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About Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.) 1898-1915 | View This Issue
Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.), 06 Oct. 1899, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn83025326/1899-10-06/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
y - f • ' - - ‘ v , * > ‘ ^ r a r . - v *• v *■ ^ m s m i f i i l l t l i i Yen Hr* Bend the Siplbyt - BatNonheTtee.\ When disuse has b e a m chronic end deep seeled d is ofien difficult to cure it* {The! is the *ason why & is best io take Hood's SersepsrM* when disease first shows itself , h long-seated, iena- [dous cases. Hood's Sarsaparilla is also wonderfully successful. HOME o r MH. 81KAUB. loom from door to window. Mr. Ktears liar an oil stove Inside to keep out ilia dampness. lit1 plays about fifteen dif- foreut imialt’al lnslnnm>mH li.v note, He baa nearly reached Hie allot ted age of man, 1ml does not appear to Lie more than 45 years obi. - ---- ---------------- 1 * ■ -- stable Muonic. Facts alKint stable manure, or. rath' er, frettbly slated eoneluslons, foyni an Important part of Bulletin !>8, M hhsh - ebusetle experiment station. Of the three common conditions of barnyard manure, half-rutted manure Is Hie moat valuable, and well rotted manure the leant, because of their relative amount of nitrates. Manure should be kept packed away from the air as tightly aa possible, and if rotted should be plowed under Ju«t before plant Ilia, otherwise several mouths before that time. The more litter tisisl In the manure, the greater liability to loss of nltiog(>n. The uae of bedding material free from de composable organic mutter la a itieana of protection against loss of nitrogen. Aa a matter of fact, many Intelligent farmers long since reached the conclu sion that manure la never worth any more than Immediately after It Is void ed, and that the sooner It run be got onto the land the belter. Of course, the sooner this la done the less the liability to loss of nitrogen, Irrespective of the kind of beddlug used. The, aultaii of Turkey has a great af fectlon for Switzerland. \I love it,’ says the sultan, \above all other states In Europe, and for a good reaBnn—be cause It sends no ambassador to Con stantinople to worry me with its griev ances.” Hr. W, A. Elllston, of Stoke. Hall, IpR- wieh, who lias been chosen president of the British Medical Association for 190ft, is a well known East Anglican physician. For the last 30 years he has been on the staff of the East. Suf folk hospital. The German emperor has consented to stand godfather of the twin sons of a coachman at Giesorf. He has also made their parents a handsome present of money, and has given permission for the babies to he christened William I, and William II. The duke of York has an imposing col lection of cigarette holders. • I t ' I A n E x c e l l e n t C o m b in a tio n . The pleasant method and beneficial effect* of the well knowr remedy, S trut or Flos, mamrfactared by the CaurototiA F t * S trop C o ., illustrate the value of obtaining the liquid laxa tive principles of plants known to he medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most refreshing to the taste and acceptable to the system. It is the poe perfect strengthening laxa tive, cleansing the system effectually, dispelling colds, headaches and fever* gently yet promptly and enabling one to overcome habitant constipation per manently. Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and sub stance, and it* *' --\■--*••* fiver and bom—, - or irritating them, laxative. im* UK ugmiPitamm* remedy am obtained from _ other ananatie plants, by a. a efeod known to the C u a m t T ee f i n e r Co. andy. .In order to get tU henefidal efteefc s a t to avoid im S a tior- printed on the froU a f every CAIiPORHIA FIG SYRXJP GO. ■.9.X. HIS JHOME (N A TdEEi A Michigan Mao Who Dwell* In a. Large Linden Stump. Mr. Ktears, the occupant of this tree house, bus spent moat of his life lu De troit. He was a Brat-class cabinetmak er. and received the highest wages. He wout to IVre - Mar quette, Mason Boun ty. about three years ago, and soon made ■ t h i s tree house, which has given him such notoriety. It Is u large lludcu stump sawed off about flf- mr . STEAns. tccu feet from the ground. The walls ure scaled and pa pered and are covered, with pictures. One circular seat extends around the The head of the Chicago Federation of Labor la James E. Daley, a popular fkbor leader of the Western metropo lis. 1‘reshleut Daley Is 82 years old. He is tall, broad-shoul dered. aud active, having spent the first fifteen years of his life ou a farm In Greeu County, Win- c o u s i n . Although American horn and reared, Mr. Daley ia U e i x. DALF.T. ha# euough Irish lq him to make him a Jovial good fellow auioug the’ labor hoys. He moved to Chicago la 1880. He lenrued the Heath fitter’s trade. Joined the union aud has continued active In labor circles ever since. The Calumet and Iicela copper mines In Montaua are now employing over 4,700 men, who are producing aud aiueltiug an average of S,5oo tons of ore per day. 'y Thirty-two ship building firms have granted the eight-hour day to the boilermakers‘aud Iron ahlp builders on new work, and the nine-hour day out' repairs on old work. 1‘uddlere s t the Pottstown (Fa.) Iron Company's works have beeu granted an Increase from 83.78 to $4.50 per lou, tint highest rate paid lu that district lu the [>ast twelve years. The-Central Labor Vulon of Cincin nati succeeded In havlug the local Board of Education vote almost unani mously lu favor of a special one-tenth of a mill lax levy for the purpose of supplying free text hooks lu the schools. Figures compiled from government, State aud general trade reports show that at the present time practically all the necessaries of life are controlled by 111! truBls. Working for these trusts are 8,547,(HHI wage-earners, represent ing over 17,000,000 Individuals. According to the HI, Paul Pioneer Press the Northern Pacific, Great Northern, Milwaukee, Minneapolis A Kt Louis and the Omaha roads have had a difficult lime to gel Inip for their grading aud constructtmi work which they hure been carrying on since early spring. After a bitter fight lasting uearlj sewn years a settlement has beeu ef fected aud an agreement signed be tween the I.lucolu (Neb.l Journal, the Evening News and Typographical I'nlou, No. 1WO, of that city. By the terms of the settlement both become union offices throughout. The Brotherhood of Locomotive Fire men on July 1, 1800. mol a total mem bership lu good standing of 8(1,778, being a net gain for the year of 3,711). Aecording to Grand .Master Frank P. Sargent Hie subordinate lodges are lu belter rnndlllun numerically, fluanelal- y and Influentially (ban ever before In the history of I lit- order. A prominent official of the Peunsyl- vjtnja Itailroad Company says that tfter several years’ eonslderatlou JoncUiaion lias practically been reached |is to the creation of a pension and su- |«>ramu\ation fund for the benefit of employes of the company. It Is under- Mood that 7ft years of age has been ftxed upon as the age for compulsory retirement, aud that employe* who Have been 8ft years In the service, but have not attained that age, will be en titled to the benefits of the fund. The pension allowance will he baaed upon length of service and the average tvagea received by the employe during such service. It Is estimated that It t tia; st/Hk the fund effective. W CfOLt ONfHH MONUMENT. tk< A**i T h H ln u »f horis Bn* • lt*itw Ton,baton* Thomas W. Darts, of Peoria, 111., ha* reared a monument to commemorate hi* career as a cyclist, aud Incidentally to mark the restiug-place of hit wife. The shaft, which Is five feet nigh and two feet square, bears a destgu of a bicycle on the top. The design la ten Inches long and five inches high, and Is complete la every particular. D dis plays protulueully all the parts of the bicycle, even to the mime Opiate. On one side the monument hears the facts of his wtfer’s death aud the other ts blank. His Idea Is td proclaim to gen erations to'come the fact of b!s being f. long-distance rider. lie said that he fauded Hull he could » * THEY CANNOT GET AWAY. How Mongolian Prisoner* Are Kept lu Durance Vile. Ever since men have been Imprison ed for their crimes they have plotted to escape, and their captors h a v e had lo devise ways to prevent their foiling justice. This Is how the Chinese have overcome the difficulty. It Is hard enough for one to escape from prison, but two prisoners find their path even more difficult Slid wllli their heads thrust through this transformed stork It Is Impossible. To he put Into one i f will require a payment by the eompauy of about $8(jfCnoo per alluum to make HI* Gr*n(lin*’»in. At a ball In Berlin this Bpring a eol- jnel came up to a young lieutenant who was wearing a large badge richly let with diamonds, and said brusquely; “What thing Is this you’ve got, young OUHn?” •'It Is an order, Colonel,\ answered the lleliteuant. \An order?” ejaculated the colonel. ‘It’s not German then, for 1 don't know it.\ ‘ No. It Is an English order,” said the younger officer, ‘‘English? And who on earth gave you an English order?” demanded the •Ulterior. “My grandmother!” \And who might your grandmother be?” \Her Majesty Queen Victoria of Eng land!\ answered the young lieutenant, who happened to lie Prince Albert-of pchleswig Holstein. The colonel suddenly took his de parture. A CHINASE M1 THOD. these contrivances renders one as,help less ks though he were a Siamese t w i n trying lo work Independently of Ills brother. The Hnsslans, who, with tlu-lt convict settlements lu Siberia, have the problem of keeping prisoners con etantly before them, chain their eon vlcts lo wheelbarrows or planks and, thus bubbled, the unfortunate men have little chance of running off to the foreBts, aa they like to do. If they do escape they spend the summer lu the woods happily, and when celd weather comes give themselves up at nearest penal settlement. Library Books \I could itock a museum with the joer things I have found kt ooi books,” said a librarian. \These arti cles Include all kinds of Dills—grocery bills, gat bills and every variety of bill trader the sun: hairpins and ha^r orna ments of every design, and material; love letters galore, locks of hair, bits of lace, dress samples and watch- chain charms; pen and Ink. pencil, cray on and water color sketches; money or ders and postage stamps, and I hive *tso a dried human ear, which I found In a book on surgery, borrowed Jby • pwBctrl student probably, as they car, ry all jiortt of uncanny things about Progs »* Bloodhounds, \It's been ten years since l was In Washington last,” said the man from Boston, \and all hough I've been here now two weeks It wasn't until yester day that I felt at home. I was horn here, hut when 1 came hack this time the town was bo changed'1 scarcely knew It, It wann't a bit like the Washington I remembered. Yesterday evening, though, I went out for a ear ride—'way out Into the country, A freckle faced ln>y sat nest uie. and wa struck up a conversation. He had a small rifle with him. '■'What are- you going to do with that?’ I asked after we had talked a •while. “ ‘Goln’ to ghoot blood'n'ounds.’ \Blood'n'ouud#! My! hut that ob # word made me feel at home. I hadn't heard It since 1 was a buy, and ths boys I know up lu Bostou wouldn't know what 1 meant If J said IL 'Blood’n’ounds!' Why, It made me feel like a boy again. I haven't an Idea how you epell the word, hut that's the way we boys used to Bay It twenty years ago. I don't know its derivation, nor anything about It. Washington ass changed mightily since my day. Out If the Washington boys stlli call hull frogs b'.ood’n'ouuds, I know lt'a really the same old town that 1 was a hoy In. The Washington boy is Just wbat be used to be.-Wasblngton Post. with them. Photographs, too, figure largely fn my collection. I once found •n Insurance policy In a book, but it was quickly claimed. The hnitlicg ad vertiser cannot let even library books alone. Somebody Is an agent for a cer tain patent medicine. He uke* oat half a dose* book*, not to read them, bat simply to Inaert'a rirctiar.\ T I s I k t h 'i ■wtoke. Tbe Shah of Perala amoks* tobacco « a pip* that hold* a pomsd e f On treed. T h * ptpa tu rn be .ffc*d with frtah toteeca watty time, efea flwqgh |a fen bad e e i j « frw w h it*. te w >*:<*&* Most people eat more than is good for them. The stomach tries to digest all that’s put into i t ta t f t repeatedly overloaded, it goes on a strike. That’s indigestion. Rich, over-sweet, indigestible rood weakens tbe stomach and makes it unable to take care of the material put into it. More food taken into a wakened stcn than the stomach can digest, stays there, forms gases and rots, bringing on all the horrors of dyspepsia, only way to cure dyspepsia is to clean out the digestive-canal with CASCARETS. Keep it clean with Cascarets, eat light food sparingly, and give the stomach a chance to rest up and get strong again. B e s u r e y o u get the g e n u in e C A S C A R E T S 1 ao when he is pi <osiag to a heiress, do yon? g to —ndianapolis I vournal. * Par six genre Iwn* * victim of dr*. --- - ----- . .. . ■tea my atomach . ......... .. -a u d dt«*t tun wt * V ___ M*n)K I MauUklng CASCARKTS sad tlace M ta itawonsiono I could eat noth k tout, and at time* my at would not (otolkoad diges tveo vul •l |h*a I h*ve •toAdtl* Improved, until I am ** well aa I ever was to mt !l(e \ D avid h . MuaraT, Newark, a The discovery by the c-’lhbon ! 't l a po\ DAVIS AN1) Ills UllsrXIKNT. hot have selected a better ilealgu for the top of the mouument. Doves ami opeu blbles are old-fuahloued, swing ing gates a mockery, and u bicycle was as swift a messenger to uuy deallnu- tlou us could he found. He knew his wife would approve the dealgu If she were alive, for she liked the wheel and was deeply Interested lu his blcyole career. Mr. Davla Is one of I lie chum pnlou long-distance rldci'B of Hit Uni ted Stales, aud hua a long siting of barg denoting century runs. For several years Mr. Davis, who I b now 72 years of age. has hern among the first half dozen of Ihe long distance riders of the eomitvy, one year covering 14,000 miles aud ranking third. Sim-e he atlglued the age of (12 lie has cover ed 112,000 miles ou his wheel. THIS IS THE TABLET ANNUAL SALES* 6.000.000 BOXES. W H I L E Y O U S L t O C e 2 5 c . 5 0 c * DRUGGISTS CA6CARKT8 *it *b*olut«)y Urwlii*, a p*r«ly v*|*Ublt oompoail. Nc marcurlal *r *tkw mlaetal piu>pbf*<iB Is Cue*rata, latent* pismytly, •■aetlvaly asi aWW*natty Mr* *v*ry SUotdarcl the Staunch, Invar and Inteitine*. Th,y not only can ccMtipattos, but correct any aid ,t«ry total cf Irregularity cl tb* bcwila, lacludli|tlaiibcMiiadlyN*tMjr. Plwaact, palatable, potent. Taata good, do good. Revat tick**, wcakai« grip*- ■* aureyou gat tbe gtncUul Bawara ct imitoUeai and nbatltataa I *ny A ban ad C l f e l l l l to-day, and It cot plowed io every rcapcct, get your mccay back I Writ* na lor booklet and ha* aampl* I Addraaa BTkRLIHO RSMIPT COKPiKT, CUCkW or DIW T9U. ELECTRICAL COOKING flare Proved a Urtat knccen Wherever It Ha* Been Tried. Electricity Is makingfta way Into the kltchcu through the parlor and dining room, says the Cosmopolitan. For some time It hua been used for the heating of Ihe 5 o'clock tea kcllle, eliminating the dangers w hich are always Incurved when an alcohol lump Is used. A tea kettle, coffee pot or chafing dish may he adjusted to the nearest lamp lu a house wlieil for electric lighting. The experienced cook knows that there are dishes which are never seen In their perfection ten feet from the fire Dial cooked them. People who have passed llielr youlh lu Ihe country grow peevish over (lie way years have de teriorated the flavor of some simple curly tuvorlte of Ihe luble. Electrical appliances have done Bomelhlug to bring hack Ihe old conditions. Griddle cakes baked on a Bind griddle, electri cally heated lo Ihe exact teniperulure, lightly bruaheil with oil, are a crisp delight as they are (lipped from grid dle to plate. But while tills appliance can be used wllh Ihe IllunilnnHlig cur rent, It requires an extra attachment, as that current Is loo weak. This Is generally put In lit Ihe leg of the (lining (able. Up to this lime electricity has been uBed almost .exclusively by ths woman who makes a fad of experi mental cooking, and ghe has her elec tric kitchen fitted up Uke a small lalxir- atory, far from the domain of the fam ily cuisine. The whole paraphernalia might fit Into a tiled closet almost anywhere, so hooded and ventilated that no odor escapes Into Hie surrounding rooms. In one of Ihe spsrtment house* In New York dHluty little eleelrle kitchens have hern filled up where Ihe tenants have asked for (hern, although the apart- meals were not designed for house keeping originally. Wed \V. Vpham, president of the Chi cago hoard of review, Is the leader of Hie campaign against tax dodgers in Chicago. He I b a nephew of Governor I'pham of Wisconsin, and has been In the windy city only five years. The Queen of Romania, whose num de plume Is Carmen Sylva. has Just completed her first play, which Is called \A Talr of Shoes.” Monk* ** Tr*4e*m en. Most of the monks at King William'* * [Tpvrn, Cape Colony, are tradesmen, do their own carpentering, brick. •*ylpg, black* tnlihing, etc, beside* teaching school. Ail the banding; they occupy were erected by themselvea On n lir. L Willy Oetertown—Mother, cook say* we will all be equal to hearen. Mr*. Ontertowo—That 1* so, Wlffy. Site will be no better tbqre than we *tiJ 1-Pock. French Railway Law. In view of recent railway.iccldest* the Freoct MUtlsTer of Public Work* ha* decreed that *11 tr*to* s e n t carry reqattite* tee g ro rn g t w r^eti aid t * (fefeferei. * .Va^fi ' * - W --- ---------- -------------------- n re* q, - . WWW HWt Hi The Man Who Lost Hope Mr. H. N. X a n t e , el Mtndn, ■eb.,*»id: \la last I «aa atUckad with pnr*. lytts to my left site. Yon might S ttok a pin to the head into my left dp and 1 would not tael It 1 waa tmetri* to do sey kind of work and -~ had to be turned la bed. 1 mode ap my mlod that I eoold pot be eared is 1 had treed all kinds of medicine and had tried many doe* tor*. I waa adviati to try Dr. WIN Uamk Pink pills for Pits People, and commenced tbeir aa. last Sep tember. Before 1 bad tabbed my Jret box I felt better, and by tim. 1 bad need ail beta* tb* diseue had ehtiraly d!a.pp«ir*«t, and I bar* not been *o f t t t from natn Mne* I waa • hoy; Tbe pereiyvla etao dtaappeamd-andaftfeougb two montba have pareeed sine* I *»- labod my bait bos. tlMr* be* bee* leturranne of a * dtaana” Mhm*, lywk**. SIQ S B E E 'S DAUGHTER WEDS. Ceremony Performed Over a Year A*o with Much Myatery. . Miss Mury Ellen Slgshsc, only flatigh- tcr of (’apt. Charles II. Slgsbee, the gulluul conimamlcr of Ihe Uulteil Slates liullleshlp Maine when she was blown up lu (he hurhor of Havunu, stole a march ou her frlemls suit was secretly X!I#S MARV KI.I.EN SiasrSK* married In New York City Nov. 2(1. 18P8, lo Balfour Kerr, a young artist. Many pretautlonB were taken lo pre vent (he Identity of Miss ,Slgsbee aud Mr. Kerr from becoming known. Dis tortion of names whs even resul ted to. The clrrumstHiiees attending the mar riage were most mysterious. Miss Rlgsliee went to New York from Washington to attend Ihe classes of the Art Students’ Fragile In com petition for Hie life clnss scholarship. She carried off the prize. At the end of (he term of 18II7-'D8 she returned to her home In Washington. Not even her Intimate friends sns|>eoted that In ad dition to the prize of the life class schol arship she had also promised to be come the wife of Mr. Kerr. In October, 1808, she returned to New York to re sume her studies. The following month the marriage ceremony was performed. H I . Poor Wife I Excitement Is frequently the cause of Strange telegrams, as well as of other strung!) manifestations. A man who had been one of Ihe passengers on a shipwrecked vessel was rescued almost by a miracle. On arriving at a place from* which he could send a telegraphic message he forwarded Hie following dispatch to his brother: \I sm saved, Try lo break It to my wife.\—New York Tribune. Alcohol for Aaiowobile*. The majority of motor cars are now driven by petroleum, hut a French en gineer recommends the use of alcohol Instead of ft, and motors are being al tered so as to consume It. There It no fear of explosion with alcohol, and It ts said to be lees costly limn petroleum. We might therefore paraphrase the na tional poet, and say, \Put It la your cars to save your legs.\ No Occasion for.lt, \Ma we ain't got no company for dinner.” < \No little Tommy.” - “Weft, wbat maxes yon stick your little finger out when you drink?\— Cigarette. Never resurrect an evil that ba* bee* fairly burled. The Industrial Commissibn Is prob ing into the trust problem again, and the little capitalists who have been forced to the wall by the superior capi tal of the big fellows have had an ex cellent opportunity to howl, while the big trust magnates have posed a* pub lic benefactor* and there is really no end to their falsifying. The commis sion's sittings are funnier than a dog show.................... § MME. LABOR!. Wife of the Wounded t'oimeel for CunUiii Dreg^ui. Mine. Margaret Latiorl, wife of the Wounded counsel for Dreyfus. Is re membered lu America as the wife of De Puchmunn, Ihe ltiis#lan pianist, who I ium coined so many dollars lu Aiucrlcu. 'The advocate's wife was an Australian girl, her maiden name lie- lug Margaret (Inker Her family went to Kughiud when She girl was quits young, and chore she soon evinced a wonderful talent forynnale. When she was 18 Miss tlake.v attended nue of Puehumnu's emieerls lu Loudon, and eventually the pianist lieeame her teacher. The liiipivsslnnuhle gill fell III love wllh Ihe Itiwsinn. After they were married they l a m e lo lliln coun try, playing In eiinceiia together. Gonecrl goers found Mine, de Filch nialiu a lieaullful winuuii. They saw 1 fine head, s|dendldly ludsed ami crowned witti sofl brown hair, loosely colled. Her face was classic lu Its fea tures, her figure lit hi- and graceful. She played supcrlily, loo, with a fill Ixhcd elegance and niarveluns bril liancy. Her touch was at all limes smooth, and often dulnly. It was a great dlMiippnliitincnl In music lovers In this I'oiiiitry and in Europe when De PuehmiiliiTs infidelity forced Ids I Secretary of War, Elibu Root, Is said I lo prolest vigorously against the mid dle Initial \11.\ which some newspapers have Incorrectly added to his name. ? h t , t - p ! f r ! fret>*««« lr«l* l**l*n M t The 0 . K. 4 N. »nd Ortfo* that* Line have added * ballet, Hacking a*4 llbmy ear io their Porllaud-Oble*|« thiongh train, and n dining cattervle* has been taaugusrnted. Tb* tv*l* la equipped with the latest ebalr e*re, 4iy coscheiggnd luxurious list-tiM* and ordinary ileepere, Dlreol **■•#*• lieu made at Granger with Uate* Ft* cllo, and at Ogde* with lio Ornid* Ilia, from all potuti I* Qieg*», Wash* Ington and Idah* t# all l**t*>ft till** For Information, rate), •(*,, Mil •• •nr 0 . K. 4 N. agent, er afert** W, If. Ilurlburl, (Jenertl Fac***ger Agent, foitlaad. 1 In the ( enter of the Plaza in Lima, :a a pretty bronze fountain that was erect ed In K>7K, a gift from some noble Span iard. and Is probably the oldest foun tain la Ainerlra. DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CUBED. Ky local aatiltcKtloire, ** thfly cannot r*«ch th* UiM-a-tii] coition ot ihe *nr. Tlrer* I* only on* «ny io tut« tleafueu, 4 mi that it by cofl»U- ludoiial ri'inetilPB. i>«urtt«M la cau*«4 by to In* fUmuiit L'Ginliilun of th« mucous lininf of th* b-UBtai-hlttn Tub*. When this tub* («U ln« flamed you hitve * rumbling sound or imperfeul hearing, h id ) when it I n entirely oioeed de*fnene ia the leault, ami unleee Ihe li>ri*<rmi*Uon can ha tiiki'ii mil amt (ma tuba restored to Ite imr- imti pumlUliHi, hearing will be destroyed for* tiver; nine catiea out of ten are cauaed by eatarih, whluh la nothing but in Inflamed con dition of the iiiiD tiuN Nurfacea We will give one Hundred Dollar* for *ny tasti of lie.ttfneaa (vaueed by catarrh) that pan* nut he cured by Hall s Catarrh cure, fckud for L'HL'ulure, free. F, JrewCHRNRT ft Ct)., Toledo. Ohio. Sold by druCaleie, 7uc. Huili |*aiiilly f'llia are the beet- Kir William Vernon Hareourt makes every visitor to his country place plant a tree before leaving PENSION | I\* i'J .AIM A.VT#< p«>K I L \ i \ 1’ h> NA THAN I | III* h h 1 »H 1 >, W iiehingtnn. T» C .. they W ill I I m i 'I u i QUii-h repln.e H. ;iih N. H vo I h . Hidff Jiith ctHpH. PtntMji'urlng t'lalniH eluce H7I, M a DAMK 1 A H-dd wifi* {(» nut* for invoivo. WliPii Mils wun Hocurod Mno1. d»* I’m-hmann ro- Urni from the 001114*11 * st nir«*. jiml short ly aftcrwiinl mflirh*il M. I,altorl, whos? ooulitltflite lu h ll his jfroat cuhoh dlfioe has honn. ($11 4 hiK IM O 101H SHOfii. ^ Allan's Foot-Kr«s«. « powd»*r for the fpM. It our«s painful, Bwoilrn, Hmurtlnjf, n.-rvoua feet, and iueranCy tak-s the sting out Of corns »ml bunions, i t ’s the graa<t> Dai romfort dlH<’0V**ry of the age. Allen's Ffiot-t-dae muk^i tight or new bhoci feel easy. It ia s certain cure for Ingrow ing Nails, sweating, calloua and hot, tired, aching feet. $ 'e have over teeilmon- iais. Try it today. Sold by oil druggists and shot* stores. By mail for in HtampH. Trial package FftE K . Address, Allen 8 . Oimst^d, !>; Koy, N. Y. No one ho completely realizes the in- enh jmik y of a Biiperior ftR a aubordln- ftte. WHY PUT IT OFF? W hen » person iseompletelv rundown, petut !?i Hie li*rk, hesdaf'lien, tired, utterly worn oul feeling, why pm off taking fiotnetbjpg to*top the fRYNgn o( di-ienNef r\ ’ j Tloore’s Revealed Remedy; Y ill make vou well, quickly A t m*kM yo« feet! like a new perst.ii It $ pleasant lo take. per bottle «t yonr druggigtg, YOUNG MEN! y«r (kMfrtaa aa* Ota* mi PtM* Ok*ii lMMh» ■ • EM ONLY MdMaa wbkft wtU mm w A M w n waa NO t’ABK kaowa a E m a*«r fhltad la aM m br M w haw avdowi or of how hwg WiHag. IkwMi lw om will aaloaM yoa. h h tfimiw aal^ ****** ErMuia and tm ha luaa vttbai ‘ rt—ea and dateaEoa frow hiwfiew. FIK1, ■ droMMa ar Ml m E MF4 m TtsfiuD^OCM PWC1 The British empire has a population of 4«6,»00,ftU0 people; of this number 40.4ftr,,ftftft are in Europe. 308.300.000 in Asia,- 45.000.000 -4* ATetea, InetHfUng Egypt, 7.100,000 in American colonies anrt 5.500.000 in Oceanic*. rrr* ponnaneiutf Cure*. Roareornervoune*, ■ I I * aftardrat d*y* **• of Di. KJIuea Oreu Horn BMorw. Bend for VKRR •*.*• trhil b-ttlr *Bd trratree. Du. K. K. XLf?* PUL, (Of XrcS street, yiritadeipbSi, P*. The man who is hia own worst enemy usually has a number of other enemies who run a close second. W tm tt u < Icea Werk*. POF.Tt.AKTi WtRK * IP/lK WORKS. WIKF. and iron fencing; offlea railing, ate. S4 Aider. When a woman has credit she al ways buys a lot of loot things she doesn't need. The Derby, England. Trades Council, ha* followed In the footstep* of ocher central bodies ia that country by tak ing np * trade otioaist and running him lo r mayor.—The British mrioaisti ar* apparntly act ia Imre with Chaa»>t berlais'i scheme o t stitiag th* T r u e -rati by tore*, a* anenl ot th% emtiral bodies sad aS the U o r papers have de-i aonacad the eoatempteted war wttk’ Oom P*oL - t