■AN OLD PAINTER'S IDEAS." The autumn season is coming mor* J and more to be recognized as a most ! suitable time for housepainting. There | Is no frost deep in the wood to make trouble for even the best job of paint- Ing, and the general seasoning of the eummer has put the wood into good condition in every way. The weather, moreover, is more likely to ba settled for the necessary length of tlsn»» t« allow all the coats to thoroughly dry, • very important precaution. An 014 end successful painter said to the writer the other day:"House owners would get more for their money If they would allow their painters to take tnoro time, especially between coats. Instead of allowing barely time for the surface to get dry enough not to be •tacky,' several days (weeks would not be too much) should be allowed so that the coat might set through and through. It is inconvenient, of course, but, if one would suffer this slight inconvenience, it would add two or three years to the life of the paint." All this is assuming, of course, that the paint used is the very best to bo had. The purest of white lead and the purest of linseed oil unmixed with any cheaper of the cheap mixtures, often known as "White Lead," and oil which has been doctored with fish oil, benzine, corn oil or other of the adulterants known to the trade are used, all the precautions of the skilled painter are useless to prevent the cracking and peeling which make houses unsightly In a year or so and ; therefore, make painting bills too fra quent and costly. House ownel should have his painter bring the in gredients to the premises separately white lead cf seme -well known relia bla brand and Unseed oil of equal i lty ar.d mix the paint Just before ap plying it. fainting need not be ea j poi, he tnJ unsatisfactory ft the *>K ' paimer's suggectloas ft re foOowe raja Bi Cufda/tuteSoda * ffhrrn Srtd - sj Clarified Sugar mm JtUfayr&ri fYtnvn s J Apcifectßemedy forConslipa- ; i| I ton, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea •«] Worms ,C onvulsions .Feverish- || ness and Loss OF SLEEP, Facsimile Signature of NEW'VpHK. || EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. 'M Rich Women Have Troubles. Tho Idea that fashionable women are too busy and had too many inter ests to feel acute sorrow over their broken crockery was disproved the other day when Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish went into the principal dry goods store in Newport with a friend who stopped to watch a man who was selling cement for cut glass and called to Mrs. Fish: "Oh, here is a cement for cut glass which not only mend 3 it but makes it ring as clearly as if it were new." Mrs. Fish called back: "My servants break so much of my glass now that it is heartbreaking and if they knew it were possible to mend it they would break it all, so I don't care for any, thank you." To Launder Hardanger Embroidery. The popular hardanger embroidery laun ders beautifully if one knows just how to do it. Whether worked in cotton or silk, do not rub, but dip lip and down and squeeze in warm Ivory Soap suds until clean. To dry, spread between coarse towels and roll them up. Iron between cloths until nearly dry. then press on the wrong side. ELEANOR R. PARKER. Preach from Automobiles. A novel method of preaching the gospel was recently tried in France with striking success. Pastor Delat tre from Roame (Reformed church), in company with Pastor Sainton, of the Baptist church, in Paris, visited with an automobile the departments of Loire, Rhone, Alier, Saone et Loire, within a radius of about 90 miles. Pastor Delattre writes: "During near ly two months, from our automobile, we have been able to preach the gospel on market places, from fair to fair, distributing thousands of tracts and selling no less than 2,600 copies of the New Testament." Smokers Shown by Handwriting. Mr. Saunders, a former schoolmas ter, told the British house of lords committee on juvenile smoking that he could detect smokers by their handwriting—that of boys who smoked being a loose, flabby kind. Handwrit ing, lie said, was a cinematograph of the heart. Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. 11. Fletcher. Br. F. Gerald Blattner, of Buffalo, N. Y., Hays: "Your Castoria is good for children and I frequently prescribe it, always obtaining the desired results." Br. Gustavo A. Eisengraeber, of St. Paul, Minn., rays: "I have usee? your Castoria repeatedly in my practice -with good resull3, and can recom mend it as an excellent, mild and harmless remedy for .children." Br. E. J. Bennis, of St. Louis, Mo., says:"l have used and prescribed your Castoria in my sanitarium and outside practice for a number of years and find it to be an excellent remedy for children." Br. S. A. Buchanan, of Philadelphia, Pa., says:"l have used ycur Cas toria in tho enso of my own baby and fnd it ple&srnfc to take, and hava obtained excellent results from its use. ' Br. J. E. Simpson, of Chicago, 111., say.s: "I havn -.TEed your Castoria la cases of colic in children and havo found it the brT; .medicine of its kind, on the market." Br. R. E. Eskildson, of Omaha, Neb., says:"l find your Castoria to he a standard family remedy. It is the best thing for infants and children I havo ever known and I recommend it." Br. L. R. Robinson, of Kansas City, Mo., says: "Your Castoria certain!? has merit. Is not its age, its continued use by mothers through all tl| a years, and the many attempts to imitate it, sufficient recommendation? What can a physician add? Leave it to the mothers." Br. Edwin F. Pardee, of New York City, says:"For several years I hjavo recommended your Castoria and shall always continue to do so, as it caa invariably produced beneficial results." Br. N. B. Sizer, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says:"l object to what are cal'jed patent medicines, where maker alone knowa what ingredients are put ia. them, but I know tho formula of your Castoria and advise its use." GENU9NE?CASTQRSA ALWAYS The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE OINTAUn CCMPMII, 71 MUHBft* CTOKT, mw >OBK OITY. Nicotine in Tobacco. A scientist writes: "The essential ! quality for which tobacco is smoked : or chewed lies not really in the leaves ! themselves, but is contained in thou sands of hollow-knobbed hairs which ! cover their surface. The vital nicotine ; is garnered in these pearlike balls, but as it is impossible to shave off these i hairs, and would be a scarcely com | mendable achievement if it could be j undertaken, it becomes necessary to | preserve the whole foliage for com ! mercial purposes." The University of Notre Dame, it ap pears, lias some features that can not ha I duplicated in any other school. It is on o; bottle SOc'., 12 o. bottle !Sl. Lickes Drug Co., Mfrs., CLEVELAND, O. jCT* 39. Kl> J'C. J i t 0.V.1 """"""""""" """■; The Greatest Boarding College in the World ; University of Notre Dame NOTRE DAME, INDIANA We guarantee two toints; Our students v study and our students behave themselves - 18 Buildings 75 Professor* 800 Students Cour*e« in Ancient unci Modern Language*. 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