New York Ci'y.?F.cs conts of line^. * taffeta ana pongee make the smartest j of all the season's wraps ami are as ' comfortable as tl:<-y are fashionable.] ' I fif'M i Ml'fj \! If y jk3k I /f?> 'm '(/ BOX COAT. ' This one i& made of natural colored linen with piping of red and matches the skirt, but white and all colors ar^ used and silk and veiling are greatly In vogue for old wraps as well as for costumes. When liked the collar can be omitted and the neck finished with a facing only. The coat is made with fronts and : backs and is fitted by means of shoulder, under-arm and centre back seams. The sleeves are in regulation coat style with roll-over cuffs and a pocket Is inserted in each front. As illustrated the closing is made invisibly by means of buttons and buttoulioles worked in on a fly. The quantity of material required for the medium size is three and threequarter yards twenty-seven inches wide, two and a half yards forty-four A LATE DESIGN I ?? mm 1/11 I I m. I B $ I MM ( $ jMv % * imm ? inches wide or two yards fifty-two inches wide. Shirt-Waist Suits. The shirt-waist suit, first so called because of its simplicity, is much more elaborate in design than last year. It is, however, an essential part of every complete outfit, and is made j in wash material, silk of every description, and even in a light-weight cloth, j The skirt with bows of shirring and . flounces is newer than pleated or | tucked ones, and is not difficult for home dressmakers, provided a good pattern is chosen. Skirts and waists are both unlincd, but there must be I a Urop-SKirr. 1101 ii peim-uin. mm tuv | waist will wear bettor and fit bettor if there is a lining across the shoulders and in the upper parts of the sleeves. In these days of long shoulder seams and the consequent tendency of the sleeve to s'iip below toe top of the arm. this lining is necessary to give a really trim, neat appearance to the gown. The fancy braids now so fashionable are a great help in making over last year's gowns, and also in trimming the inexpensive materials. Not for a moment is it intended to convey the idea that to buy a cheap material and load it down with trimming is advisable, but. for instance, with an inexpensive costume, a skirt and sliort eoat of black and white shepherd's plaid or check, a trimming of black aivl white b.aid gives a charming finish and makes the gown nppear much more expensive.?Harper's Bazar. Crern and Blue Parasol. % A grenn-and-bliie combination parasol, chosen to carry with a taffeta dress in a gre^n-and-biue check, is noteworthy. The parasol is made of material exactly like that of tlie dress. The handle down to within an inch or so of the end is of a bine so dark as to appear fairly black. At the tip | it is carved to represent a oeaforJf's I I Lead and the- enameling is of the richest description, perfectly showing the j ever-chan^in^. green-and-blue irides- | cer.ee of this bird's splendid plumage. ! Did goddesses carry parasols. Juno | herself could have asked no more j effective and suitable shield from the , dazzling reflection cast by Apoilo's i! passing chariot. j A Datnty Wrap. | Quite the most fascinating little wrap ' is nothing more than a scarf?a length of chiffon, measuring almost three yards. The one seen was of pastel j pink, edged all the way around with half-open pink roses. These roses were exquisite little affairs, and not sufficiently even in size to appear monotonous. The whole thing looked as if it had drifted down from Fairyland onto the shoulders of its pretty wearer. A Smart Hat. A smrrt hat of black and white has ! the wide riin turned up on the two sides, making the hat into something 1 of a scoop. The outer side of this j rim is set with an inch-band of white ! velvet. Two long plumes, one of black j and one of white, fall out at the back of the hat over the hair. On the left j side the rim is caught on the top with j a white owl's head. "White Duck Hate For Children. I Sensible women will provide 'heir j children with white duck hats. _tuch I as can be obtained at all the stores J for a trifling price. These mean com- i fort and s fety to the little ones while playing in the hot sunlight. I Girl's Blouse Costume. No style of frock suits little girlB [ better than this simple one, which | consists of blouse and bos pleated j skirt. The model is made of white j linen trimmed with banding of blue and white and is charmingly dainty : and attractive; but natural colored ; linen and all the simpler washable j fabrics of the season are equally ap- I _ I JY MAY MANTON, Oft I wwms^ j propriate for immediate wear and fi:;nnel and serge for the cooler days. The costume consists of the skirt, j body lining and blouse. The skirt is box pleated, each pleat being stitched j at its edges to yoke depth, and is j joined 'o the body lining, the two being j closed at the centre back. The blouse ; is made with fronts ?r.d back and is ; finished with a box pleat at the centre I front beneath which the closing is made. At th? neck is a big sailor col' j lar and the sleeves are full, laid In box i pleats above the elbows and forming puffs below. The quantity of material required for j the medium size (ten years) is eight yards twenty-seven inches wide, six and tLree-quarler yards thirty-two j i I CIKT.'S BLOUSE COSTUMEinehcs wide or four and seven-eijrlith ' yards forty-four inches wid<\ with | two and three-quarter yards of oandIntr +n trim as illustrated Scalloped Sweet Potatoes. Boil six potatoes in salted water till ! tender. Skin and slice thin. Put a \ layer of them in a buttered baking j lish, and sprinkle with brown sugar; J put on more potatoes and more sugar till the dish is full. Bake three-uuar- ; ters of an hour. Beets. Wash the beets but do not pare them. Boil gently for three-quarters of an hour, or till they can be easily pierced with a straw. Skin them and slice in a hot dish, dusting each layer with a little pepper, salt and melted butter. Those which are left over may have a little vinegar poured over them, and ihen they can appear as pickles at luncheon ce nest day. Stuffed Beets. Six medium-sized beets, one can French peas. Eoil the beets and skin them, but leave them whole. Turn the "water off the peas and wash them; heat with salt and pepper. Cut off the stem end of each beet so that it will stand evenly, and scoop out the :entre. Put in each one a tiny bit of butter and a little salt and pepper, and then fill high with the peas. Serve rery hot Stewed Tomatoes. Six large tomatoes, one teaspoon : salt, one teaspoon sugar, one pinch j soda, a little pepper, butter as large \ as an English walnut. Peel and cut j up the tomatoes small, saving the juice; put together in a saucepan, with the seasoning, mixing the soda in a teaspoon of water before adding that. Cook slowly twenty minutes, stirring until it is smooth. Last, nut in a cud of bread crumbs, or a cup of toast cut in small bits. Serve in a hot covered dish. ^ Vegetable Salad. Cut enough cold boiled potatoes to give one quart of dice shaped pieces; cut beets and carrots to give the same amount; sprinkle with salt and pepper; add one tablespoonful of finely chopped onions or the same amount of chives; mix with French dressing; chop the ; whites of two hard boiled eggs; mix j the vegetables in alternate layers on | a platter or salad bowl, pouring a little of the dressing over each layer; rub | the yolks of two hard boiled eggs j through a strainer over the top; | sprinkle with romceu parsley; garnish with parsiey or celery leaves. Apricot BallB. Spread warm boiled rice half an inch j thick on a floured moulding board, i Have in rerdiness a dozen apricots, i peeled, halved and stoned. Put two halves together and cut the rice in ! pieces large enough to wrap around : them. Press into shape with the j hands, roll in flour and wrap each ball ; In a little pudding cloth, which has ! been buttered and floured. Tie into shape and plunge into a kettle of boil- j ing water. The kettle should have a | perforated tin jam on tne Douoin to , prevent tlie balls sticking. Keep the i water boiling constantly and cook half ; an hour. Take up, remove the cloth carefully so as not to break the balls and serve with any hot sauce. Codfish Chowiler. Soak salt codfish in cold water over j night, or a little longer, to freshen it. Put on to boil in cold water. Let come slowly to boil, and cook from two to five minutes according to thickness of fish. Tour off the water and mash the fish fine; and to every cup of fish add two cups of mashed potato and a little milk, pepper and butter. Mash and mix all thoroughly together. Put on in a spider half a cup of fine chopped, fat. salt pork, fry out the fat ' slightly and add one small, fine- j chopped onion. Brown slightly and then add the prepared fish and potato, j stirring well to mix in the onion and pork. \\ Leu well mixed aim neated i through and nicely browned, turn onto ' a heated platter and serve. i r(HoysEHsLpJ|^^g^. ' Don't bathe tbe face while it is very warm or very cold. Don't wash tbe lace when traveling, unless it is with a I ttle alcobol and water, or a little cold cream. Young infants should not be given Indian meal. For children over one year it is a fattening and safe food. Coarsely-ground maize boiled in inilli i will work wonders with a puny, ill- j nourished child. Small scented sachets come for per* , fuming the hair. They are made to j place under the coils of hair or in the pompadour, and give a fait perfume, , They come in both dark and light silk, j to suit the shade of hair. Doilies and email centre pieces, ' especially with quantities of open work, c-au he laundered with very little j trouble at homo. Castile or any whito soap is the best cleaning medium. After washing and rinsing in slightly blued water, stretch them upon a window, taking care that every scallop and petal is well smoothed, and let tflpm dry. They will require no ironing and look like new. For sweetbread croquettes, cook, cool and mince a sweetbread. Add enough chopped chicken t? make a i full pint Melt one-quarter cupful o! ; butter, one cupful of rich, well-seas- I oned chicken stock and one-third cup i ful of cream. Season with salt and pepper, add a ueateu egg and tin minced sweetbreads. When eool, shape, roll in line bread or craekei crumbs, then in beaten egg and agaiE in the crumbs. Fry in deep fat, difcic and serve with mushroom sauce. v. . Hi* Tale of 'Woe. "Madam, can you offer a litUe food j to a hungry wayfarer?"' tai "And wliy are you a wayfarer?" Jo "I don't mind telling you. ma:am. d!> You have a kind" face. I lost half a of million in one of New York's gilded i ah gambling dens, and if 1 go hack they ; oa will use me for a witness against the . Je gambler and disgrace me trusting fnm- j a 1 lly." . | pa "What a sad story." stt "Isn't it?" La "Yes. Suppose yon try it on 1he dog. ev Here, Rover!"?Cleveland Plain Dealer, j | an That Man in tile Moon. | Oli The "pope." or village priest, is ge?- | in era lly the only source of information la; as to what is going on in remote vil* an lages. He is very much to the fore at an present. j su Father Ignatius Diatc-bkoff sends to ! r.n the Kazan newspapers an amusing th account of a fair held in his village, j br "Our mujiks." he says, "are intense- i th ly patriotic, but tbeir ideas of serving i their country are somewhat strange, j di< "When I visited the fair on Vednes- ! un day night I saw a great crowd of our on peasants standing about an itinerant su rifle saloon proprietor, who was hold- sti ing a telescope to his eye. They were ! ] evidently waiting their turn. j fif "Our village coffinmaker was aiming 1 fiv a gun, which he rested in the fork of i w< a small tree. The gun was pointed ! be toward the sky. .Suddenly it went off, ; be and a bell clanged, after which fol- tr< lowed loud cries of "Ura! Got him ?; again!' "After several other mujiks bad taken shots I inquired what they were ' aiming at. and was much surprised to -v hear in chorus the reply, "The Japan- j 1111 ese father.' Looking along the barrel f* of the gun 1 could see nothing but the ( moon, so I demanded a further ex- i planation. j " 'Our brother,' said a bearded giant, ' ' pointing to the showman, 'says that j in the man in the moon is a Makuk (Jap- ! nt tinese), and that every time we hit him * ten Japanese on earth join the devil. | m We have killed,' he added, naively I 'eighty of them already.' "?Kazan j Correspondent London News. gc Political FlneKfte. W "Senator." asked one of his trusty I henchmen, "did you see those two ar- re tides about you that appeared in two j in different papers last week? One ol | se them described you as a penurious ds man of immense wealth who gave grudgingly to charity because it was necessary in your business, and the other said your wealth was vastly exaggerated .and you really couldn't af- j ^ ford the stvle vou were nutting on, ! but that you had to present a bold j ^ front to keep your creditors from clos- j ing in on you." I ev "My dear fellow." said Senator Lots, j *7 un. "your lack of penetration mortifies me. Don't you know I inspired both those articles myself? That sort j of thing is necessary to keep me before the public."?Chicago Tribune. ! Vs bt Mourning in Kovea. Koreans wear full monrning for | their fathers. The dress is of hemp ! cloth, with a hempen girdle. A face j shield is used to show that the wearer ( is a sinner and must not speak to any- | one unless addressed. The costume j e5 is retained for three years, the shield for three months. This is worn for a father only. Secondary mourning is ; worn for a mother and no mourning ; . at all for a wife. The hat is of wicker, i ^J During the China-Japanese war the j , United States Minister ordered every 1 ^ American citizen to have in readi j.( ness a dress of this sort for disguise J in case ol' flight. ej Maine's Statesmen. I CJ It is many years since Maine ha? i ti changed its Representatives in Con- > in gress. except when Speaker Reed re 1 vi signed or death has intervened. All | ci four of the present delegation have I T: just been nominated for re-election by I ? the Republicans of their districts. There are 312.SOS Protestant Christians in China. N. Y.?31 j State of Ohio. C:ty of Toledo, i Lccas County. f " ' Frank J. Cheney make oath that he is | senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & j Co., doing business in the City o!' Toledo. : County and State, aforesaid, and that said : firm will pay the sum of one hundred dol- ; lahs for each and every caso of catarrh that cannot be cured by the uso of Hall's j Catarrh Cuke. Frank J. Cheney, j j| Sworn to before me and subscribed in my | , .. presence, this (ith day of Decem seal. ber. A.jd., 1886. A.W. Gleason, m ' ?v?- Notary Public. j jL Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and I I acts directly on the blood and mucous sur- j faces of the* system. Send for testimonials, i Ej free. F. J. Cheney cents sill easy way ior jiny youug \ j] lady to keep her hands nice and soft J l A budding damsel in Sturgeon. .Mo.. I J! sent the cash, and received this advice: | t "Soak your hands in dishwater three ! times a day. while mother rests."' ! ? ! f( Cue Allen'it Foot-ICaRe. ! I It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting, j h Tired, Aching, Hot, Sweating Feet,Corns and i h Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, apowdei | c: to be shaken into the shoes. Cures while you j e1 walk. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. ! B{ Don't accept any substitute. Sample sent | n. Frle. Address,Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, n.5f | The daily mileage ol the trains ol' this fs country is 2,750,000. it xr A Vast Fund of Information W is available in the large dictionaries j ? and makes them almost invaluable, but j j it is not every one who can afford to ' ^ pay for the great books. Even those j 0, who own them do not always find it A convenient to get up from their read- no ing or writing to investigate the spell- S' inw /w ilofin it inn rif ft vvnr/1 friv thr *"fe " " ~ - I big books are heavy and awkward to q handle, and are too bulky to be kept ^ close at band. IIow sensible, then, to c have a small, concise dictionary al- v ways on the table beside you. ready for | use at a second's notice?a book you I j* will use constantly. Such a work will j be sent postage paid for thirty ceuts _ In postage stamps by the Book Publishing House. 13-J Leonard street. New York City. It is illustrated, bound in I cloth, and of 3120 pages. A marvel- K ously cheap volume. The Public Health and Marine Hospital I service octets $1,0UU,U00 a year. Si Piso's Cure caunot be too highly spoken of u as a cough cure.?J. W. O'Brien, 322 Third H Avenue, N., Minneapolis, ilinn., Jan. 0,1900. In some of the ci'?es of Spai? the streets I we cleaned three tinajs a dui\ ^ Almoml Grafted on live Oak. ^ \ story of unusual grafting in veget)'.e life is vouched for by Attorney Ln J. Wells and H. C. Swain, at Redtg. Cal. They say that on the farm Julius Jensen. 011 Dibble Creek, an nond has been grafted upon a live k and a pear onto a mulberry. Mr. user. has been on the place only for few years and knows nothing of the st history of the ft.rm. In the yard inds a magnificent almond of the Ill sun i I.I1HTIJ, J..VUWVV.O ery year a crop of large almonds. Hie tree forks at the ground. A foot (1 a half above tbe ground, where e of the branches is twelve inches diameter and the other half as ge. each branch suddenly enlarges d becomes four inches greater in dimeter. This spring, to the complete rprise of Mr. .Tansen, he discovered oak shoot putting forth just below e enlargement on one of the anches. Examination then showed at up to the point where the enlargement appears the tree is live oak. "Who J this strange grafting, or when, is iknown. But the fact is plain that each branch an almond has been ccessfully grafted on to a live oak ump. [n the same yard, and distant only ty feet, stands a pear tree. About e feot above the ground the pear ,>od commences; below that is ruulrry. Clearly this is a case of pear ing grafted upon a mulberry. This *e produces excellent Bartlett pears. Sacramento Bee. Ah the Traunp Explained It. A. man from Mexico. Jacques Forbes ' name, claims to nave a typical other-in-law, inflicted with that range and almost universal Avomanfailing of asking promiscuous ques)11S. "It was only a few weeks ago," said r. Forbes, "that a dilapidated-lookg tramp, with a long, strikingly red i ise?one of those all-ablaze noses? J plied at the back door of my / other-in-law's home for food. ^ Sure, said my mother-in-iaw in reionse to his request for food, 'I'll ve you something to eat, but, my >od man, won't you please tell me hat makes your nose so very red?' "Not the least objection, madam," plied the tramp. 'It is simply bloom- " g with pride that it doesn't stick it- t If into other people's business. Good ly, madam.' "?Louisville Herald. ? Canadian Absentees. An Ottawa correspondent reports to ] e Montreal Gazette that often not SC] ore tnan 200 members of the Do- pe. inion's House of Commons are in ba eir seats. "The frequent and long th< iseuce from Ottawa of members is de en more commented on this session toi an it was last," he writes. "Among p. ose who do stay at Ottawa most of r? e time, too, there are many who th< iually lind less to interest them in th< e debates of Parliament than in the to trious rooms surrounding the chain- or t." fri Destiny in n Waistcoat. The easy-going Harvard undergrad- ' ite, left to himself on questions of "v ess, will understand the misery of m< s counterpai*t at Oxford. When the ' :am period approached a week or so CI ro. those in power issued an edict w; escribing the dress to be worn in the to lamination room to include a black re tat and a black waistcoat. In addi- to sn to the white tie and the gown, ho he British public itself was appalled mi : such Puritan severity. It was the E1 ack waistcoat, a thing that all civi- ro sation is allowed to doff in summer, th lat incited rebellion. Why. a man's wi lances in life might be impaired be- d< luse the warmth of a waistcoat, gra- at litously imposed upon him. prevent- kt g him from doing full justice to his ews on the synthetic unity of appre- F ation! It might ruin a state.?Boston J.? . . Ne ransenpt. Dr leapolis, Minn?, tells how wo- ?2 fian's monthly suffering may q? e permanently relieved by Lydia .. :.Pinkham'sVegetableCompound _ "Dear Mrs. Pineham: ? I have T ever before given my endorsement I )r any medicine, but Lydia E. 'inkham's Vegetable Compound J as added so much to my life and w appiness that I feel like making an U fcception in this case. 1; or two 3-ears u very month I would have two days of | ;vere pain, and could find no relief, but w ae dav when visiting a friend I ran p 2ross Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeible Compound, ? she had used , with the best results and advised ic to try it. I found that it worked I onders with me ; I now experience o pain, and only had to use a few ottles to bring1 about this wonderful iange. I use it occasionally now BE hen I am exceptionally tired or worn at."? Misb Alice M. Smith, 804 Third ve., South Minneapolis, Minn., Chair- I lan Executive Committee, Minneapolis | jn tudy Club?$5000forfeit if original of aboue tter proving genuineness cannot bu produced. Sci Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable orapound carries women safely . tirough the various natural A| rises and is the safe-guard of U woman's health. ^ The truth about this great ledicine is told in the letters Toi rom women being published in ? u Vli Thousands of women suffer from &rvousness and don't kntio it. If you j %klng Dr. Hart/nan's Per una. It will Ion and all your organs will be restored 8 it will immediately alleviate your cai A Dance Care. ? * ~ - 1 nnu I A L>r. .BisnoiT, 01 v aiuiviu, ~ ribes the hard work of the mining has ons, who carry 150 pounds of ore in var, gs strapped to their shoulders while jeal ey climb up hundreds of feet on lad- The rs, often only notched trees. They sigi 1 without a recess from G a. m. to 4 con m., and seem to be in need of all the tar] 5t they can get. but before supper bek ey prefer to take the strain out of aRd fir muscles by dancing vehemently *on the sound of a fiddle for an hour c'ns two or even longer if their lady eve ends happen to muster in force. one Only Ona of His Peculiarities*. Josiah,"' asked Mrs. Chugwater, A ,-hat are you so cross about this I jrning?" "Nothing. madam!" snorted Mr. ^ mgwater. "Nothing?only that I inted to be sure of having a place N stop at in St. Louis when we got I ndy to go to the fair, and I wrote ^ live hotels and six private boarding uses to inquire if they could aceoru- P adate us. I've just got the answers. | rery dog-goned one has reserved 8 oms for us. We can't go to one of | em and disappoint the other ten, can e? Not much! We won't go at all! 3 you hear, madam? We won't go all! You can go ahead with your litiing."?Chicago Tribune. ITS permanently cured. No flteornervousss after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great C rveRestorer,Atrial bottle and treatise froe i . R. H. Klise, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila.,Pa. | The number of cattle in Argentina is es- 1 riated at 25.000,000. Jour Stomach I used Cascarets and feel like a new man. I hove en a sufferer from dyspepsia and sour stomach r the last two years. I have been taking medile and other drugs, but could And no relief oniy ^ r a short time. I will recommend Cascarcts to ! friends as the only thins: for indigestion and ur stomach and to keep the bowels in good con ;ion. They are very nice to eat." Harry Stuckley Slauch Chunk, Pa f Bowels fammm lr CANDY CATHARTIC .V 'lensant, Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, fl ver Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c. Never H Id In bnlk. The genuino tablet stamped C C C. aranteed to cure or your money back. Sj Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. ;gg ?3 WM SALE, TEN MILLION BOIES I ICKLES THE PALATE \ W? % BEECH-HUT ||j|||l|||lj}l|j^l!|iil I,if Sliced Bacon, I Sliced Beef; Grape'Jam, M"JW Cranberry Sauce, Orange A Marmalade, I' Strawberry Jam. W i wm l put ap ,n G,nHH o JMWilllll J Jars. Ask your ^ "ifn& ^ procer, or write to EGH-NUT PACKING CO., Canajoharie,W.Y. 'oung Ladyj,ws It dress fronds, silks and wai<;int.'s to friends an 1 trillion. Evellent opror'ni'If;. lor large income fp >t: Novelty ('p., 99 Pranlthn .Vt., X. V. ^dflPPtK RrPAfrSTABCLESaro thebojtdj* j f?< jgzmek P?P nicdlciu- ever made. A bun- 1u rin>>! millions of thrrn have been sold in atopic year. Coustipation, heart- I ? r r fyj burn. bicU headache, dizziness. bad Al m&fti\\W7 breath. ?ore throat and every illness oridinx fmm a disordered stomach , are relleTcd or curi-d by Ripaas Tab- JC ul?s. One will generally dive relief thin twenty minutes. Thefvo centpackapeisenough r an ordinary occasion. All dnisarlsuj sell them. _ JJJ ^eyeu?;uLc Ihompsens gjfG Wata* fa ~ J So 16 SSUfi5K*>-SS3 rarn TGIHlNHHil WMHHBnnn fiiu Society^ ^ Ja Woman's Letter. St. Paul, Minn. I j 521 Wabasha St. ) j . .j. . Hartman, Columbus, 0. )ear Sir: " )m "Itook Perunalast sum- \ er when I was all run wn, and had a headache ! id backache, and no amnion for anything. I now el as well as I ever did j ^ all my life, and all anks is due to your ex- i llent Peruna."?Bess F. ialy. The symptoms of summer ca- i ;|jjS II II tics of any kind. Peruna is perfctly harmless. It can be used ny length of time without ac- j uiring the drug habit. JII pelvic catarrh and catarrhal feel fagged out, begin at once t relieve your catarrhal affileto health. By a bottle to-day, Dejjreeit of Jealouliy. n Italian philosopher, Sir Ferranl, constructed a scale showiug the yinjg degrees in which professional ousy exists in different professions. ? lowest place in this csale is asled to architects; next above them clergymen, advocates and milit officers; then follow in order from )w upward, professors of science literature, journalists, authors, doc? and actors. It is an interesting ssification, which is not likely, howr, to be completely accepted by any .?Chicago Journal. / 1?-*' _______ . nr ^kin TnrtiirpH VI JI1HI IVIIUIV.VJ Dabies and Rest | or Tired flofliers 1 '' ^ / m 11 ) Warm Baths with VSI'* nd gentle anointings ith CUTICURA intment, the great Skin ? J ? A O t urc; ctllU puicoi a. iiv* veetest of emollients,, means instant relief and freshing sleep for torired, disfigured, itching, id burning babies, and st for tired, fretted others, when all else Id throughout the world. Cutlcur* Sotp, 25c., Olnt1,30c., RtioWcm, 50c. (in form of Chocolate Coated , 2Jc. per vial of 60). Depot!: I.ondon, 27 Charterc 3q.; I'tru, 3 Kue de la f'iix; Button, 137 Columbia Potter Drug It Clicm. Corp., Sole Proprietor*. r-Send for " How to Cure Baby llumor*." DUDCV NEW DISCOVERY: ?W I % V9 I quick relief and ran* wont Bock of MaUmonlila *nd 10 rinya' tnalauat i. Dr. S. H. OREEH'S ?0HS, BoxB, Atlanta, t&. n CURES WHEMC AIL ELSE FAILS. KF m ISe?t Cough ttyrup. Tastes Good. U3C J in time. Sold by druggists. HI