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riieta-iid . n'te. lat a of Nashv ll e ais;org aand W moMuq salar W.'000 pemanum. He is .Pi. le i oJennLD gs, of Jennlngas College. Nashville. and this aup eanZ'b largely attributed te the training hb osreived from his Swell ats the lattea Influence n `_ f posttions. This is perhaps the " Ieaho'ougb and influential scohool in the States. Its graduates nearly always - positions. - Nashville Christian seeoo rPestlea Is a usamr. fe- fsonllowra letter explains itself: . Ouawv'·NlrvL's H x Roux, GA., 2. ,- l 97,O r 18-Profe or a. W. Jennings, N a- h ylll--Dear Bir: No doubt you will be uar, muprised to hear from me. but as I know . are larys gllad to hear from your o.·." tlO~l, WtaOll Uh that I have been l d book-keeper n above named bank. ° -I'om'usy it because I am writing to you, - b t 1 have said to many others that the three months I spent with you was worth as much to me as was the twelve years' e e•olnn I had gRotten previously. I have p y em myaa books which I used at Jen minag' Business College with the books of several other colleges, which other young men from this section attended, and they all acknowledged that your course is much more thorough and practical than the schools they attended. Yours truly, T. J. Sripsox; Write for catalog with names of 1,000 students from 58 States. Address B. W. Jzxxaixs. Nashville, Tenn. Distress in the Stomach .leartburh, Sick Head ache. and other symp toms of fTlpepsli troubled me for several years. Since I have been taking MODi'S SAM SAPAMRILL.A all this ;. . s changed. Dyspepsia trouble no longer bothers me. I do not have heart burn and I m free from headacheh. I have gaIned in flesh and feel betterin MueLm...H.. 7W. J. l~ Coos, artinavills, Ill Hood's Cures ooed's Pills are purely vegetable. Mo. CUES DVENTER CHOLERA INFANTUMI, AFFECT NSTHE mBOWELS. ent etnm e have use your Bro.ge's Cor. /lal in our fafhily for some time past. and are perfectly ratisled with its effects. Would not willingy do without it. espectfully, J. B. Rosnwso. SOLD BY ALL DRUCCISTS. S PRICE, goo. and $1.00. Prepared by I. L. LYONS & CO wow Orles.. I Wanted A First-Class Man or Woman I To look after our subscribers, I secure renewals and new Ij names. The coming season, _: e 1893 and 1894, will be the it greatest in the history of THE LADIES' HOME JOURNAL. TO o celebrate the Tenth Anniver- i i sary we have secured the most costly and artistic features i| t: ever published-all the great i n and popular writers: Howells, Stockton, Burnett. I Profitable employment of- ' : fered. Write for particulars. THE CURTIS PUBLISHING Co. PHILADELPHIA, PA. Corticelli Dtln crowdýls of visitors at theWorld's Fair. Fin Dshed examples or this D arnin or are alo on exhi bitlon. Corieella LWash Embrdery S Eilk E].conve le put up on a spools, is used for eantCorticli Drawn In the Qandlin ctlon on Columbia Avenue. Hanu _turers' BuiiSuld e Workin hours for expert at tedentsfrom 10 H w. to 5 P.h..Soundays excepted. Fleresee Hlome Needlewo-rk for l593explatno thee".nlque and Ikeclnatlog" opertiona. Cro. cbeted Lamp Shades. Embroidery and Pillow Lace hc arethe other mubjects. Bend 6 cta.. mentioning year, nrwllRt Cma outb o..chpp. IUeen tr.leoUs. O 'lerencs . Mass sf Unlike the Dutch Prouess No Alkalies OtherChemicals b mr used In the Of preparation orf b pure sad seolble. v nreesran e lerwhere. -Pt bA. 'w _._n D. iZ H H. srov.A, * P. . A. J ?~: , tie '- Ir..,, - &9 5--Rorr Bome of the Queer Buildings of the White City. OQd and Alry Dwelllugs of the Javanese - Straw-Stack Rate of the South .as Islanders - Notes La Geaeral. Ispeelal Chicago Correspondeneal There never was a queerer lot of buildings gotten together than are to be seen in the Columbian metropolis at Jackson park. Scattered throughout the grounds are all the different styles of architecture of every race of people on the globe, from the bush hut of the Australian ranger to the palace of the American millionaire. A study of the primitive structures of the savages of far distant islands of the great oceans is afforded the people of the big cities of civilization, who but for this grand fair would have had no knowledge of them save that gleaned from books of traveL There is also an excellent opportunity to become ac quainted with the manners and customs of the strange races of the earth in their everyday life at the fair, for everything is juq as it is in their native villages beyond Mhe big' waters. In the fair grounds proper there are the Esquimaux, the cliff dwellers of the southwvest and the aborigines of the eastern states. These are domi ciled each colony by itself in dwellings fashioned after those of their native habitations, conforming as near as pos sible to the native architecture for the benefit of the civilized world. The little people of the extreme north in their enforced imitation of semi tropic customs are not altogether in their proper element, but they manage to hang on to the ragged edge of exist ence and give a very faithful repre sentation of their home life in the frigid zone. In somewhat as forlorn a condition are the tawny-skinned denizens of the mountains of Mexico, who, in order to carry out the idea of being domiciled in their native state, are compelled to e3g fr JAV .'' LLIAG___. I II JAVA wVU inIIArmi - JAV VLLAGE. lead a counterfeit existence in a huge heap.of tin fashioned as nearly like a miniature mountain as the car penters and tinners of the fair could make it. Then there are the various tribes o eastern Indians in their make-believe tepees over on the lake front. Here there is a more faithful representation of natural conditions than is to be found in either of the other colonies. But for the genuine article of primi tive architecture the Midway Plaisance must be sought. Here are the Lapland FIJI DRUIMMER. C ere, South Sea islanders, Javanese. Da- C homeyans, all of whom hold forth in villages composed of houses fashioned after the ones they live in when at n home in their own coun tries. More picturesque and airy than the a rest are, possibly, the diminutive dwell- t ings of the Javanese. Constructed U wholly of bamboo and matting inade of 0 bamboo splints, they are the perfection a of hot weather quarters. From a casual d glance one would think they would hardly withstand the faintest puff of a wind, so lightly are they constructed, k 0 yet through the many severe blows to A BUSK HUT. ti yet through the many severe blows to is which Chicago has been subjected since fc they were erected they have remained m intact. Among the queer structures of ti this quaint little village is the theater w building in the central portion of the cc grounds. This is a somewhat preten- tb tious building to be constructed of such is light materiaL It is about thirty feet as high, thirty feet wide and fifty feet th ,l *4, Is 1 o. mpw. oS e1thirI but hi lud matting sniob sWý;: -psed on the other houses. The lork of building this vis was a mammoth undertiking for the little brown people who inhabit it, but on their leisurely fashion they finally accomplished it. and are now quite comfortable and contented in their little dove-cotes of houses. Nearly as odd as the houses of the diminutive Javanese are the huts-of the Fijians. close by on the opposite side of the Plaisance. Strongly resembling scooped-out straw satDeks ofan ancient date, they nevertheless afford the in habitants ample protection from all kinds of weather. This is all Ahat is required of them, as the highest con ception of comfort of which these peo ple are capable is a full stomach and a place to crawl into and sleep. We might go on and enumerate the different styles of architecture in vogue among the civilized nations, but lack of spacbwill not permit. Suffice it to say that there is hardly a characteristic architecture in the world that is not represented in our great White City. And not only the buildings are shown, but the minutest details of everyday life are faithfully portrayed, so that a few hours spent among the vioages of the fair will afford about as much knowledge of the different countries as would a complete tour of the world. ARTISTIC DECORATION. The Beantifal Weork Donse i Corn i Iowa's Buulding. The Iowa state building at the world's fair is literally done in corn. The great cereals which are the basis of the state's wealth have here been transferred to the realm of art and dec oration. For a decade or more Iowa has been celebrated for its "corn pal aces." Certain artisans of the state have acquired great experience in the manipulation of the cereals for decora tive effects; and now in the grand an niversary year this experience has stood them in good stead for the production of a rural ornamentation, which will prove an attractive feature of the fair. The main hall of the building is a a veritable temple of Ceres; where the y skillful use of ruddy and golden corn ears and cobs successfully simulates d the dainty saffron of old laces and the faded maroon of time-worn velvets, and where the eye catches mellow shafts e and fugitive glints of dim color, rarely e seen save in the dusky aisles of old n cathedrals. I At first thought, corn-cobs would seem to be unpromising materials for an artist to work with, but they have here been handled with truly marvel ous effect in mazy cubes, rosettes, fes toons and panels. At either end of the hall is a large American eagle wholly in various tints and hues of corn, the beak and legs golden, the outstretched wings in red kernels, shading off to a tint as deli cate as the heart of a sea-shell. Twelve massive columns, swathed in oats and grasses, studded with mosaic cubes of colored corn and fluted at the capitals with millet heads, support the high ceiling. Extending round the hall near the windows are twenty-four smaller columns wrought in wheat. Four large pa.nels represent four lead ing industries of the state-stock rais ing, dairying, mining, pottery-so faithfully done in cereals as to resem ble great pictures. The mining panel portrays a sturdy youth in a shirt of red corn, trousers of millet heads and cap from seed of vari ous kinds. The flesh tints of face and brown hands are strikingly brought out by the natural color of corn husks. The dairy panel represents a girl of comely face in light corn husk, a dress of red cobs and tresses of brown corn silk. The cow by her side is in millet heads. Three cows and a calf, also in millet, adorn the stock panel. The panel depicting pottery sets forth a young artisan, in a Roman cloak of 1 tinted corn. in the act of fashioning an urn made of fine seeds. The shading of the potter's cloak in corn is very artistic, the coloring running from a deep rich red to a light pink. Other pieces represent music, art, astronomy and literature. In the south west corner of the hall is located a kind of aery, or balcony, for a band or orchestra: and here are several really E wonderful designs wrought in corn- t cobs and grapevines. One, for exam ple, is designed as a Roman vase, com posed of cobs, holding a vine which has I leaves and husks and supports a flower j fashioned out of a red ear of popcorn. The artists-for thus the decorators must be designated-have displayed not only patience and fidelity in their work, but the promptings of true a genius. In performing their work c twelve hundred bushels of corn have C been used, and mcre than seven thou- a sand sheaves of wheat, oats, millet and other cereals. A ScorcHMa y, who employs four 8 thousand French women in Paris mak ing lace, has sent a pair of curtains for a bay window. In the six months required for the making of these curtains two thousand different ti women worked on them. The f cost of this single pair of curtains 1, three yards long was six thousand dol- tl lars. The Scotchman himself came to superintend the hanging of his fifty thousan dollar1' worth 9$ lace Ca- a hbitik mre, 7° "WORK OF SAVAGES. the Mamyrress ThJta the Atrs MNa - ibit. w Interesting, hbough largely "photo t lgraphic." is the Australian collective exhibit in the Anthropological building. l~aving joined forces with the British Sir 8outh Sea island possessions, many ca rious native implements are shown. In the laid bowls, modeled in curious desglln, the combs, Idols, hair pins, paddles and in Sof laid wooden spears, with one thousand ag other odds and ends, and photographs t bewildering make up the collection. in- Although chiefly the work of canna all balistie tribes, some beautiful bits of is decorative wood and pearl show the on. artistic in the savage; and, what is eo. more, the Illawarra tribe from New I a South Wales has an artist whose paint ings are on exhibition and highly the valued. ]is name was "Mickey," and rue he was the shining light of the tribe. wck 'Mickey" wasn't always an artist. For to many years he fought and battled with ,tic opposing tribes, but from exposure not rheumatism set into his joints and he ty. was unable to walk. He lay around his Vh, but unable to move, and realizing that ay his days were nearly over he gave up a all hope of ever again throwing the of friendly boomerang in warfare, and de ich cided to make a name for himself and as to prove to the world that he was not an ordinary savage. So he drew pictures of fisbes in the water, boats sailing, and trees-in fact, made pictures of his own native heath. Viewed from an artist's standpoint the they are not in harmony with the mod rn. ern French ideas, but as a savage ex sis pression of art are interesting and show oen great knowledge of form. "Mickey" is ec- dead now, but he has accomplished his wa ideal and we know he rests in the al- realm of the great. Mr. Bowman, the ste superintendent of the exhibit, says he she would speak to no one while at work, ra- but kept away from the tribe, and n- when his picture was finished would ed call the chiefs and have a grand dance. on "Mickey" was also a "Duk-Duk," and 'ill of course on that account was much re ir. spected by the cannibals all over the ia islands. The Duk-Duk is a secret society on the island of Tareyn and is strictly t tabn. So strict are the rules of the or ganization that should an uninitiated boy or woman chance upon the island he or she would be instantly killed or beaten and tortured to death. The be lief of the islanders is that the Duk Duk are devils, and as they carry bones t around their neck which when shaken make a great rattle, the superstition is that the Duk-Duk's bones are not in the body, but outside, and they shake in the wind. Should a Duk-Duk visit another island sure death would befall the chief of the island visited. The r system of Dik-Duk has lodges all over the island, and Mr. Bowman says that they are organized purely for the pur- a pose of promoting cannibalism and preventing the white man from civil-. 1 izing and instructing them. t INDIAN EDUCATION. The Canadian Exhibit In the Llberal Arts Building at the World's Falr. In some particulars the British methods of managing the North Ameri- g can Indians has been more successful e than that pursued by the white people t south of the great lakes. In Canada's exhibit in the Liberal Arts building there is an Indian exhibition which shows that the Canadians have relied t upon the education of the Indians to h control them. Long preceding like effort in the United States, the Cana dians have had Indian industrial e schools in operation, and the exhibit in - Canada's display consists of products of . a these schools, and along with it at e present are seven Indian girls and s d boys. They are from the northwest sb a territory, and are pupils of St. Albert's v school. Edmonton, San Boniface's t a school, opposite WVinnipeg, and the school at Battleford on the Saskatche wan river. The girls and boys repre- c r sent the Crees, Satteux and Muske gons of the northwest territory, and are from the blanketed or most un- h, civilized tribes of the dominion. The children are kept at work before the public at their respective trades, and a make an interesting and creditable a showing at mantua-making, harness making, boot and shoe making, and hi typesetting. They are surrounded by at samples of work from all the industrial T1 schools, and in contrast are arrayed at Indian fabrications,feathered garments, 13, utensils and weapons, which they a made wore, and used in the savage state. as The exhibit in its entirety is striking he and interesting, and instructive in mi showing what the Canadians are doing w, for its six hundred children in the in- an dustrial schools and seven thousand at bu the Indian day and boarding schools. o The children at present at work will be replaced by others soon from other fl1 schools, and Charles de Cazes, who has ro the Canadian Indian exhibit in charge, sp will shortly have some of the blanketed It Indians of the northwest territory added to Prof. Putnam's ethnological a' exhibit. The Tempersane Conventions. The World's WVoman's Christian Tem- O perance union and the National Wom an's Christian Temperance union of the United States will hold their conven- Di tions on successive days beginning Octo- y ber 16, 1893, in the city of Chicago, in di the Memorial Art Institute building, in di, which are held all the great congresses an of the Columbian exposition year. This th. will be the twentieth convention of the White Ribboners of the United States and the second biennial convention of ab the World's WV. C. T. U. The conven- th. tion of the World's W. C. T. U. will be ne composed of Its general officers and ex ecutive committee, the secretaries and thi treasurers of auxiliary national socie- he ties, the world's superintendents of de partments, the editors and publishers of the official organ and one additional delegate for every one thousand mem- 5 bers of auxiliary national societies. FORTY:FIVE engines are in the power plant, not including motors scattered all through the White City. There is one engine twice as large as the great Corliss over which the world wondered at the cen tennial. ONrE Austrian firm shows two thou' an sand pieces of glass woven from a wine-. Ca glass as thin as an egg shell to a gold- fail plated punch bowl in which a regiment one might have ladled. bot ·IWENTY gondolas mana'ed by Vene tian gondoliers. four state barges, forty- me five el'ectric launches, twenty steam launches and six steamboats navigate no3 the interior waters of the fair ang del4 A BLOCK of mica, ten inches thick the weighing fourteen hnndel4 pound,* i am QOilrIq .Welt tlso .THE PLY AND NHI WAYi SWates Me Preladed Hianm With a .ema.. e Stmilar to }i FIle. oto- In the dtst place the common dy--or s tive house fly-that getp into the milk and j ing. butter and heas to be kept from the bish table by fans has a wounderful machine , en- that is carried about to make life pos- 4 In. sible. The mouth of the little black ign, scamp is a curious contrivance to get i in food out of impossible places. and This mouth is really nothing more or - pbh less than a tongue, which runs in and - but of the head like the tongue of a 4 a". snake. When the hovering insect sees < a of a good spot to light on, where there is 4 the a prospect of a meal, he settles down, 4 i" shakes a leg or two, and then runs his e yew mouth out ready for business. Int. This piece of machinery seems to come hly out of the head, and it will always look and that way if you don't take a good peep p Ube. at the fly through a glass some day a For when he is busy on a lump of sugar. rith Then you will see that the tiny black ure thread just unfolds from beneath the he head, where there is a little socket pre his pared for it. hat When the tongue comes out it spreads up and the end divides into two broad, the flat leaves that are planted flat down T de. on the food that is to-be stolen. This 6 and is like nothing so much as a pump with to not a terribly strong `'draw," that sucks up t all the sweet sirup there may be on the the lump of sugar. de e, But if the food should be hard and di th. the fly cannot get a good hold of it he di int touches a little muscle spring and the P1 od- smooth surface of his tongue roughens up like a file. Back and forth these v4 edges work until the hard surface is "` torn and scraped, and the particles that the fly likes are sucked up into the C the stomachlL. the Then the fly balances on four of his he six legs and uses the front pair as a rk, napkin, wiping off his tongue. He is a nd neat little foellow and never takes a uld mouthful without brushing his face ie. carefully. Of course it would be far better if he should use a bit of cloth r- rather than his hands-they must be hands if four of the others are feet but it would be a bit awkward for him to go sailing around with a napkin on tied to his belt. It would be funny, tly too, wouldn't it? o Then the fly gives a sudden flip of nd his wings, making them go so fast that you cannot see them, and he is off. 0or aybe he has been chewing the cover - of a book, for there are wonderful fly dainties concealed in the coloring mat as ter of the cloth binding, and then when en he skips off he leaves a little spot of i white where he has scraped up the col n or and eaten it. Maybe he has been ke standing on the back of your hand sip ll ping the perspiration, of which he is he very fond, and then he leaves a faint red mark and a slight stinging feeling. er Don't be alarmed, though, for the house fly has nothing of a poisonous tr sort in him and cannot hurt you. Some ad of his cousins have a way of biting and leaving sore places, especially those that drink blood, but the house fly is not a cannibal. lIe is very well civil ized. But we are far ahead of our story. We have not seen yet how the flies are born. It is during the hot days of Au gust and September that most of the eggs are laid, and as they hatch out in 1 about two weeks-sometimes in less e than that-the swarms of the insects become very thick at that time. As ig the cold weather comes the flies begin to die off. 'Many of them, millions, have died natural deaths before then -the average life of a fly is about nine ce days-and millions more have trod un a wisely on sticky paper, and perished T there in the gum. a Other millions have taken greedy sips from deadly sweets that have been at spread out on papers and in dishes to slay them, and their dead bodies have at been swept away into the (lust bin. s Still other millions have tumbled into , the milk and gone bravely into ihe ° butter, while a few thousand have been e- crushed by quick hands or snapped by * rubber bands. Countless numbers have ° been eaten by the birds, and even Tab- S d by and Towser have snapped up a few - hundreds. 1 So the great fly family has perished, e and when the first frosts come there d are only a few old grandfathers and ° grandmothers buzzing slowly around looking after the nests of eggs that d have been laid carefully in the nooks Y and corners to provide for the spring. 1 Then the cold gets too much for them and they are found some cold morning ' lying on their backs or sticking fast to 7 a window pane that is all white around. So for some months there are no flies, and at first we are glad and speak of R how nice it is to be without the tor n ments. But before the 'yintcr is over we are apt to miss their merry buzzing and feel lonesome without their cheery, busy presence, and we sometimes catch ourselves wishing for a fly. 1 With what glee do we hail the first Sfly of spring! Why, hlie is like the first B robin out on the frosty lawn. We Sspeak about him at the dinner table. I It is a great event. P "Pshaw!" someone says, "I saw a fly 1 a week ago!" But there, what's the use of trying to get ahead of folks that are always noticing little things? They are sure to beat you in the long run. Hlow did those two early flies get out? Where did they come from? Didn't all the flies die last autumn? Yes, yes; you are right. All the flies did die last autumn, but before they died they left some eggs stored away, and when the warm air of spring came these eggs hatched, and the little or phans crept out, the first of their kind, and were lonesome at first, and bazzed about sadly until more came and then they were happy, and the whole busi ness began over again. WVhen the shell bursts and out comes the young fly, he is just as big as when he tries to drag himself from the gum paper five or six days hater. "August 1 Flower"' My wife suffered with indigestion , and dyspepsia for years. Life be came a burden to her. Physicians failed to give relief. After reading one of your books, I purchased a bottle of August Flower. It worked like a charm. Mywifereceivedim- Ad mediate relief after taking the first tte dose. She was completely cured- a now weighs x65 pounds, and can eat anything she desizes without any 85.1 deleterious results as was formierly thecase. C. H. Dear, Prop'rWash- * ingayI@K4ousi@ Wabhingtoual~s,..l9 944 For Sumsmer Cookery Royal Baking Powder will bi found the greatest of helps. With least labor and trouble it makes bread, biscuit and cake of finest flavor, light, sweet, appetizing and assuredly digestible and wholesome. Lova is a disease, and the -most fortunate patient in this, as in other diseases is he *bo, never having read a book of medicine, does not know what ails him, but suffers blindly. WoNDERa if Jatjat Jit Bingh's 800 wives were obliged to take his name, and it so, how much they took at a time.-Cbhicago Dispatch. If You Had a Friend Tormented with dyspepsia, you could not give him better advice than to adopt and stick to a courseof Hostetter'stLtomach Bit ters finest and safest of tonics and regula tors. This is no barren assertion. Expe rience has proved, physicians and thepublio certify to it. No less emphatio is their in dorsement of it as a remedy for malarial disease, constipation, rheumatism, kidney disease, Rout and neuralgia. Use it with persistence. "I DIDN'T know it was so late," said the volcano, awaking from its long slumber. "I must start my fire." J. A. Joexsos, Medina, N.Y., says: "Hall's Catarrh Cure cured me." Bold by druggists, 75 cents. A GOOD THING TO KNOW! :fHORSE SfOE PLUG Is made especially for those desiring a FIRST-CLASS CHEW. Vu SHOULD KNOV( THIS FACT. THAT AIR, BAN Kt & CO. " *OF ST. LouIS MAKE A SOAP cLED CltAIRTTE WHICH WAS No EQVAL. STAN DAD QuALITY BW(IGHT , ' fo 'K roco* p o r, THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD BE USED IN EVERY KITCHEN. McELREES' fWINE OF CARDUI. ,, I For Female Diseases. Latest Styles -IN L'Art De L ode. L. T33 LATYSY FPLAS ALB SEW 0OR5 IraSIONI. Order it of yom r ew8 deelo r or W.J. MSll'lE. PbUalhsew S Em ratZ ath., ll3w 1srh. - ,1e The Best SWaterproof Coat in the SLICKER eovasitbentlreaddlea. Bewareeimltautasm zion' as eat ot lb sla Brand" Ino on t. &If tr Eczema, Oatarrh, A-nd TOTALLY DEAF were the causes of my little daughter's suffering for seven years. D. HYATT cured all of them completely. - HHERMAN WVAITI 112 Monroe Street. Memphis, Teun. $8.00 A MONTH covers the entire cost of by mail. for alt Chronic, Nervona. tinood or td i disase. ~r~Write for Simpytom Elank FREE, J, W. YATT, Y.D., Bpciallst, 00 eUow F SUQWI#GAt. ' i asa TR , , , The Tree Lazatlwe PWnelple Of the plants used in manufacturing the pleasant remedy, Syrup of Figs has a per manentlyv benefiii effect on the iuman ays tern, while the cheap regetable extracts anc mineral solutions, usually sold as medloines, are permanently injurious. Being well in formed, you will use the true remedy only. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. "You say you wunst lived off'n the fat of the land," jeered Silas. "How d'ye eat i#1" '"Ett it with the forks of the road," responid. ed Rufus.-Demorest's. MDiCAL. science has achieved a great triumph in the production of Beecham's Pills, whickrreplace a medicine chest. 25c. "IJ there is one tsme more than another," says an experienced married man, "when a woman should be left alone, ,jt is when a line of clothes come down in the zqud." LADIES can permanently beautify their complexion with Glenl's Sulphur Soap. - ill's Hair and Whisker Dye, 60c. TrEn flies fastest on the wings of a promo isory note.-Puck. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is war ranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused ky the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespdonful in water at bed time, and read the Label. NOTEo lttloK ORR THE CE UK t NEEDLES her e. e S|flTrANDARD GrOO0 SHUTTLES, s n B = ' p REPAIRS lstLM'r' C. 3 EVER DAY We want Oue to work for us. we o_ a m * ,- ,- e. ou the ges oods on 65 W--N L I:_.. K oezxerlenee needed. A - .aas.ean ea, a P,.t e im. d RL WELLS cnwmv DRILL WELLS BEST MACHINERY CandTOOLe i the world. Reliable ork sured easepuv esad peOpleol who have weak iung or Asth. ma. should us PK.o' C.e for Consumption. It has eared theusade·. It has not injun. edone. ItIlnLotbadgt take. It isthe best sough syrup. Sold everywhere. Sae. A. N. K., F. 1468 Wnaa RITIx T@ ADVERTIsaeR PIS& utage thet m. NOW te AdOes~degag £9