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Show lWHWWiffHWWW4.HW HEAD May Be Dlsposs OP MILITARY COMMITTEE IN HOUSE. Is One of the Most Important Person, naan In Confront Jast Mow Ho Mad n Booord for lilmnolf During tho Civil War loader In Politics lu Iowa. can be driven in or driven out. Dr. Ayers Sarsaparilla drives disease out of the blood. Many medicines suppress disease cover it but dont cure it. Dr. Ayers Sarsaparilla cures all diseases originating in impure blood by purifying the blood itself. Foul blood makes a foul body. Make the blood pure and the body will be sound. Through the blood Dr. Ayers Sarsaparilla cures eczema, tetter, boils, eruptions, humors, rheumatism, and all scrofulous diseases. (Washington John A. T. Hull of as 'who, of tha committee on military affairs. Is locking after the army affairs In congress, is now serving his fourth term. At present the committee of which he is the head la one of the most important organizations in congreBJ, and the Iowa statesman will be prominent until the Cuban question Is settled definMr. Hull Is the most picturitely. esque member of the Iowa delegation. For the past decade he has been the center of the fiercest political battles In the state; and has come out of all He Is s ready of them victoriously. and eloquent talker, ripe in experl-th- e most popular men fence, and one of on the floor of the house. Mr. Hull le (a good man to have at the head of'the committee on military affairs. He has had no small experience In actual warfare. When the war broke out he enIowa lnfan-trlisted In the Twenty-thir- d and was promoted to a captaincy before he retired, which be did only after having received a desperate 'wound. He has been prominent in years, and ;Iowa politics for twenty-fiv- e was secretary of state in that commonwealth In 1878. In 1887 he was elected Iowa, chairman rti (Jei Jarsapisa ycr!s IRONING MADE EASY. HAS MANY BUT NO EQUAL IMITATORS, Letter.) ONOHE8S MAM Dr. Ayer"! Samparilli recommended to me by my physician aa a blood purifier. When I began taking it 1 had riflings or boils all over my body, but one bottle cured me. I consider Dr. Ayers Sarsaparilla the beat blood medicine made." Bonne Char, Wesson, Miss. y, prepared on This Starch scientific princi- ples, by men who have had years of experience In fancy laundering. It restores old linen and summer dresses to their natural whiteness and imparts a beautiful and lasting finish. The only starch that is perfectly harmless. Contains no arsenic, alnm or other injurious substance. Can be need even for a baby powder. FOR IT AND TAKE NO OTHER. ASK YOUR 6R0CER TVVVVWTWt A tttftTTTTtfVtfVVfT READ ACHE have "BothCA4CABET9 my wife aid myselfare the aud Inc they $3 modloine we have ever bed la the house. week my wife wae hmntto with hesdeobe or Boroift you're a New Yorker oo. Pryne CHAIRMAN HULL. What borough 7" Greene Well, X borrow In a Manhattan office building lieutenant governor. Mr. Hull Is now by day and a Brooklyn boarding honas 57 years old, strong, patriotic and able. Uf gftar nlghtfalV-rrookly- n for fifty Cents. Onaranteedt baoco habit euro, makea weak men strong, blood pure. Mo, 11. All drugglste ae Immediately. WebothnoommeudCsMereta" case. SrxnxroRD, Pittsburg Safe A Deposit Co, Pittsburg, Pa. r yt - CANDY, CATHARTIC TRAD! FliuiBt. Palatable. TOE-GU- Good. Do Potent TsMe Grit. Be, Ido,NI0. CURE CONSTIPATION. Tw. W kKy Cf T. SSLStWSSUL1 ffiST Hwtut The Klondyke JaMiR.Dickej's Eyes Sore? Cum --ore eye or rrxnuUtrd Veela whrn applied. inn S' run RlM clll Re!i8b,B Eye Water lldfc Don't hi rtt. ov pwd. went JVfJnV'i aril Bristol. Tima, and It sell" Uke Hot Cakea." I W dall e Perfected Receipt Hook. Su MgeiL Over Ml floe illustration. Hunbottle for cte.Jy kelsliborbod. JOHNT-R. Kcn-ftu- receipts dreds of tho best of prescriptions aud we wlll for everything. To Lire Agents 1 I a copy with terms to Rg"nti or 0 nte to pay poHiavo. Tho Kendall Publishing Ca, w-n-d baraitga CURES CORNS 15c at all druggists. Formation of Gold Mnggota. Concerning the theory that gold nuggets are formed by the depoettlng of the gold around a nucleus from solution, Professor A. Liversidge, tha gold expert of New South Wales, Australia, has made Investigations which he thinks disprove It By slicing the nngget and examining the obtained he found no traces of concentric coatings, but that the gold was always more or less crystallised, the crystals being In some eases very boundlarge and with aries. Some of the nuggets also showed cavities and lndosurss of quarts, al- though in many cases none were visible on the rolled surface of the nugcrose-aeo-tio- well-defin- baking powder is Schillings It Best baking powder. keeps and does its work a everywhere. Arp Vnnr English is spoken by 135,000,000 persons, while Chinese is spoken by 400,000,000. Or money back. I Good, Mover Bloke a. Weaken, or ... jk Springs, N. Y. ns ed get g Established 1780. I Bakers Chocolate, PHILATELISTS WIN A FIGHT. They May Keep, Bay. or gall Wewspapes or Periodical Stamps. ' The controversy between tha government and the philatelists and stamp dealers aa to whether newspaper and periodical stamps may be kept and and In collections bought sold waa decided by United States Cir cult Judge Laoombe. The government asserted that no newspaper or periodical stamps had ever lawfully come Into the possession The of stamp collectors or dealers. stamp collectors and dealers said that the postofllce department had offered the newspaper and periodical stamps for sale on several occasions. Judge La combe finds this assertion to be true, and In bis decision says: "In 1875, under the signature of the a third assistant postmaster-genera- l, circular waa Issued stating that the department waa prepared to furnish specimen sets of newspaper and periodical stamps at their face value, back to the issue of 1847. Now the government claims that these stamps were stolen, purloined, ,and embezsled, because some years after an order waa Issued to postmasters forbidding the Bale of newspaper and periodical stamps. The claim is preposterous. The records show that more than 700 Beta of these stamps havs been sold openly to the public." New York Sun. How Herve Began Bis Careen Herve, the celebrated French composer, began his musical career aa an Of organist When a hoy he strolled Into and church one day and persuaded the a beverage, has our blower to let him try the organ after service. He then Improvised someYellow Label thing wonderfully sweet and strange. The priest happened to come In, heard on the front of every it and wsa amazed. "Where did yof package, and our learn to play the organ?", he asked, and MLa Belle of the boy truthfully replied that he had Chocolatiere,on the 5? never played it before. "Well, said back. the priest, in amazement, "there is a vacancy in the post of organist here NONE OTHER GENUINE. and you had better apply for it. We do not want any one more skillful than BY MADS ONLY The boy applied and was acyou. WALTER BAKER L CO. Ltd, cepted. His success was Immediate. Tbe little church was crowded, and Mass. Dorchester, strangers became frequent visitors, and he soon received offers to complete his musical education. celebrated for more than a century as a delirious, nutritious, & flesh-formin- g Vbea fcaswerisg Advertisements Benitos This Taper. Kindly well-kno- pension sffstmjs IF will IllCKFOKl, Washington. D.Cm they receive gulck rcrlieaH , Staff SOth Corps. Prostcutltz Clflim line IS 7 S DISCOVERY: niDflDSVKEW EJlbUrO quirk relief end rum worst rase. Send fur honk uf te.tlm'mlali Sr. It. and I O aye . Ailu, treatment Frre. Health and ittengtk WEAK NERVOUS WOMEN. t ets pfgcHptloa For treatment. home tneipenstTS writs to Mrs. I. .iltpsrt, Typewriters all makes: f 19 up. Supplies me. IJvM Tirriwarry KscwaNdB, Denver, Colo. trade-mar- k, g ? DB.GUWS W. N. U., Salt Lake No. 22, 1898 Advertlsemeeti Mention This repel tfhea Aisverfag BWly PILLS . MIAMI Cl., well-manag- ed ! IN JAPAN. Their Advlea. I wonder what becomes of Winkle all the boys who leave the country and enter the great struggle of life in the Kinkle They make big forcity? or three families, to view the flowering tunes, and then lie back in their easy trees and plants in their season. The chairs, and advise country boys to New York WeakJapanese love all flowers, but prefer stick to tha farm. those to which they look up the flow-er- a ly. of trees. They visit the plum blosHerd. soms la February or early March; the Critic There is too much life la cherry, especially beloved, in April; the lotua in July; azaleas during the your play. Playwright (in surprise- );Too much life! Why, what do you :ummcr; chrysanthemums In the You should makt Critic aud camellias in December. In mean? characters half the about die la the the pleasure grounds connected with Puck. first art." are every temple there always magnificent collections of flowers. An expeA 8CHOOL GIRLS BATTLE. dition especially to see the flowers is From The Mall, Milford, Ind. railed a faanaml, or flower view. The Miss Emma Rybolt, a prepossessing school bank of the Sumlda River, which of Milford, Ind., 1 of mors than usual crosses the city of Tokio. is covered and is ambitions to rise lu the itelllgence, with cherry trees. These give a pleas- literary world. In the fall of 1896," said Mrs. Rybolt, ant shade, and the spot is a favorite was taken ill 8he wm a close "Emma promenade for the citizens all the year student and her work began to tell on her. Khe grew weak, pale and nervous, and com round, but In time of cherry bloom the crowds that throng the avenue are plained of pains in her back, chest and limbs. A few weeks passed and she grew larger than ever. It la crowded on worse.' The doctor said she was a victim or moonlight nightB, and also when the nervous prostration, and should have been snow lies freshly fallen. taken from school weeks earlier. She Being fully Mlve to the beauty of their country, wherever there ie a point shfl had a fever and a continual twitching from which a picturesque view may be in her mnscles. The symptoms were much obtained the Japanese will build a pa"A year vilion, or a tea house, or some similar and, passed a under place of repose, from which the eyea e h a n g a of may feast on the lovely landscape. In physiolans, the family picnics or excursions, which Emma became someare frequent, some place of beautiful what better, situation from which there la a good but was soon view either of land or sea Is always as bad as ever. selected. One day I read of a case These expeditions are not discon similar to tlnued even when the cold of winter hers which comes. Snow scenes are greatly enwas cured by Dr. Williams Her Battte. joyed, and when the freshly fallen snow is lying on the ground numerous Pink Pills for Pale People, and! derided to . them. parties are seen at points commanding try"Emma had no faith In proprietary a fine view. The children are never m edicts but tried the pills, and after excluded, but accompany their elders taking a doeen doses, she began ito improve. on all Much occaalona.-- St. Vlrhola. .JTlV&elddfo taking about right boxes, she was entirely cared.. IMcture Postal Cards. "While ill, she lost twenty-righ- t pounds, Most persons who have traveled but now weighs more than ever before. abroad are familiar with the picture Her nerves ore strong and she is in perhealth. We are all confident that Dr. postal cards which are used lu France, fect Williams Pink Pills for Pale People cured counand other European Germany her, and I cheerfully recommend them in tries. Hut of late these little cards all similar casea "Mbs. E. A. Htbolt. Subscribed and sworn to lfcre me, this have achieved a wonderful popularity. third day of September, 1897. a or iu hamlet wayside village Hardly Cabh Basis, Notary PuMfe. France, Italy, etc., but has its own Dr. Williams' Fink Pills for Pale People cards containing some typical illustrawill core all disease arising from a poor will tion of the place, when it boasts no and watery oondition of theandblood, are a down run a spebuild system up A name, is all that is repostofllce. cific for paralysis, locomotor ataxia and Sometimes to card. aa the incurable. carry other diseases long regarded quired they are sold at some remote ppot where It is necessary to go four or five neauty Is Blood Beep. miles to find a place to mall them. It Clean blood means a clean skin. Ns ia quite a fad to collect these cards as beauty without it. Case a rets, Candy Catharblood and keeps it clean, by souvenirs of ones travels. They tell tic deans your up tho lazy liver and driving all im- their own story, and often prove a stirring u ritics from the body. Begin anish pimples .boils, blotches, lilaek heads, timely aid to ones memory. New York and thatsleklybiliouacomplexion by taking Journal. Cascarets, beauty for ten cents. All drug, gists, satisfaction guaranteed. 10c, 25c, 50a. Prussian Jostle. onions are good for you, but dreadThe Prussian authorities at Alt fulSpring who sits next to you. for d year-olLsndBbcrg have Just sent a widow to jail for three days for stealMall'B Catarrh Cure ing four sticks of wood. It was the Is taken Internally. IJrice, 75c. first offense the woman had ever war correspondents never fall to make use of the word "imbroglio." au-iu- I I to-da- the-ma- Mt .ach dar Is nrawMrf k. Th. u.lt bn (Tips sor sirkm. To son ilnll for will wo rnsll Vise, m, .as.pl. trrm, or full boa PA SalWlbr dniilita agricultural college In Missouri has been making some experiments with the two. It has been demonstrated that on reasonably good roads broad tires have an advantage of from 16 to 46 per cent over narrow tires. In no case except where the mud was soft and very deep did the narrow tires prove more satisfactory. According to these tests, the Harrow tire ia desirable only when roads are in a state almost Impasssbla, a condition of things which la fast disappearing from thickly settled and districts. The experiments were made with the same wagon, , the wheels being exchanged by merely slipping them from the spindles. The widths of the tires were respectively one and a half and six Inches. The loaded wagon weighed 250 pounds more with the wide tires than with the narrow ones, making the weight of the vehicle when equipped with the wide Urea 24150 pounds. On a clean, smooth road of macadam the wide tires required from 16 to 35 per cent less power than the narrow ones. On gravel roads the broad tires had 45 per cent advantage; on loose gravel and dirt roads, as well as on roads entirely of compacted soil, the gain waa something like 27 per cent. On a piece pf road where there waa a solid foundation, but very deep, thick mud above, tha board tires were at a disadvantage, mainly because they cut in and picked up a tremendous weight of mud with every revolution. On a road that waa drying up and had a somewhat firm surface the broad tires showed 62 per cent advantage over the narrow ones. The latter cut Into the mud In some places from six to seven Inches, but the wide Ures rolled safely over without making deep grooves, merely packing the halfdry mud as they passed over it The entire experiment goes to show that narrow tires have really no points of advantage, save at exceptional times and under exceptional conditions. On what would be considered a road In a tolerable condlUon the broad tires had every point In their favor, and demonstrated their superiority ao clearly that no room was left for doubt or ques-- 1 tlon. National Custom to Maka Family Excursion In Blossom Time. It Is one of the national customs to go out on excursions, in parties of two HOUSE-CLEANIN- G; Hie aad. ss FLOWER-VIEWIN- G SAPOLIO Bo In order fully to test tha rslatlve merits of broad and narrow tires, an From the New York Press: New foundland has a king, and he la R. G. Reid. Many years ago In the face of much opposition, the government started to build a railroad through the Island, and the natives, Ignorant fishermen, tore up part of 1L Several contractor! took hold; but they were unsuccessful, too. Then the government started again, and the resumption of Ihe work was partly responsible for Wrecking all the banka and nearly fulning the colony In 1893. Then Mr. Held, a contractor from Montreal, agreed to take hold If he were to get 5,000 acres of land for each mile of the railroad or Its branches he completed. He Introduced modern methods of construction and built a first-claNow the railroad. government has turned over to him the acres promised, making 250 square miles, and has given him franchises for all electric railways, coal mines, copper mines, petroleum deposits, the government dry dock and the privilege of erecting pulp mills and starting other Industries under the benefit of a protective tariff. All he paid for this was $1,000,000, half of which la to be returned In subsidies. The bill was rushed through the legislature with only one dissenting voice, and no debate waa allowed. The value of his gift ia worth easily 120,000,000. Many privileges not mentioned are possessed by him. A year ago a paper waa read calling attention to the great mineral wealth of the Island, and the paper was much commented npon. After the elections were over It was seen that a new government had entirely supplanted the old. Then this deal waa heard of. The excuse for making It is that the government needed $500,000 to take up some bonds, and that the money could be obtained in no other way. It may be that England will investigate and annul the whole proceeding. As things stand now Mr. Reid Is the largest single owner of land In the world, and can make or unmake the government at his will. HAND 8AW IS A GOOD THING, BUT NOT TO SHAVE WITH. IS THE PROPER THING FOR Experiments with Broad Tiros. KINQ OF NEWFOUNDLAND, H. O. Kelt! Owns Milne of CHAIRMAN J. A. T. HULL Knocked Him Who was the best man at Ilojack Ibe wedding of Mr. Meeker and the Tomdlk "The widow Swayback? widow Swayback. Judge. PHILA., i Up-to-da- |