From Washington How a Little Boy Was Savod. Washington, D. C.— ,, Wheu our hoy was about 10 months old he broke out with a rash which was thought to be measles. Iu a few days lie had a swelling on the left side of his neck and it won decided to be mumps. He was giveu medical attendance for about three weeks when the doctor said it was scrofuia and ordered a salve. He wautod to lauce the sore, but 1 would not let him aud continued giving him medicine for about four mouths when the bunch broke in two places and became a running sore. Three doctors said it was scrofula and each ordered a blood medicine. A neighbor told mo of a case somewhat like our baby's which was cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla. I decided to give it to rny boy and in a short while his health improved and his neck healed so nicely that I stopped giving him the mediciue. The sore broke out again, y however, whereupon I again pavo him Hood's Sarsaparilla aud its persistent use has accomplished a complete cure." Mas. NETTIE CHASE, 47 K i St., N. E. V r , V lungs and incipient I Cough Syrupss p,^Lsp for children. Tastes good. Doses are small. 25c. DAWSON OF 1900. City Has Changed Greatly During the Pant Year. The Dawson of 1899 Is no longer the Dawson of 1898, and much less that ol the year previous. The thousands ol •bateaux that were formerly lined up •against the river front, in rows six deep and more, and comprising all manner of craft from the small canoo to sliced sections of scows, have mostly "disappeared, and in their place we now 'find the graceful and ungraceful forma •of varying types of steamboat. It ia no uncommon thing nowadays to find .'five or more of these larger craft tied up at one time to the river front, and tthe amplitude and majesty of the Mis sissippi boats gain but little in com jparison with some of the larger craft of the Yukon river. Overhung signs . call attention to the flying queens ot A Ithe 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 lolden days of the Mississippi, the struggle for supremacy has led to the opening of the throttle und 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. A Die nt the Tlunters. City Sportsman-Any game around here? Farmer—Yes: the woods are Cull of It. City Sportsman—l supposed it had been pretty well killed off by now. Farmer—Oh, no. No one ever hunt 3 around here but you city fellows. - Chicago News. Happy 1 Women who have been relieved of painful menstruation by Lydia f, PStskham's Vege table Compound, are con stantly writing grateful letters to Kirs. Pinkkam. ■siuretS Shew* it always relieves pahrful periods and no woman who suf fers shouki be without this knowledge* 4 Nearly all the Ills of women result from some derangement of the female organism. Mrs. Plnkham's great medi cine makes women healthy; of this there is overwhelming proof. Con't experiment. If you suffer get this medi cine and get Mrs. Pink ham's free advice. Nor address is Lynn, Mass. HEADACHE "Both my wilt mid myNoll'liavo been CASCARETS unci thev are the belt medicine we have ever had in the house. Last wee It my wife was fruntic with hendaehe for twoduyi. she tried gome of your CASCARETS, and they relieved the pain in her head nlmost immediately. We both recommend C'ascaretH." CHAEi. STEDEFOUI). J Pittsburg Safe & Deposit Co., Pittsburg, Pa. CATHARTIC kdCM TRAOE MARK REGISTERED Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Grlpo. 10c, 26c, 500. ... CURE CONBTIPATION. ... Bltrllßf Nrmady Company, Chlfltpn, Montreal, Now York. 317 MD.Tn.RAH Sold and guaranteed by nil drug* NU* I U'DAU gists to CTKE Tobacco Uablt. I Thompson's Eye Water THE SHAME OF IT ALL ADMINISTRATION'S INTRIGUES WITH GREAT BRITAIN. the "Firing" of Hay Will Not Atone 'or This Awful Outrage Against the Honor of the American I'eople—^lll Re Restated at the Folia. It may please President McKinley, Secretary Hay and other Anglomaniacs of our British administration to have Uncle Sam's official mail opened by the queen's imperial agents, and marked "V. R." (Victoria Regina), but it warms a patriotic American's blood up to the boiling and fighting point. It makes us feel like reaching out for our good old double-barreled shotgun, writes W. S. Bryan in St. Louis Jour nal of Agriculture. The queen is a most excellent old lady, a model house keeper and mother, and a dear old grandmother. w*hom we all love in those several capacities. But she is not "Victoria Regina" of these United States just yet. We taught her grand father, George 111., to quit signing his name that way 124 years ago, and we don't propose to allow the granddaugh ter to resume the habit, however agree able it might be to the Hanna-McKin ley-Hay combination of British boot lickers. Six weeks ago this paper de clared that there was a big scandal back of the Macrum incident, but it is far more disgraceful and humiliating than we supposed. It is simply un bearable. The English agents would never have dared to detain and open United States official mail if there had been no "understanding of alliance" between British and American imperi alists, as first asserted by Joseph Chamberlain, and now reiterated by Consul Macrum. Such an outrage would be a casus belli if committed against any other respectable govern ment. But unfortunately this gov ernment has ceased to be respectable since it fell into the hands of the Han na-McKinley-Hay gang. • • • If any additional evidence were needed to establish the existence of a secret understanding between the Mc- Kinley administration and the British imperialists, it would be found in the |Hay-Pauncofote treaty regarding the jNicaragua canal, and many other col lateral circumstances. Tli4s astonish ing treaty provides for the building of ,tlie canal by the United States, and its mutual control by England and Amer ica! In other words. Uncle Sam puts up the money and digs the ditch, and then John Bull steps in and helps him enjoy the benefits. The ultimate pur pose is the division of the North and South American continents between the English and American imperialists. We are to take everything north of the canal, including Canada and Mexico, while England scoops in everything south of that line. That is what the Hay-Pauncefote treaty means, and Mexico and South and Central America so interpret it. But the American peo ple will have something to say about the deal before the final closing of the bargain. Hay may be "fired," but that will not atone for the outrage. The whole Re publican administration Is responsible. The people will so decide at the polls. LOOKING FORWARD. Dr. Lyman Abbott, among a long list of things he is engaged in looking forward to, and which he and other fantastic dreamers will continue to look forward to until the dying breath of time shall fan the ponderous gates of eternity, is the following solution of the capital anl labor question: "I look forward to the time when, by no sudden revolution, but by thQ gradual diffusion of education and the gradual diffus/on of wealth, the capi talistic system will yield to a democ racy of industry, as slavery has yielded to feudalism, and feudalism to capi talism; when the men who work, some with brain and some with hand and some with both brain and hand, will themselves own the implements of industry, and labor will hire capital, instead of capital hiring labor." Tf there is any "gradual diffusion" of wealth beginning, nobody has dis covered it. The farmer had a pair o! balky mules. As dn experiment, he tied a bunch of turnips to the wagon pole, just beyond the reach of the ani mals. Seeing them, smelling them and almost tasting them, they started for ward on a run to catch them, hut they never did. "Looking forward" is too much like the April fool joke in vogue among the street urchins: "Look be hind, mister," and he always does, which is the essence of the joke. PLAIN TO ALL BUT HAY. By a curious paresis, the state de partment is still puzzled by the Ma crum mystery, and frankly says that it cannot understand Mr. Macrum. The department is evidently trying to as certain the facts, hut Mr. Macrum, by his own actions, has placed himself in such a curious position that he has lost the respect of the department. There is not a particle of doubt about it. Mr. Macrum. by telling the truth, has not ouly lost the respect of our Anglo-American state department, but also Its confidence and his job. This ought to be enough to make Ma crum out a liar and a traitor, but there are the original rifled letters with "V. R." stamped on the American eagle. This is alliance, witl "V. R." on top. THE MACRUM INSULT. The supineness of the McKinley ad ministration to British insults shows an alliance indeed "offensive." With the evidence of confiscated official gov- ernment letters In Mr. Maerutn's hands the matter is referred to young Adel bert Hay, son of our British secretary of state, to disprove the truth of It. Mr. Macrum has several envelopes each bearing the British sticker ap plied to the envelope after it had been opened by the censor. He has one envelope which contained mail matter from Consul General Stowe at Cape Town. It is the regulation blue of the consular service. It bears upon its face the legend "U. S. Consular Service" and a stamp "Mail suspended." On the reverse side is the United States gov ernment seal impressed upon the red sealing wax of the consular service. The British sticker, resealing the letter after it had been opened, bear 3 the po tential initials "V. R„" the initials of the clerk who opened the letter and the name of the place where is was opened. The letter was mailed at Cape Town Oct. 4 by Consul General Stowe. It was held there one month apparently, for the next postmark is that of Dur ban. dated Nov. 4. From Durban It was sent to Pretoria and reached Mr. Ma crum in its mutilated form. The cir culars to consuls Issued by the depart ment, not in themselves important, but nevertheless "official rn.il," never reached Mr. Macrum. They were con fiscated without apology or explana tion by the British censor. As for Mr. Macrum's personal mall, he never heard of it.—St. Louis Journal. Oar Brltlfih .Secretary. Our Knickerbocker breeches British secretary of state seems to think he ought to be complimented for his effort to fool the people of this country by forcing a defensive and offensive al liance with England on us under cover of a pretended canal treaty. He thinks such an alliance is necessary, because he fears that the "United States will not he able to maintain the Monroe doctrine against the nations of Eu rope" without the "assistance"—save the mark!—of England. He might have waited at least until England whipped the little Boer republics— about such a task as whipping the states of New Jersey and Rhode Island —before asking her help in sustaining the Monroe doctrine. We have man aged to take care of the Monroe doc trine for seventy-seven years without any help from England, and we shall probably he able to blunder along in our usual clumsy American style for a few years more without calling on her. Meanwhile we repeat our suggestion that our British secretary of state ought (to pack his knickerbocker pant ies and his Tuxedo coat "with gold lace around the edges" and go back to England and swear allegiance to "Vic toria Regina." If he has any self-re spect left that is what he will do.—Ex, Who Pay* the Wages. An absence of benevolence is partic ularly noticeable in the coal trusts. There has been an increase of coal miners' wages, but do the profits and dividends of the coal trusts suffer? We wonder who does. Perhaps the following item from a Chicago paper will tell. "Eastern coal is to bo 25 to 50 per cent dearer than at present, April 1, ac cording to Col. W. P. Rend, who is in Pittsburg. He says the advance is brought about by an increase in wages to the miners, by the low prices which have prevailed and by the coal famine in Europe, which has made it hard for operators to fill orders. Chicago coal dealers say the European famine al ready has begun to tell on this market and the supply of West Virginia and Pennsylvania coal is decreasing fast. It is almost impossible to get West Virginia smokeless coal in Chicago and there is a great deal of substitu tion of other coals for the West Vir ginia product. A Foxy Alliance, but— It is interesting to know that Great Britain made to the United States a vigorous offer of a formal alliance as late as December lust. Lord Itosebery is the authority for the statement. It is a long time since so much talk of a thing has been heard in two hemi spheres, with so much denial of it at this end or the line. Mr. Chamberlain said, in substance, that there was an alliance; and Lord Rosebery now men tions the month when an,offer of an alliance was made. The truth is prob ably this: No alliance can possibly ex ist, hut there could easily be some sort of an understanding, vague enough to warrant President McKinley's repudi ation of it, in case the exigencies of American elections required it. — Springfield Republican (Rep.). Wornn Tban Wcylor! Naked, starving, and desperate, it is feared that if the Republicans in con gress persist In their determination to vitiate the constitution by dooming the Puerto Rieans to a slow and mis erable death under the murderous op eration of Diugleyism, the latter may rebel and attempt to throw off Ameri can sovereignty. Such a thing would be a noble commentary on our "Chris tian civilization." They never thought of rebelling against Spain, which, com pared with the United States, was a kind and indulgent mother to them. What a horrible aggregation of heart lessness and inhumanity there is in sugar, tobacco and New England rum! —Washington Times. No Colonlm. A decision of the United States Su preme court says: "A power in the general government to obtain and hold colonies as dependent territories over which they (the congress) might legis late without restriction would he in consistent with its own existence iu its present form." The present form of our government is continually in the way of imperialism. We need a new form altogether to properly carry out McKinleyism.—St. Louis Post-Dia patcb. | GEN. H. GROSYENOR. I ONE OF THE MOST FORCEFUL MEN IN CONGRESS. | Hla Readluoss for Battl* In One or | Hit Leading Traits —Bus Served Near- I ly Twenty Years In the Lower House | at Washington. There is no more interesting mem ber of the present House of Represen tatives at Washington than General Charles H. Orosvenor 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. OSN. CHARL H. GROSVKNOK. He is all angles and pointß, and his en trance into a debate is the signal for the bristling of all the feathers an the Democratic side. He is as obnoxious to his opponents 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 yenrs and he has every man's political fecord tucked away somewhere In his well-filled brain, where he can get at it at a moment's notice. This makes him a very ugly customer. He has all the resources of a great criminal law yer in controversy. Defore 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 good deal. Grosvenor Is younger than he looks. He is some years on the sunny side of CO, 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 1801 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 lias never been a pension bill that he did not vote for, and he always hits out from tho shoul der when veterans are under attack. Grosvenor is not a political managor or organizer like some others in Ohio, hut 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 idle, began to give out estimates from time to time of the number of .delegates MeKinley had secured. He had no authoritative statistics, but he took the most favor able figures he could find in the news papers, adding a few MeKinley dele gates here and there, to suit his taste, and once a week would issue a bulle tin which kept the MeKinley column continually on the Jump. Pretty soon people began to take Grosvonor'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 with a great deal of tranoullity. Driest Spot on Karth. Payta, in Peru, is said to be the dri est spot on the face of the earth, as the average Interval between two showers of rain Is seven years. The flora of Payta consists of about nine species—of these seven are annuals, the seeds of which must remain dor mant in the ground for eight years. Notwithstanding the scarcity of rain, the natives Bubsist by the growth of the long-rooted Peruvian cotton, which Is able to maintain itself without rain for seven years in the dned-up river bed, and yields profitable crops of col ored short staple cotton.—Cincinnati En a nirer. WHAT AZ.ABASTIHIB is. Alabastlne Is the original and only dur able wall coating on the market. Ills eu ttroly different from all katsomine propar itions. Alabastlne Is made ready for use in srhito or fourteen beautiful tints by the ad dition of cold water. It is put up In dry powdered form, In packages, properly abeled, with full directions on every package. It takes the place of scaling calsomines, wall paper and paint for walls, klunastine can be used on plaster, brick, urood or canvas, and a child oau brush t on. I What Shall We Have For Deiaert? | This question arises in the family dally. Let ; us answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious : and healthful dessert. Prepared in 2 rain. No i boilinKl no baking! Simply add n little hot water & set to cool. Flavors: Lemon, Orange, I Raspberry and Strawberry. At grocers. 10c. The word "cossack" is Turkish and means "free man" or "free lance." Educate Your Bowels With rascarett. ! rt c^ dy £ a^ har L ic * curo constipation forever 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. The man who does no • ood is not ! necessarily harmless. The Best Prescription for Cliills and Fever Is a bottle of (JHOVK'S TASTHLKM 1 CHILL TOMIG. It Is simply iron and quinine In I a tasteless form. No cure—no pay. Price 50c. London annually consumes about seven and a half million tons of coal. For Whooping Cough, Plso's Cure Is n suc cessful remedy. M.P. DIETKH, 07 Throop Ave., Brooklyn, N. V., Nov. H, 189 L Denver expended over $2 v 000.000 on new buildings for business and public purposes in 1899. Jell-O, the New DcNkert, Pleases all the family. Four flavors:— Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 cts. The French navy department is build ing a battleship which will cost nearly $6,000,000. The Washington Mutual Mining Investment Co., Mutual Life Bldg., Seattle, Washington, guarantees 6 per cent, interest on all invest ments, and equal participation in profits made in mining in Alaska and elsewhere. Great advantages to small investor* Write lor circular. Highest references. WHAT SOUTH AFRICANS EAT. The Peculiar Diet of the Native Savages —Ants and Mice. German missionary who h; just re turned from South Africa re ntly de livered a lecture before the I irlin Geo graphical society, in which lie 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 adelphia 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 sized bells are bound. The dogs make j a big sweep round the countryside, 1 while the Basutos attach their various j strips of nets into one long semicir- 1 cular barrier, the lower part of which j is pinned to the ground. Then. ■ I crouching upon the ground and holding j their sticks ready, they wait the com ing of the mice. These, frightened by I the bells dangling from tho dogs, grad ually draw nearer and nearer to the | net, along which they are at last found j running in a vain effort to discover j an opening through j which they may j j escape. When the number of these I victims is sufficiently great a shrill | [ cry is emitted by the chief, the net is t 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- j ages. Monkeys, constitute one of j their favorite tid-bits, which are all ' the more appreciated as they are not | so readily caught. Snakes are sim- 1 ply killed with blovrs from a switch and are generally in high favor. Ac- j cording to the their pop ularity is well deserved. He biigeplf took part in a meal in which snakes j formed the chief attraction and found I that this animal could be favorably i compared with L prime eel. Most j popular of all delicacies, however, are the caterpillars. It is not unusual to j learn of a quarrel which has broken out among the natives for their pos session. The most favorable time for 1 catching them is the early morning and , late evening hours, when their wings j 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 j times of the year the great white- I winged ants leave the earth, and it is j then that a most zealous competition arises between the Kaffir children and the chickens of the dorp for the pos session of tho prized morsels. It is at such times that the Kaffir youngsters j may be seen running about with their i mouths stuffed full of ants, and, if the j chase has been especially successful, with both fists also full of these succu lent dainties Making u Billiard Bull. It requires skilled labor to turn out a billiard ball. One-half of it is first turned, an instrument of the finest steel being used for tho work. Then the half-turned ball is hung up in a 1 net and is allowed to remain there for j nearly a year to dry. Next the second half is turnod, and then comes the pol- 1 Ishing. Whiting .end water and a good • deal of rubbing are requisite for this. | It is necessary in the end that the ball I shall, to the veriest fraction of a grain, be of a certain weight. WHAT "KALSOMINKS" ARE. I Kalsomlnos are cheap and temporary preparations, manufactured from whiting, chalks, clays, etc. They are stuck on the wails with decaying animal glue. Alabas tlne is not a kalsomlne. It Is a rock-ba.so cement,which sets.and it hardens with age. It-can bo re-coated and re-decorated with out having to wash and scrap off Its old I coats. Alahastinu Is utilized to a great ex ! tent in hospitals, as it prevents the accumu ' lation of dirt and the congregating of dis- I ease germs, being disinfectant In its na- I tu re. ' \ j|tp' ? " 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. An Inherited opinion. Mrs. Gay—Well, suppose I was a co j quette! There's no great harm in a I girl flirting a little before she's mar | riecf. The Colonel —Do you teach your i daughter that? Mrs. Gay—Why. no; it isn't necessary!— Puck. The Way in Beautify Home Is to do as tboy all are doing. Ask your grocer, who knows all about It; has some thing for you iu tho way of a coupon book, which enables you to get one large 10c. package of "Red Cross" starch, one largo I 10c. package of "Hubinger's Best" btarck, [ with the premiums, two Shakespeare panels, I or one Twentieth Century Girl calendar, | all for sc. Glove Trade In France. France makes nearly 26,000,000 pairs of gloves yearly, and of these 18,000,- 000 pairs are exported. Try Ciraiu-O S Try Hraiu-O! Ask your grocer to-day to show you a package of GRAIN-O, 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. GRAIN-0 has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but is made from pure grains; the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. % tho price of coffee. 150. and '2sc. per package. Sold by all grocers. The great need of Havana is a mod ern slaughtering plant, and plans have been made for one to be built at the expense of the city. Deafness Cannot lie Cured br local applications.as they cannot roach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When tlih tube gets in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect bearing, ami when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless i.ho inflam mation can be taken out, and this tube re stored toils normal condition, hearing will he destroyed forever. Nine cases out, of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused bv catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. London medical papers discuss an outbreak of typhoid fever at Exeter, which has been traced to consumption of raw cockles. Heaoty Is lllood 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 liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-dav to banish pimploe, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Ca sea rets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Canadian towns and citie> are stead ily growing, and many of them quite rapidly. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your f.lfe Avrny. To quit tobacco oasily atul forever, bo mag oetlc, full of life, norvo and vigor, take No-To Bae, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or tl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet unci sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co , Chicago or New York. The Premier of Victoria states that if necessary the colony will cheerfully dispatch a fourth contingent to South Africa. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QCININR TABLETS. All druggist* rofnnd tho money 1f it falls to cure. E. W. GROVE'S signature Is on each box. 25c Among the stuff in the Boer langc: near Kimberlcy seized by General French 23 cases of champagne were found. CHUItCHKS JSD SCHOOhfIOUSES. The Interior walls ot churches, school- j houses and all public halls should never he coated with anything but the durable and 1 pure Alnbastlne. Ho evident litis this fact become, that hundreds of toes are used an- j nually for this work. The genuino Alabns tlne does not ruh or scale off. It Is olontily during the long period of its usefulness, liv ery owner of a building should u?o It. Ask : your paint dealer or druggist for oard of j tints, and write for free copy of our Interest tug booklet to Alabnstlne C'o.,flrnnd llaplds, j Mich. j | Oil."'' • Aluminum horseshoes are coming into ,j favor in some quarters. VITALITY low, debilitated or exhausted cured by Dr. Kline's Invigorating Tonic. FREE Pi trial bottle for 2 weeks' treatment. Dr. Kline. Ixi., IWI Arch St., Philadelphia. Founded 1871. Sycosc is the new material used as a substitute for sugar in diabetes. I How Are Your Kidneys V DR Jlobhs" Sparagus Plllscureall kidney Ills. Sam ple free. Add. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y . | There is a movement in the Malay i i States to send a mounted volunteer corps to South Africa. MrsAVinslow'sSnctblngßyiap forchildren teething, softons the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allayspuiu.cures wind colic. 250 a bottle. It is much better to sit in the lap of luxury than to stand on ceremony. To Caro Constipation Forever. Talte Caacurots Cana.v Cathartic. 10c or 25c. If C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. t More than 20.000 Japanese immi grants arrived at Hawaii last year. W. L. DOUGLAS S3 & 3.50 SHOES *lSsVorth 54 to $6 compared v JxL\ °** IER MAKES * / HI ■ I TIG 71,1 " P*! LUINE have W. L. { ■IS T\\ (jfl stamped on bottom. 'fakeAimSh. ' m crl "° su ' ,st j tutc ck, ' mu< * 1,1 ,e JZ TI ,'a skou ' ( l keen them "3 extra for carriage. Stare kind of leather, VJf-i*e, and width, plain or cap toe. Cat. free. Kmu-s w - L - DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass. 1 FI FOR M- CEBITS! • WI H to gain TLM y ear 1 0 L-'RLVI I :UI r: ' ticumberlßc J [ S " D- MARKET Lettuco, 160 , , m 1 " Strawberry ID slop. LF>c , 0 TTLIWI 1" V* ,)I ;Y I A< ' B* LOO J 1 9M'IWLLLSFFTD * ' Ka-LY Dinn'-r Onion,' lo I MFNFFLLJR 3 " Rrillir.at Flower Seeds, LOO | | S FFFEYGW Worth SI.OO, for 14 cent®. SLTU 1 1 5 F? KM ABNROLO Pkca. worth SI.OO, WO will I I § liff NW MML YOU FRVE, togother with our 1 I 0 IM KA groat Catalog,telling all about 1 1 OKJ Ku SALUR S MlillGK DOLLAR POTATO , 1 AK W* LAG npon roceMit cl this notice ,V | jc. | | 2 fflLiknow whni yon once try SalzVr'A 1 1 W 00! i r. N. u. i), 'oo. Mi Y#lM C A OWA ' : ' C,! " :, .Y ,N Mil Morphine, I.nutlniium. or OTHER drug habit,trial treatment, free ofclinrire. oftMmp'.t roiirri i " • ly ever di. ovrrri. Contains Cirenf. Vital K'rinciplo heretofore unknown. tte fVaetoiy - lentiilcorrespondence l.nif (trn . 'I. . I>■ Iei •: t •:; i ;i... :iVi JAM LIS SOCIBTY, tat PRO VP WAY, Nt W YORK. f|| | Feeßsfutided vice to |)iitciilitbi!ity. KENT* F'V '•'MRIITORA" L'rimer," !•'):!• . .I||l. ( > . STISVENS A CD., Estab., 18D4. SI7 I LLLI St., \\ IINIUIIL-1011, L>. C. Lrttnrbos: Chicago, Cl"veluu.t ;IH I l)c!,\.:t. Frov - Con J I ' ll> R#|| | pa| All Druggists, GFIO a isjnSaaLiJ DROP ra.*es. Book of t- -tluminals nnd iOdnvN* trsatuinni ! Free. Dr. H. H. OREEN 8 80K8, Box 0. Atlanta, Qa. site G r BUBiSV/pt ALL ILtX FATISC^W^ I BBJICt 188 "JUSI" AS GOOO." i The dealer who tells you that he can sell j you the "same thing" as Alabastino or | "something just as good," either Is not j posted or is trying to decelvovou. In offer- I IngiSomethlng he has bought cheap and is | trying to sell on Alnbostlno's demand, he I may nut realize the danger to himself na well as to you. Beware of all new substi tutes; Dealers risk a suit tor damages by selling nud oousutners by using nu infr(nge- J menti Alabastino CQ. own tfcp right to make andsell wall coatings adapted to mix [ wltlT'OOfd water.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers