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J i = ^ Why "Wo Une the Right Hand. W All nations, all tribes, from prehis- | toric man are right-handed, said a j 1 1/vAiiiwA* A r<l cl>c oYnlninnrl* ? ifl'lUXCl ll-'LCliUJ. J\+i\l Cii v v^iumvvii j i tect himself. His ??*ft band, being j & nearest tbe heart. carried a shield lo j gji protect himself. while tbe right hand j .was used to carry a weapon. St. Louis (Mo.) street cars have killed gSM seven persons a month during eight ities will be largely increased by tbe ^^^^World's Fair next year. ; " I had a terrible cold and could | hardly breathe. I then tried Ayer's g Cherry Pectoral, and it gave me im- I mediate relief." * W. C. Lsyton. Sidell, 111, a How will your cough I be tonight? Worse, prob-1 ably. For it's first a cold, 1 then a cough, then bron-1 chitis or pneumonia, and I lat last consumption. I Coughs always tend | downward. Stop this I downward tendency by | takinpAver'sCherryPec-g Ttfecthw: 25c., 59e., ?. Mirutfrt*. | MBp Consolt your doctor. If he Bars take it, flj than do as lie says. If he tells you not C to take it. then don't take it. He knows. Leave it with him. We are wllliop. <>i J J. C. AYEK CO.. Lowell. Mmb. fl \ I i ! Electric Hair Clipper. Among the patents recently granted j S^L Is one covering the combination of the i familiar hair clipper and the electric motor. The motor is skillfully mount- I ed in the handle of the apparatus and ?1; its operation is controlled by an unobW trusive button conveniently placed. F By this means it is possible for a bar | ber to make a round trip over a young- j ster's bead in remarkable short order. The little motor will drive the blades back and forth fifty times in the same time that it is done by hand, and the Kf vantage that it gives a clean, sharp crease of $3,000,000. Public and private improvements recently completed and J /< f lirs. llosa Adarns^ niece* of ||| the late Genera! Roger Hansen, C.S.A., wants every woman to |raj know of the wonders accompli plished by Lydia E. Pinkham's 44 Dear Mrs. I'inkham : ?I cannot BrasS tell you with pen and ink what good IJLyaia Jti. jrmivnam's vegemuio Compound did for me, suffering- from the ills peculiar to the sex extreme lassitude and that all prone feeling. I would rise from my bed in the morning feeling more tired than when I went to bed, but before I used two bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, I began to feel the buoy* ancy of my younger days returning, | became regular, could do more work and not feel tired than I had ever been able to do before, so I continued to use it until I was restored to perfect health. It is indeed a boon to sick women and I heartily recommend it. Yours very truly, Mrs. Rosa Adams, 819 12th St., Louisville, Ky." ? SCOCO forfeit if original of above letter proving genuineness cannot be produced. FREE MEDICAL ADVICE TO WOMEN. Don't hesitate to write to Mrs. Pinkham. She will understand your case perfectly, and will treat you with kindness. Her advice I is free, and the address is Lynn, Moss \nivnmnn Av<>r rpirr^ttpd riiavin? written her, and she has helped thousands. There are now somewhat over 100,000 students in our colleges, universities and technical schools, and somewhat over 50,000 students in our prov fiesgional schools of theology, law i and rfretffrntev. I Japanese warships equipped with wireless telegraph apparatus, have sent and received messages to and from Japan at a distance of about ! fifty miles. I happy women. Mrs. Pare, wife * prominent resident of Glas- b -. gow. Ken- ?- jvjrrW tucky. says: "I was S']f- pb=pV'f-rCV fering frotn l|k:?^ frM&y *j a ooraplica- | ?, sides a bad back, 1 >||i Jf bad a great deal ^3 f of trouble with tbe ^^>v|>||Mi secretions. which were exceedingly variable, sometimes j excessive and at otber times seaDty. j Tbe color was bigh, and passages were I F accompanied witn a seaming sensation. Doan's Kidney Pills soon regulated the kidney secretious. making J their color normal, and banished the inflammation which caused the scald ing sensation. I can rest well, mj back is strong aud sound, and I feei much better in every way." ^ Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y ^ For sale by all dealers, price DO centf per box. j New York City.?Long coats made in \ the severe tailor style are among the < features of the season and are greatly j worn both as separate wraps and for j | COAT "WITH PLAIN SLEEVES. t the entire suit. This very excellent ^ May Manton one is adapted to both uses and to all the season's fabrics, but is shown in light weight melton in military blue stitched with eorticelli j silk, and makes part of the costume. i The coat is made with fronts, backs, 1 side backs and double underarm gores 1 wliicb allow of a perfect and graceful ] fit. The seams at front and back ex- c tend to the shoulders and are con- r cealed by the straps. The neck is fin- j ished in regulation coat style and the t sleeves can be the plain ones with roll ? over cuffs or the full bishop sort as , may be preferred. <; The quantity of material required for the medium size is four and onefourth yards forty-four inches wide, or three and one-fourth yards fifty-two : inches wide. i f Two Novelties of the Season. 6 .Shirt waists with plastron effects \ are among the novelties of the season t and are exceedingly effective. The i i one shown on the left of the large f drawing is made of louisine silk in ? shades of blue and is piped with vel- ? vet and trimmed with ornamental buttons, but the design is equally well suited to all the silk and wool waistings and to the cotton vestings which s are so popular. When the latter are c used the lining can be omitted and the 1 edges simply stitched or a trimming 1 of braid substituted for the piping of 5 velvet. t The waist consists of the fitted !in- ( SPIIRT WAIST. log, which closes at the centre front, t the fronts, the back and the plastron. r The back is tucked from the shoulders to the waist line to give a tapering effect to the figure, but the fronts f from the shoulder lo yoke uepm omj- j and are gathered at the waist line, j The plastron is cut on a curved out- ( line and attached to the right side, j hooked or buttoned over on the left. \ The sleeves are the fashionable ones c of the season that are large below < the elbows and small above and are \ finished with straight cuffs. At the . neck is a novel stock with tie. t The quantity of material required for tbe medium size is four and three- j eighth yards twenty-one inches wide, ( four and one-fourth yards twenty-sev- ^ en inches wide, or two and three- { eighth yards forty-four inches wide. All broad shoulder effects are in { vogue. The other very stylish blouse f shown in the large drawing is trimmed ( and tucked to give continuous lines in r waist and sleeves and is eminently t graceful and spjart. Tho model is j made of cerise crepe de chine and is f trimmed with heavy net with ap- \ pliques of silk cherries and a ruche of f chiffon, but all materials sufficiently i pliable for fine tucks are suitable and j the trimming can be 'ace or applique i of any sort. .Phe sleeves are wide aDd full over puffs of cream chiffon that f are charming in their effect, but the f under sleeves can be of the material . if preferred. The design is simplicity Itself, all the effect of elaboration being obtained by trimming. The lining is smoothly fitted and both it and the waist are - - -? - ^ xL . i T- e*r^r\ CIOFCU Ut TUe UUl'li. i lie uuc ao oc^/rt 'ate, made of combined tucking and net, and below it the front and backs are laid in narrow tucks, those at the centre front full length. others extending 1c yoke depth only. The sleeves are arranged over fitted linings that support the full puffs and which are faced to form the caps below which the bell shaped portions are tucked for several inches. The quantity of material required for the medium size is fire yards twenty-one inches wide, three and one-half yards twenty-seven inches wide, or three yards forty-four inches wide, with one yard of net forty inches wide, )ne yard of chiffon and half a yard of tucking to make as illustrated. i Persian Lamb Trimming. 3 Persian lamb trimming of lustrous t |TEST 'RICTUS ibre silk is one of the important accessories of the season. It comes in galloons of various widths and apJliques of different forms, -which, however, are invariably edged with a plain >r novelty fibre braid. These will be nuch used, both in millinery and dres9 ximining. as will also wool embroideries on chiffon or taffeta in Oriental ir pompadcu colorings and cloth cut vork in two colors outlined in black ;nd wLite or pongee colored silk cord. Garnitures of wool embroidery in mulicolors, with fringe ornaments and langles, are attractive novelties. The Cuff of the Season* Cuffs are the centre of interest in the ileeve line this season. Otherwise here is no radical departure in outine or architecture. The baggy puff, vhich is slightly diminished by means if gores, has been shifted somewhat nore toward the elbow. But the cuff >f the season, those specimens espe ially which adorn the more dressy ostumes and coats, seem to combine he ideas and all the different eras in he history of dress, and are indeed flowing tributes to the ingenuity of he sartorial artist. Sntin Ribbons. Ribbons manipulated in n hundred ngenious ways and combined in a icli gamut of tones, trim many of the landsomest hats and toques. A dark )lue felt turban is trimmed with two arse rosettes of ribbon set on the back >f the crown. These are made of satin ibbon rolled to points and made to esemble double dahlias, the petals jeing shaded from light to the deepsst golden yellow. These trim the hat, vith the addition of two small puffs of lark blue velvet. The Gibnon Girdle. The latest belt, called rather unimiginatively, the Gibson girdle, is wide n the back and tapers slightly to the ront, where it is fastened with two itraps and silver or gun-metal harness >uckles. The girdle comes in DJacu md colored leathers, and has scalloped jands of self-colored or contrasting ;hades of leather stitched on either >ide, leaving a space between about m inch in width. Soft Graceful Effects. Soft, graceful effects in gowns are sought for tbis season, says a Paris orrespoudent of Bon Ton, and to gain his end skirts are made fuller and 'uller. boleros and jackets are short, 'howing the high girdles beneath, and he sleeves admit of a hundred and )ne designs as long as they are loose TUCKED BLOUSE. uul "floppy" with lace or pleated silk utiles falling over the hand. Woman s Fancy Kloune. Fancy blouses retain all their favor tnd will be much worn during the coning season. This one, designed by tfay Manton. includes the new cape ;ffeet with the fashionable shallow roke and princess closing and is fitted loth to the odd waist and gown. The >riginal is made of mauve crepe de hine, trimmed with ecru lace and lands of velvet In a darker shade, but ill the thinner materials of the season are appropriate. The waist is made with a fitted linng which closes at the centre front. Jn this lining are arranged the yoke, vhich closes at the left shoulder seam, md the portions of the waist proper. The back is plain, urawn uuwu m gathers at the waist line, but the ronts are laid in box pleats at their dges and both they and the sleeves ire tucked at their upper portions, he tucks providing fulness below. The ittle cape, or bertha, is circular and nils over the arms-eye seams, so givng the broad effect of fashion. The sleeves are snug for a short distance >elow the shoulders, but form full niffs at the wrists where they are leld by straight cuffs. The quantity of material required or tbe medium size is five and threeourtli yards twenty-one inches wide, F>N V BLOUSE. 'our and one-half yards twenty-seven nches wide, or two and one-eighth rarde forty-four inches wide, with hree-eighth yards of lace for yoke. \Mor^pW'!oj i t . -? ] Korea is the granary of Japan. No circle can be squared, because j] ; 3.1426, which is the ratio of the circum. V I ference to the diameter, is not a square. 11 ? The Prince and Princess of Wales i< | are the possessors of nineteen pianos, every one of wbich was a wedding t ' P^sent .. UlStd * ? y | The $2,142,207 worth of platinum ex- J] I tracteil in the Gortlagodatski district * : of Russia last year is practically the y world's supply of that metal. c A sensitive dog will follow the track } of a man who is wearing his masters c boots and will reject the track of its > master If he has on strange boots. * a Since 1852 more than 26,000 convicts r have been sent to French Guiana, of t whom eighty-four and one-half per- ? cent, die of disease, hardship and in- r sufficient food. f I A national pantheon is being erooted J | by the Mexican Government in the City 6 I of Mexico, the estimated cost being $5,000,000. It is to be at once a mem- i orial and a sepulchre for Mexico's J great men. r The number of persons carried daily by the elevated trains in New York City now averages about 800,000. They travel on the average about four miles, so that the average fare is a cent a mile. j Fifteen thousand cubic feet of sand I from the dunes of Indiana are now j brought into Chicago. 111., every day and made use of in the work of raising ! the tracks of the city in order to abol* i lsh grade crossings. The Canadian Pacific Railway sold i last year from its subsidy land nearly j 2,GOO,000 acres at a price averaging less i than $4 an acre. In the previous year j it sold less than 1,600,000 acres at a | price averaging a little over $3 an f acre. f 8 Nickel-in-the-slot machines are in use I in Dawson City. Alaska, for selling wa. 41 ter in the winter. One can put in a ! nickel and get five gallons of water, | j but no more. It is so cold there that j < the water supply in the houses is shut off so that the pipes will not freeze ? every night. , j 1 Groves of the eucalyptus tree, known I as blue gum or manna gum, may be t cut to the ground for fuel when they i * are five or seven years old, and every ; T six or eight years subsequently. The ( yield from each cutting is commonly j * fifty to seventy-five cords of four-foot J wood per acre. i a I i CREATING A DEMAND. How Success May Bo Won by Publicity of | the Bight Kind. That the advertising of any article j in a general way, if rightly done, does j j' create demand on the merchant, says j i the Michigan Tradesman, will hardly be questioned, although there are some manufacturers who believe they j have demonstrated to the contrary. Granted that the article is a good one and something that the publio wants, if advertising fails to create demand it is because the advertising is poorly done. As well might one argue, that given good 6oil and good seed^a favoring climate, plenty of sun. ' shine, rains and all other necessary conditions, there would be a doubt whether a harvest could be depended upon or nQt. A shiftless farmer, who is always behind in planting his seed and is too careless and indolent to properly culti? *-- -- "??? cv/\Tt?fr)tr rvnns. I ? IVttlt: Ui. LUl C uiv w a Jneed not expect a bountiful harvest. The; same rule holds in advertising, j It may be righly likened to'the sowing S of the seed, but there are other re- * quirements that must be complied ^ with. Just as the right kind of seed a must be sown at the proper time and r must be cultivated and cared for, so it. is with advertising. It must be sea?qnably done, in the right way, and in the fight place. 1 If-we' study the methods of any sue- J cestui advertiser we will find that c there . is careful planning along the f line .'of salesmanship and follow-up * work. f a ' ? o How Buchanan Became Preuidcnt. g James Buchanan, fifteenth President 11 of the United States, practically ob- ? tained his office through a disappoint- t ment in love. j, 1; Ait ope time, when he was in London, he said to an intimate friend, "I n peter' intended to engage in pouucs, t but' meant to follow my profession y strictly. But my prospects and plans were all changed by a most sad event; n which happened at Lancaster when I t was, a young man. As a distraction ? from my g'f-eat grief, and because I jsaw that through a political following t I coul'd secure the friends I then need- h ed," I ac<jepted a nomination."?WO' man's Home Companion. n 1 Childish Ideas of Beauty. The idea of beauty in children is strangely varied. A teacher at a cer- j( tain school gave thirty children five t minutes to think out the most beau- t tiful thing they ever saw. Five chose the moon and stars, two the sun and 6' one the setting sun. One of the five f< who chose the moon stipulated that he h meant only the full moon. Two chil- * dren chose flowers, two scenery and g two birds. Not one chose a human o face! The snow, the rain, a butter- * " - -L! eolt clival* flTlrt f ny, a Ugt'I B> no.ni, aim, v polcl, a brooch and pinl; silk all had one vote each. Portable Steam Heater. Elliott Lee, tbe municipal inspector ^ of insurance of Anderson, Ind., is the f< inventor of a new steam heater whi?h ?' can be carried from room to room and e will give out as much heat as a stove It twice the size. The heater is a small ej radiator with a boiler under it, and * thiB is heated by a gas flame supplied a by a tube from some convenient brack- e; et. The whole outfit weighs only about I (eighty pounds. j, ' 6 'HE GREAT DESTROYER OME STARTLINC FACTS ABOUT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. Little Martvr to Drinl:? How tha Llnoor Traffic OetR in Its Blows Upon Those Who Are Perfectly Innocent of Its Use ?Disproving a Time-Worn Fallacy. The following incident is a very striking [lustration of how the liquor traffic gets n its blows upon those who are perfectly nnocent of the use of intoxicating drink, nd proves the fallacy of the time-worn njunction, "Let liquor alone and it will jt you alone." On one of the coldest nights of last winer a policeman was patroling his beat in he tenement portion of or.o of our large western cities. At a certain point steam ra9 continually rising from around an ron trap door in tne street, through vhich the heating system of the city was egulated. Each time he passed this point le would pause to warm his chilled feet in the warm iron. But on one of his turns le was surprised to find some object upon he lid. and when he drew nearer found a ittle girl, not more than eight years old, lad only in a thin night garment, crouchng on the warm iron, in a vain endeavor o keep from freezing in the chill winter ilasts. She was alreadv numb with cold .nd unable to utter a sound. The policenan rang for a patrol and hurried ner to he station, where she was placed in the are of the kind-hearted matron, but the nost strenuous efforts were necessary to evive the spark of life that burneci so eeblv in her frail body. She would have teen a prettv child but for the starved exsession on her features and the long red nark across one side of her face, where he had evidently been struck a cruel blow, The policemen who were in the station hat night will never forget the sight thai net their eyes when the matron removed he child's single garment and called there n to see the condition of her body. She .cross her little back were rreat purple velts where she had been beaten with a tick. Hardened to such things as thej vere many of the polidemen wept as thej aw the child's pitiful condition. She waj oon raving in delirium, and the only in< elligible words they could get from hei vere. "Papa wouldn't Have done it if ht ladn't been drinking." Police investigation found her to be a notherless waif, living with a drunker ather and an equally drunken stepmothei n a barren room of one of the tenements Whatever they earned was spent in th? :orner saloon, and the child was sent out in the streets to beg for food for the fam ly. On the day in question the weathei lad been so terrible that she returned at light with frozen clothing and an almost mpty basket. There was no fire, so sh< >ut on the only other garment she coulc ind and crawled into the bed. About mid light the father came in half drunk, anc lot finding the food he expected draggec he child from bed, beat her cruelly anc 'orced her out into the bitter cold night orbidding her to return until she coulc ecure food or money. Knowing not when o go she sought the only warm place t< ie found and crouched upon the lid of th< team trap until found by the policeman. The best of treatment could not avail md in less than a week the little sufferei jassed away, and the last words thai irossed her Hds were, "Papa wouldn'1 lave done it if he hadn't been drinking." She wag but one of thousands of litth inea who are innocent sufferers at th( lands of the iniquitous drink traffic. Yei he great mass of church membership anc Christian voters who are in truth respon ible for the existence of the saloon main ain an attitude of the greatest indiffer nee, ar.d refrain, when the power ii heirs, from dealing the institution a tyo^ vhich would forever destroy it. Yet th< )ne whom they nrofess to follow sai( vhen He was on the earth, "'Whoso shal iffend one of these little ones it were bet er for him that a millstone were hangec bout his neck and that he were drownet n the depth of the sea."?Rev. C!arenc< S. Long. Responsibility of the Side Door. Magistrate Peter T. Barlow, of Nev fork City, says the side door of the salooi s responsible for the increase of drunken less among women of the poorer classes. "It is true thit drunkenness amonj vcroen is on the increase," he said, "bu' he tijr'res are not startling until they an arsfi'.'ly considered. An increase of < hou=and or two does not mean much vith the rapid growth of the city, unti rou consider the classes that are swelling he total. There has been a marked fall ng off in arrests of dissolute women or lie charge of intoxication. Their places ii he police courts have been more thai aken by women who belong to the re nectable working element of the city tenderloin characters do not come befon is so often on charges involving in toxica ion, while women in the tenement dis ricts are before us every day. "There is no doubt in my mind that th( ide door of the saloon is responsible fo: he increase among the poorer women rhey cannot go to glittering cafes. Thej vill not go in by the front door. Whei hey get restless and seek diversion th< ide door is a temptation. It alen involve! l lowering of the moral standard, becaus< t entails concealment. The woman knowi t is not respectable to 4,0 into a saloon she soon alters her view to mean that i s not respectable to be seen going into i aloon; it is all right so long as she is not ound out. Unfortunately, many of then ire found out by being compelled to ap >ear in court." A Destructive Agent. The famous Dr. Wulfert has lately pub ishcd a paper on the effect of alcohol or Curopeans in tropical countries. It ii nore dangerous, he says, than malaria 01 Jimate fever, as it at the same time af ects the digestive organs, the brain anc he nervous system. Every scientist whc ias spent some time in tropical countriei grees with the opinion that the digestive rgans, the stomach and the bowels easiei ;et out of order in hot than in cold cli nates, and that the breaking-down effectj f alcohol are considerably stronger in the ropics than in more temperate climates I Derson addicted to the use of alcoholic iquors will there have his stomach en irely out of order in two weeks. It is the same wav with the nerves. Tht loderate use of alcohol continued with he heat causes an intolerable somnolence; ireakness, heaviness in the limbs, difficulty i working, and low spirits. The effects n the brain show themselves by dizziess and in fits of bad temper that someimes cause real madness. These effects f the alcohol show themselves especially during the rainy time, when the aii 5 saturated with moisture. As a prool hat these troubles reaiiy come from alco01 can be mentioned that the Hollander! 2 India, who do not use alcoholic beverges, are able, to work hard either at lental or muscular work even during the ottest times.?B. E. Hockert. The Germ of the Appetite. The theory that germs of an appetite Or liouor are imnartprl tn hnhipe tnivwh he medium of milk from cows that eat he refuse from distilleries has suggested tself to Assistant State Food Inspector or E'iinois, R. M. Patterson. Mr. Patteron has returned from Peoria, where he ound 150 distillery fed cows whose milk ad been regularly shipped to Chicago. He njoined the dairymen to sell no more lilk from these cattle. "I cannot say I aw any of the cattle under the influence f liquor," said Mr. Patterson, "but I now that the corn mash has a peculiar ffect on them, and it is against the law o sell their milk." Facing a Terrible Tact. San Francisco has the terrible fact to ice that there are over 3000 saloons within er city limits: one saloon to every 125 of 1 ...U.t *1. +V.Q ivnvsf Ci. ^u^uiauuu, ailu WUdk io ?>vi.av mature, many of the saloons have grocery tores in front, and children who go for ome supplies are only separated from the vils of the saloon by a swingingdoor, and :arn all manner of wickedness from their arliest youth. Recently the Commissionrs of the city have decided there shall be o further increase in the saloons, and, lso, that if any saloon goes out of existnee no other can resume business on that ite. Through these laws San Francisco opes to have less than 30,000 arrests year7, over half of which are directly accountble to the liquor traffic. MARSHALL FIELD_? Cured of Catarr] Pe=ri ! ho>\ Tuhn'tTshe, Hon. John T. Sheahan, who has been for ' Field & Co.'s wholesale warehouse, and is c writes the following letter from 3753 Indiar | Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ot : Gentlemen?" lsist summer 1 cat my kidneys and affected them badly. I largely advertised, but they did not told me of the great help he had recet case, and 1 at once procured some. fc " It wan indeed a blessing to me, a ; day, and trouble such as 1 had affect j PerUna cured me entirely and 1 wou . salary.??JOHN T. SHEAHAN. j Mr. Jacob Fleig writes from 44 Sumner ! avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.: "I ant now a new man at the age I of seventy-five years, thanks to your * wonderful remedy Feruna." ? ' Jacob Fleig. Catarrhal inflammati6n of the mucous , lining of the kidneys, also called "Bright'* r disease," may be either acute or chronic, t The iSutc form produces symptoms of ) A Prize Squash Story. Roy E. Fiiield, of Stonington, Me., j sent to a Bangor paper t.h^ following squash story: "I took seed from the \ squash raised this year, scratched my i name upon it, and planted it. The re7 suit was a healthy vine, bearing a six | and a quarter pound squash, upon the j surface of which my name appeared, . clearly outlined. It was a Southern | squash." This story has been award! ed the annual gold medal for squash stories. The competition has now closed.?Indianapolis News. Germany now exports more bicycles ' than either England of the United 1 States. ? Germany has but 2117 miles of elect trie car lines. N. Y.-4G a i FITSpermanently cured. No fits or nervous, ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great 1 NerveRestorer.$s2trial bottle and treatisefree ; Dr.R.H. Kline, Ltd., 981 Arch St., Phlld.,Pa. It is claimed that Canada can furnish wood for pulp 840 years. Mrs Winslow's SoothingSyrup for children teething, soften the gums, reduces inflammation,ahays pain,euros wind colic. 25c. a bottle The population of tue world is about 1,850,000,000 people. ' o r? Jo ?? inf>?ll(htA i'lso s l/uf clux v^uunuuiywjivu ? ?u medicine for coughs and colds.?N. W. 'f Samuel, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900. J Stock Exchange seat6, which sold a year ] ago for $82,000, are quoted at $50,000. - Fruit acids wiii not stain goods dyed } with Putnam Fadeless Dyks. Jamaica Tea. t Tea culture experiments have proved 1 successful in Jamaica and it is now Loped that this most unlucky island will prove an ideal place for the growth and cultivation of tea. The Chinese varieties grow luxuriantly, , but more hope is placed on the Assam j and Ceylon hybrids.?Mexican Herald. r 8100 Reward. S100. ' The readers of this paper will be pleased to ' Jearn that there is at least one dreaded dls3 ease that science has been able to cure in all : itsstages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh beirffe a con * etitutional disease, requires a constitutional > treatment. Hull's CatarrhCure is ta ken inter naliy, acting directly upon the blood and mu' cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy iflg the foundation of the disease, and givinj; the patient strength by building up the ooni 6tituMon and assisting nature in doing its i work. The proprietors have so much faith in , its curutive powers that they offer One Hun' dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure, i kend for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. i Hall's Family Pills are the best. Man's recuperative power after an E injury is in an inverse ratio to liis so' cial advancement. fi The Shortcit Way ? out of an attack of I | Rheumatism ! I ^ Neur^ia Is to use St Jacobs Oil j Which affords not only sure relief. < but a prompt cure. It soothes. I subdues, and ends the suffering. OR, HfV ii I il ' ' J? WAREHOUSE MANAGER ti of Kidneys by j=na. ? IHAN, OF CHICAGO. seventeen years manager of Marshall :orporal 2d Regiment Infantrr, L N. G., ta avenue, Fiat Six, Chicago, 111.: lio' \ -*& ight a cold which seemed to settle in 1 tried a couple of kidney remedies help me any. One of my foremen vel in using Peruna in a similar is 1 am on my feet a large part of the ed me seriously, but four bottles of Id not bs without it for three months* I such prominence that the serious nature of the disease is at once suspected, Due toe chronic variety may come on bo gradually and insidiously that its presence is not co?> pected until after it has fastened itself tLoroughly upon ita victims. At tne appearance of the first symptom Peruna should be taken. This remedy strikes at once at the very root of the disease. A book on catarrh sent free by The Poruna Medicine Co., Columbus, 0. " Thirst Killed Moles. W. M. Todd, who is a close obserrer of natural phenomena, tells that he has found quite a number of moles on top of the earth dead, during the recent severe drought. He thinks the earth became so dry and hard that the dirt would fall in behind them in their runs and thus prevent their return aa usual. He says an examination showed their necks broken in their desperate struggles. Post-mortem examinations showed food in their stomachs, so that it was not starvation.?Winchester 0 (Ky.) Democrat. The first locomotives weighed three to five ions. An imported English locomotive weigmng ten tons was too lioa'vy. Twenty-five engines of that day would make on of to-day. DYSPEPSIA "Having taken ronr wonderfnl "Caaeareta" ft* three month* an J lieine entirely cured of stomkefc catarrh and dyspepaia. I think word of praiae la due to "Coacarcta''for their wonderfui compoiitioa. 1 have taken numerous other to-called remedlM but without avail and I find that Caacareta reller* more In a Jay than all the othera I have titw would in cyoar." Jamea McGune, 108 Mercer St., Jeraey City, ST.I. ^farrnaBP^ : Pleaaant, Paid table, Potent. Taste Good, Do Ooo4. Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10o, SSc, toe. Norm} old In balk. The genulno tablet atamped OOO. Guaranteed to care or yoar money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 551 ANNUAL SALE. TEN MILLION BOIES W. L. DOUGLAS '3.= & *3 SHOES?2 Yon can save from $3 to $5 yearly by wearing W. L. Douglaa $3.50 or $3 shoe*. They equal those ^ that have been cost- f ing you from $4.00 & to 85.00. The im- ?pj rnense sale of W. L. Douglas shoes proves B&ttmSk. H their superiority over W&j "U all other makes. |||||j - jjfi Sold by retail shoe ^-1 dealers everjrwucio. .nwi,.1 r Look for name and That Douglas uses Cor- ,|te-:ivlF fk. onaColt proTM there is Ja - /|L value In Douglas shoe*. -' /l/Eto^ Corona in the highest SgE8kjfc-":'- /JkM&jSv\ grade Pat.Leather made. Our $4 Gilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. Shoe* by mail, 26 rent* extra. 7llastrate4 Catalog free. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Oa? #IilpausXabuiesare tbe best dycpepsis amlieiue ever made. A buiidred uillUoaa of them imve been bold ii- tbe Uuited States In a single j-ear. Every liluesa tu-iaui^ lxoui a diaoruered uiutuucli 14 relieved or cureu by tiiejjr use. So common la it itiat diseases originate iiolu the atomaclj ll may be safely a? ... j.. ?? ?mi<i irinn nf ill uexteo mere u? ? ? iiealtn tli_t will uot be ueueditd or cured by the oceasioxial use of Kiyan# Tabulee. Fiiysicians Know them and bpeak highly of them. All druggist* sell them. The live-cent package u enuugti lor au ordinary occasion, and tbe i'auiily HottJe, sixty cents, contain* a household supply tor a year. One generally gives reliet witniu twenty Alnutee. , nPOP.QY NEW DISCOVER Y; firm IJI % I I rjaiok relief tod our?? want cams* Boo* at tMiusonials and 10 ' i?a Free. Sr. I. H. o&xen BBom, fox , AU*at?.e*. j| J?? HillCUBESWHERE ALtEtSEIFAILS. KT {y B?st Cougb. Byrnp. Tastes Good. Deo M Crl In time. Sold by drcecista. Mf i^nrjiiM.Ljrrny^ Happy i |SS?KSi P?t Johnsorf* .