The "Way tm Inn. W11. I think that I would sit there) deliberately, as yoa did, And say I didn't kaow a simple thing -'like that! The ioea! It's perfectly ridiculousl" a would-be-smart young lady -declared to a natron with whom she was on very inti mate terms. "What would you do, my dear?" said the other. "Do?" was the reply. "I would keep (till if I didn't know, and not frankly confess my ignorance. "Well, that's where you and I differ," said the elder lady. "I never expect to see the time when I will be too old or too wise to learn some new thing every day. I think, of all the follies in life, the most foolish folly is to think one should know everything. I have frequently heard elderly men, with a great reputation for wisdom, declare that they often felt humiliated when they realized how little . they knew. I assure you, my dear, that if your life is spared until you are three quarters of a century old,' you will often find yourself covered with , humility at the thinss you don't know. The wisest way is to learn early in life that no hu man being can know everything; there fore, never be too silly or too proud to ask what you wish to know, and frankly to confess yonr ignorance of things with which you are not familiar. No sensible person will respect you less for it, and wise people will value your opinion much more when they find that your ut terances are based upon actual knowl edge, and that you are not afraid or ashamed to admit that you do not know." New York Ledger. Waters Denser Than the lead Sea. A wonderful lake named Alia Paakai has been discovered on the Hawaiian islands. The waters are more salt than those of the Dead sea. Samples of the water have been analyzed in the labora tory of Oahn college, with results of pe culiar as well as scientific isterest. The water, which in dry weather deposits salt abundantly, is of course saturated brine, yet differs essentially from the brine obtained by evaporation to satura tion of ordinary sea water. The differ ence is strikingly shown by merely mix ing the two clear fluids, when a copious deposit immediately forms of sulphurate of lime, so that the mixture almost so lidifies. The sea water contains sulphate of magnesia in abundance, but scarcely any lime, while the salt lake waters con tain chloride of calcium, lime salt, with only a trace of sulphate. In composition the water of Alia ap proaches closely to that of the Dead sea. The specific gravity of the water, even at a temperature of 80 degs. Fahrenheit, is 1.256; at standard temperature it would of coarse .be higher. The water of the Dead sea is considerably lighter, its specific gravity having been found by different observers to range from 1.13 (Lynch) to 1.2400 (Lavoisier). The most remarkable peculiarity of the water is the excessive quantity of the lime it car ties. This should give it peculiar med ical, virtues. Cor. Cincinnati Times Star. 1 Typical New York Xlier. ' A sunken eyed old man whom I meet very night that I stroll op Fifth avenue ome where Between Washington square wad Twenty-third street I must have known a good fifteen years. He lives in a garret within a stone's throw of the square, and is the owner of much val uable property. In the early days of oar acquaintanceship I used to encounter him strolling in the park munching a French roll, crumb by cramb. This was his breakfast. If he eats another meal His probably of the same order. His dress is that of a vagrant, but his con versation is that of an educated man. He is especially happy in recounting reminiscences of the New York of two generations ago, ana uas traveled a couple of miles at a time with me to point out vanished landmarks in which I happened to be interested. I won his regard early by giving him car fare after each of these jaunts. - He pouched the money and walked back. This man is a true miser, but not a beggar, though he does not scruple to misappropriate my car far. New York Cor. Pittsburg .Bulletin. Where He Belonged. A clergyman not long since observed a horse jockey trying to take in a 'simple gentleman by imposing upon him a broken winued horse for a sound one. The parson, taking the gentleman aside. told him to be cautious of the person he was dealing with. The gentleman de clined the purchase, and the jockey, quite nettled, observed, "Parson, I had much rather hear you preach than to see ; yon privately interfere in bargains be tween man and man in this way." "Well," replied the parson, "if yon had been f(Wre you ought to have been last Sunday yon might have heard me preach." "Where was that?" inquired the jockey, t'ln the state prison," re turned the clergyman. San Francisco Argonaut. A Blow to Enthusiasm. The desire to volunteer evidenced dur ing the Chilian excitement recalled the story in a naval wardroom of a certain the big Cuba trouble of a dozen or fifteen years ago broke out. Thirsty for battle -and glory, he cabled his services to the proper authorities. He learned nothing from his action till the next pay day, when no found that the amount of the cable tolL which in his enthusiasm he had neglect ed to pay, was deducted from his check. Sew York Times. The Accidental DlsrVarge of a Pan. A capital pun may arise by pure acci dent, as recorded in Backe's ."Book of Table Talk." A Mr. Alexander Gun was dismissed from a post in the cus toms at Edinburgh, for circulating some raise rumor. The dismissal is said to have been thus noted in the customs bookB at the time, "A. Gun discharged for making a false report." The ruby is the most expensive of all stones. They vary from $100 to $7,000 per stone. The finest pair of diamonds are worth $13,000.' Single stones range1 from $1,000 to $3,000. KEEPING BOARDERS. The Boarding House Woman's Side of a Much Mooted Question. A woman, driven by the vicissitudes of life to throw her home open to boarders, finds the experience, as most other wom en who try it do, difficult, to say the least. But she says philosophically: "I am learning human nature. I have discov ered that the soft voiced, refined look woinaa often .carries tigerish claws beneath her velvet, and that the frank looking, well dressed man may develop into a 'Meddlesome Hatty' before my eyes. I don't know why humanity should become brutal when it essays boarding, but it seems to. A -.woman called re cently, liked my apartments, and re turned to the parlor to 'talk business,' as she said, with an engaging smile. " 'Business' meant a series of search ing, relentless questions ami exactions which set my cheeks aflame and filled my eyes with hot tears of mortification. Did I intend purchasing a new carpet for the parlor? Were my stairs and halls usually kept somewhat cleaner than they appeared that day? Were my beds clean? Did I have two kinds of meat for dinner? Use homemade bread entirely, and, fin ally, did a maid open the front door as a rule? Tins was a gratuitons imperti nence. - "I was taking the letters from the postman as she came up the steps, and naturally received her. And then she went away, after taking three names as references. . I insisted in turn that she should give me one, that of a former landlady, and it was one of the- small compensations of my lot, when she wrote me a week later that she found my refer ences satisfactory and would take the rooms, to reply that I had found her reference must unsatisfactory and was sure I could not tolerate her exactions. "A man came to me the other night. and after forcing my price down as low as he could, asked me if my husband was a Christian, if my family attended church and Sunday school, if my other boarders were God fearing people, and if Sunday was observed with religious quiet by everybody in the house. "People ask me to take tliem cheaply because they are saving to buy a home or because the husband has extra office expenses or, as one gushing creature told me, 'because we want to go to Europe next summer.' The mora they want the less they want to pay. Look at the ad vertisements for 'board wanted,' 'every thing unexceptionable,' and 'terms mod erate.' "Would these people think of going into a shop and saying, 'I want your most expensive goods at a low price?' Yet tliey do precisely that with me. Sur- oundmgs, appointments and service that mean a serious outlay they demand and are not willing to pay for. They cannot afford to keep up an establishment to their liking, and they ask me to do it for them without adequate compensation. The average man or woman 'seems to part with his courtesy, sense of justice and humanity when he starts out to be come a boarder." Her Point of View in New York Times. The Neglect of the Feet. Far too little has ever been said ' or written regarding the proper treatment of the feet, when we consider the amount of suffering that may be occasioned by their abuse. As the health of any and all parts of the . body depends upon the care taken or each, either voluntarily or unconsciously, it is a marvel that the feet are not even more frequently dis figured by growths that injure the entire system and, perhaps, permanently cripple the limbs. . Races that live in a state of nature have almost invariably (except ia case of accident or natural deformity) shapely and serviceable feet in proportion to their general comeliness and physical perfection; therefore, it must be the cov erings placed by civilized man upon his pedal extremities which cause all his de fects in this direction. If our hands were thickly clad in firm, tight fitting skins and fabrics for eight een hours in every twenty-four they would soon become, to quote Ruskin, "as ngly as the naked feet of prosperity." When thus surrounded by coverings that are well nigh impervious to the air, the pores of the feet do not act properly aud become unhealthy, while the feet themselves grow callous and develop those ill natured and wondrous painful excrescences' known as bunions nl corns. Delineator. One-third or a Dollar. Handed down ,for generations in the family is a curious and valuable relic of Colonial days now in possession of Mrs. Lizzie B. Link, a niece of the late Judge Stites and a clerk in the general delivery department of the postoffice. On a small sheet of brown paper, 3 by 2 inches in size, are the characters, which pronounce it a legal tender for one-third of a dollar. One side bears the inscription, "Accord ing to the resolution passed by congress Feb. 17, 1776," also a dyspeptic looking sun dial, beneath which is the terse ad monition, "Mind yonr own business." On the reverse is a circle of "thirteen links, each representing one of the states of the young Union, in the center of which is the motto, 'We are one." It is an interesting and valuable relic of the good old days of , the forefathers, and their fractional currency, some of which would prove very convenient at the pres ent day. Louisville Commercial. Product of the Clove Tree. ; The limbs of the clove tree being very brittle, a peculiar four sided ladder is used. As fast as the bods are collected they are spread in the sua until they as sume a brownish color, when they are put into the storehouse ready for market. A ten-year-old plantation should pro duce twenty pounds of clove? to a tree. Trees of twenty years frequently pro duce npwards of one hundred pounds each. Exchange. It Turned Her Head. "Why did Lot's wife look back? asked the pretty Sunday school teacher. "1 suppose a woman passed her with a new bonnet on," replied Johnnie Cninso. New York Epoch. PARIS BATHCARTS. Queer Way lu Which the Average French - man Makes His Ablutions. An American familiar with the fact that every house or ' apartment, renting as low as $300 per year in the United States, has its own bathtub, with hot and cold water supply and waste to re move the contents of the tub, is amused, if not amazed, when on a visit to Paris he gets an idea of the custom still pre vailing in that metropolis of luxury and Slegant buildings. ' ' '. The large hotels, some very costly pri vate mansions and apartments, and the public bathhouses have their bathrooms, as is the custom in the United States, though the French bathroom is really much larger, and is elegantly furnished with rugs, lounges, dressing tables, etc., the idea being that if one takes a bath one must-lie down and take a nap after it. People living in apartments costing as high as $1000 a year, and in the new quarter of-Paris in the neighborhood of the Champs Elysees, when they wish to bathe, other than take a sponge bath in a small portable tub, either go to the public bathing establishments or send to them to have a bath brought to their apartments. Sunday morning one sees a strange looking two wheeled cart like a very high dog cart, on which there is a framework built over the wheels. This framework can hold three bath tubs. Thej are made entirely df copper and are about 5 feet long, 20 inches deep at the end and 18 inches on the side. - The driver of this vehicle is perched up high on a small seat in front, is bare headed and wears a blouse. On each side of him an iron ring encircles a cop per colored vessel, holding about three gallons of hot water, which rests on a little shelf. He also carries a supply of dry towels and sheets. The bathing es tablishments have these carts, and when a patron sends word that he wants a hot bath at a certain hour the bath is put on the cart, the kettle filled with hot water, and the cart with its strange load is rapidly driven to the building in which the apartment is. ' The driver carries the bathtub, as an Adirondack guide carries a canoe, on his head and shoulders, from the first to the fifth floor, as the case may be, and after spreading a sheet to protect the carpet, he spreads also a clean sheet in side of the tub, so that the bather does not touch the metal. Then he carries up the kettle of hot water which he has brought from the main establishment. The necessary cold water he gets on the premises, eil her on the same floor with the apartment, or in the courtyard. When the bather has had his bath, the attendant removes the soiled water by dipping it out, wipes out the tub and carries it with his kettles and soiled tovel3 down stairs to his cart. Ths charge for all this is about sixty cents, with the usual additional tip to the man. Engineering Record. , Montana Sapphires. -The only locality in Montana' which has been at .all prolific of sapphires is the six or seven miles of placer ground be-, tween Ruby and Eldorado bars on the Missouri river, sixteen miles east of He lena. Here sapphires are found in gla cial auriferous gravels while sluicing for gold, and until now have been consid ered only a by product. Up to the pres ent time they have never been systemat ically mined. In 1889 one company took the option on 4,000 acres of the river banks, and several -smaller companies have since been formed with a view of mining for these gems, alone or in-connection with gold. v ... The colors of the gems obtained, al though ITeautiful and interesting, are not the standard bine or red shades generally demanded by the public. The stones embrace a great variety of the lighter shades of red, yellow, blue and green. The latter color is found quite pro nounced, being rather a blue green than an emerald green. Nearly all the stones, when finely cut, have an apparent metal lic luster which is strikingly peculiar to those from this locality. Neither red rubies nor true blue sapphires have yet been found. Omaha Bee. " Curiosities in Egg-s. We' met our old friend,' Mr.' Jesse Eaton, on the street the other day, and he told ns of a wonderful egg his daugh ter came across a short time ago. On breaking it she discovered another per fectly formed egg with a shell inside f it. It was about the size of a partridge egg. Another gentleman standing by told of a curiosity in the shape of a double chicken that had been hatched on his place. The backs of the twins were united, and while one would be standing on his feet the feet of the other would be pointing upward. . When growing tired of this position it or they would flop over and stand on the other feet, the positions being reversed. He said the chickens lived several days. Farmington (Mo.) Times. Animals and the Peanut Habit. There is now said to be no animal or bird in the Central Park menagerie that does not eat peanuts. Many species in the cages were at first much averse to peanuts, but the persistence of the chil dren in forcing them upon every creature there has . had such an effect that even the lions and pelicans, and everything except the snakes, have f6lt obliged to acquire the peanut habit New York Son. - Growing Celery. ' There have been many ways suggested for blanching. It is said that in the Old World, where first class celery . is de sired, instead of burying up the plant in the earth they simply tie up the eaves and then wrap them in coarse brown paper. It is aid that much . better cel ery can be obtained this way than by any other methofl of blanching. Mee han's Monthly. ' The November of 1861 will ever be famons in our political history, because in that month, for the first and only time, two presidents were elected within these United StatesAbraham Lincoln to rule in Washington, and Jefferson Davis in Richmond. ' ' - ' - - Excuses. A man who attempted to raise some money on a subscription paper for a nec essary church relates his experience thus: " , . "The first man I went to said he was very sorry, but the fact was he was so involved in bis business that he couldn't give anything. Very 6orry, but a man in debt as be was owed hi3 first duty to his creditors.. - "He was smoking an expensive cigar, nd before I left his store he bought of a peddler who came in a pair of expensive cuff buttons. i , "The next man I went to was a young clerk in " a banking establishment. He read the paper over, acknowledged that the church was needed, but said he was owing for board, was badly in debt and did not see how he could give anything. "That afternoon as I went by the base ball grounds "I saw this young man pay fifty cents at the entrance to go in, and saw him mount the grand stand where special seats were sold for a quarter of "a dollar. "The third man to whom I presented the paper was a farmer living near the town. He also was sorry, but times were hard, his crops had been a partial failure, the mortgage on his farm was a heavy load, the interest was coming due, and he really could not see his way clear to give to the church, although it was just what the new town needed. "A week from that time I saw that same farmer drive into town with his entire family and go to the circus, after noon and night, at an expense of at least four dollars." Youth's Companion. Grounds for a Pass. "I was down in Kentucky," said the drummer at the Cadillac, as he slung his foot over the writing table, "and one day I was in the 'store of a merchant, who was also the secretary of the County Fair association. Kentucky's a great place for county fairs, you know. We were sitting there, chinning about trade and one thing another, when a long legged chap with a woman and six chil dren at his heels filed in. " 'Air you Mister Simpson? he asked, coming up to the merchant. "Simpson nodded. " 'Don't you give out passes for the county fair? " 'Not very often, -replied Simpson, hedging. " 'But you air the man that gives them out when they air give out? "Cornered this time, the secretary had to say yes. " 'Well, I want one for me and my family here,' and he threw his thumb over his shoulder at the interesting group at his heels. " 'On what grounds? inquired Mr. Simpson, in a businesslike way. " 'On the fair grounds, in course,' ex claimed Mr. Huckleberry, in such an undisguised tone of innocent surprise that Simpson forked over the tickets be fore he could recover his equanimity." Detroit Free Press. . . ' Something: About ' Prices. ' Here is one of the "tricks of druggists that their customers may well be on the lookout for: A man -went into a drug store and asked the price of a certain remedy of the class known as -"proprietary" articles, . .''Forty-five centa,", wag the answer. t "Bnt," said the customer, who Was in the habit of dealing with the druggist to a considerable extent, "I have never paid more than f orty at s," mentioning a druggist in another part of the city. ' "Well, now,'' said the good natured druggist, ."I could let yon have it for forty, but I like to act on the square, and I shouldn't want to charge yon five cents extra the next time you or some of "yonr family come here to get a prescription done up." The man paid oyer ' forty-five cents and went out, wondering how many times he and other men had been com pelled to make -up. "on . one thing what they had saved on another. The inci dent is mentioned in the. hope of putting others on their guard against a neat lit tle trick that would probably have never been discovered had not the druggist in question, in a moment of unconscious frankness perhaps, given the thing away. New York Tribune. - Use and Pashlon.- Use is' hardly more than another name for fashion. It is the mode of the day that determines this. To wear the small clothes and full bottomed wigs of our grandfathers today would be most tin grammatical, and yet in the old. time it would have been equally an error to ap pear without them. This is a constantly fluctuating rule of which it is true the principle remains the same, bnt of which the application varies constantly. Every body recognizes it, and everybody is more or less influenced by it. It is need less -to point out that to be too far be hind or too much in advance of the changing fashion is to be deplored, but it is just here, it may be remarked, that this principle passes into that of ele gance. Boston Courier'. " ; ' . . . . How Indians Prepare Grasshoppers. , When grasshoppers are very abun dant and in prime condition the Indiana dig a hole, build a fire in : the bottom of it and drive the swarms of insects into it from all directions. Then they cover the opening with blankets. ' The hop pers thus killed are taken ont and put into bags with salt. Afterward they are spread out to dry in the sun. - The wings and legs are removed before eating. Washington Star; T .. . , . "How'tlsle Thread Is Made. " Lisle thread is .made of superior cot ton treated in a peculiar manner- ...The waxy surface of the cotton fiber, is im paired" by carding, but : preserved " by combing. The spinning of Lisle thread is done under moisture, forming a com pact and solid yarn. Exchange. Coffee was introduced into Constanti nople in the early part of the Seventeenth century, and writers of that time inform ns that the inhabitants of that city drank it as hot-as could be endured, the decoc tion being as black as soot, as Purchos puts it, "not much nnlike it." i'HE E00MS OF A QUEEN. GRAND AND GORGEOUS, BUT EX CEEDINGLY UNHOMELIKE.' Victoria's Huge Palace In Windsor and How the Dreary Waste of Stately Room After Koom Impressed an American Woman Who Visited It. The Scotch moors, as I saw them in July, are already fading in my memory into a soft harmonious mingling of rus set and green, for the heather was not yet purple; but the sun caught the spray of a mountain rivulet tumbling on its rocky way, or turned more vivid the in- tense green of those patches of verdure in the midst of the brown of the heather, which we think seem so unnatural when artists who paint in the highlands trans fer them to canvas. These high lights stay by one when the hills and all the ordinary features of that charming Scot land melt into the dimmest of memories. One of these summer's high lights was a visit to the queen's private apartments at Windsor. I don't know what red tape and long waiting and diplomatic refer ence it took to get the permit. I only know that the thoughtful American girl who remembered me and made me one of the four who were to invade the sacred precincts conferred much pleasure on me, and even though we were all so disappointed in what we saw, it was hu man, was it not, to be delighted to "go where few enter? We looked upon the herd of common ers who filed by us in the wake of the cicerone, who every hour takes throngs of sightseers through the main part of Windsor castle. Their hands were red with Baedekers, bnt we loftily ignored guidebooks for one day. There were but three high lights there to remember. One -was General Gor don's Bible, before which I could have knelt, for it was the well worn book of a soldier who took it into the tented field as his companion. There is no mistaking a book that has been read, the very way it lies open, the invisible marks of reverential fingers, the color of the paper which the open air produces. It disturbed me to see it in a hideous little glass casket all ornamentation and filigree. Very fine in its way, I suppose, and taking many pounds out of the hero's sister's pocket, who gave it to the queen, but so inappropriate to the sim ple life of that heroic soul, that martyr to the mistakes of his country. TWO MARBLE STATUES. The second high light in the queen's own domicile was the view from the state drawing room windows of the avenue stretching miles and miles away. It was sunny and bright, for some far back English sovereign or his wise gar dener had, perhaps, evidently believed that with all his possessions there was nothing quite equal to the God given one of sunshine, and so there was a wide strip of the greenest turf in the world on either side of the drive. There were no parterres, no fountains or statues, sim ply this broad open, sppce, where her majesty could '"Talk or flrive for miles, hiddep. by the forest trees on either side from the staring eyes of the public. The third high light in those drearily magnificent palace corridors was the life size modeling of the queen and the prince consort, made since bis, death. The marble was scarcely pure enough to represent as perfect an ideal of wifely love as any sculptor is ever likely to give. The queen's face turned toward her husband reveals the utmost devotion, the most tender entreaty, as she leans against him imploring him not to leave her. . Whoever has not understood wifely adoration before, must go away from this exquisite exemplification of it with a new knowledge of what its possibilities are.' I do not even know if it is good modeling. I only know that, intract able, ' cold and inexpressive as marble is supposed to be, it speaks in the face and attitude of the queen as no painting I remember to have seen. ( I wish I could feel such genuine ad miration of the prince, bnt ue is so Eng lish, so handsome, so far away. TTi head, is turned quite from bis wife, and as she clings to him he coldly points ' to distant' lands. NO TRACE OF HOME. , There was nothing else in these gor geous rooms that stays by me. There seemed to me miles of corridors, draw ing rooms, little and big; dining rooms and boudoirs, all glitter and glow. The usual gilt and ormolu, marble and onyx, gloss of satin and rich stuffs, the dazzle of luminous glass, pervaded the entire suites of apartments. We kept looking for some room where there might be a trace of homeliness. We longed to see a workbasket, even if her majesty doesn't do needlework, and a sitting room where there might be an ordinary writing desk, a bookcase with some well thumbed volumes or a chair an American rocking chair even, in which a loving woman had rocked her babies to sleep. The doors were closed on the queen's and prince consort's bedroom, but in genious inquiries caused the old house keeper to give np their secrets. There was no difference. They lived, in there in state, and I began to think my child ish ideas that kings and queens slept in their crowns was not far wrong. Eliza beth B. Custer in New York Sun. Chance for a II est. Mrs. De Fashion Is Mrs. De Style at home? : Servant No, mum.' "Will she be back soon, do yon think?" "No, mum; shell be away all day, I'm thinkin. Ye see I've given her notice, an she's gone ont ter find a gnrrel good enough ter fin my place. . Yes might come in an rest y'rself. There's none o' til family home to talk ye to death." New York Weekly. -" A Pitiable Case. ' Judge What is the charge against this man? Policeman He stole a street car horse. Judge I will decide tomorrow whether to send rrfm to a lunatic asylum or the poorhaose. Good News. Game Galore in Maine. - ' Moose are so very plentiful in north ern Maine that, as a sportsman can legally kill but one in a season, it is something of a disappointment to throw away the only chance, on an undersized or lean animal, or one with poor antlers. The boss hunter of Med way, Llewellyn Powers, is a man who wastes no powder on inferior game, and when he started out after his annual moose the other day he was determined to get a good one. He rolled his old slouch hat into a horn and called a moose to the water at Pock wockamos lake, but the bull did not suit, being too lean anil carrying small an tlers. Another and another came in re sponse of the hunter's call, and finally the ideal monarch of the woods ap peared. This bull fell before Powers' rifle. He weighed over a thousand pounds and carried a perfect set of antlers that spread five feet. No fault can be found with a hunting ground which affords such opportunities as this for taking one's pick of big game. Al most anybody can get a moose in the upper Penobscot region. The other day a twelve-year-old boy named Hathaway went into the woods alone, called a big moose and dropped him at the first shot Louisville Courier Journal. A New Way to Throw Bice. A practical joke which the best man at an autumn wedding perpetrated was to deliver to tha porter of the parlor car in which he saw them off a sealed telegraph envelope with instructions to deliver it at a certain station. The darky duly did so and the groom broke the seal to have a small avalanche of rice pour through his fingers. New York Times. .'. :s !::!:f the Aim-: Ic hm !. yet there is -.' ' !" ' of .Sn.-snroiriiln ihi.t nr-t3 on i;:.-it U Joy's Wsri-n..; ! sn -lio. It ru l:i ii-s it i:i L'l Imuia. ::ii! .;n occasional dosa prevents return. "Ve refer lv I-;! mission to c. K. l!:h:::r'"'., VS 1-ocnst Avenue, Sail I'raucisco; J. ... ..i- .i-.-n.I i-tuliinm; II. S. Winu. cJeary Court, Sum !"i a .. :si o. :n hundreds uf others who have use.: it i:i constipation. One letter is a Kumplo of hundreds. Eikiugtou, writes: "I have been for years subject to bilious headaches anil constipa tion. Have been eo bad lor a year buck hitn had to take a physic every other night or else I wouia nave a neaaaenc. After taking one bottle of J. V. S., I am in splendid sbape. It has done wonderful things for me. Peoplo similarly troubled should try 15 and be convinced." Joy1 q Vegetable O Sarsaparilla Most moik-rn, :ri :i... largest bottle, same price, Jl.o. :.. v .. v. n For Sale by SNIPES & KINERSLY THE DALLES. OREGON. - BEAb MERIT PEOPLE Say the S. B. Cough Cure is the best thing they ever saw. We are not flattered for we known Real Merit will Win. All we ask is an honest tiial. For sale by all druggists. S. B. Medicine Mfg. Co., Dufur, Oregon. A Severe Law. The English peo ple look more closely 'to the gennineneis of these staples than we do. In facr, they 9 J haye a law under r' which they make seizure aud de stroy adulterated J- r products that are not what they are represented to bo. Under this (aime thousands of pounds of tea have been burned because of their wholesale adul teration. ' Tea, by the way, is one of the most notori ously atTultcmted articles of commerce. Not alone are the bright, shiny green teas artifi cially colored, but thmifnnda of pounds of ub.-t: ute for tea leavis are used to swell the b:;'.U oi t-Iiap tea:; ash, rcc, and willow !pav- being those most commonly used. Again, sweepings f r. m tea warehouses re colored and sold as tea. Even exhausted tea leaves gathered from tho tea-houses are kept, diieu, and madcovcrnnd find their way into the cbrnp teas. The Eus'.Ih govf mmcut attempts to stamp this, ou; by coiil'jsiaU sn; but no tea is too poor f ir n i, and the rcsul. is, that probably the :.;;.-,t teas used by any nation are those consumed ia Americc Bench's Tea Is presented with the guar- -auty that it is nncolortd and unadulterated; in fact, the sun-cureo. t?a leaf pure and sim ple. Its purity insure superior strength,' bout one third less of it being required for an infusion than of the artificial teas, and its fragrance and exquisite flavor is at once ap parent. It will be a revelation to you. In order that its parity and quality may be guar anteed, it is sold only in pound packages bearing this trade-mark : . . BEEtm TEA rPure As Wdhood STIPATION Price 60c- per pound. For sale at Xjoslle Butler's, THE DALLES, OREGON.