|t| i t J^k tp(i()odl)ato\p /yi OST LITTLE BABIES 1)1 E, either from bowel troubles or from diseases which tliey contract because they arc in a weak and feeble condition from bowel troubles. Mothers who are seeking the ideal and proper medicine to give their little ones for constipation, diarrhoea, colic and simple fever* will liud LAXAKOLA the great family remedy. It is the belt and most effective laxative for children. BEST lepause it Is safe ami made entirely of harmless ingredients. BEST because it is non-irritating and never Kripes or muses piiin or irritation. BEST because it is sure and never (ails BEST because " Children like it and auk for it." .. I U IU.I" flanB 6 ™"''Y.n.K'o Rive little babies violent remedies that nick and rend their little bodies. DON 1 DO IT—givethem LAXAKOLA. A few drops can be given with safety to very young babies, and will often relieve colic by cxjieliing the wind and gas that cause it, and it also will check simple fevers break up colds and clear the coated tongue. Great relief is experienced when administered to young children suffering from dlarrh/ca. accompanied with white or green evacuations, from the fact that LAXAKOLA neutralizes the acidity of the bowels and carries out the cause of fermentation aids digestion, relieves restlessness, assists nature and induccH sleep. Ii A X A K O L A unditions of health ,f the FOR WOMHS, 'l M '■ irn. the dr. union. nrno.es muddy en l bloKhe i. -.n lid mil Hie d in* 156 De'l!s?n SITOI ChiJego" " nJ TIIE LAaAKULA CO.. 13. Nassau Sired, N. V.. or WASHINGTON LETTER (Special Correspondent*. ] The volume containing statements of appropriations, new offices, etc., re quired by law to be prepared and pub lished fit the end of each session of congress, under the direction of the committees on appropriations of the senate and house, has been completed for the second session of the Fifty sixth congress by Mr. Thomas P. Cleaves and Mr. James C. Courts, chief clerks respectively of those com mittees. A summary of the appropria tions shows the grand total of $730,- 338.575. The details by bills are as follows: Agricultural $4,512,420 trray 115,734,040 Diplomatic 1.840,428 DiMrtct of Columbia 8,502,260 Fortification 7,304,011 Indian 0.747,471 legislative 24.504,068 Military- academy 772,656 Naval 78.101.701 Pension 145.245.230 Post office 123,782.088 Sundry civil 61,795.008 Mdcncin 15.017,416 Miarollanroua 7,000,018 Permanent appropriations 124,358,220 Totals $730,338,675 The statement shows that In addi tion to the specific appropriations made are authorized to be entered Into for public works requiring future appropriations by congress In the ag gregate sum of $4,224,040. These con tracts Include $1,384,640 for perma nent improvements of and increased facilities at certain navy yards, $2,- 841.500 for public buildings previously authorized, to be constructed In various cities, and for certain lighthouse ten ders and a revenue cutter and $408,500 for school buildings In excess of ap propriations made at the previous or first session of the Fifty-sixth con gress, amounting to $54,215,734 moro than the contract authorizations of the session just closed. Nof tlie Proper Hour. About nine-tenths of the cranks who arc allowed to enter the city of Wash ington sooner or later make their way to the treasury department. They seem to have a spite against the place be cause there Is an immense quantity of money within the walls of the great white marble building. Secretary CI age has become so expert In handling them that he would make a first rate warden of an insane asylum when he lets go of his place In the cabinet. The other day one of these cranks secured an audience with the secretary after tell ing an Impressive story to the clerk in the outer office. "Mr. Secretary," he said briskly as he approached Mr. Gage's desk, "I won't detain you but a minute. Just please sign your name to this." "What Is it?" asked Mr. Gage, reach ing for the piece of paper which the crank liad taken from his pocket. "A check for $135,000," answered the crank. "The government does not allow me to sign personal checks during office hours," replied the secretary. "Come In after 4 o'clock." "Thank you, sir," answered the crank as he reached for his hat. He did not know that after that hour he would be compelled to state his busi ness at the outside door of the treasury building. PoHtmaiiFr Smith May Ilonlan. Postmaster General Smith has given up the lease of the house he has occu pied In ttys city since he entered Presi dent McKlnley's cabinet three years ago, and the gossips have It that he in tends within the year to resign his portfolio and go back to Journalism. Before the re-election of Mr. McKinley Mr. Smith expressed a desire to leave the cabinet, but was prevailed on by the president to remain. While he has denied emphatically his intention to leave official life Immediately, he has always intimated to friends that he wished to give up his portfolio just as soon as the president could find It con venient. to replace him. On the return of the presidential party Mrs. Smith j will go to a northern resort, and Mr. j I Smith has engaged apartments at the | I Arlington. Close friends say he will | not lease another residence In Wash ; ington, but will probably live at the hotel as long as he remains at the head of the postofiiee department. The QnenUon of Mannfaotnrm. Washington is not satisfied with the extent of its manufactures and is agl j tatlng the public with the expectation ! of securing organized effort to attract j to this city men and capital to be em ployed lu a variety of manufactured i products. The standing of the city In j the census as a manufacturer Is not low, being something like twenty-sev enth, but this figure is illusive, and the expectation Is to Induce manufacturers that will take advantage of the yet un developed water power of the Potomac, the convenient coal and Iron fields, the five trunk lines of railway offering con ' ditlons not enjoyed by many cities that j have greater manufacturing iinpor j tance. The men who have discussed the subject are very plainly not satig- I fled to see the city increasing In popu lation while the proportion of the pop ulation that derives income from the government to support the whole num ber is constantly increasing. Tliey Get Place of Honor. I Tlie public schools of Washington are to occupy the place of honor among I the school exhibits at the Pnn-Ameri ! can exposition at Buffalo. The exhibit | will consist entirely of bicgraph, pho nograph ajid photograph reproductions : of actual school work, showing every ! grade, from the first in the primary i department to the last grade in the | Normal school, and including the man | ual training department and the high schools. The expense of the exhibit | has been provided by the national gov ernment. It will he shown in the gov | eminent building. CARL SCIIOFIELD. Important. | lit; — Darling, will you he my wife? , She—Have you a recommendation ! from your fiancee?— King. Little Perry'* Awful Threat. 1 won't over live in tins house no more, And I'm goin away, 'way off somewhere In the dark woods, and tnt-hby a bear Or something nobody ever saw before Might come and eat me up, and then, I bet you, when My pa has no little boy he'll be Sorry he punished me I And I'm go in to starve and not Ever eat anything apain at all, And when I'm up with God and not Wings and can look at my pa and he Comca home and sens my coat in the hall And looks all around everywhere And I ain't there, I bet he'll be sorry he punished me! And wlirn I'm far away And nearly starved and can hardly stand They might be a big, bad man come alonn and say He'd take me off to some strange land. And then, when the people told my pa How cruel he was, 1 bet he'd he Tlie saddest person you ever saw And aorry he punished me I And when they had no little boy no more Mamma would cry all day, And when no little boy would open the door For pa at nlpht and say, "Hello!" 1 bet That's when he'd be Tlie saddest yet. Awl I'll stay this time, but he I> t-b-b-betm quit punishin me! —Chicago Times-Herald. Pan-American Exposition. Low fares via the Lehigh Valley Kail road to tlie. Pan-American Exposition. Five-day tickets, good only in day coaches, will be. sold on Tuesdays and Saturdays, May 1 to October 31, from Freeland at tin; rate of #7 for the round trip. Ten-day tickets will bo sold from Free land every day. May 1 to October 31, good on any train, except the Black , Diamond express, at. the rate of 310 for | the round trip. OASTOniA. Bears the /) The Kind You Have Always Bought fSSa7 OASTORIA. Bears the /t Tha Kind You Have Always Bought "T" i CHOICE MISCELLANY Fun on n Drintol Street. A very singular state of things now exists in the town of Bristol, Tenn., by reason of an act passed at the last session of congress fixing the boundary line between Tennessee and Virginia. The line runs along the middle of the main street of Bristol, and as there is a railway In the street the passengers on the south side of the car are riding in Tennessee and those on the north side In Virginia. If an offender against the laws of Virginia be sitting on the south side of a car, an officer from Virginia may sit I opposite to him, within arm's reach, I and yet dare not touch him unless he has duly issued requisition papers. But there Is a more serious phase of the matter than that. If a headstrong I youth and an equally headstrong maid- I en, both under the legal age and living | in Virginia*, take a notion to be mar rled, they can have the ceremony per i formed on the south side of a car, while on the north side there Is a law prohibiting It. So they have only to move from one side of a car to the other. Tennessee permits the marriage of minors, but Virginia does not. However, the same state of things would exist If the boundary line ran outside the town limits Jn a field, for Virginia law would rule on one side of the line and Tennessee law on tne other. The oddity about the present arrangement is that the line runs akmg the middle of a street on which there is a railway. A Schrmr Thnt Failed. James A. Hamilton of Chambers burg, Pa., told this story at ft reeent meeting In Philadelphia of the officials of 05 Pennsylvania towns to discuss the tramp question: "Three years ago we thought we had the tramp question In Franklin county settled for all time. We started out to make them work. We bought sev eral hundred carloads of stone and had It hauled to the yard of the coun ty Jail. We Invested in a good many suits of blue jeans and laid In a stock of hammers and ran up quite a bill for provisions. Then we sent out after the tramps. We didn't have to send far. The woods were full of 'em, sent down, I suppose, from Seranton ajid Allentown. "The whole country was Interested In the project, and the first day of the ex periment we had 000 to 800 people turn out to see the tramps work. We had a band of music, too, and altogether it was a great day. We had corralled 50 or 40 tramps, and In the forenoon they worked first rate, hut after the midday meal they complained of the food. In the afternoon they gathered in little groups of three and four and did a good deal of talking. Next morning after breakfast there was a strike. They wouldn't work, and we've never beea able to make them work since." Slic Eijjrotod It. A writer, Tolstoi thinks, ought to feel the public's pulse. lie Is fond of tell ing the following story of two Ameri can girls who came to see him in Mos cow, says London M. A. P. They had traveled around the worlcf, starting from Now York in opposite directions to meet again In Moscow for the ex press purpose of calling upon him. When they had finished, Tolstoi didn't know anything more gallant to say than: "Well, ladles, I think you might have employed your time to better purpose." As he spoke he felt the rudeness of the remark and was.about to add some excuses when one of the young ladles cried: "Ah, how much like Leo Tolstoi! I was ready to bet that you would say something of this sort." And they went away as happy as larks. The Pnmima Tonal. In the opinion of all engineers a sea level canal across the isthmus of Pana ma is the most desirable, although it would be the most expensive. The greatest objection to It Is the length of time required for its construction, which is estimated at 20 years. It is believed that with the work already done a canal with locks across Panama could be completed In six or seven years. Ten years Is the time fixed for the Nicaragua route. The reason that the sea level canal at Panama would take so long a time Is that the Rpace Is limited and It would be possible to work only a small number of men and excavators. The heavy digging Is all at the watersheds, within the limits of a few miles. The Cloth of Fall River. Fall Itlver easily loads all other cot ton manufacturing centers In America. It has about one-fifth of all the cotton spindles In the United States and more , than twice as many as any other indus trial center in America. It makes 843,- 000,000 yards of cloth annually. Every working day its mills weave more than 1,500 miles of cloth. If all the mills could be run on one piece, the fastest express train could not travel fast enough to carry off the piece as it is woven, since the product is more than two miles a minute. The Ural Monarch. Emperors, czars, kings- even presi dents, perhaps—are of less consequence than the great inen who are organizing or rather reorganizing the business of | the world. Upon them momentous is sues For good or for evil they are the master spirits of the time. Princes and presidents may wear the trappings of authority, but the man In plain clot lies occupying a swivel chair in the bank parlor is the man who does things.—St. Louis Post-Dispatch. The Benedictine distillery at Fecamp produced last year 1,081,000 bottles. One hundred and forty tuns of thin j liquor, valued at £IO,OOO, were exported ' to Hamburg. PERSONALITIES. King Victor Emmanuel 111 has or ; dered an automobile for his own use. | Governor Barnes of Oklahoma, who has Just retired from office, has accept ; ed the presidency of a new bank In that territory. The czar has presented M. Deloasse with a gold ijnufTbox ornamented with diamonds. The gift I# said to be worth more than 100,000 rubles. V. S. Grant, Jr., Is the latest convert to the orange growing fad. He has re cently purchased the largest orange grove In San Diego county, Cal. Benjamin Carlton Iloyt, who died the other day in St. Joseph, Mich., was the i founder of that city and the only sur viving Michigan pensioner of the Black Hawk war. Baron Deforest, the adopted son of the lato Baron Hlrsch, was married the other day In Paris to Mine. Menier, fa mous for her beauty, widow of Albert Menier, once well known on the Euro pean turf. George Mncdermott, an English co median who died a few days ago, Is credited with Introducing the pop ular word "Jingo" by means of a song which he sang In 1877 when the Brit ish fleet went through the Dardanelles. Love never grow old In Virginia. Near Powhatan the other day a mar riage license was issued to Sciplo Swann and Mamy Lnnghorn, colored. The bridegroom Is 1)9 years of age, and the bride Is 89. Scipio expects a hap py new century. M. Pierre de Nothne, conservator of the Versailles museum, who announces that lie has discovered an authentic portrait of Petrarch In the National library of the Hue de Hlchelleu, Is fa mous throughout Europe as an author ity on Italian literature. George Jacob Holyoake, the English socialist, bus Just celebrated his eighty fourth birthday. It Is more than V lute 11 uven. For further information Inquire of Ticket (gents. ROLL. IN U.WI LBUK, General Superintendent, -'il Cortlandt, btroet, New York City OH AS. H. LEE. General Passenger Agent, Cortland t Street. New York mtv G. J. GILDUOY. Division Superintendent, Ha/lcton, Pa. 1 A HE DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA AND SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table in otTeet March 10, 1001. tiT^lk n S YP ~ri J I ton for Jed do, Bekley, Hazlo hi ok. Stockton, Beaver Meadow Road, Roan "hzleton Junction at 600 a m dailv e *iv M P iM?! JM ' IHy .\ ,l r d 7U ' a P "C Sunday. 1 ffmhi J Bfifton lor ilurwood. Cranberry, J omnicken and Deri tiger at. 600 a in, daily SundHy: an connect at Hazleton Junction with dec trie cars for Hazleton,.leanosviiie, Auden rled and other points on the Traction Com pany's liuo. Train leaving Drifton at 600 a m makes connection at Deringer with P. R. R. trains for Mllkesburre, Suubury, Harrisburg and points LL'THKK C. SMITH, Superintendent.