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flood Fishing. I K. M. Wharry was tellinp some : friends about a proposed fishing trip j to a lake in Colorado he hnd in con- ! templation. "Are there any trout out there?" j asked one friend. "Thousands of 'era?" replied Mr. j Wharry. i "Will they bite easily?" asked au- | other friend. "Will they?" said Mr. Wharry. "Why, they'ro absolutely vicious A man has to hide behind a tree to bait a hook."?Penver Post. Package Waited Free on Request of MUNYOM'8 PAW PAW PILLS STUe best Stomach and Liver Plils known and a positive and speedy cure for Constipation, Indigestion, Jaundice, Biliousness, Sour Stomach, Headache, and all \ ailments arising from a , disordered stomach or sluggish liver. They contain in concentrated form all the virtues and values of Munyon'? PawPaw tonic and are made from the i juice of the Paw-Paw fruit. 1 un hesitatingly recommend tnese pms as being the best laxative and cathartic j ever compounded. Send us postal or ! letter, requesting a fre9 package of j Munyon's Celebrated Paw-Paw Laxative Pills, and we will mail same free of charge. MUNYON'S HOMOEOPATHIC HOME REMEDY CO., 53d and Jefrerson Sts., Philadelphia. Pa. j What He is In. I Visitor?"So your bo^ is in college, , is he, Mr. Corntossel?" ^ Farmer?"I can't say exackly. He'a in ther ball nine, an' in ther jowin' crew, an' in the jimnayzeeum, an' in ther dommytory, but whether he's ever in college is more'n I kin find ?ut by bis letters."?Harper's Bazar. | FIVE YEARS OF PAIN. | A Tale of Terrible Kidney Suffering. ! ' Mrs. J. F. Kibbie, 62 Stevens St., j | Wellsville, N. Y., says: "I cannot describe the suffering I endured from kidney trouble for . V*-., ^ UVC1 live JC ai*3. iUJ I I back was so lame and j RL ? painful I could not ; % J turn in bed -without 7 assistance, nor raise my arms above nay bead. I oftea be$$W$rii' 1 came so dizzy tbat I tfMi'fywJ',.' fell. The kidney secretions were dark, thick and scalded. I received no relief until 1 began using Doan's Kidney Pills. My improvement was so rapid that my fam- 1 ily did not think it would be lasting. In six weeks I could do a bard day's work with ease." | Remember the name?Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. 1 Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. j Safe to Hold Radium. j What is described by its makers i as the most ingenious safe ever constructed has just been completed by the Chubb Company, of London, for the British Radium Corporation. The problem presented to the manufacturers was not only to construct a . safe that would bid defiance to b?rglars, but which would at the same f tim<? prevent the escape of the radium. j ' It is well known to science that radium emanations will pass through the thickest and hardest steel. For this reason the inner coffer of the , safe was made of lead three inches bhick. inclosed within a burglar-proof ' steel shell. There are many other special features, including a means . of collecting the radium emanations j before the coffer is opened. I , This compartment of the eafe is j designed to hold 100 pounds of radium valued at $3,000,000,000. The total weight of the safe is one and a half tons.?New York Sun. Explained. "There's one thing ahout you sub* ' urbanites that I never could understand," said the city chap. "What is that?" queried the com- ; ' muter. j . "I've noticed time and again," con- . tinued the c. c., that when you fellows ( ! reach town in the morning and again when you start for home in the even- j ing, you have a happy look. Now, why is it?" I J "Oh, that's easily explained," replied the other. "After the day'e work in the city we are always glad j to get out of it, and after a night in the country we are always glad to get back."?Chicago News. A DETERMINED WOMAN j 1 rJiiaiiy I'ouuu a ruuu anai vureu ? li "When I first read of the remarkable effects of Grape-Nuts food, 1 de- \ lermined to secure some," says a woman of Salisbury, Mo. "At that time there was none kept in this , town, but my husband ordered some ( , from a Chicago traveler. "I had been greatly afflicted with | sudden attacks of cramps, nausea, j and vomiting. Tried all sorts of rem- | edies and physicians, but obtained only temporary relief. Ae soon as i began to use the new food the cramps disappeared and have never returned. "My old attacks of sick stomach I -were a little slower to yield, but by , continuing the food, that trouble has j disappeared entirely. I am to-day : perfectly well, can eat anything and everything 1 wish, without paying the penalty that 1 used to. We would not keep house without Grape-Nuts. ! "My husband was so delighted with the benefits 1 received that he has been recommending Grape-Nuts to his customers and has built up a very large trade on the food. He sells them by the case to many of the lead- | ing physicians of the county, who ! recommend Grape-Nuts very general- J Jy. Tlaere is some satisfaction in us jng a really scientifically prepared food." Read the little book, "The Road ! to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a , Reason." Ever read the above letter? A new | one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of banian Interest. Cabbage For Poultry. , i The best vegetable for feeding hens ! ^ Is cabbage, for it is succulent and 1 contains the largest amount of ash 1 and protein of all vegetables. J We bang them up just so the hens can pick them clean to the stump. The greatest difficulty is in keeping eabbages in good condition through s the winter. Few methods have been < successful with us. We have tried i Dilintr in the barn and covering with c hay, but they sweat so easily that rot "v soon begins. Burying in a trench in c the garden was only partially a sue- r cess. A cool cellar with the cabbage on shelves or hung from the joist has i given us the best results. The late flat Dutch gives the most feed and requires the least work to raise.?M. E. Chapman, in the Weekly Witness. Method of Treating Seed Grain. j I The method of treating the seed grain is very simple, so simple in fact, that there is no reason why it should net be universally employed. A pint of formaldehyde, which costs about fifty cents, is poured into a barrel containing some forty gallons of water. The oat seeds, which are placed in gunny sacks, are let down into this barrel and allowed to soak fh the diluted chemical solution for some minutes. They are then taken out and dried, after which they are ready , for sowing without any further treatment. Thus the cost to the farmer is scarcely more than a cent a bushel; i wmcn is certainly very nt-iie wucu compared with the destruetiveness of the blight and the great loss which it sntails.?Weekly Witness. Feeding Young Pigs. Concerning the ailment of pigs I c ?ay tliis: I have had a like experience, ^ md the cause I found was in feeding the sow too rich a feed when pigs a ivere small. It will cause them to be- 0 ?om? so fat they will die in the nest s it times. Sometimes ii will give f :hem the thumps, and sometimes the a scour.?. The safest feed when the c pigs are young that I have ever tried ' Is simply wheat bran, not a very ^ strong feed you may say, but if you 11 jive a moderate sufficiency it will fur- s lish milk, and the pigs don't seem to 11 ;et too fat. neither thump nor scour. rhe pigs will not he as plump as when t( ;ow is fed a richer ration, but they ire more likely to live alter they get 1 started. Eegiu on the richer feed s slowly r.nd gradually.?Correspond- v snt of the Indian Farmer. r s Work Horses at ~ TheJr Feed. ? Bulletin 109 of tfle Iowa Station a ;ays that it has been found that oats g1 tie 100 expensive to ieeu ju uirav inantities, and that the ration may > >e greatly cheapened by substituting >i! meal, cotton seed meal, or gluten eed. The health, spirit and endurmee of the horses was the same when ; ed corn in combination with one of j hcce feeds as when oats were fed. ! These experiments show that oil meal nay be worth as much as $60 a ton 'or horse feeding, and cottonseed ncal a little more. The horsea did i hard summer's work on these feeds vithout any conridcrable loss in flesh, rhece experiments are of great value 1 u :o farmers everywhere, as the ques- ^ ion of feeding the work horses cheap- j y, and at the same time in such a vay as to keep them in good flesh, is jj in important one. j, a Remedy For Hoven or Elont. j. The season for hoven or bloat fn a cattle approaches. We see in your I jtl columns many different remedies j t< given, ar.d all may bo good (if time 0 lonld bo given them to meet the re- a jairenients of nature), but as we all y rinow, this is a malady which requires r immediate relief, or death will claim f( Lbe animal. I have had sx large ex- ^ perience in this, as a clover and cat- e Llo raiser, and use but one remedy v alone which has never failed to work successfully, and I am sure, in some rases, in less than live minutes the! j animal would have died if it had not; { been given relief. j n I insert my hand into the mouth r and take a firm hold upon the tongu<* and in pulling it out as far as possi- 0 ble the gas will escape at once. It v moy not all at once, but continue ]( again and again if necessary until all! bns been removed. This do?s not in I ^ ctli^ v.iijr viiotJ. lco iuv cvj.1 iiiia.i xjui an- j ^ jure the mouth or tongue. Most all v other remedies are more or less pain- j, ful and some even dangerous. The c sticking with a lenife is about as much e risk as the disease.?E. Trumbo, in q Ohio I'i'.rmcr. ^ The E^g-Kalinj; i.afcit. t Kgg eating is usually aided or t caused by soft-shelled eggs. To pre- t vent this, have a supply of lime, or s lime plaster, before the fowls where h they can easily get at it and give the h feed in such a manner that the hens t will be compelled to exercise for their , t feed. | v If oncc your fowls get into the! habit of eating eggs, a remedy which , ci 1 have found to answer better than r ar.y other, is to give the hens a supply s of egg-shells for a few days. Infertile v eggs that have been set upon by c broody hens or that have been re-' a moved from the incubator, will answer for purpose; or egg-shells obtnin/irl fiTsm tho hilrnrc ni? nlhrv hiici. ness houses where eggs are largely | . used. Tlie shells inust be given as whole as possible, not broken, and ! j the birds must be allowed to surfeit j themselves with them. After several days of this the fowls will not touch c:j?s again, and the euro will he complete. But there must be a large and continuous supply while it lasts, so that the shells i are lying about the pen all the time, f To use a ne?t with a false bottom {1 is another way of preventing czz- S IWIIWllll? <fr mzmm ;ating', so that the eggs when laid iisappear down an inclined board Into in underneath receptacle, out of each of the thief.?Farmers' Home lournal. Trap Nest For Laying Hens. The larger illustration shown gives i fair idea of a trap nest that anybody :an make in a little while with only i hammer and a saw for tools. Of :ourse, if you have many hens you vill have to make several nests to ac:ommodate all, and then all other lests must be closed or torn up. The trap nest has heen quite an im- : lortant factor in building up strains If Trap Nest. if heavy layers among mos^of the ;opular breeds to-day. Using u, the ireeder, by a process of elimination ,i*d culling each year, breeds from inly the best layers in his flock. The mall fancier has been more successul along this line, as he has had only , few liens and had more time and ared more for his little flock. The nest is made in two compartments. The box proper is fifteen aches square by thirty-two to thirtyix inches long. The hole or opening ctween the compartments need not e round as pictured unless you care o make it so, but it should be just urge enough for a hen to pass hrough easily, and no larger. The ize of the opening will depend upon whether you are raising a large vaiety or a small variety. A lar^e , tiff wire is bent in the shape indiated, and the pari: passing oyer the peniug is made to work freely up nd down like a lever and under wire taples. 4When the hen starts to pass ^ -v ~ " it S 11 ,! j!' ! "" " '"i 1 Nest Box. nder the wire to get into the nest roper she lifts the wire arm up with er back and thus the other wire arm ack from beneath the door, where it as been held up under the lid of the ox, letting it drop in place. Block3 re fastened in front*of the door so bat the door can not be pushed out nd the hen can not escape, 110 mater how hard she tries. The lid on op may bo made of two separate lids r as one piece, as you please. With little experimenting on your part ou can bend the wire just at the ight angle so that it will work perectly each time. The wire arm over he opening should be placed high nough so that the hen will naturally rant to pass under it instead of trjQg to step over it. The first compartment should be rom four to six inches longer than he drop door is high, so the door will ot strike the hen on the back as it is eleased. fnnli l-inn r.1, ,1 on nloTninnm ij<11,u nun ai.uuiu iiavc an rtiuiiijiiuui r copper leg band on one of her less nth a number on St. Then as you re?ase the hen you can put the egg own to her credit if she has laid one a the nest. Sometimes the hens will nter the nest from curiosity, and esecially i:3 this true when the system 5 first i-nstalled, but, after they beome used to it they will seldom enter xcept to lay. To set the hens acuainted with the nest the door may e propped up for several days. The trap nest is excellent for sitins hens?you can release the hen o get her feed and trap the door, and hen after she goes back on the nest he shuts the door after her and other ens can not enter to bother her or ireak her eggs. You can easily catch he hen that is an egg eater with the rnn tint?! mc? c?r\mcx nf tl>o hrnVoTi n<r*r iiij/ iJt'itj uo iiuiiiw*. wuv ui viwii vao irill be found in the nest with her. The other illustration above is n 'ouble nest bos for sitting hens; the iiethod o: fastening the door is hown by the L-shaped catch. You kill notice that the nest is made quito 'cep. but does not have to be as long is the trap nest.?Indianapolis News. Only a Little One. Emperor William, on his arrival n London, affectionately kis.-ed ihe )tike of Cornwall on both checks. ,et us hasten to explain that the Juke of Cornwall i>- King George's It tits boy.?Chicago Record-HeraH. Investigate. Congress might accomplish a popliar thing by appointing an investigating committee to discover why the iomn team does no: always win.? ii. Joseph Gazette. St?mm THIEVES WHO HIDE LOOT. Recovered Later, and the Ex-Crim< itial Lives in Wealth. It Is well known to the police thai there are a number of ex-convicts who are literally rolling in riches and , driving about London and the prov- 1 iitces to-day in their own motor cars . and carriages, said a detective to the writer the other day. The majority cf these :*nen are ol(i embezzlers and there seems to be little doubt that they are able to live well and keep i going lavfjhly furnished residences , because i.he money they stole waa hidden by them before being arrested and sent to prison. It may surprise you to know that thousands of pounds' worth of valuable1 property looted by thieves from , various sources lies buried in odd corners o:' Britain and will probably only be recovered by the men themselves on their release. Cases are constantly occurring where an embezzler af :er running off with a large , sum in gold refuses to divulge the hiding pljyce of his ill gotten gains. He is sent to prison and the loot remains unrecovered. In nine cases out of ten the embezzler finding arrest imminent buries his stolen property and digs it up again when he comes out ol prison. A man who was for many years an inmate of one of our prisons is now living in affluence in a town up north. He was imprisoned for embezling ?70,000 from his employers and he declared at the trial that he had spent every penny of it. For some time ( alter his release from jail he lived in a cheap lodging house at Hoxton and then one day he declared that he had come into a fortune, a brother in Australia having died and left him some thonsanda. As a matter of fact, although the police had no proof, he had recovered the money which he had embezzled years before. A man of considerable means now living in the States served a term o! imprisonment for forgery, having obtained ?15,000 by means of false . checks. Not a penny of the money i was recovered by the police. During 1 the forced confinement of the thiel his wife, in pursuance of a previously agreed plan, went, out to service in A ~ 4-V* ? it gttulieijjuii & lauiiij . .in ouuu aa iuc husband was liberated, however, the wife resigned her position and the pair sailed immediately for the colonies. It ultimately came to light that the money which had been stolen by means of the forged checks had been buried under the flooring of a Soho house. Some fifteen years ago a Hindo ; merchant whp had come to London tc make purchases of gems was robbed of many thousands of pounds. The i thieves carried their ill gotten wealth to a cheap tenement in Whitechapel, but finding the police hot on their track they carried the loot one dark night to a remote spot on the Esse* i marshes and secretly buried it. They then disappeared and have not been seen since. It is believed .that the ; money remains to this day where it was buried. , i Not so very long ago a burglary was committed by a couple of well known thieves,'who got away with! about ?500 in coin and banknotes, j Thev were arrested but refused to state what they had done with the money, although one darkly hinted v that it had been buried in a garden in a suburb of London.?From Ti7? Bits. The Art of Disguise. The disguise that really serves its , purpose instead of only betraying its wearer is a difficult art. It is an arl that enters more effectually into real life?its romance and tragedy?than most people would be disposed to be* , lieve. I In the case of men, the beard is un- i doubtedly the greatest aid to tis- ( guise. But great care has to be taken, for if too striking an appear- . ance were given to the subject the whole purpose of the scheme would ! be defeated. In our art the whole j secret of success lies in not attempt- J i'ng too much, There is no particular 1 ^ kind of beard. As a rule, it has to be thin, and is usually of a lighter hue ( than the hair. Besides altering the complexion, ' ^ the use of Klight-ly smoked glasses , often helps greatly toward a good dis- ; guise. Alterations can also be made in the arch and color of the eye- I brows; and, talking of eyebrows, you j would be surprised if you only knew how often we have to paint out black | eyes. Of course, -with certain persons Ji | is useless for us to attempt a disguise I solely by working on the f?ce. Attention has to be paid to the contour ol the back and shoulders; while sometimes the use of a tovvel or two over the latter inside of the coat works s great change. The uae of a high heel and low one is often successful in altering the gait, but in this matter a | 1 good deal depends upon the person i himself.?Strand. 1 3 Free Operation. 1 "Dr. Doyen fought a duel with a ] Belgian while I was on the Riviera," said a Chicago surgeon. "You've i heard of Doyen? His latest is a J serum that, increasing tenfold the en- J ergy of our white blood corpuscles, ?' wards off old age. ] "Well, we gave him, we sawbones, < a supper at the Cergie de la Mediter J ranee in Nice after hia duel. He won the duel, you know. And in hia af ] ter-dinner speech he told us how he j had said to the Belgian, as he ran i him through: < " 'You lucky dog! I'd charge any j - 4t-? *"? < rtiin fi-nni-a fnr an ab- i UlllUi AllO.il uw,vvw *. dominal incision like this. And yet, | i by jove, you don't look over I pleased!'"?Detroit Free Press. ? , A New Kind o!7 Farm. I The Artcraft Institute of Chicago, > which since 1900 hau taught more ^ than COO unskilled women home and ' art occupations that have enabled 1 them to become self-supporting, is preparing to enlarge its scope by es- < tablishing an educational farm. The 1 Artcraft Institute is an educational < combination of school, club and workshop, reaching from the home ' to the business wwld,?American Educational Ilsfiitv. : vv as Dye With Tea. -fen A garment made of almost any ma- ^ terial may be creamed with tea. !o 1 Make the tea strong and soak the gar- :o 1 ment well in it. * Iron the garment before it dries ac^ and the color will be a pretty cream. The tea does not streak the goods, as ma: coffee does, and is a prettier color and ^'3 less expensive than the creaming substance that is bought.?Indianapolis News. the Skirt flaking. hvi In making the new flve-goi^ skirt fcra .vlth very little fullness below (this/^ ^ is the Parisian skirt of the moment), C0B it is necessary so to fit it over the hips yar that all extra fullness is taken from ! ure each gore, and thun the position of arg each seam will not be changed. ^ In other words, do not push all of _ the extra fullness into the central . . back box pleat and thus crowd the . added weight to thio one spot.?Bos- . ton Post. a#; Scented Sheets. sui sar It is said that lavender scented jg sheets induce slumber. Whether that is true or not, it is certain that to lie j*^.( down in bed after a lovely refreshing jnt( bath in sheets that have a delicate ^ . scent of lavender about them is most cea refreshing and luxurious. It does not jQn cost much to have this luxury and it is within the possibility of almost every ^ housekeeper to have in her linen ? closet several little finely cut packages of dried lavender leaves. These I can be bought upon the s'treet almost bej any time. Put the little packages be- ^ tween the sheets, pillowcases, towels 1 and wash clothes. You will find that the odor will last for a long time and will be enjoyed by all who use your ' linen, the odor is so deliriously clean. .?Newark Call. ~ As1 the An English Idea. PU1 What is known as a "Dorothy bag" in England is often made of a wornout tall silk hat. Begin by cutting " the hat close to the brim all round, r and then slip off the silk covering; it pu1 will be found to be already in shape of a convenient bag, and merely in tjU1 need of a lining of colored silk, mu which can be made by cutting a disk ^ the same size as the circle at the ^ top or tne nai, allowing xor narrow | , turnings. The sides are the same size and depth as the outer covering, and the silk lining, hcing made separate, is put inside the outer covering; the edges of the latter are turned down an inch and the former turned ^ei in to meet the raw edge and just 1 2 cover it. Small brass or hone rings ur< are - sewn inside, eighteen heing needed, at intervals; a piecc of silk cord is passed through the rings, al- n)E lowing enough to draw up to form two handles, and it ic then sewn f:o- So^ gether at the ends, the bag being tbus completed. OJd tall hats can fre- wo quently be found in the attic,'and satisfaction lies in using them.?New York Press. ^ to roi A Camphorated Rath. Nothing is so invigorating wucn tired and warm as a scented bath of For hot water. In warm weather it proves particularly refreshing when taken ^ before dressing for the evening. ' The simplest of these baths is made ^ by adding cologne, toilet water, or violet ammonia into a quarter of a tubful of water. U0I A good aromatic mixture to keep on hand is made from two ounces of |gjj tincture of camphor, four ounces of i ? cologne and an ounce of tincture of j Hi benzoin. Add enough of this to the j bath water to make it j If you are presented' with colognes or toilet waters that are not especially \ ^ fragrant, use them in the bath. The ^ scent is so faint as not to be disagree- : able, and the refreshing qualities are i as great as from more expensive col- i ognes. ' Another refreshing bath is made [, by squeezing the filtered juice of four Vi lemons into a quarter of a tubful of w water. w Where the aromatic bath seems ex- HE travagant, or there is no time for it, put a solution of the mixture given above into a spray and spray it over j face, neck and arms.?New York rimes. JI57 - boot ( ??<a - !"?* y/-0/<! ' //-f?TK ? ( r < r ~~ "? -s SM 1 I Rice Balls.?Boil cupful of rice in I tvater and add salt. While warm mix ^ in quarter pound of butter, two eggs well beaten, and tablespoonful of cin- & namon. Make this into small balls and fry in deep fat. Drain and roll * in currant jelly, then powdered sugar. ; To Caramelize Sugar.?Put sugar in a smooth granite saucepan or omelet pan, place over the hot part of the -ange and stir constantly until melted ind the color of maple sugar. Care must be taken to prevent sugar from ldhering to the sides of the pan or ? ;poon. , To Freshen Lettuce.?Wash the j eaves a lew nuurs ueiura u?>iu&, wi?i> m in -waxed tissue paper and put it on Eg the ice. All the ingredients of moist S salads can be prepared in pood sea- H son and time saved by covering them ftj with the tissue before using to pre- K ;ent drying. j| Mock Fried Oyster.?Scrape and Eg slice thin one cup salsify or vegetn- I jle oyster, cook in a little vater until El :ender, cool and add one egg, a lit- ffi .le salt and pepper and two crackers broken fine; shape into oyster shape I and fry and serve ou steamed bread I with melted butter. * f Cream of I'otato Soup.?jBre and I :ut small four medium-si^^pota- | oes, one onion and a lit^^Klery. | '!ook until tender in salt^^^nter. H Mash, stir in a little butt^^^Mper I ind flour. Add this pur^^^H^ne H luart of hot milk. Stir \^^^^Bat V ^ Too Ready Relief. l man went into a druggist's shop ? 1 asked for something to cure a ? daehe. The druggist held a hot- * of hartshorn to his nose, and he * i nearly overpowered by its pun- * cy. J soon as he recovered he began 1 ail at the druggist, and threatened juncli his hood. 'But didn't it ease your head- < e?" asked the apothecary. < Ease my headache!" gasped the < a. "I haven't got any headache. < my -wife that's got the headache." < Queer Customs. ' furious customs are noted among Mijus. a little-known Asiatic race, an explorer; who writes: "Through ng on the borders of Tibet, no ce of Buddhism is found among m. Their religion is animistic and isists in the propitiation of the ious spirits to whom sickness, fail: of crops and such like calamities attributed. The propitiation es the form usually of the sacrii of a fowl or a pig, a small portion ng set aside for the spirit, the rest ng down the throats of the offerer i 1 hia family. 'The Mijus bury their dead in a table spot near the house," the ne traveler continues. "A child buried at once, but the corpse of 1 adult is kept in the house from > to four days. The length of time ervening between death and burial )enda on the wealth of the de,sed?the wealthier the man the ger the period. 'A month or so after burial, when i deceased relatives have had time prepare for it, a^east is given to [ ! village. The grave is then opened . i the remains are burnt, the ashes ng left untouched." ? Chicago ws. ' Skin Reanty l*romoted. ! % tKo tv*ia?-monr r\f a ffonMnna fit skin and scalp which torture, dlsjre, Itch, bum, scale and destroy ! hair, aa well as for preserving, rlfylng and beautifying the com* xlon, bands and hair, Cutlcnra ip and Cutlcura Ointment are well;h Infallible. Millions of women oughout the world rely on these e, sweet and gentle emollients for purposes of the toilet, bath and rsery, and for the sanative, antlsepcleansing of ulcerated, Inflamed j icous surfaces. Potter Drug & em. Corp., Boston, sole proprietors the Cuticura Remedies, will mail , e, on request, their latest 32-page ticura Book on the skin and hair. That's Different. I 'Good-night, my boy, and remem that in giving my daughter to you im parting with my dearest treas% 19 'Thanks, from the bottom of my irt. Rut say?the cars are runig an hour apart at this time of th; ;ht. Can I borrow your machine to home in?" "I should say not, young man. I uldn't trust that automobile .with ( best man alive!"?Toledo Blade. Neptune takes more than 160 years make the complete revolution ind the sun. N.Y.?25 * try Murine Eye Remedy ' Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Kyes and i mutated Eyelids. Jt Soothes Eye Pain. | [urine Eye Remedy Liquid. 25c. and 50c. lurine Eye Salve. 25c. ana $1.00. ' . 400-pound halibut was recently disced in London. 1 ). Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children :bing, softens the gums, reduces inflnmina?,allays pain, cures wind coiic.25c. aboaie Prussian blue paint ia made from the es of the burned hoof of horses. f Overcome T your skin ^^with trouble llennVfi" 1 Sold by HHI't Hair tad Wkiltr Dy?, druggists. black or brow*. 50c. .. > c-/ A Oy Tl11818 411 Interesting \/0 IfC S\-/r> story that will i ? V ^5 owakon you to a sad realitaUon that you are not receiving the earning power of your savings. Write for our \ det, "llow to Snve," (through our Real f Ik)ud.%) lor the asking. < irtmentA. JC M DEBENTURE CORPORATION OF NEW YORK ] fifth Avonue New York City I SPALDING'S ATHLETIC L1BR No. 1 Spalding's Official } No. 1i Base Ball Guide. { No. 202 flow to Play Baae Ball. j No. 223 How to Bat. J No. 232 How to Run Bases. No. 231 No. 230 How to Pitch. No. 229 How to Catch. No. 225 How to Play First Base. No. 22(5 How to Play Sccond Base. No. 219 No. 227 How to Play Third Base, i No. 228 How to Play Shr-tstop. I ' No. 224 How to Play the Outfield. I OTHER SEASOIN, No. 12 Spalding's Official Athletic Almanac. I .No 331 Schoolyard Athletics. So. 4 Spalding's Official Lawn Tennis Guide ] NEW YORK BOSTON, MASS, PHILADELPHIA, PA. BALTIMORE, MD. PITTSBURG, PA. WASHINGTON, D. C. BUFFALO, N. Y. ATLANTA GA. ( SYRACUSE, N. Y. NEW ORLEANS. LA i NEWARiCN. J. DETROIT, MICH. INDIANAPOLIS, IND. LOS ANGELES, CAL TORONTO MONTREAL, CANADA Honil yonr name an JC jUy SI Iok Htorcn and gel n Mwmmmmmmmmmmmmsam V * ?? ; Although Singapore is the eighth jrealest port in the world and the gateway between Occident and orient, n the last fonr years only four Amercan merchant ships have arrived here. The value of the goods anlually shipped to the United States H rom Singapore is over $13,000,000. All the London "tubes" but one v :arried a greatly increased number )f passengers in the last half of 1909 >ver the same period in 1908. In:reases ranged from five to forty-Bev- 'v< ;n per cent. . , m BACKACHE WDXYEIH To Lydia E. Pinkhara's' Vegetable Compound Bloomdale, Ohio.?" I suffered from * terrible headaches, pains in my back T1 : land right side, and was tired all the time and nervous. I could not sleep. fi?8?r raj and every month I could hardly stand liiwF the pain. Lydia E. I ^ J2t || Pinkham's Ve?eta""V-a "*y:' :i hle Compound re- ^ ; !1. ? = ::' stored me to health again and made-me /, feel like a new wo/// man. I hope Shift // lAt.tAr will induce other women to avail themselves of this valuable medicine."?Mi^s. E.'M. Frederick, Bloomdale, Ohio. .; '<" . yis Backache is a symptom of female ' '} > weakness or deranirement. Ifvotl 3$ have backache don't neglect it. -*jHo -Jkj get permanent relief yoa liust reacn ftkj ther root of the trouble. Kothing W6 know of will do this so safely afid surely tA as Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com., "ih pound. Cure the cause of these,di&. J" tressing aches and pains and you tttH become well and strong. The great volume of unsolicited tes, timony constantly pouring in pztoecf ^ conclusively that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made fromroota * and herbs, has restored health to tHou?. ? ^ sands of women. v|> If you have the slightest doubt , jfe that Lydia E. Pf nknam's Yc|ge?->tj table Compound will help jfpu, write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, r* Mass., for advice. Your letter will be absolutely conftdentfal* and the advice free* <. )-m - i" * . ' J 'iu1^. w 'V/VS t MOTHER GRAY'S - ' SWEET POWDERS J FOR CHILDREN, . M A Certain One for FeverMnM ' jS Constipation, H e?d?,cl?<? stomach Trouble** Te?tfcl?g T>. sordero, *nd DB?IW ..vi Mother Gra*. Worms. T^Br?kj?CiVfc Nnree in ChilS ? * hcur*. At*) 1t Pngftfr ?? ?. yS ren's Home, SnapW rifedJIffl ^ New YorkUlty- A. a. WfcBaiR??. * ??*??. " ? Murder! One get* it by highway men?Tenf of thousands by Bad Boioelt?No *\G? ference. Constipation and dead tote* make the whole system sick?Everybody knows it?CASCARETS regulate? care Bowel and Liver troubles by simply ' . doing nature's work until you get well^ j Millions use CASCARETS, Life Sawerf 882 CASCARETS ioc a box for a week's treatment, all druggists. Biggest seller in the world. Million boxes a month. W. L. DOUCLAS SHOES S5, <4,53.50, S3, $2.50 & *2 THE STANDARD i FOR 30 YEARS. 0 ^ Million* of men wear fcliS; Op W. L. Douglas shoes be- Igpb.:. cause they are the low- tje'i e?t price*, quality con- SjgW , lidered, in the world. Made upor jonor.of the fjfU best leathers, by ?** f_jj rnoit skilled workmen. ' in all the latest fashions, ^ W. L. Douflas $5.00 and $4.00 shoes equal Cuatom Bench Work ,*& iSSpS-i A costing $6.00 to $8.00. ?Bqy Boys'Shoes, $3,$Z6Q&$2 JiggfoJj ^Egf W. L. DonRlaa gnarantees their valno by stamping ? >e SnWltntf. Fast Color KytUtu A alt your <lrnl?r forW. K Donelm ibots. Ifnol forMlefnyonr townwriteforMAllOnlerCaialog^how< InK how lo order by mail. Shoe* ordered direct from factory delivered free. W.LDougl^i, Hrocktoo, liT-HTbompson's Eyt Watef SITFIIT0 Wutioi B.C?l?nii,Wtqpi I FH I \ logtOD. D.C. Bcoksfree. Hlgtfc I M El IbIV B 1# *MI relaxecom. Bat *rw?| ARY?BASE BAIL SERIES \ Spalding's Base Ball Record. / f How to Organize a Base Ball League* How to Organize a Baje Ball Club I How to Manage a Base Ball Club. -! How to Train a Base Ball Team. How to Captain a Base Ball Team. I How to Umpire a Game. L Technical Ease Ball Terms. Ready Reckoherof Base Ball Percen iagei. 'RICE EACH BOOK' ! 10 CENTS ABLE BOOKS. I ; No. 3 Hpalillng s Official Criclcc^Sulde. SL' No. 5 Spalding's OMcial Golf Guide. ~3 No. 177 ."How to Swltu. ? No. iWl Laerosae. ffi I Spalding I "Official g National I League" | heo. u. s. tat. or/. Rail i IJL&W3.M. Official Ball E oi the Game | lor over f Tliirtj Years pNG & BROS. CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. ST. LOUIS, MO. KANSAS CITY, MO. CINCINNATI, O. DENVER, COL. 1 CLEVELAND, O. MINNEAPOLIS. MINN. COLUMBUS. 0. ST. PAUL, MINN. LOUISVUXE, KY. SEATTLE, WASH. DALLAS, TEX. MILWAUKEE, WIS. LONDON, ENGLAND. d nddrH? to nny of the above Spali. , iiew at nletic good.* catalogac free. ?