IE Hill !IK; instances of their Success in Outwitting Detectives. MISTAKES OF OFFICERS Om-s of Mistaken Indcntit Two Hn Who Served Seven, Years of Life Term When Innocent Ktmnge lUunilrr of tlie French riHcc In the Case of le Tourvllle. ll.my of the mistakes of detectives f those of mistaken identity. .' mm time ago a man belonging to no of the bent known and wealthiest jwiries In the co intry was greatly lurprlaed and more Indignant when tte was arrested by a detective who tt!nght he had captured a criminal who recently had escaped from prts o. Profuse explanations on the fiirt of the captured man were fol lowed by equally profuse apologies in the part of the detective, so that the incident closed without 111 will on either Bide. A mistake with a more tragic re salt occurred In England in 1ST 9. Tto mistake arose In connection with tktt famous lidllnghar.. burghiry, two men were brought before the Newcastle assizes charged with the jobbing of the vicarage. It B lor that when the vicar had inier rujrfed his unwelcome visitors they ia.-i shot at him, so that the charj" of attempted murder was adJed ti ilint of burglary. The two n:en. Bnanflghan and Murphy, who were cliiiginf with the crime, were con victed' and sentenced to life impris onment, as the evidence seemed to be convincing beyond the shadow of a rfonbt. They Berved seven yraia of iheir term. Then two other men cttufessed that they alone wu'e gufSty of the robbery. De Tourvllle, one of the most tor ri'i'ff of the European criminals, es cafttf punishment for a long time because of the mistake of a detec tive. The death of a woman at Ssnrborough by what De Tourvllle declared was the accidental dis charge of a revolver was investigated by a detective froia London, but bo trunk and open appeared the con duct of the great criminal and so flourishing was his appearance that tVi fficer was misled and reported tkat he was convinced that the af ffT was an accident. 'Vhen a few years later the death ' rfie wife of De Tourvllle was be- ; investigated he murdered her , hurling her over a precipice In ;'? Aljis the body of the woman j had died at Scarborough was ex : trictf and examined. It was found f.vtt, far from killing herself by ac ckTvot, she had been murdered by eoaw one who had shot her In the so- that a slight examination -wt?d have established the fact. The rrric ake of the detective at the time el llie Scarborough crime had terri We results, for In the time De Tour TiW was allowed to go free he com muted two more murders. Sherlock Holmes constantly ln siJ that nothing in a room where n -Time had been committed should lf touched, and this appears to be n good rule, judging by a mistake ittie by an Intelligent police officer in Ireland. The policeman was jilrced in charge of a room in which a murder had been committed to nee tiat nothing was disturbed until hi? wperior officers arrived. He found Ifce time passed slowly amid sv.cli melancholy surroundings and yro ded to console himself wlih a jr?'. He lit a candle which he found ojt the mantelpiece and finding a Kxanpled up piece of paper on the Ciwr he used that for lighting 1:!. JPCe. Xs he was afraid that his suprr fks.ru would object to his smoking ttle on duty, he opened the windo w tr order to let out the smell of the ltiacco and in order to tve them wfcea they approached, so that he iId put his pipe out in lime. It ms discovered later that in indulg wr la the innocent pleasure of a ftps of "tobaecy" he destroyed three rf the most Important clues. The length of the candle which ho lad lighted would have indicated . time when the murder was com-.mrt-id, the paper with which he had JfgtueJ his pipe, judging from the starred remains,, had been left there trr the murderer himself and the po Hreman had forgotten whether he itad found the window locked or un iocked when he opened it to let out ite smell of smoke. Furthermore, the keen nosed detective who wag tnt on the case, smelled the odor of the tobacco smoke, and not know ing whence It originated, spent a Jat of valuable time in tracing it 4knro. Some years ago one of the most cruel murderers ever known almost cled because two policemen re fmd' to investigate charges of whose truth they were in doubt. A ma a running along behind a cab came rn.pi U two policemen and gasped out (bat a murderer was riding In the ah wllh the remains of his victim. . Out of breath from hiB exertion raff too excited for a connected story tfie police officers were inclined to ifcink the man either crazy or drunk, 4 therefore turned a deaf ear to allegations. If the pursuer had not persisted In following the cab aatf had not met later on a less jr.ptical officer the remains of the wurdered person might have been (.K;ed In a Bafo hiding place and the murderer have gone undiscovered, DISEASES ANOJHEIrt ODORS. Curious Facts In Regard to the Xr..; in Diagnosis. The acuteness of the sense cf smell is far greater In many cf the lower animals dogs, for example than In man, and they employ it l:i guiding them to their food, iu warn ing them of approaching danger and for other purposes. The sphere cf the susceptibility to various odors U more uniform and extended In man, and the sense of smell is capable of great cultivation. Like the other special senses, it may be cultivated by attention and practice. Experts can discriminate qualities of wines, liquors, drugs, etc. Diseases have their characteristic odors. Persons who have visited many different asylums for the insane rec ognize the same familiar odor of ttu. Insane. It Is not insane asylums alone, but prisons, jails, workhouses, armies in camp, churches, schools and nearly every household, that have characteristic odors. It is when the insane, the prisoners and the sol diers are aggregated In large groups or battailous that their characteris tic odor la recognized. Most diseases have their characteristic odors, and by the exercise of the sense of smell they could be utilized in different diagnoses. For example, favus has a mousy odor, rheumatism has a copious sour smelling, acid sweat. A person af flicted with pyaerflia has a sweet, nauseating breath. The rank, un bearable odor of pus from the middle ear tells the tale of the decay of os seous tissue. In scurvy the odor is putrid, in chronic peritonitis musky, in scrofula like stale beer, In inter mittent fever like fresh-baked brown bread, In fever ammonlacal, in hys teria like violets or pineapple. Meas les, diphtheria, typhoid fever, epilep sy, phthisis, etc., have characteristic odors. The Foul-Strike Kule. An attempt is being made to modify the foul strike rule In the major leagues. Ever since the rule has been in existence it has caused more dlseuslon than probably any new rule Introduced in years. George L. Moreland of Pittsburg worked out a plan which has many com mendablo features. The plan suggested by Mr. More land is to run two white linos paral lel with the foul lines, starting from first and third bases, respectively. He sugests that any ball that Is hit on a line in the space between the old foul line and the proposed new one be called a dead ball, neither a strike nor a foul be called. The suggestion is intended to assist the heavy hitters. The umpire is ex pected to detect whether a player at tempts to bunt or not, and should an atempt be made to bunt and the ball go foul at any place the batter should be charged with a strike, but should a hard drive go within the lines the baiter should be exempt from being charged with a strike. The proposed plan Is expected to give all hard batters an even chance, pre vent disputes, and do away with all kicking over the foul strike rule be ing a handicap on the batter. la(ii:iu Medicine Men's Methods. I'aquan medicine men are regard ed with great respect by the natives. Those I have met certainly seemed energetic and hard working. They sit close to the patient, massaging the seat of palfr-wlth much vigor, and while they are thus rubbing make a noise with their lips rather like that which a groom makes when rubbing down a horse. The process is a tiring one, and the medicine man stops at intervals to drink hot water in which t.aro has been boiled. His object Is to extrutt some mysterious foreign substance from the sick man's body, and If he succeeds in this he receives a fee, otherwise he gets nothing. "Xo cure, no pay," Is apparently the Pa quau's motto. Curious Wuy to Get a Hide. "Stop!" shouted the man on the country road, holding up a warning hand. Muttering something about rural cops, the automobilUt obeyed. "Turn around and come back to town witn me," said the stranger. "You were going at least 35 miles an hour.", "You're a constable I sup pose," said the automoblllst, with a covert sneer, when they had reached the village. "Me?" replied the pas senger. "No, I'm a farmer, and had to come in to town when all the teams were busy. Nice growing weather? ThanKs. Good-by." Oat Photographers, A young womau looking for rugs told a New York salesman that she wanted a shade to match her cat. Speaking of cats, there are photo- BruyueiB m me cuy wno make a BueclaHy of posing cats for pictures. A studio in Harlem has specified I hours for poslngs. l fl . J r"0- oz73.xts be rWy THE COLUMBIAN. BIGGEST FARM ON EARTH. Said to Be David Rankin's In Missouri He Guesses It'e True. Nearly forty years ago an Illinois farmer discovered that land on one side of a State line was selling for $20 an acre while he might buy any amount on the other side of the Imaginary dividing mark for less than a third that amount. Real estate men told the farmer that no railroad would ever go near the Missouri lands, but he sold his farm in Illinois and bought all he could of the land at $0 an acre. Not long ago David Rankin, who 's the man that bought the cheap acre age, took an Inventory of his posses sions in the neighborhood of Tarklo, Mo. The inventory showed 25,640 acres, 12,000 fattening hogs, 9,000 cat tle, 810 horses, more than 100 cot tages, In which the employees of the big farm were housed, great quanti ties of farm machinery and the like. The total figures up to something like $4,000,000 In value, Bays Hamp ton's Magazine. That didn't Include the 1.000,000 bushels of corn produced annually or the 1"0 miles of tiling and ditches, some of which had been draining the marsh lands of forty years ago. "They, say I'm the biggest farmer in the world," Rankin says, "and I guess it's true. Lots of men have more land than I, but they use it for cattle ranges only. Mine Is a farm." Rankin never raises cattle or fur nishes range. He buys the raw steers from the plains and fattens them un til worth twice what ho pays for the "feeders," as they are called. He nev. er sells com because by feeding it to cattle, according to a minute calcula tion of his own, he gets more ample returns. It is forty miles from the nearest to the most distant of his farms. Mr. Rankin is Scotch-Irish. He was born In Indiana in rural poverty. Ho made his start trading a colt for salves and raising the latter into steers. To-day he owns an implement factory, a municipal water system, a telephone company, a bank and other enterprises in addition to his farm. When the notion takes him he adds $."0,000 or so to the endowment of Tarkio College, a Presbyterian school in his home toi which has known his generosity to the extent of $250,000. Electricity from Straw. While electricity has frequently been recommended to the farmer as a convenient means for ploughing, oper ating machinery, pumping water, etc., yet in practice he has been rarely able to avail himself of such assistance, since farms cannot be located in mountainous country where water power is abundant, while coal and gasoline for engiues to drive the dyna mos cannot be procured with sufficient cheapness to make the undertaking a practical success. Recently in France some Interesting experiments ' have been carried on where various waste vegetable products, such as straw, leaves, reeds unserviceable hay and ' similar substances have been used as j fuel In gas generators. It has been found that from such materials a low carbon gas can be evolved la vertical ' gi'.s generators, and by means of a gas motor and dynamo electricity can I be developed. This can be done much j cheaper than by burning coal or petro leum products, and when a number ! of farmers unite to maintain a plant ! that will furnish about lifty or seven-ty-tlve horse-power it is believed that i electricity could be distributed about 1 the neighborhood with considerable j economy. Tlie method employed was I to collect tlie material, chopping the straw and like substances, and then after it Is dried, pressing it into bales weighing about 1,500 pounds per cubic yard. As it has taken the farmers of the western United States to develop the co-operative telephone line, using, in some cases, fence wires aa conduc tors, so it muy be possible that French agriculturists will succeed in generat ing electricity so economically that It can be used not only for scientific, but also for practical farming. They Didn't Get By, Anyway. Wlllam Hodge in "The Man from Home" was riding in the smoking tar on a little one-track road in the north ern part of the State some time ago, and in the Beat In front of him sat a Jewelry drummer. He was one of those wide-awake, never-let-any-one-get the-best of-him style of men. Pres ently the train stopped to take on water, and the conductor neglected to send back a flagman. A limited ex press running at the rate of ten miles an hour came along and bumped the : rear end of the first train. The drum-' uier was lifted from his seat and ! pucnea nead first against the seat ahead. His silk hat was Jammed clear down over his ears. He picked him self up and settled back in hiB Beat. No bones had been broken. Then he DUlled Off his llHt Hrour n lono- l.vuoth I and, straightening up, said: "Hully gee! well, they didn't get by us. any way!" Hardly Encouraging. John D. Rockefeller, conversing umisb'y with a reporter, drove home r. re -.iark ou inefficiency with a golf story. "There was a man," he said, "who hud no success at golf at all. Xhe more he played, it seemed, the poorer he became. One day his work was particularly bad. " 'Dear, dear,' he said to hl caddy as he looked ruefully at a deep holu in the turf that he had Just made with his Itoo, 'dear, dear, there can't be worse players tnan myself.' "'Well,' said the eaddy, reflective ly, 'maybe ther's worse players, but they duo't play.' " BLOOMSBURG, VA, EiSllFElOliiDlEVEr Rich Young Parisian Fulfils Promise of "Surprise" by Shooting Him self at Monte Carlo. Paris, France. Fernand Ravenez, n wealthy young Parisian, committed suicide under remarkable circum stances. He gave a supper to a number of his friends, at which the fun was fast nnu furious. Several times during the evening Ravetiez cried: "This Is nothing; n big surprise Is awaiting you at the end." At dawn, when the party was breaking up, Ravenez shouted: "Now for the great surprise." He arose abruptly and walked to ward the Gypsy orchestra, which was playing a Hungarian rhapsody. His friends, who were expecting some practical Joke, were stupefied to Bee him suddenly place a pistol to his temple and fire. He fell dead. Ine only reason for his act Is Bald to be "sheer boredom." Ravenez was only twenty years old, but he had be come a familiar figure on the Paris boulevards, where his liking for "loud" dress attracted attention. i nree years ago tne young man. figured In a sensational duel. Ho challenged a professional swords man as a result of a cafe quarrel, but the swordsman refused to fU'ht on the ground that Ravenez had not reached his majority. Undaunted, Ravenez Issued a chal lenge dated the day he was eighteen years old, and ho devoted the Inter vening time to rigorous training. When he finally did meet his ad versary the contest was of the fiercest character and It ended by Ravenez plunging his sword into his oppo nent's bod. j HOW HIGH SHOULD A LADY KAHifc. HER SKI RTS7 Milwaukee Judge Undertakes to De cide the Delicate Question In Court. Milwaukee. Wis. How high can a woman hold her skirt on a damp night anu eUll remain a lady? It was up to Judge Neelen In Dis trict Court to decide it, ana he made Here's the Limit of Propriety In Rais ing a Skirt. a ruling In which he fined Miss May Walters $5 for getting past the "lady" stage. Patrolman Becker was the etiquette expert and he said that when a wom an's skirt was up fourteen Inches In tne rear and nine in front and had a waist attached which was more or less peekaboo, the limit had been reached. The Court agreed with Becker that a dress could be held too high, and he approved of the arrest of Miss V, alters. The patrolman udded that he had looked sharply and had Been no fluffy ruffle stuff under tlie outer skirt, and that was one reason why he though: the gown was deficient. ATE 4 POUNDS OF LIMBURGEK. Winners at Lemp Club's Contest Still Lives. St. Louis, Mo. Two hundred guests of the Leiiip Hunting and Fishing Club at Alton went through a trying ordeal when they attended the clubs limburger cheese eating contest. The difference between this contom ar.d the Salome dance Is that one doesn't have to have cne's eyes open to witness it. Joseph Uhle won by consuming four pounds of the frHgrant fromage and Ed Trumble finished a bad Becond with two pounds to his credit. The prize was a case of beer. Uhle is as well as could be expected, and it Is thought that fumigation will save the clubhouse for future Sunday afternoon (unctions. v Tlie Kind Ton Have Always in use Tor over 30 years, and has been made under his pcr jylr sonal supervision since Its Infancy. All Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-aa-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castoria Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare gorlc, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms , and allays Fevcrlshncss. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho Stomach and Ilowcls, giving healthy and natural sleep The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Sears the The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. TMS CCNTSU eOMMHV, f UHUV Tlt (T. MIW VOMH OITV. BIG OFFER To All Our Subscribers The Great AMERBCAftS FARMER Indianapolis, Indiana. The Leadinc Agricultural Journal of the Nation. 'Edited by an Able Corps of Writers. The American Farmer is the only Literary Farm Journal pub lished. It fills a position of its own and has taken the leading place in the homes of rural people in every section of the United States. It gives t.:e farmer and his family something to think about aside from the humdrum of routine duties. Every Issue Contains an Original Poem by SOLON GCODE 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 This unparalleled offer is made to all new subscribers, and all old ones who pay all arrears and renew within thirty days. Sample copies free. Address : THE COLUMBIAN, What a splendid type of tireless tivity is the huh hs the psalmist de scribes it issuing like "a bridegroom fr un his chamber mid reoicing like a strong itiuii to run a ruce.'' Kvery man oi.ght to rise In the morning refreshed by slumber and renewed by rest, eager for tl e strmrgle of the day. But bow rarely this is so. Most people rise still unrefreshed. and dreading tliestrainof the day 'a labors. The eause of this is deficient vitality and behind this lies a tiencietit supply or pure, rich blood, ami an inadequate nourishment of the body. There is notning that will give a man strength and energy, as will l)r. l'lerce's Golden Medical Discovery. It does this by increasing the (juuntity and the quality of the blood supply. This nourishes the nerves, feeds the brain, builds up enfeebled organw, and gives that sense of utremrth and power which makes the struggle of life a joy. The "good feeling" whloli follows the use of '-Golden Medical Discovery" is not due to stimulation m it contains no alcohol. The ingredients are plai n lv stated on the bottle-wrapper. It does not "brace-up" the body, but builds it up into a condition of uouud and vigorous health. TrtpaBB Soticei. Card signs ''No Trespassing" for gale at this office. They are print ed in accordance with the late act of 1903. Price 5 cents each, tf Bought, and which has boon has borne tho signature of Signature of Blooinsbunr. P. 75.000 Envelopes carried in stock at the Columbian Office. The line includes dru? envelopes, pay, coin, baionial. commercial 9. 0 and 11. catalotr. &e. P riro ranpe from $1.50 per iooo printed, up to $5-cc; Largest stock in the cor.n ty toselret from. a.tVan yo hki-Jkvk yoi-k kknkkh? When two of them, taste and smell, having been impaired if not utterly de stroyed by Nasal Catarrh, are fully restored by Kly's Cr..um Halm, can you doubt that tbii remedy deserves all that has been said of It lv the thou sands who have used it? It Uupplied directly to the affected ilr pussage and begins its healing work at once. W hy not get It to-day? All druggists or mailed by Ely Bros., 5(1 Warren Ktreet, Xew York, on receipt of 60 cents. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. fits Kind You Have Always Bought Bears th Signature of 7