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Her Purse and His Handkerchief. "Thb thoughts of youth are long. long Tioughts." The other day a young woman who had dropoued her purse, full <' pay money for the corps of glrls :nder her charge. considered the thoughts of youth to be rather too "Ion,. She was in one of the large depart ment stores, and as her hands were occup d she let her purse lie for a few r >menzs where it had fallen. But her e:. was on it. In the meantime a brigh' little fellow not more than nine or ten years old left his parents near by ar.1 deftly covered the purse with a han- kerchief. The woman. who is a perfectly self posse- ed young person. could hardly believ her eyes. but she waited to see what .he boy would do. Just as he was sooping to his prize she placed her fo yt quietly upon it. The young ster sUpped back without a word to the vl dressed "respectable" people with whom he was. Then the woman picked up her purse and. taking the hand:erchief over to the lad, handed it :o him, saying, "There is no reason why you should lose your handkerchief just because you didn't get my pursel"-New York Post. Too Good to Miss. "Theater audiences have improved In recent- years." said a manager. "Why. with provincial touring compa nies in the past maltreatment was reg ularly expected. In fact, the compa nies nrofited by it in more ways than one. "I know of a company that was playi-ig 'The Broken Vow' in Paint Rock. a one night stand. The audience didn't like 'The Broken Vow,' an:1 eggs. cabbages and potatoes rained up on th - stage. "Si -i the play went on. The hero rave" througb his endless speeches. dod; na an onion or a baseball every othe minute and pretty sore from thos- missiles that he hadn't been able to do ,e. "B-r finally a gallery auditor in a paro- ysm of rage and scorn hurled a heav- boot. and the actor, thoroughly alarr ed. started to retreat. " 4 eep- on playing, you fool,' hissed the aanager from the wings as he hool- 1 in the boot with an umbrella. 'Nee, on till we get the other one.'" H ow a Tree Grows. Bo Ii earth and air are required for the ---owth of a plant or tree. The root' absorb moisture from the soil, whk . in the form of a watery fluid calle common sap. rises through the fiber- of the last deposited annular ring -raversing all the branches and leaf -alks until It reaches the leaves; there it undergoes a change by the abso: 'tion of carbonic acid from the air. 't then travels downward again in t!. form of proper sap, just under neat' the bark, which is expanded by the : cession of moisture and In the cavit so formed a new layer of ma teria: is deposited which gradually hard as and forms a new annular ring., And so, from absorbing the mois :,re and minerals of the soil and the (,rbonic acid of the air the tree goes in until it finishes its cycle and dies. New York American. .Jack Tar at a Christening. A ilor went up to the font to have his I by baptized. Sailors as a class clain little stock In babies, and natu rally -nough this one presented the in fant -et foremost. "Ti other way," said the minister, and : r~ordingly Jack turned the infant upsit down "E: use me," said the clergyman, "I meaL- the other way," So back came the e *bryo foretopman to the first po sitiot .to the discouragement of every body "W: id it, Jack," said the nautical assisl at, and with an "kye, aye, sir," Jack rcomptly turned the baby end for end, and it was duly christened head first. - "On a Man-of-war." The Alternative. Th Count-Doctor, I have such a feart- ly bad cough. What can I do for i'' Doctor-Well, sir, you must re mem 3r that you are no longer in your first youth and you must take care 'f your general health. So you had -etter leave off smoking; take no aleol -1 in any form and do not excite your elf in any way; do not- The Con: -The mischief, doctor; what am I tc do then? Nothing but cough? Lustige Blatter. -The Virginia Plover. The. most wonderful bird flight noted Is the migratory achievement of the Vih-pta plover, which leaves Its hau:-s in North America and, taking a eu -rse down the Atlantic, reaches the <-nast of Brazil in one unbroken fligL' of fifteen hours, covering a dis tanc- of over 3,000 miles at the rate of f',:ar miles a minute. Condensed. "Hl 're is an article on 'How to Live a B. :tdred Years.'" "'- . and the whole subject can be cont ased into two words." "I :at are they?" "':on't die.'" - Cleveland Plain Deal r'. Not the Music He Loved. Mrs. Talkamore-Your husband is a grey lover of music, isn't he? Mrs. Cha;. 'rs-Yes, indeed. I have seen him get :' in the middle of the night and try t:compose. Mrs. T.-What? Mrs. C.-T? ne baby.-Stray Stories. Well Named. "Ti s Is the parlor, eh?" tentatively rema -ked the real estate agent, who was tooking over the house. "Yses," replied the old man Kidder, "but I usually call it the courtroom. I've -:)t seven daughters, you know." If Tou make money your god, 'twlU plagi you like a devil.-Felding. If a have catarrh rid yourself of this ",aulsive disease. Ask Dr Shoop of R Aine. Wis., to mail you free, a trial box C: his Dr. Shoop's Catarrh Re medy. A si.eple. sindle test will surely tell you : eatarrh truth well worth i our knn . Write today. Don't sulger longt -. W. E. Brown ~& Co. 7~I 3. Two Failures. "I r'arried for beauty alone," said a prest tably happy benedict to an old chuu. "And yet you remind me of a ?riend of mine who married for mon ey." ~- s the rejoinder. "IHow's that?" "-He d :dn't get it," said the chum sar eastic:.lly. Sarcastic. His Wife-You have bee2n drinking again. Haven't you, now? 1Her Hus band-M'dear. I cannot tell a lie His -'ife-You can't: Then you are !urth- gone than I thought:-Illus trate: Bits. A p"asimist Is a man who won't take the c"' remaining seat in the car for fear a woman will get on at the next eorne--Dl__Ti 1 es.e He Saw the Game. The office boy had buried countless gandmothers, brothers, sisters, aunts and co-isins. but he felt an enthusiasm for the baseball game that day which would not be dovned. Suddenly an idea struck him. Ap proaching the easy boss with an air of familiarity which had been nurtur ed by long usage he asked: "May I leave at noon today, sir?" "And why, my boy?" "There is a fancy fair at our church and mother wants me to go this after noon. She was so anxious that she bought me a ticket which cost a dol Isr. as she was sure you would allow me the few hours off. I have to assist at the refreshment stall, and it seems a pity to waste" "But surely you are above such things as that which take you away from, your work. Why not give the ticket to one of your sisters?" --Well. you see, sir, that wouldn't be fair. for I'm the only one of our fam ily who can be depended upon to eat a dollar's worth, and" His supreme nerve won the day. Smith's Magazine. An English Amenity. A striking difference between our manners and those of our English cousins was shown one day at a gar den party. The hostess, an American, was speaking to one of her guests, an Englishwoman of rank. "Dear Lady B.," she said, 'here are some sandwiches which I made with my own hands, particularly for you. You know I've often told you about our American sandwiches and how good they are. Here are different sorts, lettuce and cucumbers, if you care for 'grass.' or if you like a savory better try the cream cheese ones with pimentoes. I've sonic sweet ones. too, raisins and nuts chopped together which will you try first?" She held a pla'e in each hand, a plate filled with dainty looking sand wiches, and they were extended invit Ingly toward her guest, who looked at them critically. then said in the clear. high pitched voice of the well bred Englishwoman: "Oh, thank you, so kind of you. but do you know I never touch the nawsty things?"-Cleveland Plain Dealer. Chance For a Home Run. A clever teacher who has the power of calling out originality in her pupils says that she would have no use for text books if she took time to answer all the startling questions asked in the classroom. One day the attraction of gravitation was under discussion when one of the boys said that he didn't see any need of it, anyway. "It seems to me." said he, "there's no particular use in having the earth at tract things. Now, when the apple fell and made Newton think out the reason for it. that apple might just as well have stayed where it was until somebody gathered it." "You play ball, don't you?" asked the teacher. "Well, suppose you knock the ball very high, what happens?" "It falls." "But If there were no attraction to ward the earth It wouldn't fall. Don't you think that might prove inconven ent?'" "My," cried the boy, "what a bully chance for a home run !"-Chicago News. Her Supposition. In the Beecher family the name of Mrs. Stowe was often quoted to the rising generation as one having au thority. She was also quoted ad nau seam, it would seem, from a story told by the Woman's Journal. On one oc casion a grandniece of Mrs. Stowe be came very angry at a playmate and, stamping her foot, said, "I hate you, and I don't want anything more to do with you, nor your manservant, nor your maidservant, nor your ox, nor your ass." Her mother sternly re proved her, asking he if she knew ihat she was saying. Little Miss Beecher promptly replied, "Yes; the Tea Commandments." "Well, do you know who wrote them?" The child, looking disgusted, answer ed: "Goodness, yes. Aunt Harriet did, I s'pose." The Word "Poultry." Poultry, according to the definition given in one standard encyclopedia, In eludes "the whole of the domesticated birds reclaimed by man for the sake of their flesh and their eggs." The word comes from the Latin "pullus," which could mean a young horse or donkey as wvell as a chick (the English "foal" Is akin to this), through the French "poule," a fowl. But it Is curious that "poultry" has no French version, the nearest equivalent being "volatIle," or "oseaux de basse cour," birds of the low yard. German in Its descriptive way knows poultry as "federvich," feather cattle. An Unmentioned Ancestor. Mr. B. if very proud of his ancient lineage and never lets slip an oppor tunity to boast of it. At a dinner where he had been unusually rampant on this subject a fellow guest quieted him by remarking, "If you climb much further up your family tree you will come face to face with the monkey." Lppincott's. A Piece Conference. Russian Bear-I think we had better have our representatives sit In con vention and do what we have long contemplated-divide up Turkey. Brit Ish Lion-Yes; in other words, hold another piece conference.--Norristown Pa.) Times. His Big Score. Begnner at Golf-How many have I aken, my boy? Is It fifteen orst teen? Disgusted Caddie-Ach, I dinna ken. It's no a caddie ye need; It's a billiard marker.-People's Journal. A weak stomach, means w'eak stom ch nerves, always. And this is also true of hear-tand kidneys.It's a pity that sick ones continue to drug the stomach r stimulate the heart and kidneys. The w'eak~ ner-ves, not the organs them selves neeU this help. This ex'.la~ins hy Dr'. Shoop's flestor'ative has and is promptly helping so many sick ones. It roes direct to the cause of these dii eases Test the vital truth and see. w. E. Brown & Co. Finding a Grave With an Egg. The Miau-tsze, a little known tribe in1 asia, are very superstitious about eath and will not bury a man untilj ley have first tested the ground with~ .n egg. This operation is very curious. \hile the body is being prepared forj hurial a number of Miau-tsze, includ' ug the male relatives of the deceased, go out to the appointed slpot bearing a large basket of eggs. Stooping dowvn, one of the natives lets an egg drop softy on the ground. 11' it b reaks it is onsereld an il m~uct :ad another spot is selected. In this w:. 1u" party ~ften wander about for hours. ht'ea. nag eggs over' the gaud until they inally strike a place where the sheli oes noracnrk. The trouble with most cough reme dies is that they constipate. Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup acts gently but prompt.ly on the bowels and at the same time it, stops thM cough by soothing the throat and lung irritation. Children lii:ce it Sold by W. E. Brown 4: Co. Hlmorous Chinese Graft. A certain Chinese taotal (magIstrate) having told his men to have two ingots of gold sent to his treasury for pur chase, the shopmen brought them In and in answer to the query of the tao tai told him that the price was so much in taels, but added. "This is the or dinary price, but for your honor we will knock off one-half of the price." Then the taotai said to his underlings: "Seeing that they are to sell to me at only one-half price, just give them back one ingot of gold and put the other in my treasury, and thus their account is settled. Goodby." So the underlings of the yamen did so. but still the shopmen hung around wait ing. The taotai asked them why they were waiting, when their account had been already settled. Said the shop men. 'Wn a did your honor pay your humble servants?" Then the magis trate answered with a very fierce air: "Taio nu ts-ai" (impertinent slaves), '"did you not say that these two gold ingots were half price to me? Then did I not give you back one ingot and keep the other and thus settle your ac count without the least injustice ac cording to your own proposition? So be off with you or my lictors will give you a taste of the scourge."-Harper's! Weekly. A Singular Calculation. It would require, according to the calculations of a scientist, the power of a 10,000 horsepcwer engine about 70,000,000,000 years to lift the earth a foot in height, and to do this work, allowing thirteen pounds of water per horsepower per hour, would require some 10.000,000.000,000,000.000 gallons of water, or more than would be dis charged at the mouth of the Mississip pi in 6.000 years. This would be enough, the writer estimates. to cover the entire surface of the earth to a depth of not less than 300 feet. to convert which into steam, using good boilers, would require some 4.000,000, 000,000,000 tons of coal. If the latter quantity of the mineral was loaded on cars of twenty tons each it would de mand 200,000,000,000,000 such cars. If the latter were thirty feet long and! all coupled together in one train it! would reach around the earth 45.000, 000 times and, if running twenty-five miles per hour, would consume 25,000, 000 years in running the length of it self. So much for figures. "Crocodile Tears." The phrase "crocodile tears" owes its.origin to the imagination of some of the old travelers, who Invented the fable that the crocodile weeps over its prey. One of the earliest English globe trotters to mention this fiction was Sir John Mandeville, who In his "Travels" (1499), speaking of ".Ethlop," "Ynde" and an "Yle elept Silla," says: "That Lond Is full of Serpents and of Cokadrilles. These Cokadrilles ben a manner of Long Serpente, zalowe and rayed aboven. and had four Feete and schorte Thyes and grete Nayles as Clees or Talonns, and there ben sutme' that had five Fadme In length and sume of six and a halfendal. And in the nyght thel dwellen in the Water and on the Day won upon the Lond. Thelse Serpentes slue men, and thei eten hem wveypnge, and when thei eten thei moven the over Jowe and noughte the nether Jowve, and thei have no tonge."-St. Louis Rlepublic. Me and My Father. The commercial traveler fiicked the rust off his boots, straightened his tie nd entered the emporium of Mr. Brown, the village grocer. He was new to the district, otherwise he would not have made the error which we now. ivulge. Behind the counter was a young gentleman of fourteen, with bulging eyes and a high collar. To him the traveler addressed himself. 'My boy," he said. "is Mr. Brown "I'm Mr. Brown," the boy replied. "But possibly you want to see old Mr. Brown, my father. I'll get him." And as the boy went in search of his prematurely aged parent It dawned upon the traveler that this is indeed an age of young men.-London An swers. .Ideals. He kissed her hand. She withdrew it hastily and gazed re proachfully at him. "I didn't think it oIf youl" she said, almost tearfully. "I had always con sidered you a young man with ideals, and" "I--I am sorry if I have offended," e stammered. "I" "Well," she said bitterly, "I certain ly expected you to aim higher." So he took heart and made new res olutions and things.-Brooklyn Eagle. Mrs. Smith-Yes, my little five-year al ilis a great help in my house eeping. Mrs. Randall--Why, what can such a child do to help? Mrs. Smith-She goes down and tells the ook for me whenever we're going to hae company.-Harper's Bazar. Delicately Put. He would not say that she painted.! owdered and all that He was too: nuch of a gentleman for that. "Still I may as well confess," he said, "that she Impressed me as one who thinks she can improve upon the Lord's handiwork-" The Plagiarist. "Father,'" said Rollo, "what Is a plagiarist?" "A. plagiarist, my son, Is a klepto aniac who lacks the courage to take mything which the police could be called on to protect."- Washington A man can know nothing of man kind without knowing something of mself.-Beaconsfield. Bees Laxative Cough Syrup tor 'ough-. colds. -roup and whooping cough cirows in favor daily. Mothers should keep it on hana for children. It ently laxative, driving the poison and h~em from the system. It gives immediate relief. Guaranteed. Sold by The M.airming Pharmacy. His Narrow Escape. A jolly old steamboat captain with oe girthi than height was asked if he had ever had any v-ery narrow es "Yes." he replied, his ey'es twvinkling, "once I fell ofT my boat at the mouth of Bear ereek, and, although I'm an epert swimmer, I guess I'd b~e there ow if it hadn't bee-n for my (-rew. You see. the water was just deer enough so's to be over my he-ad when Itried to wade out, and .iust shallow ugh"-he gave his body an cx lnatory pat-"so that wvhenever I tried to swim out I dragged bottom." plain Talks on Fernilizers A Talk to Fruit-Growers You use a fertilizer 3 he yield will be of course, but do you accordin g to the use enough amount of plant food you give your trees or The yield per acre, plants - you can de and the profit therefrom pend on it. The better i.ncreases in far greater they are fete greater proportion than the cost and more valuable will of additional fertilizer- be your crop. Fertil What is an increase cize sparingly and you cost of $2.00 to $10.00 reap sparingly. aer acre for fertilizer when the returns therefron TIhe fact that over a million show an increase of $5u." t o n s o f Virginia-Carolina $250.00 per acre? Vertilizer were sold last year :oves them to be without The big Magnolia .qual. Every fruit farmer, Farms at Durant, Miss., ti. no matt-r what method hc the well-known Virginia-Car- now uses, should get the Vir olina Fertilizer Carolicia in different Company's quantities o n sta-or Almanac. .yt h c i r straw th eir is free to all berry crop. who are inter -Result: when 1,000 lbs. per estedeog 1 00 lbs perto write for it. r acre were used the profit was Adnrest csty $75.00 moreper b acre than when blw 500 lbs. per V1RGy utCfAROLNA acre were used. C h tmC eo- CO. This is modem intensive cul- -IhodV. Duhm .C ture, the method that is doub- ions, Va. arato, . C. ling and trebling the crops of C a b. I ~~~Coura, aS. . Bli ,M all kinds of fruit in Atlanta. Ga. either good or in poor Columbus, Ga. and wo-out land allana . who the 1a aeontgomer-y, Ala over the country-and C Meephis. Tenn. in good soil, too. - Shreveport, La. Professor Matched the Boss.i Boston and Cambridge people of an Iwe the ife o) wiliii qtol,.. writ earlier eay remember well Professor ten by his so CO. it . toldl Child of Harvard, a scholar who was was st over to Dublin during tcue likeise a live man. They tell with oub famine to show te Neo C gre.t gusto a story about his faithful to make soul. Stokes asked a starvin attention to city politics. Professor beggar i she did not go and get Chi.d always attended to his duties as ome of the soup that was being freely a izen of Cambridge. One night he distributed. we1t to a ward meetag at which a Soup, is it, your honor? Sure, it boss began to ut forth some of his isn't soup at all" "And what is it, waped ideas. The college professor then'," inquired Stokes. "It is nothin', was speedily on his feet and scathing- your lionor. but a quart of water boiled ly denounced the boss and his methods down to a epint to make it sthrnogn' After the meeting was over the good This is the soup maigre which o natPred boss, just to show that he bore garth caricatured in his picture of the no ill will, met the scholar on the French troops at Calais. -London! stairs and, genially handing over a ci- Standard. gari saida "Have a smoke, professor; His antagonist straightened up, took Mixed Liquors Barred. ttentiony to ciy pltcsIrfso the clgar and said with reat dignity,ie sy acSnory was the village "Yes, I'll natch you in any of your blacksmith and one of the most pow lest.er vices"-Boston Herald. erful singers in the choir of the kirk at Auchlebcheries. To show off his Didn't Get a Patent. voice to full advantage he would vary Amon the strange applications which his style from bass to alto and from reach the patent oue ce one fled som alto to treble in the same hymn. years ago was most extraordinary, it The minister had long observed that being a petition for a patent for an ant Rorv's methods were upsetting thegen egaad c osisd wih mrely drawit, eod ftecogeaio' ig ingsa chlk mah aouind a tafl yor ig n tlnt ieodtrn ther plce!"Bosito Heaclaiedh.uprtt ok eathe paten office wa oppfied. some l 3 eanone, ada sers tao wal mast etaonatsyg thgtr.AdM.Mcno ifye sing a sopitin forac preentso an rail-tasigtnr ngeoorfyer aa novel conitd causerel cosdraw- ncmi 'yrsa~ya Dne le amusemeof nt.sh apctioppe. ho.It etsr evr, was refused on the ground that T tere was nothing new in the inven- te~htpi ntebc.ta tlnso oo. that chalk had been used for such aegaa~ed ots~rfo huaim pueposes before and that such ideasjblkLbkinytole -h ourt3 were nt patntable prwas teir omertGthe toindarin the b Ii will bgrennecssaryetoogshthrugheappaileul.w ~xpanstoemakersoup. foroPilesskedyousuae inn ~a. utupina olapibe ub 'i~ n bzegga wyThe Reidn.tg n e eiclsn'sopt eal" "And their )is it, The ingIn Hs Seech tie.? Ilutred Btks. tels othin', Edyh-Yu oghtto avehead M. wo hodno ilusion qabt owther caued coudmake spech. Eyth- dow to. hav pno money ito spreg'" can't repeat~Ths i the spehbuIcasowyuId o upse ya m abgrebich d ~outherin.--estninterGaztte gart liaureod g hisopitur of egi LzTrMI Lquorse Barre. i e Too True.abotth sacmnore as tht ageh Aftr orlndlrd od ocktedtheblalket andone bofd temostel pon ~3 wic ~pa mntlyfo or t-seadfu sinersping thoe.orotekr t~ parmenohiceuhetpaifuly.l adane heu oldfar "Becuse hav a rnt my ro alto o treheink you faherhymn. ~rs" iemuriued-Echage Tlie mnst ha d sonlon bsredta GetnRqae Oh.' meoy s weeuse"n-tegn mercy, deeraldmnlody tof chok'sndaregation's sing outandI'llha'eitocg, diner.He- emnth e Nresle. o rn ~evr mnd:I we olton, aywa! "here a4." ne nouomn;edren a'e -YokerSttesan.heiterv. AndMe. But ome, sfyer tanevu singt eontnal rsl f er A Singr.afl sirt aes thembss neus-nolha Mr. agerPehasyo rcal, dvtertisr nowmns -nrosa To stopothatrpainam theibackathat stiftnehsto thetjointdandrmuscag.erakeesinuuts. The Sateno fo m tosu th c r atmentror 00 Aop inion mayose toatedm -re nor aenables.- epl prov heir easnis. let free tody cobd by. TRA E ManigPARay id t ppy.Fr n frmo PForPrc 7. The standardPofrthey. Edyth-Youeught toihaefheardgMr uggns'rinin specI as igt ay-Why.I wasntoaworethatah ul imk a Apec. dyh-el, The new Laxative Cures that does not gripe RN Stomach and Liver or nauseate. lai0roubeand vleasant to ta1ie. IAaUYOiv r'Ul 3yfUP chronic constipation. The Arant Co. Drug Store. EES LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP CONFORMS TO NATIONAL PURE FOOD AND DRUGS LAW. An improvement over many Cough, Lung and Bronchial Remedies, because it rids the -4. system of a cold by acting as a cathartic on the bowels. No opiates. Guaranteed to give satisfaction or money refunded. Prepared by PINEULE MEDICINE CO.. CHICAGO. U. S. A. Java's Fire Isiana. Ore of the greatest wonders of Java, "the fie island," a large lake of boil ing mud, is nearly two miles in cir cimfenee, and in the center im mense colimns of soft, hot mud may b- seen continually rising and falling,* like -reat black timbers thrust forth Lill then suddenly withdrawn by a giant's hand. Besides the phenomena of the columns. there are two -gigantic bulbles near the western edge, which till up like huge balloons and explode - on an av-rage three times per minute. Cause For Hurry. - "I iderstand they were married 1n; haste." "Yes: they told the minister to hur ry because there was only a little gas oline left in their automobile, and they 0 were twenty miles from home."-New York Town Topics. Plenty of Them. Joakley-Tou're right. Most people worry over what they haven't got, but - I know certain people who worry be cause of what they have. CoakLey That so? What have they? Joakley Nothing.-Philadelphia Press. Evolution. "Father," said little Rollo, "what Is evolution?" "Evolution, my son, is a 3ort of apology which man has invent ed for displaying so many of the traits - of the lower animals."-Washington Star. Good Plan. "How can I prevent the flies getting into my sugar basin?" wrote a "Con stant Reader" to a journal. "Fill the sugar basin with salt," -wasL O E NE R. the laconic reply.-Pele Mele. - Lovers' purses are tied with cob, MANNING, S. Ce webs.-Italian Proverb. 10 GeO.S. Hacker &Son G ermo ert ooo Manufacturing Co., ) c Manufacturers of Higest Grades of Combined Fertilizers and Germicides. The great natural Food Plant for all crops, all soils and Doors, Sash, Blinds, all eates. lMoulding and Buildin~ MADE BY wir ow an acy Gls Specily 212 BROAD STREE Weak Women Charleston, S. C. wyt help. Bu ith tha way, two tretents, hnldb hous embiner. neis hoca on Is ntet tire sbste b th reporairt senil DrThoo' ght ure s t me Local.es does itsA ~ A f Dr Sh gpes h Restorative esutioas Th borerDDr Shoop'slghue-stpCi L . ii u i tLI iI'li mou m sembr. suoior y roaleedy. we hoD'Rerav shoop'sera tet Th Night Cure",a t aeIpis osis_____________________________ Wor wiEsl. BRtW sote soread. eous suhensa healslangen dischroeswhilntnegestoa vveeansiterotse Gemfr Fertiizer w 1b strengh, vior, an enery.NNakNG,.Sh.oC. r. Soop' ~ ower Prices aie hdny Cn urader Ri h the goods are of inferior quality Malcs Kismcy an B~adw R~btRemember, "The best is none too good." And the best is the cheapest, %@ MADE i~ibe it Dry Goods or Groceries. ISH outhi 'h -JJi O- ORK TOTHETONES OCE.