Your Money Back If ChnA Closet Is not as dtscrited Mill Wc win hlp this China Closet freight prepaid Hist of the MM iijii Points Wm are allowed freight tu the River. It it tru le of tolM oak, MNM Inches MffcJlM Inches wiilc. French beveled mirmr on tp, XI i & Inches ; swell pitta (flats ends anil pUie lMt frunt. Retail value, J0 $T savtl In buying of the maker. fi:.7S Freight Prx-pjlJ Our Pntnlttm TVrtrtrnent mnt.iln. thi'ttsarul-. nf similar Ittrifftiris. i ha M-timnuth ift ge (. at giir Irlls all at-Ail t re, lUo .-.U.tit everything- ta l it. Vsr an t Wear; ( nt ii' s i.v r M.iMiO illustrations ami quites wholesale prl ntumers ea ovcf 1MJH dUPwaat artfclaii rwrr a ,f ?$-itnt tjnm r tot.,vMitA or. ?. JtJt - ...... .r J no. I t.. I i ilh,i:rM'liel tat il.nruff show M.iry. 'tint" upcta, RHUS, Will Papr, Iliaprrle. Sewing Ni . ! m-,, Itl.iTikrtt, O infurts, l-ramed PMure nd Ip i , in I? !i Mrr-il PutliHuri tn their reil COMtt. l,trf.-fr tjrfii rrt.tinmg nrHnkti mAoM chrgtt ,iH.t ftHfhi ptldtH all tkt alirl. It ' itahtguegf Men' !lrfliinif.hs (luth MmplM it Urhvd, It't frrfay fxfrtliaft ai.i gunranttt Jit. niyl tail prkM f, anything f W. Mil ataMMIaly I I ,- w hi ti I do yottwaatf A.l'lrefcilhlswayi JULIUS H I N ES ft SON, Baltimore, Hd. Dr pt. VRl I ER CORRESPONDENTS or REPORTERS Want ! whore, S nriuSi news, i lea, i i : i , i Ituirn 6 I articles, adva iitiwa, drawings, photo graphs, uuiqua articles, etc., etc, pure 1 1 : :. Aii iclus revise! auv3 pi o pirolfui p il)!iit'itioa, 11 lolca pub lis lit.. I s i ,i for p'trlicuUrn nod fu'l i rn in ttiim bofurH seudiuff ar Men. Tin- Bulletin Press Association, New York. Wl it u I that hfe I nr.il v w ii'Mi i !. nan He I iikw a rloe of 1 Cbatu'e rliii i'm Htomaeli and Liver Tablet They will cleanse your atooir th, 'o io hd vtnir liver an 1 re gulate i ir bo-veN niak n.vnu feel Ilk i in man I'oi sale by burg D in: 8ttu6. iddle Icrjulaltlon of Knowledge, "Well, iuhI whnl have you learned at college, Clarice?" we asked, anx ious, to know how onr niece had profited by her res !, nee at a distant instil ni inn of learning, "I learned to do up my hair in 10 different ways," replied she, proudly. Detroit Free Press. Clodhopper, Great Editor -Thai new society re porter won't do. He has not mastered the lirst principles of modern journnl tim. Manager Eh? Whafs theTnntter? (ireat Editor He aaya "handsomely dressed" instead of "smartly gowned." M. Y. JVeeklv. Sta i k ov Ohio, City or ) ToiiCDO, Looas Ooumtti HB Prnk f OtntHBy mnke4 oath lm i-- u sfniii partner of t'n tfr . if V. 3, OliM i y iv () , doing bu mss in tli i fit j i f I'jledo, uoiiiity and etttte afoivHnid, and that sniii firm will p . . 0 H E H U N 1 R E 1) DOLlR for each and every case of s i ii rr i tli at CilliiOt be eUieil by the ii i : JI ill's i ' ' 1 1 1 Ii Cure. FRANK ) CHKNEY, Sw rii li before uie and itibserib- el II 1UV ' '1 t'Sence, this I'ilii dttj ''I !). irmbe-r, A. !.. 1 it. Nolary Publ; Hii 1 O tt iTi Ii Cu is tuk ii in ( ii . itni a' h din etly (in the blood iti ' iimeniis Burlaoi s of Ihe ByttM), s- ii for leatiii'onia'B, free. F. J. CU . :.V i: V & ( 0. Tuled , Obio. ! i i Mi )i ugeUta, 7Sc. i ii.ll F,i iti I v 1MI, i r , the liest. situs a ml Tokens!, "I nut the iii' bride out on the botllevnrd; slie'x keeping house." "How did she look?- and how (lw you know'.'" "Oh she had on a lovely whitt f; i ',. vi;li a white chiffon pompon in her hair; and she had a loaf of I bread under her arm." Chicago Itee rd-Herald. 1 . . .'ii. oral. oral, both white and red( is foiinJ lUo Florida coast. C O'J 'i Ii ive used Obamberlaiu'a Colic i . ii I Diarrhoea Remedy I fin I i' 'o b i it gn at medicine, V - M r. E. S i'liipps, of Poteai , k "Ii nmed me of bloody flux, II in 1 I-peak ti 'i I i fhly i f it.'' i remedy nlwayH wins the good , - . 1, i Oil II I si Ai 1 'I". opi ii effi III! S II mil, id lint p'nise, i inose who . ri e quick ( urea wLiob it da ven in the most severe cane ,i ii a favorite everywhere. For I y .Mi Ml. lin Drag S.cre. BEST FfiR THE BOWELS If Toil liltvon t a rt'irnlnr. heiillliy nioreltiellt of till foieli ery day. .'re III or II be. keep join ,. ......11.1.11.11... well. I .,r.-..li. Hi" "ll.oor vio lent 1. 1 vleer lilll i"lo", l (Iiilllfi toll.. Tim smooth' ,!.,m, ,i. i,.'.tl'. rr.i tv.ay ot keeping tbe bowel tear aod dean lto take CANDY CATHARTIO EAT 'EM LIKE CANDY . . . . a ..!. llAn.l DnOond SrS Hlck-n, WesVen.nr (M W, mnA W Ml per UL Wrlt for fr IsWlpIl, nd booklet o llealtli. Addreu , . . rnaiKf II 1 1 111 mr KKW TORI.. jjj KEEP YOUR BLOOD GLEAKj A SERVICE OF HANDS. They've given loving service those poor hands With fretted nails, and fingers bent and worn; I hi y tar the scars which Sacrifice de manls When from their cherished Idols rudely torn. '. lovr to think that once that calloused palm With dimples In the rosy flesh was set. That once fond lips annoiuled with love's balm Pressed kisses there that live In mem ory yet. Those knitted hand with 50ft and rever ent trace llavn gently closed tired lids o'er sight less eyes, hen clasped In prayer before the throne of (Irace Asked entrance for a soul In Paradise. rear hands! Jlnivo hands! I proudly hon or you ! For lofty deeds in lowly spirit done. Ifalmtd and UlbMUttfttl tit careless view. What victories of peacn those hands have won! -M. L. Uayne, In Chlcngo necord-IIerald I Sold for Naught. i I By Mr.-.. Amelia E. Barr. UNDER flip shadow of the laburnum trees, crowned with their golden wealth of lilosHoms, Klennor Baby Waited for her lover. And yet few would have (TUegied it, for on her face was the shadow of doubt and per plexity, insteikl of the litfut of love; ind her irresolute movements be trayed a heart ill n t rami. "1 am Ktiinp; to be a fool npsiin," 'he murmured. "And the worst of it is, I like tho folly." And there were few girll who Would not have liked "the folly" rep resented by the handsome Antony V'aughan. over the heathery hills she watched him coming now, his great black In rso devouring the distance between them in loiif swinging Itrides, Stopping neither "for brake nor for stone," and taking the low garden wall in a well-distanced lenp, ulii'h brought him almost to her !t!e. stately and handsome, brave i nd gillie, read in all the learning f the schools, what mine could Eleanor want? All these "availed iiiin nothing," while his poverty sat lil c a Mordecal In the gate. And so ulie had determined that, sweet lis these meetings were, this should be Ihe last; for this woman had the na ture of Dian in tho form of Venus, and not for love was she going to sacrifice the more tangible benefits :if gold and position. Still, with his arms nround her, and whispered words ol ndearment trembling from his lips In hers, it whs hard to tell hi i so. The intoxication of his pres ence made her for a little while obe li, nt lo ' e dignity within her; but when he : 'giiii to sposk of a definite engagei :it and a certain marriage lay, 1 waver distant, she broke nt nice the spell which hud held her passive in his embruee. "The thing is impossible, Antony," she said, sndly, but decidedly. "Ve might starve, but we could not live decently on $1,500 a year. My father lins more than double that, and he never is able to make both ends of the year agree comfortably. Fortune forbids our banns." "Oh, Nellyl Nelly! I begin to be lieve what Frank Foster told me that you were going to marry that old lawyer who Las bought poor Rnowdon's estates. Nelly, aro you not going to deny It? Speak quick 1 it Is not possible, it is not possible! you cannot be so wicked and so cruel!" and he held her hands tightly, nnd looked fiercely into the fair, treacherous face. Little comfort there; only a cold defiance that, like polished sleel, flung him back the passionate love amazement that al most slabbed her like a wound. Once convinced of her falseness, it was not In his nature to sue. This beautiful .Tildas bad sold his and her own youth and hopes, nnd he would not again touch the hand which had taken so foul a price, Sho was amazed nnd confounded, Of such love as this she had not dreamt. All her intentions of soothing the pnrting with kisses, and promises of eternal friendship, melted like snow in fire. ITe would none of them- would not take the proffered kiss, nor see tbe white, be seeching face, nor touch the out stretched hand. Ho was gone, in n slorm of outraged and indignant love, and Flea nor Itaby knew very well that In that noble heart her image was evermore a fallen nnd a dese crated idol. How wretchedly now the long, hot summer days went by! And in the midst of them Antony Vaughan disappeared from all bis old haunts. Some sold he had gone to India, oth ers tn Americaj but all soon forgot him except the cold, proud woman, in whose memory he wandered like an uneasy ghost continually. Then, when the short, bright days of September rami', the rich man who had bought Elttanor claimed his bar gain, and took It home to the little palace on Rnowdon Heights, A bishop in lawn nnd silk ratified the transaction; her parents made a great feast; the world gave that assurance of approval which Is powerful as the nod of Jove; but her own heart whis pered all the time. "Thou fool!" And when the eclat and excitement were all over, when life's dull, com mon way and dreary intercourse brightened by no Stray sunbeam of love lay stretched in wearying dis tanco before her, how bitterly she re called the golden spring time under the laburnums, when love glorified the mear,estflower, and really "paint ed the lily, and gave an added perfume to the violet." For her husband she had no love, and with his pursuits no sympathy. He had been attracted to her by her great beauty, and had loTedxher at . first with a strength of passion w hich she might by a little tact have made a firm and lasting a (Tec I inn; but she had taken no pains to please him, I made uo efforts to retain his admira- I' tion, so that she had no right to com plain when time and possession robbed her of even this asm big PCS of I devotion, and she Understood herself ' hs held "something better than his dog, a little d rarer than his horse." And of Antony Vaughan no word or token came. The la nils ami home which had been his fathers' for 500 years, were sold to strangers; and Eleanor's heart lost its last hope that of seeing him again. Time, which eares for none of these things, went on n if there wre no break ing hearts, no ruined lives, and change and chance made and marred the hup p bless of millions whom he swept be fore him to their long home. I had only been a Spectator in this little drama, and had simply watched it in that. eaJm, complaisant way In which we do watch SOI rows that in no way affect us. Hut, strangely enough, the last act of it was played out in my presence, nnd I was com pelled by circumstances nnd sym pathy to become one of the dramatis pcrsonae. And thus it happened. I was U)i among the mountains of the Colorado river in Texas, and our party, charmed by the exquisite scen ery and strange nnd beautiful flora, wandered out of ihe proper trail. Sunset found US fnr from any human habitation, except n little log-cabin in the crevice of the hills half a mile below us. We Supposed it to bo the home of some freed negro, nnd des cended to seek temporary rest nnd refreshment, purposing, as soon as the moon arose, to continue onr way to the little village, not over ten miles distant. The door was opened to receive us before we renched it, and the splendid looking fellow lean ing on his gun within its shadow was Antony Vaughan. I knew him nt once; every change was only nn add ed grace; he was ten times hand somer than when 1 saw him last, laughing and hallooing, head and I shoulders higher than nny squire who rode to cover in all the glens and glades of Bnowdon, He gave us broiled venison, strong eolTce and hot hoe-cakes, and a welcome which added no little zest to his hospitable provi sion. After supper, when a couple of pipes had soothed and quieted our noisy mirth, I intentionally called hiss by his name. He droppud his pipe In amazement, and looked the question he could not ask. Then I told him who I wns, nnd spoke of the dear old town among the Westmore land mountains. When bearded men weep, they ned the ministry of angels; no human symputhy can reach such sorrow, and so I wus silent until he had conquered his emotion. He asked of every nne's welfare lye fore he mentioned Flennor, anil then his voice was odd and indifferent; but his eyes contradicted his tongue, and his tOQgUS belied his heart. I told him of all her cold, empty, neg lected life, her faded beauty and her listless, unhappy ways. And after a moment's silence, during which he lit erally trembled with feeling, he mat tered: "Only just! A life for a life! Only just! And yet, poor thing!" And then he rose hastily, und calling I his dogs of which nt least a tlozen j were lying around he left the hut, ostensibly to look after our horses. During the next year we spent much time together, anil I soon felt j for him an affection "passing the love I of woman." He was Indeed the idol of a large section of country, and the leader in all hunting ami Indian ex prditions; for to these Ishmaelitcs of .lie frontier his very name had be come a terror. Far us the eye could reach the hind was all his own; im mense herds of cattle nnd cavullards of horses roamed over tho hills; and the rich bottom lands yielded him fab ulous harvests of corn and cotton. "How did you make all this wealth, Vaughan V" I asked him, one day. "1 didn't make a dime of it. Jack. Fortune brings in some boats that are not steered, und she found mine drift ing about and took charge of it, that's nil." Then there was a pause. We were both thinking of Eleanor's mistake. j He was the first to speak. i "I am Lt-oiiiLt- to-morrow to hunt un the trail of some thieving Comanches who have run off 20 of my best mares: like enough I may never come baeit again. If I am missing more than twu days, hunt me up, old fellow, nnd bury me like a Christian." He spoke half in jest and half in earnest; but an unaccountable pre sentiment of evil seized me, and I urged him to let me go with him. This he positively declined, saying that "I was not up to Indian yet. and would only increase the danger." So early next mo ning he went over the bills, accompa led by a couple of line hounds, nnd carrying his rifle, leaving me in the cabin alone. I was singularly nervous and restless; and when, toward sunset, I saw a stranger (limbing the road to our door, I was quite sure he wns bringing bad news. What worse? Poor Vaughan had been rnrprised and surrounded by Indians; und though he had fought his way to the next house, he had arrived there in a dying condition. I found him lying on n mattress under some mul berry trees which shaded the house, bleeding from a dozen wounds. A ne gro woman and two or three rough but tender-hearted men were doing what they could to prolong his quick ly ebbing life, but no hope nor rescue coned now avail. The seal of death was on every feature. "Don't fret. Jack," ho saM, almost cheerfully. "There is really nothing, cither in life or death, that's worth a tear." I did not need to speak to him of his affairs; they had been arranged and explained to me long ago, for ho well aware In what constant ger he lived, indeed, all cure for or interest in his present life seemed to have vanished. He tulketl in a rapid, feverish manner of the past; of his home and hla dead mother; of his friends und the pursuits of his youth; but he never once named Flennor, und 1 could not bring myself to intro duce the subject at this hour. As the last tints of sunset faded in "ashen skies" he died, ejaculating, almost with his lust breath, nnd with a voice of glad surprise, the word "Mother!" I hud known his mother well: a lovely little lady, who hail idolized her son, and been so tenderly beloved by hint that many had not hesitated to at tribute his eile and the sale of I he old Vaughan Manor Boosj to grief for her death. I assisted the negro woman to per form the hist offices for him, and nt arise a little gathering of rough men, whom he had led in many a wild und dangerous exploit, helped to lay Him in hts grave. He had left all that he possessed gold, cattle nnd lands to Flennor, wife of Richard C rosby, of Rnowdon Heights. Westmoreland! nnd as soon us possible i returned to England to inform her of the bequest. I found her In a little breakfast parlor of the tine honse for which sho had sold herself. Her beauty was mueh faded, her dress slovenly and ungraceful. I introduced myself to her, ami named a mutual friend nt whose house we hud often met. She condescended to remember, and then looked at me for further information. "I have just returned from Texas," 1 continued, and then I paused to see if her heart would connect the coun try with her lover. "Indeed I" she answered, quite calm ly. "A very unpleasant country, is It not?" "I hope you do not think so, for I am come to tell you that a friend has left you an immense estate there." Into the white, passionate face a great tide of feeling rushed; her eyes brightened with their old beauty. She stood up, and with parted lips waited for me to speak again. 1 re mained silent, however, for a moment, and in that moment her heart nwoke, and whispered to her by what loss her gain was made. Then she sat down, and covering her face with her hands, cried out: "Oh, my love! my love! After all these weary years " 1 tried to comfort her by tell ing of all his noble life how he had Uecored the sorrowful and fought for the weak, and defended helpless wom en nnd children with his own life. "And what matters It?" she cried, in a wild passion of grief; "he has left me, who loved him so dearly fer all these years, without , to Sllf- u word of comfort or of hone." "Hut he has proved that he has never forgotten you." "Yes. Never forgot my most miser able folly and childish pride. See what he has done! (jive me gold, and denied inc even n look or a word of love or forgiveness! Ills remem brance of me is the most profound cruelty. I will not touch a farthing of his wealth. I have bought it with years of misery nnd tears of blood. No, no! I have gold enough, and to spare; and what has it done fnr me? Look nt that helpless, paralysed old man silting in the sunshine; he never says a kind word to me, nnd yet for him nnd his gold I surrendered the noble heart and glorious beauty of Antony Vaughan. And you tell me he is dead! What then remains for me? Fndless weeping. Leave me now; I will not speak another word to any one' It wsa impossible to take this for answer, so the next day I called gain, but she was very ill and could see no one. The following day I re ceived tho same answer, and her phy sicinn, to whom I spoke, thought it might be some time before she would be able to nttend to nny business. So I took a run "over the border" to Ed inburgh, nnd remained there several days. On my return I went Immedi ately to Bnowdon Heights, nnd I met her funeral coming down the (Trent avenue. Poor Fleanor! the title deeds of her estate had proved to be her death warrant. People's Home Jouk nal. Two of n Kind. An amusing instance of unconscious soliloquy during a tete-a-tete with a ludy is told of the famous physician, Dr. Pre ind. It was in the old convivial days, and the doctor was summoned one evening from a rather too festivo board to the bedside of a lady patient. He felt her pulse "secundem artem," but for the life of him could not count Its bents. "Drunk, by Jove!" ha soliloquized, and pulled himself Uk gether sufficiently to order soma harmless mixture. His delight may bo imagined when the next morning, stead of an Indignant dismssssi from further attendance, he received from his patient, a confession that he had diagnosed her complaint quite cor rectly. London (ilobe. Dakttown t Lawyers. Judge , one of the great lawyers of the last generation, charged a client a retainer of $1,000 in an Im portant case, but settled the suit be fore the judge had opened a book or written a line concerning It. His client called to see if he would not re fund part of the money. The lowyer seemed surprised nt the suggestion. "Refund!" he exclaimed. "Refund, did you say? My friend, that is a kind of fund unknown to the legal profes sion " Chicago Chronicle. Xot An Rplonrc. Deacon White What did yo' hab fo dinnah at Misteh Henry's, yistehday? Parson Ynllerby Well, Bah, I done fo'got to ask what it was. It tasted like Leghorn, but t might hab been Cochin China or Plymouth Bock to' all I know. Puck. In a recent letter to the Missouri Jubilee committee Mark Twain com ments on the gen eral topsy-turvey-ness of life In the Mark Tnili'i View of Life. following words: "Invital ions which a brisk young fellow should get. and which Would transport him with joy, are delayed and Impeded and ob structed until they are 50 years' over liue when they reach him. It has hap pened again in this ease. When I was a boy in Missouri I was always on ; the lookout for invitations, but they always miscarried anu went wander ing through the aisles of time, und now they are arriving when 1 am old and (heumatie, and can't travel, und must lose in;- chance, I have lost a world of delight through this mutter ot delaying invitations. Fifty years go I would have gone eagerly across the world to help celebrate anything that might turn. It would have made no difference to me what it was so that I was there and allowed a chance to make a noise. The whole science 9f things is turned wrong end to. Life should begin with age and its privileges and accumulations, and end with youth and its capacity to splen dldly enjoy such advantages. As things are now, when in youth a dol lar would bring you a hundred pleas-! ufes, you can't get it; when you are old you get it, and there's nothing worth buying with it then. It's an epitome of life. The first half of it consists of the capacity to enjoy without the chance, the last half con sists of the chance without the est paclty." Juvenile courts und the system of probation for young offenders have proved so successful in eastern cities, especially In Boston, that much good was expected from the introduction ot the plan in Chicago. The results are disappointing, says n report from tbnt city. The fundamental idea of the system is that for a first offense a young lawbreaker shall be placed on probation, during the term of which he is to be under the care of suitable persons. In Chicago at least 2S proba tion officers are needed. The city ap pointed only five, each of whom has charge of about 300 boys, and the whole 1,500 are lurded together in a reformatory school which does not re form but corrupts. It is a. pity that American cities nre so slow to learn that anything which prevents nn in crease in the number of,. criminals is a saving in dollars and cents, to say nothing of the moral gain. "We owe our readers an apology," says th Dowersville (Md.) Clarion, "for failing to appear on time this week. But the fest ive goat belonging to our genial liveryman, Patrick Casey, jfot into our pressroom on Tuesday night after our eutire edition had been printed and ate the papers all up. Consequently, the entire resources of our editorlul and mechanical forces have been called Into play in a stireiru ous effort to get out another edition to replace the one that was eaten. While we admire the literary taste of the aforesaid goat, we shall hereafter keep the pressroom locked." The farmer has found petroleum his best friend in dealing with other pests than the mosquito, says an agricul torsi authority. It is the only thing that will kill the tree scales, including the famous San Jose scale, audit is the sovereign remedy for a line of bac terial ills in vegetation. Not merely the invisible parasites are combated with oil, but the visible insects as well. Kerosene emulsion goes far to com pensate for the loss of insectivorous birds out of doors, and it is absolutely indispensable in dealing with the pests in poultry houses and stables. A queer will case has just been de cided by the courts in Minnesota. The witnesses stepped through a doorway into the adjoining room and affixed their signatures at a table about ten feet from the testator, just out of his sight, but while he was seated on the side of his bed and could see them by stepping forward two or three feet. The attestation and subscription of the will under these circumstances are sustained. She had never heard of draw poker, and was enthusiastically learning the game, beans being used for stakes, re lates the New York Sun. "And do you always play with beans?" she asked, innocently. "Oh, no," responded the young man who was teaching her many things, and incidentally the game. "We sometimes use peas, and when we feel like being very devilish we always use succotash." In a recent case of pneumonia in Brooklyn 8,500 gallons of oxygen gas was used, the sick man was packed in Ice, an alcohol bath was given every 25 minutes, and four quarts of milk with three quarts of whisky were adminis tered daily. The patient recovered. John Shoup, who died in4he Topeka asylum a few days ago, had been an imbecile for 17 years as the result of partial asphyxiation in a hotel room where hs blew out the gas. Before his trouble he was a thrifty farmer. In Helen Keller, the deaf, dumb and blind student at Radcuffe, the in structors in English are beginning to believe there is hidden an author of the Dr. Plmroe'm Fm- vorito Prescription Doubles a Mother's Joys and Halves Her Sorrows, It does this by a pre-mtal pre paration in which the mother finds herself growing stronger instead of weaker with each month. Instead of nausea and nervousness, theie are healthy appetite, quiet nerves, and refreshing sleep. The mind's con tent keeps pace with the Ixxiy's comfort. There is no anxiety," no dread of the approaching time of travail. When the birth hour conies it is practically painless, the recovery is rapid, and the mother finds herself abundantly able to nurse her child. " Favorite Prescription " contains no alcohol, neither opium, cocaine, nor any other narcotic. Sick women are invited to con sult Dr. Pierce by letter free of charge, and so obtain without cost the advice of a specialist in the diseases peculiar to women, All correspondence strictly private and sacredly confidential. Address Dr. R. V. Pierre, Huffalo, N. Y. Mrs. Annie Hlnckcr, 61 Catherine Street, Syracuse, N. Y., writes: TOUT mcdicincfl hav--donC womlerc for me. For yenr ny hcsttb wn very ptxir; I had four iniacHt riant, hut sfiice tukiiiK Dr. l'icrce'a KhvoHU PfCtCripUofl ami 'Golden Medico) XHssovesy 1 have inu,ch better heiilth. ami now I have m fine healthy haby. I htve roconttttended your uitdlclim to mvcfoI of mr friends ami thty have hoen tienetitvd by them." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure dizziness and sick headache. MAW I INK XI 1 in injo.il ni PURE WHISKEY DIRECT FROM DISTILLER TO CONSUMER. Four Full Quartsk 1 v j u 1 run $3, .20 I Express Prepaid. Saves Healers' Profits Prevints Adulterations. OUR OFFER! We will sms four lull quart bottles of Horner's 7-Year-Old Double Copper Distilled Rye fer Si.Mh expre. prepaid, shipped in pi. in pMnape, mark to Indicate con teats. Haotsatisfectort when received, return ii at our expense; we willl J return your S3.20. Such Whiskey can't beh.: elsewhere tor Ittt than t RRFKKCMeKa: Third Nat'lBank.D.Tton: Hint Nat'l Bank, St. I, unite, or u; of th. Ex. Co t THE HAYNER DISTILLING CO., 226-232 West Fifth St., Dayton, Ohio. 300-311 bo. seventh at., at. louis. mo We guarantee above firm will do a It igreea.-ED Father and Snn-lii-I.nw, "1 do not feel the confidence I would like to in that young man you are engaged to," said Kthelimla's father. "He talked about nothing but the stock market while he and 1 were together." "Yes," answered Kthelindn. "He's a little worried about that conversa tion himself. He says that if you don't know any more about stock! than you appear to, he's liable to have to supMirt the entire family. Washington Star. Ambition. Mv happiness would be complete With What 1 have If I Could kUOWHbat no one else below The sky had more than I, and no One else stood quite as high. Chicago Kccord-IIerald. To remove a troublesome corn or bunion: Fiist sonk tbo com or bunion in wirtn water to soften it, then pare it down cs closely as pos sible without drawing blood andap ply Chamberlain's Pain Balm 1 w ice daily; rubbing vigorCDsly fjr live minutes at each application. A corD pin ler should bo W010 for 8 feff di y . to protect it from tho slue A a general liniment for sprainli bruises, lameness and rbeumatisiDi Pun Balin is nneqnsled, For by Middluburg Drugstore. Und n Lovely Time. He Did you enjoy the concert dear? She Very mueh. I sat next to Mrs OaBaboUt, whom I hadn't seen tot years. We hud a nice long chat. Tit' hits. A Villus ItlnekiiniHb Meved Si ' "'" Knn'a Life. Ml II. H. lll-clr lha bmII ItllOWOl village blacksmith at OrabaniHville. Sullivan Co., N. Y., says: "Our ht'l" sun, the jenrs old, has always I 'pn subject to ciojp, and to bad bHVJi tbe attacks been tbat we have leaf. rd many times that I e would d e We have hnd the doctor an 1 " medjcine, but Cbaiuberlfpn'w Remedy i i now our solo reliance. seems to dissolve tbe tough niueoi ana ty giving irequent dose the eroupv eympton appear we have found tbat the dreaded ' is cured before it gets settle Thete is no danger in givin Hii re" rnedy for it contains no op!" a r other injurious drujr and ru iy h given as confidently to a babe as t0 an adult. For sale by lltddlebnoj Drug Store. DON'T " rr W f 1 f Your Life awy easily, be made well, strong, maanrtic, new life end vigor by taking MO-TO-B ten pounds tn tea days. Over BOO, 01 cured. All druggist. Cure guaranteed. SfS I iill Ta ml i M nV I. Swj I I first rank. l KsaiUT CO.. Chicago or new tot.