44 One Year's Seeding, Nine Years' Weeding cNiegtecied impurities in your blood will sow seeds of disease of which you may newer get rid. If your blood is ewen the least bit impure, do not delay, but take Hood's Sarsaparilla at once. In so doing there is safety; in delay there is danger. Be sure to get only Hood"s, because fficO£j|d SI OO Reward. 93100. The readers of this paper will ho pleased to learn that there is at least 0110 dreaded dis ease thut science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that, is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh (.ure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in ternally, acting directly on tho blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby de stroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up tho constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address. . , F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Dm ggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Mrs.Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, soltens tho gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic.2sc a bottle. Plso'n Cure for Consumption relieves the most obstinate coughs. Rev. I). HICHMUIL LEK, Lexington, Mo., February 24, 1894. On the few occasions when the Queen is present at a State banquet at Buck ingham Palace, she has Royal silver plate weighing about four tons sent from Windsor. The silver plate stow ed away in the pantries and cupboards at Windsor is . stimated at a million and a half sterling._ lfo-To-Bac for FlTty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c. 11. AU druggists. In spite of the law the destruction of birds in the Italian part of Switzer land continues on a largo scale. In the canton of Tessin alone the guards destroyed last year 13,000 traps for birds. To Cur® Constipation Forever, Take Cascnrcts Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists rcfuud money. National Pride. It is now almost two full centuries since England and Scotland were united, in 1707, under the name of Great Britain. Yet up to the present time the world continues to employ the familiar terms English queen. Eng lish army, and so on, with no mention of Scotland. This slight has often been commented upon by Scotchmen, but never perhaps more happily than at Trafalgar. Two Scotchmen, mess mates and bosom cronies, from tho same little clachan, happened to ba stationed near each other, when the now celebrated signal was given from the admiral's ship: "England expects every man to do his duty. "No a word o' puir auld Scotland on this oc casion!" dolefully remarked Geordie to Jock. Jock cocked his eye a mo ment, turning to his companion, "Man, Geordie," said he, "Scotland kens weel eneuch that nae bairn o' hers needs to he tell't to do his duty—that's just a hint to the Englishers." Unseen by Telephone. A business house of Aberdeen. Scot land, recently engaged as office boy a raw country youth. It was part of his duties to attend to the telephone in his master's absence. When first called upon to answer the bell, in re ply to the usual query, "Are you there?" he nodded assent. Again the question came, and still again, and each time the boy gave an answering nod. When the question came for the fourth time, however, the boy losing his temper, roared through the tele phone: "Man, a' ye blin'? I've been noddin' me heid aff for t' last hauf •oor!"—New York Tribune. Pain Conquered; Health Re stored by Lvdia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. [LETTER TO MRS. PINKHAM NO. 92,649] 41 I feel it ray duty to write and thank you for what your Vegetable Com pound has done for me. It is the only medicine I have; found that has done me any good. Jh fore taking your medi cine, 1 was all run down, tired all the time, no appetite, pains in my back and bearing down pains and a great suf ferer during menstruation.' After tak ing two bottles of Lydia E. Vinkhain's Vegetable Compound I felt like a new woman. lam now on my fourth bottle and all my pains have left me. I feel better than I have felt for three years and would recommend your Compound to every suffering woman. 1 hope this letter will help others to find a cure for their troubles."—Mas. DELLA Rkmickkr, Rk.nssklakb, Ind. The serious ills of women develop from neglect of early symptoms. Every pain and ache has a cause, and the warning they give should not be disre garded. Mrs, Pinkham understands these troubles better than any local phy sician and will give every woman free advice who is puzzled about her health. Mrs. Pinkham's address is Lynn, Mass. Don't put off writing until health is completely broken down Write at the first indication of trouble. The University of Notre Dame NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. Clnsxie*, I.etter*, Economic* and History, JmirimllMttt, Art, Science, Pharmacy, l,nw, Civil, .Welinciiicnl nud Electrical Engineer ing. Architecture. 'I horoiigli Preparatory and Commercial Course*. Ecclesiastical students at specie' rates. Knout* Free. Junior or Senior Year, Collegiate Courses. Rooms to Kent, moderate charge. St. Edward'* Hull for f>oy under IH. The oGdi Year will open September stli, 1800. Catalogue* Free. Address KEY. A. MOUKISSEY.C. S.C.. President. ASTHMA POSITIVELY CURED. I ( HOSII Y'S SWEDISH ASTHMA CURE I dees this. A trial ia' kage mailed free. I COLLINS BROS. MEIUCIKI CO., ST. LOUIS, Mo. I A MODEL STATE PRISON. MONTANA'S PENITENTIARY CLASSED AS AN EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION. Tlio Mawtlve and Beautiful Structure Built Entirely By the < Jon virtu—School Privileges Accorded to tlie Inmates and Musical Inst ruction Furnished Them. The Montana state penitentiary at Helena in its care for and manage ment of its prisoners is a unique in stitution and might well be taken as a tpodel by many institutions of a like character in the older states. Not only is every effort made to benefit the unfortunate, inmates and fit them for honest lives after they shall have left the prison walls, but much As done to render their present condition cheerful. Wardens Conley and Mc- Tague, who have had charge of the prison for many years, act upon the theory that, with all possible allevia tions, penitentiary life is a severe punishment and that a large percent age of tho men will quickly show their appreciation of kindness by being far more tractable than if they were not accorded any privileges. The latest innovation is ihe intro duction of a brass band within tho penitentiary. The band, consisting of twenty-four pieces, has been re cently organized and is under the in struction of a bandmaster, who also acts as one of theguardsof the prison. The penitentiary might also be classed as an educational institution. In the prison school, organized four years since, are taught all the Eng lish branches of the ordinary gram mar sell tols, in addition to pouinan ship, bookkeeping, typewriting, tele graphy and photography. A tele graphic apparatus lias been set up in the penitentiary for the use of the pupils. Teachers as well as students are taken from among the ranks of the inmates. Tho school is at present closed ow ing to the recent departure of its prin cipal. This young man, known as Harry Brett, is from au English fam ily of standing and wealth, whose name is known but to 0110 or two in this state. To escape the result of youthful escapades he came to Mon tana under an assumed name. He was at one time assistant city clerk of Helena, and while holding that posi tion forged a large number of city warrants. Others were implicated, but be alone was convicted. A brother iu England kept himself informed of Brett's history and a short time before the expiration of his sen tence wrote to the governor of Mon tana, asking for his brother's release and offering to send money enough to set him up in business in Australia. His brother's request was grnntedand a short time since Brett left the pris on and the same day was on his way to Australia to begin life anew. But the prison school is not the only remarkable feature of this institution. In the work performed by the con victs within the past few years, the Montana penitentiary has made a tee ord which is to the credit of its man agers. Until within the last five or six years the state prison consisted of a few log buildings of various sizes and one solid stouo structure, all sur rouuded by a high board teuce. The present prison building ranks among the finest in the United States. Few will excel in solidity or beauty, for while symmetrical iu outline it is far less severeiu appearance than the usual building of that class, being more elaborate in detail, more modern in design and surpassing in point of architectural beauty most institutions of similar character. The building is of brick, riveted with rugged, native granite, 188 feet in length, 50 feet iu width aud nearly 45 feet iu height, with four towers rising to a height of 09 feet, the whole containing a floor spacoof 59,500 feet. Iu addition to this is what is known ns the "Assembly hall," a building two stories high, 170 byfiO feet, composed entirely of brick with trimmings of granite blocks. Surrounding both buildings is a wall of native rock, eveuly out aud perfectly matched, ex tending nine l'cet into the ground, 20 feet in height, finished with n coping three feet wide, with massive en trances, and with four towers 40 feet in height. These new buildings and improvements, which ordinarily would have involved in their construction an expenditure of nearly quarter of a million, have been built bv the in mates of the prison, all within the space of four years aud at a cost to the state of less than §50,000. This work was at first undertaken as an experiment with many doubts and misgivings, but in n short time the wisdom of the plan was demon strated, so that when it was decided to erect the main building - the most recently completed portion of the work—although it involved considera ble responsibility, yet the commis sioners and managers had not the slightest hesitation in giving work to the prisoners. There were no quar rels among the men, no insubordina tion, aud 110 attempted escapes while the work was iu progress. Without chains or fetters, aad with but few guards, the men quarried the rock, cut aud dressed the granite blocks, moulded and burned the bricks, dug the sand, burned the lime, out the logs and sawed the lumber. Iu less than a year and a half they completed the massive and beautiful structure. With the exception of the the foreman of the brick yard and a tinner employed to superintend the covering of the roof, it is wholly, from beginning to end, the work of laborers, mostly unskilled, and all designated as "criminals." Even the architect who furnished the design for the building was himself a prisoner, whose sentence expired a few weeks prior to the commence ment of the construction. The two buildings will accommo- date over 500 prisoners. The main building is the prison proper, the as sembly hall containing 011 the first floor the prison bakery, kitchen, laun dry, bathroom, storage rooms and various shops, while on the second floor ure located the drug store, hos pital, library and the large dining room and assembly hall. This also has cells for about 200 prisoners and contains the female dormitories. There are now about 350 iumates ol the institution. The prisoner longest in the institution is an old man, sen tenced to life imprisonment for mur der, who has now served twenty years, and the latest arrival is within the past few days, sent up for highway robbery. There have been 27 deaths in tho penitentiary since its estab lishment, about 1871. Of this number four were colored men and eleven were Indians or half-breeds, the In dians being unable to endure confine ment dying invariably of consump tion. It is rather unusual to see within prison walls hundreds of men of all ages and nationalities patiently mas tering the various branches, from reading and spelling up to the higher mathematics; to hear tho click of the telegraphic instruments, the clatter of typewriters and the hum of recita tion classes, interspersed with lessous in music, vocal and instrumental; but this is what may be seen and heard in the state penitentiary of one of the youngest states in tho union, thanks to a wise board of prison commission ers and to the intelligent and untir ing efforts of its managers. QUAINT AND CURIOUS EYE LORE. Blue eyes are said to bo the weak est. Upturned eyes are typical of devo tion. Wide open eyes are indicative of rashness. Side-glancing eyes are always to be distrusted. Brown eyes are said by oculists to be the strongest. Small eyes are commonly supposed to indicate cunning. Tho downcast eye has in all ages been typical of modesty. People of melancholic temperament rarely have clear blue eyes. The proper distance between the eyes is the width of ouo eye. Eyes with long, sharp corners indi cate great discernment and penetra tion. The white of the eve showing be neath the iris is indicative of nobility of character. Gray eyes turning green in anger or excitement are indicative of a choleric temperament. An eye the upper lid of which passes horizontally across tho pupil indicates mental ability. When tho upper lid covers half or more of the pupil the indication is of cool deliberation. Unsteady eyes, rapidly jerking from side to side, are frequently indicative of an unsettled mind. It is said that "the prevailing colors of eyes among patients of lunatic asy lums are brown and black. Eyes of any color with weak brows and loug, concave lashes, are indica tive of a weak constitution. Eyes that are wide apart ate said by physiognomists to indicate great intelligence and a tenacious memory. Eyes of which the whole of the iris is visible belong to erratic persons, often with a tendency toward insanity. Wide open, staring eyes in weak countenances, indicate jealousy, big otry, intolerance and pertinacity with out firmness. Eyes placed close together in the liead are said to indicate pettiness of disposition, jealousy, and a turn for fault finding. When the under arch of the upper eyelid is a perfect semicircle it is in dicative of goodness, but also of tim idity, sometimes approaching coward ice. All men of genius are said to have eyes clear, slow moving and bright. This is the cyo which indicates mental ability of some kind, it does not mut ter what. Blue eyes are generally considered effominute, but this is a mistake, for blue eyes are found only among Cau casian nations, and the white races rule the world—Pearson's Weekly. Flat houses in Malta. Valletta, the capital of Malta, has been invaded by tho Harlem fiat and the Maltese are delighted. One large flathouse having proved a success,sev eral more are about to be built and the Maltese want to know just, how the thing is done in New York. The capitalists who are to build the flat houses have been to John Grout, Jr., the United States consul at Malta,and told him that they want the latest thing in electric outfits for fiats, such as bells, etc., and now ideas as to plumbing and elevators. Mr. Grout says: "I have had sever al conversations with the men in ro gard to their getting American goods for tho new buildings, and have ex plained to them, as far as I have been able, how our flat buildings are constructed and finished and tho fittings used. The result is that they have become interested to such an extent as to request me to get them illustrated catalogues and price lists of goods appertaining to the interior fitting up of buildings of this class, and especially of doors,locks, hinges, bolts, window fastenings and honse hardware in general. New York Press. Thirty-nix foreign vessels, having an aggregate tonnage of 57,556, met with disaster in American waters last year. EVOLUTION. "A scientist announces that the numan j race is an evolution from the vegetable." ' If this be true, as Science tells, 'tis ver> plain to see In certain folks the influence of marked heredity. Who can deny, if ho shall try to reason out their heads, i The (lads of many festive dudosonce dwelt in cabbage-beds? | And then what cannibals they are down East in Boston town, { Who eat their own relations cooked anil i served with bread that's brown! For no one with a knowledge of the facta behind the scenes Disputes that they of Boston are descended all from beans. And, oh, tho politician! How he shows his ancestry In every secret deal he makos that knows no honesty! Just watoh him as ho walks along so proudly on the street. I And say if there are lacking signs that bo's a perfect beetl , The lover, too, so soft-eyed, with the ways ! of turtle doves, : Whom all the world smiles swoetly on, whom everybody loves— j 'Tie clear that he's the offspring of that ! sweet and unabashed 1 Original potato that in ancient days was mashed. I I But you, O Phyllis darling, I cannot bo liovo that you j Were ever in tho garden patch where such plain things grew; Your fathers were not.veg'tnbles, for every body knows That you're the fair descendant of some sweet and blooming roso. PITH AND POINT. Chollie—"lt costs rac about S4OOO a year to live." Dollio—"What a waste of money!"—Yonkers States | man. } "I don't like that cat any move," l said a four-year-old child. "It's got j splinters in its feet!"— The Sheltering ' Arms. j "Jlamma," inquired Ethel, looking rather puzzled, "if little children have calves in their legs, do grown up people have cows in theirs?" Littlo Sister—"Don't you know why they turn 'bV one way and j 'd's' tho other way?" Littlo Brother j (dolefully)— "Jast to puzzle little ] boys learning Iheir letters!" -Buck. Instructor—"What is tho differ j ence between the positivo and nega | tive electricity?" Student—"lt is pos ! itive when it it turned on nud nega | tive when it is turned off."—lndian apolis Journal, j Mrs. Blimm—"The Dobsons at ! last have a girl they hope to keep." ! Mrs. Gimp—"Absurd! Where is such j a girl to be found?" Mrs. Blimm— | "She was born to them yesterday."— Philadelphia North American, j Doctor—"The patient is beset with the idea that the land, as far as he I can see, belongs to him." Judge— "l wouldn't call that insanity. It is merely incipient political ambition." —Philadelphia North American. | Examiner—"Want to enlist as an . army nurse, eh? Had any experience with tho sick and wounded?" Fair Applicant—"l've four brothers, every one of 'em a scorcher, and pa shaves himself with a safety razor."—Tid- Bits. "Did tho court convict that auto mobile owner of going at an illegal rate of speed?" "Yes; the witncfft had never ridden in an auto-mobile before and he testified that it went at the rate of one thousand miles an hour." Jimmy—"Won't your mother be mad when sho sees how you tore your clothes?" Tommy—"l guess not so very. Mu'U have lots of fun huntiu* up cloth to match an' puttin' a patch so people can hardly notice it." — Puck. "Oh, Harry," said Mrs. Mcßrideto her husband, as she caught sight of a 1 card in a jeweler's window, "let's go in and look at those solid gold babies' rings." "But, my deal - ," protested Mr. Mcßride, "ours is uot a solid baby."—Harper's Bazar. A littlo three year-old girl went to a children's party. On her return she said to her parents: "At the party a little girl fell off a chair. All the other girls laughed, but I didn't." "Well, why didn't you laugh?" " 'Cause I was the one that fell offl" A Novel Iniluatry, "There are many queer industries in tho world," says the Philadelphia Record, "hut the Now Jersey farmer | who has lately made a contract with a Philadelphia millinery firm to furnish crow heads at twenty-five cents apiece claims to have a monopoly on the latest | novelty in tho industrial line. The j enterprise bids fair to become extreme ly profitable, as there are thousands of crows in that section of Jersey, which is just over the Camden County I line in Gloucester County. The crow is a very wily bird, and as a usual thing powder and shot are only wasted iu an attempt to kill him. The farmer knows this, and has wasted no time in gunning. Ho traps the birds by the dozen, and has robbed all the nests he j could find. In a chicken incubator ho has hatohed out over one hundred eggs, and the young crows will bo ready for the beheading process iu about eight weeks." Tha Filipino'* Savin;;* Hank. Nearly every provincial Filipiuo of thrifty propensities puts his suvings, not in a Manila bank, but in a strong box. The box is usually a fancy iron chest of small dimensions, but is se cured by locks and bolts enough to defy a Chinese locksmith. The outer keyhole is the first secret of tho box, and is usually hidden under some moving iron baud that embellishes the chest. After raising the first lid there is one or two more that must be opened, and the locks or bars of these are equally hidden —though in most cases simple to the ingenuity of the American soldier. The whole contrivance is a relio of Spanish feu dalism, and as a place of safety is an easily solved toy to the ingenious American.—Leslie's Weekly. LIKE BANQUO'S GHOST. Vacation of Conductor* and Pennies to the Fore Agsin. It was In a suburban trolley last Sunday that the question of the con ductor's reluctance to receive pennies in change came up again, says the New York Herald. This penny question is like Banquo's ghost and will not down. A woman passenger had given the con ductor a nickel and five pennies for two fares. "I would rather change $5 for you, madam, than take those pen nies," the conductor said, in a grumbling yet perfectly respectful tone. "Why?" asked the woman. "Because the company will not take them from us. That is the only objection I have to railroading. We must turn in nick els or silver when our work is done." "But why do you not sometimes give those pennies to men? You always palm them off on women." "Well, the women always seem to keep them specially for us. Now, if the public could only know what a trial they are to us sometimes they might understand our reluctance to take them. For in stance, one of the extras, a man who had been out of work for a long time, after making the number of trips re quired of him. found he had fifteen pennies among his change. He did not have a cent belonging to himself, and there was no money at home, and the pay that was coming to him at the of fice for his week's work was needed by his wife and children for bread. They would not take the pennies at the of fice. and he could not draw his pay un til his fares were accounted for. When, after considerable trouble, he got three nickels for fifteen pennies and returned to the company's office it was closed, and he had to go home without his Pay." Another Itlue Cirotto. The famous Blue Grotto of Capri has now a rival in the state of Minnesota. It occurs in a lake on the shore of which there is a cavern of white lime- j stone flooded with water. A swimmer | enters the cave, and turning to look outward sees the most beautiful shades i of green and blue in the water and a I silvery sheen over his submerged | limbs. Do Your Feet Aclie and lliiru ? Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet It makes Tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns. Hun ions, Swollen, Hot. Callous, Aching and Sweating Feet Sold by all Druggists. Grocers and Shoe Stores. 250 Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Lelioy, N. Y. There are now published in Paris 2.585 periodicals, nearly 100 more than were issued at the corresponding dati last year. Pon't Tobacro Spit and Smoke Your I.ifc Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag letic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or SI. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address j Sterling Remedy Co.. Chicago or New York. ' A German army officer estimates that in the century just closing no less ! than 30,000.000 men have been killed in j war in civilized countries. j L ji l® . 4 | Does your head ache? Pain back of I your eyes? Bad taste in your mouth? I It's your liver! Ayer's Pills arc I liver pills. They cure constipation, I headache, dyspepsia, and all liver £_comphiints. 25c. Alldruggists. I ftrmvn <>r rir!i Mark? Then use I [ BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Whiskers | "■have lived your valuable CASCA IIKTS aid lit id thorn perfect. Couldn't do without them. I have used them for some time for indigest ion and biliousness and am now coin pletely cured Recomnn nd them, to every one. j Onco tried, you will never be without them in the family.'' Edw. A. MAKX, Albany, N. Y. CANDY TRADf MAIM MZ'.&tXUtd Pleasant.. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do i Good, Me. or Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. We. 2je, 50c. I ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... •*—■ "•<••< U-trtm. M.wTorfc. Ml 1 NO-TO-BAC W. L. DOUGLAS S3 & $3.50 SHOES "N'ON t Worth $4 to s(} compared with other makos. ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES Take no snbptttutc claimed of and tn.fto allocs In the world. Your dealer ahoulri keep a pair on receipt of price, state kind of leather, nlzc and width, plain or cap toe. Catalogue C Free. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton. Mass. Dr. Ricord's Essence of Life ard, never-falling remedy for all eases of nervous, mental, physical dobi.ity. losr vitality and pre mature decay in both sexes; positive,'permanent cure; full treatment $5, or #1 a bottle: stamp for circular. J. JA< QL'EH. Agent, 176 llroudwav. N. Y. ".SS'Sy?.™?: Thomoson's Eye Water F. N. U. 38 '99 I'^gtatraaaHfr Best Cough byrup. Tantes Good. Use R| Id time. Bold by druggists. |Sf ■gsEßaoasHZEgi Cleaning up at the shop after a long, dirty run, is a severe test of soap quality. The pores of the skin need opening, the oily exudations from them demand instant removal, for health and cleanliness. Ivory Soap meets the severest tests squarely, does what you expect. It floats, produces a copious lather, white and pure. Loosens the dirt and grease, rinses thoroughly and leaves the skin soft and clean. Economical because best. IT FLOATS. NIAGARA'S VOICES. Th*j Are Not Rumbling or Rapid, but Plan cent and Silvery, j Niagara has many voices, and some I of them are thus described by Mrs. i van Rensselaer in the Century: "And the noise of Niagara? Alarming ! things have been said about it, but j they are not true. It is a great and mighty noise, but it is not, as Henne | pin thought, an 'outrageous noise.' It lis not a roar. It does not drown the j voice or stun the ears. Even at the j actual foot of the falls it is not op ! pressive. It is much less rough than I the sound of heavy surf—steadier, I more homogeneous, less metallic, very | deep and strong, yet mellow and soft; j soft, I mean, in its quality. As to the ! noise of the rapids, there is none more | musical. It is neither rumbling nor | sharp. It is clear, plangent, silvery. It is so like the voice of a steep brook— j much magnified, but not made coarser jor more harsh— that, after we have I known it, each liquid call from a for ] est hillside will seem, like the odor of ! grapevine, a greeting from Niagara. It iis an inspiriting, an exhilarating | sound, like freshness, coolness, vitality ; itself made audible. And yet it is a | lulling sound. When we have looked out upon the American rapids for i many days, it is hard to remember con- S tented life amid motionless surround | ings; and so, when we have slept be i side them for many nights, it is hard < to think of happy sleep in an empty | silence. Still another kind of music is | audible at Niagara. It must be list ! ened for on quiet nights, but then it | will be heard. It is like the voice of an | orchestra so very far away that its notes arc attenuated to an incredible j delicacy and are intermittently per , reived, as though wafted upon varia ' ble zephyrs. It is the most subtile, the | most mysterious music in the world. What is its origin? Why should we : ask? Such fairy-like sounds ought not ! to be explained. Their appeal is to the ; imagination only. They are so faint, | so far away, that they almost escape ; the ear, as the lunar bow and the fluted j tints of the American falls almost j escape the eye. And yet we need not fear to lose them, for they are as real j as the deep bass of the cataracts." Woman Finds Woaitii. quartz mine. The vein is from 200 to GOO feet in width and is intersected in j its source by Atlin City, it has been j traced over three-quarters of a mile. I Miss Florman's fathei is a mine expert j and numerous assays of the ore which I (Tacoma, Wash., Cor. Chicago Record) 1 Miss Frankie Florman, of Black I Hills, S. I")., has discovered what Atlin | mining men regard as an immense i he recently made disclosed values run ; ning from $s to $27 per ton on the sur ! face. Mining Expert Frank Baker and i William Partridge have bonded the j property for $200,000. Partridge left | here yesterday for London to place it | on the market there. At Roubaix, one of the Socialist stronghold- of France, the 11.000 public school children receive free food and clothing, at tit expense of the town. Bonuty Is niood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascurets, Candy C'alhar i tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by , stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im I purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, j and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Sir Frederick Bridge, the organist of Westminster Abbey, has a brother* Mho is also a Doctor of Music. Before Sir Fredercik was knighted, his friends used to call him "Westminster Bridge" to distinguish him from his brother. The disproportion of the sexes is stili very great in Australia. In West Australia time were only 54,000 wom en in a population of 168,000. '"THE CLEANER 'TIS, THE COSIER 'TIS." WH4T IS HOME WITHOUT SAPOLIO [ Fits T Prm.'im ntly mi red. Nn fits or nervous re?s niter Jiist day** I'M> of Dr. Kline's Great. Nerve Restorer. tr'ud bottle Ho! tn-atiso Iree. Dr.R.H.KI.iNE. Ltd. 931 Arch -b. Phil i.Pa The railroads of Australia have j never discovered that it is possib'e to ! take up tickets on the train, hence the. | passengers are locked in the cars to ; prevent any of them stealing a ride, land when they arrive at th ir station and hustled out through a turnstile j and held up for their tickets. Educate Yonr Bowels With vH*creti. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever, j 10c, 25c. If c. G.O. nil* druggists refund money. New York's Highest Point. j Perhaps the highest point in the bor j ough of Manhattan is at Ninety-sixth street and Madison avenue. This is j where the New York Central Railroad j tunnel begins, and from this elevation i a fine view is obtained cf Harlem to the north and the East river and Long island to the east. One can look over the roofs of the live-story housev of Harlem clear to Washington Heights | and distinguish many points in the borough of the Bronx. ; From here there is a sharp decline to the East river, and the tall chimney at the foot of E. -t Ninety-fifth street : does not look so very high from this altitude. It is altogether a sight well worth seeing. ■■ W' . - 2S3HI SB ■'* fs ,c-n. J ' \ Wi'?i ■ v.^ Aji ExceJlcjii Coinbination. The pleasant method ami beneficial effects of the well known remedy, Svurt' OF Flos, manufactured by the (\vi.iroiiNi\ FIG SYRUP CO., illustrate the value of obtaining the liquid laxa tive principles of |>l ;ints known to bo medicinally laxative and presenting them in tl: • form most refreshing to the taste and acceptable to the system. It is the one perfect strengthening laxa tive, cleansing the system effectually, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers gently yet promptly and enabling one to overcome habitual constipation per manently Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and sub stance, and its acting on the. kidneys, liver and bowels, without weakening or irritating them, make it the ideal laxative. In the procc >of manufacturing tigs are used, as th v are plea >ant to the taste, but the medicinal quiui. iesof the l are obtained from senna and oth. r aromatic plants, by a method known to the CV.l.ifokni.'v Fjo Syrip Co. only. In order to get ii. beneficial effects and to avoid imitations, please remember tho full nan; of the Company printed oil the front . I'ITTM.I iu; CLASS CO,. Alliu KMV.Pa. DROPSY R & t'Hxo-. Bonk ol tn>lim<>niA -*uxOo.,Mf Greenwich Ht.N.Y. Barter'S ink Is what all tho gnat railways use