rf& .. great :.«pgpfiP;M^ the Co., iM^lT.lSo to V'W#i%. 8tr«#, has eo ^stabHdti^f for a third of a century, •ad has furnisbtd over a half a million home* in and vicinity alone. This firm Mtjojrs tbc coafidene? of the public by its iBMf JWU* Of fair dealing. It issues an 'jiQWlrtMW Ulaatrated cata logue that should be in every family, as it describes and gives the price of every article required for household use. A sample of the extraordinary values ot tered by this firm is shown is the illus tration of the gnrtlcatea's overcoats in another flaw of this paper. These gar- tnent* at» Meed wonderful values, and yet lfc?y are but a satn^>le of tbe thousand aaU OB* articles illustrated aad Jk m* beautiful catalog .«f the JmM lt» Smyth Company. Pietttnar H Out. If Inquisitive persons cacnoMt learn to "aaJjxI their ow* business." they should try at least to control tbelr tongues. The -SyflDey Journal telle this Illustra tive anecdote on the authority of a woman whose servant was given to •curiosity: •"©Ml the postman leave any letters, Mary?" the 'mistress asked, on return- Irons a visit one afternoon. , ^ •"Nothing b«,i a post-card, ma'ant.^" "Who is It from, Mary?" "••Aaad do you think I'd read it, oaaa'aua ?" asked the girl, with an In- Jured air. "Perhaps not. But any one who send.? me a message on a post-card Is either stupid or Impertinent." "You'll excuse me, ma'am," returned ; girl, 'loiftit-y, "but that's a nice way i talking about your own mother!" Rnirtime in Rcility, "Do .you have -any ragtime down here?" asked the man with the guitar. "It's always ragtime down here," re- «plied the hard-times citizen, with a 'lugubrious sigh, "nothing but rags; hardly any patches." •**:. ij ri9*] [/**• ( icf " rUy • jS The debilitating drains and discharges which weaken so many women are caused by Ca tarrh of the distinctly feminine organs. The sufferer may call her trouble Leuchorrhoea, or Weakness, or Female Disease or some other name, but the real trouble is catarrh of the female organs and nothing else. Pe-ru-na radically and perma nently cures this and all othei torms of Catarrh. It is a positive specific for female troubles caused by catarrh of the delicate ' lining of the organs peculiar to women. It always cures if used persistently. It is prompt and certain. The microbes that cause chills and fever and malaria enter the system through mucous membranes made porous by catarrh. Pe-ru-na heals the mucous membranes and prevents the entrance of malarial germs, thus pre venting and curing these affections. PILES UrafTered the tortures of the damned with protruding piles brought on by constipa tion with which I was afflicted for twenty years. I ran across your CASCARETS in the town of Newell. la., and never found anything to equal them. To-day I am entirely free from piles and reel like a new man. " C M. KEITZ. Hi! Jones St., Sloes Olty. I*. CANDY CATHARTIC I WMi n«p« i ib ^ mjsa&onxsto k!vvVwwvvVv TRAOKMARM MOaTEIttD 4Me&»anu Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do <Goed Never 8tcken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c, Kto. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... iax.i U»» IUa«4i Cmsidii IMoafp. Sontrwil, Sew Tori. Sit, i y"" Mfl Tfl BAf* Bold and^uarantped by all drag-V* JUJ'I U-JIAV &iats %o VCJUt: Xobaeoo Habit. fiSB fell SLICKER WILL KEEP YOTJ DRY. Oon'* be fooled wrtb a mackintosh ®r rubber coat. M you want a coat that .will keep you dry in the hard est storm buy the Fish Brand 9tlcfcer. if tooif&r ule in vottf tow*, write for catatogw to A. J. TOWER. Boston, Mass. W'Mf Ely's Cream Balm WILL CURE HAY FEVER DragsiiMt CO Cts. App'f E*!m Intoench nfwt-i'. ELY BROS., S6 Warren St.. X.Y. l5< ̂ "IHOH B® EYEWATER X. U. No. 37 -»» * * I T T ' . TRAM9L. VAM» CMcwtttoration of BrltUh Troop*«i tk« Bepnblic'e Frontier aa a . Meaace--Temper of tlMKiupliali Ptoo- pi* ia Plainly Showa la - In the Volksraad at Pretoria Thursday Secretary of State Helta read the reply of Sir Alfred Milner, British high com missioner in South Africa, to the Trans vaal's query as to why Great Britain was concentrating troops on the border of the Transvaal. It was to the effect that the British troops are being concentrated to f«ard British interests and aa a prepara tion against contiageacies. A debate fol lowed, regarding"*!® mobilixatioa of the British troops. T$e Speeches were belli cose, arid were apglandtod by the mem bers asi %y the people in the public gal leries. President Kruger appealed to.the orators to moderate their tone. Joakherr Dutoit said that be had had experience ia the, past of British treach ery. If there would be war the Afrikand ers would stand together. The Transvaal could go no further than she had gone, and as the British were sending forces toward the frontier the Transvaal must do likewise. Jonkherr Wolmara«s assert ed that Mr. Chamberlain was attempting •coercion, and that troops were not neces sary for peaceful negotiations. He urged an immediate counter move hy the troops of the Transvaal. Jonkherr Vac Hens- burg attacked the British annexation pro clivities. He declared that agitators of the Rhodes clique wanted to «et posses sion of ithe Transvaal to cover their fail ure and fraud in llhodesia. Jonkhen* Tosen considered Sir Alfred Milner's re ply equivalent to a declaratio® of war by Great Britain. .Tonkherr Wolmarens, who is a member of the executive council, here interrupted Jonkherr Tosen, saying: "It Is nothing of the kind." Jonkherr Tosen read a telegram from the Pietreticf dis- 'trict, stating that the people there -would rlse in rebellion if President Ivruger wont to another conference. State Attorney Smutts said the burgh ers 'whom he represented had instructed him not to budge, but he, would persuade them to allow him to do so if peace could therebV be preserved. He feared, how ever, that this was hopeless, as the inde pendence of the Afrikanders was assail ed. Jonkherr Botha insinuated that Mr. Chamberlain was influenced by his broth er, who was chairman of the firm of Ky- nochs, ammunition manufacturers, which was in Opposition to Nobel's ring in the dynamite matter. Other speakers declar ed that the Jameson raiders were robbers And murderers, and should have been banged. The debate continued until late er ' >W ; - ' el ^ i ^ ^ r % „ " ^ } *;rt SV' A- '&r GiwiMb </ev«Mr «/• neeutr • OtntDm >»CfV COMHANPRB OF THE BOKBS. hi the afternoon and the Volksraad was worked into a pitch of patriotic fervor. In the course of the debate President Krnger said that aliens had been offered equal rights with the burghers, but would not take them. Mr. Chamberlain was striving to get a franchise, which the Uit- landers did not want. He feared that Mr. Chamberlain really aimed to get pos session of the country. The burghers were willing to give much for the sake of peace, but they would not sacrifice their independence. He eulogized Mr. Gladstone's retrocession in 1881 as a no ble deed. The President added that if it now came to fighting the Almighty would be the arbiter. The Volksraad rose with out passing the resolution which had call ed forth the debate. Advices from the Transvaal show that the Boers have arranged everything so as to be able to cope with hostilities the instant they are' declared. Heliographic communication has been established be tween Pretoria and Volkrust. on the fron tier. The Boers are very bellicose, and their patrols on the border Challenge all passers-by. The British cabinet council in London Friday attracted greater public interest than any meeting of the ministers for years past. Although the foreign office has not given out a statement, the gen eral impression was that no ultimatum would be sent to the Transvaal at pres ent and that a time limit will be placed .ft conference at Cape Town. DESTITUTION IN CUBA. Oddi* A tea ins t Which the Wom- en Are Suffering. Kev. Horace Porter, assistant pastor of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, and a mem- ber of the-committee of the Cuban Indus trial Belief Fund, who has been spend ing some time in Cuba, has returned to his home. Mr. Porter went to investi gate for himself the existing conditions of the people. In speaking of the Cu ban women he said: "Such glimpses as I had of the homo life of the Cubans produced an unexpect edly favorable impression upon my mind. Their home ties are strong. Members of families hold one another in moBt affec tionate regard. Their manners are sim ple and spontaneous. There is often much refinement. It is remarkable how cleanly the Cuban woman appears to be, even in the midst of her present poverty. The Cuban women and girls seem to be apt with their fingers, neat in hand sewing •nd adept at certain kinds of hand work. So reduced in circumstances are the Cu bans that often white Cuban women are obliged to work with the hoe in the fields. They work hard by day, and re turn to their homes to do up the honse- work, what little there is of it, as best they can. The poverty of these homes Is indescribable. They are mere thatched huts. The floors are the natural clay soil. The beds, mere heaps of cast-off clothing, are on the ground. They are without furniture. The fireplace is any convenient spot on the bare floor. There are absolutely no cooking utensils and no crockery. Their food usually consists of most uninviting wild fruits, and in some cases green fruit such as we would not dare to touch. In one house we found eleven women living in one room. Most •f them were war widows. There was abaolutely nothing ip the house to fit'* m i fill C/.; S'MKA/. PLEADS FOR DREYFUS. M. Dmaanxe Eloquently Aafca JiwWui for Accued officer, The court room at Reuses Fridoy was pervaded with an air of great solemnity when M. Demange began his plea in de fense of Dreyfus. Tbe prisoner entered the court looking unusually forlorn and piteously wretched. M. Demange stood silent for a moment before he spoke. Drawing himself together f-er the su preme effort of his life, he began by say ing he was a Frenchman, and the son of a soldier. M. Demange's gestures were frequent and he spoke in a tense voice, vibrant with emotion. Recalling the testimony of Detective Cochefort, M. Demange sai& "I find this man was persecuted, trapped and pursued in an endeavor to find him guilty. At the time of the dictation test to which he was subjected by Du Paty de Olam a pistol was put before him for an obvious reason. Dreyfus did not use it. Instead he cried: 'I will not die. I am innocent and I will lire to prove it.' On the day after his condemnation he proved the sin cerity of his utterance by sending a let ter to the war ministry in which he beg ged that the truth of his case be sought. This purpose and this hope sustained him through his long years on Devil's Island, ftnd brings him here to-day." Then came a scene which will live for ever in the memory of those present. M. Demange began reading from letters written by the prisoner while on Devil's Island. These were wonderful human documents. They told of suffering which alternated with hope and despair. In them Dreyfus related how he lay in irons, and when the guards, more pitiful than their officers, stole in to him during the darkness in order to cleanse with rags the chafed sores upon his wrists and an kles. "Yet through all this ordeal," said M. Demauge, who with eloquence was now carrying his auditors with him, "there was alway* but one cry, 'I am in nocent.' " The emotion of the orator was conta gious. First women in the court began Jto weep. There were few present but jWhat paid a tribute to feeling as they listened to the moving words of the de- feuse. Dreyfus, who sat without his usual erectness. seemed overwhelmed with the recollection of his sufferings. His lips trembled, and he frequently wiped his eyes. Six of the judges sat with a fixed expression, listening intently, but the seventh, Maj. Profilette, furtively re moved unsoklierly tears from his cheeks. The infinite pathos seemed present in this plea of M. Demange, enthralling all. The wet eyes in the court room were finally dried as Demange reached his main argument. The intensity of the in terest and feeling manifested was, how ever, well sustained. M. Demange told of the alleged confes sion of Dreyfus. He took tho secret dos sier in hand, piece by piece, telling of the origin and history of it, and sifting the legal value of each document with its re lation to the accused. He dwelt on the fact that M. Cavaignac had withheld pieces favoring Dreyfus from the dossier. He controverted the conclusions of Maj. Carriere. He dwelt especially on the evi dence of Maj. Cuignet, who had testified vehemently his belief in the prisoner's guilt. M. Demange then discussed the moral proofs of the prisoner's innocence, including the performances of Esterhazy and the late Col. Sandherr, who sought to maintain his guilt. The Henry for gery and its consequences was also dwelt upon by the speaker at length. The court adjourned until Saturday morning. ' jMETs OUT FOR mzcjw. - Thirteenth Bcsimcnt Starts on It* Long Journey to the bilippinea. Col. Cornelius Gardener's Thirtieth United States volunteer infantry left Fort Sheridan, near Chicago, Wednesday for the long and tedious journey to the Philippines. Thousands cheered the men as they quit the fort, and is Evfuieton, where the seven sections of the tram turned westward for the run to Council Bluffs, thousands more lined up along the tracks of the Chicago and Northwestern Railway to give them a partijffg saluta tion. All told, 1,307 men were ia the regiment when they were roused before dawn. When the body boarded the train it had its full complement of 1,309. Two recruits who arrived on the first morning train asked leave to join and CoL Gar dener had them mustered in at once. Sheridan was left desolate. The tents that had dotted the parade ground were missing and save for the well-troddeu grass there was no evidence of the recent occupancy of the parade ground. ^ Telegraphic Brevities. A silk ribbon trust is the latest. It will incorporate with $30,000,000. Henry Binkley, 70, Wooster, Ohio, and his son, David, 50, fought. The son is laid up for repairs. The bishop of Havana, Bight Bev. Emanuel Santander y Frntos, has re signed. He is a Spaniard. Dangerous $5 counterfeit is ln circula tion at New Orleans, more than $6,000 worth being passed in one day. Negro regiment will not be massed at Fort McPherson, Ga. Citizens protested, fearing whites and blacks would clash. The agent of Wm. W. Astor at Lon don confirms the report that an English syndicate is negotiating for the purchase of Astor*s American property. The amount offered is $150,000,000. A special from Victoria, B. C., says that Private McVeigh of the Wyoming, infantry was court martialed and is now under sentence of death at Manila for AS SAYS SHE WAS HVPNOTIZEO. Noial Defense In the Trial of a He* brat»ki Yon nit Woman* v A remarkably sensational trial for at tempted murder is about to begin at Hastings, Neb., when Miss Viola Hor- locker will have to answer the charge of sending poisoned candy to Mrs. Morey, the wife of her employer. The alleged crime was committed last April and al most since then Miss Horlocker has been In a private sanitarium at Jacksonville, HL Miss Horlocker is a handsome girl of about 30 years of age. She was employ ed as a stenographer for the law firm of Tibbetts & Morey of Hastings. She be longs to a good family and had lived nearly -all her life in the town. Miss Horlocker was a good sten ographer, and well posted oh legal mat* ters. She was on very pleasant terms with Mrs. Morey, the wife of one of the members of the firm. She often called at her house and frequently went bicycle riding with Mr. and Mrs. Morey. When the wife was away the girl and her em ployer frequently went wheeling together. This occasioned gossip, but Mrs. Morey never showed the least jealousy. The talk was always more jocular than mali cious. Mrs. Morey It an artist and lias a studio in the business part of the town of Hastings. On Tuesday, April 10 last, when she returned from lunch, she found a box of candy at the door. Tied to the box was a card of a young lady friend and a line added, hoping Mrs. Morey would enjoy the home-made sweets. Open ing the box Mrs. Morey found bonbons and candied fruits. While she was eat ing a piece of the candy several friends entered. Each took a piece of the candy, but all noticed a peculiar taste and did not eat any more. A few moments later the young lady whose name was on the card entered, and Mrs. Morey thanked jux - v >„ • .* . ' • . . ../• her for the gift. While the young lady was protesting that she had not sent the candy, one of the guests dropped into a chair, deathly sick and pale. Doctors were hurriedly summoned, and their in vestigations showed that the candy had been poisoned with arsenic. All the la dies who had eaten the candy were made ill, and several narrowly escaped death. Suspicion at once fell upon Miss Hor locker. The purchase of the eandy was traced to her and she was arrested. Her mother and sisters protested that she was ill and in no condition to appear at the trial* At the preliminary hearing she became nervous, broke down and made a scene and had to be taken in a carriage to her home. The hearing was adjourn ed. bail being fixed at $5,000. Soon after this she was placed in the retreat at Jack sonville. The chief interest in the case lies in the fact that the defense of the young woman will be hypnotism. Miss Horlock er says that the sending of the candy was under the influence of a wilf strong er than her own, but she has given no hiat as to whom she suspects of exercis ing the hypnotic influence over her. There are many who scout the idea of hypnotic influence. They say Miss Hor locker was infatuated with her employer and therefore had an object in wishing tike "removal" of Mrs. Morey. Brigandage is increasing in Italy. Australian federation is now regarded as certain. Green com Is serretl at bnt -nne restau rant in Paris. - Of the 45,000 inhabitants of Jerusalem, 28,000 are Jews. Bands of Kurds are destroying villages in the Caucasus. Ireland's salmon fisheries are in serioui danger of exhaustion. Crops have been harvested by moon light in parts of England. ' It is said that there is not an adult in Denmark who cannot read and write. ferryboats are to run across the Dan ube between Roumania and Bulgaria. Sixteen hundred whales were caught in ? BY NU& PtPOCBAM. turns* TO MM. FINKHAM KO. 7^896] ••Yon have saved my life, snatched m from the brink of the grave almost, and I wish to thank you. About eigh teen months ago I was a total wreck, physically. I had been troubled with leuoorrhoBa for sometime, but had given hardly any attention to the trouble. "At last inflammation of the womb •nd ovaries resulted and then I suf fered agonies, had to give up my pro fession (musician and piano player), was confined to my bed £Uu.d life became a terrible cross. My husband sum moned the best physicians, but their benefit was but temporary at best. 1 believe I should have contracted the morphine habit under their care, if my common sense had not intervened. 41 One day my husband noticed the ad vertise men t of your remedies and im mediately bought me a full trial. Soon the pain in my ovaries was gone. I am now well, strong and robust, walk, ride a wheel, and feel like a girl in her teens. I would not be without Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound; it is like water of life to me. I am very gratefully and sincerely your well- wisher, sjod I heartily recommend your remedies. I hope some poor creature may be helped to health by reading my story."--MRS. COI>. E. P. EICHAUBSON, KHINKLASTDBS, WIS. ONLY A HINT NEEDED. ^ ' ;i#yw% MISS VIOLA 1IOBLOCKER. | And tlU» "Woman in the Caae Was Not Afraid to Give It, The best looking girl in the Pine Mountain country was Susan Natter, and Susan was extremely, not to say foolishly, fond of Jim Davis, a young man who was my chief timberman in the season, and who owned and con ducted a good farm in the river bottom as a side issue, says a storekeeper. Jim was the catch of the mountains, and like other men In that happy class be was careless and stood a fair chance of losing what ought to lie his because he was too sure of it. Susan was just the girl for him, but he hal almost worn out her patience by his dilly-dal lying policy, and on& day I thought the end had surely come, and it was all up with Jim, who was a favorite of mine as a winner of the Susan stakes. "I want to see the best dress pattern you got In the store, colonel," she said to me as I sat In front of the com missary one day, "and t>eln* mighty pertiekler I want you to wait on me," she added with a smirk not usual to Susan. "Oh, Indeed," I said chafflngly, going around behind the counter, "something must be going to happen." "I reckon thar is," she admitted, frankly. "Good for yoti," I laughed, "and I'm glad that Jim has got his senses at last." "Jim?" she sniffed disdainfully. •"Taln't Jim e* fur es I know." "Not Jim?" I almost shouted, for Jim was my chosen for her.6 "Not Jim? Well, who is It?" "Oh, that's fer me to know and you to find out, colonel," she laughed pro- voklngly, and gave me no further sat isfaction. She bought the goods and went away, and two hours later Jim came in from work and said he was go ing over the mountain that night with one of the Martin girls to a dance. "By the way, Jim," I said, "did you know Susan Natter was going to get married?" "Thunderatlon, colonel, no." he blurt ed oat. "Nor she ain't. Is she?" "I guess she Is. I sold her a wedding dress this afternoon and she told me she was." "Who's she goin' ter margr, colonel ?" he asked, anxiously. ^ - ? "I don't know. She wouldn't tell me." "Well, she'll tell me, colonel," he said, with the lines getting hard across his face, and little wrinkles of doubt and fear showing between. Jim was facing a possibility that had never presented itself to him In its full strength. He went out of the store and up the road leading to old man Natter's place. The next morning he stopped at the store ih his way to work. "Did you find out who it was?" I asked him at once, for I was interested more than he had been. " 'Course I dl$? fee with confidence. "Who Is It?" - "Me," and he laughed the short laugh of ttie man who had been made to do what he knew he should have done and what he most wanted to do. "Oh," I exclaimed. "Is that It?" And later I discovered that Susan had de vised a pretty little feminine scheme to bring Jim to the point, and by my unwitting, but by no means unwilling, assistance she had succeeded fully. Or- Bancroft of m00ugearr Mokes 1a "t»dy the Little Pe»ta Dr. T. L Bancroft, of Burpengary, writes an interesting letter to the ' us- tralaslan Medical Gazette on the iite history of the house mosquito, an insect which recent work upon malarian In fection has elevated Into scientific im portance. This mosquito, 4t Is thought, has been Introduced Into Australia from Europe.. Trad.tion says that a mosquito liven a day or two; that it feeds only once, afterward retiring to some quiet spot, where the ova are ma tured, the eggs laid Ih water, after which it dies, and that the male mos quito does not feed, and that It Is rare that it lives seven days after the meal of blood. The "investigations of Dr. Bancroft Into flhirikt metamorphosis tallies exacfly with those of Dr. Man- son In respect to the metamorphosis, except in one important item. Dr. Ban croft bad never seen the actively mov ing filaria, or thread-worms, the last stage of the metamorphosis, but this he attributes to the fact that mosqui toes want to be fed, and that his died from starvation, about the sixth day and before the filarlae had developed. In confinement ft Is necessary to feed mosqulties. Various methods and foods were tried'by Dr. Bancroft with little success, until ripe bananas were given, which proved to be Suitable; it was no ticed that male and female mosquitoes sucked the juice of the- banana almost every day. It was also found that mos quitoes would live in glass vessels up to two months; the life of a mosquito te therefore not one or two days, but a mouth at least, and frequently two months. ; • The embryo (llarlae, Dr. Bancroft says, when It Is taken Into the mos quito's stomach, measured 1-80 Inch in length by 1-3,000 Inch in breadth; on the seventeenth day It measures 1-15 inch by 1-1,000 Inch, and is not killed when put Into water. He believes that water Is the medium by which the young filarlae are transformed to the human host, and he suggests that ex periments wfth a pardon as a reward should be made upon life-sentenced prisoners. ' 1 ' V 1 . « "i *».• v .'i = ot in 's hat Cla*», "Your money or your life,*? iftltt the hold-up man. "Sir." asked tb« ricthn, "would yon take the last cent; a poor man had?" "No. no," said the other as he turn ed to go. "I may be a bad man, and a thief, but I'm no justice ; the peace," ' Aaraintt His Principles. "That great temperance advocate won't allow a cast of'hih head and shoulders to be made." . v "What are his objections?" "He says he doesn't think M'^Onld look at all well for him to be repre sented on a bust."--Philadelphia Bul letin. For a few dollar* I teach you a pro fession in ten ilays by mail which will enable you to just coin money. Five to forty dollars per day! With this knowl edge fame and fortune are yours. Send tic la stamps for particulars to Prof: fij. F. Harrington, Sheldon, Iowa, U. S. A. : DizxyP Thea yottr fiver isn't acting well. Yonttutar from bilious ness, constipation. Ayer*s nils act directly on the liver. the Standard Fami doses cure. 25c. 'L For 60 Pill. Want roar moustache or baud » bMatiftT Vown or rich M*ck f Then ut BUCKINGHAM'S DYE (MSk m ACTS GENTLY ON THE < KIDNEYS, LIVER AND BOWELS ClEANSES THE $V5TEf* OVERCOMES trSBtHeri PERMANOflilt fOG ICIAl BVt VHC GCNWME - MAN'r O fry M U S T A U M K t l O t i t t W T O t . W. L. DOUGLAS wwthtitota The secret of success in life Is for ^ man to be ready for his opportunity when It comes.-'-Dlsraell. True love builds the morning fires all the year round. 44 Circumstances , • Alter Cases/ . ^ • ft- & of scrofula, salt rheum, dys* pejpsU, nervousness, catarrh, rheumatism, eruptions, etc., the circumstances may be altered by purifying and enriching the blood 'with Hood's SarsaparSUk ft is the great remedy for all ages and both sexes. Be sure to get Hood's, because -ti ALL LMTHIM. ALLTMES m «mram mm w. nam* »rt-- WM*. T«k* bo rote«t«te (Mimed tobeMKood. UtmttaMtei* of *8 and *150 IOIOM «Tum» world. Your »IKWW *««|» then--If not. we will send j*» ft p&lr on receipt of price. SrM* kind of leather, it» *nd width, plain or cap toe. CatalotieOIVM. «; W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. BrecMm. BtM. / -- I IINIII I I 11. MI ' ' J ̂ • _ ___ 'i'Qm: ' r. f€fM Voo Good and Too Chettp to .bo without it 3&od4 Si PENSIONS SSET. --rtii fin rrntwr r.n.ii.i Tmw» »l •trtlier The new tonic system of cure, treatment 20c; lb weeks' < MOTHER TIIL CO., BOX 81. Th* FertodteM MeMhiy . Three. weeks* ;:-UK " ve*.** Shake Into Your Shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It cures painful, swollen, smarting, nervous leetana instantly takes the sting outof corns nn(i lO'V? [t'a thA COlElOrt <iis - covery of the age. Alien's Frot-Ease makes tight-fitting or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching feet Try it to-day. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores. Bv mail for 26o, in stamps. Trial package KREE. Address. Alien S. Olmsted, Le itoy, N. Y. A Oood Chance for Getting Even. "Yes," said the florid lady, "I made my will several years ago, and It was one of the wisest things I ever did." "WhyF' the meek-looking woman asked. ""Do you expect'to drqp off sud denly. "No. but ifs «ucb a satisfaction to go and change it whenerer i get mad at any of the heirs." S. N. U. No. 37 I *£•*»*»*.»«•«• ie aet kli te Uoa yo« m* the Alititli--irt I* tfcfc MK. MAMMOTH i QUALITY m STARTING POINT: PRICE TK BUUX. f-lsii 'M *i - *• <! Jor and l- xp;n»e. "Albert, Isn't it lovely here* at the seashore to see the silver waves, come tumbling in?" "Yes, Edna, and to see the silver dol- lars.fo tumbling ' i? *' • % t Haifa Catarrh Cnri. ^ •. [» a consUtntkuuU cure. Price 75 casta, Rest satisfied with doing well and leave others to talk of you as they please.--Pythagoras. 'I 1 ' I know that my life was saved by Piao's Cure for Consumption.--John A. Millar. Au Sable, Mich., April 21, 1895. The readiest and surest way to get J rid -of ensure is to correct «urselvea.-- Demosthenes. 1SL ' ^ nearer of One of these ele gant Over coats will enjoy tho distinction of being dressed in the latest fashion. There's a sense of satisfac tion in wearing perfect- fitting gar ments. color wanted. Sizes 54 to 44 chest meas ure. Price........... si*«» l»n?«r then 44 inches che*t measure will eoct frjoestn. fee** «er Wt ipntel rtefh- taff booklet of Mflsplcs* it n froo* OUR M1I10TH CATALOGUE !" which » est wholesale prices everything to eat, wear and use, is furnished on receipt of only lOc. to partly pay post age or expressage, and as evidence of good faith- the lOc. is allowed on first purchase amounting to | $I.OO or above. egoosesassssass------aa--iifnnws--so------0 Oar Ha. IS. The illustration represents • High grade all wool Kereejr Clew Over- CMt--in quality and price without a peer. It M made with double stitched overlapped Mams, raw edges, heavy fine velvet collar, lined throughout with highly finished extra fine quality farmers' satin, deep facing of own goods, two outside pockets and ticket pocket with flaps, two inside breast pockets, tailored in the correct fashion for autumn and winter dress wear. There is a great deal of clothing being advertised mostly made ia eastern tene ment factories at starvation which means dishonestly made. It Is our policy ta serve the pub'le honestly and give tbcai fust whet they should have at the lowirt Irlsf cost. No underpaid labor is employed ia making our clothing; the result is am fft the - highest class wcrk. We want vcur business and offer you goods and prices that in justice to yourself you cannot afford to pass without at least investigating. It costs you nothing to try us. We'll send von one of these special value coats on receipt of fi.oo. balance C. O. D , or if cash in full accompanies the order Mid the coat is found not as represented or sat isfactory, send it back to us and your mcajy will be refunded by next mail after the cea't reaches us. Ask your banker, any express company or mercantile agencv regarding our responsibility. Col ors are navy blue, seal brown or black. State m YOU WILL REALIZE THAT "THEY LIVE WELL WHO LIVE OLEANi- IF YOU USE