. w fifering Women. AJu! women do .offer. wny, w .iin cannot UU. but we know there is one gtwt cause, and that weakness. t-i . L-i-f irhfaL that Xrv hit common 1 01 At wch times KHVt need, a friend Lit0",' more than twenty MXtereateJtof fi 0 hukir o. need. J"?.?. -t,lul expressions lr0T done were printed, t.ouUfillvoIumcs. It you, f!r sufferer, can you W'.l... i,nm this sue- j, uB nul" -rS a " " -. ... Itttf. rhaege ' Heart. A Mob "Briutf hi in 0ut' ' Down mit monoKlyl ...(nutting hid lness What does ileman--"Yim moost .lie! ' a mill In nft vat do oSTOll DOOIl'ircv u u. .jt out off deir mouths; yon ..kl:. .,,.liine nf mine IB ;or- inn mw... . . - kK,ii.riiH. una will Ur doWDtooiie cent a glass.' S ollr-irt" Stereol rii"--w lBov"Pj,will you lend me "lend yon my miuc. fcfrsiiM1 ouugiii. j " . IVhal nave you done mi it: no; I'regot it yet." IniWuWt you use iw .!. I should take good care ol Unit to take up tacks." NO MICH BAKU. lit best watchdog that barks the lot old watchdog I")"' low and burclar before lie knows it. In t-mnit of rheumatism many suf k too much ami d too little. If it tn find out what is best for it, u-t St. Jacobs Oil and use it. It ith'l"K against the int rticimi It ,. to work uuicklv ami sure- tires h.'ldof rheumatism for the if driving it out, anil holds on un- t purpose is accomplished. It in, p. the oet renieuy, necause ii laaes means u acmniplish its end, as no have suffered fur years with the will tetifv. Thecuie Is the same no or inlitnatiiry cases. With pa iinl a free use ufii, the worst rases bunding have been finally cured tfivry small eyos of the hats (dis iuucturn.il) is due to the partial wnent of right by their very I ltrelojieil sense of feeling. ilt.HI WAV TO DESPAIR, !. too have suffered for long time as aria. lrp piH, kulrifr trouble, tier- J-rhilimi.nns. Knnw ihut Hoitctutr'a h'tteri lim ourej nurte i-aaea than J 1 Ment to help you as It has hel ped i"ihm. Hut aitrnvi n-mrmber that 5, "Dflavs are daniirrotts." Molo lubemniintHtin in eonseijtienre of wiuipurauic ui'it'iisive meuiclne. beside a stall, a liveryman of Grille, Ky., lost a art of ono A horse reached out nnd rilh iu teeth. rHODlCM AND f VRK FOOD. rl? SVP' ""-fsllea, imiallv vorjr frnliii(lofhedvv bo.ty, ia made from Im l.lln tu. l- j.. ta iuuw irom I.r.l "i vans oniy. Manillas rh hr,,,cf,,A,T!iVR,.r Co Ai.. LmiT ,mve "' manuie a- r-"luuiritinpll 1,1, ll'n,. ,.Un il forfeit II ihmi if e i rtiitioms ,m, .iruv1I1 t0 berIl0t inrisoto., Warren, I'a. "eel ; teeth are a sure sign of civ- ftrfeet teeth are found, as n raon(f aavages. HOWS Tills f '',,?" "";"-l Hollars Reward for S?jif T"- Prop--. Toledo, O. k-i 14 .... ' l , J- Cheney 1-ln.M h , M,,'ve hl" perfaetly Liei' b"::n,,s" ""'"actions a.d fln- fcrn. ' any obligations mde aiw5. r'r"K?'". Toledo, O. ,irih r i "ru"K'at. Tolejo, O. ' L,n h ' ',,11"V'n 'ntern.lly, set- f niversHry 0f the coronation of fWebrated in Home. S ,v u H fuui. tintheWorld 'A : : : : : t.M.,;.,,, a YOjo $40 Cash WILL HANG AT LAST! California Justice Pfom's-c to Overtake Durrant. GIVES UP THE FIGHT. SUPREME COUBT TAKES A HAM) Lower Court's Decision lfll,,.j Now the Vr or Ki.culloo Is to Be Kind. Pan Francisco, March 6. The hu- nreme court this afternoon ufllrtii..,! n. decision of the lower court in th ,,. of Tlieoiloro Durrant, f.ninil guilty of the murder of blanche Latinmt,' in Kmunuel church, two years itpi. II,. apIM'nled from the verdict of iftiiltv, al letfinjf errorH in the ruliiiK's of tin- trial judtjo, and filing a voluiiiinmis hill of exceptions. The trial jud-, however. was conflrnied in all liis disputed nil intfS, and tlie verdict aiiTnve. l.y the supremo court. The case will now he sent back to the superior court, which will fix the date for Durrani's execution. Friday afternoon, April 11, lsttr,, the body of Minnie Williams, a younu cirl. was found in a closet in the pastor's study of the Emanuel Baptist church. The tfirl had been outraged and mur dered, the arteries in the wrist beinu cut. Two days later, just before church services began, the body of Hlunoho Lamont, who had been missing for sev eral days, was found in the belfrv ol the church. She had been strangled to death. Theodore Durrant, a ynmm medical student, who was assistant su-, pcrintendent of Kmaiitiel church Sun day school, had been on very friendly terms with both of the girls, and was suspected of the crime, lie was arrest -1 ed while on a trip to Mount Diablo, j with the signal corps, and, although he' had been warned with a heliograph by j his comrades of the signal corps from Telegraph hill, he betrayed no concern, and calmly waited the arrival of the , officers. In his overcoat, which had! been left at home, was found Minnie i Williams' purse. A pawnbroker identi-1 fled Durrant as a man who had tried to I sell him a diamond ring which had be- longed to Blanche Lamont. It was I proved at the trial that Durrant accom-! Th. Orll0. Ho.,. Succumb, to th. nrtllahl. Th,. la.t ses-ionof the Davis house of he Oregon ,vi,.latur.. was called to '"der at ll::ii) A. M. Fridar. Seven teen mem!,s answered the roll-call. by unaiiinioiis consent, offered a resolution wl.ieh as read. The resolution :if,,.r setting forth the historv of the failure t organize the legisla tor;' in a lengthy preamble, concluded as follows: W. C. Water?, of California, Talks ot Sugar Beets. ENCOURAGES THE INDUSTRY lies. house n fi.'nc I return to tunc lve., l'.v t, nienibers of the ' " in atti'telance, and who have this resolution, that we will our respective hotni'S ui nil living our term of nfllen nu ,,t. v,i U' ''I "f the governor of the state for a eo.i,.i, of t. legislative assem bly, hoping that the members may yet m a legal and constitutional organiza tion fultill the pledges made by their rc-peetive political parties to the people of I Mcgoll. " The following thirtv names were subserilh.. to the resolution: K. J. Davis, H.-tity L. Barklcy, W. S. flten, '"hu tiill, J. .J. lloti'ser, (J.Mirge W. Hi'Llle. Thomas Buckiiiaii. David t'rait'. thin C. Knieiv. ,T. S. Smith, T. M. Mnnkets, .11M Whittaker, I). W. Yoa kum. X. .1. Svindseth, L. Bilyeu, T. J- 1 '. S. Dustin, J. ('. Haver, I). I l'ov.-y, I:. K. Misener, John V. M. Alister, .lames X. Davis, 11. O. tluild, 1. 1'. Schmiiltlein, tteorge tlgle, .lona thati Bourne, jr., J. K. Kruse, Heorge II. Hill, A. L. Maxwell und F. N. Jolies, Svindseth then offered a resolution that the house, by a rising vote, thank SH-aker Davis "For his firm and fair rulings as speaker, his close and untir ing attention to the duties of the office, his strict adherence to the constitution, his manly and courageous action in be half of pure and decent H)litics and legislation in our state." The resolution was adopted. SM-aker Davis responded: "1 thank the members of the house for the courtesies extended and the sup port given me. In accordance with the terms of the resolution adopted members are now at liberty to go to their homes." The members then discrsed. Wilt Appoint a Senator. Governor Lord, of Oregon, ill an in terview, states that he will not call an panied Miss Lamont to and from school ; extra session of the legislature, as he on the day she disappeared, and that I thinks it would be of no avail. Ho lie met Minnie Williams at the ferrv the evening on which she was murdered. That evening Durrant arrived late at a meeting of the Christian Kndeavor So ciety. Ho was flushed and disheveled. He asked permission to brush his hair and wash his hands before he entered the meeting. The discovery of the murders caused tremendous excitement, nnd, after a long ami sensational trial, Durrant was convicted of the murder of Blancho Lamont. He was sentenced to be hanged a year ago last February, but has been granted several stays of execution pending the hearing of his appeal for a new trial by the supreme court. All this time he has been con fined in the county jail, where be has maintained his usual stolid composure, devoting his time to study and religious reading. When Durrant was informed by the head jailer of the supreme court's de cision, he burst into tears, and said this was a very cruel world. He sai l that some day the truth would prevail and ho would bo vindicated. He seemed to take some comfort from the report that Chief Justice Beatty would in a few days tile a dissenting opinion. Durrant has ever since his arrest manifested the most supreme confidence in his ultimate acquittal, and when be was convicted in the superior court, de clared thut the supremo court would grant him a new trial. Tho attorneys for Durrant intend to employ every legal means to estop the execution of the sentence of death. Eugene Dcuprey, one of his attorneys, said: "I am adamant in my belief that this young man is innocent, and that his death by hanging would be murder. I shall therefore tight for him to tho la.-t resource." A FATAL BULL FIGHT. will, however, appoint a I'nited States senator to succeed John fl. Mitchell. Continued by the Semite. The L'nited States senate was in ses sion only about two hours Friday, and the greater part of the time was Ssnt out regard to the per cent of sugar con As Superintendent of the Sugar Far. tory t Wataonvllle, t'al , ll Ultra Some Valuable Inrormallou. Mr. C. W. Waters, superintendent of the great sugar factory at Wats.nn ill,., ("ah, visited Portland recently. Mr. Waters istakiirg his annual vacation, and during the time intends to go i:.,-t for the purpose of purchasing machin ery to he used in the factory at s.a inas. The proposed factory at Salitus ill be the largest in the world, as the 'stimatod daily capacity will be .'I.iiiki Ions of beets. I'laus Spreckles is erect - ng it. at an outlay of alout l.'.' io, )00. Its capacity will In-twice that it the W'atsotiviilo factory, and the .ountry adjoining that will le cngige I in raising the beets will healioiit eighty iqnaro miles in extent. Thoduily oat put of sugar w ill he 4.M) tons, and th.' .'ainpaign in California ordinarily li-ts iNuit live mouths. This would in. ike l total of about 117, ."no tons annually, l no small factor in the production of ".he home consumption. Mr. Waters has I n in charge of tint , Watsonville factory ever since it began work. His knowledge of necessary Mnditions consists of a study from a business standpoint of the miction for a period of tune years. During tint :ourse of bis work in the factory, he lias seen a sugar-producing community Mart, struggle into a permanent posi tion, flourish, and become a diligently ought locality. Dealing with the farmers at all times, their interests have been constantly 1m tore him, ami the varying success of beet culture, ac cording to experience of growers, bus been very marked. In speaking of the Watsonvillo factory in general, Mr. Waters said: i "The factory was starlet I in Wat onville in lssS, and has Iicen run ever since. In the year ls:r. the capacity was doubled, and in tin' year Ifcui in creased there-fold, making it now alsnit 1,300 tons of boots daily. The business has grown very much since the begin ning. The annual average at tirst was ntxMit 1 1,000 tons. Since the establish ment at Watsonvillo, the farmers of that locality have been paid more than i.o00,000. "We pay f I per ton for beets, with in executive session, continuing I resi dent MoKitiley's cabinet apKiintineiits. While in executive session, the creden tials of Mr. Hanna, as senator from Ohio, to succeed Mr. Sherman, were presented by Foraker, and be w as sworn in by Vice-President lloba-t. Davis was also designated acting chairman of the committee on foreign relations, to succeed Sherman. Beyond the usual notification to the president, nothing further was done. The liuuae Caucus. The liepulilicans of the national house, anticipating an extra session of congress, have arranged to hold a cau cus on the evening of Saturday, March Hi. The call was issued by liepresent ative Grosvonor.chairinan of the caucus. The speakership will be decided UKn then. Probably there w ill be no opio sition to Heed. The method of put ting thi' tariff bill through the house and possibly of organizing committees may Iks considered. ; recce .Mussina; Her Tronpa. Athens, March 8. Feverish activity continues throughout the whole coun try. Large quantities of arms, ammu nition, provisions and military stores jire being conveyed by transKirts to Thessaly. The massing of troops on the frontier is proceeding with the ut most speed, and public feeling is at the liiirhcst pitch of excitement. Those tained. The onlv limitation is that beets weighing over live pounds will not be accepted, the average weight be ing about 3 19 pounds. "Last year there were 11,000 acres of laud sown in beets for the factory. The average yield is fourteen tons per acre, which, at the rate of fl u ton, would bring the fanner if.'iti an acre for his product. The average cost of producing is I'.'tt to I'.'S per acre. The beets are grown in an area of about thirty miles in length, and from five to six in w idth. Of course, all of this was not used in beet-grow ing, but is beets are grow n only one year out of three on the same piece of hind, there would be about 30,000 acres in all nec essary. The crops which alternate w ith beets aro almost any cereal, an I crop of summer vegetables. The land has not become exhausted, but, on tho contrary, yields better crops of not only beets but even cereals than before. The yield of barley is larger than be fore the alternating system was adopted, and us the grain is much fieer from cheat, it brings a higher price. At tho time of introducing the beet industry into the Watsonvillo district, the land was badly run down. Now it is regaining its old strength in all grow ths, and barley brings ao cents per 100 on account of being cleaner. The land produces larger uuantities of beets, and tho per cent of sugar is arrowing nil the time. No fertilizers Halt-Water Soup. In nn article on llsli food, the London Spectator gives many interesting facts about the wonderful and Invisible sup ply furmshid by nature for the feeding of the millions of tubes that make up her grout a tile population. The imo.i careful exa initial ion of shal low wateis near the shore w ill not set tle the quest!, m of what the nsli feed on when lit In the wide seas, because the cond.iions In the two case differ so widely. The sea. in ttie heart of Its own do main, far from the shallow water fringe along the shorv. Is devoid of vegetable life. It ivutjiitis no growth of weeds or plants to harbor swarms of possible food creatures, except In limited spaces, us in the floating weeds of the Sargosso So;l. A bucket of water drawn from th" Atlantic Is to the eye simply so much transparent brine, uufouled with weed, ol l of Itsli, and III most cases not visi bly Infested with any form of floating m.r-iue organism. Vet ai nny moment shoals of tUh, numbering millions of individuals, may elect tii enter this apparently foodies wato. and do so with Impunity. The herring shoals disappear Into the divp Atlantic and return In good condition, oily ami exuberant. What have they lived on In the mean time'; Not on smaller llsli caught In the chase, for even If these were present In siiilieleiil quantities, the herrings travel In a serried shoal a mile square and perhaps thirty feet deep, crowding one another Pm closely to admit of a free chase after food. The explanation lies In the universal presence of those microscopic creatures that In some parts of the Atlantic are so thickly massed In the water as to dls oolor its siirl'aiv and afford abundant food for the whale. These are now known to pel v ade every drop of surface water In numbers ivinpiinible to the motes In the air. For the purposi-s of the herring, the pilchard, ami countless other vertebrate tish, shellfish ami zoophytes, the tipper waters of the sea are In fact a nutri tive soup, a food exactly suited to their needs. These microscopic civaturcN are the basis of all the life of the is-eati. Some lire wiiler llens. others occupy shells like miniature bivalves, others again lire in the form of the one eyed micro scopic monsters of the pools -the Cy clops. They multiply at an amazing rale, Increasing from one to more than four hundred thousand a year. Their existence ls one of the greatest economic triumphs of nature. They dis pose of the refuse of the sea. nnd keep Its waters sweet. Iead animal and vegetable mutter feeds tin-in. nnd they, without further machinery, are con verted Into the food llslies of the world. ITS MARVELOUS POWER. Paine's Celery Compound Better Thar Years of Doctoring. V '' -licit ;''- ".A v v? f ?--1 WIS A Itowcry I ooun'lr om. Slobsy-Sny, cully, why is dilt felly wot's storln' away do grog In do saloon like de felly wot makes all de lioise at de head of de procession"; Petey- Give It up. Slobsy-Dafs easy. 'Cause he's hit till' de-basiMl rum. See? A Second Experience. Tour Men, Eight Bulls ami Four lloraea Were Killed. Torreon, Mexico, March 5. The bull fights which took place at Durango yesterday were the most horrible in the number of fatalities over given in Mexi co, and made the largo crowd go wild with delight. The first bull that en tered the arena gored one of the fighters to death; another man was killed by a second bull, and a third bull killed two more men in quick succession, making in all four human lives sacrificed. Eight bulls were killed and four horses gored to death. takini! the coolest vu-w no longer con eeal their opinion that in the event of Hre used at any place in the valley, ro- coercion the center of interest will be tations of crops lieing dcsiidcd upon to keep the ground in condition. I he per cent of sugar in the sack is alsuit l',"v or 13, which would be from H to HI in the juice. "Most of the seed is imported. We raise some at our place near San Jose, where wo have a man engaged in that business. The factory furnishes all transferred to the Turkish frontier, when1 the most serious events may be exoected. Many foreign escorts British Naval Katlinatea. London. March 5. In the statement have alrcadv started lor Ihessaly. u recce says she will not yield to the demand of' the powers to vacate Crete, even if she has to fightall Knrope. Fire Fiend's Work New Y'or series oi nres, an oi "o 1 '" , , ..... i ...;n I K-siioih.r in their character- 'K'y "evci",--,, - - istics, spread terror through a section of the upper East Side yesterday, and to the belief that a daring incendi- nf t.h first lord of the admiralty, (J. J. Goschen, on the navy estimates for 1897-98, the expenditures are placed at 21.898.000, being an increase of 15, - 000 over the last year's estimates. Fonr new battleships, three third-class cruisers, two sloops, four gunboats, t.mndo-destrovers and new acht will be 'commenced, making loS ships building, of which completed during tneyear, bean increase of 6,1 tl officeri tn the navy. roval will be There will men sdJ 121 ,rk, March 4.-A remarkable . !H -"tcrtaine,l that ire: all of niysterious origin ! when the In.s.ness b,K,m.es more ho - OUglliy UOVOIOJH-U, m-i-'i mi lii the state in sufficient utiaiititics to supply the demand. From results so far obtained, wo believe that when , . .. . i : i; i , , , i , - a, . seeil-grow ng lias ni voin "'"" ry was abroad, applying h s torch f , J - furnished from other purpose, apparently, than the q'jV wm (( destruction of human life. i 1 those imported. It seems that when Five fires occurred ... three hours and , "1 U(,.li,a,ed, a,, w ithin the district between Sjx.y- , l . m nrtn ami r.ig.iiy -u,,. .... ........ - .... , ., , . ,.mtt(,r ,,f n,ei, importance. Some extreme grades fall short, but ordinary soil, where vege tables or cereals are grown on a heavy adobe, and some on black loam. a stone s wirow u. -.,,. v,.r.,. lr:.et cultivated bv one and the 1 farmer is about thirty-five acres. Some "'I Hie ,. .. .. , ... .i.il - , Portuguese living on uio i"" ' tho factory nave siuan i"i K..r thev nre able to s.ov about five and Third avenues. All were in tenement-houses, ami no one could tell how the blazes started. Four of the fires, the most important, occurred almost within a stone's throw of each other in a thicklv uopulatisl arc. Tl.i. clHtiir of the fire bdla .;,.!, ,.f engines tla'tiins1 miner an i thither throiigti W.e iiroris naiuiuu. 'created s panicky recline; among thu 1 tenement-hoiii- daelle,., who knew ! not wo-re the Ere fiend would strike i The ieien were exhausted by the arduous Us r I i' t.'l from them. Karwa Thiakiag of ArbltrHtlon. , , a-L . 1 .... ., lielo acres annually. 'o. and are only at the expense of seed, which leaves them a m at protit that is ifortable. One trial et ,illed and his body fatally burned, ami Chrnrtiana. aiarcn o. a nijo m , . . .,., Of the storthing, the legiative assem- , a third j . n, ure, , ;.;;;; Norway, H was decuea w. .r . or, rr.; . ' ... Mi,Hllri Of Dine to consi-ier wtn v' ' . Tlie oea-i in.'" J... I o ' ae rW a Ofewiul apeculain IS) t-hleaan. W. I 'wtune. ha.ii "h",t lhr" on h,'," in ""'res. Write r.r '."I-er,",'""' re'erenee mren. ?fv. l!n"'l. II. f., kn',wlede of the l.usl- L'Ule, Vutt" 'urtlnd. Oregon, ''vlr,T.HT"',,"' V Ut Dm m i asu... E"vSitut apii"So. a boa evsMks Mas, C. Ptuia. I'a. bly of Uu question ci ' Z , h-rk.of lilooinington armtration wtta iore.Bu wu. - ilillr,.., ar,, )V lUWUll -s v -- rapidly making them "The farmer with thirty-five acres usually makes a contract w ith either a white man or Chinaman c-r thinning, weeding and hs-iiig, r.i the price of from HO cents to f 1 per ton. This con stitutes his hired help for cultivating. "Land about Wat-onvillc rents for t!9 r,0 im acre, alel the ti-nulils for thut ' . . ., ..i , . i nncu are constaim . n fireman, of St. Lsmis, Strike Is tpreadlag. yew York, MafJi 5.-Tjo tiomber ef striking cioalt and shirtmakcra aras Increased to .0U0 toiay. jDlfttswa i p"t WAilid ljriU0 d:s:rl ffhich i iS) t'Oo s'tO iuin. nong the peiissjitr continui to increase. Jn Aragon the peasants have become so violent that the military is obliged to escort the tax gatherers. There is like ly to be a wholesiile emigration to 1 Brazil from the famine dieicts. According to Minet, a email quantity of sulphide of line added to tt) usual solution of sulphate of rinc, for xmo plating, will give a much more com pact depon O t.-n.ler, Issly crushed the waist down, wid Lg'Vn. a.'ed Ti.oi.cal under the I ....L-..,lfroIll SVe- liai.k I.auber, et.gine.-o of M. Vui, ribs broken aiid l..-ad lmrt. The iale In ' !" A heavy thunder st.O.u with rain and k t.lirO, 111. I.ooi- eie lass w indows suiasiie.i. w i 1 1 1 stru torn off. l.lati church under con-iru' i.-n .1 ,,,. hou-e blown down and ..-ka.-e burned. Eight l-r-oi.s ,.. and uurin.li a franc destroy the wr-wi-re ii.J in the r. -1 an I Co all tiv 'Q In n o.ll xl men fatal ly tic k -i 0 Inn 111 a "l ioe 1 1 ,,f tie- rxai. at A- Texas lluntngt'di, Ark., .... irr-1. burning thitty- .'.lMi;.:y, -''el s. of them uiic tua'n l-o'."'y dvd. for land. They are able to more man pay , rent with one-tlOrd sown with beet, which requires aUut 1 ' months' worP, and the remaining two-thirds is ! used to make the profit on. "The average wag-a I pay for skiUel ' and unskilled labor .efi.aSadar. Two hundred and four m. n are employed for about five months of the year. Tho cost of coal at the factory is ft a ton. In Germany the same lulior I pay ti.'.iH for is hired' for il cents, and fu.-l cost about .'..IO, w h'-re ours costs S. This makes it very hard." Mr. Waters is of the U lief that the Pacific coast has available land to pro duce all the sugar consumed in tho United States. The .Onate and soil are adapted to the business, and it is apparently only a matter of time be fore it Will be utilised. There Will He No Ooulit as to What I'hyslolaua Will lie Called lu Future Hj Sirs. Ilurlburt. From the H.-puWIi an, Kreauo, ( al. An interesting case comes from Kingsburg, in Fresno county, Califor nia. Mrs. Mattie Ilurlburt tells her ow n story, und us she is a lady who is well and favorably known and well worthy of credence, it w ill be found in teresting: "While I was living in Fresno City in 1803," Mrs. Ilurlburt said, "short ly after the birth of what was then my youngest child, I began to lose all strength and vitality, and was in u very serious condition. Dr. Haydeiv of Fresno, had been attending me, but his efforts to help mo proved unavailing, and I was gradually growing worse, though I tried all the doctors and remedies within reach. One day I heard of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pule People, and I also rend an adver tisement ubout these pills in a newspa per, and made up my mind to give t )n -in a trial as a dernier resort. I ut once procured a supply, and took them ucordlng tortile until I had used four boxes. By that time I was so much improved in every way that I could do my own housework ami was in exu berant spirits at my returned health. I ft-lt splendidly until one year and a half ago when another baby was born, and I was taken just as before, und brought very low again. The attend ing physician feared that my illness this time would result seriously, but he was not ublo to help me, so I again turned to Dr. Williams' remedy, and after taking two boxes was up and about my work again. I shall always keep Pink Pills in rny house from this time on, nnd shall turn to to them alone for medical comfort in the time of illness. (Signed) "MATTIK Hl'KLBUKT." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain, in a condensed form, all the eli-ments nec essary to give new life and richliesa to the bbssl und restore shattered nerve. They are also a s pec i fin foe troubles HS'iiliar to females, such im supptv sions, irregularities and all ficaas weakness. They build up the bVsid, and restore the glow of health W pale and sallow cheeks. In men th'-y e-tfer a radical cure in all cases arising ffB mental worry, overwork or ex-cvs nf whatever nature, pink Pills si-a ill boxes (never ill loose bulk) S-t 0 cents a box or six tsixes for t'i.fiO, se.l may be had of all druggists, or 'lin es, by mail from Dr. Williams' oiediciM Company, Sclienis-iady, X. Y. There never was a remedy so emi nently successful, so far above and be yond all coniH't itiitn, us Paine's celciv Coliipaiund. Paine's celery compound cffis-ts mar velous cures. I Where other remedies miserably fail, and where doctor do not succeed, there Paine's celery coiiisiun. is found curing disease, making people well and happy. Here is the case of Mrs. 1 1. iff, who lives at 140 Summer ave., Newark, X. J. , and whose irtrait is printed here. ; - "My doctor," she says, "called my disease liver complaint, stomach trouble, i nervous dyspepsia, and almost every other name you could think of. When 1 was in Portland, Ore., I had enlarge 1 inent of the liver, and the doolor thought all the troubles came from that severe spell of illness. That was twelve years ago, and I have done nothing but ; doctor ever since. I have had the best j physicians examine me, and see if they ' could do anything for me. For mouths 1 at a time my stomach and liver have been so sore that 1 could only lie in bed ! in misery, and w ith such severe pain in my back, ami so weak mat i coiii.i hardly talk. "After Iliad n bad night I would send for the doctor, it ii I he would leave me a small box of powders and one or' two other medicines, and it would cost -me I every tiino I had one of these spells. 1 believe 1 have taken more : medicine than any other living woman. "Last March 1 ha I a cull from a lily friend of mine, who asked me, "What 1 is the matter w ith you?" I replied by I saying, "How well you look!" "Yes," ! she said, "I never felt so well in my 1 life." She is a woman of 43. "And now ," she said, "I want to give you a In tie advice. I have been almost at death's door w ith liver trouble. After the doctor had done all that he could forme 1 told him not to come again. 1 showed him a Imttlc of Paine's celery comHiuml and told him I was going to give that a fair trial. As a result 1 am strong ami well. "I sent right over to the drug store and got a bottle of Paine's celery coin Hiund, and when 1 had taken two bot tles the soreness had left my stomach and n iv side felt much better. After I had taken, four bottles my side was much stronger, and I wits in better spirits and felt us though I might livs and not be ill such misery. Working people nowadays work the vitality all out every week, and all I ask is to be able to earn the money I have to every week. "Paine's celery coiiinmniJ has ena bled me to do this, und has done me more good than all the doctors put to gether. "Why, my nervous system is so en tirely strengthened that I feel like a new being, and what is more, I look the good the medicine has done me, right in my face und eyes. Just tell all the poor women forme that for a medicine to build one up, give Paine's celery compound a fair trial, and if It does not do it, then they might as well die, I have recommended it to severs! and it has helped in every case, I have) a great deal to worry me, and a dose of the coin h in til gives me quiet sleep ami then I can work. If any one wishes to write me they can do so." Why should a sick person do any thing else but try a bottle of Paine's celery compound? wfefrfrf SJSJSJSjaasjaa'SseaysBBJSiieasjeS'Ba V WWWWW WWW9 WW W eSBJVW f f f f Baftsassaw UliASONS FOII USING Walter Baker & Co.'s v Hreaktnst Cocoa. LV.at. .. 1 t. beciuse it Is absolutely pure. Because it Is not made by the so-called Dutch Process In which chemicals are used. Because beans of the finest quality are used. Ik-cause it is made by a method which preserves unimpaired the exquisite natural flavor and odor of the beans. Brrause it is the most economical, costing less than one cent a cup. Be sure that you get the genuine article Made hy WALTER RAktiK A CO. Ltd., Derchrster, Maaa. Ilatabllahed 1 7 SO. v TsVf no fief 9fl veare nrt fiavr Irfrir Pisn'e l7tir fnr fVtfl. sumption in stock, and would sooner think a groceryman could get along without sugar in his store than we could without Piso's Cure. It is a sure seller. RAVEN & CO., Druggists, f US', f . c . t too ieresco, micnigan, oepiemDcr x, 070. Mr. Grocer: we can't get along without you. Here are thousands of people who want good tea, and tons of Schilling's Besi for them. Will you say to your customers for us: "Here is a tea that I am sure of. I'll give your money back if you don't like it"? H RID I raiL m f EVERY HEW L f'i TI VyLaTV -A iSX P !'' I "" 'a Petalaaaa WX--X IK lbi'iWiiMiN wyTm sm ntwtrsw Un tmm whs. Ik P? 1 1 " n " iaai(f f' mr ssJa.Mi a ftrsj 4sf.viassU IsMlUM WsJi nswl V t M I I hwsi rtifMtrteM sjhich r SMSJss. f ka.tM llSStl st' aTrap. tMM.iSn ( TM 1 1 kse at IK ISJ (IsMtt naSfltMr 1 rr f ' . aBurX larsaasj , Ssff W I Wim(SZ "XHII of mtfUm OMtUMtt. 1 L iviwrtfn lists-tat C'-r tmh wf l.s.Hiti Mm. uriVanoM from flu ii j r iisjiik wluiiik Ust ksMi ismih yirtsmltjgw m-rttrmtvr 9r., Fwtwtuwis., Oftl I th tml ml h-trmAT9 f r ir 4 T , Q I i I as.t. Will llrr It tetl'C tlS) I ff C , , a , - gjFfl I i,.i-n..e..(orte-( tlH,,., J VKtCUW? SSMmm I -si siae- si iri-i "i iiae. -mT I I Sent Free! To kiiv person inti roti d in humane mailers, or who loves iiuimala, we will si-lid Ir.-e. upon iippli. ation, a eopv of tlie "A I.I.I A N K." theorifiiu ol this Society. In ad liiion to its in-ti-ns.lv iiitere-iliiK readiiur, it con tains a ht of tile valllnllle II I III 11 II iisiial preiinuma given by the pa-r. Address THE NATIONAL HUMANE ALLIANCE, 4H-11 t'ulie'l i l.aiuiM Rullillng, New Vork. tsaowaaiaja.g ia ue rs samasv. AT IMI Sja a awaa-aea" tt-ysw s)o si-ia. SH use tD E4;lise mc. v. Hyaii. Agenla Haul.il. I urt Ian. Or., U . Jw I) I I'Tlltg and I'll.KH riireil; noray until I eiin-.I: vii.l i.ir iHH.t. Pits. SI a sari ild at FoaTaKrui.il, k Market San r'ranciAo. DAnC r"r I'aeina an.l liHmllns (I11I.I or SIItss ft II II J i. re. I.'sl '.r hi.l.leii irriiaurva. M. 0. FOW llvww I.KIl, Itul All HutlllllllKlull, Cullil. 0 P i U HI H"1T DRU NX EN NESS Vail IUIlll.r.Jk i.i i. an Ii.,.. v.l-.tii tan.. OSt.J.L. 6TCPHENS. Lku5iuk,)aitaV A kkillKia Cuavpaaf i riaacias. ill SURE CURE for PILES l"k.M aaaa kt il H.ee-Hii y f rH'i tif Pl i tM4 Pit. BO-tAN-KO't PILI RIMIOT. ' J, ataa la MS A fJSMIl ffB' I f t ' l t saj St ' r Im. sViasuuusst rii sM4 at Slesi II- lr frsas. PtMSs VJ Best Cuuah sirup. Ta-i-a (n-at. Use I I PJ in rut s-,11 STdmi-aiiia 1- 4 I N.P.N. U. No. UU3. &F.N.U. N 70 i