- -- i r PIMPLES Cured in FIVK DATS by the use of Dr. Thomas' Faci al Ointment, apply at bed time; cures while you sleep. EPFor a short time we will send a Fifty-cent box by mall, postpaid, on receipt of thirty five cents. Address, Barker Cljenjical Co., 1324 North 55th St., West Park Station, i2 5-20t. Phiadelphia, Pa. FRENCH AFFAIRS. France produces 3,000,000 worth of chesnuts a year, nnd Italy 4,000,. 000 worth. The biggest mini ever spent In im proving1 one street was 2,800,000, on the liue de Bivoli, Paris. The dunes on the French coast are snld to be proving fine soil for the cultivation of asparagus. The artesian well at Passy, in France, gives the record yield of 2,000 gallons of water a minute. It coat 40,000. Avoid adulteration nnd wholesale anil retail profit. Iy buying your wrhi.key direct from the dlali'lery. Hee tlio llaynrr IMxtilliiiK '" nouncetnent In thin pj(wr. which -Kill tm liow to ifrl fmir full quarts of pure Hoven-Year-OM Hye Whiskey, fiirf tircpaid, for H.tiO. They KUarnnUte pure goods and full mraaure. A Fnnilly Affair. He Note (at the theater) That or chestra that plays between the acts is exerutiati,-ig. It's enough to drive folks out. Lohbluitnger The leader in a broth er ;f the man who has the saloon next door. X. V. Weekly. REMARK BI.K 4 I'KF. I)'(IIUI', A Mltle Hoy's Life Nntetl. I bave r few words to say regird ing Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It 8:iveJ niy little boy's life and I feel th at I cannot praise it enough. I bought a bottle of it from A. E. Steele of (iiojdwin, S. D , and wberi I pot homo with it the poor baby could hardly breathe. I gave the medicine as directed every teu min utes until he "threw up" and then I thought sure he was going to choke to death. We had to pull the phlegm out of his month in great lone BtringH. I am positive that if 1 had not got that bottle of cough me dicine, my bov would not be on earth to-day. Joe Dkmont, In wood. Iowa. For sale by ttie Middli burg Drug Store. . . . r irataral. EubbUDS I suppose you would eofl U I told you that & man who used to live In our town, but afterward moved to Colorado, had come back to iV w?1 !n "earrh of hls health. I ffwmnn-.p; tha n reaRo -ble I t-f ' ( .Ff ihut s wLe't "he hist li.- Philadelphia Press. A Cure lur Lumbago. W. C 'Williamson, of Amberst Va , says : "For more than a ear suffered from lumbago. I finally tried Chamberlain's Pain Balm and it gave me entire relief, which all other remedies had tailed to do. told by Midddleburg Drugstore, Senent lonnl, Lena What did the Kussian noble. ian write In your autograph album? Mabel Oh, something unspeakable. ' ' Lena Goodness gracious! What was It? Mabel His name. Town Topics. Fortune's Favorite. Mrs. Xewlywed You remember Bob Bigfront, whom I refused last year? .Well, he's just struck en oil well worth 15,000,000. Mr. Newlywtd Gosh! Gome men Gave all sorts of luck! PucV. f The seneihle wny to buy whiskey la to got It direct from the Dintillcry. Till, saves whole eale and retail ilenler'a pronm, alao Insure" pure pronda. The Ilnyner DiatlllinB; Cn- will hip you four full quart Heven-Year-Old Kye, express preaiil. for 13 2D. bee large advert! ae iaaot In Ihla Imuo I Increaaa In Railway MIIaT. The average increase in the length of railways throughout the world is bout 1 1,000 miles per anunm, equal .to nearly 8', per cent, of the total 1 lines existing, which at the beginning N of this century embraced nearly 480,- 000 miles. Of the Increase during re :ent years 4,100 miles per annum are I added to the European lyrtem, 3,500 tiles per annum to the American sys tem, while the addition in Asia ia at the rate of 2,2.10 miles, in Africa 1,100 miles and in Australia 1(10 miles per annum. MnhoKany'a Tenalle Strengtk, In tensile strength mahogany It njt to lance wood, sustaining tl,00tt per squart Inch. v BEST FOR THE m If ?mi li iii.-. y (..vfiii-'tir o' tli . In't p yoiit f ,,lt.l.f vlo 1 hi MIHOMtlt' iliti low ell 04-H IV" kw -la ii"- ellt I'll ' ,' H. 4'.V-t' t i'lt-ur ui.il - ! '.! t I t l:at 'cn ui : Hit. l'MM.il I.-. ! r : .. . . V.', .I l...t. . rllii I in' . ' CANDY , . i: I. I'.id i V II in'r li' - iy 1 1 1 1 y , II. it tnl ! mc i1 1 ' I 1 . ntM.-t i : .i .iii ii mi.'' & CAT!' r?3 -k aav.tMl l:im i'V twin v. i I'.'inr m it vu m;., "l la. mA '..-.- iO Of Stm Vortil. L ) vifi' """" " '...,. ,r- ... --'-m. INDIANS IN REYOlr. Do Not Llki an Order Recently I i Bt4 at Washington. Dlaaated wltk tk , Command Ckaace Tkelr Haklta and Graaa Hats and Uv la Pretty Frame Hoaaea. A recent order of the Indian de partment has created consternation tmong the reservation Indians of the southwest. The order is to the effect that all Indians shall hereafter live in houses, and cast aside their native places of habitation. If there is any thing that the average Indian holds dear, it is his tepee or grass house. It is as sacred to him as his dances, which are also fast passing away. The purposes of putting the Indians ia frame houses are two. First, the wish to do away with their habit of crouching ebout in the hollows and timber during winter time, in their tepees. Again, this kind of structure is not healthful, and hun dreds of Indian chMdrcn die every year of exposure. Again, when the Indians live in tents they are apt to have more than one wife apiece, and indulge in their (wines and dances, much to the detriment of their moral character. Most of the Indians, says the New York Tribune, have never lived un der anything but huts of their own peculiar construction. Most of the tribes live in tepees in summer, but in winter they have grass houses, sod houses, caves in the hillsidiws and leaf covered shacks in the valleys. The Wichita Indians, who live in south ern Oklahoma, have the most com plete houses of any of the Indian tribes in the United States. It is called n grass house. The Indians firs build a framework, dome-shaped. Huge logs are set up in a cone, nnd these are covered with sod. The squaws then weave the long grass of the plains into a kind of thick mat ting. This is waterproof, and is laid INDIAN GRASS HOUSE. (Sketched on the Wichita Reservation Near Anakardo, I. T ) ia 'b'tnps o.vr tke luJ.' -T'itoM-'U formed at the top to turn water, and a Miiall entrance is cut in the south side. A rude door is made to cover this. There are small holes near the bottom of the hut for breathing places, and in winter a chimney hole is cut in the top. Hut there are no windows of any sort. In summer the lower part of the sod house can be removed, leaving a good roof and open sides. In them tlicy spend the warm weather. Storms have full sweep at them, but they do not seem to care for this. In case the wind blows too hard they go into some of the numerous caves that may be found on their reservation. The Comanches do not live inside of houses of any kind. Their sole pro tection from the weather is tents made in the shape of the regulation Indian tepee. In these tepees they spend their winters, but in summer live under n leaf arbor. The Kiowas live or have lived much' after the same manner. But these Indians are being made to go into the small two roomed wooden houses which the gov ernment has built on thelrallotmcnts. Some of the older Indians are ob jecting to the change, but they are under strict orders to move or suf fer the consequence of having their annuity money cut off in the heart of the winter season. The Pswnees, Poncas and Cheyennes all live in rough tepees both in sum mer and winter, although the Poncas have had for several years good houses on their places. But tbey con tinue to live in the tepees, exposed to the glare of the summer's sun and the blast of winter's snow, while the ponies are allowed to stand in the houses. There has been some change for the better among the Poncas of late, and a great majarity are going back to live in houses. The Cheyennes and Apaches are al most beyond the reach of civilizing influences. They will have nothing to do with the white people, as a rule, nnd they scorn the little government houses which have lately been built for them. But the Indian agents will soon issue instructions to confis cate i.ie iiul',.1.1 i (ices ot' these tribes, burn tlieni and compel the In dians to accept the frame houses as tJicir future home. It h:y; been known to happen ninnng crrtain tribes that when the old men were placed in houses tlicy sieVened a: il died. They sav t Ih uMUMMilirre i too close for wilt! nature. It is partly true. S tea itf. e V ., ': I'l'd of rie.lit. 1! ir in .Mm l.'ui' (in. ' i' :'. ;.;! :ne . ' ' . ' ;i :n ::;- . : ii in l:;ul (rum 1'iT.rt. t';n is re V.ii'Vid lie el nl'i"." :t ; stieil ' y ; fired t w Ciscase. 11 ; A i; Tl.e gardrd '! 'i was f;wi"1 1 HER GUILT D0UBTFD Public Gins Bsnefit of Doubt to Miss Jane Tofpan.') Ckar4 wltk UavlaaT Caad ke Doatk f Xaaaawr ! Fm4lanta Hnr Case On ! Ik Itretna- -at Oar Tlsaaa. . ' It Jane Toppan, trained nurse, of Boston, a wholesale poisoner, or is the simply the innocent victim of cir cumstances that have conspired to fasten suspicion upon her? Herase is one of the most remarkable, in many respects, of any recently brought to the attention of the pub lic Briefly stated, its history ia as fol lows: Last June a Mrs. Davis, wife f Alden P. Davis, of Boston, became dangerously ill, and Miss Toppan was engaged to take charge of her. Mrs. 4, Davis died on July 4. supposedly of heart disease. Then Mrs. Henry Gor don, a daughter of Mrs. Davis, be came ill and soon died. Her attend ing physician also died within a few dnys, and before he had filed a cer tificate giving the cause of his pa tient's death. Then Mr. Davis was taken ill and died, and two days later Mrs. Gibbs, the second daughter, and the Inst of the family, died. It is a queer circumstance that sus picion of foul play was not aroused, or at least did not take form, until the entire family had been wiped out. Then the bodies of Mrs. Gordon and Mrs. (iibbs were exhumed. As a re sult of the examination of the re mains of the latter by an expert tox icologist, a warrant was issued and Miss Toppan was placed in custody on a charge of murder. Investigation into Miss Toppan's antecedents fol lowed, and it was discovered that seven or eight other cases of sudden , .... . . death had occurred among persons nurseu uy ui-r. Aside from the chain Of coinci- rtenor which connect Tonnnn with all these deaths, there is an- mss. jank..to?pax. (Boston Nurse Accused of Having Poi soned Macy Patients.) other fact that is worthy of mention. t hns transpired that the nurse had borrowed money from Mr. Davis, nnd that two promissory notes she gave him as an evidence of the debt could not be found among the man's pos session's nfter his death. As the case stands now, these are practical ly all the facts. It is not established, says the Chi cago Inter Ocean, that any of the persons who died suddenly under Miss Toppan's charge were poisoned. Even in the case of Mrs. Gibbs, whose remains werei the only ones exam ined, there is no statement to the effect that traces of poison were found. In fact, the grounds upon which the warrant for the trained nurse's arrest was issued have not been made known. In every instance the person who died under Miss Toppan's care was attended by a physician, and in every instance, save in the case ot Mrs. Gordon, tha death was pronounced perfectly natural by the physician's certificate. In the exceptional in stance the failure of the doctor to is sue a certificate resulted from his death, and Miss Toppan cannot be held accountable for this failure, un less it be assumed that ahe poisoned the physician as well as. his patient. Evidence may be produced later which will prove that Miss Toppan is responsible for the four deaths in the Davis family, and, if so, then it may reasonably be concluded that she is responsible for other sudden deaths that have occurred In homes where she was employed as a professional! nurse. The disappearance of the i promissory notes, and the testimony at second-hand that Mrs. Gibbs de- tected Miss Toppan in the act of rum- mnging among Mr. Davis' papers after his death, will be of value only when it is determined beyond ques- ' .v . .v i..- i.. , tion that the members of the house- I hold were victims of foul play.. Inoreaae of Population. The increase of population during the past 100 years of people of Euro pean origin, according to Sir Robert Gilliri, the famous English statistician, hns been from 170.(;00,000 nt the be ginning of the century to 510.000,000 at its close. The growth of the t'liitcd States alone lias been from a little over r,.()00,000 t o nearly Ffl.nno.ODO. The F.ns--lisli population of the British emji're has increased from about M.OOO.Odd t ;:,nnn,oni). Germany nnd Pnssla nlwc .Oiow lvinnrkuble prowth, from 'Jil. nnn.nii'i in .".'i.uiin.Oo!) in. one ease nnd from .in.(,(in,oi! in l.is.non.noo in the ether. Krnnee lias increased from 25, Oon.f'fU. to onlv 1.(10(1,000. . Incltnn l'nri-r-rs In Arlionn. In AiIciki tlurc r.re I.70O lciiin; who own farms. ' , , i r ' '41.' f j ENDLESS Long Nights oi TertLTt tegd to Srct Restf:ss by Dr. Grssns's Nenrura Bleed v,i Norn Rexsty. thousand years tm morning! Hour by hour the msht drags away bat sleep won't come. What is the matter? You seem calm enough on re tiring. You are dead tired and worn out, - but you can't v alen. r- Dr.Oreene'i Kervurahlood and nerve remedy la tha absolutely certain help for you. Yout nerves are dis ordered. Yout brain works too actively. You cannot compose yourself to slum ber because you are nlanniuc or worrying. sy-You must stop this at once and Dr. (ireone's great medicine will enable you to do so. , Ma. Orlando Kiskh, 954 Reese Avenue, Litn.t, Ohio, says: "My nervous system was entirely shattered, the nerves controlling the heart became weak, and tha hoart's action irregular, which was a source ot great alarm to me. I was unable to sleep, digestion was interfered with, and generally speaking, I considered my time short for this earth. I became dis coursed and gave up the thought ot ever beinj a well nuin again. To-J ay I am a well man in every sense ot the word, and all through the use of Dr. Cireene's Nervura blood and nerve rem eiry, of which I am proud to speak and give a helping hand to suffering humanity. My health is my greatest blessing, and words fail to express the gratitude I feel for Dr. Greene and his wonderful remedy." Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve rem edy has cured thousands ot these troubles. It always cures disordered nerves, and It alwaya enriches tha blood. Glorious health comes through It to the weak and despairing. Splendid appetite and full vigor are promptly ftowd b"u B in uiin jt nnd out wnat neaiin means, rree meaieai counsel is given by Dr. Greene at 101 Fifth Avenue, ew York City. Call or write. OF SCIENTIFIC INTEREST. A horse lives 27 years, but both lion and camel attain the age of 40. Good Cheshire cheese has 30 per cent, of water. Dutch has 41 per cent. The fly agaric, a sort of fungus. Is so called because, steeped in milk, it is used to kill flies. Foresters say that the best tim ber is that which grows from dark soil intermixed with gravel. An anemometer, or wind-measure, consists of four cups at the end of arms. It is so constructed that it makes 500 revolutions while a mile of wind passes. A tale of geese and death is told by Nature Notes: "Mr. Francis Stan ier, of Pepluw hull, near Market Dray t.QJV.wja .millionaire anrj a well known philanthropist, lie havoT ioHre favorite American and Japanese geese, which he fed with his own hands, and which were kept on a pool near the hall. He died about a fort- nieht BB.0, an(i France to relate, dnr- in. the lagt hour8 of hu jnneB. the8e birds, numbering over a hundred, flew around his bedroom window, beating their wings against the glass, utter ing a weird, screeching noise. In al most the last moments of the squire's life the whole flock of birds disap peared, and not one of them has been seen since." Try four full quarts of Hayner'a Seven-Year-Old itye, express prepaid, for IS 81). for parti vtilara, see announcement of the Hayner Dis tilling Co., Dny ton, Ohio, which appears else where In Ibis issue Wkat Jns Bald. Jane, did you say that George had no strength of character?" ;Do you mean George Strickland?" 'Yes, I mean George Strickland, the man I am going to marry." "Well, you see, dear, I had Just beard that George proposed to you. and what I said was that he was very easily suited." Cleveland Plain Dealer. A Profcaalonnl Tw later. I "Dr. Bingham's badly used up by i Ilia last ease, eh?" "I should ay. He pronounced the patient dead and sent for the under taker, when she came to life." "He ought to be glad of it." "Not at all. Having pronounced the girl dead, he considered her re- covery a reflection on his kill." Den- Tcr llm A Good Reeommenditlloii. "I have noticed that the eale on Chfimber'kiu's Stomach and Liver Tablets IB almost invariably to those who have Once used them,' says Mr. J- H. Weber, a promineut dru?mt Cascade. Iowa hat better re- t0?f?D.Bli:,n A STX have than for people to call for it ,!,,. : ; A i, edy? Try them when you feel dull after eating, when you have a bad Ifpste in your moutl?. feel bilious. ttucii n k mil iu ucfru vi duvu ioiu Ltive iiO nppetita or vhvu troubled i with constipntioi), an i you are cer teiu to l:e delighted wilh the prompt rel;ef which tliey afford. Tor sale by the. Middleburg U. ug Store, I'nlltlea. This- mlRhty nrd Incessant iln Vhnt is It all about? 'Tis l.iit to gi t feir.e follows In And ell'.ir l:!uv.s out. Washl!.j;tun Klar. Only Half n Trial. Purehns e (nnyril.v) Ynu told mc this hursu could vilh the speed of the wind. It was all I could do to et into town before, noon. Dealer lie n'u.'t had no fair show yit. V"ait ti'.l ."Jo't:" l:ome li X. V. Weekly. ye l li eii hi.ii l.ome'ard. Js "feascil ii'i.tr.'iir 7 PURELY PERSONAL. ' Prof. Koch, the noted Berlin pay licisn, has been given the rank of major general by Emperor Wlllaui. The first civic knight in Eng nd was Sir William Walworth, lord mayor of London, who was knighted for kjlling Wat Tyler. t Trot. A. Koch, of Heidelberg, sug gests that the question of employ ment for the blind should be solved in accordance with the precedence of Japan, where they are much in de mand as experts in massage. James J. Hill hns two fads. The first is the collection of paintings. In his home in St. Paul he has a large number of painting known all over the world. His other amusement Is the collection of unset jewels. ( . Two rather embarrassing g.fts have just been brought from Abys sinia for King Edward VII. by Brit ish officers. From Emperor Menalek conies a tame zebra, and from the commander of the Abyssinian army a pet lion cub. Wellington G. Sinphi, of Bockland, Me., has in his possession a photo graph of Abraham Lincoln, the nega tive of which wn not retouched. It is a curiosity, nnd shows character istics of Mr. Lincoln which a finer finished picture would conceal. Ole Hansen, the peasant who was appointed minister of agriculture in the present Danish cabinet, was vis ited by a journalist recently who found the minister engaged in har vesting. Thestatesman looks nfter all the work of the farm and even per sonally feeds the cows in the sheds. President rritchett, of the Massa chusetts institute of technology, in relating his experiences in college re cently, said that the way boys had of finding a certain professor was to step into the middle of the college yard and call out a date in American history. Instantly the professor would come out from some window or door in the college and say that the date was incorrect. HE FEARED HE HAD LOST When Wu Ting Fang, the famous Chin ese Minister to Washington, irritable and somewhat forgetful from a severe cold, missed one day from the front of his cap the lmmeuHo diamond be always wears there, bs was dreadfully frightened. A friend pointed out that tha statesman had inad vertently donned his turban wrong side before, and that the diamond was safe in the rear. Had Wu Ting Fang been wear ing a Benson's Porous Plaster on his chest or bark to cure his cold, he never would have doubted its location. He would have felt it doing its work, warming and mak ing flexible the torpid muscles, extracting the pain and soreness, promoting the free circulation of the blood, stimulating tht skin and lungs to proper action, and so ) diMomng and banishing the malady. Thus we perceive, beloved friends, that THE BIO DIAMOND ON HIS HAT while a pretty thing to look upon, was of no practical use. But Benson's Plasters are supremely useful. They relieve and cure gout, yifDJtna.tinv-?,iIJs.'i-.f0'd tin tha ctest, lame baok, etc., so quickly anTcVa).letely as to make yon wonder how it can be. Better note, well to-monwei that's tha way they work. Oct the genu ine. All druggists, or we will prepay post age on any number ordered in the United States on receipt of 25c. each. Seabury 1 Johnson, Mfg. Chemists, N.T.. FRENCH IS PROMOTED. Baekada Ceo. Sir Redvera Buller Is) Command of tk First BrHlah Army Corps, Maj. Gen. John Denton Pinkstone French, who has been appointed to succeed Gen. Sir Redvers Buller as Kimmiml.r nf tha FMrat BrltUh armv i. .k. .nnn.;..iv ' .old..M who v.Ta pi..- to young soldier who nave risen to klV .....; Inn. In lli. Tti-Olalt mllitarv ,evi( He had fought in tha Sou. dan and in the east previously to his appointment in 1899 to the oommand of the cavalry division in Natal. He is one of the two or three British generals who have faugh t th Boers MAJ. GEN. FBENCH. (New Commnndfr of the Flrft Corps ef the British Army.) with sujeesi I Elnndslaa-rt He was in command nt at Belt fontein and Lombard's Kop, and was the com mander nlso of the operations around Colcsburg and in th movements which culminated in the relief of Kimberlcy. lie (',i:- etiil the cavalry troops in the ee.inniU'ii v.hieh ended in the capture of I'.locmfonteiii and Pretoria, nnd was the ollieer in cliarpo of Lord Kol.erls' leTt wing in the battles east of Pretoria on June 10 and 12, 1 '.".'). In October last year he was placed nt tlievliead of the cavalry division ii) fouth Africa. Gen. French is 40 years old, was born at Kent, England, and was educated or tlio navy, ia which his fathor was nu j officer. ' 1 ' . Aro Do Slow." If the woman at work should make answer to the other woman, she might, perhaps, say : " You never had to scrub and clean when your back ached so that it seemed that "every movement would break it in two." It's bail enough for a woman to suffer. But when she must suffer and slave at the same time she reaches the limit of her endurance. Weak women who have beeu made strong by the use of Dr. Pierce's Favor ite Prescription, recommend it to others as a godsend. It establishes regularity, dries weakening drains, heals inflamma tion and ulceration and cures female weakness. "I have been siting some time now, being troubled with female wenknesa." writes Mrs. Wm. 11. Johnson, of Aroudale, Cheater Co., Pa. Everv mouth I would have to lie on my back. I tried many different medicines and nothing gave me relief until I began Dr. Pierce'a medi cine, using two bottles of ' Favorite Prescrip tion and two of 'Golden Medical Discovery.' These mcdicinee have cured me. When I began your treatment I was not able to do very much, but now I do the work for my family of nine, and feel better to-day than I have for a year." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure bil iousness and sick headache. They do not create the pill habit. Tk Helcht of ImproTldene. Mrs. Lakeside Mrs. Breezy has ap plied for a divorce, and yet she tells me that she has no plans for marry ing again, and no one in particular picked out. Mrs. Packinghnm Dear me! How very imprudent! Town Topics. l DIIDE7 XAUICICV 'i I Will It I IIWlXL. I DIRECT FROM DISTILLER! TO CONSUMER. ' Four Full Quarts! $$20 KJJ Eipreis Prepaid. Sam Dtaltrt' ProfittA frtvtntt AtmluraUoM. i HAYNEft OUR OFPIRl wtwM art tattles at Karaw'sl 7-Yaar-OM DmM CtffrX INstiaea Bra far iM.20.1 teat. Mas at ear eassaeai w retnra y eav aMJO. Such Whltluy eta tluwhtrittrlin iRmnum: Third Kat'lBank.DaytoBt Hai'i uaax, at. Male; or aaj oi ma THE HAYNER DISTILLING I I MeB38 West Fifth St.. Dayton. (SO 0-311 Bo. Seventh t.t St. Lou We (manatee abav Inn will do as It agreeo-Bo FOREIGN ITEMS OF INTEREST; In British gold coins one part In 18 is alloy. In silver, 13 parts In 240. Seven hundred and twenty-two water bailiffs look after British streams. In 1,000 gallons of ordinary Thames water there are four pounds of clay and soil in suspension. The checks which paas through the London clearing house in six weeks are more than equal in amount to al) the coin in the world. Wheat, rye, turnips and flax are decreasing crops in Great Britain. Barley, oats, potatoes and small fruits are on the increase. Out of 6,831 earthquakes which had been recorded in the world from the earliest times up to 1850 the British' isles were responsible for no fewer than 225. In some parts of the north of Scot- . land ftsherfolk turn back if a hare . or pig crosses their path; and at aea they never pronounce the name of the hare, the pig, the salmon, the trout or the dog. An authentic centenarian is the dowager Lady Carew, widow of the first Baron Carew, who haa completed her one hundred and fourth year. She was married 85 years age. Un til recently she played whist and chess. Mr. Edmund Putnam, of London. says: "It is safe to say that between 4:30 and five o'clock in the aftK,n8 noon, 45,000,000 English people drl tea. In England I can count ui ' the fingers of one hand the peq ' who v;Vl r.ci .tve it, cwpt til who are ill, of course. From the ! lionnire to the man sweeping j Sets, street, all drink tea in the afternirjers, The people of the different classef course, have it served in difftj ways, but they nil have tea. At IS BUCIl leu lin. Ulic iiiiiiiiii; fc. v country. Just ns the English ci make good coffee, so cannot Americans make good tea." i3L satamWtotjA a, retava It 1 wUt f II tkuisMl ax. vo b.it :o.. rl Ohio.' I a. Mo. 11 DON'T Su.- Yourutetr YcU can tie cured of knr form of tubac-i easily, bo made vtell. BtroiiK. innrtirtic.r n new life and viiror bv takinir KO.Ttt.Y that mikes weak lueu strong. Mm ten pounds in ten days. Over BOO, cured. All druggist. Cure punnum-wl. let and ndvico l'RKR. Adilruss S'l'lJJ xes, t tuiUAuy iu. cuicaeo or ..cw Yoifc 1 nNAef: "I 7 itl --rt, -'...-.... , A fV k. ' ' . . ' -.