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READING THE EVES. WHAT MAY CE SZZX IN THE "WIN DOV/3 CF THE SOUL." Their Imllcnt ion** UM to Chuvnctor A re, II H ii Kale? Ilemnrkulil}' Ac? curate-Detective!. Snot tho Llur by n Little Trick of Hin (J '.ICH. It ls Utile realized in Low many things eyes betray their owner. Many people without nt nil professing to bo ! physiognomists freQuontly ure led t<> form opinions about their neighbors by purely physiognomical signs. We often hear a mau say. "That inan Jones is the biggest fool In t m u. lie has the most foolish, expressionless, bovino pair of eyes I've over seen." Young : parents in particular are fond of plan? 1 liing bright futures for their children, basing their judgment entirely "on a most wonderfully Intelligent look in our baby .Toe's eyes." The proud moth er will mid. "I am sure he'll sume day : be a great poet." Men. moro sensibly, will be led in their business dealings by opinions funned in just this way. Few indeed i will be found inexperienced enough to repose any confidence In a mau having a pair of round, shifting eyes, closely set together lu the head and usually ! accompanied by a pair of narrow, slop- ? inp shoulders. This is the make Up of a typical sneak'thief. Hut :i man not knowing this will si 111 say: "I don't , like his looks. Ile looks too slippery ' for me." When the average man, however, having some secret conviction that he is a born physiognomist, tries to form . positive judgments about people by mere individual signs, be is likely to orr sadly. Many a naturally gifted or- , ator has been pronounced by such a : judge as a man given over to dissipa- j tion because his full, prominent, san- ; ccrlllte eye bears some resemblance to an eye full by dissipation. The latter case, however. Is easily distinguish:!- ' ble. Physical pleasure has a teudency to draw up the lower eyelid as though to half close the eye. it soon becomes thicker, fleshier and remains pressed . up agninst the eye like a soft cushion. j giving this appearance of fullness to the eye, the sign for fluency and great command of language. Undoubtedly much is told about us by our eyes. Dogs and children have ? been called natural physiognomists. A : dog sometimes will refuse any caresses ' or tidbits from some stranger and slink off. but will run up to another man equally as strange to him. wagging his tail, and begin to lick his hand, dill dren also know well who will grant their request and who will refuse gruff ly. A 7-year-old boy who went up to ! a stranger to ask him to do something, when asked why be went to that man when his uncle was by. answered. ' "Well, because the man had 'yes' writ- ] ten In his eyes." ! Many professions'apply some trait or other of the human eye to their own particular use. Surgeons and dentists. . remembering that some of the most delicate nerves of the human body are in the eye, when giving anaesthetics judge by his eye when the patient ls sufficiently under the Influence of the drug. They lift the upper eyelid and feel the eyeball with their finger. When the eyeball no longer answers to the touch of the Auger, the surgeon fools assured that the patient ls sufficiently oblivious to the Influence of the outer world for him to begin operations. So. likewise, many forms of poisoning can be told hy the condition In which the eye is found. Habitual use of drugs, like laudanum, opium, etc., has a marked effect on tho eye, and the un naturally distended pupil of victims to the Influence of such drugs easily "gives them away." But the most interesting of the eye's "give aways" 's Its use as an effective d?tecter of double dealing. A private detective,' in a discussion as to how far the eye can be depended upon to detect falsehood, says: ! "It Is sometimes pretty hard to tell ; from the manner of a smart, fluent ' talker whether he Is telling the truth or not. Of course in the case of an unskillful, amateur liar the thing ls simple. Even the average man, who usually Is a pretty poor observer, can determine for himself whether the man lies, for the would be prevaricator usually takes good care to betray him- i self. He involuntarily seeks to avoid meeting the eyes of his intended vic tim by averting his face and shifting his eyes. Ile no more cnn refrain from acting In his suspicious manner than cnn a mau look straight at some bright light after staying In a dark room for some time. The action of both In avoiding tr? look at a thing too strong for the delicate nerves of the eye ls Instinctive and Involuntary. But tho Har of sufficient practice can acquire enough self control to refrain from showing these telltale signs. "To detect falsehood in cases of this kiud we employ a delicate test, which, in the hands of a clever mun. is infalli ble. We call it the 'eye test.' The sharp detective puts a sudden, direct question to the crook which udmits of no equivocal reply and which goes to the root of the matter. As the man tries to answer the detective steadily looks into the pupils of his eyes and carefully observes any changes or movements of thc iris. Should thc man He in answering, it will be shown by the muscular twitching of the eye, as if trying to make the aperture of the eye smaller. This is the same movement as results in trying to avoid too strong a light. The eye thus seems to be equally susceptible to beams of truth and to beams of light."-New York Press. i Known by Hla Work?, "They tell me thet strange feller who wuz to th* dance at th' Corners las' night is an editor." "Thass right. He got up thom dance programmes."-Cleveland Pla Wi Dealer. - Tommy-"Pop, the rain falls alike upon tho just and thc unjust j doesn't it?" Tommy's Pop-"Yes, I yes; don't ask silly questions!" Tom- j my-"And i6 ien*t just to steal another j man's umbrella is it?" Tommy's ! Pop-"Certainly not. If you ask I more-"Tommy-"But pop, the rain ; doesn't'fall upon tho man that steals j thc umbrella, and it docs on thc man j that had his stolen. Funny, ain't it, pop?" Mm. & A TROPHY OF BURGLARY. Drummer Cn rr lea n <:ei?i Wat eli an a Sotrvoulr ?:?' Iii ; .Jceil. ..This watch vvas [?art pf the spoils of I mtv'..$:.}. [il which I participated in ' '1," . aid ?i ?:;est lu tho St. Charles lobby i., a reporter, drawing oin a handsome gold timepiece willi ti etui pus spiral pattern engraved in heavy relief un the lid. "'lt was my first af fair of the kind, and I regret to say 1 tumbled it and ;ML caught almost Im mediately. What is the joke, tl i . 1 you ask? Theil- is no joke; it is perfectly true. It happened like this: .'lu tli;> l'ail ol' ISSI, wheu I was quite young ami green, 1 got a job travel- ! lug for a Chicago grocery house, ami I one of the inst places I visited was a ? small town in northern Ohio. 1 univ- | ed about ll at night and went out to take a stroll and smoke a cigar before ? going to bed. Passing through a side | street, I noticed n light lu the little j jewelry store and also that the dcor j was ajar. That reminded me 1 had ! recently brollen the mainspring of my j watch, and I sauntered in to leave lt i for repair. "As 1 entered a young man arose from the further end of tho counter. Ile seemed startled, which was not un natural at such a late call, but he rc- j gained his composure while I explain- i ed thc purpose of my visit and told n.c ! he had closed sonic hours before, but ! happened tu remember some things ? that had been left out of the safo and returned to put them back. When 1 handed him my watch, I asked him to lend me another to wear in the mean- j time, and he gave me one at random ? from a tray on tho counter. This is lt j on my chain now. "Next morning." continued the story ; teller, "I was lounging in thc hotel of fice, when the town marshal tapped me ; on the shoulder. " 'Let me sec your watch,' lie said. j "I pulled it out mechanically and was nt once placed under arrest on the charge of robbing the jewelry store. !t seemed that it had been burglarized j during the night, and somebody in tho hotel had noticed my peculiar looking watch and reported it to tho police. It was promptly Identified as part of the ? stolen goods, and, needless to say, my ! story as to its acquisition was laughed lo scoru. I was obliged to admit that it seemed a little gauzy myself, and I | can't say I blame the authorities for j declining to give lt credence. "At any rate, I found myself in the deuce of a fix. My old watch had beeu j carried off by the thief, and there was j absolutely nothing to confirm my state- j ment except the hare fact that none of j thc other goods was found In my pos- j session. That, howev?r, went for very j little, for it was argued that I had had j abundant time to conceal my plunder. ; In my agitation and excitement I must ? have presented a perfect picture of : guilt, and the townspeople came near j mobbing me on the way to jail. They i kept mo there for exactly throe hours, the agony of which will dwell with me if I live to be a hundred. "Meanwhile the sure enough burglar had boen hagged lu an adjoining town with all the loot, Including my time piece, in his valise, und when I was finally released he was buudled into my cell. If he hadn't been caught, 1 ? don't know what might Luve happened. I don't like to think about it. The au thorities made groveling apologies, and the jeweler was especially abject. To placate me he offered to let me keep the \ new watch lu exchange fer my old one, and I accepted the proposition. I car ry it as a sort of tragic-comic sou venir."-New Orleans Times-Democrat. It Was Dcwey'ii Treat. "In 1SSG," said Colonel Frank Small, ! advance agent for a theatrical comp'a- j ny, "I was in Washington with Rose j Coghlan, playing nt what was then ; Albaugh's Opera House. One after- ; noon I was In the box office chinning with the ticket manipulator and watch- j lng the matinee girls when three ladies i came in, followed by 100 children, boya 1 and girls. j "One of the ladies stepped up to the window and said, 'We have just an even 100 children here and here ls a , check for ?25 to pay for the tickets for them.' She handed In a check signed by George Dewey, and the tickets were : passed out to the lady. The happy youngsters were soon enjoying the , play. . j "I didn't know George Dewey from Adam's off ox, and I asked the ticket i man who he was. He told me that Mr. j Dewey was a navy officer and that lt was not the first time be had handled his checks In that way; that once each season anyway the children from some of the several orphan asylums were given such treats by the gentle man, but that he seldom attended a performance himself." - St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Animals That Coast. "In India, where I was a cornet of her majesty's hussars, I gave a good deal of attention to elephants," said Murray Garde the other night. "What particularly interested me was the bold, original method an elephant has of gottiug down a hill when the gradi ent is too steep for walking. He sits calmly down on his hinderlands, you know, pushes off, and, bzz, bzz! he's at the bottom. It hurts, though-the fric tion, the inequalities of the descent, the tenderness of the hide, don't you know. "But I only speak of this because the bears of your country remind me of it. The bears of Utah and Wyoming are the cleverest wild animals I have ever seen. They, too, slide down the preci pices and the mountains, but they are more tender of themselves than the elephants. They cut bark from a tree ".T?t?i their ioeih anu claws In strips big enough to be sat upon comfortably, and on these toboggans they coast down the steeps of their wild country without any evil effects. A strange sight it Is, I tell your*-Philadelphia Record. As a cure for rheumatism Chamber lain's Pain Balm is gaining a wide reputation. 1). B. Johnston, of Rich mond, Ind., has been troubled with that ailment since 181?2. In speaking of it he says : "I never found any thing that would relieve me until I used Chamberlain's Pain Balm. It ?.cts like magic with mo. My font was swollen and paining me very much, but one good application of Pain Balm relieved me. For salo by Hill-Orr Drug Co. TOO MUCK FOP, THE CLERK. Terri'lcd Ii y tho Indln Itubbpr Hoy i.Jill tito "a xi. A person who luis luid ninny y? :it" experience in hospitals was speaking thu ot lier day lo a number of mon In j terostod ii? medical a Ifni rs about hu man freaks. .T>o you know that the greatest hu man freaks lu tho country-lu fact. i:i the weil.1." exclaimed the speaker, -have never lieeu exhibited In a mu seum or numbered muong ti circus* at tractions';" Nave you ever hoard ol* tho india rubber hoy or the negro whoso heart was on his light side or the man with a voice Uko a locomotive whistle? Perhaps you have hoard of at least tin last groat personage. They were real ly 'great personages' In their own osti inntion and seemed to he glad that they vero freaks." None of the listeners had ever seen or bearii of the freaks. "Don't think for n moment that the india rubber boy was made of rubin ." continued the speaker, "or that he could twist himself into a knot. Ile looked lik?! a schoolboy. Ile suffered from some form of epilepsy, and when he had a lit he would bounce up and down. That's why they called him the India rubber hoy." "How high divl he bonnieV" was ask ed. "I think about six feet. Some people said that hu sometimes bounced high er, but I doubt it." "I?bl he have any control over him self when ho had n lit?" "No. He never know when or where ho would be stricken, and every time lie simply bounced until he became ex hausted or unconscious. "The India rubber boy and the man with the voice like a locomotive whis tle one time nearly frightened to death a night clerk of a local hospital. A ! yoting physician tunde a tour of the country some years ago exhibiting to I medical associations the india rubber I boy and the mau with the peculiar j voice. This physician took delight in i having fun nt the expense of his ! friends. Ho was well acquainted with j the night clerk, and he selected him as i a victim for one of his pranks. One ! night, after he had exhibited his freaks : befoie a medical society in this city, ? the physician called at the hospital to ? sec the night clerk. After talking with j thc clerk a few minutes he left the i freaks seated near a desk at which the ; clerk was at work and went Into au ad ! joining room to await developments. The physician had sonn? doubt about ( his plan being successful, as the man i with the extraordinary voice would only make a noise like a locomotive whistle when under great excitement. The man. however, did what was ex pected of him. * "Several times thc clerk stopped work to glance at his visitors, bul their action did not arouse his suspicious. Soon the India rubber boy's teeth be gan to chatter, and thc lad assumed a crouching attitude. He was preparing to spring. The clevie saw the crouch ing form in front of his desk and reached for a stick on a nail at one end of his desk. As the clerk grasped thc stick the boy bounded upward and came down on his feet, only to shoot upward again. The clerk raised tho stick ns though he intended to hit the boy with It, and then the man who could make sounds resembling a loco motive whistle became excited and sounded a shrill blast. Ills voice would have terrified any one. The noise made by the man and the boy bounding up and down In front of the desk was too much tor the clerk. He rushed from the room and sounded a call for help. All the male orderlies responded to the call, and for a time there was great ex citement in the place. The phj-slclan restored order by making an explana tion, but the clerk never spoke to him again."-New York Tribune. Zbaen'i? Mild Way. Ibsen, declares M. Sardou, takes up a position on the stage and without saying a word notes down the altera tions either lu the scenery or the act ing that he requires. He then gives his notes to the stage manager and bids him communicate them to the actors. Should there be no change on the morrow he says mildly: "You have evidently lost my directions. Hore Is a frosh copy," and continues to ply the stage manager with notes every ; day until he recognizes that his inter vention is useless. Then, putting on his hat. he bows and says, "The piece you are rehearsing is not mine." and departing does not even return for the first representation. Bjornstjorno Ujornson's method, if not so silent, ls far more successful. He seats himself lu the stalls and after each act delivers a long and minute criticism. So determined, so cool ls he that his plays are Invariably per formed as he lias written thom, and this, declares M. Sardou earnestly, is as lt should be.-Mainly About People. Under a Ladder. "Just to show you what superstition a great majority of people have," said the proprietor of a large shoo store on Baltimore street a few days ago, "look at that ladder in front of my place. The base of lt Is out to the curb, and yet the people will not wark under lt. They prefer to go out In thc middle of the street and walk-around." The re mark was perfectly truel Not one man or woman walked under thc lad der during the five minutes that the reporter was watching with but one single exception, and that was a blind man, who was feeling his way along with a cane-Baltimore News. Tullo-* Ch??drc?i Zum in sommer. According to Combe, boys born In tho months of September, October, No vember, December, January and Feb ruary arc not so tall as those born In other months. Those born In Novem ber are the shortest; those born In July are the tallest.-Public Opinion. CASTOR IA For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears tho Signatur o of - To accept :i kindness and then grow resentful because of thu obliga tions which it imposes on you, it is te show yourself a very littlo sou!. S wJ rt ?.? I ? t? si 'a Miiruri'O, A lan* C?>:ISM1 v. ' . sha I i hero be nnnieles?s Im '. :| i. h.'!.?* collection ol' coins?. Ui" deejayed litcy hal boen stolen. A ral. M??ov was acousvd a-< ihf culprit ?>i.- . iuliilit'?. The sultan was approach'ti. A ? onipeiisativo stun, .j'.tioti Spanish ?I d', ia rs. was demand ed and [Vatd to iUo consul. Thu M cor and on : hors ol' his family wort! immediately ? mwn into prison, thc r goods wer?? s . il p:?\ tito Indemni ty, anti five ? iltem wiro practically beaten to ?h .-. . li turtieti afterward that the inore valuah! part of th? collection Haid ti have . ;i stolen had remained int:.< t lu tho ' amis of the consul that lt was inoiv than doubtful whet he; anytIiiiii; hail cn stolen. Not long before tho . ni's death liu otYeved to soil the whole collection to a pri vate gentle: in Tangier. Tilts offer was declined The consul died quite lately in the odor of sanctity, and aft er his deal', ?he coins wen? sohl by auction. lt cannot be said that any legation was in those days (not so very long ago) wholly ..ree from such malprac tices, though 1 have cited art extreme case. AH tim consulates and legations have sicted unscrupulously lu tho past. They have robbed the sultan's ex .hcipier, oppressed his subjects amt cheated litm shamefully on occasion. -Fortnightly. I\ c;*ptnf? Sheep, lt has always booti a tolerably well fixed opinion willi us that every farm er should keep a few sheep, regardless of the price ut' wool or the slate of the mutton market. The sheep is one of the best, kinds of stork for saving Iced ou tile farm that would otherwise go to waste. No other slock will con sumo so large a variety of tho com moner product? of the farm ami co'.i 1 vert them into a marketable shape j more readily. Ni? class ol' stock ian : he turned out so carly in the spring or ? left out so late in the fail ami slid do . well. No class of stock can make as : good use of those rough, broken pieces 1 of land that ure found on every farm, j which are perfectly useless for every i purpose unless a few sheep are kept. ? j No animal is so good a weeder or wi il j ! keep pasture lands so free front plants j ! out of place as tho sheep. No animal '? ' will do so well on pasture alone dtir ! ing the pasture season and ou light 1 feeding tu winier provided they be i well sheltered from storms. No ani ! mills enrich the fields on which they I graze to KO great an extent or so coin i pletely give back to them ntl that they take, and no animal furnishes so relia ; ble a source for the l'a-m supply of ! summer meat.-"Modern .Sheep," by . F. D. Coburn. Twelfth Century Mnmicru. . According to twelfth century inan ; ncrs, it was considered more than rude i for any one, mau or woman, to look j aimlessly into space or gaze ut tho sky ! for any length of time, and staring ! about in the street or in church was considered especially impolite. People : who desired to be considered well ! brought up were enjoined not to wave j their hands about in the air and not , to place their hands upon the head or \ shoulders of any distinguished persou ! age. ! When standing, both mon aud wom en were exhorted to [dace one baud over the other near thc waist. A well bred woman, also, when walking out of doors, had to place the thumb of the left hand in the buckle or string by which her clonk was fastened under her neck, while with the two fingers j of tho right hu nd she kept the cloak i closed. When ou horseback, men were en joined not to look at their legs, hut ! straight over the horse's head. In a i book of the twelfth century we read of a model young woman who "walked ? nicely and did not look around. She i did not speak to her mother nor greet i her father, neither would she look at I man or woman." An l nun ll n nt Comparison. The Duke aud Duchess of Cou naught, on visit to Egypt, met with several humorous experiences. One of thom shows that even the Egyptians are not free from an unhappy weak ness for saying just the wrong thing at a critical moment. After an inspection of the troops by thc duke outside of Omdurman, to ! which the duchess had accompanied j him on horseback, the girths of her ? saddle suddenly gave way. There was ; no way of repairing them, and to en j able her royal highness to get back with the least possible Inconvenience i a sort of sedan chair was improvised ! from a gun carriage. On this she was ? carried by Egyptian gunners, who j were In charge of a native officer. On the way ibo duchess said, "I hope your men will not be tired after car rying me," and was surprised and amused to receive the ungallant reilly: "Indeed, no, madam; you are no j heavier than the gun they are nccus ! tomed to carry!" Connldornhle Apprcelntlnn. I "Some weeks ago," says the Memphis Scimitar, "a young man left a small package at the home of a young wom an upon whom he was making his first call. She wrote him a note telling him he had left it. Ile wrote her oue tell ing her it was some edibles and that she might appropriate it to her own use. She wrote again' to express her appreciation. He replied to express lils appreciation of lier appreciation. She retaliated with an expression of hw appreciation of lils appreciation of her appreciation. At tito present time- ihn exprc8Slon of appreciation ls going for ward in arithmetical progression as the letters multiply, and as they contnln something a little more serious tn its nature there promise to he some very Interesting complications resulting from a correspondence presumably tv the expression of appreciation." ' Are You Troubled? and do you Want Your Troubles to Fly Away ? You have suffered worlds of trouble, anxiety aud pain, and you hardly know what ails you. Sometime your business goes wrong, and for a long tinto you have been feeling physically very badly. Don't know what, is the matter? Of course you don't, else you would got sonic medicine. The trouble is with your stomach and liver. Ty ner's Dyspepsia Itcmedy will do a vast amount of good in helping this trouble if you will use it. Price f>0 cents per bottle. For sale by all druggists Suicide of :: Dog Tho Itali.i?. ..>I; I-.- report 'hat a .-' cut, a,i nod suicido I hy i? tilt' i" ?tay in th ? l.uK'u ol' fono?. li? \v:iH dl'.ter? mined to coo .- Ijj'c, for a inati pull e : him oui V ti thc hi;: dog was lia If drowned, ni''- trow bini away fri ni tin* water. Tili' r was y cry liikudsoine, ami tin- matt ci been adiptriot: liitu, a- ti;.- ania; . .stood g.t'/.ing into tin water. To -ce wh:i]t further might happen the spectator returtieil to the lake > briu!.. .uni soon l.ie il oj? war hack again ami in the water, iii- hoad resolutely lo-ld beneath ibo surface. Again his ?: Ituiier pulled him to shore, and made 1;.: , nm nil inland, tin* man returning t>* his post "f observation, whence later ho hean! a distant splash und r< i'ogn?i'.i .1 llie dog's back. The poor fellow was swimming fast away from shore, his head as before, held under th" water. His rescuer jumped into a boa! ami pulled hard i'm- thc spot win re the deg was stn::: gling. but was to Ins sorrow, too late. The lifeless body already lloated on the water. Aa autopsy prove.1 that tho linc animal was healthy in every or gan, and it was e usci|Uenlly sur mised that the "rash act"' m us! lave had a "moral' cause. Who's at the Heirn, When sickness once begin:! hi .'? family | the tiouble;} multiply so last that t! .>. jue ci I to conic in overwhelming N. ive?* N >\. ? . j dei if sometimes one oi both ? ; inc pc.:. .. i pivos nut undci the strain ami pet h :< sonic kind neighbot oi one of the yoiut :? i members of thc household has to seize the hebn and keep the little family ship off the rocks of actual distress. The poor sick father or motlier thinks " O, if I could only get on my feet and be at work how differ ent it would he ! " Day after day the ailing one struggles to risc superior to the misery that weighs him or her down; hoping against hope that the next day will be a better one. The doctor in sent for. He gives all the "regulation " stereotyped remedies hut they prove of no avail. Then follow more ?lays and weeks pcrhapri weary months-of waiting and hop ing for the restoration that does not come ; while every heart is filled with the fore bode - question: " What will bc thc end?" A ian doesn't know what is the matter with him; he feels all the strength and en ergy oozing out of him; he can't work; he can't eat; he can't sleep; he can't even ? think clearly. He loses heart and courage and flesh; pretty soon he feels badly in his lungs. Thc doctors call it consumption and prescribe lung specifics. Hut what the mau needs is a medicine to go deep down into the foundations of the trouble; clear ? thc poison out of his blood; wake up his j liver, purify, revitalize and build up his ! system from thc foundation - stone. He needs Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Di SCO v- j cry which has cured innumerable cases of j obstinate liver complaint which the doctors ! diagnosed as hopeless consumption. The work of this masterful " Discovery " j begins at the very corner-stone of life in t the stomach and nutritive organism, lt gives appetite, nourishment, rich blood, healthy solid flesh. A cough is only a Smptotn; there arc other things that make e cough; they must bc got rid of first, thc cough may bc the last tiling to go away. Does Dr. Pierce claim to cure consump tion ? That question isn't worth arguing. Look at thc record. Take a case in point. Herc is a man (or woman) with a hacking cough, a hectic flush, night-sweats, great emacia tion or wasting of flesh, spitting of blood, shortness of breath and nil the other symp toms. After every remedy and every local physician has failed, he, as a last resort, takes "Golden Medical Discovery" and the cough vanishes, the cheek gets back ita natural color, sleep becomes sound and re freshing, the spitting of blood slops, flesh and muscles become firm, weight increases, and life goes along in quiet and comfort to the full limit of thc three score years and ten. But may be it wasn't consumption after all ? May bc it wasn't. You know it was something that was attacking the very cit adel of life, and it was something that was cured by the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. And Dr. Pierce is cur ing such ''somethings" right along with a record of over a quarter of a million cases, and not more than three per cent, of faillites. Gue fact, at least, is well established. That the "Golden Medical Discovery" does cure weak liing1;, bleeding from lungs, obstinate, lingering coughs, laryngitis, bronchitis, throat disease, and kindred affections of thc air - passages, which, if neglected or badly treated, lead up to con sumption, can no longer be doubted in view of the many thousands of well estab lished cures of such cases reported by thc most trustworthy citizens. Many of these cases have been pronounced consumption -and incurable-by thc best local physi cians before lite bufferers commenced the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis co vcr j-. Mori' than half a million copies of Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser were sold at $1.93 each, but a free paper bound edition is now issued of which a copy will he sent absolutely without charge for the hare cost of mailing-ai one-cent stamps. These should be sent to World's Dispensary Medical Association,- buffalo, N. Y. One copy only will bc sent to one family If a heavier cloth bound copy is preferred ten stamps extra should be sent. Emerson Pianos. Weaver Organs. YO IT will lind mo nt t he A D.I.B A NI'E STOKE with a select stock of Fine Pianos And Organs. I am prepared to sell on easy terms to ro Hponsible parties. I am still ???liing the NEW HOM E MACHINE at $30.00 cash, or a slight ad vance on time. M. U. WILLI-. Notice of Final Settlement. THIO undersigned, \diiiiiiifttrntor ol Estate of E. I), Me A lister, dee'd, here by giveH notice thai ho will on the Kith d?>- of January, 1000, apply t<> the Judge of Probate for Anderson Count y, S. G., n ra Final Netl'cinent ol said Ks tau?, and a discharge Irom his ellice u AdmittittliHtor. It. 'i IMS, Adm'r. Doc 13, 1S?"J 5 Wc have '?c hi regard for tho medical pro: im.r preparations are not sold to: -,.v- pr.rpi ?e of an tagon izir.-.; them, bm uithtr ns .maid. We lay it down ns established truth that Internal remedies positively injuri ous t'- expectant luuihiirs. The distress ami disconiforts ex; iviiced during the mouths preceding chi Ihirth can bo al leviated only by extern.' treatment-by applying a liniment thai softens and re laxes the over-strained muscles. We make and seil such a li: imeui, com bining thc ingredients in a manner hitherto un kui .. n, and call iv We know that ia thousands of eas.-.; it has proved more than a blessing to expect.mt mothers, lt overcomes morn ing sickness, irelieves tho sense of tightness. Headaches-cease, and ("lan ger from IS wolli a, Hard and Rising Breasts is avoided Labor itself is shortened and shorn of most of the pain. Wu know that many doctors recom mend it, and we know that multitudes of women go to the drug stores anil buy it because they are suit* their physician's have no objections, We ar ie a trial just a fair test. T-heie is no possible char.ee ot' ?Vtjury iii".:; the result, be ear s c Mothi.'r't? i-riend is scientific ally coir.po rs .'ed. It ir. sold at $t a bot tle, and should be ur.etl during most, of the period pt gestation j although great j relief ?s;oxpe!?enccd j? used or,ly a short | time before ? hildbirtb. Send for our il- j lust rsi ted book :d>?.r.t Slot her'? Friend. I I Tli? DRADl lill i) REGULATOR COr ' ATLANTA, CIA. SPECIAL KALE OF PI?NOSAHOOBG?NS. 1^ OK Tin?: NKxr nm:rv DAYS THr C. ft REED MUSIC HOUSE Will Md I any of I ii*? following lliuh Grade PIANOS ami ORO l NS td |ir>i>>-H H? low nw CHU ho obtained from the M un ti fart u iors dir? (it : - KN AUK, \V KU IO li, iv Kits & pox?,: rROWN, WM KKhOCK. I ? A K K SIDE lt ECU MOX I). Alse, TilK ? K?WX, BftTKY anti F.lttlKAlVI? A YOTKY ????ANN. I'rospoetivn purchaser;' will timi it to their inmrdst. io call and inspect my Stock or wrilH tor prie?'-. Wo also represent tbe ealing makes Sewing Machines At Hock il ut on Ugo roy. l'.OMpl ctflllL , THF. C. A. RECO MUSK: HOUSE. Presbyterian College, Clinton, s <:. SKt'ON I) TKItM \?'K\m Jun. ._".?, mao. Studeuts tereivwl tUtmylime. Ma trlcnlation. Tuition, Limul and Knout root trom Jan. 't to J II ne fi, 11100, fur only $02.00 Sume, from Jan. 251 to Juno $,"?2.00. Classical, Scientific ard t'ointner ctal cour.CH. For Ofttitloguo or informa lion ol any kind addi*-*-* W. T. M ATT H KW.-, or A K. S PENCE lt. Dec 13. ISiKI 23 C> ?B?TCMT? TR A?0EES-M AR KSi f ADVICE AS TO PATENTABILITY ff*OK?C j r Notice in " Inventive Age " BBBCIPV 1 V Hook "Llow to obtain Patenta" g BIBBHB j r CIiargcB moderate. No fee till patent is secured. 1 f Letters strictly con fid en Uni. Address, j I E. G. SIGGEHS. Patent Lawyer, Washington, 0. C. j MASTER'S SALK. ST VTK OK SOU il ?'\ !:< 1.1 NA, A nm.VIM.r: ' oirxTV. / :/ 'hr CottVt of ('ll ttl HUI kt I'lwtS. Kdtttlinds T. drown Cn, und other", l'Irtintii?H, vs. i<. It-vii.tn Allen, David K. Cooley, UM Mien ?tc Cooley, Keturah W. Allen, t i al., Oolondants. -Keller. BY virtue of an order nf sal? made in tho above stated caso I will oller for salo nt Anderson Court Unisse, S. C., at puMie outcry e.n FalosdHV in January, 1U0O, ( I'uestiav, January - within the le^nl hour- cd sale, tim fid low i j; de scribed properly,* i toni o itt fiori S'titu and in th? (Jon n ty of A nderMi?;i, to wit : All that. Tract or l*iirci-l ol hand, known HS th? M nu ld lu Tract, containing On? Hundred ?Mid w?veiily-twu were., more or los?, bounded i>v l*ttnis of J amii \Vuu>!Ovv, Kat ate i t TIIOIIIHH A Sherard, and ethers. Terms of F-ale-One bali cash, balance on a credit rf twelve montli , with Inter ent trom dav of sale, lo Im secured hy bond omi mortgage, l'urchasor tu have leave to pay nil ( tish. I'orehasvr to pay for papers. WALTER L. MIl.LKR, Master. Di C1?, IS!)!? 2? :: 50 YEARS' t AK t Kl EM CE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anvonn neiidliaj UK ll et ch und description mn? quickly iiseorlnln our opinion freo whether mi Invention ti iiroliiit.ly patent nhlo. Communion, i lotta smelly (-outillent lal. Handbook on I'nteilta Knut free. <)|i|t><>t iiironry fur HCrurmi; imtriil?. I'.it ent S tnken t?iniimh Munn .t Co. rece?v t}'ii'inl niiflrr, without chrnyo, lutho /Ol A luinilsomidv ll' ?strntod wookk. T nrtrest cir eu Int lon of any pricntitio Journal. 'I erins, 1 ? n year: lour months, tl. Sold nyilil newsdealers. MUNN?5Co.3G?Dro2d^.KewYnr,K llranch Olllco, CJj F s-'r.. Washington, I). C. FOR SALE. ABOUT Niuo 11 iim?reil Ams I IN",: LAN- ii In Kork T i vnsldp, le twe.'ti new K-rr\ nod Hutton .? K .?.KS. O. M. CM E NX AU LT, Anderson, S. C. Oct 25, 1899 IS t :7\ <?? COTTON V < be i ii thc hands ;)t every planter who raises Cotton. The book is sent FRKK. Senil name a:ul address !" GERMAN KALI WORKS, i)3 Nassau St., New York. CASEY, MCCULLOUGH, & MARTIN, Attorneys at Law, l?JAVOXfC il; lil? Li Bi. XKllBi lt MOV, S. C. W. G. icGEB, SUIFfCSOi'S DENTIST. O F KI ('li- ron! ?. , over Farmer* . Ml Mo CtlH1ll> RrttlA AN DICKSON, s. C. MONEY TO LOAN ~ ON KA KM I NU LANDS. Easy pay ments. No commissions charged. Bor rowcr paya actual cont ot* perfecting loan. Interest s JUT cent. J NO. It. PALMER A SON, Columbi?, S. C < hit. ll. IS!"!?. Ri tim FOR SALE. FARM, containing-kl ?eros, n milos Southwest from Hie City ol Ander son. All Helen ti (leal ly terraced and in good state ol cultivation. 4-room eot tage, (now,) two tenant houHt-H and big !o^ burn on the place. Price 810.IH) per acre, spot cash. For further particulars call on or address JOHN J. NORRIE, Andorson.S. C. Oct 20, ?SW IS FOR SALE. Mv House and Lot of four acres on O reenvide St. Also, Mills and 80 sores of land ."li miles south of Anderson. For further particulars apply to mo in my ellice or J. L Tribble, Esq A. C. S TRICK LANI). Sept '27. 1S?IJ? 14_ NOTICE. ALL persons aro hereby warned not to hunt, tish, shoot, snare, trap, net, cut timber or otherwise trespass on any lands owmd or controlled by either of the undersigned. Persons disregarding Hus notice will he prosecuted to the full extent of the law. J. P. Led better, P. S. Mahaffey, J. A. Stevenson, H. R. Vandiver, T. J. Dalrymple, J. A. Burgess, W. Thaddeus Hunt, W. K. Sharp, M. D. Ma\s, A. Hunter, J. I). Rabb, .1. T. Gaines, E. P. Earle. James A. Gantt. Deo ti, IS'lu 24 4* NOTICE. BY virtue of authority vested in me by the Will of W C. Brown, de eoasoit, I will sell to tho highest bidder at Anderson C. H., 8. O , on Monday, the first day ol J>tntia<y. l!i(K), a Tract ci Land lying on Togalo River, in Fork '1 ownship, containing fourteen acres, more or ?OHS. Terms-Cash. Purchaser to pay for papers and stamps. ANNA L. BYRD, Ex'x. Dec <!, US!?!> 24_4_ THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF ANDERSON. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. J. H. Fowler Fu.d Joseph N. Brown, as Assignee of J. H Fowler, Plalntill's, against J L. Saviors, Hi-If iiilain.- Summons for Belief-Complaint not Served. To tho Defendant, J. L Say lon : YOU arc hareby summoned and required to an* awcr the Complaint lu this action, which I? fihd in Ita? office of tho Clerk of tho Court of Common Pleas for 6aid County, and to Bervo a copy ol' your answer io I he said Complaint on the subscriber al hi* office, at Anderson C. H., S.e., within twenty days after thu Hervicu hereof, ex clm-ivo of the day ol such service; amt If you fail tu answer I lie Complaint within lite time aforesaid, the {Maintins in tin.? action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the < oDMiJaint. J05KPU N. BROWN, Plaint ins' Anona v. Auderson, S. C. Deren.her l.' i li, A I?, lsn.i [SKAL] JOHN C. kV ATKINS, C. C. C r. To th? befendanl, J L. Saylors : Take notice that the Complaint in this action together with I hu Summons, ol' which ibo fore goo.g ls a copy, was tiled in tho office of the Clerk of the Couit ai Anderson,in the C6unty and State nf resaid, on the I Uh day of December, IS'j'J, and that iii? ol'Jccl ol' the action is to foi ic ose a mort KHK?; ex? culed hy you to J, S. Fowler on one hun dred acr. soi La j J, william in Anderson County, in said Mai? dated Docemher 14th, 1889. JOSEPH S. BROWN, Plaintiffs* Attorney, Anderson, ?. C. December 15, lsuu '?a ti CHARLESTON AND WESTERN CAROLINA RAILWAY AUGUSTA .1 NO ASH EV1LLK S HO H 1' LIN K lu effect Dec. 1st, 1S99. LY Augusta. 9 40 am ArGreenwood. 1160 am Ar Anderson. Ar Laurens. 1 20 pm Ar Greenville. 3 00 pm Ar (?lena -pringa. 4 05 pm Ar Spartanhurg. 3 10 pm Ar Saluda. ? . 33 pm Ar Hendereouvllle. 0 03 pm Ar Asheville.I 7 00 pm Lv Asheville. ? .>* ~:I? 1 40 pm C 10 pm a 3 5 ara 10 15 am 0 00 arv UT -parianijurg.... I,v Glenn Springs. Lv G reen vino. Lv Laurens. 1.7 Anderson., L.v Greenwood. Ar Augusta. [JV Calhoun Falls.. Kr Raleigh. Ar Norfolk. \r Petersburg. \ r Richmond. 11 45 am 10 00 am 12 01 am 1 37 pm 3 40 pm 4 00 pin 7 00 pm G 33 ato 2 87 pm i. 5 10 pm ll TS arta 4 44 pm .2 16 am 7 30 a >u 6 00 am 8 15 sm L.V Augusta. 1. 1 85 pm tr Ah?ndalo. . S 33 pm tr Fairfax.1. 8 47 pm lr Yemaaseo.' 1" OS am 4 50 pm 1 r Roau fo rt.' : 1 15 am ' 5 5) pm Vr Port Royal.-.! ll SO am 0 0> ria lavan nab.I. i 7 00 pm .V Port Royal.; iou pin 5 O san .v Beaufort. I If? pm RSOau ,v Ycmasaeo.' -30pm fi so am .v Fairfax.!. 7 58 sm ,v Allendale... 8'?7 am lr A iguala.'. 1003am Closo connection at Calhoun Falls .'or Athens 11 tantnu.nl all p .( ita on .S. A. t.. ...i m eoimrtcti ?r al Vugutta for charleston .-wannah and ntl polnl I ?josi COUII lion? t: Greenwood for all polnfaois . ?. !,,.>.11 C. v I Italtway, and at Spartaubutg rith - ot.tb? n Railway. For n*iy infirmai lon relative to tickets ratoa ! heitule, etc., address W. J. CRAIG, Gen. I'^ss. Agent,August.-.,Ga". !:. M. t:?*it> Sc!. A cont. T. M. Emerson .Trame Manager.