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SUNDAY MORNING,
Dark Hair
, \ h,ve used A y er ’ s Hair Vigor
hn.iah ßl i eat many years ’ and >■
o e UE vVI\ m past eigh,y years of
my’head!” h n °‘ a gray hairin
—l mim °^° WSOn > Md.
We mean all that rich,
dark color your hair used
to have. If it’s gray now,
i? ■ ma^ er > f° r Ayer’s
Hair Vigor always re
stores color to gray hair.
Sometimes it makes the
hair grow very heavy and
long; and it stops falling
or the hair, too.
SI.M a bottle. All droiglste.
* f , yt>Kr cannot auiiniy yon,
wm 4 -, w.£? 0 n a r aud 'fillexpress
? B fmr * 'l give the name
Ot your nearest express ollToe. Addrese,
•J. ( . A\hU CO., Lovell, Mass.
Successful Submarine Tests.
Some important naval manoeuvres
took place recently between the isles
x3f Re and Oleron, near La Rochelle,
where the submarine boat Korigan at
tacked the battleships of the French
northern squadron, which were defend
ed by four torpedo boat destroyers.
The Korigan succeeded in torpedoing
several of the battleships, and having
attacked a vessel on one side passed
underneath the vessel attacked and
■discharged a torpedo against the other
side: Tho torpedo boat destroyers
were unable to prevent the attacks.
Tho battleship Admiral Trehourat,
representing the enemy’s division,
tried to pass the southern entry to
the roadstead of La Pallice, which was
defended by the submarines Korigan
and Farfadet. The attack failed, the
Admiral Trehouart being torpedoed
four times, equivalent to once for every
one of tho four 6hips forming the di
vision which she represented.—New
York American.
FITS permanently cured.No fits or nervous
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nervoßestorer.s2trial bottle and treatisefreo
Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd., 981 Arch St., Phila.,Pa
f Some fellows are kept so busy acting as
ushers that they haven’t time to get mar
ried themselves.
Silt Yonr Denier For Alton's Foot-Ka*e,
A powder to shako into your shoes; rests the
feet. Cures Corns, bunions, Swoollen. Sore,
Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet and In
growing Nails. Allen’s Foot-Ease makes new
or tight shoes easy. At all druggists and
shoe stores, 25 cents. Sample mailed Fbee.
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy, N. Y. *
f The man who boasts that he neither bor
rows nor lends must lead a very monoto
nous life.
I’lso’sCurelsthe best medicine we ever used
for all affections of throat and lungs.—Wm.
O. Endslet, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900.
Lots of people live in the same square
without moving in the same circle.
1 Dybpefsia and Indigestion cured frea of
cost. Thousands cured daily. Send 2c. stamp
for information. Hoyle & Cos., Atlanta, Ga.
An old flame has stirred up many a
heated argument.
Professional Mourners.
The paid mourner still flourishes. A
certain class of people consider that
they do not fulfil their duty to the de
parted unless they bury them with all
possible show and ceremony; and you
cannot have an imposing funeral with
out a liberal supply of mourners.—
Cassell’s Journal.
The Man Who is Frank.
The man who boasts of his frank
ness usually has a reputation for
brutality.—Baltimore American.
The wheel of fortune demonstrates
that one good turn deserves another.
THE FREE KIDNEY DOCTOR.
It’s the people who
doubt and become cured
while thfty doubt who
praise Doan’s Fills the
highest.
Aching backs are eased.
Hip, back, and loin pains
overcome. Swelling or the
limbs and dropsy signs
vanish.
They correct urine with
brick dust sediment, h ig h
colored, pain in passing,
dribbling, frequency, bed
v etting. Doan's Kidney Pills
remove calculi and gravel.
Relieve -heart palpitation,
sleeplessness, h cadaclie,
nervousness, dizziness.
Taylorsviujb, Miss. —“ I
tried everything for a weak
back and got, no relief until I
used Doan's Pills.”
J. N. Lewis.
ybursjbra Clear Head*
_ „ BROMO-SELTZERs
lUr Everywhere
Morphinism,
Alcoholism,
■ *£ Tobacco Habit, and
ft, UI IW Neuiftsthcnift readily
yield to the Keeley
treatment. Correspondence confidential
Write for pamphlet. Pell phone 493. Kee'e;
Institute, 2720 Ave. D. Birmingham, Ala.
Do You Want Your Honey
TO I!AItN J
7%INTEREST
PER ANM'.U ?
Write me for particulars of a safe, secure invest
ment payinsr seven rer cent, on amounts of one
hundred dollars or more. Hank references.
W. I. HOK I), VorK_, Pcnna.
t Dropsy II
Removes all swelling in 8 to 20
days ; effects a permanent cure
in "to to 60 davs. Trial treatment
given free. Nothingcan be fairer
Write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons.
___ Specialists, Box Atlanta, P"-
WELL DRILLING
MACHINERY.
J. H. Hattox. of Bern, Miss., writes asfonnwH .
**l will sav that I have never seen a W cIJ Imllinp
Machine that would equal the ‘‘Ohio” Machine for
this part of the country. It is the fastest machine
in psrth or rock that I ever seen, and I am well
nleased with it. I have had no trouble with it since
QUIN-INDIA 'ttrVtt MALARIA W
ADVICE BY THE BOARDER.
Reasons For Showing Belongings to
tho Landlady.
Everything was brought home on
a Thursday evening. There were
three boxes from the dressmaker, two
from the tailor, two from the milliner,
and a multitude of parcels from the
department store. After flintier the
owner of the hewly acquired finery
invited the landlady and her daugh
ters to come up stairs aud look at it.
She showed them everything —
dresses, hats, shoea and lace, and
fine linen. They admired the things,
and thanked her for her courtesy.
When they had gone the boarder’s
friend from Chicago, who had sat si
lent throughout the Interview, express
ed her sentiments wrathfully.
“Well, what in the world did you do
that for?’’ she asked. “You did not
use to be so chummy with the people
you lived with. On the contrary, you
Were quite conservative, and never
got mixed up with anybody. Why
have you developed such a friendly
streak all of a sudden?”
The boarder smiled wisely.
“I belieh-ei," she said, “that you
never lived in a boarding house?”
“Thank heaven, no,” was the reply.
“I thought not. If you ever had
you would not now he spilling your
vials of wrath on my offending head.
I showed these things because it was
policy to do so. If I hadn't, the
whole family would have gone through
everything, any way, at their earliest
opportunity, so t may as well make
the inspection easy. It is better for
then! and It is better for me. It saves
theih any amount of time and anxiety
about being caught while diving into
trunks and wardrobe, and prevents
the clothes getting mussed, which they
ard bound to do if handled hurriedly.
No person who has not boarded for
years ran understand the conditions
which induced me to throw conservat
ism to the dogs and take t!. landlady
into my confidence in the matter of
wearing apparel and other small per
sonal belongings. I used to try to
lock things up so she wouldn't get
at them, but I found that the lock
had never been Invented that a board
ing house mistress could not find a
key to, so I simply began to got
ahead of her by treating her openly
and aboveboard.
"Nowadays when 1 move into anew
ptare I Invito the landlady In to watch
me unpack. I show her my photo
graphs of my friends and relations.
I tell her who made my dresses and
how much they cost, how long I have
had them, and whene I expect to
get more and I wind up by reading
her some of my letters. That done,
her curiosity is satisfied, and we get
along together as peacefully as two
pet lambs. She does not muss the
things in the bureau drawers, and
find out what I keep there, she does
not Incidentally ruffle my temper try
ing to count my handkerchiefs and
ribbons, nor even sample my hair
tonic and toilet water. In short, my
simple, straightforward method of
showing everything I own at the start
makes model landladies, and I strong
ly advise all women who board or
who contemplate boarding to try it.’*
—New York Times.
An American has invented an envel
ope which records of itself an attempt
to tamper with its contents. The flap
is imbued with some chemical composi
tion which, when operated upon by a
dampening process or any other means
of penetrating its enclosure, records
the transaction by causing the words
“attempt to open” to appear. It is
thought that the inquisitive will think
twice before pursuing their researches
in face of such an invention.
The naked truth shocks some people,
so they drape It with subterfuge.
h v.c\v\c vow
NAME
P. O.—
STATE
For fro© trial box, mail this coupon to
Foster-Milburn t’o., Buffalo, N. Y. If above
apace is Insufficient, write address on sepa
rate slip.
Straw Hats are here J
F Hires A
Rootbeer A iSm 1
if Sy Darrin now and drink it all w®: SjgLtfßWl
Ijiw Aiuiiiner; it cools and re- /lj| ! SflfHfSj
H# frculu 8. A jrttrkHßc iimk* s I3fl sjllfw&Es
yU five Kill lon R. sold every- fflf i Hljjcffial
VS where, or by mail, for
hires w-s* iv/
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
Tuiane University of Louisiana.
Itft advantages for practical instruction, both in ampin
laboratories und abundant hospital niatorinloarn une
qualled. Free access isgiven to the groat Chanty Hos
pital with t*Ud beds and 30,000 patients annually- Spi-cial
instruction is Riven daily at tho bedside of the hick-
Tho next session begins October Slid. 190 - For cata
oguo and information rddre.-iB Prof. S- E Chaille,
M. D-. Dean, P. O. Drawer 26\, New Oiloins. La.
Am, 27, 1903.
Mineral Hill Springs Hotel.
All ideal resort for health, rest and recre
ation. Situated near the foot of Clinch
mountain in beautiful Bean Siation valley.
Nine different mineral springsin grounds,
ineluding red, white and black sulphur,
chalybeate,epsom, alum and black water.
Reasonable rates. Write for booklet, terms,
etc., to MISS MAUDE HE ACKER, i'rt.prie
treia, Tato springs F. 0., Teim.
The reason you can get
this trial free is because
they cure Kidney Ills and
will prove it to you.
West Branch, Mich.—
Doan's Kidney Pills hit the
case, which was an unusual
desire to urinate —had to get
up five or six times of a night.
I think diabetes was well un
der wav, the feet and ankles
swelled. There was an in
tense pain in the back, the
heat of which would feel like
putting one's hand up to a
lamp chimney. 1 have used
the free trial and two full
boxes of Doan’s Pills wit li t he
satisfaction of feeling that I
am cured. They are the rem
edy par excellence.”
B. F. Ballard.
Hopsed with a mollusk of the sea,
Home atom life of mean degree
Must perish that a pearl may be.
Extinguished, in its purple cave,
From prison wall and crystal wave,
Its ruin wins a glittering grave.
Till, like a dewdrop cool and clean,
Englobed in light, a gem serene
Adorns the bosom of a queen.
O life that climbs from power to power!
Each darkness broods a brighter hour,
Each fading sows a fairer flower.
Career of His Father s Son.
By L. PARRY TRUSCOTT.
Mrs. Hayes was undeniably a widow,
but she was very far from the state
known as “lone and lorn,” for her hus
band, of whom she had plainly stood in
considerable awe, before dying had
considerately bequeathed to her “his
living image”—in a slightly more man
ageable form. Like most women, Mrs.
Hayes was prone to concentration, es
pecially in matters of the heart, and
two so exactly alike might have proved
an embarras de richesse. Hut left with
only one, and that it small one, she re
established herself in her native vil
lage and contentedly applied herself t#
the washtub and the ironing board for
the maintenance of herself and the
little Johnnie until he should be of an
age to realize her great expectations of
him and prove himself the man his
father was.
“Just about a clever scholard, too,”
explained Mrs. Hayes to any one who
cared to listen.
None of her friends and relations
had seen this wonderful man of hers
in the flesh; she had met him in Lon
don while in the service there, and had
Only returned to the country at his
death. But they were not allowed to
forget him, and the tale of his numer
ous attainments was told and told
again. He had left only a very few
pounds’ worth of furniture behind him,
but, according to his wife, he had been
“most too clever" for money making—
one of those men so topheavy with
brains that they cannot conveniently
stoop to pick up a mere weekly wage-
And, then, he had died quite young, be
fore he had been given his “chance.”
A common laborer, a farm hand, keeps
himself from the time he is released
from school, but it is notorious that
men of talent take longer to start
themselves in independence; some
times the twenties see them still only
thinking of doing it, the thirties sur
prise them with the task unaccom
plished. Every one knows that brains
take longer to develop than industry
—or at any rate, all Mrs. Hayes’s in
timates knew it, having had the theory
set forth to them in homely language
many times. “And he never had his
chance, you understand me,” she would
end; “was just snapped Off like a bud
as the frost catches.”
But Johnnie, lucky boy, joined his
mother’s robust constitution to bis
father’s intellect, so she averred, and
the constitution, at any rate, seemed
iquite in evidence. And if they look
to see what his father looked like, let
them look at Johnnie, said his mother,
“his living picture!”
Judged thus by Johnnie, his father
seems to have had a sturdy, stumpy
figure, a round, blunt featured face,
powerful white teeth, a shock of stub
by, sun bleached hair and prominent
light blue eyes that were wont to stare
unblinkingly during a conversation at
whatever object first met their gaze—
all this added to a curious reluctance
to say a word more than the absolutely
necessary. A common enough type in
that neighborhood, yet not even that
neighborhood’s preconceived idea of a
son of genius.
But, if any smiled, they were kindly
folk and took care to do it only be
hind the mother’s back.
During Johnmie’s passage from a.
heavy baby into a healthy, hearty boy,
Mrs. Hayes was spared half the pangs
of motherhood. She gave away the last
of his petticoats without a sigh; with
her own hands, to an accompaniment
of smiles instead of tears, she cut close
the mop of hair which had always re
fused to respond to her efforts to en
tice it into curls. She was in such a
hurry for him to attain man's estate,
and to show forth to a wondering
world the heritage his father had left
him, that she hurried him with all her
might through his early years. John
nie never grew out of his clothes like
other boys. He was forced to turn them
up, the trousers half way to his knees,
and the sleeves to his elbows, before he
could move in them, and they were al
ways beyond patching before his limbs
overtook them. When he was live years
old she publicly announced her inten
tion of calling him “John,” as a weight
ier and more fitting name. But he was
so unmistakably “Johnnie’’ that no one
could remember to follow her example,
and half her time she only managed to
end a sentence started too nimbly with
a “Johnnie” that had “slipped out.”
As soon as he could toddle Johnnie
went to school, and continued to go
daily until the extreme limit of age
when schooling is compulsory on the
youth of England. Once laboriously es
tablished in a ‘“standard,” he showed
a marked disinclination to leave it, and
the utmost prodding never advanced
him beyond the borderland of the
“fourth.” But his mother blamed the
school and her want of pi cans to send
him to a better cne, not Johnnie. Of
course, what any yokel learned would
not be the learning to tempt her hus
band’s son. Johnnie received subtle
flattery from her instead of blows for
his slow progless. He met it, as he
met most things, with the impenetra
ble stare of his light blue eye3. His
opinion of himself would have inter
ested a good many people by this time,
hut his silence remained unbroken on
that point as on so many others.
There followed the usual little diffi
culty in fitting the village genius with
a means of earning a livelihood. Mrs.
Hayes refused to contemplate anything
whereby "honest sweat" might he
caused to flow from her son’s low, hair
thatched brow. Most of the men about
her worked out of doors, or at some
humble trade, and nolhing of that
kind, she had decided years ago, would
do for Johnnie. With great difficulty
and some ds!?y, eiie obtained him cm.
BEAUTY FOR ASHES.
O triumph of divine desires
When human passion chokes its fires,
And ail the brute in man expires!
Till then the spoil of vanquished pain,
The braver Joss, the grander gain.
The search of love among the slain.
For God discerns with punctual eyes
The godlike where the carnal dies,
And clothes with light the ransomed prize.
“ 1 mako ray jewels so,” He salth,
“ Of sorrow’s tears, of suppliants' breath,
A glory round the dust of death.”
—Theron Brown, in Philadelphia Bunday School Times.
ployment at the village grocer's—just
while he looked about him. He was to
“keep the books" as his chief occupa
tion, and she made a great deal conver
sationally of the glory of those books.
Johnnie made very little of them ex
cept to blot them freely. He seemed
all the while he sat over them to be
struggling hard to do something re
quiring great expenditure of noisy
breath, but the result failed to satisfy
the grocer.
He took his dismissal stolidly, if
with a lingering shortness of breath.
“Don’t want to slay, sir,” he blurted
out at last; “but could you say—could
you say as —”
“I’ll say I thing you’re a deal too
clever for this job, my boy,” said the
kindly grocer, “if that'll suit you?”
And lie winked jovially.
“Thank ye, sir,” said Johnnnie, sim
ply, and very slowly and solemnly re
turned the wink with one prominent
blue eye. And that was the only clew
to the hidden depths of his character
the village ever received from clever
Johnnie.
For his mother did not try again to
find him a situation; he quietly put
himself beyond that possibility. She
came down one morning to find him
gone, with a little bundle of clothes,
and apparently half a loaf and a couple
of turnips.
“Dere Ma” (he had written —he never
called her anything but "Mother,” but
“Ma” proved easier in the spelling)—
"i ham goin to foind som work has i
con do Dere Ma i wall send you som
cash reglar when i gets it. dere Ma. —
Your lovin son J. HAYES.”
She never showed this letter to any
one, but she industriously spun about
the prosaic flight of Johnnie a veil of
romance all her own. And it so took
up her time and though is that she grew
accustomed to being alone before she
began to mind it.
Meanwhile, with considerable direct
ness, Johnnie made him way on foot to
a large racing stable in an adjoining
county that he had once been told
about. He was lucky in this, that the
owner of the stable was actually pres
ent when he reached it, and lu ky also
in being given the opportunity of mak
ing his application for employment to
the Great Man himself. Johnnie’s
breath again gave him trouble, but
what he said was to the point—
“l haven't had much to do with ’em,
but I do seem to know something about
’em, and I’m so mortal fond o’ horses
that nothing would be too much trouble
to learn; and, if you’d try me. I'd work
my hardest” —Then his breath gave
out, and he stood panting and expect
ant, tho stare of his blue eyes for
once fixed appropriately on the Great
Man’s face.
And he was given the work he longed
for. The Great Man was “mortal fond”
of horses, too; there may have been
times when he even envied his men
their method of earning their daily
bread about his stables. At any rate, he
realized that Johnnie was going to
live an idea! life—a life spent in doing
the thing of all others he would
rather do.
Johnnie’s choice of occupation, in
deed, was such a wise one that he did
not long retain the humble position In
which he started. His fondness for
horses taught him more about them
than experience taught many of fhe
others; lib could always lead them by
it, just fts a woman who loves children
can always make them love her, or a
man who loves men can always man
age them. And from the first, when his
wages amounted to only a very few
shillings weekly and he was obliged to
go often very hungry to do it (for
Johnnie was still growing and his ap
petite with him), he regularly sent a
monthly postal order to his widowed
mother, and as time went on he never
failed to make it larger to match every
rise. He did not often Write, and, if
he did, he never gave her his address,
or any news beyond the state of his
health; a thing that, having started
propitiously, did not vary. Nor did he
ever visit her, although it would have
been an easy enough journey to take,
a likely thing to do. But, in refrairi
ing, Johnnie probably had his reasons;
he covered them over with a wide re
ticence, hut it was known by now that
ho generally had them—for other peo
ple to talk about if they cared to.
And then at last Johnnie gained pro
motion and a rise so substantial that it
seemed to change his views. For more
than a year he had been "walking out”
with a young woman —only a servant,
it is true, but sweet of face and true
of heart, and as fond of Johnnie as he
was fond of horses. He had started
their walks together by making it very
plain to her that marriage must boa
remote possibility, because the postal
orders taxed his resources and were not
on any account to he stopped.
“So it mayn’t he worth your while to
be waiting,” he had said. "Likely It
would be a stiffish time.'’
"Then you don’t really love me?”
sighed the maid.
"I loves you right enough,’ said
Johnnie. ‘I wasn't speaking ill of my
love.”
“If you love me, how can you doubt
me being willing to wait a hit for you?
You’re willing, aren’t you?” She
spoke with tears.
"Mighty willing,” said Johnnie. He
drew her head upon his shoulder, and
lie patted it, reeling there, as he might
the head of a favorite horse. Shortness
of breath, as of old at an emergenov,
overtook him. but he managed to re
peat, “Steady, m’ beauty, steady," x
great many times.
And now bis generous wages actual-
THE BRUNSWICK DAILY NEWS.
ly admitted of the double burden—the
postal orders to the mother at a dis
tance and the pretty wife at home. But,
before making this change in life,
Johnnie, almost for the first time, took
a step on the impulse of a moment —
felt a longing to see his mother's face
once again and acted on it.
He found her on her deathbed, plain
ly within a few hours of her death.
Johnnie had his own luck—he might
so easily have been too late. For she
had not been so particularly young at
the time of his birth, and she was quite
an old woman now. Consistent always,
she asked her son no questions con
cerning his long absence; she did the
talking to the last.
“A gentleman in a bank would have
to know a deal,” was one of the things
she said, and Johnnie understood that
he had spent the years perched on an
office stool as a banker’s clerk. “You'd
wear a top hat and a black coat to
business every day, of course.” She
touched his rough tweed covered arm.
“But you were right jtot to come Any
ways dressed up, as these folk might
think —they’re an envious lot, and
wonderful ignorant with it.” She gave
him, with increasing difficulty, the
many details of his life one by one; it
took her all her lime, and, almost at
the last, she remembered something
of great importance to them both.
“I told ’em always, Johnnie, when
(ho orders came, but I never changed
’em here —I waited till I could get into
the town or something turned up; of
ten I had to wait a bit, but I always
managed it, and I never told a living
soul how small they were, my dear. I
knew how many expenses you'd be
having, dining out with the gentry and
all; your old mother understood, but
others might have thought different,
and I never told a soul. Oh, they've
kept me well since I've been past work
ing, and I’m not complaining, only I
thought I’d just tell you as I under
stood why they were so small.”
"That’s right, mother,” said Johnnie;
“you was always a good ’un at ex
cuses.”
"I loved von, you see, Johnnie, and
your father before you,” explained the
dying woman.
“That's right, mother,” said Johnnie,"
staring hard at the foot of (he bed out
of unblinking, prominent eyes, but
gently stroking her worn hand; "you
was always a good ’un at lovin.’ ”
When her weak voice was silent for
ever, Johnnie knelt at prayer beside
her. He prayed out loud, with many
catches in his breath. What he said is,
perhaps, worth recording.
"Good Lord,” he began, In orthodox
fashion, “you know as I didn’t mean to
act untruthful, and that I wouldn’t
have left her if I hadn’t aknown she’d
be a deal happier alone. But if you
must keep turning of the women out
so fondlike and so deceiving of them
selves, what are we men folk to be do
ing for the sake o' peace?”—The
Sketch.
QUAINT AND CURIOUS.
If a census could be taken of the men
who work over a washtub more or less
days per week, it would run up into
the hundreds of thousands.
Asa self-minded atonement for sins
committed 30 years ago, a Moscow beg
gar has ever since worn an iron chain,
from which two heavy weights depend.
For sweeping the streets of Bendigo,
Australia, where such expense is
caused by people who scrapo the roads
for the sake of the gold dust obtain
able, a man has been fined 20 shillings.
It is not generally known that the
jackal is a greater destroyer of hu
manity in India than the tiger. Sta
tistics published by the government of
India show that while 928 persons were
killed by tigers more than 1000 children
were carried away by jackals.
The latest craze in Paris is the wear
ing of a lighted lantern as a personal
ornament. The fashion originated with
\ speculative manufacturer, whose “pe
tites lanterns” were bought by tens of
thousands at the fair of Neuilly. The
lantern is very small and neat, and
made in gothic form, after an ancient
model.
Sixty mastodons have been found in
New York, mostly along certain well
marked belts. Outside these belts the
slate is barren. They, therefore, had
distinct feeding grounds, and that, too,
in a not very remote time. They are
usually found resting on the boulders
of old streams and in a comparatively
thin layer of peat.
Paul Ilesmuke, of Amphlon, Texas
who lias just been elected justice of
the peace, is without arms, hut per
forms wonders with his feet. With
them he handles a knife and fork with
dexterity and writes with ease. For
six months he was county clerk, kept
the records accurately and they ars
models of neatness.
Even the jaded taste of the Paris
ians is responding to the sensation of
seeing a child lion tamer in the per
son of Tilly Hebe, a frail 17-year-old
girl. She dominates the savage beasts
by affection, and although she bears
ugly scratches, say that none were
given with malice. This modern Unad
is said to sleep with her lions frequent
ly.
A Shakespearian Relic.
An interesting Shakespearian relic
recently sold at Sotheby’s was the
armchair made from the wood of tho
mulberry tree planted by Shakespeare
in New Palace Harden, Stratford-on-
Avon. The pedigree of (he chair Is
unquestionably authentic since its his
tory can ho traced right from tho lime
of the famous tree being cut down
to the present day. It formerly oc
cupied an honored place in the Strat
ford Arms, Stratford. When Ihe pro
prietor died In 1545 It passed into the
possession of his daugnter, then to
that of his daughter’s niece, by whom
it was for some time exhibited in Shef
field Public Museum, Weston park. At
Iho sale at Sotheby’s this unique relic
was sold for Cl5O. —The Taller.
Accidental Injuries.
Among any 100,000 people, 15,000 ex
perlenco during the year an accidental
injury r.f some kind severe enough tu
ranee a claim on an aovUaat policy,
A PROMINENT COLLEGE IAN.
One of Indiana’s Useful Educators Says :
“ I Eecl Like a New Man.”
§ § § §
: ■“ ~ “ mb. johx |
Mr. .John \Y. Mi ni;, M Jefferson Avc., Indianapolis, Ind., State Representative of
Indianapolis business College, writes:
“I /Irmly believe that 1 one my fine health to Vcruna . Constant travel
and change of food and water wrought havoc with my stomach, and for
months I suffered with Indigestion and catarrh of the stomach. I /clt that
the only thing to do was to give up my occupation, which 1 felt very reluc
tant lo do. Seeing an ad. of i'eruna as a specific for catarrh l decided to
give It a trial, and used it faithfully for six weclcs, when I found that my
troubles hud all disappeared and I seemed like anew man. I have a bottle
of reruna In my grip all thetlme, anil occasionally take a fewdoses which
keeps me tn excellent health.” —John ll'. Meng.
rp HE most common phases of summer
JL eatarrh arc catarrh of the stomacH
and bowels. Domna is a specific for .sum
mer eatarrh.
Hon. Willis Rrewer, Representative in
Congress from Alabama, writes the follow
ing letter to Dr. llartman:
House of Representatives,
Washington, i). C.
The Peruna Medicine Cos., Columbus. ().:
Gentlemen “I have used one bottle of
Peruna for lassitude, and I take pleasure
CATHARTIC
GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel trembles, appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad
blood, wind on tho stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples,
pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow rkin and dizziness. When your bowels don’t move
regularly you ore pick. Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together.. It
startys chronic ailments and long years of suffering. No matter what nils you, start taking
CASCARETS today, for you will never get well and stuy well until you get your bowela
right Take our advice, start with Cascarets toHjiy under absolute guarantee to cure or
money refunded. The genuine tablet stamped CC C. Never sold in bulk. Sample and
booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicign or New York. 5° J
■■■■■■wHagMnaMMnaMHnHapaMaHaHwaaMaaaHnHHaßHHHMMHHßaaiiaaMMßMßHaMMMHi
THE MILNER & KETTIG CO. “ST
IllSiS fits
Machinery,
Engines and
j* Boilers, ■*
Saw Mills,
“Porcupine”
Dry Kilns.
RI PA N S Tabules
Doctors find
A good prescription
For mankind.
The B-cent packet is enough fof
an ordinary occasion. 'llia
family bottle (pri< e CO cents)
contains a supply luf a year.
In Hot Weather
•cp the natural channels of the
’open. It prevents<
’iSftrss, fhiuiiK Ins, rrfrrshrs
l omach , aids diiuwiiott, t ools the
f, t tears the brain. Contains no
>tic or irritant dm;;.
Use 'l by Arm iit mi Fby it ims
HOr. mid 91.00.
Al Druggists or by mail from
Tarrant Cos., 2l n‘'w vmk? t '
(f>(l iprn CIHII) WliilODT CI'TIIMC,
| it i\ UCli A New Veqetable Remedy.
Wfure (jiaironterd i<ilv-.*rv <V.se hvateil.
NATIONAL F,’. NCF.It MFMCINF COMPANY,
Aiistcil Building, At lai.tit, (.h.
isi FusTs Vditfit all ast i a.ls. £9
L.a Hunt ( miv’h Nyjup. Ta.t<: oipkl. Übo
"sail 1 w£Tft Tkewpwa's We* “
in recommending it to those who need a
good remedy. Asa tonic it is excellent.
In the short time I have used it is has
done me a great deal of good."—Willis
1 hewer.
If you do not derive prompt and satis
factory results from the use of Peruna,
write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving u
full statement of your ease and he will bo
jileased to give you his valuable advice
gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of 'The
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio.
Engine Lathes,
Milling .*•
Machines,
Upright Drills
Steam Pumps,
Boilers, Etc.
FOR WOMEN
Much That Every Woman
Desires to Know *
About Sanative Antisep
tic Cleansing
And about the Care of the Skin,
Scalp, Hair and Hands.
Too much stress cannot bo placed on
tho great value of Cuticura Soap, Oint
ment ami Resolvent in tho antiseptic
Cleansing of tl.<! mucous surfaces and of
the Wood and circulating fluids, thus
affording pure, sweet and economical
local and constitutional treatment for
weakening uleerutiuns, inflammations.
Rollings, irritations, relaxations, dis
placements, pains and irregularities
peculiar to females. Hence tile Cuti
tura remedies have a wonderful influ
ence in restoring health, strength and
beauty to weary women, who iiuve
been prematurely aged and invalided
by these distressing ailments, ns well as
such sympathetic aiilietions as anuimia,
chlorosis, hysteria, nervousness and
debility.
Women from tho very first have fully
appreciated the purity and sweetness,
the power to afford immediate relief,
l lie certainty of speedy and permanent
cure, Hie absolute safety and great
economy which have made the Cuticura
remedies the standard skin cures and
humour remedies of tho civilized world.
Millions of the women use Cuticura
Soap, assisted by Cuticura Ointment,
for preserving, purifying aud beauti
fying the skin, for cleansing the scalp
of crusts, scales and dandruff, and the
stopping of falling hair, for softening,
whitening aud soothing red, rough and
sore hands, for annoying irritations,
and ulcerative weaknesses, and for
many sanative, antiseptic purposes
which readily suggest, themselves, na
wdl as fnrnll the purposes of the toilet,
batli and nursery.
Bold Hirniijjhoiit HipwoiM Cutieura Rf ftotvent. .Hip. (iv|
• ! ( !:(>.■• late ( '-.ulc! Fill* |kt vinl of lilt), Oint
fiH-nt. ’Or . >oai>. V> WpHs: I.oiMtrn, t 7 Chor'erhoiiM
<*•; , I *• -. * I'iicdela 1 ii l v; Horton, I 7 t
!*■ ' '""’v* . ::*m, lV.ni,, Bait) Trunrioton.
N'i;; . *• A VYftflWl."