Blood Is Life Pure Blood Is Health Without blood circulating through your jTeins you could not live. Without pure I blood you cannot be well. The healthy ! action of every organ depends upon the | purity and richness ot the blood by which lit is nourished and sustained. If you have |salt rheum, scrofula sores, pimples, bolls or any kind.of humor, your blood is not pure. If you take Hood's Sarsaparilla it ■wli' make your blood pure and promptly, relieve all these troubles. In the spring tho b!o id is loaded with impurities. Hence, all those unsightly eruptions, that languor and depression, and the danger of serious illness. Hood's Sarsaparilla is needed to purify, enrich and vitalize tho blood and protect and fortify the system. HOOd'S S parH*la Is America's Greatest Mediciue. Sold by all Urußßistß. $1; si* for 83. Gel only Hood's. Unnri'o Pille arc the only pills to take nOUQ S rlllS with Hood's Sarsaparilla. Strangers Juc.abottle. Third-class railway fnrcs in India are less Chan half a cent a mile. Chew Star Tobacco—The Best. Smoke Sledge Clsarett.es. About forty tons of letters pass daily through tho gonorul postoffleo in London. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c. 11. All uruggists. Holland Is the only country in Europe that admits coffee free of duty. Fits permanently cured. No iits or nervou?- aess after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Merve Restorer. S~'trial bottle and treatise free l)n. R. 11. KLINE, Ltd.,931 Arch St..Phila.,Pa. Art Works as War Spoils. Works of art, it has loiig been sup posed, have ceaseil to be considered legitimate spoils of war. Many will be surprised and pained to know that the custom has been revived by the conquering Turks in Greece. So long ago as last summer an order was sent by the director of museums at Con stantinople to the commander-in-chief of tho Turkish army in Thessaly to transport to the capital all antiquities which he came across during the oc cupation. This has been done, and, what is more, the European powers ill settling the treaty of peace appear to have ignored, if they did not actually assent to, the spoliation. All that could be done was done by the French school at Athens, whioh obtained permission, at the advice of the French Consul at Volo, to photo graph every piece and every inscrip tion before the deportation.—Literary Digest. •JHpitnese Children. "A joyous heart is always pure," say the Japauose, and they encourage and take part in the amusements of their little ones with a zest that shows their belief. The Japanese are nat urally a gentle and childlike race, fond of gaiety, while brave and chiv alrous in action and earnest in study. The boys and girls while at play romp, laugh and shout, and have a "royal good time," but travelers say they do not see among them quarrels nor augry words and gestures. Score this to the credit of our dark-eyed little cousins in the land of the "sun's source." They have the advantage of being loosely and warmly dressed, and of being out a great deal in thejopen air. In their homes there is but little fur niture to tumble over, and there aro few useless ornaments which they are told "not to touch.".—St. Nioholas. A Shouting Fish. The shooting fish is a native of the East Indies. It has a hollow cylin drical beak. When it spies a fly sit ting on the plants that grow in shal low water, with remarkable deterity it ejects out of a tabular mouth a single drop of water, which seldom misses its aim, and striking the fly into the water, the fish makes it its prey. The largest printing office in thi world is in Washington, D, C.; it for printing government documon*