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WATERBURY EVENING DEMOCRAT. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1900. i i ! l NATTGATTJCK NEWS " Commissioners Awarded Benefits and Damages Last Night. . The commissioners on benefits anil - damages to property owners on Main, Maple and Oak streets met yesterday and examined two witnesses, Mr Ward and Engineer Ham. Engineer Ham was first and lie thought that Mr would be damaged about $700. He thought that Mr Culver would be benefited bv the change about on Main street. $2IO on Maple street and $400 on Oak street. He consid ered him damaged about $2."0 on Main street. $300 on Oak street and ?l,u00 on Maple street. He did not consider the buildings, with the exception of Mr Culver's well, which he considered worth about $150. A. C. Turtle was requested to examine the property and liring in an estimate, after which the bearing adjourned until Saturday morning. During the hearing Mr Kennedy said this business, was all a farce and that the commissioners should examine the buildings them selves and then place valuation on them and have that regarded as their decision, and not be running up a bill on the borough which increases every time the commissioners meet. Notes. The state treasurer has paid over to Town Treasurer Wigmore the sum of $3,000, due the borough on the state road which was built by Fagan Bros on Main street the past summer. The Social Blizzard company played to a very small audience last night. To-night at the opera house the Wa terbury Vaudeville company will give a show, followed by a dance. A fair sized crowd attended the hash and pancake supper at the Meth odist church last night. The Y. M. C. I. will meet to-night All members are requested to be pre eut. as business of importance is to be transacted. All the factories in town, with the exception of the glove department of the .. I. K. Shoe company's plant, are to shut down Saturday night for ten days. The first ticket will be made on January 1', 1W1. There were eight knights of the road in Chief Smith's hotel last night. Some of the tramps that strike this town are very abusive to the house wives and sometimes go as far as to force themselves into the house. House wives should be careful not to allow these fellows much freedom. Eugene Sullivan, who attends Yale college, is home for the Christmas hol idays. Twins were born yesterday to Mr aril Mrs Victor Werner of liotchkiss street. The Eintraeht lodge. Xo 524, is to run a masquerade ball on Fridav, Jan nary 25, 1901. The schools will close to-morrow for the Christmas vacation. Court Unity, No 2. F. of A., at their annual meeting, held last evening, elected officers for the ensuing year as follows: C. R.. George Lambert; S. C. R.. George ratchet t: treasurer. W. J. Moore: P. S., W. I!. Gates: It. S.. Aaron French: S. W.. William Hughes: J. W.. William Smith; S. B.. John Stockton: J.. B. Thomas Taft: captain of guards, T. P. Reiley; phvsi cian. Dr Johnson. The Good Will Social club has been closed up by Sheriff Sweeney, who acted for J. I). Shea, to whom, it is re portetl, they owe a sum of money. There was no session of the bor ough court this morning. STORY OP A SLA Vis. To be bound hand and foot for years by the chains of disease ia the worst torm of slavery. George D. Williams, of Manchester, Mich, tells how such a slave was made free. He says: "Mv wife has been so hetpless for five j-ears that she could not turn over in bed alone. After using two bottles of Electric Bitters she is wonderfully im proved and able to do her o-n-n u'oi'k." This supreme remedy for female dis eases quickly cures nervousness, sleep lessness, melancholy, headache, back ache, fainting and dizzy spells. This miracle working medicine is a godsend to weak, sickly, run clown people. Every bottle guaranteed. Only 50 cents. Sold by G. L. Dexter & Co, Druggist. PenDiirlTsiiia Rail-nraya. HARRISBL'RG, Dec. 20. Major Isaac B. Brown, superintendent of the bureau of railways of Pennsylvania, has submitted to Governor Stone his annual report for the fiscal year ending June 30. The report shows a capitalization, in , eluding stock, bonds and current liabili ties, of $2,005,077,932, with assets of $3, 067,955,537, of the 443 steam railways operating in whole or in part in Pennsyl vania. These companies have 28,885 miles of road, own 11,747 locomotives, 10,700 passenger cars and 512.048 freight ears. On those roads there were employed during the year 307,737 per sons, to whom there was paid during that period $170.702.4tjS as compensation for services. The trains of these corpo rations traversed 257,777,050 miles and carried 205,939.884 passengers and 508, '995,338 tons of freight. y Strike Declared Off. WILKESBARRE. Pa., Dec. 20 The strike at the collieries of the Kingston Coal jcompacy has been declared off, and the 1,000 employees returned to work this morning. The officials of the com pany and the committee of strikers were in conference !1 day yesterday. The company agreed to pay all its employees semimonthly in the future and also allow the miners a check weighman of their own. The toppage and company store questions will be arbitrated in the near luture. The strikers demanded the dis charge of Foreman Thomas K. Morgan, but it was mutually agreed to refer the matter to the 'executive branch of . the United Mine Workers. It is understood the men are satisfied with the conces sions made by the company and will not insist on Morgan severing his connection ith the company. American Get Anotlier Contract. LONDON", Dec. 20. The Daily Chron icle announces that a contract, for 20,000 Ions of steel rails and fish plates for the Victorian railways has been placed with lae Illinois Steel company of Chicago. David Cltyr Neb, April 1, 1900. Genese Pure Food Co, Le Roy, N. Y.: Gentlemen: I must say in regard to GRAIN-O that there' is nothing better or healthier. We bavp used for .years. M brother was a great coffee drinker.' He was taken sick and the doctor said coffee was the cause of it and told us" to use GBAIN-O-, We got a package but did not like it at first, bat now would not be without it. ; Sly brother has been well ever since we rtarted to use it Yours truly, : LITTLE S0CH0R. WATEET0WK JOTTINGS Th&; Funeral of . Tamos .Currle' Will 'Be . Held To-morrow. James' Currie; aged 1G years, died yesterday morning shortly after - 2 o'clock. He had been sick but a short time and the physician in attendance did not think his case serious until Tuesday, when be began to sink. He was a member of the 1901 class of the center school and was well liked by his fellow pupils. The funeral will be held to-morrow from the residence of his mother on Watertown Heights. Notes. Mr Cocker of Waterville and Miss Annie Berge. a well known Watertown lady, wore married at Christ church yesterday. The ceremony was per formed by the llev H. N. Cunningham. Mr and Mrs Cocker will shortly take up their residence in Watertown. Tlie tickets for the coming fair of the Watertown fire department will go on sale this week. The tickets may be had from any of the members of the department. Yesterday destroyed the skating for' the present at least. A good hard freezing will put it in condition again. It is rumored that a young east side couple will be married about Christ mas. The grange will hold its regular meeting this evening. George Brown is raffliu cycle. off his bi- George Warner and family will move to Hotchkissville shortly. Wilmer Peck has taken the contract for the cutting of a large piece of timber near the home of Charles Bid Well. Mr Peck has built a. log cabin in the woods Where he will reside dur ing the winter. It's said that a beer man from Water bury makes weekly visits to our town. Those who have been asked why the beer man comes here say that he has yet many bottl:?s to collect which were brought before the raid of last sum mer. There are still several uncalled for advertized letters at the local post office. Services will be held in all the churches on Christmas eve. The schools will close to-morrow af (eiiion for the Christmas vacation of two weeks. In several of the rooms to-morrow a f term ion exercises appro priate for the occasion will be held. All the parents of the children are cor- uially invited to attend. Don't forget the meeting of the For esters to-morrow evening. The rooms of the W. A. C. have re cently been repaired and the club now has as good a room as any athletic club in the state. Mrs Henry Fitch of the southern part of town is quite sick. A couple of young fellows broke through the ice whil;.' skating on Hem inway's pond last night. Neither was hurt execpt for a good wetting. Charles Allen and Roger O'Donnell have accepted positions in Waterbury during Christmas week. John Taylor expects to use the farm of the late D. C. Calendar, purchased by him some time ago. forstock. Mr Taylor will begin the work of fixing the farm for that purpose in the spring. John Thomas O'Neill of this place is learing the blacksmith's trade in Wa terbury. Miss Rose Kielty has continued her duties with the Waterbury Clock Co as stenographer. Work on the new building near the barber shop of P.. N. Zeidler is pro gressing rapidly. It will be ready for raising in a few days. Did the slick Hebrew pedlar visit your place yesterday? The Hebrew in question came up from Waterbury and sold goods to our "farmers" for ten times their real value. We hope he will come again and find our people easy. There are a number of first class polo sports in town who attend every game that is played in Waterbury. 0AKVILLE HAPPENINGS The polo game between the Pequots and Hanky PankysTttesday night at the West End rink was a lively one. The score was S to '1 in favor of the Hanky Pauleys. A meting was held in All Saints' church yesterday afternoon and all ar rangements were made for the Christ mas festivities which will take place at the church. A number of our people went to Wa terbury last evening to do Christmas shopping. Friday afternoon there will be an entertainment in the school house on Newton Heights. There is 1o be a Christmas tree, and singing and recita tations by the children. Miss Susie Chambers of Cherry street, Water bury, is the teacher. There are many of the Rev E. M. Skagen's friends here who regret his departure and wish him to know that be has still friends left in this village. Friends sprang; up where he least ex pected them and 1ho.se whom h-i thought were his friends betrayed him. He did many good things in this vil lage which should be remembered, and we trust he will succeed in his new field of labar. The following lines mnv explain his case: There are things in this world That to rue look appalling, Some knock a man over. Then kick him for falling; Drag his once noble name Down deep in the mire, Till lie loses all courage And heart to aspire. RAY SMITH. "Serlons It'reicbt Wreefc. UTICA, N. Y., Dec. 20. An M. and M. freight train of 35 cars was wrecked Dtar Trenton, 10 miles from here, last night. Nine cars were derailed, and their contents blocked the tracks for several hours. Brakeman Walter D. Jordan of Utic-a was injm-ed. Government Censna Sustained. ' RALEIGH, N. C, Dec. 20. The police census of the city of Raleigh, taken on account of dissatisfaction with the result Of the government census.. has been com pleted. It shows 13.C74 people in the city limits, or only 31 more than, the gov ernment enumeration. Two Hundred Christians Killed. LONDON, Dec. 20. A dispatch to The Daily Express from Vienna , reports re cent Moslem excesses against the Chris tian population in the central provinces of Tnrkejv where i200 Christians .have been killed, w- - - j - . -. -, . r -. '"- . - Dead at .108. : HARVv'ICH, Mass., Dec. .20.4james A. Nichols, 108 years of age, died yes terday of old age. .He was a Welshman and had resided here for . many yeare. He leaves-three son and two daughter!. GIRL PLAYS TRAMP. ? V. Female Telegrapher Who Pays .No ' '( . Railroad Fares. . Traveled Xearlr 10,000 Miles la Tliree Months Knom How to Win Over Stubborn Conductor and Brakcmen. In the argot of the office she was "a bird." She wasn't a hobo in the gen eral meaning of the term, but the was very near in kin a railroad telegraph operator, out of a job, and on a hunt for another place. She had good letisr and a traveling- card from the O. R. T. (Order of Railway Telegraphers) and, in this instance, was 'panhandling"' her fellow railroaders for transporta tion. She was young and bright, and more than ordinarily pretty, wore a neat tailor-made suit and carried a little grip. When she was first seen by one of the operators in the big telegraph office at the Union depot, says the Chicago Inter Ocean, she was standing at tha counter where lay the register books find sheets, and was locking over one of the C. B. & Q. registers. Thinking sue jiau muue u iiiiiaive in iiiacuii ; the end where the regular query is j "How's Tan-Handle 4?" or "Is Alton C ' on time?" one of the operators at the dispatcher's table started for the coun ter to see what she wanted. He had hardly straightened up from his chair when a little myctie sign came from the woman, and the big operator, with a grin of surprise and pleasure on his face, hurried forward with out stretched hand. "Where you from?" he aUced. "Denver," replied the girl. "I lost my office there last spring, and I've been east trying to get another, but the east's no good, and I'm going back to see my old chief again and make a try to get back on the Rio Grande. Do you know any of these "Q' men who go out to-night?" "Yes, all of them, but they are a hard game to try to beat." "Well. I've ridden with some in the east that the boys said were tough, but I had no trouble." "If you wih, I'll try and help you, ii'h mill ' TACKLING THE CONDUCTOR. but the Alton or Milwaukee are easier than the 'Q.' " "The Alton's gone, and the other doesn't leave until 11 o'clock, and I don't want to wait so long." "Ail right ; come in and sit down. The 'Q.' man will be in to register in a few minutes," and then the little gate in the counter was opened and, seated be side an operating table near her new friend, her voice often drowned by the incessant clicks of the "sounders," she told the story of her travels. "As 1 told you," she said, "I lost out in March last, and I knew when I got my time, that there was no job in Den ver for me until' business picked up, so I got a pass over the Fort Worth & Denver to Fort Worth, and started out to hunt up a place. I did.n't find any job in Fort Worth or Dallas, so I we.nt east. I have been in 18 states and traveled a whole week about the At lantic coast, and I've seen a whole lot cf things western girls seldom get a chjnce to see, but I've found no work, and now I'm going back home and wait for something to turn up. I've plentj of money; but I don't like to pay rail road fare. I guess I'm getting to be too much of a hobo for that. I haven't paid out a dollar for fare since I start ed, and I've rode nearly 10,000 milss already." Just then a Chicago, Hurlington & Quiney conductor came into the office and started to the counter. "There's a 'Q.' man. Try him," said the operator. The old. fellow in b:ue and gold, had h&rdly completed the registry of his train before he heard at his elbow the old familiar query: "Do you show any favors to railroad people?-' This old passenger man had "turned down" lots of "brnkirs" and conduct ors, and lie whirled around, prepared to crush t his tourist with a sharp nega tive, but when he saw the pretty face and looked injo the sparkling eyes of the fair h-obo he hesitated. There is an oltiiadage that says: "The man who hesitates is lost." and in this case the truth of the axiom was amply verified. He shoved his fingers through his bristling gray hair, looked around a. momtnt. ;:nd finally said: "Not often. They watch us pretty close now." "But I've got a traveling card and good clearances, and I'm in a hurr3- to get 1 o Denver." "Let me see them," said the ticket puncher. He read the letters, asked the oper" ator if the card was all right, and, get ting an affirmative answer, said: "Well, I guess it's all right. Train's on the second traek." The operator put on 'his coat and.es sorled the girl out to the train, and in a few minutes ahe was on ler way to Denver. . . . ' Ffvl iff j L Makes the food more delicious and wholesome SENTENCED FOR LIFE. After Twenty-Nine Year and SeTen Month Two -Murderers Are - .'-' Captured and Punished. Nemesis seldom has tracked the evil doer longer or more persistently to the final reckoning than in the case of Mi chael Rigosa and his wife Adele, re cently on trial in Koine for the murder of the husband's parents almost 30 years ago. Adele Retrosi then was the wife of a rich Italian land-owner. He was older than she. their tastes were not in com mon, and he scarcely commanded her respect. Soon after marriage they be gan to drift, apart, so that one day when Michael Rigosa came to the old chateau the pretty Adele was open to lis flatteries. It was not long until all but the husband' saw the mutual at tachment that had sprung up between u V1 THEIR LAST CRIMS. He went, on, blinded, to his the two 3eath. Not so the parents of Rigosa. They objected to the elopement that had been planned, and which, the ardent son had imparted to them. There was a. stormy scene. Finally the parents threatened exposure. The son's mer curial temperament broke all bounds, and he plunged a stiletto into the hearts of both his father and his mother. Blood-maddened, he fled to the chateau where he told the story to the beaut? il Adele. They had gone so far; -..ney must go further. The rich hu' jand was in the house, but before t.e two guiltv ones stole awav from Jts shadow he lav fead, with the same it!-..... . .. . in.- i kj wkic cupiurea, ana sen tenced to death. They escaped to Con stantinople, and from there to New York, where they lived, for years. Finally, feeling that the Italian police had forgotten the crime, they returned to Naples boldly, and for 20 years they had lived there in sumptuous, style when an accident betrayed them. Aft er 30 years the- Italian penal code al lows immunity for a crime, but at the time of the arrest only 29 years and seven months had elapsed. So, imprisonment for life has come to them at last, the death penalty hav ing been abrogated in Italy several years ago. RODE ON CAR ROOF. A, Toong Woman's Experience In BeotlnK Her Way Home from Kew York. City. r The crew of a fast freight train on the Lehigh Valley railroad found a young woman on top of a box car a short distance west of Pattenburg, N. J., the other night. The woman was unable to see, having been blind ed by cimlers that flew from the stack of the locomotive drawing the. train. Crouched close to the top of the car, she was cliuging to the footboard. She was taken to the locomotive and brought to East on. When she reached that city Detective Miller, an officer in the employ of the railroad company, placed the woman under arrest, on the charge of illegal car riding. Excited from her terrible experi ence on the fast moving train, the prisoner was thought to be demented. It was mainly on that account that she. was taken to the loek-v.p. At the station house, after she had been per mitted to rest and wash the dirt from CLIMBED ON A FHEIGHT CAR. her face and eyes, the young woman gave an account of her trip. She said her home was near Allen town and that her name was Mame Steel. She had been to New York and had tired of the big city. Loug ing to get back home and not having money to pay her fare, she decided to steal a ride on a freight train, as she had often read of men and boys doing. Walking to Newark, she climbed on a freight car. She barely had time to tie her hat fast to the short sacque she wore when the train began. to move. In a moment or two it was traveling at a high rate oi speed. The- wind chilled her and nearly swept her from her perch, but she clung to the footboard. After having learned the story the railroad officials withdrew the charge against her, and she received a ticket to ier home. , 1 READY FOR A VOTE Discussion of Kay-Pauncefot Treaty Falls Flat. TREATY -WITH SPAIN TAKEN UP Boutelle Ketolntlon Passed by th Senate House Votes to Compel the Pennsylvania Railroad to Build Xew Depot at Washlnston. WASHINGTON, Dec. 20. Yester day's executive session of the senate dem onstrated that the discussion of the Hay Pauiicefote treaty by that body is prac tically exhausted and that the senate is ready for the vote, which has been fixed for today. When upon Senator Lodge's motion the doors were closed yesterday and he culled up the treaty, no senatoi evinced a desire to speak upon it. Without making any special request foi speakers Mr. Lodge asked the senate to take up the treaty with Spain providing for the cession to the United States of the Philippine Islands of Sibutu and Cagay an Zulu and their dependencies in con sideration of the payment to Spain ot $100,000. Objection to this request was made by several senators, iuc-luJing Messrs. Hoar. Wellington and Bacon, and Senator Lodge, with the hope of re moving the objections made, went into a brief explanation of the terms of the ne gotiations. Senator Hoar said he should like to have more time to consider tha question, and Senator Bacon said that notwith standing he is a member cf the commit tee on foreign relations he had not been present when a report upon the treaty was authorized. He therefore would ap preciate further opportunity to go over the document. Senator Wellington made unqualified objection. Accordingly the treaty was laid aside for the time being. Congress has -authorized the president to appoint Representative Charles A. Boutelle of Maine to be a captain of the United States navy on the retired list. Without a word of opposition, even of comment, the ssiate passed the house resolution authorizing Mr. Boutelle's re tirement. Aside from the transaction of some routine business and the passage of 71 private pension bills the senate did noth ing of importance in open session. The house at the end of a spirited con test extending over two days passed bills to compel the Pennsy'lvnuia . and Baltimore and Ohio railroads to abolish grade crossings, to alter their routes into the city and to change their terminal facilities. An amendment was placed upon the Pennsylvania bill to require the road to build a new station to cost not less than $1,500,000. TAKIHG THE TIME AT NOON. All Business of the Western Inlor Company Stona for Thre Annates Daily. Just before 12 o'clock each day al! business must be taken off the wires controlled by the Western Union com pany, and that means the absolute cessation of business along the main lines cf electric communication in the principal cities of America, says Pear son's Magazine. Three minutes before noon wire chiefs in each of the prin cipal cities and the towns and cities leading to and from their large sis ters cease sending or receiving- mes sages, no matter how important they may be, and devote themselves to switching on wires in such a way as to make an unbroken circuit of com munication from Washington around the uttermost boundaries of the United States. This is called an "un broken national circuit." Thus a smooth track is made along which the electric message may flash encom passing the union and announcing the time of day. Ten seconds before the time bell strikes comes another si lence, and then a mighty throb, a titanic heartbeat from the foremost factor in modern commerce, and an electric current pulsates from the At lantic to the Pacific, from Gotham to ! the golden gate, announcing the fact I that the sun has passed over tha I seventy-fifth meridian and it is noon I at Washington. OUR VAST MINERAL . RICHES. oarlj- a Tliousnnd Millions In Value Tnlien from the Earth, Vearly. A chart published by the geological survey gives a summary of the min eral products of the United States for the past, ten years. The aggregate values have increased by more than one-half in that period and the fig ures for S'J9 are greater than in any previous year, fooling up the enor mous total of $970,000,000.', The value of the metallic products of the year is given at $527,218,084 and of the nonmetallic at $447,790, S62. The latter class includes, of course, the coals $1G8,COO.UOO in bituminous and $SS,COC,000 in Pennsylvania anthracite $64,600,000 in petroleum. $20,000,000 worth of natural gas and large value in stone, brick clay and cement, with various other minerals. Of the metals our pig iron is worth almost as much as all others together, the'valuc of last year's product being given at $245X03,000. Copper comes next, worth $104,000,00, and the $71, 000,000 in gold is third. The market, value of the silver pi-odueed in 1S99 was about $33X00,000 and the lead and zinc, together were worth about as much. Quicksilver, aluminum, anti mony, nickel and plantinum are the other metals that figure in the table. Jlasclej and II rain. In one of his recent lectures at Clark University, Prof. Angelo Mosso, of Turin, averred that "Physical edu cation and gymnastics serve not only for the development of the muscles, but for that of the brain as well." It is becoming evident, he said, that as much time should be devoted to muscular exercise as to intellectual exercise, and children should begin reading and writing only after they are nine years old. Muscular fatigue exhibits phenomena identical with intellectual fatigue. Nerve cells show on the average every ten seconds a tend ency to rest. It is probable that only part of the brain is active at a time; the various parts relieve each other. The more mobile any animal's extrem ities are the more intelligent, other things being" gqual, he says. , An Aflean's Idea of Snow. An African who had visited England described inovr- as "rain gone to sleep.'' ' - - - : The faintest echo comes at hrst. It's a strange warning- not heard, but felt. Day by day it increases if you heed it not. -The back sounds the note of trouble. The aches and pains and lameness of the back Are warnings from the kidneys. Kidneys have too much to do. They're overtaxed with work. Nature intends that you should know this. - The backache warning often saves a life. Those who listen to it hasten to relieve the kindne; ' There is only one sure way to cure sick kidneys. Waterbury people are learning how, Learning: that DOAN'S KIDXEY PILLS never fail. Here's another Waterbury case to prove it: Mrs Thomas W. .Iiuld of GOO North Main street, says: "For 23 years I suffered from kidney complaint and female trouble, as some call it. I gave many medicines a trial, but received very 1'itM.e help. My attention was directed to Doau's Kidney Pills and I pro cured a box at II. W. Lake's drug store. They relieved my back ache, which was very painful, and greatly beuefited me otherwise. They Cid me more good than anything I ever took, and I can confi dently recommend them." All druggists sell DOAX'S KIDNEY PILLS. Remember the name o; DOAN'S and take no substitute. "'' ' Price 50 cents per box. Fostcr-Aliiburn Co., F.ufi'alo, N. Y., Sole Prop's. ROOSTER TRANSFORMED. Once It Crowed and Wns a Great FltfUtcr, Xow It Lays Egs liegtttarly. There is in Edgewater. the propertv o one John Marshall, a former city policeman, a rooster chat is not a roos ter or, better, a rooster that was once a rooster, but is now a hen. a regular common everyday egg-laying hen, re ports a Chicago exchange. In its younger days this bird wis a prize winning game cock, on exhibition at the Springfield state fair, where it cap tured the prize. Marshall was very much struck with the qualities of the bird and purchased it. He brouaht it to Chicago and was soon the object of all his neighbors' wrath because the fighting rooster killed all the cocks in the neighborhood. It became necessary for him to lock rhe bird up and after it had been cap tive for several months Marshall no ticed that the tail of his pet had dis appeared. In a few weeks the rooster "lost his spurs and his comb, and later his feathers began to change color. Experts were called in aud pronounced the case a mystery. Marshall thought he had a wonder 3nd locked the rooster in his basement for safe keeping. One morning he was astonished 1o find an egg-in the cellar. He could not believe that the rooster had laid the egg, but thought some of his friends had put it there for a joke. Determined to solve the case, lie se creted himself in the cellar one night and watched the rooster lay an egtr. Now he declares that he owns one of the wonders of the world. -Vegetable Preparalioiifor As -similat'mg tiieFoodandReguIa ling the Stomachs ardBowels of Promotes Digeslion.Cheerfur ness andRest.Gontains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral. KotNahcotic. ntape afOteHrSAMl'El.PITCilKit Arhtll, SatU- Citviiitui Sugar lizatBtyresn. Flavor. m A perfect Remedy forConslipa Fion , Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions ,Feverish ness end Loss of Sleep. Tac Simile Stgnalure cf NEW YORK. I EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. 3iJp: The Smith Premier Typewriter Co., New York Office 337 Broadway; New Haven Office 2s Center Street; Hartford Office Sa Pearl Street. No e. INVENTED EY A WOMAN." The Swindle and Loom Were Ortfl. n-Hj- Designed hyaCklK.es AVorLer, All women arc not degraced in Chita. Witness the dowager empress, who rose, by the force of her own will, from the position c z a slave to that of ruler over the mist populous i-ction on tea "lobe. Notwithsrar.ciug the prejudice against the se:: among the Mongols w omen cccsMonoUy break through tho barriers and achieve cils'.inetion. In Shanghai, the metropolis of -the most coveted section of that vast em pire, is a temple erected in honor of Huang, a woman deiiied for her great service to her people, and Chinese men do not disdain to worship before her image. Centuries ago an elderly lady of good family and condition, who had hitherto lived in the region of Kwan-Tuns-, re moved to Wu-Ni-Ching, near Shang hai, where he spent the remainder of her life. Since the lady happened to be Kuang. this simple event revolution ized the province in which she made her home. It was a great revolution, yet the most conservative will not ac cuse her of having left "woman's sphere." since her instruments were" those associated with countless wom en, from'' Penelope, the terrible Fates, and the "virtuous woman" of Solomon's praise, down to our own grandmothers the spindle and the loom. Cotton fabrics have been used to some extent in China for 4,C0O years, but the cotton interest, now so im portant, received its first real impetus about oOO years ago. For Infants and Children. The Kind Yi Always B Bears the m Havs ought Signature of flirty Years THC CCNTAUK COMPANY, NEWTOMR CITY. DIPLOMA OF THE GRAND A PKI IX. (HIGHEST POSSIBLE AWARD). WAS WON EX THE SMITH TREMIEU - TYPEWEITEi: AT THE TARIS EXPOSITION. THIS AWARD WAS MADE EX AN INTERNATIONAL . JURY OF 25 MEMBERS. AND IN COMPETITION WITH 20 OTHER TYPEWRITERS, AW a Use If f J For Over