University of South Carolina Libraries
Black Hair 1 i 1 ; " I have used your Hair Vigor 1 for five years and am grea'-'y pleased with it. It certainly restores the original color to gray hair. It keeps my hair soft."?Mrs. Helen Kilkenny,New Portland, Me. Ayer's Hair Vigor has been restoring color to gray hair for lifty years, and it never fails to do this work, either. You can rely upon it .for stopping your hair from falling, for keeping your scalp clean, and for making your hair grow. $1.00 a bottle. All tfrao&i. If your druggist cannot supply you, end us one dollar and we will express you a bottle. Be sure and rive the name of your nearest express office. Address, J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. Wild Animals In Captivity. Captivity changes animals' nature. A Hon captured when it is full grown will always be treacherous, but Hons, ionr,?rits nr other carniverous 'v.-, animals that have been born in captivity can be tamed till they are quite as gentle and affectionate as poodle dogs. Deafness Cannot Be Cared by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one w*v to eare deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by on Inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tub* Is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it Is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the'inflammation can be token out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of teh are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mnooas surface?. We will elve One Hundred Dollars for any ease of Deafness( caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall'9 Catarrh Cure. Send fer circulars free. F. J. Chzskt JtCo., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the be9t. Homing Instinct of the Horse. When Dr. Erwin's possessions were in transit between Oklahoma and Morrill, Kan., last March, a fine Arabian horse was lost from the car. The horse turned up last week at its old home in Oklahoma and was all right? Kansas City Journal. Why Nations Wear Colors. Did it ever occur to you that the bunch of colored ribbons you wear in yonr buttonhole?or pinned on your dress if you are a girl?at commencement. or at a baseball or football igame, is really a flag? It tells to what class or school or college you belong, or which of these, for the time, has yonr interest and sympathy. And for somewhat similar reasons do nations wear their colors. At first maybe it was to tell one another apart, but after a while the colors?the- flag?came to represent the nation Itself; and the way the people acted toward the nation's flag was supposed to show the way they felt toward the nation.? From "The Origin of Our Flag in St. v Nicholas. OYSre^^WN, Mrs. E. B Bradshaw, of Guthrie, Okla., cured of a severe case by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. A great many women suffer with a form of indigestion or dyspepsia which does not seem to yield to ordinary medical treatment. While the symptoms seem to be similar to those of ordinary indigestion, yet the medicines universally prescribed do not seem to restore the patient's normal condition. Mrs. Pinkham claims that there Ls a kind of dyspepsia that is caused by derangement of the female organIsm, and which, while it causes dis turbance similar to ordinary indigestion, cannot be relieved without a medicine which not only acts as a stomach tonic, but has peculiar uterinetonic effects as well. Thousands of testimonial letters prove beyond question that nothing will relieve this distressing condition so sorely as Lydla E. Pinkhamfc Vegetable Compound. It always works in harmony with the female system. Mrs. Pink ham advises sick women free. Address Lynn, Mass. 80 88. I rCRN MILLS and f 9 L ... HILLSTONES S f It In neod of Corn Kill or Kllimam 0 O roa wllllVndUtoroarinWrwttooorrespond 4 * wfth < AHOLIV4 MII.LSTOSE CO. fl O l i ero-i. If. C. manufacturer! of Cora i 4 KllU from the fammu Koore CoaMj Ortt- Q 0t0t0f0f0t040f0t0t0f0?04i I A ? Tortilla*. - - - In conjunction with the systematic i effort made In recent years by the ] United States to make known in Eu- j rope the food value, or, rather, table j value, of Indian corn, it may interest many housekeepers to know how tortillas are made. These tortillas are, as many know, thin cakes of corn, and are used in Mexico and other. Spanish-American countries almost universally in lieu of wheat bread. The corn, selected clean kernels for best results, is boiled in lime water f * 1? tVcn tt'oahorl thnf. Uill.ll ouu. At 10 lU^u on^hly in water to remove all traces o. liuae, and rubbed between the hands to remove the outer husk of the corn. The clean corn is then ground, while wet, to a soft mass, which is easiest accomplished with a peanut butter mill. The w$t dough resulting from grinding is patted into thin cakes of convenient size and baked on a dry griddle (that is. without fat) and served hot. In the better class families it is usual to have one servant bake these tortilla", continually during the course of a meal, 60 that the table may be supplied fresh from the : gr.ddle all the time. While these cakes are a radical departure to all English speaking people, many soon develop a great liking for them. They are especially palatable when eaten with highly flavored meat dishes, such as the Mexican "chile con carne." and also when spread with butter. It may be well to add that no salt is used in the preparation of these cakes.?Scientific American. A Large Cotton Crop?Lower Prleea. It begins to appear as if the supply of cotton this year will be fully equal to all requirements, and the cotton piauiers Oi me duuiu wm uuuuutrss au wisely iu selling the cotton they have raised just as promptly as it cau be i brought to market. The U. S. Government in its report on the cotton crop, Issued ou the 3d of September, makes the condition of the crop S1.2. This is 17.2 per cent, better than the report at the same time iast year, and the acreage shows an increase of about four per cent. This is a total of twenty-one per cent, over last i year's indicated production, which is j the ecuiivalent of about 2.000,000 bales j of cotton. The iudicated crop is, therei fore, somewhere iu the neighborhood ! of 13.000,000 bales, aud while it is posj slble that an early frost or bad weather may diminish these figures slightly a crop of at least 12,000.000 bales or over seems probable. Suck a crop If realized undoubtedly means much lower prices. It is to be hoped tbat the cotton planters of the South will not be misled by false prophets into holding their cotton, but that they will, on the contrary, sell it as rapidly as it comes in. Nearly ell authorities are confirmatory of the Government figures. Mr. Theodore H. Price, the well-known expert, makes the condition eighty-three and the* crop 12.700,000 bales, and tbe iigure6 bf the New York Journal of Commerce Indicate ; about the same conclusion. The trnili seems to be that the nb: normally high prices to which cotton ' advanced during the spring and sum| mer. although they prolited planters but j little, as the crop was practicailv all marketed before these prices were re! alized, have greatly stimulated plant| ing aud production In every direction. i Russell Sage's Jert. j Only on high occasions does Mr. : Sage permit himself to jest Ordinarily his habit is what the late Joseph Cook made so much of as the "soul's laughter at itself." But when he can get In a dig at the expense of a great nabob of the financial world he does so in the most sardonic style. His chance came last week with the departure of Mr. Morgan tor Europe, whieh?as readers cf real estate news will recall?had been preceded by the announcement that Mr. Morgan had sold his "troublesome Park avenue flats." Thus spake Uncle Russell: "So, Morgan has gone, hey? And he has disposed of his interests in those Park avenue flats? Well. I ! don't know about the flats on vara | avenue; but I'll bet you a doughnut against a double eagle that he has not ; parted w.'th his Interest in the flats ox. I Wall street."?New York Mail ar-.. Express. iTTSpermanently cured. No fits or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great : NerveRestorer. 32"tria 1 bottle and treatlsefree Dr.R.H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Some people don't believe in nutting off till to-morrow the mean things they can do to-day. SI.00 Big 500-Pound Steel Range Offer. If you can uso the best big 500-pound steel range made in the world, and are willing to have it placed in your own home on three months' free trial, just cut this notice out and send it to Seabs, Roebuck <fc Co.. Chicago, and you will receive free by re.urn mail a big picture of the steel range and many other cooking and heating stoves; you will "also receive the most wonderful *i.00 steel range offer, an offer that places the best steel range or heating stove in the home of any family; such an offer that no family in the land," no matter what their circumstances may be, or how small their income, need be without the best cooking or heating stove made. A promoter is generally a financier with Otic any ausuvee. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup for children teething, soften the gums, reduces Inflammation,allays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. abottle There is seldom much profit in prophecies. H. H. Greek's Soks, of Atlanta, Oil, are the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world. See-their liberal offer in advertisement in another column of this paper. Most of the Accuses have already been invented. Piso's Cure cannot be too hlghlyspokenof i as a cough cure.? J. W. O'Barxx, 322 Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6,1900. They come high, but we must have 'eno I Vir castles. | Putxam Fadeless Dm color mors | goods, per package, than others. I A. woman may not believe everything sh< > hears, bat she remembers it just the same. IA SERMON FOR SUNDAY AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE ENTITLED "CROSS BEARING." < I The Tcr. Jamm E. Holmes I'rjti T"? to Have the Panl Spirit of Courage Contentment, Even When Wo Stagger Under a Load of Adversity. Brooklyn, N. V.?In the Summrrfield Methodist Episcopal Church Sunday morning the pastor, the Rev. James E. Holmes, had for his subject "Cross Bearing." He took as his text Matthew xxvii: 32: "And as they came out they found a man of Cyrene, Simon bv name; him thev compelled to bear His cross." Mr. Holmes said: - _ aL. Three kinds of crosses were in use m mc days of Jesus, the so-called St; Andrew's cross, the cross in the form of the letter "T" and the ordinary Latin cros6. It was on the last of these that Jesus suffered crucifixion. This consisted of a strong upright post, which was carried beforehand to the place of execution, and two crosspieces, which were born by the victim. It was these transverse pieces which proved too heavy for the Master; It was probably between the hours of 9 and 10 o'clock in the morning that that memorable procession, of which Jesus was the central figure. set forth for the place of execution; a place outside the city walls. Ordinarily such a procession was in charge of a centurion, and preceded by a public crier, who from time to time proclaimed aloud the nature of the crime. He also carried a white wooden board on which this was written. The longest route was always selected, and the most crowded streets, to attract the attention of the people. Each of the condemned would be accompanied by a guard of four soldiers, and, a* a matter of course, a great crowd would follow. The weight of the cross soon proved too heavy for the exhausted strength of Jesus. You must remember He has not tasted food or drink since the Paschal supper the night before, and that events had occurred since then in quick succession, every one of which must have stirred His soul with deepest emotions. The betrayal by Judas, and the farewell to His disciples had occurred, after which He had spent some hours alone in Gethsemane. engaged in a terrific mental and spiritual struggle. It was then, as vou remember, that His neemies found Him, since which time He has stood surrounded by enemies, practically alone; for His disciples had all forHim. Meanwhile He has been hur ried from place to place and from one official to another; from Annas to Caiphas, then to Pilate, then to Herod, and then again to Pilate. Indignity upon indignity, torture upon torture have been heaped upon Him all that livelong night and all that morning, so that it is not to be won dered at that ti.e weight of the cros? was too great for Him. Up to the last rate, however. He managed to drag it, bul nere He sank exhausted beneath the heavy load. It happened just then that thh man. Simon of Cyrene, came upon thf scene, and him the Roman soldiers seized and compelled to carry the cross the re mainder of the way. On first thought it might seem Strang* that the people would nermit such an in dignity put upon a fellow Jew, but this Simon was undoubtedly a foreigner, which his dress would indicate, and the soldier* would know that it was safer to put thh humiliation on a foreigner than upon a native of Jerusalem. As it was, the peo pie do not seem to have resented it, thai a fellow Jew had to suffer the defilement of bearing a heathen cress, and this may have been the explanation that Simon wa: I a foreigner, and only a proselyte Jew. Hon greativ surprised and chagrined he mus have been, to be thrust so unexpectedly into such a predicament! How it hap pened that he was there walking abroad on a fast day we do not-know. He may have been idly strolling along that eountrj road without any particular aim or purposi in view, or he may have lived outside thi city walls and was entering the city 01 business or to worship or merely on pl?is ure bent. ?We cannot know how to cxpVu his presence there on that road betweer Calvary and Jerusalem just at that momcr when some one was needed to bear th( cross of Christ, hut it happened that h< appeared on the scene ju?t as Jesus saul beneath His load, and he finds himsel seized by the Roman soldiers, and despiti his remonstrances, compelled to bear tht cross of Christ. It is all so sudden, and ? unexpected, that* he can scarcely know whether it is rot all a dream. We sec it all r.3 he did not. We see ie Simon's experience that for which w< would gladly give all that yve have. And why could he not appreciate it? Was i: igmjr|nee on his nart? Had he ncvci heard the name of Jesus of Nazareth' Had he not heard of those strange and startling events that had been stirring Jer usalent of late? To him it only appears a; an unfortunate accident that he happencc to cross the path of this man Christ ot ho war to execution, just as He sanl down under the weight of His cross. Ai it is, lie considers himself abused, humili ated, disgraced, and now he longs for th< moment of release, that he mav hide him self from the gaze of the people and beai in silence the defilement that has com< upon him and upon his house. And now I wish to place alongside o: this, and in contrast to it. the words o: the apostle Paul. "God forbid that I shoulr glory save in the cross of Christ." Tc Simon the cross of Christ means dteinpointmer.t. disgrace and loss; to Paul i( is the one th'ng glorious and worth re .ioicing over. How explain the difference in sentiment? It will not do to say Pau is simply dealing in a figure of speech while Simon actually suffered the weight and the disgrace of an actual cross, foi Paul bore the cross of Christ as actual!; cs Simon. It was the cross that brought him intc conflict with the authorities and with mobs; it was the cross that drove him from place to piece, a vagabond on the face of the carch; it was the cross that brought him into prison, and into dan' per; it was the cross that made him a disgrace, and his name an execration wlier ewe thrre was a Jewish synagogue. Paul suffered loss and pain and humiliation over and over again on account of the cross. Call it a figure of speech if you will, hut his back was bent, and broken: his bodily pains were as genuine, his humiliation was as deep and his loss as great as came to Simon of Cyrene and far more so. The experiences of the two men were very similar, almost identical; for it was on a country road leading into Damascus that Paul first came face to face with Jesus Christ, and it was then and there thc.t the cross of Christ was laid upon him. And that from that moment until he (bed he bore that cross, feeling keenly the weight of it, the humiliation of it, the loss it occasioned bim, but, unlike the other men. glorying in" it and rejoicing on account of it. Why the contrast? Ah! Paul understood the cross, its meaning, its purpose, it* power; Simon did not. Paul saw that that cross, instead of being the instrument of torture and shame, was on the contrary God's saving and sanctifying instrument among met}. In that cross Paul beheld the method and the means whereby the transcendent plan of the Almighty "to save this sinful world was made possible. Now any accident, or any providential occurrence that linked him to that cross, and thus to the glorious purposes ot the Lord, Paul rejoiced ia and counted most fortunate. And now. my friends, I ask yon to consider for a little while these two methods of cross bearing. The world is divided into Simons and Pauls: I am almost tempted to say equally divided, but perhaps not. On the one hand there are the people whose lives are a perpetual groan and complaint, and their burdens are not imaginary. either. Their backs are bent and breaking; their hearts are wounded to the Tery core; their souls are truched. Life is a great disappointment. It was i^t ever thus with them: no, it is of comparatively recent happening. Almost without a note of forewarning, in a moment, in the twink'*ag of an eye, they have had thrust upon them a:i unspeakable sorrow, or some appalling responsibility, or some irksome restraint, or perhaps it is an overwhelming disgrace. Isow are they like Simon or Cyrene. full of bittern^s and resentment, struggling along under their burden with dogged persistence, but finding no joy and no profit in their cross. On the other hand, there aro the Pauls; the ra;.n and the women that are bearing buraens just at real and just as heavy as the others. They have their own responsibilities and restraints, their own sorrows and disappointments, and they are as heavy to carry, and as painful, too, as men ever have in this li/e. But what a contrast they present! for their life note is iivous and triumphant, notwithstanding the cross on their backs. Simon is the man who is bearing his lot in gloomy and sullen silence. and bearing it in a way that makes you feel he is none the better for having to do it. Paul is the man whose sufferings and losses you can plainly see are the explanation of nis buoyant and courageous spirit. His lot, disagreeable and difficult as it is. he accepts, not as the other man. with bitterness and resentment, but in that spirit of faith and obedience that God 'hen a right to expect from all His children. I know there are 9onie to whoui this will sound strange and perhaps impossible, and I know they are conscientious and religious people. They accept it as a fact that men must expect to be suddenly halted in life, like Simon of Cyrene. made to bear some heavy and humiliating cross, and they endeavor to be stout-hearted and brave under the ordeal, but it is always and only a disagreeable and unfortunate circumstance in their lives; and they resent it and hate it as did Simon; and th?t is all. They never seem to find the source of strength and happiness in their cross. Now, is it true that the Paul attitude and the Paul spirit arc possible? Possible to the average man, I mean? Or do they require the Paul conversion and the Paul visions? Is it true that the Paul spirit is possible in ordinary life, or must one have first caught a glimpse of the third heaven? I ask you to ponder this querv, in the hope that we may clearly see and be convinced that it is no unattainable principle for any man, anvwhere in this world. Here are two young men?classmates at ! college, or shopmates, if you please, in the . s::me office or factory. The one is about as diligent as the other and about as sue. cessful. Nevertheless, there is a marked ! difference. The one finds study or business. as the case may be, irksome and i slavish, it neither inspires nor develops , him. He simply does what he does be1 cause he ought to or must, and his whole | life is nothing more than a stolid persist. ence lacking the heartiness and the hopei fulness of the other. The other man is no ; better scholar, no better workrgrtn or busi; ncss man, but he is a contrast, notwith standing. Whether it is study or business, i he finds his joy and inspiration in what he > does, and does what he dees from a spirit | of love. There are the same restraints. . the same burdens upon both, but the one exults in them and is developed by them, . where as the other is full of resentment, . and is in no way benefited. While the one i is full of enthusiasm and anticipation, the i other is heartless and crushed. The one is ; Paul, the other is Simon. 3 People used to wonder why George Wilt liam Curtis, the distinguished and gifted - editor of Harper's Magazine, entered the t lecture field. He was known to have a t lucrative position and a considerable in come from his writings: ajul so it seemed -1 aL.a _t i J ; strange to many peon;e mm nc ?uuu>u r take up lecturing, with its inconveniences t and risks. Some were inclined to regard ; him as mercenary, but on his death toe . explanation anpeared. Years before, so it 1 is said. Mr. Curtis had engaged in a bu.si; ness enterprise with a friend which proved r unfortunate for both. It was in order to ? meet all the obligations incurred by the ? firm which bore his name that necessitated i his poin: on those extended lecture tours; . and Mr. Curtis lived long enough to retire > from the lecture platform?and that, too, t after he had paid every dpllar of indebtedt ness, with interest. Some might say that : is superfluous honesty, and vet many men ; there are to-dav who would do this very c thing Mr. Curtis did. and as a matter of f fact the number of men who have dor.e ? so in the past is not small. Indeed, there ? :.re men living in our midst who are strivI ing to do this self same thing, lint all r r *>n do not manifest the same spirit in lis otherwise noble task. One man will . ac' as if be were a bond slave, ar.d while ? he is faithful to his duty, does it in a j rh.crless. heartless manner, apparently t finding nothing in his hard experience to r rejoice in or be thankful for. He goes ? about his task as Simon bore the cross-j cursing the luck that brought bim to the . hour, and full of bitterness and resentment I on aceoi: :t of it. Without heart or inf sniration. and without comfort or joy, lie i takes up his cross and trudge* toward j Calvary. On the other hand, there are 3 men to whom these heavy tasks become an . inspiration and a source of strength: who ? arc finding their happiness and their de* - velopmcnt in carrying the eros3, a han piness and a develonment that they would ? ullin win: iirrn i\uwnu. If you and I are to have the Paul spirit [ of courage and contentment, even while f wo stagger under the heavy cross, it can I only be by the way of the Paul attitude i toward God and the Paul relationship to . .Tesus Christ. This is the same Paul, who t wrote. "We are children of y -d and if . children thfcn heirs: ) rirs of God and joint . heirs with Christ;" the same Paul who I wrote. "All things works together for rood to them who love God." Afterward ; Simon of Cyrene understood the cross of Christ, and then he became a Paul. Though r the authorities turned him out of the synagogue as defiled, though he and his family > became ostracised, it mattered little to i tneni, since they could clearly see how i great a good had come to them in the form of misfortune. And do we not see how true this is of manv people about us? Do we not see that the burdens of the family to that young mother, and that the new and heavy ro| sponsihilify to others were just what they needed to round out their characters and to fill their careers with forte and ; strength? And whatever may he the form of the i weight of the cross laid upon us in this i life, mv friends, let us remember these two things: That it is possible, like Paul, the apostle, to find the inspiration and joy , of our lives in the cross: and. further, that , it must be so if our attitude toward God is one of faith and obedience and our rc'ationship to Jesus that of a loyal and loving disoiple. God's Gifts. Into all our lives, in many simple, fa ruuiar ways, uon lniuses mis element 01 joy from the surprises of life, which unexpectedly brighten our days and till our eyes with light. He drops this added sweetness into His children's cup and makes it to run over. The success we were not counting on, the blessing we were not trying after, the strain of music in the midst of drudgery, the beautiful morning picture or sunset glory thrown in as wc pass to or from our daily business, the unsought word of encouragement or expression of sympathy, the sentence that meant more for us than the writer or speaker thought?these and a hundred others that every one's experience can sunniy are in stances of what I mean. You may call it accident or chance?it often is; you mav call it human goodness?it often is, but al ways, always call it God's love, for that is always in it. These are His free gifts.?H. W. Longfellow. Entirely For Itself. Vo nation has a right to live entirely for itself any more than an individual.? Rev. Dr. Woods, San Francisco, Cal. FALL KIDNE With the chilling air of fall comes an li extra tax on weak kidneys.? It's the time c< Doan's Kidney Pills are needed ? now h recognized the world over as the chief fi Kidney and Bladder remedy. i IJ Aching backs arc eased. Hip, back, and | h loin pains overcome, .''welling of the in !>xca nni-d. I.nd.? " It was " called rheumatism. 1 could ( ? jo*: uo relief from the doc- /Dn ton*. I ?<ecan to improve on t ify/ taking Ixun's smnplo and EU S&m&llfirt Cot two boxow at our drug- ' *3 WW I ' "** pir.ts,aad, although C8years la/H \ | Dll of age, I am almost a new ; ,. man. I was troubled a good if deal with rnf water - had to I >A ? K w?*??? * jjet up fov.r and five times a 11 VkW.mn \fflt T>.?t trr.nl.li. is over I ? ? ? with and once more I can j humr rest the night through. My backache is all gone, and I j p. < ? thank you ever so much for i the wonderful medicine, I state Doan's Kidney iHlls." Tw_ tt U For free trial box. r. JXO II. Itusna, Fowc;-MiUi;rnCo.. BuCPresident, Rklgeville, apace l? itauiScieui, wrii Indiana, State Bank. RIFLE (8b PIST $ |i " It's the shots that fW^FJ Rifle and Pistol Cartri mWm they shoot accurately a 3m trating blow. This is the =? if you insist on having tl II . I I I ALL DEALERS SELL WIN ??W>ROMPT. Sale. tali^Wa.-Thaf. what Dr. l Puriowi Electric Nervine for Toothache U. ? 2*o at drogglata. or by mail Carolina * Specialty Company.Uept.C.PInebluff.N.C. <fc(% AAA DEPOSIT tl!. Dall\/\7 Railroad Pare Paid. 500 T7 " PBXB Cour?es Offered. Board at Coit. Wrt- Quick 1 tEPMIA rtl flWfl rr1""""-1""---??? FrlPUDEBl ! I] NERVOUS HEADACHES. 5 Jj UAnd lOOTHBH(be IfERTEl ft J IO, 26 and 50c at Draitloret, g BAD BLOOD "I had trouble with my bo well which msde my blood impnre. Mr face wu covered with pimple* which do extern*! remedy coald remove I tried yoar Catcerete and treat waa my Icy when the pimples disappeared after a month's iteady n*e. 1 have recommended them to all my friend* and jo.to a few have fonnd relief." C. J. Pu*ch. M7 Park Ave., Mew York CUy, M. Y. & The Bowels j* CAMDY C ATtUmC Plesssnt. Palatable. Potent. Taete Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, lie. St. Sit. Never old in balk. The rennlne tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to care or yoar moooy back Sterlinc Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. Coo mUM SALE, TEN ftHLUOH BOIES mm anui anckbo ffijyfcy represent tbe experience of 35 mfMZ years of ammunition making, ly/lr U.M.C.ontheheadof acart1mm ridge is a guarantee cf quality. Sure fire?accurate?reliable. ! W^tfiSQSSSL Catalog ttnt upon rtquttt. I HSBBF THE bkiow heullic J CARTRIDGE CO. *j BRIDGEPORT^ CCNR. pM5KiN5 EA1L IN A DRY TIME I : THE 5I0N Of THE H5H NEVER fAHS i IN A WET M. ; Remember this whenyou buy WSet 1 Weather Clothing and look for the name TOWER on the buttons. ; This sign and this name have stood " for the 6E5T during sixty-sevea years of increasing sales. If your dealer will not supply you write for free catalogue of black or yellow waterproof oiled coats, slickers, suits, hats, and ' horse goods for all kinds of wet work. ! A. J. TOWER CO, THE .tfSWQfr BOSTON. MASS. U.S.A. <SICN * 1 TOWER CANADIAN CO, : I TORONTO. CAN. I"" I ! I i Liver Pills j That's what you need; some-, thing to cure your biliousness,: and regulate your bowels. You j aeed Ayer's Pills. Vegetable; I gently laxative. j Want your moustache or beard i a beautiful brown or rich black? Use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE TZZZ-Z|:ii I? CHlifMEIIAU tuTfAluITf B Bwt Couch 8jrua, TmatM Good. Cm H } ?????m Y CHILLS. ' mbe and dropsy signs vanish. TbeV >rrcct urino with brick dust sediment* igh colored, pain in passing, dribbling; ' quency, bed wetting. Dosn'a Kidney ills remove calculi and gniveL Relieve cart palpitation, sleeplessness, headache; crvousuess, dizziness. Paxtzh Snuxoa, I m>? "I rec cited the ammm , pie of Dose's Kidney PSks. ariZ K3AA tor live years I bar* bad /rftKjrcV much pain in my back, srbfcfc (I Cjr physicians said arose froos n:y kidnira. Four boxes of law. D. an s Kidney Pilla have en tirelr cured-the trouble. M >M- think I owe my iifo to theme mmtaV V pi la, nnil I want others t? know it." Sadie Dana, Baxter Spcin^a, Kit? ????? Falxotth, Vjl?"I pmt~ fercd orer twelve *~^ltwr with pain in the small of my thlm 'back. Medici ties and piooxio n t it jUaoto ter* f*' ? ?n,r temporary * adUrai* relief. Doon's Kidney POto cured mo." F. 8. Baoera. ^ 'I Falmouth. Tm ESTER OL CARTRIDGES. hit that count. " Winchester idges in all calibers hit, that is, nd strike a good, hard, pene: kind of cartridges you will get, le time-tried Winchester make. CHESTER MAKE 07 CARTRIDGES. mypEweiTERs I CHEAP I n Plf l.ot >ec"Dd-h*nd MachiM* of - fa, Hil mKKOI IU'D ?V? y Oliver H*: gains for quick burem. J. K. CBAYTO*,ihtriotU. N. Medical college of viigiru. established 1838. __D?r?rtmsnts of Medicine, Dentlftey And rbarmscy, The Sfxty-elxth >?* Ion will commence September SI. 1BJQ. TuWt on fees and living expenses ere moderate. For announcement and further information. address. Christopher Tenpkla%. 31. D.| Dean, Hlciimond. VlnfMt. pAWMILLSHISf U with Hrpe's Universal Log Beams,Rectllln-B Bear, Simultaneous Set Works aud the Hen-H Eoook-Klng Variable Feed Works are vnex-H Qoelled for accunacr, simplicity. dubaxil-B ?itt and iask ofopikation. WriteforlullB JJdescrlptlve circulars. Manufactnred ^jr tbeB IRON WORKS,Wln>ton-8aleniJi.ag ^ Dropsy fi ,'^Mky. f Removes all swelling in 8tos? / days; efleets a permanent enter /V In 30 to 60 days. Trial treat not /flft vn /jfffcv given free. Nothingcan belnaen "iSnSkiiiEl^ Write Dr. H. H. Green's 3es% SweUllsU. Bex B. AtlanUuiBSo. 38 W. L. DOUGLAS s3.= & *3 SHOESiSSt' Yon can save from $3 to $5 yearly hy Tearing W. L. Douglas $3.50 or $3 afcoac. They equal thoso taat nava iwan ci<si- * ?? inir you from ?1.00 a sjX'. to $5.00. ^ Tim ^ ka- & |g, Douglas shoes proves ggW#r Wf?&, of their superiority over "Itfi > Look for name an J . J[ That Douglas d*mCor- A" L onal'oit prove* there in AwWfUgK lalae la Donsrlax shoe*. Corona la the highest aRfc^L^T'"'' /JTSHBtt.' grade Pat.Leather Made. ^1(1 >11 11 i <Wl$am~' t\ut Color tiy tie's used. ^j4?l\aalm?3/4jB3Bu ' 0 it S4 Gilt ?di* L ine *<vinot &* equalled & my mica. Shore bjr mall, 25 rent* extra. IIlM.ntid^ Catalog free. IT. L. DO I'll LAS, Brockton, Mam* RipausTabufesarf --JflBmsfflL the best dyspeggj^ /^^[^^^^^medicine ever tundfe^ ? XyJA hundred mrLLLoua f4lM^(j\y of them hare Dmbl sold in the United States Id a single . year. Every lllnese arising from a disordered stomach la relieved or cured by their use. So common is it that diseases originate . . from the stomach it may be safely asserted there is no condition of ill !\(?n lfK dim * tpJII ha! Ka Knnflil t a^I n*> cured by the occasional use of Ripan? Tubules. Physicians know them and speak highly of them. All druggist* sell them. The five-cent package is enough for an ordinary occasion, and he Family Bottle, sixty cents, contains 1 household supply for a year. One generally gives relief within twenty ninutes. If You Don't Want CURLS IN YOUR HAIR YOU DO WANT Carpenter's OX MMROW F01ABE (BZWAHK 07 IMITATIONS.) I It 1* the bast hatr strafehtener sold; m?)w the hair soft and *ln?ay end Is perfectly hararless. More than worth the price. KSIUfc, l"> UCN I 3, And if your dnurflst hasn't It we will Mod H by mall on receipt or ?> cent* In ttampe. Addrese, CARPENTER & CO., Louisville, Kjr. SBK Banishes Biliousness Wldl NrilMSfl cares sick stomachsend ach^gbwtds. ^ICt^noi At Dracfteu, Sfla. A ft S2 TARKAHT CO.. Chemists, New Y?fc A