WEEKLY OREGON! STATESMAN. TUESDAY. MARC55 r?. iqoo. TP ntallimes forGirls. . The first critical period in a woman 's life comes at the pass ing of her girlhood. In nine cases out of ten where disease listens itself upon her it does so at the line of demarcation be. tween girlhood and womanhood. How to preserve the daugh ter's health how to ward ofF disease at this crisis is the prob lem that confronts every mother of girls. : Dr.WHliams' Pink Pills for' Pale People are the ; best remedy to use at this critical period. Read this sworn statement of Mrs. JVM. Riggs, of Carterville, Mo. ; I? X hIth- 8h -ad pale, toad do appetiu-i tmeu JZMhmtM' Tb" who ew her eoidMon ald. waa gain lo to a decline. . g ni h .j f,-1 ffwt on ' condition w-. marvelooa. Before rndltJ waalmpro-ed.and.JUekepton raJo- Inc appetite, strength and fleab nntll ahe wm entirely well. 8be look three 1?? - A nd Uday h not be-lthier. more roboat looking rlrta trtrvla. fe la fleabier and JbeaUbier than over before la her Subecrtbed and sworn to before me a Notary Public, thla 15th day of October. 1S08. ; Wiluax Wocott, Notary PuUie. . ' ' . i : " ' :' l - ' i ' J f " Dr. Wmiams' Pink Pills for Palo People are an unfailing specific for uch diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, iSCVitus' Dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after-effects of the CTip. palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, all forms of weakness,' in either male or female. Dr. Williams Pink Pills for Pale People are sold by all dealers, or will be sent, postpaid, on receipt of price, 50c a box or six boxes for $2.50 I - 1 t , it . . v a - .... - 1 jiacy mre never oiu in uun or py Medicine Company, Schenectady, N.Y. r TIDAL WAVES. I What of the tidal wave, that myste rious, indispensable 'swelling of ,the waters that.f following the "pull" of. iic moon, 'rolls ; return thi "globe, or otrrs twice in each twenty-jour hours, stemming the outflow of mighty riv er., penetrating far j inland wherever access is ' available.' and doing within it-i short lease 'of life an amount of be neficicnt work freely tlrat would beg gar the wealthiest monarchy ruf ,he v?rld to undertake if it must need be paid for? 'Mysterious it may welt be called, since, though; its passage from zi ne to rone be so jfwift. it is like all other wives, but an jundulatory move ment of that portion of the sea mo mentarily influenced ,by the suasion of the' planet not, a 1 is vulgarly sup posed. : the same mass of water vehe mently carried onwird tfor thousands of miles. j -' To meet a tidal wave at sea is in some parts of the Vorld a grim and unforgettable j experience.- Floating upon the shining blue plain, with an indolent spelling of the surface just giving a cosey roll "to your ship mw and then, you; suddenly see in the dis tance aj ridge, a knoll of water that advances vast, sclent, menacing. Nearer and nearer it comes, rearing its , apparentW endless curve higher and higher. There is no place to flee 4rom before its face. Neither is the-? .much suspense. Fcr its pace is swift, although it appears so. deliberate, jfrocn the illimitable grandeur of its extent. It is upon the shtpV She bethaves in accordance with the way she has been caught and her innate peculiarities. In any case,! whatever 'her bulk, she i hurled forward, lupward. lckward. downward, 'as if never again could she regain an even keel, while her crew ?!ing desperately toj whatever holding place they may have reached. Some will have it1 that these marvel ous uplifting of the sea-bosont arc net tidal waves at all that they do not belong to that normal ebb and flow of the ocean that iowns , the sway of the moon. If so. they would be met -with tmre (frequently than they ore at sea. and far mpr disasters would be placeJ to their account. This conten tion seems reasonable, because it is well known that lonely islets such , as St. Helena, Tristan; d'Acunha. and As cension are visited; 'at irregular "ter" vals by a (succession of appalling .. ,.- rtIirV lhat deal havoc amonc the smaller shipping, ond look as if they would overwhelm the land. The suaeestion Ss , that the I stupendous waves are due to cfmsmic disturbances, to submarine earthquakes upheaving n-nn-l)tjl ; amdJ causing so vast a ,i;c..unn!hf the ocean that its un dulations extend for several thousands of miles. 'London jbpectator. PRINCK CONQUEROR. . 1 ' Tlte birth of a son to thcjdnchess of Aostait is Mid.-wjas a reat shock to the princess U Naiples. which has n creasol her if cry natural grtei at bcr . .i.:Mi.fci..M i Prtnr Amedco. (who by virttic of this childlessness is now in succe!sstrn ito 111c hhmh;? . .m UtUv of aout a year. . -.il. tt.n t nrdmarr amount KK.;fi ;rtinrifc' wav. tJne uay .. ! tL litili ehaw m a tne princess, im- . ' . I l.:.. : iiii 4 arm. tSC corriatir iii n.- "--'- - .' ., wouTd have 'avoided h.m. as usual tuu qs she passed with averted be-ad he suddenly held M his fat. 'I'Wled orras, and on the limpulse of the cno- while her eyes filled liith tea's. The little fellow laid Ins, Hps on ea . lids, stroking her! i cheek with bo Ji j. ci ........ , trtK ar.J has ever : 1 ,:. vk dirvoted siae. Chicago Times-Herald. ; POLITICAL NOTES. Tlte mayor of ai Michigan city Jm served ten terms consecutively.- and it that? he Is in the field lor oectS for -111 c-4. i-tt,i 0 " " " r - . success.;;:: fj i- f", (i Tte two: chief states of the North and South respectively. New York and Georgia. tUl adhere to annual sessions of the letriSature4 and in' both j last vear the biennial session project ' was sidetracked. There are now six states of w-H.ch" the empire state, of rhe North and the empire staje of the South are 1 It is anno'unced from Illinois that tlie contest over the I census patronage in that state,! which! it was expected by hrc opponents would be an obstacle to the return ot ienator v-unom 10 asn ington, lias been adjusted by an agree ment wherebv the natronaee of the tight Illinois congressional districts mc 1001 py aaores le mjt. wiiuams turned over to Senator Cullom. The average number of enumerators ior each Illinois congressional district is about 130. In New York and Illinois the office of state architect has been created to prepare plans for all buildings con structed or altered at estate expense. The salary of the state architect is $7, 500 in- New- York and $5,000 in Illinois. More votes were cast by the prohibi- ion party in Pennsylvania than in any other. Mate in the country in 1806, but notwithstanding a revival of interest in prohibition matters there since then, the vote of that party at the last state election in Pennsylvania was 1,000 less than in the national contest 01 three years ago. of Pennsylvania, though defeated by more tnan 100.000 plurality in tne state, carried twenty-seven counties and came wirhin a fraction of carrying three other counties, a total of 30 of the 67 counties into which Pennsylvania is divided. . The formal call of tie middle-of-the- road or Joshua Levcing prohibition ists for their national convention in the city of Chicago on June 27th has made its appearance. The exoenses of the state quarantine commission, on whose vigilance the health of New ork city, m great measure depends, are only $85,000 a year, though the demands upon it are considerably in excess ot this sum. In the presidential election of 1896 there was a fusion between the demo crats am! populists on presidential elec tors) in North Carolina, the populist vote being generally put a r 50.000 r-f tn tril n,-kwh Rrv.in received. The republicans carried -the state for gov- rnrr r-hofKiiricr tf Russell, the D res ell t republican governor, by: 9,000 ma jority over the democratic candidate. with a pooulist in the held. I his year the populist state committee in North Carolina at a recent meeting in nai- eigh, called the state convention to ri..- nn Anni iSth at the caoitai. -n o.i.lrcj -!s Unel condemnine the ttrrmn-ifA constitutional amendment and denouncing the election law en- n,-t.i liv t lie. recent democratic legis lature. This year the repuDiicans ex nvt ti have rhe co-ooeration xA North Carolina populists in opposition to the policy of the recent legislature a ma jority of the members of whicfli seemed tr H. metre strnnir t intent upon me it-.Ki;tVinif nt rr "whit sbvereientv than on settling any other pending question. Acts gently on the Kidneys; Liver and Bowels r . rANSES THE 5Y5TEM W--' -Nrririrer-TllAI IV PERMANENTLY rr ts. .1 toes? - - r - UlNT D BY CUT 'HI fccnvmu- " - - (AURRNIA pG SyRVPvS S ' -li.il 1 1 l 1. -m " THE LAND OF GOLD . t w. J. riLTEB "WHITES FROSt KXOIIKE ELDORADO. THE What Some Members of the Salem Colony ia Dawwa City Are Dofaf-Labor . la Very Cheap. t (From Daily, March iotK.) ; i " Ed. N. Edes yesterday received a ttter from W. I. Culver, who. wirh P. 'Minto, is now in pawson City; "in the Klondike country iwhither they went from Juneau several months agqf toi:ow:ng is the letter, 'showing tne. hardships of the trail artd conditions m the tabled gold country ot the North: .. '1 , Dawson, N. W. T t. 14, loxxJ.- fancy that I can see you Opening your mail this morning and having a,4iearty argli over your comic valentines. I have no dread of receiving any such this year, and have some doubt about receiving mail of any description' iowevtr, the mail service is improvf tng. and letters are supposed to reach nere once a week. We made he trio n from Skagway without jlaccident. ali- rhough it is quite an undertaking to ravel 500 mies over snow af d ice. anrrng this season. lint c'og team! composed of a big Newfoundland 1 and wo strong Malamutes. drew our lda41 01 300 pounds with east, and after givi ng tbem a weeks rest rhey brought wsce their cost. The trail "from Skag way to Bennett was blockided, and we were compe'led to commence our sled journey at Skagway, and krrossed over ilie summit of White Pass cn the old trail. The most severe i storm we ex perienced was on Lake Le Barge, w.uch we crossed with thej tliermometri 30 degrees below zero, land a strong w nd m our1 laces. Ther were fifteen or twenty who crossed, nd most ev ery one got frosted sorne. although none seriously. The mof-ning we left Selkirk it was 64 below,! but ajs there was no wind we did not suffer from the '. -The dry, cold climate inside does not affect a person like the damp weather along the sea coast. We tra veled for more than two weeks with out having a coat on, haVing a drilling vershirt cailed Parkay , outside our heavy woolen shirts. A. pair of moc casins, one pair of German socks and two pair of ordinary woolen socks keep the feet warm. Evef-y twenty or. twenty-five miles you fiid road h.ouse?f. at mosi of which you : can find goojl accommodations, for which, you pay $1.50 per meal and $l for a bunk. I here is no extra charge for creep ers," and not likely to be a shortage m the supply; . j i We reached Dawson on February ist., and have a good cabin back on the hill. We have met Ernest Wagner and John Singleton; they are looking alter their claims. John Bozorth. H. L. Black and Ferguson lhave an office n the main part of town, and are dp ftg a brokerage business; they .were out when; I cailed.; The Cavarijaugh boys and Jack 'Lemon are living near town. Asa Wyman own a good clarni out on one of the greeks and is work ing it this winter, j John 'Baker is iat rorty aiue, empioyexi Dyjone 01 tne transportation companies. iChas. Ford was at Circle City when last heard from. Fred Crouch, formerly of Sa lem, is 'up on Bonanza. Sunday we went; up Bonanza fifteen miles to where Eldorado comes in, iat which place there is a lively town. We were fortanate enough to meet a friend with a good team and sleigh, and ie took us through some of the bst camps in the country. Mining is fat the best now, and for miles, the creeks look 'like one vast camp. Some clajmr owners are thawing by the old method. while many 'have substantial steam thawers, which are a great improf e ment. 'They are finding new oar dirt on the benches along the creeks and i in some places the bendi claims are 5oo or 700 feet above the creek bed. T!ic average wages are $5 per day sind board, and many force their , men I to s;gn contracts to wait .lor their pay until the ' clean-up and take their pav n dust from .the claim; the result will be that many men will work-during the season and get but little besides their board, as -many claims are certain! to be worthless. A man can get tjfeat kind of a job any day, but unless i you are acquainted it is hard to get pay ing employment with the privilege' of quitting when .'you desire to. The jre- ports tvtat went out last fall, about men being scarce and labor high, were fal? e end caused many men to come in late last fall On the last boati and scows, who had only means to reach here, ex pecting to find plenty of j work. Stch men had to take any kind of work "that offered a living. Many a(e now leav ing for Nome over the ice, expecting to make the trio in about sixty dys. It is likely that tne majority will .com plete the trip on steamers from some point down the river. ! Every store and place; of business you enter lias gold scalesi and dut is much nsed or money, but currency is plentuul and all the games pay Jirp-J nines in svh monev i I I When the river opens jwe expecil to ioin the rusfi to Nome, and if nothing happens, will come out next falLj I btfievc Dawson will be a good cjimp this spring until the cleain-up is over, and then it will be almost deserted. QUEER MEDIGAL DEATH. TEST fOF 1 A recent report of experiment at the Academy of. Medicine in laris gives astonishing testimony of the yr tui; of rhythmical twkching of the tongue as a means of restoring life in cases of drowning or ! asphyxiation. Within the past few months there (have been at this hospital 40 ; such cases of resuscitation by this pne.imeans. Some of the statements made by M. Labcrde. of the Academy of Medicine, in (con nection with this report lare of excep tional interest. In 'one case a drowned man was resuscitated onlv after $iree hours spent in xmintermittent twtttch ing of his tongue. . Which is, certjairHy a reminder to physicians that this rem edy is one that requires fKatiencei N. Y. Journal. . i- 1 - ' '-'i: Chinese cheap labor, which hasjbeen considered more or less of a threat to the 'American workingman, no ap pears ia a new form to menace corpo rations. Mon Fung Youn. a Chfinese doctor, has just been awarded ai ver dict of $8,937 again Uhe Kansas Cty. St. JosepJ and Council Bluffs railroad because a porter wouia not aitowj mm to ride in a parlor car. ; . 1 tr Tin n nvrii t rimTr nEUAROINO TIIK REQUEST TO PAR- Ceervtary of Baker City Chamber of CMimrM TkM Ilaad-Cu OncrrlasOM. Gov. T. T. Gcer yesterday received a letter from O. L. Miller, secretary of thj Chamber of Commerce of Baker Gty, regarding the petition filed on the previous day or the pardon of V u- !iam Marshall, the boy now serving an 8-years term in the penitentiary for manslaughter. Mr. Miller in "discuss ing the cose, and the application tor clemency, takes the position that the result 'of the young man's act, for .vhich he suffers imprisonment, was an accident. and the boy was not guilty of a crime. The letter says in part: "If we did not feel that this is a case .hat" deserves your personal attention And the benefit of the request therein r,ade, I should not take your time nor impose upon you with such a request. Oliver Marshall, the older brother, who sas convicted of manslaughter at the "a me time, and whose defense was in anity, has within the past three months, !een adjudged insane and is now con lined iu the "asy!m. I have personal knowledge of all the circumstances and conditions ; surrounding the cae and 0 the part taken by this boy. William Marshall, in the defense of his brother which resulted in the death of James Reed, and which was a mere accident and not a crime, and was no more than hat any brother 3nd mere boy would have done under similar circumstances. Tbe signers of the petition include al most every person in this vicinity, who are1 familiar with the circumstances, and many of the leading citizens and public officials. j "At the time "of the boy's conviction an application was made to the court to have the boy, who was hen past 16 years old. confined in the reform school and the said petition was signed by all but two of the jurymen in the case. The court declined for the reason, as he stated., that the boy would not be re ceived there he being past 16 years of age. Amomr t'M names on the petition you will find that of ex-Sheriff Kilburn. vho had entire charge of the arrest and confinement of "this boy and who is probably more familiar -with the cir cumstances than any other person; also Sheriff Huntington has signed the pet ition, as well as many other prominent men of Baker City and Baker county. Several of the jurors in the case have signed this petition but. as several of hem live in remote parts of the coun ty, it is impossible to see them at this time. One of the jurors is dead. The prosecuting attorney. Hen. Samuel White, advised me that he will write vou s personal letter regarding the case. We .have not conferred with Judge Robert Eakin, in whose court the con viction was had. but from his attitude at the time of the presentation of the petition regarding the boy's confine ment in the reforrn school, we believe he will favor this petition. - HWe trust you will give this matter yor personal attention, and that the Ixrjr will soon be given his liberty." )!; "A Single Fact Is worth a shipload of argument." What shall be said, then, of thousands of facts? Every cure by Hood's Sar saparilli is: a fact, present:ng the strongest possible evidence of the mer it of this medicine. Thousands and thousands of such facts prove that Hood's Sarsaparilla will cure all dis eases caused or promoted by impure blood, It, is the best medicine money can buy. Indigestion, nausea Hood's Pills. are cured by AN OLD TIMER. George W Caris, aged 58 years, died at the Ore gon hospital for the insane lhursday night a-fter an illness of pneumonia. Caris was received at the insant asylum from Grant county in 1877 and had been. an inmate of that institution for twenty-three years. He was an old sol dier, having lost an arm in the service. A brother resides in Grant county un der whose nstructions the remains wVre prepared "for burial and last night shinned to Roseburg where interment will be had in the cemetery of the Ore gon Soldiers Home. AN 6LD CLAIM. Secretary of State F-jl. Dunbar yesterday paid the claim of W'm. Lee. a rejected volun teer, for the time served in Camp Me Kinlcy. at .Portland, while awaiting mustering in by the- United States armv officers in April 1808. The sum allowed Mr. Lee was, $24, and he had made application' for membership in Company G, Second Oregon, when re jected. 1' Habit is the deepest law of human nature. Carlyle. 1 lie for Infants Nature planned that infants should have only milk for at least the first year of life. But thin milk, skimmed milk, will not nourish. It's the milk that b rich in cream, or fat, that f does the work. This is be cause fat is positively neces sary for the growing body. sccirs findsloa f contains the best fat, in the I form of Cod-liver Oil for all delicate children. They thrive greatly under Hs use. Soon they .weigh more, cat more, play better and look better. Iff fast the richt addition to their regular Wood. The riypophosphrto of Dme and soca m n are necessary to tne growth and formation of bone and teeth. ' - - . - At I1 diimtaJ; joc d ft eo. i sexxrr & bowse, New York. Gest Food (uticuraSoi MEDICINAI&TOIL Red. Rough Hands, Itching, Burning Palms, and Painful Finger Ends, f ONE OUJEtlB. Soak the hands on retiring: In a strong hot, creAmyather of CUTICURA SOAP. Dry, and anoint freely with CUTICURA, the freat skin cure and purest of emollients. Wear, during: the night, old, loose kid gloves, with the finger ends cut off and air holes cut in the palms. For red, rough, chapped hands, dry, fis sured, itching, feverish palms, with shapeless nails and painful finger ends, this treatment is simply wonderful. Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humor. j4 tralMudioflea Ux Utick-iMd enttel; Ct-ir-o Oihtmext (ftW,). allllPll Jl to tMU-tly llyvttcbn. toflsmmmUoa. and irritaUoD, moi "! mod U&EUUJIc1 hl; -nd OtmtTVUA ltl.TMT (IOc.). 10 cool mtui cl-n. th bln.l. A Hi r (a often raffictent to car. tbr o.t un-uiHirc. dtfturtr TUC CPT wxl bum.tUUnic .kin. rlp. nd btil haatof., with k- tr hr l- I lIC Ob 1 1 ItZu J elM UU. Forra liRDa ud ens.. Conr., bol. 1'rof-. umu-. A. MIXING COUXTltY ELLTOJi SHAW WRITES OP IDAHO AND MONTANA. His Vl.lt to H alien nd Trip OTtrllm Mountain. Lumber latcreata In th MlMoula Coantry. Ell ton Shaw, wliose letters ironi Eastern Washington and Idaho tiavc soveral times appeared in the States man, is now in Deer Lodge, Montana, and from that place writes this paper of his observations 1 in the mines ana timber regious of that country, as fol lows: Deer Lodge, Mont., March 4. I be eve I cave you an idea of Wallace, Idaho, in mv last letter. From there we moved on to Alullan, a small min ing town- only about: eleven miles from Wallace. Here is located the 'Morning and I think the Sullivan mines. The town is built on a snjall flat, and up the sides of a canyon leading back toward the 'Morning mine,! which is located three miles from the Morning mill, where the ore is made, ready for ship ment. The ore is (jonveyed from the mine to the mill by, means of an ore train, which runs onia; track like that of a railroad, only is narrow. The en gine pulling -the tra-ii was quite a curi osity to me as I had never seen one like it before. The thing has no drivers on it like those of a railroad ;locomo- tive, but has four small wheels untser each end. and nonej at all. under the middle. The motive; power is conveyed to a journal, extending the full length of the engine, one kne side only, iy three -sh-Us, resembling the piston rods on a railroad engine;, with this exception they -work perpendicularly instead of in a horizontal position as on a locomotive.- Connection between this revolving journal anl the fouf wheels on one side is made by means of large bevel-gear cogs. This is what is known a 'a "Shay" engine. They push up eight? to ten mpty cars. and bring down as many loaded ones. It makes the old engine make a terri ble noise to do this, but when . you learn the steepness ; ot the grade, up and down which this queer train motes you will no doubt be surprised, to know that an engine could- make such a climb. One off those big Northern Pacific "hogs." as they are called, hav ing four -drivers on ia side, could not climb this, grade even with no ioad at all. i ' " - There is at -timesq in the ascent an 8 per. cent grade. In the scant three miles they gain 1000 fert in altitude. The track is very jcrooked, winding around th edge ofi a -mountain ?nd across gulches on feigi trestles. .The crookedness of the track accounts for the fact, that a runaway . train, down this grade, soon leave the road and plunges down the canyon below. Two such runaways have ocurred Since the line has been in operation. At the chutes wh-r the ore is load ed the work resemble that of loading grain cars from the big elevators setn throughout tb Eastern s-tates. "A spout is- lowered, a slide raised and out comes the ore m chunk of all shapes and sires, from that of a pea to those as large as a water bucket, thundering into the iron, patcn. dumping cars-. It takes out a tew minute to load a tram, then the brakes on1 every car are set as iignny as possn;. without causing the wheels to slide and the train moves on. Two men stay on the cars to tend the brake. I had the pleasure of mak ing the round trip on this queer (to me at least) railroads train. The mines here pvt out silver; and lead ore, of which I have some fine specimens packed away in my ; trunk. 1 nursaay morning, at 6:40, we boardetl a mixed freight and passenger train for Mijsoula, Montana, a dis tance of 128 miles. In making this di.v'.ancc - we cross -the summit and dhange from the state of Idaho into Montana, and down into, what I sup pose, one might call a valley or some what of a prairi country wiere, nestled clo; to the foot of a mountain, at ths eastern side of this open country, jj situated the town of Missoula. Leaving Mrulan I we move up the canyon in an easterly direction for a few miles, when wej make a sharn turn and go back -directly toward the place from which we came. Of course we are gradually gaining and ,not slowly either, in altitude. Soon we reach what is known as MS" bridge, and the shape of the bridge, i well worthy the name which has been given it. An other torn throws jus to the east once more. 'Below we could see plainly. .1 1 4 S 1 It Is of concentraies, billed for the Hmt-lter at l'ut-blo. Col. Thisiade n a heavy "-train to pull down the mountain. Soon after leaving the summit you could smell the burning grease- on thq car wheels, which, soon Jx'come ln-atcd to the burning point by the friction caus ed by the tiglitly set brakes: Nothing of importance transpirel in making the descent. Sonic lieautiful scenery, may be seen along thiv portion 01 Hie rouic. We. took ov.r Misitmn on the rear platform after getting pretty well down the mountain sid and a it wa a bi'autiful day, tlie . sun shining very brightly, we could ride outside and not suffer from cold. J . Oii thii side we find a lunrfHTing country. Utfrrng ilie i;ijn up the1 Mis- - soula river I saw more saw Ion than I ever look(kJ upon ieforc m all my life. There arc several small towns, or -ratiher .sawmill; camps, along the road, but no place 'of any size. At -Iron. 'Mountain we stopped i long enough to get a bite to eat, then moved on.- Here t 'found an old iron 'spoon while "out looking for .'souvenir's. I kept it to renienrlK-r the place by, as on this same day there was a cast-in, in the Iron Mountain mine, imprison ng nine miners. We reached 'Missoula at 4 o'clock in the eveniiiK. It is a railroad town of between 5000'and xxx people. .IJc.side being a railroad jutictUm, it is' a supply center for j the virroutuling mining-, towns, and is surrounilwkljy an aiiri- cultural country on three idcs. Wc Wt Missoula at 5 in the'-evening-for IJcer Lodge. Ail . d.iy Saturday wa-i raging a regular Montana blizard. The wind, filled', with -snow.-, blew all day so strong a man could scarcely stand aeainst it. It was Void., and the wind blowing, so liard, ; it wa very piercing. Darkness, ?CHn came upon am so that we did not see the moun tains between .here ! and that place. It' was bitter cold and the wind blowimr ouite hard when we changed cars frf this place at varrison. Thi is a- speci men of Nebraska winter weather, and it seemed it would freeze me. Thin is a place; of 5000 or less and is " th prettiest town I have seen since Icav- , mg Aana Walla. " . When the Castcllanes rrachcM": New V'ork some $-foxo was due the- conn- tees .from the Gould es.tate and -was paid. This is hardly more than enough to kcep'.the count's many pairs r a 01 irousers propeny creased ior a short time, but if the Goulds have real ly Jbeen permanently established in New York society by the visit of their Parisian- relatives life prevailing 1e lif that the Frcncliman is returiMtig with all the monjry liecame after not without reasPii. . 1 v. The Gruel Knife! It la absolntfly rjgeless to expect a surgical operation to euro eanr, or any other blood dieae. The cruelty Of (inch treatment is illustrated in the alarming number of deaths which re-; suit from it. The disease Is in the blood, and benco can not be cut out.' Nine times out of ten the surgeon's knife only hastens death. - . My Hon ba4 a hi oat malignant Oanear, tot which the doctora aa!4 aa operation waa to only nope, xceoper- atlon waa a avrr one, aa it waa nrce. aar to cut down to tlio jtbonand crap It. Before irreat wbll tb C'ao tt re tarn-d. and Ix. raa to arrow rapidly. We rave him many fpfnedtea without re lief, end finally, a oon the advice of m friend, decided to try 8. 9. b. (Hwirt'a Hn a . t . lhf- .... the -on) bottle be Av-a4 ' bejfsn to improve. - After twenty bottlm hw5 been taken, the Cancer dlaappared entirely, and he waa eared. The cure waa a permanent one. for he' la nawat-renteen yaraold. and hu never had aig of the dreadful dl wiute to re- -turn. . . J,. uikk:h, ffTf Saodcrmaa fit-IUaa, lexaa. Absolutely the only hope for Cancel fa U .If'. t3 a .ThcUIUUU - nd m m jr m as it is the only remedy which goes to the Tery bottom of the blood and . forces out erery trace of the disea.se. R ft R la miTtinfiil ntiw.? vanat.Ma and contains so potash, mercury, ox other mineral. ' Books on Cancer vrill be mailed fre to any address fcj t fiwilt pecia Co., Atlanta, ic KLlZr represented by democrats iias been rot vutsru V