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A SONG FOR THE TV Wo trend n hotter earth to-day Thau that tho fathers know; A broader sky lino round* away To realms of deottor blue. Moro ample in the human right. More truo the human ken: Tho law ol' God has been a light To lead the lives of men. He led our generation on In mist of smoldering lire: To more than all the cc?uturh*8 gone The marching years aspire. Across the onward sweep of timo Wo strain our vision dim. And all tho ages roll and eiiinb To lose themselves in Him. J | ESTHERS ? I By HELEN FO ? Mr. Martin hail just come In to ten. It was one of those sultry summer evenings when the leaves hang stirstorm. lessly on the trees, and dull electric llres blaze along the east, foroboders of a storm. It had been very hot all day, the farm-hands had lagged at their work on the lowland meadow, and all the world's wheels seemed to revolve as if they were weighted. Mr. Martin was very tired, and withal, a little cross. Perhaps Mrs. Martin was tired, too. She, poor soul, had been up sinc e four o'clock in the morning. She had washed, taken care of four cows' bilk, pretmrvu niree meats ior tne nungry ia"mhands, been up in the quarry woods to search for a family of adventurous young turkey-chicks, soothed the sorrows of a teething baby, and mended up the suit of clothes which Betsey LJlim, the tailoress, had declared "not worth a needleful o' thread!" because Thomas, her husband, had said that, "willful waste was woeful want," and that there was a deal of wear in the suit yet. if only that was a stitch taken here and there. But her checks were pink and her eyes sparkling when Thomas came in, for all the heaviness of her heart and the dull pain in her back, for little Esther had come home from boarding school. Esther, the youngest sister of all, the darling of the family-circle from which Mrs. M;irtin came, the pet for whom they all had scraucd and ninch ed so that she, at. least, might have a "Boston education." And Esther sat in the window-seat," grown into a blooming young woman, with bronze-brown hair lying in fluffy masses over her fair forehead, porcelain-blue eyes, an 1 a dress all trimmed with ribbon bows. "Look, Thomas!" cried Mrs. .Martin, excitedly, "it's Essie! Essie come home two days before we expected her!" "Yes, i sco," said lit-. Martin, in the cold, measured tone; which always dampened his wife's enthusiasm like so many drops of freezing water. "IIow c!o y<on do, EsShor? Rutli, what are yon putting cold chicken on the table for? Corned-beef is plenty I am blire. You had a great deal better save the chickcn for the men's breakfast. Working folks have hearty oppetites." "Esther is fond of cold chicken," whispered Mrs. Martin. "No ono net d want anything better than good corned-beef," judicially pronounced Mr. Martin. "Put the chicken back into the pantry, and the apple jelly with it. Good stewed gooseberries are relish enough for anybody. We must economize in little things as well as large ones if we don't want to end our days in the poor-house." And Mrs. Martin sorrowfully obeyed, while Essie watched her brother-inlaw with large, grave eyes betokening inward surprise. ( At the-end of a week, Mr. Martin addressed iii>; sister-in-law with serious purpose. "Weil, Esther," said fei, "you've been here a week now." "Yes," said Essie, "I've^becn here a week." "A week is a good long visit," remarked Mr. Martin. "It's long enough for some things," said Essie. "Mrs. Martin thinks she would like to have you stay." went, on Mr. Martion, after a puzzled glance at the blue, shining eyes. "And although, of course overv one ndilK to l lie evi>f>nse iii a family !iko this, I've no objection to giving you a home, provided you are willing to mm it by hard work." "Stop!" cried lls-de. jumping up. "I haven't asked you for ?'i home yet. And I don't mean to. And you are only making mo the offer because? Doctor Dorian says ltuili will break down unless : he has a strong maidservant to help her with the hoi::.work. But there is no money that would hire nie to mak( my. ell such a drudge poor Iluth is." "Hoity-toity!" said .Mr. Martin, "Young woman, you don't. consider whom you are talking to." \ es, l do, said bsslP, will) emphasis. "To a liluehcard. lo a stor I. n stone, a man who is grinding hi* wife's life out on the pitiless wheel ol money-making. No, i wouldn't live a? Ruth does, not it' you would put m< in a palace!" "Humph!" said he. "Fine ider.'i yon have not at tlivs fashionable hoarding school of yours. Well, if you don'l like my offer, you're not obliged to accept it. Be a fine lady, if you please and see where it will land you." By way of answer. TCsie marched oul of the room with i II the dignity of r royal princess. S.io only stopped ir the' kitchen long < rtough to kiss Ruth who was in the mid.;? of a baking. "Poor dariing," paid she, "how 1 wish I cr,ild carry you off with me For stay, I won't!" VENTIETH CENTURY. Wo naze upon the a-ous past? A blind and tumbling surge, And slowly, from tlio weltering vnst behold ti low emerge. The water ?eem? to lieavo and sway In chaos nndenied, Yet not a foam Hake goes astray, For IIo wni wind and tide. Oh, Purpose of the stumbling years, Oh, Wistfnl Need and Hope. Whereby in all the woven spheres Tim atoms yearn mid grope; Flow through I ho wandering will of rniin A tide of slow decree, And merge our strivings in tlio jilnu That draws the world to Thee. ?Chicago Standard. i OPINION?! t It REST GRAVES. ^ "Life is hard work, Essie, said Mrs. Martin, beginning to cry, In spile ol' herself; "and it's a woman's duty to help her husband." "And I mean to help mine?when 1 nave one," said Essie, blushing brightly. "But. not by wearing myself out." Mr. Martin shook his head. "If Stephen Smith is foolish enough to marry that saucy gipsy, she'll lead him a pretty life," said he. "1 wonder if she expects to sit on a satin sofa all her days, with a rose in her hand, and her hair frizzled, in that preposterous fashion, all over her eyes? But I warn 'em, they need never come to me for help! Esther has treated me with too much insolence for me ever to receive her again." "I am sure she did not mean anything," said Mrs. Martin, apologetically. "Well, then, her words belied her meaning," remarked Thomas Martin, grimly compressing his lips. But Stephen Smith was apparently undaunted by the possibilities of ruin predicted by Farmer Martin, for he married Esther and went to the city 10 live, within, three months. "I'll give 'em a year to come back here and eat humble pie," said Martin . i.mn u ? vij . "Oh, Thomas, don't talk so!" said his wife. "One would think you would be glad to havo some evil befall them!" "And so I should," said Martin, viciously grinding his teeth together. "That girl needs a lot of humbling, and 1 hope she'll get it." Three years afterward there came one of those terrible droughts that undo a farmer's life-work in a season, and swept away his prospects as an autumn wind sweeps a sere forest. | The cattle died, a pestilence broke out i among the flock of sheep, which Thos. 1 Martin had just brought a high wind I)lcw his best barn over, and diaster stared him in the faeo on every side. "It's no use talking," he said. "I can't meet this year's interest on tl?e j mortgage. The place will have to go." "Oh, Thomas!" groaned Mrs. Martin, who, poor soul, now lay all day on a hard wooden lounge, and groaned to see how woefully she was needed at the helni. "I can't help it," said Martin. "Everything is against me." "It's only five hundred dollars," said Mrs. Martin. "Von miglit borrow it." "Who'd lend to me, I'd like to know?" said Martin, remembering with a sigh how Ik had hardened his I iure KxnuiKi every nuuime suppliant m ! the golden days of liis prosperity. "There's lather's htishuml," SUKl Rested Ruth, "i've Heard that he is | doing well in Hcston. And, after all, Esther's my own sister." Mr. .Martin's features contracted into a hideous grimace. Of all the hitter cups which circumstances had held to his lips of late tliis was the bitterest. Hut it had to he swallowed. There j was no nelp for it. "I didn't suppose Smith's folks lived : as genteel as this," said ho to himself, I as a neat maid led liiin across an o< iagonal vestibule, floored with blackami -red marble, and fragrant with {lowers. under the golden fringe of an u:it lotto pcrt!?.:<, into n large, tajtefully-furnlshc 1 room, win re the singing birds, the open ; iano, the low satin sr fa all betokened no laek of money. Vt . ?Mr. fniit;; \\a.i nt home. lie bad not yet tone ">o the st< re. and presently he cine in, waving w? b-outings to the man who had married l*st ii< r's sister. "Lend y< ,i :i thousand dollar;-;?" aid lie. "Of cm!r.-e we ean lend you a thousand dollar:' \yiiat is money for If not t?? help ea? h other wilh. < ii, yes. We've a snug little sum laid i p in the ban! , and we live very (onij foi'tnbly. My :.;?:d:i?.s.<? Yes. it's to!( rnl.le, but it n; vrr got us all theso ! things." fiar. ;ag at the soft arabes<! i .4 of tie carpet, t! < graceful folds j of the crimson silk eurtaiuR, and the j c.sol Hi led with proof engravings. | is mv wife's doing." | "j-Ii?" said Mr. Martin, staring , around him. \ | "Vi aid i-:itli. with a eci'tnin, r quiet : ati.'faf lion, "l'ssie Ik :in ar* list, you know--a designer. She ili: vents j;a(t' rns for t!i paper-hangei-H I and upho! '< ' r. . Tiiey are glad to i i.; > her ( !!. dollars a week." ; "Fifty dollars a week!" exclaimed Thomas Martin. "Why that's more- ? iifty dollars is, I mean?than poor , Hutii mode by all her poultry for a year. Well, i never!" t In all his life ho had never respocti ed Essie as her respected her now. i "She has money laid up," raid Ste, phen Smith. "And if she's the woman i think she is, she won't grudge it to I j l?elp her s-ister's husband in a pinch." . j (.all and bitterness?rail and bitterl n**>s! But, thought poor Martin, wit> a sigh, how was Stephen to Unow all that had como and gone? Essie's light step, 011 \he passage- j way, sounded at this instant; and she j came in, dressed in a picturesque brown linen bloHse; her hair still shading her forehead, like a fringe of floss silk, after tho old, graceful fashion. "Yes," she said, brightly, when her 1 brother-in-law's errand was stated to : her; "of course you shall have it. I j uw? you us mucn as mat, i mini;, : Thomas, were it only to craso from your memory that last scene of our parting. How defiant and insolent it was to bo sure!" and she laughed the sweetest of mellow laughter. "But I insist upon it, still, that my theory was ; correct; a woman can work, without j becoming a drudge." "Perhaps she can," slowly and unwillingly admitted Thomas Martin? "perhaps she can! But it didn't use to be so, in my mother's clays." And he sighed to think of poor Ruth, broken down in the meridian of her days, by the cruel necessities that drive the wife of an American farmer to her doom. Was it his own fault? Perhaps it was. Essie's thousand dollar loan was the straw wllicll fcJIVO/l Mm ffnm <lorn,.a_ ' tive drowning. Ho paid the interest, ! bought a new flock of merino sheep, and weathered the storm. And the next year when Essie came ' to the farm to assist her sister, for the lir3t time she found Ruth sitting on the piazza, and watching the little lambs play in the sunshine with listless. heavy eyes. "Yes," said Ruth, "I can't work any more. But Thomas is very kind, lie don't grudge the hired girl's wages, and he is always saying he wished he had taken more t are of mo in the old times. But it's too lale now. You . were right, Essie, when you said you wouldn't stay?on here, and help with ( Kzv 1 lUU Iiv/IIDC? Ul IV. "Yes," said Essie, fondling the thin hand which lay nn the arm of the rooking-chair, "I think 1 was right." , ?New York Weekly. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. The propellers of the fast auto boats revolve 1250 times a minute, giving a <pec I of 23 miles an hour. Of all the money transactions in the country, J>7 percent are carried through by < heck; only 3 percent by notes or gold. Every fire station in Berlin is equippe?' with an oxygen apparatus for reviving persons overcumo by smolio , l. , 4 I aim Radium is the most remarkable substance 011 earth. The energy that a gram will give on before it is entirely dissipated would raise 500 tons cue mile high. Of the 12.Ton newspapers and peri uuiv Hi."> |iiiuiiMicii i!i iivi fiimiy, jnurt? ihr.n 27 percent are in other languages Hum Herman, 'J percent being in ISnglij-.h alone. Austin Smith <?t' Clinton. N. Y., is the oldest living college graduate in this country. He eclehrated his 100th birthday recently and was graduated from Hamilton college in I82(J. A German statistician states that every year the dentists use about $500,j 000 worth of gold and that the richest I gold mine s in a few centuries will bo graveyards ami cemeteries. There arc upward of 80,000 inhab: itants on llu! slopes ami skirts of Vesuvius. If it wore not for the fertilizing effect, of the volcanic products not move than one-tenth of that number would be able to find means of subsistence there. Walnut is only employed In France I m cabinet and carpenter's work. In 1002 the Imports of walnut wi re 21">2 ' tons and exports tons. During ! the last, four years the imports have I steadily declined, while exports have j increased from SG'Jl' tons in 1S90 (o , 502H tons in 1902. El Cafelal,a coffee trade journal pub* | lished in New York, i.< authority lor j the statement that the quantity of cof| foe yearly bought and sold in tho I world's trade is worth $2.r>.ri,000,000, j which probably corresponds to a net | yield from < or l,8nu,000,000 cofi'eo i trees in full bearing. I A jeweler in Turin has made a tiny boat of a single pearl. The hull is finely shaded, and might serve as a model for n racing slcop, the sail is of hen ten jjold, studded with diamonds, and tho t?innacle light is a perfect j ruby. An emerald rerves as its rudder { and its stand is a slab of ivory. Its weight is I< f/? than an ounce, and it is said to havo cost It is diflkult in CScrmany for a professional rogue to enter a family u.s ;t iidiiichik: (iorvaiii. mere every servant lias a character hook, in which the mistr< ss must enter the dates of the coming anil leaving of the servant, with her character while in the s rvice. This the girl is obliged to take to I the nearest police station and have it j dated with the ofllcial stamp, thus preventing the manufacture of bogus recommendr.t ions. Echind the Mark. "So you're going to send his letters back, are you?" asked the blonde. "Yes," replied ihr.* brunette, with I tears in her eyes. ' Hut not until 1 have copied them all. They will makn a splendid book, ?nd I have a lovelv title for them already?"The Letters of a Lazy I.over."?Cincinnati TimesS'-ar. , / WATSON IS NAM ED As Candidate for President at Convention of Populists. WAS UNANIMOUS CHOICE All Candidates Withdrew in Favor of Georgian, Who Waa Nominated by Acclamation ? Meeting Held in Springfield, III. Thomas E. Watson, of Georgia, for president, and Thomas H. Tlbblos, of Nebraska, for vice president, was tho ticket nominated by acclamation Tuesday by the populist national convontlon in session at Springfield, 111. Tho names of William V. Allen, of Nebraska, and of Samuel W. Williams, of Indiana, were placed before the convention for president, but before tho list of states had been completed in the roll call tlielr names wore withdrawn and Watson was nominated by acclamation. Whether Watson will aecept tho nomination no one in the convention seemed to know, and all efforts to secure somo definite information from Watson's friends failed. Watson was quoted as saying that if tho democrats at St. I>ouis nominated William R. Hearst he would support Hearst for president. 3id Platform Reaffirmed. The platform ns adopted reaffirms former platforms and demands the issue of money by the government m such quantities as shall maintain stability in prices, tho establishment of postal savings banks, abolition of child labor, the eight-hour day, and tho initiative" ?it <1 rofpvonitnm by injunction is denounced. The monopoly plank reads: "To prevent unjust discrimination and monopoly the government should own aii'l control tho railroads and those public utilities- which in their nature a?<> monopolistic. To perfect the postal service the government should he immediately withdrawn. Corporations being the creatures of government should be subjected to such government regulations and control as will adequately protect the public . Wo demand the taxation of monopoly privileges, v.'hilo they remain in private hands, to tho oxtent of the value of privileges granted. "We demand that congress shall enact. a general law uniformly regulating the p'>\ver and duties of all Inoorported companies doing interstate business." HOPKIN3 FACTION SUSTAINED. Democratic Sub-Committee Renders n ? r? t ^ rvcpui i un o^rioanoricii ^oniesi. A St. Louis special says: The subcommittee of the national democratic committee which on Monday and Monday night heard the evidence of the fourteen con teats in the state of Illinois reported Tuesday to the national committee that it was tho unanimous opinion of tho sub-committee that the Hopkins delegates be allowed to retain their seats. Tho report wa concurred in, and the Hopkins people will hold their seats, unless ousted by the action of the committe;> on credentials. Tho decision of the sub-commltteo was based on the ground that tho state convention was supreme; that tho fights in tho district caucuses are not proper matters for adjustment by the national committee, and that it is not the business of the national committee to go behind the record of the convention as submitted to them. The fight should, in the opinion of tho committee, have been made In the slate convention before the complrtlon of tho record of tho convention. The victory of tho Hopkins faction was also a defeat for W. J. IJryan, who has made the fight almost a personal matter. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local application?., a?: they cannot roach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafiK'3s, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflame:) condition of the mucous lining of tlie KiiStachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deafn'ss is the result, and unless the inflammation can lie taken out and this tube p'st.or <'(i io us normal condition, licarlin; will he destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which !s nothing hut an Inflamed condition of t!ie inn con 8 surfaces. W'v will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars freo P. J. C1HSNEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 7oc. Take Hall's Family Tills for constipation. When bilious take Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. For t-ale by I IckeiiR Drug Store, ijarlc's Drug { Store, T. N. Hunter, Liberty. ?f t i I ? [ ?ifmyjmw I -| I (Tm~ ~ ICASTORUI T | AVegetablePreparntionforAs- % \ similating the Food andRegula' ting ihc Stomachs and Bowels of >y " * ?^ Promotes Digcstion.CheerfuFi\ess and Rest.Contains neither Onium.Mornliino nor'NtiiuMvil ^ : NOT^AItCOTIC. IfripeafOtenrSAKVELPtTCIlKIt Punv.k 'ui Sc**t~ ytlx.Sniml * /fe'Attl* Smlit ? , .Jttj Slaitr Snrtf f ' :,j < / i Hlfffi Sfti Cln/ifird Sugar tm . HfoAny/wv* rTatvr. A Aperfecl Remedy forConslipn ife I Hon,Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea $ I Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- $ I ncss and Loss of Sleep. ? \ i FacSinulc Signnlure of ' yEW yoRK fj \\ EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. >81 |V?> -J? ' WANTS MAIDEN NAME. Mrs. Onie Tanner Makcs Unusual Appeal to Courts. . Through her attorneys, Mrs. On in Tanner, of Cllnchem district, Hall county, Ga., lias filed her petition 10 I the superior court of the county ask| ing that her maiden name, Onie Dun* can, be restored. She sets forth as sufficient cause for the petition that ; shortly after her marriage to Wiley Tanner his death occurred under un* I usual circumstances and tha; the fatii; er and ether relatives of 1i<t lale husband prosecuted her bitterly t.n a ] charge of murdering him. On account I of this relentless prosecution she does not wish to hear the name of Tanner, hut desires the court to allowed her to resume her father's name. The ense is an unusual one. Frequently divorced w'ves are given their | niai.len names back after Final legal I separation. Very rarely persons have their names changed by the <-ourt or | by special act of the leginlature. Hut j the petition of a widow for the restoration of her maiden name is of very infrequent occurrcnee. No Pity Shewn. I "K:>r years fate was after me con. tinuously," writes F." A~ '(Full edgi\Vci ; bena, Ala. "I had a terrible ease of i'iles rau.-ing 24 tumors. When all fail1 ed Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured me." r>t]iiauy lor UlirilS HIKI fill nC'IlCSl land pains. Only 2oc at Pickens Drug : Company. ti PASSENGERS FIGHT FOR NICKEL. , Objectci to Paying Two Farec for One Continuous Ride. A Nov/ York dispatch says: Defying i the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company to collect a second fare between Brooki lyn and Coney Island, nearly 1,000 pas| sensors were ejected during Sunday ! when ihe c ars reached Neck Road, ! where the second nickel Ik taken. A | number of fights occurred. A recent ' court dochion hearing on the question ! was to the offset that * passengers were entitled to ride ail the way foi flvo cents AyersPill | Want your moustachc or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Use Cut I Ms cut and return to ut IniW^ of iMrly ?!iys and njr end Set Witch h ru!s? mfl / ? n; r.i. nl. I r>r (* /< art- rra"fe (f I H guarantee and wlil *rjr . lifrt i r Hie movement i*. one rf th? BH Clock Atfclr. hut instead will compare with any $j\ to watch, pi v heiher > i ? deilre the dust pfool < r i idlfi1 (i Genti' HuA(ii>| I Dlckena Chain. Orw Intaglio Charm. One Pair laxrr Sleeve Ui Pearl flack Cellar Huttm* On* Topu OiamonJ 5tud. (ill the Teeapoona. AM the aI ove 5en? I'ree provided you allow t?* to r< H f 4 '/S We are willing to shlf? the entire outfit as deunhed C.C H| la not the tifjeii bargain you ever received from any firm, the ( 83 cent If you will remit $4 gt with order we will forward a'l the H Present coniLMlnj d One Hollow (Iround F.ifra I In* $2 SO Ke?< H en offer to Introduce their Cigars, and remember If you are not f m Incorporated Capital, $26,000.00. CLICK-RIKI > USTORIA For Infants and Children. hfi Kind Ymi. * * T, - -Tvlise p Always BougsA Bears the / \ & Signature / ,M |) i IB Use y For Over Thirty Years lAOTilDlll ma i uniH THC CENTAUR COMPANY. NIW YORK CITY. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL ?IUS '-<> nF? -vL. Vnfc. aIwiiV" r I! i'.iI :\sk Dfifr.r:;'! foi i iirrtiK-iTHHM r.i tint ??,o. (icli! iiir\.il.r tj.iv>, KOnk'il \vu!i liluc 1 fctKi'l. I it'i'" IM> otll'-r. ilfftiwc kinr.ltI .iilftilitun. isuy*>i'yourOpiKKiM. i1 r ' 'lit! t<-. n: -:: 11;; - I r k'xik-l Tvf.tl mi* ?inli< i:i"l " Itclli'L' liu* hi Itll r, l > Kuii, io.ortl TeMiniuitluls. hole b.V :.! I.NII'vims. c:".c:iE8"r.H chemical oo. '!?'? 3<ni1!iK)n t'llllj.t . V tk. %7*-nll?:n ihl* ~~~~~PARKER:S "1 hair uals/vwi ^ Olear,*rs fitul 1 hi'Kiitiliel the heir. I ft luxuriant |f:owth. {'. .t>lX\fTr -ttioNever Foll^ to Rcstoro Or.wl vaJjWii TS&i?l Hnir 1o lit-Y>#iithful Colo 1 J Vv iV9 JEKHCans * 1 h hair tnllir.A } 1> iVti.i. [ :j KGLLtks COUCH i o?rs vmej.unosl lv|T? Wr KiiBfr'a L?Zl 0 15 ct< A ? ? wj^ TK? i I'lfaXM! \ ' aVJoVir W /Consumption r?i^ : 4-' j4 Q 0U3HG r.n'J 5?c:<f:.05 | " ^OLDS Hroo [rial. [ 1 times:, ?\!h. Uuiciif.'^c Cu;o ir fill ' .'< THROAT and 'ISOKG TR?UB- t 1)} LE3, or MONEY BACK. fc-.*.T71 TrJrj.iT/,' g S"NLAKLVHRVOVY FAS'IUE KEEDS -A. | l-'ORTABLE ENG1NU I ! ikJw M 11 WMMtM Jt-i L -fa'M&WiM THE c::A'JAXf | Js tiio nn< 1? .!- . ''!'! >.',?" hi wry 1 v.?!< ' \. i11 In- n!a<l to x ikI riitnloKilc niliiumo iirtrft <>!> Application W. II. Ciil.MiblS CEL C ., COLUMBIA, S. C. HiirIihv, li(.l!c-r-<, Snw Mills. CottJ Girtnliin Machinery, Ktc. ty The Cihbcn Portable Shlnijic Mnjinr Wake up your liver. Ore Syour constipation. Gerid of your' biliousness. bid for 60 years. BUCKINGHAM'S fiTE tint erg. or uiutHjibra or k. f. ;uu t co., hasi n. u. - 1 4 A ^<IJ IU FKiifcs * j'irf wf w^UervWoti Pre# oneSteml I I4K Gold 00 the nuliu!* and I'.?w1e auompankd hy * >v p he?l 7 i<**f!cd Qukk J rjlr.levers mad* m Amenta. Il BE Fh? Cent's Oitn are *<nw cases an.1 dust proof, i The other 0 t fft jUkIc* ?rc v?.- On* Willed Oold PI I uttoni, On* flail Top Collar hut ion. On# N?kt(? tf*fd?r.1 H be t 14k Cold Plate J) Alio One 5#t of 6 Triple Sllvte Pf I end yr o in t jnc f a<kjre, $0 Mlftl < ?i*de ice. Clear* valut ). O. to any ekpreis olfue and il.'ow full examination. If 1 ,oods fan l>e letuined at ncr expense arid you will not be oul goods mentioned in IhW Ad *nd f ut In Pr?a a Grand U I r* Cutting W?icr No other f?rm in t ?e world tvet made ^ leased, we stand ready to refund your mtney fUON COMPANY, WIHSTON-SALEM, N.