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dm&nu The Man She MaiTies. "I don't really care how old tl man I'd like to marry is," said tl girl with the mushroom hat, in tl Philadelphia Press, "but I'd rath< he wasn't younger than me. Twent two is really quite old for a girl; bi a man of twenty-two is only a bo s I expect that is Irish, but you kno what I mean! [< "I like boys, but I want to oe taKt j care of and made to do the rig! thing and be quite sure all the tin that he is stronger and better ar wiser than I am?so I want to man a man! "I'd like him to be strong physica ly?broad shouldered and all the re of it?mostly for the reason that want him to be good-looking. "I want my own way, of course, bi I want it given me. I want to fe quite perfectly sure that if the w? isn't right, or not good for me, shan't get it! "In a word, I suppose I want tl iron hand in the velvet glove!"?Ne Haven Register. Banting tbc Dog. The woman who was strolling i Fifth avenue paused in front of smart little shop and looked at small article displayed in the windo and labeled, "Dog Sweater." It Wi handsomely and elaborately crocl etted and evidently was expensiv Not being .the owner of a dog, ar being fairly unintelligent on sue subjects, the woman sought inside ii formation. "Those," advised the pretty litt saleswoman, "are to be worn by pi dogs, in place of blankets, you kno-* Also, they are useful when it is ne essarv to bant doggie."' "To bant doggie?" murmured th ignorant one faintly. "Yes. You know pet dogs are lik< ly to be overfed and to grow fat an lazy. Then they have to be bantei just like people." "Ah! I suppose some one has 1 take them out for this exercise?" "Oil, certainly, usuajiy tnat rai to the lot of the maid or some oth< servant." "But suppose the servant shoul not wish to be incidentally banted' "Oh, well, of course, madam woul og . I Bread Pudding W: GSl g ; ful of bread crumbs *?3 ) When quite, soft beat S" | tablespoonful of sugar *2 2> { two eggs, beat the S3 ^ J mixture and flavor w ? 2 t which a few drops of 1 IjSJ e { a tin baking pan. stick as ) Stick raisins in here 53 | pudding pan in a largi c?> | for about twenty minu have to settle that with the servan Or she might even be willing to tat doggie out herself. Many women ai glad of almost any excuse nowada: for training down and keeping theE seleves as slim as possible."?Ne York Press. The Parlor. As the daughters bud into youi womanhood the youths of their a quaintance will ring the front dot brll. Where shall the modest ai vances and coy retreats of sweet ai sacred courtship find their needed e pression? American home trainii and its soundly placed confidence the self-respect of boys and girls ha1 included no fixed places for tl chaperon as one inevitably present . these engaging conferences. She e ists, but usually as a figure in tl discreet background. It was one the social problems of pioneer da; in a new country to find a place comparative seclusion for the bashf calls of the neighbor's lad. In the congested life of large citi the difficulty is enhanced and fim unsatisfactory remedy in the theoi that there may be solitude in crowi and possibilities for personal lnte chaDge of agreeable confidences vehicles and public parks. The pa lor, in the old-fashioned sense of tl word, is an impossibility in a flat, becomes there an anachronism, ai its substitute among those of tl world of work is the inobservant i Fashion Note. f The accompanying sketch shows dainty little gown for "semi occasions' It should suit those who have a fancy f empire lines, and a desire for the loi waist as well. A soft and clingy material is used, ai soutache in a pretty ttsign forms t trimming. ' ? f 'y ' I difference of the throng. But under ie all environments, the youth and the le maid will find a path to treaa togemer ie with lightsome feet, and eyes only for j er each other and their destined future. , y_ ?Washington Herald. at 1 v Women as Jurors. w A phase of woman's suffrage which i has been given little publicity was dis- ! >n cussed by Miss Marguerite De Forest- j at Anderson, the celebrated woman com- j ie poser, to the New York Telegram. j >d "Whether women get the right to j ry vote or not," said Miss De Forest- j Anderson, "I believe they should be j ,1- called upon to do jury duty. By this j st I mean that when a woman is vitally I interested in a court case, whether it be civi! or criminal, it should be dent cided by a jury which comprises an el equal number of men and women, ly Women alone can understand womI en, and many unjust verdicts would i be avoided if women were permitted I ie to serve on juries. Of course the j w women picked for jury duty should not be of the butterfly type. They should, instead, be intelligent women who have had the benefit of an edu- ' ip cation. o "Ac far as irnman suffraee itself is ' --- ? ? a concerned. I do not believe the worn- j w en will make much progress until i is they adopt womanly and conservative j h- tactics. A good, true, womanly worn- j e. an can get anything she desires, j id When the so-called suffragettes come i :h to realize this they will modify their j q- tactics, and then their chances for ! success will be greater. Until that j le time, however, I think the success of et the cause is more or less hopeless, for v. men will not be forced to do any- j c- thing. They prefer to be coaxed. The I women who should vote are the womie en who pay ttfxes. Strangely enough, though, they as yet have remained in e- the background. But when they do id enter the lists, mark my words, something is going to happen." ;o Etiquette For the Visitor. It is difficult to lay down hard and Is fast rules for the stranger who visits 2r in another's home. Customs differ not only in different social sets, but Id even in various families in the same "" circle. I -3 mi A ^ C iU | lut; ixicitLex ui nyyxiig, iui iujiuuic, ith "Whipped Cream.?1Take one cupand soak it in two cupfuls of milk, it smooth, add a pinch of salt and a . Separate the yolks from the whites ! yolks thoroughly, add them to the ith half a teaspoonful of vanilla to jitter almond has been added. Butter : raisins in the butter and fill the pan. and there to cover the top, put the ?r one of water and bake in the oven tes. Serve with whipped cream. t. is a troublesome problem for a girl :e or woman. Shall I tip? Whom shall re I t'p? How much shall I give? She does not know and has no one from Q- whom she can seek information withw out embarrassment. Tipping is much more customary in this country than it was a few years ago, and as a rule it is safe to give a lg moderate fee to any servant with j c_ whom you have come in contact. . j 3r In the average country house this j will mean the waitress, the upstairs j girl who attends to your room and j ttrVir\ -mov Viovo Hnno vnn email favnrc I nuv uiuj wu i v uvuv j v u wiuwt* ? vi jg such as buttoning your frock, and the in coachman who drives you to and from ve the station. ie It is not necessary to go around to at every servant on the place when many x- are kept. Some hosts object strenie uously to a tip and forbid their sero* vants to accept any. This position, if ya known, must be respected. Generally of your hostess will let you know in a ul quiet way how she feels on the subject. es How much to give depends upon is how much one can afford. It is fool- I ry ish from false pride to cripple one's j cis self by gifts or stay at home from a j r- visit because you cannot afford to j in tip. Both maids and hostess usually ! r- know your financial status, and the \ ie latter would only be worried by ex- ! It travagant tipping. id If you have made demands upon ! ae the time of a maid," such as asking j n- her to press a dress for you, she | ? should be quietly given something foi her trouble at the time. You would have to pay an outsider for such work, and have no right to expect it as a favor. If at all possible do not get into the ; way of expecting your friends' maidE to do such things for you. Hunt up a laundress, or, if you can do youi own pressing, ask your hostess when it will be convenient for you to go into the laundry to do a little freshening up to your clothes. 11' she insists on having it done for you, accept, as she may prefer it to youi presence in her kitchen. Make1 it a rule, whenever possible, to pay for your baggage on the train. This saves embarrassment later. In the country where you must be met it is out of the question, but try to be present to fee the men who carry your trunk to your room. Never fee ostentatiously. It is the height of bad taste. Also do not get | Into the habit of letting your hosts pay your way as a right. There are many excursions where ihe hosts assume all obligations; these must not be questioned, but accepted gracefully. If you propose I little trips, or if you pay a long visit, insist upon paying your share of car ! fare and other expenses. The money side of visiting requires delicate handling. You do not wish to be a "beat"' or a "sponge;" on the other hand, nothing is in worse taste than over-independence or bickering ' acceptance of the gracious hospitality ? that would assume all financial reor sponsibilitv for a guest.?New York ig Times. nd he It is said there are 1,000,000 Egypi tians who can neither read nor write. i O8?9O0?OC???O?8??O?9?OO( The Absurdity of Modern Navies. ?????CG>ccooeoe?o9oee??oss The great work of making war c surd, especially naval war, goes swimmingly. A London paragraph the Sun quotes Naval-Expert Jane rejecting the suggestion that to si warships will be a chief use 01 a ships in war-time. Not so, Mr. Ja says. But he says that experime has settled it that all ships are cleai visible at night from a balloon ovi head. But the chief protection of battleship fleet from night torpedo ; tack is invisibility. When the a ships are able to direct torpedo boj by wireless where to find their quar; the security of battleships will very much impaired. The only re edy. Mr. Jane says, will be in a betl and more complete net defense th ships now have, and in plenty of c stroyers to meet the torpedo boats. No doubt Mr. Jane's opinion wise, but it only emphasizes the fs that the whole navy business is gro ing ridiculous. It has been improv* extended and elaborated until evei body begins to see that it has lost proper proportion. Instead o? i tions maintaining navies to prot< them, it is getting to be that nav are using nations to maintain the The lack of a proper sense of hum in the English and German nai boards nromises to be the death oi fine old employment that has held place among men for thousands years. Tax-burdened .peoples, gros ing under the cost of naval progran must cry out pretty soon in a una mous howl, "Why do we maint? such a raft of these ridiculous n chines, that cost preposterously make and keep, and eat their hea off without ever doing a stroke productive work?" As soon as tt voice is unanimous, armament subside, and we suppose navies m dwindle to what is necessary for ternational police work.?Harpe Weekly. Fortune in Land Unclaimeo. There is a valuable strip of land Michigan avenue thai, nobody see to own. At least no one has be able to prove his ownership as yet. It is the thirty-four-foot strip 1 between the roadway of the street a the new sidewalk that the coram sioners have been laying in Gn Park north of Jackson Boulevard. At the rate real estate values hs nilpH nn nn rlnTOntnwn nrnriertv wttl the last few years it is figured tl there is an alderman's ransom kingly ransoms being out of date tied up in this patch of groui Three-eighths of a mile long, it c< tains 67,320 square feet, valued more than $4,000,000, if neighbori values are to be accepted. But, characteristic of conditions the lake front, much uncertainty s rounds its ownership. Instead fighting over it, however, calling Fernando Jones and rushing to t Supreme Court, the City and Pa Board has decided .to plant grass se and call it "quits."?Chicago Post. Trees and Their Murderers. The Chicago courts are soon nave a case of "arboreal murder" their hands. The slain victim is tree, and the assassin is the Peopl Gas Light and Coke. Company. 1 tree fell ill, wasted away and fina died from gas which leaked froir broken main, and City Forester Jat W Prnst nrmnnnrps his rmrnnsp make a .test of the ordinance wh was framed with the intention of p tecting trees from that kind of poisi ing. In other words, he will try make the gas company pay for 1 tree, which was a tall and valua poplar. Gas has caused many fat ities of this kind. It does more ha at the roots than smoke and bad do at the leaves. The leakage ? repaired, but not until after its deai work was done, and this test case v have an interest for all municipaliti ?Rochester Democrat and Chronic Classic English. "Nothing doing."?Addison's "L vers." "Cut in and win."?Thackera "Vanity Fair." "Twenty-three."?Dickens^' "T of Two Cities." "Forget it?cast it away."?Ha thorne's "Marble Fawn." "Gone to the wall."?Bunya "Pilgrim's Progress." ? "Make good." ? Deuteronor which is a book in the Biblo. "It's a sure thing."?Goldsmit "She Stoops to Conquer." "She was a respectable old guy.' Thackeray's "Vanity Fair." "Gave Hector a Gift?a gilt n meg ? a lemon." ? Shakespear "Love's Labor Lost."?Puck. Highest Endurable Temperature, Tf ic rliffimilt In eav xvhnt thp hi* est temperature is that a human 1 ing can live in. In the kitchens some of the great hotels and in 1 stoke holds of some steamships 1 temperature gets to 140 or 145 i grees. Cooks and their helpers a stokers have to endure that tempe ture for hours at a time, and U seem to get along pretty well. 1 hottest place, perhaps, where hum beings work is in the vulcanizing f tories, where the temperature is 2 ?the boiling point of water. Th< are a few who can stand this heat a little while at a time, but man < endure no more. Collier Nero Floated. The naval collier Nero, which wi ashore on Rrenton's Reef on July during a dense fog, was successfu floated by the Arbuckle compress air method. The deck was made z tight, and by means of powerful cc pressors the water was gradually pelled from the hull through 1 rents In the bottom. When the si had been sufficiently lightened, s was pulled from the rocks by i united efforts of tugs and salvage v sels.?Scientific- American. Snapshots the Burglar. Known as the kleptograp'n. a b glar alarm invented by an Italian nites a flashlight and photographs intruder who invades the room which it is set. : B5SSSS1 j;@TOpl lb" | It has been demonstrated by numerous experiments in Europe as well 111 as in America that the pulp possessas Ing the best fiber for paper, and the 11 k most practicable to make, is that delr" riveu from the wood of the spruce ne , and fir. nt ! * : Flinders Petrie says men have not at*? I | advanced in designing art work or j j decorations, making jewelry or in . i their ability to correct social abuses ' and the human intellect now does its its 1 work just as it did 6000 years ago i;: | 0gypt. The advice of Ptah Hotep tc 6 | his son, 6000 years ago, reads very 1 aiuch like Polonius' lines to his son :er i r I Laertes. an i le- I The municipal council of St. Peters. burg has decided to name the newly t installed municipal laboratory after w_ the celebrated Russian biologist ,,,; Metchnikoff, who is at present con jiyj nected with the Pasteur Institute oJ jj.g Paris. It will moreover found an ania_ nual prize of 1000 rubles, this to be 3Ct known as the Metchnikoff Prize, and [gg it is to be awarded for the test work m in biology. tor ,aI The increasing use of electrical en? a argy upon a large scale in industrial its establishments renders necessary th? 0? adoption of numerous precautionary in. measures, and it is to the credit ol QS the great industrial organizations ol this country that they not only recog in I nize this fact, but employ special of- | ia. ficials to give effect to the safety reg- I to illations adopted. An admirable artL(ja icle on this subject by Mr. R. J. 0f Young, safety inspector of the Illinois iat ; Steel Company, appears in the Elec,iU J trloal World. ay j in- . Dr. T. Zell, a German naturalist r'g 1 has collected many instances to prove that animals learn by experience, and thus become wiser than their uninstructed parents. Game animals oi on all kinds, he avers, have learned the m? range of modern rifles. Greyhounds ,en quickly learn to let rabbits alone, and foxhounds pay no attention to eithet eft rabbits or hares. Killer whales and nd gulls follow whaling vessels, just as ,js. vultures follow an army. Crows bemt Sin t0 accompany the chamois huntei as soon as they have seen the resull of his first successful shot, and roughlin legged buzzards follow the sportsman iat after winged game. The number ol I? birds that kill or injure themselves :? y flying against telegraph wires is ad, ouch smaller than it used to be. Dr Dn- Zell also refers to the fact that birds al and quadrupeds have learned to disinp | regard passing railway trains, as I horses quickly cease to be frightened on by automobiles. His instances of the ur- I intelligent selection exercised by of | sheep dogs are familiar to all. in , he | oMmoaimscaHoaocto S t The Wedding S I t Buffoon. ? | ' to The spirit which make a wedding on an occasion for rude practical jok, a ing and boisterous horseplay has e's long caused the judicious, even those -he who are endowed with a sense ol Uy humor, to grieve. Why should s [ a man and woman who have just taker ,0b upon themselves a relationship moto mentous in the eye of the law and ich sacred in that of religion be regardr0. ed as fit subjects for annoyance and persecution at the hands of theii to J friends and neighbors? And why. the I above all, should it be thought funny hie I to annoy and persecute them? ,al- j Not infrequently serious injur? rn; I has resulted from the rough antics air 1 of the wedding clowns, who are, oi iras | course, too ill bred to consider any(jly thing so intangible as the dignity anc? rilf happiness of their unfortunate vie es tims. :le, But cheering intelligence come! ! from Kansas. A charivari party in z town of that State recently draggec ,et- an unwilling bride and groom in ar I open wagon. Incidentally they rai y's J over a boy and broke his leg. Now j the town must pay the boy exempale i lary damages. The Kansas Supreme j Court has decided that the exuberant iw- humorists who pulled the wagon constituted a lawless and violent mob, n's which the police officers of the towr ought to have dispersed. That the ny; mob was "good natured" and "meani no harm" does not render the towi h'e less liable for the harm the mot actually did. '? So it seems that the law is ablt effectively to encourage commor I ??? ??.i .1 ? 4 V.:,. ,1 ut" &cuoc anu uctrutj in tins uu cv.uuu e's If the principles laid down by th( Kansas court become generally un derstood there will be less publii toleration of this particular sort oJ ?h- nonsense.?Youth's Companion. be of Ransom's Reformation. :he in America, a few years ago, then the was a shiftless colored boy namec tie- Ransom Blake, who, after beinf .nd caught in a number of petty delin ra- quencies, was at last sentenced to i i?y short term in the penitentiary, when "he be was set to learn a trade. On th* lan day of his return home he met r ac- friendly white acquaintance, whc .12 asked: ?re "Well, what did they put you at ii for i the prison, Ranse?" :an "Dey started in to make an hones' boy out'n me, sah." "That's good. Ranse, and I hop* they succeeded?" "Dey did, sah." "And how did they teach you to b< Honest?"' illy "Dev done put me in the shoe shop e. sah. nailin' pasteboard onter shoes fo Lir" leather soles, sah."?Tit-Bits, im ?x~ How to Speculate. Lhe A long journey by water. Bewan ,jie of a dark man. There is a lette.' coming to you from a distance. I stocks do not go down they will g< ! up. Sell those that you have and i they do not go down, buy others. Cu' the cards in three piles, please.?Nev York Evening Pest. nr is- Peoria County (II!.) holds a di an vorce record, there being one foin every lour and two-thirds marriage.' in the past year. : ' - Signal Flags. Signalling by flags, as the term Is now universally understood, was invented in the year 1854 by Surgeon Myer, of the United States Army. Before Surgeon Mver's invention the only flag signaling was by color, but realizing the inadequacy of such a mode of conveying information. Dr. Myer studied out the system of "wigwagging," or talking by making motions with the flag, a sort of deaf and dumb telegraphy, which has since been adopted by pretty nearly all the nations of the world. Sea Water For Figs. An American firm has established a large fig packing house at Nazli, the chief producing centre of Asia Minor. The fruit is moistened lor packing with sea water, which has to be sent in barrels from Smyrna, 12C distant on the coast. Heretofore the fie: crop has been transported to Smyrna for final drying and packing. It has averaged about 110,000 cancel loads a year, a camel carrying 450 pounds.?New York Press. CUTICURA CURED HIS ECZEMA. Humor Came 011 Legs and Ankles? Could Not Wear Shoes Because of Bad Scaling and Itching. "I have been successfully cured of dry eczdfna. I was inspecting the removal of noxious weeds from the edge of a river and was constantly in the dust from the weeds. At night I cleansed my limbs but felt a prickly sensation. I paid no attention to it for two years but I noticed a scum on my legs like fish scales. I did not attend to it until it came to be too itchy and sore and began getting two running sores. My ankles were all 6ore and scabby and I could not wear shoes. I had to use carpet and felt slippers for weeks. I got a cake of the Cuticura Soap and some Cuticura Ointment. In less than ten days I could put | on my boots and in less than three weeks I was free from the confounded itching. Capt. G. P. Blifi, Chief of Police, Morris, Manitoba. Mar. 20, '07, and Sept. 24, '08." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. The applications under England's old age pension law now amount to half a I million. A little bottle of Hamlins Wizard Oil is a medicine chest in itself. It can be applied in a larger number of painful ailments than any other remedy known. Climatic conditions in Colombia cause a large demand for portable houses. | Mrs. Wiunlow's Soothing Syrup for Children j teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma| tion, nllays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. Chaucer was the first known1 poet | laureate. Use and Ornament. Mr. Newrich, the Pittsburg multlj millionaire, was furnishing the library of his magnificent mansion. "Let me see," he mused. "You've 1 got the order for the $85,'000 edition j de luxe of Dickens bound in levant?" "Yes, sir," replied the bookseller. "And the $10,000 set or snaKespeare?" "Yes, sir." "And the standard authors, bound in calf, Thackeray, Scott, Washingi ton Irving, Cooper, and all ( them | there other fellers?" "Yes, sir, I have a memorandum of the entire list." "Well, then, that's off my mind," j said Mr. Newrich, of Pittsburg, with i a sigh of relief. "Now, what I want j is something to read. Say, have you ; got a complete set of " 'Old Sleuth?' "?New York Times. Mean Man. The newest "mean man" story: In ! a western county of Kansas the dead body of an unknown man was recently discovered. In his pockets they found $100 in bank notes and a big revolver. j "What about it?" asked the innocent one. "You would expect that they'd have used that hundred in finding his relatives, or failing in that, have given him a decent burial, now, wouldn't you?" "Sure." "Well, they didn't," is the answer. "They arranged his dead body before j a justice of the peace for carrying j concealed weapons and fined him j $100 and buried him in the Potter's i Field."?Kansas City Journal. Artificial silk manufactured by a new patent process is one of the new ! shipments from England to America, J and apparently a growing one. PRESSED HARD Coffee's Weight on Old Age. i Whpn prominent men realize the ! injurious effects of coffee and the change in health that Postum can I bring they are glad to lend their tesI timony for the benefit of others. A superintendent of public schools in North Carolina says: "My mother, since her early childhood. was an inveterate coffee drinker, and had been troubled with her heart for a number of years, and complained of that "weak all over' feeling and sick stomach. "Some time ago 1 was making an official visit to a distant part of the country and took dinner with one of the merchants of the place. I noticed a somewhat peculiar flavour of the coffee, and asked him concerning it. He replied that it was Postum. "I was so pleased wfth it, that after the meal was over, I bought a package to carry home with me, and I had wife prepare some for the next I meal. The whole family liked it so ! well that we discontinued coffee and | used Postum entirely. "I had really been at times very anxious concerning my mother's conI .lition, but we noticed that after using TV, fnr a chnrt time she felt so , rusium w ; much better than she did prior to its I use. and had little trouble with her ! heart and no sick stomach, that the j headaches were not so frequent, and j her general condition much improved, j This continued until she was as well i and hearty as the rest of us. "I know Postum has benefited my| self and the other members of the i family, but not in so marked a degree ' as in the cas>e of ray mother, as she ! wai a victim of long standing." Read "The Road to Wellville," i' j pkgs. j "There's a Reason." Ever read the aboveletter? A neu j oee appears from time to time. They j are genuine, trne, and full of huniai; j interest. i i * (Ul )kx,c " Do you know of any wc benefit from taking Lydia E pound?" If any woman who is suffer to her sex will ask her neight surprised at the result. Th< this country where women ca restored to health by this exclusively from a simple forr During the past 30 years \ nf letters from these grateful w" - ~ - * o by Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg? in all that time have we pul ' the writer's special permission published a testimonial that \ Here is one just received a fe\ that this is a true and honest i ence with Lydia E. Pinkham and ask her. Houston, Texas.?" When I fij ham's Vegetable Compound 11 sick for three years with femf and a liver trouble. I had triet nothing did me any good. " For three years I lived on i never get well, when I read an ham's Vegetable Compound, an " My husband got me one bot me so much good I continued ii and enjoy the best of health. "I advise all women sufferi: Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable regret it, for it will surely cur 819 Cleveland St., Houston. Any woman who is sick ai not to give such a medicine a not do her as much good as i The Right V Ib All Cases of DISTEMPER, PINK EYE, INFLUENZA, COLDS, ETC., Of All Horses,, Brood Mares, Colts, Stallions, is to "SPOHN THEM" On their tongues or In the feed put Spohn's Liquid Compound. Give tbe remedy to all of them. It acts on the blood and glands. It routs the disease by expelling tbe disease germs. It wards off tbe trouble, no matter how they are "exposed." Absolutely free from onythinglnjurlous. A child can s&fely take It BO cts. and $1.00; $5.00 and $10.00 the dozen. Sold by druggists, harness dealers, or sent, express paid, by the manufacturers. Special Agents Wanted. SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists and Bacteriologists, GOSHCK, IND.i IT. g. A. Theory an.- Fact. "I tell you it is a mistaken idea that animals have instinct," remarked the newfangled naturalist. "Will you inform me then what makes a hen set on a doorknob?" asked the auditor. "My investigations have only gone i far enough to show that it is not instinct," replied the naturalist somewhat stiffly.?Philadelphia Ledger. An effort made in Russia to form a gigantic steel corporation, on the lines of the one existing in this country, has failed. N.Y.?38 Actual Use 25c.Si i???4 mt The I Razor Read What a Man of Experi i Queenstowi Book Publishing House, Gentlemen? Permit i With \your Shrp Shavr Sa in the Queenstown News, priced safeties and pref Profes Send 25 cents in stamps ar marvelous Safety Razors. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 3 Chicks Dc If Not, Learn Why F Less Than the Value \Vhetiier you raise Chickens lor fun o get the best results. The way to do this i& offer a book telling all you need to know who made his living for 25 years in Raisini to experiment and spend much money to U for the small sum of 25 CENTS in postage ? Disease, bow to Feed for Eggs, and also f( i ing Purposes, and indeed about even-thing success. SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT BOOK PUBLISHING MOUSE. It is no use ac you have the G< having the Go advertise. ? ' :lll %jjy I 9 ittOH/ ?man who ever received any . Pinkham's Vegetable Coming with any ailment peculiar )ors this question, she will be ire is hardly a community in nnot be found who have been , famous old remedy, made nula of roots and herbs. ve have published thousands women who have been cured stable Compound, and never blished a testimonial without . Never have we knowingly , ' ._ ! vas not truthful and genuine. v Havs acrn. If anvone doubts statement of a woman's experi's Vegetable Compound write st began taking Lydia E. Pinkvas a total wreck. I h*d been lie troubles, chronic dyspepsia, I several doctor's medicines, but medicines and thought I would advert isment Of Lydia E. Pinkd was advised to try it, tie of the Compound, and it did ts use. I am now a well woman og from such troubles .to give Compound a trial. They won't e you." ?Mrs. Bessie L. Hicks, nd suffering is foolish surely ,s this a trial. Why should, it it did Mrs. Hicks, i Vay PIMPLES "I tried all kinds of blood remedies . "VJg which failed to do me any good, but I have found the right thing at last. My face was full of pimples and black-heads. After taking Cabarets they all left I am continuing the use of them and recommending them to my friends. I feel fine j when I rise in the morning. Hope to have a chance to recommend Cascarets." FredC. Witten, 76Elm St.,Newark, N.J. Pleasant. Palatable, Potent, Taate Good. Do Good. Never Slcken.Weaken or Gripe. 10c, 25c. 50c. Never sold Jn bulk. Thesrennine tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to can or your mosey back. 622 - , is Best Test. 1 afotu Pa7nr Ull/lJ llMbVE Better Than Any at Higher Prices Price is That of a Toy, But the - is Beyond Comparison ?- 'I?S ence Writes on the Subject: i, Jaty 29, 7909. iVeu> ybr/r: 7ie fo say / am delighted \fety Razor as advertised Have tried all the high er yours to all of them. sor Upton T. Rainbow. id receive postpaid one of these [34 LEONARD STREET, X. Y. >ing Well ? rom a Book Costing of One Chicken r profit, you want to do it intelligently and to profit by the experience of others. We on the subject?a book written by a nmu . 1??I*.? 1 h?.i ? a UUIlljr, aiiU 111 lUOb kiuic ucv,??aiii; uu*? ;arn the b<st way to conduct the business? ;tarops. It tells vou how to Detect and Cure >r Market, which Fowls to Save for Breedyou must know on the subject to make ? r OF 25 CKNTS TN STAMPS. 134 Leonard St.. IN. V. City. T" Ivertising unless Dods, and no use ods unless you 1