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[1 ^ Iff! ning your H fi fingers through it? |1 p ^3 Does it seem dry and H II *i Give your hair a ^ f I chance. Feed it. t 5.3 The roots are not L If dead; they are weak t S |] because they are ft ? >- iff starved?that's all., f] n n a i r y ^ a iF-H&ir I visor lfe/J Y?u don't want fl MS; f| your hair to die use If [a Ayer's Hair Vigor! II once a day. It makes I gi the hair grow, stops fi ^ ri *a^in& and cures dan- V if It always J restores Cj ?:' IJ color to gray or faded fl E tl hair; it never fails. IJ I a $1.00 e bottle. All druggists.* Vf ?p?'; If "One bottle of Ayer *3 Hair Vigor pi ??r > ? ? 1 stopped my hair from falling out, E I PI ana started it to grow again nicely." Iff 5?i - f 1 Julius Witt, /# fjk March 28,1899. Canova, S. Dak, f A . [j "Arer's Hair Vigor completely B " S W *** ? me from dandruff, with whicn IV \\ I was greatly afflicted. The growth of *1 ft 1 my hair since its use has been some- A1 ISe-' ?-1 thing wonderful." r S % 1 Lena G. Grkkkx, WL1 Bp II April 13,1899. NewYork,N.Y. JM H If you do not obtain all the benefits fa ' E 3 you expected from the use of the Hair i * '- > la Vigor, write the Doctor about It. f |.f LUU JAW MYSTERIES. / it is lKtficatt to Explais How Tbey Begia or E?L ^ "A iog jam is one of the most formid able problems we have to encounter in our line of business," said a Mississippi lumberman. 4,We had several bis ones on the Pascagoula and its tributaries this year and a tremendous j|y jam some distance above Moss Point H was dynamited only last week, gg.- "How they bdfcin is difficult to ex^ plain: A Jew dozen logs will become - Wedged for an instant in a narrow E- f?art of a stream and in less time than | it takes me to tell it hundreds of others will come swooping down and '. pack themselves in an intricate, closely knit span, reaching from bank to bank, and almost as solid as a rock. The force they exert is something marvelV loos. During a recent jam in my sect tion I saw a lot of logs plunge under | the edge of tie blockade, and a few - seconds later they pushed, their way up through the very middle of the pack, ' tossing timbers as big around as a man's waist into the air like 30 many j|?; toothpicks. The noise they made as Ell they drove through the mass was sim !eafening. It sounded as if the earth was being torn up by its iatioii^ When the logs passed 1 the Jam they were evidently ? in sneh a way as to still fur* )bstruct the imprisoned stream, rere hurried upward with all the ttibie energy of millions of gal>f rushing water. b breaking of a jam is & very h operation and seems to be jr a matter of Instinct with "old ien. ' The lines and angles of < in such a blockade are so com?d that the best engineer in the is apt to go wrong in indicating oper point of attack. A veteran rman, on the contrary, will ofke a long look at the mass and oint out the 'key log/ The key the timber on which the strain s, and when it Is blown out or >ut, the pack, in almost every ln, will break up of itself. I had I fellow In my employ a few ago who could locate a key log , imes out of ten. He couldn't i r write, knew nothing about en- ] Ing and was unable to eipiain 1 b arrived at his conclusions. He i ; 'came kinder nach'ruL'" j Wealth Is as Essential. 1 rave and Eaton squares are in ^ ithern portion of the west end ] idoa, and both are very hand- ( nd extensive. The value of prop- | ere, as in the districts just men- 1 is literally prodigious. Only the 1 people can afTord to dwell In 1 uarters and only the richest peo- i Many persons of title and long ; -who have not money enough * in* their Anopsrr&l homes, rent them to tenants with fatter purees than II* their own. Thus decade by decade (London society is losing its old repute if or excluslveness, and the claims of ' {money are superseding those of birth, i: . jMany of the oldest English families, ( Indeed, have now retired altogether ( jfrom active participation in social af. jfairs. Parvenus and upstarts hobnob 1 ' Jtrith the rich nobility, and not seldom Intermarry with them as well. Ladies Can Wear Shoes | "One size smaller after using Allen's FootEase, a powder for the feet. It mates tight 1 or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, i i sweating, aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. At all druggists and shoe stores, 25c. Trial package FREE by mail. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. m Laying Out a Celebration. "Freddy. teU pa what you want for your Bgsjg birthday.** 1 "Oh, pa, I want a tent in th' back yard, an" a , ST?n. an' a grea' big cigar store Injun.''?Mlnnectpolls Journal. i The Best Prescription for Chills and Fever is a bottle of Grovk's Tasteless ' - Chill Tonic. It is simply iron and quinine In 1 a tasteless form. No cure?no pay. Price 50c. ] ^ i Willing to Make the Risk. ] "I have seen it stated that any girl who marries a man under twenty-five years of age is taking big chances," ^ he casually remarked. "I do so love to gamble," she an- ^ swered enthusiastically. 0 Ma in the Sort* than ? otbar bnadt tumWd ? ftrs^^yete.** ? ^ *to 1 hT"H ITf-^--11^-- ? *??.. ***" ,W*V w' '* || r>r"T *. .' - DEMOCRATIC Adopted By Nat Assembled In Following are the essential features of the Democratic platform as agreed upon by the committee on resolutions and adopted at the Kansas City convention: "We, the representatives of the Democratic party of the United States, assembled in national convention on the anniversary of the declaration of independence, do reaffirm our faith in tliat immortal proclamation ot tnc inalienable rights of man and our allegiance to the constitution framed iu harmony therewith by the fathers of the republic. We declare again that all governments instituted among men derive their just powers from the consent of the governed; that any government not based upon the consent of the governed is a tyranny; and that to impose upon any people a government of force is to substitute the methods of imperialism for those of a republic. We hold that the constitution follows the flag and denounce the doctrine that an executive or congress deriving their existence and their powers from the constitution can exercise lawful authority beyond it, or in violation of it. * We assert that 110 notion can long endure half republic and half empire, and we warn the American people th?t imperialism abroad will lead quickly and inevitably to despotism at home. Believing in these principles, we denounce the Porto Rico law, enacted by a Republican congress against the protest and opposition of the Democratic minority, as a bold and open violation of the nation's organic law and a flagrant breach of good faith. "We demand the prompt anjl houest fulfillment of our pledges to the Cuban people and the world that the United States has no disposition nor intention to exercise sovereignty, jurisdiction or control over the island of Cuba, except for its pacification. "We condemn and denounce the Philippines policy of the present administration. It has involved the republic unnecessarily in war, sacrificed the lives of many of onr noblest sons and placed the United States, previously known and applauded throughout the world as the champion of freedom, in the false and un-American position of crushing, with military force, the efforts of our former allies to achieve liberty and self government. THE PARAMOUNT ISSUE. "We are not opposed to territorial expansion when it takes in desirable territory which can be erected into states in the union and whose people .are willing and fit to become American citizens. We favor trade expansion by every peaceful and legitimate means, bnt we are unalterably opposed to the seizing or purchasing of dis-' taut islands to be governed outside the constitution and whose people can never become citizens. The importance of other questions now pending : before the American people is in no 1 wise diminished and the Democratic 1 party takes no backward step from its j position on them, but the burning 36- . sue of imperialism, growing out of the ; Spanish war, involves the very exist- , ence of the republic and the destruction of our free institutions. We re- 1 gard it as the paramount issue of the < campaign. "We insist on the strict maintenance rkt tho l\fnnrr>ft flnet.rine JinH in Jill its integrity, both in letter and in spirit. oppose large standing army. j "We oppose militarism. It means i conquest abroad and intimidation at 1 home. ] warfare on trusts. i "Private monopolies are indefensi- 1 ble and intolerable. They destroy j competition, control the price of all ( materials and of the finished product, 1 thus robbing both producer aud con- i sumer. They lessen the employment < of labor and arbitrarily fix the terms and conditions thereof and deprive t individual energy and small capital of j their opportunity for betterment. t "We pledge the Democratic party ( to an unceasing warfare, in nation, t state and city, against private monop- g olies in any form. Existing laws i against trusts must be enforced and t more stringent ones must be enacted, j "The failure of the present Repub- 1 lican administration, with an absolute i control of all the branches of the na- t tional government, to enact any legis- ^ lation designed to prevent or even cur- j tail the absorbing power of trusts and t illegal combines, or to enforce the s anti-trust laws already on the statute j books, prove the insincerity of the high-sounding phrases of the Repnbli- i can platform. Corporations should be \ protected in all their rights and their j legitimate interests should be respect- I 5d, but any attempt by corpora^ons r to interfere with the public affairs of 1 the people, or to control the sovereign- t ty which creates them, should be for- g i i i i i. *ii Diaaen unaer sucn penalties as wiu l nake such attempts impossible. c "We condemn the Dingley tariff law ] is a trust-breeding measure skillfully t JONES RE-ELECTED CHAIRMAN. The National Democratic Committee Ef- p feet* Organization The national committee of the Democratic party met at the Kansas City 8 Club after the adjournment of the ^ convention and organized. Senator j a Jones, who was not a member of the I ? committee, remained outside until the 1 w preliminaries were over. Thomas Tag- j ^ gart, of Indiana, who had been men-1 p tiened as a possible chairman, nomi-|tj oated Senator Jones for re-election, 1 ^ ind he received the unanimous vote. RUSSIA IS WILLING rhat Japan Be Given a Free Hand In G the Celestial Empire. The Russian government announces that it will give Japan a free hand to t< apply military force in China. The G terms of this consent are summarized t< in a dispatch from St. Petersburg, nn- t< 3er date of July 6th. In reply to an t! inquiry from the Japauese cabinet the ii Russian government declared on May w 27th that it left the Japanese govern- h m?it full liberty of military action. ti llarona'c Vow (iinrtpr The new charter of the city of ! Tavaria has gone into effect. The j c owers of the recently elected officials re thereby greatly increased. The fficials have power to grant franchises s ud concessions. g Horses For the Sixth Infantry. ? The transport Lenox has sailed from 'ortland, Ore., for Manila via ^ fagasaki with 500 horses and mnles or tbe Sixth infantry. It is said that t I ths situation demands it the ItefiQS ti 'IU iftSg htt* Uva StcjR* at > s : PL ATFORM ional Convention i Kansas City. j devised to give the few favors which ; they do not desire and place upon the | mauy bnrdenfes which they should not, bear. FREE COINAGE OF SILVER, i , We affirm and endorse the priuCij pies of the national Democratic pU^ I P 1 . 1 ? /-, ? 4 AA A * ; lorin auoptea ia Liiicago in ioyu, ana we reiterate the demand of that platform for an American financial system, made by Americau people for themselves, which shall restore and main" tain a bimetallic price level and as part of such system the restoration of the free and unlimited coinage of silver and gold at the present legal ratio of 16 to 1, without waiting for the aid or consent of any other nation. "We deuounce the currency bill enacted in the last session of congress as a step forward in the Republican policy, which aims to. discredit the sovereign right of the national government to issue all money, whether coin or paper, and to bestow upon national banks the power to issue and control the volume of paper money for their own benefit. We are opposed to this private corporation paper circulated as money, but without legal tender qualities, and demand the retirement of the national bank notes as fast as government paper or silver certificates can be substituted for them. "We favor au amendment to the federal constitution providing for the election of United States senators by direct vote of the people, and we favor direct legislation wherever practicable. "We are opposed to government by injunction. We denounce the black list and favor arbitration as a means of settling disputes between corporations and their employees. "In the interest of American labor and the uplifting of the workingman as the cornerstone of the prosperity of our country, we recommeDd that congress create a department of labor. "We are proud of the courage and fidelity of the Americau soldiers and sailors in all our wars; we favor liberal pensions to tbem and their dependents, and we reiterate the position taken in the Chicago platform in 1696, that the fact of enlistment and service i shall be deemed conclusive evidence against disease and disability before enlistment. "We favor the immediate construction, ownership and control of the Nicaragua canal by the United States, and we denounce the insincerity of the plank in the national republican plat- ! form for an isthmian canal,-in the face ( of the failure of the Republican majority to pass the bill pending in con- . gress. We condemn the Hay-Paunce- , fote treaty as a surrender of American rights and interests not to be tolerated ^ by the American people. " , "We denounce th6 failure of the Republican party to carry out its pledges, to grant statehoods to the ter- ^ ritories of Arizona, New Meiico and ^ Oklahoma, and we promise the people < of those territories immediate state- ^ tiood and home rule during their con- j dition as territories, and we favor j home rule and territorial form of government for Alaska and Porto Rico. I "We favor the continuance and strict enforcement of the Chinese ex- 1 elusion law and its application to the ?<*me classes of all Asiatic races. SYMPATHY FOR BOERS. I "Believing in the principles of self- J government and rejecting, as did our forefathers, the claim of monarchy, we new with indignation the purpose of i England-to overwhelm with force the * South African republics. Speaking, as * tve do, for the entire American nation, r jxcept its Republican office holders, c md for all free men everywhere, we ? jxtend our sympathies to the heroio J burghers in their unequal struggle to * naintain their liberty and independ- 5 snce. c "We denounce the lavish appropri- c itions of recent Republican con- * presses, which have kept taxes high * md which threaten the perpetuation >f oppressive war levies. We oppose he accumulation ef a surplus to be ^ iquandered in such barefaced frauds ipon the tax payers as the shipping * mbsidy bill, which, under the false Q jrctence of prospering American ship- E milding would put unearned millions T nto the pockets of favorite contribuors to the Republican campaign fund. i-Ve favor the reduction and speedy re)eal of the war taxes and a return to he time-honored Democratic policy of I itrict economy in governmental ex- ^ )enditures. "Beliving that our most cherished * nstitutions are in great peril, that the ^ 'ery existence of our constitutional re- * >ublic is at stake and the decision to I >e rendered will determine whether or lot our children are to enjoy those ilessed privileges of free government rhich have made the United States r ;reat, prosperous and honored,we ear- ^ lestly ask for the foregoing declaration C principles, the hearty support of the IU/M>fv Inninn nannla TDfTQr^iOflO r*f 1UC1 IVVAlig I^W^/AV) AVQ(**v**vww V4 previous party affiliations." O KILLlXtf NATIVE CHRISTIANS. tl :nthle?s Thirst For Blood Spreading In j| Chinese Provinces. p Details of further horrors in Pekin 0 re gathered by correspondents at n hanghai from Chinese sources, espoially of the slaughter in the Chinese ]y ud Tartar city of thousands of native b hristians, so that the capital reeks j, ith carnage. The ruthless thirst for c] lood is spreading in all the northern ^ rovinces and wherever there are na- 2 ve Christians the scenes enacted in le capital are reproduced in miniaire. EMPEROK OFFERS REWARDS. eraan Kuler Will Pay For Safe Delivery of Foreigner*. Emperor William of Germany has :kl<icrnr?V>orl to tha r?nminftndAr of the -,v6* ? ~ rerman squadron in Chinese waters, ) the governor general of Shan Tnng, ) the viceroys and others, offering a Donsand teals to anyone accomplishlg the deliverance of any nationality hatever now shut np in Pckin who is anded over, to any German magis ate. FRIGHTFUL ATROCITIES. Ihlnese Bear Aloft Heads of Mutilated Victims On Spear Heads. Messengers, barely escaping the word of Prince Tuan and his boxers, ;ives details of frightful atrocities nd brutal murders hourly occurring n the Chinese capital?Pekin. A long procession passes by with rith heads victims raised oil spear teads while the city's populace rends he air with ehouts of approval. Interfttional farces grft itlU pa*grl?9t to BIG STRIKE RESUMED St. Louis Street Car Mon Say the Transit Company Has Broken Their Agreement. The strike against the St; Louis Transit Company by its former employees, which was declared off July was ordered Renewed at a meeting of the street railway men's union at the West End Coliseum Monday; Tiiesday niorning at 8 o'clock was the time fixed for the retiewat of the boycott on all the coinpauy's lines. When the strike was settled on July 2d there were some mntterings of discontent among the men over the terms of settlement, and since that time dissatisfaction has grown daily. (Charges were made that the company had failed to keep the agreement of July 2d4 and one or more instances were Cited tending to prove that there had been a breach of faith. Meetings were held at several places in the course of the week* and com5mittees were appointed to procure proof of infidelity on the part of the company. At a meeting of the executive committee of the railway men's union held on Saturday, a batch of affidavits were produced to the effect that new men have been employed by the company since July 2d in Violation of the terms of agreement. After a session lasting several hours, the executive committee determined to can a rnnss meeting of the street railway men for Monday morning, aud to recommend that the strike be declared on again. The Central Trades and Labor Union met later and indorsed the action of the executive committee. The representatives of the company, through President Whitaker,addressed a letter to the men denying that the company had intentionally violated the agreement of July 2d, and declaring its intention to live up to* every condition of the agreement, both in letter aud in spirit. Fred W. Lehmann', attorney for the company, appeared at the meeting and offered lo submit the question as to whether the company had broken faith, to Joseph W. Folk, counsel for the men, and bound the company to abide by Mr. Folk's judgment in the premises. The proposition was ignored, and by a unanimous vote the strike was renewed. A number of the exeecutive comitlee said that this was the second time the company had broken faith. CONSUL HO YOW TALKS. Prominent Clilnnirtnn at San Francisco Tells How Present War Started. Chinese Consul General Ho Yow, at 3an Francisco, rccognizt-d as authority 3n Chinese matters, says: "The origin of the whole trouble is interference with our religion in Chiua. [ don't question the worthy intentions pf the missionaries who have gone there, but they have made * the mis:ake of trying to convert a people who ire not educated as a race even to the point of religious toleration. "Good missionaries merely waste :heir energies and incense the people. Studying the history of the world, we ind that at least every great war has peen brought on by differences in reigion. There is another cause for the present uprising aside from the purely eligions work of missionaries in proselyting China to their faith. "It has so happened in China that vhenever a missionary has been inured or killed in the country, the lation which he represented has made he tragedy the occasion for asking for racts of lands from the Chinese government. "In my opinion, the powers would leed an army of about 250,000 ^nen to ;ubdue this one northern province by orce. Should there be a general upising throughout China, before they :ould do any sort of policing for that 'reat territory with its 400,000,000 people, or bring them under subjecion, they would require not less than .,000,000 soldiers, and many millions >f dollars would be wasted and millions >f lives be lost before the entire counry could be brought under subjugaion/' Powers Arraigned First, The case against Caleb Powers was he first called at Georgetown, Ky., klonday. The prosecution asked for >nd was granted an order on the jailer f Franklin county to bring in as wittesses suspects Culton and Noakes. vho are in jail at Frankfort. Big Mortgage Recorded. Attorneys for the Jekyl Island Club )laoed on record at Brunswick, Ga., Friday a mortgage for $200,000 to reire an old mortgage and 6ecure money o make farther improvements at Je- 1 :yl. The mortgage was from the Jekyl sland Clnb to the Hudson Trust Com>any of New York. War Insurance Kates Doubled. A London dispatch says: The war ( isks at the Lloyds are double the { isual rates for vessels bound for j /hina. j BOERS CONTINUE ACTIYE. 3 ? evere Fighting Has Been Oolnf On, But ^ Without Material Results. 1 As Lord Robert's dispatches reveal, < tie Boers are unusually active, both a the Orange Colony and the so-called acified western Transvaal, but withut producing any serious impression 1 pen the British arms. < Passengers arriving at Lourenzo t [arques on July 9th from Middel- < urg, say there has been severe fight- i ig between the latter place and Ma- 1 badodorp, in which the Bosrs were 3 efoated and demoralized. I Pjirkpr P vp i i uinvi in v . NONE PURER, NONE BETTER. ? ASK FORIT AT ALL DISPENSARIES I ' I * Wherever inflammation exists* there you may use with perfect safety Mitchell's EyeSalve although the Salve is chiefly feC* ommended for diseases of the eye; Price 25 cents. All druggists. HALL & RUCKEL, New York. 1848. London. A HOT WEATHER DANGER Death Lurks Bcblad Ice Cream* Soft Drioka And Summer Luxuries. BeWnre of ice cream and soft driiiks, fruits and ices, for behind them lurk death! More than twice as many persons died last year from inability to curb their appetite for these summer luxuries than were carried td their graves froni dread consumption and fevers (soldiers included). A clipping bureau drnl a medical journal's statement tell a tale of dire disaster from these evils, Well they may be called. While consumption killed forty in one state, nearly one hundred died from J eating too much ice cream, in Chicago and vicinity, malaria proved fatal to j thirty, while ninety persons were mur- j dored by swallowing peach and cherry stones. Itl the state of New Jersey ten died front heart disease, while Ice cold drinks killed twice that number. A matt in Canton, O., died frotn eating cherries and ice cream at the same time, the acid fermenting with cream. In Oshkosb, Wis., a young woman attended a dance, and after eating eighteen plates of ice cream fell dead. Her name was Mary Blake. But ravenous nppetites for cold stuff on a hot day is not all the evil there is to soft drinks. A number of well-known red drinks nre known to contain poisonous acids. The sort drink naoit is more iatai to young women than to the men. This is attributed to feminine weakness and the manner in which they consume their drinks, namely, through a straw. A -well-known doctor said to a NewYork Journal correspondent: "I know of several girls who have died from sipping ices through a straw. This is the reason: In sucking the ices up the cold substance strikes the palate of the mouth and cools the head. Then when the young women walk in the sun and exert themselves the cold reacts, giving them a severe headache, which is later followed by a fever, and in some cases death has resulted." The doctor says men are not so easily affected. Fruit Ices are also said to be very unhealthful. He Wag Too Good for the " Tecs." A few weeks ago two.detectives, one from London and the other a Glasgow man, were discussing their professional experiences in one of the streets in Glasgow. An argument ensued on the respective abilities of English and Scottish thieves, and the smart one from London, on their parting at a street corner, said that if the London thieves, especially pickpockets, were as harmless as the Scottish ones, they LA olno CO/1 Anf nuuiu ov/uu uu vivuicu vuv( Taking this as an aspersion cast on the astuteness of the Scottish police as well, the Glasgow detective was nettled, and thirsted for revenge. Looking round, he espied a little fellow who had been dogging them, and who j was known as an expert pickpocket i Crossing the street he addressed the : boy, and pointing to the retreating; figure of the English detective, he ask-; ed if he would know him again. "Aye,' replied the boy. "What aboot' it?" "I want you to lift his ticker. He I says no one in Glasgow can relieve, him of it." "Ah. it's a'richt?see ony green?' "Honor bright, Tommy! I'll give you half a crown when you deliver up the watch to me." "Ye will; an' what else?" "Nothing else." "Let's see, then. I'm to lift the ticker, an' you're to pay half a crown fort on the spot?" "Yes, that's it." "An' wad ye ken It If ye seen It? "I would among a thousand." "Is that it, then?" and the boy, dlv- j Ing into his trousers pocket, displayed the identical watch, and explained i that he had secured it "while the gent j was chaffin' aboot the prigs." A Doctor's Advice Free! About Tetterine. Dr. M. L. Fielder Eclectic P. 0., Elmore Co., Ala.) ;ays: "I know it to be a radical cure! or tetter, salt rheum, eczema and all tindred diseases of the skin and scalp. [ never prescribe anything else in all skin troubles." Send 50c. in stamps or a box of it, postpaid, to the manlfacturer, J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, 3ra., if your druggist doesn't keep it. Blf City Withoat Lawyers. The Sun, a weekly published in Melbourne, Australia, says that the people >f that city are largely dispensing with he services of courts and lawyers as rostly luxuries that honest people can rery well do without. After the boom >urst in 1938 the sunny Southern city it the Antipodes found that money was >retty scarce and hard to get hold of. \.s a consequence, the people held on o every penny they could get like grim leath. Lawyers' charges there, as here, | vere high. By a sort of common conent men began to try to get along vithout lawyers, with so much sucess that it is now reported that many if the courts are without a single case in their calendars, that most of the udges are idle, and that all but a few f the lawyers have had to seek other ccupations. What a blissful experence for honest people, to be sure.? >an Francisco Wave. The Worser Half. Mrs. Fourandred?We need some ipw rugs. Mr. Fourundred.?Carpets would be ^ jore comfortable. ^ Mrs. Fourundred,?Rugs are more & tylish. You men are such animals! il J ways talking about comfort!?New ^ 'ork Weekly. ^ >4 * ' Where DoHe Are Made. Dolls are as ancient as the human face. None can dispute the assertion that Eve had a doll before she had Cain. The dolls of the Greek and Roman children were buried with them. The native children In the heart of Africa and the greasy Eskimo baby iii the north of Greenland have dolls of which they are just as proud as our children are of theirs. Most of the dolls for civilized children come from Coburg and Sonneburg, towns of Thuringia. Just now England is belug stocked with dolls dressed In fc.li:i M, U"[irwuilllg I/WUSj mitin-uci, Baden-Powell and Rhodes. They are turned out by the million, at prices ranging from nineteen cents to $11 a dozen. The doll is a simple toy, but the work seeded for its completion is complicated. Take a wax doll, its trunk is kiade of cheap shirting, stuffed with sawdust Or excelsior* Its legs, arms and hands are made of wood or papiermache, the head having a thin wax covering; a coarse shirt completes.it. Certain workmen cut the arms and legs out of wood or mold them of papiermache; Others arrange the limbs in flat wooden boxes, which are put in the sun or near a stove to dry; others dip the arms and legs In a basin of rrd dye to give them a flesh-like appearance; others sew, cover and stuff the doll; others paint the eyebrows, lips and hair, unless mohair is glued on. The making of glass eyes and fine doll ivigs Is an art in Itself, and the dressing of dolls Is an extensive industry. All the parts are put together by a small manufacturer to whom the workmen engaged In making them carry the product of their weekly toil.?New York Press. Usrmlpcf. Weary Willy?Go right in! Dere's Ho danger! Frayed Fa gin?No? Weary Willy?Ov course not! Didn't yer jes' hear her call de dog "Percy?'' ?Puck. Japan Anxious. Japan has become hlarmed over the emigration of many of her residents to this country. It is stated that they are lured here by misrepresentation and then turned adrift. This is like the misrepresentation which delude people into believing that any other medicine is equal to Hostetter's Stomach Bitters for stomach disorders. In the Bitters lies safety and surety. It is worth its weight in gold in all cases of indigestion, constipation, dyspepsia, malaria, ferer and ague. Drawing the Line. "I suppose you feel sure of your ground In tho coming campaign?" "I should say so, ' answered Senator Sorghum. "I think I may say without i>oastlng that I have enough laid by to hold my own without mortgaging any real estate."?Washington Star. To Cure n Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Qcixine Tablets. All druggists refttud the money 11 It falls to cure. E. W. lihovb's signature is on each box. -3c. No Longer Friends. I Toes?You and Mar used to be very chummy, but you don't speak at all now, do yout Jess?No. Just before Easter we foolishly agreed that we would candidly criticise each other's gowns and hats when we got them. Don't drink too much water when cycling. Adams' Pepsin Tutti Frutti is an excellent substitute. Internal Evidence. "I wish I knew what woman wrote this book." "How do you know that a woman wrote it at all?" ^ "Its style is so Lideonsly masculine." Carter's Ink Is Used by the greatest railway systems of the United States. They would not use it if it wasn't the best. Force of Habit. "How much did you pay for that horse?" asked the Ice maa. "Seventy-flve dollars a front foot." answered the real estate man.?Indianapolis Press. Putnam Fadeless Dtxs do not spot, streak or give yoor goods an nnevenly dyed appearance, Bold by all druggists. His Luck. She?"Two weeks seem such u sbort vacation." He?"That depends on where you spend it. I struck a place where it seemed long. ?Puck. Conductor 15. D. Loomis, Detroit, Mich., says: "The effect of Hall's Catarrh Cure is wonderful." Write him about it. Sold by Druggists, 75<f Plso's Cure is the best medicine wo ever used for all affections of throat and lungs.?W*. O. EndsLet, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the guins, reduces Inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. Elusive. Jack?"Well, whatever the summer girl may Ut\ laero its uuv miuj; ouu u> uut. Will?"What's that?" Jack?"She Is not contagious." Will?"How do you mean?" Jack?"You can't catch her."?Detroit Free Press. surely, leaving your blood ] lively, and your liver and kii not satisfied get your mone To any needy mortal suffering from bo\ Sterling Remedy Compa A French Ball A newly appointed * Tench Mayor i egan bis regime D7 posting tills no- |' Ice: "On the feast of our patron ] lint the Are brigade will be reviewed j i the afternoon If it rains in the mornig, and In the morning if it rains in j je afternoon.** The ' Pinkhatn' ncijfuru Is a proud and peerless record* It Is a record of cur of constant con" quest over obstinate Ills of women; Ills that deal out despair; suffering ] that many women think | Is woman's natural heH- j tage; disorders and dls- placements that drive out \ hope? I cures these troubles of j ! women, and robs menj struation of its terrors* No woman need be with- 4 \ nut the safest and surest . i advice> for Mrs# Pinkham j ' counsels women free of i charge Her address is j Lynn, MssGb I * Can any woman afford \ to ignore the medicine and the advice that has cured a million women 9 Contractors'555 ^.bu lders'^ f amd?iviill supplies. , Castings. Steel Beams, Columns and Channel Bolts. Rods. Weights, Tanks. Towers. <io. Hteol Wire and Manila Rope, Hoisting Engines 2 and Pumps, Jacks, Lerrlcks, Crabs, Chain and Hop" Hoists. ' 8 ry Cast Every Day. Make Quick Delivery. LOMBARD IRON WORKS J SUPPLY GO. , AUGUSTA, GA. MMIKIIMMIIIMMIMOMI I | FREEj | H Oar .60 page | SHOT$ ! J! illustrated cata-| FACTORY LOADED SI i I loime. ( > the winning combination < | J | the trap. AH dealers sel! i: o?rf:i Winchester repea I | " * ,r"fc O 180 WIJ?CK*STS* Ave., N t O MMIMIIIMWIIMMIWIO ** bam AI AH aha j 2 Satisf; is unusual with " 2 smokers," but it h day experience of 1 <? sands of men who 1 | 2 Old Virgin! 2 during the last thi they are just as g better than when th< 9 Three hundred million Old Vi 2 year. Ask your own deali I LONGr.WINI ?*' t r- ? Every spring hve in, to get rid c ?5^ collected in the / ^1| house your soul Ii ||?: up during the wi filth, which' should day to day, but w; cleaning inside* ] W^MIlIl) ^ y?ur kidneys are ^mJIIJI/lj you don't clean W/l^Mjiii f youll be in bad Wm! I i everybody eke ^ DON'T USE body inside, but s positive and fora work while you J ^ \ \ collected in your ^ drive it off softly, ; pure and nourishing, your stomai ineys healthy and active. Try a y back?but youH see how the '< 1ADE EASY B NDY CATHARTIC JTUiHUS vcl troubles and too poor to boy CASCARETS ay, Chicago or New York, mentioning advertise: AGENTS WANTED ID For Cram'* Magnificent Twentieth Century V Map of United State* and World. Largest j tnd moot beautiful Map publication ever i printed on one sheet. It shows all the recent j hanges. Price low. Esc;uslve territory. Bio Pkofit to Salbsxkx. Also tho finest line of beautiful, quick selling Charts. Statb Map3 iiul Family Bibles ever issued. Write for terms _ md cl.cuiars showing what our salosmen are | lotng. licporxs Pubush'MO Co., Atlanta, Ga. ' r ? Malsby & Company, 39 S. Broad St., Atlanta. G*. Engines and Boilers Steam Water Heaters, Steam Panape mad Penbertby Injectors, Manufacturers and Dealers ta SAW MI?j?IS, Corn Stills, Feed Mills, Gotten Gin Machinery and Grain Separators. SOLID and INSERTED Saws. Saw Teeth and Cocks. Knight's Patent Dogs, Blrdsall Saw Hill and Engine Repairs. Governors, Grata Bars and a foil line of M01 Supplies. Pries md quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue 1 CC uy IUCUUUU1UI IUIO MEDICA# DEPARTMENT. Tolane University of Louisiana. Its advantages for practical instruction, both n ample laboratories and abundant hospital natenals are unequalled. Free access given te be great Charity Hospital with 900 beds and 0,000 patients annually. Special Instruction la tfveu daily at the bedside of the sick. The next esslon begins November 1st, 1900. For catalogue uid information, address Pbot. S. E. Chaille, ?I. D? Dean, P. O. Drawer 261, New Orleans, La. rnimm _ SM County. 900 to Charleston, 1,139 in Mssaphis. One agent sella 50 in one week, 94.00 to 910.00 per day caret n answering state your experience. If any. ' J. L. NICHOLS & eo./ Ho.y 13-924 Austell Building, Atlanta. Gw ( on Jfc stowed ran *1 ^PpwmmMIOWIOI I M xwiuaAarSmSurtwa. nmmttmtiim bhmmI or kr ell; treeowe ? * gl TRfflS BOTTLB _ntl||_ 831 AfCh Slrwl. frtMTI SOUTHERN DENIAL COLLEGE f DENTAL DEPARTMENT t? Ltlanta College of Physicians and Sorgeesie Oldest College ix State. Fourteenth Anual Session opens Oct. 2: closes April 30th. /~.jf 'hose contemplating the study of Dentistry hould writ? for catalogue. Address 8. W. FOSTER, Dean. - 6*3*63 Inman Building, Atlauta, Ga. leatioa this IMMIMMIIIIIIIMmilt ZSTER Winohostor lUNS ! I Factory loaded y^ Vf - < shotgun shells, ? v. a) WTGUH SHELLS] j ?N?W RIVAL? \ ':$M in the field or n. ( i ?LEADER,wand I Itken. . J ; " REPEATER." .TIN6ARMS to Haycc, Comc. ] i their superiority. . > -g M iction S . "'5' ' Five-Cent cigar is been the every- J lundreds of thou MB have smoked 9 a Cheroots J . rty years, because ? ood now?in fact,? n7/?f/? ifct ma/l^ B ' w J tf Vi v uitfi iumvivi ^ rginii Cheroots smoked tkxs ? sr. Price, 3 for 5 cents. e )?D" AXLE! / W? f. 7 Wheel does not b*Y# /./\W^/to be UJtta off tooCL 11 nB\7 Will ranSte?nMth?. \i * \Y withoatre-otling.Axi?i -jT will Laet as lone M the . h? T7fr buggy. Don't ooat *ay !| i7 .n more. Our PMtai i ;si3 m! fer\ medMBicsl woader.; mvi r ffflRR Staple C*n*t got out JlUV mfllti -'ot order. Bee eemyte P *" *C/ with our aceut Doul buy*buggy until ywn see this arte. 10C1 BILL K1C0Y C0,Boet?raiI' ' .. , ^ r - >. you clean the house you # f the dust ?nd dirt which winter. Your body, the ves in, also becomes filled nter with all manner of [ have been removed from as not. Your body needs [f your bowels, your liver, full of putrid filth, and them out in the spring, odor with yourself and summer. A HOSE^ to dean your p rweeh fravrant mild but sful CASCARETS, that sleep, prepare all the fifth body for removal, and* gently, but none the less Ji and bowels dean and ? 10-cent box today, and if cleaning of your body is nDTTr/lICTTO i/iW UVU/ X w we will send a box free* Address meat and paper. 4S | O DCV NSW DISCOVERT; gtwm vA f \Jr I %S 1 quick and cam wocat. es- Book o< tastimoniatn and 10 dtT*' a>. Dr. H. H. ORZ?K*8SOH8. Bo* B. Attest*. ?* HhBBBBHBHBBBWBBBBBBB - *