SENT TO RESTRAIN STRIKERS FROM VIOLENCE. CnttoC IMm Mapdwi t»k« a BwhI h the Ontt Httttwa Trouble -- BrM|wi Have Bra Baraed -Kanrar that the Sad Is Kma ju"£. Husband and Son Impure Blood, Boils, Carbun cles, Rheumatism "My hn&band was afflicted with bolls for eight **•*8. Last spring his neck was nearly cov ered with little boils, which grew In number and size nntii they turned to carbuncles. HBv* O^thing the doctors did seemed to Aggravate the Disease. r :> He at last bought, a bottle of Hood's Sarsapa- rilla, and when he had taken half of it his neck WM well and he has had but one pimple since. The remainder of t he medicine 1 gave to my twelve-year-old boy, Willie Massey, who had been afflicted with Rheumatism from his in fancy. After he had taken a halt' bottle of Hood's Sarsapartlla It seemed to do him ao araeh good that we concluded to give it a fall Hood's3"^* Cures trial In the spring. My husband purchased four bottles, and together they have been taking it for over a month. Now my boy, instead of creeping around and crying with pain in his legs as he used to, can plow all day or ran and play aa lively as any children." Mil. JOHtr ALTSTATT, Ozark, Arkansas. Hood's Pills are hand made, and perfect In proportion and appearance. 25o a box. What Goes to Make Paper. .... Paper can be made out of almost an^ thing that can be pounded to a poip/ Over fifty kinds of bark are employed, while old sacking or bagging makes a good article Paper is made o.;t of banana skins, from bean stalks, pea vines, cocoanut fiber, clover and timothy hay, straw, .fresh weeds, seaweeds and more than 100 djfterent kinds of grass. Paper has been made from hair, fur $nd wool: from asbestos, which fur nishes an article indestructible by fire; from hop plant?, from husks of any and every kind of grain. Leaves make a good strong paper, while the husks and stems of Indian corn have been tried, and almost every kind of moss can bs made into paper. There are patents for making paper from sawdust and shavings, from this tles and thistledown, from tobacco stalks and tan bark. It is said there are over 2,000 patents cavering the manufacture of paper. t- * II Don't Cost Much ** it *£' To get well. Only a dollar or two afid a fittfe faith. The ease of Mrs. Lillie Meyer, of Brooklyn, N. Y., is an example. IT" JkSome time * ago she be gan to feel sharp pains in her abdo men, with bearing- down feeling and pains in her back. She tried doctors, and got no relief. At last, a friend told her of Lydia E. Pinkkairi s Vegetable Compound\ and, after using it, the pain left her, and menstruation How comes without suffering. ' Your druggist will tell you what a great medicine this is, and the price is only one dollar. You see, it don't cost much to get well. It will expel tumors from the uterus in an early stage of development. 1WM.ULUE MEYER 'x)r"\ ~ .v9 Most Hot Step the MaOfe - . Federal troops and United States marshals are scattered along the line of the Great Northern Railway to guard trains and other property against violence by strikers. Several com- Eanies of regulars from Port Snelling ave been started westward, and at vaiious points along the line Uncle Sam's soldiers are prepared to oppose interference with the mail service. A special train bearing four com panies of United States troops arrived at Grand Forks, N. D., and immediate ly went into camp with a guard about the train. There are 201" men in the detachment, under the command of Major J. H. Patterson. The companies are A. B, D, and G of the Third Regiment, stationed at Fort Snell ing. They were rationed for ten days., and will make Grand Forks their headquarters for the present. The train met with no accident, although there were several missiles thrown at various points. At St. Cloud one sol dier was hit in the head with a brick, and another was hit in the pit of the stomach with a coupling pin. At Crookston some one fired a shot at the engineer that flew wide of it9 mark. The train carried a pile-driver and two bridge crews to rebuild burned bridges west of Minot As soon as these are repaired it is expected the train will be sent through to the coast. Seri ous trouble is feared on the Montana Central and possibly at Devil's Lake, N. D. A special from Hinckley, Minn., the junction point «5f the Great Northern tnd its branch, the Eastern Minnesota, ^ Duluth, says that $ mob of 200 n*en id**'waiting to prevent any train from going through, and trouble is- feared there. Very little progress has been made in the attempt of the Tvin City busi ness men's proposal for arbitration. The strikers seem unwilling to oon- sent to arbitration in any form. Presi dent Debs declares that he has inside information to the effect that the man agement will soon yield. President Hill, however, denies this and talks as firmly as ever. President Debs claimed to have reeeivedinformation from both firemen and enginesrs that they would stay by the union notwithstanding the raise in wages promised to the brother hood committee, but the company claims to have telegrams from the en gineers and firemen along the line an nouncing their determination to stand by the company. DEATH OF FRANK HATTON. S DR. KILMER'S » « * - ; > i ; _ < ?V * ""•o"*' KIDNEY LIVER ys The Spring Tonic Mates thin, pale, sickly people well and strong. La Grippe Cures the bad after effects of this trying epi demic and restores lost vigor and vitality. > Impure Blood Bctema, scrofula, malaria, pimpled, blotchy General Weakness Constitution all run down, lose of amfaifcioB itad appetite, nervousness, tired and sleepless. At Druggists 50 centa and $1.00 Size* ffenriidf OoMa to Health" free-Coeaittsifaa fkea pH. KimiB & Co., BllfOHAMTON. N. Y. "ML HOUSE POWER* slwiil6l Nfi'STACKEfit 'K IM ^-SAW.MlLL'.-®- ; • SELF Feeder,. •; - c r ©R AN-- y|̂ s::| BN91NIL. •*- A5Thev;-ARE:THTbesx v V /UWMTZD&T/UOOUtMiafcfif -- No, I 0--04 nnm-cum NBIMTK SAFETY BICYCLE. iXfWM^VikOLQ. Famoiu Editor-Politician Expires at Washington from Paralysis. Frank Hatton, editor of the Wash ington Post, is dead. He was stricken with paralysis a week previous, and although hopes of his recovery were at first entertained a sudden change for the worse Monday morning was the beginning of the end. He died shortly after 4 o'clock on the afternoon of the same day. Frank Hatton FRANK HATTOW. Waa born at Cadiz, Ohio, in April, 1845. His father was editor and publisher of the Cadiz Re tt bUcan. In his ninth year Frank atton began his journalistic career as printer's devil in his father's office. Later he. became foreman in the Re- Eublican dfflce and afterward succeeded is father in the editorial chair of the paper. From the place of his birth he removed to Mount Pleasant. Iowa, in 1868, and under the super vision of his father edited the Mount Pleasant Journal. After the death of his father, in 1874. Hatton bought a half interest in the Burlington ilowa) Hawkeye. Onlv a few years were nec essary to make him the" editor-in-chief and sole proprietor of the flawkeye, which under his management became one of the leading newspapers of the West. Under the Hayos administra tion he was appointed postmaster at Burlington in November^ 1879, and af ter the death of Garfield, in Septem* ber, 1881, President Arthur appointed him First Assistant Postmaster Gen eral to succeed James X. Tyner. Later on, when Postmaster General Gresham handed in his resignation, Hatton was appointed to fill the vacancy. His public career ended, Mr. Hatton re turned to his favorite field of journal ism, and was editor successively of the Rational Republican, the New York Press, of which ho was one of the founders, and the Washington Post, of which he was editor and proprietor at the time of his death. The Pest, as the Burlington Hawkeye. owes its suc cess to his mdicious management dur ing a period of live years. Mr. Hatton was a loyal party man, an able public officer, and a "family man." in the civil war he served the Union side in an Ohio regiment, where he remained as a private until the end of the war. F. B. STOCKBRIDGE DIES. He On Bis Way to California, Where Hoped to Regain Health. Senator Francis Browne Stock bridge, of Michigan, died suddenly at the res idence of his nephew. James L. Hough- teling, in Chicago. He had been dan gerously sicK for weeks. The fam ily were at dinner when one of the nur.-e^ came down and announced that the patient was much worse. I v»| Mrs. Stockbridge H and Mr. and Mrs. Houghteling went immediately to the asANcis n. STOCK- aick man's bedside, BBIDQK. but he expired a , lew moments afterward. «r His last hours were apparently pain less, although he had suffered severely I from angina pectoris, which had kept'! him confined ever since his arrival in j Chicago, a nv.nth.ago. .The body was taken to Kalamar.oo. the home of the *Stcckbrid<res, where the burial services took place. Senator Stockbridge and Mrs. Stock- bridge were on their way to California, wherj he hoped to regain health. They decided to stop a day or two with Mr. Houghteliner, but the invalid be came rapidly worse and could not trav el. There was little real hope of his recovery trom the first. Senator Stockbridge was 68 years of age, and leaves a wife, but no cnlidren. He was born of New England parents at Bath, Me., in 182<\ After an aca demic education he went to Chicago at the age of 24 and engaged in the lum- ber business. In this he has always been more or less interested, owning mills and timber lands in various parts of Michigan and California. Soon after removing to Kalamazoo, Mich igan, he served two terms in the State -Logislifltau^i^ vm bawaa offered Senile fw aslx-y^t^Re^i^a last year. he had been altering the cession at Washington until a month ago, when broken health made it nec essary for him to ^eek rest In a milder climate. Deceased was a large man physically, with domestic tastes, and a . jpecially ber men of his State, many of whom their prosperity to his generosity. »hen his mill burned, thirty years ago, liis employes, mostly Hollanders, brought their savings, $1,81)0, and of fered them to help rebuild the plant. 1 :--r-T,--r /"*«*)". • WHEAT ANb OAT$£pr ; OA Crop Conditions "..^relve Agricultural State*. Reports have been received from its special correspondents by the farmers' Review in twelve ^ates, on the con dition of winter wpeat* spring whe*L. and oats. !- ' WINTER WBHAT In Illinoi* it is now evident that meat deal of damage was done by the bard freezes of the latter part of March, but this loss to the crop is fast becoming neutralized by the Kood growing weather of the present month In Indiana the permanent damage was not In a few and great, except in a few counties, the general reports are favorable for the State, in Ohio the condition is not so good as before the freeze, but- yet no great damage has been sustained. The condition is generally from fai{ to good. In Michigan lit tle reference is made to the cold weather in March as injuring wheat. In nemo counties it has Buffered from dry winds, while in others it needs rain. The crop seems to be doing poorest on clay lands. It is better in most flaces than it appeared to be three weeks ago. t has not vet stooled out as much as could be desired. From Kentucky comes the positive reports that the freeze did little harm. In ^ PU#* apparently been killed by cold, the warm, weather jiae brought, it out or Its precarious condition and a fsir crop is looked for. The ^forward rink' wheat sustained the most -damage. The general condition in the State is good. In some counties in Missouri tbe tatfe fkteit and drv weather have considerably reduced the condi tion of the crop, but recent conditions are more favorable, and aretbclnring up the aver age. In some counties the stand is rather thin. The general condition for the State is fsir. In Kansas theftiamage done by the freer/ was not great, but what damage -was done hats not been recovered by later conditions, and the average as a whole is low. In Nebraska the condition is no more .than fair, and in some localities , the crop is in bad shape as a result of drought. In Iowa the crop is in oertain counties badly dam aged, and seems to be. deteriorating. In Wis consin not much change Is reported over last month. Tbe general condition of the crop is good. OATS. In Illinois the early sown oats suffered se verely by the March freeze, sad Ah* land bad to be quite generally resown. The oats that were late sown generally escaped Snjiry. On account of the reseeding it is by no mean* cer tain that the disaster wilt cut down the tflse of the final crop. In Indiana oats were widelv injured, in some places the estimate being that one-half were killed by freezing. As in Illinois, reseeding has been quite gen eral, but some of the fields will be put into other crops. In Ohio the crop is only fair, the fields that froze out having been mostly reseeded. bnt some of them not yet started to grow. Some counties report them, very back ward. In mo.4 places in Michigan seeding of oats has not1 yet, been completed, and at the time of the March freeze not t-nongh fields were up to rrafce the possibility of loss great. In Kentuokv the loss to oats was very great. Nu merous reports are received of" the entire killing of the oatm over wide areas, and there are nJo accompanying reports of reseeding. Many of the tields will doubtless be given up to other crops. In Missouri the loss has been great and the general out look is bad. Some, bnt not all, of the lost area is being reseeded to oats. The loss was great in Kansas. »nd a recovery does not seem probable. In Nebraska the outlook Is fair, as the oats were not developed enough at the time of the bliszard to destroy them. In Iowa the general condition for oats 1s good, though some localities, where the crop was early, suffered severely. In Wisconsin pros pects are good. SPRINO WHEAT. Spring wheat is not raised in moat of the States covered by the report. In States when it la raised, seeding is not vet completed. HOGAN S ARMY PRISONERS* Over Three Handred Men Reach Helena In Charge of Soldiers. Hogan's army, numbering 330 men, arrived in Helena, Mont., Monday on a special train in charge of soldiers from Fort Keogh. The prisoners were taken to the fair grounds, two miles from the city, and went into camp under military guard. Hogan's is the Northwestern divis ion of Coxey's Com monweal Army, which seized a train on the Northern Pacific Rail way at Butte, Mont. Col. Swaine, who is in command of the Department of Dako ta in the absence in Europe of Geh. Mer- ritt, was instructed by telegraph from Washington to use the United States troops to intercept the army and re store the railroad's property. Acting on his instructions,Col. Swaine ordered Col. Page, of Fort Keogh,' tr> secure a special train and captpre the, train- stealing contingent. He came upon obn. aooAn, ftOOAir IK CAMP AT FORT KCOGH. the army at Forsyth, where, after some resistance, the Coxey followers were made prisoners and as such have been taken to Fort Keogh. LYNCHED BY ANGRY CITIZENS. Johnson, the Burglar Who KUled as Iowa Marshal, Strung Cp by a Mob. Johnson, the burglar who shot the Town Marshal, at Missouri Valley, Iowa, was lynched Monday night. City Marshal Adna Whitney, of Missouri Valley, was shot and killed at 5 o'clock Saturday morning, while searching for stolen goods in, a sus pected man's houie. , Two strangers, Johnson and Davis, were sleeping up stairs. The officers had no trouble in quieting all disturbance below, but as thov v/cnt up-stairs pm-fs i^nri -Johnson opened fire with their revolvers- One of the first shots fired took effect in the cheek of Marshal Whitney, killing him instantly. Another struck J. B. Lyon, inflicting a liesh wound in the side. Johnson was struck by four bul lets. In the meantime Davis made his escape into the'woods a short distance from the house. r *i.. t. Overflow of Kfn FIRE et Shanghai, China, according to advices received at San Francisco, destroyed . 0 ) houses. ANTHONY SWEENEY, a wealthy in surance agent and real estate owner of Denver, died at Hot Springs, Ark. PRESIDENT PEIXOTO'S fleet has cap tured Paranagua, Brazil, the last of the rebel forts there offering resistance. C. W. CARPENTER, a New York traveling salesman, ended his life with morphine at a hotel in Richmond, Va. MONTGOMERY BRIGGS, a prominent young lawyer of Buffalo, N. Y., was shot dead in the street by unknown persons. ' ROBERT SALMONS, of Dallas, Texas, and James Howard, of Butte, Mont., were arrested in Kansas City, Mo., for «ounterfeitin|^. ... >-"< >> . . . Jackals. A str*4fe<«aJ*«®iiv is carried on at a oertain temple lying in a belt of swamp and jnngki at the foot of. the Efimalayas. The author of "Indian Memories," who visited the place at sundown, says that she found tKe' priests in perfect silence, engaged in c oking large cakes before the temple. Then they sat down, still silent and stolid, as if ignorant of any unac customed presence. As yie last rays of sunlight died off the temple, a "man of extreme a<re, clad in white robes and closely shaven, i- siud from the shrine. It'was the chief priest. Moving slowly forward,t he tcok up • bronze hammer, and be# an to strike the bell. Very sweet ancj^ „ 'r,$ eep was the note; the whole glade ' EcOflOmv rang and vibrated with it. * At the sound, all the priests rose and moved solemnly and in dead silence round the quadrangle, bearing with them their huge cakes, which they broke tip as they walked, and depositee them on the stones and tree-trunks, and the steps of the temple. A rust* ling sound made m» turn. A jackal,, big and plump, brushed past me, with an upward curl of his lips, and a look of surprise and resentment in his red- bronze, gleaming eyes. ^ v» > Simultaneously, from every lane and passage in the darkening thicket, came other jackals, singly and in pairs, and filled the space before the temple. Soon the feast was spread. The high priest ceased to toll the bell, and at a shout and wave of the hand, every jackal trotted, without rivalry ana without snarling or confusion, to what was evidently his accustomed place in the feast, seized the cake in his jaws, turned and disappeared through the thicket. In vain did I fee the priests to learn Kighest of all in leading: strength.-toW 0. f«*. MJipit Rowder ABMLUTELY PURE requires that in every receipt calling for baking powder the Royal shall be used. It will go further and make the food lighter;, sweeter, of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome. ROYAL CO., 106 WAU. CT., NSW VgjMC. the meaning of this strange bounty. "It had always been so," ^ v A N0-T0-BAC MIRACLE PHYSICAL PERFECTION PRE* VENTED BY THE USE CM? TO» BAOCa The Name of California. 'Dr. Thomas E. Slevin, in a recent lecture before the Geographical So* ciety of the Pacific, said: "The werd 'California' was first used in a work on Spanish chivalry -pub lished in 1510. This work was an al leged history of the adventures of 'Amadis of Gaul and his son Esplan- diam.' It was of great length, and divided into a large number of short stories, one of which was the manner in which 'Califia, the queen of the isl and of California, a country inhabited Only by women, who lived as amazons ana had cold without end.' saved Con- stantinople from an attack by the Per- thelr ! sians. This story, as well as others, j was widely read by the people of Spain. ; and by many regarded as fact. Among j the stanch believers were the members j of the Cortez expedition, who, upon | landing upon the peninsula of Lower ! California, imagined they were on an 1 island which, owing to* its apparent riches, they namea after the fabled isle, and Cortez himself called the new country 'California.' " Am OM-TUMT of TwratfthrM f««n' To bacco Chewing and Smoking Cured, and G*tni Twenty Pounds in Thirty Days. LAKE GENEVA, Wis, May 5.-- Spe cial. The ladies of our beautiful little town are making an interesting and exciting time for tobacco-using hus bands, since the injurious efleets of to bacco and the ease with which it can be cured by a preparation called No- To-Bac have been so plainly demon strated by the cure of Mr. F. C. Waite. In a writteu statement he says: "1 smoked and chewed tobacco for twen- three years, and I am sure that my case was one of the worst in this part of the country. Even after I went to bed at night, if 1 woke up I would want to chew or smoke. It w&*. not only killing" me but my wife was also ailing from the injurious* effects- Two boxes of No-To-Bac cured me, and I have no more desire for tobacco than I have to jump out of the window. I have gained twenty pounds in thirty days, my wife is well, and we are in deed both happy to say that No-To- Bac is truly ' worth its weight in gold ' to. ys." The cure and improvement in Mr. Walte's case is looked upon as a miracle--in fact, it is the talk of the town and county, and it is estimated that over a thousand tobacco users will be using No-To-Bac within a few weeks. The peculiarity about No-TO- Bac as a patent medicine is that the makers, the Sterling Remedy Com pany, No. 45 Randolph street, Chica go, absolutely guarantee the use of three boxes to cure or refund the money, and the cost, $2.50, is so triflin as compared with the expensive an unnecessary use of tobacco that tobac- co-using husbands have no good excuse to offer when their wives insist upon their taking No-To-Bao and get ting result in the way of pure, sweet breath, wonderful improvement in their mental and physical condition* with a practical revitalizationbf thelf nicotizad nerves. * Think, ' f A little thoughtfulness goes a great way in the home, as well as in the larger social life: and the more close; and intimate the association, tb# greater the need of this thoughtful ness in little things. There are. few^ things so trying as the constant neg£ lect and forpetfulness of trifles. , Many a greater fault, many a serious error even, fails to give as much actual trouble, and produce so much discord in general, as the habit of never re turning the thing that is borrowed; of. undue delay in answering notes: of neglecting to perform any and all of those "trifles light as air" in them«v selves,but which,in the aggregate, maka up so great a sum of human happiness; In fact, there is no more exasperat ing trait than thoughtlessness in tri fles. It is even more so than in larger^ and more significant matters. The imp* portant affair can well be spoken of- and recalled duly to mind, but the un important one is often difficult to dis cuss. One feels disinclined to ask an other to do the thing that should hare been done without asking. Carefulness in small things will do more to promote an atmosphere of harmony in the household than almost any other one thing. The World's Columbian Kxpoaltton Will be of value to the world by Illus trating the improvements in the me chanical arts, and eminent physicians , will tell you that the progress in medic inal agents has been of et,ual impor tance, and at a strengthening laxative that Byrup of Figs is far |n advance of all others. Do NOT allow yourself to read a mo ment in any reclininar position, wheth er in bed or on a sofa Save Money on Lumber. Of coorsp^hen you build you want It to cost aa little as possible. Then, whr pay your local dealer a commission when you can buy tetter lumber direct from th© 1*11- MD Lumber lompanv, corner of l.uHi.. «««| 22d streets, Chlcaso. 111. at wholesale prices? Write tbem for terms. DECISION of character will often give to an inferior mind command over a superior.--W. Wirt. ' HALL'S CATARRH COHB Is a liquid and ft taken internally, antl atil directly on the tjlood and mucous surfaces of the system. Write for testimonials, free. Manufactured by - " iNKY & Did Ton Ever Meet a Truly Good Man ? No doubt you think yon hate, bat we'll wager a dime or so he did not have the rhen- inat'sm. If he did, he swore occasionally, and \ no man oan be truly good who swears occasion ally. Health, nerve tranquility and morality are apt to go hand in hand. Painful spasmodic diseases like rheumatism and neuralgia rntn the temper, make one morose, peevish and re bellions. This Is a sad fact, bnt it; is none the lesstrne. Drive away the pain, mollify the temper, restore traaqullity of mind In cases of rheumatism and neuralgia with Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, an anodyne and tonio of com prehensive range and effect. It healthfully stimulate* the kidueys, bladder, Ktomach, lUer and bowels when inactive, and induefes sleep and appetite. A rerv quieting effect, not an unnatural, stupefying one like that of an opiate, lslproduced by awineglassfiil before re tiring. It is Incomparable in malarial disease. Qnlnine foP ttte iktltfM Quinine for thfe pillion is being cir culated in Benga!, thanks to the Gov ernment scheme Of-supplying small, cheap -packets of the drug at village postoffices. The quinine is made up in five-grain packets, and over 200,1100 a month are bfing sold. a$ the remedy is thus witjhin the reavh of people in the most ou^ofj-tfaj-wfcy districts. Electric "Wires. S©me##riteir very aptly lillSSftf^ the aerves to electric wires, and the gen eral working ol their system to that of electric, cars. Ai. teaw'who "slips his trolley" like M*. Jeremiah Eney, 1812 W. Lombard s-t., Baltimpre, Md.. will need something better than even a galvanic bittery to set him all right. Mr. Eney found that something in the following way. "I suffered," he says, "a long time With neuralgia in the head. £ gave St. Jacobs Oil a fair trial anl a?n entirely cured." In this way the great remedy acts as a mot5rman to restore broken wires, and tet the system io perfect action.. DR. GALEZOWSKI, the famous Paris oculist, will receive $25,000 for his visit to .Persia to attend to a sen of the Shah. Larger *ums than this have been declined by English practition ers. The late Sir Morell Mackenzie refused $30,000 to go on a professional trip to New York, and Anderson Critchett did not accept $35,00J to visit India to treat ono' of the native princes. - t "A DYING man can do nothing easy" were the last words of our immortal Franklin. A diseased . man oan dp nothing well, are words equally as true. " NOTHING violent, oft have I heard tell, can be permanent.--Marlowe. Pure, Soft, White Skin.; Have you freckles, moth, blotches, ugly or muddy skin, tetter, or aiiy other cntaneous Do you want a quick, permanent solutely infallible cure ,rjIBB or to introduce it ? Something new. putt, mild and so harmless a child drink it with perfect safety. If your full Post-office address to anas SAeere E. amni, 134 yiae»lR«<, Ci AOISNTS WASTED SV Alike m Botch So Alkalies Other Chemical* *re used in tb# preparation of W. BAKER & 00.31* I It has mors (A<mf*r«w MUMS | IkerimmgtH of Coco* Mini# , iwlth Starch, Amwreot ' Sugar, and is far »6fe eco nomical, ccittiv few Am one enl«tma*.-' It is delicious, nourishing, sad Ilimr DIGESTED. • " 8»M If Growers eTerywhsr*. ;" (equals custom 1 S4 to $6, best vain* for the i , in the world. Name asd uimm ^stamped on the bottom. TOtiy .pair warranted* TaktMsibllt. . tute. See tncal paper* far fid description of our CHgfjhll " ines fin ladies I gu»- . tlemers or send ftw M- slraitd CalrUtam* der by mail. Portage free. You ran get Uttl bargains of dealers wbo push nnr shoes. C A T A R R H ^ I*** "Women Wear Princr> Alberta. In the annual dress parade the bon nets are not a circumstance to the new style in Prince Albert coats for ladies, says a New York dispatch. That is the lattest cra'e. They are now teen on Fifth avenue every afternoon, at the chamber concerts, at 4 o'clock prayers, at the art galleiie*, and in Central Park, and they were worn Easter Sunday with the new bonnets and boots. These coats differ from the men's in having rtund instead of straight skirts. Men are comparatively slab-sided, women have hips which necessitate drapery with more or less spring. A fair descendant of Peter Cooper has the credit of bringing out the Princ$ Albirt. .. . IF you can't pay for a thing, don't buy it. If you can't get paid for it, don't sell it. So you will have calm days, drowsy nights, all the good business you have now, and none of the bad.-- Buskin. Are tell-tale symptoms that your blood is not right--full of im purities, causing a sluggish and unsightly complexion. A few bottles of S. S. S. will remove all foreign and impure matter, cleanse the blood thoroughly and give a clear and rosy com plexion. It is most effectual, and entirely harmless. Chts. Heaton, 78 Laurel St, Phila., aayst--"I have had for jean a Imte'li my Mood whfch made me dread to shave, as small boils or piaplas wonld bs cat thus causing shaving to be a great annoyance. After tilting three bottles ef I my face is all clear and smooth as it should hri i»pp»m'||» | splendid, sleep well and feel like running a foot race, all from the use of S. S. S. >«Qd fcr Twsdnea BlooJ lad Staa Olwiw malted IN«. S11FT SPECfffC CO. iwca*!msr m Win wrtfii--fflnfi STmS From away np in British North America following greeting - ~ -- Pierce. Ch»f Consulting Pfi; oomes the Invalids' Hotel and Buffalo, N. Y. Mia. to Dr. R V. to the Institute, at esFJ Sharrard, of toba. whose with that article, hoy, follows: ' I take great pleasure in recommending Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription for ' falling of tbe womb.' I was troubled with bearing down pains and pains in my back wbeoev would be on my feet any length of time, recommended to trv Dr. Pierce's Favor. I was: ITOCrlpttOD,1 I feel like a i F. J. CUE I I by & CO., Toledo, O. Vain* of Great Britain's Land. " Since the beginning of the present century the land of Great Britain ha* doubled in assessed value. IX 18."»o "llnown's ttnmchUU Trochtv were , Introduced, and their success as a cure for Colds, t oughs. Asthma, and Bronchitis has been luiparitHeled. j IN this world truth can wait. She is used to it.--Douglas Jerrold. \ SHILOH'S COBSOKPTIOM CURS IS sold on a | fiuaraatee. It cares Incipient Consump- | tloa It Is the best Cough Care. 26 cents, j M cents and 81.00- | TH* melody of music is dlrine* bat It is no more enchanting than a young glrPs face made supremely beaatifoi by the use ^of Glenn's Sulphur Soap. EIGBTEXM DOLLAR ^ara: we pay frelgha %su hm ©ou back whenever to trv Dr. Kwce's Favorite which I did with haopy results, new person after taking three bottles of it." As we have just heard from the frigid North, we will now introduce a letter received from tbe Sunny Houth. The follow ing is from Mrs. J. T. Smith, of Oakfuskee, Cleburne Co., Ala. She writes: "I was afflicted and suffered untold pains and misery, suck at no pen oan describe, for six years. I was confined to bed most of the time. I expected the cold hand of death every day. I was afflicted with leucorrhea-- with excessive flowing--falling of tbe womb --bearing down sensation--paui in the small pitation your medicine I could not sit up, only a few minutes at a tune, I was BO weak. I took Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription three per day, I also took his ' Golden Itedical Discovery' three times per day and one of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets every night. I have taken seven bottles of the ' Discovery.' seven botties of the 'Prescription' and five bottles of tbe ' Pellets.' I took these medi cines seven months, regularly, never missed a day. These medicines cured me I feel as well as I ever did in my life. Four of the best doctors in the land treated my case four years. They all gave me np as bopelees-- they said I could not be cured, and could not live. Through the will of God, OH yewr Eiiedicinea. leave been restored to tbe best olliealtti * Tours truly, Mrs. W. O. Gunskei, of Ho. 1401 Sooth Seventh Strsst, Terra Haute, Indiana, writes: "I had been suffering from womb trouble for eight years havingaoctored with the most •kulfal physiaianB, but finding only tempo rary reUsc from medicines prescribed ny them, I was advissd by a mend to take Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, which I did, and found, in taking six bottles of the 'Prescription' and two of the 'Golden Medical Discovery,' that'it has effected a positive curs, for which words cannot ex press my gratitude for the relief from tbe great auffsring that I so long sndursd." Yours truly, As a powerful, invigorating, restorative tonic "Favorite Prescription* improves digestion and nutrition thereby hoikiing up aotid, vihoUaam* ;JUth, and increasing the strength of the whole system. As a soothing and strengthening nervine "Favorite Pre scription" is unequsLled and is invaluable in allaying and subduing nervous excitability, irritability, nervous exhaustion, nervous prostration, neuralgia, hysteria, spa mm, Chorea, or St Vilas's Dance, and other dis tressing aer v ous symptoms commonly atten dant upon functional and organic rimnase of tbe womb. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety and despondency. Even inanity, when dependent upon womb disease, is cared by it Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a scientific medicine, carefully compounded by an experienced and skillful physician, and adapted to woman's delicate organisation. It ' vegetable in its composition and harmless in its effects ts any eondi- ewstem. For morning stesness, or nansee, due to pregnancy, weak stomach, in- digmtion, dywsfc and kiwbed symptoms, its use will pro*avsry bsasflrial Dr. Pierce's Book (M8 pagea,illustrated) ON ** Wainan and •HMTSOO- I I--fill means ai Haw Treatment, will be maHsd phria. fwftipi, sswni^ ssoM from ohesrsaHsa en veosint of •**.£. * *4 . . --4. .. ^ ... * * r. 4f , ' sf-V. ' * -'*** 4 -v rnrr BICYCLE mtt cataiuni Eft;;* . Buy ol lbs Ifeisslsstsrsf ssd Ss«e NfMfs VM«S| > Hoy*'and Obis'Wheels, ... tltXl ftadles' Wheel, with Pneumatic Tire. SMLO# J. C. IUBIE8, USiati «H CkiMfa, PATENTS R E I C H E H & C L T ' j C M STEAM ENGIHE A Two-Hortte-Power ®OU Raelne Boiler and Engine, 90V, ' This iiiiicnluf i8 8.'oon<l- band, but has b«en U» lliss^ •(i, lAin't write unless bave the cash. AS^r^SI ' *' CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNIOH,:^ »3 ». Jefl-eraen St., CHICA04K DIVORCE? Send SO-ceiit uoii*al note and receive book < L»w-i of all the States and censes for > can be obtained. Compiled by well-l CEORGC T. PARKER, Warder Huildinc. - W A8H1MOIW, CURE YOURS FRENCH SPKRIHF M« disease* of the nrinary i •condition. FulUim-biMs CI.OO. Sold by E. I..8T1 Baren street, corner Hftb Ar. Sent by express on receipt at piSoa. TIIS C trom. points Narthi wset. Send IS V Kaaaolpa Street. Cnci««. tu± • For Men take: 3boxes ; J wnnnucore: |gamM4.St M. Ward Cfciw. Co., htowalL^ FARMS^«.3SSto"K3Sli.atrSl . & x ̂ - > 1