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cfLENDID BARRACKS OF THE ! MORRO CASTLE, J THE XEEDLE-EAGLE. And How It Pounces Upon the Poor Baa-Baa. This is quite a startling exhibition . on account of the lifelike qualities of the eagle, which really soars into mid- : air up the mountain crag after the , defenseless sheep. , The eagle may reach its prey or ; hover about it in the air in an unsuccessful attempt as long as the youthful operator wishes. fpF^ll ; i llltL How It Looks to the Audience. ( A small toy theatre stage presents . ^ the -best setting for the trick, al- , though it can be done on an ordinary table, but with the stage setting by far the best effects may be obtained. ?rou can easily fashion a set of mountain scenery by cutting out I mountains from colored pictures in ? old magazines ana seiung tnem up either In the slits of the stage or on i small wooden stand mounts if you 1 have no toy theatre. .v ^ Two "wings" of mountain scenery will be enough ? that is, the front wing which is the mountain side in th9 foreground, and the other "wing" made up of the hills in the background as shown in the picture. Now cut out a very small picture of a sheep and paste it on the "wing" in the foreground at point A. Now cut out a small eagle from , fine tissue paper. A small sewing 1 How It Looks to You. needle should be procured. Thread it with a piece of fine thread about a foot in length and run it lengthwise through the body of the paper eagle. The most important thing of all to secure is a very strong magnet. You place the theatre or table in such a way as to enable you > to stand directly behind the stage, where you can use both hands at the same time. Take the magnet in your right hand and place it at the point marked A 4 behind the mountain and out of sight of the audience. The needle-eagle starts to fly toward the invisible magnet. You in sianuy cnecu us mgni Dy puning A.. backward on the thread, the end of which you have grasped in your left hand. Now you gradually move the invis- i ible magnet upward in the direction indicated by the dotted lines. The astonished audience sees the 1 eagle slowly fly up the mountain side. This seeming miracle is easily accomplished by holding the thread end so i that the attracted needle-eagle will ] be just far enough away to get the { full strength of the hidden magnet's 3 HINDOO NAUTCH GIRI Improved Wrench. ( The tool illustrated in the accom- * panying engraving embodies several 1 improvements over the ordinary * wrench. It is provided with oppositely ? disposed jaws, the jaws on one side ( being set at an angle, so as to per- J mit of using the tool in corners or c places that would render the use of the ordinary wrench inconvenient or Improved Wrench. ? t mpracticable. The improved wrench f !s nf the ouick actine: tvnp. The ! jhank of the tool is provided with a ( &xed head, and is formed with a recess in which a half thread is cut. < ; The movable jaws carry a feed screw idapted to fit this threaded recess.. The feed screw is mounted in a'i Ringed carriage or frame, and when j j 'ORTO RICO REGIMENT NEAR >AN JUAN, P. R. 1 I i ' V' * f. I -'"'-V.vCv-" ;.;t J ! ? I I^ f tf 4*' ^ ?From Leslie's Weekly, attraction without quite being able to touch it, and as the magnet Is raised upward behind the mountain the eagle naturally arises with It. I The audience sees only the eagle, j and, of course, is greatly mystified. If your hand is steady you may dl- I rect the eagle's flight at will, being | lareful to always keep the magnet | 3ut of sight behind the scenes.? ! Philadelphia Record. Trance Makes Girl Taller. The case of Clara Konter, the eigh- j ;een-year-old girl who became un- j :onscious recently, is growing more Deculiar. The father of the girl said lis daughter had grown fully two nches taller in the past three days, ind every dress she has worn is too imall for her. , "The girl is now perfectly rationtl," said Dr. C. P. Kerr, who examned her. He advised the parents ; hat the girl should not be spoken to i m the subject, and even the county letectives, who have been prying'into he case, were forbidden to question ler. ? Pittsburg Telegram to the Philadelphia Record. A Good Trick. Draw a big U on cardboard or stiff )aper and then, with a sharp knife or >cissors, cut it out. Laying it on the able, ask who can, in two cuts, divide t into seven pieces. That seems i difficult thing to do, doesn't it? But it is quite ea?v. The picture U ||y shows how you may do it. First cut ; icross from 1 to 2, which will divide t into three Dieces. Then place the | )ieces side by side, and one cut where | pou see the dotted line will give you j [even pieces.?Good Literature. A Slight Mistake. Young Hopeful ? "Mummy, have | gooseberries got legs?" Mother?"No, dear." Young Hopeful?"Then I've swal- j owed a caterpillar."?The Tatler. In Paris last .year 49,298 horses j svere killed for food, which was 5000 | more than the previous year. These ' inimals yielded 26,600,000 pounds of meat. ( .5 AND MUSICIANS. _4 jogiging the threaded Ehank is held n place by means of a spring latch. iVhen it is desired to quickly adjust he wrench to the work the frame is swung upward, so that the sci^w will :lear the frame, and the movable iaws may then be set to any position lesired.?Scientific American. His Lucid Answers. They were asking the eminent lawyer why he took so large a fee from ; :he Trust. "I think it was its largeness that nade it easy to take," he smilingly mswered. Then the State's attorneys con- 1 !erred. "And didn't you stop to consider hat the money was tainted?" they isked him. "No," he ingenuously replied, "I jnlv stopped to count it." This closed the proceedings for the lay.?Cleveland Plain Dealer. Vessels move faster through deep ivater with the same- ainouut of jowcr, THE PULPIT. |! i ] AN. ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY i THE REV. H. MARTIN, PH. D. 1 l i ! Subject: The Abundant Life. i i Brooklyn, N. Y.?Sunday morning, in the First Church of Christ (Disciples), the pastor, the Rev. Herbert ( Martin, Ph. D., preached on "Religion ' and Life." The text was from John 10:10:"! came that they may have life, and may have it abundantly." Dr. Martin said: I Christ came not to teach a theology primarily, If at all, but to give life, more life. He came to give life Lto others rather than live a self-con- ] tered life. I came that they may have life. He came to give life here and now. His emphasis was upon the present life. He that hath the Son hath life. Life in the future is a corallary to present life. To have life here and now is the only guarantee, the only->possIbllity of future life. The value and need of religion for the nresent life are being emphasized to-day as at no time since the early Christian era. This identification of religion and life tends to make religion a normal phenomenon in human experience. Religion has long suffered because of Its almost exclusive other-world emphasis. Its removal to the future as the proper sphere of its activity, Its other-world advantages caused men to regard it as an abstract, vague and unreal, and to treat It as having little practical benefit for the present. Under such conditions religion would be disregarded, or, if accepted, it would be in ah almost altogether objective way as a precautionary measure, and thus never become a vital element In the program of daily life. The normal man Is intensely Interested in the ??J t M Vvtf.O _V>V ; presem, ttuu m uud owccl u;-uuu-u; I only as it Is related to his present , Interest. If religion Is to cut any real figure In this life It can do so only as it links Itself to and Identifies itself I with his present interests. And this religion is capable of doing, and Is doing. The Master identified Himself with the life of the people; In fact, ' He came that He might give life to the people. The same hopeful sign Is discoverable In the educational world. Corapare the curricula of the schools ana j colleges of other days with those of 1 to-day and how evident is the difference. Education as preparation for living In the far future, even of the present life, does not and never did appeal to the normal mind unless the appeal was effected through a liberal application of physical for 3. Since the days of Rousseau education as mere preparation has graduu'ly and beautifully fallen Into disrei Educators have discovered the practically complete absorption of the child in the present. They have discovered, furthermore, that even the young child must live while being educated, and that as such It must enjoy certain rignts. as a result ui iuew uwuuv eries education is no longer a mere formal process whose goal is utterly remote from the present life interests. Education alms to equip the student for present living since fee must live while he is in process of being educated. You cannot take a boy of fifteen years and educate him for some position at thirty and expect him to fill that position satisfactorily if you wholly disregard the fact that he lives and must live from fifteen to thirty. Modern education takes note of this and seeks; while looking toward the future, to qualify the student in the largest way to live the fullest life in the present days and by so living will he be able to realize those future expectations. In addition to form, education gives content, or' better, to-day minds are formed and fashioned by giving them a content. Education and religion Beek to vitalize tbe present and out of It to ' make possible the future. Their aim is one, inspired oy me juasier, to givu more life. ; > I Jesus came "with life for the people and brought it to the people. He sought the people. He went out after them instead of waiting for the people to come to Him. His life was one of faith in God and service to and among men. He came to minister, and did minister. He came to give life and He gave it every day. The life of men was being enriched and ennobled as He gave Himself, His life to them each day. The giving of His life on the cross was, from this point of view, the final act of that life which was, par excellence, the life-giving life. Organized religion is beginning to go out after and to the people. Churches have long since ceased to oe Dum wnose entrances are guarded by iron gates and padlocks. "Strangers welcome," that condescending phrase, does not appear so frequently on our church signs. Religion has girded herself for service. She is working in the Young Men's and Young Women's Christian Associations, and Is found in settlement and slum work. Her voice is heard in the factory noon-day meetings, on the street corners, in the theatres and in all the busy haunts of men. Organized religion is hearing the Master's voice, is catching His inspiration who said, "I came that they may have life." So of education. It is being given to the people. It is no longer the peculiar privilege of the few. The people are ' being sought out and compelled to be educated. Education is for the people and is being given to the people. Education aims to give more life to the individual, and more life for more individuals. It is irue that knowledge enlarges one's wo'id and contributes to his survival. His horizon is widened, his ideas and ideals are enlarged, he discovers a deeper meaning in things, life takes on other and better aspects; in short, he possesses a larger life. This larger life, more life, is becoming possible for more individuals. While this is true, I there remains yet much to be desired j' in our public schools, high schools and colleges. Let us remember that in our system the higher the grade the fewer the pupils; that out of one hundred pupils who enter public schools only twenty-five stay long' enough to read and write; that only j twenty out of one hundred stay longer than the fifth grade; that less than ! one out of one hundred who ent<-r; our public schools graduate from the j high schools; that a small proportion of high school graduatps enter col-! lege, and that a small percentage of i I those who enter college remain until j graduation; all this in the face of I the fact that our system is graded j largely toward the university. If ed| ucation gives life it should give more life to a greater number or individuals. Jesus taught that the ninety I and nine that were safe within the j fold could not furnish an excuse for the neglect of the one that was away. With these things in mind should we rest content with that system which saves the one to the neglect of the ninety and nine? To produce such a result, no one cause is adequate. It has been fre| quently said, and with truth, that the ; course of study does not have sufI \ Bclent vital contact with the life anfl Interest of the pupil, and consequently, because of Its lack of interest for him, falls to hold him. Rapid progress, however, Is being made In our own city toward the correction of such undesirable conditions. Another cause, more deep-seated and more serious, is the growing commercial ... - ' ? j mi? J l ? ? In Spirit 01 ID6 uay. 1UU uunai 10 tuw circle of life. Men sell the*r own souls and put under tribute their children's for dollarB. There is great need for resolute struggle against the allurements of dollars. Too many altars are being bullded to the god of gold; too many souls are beinfe sacrificed upon these altars. It Is hard, yes, well nigh Impossible, to transmute commercial Ideals, dollars and cents into more abundant life. Our course of study may well ne^l revision, may require a radical change in content. But our greatest need Is larger and truer ideals established firmly in the hearts and minds of our boys and girls. A greater emphasis must be placed upon moral and Ideal than upon material and commercial values. The voice in defense of the child's inalienable rights, his heritage of moral and religious ideals, should ring deep into the hearts of parents. Parents need to learn that the dollar is not the goal jot life, that the child Is more than the victim of a parent's base ideals; that he is more than a money-making machine. They need to learn that tho child has a self-hood CO D0 UeVHlUptJU, U sum LV uo wkuicu, and a destiny to be achieved. To take a child out of school and compel him to earn money Is to deny him his rights, Is to degrade , him. For parents to do so Is selfish, brutal, immoral. I repeat that one of the greatest evils that threaten our nation Is our too complete allegiance to commercial IdealB. Our mad rush for gold makes us a nation of individuals rather than a democracy. Christ says, "No man llveth unto himself.? In New York It sometimes seems as though every man reversed that principle. Individualism Is a menace to the life of the republic. There Is, as never before, a crying^ need for parents and teachers to exalt moral and Bptrltual values; a need to dethrone the god of gold and to reenthrone the God of old; a need to engrave upon the very physical and spiritual fiber of tho child's nature the exceeding, tHe Incomparable worth of moral character. Parents themselves need to possess and properly estimate these ideals and then to Instill them and give them first'place in the hearts of their children. Such Ideals of truth and righteousness, Implying as they do a profounder sense of social obligation, will contribute in the highest degree to the enrichment of human life, to a more abundant life. Mighty possibilities are resident in the teacher's vocation because of the material with Which he works. Eternal consequences follow therefrom. The true teacher spends little time waiting for pay day to oome. His 1b a worthier work than that of a mere wage earner. He 1b a m&ker for social betterment, not a mere hireling. As with tho preachbr, right eouflnesa 1b bis concern; with God He la a co-worker." That our teachers might teel that they are called of God and are doing God's work, there was a Man Bent from God who was named Teacher. He Himself says Hla mission was to give a more abundant life, That wad His mission, that was Hi? religion, that was His life. The religious aspect of the teacher's wdrk, the religion of eduoatlon, If you will, is a subject worthy of more thought than It has received. While there Is an Imperative need for teachers with Ideals, we must not forget that the Ideals must be of possible attainment. We need, then, sane teachers, teachers balanced by. perspective. False Ideals, Ideals beyond the realm of the possible, held up before the young, defeat the teacher's purpose. Hold up before a j boy an lmpossime laeai, maKing mm struggle toward Its realization until one day Its utter absijrdlty dawns upon him, and with what result? His cherished Idol falls and with It there come tumbling down all'his Ideal constructs. In this day when our college presidents are little more, than money gatherers, when our school principals are little more than clerical workeirs, there is a positive need for teachers with lofty Ideals, but ideals within the realm of possible achievement. Impossible Ideals made for lawlessness rather than for righteousness and the betterment of life. We need, Anally, to rediscover the meaning of life, to learn that a man's life consisteth not in the abundance of the things that he possesses. We need to rediscover the fact of God, and that In Him we live and move, and hkve our being. He is the source" of our life and to find Him is to find fuller life. There is need to re-emphasize the fact of Christ as the Revealer of the true life which is the - * ??kia ^ wai.14 lue ui berviuu. iuo uic ui iuu nunu has received a caw impulse in Him. His faith and practice were that the only way to find life is to give life. Christ gave His life in deeds of loving service even unto death that the life heritage of humanity might be enriched. He thus emphasized in teaching and in life social obligation. For' Him every enriched life was an increased social asset. From Him we learn that the inheritance of life into which we have come must be shared with our fellows and passed on to others enhanced in value by reason of our participation. To give life is to make life more abundant. We live in thoughts and deeds, not in days. Tense in grammar; refers to action rather than to time. That an action Is either perfect or imperfect gives us tense. Time is a convenient U.. n,Ui?U ?./V tVlSl iiieauB uy wmvu wc luuiuaic tuc piugressive stages of life. Too frequently we beat time and count days and years instead of thinking thoughts and living lives. Life consists of ideas and ideals realized in action, not in days numbered by the calendar. God grant that we cultivate these things that make for life; that we live nobler, deeper, richer, more ideal, and, therefore, more abundant lives; that the life of those whom it is our privilege to serve may take on more meaning and thus become elevated and expanded into the more abundant life. "I am come that they may have life, and may have It abundantly." Strengthened by Strain. Temptation is that which puts to the test. Trials sent by God do this. A test is never employed for the pur- | pose of injury. A weight is attached to the rope, not to break, but to certify its power of resistance. The testing process here confers no strength. But when a sailor has to navigate his ship under a heavy gale and in a difficult channel, or when a general has to fight against a superior force and on disadvantageous ground, skill and courage are not only tested, but improved. The test has brought experience, and by practice is every faculty perfected. ? So faith grows by etercise, and patience by the enduring of sorrow. Thus alone it was that "God did tempt Abraham."?Newman K VL'v.- -. tVJV Korea's Captive Emperor. | There has scarcely ever been d more pitiful figure in history than ? that of the ex-Emperor of Korea, who, since his deposition by the Japanese conquerors of his country, has ? been kept a virtual prisoner. At tha bro time of his forced abdication of the tori throne, the ruler was wealthy, his for- of i tune being estimated at $40,000,000. 9ut But all that money has been turned m 1 into the public treasury, and to-day we( the ex-Emperor is a pauper, living in a small cottage in one of the palace ajj( inclosures at Seoul. He is closely to guarded by Japanese police and spies, B? and nobody is allowed to communi- Sh< cate with him except in their presence, says Leslie's Weekly. Even his son, who now occupies the throne; Is not allowed to visit him except un- . der Japanese escort. It is explained that these precautions are taken by A the Japanese because the ex-Emperor sev is suspected of inspiring the acts of Mr !nenrror>tlnn rernrripri frnm time to tee time in various parts of the kingdom. 430 1 How's This? i . 8?? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward j for any case of Catarrh that cannot be ga] cared by Ball's Catarrh Cure. . F. J. Chejtey & Co., Tol4do,0. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business ml transactions and financially able to carry bn out any obligations made by his firm. hi< YV aiding, Kinnan & Maiivin, Whole- . sale Druggists, Toledo, O. WI Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act- sh ingdirectly upon the blood and mucuoussur- mJ faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. The Answer. 1 A rather pompous looking deacon . in a certain city church was ^sked to ^ take charge of & cl^iss of boys during the absence of the regular teacher. cg] While endeavoring to impress upon + wnnno mlnde ttio lmnnrtftnp.fi of bUCH jUUUg Uliuug vmv w. Of? living a Christian life, the following j, question was propounded: "Why do people call me a Christian, children ?' ' the worthy dignitary asked, standing very erect and smll- fe1 lng down upon them. "Because they don't know you," laJ was the ready answer of a bright- C0] eyed little boy, responding to the tll( ingratiating smile with one equally an guileless and winning.?Lippin-cott's. One of ihe I .% Essential* of the happy homes of to-day is a vast ^ fund of information as to the best methods of promoting health and happiness and m right living and knowledge of the world's Mt best products. 1 " Products of actual excellence and reasonable claims truthfully presented and which have attained to world-wide ^ acceptance through the approval of the w Well-Informed of the World; not of individuals only, but of the many who have the happy faculty of selecting and obtaining the best the world affords. One of the products of that class, of known component parts, an Ethical remedy, approved by physicians and commended by the Well-informed of the World as a valuAble and wholesome family laxative is the well-known Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists. PUTNAM Color aoro (rood: brighter and faster colore than any oth can dye any garment without ripping apart. Wrlto toi After twenty-five' years of operation of the postal savings bank t>f India the. depositors number 1,190,- th 220 and the deposits amount tq $49,- st( 223,2 83. i . ev BED-BOUND FOR MONTHS. J*1 Hope Abandoned After Physicians' Consultation. no Mrs. Enos Shearer, Yew and Wash- ga ington Sts., Centralia, Wash., says: fo a "For years 1 was W( weak and run down, fr, could not sleep, my Df limbs swelled and ag tho BPcretions were troublesome; pains m) aY^WHi4|rrr were intense. 1 was w} fast In bed for four Je months. Three doc- er tors said there was no cure for me and 1 was given up to die. Being urged, I used Doan's Kidney Pills. Soon I was better and in a few weeks was about the house, well eri and strong again." . " " ha Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. at Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Good Pay, Short Hours. A certain cottage and its old mis- | tress had Improved so greatlyin com- * fort and appearance that a visitor shrewdly surmised that the son of the Ke house, a lazy ne'er-do-well, had turned r over a new leaf. He inquired about It. ^ "Yes, sir, my son's in work now," hj paid the smiling.old mother. "Takes good money, he does, too. All he has to do is to go twice a day to the cir- Jd cus and put his head in the lipn's mouth. The rest of his time 'e 'as to ^ to himself."?Youth's Companion. The Struggle For Liberty. f What you call liberty I call liberties, and what I call the struggle for liberty Is nothing but the constant living assimilation of the idea of freedom. He who possesses liberty otherwise than as a thing to be striven for, possesses it dead and soulless; for the idea of liberty has undoubtedly this characteristic, that it develops steadily during its assimilation. So that a man who stops In the midst of the struggle and says, "Now I have it!" thereby shows that he has lost it.?Hej>r5U Tbsen. An Example. as the teacher read out to her class . a portion of Sir Walter Scott's "Ivan- I hoe" she came upon the word "eloped." "Now, which little boy," 6he asked, "can tell me what the word 'eloped' signifies?" A dead silence following, she explained. "It means 'ran away,' "carried, away,' " she explained. "Do you understand? Well, and which little boy can now give me a sentence with. the word % 'eloped' in it?" "I can, miss," an- swered a small boy at the back of the | classroom. "Mr. Green's dog has eloped wiv my farvor's dinner."?J v 1 :1 , * J'< <0 SKIN WAS LEF.T ON BODY.' by was Expected to Die with Ecema?Blood Oozed Oat All Over Her Body?Now Well?Doctor Said to Use Catlcnra. Six months after birth my little girl i ke oat with eczema and I had two doc- J i in attendance. There was not a particle m skin left on . er body, the blood oozed M just anywhere, and we had to wrap her fl silk and carry her on a pillow for ten Eg sks. She was the most terrible light 1 I r saw, and for six months I looked for ft to die. I used every known remedy to iviate her suffering, for it was terrible 1 witness. Dr. C?? gave her up. Dr.. } ? recommended the Cuticura Remedies, s .will soon be three years old and baa er had a sign of the dread trouble since, o i. used about eight cakes of Cuticura ip and three boxes of Cuticura Ointnt. James J. Smith, Dumid, Va., Oct, and 22, 1906." , I j ' l Chicago woman has applied for hfefct fr enth divorce. ' JP s. Window's Soothing Syrup for Children thing, softens the gums, reduces inflamma :?I ?i:_ m W Ufttiiays puiu,L'uica wiuu tuiic, a<a; a uvuic 7he treasures of the Louvje are now irded by watchdogs. w tch cured in 30 minutes by .Woolford's di aitary Lotion.. Never fails. At jlruggista. A SOirod Sleep. f' y "Morning, morning!" said pat^rfalias genially as he entered the b< eakfast room. "I've had a splen- ti 1 night. Slept like a top!" His fe agreed with him.. "You did," & e' responded grimly?"like a hum- ^ ng top!"?Philippines GoBsip. . |? Lame Back Prescription. jj. Considerable discussion is being fj used among the medical fraternity gj the increased pse of whiskey for ai ne back rheumatism. It is an al- ^ >st infallible cure wh^n mixed with d; rtain other, ingredients and taken ti operly. The following formula Is p ectlve: "To one-half pint of good' jj ilskey add one ounce of Torlg Com- ti und and one ounce Syrup Sarsapar V la Compound. Take in tablespoonI doses before each meal and before \i tiring." J* ... . 8 Toris Compound Is a product of the fa joratories of the Globe Pharma- ~~ utical Co., Chicago, but It as well as a other Ingredients can be had from v A mmmm n+ 1 y guuu ui ug5igu '' M South Russia has among Its- valule minerals rock salt, coal, copro- b? es, kaolin, sands for glass making d other purposes, manganese and ?> >n ores, the latter being easily first importance, free.of phosphorus and th little sulphur, i wl .In ? '. BHI Sample treattoent In. pi Rxd Chops Pfl? and yc fi Mm hi Fistula Cora and yc Book aent by xnall J>1 T FRCC. ? A CCT.. DEPT. B. 4 MINNEAPOLIS, MINN, H-JTiiompn'sEyeWater * IFOR MEN. to assure ease and comfort. The different others lies In the fact that they are mat model. They fit exactly, and for that i Look for the label. If you do not find tl >v readily, write'us for direction* bow to sec FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brocktoi rmm or dye. Ono lOo. package colors all fibers. They d; free booklet?How to Dye, Bleaon and Jttix Conors. Young Hoodlums. The Worcester Ga'zette declares N ere is an unwhipped gang of young- Pi irs in that city, found in nearly ery quarter, and so slightly re- P rained by the police that they are I pidly being molded into the stuff I Dm which roaring mobs are made. D is to be feared that Worcester Is | i -1 1? iV. J ?V. o I" ik twuue iu me puaacssiuu ul ouvu a m ng. Pr9bably a duplicate could be und In any city of the Common-^ jalth, and no town of any size Is je from a similar if smaller group youthful disturbers. It is generhlly reed that the responsibility for the istence of such gangs rests on the? Dllycoddling spirit of the time, ' xich is reflected in some of the fool jislation relative to juvenile offend- , 3 now on the statute book.;?Lowell ? lurier-Citizen. Trimmed with fifteen ostrich feath- V b, each measuring two yards, the + 4r\ Ka wnm Kv TtTico era Tomnlo the London Coliseum, is valued at d 100. N. Y.?48 J IHICKENS EARN Ml Whether you raise Chickens for fun or pr it the best results. The way to do this is t re offer a book telling all i ct?a book written by a MMM i years in raising Poultry. [ id to experiment and spend jli V2 av to conduct the business? e!nts in postage stamps. JB id Cure Disease, how to [arket, which Fowls to Save deed about everything you must know on tt OSTPAID ON fcECEIPT OF 25 CENTS 1 Book Publishing House, 134 It is no use adv you have the Goc having the Goo advertise. P m & S&JI of the most serious character have beer 121 Cure. Coughs, colds, hoarseness, bronc 651 to its healing influence. If you have a tfcm or have difficulty with your breathing, gel |f#l diate benefit follows the first dose. Con Ml plete relief. For nearly half a century Pi: gffij that the most advanced forms of coughs, c IS] CAN BE C rra _ >y. > BHf^ v ^k .^feBSlt*. lil^V ... :: B^k < ? This woman says she was saved om an operation by Lydia E. Lnkham'g Vegetable Compound, Lena Y. Heniyl of Norristown, Ga, rites to Mrs. Pmkham: , "I suffered untold misery from feale troubles. My doctor wid an opera* on was the only chance I had, and I eaded it almost as much as death. "One day I read how other women ai :?>i?r_4i.vix^i,v.mi< - ? ; Ml UCCiiUUTVU uy jl/juia hiiibwiii ? egetable Compound, and I decided to 7 it ^Before I had taken the first >ttle I was better, and now! am enrelv cured. " Every woman suffering- with -any ' . j male tronhle should take Lvdia* E. mkham's Vegetable Compound." ACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For . thirty years Lydia E. Pinkam's Vegetable Compound, made om roots and herbs, has been the . ;f?B andard remedy for female ilia. adhas positively curedthousandsoi / romen who have been troubled with isplacements, inflammation, nlceraon, fibroid tumors, irregularities,. sriodic pains, backache, th^t bearlg-down feeling, flatulency, indiceson,dizzines8 or nervous prostratxon. -v ifhy don't you try it ? . Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick omen to write her for advice. he has guided thousands to ealth. Address, Lynn, Mass. Make Your O wn Picture Fuzzier ( FOR CHRISTMAS italn thrte for home use or make 81 profit a ' ty by Belling to your frSmd*. Thousand* oX boys, . rUandadoluare getting an Income by so dotit, h *epttn? the scissors " , . I Send you All Necessary Materials hlch In one afed one-half hour* can easily be made ,,'WSt to five complett Picture Pusxles, all different and colors. Some are copies of foreign pictures. As u can quietly selLsame from^13 to ^ 40^ eea tseach, i&35$$k'a^? ** pr^B. A. RAGE,* ' 8 Whit. Street - New York City . H.?Store merchants can apply forgrosslotprices ^ sjgttiutiraK&--| ie on ft ?pedftL natural foot-fenn H 'eason are abaMtftd** comfortable. leae thoes -^7 MftH fry' J i S DYE S re In cold crater better than anr other dm You HON&OX UttUG COm Qolncr OH*oifc r-^-r; ? m There are now in the .schools of . ew York City nearly. 26,000- more .,. 4^ lpils than tlier^were one year ago. Hale's Honey of Horeboond and Tar Clears 'I ' ?'A ' ' The Voice Sold by Druggists . Face's Toothache Drops Core ha Oae Minute H?l!rp i,a??i>h The Standard Be*?dy. VUiVltri it DBcocnsm Head lor book, "ttellel lor WoAen." LENCH DRUG CO, 30 W. 32d St., N. Y. City. HFIIH ATKil now carableitboiuands cured; re CIJfllJIIIonigujt&jpoedyAuaranieeglTeniprlco w. Write quick. Thk wright sled. CO., Pern, lad. IMC VI You Know How to JUL T Handle Them Property ofit, yon want to do it intelligently and a profit by the experience of otbera. ' you need to know: on the subman who made his living' for W H and in that time necessarily ^ wurtk m/vnotr fn lpam t.VlA h?5t ?for the small sum of 25 It tells you how to Detect Feed for Eggs, and also for 1 for Breeding Purposes, and le subject' to make a success. SENT :N .STAMPS. Leonard. St.9 N, Y. City. ? . rertising unless >ds, and no use ds unless you COMPLAINTS 1 permanently cured with Piso's WJ Jiitis and ajthraa quickly respond UN > i J ;t I _ 1*11 COUgn or coia, u you aic iiuoik : a bottle of Piso's Cure. Imme- CTS tinued use generally brings com- RvJ so's Cure has been demonstrating IOI olds and chronic chest complaints pf