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1 W O*l*e»t0n, Tax., Hair Vigor AyEB-s •'Having used ^Ayer'a Hair Vigor F^~ 0 lor yean, I find that tt keeps my Si Scalp clean and the hair in the besro condition. My ipother, now sixty 0 years of age, has as line a bead of hair as when she was forty, a fact .. which she attrlb ntes to the useoif Aye^s Hair Vigor. It thickens the growth of the hair and restores gray hair to its original color. 0: I cannot see how this preparation could o' he improved."—Mrs. F. E. BAKEB, Gal veston, Texas. Ayer's Hair Vigor S PREPARED BY" DR. I. a AYER & CO., LOWELL, MASS. etooooooooooooooooooooooj GREAT GIBRALtAR. Haw the BoefcytMUwi lapnui O— at First 8i(ht When approaching Gibraltar from the Atlantic, the impression it creates, on the mind is one of gTim forbiddance, writes Cecile De La Nois in Home and Country, in spite of the cozy appear* MM of the two settlements the "Spanish Town" and the "English Town," which are nestled close to each other, the great barracks, the signal stations, and the sleepy-looking ship ping, in the protected harbor. The great rocky "Columns of Hercules," and Cape Centa, with its giant light house, are the first things that catch the eye of the tourist, and the extreme point of the great rock is shown out to him as the most southern extremity of all Europe, and called "Point Europe," in deference to that distino tlon. On the opposite side of the nar row straits lies the coast of Africa the highest minaret of a Moorish palace towering above the cypresses and palms, while from Gibraltar's shore one catches the sound of martial music wafted softly across tlie emerald waters, and as one stops to listen, the well-known strains of "Rule Britannia, Britannia Rules the Waves" can be dis tinguished. The whole scene impressed me as wondrously beautiful, as the P. and O. steamer Bombay bore me towards Na ples last spring. I was glad to stop at Gibraltar. I had read so much of its history—a his tory that appeals so strongly to Eng land, interwoven inexplicably with memories of their greatest naval victo ries, and having justly inspired that triumphal song, Britannia's freedom and rulership of the sea. England's colonies are not all pleae ing to the eye. She has been guided by no aesthetic sentiments in choosing and fighting for them. Aden, for ex ample, is the most barren, wretched and suffocating hot place on the face of the globe, according to my notion, and has not one redeeming feature. But Gibraltar is brimful of interest, and I gladly availed myself of the opportuni ty of going ashore. GREAT SNAKE STORY. lif tllri Marked All Over with Bible Char acters from the Book of Oen«U. Very few readers ever dream that there is any single piece of reading matter in the world which lives, breathes and circulates on its own in vidual account, says London Answers. But anyone who will take the trouble to walk into a certain shop in Piccadilly, not far from the Egyptian hall, will be rewarded by seeing a spe cies of snake, known as the lemon boa, with the whole of the third chapter of Genesis tattooed on its body. The rep tile is only lent for exhibition, but the gentleman who purchased it states that onboard the South American sailing vessel, the scene of this remarkable tattooing, it is a common diversion amnng the sailors to capture live snakes, extract their fangs and cover the body with any number of inscrip tions, legends and devices, and then dispose of the reptiles at the first port. Pew of the purchasers, however, care to have charge of live snakes—be they ever so harmless—so it is customary to either stuff these latter with fine straw and putty, or else immerse them in alcohol, although this process com monly has the effect of taking all the brilliancy out of the pigments em ployed. In the case of long and extremely fine inscriptions, alcohol, however, shows up and preserves these to great advantage. A sailor spent six months in tattooing one of the "Sketches by Poz," containing four thousand five hundred and twenty words, upon the skin of a rattlesnake, which he after ward sold to a gentleman for eight fuineaa. Woman and Su. Inquiring Son—Papa, what is reason^ Fond Parent—Reason, my boy, is thai Which enables a man to determine what Is right. Tnqnring Son—And what is instinct? Fond Parent—Instinct is that which tells a woman she is right whether she jb or not.—Tid-Bits, No Money There. First Burglar—Hark! I hear some nan talking. ^Second Burglar—What's he saying? First Burglar—That he never will ]bet on another horse as long as he lives. I Second Burglar—Lot's get out of.thisl jHd money here he's lost every cent.— Nek. Approving the Journal. -As I look into your face, dearest," Mid young Wumpmug, "I can see the whole record of the present congress.* "Tell toe its features," said his steady Ayes, noes, lip, chin, cheek"—end iian the usual executive session fol ibwed.—Puck. Cool Milk ta the Well. The sketch herewith shows a simple •ad suooessfuly creamery that any farmer oan with little expense eon* struot. The first thing required is a well of good siae in diameter and of cool water. I made the experiment early last spring by hanging the cans in the well, and was so well satisfied with the results I made the needed ar rangement for hoisting and lowering the cans by means of a crank which can be attached to each roller. Three cans are all that are needed in my creamery, each one holding a milking. tie. l. which allows thirty-Blx hours for each setting. The cans should have eovers to keep out dirt and insects, but not be airtight, and can be made to hold a larger quantity where more cows are kept, but should be about three times the height of the diameter, with the case between the curb floor and the space roller to allow the can to pass freely through. The sketch is so sim ple it seems unnecessary to explain its construction. One point to be kept in mind is to see that the cans are not set too deep in rainy weather, as the water may rise and overturn the milk. Snaps are used on the ends of the rope to attach the can. as seen in Fig. 1. The oarer of the case is so made that when closed it slants back to shed rain. The front piece (see Fig. 2) is de tachable and sets in so that when closed it can be locked with a padlock. All who have seen it think highly of it, as it is a creamery without the use of ice, which is expensive to have and a great deal of work to use. On one occasion in market 1 met a man who has used a creamery for many years, and who thought it would pay him to dig a well purposely instead of using TJ XT no. 2. ice. Setting of milk in wells is so com mon that this device ought to be gen erally used by farmers.—M. J. Malbett, in American Agriculturist. Effect of Food on Bntter. Carefully studied experiments in feeding dairy cattle show that the kind of food the cows consume has a pro nounced effect on the hardness of the butter. So far as the experiments have gone it appears (1) That gluten meal tends to produce a much softer quality of butter than corn meal or cottonseed meal, and. other things being equal, tends to lessen the churnability of the butter fat. (2) That silage produces a much softer butter than does good hay, but it is also favorable to the flavor and texture of the butter product. (3) That cottonseed meal tends to produce an unusually hard quality of butter, and that cottonseed meal and gluten meal might be used together with ex cellent results.—Farmers' Review. Spring nod Summer Care of Milk. Cleanliness in all dairy operations is of first importance. Milk with dry Vm/nflm Keep the atmosphere in which the milk must stand free from bad odors. Preserve the desirable flavors in the cream. If the milk is wanted sweet, lower the temperature as soon as the milk is drawn from the cow to just above freezing if possible. Neg lect of proper care of milk by patrons is the cause of much trouble at the fac tory and results in alike reduction in net profits. 'It pays to be honest.— Orange Jndd Farmer. Ventilation In the Cow Stable. No feature in dairying is more impor tant than ventilation. Do not stable cows where their food is stored. The best stable floor is made of concrete and should be washed often. The sta ble should be light with plenty of win dows, the cattle facing each other. On the roof should be & ventilator that can never be closed. Ventilation by win dows should be regulated daily. On entering the stable in the morning open the doors and blow out the im pure air the first thing.—O. B. Had wen, in Farm and Home. WHEN trees can be protected as easi ly as they may be by weaving laths and standing them about the tree, no body should ever complain of damage done by rabbits in winter. THREE THOUSAND dollars are reported to have been taken from one western county, a few years ago, for worthless fruit trees. Pretty expensive experi ence. in *«*. Ayoung »an who walked up •venue the other evening wore hat and an extremely long' ooat. He walked in a listless way, as if he had nothifeg In particular todoi Mid as if he would' not do were there something to be done, seemed to take little Interest in thing, unless it were to avoid the llti puddles at the street crossings and :|i| keep his shoes from getting splaahedT As the young man walked along he heard aloud shouting up the avenue, and, looking in that direction in calm and deliberate way, he aawthat a cab horse was running away. The horse was ooming down the avenue«t a lively rate, and the driver, who vriaa •wHnging desperately to his box, was yelling like a Comanche Indian. When a horse runs away in New York, says the Tribune of that city, there is an earnest desire on the part of all the people in the street to talra a hand in the proceedings. What' happened in this case was just what usually happens. Two or three men would run out into the Btreet, raise their arms, wave them violently and shout. The horse would move a little faster, the cabman would yell more lustily, and those who had run out in to the street would add their cries to the general hubbub This happened at regular intervals. But the calm young man who strolled along in so leisurely a manner was evi dently not going to interfere with a runaway horse. He stood on the edge of the sidewalk watehing the galloping, animal come tearing along. Of a sud den, however, a change came over him. When the horse had nearly reached him his form straightened and he be came alert. At the minute when the cab was opposite him he swung out into the muddy street, and, running like a deer, was almost instantly .at' the horse's head. 'They ran neck and neck for a few seconds. Then the young man's arm shot out swiftly, and he had the plunging animal by the bit* Ashe ran he drew down the horse'a head until the animal had either to stop running or stumble and break its neck. It stopped running. In the crowd which pushed into the street was an impulsive old gentleman, who nervously threw open the door Of the cab. He assisted a man who was inside to alight, and then, seizing him by the arm, led him up to the young man who had stopped the horse. He was scolding the driver in a mild voice for being so careless as to allow his horse to get the bit between its teeth, "There," cried the excitable old gentleman, in an admiring voice, "is the young man to whom you are indebted for saving your life." But the young "life saver" said, with almost a drawl: "No thanks are neces sary. It's a very easy matter to stop a runaway horse." Then he stooped over and rolled up his trousers, bowed to the man whom he had "saved," and, regaining the sidewalk, sauntered, up the avenue. TARDY REWARDS OF GENIU8. Mlllet'a Widow and Hte QmtMt Faint ing, "Death and the Woodcutter.** few days ago, writes the Paris cor» respondent of the Philadelphia Tele* graph, there passed away from 'a troublous life the widow of the great artist, Jean Baptiste Francois Millet. It is rather a commentary on the strange ways of this world, the fact that the man whose picture, "l'Ange lus," brought so fabulously high a price, sold that and many other mas terpieces for sums ranging from fifty to two hundred dollars apiece, and after toiling miserably and hopelessly in the vain effort to earn money enough to keep the wolf from his shabby door suddenly broke down under the strain and died of a malady brought on by anxiety and privation, not knowing that his fame would speedily be lauded to the skies. His family survived to see the apo theosis of his glory but whether the fact of "The Angelus" bringing at a sale over one hundred thousand dollars con soled the artist's widow for the fact that, within a week after this amount of money had been paid for her hus band's work, she* herself, then in the depths of poverty, was ejected from her little house at Barbizon by the. fore closure of a mortgage for two thousand dollars and, had it not been for the charity of her son-in-law, would have been reduced to begging her bread, is an unsolved mystery. Millet's greatest work' remains in Paris it is the property, I think, of Mme. Charcot, widow of the great phy sician, who inherited it from her father* the celebrated millionaire tailor, Lau rent Richard. It is palled "Death and the Woodcutter." The grisly form has laid one bony hand on the shoulder of the old and weary man, bending under his load of wood and the worn, hag* gard face is raised in absolute ecstasy to meet the summons. One hand is loosening the cord that binds his bur den of branches and the other is laid willingly in the welcoming clasp of the Great Consoler. It is not an illustra tion of Lafontalne*s fable it is merely the utter weariness' of life of an unsuc cessful and wretched man, translated and transferred to canvas with the in tensity of personal expression that transforms talent into momentary genius and renders genius transcend ent. Suppressing Polish Rational Spirit. Preat indignation is felt among the sculptors and art dealers of Warsaw over a recent rescript of the police of that city. The guardians of the peace, in obedience to orders from St. Peters burg, visited all the stores and studios and destroyed all the busts of the Polish heroes, Thaddaeus Kosciusko and Josef Powniatowaki, which they could find. The sculptors in the city were obliged to send a written com munication to the city officials promis ing not to make busts or statues of the two men in the future. This is one way Russia has adopted of trying to suppress the Polish national spirit. It is not probable, however,'that it will eoeamplish Its purpose. -T ive and fit Maiflai At the north, pomps in eold, bleak situations are liable to freese up, caus ing a vast amount of trouble. In the accompanying sketch is shown simple method of protecting one of the eommon piston pumps. An outer Jacket of wood envelops the pump. It should be large enough to allow three-inch space all around the sides.. Tills space should be filled with chaff, finely-cut hay. or straw, pressed firmly in position. Additional protection is given by the pleCe bf board, a, which has a hole in it that fits closely over the pump handle, and during the cold est wefcthfer, when the pump is not in use, this board is placed as shown in the illustration, pressed against the side of the pump, and hung'upon a nail at b. If in a windy location, the PUMP PPOTECTOB. spout should be stopped up with cloth, leaving enough projecting to readily remove it by. Anyone who has had to water cattle in the morning and has found the pump from which he pro posed to get water frozen solidly, will appreciate this simple arrangement for preventing 6uch a state of affairs. Careless employes may leave the pump unprotected on cold nights, and find it frozen in the morning. To fix in their minds the duty of looking out for it, let them carry 15 or 20 pails of water from a more distant well for the morn-, ing watering, and they will not again forget it.—American Agriculturist. THE SOURING OF MILK. Thunderstorms Seem to Hay* But Little to Do with It. From data deduced in various experi ments conducted by Prof. H. W. Conn., who has been trying to establish some identity between thunderstorms and the well-known phenomenon of milk souring, the conclusions drawn point to the fact that the atmospheric condi tions prevailing at such times are not such as to cause structural transforma tion in the lacteal fluid. Neither is the electricity which pervades the atmos phere at such times capable of souring milk, or even materially hastening the process. Some have suggested that ozone is one of the prime causes of the change from sweet to sour milk in a very short time, but Prof. Conn has proven that ozOne is no more responsi ble for the change than are the electric conditions which prevail at such times. To bacteria, the microscopic atoms of vegetable growth which are now sup posed to cause almost everything, the professor attributed the souring of the milk. Milk is a favorite breeding ground of the bacteria. They grow best and multiply most rapidly during the warm, sultry period which immedi ately precedes electrical storms. These microscopio forms of plant life not only grow and increase in numbers with alarming rapidity, but each exudes mi nute drops of acid, which is so sour thnt none of the commercial acids can he -compared with it. This acid sours theinilk.—St. Louis Republic. VICTORY FOR DAIRYMEN. States Have thq Bight to Regulate tho Sale of Oleomargarine. The law of Massachusetts forbids the sale of oleomargarine colored to Imitate butter. Benjamin Plumpy, a Boston dealer and agent for the Chi cago fraudulent butter makers, under took to sell oleomargarine colored, con trary to law, relying on the unconsti tutionality of the law for protection. He was arrested and the case came be fore the courts, where he was tried and found guilty. He appealed to the state supirjbme court and then to the United States supreme court. Justice Harlan rendered the decision, declaring that every state had a right to protect its people from frauds of all kinds, and should control the sale of food products in so far as to protect them from adul terations and fraud. The original package decision does not in any way present one state from forbidding the sale of fraudulent products from an therrstate. The decision is a distinct victory for the dairymen of the United States and covers about the whole ground of their contention. It sets at rest the ques tion^ the powers of the states to reg ulate the sale of oleomargarine.—Farm News. The Kind of Cows to Keep. A few years of grading up by means of using a thoroughbred male will give any farmer a herd of cows which will be a great improvement upon those of their mothers and grandmothers. It is well 'to test cows and know just what they are doing. The churn is perhaps the most satisfactory way of doing this. Keep^a'cow's milk separate for one or more days, being careful to get out all Jie cream. When it is sour, churn it. The scales will tell, both with milk and butter, whether a cow is kept at a profit or not. Remember that it costs at least 835 to keep a c?w for a year. If she does not return this in milk and butter she is kept at a loss. If all such cows were discovered and slaughtered, the iiumber of cows at the present time.would be considerably reduced, and at a great benefit to their owners.! Hardly one man in .twenty knows, whet&Cr he is keeping his cows at a' profit, or a loss. They think it is too much bother to find out. They do not realize the importance of the subject. It means dollars and cents, but they do not realize it, and go on wondering wherC tlie profit goes.—CoJmsn's Rural Worl* IOWA DEMOCRATS DECLARE MONgY"" Plght Made by the Silver Men Wa% However, Very spirited—W. 1. Babb of Meant Pleasant Nominated fer Gov ernor—Beetow for Uentenant Governor. MARSHALLTOWN, la., Aug. 8.—One of the most notable state conventions in the history of the Iowa Democracy dosed in this cicy last evening. Sinoe Monday there has been a bitter strife between the two opposing elements of the party—one contending for a ticket and platform on a "sound money" ba sis, the other clamoring for free ooinage Without waiting for an international agreement. From start to finish the white metal contingent did nearly all the talking, on the street, in hotel lob bies/at various headquarters, in oom mittee rooms, caucuses and finally on the floor of. the convention: By an apparently fortuitous incident the sil ver men had a fine chance to exploit their views in1 convention hall during the afternoon, from the faot that the resolutions oommittee Got Into a Wrangle on the financial plank that kept them in the committee room till nearly 4 o'clock, the currency resolution being overhauled and reconstructed two or three times before an agreement was reaohed, and the majority making per sistent effort to avert the introduction of the minority report. During this interval the convention did nothing but listen to free silver speeohes by radioal white metal champions. The controversy grew warm and bitter, and when the minority report favoring free coinage was introduced another pro longed silver discussion was precipi tated and for awhile the proceedings were tumultuous. The final roll call on the resolutions showed the white metal men defeated by a vote of 651^£ to 420& A large number of free di ver delegates immediately left the hall, not waiting for the nominations. Babb Named for Governor. The state ticket was then nominated as follows: For governor, Judge W. I. Babb, Mount Pleasant. Lieutenant governor, S. L. Bestow, Chariton. Superintendent of public instruc tion, Lyman B. Parshall, Maquoketa. Railroad commissioner, Colonel George James, Dubuque. Supreme judge, Senator Thomas G. Harper, Des Moines. Judge Babb made a brief speech of acceptance, in which he said he only accepted because of repeated urging and his devotion to the party and its interests in the state in which he was born and raised. The financial plank of the platform is as follows: We hold to the use of both gold and sil ver as the standard money of the country and to coin both gold and silver without discrimination against either metal or charge for mintage but the dollar unit of coinage of both metals must be of equal intrinsic and exchangeable value, or be adjusted by international agreement or by such safeguards of legislation as shall in sure the maintenance of the parity of the two metals and the equal power of every dollar at all times in the payment of debts, and we demand that the paper cur rency shall be kept at par with and re deemable in such coin. We insist upon this policy as especially necessary for the' protection of farmers and laboring classes, the first and most defenseless victims of unstable money and fluctuating currency. The platform condemns the mulct law at present in force in Iowa and favors a high license law. SILVERITES WIN. Missouri Democratic Convention Declares for Free Coinage at 16 to 1. PEBTLB SPRINGS, Ma, Aug. 7—Free silver has conquered in Missouri, as it did in Illinois, and the fears expressed that there would be strife and turmoil in the convention were not borne out by facts. The so-called gold or sound money adherents were so overwhelmed by the superior generalship and nu merical strength of the free silver lead ers and forces that they made but a very faint effort to stay the onslaught of the white metal adherents. Mr. Bland said, in opening the convention, that the Democrats of Missouri had assembled to adopt resolutions for the Free Coinage of Silver, to seleot a state oommittee whioh was in sympathy wit*u the popular will, and how well the prophecy was oarried ont the result of the couvention tells. The report of the committee on permanent organization, whioh practically snows under the old committee, was adopted with but one or two dissenting votes, and the resolution for free and unlim ited coinage at 16 to 1, regardless of any foreign nation, was carried with a hurrah and expedition seldom seen in any convention. Furthermore men were selected to nominate delegates favorable to silver to the national Democratic convention in 1896. CENT A MILE. That Will Be the Bate Prom the West to the Chattanooga Dedication. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Aug. 8.— Colonel H. J. Schaller, chairman of the committee on transportation of the Chickamauga and Chattanooga Na tional Military park dedication fur nished the following in regard to the reduced railroad rates from ail points: The rates from Chioags, St. Louis, St. Paul and all points in the North west will be 1 cent a mile. The rates for all points south of the Ohio river will also be 1 cent per mile, and the rates on Eastern lines leading out of New York, Boston, Philadelphia and Baltimore will be one and one-third fare for the round trip to points where they connect with northwestern and southwestern lines. Cherokee BUI to Hang. FORT SMITH, Ark./ Aug: 18.—phero kee Bill has beeh sentenced to be hanged on Tuesday, Sept. 10. Judge Parker'8 remarks were most severe, but they prodnoed no effeot on Chero kee Bill. fMasear Bun bat l4Wle AWie -l^e. |ii4n MU ilea Hark. WASHINGTON, Aug. 18.—'Th» trtH* ury lost 91,680,000 in gold Monday for ssport to Europe, leaving the xessivs haircut $1,*0.000 above the IIW,-^ 000,000 point. The telegram which announced the withdrawal, reaohed the department just as it was closing. Mr. Curtis, the aoting secretary, said he had nothing to ay in regard to the matter. He had no specific inforxna tion and could not say whether the syndicate would allow the'$100,000»000 to be encroaohed upon or not This heavy withdrawal has given rlsfito report that another bond iwne is im pending, but there is now no one in to Washington who can speak authorita-, tively on the subjeot or who has infer* mation not shared by the public. The best publio opinion is that the «ynu cate will not allow the reserve to be ,t encroached upon until Oot. 1, when, as generally understood, their jpWige-. tion ceases. May Go Prettj Ixw. But, even in the event of still fur ther withdrawals, it is believed that both Mr. Cleveland and Mr. Carlisle would see the reserve reaoh a point be low any thing that it has touched be fore they would take any steps to reooupitby another sale of bonds or purchase of gold. It is argued that the meeting of congress is now only 14 weeks off, and without any rea sonable doubt the treasury, with .n available cash balance of nearly $184,000,000 and the revenue slightly on the inorease, can meet its ^Uptioni and have a comfortable jyiMiiw remaining at the olose of the ealendaryear. Hie best judgment ob tainable here is that there will be no bond issue or extra session of oongress, exoept in the event of continued heavy withdrawals,, whioh are not looked for. Carlisle Interviewed. DrotJTH, Aug. 18.—Secretary Car-/., lisle, when shown the dispatch from Washington, relative to the treasury. gold reserve by a representative of the Associated Press, refused to talk further than to say: "The people need have no apprehension as to the gold re serve. the treasury department will take care of that. Everything in that xegard is all right." GENERAL CAMPOS RESIGNS. (Trgee Spain to Grant Cnbn Self .Government. NKW YOBK, Aug. 18.—Special cor respondenoe of The World dated .' Havana, Cuba, Aug. 8, says: General Campos has resigned the cap tain-gen eralship of Cuba. It is generallv believed that he strongly urges the home government to grant the Mand of Cuba self-gov ernment. SPANIARDS LOSING. Cuban Adviees Vnfiavorable to the Campaign. LONDON, Aug.' 18.—The Times pub lishes a dispatch from Havana, dated Ang. 7, whioh says that General Moreno has assumed the chief oom mand of the troops in the provinoe of Santiago de Cuba. Insurgents are in creasing in the provinoe of Matansas. The force of l,860 soldiers and men of looal volunteers from Havana, whioh has been drawn for aotual service,. Causes (lie impression that the situa tion is more grave. The suppression of the news enoourages the wildest rumors adverse to Spain. The reoent Madrid appointments, giving all the posts of Cuba to Spaniards, is cpitioised as proof that Spain is determined not to allow Cubans any share in adminis-, tration. The appointment of Cabezas as director of finanoe is especially dep-' recated. THE DEAL DROPPED. •aid tho Hill-Adams Combine Will Soon Bo Officially Declared Oft MINNKAPOIJS, Aug. 18.—A Tacoma special to the Tribune says: It is stag ed here in Northern Pacifio oircles that the Hill-Adams plan to reorganize the Northerii Pacifio is positively off, and that an authoritative statement to that effect will be made in New York very soon. High officials say the present earnings are sufficient to meet the in terest on the first, second and third mortgage bonds, and that if the earn ings continue to increase at the present rate they will be sufficient within a year to pay the interest on the entire prsent bonded indebtedness. This fact, they say, has been fully explained to J. Pierpont Morgan and Mr. Adams, with the result that their views have undergone a change. It is understood that Morgan approved the first plan, whioh had to be dropped. He has since expressed a willingness to join in a similar plan if it could be devised, but haB not committed himself to the "third company" project as it stands. Adams is said to hold similar views. It is believed that within two weeks Hill's plan will be finally rejected and steps taken to form an independent re organization. The road is now earning money at the rate of |6,000,000 net per year, while between $8,000,000 and $9,000, 000 would pay the interest on the en tire bonded debt. Northern Pacifio men claim to be lieve that Hill's chief object is to get" possession of the Northern Pacific's' splendid coast terminal system. THE LAW'8 DELAYS. Attorney Third Hlldreth Hopes for Trial for Kent. FARGO, N. D., Aug. 18.—Apparently Attorney M. A. Hildreth, who de fended Kent in his recent trial for the murder of Mrs. Kent, is not going to give up the fight for another trial for his client. Mr. Hildreth is sanguine that a new trial will have to be granted. In an interview the attorney said that if the case is taken to the supreme court and the verdict of the jury in the lower court is not reversed, application will be made to the United States courts, as a legal federal ques tion is involved in the ladt trial, which would entitle the hearing of the case in that judiaiaiy. fp u*S,yt ijv -{7 & A 4' 'V, fc.i £V.C^din A' & i* "Si 'i I •s- .& sps* •'J'tixfM •V ,h si Defective