pMiiii ayLnp Wimmm' to lAigr, iuwi ^ SliiiiBiOL. tor ^ wartt*. finf tiftfKirttr it tiNtr foods, Hera In America, Am ^ \\r' r'\ * % i> J ' coaditfcme in ee o«tk» attained _ and It to h **W,»«W» tm "" 1 held in fthe United Btatoa totalthi This ftrmlasMa • to Mate Good fUHi i 1 Will |» mflUt free «ft iKVBMt. Drop a postal to Llbby, Ma lum * libby. Chicago, HL, for it. \ . Ufce tepMnM «f Itnplffit^ I liar you will laugh when I taB yon 1#hai I ooncefre to tw about the aaaantial quality for a free Wtaee liberty is to be progressive, par- anneal and on a large scald; it la much stupidity. Though not an ta- llveningquality in general society. it & nature'# favorite resource for •erring steadiness of conduct and •latency of opinion; it enforces con centration; people will learn slowly, learn only what they moat The best neettrlty for people doing their duty la that they shall not know anything else to do; the best security for fixedneaa of opinion ia that people should be in capable of comprehending what ia said JB the other side--Walter Bagehot on the French Coup d'Etat • j V 1 - • *' ' ' • Wratlini with Kasaea. " objection is made to th® auggested names for the new elector ates in New South W l̂es, those sug gested by the boundaries' commission being regarded as barbarous. Native names of an appropriate and euphoni ous character will be accepted, but the proposal to adopt names simply be cause they are native has been scouted U preposterous. Various suggestions have been made, but as parliament will decide the names, it ia thought the selection of appropriate and eu phonious names will be determined in debate after the boundariea commls •ton has made an addendum of alter natives names.--J. Hunter Stephenson In Chicago Record. • WktorML Ha harnessing of one of Sweden'a large waterfalls has Just been accom pllshed. The water power lies at Quarnsveden, and the electric current la conveyed to Domnarfvet, about three miles distant. The power sta tion, generators, cables and trasform «ra are, all from German houses. For conveying this current 46,000 pounds . of copper wire ie need. The waterfall, which is one oi the most powerful and continuous in the kingdom, is est! mated to contain 18,000 horse power, 8,000 of which is utilised to operate the sawmills of the company, while 10,000 is used for the generation of the eleetile current » 0 There Is a Claw of Paople^ - "Who are injured by the use of coffee. ' Recently there has been placed in all [the grocery stores a newpreparation ( called GRAIN-O, made of pure grains, that takes the place of coffee. The most I delicate stomach receives it without I distress, and but few can tell it from [coffee. It does not cost over one-fourth las much. Children may drink it with (great benefit IS cents and 25 cents »r package. Try it Ask for GRAIN-O. Whjr So Few Good Books. 11m reason why so few good booka written is that so few people that write know anything. . . . ithey's habits excellently fitted for imunicating information formed 1th the best care, and dally regulated the best motives, were exactly hab- to afford a man the least in forma- ion to communicate. Southey's life had events, no experience.--Walter igebot on Shakespeare, the Man. But for a* Bov«te Ha matter what alls you, headache a cancer, you will never get well I til your bowels are put right IETS help nature, cure you lthout a gripe or pain, produce easy ktural movements, cost you just 10 it* to start getting your health back. JCARETS Candy Cathartic, the mine, put up in metal boxes, every tblet baa C. C. C. stamped on It Be- of Imitations. • - > Ho DtnMttm'. ••><*.* "That's a terrible noise in the nur- Mollie," said the mist rem. ;'s the matter? Can't yon keep the »y quiet?" "Share, sss'am," replied IMly, 1 it make him quiet unleas I let him to a noise." AM TN MB| Altai** root-ButT |ii ia lb* owy cure lor tfwouea. Burning. Sweating Feet* _ and Buniona. Ask for Allen's -Baae. a powder to be shaken into ahoee. At all Druggists and Shoe a, 86c. Sample aent FREE. Ad- Alien 8. Olmsted. LaBoy. N. T. Kfa. • llvpt roid Oiwervtac BsbUt Rabbit--That town boy baa •round bare nearly a week and once triad to kill us. Babbit--Yes; he eaeme to be of all human attributee.--In- ilia Praafc Driven full. new neighbor on oar to have a hunted look." He waa one of the Cincinnati enumerators."--Cleveland Plain of the Rasaian army one naturally bagtna with the Caar, who ia at once the head and object of the whole organisation. It ia in Rnaaia alone, of all civilised conntriea, that at thia 4e?-ire find the Idea of per- aonal allegiance exiating in its prim itive purity, undisturbed by the ten dencies of modern representative gov ernment. This personal allegiance Is the .cornerstone of the whole fabric of society in Russia, and it ha§ been strengthened rather than weakened by the changes which have taken place in the development of the countr> since the days of Peter the Great In other nations the soldier fights for his country, for the idea that is so clearly crystallised in the German motto, "Fui Gott und Vaterland," but the Russian soldief fights for God and the Czar. To his mind the Czar la specially ap pointed by God as the viceroy to gov ern that large portion of the earth called Russia, and devotion to the Ctar includes all t&at we understand in the word patriotism. The peasant class--or moozhlka- which supplies the great body of Rus sian soldiers, leads a hard life. In an atmosphere of ignorance and supersti tion, amid dull, somber surroundings, a cheerless climate and monotonous village life, their characters, disposi tions and habits are determined. The Russian soldier's disposition is gentii and good-natured, even his brawls be ing of the maudlin and foolish, rather than fighting kind. Since his sur roundings from earliest childhood tend only to destroy his individuality, be is incapable of acting for himself and utterly dependent upon hi8 officers, for whom, naturally enough, he has great respect He never meets or ad dresses an officer without standing at "attention," with his hand at his cap through the whole conversation, and until the officer has paaaed. He doet> not even answer a question with a di rect "Yes, air," or "No, sir," but with "Quite so/* or "Not exactly ao." Yet despite this humility in outward forma, it cannot be aald that the sol dier degenemtos into being servile. Side by side with the unbending dis cipline there exists a feeling of good- fellowship between officers and men. The men are jovial and good-natured among themselves and nave their own glee songs and dances, at which the officers are dally spectators. In battle the Russian soldier ia strongest in all the staying qualities and weakest in all the vivacious ones. He goes in enthusiastically and witn lively energy, it may be, but not quite vivaciously; there is more of a grim solemnity in his manner as he marches forward singing lustily the national hymn and thoughtless of his fate. He ia at first dull and alow in Initiative and self-reliance; and it is only after he haa passed through several battles that he learns the knack of looking out for himself--of taking advantage of every shelter, of quickly protecting himself by intrenching, and all the other little tricks of war, which may save a man's life without impairing his efficiency or detracting from his courage. He instinctively looks for and obeya them with a bHai EaMteat, without atopping to queattfcn their merit; left i bis own tmemnm ha la almeet helpMas and will often get Wiled from Amt stupidity ti stand ing still and waiting for an order whan atari one is dead who ba» a right to give one. Bat thea« qualities, which ara ao different tfcoie of our own quick-witted vOhm- have their good site. The ftoa- •oldier's patience is boundlaas; hie endurance, his good-humor vnder hardship, his capacity for fighting on an empty stomach and under dlfllcul- ties, are beyond all praiae, and will enable a general who appreciatea thaaa qualities to work wonders with them; and he is probably the steadiest of all soldiers under defeat and adversity. Amrieu WItw of flwwl It ia worthy of note that not only waa the wife of the Baron Von Kettel- er, the German minister who was mur dered in Pekin, an American, Miss Ledyard, of Detroit, but the wife of the German minister appointed to suc ceed Von Ketteler, the Baron Von Schwarzenstein, is an American, M»ud Roosevelt La Vins€fi, and the wife pf the ouicer sent out to 6ommitS3 the allied armies, the Count Von Walder- see, ia an .American, Miss Lee of New York. The Baroness Von Schwarzen stein is a second cousin of Colonel Roosevelt, and was a belle In Wash ington two years ago. She met .there the Baron Mumm von Schwarzenstein, who was attached to the German lega tion. Miss La Vinsen was stopping with her mother's sister* the Baroneaa Von Orendorff. The baroness took har niece to Europe, whither the attache followed, and the marriage took place in Berlin. The bride had no fortune of any amount, and the marriage was one of pure affection' on both sides. The Baron Schwartzensteln, although only fdrty years old, haa had a long experience in statecraft, and ia consid ered «n,able diplomat--New Press. . • . •- KoIs*leis Powder the tatMt The success of smokeless powder In modern warfare has been such as to prompt a man of an inventive turn of mind to manufacture a powder which is said to be also noiseless. It ia the invention of a German workman who studied chemistry of explosives In thia country. He has already given a pri vate exhibition of the practicability of his discovery with considerable suc cess. A shell loaded with his powder was fired at a target fifty yards away and the only sound indicating the ex plosion was the falling of the plunger of the shell. Bohnengal. which is the name of the inventor, has not, it ia said, yet sold the secret of the process, but is still in treaty with, different governments for its purchase AMU MAVERY BXiftUlilfBD «V PROP. LOMBBOftO. 8on of Foriu«r Lwdtr. Hugh John MacDonald, who suc ceeds Sir Charles Tupper as the con servative leader in. Canada, is the son of Sir Charles' old leader and/ a fam ous figure in Canadian politics, Sir John MacDonald. The son has the significant nickname of "Man, Who Keeps His Word," a title conferred years ago by the Indiana with whom he had business. % W! Charged • Pfine Murders A Bad Man Prohibited y Authorities From Touching The Allen line steamer Assyrian, which arived at Halifax, N. S., the oth er night from Glasgow and Liverpool, brought aa a ateerage passenger a man who is alleged to be one of the most notorious criminals in Europe. De tective Power, Port Physician MacKay and Immigration Agent day were on the wharf awaiting the arrival of the steamer. The detective and immigra tion agent had telegrams and papers in their poaacssion to prevent from landing at thia port Johan Hannu, a Swede, who is credited with having taken the lives of nine human beings. 11M captain of the steamer, when apprised of the- characters & maa that he had on board his ship, wai greatly surprised. During U», voyagy over Haunt} wa* one offifre beat con* ducted pnttaeigera on beard. No ont ever auftpected him of beinr c mur derer. The Information of bis beini on board the Assyrian was received at Halifax from the department of jas- tlce at Ottawa,an order in council hav ing been iftaaaift&.prevant his landim on Canadl^ .jMMil,'N 'She murders went it is alleged, "fWWttitted at Stockholm, Sweden, where was trted ajid convicted of the driitMe,'" * • Hannu afterw«#dv tH<k| to land at Philadelphia, but waa not allowed to. HUGE MARRIAGE AGENCY, 0*1 *a<aat fael really comft»rt> nalaaa abai haa got tbam to a pair that are too small for them, to While the British housewife ^s be wailing the ever-increasing scarcity of "generals" and house and parlor maids the Queensland government agents in the country are shipping young women to their colony in thousands, says the London MaiL Some Idea of the extent to which the demand for aingle women In Queenaland ia being supplied from the country diatricta of England may be gathered from the fact that the other day alone SIS healthy young do- maetic aervanta were dlapatched to the Brlabane hiring depot by the colony's •gents, and with farm laborers, their wivaa and famiiiee, the total ahlpment for the day comprised 480 paraoae. Par the readineaa to qnit England for the new life in* the sflSm^south several reasons are assigned, not the least interesting of which is the pros pect of marriage with the well-to-do selector who raises coffee, cotton, to* bacco of sugar on his outback holding. It is the common belief of the intend ing immigrant--and the notion ia care fully fostered by the hustling agent-- that once in Cooktown, Ma^ay.Bowea of Cairns she will speedily capture the auaceptlbla aquatter, marry him, and pass in a month from the lean-to kitchen into the beat room of the home station. For every man Or woman aeeured by the energetic agents who travel over the United Kingdom they are paid Ida 6d. and for each child 5a 8d. s«parlor to taiafttM* •terttMl at Msma. > Many thaortaa have been advanced in of the dogged pcraayer- -MCh the Boera hava car ried on their atruggle to malhtaia tMr Independence, and now Proto •or Oaaara Lombroao, the dlattngnlah- ed criminologist, comes forward an« aaanraa the world that the one great reaaon ytkt the Boers ara streh atub- born Altera is beoauae their blood ia richer tifean that of other nations. His article on the subject appears in Nuo- va Antotogta. According to him, the Boera et to day hava in them the blood of four nations, namely the Dutch, the French, the Scotch and the German. Dutch blood preponderates, but with it, wa are told, is Intermingled the precise quantity of French, German and Scotch blood which la needed in order to produce such valiant warriors, aa the people of the Transvaal. In order to obtain exact knowledge of the point Professor Lombroso made a chemical analysis of Boer blood, and then he compared the results which he had obtained with those obtained by Herr Kuyser, a Dutch scientist who had been working in the same direc tion. The conclusion at which he haa arrived, is that the Boer blood is com posed of seventy-eight per cent Dutch blood, twelve per cent of French, twelve per cent of Scotch and three per cent of German. All obtainable statistics, he maintains, point to the correctness of these figures. In con clusion he asks: "Such being the chemical composition of their blood, what ia there astonishing in the fact that this mixture of the four best na tions of Europe, In a climate which is not enervating and in which an ener getic mode of life is necessary prom ises to form of the Boers a select peo ple who will prove themselves the bul wark of liberty and civilization and who will be a race superior to all those of Europe?" Scientists attach • good deal of weight to Professor Lom- broao's views on a matter of this kind. Nevertheless this article has startled them a good deal, and for the simple reaaon that the figures which it con tains are. to say the least bewildering. The Boer blood, says the professor, is composed of four elements. Quite possible, reply the scientists; but how can seventy-eight per cent of Dutch blood, twelve per cent of French, twelve per cent of Scotch and three per cent of German make 100 per cent Of Boer blood, for do not these fig ures, when added together make a total of 105. The misleading figures, it is thought by some, may be due to a typographical blunder,, but such does not seem to be the general opin ion. "The supposition that there is a mistake in the figures," says a French writer, "is hardly tenable,' since sta tistics are an exact science and a sta tistician like Lombroso is not likely to make a mistake of this kind. No; the figures themselves, are correct, although the theory baaed oh them may seem highly Improbable. They furnish, indeed, as they stand at pres ent, an additional argument in favor of Lombroso'a theory that the sur prising valor of the Boers is due to their blood, since, It can readily be seen that a nation ought to be un usually brave whose blood Is above par and is rated at 105 per cent." A plausible explanation of the puz zling figures Is that the seventy-eight ought to be seventy-three. The Boera in this case would have five per cent less of Dutch blood than Lombroso assigns to them; yet by this simple change they would be freed from the charge of being abnormal, which la now brought against them by certain Philistines, who maintain that those persons cannot be normal human be ings the elements of whose blood ex ceed 100 per cent m omoAt Of THE rr. PABL ». A. Miller, m brother at KcawaU 9. War, ahalrman of the beard <rf dl- of the Chicago, MUwaakae * Railroad company, haa bean general pnaaengar agent of Ifcat ayatem (affective Oct 18, 1808) to •wnnd George H. Heafford, reoently wtoad. The appointment at Mr. lOOar to the head of the St Baal paa- aanger deportment waa not nnaBpaatod. j aa ha haa bean for aeveral yearn the principal aaaiatant general paaaangar agent of the company, «»»»•[ nm in the Marquette build- There will be no aaaiatant ap» to eucceed Mr. Miller. The t«a other aasistanta, Messrs. Marsh and Merrill, will continue in their old poaitlons. General Passenger Agent Miller ia widely known in the railway world, and is one of the most popular of paa aangar officials. He began his railroad career in 1874, and his good nature, character ana ability have steadily ad vanced him in the service of the St Paul system since 1883, when he en tered the company's employ as a clerk in the passenger department, of which he now becomes the bead. Mr. ti^Hr was born at Harford. Pa. Smooth Surface fop Rotdc, Maintaining a smooth surface for the eaeape of water is all that is necessary to prevent softening of the road sur face, even with earth roads; kssp'as the road carefully crowned, smooth and free from ruts is more effective In disposing of "the greatest enemy of good roads" than the most elaborate aystem of foundations and under* drainage, but the necessary smooth ness can be attained only by continual watchfulness. Excessive dustiness could be allayed by an occasional sprinkling, but the distribution of traffic, made possible by the smooth surface, would decrease the wear and also the necessity of sprinkling. There Is more Catarrh in this section of the SOtratry than all other diseases put together, sad until the last few years was supposed to be Incurable. For a great many years doctors pro- Bouneed it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced It Incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitu tional disease, and therefore requires constl- itional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, man' by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional oure on the market. It Is taken internally In doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonfuL It acts directly upon the Mood fcnd mucous surface* of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any oaae it falls to cure. Bend tor circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY A CO., ĵ la^miffpuu7̂ )the best ̂ ' Bobbing Peter to Please PaaU ° "No, sir, $20 wouldn't reimburse me for the money I spent on that unfortu nate family !$ " v "Indeed 1" *•( • :,«*>, >., -f" - "That's rigllfc :̂-'t; apent f*l.:*** rowed every oent of It"--Cleveland Plain Dealer. Important to Mothers. kmbe carefully erery bottle of CA8T0BXA, a safe and sara remedy Cor Infanta and chlidrtB, sad see that It Bears the Signature of Al Uaa for Orer SO Years. ' -, Tto Kind Tom Have Alway* at «B Tuaadayi ef Maoamha* and TWrnmhar IIWMUVi MM -^RiVlnlmWVV| tow honnjauilef rata ef one tors 81 tar the round trip. Tkkata gNd ft* retorn^within 11 will save money by calling on aS Great Weatern y say Maud Good? kissed a man at the Joneses' lawn party the other night Jack--That's true. Bess--How do you know? - ̂̂ Jade---I had it from har Philadelphia Press. Too Can Get Allen's Foot-Ease Free. Write today to Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y., for a free sample of Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder. It cures sweat ing, damp, swollen, aching feet Makes new or tight shoes easy. A certain cure for Corns and Bunions. All drug gists and shoe stores sell it; 266. A 'Convert, Mrs. Goodeoul--"Did you go to the Christian Endeavor meetings?" Young Man (enthusiastically)---"Yes, indeed. Yum! yuso! Weren't smeetr t • "" |f !!"#!' | Not Mated.*' ' * "** Wiggs. Prof. Searcher haa just re turned from Borne, I hear. Has ha. brought many antiquities wifli hlmf Waggs. Only his bride. Garfleld-Tea Syrup is effective in ell cases where a mild larstive is required; the "ev ery-day" ills of infants, children and adults yield to its magical curative influence^imada from Pure Sugar, Fruit and Simple Herbs. No sadder proof can be given by a man of his own littleness then disbe lief in great men. Bach package of PUTNAM FADE LESS DYES colors either Silk, Wool or Cotton perfectly. Moat spiders are possessed of poison- fangs, but very tew are dangeroua to human beings. TO CDBI A OOU> fit _ Take Lrnnvi BBOMO Qvnm druntats refund the money if It K. W. Qrove'a signature is oi OAT. A» toons. on the boat. Four thousand tourists arrived Egypt during the last season. * Piso's Cure is the best medicine we em used for all affections of the throat and lungs.--W*. (X ENDSLKY, Vanburen. Ind., Feb. 10, lOOOw slxty-During 1899 Spain bought aeven vessels in England. BATT* CAPS FOR COIJD8. Pafeet, surest, quickest cure for oolde. Druggists know the ingredients. 95 cents. Pride makes a man walk with a cane when he isn't lame. an, Winslow'a Soothing Syrapi. ftor children teething, soften* the gams, redaeea tar Sammatloa. allays pain.owes wind oolla. Stoabottl* Never was a sincere word utterly lost--Emerson. - Unabashed. Old Milyuns. Young man, my daugh ter telle me you kissed her last night Percival Tootles. Well, if she wants to go bragging about it, that's her privilege. tXM*a Coafh Balaam m Dm eMart and beat. It will break nte ttmn anything else. It ia alwam raliabla. Trv». HO! FOR OKLAHOMA! tMfiOO acres new laada to open to aettlament, aobacirlbv for THE KIOWA CHIEF, devoted to Infor- mttoa about these lands, (tee year, *1.00. Slngte •opy.tOe. Subscribers receive free Illustrated book en Oklahoma. Monran> Manual (310 pase SetUer£ Oulde) with floe sectlcwal map, ti.00. ilipSc. AQ ahova.ti.79. Address Dick T. Hontan. PeiTT. O. T- ^Vlcbttag aMtts wltn OyM«l««, The seals' and sea lions which infest the moftlf of the Columbia river have created eucll havoc among the salmon flih^rles that a crusade with dynamite la eooa to be begun against them. The an£mal*are both shrewd and bold, and ^ is- eaid tihet a seal will police a set net wtth jaeat regularity, and take a bite out of ttg throat of every salmon It con^lntk .. Frequently when a flsher- man la taking his net Into a boat and is about to gaff a fish which Is entan gled in the meshes, a seal will rise and bite its throat The seal herds con gregate on a certan sandspit In the mouth of the river, and it is proposed that dynamite mines be sunk in the land and connected with the main land by wires. When the animals ara •fjuire the mines will be exploded. Similar plans are laid for the destruc- tiott of the sea lions, which do not father With the seala.--San Francisco Uhronicle. We hava aa pleasure in thinking of a benevolence that la only measured by Its works. Love is inexhaustible^ *nd If itaaatate la waated, its granary emp tied, atill cheers and enriches, and the man, though ha aleepa, ecema to puri fy the air. and hta house to ndofa the landscape and strengthen the laws. People alwaya recogidaa thia differ- am We know who ia benevolent by quite other mams than tha amount of BQbacriptton to soup societies. < It 1s only low mefita that can be enumer ated.--Character* ';:sr Paawvoi--as | th* rosea . ' The polwi cMiibla of Sauna, iCaa* *ws made the victims of * aenseisaa hoax , one day 4ast̂ waah -̂ > when m stranger celled at beadquartera and related a circumstantial story of how he had bean robbed of a torty-dollar bilL Ev«y polloaman in town waa furnished with & denotation of the al leged thief, and a whole day waa spent ia looking for him balm it dawned npon any of the sleuths Chat there wan no such thing aa a forty-dollar bllL By tl-'s time tha Joker had 41a- ^appeued £ro«n Salinn. • Writes Oyatdo Dews. ; ©f Ooorse. educated deaf mit^i-'let to be pretty bandy with their pencils. They have to write all their communi cations to speaking people, and do so very rapidly. The Rev. A. W. Mann Is a deaf mute missionary and expert penman. For twenty-five yean he has made missionary trips to deaf mute churchea, not alone in this country, but In foreign landa. Mr. Mann writes 'wrong side up just as well as the other | way. He is often interviewed. The method is thia: The reporter alte at tha table oppoaite Mann. A pad ot pa<- per Ilea between them. The reporter arritaa a question, %|a reads It up- aid|ff down, and, wltfipt moving the pa* wrlfcp the anaMr-alao upaide 4o#n.--New York WltML «ni 6--Har Ordari., is goitig to ftrst class of the Order ef the Bfcth, A. C. B., npon Prince Qeorga of Oreees, gbternoî general of Crete, and air Jfchn Fiahar, conunaader-in-chief of the Mediterranean sjaadroa, will pn»- ceed^oltttftlar to Omta to Invest his royl hjghnsas m lib tha ribbon and, in- of the iacoaatton. n laomHcd His norrin. "You seem dreadfully worried." "Yes; you see, I joined a Don't Wor ry Club, and it worries me to remem ber to keep from worrying."--Chicago Poet • i ••••• i mi--a----aaarifrw My Dear Mr. Editor: " ; The Passengef Department Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway begs leave to present to you under sep arate cover, by mail, a little souvenir, gotten up to remind our friends that our fast train, the "Katy Flyer," is still a flyin* between St Louis and the Gulf of Mexico. Brat up-to-date equip ment, and short hours to and from the cities of St Louis, Kansas City, Han nibal, Sedalia, Ft Scott, Nevada, Par sons, Denison, Dallas, Ft Worth, Waco, Houston, Galveston and San Antonio. Should our friend, the Editor, feel disposed to make mention of the sou venir in his paper, (a unique pen knife), he will piease say that the cost of the souvenir prevents its general free distribution. We shall, however, send a souvenir to any of your readers on receipt of twenty-five cents, being, leas than its cost Very truly, James Barker, Q. P. A T. A.. St Louis, Mo. Central New York is particularly a dairy country. Beautiful hair la always pleaatas, aad FaaaSBfa HA IF. BALSAM excels tn producing It. BIMPKBCORMS, the beat curs for coma. A 8trong man without oonfldanee li weak. BeaebaJlplayers; Golf players; all play* ers chew White's Yuca em whilst playing. True courtesy is of the heart What Shall We Have for Dessert? This question arises in the family •very day. Let us wiswer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert Pre pared in two minutes. No boiling! no baking! add boiling water and set to cool. tTlavors:--Lemon, Orange, Rasp berry and Strawberry. Get a package at yourgrocera to-day. zo cts. A timid, Irresolute and aelf-con- edous maa will often be cruel when a large-hearted and self-reliant "in would be tender and generous. The latter gives strength and confidence to all with whom he mingles. They feel his Influence and partake of his na ture. They grow stronger for his strength and braver for his courage. God is near--a beaetting Qod on the right hand and on the left aver edu cating, diaclplining, helping his child, aad striving to save aad bless him. Tha world is full of God, the aoul is tail of God; tor he is the omnipresent and all pervading spirit of tha uni- "VAN'S" BUCKWHEAT Finest Flavor. Hssialf ilinfl MM Ml tig Get a Package From Yogr Grocer. ftnkhaxi, XitK' :: "1= -•SSI with f: if yen win they tn -- POMMEL SLICKER The hnrt I Saddle Coat. • Keeps both ifder and saddle per-| Ifectfydry In Ike hardest stona.1 KtiKdllhiya •fll **-- Mjmt Aahftw I pSwlSltrfcsr I lltM entirely new. Ifaotforaalehil laatMd of preaching the usual Sun- iag evening aeraona, a clergyman in Kaa., commanda the atten- on by reading to it* of a continued Of which ha la the author. a aolaaul look on the tether's whan he gives his daughter away at the marriage altar is amusing when ana reealla feow anxious he been to gat rid Qf her during the past tfn years.--Chicago News. mad when meet a man ^dk aad raada thiadoesn'tfet any m mekee DCBOIEB COUCH SYRUP Carat • ConqaeraCrntm Or! OP Cold at iqoov wwipi ijgstSEgnva;