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Thrc-rcinc Haudkercliitf* Statement copied from .an old manuscript: "In the Foundling Hospital the Boys are bound apprentices, tlie Women when marriageable are conducted in procession thro' ve streets, and any Young Man who sees one lie wd whli fori a Wife is at liberty to mark Her by throwing his handker chief." The further formalities required previous to matrimony are not | stated. Perhaps this peculiar custom Is the origin .of the expression "throw- j Ing the handkerchief." ? Nineteenth Century. Acalnat Rate Red action. Atlanta, Ga.?The recent proposition of J. Pope Brown, Chairman of the j ' Georgia Railroad Commission, to reiuce the passenger rate in Georgia from three to two cents per mile was protested against by the Brotherhood ttf Locomotive Engineers, the Order of Railway Conductors, and unions of the blacksmiths, machinists and telegraphers, boilermakers. railway train men, carpenters and joiners, clerks and car men. These organizations employed an attorney especially to represent them, who urged that such a reduction would work against the prosperity of the State and lead to a reduction In the cumber of railroad employes as well as of their wages. The Travelers' Protective Association also protested that [ i reduction as proposed would result iu j fewer trains and poorer service. i Not What He Meant. A farmer recently paid a visit to a neighbor, and as he passed along by the side of the fields he made a mental note of the fact that no scarecrows were visible. Meeting his neighbor almost immediately, he opened conversation, as follows: ' "Good morning, Mr. Oates. I see you have no scarecrows in your fields. How do you manage to do without them?" j "Oh, well enough," was the innocent ' ??*? t fnr Ii repiy. " iuu srv, i uuu l new im, I I'm in the fields all day myself."?Chi| cago Journal. I TORTURING HUMOR Body ? Van of SoreR? Called in Three Doctors But Grew Worse?Cured bj Cuticura For 75c. "My little daughter was a mass of sores I all over her body. Her face was being eaten away, and her ears looked as if they would drop off. 1 had three doctors, but she grew worse. Neighbors advised Cuticura, and before I had used half of the cake of soap and bos of ointment, the sores had all healed, and my little one's skiu was as clear as a new-born babe's. I would not be without Cuticura if it cost five dollars, instead of 75 cents, which is all it cost us te cure our baby. Mrs. G. J. . Bteese, 701 Coburn St., Akron, Ohio." At the last sheep sales in Sydney one 'two and a quarter years old was sold for $4000. The largest island in the world is New Guinea, 300.000 square miles; Great Britain is 83.S2C square miles. In 1898 earthquakes were felt in Austria on 209 days. N. Y.?18 FITS permanently cured. Xoflts or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveBestorer,$2trialbottle and treatise free Dr. R.H. Kline, Ltd. ,931 ArchSt.,Phila., Pa. .tiair.Durg is to nave a scnooi iur uumius servants. The Good Old Summer Time. When and where to go for a vacation is a question which perplexes us all. There wire beautiful places in every section of the country, but to reach them at a moderate rate and "within a reasonable time is a great barrier. New Jersey has bounded to the front as a summer resort and well she might since her shore is within reach of all. Her attractions are too numerous to mention, and the accommodations provided for the tourist being unequalled anywhere in the land. The famous beach resorts of New Jersey are Atlantic Highlands. Seabright, Lojic Branch, Asbury Park, Ocean Grove, Belmar, Spring Lake, Sea Girt, Point Pleasant, Atlantic City, Ocean City, Cape May and Beach Haven. Each is unique in en vironmente and caters to the best class 01 summer travelers. Every convenience is at hand for genuine enjoyment and each can be reached bv rail or boat: the lines are both operated by the New Jersey Centra], and C. M. Burt, G. P. A., 143 Liberty St., New York, has issued an illustrated brochure detailing the beauties and "advan- I tages of the above resorts and a hundred others. This book will be sent to any address upon receipt of sis cents in stamps, lad one looking for a vacation region would do well to tend for it. k Got Klch on Tips. Francois Durnon, a French waiter, has just left Denver, on his way home to France, having made $40,000 in tips in five years. Of this he made $S000 last year at St. Louis. He speaks six languages. His father and grandfather were waiters all their lives, and he TL'ne hrnnrht nn to thp hnsiness. Hp is ?" 7 still a young man. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors !>ronounced it a local disease and prescribed ocal remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the 'system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney <fc Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Drupgists. 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation Straight-Laced by the Public Schools. A bright youngster answered an advertisement for an office boy in a store in the dry goods quarter, and was tnrnpri down because he wrote too good a hand. "It is a ledger hand, and you will never rise above the level of a bookkeeper," said the merchantNew York Press. Mrs. Winslo w's Soothing Syrup for children teething,soften the gums, reduces inflammation,allays pain,cures wind colic, 25c.a bottle. The crown of a human tooth is covered by a brilliant white cap of enamel. Piao's Cure cannot be too highly spoken or asa cough cure.?J. W. O'Bbien, 322 Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6,1900, The Norwegian corns of skaters is a body of soldiers armed with rifles. Popular Car*. The Pope-Hartford and Pope-Tribune gasoline care and runabouts meet the specific demands of a large class of automobile users. They are simple in construction, free from complication and efficient. Prices from $500 to $1600. For finely illustrated catalogues and descriptive matter, address Dept. A, Pope .Manufacturing Co., Hartford, Conn. A favorite dish with the Eekimoi is iw Cream made of seal oil. I,, - New York City.?Two events that mark the young girl's life are her confirmation and her graduation, for each of which she requires a simple, yet at* tractive, frock. Here is one "well adapted to both, and that can be made from any suitable material, sheer mull, lawn, dotted muslins and the like, and also of the simple silk which is well liked for both occasions. In this instance the little chemisctte is lace and the trimming is banding of lace with ruchings of the material, but this also can be varied, embroidery or tucking being used if a simpler effect is desired, while again the sleeves can be made full length if preferred. The dress is as simple as it is attractive, and can be made either with or without the smoothly fitted waist lining as material renders desirable. The skirt is full and graceful, made with a straight upper portion and straight flounce. Theflounce is shirred at its upper edge and joined to the skirt, A Late Design t M./ || l! 1 .. . c which again is shirred and arranged over a foundation yoke. At the waist is a draped belt, which preferably would be made of some soft silk. The quantity of material required for the_ medium size (fourteen years) is nine arid one-half yards twenty-one, seven and one-half yards twenty-seven, or five yards forty-four inches wide, with one-half yard of all-over lace for the chemisette, two and five-eighth yards of insertion, three-eighth yard of silk for belt, and eight and one-half yards of ruching. Checks lu Salts. The checks makegood redingote suits as well as simple gowns. One in a rich nnrl tt-H i i o. Tf'O C trimmwl in green taffeta and cream lace. The skirt and redingote were laid in deep, broad pleats and edged with a five-inch band of taffeta. The bodice part of the redingote had lapels of taffeta, overlaid with heavy lace, aud was fastened with four large silk-covered buttons. The cuffs matched the lapels, with taffeta and lace, and there was a pretty pointed girdle of the taffeta. Shirt Walat Brought Up to One of the prettiest of the many ways to modernize a shirt waist, whether silk or cotton, is to turn the elororrr. nnciila /1/m-n mill Pllt nfT tllP toll part. This will very materially shorten the sleeves, and to give it the necessary length a long cuff will be required. To make this, tuck some batiste, white if for a muslin waist, cream if for a silk one, having the tucks running horizontally. In Floe Voile. Quite the handsomest of the new checks are of tine voile, almost as sheer as silk veiling. They come in blue, black, brown, red and violet, in combination vith white, ami have small dots i . * ? Id of the color scattered over the surface. I * None of these made up have been seen, } ? but it is easy to imagine that they will j j. make beautiful gowns. White silk ! 6< rather than colored will be used for j si linings. n <? - - ~ ... b A Handsome Hat. 6l A very handsome small hat is in two ? tones of blue straw, one of the rough ] spiny varieties. There is a decided c purple suggestion in one of the shades Q of blue, and the exquisite ostrich plume j fj with which the turban is trimmed was j li blue on the upper part and mixed with j e lavender underneath. n tl Summer Hats. Summer coats are here! They are of immediate usefulness to those who are ^ going south, and tib many others who a are remaining at home, and are having j< them copied for country and resort A wear later. In shape they range from P little capes built on bolero lines to full ^ fledged redingotes. ? - c Rainy-Day Hats. -I ?fl Any iarge mimnery esxuujisuujeiit i ^ will model a silk tissue hat after a de- 1 fl sign in stock, and some few keep these I ^ waterproof on hand. A plain quill is ! the most serviceable and sensible trim- i y ming for tbe rainy-day headgear. ! a Eton Dressing Jacket. ] No garment is more in demand for t] warm mornings that the tastefwi and a attractive breakfast jacket. Here is< one that would be charming made of ' various materials. Lawn or dimity [j with lace frills is always dainty and j attractive, dotted Swiss is much liked, tl and is lovely when one of white is de- U sired, while for the many cooler morn- e ings albatross, Japanese silk or veil- G ing would be appropriate. The big ! ? collar is eminently becoming and gives ! ? the broad shoulders that are so desirable this season, and the slightly open * A rrnc> : ^ H?CK means Cuilliuri iiiiu Utraiuu ixa viivj i jj also an opportunity to develop the b throat, which is so much to be de- j h sired. The sleeves are in elbow length | ;>i and gathered into bands to which the I " shaped frills are attached. J f< The Eton form is one of the best liked of the season, and is in every f< way attractive, giving no sense of a ^ ? tl y May Manton. jj p ei u f] a t< 6< b U a a C I |b , p: negligee, while it is absolutely com- 2; fortable to the wearer. The frills be- I a low the waist Hue give it additional j depth, which is always desirable, and , ? can be made of the same material Ip when a simpler finish than that of the J lace is liked. The jacket can be made I a easily and simply, being fitted by ; b means of shoulder and under-arm I a seams, the neck and fronts finished B with the collar. j N The quantity of material required for j? -* ? j ?- * I 9 tne medium size is mree uuu mree- ^ lJ I fourth yards twenty-seven, three and n three-eighth yards thirty-two, or two rt and one-half yards forty-four inches 5 wide, witli seven and one-half yards * of lace for frills, and five and one-half j"t yards of baudhag to trim as Illustrated. ^ THE (PULPIT. [ BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY * THE REV. ALFRED H- A. MORSE. f Subject: Secret of Happiness* \ I Brooklyn, N. Y.?In the Strong fiace baptist Church the pastor, the Rev. Ifred H. A. Morse, spoke Sunday on The Secret of Happiness."' He said: There are two hidden hands, con-, oiled by the same intelligence, which re constantly working upon the hulan heart. And these are pain and leasure. Man was made to be happy, f sometimes he must eat the bread of Drrow it is because, as Mr. Beecher aid, "Sorrow is medicine." Joy is lore divine than sorrow, and does not elong only to these passing days, but ball remain with us when all tears re dried and sorrow is swept forever rom the universe. Now, joy may be divided into three lasses. There is the joy of appetite, a lerely animal condition. It comes rom the fitting of a goodly organism ito circumstances which are suited to apply its need. This is the joy that lakes the child skip and play and fill ae home with laughter. It is the joy f the singing bird. It is simply pleasre. -D..4. ?^ O 1 TT? O T*C /?hlMrDYV Wp I X>Ul UC aiC XiUk ?.! ?? W VMMUAWM* .. W row and come into the place of work nd responsibility. And here also is )y, and this we may call happiness, .n earnest man finds joy in his emloyment The lawyer and doctor and iacher enjoy their professions. The linister enjoys to preach. The merbant enjoys his business, and the mebanic his shop in spite of all its toil, 'his is joy, but it is the joy of the bee aat gathers the honey and stores it way against the needs of a hungry rinter. There is the joy of living, and there > the joy of working. These are all iat many a man attains. But it takes higher joy than these to fill the soul f man, as the sunlight fills the sky, or ae ocean fills the deep. There is a joy aat is known as "blessedness," which rches these as the heavens span the ea. It is the joy of love, the joy of nith. the joy of a good conscience, the )y of doing right for the sake of right, ae joy of sacrifice and of service. 'hese are so far above the others that aey belong to another kingdom whose iw is obedience, whose j<5y is rightousness, whose fellowship is with iod, and whose entrance is by means f a birth from above. And into this ingdom there are certain well defined teps. "Happy," said Jesus, "are the poor in plrit, for theirs is the kingdom of eaven." And poverty of spirit is naedness of soul before God. He is appy who throws aside his own rags F righteousness and going to God says, Clothe me, for I am naked; feed me, 3r I am hungry; guide me, for I am rnorant; put Thine arms under me, >r I am weak." As in the mountain asses of the West the traveler holds p his hands before the bandit, so in le presence of God's righteousness the 3U1 must throw up its hands and sur?nder to God. Blessed are the poor in pint, the consciously bankrupt in the resence of God. So long as the youngr son remained in the far ofT land, so >ng as he was satisfied with the husks rom tne trougns or ujs swme, aw iuu& j s lie wanted nothing, the father might lourn, but there was nothing for him 1 ) do. But when that son threw him- ] elf upon his father's love and said, "I } ave sinned, and you nee my want," ] Sen the father could clothe and feed ] nd kiss; place sandals upon his feet , nd give him the place of the son. , )oes a prodigal soul wish for happi- J essV I know of no chance for him till . e fling away his sin and standing in j is naked need acknowledges his pov- ( rty of soul. The happiest moment in j ae prodigal's experience was when he ( uried his face in his father's shoulder ] nd said, "I have sinned." The hapiest man at the temple gate was he rho smote his breast and without so luch as lifting his eyes, said, "God be ( lerciful to me the sinner." , Happy are they who mourn for sin. ! t is not enough to be ashamed of it. J ut there must be an actual sorrow j aerefor. This does not mean to mourn , Dr its consequences, nor for its pub- i city, nor for the misery it entails. ] in is more than a blunder which one , iay regret. It is more than a mistake ( Thich one would try to repair. It is ( pen and flagrant and defiant rebellion. ] Vhen a man mourns this, then God , ings above liim His smile as the rain- ] ow spanned the flood, and he "shall e comforted." Happy are the meek, for they shall iherit the earth. But who are the leek? They who obey the law. Moses , as passed into history as the meekest ] f men. But Moses bent the neck of ( is manhood to law, and maybe that is 1 3e reason that to this day our best in- ] Litutions are all to be traced to the , gislation in the wilderness. Only \ oce did Moses lose his meekness, when j dth an angry frown he . smote the j Dck. That shattered his meekness ( lto a thousand pieces, and he lost the , romised land. He did not inherit the arth .Tesus was the meekest man. nd He has flung out His challenge for ie world to come to Him. He was leek, for He was obedient, even to the i lace of death. 1 Happy are the hungry. Hunger and i iirst are spurs which are driven into 1 len to drive ahead. When men are 1 ungry they struggle, and there is ] ope for a nation when times are hard. 1 lut when men and nations are filled, aey lie down to sleep and rise up to ? lay. When a man is idle his arm 1 rows weak with disuse. Hunger and nirst are spurs to activity. But the oblest hunger is the hunger for rightess, for that is the meaning of "right- t Dusness." To seek God and His : ighteousness is to seek for God and j [is Tightness. A man whose soul is j imished with this consuming desire j wftll hft Honnr 4lfrki* ho cllflll hft , 1HJ ITCii WV w j lied." Happy are the merciful. But mercy ] oes not always mean leniency. When i man is convicted of seme gross crime j ; is no mercy to let him go to do the arne crime again. Mercy sometimes xacts an awful penalty, for mercy is prerogative of righteousness, and , lercy belongs to God. The man stand- J )g beside God, poor in spirit, mourn- t lg his sin, hungry for righteousness, I > merciful, and mercy comes also to t im. "He shall receive mercy." Happy are the pure in heart. But bat does this mean? Who of us is ureV It means to be single in pur- , ose. The diamond must be of "the rst water" if it is to flash the light, he man must be single in purpose if e is to see God. The double-minded ? iUli, Villi UCtCl OCC T idiuu ui XO.A1U ^ hose countenance is as the sun shin- t ig in his strength; for his vision is ( roken and disturbed, like the waves ^ f the sea driven by the wind and / Dssed. Ah! I Jove the sea. I've ratched it on a windy day, and heard : -weep and moan and sob, and breathe ut its anger in an awful curse. I've een the waves rise buffeted and beat- i d. now backward, now forward, till i s face was white with rage, but its r eart was black as death. I've seen it fi . ^ . eel and toss, till at last sobbing as Lough its heart would break, it would >urst into a myriad briny tears upon he shore and pour from its wretched tosom the seaweed and driftwood and ilth it has gathered in the journey. L'hat wave never saw the sun. But 've looked again. The sea was like a nirror, as clear as crystal. I could see he pearly pebbles, and there in its leart I could see the sun. Th* purelearted -waters lay all day long and ooked into the face of the sun. Hap>y, blessed are the pure, the single in leart, "for they shall see God." The man who has a supreme desire o please God, he is pure. He may lave temptation, he may stumble, he nay fall, but he rises again, and he is arther ahead. 1 shame to confess it, )Ut I once played football, the barbarsm of college. I've seen a man fall md slide four times as far as he could jo without falling. He's a puse man, ;hough hie clothes are covered with jrime. The man who Is pure in heart shall see Him that is invisible. The nan who serves God shall see Him. Happy are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God. iod is a peacemaker, and hath recon:iled all things unto Himself. And low the man who makes peace shall De called His son. He has passed trough the school, and has learned Doverty and mourning and mercy and singleness of heart, and now he is :aken into the family of God as Moses ?ras taken into the family of Pharaoh's laughter. There is one other "IHessed" spoken jy Jesus. It is found in the comparaform. "It is more blessed to give :han to receive." It makes more for jappiness to give 3han to get. When' self is the centre there is no happiness. But when self is forgotten there is hapDineiss at its height. When a man mows he has nerves he cannot be lappy. Mr. Rockefeller thinks that aappiness can be ruined by a sensitive stomach. The happy man is he who x>t knowing that he has nerves or stomach cares for the other man. This is the call to self-sacrifice. How Jtterly intolerable this world would be f every one lived for himself. Happily :his cannot be, and the altruism lies at Jtie bottom of family and social life. But there are different kinds of sacrifice. There is the sacrifice of self to self, of the lower to the higher, of the passion to principle. There is the sac rifice of self for others, and there is the highest sacrifice, that is, of self to aod. Do we talk of joy in these things? Most people think of them as i disagreeable sort of necessity. Maybe we see that this necessity serves a useful end. But r.o rejoice in them! ro take up our sacrifice with a song, that seems out of the question. That s the dream of the poet. Giving is blessed, because it is most ike God. He has need of nothing but lust to give. The glory of the gospel s a happy God, but He gave His Son. Be might have stripped heaven of its ingels and it would not have impoversbed Him. The only gift that He could feel was the gift of His Son. AJid that was what made Him happy. 3od Himself could not be happy if He aad withholden this greatest gift rhat was the law which Jesus declared. II: makes more for happiness to give than to get. The whole life of Jesus was giving, but the happiest moment was that last, when He said: 'Father, into Thy'hands I commend My spirit," and He had given His life tor a ransom. Tn thMp KlmnlA wnrils thpn T find the whole philosophy of salvation, of happiness and of heaven. If a man mourn for his sin, he shall be comforted and an infinite peace shall dry tns tears. If a man hunger for rightness, he shall be filled. If he strive to serve God with a single heart, he shall see Him. If He do the work of God ind live at peace, he shall be called the child of God, and if he seek for :hances to pour out his life in service, tie shall find heaven about him on ?very side. And this is the secret of ttappiness. A L7fe of Self-Abaesnticn. The Rev. DY. Josiah Strong draws this picture of the blessedness of selfsacrifice. He says: "The.life of selflbnegation does not attract you. A cathedral window seen from without is dull and meaningless. But enter, ind the light of Heaven, streaming Hir/in?rh if- fflnrifioe it -nrith nr'or'c beauty of form and color. Consecration to God for service may seem dull Enough when s?en from without; but ?nter into that experience, and the light of the divine love, streaming through it, shall glorify your life with beauty and blessedness which are Heaven's own." The Way Wo Do Things. Rev. F. B. Meyer says: "Knitting needles are cheap and common enough, but on them may be wrought the fairest designs in the richest wools. So the incidents of daily life may be commonplace in the extreme, but on them is the material foundation we may build the unseen but everlasting fabric of a noble and beautiful character, [t does not so much matter what wa lo, but the way in which we do it matters greatly." Love's Telescope. Love is quick to appreciate love. It s natural to a loving heart to And ove everywhere. We view all. things n hues borrowed from the heart. He :hat loveth knoweth God, for God is ove; he that loveth not 2;as not seen Him, neither knoweth Hiiii. Ask therefore for a baptism into the love of God -this will make you quick to perceive md understand His loving kindness, svhere others miss it.?F. B. Meyer. Coino and See. The soul-winner's speech is simple md easy. It is only Philip's "come ind sec." The most important thing 'or a soul-winner to be able to say is iust this, "I have found Him." It :jeeds no powerful philosopher or ogieian, merely tbe quiet statement: 'I have made trial of Jesus Christ. :Je has done everything for me. Now, irnn't von trv Him. too? .Tnst come ind see." Four Goorl Rules. General Gordon, the hero of China md likewise of Khartum, based his ife upon four rules: Forgetfulness ot self, absolute sincerity, indifference to he world's judgments, absorption in he will of God. These four rules abide is guide-posts on tbe path to greatless. but the greatest of these is surrender to the will of God.?Pacific 2 ?i Title* Flashes and Gleams. The will of (Joel does not call men tway from the commonplaces of everyiny life, but conditions their life in hose commonplaces until the most ommonplace thing: flashes and gleams vitli the glory of the heavens?G.: Campbell Morgan. Not the Attitnda. Reverent attitudes are necessary in vorship. but it is the reverence and lot the attitude in which the virtue esides. Our hearts must be right.? funday-School Times. v ? ! FAMOUS ATHLETES^ I As a Spring Tonic Sy I ? John Olenister, Champion Swim: 2 " *" iswirn Through the Mi PE-RU-NA Eenovates Regulates Restores i System Depleted by Catarrh. John W. Glenister, of Providence, R. I. champion loftg distance swimmer of Amei ica, has performed notable feats in thi country and England. He has used Peruni as a tonic and gives his opinion of it ii the fallowing letter: New York. The Peruna Medicine Company, Columbus, Ohio: Gentlemen?"This spring for the first time I have taken two bottles of Peruna, and, as it has done me a great deal of good, I feel as if I ought to say a good word for its worth. "During the Springtime for the last few years, I have taken several kinds of spring tonics, and have never received any benefit whatever. Thin year, through the advice of a friend, 1 have tvied ! Peruna and it has given satisfaction, ''I advise all athletes who are about to go in training to try a bottle, for it certainly gets the system, in good shape.? Tours truly, JOHN W. GLEMSTER. A Prize. The young preacher had made i fairly favorable impression with hi maiden sermon, but the deacons wer somewhat dubious. "A6k him," whispered Deacon Pep pergrass, "if he gets the call, how man; .times a year he 'xpects to lecture o: 'Hamlet.'" "Says he don't 'xpect to lecture non whatever," reported Deacon Wintei green, after holding a brief confab wit the candidate. "He's ingaged!" was the gran chorus. [ Let Commoi L Do you honestly believe, thai g Tbls has made LION COFFE I Millions of American Hon I There is no stronger proof oi P ing popularity. "Quality sui gjf (Sold only iif 1 lb. packag* (^Save your Lion-hei I SOLD BY GROC * Pope Hartford Modern Gasoline at Modei Backed by 27 Years of 6 to I6H.P. Pric Simple Construction iAddresf Dept. A Fc Pope Manuf - s ., . hartfoi Members A. I,. A. M. MOTHER CRAY'S ^ SWEET POWDERS ff FOR CHILDREN, _ L, A Certain Care for Fevcrlahnes* Constipation, Hcndachcj 1 Htonaach Troubles, Tcethiui 1 piaordera, ud Deetroj Mother Gray. Worms. They Break np Coldi Nurse in Child- Jj? 3t Soar?. AtiUl Dru*p?}3, 25 eU ren'e Home. Sample mailed FREE Address, _ YortUiu. A- S. OUASTED, L? RoyJN Y SX.ffiSSSS1 PF=RI!=NA A I^IU U A X-4 A v m. Mm s\v *. to Get the Good Shape^ mer and'Only Athlete to Successfully ? chigan Whirlpool Bapids. ATHLETES realize the importance o? keeping in good bodily trim. N 1 The digestion must be good, the circulation perfect, sleep regular and enough of it. If the slightest catarrhal condition of ;> lungs or stomach is allowed to remain, " neither digestion nor sleep will be strength? sustaining. a Those who lead very active livesy like athletes, with good muscular deI velopment, find the spring monthsespecially trying. Athletes everywhere praise Peruna be cause tney, 01 au men, appreciate me vaiueof a tonic that dispels physical depression. The vocation of some men may allow them to endure the depressing feelings incident to spring weather, but theathlete must never allow himself to get "under the weather." He must keep in the "pink of condition"" all the time. !:i In order to do this he must avail himself of a spring tonic upon which he canrely. Therefore athletes are especially. friendly toward Peruna. Peruna never fails them. Aren't People FoolUhT a "Bllggins tells me that he has had ^ only one servant girl in thirty years," observed Mr. Techyfeller. . :$| >- "I didn't think he nad been married y that long," remarked Mrs. Techyfeller. n Mr. T. thought this over for a while and then asked' If she meant to insinne ate that he kept her in slavery. / Mrs. T. told him if the cap fitted him L ,*l J t* D -Lit? L'UUIU W CUl 41. And it was on this flimsy ground that d the quarrel started.?Louisville Courier Journal. i Sense Decide I f ; coffee sold loose (in bulk), exposed I to dust, germs and insects, passing through many hands (some of them not over-clean), "blended," / you don't know how or by whom, H is fit for your use ? Of course you I don't. But n LION COFFEE I Is another story. The green I berries, selected by keen 1 Judges at the plantation, are H skULilully roasted at onr lac- I would not dream of are taken I to secure perfect cleanliness, I flavor, strength and uniformity. E From the time the coffee leaves I the factory no hand touches it till I it is opened in your kitchen. Is ? the LEADER OF ALL PACKAGF COFFEES. E ies welcome LION COFFEE daily. I : merit than continued and increaa- I vives all opposition." | ?s. Lion-head on every package.) g ids for valuable premiums.) K ERS EVERYWHERE 1 WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. M kPope -Tribune Cars and Runabouts 'at? Prices. Manufacturing Experience. es, $500 to $ 1600 , Luxurious Equipment. ?r Complete Catalogue*. acturing Co., f?D,, CONN. ' - M CUKIS WHUE AU. LLSl FAILS. Q 13 Best Ccugti Syrup, Tutcfl Good. Cm H , ra la time. Sold by drumrista. Mf r : Thompson's Eye water