University of South Carolina Libraries
An Original .Te-.rel. Mere diamonds and rubies and pearls are nothing to bo proud of in this agc of originality. One's jewels must be odd to merit any attention from the connoisseur. A playful and pretty con ceit for a brooch is three pink moon stones in a row. On each stone is cut the jolly, sleepy face of a fat baby moon. On each bald head is a cap of diamonds, tying under the chin with a diamond bow. White for Thin Women. A well known portrait painter ad vises women when posing for a photo graph to wear black at the neck, as lt gives a fuller effect and in the case of a very slender sitt?r greatly en hances the-beauty of the throat The same artist advises thin women to j wear white as m"^h as possible, as it makes their slenderness less apparent. He says the reason why some women appear to bloom out in summer time from comparative insignificance is be cause so many white fabrics, such as starched muslins, piques and the like are worn. A new way to earn money has been discovered by a Minneapolis woman, who has constituted herself a travel ing librarian, organizing and catalog ing libraries wherever she finds a de mand for her work. Her experience tims far leads her to the conclusion that this work will offer large oppor tunities to women. She says that to be successful as a library organizer it is necessary to have, in addition to the regular library training a thorough knowledge of bookkeeping, and ability tc read French and German. She fre quently spends weeks or even months on a single engagement S pan sr lc cl Hands and Feet. Stockings and gloves embroidered in silver and colored spangles are to be had if one's tastes run to glittering dress accessories. A black or a pale green stocking with a dark green ser pent embroidered on the instep, the body twisting around the ankle and up the leg, is enough to give most wom en the creeps. For stage purposes these eccentricities doubtless have their uses, but the average woman is con tent to gaze, shudder and pass on. Suede gloves with insertions of lace or designs i" embroidery upon them looking rather well on slim hands and black evening gloves brilliantly em broidered with silver are certainly os tentatious, but one'can imagine them and a small, sparkling fan. Proper Dress for Children. No persons need more careful cloth ing than infants and children. In them tho body surface is relatively large and their heat producing pow ers are feeble. For this reason they need to be covered up as much as pos sible, with loose, light clothing, so that- the natural movements of their bodies may have full play. When pos sible the undergarments should be of wool; the prevalent idea that children .should be thinly clothed, with more or less bare limbs, so that they may be come hardened, is contrary to all phy siological teaching and absolutely cruel. On the other hand, unnecessary swathing of children in wraps and comforters is to be deprecated, and it ?oes equal harm in the other direction by rendering them tender and peci liarly susceptible to chills.-American Queen. Childhood of Jenny Und. Jenny Lind was baptized as Johanna Lindborg. The nickname by which she became famous was given her in her childhood. Her mother lived in two different tenements in Stockholm, No. 43 Jakobsbergsgatan and No. 32 Mas tersamuelgatan, while she was an in fant and it is not definitely known in which she was born. Both claim the honor, but the weight of evidence seems to favor the former, which is in a short street in the manufacturing section of the city and mostly occupied by artisans of various sorts. The oth er place is on a better street near the centre of the manufacturing section. A Mr. - Lindhahl, who holds a posi tion in the royal library here, has an interesting collection of letters and documents relating to the early life of Jenny Lind. He has certified copies of the record of her birth and christen ing and the proceedings of the court, which, when she was 14 years of age. decided that her parents were unfit persons to have charge of her and ap pointed the director of the Opera House as her guardian. He also has a num ber of autograph letters written when she was a child and afterward when she was a young woman in Paris study ing with Mme. Garcia.-Chicago Rec ord-Herald. The Umbrella of Fashion. For the present the smart umbrella is exceedingly small, with a casein the same shade as the silk. At one time it was feared that we should adopt leather cases, heavy, ugly things that had nothing to recommend them but novelty, but good sense and taste have come to the rescue. The favorite coloring for the silk is in very dark shot taffetas where the black tint pre dominates; in fact*we must guess at the warm coloring beneath the black more than really define it. The frame is Jn steel, very light and burnished, but without the slightest attempt at varnish. The stick is composed sim ply of well polished wood without any ornament, either at the huidle or the point Even the pointed piece of metal at the tip is suppressed. It is, there fore, necessary to find the nature of wood that meets all the requirements of solidity and suppleness. From New Caledonia and Australia some of the finest- are imported, but the French makers have a preference for their own growth, as they say that the coloring is richer and more varied in graduated tones. For the winter, therefore, fash ion dictates small umbrellas with plain wooden sticks, with no ornamentation. Neither the perforated rings nor mon ograms in gold are considered In good taste this year. The only difference between a gentleman's or a lady's um brella is in the size of the covering and the length and thickness of the stick.-New York Commercial Adver tiser. .For the Home Dressmaker. To renovate or not to renovate is a qr^stion to be considered from this point-namely, whether 'tis better to have a new gown or to send a really good frock and half the cost of a new one and have it returned in all re spects as a new toilet One's intimate friends will no doubt recognize the A Traveling; Librarian. gown, but in all other ways it practi cally takes Its place as a new gown. A good black dress invariably pays for renovating, but all queer and un common shapes, either in skirt or bod ice, are best left alone unless the ma terial can be matched or is of the type allowing for combination. Many bodices of the seamless or stretched order can be turned into smart bole ros, and then, with a new vest and trimming, it ls practically a different garment Trimming taken from a bodice will often make a smart vest and even a ?narrow vest and collar of good lace can be used with side revers of velvet or silk or wita cascades of lace or even frills falling forward and con nected by straps of velvet across the centre of lace. Tucked vests or plas trons of silk can be sponged with ben zoline. Mounted as vests and deco rated with some incrustations of lace in sprays or bows or Btrapped across the top in yoke fashion they are hand some. There are many garments useful for country and seaside wear which can be smartened and brought up to date at a very moderate expense, but they should bo originally of good quality and cut, or they are not worth the trouble and expense of alteration. An old fashioned coat and skirt can be remade into a smart customs with about one and a half yards of new cloth to match. The skirt must be made into a tight top part fitting a shaped flounce, and the remainder and the new cloth will make the shaped flounce. If there is no new cloth a black, blue or brown cloth can be made with a separate flounce of another color, such as white, fawn, gray, etc., and then covered with stitched tucks or straps of alternate cloth and military braid, leaving only tiny lines of the light color between. The old-fashioned basque coat cuts into a smart bolero to the waist, and the neck can be fin ished with a big collar.-Washington Star. Women In Business. The remark is oiten made that wom en known nothing of business. In re gard to a large majority of women whose business It is to engineer happy homes this statement is untrue. It is also unjust to thousands of sensible women who are necessarily compelled to take care of themselves and their families, and who have ably demon strated that they are capable of doing so with as much shrewdness and wis dom as men who are their peers. The mass of women show no business knowledge in the methods of earning money, because there is some one to earn money for them, and to them is Klven the province of home. Women are likely to be contented with the care of the home so long as the support of the family ls undertaken by men whose natural province it is When it becomes a woman's place to enter thc business world she has in thousands of instances demonstrated that she has as keen wit as a man and is as capable of receiving training in business. Hundreds and thousands of women have demonstrated their ability to com pete in the business world, not as mere wage earners, but as financiers. These women know something of business, though undoubtedly they labored at first under the disadvantage of being considered women who know nothing oi it Numberless women's exchanges have appeared in recent years in the larger cities, and these business enterprises have generally propered. In the state of Massachusetts alone, in 1885, there were .305 women who were farmers. These young women possess the disad vantage of being phyically weaker and less capable of outdoor work than their brothers should be, yet in spite of this the records show that women have thrived in this occupation as well as their husbands and fathers did. In matters of business habits men are often found wanting. Nineteenth century exprience shows that women who have entered the business world are, as a rule, more conservative than men. They do not often do brilliant things in business, because they do not hazard so much. Instances of sen sible business women who risk their all on chance gains are not large, though there are thousands of half educated women, inexperienced as chil dren, who are victimized by charlatans just as men brought up in a similar manner would be. The cases of swin dling of men are almost as common as those of women. There is reason tc believe that among the thousands of wage earning women in the land it is rare to find one who persistently speculates, though business women have opportunity to spend money in this way.-New York Tribune. FofvVoiAAN'': BENEFIT Black chantilly lace Is again becom ing fashionable and is most effective worn over white. Low flat hats, worn forward over the face and trimmed with ostrich plumes are all the rage. The exaggerated long pointed waist in front is a thing of the past Just a slight elongation is stylish. The latest imported French lingerie shows all the seams joined by narrow beading instead of being sewed as seams. Half and three-quarter length coats are the fashion, and made severely plain with strapped seams are im mensely smart Flowers appear upon the pearl sticks of fans, the pearl being carved at the sides to outline the edges of the petals and the leaves and flowers, themselves of the precious metals, be ing put on with exquisite skill Gloves for the elbow-sleeved gown are shown with lacing of gold or sil ver cord from wrist to elbow on the outer seam. The same thing is seen in shoulder length gloves and the lac ing is not only decorative but also use ful in fitting the gjove to the arm and keeping it in place. Women's pajamas are one of the nov elties of the day. They are made up in fancy and figured nainsook. Some of the materials are particularly at tractive being sprinkled all over with tiny silk figures. The pajamas seen thus far are mostly imported, but lt is expected that patterns of American make will soon appear. The new shaped toques with brims turning up on each side are to be ex tremely fashionable. Twisted cords of chenille are used generally as a trim ming, as ls also heavy velvet cording to adorn the upturned parts of the brim. Little toques of gathered vel vet are likewise much in vogue, and to some faces these are wonderfully be ONS MAN'S LUCK. Stesrad Into a Junior Partnership by i Chanca Cutt of Wind. "Speaking of taking in partners," said a downtown business man, "our junior was, you might say, blown in on us, and I saw him started in our direc tion, though I had no idea of it at the time. "Going downtown one summer morning on a Ninth avenue elevated train, I saw sitting opposite to me a young man who caught my fancy, a substantial, earnest, straightforward looking chap, whose looks I liked first rate. He was reading a paper; and presently he tore off from this"" paper an advertisement leaf that he didn't want and threw it out of the window, or tried to, for as a matter of fact it didn't go out. A gust of wind with just the right twist to it came along at just that moment and blew the pa per back, to fall on a vacant seat next to him. "And as it fell something in it caught his eye, and he picked up that part which he had just been trying to throw away and began earnestly to read it, and ended up by folding it carefully and putting it in his pocket. "About four minutes after Fd got in here this morning this same young man walks in and applies for a place that we had been waiting for somebody to fill? Our advertisement for a man for it was in that paper which I had seen this young man try to throw away, and which a gust of wind by one chance in a million or more, had blown back upon him and in such a manner as to fix his attention. "As a matter of fact I hadn't liked the young man's act of throwing the paper out of an elevated car window; a paper floating down and around as that would do might frighten horses and lead to no end of trouble and lots of damage, but no one man thinks about everything, and he'd learn better about this, I knew, and so as a matter of fact I took this young man on the spot, on my first impressions of him. He far more than made good and in due course of time he came into his junior partnership, literally . and truly blown into it. "Sort o' queer, eh?"-New York Sun. MOUNTAIN MOTORING. Mountain motoring does not seem to be a promising form of locomotion, but the restless mountaineer has im pressed into his service thc new vehi cle. Two French tourists have climbed the great St. Bernard in an automo bile, being the first to do so, and the Grand Duke Nicholas has just com pleted a tour in the Caucasus in a mo tor car. His route iay over the Goder Pass, which is 7,000 feet high.-Coun try Life. MR. SMITH. "Smith is the meanest man on earth." "What's his latest?" "His neighbors' children were play ing at keeping store in their back yards and Smith bought out their business for ten pins and split up the counters for kindling wood."-Indianapolis Sun. ? Paasing of tito Cable Car. A few years ago the cable system woo con sidered the beat, but since tho invention of the trolley, the cable li being rapidly dis placed. Experts now claim that compressed air -?ill eventually bo the car power of tho future. In all lines of industry improvements are constantly being made, but in medicine Hostetter's Stomach Bitters still holds the lead, because it in impossible to make a better medicine for indigestion, dyspepsia, belching or biliousness. Be sure to try it. It is the opinion of entirely too many people that the word "friend means one who will lend his money. Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain mercury, aa mercury will surely destroy the eenso of smell and completely derange the whole sys tem when entering it through tho mucous Burfaoes. Such articles should never bc used exoept on proscriptions from reputable phy sicians, as the damago thoy will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney <k 0)., Toledo, 0.. contains no mer cury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure to get the genuine. It is taken internal ly, and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. ?"Sold by Druggists ; price, 75c. per bottle. Hall's Family Pills are the beat. Among the 282 medical journals pub lished in the United States twenty-eight are devoted exclusively to hygiene. Thirty minutes is nil the time required to dye with PUTNAM F?DELEBS DYES. Sold by ali druggists. Of 100 units of work done in Great Bri tain thirteen are accomplished by man power unaided by machinery. MRS. H. ROBERTS Says to All Sick Women : " Give Mrs. Piiikham a Chance, I Know She Can Help Iou as She Did Me." "DEAB MBS. PINKHAM: The world "praises great reformers; their names and fames are in the ears of everybody, and the public press helps spread the good tidings. Among them all Lydia Finkham's name goes to posterity MES. H. F. ROBERTS, County President of W. C. T. TL, Kansas City, Mo. with a softly breathed blessing from the lips of thousands upon thousands of women who have been restored to their families when life hung by a thread, and by thousands of others whose weary, aching limbs you have quickened and whose pains you have taken away. " I know whereof I speak, for I have received much valuable benefit myself through the use of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, and for years I lia ve known dozens of wo men who have suffered with displace ment, ovarian troubles, ulcerations and inflammation who are strong and well to-day, simply through the use of your Compound."-tMBS. H. F. ROBERTB, 1404 McGee St., Kansas City, Mo. - #6000 forftit If abooo testimonial la not ?enulne. Don't hesitate to write to Mrs. Pink ham. She will understand your case perfectly, and will treat you with kindness. Her advice is free, and the address ia Lynn, Masa. Besti?n tais Paper 'IS^i?T' -MRI AILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastos Good. Use | Intima ?oldbrdrmnrtot*. CONSUMPTION <" Ii afflicted with Thompson's Eyi Wafer Lenther-Covered Mantels. The very newest idea in leather decoration is an entire mantel in a rich shade of green, which was ar ranged for a Long Island woman who was dissatisfied with the ugly mantel in the dining room of her country home and was advised to try the effect of hiding the disfiguring projection with leather. The result was a com plete success and several of her friends have followed her example to the ex tent of having leather mantel drapery, if not entirely encasing the chimney corner. For an Indian room or a den a hanging of leather in a rich vermil ion tone, with an Indian's head skil fully etched on it, lends a decidedly bright bit of color. Something About Starch. It sounds contradictory to advise making cold starch with hot water; but those who have once tried it find its results most satisfactory. This does not necessarily mean that the water must be boiling hot, but comfortably warm. Starch made in this way works much better than that made with cold water. A little galt added to cold starch is an improvement, preventing it from stick ing to the iron It is always better to let clothes re main rolled some time after starching them, as they will then iron much better. If after these precautions you find the starch inclined to stick to the iron, it is because it is too stiff. The Ladies' World. Thc Cleansing Ball. The following is an excellent cleans ing ball to prepare for use on clothes and woolen fabrics generally^ says What tc Hat Dissolve a bit of white soap the size of an egg, in enough al cohol to cover it. Mix in the yolks of three eggs and a tablespoonful of oil of turpentine. Work in fuller's earth till it becomes stiff enough to form into balls and let them dry. When you wish to remove a stain moisten the fabric with a little water, rub the ball well in, let it dry and brush off the powder. Tnere are three classes of stains these balls cannot remove-ink, iron rust and fruit stains. For ink, pour over milk, and as it becomes dis colored absorb it with blotting paper. Then wash out well with tepid water and castile soap. If on white goods, lemon juice and common salt, often re newed and placed in the sun, are most efficient A Stitch In Time. All housekeepers who look well to the ways of their households appreci ate the value of a stitch in time. The principle inculcated by the proverh may be carried to all departments of the house. The household belongings which are kept continually in order by being mended as soon as they need mending cannot suddenly give out and need to be replaced. Prudent house keepers keep a pot of glue ready to be melted when needed, a cement bottle for china ,and once a month or. once a week, as it may be convenient they repair breakages in china or in furni ture. It is more trouble to learn to use a soldering iron, but this can be done, and when necessary a hole in tinware or in almost any commort-jnet al can be mended. Usually all that is necessary is to stop a leak In time, so it will grow no larger. It is an excellent practice to keep a list of everything about the house that has gone awry, and every six months at least, if not oftener, see that it is made right. The best time is just after the spring and fall housecleaning. If this is done the house can be easily kept in order, and at much less cost than when every repair needed is left until it has become necessary to the comfort of the home that . it ^should be attended to.-New York Tribune, Orange Sauce-Cream one-half cup ful of butter. Mix one saltspoon of salt, naif a saltspoonful of paprika, four tablespoonfuls of orange juice, one ta blespoonful of lemon juice and one half cupful of water; stir into the well beaten yolks of two eggs and cook over hot water, stirring constantly, until thick and smooth. Add the creamed butter and serve at once. Lemon Rice-Boil sufllcient rice in milk till soft, sweeten to taste, then pour into a mould to cool. Peel a lemon very thick, cut the peel into half-inch lengths, cover with water, boil for a few minutes, pour off water, cover with a cupful of fresh water, add juice, and sugar to sweeten, then stew gently for two hours, after which allow to cool, when it will be a thick syrup. Turn the rice into a glass djsh and pour the syrup over it V Sweet Potato Fritee-Boil three nie uiuni sized sweet potatoes with their skins on until done, then remove toe skin and cut each in half; place then in a shallow baking dish with a tea spoonful melted butter over each om, sprinkle with sugar and set in th > oven to bake until they have obtainer a fine golden brown color. Salt ii/ omitted, as some do not wish it witt the sugar; a half teaspoonful, how ever, sprinkled evenly over the hot po tatoes as soon as they are peeled will remove all flat taste. Preserved Pears-Peel, halve and core six pounds of pears, dropping at once into cold water to keep from dis coloring. Put in a preserving kettle four pounds of sugar, two cupfuls of water, the juice of two lemons and rind of one cut in strips and an ounce, of ginger root. Boil together 30 min- ! utes, drain the pears, put in the syrup ard boil about 15 minutes, or until tender. Take them out, lay on plat ters and boil the syrup until thick. Put in the pears once more, let thenr just come to a boil, and can. Hot Tongue with Tomato Sauce Have the tongue cooking early, for it can be skinned and put in a steamer to be kept hot if it gets done before it is wanted. For the sauce heat one half can of tomatoes, or an equal quan tity of fresh tomatoes, with one cup of water, and either one-fourth tea spoonful kitchen bouquet or a judi cious use of herbs and spices. When boi?ing add one tablespoon butter, one heaping tablespoonful corn starch, one half teaspoonful salt and one-half saltspoonful pepper. Strain it over the tongue. There are now 1142 different subma rine cables, with a total length of 19, 880 miles, owned by governments, and 318 cables, altogether 146,000 miles long, in the hands of companies, / ?ri ./SP RATS AND THE DOG. Gentleman (indignantly)-When I bought this dog you said he was splen did for rats. Why, he won't touch them. 'Dog Dealer-Well, ain't that splendid for rats?-Tit-Bits. Look at the Labels ! Every package of cocoa or chocolate put out by Walter Baker & Co. bears tho well k^'wn trade-mark of the chocolate fe'.ri, and the place of manu facture, "Dorchester, Mass." House keepers are advised to examine their purchases, and make sure that other goods have not been substituted. They received three gold medals from the Pan-American exposition. A Bucolic Monarch. The King of Greece delights in tak ing recreation lu the fields. He can plow, cut and biud corn, milk cows, and in short could, at a pinch, keep a farm going single-handed. Odd Things to Lose. When people gather greatly together there are sure to be things lost, says the Par?s Messenger. The Betheny review, 'on the occasion of the visit of thc Czar, was no exception to thc rule. No sooner was the review ended than a huge quan tity of articles of all kinds was picked up by the authorities and placed in the keeping of the officers at Reims. Thc 'collection is of the oddest. Something of everything is included; many things, evidently, will never bc claimed ; old um brellas, empty bags and empty purses; there was also a corset Then there were again two handsome stem-winding watches. There is mother side to the question. People have sent in a description of things lost. One is of a splendid sword scabbard, belonging to an Algerian Caid, which was in chiseled silver. What complicates things is that the scabbard was found and claimed. The chagrin of the dusky African may be imagined. In any case he has offered a handsome re ward to him who returns his scabbard. are am FIRST FEARS ALLAYED. Suddenly a pale, agitated woman ap peared before the genial landlord. "Sir," she exclaimed, "there strange noises in my room. I afraid a burglar lies hidden in the closet." "Fie upon you, madam :" quoth the landlord, merrily. '"'Tis no burglar. 'Tis merely the spirit of a drummer who cut his throat in your room thirty years ago." Whereupon the woman, abashed at giving way to idle fears, thanked the landlord, and returned calmly to her bed.-Indianapolis Sun. AN EXPRESSION THAT HURT. "Have I got the 'pleasing expression' you want?" asked Mr. Grubbins. "Yes, sir," replied the photographer; "I think that will do very well." "Then hurry up, please. It hurt.s my face."-Tit-Bits. AN ANSWER TO KEEP A AWAKE. CHAP He-You will have to go a long way before you will meet any one who loves you more than I. She-Well, I'm willing to.-Life. Beet For tho Bowell. No matlor irhai ails yon, headache to a cancer, yon will never get well until your bowels are pnt right. CASCAKETS help nature, euro yon without a gripo or pain, produce easy natural r vements, cost you just 10 cents to start ge.cing your health back. CAS CABETS Candy Cathartic, the genuino, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has U.C.C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. A woman may not be musical and still be always harping on something, Brooklyn, N.Y., Nov.15.-A medical author ity say* : "There ?H hardly a famiir anywhero in which Garfield Tea do?a not often take thc place ot the Family Physician, for practically overyone suffers at times from disorders of stomach, liver, kidneys or bowels. Certainly, from no other medicine can such good results be obtained. This Herb remedy makes people well and thus greatly increases* their capacity for enjoying life ; it is good for young and old. ' ' A fellow may have a turning point in his life without being a crank. FFTS permanency cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bott lo and treatiso froe Br. B. H. KLINE, Ltd., 1)31 Arch St., Phila. Pa. The fellow with a bank account is his own cash drawer. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forchildrea teething, soften the gum3, reduces inflamraa tion,allays pain, cares wind colic. 25c a bottle Sunday is the day of strength; the oth ers are week days. Piso's Cure cannot bo too highly spoken ot as a cough cure.-J. W. O'BRIEN, 322 Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900. E. Rice, Qreenville," "Cross Bow," "Spear. "Master Workman," " "Jolly Tar," "Standard tune," .? Razor," ??Ole Var TAOS MAY BE ASSORTED Our new CATALOGUE ( FOR '"will inciudo~many articles not i most attractive List of. Presents be sent by mail on receipt of pos (Catalogue will be ready for rr Our offer ol Presenta for Tag; co Write your name and addrea containing Tags, and send them A CONSIDERATE FATHER-IN LAW. "Yes," said Mr. Cumrox; "I have given my daughters every advantage." "I suppose they are very highly cul tured." "I should say so." "And they will be liberally dowered." "Yes, sir. When I think of the way a man who marries one of those girls will be criticised in his grammar arid deportment, it strikes mc that he ought to be dealt with in the most generous spirit."-Washington Star. n PAY R. fi. FARE AND UNDER $5,000 Deposit, Guarantee SOO FREE SCHOLARSHIPS. BOARD A'. COST. V/rlto Quio* to QA..A I.A. BUSINESS COLLEGE, MACON, GA. USERS OF FARM AND MILL MACHINERY Subscribe For FOREST & FIELD at eight. It ls published In their lutereet at Atlanta, Ga., monthly. Only 25c per year. Agents wanted. Sample copies Free. HANDSOME AMERICAN LADY, Inkpen dently rich, wants KOOJ, honest husband. Ad dress Mr*. E., 87 ?tlurket Ht., Chicago, lil. Gold Medal at Ii nf lulo Expotition. McILHENNY'S TABASCO $900 TO $1500 A YEAfr . Wc want intelligent Men and Women as. Traveling Representatives cr Local Managers; salary $900 to ?:?? a year and all expentes, according to exi>erience and ability. We also want local repre??nt?tives ; salary ?9 to $15 s weelc and cotnmission, depending- upon the time devoted. Send "stamp for full particulars sod late position prefered. Address, Dept. B. THE BELL COMPANY, Philadelphia, Pa. ASJHMA'HAX f EVER *'.'-/CURED BY J ^DRJAFT'S; ,FI^TJ?iA)LB0TTl4 APPRESS DRTAF7L79 E.130^TJN.YCrTY' lww?S5~?NjEEpED.~~ When you weigh on a Jones soo Lb. Scala PRIC? $8.00. F'JCL PA?f ICULARS. JO\ES (HE PAYS THE F ll El ti HT.) BISGUAMTO?T, ?. T. misincts. : horiiiuna and Tele graph College, LouisvllIex.Ky.-; ?pen the whole year. Students can e^eriuiy-tlrjn^e. Catalog free. nPHDQV NEWiOlScoVERY;girt U Et 1 W I qmok raUef and eora* worst raies- Boo* o? tOf timon (ala and 1 U du VB' treatment Free. Dr. B. E. OlEEHESOtiS. lox D. Atlanta.Sa. USE CERTAIN KURL ss SO SEALERS W. L. Douglas 84.00 Gilt L'dso Lino Cannot Bo Equaled At Any 1'rlcc. Por More Than a Quarter of a Century tho reputation.of AV. L. Douglas (3.00 and S3.J0 shoes for stylo, comfort and wear has ex celled all other malte? suhl at tltcso prices. Thia excellent; reputation has been won by merit alone. W. L. Douglas shnc3 have to givo bettor sat isfaction than other fs.co and S3.S0 shoes because his reputa!lon fer the best ?3X0 and S3J0 shoes must bo maintained. XV. L. Donglas 83.00 and 83.50 shecs are made of the same hitrh-prade leath ers used in 85.00 and t*G.OO shoes and are jost as good in every way. Thc standard has always - tern placed so high that the wcarcrrccclvismuro valueior his money InaiioW. L. Douglas {3.00 md rito shc>s than ho can get elsewhere. JV" L. Douglas makes cad ?ell?fcorc S3.00 and ISM shoes than any other two manufacturers ItlTheWorld. PAST COLOR EYT2XT3 USED. Tr. t ist upon ha vin? W. L. L'cijlaa shoe* with nama aad prico stamped on bottoa. Shoes sent any. whcroo:i receipt o? price and 25 cents additional for car riage. Talco measurements ol foot as shown : star 0 style de sired : slsc and vlei th usually worn ; plain or cap too ; heavy, medium or light soles. Suld by & Douglai stores in American citlei tt:iinp direct from factory to n-rarrr jt on? prout | and tile bett abo? A ererywliere. _Cntnloe O Free. ._TV. Jt. TtOUOT.AS..Brockton. Muas.