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Compare i 4« t Pillsbury's Vito» with other cereal» and you will instantly recognize PILLSBURY PURITY in the rich, white color ol < V in ' "3T Q iilW . 6 ) % which is actually the "Meat o! the Wheat." l It is the white heart of the wheat i 1 kernel, sterilized. Nothing added; M nothing taken away. Try this Common Sense Breakfast Food and you will never change It la HEALTHFUL—SUBSTANTIAL— ECONOMICAL A 2-POUND PACKAGE MAKES 12 POUNDS COOKED -See Ihe Economy PRICE 20 CENTS. AsA tour Grocer TO'Day - PI LLSBUB.Y* WASH BURN FLOUR MILL CO., Ltd.. Minneapolis, Minn. ll;t a of ! not recent She Rio are All George rv ry lumbia come Idaho •nan ind, •ome lohn o ey the ,ng K U antry" 7 T. Hodges, last year with "Mrs. S! 0 ^ -Y' at le t a h d e r:r«ïs. — VIOLATED STATE LAWS. Suits Started in Ohio to Revoke Li censes of Insurance Companies. Akron, Ohio.—Quo warranto pro ceedings have been commenced In the circuit court here by Prosecuting At torney Hagelbarger on the advice ot ex-Attorney General Monnett of Ohio against the Mutual Life Insurance company and the New York Lite Insur ance company to oust them from the state by taking their franchises from them on the ground that the compa nies have used their powers for the past five years in violation of the laws of the state. Thirty-three interroga tories are submitted to the companies to be answered. The a p point meut ot receivers is asked for. COMING ATTRACTIONS AT THE SPOKANE THEATER. Nov. 3-4—The Tenderfoot. Nov. 5-G— Mme. Herman. Nov. 7-8—Stair Burlesque Co. Nov. 9-10—York Stale Folks. Nov. 14-15—Sultan of Sulu. Nov. 18-19—Peggy of Paris. Nov. 22-23—Merry Burlesquers. Nov. 24-25—Arizona. Nov. 26—Peck's Bad Boy. Nov. 28-29—Thoroughbreds. Out of town patrons can have seats reserved for any of the above per formances by writing or telegraphing Jos. Pelrich, manager of Spokane the ater, who will give such orders his special attention. Prices range from 25 cents to $1.50. ;er died len ater Theatrical Notes. Frank Pixley's "The Prince ot Pil sen" is still on earth and will travel 12,000 miles this season. "the perennially popular pleas It is billed as who came Sign ot the Cross." tion and enunciation of the poor, old, downtrodden, English language are so perfect that he may safely be called of the finest "readers" now before His pronuncla * one the public. Herbert Kelcey and Miss Effle Shan their starring next month non resume The Jar of Coughing Hammer blows, steadily ap plied, break the hardest rock. Coughing, day after day, jars and tears the throat and lungs until the healthy tissues give Ayer's Cherry Pectoral way. stops the coughing, and heals the torn membranes. "I alwav, Itroi' Ayer*, ehi-rry Pectoral in the home! It *t«e« pel feci any of ua have counli* or tuird cold«. I J»»'o imaii it for a gfont many ymiri mid no lenow ÏÙ about It"- MR» . M a u T Oiikrtkax, Vary« ■ A M»d»bTJ.C Ayer Co . Lowell, Maaa. Aino luanufnüturera of /\ y SARSAPARILLA. /xifers Efv-a Biliousness, constipation retard re covory. Cure these with Ayer s Pills. 1 0.B.W1ÜIAM5 f C ATAL0G j t doors AJ [windows jfrl PkGLASS/^s * è FTC.?» SALES ROOMq^; VIOIO WESTERN AVE ^ 'SCäTTLC, WAStilWGTW O. B. WILLIAMS' MAIL ORDER HOUSE I have The » I have only one once, no agents, no branch stores, greatest saving prices ever quoted on DOOKS, WINDOWS. Locks, Sash Curds, Sash Weights, Sliding Door Rack .and You can buy from me a nearly everything in my ' and save 50 i >oors f< door. Writ in which I illustrate scribe the hundreds article* that 1 sell and the great each. painting, $ 1.00 per tor price list, and fully dc of di lièrent aaving p Also 1 send you my Safe De livery (Juarantec. which fully ex plain if any article I ship you reaches you in a damaged condition I will replace same free. You run no risk at all. My prise lists are free and are . the most complete of any ever ia- . d by any firm in the Northwest. It will pay you to have these copies your possession. Write today. The largest and most favorably Sasli and Door dealer in the know Northwest. mm ll;t a dramatization by Harry B. Smith I of "The Lightning Conductor," and not in "The Rector's Garden," as was recent I v stated Mme Bernhardt Is to open her Amedcan tour in Chicago after «Tl American tour in cnicago alter an. She and her company liave sailed from Rio Janeiro for New York, where thej are expected to arrive not later an I November 18. All the rights and titles of the p y, George w n Ade h a ^ n been sold by"Hen ■ rv Sava« to Maclvn ÄrbuckLe who ry Savage to Maclyn Arbuckle, wno I Joseph^E^IamkeU, manager ot thé Co lumbia theater of this city. Mme. Lillian Nordlca will soon bo come the bride of Captain Joseph R Delamar, the wealthy owner of the Idaho silver mine that bears his name. Maude Fealey, the young American actress who last year was leading wo •nan with Sir Harry Irving in Eng-K ind, signed a contract recently to he •ome n star under the management of lohn Cort of Seattle, general mana-I of the Northwestern Theatrical I ■ssoclatlon. The contract will go In o effect next season, when Miss Féal ey will be presented In a new play written for her by Martha Morton. «I . r. recent German army maneuvers Prince Harold of Denmark, with his regiment, was expecting an attack at 7 a. m. But the enemy had the bad manners to arrive at 4 and b-timed the nrlnce ana his men whllelthe hey we fasC The prince is think ,ng y of protesting to The Hague tri K U nal ;er Mr. Cub died rt'cently of pneumonia, len was formerly proprietor of a the ater at San Francisco. During the FORTUNES FOR COLORADOANS. 1 - settîement ^e $4,000.000; Jenver. $500.000; Mrs. W. A. Fender, ■loffat Lakes, $500,000; Miss Belle Cur ils 600 000; Frederick Curtis. $500,0001 Mrs Murray Colgln. Cripple creek $500,000. an ( l Frank S. Fisher of Den ver $160 000 The Fisher estate, con sisting largely of Holland canals, is valued at $160.000,000. Mrs. Curtis is * helr ' Th ° 0, ""' ää. a."™.- adra p.» ror ™ .1». p..., .na » '""".'"».""to" Morop I -Ä "* — —1 lowers, were and a large quantity of ammunition were captured. Three enlisted men of the Twenty -econd infantry were killed and two wounded during the engagement. Spain's New Cabinet. I Madrid.—The king, it is announced accepted the resignation of 'he cabinet and charged Senor Montero l Rios to form a new ministry. " enor Rios seeks to secure General Weyler minister of war, Senor EcUegara-y I minister of finance, and Senor ( ' ar ' I minister of the interior.] lias as vs eia Pietro as A curious well in Canada produces | sand instead of water. The sand comes fine stream like a fountain up in a The force which drives it to the sur face from a depth of 100 feet has no ' yet been discovered. Impetus was given to a movement] having for Its object the erection ot a $2,000,600 home for the physicians of Chicago al a recent meeting of the Physician's club. Most deaths occur between sunset and sunrise. IN •J T IKE r o i I 'S SUCHERS I Fbyallthe l _ BEST DEALERS %$$!«> A J. TOWER CO.. ESTABLISHED 1636 BOSTON NtW YORK CMICASO TOWER CANARIAN CO..li«it,d TORONTO CAN — . . No. 44. '06 Spokane N. U. s JFreW'l.HLEI ClUIS WHIRl Ail IlSI fAIlk. mt Couch Hyrup Tuim Qood. t ln tlm«. Hold by drugglftts. asumnacöEc LIBERTY FOR RUSSIA ence ture at L. Russian nation at this moment, when the Russian people have received from his imperial majesty the promises and guarantees of freedom, and will join In the hope that the Russian people will wisely aid in the realization of these liberties by cooperation with the gov eminent for their peaceful introduc tion. Only thus will it be possible to I secure the full benefits of the free Mom conferred upon the people. Count Witte, Russia's first premier, tonight sent the above message to the American people through the As Undated Cress. Czar's Message. S Following Is the text of the imperial jj I manifesto giving Russia rights of civil liberty: ,. We Nicholas II., by the grace of ed Go<1 ' em P eror aml aulocral ° f al1 the Hussians, grand duke of Finland, etc., I lecJare ^ ^ our fajthful subjects lha ' 'roubles and agitation in our ,. capitals and in numerous other places rt " ou y heart wUh exce8slve paln and 8or ™, w ' . . , .. „ . „„„ ' The happiness of the Russian sov k ei * n ta , Indissolubly bound, up w h the happiness of our people, and the »™w of our people is the sorrow Eng-K 'he sovereign. 'Trom the present disorders *" a ^ arise great national disruption. 1 ey menace the integrity ami unity of our I I empire. I "The supremg duty imposed upon U by our sovereign office requires is to efface ourself and to nse all th force and reason at our command to L ». all circles of public life which are es senlial to the well being of our peo i..i„ 1 pic. "Wc. therefore, direct our Rovern an Lent to carry out our inflexible will in the following manner; I and 1 "First, to extend to the population j whllelthe Immutable right of civic liberty. 1 based on the real invlelabl.lty of per tri- bon. freedom of conscience, speech, union and association. I "Second, without suspending the al-|j 1 cady ordered elections to the slate| louma to Invite the Par"elP a tlon lnL fhe CZAR NICHOLAS ISSUES IMPERIAL MANIFESTO TO PEOPLE. Autocracy of Romanoffs Is at an End —Count Witte is at Head of New -Russian People Get Con Regime cessions They Have Long Sought— Message to American People. St. Petersburg. Oct. 81.—*T am sure the American people, who understand what freedom is, and the American press, which voices the wishes of the people, will rejoice with the friendly 1 cess I things. "Third, to establish as an unchuige-1 1 hle rule that no law shall be en forcible without the approval of the „täte douma, and that it shall be pos I qule for the elected of the people to exercise participation in the .super j S i on „f the legality of the acts of the *T""Ä'"Äl .... or adra as-rsrss " h,, v „ „ P .,„ bo , «. 1 UP year o. o,„ r.lpa I •»»-> " NICH ° '- >8 ' CZÀR YIKLD8 TO WITT,. Crisis in Russia Said to Have Brought Him to Terms. I/ondon, Oct. 31.—The Dally Tele graph's St. Petersburg correspondent 1 I ""f am Informed that the emperor has . L gt aecepte d the liberal program, ap ,, 0 inled Count Witte premier and glv l Q legls i at i ve powers to the.represen-1 Lat lve assembly, allowing représenta (ve8 frolll all sections of tue ' I t j on to be elected to It and abolislling I aiartlal law throughout the empire. • lm ( urt j, el . informed Ahat the emperor will issue a manifesto to the people '° | lUorrow ■ Court in Revolt Against Czar. London The correspondent of the Daily Chronicle at sends the following: The court is in revolt against the. ■mperor, who Is vacillating between! be COU nsels of his ministers to grant I L constitution, with Count Witte 88 1 ;)r emier, and the advice of the J' e ' a tetionaries to proclaim a dictatorship 1 under General Count Aylexis Igimtieff. Lj | , member of the council of the empire. One of the most ominous factors in he situation is the feeling among the Finns. There are only 4000 troops inj Finland, the 6000 reservists sent there laving been brought back because they developed revolutionary leanings. Should the Finns revolt, the govern could not reinforce the garri soldier is wanted St. Petersburg ment mus, because every tere, and the navy is unreliable. Heavy Snow in Colorado. Denver, Col., Oct. *0.—A wet snow began falling late Sunday afternoon, and the storm was In full sway till Reporta to the local weather show that similar conditions night, bureau revall In Wyoming, northern Ne braska and South Dakota, ado only the eastern slope Is at No serious interruptions to In Colo feeted. railroad traffic or telegraph commun! call m have been reported. Snow Storm at St. Paul. St. Paul. Minn.. Oct. 30.—A heavy snowstorm lasting 14 hours dlsorgan ized streetcar traffic and delayed all trains from the west two to ten hours. UNVEILS STATUTE TO MORTON Grandson Craws Aside the Curtain, Cleveland Delivers the Eulogy. Nebraska City, Neb.—In the pres ence of 5000 persons, anil with elab orate ceremonies, a statute of J. Sterling Morton, secretary of agricul ture In the last Cleveland cabinet, and founder of Arbor day. was unveiled at Morion park Saturday afternoon. Sterling Morton, a grandson of the secretary, drew aside the curtain which exposed the statute to view. There were six addresses, pricipal of which was that of Mr. Cleveland, which was a touching eulogy of his former cabinet officer and personal friend. Other addresses were by Governor Mickey, who welcomed the visitors; Hon. Hilary A. Herbert. David R. Pfands. Mr. Stevenson and Dr. George L. Miller,, the latter of Omaha. Perfect weather greeted the thou sands of persons who came to witness the. unveiling of the Morton monument, The special train carrying the for mer President and Mrs. Cleveland and party of nearly 100 persons arrived over the Burlington at 9:110 in the morning, in this parly were former Vice President Adlai K. Stevenson, Paul Morton and daughter. Misa Paul ine Morton Joy Mo.ton Mark Morton Sucre ary Hilary E Herbert .Dr. and Mrs. Bryant of N< w \ork. Governor David R. Francis, Robert Green, Mh'hael Cudahy, James H. Eckels and L Evans. President Ripley of the S anta Ke railway. G. H. Harris and jj t. Cable also arrived by special train. A reception commute met these | and other guests and they were escort ed t o Arbor Lodge, where they were guests of Joy Morton until the un veiling ceremony. Governor Mickey and staff were met ,. y Company C. Nebraska National Guard. Ra i| r0 ad h Two Huodrecand Fifty Mde Radroa From Puget Sound to That City, N()rlh Yakima, Wash., Nov^ 1.—An ippllcatlon was hied with the city ^ council of Walla Walla 1 ucsdi.y nig 1 | for a franchise for the North Coas I ra nway to enter that city. Roheit • I Slrahurn. vice president ana genera man ager of the road, says 'his Is pre limlnary to crossing the Columbia riv ,. r at Wallnla. Mr. birahom a so sta to L new party of engineers had been es- be run „own the Columbia to Wallula and „.ere cross the river. 1 .„rvmin, .mr.ics are in the Two surveying Parties art n field between here and Wallula, work ipg on a route via the »'>n"y»' de t lsJ I trict. Mr. Strahorn said it the Cold j creek routé is selected a branch line 1 w-ould be run to Sunnyslde. per- TUree other surveying parties, ma king a total of six, are working £ I tween here and the Sound. One pai al-|j s between here and the mouth of the! slate| Tle(a n river, another is l" . Tiet . a ," lnL in a „ d a third Is on the other side , 1 NORTH COAST TO WALLA WALLA. Contract. Let ^ Mile, of .. tie railway t Northern Pacific and R Great Northern) between Kennewick, Wash., and Portland, via y a ncouver awarded subcontracts to ,10 different j bidders for sections of the line fr >m | Cape Horn for most ot the distance to Kennewick, comprising about 1. r»Ï SJSZ u»« .to »«.« .W-Uto ä-» \Z tZ »t ff S 1 slruetion fund have so tar been par celed to only a little more than a 1 RAW MEAT mET KILLS COBDEN. I Victim of I dozen. . Loujs Heavyweight a Tuberculosis. g( Lollls .—William Cobden. said t< iavp ' bee|) „ )e i argt . g t and strongest I man )n lÆfayette Park district, died ' recently from tuberculosis, which his I tr i e nds insist was brought on by a raw • nu . at ,n 0 t. Cobden was a superln | , on ,i ent of steam fitters. He was] | g % inches tail, and weighed 280 pounds. His workmen say he could carry three times as much dead weigh! they, and it was no unsttal sight to him pick up a 300 pound radlatoi and carry it from the ground to the the. ^ flQor ()f a bu ndlng. His feats] f s , renglhi cobden often sail, were I ^ ^ a jj et Q f raw nl eat. He was 88 1 known to eat two pounds of beefsteak e ' a nd three boxes of imported sardlnest a sitting. He would drink halt a Lj ()Zen j arge g iasses of beer in as many in » v as see Cunliffe Makes Denial. I Hartford. Conn..—Mrs Cunline l has made the following statement: "I emphatically deny that as a result of any confession made by me * jUt of the money stolen by my husband was found in a baby carriage in our I If the money was] ^ . . I through! the ordeal to which I was subjected by the detectives that had none of the stolen money, nor had I hidden any. The allegation of Robert W. Pinkerton regarding a confession nade by me is absolutely false. home at Pltsburg. found as stated by Robert W. Pinker-1 ton it was because of the disclosures made by my husband. I maintained Internal Revenues Increase. "The "monthly statement of the col lector of Internal revenues that dur ing the month of September, 1905. 'he total receipts from this service were $21,224.573, an Increase compared with September, 1904, of $1.212.317. Prussic acid is the most rapid poi human being can take. son a AWARDS AT THE FAIR | f lcuUura , pro( ,ucts. Xwenty . etg h t silver medals, Includ | I!g r \ Jacsson. Dayton, wool; ( j Ilco | n county, hluestem thresh, white imber wbt . at , rye in sheaves; Walla I V va.lla. county, jute. EASTERN WASHINGTON AND NORTHERN IDAHO WINNERS. a Big •List Included Some of The following awards have been glv cn out by the judges of the Lewis and Douglas County, Washington, Winner—State of Washington Has Best Grain Exhibit—Idaho Got 60 Gold Medal; Most Prominent Farmers of Idaho. agricultural with gold Douglas county—Collective exhibit jf cereals and straw ami seed; forago grasses iu sheaves; miscellaneous .arm vegetables products and fruits; oluestem wheat,' threshed; while Bel »lau oats, in thrush and sheaves; red Russian wheat, in sheaves; feed oats, in thresh and sheaves; rye, in .heaves; collective exhibit of grains, 'fasses, fruits and vegetables. Klickitat county—Collective exhibit >f wheat oals barley corn In sheaves, Lincoln county—Allen wheat, blue -heat, Welcome oats, white Bel Falrfield—Garden 'Spokane county—Cereals In sheaves, icrage grasses. Walla Walla county—Collective ex libit of agricultural products. Washington slate grain Inspector's ^ ce _cereals in seed. I ' State of Washington—Collective ex- ' ilbll of cereals In sheaf and forage ,rasses- collective exhibit of wheat, barley coni wheat and coru In Whitman county—Collective exhibit if agricultural products. Yakima county—Collective exhibit Clark exposition; Eastern Washington awards arc as follows, medals: item 1 -Ilan oats, white oats. E. H. Morrison, >at; seed. Idaho Awards. ilwnl „ B com prlsod inpludlnc Fd Vdkln B"h' Jjj*Mien qaras«: horn and rye Id sheaf, Thomas Drls- ( C.enesee. barley ; A. Q«™». I barley; James T. Hanson, Genesee, / ' . , ,. B Hurt Parma sale, "mothy l ay^ B - H , Rfa11a l ' h lblt of can- ' wool exhibit, coll ' . net ™ » a "' , daho agrlcub or ' xhi 1 I • u ■ a^d grasse^rrheTf ■« . . . erasBes - y. collections of p * 'î' a „ n Theodore Torlng Gene-1 lan wl a. Thcodc ^ Kondrlcb, b; käs« R Thompm »• '**'**£ .VTfl'ax' h' M. Ed Thornton, Southwlck. flax H. and M. J. Wessels, Kendrick, wheal, flax ami grain and grasses not Idaho agricultural awards comprised Ed Ad kin j ueana, | it »«- 0 .» Two Wound, T., 0 . 0 - r st rto .tool Ä." 5 . - S' J 5 ÄTÄ TRAIL OF BLOOD IN BANK. (but to said o the officers. Nicole, who was Leduc's brother iu law, was cashier ot the bank, as well as mayor of Chenoa. I ,'rom his farm this afternoon, walked the bank and without warning I Phot Nickle dead. In the bank, beside Vickie and Hugh Jones, were Cash er Nickle's son and another small boy. Leduc came in mo I rhe boys escaped through the back j„or, After Nickle had been shot, Jones ittempted to grapple with the mur-1 lerer, but was himself shot by Leduc. i'wo men passing along the street. j ,vho Leduc feared might attempt to ■apture him. were shot by him, one the head, the other in the hand, jut their wounds are not serious. An immense crowd well armed, gath t u I -red at the bank in an attempt to cap He drew the door of ' are the slayer. ke vault almost shut after dragging , ones' body inside, and would allow 0 one to come within range. I „Id the officers that Jones was dead. a Ammonia and chloroform were used I dentlfully in an attempt to overcome I ,ij e murderer but he succeeded in get lng enough air to thwart the effect of he drugs. I High voltage electric wires were l jtnjng from the e ] ec trlc plant to bttnk and lia d Leduc not surren w | thin a few hours u was .lamed to render him helpless by con , iecting the W i,es with the bank vault I , , , t , e ,. urre nt. Had this ^ ', educ wa8 to be starved Several hundred ,hots were exchanged between the I losse and Leduc. Leduc Insisted that g whom he «hot and dragged into valllt was dead, principal reason why ^ ^ m)t taken to Keduc -, surrender. After Le ] Juc gurrendered the dead body of Jones was found. l^educ into submission. Doubt on this col Gambler. O.— Stewart L. Pierson, a freshman at Kenyon college, was kill ed by a train while awaiting Initiation ,nto Delta Kappa Eplsilon fraternity. ■Frat" Killed. Victim of The robin -Is the last bird to go to bed at ulght. poi RHEUMATISM CAN NOT BE RUBBED AWAY When the joints are sore and swollen, and the muscles throbbing with the pain of Rheumatism, relief must be had at once, and it is natural to mb the affected parts with liniments, oils, etc. This treatment does good in a way, by temporarily relieving the pain and reducing the inflammation, hut has no effect on the disease itself, because Rheumatism is more than skin deep ; it is in the blood and cannot lie nihlied away. Rheumatism is brought on by indigestion, weak kidneys, poor bowel action, stomach troubles and a gen eral sluggish condition of the system The refuse and waste matters, which should be carried off through the nat ural avenues of bodily waste, are left to sour and form uric acid and other irritating poisons which are ab sorbed by the blood, making it thin, weak a .ul acrid. Then instead of While at work for the F. C. A P. R. R. iu the iwiimpy region, I contracted Rheumatism and wai completely help less for about lour months and spent over $150.00 with doctors, but got worse y day, und finally quit them and bo S. 8.8. I took a few bottles and y health iifh 176 ever gun was cured sound and well. M nourishing the different nerves, nuts* is mw splendid, and I we des. joints and tissues it fills them now tlklng* "Î With poison to produce the aches, Rheumati pains and other disagreeable symp- th?m Wln * toms of the disease. Rheumatism »{to has improved rapidly, and ia now is usually worse in Winter for the to ail l »ù>Terft a fromB.1ieu Iin ût'i«im' ' 8 " reason that cold and dampness are UUh, N.O. s. c. LASSITER, exciting causes. The nerves become I was severely troubled with Rheuma excited and sting with pain the mus- "TiéeF n ud d uny i ô-."who'°h"; i°ver hSd clcs are sore and drawn, the joints Rhe imat swollen and stiff and the sufferer »[i'woî-h."îVi'î'tT ÄyVn bîdïhâiîi lives in intense agony; and if the having: bonn bothered with it for ten disease is not checked it often leaves B. 8?"lSïîîo. 1, JLrt£ Its victims helpless cripples for life, tuning' two bottles I noticed the sore Rheumatism cannot be rubbed away "ÛtlnnîfP ?b" ÎSdTclne'Sîdwrttoo^ but it can be driven iront the blood ou rhiy cured; all pain, soreness and in byS.S.S. Being a perfect blood ÄÄE.iSr"" 18 - 8 ' 8 ' purifier this great remedy soon pro duces a complete change in the cu tire circulation ; the thin, acrid blood is made pure and rich, and as it goes through the body nourish es a mi soothes the irritated nerves, eases the throb jggO^ bin » >scles, and dissolves and carries out of the system the irritating particles \\ in the joints which are keeping up the 1 SkJVl pain and inflammation. S. S. S. cures J Rheumatism permanently, and in addl I U U tion tones up the digestion and stimu ' D11 D C I V VECETAHEF latcs the <lifterent '" e '" bers of the botl Y » Will-»-* vi_x.tirxok.i_, to their full duty so there is no cause tor another attack. Do not waste time trying to rub Rheumatism away, but get it out of the blood with S. S. S. so that the cold and dampness of Winter will not keep you in continual pain and agony. Special book on Rhet ma tism and any medical advice will be given free, . For t months she could ek» knows how excruciating J. L. AONEW, Mt. Vernon, O. 803 P. Greenbrier St. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, G A Stocking Darning Dev.ce. Mrs. George II. Maynard of Denver, Go1o„ has patented a device of darning B t„ c iiit, g8 which promises to give her a fortune. An oval steel band six in ches In circumference has prongs on one edge which catch and hold the stocking slender steel rods on the oth- »1; cr edge which ..old the stocking In Äaa- s; —r. si »ented Thef ooto he mbi ma ^ WiT ln tt. wS tand serled, the g.oo\cs in me ova. u... allowing the needle to pass through ^ material, doing the darning rapidly, s.wr* or Ohio, City of Toledo, I Luca« county. ; , , . p.Gne^StVheTr ùL^v A ' pay the turn of ONE ihlNDHKD DOLLAR» for | cwh and every cane of Catabhii that esnuot be b> ' " *'kkan Keen knky, „ re ^;; n ,!'!tH 1 ing one edge which catch and hold the llt 8, o^'ng, ■lender «eel rods on the oth edge which cold Ihe stocking In I *•*. 1 the boat. - ."t Los Angeles.—Mrs. S. E. Bpwdelle, j a dressmaker who came here three Years ago. has falleu heir to an estate in Colorado worth at least $815,000. She Is one of the heirs of L. Hilton, who made his money in mining. Show Turks Mailed Hand. Vienna.—It is announced that the have decided to make a dem powers oilstratlon against Turkey's Asiatic (but not her European) ports In order to avoid the appearance of giving en couragement to the Macedonian Insur gents. and that simultaneously a col lective note will be presented to Tur Grand Duke Constance of Russia is said to be the most cultured Romanoff Cremations can be watched by th<! public al a dollar a head in Italy. iu SSS2 Vj 0 i t The Kind You Have Always nought Inis borne the signa ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision for over 5iO years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and " Jnst-us-good " are but Experiments, ami endanger the health of Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It Is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age Is Us guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea ami Wind Colic, it relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Dowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. The KM You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of * * In Use For Over 30 Years. MURRAY ■TRCKT. NIW YORK PRUSSIAN SPAVIN CURE,' d fnniuUH Un» of PruHlM g»*ods: |«llai»brra SAW ibiR À ^ PRUSSIAN REMEDY OC., il --- Pa ul» Minn. ] ill liiJ rt SROKANE DNUO GO., \A/ 8 ol»»»t» Ac»nt» Spokm,, \A/»»h. ol<L «ïîw 'and££d, GcSd »ndsifver, 75c; Zink or Copper, »1; ®"StTn .ppÂ^Sî n .nd 0^ rv-'i rz we ,, Unow.n litterateur, who has ,ranslaled , lnto 8paniah "° L n an bcst Amcrlcan poe try. has been ap W. L. Beehtel, who has been explor Colorado for the past 10 years, has diseovered In a cave a carved »war god which he believes to he more than years old. ^ ||s„ot oa kppllntioD. coutrol solicited. pointed to the Mexican embassy staff Washington and will accompany Ambassador Casasus to the United States. To Break In New Shoes Always «hake in Allen's Foot-Ea*e, a powder. Heure» hol, «wealing, aching, »wollen feet. Cure« corn«, Ingrowing nail» and bunion«. At all drnggiHtH and «hoe »lores, 2. r *c, iKm't accept any HUbKtltute Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, le Roy, N. Y. Dr. Marcus Flsherbert Wheatland, colored physician of Newport, R. !.. is recognized as New England's lead ing specialist In electro-therapeutics and the X-ray. In early life he was a shoemaker. i For cougns and colds mere is no bettet medicine than Piso'a Cure for Consump tion Price 25 cents. The mother of the late Genera Wal ter Q. Gresham is still living, hale and hearty at the age of 98. five miles from Louisville, Ky., In the same house where General Gresham was born. Permanently Cured. No fits or r ervoomess of Dr. Kiln**'» areot Nerve after finit day's Restorer. Rend for Free•* triall*ottJpandtreatlao. Dr. H. U. Kline, I Ad.,USl Ar« b fc»U. I'hU-tdelphla, r% Submarine signaling has been tried successfully in the Mersy. cania heard the bell al a distance of nine and a half knots while she was under full speed. The Lu Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup the best remedy to use for their children during teething period The steamer Indianapolis has left Chicago for a voyage of 18,360 miles, its destination being Puget sound.