ay . JLfl ' I lAWtMERS I ClIAKQKfl which are . ftWf A F 1 llt 'v'A A t 1 ' " ( W ta certain to come In iM 1MSmV 1 l - 5 - UVW VJ tbo members.,.,, of f fSlk 1' J V J" A ) ' W fi- the United States 'vJiVm I SLTSSV ' f 'l ' W X . Senate next March . .' f. 1 iM. - j U ' ,r'Aw. NbkWfk wiH involve much vA. ... :f . .'.-' fSSSsvS IA ' ? A'S A U il.-f A ) ) disappearance of old fTS-Ll Ki '' ' ' TSTl J2&cZi'YZ3r iNAyces and the ap- S J1 senate of tho United 'kC' JSSSi ate8 is a !aw unto B lib,-a in mailers of procedure, und so lt 'TSfv. ' ' -1 ? ' it la. The senate does thing as no 4 iV l bther legislative body In the world II ' fJ 'U.' ' 'fiS. C.TV k' V, hoes them. The senators pride them- V- "V CHV ; ll teives upon the dignity of their body rMiVJljO4 land they take no little pride appar- $ Nj4 VribJl ll tently in the un.quencss of the rule- lylWy1, fejl7 J which govern them aud In the ac- "5S5i-fSt Vt?4V p1 Upted method of doing things with- MW . f4 but absolute governing regulation. "-T -fc? VJ i' ""A ---srrr " ' ill ":i7 111- lii Urs't'v-4 .;Ait rr ssncsir- of- Over in the house members draw for Beats. A tnan Just elected Is as likely to get a first-class beat as a man who has been In the service of the kiouse for years. The leader of the majority and Ihe leader of the minority and the oldest mem ber in point of service in the hall are allowed to Select their own seats. After they have made their choice all is a lottery. In the senate the thing Is different. A newly elected member of Ihe upper house take3 such a scat as ho can find Vacant, and his first duty to himself Is to "file" on the seat of some other member so that he may feet It when the other member dies or retires. I At times there are five or six tilings' tor me name seat. ror instance, it some senator nasi a hoice seat and he is aged and in the ordinary course or mines mav be expected to die soon, nis Beat is certain to be in renuest by several sena- ors provided that those lower on the list of ap plicants think that those above them like the holder of the seat himself, are likely to die. or to be retired quickly from the service by their constituents. Some of the old senators do not like the way In which the younger members file for their eats. Then there are some senators who are hot old who do not like to feel that others think that their seats soon are to be vacated. When b senator in the prime of life finds that his seat lias heen "filed" on he takes it as an Intimation that the senator who does the filing thinks that the seat's occupant is nearlng the end of his itether because his state has disapproved of his services, or that the political party opposing the tone of which he Is a member Is likely soon to become In the ascendant. Senator Dolllver, who died recently, had one of the best seats In the senate chamber, a com manding place from which he could always catch the eye of the presiding officer. The Iowan'a successor In the senate will not get his predeces sor's seat, for notwithstanding the fact that Mr. Dolllver was apparently In good health and was only fifty-two years old, thrre were three appli cations on file for his seat when he should va cate It. Of course it must be understood that Ithe seats of the Republicans and those of the ilVniocrats are separated and that no man of one !party ever files an application for the scat of a knan of the other party. ' Senator Heveridge of Indiana was In the upper louse for years before he succeeded In getting a ifieat to his liking. Early In his service he had (filed an application for the seat occupied by Senator Spooner of Wisconsin, a vigorous man lth apparently a iong lease of earthly and sena torial life ahead of him. Unexpectedly Senator fapooner resigned, and Beverldge moved to what hs perhaps the best seat In the house, one on the (middle aisle midway between the front and rear kf the chamber. J Klihu Uoot, who Is accounted one of the fore most men In the upper house In point of ability. Is obliged to Bit In what la known as the "Chero kee Strip." There are so many Republicans in the present senate that tliey more than fill the eats allotted to the majority on the left side of the center aisle. There are not eno-igh Demo crats to fill the seats ullolted to them. The va na:it Democratic seats are away uroun 1 near the wall to the extreme right of the vko -president, who has to turn his head to see the seats of the occupants. In this "Cherokee Strip" sit? tha "overflow" Republicans and one of them is Kliriu Root. Iiefore the new senate office building wa completed It was the effort of the senate to pro viso a separate room In the Capitol for each sen ator. All of these rooms were called eommlttre rooms, but In order to dignify them as such it was neces sary to create sev eral committee) which really were nothing more than committees In name, for they Beldom held meetings and It Is said that In one or two cases no rueet lngs ever have been held. The sen ators as they were assigned to rooms were made chair men of the commit tees which were sup posed to meet In the assigned chambers. This gave the minority sena tors chairmanships, but it can bo taken for grant ed that the majority always saw to It that the committees presided over by minority men were not of a kind to havo any great influence on legis lation. Now that the senate office building Is occupied and each senator ha3 a general office, a private office, a reception room and a bath, it Is not nec essary to provide separate rooms in the Capitol for all the upper house members. So It Is that before long it may be that the farce of naming committees which never have anything to do may be done away with. Here is a list of some of the practicaily use less committees of the senate: "Transportation and sale of meat products;" "Revolutionary claims;" "Transportation rates to the seaboard;" "Investigate trespass upon Indian lands;" and last. "Disposition of useless papers in the execu tive departments." There are to be many changes in committee chairmanships in March next and in fact there will have to be a general shaking up in the committee memberships as a result of changes In the senate's roll call. Senator Dolllver who died was the chairman of the committee on ag riculture and forestry, one of the most im portant subsidiary bodies of the United States senate. Senator Frances E. Warren of Wyoming Is the ranking member of the committee now that Senator Dolllver Is dead, but Warren is the chairman of the committee on military affairs, a position which he would prefer to hold to that of the chairmanship of the agricultural body. No member holds two important chairs and so some one besides Senator Warren muBt be selected to take Mr. Dolllver's place at the head of the com mittee which looks after the bills In which the farmers of the country and the forest enthusiasts are particularly interested. . Eugene Hale of Maine will retire In March. He is at the head of the committee on appropria tions, a position which next to the chieftainship of the committee on finance is the most Impor tant chairmanship in the gift of the senate. No body knows yet who will succeed Mr. Hale as committee chief, but It can be taken for granted that If the Republicans hold control of the sen ate and the so-called regulars hold control of the Republicans, Mr. Hale will be succeeded by a man of what in these days the country is given to call the old school of Republican thought. Senator Nelson W. Aldrlch of Rhode Island, the Republican leader In the senate, Is the chairman of the committee on finance, which corresponds to the committee on ways and means of the house of representatives. It was the committee on finance which considered the Payre-Aldrlch tariff bill and which reported it to the Henate. Every bill which has to do with the raising of revenue goes to Mr. Aldrich's committee. Under the constitution all such revenue measures must originate In the house of representatives, but frequently the United States senate takes house bills and strikes out everything In them except the enacting dame, thus gets around the con stitutional question, and frame.- revenue bills much as It wishes to. Of course these hills hive to go back to the house for agreement, hut the senate despite constitutional inhibition does Just about ns much original work in revenue meas ures as the house Itself Who Is going to succeed Nelson W. Aid rich as chairman of tbo most powerful committee In the senate of the United States? Nobody Kiiowb. Sen-itor .lulliis ('. I'.urrowH of Michigan ranks next to Mr. Aldrlch on the finance committee and in the natural order of things he would succeed to Mr. Aldrich's place as finance chair man. The difficulty Is thnt Mr. Rur rows has been defeated in the pri maries for re-election to the senate and like Mr. Aldrlch ho Is to retire in March. Roles Tenrose of Pennsyl vania comes next on this all power ful body, but It Is more than whis pered that chairmanship preferment ia not to be given to Mr. Penrose. Next In order conies Eugene Hale of Maine, who Is to retire in March, and thus is out vf consideration. Then comes Shelby M. Cullom of Illinois, w ho will not accept the chairmanship under any circumstances, for his age preciuaes nis uuuei mniuj hard work connected with It. No one knows yet who will succeed the powerful Senator Aldrlch of Rhode Island as the chief of the finance committee, a position which carries with It ordinarily the Re publican leadership of the Benate of the United States. A good deal of historic Interest centers In some of the committee rooms of the senate. The pres ent senate wing of the Capitol was not completed un til the year 1S59, but there are several committee rooms still located in the old part of the great build ing. Even in the new section there are two or three rooms which have witnessed stirring scenes. In the room of the committee on territories for in stance, a body of which Senator Heveridge of In diana Is the chairman, there were held the hearings on the Kansas-Nebraska bill- and on other "free or slave soil state" matters. In the room of the com mittee on privileges and elections, of which Sena tor Ilurrows of Michigan is the chairman, many senators have had what might be called grand jury hearings on the question of their right to their seats. The Utah cases have been heard here, and It was here that Senator W. A. Clark of Montana ap peared through hlB counsel to try to prove that ho did not. use wrongful means to secure his seat in the senate. In the room of the committee on military af fairs hundreds upon hundreds of problems were worked out during the days of the civil war. Since the United States has become a world power Sena tor Henry Cabot Lodge, chairman of the commit tee on the Philippines, has had many puzzling questions on bis hands, and the hearings which have been held In this room at times have at tracted crowds and nearly always have been of deep Interest. In the Philippines room the "antl lmperiallsts" have argued on behalf of Indepen dence for the lilipplno, and there have been met in debate by men who have maintained that the day of liberty for the "little brown brother" must be postponed until he Is qualified for Its privi leges. Memories of men pass quickly. While the United States government as a government Is only M- MAD KING OTTO'S LIFE Some remarkable details relating to the mad King Otto of Bavaria are puhllshod from a dip lomatic source by the Olornale d'ltalla, the London Chronicle says. Though shut up for forty years In castles, now at the Castle Furstenrled, and though sixty-two years of age. Otto Is still a fine, handsome figure, with a magnificent beard and flowing gray locks. The stories about his periodical fits of fury are quite untrue. His court Is presided over by Mar shal Ilaron Redwiz apd consists of a few trusty gentry belonging to the most ancient families of the Bavarian aristocracy. King Otto suffers terriby from Insomnia and oft en Bits up In bed half the night staring toward the door, as If expecting somebody to enter. He, how ever, rises punctually every morning at 8 and mute ly allows himself to be dressed by his valet. He has a holy horror of soap and water, and of hay ing his hair and nails cut, so that servants have to await patiently a favorable day for these opera tions, when the poor patient Is In a state of com plete apathy. King Otto smokes incredible quan tities of cigarettes and Is always puffing away saye when he Is absorbed In his favorite pastime of studying the operatic music of his pet composer, Verdi. Often he causes the castle to resound all day long with the melodies of "Rigoletto." The diplomat relates that the first symptom of brain decay In the young prince, till then so bright, forceful and courageous, was manifested during the Franco-German war. Just before the selgo of Paris Kaiser William summoned him to the headquarters of the general staff and kept him un der observation, In company with Bismarck and Moltke, the reason being that King Otto had called out a squad of cavalry and ordered them to charge straight at a ftone wall, which, ho Inslsfr'd, was a body of the enen y's Infantry. Ho bcfan preaching everywhere the stern neces sity of concluding peace with France at any prlci. Soon after Intercepted letters were brought to the Emperor William which the Bavarian prince had heen dispatching secretly to the enemy. It was then that the old kaiser sadly sent for the demented prince, decorated him with the order of the Iron cross for Birvlce rendered In the campaign and packed him off under a medical escort for a pleas ure trip In Spain and Italy. about 111 years old, few men can be found today to Identify without look ing at the names, the pictures and the busts of men high In official gov ernment position or of great fame in their time In contemporary history. In the senate chamber placed In niches about tho gallery walls are busts of tho vice-presidents of the United States. Only the guides of the Capitol who have their lessons letters proof, ran tell the names of those men without reference to the prlntod list or tho printed Inscriptions. When the house cleaning days were over only a season ago two pictures were replaced on the walls of tho corridor o( the senate. One of them was u picture of Patrick Henry and the other was that of Thomas Jef ferson. For weeks the fact that Jef ferson's picture Iirs been labeled Patrick Henry and Patrick Henry's had been labeled Thomas Jefferson wont undetected. Finally a visitor noticed the error, called attention io It and had the change made. Perhaps the most striking picture In the senate corridors Is that which shows Commodore Perry standing .'n the row boat to which he went from bis sinking flag ship Lawrence to the ship Niagara at the battle of Lake Erie. Perry Is pictured erect In tae boat while a small boy evidently a "mldKhlp-mlte." also standing tryt)g to pull the Commodore down to a seat so that he will bo less exposed to the furious rain of the shot of '.he enemy. The boy who Is trying to in duce the commodore to take the nec essary precaution to save his life wa a nephew of the great sailor, and It was he who Inter opened the ports of Japan to the commerce of '.he world. So It is that In the painting are the portraits of two Porrys, both of whom are famous In tho naval n nals of the United States. Curari a Queer Poison I Curarl. the vegetable poison w.h which the Indians of the upper Ami r,on tip their hunting arrows, remains a mystery In its composition after a hundred years of Investigation by sci entists. The Indiana, will sell It for Its weight In silver, but will not reveal the plants from which It la derlvfld. Not long ago a professor In a German university was sent to the Amaon wilderness for the express purpose of discovering the secret, for curarl, Vjr urarl, as It is otherwise called, Is ndw thought to be of grent value In mctM clne. The professor, lived two years In Indian villages, and whllo he was permitted to witness the boiling of the "witches' broth," which lasted sev 'eral days, he could not tell what plants went Into the brew. Returning from his baffled quest down the Ama zon with a quantity of the poison, the professor was met by another traveler, Dewey Austin Cobb, who had got pos session of a native blowgun. The lat ter tells In the National Geographic Magazine how he put some of the pro feasor's curarl on some of his blowgun arrows, which are like toothpicks feathered with cotton, and tried It on a buck deer In the forest. "After a deliberate -aim our hunter fired," says Mr. Cobb, "If I may ubs such a word for the little puff, scarce ly heard by us, and entirely Inaudible above the rustling corn leaves at the distance of the deer. The animal gave a slight start as it felt the prick of the arrow on Its flank and turned part ly around, sniffing the air for a Bcent, and looking about as If searching for the Insect that had bitten or stung It. Detecting nothing. It stood still and unalarmed. At the end of a minute, or a minute and a half at most. Its head dropped a little, as If tt was sleepy. "When the hunter saw this he arose and stepped out In plain sight. The deer turned his head and looked at him, and moved forward, not away from him, a few steps, and stopped. It showed no fear, but simply curiosity. After another minute the professor and I arose, and all three walked quietly to within reach of It. It made no movement to run away, but watch ed us Intently, and shifted Its position a little. Its movements seemed per fectly easy and natural. Absence of fear was the only observable change, until at the end of three minutes more; then It lay down, not falling, bui as naturally as a cow or cheep when ready for sleep. "We all approached Its side, and the hunter laid a hand on Its shoulder. It looked up at him, but showed no re sentment or fear. Even Its breathing seemed easy and natural, which sur prised me, as I had heard that death resulted from paralysis of the lunfi when caused by urarl." Homo Town 3- E2c!ps -E BOOMING THE HOME TOWN Cltltens Must Work Unceasingly and Ptrsittentty to Build up Their City. The reason why some towns grow Is because there are men of push and energy In It who are not afraid to spend their time and money to boom their town. They erett substantial buildings, organize stock companies and establish factories, secure rail roads, work for public Improvements, and use every means In their power to locate people In their city. Wher ever they are, they tell of the ad vantages of their city; they write about them In every letter, they send circulars and newspapers to all they think they can get to visit the city, and when anyone visits them, treat hJm so kindly that he falls In love with them and their city at once. It Is enterprise and everyone pulling together that makes a progressive town, and don't let the fact escape your memory. To hear every person saying some thing pleasant about Its people and Its Interests Is the surest, quickest way to make a town attractive to a stranger. Ono of the best ways In which to make a town attractive with that sort of attraction that will draw other icople to It Is for every man and woman to have a pleasant word for the people and the town generally. Talk up your town If you would have It do well. Talk up your town If you would have others come to you. Talk up your town If you feel an Interest In It, and would have Its people feel an interest In It, and in you. There Is no better way to do It. And many a time one little word of unpleasant reference to something thnt does not exactly suit you, and does not particularly concern you for that matter, will turn some good man's Influence away from your town and oven drive him away. At your own fireside talk up your town. Among your neighbors talk up your town. The right kind of talk Is the most potent agency ever set In mo tion for helping your town. Welling' ton (Col.) Sun. ALWAYS SOMETHING TO DO Civic Improvement Must Not Be Al lowed to Become Spas modic, Civic improvement, even in a small village or really rural community, should mean more than an annual arousal (we almost wrote "carousal") of civic life and pride. A live society should be ever on the alert, and ac complish something each month In the year. The meeting (the directors at least) once or twice a month through Out the years of tholr existence. Noth ing worthy can be accomplished with out well-directed, zealous co-operation and such civic spirit does not work by annual or semi-annual spasms of awakening; it muBt be kept alive and fostered by constant activity. Have a decided aim a goal toward which you fight, step by step. Do not yield or olse an inch but see to it that all that is gained Is well preserved and pro tected before taking up a new task. Such a well-ordered or programmed society will be constantly adding to its numbers so that though the tasks multiply as you advance, the up-keep of territory conquered, will be easy through the accretion of a correspond ing membership. Let each of our so cieties determine to accomplish more and better work during the coming year. PESSIMIST RAISES A WAIL incidental' Gives a Hard Jolt te Time-Honored Conception of Now England Thanksgiving. "Oh, yes; the New Englandors make a great time of Thanksgiving," said the insurance man as the subject was under discussion. "Yes, they are great on Thanksgiving." "All the relatives gather for a big dinner, don't they?" was asked. "Yes. My Uncle Ben, ot In Ver mont, gathered thirty of os at Dia house last Thanksgiving. " "What a visit you tiust have had!" "Oh. es." "And the banquet. 1 can picture It." "Can you?" "There was turkey, goose, duck. chicken, roast pig and sparerlb. There was mince pie, pumpkin pie and cider. There was a big cottage pudding and cranberry sance. Ah, it must have been a royal feast." "Yes, It was." dryly replied the In- turance man. My Uncle Ben killed eff four old roosters, his wife made four or five apple pies, and stewed up a peck of prunes, and we sat down to tho feast." "But but If. was Thanksgiving." "Sure, Mike. If it hadn't been we fiouldn't have got the prunes." "And and that was all?" "All except that after dinner mr Uncle Ben took up a collection for the heathen, nnO we chipped In 50 cents apiece. My Uncle Ben was the heathen, yon knot. Oh, yes New England Thanksgiving. I've been there." Putting In the Time. A gentleman was engaging a gen eral man and telling him what he wanted him to do. "You will have to clean the windows and the boots and the knives and go messages, chop wood, cut short grass, mind the horse and pony, look after the garden and koep the house supplied with vege tables and do any odd Job that Is re quired and If suitable you will get ten shillings a week." "Is there any clay rn the garden?" asked the man. "What makes you ask that?" asked the gentleman. "I was thinking I could make brick In my spare time," said the man. Gaunt House of "Vanity Fair." Writing on the original of Gaunt House In Thackeray's first novel, "vanity rair." c. Van Noorden con eludes that this was Harcourt House, Cavendish Square, and not, as most commentators Incline to believe, eith er Hertford House, Manchester Square, or Lansdowne House, Berke. ley Square. Harcourt House, says Mr. Van Noorden, corresponds almost ex actly with the novelist's description in "Vanity Fair." 'The vast hall, tho great gateway, etc., all aro here, whllo the equestrian stntuu resolves itself Into that of tho Duke of Cumberland, tho 'Butcher' of Culloden, which was removed In 18HS ostensibly to bo recast, but has never reappeared. This figure appears In inacKeiays own illustration of tho arrest of Capt. Crawley when leavln Gaunt House, affording another proof of tho correctness of thu localization Harcourt House has now given way to a block of residential fiats." London Graphic. It Was An Unequal Afatch A Story Which Proves That the Odor of Jenks' Car Was Stronger Than That of a Polecat. "Polecats," said the suburbanite, "are animals which I do not at all mind, that Is, when they keep their distance and I keep mine. In fact. I think there Is something er sugges llev and almost romantic In the far .or odor. Especially on moonlight nights, toward autumn. I really mean It," lm went on ns his friend smiled incredulously, 'but that Isn't what we wern speaklnij about. You said you could never surprise a polecat because he always got there first, so to speak. But just listen. "This happened on an autumn night, too," said the advocate of the wood pussy "I wad riding with Jenks In KiU ne nomot)lle last fall Its ou the Junkheap now. Jenks liked to rldo nt liiKbt, and as that wbb about the only time 1 could go, he used to take me and i ft wife a good deal. "One nlglit we were coming homo down Aubon road, when all of a sud den, sitting In tho middle of tho high-v-y right ahead of us, directly vnder tlrt glare of the street light, we aw, scratching Its left ear with Its foot, a ,ilce little polecat." "O my," began his friend, "you don't really" "Absolutely true story," said the other. "The wind was against us, and the little chap didn't hear. Anyway, tills is what happened. Jenks was going so fast you know there Is a ten-tnllo limit on Auhon rood that he couldn't ntop In time. The little beaBt never moved. We shot straight over It, and prepared to stop our noses. But Imagine our surprise! When we got by we looked back, and saw that Idiotic little chap just concluding Ito scratching operations. We stopped, and the squeak of the brakes weke It up to stern reality. It stopped Old Pete's Little Joke. Foolish questions and funny answer were under discussion in the Trenton avenue and Dauphin street police sta tion the other day, and after listening for a while to come amusing Instances, Sergeant McCay told the fallowing: "Old Pete Flood was the attendant In the Franklin cemetery some year ago, and It became the ctretom to ask him how business was, Just to hear his reply. It came in a heavy base voice; " 'Ain't burled a living soul today.' " Philadelphia Times. Ancient City Modernized. Tarsus, the ancient city in Asia Ml nor, where tbo apostle Paul was born, Is now illuminated by electricity. The power Is taken from the Cytinus river. There are now In Tarsus 450 electric street lights and about 600 Incandes cent lights for private tree. The coldblooded are hotheaded when you hit their pride. VERY DECEMNQ. Trees of French Cities. One of the chief beauties of the larger French cities, and second only In their edifice and monuments, are the trees. The almost Interminable vistas of chestnuts and acacias stretching along the broad and well paved avenues as far as the eye can reach, their bending branches almost touching ono another In an endless arch of verdure, form not only a de lightful perspective for the eye, but serve to add beauty to cities already beautiful, and grace and symmetry to whatever might be harsh and forbid ding. This, however, Is not the re sult of nature's handiwork alone, for science and art have lent their aid. The planting, as well as the mainte nance, of the trees In French clllos Is an item of no little Importance In the annual budget prepared by the muni cipal council, which does not look upon the preservation as of less con sequence than the repairing of the roadways or tbo lighting of the streets. Novel Idea for Boosting City. The suggestion has been mado by Prof. Joslah Morse of Nashville. Tenn., that a clearing house of ideas for Nashville's advancement be estab lished. The suggestion Is somewhat novel In the way of boosting titles and Is meeting with comment and ap preclutlon. Mero Coincidence. A farmer of Washington county, Maryland, who had had many chick ens stolen, set a gun In the chicken bouse that would be discharged the minute the door was opened. The other night the gun was discharged and the next day three men in 1 1 :i ijerstown wero reported con fine J to heir homes by "rheumatism." scratching and skipped Into tho bush es. Now, the fact that It hurbored no er resentment toward us has al ways Inclined me to " bliucKs: exclaimed IIio other. "If you want to know the real reason why It skipped, I'll tell you. Jenks's wat a gasoline car, wasi't It? Well, then " "You're quite right." said the story teller, suddenly, "And as I said at the start, I never minded the odor aa much as I do some other er smells " Youth's Companion DldSlot Knew Him. Wadtlghter (who has just been asked for the price of n night's lodg lug) 1 wish those beggars would leave me alone! Mclntimntte They would if they knew you ns well as I do. Healthy New Englard. New Zealand bas about the lowest death rate In the world. Call for Gentleness. The sick mind cannot beat' thing harsh. Ovid any The Preacher We tried a phono. graph choir. The Sexton What success T The Preacher Fine. Nobody knew the difference till a deacon went to the loft to take up the collection. MIX THIS FOR RHEOMATISM Easily Prepared and Inexpensive and Really Does the Work, Says Noted Authority. Thousands of men and women who have felt the sting and torture of that dread disease. Rheumatism, which la no respecter of age, persons, sex. color or rank, will be interested to know that It is one of the easiest af flictions of the human body to con quer. Medical science bas proven it not a distinct disease in itself, but a symptom caused by Inactive kidneys. Rheumatism is uric acid In the blood and other waste products of the sys tem which should be filtered and strained out In tho form of urine. The function of tho kidneys is to sift these poisons and acids out and keep the blood clean and pure. The kidney however, are of spongo-llke substance, the holes or pores of which will somtr tliues, either from overwork, cold or exposure becomo clogged, and falling In their function of eliminating these poisons from the blood, they remain In the veins, decompose and settling about the joints nud muscles, cause the untold suffering and pain of rheu matism and backache, often prodncing complications of bladder find urinary disease, and general woaknesa. The followirs sivj.'o prescription la said to -hIIivo the t cases of rheumi dm becrtvre t f 's cirect ac tion up. die blc.oij h.-..'. kidneys, re lieving, too. tho incst revere forms of bladder and urinary troubles: Fluid Extract Dnndellon, one-half ounce; Compound Kargon, ono ounce; Com pound Syrup Sarsaparllla, three) ounces. Mix by shaking well In a bot tle and take in teaspoonful doses after each meal and at bedtime. The In gredients can be had from any pre scription pharmacy, and are absolutely aannleM and safe to we at aa time.