AS URN IS FOUND Woman' Cremated Remains Strangely Recovered from Niche in the Wall THE UNEASY GHOST IS LAID Mister Containing Kate Bau3ch't Arhea from Crematory Discovered -Tlocturnal Rapping that Drove Ten r.r.is Away May Cease with Burial. Ts'ew York. The g'i st that haunt i J the home of Mrs. Mary Miller, No. 147 East Sixteenth street, for six years, has been laid, and the loelgera In the house feel more comfortable. After knocking about in the ice chest and under the counter of a sa loon for more than four years, and being exposed to the wind, rain and snow in a niche In a brick wall for about fourteen months, a tin canister containing the ashes of a cremated woman wa3 found, and sent to the city Morgue. With its disappearance from its haunts of six years it Is be lieved that the uneasy spirit whose poundings on the wall caused con sternation in two households will now rest in peace. The canister, half the contents of which have been lost, bears the label, 'Remains of Kate Bnusch, Fresh Fond Crematory, April 20, 1003." Who tin- woman was is a r.iy?:er;-, and Just Low her ashes tame to rest for so long in a saloon, is but little clearer. The- Morgue authorities will hold the canister a reasonable length of time; then if no one claims the ashes they will be buried in Potter's Field. The canister first apeared in 1903, when Thomas Moore conducted the tjaloon at No. 166 Third avenue. A stranger entered the saloon one day and asked the bartender to take care of a package wrapped in paper. The bartender thrust it Into the refrigera tor compartment back of bottles. . The bartender forgot all about the parcel. Not until repairs were being made in the refrigerator a year later was the can discovered. The proprie tor unwrapped the parcel and for the first time learned the nature of its contents. Thinking the owner surely would return, Moore put the can un der the counter. No one knew about ?t save Moore and his bartender. ?vnnk Dutton, a watchman, and his Innk rnnmq nvor th K.ilnnn Tra -,i u'e knocking and pounding that ' r.ed to come late at night from the . n. Dutton, on several nights, '.. :r.l down to the saloon at his wife's request. Every time the hour was always long after the time of closing and there was no sign of life. Dutton " sriys he often heard a noise as of i ;:.:? one Eplittinj wood in the sa loon, but when he opened the door at the foot of the stairs the sound ctT.sed. Oihers in house heard the noises, and several tenants moved because of the nervous strain. About fourteen months ago Moore oerided to lease the saloon to an other man. In looking over the place the prospective lessee came upon the canister. He opened it. Part of the ashes was spilled on the floor and swept out with the night's collection of cigar stumps. Moore agreed to re move the canister. Soon after the new tenant moved in Mrs. Miller, whose house Is separat ed from the rear of the saloon by a narrow alleyway, began to hear strange pounding noises at night, as if a person were rapping on the Inside of a closet door to attract attention and be released. The sounds caused several of Mrs. Miller's boarders to depart. Mrs. Miller looked up at her wall when in the alleyway. She saw a small hole made by removing two or three bricks. Thinking this hole might be responsible for the noises, she called Patrolman Colledge, of the East Twenty-second street station. -Colledge climbed up, reached Into the hole and brought out the canister of .ashes. It is believed the canister was put In the wall by Dutton, who had been told by Moore to remove the object. The saloon man and Mrs. Miller's "boarders are confident their sleep will be interrupted no longer by Kate Bausch's spirit calling for a decent burial of her ashes. THE FLEA CAN'T SEE. Merely Notes a Varying Intensity of Light Rays, Says Sayant. Berkeley, Cal. After a series of ex periments with the California flea. Prof. C. W. Woodworth of the Unl slty of California announced that al though that insect has eyes It does not see. To be more exact the pro fessor stated that the flea does not see material objects, but merely sees a variation of the rays of lights when near an object. "There is no formation of Images on the retina of the eye of a flea," said Prof.' Woodworth. "All the Insect sees when It approaches a solid ob ject Is a varying intensity of light rays." Compares Wife to Dog. Cleveland, Ohio. In her cross peti tion to a suit for divorce filed by her iniHband a year ago, Mrs. Mattla I.oescb, No. 2930 Lorain avenue, says that her husband, Eugene Loesch, at one time declared that the proper place for a wife was under the table) tba oats and dogs. SPOO QUITS bAI ILL WITH HUGE DEViL FISH fisherman In Monster's Tentacles la Saved by Companion, Who Goes Overboard with Knife. Brooklyn. N. Y. The late Jules Verne and Morgan Robertson niny hereby take notice that fictional devil fishes have n . noteworthy rival 'or fame in the devil IIhIi which nttacl -J Joseph Lorber and William Burkholt.. of Baltimore. Lorber and Duckholtz arrived here from a month's fishing trip off the Newfoundland linnks a few days ago. "We were trolling for horse mack erel and hooked a 600-pounder that '.:! .1 utn'or- the boot and tipped it .in::. I was dragged out into the wa ter. I struck out in the direction of the e'.ii-npponrlr.g boat; then all of a j.alu-:i what looked like a big 'osc loomed in front of mo and I clutched at it. to be clutched back by three long, slimy tentacles that wound thelii solvei around my waist and neck. I and the octopus went down together. "When we came to the surface I saw t'.'.at the sea all around us was I colored a murky brown and I knew tile devil Ilsii had thrown out his Ej uii'e to cover the fight. "Next thing I knew Lorber was be ?icie me yelling encouragement as ho sinshed the arms of the octopus. He ha i keel o.T two of the tentacles aeur.d my body; pnipped off u third that was i choklnt; r.ie to death and then slid in I an "p; ercut thi't must have rev-lied the heart of the monster, for It "mid .'.er.'.y sr.nk and left us two swlmmir.g cn t'.-.c- ocean surface alone. Lorber r.ie aboard the boat and after a iio tor had dressed the wounds v.e str.; ;e 1 for home." n..i:ho'.U exhibits three tins-ty worlds to prove the remarkable Ele: y. m:i of pjcea Sketch cf a ecene ct the Polo Grounds in New York as Christopher Wathewson walks to the club house after winning a hard name from the Pittsburg Baseball Team. WO MA "J CATCHES RATTLER. Mrs. Kimble Bravely Trapped Reptile With a Milk Pail and a String. MI'.lbrook, N. J. Mrs. Lydia Kim ble, of this place, was out berrying in the meadows a mile from her home v.-ten she encountered a huge rattler '.vi'.ti ten rattles. Mrs. Kimble was Just reaching out over seme low branches for a cluster of huckleberries when she heard a wt.lrring r.oise on her left. She Sr.-'ed around nnd saw the rattle ;i..'V:e, col'.ed and ready to strike. Without altering her position, Mrs. Kiir.ble deftly turned the large milk j'.ail :;he carried upside down and Jiovpsd it over the reptile. She then :'i)..:.:or.'.d a noose out of a piece of vV.Vi.e she carried with her. Lifting the ee'-e of the pail, she coolly waited :'or the suake to dart out its head. V,'h.-n it did she dropped the noose c the protruding head, and, with a i. '..'I: jerk, swung the long, squirm i:vj hoJy from her. As Mrs. Kimble v.-y-i al ter beriies first and snf.ke? sec ivu fche hung her prize to the branch of r. near-by tree and continued pick !;.: h rries. When she had finished si.e returned for the reptile and b: ought it ho.ue. MAN INVADES DEN OF LYNX. Kills Leader of Pack of Five That Caused Terror in Community, Lowellvlllii. Ohio. Armed with a big Unite. WU'.iam Smith, a South t'r.io'.ina luir.lcr, crawled into a den ct five lynx near here and killed the '.?r.C"r of the pack. The battle lasted Intermittently for three hours. The ly: wan six fet long. For several months the lynx have beer, a terror to the community. They have killed stock and attacked per sons. Their den was in a wild, rocky ravine, and none dared attempt to rout them. Smith organized a posse to help him fight the animals, but when he got inside the den the posse, frightened at the growls of the beasts, fled in terror. The battle was fought In darkness and the den was so small that Smith was unable to stand up to his tall height. A Toothpick Violin. I'agerstown, Ind. Thomaa Atktn 4oii, of Greenfork, who has a local tei'jtatlon tor making freak articles, h made a violin from 3,374 tooth - rs. Hvorythias about it, except ;'"S'r-b"'-r'!, tail-piece, strings and '-'t; s. Is m&Oe of toothpicks. i i , - (C M Safest or i ! I THE COLUMBIAN. OF AND OLDAGE CUE Judge So Declares in Freeing Child Wife-Mollier from Octogenarian FOURTEEN AND EIGHTY WED Mother of Girl Scored from the Bench for Having Schemed to Ensnare the Old Man Divorce Granted on Ground of Personal Indignities. Seattle, Wash. A divorce on t!i9 ground of personal indignities lias been granted to Mary Lanrierr,, v'io, In 1905, at the age of fourteen an J : half years, was married to Lcroy O. Landers, a man in his eightieth year. Judge J. T. Ronald, of the Supro vo Court, in his decision, characterised the union of childhood and old age as a crime, scored the Girl's mother tta having schemed to ensnare the o'.d man and get his money, and statcu plainly that he believed Lander was I robbed of $1,200 by a sister of the wife. The plaintiff was declared to have been perhaps the most innocent ! of all the parties concerned. Yet she j was characterized as ignorant of t'.io I value of money, und incapable o ! handling it in trust for vr two-ytar-t old boy, the fruit of the marriixse. I The wife was ordered to deuel bad: to the old man property r.e had given her, and this, with the remainder oC Lander's property, is to bo i .laced in, ! a trust fund for the use of the npeU, I husband nnd father and the s.:sicn- ance of the child. j The couple were married A;-. 24 I and lived on Lasders's larch, :. r Burton, on Vashon I.sI.miJ. ilnr.y U :-,t ! spring the wife left Ladders, r.r.d v ..'a her baby and her sister aiid J 1.200 or the old man's money came to e.. Landers accused her of larceny, h.i'. afterwards withdrew th co.r.piv and the matter was settled by i e.. promise. Then ' the young wife co:r.:rc.-...i divorce proceedings. Cn the v. .- .i ! stand she told the court thai Lar.i'.e. i j was cruel and abusive when lie t.j drunk, which was often. Landers piteou.siy appstled to the court to "give him back his little wife." "Mary is all right; t-'ne 13 a good little woman If they would Cu'.y leave her alone," said Landers. The aged husband told the cc.-.rt that the mother of the girl was to blame for the trouble and was con- 1 stantly at him for money. Accordlus I to the plaintiff's statement. Landers I i Is worth 525,000 and owns a valuable patent on "Landers's logging Jack." Judge Ronald's decision, as render ed, was In part as follows: "This marriage, la the first place, was a crime. The girl is perhaps the most innocent of a:l the parties con cerned, and she is not altogether inuo cent. I think the marriage was Insti gated and brought about by the ma chinations of the mother of the wifo. "In answer to the question by the court as to why this mother permit ted this marriage, even -going her self with the old gentleman to pro cure the marriage license and swear ing falsely to the age of her daugh ter, she answered to the effect that she had four children to support ami 'what was she to do?' This answer 6hows that the mother's motive was one looking toward relieving herself of responsliblity of supporting ths daughter. - "He gave the wife a note and mort gage which he owned for something like $950; he gave her some lots which cost $1,003. As the result cf that marriage she has one boy nearly two years old, and one child unborn. "If I don't divorce these people It will be but a few months at the long est until the old man Is dead; then what he has left will be dissipated by this child wife, who doesn't know the value of money. "I will grant the wife a divorce on the ground of personal Indignities, which have rendered her life burden some." JUDGE HIS OWN ALIENIST. "Find End of Your Nose with Your Eyes Shut," His Test of Sanity. New York. An unusual physical test as an index to one's sanity was introduced by a police magistrate when Mrs. Harriet R. Berry, a trained nurse, was brought to court on a phy sician's application that inquiry be made Into her mental condition. "Close your J-yes, madam, and toueh the end of your nose with the index finger of your right hand," de manded the magistrate. It was only after several attempts that Mrs. Berry succeeded, and the court ruled that the result of the test was sufficient to warrunt her commit tal to Bellevue for observation. Her case Is said to be one of "per secutory delusion." She thought a friend had sold the manuscript of. her book, "The Design of Life," to Presi dent Emeritus Eliot, of Harvard, and that the latter had plagarlied It Saved by a Bit of Soap. Washington, D. C. John Godfrey was arreted for carrying concealed weapons, a razor having been found on him. "I shave with that razor, Judge," said Godfrey In the police conrt. "Show me the rest of your equip ment?" commanded Judge KlmbalL A piece of soap about as big as ft dime wag fished out of a pocket. Discharged," said the Judge. UNION OUT BLOOMSBURtt, ALf 'OCT CENCP.O'JS. Casey was Cisco Out Once Ha Cs.ns Near "Looecnh-.n Up." Ilnrry .J. IV::.X: ty, of ( olv-t.i'.n. ivho, Foine ioiin In ii? . (, wiil hi! i .o ?.i:xt 1'n! ted Stales V ii .tn.- fron; (M o .vhlle in the n.i'jo;!! i .n' .l r-.-.eaily told tal i fee.i.y '. V V vo t'o.,:. Two I;lahu;en . . : e u.--... ..-... C:n e'patli uf a fri ;iU. aid IV. t: " '3 inc. Ca.scy was a gicd fel'e v.' '"He was that. rcvlioJ :.i.'.:c. poo.l fellov, Care;-.' "Mr.d a ilieerfi'.l man wr.a Cijcy, aid IV t. "'A cheerful man was Cn?c". iho cl.ecrfulef.i I ever U;k;v.-.' echoed "'Casey was a keiie: Ji:r, iac:i, too,' sr.Id Pat. "'Ceneroin, you ray? Well. I c'-ir.'t !:r.T,v so much about that. Lid Cr.y e' er buy you qnythln??' "'Well, neir!y,' ic;;iel ?.:i:e, scratching hM head. One day ho cr.nj Into Flaherty's barrco.n, where no Diul my frie;id.j wer.. drinking, r.iul he ?ald to us: "Well. r'en. v.hat r.:e wo going to have rain or i;no.v?"'" SAME OLD WAY. Teacher Now, if I should give a smart boy this sentence to i;rtu ate: "Mary Jane a beautiful girl ran down the street," what would he e.o.' John Make a dash after the of course. A New Use for Cliaese. An English farmer rr-rnt'.y wont into a restaurant in Liver; oul und cll ed for some bread and cheese. "What kind would you like. s;ir?" Inquired the waiter. "ClicsUlre, Vo: It sire or Oorgonzola?" "Fancy name, that last," caid the farmer; "I'll try a bit of that." I!e thought it so tasty that he bought a pouad, took ii hoii:o for hia wife lato at nisht, end left it for her on the sideboard in the kitchen. Nc::t morning he came in from his before- breakfast round and auked her if she had found the parcel. "Oh, yes," she replied, "I saw It there all right, and very good mottled Poap it Is, no doubt, when you know how to use it. But I couldn't mui.e it lather very well when I washed the children, and after I'd done they swell ed so strong that I've turned 'em out for a breath of fresh air, Just to sweet en 'em a bit before they go to school." He Would Return. Marlow was three years old. . One day his mother said to him, "Now, Marlow, you may go outdoors to play for a while, but if I .see you crossing the street to play with that naughty little hoy, Wiliie Burr, again, I'll give you a hard, hard spanking." Half nn hour later the mother look ed out after her boy and saw him playing with Willie Burr. She rai.d the window and railed, with forced gentleness: "Marlow, come here to me." Marlow came, but as he did so, ho turned to hla companion and said: "You stay wight hero, Willie. I'm doln' in to det spanked. I'll bo wight back." Back to the Farm, "Well, Silas, what did you find new down to the city?" "Why, somethin' wuth seein'. The hull place is full o' cabs with cash registers on 'em, an'' led (lags to show folks lt'3 dangerous to dispute the fare. They call 'era taxidermy cabs, "cause ef you don't mind, the drivers '11 Jest take the skin off yo." The Sacldeit Words. Said a poet to an unfortunate specu lator: "Pon't you thinl; that the open ing lines of Tennyson's little poi-r.i, 'Break, break, break,' are plaintive and sad?" "Yes," was the melancholy reSy. "But I think that 'Broke, broke," is a good deal sadder." Advice. "You's got to put a certain amount of dependence on yohself," said l'i:c!o Eben. "De man dat goes aroun' loek in' foh too much advice le liable to find hlsself In de position of de geai man dat gits bo interested readin" do tlae-table dat he misses his train." Holding Back the News. "I suppose your wife was tickled to death at your raise in salary?" "She will be." "Haven't you told her yet?" "No, I thought I would enjoy my self for a couple of weeks first," The Way of the World. Untie Biff says: "Some hev patches on their knees from kneelin' in pray er, also In th' seat o' their trousers from barkslldln'!" .-p-!',, AH''c. Took the i ji.vu e in the eye. If IIV) :'.'p- 'l - 'I.,:'- f.".(i bol.-i out your hand. If It tries to trip you, duck, dodge and biff It In the neck. 0 J$ W XK Ii rs 1 I u The Kind You Have Always lu uso for over 30 j'enrs, ami has been niauo under his per 7"f Bona supervision alnco Its Infancy. 'CfCCtWi Altmtf tin niiA tn (IupkIi a vnn In 41.1.. All Counterfeits, Imitations nnd " Jnst-as-ffood" nro hut Experiments that trifle with nnd cuilnnjrer tho health of Infants nnd Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Costorla Is it harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. Ii' contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Jareoti& substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys 'Worms and allays Fcrerislmess. It cures Diarrluua and YVlnel Colic. It relieves Teething Trouble, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho Stomach nnd Bowels, giving healthy nnd natural sleep. Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS S7 Bears tho The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. TMt ecirritun OOMP.NV, MUDHAV tk-rr, NCW VOUH CITV. BIG OFF To All Our The Indianapolis, Indiana. The Leading Agricultural Journal ct the Nation. Edited by an Able Corps of Writers. The American Farmer is tlm lSneil. It nils .n nnsitinti nf itc- place in the homes of rural people in even 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 SGL0N G00DE WE MAKE THE EXCEPTIONAL OFFER OF Two for the Price of The Oldest County Paper and THE AMERICAN Farmer BOTH ONE YEAR FOR $I.OO . This unparalleled offer all old ones who pay all arrears Slinnla C A .1.1 THE COLUMBIAN. The Fanner's Wife Is very onrcful nltnnt Iter churn. Slip ttrald it thoroughly niter using, unci Rives It a Mill hath to f-weetcti it. She knows that if thy churn H Hour it will taint the huttcr that in nuulo lu It. The Btonwh Is n churn. In the stomach and cllRi'Htivt and nutritive tracts are nerlormed nnxefses which are exactly akin to the clmi nliii: of butter. Is it not apparent then that if this stomach churn Is -'sour" it sours all which U put into It ? The evil of a foul stomach s not the had taste in the mouth and the foul breath CHUsetl hv it. but the corruption of the pure current of the blood and the dissemination of disease throughout the IkkIv. Dr. Plerca'a Golden Medical Discovery makes the sour stomach sweet. It does for the stomach what the washing ami sun nam aoior tne ciiurn absolutely re moves every tainting or corrupting el ement. "Golden Medical Discovery" contains no alcohol. lu Ingredient? are plainly printed on each bottle wrapper. The cost of niaintainine the ad ministration of the city of New York in 1910, as estimated In figures to be submitted to the Board of Estimate and Apportion ment, Friday, will be approximate ly $184,000,000, an increase of $28,000,000 over this year's budget. Bought, nntl which has lcon has uorno tho Finattiro of Signature of Subscribers Great onlv T.iiprirv Tr-n- T,,-,1 i. rwtm nl V,-,o 1... .1.,. i One: THE COLUMBIAN and renew within thirty days. J Blooinsbum. Pa. i Down east where then; are some who spend $25,000 on a supper for a dog, while others can't get what a dog would ordinarily be satisfied with, is a good breeding place for Socialism No fai.k PKktkvsk has marked the career of KiyV Cream liuhri. -Heing entirely harmless it is not responsible like the catarrh winds nnd powders, for mind shattered bv cocaine. 1 he great virtue of Kly'sCnam Balm i that It upecdily uiul completely over comes nasal catarrh and hay fever. Hack of this statement is the testimony of thousands and a reputation of many years' success. All dnnrttists. f0c.. or mailed by lily Bros., !M uiren Street. Xew York. ' - - A man who slips on a banana peeling, then arises and without waste of words or ruffled temper, removes the peeling so that others may not slip 011 it, is a Christian. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Hie Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of ER