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pxr-~-~ Dogs and the Nations. Newly completed returns show that France hold- the European record with r- 2,864.000 registered dog*, which is equal to seventy-five per thousand inhabitants. ! Ireland ccincs next with seevnty-threc ; per thousand, then England with thirtyeight, Germany with thirty-one and i Sweden with eleven. Franco has gained but two million in : its human population in more than half a century. Ireland struggles and , dwindles under discontent, denationali- I zation. oppression and emigration. Yet ; these two countries so lead the rest in the possession of Tray. Fido. Bruno j and their kind that practically there is j no second. Germany had two million less population than France in 1S45. ! Now she has 56.000.000 people to i France's 38.000.00D. but her proportion ; of degs to persons is much less than j half than in the republic across the j Rhine. Rock Oil From tho Ocean Bed. Eight million gallons of rock oil are j pumped each year from under the bed j &' of the Pacific Ocean. ife 5 Exhibits at UnffsLlo. There will bo exhibits from all ov-r tho 1 wori<l at til? .Buffalo Exposition, which will i prove very interesting to all who rnr.y attend, j but no more so than til? news that the famous remedy. Ilostetter's Stomach Bitter?, will euro ; dyspepsia, indigestion, constipation, bilious ness and nervousness. To all sufferers from j the above complaints a trial is recommended. ; with the assurar.ro that when honestly used ; a cure trill be affected. It also tones up tho gSVi; entire ry;tcro. Kangaroos can jump eleven feet i.i ! height, against a deer's best record of nice j ' feet six inches. Sweat and fruit acids will not discolor goods dyed with Putnam Fadeless Dtes. Sold by ail druggists. A a? fliA esriv Twvrind r>? tilf> 1 JJl Ulil ICU ivo it w ? ?. - - - ^ . Roman Republic, which closciv resembles | Pompeii, has been discovered near Caserta. | *'r-~___ ______________ A soft answer may tarn away wrath, j but never a creditor. Affc Tonr I>e*)er for AHtn'i FooN'Bm*, A powder to shake into your shoes; rests tho C-. feet. Cures ("orris, Bunions, Swollen, Sore, j Hot, Callous. Aching, Sweating Feet and In- ] growing Nails. Alien's Foot-Rase makes new ; or tight shoes easy. At all druggists and : ' * shoe stores, 25 cte. Sample mailed FREE. ; Address 4lien S. Olmsted, LeRor, N. Y. ; _ The one-lejcced man can never hope to ; ? get there with both feet. A Month's Teat Free. I V If yon have Rheumatism, write Dr. Shoop, ?/ Bacine, Wis.. Bon 14$, for six boitics of his Rheumatic Cure, exp. paid. Ccnd no money, jgfc..;,. ray S5.c0ifcr.red. The ouickest wav to convince a men in heed its warning in time. Lydia E. Pinkham's 1 stop your torture and restore come from unnatural menstn of the womb. Let those who ton's letter and be guided by h AN OPEN LETT] i'DEAR Mrs. Pixkham I have 1 | with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta I I thought I would write and thank B was entirely run down. I suffered wi | ache in the small of my back and c< | upright; was more tired in the mornin I at night. I had no appetite. Sinoe t | pound I have gained fifteen pounds, g every week. My appetite has improve S ache, and I look better than I ever looi S "I shall recommend it to all my 9 tainly is a wonderful medicine."?Mai | 820 York Street, Cincinnati, 0. I "When a medicine has been si 5 more than a million women, a trying it, "I do not believe it I don't hesitate to get a bottle of I Compound at once, and write B special advice?it is free. I / writer '# special p< Iknts^ ^^^^Brohard Sash Lock and Brohard Door Holder Active workers everywhere can earn big moosv, always a steady demand for oar goods. Sample sash .ock, with prices, terms, et^. free for Sc stamp , for eostsgs. THE BttOBARD CO., ' Mailea mO,? fklladslyUa, Pa. S Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use S J In time. Sold by druggists. at 'wWVAVwIThtmpioR'i Ejrt Witw % t J to agree with him. Eg T7e will giro ?100 rcrard for any caso of catarrh that canr.ot be cr.rej with Ilali's Catarrh Cure. Taken internally. F. J. CarNEt ?3r Co., Props., Toledo, 0. t Buffaloes rrc found at the height of 12,000 feet 0:1 the African mountain of Kilima Njaro. FITS permanently cured. No fite or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nenre Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free R- H. Kli.sk, Ltd., 031 Arch St.. Phila., Pa. When the worst conies to the woret v.*c have Uinak^ of it. I Is it not true? Women sn I out of them, grow old befon I wake up determined to do sc | Before the morning is verjr I attacks them, the brav^mj | matter how hard they^^^H I "Why shouldX^([^^? rj " The' answer fe ready, you I woman is able to restore you t f Backache is only a symp | CANARY ISLAND WHISTLE TALK. ! Aborigines Have a Language Learned From the Famous Birds. Unique in one respect are the aborigines of live Canary Islands as described by an antlm p >logist who has been studying them. He finds that instead of using words and syllables for the purpose of conversing with one another they are wont to whistle like birds, neigh like horses and bellow like bulls. This panthrojxdogist is M. O'Shea, and the story of his discovery has pust appeared in the Bulletin of the "Biarritz Association." t, tViocf that the an Al VV <13 I IK.HU UI\.'V . ??? . ... cestors of the canary birds originally came. It is the note- of these birds which the natives of the islands, who arc known as Gomeros, cleverly imitate when they desire to converse. In Paris and other cities criminals have a regular code of signaK in which whistling plays its part, and which is used for the purpose of misleading the police. The Gomeros. however, have developed the art of whistling to the dignity of a regular language. Just as birds express by their songs their varied sentiments, so the Gomeros. by whistling and piping like the birds, can relate to each other all the news of the hour and convey any impressions and ideas that they may desire. A stranger wandering over the islands is frequently surprised to hear on a nearby hilltop the scund of loud whistling. which Is quickly repeated op the next hill until it dies away in the distance. It is the natives conversing about the events of the day. such as the arrival of the latest ship, the number of her passengers, the weather prospect and so on. Though they have no newspapers, the Gomeros are as eager for the latest news as the most civilized persons, and they whistle it to each other with amazing celerity and accuracy. Xo sooner, indeed, docs a foreigner appear on the islands than a full description of him is flashed in this way from one end of the country to the other. At a distance it is impossible to distinguish between a whistling Gomero and a singing canary, but the nearer one approaches to a Gomero the less marked does this resemblance become. The Gomero never ceases to imitate the canary, but at the same time he whistles with such power and intensity that the sound almost deafens those who are unaccustomed to it and who suddenly hear it near them. Vet this sound is soft and melodious compared with"" other sounds, which the Gomeros also make. Being high spirited and proud, they frequently desire to express exultation or triumph or some other strong sentiment, and on such occasions they either neigh like horses or bellow like bulls. Thus they use not only a main language, which is derived from the songs of birds, but also two dialects, which horses and bulls hav? taught them. 1 FOOR FELLOW. Hewitt?I don't understand what Gruet can see in the girl lie is to marry. Jewett?Love is blind, you know. Hewitt?Well, love will have to be deaf and dumb, too. if he gets along with her.?Brooklyn Life. ffer, feel the very life crushed ) their time. Each ipprning > much before th^iSy ends, (4/ old. the drej/fful BACKACHE back in affright: no IPre "clutch" is upon tnem ^ng: What can I do f" r cry has been heard, and a o health and happiness. torn of more fatal trouble? Vegetable Compound will t your courage. Your pains j lation or some derangement i are suffering read Mrs. Mor- | er experience. i SR TO WOMEN. j been bo delighted If JfljLJ' 8 ble Compound g you. My system ?|||?K?k P Ith terrible back- &^G9"S||| g >tdd havdly stand | g than on retiring jg J fiWintr rmir Pn?n. J|y |I ? and am gaining \ yl, have no back- ! friends, as it cer- ^Kfn^MWfrR j. E. F. MORTON, "Hiri T M F 4 ; ' MRS.L.F MCRTSN| 1 uccessfYil in restoring to health I you cannot well say, without | will help me." If you are ill, | Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Irs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for I a WW Owing to the fact that son\o skeptical 11 people have from time to time questioned the genuineness of the testimonial letters we are constantly publishing, we have le National City Bank, of Lynn, Mass., $5,000, id to any person who can show that the above : genuine, or was polished before obtaining the irtaissioa.?Lydia. E. Pinkham Medicine Co. ! FRAGRANT ?070P0NT Tooth Powder in a handy Patent Box (new) Ap. SOZODONT LIQUID 25c Vi!* Large LIQUID and POWDER, 75c |p|| At ail Stores, or by Mail for the price, HALt * RUCKKl, NSW YORK. DEADLY LOCKJAW GERM ODD WAYS IN WHICH TENANUS MAY ENTER THE SYSTEM. UuciUtm I.urk* in I>irt and Any Scrstlch i Mav Admit It?Ca.<e?t from Toy IMstol*, j Diving and I'aro Fret ? Danger from ! fi?hes A No?Symptom* of the DNensw. I The lockjaw bacillus is a formidable beast. It is inseparable from dirt. Dirty hands, lurking bacillus, a scratch or cut?and the mischief is done, declares a writer in the New Y'ork Sun. The unenlightened public persists in associating all lockjaw with rusty nails, and quite refuses to accept the bacillus that was formally introduced in 3 SS5. As a matter of fact, the nail's nnlv function is the making of | a wound through which the poison j can enter the system, and an oyster j shell or a tpv pistol can serve the j purpose of the bacillus Quite as well j as a nail. Why this bacillus should be espc- j cially prevalent in certain localities j scientists do not explain, but the fact j remains. The Shrewsbury river is a 1 happy hunting ground for the beast, and a clam shell cut of the mud. down there, may inflict a scratch that will j mean death. All Long Island mud is full of the bacillus, and the fact that Long Island children live to grow up would speak volumes for their cleanliness. were it not that, exposure to sunlight kills the bacillus itaimediately, and so the sun fights for the preservation of the Long Island species. New York itself isn't inhospitable to the tetanus bacillus. In 1899 there were 90 deaths from lockjaw in New York City and its vicinity, many of the cases being due to accidental wounds made by toy pistols on the Fourth of July. The pistol wounds in I themselves would net have bothered [ the small boys more than on any other Fourth. Probably there were no more of the wounds than there usually ! are on that glorious day; but. unluckily for the owners of the pistols, I Tnclrinw harilli wf>rp out in tremen dous numbers that season and seized j the opportunity offered by the pistol wounds. No boy can celebrate the Declaration of Independence properly and keep his hands clean, so there was no escaping the lurking foe. Last year two cases of lockjaw in this city were due to abrasions on the head, caused by diving in shallow water. The diver in each case struck his head against simething sham on the river bottom, and the bacillus in the mud entered through the cut, causing lockjaw within a few hour3. A wound upon the face or head, if affected by the bacillus, will be more dangerous than a wound upon the foot or hand. The poisoning develops more rapidly and is more violent in form. A large majority of lockjaw cases originate in the feet or hands of the sufferers because those parts of the body are most exposed. In warm climates the disease is more common than in colder localities, not because the germ revels in heat, but because the feet are lefis heavily shod in warm countries and so are more liable to injury. For the same reason in the south, more Negroes than Caucasians have lockjaw. The Negro makes a practice of going barefoot and his feet are frequently scratched or cut. In one recent mild case of tetanus poison, caused by stepping upon a nail, a New York doctor analysed leather scrapings taken from the shoe, around the point of incision, and found them full of tetanus bacilli which had been rubbed from the nail in its passage through the thick leather. Had the Vwaaw Kftwo 4 Yi cformt d iuui ucnii uaic. tuc would have entered the wound. Another New York doctor tells of several cases of lockjaw which he has treated, while at his summer home, and which have been caused by the introduction of the tetanus bacillus through wounds made by the horns of catfish. "I have known of tetanus poisoning from cuts made by fish fins and from lobster claws and from oyster or clam shell," said the doctor to a Sun reporter, "and I'd advise any one to suck a wound like that vigorously, the instant it is made. The poison isn't ordinarily on the fish or the shell, but it is on the dirty hands, and a fisherman is pretty likely to have dirty hands aud to get occasional scratches ir- handling fish." The mosauito carries the tetanus bacillus along with other germs, and in localities where the bacillus is plentiful cases of lockjaw for which no cause could at first be found have been traced to mosquito bites. In violent cases of lockjaw the poison toxine may develop and produce alarming symptoms within a few hours after the entrance of the bacillus into the blood, but in most cases tne development is siow at tne outset. The trouble shows first in a soreness and stiffness of the side neck muscles, and gradually slight spasms of the muscles appear. These spasms increase in violence, and extend to the muscles at the back of the neck, and then to the entire spine and trunk. The abdominal and chest muscles become rigid, and the spine is ordinarily curved. The face takes on grimaces, with the forehead furrowed, the angles of the mouth drawn back into a grin, and the jaw firmly set; and this facial expression, in connection with the hoarse noise made by the sufferer, renders a case of violent tetanus poisoning one of the most frightful sights in the range Df medical experience. Chronic convulsions sweep over ho body. at intervals more and more frequent, as the case becomes more violent. The slightest noise or jar or even a current of air being enough to bring on one of the spasms. It is only during these convulsions that the patient suffers pain. Mild cases may last several weeks; but in acute cases, death occurs in from one to seven days, and then mortality is very high. It is estimated that about 90 percent of the cases end fatally, and, among infants, there is no recovery. The mortality from lockjaw is. however, decreasing, as a knowledge of the nature of the disease becomes more widespread and physicians learn how to treat it. Analysis has shown that tetanin poison is much like strychnine poison in IIS ClieClS, UlUUgll ill uL II &L1 Ullgfl , rtliu various experiments havebeenmade to find an antitoxin that will neutralize the poison. While the results have J not been thoroughly satisfactory, i prompt inoculation with tetanin anti- j toxin is undoubtedly valuable in many I cases and should always be tried, if that is possible. Thorough cauterization of the wound is necessary, and. if done promptly, j will ordinarily pre v. r.t dancer; but j the difficult'.* is that the wound is often j too slight to occasion any notice or I alarm until th^ toxin has developed | ' and the harm is done. When the disease is once fully de! veloped the phvsician has a difficult proposition upon his hands. The pa- : l.cnt |s relaxed by the ese of chlnrO- I / \ J form, and hypodermic morphine and ! bromide injections are given. Hot ap- j plications arc sometimes beneficial, j The patient is kept in a dark roc^j j and absolutely o.uiet. the slightest ex- j citement being enough to bring on con- J vulsions. If there is no tooth missing ! in the patient's closed jaw it is not unusual to extract one. so that a stomach. tube may be passed through the opening and nourishment given in that way. Artificial respiration is often necessary. A case developing before the sixth day has chances of recovery; but. if the trouble does not ap- pear until after the 12th day. there is . comparatively little hope for the patient. WOMEN IN MEN'S CLOTHES. ! Careers of Feminine Advocates of Masculine Attire. The case of Murray Hall, the worn- i an who so long deceived New York . in regard to her sex. is bv no means without parallel. About a year ago "Ellis Glenn," who had fled from debts and an engagement to Ella Duke of Litchfield. 111., confessed when arrested to being a woman, and yet she had lived for some time in a small town, doing a man's work and awakening no suspicion whatever. There are many tales of women who served as soldiers, and one of these, thoroughly authenticated, was reported only a short time ago from the Philippines. One Maggie Curley served before the mast; Minnie Briggs. a trapeze performer, worked as an expert telegraph i linesman, and "Otto Schaffer," a Kansas hermit and soldier, turned out to be a woman, though given, nevertheless, a military funeral. History furnishes numberless examples from ancient times to the more modern instances noted by Krafft-Ebing. Perhaps the most famous case of , this kind is that of the "Countess" ? Sarolta Vay, 10 years ago. The child of an Austrian colonel, with a large i family of daughters only, she was reared as a boy and was a well known "man about town." in Pesth. drinking and smoking, and even appearing in military uniform. When her family finally tired of the farce she refused to give it up. ana was not aiscovereu until she married the daughter of a schoolmaster and squandered nil her wife's money. Chevalier D'Eon. when Louis XV. wanted a woman to act as secret agent on a Russian mission, assumed . the role and broke a dozen hearts in Moscow. The sex of one ! Englishman, a figure at court, was discovered only by death, while Queen Christina of Sweden, after resigning ' her crown at 28. spent half her time i in European cities dressed in man's j attire. - \ The Venetian Tonina Marinello fought through the campaigns of Garibaldi, passing as the brother of her husband being decorated for bravery, j Mary East kept a saloon with a worn- j an called her wife. Louis HermaD. a well known courier and a good lin- 1 guist, has for 42 years been affecting i men's clothes. Then there is Dr. Mary j Walker and Dr. James Barry, the j English army surgeon, who fought a ! duel at the Cane with one who dared j call her a woman. Nora Smith of j Ohio, hid her sex for 12 years, and j "Frank Blunt" managed a lumber j camp, was married and divorced be- j fore detected. Mrs. Lindsey went as a soldier through our civil war; Louise Watson, a child of rich parents, braved London as a boy. and Mary Talbot was a cabin boy, broke one woman's heart and was killed in a brawl with London police: Bessie i Finegold married a New York girl, Catherine Coombs was an English miner and Mrs. Loganani also one in Hazleton. Mrs. Julia Forest took her injured husband's place also in the Pennsylvania mines, and for 20 years Mrs. Westover was the town barber of Marlboro, ut.. "Tony Lfeesa was loved by every girl in a Yonkers factory until she herself fell in love and married a man. Army muster rolls are, however, after all. the place to look for these cases. Private Jorgenson served for 20 years in the Victoria Rifles, and in Fox's "Regimental j Losses" we note example^ Mhsffs: j Charles D. Fuller. -Wth Pennsylvania, detected and discharged; Sergeant Frank Mayne,~126th Pennsylvania, de- ! aerted, and subsequently killed in bat- j tie in another regiment; Franklin | Thompson, 2d Michigan, detected; L. j M. Blaylock, 26th North Carolina, detected. Most of these women served, before being discharged, with unusual j bravery, and their cases almost parallel that of Christian Cavanagh, the English woman, who enlisted with her impressed husband in Holland, was j wounded at Mamillies and then remained with the regiment as a cook. ?Philadelphia Press. Rongli on the Bride. At a small country churchy a newly married couple were just receiving ! some advice from the elderly vicar as to how they were to conduct them- j selves and so always live happily. "You must never both get cross at once; it is the husband's duty to pro- I tect his wife whenever an occasion j arises, and a wife must love, honor and obey her husband, and follow him wherever he goes." "But, sir?" pleaded the young j bride. "I haven't yet finished." remarked the clergyman, annoyed at the interruption. "She must " "But, please, sir." (in desperation), "ran't vou alter that last nart? My husband is going to be a postman."? The King. Aiding and Abetting. A cheap-iack Leeds butcher brought i his cart to a standstill in Lady Lane. An old woman looked with longing eyes at the pile of bones and gristle J which the butcher loftily referred to as "joints" and "steaks." but was evidently very poor indeed, for she hesitated to pay threepence for a scaleful of "selected bits." " 'Ere, have 'em at tuppence," growled the butcher. "It's too much," said the woman. " 'Ave 'em at a penny.'" Still the woman hesitated. There was a look of pity, mixed with disgust, on his face as he murmured pathetically: "Still too much? 'Ere. 'ang it. I'll turn my back while you sneak 'em!" Tea in Our Southern States. The question of labor has been dealt with quite as skilfully as the natural problems of heat and moisture; and while it still costs something like eight times as much to have a pound of tea picked in South Carolina as the same service would demand in Asia, yet much of this comparative loss has already been balanced?'.nd much more, it is hoped, will soon bo balanced?by greater productiveness in the field, by the substitution of machinery for hand labor in the factory and by the manufacture of varieties of teas which from i inherent chemical causes, cannot, be brought from {he OrIent~?evlew of j Reviews. COUNTESS VON WALOERSEE. An American Woman Who is the Aunt of the German Empress. The Woman's Home Companion contains an article by Mabel Percy Haskell of how the daughter of a New York grocer, by her good sense and tact, has risen to almost a royal position in the German Empire: "There are many American women Viho have become noblewomen, but there is only one who has ever became aunt to an empress?the Countess von Waldersee; and she not only holds that excellent position, but is also distinguished as being the only American woman who ever became a princess in her own right quite aside from any title acquired by marriage. The Countess is really the Princess of Noer. this title having been conferred upon her by the Emperor of Austria many years ago. "Few people in this country know the romantic and remarkable life-story of this American princess, who has never returned to her native land since she left it forty-five years ago, then a young gir! in the glory of her beauty and first vouth. She has been so closely associated with the exclusive life of the high nobility of Berlin that Americans traveling or at home, could not know of the American woman who is acknowledged to be almost a power behind the German throne. "This remarkable woman, although the daughter of a New York grocer, married successively a royal personage and a scion of one of the most exclusive families of the proud German nobility. She frankly used her influence to bring about the marriage of the present German Emperor and her niece, and has proven herself to be a most remarkable match-maker. Her husband holds one of the highest positions at court because of her influence, and he was sent to China at her request. Thus she is really one of the most brilliant and interesting women of the century, but the'fact that she lives in Germany makes it impossible for the English-speaking world to have a true knowledge of her power and achievements; for, although a woman's influence mav be very great and farreaching in Germany, her personality is always hidden, the 'new woman* and 'women's rights' being utterly unknown quantities in the Kaiser's domain." Society's Open Sesame. Society in London is becoming divided into two distinct camps?those who play bridge and those who do not. How often have I seen the invitation to dinner stopping short on the lips of an intending hostess, as she turned away with a disappointed, ''Oh, you don't play bridge!" Good players are eagerly sought after, and are becoming a very exclusive coterie, from which all "duffers" are ruthlessly eliminated.?Vanity Fair. CIRCUS FEATS. "Great is the man behind the gun." "I don't know; the woman who gets fired out of a cannon is no small potatoes." Havo you ever experienced the Joyful sensation c I a good appetite? You will if you chew Adams' Pepsin Tutti Frutti. Germany holds the record for the first daily paper. It was printed in 1524. II. H. Grbkn'o Sons, of Atlanta, Ca., aro the only cuccessful Dropey Specialists in t jo world. See their liberal offer in adverossmeni in another column of this paper An Africau who had visited England described snow as "rain gone to sleep." llr>. Wiailow'* Soolhtry Syrup for ohl'.lrai teathiag, sofi? i tuigr.mr, xiir.cji in lamination,allays pain, cures wind c a*, ie. 25cabot?b It's usually when a man speaks without thinking that he says what he thinks. Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of throat and lungs.?Wv. 0. Endslkt, Vanburen. Ind., Fob. 10,1900. Europe has had 321 lnonarchs since the battle of Hastings. The Iiosc Tint of Health. 01 -key's Female Tonic clears the skin, bright ons the eye, and brings the rose tint of hoaltt to the pale and e.uaclated face. Wanted?Asbestos, Mica, Graphite, Manganese. Send samples (our expense) by expresi with full Information. W. M Scorr & Co.. R<-a Estate Agts, Atlanta, Ga. 25 years experience A man should choose a wife as he does a piece ot ciotn?tor qualities tnat win , wear well. ^ BHL iw^^$^rofits wiI1 b? |?3f^Esl large; without P?tash^ your Our books, telling about composition of fertilizen best adapted for all crops, are free to all farmers. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 03 Nassau St., New York. I Back up a sewer, and sours and ferments, like garb breath, yellow skin, mental stomach, make the liver Itvel Don't hesi I 1 THE TABLET ^ OrARAKTUD TO CVU ?H bad breath, bad bleed, wtada jSL headache* ladleeetlea, elwrglw. KM elexloa aad dluln?M. when ; retting sick. Cat) si 1 pa ttoa kills A It la a (tarter far the ehreek a m afterwards, Ife matter what el 25k iron will merer get well aad be H right. Take ear adrleel start 1 W rwsatet Ut careermetaty T*C* .. . ' V;: ? Toasting - 6rc baking anything that can be done with better, cheaper and quicker on Blue | Flame wSI Heat is not diffused througt out the house?there is n smell, soot, or danger, and ti r\ expense cf operating is noni TI na^ Mac^e iQ many size sold "wherever stoves are sol< If your dealer does not hai it write to nearest agency of IC^U STANDARD OIL U COMPANY I A LUXURY WITHIN I COFFEE ^ I is &? Watch our next advertise I Pure Coffee J"St try a packa?e of L,ON ' and you will understand the i | popularity. | LION COFFEE is now 1 | j lions of homes. g In every package of LION COFFEE you will find a 9 fact, no woman, man, boy or girl will fail to find in th< I comfort and convenience, and which they may have bj I the wrappers of our one pound sealed packages (which Crane Secured Plumb's Hat eeeeeeeeeei Several Senators who are still in the ' uti < ft -* a Mf-rAHA! t; :ity met in one 01 me commtttee-rooms t ffl|lL/||d| i at the capitol this morning. The con- ? I yersation in some way drifted to Will- ? > iam H. Crane and his interpretation J ' In |. of the role of "The Senator." It brought jg .! out a story of how Crane put the finish- ^j. I ing touches upon his great chdidctet f . . , ( study. _____ - " . ate relief. I 1J- "As'you well know," said one of the WtttdO ITIOf group, "Crane took his character almost than all the directly from Senator Plumb of Kansas. Hjes Du{ Crane had just started out with "The J an .u ,.0i;Jhl Senator." and had opened in Washing- I an 0,fl' re,ia01 ton. We had all seen the performance . By mB, 23c; Hal and liked it immensely. But I thought ? # ? ' I saw one defect. Crane wore a high silk hat. which was not at all according j to my thinking, in keeping with his imi- DRUrw J tation of Plumb, who always wore the <**** too* oi t?atimo ! characteristic broad-brimmed felt hat of '>cc' I the southerner. One evening, when . i Crane, Ingalls, Plumb and myself hap- -- ?. .ajj% pened to be dining together, I remarked IWCILfltrlPI t' to Crane about the matter of the high r ^"You really ought not to wear it. for MefltiOfl this Pap it is not in keeping with the character." " said I. "You ought to wear one like ! "Crane did not say much in answer, j yfi \? j but when we arose from the table he j B j? ' reached out for Plumb's hat, and calmly i BfASTCOLOj^ ' put it on. Leaving his own hat for j EYELETS , Plumb. Crane went off down the street : with the old felt affair jammed down i , ^.BROc ; over his forehead. The Senator was too ' ! surprised to offer objection. The next j night Crane appeared on the stage with i of the foot, and the i Plumb's hat on his head, and thereafter j nh^inb? wore it at every performance.?Wash- ; and price stamped 01 \ivcton Tirvrs. ' ^ f^ catalog girt Sour Stom - - ... ? a At ft ] 1 you poison the whole neighoornooa. oiog up nver ana uww age in a swill-barrel. That's the first step to untold miseryfears, everything that is horrible and nauseating. CASC y, tone up the bowels, set the whole machinery going and ke fate I Take CASCARBTS to-day and ^ y "After I was fndtteei to tr BBte. x BBTS,1 wiU never be wiitxml \ ^ZaiScaL house. M7 liver was in a very MBPa iSgfealV j and my head ached and I had ate rasSB kMBSS Me. Now, siroe taking Cascarete HH ?ach My wife has also used them with BMfl vfl results for sour stcmaeh " fflRi JOS. trwiITJM, JX& -ad 1821 Congress St, St ] His Sssy, . BEST FOR BOWELS ANi k.' Iall Vwwltroabt?. ?p??n41elU?, btltotuim. ?. * tbf? vtoBMvcL. blMM b?w?k, foal rth, CAgCT wywl Ml>'>Acr MtitCi Utw traabte, ?H?weo? ?Uallarjae?fee?a? r*w b*w?i> doa't ?rt recslarly y **" ?^ ***** 'f"11'1 ia>rt ?co?)? nu ?Ul otbcr Imcomitocctker. rmwttja f* )laenU Md l?u tmti ?TdftrliK UuU ??m ?J" ?? LU yo*. ?t?rt Ukhff CAfCAXKn MfJ. ?br 2f*?* SfJJF wtli all Ojuntll y*a pit jmr Ww?ta "* ky.??*? ggCAaCABCTlM./. nd* ~ HS&gg|g! tiling r - ironing Less j3 hh hHB MR fMM ?" THE REACH OF ALL! I "EASILT AKSWEBSD? J ; J PWhat is it, at the morning meal, 9 That makes cs bright and happy feel? fl A pleasure that we can't conceal? I LION CdFFEB. What is that brand?sold in the beta? ~ I On which no glazing's ever seen? fl Nought but the berry, pure and dean? ' What drink produces healthful Joy fl In man or woman, girl or boy? fl With no strange coatings to annoy? fl LION COFFEE. SggS What brings to every home delight; And serves to tempt the appetite, ^*43 To brace the nerves and do it right? I %fm LION COFFEE. M What is the odor?fragrant?rare? . . At meal-times borne upon the air? i ' , ;? A sweet aroma ever there ? ^Isal LION COFFEE. What is that package?just a pound? I V^li On which a Lion bead is found,? fl COFFEE Inside, a Premium List renowned? ?-7! LION COFFEE. eason of its What is it helps the housewife shrewd, I 1c/1j -^11. While buying puraet K<piid food, fl To fill her home with presents good? I LION COFFEE fl fully illustrated and descriptive list No housekeeper, in - i:.i nr>.iVh will rrtntriVmtA to their harmi??aL fl 5 iibl SUU1C aiuub viu.w* n fl , ,y r simply cutting out a certain number of Lion Heads from . ^ is the only form in which this excellent coffee is sold). I wool50n spice co.. toledo, ohio. i rsEveSaTve*^& Company, I O^J V JUif V i 89 8. Broad Su, Atlanta, Oa. . ; Engines and Boilers tense pam in the eye J j - ? 4 a Hmtew, SUam Pumps aad Often excruciating Penberthy Injector*. d caffs for immedi- ? Mitchell's Eye Salve * e for the sufferer J | || new-fangled reme sther. Mitchell's is { 9 : le salve. Price, 25c. J Jr 1 & Reck el, \ew York Oty. Manufacturers and Dealers In SAW MILLS, V5*S2t2KS!?S c?,HUto.r?awuto.c^?iOi.*WM#;; fjk oislsand 10days' MMN cry and Grain Separator*. uv'ssohs. Box b. atuat*. s* soi.lD and IKSURTED Saws. Saw Teeth and ; M 1 ochs, Knight'* 1'atent Do**, Blrdsall Saw nmJ*X*r,.t Point famem." B1I11 ?nd Engine Repairs,Governors,Grate w.a ?.2r?nn Bars and a lull Una of Mill Supplies. Prirs V S TABASCU* ! "nd Quality of roods guaranteed. Catalogs* . free by montlonlnr this paper. I* isu-lWl-Twenty^one [ jsEtanw gr cjlh 1 w i nniimis f ?. STaaMBfflS 11 Rful w?rth or W. L. DohcIju^S aad Snf^SS^ shoes is S4t?SS. My #4 mSg *:? Y^-^OiltJBJgeJLdaccoanotMe?ywlM V jiff ' ' >" lcatbe^that makes i construction of the shoe. It is mecfatniraT skill sad 1 ! made W. I,. Douglas shoes the heat in the world for men. jH?R9j?h* 7$& titnte. Insist on liavinir W. I.. Donglas shoes with name ^HLVrKSsv' - ' ' ' i bottom. Your dealer should keep them, if he does cot, /l?ffi^L rot fall instructions how to order by litslL ' /k0V& XV. J., hour. I.AS, Hrocktaa, Mom. HBWgvMltffif ach ? l 'els, and your stomach Is full of undigested food, which W ?indigestion, foul gases, headache, furred tongue, bad 3 CARETS quietly, positively stop fermentation in the 3? be saved from suffering! ; ? i pcocmnm ITCO* V IU-- S sever s ? ' ^