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1 imely Hints for the Housewife 11‘< t is a crowing tendency am.mg |" a t .. ditie iselv ant! At.! *i 1-.* of salad- and less i i tit-r .- i miners not infrequent ly * t'tc.n wi'.'t a light -a!ad width ntt- a- an appetizer, while In other ( a-- ■ end a i:li cue which tom. - with th- apples and < !c <-e ■ \t ah tie bringing up In the rear. WP! . g . 1 Mayonnaise or boil <1 dres-it.u <n l.and laud at this sea-an '..t,. may be k*:;r days at i . : • I • . red f: m material.* on hand If there is no : ; ode dre- ir.g a French dress ing >f oil and vinegar takes hut a men t i't a: F r < abbage a il-< -;i.g ui. h .a- -our t ream as a f lunda'lou is appetizing. Caimage Sa ad v. th Sour Cream Dressing. I’ ’ m oh i abbage as you re tpbre In cold wa-tr for an hour to ' Drali ki lry, then .-have r chop tini . ■ . :• 1 Add to a small nip of -hitk. -our cream, •hree tabic-poonfuls of cider or arra.-on vim-gar. a tabh spoonful of paprii.a and a few grains of cayenne. Mix well, throw . ver the cabbage, .it' and mix ligh'ly ui• h a fork and serv e Cr.so Cabbage w th Lemon and Oil. This is on- f the most digestible | forms in win h cabbage can be ea ei. A; mar.-anitariums it is per mitted ■ ... i o'her .-.ilatis are taboo . t • . a;.' .me in cold water, tit i. ..r i: .p line. Urt-.-s all •he table with two table spoonfuls ; • t t he 1 ■ ' olive • il. vveii mixed , with a ta'.desp .sinful oi lemon Juice. : a saltsp otiful of salt, and half a; sul'spui nlul i l pc; per. Cab age and Celery Salad. Chill and • ri*p both cabbage and - white s alks • i celery with roots clinging to them, after paring, then shrt 1 and to-s in a bowl with the -atiie dre dm; used fur the cabbage a!< tie It pn lYrrt-d vinegar may be .- ib.-tit f« I for tin lemon Juice. Lettuce. Lrearrt uneese anu w. ve Salad. Car. fully prepare the tender leaves * f lettuce, vca-hing. drying and crisp-j im nil :■ i ; i hop ripe nr green < lives : : . nd mix a iin or N( uf .bail i hcc.-e: i hill two butter spat- j las. tin tch as an ■: . 1 f. i making l.utter balls, and ; . ly roll ii,. the chee.-i and olive mixture into li le balls, about the si.: ■ l marbles; 1 uve some finely m:iu oil parsb-y ready on a plate; r< . 1 i . i. bail in it. after which ar l-an *' on tin- bat lie*, leave-: at the la-- i oin.-i.t p ur i vcr a tablespoon ful of rial homemade mayonnaise or serve the may muilse apart in a little cream pot. Pomelo and Ripe Olive Salad. Separate tie pulp ot a ripe pomelo! ir .in the skin and lining nietnhrani ripe olive in the propor .. of x • e ne pomelo Mix to st,-her at -t rve either in the pont , n ti a pretty dish with a French < r Mayontiaisc dressing. In 11.is ia.-i the French dressing is j.rc ferabie. it you cannot find the iipi ot,. ia the American gro n-rs’ you may always he sure of tt . m in the Italian or Syrian shops. They are -old in bulk, and after you heroine a. us-nmed to them, you will cloub’iess prefer them, as the Californians do, to the green, unripe t. . Mexican Salad. one cup rf stale bread into dice at; ! ; tinkle with bits of red 1 pc p;r. Add c ip i f .-toil 'd olives rut up and one-half cup of rh pp, d cut umber pickles. Mix v. i - ■ ■ ;. unit iso or French dress ii.g and serve c n lettuc e. Serve a strong i hec-si' with this salad. "Trembly Truck" Salad, e . an ounce i f gc-latine for an l. ,r lu a cup of cold water and season liberally with salt, pepper, celery salt, paprika and a pod of. m. c eet led pepper chopped fine; I ut ter a . .. uni tin and scatter over the bottom lit- of cold bulled rice and -mall pieces f under meat, chicken or fish. Thoroughly cooked soup meat is go d tor thi.- salad. Over the rice and meat scatter chopped oiive-; now pour over this a layer of the seasoned gelatine and set on ice ;o stittin; keep the rest of the geletine where ii is warm enough to prevent its hardening. When the h.rst layer i- hard, repeat the pro e.-s.-; lien put in the ice box until ready to serve. When that time comes, cut the -alad in two-inch -ipiares. lay . n pieces of endive or lettuce and serve with mayonaiac. Cauliflower Salad. Break off the coarse outer leaves of a small head of caulifl wer, then j -oak head down in cold salted water tor half an hour; drain, throw in a kettle of boiling water and simmer gently for half ail hour; when done, break into flowerets, place in a dish j and re aside until very cold; when ready to serve arrange in a low salad b wl, sprinkle with a little chopped parsley and serve with a French dressing. Cheese Jelly sanawicnes. Beat the yolks of two eggs light, j add a saltspoonful of salt, the same of white pepper and of French mils- i tard. Mix well and stir into the mixture a cup of hot milk, to which has been added a pinch of soda. Stir over the fire, in a double boiler, for five minutes, or until it heats throughout evenly and thickens in to a custard. Have ready a table spoonful of gelatine which has soak ed for two hours in a cupful of cold water. Take the custard from the range and beat in the gelatine al ternately with a great spoonful of cream. Set in boiling water, and. when it is hct, add a cupful (scant) of grated cheese. When you have a smooth paste, turn out to cool in a deep plate. Ilo this the day before it is to be used. Slice and lay be tween bu’ ered slices of bread. Cream Cheese and Nut Sandwiches. Work the cheese to a paste with cream and butter, and mix with an equal quantity of salted pecans, chopped fine. Butter thin slices of graham bread and spread with the mixture. Egg and Anchovy Sandwiches. Beil six eggs hard and throw them into cold water. I>eave them there for two hours. Take out the yolks and rub to a powder with a silver spoon. Moisten with a dress ing made of a teaspoonful of lemon juice rubbed to an emulsion with three tablespoonfuls of salad oil, half a teaspoonful of French mus tard and a dash of salt and pepper. Make into a lumpless compound, adding, finally, two teaspooufuls of anchovy paste. Whole wheat bread is best for this filling Cream Cheese and Olive Sandwiches Hub a I’li.I tdelpbla cream cheese 1 ■ ■ with two tablespoonfuls lr« li c Add one hopped olives, and • at ail lich’ This filling Is es i ' • pread upon thin, r ,t I >11 i> ,.f 1 ti>-.•«,n brown bread. Lettuce Sandwiches. Slice wi.i i bread thin, when you have cut iff the crust nnj buttered t' " * ut itiii of the loaf. I.ay In beaten ■ t it; two slices a loaf of ri-p lettuce dipped in mayonnaise • r. s-lng. l.ettuce and Tomato Sandwiches. Prepare as In the last recipe. lettuce leaf a slice • •f raw itoe!• 1 tomato. Pressed Loaf Sandwiches. A new and appetizing pressed samlw ch may he made by remov .g the i rus's from a loaf <:f bread, t i In r brown < r white, and cutting it in four > uual-slzcd pieces. Spread 1 • tdi slice thickly with butter, rod | oppi rs sliced In lengthwise strips and | lentv of cream or N'tufchatel , het se. Now reshape the loaf by putting the slii cs t ige’her again. Wrap n a heavy dry towel, then in I a wet one and put between two | boards, on which three or T ur heavv : flntirono urc pmced. Let the loaf j remain weigh'd from six to ten hours; this will compress It Into a which may be sliced like cake. To | -olid mass three or f ur inches high, i pars, wrap whole in waxed paper) mi ' tit a- the picnic. SHY OP SCHENK I _ CHICAGO WOMAN CONFESSES AND IS HELD ON MURDER CHARGE. CHICAGO. March 2u. — Mrs. Charles Schenk, who confessed she shot her husband Saturday morning after a night of revelry, today was held to the grand jury on a charge f murder by the coront r's jury. She will remain under the surveillance >f tin police tin ii after the funeral i if Si henk tomorrow, after which! -tic will tie committed to the county | jail. The discovery of a second buliet j f and in a register on the second ft.,nr pie nn cntitrli ueu phase to '■ the sli o'ing. anording to the police 1 ami gave them the theory that Mrs. Schenk .-ho her husband deliberate-I ly. From 'he locati n of the bullet and tee position in which her husband's I body was found, they n w believe i Mrs. Schenk quarreled with her hus band and sli • at him while lie was standing in the doorway of her ; • droom and after lie had tied down stairs f Mowed him to the top of he stairs and learn d over the rail ■ind Href! the shot that ended his Mfe. in giving her testimony Mrs. Schenk related the incidents of the party, which she said hud bet n in celebration cf the fourteenth wed ding anniversary of "Chick" Frazer, a former National League ball play er. She said she had been put to bed by other women of the party, but was awakened soon after by Schenk calling her from down stairs. She got a revolver, she said, fear ipg bit!glut's, and hurried to tlie top jf the stairs. Then she said she j could .-re her husband stcoplng on the stairs. She admitted the revol- | ver was discharged, but she said ; lie did n t know of firing the shot and had no knmvh dge of the events immediately after. Under cross-examination Mrs. Schenk said she did not know how manv shots were fired and that she " may have pulled the trigger1 more than once before dn piling the1 weapon. Tlie uncertainty of her story, to gether with the testimony of Paul Cebek, Schenk’s hostler, who de clared lie le ard two shots ilred about a minute apart, shortly after t) o'clock in the morning, are said to have been the cause of the jury voting to hold Mrs. Schenk to the grand jury. -Chick" Frazer testified that with his wife lie had formed one cf six couples that begun a night or gayety at a church euchre party. "After the church party," lie said, "at which we had lunch, but no drinks, we went to Park Ridge to a hotel. Some members of the party and myself have been living there. It was my wedding anniversary, so I got a quart of whisky to celebrate. Then we got a quart of champagne and a quart of sour wine for the ladies. Drinks were served to all. but I did not see Mrs. Schenk drink anything. "Then we went to a music hall in Park Ridge and at about 2:30 went over to Schenk's home. There we had more beer, whisky and wine and finally moved the furniture out f the dining rcom and danced. During the dunce Mrs. Schenk got dizzy and later I learned she had been put to bed. Every one was happy.” _ nAnrrnu Plim 1 I1TI I I TA Him DUO 1 UN UNU/UitLLfl IU HLU Mrs. Ethel Voorhees Engaged to Tennis Champion. BOSTON’, March 17. — Mrs. Ethel Voorhees, divorced wife of Dr. Charles Voorhees, of Lexington, is to marry ‘Teddy” Dewhurst, Penn sylvania tennis champion, next Wed nesday evening. The wedding will be quiet and will take place at the home of the bride's sister, Mrs. Wil liam S. Cox, in Melrose Highlands, one of Boston's exclusive suburbs. Dr. Theod re Dewhurst, or “Ted dv" Dewhurst, as he is better known. Is a well known Philadelphia dentist. He is 40 years old. He has won the state tennis champion ship several times and has GS tro phies that he has won in different tournaments all over the country. Mrs. Voorhees is 2G years old. She comes front an old Maryland family. Previous to her marriage to Dr. Voorhees she lived with her mother and sister in West Philadel phia. Her sensational elopement from there with Dr. Voorhees sev eral years ago brought both prom inently in the public eye. Within two years after the mar riage Mrs. Voorhees left her hus band. He was the manager of the Haggin Stock Farm in Lexington. The couple remained apart for sonn time, and then Mrs. Voorhees in stltuted suit for divorce. This wa rranted During the time she wa: separated from her husband sh< lived off and on with her sister, Mrs Cox, in Brooklyn, Mass During het stay there she entered and wot second prize in a contest for the smallest and prettiest f ot contest by a Boston newspaper. The prize was a silver slipper, which Mrs Voorhees now has. After the wed ding the couple will leave for an ex tended honeymoon trip through the south. They will first go to Charles town THAT APPLE. How many apples did Adam and Eve eat ? Some say Eve 8 and Adam 2—A total of 10 only. Now we figure the thing out dif ferently: Eve 8 and Adam 8 also— Total 16. The Boston Journal thinks both the above solutions entirely wrong and argues that if Eve 8 and Adam 82. the total will be 90. Scientific men, on the strength of the theory that antediluviana were a race of giants, reason something like this: Eve 81 and Adam 82—To tal 163. Again, the Gloucester Advertiser avers that nothing could be clearer than, if Eve 81 and Adam 812, the total must be 893. But, the Lawrence American says: if Eve Sllst and Adam 812, the correct figures are 1623. The Boston Journal believes the following to be the true solution: Eve S14 Adam; Adam 8124 Eve— Total S.938. Veritas calculates that if Eve SI) Adam, Adam 81242 oblige Eve.—To tal 82,656. This would lead us to believe, al though we admit that Eve 814 Adam, that Adam, if he 8081242 keep Eve company—Total 1,082,056. But we are informed by the Neo York Mai! that all our calculations are wrong, for it is evident that Eve. when she 81812 many (and probably felt sorry for it); but her companion, in order to relieve her grief 812. Therefore, Adam, if he SlS14240fy Eve's d> pressed spirits. Hence both ate S1.896.S64. Q. E. D. OPTIMISM. Ket all the good there ia today; Don't fret about tomorrow; There's trouble 'rouud us all the time, What need ia there to borrow? The wise man gets what joy he can, Aiitl leaven the to hla follr, He kn ws too much to waste his life In gloot and melancholy. Look on the bright side ever} time. Don't waste your days repining. When any cloud looks dark and dull. Turn out the silver lining. He wise! Be cheerful, bright and glad, Leave the fcol to hi3 folly, And let your motto be: "Cheer up!" Your rule of life: "Be jolly!" JILTED AUNT AND TOOyiECE ELOPING COUPLE ARRESTED AT DEPOT ON TELEGRAM FROM FATHER. NEW YORK, March 4. — Stopped by a telegram, Miss Eva Dennison rnd Emil Hottinger, who eloped from Rexville, N. Y., were arrested at the Erie railway station in Jersey City. The girl returned to her home with her father, George Dennison, the postmaster of Rexville. Miss Dennison is 19 years old. Hot [inger Is 27 and lives at 4G West Sixty fifth street. According to the story they told ihelr meeting and attempted elope ment were the result of a romance. There appeared in the newspapers of New York a little mere than a year ago, they said, an advertisement for a wife. The man who advertised was Hottinger, who states he Is a cashier at Martin's Broadway and Twenty seventh street, but at that place they know nothing of him. According to Miss Dennison this advertisement was anowered by her aunt. Miss Sarah Nixcn, of Rexville, who Is 35 years old and the sister-in law of Postmaster Dennison. A cor respondence began which lasted un til three months ago. About the 1st of December Hot tinger, by arrangement, went to Rexville to visit Miss Nixon. When he made his first call Miss Nixon’s 19-year-old niece. Miss Eva Dennison was in the room. Miss Dennison It attractive and vivacious and Hottin ger’s call had not lasted many min utes before he came to the conclu sion that he would rather have Miss Dennison than her maiden aunt He remained In Rexville for a week and before that time was up Miss Dennison had become impressed with Hottinger. When Hottinger returned to New York the correspondence with Miss Nixon was discontinued and a correspondence with Miss Den nison began. Hottinger decided to make an other trip to Rexville. He went tc Postmaster DenniBon and told hire he wanted to marry Miss Dennlsor instead of Miss Nixon. Dennison sale "No." Hottinger came back to New York but the correspondence was contin ued. East week Hettinger agalr went to Rexville, but he did not cal at the Dennison home. Instead h< met Miss Dennison downtown ant they planned an elopement. Ther Hottinger returned to New York ant later went back to Rexville. Miss Dennison dressed and tolt her mother she was going cut for i walk. She met Hottinger as per ar rangement. They hoarded a trail of the Erie for New York. A friend of the Dennison family who knew something of the statui of affairs, saw Hottinger and the glr get on the train and lost no time ii notifying the Dennisons. Detective Currie of Jersey wen to the Erie railroad station then when the train arriv'd, and had ni trouble, from the description fut nished him, in picking out the pair Got Over It. When Dustin Stax went into Wal Street he didn’t have a dollar h' could call his own. Yes. but in those days he wa more particular about whose dolla he called bis own. Bit REVENUE *DST EACH YEf;. I VALDEZ GRAND JURN POINTS OUT IM PORTJgT ITEM. I - I VALDEZ. March 2<L — That the j I territory I- losing a large revenue annually l v the prc'-nt Inadequate system whereby the s.ilr / leunner I les receive rebate <>f fees I and taxis for mnin'alnh^Hwtt her j ies. Is 'lie chief i>o!nt nui^K by the grand Jurv In i's final ixport to .ludgc Cushman this afternoon. It recommends that Delegate Wlck ersham urge upon congress legisla tion which will place tbe salmon canning industry on an 'qual foot ing with other businesses in Alaska a8 regards license fees ari taxatl n j nml at the same time prtvlde prop j er government supervlsiin of the propagation of the salmol species. The grand jury cans atention to the fact 'hat owing to tie lack of supervision the canneries practically name for themselves what sum they shall pay as license fees and taxes. For 1910 the superintendent of the Karluk hatchery on Kodiak Island, the only private hatchery I in this division made affidavit of the liberation of 37,103,000 salmon fry-, thereby taking exemption fer 371.030 eases of salmon amounting to over $11,000. The total tax due fr m 'he Alas ka Packers association far 1910 amounted to $29..">7.60. $11,331 of which was rehated on account of the Karluk hatchery and <10,000 on account of certificates transferred from other judicial districts- a total of $24,440. No <c*-tification of inspection has been filed with the clerk of the court since 19PG. says the report, and the law does not provide fer any check on fry liberated, the sim ple affidavit of t lie superintendent being all that is ret,tired. The grand jury recommends that : the law should require an annual | cash tax and license fee and should provide for the maintenance of sal mon hat cileries at the expense of the government and under the super vision of government experts. BOOTLEGGER’S NOVEL PLAN _ i Sells Booze by Tube Route to Jail Prisoners. j SOMERSET. Ky.. March 20. — For j some time Jailer N'eal Silers has Peer* finding his prisoners i'i a state! lot hilarious Intoxication, but with j all the close watching and grilling J of the prisoners n > light could be ; had on just how they secured the' liquor, which at times made them so unruly that rough-and-tumble fights j ensued among them. Af er several weeks of unsuccess-1 ful attempts to ascertain the source [ of this annoying occurrence. Jailor Silers placed one cf his "trusties" In ; i the corridor where all prisoners are allowed 10 exercise during the day, and not long after lie war .n there he saw some of the prisoners stand ing at the barred windows and dcors j which open into the street, talking j with a man. After seeing him there two or. three times the "trusty" made a more careful scrutiny and found that the | man had a bottle of whisky conceal- - ed under his coat with a long rubber J tube protruding from the bottle and extending through the bars of the window, where the prisoners who had the price and were on good terms with the stranger could take a pull at the tube. The "trusty” also having the price, was soon admitted into good fellow ship and took his turn at the tube. The terms of pulling at the cov eted rubber was 5 cents for a sh rt swallow and 10 cents for a lung draught. The size cf the swallows were regulated by the man with the bottle, who would cut off the flow by squeezing the tube near the bot tle. After the discovery one of the prisoners produced the tube and turned it over to the jailer, and the arrest of Elisha Burton followed. He will be tried before Commis sioner Wesley on a charge of sell ing whisky without a government license. PUSHING WORKON BIG DITCH February the Greatest Month for Excavation. WASHINGTON, Ma-ch IT. — The excavation in the central division of the Panama canal, including the great Culebra cut and the Chagres section during February, was the j greatest on record, being 1.409,338 cubic yards. Altogether in that di vision 71,033,522 yeards have been excavated, leaving 26,091,496 yards to be removed. Taking the canal as a whole, up to March 1, there had been taken out 131,829,436 yards, leaving to be excavated 50,707,330 yards. The canal at the Pacific et:'ranee is completed from deep water to a point opposite the Panama railroad wharf at Balboa, a distance of about five miles. Inland from this point the open water channel extends three miles, varying from 30 to 45 feet in depth, and certain sections have been excavated to its width of 500 feet. In the Atlantic entrance to the canal the channel is completed to its full width of 500 feet. The Gatun dam, the greatest in the world, is abcut 60 per cent, com i pleted. The concrete work on the locks at Pedro Miguel is over 67 per cent, completed and abcut 11 per cent of the concrete is in place at the Miraflores locks. Bids for the six emergency dams . to safeguard all of the permanent ■ locks on the canal will be opened i in Washington March 30. : LIVE ’GATORS FOR SCHOLARS: i — i St. Louis Boys Win Trophiss for Their Zeal. : ST. LOUIS, March 19. — Ssnday , school begins at 9:30 o'clock n the Big Pilgrim Congregational church, but the Sunday-school room began ' to fill considerably before that time this morning and presented a scene I that is probablv unoarali-hud *u the > annals of Sunday-school work. In the front of the room at the i side of the superintendent’s rebtrum • was a tank. In the water were about 30 small alligators. \V. H. Ltanforh Is superintendent nf the schi cl and he recently »tni to Florida. Before lie departed he said vvhrti he came back he would bring a live nlllga' r to every boy who would bring a new and perma nent pupil to the school. Ho ha 1 not figured very closely on the effect of his whimsical promise. The test came today and the at tendance surpassed all records made by the school Four hundre 1 and forty Interested faces greeted the teachers when the signal sounded fear c rder. and 2j of them were new boys brought to the school in re sponse to the offer of an alligator for every pupil. It Is believed in he future the possession of an alli gator by a boy will be a I adge i l honor and s'anding, like the red ribbon of the I.cgion of Hon r or the side whiskers and plug ha' cf the banker. NO YOUNG WIVES FOR OLD PREACHERS OCEAN CITY. N. J., March 17.— , To discourage young women from marrying aged ministers with a view of receiving the bench's paid t he widows of preachers, the New lersey confercm e of the Methodist Episcopal church hns passed a n u luticn providing that only in cases where the widow is not more than live years the junlcr of a deceased minister shall the full amount of pension he paid. For every addition al five years’ disparity the amount is to be decreased in proportion. WIRELESS HELPS DETECTIVES GERMAN BOY PLACED IN IRONS ON A STEAMER IN MID OCEAN. NEW YORK. March 16. — The liuifi mm or uit* wireless enueu a man hunt here today with the arrest of Julian Sucholewski, a fugitive German boy of V.' years, charge 1 with murder. He reached Hoboken in irons on board the steamer Zie on from Bremen 12 h urs behind the liner St. Louis, which had brought into port his pursuer, Otto Busdorf, a Berlin detective, who won a trails Atlantic chase against a four-day handicap. Sucholewski is in the Tombs tonight on a charge of mur der preferred by the German consul. Ho denies all kn wledge of the crime. The chase started in Myslowitz Silesia, a small town on the R;:- -bin border. On December 21 last it is (barged, Sucholewski and two com panions slew Frank Axicl. cashier of the town bank, after lie had been decoyed into opening the safe wiMi a request to change a bill of large denominati u. The assassins fled with $1,900 across a tiny stream to Russian territory. Six weeks later Sucholewski Is alleged to have r turned to his former lodgings in Myslowitz. and the police were nn ified. Here a policeman and the alleged assassin fought a rnnnlo pistol duel, and the policeman toil pierced by bullets as Sucholewski • s eaped. Busdorf, the Berlin man hunter, took the trail and followed his quarry over a route that turn ed and twisted throughout Europe to Bremen. There he found that his : man was four days out on the At lantic. Busdorf hastened to South ampton and caught the fast St. Louis just as the liner was leaving port. Busdorf not only beat the ob ject of ids chase into port, but re ported that, through the aid of the wireless, he had already secured th. arrest on the Zieten of a young Russian named Zoglowskl who is charged with the murder cf four persons in Mislowitz, Russia. Bus dorf declared his belief that an al ii god “pal” of Zogolowski, Bernard ' by name, accused of complicity in the crimes, was also on board, and that he would be able to identify and apprehend him on the arrival of the Zieten. The Zieten left Bremen four days before the St. Louis sailed from Southampton. I HAD A LITTLE PAIN, I had a little pain right in the mid-; die of my back, And felt that all my aching bone - j were Just about to crack, And when I told the folks at home 1 about my miser* e. Here are the several sort of things ■ my people did to me: Mother got the arnica. Father got the oil, Mamie put the kettle on To let the water boil. Kittie got the mustard, Tommy rubbed my spine. Cousin Howard 'an and bought A can of turpentine! Wife, she got excited, And t'xed a toddy hot; Then the doctor came along And hammered on the spot! Neighbors rang the doorbell And volunteered to help, And even Fido, willing pup. Assisted with a yelp! And when the things were ready they all gathered at my bed. With waterbags to heat my feet anil icepacks for my head; And while I groaned in anguish at the pt.ln that I endured, Here are the several sorts of ways r y people got me cured: Mother rubbed me with nrnica. , Father rubbed with oil, Mamie get the footbath out I And put my feet to boll! Kittle mixed the mustard And plastered up my spine. And Howard made a slzzler with His can of turpentine! Wife, she got me piffled With frequent toddies hot— And the doctor nearly killed me * In his hammering on the spot! Neighbors came and told me Of all their friends that croak ed With little pains Just like my own Until I nearly choked! At last the little pain that started all this ripping row Just disappeared and in the end I : got to sleep somehow; It was an ugly little pain—I hardly could endure It— But heaven knows how I survived the things they did to cure It! 1 —Baltimore Sun. Flor de Lovera, King of Havana i Cigars—Sold Everywhere. • l His New Password. mi 11-<» ird,' - iid th man who had for two I oat - rented a safety dep -it box "Very well." said the man In charge. What Is the old one?" "Gladys." And ivh’t do you wish the new tie to b' ?" Mat cl. Gladys has gone to Re no.- Judge. Mr. Advertiser, you are reading this ittm Now, if you are Interest ed in finding out whether or not the C.'iztn Is a good advertising medium Just a-k your friends tomorrow if ti e' did nit also read it LEGAL NOTICES. NOTICE OF FORFEITURE. In H. F Leaf his heirs, personal and as igns; and ail per- ns claiming by, through or under him. V t it. hereby n'Gfled that dur ing the var 11* 1 •. we expended one hundred dollars in labor and im ents upon Pi act r Mining Claim known as (Ranch association claim. No ; < below discovery, right limit. Gold tream creek, in the Fair 1 inks r niing prnlnct, Territorj ■f Alaska; and the ar. ount was so ex ; ende I and sin h 'alu.r and lmpn ve merits made for the purpose of holding said claim under the provisions of .-ectlen 2324. Resist d Statutes of the Fnitetl Sta'es. and constituted the annual as-c-snient work upon said claim for ihe year 1010. An I if wi'liin ninety dais after Ihe Iasi publii alien of this notice, you fail r ref i;e to pa> the undi rsigned, us 'owner, sour proportion of the ex penditures legally required to hold -aid primises as aforesaid, together with the costs of this advertisement, loir In; re-' in said claim will be oaie ihe ;.r, perty of ihe under ign i under said sec i n 2321, Revised Statutes of the 1'nited States. PETER VACHON, J. S. STERLING. M13-20-27 A3-10-17-24 Ml-8-15-22-29 J-5 NOTICE OF FORFEITURE. in Annie Gibraltar, K. A, Henderson. Foil i and Leant Scamiui and Fred I Inc rler. 'imi art hereby notified that dur ug ilie years 1'JnU and liilu 1 have ex ■ in1!"i lour hundred dollars in la 1 t and impri cent nts upon first tier i In it placer elaini No. 7 below left imit Kster creek, and in the Pay ii .ik Fratiion placer mining claim i tween 7 below i r. ek elaim and i below first tier bent h claim, left imit Kster creel., in the Fairbanks terording Precinct, Alaska, in order i hold s iid pr* mises under the pro : ion.- of section liML’l Revised Stat I't i of the tTided Slates, said labor iti*l imi ri\ements constituting the mitital as: i -men! wc rk for Hie • it's lt' a and liilu, and if within d t>s after tli ■ last publication •f this lienee you. Annie Gibraltar. A. Henderson, Toni and Leona Tlimitt: and Fred lloeler fail oi efu-e to pay the undersigned as to iwm-r > our pl op rtiutt of the ex ■inditure legally required to hold ml premises as aforesaid for the ears lab and 1910, your proportion expenses for the years 1909 aid lain together with the cost of hi- advertisement, yi ur interest in aid oi tut w ill t ct iiitio tiie prope rty if tin under-inned under said See i it L’b.Jl, R.-.ised Statutes of the Tilted States. AT.OIS SAGAN. Date of first publication January i, Pall, IM of last publication April 17, bib JOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR UNITED STATES PATENT Survey No. SC".—Serial No. 0224. February 2>, 1911. 'ailed Stile.-. Land Office, Fairbanks. Alaska. Notice is hereby given that, in nirsua: e to Act of Congress, ap • rove.i Me 1". 1872. John L. Me lina. August Peterson. David Pe'ne. ml '1 li ni.is l.loyd. whose postc ffici eldl'e- s is Fairbanks. Alaska, and i ,V. R. T.iyb r and Jos. Quigley. > ■ bos post office address is Glacier. | Can'ishna preein t. Alaska, have; mule application for a patent for hree thousand lim ar feet on the Silva r King lode or vein bearing told and silver with surface ground lx hundred feet in width, which aid claim is situated cn the right imit of Eureka creek, in (he Knn ishna Mining District. District of \1 >“kn. and consists of two ad oining and contigu us lode loca Ions, tn-wit: the Silver King lode ■iaim, Iieing fifieoi hundred feet In northeasterly direction from the Hsrover.v shaft thereon with sur iu e gr uml thr. e hundred feet on •" li side Ihi reof, ar.d the Merry iViib w lodi i lain), being fifteen bun in-.I fee in a southwesterly direMion Torn the Discovery shaft thereon i'li surface ground three hundred eet cn each side thereof; said lo -a'itiM iieing described by the ofil ial plat and by t. field notes In the (lice of the Register of the Fair mnks Land District, District of Alaska, as fellows, viz. Silver King Lode. Beginning at corner No. 1. whence IT, S. M. M No. 360 bears south 36° 14' west, 5S2 feet; thence south 73° O' west, variation 28° east, 1.500 eet to corner No. 2; thence north .6° 50' west. 600 feet to corner No. thence north 73° 10' east, 1,500 ' et to corner No. 4; thence south 16° 50' east, 600 feet to corner No. . the place of beginning, containing 10.661 acres. Merry Widow Lode. Beginning at corner No. 1, identi cal with corner No. 2 of the Silver ■Cing lodo. whence U. S. M. M. ICO bears south 88° 22' east, 1.0S6.7 eet; thence south 73° 10' west, var an- n 28° east, 1.500 feet to corner Vo. 2; thence north 16° 50' west, iOO feet to corn-r No 3; thence lorth ”3° 10' east, 1,500 feet to •orner No. 4; thence south 16° 50’ *ast, 6n0 feet to corner No. 1, the dace of beginning, containing 20.661 icras. Total area of the two claims, 11.322 acres. There are no adjoining and con licting claims. Any and all persons claiming ad ze* ; ely said mining ground or prem ses, or any portion thereof, so de icrlbed. surveyed, platted and ap died for, are notified that unless heir adverse claims are duly filed iccording to law witl.in the time lrescribed by law, with the reeis er of the Ended States Land Oflice it Fairbanks, Alaska, they will be tarred by virtue of the provisions if said statute. C. C. PAGE, Register. I hereby direct that the forego ng notice be published once a week or nine consecut've weeks in The Ala ..a Cl Ucn, a w ckly newipapar of established i harm "or and gen eral cirri, itimt. p.Mishc-d at Fair tanks, ..laska, by me designated a* hi newspaper published nearest the i land. C. C. PACK Ri gister of the 1,’nited States l-aml Office. M r,13 2 27 A : 1 17 21 M-l-8 ■' NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR UNITED STATES PATENT. Survey No. 361. Si rial No 0225. February 20, loll. Fnitcd Staler. I.an I Offke, Fain anks, A'eska. Notice Is hereby given, that. In pars tame t > the a< ' of congrtss approve I May 1 . 1^72, .1 hn 1. Mc ji.inn, Augm; IY'er mi. David Fetree land Thomas Lloyd whose posicScw a.i.lr Ss is Fair' tni.r. \.a. ka, W. R. 1' v lor and Jo-.p Quigley, whose , postollke :• (dress is l.iacier, Alaska, I have made apple ation tor a patent for t.'. io linear leet o" tlie Wate"loo, Chloride and Ju. iter Mars lodes, nearing gold and , ilver, with rurface g-ound r .d feet in width; said ilaim being tbt limit of tanka iru'k, in tie- K'.'ilishna Mln ,ng District, District of Alaska; said i lim coiists in, o’ three adjoining ind contiguou I le local Ions, i he Waterloo ' .do boii.w 1,1 lo fe. t south westerly. an l f. et n .rtheasierly from the Dise >virv shaft thereon, with surfact : ind 3u0 feet in vidth 'ii each sine lit reof; tho hlorhle lode I*, ing l,.V|fl feet north* ■ t rly f11.in the lit'.ovary shaft [ hereon a r h siiriaee ground 3U0 fe t in vvii-h on ia. h side thereof, ind the J up: > r Mars lode being ll''1 feet sou i, wi rly and t't feet j i. rthoas'erly fmi the Discovery i 'hr.ft therein with st.rfi.ee ground ■ d'O feet in width on each side 'here f. at 1 d sent . I fix tin official plat and by 11,• ■ field m-'i s in the oflie- of th..' Ii' r oi ihe Fair banks l.aml I); ri. t, District of Alaska, as follows, v i/. Hoginoitig a’ C : t • r '.' 1. whence Cor. No. t Silver King lode. Survey N 1 3CI beat S 33 la' Hast. 807 3 feet, l S. I.. M. No. 360 bears S. ;i -amt 17IL 1 ftet; thence N. :;2 00’ \v. variation 2s East, 600 ieet to t'or. No. 2; thence North '■'> 1 ust, K."0 tcct to Cor. No. 'three) thence south 32° 00' l.a.-t HO Vet to ■ >r. No. 4; thence s 66° I"’ W .. feet to Cor. No. 1 the place of beginning. Chloride Lode. Iler.itinin.; at ( or. N 1 Identical with Cor No. I J piter M trs Lode; v. In m e I S. I. M. No. 36') bears ■-v 25 36’ w. 2 • i ft.; thence N. :;2 Od' \V. Var. Js H (pH) ft. to •’ r. No. 2; thence N 68 04' E. 1IS2.S ft. lo Cor. No 3; thence S. 2 17 i'.oo t' et to Cor. No. 4; hence S i'o m’ \V. 1 ls2.S ft. to Cor No. I, tho pla of 1 eglnntng. Watrrlco Lode. IJeginning at Cor. No. 1 identical with C r No. I Chloride Lode, whence U. S. L. M. No. 360 bears S. I" 7i'.' \V. ;;7" '.7 ft ; tlience N. 72 i ' \V V m 2s !•: 6 ii) ft. to C r No. 2; Mn .• N. S3° 39’ E. I • "t ft. to 171 \. theme S. 7-2 (")' 1. ‘ 1 | t,> (’. ip No. 4; th< nee s. s : \v. 17,no ft. to for. No. 1 |7a- o of beginning. There are : > adj icing and con nu 11.... i ... ., - Any and all pm oils claiming ad ve.stdy .aid mining ground or prem ises. or any portion there f, so de scribed. purvey i d. p'a'tcd anil ap plied for. art notified that unless their adverse claims are duly tiled according to law within the time prescribed by law. w'th the Regis ter of the 1’nited So is Land Office at Fairbanks, Alaska, they ..ill he barred Ip virtue of the provisions of said statute. C. C. PAGE. Register. I hereby dire t that the foregoing not! e be published once a week for nine n-< < utive weeks In The Maskn Citizen, a weekly newspaper of c taldishel character and gen ral circulation, published at Fairbanks, Alaska by me do.-igna'cd as the newspaper pubic hed nearest the land. C. C. PAGE, Register of the Fnited S’al - « I .anti Office. M •’ 13-2 • 27 V! 117 24 M l 8 NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR UNITED STATES PATENT. Surv( y No. 302 Serial No. 0225. February 2n, 1911. United States I.and Office. Fairbanks, Alaska. Notice is hereby given that. In pursuance to the Lot of Congress, approved May 11872. John !.. McGinn. August Peterson. David Petree and '1 h mas l.loyd, whose [> stollice address is Fairbanks, Alas ka, \V. R. Tayb r and Joseph Quig ley. whose postoifice address is Glacier. Alaska, have made applica tion for a paten' f >r 1.500 linear feet on the Chlorine lode, bearing gold and silver, the same being 1.110 feet in a southwesterly direction from Discovery, and 390 feet from Dis covcry shaft in a northeasterly dir ection. with surface ground 300 feet in width on ach side thereof; said claim being situated in the Kantishna Mining District. District of Alaska, at the head of left fork of 22 Pup, and desorited by the of ficial plat and by the field notes in the office of the Register of tho Fairbanks Land District, District of Alaska, n. follows, • Reginning at Cor. No. 1. whence U S. M M 350 b ‘ars S. 53° 35' W., 5677 ft. Cor. No. 4 Waterloo Lode, Survey No. 36! bears S. 59° 56' W. 690.4 ft.; thence N. 16° 59' W. Var. 28° E. 600 ft. to corner No. 2; thence N. 72° 44' E. 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 3; thence S. 16° 59' E. 600 ft. to Cor. -Vo. 4; thence S. 72° 44' W. 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 1, the place of beginning. There arc no adjoining and con flicting claims. Any and all persons claiming ad versely said mining ground or prem ises. or any portion thereof so de scribed, surveyed, platied and ap plied for. are notified that unless their adverse claims are duly filed according to law within the time prescribed by law, with the Register of the United States Land Office at Fairbanks, Alaska, they will be barred by virtue of the provisions of said statu'e. • C. C. PAGE, Register. I hereby direct that the forego ing notice be published once a week for nine consecutive week3 in The Alaska Citiztn. a weekly newspaper of established character and gen eral ci-culation, publisaed at Fair banks, Alaska, by me designated as *he newspaper published nearest the land. C. C. PAGE Register of the United States Land Office. M-6-13-20-27 A-3 10-17-24 M-l-8.