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Iatavie, N. Y., formerly paid S7, 200 for sevent,y-two sire lights, or $100 a ligit. By the issue of bonds a new muice ::lnt costing S23,000 was Co::pl,1_...n1 year ago. The number of lights w:s increasad fourteen, mak ing cighty-six in all. The actual cost of running the eighty-six lights was 33570).G, or w4i.G2 per light per year-less than eleven and one-half cents per night. Adding extraordi nary eixpenses,B atavia paid for eighty six lights under village ownership $3, 055.57, or at the rate of sixteen cents a night per light. Postmastd:r iesir trie:i to cxciu 3 he Chicago 'Tlimes-Herald fro:n ,w mails on the ground that its gift et terprise was e iottery, and whilee was about it. his wife, by a i guess, won a bicycie from the pa)r. He :-s it was a poor wheel. To Our Lady Reader.. ine-tenths of tLo women of the world are .f>lcted w:tli some of the complaints famil iarly known as "F.euale Disases," or "\ou,b Tr.aubles." Th-er i 'carcely a fam:ly buthas an ido:zcL daughter, a chl:eri-hot: sister. or a deariy ovced moti+-:r who sut1ers aconies that are endur"i in sil :ce to protect hermodrsty Prop,r treatn.ent iS post loned from month to month by (iread of a ph,icians' hu:ni:iating examiratio:: or tur"'geon's knife. Most of tLet dangerous d:i -ces can be successfully trea'c'd at home, but th-ro is wiide--pread ig norance am:onz even the most intellizent classes of women re'arding their naiur. fu;ct ons and orcans of ieneration. owing to so little information havin:r been published i> regart to this subject and a modesty that shri::ks fr-m investiga:tion such a disagreea b1e naatter. -ihe\Vtneof Cardui treatment of fenma e d;scass c:ier thousands of cases of this k-:d o tri.:is every yetr. It can be tsed te cessfully in the privacy of the home end is cheap and ell ct ivt. Ask your druggist for dcEh-ee's Wie of Cardui. Providence, R. I. ~ a fr is bltt a " of Tetterine, C. o. '. i t'in;< it 'rang'*that it is not soil ert in N v: . ! it i' lie best ctre for i'- ;a i':n: War .: 1 anill c"ruptions 'f rho i . :n'. '. 'taa b' x fr"om a Cin .e' . - 1n t n 2rein her .u -s.. I':og.ie,:;nim ts ' ' t of t tom -t e 2r- her I knmvn tis: ;:egt2n:tm air "t""li b: .-! ':-:n cv r tiwi th E:ezr m :' .,,.:..,T.-..-...... 4u'< 21im eniiplete'ly, ,x0 '1 tli t' h s v' . P. c. p :in ,t .' pin :; U:ichin" Co. . m mi :" . in .?anip. J1. T. Shup I a:,ot -p'<: ?-l hi hi } of Pisr's Cure for C pt ion.- -- . Vi. Mlrnas, :> . i:;+:.- N w - . 0 StI.: 1.. Fl t pp".i fr h'v l )'D. :iINE'S GR$AT . in:', II'-. f: :-: m : r:: !" r ' s e. 'darv.:..u e-to . -l n-:+ "- :11'1 - t ril hot m. 2r: . 1)r...,"w:. ": 1 .r l t '. 'hila., Pa. 'Waiin:;- WVonid Often-be a 1'ieasure were it not for corns. These p:^sts are removed wit iindecors.hS 15c. at druggists. Mrs. Wisn'oothain: Syrup for children eeti,. so) .n thP .'''. alucS in^lamma 'on.allays pain, cu w' colic.23c. a bottle. andarm swele an -oe rk u.M no ii th sors~oZm eu.r-erei aine stre li nutd wrt.s tinal:v. r'nto rc rokh t. My:4 Et.,2 E . P. A . a.!re .- , s -:t ir:t, mil<i, effec gtio rt v y a one. Al gadrpid.lyc. Prttiescib :'~te re.yPhynsic is Relw..s id '1 n in tospalh ils L.:neo~ BEST prepa re W0D rai:. in (arn. & Sos.NeYok Pennybyarned." BuIT a penn aed in foodi' iZGIs' a dollar osBt to the11 cor. osNv ok Sve sa Do!!y arseP And Teimy ae i schon o shorticle<o. ent .o--- ies. a la ste to SS -P R SE FALS ONE AT A TIME. One step at a time, and that well placed, We reach the grandest height; One stroke at a time. earth's hidden stores Will slowly come to light: One seed at a time, and the forest grows; One drop at a time and the river flows Into the boundless sea. One word at a time, and the greatest book Is written and is read;' One stone at a time and the palace rears Aloft its stately head; One blow at a time, the tree's cleft through, Anl a city will stand where a forest grew A few short years before. One foe at a time, and he subdued, And the conflict will be won: One grain at a timre. and the sands of life Will slowly all be run: One minute, another, the hours fly; One day at a time our lives speed by Into eternity. One grain of knowiedge, and that wellstoret, Another, and more on them: And as time rolts on, your min'd will shine With many a garnered gem Of thought and wisdom. And time will tell "Ore thing at a time, and that done well." is wisdom's golden rule. -Christian Union. 'UNA AND HER LION, ~ E do not oftenheanr - faman retiring to rest, poor and in difficulties, ris ing in the morn ing rich and indc I ,pendent. Ye t such was my ex i- eionce a few years ago, whe:. on sitting down t o my frugal breaikfast, I found a letter on the table which informed me that a distant rel rtive was dead and had left me the bulk of his property. With what satisfaction did I now look forward to the next and final in terview with certain small crcditors. whose claims, enforced with a per sinacity worthy of a botier case, ha-i it ong iled my heart with bitterness and made my life a veritable burden. \ow all was change3. and I awaited with complacency the weekly visit from my landlady and relished in an ticipation the Niagara of words she was wont to let loose on my devoted head, as, with endless iteration, she announced a yet fnrther.deficiency in her rent roll, and her determination to "stanui it no longer." Never after to-day should I be dis tressed with my tailor's demonstra tions on the door step, or my cobbler's antics in front of the house: from henceforth they became creatures of the past, and the lodgings that knew them would know them no more (at least as far as I was concerned). But after a time I found the monot ony of my new existence rather irk some, for unfortunately I had no hobby to fall hack upon, and I did not care to embark in business. I soon wearied of visiting the various places of amusement, and of walking tip ani down the streets and squares of Lon don, with other devices for* killing time It was while taking one of these aimless journeys that an incident oc curredl which entirely changed the whole course of my existenc and re cued mue fromn the life of uselessness into whIich I hi:l (:rifted. One morning I found myself in the booing oilee of St. P'ancras Station. A young lady was just taking a ticket - for York, wh!en sheC dropped her purse. in stooping dowa to pick it up for her, the thought ilashed across me, "Whiy not take a ticket for York, too?" The next minute I had done so, and soon found myself in the same comnpartmient with her. She sat close to the window, anxiously scan uing the faces of all who passe 1. Presently the guard blew his whistle, and just as we were about to start. two men rushed past and scrambled into the train higher up the platform. But what a change had come over my fair companion. She was dea.thly pale, and was so evidently struggling against a fainting fit that 1 made no srn pie about proffering my assistance. After a time she came round, and we gradually got into conversation. and, as she proved very communicative, I soon learned the object of her jour nouy. "I have," she said, "inherited a lawsuit in whtch a large estate is in voved, and the only thing that stands between me and my rights is the proof of a cer tain marriage, and that I have not as yet succeeded in obtaining. Yesterday I received a message from an old lady in York, who it appears is now lying on her deathbed, who begs that I will see her at once, as she has something o[ the utmost import ance to tell me, and that something I feel certain is the very infor:nation I am in search of. With that in myv pocket, the snit is won, and I become the mistress of Wetherby Hall and estate, which for many years have been in the possession of my cousin, John H{ardy, who was one of tht')e men woljmt ran past the window." The interest I felt in myv compaL ion was ta no way di:ninished by the fact that she was very pretty,_ being tali, fair,' and 1,ossessed of the most lauhing gray eyes that mnan ever lookela t:>t his souPs andoing. I begged she woald :allow me to assist her in any way that lay in myv power, as :t was ouJ:y but too probcale tha'. ifady's presmace in the train boded lo good to her. even if it was not a source of po.itive danger. 1 also re some extent given me her confidence, hich I looked upon as an assurance that, although a perfect stranger, she he felt that she could trust me. This ;he assured me she had done from the irst, and said how glad she felt when [ entered the carriage. We exchanged arde, and I then learned that her iame was Una Wetherby. So after ome laughing and pleasant chat, it vas agreed that we should assume the haracters of "Una and the Lion." After studying the position for a ;hort time, I came to the conclusion hat the firat thing to be done was to tscertain, if possible, what Hardy's novements were likely to be. Accord :ngly, when the train stopped, I made ny way to the carriage where he and iis companion were seated. Fortun ttely, as it happened, the compart nent was full, so I took my seat in the next one, which was empty. The arriage was one of a nearly obsolete lass, in which a single lamp, when ighted, did duty for two compart nents; consequently the opening made for its reception formd a con renient "Judas-hole" for listener. At the next station many passengers lighted, anl Hardy and his friend were left by theatselves. "Alone at lasi., " said Hardy, "and e must make the most of our present apportunity for a quiet talk. As soon swe reach York, we'll leave the train nd I'll run up into the city to see ibout old Betty Wilson's funeral. I m glad she has gone, as I never felt sure of her, notwithstanding the hush ...oney that I have paid her for the Last fifteen years. At 7.35 we hke zrain for Alston, whero we arriva ibout 8, the church we are bo,uil for eing only a short walk from the sta ,ion. As soon as that is reacbel I place myself under your direction, as, f course, your professional e.n2ri ,nce will at once indicate the course Lo be pursued." "Trust me,' said hi, companion, Those name was Bill; "here not a hurch or a chapel either that I could 2ot break into or out of, for tie mat. :er of that. "But to business," cortinu ed fardy. "What I have got to do wo 't take or, as removing a le.[ o:a' of a register can't occupy mn:'h timua. It >eems to me the real difflGulty is, how re we to get at it?" "Nothing easier if you go to worl: ~he right way. I always ch'oosea night hen the organist is pratisinZ. I ben slip in, and the rest follows in lue co.urse." "Well, I don't care how it is done, provided I get what I want, and that mean to have if I burn the ch-treh lown." "So that's your pian of operations, s it?" I thought to mysel f, as I left :he carriage and hurried hack to Miss Wetherby, who was anxiouslyv await ng my return. Unable to restrain ny excitement, I seized both her ands, exclaiming: "Allow me to congratulate the mis ~ress of Wetherby. I have learne.1 ~verything you wantel 10t know, and hat from the lips of Hardy hinmelf. .he old lady you proposed to visit is lead, so now I would suggest th-it wo et once proceed to Aiston, in the par sh church of which is the re'gister hat contains what you want' I then old her what Hardy was cote:nplat ng, and poinled out to her that, with he two hours' start that we should 1ve, we ought to be prepare I for iim at all points.. On arriving at York, Hardy an-i his :ompanion left the train and went at mece into the city, and Min~ Wet herby Ld I started from Alston, which we 'eached in about half an hour. The irst thing we did was to go to the po ice station, and having laid then case >efore the superintendent, he p it on mis hat and requested us to acc >apan y uim to the rectory. On sending in is card, we were at once shown into he library, the rector a;pearing hortly after. In a few words the offi ~er put him in possession of the facts n the case, and requested his kind as istance. This was readily promised, nd then the superintendent pro ~eededl to lay his plans before him. "The first thing," he said, "will be o furnish Miss Weiherby with the opy of the register she requires. Text, we must get the organist to ave a practice from 8 till .9. The est of the arrangements I will see to." "As regards the organist." replied he rector, "I shall have to consult my laughter, who holds that appoint nent. It will be rather a trying posi ion for a young lady to be sitting here alone, knowing what is goingr m below." "I will sit with her," said Miss etherby, "if I might be allowed, as t is only fair that I share the annoy nee and Canger, if there are to be "The very thing." said the superin endent, "and then yeu can let your riend know when to cease playing, which will be soon after the men h-ive mtered. As regards Hardy's comn anon," he continued, "I strongly uspect he is no other than 'Bill the rrnkoy,' as he is calle:1, who is vantced for other robberies." A little before eight we were all in mr places. Miss Wetherby and her 'riend 'oeing in the organ-loft, while he superinten-lent, his men an 1 my elf were hidden away in an f.about forgotten the object of our being so strangely brought together, as we listened to the magnificent rendering of Mozart's Requiem, for the rector's daughter was no ordinary musician. Soon, however, our attention was at tracted to stealthy footsteps coming up the gravel path, and presently the door opened and Hardy and his com panion crept in and hid themselves in one of the pews. Shortly after the organ ceased, and the ladies came down and left the church, locking us all in, in accordance with the superin tendent's directions. Just about midnight the two men made their way cautiously to the vestry, which was locked. It did not take long for so expert a cracksaan as Bill the Turnkey to open the door, and after a similar process had been gone through with the cupboard, the parish register lay before them. "Well, while you're groping your way through that musty old. bock, I'll just look round to see what I can pick up ; 1 hato being idle, I do." "Sc this is the register," said Hardy, "and upon a simple entry in its pages depends the future ownership of Wetherby. Now for it." "Eighteen hundred and seventeen. That won't do. Nineteen, that's nearer. Tewnty; twenty-one. Th tt's the year. Month, February. Al ! here it is!" "Halloa," shouted Bill, as he sud denly forn'n himself hurled to the ground by the superintendent, who lost no time in securing him. At the san time the constables au-l I riihed upon iarly, who, snatching a pistol from his breast, fired. haphazar.l among us, the ballet finding a resting place in my right lung. It 'as long after I heard the sequel to the night's a."entnre, which may be suinne,l up i n a few words. Hardy and his com panion were tried, convicte.l and sentenced to long term' of penal ser vitude, and Miss Wetherby became the acinowledged owner of the Wetherby estate. But it was mnv weeks before her feet crossed the threshold of We therby Hall. As for my unforLunate self,Ti was taen to a hotel, where for a long tim= my health was despaired of. In vain seemed the doctor'sconstant attenton, aided though it was by the ten-ier nursing of gentle Una. At length a day came, and with it the crisis of my fate. Una sat by my bedside, her iand in mine, for there was no at tempt at concealing our feelings to ward each other now. .1 just recollect saying: "'yis hard to part, dear UYna." "Oh, don't die," she exclhimed, psionately; "live, live, for my sake," And I did, too, for here I am, Squire of Wetherby. An 1 if further proof were needed, witness this piretty child nestling to my he'art. whoie.slim fgure, fair hair, and liughinig gray eyes ever remind me of the mother after whom she is namedl.-Ti-B3its. Colonized by Rats. The Island of Tropic, twenty miles south of the Florida coast, has been invaded by an army of savage rats. and the inhabitants h-ave been forced to flee. Tropic is three miles long and two miles wide, and the soil is very fertile. A dozen families have se ttled on the island and engaged in growing vegetables for market. Up to a month ago there were no rats on the irland. At that time the advance guard of the rodents arrived and were quickly fol lowed by others, until in two weeks there were fully ten thousand. The rats came from the n:-ainland, which was only two miles awa.y, and they swam across. At first the rats contented themselves with attacking the vegetables, -which were soon de stroyed. Then they invaded the houses of the settlers. The latter made war on the rats, killing hundreds of them.. In spite of the slaughter, the rats got into the houses and attacked the women and children. Several of the atter were badly torn by the sharp fangs of the rodents. One baby was so severely bitten about the face that its life is despaired of. For three nights not a soul on the island slept, as t:hat would have meant death. At last the people, :in terror and worn out, fled in their boats to the mainland, where they are now camped in a destitute condition. The rats pursued them to the water's edge, and the women and children were re peatedly bii,ten before the bcats could be pushed off. Every vestige of vege tation had been destroyed on the isl and. -Boston Transcript. Dr. Charles H. Parkhurst, the New York reformer, says: Have I any ob iet ion to women riding the bicycle?2 Whyv~, to. Mrs. Parkhurst is going ta !-rn. and will ride if she wishes to. I shall have no objection. The bi e eloe has come to stay. In Er-ope he fad is dying out and they are looking at it purely from the stand oint of utility. Workingmen in very ordinary circumstances use the weel. In Geneva, for instance, 4000 biccles are in use. Theodore Rooseveit, the Prsident of the New York Police Boardl. is ob jecting to the term Irish. .nicaus German-Americans, Spanish - Ameir: cans, Afro-Americans in:i all that sort. He thinks we should all be simply LAD AND LASS, 0 Tad and lass, the old earth spins awayt To-day is sweet, and sweet was yesterday! To-morrow's dawu may ris" up ,hill an( .,ra.y Al! lad au: ia-. Ab. lad and la.". sosme lay you wil awaki Stand hand to hand a n-1 f"! the he art-=triuns ,reak. Drink sorrow from !ov-s eup for old time's sakn~ Al ! lad aw laa. Ah. lad and la:i. the worl-l i.- irl to rca:I And non. may tell what frnit :=hall crown the seell. But hold forever to the . v!! 'ree-l Ah! lal and lass. --Th-- X'w Bldget FUN OF THE DAY. In time of peace prepare to prevent war.-Puck. Thank goodness, it will soon be un scientific to work.-Cleveland Plain Dealer. Nell-"Do you like buttermilk0? Belle-"No, I never could bear goats." -Philadelphia Record. The bloomer wedding has been in troduced in Chicago, Now for the bloomer divorce.-Nashvilie A mcri can. "It is said that Mrs. De Riche bought her husband." "Yes. I heara that Do Riche had been scd. "--De troit Free Press. Smokeless powder has been intro duced at West Point. The cadets wear it on their coat lapels after every dance. --Chicago Despatch. "Oh! you're too fly," remarke:l the wind to the kite. "Well, I notice you always give me a good send-off," re torted the kite. -Philadelphia Record. To say that woman will not be ac tractive in bloomers is to talk non sense. Woman will be attractive in anything. Look at her sleeves. -Kan sas City Journal. The Bashful One-"They say that there are bacilli on a woman's lips. I wc,nder what they are like?" She (en couragingly)-"Why don't you try and find out?"-Syracuse Post. In the Park: Laura-"George, look at that dog! Will he bite?" George -"Bite? If he's a dog of any jrndg men, Laura, he'll try to eat you. Gel out, you brute !"-Chicago Tribune. Dorothy, aged five, looked with awe and pity at the long, needle-pointed shoes of a young lady visitor, and then asked of her compassionately, "Miss Ethel, ain't you got only one toe?" Judge. Sub-"Here's y letter from 'Ant ous Subscriber.'" Chief--"What does he want to know?" Suib-"He wants to know how long a man would live if there were no such thing as death. "-Spare Moments. Now that the noble red man has taken to the deadly bike, 'there is a chance that there will be more good Indians; at all events, he starts with the advantage of having his ".icycle face" already made.-Boston H3erald. "This morning the doctor orderel me to drink warm water an hour be fore every meal, and here I've b2ea drinking for the last forty minutes; but I'll be jiggered if I can swallow anothe! drop. "-Humioristischie B3laet Bluemg-"My friends give me nothing but good advice when I am i hard luck. Now I can't live on advice alone." Hustler--"Why not? You might jot down all the wise things they say to you and publish a book full of excellent wisdom. "-Trth'. Struggling Pastor -"Neariy all the congregation have subscribed liberally for the building fun-1, and [ feel sure that I also have your hearty co-opera tion. How much wvill you' -" M'rs. Leader-"Let me see. Ohi, I ame the only member who has a carria-;e, I think." Struggling Pastor - "Ye;, the rest are poor." Mrs. Leader-"WVell, I will drive around an l c.llect the subscriptions."--Pearson's Weekly. Novelty in Equyipa.ges. A novelty in park equipages, just a little relief from the mion'otony o: vie torias and dog earts, nothing very startling-this is not an imnagiaitiv.3 age, as our' crities, art. litrairy an 1. dramatic. are alwayvs a'trif; us5 still somaething to break the lea l level of traps and cairts. The new thing~ made its debut iin the park this sea son, and has still the g'obs of navalty upon it. It is nothing; more nor less than a coster's barrow, turned out by a Londou coneh buibler -very spick and span, highly v irnished and the appreances of t'u' s nirtest, 1. '-a costers bar'o.v none the less. Tw> tall yong swelLs-:nlon~ pr-eeioil4 they loo-are fitte 1 into it, an 1 fnernish it in the bes sty'le. A -no4t unco.n'ort able patch they hav.: but the:1 th pleasures of ee !.-micicity hrve to ha ai for. The btarrow as not drag;e.1 along by a 'dos;:'. bunt by a dimn:ian ive little co'> o& a p)oay wiLi a .r of a hoy an-l .;re'h->t m1 le.. Ari I, so freihted. it tae:eS its pa9. in th) Otrive by the f:.>tath nat !I t'- t-.w among the :a:':i'l 's wit.t t's !a.lids iis Why Oil Barria Are Bhue. Oil barrels are almost invariably painted blue. The reason for !hie is not apparent to the uninrormocJ, i.u.i a manufacturer who maakes a .peci:ll of this kind of cooperage says that because blue has been found i' by e perience to be mlore efit'li i fo'r hetp Highest of all in Leavening Po Brotherly Feeling of Ants. A naturalist who has studied the ways of ants, writes Olive Thorne Miller, found that some of them feel friendship and pity for suffering, and he tells it thus: "One day, watching a small column of these ants, I placed a small stone on one of them to secure it. The next that approached, as soon as it discovered its sitnation, ran backward in an agitated manner, an Aoon communicated the intelligence to the others. They rushed to the rescue. Some bit at the stone and tried to move it. Others seized the prisoner by the legs, pnd tugged with such force that I thought the legs -would be pulled off; but they per severed until they got the captive free. I next covered one .up with a piece of clay, leaving only the ends of its antennae projecting. It was soon discovered by its fellows, which set to work immediately, and by bit .ing off pieces of the clay soon liber ated it. The excitement and ardor with which they carried on their un ilazging exertions for the rescue of their comrade could not have been greater if they had been human beings." Great Britain still refuses to co-op erate with us in keeping the Atlantic water lane clear of derelicts, on the the ground, explains the New York Sun, that the game is not worth the candle ; that the risk is not co-exten sive with the gain. rI ONiS ENJOS Both the method .nd results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tern effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most heahby and agreeable substances, its mayexcellent qualities commend it toaland have made it the most popular remedy known. ~Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50 cent bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. DJo not accept any substitute.: CALIFCRNWA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN~ FRANiVOSCO, C AL. LOWIS ?|LLE, J:Y. NWE ~ YORK. N.Y6 Charlotte, N. C. b 'st ie, ShIorthawtl an; Typei;writ inc.Th nnl Jiusins i Co~ 'llen. ini the. south I that y'on can try herore p'a ~in-: fhe ru'>n. ActualI busin.s practice fri:n ir toi finiish. $Afnd for etanclne. J. 1-;1I I .M'I. I 'rincpal. ~~ -nothing bu with Pi \W withit. wihPea: L A soap Besid - Pea: ine's ve economical way of washing SThe One ( of farming gradually exhausts the high percentage of Potash is us' * larger bank account can only then AWrite for our " Farmers' Guit is brim full of useful information fc will make and save you money. GERMA: -F YoW KNOW HOW is i To ~eep tem. ont it is wroug to let the poor thingcs scevr and Die of the n-f' then wimul in a maiori:v i-f wer.--Latest U.S. Gov't Report Basking Powdera rEL1 PURE Punc'hin. B j K.iocks ::tl Esar. The black bear "F," located in the Philadelphia "Zoo," has gone into training for a fight. An iron trapeze and a punching bag hve been put in his cage, and he takes r:gaiar es:ereise every dav. Yesterday, while sitting on the trapeze bar punching the bag and dodging it as it ca.nc baclk, hi attention was mo ntarily divelrtt by a passing Chi(iann. The b:tg 4 went right on swinging, however, an-.i caught him with a tijm that was al most dull and] siekema. The blow hurled him against the bars of the cage, and he came near joining the baboon in the picding vat of the Academy of Natur.. Sciences. --St. Louis Globe-Denocr. -----me. Advices from San Dom n.> -:ay that far ther serious uprising.- eurr,d in the north ern and eastern parts of that zIpubhle. Gov ernment troops were sentto th-e seenes of the disturbances. A dispatch from Ti::nisin -:ys an agree ment was signed w:t!2 China granting to Germanya cr.wn ences-iot-. It Never Fails. . Tyner's Dy-pepsia Remtnedy has been on the market for several ytars. :md the universal verdict is that it never fails to aecomp;ish its work. It is a mili an;i effirient re. e:yforail etomach tndl bo-el dise:e.e. Its us- dces not interfere with bus tie=s or plea.ure, but adds to both. Nearly all diee.a-es are caused by in digestion. Stop it and your health will he perfect. A few doses of Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy will do it. Prif;, 50 cents per bottle. For sale by all druggis ts. Eow's This? We offer One Hludred Dollars reward foi any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured b Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. .J. Ctzz.Y & Co., Prope., Toledo, O. We, the under,igned, have known F. J.Cho ney for the last 15 years, and believe him per. fectly honorable in all business transaction and linancially able to carry out any obliga, tion mtde by their firm. Wsr & TRAx, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo Ohio. WALLG. KrNNA* & MARVI*, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure it taken internally. act ing directly upon tie blood and mucous sur faces of the yys:cm. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Drugr:ist. Testimonials free. . The More Onc Usee Parker's G1nicrToi a the more its virtues are revealed in dispelling colds, Indigestion, pain and every weakness. - PAYING POSITIONS GUARANTEED IN WRITING. Students' comDlete courso in HALF the Tr.x at HA r.r the EXPESsE of other coileges. 24 placed 'at month. Address at once (EORGIA BUS. COLLEGE, Macon, Ga. DAILlY $3 PER YEAR. P'residential Year. THEI CHICAGO CHRONICLE. the areat demo cratte newspaper of the west. po'stpnid every day n thc weekt for one year. 53. No subscription at this rate less ttian one year. Samnpics fr-s.. T HS -' A DAYSURE,2~~ 4ntewilsow you owt nis th wrk ndteach you tree ao work in the locality wihere you live; qend usv yur ai dres nd we will explain -the businiess fully; remember we guar'. Rtot.L JIA.UFAiTni'I CoiiANT," net LB. Detroit, Riels. JOI]NSON'!S CHILL AND FETER TONIQ -- Cost'. you 53 conts a bottle If it cures yog andt not a single cent unless it does. What does it cureCh?sadFvr 2ndl. Bilhous Feror. 3id. TYP&oID FCvBn. 4th, l!-morrha::Ic Fever. . lith;. Dx-:,gue Fever.. 6th hi1eastes 7th. Neurala. 8th. La Gr.ppe. Money back if one bottle lai:s. Ask your dealeru abel it. A. B. GIaARD;EAr, Samannab2. Ga., Proprietor. LSAICORN ANiD Sy,~WMILLSFEED hULLS. Wae heels and Hay Presses. BEST IN THE MARtKET. DleLoach 31i11 ,I!g. Co., 395, Atlanta, Ga. - ' AIRBAL.SAM Ciear:m and bra:: tcs the hair. B --..~err Fails uto Bettore Grayf . Cues scalp di. ea-ss hair_allig., 30c.andsl .Wat Drugiste S. N. U.--45. Water t water That s all youi need ^ sarline. Don't use any soap If what we claim is true, that I line is better than soap, the doesn't have a chance to do work. It's only in the way. .es, some soaps mgtcause robe ad you'd lay it to line. You'll never get Pearl ry best work till you use it just ected on the package. Then ave the easiest, quickest, most 3nd cleaning. 4a~ prop System.a land, unless a Fertilizer containing a ed. Better crops, a better soil, and a be expected. e." a 142-page illustrated book. It r farmers, It will be sent free, and Address, a KAWORKS,pNasau Street New Yor.t Chickens. a man who~ d-voted 2S: vears of his lif' to(COMDUCITNG AN P f LT!Y YAIRD AS A BlSINF:S. ne-t a- a pas :\ime At he l!v:z of him '.(f aw'l fa;: i. - -;;ed __ r.pich 'aetina yoi a i.ThnIr:dfl0o br.a w!!! com e2: cnoieent ;tsi. Wha -- '.!di : h n er 25-- cetsin<s .I BO PUB. HOUE