cr ——— OUR KIND OF A MAN, Not an Apollo with snow-white hand, A trifle austere, nor yot too bland; But a heart of gold all through and through, And tender and sympathetic, too Our kind of a man! Ah, one who, walking the world’s broad WAYS, Bees little to blame and much to praise; Has cheer and smile for the weary throng And bold contempt for the bitter wrong-— Our kind of a man! Yea, one who, ignoring baser ends, Liveth for home and the good of friends; ‘Where, self forgotten, broad manhood lies, A star in the glory of the skies — Our kind of a man! Who not for theories but for deeds, Christ's own apostle, with love for cresds, The world’s brave prophet, after God's plan, In healing and teaching he leads the van— Our kind of a man! ~E. 8. L. Thompson, in Frank Leslie's. —— to tI. A AN EVICTION FIGHT. BY SHARP, This is the story of the house of Ma- ginley, its building and its wreck. A the present moment Maginley him- self is in Montana. He made his money in Australia and then came home to Ire- land and foolishly built a house on a land- lord's estate. It was built where labor and malerial were cheap. Stones cost next to nothing; in fact, the land around roduced little else, and so Maginley spent 1500 in building a nice two-story house with a slate roof upon it. Maginley was in America. Times were bad. His boys had not been able to make any money in the Scottish harvest fields. They wanted an abatement of the rent, but that the grant. The money was offered to the of the parish, the celebrated Fr. Mac- Fadden. It was refused as being offered too late, and the command was given that the eviction must proceed. I ar- rived on the ground just at end these negotiations. The police refused to allow me to pass down the road near the house to attacked so 1 across the fields, keeping on the outside LUKE was subscribed and the of be of the police cordon—threatened every | approached too | | smashed, now and then when | near that line—and at last took up apo sition on the hillside, ine of policemen and facing the end of the house where I could what going on on both sides of it I will now mention a little incident which, although trivial in itself, goes to account for the hatred with which the police are regarded in Ireland. When I took up my position as near to the out- side line as I was permitted, the police- man near where I stood thought it would be the correct thing to stand in front of m2 so that I could not see what was go- ing on. I moved up the hill a little and he moved up in front of me. 1 moved down and he again moved down in front of me. SC “I don't think you have any right to | do that,” I said. “You move on,” was his answer. My own impulse at the moment was to hit the man across the face with my um brella, but I realized the futility of do ing this to a man armed with a rifle. so I called to an officer, who was standing wear by, inside the cordon. “You cannot get inside,” said the of ficer, anticipating the question that was usually asked him *‘I1de not want to go inside,” I said. “but I want to know if it is any part o this man's duty to obstruct what 1s going onl?’ “Not at all,’ of officer. Then addressing the man he dered him to kee p his place and [I had no more trouble with that man. The fact is the police are over zealous in their du to { my view of ' was the the or Answer ties and get themselves disliked —not put it too strongly. Although there were so many people around the line ke pt by the police lence was most intense, The house showed no signs of having ar yboly in it, the si young men were locked inside going to defend the they were able. and were place as long es Here a certain comic element was in Iroduced, One of the officers come off the Bavoy Theatre stage after playing the part of an officer in the “Pirates of Penzance.” looking man with a heavy mustache and he had one eyeglass stuck in his eye. This, which dcesn’t look at all bad on Piccadilly, seems rather comical out in the wilds of Donegal. He strode into the open space before the house and with his one eyeglass cast a look up and down the house as if judging the best place to attack. Then he walked a few steps further with that pompous stagey air of his and again glanced up and down that house. Finally he walked down to the other corner and gave the wime glance. It looked rather ridicu- lous when you remember that only five boys were in that house and this of- ficer had at least 150 armed policemen at his back. Nevertheless he examined the house as critically as if Napoleon were defending it,"and the Old Guard that might die but never surrendered were ing to take part in the conflict. When stood back a man with a crowbar ad- vageed to the corner of the house and drove his crowbar ia between the stones. At the same instant appeared the head and shouldess of a man from out one of the second story windows. He had a stone in his hand and he flung it with a viciousness that I have never soem equaled at the man with the crowbar, The stone went wide of its mark. The next came closer. The third, with deadly sccurscy, hit the man and keeled him over, while the blood spurted from his cheek where the stone had struck. His comrades pulled him back into line. The head and shoulders disappeared from the second. story window and a cheer went up from the crowd of peasants who saw what had been done, ale 's huge te situated on the ide. main body of policemen the house, were on the side above Al- | gave way from its impact, ter the repulse of the crowbar man « number of police picked up a ladder and placed it on the edge of the roof. Then very nimbly three or four police. men ran up the incline. Instantly there was a shower of stones from all that side of the house—knocking down a couple of the policemen, but one managed to secure his place on the roof. He raised a hatchet which he had in his hand and struck the slates, which flew off ina dozen pieces, rattling down the roof and falling in a shower to the ground. Blow after blow was struck. Those inside, being unable to hit the man on the roof, began flinging stones at the crowd of po- lice outside. Then the police, seized with a sudden frenzy, began to throw stones back at those in the house. This, I was told, was against the law, and it has been denied that the police throw | stones; nevertheless they did it, and did | very short | time every window on that side of the | it with a vengeance. In a house was riddled. The police threw with an accuracy and vigor that was ad- mirable, looked at from their point of view. When the man on smashed a sufficiently large hole in it two or three more policemen with arm. | fuls of stones rushed up the ladder in spite of the missiles flung at them and began throwing stones down the hole in the roof at those inside. Then a body of police took another Iadder and smashed in the pancless sash of one of the upper story windows, giving the ladder one or two swings as the sash Placing the ladder on the window-sill, a dozen po- licemen, with great nimbleness, rushed up the ladder and entered the Another dozen or more quickly fol- lowed. The men on the roof cease throwing down stones. The man with handkerchief house, landlord refused to | | of stones from evictors by the priest | { side who knew | very short time the door f | the hillside was struck | just outside the | | the blood streamed from it was | | slowly coagulating pool on the road. The | some i of ginley, who was off in { they saw their hands held up la | Coming out the officer handed the piece | of broken slate and the prece yet everybody knew that a number of | | and as he gave the earth, of the | constabulary looked as if he had just | He was a fine | u hatchet pulled out a and began to mop his brow. The rain : the police stopped and silence again intervened, only broken by a low wail from the peasants on the hill- the inside and In a g out : " Hhovs knew what their fate would be. okin on i openea i | thirty p lice m | clad lads rangi twenty-four h ] came out had a fearful until it presented a most Another had hand « and boy road he held his hand out from him as if it forming a greal his the stood Aas were poured from a teapot, police were very much excited, and when of the English had been wringing their hands and crying as they looked at the scene, tried to pass down the road to say a word of comfort ladies, who { to the prisoners, the police shoved them back with some degree of rudeness, al- g | though for that they were checked by | their officers, who explained to the ladies that they would not be allowed to have a word with the arrested men. One { the young men was the son of Ms America. The from the im mediate locality, and their relatives and friends stood ou the hillside crying, as while the stoel handcuffs were clasped upon them. Thirty or forty surrounded them, to Approad h them or speak to them. The y double on The order; given, and the rest were neighbors’ boys policemen completely Nobody was allowed constabulary formed tw lines each side of the young men “Forward, regular tramp the hard road. Arch, was ff +d fe en sf Fryers i: the UO ops echoed own Then an officer of the law went to the ruined house, picked up a piece broken siate and a handlul of the earth He went inside to that the fire was trampled out, because if 3 ’ iH ear the h use, aa s spark of fire is left alive the eviction is He sear animal was and not « ymplete, hed the house to inside if left wat no domestic A dog IL animal inside of the house invalidates the evic- foe 11 domestic ton | a wild a cat is lovked on by this wise law animal and does not matter, of earth to saving, as he ’ landlord, gave the slate, ““There is your house,’ there are your lands.” This was accepted by the agent, and thus the house that Maginley, who is in America, built with his own money, becomes the property of the land- land, who never expended a cent on the house, and never expended a cent ov the land. Thus ends the story of the House of Maginley, its building and its wreck, Detroit Free Press. EE — : ’ 2 3 the agent of the The Tuvention of Spectacles. Old Roger Bacon is generally ae. credited with the invention of spectacles, at least of the pattern now used by per. sons of failing or defective eyesight. It seems to be more than likely that his work in this direction, ss early as 12032, originated the custom of wearing glasses, at least in the western nations, Alless. andro de Bpino, a monk of Pisa, has also been credited with the same discovery, but his pretensions---or rather those of his adherents, for he has nover been heard to say a word on the subject him. self-—are disputed by students who think Salvious Armatus was the real father of the spectacle. But as both these bene. factors flourished later than Bacon, and as he is known to have mentioned the work, they are probably much in the position of the gentleman who invented the telephone after another had shown them the way. Chicago Herald, A Faculty Prairie Dogs Lack. Dr. Wilder has made an interesting note relative to prairie dogs. They seem to lack any sense of height or distance, owing, it Is thought, to the nature of their ordi naty surroundings—a flat, level plain, destitute of pitfalls of any kind. Bev. eral dogs experimented with walked over the edges of tables, chairs and other pleces of furniture, 5d Stoned to be greatly warptiand when adventure ended in a fall to the . One dog fell from a windowsill t foot above a granite pavement, —New York Journal. * | COTTON IN THE ORIENT. 1 the roof had | IRRIGATION THE SECRET OF ITS SUCCESSFUL CULTURE, How the Crop is Raised in the Val. ley of the Nile—The Story of the Industry, Surprises have been coming out of Egypt ever since outside barbarians picked up intelligence enough to recog- nize that which was odd when they saw it. Even down to this day the Xile country has continued to send forth strange things, and every-day things put to unusual uses, and curious things to be used for most prosaic purposes. It was not very long ago that shiploads of all that was left of sacred cats and a job lot of run-to-seed mummies arrived in New York en route to the fertilizer factory. That was certainly putting what had once been objects of veneration and affection- ate care to strictly utilitarian uses, And be better than the unfavorable condi: tions indicated that it would be. The Nile was unusually low, and the weather was not all that could be desired, Sys tematic irrigation produced a good ef. fect, nevertheless, and the season proved to be fairly prosperous, — New York Times, Abont Glass Eyes. *Good glass eyes come high,” said as | acculist recently, ‘Cost u big price, do they?" “Yes, the good ones do.” “Then there is a good deal of differ. | encet” “Oh, yes. They range all the way | from fifty cents to $50.” ‘‘Is there such a big demand for | them’ “Larger than most people suppose, The fact is that many people get along 80 well with a glass eye that not one per- | son in ten suspects the fact,” ‘*Some of our friends may be wearing | one of these solid visual organs and we now Egypt stands as the source of sup- ply of shipments to this country of what a peculiarly | its best | | 1 has always been considered American product, at forms. A few days ago the Times told of the arrival in this port of a large cargo of Egyptian cotton shipped from dria, to be worked into New England mills, It consisted of | 2150 bales, was valued at about 8350.. 000, and was by far the largest impor- | tation of the kind ever made into this country. Persons who are interested in the trade say, however, that a good | deal of Egytian cotton has been coming | here from Europe in the shape of goods manufactured in English and Continen tal mills. One American manufacturer began to experiment with the Egyptian product He DOW least in Alexan- fabrics in | began he About twenty owners of cotton mills in this country are said to be using the imported article. To handle it they have to and that fact probably k other mills. In Egypt itself there is turing of the cotton i three years ago, buying =a lot of bales in a lot, fifty bales; gets 2500 | machines it of use combing eps out no manuf he product exported to be made into cloth a is the last the producer ge Two kinds of cotton wiaile ys oth € Othe eh 44 the 1 raltiabl 15 Lhe 088 valuabie staple is shorter, Cultivation on a large scale began mn | 1821, in the reign of Mahomet Al periments were made with the seed from | plants growing wild, and cotton produced of a character good enough warrant a rapid spread of its cultivation throughout Lower Egypt. Very high | prices were realized for this early pro- | duct. A Freachman named Jumel, a mer. chant, brought about the next step in the development. He imported the seed of Sea Island cotton from Florida devoted much care to its culture. His trouble well rewarded, for his experiments were highly successful, and the new grade of cotton he secured was & great improvement on that formerly raised. One result of his entsrprise was the giving of his name to Egyptian cotton which is called either or Mako The latter name is that of a planter who previous to the Jumel experiments, had Ex and WAS Jumel raised cotton on an extensive scale In the beginning the cultivation + Gov later on the fellahs secures planters The industry when that privile Methods rudimentary then, and they are will behind used, such as an American planter would reg Ther one [actor the however, which the peasant understood monopoly farmed out by the ment, but right to be iil re Doom in the Was gral ted empioye i time, Primitive tools the 84) ard as beneath « mtempt has all along been in cane, ¢ oughly ti He knew how necessary ir rigation was to cotton-growing in his ountry They have two methods of cultivating cotton in Egypt, one known “Mes gani,” the other as “Bali.” In the for mer the fields are regularly irrigated with water pumped from the Nile and carried over the country in canals Ip the lat ler the fields are thoroughly saturated wefore the planting takes place. After that the plants have to get along with out water until the Nile rises. Then pumps are set at work and the fields get their needed supply of moisture. In | y per Egypt the Mesgani system is gener ally followed. Directly the Nile inundations are of no benefit to cotton, sithough for a long time a notion prevailed that the overflow would serve Ww fertilize and irrigate the fields. Experience showed, however, that too great floods often meant that | cotton could not be mised. So weirs or dams were provided to carry off the sur. plus water into canals, Planters have more or less difficulty from the fogs | which prevail in September aud October | to the detriment of the crop. When the British took hold of Egypt they went to work on vast improyements designed to extend irrigation, A great deal of money hat been expended on these works, which are expected to prove of lasting benefit to the planters, There is some doubt whether the area under cotton cultivation can be extended | very greatly. In the delta about 1,000,. 000 feddans, or acres, are in use for the crop, or about one-third of the total ares under cultivation of all sorts, One as ; . Nearly half the Nile delta, which was cultivated conturies ago, is uaproductive now, because the water supply for three of the year is none too large for inuse. To get much bigger estimated that reser. $521351 abe g 1 Hghtost Case, do not it!” “Precisely. I'll bet that several peo- ple in this city with whom you are ac- quainted are wearing glass eyes and the fact has always escaped your attention.” “Tell me something about the busi. ness, doctor.” *‘In the first place the greater share of The best quality of artificial eyes is manufac. glass eyes, wo lled, are not glass, | tured in America by a process which is kept These are the will absolutely secret, and best and Germans also last longer, The fine artificial ye. The best eyes are made of stone. maxe a The German articl American, is cheaper than the The veining in the foreign eye is not so well marked. | trade profital One t makes the il you eyed men and one would they it the Are be rather scarce, ‘) » think that ! hat having once stocked up would buy no more, An efter it has been on duty for two or Another has to purchased. This explains the reason for the lively trade But this is n artificial eye gets to be a nais- ADCy three months one be in these artic ther oe 1, and There'll xd Aways be a trade in : Rx Lobbyists In England n England lobbyists are called parlia- nentary lawyers, and they are upheld by really do not know as a class infinitely su- Maybe they are SAC of our lob byists, but there of them a» great deal worse than our lobbyists are as ws. They are supposed simply to argue before pariisme ntary commitieos, but what is to prevent them from argu. ing with the individual members of the committees! In the House of Commons of Great Britain some of the disreputable scamps in England. frequent the gambling low saloons, and some pe ople who i shout the perior to our lo yhyists much lass better than some Are some LR are most They houses and the nre as pur chasable by an unm rupulous ‘‘parliamen- tary lawyer” as any member of Congress this by a lobbyis. If there were sence they they just sain Cc untry statistios would show, without doubt, a greater p members of tl ou i nr Die 4 of the ativ An The luxury fully as expensive 0 A number of yoars , that the is sum of $410,000 was paid the itors” for rail got into the House of There is a story of an “lawyer,” “who being re- f dif hour of present British lobl rate a f ist 1» any Ls One Urs ago it is said rm parliamentary *‘s one way bill that never Commons at all. wher British tained to appear before a number « ferent commit the having received a ber of guineas for each alt found by a friend tree in the park, that he m all his ciien ’ [oN DbHY oes at tame the same day, num- endance, was ng as jastice si under a be said, it do equal to 2." Perhaps the cunning our lo ists was an inheritance from the old country. If the truth were known it would be found that many lob. byists prey upon the credulity of their clients and that they pretend to do a great deal of bribing, where in reality they do but little, — Washington Star. Ce ————— Profits in Wild Animal Breeding. One of Barnum's big tigers died re. cently at Bridgeport, Conn. The ani. mal was given its breakfast and in the huge piece of meat which formed a part of its meal was a small bose which got stuck in the animal's throat, and before it could be removed the tiger had chocked to death. The carcass of the dead tiger | was sent to the Baroum museum at Tufts College. The same night that the | in 3 tiger died there was quite an addition to | = the family of animals at the quarters, | By the law of compensation a lioness gave birth to four beautiful cubs, They are living and the owners of the show value them at $15,000, In speaking of the matter Mr. Barnum said toa pate: “I have offered my partoer, Mr. Bailey, $100,000 for the first baby elephant born in Philadelphia, and it will be | worth every dollar of that amount, Our gning by the birth of wild animals among those in the me ¢ of our show are annually about ,000 greater than our losses by death of animals, — Washington Star, ——— A Primitive Turkish Bath. The Alaskans, as a rule, are not par. ticularly fond of bathing, but some of them like ocoasionally to indulge in a sort of Turkish bath of a primitive character, For this pu a number of long sticks are driven into the ground in a circle four feet he dismeter, being drawn and tied at a joie feet from the bottom. A small re of wood, with stones, is lighted in the middle, and the hest is over the framework, | Adeler & 5 Examples of Long Life. The recent death of George Bancroft m his seventy-first year, and the econ. tinued prominence and activity of Von | Moltke in Germany at the age of ninety, und Gladstone in Great Britain at the nage of eighty-one, recalls other examples | of long life. Lophocles was ninety years old when he was summoned before the | board having controi of the dramatic performances at Athens on the charge | that his intellectual faculties had de. cayed, His triumphant answer was the reading there and then his just completed and greatest tragedy, ‘‘(Edipus at Colo nus. An esteemed contemporary gives the following list of nonogenarians and cen tevarians: Isecrates, the “old man elo- | quent,” was ninety-six when he wrote his | celebrated “Panegyric” oration, and he | Gorgias, the | lived to be over 300, famous sophist, died at 108, Hierony mus, the historian lived to be 104. with out any loss of mental energy. Zenoph anes wrote his memorable elegy at ninety two. Theophrastus composed his ¢( ‘har acters” at ninety-nine, Agathocles tyrant of Syracuse, kept a firm grasp or on that city until he died at the age of ninety-five, Passing to the Romans, we find tha Juvenal died at 100: that, us cording Pliny, Lucia, the comic actress, acted on the stage when a centeparian, and ths M. Valerian Corvus was in full possession of his faculties when he hundredth year, died in his one Coming to relativel that the of the wis smitten DV modern times, fell from hand litian only when he plague at the age of nearly 100; and tha of Michael Angelo's ity was observable at we note pence the immortia tin no diminution im sinative capa the age of ninety-five, We might ade ire : French 1 Whittier and © America, are steps of Ge Will a Madstone Do Good? Lie six e idean ich some prince cure there i» respectable practitioner forbid Bigni EWeR!s don” one inteiligent, land who believes in the madsteoe we Atlanta Constitution, - — -—" Railroading in the Himalayas. “The magnificent scenery 1n the Grand : Colorado is nothing when come from a railroad ing over the Himalaya lonel Tanner, of Cal- bune reporter, View the uns feet of ng On raniway ns 7000 in and out bridges spanm below an 's hair gray. i Ire juent the world, a marvel.’ i what so many ford to ge oF oan get it, and ver son. Don't trying it with. without AMERICAN coal be introduced Hraz The Convenlence of Solid Traine The Erie is rs is own tracks iwiween New York NO ¢ i f cars for a ower than v.a. any the £7] WAY running trains over apd Chicago ’ of jAassengers other first-class line Guaranteed {ve year slgn: osnl, Firat Mortgages on Kansas Clty property, interest payabisavery six months principal and ater. est collected when due and remitted without vipeonse Lo lender, For sale by J. HK. Baveriein & Vo. Kansas City, Mo. Write for parvoalars jr De Yeu Ever Spocalate’ Any parson sending as thelr nan and dress will receive information that will to a fortans. Hen). Lewis Puliding, Kansas City, Ma FITS stopped free by DR. Krises Ouear CERYE Hesroasn, No its after first da Arvelouscarea, free. Lae Wa's Chinese Headsotie Care. Harm. Jess bn eflect quick and positive in action. Bent prepaid on receipt of $i per bottle. 0. A2 Wyandottest,, Kansas Oly, Mo Timber, Mineral, Farm Lands and Ranshes In Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Arksoasas, boughtand sold, Tyler & Co. Kansas Olty, Ma Oklahoma Giulde Book and Mapesat any whars ad. Mr, Kilns, B81 Arch St. Vall a, I's | on receipt of Beta, Tyler & Oo, Kansas Clty, Ma, “How Is Your Appetite. 1 he | into solid | Fy Cina | load | & Ue, decurity | ‘suse | Trestise and 82 trial botiie ! Bow ; if ™ Smanty for Catnrrh That { we Contain ereury, | Ax mereury will surely dedroy the renss of mel! and completely der age the whole sys. | om when entering it through the mucous str. ‘woes, Such articles should never be used ex. wpt on preccriptions trom reputable physi. | dans, as he - sinage they will do ix ten fold to | hie good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Care, manufac ured hy ¥, J, | ‘heney & Co. Toledo, O., contains no mer. mry, and is taken internally, ang scts direct. ¥ upon the pieod and mucous surfaces of the | iystem. In buying Hall's Ustarrh Cure be wire to get the genuine, It Is taken internal. , and made in Toledo, Olle, by F. J. Cheney ¢ 10, 9” Bold by Drugeists, price 75. per bottle, A GRAIN of musk wil, scent a room for Wently years, Progress, It Is very impor tant in this age of vast mae serial progress that a remedy be pleasing to te taste and to the eye, easily taken, nooept. bile to the stomach and healthy in its nature od effects. Possessiog these qualities, Byrup fF Flgs 1s the one verfect inxative and most entie diuretic known, Children Tease For It. Dr, Hoxsie's Certain Croup Cure is a boon ¢ children who are attacked with croup or Lute congestive cold«, sold by druggists or pailed receip of 5) ots, Address A. P. Hoxsie, Bufisla, N. Y. on Money invested in cutee one uundred dol. ar bullding lots Ln suburbsof Kansas City will pay from five Lundred one thousand per ent, the next few years muder our piss. $25 cash and $5 por wmoath without intersst cog. trolsadosirable lot, Partieulars on applicatios. J. HU. Bauerisin & (Oo, Kansas Clty, M lescham's Pls cure Billous and Nervous iis, lheres a good deal on guarantee business in the store keeping of today. It's too excessive. Or too reluctant, Half the time it means noth Words —only words. This offer to refund the money, or to pay a reward, is made under the hope that you won't want your money back, and that you won't claim the reward. Of course. So, whoever is honest in making it, and works—not on his own reputation alone, but ugh the local dealer whom NOW, must have we has faith in back of guarantee. The business ldn’t stand a year with. out it, What is lacking is confi- dence. Back of that, what is lacking is that clear honesty which is above the “ average practice.” Dr. Pierce's medicines are guaranteed to accomplish what they are intended to do, and their makers give the money back if the result isn't ap- parent. Doesn't it strike you that a medicine which the makers nave so much confidences as the medicine for you? RADWAY'S READY RELIEF. THE GREAT CONQUERO: OF PAIN For Sprains, Bruises, Backache, Pain in the Chest or Sides, tieadacne, Toothache, or any esther external pain, a few applica tions rabbed on by hand, act like magic, causing the pain te lastantly step, For Congestions, Colds, Bronchitis, Pees. menia, inflammations, Hbhrumatism, New | ralgin, Lambage, ~ciatica, more thorough ted applications are necessary. Internal Cains, Diarrhea, Celio spasmas, Sassen, Fainting spelis, Nervous | ess, Sleeplomncss are relieved Inmantly, ana aniokly cured by taking inwardly 0 fo 60 drops in anil a tameior eo waler. | oBc. a bottle. All Ureggisis, RADWAY'S NPIL, Purely egeinble, Lr Yr t} | LC |i SOme- The Satest and Best Medicias | Inthe world lor the Cure of ali Disorders ot the LIVER, STOMACH OR BOWELS. Taken sccording te directions they restore health aud resew vitalicy Price 25 cts. a Box Sold by all Draggisty NY NUw wil OTHERS are your chiMren fPretful and anessy A) ot night 7 Do they start In their sioed as if fright | ened ' Are they troubled with an intense Mohing st the lower end of iw bowels Then they sre being tormented with Maworme Kovgewg will cure them [Wer Mand he convimend, Kosmenn is a purely vegeta i the ox sn pound, stwolutely safe and & sure cure, Ged | Hoof your draggt, or wend Sie, by registered otter of I P.O, money order and recelve 5 box by mall Address KONEENE REMEDY OO, South Bend, Ind, U. 8 A ] BANDON TRUSSES, Rupture radiosily cured. Drs. Harding & Maley WW. iM sm, KY ———————— i — If it is not good | you need a tonic, | Hunger is a sauce that gives your food a flesh-making and strengthening pow- er. S.5.5. is fa mous for its health giving and building up qualities. It is the best of all tonics. you and S. 8 8 aids 2 digestion makes what you eat you of dyspepsia, { Gained 44 Pounds. Mr. Jdsnes J. McCalley, of Monet, Mo. says he had § dyspepsia for eight years, ! which made him a wreck, siek and suffering during the whole time. After try. ing al! the remedies, includ. ing all the doctors in reach, he discarded everything and took Swift's Specific. Ne increased from 114 0 188 pounds and was soon a sound and healthy mas. enjoy _THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, | A ————
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers