American diet which as lavish, here only as ! De regan AO such a one as can hae by the rich. His table, 3 ead with abundance, not onl: with hs of do- mestic production, fl} of imported food stuffs. For example, his family con- sumes adnually 1250 pounds of wheat flour, and €oo pounds of oat and corn meal. @%0 pounds of meat, about two pounds per day; 750 pounds of potatoes, 4 #00 pounds of butter, and 300 pounds of Ysugar. He is the greatest coffee drinker on earth, one pound per week being re sired for the family's consumption. Of however, he uses little, five pounds > year sufficing for his re ds. costs him $16 per month. 1 meals per day, taking his dinner at noon. He retires between nine and ten at nigh and rises at six in the morning. His tabl cats three Soliloquies in the Shade. When a man flatters himsef that knows a woman, he—flatters himself. The most effective argument a charm- ing woman can use to a man is an ap- pealing “Don’t you think so?” When a girl says emphatically that she won't, it is morally certain that she will; when she says she will, will she? The greatest lack of logic is displayed by the man who reasons logically with a4 woman, The girl who judges a man from the curl of his mustache does not deserve much sympathy when she is disillu sioned. The gaudy tinsel of admiration is a surer bait for woman than the gold of devout love, Man loves to be praised for his intui- tion, woman for her logic. As a rule, neither possesses either. It is always a matter of surprise that others should take their worries so much to heart; also that they make so light of Ours, he Hot Time, the narrator, wept said and "At “she tears.” “My goodness!” er. ‘she must have been with rage.” point,” down this broke exclaimed the listen boiling over “I have used your Hair Vigo for five years and am greatly pleased with it. It certainly re- stores the original color to gray § hair. Itkgeps my hair soft.”’—Mrs. Helen Kilkenny, New Rortland, Me. Ayer’s Hair Vigor hg been restoring cg gray hair for fifty and it never fails Ril! eithe You can rely upg for stopping your from falling, for keep your scalp clean, and fo making your hair grow. $1.00 a bottle. All druggists. If vour Qrusgiss cannot supply you, gend us one dollar and we will express you a hottle. Be sure and give the name | eof your Buztest x e. Address, J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass, A ‘Bad Breall A bad breath means a bad stomach, a bad digestion, a bad liver. Ayer’s Pills are liver pills. They cure con- stipation, biliousness, dys- pepsia, sick headache. 25¢. A All 1 druggists, Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Then use for the BUCKINGHAM’S DY Whiskers 89 ©78. OF DRUGGISTS, OR R. P. HALL & CO., NASHUA, N.H UNION MADE. Than a Quarter of a Century of W. I,. Douglas $3.00 es for style, comfort and ed 2ll other makes sold at is excellent reputation has rit lone. 'W. L. Douglas e better satisfaction than $3.50 shoes because his e best £3.00 and $3.50 intained. The standard placed so high that the ore value for his money uglas $3.00 and $3.50 get elsewhere. 1s more $3.00 and 83.50 Ir two manufacturers. 4.00 Gilt Edge Line led at any pric vywhere. as shoes ottom. Douglas direct to price and | cluded scalding | the clatter of horses’ hoofs an ITAL. eceives Washin THE ¢ OUSE, pe Was rning— ty Was of Its Nearly Hidde! _ The. “as Si Reside President fast sleep ght, He Washington (Special). - William McKinley rests in hi at the White’ House Monday was borne there in sorrow. All of grief that solemn cerefony can show, all that civil and military \pagean- try can do to honor, will be encompassed in the services at the capital of the na- tion. Simple and solemn was the prodession from the railroad station to the White House. Silent save for sobbing was the multitude of people standing witli un- covered heads as the cortege, escorted by a guard of honor and military, ‘passed up Pennsylvania avenue. Scarcely less in numbers was the | fice | ter-General | later the lights | cred | persed, crowd than that which had cheered President McKinley when he drove up the same avenue to the White House March 4 last after taking the oath of of- for the second time as President of the United States. Now the people were dumb, and so silent was the city that it all semed in the uncertain light like a vision unreal. In the East Room of the White House, which has been the scene of many a joyous assemblage, a guard of honor watched alone with the dead. Se- in her sorrow, Mrs. McKinley was tenderly cared for by those closest to her. The body of the murdered President reached Washington at 8.38 p. m. It was received at the railroad station by an es- cort that represented every branch of the army and navy and was borne to the White House along streets crowded close with thousands of people. In its pres- ence stillness prevailed, broken only by he rattle of sabers. The reception was a ing testimonial fron subordinates of ment and a townsmen d affect- cutive’s zovern- former he mall Secretary Gage, [Wa Smith, Attorney- Gener:l Knox, Secretary Hay, Secretary Wilsor, retary Root, | Secretary Hitchcock and Private Secre- | tary Cortelyou. The party included also Senator Hanna Mr. Abner McKinley, Lieut. James Mc- Kinley, Comptroller Charles G. Dawes, several officers of the army and a com mittee representing Buffalo, which con- sisted of Mayor Conrad Diehl, John G. Milburn, John N. Seatherd, Harry Ham | lin and Carleton Sprague. Mrs. McKinley and the other ladies | of the party were driven unostentatiously out Sixth and away from the crowd. Guarded by details from the military arms of the Government, members of the Loyal Legion and the Grand Army of the Republic, and in charge of commissioned officers of the army and navy, the vigil of the dead began at 10.p. m. One hour were all turned low throughout the Mansion and quiet fell street | over the grounds and buildings. Five thousand persons who had gath- in front of the great gates in the early part of the evening quickly dis- the distinguished persons who came from Buffalo with the party retired for the night, the gates swung closed and the special guard of policemen paced the { walks and driveways. FEARS FOR MRS. MCKINLEY | When the Nerve Tension is Over, There Are Apprehensiors of Serious Cellapse. Washington (Special).—Mrs. McKin- ley has stood the strain of the trying | ordeal following the death of her hus- { band better than was expected and her | physician, Dr. is encouraged to Rixey, | believe that she will go through the state ceremonial without collapse. A half hour which was spent beside | the coffin on the train was followed by a | period of depression, but Dr. Rixey in- duced her to sleep in the afternoon. Their dread is for the future, when the nerve tension of the present ordeal is over and when the widow is back alone ! in the old house at Canton, with the flood | of reflection and realization that must { come upon her then. { a codicil. | erty President Left Wiil. Buffalo (Special).—President McKin- ley has left a will. The instrument was executed some time before the shooting, and at no time during his final sufferings was there any wish or occasion to revise it or to frame It leaves the bulk of his prop- to Mrs. McKinley. How much the estate is worth cannot be stated with ex- actness by those most fam#iar with the late President's business affairs, but it is believed to be a goodly sum, although 1 not amounting te a 2 large fortune. \" Death Mask Taken. Buffalo (Special).—A death mask of the President's face was made by Eduard I. A. Pausch, of Hartford, Conn. Mr. Pausch has in recent years modeled the features of many of the distinguished men who have died iz this country. The mask is a faithful reproduction of the late President McKinley’ s features. Twenty-three Drowsed. Budapest (By Cable).—Twenty-three persons were drowned by the wreck of a ferry-boat which was crossing the fleoded Kulpa river, near Asalj, Croatia. \ | ROOSEVELT] TAKES OATH AS PRESIDENT. Falters for a Moment With Emotion, and Ther in Firm Tomes, Accepts the Homer. Buffalo, N. Y. (Special).—Theodore Roosevelt, at 3.30 o'clock Saturday af- ternoon, in the library of the residence i Ansley Wilcox, at Buffalo, took the constitutional oath as President of the United States. Elihu Root, Secretary of War, acting in behalf of the Cabinet of the late President, in a voice tremu- lous with’ grief, formally requested Mr. Roosevelt to take the oath. The new President, in a voice that at first fal- tered from emotion, said: "I shall take the oath at once in accordance with your request, and in this hour of deep and terrible national bereavement I wish to state that it shall be my aim to continue unbroken without variance PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT. the policy ef President McKinley for the peace and prosperity and honer of our beloved country.” Judge John R. Hazel, States Court, administered the oath. Following the ceremony Presideat Roosevelt shook hands with the Cabi- net officers and all others in the room. A briel conference between the Presi- dent and Cabinet officers followed, dur- ing which he requested the members of the Cabinet who were present—Secre- taries Root, Long and Wilson and Post- master-General Smith—to remain in ofi- fice, at least for the present. They as- sured him that they would, and Presi- dent Roosevelt subsequently stated that he had also recejved similar assur- ances from the absent members of the Cabinet. immediately upon assuming his new office, President Roosevelt issued the following proclamation, setting aside Thursday as a day of prayer and mourning throughout the land: By President of the United States America: A Proclamation: A terrible bereavement has beiallen our people. The President of the United States has been struck down; a crime committed not only against the Chief Magistrate, but against every law-abiding and liberty-loving citizen. President McKinley crowned a life of largest love for his fellow-men, of most earnest endeavor for their welfare, by a death of Christian fortitude: and both the way in which he lived his life and the way in which, in the supreme hour of trial, he met his death, will remain forever a precious heritage oi eur peo- ple. It meet that we as a nation ex- press our abiding love and reverence ior his life, our deep sorrow for his un- timely death. Now, thereiore, I, Theodore Roose- velt, President of the United States of America, do appoint Thursday next, September 19, the day on which the body of the dead President will be laid in its last earthly resting place, a day ol mourning and prayer throughout the United States. 1 earnestly recommend all the people to assemble on that day in their respective places oi divine wor- ship to bow down in submission to the will of Almighty God and to pay out of full hearts their homage of love and rev- erence to the great and good President death has smitten the nation vith bitter grief. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. Done at the city of Washington. the 14th day of September, A. D. one thou- sand nine hundred and one, and of the independence of the United States the one hundred and twenty-sixth. (Seal) THEODORE ROOSEVELT. By the President: JOHN HAY, Life of President Roosevelt. Theodore Roosevelt, who succeeds as head of the nation, is a member of an old Dutch family which was founded in this country about the middle of the seventeenth century by Klaas Marten- sen Roosevelt. He was born in New York city on October 7, 18358, and was prepared for Harvard by private tutors. Governor Roosevelt's mother was a Georgian. One of his uncles was an admiral in the Confederate service and the other was a midshipman, whe fired the last gun from the Confederate war- ship Alabama just before she went down, having been sunk by the Kear- sarge off Cherbourg, France. He was prominent in college athletics, and was one of the editors of the undergraduate journal, the Advocate. A year of jor- eign travel followed his graduation, in 1880, and almost immediately thereafter he entered upon a public career. His first position was that of membership in the lower branch of the New York Legislature, in which he sat during the sessions of 1882 and the two lollowing years. The bent of his mind politically was developed at this early stage by his introduction of the first civii ser- vice bill in the Legislature, which he- came a law in 1883. He was an indepedent candidate fer mayor of New York city in 1886, with a Republican indorsement, but was not elected. President Harrison appointed him a member of the Civil Service Commission in May, 1889, and he serv- ed as a member of the board and its president for six years, displaying dur- ing the whole of that period a deter- «mined purpose to rigidly and honestly enforce the law. In May, 1895, he re- signed, to become Procien: of the Board of Police Commissioners of New York city, in which position he dis- played equgl fidelity and iearlessness. \On the inatyguration of President Mc- Kinley, in #897, Mr. Rooscvelt resign- cd irom thg Policve Board to become Assistant cretary of the Navy, in which positidy§ De served until the out- ‘reak of hostNities with Spain, and te of the United the of 1S whose Secretary of State. his energy apd foresight have been justly ascribed\ the complete readiness (of the naval anch of the service to test. enter upen that} brief and bullianmt con- —n SUMMARY OF THE LATEST NEWS. Domestic. A waterspout swept over Jamaica Bay, nearly engulfing a train crossing a trestle on the Long Island Railroad. A tidal wave and storm followed, spreading through the summer resorts in that locality. The engagement was announced of Capt. Thoms F. Lyon, of the Marine Corps, to Miss Florence Evans. They met at the Pan-American Exposition. Grace Wilson, 17 years old, of Chi- cago, became despondent from brood- ing over the death of President McKin- ley and committed suicide. Mrs, Mattie Hughes, charged in Co- lumbia, S. C., with killing her husband, put on man’s clothes and escaped. Rev. Joseph H. Tilton, 8 years old, of Reading, was quietly married to Mrs. Caroline P. Griswold, aged 82. Miss Nancy Stone, daughter of ex- Senator James G. Stone, of Kansas, eloped with a poor farmer. The cigar factory of David Spangler, at Red Lion, was partially destroyed by fire. The Sovereign Grand Lodge, Inde- pendent Order of Odd Fellows, began a week's convention in Indianapolis. The grand sire, A. C. Cable, of Cov- ington, Ky., delivered his annual ad- dress. The executive committee of the Ital- ian United Societies in New York de- cided to suspend the celebration of the anniversary and started a movement for a monument. At Spiceland, Ind.. the safe of the vil- lage bank was blown open and its con- tents stolen, including $500 worth of stamps deposited in the bank by the postmaster. The schooner G. Ellen, of Racine, was wrecked in the lake near Mil- waukee and the four seamen were res- cued just as their vessel was about to go to pieces. The battleship Retvizan, built by the Cramps for the Russian government, returned to Philadelphia after a most satisfactory builders’ trial trip. The hearing of the caveat to the will of Jacob S. Rogers, the millionaire lo- comotive builder, was begun in ton, N. J. State Superintendent John McCullagh asked 200 warrants on account of ille- gal registration in New York. It was decided to have the first inter- national yacht race on September 26 and the second on the 28th. The annual meeting of the American Pharmaceutical Association was begun in St. Louis. Calderon Carlisle, a well-known law- yer of Washington, died in Asheville, N.C. The battleship Illinois was commission at Newport News. At the encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic Commander-in- Chief Rassieur made a violent attack on Pension Examiner Evans and his meth- od of administering the pension laws. The Democratic put in Dr. Tren- | State Committee of | Virginia declined the proposition of the Republican committee for a joint de- bate by the gubernatorial candidates of the two parties. Immigration Commissioner Powder- ly and Congressman Cornell are draft- ing a bill, to be submitted to Congress, | which, if passed, will prevent anarchists | landing here. Shamrock II. had two lucky escapes from serious disaster while taking a spin. She was struck by a squall and came very near running Lr a vacht. The strike situation remains un- changed. The steel combine has re- fused to entertain further propositions of settlement from the Amalgamated Association. Shipping is tied up at New Orleans by a strike of the longshoremen, whose demand for higher wages has been re fused by the shipping agents. A rear-end collision took place on the Pennsylvania Railroad at Wilmington, Del.. and over a dozen people were in jured. Mrs. E. B. Clagget, Balt more, was badly briused and shaken up. Johann Mest. the anarchist, was ar- rested in New York city. A mob of negroes broke into the jail at Wickliffe, Kg., and lynched three negroes who cole Sed having robbed a respected colored man. While on a sick bed Miss Zoe Daugh trey, of Atlanta, was married in Nor folk to Dr. Louis Sage Hardin, also of Atlanta. A misplaced swiich ‘caused a wreck on the West Shore Railroad near Syra- cuse, in which 235 passengers were shak- en up. ot Fereign. King Edward has ordered the court to go into mourning for one week for the death oi President McKinley. In every place of public worship in Lon- don Sunday the clergymen made special references to the American nation's: loss. Suspected anarchists are being arrest- ed in all parts of France pending the visit of Emperor Nicholas. When the imperial cortege passes through Rheims no spectators will be permitted on the streets. Marie Josephine Eastwick. the Phila- delphta lady accused in London of forg- ing a railroad certificate oi £ 100,000. was remanded for a further hearing. The directors of the wrecked Hei- bronn Gewerbe Bank were arrested. The losses of the bank in peenlaton | will be more than 3,000,000 marks. Dr. Broeckiman, who was public prose- cutor at Johannesburg under the Trans- vaal government, was put on trial on the charge of treason. The Duke and Duchess of York ar- rived at Quebec on the royal yacht Ophir and were received with much ceremony. The Czar and Czarina with their party sailed on the imperial vacht Standar: from Kiel for France. Twenty-three pesons were drowned by the wrecking of a ferryv-boat near Osalj, Croatia. Colonel Crabbe has camp of Van de Merwe, ony, killing him and another took 37 prisoners. The Peace Conference surprised the in Cape Col Boer, and at Gi: 1SEOW took steps looking to the settlement of the American question. The late Dowager Empress Frederick bequeaths 3,000,000 marks to Coun: Seckendori, grand marshal oi her cour. with whom, it is asserted. she contrac:- ed a morganatic marriage. Lord Kitchener reports uen, on September 6 and 8, Boers from strong positions, and capturing 41 prisoners. Martial Faugeror, a Frenchman. on trial in London fo: murder. reve tel what he claimed was a plot to kil} Jos eph Chamberlain. : that Meth droy e the killing 18 —_— The Preaeller’s Lack, “1 want to tell you asgood one,” and George H. Ide's cyes sparkled and the muscles of his anatomy gathered antl relaxed and gathered and relaxed again, “Ifsa church not a from Milwaukee a railroad conductor {tended vias openly. It ‘was the | first time he had ever Ween seen in a chitrch and his presence caused quite a stir. The preacher preached his ser mon, and then, reluctant to'lose the op “The Cradle Rules the World” portunity to make a lasting impression, he traveled over the same ground in lan o guage more impressive and spun his and all wise mothers make discourse out into unwarranted length. "When the service ended one of my dea—that is, one of the deacons of the | church—waited for the railroader and, accosting him, inquired: ‘How did you like the sermon?’ ‘It was all right.’ ‘You enjoyed it, did you?’ "Y es, it was a very good sermen.’ 1 suppose we shall have the pleas- ure of seeing you at church again. ‘I don’t know; I may come. There's only one trouble with that parson of yours. “*And pray, what is that?’ ‘‘He doesn’t appear to good terminal facilities.’ "The deacon had nothing further to say. thausand miles | ® Jacobs Oil a househol. remedy for the simple reason that it always Conquers Pain have very Lots of Room. Wiie—There's a burglar in the cel- lar, Henry. Husband—Well, my dear, we ought ! to be thankful that we are upstairs, Wife—But he'll come upstairs. Husband—Then we'll go down into the cellar, my dear. Surely a ten-roomed house ought to be big enough to hold three people without crowding. WORE THAN FIALF A CENTURY OF EXPERIENCE OUR GUARANTEE ARE BACK OF EVERY WATERPROOF OILED SLICKER OR COAT | BEARING THIS TRADE MARK, We refund 10c. for every package of Put- | am FapELESS DYE that fails to give satisfac- tion. Monroe Drug Co., Unionville, Mo. The shortest terms of (overnors are in | Massachusetts and Rhode Island — one year each. It’s the “hard rubs of the “world make a man bright. that ON SALE EVERYWHERE. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. CATALOGUES FREL SHOWING FULL LINE OF GARMENTS AND HATS. Fis oh A.J. TOWER C0, ASTON, MASS, There is more Catarrh in this section 6f the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many vears doctors ronounced it 2 local diseage and prescribed ocal remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it in- curable. Science has proven ecatarrh to be a eonstitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. 12ll's Catarrh Cure, manufaetured by F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from | 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for cirenlars and testi- monials. 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