(Se = CLEANSES THE SYSTEM EFFECTUALLY; DISPELS COLDS, AND HEADACHES DUE TO CONSTIPATION. BEST FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN -YOUNG ~~ AND OLD. TO GET ITS BENEFICIAL EFFECTS-ALWAYS BUY THE GENUINE. : MANUFACTURED BY THE a FiGESY.RUPXCOY ‘BY ALL'LEADI NG’ DRUGGISTS ONE SIZE ONLY. REGULAR PRICE 50% 4 BOTTLE Not Mad. Many “mad dog” scares and frights come where a dog has eaten too much meat, or foul food, has become over- heated, or suffers from lack of water. . Again, mild strychnine poisoning in a dog may be mistaken for rabies. Many say there is no such thing as hydro- phobia. Suppose there is not. Any- how, dog bites seem dangerous, if their fright kills strong men. Friends of dogs and owners of valuable ones, by ‘aiding to keep homeless dogs off the streets, will lend a helping hand against the prevalent and spreading dog prejudice which, has grown up hereabout in the last year or two.— New York Press. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegums, reducesinflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle. a 24 The Indianapolis “News,” a newspa- per which we had hitherto regarded as actuated by good motives, the other day printed a recipe for string bean salad where out wife saw it.—Ohio State Journal. J Constipation causes and aggravates many ious SiSeases. It is horall cured by . Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. The-favorite family laxative. Telescope of Galileo. Very few people are aware that the first practical telescope — the one which Galileo used in discovering the satellites of Jupiter, in January, 1610 —ig still in existence and preserved at the Museum of Physics and Natural History in Florence. It is about 300 years ago since this instrument was. first turned toward the heavens. Un- Hke the present astronomical type, it had a concave instead of a convex eye-piece, just like the opera glasses now in use. When Galileo first exhi- bited his new telescope to the doge and an enthusiastic assembly on the tower of St. Mark’s, in Venice, he was overwhelmed with honors, because it was thought that the instrument would give the soldiers and sailors of the «republic a great advantage over their enemies.—Strand Magazine. : Careless of Life. [Each year there are deaths and in- Juries due to carelessness exceeding those of any year in the late bloody Civil War. It is estimated that al- most 500,000 deaths and injuries take place each year in the ordinary course of business which are due either to the carelessness of some employe or the worse than carelessness of the employer. Human life is less safe- guarded in this country than in any other in the civilized world, It is a terrible indictment, and, unfortunately, it is undeniable.—Philadelphia Inquir- er. To permit a motorist to explore the | dark corners of his car with a light | and yet leave his hands free, there |. has been invented an incandescent lamp and reflector to fasten to the forehead. : ~ = A Happy Day Follows a breakfast that is pleasing and heathful. Post Toasties ‘and bring smiles of satisfac- ‘tion to the whole family. ¢The Memory Lingers" Popular Pkg. 100. . - Family size, 15¢. Postum Cereal Co., Ltd. Battle Creek, Mich. 5 “velop the one and straighten the other admitted. ‘military gentlemen from the hottest - stations of Algeria. -~ Woman’s Clubhouse. Fewer turbans are seen as the sea- son advances. : Skirts for evening dresses are somewhat fuller. : Waists of black large meshed cable net made over white dotted net have shallow yokes of Irish crochet. Long pearl and diamond chains are in high favor, and old cameo brooches linked together are made into collar- ettes. The newest belts for shirtwaists are wider than have been worn, and leather girdles of all colors are much in favor. Velvet ribbon in the leading colors is combined with flowers for the trim- ming of hats. It is also used for belts. ; There is a revival of the use of velvet bags, and many of plain black, beautifully mounted, are seen ‘in the shops. Gold colored straw trimmed with black is a combination of many of the most attractive modes. Some of the best hat decorations are gold and silver. Of the many veils that have ap- peared this season, the spider weblike Mrs. Cornelius Zabriskie is chair- -man of the committee which proposes to build a woman’s clubhouse in Brooklyn at a cost of $100,000. At & mass meeting held the other day in the chapel of Packer Institute stock subscriptions to the amount of $20,- 000 were received. The largest single contribution was that of the Brook- lyn Women’s Club, which guaranteed $7500. The building will not be started until the committee has the full $100,000.—New York Sun. x. ~ For Heavy Linen Waist. Lace insertion as.a part of the em- broidery design is not so frequent as in past seasons, but there is a rich pattern just out requiring a shoulder strap and three long upright strips of wide linen lace back and fro; upon the bodice sections. At the end of each of these, which is the bust line, a large flower is em- broidered in coarse cotton floss, and the blossom is repeated on the upper part of the sleeve where the shoulder strap ends. : The flower is so designed that its petals run upward and surround the 5 EB. Pimento Salad.—Cut hard boiled eggs into eighths, mix 9 a 8 with half the quantity of chopped pimentos and an amount of 55=% chopped olives equal to the amount of pimentos; to each pint =e S of salad add one tablespoonful of chopped onion. Mix with = Sa mayonnaise and serve on lettuce leaves. lace insertion at the point where it joins the embroidered flower. The centre strip of lace on the blouse extends further down than the | two side ones, thus giving a pointed, becoming shape to the trimming.— Philadelphia North American. . lace design that looks so well in col- ors to match the hat has proved the favorite. Lingerie gowns, guiltless of a col- lar, are frequently worn with a nar- row black velvet band at the throat, on which may be a diamond or other jeweled ornament. As has been noted before, the Greek coiffure is the most fashion- able. The braid around the head and the turban swirl are absolutely out of style over the sea. There is a late fancy among some Make Yourself Beautiful. Expression is the greatest of all beautifiers, as well as uglifiers. A girl may have quantities of golden hair, pink cheeks, regular features, but if she has a silly, self- satisfied expression no one will con-| Parisian costumers for making the sider her beautiful. belts of the more elaborate gowns of Or a girl may have very few claims |‘a color in contrast to the whole color to regular beauty, but be glorified | scheme of the garment. by a beautiful expression of face, and Belts of flowered ribbon had everyone will think her lovely. _ | bands of black ribbon velvet over it, It is sweetness, goodness and .in-|gtydded with steel beads. At back _telligence that make the highest type | ang front was a narrow buckle of the of beauty. Those qualities last much | velvet studded with the steel. longer than coloring; the older their A detachable frill and detachable possessor grows the more lovely she turnover collar 'is an addition to a will become. smart white linen shirtwaist of : There are Many ways In which YOu | redium weight, which has the front can improve yourself, if you wish to covered with quarter-inch tucks. ‘become better looking. : ‘Take your figure, for example: If you are flat-chested and round-shoul- ‘dered, take simple exercises to de- pipings of velvet, and small yoke and collar of deep coffee color lace, are combined in a handsome calling cos- tume. The hat is a small toque with a blue plume. : Lace veils dyed to match the color of the hats with which they are worn are the latest. They are not pinned in, by the way, but hang down straight from the brim—oprobably necessitated by the immense shapes. defect. : Hold your head up; don’t poke it forward. If your hair is lanky and oily, wash it frequently and dress it becomingly.—Scottish American. A Fancy Dress Wedding. ; Poulbot, a French caricaturist, having determined upon so common- place a step as getting married, de- cided that he would be married in no commonplace way. He asked all his friends to the wedding, but there was a sine qua non condition.attached to the invitation. You had to go with a “made-up head” or you would not be Preferably you were re- quested to make up as a country cousin at a village wedding. Some guests arrived as ancient peasants, others as village idiots. There were several bluff Squires and rural elder- ly gentlemen with means, a number Future Food Faker. Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, the Govern- ment’s brilliant food expert, was talk- ing about a notorious case of food adulteration. : “The morals of these people!” he said. “It is incredible. But I know a little boy who will grow up and join them some day. ow when I saw this little boy gath- ering mushrooms. : : asked. 5 of retired officers and exuberant un-} = ‘Fair,’ he answered, showing me cles from the South, besides fierce his basket “But I gave a cry of alarm. “ ‘Why, my lad,” I said, ‘those are toadstools you’ve got. They're poi- son, deadly poison!’ ‘““He tipped me a restaurant wink. ‘“ ‘Oh, they ain’t for eatin’, sir,” he said; ‘they’re for sale.’ ’—Washing- ton Star. : ltr sete meses eee Generous. “Come here, Tommy,” called his mother from the edge of the pond, as she concealed the birch switch behind her, “What do you want, ma?” asked the little boy, suspiciously. “I want to give you something.” “I—1I ain’t doing nuttin’, ma!” “Then I shall be even more liberal. The only per- sons who wore their natural physiog- nomies were the couple most con- cerned. They had drawn the line at making up themselves as a burlesque bride and a comic bridegroom.— ‘Washington Herald. Anything that is draped is fashion- able. : Sashes are with us again in glorious array. ; Tulle and Irish lace are frequently combined. I am going to give you something for nothing,”’—~Chicago News. \ — Two shades of dull blue cloth with “TI was walking one day in a mead- ‘“ ‘Have you had good luck? I} Now is when the house-wife will go all over the house, and dust the accu- mulations of the winter’s coal burning. She will find that so many articles need replacing with new ones. We wish to let all know that we have just what will be needed for the purpose. To enumerate a few articles only: Cur- tain Rods, Curtain Fixtures, Picture ‘Wire, Moulding Hooks, Clothes Bas- kets, Chair Seats, Hat and Coat Racks, Salt Boxes, China, Crockery, Glassware, Toilet Sets, Etc. The most important of all is, we have all these goods at the right price. We mark the price all in plain figures and have but one price to all customers. We find that it makes us too much trouble and very unsatis- factory to the public, to work price with the percentage off plan. ~ See Our IMlustrated Bulletin For Bargains. COME AND SEE Jo T. LUCAS MOSHANNON, PA, Army) Earth By Winifred Black Heaven on RS. Cornelia Botkin dled in the California penitentiary the other day. . And the day after she died they took her body up 2 a little village in the green hills of California and buried her. There was a funeral at the little old house where her parents lived, and her mother and father sat together at the head of her coffin, and the neighbors came and brought flowers, and the preacher from the little country church mied preached a simple, kindly sermon, and the village choir sang “In the Sweet Bye and Bye” and "Come Ye Disconsolate” quite as it the woman whose body lay in the coffin had been a good woman all her life and had never been tried and sent to the penitentiary for murder. For Mrs. Botkin’s father and mother did not know that she had died in prison. ; They did not know that she had ever seen the inside of a prison any where, and they never heard of the Botkin case, which was one of the most famous criminal cases ever tried on the Pacific Caost. There is a little paper in the little village where Mrs. Botkin’s old father and mother lived, and the paper printed every day accounts of the trial while it was going on. J : : But they called it the Dunning case and spoke always of Mrs. Botkin as the accused, and the old man and the old woman read the paper and talked the famous murder case over together and never even dreamed that “the accused” was their own daughter. And all the little village took hold of hands and formed around the old people a cordon of silence, and Woe be to any one who dared to try to break through. ; : We are prone to think of heaven as a place far removed from everything we know here on this earth. But oh, that little village out there, nestling in the green, green hills of smiling California! I wonder if the angels do not look down upon it and smile—New York American. 2. 0 CT <. No Danger of Over: i} Population By Bolton Hall : SD T has been said that the time is not far off when the United States will be unable to support her inhabitants. But those who think that have either forgotten or nave not reckoned with the new intensive cultivation of the land. The island of Guernsey, in the south of England, is from four to seven miles in length, and about four miles in width. It has a resident population of 41,000, and a vis- iting population of 30,000 a year, which it supports.’ About $4,500,000 worth of farm and garden stuff, or a little less than $400 worth to the acre, is produced annually, with only 11,623 acres under cultivation. ; : Now, if the whole State of New York were cultivated and populated as that is cultivated and populated, it would yield annually $15,000,000,000 worth of farm and garden produce, ard support 233,641,473 people—that is, about four times the population of the entire United States. Wherein then lies the danger of. overpopulaticn? Only in monopolizing'and holding idle the land; where there are unused lands there are bound to be idle i > Larva 53 “s “s "0 oh ots . Pe 2 ba LE Cofofefototestdotoedod Cd GesZoefoofogoiefofold saeleriade PR 2 04) fe i; hands ,for all that we eat, use, and wear comes from the land by labor. “‘Over-population” and: “pauper labor” are not the works of. nature, and if they should ever come, the people themselves will be responsible.—Practical Ideals.