•••••»•«•«»• «»•*«* $* »*»»•• =5fc I wandered lonely as a clou<3 • r That floats on high o'er vales and tiflbfc When,all at once I saw a crowd Beside the lake, beneath the trees . Fluttering and dancln* In the breexe. Continuous as the star* that And twinkle on the milky way, " They etretch'd in never-ending lbu Along: the margin of a bay; Ten thousand saw I at a glance Tossing their heads in sprightly The waves beside them danced, bat tbsy Outdid the sparkling waves in glee; A poet could not but be gay In such Jocund company! I gued and gased, but Uttle thought What wealth the show to me M brought. 1 For oft, when on my couch I lli" In vacant or In pensive mood^"„ They flash upon that Inward ey»> Which Is the bllse of solitude; And then my heart with pleasure Oils And dances with the daffodils. x-Wordsworth. • lie Exit of Jeems. fCepyright, 1903, Dally Story f*ub. Co.) ^ . "Go way, childrun, de ol* man doan *f©el like teliin' 110 stories t'day. Be sides, he only came to de big house to hoi' a private reesepshun wid yoah pap, who gives de ol' man open house t'day. Den, coo, de heart am sad, an' de tongue am still in con'squence. "Wat! Yoah jest took it? Now, . look'er yere, yoah yungsters, yoah Uncle Jess doan want nobody to stole for him, even if 'tis tobaccy. How- «vah, seein' its heah, I guess mebbe dat might eJtec' de loostration o' my •peech, so I'll tell yoah 'bout dat onery son Jim o' mine. Nebber heerd Itt Well, well. Ol' Jess doan of en tell o' things wat make his heart jump In his wuthless brack breast. "Yoah see, childrun, dis happened when yoah gran'pap wah a young man -r-must er been erbout six yeahs be- foah yoah pap wah bohn. De trub- ble 'tween de Noath and de South had bruk out, an' de sogers wah fittin' all •her de country. De niggahs on our place wah all satisfied, an' de dld'n' babe no fool ideas erbout runnin' way to the Noath. De mahstah, yoah gran'pap, wah a shoah 'nuf angel, he wah, an' de niggars would er died fer him. de would, indeed." The tattered coat sleeve touched the fid man's eyes where a few drops of ifeolsture had suddenly appeared. "De hide of de ol' man a!m wrink led an' cracked now, but in de happy dkys befoah de wah he can see de mahstah in his big cheer at de table, wid all de fine ladies an' gemman •rbout him, ua.' de same table jes' a creakin' wid good eatin's.. In dem days de cabins o' de field hands wah nebber widout der flap-jacks an' poak neat, an' de feet o' de wlmmen wah always er dancin'. "Den, as I says, de trubble brecks out. We didn't 'spect ter see no Yan kee sojers ip our part o' de valley, an* de mahstah might er staid dere wid out goin' ter fight at all. Course he didn't do nothin' o' de kind, but he done offered his services to de state to help whip de Yankees. It wahn't very long befoah he wah made a g/leftenn't, an' JeBS done follored him trough all. When de boss lef foah de front he say to me an' de othah men: " 'Jess, yoah are to go wid me if yoah likes. Othahwise yoah may jine any o' de othah han's what might wanter go Noath. I gives any one der freedom to leabepfcf de wants ter go.' "Well, sir, not a niggah moved, *oept yoah Uncle Jess, an' he only •dged up a little clusssr to de ol' mahstah. , - " 'Thank yoah all," yoah gran'dad •ay quiet like. 'I'll leabe yoah all to took care o' de place till I returns. Come on, Jes,' an' he went er ridin' like mad down de road wid de tears •treamin' from his purty eyes. Well, we didn't see de ol' place for more'n a year, an' den we foun' ourselves in oar own lan' clus to de place wah I was rised. Jess, would yoah like to see yoah of woman an' de boy?' says mahstah. *"Bres8 Gawd, yes, sah!' i ansahd quick, foh I wah buhnin' ter see her face an* dat boy o' mine. "WeH we went ter de ol' home an' runntn' o' bare feet„ an den de voice o' dat Jim o' mine cried sofly: "'Oh, daddy, daddy! Git de mahs tah erway quick. De sojers hah cotched all de han's in de bahn, an' deys comin' here now fer de mahstah. I jes' got out foah de took the bahn.' "Well, childrun, de brain of de ol' man wucked purty fast den, yoah can bet. " 'Yeah, Jeems,' I says, Tse gotter stay wid him, so yoah must help yoah dad ter save him. Lemme whisper In yoah brack year.' I tole him what ter do an' den turned ter mahstah, who "De maatah set In his own cheer Jet* de same's In de olden days." • do mahstah set In his own cheet an' do table wah set jes' de same's in de olden days. "When de wn»hg»»Ti get himself down he told de help to all go down In de big bahn an' git ready foah An ol'-fashioned dance. "Yet de tears bust right out when ho wah left alone wid me, an' he frow his ahms erround dis same ol' Wrinkled neck an' cried as if his poah heart would broke. Aftah a while de toars stopped an' he took his place at de table. But he didn't eat none-- Jes' looked frum de picture of his daid pap an' mammy to de cheers wah de othah fine peoples uster set. "An' den. as dis niggah crouched in a cobaor, wid Us heart breakln' at de grief •' de mouhner, he heerd a "Trailed aftah him lak er dawg aftah er coon." wah sittin' at de table jes' like he wah dreamin'. Dat wah on account o' de sorrow touchin' of his soul, yoah know. "'Mahstah, do what I tells yoah now an' foller ol' Jess' I said. 'Gim me dat purty sojer coat o' yourn a minute. Thank yoah, sah. Now, Jeems, take itr an' lemme kiss yoah big thick lips fer yer an yoah mam my. Now scoot.' "De boy, he wah only 'bout eighteen yeahs ol', he wah, frew de big coat erbout him an' jes' as de sojers wah erbout to come in de front doah he jumped from de back an' started like a jack rabbit fer de woods what leads inter Mahtin's swamp. He wah in plain sight, an' de sojers, seein' de off'cer's coat by de light o' de bright moon, all trailed aftah him like a dog aftah a coon. Frum de windah I sah some little dist specks jump up in de road neah de boy s feet, but he kept on er dodgin' an' er dodgin' wid de 'cracks,' 'cracks' makin' music be hind him. "An' den I quick frew de silber in its hidin* place an' got de mahstah to our horses, what de sojers didn't hab no time ter take. We hadn't much more'n struck de pike when we heerd er disapp'inted yell in de rear, an' we sah de sojers staht aftah us in er hur ry. It didn't take us long ter git in Devil's Bend, when we turned inter de woods, an' der^vahnt no Noathern Yankees could ^otch us den, nuhow. Mahstah an' I got erway easy, 'ceptin' he losed his coat, whatwah--what must have cost him fohty dollahs." Again the suspicious moisture glis tened in the half-closed eyes and the contracted wrinkles drew the wizened old face into a queer grimace. "But what of Jim, Uncle Jess; did he get away, too?" "Hush, chile, hush! Doan yoah see yoah poah ol' uncle am not well ter- day? De heart am sad an' de pow'ful misery o' de grabe hang heavy ovah his head, foh--foh dey cotched him. Dey cotched de poah brack boy on'y when--when he dropped daid wid-- wid er bullet fx*ew his brain," and the old man'b head fell forward on his folded arms, as his feeble, emaciated form shook convulsively. Pray Without Ceasing. There is one spot in the United States where the voice of prayer is never still. For more than twenty months the "turret of prayer" that surrounds the Temple of Truth, near Lisbon Falls, Me., has never for an instant been without the sound of a human voice in supplication. It is the Intention of the people who at tend to this remarkable form of wor ship that prayer in the turret shall never cease so long as the building shall stand. Those who take part in the service compose the Holy Ghost and Us Society. The society affiliateg with no denomination, and tries to conform strictly to the teachings of the Bible. Starting without a penny, it has in a few years achieved such success that it has built four build ings, the Temple of Truth among them, which form a rectangle capable of seating 20,000 people.--Methodist Magazine. LJS-- There is no other animal ao tlr» some as the talkative man who has nothing to say. „ EUROPE SELLS HEATHEN IDOLS. Practice Carried on by Many Civil- *, ized Nations. European enterprise is furnishing Africa with its heathen idols! It i3 an actual fact that the hideous images which the African savage worships are now being made at factories in England, at Nimes in France, and at Griez in Germany. The firm that deals in these strange gods has its headquarters at Zanguebar, where It does a thriving business. The na tives pay for the European-made gods with ivory, palms, maize, nuts, gold and cattle. They pay at the ex orbitant rates, too, which the white man has always exacted from the un sophisticated savage. The merchandise paid for a single god varies in value all the way from $250 to $5,000. The tribes of the Senegambian dis trict in Africa, particularly, believe that they propitiate their gods by having their images made in rich metal8, A chief will readily pay 500 barrels of palm oil, worth $125 a ton, for a fetish in the shape of a gold monster with a fiendish head or for a serpent with three heads affixed to a long pole of ivory. Couldn't Live Without Them. New York City, Aug. 18th.--Mr. Charles Back of 64 Rue de la Yictorie, Pari-, France, relates a most inter esting experience: "Ever since I was about three years of age I have suffered severely with Kidney Disease. "Last year I spent some time at the baths at Carlsbad (Bohemia), but I came back after five weeks' treatment with a severe pain still In my Kid neys. "My doctors in Paris and Hamburg could do nothing for me. "I was obliged to start from Paris to Montreal, Canada, and when I ar rived in the Canadian city I was half dead. "I read an advertisement of Dodd's Kidney Pills in a newspaper there and began to use this remedy and after two days' treatment I felt that my pains were leaving me and In a week i had no pains ct all. "Dodd's Kidney Pills are the most wonderful remedy in the world. I keep them always with me for I be lieve I could not live without them." High-Hued Hubby. Truly amusing are the doings of un cultured people who have suddenly acquired riches. Mrs. X., who had unexpectedly come into possession of a large fortune, desired that the por traits of herself and her husband should be painted by the most emi nent portrait painter living. In an interview with that great artist painter she inquired which were the most expensive colors, and on being told that ultra-marine and carmine were, said: "Very well, then; paint me ultra marine and my husband carmine." Deafness Cannot Be Cared tor local applications as they cannot reach tt» diseased portion of the ear. There is only oae way to cure deafness, and that is by consti tutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucus lininp of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hear ing'. and when it is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition or the mucus surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, a Sold by Druggists. 76c. Ball's Family Pills are the best. Dog Rang a Bell. Herbert A. Moore, an attorney of this place, is the owner Of a very sagacious dog. Last night robb%rs entered the house, and the dog, fail ing to awake the family by his pro longed barking, rang a dinner bell. The robbers were frightened away by the noise before securing any booty.--Dubois (Pa.) Dispatch Phila delphia North American. $100.00 Cash Prize for a Name. For the new Daily Limited train to California to be placed in service No vember 1, 1902, by the Rock Island System and Southern Pacific Com pany, via the El Paso Short Line. The competition is open to the public anu conditions involve no fees of any kind. For circular of instructions, address at once Jno. Sebastian, Pas senger Traffic Manager, Rock island System, Chicago. $20.00 OCEAN TRIP. Chicago to New York, through Vir ginia Mountain and seashore resorts to Norfolk, Va., thence Old Dominion Line steamers. Meals and berths free from Norfolk. Address N. W. P. Agt., Chesapeake & Ohio Ry.. 234 Clark SL, Chicago, 111. The Guileless Farmer. • farmer paid $30 for a tin rooster on the guarantee that said rooster would turn red six hours before every storm. Several storms passed, and the rooster remained green. There are gentlemen in Chicago who would like to show the farmer the hole in the lake. < Joke Turned on America. Last year the people o* two conti nents were smiling at the humilia tion of the Italian policeman by Mus- ollno, the bandit who has Just been jailed for life at Portolungone. This year a citizen of Washington named Tracy turned the smile on our police men. ENSIST ON GETTING IT. Boms grocers say they don't ketp De fiance Starch. This is because they have a stock on band of other brands contain ing only 12 oz. in a package, which they won't be able to sell tlrst, because De fiance contains 16 oz. for the tame money. Do you want 16 ox. Instead of IS os. for same money? Then buy Defiance Starch. Requires no cooking. Many Consumption "Cures.** Within the last ten years more new methods have been devised for deal- ilJg with consumption than any other human ailment. The leading article in The Four Track News for August is on Lake George. It is by Mr. Eugene J. Hall and profusely Illustrated. No chromos or cheap premiums, bat a better quality and one-third more of Defiance Starch for the same price of other starches. The way of the transgressor Is fre quently paved with gold bricks. Ironing a Shirt Waist. Not infrequently a young woman finds it necessary to launder a shirt waist at home for some emergency when the laundryman or the home ser vant cannot do it. Hence these direc tions for ironing the waist: To iron summer shirt waists so that they will look like new it is needful to have them starched evenly with Defiance starch, then made perfectly smooth and rolled tight in a damp cloth, to be laid away two or three hours. When ironing have a bowl of water and a clean piece of muslin beside the Iron ing board. Have your iron hot, but not sufficiently so to scorch, and abso lutely clean. Begin " by ironing the back, then the front, sides and the sJeeves, followed by the neckband and the cuffs. When wrinkles appear ap ply the damp cloth and remove them. Always iron from the top of the waist to the bottom. If there are plaits in the front iron them downward, after first raising each one with a blunt knife, and with the edge of the iron follow every line of Btitching to give it distinctness. After the shirt waist Is ironed it should be well aired by the fire or in the sun before it is folded and put away, says the Philadelphia Inquirer. ' The Trouble. Mrs. Wadsleigh--O, dear! Mrs. Gadsum--What's the trouble? Mrs. Wadleigh--I'm so unlucky. My old nurse has left me and the new one I have is so unreliable that I don't feel at all easy in my mind unless I see the children at least two or three times a week. It's so exasperating! MORE FLEXIBLE AND LASTING, won't shake out or blow out; by using Defiance starch you obtain better results than possible with any other brand and one-third more for same money. Within three months fifteen new iron furnaces, to have an aggregate capacity of 5,000 tons, will be in proc ess of construction. Piso's d&re is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of the throat and lun*s.--WM. O. ENDSLST, Vanburen, lad., Feb. 10,1900, The last pleasure in life is the sense of discharging our duty.--Hazlett. DO TOUR CLOTHES LOOK YELLOW? Then use Defiance Starch. It will keep them white--16 cz. for 10 cents. Few things are impossible to dili gence and skill.--Addison. £•¥0 permanently cured. No fltsor mrraasMss sftor • 119 nnjt day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerre Restorer. Send for FRKK S2.00 trial bottle and treatfra. Da. a. H. KLINE, Ltd., #31 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Fa A henpecked husband is generally crowed over by his wife. ARE YOUR CLOTHES FADEDT Use Red Cross Ball Blue and make them White again. Large 2 oz. package, 5 cents. Glue is a good thing, but it won't mend a broken heart. Stopa the Cough and Works Off the C-old. Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Price $5c. The great life is made up of greats ness in littles. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Nyrup.' For children teething, softens ibe gums, reduces In flammation, allays palu.curei wlud colic. 25cabotUa> Actual liberty centers in essential loyalty. w W. L. DOUCLA $3 & $3=53 SHOES S VJ. L. Douglas shoes are the standard of the world. IV. L. Bouifliis maile and sold more men's Good- fear Welt (Hand Kwweil Process) shoes in the first six month* of 1!I02 than any other manufacturer. M|| nnn he Pa'd anyone who O I UiUUU ran disprove this statement. W. L DOUGLAS$4 SHOES / CANNOT BE EXCELLED. VSSSXU §1,103,8201 ISEiSSU $2,340,000 Best imported and American leathers. Hey!'a Patent Calf, Enamel, Box Calf, Calf, Vicl Kid, Corona Colt, Mat. Kangaroo. Fast Color Eyelets used. Caution f i Th® genuine have W. L. DOUGLAS' • " name and price etampod on bottom. by mail, 20c. extra. Illus. Catalog free. 3N. L. DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. \Shoet i • 11/ I Proved by Experiment. Electro-chemical reactions depend upon the fact that the salts of metals are dissociated when in solution. When potassium chloride is dissolved in water what actually exists in, the water is a succession of free atoms of chlorine and potassium, with great electrical charges. Similarly when silver or gold cyanide is dissolved in potassium cyanide solution the atoms are free; the weaker the solution the more perfect such free condition. As soon as the atoms of gold or silver lose their charge of electricity (as they do when an electrical current is passed through), gold, with its ordinary prop erties, is at once produced and precip itates itself in the solid form. An Economical Millionaire. Alfred O. Vanderbilt is one of the most simple-minded of millionaires. He dresses always In the quietest manner and his whole manner of life shows the influence of the economic habits to which his father trained him. The Law In Portugal. In Portugal if the wife publishes lit erary works without the husband's consent, the law frees him at once from all his matrimonial obligations. Try One Package. If "Defiance Starch" does not please you, return it to your dealer. If It does you get one-third more for the same money. It will give you satisfaction, and will net stick to the iron. Makes Church Services Attractive. Rev. Martin B. Bird, pastor of Hope Congregational church, St. Louis, both preaches and gives solos to his con gregation, playing on the cornet. If you wish beautiful, clear, white clothes use Red Cross Ball Blue. Large 2 ox. package, 5 cents. Hard workers are usually honest; industry lifts them above temptation. --Bovoe. HAMLIN'S WIZARD Oil 0P CUTS, WOUNDS [si--Asthma. ^1* Sold by all - - -- -- -- i j n m a i l j i 5 o p i i t n . STOWELL A CO., JRfra. Gharleetowiu w ard's Big Bargain Book ards off high prices, by holesaling goods to all. orth a dollar. ill save you many dollars. It contains over 1,000 pae«i quotingwhole- " liferent -- -- 3d to help . stand what the Koodn look like. Send 15 sale prices on 70,000 different article*--17,000 Illustrations are used to help you under- cents for catnloirne and learn how to make four dollars do the work of five. xmfm •CjlH ca GO The house that tells the truth. ED U CATIONAL. THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME, NOTRB DAMfi, INDIANA. FULL COURSES IN Classics, Letters, Ecoa nomics and History, Journalism, Art, Science, Pharmacy, Low. Civil, Mechanical and Elec trical Engineering Architecture, Thorough Preparatory and Commercial Courses. liooms Free to all students who have com* pleted the studies required for admission Into the Junior or Senior Year of any of the Collegi ate Courses. Rooms to Rent, moderate charge to students over seventeen preparing forColleglate Courses A limited number of Cutididutes for the Kccle- •ilisticiU sttit<> will bn received at special rates. St. Edward's Hall, for boys under 13 years, Is unique in the eoiniilMeness of its equipment The 59th Year win open September 9, 1902. Catalogues free Address REV. A. MORRISSEY, C. S. C.. President. ST. MARY'S ACADEMY, NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. (One mile west of the University of Notre Dsmc.) Thorough Kngllsh and Classical Education, Including Greek, Latin. French and German. On completing the full course of studies, students receive the Kagnlar Collegiate Degrees. The Conservatory of Music Is conducted on the plan of the best Classical Conservatories of Europe. The Art Department is modelled after the best Art Schools of Europe. Preparatory and Minim Departments. Pu* plls are here carefully prepared for the Aca demic and Advanced Courses. Gymnasium un der direction of Graduate of Boston Normal Sohool of Gymnastics. Bookkeeping, Phonog raphy nnd Typewriting extra. Every variot# at Fancy Needlework taufht. For catalogue ad dress DIRECTRESS OP THE ACADEMY, St Mary's Aeadcmy, Neb* Dime F. Qk, U GET A GRASP ON OUR TRADE MAFGC OCT TO KNOW U WHEN YOU SEE I f AND THEN NEVER BUT STARCH WITHOUT fT DEFIANCE STARCH IS WITHOUT EQUAL fT IS GOOD. IS BETTER. IT IS THE BEST AND MORE OP IT TOR TEN CENTS THAN ANY OTHER STARCH. IT WUj. NOT ROT THE CLOTHES YOUR GROCERJMf flLOft WILL. OCT IT VJROU ASK FOR IT. > • • • • • SATISFACTION OR MONEY BACK.' MANUFACTURED BY Th« DEFIANCE STARCH CO., OMAMA.NC& .t •• , 1 -Ly "I SUFFERED TERRIBLY ̂ _ WITH FEMALE WEAKNESS ̂̂ UTS MBS. ESTHER M. MILDER. II Ha?! Ike Headache Con tinually--Gould Not Do Mjf Work--Pe-m-na Cured." Mrs. Esther M. Milner, DeGraff, Ohio; writes: "/ was m terrible sufferer from female weakness and had the headache continually. I was not able to do my housework for my h usband and myself. / wrote you and described my condition as near as possible. You recom mended Pcruna. / took four bot tles and was completely cured. I think Peruna a wonderful med icine and have recommended it to my friends with best results." --Mrs. E. M. Milner. Miss Mamie Groth, Plattevilie, Wis., writes: "Accept a grate ful girl's thanks for the won derful help I have received through the use of Peruna. Although I locked well aud strong I have for several years suf fered with frequent backaehe and would for several days have splitting headaches. I did not wish to fill my system with poisonous drugs, and so when several of my friends advised me to take Peruna, I asked my physician what he thought of it. He recom mended it and so I took it and am en tirely without pain of any kind now." --Miss Mamie Groth. Dr. S. B. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, has had over fifty years experience in the treatment of female catarrhal diseases. He ad- eSTHCR are suffering from any female de rangement write him a description of your symptoms" and he will give yon the benefit of his experience io the treatment of women's diseases. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Perups, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable adk: vice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbua, Ohio. I I I I I I I I I I f I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I It Is Simple Enough! YOU DO NOT HAVE TO GUESS THE ACTUAL NUMER of TOtes | [ | east for Governor of New Tork State, nor the exact amount of the ' [ [ Bank Clearings of Umana to win one of the hundreds of Prizes in THE AUDITORIUM STOCK CONTEST It's the neares* best guesses that count, and you may be one of the 1.000 who will win. TRY. Share of Capital Stock and Two F r e e G u e s s e s f b r 2 5 C E N T S 5 5 ? t For information address The Omaha Auditorium Co.. Omaha, x Neb., or see previous editions of this paper. « 1 1 i i 1 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 m i i 1 1 1 1 1 ' i $5,000 IN GOLD--FRFE for IS Trade Marks Cut fro in lOe Package* of DBPIANCB Staroh j To everyone who will •end to the Auditor ium Co. or the !>•• Aaooe Starch Co., Omaha, Neb., 16 trade marka out from 10 ct. or 16 os package* of DEFIANCE STARCH will be sent an Adui- torlum Stcck * and Ouessing ticket which sella for 25 eta (1TIO( you a guess In this great contest to win ^E,ooo iisr OOLD or some one of the 1.000 other prises. If you cannot get Defiance Starch of your grocer we will send It to you express prepaid including MM ticket upon receipt of the price of the starch. The Defiance Starch Co., Omaha, Nebraska* a BABY'S DELIGHT MOTHER'S COMFORT • U FOR IRRITATIONS,CHAFINGS.ITCHINGS, Rashes, Heat, Perspiration, Lameness, and Soreness no other application so soothing, cooling, and healing as a bath with CUTICURA SOAP, followed by gentle anoint ings with CUTICURA, the Great Skin Cure. It means instant relief for skin-tortured babies and rest for tired mothers. No amount of persuasion can induce mothers who have once used these great skin purifiers and beautifiers to use any others for pre serving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands of infants and children. CUTICURA SOAP combines delicate emollient properties derived from CUTICURA, the great skin aire, with the purest of cleansing ingredients, and the most refreshing of flower odours. Together they form the only speedy, economical, and infallible cure of itching, scaly, and crusted humours, rashes, and irritations of the skin, scalp, and hair from infancy to age. Guaranteed absolutely pure Sold throughout the world. British Depot: f. Nmm & SONS, tj Charterhouse So. Loudon, E. C. POTTB* DKUG ANDCMSMICAI. Co*ro*Aiio«, Sole Prop*., U.SIA! WEATHERWISE IS THE MAN WHO WEARS WATERPROOF «®0iL£D CLOTHING A "reputation extending over ^ sixty-six ye&rd and our guarantee cxr» btxek. of every darment bearing the " 61GN OP- THE PI5H. There are i\*ny imitations. be sure of the n&m* TOWER on the buttons. ON 3AL£ EVUYWraie. M A. J. TOWER C0.R05T0N.HASi Jii.lt JZSTATE. Improved Farms-FLO to tM H t Ar per acre. For frtv Circular* dress MUK.&AY S LANU OFFICE. WUcut, ; H V.I SCIA r.. INVESTMENT FALMiWORTB-USOTOj^ Stock Griin B: transact a General Htvkerajfe 14u»:I:t'sti tu IJU of all quantities. Small cuius luvwsti'-J i:i:vngh i.« al ocW Will bring large return*. Wrlie (o us forparUcuiMfc xrscrr LA > E< > i >\ AUTOMATIC *AG0N back ii£aln;very s-mpie.vtr)- •.'.'joap u- iiiakt.nroQti *-<• durable; Stato rUbia for sale. BoxStM. Cfciil1 jotat, Kt> ir vnil MfAMT A P O S I T I O N C F A >f If TUU VTHIII Kixu m CUBA OR THl Farma for Ml* on Mir tarma. ar •xcaaim, tn la. Stab..Minn, or 8. D. J. Mulhall. Sioux City, low*. ISLE OF PIN 158. write Cuba, for laloruiatlon Look Box 86.', £Lavaa __ lucloso nr refijE »•« m lITrn Barbara. EVERY BODf If fll I F 11 DeatiiU, ntiora, aW» * ™ Su-.'frOO», toola. Ufv THl SKI HOHI a, h i caa »Larpra a ruor aa M a man oa the DK1 ;>o*yaUTor XdilMql Sri Hon* ntg. Co., Kaoiao. Wia. Afuita *1 W. N. U. CHICAGO, NO. 34, 1902^ VIM Aasweriat itfvertiseaMia MkM lutiM III* ri|K