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IwbattbeDesert | | ? Looks Likes Very few people have any Idea wbai the desert looks like. The majority Imagine it to be a vast expanse of ? ' ' '? !./> > tha nhr\f rit?rn 111' ICTfl gilUU. HUM IV niw ?> f"??r--rbere shown will con* as a revelation. This was taken during a French mili WHAT THE DESERT LOOKS L NOTHING IS TO BE SEEN EX OP SAND." tary expedition io Algeria. In the deseri Teflon of Zs-Salah. For miles and Biles nothing it to bo seen except these vast mountains of sand?moon tains which are always on the more, for the lightest breath of air blowc elonds of line sand Into tbc air. wbik ? nKn ntrc M lurvug WlilU mu VUIU|UVS\ IJ the whole face of the desert, suckiug Bp the sand Into a series of rotating fennels bearing a curious reiiemtlanct to water-spouts. At such a time the unhappy traveler is io terrible danger, for he stands a very good chance oi being engulfed bodily in the treacber pas waves of shifting sand.?The Wide Jfforid. Tka Uoa iid Tradition. Modern hunters have proved the lion the king of beasts, a rank coward, taking fright at a grunt. Any ordinary Spanish bull can whip him. Recently Texaa steer ripped one to pieces (According to tradition the lion's whelj it* .. * ??1^ It born dead aod remains 90 for thre? day*, when the father breathes on il and it receives life. Another traditioi la that the lion is the only animal ol the cat tribe born with its eyes open ?nd it is said that it xleeps with its eyej apen. A lion is the emblem of the triU of Jndah. One of the most (lingular features In the scenery of the territory of ldabc la the occurrence of dark, rockj chasms, into which creeks ami largt streams suddenly disappear and ar< never more seen. The fissures are old . lava channels produced by the outside of the mass cooling and forming i tube, which, when the fiery steam was exhausted, has been left empty, while the roof of the lava duct, havlnf at some point fallen in. presents, then the opening into which the rirei plunges and is lost At one place aloni the Snake one of these rivers appeari gushing from a cleft high up in ba saltic walls, where it leaps a cntaract Into the torrent below. Where th< stream has ?t* origin or at what point It is swallowed up In absolutely un known, although it is believed that iti sources are a long way up in the nortl country. Besides becoming the than Dels of streams the lava conduits an frequently found Impacted with the ie< masses which tuvcr entirely rnclt.Cliicago Chronicle. Dili CD AC THC U/AT/CC IVllltLn VI 1UL TT A V LJ. ?fron Harper'* Weekly. Another coronation that is taklu place in this country. juion^ engagements are rathe es pensive affairs in Rusnia. The brid? groom-elect is expected to stnd hi fta&cee a present ?verj day. f )'! I MORE ERUPTIONS DUE ij | * FROM MONT PELEE |l l' '' In an Interview at Fort de Franc**. Martinique, J. A. Jaggcr. Jr.. assist- J nut geologist to the United States j ' (Seulogical Survey, who has been int \estigating volcanic conditions in the 1 West Indies, said: "The question has been constantly 1 1 1 i l .IKE ? "FOR MILES AND MILES CEPT THESE VAST MOUNTAINS i t asked ne, 'Do you not think It is On. I if:bed now? Is not the danger over?' : I have always answered. The rnoun tain at this moment appears calm, and , the dust columns that one sees from i time to time are Iqrgely due to land? slides from the crater into the head of Riviere Blanche. The eruption of ; last night was to be expected. We ; may expect many more before so hot > and vigorous a steam engine as Mount > Pelee comes to rest.' "A diagnosis of the real diminution f in activity can only be made after the mountain has been watched a year and > all its movements recorded. After etnn/. \fnp Ol wua'uius C? ruia unc o?uw > * j 1 do not think a single habitation northwest of the line from Bellefou, taiue to Vive is srfe to live in r.t , present. I do not think that Carbti - Ponds-St. Denis. Morne Rouge o: t Basse Polr;e are safe at present. N< . that there is any immediate danger > but I believe that the action of Mou LTloA op ST ? Telec is tco uncertain for us to be ast sured that a future eruption may not i occur to windward. I "I know well that causing people to . move from all these villages and babt itations will produce great inconveni' ence, but tbe alternative is a risk of human life. When the mountain is entirely cold, and the people are pro tected by a properly equipped experiment station, with devices to signal danger, they may, with certain restrictions, return to the volcanic lands. No city should ever again, however, be built on the northeast end of the island. "I do not think that Fort de France Is in any danger from tbe volcano. "Most of the towns in the West Indies are equally in danger from tidal waves. It would take an explosion from Mont Pelee of enormously greater dimensions than anything that has happened as yet to make a wave which would harm Fort de France. ' "No evidence exists of augmenting 1 violence in the eruptions hitherto I wnicn wouiu ieua 10 lue buj?j>uMuuu f that a Krakatoa explosion is coming 1 ' here. In comparison Mout Felee is ? ' tlCE VICTOR HCQO, THE PRINCIPAL KTBEET or ST. PIERRE. i i rather a small volcano. This is all 1 vu:? say about danger." Ntwr*. English A IrUb. The tlrm of Knglish & Irish .? in Washington street. Buffalo. X. V Frank U. I?u BoK who is well acquainted with both members, says: "English is Irish and Irish is Knglish. The father of Mr. Irish to informed me a few years ago." Cupid Not Alwajr* Blind. i "Tivn" aim thu Mnnnvnnk Philn*. opht-r. "i.-u't to blind that it cauuot see a dollar mark."?Philadelphia tteeord. The importation of lubber by the United States has grown in thfirty yeara frjm $3,300,000 to J30.00t\t)00 Iter annum; fruits and nuts front 37, C00.0C0 to $20,000,000; coffee, from $24,000,000 to $70,000,000, while tea has fallen from $$14,000,000 to $0,000,000. E No man ever made z great name for himself writing anonymous comaauni: catioae. n The uiau who is on the level ought I to eft alone smoothly. j "POCKET^LANETi" | j Little Warlda Only > Rig u ? Farm- | J ' rr'? field. || {OSOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC 0300 It Is do surprising thing nowadays for the announcement to l>i> made that n not lnr plauct has been discovered. Time was. however, when such an iniioumvuieut was received with much interest. It Is wt!l known that between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter there is a belt ring of tiny bodies, pocket planets."' as Herschel called them, none with a greater diameter than 200 miles and some whose assigned diameter is less than seventeen miles. There are doubtless some even " ? lo onmirrli fnr H Iliimit'i UUUUI *ut*c iaivu(,u ? ? farmer's cornfield perhaps. So diminutive are tlicsc curious momIxts of the solar system that even after one has beeu discovered it is guite likely to be lost. Of course it [s possible to trace the movements >f the asteroids as well as those of !he larger planets, but the labor of loing so. especially of the many tiny 3Des of little practical interest, surpasses the probabie value of the remit. and in consequence the orbits of most of them are not yet calculated. The orbits of all these diminutive ivorhls lie in a belt about 100.000 miles (vide and with a mean distance from :be sun of aliout 250.U00.000 miles. At present more than 250 of these ittle worlds have been discovered, and more are found ntarly every year. How many there may be it is impossible to estimate. One astronomer hiuks there may be no many as 150.)00 of tbem. ThcMotal number, what* ?ver tbat may be. depends largely on rbetber or not tbere is any limit to iieir minuteness. If tbere is no sucb limit, tbat is if some are very mucb smaller tban [hose now known, too small to be seen Rritb tbe tekscope now in use, tbere may be nn indefinite number. Several theories have been advanced to account for tbe presence of tbe asteroids in that part of tbe solar system to which Bode's law assigned a planet long before their existence was known. Others proposed tb*> hypothesis that they had once formed a single planet, Khich had at some remote time been shattered by a great explosion, the rragmen.'s continuing to revolve about the sun in approximately the orbit of the original planet. The considerable variation in the eccentricity and inclination of their orbits, not to be accounted for by any present mode ?f calculation, and the irreater probability of their separate Formation just as were the other ind larger planets according to the bebular hypothesis, has led to the general discarding of Olbers' theory. a one or tuc greater planets nave orbits whose eccentricity much exceeds one-tenth the diameter or whose Inclination to the ecliptic. is greater than three degrees. Of the asteroid*, lowever, many orbits are Inclined nore than ten degrees and have an eccentricity in excess of one-fourth :he diameter. According to the nebular y?rH>thesls. (rhich Is at present generally accepted. :he minor planets as well as the jreater ones were formed by the conlensation of rings of cosmic matter surrounding the sun. In the case of ;be asteroids the ring instead of con LITTLE W. l.LDS flensing into one maws condensed about many points, tbe result being a great number of pigmy planets instead of a single large one. as in tbe case Df tbe others. If all the minor planets now known were to be combined into one its diameter would be less than 400 miles. A thousand more of thein. supposing tbcm of the aver apt* size, would wake tbe jjlobe scarcely a hundred miles greater in diameter, and its mass ? ? l WOUII1 pveu lif ICSK IllilU uuv 1UUI- i IhousauJth of the earth's. Assuming tin- density of these little j worlds to he approximately that of the earth, bodies on their surfaces would weigh very little. A man placet! ou one of them could easily Jump to a height of sixty fe*t. and in a day be could walk entirely around his little world with less exertion than is required for his morning walk. Why fhllip Sobbnl. Little Philip was taken to the seashore for a week and he enjoyed the j life immensely the tlrst two days. He [ ran around ou *he bench until his face' was sunburned and he was a bright red. Then itbe skin began peeling off and itched dreadfully. His mother was awakened at night by hearing the boy nobbiug. and she called to know what was the matter. "The paper is coining off my face." sobbed the little fellow ? New York Times. A Corlont Tht?|f. It is a curious thing that the less money a man owes the less credit he has.?New York Press. tlx Many a man lies liecause be doesn't happen to think of the truth.?Chicago News. A document relating to the sale of land, dated 1502 and signed by Guy Fawkes. was rtmilly sold in London (or $505. | IGkv.LrL w?r r - V n * ,'itW C- - t fwiki?: - . . i.-Li , > ?, THE GARARAO AT WORK An Animal That b invaluable to tha PhBppint Natives. Long of bora and tough of bide is the carabao of the Philippines. Sometimes it is called tbe water buffalo, and it resembles tbe animal of tbat name which is found in India. Tbe name is fitting, for tbe owner, if left to itself, will stay in tbe water nearly all day. To the native It Is invaluable. It tills bis fields and draws bis product to tbe market. It is meek and patient and docile, with great strength and a will to pull whatever it is yoked to over any road. The army lias found the bull train to be of great service in transporting provisions and ammunition from point to point. Once tbe transfer bad to be made from tbe Bag-Bag River to San Fernando, a distance of twelve miles. It took half a day to make the journey. Some of tbe carabao died, but as a rule tbe method of transportation was a success, though slow. A buffalo, drawing a heavy load of am* munition, was driven up a sharp grade at Bag-Bag to reach tbe railroad track. Both front feet slipped, and the beast fell to bis knees. Yet be pulled that load up the grade on his knees and did not attempt to #top until the strai ..ad slackened. Then it was foun. it the knees of the animal had been ?. nned and were bleeding. One r Jliarity about tbe buffalo li that he must have water and demands THE WATEB BUFFALO. it twice a day. at least. Through tbe green that surrounds tbe walled city on tbe eoutb there runs a small stream that empties and fills with the ebb nnd flow of the tide. When it ia low , there is plenty of mud. aud when high the water is net clear. But tbe Goveminent carabao that are loafing there now are not particular about tbe coodition of tbe stream. Tb?y feed aiong tbe green slope until tbe beat of tbe day. then they crawl down into tbe mud and lie tbere until the rays of tbe bud are behind the walls of tbe city, when tbey come out again for tbe evening meal. Sbould they be wanted In the meantime the driver goes down to the bank and begins to throw stones and shout, "Hoo-o. Hoo-a!" When that sound break* upon them as tbey stand there with their eyes shut and with jawb elevated above tbe water line deliberately chewing their cuds, with one accord they silently sink oat of sight. Sometimes they remain ander water for more than a minute. Then j they begin to come up, one at a time, and as they appear the "Hoo-o. Hoo-a" of their tormentor still smites the peaceful air. Slowly they move off, and it is not always in the right direction. It sometimes takes a half-hour's labor to get the drove to the bank. If NEWLY FOUND. ^ tbey are covered with mud It suit* them better, for tben tbeir bidet bare n coating which tbe fly and mosquito cannot penetrate.?Chicago RecordHerald. The Latest Corkscrew. An ingenious American has set bit wits to work on the corkscrew prob^5 |, ?=j"te? leui. aud the result of Lis cogitation* is here depicted. Pressure on the knob coils a powerful spring, aud the rebound extracts the stopper in jig time. Depend* I'pen the Mu, The quality aud excellence of a paper depend upon the character and ability of the ui;:u who conducts it. Such is the opinion of U. C. Miller, of the St. Peter (Minn.) Free Press If he is a inan lit to be a couutr) editor at all, says Mr. Miller, and gives bis best efforts to the enterprise, is reliable in all things, never loses eight of what is best tot the interest of his community, always aims to be generous, strives to build up rather than to destroy, lends, not follow*, and conscientiously supports tbe highest ideals, he is sure to earn tbe confidence and respect of the public, and bis paper will oec?me a I power in the comomuity. jidii l-rtfiriBliflTii |- _ ... M Thr*at?n?d With KitiactlM. "Some writer fays he feels awfully sorry for 'he poor horse fly. What I* he to do when there are only automobiles? What can a horse-fly pet off an automobile? Varnish only. And the writer sayc varnish is disappointing in the bcgiunlng and deadly In the end. It does seem too bad. doesn't it?" "It does. Poor old horse-fly. But 1 suppose somebody will be moved to do something for the unfortunate wretched Think of a Home for Indigent Horse flies! Perhaps one of our big-hearted millionaires will establish a park for them, and save from extinction a few equine examples for them to feast upon. If the horse-f!y is doomed his exit should be made as easy and comfortable as possible."?Cleveland Plain Dealer. Athletic Hudihakf. Beware of the athlete's handshake, says the Boston Herald. A Philadelphia lady had the bones of her Illy whit** hand crushed by n uinn to whom chc had just been introduced. Bat what wiys the book of etiquette? "When n mnn is presented to n lady they must not shake hands, but merely bow." Vow we know why the books of etiquette are needful literature. Ouch!" exclaimed the girl with the jeweled Angers. "Just we what you've done squeezing ray handr' Tiien the athlete i" so sorry. especially If he also breaks a bone or two. A New Wh?at That la Simply Great. A numlw of farmers have expert menii'ii wi^n ine new wnent in western Kansas, and one of tbem in reported as saying that bis wheat sown February 27. this year, and harvested July S. yielded twenty bushels per acre. He figures a loss of five bushels per acre caused by heavy rains that delayed harvesting. His experience shows that the wheat withstands the drouth like kafflr corn, and when rain comes it begins growing again as if nothing had hindered It.?Kansas City World. Completed Proverb*. "Listeners never hear good of themselves," and but rarely of anybody else. "Hard words break no bonet," but they do break hearts. "Health Is* better than wealth." to him who has wealth only. inr docks wuicn ueip you most are those which make you thiuk the most." often by irritating you. "The best advice is?don't give any away," don't take much more.?L. de V. Matthewman, in the Era Magazine. Hon* Power. A horse power is the force required to lift a dead weight of 33,000 pounds one foot a minute. To find the horse power of an engine1 multiply the area of the piston in inches by the average steam pressure in pounds per square Inch. Multiply the product by the travel of the piston in feet par minute and divide that product by 33,000. If an engine is rated at seventy-three Lorpc power It will raise 33.000 pound* one foot seventy-three times In one minute. Dlndna. Millions of Hindus live, marry and rear families on an income whicli rarely exceeds half a dollar of our money a week. They never eat meat and need hardly any clothing. Aik Tour Dealer For Allen's Foot-Fa**, A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, tfwolltn. Hore. Hot, Callous,Aching I Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Alien s Foot-Ease BftklS new or tight shoes easy. At J all Druggifetfe on! sbo?'f teres, 25 cents.' Ac* ; cent do rubstltnte. Sample nailed Fhek. Aauress Alien v>. L.enoy, ?. i. London'* newspaper* use up about 300 tons of paper every week day. Rev.H.P. Carson. Scotland.Dak..nay*: "Two bottles if Hall's Catarrh Cure completrij 1 cured my little girl." Boldt-y Druggists, 75c. A rolling ?tone never cukes much of an up-hill fight. FITS permanently cured.No fits or nervousness after first day sure ot Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer. tiitrial bottle and treatlsefree Dr. B.H. Rust, Ltd., 1)31 Arch St., Phllx, Pa. Some men won't be guyed and other* won't be guided. i i Mr*. W Inflow's 8c othiag Syrup for children teething, soften the gums, reduces lnflammatlon,allay*puin,cures wind eolic. 35c. abottle The Uws of gravitation are not responsible for a man's fall from grace. Piao's Cure cannot be too highly spoken ol M a couch cure.?J. W. O'Bbisr, 922 Third Avenue, 19.. Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6,1903 You never hear conceited wonle com plaining tbat life isn't worth living. Gray Hair | "I have used Ayer'a Hair Vigor I for over thirty years. It baa kept I my scalp free from dandruff and 1 haa prevented my hair from turn- I ing gray."?Mrs. F. A. Soule, J Billings, Mont. There is this peculiar thing about Ayer's Hair Vigor?it is a hair food, not a dye. Your hair does not suddenly turn black, look dead and lifeless. But gradually the old color comes back,?all the rich, dark color it used to have. The hair stops falling, too. Sl.M bottle. AJ! fcvutats. (If jrour drngeift cannot supply you, end us one do fur and we will ?zpr tu you a bottie. Bs sure undIrire the nmme ol your bMritt express office. Address. J. C. A YXR CO., Lowell, Mui. ? d7/JI 9 JDWUUM Dizzy? Headache? Pain back of your eyes? It's your liver! Use Ayer's Pil!s. Waal your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black ? Use Buckingham's Dye SOcli.ef druggist* or H P Mal< fcCo , Natfcwa.N H Tnonpian'i Eyi Wttfi / MOTHER AND Cured by Pe-ru-na of _____ 4 An Interesting Letter From'< & Mrs. M. K. Bousch, of; | Richmond, and Her Little \ Daughter, Pearl. Mr*. II K. Boo*cb, Richmond, Vi., writes: "I had eatmrrk all through my system /or tw? yearn and could get no relief. 1 woe advlued to try Peruna, and 1 have taken five bottle* of it and am well and better now (Man I have been /or years. Ieanadvlee any one " * -< nt the MWO MM Q?l?rrw i>/ ?i?y c-. r My to take Peruna. My little girl, M>ho <a eleven yearn old,.had catmrrk, but wot cured by Peruna. Before 1 began to tmke Peruna J teas Kick all the time, bwt now I am tnMrefy mre4 and all praise ie due 1'eruua."?Mr* M. K. Bouech. Mice Petri Bouech writea: "When I was | skui-to; I BAB Sleep for skin-tortur tired, fretted Mothers Cuticura Soap, and $ cuticura ol>*tment, and greatest of skin cu severe cases by mild d< solvent Pills. This if most speedy, permanei treatments for torturi ing, burning, bleeding pimply skin and scalp 1 hair, of infants and cliil MILLIONS Ol ?Jj? UN tmci'lU SU?r, urinru wj akin cure, tor pratei-rlng, purifjrin for all the purpoaea of th? toilet, PyK Women iwe Cuticcka 8oaj* in tbo i jgcsj UUoqb, lnflatniuattona, and ulrera 1 52? sanative, aatiseptic purpose*. $4 COMPLETE TREATMEFTI Cowiaduc of Ctmcvux Soar. I I OIimiMiT, to beat (tie skin; nod I 3g?l cool and cieuue the bkxxl. A 8l* tbo most tortorlaf, fflrfjrurlnf, lie! irtj raahea, and lrriurtotu, with loaa ol I SSf Cvnova* Ktnaoisa u> wU di>M(lwi V}< Man^UaiM. flt> I Marti * J Kg Cw C0W5 M* fNpa^ Jmmmu IUbom Utkta the King WrTtr^ | His majesty, never very fand of letter-writiug at any time, generally reserves penning Ills private epistles till be Ifl confined to Lis room through 111ness. The German Emperor once had a letter from his Majesty, ax Prince of Wales, which commenced as follows: . I have a wretched cold, and have neon indoors two or three days, j I am miserable and in a frightful tern- ! per, so will write to you." The last time the Kaiser was in England he showed this letter to King Edward, who laughed very heartily at his unconscious rudeness. The present Princes* of Wales al- | ways declares that her husband is "the most impatient patient in the j world." His Hoy ill Highness is a verj had hand at taking medicine, and ofteu ; laiifrliin^ly declare* tlmt lit- lias paved his life over and over ajrniu through accidentally mislayiug bis physic.?An- | gwers. Sorlely Mrn'i Club Uiin Are Heavy. j A mail like Alfred wynne Vauder- j hilt belongs of necessity to so many j clubs that his cluh dins come annually to $NOUO or This is also true cf J sueh men as W. 0. Whitney, I>r. Sew., ard Webb. John Jacob Astor and A. J. ( l>r? xel. Jr. The Englishmen of great social poni- j, tiou belong to even mure clubs that: ; their American t<|iiai*, and for I man to belong to fifty or sixty of : :< j *? nt oil iinnunnl j 19 liUI til III! Fond to Snil. | A distinctly twentieth century idea | Ih tli:it of a ho!el-keep?-r who provides j for his patron* u die! Ii?t made out by a physician. showing tin- best null-1 ml to each perwii. says lVan>uii'? , Weekly. Tli'.' fat. i!: thin. the <1yspeptic, the anaemic all are ?at? red for; and not only so hut mo far as |mssible dishes arc provided which, while they art* adapted for particular! case, ilu n<>t offend the palate*. I In frrilia Towns. In Persia, ay well ut> iu Turkey and ' throughout the Orient generally, modern waterworks! are unknown. and in every Persian town the women and ! j;iiU may be eeeu at d:iybreak on their .' way to the eonuncn wells Ju?t an iu ' old Bible tiuK'fc About the hardest Uu* of duty is the 1 e!othe?!ine > DAUGHTER Systematic Catarrh. j I i baby 1 contracted catarrh, and m doc* j red by sevemi (food physicians, bat none iid me any good. My mother was taking Peruna at tne time and gave some of it ;o me, and 1 soon began to improve, and .tm now veil and fat as a iittle pig. I am twelve years old. The doctors told mother I had tne consumption, but it was only cv larrb."?M:>u Pearl Bouacb. It is no longer a question u to whether Peruna can be relied on to core all Mich cases. During the many yean in which Peruna has been pat to test in all forms and stages of acute and chronic catarrh no one year has put this remedy to greater test than the past*year. Peruna is the Acknowledged catarrh remedy of the age. Dr. Hartman, the compounder of Peruna, has written a book- on the phases of catarrh peculiar to women, entitled. "Health and Beauty." It will be sent free to any address by The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio. If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna. write at once to Dr. Hartman. giving a full statement of your case and ne will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus. Ohio. STORED I El: ed Babies and rest for ||| in warm baths with |S ?ntie anointings with ?8! purest of emollients ??' je8, to be followed in ag yses of Cuticura Re- g|S > i the purest, sweetest, at, and economical of ?g ng, disfiguring, itch- j?| j, scaly, crusted, and humours, with loss of 8|| dren, as well as adults. ??| P MOTHERS g|j * CmccsA Onrmr.tT, the great g, and beautifying the akin, tod ft? bath, and Lurt?rj. Mllll una of form of bath* for annoyiaf !rrt are waakao?ea, and for manj ^5 : FOR EVERY HUMOUR 11 U> rlcaoM the akin; Cmccfci jcSSi ccncraA BnoLvaarr I'ill#, to uLKSrrlx often ?uflrlca<t<> ear* ita;, burning, and aealj hunoura, t hair, whan all !?? fall*. {KS t tU mM. MM Urpah ff-M. Of aUhM^Mi rnnaSawu* Chi Hard Lack. While their pupils are holiday making li-otp Hay 1 to September 1 many of the Swiss cantonal arboohuasters around Zermntt take altnatioaa in the hotels as waiters or porters. A HVKH V BO V tiMt pUr* Foot Ball ^5 ibould b??? Sitldllf'i OficUi JTTitf-w * ? Ball Umlit. It conula* fuoU /Mi. Ti'l IXjr?Drr*: fix.t ball lnform?tioa cow|/|kV iruinrcMptmforbaflaaMfcfwltaJt AV911-* 'V forth* mn*. '?? rtliJial laticioo of toot holLwlcJN Ao^rk'i tMUB. Southern foot bail. EH Wr?t?ru foot L*U. ui* ua? rak*. r*cUBr < nl? of rolHrw and acbool lun* for >1 iWl. mil plmuit or dn pUrm For V uW by all J*al*r??Dl A. u MPALD1NU ? BKOS . X.w York. Chlcair Seaaiat staanei C C C. Aeret soli in fcaft. Jkware rf the dealer wbc tries tr sail **Soaethirg jast as good." ?Wg?WW tonus To *ay rhat I aui surprise*! at tlieir [ j action will convey but a slljjht Idea j j of the value I set upon Kipjinx Tab- I | ule*. 1 derived immediate nenem and to Kipans Tubules ain deeplj indebted for feeling as I do to-dAjr. If the people of this country knew the efficacy of Kipans Tubules {or stomach and Bead troubles tbej would be reliered from many af | diction*. At druggnti. The Five Cent packet u enough for an ordinary occuion. The family bottle, 60 cent*, contain* a ftupply for a year. nn ADGV SEW D1IC0VEST; K>f qaick nlMi>4?iN cum ItNi iJ tklWMit'j tsd imunol Frr*. Dr a a tuil'tion.tu l.illau.*.. ADVEBTISING K?T,a"5A?r" gj Bik tcotn S-mp tuiM GooJ bac Bj r-j in tlmr. nI4 or drugci?u