O O ®ure A The Evolution of Mousehold Remedies. SUNDOWN DOCTOES. frl Peeallar to Washlnitton and Pr no­ tice Only After 4:30 P. M. Dke modern patent medicine busi* “Sundown doctors” are an Institution new ia the natural outgrowth of the Is oertain if you Uke Hood’s Sarsaparilla. peculiar to Washington City. They are This great medicine cures those eruptions, an amiable company of medical practi­ »id-time household remedies. In the early history of thia country, tioners wlso ply their trade only after pimples aud toils that apjxtor at all seasons; EVEKY FAMILY HAD ITS HOME­ nightfall. •urea scrofula sores, salt rheum or eczema; Herb tea* Not that these gentlemen prefer dark­ MADE MEDICINES. adapts itself equally well to, and also cures, dys­ bitten, laxativea and tonics, were to be ness to light If they had their d'ruthers, pepsia aud all stomach troubles; cures rheu. says the Louisville Courier-Journal, nor foMid in almost every house, compound­ are their deeds of a questionable com­ ed by the housewife, sometimes assisted matism and catarrh; cures nervous trouble^ ty the apothecary or the family doctor. plexion that looks "best in the sliade. debility and that tired feeling. Sundown doctors have nq ways that Such remedies as picra, which waa e •arsatabg- For thoae who prefer medicine la tab­ are dark or tricks that are vain. They aloes and quassia, dissolved in apple let funu. Hood's Snreaparilln is now put up in choco- ■ re o _ a Tyler. Eurlingtna. are as open as the dtiy that they may brandy. Sometimes a hop tonic, made lpled tablets called Satoatabs. ns well aS iu tha usual say«: ” Tha ear*«» of a large farm, ......... so _ liquid form. Sarsatabs have identically the same nni'-h to do aud ao little health to de It not utilize. If they practice their pro­ of whiskey, hops and bitter barka. A curative propertie« as the liquid form, besides accus With, cauxe.1 almo.i h <<>uip>-le break* fession by candle light rather th^n by down: bi nod poor and thin : np -t renal b. score or more of popular, home-made racy of dose, convenience, economy.—no loss by evap­ lit Un «loop Hoo.1 a Sarsaparilla gave oration. breakage, or leakage. Druggists or promptly appetite, natnral sleep. iwrluct health, sunshine that's I'ncle Sain's fnult, not remedies were thus compounded, the by tuaxL C. L Hood Co.. Lowell. Mass. strength to do all my work." their own. formulae fer which were passed along Sundown doctoro begin to get busy n... .—a-..--------- . ............. from house to house, sometimes written, only after 4 :.K) In the afternoon.' From ■ blftia» the ■espoaalblUtp. Would Taka a I'hauce. sometimes verbally communicated. Teacher—Mrs. ' Clubber, your little "Not a cent," replied the rich man . 9 to that hour, poor souls, they are to uot good for the hok>luS Hn-ir noses to the grindstones 1 The patent' medicine business is a Clarence frequently eemao ko echoad with eoldly; “ money i natural outgrowth from this trhole- hto faen unwashed. poor" . i over the government desks, for one some, old-tim# custom. In the begin­ Mrs. Clabber- Why, panto gNwintm, must live, don ’ t you know, howevet "Well,” roofiaaded the applicant, Mi* LJgisicam, what de yea bang a eeheel ning, some enterprising doctor, im­ “Just pretend ttuit yon have a grudge soaring one's scientific ambition, and Mumtas tor J—Oimge Tribue*. pressed by the usefulness of one of Uncle Sam's wages do come In mighty agataat *o."—Philadelphia Lodger. I regular and handy. So that In a these home-made remedies, would take Wssls of Bsssgy. pigeonhole is the story af the origin of it up, improve it in many ways, manu­ The prise ben wool red to quit laying the struggling fraternity of sundown facture it on a largo scale, advertise it "It eseane no utterly absurd," she mainly through almanacs for the home, elochod, “tor a »50» fowl to spend her physicians at the federal <*apita). There are thousands of instances. and thus it would become Used over a time and strength in turning out eggs at Young physicians with their careers large area. LATTERLY THE HOUSE­ B» cento a desea." Porohing tarwdf on her exclusive yet to carve secure clerkships in some HOLD REMEDY BUSINESS T00X roost, ehs eyed the common barnyard hoax of the governmental departments of A MORE EXACT AND SCIENTIFIC below bar with lofty disdain. Washington Jn order to keep the pot FORM. bubbling while they are getting their Peruna was originally one of these to. TtoiV TVeasse aad all Xtemss B to as n »tie AmealtiM. medicinal education after office hours. Cmaaeatfy osrM by Dr. kllwe'a Arra. old-time remediee. It was used by the Kaieker — I've waited aa hetaz for yen «Lora«, leend Ibr Flil-IE f 2 trial b'SSte and Tbelr diplomas thus laboriously achiev­ a is. u. itKus., L4_, ou Area a«., ruua..r». to art year bat ea straight. Kennonitee, of Pennsylvania, before it Mrs. Kaidkar—Weil, I’ve waited lesgee ed, they hang nut their shingle« tenta­ was offered to the public for eale. Dr. thaa tost fer yea to get your feet se tively, holding fast, however, to their Hartman, TH1 ORIOIMAL COM­ government positions until securely es­ aSratobt.—New York Sen. tablished professionally. A job in the POUNDER OF PERUNA, is of Men- A torvtois »Mae of Uuunpteg and hand, you know. Is worth a whole city nonito origin. First, he prescribed it stamping eemo from Bob's room early directory full of uncaptured patient*. for his neighbors and his patients. one morning. Never let go a sure thing till you are The sale of it increased, and at last he “Bobby, Bobby," retied hto mother, j established a manufactory and fur­ of a surer. freon dwwnatalra, "what to going no it to the general drug trade. op there r’ *-»♦»0» »»ossesso« es os ss se»e I nished Peruna is useful in a great many "My oboe«,“ replied Bob J FAMILY LIFE IN FRANCE | climatic ailments, such as coughs, colds, For Infanta and Chilirnn. •ore throat, bronchitis, and catarrhal A Neal Charity. * ooooo-oe»oeeeeoeoeooeoooo^ diseases generally. THOUSANDS OF The Khd Too Have Always Bonjh: Tone—Abd w hat do you think? Mr. -------------------- FAMILIES HAVE LEARNED THE Goedlwirt hadn't been aloM with me Baars the American life is not such as Ameri­ USE OF PERUNA and its value in the for flva minutes Lafore he offered to Signatare of can newspapers would lead a stranger treatment of these ailments. They kiss ma. to infer. Neither does French life seem have learned to trust and believe in Jeaa—Yea. that's one thin* about such us strangers infer who know It Dr. Hartman’s judgment, and to rely | Tack ttaodhnrt; he's just as aoft-heart- only from a certain class of French on his remedy, Peruna. cd and oharltabto as be can ba.—Phil­ CASTOR IA adelphia Press. Flibborty—"When I begin to itipwt that I'm werking toe hard at my bumaean ! ge and avaault my doctor. If be aaya I’m ali right I re baoic ta werk." Jibbit—“Thera’s nothing original to that idea. Wheuvver I get uneasy abeat ayrnlt I apply for another thousand or two of life insurance. If I pass the ex- amiaatioa I know I’m O. K.” Th.re ie m.r. Cararrk fa tkto o>«et.a .f tk' •ouniry taka all .luw pet •uid uatll Me tael few twri wm t u»y SUCKERS »35« 1K» tanto *»to md the ward TWU on toe buttons dtotin- It baa been proved that no fewer than U.BW bears re are at present tuah- tog a batter living 1a Vienna than or­ dinary worhmon. One notorious fatally of professional beggars roeetitly gave a grand ball and a concert at a bacai botai A now d«nh sad office oeavsBlenen to a teal far removing rusty or corrodai peno Bo m the bolder. Mont porsene who Veternn—Many’s the time I've made work a* a dato have experienced mere or lam AiBealtg ia this connection, and vary the enemy run. Listener—Yes? . . o • ' efts» tha ha«ern are cut with the sharp Veteran—And once they nearly edges of too pea or soiled with rust and tob TVs stoma device has bandlm like caught me! pliera, *y rletong whtoh the pea to grip- drawn sot by a small trip- Mraterr About Death*. • MF-l re tad by the fere (narr. Fou rdeaths are known to be directly attributable to exposure to the X-rays. There Is a mystery about these cnscs, the disease being unknown- to medical science, though it Is berieved to Involve some great principle of life. Dr. Wei­ gel. the president of the Rochester Academy of Medicine and the Ameri­ can Orthopedl« Society, was the last victim. “Bromo Quinine” Laxative Bromo Quinine n a MV OMS A4F. tor signatura this Ok o « fi 9 «• /w o © © o® o Q> © © o ° o a O Ar'a rulp, the farmer who spend* a great deal of hto time In town, doesn't spend very much money. You hear of people being afraid to die. We are afraid to live too long, tha old a rtf’ treated so shabbily. Always remember th* o © ° o O 0 • 0 aivls* as Illaatretlss. Voice (ever the telephone)—"Prefee- eor, I ata getting up a special article for one of the Illustrated weekly papers on 'The Value ef the Comparatively Unim­ portant.' Please tell me, fer instanee. one of your toediods of saving your odds and ends of time, by which yeu are enabled to do so much work without having to hurry.” The Professor—-“Always emitting the ‘good-by* when using the telephone.” (Ilangs up receiver.) Nat Tat, bat Oaaa. “Bay," wired the chairman •( the Rke- innk caMgaig* committee, "caa't yeu send ua epeakera ef better caliber thaa the chapa that talked bare laat aight?” “We’re aaerely flriag the epeaing guaa ef the caaapaiga," «tired bark th* political ■uauager at headquarters. “We'll seed yea some biggsr beres after awhile." Free Caaaeat at the Propie. The “pioneer American Democrat” was the Rev. Tteemas Hooker of Con­ necticut, whe, in a seruien la Hartford in the year 1633, said, “The founda­ tion “f all authority is firstly laid in the free consent ef the people.” There, in embryo, were tha Revolution and the great republic. In the ■'Funda­ mental Orders of Connecticut,” inspired by Hooker and adopted at Hartford in 1633, we have the first written consti­ I tution known te history that created a government Aud that government was as near a perfect democracy as the world has ever seen.—New York American. Finiva * No«e. “Mister," whined the amali nrchln, ■ as be shivered from bead to foot, "it to so bitter cold. C-can't yer spare tuo a Bickel r “Yes. my bay,” replied the benevo­ lent eld gentleman as be opened hto purse and fished out the coin. “Thanks, mister.” “And now I suppose you are going to buy fuel with it?” Nope! An ice-cream ends.* T/ie General Demand ■ «•<« *»kl,(. ■ MADE FOR SERVICE novels. The French, we have been ac­ customed to fancy, writes Prof. Barrett Wendell In “The France of To-Day,” do not know what we mean by home. I But those who do speak English have I I no conception of what the French mean by foyer. In tenderness of sentiment, I in Instant appeal to emotions of endur­ ing purity, one word Is as beautiful as the other. The love of French parents for their children, and of French children for I their parents, is heyond dispute. But even in Its most closely intimate aspect, it never forgets that the parent is the parent end the child the child. The fact of authority implies the right to formal respect as well as to obedl- ence. The fact that you belong to an or­ ganized social group the while, implies your duty, whatever your station there­ I in, to conduct yourself with courteous consideration for the other members of it. This, too, neither parent nor child ever suffers himself to forget. The great and affectionate pleasure of French domesticity is of a kind which could not exist if conventions were too much neglected. The result is that. In the full security of the foyers, the French seem surrounded by something like the pleasures and the limitations which make at once agree­ able and a shade monotonous our Amer­ ican experiences in general society. And Just as a good Frenchwoman must I m - daughter, mother, sister as truly and as devotedly as she must be wife and partner, so * good Frenchman must lie not only husband, but son, too, and father and brother. In France, where the family is so deeply rooted in national affection, no man can neg­ lect his homely domestic duties without braving public opinion. I reckon I'm guilty, y'r honor, anuf- flod th« leathery faced old vagabound who bad been rua in for drunkeuueiM and pen era! worthleesueks, “but it ain't m.v fault." “Whose fault is it?" inquired the police justice. “It's the. fault s’ my brother in-law On' my sister-in-law. They won't let me live with ’em- any more. When .a feller s in­ laws goes back on ’im, y’r honor, he cain't help bein’-a outlaw.” “Six months in the workhouse!” roared the police justice. Absence of Mind. Exhausted by the labor of carrying the furniture eut of the building, the mun whose dwelling was ablaze from cellar to garret mechanically rolled a cigaroot aud turned to one ef the firemen. “Have you got a match?" he panted. "A match?” growled the fireman. "If jou waut to light that thing go and loach it to your house 1” No Privilawoe. The business agent stuck bis bead In­ side the shop door. A solitary tuau was at work. “What are you doing here?" be de­ manded. “Don't you knew this is a bob day?" "Nft for ase,” answered th* eolttary man, without look tug a* I rest his werk. “I’m the trows.” A tk. To succeed these days you must have plenty of grit, cour­ age, strength. How is it with the children ? Are they thin, pale, delicate? Do not forget Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. You know it makes the blood pure and rich, and builds up the general health in every way. The chl’«1r<‘n ran>ot posalbly have gcxd health unit i* the I- »welt •' in proper con.H tion A sluggish iver give« n coibtrd tongue bid breath, con«»!pute«1 bowel*. Correct nil tht‘se by giving s inn II ) h xwlive .lose* of A yet • Pill* All vegetable, sugar coated. Xyar Co., low *11. Maas, ufactûrere of hair viciob . AGII' CURE. CtilkRV PECTORAL. SAVE THE CARTON TOPS »nd ^<>ap rapper« from “20 Mule Team Borax” »«Urate Task. “The newspapers," said the orator solemnly, “do sat tell the truth.” “Perhaps sot,” answered the editor regretfully. “We do our best; but, you know, there to nothing more dltllrnlC than to tell th* truth to a way that won’t pat It a>* tv auuie «ne to chap varaci ty."—Washington lewge y«ur Star. Naalax For the Children Ti*.r. •a the .verfhrww «f the woaarchy ef I>euto Fhilipi>e a Sunday crewd vis­ ited the Jurdia des l’laates and was auiased te Bud the fine specitnea ef the Bengal tiger still bearing the label of “Le Tigre Royal.” Nothing would serve the furious crowd but thst at ence ea the s;x»t the authorities should change the nauie to “I* Tigre Nation­ al,” and they did.—Ixjndou Academy. Proiluct« and exchanRe them for VALUABLE PREMIUMS FREE 40 pa?« illustrated catalogue of 1000 article* givaa aw»7 FREE Addrra* PACIFIC C0A8T BORAX CO . Oaklaad, Cat 10TEL MOORE OPEN ALL THE YEAB C latsop B each S easide , O regon THF Directly on the beach overlooking ■ nt the ocean. Hot n bath* and Pl irr UnilCP aarf bathing. Rerrea- ULirr nuuit tion pler for nr Sun parlor*. Electric light«. Flro ur place and ntram heat. Fine walk* drive*. Hua food* a npec- U^LUUri |tthy Kale*, 12.40and $;L00 per day. M* Special rate* by the weak. «U 4 A' 1 DAN. J. MOORE, Proprietor «■■■■01 P N U No. 15—OS F *11 TH KN writings to advertlassra plea»« I îi mention this paper. -4--- ———----------------------------- — ; RHEUMATISM Every case of Rheumatism lias its origin and its development in the blood. It is not a disease which is contracted like a cold, but it is in the blood and system before a pain is felt, and the changes in the weather or any physical irregularities, such as a spell of indigestion, bowel disturbance, etc., are merely the exciting causes producing the pains and aches, which are the natural symptoms of the disease. Rheumatism is caused by aa excess of uric acid and other corrosive, irritating poisons in the blood, which are carried through the circulation to every part of the system. Every muscle, nerve, membrane, tissue and joint becomes saturated with these acrid, irritating impurities, or coated with fine, insoluble caustic matter, and the sharp, piercing pains or the dull, constant aches are felt with every physical movement. When the blood is filled with uric acid poison, perma­ nent relief cannot be expected from liniments, plasters, or other external treatment. Such measures give temporary relief, but in order to conquer Rheumatism and bring about a Sometime aro , I had Rheumatism end had to complete cure, the uric acid and work. The pain in my back and between other inflammatory matter must be quit my shoulders was so intense I could not rest or expelled, and this cannot be done sleep. I tried everythinf, but nothing did tne any with external treatment. S. S. S. good till I heard of and took S. S. 9. This med­ cured me sound «nd well. It purified my cures Rheumatism because it is a icine blood and made me feel like ■ new men. perfect and entirely vegetable blood CORRAD LOHR, Anderson, Ind. 112 E. lttb St. purifier. It goes down into the circulation, neutralizes the acids, I was severely troubled with Rheumatism. I and dissolves the irritating depos­ had it in my knees, legs and Ankles, and any one who has ever had Rheumatism knows how excru­ its which are pressing on the sensi­ ciating the pain is and how it interferes with one tive nerves and tissues and produc­ at vork. I was truly in bad shape -bavin? been ing pain, enriches the weak, sour bothered with it for ten years, off and on. A blood, and removes every atom of local physician advised me to use S. S. S. I did so. After taking two bottles I noticed the sore­ iippurity from the circulation. So ness and pain were greatly reduced. I continued instead of being a weak, sour the medicine and was thoroughly cured; all pain, stream, distributing uric acid to the soreness and inflammation gone. I recommend different parts of the system, the S. S. S. to all Rheumatic sufferers. J. L. AGNEW, blood is strong and healthy and 803 E. Greenbrier St., Mt. Vernon, Ohio. ■ ■ ■ ■ — ■■■■ ............. ■■■ J therefore able to supply every raus- cle, nerve, bone and tissue with nourishment and strength. Then the inflam­ mation and swelling subside, the pains and aches cease, and not only is Rheumatism permanently cured, but under the fine tonic effects of S. S. S. the entire general health is benefitted and built up. In all forms of Rheuma­ tism, whether acute or chronic, S. S. S. will be found a safe and reliable treat­ ment. Speciat book on Rheumatism and any medical advice von desire will be furnished free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. J'iut Color •I the WeJl Informed of the World haa W. L. Deufias <4 and $5 6111 Edge Shoe» Cannot Be Equalled At Anj Prloa xxrt«i.ar. always been for a aimple, pleasant | »TCArTIOX. W. I. D >.rlM name »nil prirr II tla-npal on bottom. Take Na Anhetltwta, BoM by the best ,hoe deelrrv e,^rywLere. Shoes utxlel from fa-tory to any pert ol the world. Illo«- and efficient liquid laxative remedy of traleS CualM tree to anv address. W. I- 1»«>1*J1.AS. Hrarktau, known value; a laxative which physi-1 cians could sanction for family use i because its component parts are known to them to be wholesome and truly beneficial la effect, acceptable j to the system and lenUe, yet prompt, in action. In supplying that demand with its excellent combination of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, the Cali-; fornla Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies on the merits of the laxative for its remarkable success. Thot fe one of many reasons why Syrup of Fig» and Elixir ef Senna is given the preference by the Well- Informed. To get its benetdal effects always buy the genuine—manufac­ tured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading driiggtots. Price fifty cents per bottle. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES