A POLICEMAN'S EXPERIENCE. Suffered for Years From Chronic Kidney Trouble. f ? "Walter J. Stanton, 1139 Pear St., Camden, N. J., says: "Kidney trouble 4 bothered me for flfstooped, sharp twin- < ges shot through my 1 back and It was hard : for me to arise. I was ! treated by several doc- j tors, one a specialist, but did not receive relief. Finally I be- J gan using Doun's , I soon noticed an improvement. I con- ( tinued until the trouble disappeared." Remember the name ? Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. j Foster-Milburn Co, Buffalo, N. Y. , WELL QUALIFIED. \ Squilbob?That fellow over there ^would make a splendid magazine poet. ! Squilligan?A genius, eh? \ : Squillbob?No, but he has dyspepsia i ?o bad that he would't get bo hungry I l I-UTl-Ufc. Merely a Prevaricator. j A doctor relates the following story: "I had a patient who was very ill and who ought to have gone to a warmer 1 climate, so I Resolved to try what hyp- j inotism would do for him. 1 had a ' llarge sun painted on the ceiling of hia room and by suggestion induced him j ito think it was the sun which would ; icure him. The ruse succeeded and he was getting better rapidly wher ! :one day on my arrival I found he wai j ? idead." "Did it fail, after all, then?" asked [ jone of the doctor's hearers. "No," replied the doctor, "he died I of sunstroke." I He Knew the Kind. j Little Edward, aged four, was au j !only child. He was anxious for a j !baby sister, and was talking of it one ! day with a friend of the family. In I ithe friend's family was a baby girl ol : one year. The lady said: Edward, j iyou may have my baby; she is pretty j And sweet" i "Oh," said Edward, "I don't want an ' old baby. I want a bran new one wif j inoffin on but tacum powder."?Red iHen. | J Mathematical Request. j Little Mary, seven years old, was j iBaying her prayers. "And, God," she [petitioned at the close, "make seven j (times six forty-eighty" ! "Why, Mary, why diti you say that?" asked her mother. " Cause that's the way I wrote it in i I'zamination in school today, and I want it to be right."?Lippincott's. A Simple Matter. "Charley, dear," said Young Mrs. i 'Torkins, "the paper says that the Pro- i 'fcibitionists have trouble with boot- ; leggers." "I believe so." "Men are so stupid! Why don't (they put a stop to it by compelling everybody to wear low shoes?" Hedging. Clergyman?Will you take this wo- | [man until death? i Prospective Bridegroom?Isn't there ' < lany minimum sentence? I At Rehearsal. Fan?What happens when the bases Are full? Man?A discord.?Stanford Unlver J fllty Chaparral. t j Know How ! To Keep Cool? j ! When Summer's sun ! j and daily toil heat the i blood to an uncomfort| able degree, there is noth- i I ing so comforting and or or* o /rloco r\( i IL,UUIlJLIg CXO) CL Ui, I I Iced Postum ! I I I i served with sugar and a ! I lpmnn IllttiV AVliiVMI I Surprising, too, how ' the food elements relieve ! fatigue and sustain one. i The flavour is deli- ; cious?and Postum is j really a food drink. "There's a Reason" POSTUM CEREAL CO., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. J' pasture. Some plow the potato ground in the fall and sow to wheat or rye. * Certainly if weeds are present the * ground should be plowed as soon as a the potatoes are dug. The idea is to * secure a fine seed bed and have the a ground free from weeds, the great 4 curse of the American farm. All ' thinp-s r>nnsidprpfl there ia nrobably *r Importance of Sheep Ancestry. As in the high standard class the sire is the sheep, which above all others, brings worth, excellence and quality, so in this manner to the common flocks of all possess a frame well suited to the laying on of flesh, not fat, on the parts which furnish the highest priced cuts. A good back, well sprung ribs, a full chest, plenty heart girth, short, strong neck, a masculine head, with short leg#, set it the corners and all should be well backed up are the general physical evidences of good ancestry.?Epitomist. Mixed Feeds. All animals on the farm prefer feeds that may not be relished by some others. Advantage should be taken of this fact to utilize all the materials that might be wasted if there were some animals that would not accept them. A judicious use of the feed cutter, mixing a little meal or bran with the food and tempting the animal with a variety will render serviceable even such foods as wheat, straw and corn fodder. There are several modes of serving corn fodder that will make it acceptable, even to iainty animals.?Epitomist. Poultry Business. Before going into the poultry business on a large scale it would be wise to plan well, study every aeian 01 the business and do not overlook ;hances for failure, for there are as many in poultry raising as in any jther business. Many allow the AN IDEA o" 2 E3 zo T' RHUBAFsS-2 A3PV j 2 5 POLI ; ' TOM ! 3 ,CA33, 'i $ CAULrr PRQGOLLl- 1 ' 0 PfrPPEK$>-l ;10 cej 1 a J * LEJ j? (CAP j? ... ZZ \ 0 TUKHIP^-li ] ?i frA* a . r. 13 XO < > * g ' I p :pe j g i! ' | PU^HI !:s_ > L.?T" j 8?j'rhTfr-l MU3KMLi.O/H5-6H.LL! I FU/APKIM5-4H ? WIATLft 5>QUAiH-5f t A garden planned thus will sup winter vegetables in plenty. Numb in feet is shown at top and side.?H linnflits nf Kiirress to overshadow their cautiousness and frequently suffer later. Poultry raising is a profitable industry, and will pay as well foi the amount of money invested as an> other business, but it takes good management and attention to. details ?National Poultry Journal. . Tobacco For Sheep. Trainloads of tobacco are now being fed to sheep and lambs. It's no longer, "Will tobacco prevent or cure stomach worms, and is it safe to feed it?" Let the educators and the experimentalists say what they will, the tobacco treatment is "doing the work" all over this land. Tobacco, either in the proprietary medicines and foods or fed alone with salt, is saving hundreds of thousands ol lambs and that means the salvation ol thousands of flockmen, who had about gives up in despair their fight against the stomach and intestinal pests, Don't be afraid of tobacco. Feed il three times a week. Give it to youi horses and colts and your hogs. II they are wormy or out of condition you will note a radical change in three weeks.?Farmers' Home Journal. Protective Instinct of Animals. It is usually believed that animals have a protective instinct which pre vents their eating poisonous plants such as mankind frequently eats through ignorance, but this instinct is by no means general or positive. Ii the West the stock raisers are undei a serious annual drain, due to deati from plant poisoning, resulting fron grazing on larkspur, death camas water hemlock, lupines and rubbei plant. Record was recently made o: a case of undisputed mushroom poi soning, which occurred in Sweden where a herd of cows ate some of ttu poisonous varieties of mushrooms which, with accompanying familiai symptoms, resulted fatally in a num.' ber of cases. Nevertheless, it ha? been clearly demonstrated that th< protective instinct in animals usuall] enables them to avoid plant poisoninj while grazing, and even in the ha: that is given them in winter.?Epito mist. Keep the Field Clean. If potatoes are to precede a sprint sowing of alfalfa, more than usua cire should be tanen to keep the fiek clean of weeds. Some farmers dr well by sowing millet with the lac cultivation of potatoes, leaving th( potatoes in the ground until after th< millet is harvested, and when th< crop is dug the land is free fron weeds. Then it may be harrowed o' disked and seeded to rye for wiutci ??imnH ix> crop which leaves the soil in finer ? , physical condition for alfalfa-sowing than millet, and none that is more * unsatisfactory for a like purpose than 1 sorghum or Kaffir corn that was ^ planted in hills or rows.?From Co- ? burn's "The Book of Alfalfa." a t Changes tn the Horse's Food. There are few horsemen who have < not from dire experience learned that ] ' sudden changes in a horse's diet re- l ' suit disastrously. A change from j oats to corn, or from timoi.hy to clo- t ver, or blue stem to alfalfa, or even from alfalfa to blue stem, often re- j suits in indigestion, with flatulence > or impaction. Even a bran mash on 3 Saturday night or Sunday morning ^ frequently produces scouring if the horse is worked next day. c Several experiments quoted by Dr. s Fred Smith throw interesting light on c this question. Five horses were given four pounds of oats, and four horses were given three pounds of oats, and all nine were destroyed about four hours later. Four of the number receiving four pounds had digested from two to three pounds of the grain, and three of those receiving four pounds had digested approximately one and firee-quarter L GARDEN. " JO 33 ^ 4S 30 J lji | , 5?EP-DtD( ' a l?l s? \RAQU3-2 'z BEA^S-2 I ATOL^>-l LOWER, EARLY-1 T ipkl^SelsTprouts-i t ' j coop. If the weather is suitable the | next afternoon let the mother bring 1 them out for a little stroll. During the time clean out the coop, put in * ' fresh dry grajjs. Take the pan con? taining the last feed for the day, c ' place in a coop, then persuade the ' hen to bring her brood hither. By r the next day the little ones will re- a ' lieve you of that task. Let them out f every morning the weather is fit. Af- : t I ter the first week feed three times a I day. stale bread, egg bread and hard ' boiled eggs. I greatly advocate the ' : egg diet, as nothing else will assist 16 ' nature in growing feathers so readily. e Now should your little turkeys . I show any symptoms of having been 1 ' j overfed, give one grain of calomel in J c " j feed followed by one tablespoonful of j t , I castor oil in next feed. This is the i * proportion for twenty-five. Six years ' J ago I experimented with a flock of fifty that ha'l been overfed. On reaching the coop found several dead, s some gasping, and without an excep- t tion every one of them suffering from i r the same cause. Their eyelids were c 1 drawn, ej'es partially closed and res- t 1 piration3 were very rapid. What > must I do? The thought, "Arouse c t j their liver," occurred to me. I ini- t J mediately proceeded to do so. Ten - i ^ROT^-4 ZT3-4 KUTA&AGA- ^ KH-4 A?.-? >EAM3-31 ruC?r-2" > CUCUMDERS-lHnuLf. ; WATERMELONS-SH a ~ ^Jmt^pQJAW,PUitl-gM * SUMMER 23L'A}M,V)Nt-5H. r ply a family of five with summer and j ers indicate rows or hills. The scale t ouse and Garden. 1 , r pounds. "While the remaining one of g the first five had digested only twelve t ounces and the rems.iniDg one of the b second let had digested none what- t ' ever. a Of these two horses the first had t not tasted oats for eighteen months, c but the second, while he had been e used to eating oats, was placed in a strange place for the experiment, and was of a very nervous temperament. No. 1 illustrates the results of a 1 change of diet, and No. 2 shows the j f ' results of unusual surroundings on a i ! nervous horse. I. Further comment seems unneces! sary.?I. E. Newsom, Colorado Agri! cultural College. t * 1 Young Tnrkeys. 1 After the hens are through hatching lift the mother carefully from the t nest, take out the young turks, place them in a box softly lined. Then B carry the mother and brood and put into a large, well ventilated coop, always putting in something to keep the little turkeys'from coming in contact with the mother earth, which is 150 likely to give them cold. Now as 1 to nourishment, give small quantity c of egg and milk, cooked; then alternately feed hard boiled eggs and stale 2 1 bread crumbs. Feed every three hours for several days. Place a pan j of fine grit and fresh water in the ! THE TRUTH ABOUT GOVERN- J : MENT JOBS. : lootoeositotecsaitfioseett Persons who do not reside in Washington can form no adequate idea of he pressure brought to bear on Sen- I ,tor?. and Representatives for posi- 3 ions in the Government service. Men ] .nd women, young and old, troop to ] he Capitol every day with this re- j rain: 1 "I want a job, and I know you can ' ;et it for me if you will only try." As a mattor of fact, it is an exremely difficult thing to secure posiions in the service, now that civil ser- 3 ice is the rule in all the executive j lepartments. This, however, is an | idvantage rather than a disadvantage } o the office seekers. Especially is ] his true of the men who make the | ipplications, for when a man goes | 'into the Government," ho practicaly condemns himself to amount to ?othing for the rest ol! his life. There , s scarcely an opportunity tor any but he slowest promotion, and a GovirnmeLt clerk who gets more than 11500 a year is playing in line luck. To one young man who was an:ious to get such a job a Western Jongreesman once said: "Young man, you will have more hance for a future if go back home , ind maul rails. You might as well ast yourself into the sea with a milltone about your neck as to go into a ioveriiment department and expect o accomplish anything." Nevertheless, it is hard to persuade he office hunters of this. They ex-* lect to have easy hours and a comlaratively easy wage. They get this, iut added to it is drudgery for life, , treadmill existence unlighted by he hope of achievement or fame. Vhen they marry and rear families, heir former "easy wage" cannot ;eep them out of debt, and this once ccumulated in Washington, remains. ?From the Popular Magazine. BOTTLE SEALED UP IN TREE. found in Heart of Maple, Where It Had Been for Thirty Years. A pint bottle filled with rare old vhisky, the age of which i3 uncerain, has been found here, imbedded olidly In the heart or a mapie tree ilmost four feet in diameter. President Graham, of the Park Board, concluded that there were too nany trees in Bayliss Park, a breath, ng spot in the centre of the city, so ie concluded to cut out a number of he maples that were planted more hato fifty years ago, when Council 31uffs was first given a place upon he Iowa map. One particular tree that was In the ourse of a new path that was pro?osed was marked for the sacrifice, ^he choppers felled this tree, finding t solid from circumference to centre. Jawing the trunk into four foot engths, eight feet from the butt, the aw just missed a long necked blaclc >ottle. Observing It the choppers :arefirily hewed away the wood, when o their surprise, they brought forth, ightly corked, a bottle of one pint apacity, filled with liquor. The cork <*as removed and the odor of liquor >ecame apparent. It was sampled by iXDerts. who Dronounced it whisky of . most superior quality. How the bottle of whisky got into he centre of the huge maple tree is a nystery that even the oldest settlef s unable to solve. At no place about t was there any cavity, and counting he rings of wood from the place vhere the bottle was lodged, each me of which represents a year'a ;rowth of the tree, it must have been here thirty years. Besides this, old ettlers state that the bottle is of the ype in use from fifty to sixty years igo. The bottle and contents have >een placed in the public library as a urio. ? Council Bluffs Correspond' mce Sioux City Journal. WORDS OP WISDOM. More men fail from fears than from oes. The lowly heart finds the higher ife. The great test is, can we bear the ittle frets? The lazy man is always proud of lis patience. Many a man models his golden calf tefore a mirror. v Many mistake a sealed head for a anctified heart. Life owes a living only to the man vho gives a life. They who wait on God are never ound sitting idle. It is better to right wrongs than o revenge them. More opinions are born in the stomich than in the head. It takes more than church fairs to nake a fair church. You cannot get at a man's heart by jetting under his skin. True saints never groan over the jrowing pains of grace. The sins we wink at to-day are the ines we work to-morrow. Things do not work together for ;ood to the man who will not work at ill. Therp is a world of difference be ween the rule of gold and the golden ule. 1 You never can lift the submerged ;o long as you fear to soil your leeves. It's easy to think you are standing ; Or public liberty when private liense is in your eye.?From "Sen^ cnce Sermons," in the Chicago Trib- 1 ine. The Kaffir's Day Off. < When the South African Kaffir ha? i "day off" and sets about enjoying jlmself one of his greatest pleasures s to dress himself up in some extra- ' rdinary fashion and generally play he fool. ( The fete day umbrella and sundry 1 :urious forms of headgear are ' rought forth. Several hold up can- ' lies, although it is daylight, to show ' iow civilized and up to date they are. 1 'rude musical instruments?anything ^ hat will make a noise?are greatly < o the fore on such occasions as these. : -Wide World. 2 A Hospitality Hint. When I expect a guest from a die- \ tance, said a reader, I purchase a number of souvenir postcards of our home town and after stamping them place them on the desk in the guest room, where they can he addressed and sent hack without any shopping being done by my guest. For Spanish Lace. It is altogether possible to give a new leaBe of life to handsome Spanish lace that shows signs of wearing by transferring the figures to a new net ground. If the lace is black and rusty, freshen it by dipping lightly In coffee or vinegar and water. Very handsome lace should he dyed; then, with t&e new, grounding, it is better than new. 5*111 in openings with lace Btitches?they are not hard to learn. Where time is plenty and patience abounds, something rather wonderful may be achieved by holding a fine gold thread around the lace figures, of either black or white, and overcasting it firmly but sparsely with em broidery silk, either matching the lace or the thing it is meant finally to adorn.?New York Presu. Makes Housework Easy. Newest Scrubbing Device. When Sweeping. Dust, when sweeping, grinds into the skin, roughens it and makes it a bad color, as well as giving ,a feeling of great discomfort, as all will testify who are compelled to do much sweeping. The face and neck can he splendidly protected in a very simple way from much of the annoyance from dust when sweeping if you will before beginning operations annoint the face and neck with cold cream, and then dust over with talcum powder. This' may be very easily washed off after the day's sweeping is done and will not leave the face after washing feeling drawn and dried out. The cold cream and talcum powder protect tile pores of the skin from becoming clogged by the dust. It will only take a very few minute* to apply the cold cream and powder. You will feel that it has been time well spent at the end of the day. Would that therGi were as equally simple way to protect the nose and throat from the dust!? Newark Call. ' Table Linen. Table linen of the very cheapest variety can be made to look remark- i ably well if laundered according to j + w>svfVin/4 +}ion in the HRlifll I buis XIIC bliUU i avugi I.UMU vuw V.W way: The first step in washing linen well is to put it to soak over night in lukewarm water, being very careful to soak all the grease spots or particularly soiled places. In the morning wash carefully and boil the linen, then rinse well in several waters; then blue. Fold the linen as carefully as you can; it being wet, put through the wringer. If the linen is much creased or folded unevenly, fold again carefully; then roll up in a clean dry sheet. Leave the linen rolled up in this way for an hour; then iron with a good hot iron until dry. As said before the cheapest linen may be made to take on a sheen as beautiful as the finest linen if ironed in this way. Besides looking well, it is a saving in the linen to launder it in the way described. This method is well worth trying. It may sound as though it would be a good deal of trouble to launder linen in this way; in reality it is the most simple and easy thing.?Newark Call. Plain Cake?One-third cup butter, when melted, break in two eggs, fill cup up with milk, seven-eighth cup of sugar and beat all together and add a little over one cup flour with heaping teaspoon baking powder. Rhubarb and Raisin Pie?Chop fine one pound of rhubarb and one and one-half cupfuls of seeded raisins. Add one pint of sugar and two well beaten eggs. This will make two pies; make with top and bottom crusts. Frizzled Beef?Cut dried beef into eery thin shavings; put into a frying pan nearly half full of cold water; set over the fire and let it come to a boil; then stir in a large lump of butter and enough flour to make a good trravr % D J * Vermicelli Soup?Swell one-quarter of a pound of vermicelli in a quart jf warm water; then add to it a good beef broth (made from trimmings of beef) with a pound of sweet butter; let the soup boil for fifteen minutes liter it is added. Cornmeal Flapjacks?One quart of :old water is mixed with meal enough :o make a thin batter, one teaspoonrul of salt, one or two teaspoonfuls of Daking powder having been stirred n the batter. The addition of one or wo eggs improves it. Cook on a rery hot pan, greased; scrape it after >ach panful is cooked, then only occasional greasing will be required, ^easing with a clean rag. SHOULD HAVE BEEN BUSY. ^ Old Lady?What are you crying about, my little man? Kid?Nothin'. , Old Lady?Nothin! , Ie Kid?Yes. Me teacher ast me what ^ I was doin' an' I told her nothin', and ! he said I ought a been doin' sumthin' ?an' give me a llckin'. '' SCRATCHED SO SHE COULD w NOT SLEEP 'n "I write to tell you how thankful I, ^ am for the wonderful Cuticura RenH ?dies. My little niece had eczema fon five years and when her mother died* I took care of the child. It was all over her face and body, also on her g head. She scratched so that she could not sleep nights. I used Cuticura Soap to wash her with and then applied Cuticura Ointment I did not use quite half the Cuticura Soap and Ointment, together with Cuticura Resolvent, when you could see a change and they cured her nicely. Nov she Is eleven years old and has never beeu bothered with eczema "since. My friends think it is just great the way the baby was cured by Cuticura. I send you a picture taken when she was about 18 months old. "She was taken with the eczema when two years old. She was covered with big sores and her mother had all the best doctors and tried all kinds of salves and medicines without effect \ until we used Cuticura Remedies. Mrs. H. Kiernan, 663 Quincy St, Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept 27, 1909." AN INSURANCE EXCEPTION. \ "Now," said the chronic qooter, "a man is known by the company he keeps." "Say, I'm an insurance policy hold- ? er! Please don't class me with the 4 company I keep." 1 Wife and Country. ^ Paul D. Cavath, the noted New c York lawyer, said at a luncheon at the Lawyers' club: Vacation time is f( here, and already that dreadful song about the wife gone to the - country is being resurrected. But a variant C( to the song was furnished by a con- 81 versation I overheard the other night. ^ " 'Hello, Smith,' said one man to ^ another. 'I'm glad to see you back V at the club again, old fellow. .Wife off to the country eh?' " 'No,' growled Smith. 'She's got __ back.'" , A Real Argument I They were talking about arguments, not in the abstract, but as applying to domestic happiness. "What do you w think is the most unanswerable ar- ? gument you ever heard?" one bachelor asked a married man. . "That's very easy," He replied. m "When your wife says: "If they can afford .lt, we can,' there Is no flaw In b that?and never will be."?Youtlfs ? Campanlon. Shake Into Your Shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, the Antiseptic Powdsf. . It makes tight or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain car* for sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching feet. Always use ,i$ to ' Break in new shoes. Sold by all Druggists, 25c. Trial package mailed FREE. Aadresi Fc Allen S. Olmsted. Le Roy. N. Y. 5j re Generosity. *? "I never deny my wife a wish." J, "Indeed?" "No; I let her wish. It doesn't cost anything."?Life. j Red, Weak. Weary, Watery Eyes. Relieved By Murine Eye Remedy. Try Murine For Your Eye Troubles. You Will Like Murine. It Soothes. 50c at Your Druggists. Write For Eye Books. Free. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. The grand knowledge for a man to E rtnow is the essential and eternal dif- ^ ference between right and wrong, be iween base and noble.?Mallock. & Many a budding genius has devel- Sh oped into a blooming idiot. A nagging wife makes her husband ? target his other troubles. d Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup tor Childr.-n * teething-softens t begum s, red u cesi nflan: n >:i - ? Mon, ullayspain.cKres wind colic, 25c&boff" If | No other man appreciates a helping i band like a man in trouble. P The supply of talk always exceeds | the demand- 1 w ^wWE*^ There are lamps that cost JMf price. Constructed of sol __ M ornament to any room In ai ? of lamp-making that can i STEAmr^p^^k glvJnjf device. Every dei descnpUreclrcnlartothe MUMATISIYll The Return of Ferguson. |E A night clerk in a hotel Bat dozing H his desk at ahout 1 a. m., when * . ;H an in evening clothes came in as If hnrlmmlv trvlTur to walk ft crack. id said: "I'm Ferguson; key to room 44." ^?jB The guest disappeared in the dlreo* H on of hls> room, one flight tip.' In '* :::SM w minutes a man In his shirt sleeve* r 1th a flattened silk hat on the side of k Is head, and with one shoe on a foot - B id the other In his hand, came In and H ild to the clerk:- Kfl "I'm Fershon, key to for-for." H "Mr. Ferguson just took hla key and ent up." y "Mr. Ferguson Just fell out window ' left key Inside. Kindly lemms fl aye "nother."?Everybody's. B Tips you get are almost as worth? ?s as those you give. E FBI1!1 Send postal for J -M pKn Free Package I 1 I IB kl ! of Paxtine. I 1 Better and more economical I I than liquid antiseptics I fl W? ALL TOILET USES. | j BflnBflBMHffiflMHBDUHSHHDHHB Gives one a tweet breath; clean, whiter / '. germ-free teeth?antiseptically den mouth and throat?purifies the breath Vr-,;< after smokiny?dispels all disagreeable :V -'J., perspiration and body odors?muchap? -jt predated by dainty women. A quick remedy for sore eyes and catarrh. > v SA little Psxtme powder & solved m^aglis^of hot wstsf ing power, and absolutely hna? less. Try a Sample. 50c.* large box at druggfa or bymsfl. :i THE PAXTON TOILET Co., Boston. Hisa i, h ^ EnJiance Your Beauty | ' by keeping your skin sweet, 1 healthful and attractive, with Glenn's Sulphur Soap .? 1 LSold by HiD's Hair and WkUrar Dyt, I dmgjiitj. -v black ?r Wain, SOc. | Suicide? low death and awful suffering >llows neglect of bowels. Con:ipation kills more people than consumption. It needs a cure ad there is one medicine in 11 the world that cures it? . % ASCARETS. - * Cascarets?10c. box ? week1! treat- . meat. All dnmrfsts. Bifirsreit seller to the world?million boxes a month. Automobiles _____ ; * "'j THE WHITE CO. have several exchange cars hich must be sold at onca This means a iwerful, smooth running, fully equipped Aotoobile at rock bottom price. S2SO to 91SOQ. ' They are in perfect running condition urf demonstration will be eiven to a buyer. Don** 1ta this opportunity. Call at once. THE WHITE CO., iroadway at 62d St, New Yorlc. If Remove* Bursal Enlargemet?<*L 9 Thickened, Swollen Tissue*, fj Curbs, Filled Tendons, Soreness W from any Bruise or Strain, Curat ? JL Spavin Lameness, Allays Pain. - n Ifces not Blister, remove the hair 1.U or lay the horse up. 82 OO m ran itier V>ttle. Horse Book 1 ? frea BSORBINE, JR., (mankind fl and 12 bottlej ir Synovitis, Strains, Gouty or Rboumatio Desits, Varlco?? Veins. Varlcocclc. HydroOel* lays pain, roar drosfflst can supply and glrm Terences. Will tell rou more It vou write. Sent r free book and testimonials. Mid. only by r. Tocso. r. 0. r., m fnui* sc. BtrtMguu, x? machinist apprentices wanteb brown & sharpe mfc. co. BOYS 16 to Id years old, Grammar School Education. Four years course, Technical Instruction included, v.n'tc Brown & Sharpe Mfg. Co., Providence, R. L, U. S. A iAISY FLY KILLER tractsS kiUaalMU*! Miiinmmiiiii W?t,ek?n,onrnini Ul.ocnTeul.nl,eh?** BIiAIR'S PIXjIjS. ELEJiHATED ENGLISH UE.MEDVfM [)UT AND RHEUMATISM. HAFE AMJ* b.LIABLE. AT YOUK. DliL'GUlBT, ^l^uThnmnQnn'Q Fve WafPF es, ?He*"?ulF""u ""J" HUlWi ITPA1V0 WnfpouE.Coleman,Washi I* I IP H J X lngton.If.C. Boolr.free. Hi?l* H I Sal\] 1 West references. ^>est result*. . N. U.. NEW YORK. NO. 32-1910. high grade lamp, told at a low price. more, but there la no better lamp made at any Id brass; nickel plated?easily kept clean; an 17 boose. There Is nothing known to the art idd to the value o 1 tbc KAYO Lamp as a light, iler OTorrwhere. IX not at youxa, writ? tor