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Show rv W. CHILLY KIDNEY TROUBLES. RECEPTION FOR SUITOR MUander.tood by th Hothar of Bis Adored Oie. In a neighboring city, says the Albany Press and Knickerbocker, lives a young man whose name is Carr. Carr is deeply smitten with the charms of a young woman who resides with her mother in a pretty villa near Sand-lak- e on the line of the Troy and New England railroad. He asked permission of his Inamorata to call upon her at her home, and the young woman accorded him the privilege. Now, the cars on the Troy and New England road are not yet running on the summer schedule, and often villagers at Averill Park and the simple farmer folk of Rensselaer who patronize the road are compelled to wait many minutes for a vehicle. Mr. Carr reached the villa where his Juliet resided, and pressed the electric button at the door. The ring was answered by the mother of the young woman. The latter had never seen the young man. Im Mr. Carr, he said, bowing profoundly. " was the reply wh'fa' staggered him, you may sit on the stoop until one comes along. Five minutes later the daughter told her mother she expected a caller, and asked who had rung tne bell. She was informed that there was a young man the stoop who had missed sitting on The daughter rubbered bis ca- -. through the blinds and saw her lover perched disconsolately on the steps. He was quickly within the portals and mutual evnlan lens followed. Slightly jlrs. Louise M. Gibson That This Fatal Disease is Easily Cured l)y Lydia E. pinkhams Vest table Com- - : I felt verr Deab Mbs. discouraged two years a"o, 1 had s long ith kidney troubles and other complications, and had taken so much medicine without relief that I no hope for began to think theio was me. Life looked so good to me, but what is life without health? I wanted w fered so to be welL "Um-er-well,- MBS. LOUISE M. GIBSON. Lydia E. table Pinkhams Vege- Comptund cured me and made and that is why I gladly this, and gladly thank you j bottles was all I took, together nie well, write you six with your Pills. My headache and backache and kidney trouble went, never to return ; the burning sensation I had left altogether ; my general health was so improved I felt as young and light and happy as at twenty. Mr.8. Louise Clinson, 4813 Langley Ave., Chicago, 111. f 5000 forfeit If about testimonial Is not qenulno. If you feel that there is anything at all unusual or puzzling about your case, or if you wish confidential advice of the most experienced, write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., and you will be advised free of charge. Lydia Compound Vegetable thousands of is has cured and curing eases of female trouble. Another itnc.r ! are. A French physician claims to have discovered that cancer Is curable by the Internal administration of arsenic and quinine, employed simultaneousl- y. Thon the Dock! Revolted An English clergyman tells a story about a rooster who bossed the whole farmyard In the most tyrannical fashion. He would not allow the ducks to hunt for food In the yard and drove them away, viciously attacking them with his beak. The ducks finally revolted. After a short consultation they formed a circle around the rooster and began to draw In closer and closer. Threatened from all sides, the rooster fled, glad to have escaped with all his feathers. After that he never Interfered with the ducks. Cheap Excursion Rates via the Atchlesa, ' Topeka & Santa Fe Railway - On June 10th, 11th, and 12th, the following passenger rates will be effective via above route from Ogden and Salt Lake City, Utah, to Missouri River and return $32.00 39.50 St, Louis and return 44.50 Chicago and return Final return limit September 8th, 1902. For reduced rates to other points, and information regarding excursions on other dates than above, apply to C. F. WARREN, Genl Agent A. T. & S. F. Ry. 411 Dooly Block, Salt Lake City, Ut first-cla- ss Ladles Can Wear Shoes smaller after using Allen's Foot Ease.apowder. It makes tight or new shoeseasy Cutes swollen, hot, sweating aching feet, ingrowing nulls, corns ano bunions. All (.rnugi'tsandslioe stores 5c. Trial package FP.Cfcl by mail. One size Ad-ire- Allen S. t) I.eloy, N. Y. Lots. Carnegie Library. The town of I oanhead, in Midlothian, Scotland, has refused to adopt 'he libraries acts, and consequently Town 'oses Mr Carnegies gift of 12,000. IIGHT CHURCH, I POLICE OF GERMANY 23 0,dFshionel Night Watchmen Still Patrol Beats, Carrying a Long Lance and a Whistle. VO a non-sleepi- ovmwvvvwv' vtvtwwwwo iDEAL LOVES SHATTERED Affection Vanishes Before Chance Revelation of His Unworthiness. She stood at the top of the broad stairway, looking down over the heads of the dancers, until her eyes found him, and then sparkled with pride and Joy. she murmured. My ideal! My Ideal! The band was playing the new waltz, the lights were blazing throughout the house, color and brightness were everywhere, and the heart of one woman was light with joy. In a little group in the corner of the ballroom stood a man. He was tail and handsome. His features were serious and severe. The rest of the little group laughed rnd joked. He seemed cut off from tnem in his deep abstraction, and the woman coming down the stairs, with her cloak on her arm, saw him and felt happy, for she held in her consciousness the memory of his caress and his words of tender love a few moments before. Her father stood waiting to conduct her to the carriage. The serious man lookekd in her direction, and smiled a rather calm goodby, which the joy In her heart interpreted Into meaning more. All night long she tossed in her bed. All night long she dwelt on the bliss of those moments in the conservatory, till the gray dawn lulled her to sleep, and she fell into a gentle slumber, softly whispering to her pillow, My ideal! It was ladies day at the club, and the next day the woman dressed herself with fastidious care, for she knew he would see her. The halls and lunch-room- s were filled with guests, the heat was stifling, and she left her chaperon and found herself wandering alone through a little narrow corridor. He was in her mind, and she wondered why she had not seen him yet She paused before a dpor, which was open. A group of men were around a table, with a generous supply of bottles and glasses decorating its surface. She listened spellbound. She heard the coarse jests that came from the lips of the man she loved. She saw his stupor. She saw his bloodshot eyes and his neglected raiment With her heart frozen almost stiff within her, she heard him Joke about his She hated the other love affairs. men for laughing at them, and slowly walking back to join the crowd she murmured in bitterness, My ideal! York Press. My ideal! q-- COST OF MODERN WAR & Military Borrowings of Great Britain Are Much Larger Now Than They Were In 1812. , Copyright, 19C2. Daily Story Fob. Co. The season at. the national capital was at its height; the whir of fashion was in the air. and it seemed the social question would if possible absorb the political one. K. street was crowded, for it was Cabinet Day, and two members of the Presidents official family resided there within a square of each other. Some people just think they are enjoying themselves, Richard Stacy exclaimed, indicating with his cane the stream of callers pouring into the Secretarys door. They are not after pleasure, Harvey Johnston replied, smiling, they are following the band. The two men had walked into the street together and stood in front of Johnstons home watching the scene. Oh, vanity of vanities. How wayward the decrees of fate are; How very weak the very wise. How very small the very great are. Stacy quoted following his friend into the house. They left their top coats In the hall and went directly to the library. The low hook cases lining the walls were filled with handsome volumes, some of them rare and difficult to obtain, and the center table was covered with magazines and journals, scientific and political. A bronze head of Minerva held the letters and loose papers on the desk in place. Stacy seated himself in an easy chair footstool. a and appropriated each Thoughts are battling with other for a channel of utterance in this room, he said, glancing up at the busts of statesmen standing guard over the books, no wonder your editorials are a surprise to your friends! Harvey was amused. But my valiant effusions are launched from the office down town. Nonsense, the army officer persisted, I do not care where they are written they are inspired in this room, I believe in this chair. Johnston was looking for a box of cigars. I thought these could not be lost, he said, placing the Havanas before his guest. It was growing dark, and the fire had become the significant light in the library. Clouds of smole curled lazily above their heads. I wish you would not leave WashI want you to go to ington the Warrens with me, they made quite a point of your coming," Johnston said. At first Stacy way back In his chair seemed too comfortable to reply, then he leaned forward. It Is out of tne question, old man, I claim a social furlough when away from home. Tell me, Dick, the editor watched the rings of blue vapor as he spoke, "were you ever hard hit? If I understand you, no. But the question aroused his interest. Harvey, he continued, do you remember a picture that hangs in my room to the right as you enter? Johnston nodded, a look of genuine amusement showing in his eyes. It was copied from a rough drawing I made in war times. Stacy left his seat, and stood with his hack to y I thought I saw that the fire. face again; it was somewhat older and very much sadder. I was going to the Navy Department to see McNa.ry and passed her as I crossed the Avenue from Lafayette Square. The servant came in to light the gas. Many carriages rolled by outside, announcing the fact that the Secretary's home for the present had lost its Importance as the gathering place of fashion. Harvey watched his friend with InI shall Induce you creasing Interest. to remain over another day, he decided mentally, upon the chance of meeting this love of long ago, aud take you with me to the Warrens tonight." When Stacy was presented to Miss Clarke of Tennessee that evening, he was conscious of a sudden exhilaration. Of Tennessee? he repeated. The notes of low music filled the house, palms waved their graceful fronds from niches and archways, and brilliant women, and what is better, beautiful ones, moved from room to room. A good many years ago, Stacy said, I was much interested In a family named Gray; they lived twelve or fifteen miles from Memphis. The old gentlemans four sons, he went on ht To-da- And every Distressing Irritation of Skin and Scalp Instantly Relieved by a Bath with And a single anointing with CUTICURA, the great skin cure and purest of emollients. 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Rli',L?TNT Pills (Chocolate Coated) are anew, tastelesa, odourless, economical for the liquid CcTtcuBA Resolvent, as well as forall other blood puriflere snunumour cure celebrated Kith pm )s fqUivaljBUt to one teaapoonfui of Hquid Resolvent. Put up in P'"rket fa's. CO! tair.ng W doses, price, 24c. Ccticuea. Pills are alterative, anuscpt!c, t. nto, an I dusstive, and beyond question Urn purest, sweetest, most successful and economical blood and Uu purifiers, humour cures, and yet compounded. Qticura' The ''liOl So far as government borrowings Neither does the above list Include are an indication, says the New York loans Issued by the exchequer for Evening Post, the annual cost of the other than war purposes Boer war to Great Britain has been It will appear, therefore, that, disnearly double that of the wars against regarding the amount raised by inNapoleon, 100 years ago. In the creased taxation in this war or in the when England was Napoleonic contest, the Boer war has period fighting incessantly in almost every cost the British government an avercorner of the globe, and was in addiage of 57,000,000 per annum in loans, 1792-180- 2, tion subsidizing half a dozen continental states, the principal of the British an aver297,989,587 debt increased 29,789,000. age annual increase of Between 1802 and 1815, a period which covered the Spanish campaign, the American war and Waterloo, the debt an annual av323,386,041 increased erage of 24,875,000. Loans raised by the exchequer during the two years following the Boer war outbreak in October, 1899, foot up 114,000,000 They include the war loan of 1900, and two issues of 13,000,000 exchequer bonds in 60,000,000 consols in the same year; 11,000,000 exchequer bonds. 1901, and The above list does not include the temporary treasury bills issued in 1899 14.413,000 of -- the and 1900, or the same bills issued after the consols loan of 1901, and still outstanding. HIS TROUBLES ONLY Eoumeratloa of TrloU JUST BEGUN In Store far i average annual cost of to 29,900,000 per annum ie the Napoleonic contest. The much greater cost of supplies, ammunition, transportation and equipment, as compared with 1802, and thr (fact that there have been and are stli? more British soldiers undej arms in fcuth Africa than were commanded by Wellington in 1815, sufficiently account for the heavier outlay. It must, however, be remembered that the British war loans of the Napoleonic period were issued at very heavy discounts, being put out at prices as low as 60, and with Interest as high as 6 per cent, wk'reas the lowest price of the recent lcns has been 94 for a 2 per cent loan. against an 24,800,000 Uncharitable thoughts will the most charitable actions. deface hotel where we were staying and sallied forth in search of adventure. As he walked along the Rue de Ri-vit occurred to him that he much desired a copy of a certain American weekly. Noticing a kiosk on the next corner, he approached the proprietor. Naturally he supposed the man was a Frenchman, and racked his memory for enough French to make known his wants. But, sad to say, all he could think of were a few commonly used phrases. He tried one ortwo German expressions, but the man, in French, evidently explained that he could not understand. A ' couple of Italian expressions and a little stray Russian also failed. All thi3 time the man had listened patiently. Finally my friend gave it up, remarking in disgust to The newsmans himself, Oh, rats! face brightened immediately as he said In English: Say, mister, what the deuce do you want, anyway?1 The confusion of my dignified friend was intense as he listened to the remarks of the man. who used to sell papers on New Yorks Bowery." oli Moron The newly elected labor mayor of Hartford, Ignatius Sullivan, sat at the Men s banquet table of the Business Association of that city a few nights Simago, says the New York Times. He of one the speakers. was eon Ford glanced pitifully at the new official, and said: What a nerve Mayor Sullivan disimplays! Now that he is elected, he over. are Why, labors his all agines they have hardly begun. He has work and worry before him for the next two years that will wear him to skin and bones. He doesnt know what he is up against I have met but one man who showed more real grit Right after the explosion at my hotel, when the place was a wreck, I went into the restaurant It was strewn with broken glass and debris. People were and Tunning about with bloody facesa solisat corner the In clothes. torn I tary guest eating his luncheon. think he was a Hartford man. IEvery conone else was II Ie Mot New. He coolness. his gratulated him uponwho has faced danA Dunkirk man .claims to have inman said: has for me vented a system of wireless telegrager in every form. Death corned beef was phy, but as he has also discovered the I eating no terrors. secret of perpetual motion it is well hash whqu the explosion occurred. He ia Ihe only man I ever met not to get excited. whose perve was stronger than Mayor Sullivans. Oar Cottons In China The value of the cotton manufactures sold by the United States in the hBaUm Turned on Lljfht A man who not long agq made more Chinese empire last year was one-thiwas tellof our total exports of such comthan $1,000,000 in a steel dealNew York modities. , a- group of friends in a ing hotel the other day his experience In "A friend of The best way to win on a horse race Paris last summer. learned is to forget to take any money to the mine, said he, who is a statesman from Mashiugtou, left the poolroom with you. Newly-Electe- d panic-stricke- lima rd Secred Freoleots at Visitor Iuvede Hoqm of Ropresatattrefl How the doorkeepers of the House By Z. A. HOWRY. I Villages in all parte of Germany watchman. A council was called to still maintain night watchmen, who and the subject for disact as guardians of the community, deliberate, cussion was laid before the meeting. and carry when on duty a long lance, At first profound silence reigned. something of the nature of a halberd, Finally one of the members of the in their hand, as they nerambulate council rose and said he had heard of their beats during the long dark hours the of replacing human possibility of the night They also have a whisteeth by artificial ones; adding, that tle with thqpa, with which they pro- to best of his belief there was a claim to the inhabitants man in Breslau who undertook to do and to prowling men and beasts what this. He said he could not vouch for o clock it is. It is only a very few the truth of what he had heard, but years ago that the large cities dropped he really had been told that this was their night watchmen, but many of the case! A long discussion ensued, the smaller towns in the provinces with the result that the watchman still employ' their services. At a was told to go to Breslau to a new town in Posen, near the Silesian set of teeth. In due coursegetthe od frontier, one of these old worthies had man returned to the scene of his duceased to blow his whistle when the ties provided with the needful. The clock sounded the hour. The burger-meiste- r following nlyht the burgermeister sat could not comprehend the up to hear the result. To his astonishnegligence, and the delinquent was ment there was no sound of the whissummoned to his presence to account tle at 10 o'clock, nor at 11, nor even for it. At first he was at a loss what at midnight! The next morning be excuse to make, but on being pressed summoned the watchman, to whom he he declared that a few days before expressed his Indignation. You have his last remaining tooth had dropped got your teeth now, he said; why out, and that consequently he could do you not whistle as before?" In a produce no sound from his beloved voice of humility the old chapTeplied: whistle. Yes! I have got a new set of teeth, The burgermeister could think of but the doctor told me I was to put no remedy, nor could he punish the them in water overnight. $ $ Young Girls BEFORE LEAVE TAKING J not known before the young girls name. "The old people are dead, the daughter, Lucy Gray, is married, the family is scattered and the homestead sold." "And Miss Prentiss?" "Jean is here, in Washington, visiting the family of the member of Congress from our district He had He bent eagerly toward her. "Would you object to giving me her address? She gave it to him, and he left the Warrens that night thinking that at times it is well to follow the lead of an editor. some mistake. There must be I Jean this name, Prentiss said next morning, when Stacys card was brought to her. Below in the library Stacy was having a bad half hour. It was not a sound but an impression that made him turn his head; a lady stood in the doorway for a moment, then moved know no one by Tve found her! he exclaimed, bursting into Harveys sanctum. slowly across the space dividing them. The eyes he well remembered were looking again Into his own., My apology for coming, Miss Prentiss, he said, is that I am a man with a memory. And I, too, have not forgotten, CoL and she extended her hand Stacy, cordially to him. I have found her, he exclaimed an hour later, bursting into Harveys sanctum, and she is all I thought or hoped her to be! I have been thinking of the old times since I saw you, Jean Prentiss said to Stacy. She was very beautiful, her eyes sparkled like sunlight on a jewel, and her laugh was as spontaneous and merry as when she made the brightness of Gray farm. I, too, have been retrospecting, he replied, and there is one scene that will never leave my memory." He drew a yellow paper from his pocket and spepad it before her. This has been my talisman since I first saw you. Jeans color heightened as she bent over it; she saw a kneeling figure, a fair girlish face uplifted in supplication, and great wondrous eyes that looked an appeal, that carried a command. Below she read: X face to lose youth for. To occupy age with the dream of, To meet death with I could not be so Impressive now, she said, gazing sadly at her other self. This was the audacity of youth that had confronted no failure. That night she wrote to Lucy Gray Claire: I am coming home to be married; all the happiness of my life except this last has been shared with your people and I want to associate them now In Aa a postthis new era in my life. script she added: "Col. Stacy says that Isabel Clarke must be one of the wedding guests." OF POSTAL SLOW JOURNEY Had a Ten-Yea- re CARD Wandering It Wat Hailed. Mystery surrounds a faded and worn postal card received by S. Jarvis Adams & Co. of Etna street this city, in its wandering since it was mailed by the Isabella Furnace Company, Etna, Oct 28, 1891. The card was a notice of a shipment of a car load of foundry iron, and said that the iron had been shipped on that date. It is kept as a souvenir in the office of Since ten-ye- ar long-delay- Stacy seated himself In an easy chair. reminiscently, were in the Confederate army, hut he dispensed a lordly hospitality, and later when an order was issued to destroy his fine ancestral home we were able to prevent its execution. Isabel Clarke smiled brilliantly. The Grays are my dear friends," she exclaimed, "and I have often heard them tell of the time when Jean Prentiss dropped on her knees before the handsome young officer, and pleaded so eloquently with him that he revoked the Jrder to burn her guardians home. She glanced up into CoL Stacys face. 1 conclude you are the man! He bowed his head in assent "Tell me, he said Earnestly, "what has of the Grays, of Miss Prentiss? be-co- HOSPITAL SECRET. A, Nurse Pinsw-Ton- Says: ic of Efficiency. are able to carry in their memory the races of all entitled to admission to the floor is a question which would be puzzling if it were pondered on, says Jie Washington Star. That they really do not do this, but depend largely apon the sense of propriety which possesses the great throngs of visitors in the Capitol corridors, was strikingly illustrated recently. It was one minute to 12 oclock, and speaker Henderson had just made his way to the speakers chair preparatory to opening the session, when his attention was attracted to a stranger coming in at the door directly in front of him. The man had successfully passed the guards at the door and was sauntering down the center aisle gazing about complacently. The curious look of the speaker attracted the attention of Doorkeeper Will For-biand he hastened after the intrudMRS. KATE TAYLOR. er, who looked the part of an Mrs. Kate Taylor, a graduated He or a member of the senate. nurse of prominence, gives her ex- mustache, a silk wore an iron-grahat and a Prince Albert suit, besides perience with Peruna in aa open a prepossessing smile. When Forbis j letter. Her position In society had touched him on the arm and inquired 4 professional standing combine to who he was, he replied, Oh, just vis- 4 give special prominence to her oU iting, my boy, just visiting. J teranees. Well, thats all right, you are in the rethe pew, but wrong right church, HICAGO, ILL., 427 Monroe St As far as I have observed Peruna plied Forbis. "You will have to go was is the finest tonic any man or woman up in the gallery, and the visitor hustled out at a lively gait just as the can use who is weak from the after" effects of any serious illness. gavel fell. I have seen it used hi a number of Value of City Playground., convalescent cases, and have seen lev-erother tonics used, but I found that Playgrounds greatly lessen the Juvenile mischief that often runs into those who used Peruna had the quickest , crime. A noted lecturer says perma- relief. Peruna seems to restore vHsuVt nent playgrounds in cities are import- Increase health bodily vigor and renew ant moral helps and that the police de- and strength In a wonderfully short in London reported many time." MRS. KATE TAYLOR. partment In view of the great multitude of years ago that crime was largely rewomen children a chance suffering from some form of feby giving pressed to work off their surplus energy in male disease and yet unable to find soy Dr. Hartman, the renowned speplay. New York city made the same cure, cialist on female catarrhal diseases, discovery, and not only provides suffhis to direct the icient playgrounds for the schools, but treatment of willingness as many cases as make; is rapidly adding to the number of application to hm during the summer small parks and open spaces in crowd- months, without charge. Address Tho ed places. Play for children presents Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio. itself to sociologists in these times as a natural right, the disregard of Where Is Her Equal which runs up a heavy score against Extract from the parish. raglsUr of , a community. SL Louis SL Cuthbert, York, Eng.: Ann Grovea of Bromsgrove, in Worcestershire, died , 20 A WEEK AND EXPENSE' on Wednesday, the 29th October, 1788 to men with rig to introduce our Poultry goods. aged 5 years, at the Clifford! Tower, Send stp. Javelle Mtg Co., Dept D, Parsons, Kan. Peasholm green; in height 4 feet, round the breast 4 feet 2 inehes, round, Rrlgn of Terror for th Cxar. 4 feet 6 Inches, round each It is invariably the history of revo- the 18hips inches, weight 16 stone!. She wae leg that lutions, because it is natural law, In SL Cifthberts churchyard, ' buried in exact proportion as a nation has Peasholm. Stray Stories. ; been long oppressed with arbitrary subrule and kept in ignorance and Mother Gray'. Sweet Powder is its to that degree jection erf Successfully need t anarchistic. in the Childrens Hqf and violent revolt Bad of the Feverishness, That is the reason I reign of terror and the bloodshed of orders, move and Worm. Destroy the for time If commune. the the all druggist., 25ft revolution in Russia has come it will, dress Allen S. Olmttec '.V as a necessary result of the ages of vs overturn In seismic a such be th liN ( Distilleries despotism, as will make the whole world stand There are 8,745 distiller United States, annually prodir aghast 530,599 gallons of alcoholic t Mr., Wln.low. Soothing: total cost of aglig thflajLlL InFor children teething, softens the gums, reduces flammation, allays palu, cures wind coUo. 20e a bottle. Ions of whisky annually bond in the United States, in A Fortunate Prince, loss by evaporation,' interest, King Charles of Roumania, horn Insurance, etc., is estimated at of April 20, 1839, was elected prince K $14,000,000 a year. Roumania April 20, 1866. More fortunate than his elder brother, Prince To Cure a Cold in One C Ta Leopold of Hohenzollern, whose elec- Take Laxative Bromo Quinine tion to the Spanish throne had to be druggists refund money If it fails tOv.. declared of no effect, in spite of which Got the Eaogh n His Fat', war, he it caused the Franco-PrussiaWhen a Scots schoolmaster ( has reigned wisely and prosperously the temple of learning he read i years. for thirty-siblackboard the touching legend: teacher is a donkey." The put Plso's Cure for Consumption 1 an Infallible medicine for coughs and colds. N. W . SmuLi pected there would be a combic. ' Ocean Grove, N. J.. Peb. 17, 1900. clone and earthquake, but the sophlc pedagogue contented . ht Syrian Colas In Brasil. with adding the word driver te ' James W. OBannon, chief yeoman legend and opened the school of the United States steamship Atlan- prayer as usual. ta, recently found an old Syrian coin in Perambuco, Brazil. It is of sliver, Halls Catarrh Cura about the size of an English shilling Price, 75a Ia taken internally. with a raised kings head on one side, and on the other the figure of a womEditor. I an sitting spinning with a distaff in the of editor The her right hand. Upon her left and in Muscotah, Kan., by the side of her chair ia a horn of esting opportunity plenty. announ The inscription each side of the woman la in old Greek text, and trans- the wife of the boy on Sunday, lated is "Demetrius Soter, King. will pie In place of a date," writes Mr. vertisers we shall continue cannot which marks are OBannon, in be perfectly translated by any' Greek ablest weekliesat the scholar I have consulted, but most all slonal district agree that these marks indicate the eighth year of the kings reign. If this be the case the coin is somewhat older than the Christian era, for King Demetrius ruled Syria before Christ was born. y a! the company. The company ordered a carload of foundry iron from the Isabella company a few days prior to the date of the card, and waited several days for a notice of the receipt of the order and the shipment of the material. None came, but instead the carload of iron was soon in the yards ready for delivery to S. Jarvis Adams & Co. It was found that the card had been sent, but not until last week was anything heard of iL April 4, 1902, among the mail of the company in this city came a postal card so faded and worn that its message was scarcely discernible. Where the card had spent the ten years in traveling Its five miles of distance is a mystery, as no other postmarks are on it to indicate that it went far out of its course' Indianapolis News. mnmmm BUT WRONG PEW fit Hun. Never Kate Alone- - Senator Hanna of Ohio is one of the most remarkable men in congress. He is sometimes gruff in his manner and might easily give the Impression that he is a hard man to enter into convex satlon with. While he is one of the busiest men in the world, he always finds time to listen to persons who beg his ear. Senator Hanna has one peculiarity He never that stands eats alone. If he is not with some one he invariably enters Into conversation with the waiter or some one at another table. He is a lover of good things. Every time a ban lays aa egg tbs rooster proceeds to crack his lungs bragging about it. Baltimore News. 1 To-da- y? Globe-Democr- A t n x jjj Wide-Awa- d Most Prominent English Authors. 'Five literary Englishmen are named as the proper recipients of titles in this, King Edwards coronation year Mr. John Morley, Mr. Thomas Hardy, Mr. Herbert Spencer, Mr. Meredith and Mr. Swinburne. It Is doubtful if any titles will be conferred. Crops' CURES EYES S&uotfJ - t 6RANULATI0N, IKFLAHHATIOI BSISHTENI DULL CYIS,CUA. 50AT BDUGOISTSt 0HICIANS MURINE EYE REMEDYXm WHY LIVE A LOSE? BUdrr7,odi photo for ift. fieart A Hand, Kaiuee A MONTH' ALL MEDICINES FREE FOR DISEASES. 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