.. 000. ILL NOT UNITE PHYSICALLY UNFIT ,ev. Dr. H. S. Johnson' Utterances on Subject cf Ill-Adviscd Marriasea. rOVERTY MARRIAGES DiSAPFRDVED Boston I'nstor Pixi-ouragf . Mating n Insufficient Earnings. Those with Communicable Di.xenses, In herited or Acquired, Should Itc ninln Single. Boston, Mass. "I will r-fus" to marry persons afflicted with con sumption or any hereditary or com municable disease If I have personal knowledge of such nllments exist ing. ptH I tn nlo opposed to mar rying divorced peopK except In the case cf the Innocent party," said Key. Dr. Herbert S. Johnson, pas. or of the Warren Avenue Baptist Chinch, in this city, "1 'o not think It advisable to marry .mum; couples who are In noor rlrrurrsitnnceg. I believe, through observation and consultation, that i prospective bridegroom should have i.n earning capacity of at least ll.'i a week before he should eon-ili-r the matrimonial venture. This t? ten, enf, of courre, does not ap ply In all cases, for there are always exceptions, but I think the union of .'iso,:s In the middle class In this country, who are In poor circum stances, creates nothing but a hell on earth. , "When I r.inde the statement some Mine ago from the pulpit of my church that I would marry any cou ple thnt wanted to g.'t married if they did not have the marriage fee, my remark was a facetious one, made half in Jest and half in earnest, but I v. Ill pladly perform the ceremony for any unfortunate couple that might have sinned, free of cost, if they apply to me and give evidence of good faith. It Is a pitiable sight In a large city to see a young girl carrying a babe on her arm without a husband to show his love, or a father to provide for her and her offspring. "I was, perhaps, led to make tho statement that I would marry all such couples that applied to me through a case that came to me not long ago. Our church Is so situated In the heart of the city that practi abillty is our chief aim. I became Interested in a young girl who had sinned, and I appeared In court In her behalf. She was dressed In mourning and carried her babe on her arm. It develoned that when her aged mother learned of the sin and disgrace of her daughter, she committed suicide by throwing her self into the river. And that is why I stand ready to help uplift the sin ners that are making a struggle to live an upright and honorable life, and our church will assist them in every reasonable manner, such as finding employment for the husband, etc. "Now as to the marriage of young girls and fellows in meagre circum tances. There has been and Is con stantly being brought to my atten tion cases of hasty marriages when neither person Is in a financial con dition to warrant their marriage. Fifteen dollars a week is little enoagh to .ef;ay the expenses of a home with Its furnishings, its doc tor's and nurse's billd, tho bupport of children and the mite that should 1) given to charity by all Christ ians. Of course, when I place the weekly salary at $15 I refer only to the middle classes, that la Irish-Americans, or those of Anglo-Saxon ex traction, and so forth. I don't refer to the lower class of people from Ei-rope who can exist on much less. "And In regard to persons afflicted with tuberculosis or other diseases of a hereditary nature to which man and woman are subject. It is my be lief that a man or woman unfortu nate enough to be effected with com municable diseases should be unself ish enough when they are aware of these diseases existing to be content to merely love the man or woman iin-1 not ark ono to have whole lives blasted. It Is a terrible thing to have children born into this world with the tsint of dlaeaso upon them. Yet there are a great many mar riages I i this country in the course of the year when one or the other of the contracting persons Is a vic tim of some communicable sexual disease, and Is the cause of much misery and the loss to tho United States of millions of dollars. 'I will not marry persons whom I know are afflicted thusly. an.1 If there is any suspicion In my mind I will ask them frankly about tho matter. A man should be as unself ish and sacrificing In such matters as the soldier or the ftremnn or the hundreds of other heroes, and It Is their duty to humanity as well as to tneir country that they cast aside all thoughts of marriage when thev know they are unfitted to become husbands and fathers. I have steadfastly refused to mar. ry divorced persons, unless In the cases of the innocent persons. There are Innumerable cases of Innocent persons being divorced through no rauit or theirs and they should not be compelled to suffor for the sins f the guilty." rooi:.Mi:v AT THE HANK. Most of Them llelired Policemen Their C1i!ef limy lo Wntcli Tne nmii in itfi i form in the bank s good deal more than a sign post. rrjm a M until after banking ncn-r he nan,! there apparently for l...' so irtrvt e of directing strati ers the in ii'n r ultiitnu. iini lUn Is a gro ileijl more thnt he does. That is why nt the larger bniiKs M ere are f?w among the doormen who have not been policemen. Man tf them were sergennts or captains. The chliff duty of these men Is to watch faces and warn the tellers of mn they suspect. Most of them are familiar with the faces of the old crooks and are able to pick out the new crooks nlmo.st Instantly. The knowledge of faces that some of theso doormen possess Is remark able A story Is told of George II. Hewitt, who for thirty-one years has been the doorman of the First Na tional hank. New York, which Is Ep ical of ull these men. A man came In who fifteen years before had been a depositor t the bank. He had gone to Europe, an I after tr.nt lapse of time had come back with a beard and fifteen years more of life on his shoulder As Konn as he entered the bank li w!tt was h re with bis greeting. ' Geo 1 mornl,i Mr. Farr." as though tho man had been away for but a v. There are probably ten th"i".-.iiJ men who In the course of a c. a!n leal with the First Nntlorcl. !iV"t knows every one of ti'er.i. There I.- another d ufy that the doormen perform. Often during the course of tlie day one of the clerks ' S( nt out with a large sum of money to nnother bank. The doorman al ways acecnipnnles him to see that .in progress through the crowded streets Is not Interrupted by some crook who -nov.s the value of the roll the clerk carries with him. The oldest hank doorman In New York Is George 11. Hewitt of the First National Bank. In the old days the police force stationed men at man;- of the larger banks. Hewitt was otu of these men. lie has been ther i ever since, now more than thirty-one years. Ills partner John Budd, has been in the employ of the hank for six years and before that was on the police force for many years. The only police captain In this bus iness is Francis J. Kenr of the Cen-tr-1 Trust Company. Kear retired ou his pension, but Instead of living in Idleness Is to be seen every day watehihs the faces that enter the tr-st company, looking for old ac qu U; tances In ihe crooked worlJ. Another old timer Is Christopher Sr-.lth cf the Merchants Bank. Smith had the post nt Broadway and Cham bers itreet for eighteen years. There was not a prominent New Yorker In the o'd days that he did not know. One day President Grant was eros mg thb street there when a truck cam-' tearing around the corner.. Smith grabbed the President Just :n time and saved him from Injury. The Gnnal turned to hlm with a hum ir oua expression on his face and said: "You are the first man who ever Jerked me around like that." After that whenever Grant pass 1 that way he had a cigar for the officer on the post. Smith has tales to tell of all the men of that day, Arthur, TUden, Tweed, Roscoe Conkllng. Tiier j is not a Judge that he did not know, nor a mayor. Army Education. The conditions confronting officer ana r.ien who ha-e children to edu cate, are simply pitiful. Many an offlrj.- Is at this moment in debt, and paying Interest on borrowed nionev. so that he may send his son or his aaugnter to a good school, or keep them In some ity where their educa tion wir. be continuous and uninter rupted. No matter of domestic isonomy touches officers more deen ly than than this of the children's education. It is true that the public schools of a city, if the post be near a city, are generous In taking boys and girlg in, and some do so for a tuition lee; but it is. nevertheless, a fact that an army officer cannot demand local schoj' serMce as a r;ght, because of his profension and his residence on i military reservation. Even when iiea- a city, the po3t is outside of it. and the children spend from two to four hours daily travelling behind army mules to and from the school houwe. The so-called "post schools" no v eaU. Wished, and to which children are Boim times sent through absolute necessity because of isolation, are a farce, for the officer having the high 8 undlng tltla of "Superintendent ! Post Schi ols." Is generally bo fu'.lv occupied with other engaging military amies mat ne can give little or no attention to the school development and system, while the man who t teacher has usually never acto. In to ; capacity before, Asnln, officers and men are co chani.ee about that the education of td- rhiidren is subject to sad and osflv Irterruntions. as thev frennnnt. ly go back one grade In their trans- ler iron, one locality to another. i there not a remedy for this? West. Point represents hundreds of similar, though smaller cases, an i these children are as lust v. m inval and as Ai-ierlcaa as any the nation produces. Army and Navy Llf. I'atrnlriHn In Various Clilen. Berlin's patrolmen are to 340, Llvriucol's are 1 to 4 4 9. London's 1 to 4 9 U . and Philadelphia has 1 patrol. man for ever) 511 citizens, (in Manhattan Island there is but ono po liceman to every 643 Inhabitant. Tho Kind You Have Alwnm ill use for over 30 vonr. . . . , mm vuu m,F uvl VI V J till 111 HUH. All Counterfeit!, Imitations and "Just-ris-pood" nro but Experiments that trifle with and endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment, What is CASTORIA Cast or la Is a harmless substitute for Castor OU, Pare Boric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotlft substance. Its ago is its guarantee It destroys Wortni and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teethlnjr Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and J towels, giving healthy and natural sloop. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the The Kind You Hate Always Bought I If M. hi use ror To All Our The Great AMERICAN FARMER Indianapolis, Indiana. The Leading Agricultural Journal ot the Nation. Edited by an Able Corps of Writers. The American Fnrmr ic fV, licWi Tf en" .". v . llSUecl. It fills a nnwitirm rf fL. E, . - t "i 11.3 uiYu nuu nas iaKen ine leadtn? ltesn Site f 7Ural PeP,IeJn CVer' section of United iLetr ;f ff rmf r and his family something to think about aside from the h drum of routine duties. Every Issue Contains an Original Poem by SOLON G000E WE MAKE THE EXCEPTIONAL OFFER OF Two for the Price of One: THE COLUMBIAN The Oldest County Paper and THE American FARMER BOTH ONE YEAR FOR $I.OO all oX?TE!,;led ?iff" ismade to"ew subscribers, and THE COLUMBIAN. j, ,,.,, ,,a. A man can acquir? a great many disagreeable habits, and become in time so used to the txperience that it appears to be all right. That is, a man can become a downright hog and become so used to the bristles that he never fetls them when he is obliged to nut hi chester Union, AN.Y0LT "KMKVK VOIR SKNSKK? i . , oniD nun Milieu, littvlnif been Impaired if ot utterly 1- , uhhi iiiturrn, are fully re stored by Ely's Cieam Halm, ran ymi doubt that thin r K. ,i ' ... .') tliat ban been said ot it by the thou muds who have lined It? it Is applied directly to t.h .ft-..t.i ..i 11 ' and iNtrliia its healing work at ..nee. " ny nui jtei it unlay? Al druuiriHta I Ely lW, . vlK: fnreet, Jew orlc. mi i-..,.i... en cents. 1 " Do the bill colWtitisi uiu-..,.,. ,i , . . CASTORIA xur mianii ana i;nunrAn The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears tt Signature of flnns-lif. ami nitti i O . WW has bnrne 1m lmntiA ami nas ocen iimtio under his per Bonal stipcrviHlon Bineo Its infancy. Signature of uver r5U Years. CT, NCW VOKft crrv. OFF ER Subscribers t : t fiit-uiry rami journal put 1 t' . , J . . . c. The t;irl U tlie mother of tlie woman jiiNt uh the "the hoy is the fat her of the Mian." The period when the womanly fuiietioiiH begin is one to be carefully watched mid considered. Irregularity or derangement ut this time inuy l promptly met and eured by the me of Dr. 1'ierce'n Favorite Prcwi -iption. Hut UfKleetiHl at thi critical period nmy entail yearn ol future toillerinK. Favorite l'reHciip'.ion' act directly upon tho womanly orm-i ulvimr them perfect vigor ami abundant vitality It removes the obMtructioiiM of health and lutppiiieH-i, ami deliver woman hood from thecriit l bondage of "feiiule wenknens". Well recognized authoritirtt of all HchiKiUof medicine-have nothing hut praise for the ingredients of Dr. Pierce' Favorite Prescription. Koud to Dr. It V. Pierce at Hull do. N V f.-rfree booklet giving ingredients ami what medical authorities nay about them. Not a imtent-nicdlclne but a ' KaviwiW Prescription" of Dr. Pierce who mak es the diHeuscHof women his ajieciality. It has forty year of cures back of it. Mother, he said, putting his arms around her and kissing her on the brow lam going to tnairy tlie sweetest, the loveliest, the noblest girl in the wot Id. Looking up in to his eyes, the good lady by a great effort managed to keep back her tears as she answered in broken tones: My poor -boy! Chicago Record-IUraM, o