CARRIAGES FOR BABY. Ilia I.ordxliI■> of the Nurnery la Set ting a ShnrklnK Example of Itauk. Extravagance, Nothing is too goofl for his infantile highness of 1901, in proof of which it will be necessary to mention the splen dor and number of carriages alone. In the old days when babies were sup posed to make up for simple living by high thinking one stout, perambula tor upholstered in serviceable reps, painted a weather-proof color, hooded with oiled cloth and about as agile in its movements and graceful in its gait as a wheelbarrow, was handed on from generation to generation, and by no means did every baby in the block claim the proud privilege of keeping his own turnout. The rule of to-day is one baby, one carriage; sometimes there are exquis- PRKTTY MORNING EQUIPAGE. it-e double-seated equipages of satin and lace and rattan, for cheerful, worldly-minded twins. It has never yet been discovered what sort of vengeance a baby could mete out to the parents who failed on the carriage question, because those devoted servitors nearly always antic ipated the infantile scorn and disgust by procuring a brilliant, cozy, up-to date trap for park and pavement use well in advance of the first outing, and so eager are the parents to please that the baby carriage trade is increasing every year. There is a woman m New York who makes a living by upholster ing these charming conveniences, by supplying pillows for the occupant's comfort, by draping canopies and mak ing down, silk, satin, wool and fur robes for the fat, pink, lolling little lords and ladies. Every well-to-do bairn keeps at least two carriages. One for summer and one for winter use. The former is made on the American, the latter on the English pattern, and the very lat est devices for comfort and conven ience in these two types of vehicles was displayed by the assortment that greeted Miss Cornelia Stuyvesant Yanderbilt's appearance last August. Among her christening gifts were no less than ten beautiful little car riages. There were smart little wheel chairs for use when she grows a bit bigger, and a most luxurious cradle carriage, all of pure white wicker and in the form of a swan on wheels. The interior of this carriage is upholstered in white silk, the coverlid is of swan's down and in his beak the stately wick er bird holds the ends of white'satin ribbons that extend from the silk and lace draped canopy. Another very picturesque carriage for this little lady's use had a body of wicker woven into a shell and appro priately lined with pink silk, and her winter chariot from London had a shallow oval black body and black wheels picked out in bright cherry lines. On both sides of the body the owner's entwined initials are painted, and inside the furnishings are done in cherry satin. The seat and cushion can be shifted so that the small occu pant can sit erect or lie at length, and the hood of varnished leather can be so drawn up that the whole of the in terior is covered. The front half of the carriage top, when the day is fine, folds down flat and inconspicuously in front, while the rear half fixed in its place is built of varnished leather, up held by iron supports painted cherry red, and in the sides and back of the rear hood plate-glass squares are set ly. :i. Ml 7 14th Strwt. WASHINGTON, I>. «.'• Branch olUces: Chicago, Cleveland ami Uetioit. GREGORY CPPT»S Forty years o tJP&gfajp fair dealing. J.J. H.Uregorj A Bon, larblrhra.* JJ stem's rottenness. Bloated by bile the figure \\ • • /y I becomes unshapely, the breatn foul, eyes and NN sy, I skin yellow; in fact the whole body kind of j V | fills up with filth. Every time you neglect to j L J help nature you lay the foundation for just | f- -a suc h troubles. CASCARETS will carry the poisons out of the system and will regulate j you naturally and easily and without gripe or pain. Start to-night —one tablet —keep it up for a week and help the liver clean up the bowels, and you will feel right, your blood will be rich, face look clean, eyes bright. Get a 50c box of CASCARETS, take as directed. If you are not cured or satisfied you get your money back. Bile bloat is quickly and permanently ALL IBAS® SOLD IN BULK. piiDC PIIARAMTPPn SS3SS UllllL mouth. headarU Ullllllll I LLaIJ yl£r,n*"ny i pallia after eating, liver trouble. Mallow complexion almllar medicine In the -world. ThU U ab.olnto proof of |. and nilmpntM and Inner vwars of fm,r » " one,t trial, us per nlmul« direction*, and IT you are h ... * 1 " r °nic Mimenii ana ions yeira Ol not aatUflrd, uftrr lialnir onf SOc box. return the AOc ) Wllfici lug tliat COVIIC ttfttrwurdu# No mutter w hat box and the empty box to u* by mailt or the driiKfflit from J bIK you, ft tart taking €AS€ARET!H to-day* lor yoo whom you purennaed It, and tret your money back for both . Will never get Well and be well all tho time until boxei. Take our ad vice—no matter what itlla you start to- j you put your boweli right. Take our advice; start day. Health will j^i^HlMeaa th©day i with CASCARETS to-day, under an übnolutc guar- T *)*TCni lmtf nr«rnr iffi -vr vTv hiS 9^ CHICAIi'T ' unteo to cure or money refunded. Addreni bTLKI.INU BbnEDT CO., >EW lOUa or chicauu. Chrap Hfttea to California. February 12th and each Tuesday there after, until and including April .'iOtli, Special Low Kate Colonist Tickets will be soid via the Southern Pacific's Company's "Ogden" and "Sunset" Routes to all points in ( alifor nia. The rate wiil ije: From Chicago $30.00, from St. Louis, Memphis and New Orleans $27.50, from Omaha, Kansas City, etc., $25.00. Corresponding low rates from all other points east and north. For particulars and detailed information pertaining to the Southern Pacific Com pany's Routes, and these special rates to Cal ifornia, call upon or address W. G. Ncimyer, G. W. A., S. P. Co., 238 Clark St., Chicago, 111. VV. H. Connor, C. A., R. P. Co., Chamber of Commerce Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio. O. G. Herring, C. A., S. P. Co., 711 Park Bldg., Pittsburg, Pa. L. E. Townsley, C. A., S. P. Co., 421 Olive St., St. Louis, Mo. ('. C. Cary, C. A., S. P. Co., 208 Sheidley Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. Mostly Bluster—The man who is waging war on the modern prise fight is a regular Don Quixote." "You think so?" "Of course: he's only fighting windmills."—Pliil a delphia Press. An Innovation. The Louisville & Na&'hville R. R. together with its connecting lines has inaugurated the Florida Limited, which is a daily, solid trajin, wide vestibuied, siteam heated, gas lighted, with dining car service for meals en route to Thomasville, Ga., Jacksonville and St. Augustiine, Fla. The sleeper leaving Cincinnati at 11:15 a. m. is attached at Nashville, running via Birmingham and Montgomery, Plant System to Jacksonville, and Florida East Coast to St. Augustine, arriving at the latter city at 7:30 tne next evening. Mr. C. L. Stone, General Passen ger Agent, Louisville & Nashville R. R., Louisville, Ky., will answer all inquiries con :erning this train and furnish printed mas ter concerning it. He Looked It.—Fond Father "Now, when I was a boy I didn't have the advan tages you have." Smart Offspring—"And you look it, too, guv'nor." Ohio State Journal. A Lonur, l.onK Time. This expression is especially forceful when it relates to the period of a person's ill ness, and it then has a very dreary sound. When Mrs. A. A. Bailey was living at 858 Bolton Ave., Cleveland, Ohio, she wrote: "My daughter has been troubled with Granulated Sore Eyelids for four or five years. She has now begun to ut