r r i i hi T A AN AFFLICTED MOTHER From the Times Paw Paw VI A resident of this town who has lost two JiiMrcn during the past six years by violent deaths has been utterly pros trated by the shock and seriously sick as a result of it One child aged 9 was killed by a cyclone in 00 while at school another three years later was run over by a Burlington R R train That griefs and misfortunes may so prey on the mind as to lead to serious physical disorders has been well demonstrated in this case As a result of them her health was shat tered and she has been rf constant sufferer since 1S00 Her principal trouble has 3 Bl JH M II rf f r S v 1 9 f 2 1 JM4 A Constant Sijfierer been neuralgia of the stomach which was very painful and exhibited all the symp toms of ordinary neuralgia nervousness and indigestion Physicians did her no good whatever She was discouraged -and abandoned all hope of getting well Finally however a certain well known pill was recommended Dr Williams Pink Pills for Pale People She supplied herself with a quantity of them and had not taken them two weeks when she noticed a marked improvement in her condition She continued taking the pills until seven or eight boxes had been consumed and she considered herself entirely cured She can now eat all kinds of food which is something she has not been able to do for years and is not trou bled in the least with nervousness If any one would like to hear more of Ihe details of 2ier suffering and relief gained by the use of Dr Willi uns Pink Pills for Tale People they may be obtain ed probably by writing the lady direct She is one of our well known residents 3Irs Ellen A Oderkirk Paw Paw 111 Oldest English Business iTrobably the oldest business in En gland is an ancient linen drapery con cern which has been in existence since 1G00 Under the title of the Sign of the Croune the industry has been car Tied on in the old town of Shefford in Bedfordshire nearly 300 years for more than half of which time it has been in the hands of a single family in an almost direct line Since 1750 this ancient drapery shop has been under the control of Cator Sons -who occu py the original building Never wear a short stocking or one -which after being washed is not at ieast one half inch longer than the foot Bear in mind that stockings shrink Be -sure that they will allow your toes to spread out at the extreme ends as this keeps the joints in place and makes a strong and attractive foot As to shape of stockings the single digital or one toe stocking is the best Spring Medicine A Good Blood Purifier a Ne cessity Now foods Sarsaparilla Unequaled for Making Rich Red Blood The necessity for taking a good Spring Medicine to purify the blood and build up -the system is based upon natural and un avoidable causes In cold weather there jhas been less perspiration and impurities bave not passed out of the system as they Food has consisted largely of -rich fatty substances and there has been Jess opportunity for outdoor exercise The Jesuit is the blood is loaded with impuri ties and these must be promptly expelled or health will be endangered Hoods Sarsaparilla is the best Spring Medicine because it is the best blood purifier and tonic It thoroughly purifies the blood -and gives vigor and vitality Hoods SaPaMna Us America Greatest Medicine 1 six for 5 FlVirirfc Iil are the favorite cathar I1UUUJ J lllfc tIc jyj druggists 25c rr imm fl BRK f Keeps both rider and saddle per- fwtlv rlrv fn th hnrlAf ctm mc Substitutes will disappoint Ask for ioq7 nsn orana rommei oncKer It Is entirely new If not for sale In your town -write for catalogue to A j TOWER Boston Mass JASflbf1WMWiJ IIS aRWMCMMiirtirfwri rnurs whfrc am ciec cahq Best Cough Syrup Tastes Good In time Sold by dranrista POMMEL The Best Saddle Coat EXCURSIONS To the Free Grant Lands of Western Canada where riwenty five and thirty bushels of wheat are crown to -the acre will be personally conducted by a Canadian -Government representative on MARCH 23 AND 30 AND APRIL 6 JeavinR St Paul on these dates For particulars as to ihe specially low passenser and freight rates apyly to N Kartholomow les Aioines iowa u a Mur phy Stratford Iowa XV II Kopers Watertown South Dakota W V Bennett N x uiu jjuuainc uuiann i Nob Ben Da vies I5J tust Third SUM Paul Minn J S Crawford 808 Board of irndP ijuudiuir Kansas City Missouri Agents Ton tfik Government ok Canada SEND F6H A B5GY0LE High Grade 98 Models 14 to 40 CREAT CLEARING SALE of 97 and TO models best makes 6975 to 18 Sent on approval witnovt a cent payment Free uso v udft w jm auiw iMiiujiiruiu new plan now to tarn a Bicycle and make money SPECIAL THIS WEEK 10 hiph itrauo xi moaeis Eiignuy piiopwornj eiu eacn w enaenne Avsecir a souvenir book of art FilKB for stomp wnile they lost K C MEADcCrCLE CO CHICAGO EEL What Arc His Specifications The Hamilton Club assured President McKinley by telegraph that it felici tates lum on the magnificent results and the fulfillment of tine Republican promises of 1S90 achieved during the first year of his administration What results magnificent or other beyond the prompt passage in special session of a drastic and onerous trust measure known to the world as the Dingley tariff What else Has there been currency reform If the President wants it he does not indicate a plan and the Republican House has no pros pect of agreeing upon any that may emanate from him or from anybody else There is no currency reform af ter a years administration under Mc Kinley The annexation of Hawaii is promised but not accomplished It is due to McKinley -however to say that he has done his level best to bring that calamity about The Nicaragua Canal was promised as a national work but it has not been undertaken The Danish islands were to be purchased No ne gotiations to that end have commenced Cuba was to be free But Cuba is not free We were to have an end of for eign immigration at least that much of foreign immigration as was incapable of passing an examination for a New England university but while the Sen ate has passed Mr Lodges bill the Re publican House looks on it and dafe not pass it Territories were to be ad mitted Alaska was to be represented but why go over all the promises that were so freely made by the Republi cans of 1S9U It would have ben far more to the point if the Hamilton Club had given specifications Its generalizations were well enough as Republican assertions but facts do not support them Chi cago Chronicle Too Much Protection The cotton industry has a tariff schedule entirely satisfactory The ex perts do not know how to better it or to make it more protective But the industry languishes Shutting down the mills lias been tried in order to starve the market without bringing re covery Wages have been reduced Still though prices be phenomenally low there is an unsold surplus The Manchester N H Union con ning the statistics of the export of cot ton cloths finds that in nearly every part of the western hemisphere there has been a falling off in shipments It gives the following table of exports for 1S9G and 1S97 ISOfl Yards British Xorth America 3V10HS0 Central America iv -V 11 Santa Domingo Porto Rico Argentina Urazll Colombia Other South America L J till v a- 317200 7208007 20H77G 244350 293310 4313130 o005S 744202 215040497 3397 Yards 14378247 9118989 r829GG3 1ST4121 20S539 09539 2128807 7803000 lS4r03 22047022 10199442- GGSr25S There was a trifling net gain in the total amount of cotton cloths exported of about 4000000 yards principally in sales to the Asiatics but the losses in our near by markets are exasperating Evidently there is such a thing as too much protection Our best foreign market is Canada and that has al ready been cut down more thau cne half Disagreement in the Cabinet Here we have Secretary Alger assert ing that the United States is nearer war with Spain than it has been at any time VL m iim f i REVOLT OF THE NORTHWEST The temper of the Northwestern States of the Union on the subject of monopolies and grabs of public fran chises is unmistakable It shows itself at every opportunity Great cities Mice New York Chicago and Philadelphia may if they choose yield themselves helplessly to the spoiler but in the second-rate cities more public spirit is an to develop itself and somehow too it seems to more easily iind leaders and accomplish results Under such guid ance municipalities like Detroit Tole do and Syracuse have entered upon a new career and their residents have devoted themselves to civic economy the ownership and operation of then franchises low street car fares cheap gas and similar reforms The enthu siasm dashed with self interest -widen it has been found so dillicult to awak en or rather so easy to suppress in the greater class of cities there finds full vent aud effect Nor is it only on the pavements that this spirit manifests itself the opn fields aud country roads witness the same march of progress Governor Pingree called an extra session of the State Legislature of Michigan His call announces that a revision of the State tax law is necessary that the corporationsthe railroad express telegraph and telephone companies which own one third or more of the property -within the State have suc ceeded in so arranging legislation that they pay only about part of the taxes and that the schools asylums and other public institutions are therefore left to be supported by the farmers laborers and manufactur ers and other individual producers The decisiou of the Supreme Court at Washington against the railroad rate law of Nebraska is also likely to result in an extra session of the Legislature in order to pass a new law for the re straint of the unjust freight charges of the corporations In fact everywhere in the West restlessness under corpo ration tyranny and exaction is begin ning to be seen and felt New York News since the beginning of the present crisis and on the other hand a dis patch from Cleveland Ohio credits Secretary Gage with frankly declaring that he does not believe that the pres ent complications -with Spain will lead to war The people of the country Mr Gage is reported as saying are getting used to this -war talk and they understand that it means little or noth ing Boston Herald More Taxes to Be Paid Now Mr Dingley steps to the front and tries to take advantage of the lib erality of the country and of Congress Although ho has insisted ever since the production of its first deficit that his tariff bill would produce more than nough revenue for all the needs of the government he considers this a good time 1o announce that we had better submit to some more taxation whether we are going to war with anybody or not Of course this was inevitable It was only a question of how long he and those responsible for our present tji riff muddle would keep up the pre tense of expecting the Dingley law to prove equal to the treasurys require ments Under it the deficit has been already increased by something like 00000000 which added to the equal sum voted the other day by Congress as an emergency fund to be expended by the President in any way he lilies makes us as a nation one hundred mill ions poorer than we were eight mouths ago Naturally -we must expect that the neAv taxes to be imposed will be taken out of the pockets of those least able to pay them This is the usual Repub lican way which is not likely to be de parted from The trusts corporations aud the rich generally almost invaria bly escape their share of such burdens and they will undoubtedly keep on do ing so as long as Mark ITanna occupies a seat in the Senate and has a bedroom reserved for him in the White House The Line Js Drawn The vote in Congress has decided the money status of the two political par lies The Republican party has de clared for gold and gold only while the Democrats are for both gold and silver The Republican party cares nothing for the people but depends upon the monopolists to furnish money to corrupt the voters at election times according to the Hanna idea If they can so fix the finances of this- country that the bondholders can make mil lions out of the people it can readily be seen that a huge campaign fund can be raised to keep that party in power To be a Republican means the gold standard To be for bimetallism one must vote with the Democrats The line is drawn and cannot be changed till after 1000 Secrets of a Corrupt Campaign If Matt Quay and John Wanamaker should fall out in the present contest in Pennsylvania and tell all they know about each other it would make the spiciest reading ever introduced into Pennsylvania politics When Quay was chairman of the National Commit tee and wont out to buy the Presidency John Wanamaker looked pious and fur nished tlie money to do the bribing and pay for the stealing On account of their mutual interest in that incident it will probably not get hot enough in the fight to bring out the facts though there is no tolling What such a man as holy John may conclude to do Louis ville1 Dispatch Why They Want a Bigger Army The bond syndicate and its creatures care nothing for national honor It is nothing to thorn that thousands of wretched people are being starved and tortured in Cuba They are for peace peace at any price for war would cause a flurry in stocks they fear and their dividends might be affected These financiers were with the President heartily with him When he strength ened the army aud bought guns and amunition They approve soldiers and believe in standing armies but not for making Avar They want the military ready in case the laboring class grows desperate and revolts Kansas City Times Trouble for the Sujjrar Trust The sugar trust is undergoing the fatal experience which sooner or later overtakes all such monopolistic viola tions of the laws of trade New re fineries are springing up and the trust must submit to their competition or buy them off on their own terms Each suc cessive purchase at heavy cost of plants that are not needed reduces the resources of the monopoly and at last will come the collapse The sugar trust has had a long and prosperous run but there is no mistaking the signs of re volt against its power Need of an Andrew Jackson The question of the moment is wheth er President McKinleys backbone is equal to the crisis The money powers are centering their combined influence upon him to avert war even if he shall have to go to the extent of making us a nation of crow eaters and he is more or less dominated by the money powers The Spanish and Spanish Cuban bonds which the money powers hold would greatly depreciate in value were war to ensue and there is the rub Would that an Andrew Jackson were in the Presi dential chair Kansas City Times The oldest tree in the British Isles is said to be the Barbourne Yew in Kent t i DEATH OF LOUIS XV The Kins Died of the ZVIost Violent Form of Smallpox Marie Antoinette as Dauphine is the title olan article by Miss Anna L Bickuellfn the Century Miss Bicknell says On ApVilj28 1774 Louis XV felt the first symptoms of illness while at Tri anon his favorite summer palace ad joining Versailles to which he return ed immediately During the night of the 29th the characteristic eruption of smallpox appeared in its worst form With admirable devotedness the Kings daughters came to his bedside not withstanding the dreadful danger of contagion and remained there day and night till his death Marie Antoinette had asked admittance to his room but for very evident reasons neither the heir apparent nor his wife was allowed to breathe an atmosphere so dangerous that more than fifty persons took the smallpox merely from having crossed the gallery before the door of the Kings room Monsieur Letories took the disease fatally merely through having opened the door to look at the King for two minutes Regardless of danger the Archbishop of Paris came to Versailles He was anxious to secure the means of repent ance and a Christian death to the wretched sinner but at the same time lie declared that he would not allow the last sacraments of the church to be administered to the dying man unless Madame du Barry were previously dis missed from the palace On the 4th of May the Duchesse dAiguillou took her to a country house belonging to the Due dAiguillou There was conse quently no further obstacle to the ad ministration of the last rites of the hurch Shortly afterwards his condi tion became more alarming and It was evident that the end was at hand The courtiers crowded in the large room called the Salle de lOeil do Boeuf where they habitually awaited the Kings pleasure The carriages were in readiness to take the royal family to Choisy a lighted candle placed in the window of the Kings apartment was to be extinguished as the signal for departure which the fear of contagion in addition to other con siderations caused to be impatiently expected The candle was extinguished the great clock was stopped at the fatal hour p m It was the 10th of May 1774 The rush of the courtiers with the noise like thunder as they hasten ed to pay homage to the neAv sever eigu was the first announcement of the great event to the young heir and his wife Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette burst into tears and with a joint impulse fell on their knees ex claiming Cod help us and protect us We are too young to reign The King was not yet twenty the Queen was in her nineteenth year Madame de Noailles came into the room where they had remained togeth er in seclusion and anxious expectancy and addressing them by their new ti tles begged them to receive the digni taries who had come to pay homage to the King and Queen The Queen ap peared leaning on the Kings arm weeping bitterly she received the first visits of the royal family and the prin cipal officials but the physicians urged the necessity of immediate departure The carriages were read and the whole court set off for Choisy leaving the wretched remains of the late sover eign to the care of servants and work men The unfortunate man who solder ed the lead coffin died within twenty four hours The body was taken to St Denis the burial place of the kings of France during the following night with a military escort followed by the execration of the populace loudly ex pressed on the way The scandalous reign of Louis XV was ended a new reign was beginning t4Le rol est mort Vive le roi j iT 7 V The Enchantres3 She plnyed upon her sweet guitar She smiled at him the while Emboldened then she sang a bar Or two in awful style He yawned his larynx was displayed She dropped her sweet guitar Perhaps exclaimed the angry maid You know what manners are But if you do I must declare You have concealed the fact He went and kissed the maiden fair He was a man of tact Sweet little sorceress he said I fell beneath a spell And so I nearly lost my head For you performed so well Ah woman woman Flattery Goes right into thy heart It dries the tears it comforts thee It soothes thy keenest smart She gave her hand to him and so She never plays to day The first thing that he did was to throw Her sweet guitar away Cleveland Leader Sparrows Vanquish a Cat The little English sparrows are the gamest birds that live They have driven the bluebirds robins martens and swallows away from most of their old haunts and taken possession just as the white man crowded the Indian to ithe frontier ahead of civilization Several persons watched a flock of the brave little fellows try to drive a cat cut of the park at the City Hall says the Kansas City Star Hundreds of sparrows hop about the lawn and catch worms in the big flower bed all day A large gray cat stole across the sward and hid among the flowers She lay motionless a long time watching a chance to spring upon a sparrow but the birds waitched her and kept out of her reach Finally the flock seemed to be holding a council of war They grouped themselves on the turf a few yards away from the cat and chat- tered vociferously Then they began hopping toward the cat forming a reg ular line of battle Puss became nervous as the big flock i of birds came almost within her reach and she backed away hoping that one would be foolhardy enough to advanco within her reach Suddenly the whole flock of birds took wing with great chattering and whirling and flew di rectly over the cat It frightened her and she fled Then the sparrows settled among the flowers and began scratching for worms NAMES FOR HEROES Difficult Task to Select Appropriate Titles for Characters The invention of names for heroes and heroines is always a ticklish task When native authors baptize foreign ers they often make the most egregious blunders Not one writing Frenchman in the thousand is there who tackling with an English name makes a possi ble one Unfamiliar names in novels may strike you with their inaptness but you may become accustomed to them in time Ultra romantic names are vulgar and are never assimilated It is thenr a very nice thing in liter ary art to make a judicious selection We all know the Balzac method of ac quiring a name for his characters The great romancer hunted for them As he walked through the streets he read the signs Happening to have a per sonage in his brain whose peculiar traits he had emphasized when he saw a name he appropriated it It the name became the personal attribute of the man of his imagination and it was alive There is an anecdote related of him which we think Miss Wormeley repeats Balzac came home one day highly elated and told that after a whole months hunting he had found at last over a tailors shop the precise name he wanted Dickens must have car ried out the same process We all know that the rickwicks as a family were not uncom mon in England Somebody writes to the Spectator that years ago when look ing over some legal papers he found in the one and same document several of the names used by Dickens notably Tupman and Winkle and the sup position is that this same document must have passed through a solicitors office There is something ludicrous in Gamp but hardly in Harris But the probability is that Dickens had seen them in conjunction Thackeray was excellent in his no menclature and never sought the ex traordinary Henry James and Mr Howells are not in the least fastidious nor for that is Mr nardy But nev ertheless was there ever any mortal who was called Dick Swiveller New York Times It is not generally known that at the time of his death Du Maurier had com pleted two papers giving reminiscences of the two celebrated caricaturists with whom he was closely associated John Leech and Charles Keeue as well as an account of his own career as illustrator The articles appear in Harpers Maga zine accompanied hi drawings some of which had never been published With Marion Crawford at Sorrento the Critic begins the second of a new series of Authors at Home The ticlq -presents an interesting picture of the home life of the famous American author who was born and brought up in Italy and seems to have made that country his permanent home thougu at least one half of each year is spent in America A new photograph of Mr Crawford taken for the occasion and a group of his children at the entrance to Villa Crawford illustrate the article Captain Mahan in his article in Scribners asserts that while the cap ture of Burgoyne has been classed as one of the Decisive Battles of the World it was only made possible by the invaluable year of delay secured to them in 177G by their little navy on Lake Champlain created by the indom itable energy and handled by the in domitable courage of the traitor Bene dict Arnold This little appreciated naval campaign is expounded by Cap tain Mahan in his usual philosophical manner The rarest autographs in the world are probably Shakspeares Only seven are claimed to exist Three signatures to his will two of which are doubtful two to conveyances of property one in the folio edition of his plays doubtful and one in a translation of Montaigne this last is in the British Museum and cost over 300 guineas This total ab sence of record is as marvelous as his genius itself He must have written many thousands of words for it is not likely that he employed a typewriter yet all have vanished What would one give not for a play but even for a let ter of his no matter what the subject written incontestable by himself How we should like to know how he made his very Cs his Us and his Ts something that was in contempt of question his own hand The T st Miss Millward You say you love me but you must prove it Make some great sacrifice for me and I will then believe you Mr Helmwood By Jove Ill do it Ill limit myself to three packages of cigarettes to morrow or your sake The monkey has one advantage over the Anglomaniac hes imported Are you frequently hoarse Do you hiwe that annoying tickling in your throat Would you feel relieved if you could raise something Does your cough annoy you at night and do you raise more mucus in the morning Then you should always keep on hand a bottle of Ayers I If you have a weak throat you cannot be too careful You cannot begin treatment too early Each cold makes you more liable to another and the last one is always harder to cure than the one before it dp Ageps ceppg Peciopa Piasrcp protects ie leans Iron colds Help at Hand If you have any complaint whatever and desire the best medical advice you can pos sibly obtain write the doctor freely You will receive a prompt reply Address DR J C AYER Lowell Mass i i vn iwxt ay Her Vulnerable Point Its very foolish according to my Ideas said Mrs Sampson addressing the Ladies Sewing Circle during a lull caused by a frantic hunt for a missing pair of shears it is worse thau foolish for people to give way to their nerves as they do Now I may say with truth that I havent a nerve in my body which isnt perfectly under control Its merely a matter of self control of course every one knows The ministers wife flushed uneasily and Miss Marvin looked conscious but defiant Now Ive heard of people said Mrs Sampson pursuing her theme with rel ish who couldnt stand the ticking of a little clock in a room where they slept or even the ticking of a watch Theyd wrap them up in flannel or some such thing to deaden the sound It hardly seems possible to me that anybody could be so foolish but Ive been told it for a fact Then there are those who dont like to hear wood sawed Here the ministers wife breathed freely her particular weakness having been mentioned at the start she knew that for her the worst was over Now that seems downright ridicu lous to me continued Mrs Sampson A necessary sound like that I should feel it my duty to sit in the woodshed and listen to sawing till I had overcome my nerves once for all Miss Marvins nose was elevated and she gave a distinct sniff Ive heard of people who couldnt boar to gee others rock continued Mrs Sampson calmly and of those who didnt feel equal to hearing the sound of a hammer or rain on a tin roof or water dripping from a faucet or a pen that scratched once in a while or squeaky shoes Ive heard that all those things made certain people nervous and other things just as foolish Mrs Sampson paused to measure a hem She wore an air of lofty supe riority Miss Marvin looked like one whose hour of triumph has arrived She knew her old neighbor like a book She nicked one edge of a length of cotton cloth with her scissors and proceeded to tear it with great deliberation Before the cloth was torn in two the entire sewing circle was wreathed in smiles for there sat the prophet of self control with her fingers in her ears The citizens of Berlin have a sum mary method of stopping the danger ous practice of carrying sticks and um brellas horizontally As soon as a man tucks his umbrella under his arm he will promptly feel a quick blow on it from behind There is no use in his getting sngry with the person who strikes the blow because public opin ion sanctions his conduct Russia constituted the country of the Russ a tribe who overran it at a very early period The Russian empire was founded by Ruric or Rourik a Scandi navian chief whose death took placa In the year A D S79 The 2nfceas faurname Queen Victorias surname is Wettln by marriage but an expert in geneal ogy says that by birth she is an Este rather than a Guelph She has claims also to Fitz Alan Plantagenet Tudor and Stuart It is a wise Queen wno knows her own surname Depend not on fortune but on con duct Dont wait for something to turn up by which you may gain an easy position and good salary Work your way up its harder but surer Retail Clerks Gazetta S c