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Failure.
“Failure,” says Keats, "is, in a sense,
the highway to success, inasmuch ns
every discovery of what is false leads
u.s to seek earnestly after what is true,
and every frcsli experience points out
some form of error which we shall
afterward carefully avoid.”
Defeats trail failures have played a
great part in the history of success.
It is not pleasant to think that more
or less of defeat Is absolutely neces
sary to great success. Hut that it is
true every student of history knows.
Defeats and failures are great devel
opers of "haructer. They are the gym
u: da which have strengthened the
muscles of manhood, the stamina, the
backbone which have won victories.
They have made the giants of the iaee
by giving titanic muscles, brawny
sinews, far reaching Intellects.
How true it is that poverty often
hides her charms under ugly masks!
Thousands have been forced into great
ness by their very struggle to keep
the wolf from the door. She is often
the only agent nature can employ to
call a man out of himself and push
liim on toward the goat which she had
fitted him to reach. Nature cares little
for Ills ease and pleasure. It is the
man she is after, and she will pay any
price or resort to any expedient to
lure him on. She masks her own ends
in man's wants and urges him onward,
oftentimes through difficulties and ob
stacles which are wtdl nigh disheart
ening, but ever onward and upward
toward the goal.—Register.
The Boy Who Lcurnctl the Way.
lie was very young—about 13—this
boy who spent most of his time in the
studios watching the artists draw and
paint and wishing he could do the
same.
“What kind of pencils do you use?”
lie said oue day, and they gave him
one of the kind. That night lie tried to
make a figure he had seen oue of the
artists draw, it seemed so easy. But
he could not do the same kind of work.
“Perhaps l haven’t the right kind of
paper,” he reasoned. “1 will get a
piece tomorrow.” Even the right kind
of paper did not help him any.
“1 need a studio and an easel,” was
his next conclusion. “I have the de
sire; surely all 1 need now are the
necessary surroundings.”
A few years of impatient Vvaiting
passed before he secured the “neces
sary surroundings,” ntid when he had
them all and still found it impossible
to draw the truth dawned upon him.
“I know wliat is wrong,” he cried,
throwing down his pencil. "I know
nothing of the principles of art. 1
must learn them first.”
He was still young when his name as
a great painter was known oh two con
tinents. He had learned the “princi
ple.” A bit of brown paper and a
burned match would then enable him
to draw as easily as all the art essen
tials.—Ann Portion In Success.
Holding His Job For Him.
“Os all the excuses 1 have ever heard
from people for not paying their bills,”
said a collector for a prominent firm
the other day. “I got tbe neatest today
from a very wealthy man who always
owes the house a bill. No matter
whether the bill is for $lO or SIOO, he
always pays $5. 1 have gone hack the
next week and got $5 more, and once 1
went back twice In one week, and he
paid me $5 each time and seemed glad
to see me. 1 got to know him pretty
well, and the other day 1 asked him
why he did not pay it all, as I knew he
had tlicmoney.”
•• 'Well,’ said the old fellow, ‘if I pay
you everything 1 owe you at one time
you will collect so fast that pretty soon
you will be out of a job for tbe want of
something to collect.’
“I don’t know whether that was his
reason or not, but 1 let the subject drop
and am just going around there now
for another ss.”—Memphis Scimitar.
Gonnod'M Opinions.
Music is tbe most beautiful art, but
It is the most detestable profession.
But is not that right? That which be
longs most to heaven should fare worst
on earth.
The public moves much faster than
the Individual, and therefore the indi
vidual must place himself before his
age if he desires not to be behind it
Wagner lias some Idea of this sort. It
is a necessity which every true artist
must realize. Great men may be said
to be for every age save their own.
Small men are for their own and none
other.—“Uemlniseences,” In Macmil
lan's.
The Conjfreijulion Smiled.
A certain clergyman when preaching
extemporaneously touched on the sub
ject of miracles. Some people, be said,
bad difficulty in accepting tbe miracu
lous stories of the Bible, as, for ex
ample, tbe story of the speech that
Balaam’s ass made to his master.
Looking solemnly at the congrega
tion the preacher hammered In his con
tention with the remark, “Why should
not God make an ass to speak—he
made me to speak.”—New York Trib
une.
Tripped Cp.
Mrs. Newrlch—That Mrs. Hyart is a
stuck up thing. 1 know just as much
about music as she does. She needn't
get funny.
Mrs. Browne—Why, wbat has she
done?
Mrs. Newrlch—Oh, she tried to trip
me up today—asked me if I’d ever
heard somebody’s “Songs Without
Words.”—Philadelphia Press.
Ilia Ambition Realised.
i Blobbs—When he was a little boy, he
was always singing “I Want to Be an
Angel.”
Slobbs—And ho died young, I sup
pose.
Blobbs—No; but he’s had his wish
gratified. He's backing Barnstormer’s
Colossal Aggregation of International
Stars.—Philadelphia Record.
AN INSPIRATION.
It Showed (he Doohfol Yoatti o Hop.
py tVoy to !*oi» life gneotton,
“It’s u go.” announced the young
man with beaming face, "nml the hap
py day has been set!"
“So you got your courage up to the
point ni last?" said the friend who
Understood the situation.
"Yes. Say. it isn't hard when you
get started. But it is a wonder I
didn't get nervous prostration before I
made the plunge! 1 was six months
trying to get courage enough to ask
the all important question. But every j
time that i opened my mouth to sp.nk j
i simply broke out into n cold svven' '
and couldn't say a word for the life |
of me. I would have retreated a do:,vn
times bag and baggage if 1 could have
done so gracefully. Not that I didn't
want the girl, but simply for the rea
son tlmt I despaired of ever being able
to ask her to he mine. The girl acted,
too, as if she had a right to hear some
thing to the point. But ! could only
sit there like a chuckle headed Idiot
and abuse the weather. I would have
been right there in the same horrible
situation it something hadn't happen
ed to break the ice.
“One night last week we wore sitting
side by side on a sofa and during one
of those blissful moments when noth
ing was being said I chanced to notice
the girl's eyes intently fixed upon a
motto that hung on the wall opposite
and which road, ‘Love One Another.'
I'll be hanged if I ever saw that motto
before, but it gave me an inspiration,
and I leaned over and murmured.
‘Shall we?’ and she murmured, ‘1 don’t
mind.’ and it was ail over bnt the
shouting!"—Detroit Free Press.
ONE ON HIS FATHER.
Smart Youth la Caught. Tlsen Vie
tfn»ir.es IVrcnt.
The 12-year-old son of a Van Huron
street fond parent recently became the
proud possessor of some guinea pigs,
A day or two after the same were
safely corralled in a cage he went
about bragging of his new acquisition
among bis playmates. Now, it seems
these youngsters knew of a “soli” in
which guinea pigs play a prominent
part. They started to “hook” the
youngster and caught him fast and
hard.
He felt so bad about it that be
started in turn to "sell” some one else.
His father was the victim.
“Did you know, papa, that if yon
hold a guinea pig by the tail its eyes
will drop out?”
His father laughed outright.
“Why, who in wonder told you such
stuff, Louis?”
“Tbe boys al! say that,” answered
Louis, sober as a judge, “and it’s so,
yes, sir.”
‘.‘Oh, nonsense,” said his father, still
laughing.
“Well, you go to the cage and hold
one up and you'll see.”
Just to humor the boy the father
went out In a moment he came back
looking—well, looking just like a maa
that’s been badly sold.
"The little rascal got me that time,”
bo replied to a friend.
“But I don’t see tlie point,” said the
friend.
“Dou't. you?”
“No.”
“Well, guinea pigs have no tails.”—
Topeka Capital.
The Mflßio Lantern.
How many of us while using magic
lanterns have wondered how they were
first made? Indeed they are of very
respectable antiquity. As early as the
seventeenth century a Jesuit named
Klrcber constructed one. It was a
very crude affair, and as he was not
unwilling to excite the fears of the
persons who witnessed ids exhibitions
he called it a “magic" lantern, and so
It has always been called.
There are reasons to believe that the
lantern was In use even earlier than
the seventeenth century and that the
mysterious figures which the old as
trologers produced in the smoke of
their mystic fires were produced in the
same way as Kircher produced his, the
smoke hiding the lantern.
It Told the Trnfli.
A countryman on a visit to Glasgow,
while walking along Argyie street
leading the signboards and the tickets
in the shop windows, said to Ids com
panion: “Uoo can a’ thae ham shops
be the best and cheapest? Every yin
o’ them says that, .•Kid the same w”
the clothes shops tae. They are jist
a lot o' leears.”
They continued along the street un
til, coming opposite a plumber’s shop
with a big bill in the window with the
words “Cast Iron Sinks" printed in
large letters on It. he exclaimed:
“Well, Jock, here's yin that tells the
truth at ony rate. But any danged
fool kens that east iron wad sink.”
Her Choice.
Once upon a ilrnV a Young Person,
by Dint of Frugality, had accumulated
a Wad, and, the season of Millinery
Openings having come, it was uow Up
to her.
“Shall 1,” she mused in no small anx
iety, “make my Wad look like 30 cents,
or shall I trim my own Imt and thus
make myself look like 30 cent*?”
As the Shrewd Reader will doubtless
have conjectured, the Upshot of the
matter was that the Young Person pur
chased a Lovely Imported Creation,
costing sso.—Detroit Journal.
Obeying Pn|ia.
Stern Father—Now. -now, my boys.
Quarreling again—and for a miserable
little halfpenny? if
One of the Boys—Well, you said, fa
ther, the less we quarreled about the
better.—London Tit-Bits.
A Sweet Hmonwon.
“What a beautifuKvdume of Emer
son's ‘Essays’ you have. Miss Madge.”
“Yes. Isn't It lovely’ It’s a candy
box.”- Indianapolis Josrmfl.
WALKER COUNTY MESSENGER, NOVEMBER 1, T9OO.
- unvnu 1 tAOUnUjU:. >1 ■ —II ■■IIHH II IlllHlf——
Tlie niffnens of the Ocean.
Some people gratefully reflect that
we owe the clouds ami the tides and
the winds to the “Mother and Maker
of men,” but these are less numerous
than the folks who “would like to
know” what wo should do for soles
and cod and mackerel if there were no
ocean. Vet think only how big it is!
If you divide the whole globe’s area
Into 11 parts, the sea covers eight of
those, with an average depth of 2.000
fathoms. Trv to imagine 12,000 feet of
solid, perpendicular sen water lying
upon eight-elevenths of the entire
planet!
A patient mathematician has been at
the pains to inform us that this bulk
of brine would weigh one anil a half
million million millions of tons. For
the most part this vast body of water
—tints set down in figures as 1.500,000,-
000,000,000,000 tons Is of the same
composition everywhere, and us every
body knows, carries great quantities of
ocean salt.
But that same salt is Itself singularly
complex. Not only are there in it
chlorides and sulphates of sodium,
p tasli, magnesium and lime, which
are familiar to many, but it contains
also silica, boron, bromide. lodine, flu
oric acid and the oxides of nickel, co
balt, manganese, zinc, silver, lead, cop
per. aluminium, barium and titron
tium. Arsenic anil gold arc also found
In it, along with those rare metals lithi
um, rubidium ami eeesium.—London
Telegraph.
Tlie Prince and the Cnptnln.
The admiral commanding the British
Mediterranean squadron some 20 years
ago, writes a correspondent, gave a
dinner to the captains of the fleet at
Malta. By 0:45 most of the captains
had reached the flagship, been received
on the deck by the admiral and usher
ed below. Next the Duke of Edin
burgh arrived. The admiral received
him. and, keeping him In conversation,
continued to pace the deck. All subse
quent arrivals were duly ushered be
low to the saloon, but still the admiral
kept the duke on deck. At last It oc
curred to the duke that the dinner hour
had been passed, and he ventured to
inc • if his host was waiting for
anybody.
"Y es," replied the admiral, “I am
waiting for the captain of the
Instantly the duke took the hint, call
ed for a boat and made posthaste for
his own ship. He alone among the
captains of the fleet had turned up in
mufti, forgetting or not knowing, that
the dinner was official. On his return
to the flagship in the quickest time on
record and in full uniform the gallant
but inflexible admiral was still pacing
the deck, and deprecating his royal
highness’ profuse apologies conducted
him to dinner. 1 believe, concludes my
correspondent, the admiral was Sir
Michael Online Seymour.—M. A. P.
Afit Sinveholdem.
Many of the largo rod ants are slave
holders, and. oddly enough, tlielr slaves
are invariably black, much as is the
case with the human race. When
slaves are desired by a colony of ants,
a regular army of invasion Is formed,
and skirmishers and scouts are sent on
ahead to discover a nest of black ants.
This having been found, the warrior
ants—lnsects quite different from the
ordinary workers, with powerful Jaws
—set out to invade their neighbor’s ter
ritory and carry away tbe eggs and
pupa? to tlieir own nests. A fierce bat
tle ensues, but the Invading ants are
always victorious.
On returning to their own colony the
young of their defeated foe are taken
Into their nests and carefully treated
until they arrive at maturity, when
they become the willing bondsmen of
the conquerors of their parents, doing
nil the hardest work of the community,
even to the length of feeding their cap
tors. The hitter, however, is not en
tirely a needless humiliation to subject
them to, ns some species of slaveliold
ing ants are Incapable of feeding them
selves and would die of starvation In
the midst of plenty were It not for
their slaves.—Kansas City Independ
ent.
A Cn*e of Color Blindness.
“Yours is a perplexing case,” said tlio
oculist. “You call red purple and refer
to nlle green as turkey red.”
“Yes.” replied the visitor, with a con
tented smile. “I fancy 1 was born that
way.”
“It’s the most aggravated case of col
or blindness I have ever encountered
in my professional experience.”
“That’s it. 1 want you to write me
out a statement to that effect. Never
mind what the fee is. You see, my
wife has a lot of samples she wants
matched, and she’ll ask me to tackle
tlie Job some time next week for cer
tain.”
And tin'll the oculist had his suspi
cions.—Pearson’s Weekly.
Mriiet’n Halny Srnnon.
What they call the rainy season in
Mexico conics only in the form of
showers, which fall In tlie afternoon.
These showers usually occur every
day, hut sometimes there will be two
or three days of perfectly clear weath
er. There is no steady downpour, how
ever, ns In most tropical countries, and
In Mexico the rainy season is regarded
as tlie finest season of tlie year.
Serving Ibe Public.
Wtinn— But if yon insist that the
man who works for tbe public good
without hope of gaining gratitude Is
a craDk, what do you call the roan that
expects gratitude?
Tutber— Him?" Oh, he’s Just a plain
fool.—lndianapolis Press.
In the manufacture of a pocketknlfo
In France 22 workmen are employed
for the handle and blade, 18 for a table
knife, 9 for scissors and 0 for razors.
In Japan it would be thought as
rude to neglect to ofTer tea to a visitor
on his arrival as not to speak to him.
fefl Hill! PHiSlilC PoKtsi
f Kr A Iti some rases the external signs of Contagious Blood Poison arc so slight Hint the IvlulaC
i-i-. victim is firmly within tlie grasp of tlie monster before the true nature of tlie disease 11 asa IIV
is known. In other cases tlie blood is quickly filled with this poisonous virus and the f’!>/!>[!/£*
12’ "’• ?! swollen glands, mucus patches in the mouth, sores on scalp, ulcers on longue, r.orc ||| ri 11%
ix\< /. . throat, eruptions on skin, copper colored splotches, and falling hair, and eyebrows "* * i
leave no room for doubt, as these are all unmistakable signs of Contagious Blood Poison. JSii/li?’
Doctors si ill prescrilie mercury and potash as the only cure for Blood Poison. These poisonous mill- ! VjSyl 0.111 fjh
rials never yet made a complete ami permanent cure of Contagious Blood Poison. They drive the disease v V
bai:k into the system, cover it up for a while, hut it breaks out again in worse form. The: e powerful minerals produce mercurial
rheumatism an.l the most offensive sores and ulcers, causing the joints to stiffen and linger nails to drop off. Morcury and
potash innko wrecks, not cures, ami those who have been dosed with these drugs r- never aft r free from aches and pain.
S. S. B. .sets in an entirely different manner, being a purely vegetable remedy ; it forces the poison out of the system, and
instead of te.oing down, builds up and invigorates tlie general health. S. S. S. is the only anlid..te for this specific virus, and
therefore the only cure for Contagious Blood Poison. No matter in what stage or hV. hopeless the case may appear, even
though prom uiieed incurable by the doctors, S. S. S. can he relied upon to make a rapid, permanent cure. S. S. S. is not a
new, untried remedy; an experience of nearly fifty years has proven it a sure ami unfailing cure for this disease. It is the
only purely vegetable blood medicine known.
Mr. 1,. Myers, uio Mulberry St.. Newark, N. J.. say s : "1 was afflicted with n terrible blood disease, which was in spats at first, hut afterwards
spread all over my body. These soon broke out into sores, and il is easy to imagine the suffering I erntmeu. 1 dote 1 became convinced th«i the
• ye.. -s ....... ... vdoctors ecuid do me no Rend I had spent n hundred dcllai \ wha n was really thrown away. 1 then
jy.'i.’y *' -t'y .jS, a -V.dra i>r'fX o 5 tried vmi. us patent medicines, tint they did not rea -]i the di- . When I had finished my first
/c y A, lA.Vp /frSj.VsT J bottle of s. s s. 1 WAS a real 1 v improved, and was dchiihted with tlie result. The large, red splotches
1 1 i'-.c vq ;VyX -q on my chest began tn grow paler and smaller, and hcfoilong disappeared entirely. 1 regained my
v eo.*, *' < 'Vs.. ' ■ .'V lost weight, liceame stiongci, and lily spjietite Improved. I ivns is,on entirely well, and my skid as
.i.-tVsV ‘i.- v’lsnßi, clear as a piece of glass.“
i. NrfAt' fc, V Send for our Home Treatment Book, which contains valuable information about
e'.wp !•!*>-,■. v 'mJ p >,>,, -sn&W this disease, with complete directions for self treatment. Onr medical department is
'/ y' . ,A/ t: A,'--’ in charge of physicians who have made a life-lime study of blood diseases. Don’t
'*hesitate to write for any information or advice wanted. We make no charge what
ever for this. All correspondence is held in the most sacred confidence. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, ATLANTA, 6A.
ivetar, v irKZOMxm.
Would (nine Vnyltovv.
The Rev. Father Staunton of the well
known Church of St. Alban, Holborn,
is a humui'ist in his way and often tells
with inimitable effect a droll story in
the course of his sermon which sends
through the congregation a gentle rip
ple of merriment. On Sunday he sat
irized the ambition of certain people
to use words of which they did not
know the meaning. Many of them
were fond of sticking tlie letters “D.
V.” in all sorts of places instead of
using the plain, homely English phrase
“God willing.” He knew one gentle
man. rather shaky in Ills Latin, who in
a letter to a friend wrote “I.will be
with you ‘D. V.’ on Monday, but any
way on Tuesday.”—London Telegraph.
Why She Was Itlstit.
Haydn had a peculiar way of deter
mining the time in which a piece of
music should he sung. On one occa
sion a female singer In high esteem at
court had been appointed to sing one
of Haydn’s compositions. At the re
hearsal she and the conductor differed
as to tlie time of tlie music. The mat
ter was to be settled by referring it to
Haydn himself. When called on to
decide, tie asked Ihe conductor if the
singer was handsome.
“Very,” was tlie reply, “and a spe
cial favorite with tlie prince.”
“Then site is right,” replied Haydn.
WOMellleed.
To stop bleeding at tlie nose, cut
some blotting paper about an inch
square, roll it about tlie size of a lead
pencil and put it up the nostril that Is
bleeding. The hollow in it will allow
the sufferer to breathe. The blood will
fill the space between tlie tube and
the nose and will very soon coagulate
and cease to flow.
A Conlrnolor.
Knlcker—You say your son is a con
tractor. What is his special line?
Bocker—Debts.
Es r a ys.
Ptrayed from the undersigned
one white heifer, 2 years old with
a few red specks about the head;
with nmall horns; marked crop
and two splits in right ear.
Also one mil ley stoer black
(might be called frosty) 2 years
old;, marked with crop and split in
right ear. Been gone ever since
May. Last seen was with Mr.
Hunter’s cattle near John Moore’s
on Lookout Mouutain.
Any information as to their
whereabouts will bo tbaokfuly re
ceived and liberally rewarded.
13. F. Pitman,
Eagle Cliff, (la.-
Constipation means the accum
ulation of waste matter that should
be discharged daily, and unless
this is done the foul matter is ab
sorbed and poisons tlie system.
Use Herbine to bring about reg
ularity of the bow: Is. Price 50j.
For sale by .1.1). Farias & Co.,
Druggists.
Found on road leading through
Scroggins farm, one used by the
Government hauling gravel from
widow Gordon’s place, pair of
speet teles. Loser may get them
by calling on C. V. Henderson
half mile south of Lee & Gordon
Mi I.
When you fee 1 that life is hard
ly worth the candle take a dose
of Chamberlain's Stomach and
Liver Tablets. They will cleanse
your ston. ich, tone up your liver
and regulate your bowels making
you feel like a new mau, For
j sale by J. D, Fariss Si Co.. Drug
gists.
According to a small boy, a
coincidence is twins.
/DrßullsN
i r Cures all Throat and Lung Anccti#ns.
COUGH SYRUB
IL Get the genuine. Refuse substitutes.
Vis sure/
Oil tun* Kheuin»tl»in. if&asct*.
Slammer
| i larsaons
The
2 Route forms close connection at Cincinnati with the great trunk
] | lines—Pennsylvania Lines, G. R. & 1., Big 4 Route, C. H. & D.,
11 C. & O. and Erie railways, handling through traffic expeditiously
| [ to all summer resorts of the North.
i i SpeciaS Low Excursion Rates
] | Are now in effect daily from all points South over the Queen &
11 Crescent via Cincinnati, to
; Chautauqua, Niagara Fails, Thousand Islands,
! Put-In-Bay, Petoskey, Mackinac
and all other summer resting places on
I Mountain, Lake and Seashore
! A New Ticket to Mackinac.
You can buy a ticket to Mackinac now, at excursion rates, that will take
j | you to Chicago, thence by tin; palatial steamer Manitou to Mackinac, re
-1 1 turning via D. & C. steamer to Toledo or Detroit and C. It. & D. Ry. to
9 Cincinnati (or the reverse.) A finer summer trip was never offered.
| The famous resorts of the South are also open now. The sea
[ son :tt Rock Castle Springs, Ky., Cumberland Falls, Ky. ; and Rhea
1 Springs, Tenn., promises to be the most successful ever known.
| Qneon A Crescent trains are palaces of travel. Through Pullmun Hlccpers daily from
! all N< HI thorn oiiies. l’arlor, obtforvutlon and clinir cars from ChattunooKa, Romo and
! Attalla on dajr trains. Froo reclining elmirs from nuittanooAa on night truinn. Fuat
, HoheduloH, perfect track. "No .smoke, no dust, no cinders.”
, Send for froo information ns to summer results and Queen & Crescent service to O. L.
, Mitchell, i). I*. A., Chattanooga, Tenn., or cull upon your ticket agent.
1 W. J. MURPHY, General Manager. W. C. RINCARSON, Gen'l Passenger Agent.
1 Cincinnati.
ette Jjchool,
LaFayette, Greor^ia.
Fall Term opens September 17.
Full Academic Course.
Prepared Bovs aad Girls for College.
Two Departmtsnts of lust.nic.tiou;
Literary and Bookkeeping.
Tuition; SI.OO, $1.75, and $2.50 per month.
Board in Private Familcs at Rcffsouable Cost.
Write for Announcements.
For further information ttpplv to
C. C. CHILDS, Principal.
KPARKEfCS"'"""
HAIR BALSAM
iicu and biitulifiofl the hair,
old a lumrini.t growth,
r Pulls to Bostore Gray
ip to its Youthful Color,
i Minlp disriurß b hair foiling.
&Otvftm^JAJOaM)ru||^^
HH Ice water will chill the stomach. but It El
fai will ruaku you feel warmer. g
1 HIRES 1
Rootbeer
H will cool the blood and make you really S
19 cuol. It'd the drink for warm days. w
fW IKK t IIAHMH R. HIKES CO., PtillMtalpLU, Va. «
BB Maker* rfHlren Condenwd Mill. ■
Rfl >• Merry Rhymti/or Thinly I'imte." Hent fma. H
Our Ice ret* r .ed if we fail. Any one wading
sketch and r.'.scription of any invention will
promptly receive our opinion free concerning
the patentability of same. “How to Obtain a
patent" sent upon request, patents secured
through us advertised for sale at our expense.
Patents taken out through us receive tper.lal
notice, without charge, in Tup. Patent Rscokd,
an illustrated and widely circulated journal,
consulted by Manufacturers find Investors,
bend for sample copy FREE. Address,
VICTOR J. EVANS & CO.
(Patent Attorneys,)
Evans Building, WASHINGTON, D. C.
iTULEnMIpj
I BUCK EYE Klhm
OINTMENT
founts NOTHING Blim&js
/A BURE and CERTAIN CUR£§
9 known sor ta years a3 th® &
J BEST REMEDY for PSLES, |
I 9 sold cv aix imtmoiSTS. e
; \ ftnvtdv 7 aLCS.-erJ® /
VlHwmcrv.
Refrrenee —Awards at 2 greatest World’s Expo*
idtiorm urid thoiisauils of araduatoa in ooditlont.
Coat of Fall Hftialnesa Courte, Including Tui
tion, Books and Board in family, about ft 0.
BHORTUiBD, TYPK* WftlTlf 9 A TELEOBIf Bf, BKKCIALTIES*
**TThe Kentucky University Blploina, under seal*
awarded graduates. bltorary Course free, If desired.
No vacation. Enter now. Graduates »iiceeMful.
In mder to hay pour letter* reach ue, uddrett onlj
WILBUR R. SMITH. Loxlngrton, Ky.
Nata.— Kentucky Vnlvoreity remuroee, 9000,000. and
had nearly 1000 itudent « w» attendance laet year,
HOOK AGENTS WANTED FOR
the graudeftt and fmimt milling hook svor published,
Pulpit Echoes
«>lt GIVING TBUTIIM rOltllKAI) AMI HEAHT.
rofitainifig Mr. MOOIIY’H tmst sermons, with £»««
ThiiUmg Stories, Incidents, IVrsouul Kaperlences.etc , sxUiUl
By 1). L. Moody
turned/. Wllhaeompletfl history of hUUN by lb». til AX. K.
tioss, I'astor <>f Mr Moody *
mid nn I ntrod nation hy Key. 1.% MAN A It BO * J«K- **.
Brand new. GOOnp., i.ruuu/»llyllluetraled. 0/
AGENTS UAVri lf-Mrii nod Women. C / Hmea
imm' UNO a harvest timo for Admits. Hand for term*
A. I*. W OUTUIKiGTOA A UuriAird. t«uu.
PARKER S CIMCEI? TONIC
,S,i'. J.UQX Trouble*. Dublin/, ill«tn»tng Monuli me
'n. il»ll!., an.l .» not«(U..r "uAin*
treatment fails. Kvory oiot luran <1 invalcUhoulSJißV^iL^^
ha!r R balsani j
lf,U zflrta&Z Clears.* and btaatlfles the hafr.|
foV-N nr-'* Swr HH Promotes a lnruna* growth. H
VLy* y- ftgjjGvr Fails to It eater,•
■S&fcj’} Cuei Valp *di mw Aha Irbdlinjpß
ESssßgj?aa,^Mesß
Shake Into Your Shoes.
Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder. It ouros
painful, smarting, swollen feet and in
growing nuilH, and instantly takes the
sting out of corns and bunions. It’s the
greJtest comfort discovery of the age.
Allen’s Foot-E-.se makes light or uew
shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for
sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching
feet. Try it to-day. Hold by all drug
gists and' shoe stores. By mail for 2‘>o
in stamps. Trial package FREE. Aa.
dress, Allen S. Olmsted, Lußoy, N. 1
Wanted-An Idea S^SS
proto**' l .jr ideas; they may bring you wcalib.
Vvrlt-1 J6IIN WKUDEBBURN A Ci) Patent AttOfr
Üby ‘ Wosnlßgton, L. C..for tbctf Al.Wi pricu offer
a.* iigr, ot *wo titiadred iu/entloxx wauted.
7