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A HA1DA INDIAN Find the Chief or the Tribe. The home of the Haida Indians is Queen Charlotte islands off the the: coast of British Columbia to which they belong, though scattered members of the tribe are to be found in the southern portion of Alaska. They are supposed to have come originally from Asia, and have some characteristics that point to such an origin. They are ex perts at tattooing, and cover their entire bodies with quaint figures. Throughout their villages, and especially before the chief's home, may be found queer images called totem poles, which they worship. The tribe is rapidly decreasing in numbers, there being much less than 1,000 of them at the present time. AN EARLY GRIST MILL. Odd Contrivance In Illinois That Suf fered Thronith the Reckleas neia of a Racocon. Down in the city of Quincy the old jettlers tell the following story about one of the first if not the first mill for grinding corn produced in that local ity, relates a Chicago paper. The mill was the invention of a lo cal genius whose name has been for gotten, though the mill and its mechan ism are still remembered. The mill was constructed near the water's edge at the foot of a bluff from the face of which poured a spring of considerable volume. In proper proximity to this spring a heavy post with a natural fork at the top was set firmely in the ground, and balanced in this fork was a long and slender but very tough pole, probably a hickory sapling. As one end of the pole was suspended by raw hid a smooth bowlder of perhaps a hundred pounds weight and on tbe other end was constructed a box large enough to contain about 50 gallons of water. The affair resembled an old fashioned well sweep, and was so placed that the water of the spring fell into the box in a steady stream, thus depressing that end of the pole and elevating the end sustaining the bowdler. When the water in the box reached a certain height it was au tomatically discharged by means of a float and sliding door, thus taking the weight from that end of the pole. The bowlder, relieved of its counterpoise, fell by its own weight, and with great force, into a sort of mortar prepared for its reception on the ground below. This mortar was a section of a tree trunk hollowed to hold a bushel or so " of corn. The mill worked perfectly. The wa ter of the spring flowing steadily into the box elevated the bowlder. The wa ter released, the bowlder fell into the mortar, crushing the corn placed there, and the box filling again, raised the stone for another fall, and so the grinding, or rather crushing, went on. A bushel of corn placed In the mor tar at night would be found thorough ly ground in the morning, and the mill was never idle. One morning a "citizen went to the mill to remove his grist, placed in posi tion the night before. He found that some animal, probably a 'coon, had in vaded the mortar, doubtless attracted by the corn, and had become a part of the grist, and had been thoroughly ground and mixed with the meal. The story soon spread abroad and the mill became unpopular, as did Its product.' A Quincy man has never been able to disassociate in his mind the thought of ground corn and ground 'coon. So corn bread Is to this day unpopular In that city. .What a True Scholar la. The scholar in the true sense is the man' or woman for whom the schools have done .their best. The scholar knows some one thing thoroughly, and can carry his knowledge into action. With this, he must have such knowl edge of related subjects and of human life as will throw this special knowl edge into proper perspective. Any thing less than this is not scholarship. The man with knowledge and no per spective is a crank, a disturber of the peace, who needs a guardian to make his knowledge useful. The man who has common sense, but no special training, may be a fair citizen, but he can exert little influence that makes for progress. There may be a wisdom not of books, but it can be won by no easy process. To gain wis dom or skill, in school or out, Is edu cation. To do anything well requires special knowledge, And this is scholar . ship whether attained in the unlver- sity or In the school life. It is the man who knows that has the right' to speak. President David Starr Jordan, In Atlantic. White Ulackherrlca. ... By means of cross-breeding Mr. Lu ther Burbank, of Santa Rosa, Califor nia, has developed a variety of black berries which are perfectly white, and as bright as snow in the sunshine, and so transparent that the seeds can be seen Inside the ripe fruit. 1 The seeds are said to be unusually small, and the ber ries are as sweet and meltingly tender the finest of the black varieties. The familiar Lawson berry is described as the great-grandparent of the new white variety, to which has been given the name "Iceberg." The white berries are as large as the Lawtons. V BEING TATOOED. PRACTICAL MISSIONARIES. Severa of Sonla In Foreign Lnnda Mint Know Much of Ma terial Thlnea. Missionaries often find, it neces- sary, if not be masters of many trades, at least to have some knowl edge of the practical details of daily life. An instance of this kind is given by Mr. Cousins in his "Mad agascar of To-day." "Soon after the dismissal of Mr. Lyall, the British agent, the queen began to show uneasiness at the growing influence of foreign ideas, and wished to get rid of the mission aries. Messengers of the queen were sent to tell them that they had been a long time in the country, and it was now time for them to think of returning to-their own land. "The missionaries, alarmed at this message, answered that they had only begun to teach some of the ele ments of knowledge, and that very much remained to be imparted. They mentioned sundry branches of edu cation, among' which were the Greek and Hebrew languages, which had been already partially taught to some. The messengers returned to the queen, and soon came back with this answer: "The queen does not care much for Oreek and Hebrew. Can you teach something more useful? Can you, for instance, teach how to make soap?' "Tills was an awkward question to address to theologians, but after a moment's pause Mr. Cameron said, 'Give me a week to answer this ques tion.' "At the end of the week the queen's messenger again appeared, and Mr. Cameron was able to present to them a bar of tolerably good white soap, made entirely from ma terials found in the country. This was an excellent answer; and the manufacture of soap was forthwith introduced, and is still continued to the present day, although no one would now venture to call the soap white. "As a result of the making of this bar of soap the mission gained a res pite of five years." An Ancient Canal. Between Bagdad and the Persian gulf, about 500 miles along the Tigris, is a desert in which Sir William Wlllcocks finds the same engineering opportunities that are being improved in Egypt. As late as 970, A. D this land of Chaldea was made one of the most fertile and prosperous centers of agriculture, through a great irrigation system, with a main canal 250 miles long and an Im mense number of subsidiary canals. For the first ten miles the great canal, with a width of 65 feet, was cut through hard conglomerate rock, to a depth of 50 feet. With neglect of the works,- the main stream of the Tigris became diverted, the old bed of the river silted up, the ir rigation Bystem fell Into ruins, and only mounds on the barren plain mark the sites of the ancient villages. To reclaim nearly 3,000,000 acres by a new irrigation system is Sir William's hope'. London News. C C C C. "Here's Mrs. Cadleigh's name in the society column. It says: 'Mrs. Charles C. C. Cadleigh will summer at' " -. "For goodness' sake! Where did she get the two middle initials?" "Oh! haven't you heard? She Just stuck them in so that her monogram would represent the 'Four Hundred!'" Philadelphia Ledger. The New Watch. Youngman I got this watch on my birthday. Sharp So you had a birthday this week? "Yes; but how did you know it was only this week?" "I notice you still keep the watch In the chamois case that came with It" Philadelphia Ledger. No Longer a Wonder. The Brooklyn bridge has lost Its place as one of the wonders of theworld since the building of the WilliamsDurg steel bridge, a mile further tip the East river, and the bridge now building to Blackwell's iBland will be more wonder ful than either. How France Octa Her Corn. The average annual importations ot foreign oqrn Into France for the past three years were 14,000,000 bushels, of which the Argentine republic furnished an annual average of 4,250,000 bushels, Raumania 3,000,000 and the United States 2,800.000 bushaln HOW TO WEED ONIONS. Valeaa One Haa the Rlatht Sort at Toola.lt la a Taak That Triea One' Patience. "Working onions" is a little harder than talking about it. I found It dif ficult to find the tools needed, or rather I needed in this section. All hoes had too wide handles, too short and not of proper shape, onions being two to six inches apart. I made what I needed from an old hinge, cut and bent round, as at (a), sharpened from inside and nailed on suitable handle. Another was wad' from a narrow plow fitted on an ONION WEEDING HOES. old handle, curved and sharpened from Inside also; it is shown at (b). A third was made from an old hoe (c), cut two Inches wide. All these were kept sharpened by fil ing. They are not for deep or rough hoeing. They are used more as scrapes, to be drawn gently across rows. They cut grass and weeds and break the crust. Without these simple tools I do not see how I could have cleaned my crop out, as our little winter weeds set close to the ground were the great est trouble.. Have plowed and hoed three times and feel with one more thorough working my crop will be made. J. J. Carmlchael, in Farm and Home. THE LADY-BUG FAMILY. It Membera Are the Fruit Growers' Beat Frlenda and Shonld Never Be Deatroyed. With their little red wrappers deco rated with black polka-dots, the various members of the lady-bug family are gay and attractive members of the inBecl world. They are always man's friend, and get most of their living by preying on the destructive soft-bodied plant lice, the most common of which is the green aphis, which can commonly be found on house plants and rose bushes. The most striking example of the usefulness of the lady-bug to the horticulturists is seen in the case of Vedalia cardinalis, the bug which was Imported from Australia and which saved (he citrus trees of Ci!!fc:".:ia ty destroying the cottony-cushioned scal6 which was devastating the orange and lemon groves. In the study of the grain aphis it was found that a species of lady-bug preyed upon this pest. The former were observed to go down among the roots of the grain in the field in search of the aphides, and to pass the winter along with them in that situa tion. , The larvae of the lady-bug also live principally upon insects which are destructive to garden and field crops. The dainty lady-bug should never b destroyed. Scientific American. P0TAT0MAT0 PLANT. It Beara Tomatoea Above and Pot. toea Below and la a Triumph of Grafting- Art. An anomaly in grafting, being a plant Which is growing first-class potatoes at the roots and bearing fully developed tomatoes at the stalk, was brought about by Prof. Green, of the Minnesota state school of agriculture, when he cut off the young shoots of a potato vine, making a V-shaped slit in the top, into which he inserted a freshly clipped young tomato plant, bound the joint with straw and supported it by long rods. Nature did the rest. The tomato drew sustenance from the earth through the roots of the potato, and in return furnished what was re quired In the way of the action of light and air upon its own leaves to its adopt ed roots. The plant is now three months old. On pushing aside the earth several fair ly developed potatoes are shown, each a trifle larger than a large hen's egg. From the vines a half-dozen tomatoes are hanging, in different stages of ma turity. Several have ripened and the others promise to do so, as well. The tomato vine loses its identity at the place where the graft was made. There are no leaves at all suggestive of the potato. The vine is fully three feet high. N. Y. Herald. Sewaa-e on the Farm. Because a farmer has all outdoors, tht disposal of sewage on the farm is usu ally a neglected subject. While the pio neer had no need to take thought on this matter, it is a question whose im portance Increases in direct proportion to the growth of population. Very prlmi tive methods are still in vogue in coun try and town, and the time will come when the present custom of turning of disease-reeking sewage into wa'te? courses will be looked upon as both criminal and suicidal'. For the present every farmer should make that provi sion for house and stable sewage which seems safe and economical. The farmer who always sees wealth on waste prod ucts will endeavor to utilize sewage as far as possible for fertilizing purposes. Rural World. Learn to Balance Ratlona. A cow's milk flow depends upon hei digestion and general physical condition as much as upon a correctly balanced ration or . its succuiency. There are somo rations well balanced having about one part of digestible protein to five and one-half parts of carbohydrates which are not easily digested; there are also succulent rations soft grass Is one of them whose digestive effects, when fed suddenly and exclusively, are not the best. Feed the cows dry food, the most appetizing on hand, for at leant the first ten days of fresh pasturing. A light feedlngi of concentrates through all the best grass season will not in thf end be unprofitable; for it helps keep tli! animals in fine condition. Farmer' 'ol :e . " - I'tllltarlaa Enterprise. Passenger (on southern railroad) Hellol The train seems to he going fester. Conductor Yes: a cow got on the track. "Why does that make the train go faster?" "Oh, they've hitched her to the en fine. But wait till the brakeman be gins to use his whip a little and then see how we iro!" N. Y. Journal. A Snre Tekt. Lady I Louglil these diamonds hert last week for 50. What will you take them buck for? Jeweler I'll give you 25 for them. "Thanks. That's all I wanted toknow. If a jeweler offers to pay back half as much as diamonds cost, that is a sure test that they are genuine." Tit-Bits. Molecules In Gna. It has been calculated that the num ber of molecules in a cubic inch of any gas is 100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000, and in each of these molecules there are several atoms moving among them selves at the rate of TO miles a minute. Cincinnati Enquirer. Klondike Currency Statistics. "What is the circulation per capita up in this part of the country," asked a new arrival of a Klondike official. "Well, sir, the latest statistics, com piled this morning, after breakfast, in dicates two quarts of benns and eight crackers to each Inhabitant." Pnck. Easter Egar for the Pope. Last year the pope received an Eactei egg. The shell is made of ivory, its lining is of white satin and the yolk is a golden case containing a large ruby set in diamonds. The whole is worth upward of $10.000. Chicago Chronicle. Uncontrollable Clrcomatancea. She Mr. Brown does not pay his wife much attention. He No; the only time I ever knew ol his going out with her was once when the gas exploded. Pick Me Up. The Bicycle In Mexico. Bicycle racing, is said to be supplant ing bull fighting in Mexico. Tbe newel pastime is looked upon with almost ai much favor as the ancient one importec from Spain. Every Where. Very Striking. Tourist You have some strikinj scenery around here. A Good Story. Frederika, la., July 13th. -Mr. A. 8. Grover, of this place, tells iin interesting story showing how sick people may regain their health if they will only be guided by Uie experience ot others, lie says: "I had a very bad case of Kidney Trouble, which affected my urinary organs so that I had to get up every hour of the night. 1 could not retain my urine and my feet and limbs begin to bloat up. My weight was quickly running down. i "After 1 had tried many things in vain, I began to use Dodd's Kidney Pills, a med icine which had cured some other very bad cases. "This remedy has done wonders for me. I, have gained eight pounds in two months. The bloat has all gone from my feet and legs, and 1 don't have to get up at night. 1 took in all about ten boxes before i was all sound." Those who suffer as did Mr. Grover can make no mistake in taking Dodd's Kidney Pills, for they are a sure, safe and perma nent cure for all Kidney and urinary dis orders. Where Hla Aft Wai Needed. Mesmerist's Wife Carlos! Mesmerist Well, dear? , "I wish you would come here and tell baby he is asleep." London Answers. "Her First Bun" is the title of a little booklet issued bv the Chicago & Alton Railway. It is reprinted from the Chicago Record-Herald, and tells of the running of the Alton Limited 100 miles, by a young lady. The story isattract vely told, and is illustrated. Copies may be obtained by sending four cents in stamps to Geo. J. Charlton, G. P. A., Chicago. She "My parrot .ays some awfully clever things." He "And who taught it to talk?" She "Oh, 1 did." London Tit-Bits. Shake Into Your Shoes Allen's Foot-Ease. It cures painful, swollen, smarting, sweating feet. Makes new shoes easy. Sold by all Druggists and Shoe Stores. Don't accept any substitute. Sample FREE. Address A. S. -Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. The scientists have discovered that lazi ness is a disease, but they will never find out how lazy people can be induced to take anything for it Chicago Record-Herald. Chicago, St. Paul-Minneapolis, four daily trains via the Chicago & North-Western Ry. Trial plus toil equals triumph. Kim's Horn. Iowa Farnia 4 Per Acre Cash, bal. ) crop till paid. Mulhnll, Sioux City, la. Time is the capital of the intellectual man. Chicago Daily News. Opium and Liquor Habits Cared. Book tree. B. M.Wooliey, M. D., Atlanta.Ga. He that committeth no eril hath nothing to fear. Hindoo Proverb. The Four Track News for July, be9tyet. Sold f newsdealers. Five cents a copy. Never trust, the man who will not trust another.. -Kama Horn. THE MARKETS. New York, July 14. CATTLE Native Steers.... 4 65 sti 5 32H COTTON Middling 12ft FLOUR Winter Wheat.... 3 75 U 4 30 WHEAT No. 2 Red 8 87 CORN-No. 2 67((f 5sVa OATS No. 2 0 PORK Mess (new) 17 00 17 60 ST. LOUIS. COTTON-Mltldling 12Vi BEEVES-Steers 4 00 g 5 60 Cows and Heifers. 2 25 (g 4 90 CALVES-lper ltw lbs) 4 60 6 50 HOGS Knir to Choice...... 5 25 Co; 6 80 BHEEP Fair to Choice.... 3 25 (g 4 00 FLOUR Patents 3 85 g, 4 00 Other Grades 3 25 t( 3 80 WHEAT No. 2 Red 81 t Sift CORN No. 2 '.WV 60 OATS No. 2 38 U 40 RYE No. 2 if 50V4 WOOL Tub Washed Ill 20 Other Grades 12 i' 20V4 HAY Clear Timothy 11 00 16 00 BUTTER-Cholce Dairy.... 13 (v 174 BACON-Clear Kib i 9 EGGs Fresh ....i i 11 (a 1214 LARD Choice Steam Vii PORK StundardMesa(new) .... 15 10 CHICAGO. CATTLE Native Steers.... 4 60 6 40 HOGS Fair to Choice 5 25 6 66 SHEEP Fair to Choice.... U 4 00 FLUUR Winter Patents... 3 76 3 90 Spring Patents... 4 00 4 60 WHEAT No. 3 Spring 75 78 No. 2 Red 79 80 CORN-No. 2 Sji 51 OATS No. 2 .. C ) PORK-Mess. 14 60 14 60 KANSAS CITY. CATTLE Native Steers..., 4 60 6 05 HOGS Fair to Choice 6 26 6 60 WHEAT No. 2 Red 72 73 CORN No. 2 Mixed 49 49H OATS-No. 2 White 38 39 NEW ORLEANS. FLOUR High Grades 3 75 4 55 COttN-No. 2 t 8 63 OATS-No. 2 66 C(D 67 HAY Choice 23 00 24 00 PORK Standard Mess 18 00 18 50 BACON Short Rib Sides... 10,; 10 COTTON Middling 12 LOUISVILLE, WHEAT No. 2 Red 78 80 CORN-No. 2 52i 63ti OATS-No. 2..... MWa 41 BACON-Short Ribs.... 10140 WA UOTXON-MlddUng t 12 Ao Chaaee for Thrai. A oumber of rapitalifcts sent a man down to a lit i le town to repurt un the uv ina bility of introducing ga there. "Weil, queried one ot theiu, "what do you think of it?" "No ue." responded iheagent. "Wouldn't pay the Hilary of the rupt-rintendent. let alone the expenpg of putting in the plant." "Why? What the matter?" Citizen too poor?" . "So; they're rich enough." "Old-Uihioned? Prefer kerosene or candle-?" "Xo-o; that not it." ''Well, what is the matter, then?" "To inanv eneaeed couples. Wouldn't burn gas at all." Itiooklyn Kagle. Supreme Court Suatalna the Foot Enae Trade-Mark. Buffalo, K. Y. Justice Laughlin, in Su preme Court, has granted a permanent in junction, wnn costs, against Paul B. Hudson and others, of New York City, restraining them from making or selling a foot powder which the court declares is an imitation and: infringement on "Foot-Ease," now so large ly advertised and sold over the country. The owner of the trade-mark, "Foot-Ease," is Allen 8. Olmsted, of Le Roy, X. Y., and the decision iu this euit upholds his trade mark and renders all parties liable who farudulently attempt to profit by the ex tensive "root-Ease" advertising. Similar suits will be brought against others who are now infringing on the Foot-Ease trade-mark rights. . Worth Something-. The new metal, radium, is said to be worth $3,000,000 a pound. Don't neglect to save up your scraps of radium. Chi cago Record-Herald. The Adirondack Mountain. The lakes and streams in the Adirondack Mountains are full of fish; t.ie woods are inviting, the air is filled with health, and the nights are cool and restful., If you visit this region once, you will go there again. An answer to almost any question in regard to the Adirondacks will be found in No. 20 of the "Four-Track Series " "The Adirondacks and How to Reach Them;" sent frea on receipt of a 2-cent stamp, by George H. Daniels, General Passenger Agent, Grand Central Station, New York. Tired- Tommy "Didn't youse belong to de Woodworkers' unions when youse was a workin'?" Resting Rastus "Nah I be longed to de Wouldn'tworkers union." Baltimore American. Stop the Cofierh and works off the cold. Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Price 25 cents "If you refuse me, I shall commit sui cide." "Well, pa says you can't hang around here." N. Y. Sun. Do not believe Piso's Cure tor Consump tion has an equal for cougns and colds. J. F. Boyer, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, 1900. What's the use of having trouble, when there are so many people anxious to bur row it? N. Y. Telegraph. NERVE WORN KIDNEYS. Boan's Kidney Pills make freedom from kid ney trouble possible. They carry a kind of medication to the kid neys that brings a bright ray of hope to desperate cases. Aching backs are eased. Hip, back, and loin pains overcome Swelling of the limbs and drop By signs vanish. Lock IIaven, Pa. Mrs. L. W. Ammumen writes: 14 A few weeks a?o I sent for a trial box of Doan's Kidney Pills for myself, and they did alt they are said to do. My husband was kicked last fall 'whs? I Yiilim'",m"' R'" VMCl SO NAME.. P. O STATE For free trial box, mail this coupon to Foatt-r-Millmrn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. If above spaco in insufficient, write address on eepa rate slip. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of 5m PaoSlmllo Wrapper Dalow. I Try nail wad aa eaay to take oa anjpos. FOR HEADACHE, FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION . oaifumia Muwmvt upmatuwc. tjSrtj I Purely TegrtMe.fewg juamnj wiiiiiiiiii.il CURE SICK HEADACHE. tvfeathep if Is no hindrance to the SAWYER'S EXCELSIOR BRAND POMMEL SLICKERS Han or saddle can not get wet. EXCELSIOR BRAND OILED CLOTHING For all kinds of wort. Warranted Waterproof , Look for trade-mark. it not at dealers write 8. . Sawyer Horn, SoltMf rt, Kaat tfemtorMi. Haw. If you suffer from Epilepsy, Fits, Falling Sick Best, St Vlius's Dance, or Vertigo, havechlldreo. relatives, friends or neighbors that do so, or snow people that are afflicted, my Nev Treatment will Immediately relieve and PERMANENTLY CURB Ihem, and all you are asked to do Is to send for my FREE TREATMENT snd try It It has CURED thousands where everything else felled. Will be sent la plain package absolutely free, express prepaid. My Illustrated Book. "Epilepsy Explained," FREE by mall. Please give asms, AGE and full address. All correspoadence, professionally confidential. W. H. MAT, M. D., 04 Pine Streets New York City. 909 Locust St., ST. LOUIS. I Opens Its Fa'l Term and 22nd year Sept. . f urnisnes a tnorouirri preparation tor ous- Iinuss, and secures positions fur graduates. SO-p&SecnUloguo giving lull Information m.ilodfr... 'S, JEWELRY, i DIAMONDS. SILVERWARE. . Mtnndhril fiooda. Lowe.1 Prices. hM Orders Filled, rstsloiue FREE. OSS Locust Street, kit. JLeuls, Mo. CARTER'S EITTLE SUFFERING WOMEN A MERICA is the A nervous women. The (treat majority of nervous women are so because are suffering from some form male disease. Mrs. Emma Mitchell, 620 Louisiana street, Indianapolis, Ind., writes: " Peruna has certainly been a bless ing in disguise to me, for when I first began taking it for troubles peculiar to the sex and a generally worn out sys tem, I had little faith. "For the past five years I have rarely been without pain, but Pe runa has changed all this, and In a very short time. I think I had only taken two bottles before I began to recuperate very quickly, and seven bottles made me well. I do not have headache or back ache any more, and have some In terest In life. I give all credit where It Is due, and that Is to Pe runa." Emma Mitchell. By far the greatest number of female troubles are caused directly by catarrh. They are ca tarrh of the organ which is affected. These women despair of re covery. Female trouble is so common, by a horse and badly hurt his hip was fractured and after he recovered he was in such misery that he could hardly walk, and to stoop caused him such distress that he thought he would have to quit work also, it affected ". CUTS. his bladder, and he was un able to make his water wito- out so much distress. I in-1 sisted on his getting a box of your pills and trying them. so I went to Mason's Drug Store and got a box. The first box helped him so muck that I got the second and also the third, and now be is en tirely well." Mrs. L. W. Ah mum ex, Lock Haven, Pa, WHAT'S WRONG? Are you sick ? Do you feel under the weather? Suffer from shooting or aching pains? Consumption. If so your blood and nerves are probably in need of some special vitalizing food, like Dzomulsion !ullJiWL'':l'A-fiJllt Ozomulsion is a vitalizing and purifying blood and nerve food, which prevents and scientifically, certainly and safely drives disease out of the human system. It is not merely a food. It is not only a medicine. It is a pleasant emulsion combin ing the health properties of both. Cures Consumption and all Lung Troubles. For sale everywhere in large bottles, Weighing Over Two Pounds. TRY IT FREE! Free samples will be sent toeveryone who will send their complete address by letter or postal card) to Ozomulsion Food Co 98 Pine Street, New York AMMUNITION Is extensively used everywhere in the world wherever the muj:le loader has given way to the breech loader. It Is made in the largest and best equipped cartridge factory in exis tence. This accounts for the uniformity of its products. Tell your dealer " U. M. C" when be asks i " What kind 7" Catalog free. The Union Metallio Cartridge Co. BRIDGEPORT. CONN. Agency, 319 Broadway. !. York CitFt N. V, BHADERS OF THIS PAl'En BKSIKINU TO BUT ANYTHING AilvBRTlSKD IN ITS COLuMNS SllOUM) INSIST UPON HAVING WHAT Til KY ASK FOR, URKIISTNO ' ALL SUIWTITUTBS OR IMITATIONS. ' TcenVoSt ELECTROTYPES In (rrecit Tarlety for ala at the )owrt prlcon by A. H, KellotR 2tupapr Co., 824 ttKlaul HI., BU Unit, of fe- I ... 7 . Tired, Nervous, Aching, Trembling, Sleepless, Bloods less Pe-ru-na Renovates, Regulates, Restores Man) Prominent Women Endorse Pe-ru-na. of i?rmmrmm$ so prevalent, that they accept it as al most inevitable. The greatest obstacle in the way of recovery is that they do not understand that it is catarrh which is the source of their illness. In female complaint, ninety-nine cases out of one hundred are nothing but catarrh. Pe runa cures catarrh wherever located. Chronic invalids who have languished for years on sick beds with some form of female disease begin to improve at once after beginning Dr. Hartman's treatment. Among the many prominent women wfco recommend Peruna are: Belva Lockwood, of Washington, D. C; Mrs. Col. Hamilton, of Columbus, Ohio; Mrs. F. E. Warren, wife of U. S. Senator Warren, of Wyoming. If you do not derive promptand satis factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give' you his valuable ad vice gratis. Address Dr. ITartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. HAIR GROWTH Promoted by Shampoos of Cuticura Soap And Dressings of Cuticura the Great Skin Cure Purest, Sweetest, Most Effective Remedies for Skin, Scalp and Hair. This treatment at once stops falling hair, removes crusts, scales and dan druff, destroys hair parasites, soothes Irritated, itching surfaces, stimulates the hair follicles, loosens the scalp skin, supplies the roots with energy and nourishment, and makes the hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy scalp when all else falls. Millions of women now rely on Cuti cura Soap assisted by Cuticura Oint ment, the great skin cure.for preserving, purifying and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening and soothing red, rough and sore hands, for baby rashes, ltchlngs and cha&ngs, for annoying Irritations, or too frve or offensive perspiration, for ulcerative weaknesses, and many sanative, anti septic purposes which readily suggest themselves, as well as for all the pur poses of the toilet and nursery. Cuticura remedies are the standard skin cures and humour remedies of the world. Bathe the affected parts with hot water and Cuticura Soap, to cleanse the surface of crusts and scales and soften the thickened cuticle. Dry, without hard rubbing, and apply Cuticura Oint ment freely, to allay itching, Irritation and Inflammation, and soothe and heal, and, lastly, In the severer forms, take Cuticura Resolvent, to cool and cleanse the blood. A single set Is often suffi cient to cure the most tortn'Ing, dis figuring skin, scalp and blood humours, from pimples to scrofula, from infancy to age, when all else fails. SoldthrouKhoutthewnrld. Cutleun RcolTrat. S0o fin form ol Chocol.te Coat.d P1JU.2.V:. per Tlal of flni.Oint Rivnt, oc., Po.p. n.pol.1 London. 2T fhirttrhnuia Bq. t P.rl.. SKu. dela Paiz I RnMnn, 1.17 Coluuibui ATS. Irotltr Drug I'hfm. Corp . Sol Prop, aw Sand lor "Bow to Cur. ti.rj Humour.'' Travel on the Two new sleeping car lines, via Big Four ROUTE from Chicago to Dayton Springfield Columbus from St. Louis to Dayton Springfield Columbus For (nil information anfl particulars, call on ARcnta " Ills Four Route," or aUdreu the uudcnlgnt'd. WARRtN J. IYNCH, W.P. DTPPt, aen'lPasa.fcTketAgt. A sat. a. P. AT. A. Cincinnati, o. A. N. K.-li 1978 WHIN WHITIXO TO AIVVF.HTiSKBS, pleuoe alnte Ihut yuu w thtt Advvrllaa ment In thla puper. l.llhtS WHtUI- all list (AIIS. I Boat toiitfll Syrup. TuhUsb Uuud. CM I in time. Nolfl ur drufrulnts. J