DALY AND HACKMAN. y New Story Told of the Late Montana Copper Klug. When Marcus Daly was In Wash ington last it is told that he performed a humane act which very nearly brought a brutal hack driver into the police court, and was a topic of con versation at the hotel and other places which Daly frequented. The story es caped the vigilance of the local news paper fraternity, and is here published for the first time. Daly was coming out of Chamberlain's one morning when he espied a negro hackman brutally belaboring a crippled old horse with a heavy whip in an almost futile effort to increase its speed from a walk to a slow trot, says the Wash ington Post. Daly hailed the driver, who quickly drew rein and approached the curb with the prospects of obtain ing a fare. "Where do you want to go to, boss?" inquired the negro. 'Til want to go with you to the police court if you don't stop beating that poor old horse," replied the millionaire. "You could coax the nag along faster with a / handful of oats and a wisp of bay in front of him than you can by beating him from behind. When did you feed him last?" The negro complained that times were hard, that fares were scarce and that he could not afford to pro vide better for his horse. Daly saw the force of the argument at once and inquired how much the cabman aver aged a week, and was told that $8 or $lO was considered a good wage. D.'Jy reached down in his vest pocket and drew forth a roll of bills, from which he peeled a S2O note and handed it to the astonished negro. "There, take that," said the copper king, "and put that rack of bones in the barn and treat him to a banquet of hay and corn and if I see you with liirn on the streets in the next tv/o weeks I'll have you flrrpfltftri. " Putnam Fatness Dyer do not Rpot. streak or givo your goods an unevenly dyed appear ance. Mold by all druggists. Andrew Carnegie believes in being gen erous while he is alive, and does not de fer the manifestation of his charity un til death has parted him from his wealth. Last year his gifts amounted to !j>3,009,000. In ISOU he gave away £5,000,000. flow's 'J'hift "Wo offer One ITun ln d Dollars Howard for any case of Catarrh that (.annol bo cured bv Hull's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney V Co., Props., Toledo, O. We, the undersign 1, have known F. .J. Che ney for the lust 15 ye;.iv . and In-Hove him per fectly honorable in nil business transactions and financially able to carry out anv obliga tion made by their Arm. West & Tiiuax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo Ohio. Waldino, Kinnan .V Mahvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. llaU's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Price, 75c. per luTttlo. Bold by all Druggists. Testimonials freo. Hall's Family Pills are the best. There were 295,752 marriages in France during the year 1899. AVti.n Von BSuy Ink f:et Carter's and you will got the best every ime."lnklings" free. Carter's Ink Co., Boston. The record running high jump is six feet live and three-quarters inches. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup lor children teething, soften thogums, reduces i alia tarna tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle The hairdresser feels no compunctions about dying an old maid. Plso's Cure cannot ho too highly spoken of m a cough cure.—J. W. O'Bbikn, 922 Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jun. 0, 1000. The unsuccessful man realizes that tiiere is plenty of room at the bottom. Professionu I uiml Etusiiics* EVoplo, If you would clear your head of pain and heaviness tako Garliold Headache Powders, a remedy that acts quickly and surely, that is not cathartic, that is genuinely good. In twenty years the population of Loa 'Angeles, Cal., has increased 100,000. THE DUTY OF MOTHERS. What suffering' frequently results from a mother's ignorance; or more frequently from a mother's neglect to properly instruct her daughter ! Tradition says "woman must suf fer," and young women are so taught. There is a little truth and a great deal of exaggeration in this. If a young woman suffers severely she needs treatment, and her mother should see that she gets it. Many mothers hesitate to take their daughters to a physician for examina tion ; but no mother need hesitate to write freely about her daughter or herself to Mrs. Pinkham and secure the most efficient advice without charge. Mrs. Pinkham's address is Lynn, Mas 3. Mrs. August Pfalzgrnf, of South Byron, Wis., mother of the young lady whose portrait we here publish, wrote Mrs. Pinkham in January, 1899, saying her daughter had suffered for two years with irregular menstruation iiad headache all the time, and pain in her side, feet swell, and was generally miserable. Mrs. Pinkham promptly •. replied with advice, and under date of March, 1899, the mother writes again that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cured her daughter of all pains and irregularity. Nothing in the world equals Mrs. Pinkham's great medicino for regu lating woman's peculiar monthly troubles. Mothers. Mothers are the queerest things! 'Member when John went away, All hut mother cried and cried When they said good-by that day. She just talked, and seemed to bo Not the slightest bit upset— Was the only one who smiled! Others' eyes were streaming wet. But when John came back again On a furlough, safe and sound, With a medal for his deeds And without a single wound, While the rest of us hurrahed, Laughed and joked ami danced about, Mother kissed him, then she cried— Cried and cried like all git out! —Edwin L. Sabin, in Century. How 11i Klpplinnt Slueps. One of the most erropeous of the many queer ideas which the layman has on the questions of natural his tory is the one respecting the ele phant's mode of sleeping. Even the old schools of naturalists declared that the elephant has never been known to sleep except in a standing position. Of late, however, say within the last cen tury, it has been learned that tne er ror came about by persons studying the habits of such beasts as had not been long in captivity. Such animals, When undergoing the process of domes tication, have been known to stand for 12, 18 or even 24 months without once lying down to sleep. This is regarded as a want of- confidence in their keep ers, coupled with longing desire for liberty. When elephants are perfect ly at ease and reconciled to their fate, they will lie down on uieir sides and sleep as all other beasts do. A Hear Aboard Ship. "Boars make good pets," said Lieu tenant Clark. "When I was in the rev enue service at Alaska we had one on the boat and he made things hum. We named him Wineeka. He used to climb to the crosstrees, going up hand over hand by the ratlins. One day he ven tured out on the yardarm. and there he stayed. We had to get a rope and haul him down. Once he vaulted over the head of our Chinese cook and went into the locker, where he helped him self to sugar and butter. We had a tackling made for him, much the same as a harness of a pet pug, and would drop him overboard, with a rope at tached, to take his bath. Once he landed in a native boat and nearly frightened the occupants out of their wits. He was as playful as a kitten, and although sometimes he disobeyed he was never treacherous or unkind. When he was lost or hid himself, as he often did, we would look in the dark till we saw two balls of fire. These were his eyes, and gave him away ev ery time."—New Orleans Picayune. A Noble Dog. A gentleman recently sold his villa Just out side Paris to move into a flat within the city walls: On leaving the country he parted with his Danish boarhound, too big an animal for a Paris fiat, to a gamekoeper of the dis trict. The new owner found the cost of keeping so big a dog too great. Ho decided to be rid of him. With this idea he took the dog out in a boat to the middle to the neighboring Marne, tied a stone to hi 3 neck and pushed him over. But the stone came untied, and the Dane swam after the boat. The gamekeeper struck the poor dog with an oar, so that the water was dyed with blood; but still the Dane swam after the boat. Enraged at his persis tency, the gamekeeper rose and swung his oar to strike the Dane again, so vi olently this time that he overbalanced and fell into the water. The game keeper could not swim, and must have been drowned, had not the noble Dane come to the rescue and held him up till he managed to clamber into the boat again. A revulsion of feeling took place. The gamekeeper bound up the wound in the dog's head, and he now says that death alone shall part him from his dog.—Le Temp 3. A Hull Story. When I was a little girl mamma gave me a large doll. This new doll was very pretty; for she had round, rosy cheeks, bright blue eyes, nnd black, curly hair—of course, make-be lieve hair, for she had a china head and a kid body. My dolly, when mamma gave her to me, was dressed in a gown of lovely blue silk and a cunning white apron trimmed with lace; and upon her feet were some little black kid shoes, or "ankle-ties." Oh, how I loved dear pretty dolly! I could not think of a name nice enough for my precious china baby until one Saturday afternoon, when school did not keep, mamma took mo to a "show," where I saw some "little people," pretty little dwarf people. I well remember Tom Thumb and La vinia Warren—a tiny grown up man and a tiny grown up woman, not much larger than good-sized dolls. On the way home, I said, "Oh, mamma, I am going to name my dolly Lavinia War ren!" Near the house where I lived when a little girl there was a stone wall; and I loved to go out there with Lavinia In my arms, and climb up and sit on the wall, and look off at the fields of green grass and watch the little birds hopping about in the trees, end gaze up at the bread blue sky beyond the treelops. I was a very little girl, you know, and mamma often told me I was care less and forgetful. Therefore, I must have been naughty sometimes, and not have tried to remember to "hold on tight" to anything I had in my hands. I know you will say, "How could you have been so forgetful!" when I tell you that one day I dropped poor Lavinia Warren upon the wall, and her pretty pink face, with her blue eyes and black curly hair, was "smashed" on the stones! Oh, how I cried! lam to mamma, crying and sobbing, "La vinia Warren's broke!" Mamma took me in her lap, and said: "Don't cry, my little girl! Crying won't mend Lavinia's head." And then she took me by the hand, and went with me to the spot where headless Lavinia was lying. Her dear little kid arms and her little upturned feet, and her pretty face all scattered about her, caused me to cry more than ever. I shall never forget that sight. Mamma bought mo another dolly, but tliic new one had a wooden head. I was fond of her. Still, I never loved her as I did dear Lavinia Warren. But I have always remembered since that sad mishap, to "hold on tight." Mam ma said I would not forget again, and I have not. —Ray Laurance, in Little Folks. The Storv of Dick, flic Turtle. Dick's life is not all sleeping and worm hunting. Every second clay he has a long swim in the bath, and he has certain social and domestic duties to perform which are very important. When company is expected Dick has to wear his swellest garb, a broad crimson ribbon, which is tied around his shell, and into a huge bow upon his back. So attired, he gravely marches about as if ho considered himself no unimportant personage. When all the pets are "dressed up" with similar rib bons, the effect is very comical. Dick has to do his share of the work, too; for this is insisted upon by a very young lady, whose commands are not to be trifled with. She owns a small cart and a vague number of dolls, in cluding one'springy rubber man. To the hinder edge of Dick's shell is affixed a ring—a solid gold one. by the way; for it rightly belongs to the ste m of a certain watch. The cart has a cord and a gold snap, which should be at the end of a watch chain I know of. This snap is fastened to the ring, | the lady dolls are seated in the cart, | the springy rubber man is placed upon Dick's back, and hay!—away they all I go for a 10-foot dash down the stone walk. I This performance never fails to de- I light the young lady who owns the I dolls, while Dick does not mind it in | the least. One terrible day—l almost ! shudder to think of it—the rain had j left a pool about four inches deep at a 1 low spot in the walk. Dick was hitched I up to take his party for its usual air i Ing; and lo! "he yunned away," as the ' young lady put it. Away he went full \ gallop, straight for the pool. The par ty came near being drowned! So exciting was the work of rescue and the restoring to consciousness of the lady passengers that the rubber man was forgotten. Later, after the pool had been dragged and everything possible had been done, he was found in a thick growing plant, where Dick had left him a la Absalom. Dick for a time strove to makt friends with the black turtle; but of late lie lias discovered his own image in a mirror which extends to the floor of the studio. He climbs up the carved ! moulding, and intently regards his re flection for an hour at a time. Wheth er he fancies that he has found some captive maiden of his race or merely desires to be sociable, as other turtles are upon logs, 1 am not prepared to | say. ! Taken up on his merits Dick is a harm ; loss and most interesting pet. Tie has i Already shown much more intelligence and I should not be astonished if a ! few year? of good treatment developed his faculties much further. —Our Ani mal Friends. 'I lie A ntitlieticu! riiitiaman. To attempt to get a Chinaman to as sign a reason for anything is futile. One day. while riding a donkey through the country west of Pekin, 1 noticed that the women of the country villages, mostly farmers' wives and daughters, did not bind their feet. 1 ; said to the donkey driver, who was running along beside me, "The coun try women do not bind their feet, do they?" "No." "Why?" "They do not bind their feet.'* "Why is it that the Chinese women | bind their feet?" ! "They bind their feet." | "But why do they do it?" ] "That is their custom." . I "But why is it their custom?" 1 "There is no reason why—no rea son whatever." i Ask a child: "Why did your brother not come to school today?" "My brother did not come to school I today." j Or. inquire of a man: "Why is it that the Chinese build a ! j pagoda 13 stories high?" nnd he will most probably answer, "That is the wav to build a pagoda."—Tsaac Tavlor Headland of university of Pekin, in Washington Star. To IH-.lcu A l'olnt. Mark Twain lays great stress on tht pause just before the point, in the use of which ho regards Artemus Ward and James Whitcomb Riley a3 the greatest adepts. For instance, Arte mus Ward would say eagerly, exclted -1 ly, "I once knew a man in New Zea land who hadn't a tooth in his head" | —here his animation would die out, | a silent, reflective pause would fol low: then he would say, dreamily, and i as if to himself—"and yet that man ■ could beat a drum better than any ! man I ever knew."—Argonaut. Boeri' Pronpect of Fraadom. Howard Gregg, of San Francisco, who spent several years In Johannes burg, says that the Boer Is not fight ing for a hopelessly lost cause. By that, he continued, I do not mean that he will again occupy the position he did prior to the commencement of hos tilities, but I am inclined to the opin ion that sooner or later a peace will be declared, in which greater or less freedom and independence to the Boers as a nation will be guaranteed. Cer tainly Edward VII. 's proclamation naming Milner as a paramount lord of the Transvaal would seem to point in this direction. If England doesn't compromise with the Boers they will make her tenure of the country a dis agreeable and expensive thing. I be lieve they can keep up the guerilla sys tem of warfare they have embarked on for years, and so long as any of them are left In the field bearing arms England will be forced to maintain a heavy military establishment in South Africa, so heavy indeed, that it will soon prove a heart-breaking strain to the taxpayers. A single workman can cut by hand 0,000 watch glasses a day. Iloxsic'a Crnp Cnre fa the only remedy in the world that enrea and prevents Croup, Pneumonia and Diphtheria, ho opium and 110 naußea. 60 cents. A man seldom enjoys good health while he has it. Garfield Eeadache Powders are made from herbs that many peoplo nse every day, and other products known to bo effective in curing Headacho, Norvoutmesa and Neuralgia. They contain no opium, bromides or narcotics; they arc cathartic; they cure quickly. In South Australia there arc only eighty five women for every 100 men. Women use seventeen times as many gloves as men. Throw physic to the dogs—if you don't want tho (logs; but if you want good diges tion chew Beeman's Pepsin Gum. The value of all Kansas products for 1900, including animals slaughtered, is placed at $187,796,400. Frey's Vermifuge Eradicates worms. It cures. 25c. Druggists or by mail. E. AB. FBEY, BALTIMOBB, MD. About 7000 people in Paris are employed in the preparation of human hair for the market. OH! FOR STRENGTH! Wsak Nerves, Tired, Exhausted Bodies. Tlie Complaint of Thousands upon Thousands. Health and Strength are Within Your Grasp. Dr. Greene's Nervura Makes You Strong and Well. It it the Great Restorative of Brain and Nerves. Oh, those nerves of ours, how they do bother us! Weak, tired, and ner vous is the conipluint everywhere. We overwork, dissipate, weaken our bodies, ruin our health, and finally break down. Sleeplessness and indi gestion are early symptoms, for the nerves are too exhausted and irritable to permit rest, and the stomach too weak to digest food. It is nerve and brain exhaustion which makes the brain tired, and the arm nerveless, the limbs trembling, the muscles weak, and the whole body without strength, energy or ambition. It is loss of nerve and vital power which is slowly but surely sapping the very life itself, and unless help is sought from the right source, the end will be shattered nerves, insanity with softening of tho brain, nervous pros tration, heart failure, paralysis or pre mature death. Beware of such symptoms! A well known druggist. Charles W. Eggles ton, 329 Park Avenue, Worcester, Mass.. suffered from nervous prostra tion and all its terrible symptoms. He writes the following letter telling what he knows is the best way to get well. "Some time ago I was taken with nervous prostration, I suffered terribly with my nerves and could get no sleep at all. I became fearfully exhausted, my stomach was in terrible condition from dyspepsia, and I could eat hardly anything. "I used several medicines but with out benefit. Being in the drug busi ness myself, and having had many customers speak In the highest terms of Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy. I determined to try it. After taking only one-half bottle I be gan to feel much better. "I slept soundly at night, and my appetite was splendid. After taking three bottles. I ate three square meals a day. and had not the slightest dis tress. My nerves were perfectly strong and I felt like a new man. being com pletely cured of all my troubles. "Out of the respect I bear the manu facturorsof Dr.Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, and my desire to have the slclt and suffering mnde well and strong. I unhesitatingly say that this medlelne Is tho best and most wonderful remedy known today. "It does just what Is said of It, It I cures disease. Don't hesitate to use it. sufferers, for you will never regret It! You will be made well and strong." As this letter Is from a dealer In medicine, his word Is authority on such matters. Everybody knows tint Dr. Greene's f'orvura blood and nerve remedy Is the great leading medicine of the age. Take It and you will he made strong, healthy and vigorous. Doctors recommend It because It Is the prescription of a physician, and because they know it cures. Dr. Greeno, the most successful spe cialist In curing nervous and chronic diseases, discovered It. He can be consulted free, personally or bv letter, at his office. 35 W. 14th S, New York City. Flottlngham Is the righest town In England. It has established the only university college maintained by the municipality. Dr. Bull's Cough Cures a cough or cold at once. Conquers croup, bronchitis. QV j II Dj grippe and consumption. 35c. J 1"^ THE GENUINE v \ f ' sti BWS® > ,0/3LKIEi tTII J -W.ACH (A VEL LCW 7 /\K! f WILL KEEP YOU D 27 ' f 1/ KOTHIftG ELSE will LOOK FOR ASOVE TRADE MAPK.TAIK HO JU&STITUTES. CATALOGUES POLE 3HOWING FULL LINE OF GARMENTS AND HATS A.J TOWER CO.. BOSTON.-MAS 3. W. L. DOUGLAS /T $3 & $3.50 SHOES VSKS2 L** I The real worth of W. T... Douglaa ©I.OO and $1.1.50 Shoe* compared with other mukes is $4.00 to $5.00. cw Our $4.00 Cillt Rdge line cannot be equalled at any V &/] price. We make and sell more 83.00 and $1.50 shoes CZ than any other two manufact urcraiu tho United States. Mill fn * 3 Til K REASO.V more W. L. Douglas f3 nnd M.50 shoes are sold $ •n^othermskc ÜbeameTUbeameTUEY A Uiyi'lli: BKtiT. Your - 111 ;.ll uui* K-l-.i ,!!■'. ... ".-1 .. . e'fcj 1 Pimples, Blackheads, Red Roogii and Oily Skin PREVENTED BY TWriLLIONS of Women Use CUTICURA SOAP, assisted by Cuticura Ointment, the great skin core, for preserving, puri fying, and beautifying: the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping: of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, ztchings, ana chafings, in the form of baths for annoying irritations and inflammations, or too free or offensive perspiration, m the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and many sanative antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves lo women and mothers, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nur sery. No amount of persuasion can induce those who have once used these great sum purifiers and beautifiers to use any others. CUTICURA SOAP combines delicate emollient properties derived from CU I ICURA, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleans ing ingredients and the most refreshing of flower odors. No other medicatedsca.p is to be compared with it for preserving, puri fying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to be compared with it for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines in ONE SOAP at ONE PRICE, vie. TWENTY-FIVE QiNTS, the EEST skin and complexion soap, and the BEST toilet and baby soap in the world. Comp.oie External anc! Internal Treatment for Every Humor XC'I 1 • CoMiitlna of CoTlrtmA SOAI- (26c.), to clcuiae the akin of clusla MIL ff 1 (I'lrkonoil cuticle; CtrrrcnßA (IIKTMCST (60-' ) lliaillU ifil !° iMkintly itlluy Helmut, tofl.iraui.tlon. and Irrltollon. and aoolho unti '•!) '■" O'Tlfl'ltA I'.R S o,.V,KT(Oc ). to COOI .0,1 cICKO.O th.hi<£d. Tljr OrT t? lor a'a 1 "''?,, hK - T,B,)fu " 1 auillolenlltocurc ilia nvnttorturing. fcHr .\r I \] /'* cad tanrnlHailt *Un ponlp, ami blood h unura, wUhlunof haL- who* . I lib OLif fcju.d Uio wor.d. ' *® gi URINOPATHY Uft \ Is the new science of detecting and \*S&M /fx curing diseases from a CHEMICAL WJC W Jand MICROSCOPICAL analysis of case and bottle for urine. Book fre& 7/F'shafer, M! D'" I-IMMFLS ttSu42 Penn Ave., Pittsburg, PB. PATENTS IS ■ MILO 11. STKVENS V ♦ 0., Kstab. IRM. Dir. Bi7-14th Street, \VAM I MiTON, l>. C. Branch ofliees: Chicago. Cleveland und Detroit. t|ENSlONi^"hi^.n?n.% 'Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Lat6 Frlncionl Dxaminer U.S. Pension Bureau. 3yralu civil wur. biucA DROPSYSKIE.-5! cane-. iiooa ot itMiiiuoiiial-t hud ]O da>•' treatment tree. Br. H. U. UafcEN a *Ut%b. 11* B. AUaat*. o*.