Hood Sarsaparilla Cures all blood humors, all eruptions, clears the complex. ion, creates an appetite, aids digestion, relieves that tired feeling, gives vigor and vim. Get it today in usual liquid form or choco- late coated tahlets known as Sarsataba. Mrs. Sage’s Bible Distribution. The gift of $500,000 made by Mrs. Russell Sage to the American Bible society, on condition that a like amount be raised by the society, has become effective. The $1,000,000 thus secured is to be a permanent endow- ment fund, the income to be used for the distribution of Bibles through nine agencies in America and 12 abroad. Of the $500,000 raised by the society, the largest gifts were of $25,000 each. The smallest was 10 cents and nearly 10,000 were $1 and $2 subscriptions. —Indianapolis News. RESTORED TO HEALTH. Another Remarkable Cure of Serious Kidney Trouble. H. W. Solomon, 228 Market St., Harrisburg, Pa., says: “Xidney dis- ease afflicted me for years and dizzi- ness was so se- vere that I stag- gered as if drunk. My back was so lame that often I couldn't stir. Three or four doctors had ex- amined my urine -and all had found albumen. My said I had Bright's dis- ease and could not live three weeks. 1 had run down from 195 to 135 pounds. . 1 began using Doan’'s Kid- ney Pills as a last resort and was cured. | have had no kidney trouble in over two years.” 3 Remember the name—Doan’s. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. re 20 Rise of Modern Liberty. It was in the town that "modern Democracy had its rise. = Despite all the efforts of the kings and barons to prevent it, the spirit of liberty began to assert itself in the larger towns in the shape of the charters which guar- antee to the people certain commer- cial and political rights; rights which, once obtained, were never to be sur- rendered. Bafore the middle of the eleventh century there were many of these ‘chartered’ towns which pos- sessed the right of electing their own magistrates, sheriffs, judges, and reg- ulating their own taxes. The wretch- ed serfs from the country were wel- comed by the townspeople, and aided to larger freedom. These free towns were first known in Spain, from which country they slowly spread over Eu- rope. fered protection and freedom to all who would flee to them from the feu- dal estates, and thus, slowly but sure- ly, the good work went on until! the ancient despotisms were destroyed. Ambassador Bryce. Ambassador Bryce delighted the uni- versity at Lawrence, as he did Grin- nell Co’lege in Iowa on this trip and the Knife and Fork club at Kansas City. It used to be that America picked her wisest men to send to Lon- don and England's opinion of this country and popular friendliness to this country swere greatly promoted by such men as Adams and Hawthorne, Lowe!l and Phelps and Bayard and Cheate. With Ambassador Bryce England is paying us back. It may be hoped that she wil lend him to us for vears to come.—Toneka Capital. -The burgesses naturally of-] ,. Gardening as a curative pastime is the newest idea introduced by the head of a fashionable sanatorium for nervous women, and each patient has | g® her particular plot to look after. She is even given the task of spading up the ground and is expected to spend a certain amount of time daily cultivat- ing it, regardless of the weather. On clear days, after the. gardening hour, ‘the entire force of fair women is sup- posed to turn to and rake and burn leaves and faggots and play they are amateur farmers. The benefit that the out-of door life and interest does to the nerves ‘is incalculable and the novelty of it makes it something to be looked forward to.—New York Tri bune, This Will Interest Mothers. Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders for Children, cure Feverishness, Headache, Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders. Regulate the Bowelsand Destroy Worms. They break up colds in 24 hours. Pleasanttotake,and harmlessasmilk. Neverfail. AtDruggists.25¢c. Samplemailed FREE. Address Allen S.Olmsted,LeRoy,N.Y. re 20 How Hummingbirds Learn to Fly. I often wondered how these tiny creatures learned to fly. When the time comes, they seem to spring into the air full-grown and fully equipped. By watching at the hummingbird nest, I finally learned the reason. The youngsters tock their turns sitting on the nest edge, stretching their wings, combing their tails, and preening their feathers. Rach would try his wings. The wings started slowly, as if get- ting up steam. Then they buzzed till they fairly lifted the bird off his feet. In this way, they practiced many times a day, so that, when the time was ripe, the breaking of home ties sim ply meant two buzzing streaks.—Wil- liam IL. Finley in Suburban Life, "Pillar of Brewing Industry. The Munich Post pays a remarkable tribute to Herr Joseph Fischer, who for 40 years, without a single break, has been a daily. customer at the Deieth brewery in the town of Strau- bing, and during that period has spent $4,000 in beer and $115 in tips. “Such men as these,” remarks the Post, “are the pillars of our native brewing in- dustry, the steady upholders of our patriotic. . traditions. The chair in which this modest hero daily sat for 40 years should one day find a place of honor in the Town hall of Strau- bing, to be venerated as a memorial of one imbued with a profound love of his country, who fulfilled in a faithful and unassuming manner the duties of a citizen.” Pine Forests at the South Pcie. Prof. David, who occupies the chair of geology in the University of Syd- ney and who accompanied Sir Ernest Shackelton to the Antarctic, has been making some interesting remarks on his discoveries there. The fossil woods he had found showed that pine forests had flourished in the vicinity, of the South Po’e at a remote geolozi- cal epoch. The coal seams he discov- ered suggested the same conclusion. At that time ‘there was more or less ‘continuous land from Australia to the. South Pole. The climate all over the world was at that period probably. much milder than at present.—West- minster Gazette. oh Misquoted Lines, Answering our challenge as to the most constantly misquoted line, a cor- respondent instances ‘“He who runs |may read,” which 'scunds very scriptu- ral, but is in rez2lity a mangled version of the verse in the Prophet Habakkusz: “Write the vision and make it plain upon the table that he may run that readeth it.” Ancther biblical mis- quotation ‘is. concerned: “By the’ sweat of thy brow shat thou earn thy bread,” the real text in Genesis be- ing “In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread.” And when we pour “oil on the troubled waters” thousands search the Scriptures in vain for the metaphor.—Londcén Chronicle. The eggs of wild birds are smaller than those of the same species of hirds when domesticated. \ Some Sweet Day Te 4 aa £3 PATENT OFFICE IT y—— " a Sm fr] Tm EARL] i EEE SE A Compound of Indian - Corn, Postum Ce Severe a i Settle Creek. Michigan, U, o, rs . SSN iat wea cn 2g’ 2 UN & wa Popular pkg. 10c Family size 15c. Seld by Grocers, Postum Cereal Co.. Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. “The Memory Lingers” You may be served with Toasties Then you will know what a dainty, tempt- ing food you have been missing.’ Every serving wins - d friend— Le — "The Garden Cure. . . [pCa a pensation his mother was anxious to been the text for the sermon. | the quilt.” | Just then she saw a .friend going Americans who visit Battery Park J Engineers and scientists are mak- ing echaustive ctudies of the recent floods . in Paris, to devise a system which will prevent a repetition of the disaster. It is planned to keep the Seine within its channel either by constructing higher embankments or by carrying the surplus waters around the city in a by-pass channel. Sara \ That the steel car is of great value as a protection to passengers in the event of collision was demonstrated in a recent clash of two trains in the Hudson tunnel, New York City. There ‘was no such telesconing as would probably have occurred with wooden cars, and the injuries were merely such as resulted from the passengers being thrown down by the shock of the collision. According to the very latest pro- nouncement of one of the best of liv- ing scientists, the earth's crust, the materials of which have a density about twice that of water, is between thirty to thirty-eight miles in thick- ness. Below this depth, and down to about 180 miles, the matter is in a state of pasty fluidity. Beyond this layer and despite the very great’ pressure, the heat is too intense to allow substances to exist in any other state except that of gas.—New Yorx American. We have read somewhere that Peter the Great, when he was stay- ing in England, had a particular lik- ing for the companionship of Halley, |. and that after carousing with him at Deptford one evening he wheeled him in a barrow through a vew hedge and did such damage that he had to pay handsome compensation to John Evelyn, the owner, which incident. shows that Shakespeare was right in thinking that not every astronomer plucks his judgments from the stars. — Scientific American. , Gold is usually classed among the metals which are soluble only in aqua regia, i. e., a mixture of nitric and hydrochloric acids. It has been ob- served, however, that hydrochloric acid alone is able to dissolve gold, in the presence of certain organic com- | pounds, which are here arranged in order of activity: Methyl ‘alcohol, amyl alcohol, chloroform, ethyl alco-" hol, chloral hydrate, phenol ' (car- bolic acid), cane sugzar, glycerine, trioxymethylene,: formaldehyde. The solution takes place slowly in the cold, but is accelerated by heating.— Scientific American. so He Knew the Text. Robert Saltsman, a prominent citi- zen of Erie, Pa., was in.town the oth- er day long enough to relate’ the strange church-going experience of his son Chester. The boy had been in the habit of going to church with his mother, but one Sunday she was un- able to go and he persuaded her to let him go by himseli. Well, when he returned from the seat of gospel dis- ascertain how closely he had paid at- tention. She asked him what had “Don’t worry, you'll get tife quilt,” replied the boy promptly. The mother failed to see the con- nection. Once more she. inquired about the text, and the boy repeated his remark: “Don’t worry, you'll get This ‘about convinced the mother that her son was getting a bit too fresh for so small a child, and she made up her mind to punish him. home from ,church, and she called af- ter her to learn what the text had been. Here's what it was: “Have no fear. The comforter will be with you.”— Cleveland Plain Dealer. Memories of Jenny Lind, Jenny Lind, ‘‘the Swedish Night- ingale,”” has been dead many years, and yet one of the pleasantest mem- ories which continues to cling to the Aquarium in Battery Park is that it was there that the silver-throated Swede won her first great American triumph. Those who wish to pro- «vide larger and better quarters for the fish, from the hellbender to the angel-fish, may rip the top off old Castie Garden and strip it until it is nothing but an open-air amphitheatre. And after all that has been done will point at the massive walls of old Castle Garden and say: ‘“That’s where Jenny Lind sang; I wish I had been alive then so I might have heard her.” The little Scandinavian woman with the voice of a bird was one of the most artistic and profitable of the many entertainment projects carried out by the master mind of P. T. Bar-| num, and that was once when the showman did not have to humbug; . Americans to get their money. Jenny | . Lind was worth the price lovers of, music paid te hear her.—New Yerk | Press, | i ; which seem indelicate. ~ Et has been Dr. Pierce’s privilede to cure a reat mary women who have found a refuge for modesty in his offer of FREE consulta All correspondence is held as sacredly confidential, Zddress Dr. R. V. tion by Iectter. Pierce, Buffaio, N. Y. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription restores. and regulates the womanly functions, abolishes pain and builds vp and puts the finishing touch of health on who gives it a fair tuial, It Makes Weak Women Strong, ’ Sick Women Well, You can’t afford to accept a secref nostrum as a substitute ol Cp ag AT egg ~The instinct of modesty natural to every woman is often a . great hindrance to the cure of womanly diseases. - shrink from the personal questions of the local physician The thought of examination is ab- bhorrent to them, and so they endure in silence a condition of disease which surely progresses from bad to worse. Women every weak woman for this non-alcoholic medicine OF KNOWN COMPOSITION. ¢ Cautionazy Note: Be'sure | you get this stove—see §] that the name-plate § seads “ New Perfection.” G UE £ 5 2 Many Women who are Splendid Cooks dread having to prepare an elab- orate dinner because they are not sufficiently strong to stand over an intensely hot coal range. This is especially true in summer. Every woman takes pride in the table she sets, but often it is done at tremen- dous cost to her own vitality through the weakening effect of cooking on a coal range in a hot kitchen. . It is no longer necessary to wear yourself out preparing a fine dinner, Even in the heat of summer you can cock a large dinner without being worn out. : fection. Gives no outside heat, no smell, no smoke. It will cook the biggest dinner without heating the kitchen or the cook. ately extinguished. It is immediately lighted and immedi- It can be changed from a slow to a quick fire by turning a handle. There’s no drudgery connected with it, no coal to carry, no wood to chop. You don’t have to wait fifteen or twenty minutes till its fire gets going. Apply a light and it’s ready. By simply turning the wick up or down you get a slow or an intense heat on the bottom of the pot, pan, kettle or oven, and nowhere else. It has a Cabinet Top with shelf for keeping plates and food hot, drop shelves for coffee, teapot or saucepan, and even a rack for towels. health and temper. “It does all a woman needs and more than she expects. with 1, 2, and 3 burners; the 2 and "3-burner Cabinet. It saves time, worry, Made sizes can be. had with or without Every dealer everywhere: if not at yours, write for Descriptive Circular to the nearest agency of the The Atlantic Refining Company (Incorporated) 2 J5ed and recipe R A FLAVOR that is nsed the same as lemon or vanilla. By dissolving granulated sugar in = waterand adding Mapleine, adelicious syrup ia i~® made and a syrup better than maple. Mapleine is sold by gross. Send 2¢ stamp for sample Arthur Dupin, the “father of the Apaches,” has just died in Paris. He was a feuilletonist, who wrote stories for the Paris press after the style of Fenimore Cooper. : Baby Wasted to a/Skeleton. “My little son, when about a year and a half old, began’ to have sores come out on his face. I had a physi- cian treat him, but the sores grew worse. Then they began to come out on his arms, then on other parts of his body, and then one came con his chest, worse than the others. Then I called another physician. Still he grew worse. At the end of about-a year and a half of suffering he grew so bad that I had to tie his hands in cloths at night to keep him from | ‘scratching the sores and tearing the flesh. He got to be a mere skeleton, and was hardly able to walk. “My aunt advised me to try Cuti- cura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. 1 sent to a drug store and got a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of the Oint- ment and followed directions. At the end of two months the sores were all ‘well. He has never had any sores of any kind since. 1 can sincerely say that only for Cuticura my child would have died. I used only one cake of Cuticura Soap and about three boxes of Ointment. “I am a nurse and my profession brings me into many different fam- ilies and it is always a pleasure for me to tell my story and recommend Cuticura Remedies. Mrs. Egbert Shel- don, R. F. D, 1, Litchfield, Conn. Oct. 23, 1909.” Frese Etnies 20 The harpy eagle of Brazil feeds ex- clusively on monkeys. For Red, Itching Eyelids, Cysts, Styes, Falling Eyelashes and All Eyes That Need Care, Try Murine Eye Salve. Aseptic Tubes, Trial Size, 25c. Ask Your Druggist or Write Murine Eye Remedy Cc., Chicago. Eighty-seven in every hundred Cana- dian farmers own their own farms. H. H. GrRrEX’'s Soxs,of Atlanta,Ga.,are the oniy successful Dropsy Specialists inthe world. See their liberal offer in. advertise: ment in another column of this paper. London has 2,151 miles of streets and 300 miles of tramways, 2 Constipation causes many serious dis- eases. It is thoroughly cured by: Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. One a laxative, three for cathartic. or Crescent Mfg, Co., Seattle, Send postal for } Free Package: q E k of Paxtine, Better and more economical than liquid antiseptics FOR ALL TOILET USES. af Ei ESE reath; clean, white, germ-free teeth—antiseptically clean mouth and throat— purifies the breath after smoking—dispels all disagreeable perspiration and body odors—much ap- preciated by dainty women. A quick remedy for sore eyes and catarrh. A little Paxtine powder dis- #2 solved in a glass of hot water A makes a delightful antiseptic so- lution, ' possessing extraordinary cleansing, germicidal and heal- 4 ing power, and absolutely harm- 3 less. Try a Sample. . 8 ~ large box at druggists or by mail. gre PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass. W. L. DOUCLAS SHOES $5,$4,$3.50, $3, $2.50 & $2 THE STARDARD FOR 30 YEARS. Miilions of men wear . L. Douglas shoes be- cause they are the low- est prices, quality con- sidered, in the world. Made upon honor, of the best leathers, by the most skilled workmen, in all the latest fashions. W. L. Douglas $5.00 end $4.00 shoes equal Custom Bench Wor costing $6.00 to $8.00. Boys'Shoes, $3,882.50 & $2 £5 _W. L. Douglas guarantees their value by stamping his name _and price on the bottom. Look for it. Take No Substitute. Fast Color Eyelets. Ask your dealer for W. L. Douglasshoes. If not forsaleinyour town writefor Mail Order Catalog,show- ing how to order by mail. Shoes ordered direct from factory delivered free. W.L.Douglas, Brockton, Mass. BI. ATER’E PII:xI.Ss. CELEARATED ENGLISH REMEDY for GOUT AND RHEUMATISM, sAFE AND RELIABLE, AT YOUR DRUGGIST, W ANTE SECOND-HAND BAGS AND BUR- LAP; any kind, any quantity, any- where. Write f° r prices. RICHMOND Xa G CO, Inc., Richmond, Va. - PATENTS P. N. U. Zu, 1910, DROPSY NEV, Discoveey gives quick relief and es worst eases. Bosak of testimonials and 20 Days’ treatment Sree. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS, Box B, Atlania, @a Watson E.Coleman, Wash. ington, D.C. Books free. Highe est references. Best results. x