Hetion © ing Machine, d in a very he clothes. washing. ankets and s the finest d. e kind of a 1ine as de- ved so that Wet, never pest high- on the and prices. HINE GO. ). TURE EINE, ing Methods achines, ou can obtain e purchase of Machine than ulars. How ving machine direct from is an oppor- you know machine and to exchange n full. land, Ohio. VVRVBVD fes for Walls. 3 ou vant MFG. co., ful and Cheap. for half the qual- ranteed to give aded, ays buy it, ROLLERS. thes, POWDER 00., N. J, NGRESS DAY. entire day in relief, and al- avored the bill the island, no esentative Ray al amendment of trusts he ropriation bill, passed. The ttee submitted r the construc- jovernment or :stion now be- AY, bill for the re- ed on impor- tates, amount- he Senate, and the House, roviding for amounts. AY concur in the Puerto Rican its supported ce ground that lay in extend- nts of the is- 5 stood firmly in his demand on its original not only the > Rican goods 1 subsequent » be collected. DAY. Puerto Rican agreed up- e. The Sen- m the Senate appropriation d on Puerto Jan. 7, 1900, in the House evenues. DAY, onference re- appropriation and the $2.- ms duties up Il future reve- The vote, 35 , except that levada, voted rity. ublican ranks ce trade with conference to zg to an early r time in case un don wears a uns diamonds “Abundance” ese plum and is the some- d by Captain South Africa. » | From Washington How a Little Boy Was Saved. Washington, D. C.— was about 16 with & rash wl measles, In swelling on the and it was dee was given me about three we ‘‘When our boy onths old he broke cut h was thought to be days he had a side of his neek to be mumps. He al attendance for when the doctor said it was a and ordered a salve. He wauted to lance the sore, but I would not let him and continned giving him me licine for about four months when the bunch broke in two places and became a running sore. Three doctors suid it was serofula and each ordered a blood medicine. A neighbor told me of 2 case somewhat | like our baby’s which was cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla. T decided to give | it to my boy and in a short whilo his health improved and his neck healed go nicely that I stopped giving him the medicine, The sore broke out again, however, whereupon I again gave him Hood's Sarsaparilla and its persistent few use has accomplished a complete | cure.” Mgrs. Nerrie CHase, 47 K 8t.. N.E, Po vely curescoughs, Dr Buil’s CO] Tot the chest = or B Si and incipient consumption! Always Coug h Syraporne Itis Seay small. 25¢ for chi in Tastes good, Doses are CONFINED LIKE A PRISONER. Tells of the Jokes His Friends Played on Him. Representative Alexander of Buffalo was released from quarantine the other day and appeared among his friends in good health and spirits, says the ‘Washington Pest. He went home from congress Thursday evening, Jan. 18, and walked into the hands of the health © Is, who had just decided that Mra. Alexander's maid was suffer- ing from a mild case cof varioloid. Since that time Mr. and Mrs. Alexander have kept their rooms at the Concord. “How ‘did you enjoy quarantine?’ he was asked. “They call it quarantine,” re- plied Representative Alexander, “but for all practical purposes it is an isola- tion more complete than jail or prison. | We could see the people in the streets; voices reached us from the hallways; | | Represenialive Alexander the ring of the elevator announced the coming and going of friends, but from | them all we were as completely cut off | as if our rooms had been in the heart | of a great forest. An attendant, night and day, sat in the hallway. Our meals | were sent in from the cafe, and the mail came each day, but this was our only connectiion with the outside | world. No one could come to us, and, added the congressman, laughing, ‘no one wanted tc come to us or have us go to them. “Many loving notes of sympathy came each day from friends in this city and Buffalo, but no one wanted answers. ‘lowers came, but | the bearers didn’t wait for replies. Our | friends recognized the truth of the | scripture that it was more blessed to give than to receive. Representative ! Landis of Indiana sent his sympathy and love, saying: “I'li gladly write | every day if you won’t answer. The | Rev. Dr. Hamlin of the Church of the Covenant, suggested that I could com- fort myself as Mr. Lincoln did under similar circumstances, that I now had something I could give all applicants. | Gen. Tyner, assistant attorney general for the postoffice department, offered to get me out on a write of habeas corpus if he could find a court to hear his application. Fortunately,” said tho representative, “a door opened from our library unto a small balcony, dis- connected with any other part of the hotel. Here we got air and exercise. After donning hat, overcoat and gloves I walked back and forth like a sentry, limited to six steps, about as many as were allowed the prisoner of Chillon. | station maser, { and ro 'e away. | low. At the end of sixteen days I could bet-' ter appreciate the horror of Bouivard’s four years’ imprisonment and the noble ' utterances of Lord Byron. My steps, like his, didn’t wear the stone pave: ment, but it will take a coat of paint to erase my tracks.” A daughter's likeness to her mother has both promises and threats. who have bees rolicved ci painful mensiruation by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-~ table Sormpound,; are cor= stanty letters to Birs. Pinkhane | Lydia E. Pinkhsm’s Vegetable Compound | eured thom. FE always | relieves painful periods and no weman who suse | fers should ke without this knowledges Neariy aii tho lis of women result from scime derangement of ithe fomale organism. Mrs. Pinkharm’s great medi= cine makes women healthy; ef this there is @verwheiming fjreofs Don’t experimont. you suffer get this medi= cine and gat Mrs. Pinik- ham’s free advice. Her address is Lynn, Massa SBoth my ol and my sitions been using CASCA RIS and they are ine best medicine we have e 1ad in tze house. 3 week my wife was Fons or ¢ for twodays, she tried some of your CASCAT Rat oS, and they relieved the pain in her head almest fmmediately. We beth olen Cosearels TEDE FQ D, CANDY CATHARTIC Pleasant, Paiatane Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, pid cken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 25¢, 50¢. URE CONSTIPATION, are Sterling as Compary, Chicago, Montreal, New York. 317 Sold and UETaneed by all druge- KC-T8-BAG gists to CURE Tobacco Habit! a it atiicted with | Thamnson's Eye Wale | one child, | discharge | Arthur, writing grateful | servant,” | ing, hear their ‘room to air. {she crept to bed at | dren, iF | ness in ENVIRONMENT, A lily grew in a garden far From the dust of the city street. It bad no dreaw that the universe Held aught less pure and sweet Than its virgin sell; so chaste was it, So perfect its retreat. When night came down the lily looked In the face of the stars and smiled; Then went to sleep—to the sleep of death, As the soul of a little child Goes back to the clasp of the Father-soul, Untouched and undefiled. A lily bloomed on the highway close To the tread of tho swee ping throng: It bore the gaze of a hundred eves Where burned the flame of wrong: And cone eame by who tore its heart With a ruthless hand and strong. It caught no zlimpse of a garden fair, t knew no other name For a world that used and bruised it so Than a worid of sin and shame; And hopeless, erushed, its spirit passed As the evening shadows came. And who can say but the sheltered one A sullied flower hal been Had its home been out on the highw ay close To the path of shame and sin? And the other forever angel-wh Had it blossomed safe within? heh , Satiap Perkins, in ite Boston 00000000000000000000600000 p= WEALTHY. § & BY M. ATWOOD STUART. The train rolled out of more than Egyptian darkness and stopped sud- denly. The flare of many lights, the rum- ble and roar of traftic,and the throngs oi people in the streets, proclaimed the station to be a city, and a great one. : The passengers whose changing place of destination is was, poure i ouf, pushing and jostling against a stream of peonle coming in, for the train was a through one and the time limited. Among the last to reach {he plat- form was a young girl, clad in mourn- ing, evidently a stranz.r. She looked about her wonderingly, as though with the commo ion and noise and confusion she could hardly think. Presently, by the intercess on of the she secured a carriige 3y and-by she reached her destina- | tion, and becanse she so desired,in tha she foun: herself in the presence of the master of the house. In his haud he held the letter brought him by his careful henchman, who state | that the bearer waited be- Having perused the letter, the had returned that she appear beicre him. “Have home?” Yes. “dow long has it taken yon?” She told hin. “And what is your name?” “Wealthy.” “Humph! fortune.” A pause, ‘How old are you?’, ‘“Sisteen my next birthday. ” Umph!” Another pause. ‘Well, Dorothy, I suppose we shall have to let her stay.’ Let her stay! and the pale girl, a mere child, cour e of events come straight from yon Dou’t fit your present “ without father or mother, was his own brother's dangh- | ter, a stranger in a strange land al- most, homeless and penniless; the Dunnings could have housed a regiment, and were fairly roiling in wealth. A-trembling with the strangeness of the reception, scarcely comprehend- ing the right and the wrong of the whole matter, and already homesick, timid little Wealthy stood with down- cast eyes brimming over with tears, while they so positively decided her fate, Mrs, Dorothy Dunning her work. “Come with me, put down “she said. Wealthy followed to an apart nent containing | two bels. might yours, Hore she was told she sleep. “This bed will be ’ indicating the bed containing of these three children,” the othey, in which were two, three boys in all, sleeping soundly. “You can dre:s them in the morn- prayers, and oyen the Then come to me and I will tell you what next to do.” Wealthy silently acquiesced by an pointing to ! inclination of {he head. Left alone,she gave up, heartbroken, to real, genuine arief, “Oh, papa, papa!’ she last, sobbed, as weeping. Poor little Wealthy! “On the whole, 1t is quite as well,” said Mrs. Dunning, when she went back to the drawing-room. “We wili the present nwmse for Rob and Joe, and serve instead. nearly 16, and she looks capable.” ‘Her name will do very well for a remarked Tou, the oldest daughter,and young lady of tise fa nily, looking ove: the “top of her sheet. ‘““Ahem!—hardly a servant, must remember she is your Yon cousin, you know,’ said Doctor Dunning, | evincing a slight twinge of con- science. » ‘She needn’t try cousin-ing me,” muttered Lown, turning away to her own affairs; and at the end nf a week Mrs, Dorothy Dunning had the same, and mentally vowed that the handy Wealthy should forget the relationship, and keep her place with the children and mind the housework, which she could perform with such dexterity. So Wealthy found herself the nurses, one of who were employed to take care of the six Dunning chil- her charge being the three oldest, except Lon. She, being 18 and out in society, was considered beyonda nurse’s care, and never turned a hand over to brighten anybedy’s life. But there were gleaus of Wealthy’s life, after all. Pleasant days she took the children to the park, and, while she sewed and winded thew, she could also feast her eyes on the beautiful trees and green sward and the blue skies; so blue, Wealthy thought; skies anywhere else were never so blue as those, [Little by little she learned that the best of us all, in one way or another, more or less, and she argued that, per- haps, hers was not such a hard Tot as it might have been, in spite of the fact that she was obliged to be busy at something all the time. She was thankful for what she had, and worked and sang and made the best of it. And so it went on for six months, July came and Doctor and Mrs. Dunning and Lou went away to cool Birchlands, ‘Doctor Edwards is coming to Birchlands this season,’ Mrs. Dunning at the end of the fort- night. “Very wealthy family. Eerpard, the oldest son, has stndied in Europe and has returned and taken his father’s practice. Every one is speak- orphan | and | “and you can have the cave | she cau | She told you she was | music | decided | bright- | work reported | ¥ | inz of the celebrated Doctor Edwards] ~—an excellent parti for Lou.” Lou matched her pretty eyes with | prettier ribbons, and when he called | she rustled to greet him in the fleecy | raiment that had cost Wealthy hours | of patient endeavor to think out, and | fit, and make—a creature of a dream and fair to look upon, ‘‘as beautiful as a fancy,” Docter Edwards thought. | But in the chain of circumstances, { there were other incidents. Iy the city the oppressive heat was | | telling on poor, puny Arthur, and ona day Wealthy, nurse, housekeeper and i commander-in-chief, fouud care on her hands, a sick Loy. Gently she quieted hm, tenderly | she cared for bim, but at dusk she | stood despairingly by hs bedside, with | the realization that the disease was beyond the scope of her immediate prescriptions and fully aware that the { boy was on dangerous ground. {What could she do? Send for her | nncle? He was miles away, and Arthur might before his father | reached him. Sead for a doctor? Where? Neither | she nor any of the children knew the | location of any vhysician’s office in the city. ! Speak to the neighbors? Yes, but it is August, and they ave all away. Completely ba‘fed in this labyrinth of perplexities, suddenly a bright idea occurred to her. Looking hastily out of the window | she saw a bright light away down the street on the opposite side. i “That must be Doctor Edwards | i that T have heard so much about, 1] know,” she said. And shortly after- | ward, Doctor Bernard Edwards, pro fessional, indeed, but handsome, fine- eyed and kind, was obeying an urgent | summons up the street. He stayed all through the hot night | with the sick hoy, socthing and help- (ing him and lightening for poor | Wealthy what otherwise would have been aseasun of multitudinous terrors | —and when morning dawned once again, Arthur's life was saved. And during that night he had be- come interested in the faithful, lovely young girl, Doctor Edwards always looked grim reality straight in the eye, and he found out what her position was in that house, and such a distaste for Lou Dunniug’s frivolous beauty came over | bim at the disco ery that he hoped he! might never see her again. He stamped and stormed a little and in his righteous wrath he spoke some cerfain “truths of the Dunnings. ‘it is too scandalously bad!” he wound up. **You might marry he, another | die » suggested | © | grouty old Doctor Edwards, who Lad | got the tenefit of Lis son’s late re- | searches, “Have Bernard. Evidently he had a whole mind to; | for the next day, before the gray dusk was fairly out of the sky, and long before the children were awake, Wealthy, standing weary and alone by the chamber window, found her- | self clasped tenderly in a pair of strong arms, Lovingly the tall doctor stooped and tenderly kissed the little girl. “Wealthy, he whispered, ‘Wealthy | look at me, darling! I have some- thing to tell yon, and I want you to | answer me a question.” Somehow it took a long time; but at the end of the narration, though Wealthy was in a flood of tears, the i tired head rested against Doctor Edward’s breast, and with a joy that | could not be told,she answered ‘‘yes’ | to his question. | When the Dunnings came back there was a heavy gold ring on Weal- thy’s hand Lut Doctor Pernard Ed- wards called lL elore they had time to notice it, “I have to apologize for not keep- ing my promise of returning to Birch- wood, but professional duties prevent- ed,” he said. ‘‘Perhaps, too, I should make excuses for falling in love with your niece, but that, alse, I could not prevent. ’ And Lefore they realized what he | was doing he had taken Wealthy away and married her, and she had left | them forever. Doctor and Mrs. Dunning refer to their niece as “My dear Wealthy.” Leu does herself, indeed. ‘My | cousin Wealthy,” she says, in speak- ing of her, ‘Doctor Edwards’ beauti- ful wife.” But it was a corrective for the Dun- nings. They may not be less self- c entred— ths it would be hardly pos- sible—Dbut they are more discreet. half a mind: to} said PEARLS or THOUGHT. Use palliatives s when you contradict, Modesty is the only sure bait when | you augle for praice, The desire of pleasing is at least | half the art of deing it. (Giive me but virtuous actions, and I will not quibble and chicane about the motives. I believe there is more judgment] required for proper conduct of our virtues than for avoiding their oppo- | site vices. | from t leafed and quaintly | whole family are! | ready sale for salads to of an unusual romance. 'DOORSTOOP GARDENING Expensive Plants N Now Used to the Outside of City Houses, Investments ranging all the 210 to $300 are now made by city residents for the purpose of de- Decorate | €COTAl® | who Peculiar Diet of the Native Savages | way | WHAT SOUTH AFRICANS EAT, —Ants and Mice. German missionary who has just re- { turned from South Africa recently de- corating the exterior of their home | with ornamental greenery. This fashion comes from Italy and France where, since time immeroiial, it has been the custom to embower the en- frances of the great houses of Rome, Paris, ete., in shrubbery, clipped and grown and potted in big tubs for the | special purpose of threshold embellish- ment. English ivy, dwarf cedar, Italian laurel, privet Canadian spruce, Eng- lish yew or hawthorne and Dutch box | are some of the most popular and ser- viceable shrubs inside the glass storm doors or out- for doorstep use just | = | sized bells are bound. side on the stone landing of the street | steps. Mop-Lieaded Italian laurel trees are the most expensive in this kind of verdure, for a good healthy pair cost all the way from $50 to $250. Fine specimens of English yew come next in estimation, while give the proper foothold to any of these species of evergreen, though now the bric-a-brac dealers, keen to seize a fresh opportunity for trade, are importing from Italy, France and | England time-mellowed but beautiful- | ly “chiselled old marble vases that glorified eighteenth century gardens once. Early in the springthe smartly kept | city house will display a brace of fine privet or prettily Llooming hawthorne | bushes in green tubs, while pots on ! the stone newel posts of rough green potiery ave filled with dwarf cedars and at the bases of these rlet geraniums bloom. In the lower win- dows handsomely tiled window boxes of geraninms and green vines ave set, and such an exterior decoration costs i the owner $50 or § In the an- privet until there is danger of a Leavy ! frost, weather, and then four or six sided box pyramids or handsomely shaped steeple pointed yews, and the window boxes which the laurel does not often | come a couple of | a richly | shaped pair of | | Dutch box bushes are wonderfully | ornamental, sturdy and valuable. Plain, green-painted boxes or tubs | tumn laurel trees in tubs replace the | are | cleared and replanted with little pines | and sturdy spruce and cedar, well bedded and draped with the richest English ivy. The result of all this is to take away in no small degree fiom the stony hardness and monotony of close-set residence streets, and against the new houses of eream brick, gray ! stone and white marble the ply of | greenery is delightful. —New Suan. Weeds Have Nutritive Value, The dandelion isn't the only weed | eaten by people who know what's good to eat. Take wild chicory, the plague | of the farmer. It makes one of the finest salads served—pigquant, tender and wholesome. Charlock, ov mustard, is another mer. He dcesn’t know that as a pot herb it can give a delightful flavor. The dockweeds—how annoying the Yet the broad leaf wild | bane of the far- | York | livered a lecture before the Berlin Geo- graphical society, in which he brought forward the following particulars con- cerning the peculiar diet of the native savages of the Transvaal, especially as noticed among the Basutos, the tribe which is now threatening to take up arms against the British, says the Phil- adeiphia Record. One of their most characteristic hunts is the mouse hunt. Twenty to thirty Basutos gather to- gether; they march off carrying strips of nets made by them for this purpose and, accompanied by a large number of dogs, about whose bodies different The dogs make a big sweep round the countryside, while the Basutos attach their various strips of nets into one long semicir- cular barrier, the lower part of which is pinned to the ground. Then, crouching upon the ground and holding their sticks ready, they wait the com- ing of the mice. These, frightened by the bells dangling from the dogs, grad- ually draw nearer and nearer to the net, along which they are at last found running in a vain effort to discover an opening through which they may cseape. When the number of these victims is sufficiently great a shrill cry is cmitted by the chief, the net is pushed forward all along the line, and the struggling creatures caught in the meshes of the net are unmercifully whipped to death by the jubilant sav- ages. Monkeys, constitute one of their favorite tid-bits, which are all the more appreciated as they are not so readily caught. Snakes are sim- ply killed with blows from a switch and are generally in high favor. Ac- cording to the missionary their pop- ularity is well deserved. He himself took part in a meal in which snakes formed the chief attraction and found that this animal could be favorably compared with ¢ prime eel. Most popular of all delicacies, however, are the caterpillars. It is not unusual to learn of a quarrel which has broken out among the natives for their pos- session. The most favorable time for catching them is the early morning and late evening hours, when their wings are heavy with dew and they are un- able to see clearly. The children ot the mission, numbering about 400, hav- ing organized a locust hunt, succeeded one day in capturing no less than 160 pounds of these insects, which were consumed with the greatest avidity before the day had passed. At certain times of the year the great white- winged ants leave the earth, and it is then that a most zealous competition arises between the Kaffir children and the chickens of the dorp for the pos- session of the prized morsels. such times that the Kaffir youngsters | may be seen running about with their months stuffed full of ants, and, if the chase has been especially successful, - with both fists also full of these succu- lent dainties rs NEWSYSTEM OF BREAD-MAKING variety and the curly leaf are used | all over Europe as table vegetables. There's pokeweed, commonest of them all. In France, itis cultivated. Tt takes the place of sage, thyme, parsley, and bay leaves as a flavoring for soup. Everybody in America hates a nettle and can’t see what use it 1s. In Scot- land, Poland aud Germany tender young nettle leaves are used as greens. The Germans boil them vegetables to give flavor. Purslane is another weed that can be treated the same way. Most people think milkweed poison- It is a medicinal vegetable with with other | them a piquant | ous. a delightful flavor of its own. The young leaves, when they are justin | the rizht condition, are a cross be- tween spinach and asparagus and in a | salad ave delicious. Sorrel feathers | and chevril are looked upon as field pests by 99 out of every 100 farmers. | The hundredth one picks the choicest from these weeds and sends market, where they find a be eaten with herbs—for leaves them to game and for flavoring herbs they are and dustrial Journal. Wed l nz: End a Feud. Alexander Kane and his son, Alex- | ander, aged respectively 60 and 41 years, were married recently at Can- ton, Ohio, to widows who have been bad friends for years. The double wedding have resided for years on adjoining | farms in Ward township, and both were in love with theelder Kane. As a result the women have not lived amicably, and recently an openiup- ture ensued because dogs belonging to them fought. | the differences and a lawsuit resulted. | : . 5 . i Tt was tried before the elder Kane, who ! | stable, When you have found out the pre-! | vailing passion of any man, remember ! not to trust him where that passion is concerned. A wise man will live at least as much within his wit as his income— | Culled {from the Farl of Chesterfield’s Letters to His Son. I really know nothing more criminal, more mean, more ridiculous than lying. It is the production of either malice, cowardice or vanity. Style is the dress of thoughts. . . it is not every understanding that can jndge of matter, but every ear can and does judge more or less of style, If you will please people, yon must please them in their own way; and, as you cannot make them what they should be, you must take them as they af | A spruceness of dress is very be- coming at your age, as the negligence of it implies an indifferency about pleasing, which does not become a young fellow. | Wrongs are often forgiven, but con- tempt never is; our pride remembers it forever; it implies a discovery of weakness which we are more careful to conceal than crimes. A man is fit for neither business nor pleasure who either cannot or does | not command and direct his attention | to the present object, and banish for that time all other objects from his thought. Next to doing the things that de- serve to be written, there is nothing that gets a man more credit, and gives him more pleasure than to write the things that deserve to be read. Great talents are above the gener- | ality of the world, who neither pos- i sess them themselves nor judge of them rightly in others; but all peo- ple are judges of the lesser talents, | such as civility, affability and an agree- { able address and manner. i —_— | About 80 per cent. of the fisting | nets in Hokkaido, Japan, are made of | cotton thread. Cotton nets were first | introduced from Scotland in 1888, | this is a justice of the peace. were served by the son, the home of his father, Justice Alex- ander Kane, where they were ar- raigned for disturbing the peace. The widows’ tongues wagged vigorously end charges and counter-charges were made. The pent-up feelings of re- sentment that had so long slumbered on the altar of love, burst into flame, and, for a while, there was a very lively time. Then an odd compromise was ef- fected. A joint consultation was held, and, as a result, Justice Kane, the father, wedded one of the widows and his son, Constable Kane, took unto himself as bride the other widow. Thus has the feud of love on Armena mountain been wiped out. Wool from Many Sheep. A wool sorter is a factory hand who stands all day at a table on which great soft masses of wool are piled, sifting out the dirt and waste from this, and sorting the good wool that remains. In a single tleece (or shear- ing from one sheep) there are 352 grades of wool. These fleeces do not come to the sorter whole, but piece- meal, jumbled together in great bags. He recognizes their several grades as a pianist does the keys of his instru- ment, states the Philadelphia Record. A good sorter can also tell at a glance the nationality of his wool, whether it be Chinese, Egyptian, Persian, Alas- kan, ete., while in the case of West- ern, American or Territory wool he can even hit on the Territory it from, being gnided by the texture of the staple and by its color, corresponds with the color of the soil on which the Sheep has gr aged: Human Limitations. Professor Gardner tells us that monkeys ere per.ectly capable of learning the French language. Does attack the Darwinian theory? Certainly there are plenty of men who cannot learn to speak French. — Boston Budget, Stuninering is prastinatly unknown among uncivilized people, came | not weeds, —Iu- | was the resuit | The women The owners took up | The papers | who is a con- | He escorted both women to | | eases. which | Trench Process Supposed to Be Filled with Nutriment. Bread-making is so important a fact’ of economy and existence that it even interests the officials of the United States government. The United States consul at Roubaix, France, recently sent to the state department a very ac- curate description of the Schweitzer system of bread-making, which is now being operated at a suburb of Paris, and which is to be established in all the cities of France by a society or- ganized for that purpose. It is claimed tor the Schweitzer bread that it con- tains more nutritive nitrogenous prop- erties than bakars’ bread and double the phosphates to be found in the lat- ter. The system consists of converting the wheat into bread within a short time after it enters the mill to be ground into flour. Ati the Schweitzer establishment the wheat is first treat- ec to a cleaning process, being brushed and washed. Then each grain is split in two, after which ihe wheat goes to the grinders, which crush it in such a way as to retain in the flour all the gluten and other nutritive properties, the bran alone being expelled. The freshly ground flour 1s mixed with yeast, salt and filtered water and car- ried at once by machinery to the knead- ers, which are operated by steam. It is possible to knead 4,409 pounds of dough per hour. When the dough comes from the kneaders it is carried automatically to a room, where it is cut into loaves of all sizes and shapes. The bread is then baked in gas ovens of a peculiar device. By this system of bread-making it is said to be possi- ble to get 100 pounds of wholesome bread from 100 pounds of grain. This bread is sold at the rate of less than § cents for a loaf weighing over two pounds, which is nearly 2 cents a loaf less than the usual price for bread. Ten ‘big two-horse wogan loads of bread are sent out from the establish- ment twice a day and the trade is STOWIng. Cleanliness. One of the most important factors in maintaining health in good order cleanliness. It is comprised in meas- ures that tend to keep the organs clean and in proper order to perform all their functions. The cleanliness of the skin and the air (purity of the air) that we breathe in are essential for the proper keeping of one’s health. Any fmpurities that are taken in breathing find their way to the blood, and thus serve so many centers of disease, and are the cause of many infectious dis- Again, i? the skin is not kept clean the impurities that are to be se- creted are unduly accumulated in the bleed and tend to give rise to severe and often dangerous disorders, such as skin diseases and blood-poisoning. S A Dig at the Hunters. City Sportsman—Any game around here? Farmer—Yes; the woods are full of it. City Sportsman—I supposed it had been pretty well killed off by pow. Farmer—Oh, no. No one eve: hunts around here but you city fellows —Chicago News. It is at} GEN. H. GROSVENOR, | ONE OF THE MOST FORCEFUL MEN IN CONGRESS. His Readiness for Battle Is One of His Leading Tralts—Has Served Near- ly Twenty Years in the Lower House at Washington. There is no more interesting mem- ber of the present House of Represen- (atives at Washington than General Charles H. Grosvenor of Ohio, whose name, after the retirement of Speaker Reed, was coupled with the speaker- ship. One of the most prominent traits of Gen. Grosvenor is his pugnacity. He has been in Congress nearly twenty years, and has been fighting all that time. There is nothing he likes better than a scrap, and there is always fun in the air when be gets up to speak. - ZS GEN. CH ARLES 0 'GROSVENOR. He is all angles and points, and his en- trance into a debate is the signal for the bristling of all the feathers on the Democratic side. He is as obnoxious to his oppenents as a cat is to a poul- try yard. Grosvenor is one of the most effec- tive debaters in the House. He knows political history for the last thirty vears and he has every man’s political record tucked away somewhere in his well-filled brain, it at a moment's notice. bim a very ugly customer. the resources of a great criminal law- yer in controversy. Before he ever went to Congress he had a reputation in his state as one of the best crimi- nal lawyers who ever practiced in Ohio—and that is saying a gocd deal, He is some years on the sunny side of { 60, but his appearance is that of a man older than this. He is of meagre size with white hair and white beard and a pair of shaggy eyebrows beneath which gleam a pair of very bright eyes. He served all through the war in an Ohio regiment from 1861 to 1865 and was promoted from major to colonel, retiring with a brevet of brigadier gen- eral of volunteers. In the battle of Nashville he commanded a brigade. Since the war he has never ceased to take up the cudgels for his old com- rades in arms. There hag never been a pension biil that he did not vote for, and he always hits out from the shoul- der when veterans are under attack. Grosvenor is not a political manager or organizer like some others in Ohio, but he is one of the most effective lieu- tenants that a great political organizer could ask for. When Mark Hanna was setting up the campaign which resulted in McKinley's nomination, Grosvenor, who couldn't consent to lie {dle, began to give out estimates from time to time of the number of delegates McKinley had secured. He had no authoritative statistics, but he took the most favor- papers, adding a few McKinley dele- gates here and there, to suit his taste, and once a week would issue a bulle- tin which kept the McKinley column continually on the jump. Pretty soon people began to take Grosvenor’s fig- ures seriously. He chuckled to himself and kept it up. When the convention finally met there was a landslide and Grosvenor found himself more than Justified. Since that time he has en- joyed a reputation as a great statisti- cian, although he really cares very lit- tle about political mathematics. He has a rich sense of humor, though, that helps him to carry his reputation {th a great deal of tranquility. DAWSON OF 1800. City Has Changed Greatiy Past Year. Dawson of 1898, the year previous. The thousands of against the river front, in rows six: deep and more, and comprising all | manner of craft from the small canoe | to sliced sections of scows, have mostly disappeared, and in their place we now find the graceful and ungraceful forms of varying types of steamboat. It is no uncommon thing nowadays to find five or more of these larger craft tied up at one time to the river front, and the amplitude and majesty of the Mis- | issippi boats gain but little in com- parison with some of the larger craft of the Yukon river. Overhung signs call attention to the flying queens of! the river, the Bonanza King, Canadian | and Sibyl, and thousands are offered | upon the result of the race to the White Horse rapids. So here, as in the | olden days of the Mississippi, the struggle for supremacy has led to the opening of the throttle and to the] scraping of the fire-box. Upward of a hundred arrivals from down the river were registered at Dawson during the season of open water of 1899.—Apple- ton's Popular Science Monthly for Feb- ruary. : Sheet Lead In Formosa. The method of making sheet lead for tea packing in Formosa is most in- teresting. The lead is from Australia in pigs, and after being melted is poured between two large tiles, the required degree of thickness for the sheet being obtained by pressure by the feet. The sheet is afterwards trimmed to suitable sizes and shapes for soldering and is used for packing. where he can get at! This makes He has all | Grosvenor is younger than he looks. | able figures he could find in the news- ! bateaux that were formerly lined up| During the | The Dawson of 1899 is no longer the and much less that of | | . | | | | | 2 | | 3 | | | | | halt is turned, and then comes the pol-' Don’t thee wed for money, friend; For money hath a sting; Don’t thee wed a pretty face; 'Tis but a foolish thing; Don’t thee wed for place nor fame; Twill disappoint thy hope; But when thee marries, choose a girl Who uses Ivory Soap. iT FLOATS. QOPYRIQHT 1889 BY THE PROCTER & GAMBLE CO. CINCINNATI The reuch navy department is build- "ing a battleship which will cost nearly $6,cc0.000. Making a Billlard Ball, It requires skilled labor to turn out a billiard ball. One-half of it is first turned, an instrument of the finest The Washington Mutual Mining Investment steel being used for the work. Then irate oh lity ak, a Sham, re . tees 6 be cent. ir the half-turned ball is hung up in a al net and is allowed to remain there for nearly a year to dry. Next the second ition in profits d elsewhere, 11 Jovestorw Write 1s Turkle h and ‘free lance.” “cossack” ishing. Whiting and water and a good 22 an or deal of rubbing are requizite for this. It is necessary in the end that the ball shall, to the veriest fraction of a grain, nce For Whoopie Gough, Sossin rome -M.P.D Brooklyn, 2 consumes about 1 tons of coal London An Inherited Upon. seven and Mrs. Gay—Well, suppose 1 was a co- quette! There's no great harm in a giri flirting a little before she's mar- ried. The Colonel-—Do you teach your HE daughter that? Mrs. Gay—Why, no; float, it isn’t necessaryv!— Puck. Deafues “Cannot Be Car.d by local applications,as they cannot reach the cased portion of the ear. Thereis only oLs that is by constitu- y an in- of he auc lining of the Whe this tube gets in- ihl sound or imper- ud wien itis entirely closed , and unless the inflam- he Way to Beautify Home Is to do as they all are doing. grocer, who knows all about ft; thing for you fn the way of a coupon book, which enables you to get one large 10c¢. package of “Red Cross” starch, one large 10c. package of ‘“‘Hubinger’s Best’ starch, withthe preminms,two Shakespeare panels, or one Twentieth Century Girl calendar, all for 5e, Ask your has some- g case of Dea wv cannot bec ared b by Tails 8 ‘Catare tor circulars, rh Cure. Toledo, O. e, J. CHENEY & CO, Sold by Drug Hall's Family = Aluminum hor favor in some sesh are coming ints Very Near It. . quarters. Governesa-—What were the names of Noah's sons? Kitty (after a pause)— Shem — (pause) -— Ham, and—(long pause)—Bacon.—Ally Sloper. ALITY low, debilitated or Sxhatastcue] by Dr. Kline's lnvig gorating Tonic. FREE 81 trial bottle for 2 weeks’ treatment. Dr. Br ine, 1d., 931 Arc °h St, » Philadelphia. Founded 1871, Sycose is the n a substitute for material used a: sugar in diabetes. Fry Grain-0! Try Grain-9! Ask your grocer to-day to show you n package of GRAIN- the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. Children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it like it. GraIx-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but is made from pure grains; the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. 4 the price of coffee.” 15c, and 25¢, per package. Sold by all grocers, How Are Your Kidneys ¢ Hob ragus Pills cure all kidney ills. Sams Sis Nad Storing Remedy Co., Chicago or N. ¥ The man who does no good is not necessarily harmless. oothing Syrap forchildren s the gums, reduc nflammas Mrs. Winslow® {tens ain. cures wind colic. 25¢ a bottle. . teething, = tion, allays The great need of Havana is a mod- ern slaughtering plant, and plans have been made for one to be built at the cxpense of the city. Jell=0, the New Dessert, Pleases all the family. Four flavors:— Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers, 10 cts. It 1s much better to sit in the lap oi luxury thar in to stand on ceremony. 3 Care Consuipacion Forever: Take a ndy Cathartic. 10c or 25¢. iC. C ¢ Tail % cure, druggists refund money. 20,000 Japanese imuni- at Hawaii last year. W. L. DOUCLAS $3 & 3.50 SHOES YNIoN 2 Worth $4 to $6 compared ¢ t] with other mak £ Inde d by ov ny 1,600,000 wearers. The genwine have W. L. > name and price § Take London medical papers discuss an outbreak of typhoid fever at Exeter, which has been traced to consumption of raw cockles. Licanty 1s Hlood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar- tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy iver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to amish pimples, boils, Tors blackheads, | and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug- gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 2 25¢, 50c. for a nd of Tathr 3 5 and att, plain or ca % toe. Cat. eras WL DOUGLAS SHOE C0., Brockton, Sik stead- er Sega them: % ute | | | | i and cities are many of towns and £0060000680 R 14 CENTS , his ear 200,000 n theirs noe offer me a Or arket Lettie. fig sty Te lon, Ripo Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever. Le mag setic, full of lite, ner wid vigor, take No-T'o Bac, the wonder-work that makes weak men strong. All druggists, or §l. Cureg teed. Dooklet und sample free. Sterling Remedy Co.. Chicago or New hig Above 10 Pigs The Premier of Vi states that ou free tog ett 3 , +111 cheeriully rs Catal ii necessary the colony will cheeriu SALIER' S witlion tv) STAT dispatch a fourth contingent to South bpontecalpi @ & stamps. We Ha srtSde, and know when Wh ever ry Sai er’s E | Cire Afr To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TABLETS. All dru gists refund the money if it falls on curs, RE GROVE'S Signature is on each bo 2c. | = 2 | | P . iest To. Jon A. Tn EL aes Wis. NU. g fi P b i iN EE Eormanine We will send So addicted to plornhine, danum, or Coll rd bt Alirencment, fro ofc Among the stuff in the Boer near Kimberley scized by ‘rench 23 cases of champagne found. What Shall We lave For Dessert) This question arises in the family daily. Let us answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared in 2 min. No boiling! no baking! Simply add a little hot water & set to cool. Flavors: Lemon,Orange, Raspberry and Sirawberry. At Erocers, 10c. Denver expended over $2 ,000,000 On new buildings for business and public purposes in 189. the mos! SECURED OR Fee Refunded ‘Patent advertised free. Mree ad. pre 2, to Ei teniabiiity, FE Send for “Inventors 0 BB, STEVENS & CO. 7 Thi st, W Ashington b C. icago, Cleveland land © Faneate Your Dowels Sil Ca foaram ar dy Cathartie, cure ¢ tipation {ore 105! The. Hao. cet fail, druggisis refund Sha na. ARNOLD'S COUGH There is a movement in the A Y ures {oughis and Colds. EB < o 4 ; ‘revents Consumption. KILLER tates to send a mounted voluntee: Dre i Ree corps to South Africa. DR [e] PSs Y NEW DISCOVERY; gives ial o of Le cures wore} eases. Book of testi TE and @' treatmend Free. Dr. H. : 8, GREEN i's sons. Bex 5, “asienta, Ge. The Beat Prescription for Chills and Fever is a bottle of GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL ToN10. It 1s simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form, No cure—no pay. Price 5c. Glove Trade in Franee. France makes nearly 26,000,000 pairs of gloves yearly, and of these 18,000,- 000 pairs are exported. WHAT ALABASTINE IS. Alnbastina is the original and only dur- able wall counting on the market. Itisen- tirely difforent from all kalsomine prepar- ations, Alabastine is made ready for usein shite or fourteen beautiful tints by the ad- dition of cold water. It is put up in drv powdered form, in packages, properly lnialed, with full directions on every package, It takes the place of scaling , wull paper aud paint for walls, ne can be used on plaster, brick, or eanvas, aud a child ean brush # AQ0 t ou, WHAT “KALSOMINES” "ARE, preparations, manufactured from whiting, chaiks, clays, ete. They are stuck on the | walls with decaying animal glue. Alabas- | tine is net a kalsomine, It is a rock-base | cement,which sets,and it hardens with age, | It can be re-coated and re-decorated with- { out having to wash and scrap off its old coats. Alabastine is utilized to a great ex- i tent in hospitals, as it prevents the accumu- lation of dirt and the congregating cv dis- ease germs, tare. | Kalsomines are cheap and temporary being disinfectant im its na- CHURCHES AND SCHOOLHOUSES. The interior walls of churches, school- | houses and all public halls should never be coated with anything but the durable and pure Alabastine. So evident has thiz fact become, that hundreds of toasare used an- nually for this work. The genuine Alabas- s tine does not rub or scale off. Itis cleanly 3 inger to during the long period of its usefulness. Ev- | as te 3a of al! ery owner of a building should use it. Ask . Denlers risk ¢ for your paint dealer or druggist for card of | Sei a and consume tints, and write for free copy of our interest- | ment, Alabast tho right to ing booklet to Alubastine Co..Grand Rapids, | make and sell wall soatings adapted to mix Miekb | wite cold water stive cr cither is not yer In offer. t shaap and is demund, he himseit as Rew substi- yusingani