i;^sasabtiiiriSHbcSi a sraeSg c^ i OLD RELIABLE $ I DRUG STORE S The Home of Vinol jjj K The great Tonic Reconstructor. »] ffi A specific for LUNG TROUBLE, }fl S COUGHS and COLDS. ju Protect Your I.IIIIKS bj (n A full line of Chest Protectors. n] -I!: Chamois vests for men and fu women. In []{ Prepare for Winter [{] Jn New line of up to date Rubber [{] (Jj Goods, Water Bags, Syringes f|] pJ and Atomizers. 1/1 iQ jjj jjj Avoid Typhoid Germs [}j jjj in your prescriptions. Our [jj ui Prescription department has con- In Sstantly on hand large quantities {}| of distilled water. jjj |The Bargain! [ Store * Fruits -- Vegetables ) \ Arriving daily and going at X 112 the lowest possible prices. < J Pine Apples, ) 3 Cucumbers, Cabbage, J i New Potatoes, \ \ Bermuda Onions. X i Remember I am handling i s Presh and Smoked Meats of all j \ kinds. Bacon, Hams, Boiled \ X Ham, Bologna. | Fine Line Groceries j \ Free delivery anywhere. 112 Phone your orders. } !T.W. WELSH j 112 Chas. Diehl's Old Stand, West Ward \ f weeks ago when a liig negro stepped up t<> her politely and asked her to give him a quarter. "I am a shipwrecked sailor." he told her. "Three (lavs ; i :. r < i the ship I was ou went ashore on: side Sandy Ilook Ever since then I've been wandering around wlthou; being able to get a Job." The lady gave him a quarter ami passed on. A week later while •,< !:;g by the same spot ou Fifth avenue she was approached once more by the same negro. "I am a shipwrecked sailor." he he gan. "Three days ago" She let him finish. Then she re marked: "Two weeks ago when 1 gave you a quarter you told me that same story. Then you said that you had been wrecked three days before. Now yon say the same thing." And she looked at the negro severely. He threw back his head and burst forth into roars of laughter. "Did—did I give you dat, story last week'/" he chuckled. "Did you give me a quarter? Well, if dat ain't a joke on me!" And she left hiui standing on the sidewalk convulsed with laughter.— New York Times. CARDS IN CHURCH. They Were Not Uncommon In the Old Days In England. Frequent cases of card playing oc curred in churches in olden days in the high or curtained family pews that were to be found in several parts of England. A case of card playing was men tioned by the poet Crabbe as having occurred in one of those pews in Trow bridge parish church. Mr. Beresford Hope stated that card playing was not uncommon in churches having cur tained pews, where those occupying them were screened from the observa tion of the rest of the congregation, and that one of the Georges is credit ed with taking part at a game of whist In the church he attended. The church at Little Stanmore, in Middlesex, has a luxurious room pew which is approached by a special door and staircase. The old St. Paul's cathedral before the great fire of London was used by business men as a sort of exchange. The portico was let out to hucksters, and in those days gambling and cards are both said to have been indulged in without let or hindrance within the cathedral.—London Standard. Outwitting a Bushranger. In Mr. George E. Ho/.all's "Story of the Australian Bushrangers" the fol lowing little episode is related: A man named Michael, who went to an inn for food, found the place in the hands of the bushrangers. Fourteen guests were already disarmed and were being searched in order. Michael was com pelled to take his place in line. The bushrangers handed him a pannikin of tea before they took his money. Know ing what was coming, lit; held the pan nikin as if the tea were too hot to drink, and when the leader of the highwaymen was looking away drop ped his roll of bank notes into it. He stood <|iiite quiet, and when the bush rangers came to feel his pockets there were only a few shillings in them. The robbers appc;>-. d satisfied and al lowed him to go. carried his pan nikin out with h: look his money and put it in his pocket without being observed. Then he mounted his horse, rode to tin? nearest police station and gave information. Her Indorsement. "Madam," said the teller of a bank in Baltimore to a woman who had handed him a check to cash—"madam, you have forgotten to indorse." A worried smile came to the wo man's face, but she took back the pa per and wrote something on the back thereof. When again the teller looked at the check he found that the woman had in dorsed as follows: "The bank has always paid me whatever it owed, and you need have no worry. Therefore I indorse this check. Very truly yours, Anna M. Blank."—l larper's. Radishes. Radishes originated in China, where they have been cultivated for many centuries and sometimes grow as big as a man's head. In Germany the old fashioned country mothers cure hoarse ness and cough with radish juice mix ed with sugar candy. The radishes of today have no flavor, no character. Formerly their sharp, biting taste made them palatable. An Outrage. "What makes you so late?" asked the boy's parent. "The teacher kept me in because 1 couldn't find Moscow on the map of E®rope," ropiic.l Johnny. . '''And no wonder you couldn't flm* Moscow! It was burned down years ago. It's ail outrage to treat a child in that way!" Kir T!-irst. "My poor man. how did you acquire such a thirst?" "It was dls a-v.ay, mister: When tie doctor operate 1 on me for appender- Citis lie forgot . i' left a sponge Inside o' me."-Boston Traveler. r\ f.l-n to Let Alone. "What !;l'ii|