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^^JSmart Frills New York City.?Such a waist as this one serves an indefinite number of uses. It is equally well adapted to the entire gown and to wear with the odd skirt; it can be made from linen, madras and materials of the sort, or ft can be made from the pongee that promises tc be such a favorite for the - 1 r odd blouse of tjie incoming season, and it is admirably well adapted to cashmere, henrietta cloth and simple silk and to various other materials of a similar sort It allows effective use of buttons, it has a tailored effect, yet It is simple withal. There are epaulette-like portions which extend \ over the shoulders, giving becoming breadth, and the sleeves are simple and effective, yet relieved of all over severity. In the illustration cashmere is trimmed with satin covered buttons in matching color. The waist consists of the fitted lining, which includes plain sleeves, the fronts, back trimming and sleeve portions of the waist proper. The waist is tucked in groups and is finished with the trimming portions, which are arranged over it and stitched to position. The closing of the lining is made at the centre front of the waist, slightly to the left. The sleeves are made in sections, the centre portions being tucked, while the outer portions overlap them. The collar is a novel one, made in two portions, one overlapping the other, and is closed invisibly at the back. The quantity of material required for the medium size is fivc and fiveeighth yards twenty-four, three and one-half yards thirty-two or two and three-fourth yards forty-four inches wide. Bronze Shoes. The bronze shoe, for street wear, has r.ot eained the irreat voeue that was predicted for it. A New Coiffure. The fiat casque coiffure is becoming qiore general and is very noticeable Cor a small, tightly dressed h^ad amcng so many that are gene* .-.ly aided by extraneous curls and braids stands out with distinction. I)og Collars. Dog collars of velvet are especially ,pretty when embroidered in tiny buds and flowers or a spray of foliage in natural colors. Worn with light dresses they are smart and stylish. i of Fashioir|j^ Tinted Laces. Have you marked the trend toward tinted laces for the lingerie waists of pure white materials? Those who have always clung to these laces because of their becoming softness will not be in the lead of the fashion. Bishop Sleeves With Caps. Bishop sleeves make one of the very lateot developments of fashion and those illustrated, with separate caps, are exceedingly smart as well as practical. The lower portion of each is designed for thinner material, while the cap is supposed to match the blouse, and it will be seen at a glance that they are admirably well adapted to remodeling as \*ell as for new material. The sleeves can be made in long, three-quarter or elbow length. In the illustration the full length sleeve is made with a cuff of fancy material, the three-quarter sleeve is made with a cuff which matches the cap, and the elbow sleeve is made with the under portion of " J ^ V? i-k mror nnrtinn QOtiea SWISS auu inc^iv. Kv.?. embroidered in a simple but effective design. The caps can be embroidered, trimmed with banding or with applique or treated in any way that fancy may suggest. All the sleeves are designed to be made over a fitted foundation. The full, or bishop portion, is made in one piece and gathered at upper and lower edges and the cap is made in one piece finished separately. The full length sleeve is finished with a shaped cuff, the three-quarter sleeve is finished with a rolled-over cuff joined to its lower edge and the elbow sleeve is finished with a band that is edge<J with a frill. The cap in each instance i#arranged over both foundation and bishop sleeve. The quantity of material required the medium size is, for any caps, three-fourth yard twenty-one or twenty-four, three-eighth yard thirty-two or forty-four inches wide; for any ^ i puffs, one yard twenty-one, twentyfour or thirty-two, one-half yard for ty-four, with one-four yard eighteen for deep ruff?, four yards of banding to trim the sleeves with rolled-ovei cuffs. Garlands For Hats. Garlands of flowers laid across th? wide crown of the hat, rather than wreathed closely around it are is vogue. They are frequently held in place at either end by chous of blaci velvet or colored ribbon. One Black Gown. The woman who does not include in her wardrobe one black evening gown will find herself out of the j imi ning, for black is promised a gre?i| vogue, especially for evening. I ee#o?o??oetcoooo??ee>??#9o i: A Force New to S Science. : ?*0Heie6os?SMM?aa?seM* j The measurement of nerve force J presents one of the most mysterious j and perplexing problems in medicine. J It is the meeting place of science and ; occultism, the ground on which the i occult contends successfully with | medicine and conquers it. j Mystics have long declared that I the human body is surrounded by an , aura, depicted in ancient illuminai tions over the heads of saints as the I halo; many apparently reputable per! sons have declared these emanations j visible to them, and that they varied ! in color or actually changed according to the possessing emotion. j The French Academy of Science j has investigated the properties of the biometer, a little machine invented for the purpose of measuring some | unknown force given off from the human body. The machine consists of j a glass cylinder eight or ten inches j r** */*!* ae? tit irio j long ami nve iu sia I closed at the top, and standing in a narrow circular groove on a wooden j stand. From the top of this appara| tus depends a single untwisted thread I of cotton about four inches long. The j lower end is carefully fastened to the exact middle of a copper needle i about three inches long, suspended ! from it horizontally, so as to move in . horizontal rotation to right or left I with perfect freedom. About onethird of an inch below this is a circu' lar horizontal card, divided into 3fi0 degrees, which rests on a glass bobbin having an exterior diameter oi two inches and resting itself upon the wooden stand. This glass bobbin has been wrapped round with alternate j layers of blotting paper and fine iron j wire. The result is to produce a moj bile needle that can rotate horizonj tally immediately above a circular j card divided into 360 degrees. Various otljer contrivances, such as the sthenometer, have been devised, but all on the same general principles. The biometer consists of a con per needle, tne stnenomeier or a sus-? j pended straw, bath completely ini closed in glass. Now, when the right hand is ad! vanced to within about one inch ol i the cylinder, and there retained from ; three to five minutes, no one else ' standing near, and the experimentei ! neither moving nor talking, the neei die is rotated through twenty to sixty ' degrees, remains fixed for a time, and I then returns to the starting point. ' The same occurs when the left hand | is advanced. There is no possibilityI of illusion. It can be done whether I the room be dark or light, cold or i hot. quiet or noisy.?Harper's Weekly. I i New Sea Superstitions. ! With the advent of wireless telcj graphy there has come a superstition ; that bad news may be warded ofC if I the mast that is a part of the appara| tus ib patted thrice with the palm of the hand. on/? ?"?olr f V? /% aaaI?" O POO. uv a ii vi a on. wvn. ? j man's inevitable reply to all irrelei vant questions?has been elaborated i in the last year to, "Go and ask the cook'e sister," and it is related that j Captain Turner, of the Lusitania, J went so far recently as to alter the j time-honored reply to, "Go and ask j the ship's cat." A minister aboard ship has always been taken as a "Jonah sign" by seamen. In recent years, however, this superstition has been modified to a certain extent. A young minister, the seamen believe, will not bring as much of a "Jonah" with him as an old one. Men of the sailing vessels have always held that scraping or scratching the mainmast would bring a long pej riod of good weather. Men on the I huge modern steam vessels now similarly believe that scratching a smoke! stack with the finger nail will insure J continued fair weather. One of the oldest sea superstitions has been connected with the flying of I birds. If the birds flew high, that signified eood weather: if thev I skimmed the water, that meant bac weather. There is gradually spreading among the seamen a superstition that if an animal is aboard the vessel bad weather may be deferred?even ! if the birds are flying close to the water?if the head of the animal is p<Jinted aft and is held in that direction for some time. ? Harper's Weekly. The Skirt Tree. Before the advance of civilization I trees provided the principal articles of "clothing" for inhabitants of tropical regions. One of the best examples of these trees is the "Sack tree" (Antiaris linnoxia) of Ceylon. To obtain the bark of this the tree is ' felled and cut into sections; these are submerged in still water for several weeks for the purpose of rotting I the bark, the latter being then washed and pounded bo as to separ-j ate the parenchymatous tissue from the closely interwoven layer of fibres. The bark is afterward dried and , bleached, when it is ready for use in a fashion according to the fancy of i the wearer. The sections of the bark | may be cut so as to adapt it for either | a ready-made skirt, kilt or shirt.? London Chronicle. The Thrifty Chinese. vvitn tneir wontea acuie perceiiuuu of the possibilities of things, the Chinese have taken advantage of the anti-mosquito campaign in the French . concession to enrich themselves. One j of the methods adopted to destroy j the embryo nuisances is to pour kerosene on the waters of the various j creeks and pools, and as a consei quence most of them now carry a surface covering of oil. The Chinese, who do not view the work in the same light as the foreigner, have recently commenced skimming the creeks of the floating oil and using it lor their own purposes. ? Siamese Weekly New:. The great telescope ol the Paris exposition of 1900, which was built at a cost of $150,000. is now offered for rale by the receiver of the exposition at about one-tenth of its cost Its housing requires a building 130 fe*! . >Oidg J J A Hasty Fruit finlad. For a hasty fruit salad when fresh i i fruit is not at hand open a can of j j peaches, drain it and arrange the j j halves of the fruit on lettuce leaves, | j sprinkle them with shredded almonds j and a few cherries if they are at hand, | and dress them with mayonnaise. If j ! nuts and cherries are not at hand the j peaches are excellent alone.?Indian- i j apolis News. j Lemon Sponge. Soak one ounce of gelatine in a pint of cold water for six hours, then dis- j j solve it over the fire. Add the thin I i peel of two lemons, the strained juice i of three lemons and one-half pound j I of sugar. Let all boil two minutes; strain it and leave till nearly cold. I Beat the whites of two eggs to a i j froth, add them to the jelly and whisk all for ten minutes, till the mixture | becomes the consistency of sponge. I j Pour into a mold and set on ice.? j j Washington Star. Plums, Fresh and Preserved. I While the finer varieties of plums | make beautiful dessert, being rich | and lusciois of flavor, .they are not quite so wholesome uncooked as their next kin, the peach. When it comes to pickling and preserving, plums can hold their own every time. The fruit is found in nearly every part of this country, and the provident housewife feels that there is something decidedly lacking if her store of preserves has not its usual good supply of ' plum jam, plum jelly, plum cheese ! and plum conserve. For there are [ many delicious desserts to be made i from plums, fresh or canned.?New j York Telegram. Scrambled Eggs With Asparagus. Six eggs, two heaping tablespoonxuls butter, one gill of asparagus tips, two tablespoonfuls cream, salt, pepper, paprika and grate of nutmeg. Boil the asparagus tijl in boiling salted water until .tender, drain well, put j them in a saute^pan with one table- j spoonful of the butter, and saute over j the fire for five minutes. Break the 1 I eggs in a basin, add the cream, sea- I son- with a little salt, pinch of pepper, 1 paprika and nutmeg; beat up well, | put in a saucepan with the remaining i tablespoonful of butter, stir over the fire for ten minutes, then add the asparagus, stir again until the eggs begin to set. Dish up on a hot dish, garnish with parsley and serve hot. Slices of cucumber in place of asparagus points will be found a nice change. A pinch of sugar should be added when sauteing the cucumber.? New York Press. Meringues. To each white of egg allow two ounces of sugar. Whip whites till on taking away the whi6k the egg froth stands up in solid points or is so stiff that it can be cut in two with a knife. Stop beating at once when this point is reached; stir in two ounces of sugar to each white of egg. Lay it in spoonsful on a baking sheet rubbed all over with white wax. Dust them with a little icing sugar and 1 4-Iiawi i r\ ?? Atron fnr ttX7 rv nr ! jcavc oucm m au wwu ?.ui v v. , three hours, or until quite crisp and dry. The oven should feel just warm to the hand. If to be filled with cream or jam take them out of the oven before the bottoms are quite firm, press each of these into a hollow with the back of a spoon, then return | them to the oven, bottom side upper- | most this time, to dry them properly. , When quite dry put aside to cool before filling them. These meringues 1 can be kept if put in a tin.?Washing-j ton Star. I To acquire a straight back remember to keep the abdomen in and the chest out. Cold water dashed on the face and j chest each morning gives the same tonic effect as the cold plunge without j danger of shock. When the skin becomes overheated, as it too often does in summer, try < ? e/\rlo in thft I pUlllQg a 11ULi tr Ua&lu5 ouua aaa vmv water in which you wash. Nothing relieves the sting of mosquito bites or the intense itching of hives like bathing in a weak solution of carbolic acid and water. Learn to relax if you would be free j of lines in your face and cheat old ! age. Most of us keep ourselves at | tension, mental and physical. If relaxing exercises will take the . kinks out of your face, relaxation? j the kind best suited to your taste? will remove kinks from your soul. If you overboil potatoes, you can drain off the water and dry them out over the fire. Afterward they can be mashed and beaten in the usual way. A good furniture polish may be made of paraffine, oil and turpentine. Kerosene, too, is very good, while | crude oil may be used to darken wood | that has not been varnisnea. i Dandruff arises from different I causes, but when it is very much in | evidence it is usually a symptom of j depleted roots and the scalp needs | feeding with grease or tonics. Brasses take a most beautiful i polish if washed in a mixture made of one ounce of alum and a pint of lye, boiled together and used while still I warm. Worn brooms or whisks may be dipped into hot water and uneven edges .trimmed with shears. This makes the straws harder, and the trimming makes the broom almost as good as new. Do not neglect the value of fruit in improving the complexio.i. Nothing equals the juice of oranges and lemons to clear up skin and brighten eyes. The latter must be diluted and taken without sugar; a half-lemon to glass of water." I ? MUNYON'S EMINENT DOCTORS AT YOUR SERVICE FREE. i Not a Penny to Pay For the Fullest Medical Examination. If you are In doubt as to the cause af your disease mail us a postal re- i questing a medical examination blank, which you will fill out and return to us. Our doctors will carefully diagnose your case, and if you can be cured you will be told so; if you cannot be cured you will be told so. You are not obligated to us in any way, for this advice Is absolutely free; you are at liberty to take our advice or not as you see fit. Send to-day for a medical examination blank, fill out and return to ua as promptly as possible, and our eminent doctors will diagnose your case thoroughly absolutely free. Munyon's, 53d and Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. While the seeds of the dorowa, an East African leguminous tree, are extensively used for food, the pods I and leaves form an excellent cement : when mixed with crushed stone. BABY HORRIBLY BURNED By Boiling Grease?Skin All Came Off One Side of Face and Head? Thought Her Disfigured For Life ?Used Cnticura: No Scar Left. I "My baby was sitting beside the fender and we were preparing the breakfast when the frying-pan full of boiling grease was upset and it went all over one side of her face and head. Some one wiped the scald with a | towel, pulling the entire skin off. We took her to a doctor. He tended her a week | and gave me some stuff to put on. But it | all festered and I thought the baby was | disfigured for life. I used about three boxes of Cuticura Ointment and it was wonderful how it healed. ' In about five weeks it was better and there wasn't a mark to tell where the scald had been. Her skin is just like velvet. Mrs. Hare, 1 Henry St., South Shields, Durham, England, March 22, 1908." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. The famous Maelstrom whirlpool is four geographical miles in diameter. PUTNAM Color :aoro coodc brighter and foster colon; than any oaa <iyw fmy carment without ripping apart. Write Worms " j "Cascarets are certainly fine. I gave ft friend one when the doctor was treating him for cancer 1 of the stomach. The next morning he passed four nifcfsof a tsw worm. He then rot a box and in three days he passed a tape-worm 45 f*et lone. It was Mr. Matt Freck, of Milleraburg, Dauphin Co.. Pa. I am quite a worker for Cascarets. I use them myselfand find them beneficial for most any disease caused by impure blood." Chas. E. Condon. Lewiston, Pa., (Mifflin Co.) Pleasant. Palatable. Potent," Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken,Weaken or Gripe. 10c, 25c, 50c. Never sold in balk. Thegenuine tablet strmped C C C. Guaranteed to | cure or you- money back. 921 The Secret of Meredith. The secret of George Meredith's mystery may perhaps lie in the fact i that never before has a writer of such eminence partaken at one time in so full a measure of the critical and the creative faculty. Shakespeare knew how to write a play, Aristotle knew how one ought to be written; we shaH rarely find in tbe study of any .period an author pre-eminent both as critic and creator. That word which is able to make flesh of abstract material j comes seldom from the mouth of the j scientist, however fine and true be | his knowledge, potent his voice or sturay nis iann. wuai a uiuuisi.russii.jr indeed was that Frankenstein, man created by the hand of man to scare the public of a century ago! Nor eould ever a workman, however curious his art, make of any dry bones a Zagloba. This it is then which ] marks George Meredith as unique I among artists: that being first a critic j of man, he is in a secondary degree, and yet in a degree extraordinary, a i creator vf man.?Atlantic Monthly. A dentist surgeon expresses the! opinion in the Dundee Advertiser that? | the chief cause of the increase of denj tal troubles in recent years is that the ' bread now generally used is made : from roller ground flour. A German physician has found i germ-free horse or cattle serum an i excellent application for stopping bleeding of the nose or hemorrhages in general. | _ .?_ ^ NEW STRENGTH FOR WOMEN'S BAD BACKS. Women who suffer with backache, bearing down pain, dizziness and that constant dull, tired . 1 feeling, will find | comfort In the advice of Mrs. James T. Wright, of 519 Goldsborough St., Easton, Md., who says: "My back was T ( ' M in a very bad way, < - ' and when not gainful was so weak it felt as if broken. A friend urged me to try Doan's Kidney Pills, which I did, and they helped me from the start It made me feel like a new woman, and soon I was doing my work the same as ever." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Policeman in a Quandary. It is not all pleasure, the life of a country policeman, says the London G'obe. The guardian of Pigburysuper-Splosh's morals was observed the other day to be looking careworn. "What's the matter?" he echoed, in response to kind inquiries. "Why, it's those three tramps I locked up this morning. They are kicking up a row because they want to play bridge and 1 can't find them a fourth." Plan to Protect the Osprey. The British Government has issuea a proclamation prohibiting the capture or destruction of Goura pigeons and ospreys for the next five years in Papua. No permit or license will in future he issued except to duly ac credited agents or some recogmzeu zoological or other scientific society. This rule -vill materially curtail the future supply from Papua for commercial purposes of that pretty article of headgear, the osprey feather, so highly valued by women in all countries. ' <''y.VSf.'-jvVjr; Ruling Spirit Strong. i Instances of the ruling passion m strong in death are very common. It /l is said of Dr. Orne, the great English Xj composer, that he died in the middle of a conversation on some musical matter, trying with his last breath to sing a passage the meaning of which he was too exhausted to explain. CONFESSIONS OF A CLOWN. At Last, There is on Sale a Boob Brimful of American Humor. Any bookseller will tell you that . the constant quest of his customers Lj is for "a book which will make me kj laugh." The bookman is compelled to reply that the race of American _ ^ humorists has run out and comic lit- ^ erature is scarcer than funny plays. A wide sale is therefore predicted for tio the "Memoirs of Dan Rice," the m Clown of Our Daddies, written by k| Maria Ward Brown, a book guaran- fag teed to make you roar with laughter, raj The author presents to the public a I volume of the great jester's most B pungent jokes, comic harangues, ||j caustic hits upon men and manners, |j| lectures, anecdotes', sketches of ad- I venture, original songs and poetical I effusions; wise and witty, serious, K satirical, and sentimental sayings of p| the sawdust arena of other days. Old Dan Rice, as proprietor of the cc famous""One Horse Show," was more an of a national character than Artemns he Ward, and this volume contains the 29) humor which made the nation laugh [ even while the great Civil War raged. V( This fascinating book of 500 pages, an UlnofrotflH uHll ho QATlf US' UCOUUiUMJ ?? ?. uw you postpaid for $1.50 by Book Publishing Hou3e, 134 Leonard street, rej New York. be ' . ge There are 321 medical missionaries in tl( India, of whom 121 are men and 200 women. . ?^ H. H. Obeen's Sons, of Atlanta, Ga., are gti the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world. See their liberal offer in advertise- ?0 ment in another column of this paper. pj The world experiences 30,000 earthquakes th every year. HO FADELES other dye. One 10c. package color* All fiber*. They dy i lor free booklet?How to Dye, Bleach and Jtx Color*. Out of 1358 begging letters re- po cefved in London by a charitable association, eighty-seven per cent, were found to have come from swindlers, and of the remaining thirteen per cent, only five per cent, were found to be really destitute. Death from fright in the first stages of ether and chloroform before consciousness is lost is best avoided by letting the patient hold and inhale tl"? stuff himself. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup for Children t teething, softens the gums, reduces infkmtna- 1? tion, si lays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. The smelter production of lead in the United States in 1908 was 408,- ^ 523 tons of 2000 pounds, against ho 442,015 tons in 1907 and 418,699 re< tons in 1906. N.Y.?37 to1 AS ? Bv The Ideal PALATAL V>r?am,Sf P( Cathartics 1 Oa?torOil w< ChTlDBEN LICK THE SPOON. HelleTM FlataUncy, Corr.cU ?rlptng.Aia.Dl???!<?. 28C. DKBOOtSTS. , ? n A II n n 111 car?6 Colds, Catarrh, Hay Fever E I fl Mn KK1II and Influenza- Sample Free. not UHIVIUIIIIIf. W. HAHN, New Town, Ohio- Fr F0RPINK /Yf^kW 1 11111 jOlJ B *Vi|i Cares the Hick and ITftll I W\ J) ijjUJ given on the tongne. ? TO1 V9II W/ kidney remedy; 60 cent Sold by all druggi6tj a paid, by the mannfactB SPOHN MEDICAL Cl Actual Use is 25c.i ???The Pri( Razor is -* Read What a Man of Experien Queenstown, j Book Publishing House, Ne Gentlemen?Permit me with your Shrp Shavr Safet in the Queenstown News, f priced safeties and prefer Professor Send 25 cents in stamps and ] marvelous Safety Razors. Book Pub 134- Leon; Chicks Doi If Not, Learn Why Froi Less Than the Value of Whelher you raise Chickens for fun or pn get the best results. The way to do this is to ] offer a book telling all you need to know on who made hi3 living for 25 years in Raising Po to experiment and spend much money to learn for the smaH sum of 25 CENTS in postage stam Disease, how to Feed for Eggs, and also for M ing Purposes, and indeed about everything vou success. SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT'OI BOOK PUBLISHING MOUSE. 12 *9 Mmmm* m inn It is no use adv< I you have the Goo< having1 the Good advertise. ' . ' ''f jl jnr DOCTORS I FAEED . .fy/3 ;dia E. Pinkham's Vegeta* e Compound Cured Her. ? Villimantic, Conn.?"For five years raffered untold agony from female . ubles, causing backache, irregularis, dizziness and nervous prostnu n. It was impossible for me^to ^ dng Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable impound to see what it would do. d I am restored to mly natural alth."?Mrs. Etta Donovan, Box ), Willimantic, Conn. J. rhe success of Lydia E. Pinkham's . 1 - fl ;getable Compound, made-f rom roots a herbs, is unparalleled. It may be ed with perfect confidence by women 10 suffer from displacements, inflam ition, ulceration fibroid- tumors, lrgularities, periodic pains, backache, ; ; a ring-down feeling, flatulency, indi. ; iS stion, dizziness, or nervous prostis>n. For thirtyvears Lydia E,Pinkham'? igetable Compound has been the ' ildg mdard remedy for female ills, and ffering women owe it to themselves 1 at least give this medicine a triaL odf is abundant that it has.curpd , {A on sands of others, and why should it >t cure you? IS DYES e In cold water better than any other (tra. Too MONROE JJ&UG CO., Q a lie 7 lUlnota. R INFORMATION AS TO - LANDS IN ;(\ ]] The Nations f]]T Garden SpotTHAT 6U AT FRUIT aa*TBDCK JJ 6R0WDIC SECTION? 1111 :'M along the IflanhV r*A5Kt f .inp nuuiiuv vvwut ?mv RAILROAD in Virginia, North and South Garolloa, Georgia, Alabama and Florida,write to Mgj WILBUR McCOY, . Agricultural and Immigration Agent, Atlantic Coast Line. Jacksonville, Fla. freeI l beautifully bound Postal Card Album U Id 800 cards?value 11.60. Send 80 cents and . :elre 12 postal card views, colored, of Call'ala, the Eden of America, and particular! I' to how yon can get the Album FREE. erybody can get one. HEDEN BERG )STAL CARD CO., 336 1-3 So. Broad- - . iy,Los Angeles, Cat. iDOPfiY NSW DISCOVERY; M "<?vr V I gtreaqoldkMllafaadouej rst cum. Book of testimonial* 4 10 d?/?" trc?tme af ee. Dr. H. H. QKKEK'B SONS.Boi . V PUP DISTEMPER L VL CATARRHAL FEVER . r f L and all nose m AND THROAT DISEASES acta as a preventive for others. Limiid ' safe for brood mares and all others. .Best ,8 and $1 a bottle; $5 and $10 the dozen. .. ' , > jj? nd horse goods houses, or sent, express trera. . .f 0., Chemists, GOSHEN, mpiana 'V - ?|f|g > Best Test. fety Razor etter Than Any Higher Prices km in Tli ni nf ? Tflif Dnf iho ;c Id uiai ui a iuj, wui me ? Beyond Comparison @?@ ce Writes on the Subject: 'Vff Md., July 29, 1909. ' 'W York: to say / am delighted y Razor as advertised lave tried all the high yours to all of them. ' Upton T: Rainbow. '?' * ^ -eceive postpaid one of these ^ ' ' ! Iishing House, ard Street. New York city. ng Well ? m a Book Costing \ ! One Chicken . ' ofit, you want to do it intelligently and profit by the experience of others. We the subject?a book written by a man ultry, and in that time necessarily had the D(st way to conduct the business? ps. It tells vou how to Detect and Cure arket, whicn Fowls to Save for Breedmust know on the subject to make 4 ? 25 CENTS IN STAMPS. 14 Leonard St.. N. Y. City. artising unless ds, and no use is unless you