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A True Southerner. Senator Beveridge was praisin the savoir-faire of a Southern Coi gressman. "His savoir-faire," said the Sen? tor, "never deserts him. I once se next him at a banquet. Suddenl there was a clattering fall, and clumsy waiter spilled a plate of sou clear down his back. He just bit h; lip. " 'It was thick soup I asked for he said, in a slightly reproachfi voice, to the man."?Washingto Post. Cure For Toothache. a t.nndnn nhvsirlan at a meetin v of a medical society stated that ej traction of teeth was unnecessary He was enabled to cure the most des perate case of toothache, he said, ur less the case was connected with rheu matism, by the application of the fol lowing remedy to the diseased tooth Alum, reduced to an impalpable pow der, two drachms; nitrous spirits o ether, seven drachms; mix and appl to tooth.?London Globe. WOMEN SUFFER NEEDLESSLY Many Mysterious Aches and Pain Are Easily Cured. Bachache, pain through the hips dizzy spells, heedaches, nervousness hb bloating, etc., ar SO? troubles that com PICTURE monly come wit! 1^ sick kidneys. Don' rrvjL,* mistake the cause? l . Doan's Kidney Pill ^ have cured thou WL sands of women at fiicted in this way. jlH| Mrs. William Jones bHkI R. F. D., No. 6 If 'ITlNorth East. Pa. MBiDaaAJl says: "Infiammatloi of the bladder kept me in agony to Blx months. I could hardly walk fron one room Into the other. 1 had ni sleep night after night; my ankle were swollen all the time. I oftei reeled and fell. I began using Doan'i Kidney Pills. My health began t< mend at once. At the end of sL months I was as well as ever befon In my life." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Cong*-ess refused United State Commissioner of Education Brown' request for $3000 to study a certaii phase of child life, but granted $15, 000- for a scientific study of clams. A Bare Good Thing* I "Am using Allen's Foot-Ease, and cai / < truly say 1 would not have been without i so long, had 1 known the relief it wouli give my aching feet. I think it a rare $oo< thing for anyone having sorfe or tired tee) ?Mrs. Matilda Holtwert, Providence, E Sold by all Druggists, 25c. Ask to-daj Men Who Guard the King. The British Honourable Corps o Gentlemen-at-Arms, the body-guar< of the King, has just celebrated th four hundredth anniversary of it founding. It Is now composed o T fAiABol W A Vlpfrher JLueucciiaui-\^v/*\sAA^? M. -?? clerk of the cheque and adjutant o the body-guard, and Colonels Mltfori and Spragge. The corps was formei by Henry VIII. Immediately after hi accession. Jn the old days one of th duties of its members was to accom pany the sovereign on the battlefield and there to form a ring around hiD and to guard him with battle-axes Nowadays, when it is not the custon for the sovereign to go in person ti war, the gentlemen-at-arms are callei upon to assume less onerous work For instance, they are required t< attend levees at St. James' Palace and to keep clear the ways to th royal presence. When there is i court at Buckingham Palace the; Cttend there; and they are present a Westminster when the King open Parliament. Examination Time. Miss Clara Evelyn McHugh, i fefycher in one of the Topeka schools :?ead at1 a recent teachers' meetinj from a collection of quaint examina tion answers that she had been gath ering for some years. The gems of Miss McHugh's col lection were: "A blizzard is the inside of a hen. "The equator is a menagerie lioi running round the earth." "Oxygen is a thing that has eigh sides." "The cuckoo never lays its owi eggs. ?wasniugum oiai. WON'T MIX Bad Food and Good Health Won' Mix. The human stomach stands mucl abuse, but it won't return goo< health if you give it bad food. If you feed right you will feel right for proper food and a good mind i: the sure road to health. "A year ago I became mucl alarmed about my health, for I be gan to suffer after each meal, no mat ter how little I ate," says a Oenve woman. "I lost my appetite and the ver; thought of food grew distasteful, wit! the result that I was not nourishe< End got weak and thin. "My home cares were very neavv for beside a large family of my owi I have also to look out for an age> mother. There was no one to shoul der my household burdens, and com what might I must bear them, an< this thought nearly drove me franti when I realized that my health wa breaking down. "I read an article in the pape about some on with trouble just lik mine being cured on Grape-Nuts food and acting on this suggestion. I gav Grape-Nuts a trial. The first dish o this delicious food proved that I ha< struck the right thing. "My uncomfortable feelings i; stomach and brain disappeared as i by magic, and in an incredibly shor space of time I was again mysell Since then I have gained 12 pounds i: weight through a summer of har work and realize I am a very differen woman, all due to the splendid food Grape-Nuts." "There's a Reason." Trial wi! prove. Read the famous little bool "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A nei one appears from time to time. The are genuine, true, and full of hurna interest. i i ? | BALLADE OF TALK. g ' l- Oh. if you sleep, or if you wake. I And if you smile, or if you sigh.,. 1 And if you mar. or if you make, j And if you sell, or if you buy, it And if you praise, or villify, v And if you spurn, or if you woo, 3 < If you pollute, or purify? a Why, fplks will talk, whate'er you do! P is Oh, if you give, or if you take, . If truth you tell, or if you lie, 1 If you be saint, if you be rake, , If you disgrace, or dignify, j] If you enrage, or pacify, If creeds you preach, or creeds pooh-poo n , If you amuse, or terrify? | Why, folks will talk, whate'er you do! Oh, if you build, or if you break. If you be bold, if you be shy, v g If vou be brave, or if you quake, Tf you be slow, if you be spry, If you admit, if you deny, ' If vou retreat, if you pursue, It you corrupt, or eaify? . Why, folks will talk, whate'er you do! ' envoy: [. Oh, be you low, or be you high, If you be false, if you be true, And if you live, ana if you die? f Why, folks will talk, whata'er you do y ?Harold Susman, in Life. | HE WON s | THE GIRL g "There goes on? more ov th' ui appropriated blessings on this con ^ munity," said Philander Beasley, i t a middle aged spinster passed tl blacksmith shop. "There is shore pile ov onclaimed valuables ov tt lady gender in this village." "You don't need to worry," sai Bildad Smiley. "You've claime j your share. Is it four or five clain you've put in at the matrimonii department?" ^ "You mind your own blamed bus r ness, young feller, an' I'll min j mine," returned the offended Phi 3 ander. "I've been blessed weth thre g good wives, if you want to know, ai 1 I made a livin' fer them while the was in this vale ov tears." "It's right queer thet so many c E our gals has stayed single," intei a rupted Reason Jupe, with the laudi ble desire to lead the talk awa from dangerous channels. "I don know," he continued, "ez I ever se a place where they was sich a pel S t'euidgc uv uauuouuic ?uuicu tu ?? s bev. An' about every third oc i grows up a ol' maid.'"They ain't nothing queer aboi It at all," said Jabe Henry. ",How i nation are our gals goin* to marr If they ain't no men to choose from ? Why, great snakes! There's thre d gals for every boy baby born in th: d country. Everybody knows thet w( \ men outlive men ? excep^in' whe r". they marry inter the Beasley famii; So even ef a gal was ez as pretty e all git out she wouldn't hev muc t show to git married onless they was j pestilence broke out thet took onl e female women an' she was the onl s one that had been vaccinated." f * "Thet rule hasn't worked in som 1 cases in this country," said Marti i Underdunk. "I knowed three gal 3 over in Beulah township thet hed a s kinds of fellers in love with thei e afore they fln'Iy got married. The . was ol* Hausenger's daughters." I "T'vo hoarH tpl! nf tht? famhlv > * *v """" " " " "" """ ' a said Jabe. "They was three of fou i. boys, too." 3 "Jhey was," replied Martin. "Ai o it was owning to them boys thet tl 3 gals didn't git married quicker' they did." 3 "Yes, consarn their picturs!" e: ?, ploded Philander Beasley. "The e ort to be a law in this country makii a it a capital offense to raise sich boy ir as them!" tj "Hi, Philander!" cried Bilda s , Smiley. "So you hed one ov th' Hai senger gals in thet killin' eye o yourn once, had you?" "Dad, fetch you!" stormed Philai der. "Ain't you quit your foolisl ness yit?" '' "I kain't help it, Philander, hoi _ i est I kain't. If I kep' quiet I'd bio1 _ | out a fusion plug or somethin' lik a automobile does. Ever sense th< time after your second wife was too an' von made th* sneerh in tow ? | meetin' I hev had a awful ticklis j place on my funn^ bone." I "I didn't know I said anythin' fui ny on thet occasion," said Philandt stiffly. "Thet's why it was funny," grinne Blldad. "Ef you hed tried to be hi mor you'd hev jes' made me sad. A you said was, in referrin' to your r< cent bereavement: 'Th' memory : ' ever weth me of thet dear departe one whose place never will be fllle ?perhaps.' Thet's/all you said ths J I remember." * "Tell us about th' Hausenger gal Martin," said Reason Jupe, the lov? ' of peace. "Sure I will, ef them two fellers' quit- jawin'. You see, it wasn't ez 1 them Hausenger boys was little kic thet didn't know no better an' woul git into mischief ez natural ez snee: r ,, . in . unp couia matte excuses it sich. Thes boys was older than tl gals?big, luraberin' fellers, but < * full of tickle ez a dog is full of flea They didn't do things jes' a purpos to scare away their sisters' feller ' but they must have their fun wha J ever stood in th' way. "Ef a feller driv up in a buggy ai vjtent in to ast one of th' gals woul ? sne accept his company to a drive i th' pale moonlight, them- boys 'u c change th' buggy wheels, put th' hin 3 ones on in front an' vicy-vercy. Whe th' feller come out he'd hev to drh r off with his knees up to his chin, ai e him tryin' to peep over th' dashboar ' ! to see th' hoss. e j "They'd tie a stroing to th' parlc jj ! door knob when a feller was stayin' little late, then tie th' other end to a panful of ol' iron on th' top landin' < f th' stairs. When the caller started 1 t tiptoe out he'd haul thet load of juc > downstairs an'- ol' Hausenger 'i n come out madder'n a wet hen. They (j pour water out o' th' upper windi t on th' head ov a feller that was tall [ in' to a gal on th' outside steps. "Th" way they hurt Philander [1 feelin's was bycatchin'him an' lockii .? him up in th' smokehouse. He didn get outen there till th' ol' man con round in th' morning fer bacon s T blame near busted Philander's hec y with his lantern, thinitin' be was a thief?" "Thet's a lie," interrupted Philander. "He didn't do sich thing as hit me weth a lantern. He used a ax handle an" I have th' lump on my head ylt." "Well, anyhow," said Martin, "th' boys kep' up thet line ov humor till they mighty nigh spiled their sisters' chances. ci "Then one fall Bud Powis come Ir over from Bog Holler to look around ec an' he got his eye on Medory, th' Is , youngest Hausenger gal. She looked te ' good to him from th' fust, an' they It made a mighty fine lookin' couple. Bud was big ez a hoss an' Medory was little an' powerful cute lookin'. He driv her home from singin' school a few times an' didn't say nothin' when them fool brothers ov hers i -1 3 ~ nn Vlfm j piayeu meir muiin.cjr ouiuco uu mm. > Bud was a scrapper, all right, but he | wanted to. git in good with th' family. "One night Medory got a spell like all gals does when they git shore that I a feller i3 gone on 'em. She treated Bud shameful all evenin'. He went in th' parlor with her to try to make up, but she only treated him worse'n o ever. ? "He wasn't felin' right cheerful 4/ when he came out, an' when he found ^ his wheels tied together with a ox chain he lost his temper in a minute. Yes, sir, he got on th' warpath in dead earnest. He knowed them four a~ boys was hid in th' barn snickering at a" him. Scf in there he goes, lit th' barn ls lantern an' after lookin' 'round a ie spell pulled them boys out from bea hind th' oat bin. ie "They tried to rush him in a bunch, but he got hold of th' belly band of a 'd plow harness an' finished up th' purt!(* iest job ov whalin' ever done in this 1S State. 11 "He was Just throwin' the last joker out through th' barn winder I" when Medory come runnin' out. Bud thought he was goin' to git a big m roast afore she sent him home fer jj? !? good, but she comes smilin' inter th' 0j a barn, pleasant ez a basket of chips. RI !y " 'Bud,' sez she, 'when you git over k, your awful temper you Kin come into i0 ,v th' house an' say you're sorry you Bi r" was slch a bad boy.' m "Then she held up her skirts, dain- ? J ty-Uke, to step over one o' them bad' ly frazzled brothers o' hers on her !e way out. r" "Medory and her sisters didn't hev e no more trouble after that night. ie They all got married afore spring." "I wisht the feller'd broke the four fool necks o' them Hausengers," n said Philander Beasley, spitefully. y "It wouldn't hev done you no ? good," said Bildad Smiley. "You was !e took with another flit ov matrimony ls afore that happened." ? Chicago )_ News. n . I! Rushina the Canal, i _ U W y y Every two minutes a ton of coal is burned up at Panama, every minute e twelve carloads of rock and gravel 11 are torn from the earth, every hour 1666 pounds of dynamite are ex11 ploded in mountain and jungle, every n minute $124 is spent for labor! y One hundred and thirty-two locomotives are shrieking and creaking in the nine-mile ribbon of the Culeir bra cut?10,000 shirtless men are sweating and swearing? 1250 flat cars a:e running and grumbling! i' One hundred and six miles of.track a split the gorge?a dozen sets of rails, in a width of 200 and-300 feet, are t- hung in tiers one above the other, y Sixty-seven steam shovels are plungi' ing twonty-ton scoops into the earth 's two and three times every minute. Over 2,000,000 cubic yards of earth d oro VioJncr ivresfprl fpftin thfi rnlnhnW i- strata of soil every thirty days. v And on the two sides of the inferno squat the twin peaks of Gold and i- Snow hills like a couple of apples i- which a schoolboy has nearly bitten through. i- Roughly, a hole measuring 97,ff 515,000 cubic yards must yet be :e bored in the Panama clay to make it the canal a reality. When the k French were routed 81,500,000 cubic n yards had been excavated. The jn h Americans have added 42,000,000 cu- te bic yards to this total. tt l- Picture a chasm measuring 125 tl ;r feet in every direction, in which 0] could be buried twenty-five ordinary C? d three-story houses forty feet in tl l- height, in width and length. The tt] 11 equivalent of such a chasm is bored oi 5- every day along the course of the tl is Panama Canal ? the excavation tc d amounting to nearly 2,000,000 cubic ei d feet daily.?From an Article in Put- la it nam's and The Reader. ai q, s Fighting Tuberculosis. tfc ir Three large fraternal orders are at si present conducting sanatoria for their tl* 11 tuberculous members. The Royal if League, the first order to take up b? Is this form of work in t'ne United tr d States, has a sanatorium at Black or z- Mountain. North Carolina. The Mod- fr >r ern Woodmen have recently opened ar h' a sanatorium at Colorado Springs, th ;z and the Knights of Pythias one at th s. East Las Vegas, New Mexico. The | co se Royal Arcanum and the Brotherhood | s, of American Yeomen will consider : fo t- propositions at their coming grand fo councils for the erection of similar ina' stitutions. y? Id st n Truth in Death. j H i tV " Those collectors of queer epitaphs j still are raining them in on poor Tip. j n As usual the husband is the malefic- | fC ret tor, and here's a sample, taken from \ ej an English churchyard: I m 'Q . Here lies my wife, ! w Who's gone on high; I jn >r If I said I was sorry a I too would lie. a ?New York Press. j 3f ' I oi t0 In Merry England. j w ik In a case at Lambeth County Court j id yesterday a woman stated that she j w 'd received 2d. (four cents) each for i ^r making blouses and had to find her C1 k- own cotton and pay another woman | w ls. (twenty-five cents) a dozen for j w 's making the sleeves. It took two days | Ci n' to make a dozen.?London Daily I't Mail. :e n' All employes in the Netherlands fl id who are boarding with their employ- k, a ers are entitled to medical treatment jj. for at least six weeks. New York City.?The blouse that in be made from the pretty flouncigs and bordered materials that are j. ) numerous this season Is one that I quite certain to be needed, and this lodel Is charmingly attractive, while involves very little labor in the . n r im i aking. As Illustrated the front ana a ick portions and the under portions t ! the sleeves are made of tucking, t id the effect Is a most desirable one, t it while the pattern Is simple it al- t ws of several variations. The t eeves can be made of tucking to v atch the front and back, as shown c * ^ I L j*11 #* j J :/ ' I i the back view; or, If bordered ma- 1 rial, with a straight edge is utilized, I le borders can be Joined to make 1 ie sleeves and the tucking omitted; t * the blouse portions and the sleeves in be made from plain material with t ie centre-front and backs only of t icklng, embroidery, lace or other all- ? ?rer. In the last instance, however, f ie edges of the blouse would require 1 i be trimmed with banding, to be ? nbroldered or treated in some simi- e ,r way, but as the edges of the front c id the backs are straight they can t lite easily be finished in any way c iat may suit the fancy, and the de- f gn consequently becomes an exceponally useful one. The blouse Is made with front and tcks, the centre-front and the cene-backs. The sleeves are made in ( le-piece each, although when made , om flouncing two straight lengths e joined on indicated lines, while .e tucking is arranged under to give ie effect illustrated. A standing illar finishes the neck. The quantity of material required r the medium size Is five and one 1U ?flnntioincr fiftOPTl Ill" til >ai UO UL ilUUllViUQ M4VWW*. ches wide with one and one-fourth irds of tuqking eighteen to make as town in the front view; two and le-eighth yards of flouncing with tro and one-fourth yards of tucking i make as shown in the back view; iro and seven-eighth yards twentylur inches wide, one and sevenghth yards thirty-two or one and le-half yards forty-four inches Ide with three-fourth yard of tuckg to make from plain material. Smart Silk Coats. There is no end to the silk coats ie sees; separate coats to be worn ith any sort of skirt. They are jautlfully lined and much trimmed ith the new embroidery by clever itches taken in long effective lines, ossing and interlacing and with ide and narrow silk braid mingled ith the pretty satin cords and acinting dots. Orchid Desi)?ns Used. f The orchid is used for the beauti- f il design with which an elegant f ridai gown of white satin is em- t roidered about the train. j ? ?_i ? Aad rin Rnching For Blouses. fon Wide ruchlng Is used for front of T , . > louses. ' 1 mmtJ? And my ] Veils as Drapery. it ? * i 11 ... i. , . Then the Long lace veils will be used to the Irape the hats. And my ______ be Long Fringe on Frocks. Then my There Is a wide return to .the use s'Ik if fringe of all widths on Indoor kej jowns. In other days it was used on And my i itreet frocks, but it is to be hoped, jew or the sake o? convenience and com- t'3f 8 ort, that this fashion will never reurn. Seven p enc Cretonne on Hate. And Many hats are finished with a little I shall w lit of cretonne just to add color. . , lometlmes it borders the satin ribbon n at ? rhich is used for the big cabbage tow, sometimes it appears in a band ^ you'r? ound the crown and sometimes it is por [Bed as a piping around the edge of fori he brim. But it n gaii W})pr? 9 * Linen Blouses and Skirts, W; Blouses of heavy white linen of the iest quality, with insets of real Cluny, ' rish crochet or filet medallions and T rmbellished with balls, tassels or 7/v^ ords, pay better than any other sort * Zcs >f waists, even if they do cost a iretty sum at first It pays to be inLlvidual in one's blouses. She? 1 throws Child's Dress, splendid This simple little frock has a great 14 every aany advantages to recommend it "Her* t is dainty and attractive and child- comin't Bh in effect, yet it is very easily made In de ji ,nd easily laundered, The front and season? iack panels are cut In one piece each, ?jjy iut at the sides the pleated skirt and young E ?ody portion are joinea oeneain me name'" ielt, If the Dutch neck Is not liked that ^ he dress can be cut high and finished Detroit rlth a standing collar, and the sleeve* an be extended to the wrists. In tks In a remark< =5;^^ package arrest h rsee any "Neithe bank, a] The ] you thl '* ^lB mor t ' "Nev< lUl\ tlle mai pf C-?:% SI ^ / vfl?'* VM W h ji. 'wV/jT ours ce J i plied G j jjj H or f?ur *' (\^ "*"/^l nel6bbO ^t f^yji *****rl I ' 102 ^"ig fill .. m i I \li i ! about ti I /1 v\ ' around POLIC] llustratlon rose colored linen ia em- . )roidered with white, and colored They Hi inens 60 treated are essentially smart his season. p The dress is made with front and w ? >ack panels, the side portions of the es 011 >ody and the skirt, which are pleated ?lore se< tnd jointed to the body and to the !? ma ront and back panels below the belt P?1Ice rhe sleeves are just comfortably full, f?xes fno TMOTL md whatever their length are gatn red into bands. The belt is arranged Dei?j7 >ver the seam at the waist line and Is me uttoned into place and the dress la '' :losed invisibly at the left of the the bas rout. !"eeks ! fox run t other e commen the cent on guar with his huddled 11; i TOIM 1 ers> fish II; J * If the ene i 'lil fl/7 f?X mU lT l / V V ! !l I hleachin l\ I Vl '1.7 4 jimson \ / \ YEr 0f famil yi^ va- It. | b*eac.biE ~~^~ is an ol : very un yhe quantity or material required rhis ca or the medium size (six yeara) is placing our and three-fourth yards twenty- boiling I our, three and seven-eighth yards out all t hirty-two or two and seven-eighth 'ore mai rards forty-four inches wide. leaves t Prneresf EPARING FOR A REST. \ waking, call me early, call *.e y, mother dear, gj orrow I start packing, as I do r i time each year. ' g for vacation up where mountain lamlets run, need a rest, dear mother, long be- it : my packing's done! ^9 Id my shirt waists, mother; there [ twenty-three, I think, 1 lingerie needs ribbons?I shall run P9 ill with pink; ^ skirts must not be crumpled and __ hats must not be crushed, PT coiffure puffs, dear mother, must UU all unrolled and brushed. slippers need new boxes and my H ; embroidered hose a laid out lengthwise, mother, in the test kind ot rows. j pa? iheath and evening dresses and my I meE els ought to be ] tive afest trunk, dear mother; so, at a 21 it, it seems to me. feet arasols, I fancy, will be quite FII ugh to do, lozen three-piece costumes really ;ht to see me through. ear mv cherrv basket and an auto bile veil, > yellow Rajah empire with tho I 3 I nning fan-shaped trail. 1 1 ! waking, call me early, call me \ [|| ly, mother dear, j ? e's such a lot of packing now my | tnight's grace is here. iust be done, dear mother, ere 1 q the rest I seek? ' Just going to the mountains; m Id Cat Cottage. Six a week! ^ ?Lurana W. Sheldon. I -"Oh, Isn't the man that the ball, on your side, just I! He throws it so they hit time! "?Life. 3's a man what say de world's :er a end next July." "What! .j ijji. ?? j? I iiujr rniuuie ui uc wttteimciuu n " ?Atlanta Constitution. I /^nor t*tV> rr Ar\ vah noil thot I u^ui I nu/ viv j wu v?ii vuMh aan Spring? Is that his right "No, mother. I named him cause he's so backward."? Free Press. pinch use Allen's Foot-Ease," ;d the tramp, as he threw a i of white powder into the eyes policeman who was about .to im."?The Harvard Lampoon. ier, raav I go out to spin? 3, my darling daughter, d. your time in the limousine, t don't go near the chauffeur. j say you are in love with Miss * "I sure am." "But I can't thing attractive about her." r can I see it. But it's in the 11 right."?Cleveland Leader. ?arson?"Might I inquire why ink I operate an airship?" when yo was walkin' along nin', de boss sez to de missus, :omes de -new sky pilot.' "? ar trust to synonyms," said a who was threatened with a of promise suit. "What is ble?" "I wanted to say some- I ancy, so I wrote, 'veritably I instead of 'yours truly.' "? I gton Scar. 1 se by this paper," said Mrs. "that growing children re occasional change." "Well, -? rtainly get their share," re- jj riggs. "They brace me three || times a day for nickels and '{J ?Chicago Daily News. SH9 pou think I ought to send my H5 sr abroad to complete her H| aining?" "I dunno. Haven't fl| lsulted anybody?" "Yes, my 9(3 rs." "And what do they say?" 9jg all agree it's the very best .or me 10 ao. ?uieveiana . . ealer. , e way to get a raise in pay? L Learn it: just to go to work to-day To earn it. ?Detroit Free Press. Lapsling was in a high state ;nation. "I'm done with Mrs. crop^ " she said, her eyes snapping, f&JJJ >t hold of a letter I wrote to j her, in which I said something j ZTj be Snaggses, and she's going j fill] giving a gargled version of licago Tribune. a?;i coin E CATCH 7 BABY FOXES. If a( ? with id Been Living High on Thefts *yca' From Boston Suburbs. ry owners in Auburndale, and adjacent places will feel com A 9 /inn I juio ueuauae ul iuc laicoi, eil6G ,de by the Metropolitan Park j0in at Riverside. Seven baby n0^ ive been taken from a den on cupg ton side of the Charles River pr0jorumbega Park. part cubs, which are about half up ^ are confined in a large box in repj( sment of the station. Several j aary tgo a patrolman saw an old mjg] ning ,along the bank of the rjgb nd after some difficulty dis- ^ere the entrance to the burrow. ^ day a squad of officers, armed ttl0S ovels and a gun, found four wer( ntrances to the den. They tjje ced digging in a spot as near very ;re as possible, leaving a man boy d at each hole. One tiny fox tpp . dash for liberty, but was ind immediately made friends he } > captor. When the den was en? pened the remaining six were pect* in one corner. )lace was littered with feathbones and other evidences of rgy with which tne motner > st have hunted to feed her ' T mily. The body of a muskrat j seat part of the contents of the i ly tc It is thought that the cubs I T. sent to the Zoo on the Middle- j on 1 Is reservation. The mother I mid< not been caught. ? Boston I "j ipt. I this ! w Jimson Jnlee. j turn :hemist who will extract the i ig principle from the common gas! veed and place it within reach | y and laundry use has a forstore. It is a well known | T it there is no better way of j Scot ig the family linen during thro than by putting a few leaves be f m into the boiler, but there no 1 jjection to this practice, as a his < pleasant odor is the result, help n be removed, however, by ^ries the clothes in cold water and he them, or by repeated rinsing, whe his is troublesome, and there- "We ly who know the value of the nois lo not use them. ? Eternal Sabl i. nich . . MUNYON'S AWPAWPILLS ^ The best Stomach ?|and Liver Fills known and a positive and speedy cure for Constlpatlon, Indigestion, Hf'_ i ^aundicc> Biliousness, Sour Stomach, Head| IV ache, and all ailment* g ?H?in?r from ? dlsorII ^ k</ll JIM d e r e d stomach or JLLkU^?*njl sluggish liver. They l\iMA4M contain In concentrat2frH?n ed form all. the virtues and values of "TBT; Munyon's Paw-Taw 1|ttBtonic and are made from the Juice of the r-Paw fnilt. I unhesitatingly recomid these pills as being the best laxaand cathartic ever compounded. Get S-cent bottle and If you are not perly satisfied I will refund your money* [UNYON. iTY-THIRD and JEFFERSON STS., PHILADELPHIA. PA. Are Best For Your Tab to Because they are made of the choicest > materials and guaranteed to be absolutely pure. Llbby'a Vma# | Loaf makes a Helicrht ful dish for Luncheon and you will find. Llbby's Vienna Sausage Cerned Beef Pork and Beans Evaporated MUk equally tempting for any meal. ' r- . ,">?$ ^ "v.Have a supply of Lib by9s in the house and you will always be prepared for an extra guest. You can buy Ubby's I I at all grocers. | Ubby, McNeill ? Ubby I Qhloago J Sleeplessness I may be overcome by a warm bath 9Q with H ^ Glenn's h Sulphur Soap ??. Sold by HiO'i Hair tad Wlusktr Djr*. drugpju. black or brewa, SOcv (ND?IRRIGATED?LAND. petua water rights, fine water, productive soil, allures unknown. 50 bushels wheat per acre. S tons alfalfa. Healthful climate, free Umber, j easy. Write now. LINWOOD LAND CO., Springs, Wyoming. f n Rare Opportunity?160 acre# rich placer 1 ground in famous old channel district, Plumas County, Cal. Equipped, BuildCar, full mine outfit; forty-lire tut of tan-r our hundred to complete. AMS8 REALTY 'AITT, San Diego, California. "^Thompson's Eye Water' Tea Table Etiquette. ?a table etiquette was somewhat I plicated in the days of that^'hard1 and shameless tea drinker," Dr. ison, when many people thought ilng of drinking ten or twelve i at a sitting. It was considered ter for the cups and saucers of a y of tea drinkers to be all passed o the hostess In one batch when enishment was considered necea, and in order that each person tit be sure of getting back the t cup the teaspoons were numd. rhen the cups were passed up e who did not require any more 3 supposed to place the spoon in cup. This writer remembers a ancient dame teaching a small to place his spoon in his cup afthe first cup had been emptied, wondered for the reason. Now ;nows that tea was once very exiive and little boys were not exed to ask again.?London ChronLightning Change. he three-year-old boy on the side in the street car iurned sudden> look out of the window. hereby wiping his muddy shoes ho He-ht-colored trousers of the ile-aged man sitting next to him. Madam," exploded the man, "19 your nasty little?" ere the boy's pretty mother ed her head and looked at him. \ngel boy?" he finished with a ).?Chicago Tribune. N'o Hurry. lie minister of a certain parish in land was walking one misty night - in tho villnerfi when ugn a succi ?i? ell into a deep hole. There was adder by which he could make escape, and he began to shout for A laborer passing heard hia and, looking down, asked who ?vas. The minister told him, reupon the laborer remarked: el, weel, ye needn kick up sic a e. You'll no be needed afore jath, an' this i3 only Wednesday t."?Argonaut.