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Show EDICTS OP FASHION LATEST MODES, AS DECREED BY society Leaders. Waifs. With faces 'jlined too soon with cars They glide along the street, A scared look In the eyes that stars Into the eyes they meet, A s If they would apologize For bringing to the earth The discord of their sobs and sighs That chill the soul of mirth. Those little faces lined with care; Those little shoeless feet That shiver In the frosty air: Those wistful eyes I meet They haunt me through the busy day And come to me at night 'When home I watch my own at play. So glad of heart and bright. Thou, Father of the fatherless. Watch 9er them all the way. Through all lifes perils guide and bless The little ones, we pray. Who early face the orphans woe And want while others waste. The world Is kind at heart but oh! So thoughtless in its haste. My needs are small; I ask not wealth. And less care I for fame. The one rich boon I crave Is health And strength of mind and frame. That I with deeds of love may gem The childhood of my own, them And stand between the world and TUI they can stand alone W. L. Sanford In Dallas News. Won His Way to Fortune. Once there was a boy of the name of Hugh McGowan, who went to Kansas City in search of work. He found this at the stables of the street car company,' and the work consisted largely in currying mules. The currying of mules is 'not an attractive vocation, hut Hugh never grumbled, and die sent them out to work looking more flt than they ever had in all the history of rapid transit in Kansas City. He curried those mules so faithfully that now he does not have to curry mules any more. McGowan is now a rich man, with millions of dollars under his control. He had reached the age of 40 before he had earned so much as $100 a month. No man can rise to fame by the mere process of currying mules, but if this duty fall to his lot he can do it so well as to show what is in him. Thus did McGowan; he attracted the attention of his superiors and was promoted to the driving of a car. Then he got on the police force; all stations humble enough. After a while the agent of a big concern visited Kansas City and while there sought to find a suitable man to represent his concern. McGowan was chosen, not merely because he had curried mules well, but that he had gone Into every field inspired always by the motive to do the best he could. He is now 43 years of age, a solid citizen, with a long bank account, and a reputation that is of far greater value than any great sum of money. -- Spiders That Box the Compass. If you discover you are lost during the holidays on some lonely country road, first stop and pull yourself together. The next step is to fix the points of the compass. When that Is done you will be able to go in the general direction you wish. Find a mature tree which stands apart from its fellows; even if it is only slightly separated it will do. The bark of this tree will be hardier, drier, and lighter in color on the south side. On the north it will be darker, and often at the roots it will have a clump of mould or moss. On the south side of all evergreen-tree- s gum which oozes from wounds or knotholes will be hard and amber-coloreon the north this gum is softer, gets covered with dust, and is of a dirty grey. Hard-wootrees the oak, ash, elms, hickories, and so forth have moss and mould on the north. Leaves are smaller, tougher, lighter in color, and with darker veins on the south; on the north they are longer, of darker green, and with lighter veins. Spiders build on the south side. Cedars bend their tips to the south. Any sawed or cut stump will give you the south side. The heart of the stump is thus nearer to the north side. Stones are bare on the south side, and, if they have moss at all, it will be on the north side. d Filipino Boys Kites. Just now as we came in off the street we saw a Filipino boy, about 8 years old, flying a feather for a kite, writes a tourist in the Manila Justtcia. The feather was not more than two Inches long, and an inch wide at the flaring end. He bad thread tied to it in two places. Of course the feather did not fly much, but the boy amused himself with it Tor more than five minutes that we watched him. There were no other children about, and he never said a word. Never complained when it did not fly, or expressed any exclamations of joy when it did. These Filipino boys will fly most anything. A leaf out of a book, a , leaf of a tree, a piece of newspaper, a beetle or a bee a locust or a bird. For making and flying graceful, artistic and bird-likkites our home boys are simply not in it with the Filipinos boys. Their best flying kites reach a .great height, and the way they sail about in the air, one would have to observe closely to not mistake them for a large bird. It is not unusual to see several of these kites in the same locality, and they resemble soaring hawks looking for prey. e Attractive Outing Costumes of Coarse-Graine- d White Mohair Traveler Telia of New Way to Cook Aznara-gu- three wafers will thus be left untouched on the other side, and after yc have made it appear that there are no wafers on either side, you may, to all appearance, show three on eacn. When turning the knife you must, as you lift it up, turn it completeij s. New Way to Cook Asparagus. One of those globe trotters who is fond of good living has just returned round with your finger and thumb, sc as always to bring the same side and is bubbling over with culinary secrets discovered in many lands. For one thing, she has a new way of cookDolls Furniture. ing asparagus, which she says is deI wonder how many of our little licious, and which at any rate is a readers have ever made dolls furni- change from the method now in vogue ture out of corks if not, try it. Col- in the average household, says the lect as many corks and bungs as Philadelphia Telegraph. This she you can, and get a few ounces of picked up in Poland. The Poles, she colored beads, all one size, with two says, boll the stalk as we do, but when or three dozen big ones, a packet of placed on the plate Veady to be served pins, and you have all you want ex- crumbs of toast that have been soakcept a small skein of wool. Slice up ed in butter are sprinkled over the the corks, crosswise, to make the green ends of the vegetables. Over seats of the chairs and table tops; this the melted butter is poured. The the bungs will do for the sofa seats. toast crumbs are an appetizing variSlip half a dozen of the beads on q ety to .the dish. , pin, putting a big one first of all, I 4 " ' and dig the points into the slices Coats for Autumn. of cork to make the chair legs. The The; floats of . al the costumes dechair and sofa backs are made with signed for , early autumn are made plain pins, and the wool laced across long enough 'to coine more than half them from side to side. If you want way down thei fkrt, and the short the furniture to be very grand the jacket of last year and the year becork may be painted with enamel, or fore is quite but of date. And yet, to show how capricious is fashion, gilded. I know a little girl who spends an immensely smart little coat is on many happy hours fixing furniture for the old fashioned reefer style, double-breaste- d and curved in at the sides. a very ordinary little dolls house made of a dry goods box, with a par- After all, the fashion which remains tition half way up, fixing thus two as many styles come and go, is to pay more and more attention to the quesstcries to the tiny house. tion of which style is becoming to the Man. Dont Be a Second-clas- s especial individual who is to wear it, and from all present Indications the You can hardly imagine a hoy saying: "I am going to he a second- - autumn and winter will not show any class man. I dont want to be first-clas- s more definitely marked lines than did and get the good jobs, the high last year. Harpers Bazar. Second-clas- s pay. jobs are good Effective Fashion Note. Such a boy would enough for me. An effective examp.e of the fashbe regarded as lacking in good sense, if not in sanity. You can get to be a ionable blue and green idea was a second-clas- s man, however, by not costume of green taffeta almost hidden by dark blue voile. On the skirt s one. Thoutrying to be a sands do that all the time, so tha; there were broad vertical double folds second-clas- s men are a drug on the of the voile fastened at one side only, so that the slightest movement market, remarks Success. Second-clas- s things are only wanted showed lines of green. The blouse when first-clas- s cant be had. You was built in the same way, and had wear first-clas- s clothes If you can pay a tiny niching of green point desprit at throat and sleeves. The green in for them, eat first-clas-s butter, flrst-c'awas so soft, although meat and first-clas-s bread; or, this costume light in tone, that it blended most if you dont, you wish you could. Second-class men are no more wanted harmoniously with the blue. than any other second-clas- s commodAn Attractive Outing Costume. ity. They are taken and used when One of the special features of the the better article is scarce or is too for the occasion. For newest frocks is the stitching in a work that really amounts to anything, contrasting color. Especially smart are the frocks composed of materials first-clas-s men are wanted. in two colors, the stitching of each matching the coloring of the other. Interesting Experiments. A simple experiment that many This gown especially designed for sea- boys have tried is the following: Fill a tumbler with water, and on it place a sheet of paper. Place one hand on the paper and then invert the glass. Remove the hand from the paper and the water will not fall first-clas- ss high-price- d out Another interesting experiment is thus described: Heat a piece of thick brown paper before the fire. Place it on the table and rub it with a clothes brush for half a minute. Then sail the piece of brown paper over some small, light body, such as a little sheet of blotting paper, and the light body will jump in the most excited manner. If the brown paper is held over somebodys head the hairs will immediately stand straight up. of the collar in turn appears to be continued to form the vestee. All the edges of the blouse as well as the pleat which broadens the shoulders, running from there to the belt, are piped with dark blue mohair, and this piping is repeated upon the narrow flat flounces of the skirt many other occasions, is composed of white mohair, a favor- coarse-graine- d ite among the seasons fabrics. The sailor collar of dark blue mohair is stitched in white Corticelli stitching silk, Size D, and is finished with a strap of white, mohair also stitched a dark blue shade of the silk exactly matching the collar, which is prolonged to form a tab. The strap edge A Bird That Cannot Fly. Who knows of a bird that cannot fly? Even a tame goose can fly, though very awkwardly. But I know of one, the auk, who cannot fly at all, for his wings are too short, and the poor fellows legs are so short and are set so far back that he can hardly walk. How, then, does he get about and find his food? An old Irish sailor, nine years ago, explained that all their walkin was done by swimmin. Their broad webbed feet are good oars, and their short wings are useful paddles. They get over the ground by swimmin', which is the best way for thim, deein th ground where they live is mostly wather. Run-a-Mil- In run-- a mile the boys count out and It hides his eyes. He Is then touched by one boy, who immediately conceals himself with the others. When it has counted 100 or so he starts out to find the .toucher." Mysterious Wafers. Each player, when discovered, steps In the presence of your company from his hiding place, but offers no place on each side of a table knife information as to the . whereabouts three wafers. Take the knife by the of the toucher unless, indeed, he handle and turn it over several times be that same, in which case the exto show that the wafers are all on. citing race to' home occurs, and Request one of the party to take a it gets there first he may set if any one from wafer side of the blade, turn task he for the toucher to the knife over two or three times. perform, pleases even to the running of a And there will seem to be only two mile. But it is safe to assume that on wafers each side; take oft another this penalty is seldom exacted or wafer, turn the knife as before, and it paid. will appear as if only one wafer was on each side; take the third wafer How Old Is the Earth? off, and again turn the knife dexterSir Archibald Geikie, In a recent ously twice or thrice, and It will ap- address in London, said that figuring pear as if all the wafers bad disap- from the stratified rocks of the earths peared from each side. Next turn the crust may range from a minimum of knife once or twice more, and three 73.000.- 000 years up to a maximum of wafers will appear on each side, as 680.000.- 000 years. Dana on the same at the first. In performing the trick basis figures that the earths crust use wafers all of one size and color. is 48,000,000 years while Alfred RusAnd always have one side of the knife sel Wallace figures that the earths uppermost, so that the wafers may crust has been forming for 28,000,000 ibe taken one by one from that side; years. The gown on the left is of white silk, covered with bouquets of roses with their green leaves. The skirt, gathered slightly over the hips, is finished with a gathered flounce, Which Is edged with a ruching of pink mousseline de sole and headed by a band of ecru lace insertion. The bolero is trimmed at the top with bands of the lace, and bordered With the pink ruching. The plaited blouse is of white mousseline de sole, and the collar and girdle are of pink panne, the collar trimmed with straps of the lace. The PRACTICAL INVENTIONS AND COVERIES OF BENEFIT. Japanese Furniture. A convenient and' useful piece of furniture is a Japanese settle. The words do not seem to blend well, for no one would connect a settle with anything Japanese, but this is surely In settle shape, with its tall, straight back. It is upholstered with Japanese mattng, has a frame of the colored bamboo and the seat is also made of this. The seat Is made to raise, for the lower part of the settle Is a shirt waist box. The settle costs $25. U makes an excellent hall seat for a sum mer house, and in the box may bt stored wraps, sweaters and need to be kept always on hand. nips-whic- DIS- Simple Device That Will Be a Boon to Women on Shopping Trips Elevator for Cinder Pits A Plant Pro- tector. Affords Protection for Plants. As every gardener knows, a scorching sun is liable to wither, plants and thus cause thousands of dollars worth of damage, which might be averted were the plants protected during the hottest hours of the day. To provide this shade in a convenient and cheap form is the task which Joseph W. h .Advance Styles In Skirts. The most marked features of the skirts of the senson are the front Ross of Alma, 111., set himsell, and our picture shows the result of his efforts. It consist of a hood made up of paper or thin wood folded to the proper shape, the folds being secured by a double rivet, through which is inserted the wire bail on which the guard is mounted. In order that the protecting hood may be adjusted in several positions a notched flap is secured to the top at right angles to the bail, the flap being folded down flat when it is desired to tilt the guard on the support posts of the bail. The proby overlapping pieces, whlcn being tectors can be folded into small space continued for the shaped flounces for shipment, and it requires but a which border the edge. The upper short time to insert the ball in the flounce is headed by thiee rows of eyelets and force the ends of the wire the fancy monair braid sc much liked into the earth on either side of the at present Though rather of the fan- plant. The hood may then be lowtailor-mad- e order, the finish ered, raised or tilted at will, to shade cy throughout is of the most severe tail- or protect one side of the plant, or, or type, all edges being stitched with as may be frequently desired, to allow the sun to strike the plants while Corticelli stitching silk in self color. protecting them from the wind. At night the hood can be lowered to the After a Journey. If ever you have been traveling any ground to shut out the moths which distance on the cars, dont wash you are in the habit of depositing their face in cold water the moment you eggs on the young plants after dark. reach a wash stand. If you want to Mica Springs. remove all the traces of dust and The American Machinist, of recent smoke, rub your face well with cold Mr. W. C. Leland, a macream or vaseline, and wipe off on date says: a dry towel, says the Washington chinist of Brooklyn, referring to our Star. The towel, after wiping, will inquiry some time ago for a spring show you where the dust has gone. made of a substance whicn would not Then you may wash your face in hot be affected by beat, sends us some water, if you will. There is nothing pieces of mica arranged to act as a like hoff water for the complexion. It fiat spring, and he says that a mica keeps it not only clean, but clear. spring continues to act as a spring However, its habitual use ia not ad- when exposed to very high temperatures. A specimen he sends us acts vised. as a spring waen held in a gas flame and continues to so act for a considParasol Pointers. A plain white sunshade is useful and erable time at least as long as our patience has held out to test it Of pretty. umbrellas are, as usual course, as many layers of mica may be 'superposed as is necessary to get in evidence. Grotesque handles are not seen to the desired thickness and for experimental purposes at least we would any great extent. A plain lace over a silk foundation imagine that such a spring may be quite useful. is the usual thing. and are the Always quaint pretty Carrier for the Umbrella. dainty little carriage shades. The woman who thought out the InStrapped parasols are not a happy vention shown in the accompanying idea, the effect being clumsy. These delicately enameled novelties drawing has evidently either been shopping herself and attempted to are chosen to match the dress A jeweled network over a fine crys- hang on the supporting strap of a street car with- - her arms full of buntal ball forms a stunning handle. Grass linen ones are the top of the dles and an umbrella in addition, or vogue when carried with rigs. Tucks figure. Either a cluster to form a border or in an all over scheme. Clever little Dresden figures form attractive handles if a picture dress is to be worn. Very lovely are those terminating in the shape of a rosebud, a lily or other flower that lends itself. Elderly women especially appreciate their capability of being tilted exactly right, thanks to the joint. Detachable covers may be admirable, but they seem to us about as sensible as detachable hat trimmings. A lace or embroidery medallion may be applied to each gore. This is usually done that the parasol may be really a part of a costume. Invention of a Chicago Woman. else has seen some other women make an effort to perform the feat. As a practical solution of the question of what to do with the umbrella when not in use and both hands are wanted for some other purpose this invention seems complete, and as its use eliminates the possibility of losing an umbrella by laying it on 'a counter when shopping it will probably be considered a good investment by ladles who have met with this misfortune. The device consists of a single piece of leather, cut to form a straight hanger, with two staps projecting from either side to clasp the umbrella at about Its thickest part The fasterieg devices may be either buckles or snap buttons, though the latter are preferred. The hanger may be attached to the belt by the eyelet at the upper end, which is formed of another snap button secured in the proper place to allow the point of the strap to be folded hack on itself. The hanger adds no perceptible weight to the costume, and it is very easy to detach the umbrella should it be needed in a hurry. Eva M. Bowyer of Chicago, 111., is the inventor of this practical novelty. linen-colore- Two Boys Who Will Prosper. Arthur W. Barker, Marysville, Kas., has completed his eleventh winter term of school. Last year he paid his tuition in the Modern Normal Collego, which is eight dollars for a term of ten weeks, by sweeping and building fires. He did the same this year. Arthur is right tackle in the Modern Normal College Football team. Fred C. Boston, and a boy friend of Wheeling, W, Va., have a shop. They call themselves the Junior Roycrof-ters- , after the Roycrofters of East Aurora, N. Y. The boy's make odd furniture, employing scroll sawing and pyrography. They have eight dollars In their treasury, and have an order for. six dollars worth of furniture. They got nine dollars for a table they recently made. PROGRESS OF SCIENCE d sleeves are finished at the elbow with deep ruffles of the material over tight undersleeves, also of the silk, trimmed with the insertion. The other gown is of ' beautiful striped silk, a stripe of white watered silk alternating with a stripe of china silk, the stripes separated by a narrow line of fine black figures. The hip yoke and front panel, cut in one piece, are of beautiful white lae- - bordered' with a black embroidery. This lace and embroidery forms the Heading to the flounce, which is narrow in front, In the bak e to zero in this way. The remedy Is to break up the electric continuity of the piping system by insulating Joints. A single insulating joint will stop more current in the piping system thaa many thousand dollars worth of copper laid in multiple with it. and 20 or 30 properly distributed Insulating joints will reduce the current in a pipe line more than an almost infinite amount of copper will do, The work to be done Is on the piping system. The damage comet from the trolley system. The question as to who shall do the work 1b, of course, one of some controversy, and, in fact, the Installation of the insulating joints can be, and often is, checkmated by the pipe company, which will not allow the electric company to touch its system in any way, shapa or form. AN IOWA MANl the Right Thing Right Time, Discovers I w Mr. E. Bayre, official government meteorological repoiter, maiding t(L Iowa, was a very ck man fro kidneys. Bayre was prostutL. the Sommer of 1898, and almost all endeavors to check proved of no avail; just at tbs dT point of kidney trouble he found that cured him. It was in a Ut box and LOOKED LIKE Blchmr Oauflhte THI- S- Pan Aianey I -- - r ' Elevator for Cinder Pits. Anyone who has ever watched the men shoveling hot ashes out of the cinder pits where the fire boxes of enare dumped after each gines trip of the road can readily understand the importance of the invention by William Robertson of Chicago, illustrated below. The ashes must first be cooled by thoroughly wetting with water, which makes them heavy to handle, and on a hot day in summer the heat in the pit is sufficient to cause actual suffering among the men who are called upon to perform this disagreeable task. The object of this invention is to provide an apparatus which can be easily installed and adapted to convey the cinders from the pit and discharge them into large cars for transportation to the ordinary deposit. The elevator consists of a cable car running on an inclined track, with a hydraulic or compressed air cylinder for hauling in the cable and pulling the car up the incline. When the car reaches a point directly above the receiving car an automatic trip opens the floor and discharges the contents. The elevator is controlled by a valve, which is turned in one direction to admit compressed air or water back of the piston, driving It downward and pulling on the cable until the car is lifted to the proper height When the dumping process is completed the valve is reversed to allow the fluid trTfrrv ( I If you have any kidney or bladder and want to be cured, cut out this caJJ send to us with your name and add, plainly written, we will mail youA FREE THIS TRIAL, COUPON good for s free trial of DOAtN KIDNEY FILLS, a modem kldan specific for Backache, Khoumam Faina, Urinary Disorder, Dlabot. Droppy, and all Ills of the Kldan, and Bladder. CO., Buffalo, R. f. GAVE WIFE A SURPRISE, A Husband Used Official Signaturs J stead of Hubby. j The wife of a Philadelphian who a man of importance in the affair. 3 an insurance corporation with a prij perous local branch vent on a ji' Mrs- sure trip through the West not km.1 writes: ago. That he was too busy to n bad with her she knew. But she dislikit tort 0a even the temporary separation a! much that she made him promise have ta write daily. For a week, each tetter vellaBd from home was filled with genia U accounts of his troubles with th hat catai cook, the tradesman, and other bon1 0ke P hold matters that generally give cos' tleven y Bred by cern to a man left to shift for bl Pei self. She found the letters dellghtft take tut now substitutes for the good fellow vh prals I Bouscb. always signed Hubby at the bottoa The eighth day away, she opened k MisaP letter, which lovingly began My D' was a b Wife, as usual, and read on until tk bottom, where she was amazed to th the foUowing: Very respectfully, U ryn H "Assistant BUSINESS - E Superintendent COLLEGE. Fall opening September 1st. We trol the Ellis Cabinet By stem of bo1 keeping and the Gregg system of ihm hand. They are the best. Visit m Ashes of Hot the a Thing Shoveling Past jhe Templeton and make inqulris1 or air to escape from the cylinder, about us from the business, profession!1 when the car falls of its own accord and educational men of the city. It! back into the pit to receive its next lead, others follow, Salt Lake Busloes - load. College. Not Hopeful of Success. The minister of a rural parlst, h Scotland, having neglected to pray to! rain in time of drought, a deputatks! was appointed to wait upon him tai remonstrate with him.pn the subject After hearing what they had to say k replied, Weel, weel, Ill pray for nil to please ye, but the feint a drap ysl get till the change o the moon." Popular Science. . In McClures Magazine, Vol. XVIII, No. 3, is an account of explorations in and around the Great Pyramid of Egypt. Is it true, the explorer asks his Arab guide, that the passage into the pyramid points straight to the North Star? I had a caprice to test this thing that I had r.ad in books. So I clambered up, then down into the hole. We did not go far, only about twenty feet, but that was far enough. Looking up the passage slope I could see the north star lnthe very middle of the square. I was satis- No need to fear sudden attacks of choln infantum, dysentery, diarrhoea, sunns complaint of any sort it you havs St Fowlers Extract of Wild otrawbsnyk the medicine chest. fied. When the pyramid was built, about four thousand years ago, the bright star Alpha Draconis, at its lower shone directly down the Since that time the passageway. precessional motion has carried the pole star of those days far away from the North Pole of the heavens and thus brought another star Polaris, our pole star near to it. But our pole star does not shine down this passageway, though it can be seen, of course, from any hole looking toward the north. The'explorer was at least three thousand years too late in hl3 verification of the science of the Egyptian priests. Popular science, much diluted, had made him far too easy to satisfy. There is a moral to this fable which every one can draw. Screen to Protect the Face. The discomfort occasioned by the hair falling on the face as It is being cut from the head by the barber is an unpleasant experience, which the majority of men aie called upon to pass through at frequent intervals, and it has occurred to a German inventor that the annoyance could easily be done away with by providing some sort of a face screen to catch the cutr tings as they are clipped from the head. How the idea has been carried out is shown In the accompanying drawing, the device consisting of screen to protect the face, togethei with a trough to prevent the hair from falling on the clothing. The device is preferably transparent, in order thai the customers view may not. be ob structed, and It may he made out oi celluloid, gelatin paper, waxed linen or glass. The upper edge of the screen is adapted to flt snugly around the forehead, for the purpose of preventing anything from passing underneath, and this enables It to be used In shampooing the hair, to catch the water and lather which might other-wis-e run uown the face. The prin-cipadvantage of this arrangement in To Preserve Buried Pipes. practical use is the greater freedom it The Electrical Review of a recent gives the barber in his work, thus date, in an editorial on Electrolysis The time is beginning to a. says: rive when reckoning of a gigantic character is to be had between electric street railway companies those who employ buried piping various purposes. It then, after brief ly reciting the history of the trouble and the efforts made to avoid or overcome the tendency of the electric rent to divide or leave the paths pared for Its return, and the consequent corrosion of the water and gas pipes sought for conductors, points out the remedy. It says: The rent In the pipe system can, by means of Increasing the ground return, diminished to any quantity desired, to the r limit of the financial ability saving time for his customer and him of the corporation controlling the self. The inventor is Maximilian Galuation, but it can never be reduced ley of Hanover, Germany. al Wheat Heavy This Year, Wheat Is weighing heavy fib year, said the owner of a steu thrasher, who was buying some belt ing for his machine. I have bsn central thrashing for farmers in for two weeks now, and have der guessed every batch of whstt.J have handled. Wheat in the fiqtd til fool the experts this year. The suni Is short, but the heads are long Itoj large, and the grain is very Kill In the territory I cover the estimih of the crop will nit equal the product by considerable. 1 would add at leak 20 per cent to the official estimate,". I do not believe Plso's Cure for Oounsylto has an equal for coughs and colds. Jos 1 Bona, Trinity Springs. Ind., Feb. it. IMt I 1 Woman and the Hairpin. A close student of woman has oot-- lected a few uses to which she cu turn a hairpin: Pick a lock, as a bk j ton hoolc, draw out a nail, do up i baby, aee if a joint Is done, fastest door, repair a baby carriage, pat up I curtain, cut a pie, rake a fire, msktij fish hook, make a fork, regulate I range, stir hatter, whip cream, a cake, shovel bonbons, doctor an auto mobile, tighten windows, peel an ip j pie, wake up a cat, beat an egg, sent as a toothpick. But the most preciou j purpose of all lend it to her husbui j to clean out his pipe. , and Stops the thoughCold Works Off the Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. FrwsS Relio of Chickamauga. 0 Major William H. Lambert of m&ntown. Pa., has in his library piece of a tin trunk five feet in and 18 inches in diameter, taken fn the battlefield of Chickamauga. TM are eleven pieces of metal in it, shot fired during the terrible struC there. The shot vary in size from ordinary riflejbullet to a ; j ' j big ball. Terrible plagues, those itching, pests disease, of the Skin. Put an end to Doan's Omtment cares. At any drug 1 a-- Is Erecting Fine Drinking Fountai B. Duke, president of th bacco trusthas begun the erectk I of what he expect! b Raritgn, N. James J, be the finest public drinking fountJ in America. It is to be located ontt extensive preserves, a few miles t J Plainfield, and will cost about a bronze statue which Mr. I purchased in Italy for $25,000. $80-wi- Mrt. Winslow ft nothing Hyrop For children teething, softens tlie Kum, red0. collce th pin, cures wind Indian Hailstones. Hailstones nearly three pound 7 weight fell during a recent stcrJS t Jessore, in Bengal. Metal vm ' roofs were perforated, cattle male trees beaten down and a man ItL outright by the downfall. flammation, allays |