The, 1AIR - A NEW FEMININE CALLING. The calling of veterinary surgeons b not one In which women bare here tofore evinced any special disposition to shine, but one member of the fair ex Is preparing herself for gradua tion from a veterinary college and ex pects to receive her diploma In the spring. The aspirant for honors in this particular field Is Mrs. Mlgnonne Nicholson, now a resident of Chicago, but whose childhood days were spent In a Long Island town. Cats and dogs are her special pets and while In accordance with the requirements of the veterinary Institution she Is ob liged to learn how to doctor horses he proposes to give her attention after graduation to her special favor ites and has already proved successful In her treatment of dogs. A FARISIAN TETTICOAT. Very seldom will we be wrong If we let down a lavender and blue combina tion as a product of Tnrls. Even if It doesn't come from there, you may rest assured It has been copied from one that did. The charming thing In rjini. tlon Is of lavender taffeta. There's n deep Van Dyked flounce, which Is elaborately tucked. Both at the top and at the bottom of this flounce there's a three-inch band of filet ap plique In an ecru tint, and from under this very open Ince shows the blue taffeta. It Is of a lovely shade, bright yet soft, not quite as strong as tur quoise, but with more character than baby blue. Such a petticoat would bo lovely with a dress In the opnlescent tints, or even with one In which these exquisite tones served In as garniture. The colors of the opal, by the way, are first choice for evening. THE WELL-DRESSED WOMAN. The smart girl Is showing a decided preference for gray this winter steel gray, not the perishable silver shade. Her covert-cloth coat, with Its strapped or slot seams, Is no longer In tan; It Is now made up In steel-gray. Gray squirrel Is the fur of the moment, and squirrel fur and orange velvet is the Smartest of combinations. The one-colnr Idea Is another fad of the smart girl. Whatever color she 'elects for her very own, she Is careful to see that a suggestion of it Is visible In every costume she wears. If gray Is the color she chooses, she will not only have her cnlllng-costume of gray, her rain-cont gray, her furs and velvet Jacket the same shade, but she will be particular to have even her' dress ac ' cessorles In gray, too. For the smart girl who affects gray there Is a new style of umbrella. It ts made of dark gray silk, with a border v a ubiiu'r Biuiue ul WO. J lie uuuuip Is gun-metal, and In place of the usual tassel there Is a small gun-metal trin ket suspended by a short chain passing through the hole in the handle. This, too, is gun-metal. It looks like an oval-shaped case, and when opened It may contain either a bit of a mirror, a coin-purse or a powder-box. Woman's Borne Companion. MARRIED WOMEN'S NAMES. In several of the smaller towns In Wisconsin, where a strong organized movement has been made to get the names of women on the registry lists, consternation has been caused by the discovery that a married woman is not . legally registered if the Christian name by which she Is designated on the lists Is that of her husband. Thus, "Mrs. John Smith," whose "given" name is "Mary," cannot vote unless she is registered as "Mai'y," or, if she doe vote. It must bo by the troublesome process of "swearing in." Socially, a married woman always goes by her husband's full name, prefixed '. by "Mrs." until he dies, unless the pair are severed by a divorce. Legally, . however, it la only his surname which becomes hers by marriage, and her Christian name continues to be an es sential part of her formal designation, supplemented. If n!ie chooses, by ber patronymic. If she Is a public char actera writer, a speaker, a physician she Is generally known by the name Which she bore previous to her mar riage, with her husband's surname ap pended. Thus Ella Wheeler became Ella Wheeler Wilcox. Thus Elizabeth Cady became Elizabeth Cady Stanton. The whole nation knew tuc jreat woman suffragist by that name,, but comparatively few people knew her by the name of Mrs, Henry Brewster Stanton, though Henry Brewster Stan ton, her husband, wus in his day a well-known man. Milwaukee Wlscon- THE AMERICAN GIRL, What makes the American girl a most attractive being is ber self-confl-decce, amiability and good temper. Now, I am not a flatterer, and I must say that pretty women are as much In the minority in the United States as In any other couutry, writes Vis count de Santo Thyrso In the Smart Set Beauty, like gold, Is scarce every where. Xoa can find more gold In Cali fornia than in Europe; but even In California you certainly find more dross than gold,, So It Is with women. In some places, or in tome countries, the number of pretty women Is greater . than In others, and In this branch of natural production the United States la sot behind hand. This, however. Is only a foreigner' view of the subject T tc3 tbt truth, I have sever mat a American girl of twenty who did not consider herself fascinating; this la self-confidence; and for a woman to believe she is beautiful is hnlf-way to real beauty. In the first place, a plain woman, who Is aware of her plain ness, is unhappy. Man Is n del Hull ant mnl, and despite what novels say about sad women nnd the power of tears, unlinpplness Is as rrpcllont to a healthy mind, as disease to a healthy body.. Then, the conscious plain woman gives up every thought of pleas 1 11 3, and therefore she does noth ing to make herself attractive. She does not dress in a becoming way, she does not smile, she does not try to be attractive. She becomes sour or dull, or both. HINTS FOR BUSY WOMEN. The longer a woman persists In Ig noring the necessity of walking, stand ing and breathing correctly, the less able sbe will be to wlthstnnd the strain of her dally work and to correct the faults In her figure which as time goes on become more and more difficult to eradicate. As a matter of fact, every woman who goes to business daily can get enough exercise out of the energy she expends in the course of the day's duties to fight off that tired feeling and make her healthy and physically perfect. She should hnve her sleeves made so that she can turn or lift her arms high above her bend with ease. ' She must avoid the slump of the shoulders which gives the beholder the Impres sion that she Is actually leaning upon her corsets. The shoulders must not be bunched up to the cars, or drawn bade. Just let them remain relaxed In a perfectly natural nnd easy posi tion. She must avoid that Injurious habit of clinching the thumb In the palm of the hand. Another bad habit Is that of rolling and twisting either a glove or a handkerchief round nnd round, as though trying to twist It In half. Such practices as these stop the cir culation of the blood through muscles that are of great value. When going up or down stairs turn the toes out Instead of In. Never for get to sit upright, nnd when standing keep the spine straight. Always breathe through the nose and bold up the chest. When sitting down relax as much as possible, without slumping or lotting the hpad droop forward. There we have a few simple little things which will not Interfere with your dally duties In the least. They nro nil excellent exercises for busy women. They will tench you to forget all about fatigue. New York American. OovdoiV i,HAT- Miss Helen Gould employs a man named Tutt to net as her bodyguard and to keep camera fiends at a dis tance. Miss M. E. Braddon, the writer, bas a triple fml for books, old china and dogs. These three hobbles take up nil her leisure time. "Miss F. E. Buttolph. who Is making n collection of menu cards for the New York rublic Library, hos already gath ered together 10,250. Miss Mary Andrews, of Hamilton, OI1I0, has been installed as pastor of the First Fresbyterlan Church at Kan sas City. Sbe is the only woman preacher In Missouri. There are only half a dozen English women In Marrakush, Morocco, and they are obliged to wear the garb of native women to avoid being Insulted by the fanatic Mohammedans. There are now In the United States forty-five feminine locomotive engi neers and firemsn and seven female conductors. Add to these tblrty-one brakemen or, to be correct, brake women ten baggage women. About five years ago a Maine woman, taking a consumptive husband to the mountains of Arizona, was sCown an old abandoned claim by her Indian servant. She took It, with great diffi culty secured $500 to work It, and before the year was out sold It for $50,000 and a life interest. LEADS W1 The scarab Is a popular design for rings, scarf pins and sleeve buttons. Buckles this year are larger, hand somer and more elaborate than ever. Green walrus and gray ooze calf are two of the most fashionable leathers for belts. Drapery net for mourning millinery resembles point d'esprit sprinkled with tiny dull Jet beads. Th moonstone is In evidence as the setting for some of the newest sleeve links and fancy buttons. Tabs and tails are the correct adorn ment for fur muffs this year, stuffed heads having been discarded by Dame Fashion.' ' Square eyelet holes are an Innovation on some of the new leather belts to match a square harness imckle and square tongue. The grape ornamentation has caught the fancy of the hosiery manufacturer, and white silk stockings show a design of fruit and foliage over the Instep. '"' Leather belts are cut so as to con form perfectly to the slight dip In front so much used now to give the becoming and fashionable long-waist effect The newest gold-topped vlnlagrette with Jeweled centre Is distinguishes from its predecessor by the shape, which la square. Instead of tb familiar round torn. IS Tli nrismntlc color of shells, scales nf fla'.i. wliiux of inacets and feathers of birds depends upon the Interference cf Hulit in the thlu plates that compose the integuments. Gnmo Commissioner Harris, of Col orado. Is making a strenuous effort to preserve the few benvcrs left In his State. The animal Is now almost as rare as the buffalo. A beaver sklu for merly sold for about fS, but It Is now almost priceless. The London Times reports thnt In vestigations by the Lncroix expedition to Martinique have shown thnt the Im mense opening on the southwest side of the crest of Mont Telec has grown to formidable dimensions, nnd the White River Is choked near Its source. The dangerous portion of the mountain is the southwest slope. It seems to make no great difference In Torto Rico when a crop Is planted a good harvest always results.. One of the Island's enthusiastic agricultur ists In endeavoring to find out the right season for planting put In a patch of corn each month consecutively for a year, and In sixteen months from the time of the first planting be bad bis twelfth good crop. Artificial freezing is a device much resorted to for sinking pit shnfts through nq'irous strata, holding the earth In a com pi ess of-Ice to ward off a sudden Inrush of water. The system was first applied In 1852 by a mining engineer named Mlcaux, and after a long struggle against difficulties nnd Imperfections Is only just beginning to approach security and certitude. Dr. A. Keith, In the Journal of Anat omy and rhyslology, calls attention to the fact that naturalists are wrong lu describing the larger apes as quadrupe dal. They are so only when on the ground, which is not their proper hnbl tat. When at home among the trees they carry the body upright, nnd may thus be called orthograde, in contradls tlon to the lower Frlmatcs, which are pronograde. According to the Turkestan Gazette It appears that the earthquake at Knshgar on August 22 was far more disastrous than was supposed from 'be first accounts. The populous settle ment of NIJnl-Artlsh, lying to the northeast of Knshgar, was practically razed, ninny of the bouses were wholly or partially engulfed In huge fissures, and 1700 persons perished. In Knsh par Itself and In the Immediate neigh borhood the earthqunke was less de structive to property, but (100 persons were killed. The village of Besh-Ke-rim, consisting of eighty houses, was entirely destroyed, with tiie whole of Its Inhabitants, number 550 persons. The total loss of life Is estimated at n little above 3000. Undulations of the surface, like sen waves, were observed In the Chatnr-Knla Hills and the wood ed bands of the Scharlkhanskala are riven Into Immense chasms. Gave the Game Away, A certain regiment in India was about to be inspected by a certain Gen eral Just out from England, who was very particular that the Captain of each regiment should know the name of every man In his company, and nlso where he came from. Now it happened that the Captain of this particular regi ment had just returned after twelve months' leave, nnd during his absence many changes had occurred. On the morning of tbo Inspection the Captain addressed his company ns follows: "Now, men, the General is very par ticular that I should know every man's name, and also to what county he be longs. Now, there nro many here'who are strangers to me, so whatever I say your names are, or where you belong to, mind you don't contradict It." The General at length arrived, and as he passed down the lines ho stopped before a man aud said to the Captain: "This Is a smart looking soldier. What is his name?" "Brown, sir," replied the Captain. "Where does he couio from?" "Wiltshire, sir." The General passed on and soon stopped before another mnn. "Whnt's this man's name?" "Jones, sir." "Where does be come from J" "Devon, sir." "Ah, I'm a Devonshire man myself. Fine county is Devon, is It not, Private Jones?" ,. Private Jones looked startled for a moment, and then, in a broad, Irish brogue, replied: , "Bedad, an' there oin't a folner coun try in the world, yer 'onner." Tit-Bits. A Clilp of the Old Block. Army and Nary officers are enjoying a hearty chuckle over the discomfiture of a well known retired officer who Is a familiar figure at several clubs. This officer bas a son of considerable prom ise, but, of tender years. A few years ago, so the story goes, the officer mar ried a fortune, and soon after discovered that he bad heart disease, and went on the retired list "Jack," said a visitor to the son the ptUcr day, "what are you going to be when you grow up?" "Well," said the eight-year-old, with1 grave deliberation, "I've beun thinking of that for some time, and I think that when I'm a man I'll get heart disease1 and go on the retired list, just like1 papa." New York Tribune. For the first time In over thirty years a steamer baa been launched from a Dublin shipyard. She la owned In Liverpool and will be engloed at Glas- A NOVEL tXPcHIMENT.'. renting the Timanatlon Prom thelfew (. -.'' rtlement, featllnm. It was noticed two or three years ngd that tlm same photographic effect pro duced hs X isys was nlso caused by a newly liscorcred substance called ra dium. The question" then arose whether this action resembled light, in being a series of ether waves, or was due to the shooting off of exceedingly Otto par tides from the piece of radium. Jn one case the phenomenon would be a form of force. In the other It would be mntter exhaled like the perfume from a bit of musk. To answer that question several different methods have been employed. A new one was pub licly exhibited at McGIll University, Montreal, n few days ago. , ' Some hydrogen gas was put Into a tube, an electrl current of a given strength was sent through it, and a delicate electrometer was used to show the precise degree of each with which the hydrogen conducted It. When only one person examines an electrometer be can see the movement of the needlo on a scale, and read the result without further apparatus. In this Instance, though, In order to represent the thing to other spectators a tiny mirror was mounted on the electrometer, and a slender beam of llrflit from a concealed lamp allowed to fall on It. When any current passed through the Instrument, therefore, a bright reflection from the mirror crept along the wall of the room horizontally. Professors Cox nnd Rutherford, Who gave the exhibition, made three suc cessive tests of the hydrogen. First, they used pure gas. Then they con taminated It with the emanations from radium. Flnnlly they afforded the Im purity a chance to evaporate off from the hydrogen. In the second operation the exhalations were led through a tube surrounded by liquid air. The tube containing the hydrogen wns also surrounded by liquid air, to cool It. At the third stage of the experiment the temperature was permitted to rise. The ostenslblo object of the cooling wns to condense the gas which Profes sor Rutherford thluks that the radium generates. When pure hydrogen was tested Its conductivity was sufficiently high to permit the beam of light from the elec trometer' to move visibly along the wall. When the gas wns supposed to contain condensed vapor from radium tho mirror would not move. The hy drogen would not conduct. After the indium fumes hnd passed off, leaving the hydrogen pure agalu, the electric current flowed as before. Owing to tho difference in the behavior of the electrometer the two professors Just named concluded thnt the emanntlnns from radium were matter, not force. New York Tribune. How to Drink Water. A beginning of kidney trouble lies In the fact that people, especially women, do not drink enough water. A tumbler of water sipped In tho morning Imme diately on vising, another at ulght, are recommended by physicians. Try to drink as little water as possible with meals, but take a glassful half an hour to nn hour before eating. This rule persisted In day after day, month after month, will improve -Hie complexion nnd the general health likewise. Wnter drunk with meals should be sipped, as well as taken sparingly, Ico water ought never to be taken with one's meals, and as little as possi ble between meals. One never knows what is being taken Into the stomach In water filled with chipped Ice. It is safer to fill bottles with wnter and al low them to stand beside ice to chill until required. . Tests have been made which show that one gill of Ice water, which means on average tumblerful, poured hastily down the throat reduces the tempera' ture of the stomach from 100 to sev. enty degrees, nnd it takes more tliau half an hour to recover tho heat It hos lost. Cold water, slowly sipped, will not be followed by such a result, cool- Ing the system plensnntly in hot weath. er without chilling tho glands of the stomach so that digestion cannot take place. Detroit Free Press, Vanishing' " Johannesburg," : So common is the use of the term "Joh'burg" now becoming that the origiual name of the linud capital seems threatened with suppression al together. Young as It is for It Is only fifteen years old Johannesburg has already made a groat figure in his tory, aud the name hus become familiar all over tho world. It nnrrowly c caped belug known as RiHsiksdorp, for the settlements on the new gold fields in 1887 was bound to be called after Mr. Johannes Rlsslk, the Transvaal Surveyor-Genernl, who brought It iuto existence. For days It hung between the Christian and surnames of the plodding Boer Surveyor, but flnnlly was labelled with the former. For long the officials and business people have used tho term "Joh'burg," Just as they used E'Jaagtee for Elandslaagte, but the newspapers are now adopting "Joh' burg." The change will probably In terest the Colonial Secretury when he gets to the South. London Chronicle. Convicts In Fantoinline. Old convicts are, beyond all other men, skilful In expressing their duslres by gestures and movements of the lips and eyes. At chapel and exercise aud In the quarries and workrooms the fuc ultles of men forbidden to talk, and with years of silence before them aro stimulated to the utmost, and, without uttering a single word, these men con trive to indulge In lengthy conversa tions. At chapel, particularly, men sit ting widely apart can read each oth er'a lip movements with the utmost ease and accuracy. Of course, certain sign mean certain things to all. old convicts, but In many cases no precon. certed signs whatever are used pure pantomime being' Indulged ' la. The CATTfmr RY THE (tRTP Congressman Geo. H. White's Case. A Noted Sculptress Cured. The world o f medicine recognizes Grip as epi demic ca tarrh. Medical Talk. LA GKll'l'E is epidemic catarrh. It spares no class or nationality. The cultured and the ignorant, the aris tocrat and the piuiper. tbe masses ami the classes are alike subject to la grippe. None are exempt nil ure liable. Have you tho grip? Or, rather, has the grip got you? Urip is well named. The original French term, la grippe, ha been shortened by the busy American to read "grip." Without intending to do so ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR A FREE PE - QUAINT CU3TOM8. Brides Once on u Time Oot Money '' From Grooms.' ' " i A certain marriage custom, has, 'un luckily fur the brides of to-day, fallen into disiiBe. It was once incumbent on the bridegroom to place a sum of money In a purse on the wedding night and present It to tho bride. Afterward this was dons' tbe following! morning, and the gift was called the Dow Purse, Another phnsi of the same thing ex isted in Cumberland, where the bride groom provided himself with gold and crown pieces. At tho words "With all my worldly goods I tbee endow" he gave the clergyman bis fee and poured the rest of the money Into a handker chief which the brldo held out. In other places It was the custom on the day following the marriage for the bride to ask her husband for a gift of money or property, and he was bound In honor to grant her request. Old-Time Gardens. In the old time bold and forceful men delighted to be Uuown as coun trymen. The great cities had not yet arisen. . Great commercial .opportuni ties were l'ow. . Men lived on their es tates, and they built generously and broadly. Their homes wore homes in tho best and truest sense, with which the very life and welfare of tho fam ily were Interwoven, not mere summer houses built as adjuncts to city life. Often these men wont into the very wilderness, "took up"'' many acres along water courses or on lakes, and established places that marked ' the very highest Intellectual and social at-' tainmcnls of the region, and which to this day remain as landmarks. If the family was one of culture and means a home garden was more than a. place In which merely to grow vegetables and pleasant flowers. It was an entity wholly aside from tho plants that It grew. It was laid out as a permanent feature, and usually , with such a, half presence of formality as to Insure re spect on tbe part of tho beholder. Buildings could be moved and repair ed, but the garden' was Inviolate. ' Foundation of Skeletons. . It has been discovered that the great city of London, England, rests on a foundation of .skeletonsT-hundreds of thousands of skeletons that extend east, and west, north and south, from boundary to boundary of the world's metropolis, and beyond. There they He, compressed Into a compact mass by the superimposed clay, gravel, sand and surface structures. These skele-, tons wer once the framework of living beluga beings that were tho most simple of multicellular animals, known as spongcB. Many thousands of years ago, when the great sea - ebbed and flowed where London - now stands, these metazone organisms, these cities of cells, these Venices, with their thousands of canals, lived ' and did their unconscious part In tbe great plan of evolutloo. ' Now, the life bas gone, the cells are crushed, the canals are closed, and only the frames of flint, compressed Into a homogeneous mass, remain, - RELEASED BY a new word has been coined that exactly describe the case. As if some hideous 'giant with awful limp had clutched us in its fatal clasp. Men, women, children, whole towns and cities are caught in tho baneful grip of a terrible monster. I r.-ru-na For (liip. Mrs. Theophile Sehmitt. wife of the Ex Secretary of the German Consulate, writes Christmas fn Hawaii. . Before the missionaries and the American settlers went to Hawaii, the natives knew nothing about Christ mas, but now they all celebrate the day, and do It, of course, In the same way as tho Americans who live there. The main difference between Christ mas In Honolulu and Christmas In Now York Is that In Honolulu in De cember ,the weather is like Juno in New York.- Birds are warbling in the leafy trees; gardens are overflowing with rosos and carnations; Holds and mountain slopes are ablaze with color; and a sunny sky smiles dreamily upon the glories of a summer day. In tho morning people go to church, and dur ing the day there are sports and games and merrymaking of all sorts. The Christmas dinner Is eaten out of doors In the shade of the veranda, and every body Is happy and contented. . . Good Year for Coffee. . Statistics which have Just been pub lished by the Society of Colonial Stu dies show that during tbe year ended on June 30, 1901, tho total production of coffee amounted to 15,500,000 bags, oacit containing GO kilograms. Mocha does not figure to any extent In these Btatlstlcs; lndoed, wo only know that a few or the 225,000 bags, representing tho entire Arabic and African produc tion, were filled with it. Brazil fur nished more coffee than any other country, 11,500,000 bags, or nearly three-quarters of the total production, being exported from it. The remain ing bags wore exported from tho other countries of Central and South Amerl. ca, tho Antilles, the Dutch and British West Indies, and finally from Africa. It Is estimated that the production for this year will amount . to 18,600,000 bags. ... ..... . i A Coneul'a Gallantry. While ex-Gov. Waller, of Connecti cut, was consul general at London a prominent society woman of Philadel phla who had married Into tho, Eng lish nobility, with reasons to regret It, called to see him about signing papers necessary for a transfer of property In this country to raise money to pay her husband's debts. The bloom of youth had long been brushed from the cheeks of the American woman when she married the young Britisher. She was supersensitive about her age, and was very much distressed when told that It must be affixed to the docu ments Bhe wished officially recorded by the United States govornment. "Oh, Mr. Waller, must If" she pleaded. Tho gallant consul general seized a pen and wrote on the) blank: "Of the age of accountability and upward." There was no subsequent corres pondence on the subject with the State Department at Washington. . Recurrence of Measles. A physician in Switzerland who has been studying the recurrence of con tagious diseases, reports the cases of three persons who have been attacked seven times each by measles, .. It Is reported that large sales of pi anos are now made to Indiana,. .(. i ' IfE - RUNA. the following letter , from 3U7WbaBi avenue, Chicago, 111.: i "I suffered this winter with s severe tack of la grippe. After nsing three bot tles of I'eruna I found the grip had die appeared." Mrs. T. Bchmitt. . Mrs. Celeste Covell writes from 219 K. avenue, Aurora, III.: "Only thorn who have suffered with la grippe anil been cured can appreciate how grateful I feel that such a splendid medi cine as rerun ha been placed at the dnor of rery suffering person." Mrs. U, Covell. , . , i. Noted Sonlptress Cared of Orlp, " Mrs. M. C. Cooper, of the Royal Acad emjr of Arts, of London, England, now residing in Washington, D. C, is on of the greatest living culptors and painters of the world. She eny: "I take pleasure in recommending Pe runa for catarrh and la grippe. 1 have suffered for month, and after the use nf one bottle of I'eruna lam entirely well. . Mrs. M. C. Cooper. 1). L. Wallace, a charter member of the International Barbers' Union, writes from IS Western avenue, Minneapolis, Minn.! "Following a severe attack of la grippe I seemed to b affected badly all over, , "One of my customers who wa groatlv helped by I'eruna advised me to try it, and I procured a bottle the same day. Now my head I clear, my nerve are steady, I enjoy food and rest well. I'e runa has been worth a dollar a dose to me." 1). L. Wallare. ' Lieutenant Clarice Hunt, of the' Salt Lake City Jlarack of the Salvation' Army, write from Ogdcn, I'tah: "Two month ago I was suffering with so severe a cold that I could hardly sneak. "Our captain advised me to try I'eruna and procured a bottle for me, and truly it worked wonder. Within two week. I wa entirely well." Clarice Hunt. Congressman While' Letter. , Tarhoro, y. C. aentlemem-1 am more than tails' fled with I'eruna and find it to be ah excellent remedy for tho grip and catarrh, I have used ft In my am lly and they all Join me In recom mending ft a an excellent remedy, "George H, White, Member of Con gress. -"i" Mrs. T. W. Collin. Treasurer Independ ent Order of Good Templar, of fererett. Wash., writes: . . . ) , "After having a severe attack of la grippe 1 continued in a feeble condition even after the doctors called me cured. My blood seemed poisoned. I'eruna oared me." Mrs. T. W. Collin. ... , If you do not derive prompt and aatis factory result from the uso of I'eruna, write at once to Dr. llartmnn, giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased. to give you his valuable advioe gratis. Addre Dr. Nartmon, President of The Hurtnian Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. RU - NA ALMANAC. There has been recently completed at Kansas City, Mo., a locomotive, de signed for use. In a Mexican mine,, In which gasollno is nsed as fuel. ' The mine whore this engine Is destined for service is 180 miles from the nearest rnilway, and the engine had to bo de signed with a view to transportation to the point of delivery on nulla back, and therefore no Individual part "was allowed to weigh more than y200 pounds. To prevent the escape ot fumes In service provision is made for tbe purification, of the gas escaping from the engine, which is washed In tbe same way as illuminating gas Is passed through scrubbers at the .gas works. - ' , : ' ' i 1 ... i . .l - ft-, hi..... ST. JACOBS OIL POSITIVELY CURES Rheumatism Neuralgia::;;; Backache Headache , - Feetache : ' ' r All Bodily Aches AND - CONQUERS PAIN. I T" Genuine stamped C C C ' "ever sold' In bulk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell "some thine jnst ss rood.' JACKS KaiM mutes iid rat rich, fitti It run, blurk UpftiilBtk J a Mv fur awl, U to U lisuida lliirh; ajuud uJitihttUil oiuutsy limit ttrr. C'lifiijHir now ttiati .AJhu sHitnft one, Iarii Jtmny nDADCV MKVDISOOVEKT; MJ WX J r O I quiok nIM ud mrM won ..l Book ot SwUmonisl. nd 10 aaya twlaiu Vr.. Ot. a, a. uus i hum. as , Atlanta, Oa, P. N. U. 6, '03, . , . J :i b-ii-.w-inu ' ,nti' imIiI.i. -i ' it