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i , DCWT LOOK FOR THE FLAWS. I Don\l look for flaws as von cro through life; I And even when you fin.I them E It is wis# and kind to be somewhat blind, And look for the virtue behind them. For the cloudiest night lias a hint of the kb& ^omewncro m us snru.ows niuiug; It is better far to hunt for n *iar MM Than the spots 011 the sun abiding. gfflSj^Khe current of life runs every way tyESIM'To the bosom of God's great ocean: H^Bou't set your force 'gainst the river's course And think to alter its motion. Don't waste a curse on the universe; Remember it lived before you; - Don't butt at the storm with your puny form, But bend, let it fly o'er you. BzflHn'he world will never adjust itself gSMl To suit your whim to the letter; HE^^Bome things must go wrong your whole lire long, SRk And the sooner you know it the better, It is folly to fight with the Infinite. And go under at last in the wrestle. V The wiser man shapes into God's plan, ffl As the water shapes into the vessel. "?Ella Wheeler Wilcox, in Progressive Age. I ? Noughts I " ...and... P Jl Crosses. p> E began to play first on a W || bu )( scrap of paper which I bad ? Vv ? utilized to make a diaft i * )R gram of tbe neighborhood ft Sro>r to show her the relative H position of our respective homes, that K is to say, of her home and the little house which I had bought and furM^^qished in the somewhat wild hope that she might one day by becoming its j|| mistress convert it into my home. On W that occasion she had treated the diaw gram flippantly by guiding my hand io 2 make a nought in the area which stood 1 for mv front crarden. and her mischiev fous look conveyed to me that the teypher was meant to represent the lum of my worldly goods. Accordingly, I responded with great independence by making a big cross? the symbol which I believe is popularly supposed to denote a kiss?on either side of the little square which in my amateur drawing stood for the front door. Sh? resented this because she said I h&d played out of turn. She thereupon drew the correct figure for a game that she termed noughts and crosses and instructed me how to play in accordance with rule. The figure ;was very simple, merely two perpendicular strokes crossed by two horizontal ones, and there was no skill required, it seemed. One merely put a nought or a cross into one of the lit itle spaces ana am one 5 ievei uesi m get three in a row, which counted one point. It was a very childish pastime, and yet after that day I found myself playing it with her at every opportu-j nity; and it had at least the merit, j like, mediocre music in a drawing room, of affording cover for conversa- j Hon. "I don't think." she said one day. in 'an interval which I spent sharpening her pencil, "that I'm exacting; but one naturally expects something out of life, either love or money, and you can't give me either.*' | "At least" 1 said, in a low voice. "I give you krve." "iio; that's where you make the mistake. You think that in loving me you give me love. But you don't? not an emotion even! Cross out love!" "I shall do nothing of the kind," I |E responded, indignantly. "As for money," she pursued. "I dor't think, I don't really think that 400 a year or so is the height of my & ambition. Put a nought for money." Hfe , "I decline," I said, "for I can at least look to the future with tolerable certainty." gfi^L "It's no good looking too far ahead." said; "you must remember we've to love in the present." jSBB^fc'ou're richt." I said, mildly, "and n^rafiHnot mueli consolation to me at the BnggSHsent moment to reflect that you'll ^HHFtainl.v be sorry some day that BPUyon've let such a chance slip." wA She paused, looked hard at me, and IffijiHesuTned. gffijH'To put the matter in a nutshell. really have nothing to offer me. gggMgShing, that is to say. except marSffiSHrge. and I don't think that of ilself M^^Kfticiently attractive." "i might suggest." I ventured, "that you are scarcely in a position to ju?lce. w Tvow lr you woum aiiow mo to piay the part nt devoted husband to you for SH a year, at the end of that time you H might really be able to give an opinV ion dn the subject." She shook her head and put a nought Into the middle of a new diagram, and I responded belligerently with a cross underneath. "As regards the money," I said, "you can't expect me to make a fortune without ever having had an opportunity." t. "No," she admitted. V "rfut you seem to expect me to make ^ you love me without any opportunity at all. You haven't given ru? much H opportunity," I said, regretfully. ? "That depends." she said, "upon .what vou call onnortunitv." "Well," I remarked. "I think Miss f 'Arnold gave me a pretty good opporf tunity tlie night of the dance whpn I | sat out with her in the conservatory." "Miss Arnold?" she asked5 quickly, t "What Miss Arnold? Do you mean hft| Jessie Arnold? 01). I always said she fas a most atrocious flirt!" Hi 4,I don't know her Christian name," m I said vaguely. "I called her 'darling.' and I don't suppose it's any Miss Arw nold that you know." "Jessie Arnold." she said, solemnly, "would he the last. mind. I say the very Inst girl to mnice a wife for a | poor man." & "Oh! no; the Miss Arnold I mean 1 told me she understood economic P*. housekeeping thoroughly." r "Jessie's mean," she said, earnestly, j "and she'll never give you anything but a cold luncheon. Her way of economizing wui oe to starve you: ' "Whether one succumbs to starra1^^ tion or a broken heart." I observed, darkly, "it will be all the same & hundred years hence." "And in the meantime you've always ?0t the house," she said, thoughtfully. "But. you know. 1 haven't inn oil t< keep it tip on,*' I .said, and I crookei my fori-tinker and thumb to represeni nought?nothing. "I suppose/' she murmured, "on< would sooner succumb to slarvatioi tlian a broken heart." "Could you." i asked, with a sudder inspiration, "subs'st on such Sparta; fare as broad and cheese and?erctosspsV "I think I could.*' she said, softly I "if you provided it."?E. Becre, ir | JtJlack and White. FEAR OF DEATH DIMINISHING. Undertakers' Customer* Less Afraid That Formerly. That people stand less in awe o] death than they did a few years age is the belief of several New York tm dertakers. They say that nowadays twice as many persons make prepara tions for their own burial as a genera tion ago. In accounting for this, out uneral director said: "It is my opinion that the displace ment of the gruesome wooden coffin by the modern burial casket, which is not offensive lo the eye. has done mucli to rob death and interment of theii horrors. Some people when they arc sick and are fearful that they will never regain their health sometimes call In an undertaker, or his or he* friends do it, for the ill one. and make air arrangements for the funeral, selecting the casket and designating what kind of a hearse is preferred. It is the same with some persons in advancing years. A well-to-do man living in this neighborhood wen1 abroad last year, uud before going provided for any contingency that mighl arise while he was on the voyage. He is still abroad, and, peculiar as it maj seem, a few weeks ago I received s letter from him, dated at Amsterdam telling me that he was still alive. 01 course he did not say it in those words but, while he wrote me about some trivial affair, I could see plainly that il was simply a pretense under which ht informed iue that he had not died yet When he shall die he is to be taken to his native town, and there buried in a specified cemetery, and everything will be done in strict compliance witl his desires as he expressed them to me I "Men who are going into hospitals to have serious operations performed frequently make arrangements with us for their funeral and burial, should the operation terminate fatally. Such men seem to approach the subject with entire calmness. But it is different with the man who is in perfect health seemingly, at least, but who wants tc make arrangements for the burial ol his body after death, whenever thai shall occur, because he has uo rela tives or near friends who he is certair will look after 'all that is left of "I'" or because he fears he might not have the money at the end that he has al that time. One day a middle-aged man came into my office and approaclied the subject with manifesl embarrassment. I understood what hf was driving at, and pulled from my drawer a score or more of contracts such as he wanted to make, and he, seeing that he was not the first ta think of such a thing (although probably ho thought he was when the subject first entered his mind) seemed reassured. and we proceeded with the business in a business-like manner. "Some of these contracts I have made for a "ertain number of years, the amount of money sufficient to cover the expenses and the payn^enl for ray services being deposited. Ana it has happened that when that period has expired the other party to the contract has decided that he isn't goinp to die. or that he needs the money, and he takes the prepayment and goes ou his way rejoicing. It is the same way with those who go into hospitals tc have operations performed. Of course, if they don't die the contract is null and void, and the patients, regaining their health, seem to forget it entirely as they go on their busy way tbrougl life."?Nt'W York Times. Not Absolutely Helpless. Some few persons still cherish the idea that all women are. absolutely helpless in business matters, and thai they are so lacking in financial ability that they cannot safely be trusted tc handle money. Mr. Black belonged to this class. Il< had been in the habit of paying all th( household bills at the end of cad: month, and his wife, although allowei! unlimited credit, had never had an al lowance. One day the Blacks hap pened to be passing the comparatively new building in which the duuk was situated. "Do you know, John." remarked Mrs Black. "I have actually never been in side the bank since it was built more than two years ago." "You haven't!" exclaimed John. "II that's the case. I guess I'd better givt you a check this month and let you paj the bills. Do you thiuk you'd know how to cash it?" Mrs. Black received the check. Thai evening Mr. Black asked, not withoul sarcasm, if she had succeeded in in dorsing it properly. "Oh. yes," returned Mrs. Black cheerfully. "How many bills did you pay?" "None?it seemed a pity to waste al that money paying bills." "Then what in the world did you d< with it?" "Oh," returned the little woman, f?e I "T -Suet ripnnsited it to mv OWI account."?Collier's Weekly. The Only Titled Mate. Sir Evelyn Arthur Fairbairn is th( only subject of King Edward whc bears an hereditary title and was borr deaf and dumo. A tall, handsome man with a peculiarly winning smile am' i attractive manner, he gives no outwart1 sign of a misfortunate which would have shadowed a temperament less buoyant than his own. Sir Arthur if a famous globe trotter, a great pari of his travel having been undertaker to study means of ameliorating the lol of those afflicted as he is himself. Ingenious Scheme. The French railway companies hav( issued to all stations an album wliict I contains pictures of every possible article tliat a traveler is likely tc have about him. Owing to the greal number of passengers who are unable j to speak French, it is often found diffi cult to trace lost articles from the de scription given. Nov.- all that a pas eeDger has to do is to point to -he i missing articles in the album. New York Cijy.?Coats made in j Prince Albert style are among the lat1 est shown and are exceedingly smart. This May Manton one is made of plum f r t#*~ PBIKCE ALBEBT COAT. 1 1 colored zibeline simply stitched with ;: corticelli silk in tailor style and makes i part of a costume, but the coat is also ' | appropriate for the separate wrap. ' j The coat is made with fronts, under'! arm gores, and side backs that are cut 1 j 6ff below the waist line, full length ' ! backs and skirt portions. The fronts ' are fitted by means of single darts ' | and closed with buttons and button-. ' holes. The 6kirt portions are seamed I to the body ana are jam in pieais ui the Bide back seams. The sleeves can 1. be plain ones in. coat style with roll' over cuffs or the full ones shown in 1 the back view as preferred. 1 j The quantity of material required for 1 | the medium size is two and seven1 eighth yards forty-four inches wide, . two and one-half yards fifty-two inches wide. ! i A Seasonable Costume. Long coats are much in vogue and gain favor with each succeeding week. 1 The May Manton one shown in the large drawing is made in Russian ! ! style and is well adapted both to the : i entire suit and the general wrap. The 'j - / J . \\ 4 11 Mf RUSSIAN COAT AND J - i > ' model is Made of hlack taffeta stitched | with eorticelli silk, but all coat and k , suit materials, both silk and wool, are ? j equally appropriate. i The coat consists of a blouse portion, I that is made with applied box pleats . J at front and back and is fitted by . I means of shoulder and underarm r j seams, and the skirt which is attached ; j thereto beneath the belt. The skirt includes applied pleats that form contiunous lines with the bolU6e and is laid . in inverted pleats at the centre back, > which provide graceful fullness. Tli? I right front laps over the left to close I in double-breasted style beneath the ? j edge of the pleat. The sleeves are t i box pleated from the elbows to the r j shoulders, so providing the snug fit j required by fashion, but form full t I puffs ac the wrists, where they are t finished by flare cuffs. The quantity of material required for the medium size is six and onehalf yards twenty-seven inches wide, four yards fifty-two inches wide. four yards forty-four inches wide or j Skirts that just clear the ground are among the latest decreed by fashion , and can be relied upon as correct both for the present and the season to come. The very excellent one in the largo ( picture provides a graceful flare about the feet and is available for the entire miKTn nf abirt niul suit mnterials. but. as shown, is made of Sicilian mohair , stitched with corticelli silk. ' The skirt is cut in five gores, which are so shaped as to fit with perfect snugness about the hips, while they | flare freely and gracefully below the ^ knees. The fullness at the back is j laid in inverted pleats and can be , stitched as illustrated or simply ' pressed flat as preferred. The upper ' edge can be finished with a belt or I cut in dip outline and under-faced or j i i . uouna. The quantity of material required for the medium size is six and one-fourth yard- twenty-seven inches wide, three and three-fourth yards forty-four inches wide or three and one-fourth yards fifty-two inches wide when ma' terial has figura or nap; three yards t forty-four or two and three-fourth | yards fifty-two inches wide when ma terial has neither figure nor nap. 1 ] New Dre?s Materials. A beautiful material has appeared 1 1 In the windows of late?a kind of J basket cloth in elephant gray, .with a J J s~Je?^. suggestion of speckles in white nr color. Heather mixture (purple at green) is going to be used for Indie dresses, the kind of thing which hj hitherto been reserved for men's shoo ing suits. Several of tho winter m terials are to be popular once mor even face cloth is figured with zib line effects. The favorite colors a] pear to be coffee color, serpent greei brown, elephant gray, a rosy shade < red and "desert sand," a pinkish shac of fawn. Plain materials are provide for those who prefer them, thou^ zibeline will be more in reques Among the possible plain fabrics ai Venetian cloth, covert coating, serg cashmere, hopsack, face cloth and c-ai vas?London Free Lance. Popular Color For Hat*. A very striking hat, an importatioi is made of that vivid dark blue cok which is so popular this seasou. Thei is a rolled brim of the blue, and tb top of the crown repeats the colo The sides of the crown and the edj: of the brim consist of rows of brigl red, white, and flax-blue braids. Tb hat tilts well over the face of th wearer, and is lifted behind with bunch of cherries and leaves. It ha 110 other trimming. Picturesque Scarfg. Veils continue to grow in length an breadth as well as thickness with th coming of cold weather, and tne lates "automobiling veils" are really pictui esque scarfs, passing completel around the head and tied iu an arti; tically careless knot on the left shou der that can be accomplished only b * v, yv W?A/1A1 naiiciilorntfil lI biUUy UJL IUC uiuuv;it vv?iutwv4???w placed upon tlie veiling counters c the leading department stores?Xei York Mail and Express. Hygiene and Style, Too. White-footed stockings are recon mended by the pedicures, and oij can now buy stockings that have whil feet, and from the ankle upward blae thread is introduced and woven wit the white into a pretty pattern. Tfc effect is extremely smart, and quit Parisian. A Handsomely Trimmed Waist. A dinner wuist of tucked cafe a lait crepe de chine is trimmed wit ili\ jivE-GORED SKIRT. straps of brown velvet, ending in gol and amber buttons. It has a vest < Cluny lace over ivory silk. The bolei is fastened by bows of brown velv< tied through small round buckles < gold and amber. The collar and cuf are of silk embroidery in delicate Pe sian colors. Ealn Coat. Coats that a fiord perfect protectio against the rain are essential to eve: woman's health as well as comfor This one is adanted to covert clol and all the materials used for coats < the sort, but is shown in Oxford gm rravenette cloth and stitched wil black corticelli silk. The coat consists of the fronts, bad and side backs. The fronts are wit) out fullness, but the back is drawn i at the waist line and held by meai of the belt. Over Ihe shoulders is circular cape and the neck is Cnisht with a shaped and stitched collar. T1 sleeves are the ample ones of the se SAIN COAT. son and are finished with straight cul pointed at their ends. The quantity of material required lo the medium size is five and thre< fourth yards forty-four inches wide o five yards fifty-two inches .wide. .1 w xv^iiis SMer I J IS Intendeut of Streets 1/ of Lebanon, Ky.t liv| lnr> on ?as^ Main street, in tliat city, says: "With my nightly rest broken, owing | to irregularities of the kidneys, sufferid , ing intensely from severe pains in the id ; small of my back and through the kids' j ueys and annoyed by painful passages is j of abnormal secretions, life was anyt j thing but pleasant for me. No amount a- of doctoring relieved this condition, and e, for the reason that nothing seemed tcf e- give me even temporary relief I be* p- came about discouraged. One day I Q. noticed in the newspapers the case of )f I a man who was afflicted as I was and le was cured by the use of Doan's Kidd ney Pills. His words of praise for this ;h remedy were so sincere that on the i. sirengm or ijis biuieuient i weui iw 'e the Hugh Murrey Drug Co.'s store and e, got a box. I found that the medicine i- was exactly as^jowerful a kidney remedy as represented. I experienced quick and lasting relief. Doan's Kidney Pills will prove a blessing to all 1* sufferers from kidney disorders who >r will give them a fair trial." 'e A Free Trial of this groat kidney e medicine, which cured Mr. Walls, will r* be mailed to any part of the United 'e States on application. Address Foster!t Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. For sale ie by all druggists, price 50 cents per box. ie a The Fountain of Youth. is Like pretty much everything else, this matter of having children has two sides to it. As a great many children are failures and as children are the Q joint product or Heredity ana environe ment, both elements preponderantly st under parental control, it would seem r- more sensible to say that there were y too many people undertaking parental 5- responsibilities instead of too few. And, 1* further, parentalhood has many cares y and sorrows and exasperations. Still, y when all is said, how many persons n who found themselves childless at .v forty-five have been able honestly to congratulate themselves? Cuildren have a lse as an assurance against destitution and loneliness in > old age. They are satisfactory to the ie vanity for family immortality. But :e more than these and all other advank tages is the advantage of prolonging k one's life. Growing children will keep IC any proper man or woman young iu j spirit and in mind, will retard tlie de- j velopment of that sour yet complacent { cynicism which curses old age both for one's self and for those about one. Q The man or the woman?again, the j b right sort of man or woman?who has | children drinks every day a deep draught at the fountain of eternal youth.?Saturday EveniDg Tost. The Blind in India. It is a strange and startling fart that, according to the latest available figures, the proportion of the blind to the sighted in India is one in every GOO, so that, allowing for the usual native reluctance to eater into bodily defects j in the census reports, it shows that more than a half million people in that country are deprived of sight. Diseases of the organs of sight have for ages been a peculiar feature of : Eastern lands. Among the causes are i the continual glare of the sun, the 1 prevalent dustiness of the air, the lack | of cleanliness and due care of the eyes of the young. It is a common sight to f see the eyes of babies one muss of flies and dirt, which the ignorant, careless | mother is too indifferent to drive away. This peculiar Oriental affliction has long engaged tbe attention of philan- ' tbropists in India, and several societies are turning their eudes^ors to the j mitigation of the evil, as well as to j providing books for the b'*ud, and j make more adequate provision for their needs in every wajr. Healing Water by Sun Power. Solar heat is being utilized for heat* i - ing water for various household pur- { Id : poses. The apparatus for this purpose is absurdly simple, merely a sectional :o" boiler of tbiu blackened copper, exet posed on the sunny side of the roof under a glass cover very like a hotfs liouse frame, and suitably piped for r- : supply and demand. j An hour's exposure to full sunlight ! raises the water to a temperature from i thirty degrees to sixty degrees FahrenlH licit above that of the air, and as tbe J heaters actually in use contain from u forty to l-u gauous, accoruiug iu m | there is an ample supply of hot water i through the hours of daylight. Polar y ; water heaters of this kind have been ;il j installed on the roofs of many houses i in Southern districts. They work adcs j mirably, and even in less favorable b* | places have been found useful.?Casin eier's Magazine. i?| a "What Shall I Do?" :d J That is the probiem which frequently ie ! confronts everyone?especially parents a- |.with small children. A slight illness ? j treated at once often saves a long I period of sickness and expense?some! times prevents death. The trouble is that so few people can think on the instant what treatment to apply, even if ,t'?" linv/i th/i L-nnwlodiro IlPfPSRm'V to i j llltj ' V- i? ? -- , I recognize the disease and know what j simple remedies are best. To meet t" is ! want at small expense the -Book Pubj lisbing House, 134 Leonard street. New I York City, is sending postpaid a doctor book on receipt of sixty cents in i stamps. The book is illustrated, contains 598 pages, explains symptoms, causes and simple means of overcoming ordinary illnesses. It was written bj the eminent J. Hamilton Ayres, A. M., M. D. It is a volume which should be j iu every household, as no one can toil j what moment he may require the knowledge :t contains. Anglomania in Italy. A trnvn r.f .lniflnnifiiliii is RWPMlini. over Koine. The Queen anil King of Italy are adopting Mritisb customs and manners. Many of the old court resent the passing of traditions, but Queen Helena has installed English servants and tutors in the royal hcuae; hold. The Italian nobility has taken ~ ; the cue. and English governesses tiiul 110 trouble in getting situations in | Rome. Many fashionable women are ' j taking English lessons, and every one ' who claims position in the Quirinal 6et serves afternoon tea. " > "iW W, Soda in Wyoming. A Wyoming paper claims that its State has the greatest soda deposits in the world. Its soda lakes have enough to make all the soda biscuits that the world may want for the next two centuries, with plenty left over +/\ mci-a oil +iio snlsnrln find sodalvp that the tribes of the earth would need for cleansing purposes for that length of time. And when this had all been provided for, there would be surplus enough to make all the window glass that builders would need for generations. Nature Thought*. Lea. . j the shore, I walk among the trees. A cloud passes, and the sweet short rain comes, mingled with sunbeams and flower-scented air. The finches sing among the fresh green leaves of the beeches. Beautiful it is, in summer days, to see the wheat wave, and the long grass foam-flecked - ? rofnrn U1 IlUVVtri J ICiU Ciiiu Abwutu VV vuv wind. My soul of itself always desires: these are to it thought. I know that there is something infinitely higher than deity. The great sun burning in the sky, the sea, the firm earth, all the stars of night, are feeble, all. all the cosmos is feeble; it is not stroi... enough to utter my prayer-desire. My soul cannot reach to its full desire of prayer. I need no earth or sea or sun to think my thought. If my thoughtpart?the psyche?were entirely separated from the body and from the earth, I should of myself desire the same. In itself my soul desires: my existence, my soul-existence, is in Itself my prayer, and, so long as it exists, so long will it pray that I may have the fullest soul-life.?Richard Jefferies. A Canary Tliat Talks. A Blackburn man Has a remarKaDie 'canary which never sings, but can j"talk" as fluently and distinctly as any parrot. It reels off quite articulately sentence after sentence, such a.^ "Pretty Polly dressed in green, coming home to see th? queen." "Polly's sick; run for the doctor, quick." ."What do you want here?" These are only a few samples of the linguistic attainments of this wonderful little bird, which is certainly the feathered marvel of the age, and is believed to be the only authentic instance of a talking canary known.?Chicago Journal. The millionaire Jews in America number 115. X. Y. 43. Stati or Ohio, Cit* or Toledo, i Lucas County. i Frank J. Ciieney make oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Chenet A Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State uforesaid, and that said Arm will pay me sum ui uat labs for each aDd every case of cATABBHthat cannot be cured by the use cf Hall's Cataebh Cciie. Fbank J. Chenet. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my . , presence, this Cth day of December, < seal. V A. D., 1836. A. W. Gleason, ' ?v-? ' Notary Public. Hall'sCatarrh Care is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney <fe Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by all Drusffists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the be3t. A Coveted Post. At a meeting of the Wandsworth Guardians applications were received from no fewer than 1170 persons for the post of messenger at a salary of thirty shillings a week, with three shillings a week extra allowance for Sunday work.?London Tit-Bits. Piao's Cure cannot be too highly spoken ot as a oough cure.?J. W. O'Bbiin, 822 Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6,1900. The man who is ricli because he is stingy is also stingy because he is rich. Dizzy? Appetite poor?*/ Bowels constipated? Tongue coated? Head ache? It's your liver! Ayer's Pills are liver pills, all trpfypfohlp Cold for JiC. Ay?rCo.. VCgClaUlv* gixtyyoara. Loweil.Mc.s3. Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE rrrrr crs. o? decgoiets or r. p. hall ? co.. waskta. if. n. blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowelf pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin regularly you ore sick. Constipation kills n starts chronic ailments and long years of sut CASCARETS today, for you will never get right Take our advice, start with Cascari I money refunded. The genuine tablet stain booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Con i SiclON* i ' ar v JjgL^g, Sf III IDCFNTS. xlfj CBREsiil TVi {headaches. rj& ^B-wygaEig^' SQiDEP ^ nt?m nte/iAWro v? ? ? % <1 J Q ra ^ w nnii ifmuv inuii ft./1 % Vx ij I quick rolia' undcare* wont CMI. Boo* ai Uotimoni?is ?nd 10 <laj?' tro?tm? il trmo. Dr. X- a. UCU IUII,I?> B. AtUaVi. 0? Thompson's Eye Slate ? ' . nirtV'-'f.Tri-i-iA .V^to.Sfcgiii Cost of a Cycling Tour An English cycling statistician, has drawn up a table of comparative costs of touring in various countries. The home tour works out considerably more expensive than the continental tour, and of the home countries Scotland is dearer than England. France. Italy and Germany are all much-on a level, from thirty to forty per cent, cheaper than Great Britain; and lowest o* all 1 4-v?*v /tnmAo rrinm o Inn/1 mnph ill LUC HO t V^UUiCO jjwiftiUUi, ?* ? favored of the tourists by reason of the beauties of the Ardennes country.? London Tit-Bits. FITSnermaneatly cured. No fits or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer.32trial bottle and treatls?free Dr.R.H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phlltu.Pa. The University of Zurich is about to establish a chair of journalism. Mrs.Winslow's Soothing Syrup for childrea teething, soften the gums, reduces inflammation,allays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle A flock of ostriches at Phoenix, Ariz., now numbers more than 1000 birds. You can do your dyeing in half an hour with Putnam Fadeless Dtxs. It's all right to be wide awake so long as vou don't suffer from insomnia, w Gray? mmmmmmmammmmmmmmmmmrn "My hair was falling out and turning gray very fast. But your Hair Vigor stopped the falling and restored the natural color."?Mr*. E. Z. Benomme, Cohoes, N. Y. It's impossible for you not to look old, with the color of seventy years in vour hair! Perhaps you are seventy, and you like your gray hair! If not, use Ayer's Hair Vigor. In less than a month your gray hair will have all jhe dark, rich color of youth. Sl.OO a bottle. All dragitsts. If your druggist cannot supply yoa, send us one dolor and we wlu express yon a bottle. Be sure andeive the name of yonr nearest express office. Address, J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Man. W. L DOUGLAS $3.= & *3 SHOESffi Yon can save from $3 to $5 yearly by wearing W. L Douglas $8.50 or $3 shoes. They equal those x I that have been eo9t- f 1 * OA AA ?>' I ing you iruiu gr?.w #5to $5.00. The im- j?R meiisa sale of W. L. S? Douglas shoes proves fl# their superiority over ^5 all other makes. giga' wff Sold by retail shoe *-] dealers everywhere. Lx Look for name and ;-J{ price on bottom. ^sir/ That Donglat uiwss Cor* Jk on* Colt pro res there U value Id Dongla* shoes. / 1 Corona I* the highest i^ni^ grade Pat.leather made. A"a?f Co/or Eyelet i uted. K^)/\?t9^/7-<4zraaB? , Our f4 Qilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. Shoes by mall, 25 rent* extra. IUiatratei Catalog free. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Kt? #iilpauBl'abulesare the best dyepepsla medlclue ever made. A hundred mlllloui or them cave been bold ii. the United States In a ttiuglo year. Every nines* arising liooj a disordered stomach la relieved or cureu by their use. So , common is it that diseases originate from tbe stomach it may be sately a*-? ail eerted there is do couaiuou ui iu bealtn tb. t will uot be benefited or cured by the occasional use of Ripans Tabules. Physicians know them and speak highly of them. All dfuggists 1 sell them. The live-cent package Is ! enough for an ordinary occasion, and i the Family liottie, sixty cents, contains a household supply for a year. One generally gives relief within twenty minutes. " I PAY SPOT-CASH FOR SESF LAND WARRANTS issued to soldiers of any war. Write me at one#. I HANK H. RKGEK. Ba'rtli Block. Denver. Coin . ^ ! THE BOWELS ^ ^ CANDY 3le?, appendicitis, billousneas, bed breath, bad i, foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, and dizziness. When your bowels don't mova tore people than all other diseasea together. It Jering. No matter what aila you, start taking well and stay well until you get your bowels ;ts today under absolute guarantee to cure or ped C C C. Never sold in bulk. Sample and apany. Chicago or New York. 503 "ll i srvbus II juralgic adachesj CKLY CURED BY iflMOSt) ??g|? WYJVffEBE. /ifr )| M" co is^Iek au "u? r"ivia Hfl"' #V*n?rH flrrnn 'Pntf/vi rtortd. llM M Prl In tlma. Sold by drucgliU. K| TpiIfHTIHII'wfli