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JULY 24, MttJ .2 £§ ' !■■■■ February 4, 1903. at Harper's ] Virginia,'as second-class \ wider All ef Congress Mareh 3d. 1879 met (^eO. W, GRftHfttt, THE ONLY AND ORIGINAL Beal jSstoEbte AgexLts AND ONLY ATTORNEY, at Harper’s Ferry. Weft Va. W. Wentzell, W*st Camp Hill, ■ Harper’s Ferry. ts catarrh. R»> « inflame* the Opposite Cavaliers Store, Bolivar. West. Viri Taking *n Inters. t(T take a§, interest in ioir.t like yt ifffhWfWr. Dodging the Question. “Is trade pretty good?” we asked the great merchant. “Weil,'’ he replied—a bit evasive ly, we thought—“the sitore is crowd ed every day with lady shoppers.”— Knows Its Value. both have fair appetites. In the asorning when we rise we take ah <S|Hy breakfast, tea and bread and butter; at noon, a hors d'eeuvre, meat, vegetables, dessert and coffee; at 5 o’clock, tea and cakes; at 8 o’clock, soup, fish, meat, vegetables, sweets and dessert. Food is veTy dear in France, first on account of the great number of middlemen wife intervene between the producer end purchaser, next because certain articles—coffee, sugar, etc.—are charged with very heavy duties. Feeding is the heaviest expense of bur household. It coats us $72 a month, divided as follows: Baker and pastry cook, $9; various meats, $20; fish, $6; groceries, $12; fruit and vegetables, $9; milk and cream; $8;, a quaff#* barrel of #f>6rdeaux wine {about seventy-five bottles), $8; two or three bottles of liqueurs, $8. To this mu> added $8 for the extra caR|^f^£inner thill friends, a|?a writer in the Atchi There remains then $53.60 her mopth. My wife takes $20 for her personal expenses—dressmaker, mil liner, shoemaker, etc. I keep the same for my tailor, bootmaker, shirt, maker, cigars, etc. With the. $13.60 which remains I take my wife to the theater once a month, I occasionally take a carriage drive with her or visit art exhibitions, and. I present her nOw and again with flowers, a piece “Of music or some other trifling own if he was ‘Erirheift; rks. He’d Hhoda good and was Justin, from the 'q be Frank, he looked Said he came to a river promised Mercy. tropical coup s' MgW tan, wool or at away the clothir pair of scissors, - pup away any f ' burned parts, surface aa quiekl pieces of linen or ] »mes is to get oil—or, better 1 some cdt ; wadding. Cat reftilly with a care not to Splifok'.to Cm rer the buriied is possibly with soared in oil. WhanTV Trees and lar times as boys, ttyirtr efgrowin^llndl aachlaetfy <*.} alway are bars of feat fries, where tt ■Ms | tne trees season or drought. They if most unfavorable doing their chooses thp hight see to work. horse “Would he ?” said the boy. “WeU, he’d hare to get in the cart first” A Surgical Operatiafc ' is always dangerous—do not submit to he surgeons knife until you have tried De Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve. It will jure when everything else fails—it has lone this in thousnndaof cases. Here i* me of them: I suffered with bleeding nid protruding piles for twenty years. Was treated by different specialists uad used many remedies, hut obtained so relief until I used DeWitt's Witoli Hazel Salve. Two boxes of this salve mred me eighteen, months ago and I rave not had a touch of the piles since. H. A. Tisdale, Sumwerton, S. C. For Blind, Bleediug, Itching and Protrn ling Piles no remedy equals DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. Sold by H. D. Wright Drug Store. W ■V Great Britain. The estate of the Dulfe ~Athol‘ *® disfi^JTed by an were inaccessible to climbers. Nas myth determined to make a bold bid for success with a cannon which was at hand. By his advice tin canisters were prepared and loaded with tree seeds. Fired from the cannon’s mouth, these novel shells burst against the face of the crag and scattered their fruitful contents 3s^-«Ra?s. Sts • No Pity Shown. “For years fate was afte ous'y wit*.’’. F./k.s Ala. ' “f fcafta terrii: sing 24 tumors. When all failed ] len’s Arnica Salve, Cured nw.” lv good for Burns and a!l jtoins. Only 26c at, H. JX Drug Store. Had flfty dollar, he would give for ma 1 can’t begin to tell how that swim Had tuckered me all out, and so I found A cool place by the bridge, and then a ; sound yell on my ears—a sound as fatal* and dim AS If a leaf had fluttered on a Umb. But, listening again,- I heard a whine, | And oh that bridge In an old flour sack With a, big chunk of Iron tied with twine found I|M blgoB"* I found piy pups—are, found the bloeee* And to this day. ftaougta **ve seartW everywhere ^ ^ • —Indien»polls flea Ufikee you ars a drag) have no idea of the value r« ed by a little shelf in the ] tion department Of a big dm It is one of the wonders world tljet drug stores do nish th§ same temptation t to knights of the chisel, i jar of hyoscoaaine is worth 240 the world over. Jaboi little liees, presumptuous as i it costs $1,500 a pounds to cause perspiration; crystals host the druggist th< sumof$5,G00apound. 1 A Min* of Red Oklahoma is still j known and unsuspected long ago a farmer I was boring for water \ at the depth of sixtee