) i I, f i f 'f -t ; i; If r E OF rm L Exhibited Quadruplets Which Got Sympathy and Money, But Were Spurious WtS ASKED TO LEAVE TOWN S'jhttetr Camt for Miles to Goshen, Matt., to See Four cf a Kind that Are Now Declared Bcgus Some Douttlett Looked Up Records. Northampton, Mas?. It looks a though the qaudrurl(-ts claimed to have been born to Rev. and lira. Samuel H. Secomle of Chicago, but now of Goshen, a ton near this cltr, are n.yths. The people of the little town where Mr. Secombe was eneaged to preach In the Congregational church are astounded at some of the development. There has been a widespread inter est in the reported births of the four babies which, as It is claimed, were born on May 26 and are still living very sprightly. The papers in all parts of the ccmtry have had stories about this interesting and unusual family. The parents of the quadruplets who came to Goshen fcr;ng:i.e with them four oth'-r children, have been the ob Jwt of sympathy because of their nef-dy circumstances, and there have be.-n large contributions of money. After :.!.-. . hod preached in Goshen a few Sundays, early in the Burarcr, tn inve.t;eat!on led to his bein? shut on from pn-ncliir.g The family was allow ed to re;ii?.in in the pr.rionpg. b-;t en t'-.e revelation of what appeared to be facts showing that the quadruplets are spurious, the people of the to-1 n became so incensed that they asked thut they leave town within two days. Physicians ar:d others in Chicago who became interested in the birth of the quadruplets and made Investi gations found that the Rev. Orin Jwiks, an Advntist minister, mar ried Mr. and Mrs. Secombe Not. 9, 1908. and that quadruplets were born so it was said, on May 2, and the mother came with the children to Goshen June 21 to join Mr. Secombe. Mrs. Secombe's explanation was that she was frightened by a burglar breaking into the house and attack ''3 her. 'Vhen the rr.other and babies ar lJ in Gohhen the church authorl- -. asked the pas-tor to explain the oris that he bad been married be- : e and divorced, and why he had ad- rtised for a wife. He could not ex plain satisfactorily and he was told that he could net preach longer. Out of sympathy for the family it was agreed that It could remain in the parsonage two :..cmhs. People who are acquainted with the Secombe family in Chicago and were the next door neighbors, living at No. 2143 Fulton Ftreet, say no babies were born in the Secombe household, but claim that a baby was adopted in April, and they are sure that Mrs. Secombe's house was not entered by a burglar. These quadruplets, as It is claimed, weighed from six to twelve pounds each at birth. Mrs. Secombe's story Is that she was attended by a lady physician. Dr. G. G. Craig, but no such doctor is reg istered In Chicago. Since the family has been In Gosh en people have come by teams and touring cars In great numbers to see the wonderful quadruplets, and in many Instances the contributions have been generous. The last Sunday the minister preached before being bar red from further occupying the pulpit he ts reported to have said to some of the church people: "Sometimes I feel that the Lord has overwhelmed me with blessings, and again I asked myself what have I done that He should afflict me so In sending me four babies." Mr. Secombe is fifty-three years old and a graduate of Amherst College. His wife was from Maine, and before her marriage was a nurse in Lynn. It Is a fact that no birth of quadruplets has been recorded up to several days MO. ALASKA LONGEST CIVILIZED. otenttet Finds Skeleton of High Type Thousands of Years Old. Port Townsend, Wash. News Is brought by the United States revenue cutter Tohama, which reached Puget Bound after steaming around the world from Iialtimore, that a party of ethnologists, headed by Dr, William Yochelson, a noted Russian explorer, encountered at the Island of Attu, In tba Aleutian Archipelago, has discov ered relics and skeletons that would establish the record of population of north western North America during the prehistoric ages. In a statement to Captain Queenan, of the Tahoraa, Dr. Yochelson told of differences from the present etrllsa tlon on the islands. He saM the rel ics uooovered would establish com pletely a belief that thousands of years ago the highest type of humani ty existing In the new world existed tn the North. Cava Leonem. Mountainside. Walter Cook of this town has a lion cub which he la going to train to do tlio work of a watch dog. He proposes to turn it loose at night to guard his chickens. CENSUS PREACH n nun v n 3 rHMILl BATHING WITHOUT WATER A Coed Rub ana an Air Bath a Sub stitute for the Tub. The conditions and contentions of ot:r civilization fletnand frequent bath es. It is popularly supposed that this freq sent bathing Is essential to health. "This Is quite untrue." says the Medical Journal. "We have seen fine and vigorous men among the habi tants of Canada who had never taken a fjll bath in their lives. Were the j truth known many thousand of our fei.ow citizens probably know noth ing of the ali-ed benefits of the tub, though maintaining excellent average health. , "S'uch people do not present the j f i - h a-.d pleasing apearance of the ) frequent bather, however long lived c;- i:.ay be. Is not. however, much yf the bf-nofit attributed to the water in reality due to the complete expos ure of the skin to the air? "The respiratory function of the skin is of high Importance, and al ti'igh water may be dispensed with closing the pores to air would result i in speedy asphyxiation. The historic iir.star.fe of the boy who impersonated j John the r.aptist in a mediaeval pro-res:-ion, and whose body was covered with pold leaf with rapidly fatal re I suits Is proof. "The ke cold bath is a superstition; lit is a pastime for the afcorrnal!y j vigorous: not desirable for the aver j ?e civilized man. A bath not too cold I is re:lly an agreeable stimulant as !-.! n being a luxury. The feclln" i of well being after a bath can hardly j be obtained in any other way. and I t ie it'pid multiplication of tubs in ho'e'.s and private residences, soon to ! ;ppr" -h one of the Individual, shows ! how they i.re appreciated, j "1"n .ppy persons, however, who3e :tr:. in the i rovinces or into the i -I.'-. r' n.ny temporarily deprive them jef ;e:,t wavr for bathing may j fa.u a substitute that will at least af-''or.-! r. p.rt of their accustomed en I U y;.. er.:. Tl.e body may be ecerge jti'ul'.y rubbed with a brush or coarse jTur'tlsh towel and afterward exposed I 'o the air for fifteen minutes or so. Tl.e frctistomed feeling of vigor will follow and the process will be found by the uninitiated to be astonishing ly cleansing." No Competitors. A v FJn-lanUer, travelling on foot tl. "o-:jrh the Southern mountains, tu'yfr? the people, asked a man vl:o:.i he ::.et to direct him to a cer tain cabin at which he had been ad vised to stay overnight. "Going tbar?" said the man. "Well, Tom's a first i rater, take him Just right, but he'ti I mighty queer." j "What do you mean?" asked the l traveller. i "Well, it's like this," and the man looked at the stranger in a calm, lm j personal way. "He's be setting out j side, most probably, and he'll see you j coming; he'll take a good look at you, and ef you don't suit him, he may set ' the dog on you. "Ef l;e don't, and you get to talk- In? him. ar.-l rrythlrp he don't Just like, l.i; may throw you down i and trorr.p on you. Hut ef you're too j careful in yotir talk, on the other i hand, he's liable to take you for a ! spy and use his gun fuat and listen ; to explanations afterward, j "But it's no use trying to get by l without stopjiing," conc luded the man, I with evident relish of the prospect he was opening up to the stranger. "Ef j you was to undertake that, 'twould be j all up with you, for he'd think you was i proud and blssetty. "Ef you want to come out of the j mountain whole, don't go past Tom's I cabin without stopping, whatever you do!" Spoiled the Performance. The play was all about n horse famous horse, the autobiography of which is even yet among the "best sellers," and over the sufferings of which thousands of readers have Fbed tears of sympathy. The four ics;:ed actor that had been cast for the part of the horse was doing Its be:-:', presumably, to look pathetic. V i'.l. drooping head, it stood on the s' ;?. from time to time switching i: ; oor docked tail. One of the two-Ut-.vI actors was delivering an lm i r. -cloned and really touching speech, '.,!.:) the Midience suddenly burst iiro a ill of prolonged and uncontrolla ble l-iughttr. Tl :e oration came to a sudden ston. Tl " actor glanced at the horse, then turned and fled in dismay behind the C"e, "Ulack Ueauty" was yawning. Her Capacity, "!f teeth do Just as well without r(.-v"M?" she said to tho dentist, "and K'.iy Just as white and don't break rry quicker, why ure the nerves put t'.c.e in the first place?" "I've often wondered myself," said be. "I don't know unless It is so you t-.in suffer the pain of losing them. You'd be too happy, you know, unless you underwent a little suffering now a:.d then." "A little!" she shrieked. "You re ir.eir.ber that tooth of mine last win t .1. and how I came within an ace of dyir.- with the pain?" "I remember," said he, "but you have a great capacity for suffering. I ve seen other people lose four and si'f'er less." Mot by the Sweat of Hla Brow. T! Knights had moved Into a new neighborhood, and Mrs. Knight was wondering aloud at the breakfast-table as to the occupation of a certain neighbor. "Ob, I know what he does, mamma," said the bright-eyed four yes r-old of the Knight household. "What?" asked mama. "Why, he takes up the collection at church!" The Delineator. THE COLUMBIAN. THE FACTS IN "RACE-SUICIDE." The birth rate In the Unite States la the days of Its Anglo-Saxon youth was one of the highest In the world. The best of authority traces the begin ning of iu decline to the first appear ance about 1850 of Immigration on a large scale. Our great philosopher. Benjamin Franklin, estimated six children to a normal American fam ily In bis day. The average at t!i present time Is slightly above two. Kor 1900 It Is calculated that there are only about three fourths as many chil dren to potential mothers in America as taere were forty years ago. Wtr-.-the old rate of the middle of the cen tury sustained, there would be fif teen thousand more birth yearly in the state of Massachusetts than no occur. In the ccurse of a century tl.e proportion of 3ur entire population consisting of children under the ag? of ten has fallen from one-third to one quarter. This, tor the whole United States, is equivalent to the loss of about seven million children. So alarming has this phenomenon of the falling birth-rate become in the Aus tralian colonies that. In New South Males, r. special government commis sion has voluminously reported upon the subject. It is estimated that there has been t decline of about one-third in the fruitfulness of the people in fifteen years. New Zealand even complains of the ack of children to fill her schools. The facts concern ing the stagnation, nay even the re trogression of the population of France, are too well knuan to nccJ description. MONEY-MAKERS NOT AL WAYS INTELLIGENT. People are very apt to Imagine that a man who has acquired wealth must be a particularly intelligent man. wnose advice it would be safe to fol low on almost any question, but as a matter of fact there is probably in- r -practical common be use to be fou.u.i among those who have to work 1rJ and live from hanu to nioutli th.in among those who hav- ik-r.ty .,: money and nothing to do; for t.. workers have more coubcioua iuk , wisdom and giva more thought to t:. practical problems of life. Few persons seem to be av.ur the fact that the human brain i. a simple but a complex tnsiru:.. It possesses many U . Hcrem f:.ci. ;. but not by any means in tl.e- i . proportions or In tne same r.-.t. ... to each other in all individuals. The faculty for acquiring wcaltli :. very convenient one. which moi o us would like to possess in sou:, measure at least, but it is far fu .v being one of the noblest of muii'.v faculties, and does nut indicate grc.it ness of any kind, although it not commonly enables the man who p ... sesses X to attain to much promi nence and perhaps to political social power. A LUNCHEON REVOLU i ION. Russell Sage should have a monu ment erected to iiimself by his widow The old miser educated all New York, south of Fulton street, how to be ab stemious. His midday luncheon (when he had to pay for It) was a section of applo pie and a glass ui milk. On this repast he thrived, re tained his health and waxed rich. No corned beef and cabbage In "hisn." No wines, no beer, no fat pastries, nothing of the fle inputs. A million young men are now imitating the old man who spent IS a year for clothes and left $70,0uu,00J for his wife to squander on people who used to damn him as skinflint. Mrs. Sage is taxed higher than any other woman In New York, and she I working overtime to reduce her fortune. WHOLE HOG NOW "CANNED." It was tho boast of a great Chicago meat packer that in his stock-yards every part of tht pig was utilized ex cept the squeal. Recently a manager of one of the rural plays wanted some realistic pig squeals for his show, and ..e accordingly gave a contract fo- the required i umber to a phonograph deal er, who took a machine down to the stock-yards, "canned" the squeals, and turned over the records to the show manager. Those who talk about the extravagance of the present age 6hould remember that with the by-product already mentioned, nothing now goes to waste in the pork industry. GONE OUT! The poor little black and tan dogs! How they have faded into obscurity, unhonored and unsung. At one time they were largely the fashion and great ladies fondled them and were proud In their possession. Now they have been superseded by other varie ties. The other day we patted one of these pathetic creatures on the head and he returned our caress with a deprecating wag of his tall, as to sa- that we didn't quite know what we were doing, but he thanked us all the same. And yet of all the dogs there be, there is none more Intelli gent than the black and tan. David Lloyd George, chancellor of the exchequer, said In Albert Hall that a bill would be introduced to give women suffrag:; and. If the chance to pass It was thrown away, It would be entirely owing to the lunacy of some who thought they were helping the cause by cleaning themselves to seats uud breaking up meetings. The only kind of ethical passion that greatly benefits the public la that which expends itselt at first hand In the rlwht conelvu . of the Individual moved by It, and In the Inspiration of those who come immediately within the sphere of his Influence. BLOOMSBURd, UA. Rk.lCUTIO.N CHATTBR-D. The Moral S'jas'on Schema tl;r,': Work en Jack Jones. A little boy catr.e home ona t'a? rrom sencoi la a very bad humor. An other boy. Jacfc Jor.es. hud givea !i::a a thrashing, and he --v in ted lev-.:...,.. "Oh," said his mutter, "clou'; tii:r.' or rovers", ui.iie. la It.ud to . . .;. H'&p c.'.l of fire on his head. T1:'.-j htt wiil ti..f o:r. vonr fr. --..!." Willie thought he wuu'.d t: v t..U method. So th nprt i!:iv rt rfiii Just as he was buying a lti.,on pie- ior luncr.eon, jacx nppearcu ana sa.il: "Lock here, I licked you yesterdiy, but I didn't plv you enough. Now I'm ro'.r.z to lick vn-i ne-.dn " And he planted a hard blow on While s Utile stomach. Willie gasped, but Instead of s'.rik Ine bark he extended hl n'.e tn .7 ) -i5 "Here," he said in n kindly voice. " i ii give yoa mis. I make you a pre:er.t of it." Jack, In plad atr.a.-emr nt. fell ;:rrn the re greedily, and It had soon d.s appeared. "Gosh. It was pood!" he rilj. "V.'h-t did you give it to me for?" "I)ecau.-e t,'t struck i..e," raij the helper of the coals. Instuntly Ja-k hnu'ed o.T r.n-J struck hlra a?ain. "Now go ml net toother pie," he said. Lauie i' Ioj Journal. FINANC! Landlord I'll give you ten per cent, off if you'll pay the rent to-morrow. Tenant Thank you. Now, su;;;.o::e you let n.e have that ten per cert now and I'll pay it to you on accouut to-day. Exasperating. From the dark kitchen there eman ated a series of thumps and angry e :: clamations. Jones was looking' for the cat. "Pa!" called the son from the stair way. ' Go to bed and let me alone," blurt ed Jones. "I've Just barked my shins." "Pal" Insisted Tommy, after a mo ment's silence. "Well, what is it? Didn't I tell you to keep quiet?" "I I didn't hear your shins bark." And the next moment Tommy was being pursued by an angry sire wiQ a hard hair brush. i A Sharp Retort, i "My dear," said a thin little Bri7h j ton man to his wife, "this paper says i that there Is a woman down In Dovon I shire who goes out and chops wood I with her husband." "Well, what of it? I think ho could easily do it if he is thin you are. I have often thought of usisg you to peel potatoes with." The th!n man laid down his paper with a sigh that rounded like thr squeak of a penny whistle. Again Those Immigrants. Little Eleanor's mother was au American, while her father was a German. One day, after Eleanor had been subjected to rather severe disciplin ary measures at the hands of her paternal ancestor, she called her mother into another room, closed tb.2 door significantly and said, "Mother, I don't want to meddle in your bual ness of yours back to Germany." Almost at Good. Mttle Ikey came up to his fathi r with a very solemn face. "Is it true, father," he asked, "thjit marriage is a failure?" His father surveyed him thought fully for a moment. "Well. Ikey," he finally replied, ".f you get a rich wife it's almost as gocd as a failure." Very Singular. "That second speaker was a very singular man." "There was nothing in his nppear ance to indicate singularity." "Hut didn't you notice that when he got up he didn't say the ton! master's introductory remarks re minded him of a story?" What He Wanted. Small Hoy (applying for situation) What kind of a boy does yer want? Merchant A nice quiet boy that doesn't use bad words, smoke cigar etten, whistle around the office, play tricks, or get into mischief : Small Boy Yer don't want no boy; yer want a goll. See? Double Charge, Anyhow. Howell Did you have double pntu .onla? ( rowel I guess so; the doctor charged me twice as much as I thought he wou'd. nr.tl r- 3'jjIous. "Yes, :r - -no Purina lam'i" iecl,',rei' leu bi.icnei. liOUiiewlfc. l JJ- ASfcEelable Freparationfor As similating iticroodandBcgula ling the Stomachs and Bowels of FromolcsDigMtion.CrVerfur- J ness and Resl.Contains neithcr OpiiurvMorphine norlincral OT TiAIlCOTIC. p-vffoun-SAMiiinraaR Atx.fmtfL HirmSmJ. rmmt Aperfecl Rrmcdy rorConsLipa Tion, Sour Stomach. Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions. Feverish nrss and Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Si'Cnalure cT NEW YOUK. 3 tXACT COPY Of WRAPPER 13 11 BIG OFFER To All Our Subscribers The Great AMERBCAN FARMER Indianapolis, Indiana. The Leading Agricultural Journal ot the Nation. Edited by an Able Corps of Writers. The American Farmer is tlis lisned. 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 btates. It srives t::e farmer nrul hie fimiUr enmati,;,,,, i,;t, about aside from the humdrum Every Issue Contains an Original Poem by SOLON GOODE 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 unDarallelori nffpr ic all old ones who pay all arrears bample copies free. Address : THE COLUMBIA, Old Age. i uki am- ns ix eome in Uih onleily pr. i-tw of Nature is ii luinitiful ami niajest- c thiiitf. The vt-ry (shadow of tciii.se Old nt't- ns is conic in the ordeilv nro- .i .... .. , j , . . - . . . I, ll: '""'S' llle VlTy nlllKlOW ii tcliise "linn inicuieiis ii, imiKes it -lie more lnj.t-d. It siHiuls for expel iciifc, know- i lfdfre, wisdom and pouiim-I. That is I old atie as it should he. lint old Hire ' as it so often is niejins nothing hut u w-cond childhood of mind and hody, i What makes the dill'eivnei. V..,. I largely the care of the Btoimich. In youth and the full Ktreimth of man h od it doesn't twin to mutter how we treat tho stonmch. We uhuse it, over work it, Injure it. Wo don't duller from it much. But when aire comes the Moniach is worn out. It can't prepare to distribute the needed nourishment to the body, and the body, unnourisL ed, falls into senile decay. Dr. Pierce' (lolden Medical Discovery is a wonder ful medicine for old ieonle whose stomachs are "weak"and whose diges turns are "poor." Its invigorating effects are felt by mind as well as body. It takes the sting from old age, and makes old people strong. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Stgnatcr of ST Ill For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Thirty Years TMf Of MTAVII OHMItV. NCW TOK ClTT. nnlv T.ltpnrv TToi-m of routine duties. One: THE COLUMBIAN and renew within thirty days, Bluomslmnr. Pa. China's Ban ou Newspapers. "ng upou me reLOintnenaau oh of the foreign board, the Regent issued a mandate last week closing ...... up two of the ablest Ch'nese news papers in Peking, the Kuopae and the Tatunpac. This action was taken because the papers published Government telegrams in which the Governor of Kiriu discussed Japau's military intentions iii con nection with the opeuiug of Kirin Province by the extension of the Kirin Railroad and the exploitation of the Chinese territory in accord ance with the terms of the agree ment recently signed by China and Japan. Ely's Craara Bala (ik... P. ii ,i nl n... WtV'.V,',; - ... WM1.V. It trluunttM, Boollie U'uU uud protects the disi- licit nu-iiL hr.ii'3 Jc-.-tliiu!.' (rum CuUi.Tj ich1. drives W'.frff i Head quickly. 11c. a,l , tJ fit"0 tores llo Hun- of Till i 5' ViuTl Tuate wnd Smell. .-i.-.- .V) cU., utDrutf- ur Bynmii, Jul ,m I form, 75 itui lily Uiothers, uii V.'wfwu fciUixit, iXow liw Bears the Signature jxy w IU' For Over V v