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It was her husband who .finally brou t hone RUB-NO-M RE. Nowshe'sen siastic about it. S e had in tended tc buy RUB ,NO-MOP WASHING But over ed it. Don't you verlook it. RUB-NO -MORE WASHING POWDER is a sudless dirt re mover for clothes. It cleans your dishes, P sinks, toilets and cleans and sweetens your Bilk crocks. ,It kills germs. It does not need hot water. RUB-NO-MORE RUB-NO-MORE Washing Powder Carbo Naptha Soap Five Cents-Al Grocers The Rub-No-More Co., FtWayneInd. W.L.DOUGLAS SHOES metds $2- R. uS3402m EissesBoys,ChIldren 51.10 $l.75S2S2.80 homeosgsws asun '-'he am of -e W. o. $3.60pe an 00. - oawhZ t argest Ae V Z show &bn191 ow 1912. safes of t" W. L pr.Yerme . rhe fmsesil estaes shpwng bowe to order bytma a -rocklos a spra. oePalishes nest Quali' Largest Variet FA F. * 6il~a boots and -shoes, shines without rub Sbing. 25c. "French Gloss," l0e. STAR ~.-bi--m- for A-n-and polsbng allkid ~mofrseranbhoe.,10e. "Dandy"size25e. "QIKWHITE" Gn liquid fonm withspoeae) - clY5~ eans and whitens dirty canvas ebhoe BABY ELITE ~--'n~a~ for gentlem whatake ~ing~ner soes ook Al. Restoresaceler and toaliblagckhos. Polihwithbabrush orcdoth. 10c. 2 i6 Albany St. Cambridge. Mass. - TeOdestad Manufacurnrs Sf Shoce In thWord: Shinq'es. Spanish Tile BsT 'TMAT MONEY CAN SUN STOP-I.OOK-RAD~i necklaces 49o, steln silver stIckplas 1nc, penknilves ac godSned pesee7 god iedplS I e. BeaurfdMTruck ad GrFm *e* anino enltvation. Nice bome, une orchard. 13,fi00 wit~ orope. Jas.W.LonrtlR10Main-Street, Riehamn4 V No Insult. Some time back, when Sir Herbert Tree was taking the waters at Marien bad he was accosted by a perfect. stranger. "Begging your pardon, sir," said the latter, "but aren't you Beerbohin Tree, the actor?" "No, certainly not," replied Sir Her bert unblushingly. "I'm very sorry," said the other, "but I thought you were. You look so much like 'the pictures I have seen of him." "I can assure you that you are mis taken," persisted Sir Herbert. "Well, I didn't mean to insult you, sir," observed the stranger, "but I did think you looked like him." RUB-MY-TISM Will cure your Rheumatism and aDl kinds of aches and pains-Neuralgia, Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts, Old Sores, Burns, etc. Antiseptic . Anodyne. Price 25c.-Adv. Well Posted. Maid-Where shall I put this copy of "Pilgrim's Progress?". Young Bride (arranging her I1 brary)-Why, that goes with the! books on travel. CHILLS AND1 FEVER AND AGUE Are Promptly Cured by Elixir Babek. "I recommend 'Elixir Basbek' to all sufferers of Malaria and Chills. Have suffered for several years. hiave tried everything, but failed, until' I ca-me ac -s your wonderful medicine. Can trt . say it has cured me."-George In scoe. Coimpany G. 4th Batalllon. Elixir Babek 50 cents, all druggists 07 by Parcels Post prepaid from Kloczew ski & Co.. Washington. D. C. ,Seeng Is Believing. Wright-Put there is such a same ness about h!.s writing. Penman-Ohi, no, there isn't. Why. he's ambidextrous-he writes with both hands, you~ know. Sold upon merit-Hanford's Balsam. Adv. Fashion's Slaves. Miadge-It's a pity we couldn't see ourselves as others see us. s M3arjorie-If we did, mn: dear, the slit skirt wouldnt be so fashionable. Puck. Ominous. He-Do you think your father will, object to our being married? She-I'm afraid he will kick., Life is full of ups and downs, and even the man who is on the level doesn't always find It smooth travel ing. r MI.A JUSTICE JOSEPH RICKER LAMAR Justice Joseph Rucker Lamar, who was recently appointed mediator at the Niagara Falls peace conference, is accepted by all who come in con tact with the Supreme court, or the social life in Washington, as one of the most delightful personalities on the highest bench. President Taft found him to be the most companion able of men when he was visiting in Augusta, Lamar's home city. A story soon started, and has not yet been downed, that President Taft, who was suspected of being anxious to form a golf cabinet In Washington, matching the "Tennis Cabinet" of a form# era, had known Lamar on the links In the southe.rn city. But the justice denied it, and, by way of making his asser - tion believed, capped It with the re mark that he had never had a golf stick in his hands In his life. It may not be legal evidence, but it Is strong ly circumstantial, that the justice would not have called'a golf club a "stick" had he been a follower of St. Andrew. As a matter of fact, Lamar has no recreations of this sort, He is one of those southern men who are able to keep most warmly human, without doing anything that is patently human, such as golf, or being a baseball "fan." His only recreation is com panionship with others, and scholarly pursuits. Of course, he was a judge down in Georgia, as all Lamars- who follow the law must be; but he was not on the bench when Taft offered him the nomination. Just then, as he says himself, he was "specializing in general practise." Down South that .phrase means much, from important corporation. practise to speaking a word in police court for Aunt Mandy's "wuthless son," who may have got into a scrape, "but he ain't mean no harm, Mas'r Joe." SAYS NATIONAL GUARD IS WELL EQUIPPED "The national guard," said Gen. !lfred Leopold Mills, "has never been better equipped or better trained or better officered for service than it is today. Which may be an Important fac- .... tor In the present situation if the states' militia should be called on for action. General Mills' statement may be taken as fairly representing the situation. In the first place, General Mills knows. He is the head of the division of militia affairs at the war department- and as such would havo charge of the transfer of the militia to the service of the national govern ment. In the second place, Mills . wouldn't say it if it were not true. His specialty Is seeing-and saying- 1 the truth. Mills Is the man who reformed West Point. Before his day there as superintendent the cadets were treat ed like prisoners, fed upon theory and clothed In uniforms that fitted like the skin of a mushroom. If a regiment of West Point cadets had ever harged an enemy, the sound of popbing seams would have been heard above he rattle of musketry. They knew a great deal about the manner In which apoleon was whipped at Waterloo, but they didn't know how Geronimo used o lie behind a rock in order to pot soldiers. Mills changed all that. Mills came. to the academy as superintendent while he was first lieuten at, and therefore still young. That fact did not please any one at all. The lder officers theught It absurd that a "young whiffett"--these cruel -words re quoted with exactness-should be given a place that had always been ikened in honor to the command of a division. The younger officers were ealous, and said that his appointment was due to favoritism. As a matter f fact, it was due mostly to A. L. I~ills, somewhat to Theodore Roosevelt and partially to President McKinley.. WAS BORN IN PRUSSIA .F. W. Lehmann, one of Uncle Sam's mediators at the Niagara Falls peace donference, was born in Prus sia, and spent his boyhood days in the fields of his father's farm in Prussia, tending a small flock of sheep. Before the bof~ was ten years of age the fain Ily moved to this country and settled . ~ in Cincinnati. Lehmann ran away from home and tramped several states, specializ ' .fWing In chores as a buslness,'and went . . to Nebraska. There he tended sheep again, but shepherding for the g'f-eat .~ 1k. *. sheepmnen of the West, and watching '~' *'. a flock on the Prussian farm were dif ferent jobs. Lehmnann was not inter ested in his task, and neglected his charges In the interests of 'readings Sterling Morton, father of Paul Mor 'ton, took Lehmann away from sheep and put him among books in Tabor college, Iowa, which he quit with honors and a degree in 1873. The rest of Lehmann's story is just one ise after another. In St. Louis they tell you that Lehmann Is one of the est lawyers in the country, and then add that his mind is more literary han legal. He is also described as a large, rectangular man, stuffed -with exact information. In his person he is large enough to afford room for ufficient facts to qualify him as an unusually able lawyer, besides his literary storage space. He is generally said to be the best-read man In St. Louis, and folks do read In that city. His hobby Is the collecting of rare books, and e has probably the best collection of Dickens' first editions in the world. And probably, as he traveled to Niagara Falls, he had a volume of Burns In his pocket, for curiously enough Ithe Scotch poet is the first love of thiu russian-Missourlan.. SENATOR LEWIS CALLS A HALT "It Is not a high type of Intelli gence which mistakes civility for ser ility." Thus Senator James Hamilton ewis of Illinois, bored and perhaps ade a little indignant by what ap ears to him in his less cheerful mo nents to be a persistent habit on the art of undiscerning persons to sum p his extremely useful and varied areer in a few parrotlike comments pon his dress and his appearance. "My beard," said the senator, "If ou will pardon my reference to an ntimate personal matter, has been escribed as a remarkable work of ature, as a hirsute forest bristling ith sparks of fire, and as an ambro ial chest protector. I have been alled the Aurora Borealis of Illinois. the Pink-Whiskered Prodigy, the Man Who Mfade Whiskers a Political Asset, the pink-Fringed Political Expert. Jan-, a home has been built. many a amily thrives upon the steady and ppently rising market value of jests about my clothes and my manners. "Now, my dear fellow," concluded the senator. "I am glad to contribute o the prosperity of the country by having my surprficial peculiarities fur nish material for tbe struggling efforts of the budding geniuses of journalism; m- I have done my share, and it is time that our experimental literary citi e,ps should turn their attention to the gentleman whit, so the newspapers e Il us. has discovered a method of breeding blue pigs, at to the Inventor of the noiseless hammer." Toacco to ;:U -~. trolling influence on the most distreas In a R1:ssian mned.ica journal Z.'. lug symptoms, Dir. Tatevosoff at last . T.aeosat.f oraws adtention to tn.e decided to give a trial to the said old xclleni: ser-vice which may be ob- fashioned popular, means, making the aed from :he orcinary snuff tobac- patient on each Occasion thoroughly o as a means of cutting short hic- snuff into his nose a pinchful of the aghs. iit- relates an instructive case powder until fhe"tppearance of live r a patient with some chronic chest ly sneezing. From'the first treatment - - - at rn l1 brilliant, the hic A HER EXPERIENCE GAINED ON TRIP Found That Ladies in State Agreed With Her on One Important QuestiOD. Mangham, La.-Mrs. Liza Barber, of this town, who has returned from a trip in West and Middle Tennessee, has the following to say: "I have been on a trip In Middle and West Tennes see where I found many ladies using Cardul, the woman's tonic. While traveling I took great pleasure in tell ing what it had done for me-I not only praised Cardul-but advised poor suffering women to take it. I know that Cardui cured me and I believe It will do the same for other women. Sometime ago, I could hardly stand on my feet, and I had given up ever having good health. After using two bottles of Cardul I could tell it was helping me, and I continued taking It for awhile. I soon felt as well as I ever did, and could do all of my work. I shall always praise this great medicine to every suffering woman. I think there Is no other half so good." Mrs. Barber would have found weak, ailing women taking Cardui al most anywhere she could have gone, because Cardui is recognized as the standard woman's tonic. It has helped more than a million women back to health and strength in the past 50 years. Why shouldn't it help you?-Adv. Anecdote of Sargent. Parisian disciples of an illustrious and rather pompous French painter are telling a neat story against him. Last autumn he was, with most of European society, in Venice. He saw a painter sketching the view of the Grand canal. Some innocent amateur, no doubt He went up, looked- at the sketch and liked It. "Not bad, sir; not bad at all," he said, and added: "You ought to exhibit in Paris. Send something to the Artistes Francaise. and mention my name. Here is my card.'" The "amateur" took the card, thanked his patron, and said: "I must also introduce myself. I am an Ameri can. My name Is John Singer Sar gent. I have exhibited in Paris once or twice already." OFFICER CARROLL CURED OF BAD CASE OF ECZEMA He writes from Baltimore as follows: "I am a police officer and had long suffered front a bad case of Eczema of the hands and had to wear gloves all the time. "I was under treatment by eminent physicians for a long time without success. Last summer Hancock's Sul phur Compound and Ointment were recommended to me and my hands Im proved on the first application. After a week's trial I went to the- Johns Hopkins Hospital to have my hands treated with X-rays. Under their ad vice, I continued to use your Sulphur Compound and Ointment for 6 .or 8 weeks, and at the end of that time my hands were cured. I cannot recom mend your preparations too highly." (Signed) John T. Carroll. Hancock's Sulphur Compound and Ointment are sold'-by all dealers. Han cock Liquid Sulphur Co., Baltimore, Md.-Adv. What He Needed. After Jack Sullivan, the witness who charged that Becker was "framed up" by the gamblers, left the witness stand, it took him consider able time to cool off. Sullivan created an uproar in court by defying every one and giving his answers as he saw fit. Some friends met him on the street outside the court building. "Jack," said one, "come over at the corner and get something cool to drink." "Not me," he replied, wiping the perspiration from his face. "If I took a drink nowv in my condition I'd crack a boiler. What I need is a two or three days' snooze in somebody's Icehouse." Cures ivy Poisoning. For Ivy poisoning apply Hanford's Balsam. It Is antiseptic and may be used to kill the poison. Prompt relief should follow the first application Adv. Taking Her Literally. Time-11:30 p. m. *Place-Parlor of her home. She (indignantly)--Sir! Relieve me of your presence." He (rising and taking the ring from her finger, putting a sofa cushion un der each arm, holding the dog in one hand, grabbing a chair, stuffing a choc olate box in his packet and sticking a bunch of flowers in his mouth) Just as you say; I'll send a messen ger for the rest. Why She Was Interested. John D. WVells or the Buffalo News does platform work. Once at Sher wood, N. Y., he was pleased to notice an old lady who never took her eyes from his face. Afterward she said: "I was mighty interested-" "Yes, I was so glad you sepmed to be enjoy ing my lecture." "Oh, sir, it wasn't anything you said, but I was wonder ing if you were any relation to the Welses in Jamestown." Appropriate. First Shining Light (in the colored church)-Ah don't believe In callin' dis heah society de Ladies' Auxiliary. Da's imitatin' de white folks. Second Shining Light-Den wot will we call it? . First Shining Light-Well, wot's de mattah wid callin' it de "Colored Sup lement?" Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills are sold with and without soluble sugar coating. They regulate the bowels, invigorate the liver and purify the blood. Adv. But Sister Didn't Hear it. "lIe comes up to our house nearly evry night." "-What is it that is so attractive up "Nothing attractive, he just comes to see my sister." Some men imagine dignity means maintaining a constant grouch, and othrrs think it means wearing impos sible whiskers. LOST CANADIAN GOLD MINE Arclbdeacon Whitaker a Missionary in the North Relates Story He Heard. Edmonton, Canada.-Headed by Bishop Lucas, who has had 23 years experience In the Anglican missi'u fields of the North, and Archdeacon Whitaker, a close second with 19 years In the same field, a party of ten have left Edmonton for the North. Archdeacon Whitaker relates a re markable story of a lost gold mine be tween Fort McPherson and Herschel Island. According to Mr. Whitaker tra dition says that a great number of years ago a party of nine men, one of them an old C. P. R. surveyor, found a gold mine which was stated to be of fabulous value among the mountains in that vicinity. They made elaborate geographical notes so that they would be able to find it again, and then re turned with the object of making the necessary arrangements to wo-k the. mine. On the way out, 'ch of them heav fly laden with the p taus metal, pro visions ran short and seven died. -The two survivors of the party organized another party, but the geographical calculations were lost in the meantime and all attempts to locate the mine ended in failure. HONOR HEROES OF TITANIC Ten Thousand Witness Unveiling of Memorial to Engineers of liI Fated Steamer. London.-Over ten thousand people were present when the memorial was unveiled recently by Sir Archibald Memorial to Titanic Engineers. Denny, Bt., president of the Institute of Marine Engineers. He said the engineers of the Titanic must have known that no pumping could avert the final catastrophe, yet they stuck to their duty, driven from boiler room to boiler room, and fought for every inch of draft to give time for launch Ing the boats. He compared them to the soldiers of the Birkenhead, but pointed out that, while the latter stood together in the open air, the engineers worked below and perished in the dark. The figure of Glory In the mon ument rests on a boat prow of bronze. SWARM OF BEES INVADE TRAIN HIves Break and Passengers Are Routed by 10,000,000 insects Near London Bridge. London.-Bees were much In evi dence near London bridge recently. There were 10,000,000 of them bound for a bee farm at Bures Suffolk, to begin -with; there were also some others, healthy English specimens, close by, a couple of dozen of which for a few glgrious minutes may be said to have "made things hum." On the bumpy journey across Lon don bridge to the train for Holm wood the box containing a hive broke and suddenly every one was in a hurry. Eventually the carman and a par cels- clerk tackled the remaining bees and put them in a box, but the few that escaped did wonders, and per spiring travelers fled as from an un seen terror. WORKED GARDEN ON SUNDAY Swedish Landowner Is Accused of "Breaking the Sabbath" by Po lice Official. Gothenburg, Sweden.-A remarkable ction which is exciting great indig nation all over Sweden has been brought by the commissioner of police against A. Abron, a merchant and land proprietor of Halsingborg, for "'break Ing the Sabbath and holy days" by working In his garden on Easter Sun 'day and Monday and also for wearing 'only his shirt and trousers. Two policemen who saw him at work during church service time or dered him to cease work and dress himself properly, but he replied that as hit' time was fully occupied by his business during the week, Sun day was the only day he had for recre ation in his garden. WHITMAN'S WIFE GOES FLYING 'it Was Wonderful," Comments New York District Attorneys' Spouse ,After Cruise. New York.-Mrs. Charles S. Whit an, wife of District Attorney Whit man, went up in a flying boat over the Hudson from Dobbs Ferry. "It was wonderful - perfectly won derful." she exclaimed after she alight ed. "Ift was too wonderful for words." Ralph M. Brown, the aviator who took Mrs. Whitman up, said she was the most composed woman passenger who had ever flown with him. IReferee Favors Divorce Effort. New York.-A referee reported in favor of Isaac Weill, whose wife wrote to him that she would not contest his action for divorce, as he deserved to win. Holds Up Man With Wooden Leg. Meads Cornera, N. Y.-A footpad who held up George Duryea took off his victim's wooden leg and threw it 'away to make sure of his escape be fore Duryea could summon aid. Leaves Husband $1 in Will. New York.-Moses Oppenheimer 1has received $1 from the $15,000 es tate of his wife, whose will said that their children will take care of him. WIll Banish Beggars. New York.--Police Commissioner Woods has formed a "mendicancy IN NEED OF ITS TEACHINGS Able Seaman Had Not Read "Little Book," But Evidently it Might Have Done Him Good. The chaplain of one of our cruisers had a knack of presenting small Bibles, neatly tied in. a parcel, to men on'the upper deck. That It contained a Bible he carefully refrained from mentioning, merely saying, "Here is a littl book youll like." He gave one to Able Seaman Spikes. One day, a week later, he approached Spikes as the latter was smoking on the upper deck. "How do you like the little book, Spikes?" Spikes' mind flew to his ditty box, In which the little par cel' still intact, reposed. He slowly removed his pipe. "Very interesting, sir-very." "Glad to hear that you have started reading It," said the par son. "Started, sir? Why, I've finished it. (Spikes had no Idea what the book was) ; don't take me long to read a book,.sir, especially a good book. But there, sir, it ended like all the others got married. and lived happily ever after." HEAD ITCHED AND BURNED 604 Greenville Ave., Staunton, Va. "My head broke -out In pimples which festered. It Itched me so that I would scratch it till my head got al most In a raw sore. My hair came out gradually -and It was dry and lifeless. Dandruff fell on my coat collar till I was ashamed of It. My head had been that way all summer, itching and burning till I couldn't sleep- In any peace. . "I tried salves but It looked like they made it worse. I got , but it did me no good so I got a cake of Cuticura Soap and. box of the .Cuticura Ointment and you don't know what a relief they gave me. In two weeks my head was well." (Signed) J- L. Smith, Oct. 28, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."-Adv. Mexico. "These Mexicans, for all their boast ed Spanish politeness, are a laugh.' Why, a New York subway guard could give a Mexican cards and spades in the politeness game and beat him hands down." The speaker was Yngve Lungstrom, the noted railway engineer of Denver. He continued: "In a block once In the- traffic of the City of Mexico my cabby shrieked at the man ahead of us: "'I had a beard like yours once, but when I found what it" made me look like, Santa Maria, I cut it off.' "'Yes,' answered the other cabby, 'and I had a face like yours once, and when I found I couldn't cut it off, by the holy St. Christopher, I raised a beard."' Use Roman -Eye Balsam for seadldng men sation in eyes and inflamntion of ye or eyelids. Adv. Suffrage in Spain. Emilia Pardo Bazan has announced that she will start in the near future a national campaign In favor of wom an suffrage. She is the foremost womn an writer In Spain, her literary achievements having won for her the title of countess, which was given by King Alfonso in 1908. Spain Is one of the three European countries which have -not an organized woman-suffrage movement, the other two being Greece and the Grand Duchy of Luxemburg. For galls use Hanford's -Balsam. Adv. ________ Much Healthier. "Did that trust 'magnate take hot baths for his brain?" "No; he took an Immunity bath." A man's Idea of a "quiet little game" Is one in which money does all the talking. Wha ISoothing Syraps.] other Narcotic substances Feverishness. For more ti of Constipation, Flatulenoy regulates the Stomach ai natural sleep. The Childr4 The Kind You Hlavi 80 years, has borne the si his personal supervision si All Counterfeits, Imitations and endanger the health o: ALCOHOL 3PER CENT. SIA'vegetablePreparationfaAs simatng tFoodaIgIa * tinguteStomadisandBowest Promoestitionfilte ul nessandstontaisnelftw Opium.Morphine norfik~ral NOT NARc OTIC. iwors,Com1sios,FeVeisk '~ NEW YORK. Back Tafk, Howard Elliott, president of the New Haven lines, said at a dinner in New York: "I don't encourage back talk among our employes-far from it-but I must say my sympathies are rather with one of our conductors who ventured, under great provocation, on a little back talk the other day. "As the conductor was punching tickets, a man said to him, with a nasty sneer: "'You have a lot of wrecks on this road, don't you?' "'Oh, no,' said the conductor. You're the first I've seen for some time.'" No. SIX-SIXTY-SIX This is a prescription prepared es pecially for Malaria, or Chills and Fever. Five or six doses will break any case, and if tiaken then as a tonic the fever will not return. 25c.-Adv. Magicians Sit Down to Dinner. The Magicians' club, which is com posed of all the most celebrated trick makers on the English stage, recent ly held its first annual dinner, folowed by an entertainment, at the Hotel Cecil In London. It was a mar velous evening. The dinner Itself was shrouded with magic effects difficult of discernment, but one got an impres sion of new potatoes that turned. Into forks, and of waiters folding up the thick soup and putting it neatly into their breast pockets. After dinner wonder grew. After speeches real journalists conjured with words, and then Mr. S. C. Mau rice dazzled one with kaleidoscopic card-turns, a trio sang a quartette, the Zomahs told- the secrets of all the watches and other concealed articles in the room, and then Mr. Houdini Mr. Houdini took a bag and took al egg, and smiled, and the world seemed a simple understanable place. Whet Mr. Houdini had finished with the bag and the egg, the solid ground had faded beneath one's feet. In Hoc Signo Vincest. Lac Stafford of Minneapolis fouli himself in Chicago once in rush times An Odd Fellows' coivention made the streets hum, crowded the hdtels an( jammed the restaurants. Stafiord ane a companion were casting about foi a likely spot for a short snack whex a sign confronted them. -It presente the links of the order, with the let ters ". 0. 0. F." superimposed. "Let's go in here," suggested Staf ford. "We can get ten off on sau sage." For sprains make a thorough appl cation of Hanord's Balsam, well rub bed in. Adv. Sniffers. Miss Elsie De Wolf said, en routA for a summer in Versailles and Ven ice: - "New York is the most democratk4 city in the world. I4 New York tal ent, real talent, will admit one. any where. There is nothing sniffy aboul New York, - "No, we're *not like the .duchess whose little-daughter, Lady Ann, said: "'Mother, why do people hav4 noses?' "'Common people, dear Ann,' thi duchess answered, 'have noses. t smell with; but high-born people lik4 us have noses wherewith to exprest contempt for common people.'" Wounds on man or beast should be healed' by Hanford's -Balsam. Adv. Positive Cinch. "I don't like to .knock," said -thi Grouch, today, "but whenever I heal that two of my acquaintances, Bori and Pest, are sick I am always surn that It can't possibly be brain fever.' orse xpenled promtyf h hum Shot." Adv. If you .have a skeleton In you closet, ,that's the place for It. Et is Cast ess substitute for Castor ( [t is pleasant. It contains De Its'age is its guarantee. Ita athrty years it hasbeen ix Wind Coi, all Teething '1 id Bowels, asimilates the m's Panacea-The Mother's J SAlways Bought, and whici gnature of Chas. H. Fletcher nce its infancy. Allow no( and "Just-as-good" are but F Infants and Children-Exp Letters from Proi addressed to ( Dr. Albert W. Kahl, of Buffalo, N my practice for the past 26 years. for children." Dr. Gustave A. Eisengraeber, of your Castoria repeatedly in my praec mend It as an excellent, mild and hi Dr. E. 3. Dennis, of St. Louis, M< your Castoria in my sanitarium and and find It to be an excellent remed Dr. S. A. Buchanan, of Phladelpi toria in the case of my own baby a obtained excellent results from its1 Dr. 3. E.~ Simpson, of ChIcago, Ill. cases of colic In children and have : on the market" Dr. R. E. Eskfldson, of Omaha, Ne standard family remedy. It Is the have ever known and I recommend Dr. L. R. Robinson, of Knsas Cit has merit. Is not Its- age, Its contitr years, and the many attempts to I What can a physician add? Leave Dr. Edwin F. Pardee, of New Yorli recommended you~r Castorla and she Invariably prodneed beneficial resul Dr. N. B. Sizer, of Brooklyn, N. patent medicines, where maker alor them, but I kinow the formula of yo CENUINE CAS'I Bersth WOMAN Y WHAERLST ache. Morv ibP tyd X bPCin L-~ Phladelpbia,Pa.-I - sffened froi tisplacemeftand 'hi ids anda a t sixtt pound~adno1e4i goodanddn'ts a bit aObleW Pinnm's YVegetable -ompo&. atsmntbI2lottr I adadi -au pAmntee''arinwandbcCase. uTrlode aR.I.-"aI cannoia spent jooig~ o your compound. It can see what ft bas do for me Iand you msitopublih&am*6~=A';~ ,nnyof mfrlemds"- _39 WON, not beUWitt St . PIvhdeme,3 age -iaIa to- -e until ~ .ft IIol NdVa h -e wtr done pbysItooLdia! hepe mand m teestfhad --ngbide canw lersative fare.I be o yercomr t a^in ham'sVege of Ameri"anwom r. Aln rTrr Nil its vitU S D gr ignteedtto arwa one erit weht~ h rose and yu aey Ubeoeoe takr am'=asad .ft Am. In w omeWilbig-estify Tiea.~ayu EjRebP its virtua - ibm. 1tmas _Wd efwmw TmCO uIEsRAP_ I Nofo~s anteed'h~ -oo~N. I0 N~. Co. -bmao. jiHing. W3 WNT CO lY2inh10SWdW isavonpiur vemnd an urme direct be1hasn'3i . I ney fer Fi R taae ude s i W/N. U. g, ROTE waaaNet ia fra rarss Dpea - AMY.. ithe-r- Opuhe pbn n costnty s fortsicl W/N. U.,-HARLOTTE ~estond o-s n a has beeniiiusefo~v and has benma e to deceive you iun is Eperiments~tattrifle ith ~rience against Exeriment dnnet Phsicians Y., says: "I have se regard it as an exeeant ndc L Paul, ~[n1says. "'haveuust Ice with good results, and can-?econ. -mless remedy for chlldren.' , says: "I have used and Drescribe~ utside practice for a hnmer of years for children. dfind it pleasant to take, and have says: "I have used your CastoriaI md it the best medicine of its kind ., says:Ifndyour CastqrIabbSbe est thing for infants and children. , Mo., says: "Your Castoria certif1 ned use by mothers through all these itate it, suffcient recoZmmendt :, it to the mothers." City, says: "For severs! years I have 1 always continue to doi'sos asit baa' ,ay:"I object to 'what arS cale4 eknows what ingredients-are pUt1 r Castoria and advise its use." * ORIA AWY ignture o