KALLKOAI) TIME TABLES. t'EN.N A K. K. KA3T. W EST 7.13 A. M. S»-W A. M. 1U.17 " 12.15 I'-tM. 2.21 P. M. |V! " ti.o9 " ~' r »l " SUNDAYS. 10.17 A. M. 4.53 !'• M- D. E. & W. K. K. EAST. VV EST. 6.5S A. M.»•<*> V. M. lU.lil " 12.17 P. M. 2.11 P. M. " ti.lo " 5.20 " SUNDAYS 6.58 A. M. 12.47 PM 6.10 P. M.." Pill LA. A UK \DINO R. K. NOKTH. SOUTH. 7 82 A. M. 11.25 A. M. 4.110 P. M. H. 05 P. M. BLOOM STKKKT. 7.34 A. M. I12:i A. M. 4.02 P. M. 1i.04 P. M. J. sni isioKi SURGEON DLNTIST, (^WP% Owing on Mill St., Opposite the Post Office. Operative anil Mechanical Dentistry Carefully performed, Teeth positively extracted without pain,with Uas, Ether ahf work. Will prevent colds if taken when first symptoms appear. Price 25 c Sold by Rossman and Son's Pharmacy WOMAN AM) HOME. THE MOST SUCCESSFUL INDIAN WO MAN MODEL IN THE COUNTRY. llaby'■ Accidents—Women'* HI Used Eyes C'ardH Daring lilueaa Too Good to Throw Away—They Worlt For Lnele Sum. Mrs. Tahamout, a famous woman mod el, is a pure, full blooded member of the Abenaki tribe, which formerly lived in northern Maine and now has its reserva tion in Canada. Her people, numbering less than 1,000 members, are well to do, and follow farming as their chief occupation. Iu her early days Mrs. Tahamont was con sidered the most beautiful of her tribe. The fast passing away of the original Indian people, together with their color and picturesqueness, is genuine regret to ■ ' jU'j.' 1- ' 1 ■ ■ " " '"■■! '■! ' A MRS. TAHAMONT. the Indian painters and artists. Conse quently a typical and full blooded rep resentative of this race is much in de mand for posing purposes. Possessing as sho does superior mental gifts, an unusually characteristic Indian face and varied beautiful Indian cos tumes, Mrs. Tahamont is looked upon as an ideal subject for illustrating. One of the most noted paintings in which sho appears is the large wall decoration iu the lobby of a hotel in New York by the artist Tuttle. The picture represents Peter Minuet buying the island of Manhattan from the Indians for the sum of $24 in wampum belts. The headT of the Indian chief's wife, the most prominent Indian woman in the foreground, is that of Mrs. Taha mout. —Boston Globe. Illtliy'a Accident*. In a book upon "baby's accidents" we find some useful notes on first aid in cases of burns and scalds, bruises, dislo cations, cuts, etc. Burns and scalds, it seems, are such common accidents amoug children, especially among the poorer classes, that about 3,000 lives are lost ev ery year from these causes. "Should a child's clothes catch fire smother with anything handy," says Mrs. Ilewer —"your own dress if nothing bet ter offers. Never wait and call for help, and never carry the child elsewhere till every particle of flame has been extin guished. Scalds and burns produce nu alarming amount of shock and prostra tion, especially if the surface involved be large. While waiting for a doctor cover up the affected part with soft rags dipped in sweet oil and give the child some brandy." We are further told that in the case of slight scalds or scorches a mixture of equal parts of collodion and castor oil well mixed together and applied with a soft paint brush will allay the pain at once. A solution of bicarbonate of soda made as strong as possible and applied with soft rags will also quickly give re lief. If the part be only scorched, fine flour or whiting may bo dusted on and covered with cotton wool. If, however, the skin be really burned, an oily or greasy applica tion will be the best. An ointment of vaseline nnd eucalyptus oil or one of bo racic acid and lard or oil and limewater spreail on strips of lint or linen should be applied to the affected part, covered by a layer of cottou wool and kept iu po sition by bandages. As a remedy for bruises Mrs. Ilewer advocates a little spirit lotion of eau de cologne and a plentiful supply of grease to lessen the discoloration. Her advice on concussion should be laid to hdart by those who have the care of children. "In case of concussion," she says,"even if slight, put the child to bed, darken the room and keep everything quiet. Feed the child very lightly and, if necessary, give a little castor oil. Quiet nnd sleep are what the child needs. It is impossible to predict with certainty how such a case may end, and a doctor should always be called in." Children often wound themselves with knives and scissors. Mrs. Hewer's ad vico in such cases is to apply a small piece of lint to the wound and keep it on until healing has set in."ln the case of deep wounds where the bleeding will not stop put on a piece of liut and bind up very tightly with a long strip of rag, used as a bandage, and the bleeding will prob ably not recur. But the bandage should be loosened in a few hours, or the part may mortify from the pressure employ ed." Womtn'a 111 I'ned Eyen. Tho other day a woman, calling for ad vice concerning her failing eyesight at the office of an oculist, took up u looking glass about the size of a half dollar and began to twist her neck about in her ef forts to see the back of her head in the large mirror behind her. The eye spe cialist watched her with lowering brows. "It's a wonder to me," he said, "that half the women in the land are not cross eyed. The contortions to which they sub ject the muscles of the eyes in their ef forts to see themselves ns others see them nre something awful. "If an acrobat on the stage should per form with his limbs the feats that the average woman does with her eyes day after day, he would be advertised as a marvel of a«ility. But he couldn't do it. He couldn't stand it. "And the women are not going to stand it always either. They are bound to pay tin- penalty of their abnormal optical ex ercise some time. It isn't natural foi the eyes to be pulled and hauled from light to left and turned inside out every time a woman puts on her hut togo to the meat market, and they're going to make her suffer for the unnecessary strain put upon them. Only yesterday I had a patient who put up a most pitiful wail about the condition of her eyes. " 'They don't seem straight auy more,' she said. 'They give an observer the im pression that I am looking 17 ways fot Sunday at one time.' " 'Yes,' I said, 'and they will continue to look so and even worse if you don't quit rolling them about.' " 'How do you know I roll them about 7* Didn't Marry for Money. The Boston man, who lately married a sickly rich young women, is happy now. fur he got Dr. King's New Life Pills, which restored her to perfect health Infallible for Jaundice, Bil iousness Malaria, Fever and Ague and all liver and stomach troubles. Gentle but effective. Only 25c at Paules and Cos. drug store. »tie asked. " 'Nothing else would make them sc crooied,' I said. "Then by degrees I drew from her th« information that she hud a little mol« a roil id at the base of her ear, and iu trving to doctor the blemish she would roll her eyes till the pupils were almost lost ii her head. And then she wondered why her eyes were crooked. "'if I had my way, I'd smash half th( ham glasses in the country, especially those little pocket editions that necessi tate twisting the eyes half out of theii sock its to see the desired part oft lie head and face. I suppose it is quite i t ural for a woman to wart * ■ ' he a look at her baik hair befoi> . - ■ m the stmt, but justice to her eyes demands that her luind mirror be considerably big ger than alO cent piece."—St. Puul Dis patch. Card* DartnK IIlne*». When the fact of the illness of a friend or acquaintance becomes known, those on calli ig terms feel it incumbent upon them ton ake personal inquiries respecting the condition of the invalid. They therefore lenv- cards without delay with "To in quire" written upon them. Married la dies leave one of their own cards and oc casii nally one of their husbands' cards, but not unless an invalid is a personal friei d of the husbands as well as of the wiv< siu question. In the case of a grave illne is lasting some weeks it is usual to leavr cards, say, twice during its course, as regards acquaintances; intimate friends won d naturally call more frequently. Whin the invalid is a daughter of the lady called upon, married ladies only leave their own cards, and not their bus bam s' cards. Crrds of inquiry during illness should be 1 ft in person, that inquiries may be mada on the occasion of so doing; also they could be sent by a servant instructed tom ike inquiries. But these cards should not be sent by post, as they would fail of their purpose in that case, the object be ing to ascertain the progress of an invalid toward recovery. On the other hand, cards of sympathy may be sent by post if distance prevents their being left in person or by a servant, as the object is to convey sympathy, and not to make inqui ries. How the above cards should be ac knowledged is the other side of the sub ject. In former days inquiries received during illness were responded to by cull ing on the inquirer when sufficiently re covered to do so. But as change of air is generally prescribed to complete conva lescence, whatever the nature of an ill ness may have been, it is considered pref erable not to postpone acknowledgments until so distant a date. Therefore, cards of thanks for kind inquiries are left by a member of an invalid's family or sent by n sesvant as soon as the recovery is as sured. "Many thanks for kind inquiries" is written at the top of ladies' visiting cards. The cards of the husbands are not sent on these occasions. Concerning the acknowledgment of cards of sympathy and condolence and also letters of the same, it is usual to do this as soon after a funeral has taken place as possible.—Philadelphia Ledger. Too Good to Throw Away. Every woman when making half yearly Inspection of her closets and trunks has probably experienced the great difficulty of deciding what to keep and what to give or throw away as useless. Perhaps there is no department of housekeeping in which the natural depravity of inani mate objects is more exemplified than in such selections. Some garment or piece of material has been kept year after year just because it is "too good to throw away." It has been taken from the town house to the country house and back again from the country house to the town house, and the expected need for it h(js never occurred, says the New York Trib une. Finally the owner is quite tired out waiting until it may be useful and gives it away with a bundle of old clothes; whereupon, of course, the long looked for occasion arrives when its need is almost imperative and something must be bought to fill a necessity for which the missing object would have been "just the thing." Many women get aueerly attached to their old clothes, to the various rich ma terials that have composed their dinner gowns and other handsome toilets. They cannot bear to treat with disrespect ma terial that has been very costly, and the consequence is they accumulate a regular storehouse during years of prosperous living. "Mary is never happy without her rags," laughed the husband of one of these thrifty dames. "She carts trunks around with her filled with old clothes, and yet she is forever getting new ones. We actually had to build an addition to our house to accommodate them." "Nonsense, James," interpolated his wife indignantly. "You know very well that you yourself suggested that we should copy that lovely wardrobe room in one of Violet le Due's interiors of an old French chateau. But I do love my things," she confessed; "my laces, my brocades and my velvets. All are quite dear to me, and 1 do not mean to have them divided up un til I am dead." They Work For Uncle Sam. Male clerks in government offices in Washington are disappearing. More than one-third of the 7,037 clerks hired by Uncle Sam at his business headquarters are women. It is estimated that 40 per cent of the clerkships which fall vacant in Washing ton are tilled by women; if the ratio of Increase continues for two generations, the male employee will disappear except In the higher places. Women were first permitted to become employees in government offices in 1802, when Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase appointed six women clerks. At first they drew only half the wages paid to men, the government figuring that It took two women to do the work of one IUHB. But In the dead letter office, alter wom en were employed in that department, it was found that one woman could iu one day'* work open, examine and return 25U letters, when theretofore one man had opened and returned only 120. Thus wo man established a new standard of work, and it bustled the men to keep up, and they've been hustling better ever since. In the early days many bills were in troduced in congress discriminating against women employees, but they re ceived little support. Congress did once pass a bill fixing the maximum salary for female clerks at SOOO p«r annum. This was in force for several years, but in 1870 an amendment was passed which removed the discrimination. OpproHMion of Haitian Fbcpk. "Rave you ever noticed," she said, "the agonized expression on the faces of near ly all the women whom you see as stran gers on the streets nnd in public convey ances if they happen to be alone? Every one looks worried, cross or miserable. All the small perplexities and anxieties incident to their various occupations and purposes are written legibly on their faces. If they have companions, however, it is different; the American woman for gets her troubles as easily as a French woman, and her countenance becomes animated, agreeable and often charming. It is not only among the surging crowd that one sees these unhappy looking coun tenances, but those who roll by in open carriages, if they happen to be alone, have the same expression of worried care and added to it a certain hauteur, an unbecoming lift of the eyebrows, that is either due to the difficulty of keeping their bonnets straight iu the wind or in consciousness of high steppers and foot men. But, whatever the reason and whether the women are rich or poor, not Head Feels Like Bursting. Maybe yon were out late last night ? If you had taken a Kranse's headache Cap sule before retiring yonr head would be cool and clear this morning. Take one now and you will be all right in a half hour. Price 25 c. Sold by Ross man and Sou s Pharmacy. one woman in 50 possesses the art of keeping a smooth, pleasant countenance in the street when her face is at rest. It seems to nie that it would he a very good thing for parents and teachers to remedy this national fault in their charges before it is too late." Iluiv to Make Cold Creama. In preparing creams or lotions it must be remembered that the formula should be followed exactly if certain results are expected. Fats or oils should be melted over a l.ivv fire by tlfe least possible heat and in a double boiler preferably. The meth od as given of adding tlie other ingre dients should be closely adhered to. Tinc tures and extracts are invariably added at the last, when the mixture has slight ly cooled, and drop by drop or at least very slowly. Glycerin properly used is an invalua ble cosmetic. It whitens, softens and dis solves coloring matter when carefully combined with other agents, such as rose, elder flower or orange water. It is very injurious used in concentrated form, as it burns, parches and yellows the skin. Fats are the basis of all cold creams. Wax and spermaceti are often added to give requisite firmness, but possess no in trinsic value. They are inclined to clog the pores. Perfumes, aside from being agreeable additions, possess antiseptic qualities and prevent the oils from being rancid.—Stella Stuart in Ledger Month ly. ___ All the Difference. The difference between French and American toilets does not lie in the shape or the material of the dress as much as in the way it is worn. A well dressed Parisian does not trouble about ordering something absolutely new. Nov elty is not her object. She seeks of course the latest make in skirts and bo leros, but she does not give so much at tention to the inedlt. Her great aim is that the silhouette should be perfect, and there is no surer test of good dress ing than to judge the effect of a figure at a distance. The line, what the French call la ligne, must first be studied. The details of revers, cuffs and cravats then follow. We, as a rule, make the mis take of giving too much attention to de tail and not sufficient thought to the broad lines. If we would look at our selves through a looking glass at some distance off and without the preconceiv ed idea that we were to see our own re flection, we should see faults that would be very easy to correct, chiefly in the length of our skirts in front and the way our hats are placed upon our heads. Mary nnd Martha. Mrs. Fanny C. Hays, a missionary in China, tells an amusing anecdote in The Century of a native woman's hospitality: One afternoon's experience gave me an excellent commentary on the story of Mary and Martha. I was most warmly welcomed by my hostess, who wished to do something for iny refreshment, so she decided she would poach me a couple of eggs. In vain I protested that I had but an hour before eaten my dinner; that I had only a short time to stay with her and could not visit her again, perhaps for years; that to please me best she must sit down beside me for a quiet talk. No; she must show in her own way how much she appreciated the visit, so she started a fire iu her little range, which immediate ly filled the room with smoke; she hustled about and poached the eggs, amid the loud advice and kindiy criticism of her friends, who were too much distracted to listen to niy remarks, and as I prepared to eat one of the eggs, to please the poor woman, a message came that the shentzu was at the door, and I must leave at once. The Virtue* of the Apple. The apple, says Dr. (J. R. Searles, Is such a common fruit that very few per sons are familiar with its remarkably ef ficacious medicinal properties. Every body ought to know that the very best thing they can do is to eat apples just before retiring for the night. Persons un initiated in the mysteries of the fruit are liable to throw up their hands in horror at the visions of dyspepsia which such a suggestion may summon up, but no harm can ever come to even a delicate system by the eating of a couple of ripe and juicy apples Just before the hour for going to bed.—Ledger Monthly. Mary Wilkin*' Way. Mary Wilkins, the novelist, keeps three stories going all the time and has a sep arate typewriting machine for each story. In response to the usual question put to authors as to their working hours Miss Wilkins says, with a touch of drollery: "Yes, I have regular working hours. They are in the morning. I never write in them." She confesses that she works best when her publishers are urging her to send more copy. Like many persons, she pro crastinates and waits until the last min ute and then falls to work in earnest. THE GLASS OF FASHION. Hairpins with Jeweled heads are one of the novelties for bair decoration. White applique gowns are strapped with bands of white suede cloth by way of novelty rather than for practi cal use. Something new In underwear is a combination garment of finest nain sook which supplies the place of cor set cover, underskirt and drawers and is especially desirable in every way ex cept In price. Plain parasols of brocaded silks, all of one color, are one of the many varie ties which the season has to offer. These have wooden sticks with knotty heads apparently carved to simulate some freak of nature. The fancy boas so much worn in spring and summer are made of chif fon in white and pale colors. They are very fluffy about the neck, decorated at Intervals with large gauze roses, and long scarf ends fall below the waist. There Is nothing else in the line of petticoats so attractive as those which are made of white lawn batiste and nainsook trimmed with exquisite em broidery lace, and they are to be very much worn In spite of our fondness for silk skirts. Enameled flower hatpins have come in for a fresh share of attention now that flowers dominate the millinery de partment, and then there are the Insect pins, with Jeweled beetles and spiders attached to a spring, which gives them a very realistic appearance.—New York Sun. Irretrievably toil. "Miss Goldrox," began Mr. Cal Q. Laite, "I must confess that at last I have lost my heart, and you"— "My! That's too bad!" she inter rupted. "It's so small you can never hope to find it again!"— Catholic Standard and Times. Couldn't Sleep. O'Lafferty—Mulligan hez resolgned frum the perleece foorce. O'Hoolihan—Phwy ? O'Lafferty—The little b'ys wadn't let Mm slape on dooty at all, at all, which Wor razin enuff, begob.—Ohio State Jour» M i. Saves Two From Death. "Our little daughter had an almost fatal attack of whooping cough and bronchitis," writes Mrs. W. K. Havi land, of Armonk, N. Y. 'but. when all other remedies failed, we saved her life with Dr. King's New Discovery. Onr niece, who had Consumption in an ad vanced stage also used this wonderful medicine and to-day she is perfectly well." Desperate throat and lung dis eases yield to Dr. King's New Discovery as to no other medicine on earth. Infall ible for Coughs and Colds. 50c and SI.OO bottles guaranteed by Paules and Co. druggists. Trial buttles free. REACHING THE LIMIT POSSIBLE NEW STANDARD IN MEAS URING EXTREME HEAT. By the line of ftie Electric Pyrometei I'hystclntM Confidently Kxpect to lie Able to Accurately Record Soon the Boilinic Point of Platinum. For centuries the human eye has been the constant gauge for determin ing the highest degrees of heat. Any person who has ever stood in a black smith's shop iu childhood's days knows how steel ranges through the various colors as, for instance, black, dull red, cherry red, yellow, white —up to the melting point of bluish white. In blast furnaces, in kilns of all kinds, from baking brick to baking pottery, in glass furnaces and through all the different range of the arts and trades, the eye was in the past the only available ther mometer. Great loss frequently re sulted from this primitive means of telling heat, for every rise or fall of temperature above or below certain points might cost literally thousands of dollars. Scientists have lately come to the res cue, notably Professor C. L. Norton of the laboratory of physics at the Massa chusetts Institute of Technology, in Boston, who has made heat measure ment a matter of exhaustive experi ment. The most exact and scientific method of determining the temperature of fur naces and retorts is by means of elec tricity. The loop of a platinum wire or the joined ends of two wires are placed within range of the heat to be meas ured, a current is established, and the resistance it meets is recorded by a galvanometer, the degree of heat being proportionate with the degree of elec trical resistance. A device of this sort Is called a pyrometer, a name which ap plies to any mechanical instrument for measuring heat. By another kind of pyrometer the effect of either heat or cold on the electric current is detected by a modified telephone called a ther mophone. This is quite different from the terinopbon, which is merely a tor pedo which explodes after a period, long or short, as the heat is more or less intense. While the electric pyrometers are the more exact, much assistance is given to the human eye by a visual pyrome ter. With this instrument the fire in a kiln, for example, Is observed through a telescope and its temperature judged with sufficient accuracy by its color as seen through a polariscope or by its brilliancy as compared to a standard lamp. There are regions of heat possible to the electric furnace far above the pres ent possibilities of exact measurement, but physicists look forward to the day when they can accurately record the boiling point of platinum. Production of Aiibeiitn*. In Canada are a number of mines where asbestus Is produced, and one of the largest of these is near Sherbrooks, in Ontnrio. The separation rock Is mined in open quarries, and after it has been carried to the surface that bearing the asbestus Is separated from the bar ren material by hand picking. At a cobbing house the long flbered asbestus is knocked off from the serpentine by hand if the veins are more than three quarters of an inch thick, but in the smaller pieces this separation is made by machinery. In this process the rock is crushed nnd the useless pieces are picked out by hand. Then the asbestus bearftig fragments are pulverized, and the fibrous material is separated from the powdered rock by means of a blast of air. Bottled Tear Cnre. A physician who has recently return ed from Persia says that the natives believe that human tears are a remedy for certain chronic diseases. At every funeral the bottling of mourners' tears Is one of the chief features of the cere mony. Each of the mourners Is pre sented with a sponge with which to mop his face and eyes, and after the burial these sponges are presented to the priest, who squeezes the tears into bottles, which he keeps. Valuable Alloy of Alnnilnlnm. Magnalium is the name given to an alloy of aluminium and magnesium in vented by a continental scientist, and the reports upon it are of the most en couraging nature. It is lighter than pure aluminium, It can be worked and turned like brass or copper, and it Is stronger than brass. It is stated that it does not oxidize at all, fumes of ammo nia and sulphuric acid not damaging it. It can be turned, bored, drilled, milled, filed, ground and polished easily. A Wonder In Watchmaking Among the treasures of a Swiss mu seum, inserted in the top of an old fash ioned pencil case, is the tiniest watch ever constructed. It is only three-six teenths of an inch in diameter, and its little dial not only indicates hours, minutes and seconds, but also the days of the month. So perfectly formed is this lllliputlan watch that it keeps ex cellent time and is a marvelous piece of mechanical workmanship. Acetylene «•« for MRhthonsen. Consul General Guentber of Frank fort reports that at the lighthouse of Altenbrueh acetylene gas has been ex perimented with, as the strongest pe troleum light proved too weak for this station. It is stated in German papers that the results were entirely satisfac tory, and it is expected that acetylene gas will now be used extensively for lighthouses. New Pho»pbore»cent Gnu. It is announced that M. Curie, the chemist, has separated a new gas from radium. It is intensely phosphorescent and will glow for months in the dark. How to Cream Codflah. To prepare it in the old fashioned way shred u cupful of the fish fine, be ing sure to remove all the pieces of bone. Cover it with cold water, bring it to a boil and strain. Return it to the pan, add a level tablespoonful of cornstarch and a heaping tablespoonful of butter and cook for three or four minutes without browning, stirring constantly. Then add one cupful of milk and cook until It thickens, turn in one cupful of cream and serve at once on toast. This can be varied by serv ing a poached egg on the top of eacll portion. Seven Years Iu Bed. "Will wonders ever ceaseV ' inquire the friends of Mrs. S. Pease, of Law rence, Kan. They knew she had been unable to leave her bed in seven years on account of kidney and liver trouble, nervous prostration and general debil ity; but, "Three bottles of Electric* Bit ters enabled me to walk," she writes," and in three months I felt like a new person. Women suffering from Head ache, Backache, Nervousness, Sleepless ness, Melancholy, Fainting and Dizzy Spells will find it a priceless blessing. Try it. Satisfaction is guaranteed, j Only 50c at Paules and Co s. drug store, j HIS INDIGNATION. Only it llrute Would I.»-t at Woman Mima ■RT II < nr. The rushed man of affairs joioped en the car. The passenger next to the j door got off, and he made a dive for : the vacated seat, never once casting i even a glance at the half dozen women clinging desperately to the straps as they were jerked this way and yank ed that, lie hid himself behind his paper, and all things else sank into complete oblivion so far as the man of I affairs was concerned. It mattered ! nothing to him whether the woman in front of him sighed as her tired lianJs I clung to the strap over his head with grim determination. She could have stood there forever, and the man would never have as much as turned a pity- : iug glance upon her. "Well, my dear, are you tired to- j night?" asked the wife of the man of j affairs as they seated themselves at j dinner. "Oh, no, not especially." "Well, I am tired—just tired out to- j night." "Keen oyerdoing it again, I suppose. ; You must be more careful. Avoid all unnecessary exertion, my dear, or we will have a doctor's bill." "I had such a trying experience to day. A man made me stand up in the car for 20 blocks. My hands were all cramped and tired, and I was nearly dead. Such men should be ashamed of themselves." "Oh, you find such people every where. Only a brute would let a wo man stand in a car," indignantly ob served the man of affairs. "Did you find the paper interesting?" she inquired sweetly.—New York Sun. The F.lderly Caller and Johnny. "1 hope, Johnny, you are a good little boy and mind your parents. You must never forget how anxious they are that you shall grow up to be a good man. Never do anything to give them sor row, Johnny, and let your conduct al ways be such that they may be proud of their sou. who" "Say, them new teeth of yourn don'* match the other ones at all!"' —Chicago Tribune. SEVEN DEVELOPED GOLD MINES. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ 60 ACRES OF GOLD ORE. THE ARENA Gold Mining & Milling Company CRIPPLE CREEK, COLORADO. This Property is Estimated to be now Worth More than SIO,OOO per Acre and will be Worth over One Hundred Thousand Dollars per Acre,with Proper Development CAPITAL STOCK, $1,000,000. ftaTDivided into Shares of 81.00 Each, Full Paid and Non-Assessable."^©# The Arena Company offers 50,000 Shares at 50 cents each in a Property that is Worth over SOOO,OOO. For the purpose of raising money to purchase t lie necessary machinery lo make the mines produce daily fully Three Thousand Dollars in Gold, thus enriching every individual shareholder according to the shares he holds. You can buy any number of Shares you Wish, and make more money than can be made in any other line of investment. The gold ore is in these seven developed mines. There are !i,OOO feet of ore in a vein, and these veins are true mother veins, held within walls of granite.placed there by nature. The Company has already developed this property to demonstrate that it is one of the largest gold properties of the Cripple freek District which is the greatest gold-producing camp on earth, its output last year aggregating 5M,000,000 or nearly double t lie amount produced in the whole State of Call iornia. At 50 cents per share the Company is giving you a discount of 10 cents per share to start with, making 20 cents on the dollar. As already stated, this is dime for the purpose of rais ing fi'i.ooo to purchase improved machinery, air-compressor drills, and electric plant. We have two large hoisting engines on this property,a commodious sliaft-house,office buildings, boarding house for the men. stables, a powder-house, a large quantity of tools, etc. The re ports on these mines, made by one or the best mining engineers in the State, succinctly de scribe these improvements. NAMES OK MINKS. AZTEC, 210 feet in depth, with shaft-house, boiler and engine for hoisting, well timbered all the way down. li<>Nl>H< il.liEK, 200 feet deep, hoisting engine and boiler, large irou sliatt-house. MKX ICO and MANiIATTA N, both o\er 100 feet di ep, on same vein as the Aztec mine. CRYSTAL, JASI'EH and GKEAT KASTKKN. on I he same vein as the Bondholder and o]>en ed in depth to over 100 feet, and developments already made show over -1,000 feet of ore. If you want to make money out of nature, become a producer of gold out of her treasure vaults The Arena group of mines will do it for you. We can furnish the best of references bank and mining engineers and our title in t lie property is perfect, coming, as it does through a patent frmii the < .overment. With more im proved machinery, from $3,000 to Sfi.ooo per day u i;i be a conservative estimate of the output of these mines. Kemeniber that only ">O,OOO Shares of this Stock are for sale at 50 cents on 1 lie dollar. Orders lor the number of shares desired, accompanied by Draft, Money Orders, Express or Cash in Registered Letters, can be sent to The Arena Gold Mining & Milling Company, 501 Equitable Building, DENVER, COLORADO. PLANING MILL 1 HOOVER BROTHERS MANUFACTURERS OF Doors, Sash, Shutters, Verandas, Brackets, Frames and Turned Work of all Kinds. Also Shingles, Roofing Slate, Planed and Rough Lumber. RIVERSIDE, NORT'D COUNT\. FOE FIRST-LASS WORK ONLY 5010 r # j, q--' < ,< < A .ik Special alien • \ lion given La- HOf dies Suits and Delrvery. Waists, Gents I>rices . ,** 1 fifaa&'S ' All packages loons and \ ests. Danville Steam I -aundry, No. 20 Cana St Lore and Kase, Proi ITEMS OF INTEREST Cork is to hold an industrial exhibt tion of Irish Industries next year There are 80 cities in India witti ovei 50,000 inhabitants, a record beaten bj no country of the same area. An aluminium resonator to take t: place of the wooden belly of the vml.i has been devised by a Londoner nan:M Stroh. The volume of tone obtained i? said to be greater than that in the or dinary violin. Berlin has an association of physi ciatis who pay a sum equal to f> pei cent of their income tax every yeai Into the treasury. This yields about j ? 12,000 a year, which is given to those members and their families who need help. Rome of tlie laundries In Paris use balloons to dry their garments. A ! bamboo frame is attached to a captive i balloon, and the clothes are securely j fixed to them. The balloon makes six J ascents a day to a height of a hundred | feet or more. The Austrian parliament has among i its members a waiter. Carl Mittermay | er. There are a butcher and a grocer in the British house of commons. Five commoners were once day laborers The speaker of the parliament of Van couver was once a coal miner in North umberland. POINTED PARAGRAPHS. A dollar in the band is worth two in a will. Women's thoughts of men are most ly afterthoughts. A wise man never counts bis checks before they are cashed. If you bestow a favor, forget it; it you receive one, remember it. Absence may conquer love, but it sometimes takes costly presents to hold it. Women don't mean it when they kiss each other; they do it for the purpose of showing men what they are miss ing. It is not necessary for a man to be poor in order to be honest, but some times it seems necessary for a man to be poor If he is honest.—Chicago News. I Mil If lIJfL WB want lo it all Ms of Printing fil" II It's H. ' ii ill Pita. I lis ML 112 """I A well printed tasty, Bill or Let \) / ter Head, Poster A) A Ticket, Circulai Program, State ment or Card i. (y> an advertisemen for your business,. A satisfaction to yot, Sen Tp, New Presses, Best Pajer, Stilled fort A Promptness \ll you can ash A trial will mak you our customer We respectfully as that trial. iii ii No. II H. Mahoning St. ID-A.IISrTT'IIini.E. For Beauty style and finish our Ha' are unsurpassed. The lo prices on our trimmc goods will make thei move out in short time. We are offering trin med hats at prices whic can not be duplicated See the shirt-waist ha' the latest style out. JIKIIII j 122 Mill Street.