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WHEN WE TWO WALKED IN AR- CADY. tVhei! we two walked In Arcady How sweet the summers were! How thick the branches overhead. How soft the grass beneath oor tread. And thickets where the nun burned red Were full of wings astir, my dear. When we two walked In Arcady Through paths yonng hearts prefer. Since we two walked In Arcady (How long ago It seems !| High hopes hare died disconsolate; The calm-eyed angel men call Kate Stands with drawn sword before the gate That shuts out all our dreams, my dear; Since we two walked In Arcady. Beside the crystal streams. Beyond the woods of Arcady The little brooks are dry. The brown grass rustles In the heat. The roads are rough beneath our feet, Abore our heads no branches meet. And yet. although we sigh, my dear. Beyond the woods of Arcady We see more of the sky ! —Caroline Uuer, in Scribner's. "How the Ghost Wasjaid.” By Mary Kyl« Dallas. "I cannot marry you,” she said, “I am afraid. You laugh at me, and talk about auperstition, but Dick Pardon has kept his word twice, and he will keep it again. When I, a girl of sev enteen who was not able to control her feelings, refused him with scorn and contempt, asking him how he dared to speak such words to me. his master’s daughter, he caught me by the wrist and looked into my face as no one had ever looked before. ‘Avis Shaw,’ he said, ‘you’re proud and airish, and you refuse to marry me because I am one of your father’s hands, but you’ll rue the day you spoke such words to me. I understand I can’t get you, but no other man shall. Living or dead, I will stand between you and every man that comes near you. Living or dead. Avia Shaw, I’ll have my re venge!’ “Well, I thought nothing of his threats. I told my father that Dick had asked me to majry him, and he dismissed him. From that time forth every young man who offered me any attention was set upon and beaten or shot at, or in some way injured on his way home from our house. “At last Hall Grayson, the young lawyer, was killed. That was two years before you came here. The poor young man was not in love with me- his business was with my father; but you know how country folk gossip and pair people off. He was stabbed in the back, and this time the men of the village caught the wretch red-handed. They were carrying him to jail when he escaped from them, led them a chase for miles, and ended it by Jump- ing from the cliff near Hunters Hole into the sea. By the time the inspec tor and the rest of them got to the edge of tho cliff the body of the mur derer had disappeared. “But, Raymond, Dick Pardon had said that he would carry out his re venge, alive or dead, and, though every one thought that with his drown ing my troubles would end, it has not proved so. No one can come to our bouse in a way that makes it appear that the object is my society but he is warned away. If he does not take the warning he is shot at bv soniB one “I am, Mr. Jones,” replied Rayaaimd. “Glad to know you, sir,” said the blacksmith; “but I’m sorry to say that you are wrong in ypur idea about what is seen—what even some here have seen in the old stone house on Shaw’s place. It’s a real apparition, that is no trickster's work whatever. “Nevertheless I desire to enlist my army. I offer a sovereign to every re cruit,” said Raymond. But, despite this offer, not a soul would accompany him to the stone house, and he was obliged to give up his plan for that occasion. On the following Sunday evening, just as twilight fell, everyone In the village saw the young architect take his way along the road to the Shaw farm. There, upon the porch, old Mr. Shaw met him and shook his hand kindly. “Avis is not here,” he said. “Of course I know what has passed be tween you, and I like you. I should be delighted to welcome you as a son-in- law, but what folks say is too true for that, for your own sake, young man, you’d better give up all idea of her.” “I will never do that, sir,” said Ray mond. He talked a little while to Mr. Shaw, allowed the shadows to gather ere he bade him adieu, and walked slowly down the road. It was not a very clear night, but the moon now scudded through the clouds piled white and high. In her light the old stone house was plainly visible, and once again he saw tne vi sion that had affrighted so many of the villagers, the shrouded figure sur rounded by blue light, the hand lifted In warning. On the instant he drew a pistol from his pocket, took aim at the lifted arm, and fired. As he did so out of the bushes sprang six stout men, employes of the village brewery, armed and bearing lanterns. Headed by Raymond, they dashed into the old house, and the lights they bore revealed the figure of a man lying on the casement appeared. A white sheet had fallen to the ground, a lantern with blue glass es lay beside it. The man was sense less. “Your bullet hit the mark, Mr. Bell,” said one of the brewers; “you’ve done for him.” “And, by the Lord Harry, it is Dick Pardon himself,” said another. “I thought so,” said Raymond. “The man did not jump into the sea; he contrived to secrete himself among the rocks, and has been playing ghost ever since, hiding here, probably.” This proved to be true, for Pardon before he died made a full confession, and a little while later Avis Shaw be came the bride of the ghost-layer.—* New York News. SADIE ROBINSON. Pretty Girl Suffered Front JYtrv- outness and Pelvic Catarrh— Found Q:tielc Relief in a Few Days. ' -- ~ i lUimi nlfi NERVOUSNESS AND WEAKNESS CURED BY PE-RU-NA, Miss Sadie Robinson, 4 Rand street, Malden, Mass., writes: “Peruna was recommended to me about a year ago as an excellent remedy for the troubles peculiar to our sex, and as I found that all that was said of this medicine was true, I am pleased to endorse it. ‘*1 bejan to *ia •- tt about aeven months ago for icethneat and nerv ousness, caused from, overirork and sleeplessness, and found that in a few days l began to grow strong, my ie floor beneath the broken i appetite Increased and I began to at which the ehost had better, consequently my nerv- ai wmen tne gnosi naa ousness passed away and th ‘ weak ness in the pelvic organs soon dis appeared and I have been well and strong ever since. ” Address Dr. S. B. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O., for free medical ad%-ice. All corres pondence strictly confidential. GOT ONE? With beef absorbing all our stuff The fellow is in luck Who has a back yard big enough To raise a patch of truck. Louisville Courier-Journal.— FlTSpermanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great NerveRestorer,*2trial bottleand treatise free Dr. R. H. Klixe, Ltd.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. A London daily paper has opened a joke department. LIVES FULL OF HARDSHIP. AN AWFUL SKIN HUMOR he canum see “As I did not care for any of the men who came to see me, I made up my mind to endure my fate calmly; but now—” Here the poor girl burst into tears, and her lover caught her hands and pressed them to his lips. “If you love me, no man shall part us, Avis,” he said; “and as for the ghost of your murderous farm hand. I’ll exorcise him if he attempts to frighten me.” “Papa likes you,” said Avis, “but we feel the tales you and all reason able people laugh at are not mere sup erstitious fancies, and because we both like you so much he joins me in begging you never to come to Shaw farm again.’’ “Nevertheless, I shall come,” said Raymond, “so expect me whenever I can got here.” “If you come I will not see you,” said Avis, in a terror-stricken voice. “I will not lead the man I love to his doom; I will never marry you. Leave me, I pray, and fiever see me more.” Raymond Bell answered by a look which needed no interpretation, and kissed her tenderly. It is strange how much men can for- 1 give In women they truly love. If any other person in the world had ex pressed belief in such an absurd sup erstition, his derision would have been so great as to blot out all respect for that Individual; but Avis could do no wrong in Raymond Bell's eyes. Af ter all, he thought, her anxiety for him was proof of her love. Thinking thus he passed a little stone house by the roadside which was said to be haunted by the ghost of Dick Pardon, and paused a moment to look at it. It was evening, and stars were in the sky, but it was n moonless night. The ruinous little building was cov ered with Ivy, and so dilapidated that tall weeds grew within the almost roofless walls; but as Raymond stood loking at it he saw a strange blue light begin to glow in its lower win dow's, and in the midst of the radi ance stood a tall figure draped in white, who for a moment lifted his arm with a warning gesture. Gripping his walking stick, the young man dashed toward the win dow; but suddenly reflecting that as the seeming ghost was probably a hu man being bent on mischief, and that he was unarmed save for the stick which he carried in his hand, he re solved that it would not be wise to ex pose himself further. Consequently he passed on, but, turning to look back, saw once more the strange ap pearance, this time at an upper win dow. Again the hand menaced, again the figure faded, and this time Raymond was angry at himself for feeling cer tain of those chills and thrills which the most sensible of us have at times experienced. A laugh drove them away, and coming to the open doors of a smithy, he walked in among the men who were watching the proprie tor as he shoed a restive horse. “Good evening.” he said. “I want half a dozen men and boys to come with me to the old stone house on Mr. Shaw g farm. Some idiot is playing ghost up there with blue lights and a white sheet, and I’m raising an army to put an end to his capers.” The loungers looked at Raymond while he spoke; the smith finished his Job In silence. Then lifting his head, he spoke gravely: “You’re Mr. Bell, the architect that has come down to build the church. I believe!’’ Unceasing Toil and Suffering the Fate of Middle Class Chinese Women. Dr. Charles K. Roys, a missionary at Wei Hsien, China, in a letter Just received by the Presbyterian board of foreign missions, throws some light on the condition of the middle class women of China. He says: 'We have been employing a Chinese sewing woman for a couple of weeks, and I have been much impressed with the cheerfulness and force of charac ter shown by these poor creatures, condemned to hobble through life on feet not much larger than a sheep’s hoqL Thii wnmaji .(nil go up etaim CoTered Head, Neck and Shoulders—Snf. fered Agony For Twenty-Fire Years Until Cured by Cutlcura. ‘Tor twenty five years I suffered agony from a terrible humor, completely covering my head, neck and shoulders, discharging matter of such offensiveness to sight and smell that I became an object of dread. I consulted the most able doctors far and near, to no avail. Then I got Cntieura, and in a surpisingly short time I was com pletely cured. 1 advise ail those suffering irom skin humors to get Cuticura and end their misery at once. i>. P. Keyes, 149 Congress Street, Boston, Mass.” French Sliti Mg" >S She Sneaks only with great difficulty; she can’t run a foot power sewing machine without pain, so our little hand mach ine is a boon to her. Although carry ing any burden is very painful, in their own homes women have to carry a heavy child around with them while they do their housework, but toning the child into the front of their clothing to keep it warm through the winter. Yet many of the women have cheerful faces and kindly smiling eyes very much like an old southern mam my who has seen much trouble, yet remains cheerful and content. This is especially true of the Christian Chin- | ese women. So much so that their i neighbors say some magic changes their faces. “Today I passed some women wash- j ing clothes in a little stream in native ! fashion, where they crouch for hours 1 in the bitter cold sousing the clothes ; back and forth in the water—no soap j and no washboard—lucky if they have a mat or a stone to sit on. Another j heavy task in the fall season is the j making of wadded garments for the whole family. It is no easy matter when added to 'all that a woman is expected to do. A woman near us tried to commit suicide last fall be cause she was asked to make her hus band’s uncle’s winter clothes. These wadded garments are ungainly look ing, but are said to be very comforta ble by missionaries who wear them. They are made of two layers of muslin dyed blue or black, with a layer of cotton batting between them. Each j individual wears three or four of the wadded coats, and usually one pair I of trousers, the latter very loose and baggy above, and very tight around the ankle, where they are secured by j a strap. The accumulation of coats makes a man look as round as a bar- ; rel, while the little children are spherical, and if they fall down have j hard work to get up again. The win ter hat is a great hood of wadded cot ton like a fisherman’s sou-wester, fall ing over the back and shoulders, and in children ornamented with all the colors of the rainbow.”—Special Cor respondence of The Washington Post. the telephone^ while her mother tran sacted he^-business with the head of the office: A caller was an interested listener to the one-sided conversa tion until, Just as the talk grew in teresting, she began to speak in French. “What was that girl saying?” de manded the caller of the bookkeeper, after the two women had left the office. “You speak French.” “That Is just the trouble,” was Jhe laughing answer. “I speak French; that girl merely thinks she does. I could not understand one word in ten.” “Then how do you suppose the 6ther girl understood?” “She understood it because they both studied under the same teacher. There is more bad French taught in the fashionable finishing schools in this city than any one save a French man can realize. She used words I never heard before, and yet I could have told what she was trying to say.”—New York Press. JUST LIKE SALVATION. Tourist (in Arizona)—How’s the death rate in this town—pretty high? Tarantula Tom—High, nothin’! dyin’ don't cost yer a cent in this yere camp, pard. You kin git it free, an’ quick. No. sir; we hain’t so sting we've fixed up a sehedoole yet awhile!—Cleveland Leader. FOOD IN SERMONS. Feed the Dominie Itlght nnd flic Sermoi.a Are Drllll-.iut. EYESIGHT FAILS HOR ARTIFICIAL LIGHT Iquently THE CMJSE. FRE. A Useful Hint. An artist’s palette knife or drug gist's spatula is a vast improvement on the vegetable or case knife in the itchen for innumerable purposes. An Old Stair Carpet. If thoroughly cleaned, an old stair carpet makes excellent pads to put un der the new one. Each piece of car pet should be lightly nailed to the stair, as unless this is done it is lia* ble to slip.—Home Notes. For a Cleare rLight. It is said that if a lamp wick is soaked in vinegar 24 hours before be ing placed in the lamp a clearer flame will be insured. Wicks should be changed often, as they soon become clogged and do not permit the free passage of the oil. Wood Being Used. Women who have been using silver toilet articles are now replacing them with other materials for the simple reason that silver requires much labor to keep it polished and bright. Various fine woods are being used, hand carv ed and enameled, but, perhaps the daintiest toilet articles are those mounted in mother of pearl. Whitewash. J We publish the following receipt /or whitewash, which has been tested and found good: Slack one-half bushel of unslacked lime with boiling water, keeping it covered during the process. Strain it and add a peck of salt dissolved in warm water. Add also three pounds of good rice put in boiling water, and boiled to a thin paste; one-half pound of powdered Spanish whiting, and a pound of clear glue dissolved in ^arm water. Mix all these well together, and let the mixture stand for several days. Keep the wash thus prepared in a kettle or portable furnace, and, when used, put it on as hot as pos sible with painters’ or whitewash brushes. This whitewash has been found by experience to answer on wood, brick and stone nearly afc well as oil paint, and it is much cneaper. For House Plants. Spinsters and others addicted to floriculture and the tending of house plants should be instructed^ thaV*Mrt»y flowers of innocent reputatirn hereto fore are now being scientif.cally ar raigned as bearers of various kinds of infection. The China primrose is a great sinner in this way, and the Bor deaux Medical Journal presents a con siderable number of cases ofriermatitis caused by it. The chrysanthemum al so comes in for a share of the arraign ment, as also do several varileties of rhus, which are extensively i»sed in this country as house plan count of their fin^ foliage, pie, the article says, c them w ant' af tlie Pasf, On# and A'l, ?erloa« D. ferta —Aretyt«ne <,»•, ^ Ita Clraf, tTnwarartn*. Yet Soft atne Cannot Ifort the Eyoa. Nsm York, June 20.—No one can go into our schools or meet ft group of ehildi^n on the street without noticing how arge a number of them wear spe< tides. The proportion seems to Incicfise yearly, and there are many ore who ought to wear g’asses. The perifnee of one teacher might be du plicated by the score. She knew Alice ns inattentive nnd she thought she ■vas unusually stupid. She said so . to the principal and sent a note to • U»P mother, requesting that the child be helped at home if she wished her to keep up with her class. Ore day after u blackboard explanation, the teacher called upon the child nnd found that she had not seen what had been written. She was kept after school nnd by dint of much sympathetic ques- tionilig Miss C. found that Alice had never been able to see what was put on the board and that her head had ached so often nnd so hard that she frequently failed to hear what was said. Such a condition may be caused by lack of proper food, but in our Ameri can homes it is usually due to the poor quality of the artificial light. The yel low, insufficient light of the ordinary kerosene lamp, with its smoky chim ney, is about as bad for the eyes as can be imagined. The flickering light from a coal gas jet is but iittie better, and even the electric light, brilliant as it usually is, has an unsteadiness j due to variations in power, and a glare peculiarly trying to the delicate nerves of sight. The comparatively new il- Imninnnt acetylene gas produces as nearly perfect an artificial light as has yet been found. It gives a clear white, unwavering light, very brilliant, yet perfectly soft, and so nearly like the rays of the sun that even colors ap pear as in daylight. Fortunately, acetylene is very easily and cheaply produced, and the simple apparatus necessary can be purchased and installed in any home at a very moderate cost, and the acetylene can be piped to convenient points in the bouse where a light is needed. It is then lighted and extinguished and used exactly like common city gas. Acetylene is rapidly coming into common use in homes, churches, schools nnd institutions of all kinds, nnd it is reasonable to expect that as its use in the homo increases, there will be fewer defective eyes, particu larly among children. Poor eyesight and the many ills resulting therefrom jj'ill undoubtedly be much reduced by the use of this new’ illuminnnt. Avery & Company SUCCESSORS TO avery & mcmillan, yi-&S South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga. —ALL KINDS OF— MACHINERY Lydia E* Plnkham's Vegetable Compound is a positive cure for all those painful ailments of women. It will entirely cure the worst forms of Female Com plaints, all Ovarian troubles. Inflam mation and Ulceration. Falling and Displacements of the Womb and con sequent Spinal Weakness, and is pecn iarly adapted to the Change of Life. Every time it will cure Backaches It has cured more cases of Leueor- rhcea than any other remedy the world has ever known. It is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels Tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of development. That Bearing-down Feeling, causing pain, weight and headache, is instantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circum stances it acts in harmony w-ith the female system. It corrects Irregularity, Suppressed or Painful Menstruation, Weakness of the Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostra tion, Headache, General Debility. Also Dizziness, Faintness, Extreme Lassitude, “don’t-care” and “ want-to-be-left-alone ” feeling, excit- ability, irritability, nervousness, sleep lessness, flatulency, melancholy or the “blues,” and backache. These are sure indications of Female Weakness, some derangement of the Uterus. For Kidney Complaints and Backache of cither sex the Vegeta ble Compound is unequaled, You can write Mrs. Pinkham about yourself in strictest confidence. LIDIA E. PIXKHA1I HID. CO., Ljna, Hut. Reliable Frick Engine*. Bolters, all Sizes. Wheat Separators. BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH. Large Engines and Boilers supplied promptly. Shingle Mills, Com Mills, Circular Saws,Saw Teeth,Patent Dogs, Steam Governors. Full line Engines d Vill Supplies. Send for free Catalogue, Sour Stomach ’ / FOR I Bargain To better advertise the South’s Leading Business College, four scholarships are of fered young persons of this countyat less than cost. WRITE TODAY. GA-ALA. BUSINESS COLLEGE, Macon, Ga. “I used Caicarets and feel like a new man. I hava been a anfferer from dyspepata and aour atomaeh for the laat two years. I hare been taking medi cine and other druea, but could find no relief only for a abort time. I will recommend Caaearets to my friends as the only thing for indigestion and lour stomach and to keep the bowels in good con dition. They are rery nice to cat." Harry fttuckley. Mauch Chunk, Pfc Best For The Bowels CONCENTRATED Crab Orchard WATER A SPECIFIC FOR Dyspepsia Sick Headache Constipation... Ths Thro* “HU” That Make Life a Burden. Natnre’s Great Remedy In Use for Almost a Century. BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. CRAB ORCHARD WATER GO.,— LOriSVIM.K. KY. r ineuuweis ^ CANDY CATHARTIC 'VORKYHIU^ Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10c. ?5c. 50c. Nevef sold in bulk. The genuine tablet stamped C C 0. Guaranteed to care or yoar money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 599 ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES Dropsy CURED Gives Quick Relief. Removes all swelling In 8 to so days ; effects a permanent cure In jo to 60 days. Trial treatment given free, Nbthingcan be fairer Write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons, Specialists, Box b Atlanta, Ga. You want only the best Cotton Gin Machinery Ask any experienced Ginner about Pratt, Eagle,Smith Winship, Munger We would like to show vou what thousands of life long customers say. Write for catalog arid testimonial booklejt. Continental Gin Co Charlotte, >. C., Atlanta. Ga. Birmingham, Ain. Memphis, Tenn., Dallas, Tex. on ac- peo- hatt- ferup- ed as times a dissemiri; ease also. The skin of those die and caress it breaks out i: tions, the malady being dipgn psiilacosis, which sometimes tdkes on malignant symptoms, and the patient dies. Lovers of flowers and parrots will do well to take heed of these sci entific declarations concerning the danger which lurks in thfeni, fcoiigh It ought to have been found ou| long ago if it had been as serious a^ it is now affirmed to be. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. A single honor acquired is surety for more.—Rochefoucauld. Opportunity, sooner or later, comes to all who work and wish.—Lord Stan ley. The man who does his whole duty has precious litt'.e time to criticise the i work others are doing. Enthusiasm is the genius of sincer- 1 ity: and truth accomplishes no victor- i ies without it.—Bulwer Lytton. I A great many people have a habit, of expressing surprise at the exposure j of corruption that they were cognizant of all the time. In dreams the will and the reason are feeble, but the desires and real I nature.pf the soul have full play and discover themselves. Hence, as a man I dreams, so is he.—Dr. Frank Crane. One of the most massive and endur- | ing gratifications is the feeling of a j personal worth, ever afresh brought into consciousness by effectual action: : and an idle life is balked of its hopes partly because it lacks this.—Herbert ; Spencer. In all the chief matters of life we are alone, and our true history is ; scarcely ever deciphered by others. The chief part of the drama is a mon- i ologue, or rather an intimate debate 1 betwen God, our conscience, and our selves.—Ruskin. A conscientious, hard working and eminently successful clergyman writes: “I am glad to bear testimony to the pleasure and increased measure of efficiency and health that have come to me from adopting Grape-Nuts food as one of my articles of diet. "For several years I was much dis tressed during the early part of each day by indigestion. My breakfast, usually consisting of oatmeal, milk and eggs, seemed to turn sour and fail'd to digest. After dinner the headache and other symptoms following tin- breakfast would wear away, only to re turn. however, next morning. “Having heard of Grape-Nuts food, 1 finally concluded to give it a fair trial. I quit the use of oatmeal and eggs, and made my breakfasts of Grape-Nuts, cream, toast and Postuni. The result was surprising in improved health and total absence of tho distress that had. for so long a time, followed the morn ing meal. My digestion became once more satisfactory, the headaches ceased, and the old feeling of energy returned. Since that time, four years ago. I have always had Grape-Nuts food on my breakfast table. *T was delighted to find also, that whereas before I began to use Grape- Nuts food I was quite nervous and be came easily wearied in the work of preparing sermons and in study, a marked improvement In this respect re sulted from the change in my diet. I am convinced that Grape-Nuts fool produced this result and helped me to a sturdy condition of mental am! ply si cal strength. “I have known several persons who were formerly troubled as I was. and who have been helped as I have been, by the use of Grape-Nuts food, on my recommendation, among whom may be mentioned the Rev. . now a mis sionary to China.” Name given by Postum Company, Battle Creek, M’.ch. “There's a reason.” Recipes. — 1%^' Swiss Cream—Lay one-quartet- of a pound of macaroons id a giafcs fiish; mix two tablespoonfuls dt cornstarch with three of milk. Put a pint of ‘pailk over the fire, and when near boiling stir in cornstarch; cook slowly three minutes. Remove fronir fife arid flavor with teaspoonful of vanilla; pour over the macaroons. When cold dot with bright bits of jelly. Five Minute Soup—One tables!) ful finely Chopped oilion, ohe tabjie- (spoofifht finely chopped parsley, three Clips boiling water, four teaspoonfutts salt, put onion and parsley in tureejfl on the back of the stove; pour 0fl§ cup boiling water oh the beef extfdcfyt dissolve it and pour over the vegeta bles ih the tureen; let stand five nliti.- iites, and then JUst before serving add the calt and remaining two cups both ihg water; this is one serving for four. Coffee Cream—Soak one-half bo~' gelatine in cold water one hour. Put one half ciipftil of ground Coffee into Ohe pint of of boiling milk, and allow it to stand 10 minutes. Strain through a thick cloth upon a cupful of sugar, amt then add the yolks of three eggs well beaten. Stir the whole until it becomes creamy, then add the gelatine and stir until dissolved. Set away in a cool place, and when it begins to harden whip and add a cupful of whip ped cream. Flour Ball—Tie a cup of flour tight ly in a muslin bag and put into a saucepan of cold water. Bring to the boil, and cook steadily for three hours. Turn the ball out of the bag and lay it in the open oven all day to dry. To use for a teething child, grate a table spoonful of the hall, wet to a paste with a little cold water and stir into a half cup of boiling water, rben ndd a half cup of boiling milk. Stir for five minutes, then remove fnam the fire. Orange Charlotte Russe—Dip the edges of some vanilla wafers in boiled sugar and arrange them neatly around the outside of a hexagon mold, press ing them well together to make them adhere nicely, and leave till set; dis solve three-quarters cf an ounce of gelatine in one-half pint new milk and bring this well to the boil; mix in the juice of four oranges, the well-beaten yolks of three eggs, three ounces su gar, a grate of nutmeg and a little cinnamon; stir this over the fire till thick, but without letting it reboil; then add an ounce of butter; take off the fire and stir still it begins to set; lift off the water case from the mould, pour the mixture into the latter and put away till the mixture has set; turn it out, place in a glass or silver dish and slip the water case over it; gar nish the top and round the sides with stiffly whipped cream sweetened and flivored with a little curacao. Heard the Voice of Conscience. The mother of the small boy had been trying to install within him an idea of conscience. She described it as a little voice which whispered in side one when he was doing wrong. “I never heard it,** said the small boy, cynically, and in tones of one who shrugs his shoulders. A little later the small boy did some, thing he had been told not to do, and was sent to sit on a chair, and or- ered not to get off until the powers t be gave him leave. minutes later he came into the ,ere his mother was sitting, an 1 ™ ‘Fye heard it, mother,’’ he ex- ed. ‘Heard what?” asked his perplexed parent. “Heard the little voice. It said, ‘Sam Smith, you get off that chair. Don’t you care what your mother says!’”—Philadelphia Public Ledger j” WIRES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS^ I Beet Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Pee | I In time. Sold by druggists, B ALL HE FOUND. “1 trust,” the new joke contributor wrote, “you may find something to attract you in this batch.’; “Huh!” grunted the editor. “1 find an error in spelling. The word ‘batch’ should be botch.’ ”—-Phlladet phia Ledger. QUITE REMARKABLE. “Mannish sort of a girl.” “Is she, really?’* “Yes.. Sh<> 11 the telephone. tO-_ day for the first time in her life and she didn’t giggle once.”—Philadel phia Press. NEEDLES, SHUTTLES, REPAIRS. rOME TO MONTANA--A-«»you thinking o f rt ang:- Uue loci ion* 8 n 60r. in ta'npi* or f 1 inf ir- p ation a-1 > soil, clima e, pries i f farm la in nnd n due nen stoh meres e s.W»s nd vo ’ gr-iln sain- VJes sn t rel abls i titisti s. Address. Jones k Kellv. Bozeman. Moutana. Referenr e-Com’l Na IBank. FOR. ALL SEWING MA CHINES. Standard Goods Only. Free TateJeSue to Dealera. BLELOCK MFG. CO., 913 Locust St.. ST. LOUIS. MO. CENTS BUYS A PACKAGE ECONOMY BLUE Makes Full Quart Best Wash Bluing 18 year* on the market. Ask dealer, or wo will send by mall package upon receipt of 10c. to stamps and your dealer's name. Bbidoks-McDowkli. Co.. Louisville. Ky. Address of (1) persons of part Indian bio ANTED- (At25-’05) ilood who are not living with any tribe, (2) oi men who were drafted jn Kentucky, (S) of mothers of soldiers who have been denied pension on account of re marriage, (4) of men who served in the Fed eral arm)-, or (5) th- nearest kin of such soldiers or sailors, now deeeasec.. NATHAN BICKFORD, Attorney, Washington, D. C. Afi Interesting Rdifi: One of the most interesting relics of old literature is a volume bearing the date, 179G, and containing copies of the original official letters writ ten by General George Washington during bis command of the Contin ental forces of the Revolutionary War. This volume was brought to light by George W. Stevens, of Au gusta. while looking over some old letters and pftpers which occupied one corner of ftn attic. Nd rOadltiM matter is extant which will give one an understanding of the private life of Washington and an appreciation of the emotions and bardshlps which wore fcegottdri lii thfe throes of the birth of Freedom. These letters are copies of the letters which had been preserved in the office of the secre tary of state At Philadelphia, and Mf. Stevens shows the volume with tt great deal of satisfaction.—Kennebec Journah The Five Boys, T. D. Meador writes: Rave five children and under no circumstance would I be without Dr. Diggers'Huckleberry Cordial in my house, especially during the fruit sea son. The result in its Use Is very gratify ing. Fof all stomftch and bowel troubles. tiold by all Druggists, 25Hud 50c. bottle. Danjinij the ^reat Japanese tragedian, is a <0 a most ski. fill da ncer. Ask YoUr Dealer For Allen's Foot-Base. A powder, It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions. Swollen, More,Hot, Callous, Aching Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nalls. Allen’s Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. At all Druggists and Hhoe stores, 25 cents. Ac cept no substitute. Sample mailed Fbek, Address, Allen 8, Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. A Pennsylvania man says that the world will last onlv three vears. Mrs.Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teejthing. soften the gums,reduces inflamma- tio|»,allays pain,cures wind colic, 25e.n bottle. A Connecticut woman killed herself be- cai se the weather was bad. I ai a sure Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved mv life three years ago.—Mrs. Thomas Rob- ebts. Maple St., Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17,1900 lent fashion of shoes was intro- presCm into-E After a recent storm. amber worth $1504 was picked up on the beach a Read the little boob. “The Road to I Newkburg, a German village on Wellville,” in each pkg. | RaJMc coast 1 ngland in 1033. Cures Bl-o-xl I'olson, Cancer, Ulcers. If you hajve offensive pimples or enip- t’on-s, ulcersjon any pa-t of the body, a-h- ing bones ojr joints, falling hair, mucous patches, swollen glands, sk n lt<*hes an 1 burnis, sore lips or gums, eating, festering sore#, sharp, [gnawing pains, then you suf >m serious blood poison or the begin- !of deadUy caueer. You may be per- Jr cuied bv taking Botanio Blood " V m - . sAd skin diseases. Heals every ilcer.leven deadly cancer, stops all id paliis and reduces all swellings. Bioofc Balm cures all malignant jubl*s\ such as eczema, scabs and f, running sorei, carbuncles, fists, #1 per large bottle. 3 ottles $5, expr-ss prepaid. Jres, sample of ibood Balm repaid by writing Blood Balm Describe trouble and fre« bent in sealed letter. ALL DONE OUT. Veteran Joshua Heller, of 70(1 South Walnut street, Urbana, 111., says: “III the fall of 1800, after taking Doan’s Kidney Pills I told the readers of this paper that they had relieved me of kid ney trouble, dis posed of a lame back with pain across my loins and beneath the shoul der blades. During the interval which has elapsed I havd had occasion to re sort to Doan’s Kid ney Pills when I noticed warnings of an attack. Dh each and every occasion the results obtained Were just as satisfactory as when the pills were first brought to my notice. I just as emphatically endorse the preparation to-day as I did over two years ago."* Fostet-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., proprietors. For sale by all druggists, price 50 cents per box, Queer Ballast for the Subway. Now that windows in the Subway cars are let down at the top many passengers seem to think it is done j for them to throw things out of in stead of for ventilation. An observer says he saw enough stuff hurled from | the cars on one trip to fill a trasn 1 basket. A woman who had fed her J two children on bananas threw skins j and bag out of the window. Two girls finished up a quart of peanuts 1 between them, put the shells in a j bag and threw them out. One man emptied his pockets of odds and ends i of correspondence, tore the paper in- I to shreds and contributed it to the roadbed. There were cigar butts and several empty candy boxes added to the contribution. Orange peel is an other thing that passengers seemed to think it was necessary to cast out. The spitters, now that the windows are down, are as much in evidence in the Subway as they are on the elevated and surface cars. Men walk half rhe length of the car to find an open window that nobody is sitting before. The guard never says a word. If this sort of thing keeps on it wi’l be necessary for Mr. Belmont to get out a revised edition of his expert’s pamphlet on pure air in the Subway. We will forfeit this turnmoL-lf by analysis or chemi- “ eke $1000 EWARD cal test, Checkers is found to contain any Alcohol or the minutest particle of Morphine, Opium, Cocaine, or any other dangerous narcotic drug. Checkers is perfectly harmless and only contains sofficient concentrated California Orange Wine and imported Oporto Port to preserve the medicinal properties of the formulary and render the scientifically prepared Cod Liver Oil (which it contains.) palatable and agreeable to the weakest stomach. Checkers cures Stomach, Liver, Kidney, Nerve and Blood Diseases, Catarrh, Bronchitis, Coughs and Colds, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, La Grippe, Heart Disease, Indigestion, Malaria, Chills and Fever, Nervousness and General Debility. It checks Consumption and is a good medicine for all Female Complaints. Get one of the large dollar bottles to-day* you may forget it to-morrow, and the disease will obtain more sway by delay. Sample free—if you write. Checkers Medicine Co., Winston-Salem, N. C. Let Libby Serve Your Soup Tomato, lniienn-. Consomme, Chicken. Mulligatawney, or Oxtail will please the mo»t fastidious. They are quickly prepared—delicious to cat—always satisfactory. JLibby’s ^ulvo^ 1 Food Products Corned Boef Hash Boneless Chicken Vienna Sausage Ox Tongues Soups Ham Loaf Your Grocerlhas them Libby, McNeill <JL Libby, Chlcafto ‘Myrtilla,” NERVY, said the old genfle- B; Bf) mad • especially to cure the | man sharplV( .. that young m3n you had in the parlor last night is dull of comprehension. Ail I had to do was. cough when the other chaps re mained too late and they would take the hint and depart. Did this one say anything when I coughed last night?” "Yes,” replied the beautiful daugh ter; “be said the next time he called the he was going to bring you a bottle of cough syrup.”—Detroit Tribune. leanhness prevai' haeen. Tlie Secret ot Good Coffee Even the best housekeepers cannot make a good cup of coffee without good material. Dirty, adulterated and queerly blended coffee such na unscrupulous dealers shovci over their counters won t do. But take the pure, clean, natural flavored LION COFFEE, the leader of all package coffees— the coffee that for over a quarter of a century has been daily welcomed in millions of homes—and you will make a drink lit for a king in this way: HOW TO MAKE GOOD COFFEE. Occ LION COFFEE, tx-raijoe to %ft rtfmlu yon mart nnn the best coffee. Oiiad yoar LION COFFEE rather fine, fee “a tahleepoonfol to each cup, and one extra for the pot." First mix it with a little cold water, enough to make a thick paste, and add white of an ec;B (if egg is to be used ae a settler), then follow one of the following rules: 1*1. WITH BOILING WATFJL Add boiling water, and lei It boll THREE MINUTES ONLY. Add a HUle cold water and set aside live minute* to aetfle. Serve promptly. . 2d. WITH COLD WATER. Add your cold water to the paste aad bring it to a boll. Then »e* aside, add a little cold water, and in live minutes it’s ready to serve. (Don't boil it too long. . 0 -! Don’t let it stand more than ten minutes before serving. DO NT’S (Don’t use water that has been boiled before. TWO WAYS TO SETTLE COFFEE. let. With Ejjgs. T ’*e part of the white of an egg, mixing it with the ground LION COIFE2 before boiling. 2d. With Cold Water metead of eggs. After boiling add a daah of cold water, and set aside for eight or ten minutes, then serve tbrongh a strainer. Insist on getting a package ot genuine LION CO FFEE, prepare it according to tbls recipe and you will only use LION COFFEE In tuture. (Sold only in 1 lb. staled packages.) (Lion-bead on every package.) (Save these Lion-heads for vninable premiums.) SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. % J antation cure, or money refunded by your merchant, eo why not try It? Price 50c.