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An Island ALONG HAWj VENTILATES THE SHOE. Apparatus of Levers and Tubes Arranged in Interior of Heel. It is well known that the foot, when incased in shoes, does not receive proper ventilation?in fact, does not receive any. This is particularly so in regard to the heel and j j the sole, as a small portion of air does I manage to enter the upper part of the j shoe and ventilate the ankle. It has | iipon said that the foot should re ceive as much ventilation as the j hands and equally as much care and | attention. It would be impossible to j ventilate the foot except with some | such apparatus as that shown here, : the invention of an Aigcntine man, j and recently patented in the United i States. In this apparatus for the interior ventilation of the foot there is a combination of an air suction and compressing device arranged inside the heel. A system of levers tends to Increase the mechanical effort of the natural action of the foot in walking. Inside the shoe are also tubes for the i circulation of air.?Washington Star. Grape Pomace For Cattle. A consular report states that the rei usy ui WIUB JII cooco, mc y\j , Is being fed to cattle by French farmers. After the wine is pressed out, the pomace is generally used to make a kind of brandy called "eau de vie de marc," and then the residue is used as fodder for stock or as a fertilizer. A French farmer experimenting with this pomace has found a means of converting it into an excellent fodder for milch cows. He makes WAS IT FAIR,1 ' : - : >, ; * W 0 * , \ / ' l i*r 1& ? :?*-"^ He?"So you persist in breaking She?"Most decidedly. What dt He?"Oh, about forty. Better tl chance."?The Sketch. Hnrr Dii'inrr rnmh ? 9 v/w"v' With the aid of the comb shown here the hair can be dried in less than half an hour. In (he handle is a metallic tube, which extends to the I Parsdise. | ??1 r:i i ' MIAN WAYS. I ?From The Motor Car. ^ Q a compound consisting of parts of t] sugar and parts of pomace, forming e, a substance that the cows eat with great relish and which can be pre- ti served three months. He says that tl after he had fed this mixture to his L cows three days they gave twenty per k cent, more milk than before, and that the milk was of a much better ^ quality. The past summer has been 6] very dry, and farmers believe the ? grape food will greatly aid them. A p company has been organized at j T Clermont, Ferrand, with capital of t< $30,000, to build a factory to convert j grape pomace into cow feed, in the i ^ form of oil cakes, using chopped hay I s, or straw and molasses.?Country 1 s| Gentleman. o Improved Cleaver. ! C With the aid of an implement In- ! ^ vented by a New Jersey man it now j ^ becomes possible for the butcher to j s, chop the meat and at the same time ' a add to its tenderness by pounding j with a combined cleaver and meat j cj tenderer. The cleaver, as shown in j ** the illustration below, is similar to I ^ ; n p \ I 11 I a T w\ I' I I I e ,T those commonly used. On the corner, j. opposite to the blade, a series of teeth are arranged at an angle. These h teeth are used in tendering the meat. P The advantage of placing the teeth ,t] at an angle will be obvious. If they j * were placed parallel with the upper j J 5 -** c it- KA imr?AC_ I UUgt? Ul LLiC ^'lCclVfl it v> uuiu ut 1m J^UM sible to manipulate the tenderer with- r out knocking the hand on the table, s By placing the teeth at an angle the li handle is removed from the table b v.-hen cither the blade or teeth are ! * being used, preventing injury to the j jjj hand.?Washington Star. I b ?TO FORTY? e ^ j ; off the engagement? ' ) f ) you take me for?" I s link it over; it may be your last ? ' \ a n end of the comb. Within the handle g is a small battery for electricity, the v latter circulating through the tube i' to the teeth of the comb. The teeth 1 are perforated/to allow the heat thus a generated to escape and enter the ? hair when the comb is being used. r A heating element is placed within B the tube to properly hold and dis- t tribute the heat. It is surprising a how quickly the hair can be dried t with the aid of this comb. The heat a is forced close to the scalp, the most 0 difficult and the hardest part of th6 ? hair to dry thoroughly.?Washington v Star. f Slfttisticrfl. t It has been estimated that if all g the beds said to have been slept in by g George Washington had really been t so honored the Father of His Country 1j must have spent some seventy-two d years, eight months, seventeen days, ^ thirteen hours and forty-one and a half minutes in slumber.?Life. ? ? ? . . ^ Norway produces annually some .q GOO,000 tons of ice. London buys v one-tuird of this. C The Pulpit i; . A SERMON' t JT TAE RE\A?! c [RsW^/lENDERjofJ^lj^P'- i I Theme: Discipleship. * i Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching at the * rving Square Presbyterian Church, a lamburg avenue and Weirfield street, a n the above theme, the pastor, Rev. ra wemmen Jtienaerson, iouk. as ms ?xt 1 John 2:6: "He that saith he bideth in Him ought himself also to alk even as He walked." He said: A disciple is a learner. He is a tudent who sits at the feet of a ;acher and imbibes knowledge and isdom. A disciple is a follower, 'tie who walks after another. One ho places his feet in the footprints f his predecessor, who studies to mulate the teaching and the practice f his guide. Pre-eminently the disciples of Jesus hrist are students and followers, tudents they are of the wisdom of od revealed in and through Him, le essence and the refinement of ternal and supernal truth. Distinctly they are followers, if they be ue followers, and it is of such only lat I care to speak to-night, of the ord. They seek to emulate His nowledge and to practice His prespts and become conformed to the tandards of His virtues. They are [is disciples. They glory in their pecial allegiance to Him. They exalt [is overlordship and promulgate His rinciples and declare His divinity, hey pray, and they profess to strive, > become like Him. And all thi9 hey do and endeavor to be simply nd solely because they believe it to .' e the Word of God that "He that lith he abideth in Him ought himslf also to walk even as He walked." This discipleship is 'he ambition f us all. It is the glory of practical Christianity. It is the outward evience in large measure of the faith tiat moves within our souls as Chrisian men and women. It is a true tandard of our worth as we walk mong men. But it is manifest that before we an practice the truth we must know ;; that before we can follow we must ave a vision of the leader, that there lust be footprints ahead that we may read therein, that there must be exmple ere there will be emulation, o say this is prosaic.- But none the *ss it is necessary. All of which is to say that if we are d be disciples of the Lord Jesus ihrist we must have some conception f His character and an understandig of the manner of life He lived, ye must have a vision of the outtanding characteristics of His man* nnri It would be impossible in the space f time allotted to the sermon of this r of any other day to enumerate the irtues of our Saviour or to present omprehensively and fully the comonents of His character. To-night ^e shall consider simply four of the raits that we must possess and auglent by His grace within us and exress to His glory 'about us if we rould be His disciples. And these raits are: 1, a large outlook; 2, a 1 atholic spirit; 3, a militant right- 1 ousness; 4, an optimistic foresight. 1 'hese we must have are we to follow 1 lim and to be the sort of disciples i le bids us to become. i Jesus had a large outlook. His 1 orizon was boundless. His vision < ierced the veil of time and pene- i rated the mveteries of eternity. He i fas not circumscribed by the limitaions of His family relationships, nor y the boundaries of His birthplace, or by the confines of Palestine, luch less was He concerned with the mallnesses and the meannesses of ife which so dominant the minds and tultify the spirituality of so many of lis followers. Jesus was so en;rossed with the consideration of urge things that He had no time to it little things annoy. He was so usy promulgating principles and exmplifying them to men that He had o time for gossip. The trouble with he Christianity of the day is that re have reversed the process of ur Lord. We are so busy with the mall things that we have but recious little time or strength to atend the pressure of the large. We re so busy with gossip that we foret the proclamation of principles, 'he disciples of our Lord are generlly so busy discussing yhat they hink of the manners and the methds and the clothes and the frailties f brethren in the faith that they ave little time to engross themselves rith the largest and perdurable afairs of the Kingdom of Almighty tod. But if we were true disciples f the Lord we would minify the falliilities and idiosyncrasies of the rethren in the household of faith rhose sins are no greater than our wn, and magnify the need of the ,'orld, and the importance of a stern esistance in the front rank in the lot fight against sin, and the desiraility of communion here and eterally with the infinite King of leaven. And we would practice what re preached, and labor as we prayed. ] "/-Jesus had a catholic spirit. There ] lever was a man who had firmer or i lore ultimate convictions, a message < tiore final than our Lord. His con- ; idence in His ambassadorial rela- ] ionship between God and the world j /as supreme. His belief in the final- i ty or wis uospei was cunsuumitn.e. < ind yet He was never narrow. He ] ^as tolerant of all. Affirming the j alue of the truth that He declared, ( le had ever a word of encouragement or the seeker after light. Were that j eeker a Samaritan or a Roman, a j ich man or a slave, Jesus had tolera- ] ion for him. He was disdainful c l .11 that is superficial in religion and j norals. He had a welcome for every j oul, however weak and wandering, rho was honest. Quite otherwise is t with multitudes within His church, 'hey seem to think that tolerance . nd religious dishonor are co-termin- ' us. They seem to imagine that the larrower they are the greater they ; ender homage to their Lord. And , till another multitude seem to think ; nat in oraer to oe caiuon^ m spun . nd tolerant in temper we must ce~ie 1 o affirm the finality of our teachings, nd naul down our flag, and minimize , ur eternal importance, and place . urselves wholly within the class of he so-called ethnic faiths. In other J /ords some of us, too many of us in . act, have become so broad that we ave become shallow, and so tolerant hat we have become vague, and so ;ood-natured that we have become uperficial. Too many have forgotten I hat the heavens and the seas aro 1 oth wide and hospitable to all and i eep. Because I shake the hand of a < lohammedan and have respect for c ;is convictions and admire his sincer- I :y and emphasize the points of agree- 1 aent that exist between his system c nd mv own is no sign that 1 relin- f uish in any sense or fashion my con- i ictions as to the personality of Jesus t 'brist or the finality of the cosuel i hat He preached. Because I am ensible enough to see the clear cvilences of the working of the Spirit ?f God in faiths other than my own s no reason why I should belittle, acually or inferentially, the supreme :onsequence of Christian truth. For t is as clear as day that whatever nay be the undoubted excellencies of >ther faiths there is no truth so com>rehensive, no salvation so efficient, 10 message so ultimate, universal or ixacung as xnai wmtu i? w.iupi iocu I n the Christian scheme of things, knowing that we should be tolerant ind at the same time fervent, we can ifford to be. Jesus was militantly righteous. He lad no use for the militarism of lome. Nor would Ke have any word if approbation for the militarism of ' o-day. He was a man of peace, ex- \ ept when He was face to face with 2 in. He was peaceful in His attitude j oward sinners. He was militant J igain3t their sin. Jesus was a fighter, j ie carried the warfare into the enenies' country. He could turn His A lack upon the representative of or- \ ;anized wickedness. He fought sin vith no care for the cost or the coniequences to Himself. But He wa3 10 quarreller. He was therefore dif- t erent from a host of His disciples. ( rhe trouble with the church, among ( ither things, is this, that we quarrel r ather than fight. We seem to enjoy ( l row among ourselves as much as ve fear to take up the cudgels of ( ruth for God and humanity and go f lUWii lU luc wanaic agaiuai yviuu& t vherever we may assail it and what- r ;ver may be the cost. If some :hurches had a coat of arms a shil- t lalah rampant would have a promi- t lent place thereupon. We need to s luit "scrapping" and begin to fight g iin. For until we cease to belabor ^ :ach other, and besiege the strong- t lolds of sin we shall be neither true i iisciples of Jesus nor credited among he men who" live in the busy world. ^ ?or we are called to a warfare, and a he world knows the difference be- a ween a row, a sham battle and a r Yar. t Jesus was a man of optimistic fore- r sight. He had confidence. He be- t ieved what He preached. He did not t liscount sin or its power. He was | lever foolish enough to deny its ac- r uality and the grewsome evidences p )f its activities. He was no pessimist. r 3e was not so unwise as are some j :ontemporaneous optimists. But He c iid have confidence in the future, in j ;he efficacy of His truth, iu the suf- r iciency of the God of ages. He was t inlike too many Christians who seem f .0 take delight in declaring the vrork f )f transforming conditions that have 2 secome intolerable impossible and aopeless. And if we are true disci- ^ jles of Him who never despaired we ^ shall have to cease to doubt the ca- [ pacity of our truth or our Leader to [ lissolve difficulties and to remove 1 mountains. We must be sanely hope- 0 [ul. f. A large outlook, a catholic spirit, a militant righteousness, an optimistic foresight, upon the pattern outwrought by Christ will rehabilitate c )ur forces and enthuse our member- t stiip and inspire our souls and resur- j *ect our hold as a church upon the ( learts of men. And it is high time ( nq had them. |j God's Fellowship With Need. a Notice that the voice of need is the 3 POice of God. That need is an ap- i peal to God, we easily believe. His a :enderness guarantees His notice; but ii lere is another attitude of His love, t and a new emphasis upon its meas- b are. Paul hears the Macedonian cry r for help, and he and his companion^ t conclude that they have been listen-' a ng to the voice of God. They have p lot only grasped the idea that the 3 leedy Macedonian has spoken to a 3od. He is somehow God's represen;ative?not only a suppliant for God's e jounty, but a messenger to speak t 3od's will. And these heralds of the \ :ross, loosing from Troas and cross- ? ing the Aegean are showing loyal n jbedience as well as responsive sym- a ?athy, c We need to learn that truth more e ihoroughly. God has identified Him- f( self with human need. Surely the [, life of the Man of Sorrows teaches us :hat. It is what He bids us recog- 13 aize in His picture of the judgment. ^ 'Inasmuch as ye did it unto one of g ;he least of these My brethren, ye did j it unto Me." This is Jove overpow- a jring! Every craving for food in n feeble, famishing bodies is a con- p linuance of His wilderness fasting; p jvery prison bar of every pining cap- jj :ive a counterpart of the fetters of , :he savage soldiery in the governor's j palace; every shooting pain of every diseased frame an addition to the igony of the crashing nails and piercing thorns on the cross. "Ye did it . anto Me." What a marvelous statenent of fellowship! The condemnation of the miser* ible victims of selfishness was in the r< 'ace that they had not listened to the 3 pleading of the hungry, suffering" v Christ. Now this is the lesson: The 61 Macedonian need is God's cry. The 81 esponse to the need is obedience to 81 Htim. The failure to respond is re- '? "TV./* Pontoin r\f On 1* I S Jtriiiuu. auc vupvuiu wv.. Faith," by Wallace MacMullen, D. D. o Making Worthless Things Great. In some of the great halls of a Europe may be seen pictures not Bj painted with the brush, but mosaics, which are made up of small piecea 3f stone, glass or other material. The irtist takes these little pieces, and, polishing and arranging them, he ^ forms them into the grand and beau- e :iful picture. Each individual part j1 3f the picture may be a little worthess piece of glass or marble or shell; Si jut with each in its place, the whole n constitutes the masterpiece of art. - s1 So I think it will be with humanity ? in the hands of the Great Artist. Go4 ^ is picking up the. little worthiest 11 pieces of stone and brass that might a ae trodden under foot unnoticed, and 11 is making of them His great masterpiece.?Bishop Simpson. The Christian Measure. Of a Chinese convert it was said ifter his death, "There is no differ- jt ance between him and the Book." A. Brahman once said to a missionary. *You Christians are not as good a.' pour Book. If you.were as good a-* ? pour Book, you would convert India P. .o Christ in five years." What th^ 11 tvorld needs is living epistles, anJ jpistles that are written as in the S Holy Scriptures, by the Spirit of th4 Is iving God. When the men aro ai a: ;ood as the Book, the world will tnow that Christ is sent of God.? SJ Home Herald. r( b Riches Hard to Handle. When we -have much of God'i ei srovidential mercies it. often happens te :hat we have but little of God'.i p; ;race; satisfied with earth, we an tc :ontent to do without Heaven. Rest ol it ic? hnrrTnn i r\ Imiaiv hnw I 1 C l&auiou 10 io inuuvi I>J JUJV/.. ?UH ? ? ^ )e full than it is to know how to Le lungry, so desperate is the tendency w )f human nature to pride and forgetillness of God. Take care that yo j j ^ isk in your prayers that God v.oulc w each you "how to be full."?C. II j)( jpurgeon. J THE CRUSADE AGAINST DRIN PROGRESS MADE BY CHAMPIOK FIGHTING THE RUM DEMON. rocm: Whet a Barrel of Whisky Co; tains?Congress May Abolis Liquor From the District of Co "D uiiiuiiv?xvuiii sellers aiaiiuvui A barrel of headacheo, of heartaches, woes, A barrel of curses, a barrel of blows, A. barrel of sorrow from p, loving, we.n wife, A barrel of cares, a barrel of strife; A barrel of all-unavailing regret, L barrel of cares, a barrel of debts; A barrel of hunger, of poison, of pain, A barrel of hopes, all blasted ana vain; A barrel of poverty, ruin and blight, A barrel of tears that run in the night; A barrel of crime, a barrel of groans, A barrel of orphans' most pitiful moani A barrel of serpents that hiss as they pas rhat glow from the liquor in the head < the glass; \ barrel of falsehoods, a barrel of cries rhat fall from the maniac's lips as he. die Self-Protection. "It was for self-protection that w idopted the rule," said the proprietc )f a large factory to us when we lr luired as to a rule he had recentl nade enjoining abstinence from drln >n the part of his employes. "Drinking men are uncertain an :annot he depended upon, and then ore are not as valuable to us as tec otalers. When we announced th ule to our employes and showed i vas done in the interest of self-prc ection," he added, "a majority c hem saw the propriety of cur actio md remained, while those who in listed, that the rule was interferln vith their private rights, were per nitted to go elsewhere and secur heir rights."For the same reason numbers o ;reat corporations, manufacturer ind railway companies havo adoptei i similar rule. In the managemen if their concerns they have foum hat by the carelessness and incom letency of drinking men a great los las been caused. In Great Brltaii his has been very noticeable. On arge factory in London, which em iloyed 7000 hands, has been com lelled to suspend business because si nany were disabled by Sunda; Irunkenness. This caused an an lual loss of $175,000. The Akroi ron Company, with a force of 88' nen in their rolling mill, estimat hat drink decreases the productiv sower of their men fully twenty-flv ier cent. At times it causes the los if whole heats of iron. One railway wreck caused by i Irunken brakeman or switchman o lefuddled engineer would cause mor oss- than the man could repay in hi ifetime, and companies are obligei o bear the losses caused by employe ,nd take the blame of their acts.Jational Advocate. A "Dry" Washington. Seriously speaking, the reportei novement to prohibit the manufac ure and sale of intoxicating liquor q the District of Columbia is perfect y rational in the circumstances, i 3 hardly likely to be successful, per iaps, if it is ever brought before Con ;ress, but it would be more than con istent for the Senators and Repre entatives of those States affected b; he prohibition movement to vote fo ,n anti-liquor law in Washington. I 9 for Congress to decide. It is aai; hat the House contains enough mem ers opposed, either personally or a epresentatives of prohibition dis ricts, to the sale of liquor to pass ai nti-liquor rider with one of the ap iropriation bills next -ession. W hall know more about this matter ii few months. Meanwhile, speculation as to th' ffect of a prohibition law in the Dis rict on the social and official life o Vashington would be more amusini hnn instnirtivp Thfi whole Dinlo latic Corps would be amazed, un oubtedly. Official representatives o ountrles where people do not rush t xtremes would be shocked by a ne^ evelation of the eccentricity of Amer :an character. But it would be folly to ignore tb eriousness of the opposition to alco olic liquor in many States, and th rowing enthusiasm of the opposers 'he liquor trade is avowedly alarmed 8 month by month the prohibitioi lovement gains ground. In som arts of this country rum is more un opular than ever before, and Wash agton is the capital of the whol ountry.?Editorial in the New Yorl 'ribune. A Frank Statement. The Charleston News and Courie: rankly said in a recent editorial: If the entire disappearance of th< rhisky traffic from public view, th< eaucuon 01 reiau saies to one-niueu r one-hundredth part of their forrre: olume, the complete obliteration e tationary whisky shops and the d'3 truction of the treating nabit con titute prohibition enforced, then i i enforced in the rural counties o outh Carolina. There are numeroui jwns and villages in the State when ne may spend weeks without seeing earing of or smelling whisky, anc hero one would find it a commoditj bout as rare as paregoric or othe] taple articles of the druggist. A Merchant's Personal Testimony. A merchant of Owensboro, Ky. 'lio was one of the most active work' rs in the recent local ortion contest rose at a meeting, held just aftei le announcement of the defeat, and lid: "This morning when I went tc ly store, I found it decorated witi treamers of crepe, and an insulting ote was pinned with it. Just thirtj ears ago to-day there was crepe or ly father's door, and he had gone tc drunkard's grave. Can you blame le ior aavocaung prouiuuiuu: Temperance Notes. "If it is a bad thing to be a drunkrd, is it ?t.gQod_thing to license meE ) make drunkardsT"?ChtfMes-iJcan" )D. Hear this from Bar and Buffet: The prohibitionists are gaining round steadily and rapidly. Prohiition is no longer a remote possibily, but a menacing probability." Herr Wurm declared at the Essce ocialist Congress that drunkennesc i the result of long hours, low wage.! nd unhealthy dwellings. He who looks in the bubbling jring sees the beauties of heaven ;flected; he whose gaze is into the eer mug will see hell's ugly pit. Maine, without one dollar of rev lue from the saloon, lias more school :achers to every 10,000 of her peole, and more teachers in proportion > her school population, than any tlier of the forty-five States.?Union ignal. In North Carolina and Georgia tany of the distilleries am nut of usiness. In Kentucky distilling counties, but thora nro fev/ counties in hicli the sale of liquor is not pro* ihit.'/l ' >* *4 j, A New Kind of Bait. After weeks of waiting and longing for the sport, rods, reels, gaff, fS creel, everything was in readiness for a week's trout fishing. The young wife, smiling joyously, hurried into , the room extending toward her husB band some sticky, speckled papers. >li "For goodness sake," he exclaimed, 1 "what on earth are you doing with . those old fly papers?" "I saved them ol for you from last summer, dear," she nuswerea. iuu kuuw juu stuu juu always had to buy flies when you 7 went fishing."?Dundee Advertiser. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, 1 flq Lucas County, * Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F.J. Cheney Sl Co., doing business in the City of Toledo. County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay thesum of one hundred dol3; lars for each and every case of catarrh s. that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's oi Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D., s 1880. A. W. gleason, iseal.) Notary Public, lall 'a Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, 11 free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. l* Sold by all Druggists, 75c. y Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. is Infantile Politeness, d Tommy had been invited to dine 5- at a learned professor's house, and his mother was anxious for his good ? behavior at table. She gave him elab; orate instructions. "Well, Tommy, how did you gel Q on?" she asked on his return. "You [. are quite sure you didn't do anyg thing impolite?" "Well, no, ma?at least nothing to ? speak of." I The mother's anxiety was aroused. " i "Ah, then, there was something f ' wrong. Now tell me all about it, t Tommy." A "Oh, it wasn't much. You see, 1 was trying to cut my meat when it s slipped off the plate on to the floor." Q "Oh, my dear boy; what ever did e you do?" "I just said sort of carelessly, ? 'That's always the way with tough y meat,' and went on with my dinner!" _ ?Philadelphia Ledger. a ? 0 FIVE MONTHS IN HOSPITAL, e e Discharged Because Doctors Could 3 Not Cure. Levi P. Brockway, S. Second Ave., a Anoka, Minn., says: "After lying r for five months in a hospital 1 was disci t charged as incura3 i? !)le, and given only W&cyb'. ^ six months to live. )J My heart was afTect J ed, 1 had smothering spells and some1 times fell ucconscious. 1 got so I 3 couIdn't use my t arms? my eyesigh; was impaired and . the kidney secretions were badly dis ordered. I was completely worn out - and discouraged when I began using y Doan's Kidney Pills, but they went ? right to the cause of the trouble and r /HH thpjr work well. 1 have been feeling well ever since." s Sold by all dealers. 60 cents a box - Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. a Mirror Making. ? A paper read before the British Association at Leicester, 1907, alludes e to Faraday's method whereby a mir ror-llke deposit can be obtained bj f dissolving a little oxide of copper ir 5 olive oil and heating plates of glass in this liquid up to a temperature a1 " which the oil decomposes. Such mir* [ rors lack brilliancy, being liable tc ? staining or to discoloration in patches _ from the decomposition products ol the oil. During an investigation ol e the aromatic hydrazines, the authoi ~ observed that when solutions ol e cupric oxide are reduced by these ' compounds, the metal is deposited a' upon clear glass in the form of a bril0 liant coherent film. Mirrors prepared . by this process have the lustrous red - j of burnished copper, and are as per e feet in reflecting surface ana as uni* form as silver Terrors obtained by the deposition of silver.?Engineer. Tiles Cured in 0 to 14 Days. r Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any caseof Itching, Hlinu, 13Ieedingor Protruding 3 Piles in 6 to 14 daysormoney refunded. 50c. 2 . ? " Ships we're first "copper bottomed" in ; ^ CHICKENS EARN M L ?-^-VV'hOlbct^you raise Chickens ior lun^W" get the best results. The way to do this is We offer a book telling all iect?a book written bv a 1 , i 25 years jn raising 1'ouJtry. f . ' | bad to experiment and spend ||4 | I way to conduct the business? KSk J ' CENTS in postage stamps. gSfek M and Cure Disease, bow to ; J Market, which Fowls to Save =a"3 ' indeed about everything you must know on ; ; POSTPAID ON ftKCKiPT OF 25 CENTS Book Publishing House, 12 rAN IMITATION PATTERN THE There was never an imitat j tators always counterfeit th'j g I what you ask for, because genulni ' W Tmftflfinns are not advertised, bul j ability of the dealer to sell you s I W good" when you ask for the genu | $ on the imitation. Why accept iml vJ/ uine by insisting? | REFUSE IMITA1 The General ^Demand of the Well-Informed of the World has always been for a simple, pleasant and efficient liquid laxative remedy of known value; a laxative which physicians could sanction lor lamiiy use because its component parts arc known to them to be wholesome and tndy beneficial in effect, acceptable to the system and gentK yet prompt, in action. ,Vi In supplying that demand with its excellent combination of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna,' the California Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies on the merits of the laxative for its remarkable EUCCeSS. ; | That is one of many reasons why \ Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given the preference by the Well-Informed. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine?manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale } f by all leading druggists. Price fifty cent* per bottle. PT3C ??a????1 SERIAL No, 2065 1 is your assurance or our guarantee filed with the Secretary of Agriculture, Washington, D. G* that Hales' ..Honey Horehound & Tar i * the standard remedy for genera- 1 tions, is a safe and pleasant cure for coughs, colds and hoarseness. Get it of your druggist ^ PUcc*a Toothache Drops ? Cure til One Minute. Royal Dowry For Maids of Honor. A tradition attached to maids of honor is that they invariably marry well. Their position at court brings them Into contact with highly eligible parties onil on rmatnm dfttlnc hank for centuries ordains their royal mistress to provide a dowry of ?1000 on their wedding day.?From P. T. O. FITS,St. Vitus' Danc^N ervous Diseases permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerre Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.,Phils., P?. " ' Fish live in the ocean at a depth of 18,000 feet. __ Itch cured in SO minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At cbnggiets. The first sulphur match, was made in 1829. . Mrs. Winslow's Soothing syrup for Children teething, softens thegums, reduces lnHammation, allays pain, cures ^nd colic, 25ca bottle Of Brazil's navy of forty-five vessels only Y five are seaworthy. SUFFERED TWENTY-FIVEJEARS ? / ^ -fj With Eczema?Her Limb Peeled and Foot Was Raw?Thought Amputation Necessary?Believes Her Life Saved by Cnticora. "1 have been treated by doctors for I twenty-five years for a bad case of eczema . on my leg. They did their best, but , failed to cure it. My doctor had advised me to have my leg cut off. At this time 1 my leg was peeled from the knee, my foot 1 was like a piece of raw flesh, and 1 had to ; walk on crutches. J bought a set of Ctfti cura Remedies. After the first two treat? ments the swelling went down, and in two i months my leg was cured and the netf skin > came on. The "doctor was surprised and t said that he would use Cuticura for his I own patiento. 1 have now been cured over , seven yeurs, and but for the Cuticura Rem edies 1 might have lost my life. Mrs. J. 13. ! Renaud, 277 Meritana St., Montreal, Que., I Feb. 20, 1907." , The Bank of England employs 1000 persons. Only One "Brorao Quinine" That is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look for the signature of 15. \V. Grove. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. English sheep are sometimes fattened on snails. N. Y.?1 I ft o| Farm mortgage# sold by Bank. Vander v? |o voort, Ark. Superior others. 6 per cent. riDOPQY NEW DISCOVERY; * giveeaalck relief andean* wont canon. Bookof te?tlmonial?i iOdajV treatm< at Free. Or. H. H. QKEEN'S 80N3.Boi B.Atlanta. 6*. a "* ? Ml ??? "OUCH" ( DH, MY BACK I WONDERFUL HOW QUICKLY THE I ^ND STIFFNESS GO WHEN YOU USE \ .lAfiniK mi VI 1W W VIM I THIS WELL-TRIED. OLD-TIME I; REMEDY FILLS THE BILL 1 25c.? ALL DRUGGISTS.?50c. I CONQUERS I PAIN I mMcvi,f You Know How to lUnCT . Handle Them Properly , ?rntiu you want to do it intelligently and ^*v' to prohtby tljeexpenence ol others. you need tovknow on the sub man wuo maue nis living ior and in that time necessarily much money to learn the best xor the small sum of 25 It tells you how to Delect Feed for Eggs, and also for for Breeding Purposes, and i the subject to make a success. SENT IN STAMPS. 14 Leonard St., N. Y. City. TAKES FOR ITS%^ REAL ARTICLE | ion made of an Imitation. Imi- % i enulne article. The genuine Is | i a articles are the advertised ones, m : depend for their business on the ^ omethlng claimed to be "just as ^ ine, because he makes more profit w tations when you can get the gen- j $ Pt/^XTO get what you w LIUiNo" ask for! jg I i y