V THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MAHCH 21, 1000. i HOLLAND AWAITS AN nEIR Tation Ready to Welcome It. Future f . Ruler nJTURE OF COUNTS Y AT STAKE "theaM Qaeea Wllhelmlaa Cilve Flirt a to m. ftea the Rejotrlns Mill Be l'aaoaael floral Xareerr Has Bff Prepared. . THfc HAGUE, March 10. -The advent of n heir Apparent to the throne of Ilnlland l a prospect whlrh causes the heart of very patriotic Dutchman to beat higher. 'For Holland, of course, the question of the continuation or the extinction of the house of Orange-Nassau Is of paramount Importance inasmuch of the latter con tingency would mean either the blotting out of the kingdom as The Netherlands as separate entity or else a return to Its seventeenth century status of a common wealth. Blnce Germany Inaugurated a more am bitious naval policy some few years ago . these possibilities have formed the sub Joct of grave considerations In more than one Bumpean chancellery. Twice already the hopes of the young queen have been disappointed, and her subsequent state of health gave rise to all sorts of rumors as regards her ability to ever give an heir to the nation. Da tea Saeeesaloa dimple. The Dutch succession' is really a simple Alough question, seeing that, contrary to the state of affairs tn many other Euro pean countries, there are no pretenders or claimants to the throne. Fate Indeed has not dealt kindly with the house of Orange during the last half century. King William III, the present queen's father, saw the sons of his first marriage die childless after they" reached manhood, and his brother and uncle also died without leaving male heirs. With what tense expectancy the scion of Wlll'am's second marriage with Princess Emma of Waldeck Pyrmont was awaited those who were In Holland at the tlfte of Wllhelmlna's birth can testify. Apart from the purely Teutonic origin e the reigning house of Holland, It has gjt several occasions received further ad jpjxture of German blood since the con gress of Vienna In 1814 remodelled the Map of Europe and 'William I assumed the Lyle of king of The Netherlands. For this wjonarch married a Prussian royal princess, fid his grandson, William HI, went for Ms two consorts, first to the court of Wurtemberg and then to the principality of Waldeck Pyrmont, while the union of queen Wllhelmlna, the last direct repre sentative of the Orange-Nassaus, with Duke Henry pf Mecklenburg In mi Is of too re cent date to need comment. Collateral Heirs. Falling an heir, male or female for the Callc law does not operate In Holland the nearest candidate in line of succession would have been Prince William of Weld, whose mother waa the only daughter If William Hi's uncle, Frederck. But the prince of Wled died in 1907, leaving an off spring of very tender age. Since then the chances of the grown-up sons of the late Prince Henry VII of Rcuss, whose con sort was a daughter of Princess Sophia, William Ill's only sister, have been con sidered. These are, of, course, purely German princes, holding commissions In the German army and navy, and their willingness to press their somewhat remote clalni 'on the Dutch throne if occasion arose has ao far been understood to be doubtful In the extreme. Reasona of state prescribe precautions to be taken in view of the possibility of the queen dying childless. A. council of state would take the reigns of govern ment, but It Is unlikely that Prince Henry of. the Netherlands, the queen's consort, would have more than the courtesy title of president of that' assembly. Of Queen Wllhelmlna's persanal popular ity among her subjects there cannot be the slightest doubt. For the majority of he Dutch she has since her childhood presented the hope of the nation, and van those whose leanings are toward the re-establishment of the United Prov inces sympathise with her over her dis appointed hopes of motherhood. All Holla ad aad the Karaery. And so all Holland la waiting eagerly for the event which is to affect Its des tinies so powerfully. Everything is ready for the arrival of the expected little stranger at the unpretentious royal palaoo at The Hague. The nursery occupies part of the second story of . the palace, comprising six wide aDd spacious apartments, besides separate rooms for the attendants. The wing of the castle has been remodelled in Its en tirety. 'Tnwvalla and ceilings of all the rooms have been scraped, and new woodwork, as well as new floors, heating apparatus and hot and cold water have been put in under (he queen's own supervision. She devised the plana from EnglUh and American models, ' ordering that everything old fashioned about the nursery be abolished, aad Insisting that she would have none of the old time nursery with Its unsanitary surroundings. Ths only old-fashioned things about the nursery are the various cradles, heirlooms In the. Nassau royal family, some of them nearly aa Uio as a state coach. .The queen had them thoroughly overhauled and only their elaborate shells remain. It la the. custom tn Holland to use pink ribbons and pink lining for the cradle cur tains when a girl would be most welcome, light "' blue when a boy Is hoped for. So The Hague women Inquired what color the queen would prefer for the cradle. The dip lomatic answer came that she had chosen a special shade of vlell or for the nursery and would prefer the same color for the cradle. Trosmeit la Ready. 'The baby trousseau l.ad. Indeed. a!resd ben ordered lien the queen was the first time dls ippolnV-d In her expectations. The dainty llt!e garments wtre made In dif ferent schools tnd workshops In Holland. The queen is fond of elaborate hand-made embroideries and she Is a very good Judge of needlework, to that It Is needless to say with how much loving care tho layette was ordered. The coming event has already set many heads at work in devising plans to cele brate It. Throvglinut the country commit tees of HOirlety women snd others have ben formrl lo rollfct funds and make ar rangements. The queen has intimated her desire that the msjor portion of the funds I so collected should be used for phllan- tnroplc purposes and not be employed In making her presents, as was originally In tended. At Holland's chief naval station of the Helder the military and civil authorities ip committee have decided on a great fete to which the united mualral societies of the town and surrounding districts ar to hf; Invited. A philanthropic lady at The Ilegue has decided to give All the poor children of Th ' Hague find Sehevenlngen a treat ef biscuits and sweets (oars way candles called mulsjcs). It Is the custom In this country to give biscuits and car. sway candles when a child Is bom, smooth candles being chosen when the newcomer Is a girl and rough or.es when boy, so that from thp character of the sweets re ceived one can know the sex of the new born child. The recent plans at The Hsgue, which are under consideration by the committees, are for the celebrating of the event four weeks after the actual birthday. Uvea the Shoes'. Throughout the country of late there has been a brisk trade In orange paint. In red. white and blue ribbons. In flags and flag staff. In secret mxny peasants have painted their best ooden shoes orango, rutting them aside until the festive mo ment. Careful housewives have had tho flasMaffs of their houses newly painted and the flags cleaned, so as to have every thing In readiness. And with every house displaying the red, white and blue, with the bells ringing, the old churches playing their carillons and the crowds singing in the streets, the towns will be festive enough. Queen Wllheflmlna has signified her wlll li gnesa to accept the suggested work of the pupils of a needlework school at The Hague, who intend making six sets of In fants' clothing, which will be presented to women who have tho good fortune to become mothers on the same day as the queen, and numerous gifts hue been prom ised to the lucky babies that will be born on the same day as the hoped for heir to the throne. At Wlnschoten ft has been decided to employ all money collected In establishing holiday settlements In three provinces, to which poor and weakly children can be sent to recuperate. In this way they think to associate the idea of the birth of a young prlnoe or princess with the recovery of health and strength by some poor chil dren. . . Gift for the Queen. In every trn"t,n3 vlllagV committees have been formed to allow all the women in the place to contribute. A central com mittee has been appointed for every prov ince to arrange one gift itv the name of the whole province. In this way there will be money enough to present the queen with an article of value and sufficient will be left over for charity. The province of Zetland, for Instance, will give a white perambulator. The lace sunshade over it for summer use will be made by the famous Sluis lace makers. The Hague glvc a cradle, the embroidery of which is entrusted to the same hands that embroidered the queen's coronation robes and her wedding dress. Leeuwarden glvca a silver book on an antique oak stand, in which the events of baby Hfe will be noted down the baby's weight every week, the date of the first tooth, of the urst step, of little ailments, etc. Rotterdam gives a sliver mug, plate, spoon and egg cup; Amsterdam a wash stand with sliver ewer, basin, etc. A screen painted by Dutch artists, an antique oak chest for linen, a press for baby clothes, white lacquered furniture, a clock in Hln loper carved wood and a weighing machine are among the other gifts. The larger towns preferred not to Join the provincial committees. The East and West Indian colonies and the Dutch people living abroad are following the same course. The Dutch colony In London hopes to collect money enough for a free bed in one of the Ixmdon hospitals, to be always at the disposal of a Dutch patient. To Aanoaace the Kveat. As soon as the doctors go to the palace a battery of artillery la to be put up In the Malleveld, a large open space at the en trance of the Hague Wood. Men with flags will be stationed along the route from the palace to the Malluveld. As soon as the royal baby la born they will communi cate the news from one to another with different signals tor a prince or a princess. Then the cannon will boom forth the happy news of the queen'a deliverance. Telephones and telegraph will convey the newa to every part of the country and the colonies. As' soon ss the queen has regained her strength the royal family will go to the queen's country residence of th !,, where she spent the greater part of her happy childhood, under the old trees In the healthy Gelderland air. ALONG THE COLDEN HORN Constantinople, Too, Hai Its Bridge Crush. DAILY JAM BECOMES NUISANCE Slightly Disfigured But Still in the Rinq All coal orders will be filled from our South or Cen tral Yard until wo can aooumulato now supply ;it tho North Yard whoro tho flro waa. If you ordar from ua you will rcelve dry, claan, high grado ooal Juat tho aamo aa ovor. Our atock of Building Matorlalo at tho North Yard waa not touehod by tho flro and wo can take oaro of North Side bualnaaa right MOTC-Our rreaseet re ret la oeaneatlaa) with ta thee M ameeat aersea saewlS neve SMI u tHe ra Milt at a nei eisn, eewarsiy set. tflre la that i 1st as Sunderland Bros. Go. MAIN OFFICE 1614 Harney Street Patchwork . reel ore aa Which Maay Races Meet Regaars, Peddlers, rrlesta. Porters, Officials la the Crowd. CONSTANTINOPLE, Feb. r.-Every year or two the European Inhabitants of Con stantinople are aroused to a certain amount of enthusiasm by the prospect of having a new bridge to take the place of the patchwork structure that now serves as the main onnectlpn between Stamboul and Fera the Turkish and the European quar ters of the city. At the request of the pttoman government various engineering firms throughout Burope have frequently made proposals, snd laid down plana for this 'indertaklng; but with the Turk's cus tomary reply thst he would look Into the matter the government has carefully dock eted and pigeonholed each plan without giving It any further attention. I'nder the old regime an American once offered to build a suspension bridge from the heights of Stamboul to those of Pera in exchange for concessions to lay elec tric tramways . throughout the city. But Abdul Hamld wanted no such improve ments. Dynamos sounded to him suspiciously like dynamite and the entrance of all ma chinery Into the country waa strictly pro hibited. The old pontoon bridge was good enough for his ancestors, and so, contin ually patched and repatched, It Is quite good enough for the present day Turk, many thousands of whom, with their clothes hujiglnsT together In mysterious manner, resemble externally the ancient bridge. Adventure of Steamer. Since the constitution ttie question of a new bridge has again arisen, and a firm of engineers recently offered to rebuild It 1 for IJOO.000. While this proposal was "under consideration" by the Turkish gov ernment an English steamer in leaving Its ancharage last month had the effrontery to carry away a portion of the Stamboul end of the bridge. And for, this little ex hibition of its prowess Its owners had to pay $30,000, which amount naturally comes In very handy for some long needed re pairs. For several days after the accident no attempt was made to construct a tempo rary passageway, the Turk contenting him self with exclaiming "Kismet dir" (It Is fate)! But when the thousands of busi ness men, hamals (porters), horsemen, pack drivers, beggars and carriages that daily use the bridge were forced to cross the Golden Horn either In caiques or make a long detour round the Arab Kapou bridge further up the stream, which meant a loss to the government of from J1.000 to $1,600 a day, the Turk awoke to the fact that something must be done. And though today carriages are still un able to get across, pedestrians are able to get to the other side by means of a triple flight of narrow steps and a pa sage connecting with the shore. At the head of these steps you are frequently obliged to wait from ten to fifteen min utes while a flock of sheep, bewildered and dased. Is induced to ascend, or while four hamals, getting their long poles entagled. leisurely proceed to solve the difficulty of lifting their heavy burden to the bridge. About a week after the departure of the English" steamer a huge umbrella twenty feet in diameter was set up near the former entrance to the bridge, an here some half a doaen workmen began repairing opera tions. But perhaps owing to Intense cold and Incessant falls of of snow or to the fact that there are three days of rest In every week Friday for the Moslems, Sat urday for the Jews and Sunday for the Greeks and Armenians the progress of their work Is very slow. Crossing the Bridge. When in its customary everday working order It la a source of wonder to many people how the London bridge of Constan tinople (as the old pontoon bridge la often called) manages to keep together its un even planks of ancient timber and how it supports the constant stream of heavy traffic which abates only at nightfall, for a hundred thousand fares are taken dally from carriages, and pedestrians, exclusive of the soldiers and po'lce, the maimed, the lame, the halt and the blind, and all sick persons, to whom the bridge Is free. An American girl recently visiting Constanti nople for the first time was amased at having her metallk (1 cent) returned po litely by the collector, who, pointing to the crutch with which she was walking, in dicated by his gesticulations that her "wooden leg" exempted her from the toll. These collectors, four of whom stand at either end of the bridge, are aa well padded as the Paris cocker. The white cotton nightshirt which each man dons on a fine day makes him easily dlslngulah able from the-crowd, but on a wet day both fes and shirt are hidden by a large peaked hood and overcoat, such as la worn by every third man one meets. In little wooden sheds at the right and left of the bridge entrance sit the change givers, who under the old regime had a curious system of making money by punching holes In It. which accounts for the far that practically all the imal coins In circulation today have hcles In them. Each of the sliver coins which passed through their hands they punched, snd the pieces thus obtained were care fully and painstakingly collected until a amall fortune waa accumulated. At the same time the total amount of dally tolls, which would . have been sufficient to keep up a first ctaas navy, went with out question into the pockets of the old ministers. Plagaea af the Paaaaga. li Is practically Impossible to walk upon ths narrow footway, for when It Is not occupied by hamals. who frequently stand and chat with a friend while rest ing their load and one of the stands placed here for therir benefit. It la covered with loathsome looking beggars of all ages. One of the young Turks' first attempts at reform was to banish these plagues from the bridge. But they were unsuccessful. For one short week only were pedes trians allowed to pass unmolested, then every beggar waa back In his place and tlw popular and legitimate business of begging grer on aa before. It is said that one man makes it his business to collect, from all over the empire such monstrosities as are to be found and to bring them to the capital; and all ths deformed beggars nknowledg htm as their chief. Msny poor women Injur their infants In th sura knowledge thst they can then earn a good living later In this country where labor la too plenti ful and 111 paid. Bide by side, upon tha footway axe round faced, wide eyed babies, hardty able to walk, hat having been taught by their mothers, they repeat v.r and oyer again mechanically a versa from the Ctoran In tended to tnova passersby to pity. There re too blind boys, boys without legs. youths' with shrivelled arms and men Ask the sal rim an to allow you the Vntran Clas ISange. the kind that saves pas, and is positive ly odorless. er. St ewar fft 413-15-17 South 16th Street We re exclusive ngrntn f"r the llolin Syphon System nnd Minnesota Kefrlg orator, the lxst refriireratora made. al2 ofi IELoonnni-!S:zs IRLmicjjs Tomorrow we offer tlircc hundred room-size rugs at prices cut 33 1-3 and 25 per cent. You will find a remarkably pretty collection of domestic rugs. Patterns in all sorts of artistic color effects y sizes for parlor, reception room, library, hall, den, dining room and bed room. Patterns shown to suit nearly all schemes of decorations; $13.60 Brussels Rug, 9x11 Monday special $9.00 $16.00 Brussels Rug. 9x12 Monday special 811.05 $18.00 Brussels Rug. 9x12 Monday special 813.50 $16.00 Brussels Rug, 8-3x12 Monday spe'l $11.75 $10.00 Brussels Rug. 6-9x9 Monday special. .$7.25 $20.00 Brussels Rug, 9x12, seamless Monday. special SI 4.25 $18.00 Brussels Rug, 8-3x10 seamless Monday special $12.25 $15.00 Brussels Rug, 7-6x9 seamless Monday special $9.25 $12.00 Brussels Rug, 6x9 seamless Monday special $8.10 $22.60 Wilton Velvet Rug, 9x12 $15.05 $25.00 Wilton Velvet Rug, 9x12 seamless Mon day special ...$17.50 $44.50 Wilton Rug. 9x12 Monday special. .$30.00 $76.00 German Saxony, 9-10x13-1 Monday special $30.00 $66.00 German Saxony, 8-8x11-6 Monday special S45.00 $32.60 Body Brussels, 9x12 Monday, spe. $23.00 $30.00 Body Brussels, 8-3x10-6 Monday special $20.00 Sal.e of .Printed and Inlaid Linoleum The greatest attraction for this week's showing is the Clearance Bale of Printed and Inlaid Linoleum. We have nearly one full car of these goods which muBt be disposed of. 65c Printed Linoleums, per square yard 25 70c Printed Linoleums, per square yard 35t? 76c Printed Linoleums, per square yard 45 80c Printed Linoleums, 12-ft. wide, per sq. yard..49 WILTON VELVET RI O $28.00 Wilton Velvet Rug, 10-6x10 Monday " pwlal $18.67 $24.00 Wilton Velvet Rug 9-9x9 Monday Peclal S10.OO $33.00 Wilton Velvet Rug, 10-6x1 1-9 Momlav spetlal $22.00 $16.00 Wilton Velvet Rug, 6x7-6 Monday special $10.67. AXMINHTKK Ul tJS. $37.50 Axmlnster Rug, 10-6x12 Monday "PeeUl $25.00 $36.00 Axmlnster Rug, 10-6x11-3 Monday Plal $24.00 $35.00 Axmlnster Rug, 10-6x12 Monday pwm $23.35 $24.00 Axmlnster Rug, 8-3x10 Monday Pecl-1 $10.00 nm ssKLs m os. $25.00 Brussels Rug, 10-6x11-3 Monday special SRI ft 67 $32.00 Brussels Rug, 10-6x13-6 Monday special 21 T 4 $20.00 Brussels Rug, 8-3x1 1-6 Monday special $1115 $15.00 Brussels Rug, 6-9x8-8 Monday special $10 OO Inlaid Linoleum The kind that the colors go through to the back and do not wear off. 90c Inlaid Linoleum, per square yard 65 $1.25 Inlaid Linoleum, per square yard 80 $1.35 Inlaid Llaolcum, per square yard 98 $1.50 Inlaid Linoleum, per square yard $1.15 $1.65. Inlaid Linoleum, per square yard Sl25 $1.75 Inlaid Linoleum, per square yard jkl!35 Remnants, per square yard 50t? and 252 Every kind of curtain, nothing that the spring season calls for is omitted from this, largest; of all drapery stocks either for door or window. The variety in styles is almost endless. Plenty of pretty patterns whether you are outfitting a new home or replenishing. The expense need be trifling and nothing adds more to the beauty and attractiveness of your home than pretty curtains and'draperies. Novelty Net Lace Curtains In Arabian, cream and white, suit able for library, djnlng room and bed room, price, per pair, $5.00, $4.75, $3.95, $3.75, $3.60, $3.25, $3,00 and $2.75. Until yon see the new McDougall improvements, you will never realize how perfect a Kitchen Cabinet can be. Come and see them. You'll never regret it. Brussels Lace Curtains an end less variety of new designs, some special attractions, dainty effects In real Saxony Brussels; many styles made and exclusively con trolled by us for the OMAHA TRADK. Prices, per pair, $25.00, $22.00, $17.60, $16.00, $15.00, $12.00, $9.00, $7.60, $6.75, $5.00, $4.75, $4.00 and $3.25. Battenberg Lace Curtains, In white and Arabian, range la price from $42.50 to $5.00. Cluny Lace Curtains, both white and Arabian, prices range, per pair, from $11.75 to $2.15. Cable Net and Scotch Brussels Net Curtains, Ivory, Arabian and white, prices range, per pair, from $5.00 to 65c. Cretonne Bed Room Curtains, fringe edge, all colors, per pair, from $2.25 to $1.55. Snow Flake Curtains, silk striped, In various designs and colors, prices range, per pair, from $8.25 to $1.75. Curtain Net, by the yard, Ara- bian, two-tone, white and colored, prices range, per yard, from $1.75, $1.60, $1.25, $1.00, 95c,. 76c, 60c, 45c to 25c. LA i It takes less than half the time to maice a pie who a McDourall Kitchen Cabinet. Let us . show vou what a 1 wonderful helper a McDougall u ana cow unit it costs. with none, gypsy women, lepers and sore eyed infants, all exhibiting their deform ities and diseases as a showman exhibits his goods. Some rock themselves to and ro shriek ing: hideously; others chant verses from tha Coran, and the pious Moslem, being enjoined by Allah to give alms, gives dally in the full belief that by so doing a sin is expiated with each gift. The brldga is indeed the beggars' paradise. Bea;a-ar with a Business' Eye. Both here and outslda mosque gates they have been known to grow rich and prosperous, and a week or so ago a visitor to Constantinople was amaied on hunting up one of these beggars to whom she had given a sovereign in mis take for a meUllik to find him living in apparent luxury. He politely handed her back the sovereign, at the same time suggesting he would take the niotalllk she had Intended to give hlra. There is little room on the footway for pedestralns. The road teems with a heterogeneous mass donkeys, mules, buffalo, horses, carriages and human beings in every variety of coatume jostle one another all day long. There are officers of all degrees smart looking men In light gray cape with red collars, and others In dark blue or gray unlforms but none Is too proud to be seen with a bundle of fieh or a couple of newspaper packages tied up In a red cotton' handker chief. There are white turbaned Turkish Ind ians, softas and hojaa fprtests and relig ious students) In close proximate to Jew ish rabbis; the Merleri and Rup to dancing and howling dervishes) in khaki colored headgear from fourteen to eighteen Inches in height mingle with black aklrted Greek and Armenian priests in chimney pot hats many cf the Armenians, vener able patriarchs with beards reaching to their waists, look from behind like women with their uncut hair fastened for con venience Into a knot at the nape of ths neck and long black veils flowing from their hats. J amble ef Toagaes. Every variety of dialect is heard as you push your way past Turkish women, Arme nian hamals, Levantine sailors, merchants of European nationality, soldiers from every part of ths empire and pilgrima from Mecca In bright green turbans. Here are proud looking Arabs; over there are wild looking Tartars and Circassians with belts full of knives and other weapons, and in the dis tance, making a broad passage for him aelf. Is a rough Albanian shepherd whose sheep skin coat, kept out on the shoulders by means of a wooden bar, puts the modest shoulders of a stalwart American athlete to shame by at least foot on each aide. In and out of this motley throng you are forced to dodge, at the rama time keeping your eyes and eara open to avoid collision with one of the horsemen who dash madly over the bridge and who often come to grief In the middle, knowing no more how to ride the hired beast on which they sit than a Turkish csptaln who haa never been to sea knows how to sail the ship in his command. All day long U heard the rumble and clatter of the arabaa (cabs) with their couple of woraout horses and private carriages with their well groomed pairs as they drive recklessly through the living mass; while to complete the pande monium, above the din are heard ths voices of Innumerable hawkers, who stand shoul der to shoulder at tha edge, of the footway yelling out the nature, excellence and cheapness of their wares. aaaet at S la at baa I. Then, as the sun begins to set behind Stamboul, silhouetting the great Sulelmanlet mosque with its six graceful minarets, business men swell the crowd bending its steps toward Peru, where buildings of every description Imposing embassies, houses of wood and colored plaster are seen between the masts of thousands of boats at anchor Tongues of fire shoot out from the horlson, and while the heavens change gradually from red to brilliant orange, gold, yellow, green, purple and soft blue, you realize how the narrow horn of water stretching In the distance came by its name for at the mo ment even this is turned to gold. But fascinating as it is to the artist and the poet and Intensely picturesque aa aeen by twilight, the Golden Horn with Ua thou sands of sea craft is nothing but a home of refuge for useless truck which the Turk is too lazy and too Indolent to dispose of. Here along the water's edge. In rows five, ten and even twenty deep, between the main bridge and Azab Kapow every de scription of boat is to be seen. Those which occupy the front ranks are still in use, but look as if they must soon Join the fast decaying, motionless craft around them. Some are old steamers which, having been scrapped by foreign countries, .were sold to the Ottomon gov ernment to end their days plying between Stamboul and the Asiatic shore, and to all appearance nothing but a miracle keeps afloat those which are yet In constant use. Last month there was a strike among the passengers, the greater number of whom are business men, who boarded the steam ers and refused to pay the fares until the steamboat company promised them sjme improvement. After a day or two the fol lowing notice was posted up on the boats: "The honorable public is requested to be so good as to pay the fares. Three new steam ers have been ordered." Further up the stream, as if afraid they would escape, lie a few large cargo boats chained together like prisoners, although they are obliged to lean heavily upon one another for support. All that is to be seen of life Is in midstream, where ungainly slow-going lighters creep lazily up and down and various steamers and tugs after calling at their landing stages cut through the water without heeding the myriad of yawls and caiques that skim gracefully but perilously near their larger brethren. Everywhere on shore you will notice apathy and neglect In the tumbledown houses and filthy, uncaied for streets, but you are still more forcibly struck with the Indolence of the Turk as your eye takes In tiie whole dead scene upon the Golden Horn. The few Young Turks who have arisen -though they have done much in 'freeing their country from the despotic rule are as handicapped as Gulliver when a midgut In the hnnds of the giants. Their work In a gigantic one with the odds tremendous against them; and you are inclined to lay your hands upon your stomach In tha Turkish fashion, ejaculating piously In' the words of the Turk himself, "Allah kerltn"" (God will provide). FREDERICK MOORB. Outranks the White Plaicae. Lecturing at Harvard Medical school Dr, Elliott P. Joslln declared that pneumonia was the most fatal malady in Boston in 19(13, claiming 3,000 victims; ht-art disease ranking second in this regard, and tin "white plague" coming third. Pneumonia affects all ages, and about 25 per cent of the cases result fatally, it is not usually contracted from a cold, as Is generally sup posed, said Dr. Joslln, but develops from bad physical or hytrenlc conditions an4 . from exposure. It is contagious In that nne may catch It by breathing in the at mosphere where there is a pneumonia pu tient in the vicinity. New York Tribune. . The Blood is the Power " "" wmm i That Defends the Body This is the greatest and most important discovery of modern medical science. It ranks with the discovery of the circulation of the blood, which was made centuries ago. The blood protects the organs and tissues from disease, but it does so only when it is healthy itself. Healthy blood is pure blood, and at no season is it more necessary than IN THE SPRING when there is so much exposure to disease germs. Hood's Sarsaparilla makes healthy blood. It is the medicine that purines and enriches the blood and makes it normal in red and white corpuscles and all other constituents. It cures all humors and eruptions, catarrh and rheumatism, relieves that tired feeling, restores the appetite, cures paleness, weakness, nervous ness, and builds up the whole system. BEST BLOOD MEDICINE. "I have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla for a great many years, and I think it the best blood medicine in the world. I use it spring and fall. "This last winter aad spring I was in very poor health. "I waa weak and had lost all my appetite and I was all run down. Aa soon as I began taking nood's Sarsaparilla my strength came back and my appetite returned. .."j am now a well woman and can go about my household duties. I no longer bare that tired feeling." Mrs. Marion Bruce. Cumberland, Me. HIS ONE MEDICINE. "I have used Hood's Sarsaparilla twenty years or thereabout. During said time I have not paid out one cent for doctor bills. I have for a long time used only four bottles per year, two in spring and two in fall. My bowels ara regular, I sleep sound, feel like always being young, entirely free from any malaria, etc.'1 Chas. F. Roberts, P. 0. Box 478, Peoria, Ilia. C3FHood's Sarsaparilla effects its wonderful cures, not simply because it contains sarsaparilla, but because it combines the utmost remedial values of more than 20 different ingredients, each greatly strengthened and enriched by this pecu liar combination. These ingredients are the very remedies that successful physicians prescribe for the same diseases and ailments. There is no real ' substitute for Hood's Sarsaparilla. If urged to buy any preparation said to be "just as good," you may be sure it is inferior, costs less to make, and yields the dealer a larger profit. V Begin taking Hood's Sarsaparilla today, la ' usual liquid or tablet known aa Saxtataba, a., i V, i li