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x "V IT MATTERS LITTLE NOW. ac dc It matters little now; 10J The past we can't recall. , Tears are unavailing? * f The grave grass covers all. f W! ; It matters little nor; jje ' The good we might have done . ( [Vanished Uke the dewdropa r On yonder setting sun. vii ; It matters little now; ! We soon shall follow, too; Kest beneath the willow to And yonder bounding blue. _ wJ It matters little :.ow; Nor wealth nor power avail-. The ship that sank at sea ne Will never show a sail. ey Fc It matters little now; Our sighs are all in vain, r Neplected love and hours Will not return ag-.in. . ea ?John A. Joyce. ej( ^ ce! f How the Signal 1 i Man ; I Lost His Job, j E BN leaving Chicago datfy thi MeFadden and Forbe3 had ite a certain street crossing wi to which they came, and 4 at which they never failed trr to lean far out of the cab of their en- jol gine and shout to an old man who tie stood by the way waving a white flag do In his bands. This old man was Denis kil Fahey, keeper of that crossing for he thirty-sis years, and at the time of this W story ninety-one years old. It was his ] fond boast that he was not only the op oldest crossing flagman in the United ws States, but longest in such a position, inj "an' a railroad mon, ivery inch o' all blm." ve: It was not a bad crossing as grade th< crossings go in Chicago. The number thi of accidents a year there rarely ex- to ceeded five or six, and the fatalities thi (were comparatively few. The street of ran straight away from each side of scl the track; it was clear and open, the sp< mrAfooflAn ffo+oe trora mn^orn ftnri fh/ Denis most watchful. He knew every tra human in the district, and every horse G and cow, and it but needed his voice in or the sight of his flag to -warn them fal not to venture,on the tracks until the gli gates raised. hir McFadden and Forbes had taken a sal fancy to the old man because, despite hir his age, he was so prompt in doing ga1 his duty, so eager to let trainmen and ha< public see that he kept the crossing eh: as a sacred trust True, he only earned die $40 each month, but that held up his of tiny home and bit of garden, not far xrt from his place of work, and he was hit contented. That he would die appar- hir ently never entered his head; he acted th( as if he would be holding this crossing th( long after all about him were dead. he He knew every engineer and fireman in 5by name, the styles of their engines, their runs, which had the limited, the express, which the oriental freight, and q so on. His data on time tables was mo marvelous for his age. pai "NOi 5," he would say, "is due here iDt at 3.19 an' No. 6 will go by at 5.08. The Mr limited, if she's makin' her stame, will ca] be passing just at 2, an' you'll see Mc- an FAdden a wavin' his hand at me, fre I-"?~ an ! Then would come the limited at pro- q per time, and McFadden and Forbes iy iwonld be looking down, and perhaps TjC eomething wrapped in a paper would ani come out of the cab, and when the old SjS man picked it out of the ditch it was rec sure to have a remembrance inside for him* f ...s boi i 1 fra He was a gentleman, this Fahey. 0f There are railroad men not gentlemen. be( The boor, and what the president calls eVj "intentional asses," find their way into railroad work, the same as into other 0f callings. Some of them manage to j twist and sneak to live a career of ten pe, or fifteen years, arrogant, self-opinion- ]0B ated individuals. But they drop in be time, fall by the wayside, and the gen- th( tleman who is not afraid remains. caj Fahey had witnessed the downfall of no many employes, but through all the ani years he kept his kindly greetings and cheery word for the people who need- j ed protection over his crossing, and th< iwfcile the company knew little of him su] beyond his wage roll, the public that m? came to his care honored him. frc Iune cay jfaney picKea up Ms news- ter paper while off duty and bf chance to read a long description of the company's Intention to elevate its tracks. He saw that this elevation would take >] In his crossing, and that one of the sav- js Ings of the company through this work ja would be in the number of flagmen it ow Should be able to discharge. ma "I'll be lookln' for a job," said Fah- da ey, and felt a strange tugging at his xh heart To not have the flag in his ?g] hand every day, to have his crossing mt replaced with a subway, to miss the an, roar of the trains, the shouts of pass- -] ing trainmen, the joy of protecting pe- pa: destrians was something ho could not f0i imagine. He looked ~o hard and long at the offending newspaper that he suddenly found the lashes of his eyes ow ,wet and realized that the "crossing" had become so much a uart of him j that to be taken from it meant the end Of life for him. yC! | Many an inquiry did he make during t,0] the following weeks of those he met as 011< to the certainty of the tracks being jnj elevated. One and all assured him he hwork would commence in the spring ye: 1?rwl ha 111 nlota/1 I I** ?^ VVU.[y.vil.U ?> llJLilil CJ?,UICUI1 months. An Alderman said to him: to"I hated to get your job, Denis, but th< the tracks have got to go up, and the j work must commence here. This Iru slaughter of people must cease." re( In the long nights Fahey thought it all over. If, as a railroad man. he bad been a train despatches he felt that sa^ be might have had a hope of ending frc bis days in an asylum when labor was ou doDe; if he was an engineer there was good chance of his dying a wreck. But as flagman nothing faced him but 1 discharge. Fa hoy shook his head at be: this?discharged he would not be. tlx Now there came a change in his man- be jier of work. Fahey. who had never be; gone on the crossing himself except sin to catch some stray child, now ran bii rsrildly about at the approach of every Cli train. He would cross the track on of tanv provocation. waving .' is flaer and ho ting as if he thought people were enavoring to rush into danger. No iger be stood patiently by tbe track ring his signals. No. he must see ery part of the crossing, and this is particularly true when either the oited or fast mail passed. These o trains were the fastest on the dision. 'The old man is getting wonderfully ry," commented Forbes one morning McFadden. 'Yes," said the engineer, giving his ; iiistle cord a sharp pull, "but if he j er slips he's gone. I don't like his ; w system. Keep off the track, Fah," he shouted from his window, ihey could not hear what he said, but tiled back and waved his hand, rhe winter wore on and the days me near to hand when the track ; ?vation work was to begin. Fahey's j lerity or nervousness in guarding j 5 crossing was now apparent to j ery engineer and fireman on tHe ax* | sion. He had always been the best i ad of a flagman, but now he outshone I previous efforts. If a train was ap- j oaching and he saw a woman or i ild on the opposite side of the tracks j d coming toward him he would leap , er the rails and shout at them and , en run back to his old position just ; time to miss being struck himself, j 3e had not done this many times, j augh, with McFadden and the lim- j d before that engineer suspected mt was up. 'By jingo! Forbes," he said; "this tck elevation is the end of Fahey's 3, and he's trying to quit like a genman before he's fired. I'll bet a | liar to a cent that he doesn't care to i 1 himself, but would be tickled if i slipped some day and was caught j ithout the crossing he's done for." j Forbes did not share McFaddefi's ' inion, but both men kept a close j itch of Fahey, until one foggy mornj, when a bad rail, a nasty sky and j kinds of trouble in the yards, di? j fted their attention from him, and j ?y came down to his crossing -with | jnder and steam without a care as ; his whereabouts. And it was on j s morning tnat one of the children the neighborhood, hastening to i iool, thought it would be great ! jrt to run the crossing gates while j ?y were down and pass ahead of the .in. i The first th..t McFadden saw ahead the mist was a child stumbling and ling between the rails, next, one mpse of Fahey, between the rails nself and hurling the child into "ety; last, the engine upon Fahey nself, tossing him high, over the tes, and into the roadway. Duty [1 saved the old flagman not only disirge, but the pain of suicide. He had d for another on the eve of the end his labors. He never opened an eye ien McFadden and Forbes picked u up. The limited had mangled a, but could not take from his lips ? faint smile of contentment resting ?re; the reflection of the last thought ever gave earth.?H. I. Cleveland the Chicago Record-Herald. Bones of the Insane. 'he attendants in city hospitals wno ke a practice of calming demented tients by jumping on them will be erested in a paper read by Dr.1 lule Smith before the British MediAssociation. Dr. Smith stated that undue fragility of bones was not inquently met with among the insane er middle life. J .'he ribs, he said, was the most easi? affected; then followed the fiat pel: bones, the vertebrae, the skull cap i lastly, the long bones. An analyJ of 200 cases from the post-mortem ords of the West RidLug Asylum s made, the strength of the rib : les being tested with the hands. Xo i gility was found in twenty-sis out I twenty-seven cases of idiocy or im- j Gility. Melancholia was marked by dences of increased fragility, and j s was still more marked in the case ; dementia. iy knowing that the ribs of insane sons break most easily, while the ig bones are likely to be the last to fractured, the attendants can save j ?mselves a good deal of effort in | ming their patients. The veriest j vice should be able to break ribs, j [1 an attendant of experience should i ye no difficulty in fracturing skulls. ! f there is any public protest against i injuries to which the patients are bjected, a plausible showing can b? ide that the patient's ribs were so , igile that they broke when the at- . idant tried to lead his charge back j the ward. Father Time In Korea. The calculation of the Korean yeai j said to begin about the latter end ol : nuary. about a month later than oui ! n. The moons of the calendar are j ide alternately long months of thirtj i ys and short ones of twenty-nine. , e first is a long month, called a reat moon;" the second a shorf J on, the third a "great moon" again, i il so on. rhe moons are divided Into thre* | rts of ten days each, instead of intc i ir weeks, as with us. The day is di < led into twelve hours, each one ol ; ( Lich is twice as long as one of oui ! n. The Korean day begins at mid i :ht j , n calculating age, Koreans takf ; ( all account of any fraction of s J ' ir. The moment a Korean baby is ! | rn he is said to be one year old, anc J , ? year old be remains until trie corn | j ; of the next New Year's- Day. wbei | is suddenly advanced to be tw( irs old, just as all bis compatriot: ; pronounced a year older, no matte) w near tbe close of the expiring yeai | ?y may bave been born. ^s may be believed, time is not o: ( lcb value to a community whicl | t kons 011 sucb a system. Tbe means ' , calculating age of individuals savor: , 8 "Alice in Wonderland." American travelers conclude it i: | , fe to deduct a year and six month: j t >m tbe given age of a Korean to line ; , t bow old be really is. 1 , The Lril Eye. j ! rhe late Queen Isabella of Spaii lieved in the evil-eye, believed tha' , > Italian Bourbons possessed it. ant lieved that they cast it upon her t< r detriment. She was a victim of it, l? maintained, from the hour of bei j th, for both her mother, Queer ; iristina. and her aunt, the Duchess fi Seville, were members of tiiu! ,, use.. l 77 ew York City.?Full waists worj With fancy boleros are extremely smar and allow of many charming and effe< tive combinations. This one shows ; J - \- II II II I' II j FANCY "WAIST. full waist of dotted silk mull, wit slashed bolero of pale green mousselin taffeta, which matches the skirt, bu there are numberless other material that are equally desirable. Veiling are always pretty made with waists o either thin, soft silks or muslin am very nearly all the season's fabrics cai be utilized. The yoke of lace with col lar to match makes an attractive fefl n-rxA 1 ci TrM+li 1 ono nr lUItr UiiU 1 o umpucu 1MLU 1UV.V v*. WMV banding when the bolero is not used. The' waist is made with a fitted lie Ing on which the full fronts and bad are arranged and is closed invisibly al and on a line with, the ieft edge of th yoke, which is hooked over onto th left shoulder seam. The sleeves ar wide and full, finished with doub! A Late Design frills, and can be made full length bj using linings to the wrists and lacinf the lower portions to form cuffs. Th< 6lashed bolero is cut in one piece anc Is arranged over the waist, being joinet to it at the lower edge beneath the ful belt. The quantity of material required fo: the medium size is: For waist, foui ind one-fourth yards twenty-one inchei wide, three and five-eighth yards twen ty-eeven inches wide, or two and one fourth yards forty-four inches wide with one-half yard of all-over lace; foi bolero, one and three-fourth yard.' twenty-one or twenty-seven inches wide, or seven-eighth yards forty-foui Inches wide. Grinallle Silks. The most precious bits of' stainec1 plass in Old World cathedrals are th( pieces of "grisaille," so-called, decora tive painting in monochrome of i [rreenish gray. The silk merchants borrow the word his season as a trade name of grisaille. Some are the queen's gray, a sober ?olor which is adopted by women in lialf mourning or by those who seldom vear anything but black. Some shades if gray without the slightest tinge oi sTeen also pass muster as grisaille. Flounce t<m!>rolder5es. Deep or narrow flounce embroideries n tine Swiss or heavy materials, collar tnd cuff sets, and special blouse sets, ire manufactured of this embroidery. flounce that will do away with the lecessity of gathering is shown, made if a circle of Swiss, the embroidery jeing along the outer border. The oui;d centre is intended he the size >{ the skirt or petticoat, although it nay be cut out to accommodate a vider one. The plain edge of the ircle is stitched to the draperies. The embroidery then falls in folds, uuch more graceful than the ordinary lounce. Latest ItfcnB in Luce. The day of the heavy, rope-like lace s waning, and all the new sorts coning now to trim the summer frocks ire on the Chantilly order, thin and dry as cobwebs. But most beautiful obyvebs they arc, wrought upon wiUi u delicate wreaths of flowers and othe t designs suggesting the Pompadou period. Breton, Aiencon and the Ma a line laces, as those with a basis o - fine netlike Maline are called, ar< going to have a great season. A Coming; Mode. Fine Brussels net, or footing, ii going to be largely used to beautifj our thin frocks. More than one dainty creation displayed in smart shops ii trimmed only with this footing. Band! of it are set around the organdie oi Swiss skirt, in place of tucks, insertet in bodice and sleeves, and of wide long band serves as a sash -with long flowing ends. The beautiful effect o frosty-looking net in this capacity cai be imagined. Mnslin Walking Gowns. It is a comfortable prediction tha dark muslins will be fushionable fo: promenade wear this summer, an< the newest models have no trimming! on the skirt except two or thre< flounces. Dark blue muslin scatterei with a rose pattern has the skir b flounces headed with a ruching o e pink taffeta, which/ also trims thi I draped fichu around the shoulders. s s Crepe de Cliioe Suits. f One of the newest particularly smar 3 stuffs for the coat and skirt suit, am a one that has been eagerly receive* [- simply on account of its novelty fo: the purpose, is crepe de Chine. r Latest Glove. A short, loose wristed glove withou I- buttons is being worn by a few goo< tt dressers. e 1 Shirt Waist With Underarm Gores. e t - ? TT-oic+a m a tin in tflilo' 0 I JT liXLLl OJlll b n uiwiw, ujhmv ? e style, always are in demand and al by May Manton. r ways are smart. This one is mad* ; with under-arm gores, -which render ii 2 peeuliaiy well suited *o stout figures 1 and is appropriate for the entire rang( 1 of waistings, although shown in whit? 1 mercerized cueviot. xne Dace is piam drawn down in gathers at the wais1 r line, but the fronts are slightly ful r and blouse over the belt. With th< 5 waist are worn a novel tie and bell - of ribbon, the former being made ii - one piece with the stools: and closec , at the back. r The waist consists of fronts, baci 3 and under-arm gores, the fronts be ; ir.g laid in narrow pleats at their uppei r edges and either pleated at the waisl line or left free to be adjusted to th? figure as preferred. The slee-v-ee art the fashionable ones of the season ancl 1 form drooping puffs over the cuffs. ! The quantity of material required foj . the medium size is four and three i eighth yards twenty-one inches wide SHIRT 'WAIST. four yards twenty-seven inches "wide, or two and one-fourth yards forty-four inches wide, with one-fourth yards of any widtfa for tie. THE CEOLOCICAL SURVEY. rtii lade by a Well-Trained and Disciplined PV I Scieutlflc Corj>.?. When the .Northern Pacific Railway ! j?? **as selecting coal lands in tbe dense- I i y forested regions of Washington, says | W | he Book lover's .\iagazine, the xeolo- i J ;lst in charge, having measured and ' ! !alculated the dip of the strata, said i j o his assistant, "J'-n, take your drill 1 ' rew over to section thirteen and see j r f you don't find coal about the middle j r )f the section." Jim, who knew that the geologist j ' j lad never visited section thirteen, | } I went off 011 what he considered a wild j I ?oose chase. When be arrived on the j ground tbe deep cover of undergrowth j j and soil prevented examination of the j 1 i rocks. But he went to work, and in i r ; a short time sent bis drill into a good j r i bed of coal, great quantities of which i | have since been used to haul trains ; 3 ! across tbe mountains. Jim would drill j f i n rtinnri haw if tbp cpnlncrist told ! j biiu there was coal in it. ' I Although it is uot always possible j j thus accurately to predict the discov- i ery of minerals, it can be done with j 1 sufficient frequency and certainty to j render valuable ihe mapping of soil I and rock strata which is being carried j out all over the country by the Nation | :.l Geological Survey. This work, first J j systemized in 3879. has progressed so j j far that a third of the area of the 3 ! United States, or about 1,000,000 a I m j I square miles, has been plotted, exam- |^qj ^ I ined and mapped. The maps describe ^ j the contour or changes in elevation of < the surface, the rainfall and draiuage, a'hd the geological formation, as well ^ as the railways, roads, rivers auci po- , ^ ^ litical divisions. j I? There is no better trained or disci- j M , plined scientific corps in the world ; R?a j than that which has this task in - charge. It is divided for field work ?yat into three chief divisions. The first plea to cover the ground is the topographi cal, which, after laying out the eoun- for t try in quadrangles of a square degree rem 1 each, surveys minutely everything Jest within those boundaries, measuring ' ^ the height of every hill and mountain, I Bur the depth of every valley, and the ? r course, direction and exact location of every watercourse or other feature This provides the now familiar contour map in which points of equal eleva- sin* tion above sea level are connected by ^?.6 a line. The presence or abs nee of ;^ii ? ! and mady lines id a sluuii area jhuhuics a 6teep slope or a gentle descent or a tin level plain. ' Following the topograpnieal workers come tbe geologists, who examine soil ^ and rocks, sink drills, examine bor 3 ee ings, measure tbe dip of strata and ; Pr0( study tbe geological formation of tbe | 0n whole region. On tbe .topographical | mai map they plot the colors, which by international agreement represent the various minerals. jap Last of all come the bydrographers j ^on who study the rainfall, tbe capacity ol | ^ j watercourses, tbe current and volume j ^ a | of rivers at all stages, the capacity ol j J(K)] i lakes and ponds?all that pertains to aoo drainage. j is ? An engineer having these facts pro j 0jCI vided for him is able almost at a glance i to select a route for a railway or a ! canal, or to locate tbe best site for a J ^ storage reservoir. It is on this account i and because of tbe excellence of the j ' corps that Congress has intrusted the j Geological Survey with the carrying s out of the new reclamation law, bj _jjj .which arid lands are to be made fer tile through irrigation. Although tbe <j] law is very young, tbe engineers have ' |am alronHv hppn nhla tn hoL'in sis dams f 1 v"? ?- - ??=? ? i JI j for reservoirs, and to project a six j [n ] mile tunnel to divert a river in Col j ^ orado. FF Iceland Is American. ! 3epg The old, old question whether Ice , j*er] land is European or American is an j swered. The land of the geysers is i Yankee. It is waking up. M Consul Mahin, of Nottingham, re j]d ports that Iceland, cut off from the j stre world save for slow mails, is to be for linked to other countries by wireless aot telegraph with the Shetland Island 01 the mainland of the United Kingdom g-rr more than six hundred miles. The ? Ft Icelandic Parliament has voted a year 3eni ly subsidy of $9380 for twenty years I Co., and also for similar communications I Cou between Reykjavik and the principal ' | towns of Iceland. I that ' I Four-fifths of the foreign trade oi j Cat > i the island is with Denmark and Great j ' J Britain. In 1900 the imports totalled ! ; j $2,507,902 and the exports $2,571,921. j ' ? A single merchant at Reykjavik last ! > j opto 1 | year bought salt fish for $300,000 cash ' face ' i and exported it mostly to Spain. Emi free ' j gration has not been great in recent j 8c ' | years. Farming has made great pro- t Tl 1 i gress owing to the agricultural schools. | ' | A butter export on the Danish system i T i has been commenced, and the stock of ill 1 j cows is increasing. ' sho . J Am Baronees liurdett Couttg. ! gp]< I I The Baroness Burdett Coutts, says I London Queen, was much feted recent' j Jy, when she celebrated her ninetieth I | birthday, all her many friends vying easi i to do her honor, and the flowers she feet ' | received were most beautiful. There j all< | were roses, orchids, stocks, lilies tilling 1 many beautiful baskets, and arriving j j with many kind words of greeting and i . ^ I good wishes. A very charming basket ! . of La France roses came from the lit- ' m , tie Lady Clifton, who arrived in the j teet I morning with her pretty present, and | l'011 on a card tied to the basket were the j S; I words, "From the youngest Baroness t lock to the oldest Baroness."' The Duchess I j ( of St. Albans also sent a beautiful has- j tion ket of China roses and lilies of the val. j FJ*' ley, and Lady Asbmead-Bartlott's j present was a fan made of white 1 nlat stocks and a spray of lilies. The great = event of the birthday was the large ! luncheon party given by the Baroness j Aj at her house in Stratton street. ' lS i V Remarkable ?w Mineral. I ^ Specimens of a remarkable mineral ! ne wly discovered in Ceylon Lave been t)al sent to London for analysis, flic Lope we a. j that this substance might prove to be | a source of wealth in containing large quantities of thorium?of which incandescent gas mantles are made?ap- B pears to have been ill founded; but. on Hi the other hand, there seems good reasou to believe that its potentia I itier in othtr directions are much greater than any one could have guessed. It lias 19 already yielded signs of containing two elements hitherto unknown iu cheu.- Bs9 ists. and it may well turn out to be 5?8B the most precious product of Cej Ion's Isle. 1 II HOT WITHER Mil Veil Known Canadian Lady Sends j etter of Endorsement to Pe-ra-na. i isa Mary Burns. 28 Spring Garden d, Halifax, N. S., writes: "Having ? I Peruna for indigestion and stomach 1 ible and to build up a broken down 1 em with the very best results, 1 am ] ?ed to state my experience with thia illent medicine. 1 nad been troubled ' l stomach trouble and poor digestion some years, and although I tried many < edies and dieting, nothing seemed to ( ore my health until 1 used Peruna. < three months 1 had entirely recov- ' I my health and strength."?Mary i ns. 1 " -11-1 -r _ Utm.lo.. Pnhv ijuimuj ui M u?vj. 1 certain parts of the Himilaya intains- the native women have a t Hilar way of putting their children I ileep in the middle of the day. The t d is put near a stream of water, by means of a palm leaf or a scoop the water is deflected so as < run over the back of the child's (J. The water pouring on the d's head apparently sends it to p and keeps it so, while the mother J ?eeds with her work in the fields. 1 one seems ever to fear that baby ' r be drowned.?Chicago Journal. ^ Japanese Executions. ' ipital punishment is in vogue in an, but no one?not even the execuer?witnesses the actual dispatch iie condemned man, who is placed . kind of box and left to himself as 2 as the noose is adjusted. The r or the box falls when the signal ;iven, and the murderer drops into nity unseen. The Pathway to Fame. ny man who seeks notoriety and Dot get it otherwise may realize wish by claiming the authorship iny poem he may fancy. There is ? to be a controversy in which he be mentioned.?Washington Star. tie number of carcases of frozen ( b and mutton landed in the port j London during 1903 was 5,065,351. | L88U only iw carcases wm- nu^i/nN. Y.-27 TS permanently cured. Noflteornervousafter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great /eRestorer,$2trial bottle and treatise free El. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila.,Pa Narrow Street* in Japan. ost of the Japanese cities are very and their streets are too narrow for et railways. To rebuild the streets 1 the use of the street railways is ' an easy matter. rs of Ohio, Citt of Toledo, I Lucas County. ) * iank J. Cheney make oath that he Is or partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney <k doing business in the City of Toledo, nty and State aforesaid, and that said will pay the sum of one hundred dols for each and every case of catabrh cannot be cured by the use of Hall's abbh Cube. Fbank J. Cheney. yorn to before me and subscribed in my -a?,, presence, this 6th day of Decem:al. [ ber, A.D., 1886. A.W. Gleabon, ? ' * Notary Public. all's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and directly on the blood and mucous surs of the system. Send for testimonials, F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. >ld by all Druggists, 75c. ike Hall's Family Pills for constipation. American Shoes In Denmark. he American-made shoe is popular Denmark. Two of the foremost e stores in Copenhagen use the ierican shoe for a "leader" in their ?ndid show window exhibits. Ladle* Can Wear Shuei i sine smaller after using Allen's Foote, a powder. It makes tight or new shoes Aires swollen, hot. sweating, aching , ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. At Iruggists and shoe stores, 25c. Don't act any substitute. Trial package Free by 1. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y. idium, made of compressed cork, is used making furniture, etc. rs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children hing, soften the gums, reduces inflammai, allays pain,cures wind colic, 25c.a bottle lxony has seven schools for training smiths and blacksmiths. 3o not believe Piso's Cure for Consumphas anequal for coughs and colds.?John 31'kr, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15,1SKK). j j ussia has almost three times the popion of Japan. ' RIFA5S TABtJLES tre Ibe txrt dy* pep9ia medicine err:- made. A hundred millions of them har? been sold ina single year. Constipation, heartA/1 jcyJ burn. n:clc headache, dizziness, bad IKfoU?^ breath.sore thioutmd every Illness Kb? anting (mm a disordered stomach I are rrlieTod or cured br Ripaas TabDies. One *111 geicrally relief lin twenty minute*. Theflre centpackaeelsenouafU m ordinary occasion. All druggists sell theau Thompson $Ere late i m WOMENJERVOUS. I Ingestions bv Dr. Hartman?How . /| tO'Combat the Nervous Depression * Incident to Warm Weather. Nervousness la very common aivcirg romen. This condition is due to anaemio erve centers. The nerve centers are he reservoir for nerve vitality. These enters become bloodlesj for the want of iroper nutrition. This condition is especially noticeable luring the warm season. Every sumtier an army of invalids are produced as . direct result of weak nervous systems. This could easily be overcome by the ( ise of Peruna. Peruna strikes at the oot of the trouble by correcting the ligestion. Perfect digestion furnishes in* reased nutrition . for the nerve centres. S terfectly digested food gives these neser oirs of life a vitality which creates 6trong, teady nerves, and in this manner fortifies md nourishes life. \CJeo Plflnnkft flr*arr a nrnm inonf milfTCP lociety woman of Stfemplais, Tenn., in a ecent letter from 174 Alabama street, mtes: "To a society woman wnose nerrous force is often taxed to the utmost rom lack of rest and irregular meal*, [ know of nothing which is of so much \eneflt as Peruna. I took it a few nonths ago when I felt my strength givng way, and it soon made itself manfeat in giving me new strength and iealth."?Miss Blanche Orey. Pe-m-na Contains No Narcotics. One reason why Peruna has found per- Tfcfl nanent use in so many homes is that it :ontains no narcotic of any kind. Perun* s perfectly harmless. It can be used any ength of time without acquiring a drug jabit. Peruna does not produce temporary esults. It is permanent in its effect. It has no bad effect upon the svstem, tnd gradually eliminates catarrh Dy renoving the cause of catarrh. There are a nultitude of homes where Peruna has been lsed off and on for twenty years. Such a ;hing could not be possible if Peruna con- $ ;ained any drugs of a narcotic nature. At this season of the year we are peculiarly liable to inflammations of tha ttomach and bowels. It ie the part of wia* iom to learn how to treat them short and n the easiest and quickest manner. Pe- 1 runa does this by its peculiar power over ill forms of catarrhal troubles. Across the Line Fence. "I am looking for my cat. l naven't seen him for several days, and I didn't know but you might have seen him sver in your yard." "What sort of cat is he?" "Large and white, with a black stripe flown his back." "Quarrelsome animal?" . %S "Well, he's a pretty good fighter." "You'll find him over here in the jk fence corner, third plank north from the barn, if you care to dig him up. flj Cool weather for this time of year, B| isn't it?"?Chicago Tribune. sssa I Sliced Bacon, ma Sliced Bee f, FOR 1/1 Al A Marmalade. 1& IMia Cranberry Saaoe, IIIIIMl Strawberry Jam. Packed In Vacaain Glass Jar*. Asi your grocer or write BEECH-NUT PACKING CO., CANAJOHAfflE, N. Y. FREE to WOMEN 1 A Large Trial Box and book of in? . structlons absolutely Free and Post* paid, enough to prove the value of PaxtineToilet Antiseptic Paxtine Is In powder \ iiasStSS*. _< *or to dissolve ia water ? non-potsonoas and farsuperiorto liquid AflFantiseptics contain tan alcohol which irritates inflamed surfaces, and WjrL have no cleansing propmfl ^ UK* erties. The contents ?' every box makes aH HE more Antiseptic Solution?lasts longer? goes further?has mors 3P uses In the family and MiT' does more good than any antiseptic preparation ' The formula of a noted Boston physician. . L _ %#_? I ana usea wiin great success as a vaginai Wash, for Leucorrhcea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, and all soreness of mucus membrane. In local treatment of female ills Paxtine is invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash w? challenge the world to produce its equal for thoroughness. It is a revelation in cleansltog and healing power; it kills all germs whicE cause inflammation and discharges. All leading druggists keep Paxtine; price,60c, A box; if yours does not, send to us for it. Don't take a substitute ? there is nothing like Paxtine. Wrlteforthe Fi*eBoi of Paxtine to-day? B. PAXTON CO., 7 Pope Bldg.. Boston. Mao. .. * :, INSOMNIA 1 "I have been mior Cascarete for insomnia, with which I have been afflicted for orer twenty yean, and I ean eay that Cascarets have rlren tat mere relief than any other remedy i have erei tried. 1 hall certainly recommend them to my irlenca aa DCiag *J1 tucjr ?ic . .., Thoi. OlUard, Elgin, iU. The bowels ^ pmoo CANDY CATHARTIC Pleaaant, Palatable, Potest, Taste Good, Do Good, Nerer Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, 10c, JSc.sflc.Keret told In bnlk. The gennino tablet atamped CCG. Guaranteed to cure or your moiiejr back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 597 ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES I PAY SPOT CASH FOE ?nnrm?Y LAND WARRANTS tstraed to lo'dters of anv w.tr. Write me at oaoe. fRA-SK H. REGER, Barth Block. Denver, ^clo SHH'lW'liHiiljBl CURES WHERE All ELSE FAILS. Q' Best Cougb Syrup. Taste* Good. D*C W In time. Sold t>y c rural't*. |M nOnDfiV NEW DISCOVERT; r*L/ ? qnttk r?II?f u4 nm wmt , tut Book of lesilrcooltls >sd 10 days' V*?tsua| free. Dr. I a. oreii'i ioia, BoxB, iUutt, t*. IE c 11 11