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1Sprin9g Unlocks The Fowers 7,o lirdj lte Zrghqing sxor" And not even Nature would allow the flowers to grow and blossom to perfection without good scit. Now Nature and people are much alike; thze fonner must have sunshine, latter must have pure blood in order to have perfect health. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures blood trou bles of al sorts. It is to the human system what sunshine is to Nature the destroyer of disease germs. It never disappoinfs. Poor Siood-" The doctor said there were not seven drops of good blood in my body. Hoc-l's Sarsaparilla built me up and made me strong and wil " S,:s! E. Bnows, 16 Astor HI", Lynn, Mass. DySpepSI, etc.--" A complicatlon of troube-, dy5p-psia, chrGnic catarrh and inffa:rn:ation of the "ioMach. rheumatism, etc., n:ace i.e mi:arabie. Had no appetite until I took Iood's Sarsaparilla. which acted like ma.:c. I arn thoroughly cared." N. B. SzsL:, 1874 W.14th Av., Denver. Col. - Rheumatisn-"My husband was vbliged togive up work on account of rhen matisrn. No remedy helped until be used Iood's Sarsaparilla, which permanently .red him. It cured my daughter c0 ca tarrh. I give it to the children with good results." .'ns. J. S. McMATs, Stamford, Ct. V Hood's 11P.% cure liver -l-. the non."r;:ating and the caly (.hi:: lic t an:e wil k.',o-s Sars.pariIZs. iN d F11 F M adALOKnO-k ed on r.f Fin-.er- ot Join.t-Used %z%ntia :cw days. 1 Cures Er ery T1ine If You Will Use 1t Right. U y ley or s . When Eirds Begin to Sing. An ornithologist, having investigat .ed the question of at what hour in summer the commonest small birds wake up and sing, states that the greendnc"h is the earliest riser, as it pipes as carly as 1:30 in the morn ing, the blacCap bcginning about 2:0. It is nearly 4 o'clock, and the sun as well above the horizon, before the drst real songstcr appears in the person of the blackbird. He is heard half an hour before the thrush, and the chirp of the robin begins- about the sO-Me length of time before that of the wren. Finally, the house sparrow -and the tomtit occupy the h1st place on the list. This investigation has alto gether ralzed the lark's reputation for early rising. That much-celebrat ed bird is quite a singgard, as it does not rise until after the chaffinches, lin nets ar.d a number of the hedgerow birds have 'ceen up and about.-Cin einnati Enger THE ILLS OF WOMiEN And Hlow iErs. Pinkhzm fle19 Overcoma Them. Mrs. MU&ayBoLo,111Mfariaans St., Chicago, 111., to Mrs. Pinkham: "I have bcen trouboled for the past two years with falling of the womb, lencorrhoa, pains over my body, sick headaches, backache, nervousness and weaknuers. I tried doctors and various remedies without relief. After taking two bottlcs of your vegetable Com pound, the relief I obtained was truly wonderful. I have now taken several more bottles of yor.r fo.mous medicine, and can say that I ant entirely cured.* Mrs. Em .. Dor:::, No. SOG Findley St., Cincinnati, Ohio, to l.rs. Pinkcham: "For a long time I suffered with chronic .inflammation of the womb, pain in abdomen and bearing-down feln.Was very ncrvosat times, ad thing. Was subjort to headaches, also troubled with leucorrhea. After doc toring for mrany months with different physicians, and getting no relief, I had given up all hope of being well again when I read of the great good Lydia E. Pinkiham's Vegetable Com pound was doing. I decided immdi ately to give it a trial. The result was .\imply past boief. After taking four bottlcs of Vegetable Compound and asing three packages of Sanative Wash I can say I feel like a new woman. I deem it my duty to announce the fact to my follow sufferers that Lydia E. Pinkh:m's Tegetabole remedies have entircly curedt m.c of all my pains and suffe-ing. I have her alone to thank for my recovery, for which I am grate frl. May heaven bless her for the goopd wgi;she is_ donfor_s_ VERY. SUCCESSFUL farmer v':ho raises fru;its, vegetables, berries or grain, knows by experience the imiportance of having a large percentage of in his fertilzers. If the fer tilizer is too low in Potash the harvest is sure to be small, and of inferior quality. Our bo:z.:: to!boat thec niceer fertilizers for all crag, a:nd we W.i3iladly scn:i them Trades:ark Means "Standard . of Quaty" on Athctic Cods Inlsist uon Spaldinlg's ye . Yor. : hia . eos.. TAHITI'S WAR SCARE. Everybody Excited Except a T1anke WhO Had Tinber For Sale. The worst scared people of the year 1898 probably were those inhabiting the French isles of the Pacific, espec ially in Tahiti. The people of such islands as New Caledonia Tahiti, etc., reqeive news from the outs-de world when it is months old, and the white inhabitants, being mostly Frenob, are easily excited. New Caledonia is a convict settlement of the French Gov ernment, where there are thousands of exiled oriminals. This made an exceedingly anxious time for the rt spectable, inhabitants of the principal town, Noumea, during their war scare. At Tahiti the officers of the French transport ship Aube, hearing of the war talk between their country anA England several weeks after it started, became disturbed at the movements and signaling of several foreign *es sels, and straightway ordered all har bor and lighthouse lights out, and be gan collecting and carting all stores into the country, the work being car ried on at night. To heighten .the scare several of the crew of an Ameri can ship went on a spree and started a row in the market place at Papeete, and the natives joining in, the fight became general. Then was spread the rumor that the English had landed and were "in the fight," More than half of the natives and.a large number of French women and children made. for the country. taking their goods and chattels witlh them, and have not re turned yet," thinking that a terrible war is gokng on. For a jew days boats and cutters were.ke,t busy taking emigrants to Morea, a mountainous island lying twenty miles away, and the Governor of Tahiti, the Captain of Aube and the'military oficers held a council of war. This council decided to make a new fort, the soldiers being started on the work in a pouring rain, the wet season having just begun. Every thing portable from the Aube was landed and her guns were mounted on. the new fort, and the vessel was prepared to be taken to the entrance of the harbor and sunk, a Is Hobeon and the Merrimac. The man who reaped the profit of the scare was a Yankee timber mer chant, and at last -accounts he waf I still doing an enormous business, tak ing orders and saying nothing. The sighting of the Oralan, an in nocent ship of commerce, caused in tense excitement, as she was firs taken for the expected enemy.. Jus I before this steamer turned up it hai been decided at a second council o. war to call oat every man capable o: carrying arms. However, the appear ance of Ovalau quieted things down, and peace promises to reign onct more in the principal town, but the poor people who fled to the bacl country and the other islands will be some weeks in learning the situation -CURIOUS FACTS. . George I. of England,introduced the klack cockade from Germany as a mark of the servant. More women than men go blind in Sweden, Norway and Iceland; more men than women in. the rest of Ea rope. Several States in New England. have statutes forbidding kissing on the streets. The !aw is an old one and obsolete. A grain of.fine sand would cover about 100 of the minute scales of the human skin; each scale covers from 800 to 500 pores. The utilization of grain-elevator waste for sheep and cattle food -has given rise to a new industry in the Northwest. The waste brings $7 a ton. John Hooper, a moan with a mania for tombstones, stole eighteen of them from Graceland Cemetary, Chicago. and used them for bric-a-braei at his home. Some of the petridd wood found in Ari2can, it is sad, is so hard that steel tools will not work it, the peti fications being only three degrees less in hardness than the diamionc. The walking advertisement, .known as a "sandwich man" is by no means a modern idea. In 18& j. procession of men dressed to represent straw covered wine bottles used tz parade the streets of Florence, Italy. Tea drinkers in London are swin dled systematically. A number of old women go about and buy up from ser vants tea-leaves that have been used. The leaves are then artificially col ored, dried, and sold as good tea. IIn Japan is a venerable campfiE tree, which, it is said will hold fifteen fall grown persons ir. its hollow trurk. According to Japanese tradition, it grew from the walkingstick oft the fa mous philosopher Kabodairs, who flourished about the year 780. .The tree is certainly 100) years old. Bicycle as a Mlotor. Few wheelmen' are aware of the amount of power generated by them when on a spin, and what wondrous resultsicould be obtained from it if it were possible to concentrate and apply it for practical purposes. According to Dr. Sehrwall, of Ger many, there are four points to be con sidered about cycling-the friction of the surface, its gradation, the natural speed of the wheel sind the resistance of air. Thus, in making an attempt to compute the amount of power gen erated, the conditions of the road, the velocity of the winn and the weight of the wheel and its rider must be taken into chief consideration. When the rider exerts himself to the full extent of his physical strength, as in twenty-four hour record making races the amount of power produced is wonderful. It amounts to nearly three million pounds. In other words, it is equal to the force required to raise 291.52 hundred pound weights to an elevetion of three feet in one day. "From a hygienic standpoint," says Dr. Sehrwald, "the best recreation can be obtained by a cyclist from a seed that does not exceed ten miles an hour for a distance of about twenty. five miles daily.' A Bee Line. The eyes oi bees are made to sec great distances. When absent frong their hive they go up in the air till they see their home, and then fly to ii in a straight line and with great speed. The shortest line between two places s anmetimes called a "bee-line." BEFORE THE FIGHT.I THE PRECIOUS PLUO OF TO BACCO AT SAN JUAN. ?-t Courage into tbe Men -*"Cnder Its Stimulus They Became Perky and Sassy," Says One of Their OfMcers -EnFoyin* s Chew .to the Last "It has struck me right along that the newspapers have been making a terrific hullabaloo over the way things were run down in Cuba, Porto Rico .nd in the American camps, with very little reliable information upon which to base their charges," said an of!jcer of the Twenty-fourth infantry (one of the negro regiments), who was struck by three Mauser bullets-badly wound ed by one of them-and a piece of shell in the fight at San Juan, according to .he Washin'gton Star. "I didn't see muchl complain about under the cir euMstances down in Cuba, and I had a pretty fair chance to see what was going on. The only genuine criticism, in fact, that I have to make refers to the scarcity of tobacco amo a the troops down there. Tobacco was at a premium during the greate- portion of our stay in Cuba, and the soldiers who were deprived of it would very willing ly have paid for it at the price of its welght in gold. I don't think it would be possible to overestimate the value of tobacco to troops undergoing a hard ampaign. It is bread and meat and drink to a soldier enduring th.i hard ships of war. It is at once a stimulant and .a tonic, and its value in allaying hunger is well known to elperienced commanders. Queer as it may seem, :hewi!g tobacco also allays thirst. I know this, because I've tried it. An other, point with reference to the chew Lng of tobacco by soldiers in a cam valgA- is that all of the old-timers swallow the juice of the weed. They allow that it Is apt to make fellows not used to handling ft in that ;ray a bit sick at first, but they say t.t the stimulating effect of the plant is lost If tbe- juice is expectorated. I never had a better illustration of the value of tobacco to men who had long been hankering for it than on the day of the San Juan fight. The black soldiers of my outfit of the Twenty-fourth had been entirely tobaccoless almost from the tine we landed in Cuba and i was the hardest kind of a deprivation Apon men who had been used for year. to consuming the weed in all iti fonms. The men missed tobacco, particultrly after.,bneals. . After they got outsid& of ther coffee they would get together and talk longingly of tobacco, and I could just see their teeth leaking ifor It, but there wasn't a quarter of an onIce to be had. I don't hesitate to say-that the men of my company weren't quite the same without tobc co, and a number of them frankly s,dd that they'd rather be without gstu.b than.-to go tobaccoless. On the morn ing tof the San Juan scrap I came ir.to. the proud possession of a one-pound plug of chewing tobacco, I'm not go ing-to 'ideriminate myself by stating: now I happened to get the plug, but I got it all:the same. A short time he fore* it came our turn to go into ac tion, I produced the plug and handed it -to the big, black-top sergeant of my company. You ought to have seen his eyes stick out when he caught sight of the plug. 'Just pass it down the1 line,' I told him, 'and let each of the boys take a nibble off it.' The sergeant took a bite oif the plug himself, and then- handed it to the first duty oce geant. "The whole company was 'on to' the presence of the plug of tobacco in the outfit by this time and they set uip a cheer. They just forgot about the im pending fight, they were so tickled over the sight of the tobacco. The p'ug went down the line, every man taking off a bite, and then it started up the line and toward me again. It certain ly did dwindle in size, that plug ofto bacco. By the time it got into the hands- of the top sergeant it was just the size of one good chew, which the men had, by careful calculation, sat'ed for me, 'the lcot'nant.' Did I take it? Well, I guess yes, and swallowed every bit'-of juice, like the rest of the men. And I can tell you it tasted good. The men threw their shoulders back under the stimulus of the tobacco and he ca:ne perky and sassy and fighty all through--and I suppose you remember what the Twenty-fourth did-in the San Juin fight? I had the chew in my~ mouth, enjoying it hugely, when the last of the three MIausers that plugged me 'got me in the hips. paralyzing me froin the waist down for a couple of months afterward, and, as I didn't bc cotte unconscious, I en.joyed tiat chew even afMr T was M't.' 'A Curious Portrait of Charles I. .A cuirious picture has turned up at Birimingdale. Elnglani!, which reveals for the first time the astonishing fact that after the execution of Charles I. his head was neatly stitched to the body, a silk cap was p)laced over the fowing locks, and then the portrait of the martyred sovereign was paintedI in oil. This strange picture is now in the possession of is. Leonard Mlac kay, of Birmingham. Mir. 3Inchay ob tained the picture from the Holt fam ily, who for years had p)reserved It in Ashton Hall, the family seat, near Birmingham. The portrait is pro nounced an excellent likeness of the Kiing.-New York Journal. "Isaffered the tortures of'the damned with protruding piles brought on by constipa tion with which I was afflicted for twenty years. I ran across your CASCARETS in the town of Newell. Ia.. and never found anything to equal themn. To-day I am entirely free from piles and feel like a new man." C-BE. Kaz. 1411 Jones St., Sious City, Ia. CAN DY CATARTIg TRADE MAR K REO57ERED 1'easant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. DO oo,Never sicken. Weaken. or Gripe.1Oc.25ac.50e. ..CU RE -CONSTI PAT ION.., Stefng aRedy c.wpa, cbg.se.onteet. 5w Tort. sa : ilO-TO-BAC 8lme*d"A"YaiiW d!t S Mediclnal Soap. The use of soaps containing a disin fectant of some kind has become so general, says the Medical Press, that observations on the practical value of such combinations cannot fail to be of interest. Dr. Reithoffer has recently published the results of some experi ments carried out by him with various kinds of soap, having for object to de termine their value as microbicides. He used the ordinary mottled soap, white almond soap perfumed with no trobenzine, and hard potash soap. He found that these soaps were very in imical to the cholera mivrobe, al per ent solution killing them in a short space of time, while a 5 per cent solu tion of the potash soap killed them in five minutes. We are, therefore, at liberty to infer that, as-in washing the hands the strength of the soap solution is never less than 5, and may go as high as 45, per cent this method of disinfecting the hands, as well as the clothes, etc., is fully trustworthy. Most stronger solutions are required, how ever, to destroy the bacili of typhoid, the coli-bacillus, etc., not less than 10 per cent being sufficient. None of the soaps experimented with appear to have any effect on pyc;enic microbe. The practical result of tiese investiga tions is that iL is alwys preferable to use soap and water fi-st of all, rins ing the hands in the disnfectant solu tion afterward. This is an important point, which mrits fo be generally made innwa "Lam eSr." It was during eveni "prep." Jones minor was laways g;ttiig into mis chief, and the master had his eye on him in consequence. "Jones minor, you'r- talking," said be suddenly. "Yes, sir," replied J'es, meekly. "What were you sajng?" Pause. "Well, I'm waiting. Wiat was it you said?'" ,, "Come here and I'll te: you, sir." an swered Jones. We stared aghast at ar companion, and wondered what 7ould happen next. The master lookd as if he had not heard right. "What did you say?" .e said, slowly. ,Come here and I'lltell you, sir." - ventured Jones again. We were on the time of expecta tion. Such dar!g althis was un paralleled, even for Joes. The mas ter rose from his chairbis anger was terrible to see. "Leas this room!" he thundered, stridin towards the trembling c-ulprit. -Why, sir?" falteredrones. "Why, sir?" sputtereithe irate peda ogue. "When. I as4,you what you were talking about 3u ask me to come to you and yon'llell me: Why, ndeed:" "Yes. sir; but that's nly what I did say." the. boy replied. "Mobbs asked ne what the exercise as, and I said, 'Come here and I'll tellou.' Then the band ayed.--Buffalo ecws ns - t 4"" Iteave ito hsv!thal en ma- a r nently andpo4y cred 'f Rr. 3XAr1s) to mak,ims.Among thos'e who have recerIrd us volunta ,'y letteis sayitey bd been cured are: Rev. J. L. der. .alerh. N. U.;i Mr.~ J. E. Robin. Ed&r. Gold'-boro, - )'. C. Daily Arp1r.ZjDaus.a prom IneUt merchamaco G-..Mr.W.R. Djuke,a railroaLnn.nsas Clty,Mo. nEheumaciWmSP rr lou. -Manufactured ibe BIBITT DR UG CO. 5old by Drugg st Y1Yce 31per bottle MONEY ItIflENS, Send 25 cenb steps for Book. BOOK PUiISHG HOUSE, 184. Le,...a et -. Kw vY.w 33eauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means. a clean skin. N beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar. tic clean your blood and it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and iving all im purities from the bod. Begin to-day te banish pim es, boils, lotches, black d, -and that sickly bilious complexion by tig Cascarets,-beauty for ten cents. All drug. gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c%50c. Venus is a splendid morning star, in the .southeast. She was at her greatest brilliancy on the 5th of last-mont. So. 12. . Don't Tobacco Soit and Smoke Your ife Away. - To quit tobacco eas&il and forever, be mag nrtic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Bac. the wonder-worer, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or 3l. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. Instruction in poultry culture is given in the Rhode Island College of Agriculture, To Cure a Cold. in One Day. TakO Laxative Brono Quinine Tablets. All DruggIsts refund morey if It falls to cure. 25c. The Bramshorn woolen mill, ilbury, Mass., is running night and day. %No-To-Bac for rifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. .50c. Z. All druggista, Noless than -15.000 is invested In tha glove industry in the United States. To Cure Constioation Torever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10e or 25e. Tt C. C. C. fail to cure. druzgists refund money. George Breakman is to erect a 12-pot glass factory at Auderson, Ind. Edueate Your Bowels Witm -ascaret. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. oc,25. If C. C. C. fail, druggiLstsrofundmoney. A cotton and woolen mill will probably be established at the Te.as State Penitentiary at the town of Rusk. Mrs. WInslow'eSoothing Syrup for children teething,softens the gums, reducing infiama tion, alays pain.curea:wind colio 5c a bottle. Piso's Cure for Consum-tion has saved me many a doctor's bijl.-,-. F. HAnDT, Hopkins' Place, Baltimort-, Nd , De . 2, 189:. Fits permanently cured. No fits ornervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer.$2trial bottleand treatise free Dn. R. H. K,INE, Ltd.. 931 Arch St . Plla. Pa How's This? We offer One Hundred ; ollars Reward for any case of Cat irih that cannot be cured by Hail's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CEENEY & Co.. Props.. Toledo, 0. We, the underigned. have kudwn F. J. Cheney for the lact 1 years, and believe him perfectly bonor- ble in all business transac tions and linancially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. Wrsr& TuAx, Wholesale Druggists, Tole .- Jhio. WADING. KINNAN & MAnvx!, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, Ohio. Hall's catarrh Cure is taken Internally. acting directly upon the blood and mucou. surfaces of the system. Price, 75-. p* bottle. Sold by all Tirugr sts,. Test'manials Free. Hall's Family Pills are the bett. In the Sandwich Islands there Is a spot called the Reck of Refuge. If the criminal reaches this rock before capture he Is safe as long as he re mains there. Usually his family sup ply him with food unil he is able to make his escape, but he is never al lowed to return to his own tribe. Not 3an Exception. Softleigh-"So, you-_w, don't think the clothes make the man, Miss Cut ting?" Miss Cutting--"Well, they didn't in your case, at least."-Chicage News. W ITH a better understanding of td efforts-gentle efforts-pleasant ef forms of illness are not due to any act1 the pleasant family laxative, Syrup of of families, and is everywhere esteemed the fact that It is the only remedy whit It acts. It is, therefore, all-important, have the genuine article, which is mann T Of the art of advertising Is to correctly always prove most effective in time. Tl the California Fig Syrup Co. by reason laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs, which ment. which the company freely make should. be used when needed by the hur of salts and pills the more constipated other hand one enjoys both the mneth Figs is taken: it is pleasant and refreo yet promptly on the kidneys, liver- and tuiaily, dispels colds, headaches and feve r,nation permanently; also biliousness and The great trouble with all other purga raIl to act when a single dose Is take nvariably tend to produce a habit of b4 loses. Children enjoy the pleasant ta rigs, the ladies find it delightful and bei s needed, and business men pronounce eithout interfering with business and do< THE EXCELLENCE 0. s due not only to the originality arid sim! o the care and skill with which It is mne nown to the California Fig Syrup Co. oo '-ess on all the Importance of purchasik Then buying note the name. California Fi very package. CALIFORNIA FIG San Francisc TICE When you writre a!veriise '. kin:lly - nto'n this papmer. It nla obre.in best tet nt au il s.u S.P1 THE SCHOOLS "r Greater New York, Boston, and ye ny other places use Carter's Ink of1 :lusively and won't use any other. pa That speaks well for CART ER'S INK a and iveyou oodfor houht. Mr. ~98, MIPand Whiskey Habit pi: * cured at homne with-- ton ticulars sent FEEE. Pni B.M.WOoLLEY, M.D,.b Oa. ice 104 N. Pryer St. erd RD'S LUCKY PUZZLE SELLS LIKE pl5n itFs enue Nov-WILDFIRE. I*1 B aioghru TastMes Co.t As vC iofr] CUR W HERE Atl EtSE FAILSC - I~ii e. sou a Urgg se A SONG a q The =nma-day i But Nitecrsh, _ to4 g wasth ; NT b li=ee:narkao ughtes the geuif Askoori Th gum tresf AutIr the tallesoes in the woldiTeyaf r age300fetoineiht.afC Oneofth largest fors in thew twee Urad ad theloy; O htsRE Nea. Au rellrwas-recentlyldug on tha egiso and ~ ~ ~ ~~~n ate aAet f20fettegon <TREES Tas stil ren.o usrla'r h als Geman atheory Tnfoety an-r tree havftinevs heigh yelcria <3\' On fthat whevrgucest fonest I the e cevesn aUerectal sheOhoskS. Eve which as eenl gin tiht naeiof, ph illfea etian hsasrog.fu encercasng antihovritiost at. andstnce ofe dsvery ieet Thei ele trha whtrtofhe tre bfariesac codngt the ntice.! this day,e ehc trase natuen fthe man phyic acie, ut mplyeto varosated F isanpropf eves f. Th eswyc n rder toets bteicieecvts, to. <actured yethe wait ons oiyrpo informeth puio the mer5Ofit: n oflthesencewlene sfthed plresn it' manfaturie s, confrmsthosate 3, tha thebeto, rdiestto onlyd ad and te rets when Sriopo AhigOt th tate WaRn ctetly a how3s caseds thevoys;temAeEfec.u <'rsadoercomles hbitua coth gniesto the m tlsreso utiathereom. talest tree aeintsio thea Theyaer ae 3nd feete ion eight. o nefia heeargrst aa'foerem ned wort invabl,ds niet is b stuatedne tsn grae nr taueaOte. se. lt ofs thecomnatlgin tht alson wuactilurbzend cpocse Ay Germanhareforeit o im-rya civ tetu ausvr elcricial shcEmen wic hasu Co., printen the front of lenecin most roliic variea cottn eae aedistane fo seont t bhe elec prcl tre nonary ofad thOne ar acco crg e Oi' this cttoncan tbe dr, e rnuc ls expns.m a oorbi t te asn mue ofi cto nhs Ia. .mets-ariety dicted. hreom moth rt seedsaeage butd simpl to. costi.te toFis prankptl tevs Thaet istwa-i husl prme intern9al cea n4ines;ihu baode to gth otneficl effct,B o asfyouh pouldl othe cthen merit ofeed set anftreonrstellstfate e tha tse best of ru.medte, onlype 10n su.stemr. The0 bore oedke the sygsteme becttes, wrhe to J.he )RNTON, clexane te Ala.m frc r ~and boeome haUitual pcnsi the 4yil arestin., helarefrto,D Lives an apet iseot that they Newbuk tfor thsae at too ionyand. Rd rePurin constantly RTugmene aeiil wheneve a .a tiv reed j4 F HOME In the heuewifes hand awaibg Is a cake of Ivoy Soa, Andwe hear hersay t"Hedirtaway, 'Tis this that gives hope So he takes the shaig tra&r And ath47ing with delght, Cries:"See it Soat,thewagSe buat That makes my home so brigW ewtesoaps,eadrepresentedfobe"just like all counterfeits. lack the ecllar amd vory " Soap and Insist upa getivg IL GnCkk Co., CladuMLd What Bloom s 000 . 'The white powdery coating seen du some fruits and the leaves of many plants is known to botanists as blo6m. It is of a waxy nature, and, accord!ng to experiments recently made at Ober. lin- College, its chief -purpose is to prevent water from passing too read. ily out of the leaves. When the bloom was removed the transpiration of water was greatly Increased, the loss in some cases being In a give. time two and a half times aa much as be fore the removal. Not only the German post offie has benefited by the mania for picture pos tal cards, which hids prevailed for some years, but the painters, paper makers. and printers. 'The govern ment has come to the concltsion,-too, that it stimulates the tourist bsine , and in Saxony a prize has heeii ofered for the best twenty views of natural an~ery. Ills which vanish before prg !n the knowledge that so;ina condition- of the system. 1ubiek Es the only remedy witl% millions Its beneftlal effects 'are due to ebilitating the organs on whIch >te when you purchase that you only. article, and truthful statemms FOR 14 CENTS new enstorau a D on Abovell pk~ELlwt upon ofhi our a. anna e s., r& ca, win tUe Creek sf. ElENa and Ploesnt+ AW8!1ewmb ters, CUa.UrSb,ete.