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v .* xf W IW THE OLD FARM.| old farmhouse I see it again; Its low dark eaves the twittering wren [ Is nested as long a'go; id I breathe once more the south wind's balm, id sit and watch, in the twilight's calm, The bat flit to and fro. e white cows lie at the pasture bars d the dairv cool, with its tins and jars, Il9 stored with curds and cream; ere's somebody putting the things to right, a through the window I see the light LFrom the tallow candle gleam. Igarden is rich with its old-time bloom. Id catch, in fancy, the faint perfume blossoms dank with dew; ^Bcer it all is the starlit dome, j^nnd about it tht? peace of home? fi^w it all comes back to view! ^ftt wind stirs in elm and oak, SsHfrom the millpond comes the croak Sjj^ne bullfrog's rich bassoon; KSa^fcch the cleam, as over the brink [Schools. HADDEUS# BENT, princiJ __ V Pal of the Diogenes High O O School, in the far South Jl Side of Chicago, left the Vow train at Gower Hill Station, Wis., where a teachers' summer school was in progress. Professor1 Bent?he had sat in a college chair in his day?was forty years old. His hair was a trifle gray, his eyes were kindly and his shoulders a bit stooped. He was going to the sum uici ocuvui lv/ ucai iut* uaiuiiii uimui v \Jectures of Audubon Burroughs Wood, ?od to get a bit of nature first hand b from the fields. W. At the big boarding house by the K brook with the great trees at its back, f Thaddeus Bent met half a dozen teachers whom he knew and half a hundred whom he didn't know. The assistant principal of the Diogenes was there, and had been there for a month. She felt bound to dodier duty by her chief. ^ She introduced him right and left. HA Then she put on her thinking cap. "He won't care much for those frivo lous (freatures just out of the normal," B she said to herself. "He'll want some W one to pair off with. Now there's B Theodosia Desmond, principal of the I- . Plato School, way up on Chicago's t Nortk SJide. ShVs just his opposite, but opposites getvon well, so here goes." 'And the assistant principal introduced Principal Thaddeus Bent to Principal Desmond. Professor Bent found himself in the company of Miss Desmond, on the yeranda, the second morning after his arrival. Theodosia was a little creature, with a trim figure, a rather positive manner and a piquant nose on .which rested a pair of glasses. Theodosia was thirty-five and admitted it .when it was necessary. "What's your hobby, Professor Bent?" she asked. "Every one of us t bas a hobby, or we wouldn't be here." "Well, I confess, Miss Desmond, to weakness for natural history. I gflggj^k.frogs, snakes, snails, turtles, water wHra^^and the rest." jfaHXa^Kcrers, all of them. Excuse me, SBMTI thought you were above creepMw things. I haven't a bit of symHttHttby with you or with them. 'The SgKroper study of mankind is man'? HHand man's attributes, let me add. I BWstudy mental philosophy. It's the only flBHthing worth studying. We won't get ^^Kalong at all well. Thank goodness, I above the earth a bit, as high as ^^^nan's head, at any rate. The brain jgs and the understanding?these be noble themes. Snakes and toads, or, how SB can you?" I "Well; I trust I am a little above the creepers and the hoppers at times. There are the birds and the trees; they appeal to me." "All of a kind; man's and woman's mentality is the thing for me. I've heard forty of Professor Searcher's lectures on 'Mind' already, and I'm going to hear the other forty. Some of the otho?r teachers have fallen away. They are not true blue, though they made much pretense at the start. Can't I induce you to hear Professor Seacher? He'll convert you." "Pray forgive me, but I've heard Searcher and I found him a bore, but Til go if you'll take me." Theodosla blushed a bit. She was past even such a remote hint of gal juuirj us mis, suv uuu iiiuugut. "No, I won't take you," she said, "but you may come if you will. Go well up to the front. Professor Searcher does not speak any too clearly and I sit up there?I mean you can hear better there." There were excursions into the woods and fields arranged by the teachers assembled at Gower Hill. Professor Bent took the tramps, and through the urging assistant principal. Theodosia Desmond occasionally went along. This student of man amused Professor Bent, and despite her antagonism she attracted him a little. On one of the excursions he found himself alone with her in a woodland path. Each had books. "What have i you there, Professor Bent?" asked Miss Desmond. "I have P. n. Gosse, a man too little read now, and Burroughs, and White of Selborne. They are full of frogs and snakes and foxes and birds." Theodosia Desmond tossed her head, , and her piquant nose became as near pert as her thirty-five years would admit. "Trash, every bit of it," .she said. "There's nothing human about it." . "Surely there's human interest in the lives of the frogs and the loves of the birds." "Loves of the birds! I thought you r. rrni'o harnnri conHmonf Pi'Afnccnr Ront IP Well, there, I ilifl not mean to be rude. Here I have John Locke's 'Human Understanding.' Now that's the proper ? jtudy for a student. He isn't read '"much jiow, but lie ought to. be. He would not touch sentiment with a "Seems to me I've be.ird that Look*, i once wrote a book on how to bring up children properly." Theodosia Desmond blushed furious- , ly. "So he did, but I've not read it. I ! see how it is: we can't agree, and I i.l ~ .1 niitlinKC if I YVUU1U lit 11. IfilU UIIC U1 ,tuui iiumuia " I the reading would make me superiu- J tendent of schools. I'll stick to Locke i and Kant, and you can keep on reading about the earthworms." Nevertheless, tliey went walking together again, and when they separated j for the summer there was just a suspicion of lingering over the farewell. I "Better read White and Burroughs, { Miss Desmond," said Professor Bent. "You couldn't hire me to. Suppose ! you try Locke." 11 The professor shook his head and i they parted. j1 Two weeks later Thaddeus Bent j walked into the Crerar Library and j A- ? A Vvaa1-? TTA' fAAL* I wruit an uruti IUI u uuuu. nu ivwu the volume and stnrteil for a table. He turned out to avoid a pillar and ran plun?p into a little woman coming from the other side. She uttered a smothered exclamation and dropped a book. Thaddeus Bent stooped, picked the book up. looked deliberately at the title, and, with a bow. handed it to Theodosia Desmond, who was standing with heightened color ahd flashing eyes looking at him. "How dare you look to see what I am reading?" she said. "I thought I recognizgd the cover as that of an old friend." said the professor. coolly. "They always bind Burroughs' works nicely. The book I'm about to read is snuff color. Do you know the author, Theodosia?" He turned the book back to her, and she read, "Human Understanding, Locke." "Don't you think. Theodosia. that we - - ' '1- - ? ~ - xs 1 wouiu oetter ao me rest m uui mc o j < reading together?" They put the books on the table and i went out side by side, and tbe attend- j ant at the desk noticed that the glasses < 'which the little woman wore were I dimmed, though the face below was ' smiling.?Edward B. Clarke, in Chicago I Record-IIerald. * I j A Grim Humor of the Boer War. Gilbert and Sullivan in their wildest ' flights of fancy never ventured to in- 1 vent such things about the British ' Array as have been disclosed by the astonishing testimony before the Military 1 Commission. Consider the artistic ' perfection of this incident, for exam- ! pie: Lord Roberts wrote to President 1 Steyn, of the Orange Free State, on 1 March 11, 1000, complaining that explosive bullets had been found in ' Cronie's laaarer. "Such breaches of the recognized usages of war," he sol- 1 emnly proceeded, "and of the Geneva ' Convention are a disgrace to any civil- 1 *ized power. A copy of this telegram has been sent to my Government with a request that it be communicated to the neutral powers." Mr. Steyn explained that the bullets ' in question had been taken from Brit- 1 ish troops. Now it turns out that this ammunition with expanding bullets had been manufactured in England be- k fore the war to the extent of 00,000,000 : rounds; that there was every intention ; of making it the standard outfit of the ; British Army all over the world, but ; that its production was stopped be- ; cause it was found to be dangerous to ; the user in hot climates. It was cpn- > demned by The Hague Convention on ; grounds of humanity, but it had to be supplied to the British troops in South A <Vi/>o Wfiiico nt rmo timo thprf* \VPI"P ! only two or three hoses of any other kind on hand. j All that is needed now to make the story complete Is an apology from Lord Roberts to Mr. Steyn, but the wire seems to be- busy in that direction.? New York World. Difference In Bird Songs. Much of the attractiveness of the voice of the wood-thrush is due to the excellent sounding-board furnished by the foliage by which his song3 are backed. In an open field the tones would be deadened and their ringing quality lost. It would perhaps be going too far to credit him with knowledge of the value of bis chosen environment, but be certainly shows no disposition to abandon the advantages he thus secures, in this respect differing from several of his usual associates. The cardinal, wood pewee. Carolina wren, and many other woodland birds frequently pour their songs into the larger spaces of the open meadow, and the wood-thrush, through chance or choice, thus gains a distinct advantage over these less consistent performers. There ia a marked difference in the light notes of the Carolina wren that come from fence post or isolated tree , and those that ring out in the echoing forest. The cardinal's rich portnmentos, too, are far less striking in the I pasture than in the deep wood. And ; . much of the sad sentiment of the mel- j . ancholy plant of the wood pewee is | ( lost when it rises from a bu!?b in the I f open instead of stealing out of the j heart of the wood.?Henry Oldys. in ; Lippincott's. Dancer in Green Paper. ; The general public, we fear, Is not; J acquainted with the dangers arising ! ' from arsenic coloring matter in wall ' paper. A recent death in Palmer, | Mass.. is directly attributed by the | ! medical authorities to this cause. The 1 f trouble which resulted so disastrously j 1 made its appearance a year and a half j 1 azo in what seemed to be nervous dys- ! pepsia. Two months of travel abroad seemed to greatly improve the patient,; ' but on returning home he soon grew ; worse again. On account of certain ' conflicting symptoms which could not be readily accounted for a specialist , was called in and gave it as his opinion that there was arsenic poisoning in the 1 system. An investigation was then. made which resulted in the discovery of arsenic colors in the wall paper of the sitting room. This room had been ^ papered shortly previous to the appearance of the first symptoms. The wall paper was at once removed, but the , disease bad by this time progressed so far that it was impossible to save tbc life of the unfortunate victim.?Scientific American. "Wealthy New York Churches. J A New York church that keeps silence respecting its wealth is the Dutch Collegiate, which is reputed to have an income from investments of $400,000 a year. Trinity Church has an income from its investments of over $1,000,0*00 per annum. New York City.?Long box pleatet :oats are among tbe features of th< season that may be relied upon to ex tend tbeir favor well into the future ItlSSBS* BOX^^nBAZB^ COAT. ind are much worn by young girls rhis one, designed by May Manton, ii Idapted to both the entire suit and th< general wrap and to all the lightei freight materials in vogue, but, as il lustrated, is made of pongee stitchec ivith corticelli silk and trimmed wit! landsome buttons which are held ty silk cords above the waist. The pleat! jive long lines which mean an effec )f slenderness even while the coat ii oose. The sleeves are the large am imple ones that slip on over the bodici tvith ease. The coat is made with full lengtl fronts and backs, and a skirt portioi :bat is joined to them beneath the bel ind pleats. The box pleats at thi ;entre are laid in, but those from thj shoulder and at the back are applied A.t the neck is a flat collar and i pointed belt is worn at the waist. Th< sleeves are pleated above the elbows )ut form full puffs below that poin ind are finished with roll-over flan :uffs. The quantity of material required foi he medium size is six and one-fourtl cards twenty-seven inches wide, threi ind three-fourth yards forty-foui nches wide or three and one-fourtl rards fifty-two inches wide. A Tenture of the Season. Yoke waists of all sorts are amonj ,he features of the season and ar< nade exceedingly attractive with trim ning and contrasting material of vari >us kinds. The stylish one designee >y May Manton and depicted in th< arge drawing, is shown in pale pint :repe de Chine with yoke and trim ning made of bands of pink silk helc >y fancy stitches, but the design is WOMAN'S YOKE WAIST 1 suited to a variety o- materials, silt md light weight wools and to th< nany cotton and linen fabrics. Lac< insertion can be substituted for the sill )f the yoke, or bands of materia feather stitched, or any yoking mate rial can be used. The waist consists of a fitted lining )n which the front and backs are ar ranged. The yoke is separate ant joined to the waist at its lower edge Both front and backs are tucueu a their upper portions, but the backs ari lrawn down smoothly, while the fron blouses slightly over the belt. Th< sleeves suggest the Hungarian style ind are made with snug fitting uppe: portions to which the full sleeves ar< attached. The quantity of material required fo the medium size is four yards twenty >110 inches wide, three and one-fourtl rards twenty-seven inches wide, tw< ind one-half yards thirty-two inchei ivide, or one and seven-eighth yard: forty-four inches wide, with sever cards of banding to make as illustratet >r five-eighth yards of material eigh :een inches wide for yoke and collar. Triple skirts are much in vogue anc ire exceedingly graceful and attractiv< ivlien worn by tUe women to whon foey are becoming. Tlie very cbarininf nodel shown in the large drawing is ldapted to all tbe season's material: ind to variations of trimming that ar< rery nearly %vitbout number, but ii be ease of the original is made ol chiffon veiling in crcam white witl )unds of antique lace as trimming. The skirt consists of a foundatior which is cut in five gores, the uppei jortion of the skirt and the tw< Jounces. The quantity of material required foi he medium size is eight yards twenty seven inches wide, seven and one-hall rards thirty-two inches wide, or flvt ind three-fourth yards forty-foui 1 IrtLFAlRJ .] ATEST ' 'ORK FA5fWN^ | 1 inches wide, with eight and one-half *> - yards twenty-one or five yards thirty- ^ - six inches wide for foundation. * ? ? r. Costliness of Linen Costumes. ( Linen launders well, but it musses 1 oncilv nn/1 ic tliorofnrp hv nn c means economical wear. A smart i white linen toilet is in two pieces. The 1 slightly full skirt is of the five gored 1 model, with an inlet above the hem of c a three-inch band of embroidery done i on linen. The three-quarter length 1 coat has a similar band around its skirt^ set perhaps two inches above the { hem! A deep-jointed cape collar of the 1 linen falls over the shoulders, with a { second collar of embroidery a size < smaller falling over the first. The ] sleeves drop from the elbow with an inlet of embroidery, and are gathered into a long-pointed cutf of embroidery at the wrist.?New York Post E Packlnp the Trunk. ' Trimmed hats and starched blouses < suffer greatly from packing. It is * much better to pack the blouses rough- 1 dry and have them got up when one ? arrives at one's destination. Hats can * . easily be packed before they are s trimmed, with the ribbons which are to ' ? adorn tbem stowed away inside tlie i r crown. Linen collars can be packed < - very safely in the crown of a sailor < 1 hat, and this is one way of economic- 1 1 ing space. * 7 < 5 Use of Lace in Winter Hats. 1 t Heavy guipure lace in the form o\ 1 3 circular appliques, with deeply Van- ( 1 dyked edges, and of broad bands in- f a serted clear in the brim, must be reckoned among the fashionable decorai tions for this style of hat when made 1 of velvet. The Tandyked guipure is c t also used to trim the underside of /hat 1 2 brims. Such lace is generally chosen I t either pure white or of a light creamy 1 . tone.?The Millinery Trade Review. j i i t a The T2ver Popular Gainsborough. S The Gainsborough hat is, so report t t says, to have another season of popu- ( ; larity. t j. Tucked Blouse Waist. . j Big round collars are much worn and ! . j are very generally becoming. The'l "c smart May Manton waist illustrated ! j combines one of the sort with tucked I fronts, that are exceedingly graceful, j l and can be made with tucked elbow r or plain bishop sleeves. The model is j ; made of mauve peau de cynge stitched j i n-Hii ?r?rtir>oiii silk, the trimming, shield ^ - and collar being of heavy applique in - twine color, and is worn with a skirt 1 of the same, but the design also suits ? the odd waist and all pretty, soft mate; rials that can be tucked successfully are appropriate. When desired the j I shield and collar can be omitted and i i the neck worn slightly open. ^ ^^^ k.ND TRIPLE TUCKED SKIPwT. . c c The waist is made over a smoothly ^ - fitted lining that closes at the centre x 2 front. The back is plain, drawn down r c in gathers r.t the waist line, but the i j 1 fronts are tucked for a few inches be* ( - low their upper edges and form soft x folds over the bust. The neck is fin- (? ished with the big collar which laps - over with the waist to close invisibly I at the left of centre. The shield is separate and is arranged over the lin- c t ing, beneath the waist. The tucked ; r - sleeves are eminently graceful and J c II form frills below the elbows, but the j r ~ -v ?'? ? Into I I " j uisxiop sieeves me piuiu, gmuviw . straight cuffs. J r r The quantity of material required j t 8 for the medium size is four and one- r fourth yards twenty-one inches wide, e r four and one-four-th yards twenty- j ? seven inches wide or two and three- j li * eighth yards forty-four inches wide, a > fl woman's tucked waist. ' < ' < . with three-eighth yards of all-over lace < ' for collar and shield and two and three- < > fourth yards of applique to trim as 11- < lustrated. J . I Teaching Poll Parrot* to Speak. ' I TJe strangest school in the world has )een established In Philadelphia by a voman. It is a school where parrots ire taught to speak by means of the jhonograph. which is a new method >nly recently adopted by the founder ^ >r tue scnooj, Mrs. Jacob Hope, ["be old way of teaching parrots is edious and unsatisfactory. The tutor, touched in a corner out of sight of he bird, repeats to it, over and over, housands of times, the same word, the same phrase, till his back aches from lis cramped and still position and till lis voice cracks and gives out. The lew way of teaching these birds to :alk is pleasant and wonderfully suesessful. The tutor sets his phonograph going at the parrot's ear, and ;lien retires to read or to look after )ther business. His phonograph, while le rests, works for him. With a precision and perseverance that he could lever equal it drums into the brain of he bird the sentence that is to be earned. This sentence the parrot ac* luires much more quickly and much nore thoroughly by the new way than >y the old. The term at the Philadelphia phonograph school of languages for parrots asts six months. The tuition fee is , 540 a term, and the school has at present twenty pupils.?W. B. Trites, in Leslie's Weekly. Costly Impoliteness. It pays to be polite, and sometimes mpoliteness is rather expensive. The ;moke from a gas and electric plant in San Francisco annoyed Claus Spreck;ls, the sugar king. He complained o the President of the company, politey requesting an abatement of the nui ;ance. The President responded curtly ind hinted that Mr. Spreckels should 'chase himself." The sugar king, at in expense of $4,000,000, started a rival ras and electric company, and brought lown the price of these illuminants to me-quarter what they had been. Then he President begged for quarter, and Spreckels sold his plant to the penitent company for $6,000,000. The sugar iing cleaved $2,000,000 by the transac:ion, and the company had to pay $6,100.000 for the impoliteness of its oficer. A Curious London Custom. A curious survival in London is the ontinuance of taxes and tithes on the louses which .used, as every one < mows, to stand on London Bridge, i ["he houses, grown decrepit, were torn lown in 1750, and the bridge followed hem, but the tithes survived, and are itill paid by the Bridge house estates I < n the rectors of St. Masfnus and St. | )lave churches, the total amounting < O $300,000 since the houses disap- ; >eared. These ghostly taxes on things i hat have no corporeal existence might lave given Dickens a theme. Speed of Motor Can In France. In consequence of the reckless "drivng of motor cars through villages nany of the local mayors issued orders describing speeds of only six or eight kilometres an hour within certain jounds. These restrictions have been wrought to the notice of the Prime Minster, who has just issued a circular :o the Prefects, in which he says that, ivhile he quite agrees that the speed >f motor cars should be limited in places .where there is considerable xaltic. he does not think it equitable :hat the cars, which are so easily handled and pulled up, should be required to travel at a less speed than lorse-drawn vehicles. He consequently nvites the Prefects to see that the ac:ion of the local mayors is not vexa:ious and beyond the real requirements >f public security, as it is necessary :liat hostility should not be shown toward the new means of locomotion, (vhich is destined toi render great serrices, and with which the public will gradually become familiarized.?Paris Correspondence in London Standard. 200,000 KIbspb. "Kissing the Book" is a practice tvliich shows no sign of losing its popularity. Witnesses have enjoyed for several years the statutory right of bong sworn in the Scottish fashion, but ixtremely few exercise it, despite the .'requent objection urged against kissing the book on sanitary grounds. A vitness in the X&s.-castle County Court las contrived to adhere to the practice, vhile showing his appreciation of the rrounds on which doctors have conlemned it. Immediately he stepped nto the witness box he produced a Testament from his pocket to be sworn >n. This precaution was at once comnended by Judge Oreenwell, who renarked that he himself would not kiss >ne of the court Testaments for flOOO. n a court in another part of the cou'nry a Testament has been so long in lse that it is calculated that over !00.000 persons have kissed it. The oficers are said to have made this inter sting calculation known to the world vith feelings of peculiar pride.?Lon- ' Ion Globe. t Good Navy Marksmanship. I An interesting illustration of the ex- i client marksmanship of Uncle Sam's ] nen behind the guns, as developed < luring the recent inspection trip of the laval committeemen on the U. S. S. ? dolphin, has just come to light. Rep- ? esentative Roberts of Massachusetts ( vas of the party. Approaching <*4un- i ler's Mate Spoer of the ship, Mr. ikob- ? rts offered him a dollar to hit a s<m S nil. Spoer took n forty-pound six-iiiH- 1 imetre Colt's automatic gun, and affer trial shot he popped a sea gull on the 4 y at 400 yards. One of the Represen- ' itives was firm in his declaration that , lie shot was an accidental one. where- ' pon Spoer shot another sea gull at p r?0 yards. The crowd of astonished f witnesses to the feat finally came to n tie conclusion that Spoer was the rack shot of the ship. This Spoer C odestly disclaimed, saying, "We've a ,~ liipload of 'em. .sir." Spoer got his j ollar.?Washington Evening Star. J; Even the sculptor may not cut much | f a figure in society. N.Y.?10 | | Right Alon; a good thing lives ana takes on new life, and so * / WORN OUT, D Are Most Women in Summer ?Pe-ru-na is a Tonic of Efficiency. JOSEPHINE MORRIS, 236 Carroll St. Brooklyn, N.^Y., writes: jreruna is a. ime ihcujciuc vaa^ ?u< time of the year, but I have found it es peciallv helpful to withstand the wear anc tear 01 the hot weather. I have taken il now for two summers, and feel that it has Kept my system free from malaria, anc also kept me from having that worn-out draggea-out look which so many womei have. "I therefore have no he?itancy in sayinj that I think it is the finest tonic in thi world."?Josephine Morris. Peruna is frequently used as a mitiga tion of the effects of hot weather. What i bath is to the skin, Peruna is to the mu cous membranes. Bathing keeps the skii healthy, Peruna makes the mucous mem branes clean and healthy. With the skii and mucous membranes in go.od workini order, hot weather can be withstood witl very little suffering. Frequent bathing with an occasional us< of Peruna is sure to mitigate the horror of hot weather. Many ladies have discov The Handbill Nuisance. A city which attempts to have cleai streets might very properly pass ai ordinance regulating the distributior o!.' handbills, and if it vent so far as to abolish them altogether no ham would be done. They are thrown into door-yards sine on door-steps, where somebody musl pick them up and put them in the fire or else suffer them to litter up th< yard and street. Their practical vain; as advertising is by no means commen surate with the annoyance they occa sion. Canaries as Featherless Bipeds ' A canary breeder has two younj birds, now about six weeks old, Whosi bodies are entirely destitute of feather or down of any kind, with the excep tion of the quills on wings and tails The skin is perfectly smooth, with n< sign whatever of feathers to come.Nature Notes. Typhoid Fever. The average mortality from typboii fever is three times as great In Amei iean as in European cities. The citie in the United States which suffer mos from the disease are Washington, Chi cago,Boston, Philadelphia and Provi denQe, in that order. STRAIGHT 1 Aching backs are eased. Hip, back, and loin pains overcome. Swelling of the limbs, rheumatism, and dropsy signs vanish. They correct urine with brick-dust sediment, high colored, excessive, pain in passing, dribbling, frequency. Doan's Kidney Pills dissolve and remove calculi and gravel. Relieve heart palpitation, sleeplessness, headache, nervous cess. Tell City, ikd.?i received me iree trial of Doan's Kidney Pills. They are splendid. I had an awful pain in my back ; on taking the pills the pain left me right away and I feel like a new man. ? Stephen Schaefer. Mrs. Addie Andrews, R. F. D. No. 1. Brodhead, Wis., writes : I* received the free trial of Doan's Kidney Pills with much benefit. My little nephew was suffering terribly with kidney trouble from scarlet fever. Two doctors failed to help him and he finally went into spasms. His father gave him Doan's Kidney Pills and from the second dose ? iiiuausTjibuiesarf the best dyspepslJ /^> ?^gSwaB>mt'dicme ever made /^y A huudred mlllloj! \^GKt&<ftki\\<t?Jot lheui fluve beer sold II the Unitei States In a si^glt year. Every Illness irisuig Xrouj a disordered stomach if relieved or cured by their use. S( :oiuDJon is it that diseases originate L'rom tlie stomach it may be sutely as serted there is no condition of 111 lealtn th. t will not be beneiited 01 :ured by the occasional use of Hlpan: labules. Physicians klow them and >peak highly of them. All druggists tell them. The tive-ceut package is ?uough for an ordinary occasion, and he Family Bottle, sixty cents, contains i nousenoKJ BUppiy ror a year, uuc jenerally gives relief within twenty ninutes. Good Pills Oyer's Pills are good liver ?ills. You know that. The best amily laxative you can buy. rhey keep the bowels regular, ure constipation. j0c^r&: Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE nrrr cts. or dbouuibts or b r. hau* co., habhoa. h. n. ' ' ' ' r&M rnmmmmm?mmm-mmmm?mmmmmmmmL IBA66ED OUT, ? Mrs. Treaaie Nelson, 422 Broad St.,? J Nashville, Tenn., writes: J ifAa Peruna hag done me a J J world of good, I feel in duty? j oiruna 10 tew oj m nuyca >?< * ^ * it may meet the eye of some wo * man who has Buffered as I have. + * "For five years I really did not t J know what a perfectly well day ? J was, and ifl did not have head- J J ache, I had backache or a pain J * somewhere and really life was J I* not worth the effort I made to * keep going. J i "A good friend advised me to J * use Peruna and 1 was glad to try t J anything, and J am very pleased ? * to say that six bottles made a new i * woman of me and I have no more ? { pains and life looks bright? * again."?Mrs. Tressie Nelson. ? ered that the depression of hot weather ? and "the rigors they have been in the i habit of attributing to malaria quickly disappear when they use Peruna. This is - why Peruna is so popular with them. Pei runa provides clean mucous membranes, - and the clean mucous membranes do the 3 rest. If you do not derive prompt and satisi factory results from the use of Peruna ? write at once to Dr. Hartman. givini? a i full statement of vour case, and he will be * < ? ? L:_ ?l?1.1- . pieasea to give you ms vmuauic auvito e gratis. - . ft s Address Dr. Hartman, President of The ^ - Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0. A Bargain. . i It was in the raspberry season, and > 1 a freckled, barefooted little girl in a i torn blue calico gown came to the door 3 of a country boarding house to sell l some berries she had gathered. "How much are your berries?" asked I the mistress of the house. t "They are fifteen cents a quart, , ma'am. But," she added, in the same ; ]breath, "if you don't want them, you i can have them for ten." . "I don't want them, so you may give - me three quarts," replied the lady, merfili-?Wnmon'a TTnmo Pnmnflnlnn. Older Than Solomon's Temple. , v s It is not generally realized that when e Solomon erected his temple a thousand 8 years before Christ, Americans in Peru " were building their tremendous "struc' tures to the glory of. a creator god." 0 Yet this is the conclusion toward which ' . ~ our archaeological researches in South \ America liow point. Professor Max Uhle, of the University of California, writes in Harper's Magazine of the 1 slow but effective processes by which these records have been unearthed, res vealing city buried beneath city, as t each new period of culture succeeded i- its predecessor. The article is illustrated by curious pictures of early pottery and of significant ruins. Fo THE SPOT the pain was jess. Ee began to gain ana is to-day a well boy, his life saved by Doan's Kidney Pills. T>\frr*a XT*9 T fVl A XIUJ^LLO JJJLLLjXjO, ?l T wt vuv free trial of pills. They did me great 1 good. I had bladder trouble, compelling me to get up often during night Now 1 I sleep well; no pain in neck of bladdfer; Jain in back is gone, also headache.? no. L. Hill. - namc tate . For free trlai box. man this coupon to . fostar-MUburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. if above I pace li Insufficient, write addreaa on i?pa I rateillp. J=====S===============i , JUDICAL ADVICE FREE. LAZY LIVER i 1 "I find Caicarets *o good that I would not b# , without them. I was troubled a treat deal with torpid liver and headache. Notv since taking i Cascareti Candy Cathartic 1 feel very much better , 1 shall certainly recommend them to my friends as the best medicine 1 hare ever seen." > Anna Bazlnet, Osborn Mill No. 2, Fall Blvor, Mass. ft ^ The Bowels teaa CANDY CATHARTIC Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, I Never Sicken. Weaken or Grim). 10c. t'ir. 50c. Never i old In 1mIk. The genuine tablet stamped C C 0. Gnarauteod to car* or roar money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago cr N.Y. 6oi ANNUAL SHE. TEW Mill m BOXES The Effervescent Stomach Cleanser M brA M &fil prevents headaches, ylBjf biliousness, constipation. | At Druggist*. &Oc. and 91? \?W|*iIwjy or by mail from j trara by Auieucan TAIIRA.VT CO. I Pliyaiclaui ?lnce U?. ?1 Joy Street. Hew York CURES MALARIA ?35cfTT L CHILLS A FEVERS B.?JC U JOhnSOil'S I V- ftM R.KaMn Z St. Jacobs 00 f keeps right alon^curing < > Pains and Aches, o Price 25c. and 50c. < | < < - ' '-V*5