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Show ,"t times in the same position, bat it hadnt stayed on ite perch all the time, for the skins of the squirrel lay on the as AND floor, the hawks craw was chockful, act Bt T Turn Fcbusbiski CourAirr. hawks r. M. riMiLU, t dllor nod Jlsoogjr. its eyee were bright and it was in the SQUIRREL TRAPS. UTAH. very best of humor. The annoying COALVILLE, noises ceased at once, and the patient load. Elk of RaUunS Rho1S farmer to recover right away. far Troth aa4 Probity, began We ahull never know if we are a until nation -- Varaila brutal fiomorkobl a Spanish a Talla really Story BETRAYED. bull meet up with a college rush Ovarraa tha Neighborhood. irTTTr. THE WORK OF BIRDS. rat Wall-Kaes- line. There are 71,895 gr XtUaA. fcOvr UAXf widow Ji the United States. No figures are at band as to the number jof widows who toJ.keep of! jjthe gras. able hat u been V ' j a Stop advertising when your business gets too heavy for you to handle, but until that happy dim is reached youd better continue talking to the people. The idea that MU Anna Gould's futnrs husband is without in trinsic He is worth should he dismissed, pronounced the best cotillon leader in all France. The Brooklyn trolley cars appeal to be running again as usual. They ran into three funeral processions in one day last week, and it wasnt any of their funerals either. One sure effect of tho hypnotic fan to confuse paresU with the new favorite. The new title is quite as euphonious as the old, and is much more satisfactory to the victims is a tendoncy In making changes In its game and has dona one o the funniest things ever known in that of adding the state preservation professor of geology to the commission. fish laws, Wisconsin - Thiktt years ago Lord Kelvin calculated that the earth is about yoars bld, basing his figures on the loss of the internal heat of the globe. Lord Kelvin now says that his estimate should be multiplied by ten. Colonel Ingersoll should sail into science as a delusion and enemy to 100,-000,6- 00 truth. The ascent of the Jungfrau will be a simolo matter when the climber can walk up to the line of vegetation and then board a railway car to be drawn to the top through an inclined tunnel cut in the rocky side of the mountain. At this rate the Alps will cease to be a reign of thrilling interest. - The engagement oi Miss Anna Gould is announced, and this time confirmed by her brother George. The successful gentleman is count and Uvea in larls and admired bliss Gould the minute he heard In fact, on his part.lt about her. was one- of those pleasant cases of - love at first hearing, semi-annu- y of a ( aplale W bo Nursed a 4 aptlva. The tragic fate of Captain Wilson Hubbell, commander of a trading vessel during the French war with the Unites Stales WlTY," is' record etFby the historian of Stratford, Conn. While returning with a cargo of molasses from the West Indies. Csptain HnbbeH's whip wa overtaken and A captured by a French privateer. prlzemaster and two French seamen were put on board the captured ship, and the privateer sailed away in Search of .Other ad venture. Unly Captain Hubbell, one seaman and a cook were left on board the trading vessel. Although seemingly resigned to his fate. Jthe captain felt his situation keenly, and determined in some way to recover control of hia.shlp. He made no show of disappointment, but assumed rather an air of stupid indifference, and the prizemaster looked upon him as a lout of a Yankee," b neath his notice, and permitted him considerable liberty. The cook and seaman were required to work, hence they were unrestrained. On the second afternoon out the retired to the cabin, prizemaster whore he remained for some time. The cook contrived to get nesr the The door and peep through a crack. Frenchman was asleep, his sword and pistol on the floor beside him. The cook hastened to inform Cap-lai- n Hubbell, who quietly mado his way to the cabin, and a few minutos later the Frenehman .woke to find himself a prisoner. It was not difficult to secure the two French seamen, and Captain Hubbell was once more in command of his vessel. The Frenchman accepted the change with perfect serenity of spirit. I anf quite willing you command ze ship, he said amiably, but I like to be free." And he made such fair promises that the captain was won to give him his freedom. He proved to tie excellent company; he told stories, laughed at Captain Ilubbells jokes and indeed seemed to be an excellent fellow. One evening Captain Hubbell and the Frenchman stood together on deck leaning over the ship's side. They had passed a pleasant evening, and the captain's suspicions of his guest, as he now called the prizemaster, were lulled to rest. - The Frenchman was to the act of lighting a fresh cigar, when It dropped from his fingers. lie stooped to recover it, and quicker than a flash, seized the unsuspecting captain by tho feet and thrust him overboard. The Frenchman was deaf to his entreaties and left bins to drown. The oook, who eventually returned to Connecticut, related the mournful story of Csptain ilubbeUs late. Trails Tol The Japanese are having ail the glory and excitement of war without any o( the hardships and with- out very much of Its dangers. It is ' said that during the whole course of the war they have not lost to many lives at were lost by the sinking of the Elbe. The war has not been much more fatal to them than is Uncle Sams annual Fourth of July celebration. Marin than they disaster seem to be worse have been in years. Luckily, the men of the sea take these things tolerably easily If not contemptuously.By gosh, BUI," was the remark of a sailor on the Southern Atlantio to his mate during an awful storm, think of the terrible time those poor devils are having on shore with darned chimbley pots and shingtos all around them." ut Jake Gordon Bennett make a most liberal offer to American writers. He will donate $10,000 to the best serial story of from 60,000 to 76,000 words by an American author; $3,000 for a novelette of from 16,000 to 25.-0words; $1,000 for a story of from (1,000 to 10,003 and' $1,000 for the best epic poem of any event in American history. This is the way to build up American write rshlp. 00 In a suit lor divorce recently tried In Kentucky the defendant, replying to the charge of drunkenness solemnly averred that he never drank anything but water. The jurywithout leaving the box unanimously decided the case against him, Ihough usually inclined to stand by each other, Kentuckians have no place for other Kentuckians who confine their drinking to water. They Insist that they must have been bora In some other state. T Fennstlvania wants to bribe people to put out forest fires. A clause in a new forestry bill now under consideration at Harrisburg is as follows: Every person assisting to suppress a forost fire when called on for such service by a firewarden shall be entitled to payment at a dally rate not greater than $1.60 per day, or proportionately for part of a day. The extravagance of the reward offered for the dangerous work of extinguishing for. est fires will be apt to excite a stamfrom other states pede of to the Keystone state The man who drafted the bill has probably never measured "the value of a forest except by the cord. rs One morning recently Farmer Resolved K. liall tead, of Elkland township, Ia., saw a large white-breaste-d into winds nose the peak of a agon barn that he had finished building a few days before. l then cSme out It stayed for a with a rat in each claw, nod the - interested farmer watched it till it met another hawk in mid-ai- r. The two circled and undulated side by side for a spell, when the one with the rats resumed its Right towaed Aha forest.-Th- e other hawk immediately minted for the barn, shot through the window. flitted out a few seconds later with a struggling rat in each talon, and sailed off in the same direction. Mr. Hallstead started to tell his wife shout what he had seen, when the hawks, or a pair exactly like them, flew into the barn window and came out shortly with their claws full of squealing rats. There was no grain or hay In the new barn ana the farmer wondered whero all the rats came from. He was also in a quandary as to how .the fierce forest birds knevr where to find the rats under a roof. On going Into the upper part of the barn Mr. Hallstead saw scores of rats scampering around on the floor, says the ( hicago Times, and the mystery of their presence was solved. Two nights before, a day or so after the barn was completed, the young people of the township had a ball on the The jocund rustics upper floor. brought peeks (f pojeorn to the party, and between the dances they sat on rough wooden benches and munched It with their partners. When the ball broke up lots of the popcorn was left, and the rural merrymakers threw it at one another till the floor was covered. The rats in the other barns soon got scent of the fragrant popcorn, and swarmed into the new building after it; but bow the hawks ascertained that the rats wore there in large number none of the smart local naturalists were able to tell. Mr. Uallsteads dog pitched into the d cornealers and the fierce rats pounoed upon him, bit his nose and ear till the blood ran, and sent him yelping down the stairs. The farmer went at the rats with a shovel, and they ran up his clothing and forced him to olear out They bit him on the ears and neck before he could shake them off and he decided to let them alone. At dusk that night he law Two Owls flirt through the window and tail out with four rata. The hawks continued to dart into the barn several times a day, and they always ' steered for the woods with their claws full. WhSa the useful birds of pre ceased to come not a rat was to be seen in the barn, although a lot of the n still remained on the floor. pop-corA barn belonging to Edgar Putnam of Sugar Loaf hill burned, and the next day an army of rata flocked into Mr. Putnams house and attacked the baby in tho cradle. Mrs. Putnam was working in the buttery, and the cries of the infant were so different from what they generally were that she rushed to it in great haste. She found rats climbing and pushing one anothor all over the cradle. A tame hen hawk named Dick was doing his best to protect the baby by catching the rata right and left, giving each a squeeze and then dropping it Mrs Putnam seized her little one and started for the next room. The ravenous rodents clung to her skirts, and the hawk pulled them off and pinched them fatally, working as though he knew that the Infant was In danger. Dick Rapped and hopped and flung the rats around until Mrs. Putnam got out of the room without any of thorn clinging to her clothing. The helpless little child was bidly bitten on tho face and hands, and Mrs. Putnam said afterward that the bloodthirsty rata would surely have killed the baby if tho watchful hawk had not aailed into them almost as soon as they swarmed into the house. When Mrs. Putnam returned to the room Dick was stilt killing rats, and he didnt let' up until more than thirty lay dead on the floor. A pair of red squirrels took up their abode in Erastus Felkert residence on Pleasant stream. At times they made a great racket over the coiling and between the jart.tion& One of the family fell sick, and the noise of the playful squirrels mode her very nervous and wakeful every night. A i air of black walnut trees in tho front yard had been the means of causing the squirrels to settle In the house for the winter. Mr. Felker found more than a biihhel of nuts under the second story floor, and beneath a plank walk between the house and street the providen little animals had stored up a peck more. The neighborly squirrels were not contented in any part of the dwelling. They scampered all over the house between the rooms, their nightly capering and barking finally becoming unbearable to the invalid, and Mr. Felker deckled to sacrifice them for four-foote- In Pennsylvania they propose to her sake. He set three traps in the garret, but require that flags be put on public the squirrels had. so much natural food school buildings, made of American laid away that they wouldn't touch wool grown by Americans md floated Of bait. The cats couldn't from flags tads of American lumber any kind at the noisy Uttle nut gatherers. get fashioned by American workmen. . f K,Uoa out of tho 1ueB" use This is real Pennsylvania patriotism. , - - Finally one of the neighbors brought A SCiENTUTsbow. that the Came of t h.wk to Mr. Felker s and plaf-ea cindle can be extingulshod by blow- Th Wnl in tho ca" br,ckba. ? bird hadn't been fed In two days, and more eaady by blowing u wmant natured. It gat without brickbat.' Besides candles. still, though, and when Mr. Felker are but Uttle used these days, went up at sundown to feed itjjt was scientist should go soak his head , vuJfrn . d bit-go- j od An Aaelout Vania at tha Psatuta, At Essen, Germany, in the archives of the Munsterklrche, a manuscript of the psalms has been discovered, which, if - it belongs, as is believed, to the middle of the nifith century, is. the oldest Latin version of the psalms we have. It contains nearly all the psalms in Latin In three columns, while la the fourth column is a Greek text written in Latin character. - The manuscript seems to be written by the school of scribes. tits Beak Bill Tall All About 0 American Friend But surely you are not going back already. You have been only four days in tho coun- try. Visiting Englishman Whats the good of staying any longer? My note books full. S- - -- A BRIGHT STAB. SKETCH OF THE MAN WHO LED MARY, ANDERSON' TO FAME, Usdlif Horrott Fr with Booth, 4 Thorn. Kola Louis Chronicle the One of the most conspicuous figures in the la John W. Magelttud of America Norton. Horn in the Seventh ward of New York city fortv six years aim, the friends Kedsaf ana Tbse at Frank Chanfrau V e find Keene a alar at llie age of 26 and Norton In tlie flower of early manhood, the leading man for Kdwin Booth at the famous VS inter Garden Theater. J! was starred with Ihwrvoce bar, and alternated tut relt early lu the leading rule with fTTarlea 1 borne at the Variety theater in New Orleans Early in the Centennial year, In Louisville, Norton met our Mary Anderaon, then n fair young rtrl whoaMrrd terjUgefamtnok her under hit guidance and. as every body known, led her to fame. Mr. Norton u now the proprietor of the Grand Opera Houm in ht. Louis, the Du OUeane Theater, Pittsburg, and one of the stockholders in the American Extravaganza Company. One afternoon early in June be hobbled into Ilia Near York office on ii roadway encountered his business manager. George McManus, who had also been a rheumatic sufferer for two years. Norton was surprised that McManus had discarded his cane. Wbocured youf he asked. I cured myself," replied McManus, with Dr. Williams' Pink PiUs," I was encouraged by Mr. McManus' cure, and as a last resort tried the Pink Pills myself, said Mr. Norton to a Chronicle reporter. You have known me for five years, and know how I have suffered. Why during the summer of 1893 I was on my back at tha MuUnnphy hospital, in this city, four weeks 1 was put on the old system of dieting, with a view to clearing those acidulous properties in my blood that medical theorists say is the cause of my rheumatism. I left the hospital feeling stronger, hut the first damp weather brought with it those excruciating pa ms in the legs snd back. It was the same old trouble. After sitting down for a stretch of five minutes, the pains screwed my legs into a knot when I arose, and 1 hobbled as painfully as ever. After 1 bad taken my first box of Pink Pills, it struck me that the pains were less troublesome. I tried another box. and I began almost unconsciously to have faith in the Pink Pills. I improved so rapidly that I could rise after sitting at my desk for an hour and the twinges of rheumatism that accompanied my rising were so mild that 1 scarcely noticed them. During the past two weeks we have had much rainy weather in St Louis. But the dampness has not bod the slightest effect in bringing back the rheumatism, which i consider a sufficient snd reliable test of the efficacy of Pink Pills. I may also say that the Pink Pills have acted as a tonic on my stomach, which 1 thought was well nigh destroyed by the thousand and one alleged remedies 1 consumed in the past five years St- - ' Watches la the tloase. Tom Reed has the finest natch lathe house. It never varies more than two or three seconds in a week. It is not especially costly, but it is a wonder for never has accuracy, and the the slightest trouble with it There is a chronometer in the house lobby which ia connected (with the meteorological apparatus, and the members who happen to have fairly good time pieces set their watches by it every day. Reed's is easy at the head of the list, but Ding-leyTurner of Georgia, and Russell of Connecticut come close behind. Wash-ingtoLetter. Bows This? W offer Ons Hundred Dollars reward for any com of Catarrh that can not bs cured by HsU'i Catarrh Cure F. J. CHENEY ft CO.. Toledo O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 19 years, and belleva him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially abla to carry out any obligations made by their firm. Wests Thdax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Kjniux ft Mabtin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. ball s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75c. per bottle, bold by oh Druggists. Halls Family Fills. 85c. Wii-Dix- Nobody contents himself with rongh die monds, or wears them so. When polished and set, then they give a luster. Chicago Tribune: "When I was in vour line of business, my friend, said Mr. Fellalre, giving the greasy tramp a half-dolland kicking him off the front steps of his mansion, I always had sense enough to go round to the back door." W. I Douglas as a Publisher. The Times is the name of a late ar rival ia the field of journalism at Brockton, Mass It is an eight page, seven column daily, with a twelve page her. Saturday issue. It is neatly printed And I like yours, said he, as he and shows evidence of experienced kissed her again Truth. hands in every department. It owned by W. L Douglas, whose porSCIENTIFIC SENTENCES. trait is so familiar to newspaper readers throughout the country, there beThe brjechlotdin j riflyis over 300 ing very few dailiee or weeklies in year old, but the principle only be- which his 3 shoe is not advertised. came general after gnn barrels were CoL J. Armory Knox is manager, and a personal representative of' Mr. Dougrifled. To prevent the evaporat on of water las. The Times is independent in polito advocate principles in fire pails it has been discovered tics, preferring than parties. It is printed on s rather that fifteen to twenty drops of oil Iloe press which is evidence that it has will form a coating sufficient to ob- started out with a good sized circulaviate the difficulty. tion. The mole is not blind as many perwno win the ssoor sons suppose. Its eye is hardly larger A novel way to obtain a suitable than a pinhead, and is carefully pro- name for their great, yes, wonderful tected from dust and dirt by means of new oats, has been adopted by the John A. Salzer Seed Co. They offer enclosing hairs. 1300 for a name for their new oats; muscles are almost Voluntary catalogue tells all a bout it. F arm-ermuscles theirare red; involuntary enthusiastic over the oat, are generally white; "the moat 300 bushels can be grown per notable exception in the latter case claiming acre right along. You will want It. being the heart Farmers report six tons of hs v from Lieutenant Colonel R. W. King, C. Salzers Meadow Mixtures; 118 bushels 8. A, of Willett's Toint, N. Y has corn per acre in a dry season, and 1,161 constructed an enormous magnet out bushels potatoes from two acres of an old cannon, which will resist a It Yea Will Cut This Oat ao4 Wad II ' strain of 44,800 pounds. with 10c postage to the John A, - The blood flows almost ms Seed Wis La , Salzer Crosse, Co,, you freely through the bones as through the get free their mammoth catalogue and flesh of very young children but a a a package of above asoo rrtao oatawnu age comes on, the blood vessels. In bones are almost filled with matter. Bis ICamoa, Professor Neweomb has declared, A pair of twins was born in the Back from astronomical considerations, Bay district A bright boy set About ill that the earth went slow and lost to try and name them, lie said, seven seconds between 1S50 and 1863, they be called I'eter and Repeater?' and then went fast and gained eight But net Ilia mother would not listen to the name Peter. Then he tak) Let seconds between 1963 and 1873. called Max and Climax." A Boston woman is lecturing on them be No," she said, They are both litthe newest of sciences, teaching that tle girls, so we cannot name one of unpleasant feelings create harmful them Max." chemicil products in the body, while Then he ssid after much thought, benevolent and cheerful thoughts Let them be called Kate and Duplihave a contrary and most desirable cate." After this his bead was bandaged and ha was seat out to play. effect. Union bignaL She Taras kl-wa- ys ' L PAPER. OF greater inocruive to tne exercise of the forester wart than the discovery of the method of making paper out of y Suppulp. Wohd pulp 20.000 and daily periodplies weekly wood AIM Flayed tho Other Cheek. 1 like your cheek," said the Indignant maiden to the youth who .kissed An LISES Hoojrirs.. Weo4 Pulp May Tot Porolah Armor tor War MlfS Nothing of recent year ha given a td-da- icals with paper, and each year the number increases from ten to twenty per cent, making the demand upon the spruce forests so great as to threaten their extinction unless intelligent effort are made to proserve them.' In German'iiere't'ae manii-- " facture of wood pulp is even greater than in this country, the forester's art i exercised so that the forests steadily keep op the supply. - It I to imitate this method of using, but not abusing, the natural spruce forests here that paper makers are trying to buy up the large areas of woodland wvwvd by these treea In the arts and trades new uses are found for paper every year, so that the demand increases as fast as the The records at the production. in Washington show an patent Loffice I VDlVUlSUIl number ef use to which paper is put, and applications are made for patents for other queer inventions that never see the light of day. Cigar boxes are made of paper and flavored with cedar oil to give the impression that ther are manufactured Medals are press 'd out of paper and then coated with a preparation to make them resemble either silver or bronze. Similarly cornices, anels and friezes are molded out of tho paper pulp, and both interior and exterior architectural effects are obtained at a relatively low cost by this method. The manufacture ol car wheels out of paper is an old story. It is probably the good results obtained with them that suggested the idea of coatwith men ing iron-da- d are now working on the problem of finding a preparation either of compressed paper or of compressed ramie that will form a bulletproof coating for war vessels. The car wheels and steam pipes made of paper admit of being molded and formed to suit any purpose, and it is suggested that by using paper for coating armor plate the surface could be formed like fish scales with tiny The Surface plates. overlapping could be made rough or smooth, and besides giving more strength to the steel armor the paper coating Would protect the metal from corrosion. Another queer use to which paper promises to be put is in the manufacture of telegraph poles. The paper poles are hollow, and are made from paper pulp, and then, coated with silicate of potash to preserve them. Electric conduit in successful use are made out of paper pulp, and also steam and water pipes of great strength and durability. Paper roofing material is so common that it is unnecessary to mention it, and also paper pails, basins and pans. Undertakers are using cheap coffins pressed out of paper pulp. When polished, and stained such coffins are almost as handsome as those of wood.' They last longer in the ground than coffins of wood or metal, and they Can be hermetically sealed better than the heavy metal coffins. Paper boats are generally looked upon as playthings for very small children, but large, commodious, staunch boats are now manufactured out of paper pulp. They can resist the water and are lighter than wooden or metal boats. Lead pencils and cigar holders made of paper are in daily use, and even carpets and are manufactured in a limited way out of paper. The mattresses are made of paper pulp and ordinary sponge, with springs imbedded in the Artificial straws for composition. drinking iced beverages, which are superior to the natural straw, are being placed on the market, and so is a peculiar cloth paper lor printing bank notes on. Made Mo Strong "I caa recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla as the best medicine I have taken. run I was terribly la health down and hardly ever en- Joyed s well day. I suffered with terrible peine Jn my stomach, breoit and head. I - y.pwA regardlng the wonderful euro by Hood's Sarsaparilla sod I thought I would rive Its trial. --I lta.ee almost tlx bottles and happy to soy that Mrs.Mary M. Stephens I am oured of thooo Crano hast, Ohio. terrible palm. I giv Hood's Sarsaparilla all the prxlje for giving me qpd health and making - f HoodsrCures line. Near 11 me feel strong again. Crane Nest, Ohio. Get only Hood's. HoodS Fills aroTh6Kf -- UU; $utaUtdietion after dinner prevent constipation. WORLD'S-FAI- R IIIIGIIEHT AWARD! ar. of-w- iWODIOINAI paper.-Invento- His justly acquired the reputation of being The Aliment for the Growth and Protection of y I Fevers, And a reliable remedial agent in all gastric and enteric diseases ; often in instances of consultation over patients whose digestive organs were reduced to such a low and sensitive condition that the IMPERIAL GRANUM was the only nourishment tho stomach would tolerate when LIFE seemed depending on its retention And as a FOOD it would be difficult to conceive of anything more palatable. -- Sold by DRUGGISTS. Shipping Depot. - JOHN CARLB ft SONS, New York. &lCO. WALTER BAKER of PURE, HICH CRADE Tb Largest Msnntsctarara COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES Us CatboA hero rw4va HIGHEST AWARD8 ftMBtepnt Industrial and Food Oa EXPOSITIONS In Eoropead America. Aik flta Dvteh Pfbmw. th r Chcmlcftk r Djm Mf f tMrA toNpanttoM abao imty fAST'COCO TFmlfln ttMr vnad BR&AK m OLD BY GROCERS EVtRYWWEVML WALTER BAKER MASS. iCOORCHESTIR, W.L. Douglas $3SHOE r! FOB AKIN4, I. CORDOVAN), fnznchs, ENAMELLED CALF '43 Fine CaiUGukarou 3.VPDUCE.3 SOLES, 2.t.7?B0YSSCimSHDa LADIE3 - BROCKTOrUMASJ, OwtrOtN MUliea Peopto wear W. L. Douas $3&$4 tb Shoes All our ahoea are equally satisfactory They fly the best yalos for the money. They equal custom Shoe la stylo on4 fit. Their woorin qualltio are unsurpuss4. Tb price art ntform,Mtaniped on soli From Si to $3 Mved over other makes. If your dealer cannot supply yoo we can UNCLE SAMS Condition Powder lathe best meul.lue lor Horses, snd Sheep. It purifies the blood, collie, bogs disease snd cures Coughs. Colds Colic,prevents Hidebound, Worms, Distemper, etc. Nothing equals it for Hog Cholera. Honest and reliable, in honest X6 sndAO cent packages: used sod warranted for over twenty j ears Every one owning s hone or cattle should give It s trisL Made-bEmmibt Pbopmxtsbt Co., Chicago, I1L Uncle Sams Nerve and Bone Liniment for Sprains. Bruises Rbeumstisnv Stiff Joints, etc. Goes right to the spot of pain. Nothing else so good for Man and Animal Try it. t. lUll ImiAAUT CoosompMves Ordered to the Pest IIou. Cincinnati, Ohio, Feb. 18. Dr. W. R. Amiclc, the eminent consumption specialist of this city, has created a national sensation by bis decided opposition to the order of the hospital authorities to send 100 consumptives to the smallpox pest house. His experience in the institution convinces him that it ia unjustifiable and brutal. Ha has, through his attorneys, entered qrotstL and in tha Cincinnati Tribune presents a formidable array pf scientific facts against the contagion theory of ' consumption which covers that theory with ridicule, A hot newspaper controversy ia the result The Amick Chemical company, compounders of Dr. Wmicks remedies, is mailing free to physicians, consumptives and all extra copies of the Tribune containing explanatory charts of hie -theory. Master Workman-Connellhas issued an address in 'Brooklyn, N. Y., tbe-tto- lly strike had denying that been declared off and exhorting striker not to go back to work. E-IV- A Superior nutritive in continued g, forty-poun- INFANTS and OH I LD Ft ' Fate. Long sho stood at the window ana mused. The rays of Die setting sun entangled themselves in her Titian hair or , surrounded her glorious height of five feet eight with an aureate halo. Proud, queenly, limbed like a goddess, she was indeed a magnificent specimen of femininity. Strange," she muttered. And then a soft, half happy smllo Bitted across her face like a gleam of April sunshine. Strange, she said again, to think that 1, who only six short months ago was the quarter back of the Emancipated Maidens' football eleven should have lost my boart to a man whose collar is a size and a half smaller than mine. But such is fate. And Ilove him." Cared dumb lessly picking up a bell, she tossed it out of the window and across the lot and then sought her boudoir. Cincinnati Tribune. for The-Age- d. An Incomparable mat-tress- a Salvator ISIS LOCAUY m Insufflator. h mar mu wn ft, H. tins nso., wisam sold hr an brogsius. DROPSY- - TREATED FRER. Positively Cored with Vegetable Reasedloa.lisve cured thousands of esses. Curs css proBounced hopeless by beet physicians t rom erst dceo symptom d Isappaar; In tea days at Isest til symptoms rsmoved. Bend for f re booh teeMmo-aleof mlraraloas sore. Ten days' treatment isre-tblr- le tree by molt. If yea order trial mod 0e lo stamps a pay postage DlH H units Sosa. Atianta.ua. sue order trial retard this advert! sen, cot m as Patents, Trade-Mark- s. Rismluatlne as A4rics u ta Patent ability of tnvseitom Scot) fnr 'IsvrnromOaMa. How to Oct orataof f SI3RI 87AJLXILL. WAHTID ti iwiy fCrVTt mmr A FOLRIs txKloa -- o to ISO r0T AlxmklM VUtkiX tori iaibd - i WAtksirhl, & S. toettitr t kwitt Un w ---- rk -(.ma & -- i- |