ta'W. i KELBAIGH OF WEST VIRGINIA PRAISES PE-RH-NA. " mm Mm v. i TO w I X i ' Hon. v. tl. Keinmi&n. A Culil at Ami Time of the Yittr, Kvpr rinlltin lint i'enthrr, iti'ern hrprrssinn In the System, I'e-rtt-iltl in tin I'ltrtitalerl Tonic hue Svrli t'nxi'n. Until What J rttttr .Sill AltlUtt It. I Hon. W. II. Kellmiiph, Kx-Memher t X W. Vn. I.'vislntiire, 2(U Ot li street, X.J J E., Valneitim, I). C, writes: "I'im')i use mil tin mr a nil word! I at (ill 1 1 hi cm fat' IV ri ltd II a infill- J cine ami Initlc it iiriiut II I! . I hit i c f trli'il II far it utiharii cold i(I 1 tin tlly run. down Hiistcm.' 1 tried t ; all miri .-.' other mid id net limit lia til scrcrnl cxtriml re doctor t bill, l'r rutin curat me, m rcnflli- ciwtt vic marc than vvcr, a mil naval me inouey." I K1 l'lnKn I ,1 lnt n..r.nl.l . "lat full I took a severe cold. I took rcrunn, lu'gan to improve and kept on io UDtil I wo able to do my work." Food Products etuLle yon lo uc).? good naab out of "hurry" inetlt. Libby'i Food Product are ready to nm wnea you get llw.i, yet are cooled at carefully and as well u you could do it in your own kitchen. Oa Tonau Dried Beef, Boned Chick en, Drrilea Ham, Veol Loaf theie are bat a few of the many kind your dealer keepa. Try for lunchwn or nipper tomorrow, tome sliced Chicken Loaf. Broil. "How Id M.lr Cod TIudbi lo Eai." ire ii you wribi Llbby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago. BOTH .V Tllll SAME BOAT. At a recent dinner which was attended by i number of clergymen President Huckham, of the University of Ver ' mont, told the following of Bishop Hall, of the Episcopal Diocese of Ver mont, in response to some good-natured chaff about ihe liberal views of the Congregational Church and the cast with which almost anybody could join it. He said he had heard of a negro who had many times applied for nuin- j bcrship in St. Paul's Church, at Pmrling ton, bi.t had not been able to satisfy the Bishop that his state of mind entitled him to admission. The negro had been advised tc; pray that his spiritual con dition might improve. After doing so he made a new appli cation. The' l'.ishop said to him : "Well, 'Rastus, have you prayed as I told you to?" "Yas, nulti dy, suh ; I done prayed an' i done tole de I.awd I wants to j i ne St. Taul's Church, an' de Lawd he say to me : , " 'Cried luck, 'Rastus; 1 been tryin' to '.line dat church fo' 20 years mahsc'f.' " Pittsburg Post. COOP GUESS. Senator llalc, apropos of an cwkward remark, said: "It reminds mo of the conversation of t.ko women at u re ception. They were strangers to each other. After a moment's desultory talk, the first said, rather qm-ru'ously : '! don't know what's the matter with" that tail, blond man ner there. He was so at tentive a while ago, but he won't look at me now.' 'Perhaps,' said the oilier, 'he saw me come in. He's mv husband, you know'" New York Tribune. "No TnoriJi.r:" To Cluiniie From Coffee to I'oMuni. "Postum has done a world of good for me," writes an His. man. "I've had Indigestion nearly all my life, but never dreamed coffee was the ruuse of my trouble until last spring I got so bud 1 was in misery all the time. "A coffee drinker for 30 years, it irritated my stomach and nerves, yet I was just crazy for it. After drink ing It. with my meals, I would leave the table, go out and lose my thea.1 and the coffee, too. Then I'd be as hungry as ever, "A friend advised rr.e to quit cof fee and USA Piulum en 1.1 I, 1 . uu.., om n, cuict i him. Since taking his advice I re- lain my tooa and get all tho good out of it, and don't have those awful hungry spells. "I changed from coffee to PoBtum without any trouble whatever, felt better from the first day I drank It. 1 urn well now and give tho credit to Postum." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich,. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellvllle," In pkg. "Thero's a reason." Spunls-li Women. Vhnt women more adorable than tho-m of Spain, do proud, so simple, so radiantly feminine? Ah n type, the Spanish woman of the South Is unique. She Is small and slender, exquisitely proportioned, with tiny but beautifully shaped hands and feet. Her face Is oval, finely chis eled, frank and childish. . , , Her eis are the mirror of her soul, dark, lustroui, pensive and. passion ate. , . . Her grace of carriage and deportment Is the Klory ot her race. Nineteenth Century. The Henllhy Woman. it careful to spend at least half an hour every day In the open air. Never rides where she can walk the distance comfortably. Doesn't waste her vitality In su perfluous and energetic talking. Kills three meals u day at regular hours. Sleeps elf;ht hours and as often as possible, two of them before mid night. Takes fifteen quiet minutes In a darkened room nfter luncheon. Begins each day with a cold bath, followed by drinking a glass of hot cold water. Your I'roperty. rf.ll you had before your marriage lo Bllll yours, and In most States you l:ave also the sole ownership of that v.hlch you acquire after marriage. Your right minded husband win wish ou to have your property stand in your name, that it may be free from the possible attachment of his credi tors. If your property or part of it be real estate, remember that the law of the Stale In which real estate is situated governs all matters con cerning it. All your property is subject. to the laws of your domi cile. Some Slates require a man to Join in a deed of his wife's property, even though the property is really hers. Get legal advice on such points. It is seldom safe to be a party to the transfer of property without It. Caroline J. Cook, in Good Housekeeping. Slum the Tale-Iiciu'cr. The fault-finding woman is ill bred and to be avoided. She is the one who, while she criticises her breakfast, cats heartily of it. She objects to the style in which dinner is served, especially if she happens to live at a hoarding house. Then she complains of the atten tion paid her bedroom. She is disgusted with the general appearance, and yet she is confi dential with the landlady. She is usually a tale-bearer, and unless you wish to be mixed up in numerous quarrels you had better avoid her, says Woman's Life. Think how pitiful it is to see women of the fault-finding type women who are making life a misery for everyone, but more particularly for themselves. Ask yourself if you are one of tho fault-finding type, and if so reform. Women In the Census Returns. "I never get tired of the census," the- girl was saying.- "It's as inex haustible as the IiibleJ One can return to It again and again, always picking up some new and interesting fact. Here, for instance, under the heading of women's occupations, I Bee that 1S05 women earn their liv ing as' fishermen and oystermen,and just listen to this! 1320 as guides, trappers, hunters and scouts! Aren't those astonishing trades for women? What In tho world do you suppose made thosa 1320 women go in for trapping and hunting? Prob ably they are tho daughters of woodsmen and help their fathers, or perhaps they are the widows of trappers, scouts, etc., who have found it necessary to do something after the death of tho breadwinner, and so went on following his craft as the easiest thing possible. Any how, their strange employments open up Interesting perspectives of conjecture, don't they?" J.ong Gloves Hurtful. - Some of tho French physicians are making a disturbance over the long, tight gloves! They enume rate all sorts of dreadful things to come from the continuance of this fashion hands as red as a kitchen maid's, crows' feet, red faces, and even varicose veins and their atten dant miner let;; but whether women of fashion are skeptical or indif ferent it Is hard to say, for there seems to have been no falling off in the number of gownB designed espeeally to be worn with long gloves. There Is a chance of escape from such Pis In having the gloves made to order. Most Parlslennes do, because they are so fastidious in the matter ot their handgear, and fre quently, even with the most beautl tlfully Bhaped hands and arms, there is a slight difference in size between the two hands, which is sure to bring about a misfit. The right hand being used so much more than the left. It is apt to require a half-size larger glove than its idle fellow. . "In the Hweat of Thy Knee." The other day I heard a formal matron rebuke her daughter for us ing the word "sweat." More than once a well-meaning friend has gent ly Informed me that "perspiration" sounds more delectable. However, I will stick to "gweat," and I expect the Karnaygee Reform Spelling As sociation to Indorse me, declares a correspondent of the New York Press. Now that our Sklbo laird has started on his campaign of edu cation there are many lines on which be might branch out. It be is to spell by ear, why not strike out word of the falsa modesty, not strike out words of the false mod sty of "perspiration." Mor.t of us have got past the stntte of saying "limb" for the Rood old-fashioned I "leg." Evcntuully we will call a j spade a spade but not yet. The I greater part of Fociety will have It I that, man lives "by the perspiration j of his brow," or wears "a striped i persplrer," yet we have got to the stage of removing the last trlniminss ! from the peel-.-a-hoo waist. Sureiy, j v,e are an Inconsistent lot! A Quern's Cbami trriM ic. The new Queen of Norway Is prob ably the Blimmrst woman in her do minion. Her waist measures but seventeen Inches, and she is so eth eral In appearance that rven in Eng land, where the cult of thinness has as worshipers practically all the women of the kingdom and most of the men she 1st called rather too frail and delicate in appearance. Queen Maud was the tomboy mem ber of King Edward's family and s brightest member as well. It was she who first nicknamed her broth er, the late Duke o,' Clarence, Col lars and Cuffs, a name which clung to him through life. She called her eldest sister, the Duchess of Fife, now called the Princess Hoyal, Her Royal Shyness, on account of that retiring lady's almost morbid dis like of appearing in public. And it was this merry princess who collected all the quoted sayings and doings of the royal family in a scrap book and labelled it "Things We Never Did or Said." As a girl the merry maid was her father's companion on his walks and rides, and this winter In her adopted country she ban taken to skiing and skating with n zest which has de lighted the loyal Norwegians who are rery proud of their cold coun try's outdoor sports. What is I.ifr Without l.ovo? Is It worth having? Well, hardly. We' may not be sentimental. We may be the most mattor-c.t-fuct per son In the world. Unless we are very crabbed and very foolish, how ever, we must appreciate the help love proves in all walks of life. With out love would the tired mother care to sit up and work for her little one, tend on the ailing child at nigh,? Without love would the father be always an"xious to get on in the world and be helped in his daily work by. looking forward to the even ing at, home? Most of us know the difference love makes in tho countenance of tho engaged girl and man. Certain ly the knowledge of It changes their outlook in every way, while love entirely alters the relations of a brother and sister. With it they are chums and take an Interest In all that concerns one another. Without It they are strangers, probably, with the ordinary restrictions of good manners removed. No; ' even the most matter-of-fact among us must own that " 'tis love that makes the world go round," and certainly the unbappiest person In the whole com munity would be the one who waf doomed to "life without, love," were it possible to find any such. Wom an's Life. A bit of vivid green on the Pana ma or other ecru-tinted straws forms a cool color combination thut is very becoming to the clear brunette type. Tiny tots are very sweet in the Dutch-necked short-sleeved gowns, the Dutch-cut hair adding to the qunintness und beauty of their at tire. A corselet skirt that is a bit un usual Is made in box pleais that are stitched quite to the knees. Between the pleats at the bottom are stitcLcd bands running horizontally. So general is the fashion- for Km p1re designs that my lady is dressed in costumes that hint .of those tar gone days whether Bhe is eating, sleeping, walking or motoring. Becoming millinery Is as essential. If not more so, to the appearance ol a woman than becoming gowns. And yet a woman seldom takes the pains with her hats that she does with her 1 gowns. Unless you are straight of figure, not the least bit bent, do not wear a bolero, for the rounded back Ib almost sure to throw the coat out ward Just below the Bhoulders iuuk lng an angle that is aw'tward in the extreme. The womun who hasn't as hand somely shaped a foot as she could wish will select a very wide ribbon for her ties but not too long, for in stead of a trim bow that will conceal irregularities and a low instep she will have bows and ends that will call attention to her foot. Many people prefer to leave the fullness of the shirt waist free at the bottom to facilitate ironing. A piece of half-Inch elastic cut the ex act size of the waist and fastened with a hook and eye will be found a convenient way of drawing it snug ly to place before putting on the skirt. Heavy linen and Irish lace are combined in a handsome costume, The Jacket is of the lace, with a 'bor der all around of linen. Sinallj notched revels and cuffs are also ot linen, and the skirt is linen trimmed with bands of lace. A collar and ' glrdln may be added of black or colored velvet, giving a very effec live touch, but it wpuld be prettier all In white. NmrC- fLAl I r.U a 1 SUiffcc! Cabbage. Cut out tho stalk end of a Inrga head of rabbntie. Icnvlno- a l,n, nhtll. Tie the cabbage In mosquito , netting and boil carefully until ten ur. Make a stuffing of seasoned crumbs, and any cold cooked meat. Fill the drained cabbage with grated ! (hecse, dot with butter, and . bake ! In a quick oven until brown. SI ruined Kljs. l it:s for brrakrast arc very much liked In one household, where they are prepared In the following man ner: Pull apart and soak overnight I - a thin syrup of sugar and water. In the morning lay them In a small steamer or colando to lit over the tea kettle. They breome sweet and plump prepared in this way. Of course, the best Has do not have to be prepared nt all, but this family pra-tlces economy and buys ordinary figs, which are really ns valuable for food purposes as the choicest. To Serve With Meats. With roast beef, grated horserad- fsh. . Roast veal, tomato or horseradish ! sauce. Roast, mutton, currant Jelly. I Roast Iamb, mint sauce. Roast turkey, chestnut dressing, j cranberry jelly. Ronst venison, black currant jolly or grape jelly. Roast goose, tart, apple sauce. I Roast quail, currant Jelly, celery 1 sauce. : Roast chicken, bread Fauce. Fried chicken, cream gravy, corn fritters. F.oast duck, orange salad. To Cook liecfsteak. All beefsteaks and chops should , be handled without having a fork stuck Into them. Punctures allow the juice to escape. Beefsteaks and chops should bo dipped for a mo ment Into boiling water just before j being rooked. This contracts and i closes the surface, enabling It to re- ! tain juices. ' Beefsteaks for the family should , be cut one nud a quarter inches at ; one edge and taper in thickness io half an Inch at. (he other. This, when cooked, enables the carver to : serve rare, medium or well done por- , tions, as desired. j Tho round of tender bcof cuts wci! ; flavored steaks; It Is mueii cheaper ! than the loin and If properly cut a:id ; cooked Is equally good. Before dip- ; ping it in scalding water nuiko pev- eral through and through incision? three inches long at regular inter vals. In these insert slices of kidney fat or suet. Dip and broil over wood coals if possible; If these cannot ba ' had heat a frying pan very hot and butter it, pluce the steak in It, cover and cook quickly over a hot fir Delineator. Clint About Housewifery. ( A cloth dipped in boiling water, wrung out and placed over lish that has been boiled, will keep it warm for quite a while. Those who find that Welsh rabbit, doas not agree wiih them may enjoy this simple sub stitute: Grate some cheese and mix with it a grain of red pepper, a pinch of mustard and a bit of curry, pile upon slices of toasted bread or browned crackers and return to the oven until the cheese Is melted. A tablespoonful of turpentine placed in the holler with clothes will whiten them beautifully. If a piece of paper placed in tho oven turns a dark yellow, tho heat of tho oven is right for the baking of bread or cake. If double layers of brown paper are placed under oilcloth on shelves or tables It will last twice as long. A small piece of wash leather wet with methylated spirits end rubbed on mirrors or picture glass will clean them beautifully. Polish afterward with a soft cloth. An easy mode of covering jelly glasses: Brush white of egg over white kitchen paper, cut into pieces of proper size and cover the jelly while hot. The paper will stick tightly und prove as airtight, as parchment. Cover plaster of parls ornaments, that are intended to be cleaned, with a thick coating of starch and allow It to become per fectly dry; then It can be brushed off and lha dirt with It. House keeper. White Cookies Two eggs, two cups sugar, one cup butter, one tea- ! spoon soda, one teaspoon salt. Fla vor to taste. One cup sour milk. Mix as soft as can be handled. Cornstarch Cookies Two cups of sugar, one cup butter, one cup sour milk, one cup corn starch, two eggs, one teaspoon soda, flour. Drop from spoon on greased tins and bake. Salad Dressing One cup sour cream. When scalding hot, add two eggs, one-half cup sugar, stir in cream, add one-half cup of vinegar, wait and pepper to taste. Pour on cabbage while hot. Chicken Salad Four pounds of chicken will make salad for ten or twelve persons. Cut tho light and dark meat Into fine pieces. Use two thirds of the chicken to one-third of celery. Mix the salad with the dress ing, saving some to pour over tho top before using. Apple and Cucumber' Salad Peel equal quantities of cucumber and sour cored cooking apples, cut them Into thin slices, season with salt, pepper und lemon Juice. Place Into a ralad bowl, pour over sufliclent slightly whipped cream to rover, tprlnkle over little paprika and serve. tS&tjfi ' alii ATX'OHOI, IN GAS KNGIXEM. Only Slight Change Needed In (lie Mechanism. It has been asserted that the farmers use more gasolene every year In small engines than do the owners of automobiles. We do not know whether the statement Is true, but a great, many people will havs a chance next year to substitute al cohol for gasolene. If, as has been said, grain alcohol can bo produced for ten cents a gallon In large quan tities, It. ought to retail (or less than gasolene, which now costs from eighteen to twrnty-lwo rents. f'are- fill trsts show that thr same amount of power ran be hud from a given quantity of alcohol as from gasolene. One estimate make.i It possible to get a horse-power from u pint ol either per hour. Alcohol can usually be made to work In an engine In tended for gasolene, but In building entirely new engines the designs will probably need to be modified In cer tain ways. The opinion is f-xprcsml by the Iron Age that tho niosi important change that, will be required will be In t'ue cylinder and Its Intermediate i n: ;s. Other thing? being equal, the essential factor in determining the economy and c.-flieirncy of an ex plosive engine Is the extent of com pression that Is possible with thr mixture of vapor and sir. This is greatly in favor of alcohol, siner tho compression can be carried much higher than with gasolene without danger of premature evploslon. The same rule obtains here as in other e;ploslves; guncotton is a compara tively, harmless substance until closely confined. Compression in a ga.sokne engine ranges from forty five to sixty pounds a square inch, varying according to the design and the rapidity of th? cooling of the cylinder. A higher comnrosslnn being possible with an ale.ihol mix ture, the combustion is more per--feet and the en-n-gy greater wttli equal volumes of gas. In all gns engines. o.e ,t those of the throttling type, the cylinder is completely filled with tho mixture during the stroke jus: pierrdir,? ig nition. If the rl-aranec: were as small aft in the ordinary strum en gine the heat due to rnmpr:ion would bo so g.-cnt as to cause in flammation of the gus before the pis ton rod had reached the end of its etroke. To overcome thlF, the com mon gr.solcno engine is made with a clearance rq-.ial to one-fourth to or.n fifth of tho volume of tho cyliu'.cr. This clearance will hav to he re duced to meet tho requirements of an aicohol mixture and obtain n higher compression before, ignition by the spark takes place. In this country engines have not been de signed for the use of alcohol, neither have endeavors been made to modify the ordinary engines for that purpose. Tho price of alcohol has been so ex cessive as to discon.age and in fact prohibit its employment as a fuel for power purposes. There has been absolutely no Incentive along that line. But much work has been done in this direction in Germany and France, where alcohol Is cheap and engines using It are common. Shipping Fish Without Water. Consul-General Richard Guenther writes that experiments made In Ger many in the transportation of live fish have demonstrated that fish can live out of water fur days. The gills of fish arc similar to the human lungs, and aiw constanly washed by water containing oxygen. The thin membrane of the gills sep arates the blood in them, vitiated wijh carbonic acid, from the water, containing oxygen, and thr practical result is the same as with the human lungs. It had been noticed long ago that many kinds or lish could live out of water for some time provided that the gills remain wet. In order to 1 s the gills wet the evaporation f the moisture had to be prevented: f r t'..is purpose the ilf.h were placed l.i n:i atmosphere thoroughly satur ated with water vapor. An hermeti cally closed wooded box was filled with water to the depth of about one-third of an inch, or the bottom was covered with wet rags, which through evaporation kept, the air in the box always saturated. The fish were placed In the box, which was th"ti shut hermetically by the lid; Through a tubo oxygen was intro duced. Before entering the box the oxygen pusfed through several water bottles, which thoroughly saturated it with water vapor. Jn this way th fish are always in a pure oxygen nt mosphere. The result of tho experi ments was surprising. Carp, tenrh. bleak and other fish remained in the box for from three to four dayf perfectly well. When they were then placed in water they swam about In a lively mani.er and appeared per fectly fresh This mode of transportation Is much more economical than shipping live fish in water tunks. By the lrttcr method the weight of every shipment m ninety-thre3 to ninety tlx per cent, water. Sensitive. The 'pompous gentleman with thfc $1000 watch fob was being piloted through the food show by his beauti ful daughter. Suddenly one of the demonstrators halted him and said: "I wiil now show you the process in which I serve" The pompous gentleman Btarted and looked as though he was about to run. "Please don't say anything about serving processes," cautioned the daughter, "it always male pa ner vous. You tiec, he Is a trust mag nate." Scotland Yard, f cot land Yard, widely known as tho headquarters of the London po lice, is a historical place, said to have been the site of a palace whero kings of Scotland were received when they came to London. It Is near the banqueting ball, Whitehall. The Scotch kings retained possession of it from D59 till the rebellion of Will iam of Scotland. Milton, Sir Chris topher Wren and other notables lived in Scotland Yard. n ilES IN DOL'HT. C f S l,-t rtb.n nnltw r,t ft,. j strong and successful drama, "f.cah I Kicschna," lias pronounced views against war. "If the men who caused war were the linn who fought," lie said one day, "1 should admit war's logic. lint this is not the case. On the contrary, the men who cause a war nccr tiht in it lu'ur rk their lives, or endure hard ship, or suffer loss. "It is the nation's young men who must light. Those young men. without any roa-on of profit or glory, die or re turn honu' with an empty troiiscr leg. and the prolit and the glory all go to a lot of high officials a lot of iioiicom hatanls who never struck o blow. "The common soldier, on the whole, is treated like the culprit ill a Mogador prison. "This culprit, convictrr! of slander, was sentenced to the bastinado. Twenty lashes were ordered. Two men were appointed to do the work. "The culprit, weeping, was bound down. Tin- two men, rolling up their flrcws, took sticks in their hands, and ! wil'i knit bmws began to rain the Jo lashes on the culprit's llch. "But half way through thry lost count. "'This is io,' said t lie lirt. . "'No; its 1,1.' said the -econd. "'I'm sure the las-, stroke made io,' the fir-t insisted. " 'Nonsense. It made l.t,' declared the second. "They argued for sonic moments, the prisoner listening anxiously, and then, finding it impossible to settle the ques tion., iliey agreed it would be best to start all over again." Chicago Inter Ocean. Tin: eathuh's ..v.s'c;o. An anecdote is told of Richard Sed ilen. the late premier of New Zealand. He was very active in sending troops to the assistance of Creat Itritaiu in the South African War. On one occasion he was taunted by the opposition mem ber with his readiness to sacrifice the lives of the colony's manhood. "You arc ready enough to send our sons and brothers to be shot at, but " was the opening of a taunt by his op ponent, when the Premier broke in: "Sir. this morning I sijtud a commis sion for my own son. lie will be shot at. too, and I have dared hini to conic back without a wound." Chicago Inter Ocean. DAZUll WITH PAIW The Sufferings of a Citizen of Olym pia, Wash. L. S. Gorham, of 01C Kasl 1th St., j Olymptn, Wash., says: "Six years ago 1 got wet and took cold, and was soon flat In bed, suffering; tor: arcs with my hack. Kvery move- -- v. .:K5?.V "t caused an ago nizing pain, and the persistency ot it ex hausted me, so that foratlme I was dazed and stupid. On the !'-& advice of a friend 1 Doan's and soon noticed a change for the better. The kidney secretions had been disor dered and irregular, and contained a heavy sediment, but in a week's time the urine was clear and natural again nnd the passages regular. Gradually the aching and soreness left my back and then the lameness. I used six botes to make sure of a cure" and the trouble has never re turned." Sold by all dealers. 50 eontsabox. Fostor-Mllburn Co., Tiuffalo, X. y. WORLDS FOR EXPLOIHiRS Notwithstanding ti c rapid advance of exploration in various parts ot the globe a recent estimate by a member of the American Geographical Society shows tiiat no less than .-0,000,000 square miles ui the earth's surface jet remains unex plored. The largest unexplored area is hi Africa, 0.500,00.1 square miles, but even North America contains 1.500,000 square mills of virgin territory. It is surprising to learn that there is three times as much land awaiting the foot of the pio neer in North American as in South American. To Wash C.Iassware. Much oi the imttatieii cut uliiMovnre may be Hindi' to look nhnns;. like the genuine ni liile it washed in the following imoinci : .Make a Mron suds oi Ivory iSonp hiu! itu inerwe the piece of iilassware- in it. Kub viirnioui.lv willi k sou brush, dip up nnd down in the xihIh and cfo not dry but let drain. This will give a bcuutiful sparkle. Klcaucir H. Parker. xor much there. "Yes," said Mrs. Starvcm, "he's a millionaire now and they say hc rose from practically nothing." "Yes?" remarked the s.ircartic hoard er, "that's what I ruse from at the breakfast table this morning." Phila delphia Press. FITS.St. Vit us'DHnrr:NervouKTn' scaurs per manently cured by Dr. Kline's (treat Nerve Restorer. tFi trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. II. R. Kline, Ld.,:il Arch St., Philu., Pa. A (tnnrt muny young men will liansr this milium r on front gutes. Mrs. Winslow'sSoothlng Pyrnp for Children allays pain, cures wind colic, tUca bottle tjulte often tliti man who Is swift Hurt 11 good aucHHcr distances tliii alow but sure cliap. HEAD COVERED WITH HUMOR. Bothered With Itehlng l or a Long- Time -.Kentucky I.acly Now Completely Well-Currd by Cntlcura. "After uing Cuticura Sonp, Ointment, and Pilla, 1 am very glad to aay 1 am entirely relieved of that itching humor of the head and aealp which 1 waa bothered with quite a length of time. I did not use the Cuticura Remediea more than three timea before 1 began to get better, and now I am completely well. 1 suf fered with that humor on my head, and found no relief until 1 took tha Cuticura Kcniediea. 1 think 1 lined several cakes of Cuticura Sonp, three boxra ot Oint ment, and two viala of Pilla. 1 am doing all I ran to publish the Cuticura Kcnie diea, for ; icy have done me good, and 1 know they will do others the same. Mrs. Mat tie Jackson, Mortonaville, Ky., June 12, 1U05." Few men believe In an everlHstlnsr fire and brimstone punishment except for their neighbors. Gall STONES, KIDNEY STONES, GRAVEL OR STONES IN THE BLADDER AND Raaulllng from Ulllouenaaa poallly.ly cur.d by urcui-js. WM.CRAlMlR,41UU N. vnAND AytNUK, saT. kOUlo, MISSOURI. ITS MERITJS PROVED RECORD OF AGREAT MEDICINE Prominent Cincinnati Woman Tells How Lydia E. Pink-ham's Vegetable . Compound Completely Cured Her. The (rreat g-ood Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is doing' nmonu the women of Aineviea Is attracting the attention of many f our leading scientists, uud t'.n.Uing people gener ally. jifrJijora IVison The following- letter i only one of many thousands whirl, are on fii in the Plnkhiim office, and fro to prove beyond question II. lit l.vdin K. I'ink bnin's Vegetable C nmroiiiid must be a remedy of grvat mer.t. othrr-.viae it eouiil not produce mk h marvelous results ninonjr mi k ai.d nihng women. Dear Mrs. riiikhnui; "Atmtit nine luonllrs rf,o I wn n grNit suf ferer wit Ii teomle ti ir.l, rr'.ni h ru'i.sed tne severe piiin, extreme nerveut urns Hiii fre quent h-HdnrlioK. from wlueti Hip Sector tailed to relieve me. 1 tried Lvriin R. I'mlt hiiin'n Veg-.ite t 'onipounii. und -iihin a f.hnrf lime felt Itetti-r. nmt utter t.'tiroiK five liol ties of it I was entirely run d. Ith''ifnre bwirtily rneoiruueiid yinr (Vmpofiuil s a splendid fcmnle tonic. ' It n,ni;rM the monthly jK-riods ivpilnr nn-i v.-itiioi,t pnin: nnd won't 11 tileMsing it is to tinu fueb a r'iiieiy nftr so iiinnv di etorM fnil to li )ji you. I nin pl-aswl to reef.lnnielnl it to (ili sliltVi'ing women." .Mrs. Hhiti WILsoii, ul J:ust. :sd Ktrect, Cincin nati, Ohio. Tf you hnve suppressed or painful periods, weakness of the stomach, indigestion, bloating, pelvic rat.irrh, nervous prostration. rirzim-Mt. faint nesFi, "don't-care" and " wont-to-bc-left iilone" feeling, t x itntillity, ba k aebr or the blues, these ure sure indi cations of feu. ale weakness., or .so:no derangement, of tie oif.Mjr;s. In such cases there, is fine '. -.c nnd true remedy Lydiu. E. l'ii.i;La.-n s Ycc-tulle Com pound. You Cannct all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con ditions of the mucous ir.eml ranc st.ch ai nasal catarrh, uterine cat arrli caused by feminine ills, sore throat, sore mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing tlie stomach. P,ut you surely can cure tLese stubborn atlections by local 1 I treatment with, Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease gcrms.cherks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtinj represents the most sucr.cssfvl local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousai ds of women testify to this fact. 50 ctr.ts at t':ra:;gists. Send for Free Trial Bex TKi: R. PAXTO-: r.C. or-ton. M. CALL THE LO! !.. After a number of rct;':i:s ot'.c "tellers ol the law ft law ft" the land i : 1 studied matters in t' ucy of prison walls, it ( n fort r rl 1 r -prohal.i tha: breaking laws will in t be ron-Merr:! such great fun as i; !:,- been in tile past. New York Tri! :::)-. .Y( VSE '(;. THEM. Canvasser Madam, 1 would like t 1 show you the bea;itit;:l s.ler fork- til... we .-.re giving away with every ha!;' doen bars ol SkinHjnt soap. l.ady of the House We don't rev. r cat with forks in this house. They leak. Woman's lhur.c Companion. I mA It hcI Ininu-iliiitPlv g M II flf I" yen foi'l i: fl..cip in 19 Bh InlhlltfH. Ynn don't INDIGESTION and 'r.T. AOIPtlTV ' k to knrv tin trocul It 'ir Hulvlll II KAIA( II i:h ALHO l7 rt'Uiuviufl tbecuK. XUceutn. COLLEGE A ajrhnol for Hoy, unit blrl. long, ,. and tonne- Women. A hiiImiiIp. ('ollrili, tr. omnrrrlal 11 ml Muilmieiiunn. f ,.,, i. W. H. KLIJVE. Tres. RELIANCE. VA. POWHATAN COLLEGE Fffir CBMUtS TOWN. U V. NoTKn Knn It la Ket.onlK. Able Fncullv. Miitrnlflcent llnllilliiK.Vlep 1'iii.rniiiu. H. ..,' 'iiiiifiirtHiuul Locution "lur funied Vnllr of Irirlfiln," near nnhlnutoii, 1) C Write' tor t amloiiue. B. I'. HTTuN,A.M.,Pe. II . Pre. Ii ih oldest ud lint butirvm -JW in Va. fcovn , build Ins a tins on. N vacation!. 1 and Ganuenwn. bookkeopina, Shorthand. Pnmamhip. Typewriunj. 1 tie aiaphy. Ate. 1Va am laughl by mail alio. " Leading business collets south ol the FetrauO liVSr." Phlla. fif,oo-oaA.r. AdHnsw, C M. SM1THDEAL, Prtxdeoi. Richmond. Va, i PVKBTIbS IN TUlk) 1'Al'tK. IT WILL PA V a Ml) .ii pENSIOINFORAGE. A new orlir wul ariva siou lor 1 1 Hrltamesi onoa lor blanks autl ituirufltlri.ii rrte ol chara. No htmsion, ho Par. Avldruas W. H. WILLS). WUls bullUiug.au ludiaua A. WathiDgioa. U U lamtiu ami iraav-ataras kwllulUMi. OHJARCH STUMP Pill I fRW"",,J sat .,7 111 " "sssi-aiumpi I tug A ulec., ad'r's, Blonaioh urutibur Cu.Lone 1 raa.la. WINTER1 Ue.lt. Hit llllaknla rr l utuliiKiio Ana ManinlA fealmerHeriH O..IIOX ., l. l lllll, Wla. It anilrled wllh wimla Thompson's Ey 8 Waiei BILIOUSNESS P:.'.' C It At MRU'S CALCUlUS UHl. Wrila lor ' & ,.y :S3 3S2 feSBU
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers