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ft-y.: "?- - \ mmmm?i i -. Some men spend the last half of their lives discovering the mistakes they made in the first half. ? A?fc Your Dealer for Allen'* Foot-T!a??, A powder to shake into your shoia; rests th> ^cet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen. Sore, llot, Callon', Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Xails. Allen's Foot-Ease makes new or tight sho^s easy. At all druggists and shoe stores. 23 etc. Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, X. Y. On some of the Japanese railways terra rotta sleepers are used. They are far more durable than those of wood. 11 You Have Dyspepsia Send 110 money, bnt write Dr. Shoop, Racino Wis., Box 14*, for six bottles of Dr. Slioop's Restorative: express paid. If cured, pay $5.50; if not, it is free. Austria and Mexico have resumed intercourse for the first time since the execution of Emperor Maximilian. Arc Your Eyes Sore? If your eyes are weak or sore Jno. R Dickey's Old " Reliable Eye-water will cure tb<m at once. 1 ou t burn or hurt. 25cts. Dickey Drug Co., Bilstol, Tenu. FTT9 permanently cured. No fits or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free Dr. R. H. Klixe, Ltd.. 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. An oil well and an orator are neither of thein much good unless they spout. Spain's kingdom of Asturias boasts of twenty-eight centenarians in a population of 600,000. |; How Three Woi i While no woman is entirely free fr to have been the plan of nature that V ?. Pinkham's vegetable Compc lator known to medical science. It r much discomfort and robs menstruati' The three letters here published she Aug. 6, 1898. " Dear Mrs. Pixkham : ? I have suffered since the age of sixteen with painful menstruation. I have been treated for months, and was told that the womb had fallen a little. The f' doctor says that is now in place again, but I still have the same pain. Please " " '"tell me what to do."?Mrs. Emma ??: Kukhl, 112 Trautman St., Brooklyn, v E. D., N.Y. Jan. 19, 1899. " Dear Mrs. Pinkham : ? After receiving your reply to my letter of j. - Aug. 6 I followed your kind advice, and am glad to tell you that I have been cured of the severe pain at time of menstruation through the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I have taken six bottles of it, felt better after the first bottle, and after a while had no more pain Sjv v or womb trouble. " I had doctored from the age of sixteen to twenty-six, and had lost all hope, but your medicine has made me well. " I would like to have you use my testimonial, so that others may see, and be inspired with hope, and take \ your medicine."?Mrs. Emma Kueiil, " 112 Trautman St., Brooklyn, E. D., N.Y. Feb. 20, 1900. "I saw your medicine so highly recommended I thought I would write to you for advice. ' My menstruation occurs every two weeks, lasts a week, and is painful. I j have been troubled in this way for some time. I suffer from sick head' ache and backache all the time, appeIf there is anything about your ci advice, write freely to Mrs. Pinkham. surely help you, for no person in Ame ing female ills as. she has had She " : women back to health. Her address You are very foolish if you do not ace A* AAA REWARD.?We liavodepo: Vkh j -which will be paid to any peri wvUwU arS ?enulne' or wer? S**1*3 B PRICE,25c. | Constipation j ? is easily cared and the bowels restored I T to a healthy condition by the use of^ \ A bowel, liver and kidn*. troubles. By T oar method c? concentration each 6 oz. bottl9 is equivalent to three gallons of a the spring water. 9 Sold by ail drug* ^ QpF \ i gists- Crab apple V trade mark on ?.mr yam* A every bottle ISr*^ J CRA3 ORCHARD WATER CO.. Louisville. Ky. "The .Sauce that made West Paint fameus.' MclLHENNY'S TABASCO Sozodont *' " 1 9 AN INFERENCE. "One thing I like about her is that she never gossips." said one woman. "Nonsense!" said Miss Cayenne. "That doesn't indicate amiability. It merely shows that she has no friends who will intrust her with a secret."?Washington Star. REPARTEE. She?How do you define repartee? He?Well, it's the thing that's smart v "i ni say it. but impudent when the ?. low says it.?Chicago Sews. First Submariu? Cable. Iho first submarine cablo wae laid acron j the English Channel about fifty years a jo. It j was also about the same time that Hoatettcr's | Stomach Bitters, the world renowned drsppp! sia cure, wat first introduced to tho public. | If you are a sufferer from this ailment, or | from indigestion, flatulency, constipation, I nervousness or insomnia you should try it ai 11 once, if you would be well. It will strengthen your entire system and produce soun 1 sleep. There is more false hair worn in the I United Spates than in all the rest of the world put together. Cheap in Price, But as a medicine worth its weight in gold i? Crab Orchard Water. Many have been restored to perfect health by its use. The largest body of water in the world I having no outlet in the ocean is the Cas! pian bea, it being 180,000 square miles in I extent. nen Found Relief. om periodical suffering-, it does not seep 'oman should suffer so severely. Lydia mud is the most thorough female reguelieves the condition which produces so on of its terrors. >uld encourage every woman who suffers: tite poor, sick at f stomach every morning, ever ything 1 eat hurts me, am very weak, thin, and sallow. 441 have tried a doctor, but he did not seem to do me any good." ? Miss Maggie Pollard, ' April 23. 1C00. 44 Since receiving your answer to my letter 1 have been taking your Vegetable Compound, and it has done me more good than any medicine I have ever taken. M3- menses are all right now, and appear once a month, and I feel so much stronger. 1 shall always praise your medicine."?Miss Maggie Poli.asd, 319 So. 4th St., Richmond, Va. 441 was troubled with female weakness.irreg-ular and painful menstrua- fr ) a t i o n, and leu- / p corrhoea. The doctor's medicine ^ . c? t did me no good. ft w ft I have taken one .W I J) bottle and a half 3 \^?* of your Vegetable i} I Com pound, and rj} thanks to your medicine,my pains are gone. I advise ?-' all women suffering as I have to use your Vegetable Compound." ? Emma J. Prieble, Indianola, 111. ase about which you would like special No man will see your letter. She can irica has such a wide experience in treat? has helped hundreds of thousands of is Lynn, Mass., and her advice is free, ent. her kind invitation. sited with the National City Bank of Lynn. S5000, jon who can find that theabove testimonial letters fished before obtaining the writer's special oerLYD1A E. PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for child ran loathing, soften the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25cabottle Only three weeks are required to develop a perfect mosquito from the egg. Pigo's Cure for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds.?N. w. Samuel, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900. ; About 10,000,000 cattle are now to be \ found in the Argentine Republic. J. C. Simpson, Marquess, W. Ya., says: " Hall's Catarrh Cure cured me of a very bad case of catarrh.'' Druggists sell it, 75c. Cape Colony has 30,000 acres of vineyards, with 90.000,000 vines. Happiness cannot be bought, but one of the great hindrances to its attainment can be removed by Adams' Pepsin Tutti Frutti. Even the tall cashier may be short in his accounts. All goods are alike to 1'ctxam Fadeless Dtes. as they color all fibers at one boiling. Sold by all druggists. i Only one colored soldier wears the Victoria cross?Lance-Sergeant Gordon, of the West Indian regiment. : rm ^ Every cotton planter should t write forourvaluable illustrated ! pamphlet, " Cotton Culture." , : It is sent free. Send name and address to j GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., N. Y. reeth am Mouth 25* HARRISON'S SAD ORDEAL kX-PRESIDENT FOUND FATHER'S BODY IN A CISSICTING ROOM. Went There to Try to Fin<l the Fo:ly of an Humble Herman Which Had Keen > tolen ? remitted in IIin fenrch, and Man lireHtly SliocKea nt tits uifcovcrj. The death of former President Benjamin Harrison has recalled to a few residents of this city, writes a Cincinnati correspondent of the New York Sun. a tragic incident in his career which happened here not long after the death of John Scott Harrison, his father, in May, 1S78. The man who was later to be president had accepted the nomination for governor a short time previously and although he ran 2000 ahead of his ticket the Republicans were defeated. It was before he had been elected to the United States senate, although that possibility was already contemplated. General Harrison had returned to his native town of North Bend, 1G miles from here, to visit his family and renew his old friendships in the place of his birth. He had gone there from Indianapolis, because it was already rumored that he might be called to Washington to serve his term as senator. During his visit to the little Ohio town he was made much of by the persons who had known him in his youth and although his father had just died he received many visits from the country people; one of those who came to see mm was an om ueimau nuumu, whose husband had been buried recently. "She came to see General Harrison," said a man who was a part of the incident he was relating to a group of friends the night after General Harrison's death, "because she knew he was 'influential, a friend of her husband's, and would help her in the trouble that had come with her widowhood. Her husband's body had been buried in the little churchya^ of the village and a few days afterward there were unmistakable evidences that his grave had been tampered with. Investigation showed that the body had been stolen. There was immediate suspicion that it had been sold to one of the medical colleges in this city, and the woman wanted her husband's friend to help her to recover the body. "She told her story to General Harrison, who promised to do what he could to help her, as he was coming to Cincinnati the next day on his way back to Indianapolis. He agreed with the idea that the body had been brought here and sold for the purposes of one of the clinics, and the first thing he did on reaching Cincinnati was to consult with' the chief of police. "The general and he agreed as to the best means of conducting the search. The chief got a warrant and sent a constable with him and his friends to all of the medical colleges here. The first institution they went there they found no signs of the body, fionoml Harricpn knew that, he would be able to identify it and he'spared no effort in making the search thorough. Every body in the dissecting room was shown to the party, and when General Harrison told us that he had failed to find any that looked like the old German we moved on to the three other colleges with dissecting rooms. In none of these was there any sign of the body for which we were searching, although General Harrison looked at every cadaver from those which had just been brought in to those pickled in the cellars down stairs. "We had about given up hops and only the general's suggestion that we return to the Ohio State college once more led the party back there again. We felt certain that there was no place we had not seen, but when General Harrison thought that it might pay to look through the rooms again we all went back williuglv. The dissecting room in the State college was on the top floor, and the cellar, in which the bodies were kept, was directly under this. The subjects were lifted from the cellar to the top floor by a pulley rope, which passed through the different floors by means of trap doors cut on every landing; in these were cut holes for the ropes. We had walked up the staircase without noticing this rope, especially until we reached the dissecting room, and then understood from its appearance for what purpose it was used. The constable in the party put his hand on it just as we were leaving the room and felt that it was taut; he suggested to General Harrison that the | trap door be opened and that whatever was on it be hoisted to the room in which we were standing, in order to see what it was. I "The janitor of the building, with one of the instructors, was showing us through. He demurred at this suggestion: but when General Harrison indicated to him plainly that he wished the rope pulled up the two men complied. We stepped back from the trap door, which was opened; the janitor leaned forward and pulled down the rope, which brought up the object attached to the other side. "Suddenly there shot into view through tho aperture from the floor below the naked body of an old man. A rope was tied around the neck and in this was a hook attached to the rope that served to lift the bodies upward. General Harrison had been through all sorts of experiences that evening with the bodies of so many kinds that we had seen. He had never flinched or hesitated to examine closely enough to see if he had found the missing husband of his old rriend. He was not an emotional man, but changed color at the sight of the body that came into view, its head had already been shaved for the dissecting table. He spoke a few hurried words to the constable that none of us heard. The official remained in the room, while we left it at General Harrison's request. These two remained alone with the college officials in the dissecting room up stairs while we awaited them down stairs, confident mat the missing body had been found. "It was not until the constable came to dismiss us that we learne i the truth. The body which so suddenly came into view was that of General Harrison's father, John Scott Harrison, the grandson of a signer of the Declaration of Independence: the son cf a president of the United states, and a distinguished lawyer, soldier and statesman; but he was the prey of body snatchers, just as the humble German in the same cemetery at North Bend had been. "Naturally, we did not see the general again that night. He sent for a friend, and with him went to the newspaper offices in the city, explaining the matter fu'iv. and requesting that the least possible notice be given to it. As far as I can remember now, the incident was scarcely alluded to, and at all events its details never became public. The body was returned quietly to the grave at North Bend, which bad been robbed by ghouls from Cincinnati who had supplied the medical colleges during the entire winter. "The authorities in the college where 1 General Harrison found his father's body supposed that the cadaver on the dissecting table, when they learned ! the business of our investigating party, was that for which we were seek- 1 ing. It was then lowered into the cellar on the rope, and when we went down there to look it had been lifted to the floor above. In that way it had been concealed until the sudden demand that the taut rope be drawn up was made on the janitor and instructor within. "A party of us went out on the fol- j lowing day after we had heard of the incident to visit the cemetery of North Bend, and found John t,cott Harrison's grave empty. The fresh earth had been removed, the upper part of the coffin lid cut away and the body taken. I never heard whether the body for which the search wr.s originally started was ever found, but I know that the chief of police, who learned * * ? ~ -A *U/? n r> ri ot toe incident, saw to it mai me in that little cemetery were protected in the future. "General Harrison confessed shortly j after the incident that he had never in his life gone through an experience like that which followed his first discovery that it was his father's body 1 hanging by the neck to a rope only a few days after he had been buried with all the honor that the region could show." PRETTY C'JBAN CIRLS. They Are Tretty, Lanj-uoronp, and Won- j der at American C.irl9* Activity. Mrs. Mary A. Ames, who has been I in Cuba for the past 18 months with j her son, talks interestingly of the 1 people, or rather of the Cuban girl, for she saw little of the Cuban man, and a great deal of the girls. In fact, Mr. Harry Marshall of Little Rock, Ark., who was associated with Mr. Ames, married a Cuban girl. There are no people on earth as in- i teresting as Americans; of this we are assured by high authority; but it is interesting to hear Mrs Ames draw . the contrast between the American and the Cuban girl. Unless, indeed, it gets on your nerves, then you had better eschew uuba and its people. "In the first place," said Mrs. Ames, "They the generally pretty in a langourous way, but as a rule they are not mentally active, and conversation with them as between woman and woman is a little stupid. With the man it is rather different, for they 1 make up in animation what they lack in mental cultivation. They dance and dress, play cards and flirt admirably." An occupation which is essential to American girls is unknown to the Cuban girl. Would she be a shop girl? Never. Neither does she do any man ner of labor In the home, unless one could call embroidery and fancy work I of all kinds labor. Her little white hands are smooth and white and as free from scars as they were the day she was born. Even the most reduced of them will not lace her own shoes. She thinks it horrid for the American girl to do any of these* things, but there is one American custom in which they think the American girl has a ; decided advantage, and that is not having a chaperone every minute of , her life. But what they lack in admiration for the American girl they make up in : adoration for the American man. They think there is nothing like him in all the world. The Cuban men do not admire him so extensively, and it was j i'unny to note that none of the Ameri- ! can men went for a shave, to a shop, a ball or to the home of one of the j senoritas that all the Cuban men in town could not have told you his exact whereabouts. "Cuba," said Mrs. Ames, "is not the i place to indulge in fine clothes, jewelry and all manner of fripperies, for everything of the kind is so expensive there. One needs an empire at one's back to meet the exorbitant prices charged to an American in the shops. The native, of course, gets off easier. Thirty dollars is the regular price for dressing the hair of a bride and it is done no better than the deft fingers of an American girl could do it in 10 minutes. "The girls who have been educated in Paris are of course broader in their feelings and anupatnies, mey reau books and magazines and papers with as much avidity as the American girl, but these are not in the majority even among the best classes. "Women do not shop in Cuba as they do in the States. At first I wondered what it meant, that what I took to be peddlers would be entering the homes of the wealthier classes at all hours of the day with great rolls of goods. It turned out to be the shopkeepers carrying their goods to the ladies to make a selection. Their gowns provoke as much thought and discussion as our own, but it is all done within the shadow of her own home. "The Cuban girl doss not trouble her little head much about its covering. At all hours of the day, if she appears at all, it is with uncovered head in the broiling sun, but they either have a superstition about the moon, or else some well authenticated reason for protecting themselves against the potency of its rays, for no one ever thiuks of going with uncovered head in the moonlight. "What do you think of the Cuban girls' chances for making a place for herself in the world?" "I don't think there is a chance for much mental activity in any direction in that climate. Transplanted, she has wit enough to rise to almost any occasion, and in a colder climate and in contact with women who 'do things' there is hope for not only a change of ideas, but a renewal of energy."? Marie Alice Phillips, in Atlanta Journal. Saved Cat's IJfe Three Times. A correspondent sends to The London Spectator the following anecdote: "The servant man of one of my friends took a kitten to a pond with the intention of drowning it. His master's dog was with him, and when the kitten was thrown into the wate" in onH hroiipht it hack lilt" uug Oi;i ang iu uuu ?. .. safely to land. The second time the man threw it in. and again the dog rescued it; and when for the third time the man tried to drown it, the dog, as resolute to save the little helpless life as the man was to destroy it, swaui with it to the other side of the pool, ran all the way home with it, ani safely deposited it before the kitchen fire, and 'ever after' they were inseparable, sharing even the same bed." First Lynching in France. From Montreull, a small town, comes a story of lynching of two burglars who naa incidentally assaulted the lady of the house while her husj band, bound and gagged, looked help lessly on. It is the first lynching in j France, so far as known.?New York World. Even the honeymoon is sometimes obscured by a cloud. I:Ji Rf*\l Drv'isin;. About a bed the chintz may be managed in several ways. A valance may be made reaching to the floor, and a frhite spread hung over it edged with lace, fringe or ruffle. If more color is liked about a bed, then the spread may be of cretonne, either hanging over a valance of the same or, reversing the former combination, the valance may be of white. Even with a bed, when the spread is tucked in on either side the. cretonne is good, but to most eyes the effect is prettier if the pillows are in white cases rather than matching the cretonne. A Xew Veranda Ktig. Those wno are looking for novel effects for their summer cottages may find a helpful suggestion in the rugs that one woman has been making. They are woven from lampwick. something after the manner of old-fashioned braided rugs, such as one finds in farmhouses, anu when finished are painted to harmonize with the room in which they are to be used. In all cases, however, black appears as a conspicuous part of the color scheme. This brings out the other colors by contrast and gives decided character to the rug. For veranda use these rugs are admirable, being substantial, picturesque and unostentatious. When they are to bo used out of doors it is a pretty conceit to introduce the colors of the exterior of the house into them, retaining the black, however, as in those for indoor use. Lampwick, when bought by the quantity, is inexpensive, and as the work costs nothing and the paints little, one may have a unique feature for house furnishing at a small outlay. ?Philadelphia Press. Kefpinj the Home Healthful. The licat and moisture of the summer months have a tendency to rust metals, mildew fabrics and cover all sorts of substances with mold. Fermentation and putrefaction develop rapidly in vegetable and animal substances if they are not carefully watched. Lime and charcoal are two aids toward keeping the house sweet anrl rlrv anH tha hnnspltaaner should. L possible, provide herself with both of these materials. A barrel each* of lime and charcoal in the cellar will tend to keep that part of the house dry and sweet. A bowl of lime in a damp closet will dry and sweeten it. A dish of charcoal in a closet or refrigerator will do much toward making these places sweet. The power of charcoal to absorb odors is much greater directly after it has been burned than when it has been exposed to the air for a length of time. Charcoal may be purified and used again and again by heating it to a red heht. The lime must be kept in a place where there is no chance of its getting wet and not exposed to air. I'nthrootn Knrnlture. Bathrooms, curiously enough, are apt to better in apartments than in houses. At any rate, if you leave out of consideration large and important new houses, you will find that the best showing is made in apartment bathrooms. The newest of them always have the tiled floors and dados, with the porcelain tubs, the closed plumbing being confined to old apartments, It might seem, then, at first, that almost nothing was left you as a tenant to do, but in reality there are ever so many opportunities for the giving ol distinctive touches. The color of youi rug, for instance, must be considered, and, again, of your curtains, and still again of your walls, and last, but by no means least, there are the color and quality of your basin and pitcher, since most unhappily, all bathrooms are not furnished with stationary basins, j When, therefore, it is necessary to introduce a basin and pitcher, the problem is not always an easy one. It is sometimes met by a board which is placed across the tub and on which A VkArtln rtlf/iVtOl* Q TO nlonoH T{ | LllU uaoiu auu pitvuvi aiu ^/awvvu. ?< the tub happens to be an old one encased in walnut; this board can be treated with a walnut stain, but if the tub be white it should also be painted white. Give it first one coat of ordinary paint, to be followed by another coat of bath enamel, which is not i injured by hot water.?Harper's Bazar, | RSC/PffS Apple Fritters?Beat two eggs, yokes I and whites separately, the latter until they are as stiff as for frosting. Add to the yolks a half pint of sweet milk, a pinch of salt and two cups of sifted flour in which has been mixed a teaspoonful of baking powder. Stir in a pint of peeled and slived apples and the whites of the eggs. The batter should be thick enough to drop from a spoon but not so thin as to run from it. Drop in very hot lard and take up with a skimmer. Sift powdered sugar or them and serve with syrup, i Com Soup?One can of corn, a quarl of milk, butter the size of a walnut one tablespoonful of flour and a scant teaspoonful of salt. Put the milk over the fire and when boiling add the corn; let the latter heat (but not cook) in the milk, then rub through a colander and then through a sieve. Return to the fire; when it boils add the butter, the salt and the flour stirred perfectly smooth with a little cold milk. Let cook till slightly thickened and serve hot. Three ears of green corn can be used instead of the canned corn. Carrot Balls?Boil carrots in lightly salted water until tender, peel, rut through a potato press. For each cupful put in saucepan over the fire onehalf tablespoonful butter, one heaping tablespoonful flour, one-half cup ol milk. Stir until smooth, add the prepared carrot, season with a heaping saltspoonful salt, a dash of pepper, a few drops onion juice, a teaspoonful chopped parsley. Cook two minutes and set away until cold and firm. Form in small balls, dip in slightly beater egg, then sifted breadcrumbs, fry golden brown in smoking-hot fat. Consomme Chasseur?Put into a stewpan two ounces of butter twc sliced onions, a carrot, two stalks ol celery, two or three bits of turnip, with thyme, parsley and a bay leaf. On this lay any bones of game with giblets cover tightly and let simmer for hall an hour. Let the contents get brown but not black. Then pour in aboul tvo quarts or so of good stock, preferably chicken or poultry. Let it come to the boil and then let simmer foi four hours. Strain off into an earthen basin and let get perfectly cold. Skim off all the fat, strain and heat ready I for serving. % m? sSPj^A ?l^r- Afsl / Starts t a You I VlCKL l<Oil^Si A LUXURY WITHIN 1 Coffee GLAZED. ( \ COATED, h J V?fi| Of otherwise JL.-bl H/msHK "> H treated with Ieto, etc. Lion ^ Coffee ^v^? js a Watch our next advertlsem ' Pure Coffee. Just tr>' a Packa?e of LION C< and you will understand the rea _____ popularity. LION COFFEE is now us< i ^ lions of homes. In every package of LION COFFEE you "will find a ft fact, no woman, man, boy or girl will fail to find in the 1 comfort and convenience, and which they may have by s: the wrappers of our one'pound sealed packages (which is 130FEETJ TTin ^Look O 1 I eophaffustmeat.plnejwhleh conrcyf tEfifoed ttethroet U to tne stomach; 2. Cwdiac end of stomach: ll^lorfe end o -gc^tfe stomach; i, Duodonuni; 6. 0*11 bladder; 6, . 0.JBiael-~??.fr i tines; 7. Caecum; I. Vermiform appendix: 9. Ascend^ colon. 10 Transverse colon; 11. Descending colon; 1? VT*OC XH4 i > ore- IS. Rectum- 14 Anus. Tho duodennm Is continuous ^rtJt r< < at... tho'small intestines. The nrnall Intestine e P?et find tha [ ! l?r^ intestine or colon at tho cse<mm. The arrows indite rvrnmntt-1 tha direction which the contents of the bowels mnittfcjce 10 prompil, ! piffle through tho tllzat&tAry csiisL Made CLEAN RRSL MmBL^ 4 jjKBH Wami wH|HV a tti^ r*trvr?n | ALL L>KLHjrU13 i d. ? Alinr ?? b<>wcl troubles, appendicitis, Ml* I IIUL lonsness, bad breath, bad blood, wind 1 I III 111 on the stomach, bloated bowels, foal V Ir 11 lo month, headache, indigestion, pimples, pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow complexion and dizziness. When your bowels don't move regu, | larly you are getting sick. Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together. It is a ! starter for tho chronic ailments and long years of safffering that come afterwards* No matter What alls yon, start taking CASCARF.TS to-day, for yon ; i will never get well and be well all the tlmbnntil yon pnt your bowels right. Take onr advice; start 1 i with CASCABETS to-day, under an absolute guar[ antoc to core or money refunded. ^ * : 1 1 ! ^ .Sai.?si Ml rc?t cure fo> _ _ i Dr.Bull ! iM-ii"1 | Cough Syriip5i,]S:Tu? S!Si j ?E \.\w 1 I Refusesubstitutes. Gel r?r. Hull's CoughSvrup* ? B j! PROFITABLE EMPLOYMENT If you '.tin (or think yon on) d-dioif LIFE l/NSU"RAM0E,| H rite (with reffreuees for terms to , n r lc^ W vr!'r _ ! of the foot, and the eon J R. F. SHfcDDEN, Gen. Agent, Atlanta, Ga "j THK MUTUAL I.IFK I n SU It A N'CK CO. and price stamped on hot: j or >. Assets Over 833J.000.000.ca. i send for catalog giving fu ; 1 nDODQY ??EW DISCOVERY; ? ? UI\V I V* muck r-'ie' and cures w:>rs j -J -yrp. J w-w , j c?*?s- too* of testimonial* ami I O tin vs' treatms . I 2)l^k.S V I * I Irrc. Dr H H. GBEENF SONS. Box E. Atlanta. 3? j ^or.a o^staple "COJs rcc ', j * j trom; ji in every ?ounty o I use certain ;?fciire.Ss j gssip ' - jH . . . ..it felt ^**SThe Afe&I \ ??e a i CCD BLUE 1 COO FLAME I tove i If your dealer JF liOtt ncl k?Cp ~~ ~ HE REACH OF ALL! | 11 THE NEW YANKEE DOODLE." || T ION COFFEE came to town To satisfy the craving \ Of millions, and their pleasure crown By also money saving. LION COFFEE IS the best, LION COFFEE stands the test, LION COFFEE'S sales attest The road to fame 'tis paving. . - ^ \ LION COFFEE is not glazed, . | I It has no foreign*coating, Its purity is always praised? Good health it is promoting. \ LION COFFEE takes the lead, ft LION COFFEE'S grand, indeed, } LION COFFEE all concede ^ Perfection is denoting. ^ . LION COFFEE'S in the bean? ^ Nothing there to hide it. ent. Lion head on package seen, Qppgg Premium List Inside it! son of its COFFEE'S gifts are great, I LION COFFEE'6 one-pound weight, j . .. LION COFFEE'S up-to-date, id m mil- x 11 i_iii ' ' All grocers will provide it illy illustrated and descriptive list. No housekeeper, in ist some article which will contribute to their happiness, imply cutting out a certain number of Lion Heads from the only form in which this excellent coffee is sold). WOOLSON SPICE CO., TOLEDO, OHIO. F BOWELS ed away in your instdrs and must fee kept dean, 4/vin/v fw?f?n#fc. MIW WVUiJ VWM?%wv* ^ a long way, with many turns and pitfalls to catch . sc and cW the channel if not most carefully out every day. en this longf canal is blockaded, look out for -furred tongue, bad breath, belchrng of gase* pots, pimples and boils, headaches, spitting up of || sr eating?an all-around disgusting nuisance. fofe/if calomel purges or griping soils ore jdaxr trous to use for cleaning out the bowels, hey force out the obstructbn by causing , v >J|| iolent spasms of the bowels, but they leave ie intestines toeak and even less able to keep o regular movements than before, and make a rger dose necessary next time. ; >u have the pill habh> which kills more people ; morphine and whiskey habits combined. : only safe, gentle but-certain bowel cleansers are ragrant CA5CARETS, because they don't force foecal matter with violence, but act as a tonic on le 30 feet of bowel wall, strengthen the muscles - : '^ ore healthy, natural action. Buy and try them! I ut for imitations and substitutes or you can't get Cascarets are never sold in bulk. Look for the irk, the long-tailed uCn on the box.) You will t in an entirely natural way your bowels'will be f and permanently -Sil and STRONG by ^ fi WMWI ^'? SOLDINBULK. M GUARANTEED IW18 -1 similar medicine In ike world. TUs Usbtolntcproof of great merit, and oar beat testimonial. We nave faith and will sell CA8 A_R ET8 absolutely guaranteed to cure or saoaey rcfaaded. Go bay today, two 50e boxes, lire them ? fair, ton est trial, as per simple directions, and If yon are not satlsfled* alter aslas one aOe box. rstsM the uaascdMt box sand the empty box to as by mall* or tho droflist from whom yoa purchased If, and set yonr money back ftr both boxes. Take oar advice?no matter what alls yoa start today. Health will quickly follow and yon willbless the day yea first started the me ofCABCAILETS. Book free by mstll. ? Address* STERLING BEXEDY CO.* KEW YOBK or CHICAGO. /I^uc^s^ST I 13. & $3.50 SHOES SEE. ik; 1 ?S Heal worth of W. L. Don~las S-'l and t$4. **h .hoc* is 84 to ?&. My. W g&y cannot b? cqualleu strnction of the shoe. It i>> tnerhiinhiii skill and X le W. I.. noiijflHg shoes the lest in the world for men. to. Insist on bavin* W. I_ lk>m;!as shoes with name ^^LY?&KNv' //fgw torn. Your dealer should keep them, If he does not, " /J*t38*k II Instructions how to order by inall. W. JL. DOIGLAS, Brockton, Mom.8bhe'vs5vv57^hffim rsp taHssagf 11