Till? CITIZKN, lflUDAV, MAHCIl 11, 1010. 'I "'MI1K"MWKM!"M"M!HI!-H I t f ? f T 1 Us TUi; MOST KEUAM.R MKDIUM FOK AOinIG ALDENVILLE. The sugar bush occupies the at tention of mnny at present. Miss llertha Ludwig, of Hones dale, was a visitor at William Kol ley's last week. The Y. P. S. C. B. are planning for a social and the Athletic association for a entertainment; both events to come oft In the near future J. L. Curtis nnd family, of Miners Mills, spent Saturday and Sunday' witn relatives at this place. Stephen Treat has resigned tl,e position of Superintendent of the M. B. Sunday school to take up his du ties preparatory to entering the con fcrence. The young child of Mr. nnd Mrs. Chas. Gilbert is ill v.-ith pneumonia. 1 day; a,so vi8'te " daughter. Mrs. Miss Nellie Bowon Is assisting them I Lewls Curtis, at Pink, and returned Miss Emma Stanton spent Satur- ,lomo ln tho evening, day and Sundnj: at her homo In South ! Mlss Gladys I'onnell, of Uswlck. Clinton. She is the successful teach-1 ""ended Lucy Sheeley's birthday er of the primary and Intermediate ,mrty 011 Thursday evening at Lake grades In the public schools at this vI1,0, place. Tlie auditors for Pnupack town- What might liavo been a very sori- I shin roniraenced auditing the ac ous accident occurred Sunday night I counts for tll township to-day at when Frank Derrick, who was re- ! tho p- s- of A- naU at I-akevllle. turning from Honesdale, and Percy' Wc have had about a week of Curtis, who wns returning from Al- I fine "Pring weather. It Is cold and denvllle. In the darkness, cnused : snows to-day. by a heavy rain storm, their wagons collided near Albert Odell's. As each was driving a young horse a live ly scramble ensued during which Curtis' rig was overturned down the bank, ho leaping to his horses' head jusi u wiu wagon upset. uerricK s horse wns thrown nftor nriiv i,,i, Ing loose from the wagon Both vehicles were moro or less damaged. 1 It is said that both these nanies are considering taklng.out life Insurance policies. This accident shows tho need of all vehicles beinc enuinnod with lamps whereby all danger of traveling in the dark would be greatly reduced. -.- SOUTH STERLING Mrs. George H. Lancaster spent a few days with her people in Hope-; The many friends of Bates P. well. N. J.; also in Philadelphia on White, of Lestershlre, N. Y., will bo business. glaI to learn that he is rapidly re- On March 2d Dr. Edison Burko covering from an operation for ap of Chicago; Dr. J. M. Burke, of Buf- pendlcltis. Mr. White entered the falo; Dr. Harry Burke, of New York, Moses Taylor Hospital of Scranton, and Mr. Hugh Burke of Scranton, 1 Monday and was operated upon on gave tncir mother, .Mrs. Angeline JJurke. a surprise on her 78th birth- day at the home of Mr. G. H. Lan- ,aster- , Mr. J. M. Barnes has been sick nut is on me gain again. , Miss fc.ua veiklln has returned "home again after spending two i weeks with Mrs. Ernest Elder, at j Gouldsboro. ) Mr James Gilpin is on the gain, i Tho A D. K. boys hold their en-. tertainment in Newfoundland High j hchool building, on Friday evening, j March 11th George Lawrence and Anna Barnes spent Saturday and Sunday with relatives In Sterling. Dr. Edwin Burke is visiting his many friends in this place. The Ladies' Aid meets at the home of Mrs. Frank Madden all day on March 17th. Mrs. Dr. Simons spent Saturday In Scranton. INDIAN ORCHARD. Although we read of landslides and floods caused by the rapid waste of snow, we are very fortunate ln hav ing such a quantity of snow as there was, disappear without causing any disaster. Tho first blue-birds seen hero were reported tho 2d of tho month and robins the Cth. Miss Minnie Parmcton, of Holly Beach, N. J., Is visiting Mrs. Elizabeth Garrett at Mrs. W. H. Hall's. Mrs. Hebecca Leftwlch recently visited her daughter at Whito Mills. There was no school on Monday, it being settlement day. Tho chil dren met with their toacher In the evening to practice for the enter tainment which will be given this Friday evening. Miss Minnie Weeks expects to spend the last of the week, visiting relatives in White Mills. Andrew Maloney and son passed through here enroute for Long Ridge recently. Friends from this plnce attended a social gathering at William Ma loney's of Lnurclln Saturday even ing. Mrs. Louise Case, who came up from Hawley to attend tho funeral of her little grandson, Evoral S. Case, has returned to that town. USWICK & LAKEVILLE. Misses Gladys Pennoll and Pearl Crano, also Lester Pennoll have tho sore throat and tho grip. Messrs. P. B. Pennell, P. G., and P. It. Olmsted, P. G., of Uswlck, and Oliver Locklln, P. G Alfred Locklln, Charles Daniels and Wil liam Sheeley, of Lakcvlllo, attended Wangum Lodgo, No. 448, I. O. 'O. P., at Hawley, on Wednesday even ing, March 2d. Joseph Mackoy, Grand Secretary, and Mr. Mont gomery, Grand Master, weh present and hold a session of Grand Lodge, after which lunch wns served and all returned to their homes having enjoyed tho evening's entertainment very much, Tho L. A. 8. of this vicinity, rtfltiW COLUMNS : I INFORMATION met at tho parsonage at Lakcvlllo on Wednesday, March 2d, and re elected the officers that served last year and elected two moro as assist ants. Tho officers are as follows: Mrs. A. Goblo. president; Mrs. C. A. ITtt, vlco-prcsident; Mrs. C. W. I'ennoll, assistant vice-president; Miss Alma Killam, secretary; Miss Minnie Locklln, assistant secretary; Mrs' wman Seeger, treasurer. Mrs. Charles Utt returned home from Ledgedalo on Wednesdny of i last week. She has been caring for Ill0r ,inuBhter, Mrs. M 11. liarioc, Harloe is for some time. Mrs getting along line. K. B. Pennoll visited his son Chester at Ariel Junction on Thurs- WHITES VALLEY. The Ladles' Aid society pleasant I ly spent last Thursday at Mrs. S. ' Pomery's .and seven dollars were" , added to tho treasury. Under the , , , , i "ow management, it is expected that, great BOod wIU bo accoulPHshed. j fVn lnvitation to be Present at the homc of Mr and Mrs- Warren Spcn- rer' ,Ijake LIar. March 24th. is ex- te"f)ci1 a , Mrs- H" w NN nite' who has be I II, .l.n .-. u I . . 1,n in in hi in, iccuici. Mrs. II. L. Fisher, son Mark and daughter Clara, are visiting relatives ' nnd friends in Blnghamton. Mr. H. W. White and F. W. White , attended the funeral of Mr. Ward Auckland of Wavmart Thursday morning. Mrs. White and ; his sister. Mrs. H. L. Fisher, accom-! panied him. Dr. Wainwright, operat- - ing surgeon, ranks second in skill in the state. Dr. Heed Burns, for-1 merly of Honesdale, holding highest i honors. Mrs. Fisher returned to Blnghamton Thursday evening, but Mrs. Whito will remain in the city until all danger of complication Is past. Mr. S. Pomery visited Scranton and Carbondale friends recently, STEENE. The Bobolink gets :iis first fish story from Mr. Buckland Tuesday morning as the "Link" had a few minutes to spare, but wouldn t have had the tlmo to spare only for tho cold snap drying up his sap spiles, which had kept him from letting the grass grow under his feet for four days and nights until midnight. After witnessing his neighbor cut off an extraordinary large chow, from a fresli plug Just received, he knew that their was something coming without asking any questions. Af ter getting the big chew well placed so that ho could talk without being choked, he began: "Well, Link, you may think I'm lying because there arc no such fish stories, or no such llsh ln your dny. I think that it was in the year of 1840, that the forest surrounding Keens' Lake was alive with white rabbits, and you know to get one of those It was worth as much as a four weeks' old pig for a roast. Well, thu first night I set two large box traps, aB it took mo all day to make them. Well, I struck two good runwnys where tho rab bits would come down to the lake for a drink. There I set my traps as close the water's edge as possible, and tho next morning at the peep of day, I rowed across the lake to my traps. They were about 100 feet apart. Before I reached tho shore I could sco that my traps were sprung. You know that I had been living on fish so long that my heart gave a hound, thinking of the two fine would-be roasters ln store tor mo, but in reaching the traps I was in a quandary what to do, as each trap had, as I Judged at the time, a 40 or HO pound roaster Inside and I didn't want to loose any such game. So after a short consultation with myself, I decided to take traps and all to tho house where, by tho aid of tho women, in a closed rpom I know there would bo no escapo for the bunnies. Well, Link, you can be lieve me or not, when I opened the first trap there crawled out on tho kitchen floor six eels that would average six pounds apiece, and when I lifted the trap of tho second one, live black bass Jumped out on the floor, that would average five pounds aploco. Well, I grated my teeth in rage, but the women smiled as they had tho fire built and two large fry ing pans hot awaiting my fish. When you huvo more time I have a better ono than this." Lesley Mill visited friends at Car bondale Saturday and Sunday; Miss Ruth Nichols visited friends at Cnrbondnlc Saturday and Stindny. uicnaru nurry nnd son waiter nro making n two weeks' visit with the former's brother, John, in Now York city. j George Chapman, of Carbondalo, spent two dnys last week with tho Bobolink. , Within a radius of n half mile there arc three large sugar camps, working full blast day nnd night. 1 Charles Dennlo hns about ono hun- dred trees that he expects to rcapj a dollar a piece from and the Bobo-, link hns 90 under the tap, enough for one mnn to nttend to. Emmet Swln- glo says that if ho can tlnd the trees he will tap two hundred. Emmet's ' suns are long; ne can wade through deep snow. It Is expected thnt tho Rev. Mr. Davis will preach his farewell ser mon hero next Sunday. it Is hoped that the conference will send him back to us again aB we feel that his plnce can't be filled to the liking ot ourjone, us no huh u. Farmers who are not oporatlng a sap bush arc busy getting their sum - mer. wood. .Mrs. Thomas Arthur is quite ill at tho home of her son, Thomns, at Steene. LOOKOUT. George Brlgham, of Galilee, spent Saturday nnd Sunday at J. B. Mauds-' Autoiiino Louis, a surgeon at-tuo bai ley's, pstrlcrc, to devise a machine and later Mr. Jesso Hathnway has gono to Bavo a similar order to a carpuuter visit his daughter. Mrs. Norman ' ' lnu namo ot Guidon, who offered to Tyler, near Ellenvlllc, N. Y. construct an instrument lor decaplta- William Flynn, Jr., has gone to j "on for 0,000 llvrus. Mlddletown, N. Y on business. I "Tills was considered too high a Mrs. A. Bush nnd sons, of Galilee, called on frjends at this place on Tuesday. . Mr. and Mrs. A. Daney, Mrs. P. M. Lester and children vlBlted Mrs. B. A. last. Brlnnlng at Union on Friday! HAMLINTON. The Book club was entertained on Wednesday afternoon at tho home 0f Mrs. J. T. Stocker. Edward Hoffman, of Scranton, re ccntly visited his parents here. , A load of young people from tills , place attended the Grange supper, at iiautsonviue i uesuayiignt. Cora and Lawrence Alt are spend- i ..... ... m . . . . i ing the week at Big Pond, Miss Edna Chumard has returned from a visit to friends ln Scranton. Mr. and Mrs. John Hummer are visiting .Mrs. Hummer's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Florence Chapman. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Corrith of Scranton. are rejoicing over the birth : . - ' - of a daughter, Mrs. Carrlth was form-' I erly Llda West of this place. On the afternoon of Thursday. March 3d, a number of girl friends gathered at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Williams and showered her with pretty and useful gifts. jir. and Mrs. Williams expect soon to begin housekeeping In Scranton. The annual settlement of the aud- itors of the township was held ln the I .0. O. F. hall. March 7th. Sugar making is in progress. Thus far tho weather for that purpose has been very favorable. Mrs. C. M. Loring spent Tuesday with Mrs. Inez Curtis. John Williams is getting out lum ber for a new house which he pro poses to erect upon the site of the one recently destroyed by fire. USE MORE THAN CNE DESK. Men Who Find Two or Even Thr Desks Convenient in Their Work. "One man 1 had occasion to call on tne other day." said a man whoso Business taKos turn around among people more or It-ss, 'i found sitting between two d .ks. Facing one, ho had tho other directly at his back, and evidently both were in use. The significance of the two desks was real ly very simple. "This man Is at the head of an es tablishment culling lor both scientific and administrative work and in one of his dusks he has ail the material required in Ills scienllfitic work and in tho other thu various thiugs re quired in his buslutss work. "Ho sits between tho two deska in a revolving uh&lr. If he has business to attend to he swings around and goes at It on thu business desk. Busi ness finished, he swings around again to his other desk and resumes his scientific work, enabled by thu ar rangement to avoid confusion and to prosecute his work in either direction with convenience and' uconomy of tlmo, all of which 1 thought was very tine. "I have since heard of another man engaged In three pursuits who uses three desks In precisely the same manner, the thru desks being set to form three bidts of a square, with his revolving chair in the centre, the pa pers and documents and data pertain ing to ono thing In one desk, to an other thing In another mid to the third thing in tho third desk, all very con venient, aud time savlnt, "And I suppose If you looked around enough you would find In fact a con siderable number of men who make use In their business or professions of mo: o thun one desk." Very Old Painting. What is believed to be tbu oldest European painting in existence baa been found in cfoto by the Italian archaeological mission it Is on a sarcophagus, aud U supposed to have been produced about 2;00 B. C. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bough! Boars the Signature- THE GUILLOTINE'S ORIGIN. Not Invented by the Genial Old Doc tor but t Ont bcnmlut. In a book Just puUiiM.-ui uy Hector. Klclshmuii in Germany thu usual story of the origin or luu uutt uiuuiit or exo- cutioii which wuo tiuiucu tor Dr. Hull lotln in "tbu d.i) ut tuu i'lenen relgu or terror la liuu Uuuil-u. "Thorn Is no truth In n.e toi, which ban ao long been believed," he suys, "that the genial old physician invented thu machine which was iian.tU tor him nnu by means or which m.- is said to have lost his ufe si.orny after Its adoption. Guilioti.i. m Keuoinii with thu spirit ol ins iiniu. pioposud on Oct. IU, 178'J, mm uil uiluhUers, ro guiuicss or their bit in or station, slioiiid be dealt with itilhe by thu law, una ix montiiu latei uu proposed to tho Government mat convicted mur derers sliuuld be beheaded by means j 0f a "simple apparatus. , ..Tho raucimmsui ol which be and I no one eiau ll!Mt uny ltlull ul tuat tlmo 1 wa spoUen ot aH luu zUniAu appara tus' by tho humorists ot Hie day, and thu phrase was used to mnku its pro poser ridiculous; tto tbat when a ma chine finally was adopted thu wits of thu time named it guillotine. Thu I Government evidently recognizing tho valuo ot tUo suggestion, uskeii ono price, and thu contract was glvun to a German cabinet maker by tho name of Tobias Schmidt, who. received 824 llvrea for thu aecoptut nmuel In 17U2. Schmidt made guillotines tor al) the provinces and thu Industry brought him a moderate fortune, which he proceeded to squander in Purls, while Dr. Guillotin. who never had anything to do with the making of the machino which bore his name, continued to practice bis profession quietly nnd un ostentatious! in Paris until he died there on March 2S. ISM." Chicago News Costly ! nake Polso'n. One of tho strangest as well as most costly articles ot commerce is snako venom, for which there Is a growing demand in medicine and other branches ol science Thu supply comes trom Australia, and a recent Sydney quotation placed the market pricf at 2l)c to ' a grain, or about I ?.'(! til 'II imntiH Tr-nt .... n. ....... ; ' " , . T RcunMiii; In him. htn mini, utliorfu to distinguish between thu poison of i snakes whose bite is usually fatal and that trom reptiles, that seldom kill. Dr. Tidswell. of the New South Wales Health Department, states that the venoms are now being classified. Laboratory experiments place tho tiger snake venom first, as it is six teen times as deadly as that of tho jilaek : nake and four times as power ful as that from the brown snaku or the death ndder. In average yield at a. blto tho death adder supplies three times as much as thu tiger snake and seventeen times as much as the brown snake. So mr the snakes have been mostly captured by hand to avoid loss of poison, aiid, at even greater personal risk, havu been held ln the hand while being enraged and made to bite through a rubber band, ejecting upon a gUibs plate the venom from the two poison fangs in the up per Jaw. Each snaku has supplied the material from one bite, averaging about a grain. Dundee Advertiser. Farmers' Lot in New England. Anybody who thinks the farmers of , New England aru living In solitude, out of touch with thu great world and indi'ferent to the advantages of or ganization. Is destined iu a rude awak ening It he subjects ills .inpression to the test ol falr-nilndul inquiry. Much "pity" !s patroiilzingl.v bestowed on the farmers, who retcui it and reject It Their winters tuu said to be de pressing, whereas that season is in reality the period or their social gay eties, grange suppers, neighborhood sleigh rides, lestivltles within tho reach ot moderate purses and moder ate desires. Taken as a whole, the farmer's lot is not uu unhappy one, any more than that or the hired man. Tho hired men havu not boou "union ized" yet, and that accounts for a great gap In thu ranks o: organized, labor. Boston Trantcript Rattlesnakes. It is commonly belloveu tliaL the rattlesnake will strike without giving the warning rattio during the hot dayo of August, at which time their Bight is affected. A now joint is. formed to tho rattle every time thu snake sheds its skin As the repulo sheds Its skin oftoiier than once a year, tho number of Joints does not represent tho nge of the rattlesnake Many Joints are lost by accident or wear. Rattlesnakes ure entirely confined to tho western hemisphere Bobby's Faltering Talth. One Sunday morning little Bobby showed signs ot having something on his mind. Finally tu mustered up courage and addressed his fnther thus: "Say. papa, don't yon think it is time tcr ine to graduate from Sun day school?" Nothing New. Fashion Is ovei changing, but it must be confessed that all the dresses wo "create" are merely variations, improvements, or transformations of models worn In other days. Moda, Rome. An Apology Crank, A man who is good at making ex planAtlons and apologies Is seldom good foV anything else. Selections 4. -l-i ."i".f-i-i"ii-i-t"i -"i-i'-i"i-i-'i"; ALL FRENCHMEN SAVERS. Government Bond as'Small as a Fr.-.nc May Be Bought. If you were a Frenchman w't' n very small surplus to invest; If, " n, that surplus were hut a modest fr-.r, ymt might become the holder of ,i French government bond. From Lie cradle to the grave the French s i'j Ject Is taught to save and to turn Mm eiirnlngst Into safe income-produv u.; account. The state pays n pro"'l";ii on thrift. It rewnrds Its r"hool ' :l drrn for various good perforir:itir.i1'. with a tiny bank deposit whlrfi 'n variably will have grown Into gnuMU size when the recipient has refi-'l ! maturity. Having nursed Its tn-nplM through the- early stages of epn-.-omv It directs their stopa In the rho'cM of investments, and even assumes p: .--nal power In arbitrarily transform -r the savings bank account into govM-n-mcnt bonds, or rentes, say n v.-- c in the American R'evfew of Rpvt Thrift is n national charactert-r'r Franco Is n nation of little save- little Incomes, and of little farmr. . ol lectlvely, these exercise' a trcmcut power on the nffalrs of Europe. T'm holder of tho one and' two franc boil and the possessor of the bank hccn.iiu. so small that bankers of other roun tries would- scorn It, have built up n monetary power thnt command fir rcstiect of the world and. Indeed r:a-In'-! the finances and politics of n. v, more presumptuous nations. Bonds of states and governments, of railroads ith n government guaran tee, bonds of cities and towns, o.' mortgage companies, nre the Fren li roan's choice. His portfolio contrt;ns the most varied collection of govern ment securities Imaginable. It is sv'e to lay that In Paris coupons, are -n from the bonds of nearly every ' eminent under the sun. Too often t'le Frenchman gambles and loses in i"i! Ing shares. Ho will have none of li.s own country's Industrial issues. Necessity of Air Baths. ' The conditions and conventions pi our civilization demand frequent bnth ins; any one suspected of avoiding a dally bath would quickly find himself persona non grata in decent socio y. It is popularly supposed that frequcit bathing is essential to health. This !a quite untrue. Much of the benefit at tributed to the water is ln reality due to tho complete exposure of the s.'Tu to tho air. The respiratory function of tho skin fs of high importance, and although water may be dispensed with, closing the pores to air would result In speedy asphyxiation. Tactics. So far as history gives us any in formation on the subject, the father of "tactics," in the military sense, was the great Theban General Epamlnon das. who, at the famous battle of Leu ctra. B. C. 371. fought between the Thobans and Spartans, for the first time introduced the scientific mode of fighting. Prior to that time the universal rule was for tho oppoius armies to face each other and fight It out by sheer brute force and building tenacity, without any particular re gard for scientific principles. Darwin and Wallace. In 1858 Wallace sent to Darwin a paper ln which he sketched the out lines of a theory Identical with that upon which Darwlu had so long been at work. The same sequence of ob served facts and inferences thnt led Darwin to the discovery of natural se lection and its consequences had led Wallace to the very threshold of tho same discovery; but ln Mr. Wallace's mind the theory had by no means been wrought out to the same degree of completeness to which It had been wrought In the mind of Mr. Darwin. Amount of Rainfall. Decent authorities assure us that if all the rain which falls upon thu earth were allowed to accumulate In a hnsln of the same area of the ter restrial surface. If. would almost be a collection of eight feet deep at tho oml of tho year. The heaviest rainfall known upon the earth occurs upon the mountain slopes beyond the bend n' the Bay of Bengal, and nmounts upon tho average to 610 Inches or nearly ."! feet, In tho course of the year. Cl inch of rain Implies n fall of 101' tu-is of water upon each ncre of ground. "Hlcksites" vs. "Friends." Hlcksltes are a numerous body J n tionallstlc Quakers in America, found ed by Ellas Hicks (1748-18a). -vn 'n 1827 seceded from the Society of Frlonds and created a schism In tlia. body by his promulgation, of Unitarian doctrines. About one-hulf ofN thu "Friends" In America adopted hK views. The Hlcksltes deny the miracu lous conception, the divinity and the atonement of Christ, as well as tho In spiration and authenticity of the Scriptures. Ominous. One of the first signs that a womau is getting old is when she tolls the story that she married before she was 16. Rice Cultivation In Burma. Of the twelve million acres un'?r cultivation in Burma, eight million ure devoted to rice. What Not to Remember. There is a great secret ln knowing what to keep out of the mind as wuli as what to put, in. -Emerson. RUN WITHOUT HEADLIGHT. Wherein British Railroad Trains Dif fer from Those of America. Locomotive headlights as wo know 1 thtin In this country nro practically unknown in Great Britain, wo aro told by a writer In a recent railroad ' magazine. Thelv are few grado crosa- lngs there, and these nre well pro ; tccted, go that the light Is not need . ed as a danger signal, and thero la 1 no effort to use exceptionally bright I lights to llluminati the track In front of train. The situation Is not without its ad vantages. Bright headlights modify or obliterate the feoblu colored llgbU , of signals and swltcnes, and they daz zle tho eyes of the drivers on pass , ing trains. In this country the head light seems to be a necessity. To be effectlvo It should be sufficiently bril liant to illuminate the track for a dis tance greater than that within which j tho brakes can stop the train, but It ( must not be so powerful as to blind i approaching trains crews and modify j tho colors of signal lights. It should als be as effective as possible In fog I gy and snowy weather. Tho oil lamp Hardly meets these j conditions; it is too feeble, even with I a proper rellector. Electricity is too powenu, anu nas been abandoned by some of tho roaus that have intro duced it. Acteylene, whicli Is now so familiar as an Illuminnnt on automo biles, Is alvocatcd by many authori ties. Tragedy of a Kiss. An Atchison lomance: Hu had not known her long, hut as she stood la the moonlight a wnlte dress and a blue sash set otf her figure so wen that he thought hu had never seen a prettier picture. And theu hu did aa awful thing ho kissed her. Thu in nocent girl shrank trom htm ln hor ror aud the young man realized that hu had gono too tar. Indeed, as thu panting jtrl strove to collect herself SUlilCiuUtiy to UXDteSS the snrn vnr... j ing in uer bosom tho youug man uiougut or the beating lie must en dure thu next day trom uer father and brothers, aud or tue long accounts of thu light that wouid appear in the newspapurs. Foituuaieiy, hu had his hat in uu haud, ana turutd to go. But the irl strugt.ed to speak, sno would express her contempt lor his action thuugu It killed uer. "When," sii said, m a low, iaitcnug voicu, tull of Ueep-nuated tatred, "are you com ing again" Atchison Ulobu. Uses of Adversity. Prospecity is not without many fears and disasters; and adversity is not without comforts and hopes. Cer tainly, virtue is like precious odors, most fragrant, when they aro incensed or crushed; for prosperity doth best discover vice; but advorslty doth best discover virtue. Bacon. NEW SPRING SILK sEASTER DRESSES Are already here in splendid i variety in all the accepted fabrics including Foulards, Rough Shantungs, Imperial Messallne, Peking, and Kek ko Silks. Select Your Dress NOW So you can give yourself j plenty time to make or have tit made up lust as you want it. i I Priestley's English Tus- sah Royal Made of Worsted and Mo hair. The new and distinc tive dress fabric for evening, and street wear. NEW SPRING SUITS Come and look them over and you will notice our Suits are all lined with Beldlng Satin and well tailored. Get In line for Easter and select your suit early. KATZ BROS.