Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, March 01, 1901, Image 3

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    When American armies were in Cuba
the island was almost depleted of cattle,
a vast number of the animals having
been killed for food. Now the ranch
men and farmers are busy stocking up
again and have made heavy drafts on
Florida, which, as a consequence, has
about been stripped of its better grades
■of c; r.tc.
J" Valaitblc Aim■.<• Fre.
' -We have received a copy of the now
almanac for 3001 published by the
Royal linking Powder Co. It is an ar
tistic and useful book, and will be of
interest, to housekeepers. A notewor
thy fc< lure of the almanac is a predic
tion of .U," weather for every day of
the year by Professor DeVoc, who cor
rectly prophesied the great Galveston
cyclone and other important metero
logical events. We are authorized to
say that any woman reader of this
paper call secure a copy without ho-c
by sending a request to. the company
at 10U William street, New York.
Nordi Carolina, in colonial days, was
called the "Old North Colony," and the
name with State instead of colony, has
been retained to the present time. It
has also been called "Turpentine
State." from the importance of tnis ar
ticle in the list of its exports.
Cnurrli Cniiiiot be 'urrrt
With local applications, as they cannot reach
the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or
constitutional disease, and in o-der to cure
It you must take internal remedies. Hall's
Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and arts di- ,
re. tiy ,n t he blood and mucous surface. Hall's !
Catarrh (hire is not a quack medicine. It was
proscribed by one of the best physicians in
this country for years, and Is a regular pre
scription. It is composed of the best tonics
known, combined with the best blood pari flora,
acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The
perfect combination of the two ingredients is
what produces such wonderful results in cur
ing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free.
F. .1. C henry & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, price, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
An ex-Confederate soldier of Conner
county, Missouri, who raised a 90-pound
pumpkin on his farm this season, in
tends to have the mammoth vegetable
made up into pics for distribution am n ;
such of his former comrades of Sibley'.*
Brigade as reside in his neighborhood.
Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not stain the
hands or spot the kettle. Sold by uii drug
gists.
A test has been made which shows
that a rock can fly 60 miles an hour.
The hawk makes 150 miles in the same
time.
Attar of roses sells at SIOO an ounce,
which is exactly five times the value of
gold.
Cdo not hellovo PHo's Cure for Consumption
has an equal for cough) and colds. —John F.
Boyek, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, 11)00.
The mackerel fishing on the south
and southwest coasts of Ireland has
been ?. failure this year.
Kansas City is to have a big banana
warehouse, large enough to hold 25
carloads.
A lli atlachr Cnrc A't CompoMrd of
Harmful llru^ki.
Garfield Headache Powders enjoy the dis
tinction of being Absolutely Pure, Effective
and Harmless ; they are made from Herbs,
The Queen has 60 housemaids at
Windsor Castle. This is the regulation
number.
To Cure a Cold In One Day.
Take Laxative Rromo Quinine Tablets. All
druiryints refund th money If it falls to cure.
E. W. UltovK's signature id 011 ouch box. 25c.
There arc 256 railway stations within
; six-mile radius of St. Paul's Cathedral,
Talk"
About It
That's always the way with
our Hair Vigor. When per
sons use it they are always so
highly pleased with it that they
tell their friends about it.
if your hair is short, too
thin, splits at the ends, is
rough, or is falling out, our
Hair Vigor will perfectly satisfy
you.
If your hair is just a little
gray, or perfectly white, Aver's
Hair Vigor will bring back to
it all the dark, rich color it had
years and years ago.
One dollar a bottle.
II your druggist cannot supply you, send
us >l. ° and we will express a bottle to you,
nil charges prepaid. Be sure and give us
your ucarest express office.
J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass.
kend for our handsome book on The Hair.
R§3KiSi£ <•?
mammoth ;
Mp 31 kitclicn we cm-
Iwlio is an ex
pert in making mince pies.
He has charge of making all of
Libby's Mince Meat.
J We don't practice economy here.
1 He uses the choicest materials. He
?is told to make the best mince meat :
ever sold—and he docs,
f Get a package at your grocer's—
J enough for two large pies. You'll
? never use another kind again.
I LIBSY, MoStEILL & LIQCY
J Chicago
I Write lor our booklet, "How to Make
£ Good Thing, to Eat." ■
hiviced bin Slilrt Wnlnta.
Pretty and serviceable shirtwaists
are fashioued of alpaca and of alba
tross. In white, trimmed with gold
buttons and gold W*aid or ribbon, the
alpaca is effective but the alliatross
can be bought in ail tha bright and
ielicate hues as well as in white and
has a soft crepy effect. Shirtwaists
made of these materials are finer,
softer and lighter than those of
danuel, which.in spite of its popularity,
many women find too warm and
clumsy to wear beneath heavy coats.
To Veil (and Enhance) Her beauty.
The veil of veils to wear with a
white toque or with one of sable, or
mink is a soft tone of beige, dotted
with chenille. Small spots arc the
most fashionable for veils, and a
round mesh with small "suspended
spots" of chenille, is odd and rather
pretty. Brown or castor colored net
of fine mesh, dotted with black is
smart and effective, and a fino white
tulle, witii cross-bar threads of black*
and spots of chenille, is becoming.
The tull-lined veils have many virtues.
They beautify tho complexion, or ap-
I pear to do so. They protect it from tho
I too harsh caresses of the east wind,
] and they are becoming to nearly every
| wearer.
Tho Snsh i>r 1001.
j The new sash of 1901 is so different
from the older sash that it deserves
| its name. The sashes a,re worn for
j dancing gowns, and are especially de-
I sired by young girls who have just
| been presented to society. Taffeta is
the favorite material for a dressy
sash. This is not made in one piece,
because the belt, which is quite high,
is carefully fitted to tho shape. Tho
sash belt has long ends of very wide
ribbon. These are split up at the lower
end for exactly half a yard depth, and
then the split ends are tagged with
gilded spikes, or provided with tiny
gilt tassels, which are carefully fas
tened down, so that they cannot come
loose. A black satin sash, with gilt
ends, would look very handsome.
Velvet ami Gold.
Very smart is the new confection of
wide gold ribbon, violet velvet in
many narrow strips and myriads of
tiny dull gold buttons. The collar Is
an openwork affair. Five bands of
broad gold ribbon are stiffened to
servo as the uprights. Each one is an
inch and a half in width, and from
these the strips of narrow velvet are
strapped across. There are five strips
of velvet in each row. Each end of
each strip of violet velvet is fastened
down to one end of the broad gold
ribbon with a very small gold button.
Finally, at the bottom of the collar
the long strips of velvet ribbon are
arranged to come forward from the
sides and are knotted in the middle
below the chin. There are longish
loops and short ends of ribbon which
terminate in a cluster of gilded spikes,
or tags, as you choose to call thorn.
These collarettes cost about $3.50.
The expense of such an affair depends
somewhat upon the quality of gold
ribbon used. The cheaper qualities
tarnish easily and the loosely woven
meshes untwist and ravel with speed.
A closely woven firm web of gold
ribbon is worth the price asked for it.
Tlie Dalles of n Guest.
In the ethical code governing the
behavior of tho guest many points are
contained. You may arrive a few days
later than the invitation specifies, but
you should not remain overtime.
Even is you are coaxed to prolong
your stay, a ready tact should make it
clear that your presence is required
at homo or elsewhere. The guest who is
regretted and missed is the popular
guest. The guest at whose departure
every one draws a sigh of relief is
the one who has made her hosts
twice glad.
It is also a part of the ethical code
that you should be on time at meals,
not a minute late at one of them. No
guest has a right to disregard the do
mestic schedule of events. Keep your
things "picked up" and put in their
proper places, and your room looking
as well as your hostess usually keeps
it. Put the pillow-shams on the bed,
and do not stick pins in the best
satin pincushion. Use your own comb
and brush, and when you leave do
not carry away the silver manicure
file nor the scissors by mistake, as
some guests have away of doing.
Have your laundry-work done out
side if possible: if not permitted to do
so, do not fail to remunerate the ser
vants generously for the service.—
Haryot Holt Galloon, in the Woman's
Homo Companion.
About Mm, lloojpvnK,
Many people have imbibed the idea
that Mrs. Roosevelt is a timid, re
tiring woman, with little interest in
anything except household duties.
Some have even suspected the gov
ernor of being something of a domes
tic tyrant. Nothing further from the
truth could be imagined. Mrs. Roose
velt is almost as decided a character
as her husband. She is the Chatelaine
of Sagamore hill, the beautiful Roose
velt home at Oyster bay, and no one
who has ever visited there will be
apt to forget the dignity and firmness
with which Ehe rules over the entire
establishment. The govenor never
dreams of questioning one of her
orders.
Mrs. Roosevelt, who was Miss Edith
Kermtt Carow, is a younij woman still
and a very attractive one. Rather
above the medium height, she has a
slender, graceful figure, and a fine, in
telligent face. She has very bright
eyes, and the beautiful teeth, that are
charact jristic of the whole Roosevelt
family. Her hair Is light brown, and
is arranged simply, without a war a
or a ringlet. Everything about her
speaks of grace. She is an aristocrat
to the tips of ber fingers. Her manner
is that of a gracious lady, tactful,
kindly, certain of her rank, but con
scious also ot the old world obligation
of rank. She dresses extremely well.
That she will fill her position at
Washington in away of which few
women are .Apable, none will doubt
after seeing her. The Roosevelts are
not rich, as riches are counted in so
ciety. They will not be able to enter
ain 011 any great scale of magnifi
cence, but at their home in Washing
ton foreign visitors will have an oppor
tunity to see the very best type of an
American home.—The Presbyterian.
Woman Disciple of Isauk Wulton.
Mrs. James Gardner of Avalon,
Cal., has just succeeded in landing the
largest fish ever caught by a woman
—a monster tuna, five feet two inches
in length and weighing 136 pounds.
Mrs. Gardner is the wife of James
Gardner, one of the most noted sports
men in California. Both Mr. and Mrs.
Gardner are members of the Tuna
club, which has its headquarters at
the Island of Santa Catalina. Every
year the club holds a tournament, in
which are included fishing contests of
all kinds, handsome prizes being of
fered for all the events, the only stipu
lation being that all fishing must be
done with a rod and reel and only the
lightest of lines. This season a special
feature, a contest for women, was In
augurated, and a gold medal offered
for the woman who would take a
tuna of any size with rod and reel and
conventional tackle.
Mrs. Gardner, who is skilled in the
use of the rod and reel, determined
to win the prize, and so devoted her
self exclusively during the tournament
to the chase of the tuna. After some
practice the fishing club was electri
fied by the announcement that Mrs.
Gardner had hooked a leaping tuna
and was being towed out to sea. The
tuna succeeded in towing the boat
almost a mile. Time and again the
fish was brought almost within reach
of the gaff, but when it caught sight
of the boat it would rush away.' When
an hour had elapsed, by remarkable
effort the fish was stopped in the midst
of a run, and, turning it deftly, the
angler began reeling in. Around flew
the handle, and the big multiplier ate
up the line in feet and yards until the
fish was within 20 yards of the boat.
Then the angler raised and hit the
fish, then reeled again. Then the gaff
crept up, a thundering splash, a deluge
of water, and the largest fish in the
world taken by a woman was hauled
into the boat.—Denver (Col.) News.
Shopping bags of fur, mounted with
silver gilt, are one of the novelties.
Rome new stocks are softened with
a little line of white around the neck.
Black fox showing a few white hairs
is reported as one of the favorite furs
for boas.
EYonch knots are as commonly used
for dress decorations as they were
last year.
The neat, natty, and durable tailor
strappings of past seasons are still
more in evidence on winter costumes.
Every conceivable costume is now
being designed from velvet. The most
novel of these, perhaps, being the
golfing suits, which are extremely
chic and attractive,
The Aiglon cape is One form of out
side wrap which has some popularity,
it is made of cloth and is really a
triple cape, the lowest otie three
quarter length, with a collaf which
stands up or turns down.
Pur is a popular trimming for even
ing gowns, and it is used in wide bands
as well as narrow lines. Three hands
set closely together so they look al
most like one trim the skirt of a white
panne dress, while something of a
bolero effect is carried out on the
bodice with a band of fur.
One or two wonderfully beau
tiful shades in deep blue, the -tawny
gold-brown called Siam, and the rich
Cleopatra dyes in russet, sable, and
tan, are among the most attractive
shades in broadcloth, camel's hair, and
similar fabrics used by Paquln for tbe
smartest costumes of the winter.
An attractive hat is triple brimmed
ana is inado of soft felt of a delicate
blue, each brim edged with brown
panne, it is somewhat Napoleonic in
shape, with a curve upturned directly
in front, and on each side is a large
chou of brown chiffon. A cache peigno
of pink roses rests on the hair in the
hack.
A frock of rough cheviot in black
and blue with surface of long white
hairs is trimmed with strips of blue
cloth edged with narrow gold braid.
Ihese, with small gold buttons, are
used to trim sides of the blouse and
sides of the skirt over the hips. The
plain cloth and braid make the collar, I
and the waistcoat is of yellow silk.
The fabrics composing some of the
smartest tailor costume's for the street
are of the handsomest quality of
cloth, and sillt-lined, but the skirts are
notably plain in style, silk stitching
still forming the only decoration.
The jacket-fronts turn back from a
vest of dainty silk or satin, showing a
simple trimming of gold braid and
buttons, tucking, brier-stitching, or
silk appliques.
EACH HAD SUSPICION.
A Story of Tsvo l'artnern. Both of Whom
Were Honorable Men.
"MY first business venture on my
own account, was in well, never
mind the name of the city," said n
New Orleans merchant, chatting over
old times with some friends at the
Board of Trade. "The location lias
nothing to do with the little story I [
am going to tell you, aud, for reasons |
you will understand in a moment, I I
don't care to be too specific.
"I was a young chap of twenty-five
at the time, and. getting tired of
working for other people, I opened a
cotton brokerage office with !
ex-elerk, who was considerably my J
senior in years. We put up an equal j
amount, of capital and agreed to share ;
and share alike in the profits and the
hustling. From tiie very outset every
thing went remarkably well with us.
We both had lots of friends, who took
pains to throw business in our hands, j
and the end of the year showed a very
nice little balance of jirofit. Next year,
however, the results weren't quite as
good, and I began to have a faint ap
prehension tiiat I was getting a hit
'the worst of it,' as the saying goes. I
heard a vague rumor that my partner
was living at a pretty fast gait, and
the more I thought about the matter
the more dissatisfied aud suspicious 1
became. You know how easily such
estrangements will grow upon a firm,
I and to make a long story short, I final
ly went to n detective agency that
made a speeialty of 'private investiga
| tions' and arranged to get a 'report,'
j as they called It, on my assoeiate. I
I admit that it was a rather sneaking
I proceeding, ami I felt secretly ashamed
of myself for resorting to it, but I ar
| gucd that it was my duty to know
j whether he was really in the way of
! getting into any embarrassing entan
j glement. Well, in the course of a
I week or so, the agency made its re-
I port, and without going into details, I
j may say that it completely exploded
j all the disturbing gossip X had heard,
j I realized after reading it that I had
been doing my partner a deep injus-
I tice, and of course, I was conscience
; stricken. To make amends I deterrn
| ined to treat him with extra cordiality
, and at the same time it seemed to me
j that his own bearing, which had been
j a little dlstnut, became much more
' friendly. At auy rate, whatever cold
] ness had existed soon passed away and
' tUe three years of business associa
tion that followed were singularly
pleasant. Thou lie received a flatter
ing offer from Liverptol, and went
there to live.
"One day several months after his
departure, I was looking over some old
papers and ran across a liig envelope
marked 'private and confidential.'
j Thinking it contained something re
lating to the firm, I tore it open, and
what do you think I found?—a report
on myself from the same detective
agency I had hired to investigate my
partner. It seemed Hint our suspicious
had been mutual."—New Orleans
Times-Democrat.
An Offshoot of the Salmon Family.
It is a curious fact that the smelt is
an offshoot of the sulnum family, hav
ing all the characteristics of that fish,
with the general formation of teeth
and tongue, etc. In Scotland it is
cnlled the spirling, and in France the
sperlau. The beauty and delicacy of
this fish years ago tempted the would
be sardine packer of California to use
them for sardines. Unfortunately it
proved a failure, as they did not keep
firm after canning.
The swarms of young mackerel off
the coast of California were then
tried, resulting most satisfactorily, and
now quantities of these little fish are
prepared and cured for the American
market and sold under the trade name
of sardines.
The true sardine of commerce is the
young of the pilchard, found in vast
quantities along the north shores of
the Mediterranean and the Atlautle
coast of Portugal and Franco.
II nil-Cloud Experiments.
The Austrian Ministry of Agricul
ture has recently caused a series of
experiments to be made with a view
to testing the efficiency of the Stlger
apparatus for dispersing hail clouds
by gun-firing. A mortar with a long
funnel attached to the moulli was
used, and when a sufficient charge of
powder was fired rings or whirls were
produced in the air. It was observed
that,these rings, which vary with the
charge and the size of tlio funnel, did
not reach a greater height than 400
metres, though it is said that this
height has been exceeded in previous
tests. From this it must follow that
unless the hail clouds are very low, no
practical result can he obtained. In
some cases the formation of hail might
be prevented, but in others the hail
follows in spite of repeated firings, so
that it was not possible to make a
conclusive report in favor of the sys
tem.
Use For Old Knvulnpes.
Rigid economy is tlio mother of ac
cumulation. One of the busier busi
ness men of New York City, Willi
offices in Broadway, never purchased
a scratch book in liis life, and never
wastes a fresh piece of paper on a
memorandum or a column of figures.
Every envelope that comes in his mail
is sliced apart, back from front, aud
the front or addressed side is preserved
for use. The inside forms a clean,
smooth sheet .'l'/ixliii inches. One of
the millionaires of Boston made ills
start by saving empty nail kegs and
selling them back to the nail makers
for ten cents eaeii in trade. His clerks |
were accustomed to kicking In the I
staves and burning them, in the stove.
—New York Press.
j This picture tells its own story of sisterly affection. The
older girl, just budding into womanhood, has suffered great
ly with those irregularities and menstrual difficulties which
sap the life of so many young women.
Lydia E. Piukham's Vegetable Compound can
always be relied upon to restore health to women who thus
! suffer. It is a sovereign cure for the worst forms of female
complaints,—that bearing-down feeling, weak baclc, falling
and displacement of the womb, inflammation of the ovaries,
and all troubles of tlio uterus or womb. It dissolves and
expels tumors from the uterus in the early stage of develop
ment and checks any tendency to cancerous humors. It
subdues excitability, nervous prostration, and tones up the
entire female system.
(loulsl anything prove more clearly the el
fSatoi'suj? of Mrsn PSnkham's MetSUcme than the
fotkfwmff strong statement of Grace Staatsbury7
li T/i 1 ; K11 yyjj. PiJfKiiAM : —I was a sufferer from female weakness for
! about a year aii<£ a "half. I have tried doctors and patent medicines, but
nothing helped me. I underwent the horrors of local treatment, but re
ceived no benefit. My ailment was prononnboj tha wombs
1 frgp itttc®"'. ln the |
w ovn >;t}6. uie backache was dreadful, I hafl
4 p in its worst form. Finally, I grew so
4 weak I bad tc keep my bed. The pains were so
I hard aa alpiost cause spasms. Whoa I could
fli { endure the pains no longer, 1 \yi\fc glvCu in6Fphine.
lat* nsemory grew short and X ffavf up all hope 0i
*- r getting' well. Thus X tlrutffrea along. To please
I */ v X wrote to Mrs. Plfckhaifc for advice. Her
I*JT- gy H answer came, but meantime I was taketl worse
1 an( X under the doctor's care for a while. £
1 " After reading Mrs, Pinkhara's letter, I con
eluded to try her medicine. After taking two
bottles X folt much better; but after using six
.>| bottles I was cured. All of ray friends think my
EBBHfsSff'gfJppfofr cure almost miraculous. I thank you very much
tl 11 CRAC£ Q-STANSSuV(Y| for your timely advice und wish you prosperity
■ u.. w -An=Bß=siagg3gsJ i u your noble work, for surely it is a blessing to
(I broken-down women. I have full and complete faith in the Lydia
ty E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound."—GHACE B. STANSDUBV,
Herington, Kansas. ')
S K HIIII SEWARD 1
t f] tl fl !-t i'j fjjj deposited with the Notional City Bank, tif'l'yi.n, Maw., st.ooo B
Fi h i 1 t-J t'M 11 f'i wl 'ich will be paid to any person who will show that the above H
wHv V' 'V VI" 7 Y 'v testimonial is not genuine, or tvas published before obteinirjr the M
NaW writer's special permission.— l.YDlA p. PtaKEUt MKDICI.NI Co. R
The 112 cGttori iii:Ms of Mexico con
sumed last year. 57,000,000 pounds of
cotton and produced nearly t0.c00.000
pieces of woven and printed goods.
These mills give employment to 22,000
operatives, and the sales for the year
amounted to more than $28,000,000.
Try Graln-O! Try Grflin-O!
Ask your grocer to-day to show you a pack
ago of Gnaix-O, the now food drink that takes
the place of coffee. The children may drink it
without injury aa well as the adult. All who trv
it, like ft. Ouaix-O lino that rich seal ljrown
of Mooha or Java, hut it is made from pure
grains, and the most delicate stomach receives
it without distress. the price of coffee.
15 and 28c. per package. Hold by all grocers.
Edward Goll, of Nappanee, Ind., had
14 acres of wheat that was a failure last
spring. He bought nine bushels of tlax
seed, which cost him $ 1.4: sowed the
seed April to, and from the 14 acre field
threshed in August 215 bushels of flax
seed, which he lias just soV. for $33.1.25.
Conffliinff t end* to Consumption.
Kemp's Balsam will stop the couyli at on-•e.
Go to your druggist to-ilay and get a fwnnl
bottlo froe. Sold in 25 and 50 cent botlu-
Go at onco, delays are dangerous.
A chameleon, when blindfolded, loses
the power to change its hues, and ihc i
entire body remains of a uniform col >r.
MbVWiWWY.WiiW
S sr
|§ ''.)■ |
| Cold Agony jf
-I I ;
> Pain intensified by
£ cold is unbearable.
Neuralgia I
! ° $
" in vrinter must seek
I St Jacobs Oil I
I I
5 for tlie surest relief 3*
L-fi and promptest cure. Jfc
I!
I Iwo thousand gallons of air arc a
| grown-up person's allowance for 2\
' Hours.
) j Tho stomach lias to work hnrd, grinding
tho food wo crowd Into it. Make itH work
j easy by chewing lJoeman's Popsia Gum. j
I The recent census taken throughout
I Switzerland has shown a remarkable in
j crease in the number of inhabitants.
I I crhaps the most extraordinary growth
is in the Canton of Zurich, whose popu
; lation in 1888 numbered 337,183, but now
it is 428.030. an increase of 90.847 in
habitants in 12 years. This is consid
j ercd a world's record. Geneva has in
. creased by 21.412 persons during the
same neriod.
l ane's Family llodiciiie
Movos tho bowels each day. In order to
bo healthy this is necessary. Acts gently 011
tho liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache,
j Price 25 and 50 cents.
Georgia lias led. the United States in
1 textile mill building during the current
, year, with North Carolina a close scc
! ond and South Carolina in third place.
The two Carolina* still have each a
j larger number of cloth factories than
! Georgia, but the latter is steadily forg
i iiig to the front.
Thre Is a Claw of People
Who are injured by tho use of coffee. Recently
there has boon jdacod in all tho grocery stores
a now preparation called GIIAIN-O, made of
pure grains, that takes the place ot coffee,
tho most delicate stomach receives it without
distress, and but Tew can toll it from coffee It
does not cost over Iw much. (,'hildren may
mk 11 with great benefit. 15 cts. and 25 ctu.
por package. Try it. Ask for GEAIN-0.
An Italian who has returned from
I Abyssinia declares that in the more di-
I taut parts of that country there are still
a large number of Italian soldiers liv
| ing :n slavery. They are mostly men
who were wounded at the battle Adow.i.
Lett ori the field and subsequentlv taken
I prisoners.
Ui'ailnrnfcti anil Nerrousiirsu Cll roil
tv rt . '. eme ly compounded of simple Herb*.
1 nysicians have had tho most signal success
in prescribing Garfield Headache Powders l' •
Nervousness and Headaches.
In Hartford. Conn., the life of every
j cat j S in peril. The board of health of
t Mat city has come to the conclusion
that cats are the means of carrying dip.V
The Best Prenorlption for Chills
and Fever Is A bottle of GKOVR'S TISTEIKSB
T nii.i. TONIC. It Is simply iron niul quinine in
H tasteless form. No cure—uo pay. Price 500.
In Cincinnati there is talk of ai.\>
tnohile lines to compete with the street
cars-