nraOTDK w h if' t. r L WAKEMFS TBAYEI& A Town Amon? the Beautiful Islands of the Mediterranean. HINTS TO R1CII IWMEDDILDERS. The Sunlit, Zeplijrns, SleepjOId and City of Palma. Hartor FELUCCAS AND TIIEIE ODD FKFIGHTS fCORKESPOKDEXCE OP THK DISrtTCn.1 ' 1'auia, Majohica, Jan. 31.--In these days of strong and s ift steamers plying be tween England and all Iediterranean ports, it is but a voyage of two nights and a day iroin Gibraltar to the city of Palma, the capital ot the Spanish dependency and Proince of Balearica, comprising the Bele aric Islands: or, if you are wintering in Southwestern Spain, you may journey in a night from Valencia or Barcelona to this least visited and most beautiful of all Slediternmean regions. Your steamer is seldom out of sight of some huge or tiny Mediterranean craft and there is always couciouMicss of pleasant aearncss of other human interests and a quiet and restful s.eae of companionship upon this great land-Iocl.ed sea although it is longer than the Atlantic is broad be tween Newfoundland and Ireland I have never Lnovu or felt ou other Maters. Howevr tre.K-hcrous the Mediterranean lias been to others. I hae necr seen its face sale in its blandest, swcetct mood; wJien its skies were lair, the sunshine above it mild and loving, its airs zephyrus and dreamful, and its f ice as blue and smiling sb a rift, oi June-day heaven. Like a IVrfumcd Cloud. Then, too, before the tropic night settles softly upon tiic sea and land like a per luased, translucent cloud of daikeufng pearl, there is sprcid before you such a reach of grand and glorious coastline the real "Afric's coral strand" ot transcendent beauty, and not the dread coast of the old missionary h mo as renders true picturing impossible, the whole changeful panorama of headland, beach, forest, glittering village and noble bav, backed along the ragged liorirou by the eternal peaks of the Atlas heights which even under tropic suns soar aboe the cloud to the region of silences, ghostly and pl.antomlul with their crowns ot snow and ice. The i err air upon this sea is odorous as with tin me and balm. The fancy, quick ened by tradition and Oriental mysticisms, builds Mondrous creations surpassing the rildest and most labulous tales of the "Arabian ICight.' Snug in a steamer chair, one retimes and dreams. Subtle es sences as Iroin lotus flowers mingled with subtler rose attars touch the sense and blind in sleep. The deck stewards must be simi larly enthralled, lor you are never rudely disturbed as on the Atlantic liner; and through all the caressfiil night, while the stars prow and glow above, and the silent Jmosphoresceni ea pulses and throbs in , rale flames beneath, you near this radiant iiaveu ot this radiant, storied sea. A. Conjjlomerato Architecture. Here, just as the sun is rising, between the tea:, bed of crimson and the awakening fit v are swaying on the gentle tide hun dreds of strange and curious craft, a wild conglomerate of the marine architecture of tfee Mediterranean, their yellow spars but a aaoment since like giaut reeds above the blaming of .1 shadow v marsh, now pinked iron) up to socket with the clorious sunlight wrhich hints in its play upon their gaudy ensigns oi the far lands where their home havens lie, iihilcfar out on the water's lrarizon, rounding Cane Figuera behind, eoeies on the morning fleet of fisher boat, their sails of every striking hue, and the eonc ol the fishers stealing across the dis tance in taint but melodious rj thru. Here and there are Turkish a essels w ith tremendous single sails square built fore aad aft like a settler's log cabin. Scores of the clumsv feluccas from Crete and the Ionian Islands, the Chebecs of the Arabs, and the identical great boats of the olden pirates, lie low in the waier round-about, their half-naked Greek and Arab sailors, lithe ot limb and nut-brown of face, vividly recalling those glorious days of Barosa, iwoty and blood But quainter than all are the rare old tubs from Chioggia and Venice, snth the same high prows and sterns they ld in the days of Doges. They come with the glass of Murano, and carry back the corn, oil and -nine of the Soller and Valde l6a, aud on the bow of each craft is jiainted an cfiigy of the Virgin, an endless supplication lo'the waves against every feriu of e ll and peril at sea. The Colorful Harbor Scenn. And there, facing the slrinins sea and colorful harbor seine, rises lrom the shore were gracefully than Naples, as fair as Algiers, as tropical in tvpe and seeming as llaiana, the ampitheater like city of Palma; once the brightest pearl ot tne seagirt isles; still, itateh , silent, beautiful, with tone ad tint ot the Orient in its pinnacles and minarets, its dome-shaped belfries and its weird and shadowy palms. Loingly con templating the exquisite picture, its ro lAantic historj old and new flutters from the hiding places of memory and troop clear . ami distinct into your musings; even as the Morning do es ot Palma sweep from the thousand shadowy homing niches of its snassire cathedra!, and, alighting on buttress peak, battlement and spire, iorm proces sional silhouettes of burnished puce and blue against the eastern sky. Out of the mythic days come brave old tales of the folk that flourished here. The inhubitants, a heroic race, fought naked with slmo. and from the dexterity of the warriors the islands became known as Ualeanca, country of the strong-armed dingers. The old"legends have it that their Marvelous proficiency with this weapon ivas attained through the mothers refusing their children food until "they could sling it down" from beams or branches on which it was hung. This very city of Palma is built upon the ruins of the old Roman town founded by Quintus Cecilius Metellus, who conquered the islands with galleys "plated with ox hides and skins as a protection neains: the iatal strokes of the Balearic tlingcrs." A Commonwealth or Power. .Tluled in turn by VaadHls aud Goths, the islands eventually fell into the hands oi the Moors, shortly after Southern Spain became prey to the hordes of Gebr-al-Tarek. Curiously the people of the island reached tfeeir highest prosperity under their African mlers who taught them all the arts and cruelties ot piracj, until the Balearicans became master of aud spread terror over flic entire Mediterranean. The isles were thus Merged into a clear yet terrible common wealth, whose pow,er was often courted and employed by neichbonng sovereigns. The accumulation of treasure was enormous; so great as to invite cupidity of invasion and cento "holy" crusades, until Don Jayme I., King of Aragon and Count of Barce lona, in September 1229, sailed for Palmi with a fleet of J .TO galleys and IS, 000 men, principally Catalunian peasant war riors. Palma fell. The males of the mixed race of pirate Moors and Balearicans were butchered, sold as slaves, or banished to the African coast. The women became the slaves and wives of the Catalunian peasant warriors. The islands were peti tioned off among the followers of Don Jayme I., founding a titled land-holding aristocracy, existing to this day, as proud, rich and noble blooded as Europe ever knew. The then independentkingdom of Ba learica, under eventual vassalage to Pedro IV, of Aragon was finally merged into the Span ish dominion "With mothers of pure Balearic and Moorish blood and fathers from the bturdy, sluggish and over-contented Catalu nian stock, tinge and tempered by a match--Jess clime and fruitful roil, the 700 inter vening years have molded a race fine'in ,physique, supple of limb, cheery of temper and heart, melodic of specsh and tongue, fair to look upon and truly good to find and know. A AVclril and Grotesque Picture. Having left the beautiful, sleepy, sunlit bay for Palma's streets, you have entered a city of nearly 70,000 souls, where Italy, Spain and Algeria seem to have formed a charming composite in architecture and people. The hugeness of walls is every where remarkable. Everything is con structed as if for eternal lasting. No street is beautiful, but not one fails of a pictur esquencss that is often weird and grotesque. Even- structure possesses in some portion, and frequently in the most unexpected posi tion, some wonderful and ornate ornamenta' tion. Tiny squares with wimpling fount ains are set in all sorts of odd corners. A huge church may tower on one side of each of these. At a corner may stand or project from a curious and seemingly unnecessary wall, a massive carved facade or gargoyle from which the water is endlessly flowing. At another side a mass of vines and verdure, capped to the sight by far domes or spires, is only visible. Outjutting at another spot, the angle of some huge building seems to have pushed its nav half across the plaza and with its galleries, balconies and tre mendous overreaching roof is ready to pitch headlong into the open space beneath While another suunv side shows onlv a roof of red tiles sloping like a tent cover, un pierced by a single aperture, from an inter minable height wholly to the edge of a stone cloister-like porch beneath. In all open spaces are palm trees. And these, rising Irom courts lifting their spreading fronds high above roofs from darkened thoroughfares, often leaniug, like the tower of Pisa, out of quaint old courts, and here and there being preserved by an entire building constructed around them, lend a dreamful, mystic, almost lonesome and pathetic coloring to every massing of structures upon which the eye may rest. Tho Palm a Lonely Emblem. To me, the palm, whether I have seen it in Southern Spain, in Sicily, in Morocco, in Algeria, in Cuba, or here in Palma, whose name had its origin in the former extraor dinary number of palm trees upon the island, has always been an emblem of dolorous isolation and inexpressible loneli ness. It hints of the camel, the Bedouin, the desert. In art, in story, in fact, it ever suggests the endless hopelessness and im passibility of the barriers between the races that subsfst upon and rest beneath it, and those who know and love the maple, beech aud oak. It is a city of steep ascents and ill-paved streets, but of witching old bits of curious architecture, and perhaps as lovely and splendid interiors as any Moorish or semi Moorish city can show. All the houses re tain features ot Moorish taste and evidences ol medieval forms of habitation and living. They are not higher than three or four stones at best. More have but the eround floor with an upper one, and an attic called a poreho. Invariably the entradas to the interior are studies in carved arabesques and fanciful Moorish designs. Balconies are as universal and as huge or as lace-like and fragile as in Granada or Seville. A marked peculiarity of all structures is their huge projecting roofs, spread out into pent houses and frequently most fascinatingly worked out and decorated. And the lowliest home in all Palma is charming in its patio or court that loveliest of all interior ar rangement around which Moslem or Chris tian home can be built -CHANGING FEAT-ORES Light on One Portion of Stage That tho Genfcral Public Art KNOWS YERT LITTLE. ABOUT. Kate Castleton One of the Cleverest Make ups on the Boards. HOW FACES ARE EASILT ALTERED A riace of Rare Beauty. Every one of these courts is a place of beauty, sunshine and song. In every one there is a melodic sound of water from run ning jetty or fountain. In every one, whether glittering with slender marble columns and daintily wrought arches or softened in tones with mossy stone and crumbling tiles, there are waving ferns and flowers. Vines clamber wantonlv over en tablature, arch and balustrade. The alcobas of all living in these abodes are within the sound of friendly calling voice. And not one is without birds ot gav plumage and birds with endless songs. I often wonder why the rich of our ow n land do not build their homes like these. A dome of glass instead of the bine Mediterranean sky, is all the change required. Banish the pall like hangings and withering shadow-places from vour stuftv homes, and learn to live in the life-giving light like the Latin and the Moor. Put your great Hew England fire places opposite your arched entrances: and make of these sunlit open courts places of beauty, lightsomeness, melody and home side joy. Only when the feast and processional days come is Palma a gay and brilliant city. At all other times it is sunny, restful, slum berous and almost silent. " Its street folk arc the same as of any other southern Span ish city. There is greater content here. Ivb one is in a hurry. Among the lowly folk there is less excitability; greater good nature, and the latter is of the gentle not of the uproarious sort. Here, as in Madrid, is your lechero or milkman, who drives his cows in from the country and milks for you before your door. The dulcero or seller of sweets, w ith his songful call by day and his tinkling bells by nitrht, is here. The cochero or cabman, with comfortable land auletand pretty diligence, will serve you faithfully w itliout guile. The mercanchiste or notion peddler, the aquadnror water seller, the rcgatero or huckster, who has the sociable habit of entering shop or borne with his donkeys and paniers, the zapatero or archway shoemaker, and the latonero or tinkcr.'whom I found to be Spanish Gipsy, are all here in their lazy, pleasant and pict uresque ways. All Days Alike in Palma. By d3y Palma seems to the stranger to be continuously experiencing something like a soft dreamful buzz of activity in all human aflaiars. Perhaps it is the reaction after some great business tension, you ruminate. But no; each day is as the day before it. Everything is gently done. No one is astir before ten in the morning. Then the pretty market attracts bewes ot beautiful women and maids. This is followed by the noon time siesta. The shops are bright and brilliant until evening; but everything is quiet and restful within. In the eening the cafes are ablaze with light; the parks and passeos are throneed with gay .cabal leros and lovely senoritas. Still there is a bush "and tranquility in all sounds and seemings. As the night advances, in every quarter of the olden city is heard the mandolin and- guitar, tremu lous, pathetic, sweet; like the echo of real tones rather than the vibrant notes them selves. Zephyrus. breezes pulse from Afric's shores. The shipping rocks geutlv upon the star-mirroring bay. Go where you will, all is life until long alter mid night, but tender and subdued as if the witchings ot the tropic airs lulled to repose yet withheld irom sleep. And at last as the centinelas of the fortresses upon the heights have chanted answers to their challengers with: "Ave Maria Purisima! La una, y todo sereno!" you seek your couch in sweet old Palma of the Isles, your heart giving back the centinela's answer that "All is well!" Edgar L. AVakemax. BOr.BETTl! gives some Washington Jlirthday adtico in THE DISPATCH tomorrow IHAVt been afflicted with an affection of the throat irom childhood, caused by Uiptheria, and ba c ued various remedies, but liaTe never found anything equal to Brown's Bronchial Troches.1' ISev. t. M. 1". Hampton, Plketon, Ky. told only In boxes. New 1Ta6liIn5ton, I'enn., People Are not slow about taking hold of a new thing, if the article has merit. A few mouths ago David Byers of that place, bought his first stock of Chamberlain's Cough Itemedy. He has sold it all and or dered more. He says: "It. has given the best of satisfaction. I have warranted every bottle, and have not had one come back!" 50-cent and 51 bottles for sale by druggists. ttssu " i A sweet, firm, light body, a crisp deli cious crust that tastes of wheat that is a loaf of bread made from Minnehaha flour, Ths Look out for Tiie Belle or Pittsbcko, Mrs. Winslow's Soothinz Syrup Is the best of all remedies for children teething. 25c. A face, if you please, though it bring a droll expression into the world with it, can become the exponent of tragedy through the powerful aid of a bit of chalk. One's countenance, like one's parlor, can have its furniture, otherwise its features, rearranged. There are the eyebrows! Per haps you inherit it maternally or pater nally, or, perhaps, nature fell out with the family likeness when it gave you an arch ing evebrow. Such a feature produces a bland, "I'm-just-come-on-earth" sort of ex-' pression, indicative of a belief in every thing from a nickel in the slot down to a man. A judicious use of chalk and paint would make one willing to swear that the owner of so keen a glance would spend his season in the Promised Land, betting ten to one that its streets were made only of jilt Your nose mav be timid and retiring desiring to seclude ltsclt among the cushions of your cheeks. Lo! ye, it suddenly stands out a nez such as Napoleon would have had marry into his family im mediatelv, and have given a kingdom to all caused by a few lines at its base, and mavbe for the improvement of its contour, a bit of wax on the bridge. A retrousse nose may have its fascination spoiled bj a long sort of a Presbyterian upper lip. This a little red remedies, a Cupid's bow being the result. Then what wonders may be worked on the niouth itself! Have you not seen one that looked as if it had been born old, dumb, uninteresting, unravished of its fruit, that had grown withered while waiting in vain to be plucked? Such a month be comes, under the kindly guidance of a skill ful hand and the grease pot, a haven of bliss lor some hungry man. Kato Castleton a Ilaks-Ep Artist. Miss Kate Castleton, who is nothing if not emphatic, prefaced a talk on "make-up" thus: "I see no more harm in a woman using paint aud powder than in her wearing false hair, false teeth and a bustle." Miss Castleton thinks the crime really lies in a make-up's inartisticness. She does not af lect to present subtle characterization, but simply treats her face in a manner that will emphasize every interesting and attractive point. So masterly has she become that she is called the best made-up woman on the stage to-day, and her dressing room is the resort of other actresses, who imitate her methods first and find ont the reasons for them afterward. She compares her face to that of a French wax doll. The crucial points in beginning "make-up" with her are the eyes aud hair. The complexion takes its tone from them. not a point being overlooked, for the color is carried up carefully into the roots of the hair on the brow and the neck. The mechanism in those wonderful eyes of hers is most intricate That shelving portion between the evelid and eyebrow, and also the part over the cheekbone are filled in with shoit, black lines, radiating from the eyeball the doll's face illustrates this. The eyelids are dashtd with black and the lashes thickened with black grease paint A near view- of all this usually is disa greeable, but not so in the case of Miss Castleton. This,by theby.she says,is because of her knowledge of perspective. Brought up in a draughtsman's establishment, she can so gauge effects that practically she looks the same to the bald man sitting in the front low and the late comer hanging on the back railing of the circle. A little dab of red at each nostril is something she alone of all actresses practices. Nature presented her with a delicious dimple, to which a sign post is added in the form of a bit of black court plaster to point out its location. Tho Hands Not Neelected. r Besides all this, Miss Castleton treats her hands in what she calls a rational manner. Their nails are colored red, which tone is carried down nast the first ioint "Where the Jiand dimples at the base of the fingers is touched with the same color. And all this has to bo gone through every day before Miss Castleton comes on the stage, to do as we have all seen her do swing on her toes a bit, look at the audience until each man and each woman thinks he or she is the par ticular recipient of her battery of coquetry, and then say so quietly, "For goodness sake, don't say I told you." Among the numerousanecdotes that cluster round the stage and its people, one is told of an exceedingly novel case of what might be termed facial, theft. In a company in which Mr. Felix Morris held a prominent position there was a minor member who was constantly infringing on Mr. Morris' "make-up." This little man absorbed him, devoured him, watched him unceasingly. Every favorite disguise of the premier was reproduced with 'prentice hand on the face of the minor member. It so happened that the minor member by nature was gjfted with an exceedingly long nose, Mr. Morris, with a short one which, by judicious shad ing, he was enabled to lengthen at will, dnd produce a nose of fair proportion. The fellow who aped him nqticed the effect, and without analyzing the motive, followed the method and1 applied it to his own superabundant length of nose. The effect was ludicrous. Every other feature was dwarfed and almost exterminated. Such a proboscis you never saw! His ap pearance behind the scenes, before going on the stage, was greeted with a shout of laughter. "Good heavens, man, what's the matter with vour nose?" "Mr. Morris does the same thing to his nose," said the minor member. "Yes," was answered, "but look at the difference in the length of your noses. Yours looks like a broom handle." With a shower of chaffing and snubbing going on, the minor member, with much rnbbing and fussing and fuming, reduced his nose to its own unusual length again. Some Actors Gifted by Nature. Mr. Joseph Jefferson " does" not devote much time in preparing for the perform ance, and will frequently entertain his visitor in his dressing room until within 15 or 20 minutes of the ri.se of the curtain. John T. Raymond, in his inimitable per formance of C6L Sellers, would frequently rush in at the last minute, and with a few touches of the "hare's foot" and a little face powder, buttoning up his frock coat as he stepped on the stage, would there be wel comed with as much enthusiasm as if he had spent hours in 'preparation. Denman Thompson, in the same way,used little or no make-up, his marked individuality being all that is necessary to the character he so ably presents. Coquelin, the great French exponent of comedy, varies his methods. Sometimes his make-up is a marvel of art and again it may be simplicity itself. Mr. Felix Morris, as the old French Comte in the "Rose," uses no less than nine different shades of grease paint As the old Chevalier in the "Game of Cards," he also uses many different tones, the object of which is to produce a face as wrinkled as an English walnut shell, and this without lining, but simply by masses of color. A Dnrlesqner'a Illustration. Another field in "make-up" is that of must "bo so arranged as to bring out the expressfon that you require. Then powder and plenty of it. That done, apply the black to the eyebrows and accentuate the lines of the face wherever required with dark blue Or black. Last of all, reach out for your No. 5 grease paint again, so as to blend whiskers, wig and flesh together, a little more powder, put on your hat, look out carefully for your '-''Je props' and Snarlt'joa is ready." A COURT HOUSE WELL Proposed as a Better and Cheaper Plan of Supplying That Institution With Water The Commissioners Will Consider the Hatter. Court Houss Superintendent Carson Mercer has a plan to make the Court House independent of the city in the matter of water, and it will be considered some of these days by the County Commissioners. As they must erect a new building the com ing summer, the Superintendent proposes tho sinking or a well. The idea js to havo it 15 or 20 feet in diameter and cemented so that tho water will he as pure as that of a spring, all the surface water being shut out. Sir. llercer says tho work would save its .cost in a year, or 18 months at most, nnd (i much hetter articlo secured. lie has been iuv estimating and finds that the water can he pumped into what ho calls a purifier and it conies out so puro that some en gineers arc disponed to think it overdone and advise the addition of a little lime, as they think a slight scale in hollers conduces to tneir saiety ana wearing quali ties. By tho arrangement proposed Mr. Mercer states that the only cost will be the digging of the well and the apparatus for cleansing the water or mineral qualities, not a man nor a pound of steam more than the man and steam power necessirry at present being reqnired to operate tho pioposed ar rangement. Tho cost of water at present for Conrt House uses is between $3,000and $4,000a year, with possibilities of short supply in caso of accident from bursting mains or breaking engines, both of which wonldbe obviated by the proposed plan. V r HKTT ADVERTISEMENTS. y&m LATEST STYLES. BEST ONE PRICE. VERY MODERATE. MAKES. ELEGANT FULL DRESS AND TO NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. C3-LJLS S NEAELY KILLED BY EATS. The Strange Adventnro of a Young Lady in a Church Belfry. Myistle Hill, Cons'., Feb. 19, Miss Lavina Hull strolled into the Baptist Church onllonday and in spirit of adventure climbed into the belfry. She had been there only a few minutes when she was startled by a large rat approaching her. It was followed by another one within a few seconds, and back of him came still another. Miss Hull was too terrified to cry out. and when she drew back the rats set up a squealing, and the leader rushed toward her with open mouth. The squeak o the rat seemed to attract others, and in a few sec onds the place swarmed with' rodents. The leader jumped for her ankle, bitting through heT shoe. Other rats also jumped on her, and bit and lacerated her face. She drew out a small pocket knife, but it proved small protection, and she was gradually be ing overcome, when, having regained hpr voice by this time, her screams were heard by a young man, who rftshed into the edi fice, and with his cane succeeded in driving the rats off. Miss Hull's face, bands and lower limbs are badly lacerated, and she is under the care of a physician. For Evenings, For Weddings, For Dancing. Delicate Shades, Pink, Blue and White. SATIN SANDALS AND OXFORDS! Black or Colored Suede. PATENT LEATHER SHOES, DANCING PUMPS AND OXFORDS, For all sizes and all ages. 433 & 435 WOOD STREET. 406, 408, 410 MARKET STREET. Hi LAIRD All Goods Fully Warranted. PERFECT FITTING! COMFORTABLE! SATISFACTORY! fe!7 97 AT BEECKINEIDGE DESPONDENT. THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER. My doctor says It acts gently on the stomach, liver and kidneys, and Is a pleasant laxative. This drink is made from herbs, and is prepared for use as easily as tea. Itlsoalled LAME'S MEMGIElE All druggists sell it at 50c and $1.00 per package. Buy one to-day. Lane's Family MeJlclnr moves the bowrla each day. 13 necessary. In order to be healthy, this Qrfp0h Elite Photo Parlors, 616 Market Street. CABINETS, $1 PEE DOZEN. A one-half life size crayon, handsomely framed, $3. No stairs to climb. Use the elevator. fel2-xrs J. O: FLOWER, IDembal Office, 43? PENN AVE. Ja7-55-rrs M. MAY, SONS & CO. FINE DYEING AKD CLEANING. 00 Sixth Avenue, hl3-6S-TuTh3 Pittsbura Pa. FOR HIE NEW PHILADELPHIA & READING DEPOT, PHILA DELPHIA, PA., WILL BE MANUFACTURED AT KENSINGTON The Brownsville Plate Glass Company, located at Ken sington, secured the contract to supply all the heavy plate glass for use in this new railroad depot, and will make the first shipment during the week. This is the first product of this extensive plant, now being operated in all its departments. The new city is steadily making advances in the manu facturing world. The Pittsburg Tin Plate Works will be started in a few days. Many of the manufactories are running, while others are nearing completion. Constant work to the laborer and mechanic and good business to the merchant is assured to all who buy property and locate there. Many of the choicest lots for homes and business pur poses are still open. Those who make purchases of lots now will get the bene fit of the advance in values and have a good and safe in vestment. Free railroad tickets given there and return. Salesmen always on the ground. THE BDREBLL HEOffllT COMPANY, NO. 96 FOURTH AVENUE, PITTSBURG, PA. felT-S-w? ltm DESKS. OFFICE OUTFITTERS. Olce Specialty Co., Wlbirdar. TAILORING. Correct Winter Suitings and Overcoating n. & d. r. ahlees, Merchant Tailors. OSmlthfleldsc go28-3-TT33 CANCER and TUMORS cured. IT Itnire. Snd for testimon ials. G.n.McMichaeL M.D.. GS Niagara at. BaSalo. N. Y. nulS-Tl-TXSSuwk Tho Kentucky Senator Takes a Gloomy View of the Situation. BoSTOir, Feb. 19. Congressman Breckin ridge, of Kentucky, is in town and to-day gave his view of the Presidental ontlook in these words: If the Democratic party will demand that tho bills passed by tho House shall be a sub stantial repeal of tho McKinloy bill, it may furnish an opportunity for the Democrats to make a platform which the people will bo- lio vo In, and then there w ill bo some hope of electinjr a Democratic President, if the right man is selected next fall. In my judgment, tho only hope of electing a Democratic Pi-eiident Is to nominate a candidate who will in himself and his past political life afford a sufficient platform for tne prty, so that tho country will understand that his nomination and election mean In good faith not onlv a pledge, but a promise that tho pledge will be kept If ho is elected. Any form aH BaHa! I Bfc mm mt mm. hq p of an ambiguous or uncertain simply means Democratic defeat. platform DEPARTMENT FURfflif. $13.75, Reduced from $21. for- this. largo BEDROOM SUIT. Also, 21 Snits reducodfrom $2-to-$l5. 29 Salts reduoed from $3 to $23. 16 Suits reduceeUrom $83to $60. , 12 Suits reduced from $275 to $200. STORES. KABPETS1MES' WRAPS. " WE HAVE-40 OR 50 PATTERNS OF INGRAIN KARPETS p "Which, havo from 20-to 30 vards hi the piece. KEJiKiAKXTPEIOES. They'll-alLgo ot "that I spent many weeks of hard work be fore I was thoroughly satisfied with Snar leiow. I must have drawn a hundred sketches of the .old.salt on paper before I decided he would look best with a raised wig, a bald head, that lovely 'curl in front and two side curls, beau-catchers you know, and a fringe of hair around the neck. After a flesh ground, flesh tints and high lights, you are rcadv to .liuo your face with a dark blue, which YTe Send Free by mail to any woman a beautifully illustrated book, containing over 90 pages of most important infor mation about all forms of female complaints. No woman should live without a copy of "Guide to Health and Etiquettes" byLydiaE.Pinkham. Thousands of women have been benefited by Mrs. Pinkham's advica after all other medical treatment had failed. Send 2 two-cent stamps to cover postage and packing, when you write for the book. Address LYDIA E. PIHKHAM MED. CO., Lynn, Mass. $10.95fedl . Will buy this ifi 9y . . (regularSn, H HflSr I ITI I TP ' TAFESTRY-COV- 113t ft I 1 1 1" S 1:1 LHU LO BED LOUNGES. J IBjl JPI $8:85, $12, H SC 'f $15, $17. n mm i La They're comfort- f I la&iZr $iMifiL. r7! Able bargains. yr :W2aLr tt.W- TW "TrfrTrfrpSjfiflpr I PRrCES-FOR-A-LEAN-PUR9Ei Karpets,flne enough-for-any. room in your house afc-the price ofthe cheap trash: 20.Renmants-at-63cJiaTe.been.85c 15vBemiiant-ai-49vhave.been-70e. 'B'Benmants at 2SL',liave been 45a B-fi-U'S-S-E-L-SK-A-R-PE-T-S! 4007arts good Brussel360ci havo been 80s. 720',7aid itae iBrusaeli, TBc; hove besn $1.00. 400iyardg Azmlniter, $1.60; hare been 52.23. IHEyBE BABOAJnSB, AJSTJ YOU" WANT TrTTOM. Wo want tho room, jjArBoillng Daryam iur KQATS AND JACKETS CONTEXTS. you want a "Winter' Coat-or Jacket-at two-thirds of ( former prices? Plush Jackets now $8.90, were $16. Plush -Coatsnow- $15, were $28. 1 TTushBoUor, tCoffoe Boiler, tSancepan, SJie Platen, 1 Cook Fan. IPoCorer, PepDerBor, IKntmeg Grater, 1 Cake Cutter, 1 Steamer, 1 Tin Cup. 1 Dipper; 2 Spoon. 1 Meat Forlr. 8 Bread Pans, 1 Cake Pan, Cookie Pans, 1 Cake Tnmer. . Mattresses, Springs and Comforts Are no side issue with usi but the prices are far below all competition. CLOTH JACKETS. Fur-TTimmecknow $17, were $26. Fur-Trimmed'tiow $24, were $37. Also aTlot ofRolkCollar Cloth Jackets and Newmarkets at ft to off. TERMS KASH OR KREDIT. NOTIONS -AND- MALL WARES. IS THE LAST DAY OF OUR SPECIAL SALE , At Reduced Prices. If you miss these bargains by de lay, blame jourself "and not us. FLEISHMAN & CO., 04, 506 and 508 Market St. fe20 PARLOR FURNITURE. We -invite you to look at a-stock-of PARLOR AND UBBUBT FURNITURE That is- unsurpassed for beautiful I form, color' and construction. The prices tell a wonderful stor, as it shows effects in medium-priced goods that look worth double the prices asked. For this week, also, we have cut the prices to TOILET SETS. Wa.haro only 22 of tnese regular $3 C3 Toll- et sets. -Bat nere they 12vPJECES FIHELY DECORATED, N SB.49. AU Dlshd and Toilet -Sets at CLOSE-OUT PRICES. & j L-Sw 0C (JF& T Kju slgfc J fe irt 5k y $11.50 For This HANDSOME SIDEBOARD. NO-PROFIT PRICES JI1IB ?iyL A RED"HOT subject. te' ftlr $9.50 mM llr'.!2-L5t'L ? '"S lrr-2 Forthis targe COOK QC 3-QtTAKT gsSSaNJP Lj 3 STOVi. O BUCKEX I lil.N MIIIH rili.MI .Mill ,Tl.l -c n.H.m. .c. j.iuu j.xuu .iuuu uuii y-ii t i CUSP1DOES. 1-Pint TrDIUie. HASH OR e &.imj. ir EDIT. FREE DELIVERY. -.r . TIXCUFl OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS. 635-637 SMITHFIELD ST. 635-637 tjteu &. .