FORTUNE IN A HAIRPIN, la Worn bj a ... 1,500 ami ! Cw" New Vork Girl, hairpins are fust anil the becoming Blrl who the " Her many companions. These , ;t any amount from $10 to f- e iianilsoinest worn in this I . 1 ,i hr n New York lady. if" . I.. 1n..tll It ill illst Sll.iHFO. - . while the npppr, or oroa- part of It measures two Inch .V it l not n pronRed affair, "L'oid-fasliioned pins, but Is what ..K..mnn miirht call a slnsle Ktiek- Tbe great cost of this trinket is t only to the profusion of the r Bitli which it is set. but also to I" . ...... lit.. Tln rare ami iiriinam iuuu. Lr part or tins Pm'" ..v,,..nslve od Is ,be M . ,, I'OSt aches, Jul TOSS. "PICK UP" FOR UNCLE SAM. Million, of Dollara of Unclaimed Money in the Treasury. There are millions upon millions of dollars In the treasury paid in from dlf ferent sources which belong to citizen of the United States. To this wealth the postofflce department, through the money order office, contributes largely. A few years back the postmaster gen. eral deposited with the treasurer nearly $8,000,000, the money from uncashed orders which had accumulated since the office was started In 1863. At first no effort was made to restore this un claimed money to its rightful owners, but the letters of advice, turned in as unpaid by the postmasters from all over the country were kept, in case a de mand should be made for their pay. ment. This money remained to the credit of the money order office, show Ing a large profit for the service. This policy was subsequently changed, and now the office endeavors to refund the money to the remitters by a draft drawn on the treasury. This rule ob tains In cast of money orders less than ten years old. Letters of advice older than this are destroyed. Jiverv vear n limit 1 M i .. i monev nrrto T 1 . ' V? ! J1(' w("ut ar ' me back with the msucu nil UUl CaBDcU, I i-nviiiif irnrn nimwhi Jq ;IV 000 1111 COMPLETELY OUTGENERALED. Co.tumea Were Not in the Contract, but She Finally Got Ihem. "I've heard a good deal about coer cion," said the niau with a heavy mus tache and a big gold watch chain, as he leaned over the desk of a Washing ton hotel. "But it's my opluion that the public in general don't know what coercion is. Just wait till you get wom en in politics; then you'll tind out some thing about It." "Have you ever had any experience with women lu polities?" inquired the clerk. "Not with women In politics. But I've Just had experience with a woman in business, which shows how quick the sex is in recognizing au advantage and how heartless It can be in making use of It. I run a dime museum. One of my chief attractions is a bearded lady. About two weeks ago her husband came to me and said that she wanted some new costumes; that she was tired of trying to keep up appearances with her old ones. I just laughed at hlin; but he assured me that she was in ear nest. I told him to tell his wife that we weren't paying her milliner's bills. ft Happy Couple. fOSTI.Y HAIKPIN. Ins across It. Tills string, the sides tie lyre, and the bar, or pin proper. ill of solid gold, and quite broad heavy. The sides of the lyre are Idded with diamonds and rubies, the let of a quality that makes them In value with their more sparkling khbors. The string Is similarly In- k and at each tip of the lyre Is a Serb diamond set about with ru- . In the bottom part or bowl of lyre Is a golden lotus bud, with tolng leaves, that reveal the largest most valuable diamond of the or- cent The effect of the whole le g b heightened by two flexible toss of diamonds, ingeniously con led by delicate settings and threads that run from the horns of the pice to where the bar begins. LAWYERS' CLUB HOUSE. ndiome Structure Krecterl by the lu Association of New York City. ie Bar Association of New York has III Itself a new home In that city. Ii very proiid of Its new home, and jflonably so, for It Is not only use- bat very pretty, too. All the big Pfers in New York participated in claimed, which Is deposited In the treas- ury. .there are many reasons to ac count for this large number of money orders not being cached. In some In stances orders are filed away with oth er papers and forgotten. More fre quently the letter containing the order Is lost or stolen, and the order never reaches the addressee. This is true of the orders made out to the large shops which do not receive the order or the accompanying letter containing orders for goods to be shipped, owing general ly to the dishonesty of employes. There er cases, too, where men have used the money order office as a bank and have made out orders to themsehes which, owing to sudden death or other cause, have never been claimed. 1 It Is difficult, however, to explain why such large sums remain unclaimed, for In case an order Is lost a duplicate Is easily obtained. Application Is made by either the remitter, the payee or the office of payment, and a duplicate Is is sued with only the delay necessary to comply with the forms. A year ago the department made a ruling that du plicate money orders could not be Is sued In less than three months from the time when an application was filed, but this was found Inconvenient, and this order was rescinded. TARIFF AND TAXES. message that she wasn't going to be pin off; mat stie wanted three new dresses, and that she wanted 'em mode by the most expensive modiste in town. 'Wliat'll she do If she doesn't get 'em?' I asked. 'She's awfully set In her own way,' he answered; 'I shouldn't be sur prised if she resigned right off.' I laughed at him again and told him that I had a contract with her for the sea son, which It would cost her more to break than she could earn In six months." "That ought to have settled it," the clerk remarked. "It didn't, though. In less than ten minutes he came back to my office in a run. 'You've got to compromise some how,' he said. 'You've always been a friend of mine, and I don't want to see Viu get the worst of it.' 'She enn't get !uud that contract,' I answered, be ginning to feel a little apprehensive. She isn't going to try to. She says she'll stay her time out and appear every afternoon and night as she agreed to. But when I left her she had her things on, and you'll hnve to run If you want to catch her; by this time she's half way to the barber shop. She's go ing to get shaved.' "Washington Star. SOME FOB THE BAR ASSOCIATION. f formal opening- of the building. New building is located at 42 West P street and runs right through 'block to 43d street. The first floor 'ken up with a long marble corrl f. with readiiiff -rnnillH enntrnnnia S1 Offices OU either alfla I"ln tlm aoc. f "wr is the assembly-room, decor- p u wiute and red. On this floor, i a large reception-room. The rary mid rnfni-n.w i , - let uu mc ff "00r. The Interior of the hnllil. F1" richly decorated. The MpnnthAini f 'lmple apparatus, called the "Me Wm." h.1 hn ,1IJ ... "V v i. ucilSCU, 1 Ul Uf steady and continuous heat to ' Part of the surface of the body, It Is required for medical pur- U C0n8ist8 Of flat rnhhor nnrl Fected to a small copper cylinder L , oy two rubber tubes, the re oeing filled with water, and her- , " 8(,aled- In use, the cylinder u in n enn nf i rter In the evil tlrlni la fhna hoof, I M caused to circulate through the I V .IP tPmnarnti,M Kl ..., o. u ueiiiK reguiuieij " "eignt of tne lamp flarne Too Bad for DesL-rlntinn. 1 tosternionirer Haden mm a r m into by a coaching party. The ii , got tne Worst of It. losing hi, . " ,uuj lreigni ueing r"a ail over the street. The driver l coach came back to settle for the rrix, ana expected to come in for a ri"' lU0le cursing. But the cos- 'want, b, t , I. . rt fcrdi . i "Guv'ner, dere eyen't no ii; itutniTi i. : '"a II H (inilntrv a, thnnt M. ikmlr 80 orPuannge. Every wnlf U fat , ""'""B uuuse, wnere u i I until a o, i . ,, Whatever the new order of things may be in tariff and taxes, business Is already better, and there are sure signs of its being rapidly improved. Infirmities and ail ments are the tariff and taxes on physical strength. Lumbago is a complaint that taxes our Dst eimurance. xi crippiea au unfits one for anvthing like active exer tion. It is a sudden backache, but no matter how sudden, St. Jacobs Oil is quick and sure enough in its prompt cure to break it np and restore strength. In pay ing the taxes on our health the best cur rency is the best remedy for pain, and its prompt use the surest way of getting back to business. The Turtle. Formerly the turtle was taken by means of harpoons or spears; but this iprooeM Injured the creature. It Is now I . , . nantM1 II n n II t Vl d tftKCu 1U UCIO laifmivu uKvu teach. Certain fishermen prefer to dive and take the animal by hand, but when the reptile Is powerful this Is not ccotnplUned without some difficulty. TO PAT A PENALTY FOB DININO Is rsther hard, Isn't ItT Yet now "; "' compelled to do this sttcr every meal. Pys inexorable P-ecmor never ceansi va j,l ' Hut Knew the Bible. At one of the recent revival services held at noon In Old Epiphany Church a ragged, unkempt tramp walked in, apparently supposing it to be a charit able soup establishment. When ' he saw his mistake he started to go out, but was stayed by one of the evangel ical workers. "Stop with us," he said. But the tramp persisted in going out, saying: "I'm in de wrong place." "No. you're not," responded the evangelist: "we are glad to see you." "But," said the tramp, "youse are all strangers ter me." "That may be," replied the other, "hut we nre all servants of the Lord, and the Iord, you know, went among strangers." "Yaas," sententlously add ed the tramp, "and they didn't do n thing ter him." Dumfounded by the display of Biblcal learning, the gentle man allowed the tramp to paw, and when outside the door he was observed to sigh deeply and walk rapidly away with the air of a man who had Just es caped with his life. Hammers. Hammers nre represented on the monuments of Egypt, twenty centuries before our era. They greatly resem bled the hammer now in use, save that there were no claws on the back for the extraction of ualls. The first hnm- Squlra Moore and Hla Katiniabla Wife Interest a ltepurtar. From Tribune, iireeley, Colorado. Among the many good people resid ing in Ctreeley, Colorado, 'Squire Moore and his amiable wife are the best known and the most respected. I This happy couple were born in West Hiding, of York, England, in 1820. In 1848 they emigrated to tins country and settled in Derby, Conn, .where they resided for a number of years. While there Mr. Moore, who was highly I respected by his neighbors, was elected a member of the state legislature in 1867. A reporter called on them reoently and was received cordially and in re sponse to his inquiries, Mrs. Moore said: "For four years I was miserable, hardly a week passed during that time but what I suffered from extreme lassi tude. The least exertion fatigued ine. At times when I was sewing or read ing, I would be troubled with tingling sensations, like the pricking of pins in hands, foot, arms and legs. Occasion ally I would puffer from profuse per spiration, the water fairly running from my f:icc and hands. Then for days it would seem impossible for me to enjoy a minute of warmth. 1 would sit in a rooking chair alongside a roar ing fire in the stove wrapped np in blankets, yet while my faoe would be scrorched, the rest of my body would be chilled. "Finally, despite my opposition, my husband called in a ' physician, who attributed my ailment to rheumatism and prescribed for that complaint. A day or two afterwards he changed his opinion, saying I was attacked with la grippe; also changed his medicine, but to no purpose. I was going from bad to worse. The tingling sensations were resumed. At times I would be incapable of doing anything with my hands and my husband was fearful that I was suffering from partial paralysis. "One evening, while reading the rew , roric iriuune, lie read to men statement of a wonderful cure perfected by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. He and I had at times read similar testimoni als describing the great powers and virtue of these pills. But this night in particular, I was impressed with what he read and told him it wouldn't do any harm to try a box. The next morning he purchased a box of the Pink Pills and I commenced taking them according to directions, three times a day. Within a week I felt better, and when I had finished that box I asked my husband to got me another and he laughingly complied, saying, 'conceit is as bad as consumption, but even if you think they are doing you some good there is a great relief ex perienced." After that he purchased for me about a dozen more boxes, and for nearly two years I continued taking them. The result was I regained my strength, the tingling in arms and legs, hands and feet ceased and the frequent sweats which I had been subject to left me. In all truth, I am forced to state that the Pink Pills made a new j woman of me. Thut is," she laughing ly remarked, "as new as you can make a woman who is now in her 76th year. " And in truth, Mrs. Moore's closing re- murks are well founded, for she is as hale and healthy looking as any woman could be who has lived her great age. (Signed) ANNA MOOUE. Subscribed and sworn to before me, a notary public, this 28d day of May, 1896. My commission expires May 14th, 1900. Milton A. Lyons, Notary Public Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent postpaid on receipt of price, 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $3.50 (tliey are never sold in bulk, or by the 100), by addressing Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenec tady, A. x. Water In Wood. It has commonly been estimated that green wood, when cut down, contain about it per cent of its weight In mets ture, but In the forests of ceutral fo rope wood cut dowu In winter is said to hold more tban 40 per cent of water at the end of the following summer. Keptj fer several years In a dry place, wood; retain from 15 to 20 per cent of water,' while that which has been thoroughly doslceated will, when exposed to air under ordinary circumstances, absorb 5 per cent of water lu the first three days, sad will continue to absorb It un til It reaches from 14 to 16 per cent as a normal tandard the amount fluctu ating above and below this standard according to the state of the at mo-; phere. It has been found that, by ex posing green wood to a temperature of 21'J degrees, F.. the loss of weight equal ed 45 per cent; and, further, on expos ing small prisms of wood one-half Inch square and eight Inches long, cut out of billets that had been stored for two years, to the action of superheated steam for two hours, their loss of weight was found to be from 15 to 45 per cent, According to the temperature of the t uam. SURE CURE for PILES luhlDi tod UUod, BlMdlBi r Prvuudlng FIlM ytald at mm ! DR. Q-AN-KO'S PILI REMEDY, au.p.lt.k-1 KM. Druul.u r atll. UK. UOSANkO. Pkllan Pa. rarely yields to ordinary m"'"""-, nier was undoubtedly a stone held in iM-t hand. Claw hammers were In- vented some time unring tne lnniiuu ages. Illuminated manuscripts of the eleventh century represent carpenters with claw hammera. Hammers nre of all sizes, from the daiuty Instruments used by the Jeweler, which weigh less than half an ounce, to the gigantic fifty-ton hammer of shipbuilding estab lishments, some of which weigh as much as fifty tons and have a falling force of from ninety to UK). Every trade has Ita own hammer and its own way of using It. wno P'"r.,- .w,,..JIii m. ffrUandkloSpUlntr rheumatism, constipation, biliousness and nervousness. A codfish recently caught off Flam borough Head, England, had inside it fifty-nine fish hooks. CATABBH CAMMOT B CCD with tnCAL APPLICATIONS, at thef eannot Mtto an tin blooi an muoous surfaces. Wall a.v'p'i!i.pM FPiso's Cure for Consumption has be"! mi family medicine with us since UU -J- B. Madison, :sw u ., - e-. Large Lobsters. The largest lobster ever caught on the coast of America was taken by a Bel fast, Me., fisherman In 1SU1. It weigh ed twenty-three pounds and measured thirty-seven Inches from the end of Its tail to the tip of the long front claw. The monster was too large to enter n enmmon lolister trap, but as the trap waa being drawn up It was caught In BLACKW ELL'S f lAiaii-r " - B-r. ba . . iZff Oiy. sjettbens. ' " P" ,nTi J ' If i Yob will And o tnslda aoh two and two aonpona fosir enuea bag well's Dukaai. of tills celebrated aid read the eoapon glTea a list of valuable casta and how Us . .i.. written on h netting and safely landed. Many Thre.pie8otc-.r, .obgter weilllnK tWe,y. leaves of the fan palm, are in the Brit ish museum. Schilling's Best tea-grocer gives your money back if you don't like it It's one thing to say money back, and another thing to do money back. We say it, and your gro cer does it; and we pay him A SchiHioi Coispsay su rraacidc SO two pounds was captured near the sauw place, and the event was considered to be of enough Importance to be given a place In Williamson's "History of Bel. fast" Aches. Essence of peppermint, applied with the finger tlps,over the seat of pain, often gives relief in headache, tooth ache, or neuralgia pain In any part of the body. Care must be taken not to put It directly under the eye. on ac count of the smarting it would cause. Daisy Is beginning to show that she Is not one by writing her name "Dalcey." REASONS FOR USING Walter Baker & Co.'s Breakfast Cocoa. Because 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. Because it is made by a method which preserves unimpaired the exquisite natural flavor and odor of the beans. Because it is the most economical, costing lest than one cent a cup. B sura that yaa set th (enuln artkl. saada by WALTER BAKER 4 CO. Ltd., Dorchrsur, Mass. Established 1 7 SO. vm WHEAT. Make money hy suc resHful speniifaiion In Chlcaiio. We buy and st-ll wheat there on marKins. Fortunes have been made on a small beKliinlnK by trading In futures. Write for lull particulars, best of relerence slven. rev eral years' eperlenre on the Clncsun Hoard of Trade, and a thorough knowledge of the busi ness. I'ownlng, Hoiiklns Co., I'lik-ago Hoard of Trade Hrokt-rs. Offices lu i'ortlaud, Oregon, and Hpokane, Waah. RODS Si lost or hlrlilen Irranurra. M. I). fO W- Box 3J7 Huutbliigton, uonn. T) VPTt'KI and 1'II.KS cured; no pay until JV cured ; send for hook. Iim. MNrii!LD 4t PoRTitKrui.D. Has Market Ht., Ban Francisco. W fifty frslvtat. Ili'latrfttMl CfttftlnfjnM rrtM. Pwtalama Incubator Co., All 9 Ml EVERY HEN fUieril In PtaiUat In cub tor a at, ri ot right, and la bctur Q( rtlDlDI UtriWN lliaw istrhinM sc1nivlr in trdjj thcfMlnrM wfairh pro dc th nrtttt number f Tie"fu Cblekoaa. tncabttw from HO up. Petala ma, Cal FOR PEOPLE THAT ARE SICK or "Juftt Don't Peel Well," &KLIVER PILLS tar the On Thine to uao. Only One for a Dose Bold by pnif glata at 2 Bo BanplM malld free atddraaa Dr. frunke Mtd. U. FtUla. 1'a- QPIUMDRUNKENNESS W WIVIc.r,iil,ioi.aulr. N.r.jtiil C.rW.DR.J.L.STEPHENS.UBAKON.oAlO, J Kb ajrup. Tasws Good. Das fjl t!t, fin tT arurrwa. r-T B. P. N. U. No. 681. 8. F. N. U. Vc 701