i ODE BOYS ANB GIB1& 6 ! to THE OLP-TIMB HMO. 8woto?Uer t tfyi,cor tu be, SCW Wghway wai tha nlrrse; , With equal Tc and gallantry & tbatched a fcias or cat a pane; . Tftkt as was tost tJ hltn. in truth. In wnlch he failed to break a lancet A merry se&tlaman,-foraootb The picaroon at old romance! . Bow well we knew his jerkin'a cat, . - Dr eofar of hia rareockadel- ind how we're lored Bis platterdash Aye, etery one of os that reads! ' And joyed to see him cut and slash. And gloried in his gory deeds! Ah, there's the hero to our mind! NO languid airs for him, parfay! A damsel in distress to find Hot foot he'd travel night and day; And when he found her, as was sure, Oda daggers! there was sport for him. The rognes who thought themselves se cure Were not their chances mighty slim? A tankard of good ale, mine host. Or shandygaff the best ye can! Come, one and all! We'll drink a toast To our enchanting gentleman! a. prodigy of valor he. The very piteoa of all gallants. Whose like we ne er. again snail i The picaroon of old romance! Monsey's. MERCY FOOTE'S RECONSTRUCTION. A RUG pathway meandered from the kitchen door to the parlor A A. door, -with ramifications on elth er aide to chairs and sofa and table, Square rags and round rugs and oblong, octagonal, oval rugs filled up all the chinks. There was scarcely a square Inch of the carpet visible anywhere. The two or three ambrotypes ana toel engravings In solemn black wal nut frames were befogged behind veils of mosquito netting. The comfortable looking lounge was draped in crisp, clean newspapers to protect the new covering underneath. The face of the clock on the mantel looked out coyly through Its veil of netting. It was dim and cool in the big, cleat, room and empty. They sat in the kitchen or, on especially hot evenings. out on the porch. There was so much danger of files in the sitting room, and dust and sun-fading and all aorta of dreadful things, especially in dog days. It was dog days now. Mercy Foote was upstairs In the un finished chamber, "resting"; but it was so hot and so close that even to rest was hard work. She never dreamed of going Into one of the spotless, speckless chambers and "mussing up" one of the white, plump beds. Mercy Foote was a very neat woman some of the neigh bors openly called her "p'ison neat." About midway of the afternoon Nath an Foote came up through the orchard . from the hay field. lie wnlked very slowly, as if it hurt him. Every min ute or two he mopped his bald, shiny head with bis handkerchief and drew long, tired breaths. Nathan was almost an old man a good deal older than Mercy. He had been working hard all day, and every Individual old muscle felt strained and sore; and bow his back ached! It was a rather long way, too, up to the house. Mercy put her Hps to the window screen and called sharply to him when he came Into sight round the corn house. "Nathan, go In through the stable," she called, "and mind you slide the door to real quick behind yon! I've been out there fly-powdering. I don't want to have files following you in. Shut it the Instant!" "Yes, Mercy," Nathan said, wearily. It looked like a long, circuitous route Into the house, and he was very tired. He slid Into a narrow crevice In the door, rubbing his aching bones against the edges. Then he braced himself and lid back the heavy door. In the sudden transition from the hot glare outside to the dusky interior he felt dizzy and blinded, and had to sit down on a wagon thill a minute. Then ' he shuffled up the steep stairs and through the "shop" and woodhouse to the kitchen, opening and shutting all , the doors with conscientious dispatch. ' Mercy's voice drifted down to him, muf- i fled but incisive. "Don't wash in the best wasbdlsh, ' Nathan. I've got It all scoured up. You get tbe old one over the tubs In the , woodhouse. and mind you empty the ' water out In tbe asparagus bed. I don't ! like to have the sink all wet up." ! "Yes, Mercy." He got the old basin and filled It and 1 set it on a chair with the soft gap j crock. Some of the drops splashed tc . the shining floor, and stooping with evl- j dent pain, be wiped tbem up carefully, i "I declare," he murmured, "I don'l I know as I was ever more beat out than ! I am this afternoon! I don't know as 1 was ever! I guess I've got to lie down spell." "Nathan r "Yes, Mercy." "If you're thirsty, you'd better draw some water out of the well; the pump's all dry and clean. I gave It a bard cleaning to-day, the last thing." Nathan took the basin of water out through the shop and stable door and emptied it over the asparagus bed. He made a second journey over the same toilsome route for a drink of water. "I've got to lie down somewhere right away!" he muttered. "I'm all beat oit!" "Nathan!" Mercy called. "Yes. Mercy." "Did you rub your feet on the mat Id the porch and the scraper?" " The scraper's out to the kitchen door, Mercy!" Nathan called back, rais ing his voice with an effort. "Did you rub 'em on tbe porch mat?" "Yes. I don't know as I did all th times. I did once." A groan, muffled but clearly audible, descended to Nathan. "I can't help It!" he muttered. T guess I'll go He down on the sitting room sofa for a minute. I'll have to; I can't stand up." He took off his boots and padded soft, ly along the rug pathway. It was so dim In there that not till he got close ta the lounge did he notice the newspapers' covering It. He lifted one of them off with a determined twitch pf his lips, but replaced it hastily, and padded soft ly back to the kitchen, ne went to the loor. "Mercy," he called up, "Where's the hist paper? I don't see It anywhere." "Goodness. Nathan Foote, shut that door! You'll let In a. mess of flltjsP' "Where's the last paper, Mercy 7 Nathan's diminished voice rose, patient; .-.nil tired, to Mercy's ears through the il'ised door. "It's all piled up nice, Nathan. You :ou't want it now. You take the al ;: nac over the kitchen table and read II e jokes!" she called back. He got the 2'lmanac and put on his boots. Then !.e dragged them wearily, step by step, oat to the stable. His griraled. Beamy fare was drawn with exhaustion and pain. Mercy Foote came downstairs at pre cisely ft o'clock to fat Wfgy. ; " bo atappod over the kitchen threshold the laat stroke of the Clock waa clang ing. That waa bar rale. - Mercy was as methodical as she was neat. "Goodness," she exclaimed, "there's a flyl there's two flies r She caught op one of the deftly folded' newspapers that she kept hidden In handy nooks and proceeded to wage war. "Nathan's so careless!" she fretted. "But I didn't think they'd find their way clear In from the stable!" Bbe pearaatato the sitting room, aaa otlcod that-oaa of the papers on the lounge was. awry. "Nathan's been In there yes, there's a wisp of hay on the speckled rug! Now I s'pose I've got to go to sweeping!" - It waa quarter of 8 before supper was ready on the little kitchen table. Mercy had arranged the dishes precisely, bat there seemed very few of them. "It's too hot to light tbe Ire, and 'twould muss up dreadfully tbe shavings and all. We'll have Just a cold lunch. Nath an oughtn't to eat hearty victuals after haying and getting all heated up. "Nathan! Na-than!" she called from the porch door, which she warily open ed only a crack. He was not out there. She could not find him anywhere. She went all over the house, and peered from all the tightly screened windows. She put on her sunbonnet and biew the dinner horn. She always put on her sunbonnet when she blew the horn, nobody knew why. Mercy didn't know herself. There was a little circular hole in the upper part of the kitchen door, protect ed by a swinging disk of wood. It was to blow the dinner horn through. Na than made It for her so that she need not open the door and run the risk of the entrance of flies. She slid away the wooden cover and quickly inserted the end of tbe born into tbe hole, and blew long, resonant blnsts. They echoed back to her lonesomely. Tbe clock struck six seven. Still Nathan did not come. Mercy went out to the bayfield and all over the little farm. Her heart grew heavy with new. unacknowledged dread. Where was Nathan? "I'm beginning to get scared," poor Mercy confessed to herself. Why was it that she kept remembering the sharj words she bad said to Nathan? Why did she remember bow old and tired out he bad looked at dinner? Terrible things she bad read of and heard of kept recurring to her mln;l with dark insinuation. Could It be pos sible that weary old men with fussy, scolding wives ever ever Oh, no! But where could Nathan be? Eight o'clock one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight slow, solemn, significant clangs: Mercy went out Into tbe woodshed In to the stable anywhere, away from the sound of the clock's voice that scolded incessantly. Tbe hungry old horse In bis stall was whinnying and pawing for his supper. Mercy stroked his nose. "I'll get you some hay, pony," she said. She went upstairs to throw it down to him, and there was Nathan asleep In the bay! He lay in the pro found, relaxed slumber of utter weari ness. The yellow almanac had fallen from his fingers and lay beside him. She knew be was tired, and not very well. He bad been driven to take his rest In the barn! Mercy tiptoed back Into tbe house, breathing, long, free breaths all -the way, and forgetting to shut the doors. She built a fire and filled tbe teakettle and made many trips to the pantry, coming back with sundry dishes that Nathan liked, and crowding tbe table with tbem. She took a lighted lamp In to the sitting room and set it on tbe ta ble. With a vigorous sweep of her arm she bundled together the newspapers on tbe lounge and carried them out. "There." she said, "now I'll fetch a pillow and put the pnier handy." A few minutes later she stood in tbe porch door and blew long, steady, pene trating calls on the horn. Nathan beard them and came In, looking guilty. "I guess I went to sleep, Mercy," he said. "I must have. I was all beat out when I came in." They sat down together to the savory little supper. The pungent, pleasant f II 55 VLJf 1 i. J m7 c3 wonder it has fifty happy years back of it. j Get a bottle today Am m m Sarsaparilla which nude Sarsaparilla famous All DatJGCim Sell Ana's Samapaull. f i.oo a Bottle. wdor of atearaf g tern fillets t toon Nathan ate with the hearty relish of well-rested man, and Merer wfttehe .nlm with delight. . Roddeady Nathan suspended hi kfiir and fork and looked across at Merc: troubled. "If there ain't two peaky flies!" 1 aid, ruefully. . . Mercy's eyes were glued with doggr heroism to her plate. "Where?" she said, cheerfully. don't see 'em, Nathan." Youth's Con panloa. ." OPPOSED THE STAGE -COACH A.B Ancient Ecoaosalat Who Tateasjlit It WnM Kala tae Com try. The New York Telegram noteo thai the first stage coach seen In England waa a boat the year 1568, and another 120 years passed before stage coacbe; began to ran; they were not received with much favor. In 1673 a treatise was published In London by "A Lovei of His Country, and Well Wisher tc the Prosperity Both of tbe King and Kingdoms," in which war used many elaborate arguments and violent ti rades against them. "These coaches and caraTans," said the writer, "are one of the greatest mis chiefs that hath happened oi late years to the kingdom, mischievous to the pub Uc, destructive to trade and prejndlcia' o lands." He laments the decay of good horse manship, which would follow It every body rode to London in a coach. lie calculates that a coach from York, Chester or Exeter would have forty horses on the journey to the capita! and carry eighteen passengers a week. In the whole year It would carry abou: 1,872. Suppose there were rernrnine passengers there would be 836, and for these forty horses would be sufficient but If people traveled In the good, old fashioned way, then at least 500 horses would be required for the work. The use of so many horses would give em ployment to many who were by the stage coach thrown out of work, such as cloth workers, drapers, tailors, sad dlers, tanners, curriers, shoemakers. spurriers, lorlmers and fellmakers. Tbe Inns would also suffer, for the stage coach stops only at a few, but when gentlemen traveled on horseback, ac companied, as they usually were, by two or three servants, they stopped at any and as often as they liked, ant thus encouraged trade. Farmers will be ruined, he says, by tbe stage coach; for how can they dis pose of their hay, straw and horse corn? Moreover, the influence on health would be bad; men called out of their beds before daylight, hurried from place to place until far on into the night, in the summer stifled witb beat and choked with dust. In the win ter starving and freezing with cold or choked with filthy fog, obliged to ride all day with strangers and with sick, ancient and diseased persons and with children crying, poisoned with fetid breaths and crippled by the crowd of boxes and bundles. Besides all these troubles there were accidents arising from tbe rotten coaches and foul roads. In short, the writer Is fully convinced that if stage-coach traveling becomes popular the country will go to ruin. Had be lived to see the railway he would have been bereft of bis senses A Cariosity In Will. The outer uniformity about wills to general both as to parchment and pen manship, makes all the more note worthy the last testament of the late Sir George Parker. Sir .George, who lost his life at Cawnpur during the Indian mutiny, had only a tiny scrap of paper on which to write his will, and when It was made it was carried through the lines by a native, who con cealed it in his ear. Fragile as It is. It will doubtless outlast as a curiosity and almost as a bit of national history many a bulky manuscript lnscrolled on material prepared to defy the decay of years. No man ever traveled over the road to fame on a pass. Golden Wedding ofMiss Popu lar Esteem and 'Mr. Aycr's Sarsaparilla. Fifty years of happiness, fifty years of sapariuaininc world that ever celebrat ed its fiftieth anniversary and is doing it today with no signs of decay. Its mission is to cure and tohelo. No of 9 ers SALESWOMEN tmderatand what tartar It. , ( Constantly on their feet whether well or O. .,CofP to smile and be agreeable to customers while drage down with some feminine weakness. Backache and head- aches count for little. They must ' - - keep going or lose their place. To these Mrs. Pinkham's help is offered. A letter to her at Lynn, If ass., will bring her advice free of all charge. Miss Nancik Shobe. Florence, Cel.. write a letter to Mrs. Pink- fim frntn arhir.li ara flaotar I had been in poor health for some time, my troubles bar ing been brought on by standing, so my physician said, caus ing serious womb trouble. I had to give up my work. I wa just a bundle of nerves and would have fainting spell at monthly period. I doctored and took various medicines, but 1 1 could not at a time. 3 stranger medicine. what Ml left ovary being so swollen and sore that 1 eould not move without pain. Now, thanks to your wonderful medicine, that tired feeling is all gone, and I am healthy and strong. " TRUMPET CALLS. Sam's Bora Soaada a Waralan Hate to tbe Unredeemed. - OV'E turns duty Into delight. Bigotry Is not peculiar to r e -liglon. Meditation Is a tonic for poor memory. Some little men love to live in the clouds. When you take your burdens to Christ, leave them there. Virtue is finer than any of the arts. Half-hearted service is always hard. Neglect bolts the door of opportunity. Trials melt the brass out of charac ter. Small boats should keep near the shore. In order to do right, it is necessary to be tight The pulpit rail may become a wall of partition. Some Christians do more whining than shining. Keeping your eye on Christ keeps it oft the world. The wings of riches are poor aids to heavenly flight. The dews of grace fall during the night of sorrow. While the saloon exists, your own son Is never safe. - More souls are saved through service than by sermons. The more perfect the trust the more perfect the peace. Dress does not make character, but it often proclaims it Faith gives unlimited backing for tbe business of living. Kind words, like fragrant flowers, are admired by all. God will do as much for us as we will submit to have done. Policy sits on the fence while princi ple fights the battle. An Iceberg In the pulpit cannot kin dle a fire in the pews. Make your trials stepping stones to a higher Christian life. The man who confesses his Ignorance Is on the road to wisdom. Modern theology teaches that man falls np instead of down. fidelity In little things is one of tbe surest tests of character. Those who know when to apeak know when to be silent Love Is like a convex mirror It broadens what we see In it The only safe place to bide your sins is under the blood of Christ Don't use religious stilts when you visit a strange prayer meeting. Tbe man who reaches Christward for refreshing will reach worldward with a blessing. There is a vast difference between speaking "one to another" and on about another. RECENT INVENTIONS Sand beaches can be formed along the banks of streams by the use of an Ohio man's device, consisting of wood en cribs to be filled with stone and sunk Into the water, projecting arms being arranged at'the aides to prevent the crib from tipping over as It sinks, allowing the water to deposit soil and form the beach. Dental floss for cleaning the teeth Is easily manipulated by a new tool, which has the floss wound on a spool, suspended between two hollow arms, through which It Is threaded, passing from tbe rip of one arm to the other, to be drawn tight by a reel and inserted between the teeth. A Maryland Inventor has patented an electric switch which has I no metallic surfaces to be thrown in and out of contact, the enda of tbe wires - being barred and extended Into a chamber partially filled with mercury, so that a turn submerges the wires In the fluid two Westerners have patented an improvement In Ice tongs bywhich the prongs are made to grip thecake more irrurely, the handle being 'Shaped like i-j 'nrrrtrd U, with the songs pivoted t: the ruds, a sliding member Inside .he handle being raised to pull the tongs apart and release thelice. In an improved oil stovelthe burners are carried by a piston, which rises ai d falls In a well connected with tbe oi reservoir, the latter being air-tight, sii tl:at when the oil b pumped In tbe hv.iucrs are lifted by the pressure and :i;'.!utained at the level of the olL Many a wife daats the billiard chalk from her busband'a coat and sheds ti ars of sympathy because of the late hours be must spend at bis desk close to a whitewashed wall WOMEN THEIR UVIUQ I got no relief, ana wnen a ww j walk more tnan xour ojows I followed your advice, tak ing Lydia E. Pinkham a Blood Purtner in connection with the Vegetable Com pound and began to gain in strength from the first. I am getting to be a to pain and I owe it all to your There is none equai w n. for I have tried many others be fore using yours. Words cannot be said too strong in praise of it." Miss Polly Foams, Meade. Kan., writes: "Dear Mrs. Pinkham 1 feel it my duty to write you in regard to your medicine has done tor me. I cannot praise it. enough. Since my girlhood I had been troubled with ir regular and painful periods and for nearly five year had suffered with falling of . the womb, and whites. Also had ovarian trouble, the Doctor Jenner's Self-Reliance. The lata Doctor Jenner was eseen tiaily a self-reliant man. His patients numbered kings, queens ana princes. On who knew Jenner well once hinted that his many responsibilities must be sufficient to render sleep Impossible. "Sleep!" replied Jenner In bis char acteristic way. "I don't think that anxiety about a patient ever kept me awake five minutes. I go to a bedside. I do my best What more can I do: Why should I not sleep?" M. Tj. Thompson A OOm Droggtets. 4f rort, Pm.. say mil's Ctrrh Con. is tha tost and oaly ran ears for catarrh tbay ever said. Draggisu sail it. 78c It la not our failures that ruin us, but oar fear and tardiness In making new beginnings after failure. Edacat Yar Bowels WRa Cascarats. Candy Cathartic, cure conainmtion forever. 10c, 25c .11 C C. C fail, druggists refund money. When we read, we fancy we could be martyrs; when we come to act, we can not bear a provoking word. He-Ta-Bae for FVty Cent Guarsntead tsbaece habit aura, makes weak nea stronc, blood para. He, $L All druggists. What men want is not talent it is purpose; In other words, not the power to achieve, bat the will to labor. To Car Cold ta Oaa Dot. Take laaaara ! Oahrtaa Tasista, A rassansnraaaaMaeytt It falls wear, sss. The devil la a lively chap. He is the first man at a camp meeting and the last one to leave there. m . , i .1... .1r! hf. irieaa uioeu kuh m beauty without it Caacarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lasy hver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin today to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c Humility Is the hall-mark of wis dom. Tnre nnaraateed br OR J. V MAVKR.101S AKCH ST.. PHI LA.. Pa. Eaw at onoe: no epentma er delay Iroin bustoca. Consultation lice. KndorMmeuu of phrICMMM. ladle aa4 prominent citizens. Send lor circular. Offict Lours A.M. to IP. M. No matter how many mistakes you may have made. The point Is what have you learned by them? lira. Window's Soothing Syrup for children teethins;, softens the gums, reducing inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 2uc a buttle A man who does not know how to learn from his mistakes turns the bert schoolmaster out of his life. Arc You Uslna Al'en'a Foot Ease? It is the only cure for Swollen, Smart ing. Tired, Aching. Burning, Sweating Feet, C-irns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, a pow er to be shaken into the sho-s. Sold by all Druegists, Groce s and Shoe stores sc. sample sent fuse. Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. MONSTERS AMONG THE KITES Eaaae of Tbesa Are aa Blar aa Hoaeee and Will Carry Mea. While science, through the efforts ot William A. Eddy, Gilbert T. Wooglom and others, has taken the kite an made It perform wonders at an eleva tlon of about two miles until it has be come a valuah e scientific Instrument the everyday kite has not been neg lected by the laity. A monster kit built by W. H. Markle of South Beth lehem. Pa., is as big as a two-ston house. It is twenty-five feet high twenty-four feet wide, and triangulai in shape. The sticks are of white pine five and one-half by two inches, taper ing to one and one-half at the extreml ties. At the angles are two Inch sere eyes to which are attached the canvai sail corners. Mr. Markle has flown thi kite only once, so far, and then it be gan to carry him up with it, support Ing him steadily while be climbed dowi hand over band. Another large kite has been built b; R. E. Ramsey, a cigar manufacturer ot Lebanon, Pa. It la eighteen feet b sixteen feet, and the top is ornamentef with gold stars and the lower part wit! red and bine stripes. When he startet It up on a trial trip it ran away wltl him, and it took six men to hold I down. A kite seventeen feet high and twelvi i feet wide has been made by A. An drews, Arthur and Leon Bunnell, ant Wallace Cook of TerryvUle, Conn. I is covered with fifty-four yards of can vaa, and weighs fifty pounds, havlni tall 124 feet long. It carries 2,001 feet f line, and one day it dragged thi boys, seated in a light buggy, six mllei down tbe road. Fortune Labado, of Nyack, N. Y ha. made a folding kite on the umbrelli plan, offering great resistance and per feet stability. Tbe frame consists o: eight ribs. Tbe tail la a cord with Ugh canvas pockets, In which sand or peb bles are placed for ballast Another large kite is that of Georg Thomson, of Dudley Hill, England.. I' has a rib frame of ash, and Is twenty two feet high, fourteen feet wide, sixty Ore feet In circumference, and weight forty pounds. Its tall Is 125 feet long and It takes four loon to fly It. tie Oaee to gome little Spring Beauties Bred : WT... tht. In the wuawooo, 7-rr to. mytTT Bat they wore their best gowns for every .. . i iil ntrbt. From earnest "",r; -Ve never For they said to each ether, xen w can know and When callers may drop In to see aa, . .Iw. r. how we loo" j raw ss. k -tin And tZZ ttths dor go- weU with their .. . t- t. brook. They peep at wnffl""?"' " T " -n And sureSeugh! oB,"L' In popped such a nice little ores, Aa- TSLm paid eu, a ornin cal As she strayeo w And thTcblldren came nest a Mrthe And r.C?ed with s. when they saw the sweet group Of dowers by the rlmle "JfV. And the beauties sll whispered together. We were ready for callsT and each gay ttttle belle .. Blushed for Joy. Just the pretti pin Tooth's Companion. Whr Washington Croeiod. Teacher-Why did Washington cross the Delaware Elver? Johnny Thick neck To git on the other side. What ColasBbae THd. Teacher "Now, boys, who waa Co lumbusr No answer. Teacher (promptlngly)-"The man " Class (readllj)-"Broke the bank at Monte Carlo." London Judy. A Free Faow. Tommy-"Goln' to the show ter nlght Johnnyr Johnny-"Naw. We re goln' to have a free show at our house to-night Pa's goin- to put. u - pet" Beaaoa for the Whipping. .xr. Tnhnn. do von understand thoroughly why I am going to whip your' "Tes'm. You're in a i humor this morning an- you lick someone before you feel satisfied. One Flow Foot, w f mnr feet walks faster than the other one. People who get lost in the woods travel for hours thinking they are going straight ahead, but they find after a while that tney nae in going around In a circle. You can try this, ana nave a great, deal of fun out of it by getting your boy friends to Join you on a lawn or other open place. Blindfold them one at a time and start them straight for the gate or some other object about fifty feet away. Not one of them win rencn it Try this and see If you are left- footed or right-footed. Cattiaa Aaiaaala from Paper. A reader writes that he frequently amuses his nephews and their little friends in "rnttlnoT animals." and says he caught the knack of doing such scis sors art work when only four years oi ctrr OUT WITH THI scissors. age. Tbe accompanying cut Illustrates tbe perfection which this skill witb tbe scissors may attain. He says the amusement is exhaustless In Ha power to amuse children and suggests that the children may find it to their pleas ure to practice the art. Animals cut from white paper and pasted on a black background, or vice versa, show to tbe best advantage. Making- sad Baking- Bread aa Cam el a. There ore very few American famil ies that do not stay at home long enough to eat and also to prepare their meals. But then American customs differ in every way from those of the Bedouins, as some of the wondering tribes of Arabia, ore called. The re ligion of a Bedouin tribe seems to be to "move onward." Having once begun the nomadic life. It becomes almost necessary for them to keep it up. In the first place they don't want to settle down, and tbey wouldn't have any place to stop if they wanted to. Some times It becomes expedient that they make great baste in these long Jour neys. Wandering around over tbe plains are other tribes whose only occupation la "moving on." There Is frequently 9 ' ft ME EXCELLENCE OF SYKCP CF FIGS fa due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, bat also to the care and skill with which itta manufactured by scientific processes known to the California Fie Strup Co. only and we wish to impress upon U the Importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufacture? by the California Fia Bracr Co? only, a knowledge of that fact win assist one in avoiding the worthier imitations manufactured by other ties. Thehighatandingofthe CAT '"r. CoTith tie mtS: cal profession, and the aaUataeUoa which the genuine Syrup of FTha. given to mlWoa. of iuZm the name of the Company a warant of the excellence of imn far In advance of all other laxatives" as it acta on the kidneys, liver IS bor-els without irritating or ww ing -hem, and it does not border to tiU beneficial Ppa-re,nemberthe CAUFOR10A HG STRUP QO. KtV When sand's as good as sugar, and chalk's as good as milk ; When thirty Inches make, a yard, and. cotton equal's srtkr. When fourteen aunces makea pound (and that you'll not allow.) . Then commorr soapmay he as good as-IVory Soap irrrow. IT FLOATS. THE GLORY OF MAN! ertnrth. Vital it v. Manhood. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE; nhuiit ' - ... - - I cry pFLJl v 11 R?Ty L(S . (K edition, with latent observations t th snthor ) ' PRI'E OoIVIt WMWwd KNOW THYBEXF, ror knowledge is power.' LSvSaMiiSoS Institute. No. 4 Bulflneh St.. Boston. U.. . i:ia.,IK W in 1 ) lPha sSlAulord.iatee.f Harvard itorl.cal Collar.. fU w;i. Rr ?,K22rWBrhniVelr ost Ea.la.at Specialist la Amerlra. . ( ,rw ., Fifth M"J,i-2ata tiaeaoo or by letter. 9 to 9: Sundavs 10 o 1. fWMw.UiU. joHlolaUASSSSoo awarded the oW UdaJ for this Grand Prv T realise, tuch .Jnic FOREVERY M AN. Yono. MJddlft-art. or Old. MarrM or Mueie. i Know thy-rtf MmnSal. a W-r-e r-mphlrt with trtlm,,mals and endor -JfJStfSssPnceao cents, btrt mailrdFREEfv8.ldavS. Send now. It is a perfect YALE s?JMaoTSS TfoT WEAK and FAILlMt MKS bv a Humanitarian and C.lebraW dA?tbor duaTturmstKd throughout this eonntrr and &iipp. Addre as shore. Tae pna Medical Ajutnor '"f ttM peabody Medical Institute Read the following l-ZVaMba established in Boston ST years, and ?he fame which ltnu .n kn aubiected it to a test whicn only a tt'.Dr? . T!ri.-,.Xu lvMtauix uas u-- 1UB ' enmity between two of these Arabian families, and should one pursue the other it behooves the pursued to hasten onward with aU the speed their ani mals are capable ot Or it may be that the springs of water are so widely sep arated that hard travel is necessary to make the distance from one to the oth er In a day. When either of these con tingencies arise they cook and eat while on the march. They don't eat much. Two or three dinners such as American boys and girls are nsed to every day. with something extra for Sundays and company, are supposed not to agree with Bedouin children's stomachs. When on the road bread is their chief food. This is baked while riding. One woman will mix tbe coarse flour which is carried In a sack on the back of her camel, another will roll and shape the dough, which Is brought to her In small quantities, and a third will make a fire In an earthen vessel and attend to tbe baking. Wom en or boys on foot run along from one cook to the other and carry the materi al, and when the feast Is ready they distribute it among tbe various mem bers of the tribe. Deceptive Kaasee. "Longfellow knew what be was talk ing about when he said that things are not what they seem,' exclaimed Her bert, vahemantly. "Or, rather, they are not what they are said to be. Ev erything Is a snare and a delusion. We are living in the midst of a great big falsehood." "Land alive," exclaimed his Aunt Lucy, who was startled out of ber usual calm by these pessimistic utter ances and took three false stitches In her crochet work In consequence. Even Herbert's mother, who was used to her boy's tragic way of putting things, looked up a trifle anxiously. "What's the matter now, Herbert What do yon see that Is sailing under false colors?" "Just look at this table," said Her bert, pointing his right forefinger at the offending table In Question. "Ev. j. thing you see lying thereon Is going by a name that doesn't really belong to It. Here's this card tray. It Is a fine speci men of German silver, but In reality It doesn't contain a grain of silver, being an alloy of sine, nickel and copper, and moreover, it wasn't made In Germany. Then there Is that whalebone that you are going to put in auntie's dress. It was never within a thousand miles of a whale, but Is some kind of steel sliced down real line. That plaster of Bur gundy that you are going to stick on grandpa's rheumatic shoulder Is not pitch, but a combination of resin and palm oil, and is not made In Burgundy. Then there Is that bnnch of tuberoses, which are not roses at aa The black lead pencil i acnbbled my exercises with a few minutes ago Is not lead, but mixture of carbon and Iron.' The sealing wax with which I am going to eal my letter when I finish it contains wStiTV" e steel pen I am writing J 1th ""n particle of steel In Its TkJ"p- To tal P the long list of deceptive names. I've been writing to Cousin James about the Turkish baths grandpa has been taking for bis rben- WK8D?:,Wh,ch ""t of all, for both. like that have never evereen dreamed of in Turkey. Herbert resumed bis writing. His SnJT AMt Lncy t each other In amazement. wJJ?d'' "W Annt Lucy, -doesn't tt.tbe.t aUT It's really wondTrfu ow boys learn so much these days. I dhl.rnether.aofUy.Ch0, l"know"irtue ne- ew virtue when he meets it? "Use the Means and Heaven will Give you the Bles:- i.ogiect APOLIO MWMMoeTn a OAaaifoo. co.ati OR, SELF-PRESERVATION. A ureas Meaicai i.rKnti u n'y fMarriapes, the cause ami cue of Ex hausted Vitality, Nervous aud PUysical Debility, Atrophy (wasting), ami Vari cocele, also oq ALL DISEASES AND WEAKNESSES OF MAN Jrom what- -... Mtimlnn. Trort Prinrirl?a nf 870 rtn. 12mo. with En-. uriEif. .- M - J' Fmhretttl u roemora M i'""' '"" 4 imitators, but no equals. '-itoHo. i.nud. . .. Truth is the only thing that don't lose in translation. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or Sic. If C C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. A flatterer is like the tuil of a dug that wags for bread, and not for the master. Beat Toasces Spit sad Smoke Tuar Life Inf. To qnit tobacco easily and forever, be mat netie. full of UCs, aenre and visor, take No-T Boo, the wonder-worker, that makes weak Del strong. All drureists, &oc or f I. Core rJtnn teed. Booklet and sample free. Addren Sterling Bemedy Co., Chicago or Kec York No men living are more worthy to be trusted than hose who oil up from poverty. Pirn's Care for Con?rimptinn has no tonal as a Cenfrh medicine. f. M. Abbott, 113 Sea. eca St. Buffalo. N. V, May 9. lrtrt. It is the wise only who profit by ad vesity. Itts permanently cored. No flu or nerrea Seas slier first days use of Dr. Kline i Gretl Kerve Kesto. er, t2 trial bottle aurt treatise Ires bit. K. 11. KLIMK. Ltd. KSi Arch L 1'bUa. 1'a True merit seldom falls to get Hi just reward. BAD BLOOD "CAiCARETS ! all claimed Ur tpm and are a truly woHderful nnJicnit. 1 haworwo wished for a metllciue plvusant to take and t have found It to Casc-arets. tiiucv takitiK them, or blood bas been ur tried and my coniplexioD b" u pruved wonderful! aud 1 f el much better In 'T way. Mus. aALXlkv K. fch-LLARS. LuureU.Tena. I afcsT CATMARTIC j raaof soistiio Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste GooS. P Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gme. 10c.a.- . CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Stsrase asswsy Csnsssy. Okie wsi. ' MTfl Rlf Sold snd euarunteed bj alldJM " I U'DAb Bisl. li CI' K F. Ti'twreo Habit THE Spalding OFFICIAL League Ball (.vmt.It nffit-tslbal! of the Ntiil Lea Ut ami must w u;-e 1 1 1 all nil"' avh bU warrsnted aiS7nn h:a sn-RiTI I' I T i S. If a dealer does not carry Si ai.lins athletic goods in stock, seud your name an., addrwa us (and his, too) for a coi7 ' uur lisuusumeu illustrated catalogue. A. C. SPALDING A. BROS.. IXesr Vara. Uener. "'" INVENTORS Send to-day for our haudsomeU- engraved Jn anniversary work on patents, FKKK. MASON, FENWICK A LA WnENCE Paltet Lawyer, - - Wa;hingm 0. C FOR FIFTY YEARS! MRS. WINSLOW3 SOOTHING SYRUP; nas been used bv million-" nf mothers fw their children while IVethlnu for over W Yetaim. It soothes the cliil.l. softens 1M ....... .11 .11 iuIIc. sns . Is the beat remedy for disrrho-a. T..a.n.. m Rattle. rVVVVVVVVssrVVsArrVsrVVVV U7 A NTKD Case of bad health thi.t B-l-P--" " will not benefit. Send & cts. to KH"' ' "'Jj Co, Mew York, for 10 samples an-' Iia. lestinnwissv R IEUMATISM freaS7X."r:? 1 fltllflar an irr . a . UUIU MtLltr rtMALc NLLi ri,T; ntwodir. pun rail tec St. UK. READ, loai South Mreet. PS"a- DPADGV NEW DISCOVERT: r jLa 1 KJ IO quickr.lMf and or mxm m isatimontsii and hhih.w Dr. m. m. aaiu's boss Boi i. stiaat. .1? I Tkompson's Eyi Wat a useful Article Like HEAL T