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Wash Money. Secretary MacVeagh's reported in- J tention to have bank notes and other " forms of paper currency washed frequently in a cleansing chemical solution will be generally applauded. Clean notes have been considered a luxury not attainable by the great majority of users, but in these new lays of progress and antiseptic precaution they ought to become a thor- ] *ughly popularized convenience. The Immunity bath experiment will be well worth trying.?New York Tribune. MCNYON'S EMINENT DOCTORS AT j YOUR SERVICE FREE. ' Not ? Penny to Pay For the Fullest j Medical Examination. If you are in doubt as to the cause j n 1 I 01 your disease mun ua a pusiai ic%uesting a medical examination blank, ! "which you will fill out and return to | us. Our doctors will carefully diag- ; nose your case, and if you can be j cured you will be told so; if you can- | not be cured you will be told so. You j are not obligated to us In any way; i this advice is absolutely free; you are J at liberty to take our advice or not as ! you see fit. Send to-day for a medl- j cal examination blank, fill out and j return to us as promptly as possible, j and our eminent doctors will diagnose your case thoroughly absolutely free. Munyon's, 53d and Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. Gonzalo de Quesada, the Cuban Minister to the United States, went to Lisbon for the purpose of investigating the possibilities of emigration to Cuba. ; TOTAL LOSS OF HAIR Seemed imminent?Scalp Was Very Scaly and Hair Game Out by Hand* fuls?Scalp Cleared and New Hair Grown by Cuticura. "About two years ago I was troubled with my head being scaly. Shortly after j that I had an attack of typhoid fever and i I was out of the hospital possibly two j months when I first noticed the loss of j hair, my scalp being still scaly. I started i to use dandruff cures to no effect whatever. | I had actually lost hope of saving any hair j at a'l. I could brush it off my coat by tha handful. I was afraid to comb it. But after using two cakes of Cuticura Soap and nearly a box of Cuticura Ointment, the change was surprising. My scalp is now clear and healthy as could be and my hair thicker than ever, whereas I had my miud made up to be bald. W. F. Steese. 5812 Broad St., Pittsburg, Penn., May 7 and 21, '08." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. Since 1838 the population of the Germa"b Empire kaa doubted. VT? ?^~trrtitr nd^tr miv Kfh I ilU iuaitci UVTI 1UU5 /VU4 iivwa "??y ?- . or bow Bore your throat, Hamlins Wizard . Oil will cure it surely and quickly. It j drives out ?*1 soreness and inflammation. Both the "Yench and Italian Govern- j merits maintain national pawnshops. Mrs. Winalow's Soothing Syrup for Children tMtbing, softens the gums, reduces inflammation , a]lays pain, cure* wind colic.25c. a bottle. Daniel and the Lions. An old negro preacher in Kentucky was dilating upon events in the Bible which had a zoological trend. He described the Deluge, and how all the animals, two by two, went into the Ark and were saved. Then he discussed the Incident of Jonah and the whale, Balaam's asB, and finally the exploit of Daniel, who entered the den of ravening lions and emerged, unharmed, Jiis auditors had listened with interest, and some of them seemed to have their doubts a3 to the authenticity of the tales. Finally one of the younger negroes | rose up and inquired: "Say, pahson, i wuz dem lions jest like the kind we I has now?" 'Cose not, cose not," retorted the gender, irritated at having his discourse interrupted. "Dey was B. C., meaning befo circases." The explanation was sufficient and | satisfactory.?Buffalo Commercial. j Since the United States Government began to patronize expositions, down to the Jamestown fair. Congress has appropriated a total of $28,752,- j 231 for world's fairs, of T.hich only $485,000 ha3 been spent west of the Rocky Mountains, at the Lewis and Clark exposition. The earMest Bible pictures were painted on the church walls instead of being Kound between the book covers. FOOD QUESTION Sealed With Peifect Satisfaction by a Dyspeptic. It's not an easy matter to satisfy ail the members of the family at meal time, as every housewife knows. And when the husband has dyspepsia and can't eat the simplest ordi"" AAnatniv f ??AII Kto Jldi J luuii nituvui tauoiug nuui/it, tbe food question becomes doubly jnnoying. An Illinois woman writes: "My husband's health was poor, he had no appetite for anything I could get for him, it seemed. "He was hardly able to work, was taking medicine continually, and as soon as he would feel better would go to work again, only t:o give up in a few weeks. He suffered severely with Ftomach trouble. "Tired of everything I had been able to get for him to eat, one day seeing an advertisement about Grape. Nuts, I got some and he tried it for breakfast the next morning. ' TVe all thought it was pretty good, although we had no idea of using it regularly. But when my husband came home at night he isked for Grape-Nuts. "It wag the same next day, and 1 had to get it right along, because when we would get to the table the question, 'Have you any Grape-Nuts?' was a regular thing. So 1 began to buy it by the dozen pkgs. "My husband's health began to improve right along. I sometimes felt rffended when I'd make something r thought he would like for a change, and still hear the same old question, 'Have you any Grape-Nuts?' "He got so well that for the last rwo years he has hardly lost a day from his work, and we are still usln? Grape-Nuts." Read the book, "The Road to Wellville," in pkg3. "There'} :\ Reason." Bver read the above letter? A new <?ne appears from time to time. They are gennine, true, and fall of human interest. i THE NEWSFAPER MAN. ' My son, I don't know if your youthful con | ception Has breadth in the scope of its nebulou plan I To wield comprehension of that one ex ception to workaday mortals, thi newspaper man. But if you'll agree to a feeble description From one of their number, I'll do wha I can To blend in the way of a little prescription The mixture that's known as a news paper man! ... Take a brain that is steeped in a solutioi of knowledge, [ Most varied and picturesque under tlsi sun; Then add just a pinch of the salt of th< college, A flavor of wit and a soupcon of fun. i For a relish, Bohemian sauce is the caper | And a mind that will' stretch fron Beersheba to Dan, | In fancy or fact, when it comes to "thi paper," Or touches the heart of the newspapei man! I To a memory that clutches the veries1 trifle. %,?' , ." >r.: And a hand that id tirdass when work'j to be done, \ Add an eye that is quick as the flash of { ! rifle, And keen as the eagle that flies to th< sun. I Take strength and endurance and loyal de j votion, And add all the grit and courage yoi can To the heart that's big and as deep as th< ocean: A hundred to one on the newspapei man! With a brew of ideas that, seothing anc boiling. Run out into molds that are models o; | men, Add a ceaseless encounter with planning and toiling For the world of to-day that is ruled bj the pen; Add the honey of friendship, the dew oi affection, And the esprit de corps that gets dowi to hard pan; And paste in your hat the whole morta I collection '< As the regular stock of the newBpapei man. ?Press and Printer. kkk-kkk-kkkkk k k k k k k k it SOAPSUDS JND SAH By Georgia B. Flinn. j TTWV appeal CUL un tilU HUIIL Ol JCLC1 j gingham apron. Soon the basket wai I full of- clean white garments, anc ! lifting them in her strong arms Poll: j started for the back yard, but a musi ! cal voice called her name, and.- look ing toward the door she beheld a vis j ion in shimmering red satin. "Oh, you poor dear!" the visioi I exclaimed, advancing gingerly iat< | the steaming, suds-scented room. " j came after you, but I don't suppost j you will go now." j "Go! Go where?" Polly inquirei ! a trifle eagerly. "Why, for an auto ride with Wal | ter Radcliffe," Julia explained impor | tantly. "A party of us are invited including yourself. We are to mee at my house and will start in ai I hour." Polly dropped the heavy basket am j a look of keen disappointment settle* j on her pretty face. She had neve j rode in an auto in her life. Must shi j lose this splendid chance just be : cause? Her eyes roved over _ thi ! disordered kitchen, the tubs full o ' unwasnea garments met her glana I like a challenge, the suds-spattere< ! floor, her red, swollen hands and we I apron. Could she finish her worl and get ready in an hour? No, i i would take two hours at the ver; least. Her eyes smarted with tears but she staunchly brushed them asid and bravely reconciled herself to he disappointment. "I am sorry, Julia, but you tell Mi Radcliffe that duty bound me to hom to-day. though I would like to hav gone so much." | un, tuUge, Polly!" Julia es claimed, surveying lier new coat ove her shoulder. "Put. the things awa and come along You've just go ! time to dress." ! Polly shook her head. "No, Juli; 1 couldn't do that. I armniopfi \ i . ? .i Polly was washing. Her 3leevei I were rolled up, disclosing a pair ol round, dimpled elbows and some verj pink fingers from contact with the hot suds. Her cheeks were no lesj i rosy than her fingers, and the wavj ' dark, hair was drawn neatly ba'ci from a white, thoughtful brow, foi Polly was thinking as she scrubbed away?thinking hard. She wrung out a linen tablecloth from its foam) bath and paused to inspect its snow) whitnesess. "I wish," she said witt sudden wistfulness, "that I had a red satin coat like Julia's. I look so good ia red, too." She sighed enviously as a mental vision of Julia in all her finery row before her. Julia Dent was considered the best dressed girl in town and her father being a lawyer, made her very popular among the young set. She always appeared in the latest styles quite before the othei girls had heard of them, which awoke considerable envy in the hearts ol the less fortunate ones. Of late there had been even more envy among then because Walter Radcliffe, the broker'j handsome young son, was home from college, and he was considered a critic on style and appearance. It was the general belief that he and Julia Dent would become en gaged before his vacation was over as she seemed to be the only girl ic town who could suit his fastidious taste in dress. Julia knew this and I she straightway ordered a new ward' i robe, among which was the much en I vied satin coat. Polly was thinkinghow nice it musl ! be to be rich, wear beautiful clothes and not be obliged to spoil one's hand; by housework. She thought, too, ho'w splendid it would be to be lookec upon with approval by Walter Radcliffe. How he must admire Julia ir her red satin coat! And the prettiest | thing Polly possessed was a white lin en dress embroidered by her own pinl I fingers. How hateful and common j place It seemed now beside Julia'i I rich clothes, and she had felt so prouc ! of it before! But Walter Radclifff i had complimented her the last tinu I she wore it, so it could not be so plaii j and commonplace, after all, since h< j admired it. j Polly's cheeks grew rosier as th< i laundry work progressed, and a bij fer I would do the washing, and Til do ! It'even at the. cost of such a pleasure | | as au auto ride." A few minutes later, as Julia was ; hurrying home she met Walter Rad cliffe unexpectedly on turning a street ; : corner. "Our friend Polly cannot ! join our auto party to-day," she in- ; t formed him after the usual greetings were over. ; ' The young man's face fell. "So? . I am, indeed, sorry to hear it. I hope i she is not ill." 1 Julia laughed. "Not at all! I J . found her just now shoulder deep in the soapsuds, her cheeks and hands j 5 soarlet. I suggested putting aside the j work and coming along with us, but ; , she would not shirk her duty to her j 1 mother. Poor little household ; , drudge!" A peal of laughter followed her r words, which somehow jarred on : Walter Radcliffe, and like a lightning t flash his thoughts and feelings underwent a change. . 3 " "I am sorry she cannot come," he t said earnestly, "but," his eyes grew a trifle cold as he looked at her, "I am 5 sure such faithfulness deserves re. ward, and for Polly's sake I shall nostDone the auto trip until to-mor 1 row." ; Polly was hanging out the clothes, so deep in her .disappointment that i " she did not hear the footsteps ap- j proaching until a tall, sylishly ! 1 dressed young man stood before her, hat in hand. Polly uttered a sur^ prised "Oh!" and made a wild plunge j to run out of sight, but was caught in a pair of strong athletic arms, and r soon found herself gazing into Walter f Radcliffe's merry blue eyes, which held in them a light so strange, so 1 thrilling, that poor little Polly was I actually frightened, yet her heart fluttered exquisitely at the same time. "Polly; I love you!"-he cried with the vehemenoe of youth' rfnd passion. "I want you to marry me! Will you, ' little girl?" - She freed herself from '"his arms and stared at him. "You marry me!" f she exclaimed, bewildered. "Why, | where is Julia? I thought you were I going to marry her?she is so stylish, I while I?oh. dear?" "You are the beBi. little girl in all ' the world, and I want you, Polly! . Listen I To-morrow we are going for i r a long auto ride, and I want you to j- promise to go along as my betrothed | j wife. Will you, dear?" r And Polly, like all the rest of her , sex, answered "Yes."?Boston Post, j ! The Wiles of Women, j r By TOM P. MORGAN. ' "Bewar'!" ominously said good old j > Parson Bagster, addressing the sad r dle-hued young theological student. r "Bewar' o' de wiles o' women!?an' 1 ee-specially widdah women! All 1 th'oo life de pafway of de preacher | I am besot by designin* women in [ sheep's clothin', seekin' whom dey I mought devour. I muhse'f was de j ' humble inst'ument in one o' de most 1 diabolical plots ever hatched to kotch ? a man; an' if it hadn't uh-been for ' de blessed fac* dat de Lawd was wid > me I'd sho' have been trapped! ' "Dar was a lady?good-lookin' yal" Iah widdah?dat indooced me, in muh J ' sonpisucacea innocence, to nui ner > f han' now an' ag'in, an' guggled like j > a jug wid bashfulness every time^ i Ah' she softly, whiepuhed in muh i 'yeah dat her' husband had <iied of t dat ar intellectual disease, info'ma- { : tion on de brain, leavin' her mighty i nigh three hundred dollars on de- j - posit, an' all alone in de col' world i 'cept for one brudder eight feet tall. [ . But. uh-well, sah, I was tuk sick on | i muh way home, 'count of a cullud i man dat was fatigued 'bout de afo'- j I said widdah kotchin* me an' hom merin' me widout mussy ? Lawd's - wuk, sah, dough I didn't organize it at de time?ontwell I was fast in muh t bed for two weeks. When I was able to crope out into de sunshine ag'in j > I learned dat it wasn't brains dat had 1 ' killed her husband, but a gropin' I I pain in his abandon dat twisted him j - out'n his mawtal quile; an' de money : 1 he left on deposit was what de cou'ts 1 b had c'Jected out'n him fum time to , - time in fines; and de brudder eight r i feet tall, dat a enterpri3in' pusson j - could a make his fawchin out'n in de ; 3 op'ry business, was two half-brud- i 1 ders, bofe hunch-backs fou' feet high , i an' busted in deir financials at dat; j i an', 'sides, de culled man dat gimme l ae Deatin naa one mar a ae wiaaan j next day atter his frolic wid me. I "I alius blesses de Lawd an' de 3 tudder gen'leman for lookin' out for I me when I was too innocent to take 1 r keer o' muhse'f. Bewar' o* de wiles 5 o' women!"?Puck. I 1 f Americans in London Society. i Regretfully as one must acknowl" j edge it, such novelties in the way of entertainments as have illumined the past rather dull season have been pro1 vided by Amerioan hostesses. The ' soiree Watteau gave recently in the J garden of a house not hundred ' miles from Sloane street'was abso-, lutely charming and original. It is wonderful what can be done with quite a commonplace "back garden" in a London square if the hostess only has ideas. This American ' one has many, and by means of roses, * electric lights, artfully constructed 1 little fountains and the most graceful measures?for it was pavanes and minuets and gavottes tnat were i * danced in suitable costume amid r these picturesque surroundings?she e transformed her little garden space into fairyland and transported her ? guests to the eighteenth century.'-? Lady's Pictorial. h> i A Question of Grammar. ^ Hetty's uncle, who was a school f teacher, met her on'the street one y beautiful May day and asked her if she was going out with the Maying e party. r "No; I ain't going." "Oh, my little dear," said her un.. cle. "you must not. say 'I ain't going.' You must say 'f am not going.' " and 0 he proceeded 10 give her a little lesson in grammar. "You are not going. > | He is not goir.g. We are not going. r I You are not going. They are not goy ing. Now, can you say all that, ,'t ! Hetty?" j ' Sure, I can." she replied, making 1 a courtesy. "There ain't nobody go, ia; "?TjiMip.raa itrtpg Woman's Creed. y It is the creed of the uprtto-date woman never to give herself away. A cup of coffee may be spilled over her delicate silk gown, she simply folds the breadths together and goes oh with her flow of feminine talk. "Enfant terrible" makes agonizing remarks, a rival gives some cruel stab; all is met with the same absolute immobility of countenance.?From the Lady. Brave Women. On the western ooast of the United States, at Monterey, Cal., Mrs. Fish keeps the lamps lighted in the Point Pinas lighthouse. On the eastern coast, at South Portland, Me., Mrs. Oorden earns her living by working as a deep-sea diver. Sprinkled over the country by these two women are thousands of other members of the sex ^rho deserve to be enrolled as auxiliaries to Mr. Kipling's corps of "Unafraid Gentlemen." ? Technical Wbrld.' , Invisible Clothes. It's coming to that. We have the lingerie blousfe. The latest is the lace corset cover. It Is made of Cluny, ten inches in : width. J It is modeled on the old embroidery favorite. Ribbons or lace insertions are run 1 over the shoulders. A strip of lace insertion serves for the waistband. Cluny of suitable width costs $5.50 a yard, and most fair ones need a yard. Those who frowned upon the peek-; - . French Qmelet.?Bre <?? g cup, to be sure they areT* s? [ light, but not as long as _CM 5" ( of milk. Heat a level tat B V pan and when hot turn "S ? pick It up in several pis 5 may run under the edges, a it is cooked hard, slip a r 1 under one side and fold c fa * ! ing the platter on the oi "* J i when the omelet will be aboo blouse, with its perforated frankness, little thought to see it supplanted by a corset cover even more open work.?Philadelphia Record. Vassar Blonds, Blacks and Reds. A- VflOr iVlUUIIlg [Jill u ui tuc oi/uuvi j vv?? rather lacking In sensations, twenty young women students in Vassar have organized a hockey tournament in which the compkiilg teams'-shall' be distinguished'by the color of their hair. In a match which took place on the oollege campus recently the members of one team were brunettes, while their opponents were selected from among the undergraduates having red hair. After an exciting and hard-fought contest the latter won. During the game the grounds were crowded with the friends and supporters of the contestants, who cheered vociferously for their favorites. The "blacks" made the first goal on a clever play by Miss Polly Gardner, but following this Miss Ann Cook, of the "reds," became the star of the day by making two goals in rapid succession. The team of blonds challenged the victorious "reds," confident of winning. Many boxes of fudge were wagered-on the result.?Poughkeepsie Dispatch to New York Herald. Tlio Friendly Girl. The girl who makes friends wherever she goes is delightful.-She cornea into a room like a sea breeze, fresh, laughing, nodding right and left with happy impartiality She is ready for anything, and never throws cold water on your plans. She generally sees the funny slde.of things, and she has such a whole-hearted way of describing them that you feel as if you had seen them yourself. She does not retail gossip, though, and she does not know how to be spiteful, or sarcastic, or bitter, and she never exaggerates to produce an impression. She knows how to be clever and funny without being unkind, or .untruthful, or coarse. She likes everybody, not considering It is her duty to suspect any one of evil until they have proved good. She prefers to consider the world good and honest until it proves itself otherwise. She always gets along, M? ~u- v"r?~ nw/apvn/haro T-Tpr lur sue uaa uicuuu vtv>^ * v. heart is big enough to contain everybody, and she never forgets her friends, or is forgotten by them.? McCall's Magazine. What the Eyes Tell. Steady, widely opened eyes that are not afraid to meet yours mean sincerity and honor. But the steady, glinting eyes that look through half-closed lids at you would rather indicate a cold and sus picious nature. Beware of the shifting, faltering eyes that always look away from you. Small eyes usually mean an alert mind. If they look straight out at you steady and bright, like a squirrel's, you may expect the right sort of cleverness, a quick tongue and a gift of repartee. But if the small eyes are more dim j fcnd do not look straight into yours. | you may look for the wrong kind of cleverness, for little dishonesties and equivocations and for a bueiness sharpness that is willing to sacrifice ; too much for a little money. i Your large, tranquil "cow-like"; eves, on the other hand, are lesa re- | woman's! xh realm j | j a 3$S'\ ! 74*s/- . v ?6* * sponslve than the alert/ bright, little beady eyes, but once stir them to' their depths and they will look In- j finitely more intense and ftfeanjngful i 1 mau me mure ituput^irc; c;co. ' rrr^T Round, protruding "eyes show an ' v0 ambitious nature and a lore of ac- '*?n tion. ' w The longer eyes show more the j temperament -of the dreamer. 1 The most beautiful eyes in the j wo; world are very clear (that indicates ' 1 good health) and are set widely apart 1 but and rather deep. That width of setting always gives ; a certain expression of sweet spirit- ; ] uality.?Indianapolis News. j are ] PRGTTY & 133 9PH,NSSJm TOW?AJl4y^ j" i she Fashionable fans are very small. Boi j-Most of the new coats show added fullness. Many parasols are made of English chintz. ' 30^ Some of the smartest hats are cin- . rap namon-toned. 1 . for Shadow-striped mohairs are excel- . lent for traveling wear. All the pr6tty, faded, washed-out j < dyes continue to be modish. | ma Birds perched on top of parasol tw< handles are seen everywhere. ' ' Sheer silk and chiffon wraps figure ' prominently at the resorts. urientai designs ana colorings nave ; a great vogue among parasols. ! t-] j ^ ak three eggs, one at a time, in a : U3l fresh. Turn, into a bowl and beat ; w'y for a cake, add three tablespoons : fr. >lespoon of butter in a small omelet in the ejgs. >Aa the omelet cooks ices so that the uncooked mixture W^en it looks creamy, but before broad knife round the edge, then J \ fver. Serve on a hot platter by lay- j melet pan *nd then inverting both, j pn on the platter unbroken. i New turbans are all large and generally are very simply trimmed. There is a rumor that jackets will : to not figure in the coming styles. j High-waisted, one-piece frocks are j quaint and charming for children. ! "Middy" blouses for young girl? \ are popular for out-of-door sports. j Narrow embroidered silk ties are ' worked in <ol9rsrofl*>hite or a color. ,j , ;; A numfeer of the straw hats are of ' _ the color of corn, ripe from the fields. ! Cabochons of straw with jewel cen- j tres will be seen on some of the smart hats- . i hu Roumanian embroidery appears on ma many hats, blouses, frocks and coat ; suits. Black sashes accompany many colored gowns and are even worn with white. j a Gold and silver chatelaine bags are | . ( in bad form for tailormades and other j forenoon wear. ^ filet lace or embroidery on netting | is one of the most fashionable trim- j mings of the hour. Amethyst and wistaria, in spite ot j their long vogue last year, seem to be bobbing up serenely. )Bronze,pumps, finished with; a single: strap and large rosette or buckle, m3 are in great favor. Sashes are used wherever a line j coi need3 lengthening or floating eadi will enhance an effect. Cross-stitch embroidery has a re- i vival. It Is used on cushion covers, | wh table covers and bags. j ma Green is almost garishly bright for I costumes. On millinery it frequently , gives just the touch needed. Fashion Note. "u~'^^1 gel ! *''? Here's a novel suggestion for the girl, who is hunting for something really new. ! The full kilted skirt is topped by au apron j over-skirt :ind the sleeve is all in one with j P?' the blouse. On the right girl it would b? ! *!*' very fetching- ? 4W e' simple village belle. be is a simple village belle Whom we, perforce, admire; 0 splendid effort to be "swell* la shown in her attire. 'er shirt waist is both neat and white. She wear.j a flowered bonnet? 1 olden times so fair a sight Would hfcve inspired a sonnet. he strolls along unconscious that By all she is adored? That think you if I tell you flat She's here for summer board; hafc though attired with simpleness. Expert aroasmaking scholars saert her unassuming dress Cost just two hundred dollars! ?Wilbur D. Net*bit, in Juage. Hospitality! landlady?"Whenever you want a f bath, sir, just Ifet'-^e ;know, and hsee you have it!''?London OpinPossible, But?. CVife?"In a battle of tongues a min /vqVi VinlH hpr nwn " husband?"M'yes, p'r'aps she can; ; she never does."?Tit-Bits. Two Instead of One. Rollins?"Do you know that there two full moons this August?" Rounder?"Sure! Saw 'em both t night."?Boston Transcript. Would Dye to Do It. rack?"She asked me what color r I liked best." Estelle?"That's just like Mabel; t's always so anxious to please."? iton Transcript. 4 Logical. 'A disease should be attacked at Its irce." 'Then if a man's disease is herediv I suDDose you'd doctor his father it, eh?"?Boston Transcript. The Central Interest. "Come quick, doctor, there is a a up-stairs who has swallowed a anty-franc piece." * 'Are you his wife?" "No, his landlady."?Pele Mele. The Better Way. First Boston Child?"Do you beire in corporal punishment?" Second Boston Child?"No; I can lally make my parents do what 1 jh by moral suasion." ? Boston jnscript. Had an Answer. whv Hrt vnu reDeat so manv :es?" "Some of these jokes," replied the ?ss humorist with dignity, "are rth impressing on people."?Louisle Courier-Journal. Easily Located. "Queer styles the girls affect. Hard find the waistline these days." "Oh, no." "Think not?" "Not at all. The waistline is wher< i pins are."?Louisville Courier urnal. ; \ ___ The Touch of Fortune. . "What do you think, my dear' ch luck! We leave for Paris'in ar ur." "Really?" "Yes, we're going to Pasteur's. Mj sband has just been bitten by i id dog."?Bon Vivant. The Party of the First Part. General?"Send my orderly to m< once." Aide-de-Camp?"Sorry, sir, lie nai jt been cut in two by a bullet." General?"Then order that part o: n to be found which contains mj jacco pouch."?Sourir. New Use For the Auto. She (in a motor car)?"What wai } matter?" j He?"Oh, nothing." She?"Then why'did you stop th( ichine and crawl under it?" He?"I saw one of my creditori ning."?Boston Transcript. An Embiyo Carolyn Wells. Mother?"There was an old womai 10 lived in a shoe. She had s( tny children?" Mabel (interrupting)?"Mamma,] ow what kind of a shoe that was? Lid shoe."?Boston Transcript Quoit Useful. Young Wife?"And you would lik? r doughnuts if they were' larger' at is very complimentary." Easeoff Laybor?"Yes; then me an ! pals could 'ave a game o' quoit: wq by the waterin' tanks."?Ideas. Smooth Waters. The Eoy?"Have yer caught any ng, zur?" The Angler?"No. not yet, inj y." The Boy?"Ah, I thought not .ure weren't no water in that pone I it rained last night."?The Sketch How is This? "Are nolle CU LUt; uiiusaa 51113 o" ; to the seashore?" "Why do you ask such a questior that?" "I haven't seen any news iten out a lady slipping through a craci the boardvralk."?Louisville Conr -Journal. Modern Methods. "Si Whiffle tree believes in scientific raing." "What's he done0" "Hired a quarter ro sing auu mi :ors from a rural play to tall: dia :t. He's simply turning away the tnmer boarders."?Louisville Cour-Journal. Works in New York. "And what do you do when a pal ls pinched with a stolen watch on i person?" "I posi? as a solid citizen protesting ainst arrest," explained the pick2ket. "Then, while the cop is husj estin' me, me pal makes a getay."?Louisville Courier-Journal, - HIS DAYS NUMBERED. How a> Younjjstown Man Disappointed Uie Pessimists. John H. Trube, '.M2 Harvard St., Youngstown, Ohio, says: "la spite of three different doctors I was getting worse, and was told I couldn't live tsix months. Thejr called it Bright's disease. My limbs were swollen so badly I had to keep to the bouse for nine mouths. The urino was thick, passages were frequent and scanty and my head was sore and dizzy. I used Doan's Kidney Pills on the advice of a friend, found com-' plete relief in time, and two years have now passed without a sign of kidney trouble." Remember the name?Doan's. %jld by all dealers. 60 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y. 1 * ' ~V ?t--- ? . v The greatest daily chau*4e of tem- v perature to be found cn the earth's " surface is in Arizona. There <3 fre-' quently a change of eighty degrees In twelve hours. I "MEMOIRS OP DAN RICK." THB : CLOWN OP OUR DADDIES. Dan Rice in His "Memoirs" Tells Inside Mysteries of Show Life. , 1 Any bookseller will tell you that 1 the constant quest of bis customers Is for "a book which wHl make me . 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, . i the "Memoirs of l)aD Rice," - the | Clown of Our Daddies, written toy Maria Ward Brown, a book gtiaranI teed to make you roar with laughter.' | The author presents to the'pubile'a ' volume of the great jester's most i pungent jokes, comic harangues. ' ' caustic hits upon men and manners, j lectures, anecdotes, sketches of adventure, original songs and poetical I effusions; wise and witty, serious. ! satirical, and sentimental sayings of - j the sawdust arena of other days. > i Old Dan Rice, as proprietor of the famous "One Horse Stow," was mor? 1 of a national character than Artemua j Ward, and this volume contains the > humor which made the nation laugh ; even while the great Civil War raged. This fascinating book of 600 pages, beautifully illustrated, will be sent ; , yon postpaid for 511.50 by Book Pubr { lisbing Hou3e, 134 Leonard street, I i lfewYorfc 1 > I .-tS i The electric lighting industry to ; represented in the United States by 5264 companies and municipal plants. ! Care of School Children in Japan. ! .i Consul George H. Scidmore, of Na- . 1 -I gasakl, In answer to an Inquiry; to' \ ports that a thorough physical examinatlon of all school children in Japan must be made by physicians in April , t each year, and a monthly sanitary in- S t I spectlon. made by physicians also, of all school buildings, their contents, water supply, surroundings, etc:, also | a monthly examination of pupils;&ut > ' not so minute as the annual examine . I tions. If a pupil is found to reqtiir* ; medical treatment the fact must be | reported to the parents ; CO^VOQ&QW flay W ^etmTvevv^i ov&rcoma Xiy prop sistancscj fea c&& Vr*\y WftcuA 1 * c iFa. .FV..V 3 i iQ^lV&tftmyoy^vjiv^cMAiui f i cjSem,^cKena\^OTS\c^^occ I r ' VbVtsda\\vsot\\a\ assutaiKftto ivoiute, I | \tvo^' be ?raMty dwpeuseA wtt\\ I I wWtw Wilder tieedei. as ^e\xsio} I 8 TCM&\?S wVa\ w^ivrc& arc to ass\sY I &aXure,attdflsA to sw^AwX tM^urgX I 5 Jutufyous As^eo^ uViv- 8 , r ma^upou^topef \\fluns\vrcvet&, 1 proper djorts.and r$*fyw$ $moXtyi B lb $a'ta ber\?$\c\c& ^aiioWysboy &A ^CWB?? I HflNvTACTuflEU Ov rw?c CALIFORNIA I > Pic Syrup Co. B SOU) BY ALL LEAD! NO DRUGGISTS 9 ^ OMeStZCONUr-ROUtMPfUCC so* PER BOTTUr J Hale's Honey I U of Horeboond and Tar I ; Clears I ! The Voice I Sold by Druj-gista I Pike's ToolhncRie Drop* K B Cure in One Minute I I i?iniH-iB? ii j I , FOR INFORMATION AS TO LANDS IN 'I PThe Nation's OTTj I Garden Spot V I THAT GREAT FRUIT and TRUCK 9 | I CROWING SECTION- ? i ! Atlantic Coast Line I : RAILROAD I w"-*t? *nr1 Smith Carolin*. I in TimiUIBt nulla Georgia, Alabama and Florida, write to B WILBUR McCOY, Agricultural and immigration A cent. ? ! Atlantic Coast Line, - - Jacksonville, Fla. H " "i ji' Hj ! |f Children Like ^ I PCURE SI m bist mmz m (gu wis # (guas . It is so pleasant to take?stops the j H cough so quickly. Absolutely safe ' H too and contains no opiates. ] AO Drusgiate, 25 centa. j I ? ^