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\ SUNBURN AND FRECKLES Why Oae Taos sod Another Freckles is No Easy to Explain, Both of these affections are caused by the action of tli? Sim's rays, but "why one person tans while another freckles Is not easy of explanation. Both affections are said to be caused chiefly by the chemical or ultra-violet rays, but In the case of sunburn It is probable that the heat also has some effect. The tan may come gradually, Without any burn, after a succession of slight and brief exposures to the sun or to high winds?for "Vllld will tan as well as sunshine, TJsually, however, the city-dweller gets well burned during the first few days of his vacation in the country or on the water. * In severe cases the skin Is red. slightly swollen, and the seat of a sharp, burning eensation; If the exposure has been prolonged, or the glare of the sun very Intense, it may even be blistered. After a few days the soreness and heat subside, and the red color gradually turns to brown. Tf the bum is pretty severe, cooling lotions, such as alcohol and water, diluted cologne water, a solution of bicarbonate of soda, cr lead water, may be applied, or the skin may be smeared with cold cream, camphor ice, zinc oinb * ment, or a mixture of lime-water and oil. Some such application as this, the ' Sufferer being careful to keep out of the sun for a day or two, will usually suffice. If blisters form, they should be pricked with & clean needle at the most dependent part, and when the water has drained away they should be covered with a cloth spread with oue of the greasy applications just mentioned. liennllv nn TWSOUS of a gaudy complexion, especially those with red hair. They are not common in very young. children, under six ob eight years of age, or in persons of middle or advanced life. They usually come for the first time in summer, and are less marked, or even disappear, in winter. Persons who freckle do not tav&s a rule. Freckles, like sunburn, * may be prevented by the wearing of a yell, preferably red or brown. Medical books sometimes speak of removing freckles by electricity, or by touching each one with a drop of carbolic acid on a glass rod, bnt snch severe remedies are worse than tbe disease. The spots will fade out more or less completely lb the winter, and will disappear wholly In time. In any case they are not particularly disfiguring.?Youth's Companion. A Remedy For the Red Nose, red nose, that trial pt trials to a sensitive woman, fcr usually the result of bad circulation. Wash the feet dally in warm water, bathe the body every morning with cold water, adding a little ammonia to the water. Soaking tho hands to above the wrists in warm water has also a beneficial effect on the drcnlatlon. Hot tea, soup, etc., which tend to bring the blood to tho tace, should be avoided. ; Y Millions for Baseball. k milhoa of dollars are 8].ent every year upon the game of baseball, but large as this sum is, it cannot begin to equal the amount spent by people in search of health. There is a sure method of obtaining strength, and It is not a costly one. We urge those who v have spent much and lost hope to try Hosteller's Stomach Bitters. It strengthens the stomach, makes digestion easy and natural, and cures dyspepsia, constipation, bilious* nests and weak kidneys. * v 8?rt of Boomeeanjc Wish. Mrs. Probe-"That man Who had typhoid sends word he can't pay your bill for a month - Dr. Probe- "Confound htm! I almost wish he hadn't been sick!"?Life. fitiV _ ? . To. Core a Cold In One Day. Take LaxutvkBboxo Qudcikk fxsbtrs. Ail druggists refund the money If it falls to cure. K U. GsOTK's signature is oil each box. 20c. A Real Vacation. "You and your wife don't seem to talk to each other much when yon travel." "No; we agreed before we started that we'd get rested."?Chicago Record. ' PITS permanently cured. No flu or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Qreat Nerve Restorer, %2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. R. H. Xixxs, Ltd., 831 Arch St., Phlla., Pa. " ; . Ia the Rhetoric Class. VfMin* ProfMimr?Give me ah stkMDle of aarvaam. ?*Mt J an lore m -The phrase, "Man's superiority to woman."?Somefville Journal. 11k. Wtaslow's Soothing Symp for children toothing, softens the gams, reduce? Inflammation, allays pate, cores wind code. 85c. a bottle. I do not believe Plso's Cure for Consumption has an equal tor coughs and oolds.?John P. Bora, Trinity Springs, In<L, Feb. 1&, 1900. W. H- Griffln, Jackson, Michigan, writes: "Suffered with Catarrh for fifteen years. > Hall's Catarrh Cnre cured me." Sold by Drug}i/: gists, 75c. Edith?Tee; that Is one of my ancestors; had Is head cut off In the tower, I believe. Meggy? Haw! elevator accident, I suppose?? Painful Periods mro ovoroomo by Lydla Em Plnkham's Vegetable Oompomdm if . * i V I FHiy thousand happy woman toothy to this In grateful tottoro to Mrsm Ptnkhantm i? - A ' Menstruation is a savers strain en a woman's vitality. If H Is gmfmful something Is wrong whhh wUI promptly set right; If exoesslve or Irregular write to Mrs. Phtkham, Lynn,, Mass., for advice. V KvMenoe abounds that Mrs. Pfnkham's advice and medicine have for many years been helping women to be strong. Mo ether* advice Is so unvaryingly accurate, no other medicine has such a record of ours. ^ I FARM AND GARDENJ I.onjr Row* S?Va t^bor-. An agricultural Writer Weli illustrates th'e impdrtan'e'e Of long rdws In' telling of n western farmer who hail plowed land 100 rods wide Anil A half mile long. He made three fields each v>3 roils wide and 100 rods long. When planted in corn he found that liis man could cultivate it the long way of the row in three days, while if ?o ing the other way there was four days' work. Just one day extra was spent in turning around at the end three times as often. Killing the Onion Maegot. iVof j. B. Smith ttf New Jersey drives two methods of treating onion belts to keep away or kill the onion maggot. For small patches in the garden he would take fine sand find moisten it with fcerV?>oho and sow it along both sideS 'of the row. near hut hot touching the plants. This not only drives away the fly which lays the egg. but kills many of the maggots as they leave one plant to go to another, as they will when the first one is dead. The fly looks like a small house fly. A cupful of kerosene to a pailful of sand is enough. t*Or larger fields fie would make a fii'rrow alongside bf the FoWs, turning the Soil away from the plants, using a hoe or hand plow for that purpose, then sow broadcast about GOO pounds of kainit and 300 pounds nitrate of soda to the acre, after which level the ground again. The first rain will carry the fertilizer to the plants, killing many of the maggots, and increasing the crop. Regular Hoars for Milking CoWs. The Oregon experiment stati'dh made h valuable test Of the importance of tegular hours for feeding and milking cows, a matter which we have many times urged upon our readers. They took six cows, and divided them into two lots as near alike in condition as to age and length of time in In ilk as they could. One lot Was fed and milked regularly at 5.30 a. ni. and -.30 p. m., While the other lot was fed and Vnilkp'fi at hours rnmrincr from 5 to 7 a. ? *** ? C O ill., and from 4 to G p. m., which last is a too common practice amoug farmers. This was kept up for three weeks, the amount of feed being the same for each lot. As a result those fed and milked regularly increased their milk production 5.0 per cent, while the other lot shrank 4.4 per cent. The difference of about 10 per cent, in three weeks emphasizes what we have said so often, f'Ved and Ulilk regularly. Sundays as well as other days, and If you need ah extra sleep on Sunday, take it later ift the day, even if you have to take it iii churcli, <r Care of the Foal. As soon as the young colt is born the first thing to do is to see that it gets up and sucks its dam. When it is a day or two old, catch it by putting one arm around its neck and the other about its hips and hold it until it stop* struggling. This teaches the colt that you are its master and that it has nothing to fear from you. It will be much easier to handle in after years. The halter should be put on and it should be halter broken before it is A month old. The next thing is to see that the bowels are kept open and regular and that it gets started right. Teach the colt to stay at home during the day while the dam i* at Work and keep it in a box Stall Where it cannot get out or be in jured. Be sure that there are ho hiangers or hay racks into which it can Climb and not get out, or a dead colt tony b? the result. For the first few Weeks it will be necessary to bring the dam to the barn during the middle Of the forenoon and afternoon. As soon as the colt can eat, give it a separate box and feed crushed outs and bran with a little oil meal. Continue this grain food regularly every day for the first two years and you will have the foundation laid for a good horse. ?New England Homestead. Planting Sorghnm. Sorghum as a crop for pasturage and winter feeding is fust gaining popularity. Its superior feeding vallie together with its drouth resisting qualities make it an ideal fdra'ge plant for sum iner and fall jfcteVdring. Even where left standing or merely cut aiul left topoii the ground, It will make a fodder that cattle will seek after during the winter. It is of very slow grdwtli when drst planted and in weedy or trashy ground is apt to be choked out by the "weeds, but once given a start there are few things that can prevent a crop. The best time to sow the seed is the first of June. The ground Is then dry and there will not be much danger that the young plants will Ik4 drowned out. To guard against weeds one of neighbors last year planted with his sorghum millet seed at the rate of one-half bushel to the acre. This came up quickly and kept down the weeds until the cane got started. Another neighbor tried feeding the fodder to his hogs last winter and found it appreciated by the swine, lie could "see a marked improvement m them over the season before and will feed more extensively next winter. He cut and bunched the fodder and hauled it to the pen as needed. One of the good points of this crop is the ease with which it can be cured and kept. All it requires is bunching up. when it will keep all winter. Cattle running to the piles will clean up the ground before going to other roughness. When the corn is laid by. sow the seed in the turning rows. You will harvest a little fodder and will have no weeds +a rrA trv ?T T . Ri*r\wn 111 A mnri_ W V V WV\?( Kf JLJL/1V1I u 1U AAtJUVlA~ can Agriculturist. Kn.rlnfjor Brffdin; Dairy Cowj. Whether a man shall buy or breed the cows to be used by him in the production of milk and butter will depend on what he is doing and the circumstances in which he is placed. The man that is making butter or selling milk to a creamery or cheese factory, should raise his own cows. The man that is engaged in supplying milk to a city will be compelled to purchase his milch cows for the reason that he will not have any milk or skim milk for his calves. This is a very important consideration. The man that is supplying whole milk for consumption seldom lives near a creamery, where it would be possible for him to obtain cheaply enough skim milk for his calves. The custom that has sprung up among this class can hardly be improved on for the circumstances. namel>. the purchase of cows already developed to a good how or milk. The cows for the milk supply of cities must always come from the farms rather than be raised by the shippers of milk. But to every other man the writer would say "Raise your own cows." The advice should be further not to sell the b >st milkers at acv price but use them for the breeding or cows for the farm dairy. The temptation will be great to sell the best cow when the milk shipper eonir* along and offers something tlbdvO the market foi* her. The HiStoni of sell1 Vug sucli cows has proved <en disadvantageous h> our dairy interests, tor ; the 'wvs thus purchased are never again used for rearing calves for the , dairy, as the milk shipper either kills , the calves at once or sells them to some other man that feeds them to the veal ago. Possibly the obstacle could be overcome by the introduction of some means of recording these goon milkers and having the calves of such , cows sent hack to the farms for rtHF?ing. But hete agaiil tbmes iii tlie problohi bV parentage, for the milk shippers, wanting not a calf for rearing, hut for veal, use largely hulls of the beef type. They want calves that will please the eye of the butcher and that will sell at the highest possible price.?Farm, Field and Fireside. When Poultry Fny.% When we say a breeder raises poultry for profit, we mean only one of n large number of people. There being a gi'ertt number of people Who do lidt lilake it pay, tiieir failure can l>c traced to lack of sufficient bxilerience; or knowledge , of poultry facts, or to carelessness. The poultry industry is a magnificent enterprise and even almost surpasses any other industry in value and profits. This Industry is now increasing i rapidly, and the present work is conducive to future improvement; that is. both improvement in breeds and in , improved methods of management The location of the poultry house is an important part of the work, yet a good warm house would be of Valtle ill most any pi nth-. The breeder who wishes "to make it pay" should select his breed for the purpose that he desires to raise theiri for. that is for eggs or for market fowls. One , mistake is the failure to get pure breeds. A good many persons think fcbat common fowls will do, but not so. A pure breed is much better for several reasons, and then after h# has got the pure ones he can make crosses, etc., and still keep the pure breeds. When a person breeds poultry he should keep an. account of everytniug bought, used and sold. So at any moment he may know just how he Is getting along. We say that a lien pays if her profits are one dollar each year, that Is, a hett is supposed tb lay two dollars' worth of eggs in a year and consume bile dollar's worth of food. The individual nest boxes are valuable in deciding which hens do lay the required number of eggs to amount to two dollars. And last of all, in the poultry business, as in any other business, we must l>e careful and go slow in the beginning. Those who make the profit are those who l>egan at the bottom and worked their way up. Often those who don't make poultry pay are those who get discouraged when some trfling matter confronts them, when their best bird is lost or something of that kind; yet there are no victories without trouble; So bd prepared for it and make the elfort and succeed?Percy W. Shepherd, ill Poultry Staiidard; Shttrt and t'seful Pointer^. Plant biiiy the best seeds; Currants frill appreciate a little shade. Tlierb i? money iii ducks, liaise at least a few. Never buy a cow without first testing her milk. As a rule a fat cow is not a good milk producer.. You cannot go amiss in whitewashing the stable. All young growing animals should have exercise. It is a pretty hard, matter to harrow a field too much. Good seed and cultivating is what brings the crops. In raising bull calves keep only the full blooded ones. Don't let the weeds get evCn one I H.iv nhp.id of VOU. Don't allow your milch cows?or in fact any of the animals?to be whipped, abused or excited. A dairy and a pig pen are excellent things on a farm, but they must not be tod clofce to one another. The fruit-growing of today is not ad experiment or a slip-slod arrangement, but an established industry. A surface mulch of leaves and decaying vegetable matter is nature's way of holding the moisture. If every farmer would strive to do better than his neighbor every farming community would soon be a good many dollars better off. Every farmer ought to market his produce according to a standard. It wouldn't be long before buyers would be looking for his produce. Reports of results obtained from feeders indicate that alfalfa is as valuable for producing beef, mutton and pork as it is for producing milk. One Old Horse Guard* Another. Two beautiful chestnut horses. Jack and Sam, were among my early friends. They were clean-built, highstepping trotters of a speed which might have distinguished them 011 the track; but they led a happier life, being favorite carriage horses in a region of beautiful country roads, or, sometimes under the saddle, threading lovely forest paths. Rarely used in single harness, they had been as rarely separated; and when, in tlier old age. Sam became blind, it was a touching thing to see .lark's constant watchfulness over him. Their pasturage was in fields, broken by rocky ledges, and where more than one steep ravine suddenly descended from the smooth sward, .lack never left his friend. Constantly beside him. if Saui went ioo near a perilous edge, the stream, a rock or fence, he would go between him and the danger, pushing him aside, or, if that could not be done, he would take him by the main and gently lead him to a place of safety. No allurements in luuips of sugar, apples, or the saltbasket ever drew Jack from his dependent friend.?Our Animal Friends. The Thoughtful Boy. "That office boy of yours has a thoughtful cast of countenance." "Hasn't he? He's thinking up some new excuses for getting away to the ball games."?Cleveland Plain Dealer. What a Man Owes Hi? Wife. The average man owes most of what he is to his mother, most of what he becomes to his father, and most of what he gets to his wife.?New lork Press, NO ADVANCE YET AWHILE Powers Will Not Risk Attack On Pekin For at Least a Month. WOULD BE "MILITARY SUICIDE" Ufllted States Is Alone as Regafds Imniedidte Action Iri tHe Matter^-England Not Ready. A "Washington special says: Two dispatches from Chiuese oilicials and one from Admiral Remey, at Takn, - " .1 1 l _ _ ? represented tne news ueveiopmeuis 01 Saturday so far as the Chinese situation was concerned. The (Ohinese dispatches we^e corrofcorritive; or were intended to lie so; of ihe iniportaut news of Friday relative to the stato of the legations. Admiral Remey's dispatch, aside from a list of casualties, already treated in brief form, was most important. It conveyed the disagreeable news that the international column would not begin its advance upon Pckin before the middle of August, This notice was received in Washington with consternation, in view of Mr. Conger's advice of the desperate position the lcgationfcrs were In on the 18th. The delfly isincdraprehensire to tile Officials. It is knOwn that army, already formidable ill nnmbels and of veteran soldiers; is at Tien Tain and Taku; arid with a courrigeons leader it was expected that this worild piish on at orice; cuttiug loose from its base if need be, aud forcing its way to PekiD, leaving the reinforcements now steaming toward Taku from every quarter of the globe to reestablish the base and to reopen communication. It is possible to draw two conclusions from a failure of the foreign commanders to do this. First the European governments have allowed their skepticism as to the authority of Mr. Conger's dispatch to carry them to the poiut of deciding coolly and deliberate* ly upon the first supposition, namely that thete ate no foreigners aliVO to oO saved; consequently there is no need for haste. The other conclusion is that friction is developing among the internationals in spite of the earnest endeavors of the powers, wiiose motives to China are so fa* unimpeached, to prevent it. Color is lent to this latter theory by the fact that the governments have so far been unable to agree upon an international commander for the expedition to Pckin, and this, too, in spite of the fact that Admiral Remey, acting by the instructions of his government, is exhausting every effort to induce the other commanders at Taku and Tien Tsin to hasten their movements. ENGLAND NOT READY. A London special says: The rqxlest of Secretary of State Hay at Washington to the powers to make ad immedidte forwdrd nlovement upon Pekin is not likely to meet with any success id Ehgland. Lord Salisbury is just as eager as the American secretary of state to adopt such a step, bnt he is practically convinced that it will be impossible until September, owing to local conditions and the allies' lack of equipment. Beyond a courteous reply that England is willing to co-operate in any movement that the commanders on the spot may deem advisable, nothing is likely to come of the latest American effort to reach the Chinese capital, for all official advices received indicate that a dash toward Pekin in the immediate futnro would be military suicide. The government's attitude may be described as philosophic determination to grin and bear it, hopiug fer the best, yet feariug the worst, until troops and climatic conditions enable the powers to enter Pekin and ascertain without a shadow of doubt the extent and cause of China's present disintegration. Until that is accomplished all is suspended, not only regarding the future of China, but also aS to the nature and severity of the retiribution to be exacted; BRYAN AM) ROOSEVELT Are "Hooked** to Spenk From tlie Same Platform In Chicago. Governor Theodore Roosevelt aud "William J. Bryan will, in all probability, speak from the same platform in Chicago within the next two months. The occasion will be the coming Labor day demonstration of the Building Trades Council. Mr. Bryan has indefinitely accepted the invitation and a reply has been received from Roosevelt which leaves little doubt that he will be oue of the speakers. AT WAR WITH RUSSIA. No Doubt on to the Chinese Attitude Toward Muscovite Hear. The Berlin Tageblatt says official Russian news shows that Chinese regular troops, aided by irregulars, in all numbering about 120,000, are in open war against Russia. They not only demanded the withdrawal of the Russians from Chinese territory, but after the Russiau refusal to withdraw they assumed the offensive and drove off the Russians from railroad construction and are undertaking hostile opera tions against and shelling many towns. Parker Rye NONE PURER, NONE BETTER. ] RpnMW c-a: sm|g?p7 feAfrtEkSOSgjpf/ VCs? ASK FORIT AT ALL DISPENSARIES IJ Xlft hair has riMlrl no life. f 1 It is starved. It keeps m coming out, gets / r< thinner and thinner, j k bald Spots appear, < I then actual baldhes?; \ p The &nly good hair f4 M you h can r\j\I yjf U- Hair : vigor ^ the fooisj sfops t i starvation, arid the / ^ hair grows thick and / f long. It cures dan- < > druff also. Keep a J bottle of it on your 4, dressing table. \ % It always restores >i \ color to faded or gray / > hair. Mind, wc say ^ "always." < * . . K !$i :00 a bdttle; All druggist^: ^ " f invo foiind your ilr.fr T/gnf i j to ho tho best remedv I have ever ' tried for tho hair. My lm.fr was < faffing out very had, fo I thought S 1 would try a notrlo of it. I liad ^. used only ono liottle, and my liair * 4 ftoiij.ed falling ont, and it is now real thick and long." i J K \XCV J. MOCNTCASTT.E, . ' July 2?, 1808. Yonker8,N. Y. ^ ^ (!:o Doctor. 4 j ITo will send yon his hook on Tho .1 ^ Hair mid henlp. Ask him any qne.s- rA ?i->i? vmi sviih*?ilK>ut your hair. You r ^ w!lt rcceivo .1 pr^mot ii??wcr freo, 9* B L ' Address, 1)R. J. C. AVER, f ^ Y ; Lowell, Mass. 11 LV t v y ^ 1 Luoking For Reveoge. "I'm looking for that best man ol mine," said the hewiy-ijBrliTied mat savagely, "When we meet therb is go ing to be blood shed! What is the mat ter? Matter enough! Didn't my wife and I plan for two months to have om wedding trip to ourselves and not bt bothered by a lot of grinning ctrang ers who think it funny to nudge oik another whenever a newly-married eouple appear on the scene. And dldn'l that fool of a best man, just to be smart, go and upset all our cherished plans and have us followed around like a couple of prize monkey3 In a dime museum? "We managed to smuggle our tronkf to the depot without having them tied nil over with white ribbon and othei fool things, nnd that was victory hum ber one. Then,- after we Were married and everyone wds waiting oil the fronl porcli with rice and old shoes to throw at us and make us feel miserable, w* managed to slip through the back dooi and get away without their knowing it. That was victory number two, and we thought that that ended it, as wc had carefully planned to act like old married folks on our wedding trip, and there was not the slightest doubt aboul our being successful If we had beer left alone. "But what did that fool of a besi nian go and do, but wire the hotel* where we intended staying that wc had just been married and to give u* the best the house afforded. Oh, yes we had a perfectly lovely time! Bu1 when I meet that best man I expect to have a better time!"?Detroit Free Press. * Prof. Walter Wilson, Of the Savannah High School, pays "I feel it my duty to testify to the won derful curative properties of Tetterine. It has cured in a few days my son, whose feet had been very badly afflicted with some stubborn skin trouble) after having used a number of remedies without any benefit." 50c. ai druggists or by mail from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga. Ingenious Idea of a BrideA Belgian bride of recent date made an Ingenious application of the autograph idea. She asked every guest to write his or t.er name In pencil on the train of her white satin gown. These she will embroider later in silk and keep as a souvenir of the occasion, The same original young woman had in her bridal bouquet some myrtle grown from a sprig planted by her from her elder sister's bridal bouquet A weddlrg least in Belgium begins at 3 o'clock in the afternoon and lasts until 9. Notice?Two traveling salesmen wanted In eact state. Salary and oxpetsesiexperlence unneces siry. Pocahontas Tobacco Wfcs, Bedford City. V? Towne?"He's got an awful cold in his head.' Brown?"Severe, ch?-' Towne "Well, I shouhl say. It was so severe yes'erday It cracked hit glasses."?Phllade;phla Press. The Heat Prescription for Chill* and Fever Is a bottle of (thove's Tasteless c nn l Tonic. It Is simply iron and quinine in a icsteles* form. No cure?uopay. Price oOo. Then She Wanted >t Too. Mrs. Willful?"My husband told me If ] didn't like this brooch you'd chance It for me.' Jeweler?"tortnlnly. madam. I'll be only to< plad. as four different ladles of your set wanted It."?Tho King. Did Ton Ever Ban Across an old letter ?ink all faded out? Couldn't have been Carter's Ink for it doesn't fads. Sunday at the Zoo. Mr. Murphy?"Excu?e me, sorr; biit can ye direct mo to the going out lntrance?"?Punch We refund lOe. for every package of Putnam Fadeless Dye that fails to give satisfaction. Monroe Drug Co., Unionville, Mo Sold by all druggists. A Dark Secret. Foreigner?"How are your senators elected?' American?"None of them will tell."?Puck Happiness cannot be bought, but one ol the great hindrances to its attainment cat be removed by Adams' Pepsin Tutti Frutti, There are Many Such. Mrs Hoon?You can believe very little thai Mrs. Gabbleby says. Mr. Hoon?No; the poor woman is sadlj pfflictcd with palpltatlonof the imagination.? Pu-'k. IM Heaping Attractive. " A woman can make or mar her attractiveness. She can by an utter disregard of hygienic laws and a neglect Of toilet accessories lose entirely that charm of face mid form that nature -^bvltiusty Intended should he hers. It j will do no woiriari harm fd know that i a few drops of a soothing fotiotf wilt transform a pair of rough red hands j J i into soft white ones; that systematic care of the complexion will keep It i sind&th and ward off wrinkles, and j that an eagerness to read clever books I and to know things and a lively In-: terest in the current events of the day j will brighten the eyes as notliiug else i can, except it be the sympathy of the | tnati she love*. The woman posses- j fting tills knowledge is far more charining and attractive than she in | pilose path no beautifying whirm? j ] J have ever come. And the woman' _ j who applies this knowledge Is the one who will develop into the entertaining, interesting grandmother of the next generation, as dainty and as straight and as youthful as was the mother oi the past generation. A Wonderful success. The Cincinnati, 0., Euquiref is the only paper in the United States that lias maintained tho high, hard-price subscription fates tip to this date. The daily Enquirer costs $14;00 a year and its weekly issue 81.Od a year; Nothing but actual merit and Irue worth in a newspaper could maintain such rates in these days. Its circulation, price, size and enterprise are like its success, truly wonderful. Her "Colfey" T rlnkets. The golf girl is receiving more than her share of attention just now. The shops are filled with novelties made purposely to please her,- and the I golf jackets and hats are seen in a j greater and more attractive tariety than ever before. If she is a golf girl, what to^give her on her birthday or as a little souvenir of some especially happy game is no longer a puzzling question. One of the latest golf novelties Is a little three-inch-high caddy bag, made - _n,_ .1 ,vtH, or ongQt piaiu SHU. mm mien niui miniature golf clubs. The clubs are sterling silver, and they are made as . stickpins, and are, therefore, of actual use to the golf girl. The newest charm to dangle from ' the chatelaine Is a silver golf ball. 1 Touch a spring and it opens and inside ' you find a tiny book of golf rules.? Baitlmorfc American.Ladies Can Wear Shoes One size smaller after usiDg Allen's Foot! Ease, a powder for the feot. It makes tight or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, , sweating, aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns ' and bunions. At all druggists and shoo 1 stores, 25o. Trial package FREE by mail. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Simply Had to Do-It. ' "Why is It." they asked, "that you have I changed from Irish to tfcou-h whisky?" "J have Joined a golf club," he replied.?Chicago Evcnl Ing Post. 1 I ' I"' ^ ^ ^ l ' | ^ | prevent dicease and that is ; strengtheners. All diseases 1 [ I (?? I the ^NOUS TABLET. CASCARBTS are absolutely harmless, a j i CARBTS promatly, effectively and pennaneal but correct any and every form ot irregularity good. Never sicken, weaken or gripe. Wri I ? Only Cat at the Dog Show. , Things were the reverse of dull for a quarter of an hour one morning during the recent dog show, says the Chicago Inter Ocean. A lone black cat started the excitement of the day at a [ comparatively early hour by wander ing into the big armory and attemptI ing to inspect the canines. Before the cat had been in the bhilding three minutes a solemn-faced bloodhound f, caught a glimpse of him. For the ' fraction of a second the bloodhound glared at the Intruder. Then he unclosed his ponderous voice, and in less > time than it takes to tell about it ' every dog in the place was on the alert. They pulled and tugged at their . chains; they barked, yilped and growl. ed, and in various other ways demonstrated to their keepers that they were in anything but a pleasant frame of , mind. Heedless of the turmoil, the black ^ a wis iwrro hr wilkiner down | Cfll BUOWCU xiio utt ? v, 0 __ , f the aisle and carefully inspecting his i 1 friends, the enemy. Finally the dus- j ' ky feline was captured by an attend- i ant and removed, but the dogs did not | t recover fx-om the shock for several j hours, and as a result were snappy i and churlish for the remainder of the | day. I * ' r ... . 3ZZ Z rhosc who know what intertge pain KJIolohti 9t Pfltff 11901/ comes with some diseases of ITIlliuUJ W UU!llf#(l?*jy the eye can hardly believe 39 s. nroad st., Atlanta, o?. Engines and Boilers'1 fcjmin Water Heater#, Steam Fiuap?a<ul ' Penberthjr Injector*. Mitchell's Eye Salve j do all that is claimed for it, but a trial soon convinces ?'"WSgESSjSfe C .1 a rtAalora in any one UI liic tAU <IUI uniai y Hiu:uiBnare7B*uu "vv.w? , curative powers of this little S MILLS, remedy. Cora Fecd mm*. cotton ?in Machin" * ?ry and Grain Separator*. Price 25 cents. All druggists. i^k"^.SpS^.bi^V.w t r i t j , DTTPiroi SI 111 and Engine Itonalrst Governors. OrstU HALL c? KULl\.c,L, Ban and a full line of Mill Supplies. Price !WYork. 1848. London. ana Quality or goods guaranteed. Catalogue i n l- .i b???? ? free by aaa^tlcnlng this paper. A H A EH A &U A H A EH A A H A 18 A B AH ^H A I Did You Ever Know I H any one who smoked the same kind 2 of Five Cent cigar any length of 5 time? Five Cent cigar smokers are J. i I always dissatisfied?always trying J something new?or something differ- ? A ent. as there always seems to be some- 9 < ,i < _ hB thing wrong about the cigars tney nave j . Bi been smoking. Ask your dealer for 1 5 Old Virginia Cherootsj ; ? They are always good. * * H Three hundred million smoked th?ycar. Price, 3 for 5 cents. 0 ; .iAiAiAiAiAiauAi(*iAiA.A.A.AufciAi?N<a.4iAiAiAiAiAiAiAi<rtAi*iAiA liiiiAirthf MMMBHCHESTEg%[ : WW FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLsir? [ i "New Rival," "Leader," ana "Reaeat&r^^Wm 4 InsUt upon having then, take no ethers and yoa will get the beat shall* that money can bay. \ L - 'wp < ALL 0EALER8 KEEP THEM. p j% fi TALKED INTO IT. j /Vsv D?n,t allow yourself to be talked into boy- I \v/ / nA f/C i *ng a 8hod^ j?^ to save a dollar or so when 1 nvfv/ \lr nf JI on sale in every town in the 1 ) I\*y \// /? I) So^h. Did you ever think how easy it is V \ \ 7 / for some people to be talked into a thing? 8 -:~:Zi "?r 1 * DATIT HY1 I Btocr CO- | BUBONIC PL ASIATIC CHOLERA,, YELLOW FEVER, |mi||^k all begin in the bowels. It's the unclean . . *||i places that breed infectious epidemics, and mmm it's the unclean body?unclean inside?that "catches" the disease. A person whose stomach and bowels are kept clean and I ?* k(rto/j mifpi. |g { VWilUSC 11VCX lO JUVUJ f UiAW Vtwvw f %? wj ? safe against yellow fever, or any other of., the dreadful diseases that desolate our . % beautiful southland. Some of the cleanest -.It people outside are filthiest inside, and they are the ones who not only "catch" the J 3 infection, but endanger the lives of all their friends and relatives. There's only one certain way of keeping clean inside^so as to j to take CASCARETS. Perfect disinfectant and bowel are NDY^CATHARTIC^^^^^' ; 50cm dl II nil ALL DRUGGISTS rarely regctaole compound. No mercurial or other mineral pfll-poiscn in CASCARBTS. CASly cure every disorder of the Stomach. Liver and Iatoatinea. They not only core constipation, of the bowels, including diarrhoea and dysentry. Pleasant, palatable, uotent. Taste good, do to for booklet and frco sample. Address STERLING REMEDY CO., CHICAGO or NEW TORE. 459 m - . " A Wood Word For Nature. TY AIT jTH JJI IT'C^ "Nature constructed the world on a IJJ vfllJull 1 l^U perfect system," observed the profes- I \ ^ eor of geology as he tried to blow the mJ Din a ikin Ktiiltl/rc foam off his glass of ice tea. "She f IpC I put nothing where it would not be use- * 0 i ? 6 Six Car Loads In Stock. ^ "That's right," agreed the real es- Cu* an<1 Qa^c^ tate agent, "Just see how far she put XiOlVT'RAjtt.ij Kentucky from any large body of water, poflflllrj, Hacfailie M4 Boflef Works astf ^ Sapply Store, - AngHsta,(ia. SOUTHERN DENTAL COLLEGE ; DENTAL DEPARTMENT * MEDICAL DEPARTMENT. , Atlanta College of Pliytlclan, and Snraeoni University Of Louisiana. gK Oldest Coiaege in State. Fourteenth An- M mini Session opens Oct 2; closes Anrfl 30th. maferi&ls are unequalled. Free access given to Those^ contemplating tho study of Dentistry ,he great Charity Hospital with 900 federal \ddreU Ca S W POSTKR Dean 30.000 patients annually. Special instructtott Is Address s.W. FOSTER, Dean. given dally at the bedside of the sick. The next 62-63 Inman Building, Atlanta, Ga. 8e8sion begins November 1st, 1900. For catalogue : and information, address Pxop. 8. E-ChArab, 3*5 i /y ytW\ w anted for the best M. D., Dean, P. O. Drawer 261, New Orleans, La. A IwLiM | C wiling book ovar / . AUCN1 bif?H CALESBEN WANTED. Charleston, 1,139 In Memphis. One agent sells Just out and a snlen did seller Our New St 00 ,o .10 00 p.rd.M?r., al Wttffi H&SFrfftJ"cSt ? euttT In ansnortng atalo your uperlence. It any. Complete and attractive. Samplo aad ir j. l. AuenoLS a eo., ? terms sent upon receipt of 23 cents. ~ ~ No. 912-924 Austell Building, Atlanta. Ga RAND, NIcNALLY & CO., -{*38 That little Beck For Ladle*, Ss? Chicago, Illinois. > J alice mason, bochisim. n. t. _ hdodgv new discovery; rfvss VJ1 quick relief and caret wont ^3 Mention fhic \>*n*rInwritin110 M^rtiser*. cases- Book of tsstaaonialftnd 10days* tresteett mention MIS rap-r anc-1900-80 Free- Pr. h. h. okxix 8 soh?, Box 3. AtUat*. oa