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7 away your w~ard-it ruins your clothes-it gives you a backache to look at it. Use RUB-NO-MORE CARBO NAPTHA SOAP. 'No rubbing required. Clothes on thline ickly-fresh, sweet d cleaa. RUB-NO-MORE CARBO NAPTHA SOAP should be used freely for ., washing the finest - fabcj3t does no -h * and water bo Disinf leans Carbo aptha Soa Wig Powder .' . ' Fiv rwe Cen' rocers 3 .beRub-N-M 4FLWayneind. ,SkjePanishes WEthe l ui ooem ObI~UBO.ICkA an ees Iffclor and and sboms shines without rub -French Glows" 10r. oMb far ceaning ando. lid. tkhoesi 10c. "Dandy"ze2c "I~ae5c. WHIT~dE" npliqduid an ihsse)d ELIT ~-ha-ann fog g-=le who take hev ir shoe "oo A]. Retrscolr and A all shoes Polish with a.beuh ar &ith. I 0r. dealer doe not keep the kind you want, sead pricein stamps for a full size package, charges paid. WHITTEMORE BROS. & CO. AlbanySt Cambridge. Mass. & SlIoe Poishei in f k %d .L.DOUGLAS SHOES Men's :-S2si WomaR's ai-so"': Mlsss,BoysChldren s.50 smss2z.o # - aIOte - --6 -- 0 t es e a nd orao9 tow .souuwItan oe TiUthe roomnosheg olYarerene - rAKE NO SUBT TUTE. mgand SC50tho itw 5. inte Ths i s the BEST Saw Mill The Twentieth theseivaria ble belt feed and center friction feed j saw mills of the best tested materials throughout. Steel headblocks and dable drive. Economical. -. 1 Write for descriptive catlog of SBl sisee of( saw millstj planers, ressws, edgers. etc. J. AsV ANCE & CO., eN*RhCRU~ New Tribes Found by Explorers. Word /has been received that the members of the Amazon expedition of the University of Pennsylvania mu - seum, sent out in March, 1913; are all well after nine weeks of exploring in unknown territory Ir. southern British Guiana.t The party spent many months in territory never explored by white men. New tribes of Indians never before heard of have been discovered and vocabularies made of their lan guages. Putnam Fadeless Dyes color more goods than others. Adv. Pains of Dressing. "She dresses with great pains." "Yes, her shoes pinch, her corset is too tight and she frequently scorches herself with a curling iron." It isn't always philanthropy that .prompts a man to be looking for the "good things" he can do. It keeps the idle rich busy supply ing copy for the sensational journals. Blessed Relief ForSick WomenM Failing strength, increasing nerv- i ousness, aches and pains, depres sion, "blues"-these and the other< symptoms of the irregularities of ' the delicate female organs have fallen tb the lot of a vast multi tude of women. STELLA-VITAE has brought a blessed relief to many thousands of I women during the last thirty years. To girls just maturing into, women, to young wives, to middle-aged women, to women passing through the critical period called "change-of-life"-to women of all ages, STELLA-VITAE has been indeed, the "Star of Life"-giving them strength, hope, ( freedom from pain; giving them HEALTH. MRS. D. S. HAMILTON, Milner, Ga., says-u "It gives me pleasure to testify to the benefit which both my daughter and L myself have derived from STELLA VITA E. The doctors of our neighborhood had treated my daughter without success. One bottle of STEL.LA-VITAE, in three weeks' time, completely cured her. Idy *own health has been restored by ST ELLA VITAE." We want to PROVE toyou that ST ELLA VITAE will do as mubh for you. Tog INDUCE you to TRY the first bottle, we authorize YOUR dealer to REFUND c YOUR MONEY if that Sirst bottle does t: not benefit yotu. t Can YOU lose anything under this liberal offer( Can -WE gain anything unless P STELLA-VI E really lhalps you? 0 4O The Tripollum-Milk Depot and Milk Co-Operat: Products 1V How It Is Done in Euro in America t6 the Farmer and i By MATTHEW 8. (Copyright. 1914. Western GETTING GOOD MILE Copenhagen, Denmark.-Would it er iot be a relief to you if you knew se where you could get absolutely good w; nilk, and cream, and butter; if your in nilk and cream were guaranteed to ta )e rich, and pure, and fresh; if you fil ,ould buy a brand of butter which was sa dways up to standard, always had the ar ame flavor, and the same amount of cc noisture in it, was never over salted in r under salted, and was always abso- $1 utely free from taint of age. Most H f us in America get good butter and al ;ood milk at times. All of us get pi )ad butter and milk at least occasion lly. Over in Denmark there is an mtire nation which is united in a dc ommon purpose of producing good tr nilk and butter. Its success is due to Ix eam work; the cow does her part, to he farmer does his part, the cream- th ry does its part, the delivery man in loes his, and the government Itself ac akes a hand in the process. Not very li ong ago there was a complaint from er Ingland that the quality of Danish fr )utter was falling off. It was treated ca n Denmark as if the national honor ni xad been attacked and every reason- cli tle complaint was attended to at once m )y the wilted action of all concerned. ti :t Was not a local question, but a na- st tonal one. Primarily Danish butter sh md milk is good because the Danish m armer is sciexitific in his methods. ul 3ut the milk after It leaves the farm su s dealt with by the distributive agen ~ies In a way no less efficient, and sci ~ntific and businesslike. This is m rhere the Danes surpass the Ameri- jdc ~ans, and with the r'esult both con- th umer and producer in Denmark have es ccasion to be satisfied. . ~,ta Vhy American Milk Is High to the Ifr Consumer and Low to the Farmer. ha Dr. Thomas Nixon Carver, now di- ax ~ector of the government bureau of pl: ural organization, who at one time i: nade a thorough Investigation of the PC rices of farm products, says 'in his p1: ook on the "Principles of Rural Eco- In omics" that the- milk for which the Ei ealer in Worcester receives 2%c per TI ~uart sold for eight cents in nearby hu oston. Milkmen drove all over the go Ity to deliver a few gallons of milk. m< [e received and probably earned two ou ents per quart for doing this. If a an oute' were arranged (as they are in fill ~openhagen for example), so that one th an could deliver on one street con- -pe ecutively from house to house mak- fr< ig it unnecessary for any other de- cl< very man to follow him up or dupli- ca ate his delivery route, the work could robably be done for one-half cent per IS uart, certainly for one cent per quart. wi Another reason for the high eight by ent price was that the farmer sold us he milk to a contractor, (the con- de -actor seems to have been a specula- NC yr), who took out a profit of 2%c per dit uart raising the price at least two Iro ents higher than it otherwise would~ its ave been. The account stands thus: du~ At It As It Is Should Be. Cents. Cents. armers price is.....2% 3 to 3%, da ransportation cost .... %4 % to 1 is ontractors profit is... .2% %~ to 1 ilkmans wages is..2 - to 1 c ______th< Total ...............S 4% to 6% "ii Copenhagen's Milk Supply. ini Here in Copenhagen there is a bet- be er method employed. The farmer of ets more money, the city man gets co ore money, the city man gets more fo' ilk and the milk is better. This is tai eing accomplished through a co-oper- TI tive arrangement which could be ce: uplicated in Boston, Chicago or Kan- an ~akee. It is no experiment. The m< ompany has been operating success- ou lly for twelve years, and it has been fal learly demonstrated that it is possi le to do the business in this way. so: 'here is nothing mysterious or secret arn bout It. This co-operative association wI ; a simple, business-like organization an f dairy farmers, backed by good bus- th< ess men operating on sound, scienti- hit c and business principles. There is sol elivered every morning to local pri- mi ate consumers in Copenhagen 35.000 pr< ottles of the best milk in the world hu t a price less than six and a half wi ents per quart; some of this milk ga omes forty miles, but it is handled va o well that three cents pays all ex- tic enses and profits between the farm- B 'MAY CURE rafting of Nerves May Acceom -pish This Result. of ondon Surgeon Shows Brain -Cells to Can Be Given Two Separate Func- Gr tions-Makes Experiments on thi Foreleg of Dog. wa hu: Le'ndon. England.-The Times re rts one result of important nerve col afting experiments recently by Prof. nei obert Kennedy of Glasgow, proving the inclusively' that a brain cell may be bet ught to pegorm two separate func- of ns. tru Each nerve cam~munic ites with a ora rticular set ol' brain cells which si ntrol its activities. It was sup- Ian< ase that these hells were able o i~ said to be a digestive aid of great ef fectiveness. Alto'gether the companY takes in annually for Its products the considerable sum of $4,150,000. Profits to the Farmer. At the time when the milk is deliv ered to the concern the farmer Is paid a litfle over two cents a quart. This is exactly the same price which N others are paid for their milk by the distributing companies. In case of the man who delivers to one of the joint stock companies this is all that the farmer ever receives for his milk. The farmer who is a member of this te co-operative concern, however, at the end of the half yearly period receives a dividend which amounts to about one cent per quart. At the end of the year there is generally a small additional surplus, so that the farmer has altogether received over three cents a quart for his milk, almost one cent more a quart than the person selling to the private distributors. But this is not all. The farmer has invested absolutely no money in this co-operative concern. Yet at the end of the 20 years the 100 farmers are W in possession of a plant which Is prob- R ably worth $200,000 and which has fc been accumulated out of the profits of I W the establishment. This is the prop- In erty of those who have delivered the milk to the concern. It belongs to them in proportion to the amount of w milk which they have delivered, taking sc into account, in every case of course, cc the quality of the milk as well as the sc quantity. The average farmer has ol then from his milk, in addition to the li price which he has already received, S1 made a profit of $2,000 for the 20 years. c6 Cheap to the Consumer. h On the other hand, the/prices paid fc to the co-operative concern by the pri- a vate taker is extremely moderate. For V the ordinary quality of milk, which corresponds to our certified milk, he pays about six -and one-third cents b per quart. For the special milk, the tA infants' milk and the hospital milk, ( which is of a quality seldom found in V American cities, the consumer pays YE seven cents per quart. Capitalized Without Money. Twelve years ago when the Tri folium was organized, not a dollar T was furnished by the members. One hundred farmers got together and au- R thorized a few of the leaders to bor row $125,000 at the bank. It is to be remarked in this connection that the banks of Denmark consider.a loan to a co-operative association which has " no capital stock and no tangible prop- G erty as a perfectly good loan. It has been demonstrated again and again si that these associations are planned in such a way that they are worthy of credit. It is considered as safe as any American industrial bond. In this case as ii all others, only a few of It the leaders signed the note at the ei bank, although of course the entire ni number who were in the organization i agreed to stand back of those who borrowed the money. The bank was s1 safe, both because the 106 farmers fa represented were responsible finan- ni cially, and because they knew a co- fe operative concern such as this was to ul be was a sound business venture. , The arrangement with the bank b was that the money was- to be paid te back out of the profits in annual in- Ca stallments running over 20 years. vI The rate of interest was low. h< The association has been In opera tion 12 years. A larger sun than the original $125,000 has been advanced because the volume of 'business has la been so great that it was necessary c to make additional investment. The concern has now $200,000 invested,. Nevertheless the entire indebtedness p will be wiped out within the 20 years. c -Quality First. f It is to be noted that this co-opera- cl tive milk company succeeds, not be-! cause it is co-operative, but it -suc- b ceeds because It stands, as do other co-operative concerns, for the highest ta possible quality in Its product. It ba strictly enforces rigid rules relative Ib to quality and takes every precau- 01 tion to insure cleanliness and purity. 01 Some of the requirements which it en- hr forces upon those who furnish milk f to It are as follows: i First, there must be a monthly In- i spection of ,the cows by the veter iary representing the distributing company; second, all unhealthy or de fective cows must be Instantly with drawn; third, any slight sickness be- H tween monthly visits must be reported to the company and the milk kept sep arate; fourth, all sanitary directions as to ventilation, cleanliness, etc., t must be followed; fifth, ml.k from b eows others than those Inspected and b. under control must not be mixed with the milk furnished to the company:i sixth, milk Intended for Infants' use or hospital use must be produced from cows from which are excluded all feeds and fodders injurious to thBe of favor or quality of the milk; seventh, Ot there must be a pdriodical examina- d tion for tuberculosis; eighth, the milk must be cooled in some efficient way al as soon as drawn from .the cow, so ax that bacteriological growth may be cc stopped. Here, as In other co.opera-I tive institutions, the quality is evi denced by brands which have come to stand as guaranties of cleanliness, m healthfulness and palatableness. " Do it in America. t Naturally, the question that ;re- gi sented Itself to us Ahericans as we w looked over the plant, was whether gi or not the procedure could be dupli- m cated under American conditions. We Iaf have canvassed the situation fully and can discover no reason why the entire plan or one paralfel to It could th not be adopted in any progressive ~ American city. Everywhere co-opera tive societies succeed, but succeed because they produce a product that is recognized as of standard quality. V Co-operation in Denmark spells qual MAN IN PERU NOT ANCIENT Hr-dicka Expeditiort of National Mu. scum of Peru Disproves Theory of Great Antiquity. Washington.-The expedition of Dr.;c Ales Hrdlicka of the National Museum to Peru has largely disproved the the-; oies rega~ding the extreme antiquity of man in that region, according to r Doctor Hrdlicka's report. Not a trace suggesting anything old er than the pre-Columbian Indian was found anywhere, and neither the coast nor the mountain population, -so far as studied, can be regarded as very ancient in the regions they Inhabited. No signs Indicated that any group oc cupied any of the sites for even as long as twenty centuries; nor does It seem that any of these people devel-I oped their culture, except In some par ticulars, in these places. ae-'- !~. NaJvsa From Rih. WO0MAN COULD NOT SIT UP ow Does Her Own Work. .ydia E. P kham's Vegeta Ale Compound Helped Her. ronton, Ohio.-" I am enjoying bet r health now than I have for twelve years. When I be gan totake LydiaE. PINkham's Vegeta ble Compound I could not sit up. I had female troubles and was very ner vous. used the remedies a year and I can do my work andforthelasteight months I have worked for other )men, too. I cannot praise Lydia E. nkham's-Vegetable Compound enough r I know I never would have been as !ll if I had not taken it and I recom end it to suffering women." Daughter Helped Also. "I gave it to my daughter when she as thirteen years old. She was in hool and was a nervous wreck, and uld not sleep nights. Now she looks healthy that even the doctor speaks it. You can publish this letter if you :e."-Mrs. RENA BoWMAN, 161 S. 10th reet, Ironton, Ohio.. Why wil women continue to suffer y in and day out and drag out a sickly, alf-hearted existence, missing three urths of the joy of living, when they a find health in Lydia E. Pinkham's egetable Compound? If you have the slightest doubt iat Lydia E. Pinkbam'sVegeta leCompoundwill help youwrite oLydiaE.PinkhamMedicineCo. :onfidential) Lynn, Mass.,for ad ice. Your letter will be opened, ad and answered by a woman ad held In strict confideuce. 'ERFECT IEALTH. utt's Pills keep the system In perfect order. bey regulate the bowels and produce A ViGOROUS BODY. emedy for sick headache, constipation, Tuff's Pills REAT QUALITY IS "FACULTY" mply Means the Turning of All Things to Proper Account, But It Is a Rare Possession. Among the most pitiable and often e most hopeless factors of city pov ty are its ignorance and helpless ss. Poverty, for a time at least, is t such a terrible thing to the woman ho knows how to make every cent te can get serve the needs of her mily to the utmost. In Mrs. Stowe'E )vels of New England, one of the minine qualities most lauded is "fac ty." It means the ability to turn ery smallest bit of material to the st account. Mrs. Stowe herself was rribly poor before "Uncle Tom's bn" was written, and she knew how luable "faculty" could be. Some ~w or other ong does not associate ch poverty as that of the Stowes,. their Cincinnati and Maine days, that of the hundreds of New Eng nd families which have sent sons to lege on incomes less than that of motorman in Brooklyn, with the verty for the relief of which so any organizations are created in the ty. One reason is that the country milies commonly had a garden and a; icken house from which they could ise a considerable part of! their food, Lt a greater reason is that the coun y women were trained to get the st ounce of nutriment out of every t of food and the last shred of wear tt of every bit of clothing. The story the New England woman who made rself a "go-to-meeting" _silk dress om the pieces left from the dress aking of hel- more opulent relatives pathetic in one aspect of it, but It as proof of a faculty which could Lve faced the poverty of a city tene ent undaunted. EAL YOUR ITCHING SKIN WITH RESINOL No matter how long you have been rtured and disfigured by itching, tning, raw or scaly skin humors, st put a little of that wonderful res ol oIntment on the sores and the suf ring stops right there! Healing be as that very minute, and your skin ts well so quickly you feel ashamed the money you threw away on tedi s, useless treatments. Prescribed by ctors for nineteen years. Resinol ointment and resinol soap lo clear away pimples, blackheads, d dandruff speedily and -at little st. Sold by all druggists.-Adv. Standing Up and Sitting Up. Lady de Bathe (Mrs. Langtry) once ade the piquant remark that she was .foe to dissipation or anything of at kind, and I would urge every r to say 'No' to the dissipated man iol would marry her. The man a r is obliged to stand up for before arriage, she will have to sit up for terward." According to the latest statistics ere are 2.000,000 French families thout children. Distance lends enchantment to the ew, especially when we view the ople we don't like. Fousework Is a Burden It's hard enough to keep house if in erfect health, but a woman who is reak, tired and suffering from an aching ack has a heavy burden. Any woman in this condition has good ase to suspect kidney trouble, especial y if the kidney action seems disordered. Doan's Kidner Pills have cured thou ands of suffering women. It's the best ecommended special kidney remedy. A MARYLAND CASE - M isas Lucinda Everjie- Price. Eleventh St.. are Teds 0 Laurel. .Md.. says. "I1 Stor/-" seemed to have dropsy. My feet and hands were swollen and there were ter ble pains in my ack. I couldnt - sleep well and for / one whole winter. could not get out. I doctored, but noth -ing helped me untIl I used Doan's Kid ney Pills. Eight boxes made me weLl." ---------- Wagons Owned by 100 Farmers. ive Farm tarketing pe and May Be Done Profit of Both 'onsumer DUDGEON. Newspaper Union.) INTO THE CITY. and the consumer. For the same rvice performed in a less sanitary ty taking a longer period of time, volving more waste and more con mination the Boston consumer pays e and one-half cents. Here is a ving in cost of distribution of two d one-fourth cents per quart. If this uld be'saved to- the milk consumer Boston it would amount to about 0,000 pay day of $3,650,000 in a year. )w many lives would be saved by solutely pure milk at the reduced ice no one knows. A Night Visit. In order to see the Trifolium milk pot at its busiest we planned our p to reach the establishment at 10 m., about the hour when they begin fill their 36,000 bottles of milk for e morning delivery of the succeed g day. The most striking charac teristic is the immaculate . clean iess that everywhere prevails. The tire establishment Is absolutely e from dust and dirt. Not an odor n be detebted. The association fur shes the employea with working ythes, and itself launders them and dintains ample free bathing facili is. The employe coming in from the reet goes into the dressing room. eds the clothes which have been re or less contaminated by wear on the street, takes a bath and as mes a newly laundered garb. Efficient Processes. Every process through which the lk moves from Its receipt at the or until it goes out in the wagon in e early morning is an efficient proc s both from the standpoint of main ining purity and excellence and im the standpoint of economy of ndling. After the milk cans, for ex aple, are fully emptied, they are iced supon a drain board. The drip ags from this board produce 1,000 unds of butter per year, which am i repays the slight trouble caused placing the cans In this position. ery process is practically automatic. eir machines seem to have almost man intelligence. The milk which es into each bottle Is automatically easured and not a fraction of an nce more or less than the -specified ount is placed ~in the bottle. The ing of the bottles, the placing of a stoppers, the sealing of the stop r, the transportation of the bottles >m the madhines to the shelves, the ~ansing of the empty bottles and as-all these proceed automatically. When ready for delivery the milk placed on racks in the large, milk gons. Each wagon Is accompanied a driver and six boys, who by the a of carrying racks are enabled to liver the bottles with great rapidity. Sdriver can go Into another driver's trct. There Is no duplication of ites. The wagon hardly pauses in course. Here milk delivery is re ced to a science. Over Four Million Receipts. he concern gets out a variety of iry products. The fresh sweet milk of the grade known generally as rtified milk. In addition to this ay sell a special high grade called fant's milk." The milk that goes o the bottles so labeled must have en produced during a certain part the bovine lactation period. The ws must havei been excluded from ders which are Inclined to give nt or unpleasant flavor to the milk. e milk must have certain high per tages of butter fat. The qiuality i purity of this grade of milk Is >st carefully guarded, and It goes t only in sealed bottles or cans to nilies and hospitals. Skimmed milk and butter are also d. Three different grades of cream placed upon the .market-the rich pping cream, the inedium cream half cream. In addition to this finest of cream cheese and the ~hest grades of bytter are made and d. A particular brand of butter Ik which has proved popular and fitable is known as Bulgarian Yog rt. This is similar to the product .ich is said to have made the Bul ians a race of centenarians. Its uable qualities are due to fermenta n prcduced by the bacteria of the cillus Bulgaricuj variety. It is CR IPPLES scles below the joint and then con ~ted all these muscles to the group nerves controlling flexion or bend The dog was for some time unable direct or co-ordinate its movements. idually, however, about the ninety rd day, this power returned and s regained completely by the one idred and twonty-third day. The possible applications of the dis ery are wide. i For example, the yes of a witheted or useless limb. function of which has been lost ~ause of some linjury to or disease te brain, if coz ected to the nerve nk leading to a ealthy part of that 'an might again Irceive and convey nuli. In that cise the degenerated I flabby muscles would again re FIND A VERY CURIOUS KNIFI Relic of Past Found When Stump C Apple Tree Is Removed From Canton, Pa., Garden. Philadelphia.-When the stump C an apple tree was removed from th garden belonging to E. W. Walbor near Canton, Pa., directly under th stump and sticking straight down i the ground was found a curious knifq The blade, from shaft to point, is 111 inches. It is 2% inches wide at th hilt and tapers to a needle point.-Th back of the blade is thick and heav and the edge has evidently bee ........... .... . .......... Two Centuries Old. ground down to a razor-like sharpnes Near the hilt are die-cut Roman le ters "Sabatier Rue, France," and b neath this an open hand, surrounde by the letters "A Paris." The que tion at once arises: Who put th knife there, and when? The steel J of the finest. Not even its long in mersion in the earth has daten awa the surface to any considerable ei tent. Perhaps some French "vol ageur" camped there two hundre years ago, and forgot his knife. Mor likely some wandering Indian band e camped there and left the knife the they had bought of the French, payin for it with beaver skins. One can sui mise almost anything. The chance are that the owner left in a hurry, fc knives like that, even today, are vah able, and some hundreds of years ag would have been 'worth its weight i: gold. Certain it is that the Englis settlers did not carry French knive. and this particular blad.e dates bac beyond the earliest English settle ment. HOUSE CAT. IS NEARLY BAKEl The Family Pet Slept in Oven of Coo Stove and Is Nearly Burned to Death. Waynesboro, Pa.-M. B. Ayeri Hamilton avenue, Waynesboro, almoE cooked a new dish at his home. When he retired at night he left th oven door of the- kitchen stove ope: To get away from the cold the famil cat crawled into the oven and ther curled itself up for a sleep that laste all through the night. When Mr. Ayers went downstairs]i the morning to stir up the fire h closed the oven door. The cat slej on and made no protest. Then M Ayers turned on the drafts and thrus the poker into the bed of coals, an ina short time he had a good flr going. He heard the mewing of a cat, bi he couldn't see a cat, and he fancie the animal might be on the outsid< But the cat grew more persistenti its mewing and added a tone of al guish to it, and then Mr. Ayers--b thought him of the oven. He opene the door and the cat sprang ont him, almost knocking him off his fee The animal was burned terribly. Il feet were badly charred ai~d its bod was almost baked., It is still livin and is on the road to recovery. 1,000 JOBLESS MEN IN RIO Told by April Fool Joker Compan Would Hire Man, They Go There and Break In Doors. Chicago.-One thousand clamoriz men, misled by an "April fool" joke stormed the, new $1,000,000 Soo Lix freight terminal at West Twelfth an Canal streets in quest of employmen Through heavy steel gates, the loc] of which, were broken by the onrus1 the army surged. Until attacked by phalanx of bluecoats, under the leal ership of Lieutenant Kelliher of ti Maxwell street station, these men part of the "army of unemployed" ,ere In control of the grounds< the terminal citadel. But the polic men soon drove them back, a quarre ing, cursing, disappointed throng. It was fully an hour before ti police succeeded in clearing the pro: erty of this host of men. The invaa ers refused to leave until driven bac by the clubs of the bluecoats. "We want work! Give us a job! were the cries of the men. . As the crowd was driven from ti railroad property it took up a ne position dlrectly across from the pla: of the terminaL. None were arreste YOUNG CHILD GETS PIG'S EY Operation in Baltimore Hospital ti F~rst of Its Kind In United States. Baltimore. Md.-What Is believedi be the first operation of its kindi this country was performed at a loc hospital when the cornea of a pig eye was grafted on the sightless ey of a three-months-Old boy. It was sai that previous operations, in which ra bits' eyes had been used, were unsu cessful, but that experiments wit pigs' eyes had led scientists to belies that they were more adaptable. Tv cases are said to be on record whe: the grafting of human cornea gav sight to totally blind eyes. In the operation the pig was chlor< formed, the eyeball taken out an the cornea cut from it. An extraord narily fine needle and fine silk wer used In sewing the cornea In placi The eye will remain bandaged f4 about a week. How to Wed Happily. Princeton. N. J.-"To assure haplx marriages all applicants for marri licenses should file declarations of I tentions a month before the license granted." said Prof. R. M. Ross, In lecture on social economics.. Young Girl Attempts SuIcide. Haverhill. Mass.-Gladys F. Pelke fourteen, who wanted to see the worn - '00 ROPS e n e ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT e AVegetabePreparationforAs Ssitnilating thefoodamiReguia n ting the~ontachsandBow el J Promotes DigestionCheerful 4 nessand Rest.Contains neither Opum.Morphine nor Mineral NOTNAn cOTIC Ar~rdASA#WIA7 Aperectd lSWZIM Apfez ct Remedy ror Cotipa N tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, 10 WormsConvulsionseverish ness and LOSS OF SLEEP Fac Simile Signature of 'THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW -YORK. d uaranteed under the Food 3- Exact cOPY of Wrapper Couldn't Hurt Coveleski. Otis Harlan came to town last wee] . with a brand new story on. Covelesld d the pitcher of the Philadelphia Na e tional, league team, who beat ou: . Giants out of a pennant -a few year, t ago by-beating them three times in i g week. 7- "Covey." as Harlan tells it, "was-no much shucks .as a pitcher despite hi: Giant-killing feat. One day he wa . pitching against the Pittsburgh team o A runner got on first and straightwa: stole second while Covey held the ball a "After the inning Billy Murray, wh4 was managing the team, called Kitt: Bransfield over to the bench and whili the big pitcher beamed his approva said: "'See here Kitty. I don't want an: secrets on this team. The next timi one of those fellows gets on your base k you just let everybody on the teas know it. Do you understand?' "'That's right Bill,' said Coveleski 'he had that call coming to him."' New York Sun. it RUB-MY-TISM e Will cure your Rheumatism and al 1. kinds of aches and pains-Neuralgia y Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuti e Old Sores. Burns, etc. .Antisepti d Anodyne. Price 25c.-Adv. n Will Be Heard From. - e Ppnnsylvania and 'California ar t two states whose -chairmen of th . civics department of the G. F. W. C tare to make special reports at' th d Chicago biennial in June, as they ar e said to have good laws governin civic activities. d HOW DO YOU GET UP? 2Heavy and sluggish? Try taking .couple of Wright's Indian Vegetabi d Pills upo~n going to bed. Costs yo' o nothing for trial boi. Send to 37 t. Pearl street. New York.-Adv. Daily Thought. SNature, purity, perspicuity, simpilit ity never walk in the clouds. -The are obvious to all capacities, an re they are, not evident they don SULPHUR-THE' GREAT HOME REM9ED1 LMr. Warren C. Gares, 108 So. Ohi< r Ave., Columbus, Ohio, writes as fol lows: "I suffered intensely frozi dEczema which covered 'my bodj and arms. After trying three physi clans and one skin specialist and 21 different ointments and lotions, I ac acidentally learned of Hancock's Sul ephur Compound aid Ointment. I triec e them and the first application gave me instant relief from that awful itching I persisted in their use and in one week I had hardly a trace of the erup tion." If any reader questions thu -testimonial as not being bona fide anc unsolicited, an inquiry sent to the ad edress above, enclosing postage will convince anyone beyond question. dHancock's Sulphur Compound ani Ointment are sold by all dealers. Han cock Liquid Sulphur Co., Baltimore d.-Adv.______ e- The Loiterer's Apology. "Looking for work?" a"No, sir. I'm in favor of extendini dthe principle that requires the office to seek the man, to private employ E ment." eC To stop bleeding use Hanford's Ba] sam. Adv That Cynic Again. o0 The cynic believes the bonds o n matrimony would be more popular I they paid cash dividends. , LINES IN ea thyshow the effect of un e beauing-down sestice e These s vptomns indicate that Nq ing, lack o exercise, and other eam outside aid must be called upon to res Dr.Pierce'sFay R-Te l emedy for Woir r L and iritab -tyad removes other dii [tions of the delicate feminine organis For over forty years It has b the young, middle-aged and the elder will find itof great benefit. Sold bi y. send Dr. B.V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y.,1 e DR. PEECE'S PLEAl ion. regulate the liyer. a Juicy and "awe you want. If: CASTO For Tnants and Chidren. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature ~-J, * For vi 9L Thirty t CAST Uppermoath 4OWgb Mrs. Church. with a hand on h boy's curly he4-Why.:70'littiSbOY is growing like-like Mrs. Gotham, helpng-ertk the price of eggs. Even when he can't make ati else a man cn-generally be fte jpon to make a'fool ofhlimselL 'Tis better to have, foved and lost tha er to have lovedt a but isn't so eap. #-A anteed lpurpose anmd. yo win be - HUT Disease. 50cat~our I dtifhebasn'tit. ,A.I.GRHlARQSEEDrOHEW MR, G. . 40 Gooe s ine Gthae 'Liv ndBssl ac lr es saxopi acesuaas' DASLYE SD IEIL R I SALhb aZal esin en etm fo s rs ec m s,..e..au r... forFBB AA B8.DesD. E stop Intestinae erntnf=gan Eeuev Gasand istr es ar atng. sizeL Soly,-150 ye.de hs a.3 u1 Brmisl~e BwolEf iu t nau -s wentolearemearber N.&~D&OE1Sead y on o r.RLWes whie cearning'freeestalog iNCHOUNDAREY RCLLG CpreMT Bstinord. ce,. setig.A.C.BRGabe tse st. eny'C Money redoed or .. amoep cwrt frieed Sam ind com m rmIfen .t Pettisaw EvewS EYE WEi ent Lraae oo efldea~l e ins lw~e lains; sirese~,Y sIr needs~ help .bOeor-5iUS rng us dreselt aOTnet L -O. n-een S ell fone tria n bof oy m a bowls.Eas t taYESaseanL TE HE FACE tfortt.e *"" T H EZI' Fi(5 c NE EEWNOroi#AL1