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Whyl 01 Hereis S"If I bad X be advertise corner. T1 that has rhe1 to keep and ment is-like refusing a re Dyke, Lake Sl' 4*~ Lir What Will Th Have you ever stopped tot your life's work will be? Are 3 money crop for the winte rs of 4. investigation w ll you t ideal place for kb-epingayour ft for every farmer to have a stro may waDt to borrow one of the! loan for you, on good security, any red tape Drop in to seetus Make the call friendly-you dc time you come in to say "bello. Rememaer Us When ou Have _You when YOU BANK OF T1 PROOF COINS. They Are Always Struck From. Now - and Specially Prepared Dies. Proof icoins have been struck at the hilal phia mint for many years, but at no othermint, to be sold to collecj A emium of about 10 per cent - ag when a lot includes coins' -otsdenominations. For-minor proof et however, when ordered separate 1. 'little more than double the face - alueis charged. The coins are struck from new and specially prepared dies on planchets ptgvionsly burnished, a hand press in tead of the regular steam press bein.g used. When there' is a smooth field around the raised portion of a coin th~e burnishing gives the surface a lasting brilliancy thiat is very attractive. Qur silver coins still have such a 11eld, but. the -gold coins, particularly the S5 and $2.50 pieces, 'and the minor -coins no longer present this desirable feature. In fact, outside of the lines being, a little finer, proofs of these coins differ little in appearance from pieces struck for regular circulation. The incused inscriptions on the gold coins do not harmonize with the field as did the old raised Inscriptions, while on the minor coins the field is not smooth. and the nickel has really no *field, an exc-ess of letterngdisfiguring wvhatsis npt motiopolized by the Indian head and-the buffalo. The $20 and $10 pieces presente artistic designs, but -proofs of- these coins are far from be Ing a attractive as were those of the old designs.-Pittsburgh Press. -A LEDGE AND A MINE. How a Learned Lawyer Was Taught to Distinguish Between Them.' Let not distinguished counsel from -any eastern or western -bar plume themselves upon their fancied superior iIty to their frontier brethren. The liti gation which attends upon rich mnin eral discoveries often tempts the keen -est intellects to the forums of the frontier, and an Imported counsel is, *in his ignorance of local customs and local nomenclature, liable to make a bad break. A distinguished New England law -yer who was imported by a Boston capitalist to take charge of a big min 7Ing suit delivered himself of a lengthy philippie against a witness who had testified that a mine was in a certain locality and who a year before had 7 testified that it was in another locali ~ty aquarter of amile distant. "Did -he lie then, or is he lying now?" said the Imported lawyer. "The learned counsel from afar," an swered his opponent. "is an apt illus ~ration of the proverb that a little learning--and in his case such a very )Ittle-is a dangerous thing. He con fuses- a mine with a ledge. The lo cility of a ledge cannot, of course, be changed, but the locality of a mine. which is the work upon a ledge, may be, as in this case, placed at one point today and In six months may be at another point a quarter of a mile or more away."-Case and Comment. A Fine Viewpoint. Sherman, Wyo, so named in honor of General W. T. Sherman. is the -highest point on the Laramie range. reached by the U~nion Pac-itie railroad It is claimed that from this point on a clear day may be seen Pikes peak. about 105 miles to the south, Longs peak, sixty miles to the south, and Elk mountain. 100 miles to the west. From many points in the vhiinity of Buford good views may be- obtained of the high peaks of the Roky~: mnountains far away to the south and of the relative ly low but rugged Sherman mountains, a part of the Laramaie range, to the right. Two promnent points seen to the north are called Twin mountains and are celebratedi as one of the strong holds of the notorious desp~era1o Slade. Slade during bis checkered career fought both for and against law and order. and his career is set forth in Mark Twain's -"Roughuing 1t"-Geolog ical Survey Bulletin. * ' In the Gym. "So you liave a gymnasium In your new house?" -Yes," replied Dustin Stax. "I spend an hour or two there every day. I havb swung up a ham mock, and it's a nice place to take a han in "-Washington Star. xxxxxxxxxxxs hosePans? a testimonial unasil my will it would d on every street . e man or woman 2matism and fails use Sloan's Lini a drowning man pe."-A. J. Van vood, N. .. oan s iimenit_ R U T 5SPAS e Harvest Be? hink of what the harvest of 'ou storing away part of your >ld age and misfortune?. hat our bank would be an Ods safely. It's a good plan 3g banking oonnection. You ;a days; we can. negotiate the at right rates and without next time you're in tewn. n't have to do business every honey and We'll Remem ber Weed Money. IRBEVILLE. To Keep Bacon From Curling. "But bacon-curls up so when 11 sliced very thin." protested a yo' cook when the family objected thick slices of bacon. The way avoid that annoying curling is to h the frying pan- very hot and tarn slices before the meat sears on under.side and begins to curt. By < stant -attention and turning the tl nest slices can be broiled brown, ci and Styaight.-Nebras1-a Farmer. Recommeded For Croup. W. C Allen, Boseley. Mo., savs: have r i1e' a family of four child and 4s d Foley'- Honey and Tar' t all of t em- I find it the b'-st .col and crotii m'dicine I ever' ut.d I c it for ei~ht or te'n ) ear'. and can comme ai it for croiup"' Same se fac'ory re-tte fr.r c. ugh s and cc Dicksons Drug Store., Adv. THE FATA MORGANA. Bonditions That Must Obtain to Al -of lIs lProduction. The fata morgana is a singular'ai phenomenon akin to the mirage. ' seeg in many parts of the world, most frequently and in greatst feetion at the strait of Messina, tween Sicily and Italy. So many ditions must coincide, however,1 even there it Is of comparatively:a ccurrence. To allow of Its production the must'be at an angle,.f forty-flve grees with the water- both sky sea must be calm and the tidal xent suffleently strong to cause water in tihe center to rise highert on the edges'of -the strait. When ti conditi~oons, are fully met the obsel on the. -ghts of Calabria, looking wirdIl sina, wil behold aserie rapidly changing pictures , someti of most exquisite beauty. Castles, -colonnades, sucesm beautiful, arches, palaces, es, 1 houses and streets and chiwth der .otiniains, forests;' gi'ottees, will pear and -vanish, to- be succeeded haps by fleets of ships. sometimes j idly sailing over the deep, someti inverted, while a ha). like a rain1 surrounds every image. It is supposed that the Images due to the Irregular refractive poi of the different layers of air above sea, which magnify, repeat and dis the objects on the Sicilian shore yond, but to the Italians these sia lar appearances are the castles of Princess Mor'gana,- and the viw them Is supposed to bring good fort to the beholder. A MADAGASCAR BANQUEl Where the Riot of Food Vied With, Riot of Tumult. The longest and noisiest dinner James Sibree. Jr., the author of Naturalist In Madagascar." ever tended was given by the governor town called Ankarana. About a s< of oilieers were at the table and se ladies. After a long grace by the] tor, dinner was brought in and< sisted of the following courses: First, curry: second. goose: tU pigeons and waterfowl; fourth. ch en eutlects and poached egs:. 1fthi.1 sausages: sixth. boiled tougue; seve: sardines: eighuth. pig's tr'otters; ni: fried bainanas; tenth. paincakes:e enth, manioe: twelfth. dried bana: and lastly, says Mr. Sibree. whe thought everything must have I served. camne haunches of roast bee: There was a big drum just out: on the -veranda. as well as two si ones, besides clarinets and fiddles, these were in full piay almost all time. Then the room wa.s lilled 1 crowds of servants and aids-de-ci and the shouting of every one, f: the governor down, was deafen The old gentleman directed everytl and every one. I was glad whe could take my leave, after two ho sitting, but I was not to leave quit The governor took me by the hand escorted me home, while the big d was hammered at ahead of us all way.-Youth's Companion. Difficulties of Astronomy. "Is it hard to learn the use of a scope?" asked the student. very," replied the candid profw "The hardest thing about astrita in guessing what something is a DADDY LONGLEGS. He Is Harmless, He Doesn't Bite, and He Isn't a Spider. Don't call a daddy longlegs a spider, becanem he isn't. Spiders bite and have poison glands. This insect is. per fectly harmless. It isn't just pleasant to have one of them crawl up your arm or down your neck, but you're just as safe as when he Isn't there-ten times safer than the insect Is just at that moment. He's not only harmless, but go common that you'll find him al most any place in the world where it's warm enough for him to exist. In good old American language we call him daddy longlegs. Maybe you've heard him called harvest man or grand father graybeard. He has eight Idag legs bowed in the middle, so that when he's standing up his little round, body almost touches the ground where he walks. He.:also has two eyes and two pincers, which you will see If you ex amine him closely. From midsummer to late autumn daddy longlegs scampers about over rocks, tree trunks, gets in the picnic marmalade in the park, crawls up the fisherman's neck along the stream, col lects In barns and has a general good time. Few of them survive the win ter. In Mammoth cave, Kentucky, the daddy l'onglegs are blind.-PhIladelphia North American. LEMBERG RICH IN NAMES. It Has Had Twenty-seven Diferent -One In Its Career. Many cities are known by More than one name, but It is given to few to re joice In more than half a dozen dis tinctive cognomens. But the historie Galician city of Lemberg has been known at one time or another by no less than twenty-seven different appel Slations. According to the Polish Bulletin, the ancient Ruthenian names for Lwoff were Lwow, Lwiw, Lwlhrad, Lwlho @ rod, Uwiw; the Germans called It LAm Sborg, Lemberg, Taemburg Loewenburg; theL In and pseudo Latin names In elude Lebburga, Lamburga, Leontopo lis, Leone, Livivia, Leopolya; In the thirteenth century It was known to the * Greeks as Lithon and Lifbada. The patriarchs of Constantlnople, Alexandria and Jerusalem referred to It as Leovios and Leonopolis; the Turks galt it in their books 11, Bbo, Ilbot, -bw, Ilbadir; the Armenians gave to - it the .ame of flof; the Russians have lately baptized it Lwoff. - The real name of the city, It Is as serted, is the Polish one of Lwow, wbich literally translated means Lion SisCi. ~ Ing t Why Boiled Water Freezes Easily. Water which is hot, -of course, can tP not freeze until It has parted with its t heat, but water that has been boled th will, other things being equal, freeze on- sooner than water which has not been. boiled. A slight disturbance of water disposes it to freeze more rapidly, and this is the cause which accelerates -the freezing of bolled water. The water that has been boiled has lost the air naturally contained in It, which on ex --I posure to the atmosphere it begins rI. again to attract and absorb. During ith this process of absorption a motion is ]~necessarily produced among its parti en elea, slight certainly and impercepti Able, yet probably sufficient to accel i erate its congelation. In unboiled wa ter this disturbance does not exist. In deed, water~ whem kept perfectly still can be reduced several degrees below the freezing point without its becoming ice. __________ lw Knew What He Was Doing. iIl At the time of the great disaster In Martiniqtre the Italian bark Orsolina was taking on a cargo of sugar there. but.- Her captain was accustomed to volca Snoes, and he did not.Hike the appear b-aneof Mont Pelee. Not half his cargo was on board, but he decided to sail refor home. re"The volcano is all right," argued Sth'e shippers. "Finish your loading." d- "I .don't, know anything about Mont and ?elee'" said the captain,."but If Vesu vmus looked that way I'4 get out of Na ~te plea, and I'm going to get right out of leeThe shippers threatened him withear ve rest. They sent customs officers to to detain him, but the captain persisted ed in leaving. Twenty-four hours Jater esthe shippers and .the. customs eoleers lay dead In the ruins of St. Pierre. of rith Matrimony. ea; The primary impulse of all creatures ap- . is possession. It is this that causes a er- chicken to tear around the yard with a la- piece of meatin its mouth and all the nes other chickens after it. .It hasn't-time, ~ow but the instinct of possession makes him grab and keep it. The same Is are noticegble among beasts. They like to rers get a great piece of meat in their the mouths and then growL It Is this In tort stinct in man which provokes him to be- matrimony. He wants something to gu- guard and growl over, so he seeks a the , hollow tree, a cave or a house and a of wlfe.-Pittsburgh Press. une Pretty Clever Idea. "How do you anage to turn away smayapplicants for positions in the chrswithout hurting their feelings?" the "Oh, I tell them they are too pretty; that the star wants to be the only athandsome woman In the company." ogSt. Louis Post-Dispatch. at-j f as A For'oed L.ean. ~ore Sport--I say, old chap, can you let ena me have two fives for a ten? Long >aSure. Here they are. Short-ThankS on. I'll hand you the ten In a day or so. -Indianapolis Star. ek- To have failed Is to have striven; to )eef have striven is to have grown.-Malt th. bie D). Babcock. ath.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ e las- fcu Know It. 1 I The man wao really practices what een heDece does mighty little preach -. ig. ade t IRUB OUT PAIN r aI with gooc ',il liniment. That's ui, [the surestL way to stop them. n~ The best rubbing liniment is MUSTANGi LI IENT Good for the imenfr of JHorses, Mules, Cattle, Etc. ele GI ood for yourc non Aches, o Pai~ns, Rheumatism, Sprains, II srCuts, Burnas, Etc. Ii im l~~L25c. 50c. $1. -At al Dealers. The Eind You Have Always Bon In use for over S0 years, has and has 1 sonal sup 42 0 Avw(ct% Alowno All Counterfeits, Imitations and Experiiments that trifle with an Infanta and Chien-Experiel What is CA Castoria Is a harmless substiti goric, Drops and Soothing Sy' contains neither Opium, Morp substance. Its age is its guara and allays weverishness. It e Colic. It relieves Teething Tre and FlatUlency. It assiilate' Stomach and Bowels, giving ]b The Children's Panacea-The ]1 CENUINE CAST( Bears the 8i4 The Kind You Hav In Use For Ove "e COaA" oOMPAa. N mOUn War Upon Paln. Pain is visitor to every home and umally it-comes quite unexpectedly. Cc But you are prepared for every emer- co eny if you keep a small bottle of ev Soan's Liniment bandy. It is the so geates pain killer ever discovered. BI Simply laid on the skin-no rubbing ne required-it drives the pain away. It 91 is really wonderful. ca Mervin H. Soister, Berkley. Cal., cc wites: "LAst Saturday. after tramp- 4l ig around the Panama Exposition G with wet feet, 1 came bome with my se eek so stiff that I couldn't turn. I ap- A pied Sloan's Linient freely and went - tobed. To my. surprise, next mornine the stiffness bad almost disappeared. four hours after the second application I was as good as new." March. 1915. At Druggists. 25c Adv. Where Nebraska Leads. Though Nebraska as been termed the state without a mine," it ranks rst In the production of pumice, for less than one per cent. of the total out at of pumice comes from other states. Help Your Liver-It Pays. When your liver gets torpid and your tomach acts queer. take Dr. Kjog's ew Life Pilsand you will fnd your-( elf feeling better They purify the lood, give you freedom from constipa ioe, biliousness, dizziness and indiges ion. You feel fine-just like you want to feel. Clear the'complexion too 25c. as druggists-Adlv.. Flowers Bloom on icebergs. et ArctIc explorers often report the dis :overy of flowers blooming on Icebergs. b The explanation of, this is as follows: t. appears that some nimnals carry ii n their feet a growth of moss, which la deposited on the iee while It Is at tached to the ainland in polar ~re-. -ina In time this decays and ferms -. shallow soil in which the seed of butterenps and dandelions often find a* odgng, borne by currents of wind that doubtless eaught them up in'some - aouthern clime. These take root and bloom when the great gleaming Ice birg foa outi to sea and Is carried southward, where the soft winds melt the surface -and give the plants the meis they need. Obserye The Warning. A cold that promises to -'hang on all winter" is to be dreaded. ,Prompt ac tion should be taken at the first warn ng of a cold-sneezing, chillness, light shivering. Foley's Honey and ar makes quick work of coughs, colds and croup. It clears sir passages. stops coughing, eases difficult breath g Dicksons Drug Store.-Adv. Correct the Habit Habit. The surest way to bi-ing on prema tare old age 4s to get Into a rut. On the other hand, the surest way to avert old age Is to get out of the rut. If you desire to keep young, do not make your habits hard and fast, or your arteries will likewise become so. Govern your habits; do not let them a rule you. Just to show them that they ri do not, order them to break ranks U from time to time.-Brain and Brawn. Government Kept Going. "I notice that the old man's quit :ssin' the government?" "Yes; after tryin' it for 30 year the government kept a-goin', je' like It never heard tell of him'-never so much as askin' him to please let up an' give it a hance to grow up with the country. That made him so mad he was too lzl fer utterance, he was struck peechless!" Annual Slaughter of Elephants. Africa is the chief source of the world's supply of ivory, and it is esti mated that 70.000 elephants are an nualy slaughtered for their tusks. But not more than 20 per cent of this Ivory is represented in the total inb ports to Europe. On Wearing Goggles. Safety Engineering has this to sa3 about the wearing.. of goggles by in dustrial workers: In order to reduCe injuries to the eyes of industrial work' er, two requirements are of primary importnce-to provlde the goggle which meets the need5 of the opera' tor, and insistence that the gogg ' h worn at all times when in the d er zone. The fact should not De overlooked that not only must the lenses be best suited to meet the con ditions of work, but the goggle must not occasion discomfort. If the gog gle causes discomfort to the wearer he is apt to remove it, and many eyes have been injured and lost from this cause. An entirely satisfactory gog gle will e.ldom be removed by the wearer who appreciates that an eye I a neve be rnlaced. th born thesigatur of t1 f V( fi an3d which ha be a] borne the Signature of t een made under his per- E ervision since its infancy. g one todeceive youin this. 's "Just-as-good" are but t d endanger'the health of lce against Experiment. a a STORIA ite for Castor O, Pare ups. It Is Pleasant. I P bne nor other Narcotie tee. It destroys Worms res Diarrk42a and Wind t ables, cures constipation the Food, regulates the t esathy and natural sleep. [other's Friend. )RIA awAs nature of slow M ways Bough llW8JSa11,1 r 30 Years. Ies r. nw w"e m. Coughs and Colds are Dangerous. Few of us realize the danger of mehs and Colds. We consider t-hem mon and harmless ailments How er statistics tells us every 'hird per a dies of a ling ailment. .Dangerous ronchial and Luong diseases follow a rected cold. As your body strg es against cold germs. no better aid , be had than Dr King's New Di aery. Its merit has been tested bi and young. In usa over 45 vears t a bottle today Avoid the risk of ious Lung - ailments. Drugists fThe Successful Busi ness Man a gool -one to follow; you can't go r wrogsif you walk in his footstei man of amirs today is without as mmercial bank account:; no busine-ss. owever small, can altfrd to be r h--t e. If you have not an aciount, i' t n ne for success by opening ouie .Wi oe Bank and Trust Ct NEW HOME ray ' t A U- .. -, AJr NO OTH ER LIKE IT. NO OTHER AS COOD. Prchase the "NEW HOME" and you will have ieme atthe price yo pay. The eminati of uncost. Init on hvig h NEWMe H -E WARRANTED FOR ALL TIME. fown the world over for ?serior sewing qualities. Not sold undcr any cther r.:me. lE NEW HOME SEWING MACI!NE CO.,0RANGE,MASS. NEGOTIATED! If you want to buy Farm Lands or Lots in town, Or if you have a' Farm or Town Prop erty for sale let us handle it for you. . H. LESESNE. JOHN 6. DINKINS. Oficsno Ol ourinnt House. What is a Campor? The world now krw)ws the answer to e momentous question, What Is a mper? The United States public !alth service gives the information in ese few simple words: "Campers are rsons who, of their own volition or rough the enticement of others, re :t' to primeval modes of existence id ostensibly obtain e.joyment there om. Both place and persons then fa >r the development of irregularities. icourage more or less irresponsibility id lead to inmediate wildness. In this tere is no harm and often much good. owever. one tfing should not be for 3tten-the arrangements. Allow the nimals' to break loose once more for ie seasonal enjoyment. but by all teans have the camp sanitary. so that t their wildness they will do no arm." Add to this the ability to bal nee a dough god on the left knee. hold cup of coffee in -the right hand and rush a black fly off the right ear with 2e left hand. and you have the com lete camper.-Outing. Not Guilty. Marcus Pickney had been arrested rough the activities of his 200 pound 'otch wife. and the poair were facing he judge. It seemed that Pickney was a shift ass. ne'er-do-well. lazy man, with a trong disinclination to honest toil oreover. he was In the habit of com g- home "corned" and beating his brifty better half. It was on the oc asion of the last of these episodes that he had brought about his arrest. After patiently hearing testimony the udge said: "Mrs. 'Pickney. It seems to me that his is a case where prosecution Is pos ible for nonsupport." "Oh, your honor." wailed the escited woman. "they can't bring that up ag'in ne! I've took in washin' and giv' him what you might say was fine livin' mer sin'e we was marrit No; he can't Lccuse tme of that. judge."-Case and omment. The Famro of Newburyport. I asked the old negro porter at the nn at Newburyport what the town vas principally uoted for. and he an ;wered its purity and the landing here if the Siamese twins FUe adsed that. :hey were both dead. and I do not know whetiter he referred to the two ttractions. purity and the Siamese. )r simply to the ,twins. I was shocked that he did not speak )f Washington antd Lafayette. who had lept in a neighboring mansion. but notables who were not freakish by na ture he held in small esteem - Even the hotel clerk was rather blase about these distinguished guests. opining that the two gentlemen. If one could judge by tablets all over the county. slept more than any other men in history. Louise Closser Hale in Century Maga zine. Not What Ho Expected. This story is told by an English naval officer who witnessed the oc curren'e at Nlanila: 'Xs l was cross Ing one of the numerous bridges ameross the Pasi: river I saw a natiWe Fill pino spit in the face of a Spanish of ficer and then run for protection to the American sentinel. who was pac ing the bridge. It was some time be fore the Filipino could make himself understood. When the sentry compre hended his action he was very prompt indeed. He handed his gun to the Spanish officer. caught the native by the nape. of his neck and the seat of his trousers and pitched him 'off the bridge into the Pasig river. Then he calmly -took his gun from the officer and began pacing his beat as If noth' g bad happened." Worked in The Hav Fild. Ar-hur Jont's A-4-n. Kas writ'-: ad kidr:-v tr-uh' s. f.r a go-'d many years. If it w-r. no for Fole, Kidnev Pits i w .uM nev--" he de m~ work in he hav ti- bi " Men and wro non past inilddlt age find th-et pills a -piendid om' d for w-ak. .y-rw'rke i or di eased ki'nes' D --ons D'ut S 'r'e. -Ade. TOLY KIDNEY PILLS OR BACKACifE KIDNEYS AND BLADDER Dont Forg CITY TAl TIo get ',oUr F I Sui', su is no e in. WVe use 'te weare prepared to tein' We also do Cleanting ine ontI all krds ~PHONE N'. 1. es' -you ~.ns Mket y If. for no( otheri re'as~on than to human life, you owe youriselfa I's a duty. because you ha futu. e but you have power to sta tefuture. B sides we want to he Bggintoday with Si. The Bank ( Mrs ter Vincent 4 Hill. N. C., - r three sum mers I. sItered froin 1 rervoZuness. d r ea d f u I p-ns ir my.- back and ides. an:d weak sinking c;-.s. Thrce bottles of Cardui. the woman's I:. relevcd me entire ;y. Lecl like another r.-:scn., now." TAE * j; rduit Tie Wonan's Tonic For over 50 years, Cardui has bcen helping to relieve women's un necessary pains and. buil.di::g weak women UP to health and strength . It will do the same for you, if given a fair triil. 1 $o, don't wait. but begin $ taking Cardui today. for its use cannot harm you, and should surely do.you good. E-72 Queer Refuge for Hunted Stag. Pursued by hounds a stag bornded n through the open Frinch windows of the Y. M. C. A. building at Ash bourne House: Epsom, England. and took refuge in the larder, whichmeas res eight feet by six. . The huntaman and whips quickly- came '2p and, secur Ing the stag with ropes, placed It iD ome stables, from which it was re moved shortly afterwards. . Tim-ly Hint on Over-Eat'ng BY die-rz caused aur.- d div-i The s o"-' -nd *.nw '% --'n'i T he eine,-d %iith undi..' ' d ".i -on' -:i- dt-- af- r ettin!. tAo - inis, han'-h bl. :4tti--end Laa on atom wrh. r,-%nIrte the howe4. sw",-'en' t1 e :tomach ard t-n.up-the- liver: Dick Sens D'ug Stor- -Aav. Killeo B) Stampedino Elephant.. A stampeding elephant trampled and killed three persons as they were following a Brahmiu marriage procef sion through the streets sif Badahra Bengal. The procession, headced b the usual band of musicians, had ar rived at the bride's house when on. ,)f the elephants- became furious. The. :uests in the howdah leaped to the ground, where the bridegroom's fatb er, a priest, and another guest, were -ramp'ed to death under the elephant'. feet. Four other pqrsons were in ured. The elephant was shot on th -llowng day by a police sergeant ud the wedding -was postponed. Oar Jitz::y Offr This and Sc. [DON']T MISS T H Cut -ur 'h S sp. enceI s-- wih five ce :ts 'o Foc , & C. ' hicg'. 1l- , writ.i',e .wur namn au': addres-- *l'~r.l., You w l '-ece ae in return a trial piakne cn'ainis g Fol'y's HJ're. ai~d Tar Compeun!, for e- a ]s cS.. d e.p [e - K d e Pi: s, :, Fo - ib r - fab e s Colds Uked Attention. Iu re-. i" a and est 0. 'o .ie.-- :[Ia imat-'fn. :r i *. 8\e - a. a - h yt au to si-I - on *e. au ' . xi in 0 - i . ..g P :.-.i-' i U -\ -n bi. -hh .' a h.-.----. ut . - IU *u t f >> s I on) d -r n 25-* a - eu. st- - et To Call ..OR Si-OP. F1L1 anl WV :.r S ?.np i us Brun.'r W..o"2n. and you a ru aranteed job. ?rsing, Dyeing and. R lep~ iring, Alter. f a-ot All r no- T. ' C WILLIAMS. Prop. OLD BAXKERY .STAND no7(menI ie tells wa did yesterday. morrow better tarting a Bank iccount to-day." ' unforeseen demands, icd. Bank account. Ven't the power to pr.-dict 1: rt a Bank account and fortify fo. Ip worthy young men to succee f Manning. ANCIENT BAGDAD. Its Ruined Mosques, Crumbling Wall* and Rich Bazaars. Squalor and ruin are the present. :haracteristics of ancient Bagdad; the mee beautiful city of "The Arabian ights." Of its famous hundn. nosques only about thirty are now in lse. Several are so dilapidated that their crumbling roofs and walls threat n the lives of the devout who still worship in them. The one splendid wall. ,bullt of the bandsome Arabian brick and extend Ing around'the city a distance of five miles. still stands. but it is broken in many places. The four original gates remain, and the.oidest and finest one. bearing the date of 1220. has not been opened since the middle of the seven teenth century. The famous river Tigris, -a muddy stream flowing sluggishly' during the greater part of the year, divides Bag dad into two parts, which are connect ed by a 'rickety bridge of boats nearly 200 feet long. When the snow melts upon, the Armenian mountains thr TI gris rises, sometimes floods part of the city and often carries away the bridge. The bazaars of Bagdad exhibit rich merchandise of many kinds, including Turkish and European products. both. modern and antique, and are the most a-tractive part of t-he city.-New York Tribune. FATE OF A PIRATE CREW. -Strange Case of the Nancy Brig and a Hungry Shark. In the museum at Kingston. Jamaia, there are some tattered ships' paper, brown with age and salt water, and.a small tin canister., These articles at test the truth of the strangest pirate story ever told. In 1799 the -crew of the Nancy brig were apparently honest traders, butdid some piracy now and then on the side. One day they found it necessary to'go Into Kingston for supplies. Before do ing so they naturally removed all traces of their buccaneering trade. Among other things they threw- over board this tin canister stuffed with pa.- e pers taken from ships they had'sunk, with comments written on the margija by the pirate-captain.. LAter In the day a'-British frigate was'becalmed near the spot, and the sailors. spent theIr leisure catching sharks. Presently they hauled up af big fellow, cut him open and found the tin case with the~papersnside. Thes were taken to the captain, who, as soon as a breeze sprang up. sailed into Kingston harbor, found the Nancy brig there and had the ciew tried. convict ed and hanged in chn at Pdrt RoyaL Beautiful Blue Lake. Perhaps the most striking instance; to be seen in the- whole world of the wonderful- apparent coloring of bodies.-_ of water Is the*marvelously beautiful Blue lake in Switzerland. Encompass ed on all sides by lofty mountains their lower ranges luxuriantly clothed with .verdure down to the edge of the water and adorned with many fine for est trees, while their higher acelivities are garbed in a mantle of eternal snow, the little lake, nestling in its deep hol low basin, is quite startling in ts. sin gular and strange beauty. The water, although really pure and colorless, 'ap pears to be of a most intense sky blue. And Its transparency is so remarka. ble that a small coin droppedinto the water in the center of the lake can be seen until it reaches the bottom, ap parently more than a hundred feet bie neath. - Finger Nails Show Health. Our finger nails are mnade of a horny material that Is in some ways like the ' material that makes our skin. But it Is more like the material that maes our hair. It is after all different, from eI ther of these and is more like born than any other part of our bodies. The special cells at the base of the nails form the material for our nails and therefore the'health of our finger nailS depends on these cells. If you are not in good health -or If you do not take good care of your-skin your finger nails will show that thef' are not healthy. If your blood Is out of order- the celis that make the finger nails will not do their work properly and then little white spots will appear on the nails. So you see those little white spots are a ~sign of bad health.-Kanaft City Star. Could Lift a Ton and a Half. A Scotchman, said to be the ns~t of the Stuarts, wa's possessed eith an ex traordlnary strength, from which cir cumstance he got the byname of Jem my Strength. Among other feats, he could carry a twenty-foui- pounder cap non and had been known to lift a cart oa'd of hay weighing a ton and a half upon his back. Many a time he took up a jackass and, carrying It on his shoulders, walked through the tollgate. H andicapped.. "A rich woman misses much in life." "As to how?" "She can't run out to the back fence when she gets hold of a 'clioice bit of gossip). She has to get~hp' a tea or recepion, and by that, time the news. Is stale."-IusvlleCurer-Jour3nal. - He Meant Well. Niece-I do think you are clever;. aunt, to be able to argue with the pro fessor about sociology. Aunt-I've only been concealing my Ignorance, dear. Professor Bilks (galiantly)-Oh, no., Miss Knowles; quite the contrary, I as sure you.-Boston Transcript. An Ominous Hint.. "SIr, I want to ask Z'ou for your daughter's hand." . "All right, sonny. You'll find it in my pocket."-Baltimore American. PeculfarIty of the MIssIssIppi. 'One of the most peculiar things about the Mississippi river was figured out by a government engineer. He says that It would be possible for a. man to take a light canoe at Green vile. Misse and by floating down. stream 40 miles and portaging fcur times he would find himself 40 miles unstream from where be started. Constipation Is to be dreaded. It leads to serious ailments, Fever. Indigestion, Piles. Siek Headaohe, Poisoned Sytam and * moore of other troubles follow. Don't let Constipetion last. Keep your Kidneys, liver ad Dowels healthy and active. Rid Toer systesa of fermented. gassy~foods. Nothing better than Dr. King's NewLife Pills All Druggists 25 cents SATIS-FCwION nO unT RAwK