Newspaper Page Text
&SW Tt'-lM i ljit & ' IlKdVh intlS P HSfe ! IlillJKiS 1 yji i II i 'i f . U.U .'H . 4 hi 'Hi fcwfa' w 1 -I ' ," I' ' 'B,1iB 1. 1 , , I i li i m t tf tt 'M i I'K ' i ij iili1 h K I fi . iri ; dill ? ' ! i...; ft'fi' Jje (Coconino gun PUBLISHED EVEBY THURSDAY At Flagstaff the county Mat of Coco olno oounty. CURRENT COMMENT. Nicola Tfri. v. has, by means of the Roentgen or X rays, seen throutrh the todies of thrco of his assistants ptaced 4n a line. Itf Columbus, Minn., choice white potatoes were recently Teported as -belling1 at the reuintkably cheap price of IK cents a bushel. It Is said that the women 'ot'Ohto, in response to the theater hig"fc hat bill, will ask the legislature for'a law pro hibiting ejepectoratkw on 4he floor of any public place. Ax Englishman wlio liaB "been look ing ot Georgia assures an Atlanta puper that thero nro gold 'nines in the northern part of that stato that ought to produce 840,000,000 a year. Tiik Ohio legislature has'followedup the theatrical high hat law with an other adopting the elootric chair in executions, and a third making it a misdemeanor to offer to treat a man in a saloon. Tiik czar of Emeslaihcsa-orllered that bottles of brandy, ornamented with the royal arms, 'bo distributed at Mos cow during the tlmeaftao coronation festivities, lie has alro directed the hotel proprietors in that city 'to exer cise the greatest iliborallty toward their guests. NEWS OF THE WEEK. According tto late mdvices a Cossack giantess will visit America during the coming summer. fShe'Creatcd a sensa tion in St Petersburg a short time ago when she appeared there. Her age was given then: -as Uiyoars amltfmontUs her weight as M3X pounds and her height as S feet 11 o'nohos. Tin: Sioux Crty, Ha., school board has ordered the rcmo at of all penny-in-the slot machines from thoviclnity of the schoolhocses. The pupils are said to have been converting their available assetk into pennies to,play the machines and to be -forming dis honest habits by working them with slugs and buttons. A native of Montreal, Can., has in vented agun which hp.ronfidently be lieves, when it is adopted by all nations, will mnkemur impossible. If all that is claimed for it be true the gun is certainly the most remarkable piece of ordnance in existence. '.The most remarkable feature of the gun is that no explosive is used and that its missiles are projected by an agency, the nature of which is a profound secret, which, without noise or smoke, is capable of discharging the almost in credible number of .200,000 ,$liot n minute. Mori: than 20,000,000 people of -the United States chow gum persistently nt an annual cost of S20, 000,000. l've big factories to say nothing of imany smaller concerns, are needed to supply the increased demand for gum, one company alono belling more than SV 000,000 worth a sura greater than we pay for the support of home and for eign missions. For this Tariety of jaw -exercise wo p ty 53,000,003 more than we do for the maintenance of prench ers of all denominations. The amount expended last year for colleges, chari ties and churches about cciualswhat was pakl for chewing gum. Axmajoiutv of the members of -tho 'house of representatives, the Phila delphia Press says.secm to be impressed by the arguments in favor of the metric system, but when it appeared thattthey were strong enough "to pass -thciractric bill they became afraid and began to vote the other way. l'onnds which vary in weight and bushels and quarts which vary in size are admitted evils, but the people have been getting alongiwith them for so many centuries and the metric system Is so foreign to inenmnut iney prefer to bear the ills of unequal measures and weigh ts rather .nan adopt an unfamiliar system. Hs. A.VDitEw D. White, ex-United States minister to Russia and a mem ber of the Venezuolan boundary com mission, presents statistics which show that under no other civilized gov ernment, whether monarchy or repub lic, is therlghtito life so trampled upon by a privileged .class of criminals" as in this eomntry. "The United States is," he saya, "among all the nations of the Christian world, that country in which the .crime of murder is most fre quently .committed and least fre quently punished" Thero were 10,500 .homicides in 18BC, as against 3,r.G7 in .1889, and only las legal executions. Gleaned By Telegraph and Mail. nSRSOXAt AND POLITICAL A cittauLA.it was issued by the ad visory board of the A. P. A. at Hoston on tho 15th adverse to ex-Gov. McKIn ley as a presidential candidate, stating that they had found to be true the charges that the Ohio man had dis criminated against the A. P. A. in ap pointments in favor of Romanists. The editor of the Cle eland Leader, MoTvintey organ, however, came out with an authorized statement denying tho charges as ridiculous and untrue. JoiiN'O. tlUMi'inthY, of Springfield, 111., received a telegiam on the 13th from Senator Cullom at Washington that he (Cullom) had not withdrawn f rota tho picstdential race andtUdnot intendto withdraw. TUiion O, WiLHAMAhns resigned as consul-general to Hat ana, and Tizhugh Lee, of "Virginia, has been appointed to succeed him. The Massachusetts house committee, to w hom was referred tho bill for a statue of Gen. Butler to cost SkO.OOO, reported against tho plan. The Maine republican cemvention met nt Portland on the 00th and Thomas II. 'Reed, speaker of the lower house ofcongrcss, wasenthusiastically indorsed for president. Ttoo resolu tions said 'that Speaker Reed was-op-posod to tho freo coinage of -silver ex cept by international agreement, and believed tho present gold standard should beimaintained until that agree ment was secured; that he fworcd the restriction of immigration, a just ad ministration of the pension laws and was an earnest -friend to .American shipping. The Kentucky ropublicaii:on-vention completed its labors nt Louisville, after indorsing the presidential candi dacy'Of Gov. llradley. with SEcandiin structions for Mqj. MclCiuley, adopt ing a platform declaring for the gold standard, protection and reciprocity, and expressing sympathy with 'Cuba. 'Covoiiksssian'W. b. Linton, who has been urged by certain of the .A. P. A. leaders as a possible candidate for president, has denied that ho 'is or has 'been a candidate, and naid that the nso of his name in connection with the republican nomination for presi dent was unauthorised. He km candi date for renomination to congress from tho Saginaw, Mich., district. A'Iikckxt tele-ram from Washing ton stated that W. II. Pugh, Dne of the auditors in the treasury department and a close 'friend of Secretary Car lisle, was booming the secretary for tho 'presidential 'nomination .by send ing outlettors to all the sound -money leaders in the different states urging them to action and soliciting their sup port for Mr. Carlisle. Leonard Hen.klu is the architect .-and originator of a stupendous enter prise to build a. S4,000,000 palace over ithe cataract at Niagara Falls. It is to ibe located about CO feet above the tbrink of the Horseshoe .falls and will Te at least half a mile long and in warn l.eoo feet. The fcehrht will b 1 COOjfeet, tho center, howerer, rising to about 4,000 feet above the .river. The lower part of the building will average 40 stories. The exterior (will consist iof block stone, fretted and ornamental. Tho building will be supported by 40 Jiuoe .columns, whieli are to be pre sented by the nations of the world. Wio's -state road commissioner has devised a wagon road of steel, which will be give a thorough trial in that and several other states. These ro ids consist two steel gutters of boiler plate thickness, five inches wide, with a square, perpendicular shoulder half an ineh high, then an angle of one inch outward, slightly raised. Tho gutter forms a conduit for the water and makes it easy for tho wheels tn enter or leave the track. Such a double track railroad, filled in with broker stone of macadam siae, costs ubou' 80,003 per mile, as against 57,000 for ii inocjdam roadbed of tbe same width. ' MISCKLLANEOCH. Jajim Nmvmaii'h barn, near tMil housen, Ind., was burned by a supposed Incendiary, consuming 10,000 buthcls of com andil. 000 tons of hay. Eighteen valuable horses und mules were cre mated, together with 40 head of cattle and hogs iFvULURKs for the week ended ti.e 17th were, according to Dun's Review, .'23 in tho lUnited States, against 311 last year, and u0 In Canada, agaiust 3i last yeir. Jamm E. Alsop. alias A. A. Aostin, who was arrested on the 10th in heat tie. Wash., on the charge of murdering Lena (Olson near Duluth. Minn., in order 'to got possession of 5410, com mitted suicide in the jail on the 17th. Piioui.vi.nt Knights of Labor in Phila delphia stated that a war between General blaster Workman Sovereign and 'General Secretary - Tieasurcr Hayes, which has been waged under cover for soino time, will probably re sult in the withdrawal of both oflicials from otllce. It was also aid that Mr. Sovereign .had not been paid his salary of 63,000 a j ear by the hecretay. Ax the city council meeting at Cedar Uapids, la., on the 17th, the report of the outgoing city treasurer, .1. C. Stod dard, who has held the otllce for almost a quarter of a century, showed a short age of S12.0J0. Where the money had gone was a mystery, as it was not be lieved that Mr. Stoddard had profited by It A RreoLCTJON was adopted by the United Mine Workers' convention at Columbus, O., on the 10th recommend ing the nomination of Eugene V. Debs for president by the populist national convention. The colored population of Washing ton celebrated the IMth anniveisary of tho emancipation on tho 10th by a street parade and speech-making. President Cleveland reviewed the pro cession from the white hoube. Two granddaughtcis of Nelson Bishop nt Fall Village, Conn., aged nine and eleven years, were burned in their bed tho other night. A. II. Isiiam, of tho World's Proctor Memorial association, will ask aid from congress In the erection of tho largest astronomical observatory in tho world on tho summit of Mount San Miguel, near San Diego; Cal. It is to be an in ternational one. Bukolars blew open tho safo at the Two Bors, Isham Strcde and . Tames McNeal, were charged at Guthrie, Ok , on the 17th with holding up and rob bing Allen Howard in regulation high wayman style. They took from How ard his toy bank, containing S4.2G, in timidating him by a club and a toy revolver. Tho crime is punishable in the territory by imprisonment for life. Two persons were killed, two prob ably fatally injured, and two others seriously hurt by two bolts of light ning, which successively struck the dwelling of Andrew Olson at Wallace Mich., on the 17th. TilK notorious Timmie Jack has been convicted of murdering Jimmle Brown both rich Indians, in Judge F. Mar. shalfs court for tho Okmulgee, I. T., district, and sentenced to be shot, which among the Indians is the legal mode of death. A gioan ric bicycle trust taking shape with every probability of its headquarters being located In Toledo, O. Three largo eastern factories are behind the trust, and tlio new concern will be capitalized at from 8,000,000 to 510,000,000. The company aims to con trol the price of every wheel put -on the American market. The championship season in tho Na tional Baseball league opened on tli lGthwitli games at Philadelphia, Louis--ville, Washington, Cincinnati, St. Louis and Baltimore. The attendance indi cated a genuine interest in the game. At Louisville the attendance was 10,- 4)00, the largest crowd ever packed in the grounds. Fifteen thousand saw the St. Louis game and 2J,000 that at Philadelphia. Charles Veith, a baker, suffocated himself with molasses at Chicago oil the lUth. He was fond of the stuff, and in order to get enough ho lay flat on his back on the aloor, so that when he opened the ellp on tho barrel the simp would flow into liis mouth. He was literally drowned by the sirup. Ho was found dead with his -mouth open and the molasses pouring into it. ISnitr.LAits looted the bank in Pio neer, O. They succeeded in opening the safe without explosives and then changed the combination so that the cashier could not open it. tiroNTANF.au combustion caused a fire at Fairbury, ILL, which resulted In a loss of S22r,00a 3'hTEil 1'itETZlUjER and John 'Leimin ger were driving across the railroad tracks at Looneyvllle, .N. "Y., when a -fast train struck their buggy. iBoth imen and the horse were instantly killed and the biggyiredueed to splinters. The farm residence of Teter'Glauber -nt Greensburg, 1ml., caught on tire while the family were asleep and two .children were fatally burned. -A letter received by Rev. (C W. fcmith, editor of the Pittsburgh Chris tian Advocate, from Kev. . S. Mon roe, of Altoona, Pa., the secretary of the Methodist general conference, stated that the constitutional amend ment for the admission of women as delegates to tho general conference had received more than tho requisite three-fourths votes of the annual con ferences. An explosion occurred in the Brance peth coal mino near Durham, Eng., the other evening and eight bodies were taken out dead and it was feared that ten others would loao their lives. There were olso 20 others entombed, but ttiere was a possibility of saving them. Jons Lrjircus, of Chicago, snot and killed his three children and then sent a bullet through his own heart on the Uth. The cause of the tcrriblo deed was despondency caused by possible poverty. The man's family lived com fortably aad he had a bank account of SI, 300 WASHINGTON MATTERS. East Palestine, O , post offlco early on tho morning of the 1.1th and took all the money und stamps it contained. A sheriff's posse in dispersing an un authorized negro military compiny at Tallahassee, Fla., killed one negro and wounded another. Frederick Merrick shot his wife at Brooklyn on tho 11th while she was asleep In bed and killed her. Ho then blew his own brains out. Jealousy was said to have been the motive for tho crime. Six fishermen were drowned in the English channel on the 13th by their boat foundering during a heavy gale. I'lB New York mill at Whitehall, Mich., was destroyed by an incendiary Hre. Loss, SSO.OOO; no insurance. The immigration authorities ut New York were said to be fairly appalled at the number of Italians of the lowest class coming' to this country and real ized that no steps must be neglected to check tho inftjx. ADDITIONAL DISPATCHES. Two firemen were crushed to death by a falling wall and several others seriously injured in a fire which de stroyed the old depot of the Pennsyl vania roau at rhilauelnhla and en tailed a loss of over S200.000. Ex-Gov. BoREMAsr, tho last of the war governors of West Virginia, died at his home nt Parkersburg, W. Va., on me loin, lie was once United States senator. Padfrkwski made his final appear ance nt New York on the 16th. The audience went wild. Men yelled and women rushed down the aisles. The virtuoso played three encores and was called out 12 times besides. Ezekiel Smith, a wealthy contractor at Chicago, who was recently sued by Miss Ella Donaldson for S50.000 for breach of promise, has compromised the suit by marrying the plaintiff and starting for California o'n a wedding trip. An explosion occurred in the Broad water mine at NIehart, Mont, on the ISth by which seven men lost their lives and six others were seriously hurt. It was supposed that an em ploye in tho magazine must have ig nited some powder by his candle. "it piaguo news irom Ulilna was last reported as not alarming. There was a great deal of sickness among the European colony at Hone Kontr. but nothing very serious. It had raged there constantly for seven weeks and the city was In an unhealthy stale. A fatal cattlo disease had broken out which had almost ruined tho dairy uusiness. With Imposing rites Right Rev. Thomas O'Gorman was consecrated as bishop of Sioux Falls, a D., at Wash ington on the 19th. Cardinal Satolll officiated as conseerator, and 150 bishops and priests occupied the chan cel and chapel and ioined in fh -.. spouses. A vou.no man living In Jefferson county, la , who has been experiment ing with the X rays, believes that ho has discovered the way to transform base metals into gold. It was said that he took a piece of metal worth a few cents and in thiee hours' tlm changed It into pure gold worth S154. sterling savage was taken from hfe bed at living college, near McMlnn villo. Tenn., by a mob of men and hanged to a tree. The man was suspec.'ed of being a "spotter" for United States olllcero by the m. bhineis. Appropriation Hill Wilt Have tbe Bight of War In toncreu HcKlnler and tteed Delegates Other Items of Interest. Washington, April 2a The proceed ings of the senate to-day probably will open with a contest for right of way between the appropriations committee and the friends of the Peffer resolu tion for au investigation of the recent bond sales. Senator Peffer is anxious not to antagonize the appropriation bills, but he thinks the debate on the bond investigation resolution could be concluded in another day or two. He has not yet decided whether he will yield to tho entreaties of the appro priations committee or allow the ques tion to go to a vote. There are st least two or three days more of work on the Indian appropriation bill. The Indian bill w ill be followed by the naval ap propriation bill and that by the sun dry civil appropriation bill, though neither may be reached this week. Tho programme for the coming week In tho house Is very unsettled. Mr, Henderson, chairman of tho ju diciary committee, has given notice that he will call up the bankruptcy bill for consideration on Wednesday and Thursday, but it seems likely he will be cronded out this week st least First of all Mr. Cannon, chairman of the appropriations committee, is de termined to push through the general deficiency bill, the last of the supply bills, at the earliest moment, and as appropriation bills are privileged he can be kept out only by a vote of tho bouse. Mr. Pickler, chairman of the committee on invalid pensions, is very much in earnest in his purpose to bring In the general pension bill re ported from .his committee, and he in tends to press it at every opportunity. With this legislation also the members of the house are in sympathy. There are in addition several contested elec tion teases to be disposed of. m'kinlky and REEI) delfoates. Washington, April 2a Following Is tho present condition of the MclCinley vote, as given out by Gen. Grosvenor, including the full vote of Ohio and Indiana: Alabama, 12; Arkansas, 1G; Florida, fl; Georgia, 19; Illinois, 10; In diana, 8Q; Kansas, 20; Kentucky, 11; Louisiana,-8;iIaryland, 4: Minnesota, 18; Mississippi, 18; Missouri, 14; Ne braska, 10; New Jersey, 10; New Mex ico, -1; New York, 4; Ohio, 40; Okla homa, A; Oregon, 8; Pennsylvania, 2; South Carolina, 10; South Dakota. 8: Texas, 12; Virginia. 0; West Virginia. : Wisconsin, 24; Utah, 1; Tennessee, 10; North Carolina, 2; North Dakota, 0; total, 375. Mr. Aldrich. manager of the Reed campaign, gives out the follow! ig: "The developments of the past wtjk in tho republican presidential contest havo resulted la no material change ia the relative standing of the leading candidates, notwithstanding the pre diction mado by Gen. Grosvenor some days ago, in which he 6aid that during the week McKinley's strength would grow rapidly by the conventions in Kentucky, .Nebraska and New Jersey. Of the twenty votes confidently counted upon by him in Kentucky, Gov. Jir.idley has captured 10 and the failure to instruct for McKinlev the 14 delegates elected from New Jersey was a significant disappointment My last statement gavo to Mr. Reed 111 dele gates, to Mr. JIcKinleylCO, to all other candidates 100, and 40 doubtful. In that table I credited Mr. Roed with two uninstructcd delegates, which, upon later information, I deemed it fair to placo in the doubtful column. With this single exception my figures of last week cannot be seriously disputed. A little calculation will disclose that of the 004 delegates elected to date Mc lCinley has just about 35J per cent If he continues at this rate to the end lie will havo have 325 votes out of a total of 91 when the convention as sembles, or just about the number that the friends of Mr. Reed and the other candidates hare conceded to him from the active commencement of the cam paign." Mr. Aldrleh gives Reed 123 delegates and JleKlnley 214. the ahiiituatio.v confebexce. Washington, April 20. The nation al arbitration conference will hold a two days' session in this city during tho coming week, beginning 'Wednes day. Between 300 and 400 written ac ceptances of the invitations to attend tho conference have been rren!rrl from governors of states, judges, pub licists, lawyers, leading business men, ministers of religion, philanthropists, educators and other prominent citi zens. They represent in all 38 states. It is expected that ex-Senator Ed munds, of Vermont, will be the per manent president of the conference. SATURDAV'8 HOUSE. Washington, April 2a In tho house Saturday Mr. Cannon reported the gen eral deficiency, the last appropriation bill, and Mr. Hilborn (Cal.) secured tho passage of a bill to establish a naval training school on Goat island, in San Francisco harbor. Eulogies were then paid to the memory of the late Repre sentative Coggswell (Pa.). Killed by IlurRUr. iNDlANAroLls, Ind., April 20. A brutal crime was committed in this city about 1:30 yesterday morning at 320 West Washington street -Lee Hirth, whoowned a grocery and saloon at tnat number, was shot through the heart by burglars who had broken In to the house from the rear. He died almost Instantly and the burglars suc ceeded in escaping. The men also tried to kill Hirth's wife. The mur dered man leaves four children. The Gumbtert Greed. A story is told of a young American couple who took in Monte Carlo in their wedding-tour. The pair had sot been there three hours when Edwin discovered, to his horror, that his An gelina had become a confirmed gam bler. Nothing could tear her away from the tables. When he refused to suppfy further funds, the lady prompt ly parted with some of the costliest jewels in her trousseau. Moreover, she became intimately acquainted with some of the bonarobas who fre quent the tables, and whose acquaint ance is anything but desirable for a bride. She cultivated tbem for the purpose of learning their "systems," by which she hoped to win a vast for tune. But Edwin noticed that they generally borrowed 100 francs from his bride after having expounded their "systems," and that they always for got to repay these loans. Such was the rancor engendered by tbe quarrels between the young couple that finally it came to an open fight, and the young lady decorated her husband's face with a number of long sciatches. This may seem preposterous to those who havo not been to Monte Carlo, but those who have, and who have no ticed the gambler's greed which shines In the faces of otherwise attractive and refined women, will not be sur prised at anything. San Francisco Argonaut Throwing the Ulicu. Discus-throw Ing was a later and more refined form of hurling tue stone. In Homeric times, and even atOlympIa, a stone or mass of iron was first used for the purpose. This was held by a leathern throng, swung in a circle, and hurled as far as possible. A cir cular or lenticular disk of bronze was used at least as early as the beginning of the fifth century. A standard w eight must, of course, be assumed for the great games. A discus now In the British museum, which seems to have been used, weighs 11 pounds 9 ounces; but whether this was tho stundard weight or not is not definitely known. The thrower took his stand upon a slight elevation of limited circumfer ence, where he could have a secure foothold, and was prevented from run ning; Mien, with a swing- of the arm and a corresponding movement of the whole body, lie hurled the discus as far as possible. The value of the body movement was recognized by the sculp tor juyorn in nts lamous statue "The Discobolus," and is understood by the modern athlete when he swings the hammer, or even when ho makes a drive at golf. As for records at discus throwing, Phayllus, again, is said to have thrown the discus 95 feet Prof. Allan Marquand, In Century. Spring Medicine Your blood la Snrinr l i... tefuUoflmpuritlw-thTLT?11 of the winter month,. B, of sleeping rooms, ImpurTaJ ings, factories and shor,. "'' . de heavy, Improper fods, failur kidneisatid liver .. . :Mfi kidncjsnud liver thm, i dltin.. importance that joi Pi lroorlvtrt j. " work thus thrust unnn ... . prime causes of ti, conditio T, tue utmon Important s ' ". b m ISFSTO Your Blood (7nur n MrtiAn .im.. .. . , ...-, ., ...tl wciiaer cones r.j tho tonic effect 0f cold bracm ,. 7? gone, your weak, thin, Unp,n l',5 will not furnish neocss P That tired feeling towot 4c open tho way for serious disease Zi j health or bieaWn? out or humS blOOd lloodR Sars.-lnnrlll, ...,' rel equalled. Thousands te?tifv ,, ?" -" u merits. Millions Spring Medicine. testify u" as tip). Get Hood 8,1355,, Hood's Sarsaparilla ne True Blood Purifier, nix , Prepared only by G I. Hood & Col. LotlUhlr Hood's Pillsfffa'aK. Terr Conroilnir. An 4,undcrground" train from White chapel was trundling along through the city bne dark and foggy day. An old Irish lady was a passenger, who was evidently movlncr her "hom" tied up in a ragged old apron, from an eastern to a western "dosshouse." "How far will I havo to go wid this?' she asked of a fellow-passenger, thrusting her ticket In his face. The affable man put on his spectacles. Latimer road, ma'aml Seven sta tions further on." The old ladv grunted incredulously. Some minutes passed, during which the old lady mused or dozed and took no thought of stoppages. Then she roused her ctf and addressed the same question to anotner passenger. "Four stations on,'' muttered this ono briefly. The Irish dame smiled bitterly, but kept ner own counsel lor awhile. Then she suddenly turned npon a traveler of her own sex "Now will vou tell mp. ma'am, how far am 01 from this sta- Hon?" "It's tho next station of all." said the other, smillnelv. Tho Irish woman cast around a glance of indig nant scorn. "An' which of yez am Oi to believe? sure ye all tell a different tale!" Household Words. The Greatest Medical Discoen oi me Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY, DONALD KENNEDY, of ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered In one of our connoa pasture weeds a remedy that cures tiy kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven huilti cases, and never failed excectintttocatts (both thunder humor.) Hehasnowint possession over two hundred certfeats of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from th first bottle, and a perfect cureisuarraitd when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it u shooting pains, like needks rasicf through them; the same with treLiwror Bowels. This fs caused by the ducts It ing stopped, and always disappears m a ween auer lawng re. iteaa uitiarel. If the stomach Is foul or bilisisitmll cause squeamish feelings at first No change of diet ever necessary. E:t the best you can get, and enough of it Dose, one tablespoonful in water attet time. Sold by all Druggists. A SHINING EXAMPLE of what maybe accomplished b) neururj ing devotion to a single purpose is seen in the history of the AkCormtt Harvesting Machine Co., Chicago. For 65 years they have simply teen building grain and grass-cutting ma chinery, and while there are probably tony manufacturers m this line, it is safe to say that the McCormirt Company builds one-third of a'l the binders, reapers and mowers usJ throughout the entire world. CTABK THEESEESiS All r5-1 M SUM ISTcotD ri iDii'draiii n sit i st.irt.iiiiiiit. &tmktimkium1 1 Ivi X Il.EKtlW.UlL 4 p Clippings. Superstitious faith in the unusual i well illustrated by those New York people who drank furiously of the water of an alleged "hot spring" that was discovered In the basement of a city building. It was afterward found that the water was merely diluted sew erage heated by accidental contact with steam pipes. Exchange. At a recent sale of the assets of a riding academy in New York city the saddle horses brouarht on nn n. of less than 830 apiece. This is said to do tne lowest price on record for horses of this description. . 4I write to let vou knnw ' how pleased I am with ' fjour sarsaparilla. I f felt vprvlri Uf nnrltfroil ' last moittli. and int .i 1 usuil.tocet 'sum- F Parllla. ana illd not know but Iltnrl a until I .rvfr ' home, when I found 1 had ' r 5 OUM. Anr nlp.ifi1 r nm ' fuat I cot our. fnr it rniHn ' ' HIS mrf-orl nnri itmni .n.nnr 1 .. - - oo-" -.-.-. -J..V..I. .vnjliv. i IU in 11 .a l..n( I Hat IfiPttnunrtf Ql.n. tAtrn ' 1 a hmiCA rrtim.l T . .t t.la ' ' h0USQ It full lnh ...! than ' IS fcpfc hftitlr -v..a.... t.n.lnr. 1 I . T ..w... UII43 .III UI1UV. tHKlnir for nnA tnin Tli. tt W.I4 I TOUr h.irfitiarllt . !... nvA n.n f fitl".?.11 to do it 1 shall alwayi ' I IIIIID. n..""1' iUUa. T.Vfc, ou, uiipuanr, ra , Dec. 'S, isjs. WEIGHTY WORDS FOR Ayer?s Sarsaparilla. ft Breast Gocoa. 4 Made by Walter Baker & Co., Ltd., f; Dorchester, Mass.. is "a perfect f type' of the highest order of excel-1 ; lence in manufacture." It costs less T than one cent a cup. lfl ffiSgS fc ltiSi-ciaijfiiMMt.rtM-,i-. , ,