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B'DE YOUR TIME. iWben fortune treats you slightingly And everything goes wrong. Remember that you still sre free To labor and be strong. To him who bravely does his part Misfortune is no crime. Just hold your grip and keep up heart . And learn to bide your time. The surest road to greatness lies Through hard and patient work, j The glorious name that never dies Comes not unto the shirk. Fame sits upon an eminence, A Dinnacle sublime. He who would win must seek her thence, Strive on and bide his time. The man of hope and energy, j Who keeps one goal in sight, .Who goes his way with constancy, Will some ;iine win the fight. The man whose life a glory lends .To every age and ciime Is he whose purpose never bends, t Who works and bides his time. Go onward. O'er the future's hills | The dawn falls coo! and sweet. Go onward. He can win who wills And bows not to defeat. Go onward though your path may Ik Through calumny and slime. / The way will brighten by and by. I Go on and bide your time. i !And when the fight at last is o'er, ! The toil at last is done; | When standing on life's farther shore, I Beneath her setting sun; Beyond the future's unbarred gate, i The bells of heaven chime; !And justice, love, and glory wait For him who bides his time. ?Denver News. THE LONG NEW Cflll By HOWARD MARCH. j^OK HE big chum wasn't long in 4 _LL|j getting the hang of things. 5 r|^ O He was a good shot to bejf * k gin with, and kept us fairly well supplied with game and kangaroo tail soup. Jackson, our boss, had fixed the name of Cropper on the newcomer, probably because somehow it fell to his lot to get all the "buck-jumpers" to ride. He had been thrown so often that he :was getting saddle-shy. He couldn't understand why it was that the other fellows' horses gave them no trouble, while his own were shooting him into space at most unexpected times. "You see, it's like this. Cropper," the boss would explain to him; "the horses know you're new, and they're just having fun with you." Barnes, on the other hand, warned bim that all the horses were only half broken in, that they needed constant watching, and couldn't be trusted for a minute; but he doubted that. To convince him Barnes roue alongside or Cropper and swung his stock whip lash suddenly under the tail of the new chum's mount. The horse clamped his tail down upon it like a vise, dropped his nose to the ground, doubled up like a cat in a backfence concert, and bucked for all k was worth. Ten stone te::i of New Chum went bouncing away from him like a rubber ball, and struck the ground none too gently. Cropper picked himself up painfully and remarked to Barnes: "A little of this will go a long way with me."' It did. It went a long way toward making it impossible for a horse ever again to catch him unawares. There was ouc man in the party to whom Cropper didn't cotton. That was Johnson, the one-eyed cook. It I was a case of mutual dislike. Jolinson had begun by trying to rough Cropper, and was promptly called down hard at the muzzle of a gun. He weakened at once, but he got some satisfaction out of telling the others what -terrible things he would do one- of these fine days. The New C'hum knew he wasn't scared by the gun. he said, and he referred to the act as a cowardly bluff. Thai gave Barnes au idea. "Look here. Johnson, why didn't you call him out?" ho asked. "Call him out. Tell him you want to settle the thing. There are the two Martini rifles in your wagon, say you're willing to meet him and fight with them. If he weakens, you've got him. If he agrees, we'll doctor the cartridges so as you won't hurt one another." The cook's one eye sparkled at the thought. "I'll call him out. all right," he said, when he had digested the idea. "I'll call him out. all right, and you needn't doctor the cartridges, either. You'll see. If he doesn't get frightened, why, I'll make a sieve of him at a hundred yarfls." "Hundred grandmothers!" Barnes said in disgust. "Do you think we're going to waste all the ammunition in tho TVQ"fin *5 VauMI mflnt of ton rnr/lc I and you can liave the ammunition faked or not, just as you please." The cook hesitated. "I don't want to mangle him." he said, finally. "If we meet at ten yards maybe?maybe you'd better fake the bullets." "That's settled, then," Barnes declared. "I'll second Cropner. If he won't come to time I will. I'll be behind "Hold on there," the cook exclaimed, excitedly. "We haven't had any trouble?you and me. We've got r.c call to figm." ||| "This end cf the 'we' Hoes and will." HEarr.es snhl. grimly, "unless ibis bus!sHness is settled at once. Is it to be 9 faked or not?" "Why?er?faked." of course." said Htbe cook. "I don't know as I realij Movant to hurt Lira. A fright xvil! dc jflhim a bit of good, though." ||| Then Mr. Johnson had anothei H though i. Ill "Of course, he won't know it's to l>< Ha fake. There's no need to tell bin ||| "No. of course not." Barnes replied sarcastically. "He isn't a sure thins: Bisan. you know. Couldn't be. He's Honl.v white." P|j The cook began to fidget and lingered Ha cartridge nervously. "How do J EH know you won't forget to fake them?" fHhe asked. |f| "0!:, that's ai? right, Johnson." tb< put In cheerfully. "I'll attend t< gflthat for you." ?2:| Cropper came along and dropped : jHcounle of wild turkeys on tlie ground ^B"There's sometliine better than salt ^Bhorse. cook," he declared. "Cook then Hfor sujjper. will you?" IM "Better wait and see if you're alive I at supper time,"' Barnes remarked, sig- J nificantly. "You can have ruy share if I am not," 1 said Cropper. "But I don't feel sick? haven't got heart disease or anything ! like that?and 1 am hungry?hungry j for something better than salt-horse and new-killed mutton. What's the j joke, anyhow?'' "There's no joke. Cookie, there, has challenged you to a duel with riflesten yards' limit. I'm holding your horse. The boss is looking after his. j What do you say?" "Say? Why, I say he's an ass. that's what. I don't want to kill the fool, and ! ^ T iTrm't uronose to let him kill me." ' The cook's nervousness left biin sud- j denly. "Yah, he's a chicken-hearted Johnnycome-lately," he cried, turning to Barnes. "I knew it all the time. He's ! scared and I knew he would be. I'm [ satisfied. I don't want to kill a man 1 that's half scared to death to start j with. Tali!" He kicked the turkeys J as he spoke. "Oh. you don't?" Cropper snorted, red with rage. "Well. I do. by thunder. Kick my turkeys, will you? Take tbat ?and that!" "That" and "tbat" were foot applications upon that part of the cook's person which should have been covered j by his coat tails had he worn a coat I with tails to it. Jackson ran in between them. "I'd : eat the heart of a man who did that to I me." he hissed in the cook's ear. j "Nothing but blood will wipe this out," he said gravely to Cropper. "Nothing but blood. I'm backing Cookie." "Come on, then," said the angry new chum. "If be must have it, he shall take a bath in his own." Tlipv stnrtpd down to the flat. CroD- a per and Barnes in the lead, Jackson e bringing up the rear with the cook. Jackson was busy wrenching the ^ bullets out of a handful of cartridges a and filling their places with pulped n plug tobacco. Where the edge of the ? flat sloped down to the Billybung they came to a halt. The stream there was ? hedged off by a thick growth of wattle bushes, six feet high. Even cattle T could not penetrate it, which was a good thing for the cattle, because just there the Billybung swirled over a c bed of quicksand that would have n bogged them in short order. Jackson placed the men ten paces 0 apart, the cook with his back to the bushes, and between Cropper and the i T river. Then he handed each man a a rifle. "Fire at the word,-' he said. "And just remember that Fll fire at the man that fires before the word."' j Barnes put in, looking significantly at the cook. Mr. Johnson shut his one eye in a long wink, and grinned as he directed Barnes' attention, by the wave of the hand, to Cropper. "You'll see," he muttered. The new chum's face had grown white. His passion had worn itself out. "Say. Cookie.*' he called out, "what's the use? Cau't this thing be settled some other way?" "I told you he was chicken-hearted,'* the cook shouted to the others. "No, it can't, you white-livered idiot!" ho replied to Cropper. "I am going td fill you full of holes." The new chum's face grew rod apain. "I'll make you crawl for that," b* said. "Ready?" Jackson asked. "Fire!" Both guns were discharged at the same moment. Cropper tried to gel out another shell, but the shortened cartridge got jammed between the magazine and the lift and disabled his rifle. The cook was having better luck, dropped his piece slowly, worked the lever carefully, brought the gun to big cheek confidently, fired and repeated. Cropper worked frantically for a moment to clear his gun. then straightened up and throw it aside. The cook let out a yell of triumph. "Now watch him run!" he cried. Next instant lie shrieked in terror, threw his own pun away and started at top speed for the wattle patch. "Stop him!" he yelled. "Take it away from him! Don't let him murder me!" No one but Cropper had thought of 1 ? Hie ivory handled six-shooter at his i a hip. ! * The new chum drew it as he threw i T away his rifle, and as it flashed in the j * air the cook saw it and turned tail. The new chum fired two shots over j * the head of the fleeing cook, and then ] collapsed in a fit of laughter. The j ' cook flew at the wattle bush, and as ; c he reached it he rose in the air und j 6 sailed over it. j e "When they got him with a rope he j was up to his armpits in the quicksand i ^ a yd begged in tearful tones to be n saved. It was Cropper who passed c him the rope.?New York News. 8 Hovr Bookseller Gives Away Koran. A writer spent much of his early life in Turkey observed that Turkish j ^ books and booksellers were among I ^ the curious features of the country. | . "Tha Turkish bookseller," he said, ! "has a soul above trade. He rarely j ^ or never attempts to push his wares, and treasures some of hio more valu- ^ able books so greatly that he can hard- f . ly be induced to sell them, although I ^ , they form part of his stock in trade. ! Many of the books displayed by the i . bookseller are in manuscript, which 1 ^ the old-fashioned Turks esteem more j ^ k highly than print. Th? Koran he may j not sell. He gives it away?in return J I for a present of its value in money."? ! A London Globe. ! r j 1 Telephone* in New York City. | ^ It is astonishing 1o note the number j of telephones in use in New York City. In 1803 tbere were about 9000 in use; to-day tbere are over 132,000. In the ' ( 1 last three years alone 70,000 have been ; 1 installed. It can be readily seen that j 1 tclopliov.' service is becoming more I * : and mc;-e an important factor in busi- ) ] ' tiess equipment. Tlie large growth of j telephone service in that city is cred- I J . ited to expert equipment and the uics- ! . sago rale* system. lliul to Believe ller. ? Judge Perry of the English judiciary > iclls of a feeble-looking man who was rebuked for supporting a ridiculous i claim made by a wife. '1 toll you can. didly 1 don't believe a word of your - wife's story." said Judge Parry. "Yer i may do as yer like," replied the nuui mournfully- "but I've set ta." J i ! ' : New York City.?Combinations of mslin and lace always are charming, ut never have been more effective ban at this present time, when both YOKE WAIST. re offered in an unprecedented rarity. The dainty waist shown is made f sheer white Persian lawn, with the oke and frills of Valenciennes lace, pplique of embroidery and belt of aessaline satin, but the list of equally atisfactory materials is almost limit?ss. The model is an admirable one nd can be made, as is this one, unined, or over the fitted foundation, rhen it becomes suited to the many oft silks and wools of the season. The eep, scalloped yoke i6 eminently beoming, and the fall of lace below aakes a most graceful finish at the ame time that it adds to the breadth f the shoulders. The -waist consists of the lining, rhich is smoothly fitted, front, backs nd yoke. Both front and backs arc A LATE DEJIQN E :athered at upper and lower edges nd droop over the full belt. The yoke 5 separate and arranged over the vhole and the sleeves are soft and ull, with groups of tucks above the rrists which provide additional fulness or tlie drooping puffs. The quantity of material required for lie medium size Is four yards twcntyme inches wide. three yards twentyeven inches wide, or one and sevenightb yards forty-four inches wide, vith five-eighth yards of all-over lace, ive and one-half yards of lace, two ind one-half yards of applique and ine-half yard of silk for belt to make s illustrated. Colors For Hatft. Shades of blue, shades of Bordeaux, hades of green, shades of pink, are ill favorite ideas for the entirely traw toque. It seems agreed that cosume and hat shall make a compact is to color, and 011 these lines one noices that the new sleeve frills are of hiffon, matching the fabric of the rock or the coat and skirt in quesion. And this will be a very pretty ashion, of which a charming variition may be found in having the hiffon flowered, although the groundvork matches the material of the rock. For instance, with a black 'rock, frills or rose-patterned black hiffon, with a dark blue, frills of vhite and pinky-flowered blue chiffon, ind then lace and chiffon may be dended. The Coin Spot of Green. The coin spot of green i now in eviIcnee on crash or organdy, and on the lseful foulard and also on the newer uohairs. It looks best on a white or a dack ground. Fortunately the coin spots are set at proper intervals, not oo close together. An ecru grass cloth latterned with coin spots of cool wilow green, set at intervals never closer ban five inches apart, i" one of the successes of the season. A gown of bis sort requites but little trimming, isually bands of the plain material, lot using the spotted parts, finished villi double row of shoemaker's stitchFnr Wnsh Dresses. That the bolero effect is not near ts end is shown by the models in thin I ; ^ \^3 ; I e fabrics. It is promised a continuance j of its reign on Trash dresses. A linen ! gown shows skirt and short bolero of | that material, and under the bolero a j ? blouse of sheerest lawn. The same b idea will be carried out in less sub- c stantial stuffs. White berthas, epau- ^ lets and simulated etons will have v their shares of favor through the sum- * mer. T a Tailor-Made Go-was of Silk. d The latest departure in the world 7 of fashion is the silk tailor-made i gown. It is extremely "chic." The ! T colors most used are golden brown . * and the popular green shades. One j 0 handsome model was made with a d skirt of six flounces, very flat at the ; n hips. The bolero on the bodice, also j 0 flounced, fell over a high girdle. 11 I s Put on Smart Jackets. j 0 A good deal of braiding in gold and : ? silver is being put on smart jackets. | vests and gowns. It is said that all f sorts of silver chains, belts, buckles ? and ornaments are to be worn with * the white summer gowns. f Shirring*. Shirrings are stiil so much in vogue in Paris, both for skirt and bodice e embellishment, that they bid fair to v stay in fashiou here for some time to come. Foulard Velvet. ' ? Foulard velvet is the velvet of the | 8 new soft quality printed in foulard 11 designs and is a picturesque material * for the house gown. * s Fancy Blouse Waist. Fancy waists madewith deep berthas t and shallow yokes are conspicuous favorites of the season and are most charming made of the dainty thin ^ materials so much in vogue. This one combines silk mull, all-over lace and . inserted tucking, with trimming of nar- ? IT MAY MflNTON. I 1 t c r r ? row Valenciennes 1 rills and is unlined, but the design suits soft silks and wools equally well and can be made r over the Gtted foundation whenever f preferred. The horizontal tucks in e waist and sleeves are among the nota- c ble features of the latest designs, and * in addition to being effective, serve the practical end of giving needed body to thin fabrics. The belt is one of the ^ new draped ones, and the waist blouses [ over it most becomingly. t The waist consists of the lining, the J full front and backs and the deep seal- E loped bertha. The shallow yoke is formed by facing the lining to required depth and can be made transparent f by cutting the foundation away beneath, whenever such effect is desired, t The sleeves are simply full, shirred to 1 form frills at their lower edges. The quantity of material required for c the medium size is six and three-fourth yards twenty-one inches wide, live and one-half yards twenty-seven inches 4 wide, or three yards forty-four inches wide, with five-eighth yards of all-over FANCY BLOUSE WAIST. i a ?_ ! c lace for bertha, one-balf yard of inserted tucking for yoke and twenty-one l yardjkof narrow lace to make as illus] trated. * Australian Pontcarrtn. Official recognition of the popularity f the picture postcard has been madt ^ y the Australian Postmaster-General * rho has; invited competitive design* ? or pictorial postcards, to he printed 1 nd issued by his department for list 1 broughout the commonwealth. Pre * aiums of $50. $25 and $15 respectively : ( rill be paid for three series of twelvt j esigns, each adjudged by the Tost i aaster-General to be first, second anc i bird in order of merit in the case ot ; ach state. The designs will consist xclusively of Australian subjects. A Trapper of Big Hawks, i Glenn Piiissell, a young man of neai j l lunter, this county, has certainly t Token all late day records as a hawk atcher. He began his work of catch- ] ng hawks by means of traps in No- i ] ember last. when on the 22(1 day of j hat month he bagged his first bird, ] vhich had a spread of wings of fiftjf i nd one-half inches from tip to tip. The ] ay following he caught another < rhich measured fifty-four and one-half aches. On December 8 another one ras added to his list, which measured , orty-nine inches. On the 9th and 10th f the same month he scored one each ay, measuring forty-eight and fortyine inches respectively. February 27 , f this year another was caught, which ' aeasured fifty-one inches. March 4 he ; cored a catch, which showed a spread f wings of fifty inches; on the 14th autber was added, having forty-eight nches of wing; on the 19th another big ellow was trapped, which showed up ifty-three inches of sailing power. On he 24th perhaps the daddy of 'em all ras taken, and this fellow could unold fifty-five inches of wing power. | )n the same date another was decoyed nto Mr. Russell's traps, with a wing aeasurement of fifty inches.?Barnes ille (Pa.) Whetstone. The Dangere of Latin. The Latin tongue has a curious fasination to those who are only just ufficiently acquainted with it to be ble to quote the common tags, says he Pall Mall Gazette. So long as hose aspirants of culture confine themelves to quotation, they may not come o serious grief; but at times they atempt'to supply an explanatory transla. ion which woefully exposes the povTty of the land. Nothing is gained, iter the expression currente calamo ins been quoted, in gratuitously going >n to say, "or in the refreshing Indian dioin, 'the calumet of peace,'" as one infortunate journalist is rumored to lave done. Again, "It's .1 low thing o put copper in the bag" can only beegarded as a singularly loose attempt 0 express the meaning of Bis dat qui ito dat. On the whole "Don't" is. >erliaps, the best advice to offer those vho would, on but a nodding aquaintince. mingle Latin with their native 3ngHsh. His "Warning. ltm?ah o m.in tyiott oniat fk JJLV ^ ? XT1 Xli ? UUUi UiUJ VUJVJ tfc olie, there comes a time when he feels nstinctively that he must draw the ine. This happened in the case of signor Luigi Carbandi. of Sienna, on he occasion "when his house was burglarized for the thirty-fourth time in en years. The passer-by now notices tn his door the following notice: "I mve bought two dogs, three guns and i water boiler with hose attached. Jurglars are welcome." Immense Circular Saw. The largest circular saw in the world las just been made in Philadelphia. It s seven feet four inches in diameter, md will be used to cut pine, stumps nto shingle bolts. Deafnes* Cannot Be Cured >y local applications as they cannot reach the> liseased portion o f the ear. There is only one ray to cure deafness, and that is by constiutionul remedies. Deafness is caused by an nflamed condition of the mucous lining of he Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in lamed you have a rumbiingsound or imper- j ect hearing, and when it is entirely closed j )eafncss is the result, and unless the inflam- j nation can be taken out and this tube re- ! tored to its normal condition, hearing will le destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten .re caused by catarrh,which is nothing but an flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We wjffl give One Hundred Dollars for any ase of Deafness (caused by catarrh)that canlot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for irculars free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation, i So Milk While in Mourning. Wlien an Arabian woman is in ! nourning for a near relative she re- j uses to drink milk for a period of j igbt days, on the principle that the j olor of the liquid does not harmonize | vitb her mental gloom. Cue Allen's Foot-Kan*. It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting, 'ired. Aching, Hot, Sweating Feet,Corns and iunions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder o be shaken into the shoes. Cures while you ralk. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. | )on't accept any substitute. Sample sent ! 'Bke. Address,Allen 8. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y British India now employs over 1,000,000 teople i# its cotton industries. Mrs.Winslow's SQOthing Syrup for children eething, soften thegums, reduces inflammaion, allays pain.cures wind colic, i!5c.a bottle Of American animals the moose, elk and aribou are natural trotters. Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of s a cough cure.?J. W. O'Brien, 322 Ttird ivenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 0,11)00, Ten-elevenths of the world's people are i lorth of the equator. j FREE to W?!WEM | A Large Tria! Box and book of in* | tractions absolutely Fvee and Pest* aid, enough tc prove the vaiue o? 1 >axtineToilet AiTitesepftsc ii ?Pcxtir.e is in powder | I form Jo dissolve in water ? ron-pciaocatJS | and far superior to llo'J id , antlseptlcc containing alcohoj wfcsch irritates I koilamed suriacef, and , have nc cleoneing prop- I erilcs. The contents j oJ every box mokes 1 more A&iiscptic So?u j f?oct further? hac more usee Ji2 the iawlty acd | does mere good thou any antiseptic ^preparation The formula of a nctec Bcsior? physician, ird used with .great success as a Varinai Vash, for iLeucorrhcza. PeivicCatarrhs WasaJ ; Zctarrh. Sore Throai Sore Eyas, ?uis> | ind ali soreness of mucus membrane. In local treatment ol fomaio ills Paxtine is nvaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash we hallcnge the world to produce its equal for horouglmess. lusarevciauonin cicansms ,nd healing power; it kills all germs wliicn ause inflammation and discharges. All leading drugf,''-^ keep Paxtirie; price,50c. ,bux; if yours does not, send to ua for it. Don't ate a substitute ? there is nothing like Paxtine. Write for the Free Dox of Poxtine to-day. L PAXTON CO., Pcpo Bldg., Boston, Mass, Not Square. The Teuton is a long time in learning British idioms. One who had been aere a year or more and could speak ionie English before his arrival?a ;ery short and corpulent man, by the ivay?went to his grocer's and paid a )ill which had been standing for sev?ral weeks. "Nowyouareallsquare.sir "Now you are all square, sir.* "I vas vat?" "You are square, I said." j "I vas square?" "Yes, you are all square now.'* Hans was silent for a moment; then. fvitli reddening face and flashing eyes, ie brought his plump fist down upon ie counter and said: "See here, mine frent, I will have no more peezness mit you. I treat you ike a shentleman. I pay my pill, and rou make a shoke of me. You say [ vas square ven I know I vas round is a parrel. I don't like such shokes. My peezness mit ycu vas done,"?Lonion Tit-Bits. Birds' Absence of Smell. Birds seem to have no discrimination whatever in regard to poisons, problbly because they have almost no sense Df smell and swallow their food without masticating it. They are terrified to paralysis by the appearance of a poison snake (unless the terror be due to dread of the appearance of the serpent rather than to an inherited knowledge of its venomous power); but such intelligent birds as rooks will pick up and eat poisoned grain, and crows or ravens readily eat poisoned eggs or meat. Chickens will eat the poisonous seeds of laburnum and die from its effects. Whether birds such as tits and greenfinches ever do so does not seem to be known. But wild birds are frequently found dying in gardens, though apparently they have been in good health a few hours before, and fVifti'i* rl s\n fh tmott r\w/\Vvn V\r\ Ia lutii UUUUJ IUUJ yi\juauij uc uuc iv the consumption of poisonous seeds.? London Spectator. Trnth About Preciong Stones. The American garnet, the hyacinth, and the stone known as spinel are commonly mistaken for rubies, and it is only within a few yeari that the famous ruby in the crown jewels of Russia was discovered by an expert to be a spinel. The renowned "diamond" in the collection of the King of Portugal is now known to be a white topaz. The Clerk Made a Slight Mistake. It is occasionally difficult to realize that a man is deaf till something suddenly makes us apprehend it. I think of the clerk of a country church who was once much exercised at the appearn n/?n /-?f o rvrrA nl/1 ivAnflATvtnn a anv.c ui a. ^uaii^c uju fe^iiuciuaii >v uu when the sermon was about to begin, took a trumpet (in two parts) out of his pocket and began screwing them together. The clerk watched him until the process was completed, and then, going stealthily up, whispered: "Yeow carn't play that here. Do, I'll turn yo' out."?Cornhill Magazine. At Pompeii. In the kitchen of a house recently unearthed at Pompeii was found a fireplace with a kettle on its grate just as it was left by some Pompeiian housewife over 1S00 years ago. Canada's Wheat. Canada is capable oi furnishing more than the 200,000.000 bushels of wheat which Britain has to import every year. A New York life insurance company holds $8,000,000 worth of Russia's railway securities. N. Y.?20 , FITS permanently cured. No fit* ornervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer, $2trial bottle and treatise free Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa The first electrical railway was that of Siemens, at Berlin, in 3879. jgT BEST FDR GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel troubli blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin a: regularly you are sick. Constipation kills mo Btarts chronic ailments and long years of suffe C ASCARETS today, for you will never get w right Take our advice, start with Cascaret money refunded. The genuine tablet stamps booklet free. Addreas Sterling Remedy Comt Chickens Eari If You Know How to Handl Whether you raise Chickens for ] do it intelligently and get the best re is to profit by the experience of others all you need to know on the subject? who made his living _ * Poultry, and in ths I to experiment and spen in I the best way to condu (Stamp*. J sma? sum of 25 cents i: ? al T. . 1, ___ 1 T it tens you now iu j liow to Feed for Eggs, and also for Mi for Breeding Purposes and indeed ab know on the subject to make a success. SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 21 BOOK PUBLISHTNG 134 Leona m I HOT WEATHER, | BLANCHE GREY. ^ MISS BLANCHE GREY, a prominent young society woman of Memphis, Term., in a recent letter from 174 iUabama street, says: "To a society woman whose t\ ervou$ force is often taxed to the utmost from lack of rest and irregular meals, 1 know of nothing which is of so muci benefit as Peruna. 1 took U a fevt months ago when 1 felt my strength giving way, and. it soon made itselj manifest ingtvlng me new st rength and health. Blanche^irey. Peruna is witbou: an equal as a nerve tonic and vital,invicorator. Buy a bottle of Peruna. It you do not receive all the benefits from Peruna that you expected, write to Dr. JJartman, Co* lumbus, 0. Floating Poitnffice. In Lake Wabigoon, Ontario. Canada, , -M at a point where the water is not very I deep, a strong wooden stake has beeB driven into +he ground. On tfie top a box has been securely fastened, and there you have the Lake WabigooD postoffice. The little steamer frono Rat Portage drops the mail here on her outward voyages, and a canoe goes out from the sh^re and collects it, depositing the outgoing mail at the same time, which is picked up by the steamer ?n her return trip to Rat Portage next daj-.?London Tit-Bits. ; First Telephone Circular. The first circular ever issued referring to the commercial use of the telephone was that of Gardiner G. Hubbard, in Cambridg-, Mass., 'in 1877. I PAY SPOT CASH FOR =YLAND WARRANTS -a Issued to ?o Idlers of any war. Write me at once. FKA.NK H. liEGEft. Barth Block. Denver, Oolo >'?} r> D A DO V HEW DISCOVERY; (in* U TX. Vf I O 1 quick r*!l.f u4 nm went Free. Sr. E. a. OREIl'a iOKB^BaxD.'aUabU, It. Bood as Hew Pianos. JS?S:c>A.dt!y JjP cults WMERE All ELSE FAUS/, Til' U Best Cough Byrup, Tiatea Good. Use Ed 1p time. Bold by druggists. Wi . ? THE BOWELS * xmx>, 1 ^ CATHARTIC :s. appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bat? > foul moutb, headache, indigestion, pimpleSj : nd dizziness. When your bowels don't move , re people than all other diseases together. It ring, No matter what ails you, start tcking ell and 3tay well until you get your bowels s today under absolute guarantee to cure or sd C C C. Never sold in bulk. Sample and lany, Chicago or New York. 502 1 Money! [^] I e Them Properly. ^ A fun or profit, you want to suits. The way to do this I We offer a book telling WJ a book wrkten by a man I for 25 years in raising it time necessarily had it much money to learn I l: ct the business?for the ^L_ detect and Cure Disease, irket, which Fowls to Save I out everything you must r CENTS IN STAMPS. Touse, f i rd St., N. Y. City, r i M i' ;.^jU /