University of South Carolina Libraries
* i" m - - ' ?v<- - f .^lumber Knit of Eiderdown. Eiderdown bought by the yard " makes a pretty couch covering or slumber rug. It should have a thin sheet of French wadding added and a lining of silkoline. The edges may be bound with two inch wide satin ribbon. Mahogany Imitation. - The revival of massive old-fashioned furniture for everyday use is on the increase. Many people, however, are purchasing bits of so-called mahogany that are really another kind of wood .that never saw San Domingo or South America. Unless an expert in the grain of wood one cannot tell the difference pr after it leaves the furniture maker's Kp hands. Hps*-* Art Gln?s of Home Make. Lovely lamp shades are made of V pieces of stained glass leaded together. The lead may be bought already ^ pinched into the groove, and with a tod1 or so is easily manipulated. Then (he ;: pieces of glass can be purchased, too. pr'1-'; All that is lacking for the home-made lamp shade is the frame, and chat ? 1 ought to be obtainable, as well as the - v-' foundations for square to hang in screen fashion in front of the lamp or .to adjust to the window. The scheme is attractive at present giving time. Color In the Kitchen. The kitchen, it goes without say' jng* should be the first department settled. Make that part of your apari^f - ment comfortable, and the rest of the machinery will be sure to run well. A certain sense of equity should ?- >'. prompt the householder to do this. ;?' White'makes the ideal kitchen, the introduction of blue, in either tiles KBfcr nr china. .dishes, nroducine a charm ri ing and delightful result White tiles are beyond the means of most persons, j?j?" though the bath enamel or the white oil cloth can give effects almost as good. Next to white and blue comes Pi* yellow?white woodwork and yeliow |?yi walls. J Green is always cool and refreshing, and, with the imitation oak woodwork Iff: see* hr^ery flat, makes a good combination. Stained floors in most apartments are desirable, although the >-white linoleum is a great addition ? Harper's Bazar. always Ready for Company. r; The first time my husband walked in > with three extra people for dinner nearly brought me to the verge of ner yous prostration. My dinner, already cooked, consisted of four lamb chops, six potatoes and two cups of cdstard. It meant a scramble and a polite refusal of every dish on the table by my husband and myself. After that day I added what I called an emergency shelf to my panJ rVtry. On the shelf will be found one &; - bottle of salad dressing, one can of y lobster, one can of salmon, one can of f deviled ham, three cans of assorted ? soups, several bottles of fancy pickles ^ and a package of banquet wafers, b^^janned vegetables are, of course, a As soon as anything is used, | replace i, .at once. The housekeeper who once starts an ' twill TtAVA* If ilrnn v CUlCi gOIlV/ SAvli VTUI I^V it Ui wy js*T out of the pantry- She is amply rcpaid by having fiends say they are ' always certain she x is prepared for company. Chopped celery, ready for a salad, can also.be added; it makes a - v nice addition to the list, salads are generally liked by all people.?Good v,' Housekeeping. " t " Grape Sherbet?Mix a quart of grape '*r juice with two cups of orange juice and two cups of sugar. When the sugar is dissolved turn into a freezer. When half frozen take out the dishes v and mix in the beaten whites o? two eggs. Pack and set away to harden. Spiced Beef?Remove all fat from four pounds of the round of beef; chop it fine; add to it four eggs, three dozen small crackers, rolled fine, one-half pint of milk, two tablespoonfuls of black pepper, one tablespoonful of ground mace, one teaSpoonful of salt 'and one tablespoonful of melted butter; mix well; pack firmly in a tin pan ~ and bake for two hours in a moderate oven, basting frequently with butter ' and water. Fricasseed oysters?Heat the oysters in their own "liquor. Put one heaping tablespoonful of butter in a frying pan and blend in one heaping tablespoonful of flour; when smooth add one cupful of hot milk, stirring until it boils, then add the oysters, one-half cupful of their liquor and pepper, mace and salt to taste. When it begins to boil again, remove from the fire, stir in the well-beaten yolks of two eggs and one teaspoonful of minced parsley and serve. Jellied Chicken?Boil two chickens until the meat leaves the bones: let the water be reduced to one pint of boiling; remove all skin, fat, gristle and bones, and place the meat in a wet mould in alternate layers of white and dark meat Skim the fat from the ' liquor, add pepper, salt and lemon juice to taste and one-half ounce of gelatine dissolved in water; let it come to a boil and pour over the chicken while - hot. Let cool and garnish with ceiery leaves and slices of lemon sprinkled with parsley. Creamed Eggs?Melt one tablespoonful of butter; add one tablespoonful of flour and blend well together, then add one cupful of hot milk, stirring constantly, season with pepper and salt and cook until smooth and thick. Add six hard-boiled eggs cut fine, one teaspoonful of minced parsley, and onehalf teaspoonful of made mustard; remove from the fire and stir in two tablespoonfuls of cream. Line patty tins with a good puff paste, fill with ttfS egg mixture, sprinkle a little grated Parmesan cheese over each, and bake in a hot oven. Too Bfany Rabbit* In Oregon. Owners of orchards along the Deschutes and creeks near The Dallas * say that since the coyotes have beegj killed off, rabbits have become sol numerous that they make raids on young trees and eat oft their bark, in many places doing serious injsfry.? ' Portland Oregonian. : ; \ > Qnail in Fweden.*^ The American quail imported into Sweden some time ago seem to thrive a and increase in number. It remains to kbe seen, however, whether the birds the long winters there. | CKtMCHESS DECKED IN PEARLS. Rara Trsasuresthe Bay of Panama Yielded to tha Spaniards. When the stranger arrives at Seville and Toledo and the guides conduct him to the cathedrals of those old cities, he is struck with their magnificence and the abundance of the pearls which are their finest decoration. These pearls came from the Bay of Panama and date from the epoch when the Spaniards, at the zenith of their glory, made the conquest of America, These Panama pearls rival the most beautiful pearls in the Orient. Quite recently, in the spring of 1S99, a lad of 15 years found an oyster containing a pearl which was sold at Paris for 50,000 francs. For his portion he received 20,000 francs. A considerable Quantity of Dearls procured at Panama are sent to New York, where they do not lack purchasers. One consignment exceeded in value 750,000 francs. The island pearls are thus denominated on account of the archipelago in which the oyster fisheries are carried on. It is opposite the Bay of Panama. The archipelago is composed of 16 islets, in which are 30 or 40 small villages of negroes and Indians. The soil is fertile but the principal occupation is that at the fisheries. The large isle, called Rey, alone embraces half of the population. San Miguel is the chief place of the fisheries, and there there is a very fine church. The inhabitants are nearly all blacks. They are descended from the negro population, from whom the Spaniards learned the advantage they could derive from the island riches. In certain of the islands there must have been diamond beds. Some fine rough diamonds were formerly procured. There are two systems for carrying on pearl fishing in the Bay of Panama. In certain spots, where the yield is the most abundant, it is necessary to pay the government a very high tax. At other points the tax is small, but a percentage on the pearls discovered is added to it. Generally, these pearls are rather small. They usually bring from K +< ? Krt f-ronnc oa ph ThKco whiph Xj \,\J tt\J iiauw VIAVM. A MVWV I. M4VM reach 150 to 300 francs are already much less in number.?Jewelers' Circular Weekly. Proposed Alliance with England. If the United States and England should form an alliance, the combined strength would be so great that there would be little chance for enemies to overcome us. In a like manner, when men and women keep up their bodily strength with Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, there is little chan< e of attacks from disease. The old time remedy enriches the blood, steadies the nerves, and increases the appetite. Try it for dyspepsia and indigestion. Hie Prevailing Idea. Little Jeff>rson Davis Sogbaek (an Arkansas lad)?Paw. what Is an enterprislu' citizen? Old Man Sogbaek (his father)?Aw! A yankee or 8)ffie other sort of durned foreigner! If you want "good digestion to wait upon your appetite" you should always chew a bar of Adams' Pepsin Tutti Frutti. Consideration For the Fishe?. Willie had been wutchlnt: his father fishing, and presently ask?d: '-Does the dampness ever give the fishes ooughSfdaddy?" Wanted?At Once! Traveling salesmen with or wltho-it experience $00 00 and expenses For partlciVfas write Pocahontas 1 obaooo Works, Bedford "City, Ya. 'Si Not Like It Used to Be, Mr. Ilocorn?Have any excitement while you was in New York? Mr. Meddergra83?None. Sence they tut In these hore electric lights a feller hasu't much chance t' blow out th' gas. The great public schools of the large Use carter's Ink exciBDvelj. It is the best and costs no j^orts^hsinthe poorest, (iet it. Prize? For the Helpless. "Ediih, this last china plate you painted is . awful - awful!" "Now, never mind about that, Edgar; I'll give a whist party one of these days." Dyeing is as simple as washing when you use Putxam Fadeless Dyes. Sold by all druggists. . A Woman's Way. to tak-? a day off next week for the purposeof-tselebratlng the anniversary of my birth. She?When I celebrated mine last month I took a year off. Mrs.Winslow's Soothing Fyrop for children teething, soften s the gum?, leduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic.25c a bottle. PlsO's Curo for Consumption Is an infallible medicine lor coughs and colds.?N. W. Samuel, Ocean Grove, N. J., Fob. 17,1900. Her Definition. Asked what a nephew was, Molly replied, "It's when your niecj Is a boy." HELP FOR WOMEN WHO ARE ALWAYS TIRED. 441 do not feel very well, I am so tired all the time. I do not know what is the matter with me." You hear these words every day; as often as you meet your friends just so often are these words repeated. More than likely you speak the same significant words yourself, and no doubt you do feel far from well most of the time. Mrs. Ella Rice, of Chelsea, Wis., whose portrait we publish, writes that she suffered for two years with bearing-down pains, headache, backache, and had all kinds of miserable feelings, all of which was caused by falling and inflammation of the womb, and after doctoring with physicians and numerous medicines she was entirely cured by cK x Mrs. Ella Rice Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. If you are troubled with pains, fainting spells, depression of spirits, reluctance to go anywhere, headache, backache, and always tired, please remember that there is an absolute remedy which will relieve you of your suffering as it did Mrs. Rice. Proof is monumental that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the greatest medicine for suffering women. No other medicine has made the cures thathas. and no other woman has helped so many women by direct advice as has Mrs. Pinkham; her experience is greater than that of any living person. If you are sick, write and get her advice; her address is Lynn, Mass. Profitable employment If yotbcan (or think vou can) solicit LIFE i/NSURA/NCE, \N rite (with references for terms to lo al and special agents, to R. F. SHEDDEN, Gen. Agent, Atlanta, Ga. THE Ml'Tl AL LIFE INSURANCE CO. I of N. V. Assets Over S330.000.000.CO. j SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY. Cargoes or other masses of coal often take fire spontaneously. The popular belief is that this is due to the action of moisture on the pyrites and other impurities in the coal. The I%irine Review, however, now quotes the results of Professor Threlfall's experiments on the subject, and shows that popular tradition is again wrong. The investigations showed that dry coal is more likely to take fire than wet. A lecturer at the London Polyclinic declared at a recent meeting that the progress of leprosy could be arrested if sufferers would abstain wholly from eating fish. He cited several cases in his own experience. One was that of a man who was blind from leprosy and who had had muscular atrophy for 15 k ^ -v ? iV./s' rtkolinonAO years. Aiier j.o muuiua taking at the same time small doses of arsenic, all traces of patches had disappeared from his hands and feet. An extensive botanical garden has recently been laid out at Dahlem, a village within easy distance of Berlin, which possesses some novel features. It is situated in very rough country, and unique advantage has been taken of this fact by reproducing, as far as possible, the natural scenery from which the various specimens of flora have been collected from all parts of the world. By this means a more comprehensive idea is obtainable of the native habitat of the plants and trees, and the conditions under which they thrive. An outbreak of typhoid fever has occurred in Lambeth, Eng., owing to infected mangles. Forty-one cases occurred in 21 houses, all within a restricted area. There was much intercommunication between places and families living in different houses. Many of the inhabitants after washing their clothes in their own homes took them to some neighbor to be mangled. Owing to this custom, bedding and clothing of those ill with twphoid fever were mangled in the same machine, thus spreading the disease. Four different infected mangles were traced. Professor Koch, in describing his experiences with the government expedition in Java and New Guinea, stated that he had reached the conclusion that gnat bites introduced and developed parasites into the human body. Thp trprmss are nasserl hv a o-nat frnm one human body to another, but they develop in the body of the gnat during the passage. Children are specially liable to impregnation. In a village in New Guinea, 137 inhabitants out of 700 were infected by the disease. All inoculations have hitherto proved to be failures, but the success of quinine is very gratifying. The liquid crystals with which 0. Lehmann so startled the world a few y^ars ago have now been proven to lack no quality that can be logically made part of the definition of a crystal. The only general characteristics of crystals are that they are not isotropic, and that they possess a molecular directive force that governs their shape and the disposition of their particles. The directive force is preserved *by surface tension, so that crystals mayjbe liquid or solid but not gaseous, liquid crystals may be produced by depositing solid crystals from a mother liquor on the cover glass of a microscope and gently heating them above the fusing point AN IMMENSE CLASS ROOF. Extent in Miles of the One Which Covers the Crystal Palace. The Crystal Palace has just been reroofed, and the spectacle is one which cannot be witnessed every day. How many visitors to the palace are aware that wheat they stand inside the building th^r are covered by nearly three-quarters of a square mile of glass? Yet such is the measurement of the transparent roof. Above the level of the floor the building is constructed wholly of iron and gl^ss, with the exception $ part of the west front, which is panelled with wood. The whole leneth of the main build ing is 1608 feet, the wings being 574 feet each, making a length of 2756 feet, which, with the 750 feet in the colonnade leading from the railway station to the wings, makes a total length of 3476 feet covered with glass. The superficial quantity of glass used is 25 acres, weighing 500 tons. If the panes were laid side by side they would cover a distance of 48 miles, or, roughly, from London to Brighton. If they were laid end to end they would reach from London to Newcastle?over 24 miles. The work of roofing has taken just over a twelvemonth to complete.? London Express. A Scientific Violin. The science of the violin, as may be supposed, is but imperfectly understood. The" present form of the instrument was worked out more than 200 years ago by the Italian makers, but resulted from experiment rather than an . intelligent application of acoustic principles, and u gives varying results. When the curves of the ribs or sides are uneven or incorrect the sound waves interfere, causing some tones to be imperfect After much study of tne subject, Dr. Alfred Stelzner, a German, has brought out a new model, in which sections of ellipses are adopted for the ribs and the opposite sides are made carefully symmetrical, so that the sound waves from each side are reflected to the some foci, in the middle. Whether the theory of the violin h'as been fully mastered or not the new model is said to produce a remarkably fine tone. Another Phase. The two friends met after a brief separation. "So you are married, are you?" "Yes." "I was surprised to hear it. "I thought you would be." "Who is the bride?" "Miss Thornton." "Wasn't that the girl you met at the seaside?" "Yes. "You got engaged to her there?" "Yes. "But I always understood that seaside engagements didn't count.' "I thought so, too, but I have learned differently. Good bye." "Good bye."?Detroit Free Press." 20.000 Caribou in Herd. J. M. Bell of the geological survey department has just returned to Ottawa,. after an absence of about IS m<Jnths, during which time he traveled across Canada, from the Arctic to the boundary. He saw immense bands of caribou. There must have been, Mr. Bell says, over 20,000 of them in one ^band. He never brw anything lifts It.Toronto Truth. SiSL hj IALAR1ING flORTALITY.I I N oticeable Among the Weak and Ailing. Spiff tie Time Death Reaps Its Larpst Harvest. There is a Way of Eluding the Grim Destroyer. Every Spring it is noticeable how ; many people are taken away that we have been accustomed to see in our ' daily life. Statistics show that at no other season of the year does so many deaths occur. j Especially large is the mortality . among weak and sickly people. The reason for this is apparent. The body that is weakened by age or disease has much to contend with during the Winter months. Insufficient exercise frequently has been taken. Too much starchy and fatty foods have been eaten. The system has been allowed 1 to become run down, and when Spring comes with its bright, sunshiny days, cider people will begin to realize that their vitality has become very low. The same thing is true of people who are naturally sickly and weak. This is the season of the year when ' even a strong person feels at his worst.' That tired, restless feeling is experienced by too many. ; There need not be as many deaths 1 thi3 year as usually take place. A little care will ward off many Spring funerals. If one is weak or ailing they should take time by the forelock and ' take Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy. This great medicine 1 has been in many cases, and will con- 1 tinue to be. the means by which the s black angel of Death has been driven i from the threshold. It dispels the , grim destroyer in a scientific way, for it purifies the blood and gives strength and vitality to the nerves. It 1 tones up and restores to a healthy con- ( dition all of the great life-giving or- '< gans cf the body. < Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and ( nerve remedy will enable those who j take it to throw off little ills that j prove dangerous only when they at- . tack a system already wasted and weakened. 1 From many people, who have ex- t perienced benefit from this greatest t of 9.11 life-lengtheners comes the fol- f lowing from the famous General Long- ( etroof nt 1917 "Knw Hnmnshirp avpnun. Washington, D. C. He says: ."It gives me great pleasure to add my testimony with many others for Dr. Greene's Remedy, which I have used with highly beneficial results and I am able to recommend its virtues from experience. I have used it fo? catarrh and have derived help." Mr. Wellington Hynes. Klizabethtown, N. Y.. writes: c "I feel it my duty to tell how much good Dr. Greene's Nervura has done "v me. I was so run down that I could d not sleep at night and everything worried me. I had no appetite and could not work, my head ached all the time and there was an all-gone feeling in my stomach and I was always looking on the dark side of everything. I be- E gan to take Dr. Greene's Nervura i blood and nerve remedy and in less t than three weeks I felt like a new c man. I can now do as much work as r is expected of a man my age. I advise t any one who is troubled to take Dr. Greene's Nervura. Do not go to a doc- e tor, but get a bottle of Dr. Greene's ^ Nervura. It is cheaper than a doctor's c bill." ^ The latter part of Mr. Hynes's ad- c vice might be profitably disregarded, y however, if you should feel you would , like the advice of a physician. You can have such advice and have it free s If you will write or call on the great- I est known blood and nerve specialist, \ Dr. Greene, 35 W. 14th St.. New ( York City. a A Naturalist's Bill of Tare. In Mr. Tuckwell's recently published c reminiscences' of Oxford and of well- * known Oxford men there Is an amusing 1 account of Frank Buckland, the natu- ? ralist, who surrounded himself so completely with the objects that most interested him as to make a visit to his rooms at Oxford or to his house in ^ ' ? r k j. E London a rainer iormiuauie auair. ai breakfast his guests had to make their ? way to the table amid monkeys, chameleons, snakes and guinea pigs; in other parts of the house were to be found eagles, jackals and pariah dogs, upon which one stumbled unexpectedly; while in the little yard outside the house was picketed a bear. Buckland's fondness for experiment led him also to play strange culinary tricks upon his guests, before whom he J set at different times such unusual J viands as kangaroo ham, horse's tongue, bison steaks and elephant's trunk. His brother-in-law used to quote with glee from the diary of a departing visitor this terse passage: ."Tripe for dinner; don't like crocodile for breakfast."?New York Evening Post. A LUXURY " J* Watch our noxt advertiser In every package of LION COFFEE fact, no woman, man, boy or girl will comfort and convenience, and which t the wrappers of our one pound sealed CATACOMBS OF ROME, How They Were Constructed and Changes That Have Been Made. The model in which the catacombs were constructed and the changes which they underwent at different periods is very clearly illustrated by the example of the catacomb of St. Callixtus, whose discovery is one of the most important which Di Rossi has made. The Christian proprietor secured a site of 250 feet frontage to the road and 100 feet deep from front to back. The staircase was sunk into the soil at one corner to a certain depth, and gallery round three sides of the area, with another staircase at its further extremity; two other galleries also extended from front to back, and still four other galleries extended part of the way across, all on a rather higher level than the main passage, and therefore approached by an ascent of a few steps, and at the extremity of one of these shorter galleries three chambers were formed; all these passages and chambers were occupied by graves. After a fresh set of cubicula were formed opening out of the main passage, only on a rather lower lever, and so approached by a descent of a few steps. At the same time another series of galleries stretching across the ] area was constructed at a lower level, gained by another staircase. Still later an endeavor was made to reach a still lower level, possibly for the ! purpose of constructing a third set of galleries, but after sinking a certain number of steps the excavators found 1 themselves below the stratum of tufa [ and in a stratum of friable pozzolana. ' They strengthened their wall with < brick, and made a few graves in the ! walls of brick, but seem then to have i abandoned the further progress of their ' work in the unsuitable stratum. The i tiles and bricks used jn this latest portion of the work bear the imperial stamp of Marcus Aurelius, and thereiore must have been made between the l years 160 and 180 A. D. ( Some time after, precautions were taken to conceal the entrances to the cemetery by blocking up the staircases \ md making entrances through an 1 idjoining sand pit. Still later the < :emetery was further enlarged, and : nade to communicate with others adioining, and finally the galleries, which lad been lined with dead in the graves nade in their sides from top to bot;om, were filled with earth, probably :o conceal them and preserve them rom violation in the Diocletian perse:utions. The discovery of this interestng cemetery is due to Di Rossi, who bund part of an inscription on marble n the cellar of a vineyard, which he :onjectured?rightly, as it turned out? ;o be part of the tomb of Pope Corlelius, which was known historically o be near the cemetery of St Callixus. At his suggestion the Pope purhased the vineyard and one adjoining, ixcavations were made, and were regarded by this valuable result.?Lonlon Architect British Royal Succession. in ureal cnutiu me ivyui sutteailon is in the direct line of de- j icent, males and the descendants of , nales being preferred to females or ' heir descendants of the same degree < ?f consanguinity. It would have made 10 difference, therefore, if the Empress 1 <Yederick of Germany, who is the < ildest of the children of the late Queen Victoria, had remained unmarried; the >ldest male child of the queen, who pas the Prince of Wales, and the issue ( >f his body would nevertheless have i >een the heirs to the throne. The older J laughter of Queen Victoria could have < jucceeded only if all of her brothers J lad died before their mother and < without leaving any descendants. The J ierman constitution makes the rank < ind powers of the Kaiser hereditary in ( he royal house of Prussia. The rule ' >f succession in Prussia not only pre- j< ers males (as does that of Great j Britain), but excludes females alto- < ;ether. J Journey of a Ticket. < A recent number of the Railway < fournal contains a well-authenticated J itory of a railway ticket which took a < ludden journey on its own account. j As a northbound train on the Colo- < ado & Southern road passed one of J he stations a passenger in a forward ( :ar raised a window and in an instant j lis ticket was blown from his hands < >ut of doors. The passenger naturally gave it up J or lost, and was very much surprised < vhen the baggagemaster handed it to lim a little while later. It appears that when the ticket flew ;hrough the window a southbound ;rain was passing. The suction of that ;rain, which was moving at a rapid ate, drew the ticket along with it, and -" niooaH iho -roar onH nf thp nnrth lo II* yacovvi tuv * vw* VMM ??v ? r >ound train it blew into the door of ' ;he smoking car. There it was found , jy the baggagemaster. " ' WITHIN THE REACH i MY PIC1 goes on evi iS I innf irm ? y "*s Make sure that pjj\& on every packagi V That tells you that it is gei I If you don't see my head / ^ If not at your groc / ll All leading 'JLION C Rnt,i is now the lei ? and is used in i you will find a fully illustrated and desc fail to find in the list some article which y hey may have by simply cutting out a cerl packages (which is the only form in which W00L50N SPICE CO., TOLEDO, OHIO. 1 Dark Substances Good Heat Radiators. The tendency of heat to diffuse it? self is effected by radiation, conduction and convection. Nearly all dull and dark substances are pood radiators, "while bright polished surfaces radiate badly. Some substances conduct heat more freely than others, silver among the metals being the best conductor, and as a unit of measurement is taken at 1,000. Compared with silver as a conductor, gold is 9S1, copper zinc U41, tin 422, steel 307 and wrought iron 430. Glass, wood, gases, liquids and resinous substances are bad conductors. Water is such a'poor conductor that if heat is applied to the top it will boil at the top while the bottom will remain cold.?Newcastle (Eng.) Chronicle. Best For the Bowels. No matter what ails you, headache to a rancer, you will never get well until yoai bowfls are put right. Cascahets help nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. Cascarkts Candy CHthartlo, the genuine, ?ut up in metal boxei, every tatlet has C.C.C. stamped on it. Beware ci mitations. IIia Piivilege. Jasper?Young Rooky spends his money In lumps without enjoying It. Jumpuppe?Well, that's r 11 right. Ills fathmado it in lumps without earning It.?Life. There Is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to bo Incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced It a local disease and prescilbed local remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced It lu :ongtitutlonal disease, and therefore requires :oustltutlonal treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney <&; Co., Toledo, Ohio, Is the ouly constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on tho blood and mucous surfaces of the system/ 1'hey offer ono hundred dollars for any case It fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. Chexey & CO., Toleilo.O. Sold by Druirgists. 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Dyspepsia [n its most aggravated form has been effectually :ured with small do.ses of Crab Orchard Water. Putting tlie Oceau to use, A poor little city child whose mother was a vasherwomau. seeing the sea when it was very ough for the first time, exclaimed: "My mother ought to be here. My, what a lot >* suds!" Dr. Bull's Cough Cures a cough or cold at once. Conquers croup, bronchitis, JVil III grippe and consumption. 25c J Mi To produce the best results n fruit, vegetable or grain, the "ertilizer used must contain enough Potash. For particjlars see our pamphlets. We >end them free. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 03 Nassau St., New York. SIOSC HEADACHE | succumbs readily to the easy remedy to take ( A natural medicinal water?concentrated. Aperient, laxative, tonic. A specific for all liver, kidney, stomach and bowel disorders. % It cures?Torpid Liver, DUIo??ncM, <#?on- A Hlce, Chronic DUewet of the Kidney* 2 Ilcfl.^nata if rnrtburm Hick Heftdftclic, 2 I Djuontcry Constipation, **"?? . - ffl. I Crab Orchard Water is the most em J I cacious of the natural mineral watera, moet | convenient to take; most I | economical to buy. \ lHBk 1 I The senulne Is sold by j [ k all druggists with Crab JfWh..,? I Appl trade mari onTBADE K&dijg* I I . ! every bottle. i I CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO., Lou;svil!e, 60 pig* oclSB 62 **ch (?nd " Vr^ rrtf^Q of field & vegetable seed* free orchoiee \ of 8 olbe: premium*, Including Silver* n{Tjy filled vatch sad eait of clothe*. Write Tvaflg'^JKiyM poetil accepting this offer *cd we will fomeiu ^ seeds, csUlovue. etc., by null. Btftrtnct?Citf BmkefSiicVmmd. p, J. gTXfi CO..El?hnwd.Va| taa Our Seeds Are northern Grown lention this Paper'" 'SKr""" OP ALL! n tdp sry package of Coffee. there is a lion head e before purchasing. mine, and not a glazed coffee. on the package, don't buy it, er's try another store, stores keep it. rOFFEE ider of them all, millions of homes. :riptive list No housekeeper, in ^ill contribute to their happiness, tain number of Lion Heads from this excellent coffee is sold), -^2" v i ~s > V >r ? Vy " I'ryr^'.yf' ' ' . ? " " . r^22-? v:f"' CURES BLOOD POISON. TREATMENT FREE. Have you eating, festering sores, mucous patches, sore throat or gums, ulcers, pimples, itching skin, aches in bones or joints, falling hair, boils, cancer, scrofula, offensive catarrh or old rheumatism ? Then you have contracted or inherited blood poison. To cure, take Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) which is made especially to cure the worst and most deep-seated cases, even when tho bones are affected. B. B. B. heals every sore, stops all aches, makes new, rich blood, giving the rich glow of hea th to the skin. B. B. B. improves the digestion. B. B. B. thoroughly tested for 30 years. B. B. B. kills or destroys the poisou, drawing it from the system. Drug stores, $1. Treatment "of B. B. B. sent absolutely free by writing Blood Balm Co., 25 Mitchell St., Atlanta. Ga, Describe trouble, and free medical advice given until cured. Costs nothing to tiyB. B. B. Medicine sent prepaid. Wise Bird. "Give us a proof of your boasted wisdom," cried a lo: of chattering inappies to the owl. "I will," ho said, and flew away. I ^ D0NT RUIN YOUI I O VV..M? i .a..a.a<a.a.a.a.a.a.a.a1.a.a.a.a.a? IMgtNCl : ww factoryloade i "New Rivalt" "Leat < i Insist upon having them, take no others and < ALL DEALER! Burninf * Complete ?: Internal 1 ^5E SE Consisting of CUTICURi skin of crusts and scale ened cuticle, CUTICUR A allay itching, irritation, stgHB heal, and C MBcleanse the! germs^tlNGLE SET i the most toftufing, disfl blood humors, rashes, it with loss of hair, whei and all other remedies f WONDERFUL CURI AS a sufferer for thirty years asis, finally cwed by C Ointment, I wish to telly may Benefit by it* I was so ' matter that exuded from my pc off, would cause my underclotl body* After remaining in 01 down, for an hour or two, the f would split, so .thick and hard w The humiliation I experienced agony, was something frightful fairly rain from my coat sleeve testimonials that appear to repr But as to the cure* I comm< cura Soap suds night and mo: Ointment, and ,then wrapped weeks my skin was almcfct blc and without scales* Patches oi ' to appear, and in less than a m< passed forty years of age and h as a baby's* Hoping that othe ence, and regretting that sensiti closing my name, I am y< - ?, J. H. ML, Bo Millions of People i Assisted by Cut!cura Ointment, the great a] beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp o ping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, t baby rashes, itchlngs, and chaflngs, and for nursery. Millions of women use Concuba 8c tions, inflammations, and excoriations, or too fi washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for man j mnrrrrnat f)lAm?plr0a t/% TTfimATl. Aim#Hllll7 cate emollient properties derived from Cuticc cleansing ingredients, and the most refreshing can lndnce those who have once used these gre others, especially for preserving and pnrlfylnj children. No other medicated soap is to be com] beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands, however exuendve, is to be compared with it nursery. Thus it combines in One Soap at O soap, and the best toilet and baby soap in the1 W. L. DOUGL $3 & $3.60 SHOES The real worth of TF. L Douglas 13.00 : shoes compared with other is 84. OC Our 84.00 Gilt Edge Line cannot be equal price. We make and sell more 83.00 and 8 than any other two manufacturers In the Uni THE KEASO.V more W. L. Douglas $3 and $3JD i than an* other make it became THEY ABETHE B dealer should keep them i we rlre one dealer cxcIusjtc sale 1 Take no substitute! Insist on baring W. L. Doujrl came and price stamped on bottom. If your dealer will rot too, send direct to factory, enclosing pries and 83c. extra Stats kind of leather, lis*, and width, plat# or cap toe. 0 reach yott anywhere. Write for catalogue Moving pew , We use Putt Celop W. E- Dh?1m Eyticw fa oil 9w HmktoBs " srri-V . : v ; ,7| . ' ; :'-" -. - . './;? WSplP^H I ?? '"SR&PKa^T ML fliwtort, Ctafot Fm4 m Ert QRm for Siietf, SwiM.Catda, jJjfiK* wm t? W?ik$m* ym to not w)M iflEr tihii1iOili|w^i>wlB^ SS?. BHUon Dollar 8r*M NCflfiV wfll poAirtij' moka j"0* riehj 11 taw Er ?< >*> n? lioilioloi pi ?ill *1 KjE> w?, r-an,%^ (*?to. ?r*,M IMF F0PiW? fl5tet?i 1?* IV ? Mfl bto ?ate%> nd MtaM jW y?r?kk?, 5ay ?A t?i? ?* moi 5v toSS 'floWJI<7 ** ? ?*1?oSo? | UOtWllAlittSgflOL^gH nDADQV mew DISCOVERY; gir? \J |% V r O 1 quick rtlM ond eons wont e*coe- Look of tMtixnouiolt and IO days' UOOtiMM tree. fir. K. I. fiius'lion. Box B. AtUato.9*. Ise CERTAIN iw'MIIM I STOMACH WITH MEDICINE. I adi J&nos I JRAL LAXATIVE MINERAL WATER. I lsed by tbe most prominent physicians is the best and safest remedy for die* . :h, biliousness, liver troubles, goat and . . I res Constipation! I glassful on arising In tbe morning and 5 remarkable effects in half an boor. ? I LOOK I CortmPia* | naofAndreasSexlebaer, 130FsitoeSt*.N.Y. flj Sfataiaiaiaiaiaiaiaiaiaiaiaiiaininu ? 1ESTEJ% tor," ana "Repeater " 70a wiH get the best shells that money can bay. 5 KEEP THEM# ? 1?si ? {Scaly' sternal and leatment I r 7 v - A t?i ' i&?Z'i''-<. i\ : -v ,:'' >'* -'a ' /r' /1 I ;' - ..S^- . . \^V~v" X -!t 1?j5 ' V ^ '-'.* '* - '* '^.'- ^ . *>. /. '-Hr* MB i^ MA -C- ~~"iv L #a-Sr'5Pts^l T $1.25 {SOAP to cleanse the s, and soften the t&lckOINTMENT to instantly % ?? "jL^JT--'. r anu muammautiii, ana - ^ UTICURA RESOLVENT blood, and expel Immor soften sufficient to cure gluing skin, scalp, an* things, and irritation, 1 the best physicians, ail. E OF PSORIASIS. from the worst form of Psoriuticura Soap and Cuticura ou my experience, that others grievously afflicted that the >res after the scales had peeled ling to actually gum to my le position, sitting or lying. (esh on my elbows and knees oUld the crusty scales hec^ne.' 35 , to say nothing of physical - The detached scales would, s. ~ I have read none of your e 4 ? esent a so oao as mced bathing in hot Cot*-' rning> applied the Cotkora* myself in a sheet In two' )oo ted in color* hot smooth' ; natural colored skin began' with I was cured* I am now(' Lave skin as soft and smooth rs may benefit by my expert*1 [veness forbids me horn dis? Dors gratefully, ston, Mass^ Sept* 30,1900. Ise Cuticura Soap idn cure, for preserring, purifying, ud f cruets, scales, and dandruff, ana the slop* wd healing red, rough, and sore hands, for all the purposes of ihe toilet, bath, tad ap In the form of batfls for annoying lrrita. ree or offensive perspiration, In the form of mothers. CtrncuEAt80A^comblnes^S^ rna, the great skin cure, with the purestof of flower odors. No amount of persuasion at skin purifiers and beautlfiers to uss any g the akin, scalp, and hair of Infanta ana pared with it for preserring, purl tying, and No other fore tan or rfomestir. inust MM. for aD the purposes of the toilet, bath, ul ' xe Price, the best sUn and rnmrlOTlf irorid. Sold by all drogflsU. ?