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THE HORSELCSS CARRIAGE 2t Is as Yet a Scraewhat Imperfect Mechuniam. | ‘The opinion at the present time of those best fitted to judge of the future of the motor carriage is as follows: Steam will probably be vsed and it wiil be generated by means of lignid fuel. It will be necessury to invent suitable air-condensers to obviate the clouds of ®team, and to prowde means of dispos ing c? the smoke and cinders. This opinijon Is based vpon the soundness of our knowledge of the properties of steam and upon its steadiness of action under definite conditions. Itis not be lieved by the chief authorities that the practica! motor carriage can be male very light; and it is not thought, for instunce, thatalight motor can be made swhich would be a serviceable attach ment for an ordinary bicycle to assist the rider to mount hills or even to take partinthe propulsion over level, smooth roads. Such motors undoubtedly can be made, but they are not fitted for every day use. In the firet days of the popu larity of the bicycle hundreds of in frenious inventions were made for in creasing the range of the machine. The tendency was to make all the parts as light as possible. Longer experience has shown that complicated mechanism dJdoes mnot stand the wear and tear of daily use. The modern machine has been shorn of many so-called improve ments, and its weight has begun to in crease, for it has been found that ma chines weighing less than 20 pounde are not serviceable on common roads. The motor cerviage of the future will prob obly imitate the bicycle in its rubber " tires and ball bearings; it will bave o very respectable weight, and it will re fuire a smooth road.—l'rof. John Trow btridge, S. D., in Chautauquan, Well I'rotected. Mrs. Grimm (sternly)—Dridget. T must say that [ seriously object to that policeman occupying a seat on our basement steps for an hour or so every evening, until you are ready to nccom pany him. Bridget—Shure thim sthone sthips won't hur-rt him, mnum. He'll niver catch cold, for he do be a mounted ofti ter an’ wears a double-bristed sate in his pants.—N. Y. Truth. After physicians had given me up, I was mved by Piso’s Cure.—Ralph Erieg, Wil hamsport, Pa., Nov. 22, 1593, Some men need a good roasting, but they are such good fighters that no one will give it to them.—Atchison Globe. If stiff and sore, St. Jacobs Oil will cure you. Won't lose u day. The cure is sure. . Love, when true, faithful and well-fixed, is eminently the sanctifying element of human Life.—~N. Y. Weekly. Just try a 10c box of Cascarcts candy ca thartic,finest liverand bowel regulator made. Juliet—“ Did you ever study the stars®” Romeo-—*‘l've understudied them.”-Yon kers Statesmau. Years of rheumatism have ended with zure by St. Jacobs Oil. Cures promptly First Neighbor (proudly)—"“Mv daughter is learning the violin.” Second Ditto (sad ly)—"So Y hear.”-—Fun. . “Star Tobacco.” As you chew tobacco for pleasure, use Star. It is not only the best, but the most lasting, and therefore the cheapest. Do brides put a picee of their wedding cake under l[u.-ir pillow to dream on?%— Atchison Globe. | Cascarets stimulate liver, kidneys and bowels. Never sicken, v.eaken or goipe, 10 Bed is a bundle of paradoxes; we go to it ( with reluctance, yet we quit it with regret, | —N. Y. Weekly. ‘ I e , The pain of sciatica is cruel. The cure by St. Jacobs Oil is sure. It penctrates Some men’s only virtue is that they go to I ‘lyed early.—Washington Democrat, I Confined our son to his bed for five months. The discase left him an object of pity and a great sufferer. He was « d with blotches and the burning and itching were terrible to bear A lady told us to try Hood's Sarsaparilla. He begen taking it and soon improved. After taking a few bottles he was entire cured S. C Borwrax, East Leroy, Mich. Get only y . Hood’s Sarsaparilla The best—in fact the One True Blood Purlt Hood’s Pills {7O 0 ///fi" — UN & 7 SOl atin ’ ,/‘ v = é‘ T MAKiNG ¥"W =& and health making R sgd@/ arc included in the \ \ I‘/ making of HIRES N\ 7%/ Rootbeer. The prepa i ration of this great tem giaa perance drink isan event @ ofimportanceinamillion g well regulated homes. 4 \ HIRES g N Rootbeer "i 8 is full of good health. n: ‘l:;vigor:\pnu, appetiz *;;lf.{ ing, satisfying. Put ;glg;;', B 8 some up to-day and Cl?,“ W 4 have it ready to put P3Bl down whenever you're 1N thirsty. LT | Made only by The SBl Charles E. Hires Co., N - Philadelphia, A pack -1 l‘E‘ age makes 5 gallons. L Sold everywhere. s<7s 8 50 - RIDE A SCENT ng@ B/Q«'z-{.) .- e Western Wheel Works v LG MAKERS wOO e CHICAGDO ~ o, LLmnors CATAL2GVE " FREE @ SELF-ACTING) £) ) HARTSHORNS shoe i NOTICE e XAME THUS LABEL AND GET G HARTSHORN -~ PISO'S CURE FOR s, ’ {5 (tS WHERE ALL ELSI ' Teo o Cough Byrup o PR vßt by drvgrise. -IR ) CONSUMPTION : g | MIRACLE OF THE GREEK FIRE. l A Ceremoninl in Jerusalem That Is Spectucular and Blasphemouns., | Now the time of the miracle ap | proaches. A flame from Heaven is to be communicated to the expectant world. As a preliminary to this sacred | manifestation there is a new, wild out burst of cries and screams. Weare told that it is the Jerusalem worshipers,who | pound with their fists their fellow | Christians of Jaffa and drag and jerk | them away one by one from the win dow where the celostial fire is 10 ap pear, The noise swells like a tempest! A burst of sound--the clanging of bells and stricken bars of metal! A flash at the Greek window. The fire has come! One wild rush, one high-pitched, multi tudinous seream, still the excited clang ing, uud out springs the light over the | frantic human mas<«, leaping from hand to hand, as if each flame were lightning {and music. Around and up and over and through, til flame is added to | flame, spreading from candle to candle, L and floor to gallery. Now a priest ap ! pears on the roof of the Sepulcher it self, and the flame runs round the top like a crown of firc. Higher it springs, drawn by a rope up to the people at the Lase of the dome. It illuminates the moxt distant and dungeon-like vaults, | the chapels above and below, every 1 i vantage ground where the spectators © have stood or erouched on the floor, or in temporary lodgments in midair, | On and on sounds the clangor and the shouting: men, women and children \ ire mad: they pass their handsover the E iame s it not from Heaven? how can | 1 it do harm?-and then draw their | | aands over their fuces, taking the celes | tial touch in cestatic adoration. Over | a path made clear for the runners from | | the window already the fire is on its | aay 1o the ends of the earth. \ ‘ f The Armenian patriarch declared to | 3 ( 18 Juter and without hesitancy that the i | irech patriarch siaply had a lamp on | he tomb proper, which hLe blessed. : 1 Ihis kindly old Armenian said to us : chat it was not miraculous, It was | sumored that @ prominent visitor wax - | told by the Greek patriarch that he told | : ’ che people that it was ouly a symbol, | ‘ ind not a miracle, I asked the visitor | ‘ whether this was true, and was an- E awered: “No! How could he teil them | hat? He would be torn to pieces.” In ' elligent Greeks assure yvou that jt is + symwhol: that “holy fire” is the same | i | ‘hing a8 “holy water.” The Latins will | , ‘ nave nothing to do with this, one of | ‘he most venerable ceremonies and the 1 | nost appalling scandal of the Chris : | Jan world, | | At the height of the frenzy, as the E dame leaped through the rotunda and | | ighted the encireling chapels. making | nore rich and glittering fhe altars, the | | zorgeous vestments, the whole ceclesi- l : ! astical paraphernalia, the arms and uni- | | forms of the troops and the many-col- ‘ | sred costumes of the mad and motley | | trowd, the thought flashed upon me: | Was there everanything in all Christen- | lom so beautiful and so blasphemous? | I‘ —Richard Watson Gilder, in Century. i SR rehabaubee Sl | INFLUENCE OF MUSIC. Physiologlenl Effcets of Harmonies on the Human Henrt, | MM. Binet and J. Courtier give in the | | Revue-Scientifique an account, trans ; luted for the London Lancet, of experi- | ments made by themselves and others I | on human beings and animals of the ef- f | feets of music on the heart and respirn- | ‘ tion. M. Patrizi, an Italian physiologist, had a patient with a wound in the skull i which laid bare the brain. e was thu | enabled to observe the actual effect of | I musie on the cerebral circulation I Music occasioned an increase in the size | { of the brain itself. The effect on the | | cerebral circulation was variable, the | i vessels being sometimes constricted | and sometimes dilated. At other times | l no effect was produced. | [ MM. Binet and .J. Courtier experi- | mented on a musician, Isolated notes, | | chords in unison and discords were first | | tried. Both major chords struck in a | | lively manner and discords quickened ‘ | the respiration, the latter more espe | cially. Minor chords tended to retard | | respiration. When melodies werc tried it was found that all, whether grave or *;'u_\. produced quickened respiration | and inereased action of the heart. The i lively {llen-n produced the greatest ac- | | celeration. | | The subject also sometimes uncon- | sciously endeavored to synchronize his | respirations with those of the ~in;'n~r.; In rallentando and diminuendo |>uv| sages the respiration was retarded. | | Where the sound was wholly uncom- | plicated by emotional ideas, as in single ’ notes or chords, the heart's action was | zecelerated, but not in so marked a de- | gree as when the melody, either grave : or gray, was played. During operatic | picces or those well known to the sub- ' jeet, the acceleration attained its max- | imum. The subject had a strongly- ; marked capillary pulse. The influence | of music on the capillary circulation | | was tested by a plethysmograph at- | tached to the right hand. The capillary F \ tracing usually showed a diminution of | pulsation. This diminution was oc ; casioned by the sound of single notes, {chords or discords. In sad melodies, | { especially minor anes, there was almost | no diminution, while in lively airs the | diminution was marked.—N. Y. World, | I_".““;‘.'-u.i-.—.".;;:- Of course they wouldn'tsay anything | unkind to one who was so dear a friend —oh, dear, no! l “Beautiful girl,” said the one in orown, I “Oh, lovely,” returned the one in | gray. “Poor complexion, but most at | tractive.” ' “Her eyes aren’t much to boast of,” suggested the one in brown, “hut I | think the world of her.” 3 “And her chin!™ exclaimed the onein gray. “Did you ever see such an apolo gy fora chin?" “Never! But I don't think it's any worse than her teeth and her hair. But ctherwise she's really a beautiful girl.” *Oh, lovely."—Chicago Post. Sweet Pea. S The sweet pea, which has become a very popular flower, was first culti vated in Sicily about the year 1700, and of the four original varieties two came from Sicily and two from Ceylon. The time to plant the sweet pea is as soon in the spring as the soil can be turned without clogging, and that usually comes early in March.—Chicago Inter | Ocean. Edifying, B.~—You have a magnificent library. W.—Yes. When I think of the amount of money I've sunk in that collection of books it makes me feel quite intel lectunl.—Tit-Bits, 3 B i i Y o ot Wonld Never Do. [ The great theatricai manager frowned. ‘ “Fver lose your diamonds?” | “No.” s L s { >, 1 Ever mixed up in a newspaper scan -1a]?” “No, sir.” . “Ever get divorced?” | “Sir, my reputation is above re preach!” “Well, you've got a nerve to ask me ‘o star you., with all those disadvan inges.”—Town Topics. A MODERS GEORGE WASHINGTON. . “Poor man! How did you lose the sight of your eye?” “Lookin' for work, mem!"—Pick-Me- Up. One on Albert. | “By the way, Jennie, how did you like the dog show 2" “Oh, Albert, wasn't it too lovely for anything? There was one dog there that had such a humeaen face. Idid ad anire that dog.” *lndeed, did he look anything like ne?"” *No, not a bit. It had toomueh char leter in his countenance,” . Then Albert reached for his hat.— Tammany Times. It Was Settled. “DBy the way,” asked the former resi dent of the village, “did Jones and <“mith ever get that dispute settled as to which one owned that stripof jand ?” “0, yes: that was settled some time 1go.” “And who got it 2" “l forget the lawyer's name.”—Up-to- Date, | 3 A 3 1 WHERE WILL IT STRIKE? Almost the Same, | Nonie—ls your husband as shy now 15 he was before you married him? Laura—Almost, for then he used to rold his breath with fear, and he does it just the same now when he comes li:nmc late from the club.—Pittsburgh ilklil)’ News, How She Reasoned It | “My dear,” said Mrs, Fosdick to her | tcn-year-old daughter, “you should not kku_\‘ ‘tecthbrush.” You should always say ‘toothbrush.’ ™ | “But, mamma.” said the little girl, ! ‘ brush all my teeth with it.”—N. Y. Trib | une. An Instance. E Tommy-——Paw, what is adding insult ; to injury? | Mr. Figg—Well, I once had a dentist | at work on my teeth for half a day and | when he got through he said he hoped ;l had had a pleasant time.—lndianap { slis Journal, Taking Orders. | Mrs. Brown—Did you know that afr. Vestment is going into the ministry ? I Mrs, Greene—No. You surprise me. | I thought he was going to be a waiter \iu an eating house. llis mother told | me he was going to take orders, you ‘, know.—Boston Transcript. | o et A Few Words at Parting. | Young Husband--You'll write 10, me, darling, won't you, very soon? Young Wife—Why, yes, Henry, I'll | have to write. 1 haven't money enough | to last me more than about six days.— Il.‘hicngo Tribune. Explaining It. | He—lt seems strange that Van | Wither with such a family tree back of ‘ him and money and time to burn, gets | blue every noew and then. l She—Perhaps it is his blue blood hav | ing effect.—Cincinnati Tribune. | A SAD RETROSPECTION. Tramp (to fellow wanderer)—Ah, old 1 fellow, there are two of us; on'y you wuz borm one, an’ I made one of myself! 1 ~XN, Y, Trutb. Foreseen, Mrs. MeSwatt—Dßilliger,when I asked you to get a book for a birthday pres ent for brother John I supposed you would select one that had at least a substantial binding. This one will fa!l to pieces before he has it six months. Mr. MeSwatt—No it won't, Lobelia. It will last that brother of yours 100 yvears, in any kind of binding. It's a book on manners.—Chicago Tribune, Too Much Stuck Up. Miss Upperten (daughter of a rich manufacturer) —l'ardon me, miss, but 1 have not the honor of your acquain tance, Miss Lowerten (who does not intend tobe put down in that style)—l thought you had, at one time; but never mind. Perhaps if my father owned a big mucilage factory like your father's, I'd be stuck up, too.—N. Y. Weekly. Good Reason for It It was the seventh time she had tried on the gown, snd she still had fault to find with it. “It doesn’'t scem to me,” she sw@id, “that it beeomes my complexion.” The dressmaler shrugged her shoul ders, “Madame forzets,” she said, “that she has not the same complexion she wore last time she was here.,”—Chicago Post. In the Heefee Islands. “What did you say the name of this missionary was?" asked King Ktwapta. “Live ever, your highness,” said the trembling chicf; “he said it was John.” “Well, for a change”—King Ktwapta lcoked lovingly at his toothpick—*let | us have a Jackpot-pie."—Town Topics, His Views on Labor. First Tramp—Do you b'lieve in keep in' out the pauper labor of Europe? Second Tramp—l don't miud the pau per labor, but when it comes to lettin’ in paupers what don't work, I'm afraid they'll erowd us fellers into lookin' fer a job.~—N. Y. World. He Stopped It Truthful Tommy (describing his last great fight)—Then he let out at me with his right, but I stopped the blow, Cynical Sam—Did you? How? Tommy (significantly) — With my nose.—~odds and Ends, Rightly Named, Hewitt—l don’t see why you call this front door a storm door; it isn't a storm door Jewett—Just wait a minute,old man; my wife always meets me here.—N. Y, Tribuve, Preparing for the End. Crimsonbeak (discouraged;—Oh, I'm tired of life. Yeast (lightly)—Deen eating some of your wife's eooking, old man? *No; but PPm willing to now.”"—Yon | kers Statesman. Self-Evident. b st Y S oRt They haven't confided their secret to me, But I know ‘hu engagement’'s begun, For he's ordered a bieycle built for two, She u rocking chair built for one. { — N. Y. Journal. B CRSERR S, - SO, HEARD IN AFRICA. Mrs. Ostrich-—So you are the sucker I've been laying for?—Up-to-Date. Not Strietly Frofessional. “That young doctor makes an im mense number of calls on Mrs. Oglesby, Is she very sick?" *No; she is very pretty."—Philadel phia Press. One Hindrance. l Ned—l'd marry that girl if it weren't for one thing. Tom—\What's that? Ned—She refused me last night.— Somerville Journal. Withered by Age. “Does that ]O_i; go?" asked the hu morist, *lt used to," said the editor, “but it is too feeble now.”—Brooklyn Life. Quick Action Often Wanted. Man wants but little here below, So wrote a poet long ago; But now and then, when times are sad, Man wants that little mighty bad. . ~N. Y. Truth. A Good Reason | Smyth—What'makes you think Bog. | gett is a good bookkeeper? ‘ Browne—lHe pever returned the oney Iloaned him.—N. ¥. Tribune. . DIAMONDS OF GOLCONDA. Marco PPolo’s Account of Them Rends Like One of Sinbad's Tales. Tt ig in this kingdom that diamonds are got; and I will tell you how. There are certain lofty mountains in those parts; and when the winter rains fall, which are very heavy, the waters come roaring down the mountains in great | torrents. When the rains are over, and | the waters from the mountains have ceased to flow, they search the beds of the torrents and find plenty of dia- | monds. In summer also there are plen- | ty to be found in the mountains, but | the hLeat of the sun is so great that it I is scarcely possible to go thither, nor is there then a drop of water to be found. Moreover, in those mountains great serpents are rife to a marvelous degree, besides other vermin, and this owing to the great heat. The serpents are also the most venomous in exist cnce, 5o that anyone going there runs | fearful peril: for many have been de stroyed by these evil reptiles. 1 Now among these mountains there are certain great and deep valleys, to | the bottom of which there is no uc-; cess. Wherefore the men who go in[ search of the diamonds take with them | picces of flesh, as lean as they can get, | and these they cast into the bottom of | the valley. Now there are numbers of white eagles that haunt these moun- | tzipsand feed upon the serpents. When | the cagles see the meat thrown down, | they pounee upon it, and carry it up | «ome rocky hill-top. where they begin { to rend it. DBut there are men on the wateh, and as soon as they see that the eagles have settled, they raise a loud shouting to drive them away. And when the eagles are thus fright ered away the men recover the pieces of weat, and find them full of diamonds “which lave stuck to the meat down in the bottom. For the abundance of Jdinmonds down there in the depths of the valley is astonishing, but robody can get down: and if one could. it would be only to be at once devoured by the ' serpents which are so rife there. There is another way of getting the ' diamonds. The people go to the nests ' of those white eagles, of which there are many. and find plenty of diamonds l which the birds have carried off with the meat that was cast into the valleys I And when the eagles themselves are taken diamonds are found in their stomachs, So now T have told you three different ways in which these stones are found. No other country but this kKingdom of Mutfili produces them, but there they are found both abundantiy and of large size. 'Those that are brounght to our part of the world are only the refuse, as it were, of the finer and larger stones. For the flower of the diamonds and other large gems, as well as the largest pearls, are all carried to the great khan and other kings and princes of thote regions; in truth, they pos sess all the great treasures of the world, | —XNoah Brooks, in St. Nicholas, | MOHAMMED'S COAT. e | eacred Relle to Which the Sul(nn} Annuzlly Pays Ilis Devotion. | No more striking illustration of !hei | ularming condition of affairs that pre- | | vail just now at Constantinople could be | | afforded them the fact that the sultan 1 | should have considered it necessary to i proceed by water, instead of by lnud.’ | from his residence at the Yildiz Kiosk to the old seraglio for the purpose of | paying his annual devotion to the holy ' z coat of Molkammed, which.is preserved | in a great box in the innermost snuc-l | tuary of the imperial treasury. The ex | tent to which this garmentis venerated | Ly all believers may be estimatad by | the fact that the principal and most | highly cherished title of the sultan is | that of “guardian of the holy mantle.” | This robe, which it is needless to say | is green, was brought to Constantino i ple by Sultan Selim along with the keys | of the holy cities of Medina and Mecca, | from Cairo, where they had been pre | served until that time in the keeping of | | the caliphs. ‘ Tkis worship of the mantle by the 1 sultan is the most solemn and impor | tant religious function which the Turk | ish ruler is called upon to perform 1 thronghout the year, and, as a general i rule, his majesty’s progress from the ‘ Yildiz Kiosk to the Sublime Porte is | marked by a magnificent display of | [ troops four or five ranks deep, who line | the entire route on either side. ) This year, for the first time since his | accession to the throne more than 20 | years ago, the sultan, through dread of | assassination, has abandoned the cus | tomary procession by land, and has | cone by water instead, furtively and al | most by stealth, the public being led | till the last moment to believe by the | military display that the sultan was | about to proceed to the old seraglio in the usual manner.—Chicago Record.. ] Philanthropy. | “Dolan,” said Rafferty, “ye're gittin’ { too savin’. Did yez nivver hear thot money is the root av all evil?" “0i hov. An’ I'm doin’ the little Oi kin to pull it up by the roots an’ shpare | the rest av yez."—\Washington Star. CAAUTAUQUA ASSEMBLY. g (sland Park, Winfie.d, Ransas, June 13 ta | 25, 1897, | One fare for round trip from points E n Kansas and Oklahoma located not | more than 250 miles from Winfield. { Tickets on sale June 15 to 20, inclusive. Agent Santa Fe Route will be glad to supply additional particulars on appli cation. NATGRAL CURIOSITIES. l The Greenland whale, it is said, some. | times attains an age of 400 years. Dr. Ellison, of Williamsburg, Ky., owns a cow which lately gave birth to n calf that has two bodies, two tails and eight legs. The head resembles that of a dog. An Albino deer is on exhibition in Augusta, Me. The deer is practically white all over and a perfect beauty. It was shot by Irnest G. Lyons, of Cen ter Sidney, in the fall of 1895, on Bald mountain. The animal is about four years of age. i ONE FARE FOR ROUND TRIP is all you will have to pay from any A.T. & S. I". station in Kansas to the MUSICAL FESTIVAL and : CHAUTAUQUA ASSEMBLY Forest Park, Ottawa, Kansas. From points in Kansas within 150 miles and from Kansas City and St Joseph tickets on sale June 10 to 25. | From points in state beyond this dis tance, tickets will be sold June 12 to |l7. The park is only half a block from A.T. & S. F. station in Ottawa. Folder and particulars on applicatign, STATE OF OHIo, CITY OF TOLEDO, Lucas Country Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the | genior partner of the firm of F.J. (‘henovi & Co., doing business in the city of Teledo, | County zuuf State aforesaid, and that said | firm will pay the sur of One Hundred Dal- | lars for each and every case of catarrh that | cannot be cured by tlie use of Hall's Catarrh | Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. | Sworn to before me and subscribed in my | | presence, this 6th day of December, A, D. | | 1886. 1.3 V, GLEASON, | ESen]] Notary Publie. | Tall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally and | | acts directly on the blood and mucous sur- | | faces of the system. Fend for testimonials, | free. F..J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. i Sold by druggists, 75c. I Hall's Family Pills are the best. | The Old-Fashioned Way.—*“\What was ’ ver daddy lickin’ you for?” asked the half grown boy. The other hali-grown boy an swered: “0, he was jist provin’ to me that the whale really u?d' swaller Joner."——ln»' ’ dianapolis Journal. { | . It may come last, but St. Jacobs Oil is the | best to cure sprains. It ought to be first. Not to be provoked i best; but, if moved, never correct till the fume is spent; for | every stroke our fury strikes is sure to hit | ourselves at last.—N. Y. Weekly. ! No-To-Bae for Fifty Cents | Over 400,000 cured. Why not let No-Tc-Bace | regulate or remove your desire tor tobaceo? | Saves money, makes health and manhood. | | Cure guaranteed, 50¢ and SI.OO, all druggists | People kick when n show is too long and | also when it is too short.—Washington fi)em | ocrat. | A Dangerous Lethargy. | The forerunner of 1 train of evils, which | too often culminate fatally, is inactivity or | lethargy of the kidneys. Not only is Bright's | disease, diabetes, gravel, or some other dan | gerous integral disease of the organs them selves to be apprebended, but dropsical diffusions from l\lc blood, rheumatism and gout, are all traceable to the non-removal from the blood by the kidneys of certainim purities. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters de purateg the blood, renders the kidneys ac tive a;'h prevents their disease. Boys who are always waiting for the high ‘ est wages are generally out of a job.—W asn i ington Democrat. { R TN i When bilious or costive eat a Casearet, | candy cathartic, cure guaranteed. 10c, 25c. | B ]am e ! When a man gets beit in a game of card: | be always tells fun'. he is out of practice.— [ Washington Democrat. i Any ache, from toothache to backache | St. Jacobs Oil will cure. ! Some people are proud because they once | had a lot of money and squandered it.— | '\\'uhington Democrat. | Rt bl:fpcd and fell; bad sprain. Neve mind. St. Jacobs Oil will cure It. When a rich man’s boys don't succeed people always enjoy it.—Washington Dem ocrat, ‘ : A-head of Pearline? ‘ Never! Not a bit of it! That is ‘ out of the question. Probably not one of the many washing-powders that have been made to imitate > Pearline would claim to excel it in any way. All they ask is to be considered ‘‘the same as” or ‘‘as , good as '’ Pearline. But they're not even that. Pearline is to m day, just as it has been from the ’ first, the best thing in the world ‘ for every kind of washing and cleaning. | T @eeeeeeesetttssressstesee st ts et rtet et eeeseserseeretettseree .o ‘ § REASONS FOR USING ' 2 iWalter Baker & Co.’s i ‘&N Breakfast Cocoa. { N o | 813 B 0 1. Because it is absolutely pure. | (:-(" 2. Because it is not made by the so-called Dutch Process in [ g ] which chemicals are used. 0N 3. Because beans of the finest quality are used. N i, 4. Because it is made by a method which preserves unimpaired ) ! the exquisite natural flavor and odor of the beans. | y KR4 '1 5. Because it is the most economical, costing less than one cent | : 3 a cup. |i N 3‘ Be surc that you get the genuine article made by WALTER o SN BAKER & CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. Established 1780. t @ 000000000000 00060000 000000 000000 04000 0000000000 000006000000 000000. ] RS 140 12 At o ee L v bt | | SRR ENP @WM CINEE b | R NRN 0 Lk . | AN SR | 4 C A P CHE = — | R IS T R - =Ol m :1 A e Z S ’:.:\ S | | ST £ s The pine knot—the tallow | {’ i/, %@%\ \\»Qcandle—lhetoil lampu;gu~ DN y NS these are stages in evo |) T ) {’lm\\\ NN lution of illumhination, which : 77/ today finds its highest expo | nent in the electric light. | Similar and no less strik‘chy\&:nu been the evolution of grain and 7 grass cutting machinery. In 183 J the and the cradle were superseded by | the McCormick Reaper. The intervening years have seen many improvements, A until now we have that model Harvester and Binder, the McCormick Right i 0 Hand Open Elevator, and that veritable électric light of mowerdom, the 1y “—._ e ,‘:)/f" d ;/‘77“57 .“;;E‘;;;v‘ }7“?’-':_:’»;. !&\ == »..9{:’s& PP P L i J V= | (¥ - L ) | & A Y | | New 4. Itis not only the handsomest mower ever built, but it is, in every | sense of the word, the best—and if your experience has taught you anything, i itis that there’s nothing cheaper than the best. { McCormick Harvesting Machine Company, Chicago. | The Light-Running McCormick Open Elevator Harvester, | The Light-Running McCormick New 4 Steel Mower, | The Light-Running McCormick Vertical Corn Binder and ‘w The Light-Running McCormick Daisy Reaper for sale everywhere. 1& NI RIT YR RN { o | W\GN) l 108 RE : b 234 So¢ SRS ALt ABSOLUTELY GUARANTERD §,caxs, aar caseof contination. Cascarsts are the Ideal pleo and booklet free, Ad. mlml.l.!(:“l'i'l.lel;'Ir (fi'gmmmmm . tooreereeccoseoee ne " SEE THAT . | THIS NAME o T 18 STAMPED ON @ ) 3 ' Everg Pair e ‘ OF SHOES YOU BUY. : . | AT S e e Ask Your Dealer for Them. ...F....?,‘,’.%gz% LT ‘.'_.’:,s-“’;;j' g In® The papers ace full & ~=’} Ei of deaths frem BAR'S = BAYE £ = 122 N || Heart | FeR\GGR ) | 3 |22 A B Failure 5/ = onmnououz ' |2o H $ BT T Of course e : the heart fails to act s E when a anan dies, . | S but “ Heart Failure,” so called, nine § | 8 times out of ten is caused by Uric s ‘ | $ Acidin the blood which the Kidneys ¢ 1§ fail to remove, and which corrodes & ¢ the heart until it becomes unable to & { 5 pesform its functions. g ! Health Ofiicers in many cities very & 1 ¢ properly refuse to accept “Heart Fail- ¢ 1 ure,” as a cause of death. It is fre- $ |3 quently a sign of ignorance in the s | E physician, or may be given to cover s ‘ s up the real cause. S |3 Worm s . : : . o . o : s 8 A Medicine with 20 Years of ¢ Ie « o Success behindit . . s L o :: will remove the poisonous Usic Acid § $ by putting the Kiducys in a healthy : | s condition so that they will paturally S $ climinateiit. S :'..'“...“...m.““....‘, ..’Q .: HAY PRESSES! SR T veag) Iroed witupat on saal By VR Rt oSS M. B. LEWIS, Lessee, ' Meridian Machine Shops, Box X MERIDIAN, MISS, Weeks Scale Works, EAYCokI STox CRAI™. BUFFALO, N, Y. PENSIONS. wivows Feo for increase §2. Rejected clalms recpened. All laws free. 31 yra. practice. Success or no fee, W, BeCurmick & Sons, Ulncinnatl, U., snd Waskingion, .0 L PR BB BRE +'d Whiskey Mabit cured OPIUM Ghihalipafit (WOOLLEY . M.D.. Atlarta. Ga, DRO PSY izw’i\llsrmnfnf : gtves saes: Seikd 05 boSK, OF 1o palels and 1O aaya? trentment Frec. Dr. . H. GREKN'S SUNS, Atlasia. G i (% €OO SECOND HAND BICYCLES $570 sls— — GOOD ASNEW Must be closed out. Listafree. LA Mead Cycle Co., Chicago. T AEaH, 0 168e | WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS plense state thut you saw the Advertise ment in this paper.