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THE HUTCHINSON GAZETTE THE GAZETTE PUBLISHING AMI PRINTINQ CO La A. Button, PivaJd oL H. S. FOSTER. Beo'y ft Treas. fiUTCHMSIX, KANSAS, The New "jersey legislature has Bought of Chicago nrm ior ii,u mm nf Htivl nle-eon holes worth $7,- 00. Even at that cost It will prove a paying Investment ir it serves w jus eon hole nine-tenths of the bills Intro duced. Never having Intended that the Ar menian Investigation should Investi gate, the unspeakable Turk has decided that It shall not go on until better weather comes. For the purpose of that Investigation better weather will nver come. In short, and with as much gallan try as the circumstances will admit, we think the female forgers who are now plying their vocations with such bril liant success ought to get exactly the same punishment as male forgers. This Is an age of equal rights. If the fool killer ever resumes business It will be his duty promptly to dispatch Calvin Ross of Shelbyvllle, Ind., who set a shotgun trap for thieves In his cellur and failed to tell his wife who, when she went to open the cellar door, received wounds which will cripple her for life. A writer declares that "the future educator will see to it that the child's precept structures are not unregistered haotlcally and disymmetrlcally." We mistake the temper of the Ameri can boy If he will permit anything so terrible to be done to his structures without a vigorous protest The anti-cruelty people have charge ef the dog pound in Philadelphia, and they refuse to give a cur dog to a sur geon In order that a section of one of Its nerves may be used to relieve the distressing disease of a human being. A society for the promotion of the wel fare of folks seems to be In order. The surgeons, after showing that kid sere and lungs and sections of the ali mentary canal can be removed without fatal results, have now demonstrated that a man with a broken neck can be fixed as good as new. The grip, how ever. Is still greater than the entire profession. Thoughtful men will make prepara tion for the careful picking of their fruits during the summer and fall, and ttie kind of baskets In which to send them to market. A nice basket filled with eljolce fruit will nearly always sell for double the money and as quick gain as fruit and basket of the nonde script commonplace character. This applies to many other things besides trait and banket. The Chinese warships at Wel-Hal-Wel were destroyed, not by the great, heavily-armored Japanese steel-clad battleships but by the little torpedo boats, which sent five ships to the bot tom within thirty hours. Much has been said about the battles of the future being fought among the clouds with airships. .It seems probable that the aval battle of the future may be fought under the sea with submarine tsrpedoes. The millions left for public uses by James Lick, of San Francisco, more than twenty years ago have been ex ceedingly well handled by the trustees. They have expended about $2,000,000 on the Lick Observatory, now one of the great astronomical Institutions of the world; a school of mechanical arts, free baths, and a number of statues, and have a million left to hand over to the Academy of Sciences and the Society of California- Pioneers, who are the residuary legatees. The property was scattered all over California, and there was also a contesting heir to compro mise with, but the trustees stuck to their work faithfully and deserve lusting credit for their complete success. The appeal of the people of New foundland to the British government ft help in the distress which has come upon them has been rejected. In reply to it Lord Rlpon, colonial secretary, says that the self-governing colonies should not look to the Imperial govern ment for aid In financial affairs, but he offers to send a royal commission to the Island to relieve actual distress from the treasury funds. The New foundlanders did not ask for govern ment alms, but for aid In working out their own relief, and It seems to be an act of political heartlessness thus to repudiate Interest In and disown the oldest colony In America. Blood is not always thicker than water. A white man In Virginia has been sentenced to prison for life for stealing a piece of bacon worth about thirty seven cents. This was his third offense and the law provides life Imprisonment fsr third offenses. Virginia laws are almost as unJuBt as Virginia lawless nesa. Realism on the stage has educated audiences to such a fine point of appre ciation that when an actor's clothing caught Are and half burned him to death during the progress of a perform ance the other evening the spectators took It for granted that the accident was a part of the show. Now that the Mahdlsts no longer har ry the Boudan, which gives the world Its main supply of gum arable, there Is no excuse for our postofnee depart ment In giving us stamps which won't stick. The nuisance Is a petty one, but it evolves a good deal of widespread blasphemy from wicked men. Unprotected men will view with alarm the proposition to form conversation classes) to teach women how to tall. Peer Robert Louis 8tevenson would shake his coffin with laughter, 1' be could, at the latest story about him. It Is said that he Imported firearms be fore his death for one of the contending factions In Samoa. Btevenson detested aad feared firearms, and . never dis charged one In his life except la a novel HAJPPEMIKGS IN KANSAS. ITEMS Oh INTEREST TO DWEL LERS IN THE SUNFLOWER. TheWeeVsReT ewof Personal ant General News Condense to Short Paragraphs f T the Convenience of Hurried Readers. Some enthusiastic Osborne county Wheat raiser has already ordered a reaper and binder for his wheat crop this ear. Ex-State Superintendent H. N. Gaines will conduct the Kinsman county normal institute during the month of August. 4Kansas had only 1 regiment at Chic maugua, but she has appropriated for a monument in each of its three fight ing positions. Mayor Nathaniel Barnes, of Kansas City, Kan., president, of the Barnes Tea, Coffee & Spice Co., made an as signment on the 26th. Poor collec tions is the cause of the failure. O. C King, IT. H. . Barley and S. R. Washer, leading business men of Atchison, are working with the gov' ernor for R. F. Antle of Atchison for State grain inspector of Kansas. Prof. Geo. W. Winnns, ex-State Su perintendent of Public Instruction, will deliver an address before the Harper County Teajhers' association, which meets in Anthony, April 13. Miss Fannie Nesbitt, night operator at North Topeka, has been presented with a go'.d medal by her fellow oper ators for her bravery at Bonner Springs last fall wheo she drove away a robber. President William R. Harper, of Chi cago University, has accepted an invi tation to deliver the annual com mencement address at Kansas Univer sity in June. Miss Grace King was appointed reg ister of deeds to till out the unexpired term of her father, the late Dr. W. N King, of Dickinson county. She has been an assistant in the office and is upable of filling the place well. Todircover the value of testimony Editor Scott, of the loin Register, ask ed 103 persons which leg of a well known citizen, who only had one, was gone. Fifty-two said the right leg, and 51 the left, and yet they see him every day. The president has granted a pardon to John R. Miller, alas Dick Miller, sentenced in Arkansas to three years' imprisonment and 1200 fine for illicit distilling and unlicensed liquor sell ing, and An to Gabo, sentenced la Kansas to two years' imprisonment for perjury. Yates Center has entered into an agreement with the Werner Book company whereby that company will lake up all the arithmetics, geogra phies and physiologies now used in the city schools and provide new books free of cost. Assistant State Superintendent of Public Instruction Guv P. Denton has jfone to Abilene, where be will repre sent Superintendent Stanley at the soinmittee meeting held to arrange the program for the state meeting of jnunty superintendents to be held in May. Charles Carson, of Nickerson, who hnd been on trial for five days last week, was acquitted Mocday morning of the chnrge of liaviug muruered his wife lust Christmas eve at the Colo rado hotel in Nickerson. 1 he court loom was crowded and when the clerk announced that the verdict was ''nut guilty," ch.'ers and great applause went up. W. K. Musselman, a prominent farm er of Pawnee connty, whs accidentally shot Saturday noon, lie was riding in a do0 cart when a double barreled shotirun he was carrying slipped from his grasp, striking be hammers on a Blut in the curt Both barrels were discharged in Mussel man's side, from which he died ia a few hours. At Sedgwick Similar night burglars entered the pnstoPiue and blew open Ihe s.ife, but fail d to get the cash box open. After laioug everything of value they could find, the thieves stole a horse and buggy and escaped. Lust Friday there was much excite ment arouni the Kansas penitentiary over a murderous assault on James J, Howard, cell bouse guard, made by Finnian Wolf, a full blooued Indian who is under a life sentence for mur der. While the convicts were all out todinnei but the Indian and a one armed prisoner, Howard was in the cell nouf-e alone with them. He lean ed over the desk in a drowsy manner, when the Indian picked up the hatch et that wus on the desk and struck him on the head with it, fracturing his skull. He was about to repeat the blow when the one-armed prisoner grappled with him and managed to wrench the blade from the handle. The Indian then cut Howard half a dozen times on the head and shoulders with the blade of tho hatchet, then made a rope of his clothing and at tempted to scale the prison wall. The alaim was giten, and his escape pre vented by shooting him and turning the hose on him. The guard is not expected to live. The thirty-two ex-Pullman work men brought to Hiawatha last fall have succeeded in interesting enough capital to start them in the manufac turing business. A building and two acres of ground have been bought for them and they hope to te at work for themselves Inside a week. The Kansas Irrigation Commission has located the irrigation iluutn near the east line of Hamilton county, near Ulyse, Grant county, near Cimarron, Gray connty, near Oakley, In 6cott county, near Goodlacd, and near Attains. A prairis fire near L incaster, Atchi son county, burned over 600 acres Sunday, destroying fences and consid erable hay. The Gaylord Chess club has chal lenged any chess c ub or chess player in the northern prt of the State to play a sere of games for the cham pionship. An old gas prospect well. 310 feet deep has been cleaned out at Mound City, and a flow of gas 'developed. Steps will be taken to light and beat the city from it The supreme court after certifying down all the cases to the various di visions of the appellate court, will be but a trifle over a year behind. It is thought it will now be able to catch up completely. The Gulf depot at Parsons was bur glarized Friday night and many ex press packages were broken. Only 540 was secured. Several holes were drill ed in the safe and an ineffectual at tempt made to blow it open. The members of the State Sanitary commission are: J. F. Williams, of Eureka, James W. Johnson, Eureka, and E. M. Turner, of Murysvil e. Mr, Turner resigned and will be succeeded April 1 by J. W. Moore, of Marion. Sunday morning at 4 o'clock the two story stone block of J. W. Hall, of Alma, Kan., occupied by Lewis Schroder as a furniture store, was de stroyed by fire, as was the entire stock of furniture. Cause of fire unknown Loss on building and stock estimated at $4,000; insurance, 52,000. A woman named Maggie Somen, giving her residence as Independence. Kan., went to Parsons last Thursday and gave birth to a boy at the South ern hotel Tuesday morning the body of the bov was found in the rear of a residence in the eastern part of the city. The police are investigating the case. John H. Wild, of Atchison, foreman of the Santa Fe freight depot, took laudanum with suicidal intent Tues day night and died next morning. De spondency as the result of not being able to stop drinking strong liquor is thought to be the cause. He was a nephew of Channcey M. Depew, his mother being a sister of the railroad magnate. A discovery which baffles the scient ists was made 15 miles Northeast of Msrysville. David Lasher, who was d'gging a well, at a depth of IS feet found the tooth of a mastodon which was larger than a man's head. Scient ists say that it was the tooth of an an imal larger than the elephant Mr. Lasher was offered SCO lor it by geolo gists of Nebraska, but refused the offer. Gustave "elson, a tramp, was lodg ed in the Pawnee county jail Tuesday, having pleaded gailtv to the charge of raping the 9-year-old daughter of Gustave Tell at Burdette, 20 miles west of Larned. The crime was com mitted Friday while the child's par ents were away from home The child is still in a precarious condition and may dio. Col. W. II. Rossington, of Topeka, will be United States judge for the district of Kansas to succeed Judge Foster, if tho attorney-general can have his way about matters. This is evident by a statement made by a Mr. Olney to a friend. Mr. Olney said he lavored placing Judge Foster on the, retired list at full pay if it couid be brought about. Dr. N S. Mayo of the State Agricul tural college. Dr. Deroe of the Bureau of Animal Industry, United States de partment of agriculture, and the mem bers of the State Live Stock Sanitary commission went to the scne of the outbreak of supposed contagious pleu- ro-pneumonia in MorrU and Geary j counties Tuesday. A telegram from Dr. Mayo at midnight tells the result of the investigation. Dr. Mayo wires: "A thorough exara'n ition prove con clusively that the disease is not con tagious pleuro-pneumonio." R. M. Gilluly, of Oskaloosa, has been appointed stenographer of the Board of Railroad Commissioners. The posi tion is worth $400 a year. John Waller, who has been sen tenced to 2i) years in the penitentiary by Spain, has been quite prominent in Kansas polities In 1882 ho went be fore the Republican convention of Douglass county for representative, but was beaten by one vote by John Speer, chief clerk in tho labor com missioner's oftice. Waller whs one of the Republican electors from Kansas when Ilarris in wns elected. Several times he has (-tumped the htate. He is an able orator and a shrewd man. C. S. Jobes, of Attica, the newly-appointed State bank commissioner, will file his bond with the Executive Coun cil next Thursday, and then make for mal demand f Mr. Kreidenthal for the oftice. Mr. Breidenthal will not com ply, and Jobes will Institute a quo warranto proceeding in the Supreme Court to oust him. The contest wi.l be free from scandal. It is simply a que st;on of law, and all the parties are on friendly term Governoi Morrill claim that he has appointed Jobes to fill vacancy. Breidenthal claims that there is no vacancy. Governor Morrill has named John Seitoo, of Atchison, Sol Miller, of Troy, and Miclnel Henry, of Topeka, as members of the stkte board of pub lic works John S peers, ch'ef clerk of the labor commissioner's ofllce, with Governor Robinson, susveyed the grounds for the Kansas University at Lawrence on New Yesr'sday 1855. The Hon. J. V. Beekmsn of Arkan sas City has been appointed Judge Advocate of the Kansas U. A. R. J. & Fishbuck of Wlnfleld bos been ap polatsd aide-de-camp. HUMILATION OF A COUNTESS. Driven by Poverty to KenUI Bei-rloe aad rtnaJly to Theft. Countess Clarice Strozzl sat -on the prisoner's benoh In a Rome police court three weeks ago. In the police books she bad been registered as a chamber maid whose mistress accused her of theft Behind this humiliation of the Countess lay a remarkable story. Count Flllppo Strozzl, her father, stood In the front rank of Papal Rome's society. He was enormously rich and his ances try was traced well back beyond the middle ages. He had strengthened his fortune by marrying a Marquise of Blondl. who In 1867 bore him the daughter afterward known as the Countess Clarice. The child lived In Roman splendor and luxury until her twelfth year, when her father lost three-fourths of his fortune. She had Just begun to attract lovers by her beauty and be counted on by her par ents for a rich marriage, when the rest of the family fortune went by the board. The Strozzls yielded their last hold on the fashion of the capital, with drew to a cottage in Bologna, and, with only the necessaries of life, began a long penance for the extravagance of other days. The troubles of her par ents told upon the young countess spirits. Without society and exiled by poverty from' her acquaintances of former days, she grew moody and de spondent Eventually she decided to run away and distract her mind with work. At Christmas she went to visit a girl friend in Catania, She did not return home, but hastened from Ca tania to Rome, where she got a place as a chambermaid. She had cut her hulr and disguised her figure and car riage so completely that she was not recognized by two of her father's old friends who called at her mistress' house, and could not be Identified by the detectives whom her father had looking for her. Accidentally one day In February she heard a man calling upon her mistress speak of her father's distress. A few hours later she took some $300 worth of diamonds and pearls from her mistress' room. She pawned them In the evening, and made ready to send the money to her father on the following day; but the theft was dis covered, and she was arrested the next morning. Five men from the Roman world of fashion appeared In court to plead with the Judge to show her mercy. They all had known her as a child In her father's palace. The result was that the Judge pronounced her crime already expiated by the six days' Im prisonment between her arrest and trial. THE CO-OPERATIVE PLAN. Many Chicago Retail Stores Are Patting It Into Practice. Quite a number of Chicago's large re tall establishments are at present be ing conducted on the co-operative plan, and the result is said to have been highly satisfactory to both the pro prietors and the employes. January 1 is the date at which the distribution of profits take place, and consequently quite a number of the establishments which have adopted the system made their semi-annual division of profits within the past several weeks says the Chicago Grocer. Among those which have adopted this method of rewarding their employes are Carson, Plrie Scott & Co., and the system under which this distribution Is made Is something unique and well worthy attention of business men throughout the country. When the system was adopted all the salespeople who had been in the em ploy of the company one year or more were then Informed that if the amount of their sales for six months exceeded the total for the same period of time during the previous year, they would receive a commission averaging 2 per cent, throughout the store on the excess. Immediately the young men and women behind the counters began to Increase their efforts to sell goods, and when the first distribution was made last July some surprising results were shown. Shop girls, drawing $10 a week in wages, received as high as SO in premiums for the six months. The Balary of the employe is raised in ratio with the excess of the sales and according to the wage percentage which governs the department In which she works. If, however, she was suc cessful In exceeding the amount of sales necessary tomake her salary at the percentage fixed In her department by, say, $1,000, she would receive a com mission on this amount of about 2V4 per cent, or $23. Besides this she would have her Balary raised for the next six months by an amount equal to the com mission per week that she had earned on her sales. In this example it would be one-twentieth of $25, or $1.25 ad vance per week. Iloston and Opera. HaB Boston outgrown opera? A visit to the opera at Mechanics' hall raises In the m'.nd the awful question whether the present generation has not out grown opera," writes a Hub critic. "The only thing that really prevents any serious opera from being absurdly ridiculous. Is such a combination of effects, through an appeal to the senses of seeing and hearing, that In the re sulting emotion one loses sight of the essentially ridiculous features of the performance. If a woman should actu ally fall Into a pond and ten men should come down to the shore to rescue her, and on the way should stop, every man with his left foot extended Just so, and should all gesticulate with their right arms and sing in parts, 'We fly, we fly, we fly-y-y to rescue, rescue thee,' and should then recoil a couple of steps all together, and at last ad vance by a series of such movements and pull the woman out, still singing, we should find the thing so amusing that even the prospect of the woman's death would hardly keep us from laughing." Why n Objected. When the le.te Judge Taple was dy ing a well known minister called upon him and asked If It would be agreeable to him for a word of prayer to be of fered. "No," slowly and respectfully answered the dying jurist, "af this stage of the game it would be too much like prayer under duress." The street beggars In Barcelona have entered Into a solemn covenant to with draw from circulation all the ' two centime pieces which' they receive from the charitable public, so as to compel their benefactor to give them the coin next In value vis., five centimes. Berlin has no slams. Edison makes rubles. 1 Krupp is worth $2,000,000. Aluminum yachts multiply. i China has no telegraph poles,. Zante has a petroleum spring. Brussels will become a seaport Millionaire Starin was a peddler. . Rawlins Wyo , has a paint mine. New York City has 11,000 factories. Weak Indicate as surely as any physical symp tom shows anything, that the organs and tissues of the body are not satisfied with their nourishment. They draw their sustenance from the blood, and if the blood is thin, impure, or insufficient, they are in u state of re volt. Their complaints are made to the brain, the king of the body, through the nervous system, and the result of the general dissatisfaction u what we call Nervousness. This is a concise, reasonable explana tion of the whole matter. The cure for Nervousness, then, is simple. Purify and enrich your blood by taking Hood's Karsupurilla, and the nerves, tissues and organs will have the healthful nourishment they crave. Ner vousness and Weakness will then give way to strength and health, That this is not theory but fact is proven by the voluntary statements of thousands cured by Hood's Sursupa rilla. Read the next column. Hood's Sarsaparilla Qs the Only True Blood Purifoer (IflcKAI. Ion or hidden trwwunn. yPr";- h.Miwii. M O. Vnwlw. Boi M7. Snnthlnrtnll, Ct atents. iraoe-Marks, Examination and Advice as to Patentability ot f vrntloo. Bind for " Inventors' OoldLor How to Gel nan 'gsHiMarD, p. a JX1. JXAVB TOU HSABD SVfc- Tleialviinll Steel Wld fc- m" f Mill! l nut, writs or price '. G''!:'J 1 J-'" J"0 ClHHIaS will i.Bwni'u I - U IJiUHlLLCO,, JSanAat. tan. KM. the SCALPER Is pap-ee, go. All ehm. ranking money la OraJn nj Stocka by wlpin(f the market" on tntrflna ot ISO to 91,000. Bet method yet. All Malpra mak9 coo. LAJfm A Co., Ill QuJnoj St., Chicago. WELL MACHINERY nd JUTTING MACH1NEKT, KTC. Howell & Chase Machinery Co. "COLCHESTER'' SPADING BOOT. BEST I MARKET. BEST IN FIT. IS EST IM WEAUraO QUALITY. The ontfr or tan tola fx- ,il J tends tho whole length V teotlDft the bout In die ; pine and la other hurd f'i ASK YOUR PKALEIt i w 1 4l run i nun ,' ' ' Jjanrt don't put off f wjmrfgif.- wuu uiienor koous. CGLiCHEWRR Rt'BBKn. CO. WALTER BAKER & CO, Tho Largest Manufacturer! of PURE, HICH GRADE COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES On thU Continent, km near HIGHEST AWARDS from tho wt Uiisirial and Fool EXPOSITIONS In Europe and krica. UnlikettiaDntrhrroenM.no Alkft- lift or utlirr ChtmlcaUor Dye. ir hmkI In inT of thrlr Mrnonttton Their datlcimii BKEAKFAST COCOA fa itMoluttW pun and oltibla, and coats leu than vm Mai cvp. SOLO BY OROCCR.8 EVCRYWHERL WALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER, MASS. "Oonarat! Rtfr4ir( protpaeti tor tha maiaf yta. tttild Mjr, tr k&pt to doubU omr la frar'a output if Aw awterv, or, at hart, tw bi in tiU pa. mU trnnty fir m of wry twntp-fie windmill that art myiri. tfuM tm4ncig tMtwaUi lt9, HE UaVI ftUlB ABOll ' 500 AERMOTOnS do Dot titribata thti falrtrteod rteord ttHfraty ta.MTtf forta, but to th haportority of th (nodi which foa auk. DOT ILL vath. urotnt, in., rmrmmrj i, isw. flimmini ; W bought and pofap Aormotor Wa, 3, tn4 aot ( tha Irst flttr which yon aidi wt had Ihirtaw. Ataaa that lima w bava tald about 400 AERMOTORS In our raaJI tarritor d raptaantad tho Matonr at tha iarawtar aod lha Aar motor Company tnm tha bagmitinf to tha prisonl nr. That history ia one MM ef aabokaa trmnph. da froai tha AaraMtor there bave bean but nw tor windmill put op V la er tamiory -Just the Aarraotor never stood farther a'tove all ooatpetitors in rape tatioe and tn fact than to-day. Saua uaiaart, Warertse, LU fahrnary 3. 1M." Too t AsraMtor a, win ae ex pnaiaa. ws tnan sir? rer $7.50 a $15 three way fores peajp. All ealera iboeM have R or eaa tt It towllatUiatprUe. All Aerasoioff owa will have M. Tito wak foltowini will appear ear edvorttMeiout ef talvaaittd steel tanks at 31 eenta per palleei. They neither (ferial, look, rust at auks water taste bed, AermOtor Co9 r-nn 5 I, u,.i 111 .M. lttCoia8jma. 8jrna, Tuu Oooi V nun mm .1, it im fJW ;n4 .hi u It. - J L - Mum fry Il4 ft m 1 1 m enouiin wita wnica to aw; 1 g jiri r r aae how the infinite so f sfwTt -T 4 Prtiyef the aarmot'W in dosifn, gv. Vt ' -IWaVJ rksaniaip, aiah (all filvantscd r J "after earn pie lion), and ability to ran , 4 and do effort! a work whan ail ethars stand e i (die far want of wind. Wo abould Save soid mere est ,ev but this rttea was wall supplied with wiad power j I erbea the sermetoc ap patd, It bointoniyce aiilee lit veara boon the battle ground I I I larfaat, boat known and I 1 1 6init, all betas, located I I I CM Or OCR BdMaK-) I I mcixv WOOD1R ASO 1 J TUkU WHWL4 WITH Elk yoe have daring the post I ,1 Tieas year's raeerd by I 1 you eipect te double your I ( 1 eaasiat roar. Coontoa as J vl Throughout Finland women are reg ularly engaged in agricultural labor. A British commander-in chief when on active service receives J375 per week. Out in Walton, Kan., a church festi val was postponed on aoxouot of a dance. The clothing of the womn of the Sultan of Turkey costs 81.500,000 a year, so it is said. North Carolina go'd mines will be worked. SWERVES " With pleasant I w"l stats that Hood's Sarsaparllls baa helped me wouderfully. For several mouths I could not He dawn t sleep on accouut of heart trouble aud also Prostration of the Nerves. For three years I bad ben doctoring, but could not get cured. I received relief for s while, but not permanent Soon after be ginning to take Hood's 8arsprllla there was a change for the belter. In a short time I was feeling splendidly. 1 now rest well and am able to do work of whatever kind. If I had not tried Hood's Sarsaparllls I do not know what would have become of me. I keep It in my house all the time, and other members of the family take It, aad all say there Is Nothing Like Hood's Sarsaparilla. I have highly recommended It and one of my neighbors bat commenced taking it. I recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla at every opportunity." Mas. S. B had dock, 404 Erie A v., WUHamsport, Pesos vanis. Remember Ttiera f attorns retail In faahJon bamara and aeon for US to 10 cant oach, but in onlor to inoi-aax tho do niand among ntranera wo offer thorn to tha lady nad ir of this papor for tha rom&rkably low prioa of onlr lrrntaraott. Postajr one oant atra. Tb pattern ara all of tha Tory lata Maw York itvta and ara ntMnualod for stylo, accuracy of St, sim plicity and aoonomy. For twanty-foar years thaw pattorna haT boon used tho country over, Pull da crip Hon and till actions as tha numbar of yards of material required, tha number and names of the dlf fei ent pieces tn the pattern, bow to cut and At and put Lite arm ent together-ai sent with eaeh pattern, with a picture of the garment to go by. These pat Urns ar . omplate In every particular, there bolus; a operate p em for every single pleoe of the dress, lour eider win be filled the name day it le reoeired. Every pattern guar" ' perfect, Limes' Tka Gow. I, ossi Is out tn six eftes, Tis, i IS, M, M, SI, a and 8 Inches bust measure. Here ia aveiy oharmlnr gown of pale gieen orepon, with front of erltnped China si tic In pale pink, green and white. rull graduated bretellee ef lace crocs the ehouMsrs, tlie full square yoke being outlined wit i rej tin aatln ribbon, I jag ktieamers of which fall from the rosette at the left front. Tbe stylisb anaugement Is made otot title I llnlnga tha otose te center front. The yoke and uu front can also do mane m clote in com sr. or at the boulder and left front under rosette an here shown. A eruab collar of silk finishes the nook. The lower por tions of the sleeves ere faced with the orln psd silk, full Empire puffs 01 the ore pon standing out stylishly at the to pit. When not eonTenlent to use tlie crimped bltic. the 6331. reon! can be gathered or plaited. Acounlloo plaited tiik Is much oieJ In this way. Kldb oon.blnationa of laoe, not, erepe, or roone ellne-te-bole and silk, taffeta, cashmere or Henrietta, ean bedeouraelto suit Individual fancy. This will elm be found a rood model for option fabrics, and tlie full Soke, eoUar and bretolloe can be) omittei If pre irred. Tbe retail price of IM la 38 cents. 1 Sots' Shot Wimt. V'tthMt. . .. tSU le onl tit fl ve al es viai a, t, 8, 10 and II year. Stilj 1 outing flannel make this use ul and comfortable f arment for bora. ButtoLs or studs are need lrf doing ti e 1 aid at the waM 1 line LelnarDioilJed with lai-tre 1 butt n which will snppottthe knee trout era. A By run collar nlAhoa the neck. The com fortable ehlit sleeves are - . Hashed at ti.e back, provided 35 fttthnpterand under facing BOY'S SHIRT WAISTS J endoomi leted with ouffnthat are eloeed with buttons and buttonholes or studs, ae prolan ed. The waist la Intended to wear with or without a ooat or b aier a the weather end clrcutnstenceo diet -te. It can be attractively ma le i p In strled, oheokod or plain rercala. eambtle. gingb.n, Oxford fthlrttutf or French flannel In blue, gray or mlxeJ varieties. The cu.. wtiueex n' " " coma Hun-af Waist with v . . . . Pattern Ho, 1303 ts oat inthe nix, vts.i IS, 1 and 19 yare. A very trlldft coram na t n of plain and fanoy nixed silk and wool novelty elotu la here shown. The plain cloth that U shown In the waUt, jacket fronts, rovers and sleeves. Is hunters gieen In oolor, the trimming thatdecoratee tho leversandwal tn being tanoy galloon tn green, brown and goid shades. Tho novelty goods from which the vet Is made eonv bloee the ame colors, golden brown being the most prom Insnt shade The ohomisotte can bo made of the plain cloth, or it can be omitted In 6303. Atrog of a Wiilte or colored linen shirt front, aad Vow necktie. This Jaunty style wltl be found very becoming to veil formed ml the, who like to copy their mammas' style, or who are almost young laJte Many pretty com (nations, both of color and fabrte, ean be effected by the mode, wh tub can be plainly fin ished la tailor fashion, or decorated la an preferred ins) mail pnoa oi pattern vwum .A. COUPON' In orderimr. H No- of pstterns wanted Bust and Waist meiw- 1 nrai Either of these pottoms will bfisent ' to any address upon receipt of 10 oenw In ' silver or sumps when thin coupon ia en ' closed with order and one cent tot postage, with your address. Address COUFOW FATTZSS CO., urT Look Bos 77, Mew York. t i VV. L. Douclas a3 SHOSIriTFOR '"la 3. CORDOVAN, . FRENCH JttNAMlUUl iLT. '4.3.FlNCCAtf&KANQai 3.EPP0UCE.SSOLE3. 2.l.7B0YS"SCHC3LSm LADIES BHOCKTQM.MA1J. Orer On Mlllloa Peotrit wear the W. L. Doag'as $3 & $4 Shoes AH oar shoes are equally satisfactory Tiey rive the best lue for the metier. fhy luaieaston Shoes la style ad I yieeea lit. arpeseed. rbeiri r weailnc qaalltles are snaar he price are allomi,'taniped on sol i Si te I t saved aver ether aukee. ii jvw doaier can act mglj jv r M ril1t.lllm mm f : 0 a