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Went NearesL to the role. The nearest approach to the North Pole, according to the Dallas News, was made on May 13, 1S93, when Lieutenant Lockwood stood within 393 miles ci that coveted sDot. A recent funeral procession in a Wisconsin village was largely made up of men and women on bicycles, the de ceased having been a member of th3 bicycle club. NEW CHATTANOOGA LABORATORY. One of the Large-"t in the World-Wine of Cardal Ilias an immerse Saie. CHA-rANOO0A. TENN., November eth.-Th immense new iabiratory of the Chattanno.a Medicine Company wa cnmmenced o.dav. "early an acre of floor space is now ue. int making McElree's Wine cf ('ardlui and The:l ford's Black Draught, but this n n" aex doubles the capacity of the plant. This bu-i - ness has become one of t:e larde!t in , country, and now rends its leading pr,it-, Wine of Carrin!, to every part of the w.. A branch ofiice has been estalii,heted att Louis for the northwes:ern trvie. 6100 teward. Coo. The readers of this pap'r will he pleased to learn that there is at lea-t ono dreaded disea a that science has been ab:e to cure in a!1 ::s stages, and that is catarrh. Harll's Catarr" Cureis the only positice cure now known to the medical fraternity. Caitarr, being a cou stitutional disease, requires a constitution.. treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken :i - ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the syet:r, thereiy de stroying the foundation of the nisea-e, e.rA giving the patient strength by ibuilding u p :n constitttionl andI asi+in::natn:-e int doing it work. The proprietors have so Innch fait h in its curative powers that th. y offer One Han. dred-Dollars for any case that it falls to cure. Lecd for list of testimonin:s. Address i F. J. C t ENIY ; Co., Toledo, 0. r sold by D:uggis<t, :,. In Olden TImes People overlooked the importance of pernt, neatly benciicial efTcits and were satidied with transient ac,ion, but now that it is gener ally known that t i Fies ill permanent ly cure habitual crsti;ation., well-infornted pcnplie will not buy o;:e: haxativs, which act for a time. it t:nally injure the syster ,hWbnSense of Relief it Is to Kiaow that you have no corr.s. I inde reorns remove: them, and is comforting. 15:. at druggists. Your Ef'brts are in Vain trying to rena a ieSt strenthllil by the use ( tonies, nervini. ,o *;-ns of codiive: o-1. iron. etc. To-.et im -k i old-tine vigor. e bright eye. the jirn: .te,. t ambiti'.'h tira:tn:1m1muth tio1 pronoe :nutlri'ion1. i! stonaclh ne<!s Eth a i ,t :+ ti n:erful a i lyl " Tyn"is 1y'eplia Iitmn y s.Witll i'. i t inriicest,icnt on 1vodhe , i t .ii .,til rut_: a ncl health Nt aur%ir. For saie ny all (u =;. Pri" -O Tt. I' bottle. Mrs. Winslow'sSoothin, Syrup for ch:ildren 1eet.hir ,softens the::nm-, reduc- sin'".tnm-t tion. allays pain, cures wi:d Cl. . a bott.e Parker's Gin.er Tonic is Populan for good work. S;'cr:n-:, sleelte nereong womenf nd nothins., tig at. rvj :". For Whvopit i_. P.s ' r a successftl rmetv.---. P im nr ThroopAve., Bro*klyn, N. , Nov. 14. FITS stopped free by ?t: it.l:'s G.E.1r .ERv: }IF.STORER. No t. - ":r:t day's u-. Marvelous eures. Tac .ts an.d :' .t rial bot tle free. Dr. Xli', t r r . Phila.. Pa. If afflicted wit.h eyte -: Dr. . I <aac Thonl son's rve Wat-tr. Druc,tists sel at -Se per hottio feak nd Lngui "Or ioKthrieha wooig ouh .fte wh: h ligee alr;fomdy1 eatan thig ahornleshas s7oot and sligw. I gave her Hood's Sarsaparilia and she soon began to crave something to eat. She steadiily improved. and today is in full good health. Her flesh is solid. he cheeks rosy, appetite go:yd and her sleep) reireshing." Mias. M. A. Coots. Si Fuliton R., Peabody, Mass. Get only Hi'u.-s. Hood's Pihs tie.Al iM. , Them All, Dick an~d Harry's BuckwhEeat. THEN TRY Do TO AV(mDl TiS TTSE 00TETTERINE es n te fce crsd s . A , Grz: th,c:e,c . n LR T .p- Po->onfromiyrmon . ri n ort ALL. ilciiS- Senti s-. n. or c:i.h to J. Tr. S:'uptwe. HSmt~r ah, Gat., -or one bex. if yow dr .ggiit don't keep it. Charlotte, N. C. un- etOe. .L Eig.. HiDp 5 e:oM wor in1 'j-..iy whee ' :. - senid usy :: d--.'an'd w e wil! eI; i a-. d.ar tpo i: $3 'or er - : w :::asslwy t ::re: wre at .-iI D.T.MO CRG.tN.Muanage. Box .F. DETRoITTIC I1G'A. 819SAW Mill SALE' 1RO:N WORKS.SALEM . -U- --~. TWO LOVES. Two l ve. had I; a star of morning one" The other like the rising of the sun. Two love.?. to dreamsl The one made haste to ily: The other had a life that may not die. T wo h.opes, two aids. The one islost in light, The other still eludes my closest flight. I mourn for one benea.h th-s rustling tree Where haunt the quiet birds of memory; But rise and follow when the other ca" With sc"r .or o bstaics. contempt of fails. Perh%ps 'ii: well that I coul.l never gain The firt-tha: I pursue the last with nain. It mnia biLL one life was never rm'ant For fll a-'ii vement or c:m-iete content: It may . we:- are iau:tht by long pursuit. here is th-? : l ism. '7nlr there the frait. I Can"t tell: u:it rtiil the pang; remain; Two, lov. hal 1. cad foulowrad both in v.tin. -Arthur L. Salmon. THE LOST TRUNK. , O'ME, Courtney, en me yon ears ."; ' for half ar houi', _ or I am in a pickhle," exclaimed S l,Fred Sawyer to his friend. "Come up to my quarters, hare something to - \ 'Low you, and-no ' 1oking - I need ~your advice." ".f fy ou take it it will be for the first time," iaughed good-natured Cortcey. "Lead on, and don't lose any time in relieving this supne '*n not fond of rid dles, you :n o." "hy yestery I "'roppel into th 1 alroro:3 at alondon sttion. You k-o'w, they sell ofi the uncalled for tugga ,et ii'tcr;al.. and a sale ':as tsut 'oing on. A number of the boy; were ther, an-d we each como mteuce. Io tbid for a trunk. I selected rather a sm.1 un and-- Here we ar! Com~ riht in, and view the b' en oi y wd." Ne ld ti w:y iato plasat'ar_Rt m and :ointedi to ' smnli leather trunk wi oCo:i te niddle of the (roo-:n "O pn it. iL you want to," he said. "i"eu i oF the confounded thing. It',ul o. woman's stuf1, and what do Von suonose I can do with it9 I haven't an aunt or a cousin in the wide world." " t till you'r. mnrried, Fred. Te.-e cetn to be gee:l cloties," said Coiv:ey, p,;in!Z into the box, and uty garments with a half reve'rrt toneb, in spite of his laugh ing~ f'c*. "{umpoh ! The idea of such advice from NOul Why, old boy, I shall not marry fo : year*s-'tiae, anyway and I"m not goin to risk keeping th's th'ings here ond being taken for a lady burglar 3Is MIcGafrey would find them'u in spite of everything smell murder' in the air, and hunt aound for the skull bones. No, i'll aun the trank in the river; that's what 1i1 do." "PNhaw! Yo're too sensible for thet. Thecse things cost money-lots of it, I imaine--and youi paid some thiun- for thema in the barg-aim. Yen m t sel the.u to the secondhand No I've a bertta scheme than that. Wiiy r.ot go through the trunk sys tematicaliy,tin out the owner's name and adress- there are surely. le tters or smeth:ing--andi write to her, offer mng her the whole rhing for a reason ab]e sum?" "Do an act of charity, and yet turn an hones: ruen ny. Any one would kno.w 'ronare" 3 Sc'ch But I must go back t~o to store, a-- Here! you have all the time there is; suppose vou go through it for me? All I ask is that you wil keep~ Mrs. MicGaffrey out. i.re dieu! Andi o' he went. Courtney' utgingly locked the d'or ; but the smiles soon lef t his face as h'e proceeded with his task. He w-onderedl if the little battered trunk Lhad beenl lost in some of the dreadful attrophes he had r:ead of ; he im agined the owner killed and her body as well as luggage unidientified in the They were girlish things-dainty veils and ribbone, ginghams, silks and showy linenU. He lingered over a small, worn slipper, and ic!t a thrill akin to that awakened in Cinderella's prince. "No elew yet," he murmured. "Perhaps there are letters in this box." Its catch was bent, but he wrenched it open, and out flew-his own photo He sat d own plumtp in a box of lace and stare.1. On the other side were his 'iitals, and a date he had been t'ying for three years to forget, "Ne1l Buarr's t runk !" he oeaimed. "O0, myi little girl, what has hap 'ened to vont? May be some one-. N%o, here are your initials on thiis belt buckle, and your gloves were No. 6, and thus slipper would just fit your dear little f'oot." Th young man grew excited and rapturous~ over each article; presently he lfte~d a package of letters from one coner. "3Iy own-and they express the greatest happiness life ever brought me. They are like the leaves that flat ter down in the November rt.in. I wonder why she kept them. How many there are!" Unfastening the cord, he turned the letters over and found many of the envelopes scribbled upon by a iamiliar hand. There were items jotted down to be 1eembered in answering, and scraps of poetry which had not long since reached his eye, and been ever since cherished in his memory. Upon the last one-for they were all nu bred-was writiten in ink this giriih conf esion: "Al Courtney, I love you but wili never marry any one so in constant." Resting his head on the empty tray in silence, he exclaimed: "I was a fool-a consummate fool! -aui now, perhaps, she is da. Anoise outside aroused him, and in a bewildered: way he surveyed the gar mais~ stre'ed on evcry side, and az. orn ulhy at the beanuiful hat thre--- wMen: he La-1 run one foot and 1i6. >-x of laces L-: had uncon e u edt .or a cushion. Fred w,ild he con:: in a few inues.~t5 1e hceaan . actiug the things with ra:: ite, and, stowing the let Se if -: woces was lyino lazily on the couch reading the paper when his chum entered. "Well !" he cried, "what mystery did you unearth?" "No mystery at all," was the delib erate answer; "but ihe 'stuff,' as you call it. is worth something, and would be a regular golcl mine to a girl. I've a notion to buy it from you and pre sent it to my sisters. What will you take?" "Oh, come ! You're just;doing that to help me out. I know ycur benevo lent old heart. No, I'll follow your first advice, and hunt up the owner. It would be quite tomantic, and, be: side, you hint. I that I might make a shilling or twL is. You found her name and address there, didn't you?" "Yes," Al reluctantly answered; "I found her name and an address, but it is hardly likely you could find her after so many years. You know, they keep i:ggage a long time before it is sold." "i'.n not sure about that," said Fre3. "I've thought about it all the morning, and the idea grows on me. It will be rare fun to try, anyway. What did you sa the name tas?' "Brut no doubt this girl was l;illedl -luggage is seldom lost except by some such accident, and-and maybe he is an old woman." Fred laughed immodertely. "just as if that would make an act tf charity less meritorious. Old wo men (1 '- usually wear white lace !ats, t. .gh. You must have found something precious in there-jewelry, or someihing-which makes you anx ious to martyrize yourself. It's mine, however, and I am not as anxious 'to ,art with it is I was-not till I've looked through it, anyway. As be iurne: the key Al remembeied :hat his own p:hotogi'aph was lying in a Cuns,icuous box, and exclaimed "Wait until after inur, then; Im half tre "Pehap it roull be better," was the au;wer, and they passed out to When fairly tlownstairs Al said he had forgotten his handkerchieF, and ;'c back three steps at a time to get g the picture and placing it in an i:iside pocket, he said to him self: "Surely there' nothing else to give me away. But I must wheedle him out of the trunk." After dinner Fred "went through" the contan;s of the trunk, making boyish rema"irks concerning each arti dle as he tljrew it aside. Al inwardly winced at these remarks, and could scarcely restr.ain himself from kaock ing him over on the spot. "What mkes you so crusty?" queried Fred, suddenly, as one of his choicest jokes was met by a. gruf "J'm !" "There's no fun in you, and why you want this stuff beats me. Your sisters would turn up their noses at secoal1-hand clot.hing, if it is pretty. But it isn't worth fussing over, so take it along. No dlon.>L it would p)rove' a white elephant on my handIs sooner or later." Not until the trunk was safely in his room could Al breathe freely ; even then it was no easy matter to keep it out of his sisters' sight. They bioth made a pet and confidant of their one broter,M ad.sashon of dropping into his room at all hours to talU him of their schemes and woes. IHe had pushed the truk unier a mahogany table in the corner, the old-fashioned cover of which reache2 almost to the tioor. When he told the:n he was going away for a little business "trip," they beset him with q~uestions and petitions to be taken witii him, 1inally declar ing that they woul clean house while ne was gone, and "sort out his tras]." So behold him, in the deal of night, carrying the "white elephiant" up the narrow attic stairs bumuping his head on every rafter and getting cobweoe in his mustache. l{e coere.1 it with old clothing, pushe'l a big box in rront of it and then crep d ownstaiurs, feeling as guilty as it lhe hal beoen con ealing some crime. At b)reaLkfast the girls both talked at once about the burglar who tried to get in. and how they pounded on Al's door and could not even get an auswer. At noon he was off, and as the train whirled onward he becumo possessed with fears. She might not be at Hast ings; she might not care for him after these three years; she might even be married or dead. Arriving at his destination at last, he only stopped to leave his bag at an hotel, and walked rapidly to a familiar house in the suburbs. Ringing the bell, he inquired for Miss Burr in a matter-of-f act way, as if he had seen her the day before. He watched the girl's face as he spoke, andL saw no trace of surprise. She simply said: "Miss Burr may not be able to see you, but come in, and I will ask." Presently he was shown into a small, sunny roo~m, where, on a couch, lay the one girl ho had ever loved. He meant to explaia at once the cause of his foolish going and eager coming, all of which he had framed into frank. beautiful sentences; but somehow they forsook him, and he fell back on the commonplace. She received him with quiet words of welcome, and then "Pardon my position, but I am such an invalid that it is a trial to sit up.' "An invalid !" he echoed, faintly. "es" she answered. "Did you not hear of my accident scveral months ago? On coming home from a visit .1 stopped for a day or so in a London hote. The building caught fire a few hours af ter I entered it. The horror of the scene is so stimnped--branded would be a more appropriate word on my memory that I cannot bear tc talk of it. I lost ev-erything except the ulster which wa: wr-apped about ae and wouldl have lost my life but or the brave ireman who broke my fall. Oh, no, I am not seriously in ired" she continued, in answer to iis half-spoken question. "thoughJ hae been ill ever since. It was suc: a shock. von know." By deft questioning he succeeded iI mn'king her say: "Yes, I lost my trunk. It was lefi at the siation ([ expected to go on ir a day or twc), and the deposit checli was destroyedt with 'y pocketbook Raiay people are necessarily par; ionnr abou t "i-'t fyng luggage, anc jor two weeks I was too ill to even re me mber it. Besides, I bud only goni ora short outing, and it held nothing of muh value, except some keepsake ~iza wer der to~e. A deep flush stole over her fae at these words; he watched it for delicious moment, and then gathere her up in his arms, exclaiming: "I will bring them back, if you wi] pay the reward I want." Then-or rather, after he had tor tured her impatience mercilessly-hi told her of Fred's "bargain" bough: at auction. She begged for it, ccaxed pleaded, all in vain. He declared sh could only have the little leathe: trunk as a wedding present. And very happy wedding party it was, too -Tit-Bits. A REPULSIVE O;CUPAUi0_' PROFESSIONAL EXECUTIO KERS I] VARIOUS COUNTRIES. How the Legal Decrees Are Carrie Out in Cuba, Fraue, Spair China and Elsewhere. ROBABLY more legal execn tions occur in Cuba at pre: ent, according to the Ne1 York Herald, than in an; country in the world, but there ar no professional executioners in tha war-ridden island. Garroting in Cuba although under the requirements o Spanish law, is a very rar_ oceut tence. The circumstances must b very grave before a Cuban judge wil sentence a prisoner to deatih; not fron any sentiment, but from the fact tha powerful pressure is usually brough to bear by the friends of a condcmnei man uno n the judiciary. Genera Campos has firmly objected to the re vival of the garrote as a means of pun ishment for rebels caught under arms althourh a strong effort was uiade br Cuban tories to have the barbarou relic brought to use a~ain. The gar rote has been considered barbaron because of the horrible spectacle i makes of a victim dying under it grip. After the victim is secured it the chair, and the "cravat" place: around his neck-the cravat being th band which presses again,st his thro; -the executioner gives a saddcln hal turn to the garrote handle,and almos instantly a screw punctures the nec at the back and grinds into the verte brac, breaking the bone anl piercin; the marrow canal. For an instant th body of the victim shivers, tremble and stiffens, as if sufering intens agony. This lasts but an instant, fo death comes as soon as the screw ha broken his neck. There is no profeC sional garroter in Cube. That ofie is alvays performed by some al tach of the prison where the execution is ti take place. There is the usual Span ish aecnmpaniment of priests and pln toons of soldiers. At present most o the executions in Cuba, being of military character, are by the bullet and sometimes the poor markamanshi of the soldiers mikes the scene fa more painful than if the prisoner wer guillotined. There is probably no legitimuat trade followed by man more repalsiv and abhorrent to the average persoi than that of professional ~eeutioer No matter how jo> and lighn heatrte they may be, no matter ho w 1hey ma go to church and pray and m ingl with their neighbors, they anre alwvay re.ded as liviug bruntaed lives an e9ping in ta coigxuy ci he.adle ghosts. In this State, where condemue prisoners are executea by electricity the man who turns on the curren stands in another room and is public ly unknown. This makes thme lot c the executioner a :omparatively cas; one. In Scotland the duty of witnessin; executions is imposed on the civil magistracy, one of whom m?uteuds so this purpose. Since 1807 Edinburgi has had no regular executioner, bn depends one the L'ondion executionea who is hired io.c the oersion. For merly this personage was Willia-n Clcraft, It is related of Caleraf tahehimself, together witha hi father and brother, was imprisoned il the Tower and condemned to deatb Nobody could be found willing to car rv out the sentence. Finally Caleraf himsel offered to execute his fathe and brother, provided he was give: his freedom. The compact was mua:lE and the father 'and brother were dui: exeuted. Caleraft was then mad reular executioner and traveled al over England in the perforance o his duties. e never seemed to worr; over public opinion, but rather er joyed the notoriety he gained. 11 amassed a snug little fortune fro:n hi peculiar trade. Besides the usual fees of L1 pe month as a retainer, the E2nglish es ecutioner received E10) for every es ecution. In addition to this the Eng lish executioners from early time have claimed the clothes of the ex ecuted as a perquisite. So numerous were the public c., ecutions in England in fern: r time that almost every town and cont had an executioner as an acknowledge oficer of justice, with a salary. 0 many noteworthy occasions specia executioners were employed. Whe: Charles L. was put to deatht the execal tOiner concealed their faces undle visors, but this was trore in the wa' of precaution than of custom. Th ofice of executioner seems to hay been at one time hereditary in Eng land. This custom died out in time and the oflice was filled by appointl ment. Calcr aft was suceced ed by Mar wood who became quite as celebrated in hi. way as his predecessor. The last es peciai beadsman of the Tower of Lon don died in 1861. Latterly the oflie has been a mere snmine. Probatbly the most noted exeutione of France~was the~ late M.. Sanson, wh officiated at the deathi of Louis XVJ ihis latter years be was assisted b hi o.The French people do no seem to entert:un any particular avem sion f or executioners. There was notl ing' paLrticularly lugubrious abou ether M. Sanson or his sos. The mnled with the crowds at exec:itiot wth tne greated gool nature. Thim however, was before the~ d?.ys of th anarchists. Since the latter h-ve mot onolizedt the guillotine Frencm excer tins have lost many of the featuire tht made them so charteristic NwPaa fearstrickten cro;wds lres a'anst the barriiers tMt' as. k e mobs of merr.vmakers hu a r Ifills every min d. The scenes at theye necal ocu tions are in strangee onirs with we: es plae at the foot ot the guil( tine when a "passional" criminal is hurried into eternity amid the gibes of a French crowd. On the latter oc casions vice-bought elegauce and ab ject misery rub elbows in the struggle to catch a glimpse of the spot where the execution is to take place. In these executions M. Deibler, the present Paris executioner, is pre-eminent, and does his work with an easy good na ture that is fascinatinn. The ciice of executioner in Spain is not regarded with undue aversion by the masses. The execations are per formed with great ceremony, but are seldom in public. although souads of soldiery are .'mos_ invr:":y- dr:aw up aroand the gar<>oe. Tit,, :.(: i exc utioner h'l i f l ru r job than that of hi.s Fre ic bi) r. A simple twist of a screwand tl: oner's neck is uis!ceated b metal point that enters --t the jue tion of the spinal coi:nn. In Cambodia the pu?lic ex'.ct :onr does his work with the swor. chp - ping his victim wherever he ...-' please. Beheading is the StLyie iet - by China, while in Armenia tbe cj demned man kneels and has hi.; throat cut quietly and peaceably by the exs cutioner. This, however, i A ue death compared to that inflicted by f the executioners of Central India. In former times the condemned man wss forced to put his head on a biook, t 1where it was stepped on by an ele phant. t As for the domestic lives of public t executioners, they are probably as quiet and happy as those of most men. t At the same time the job is not one - calculated to excite envy. The gar rote is also employed in Sweden, Italy, Belgium and Norway.- New York Hlerald. r HIngenious Advertising. A citizen with a swollen jaw was hastening along one of the principal streets of the city, when a sign in front of a tall building caught his at t tention. It was as follows: f "Painless Extraction Of Teeth Free." He stopped long enough to note the number of the floor on which the business indicated by the sign was car ried on and then hurried inside and made his way to the dental parlors. s "Is this the place where you pull teet4 without pain free ?" he inquired. r "Yes, sir," said one of the painless extractors on duty. "Well, i've got a grinder that's been giving a good deal of trouble. I wish you'd yank it out." The sufferer took his place in the chair and opened his month. The operator, after applying to the swollen gum a pungent lotion of some sort, speedily relieved him of the offending molar. "Thanks," said the caller, climbing down and picking up his hat. "That will be fifty cents," remarked the dentist. 3 Fifty cents?" echoed the other. "I thought it was free. That's what ou told me a minute ago, and it's Swhat you say on y:me sign." "ust so. .Did it hurt you any? T"Yes, it hurt a little." 3 That's right. We do our p)ainles extracting free, exacily as we clai:n.I 1When it harts we charge for it. Fifty I Blindi Age Wedis Tmiih. Joseph King, a blind veteran or ih3 -Civil War, and a familiar figurc in the streets of quaint old Chelse:a, M'is., has caused a sensation by marrying young Miss Ada Swain, who has pilot ed his unknowing footsteps throu.zh the city for ten years. The bride -groom is sixty, the bride only nine teen years old. I E lverybody knows the strangely asv sociate'd couple, who always were ac compained in their walks by a small terrier, and who were presumed to be father and dlaughter. The girl has lived with the blind man ever since ishe was a chil-. She has developed into one of the handsomest young women in Chelsea. She is tali, cx ellen tly proportioned and has great, sparkling black eyes. She is always attired in the hecight of fashion. New York Press. f WOMAN'S ENEMY: Wen ft Does she is int a Wreck--Phy siians H-avo Lang Seen P'owerless --The Experience of a B3alt1 monra Woman. Fr.nm Ihu Hera'd. aThzImore. Md. Ir-. J. P. ?Ocove . a marriel laly with andchildren. .lives 417 Pinkney Place, Bltmoere. She would easily pass for a wman-n of hair her age. and owes her present state~ o. good health and probably her life to the ue of Dr. Williamns' Pink; Pills. A IIerald? rporter caflca at the hense a. few days ago, '~and was~ informed that 3Mr.. Grove had gone 1out for awalk and would soon be back. The seri be was- ushered into the parlor to await her arrival. The room gave every evidence of refinement and the care and attention of a good housewife. Choice bocks lay around rving proof of the intelligence of the family, and the walls were decorated with many rare articles of virtu and brie-a-brac from South America. Japan. and other countries. When 3r. Grove was~ announced theO reporter was astonihed to find her such a young looking andhealthy woman. She iswell educated.aod is at tluent talker and interesting to listen it She. however, declined at first to speaik of the re-its lhe~ ha-l experienced from taking th. Pink Pills as, she said, she did not like to have her name appear in print inanyway. "However." she added. after sonmc little h'est - tation. "the pills did me so much good that I might hve doing wrong hy not lettin:r some other suffer'r know what th.'v did for me. Then she said. "Dr. Willia-ns' Pink Pills are c ertinly~ all the proprietors represent them Sto be. iever hadl such relief from any o ler medicine. A short time ago I had an taec o peritonitis which left mne in such a notrti' and nervous eonditior. that I de r.ied of reovery. I could neither sleep, eat or iread with any degree of poe or sat ~a. on. and ire was absolutely a burden. Hviag hi-ard that others had been cured of t t'hn am troubles by Dr-. Williams' Pink Pills. I~ j er-red several boxes and began to taka hm. A.- if by magic I at once began to imrove. They cured me. and now I have no 'itomsof nervousness or of the disease hichbs'oprostrated me. Now that's e 'ough." d fra. (rove, in reply to anothe- ques - n h- n-alked to the door asligi vas a - vu:: 'irl an 1. with a plessut goe morti arr to the reporter. disappeare ' wit . the portals of her happy home witr- little andebil-l clinging to her skirts. D-. Wi llitns' Pink Pills contaia, in a eon d esd formi. all the elemaents necessary to nve new life and richness tO the blood and e.-'or -e vtter'ed nerves. Pink Pills are sold by '!! dealiers. or will be sent post paid on r ci price (50 cents a box, or six boxes r 22. 50-they are never sold in bulk or by l, h addressing Dr. Williams' MdedieinO .enay Snhnectadv. N. Y. Highest of all in Leavening Pc The Emperor's Surprise. The German Emperor is a master of little surprises quite other than those which occasionally fetch his troops ont of bsd in the m:ddle of the night when they least expect it. While at Low ther Castle he took the opportunity afforded by the absence of Lord Lons dale to unpack a very fine marble bust of himself and put it in position, screened by the leaves of a large palm. The sadden unveiling and presenta tion were quite dramatic in charac ter, and it need hardly be said that Lord Lonsdalo was highly delighted with the carefally planned compli ment. f:ng'.s' and 5pan7S1 u:e An Englishnian entering a drawing room expects the lady of the hoase to rise and greet him. In Spain a lady would seem to forfeit her selt-respect should she exhibit so much forwrzd. nas: The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KElN EDY'S Medical Discovery. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in onn of our eommon pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common p imple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never fai!cd except in [we cases (both thunder humor). He h:s now in his possession over two hurired certiti cates of its value. all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal eardl for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perf.ct c: ro is warranted when the right quantity P; taken. When the lungs are affeted it causes shooting pains, like ueedies rassing through them: the same with the Liver or Bowes. This is cause I by the ducts being stpdc.l.aud alway.s disa!pears in a wee:.: after taking it. le.ad the labeli. It the stomach is foul or bilious it will eau:se squea:ish feelings at first. No chang of diet ever necessary. Eat the iest you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one t:)Ilwspoonful in water at bed time. Sold by all Druggists. Echiol of !shorth1an~d Nnl te=t b)iOob ne~vd. Actua; br.-,ineSs fro:n day ol tcrig. Bu.in,s g.iper', colcag.+-curr,-ncy and $3 A YEAR. Presidential Yea. (d:.; a week one year for 5:1. No ij M . CHRO'NI"LE. 1t3-1& wa-i:nas. ca ier ':e '=.- -.. a fc parng polishir:. platini: and Si "-hing. no :ays, sr.al: in rai ~case. large for shops. .ecc rptiei dprices, te.Cim.-rini. r.arc free Ur 1 (o W'uDZ~orks, Dept 16, colnmbus, CI 09 $'S.T H SPEaZ~C.0 Timely . The great success o the house of Walt in 1780) has 1e< many misleadir . of their name, SBaker & Co. are ~ ~ facturers of pur Chocolates on tI * used in their mai - Consumers sh they get,the gent WALTER BAKE DORCifEf ) Exhaus are made to produce lar; use of Fertilizers rich ii S Write for our "Farmers' Gui is brim full of useful ir.formation.f will make and save you money:. GERMA: the fo< for resistIng disease-thin pe The food for all such men, E\tsToN. The hypophosi: w ill tone un the system, giv the appetite and help digest be a fattening and reddening, omfort and good-nature. Be .;-m p':a ge: ?:tt E:n:d.n 'abr~Ae tt & Icwne. NeW Yoi wer.-Latest U.S. Gov't Report . Baking .Powder t FELT URE Division of the Sf.es. One of the most rema'.:a ,e churchee is to be found at Freuienthai, in the Black Foresf. It is built on such a plan that the men are unable to see the women, and vice versa, for it is composed of two wings, which meet at an angle where the pulpit stands. The right wing is allotted to men and the left one to the women of the con ;regation.-Seiwabischer Merkur. To Cool the Hands. Roman ladies of rank had their slaves carry for them a number of amber and crystal bal!s about the size of a billiard ball. At fetes, or while seated at the giadiatorial games, they held the crystal balls in their hands for the coolness imparted by them. - NEVW DOQESTIC COFFEE BERRY. r ug to p mo:d eo- nuh over&th Unio Fet frewth.. C. E.. L ,y i e BETTERi RhAN A C A . It,ts y,,Ur Of l Co"_ccO at c: ti: 1 C?r :i. n .t nd L t htgh tirr stn:" c' t ?:. 'Tk! PO~0 - . t and ;ich tn2an de1 h. .I-iures\~ orS5outh in four rlt1S.h Put a"y t! o"(! r'' to t s'-- h sf Juue. 2wL 0 faerwe svia. ad cy, Prsases it. W h a d oe e nel' F eS v er~' 5 c I ~r:y as someer prfr"ic to store cor:'ce t.C-I.. ,c.op a year -. __-.. "..l ""rrf Ctt( t l p 1 I l ets,_O, fo- kn. I ue eD isi s k c- .r a es asb0t vieisf Ceisatsesnd.I heaute jthea ha er ake &Co.E u(esalsed!%c to t plcing on the ma.zirketI g hi an d usccruulousc imtation te ldes and gs manu-es s cotinnt Nto hemiicsre ufactures.' n ht C . (Simted,r TER,MAS. sP~1V erad4tte cmrops byi heer Pota h.De-e 'c e, a. 14 aae tated booki . I rotor Address, l'bCLIIt t e hi KA I WRKS 9-.; Nssu a Xtreet wt How , may toalse folk haverthe wi boutf o por. tobrngon tr vt rality; peolewhoswnggik a thenduoc late bretween V o thpactn on edawrk causcrupixloas' sickness >lael, ndvelesp,rseliaite women high-gilden Coos acndr' is combinedN weic theoi whi ctbrs wt tstegh ouldnt| and fo, an beta sureS Nt a t. A SoDugis. ocanS, -