a HAD TO USB A CANE. Weakened Kidneys Made an El wood, Ind., Man's Back Give Out. n. A. Pugh, transfer business, 2020 North B Street, Elwood, Ind., says: "Kidney trouble laid me up for a long time, and when I was able to be up I had to use a cane. I had terrible back aches and pain in the shoulders. The kid ney secretions were dark colored. After doctoring in vain I began using Doan's Kidney Pills. Three boxes cured me entirely, and I am glad to recommend them." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. The Curl Of Xlneteen-Soven. A typical girl of 1907 stood In side of a drawing-room the other day. Her hair was parted and al lowed to ripple over her temples. Around her head were bound two great flat Dutch braids so heavy that they made a great halo around her brow. A great, beautiful bow of ribbon crowned her head. The effect was too simple and too sweet for any thing. The girl of 1007 will bo very tall. She may have to resort to Cuban heels and to stretching exercises, and she may want to pile bralJs on top of her head and to wave her hair hlph. She will be tall and she will be slender. Living skeletons were the fashion last summer in London." They looked healthy and they acted as if happy, and while they were lean, yet they were not angular. To attain this means art was combined with science. Tho beRt professional models are now taking a double set of lessons In massage. There are two kinds of massage. One kind develops and the other kind reduces. Women who are wide awake are practising both kinds. It costs a professional model pome thing to live and keep her figure ithese days. She must have two pets of maBsage operators. She must have one masseuse who understands the art of pounding away the flesh anil another one who understands the art of putting It on. The girl of 1907 la going to ba very simple. Or she Is going to look as though she were very simple. She must be? absolutely perfect in the art of s,weet simplicity. It is not a country-girl simplicity, but an ar tistic simplicity. Milwaukee News. A Cui For It. nicks He doesn't spend much time at home, you say? Wicks No, she has become sc crabbed of late that he has joined a club and puts in his time there. Hicfts Why, he used to dote on her. Wicks Yes, but now he Is using the cl" as an antl-dote. Philadel phia Lb.,,;er. The Farmer's "Wife js vcrj careful about her churn. She scalds It thoroughly after using, und gives it a 8ii n bath to sweeten It. ISho knows that it her churn Is sour It will tulnt the butter that is made In It. Tho stomach is a churn. In tho stomach and digestive and nutritive tracts uro performed pro cesses which are almost exactly like the churning of butter. Is it not apparent then tli at if this stomach-churn Is foul it makes foul all which is put Into It? Tho evil of a foul stomach Is not alone the bad taste in tho mouth and the foul breath caused by It, but the corruption of the pure current of blood and tho dissem ination of disease throughout tho body. 'Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery makes tho sour and foul stomach sweet. It does for the stomach what tho washing and sun bath do for the churn alwolutely removes every tainting or corrupting ele ment In this way It cures blotches, pimples, eruptions, scrofulous swellings, sores, or open eating ulcers and all humors or diseases arising from bad blood. If you have bitter, nasty, foul tasto In your mouth, coated tongue, foul breath, are weak and easily tired, fool depressed and despondent, have frequent headaches, dizzy attacks, gnawing or dlstres-s In stom ach, constipated or Irregular bowels, sour or bitter risings after eating and poor appetite, these symptoms, or any consider able numlier of them, Indicate that you are eulTcriiic from biliousness, torpid or luzy liver with tho usual accompanying indi gestion, or dyspepsia and their attendant derangements. The hfst.flgenM knmrn tnjnedical sct encn Inr I In; i'MVTHIii! ulxivc ; symptoms unci co11,in.i.,n atTFifirtiv tlte writing nil tlie scvcra) school sof myilic"' lr-",''i ffi "tnli in" it IV FFrri-'H irrfirt iaauiyx. That this Is absolutely true will be readllv Droven to vour satisfaction If you will but mall a postal card request to l)r.'R. V. Pierce, Huffulo, N. Y., for a free copy of his booklet of extracts from the standard medical authorities, giving the names of all the Ingredients entering Into his world-fumed medicines and show ing what the most eminent medical men of the ago say of them. i ;sr . V'. v XA THE PRICE OF THE SOUTH Made Under U.S. Government Inspection If afllli-iril STIiompsoa'sEyeWater Willi w yea. pit Our Millionaires Are Our Greatest Failures. William Allen White, in the American Mugnzlne. ' The greatest failures in our mod ern life are our millionaires. As a rule they have accumulated money without giving society a just and equitable return for that money; they have acquired what seems to Ihem a vast amount of power, with out intelligence to use it, and they are going through life looking fo Joy and happiness, but finding only pleasure that burns out their souIb and does not satisfy their hearts. To get their money they have developed their cuunlng and stunted their can dor; they have deceived and bul lied and sometimes killed the man In their own hearts, and have let a demon lustful for gain reign in their souls. Often the man who was killed lingers in an empty hearts a pious ghost, full of wise saws and good intentions, and tho crackling laughter of tho fool, but the good man is, only a ghost; he has no real part In the rich man's life. Suppos ing the pious ghost that haunts the richest, man In the world desired to set aside half of his millions to pro mole the cause of tho Christian re ligion. Ills money would accom plish but little.. The worst blow the organized Christian religion mlsht haite would be that money. For the man's life Is so well known, his char acter Is so thoroughly despised, that all the preaching of the paid preach ers would bo futile against the in fluence of that one life. "How can I hear what you say," says Emerson, "when what you are keeps thunder ing in my ears?" The example of one poor man laying down his life In a fire or in a flood for humanity Is worth more to the cause of righteous ness than all the millions for which the rich man has strangled his man hood or bartered away his soul. Money does not pass current in the real world of service. It is false coin there. Churchmen need not worry about tainted money. If It is tainted, God will not accept It. For what God needs In this world Is not money but service service that comes from the God-Implanted instinct to help one's fellows. The failures of this life may heap tho golden evi dences of their failures mountain high, and donate them to the cause of righteousness, and they will avail less than the testimony and the hon est service of one poor man who has succeeded by living manfully. Men cannot cheat and Bteal and kill and oppress their fellows, and then buy their way Into the happiness that comes from real usefulness to man kind: the peace that passeth under standing is not to be purchased with stolen money, even though the rob ber shall present it as a sacrifice, and even though he shall lay It upon the altar in seven figures. The million aire of to-day may not buy indulg ences any more than tho rich man of Martin Luther's time. Christ said to the Magdalen, "Go Bin no more," and to the rich young man, "Sell that thou hast, give to the poor," and then 'come and follow Me." Christ had no more thought of spreading His cause by the money of one sinner than by the money of another. And the chlefest proof of Christ's divinity Is not in the miracles, nor in the jigns and wonders, but in the fact that He knew that the gearing of the world is not turned toward the mil lenlum by money or by the power that comes through worldly success, but by service of man to man, with out money, and without the power that money can buy. Money has Its place in our social organization. It can feed the bodies of men; but a dollar ior a million dollars never fed a soul. For souls grow, only as life has grown on this planet, by service to one's fellow creatures. Cut answer will be made that this Is a practical world, and not a world of dreams and theories. Men will say, take away the love of money, even though it be the root of all evil, and you take away the Are that gen erates the steam in the engines of our civilization. And to those sit flng In tho seats of the scornful wo may answer that this is Indeed a practical world, but that the scrap heap of antiquity is Uttered with the ruins of practical worlds. Also If the love of money produces the steam of our civilization, then sooner or later the fires must go out, and If we would hold the steam we must change the fuel. And we must flak those who question us, and we must ask ourselves, if Indeed, and in truth, the love of money does hold the fire that runs tho engines of our civili zation. Let us take a look at the thing we call civilization, and see how It Is going. We know America fairly well; it la probably as highly civilized as any other part of tho globe. In New York City there are said to be five thousand millionaires. Probably there are ten thousand or even let us say twenty thousand men who ar nearly milllotalreh, and fifty thou sand more who are living in the blessed hope of becoming millionaires reasonably soon. Their hopes of course are based largely on being able to tear down' the real million aires and to share in the fallen for tunes. Let us say '.hat thero are one hundred thousand people who. cer tainly are Inspired by tho love of money. These hundred thousand people have killed the social Instincts in their own hearts. They serve their fellows only for tho money thero Is In it. They live parasitic existences. Hut what of the three million other men and women in New York? Is the civilization of New York depend ent upon the hundred thousand para sites, or Is It dependent upon tho three million people? Three million people are working day by day for money with which to buy the necessi ties and comforts and luxuries of life. The three million people devote eight hours every day to money get ting; but what of the olher sixteen -hours during the day? In the eight waking hours that are left what a vast amount of work Is done for the love of it; and as we descend to those levels which are falsely called the lower levels of society to the poorJ what a vast amount of social work V) done without the thought of pay. The nursing of the sick, the care of j motherless children, the feeding of those below the line of subsistence, ' the helping and shielding and sooth- utfc iimi ib none ity ins pour to ine poor every day. If paid for in dollars would make the hundred thousand millionaires poor at sunset. Tho spirit of social service Is In the masses of all our people. One finds it throughout the land, among workmen who join unions, among farmers who put in their sick neigh bor's crops, and country-bred people who come to one another's help in a thousand neighborly ways in time of trouble. The work that Is done for money to buy comforts for tho work er himself is but a small per cent, of the work done in this world; it Is the work done by fathers for their fam ilies, by mothers fox their children, by neighbors for one another all in stinctively following the divine in spiration of social help that ha made our civilization grow nnd spread nil over America. The great Inventors are not rich; the great moral and spiritual leaders of men are not rich, nnd the greatest of out political leaders die poor. This is Indeed a practical world; that much we must grant to those who eit in high places and scoff; but It is made a practical world by those who. with out money, do practical work for the practical benefit of their fellows, nnd who, perhaps, without professing re ligion, are living the spirit of Chris Uarilty in their simple relations with their real neighbors more surely than those who have killed their souls for money, and let the ghosts of them selves haunt their lives, canting, in effective spectrea Hectoring the corpse! THE SILENT OPINION. What Men Think of Women and Women of Men. Most men have some silent opin ions about women and most women about men. There are certain types of face, certain kinds of manner, cer tain methods of expression even, for which many men and women are ut terly condemned in the minds of some of their brothers and sisters. A disposition to dislike certain types of face is at times so strong as to suggest a previous existence. We do not openly say that all wom en with such and such eyebrows are hard hearted or that a man must be a charlatan if the color of his eyes and hair contradict each other, but we act continually upon notions hard ly less unreasonable. Educated men with small vocabularies, for instance, are divided as a rule by clever wom en Into fools by birth and self-made fools, according to whether thelx want of equipment be ascribed to na ture or to affectation. To the first they are indifferent; to the latter they have almost always a more or less active dislike. Such men are often able, a fact their own sex Invariably recognize. The man whose words are few and ill chosen may be a man of prompt and rea soned action, who having been brought up among the silent wise or tho garrulous silly deprecates the waste of pains occasioned by the game of talk. All mental athletics bore him just as physical athletics bore others. In the same way the fact that a man pretends to know no more words than a savage may be a matter of awkward though genuine humility a fear of preteading to a culture he does not possess or an act of super ficial conformity to a passing fashion among a small set. It may have no more to do with his real mind than an ugly figure or an ill cut coat. Cir cumstances will sometimes convince even a clever woman of these facts so far as a given man is concerned, j but she will never alter her silent opinion as to the generality. Clever women are very hard on the men they imagine to be fools. t Able men, on tho other hand, are not '. at all hard on women they know to bo stupid. Where youth and beauty 1 are concerned the fact Is easily un- ' derstood, but youth and beauty by no means explain the whole of this phenomenon. Many men are in clined to think that the kind of men tal power in women which we collo quially call brains exists in inverse ratio to their common sense aud serves only to carry them with fatig uing rapidity through verbal fallacier to a false conclusion. London Sp' tator. Remarkable Rentals. Strange rents were being discussed how this church paid one red rose annually and that convent paid two doves. A real estate man said: "We have some remarkable rentals, but England beats us here, for she is the older country, and she delights In maintaining the qualut customs of the rast. "The splendid manor of Farnhara Royal Is held by the service of put ting the glove on the King's right hand and by supporting the arm that holds the scepter on Coronation Day. There is no other payment. "The rental of the manor of Ayles iry Is three eels in winter and three ireen geese in summer, besides a lit ter of straw for the King's bedcham ber ttrlce a year if ho come thut way so often. "The manor of Addington's rental is a pair of gilt spurs, a pair of tongs, a snowball on Midsummer Day and a rose at Christmas. "The rental of the Manor of Cope land Ib the holding of tho King's head, If needful, as often as he crosses the sea between Doverand Whitsund." Philadelphia Bulletin. Out of Danger, Doctor Whipple, long Bishop of Minnesota, was about to hold relig ious services near an Indian village In one of the Western States, and before going to tho .place of meeting asked the chief, who was his host, whether it was safe tor him to leave his effects unguarded in the lodge. "Plenty safe," grunted tho ted man. "No while man In a hundred miles from here." Woman's Home Companion. Too Much U.nnpathy. "Does your rheumatism bother you mucbf" "I should say it did. Every Idiot I meet asks questions about it." Cleveland Ltader.-' NEW YORK DAY BY DM. Some of the Things Done Daily in the Metropolis. "Needs A Mother's Care." There Is a child In St. Joseph's Or phan Asylum which, like Smee,.the wicked pirate In "Peter Pan," "needs a mother's care." Anyone who wants to adopt a child of spirit could not do better than try this. He (the child) Is about 2 years old, wears a white coat, a red dress and black shoes and stockings, and up to date he has this record: Found by a pollcemnn pulling up grass by the roots In Corlears Hook Park. When taken in tho. policeman's arms continued his agricultural practice on The policeman's mous tache. When taken on JtiBtlce McAvoy's desk In tho Children's Court he de liberately turned over the Inkwell. When snatched up by the Justice to save his little frock from getting stained he tried to abstract the Jus tice's gold watch from his pocket. Placed bnck on the desk, he play fully threw the inkwell at. the bridge otneer who came to refill It. Taken to the Gerry Society rooms, be looked over tho other babies and began to pummel them. Spanked and put to bed, he had to bo rcnrralgned (by proxy) lu court. Swung Cop Hy Coat. Tails. Mrs. Rleka Silverman, "mother of the push-cart man," fought to free one of her sons and gave Policeman Hannon a very unhappy 10 minutes. An admiring East-Side crowd of 3000 persons saw Mother Silverman catch the pollcemnn by the coat tails and swing him around twice In tho air nlmost as easily as a child swings a toy balloon. Mrs. Silverman, who owns many push-carts. It Is said. Is 60 years old, weighs nearly 300 pounds and Is very muscular. Han non had arrested "Shear" Wolfsky, a push-cart man, for violating the law. Wolfsky submitted to arrest quietly, but Mother Silverman appeared and, Hannon Bald, tried to rescue the pris oner. Hannon arrested her, too, and had his hands full. As the muscular old woman threw herself on him, a crowd miraculously sprang from tho street to see the fun. After his aerial flight the policeman mastered the woman, just as the reserves were going out to learn what the row was about. llliiid Poodle, Historical Maivci. There was a man In our town and he was wondrous wlso. Ho jumped Into a bramble bush, and scratched out both his eyes; And when he saw bis eyca were out, with all his might and main, He jumped Into another bush and scratched them in again. The only time the trick of the wlsr? man in our town has been duplicated Is reported from Brooklyn. Hence, a poodle In tho family of Louis Par mer, of 435 East New York Avenue, Is the wise one. Heine Is 12 years old. When Heine was a puppy he was wondrous wise, nnd he got Into a fight with a pussy cat that scratched out both his eyes. Twelve years went by, during which poor Heine was led about by loving hands. Last. Sunday the poodle met a cat and jumped Into a fight with the pussy, which scratch ed his eyes in again. At any rate, Heine can see again. Lizzie Went To Jail. Because Llzzlo Quelette Is a good servant during her periods of bo brlety Magistrate Smith of Long Is land City has been somewhat Indul gent with her In the past. His knowl edge of the girl's good qualities is complete, as she Is employed In his household. Magistrate Smith, how ever, realized Friday that there must be an end to all things, even to ex tending clemency to tippling servant girls, and had the unusual experi ence of sending his own servant to Jail for 10 days on a charge of in toxication and disorderly conduct. The Magistrate accompanied his wife to Far Rockaway to attend a social function last Sunday. Lizzie was left to care for the house during their ab sence infill Monday. Mrs. Smith re turned to the house alone on Moiu Jay. She was shocked to find 50 children In front of the house hooting nnd yelling at a woman who was making a political speech on tho front porch. It was Lizzie. Xcedle "Hhciiiimtlsni." An old-fashioned silver needle with n gold eye wandered around In Mrs. H. A'. Smith's body for something over a half century. No one was more surprised than she when the needle ended Its wanderings by emerging from her left knee. It U a particularly fine needle, with its gold eye, and Mrs. Smith's mother must have been very much vexed when her baby daughter swallowed It. Mrs. Smith as a baby must have swallowed It, say the doctors, though Mrs. Smith has no rocollection of having performed such a feat. She bad been having "rheumatism," so she thought, for more than a year, and the pain had been settling about her ' left knee-cap. Yesterday the pain became so Intense that she callod Dr. Lambert. He applied the lancet and found the long-lost needlo. By order of the Minister of Rail ways all the women who have hither to sold the tickets at Prussian railway stations have been replaced by men. The women are said to have been too nervous, Irritable and prone to get into disputes. A statistical paper on India Issued recently shows that in 1904 there were killed in that country ly snakes and wild beasts 24,034 persons 21, 880 by snake bites, 796 by tigers, 399 by leopards, and the rest by other animals. The number of cattle killed was 98,582. The ancient poets used to sing of the dense forests of Sicily. Today the mountains are bare. The ques tion of reforesting is a difficult one. Attempts at starting new growth are Frustrated by the peasants, who tear down fences and drive in tbelr goats. Only under military protection could new forest tees be grown. The Alliance Israelite Universalis has placed five Blalystok orphans in the Ahlem Agricultural Scnool, and has as a first Instalment applied the sum of 18,000 marks for their main tenance and education. I COMMERCIAL COIMi Weekly Review of Trade and Latest Market Reports. New York. R. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: The advancing season hns broaden ed retail trade in staple lines, nota bly heavy-weight clothing and foot wear, while wholesale and jobbing departments make satisfactory- re turns, and there is definite improve ment in the promptness with which mercantile collections are made. Current distribution Is scarcely more general than the demand for distant delivery, indicating that confidence In the future remains unshaken. In dustrial operations are on an unpre cedented scale, with especial pres sure at steel mills, rnr shops and Bhipynrds. Prices are well main tained, the general Ifvel showing a net. gain Blnce the month opened. Many voluntary advances In wages are noted, and If Is hoped that, the scarcity of labor will be less disturb ing when farm work Is finished. Railway blockades still delay phlp pvt.ts, yet earnings for October thus far surpassed last year's by 7.5 per .ent. Aside from the ndvnnce of $4 per ton In tho price of pipe nt the chiso of last week, quotations of Iron and steel remain steady, but notably firm. Some mills can promise small deliv eries In a few weeks, but as a rule contracts already on hand assure ac tivity far Into next year, even with tho InorcnseJ production that will follow the opening of new plants. Liabilities of commercial fnllures thus far reported for October amount ed to $4,561,211. of which $2,S20, 177 were In manufacturing, $1,671,- 333 In trading anJ $69,701 in other commerclnl lines. Failures this week numbered 186 In the United States, against 233 last year. Wholesale Market. Baltimore, Md. FLOUR steady and unchanged; receipts. 13,725 bar rels; exports, 16.705 barrels. WHEAT Firmer; spot contract. 75 U (ir 75 V4 ; snot No. 2 red Western, SO ft. 80 Hi October. 75 U tfr75; November, 75 Civ December, 77 (n 77 ; Bteamer No. 2 red, 69 U ('( 69 i4. CORN Firm; snot, 52?fr2 94; October. 52 (ft 5 2 V, ; f ar, 47 i 4 7; January, 4 7 H fit- 4 7 ; Febru ary, 47; steamer mixed, 51 f 51 '4 ; renoitits, 62,222 bushels; exports, 17. 142 bushels; Southern white corn. 54 56; Sou'hern yellow -corn, 5 4 (a 55 OATS Quiet; No. 2 white, 3Sa4 W39V4; No. 3 wbit, .". 7 & Z 8 I No. 2 mixed, 37 Cf 37',. RYF Firm; No. 2 Western ex port, 6l'f?67: No. 2 Western do mestic. 72 iff 73. BUTTER Steady and uncharged: fancy imitntlon. 21 ji 22: fancy creamery, 27ffi 2S; fnncv ladle, 1 S ? i 20: store pnekod. 1 C 1 A ifi IS. EGGS Firm. 2 4. I CHEESE Active and unchannod: j larco, 13; medium, 13T; small, 14V4. SUGAR Steady and unobungpj; ' coarse granulated, 5.2": fine. 5.20. j New Wk. BUTTER Firm: street price, extra creamery. 27: of ficial prices, creamery, common to p'tra, 19(fi 26'; held secoir'" i ex tra, 21 (ft 26; State dairy. ' mon to fancy, 19 0 25 V. ; renovate.:, com mon to extra, 1 6 f 22. EGGS Steady; Western firsts, 25; official price. 2 4 V- ff 25. POULTRY Alive, quiet: Western rhlckenB, 11; fowls, 13: turkvs, 14: dressed. Irregular; Western chickens, 10fil5: spring turkeys, 1 1 f 14: fowls, 10 13. LARD Firm: Western prime, 9.55 9.65; refined, steady; com pound, 7 Hi 7 . PORK Firm; short clear, 16.75 I8'50; mess, 18. 00f. 18.75. COTTONSEED OIL Easy; prime crude, f. o. b. mills, 29; do. yellow, nominal. SUGAR Raw, steady; fair refin ing. 3; centrifugal, 96 test, 4; molasses sugar, 3 V4 ; refined, steady. POTATOES Irish, steady and un changed; .sweets, wet.k; Jerseys, per barrel, 1.001.50. WHEAT No. 2 red, 7& eleva tor; No. 2 80 f. o. b. nflont; No. 1 Northern Duluth, 87 f. o. b. afloat; i:o. 2 hard winter, 82 f- o. b. afloat. CORN No. 2, 54 elevator and 5n f. o. b. afloat; No. 2 yellow, 55; No. 2 white, 55. Option market was without transaction, closing net unchanged; January closed 50; May closed 49; December closed 5194. OATS Mixed oats 26 ft 32 pounds, 38; natural white, 30tft 33 pounds, 39 4' 40; clipped white, 38 40 pounds, 3943. Live Stock. New York. BEEVES Feeling dull; dressed beef In fair demand; native sides, 7fa9c. per pound; Texan beef, 6G?7c. CALVES Westerns and grassers not wanted. Veals, 4.50 (fi 8.50; culls and little calves, 3.50 4.00; West erns and grassers, nominal; dressed calves, dull; city dressed veals, 8 13c. per pound; country dressed, 7 12c. Chicago. CATTLE Fancy steers 6.757.30; common to good, 5.00(7? 6.63; cows, 2.754.90; heifers, 2.50 f 5.25; bulls, 2.40 4.25; culves, 4.75 (fi 7.75; stockers and feeders, 2.254.50. HOGS Choice heavy shipping, 6. 53 6.62; light butchers, 6.506.60; choice light, 6.45;6.55; light mixed, 6.30 (C 6.40; packing, 5.50 6.40; pips. 5.25 6.15. SHEEP Sheep, 4.50 5.75; yearl ings, u.506.25; lambs, 6.007.60. WORTH REM KM BERING The population of Chicago now al most exactly equals that of Vienna. As far back as 1568 It wns decid ed In the case of Bon vs. Smith, In tho reign of Elizabeth, that a woman by marriage loses her former name, and legally receives the name of her husband. The crust of the earth, so far as we can examine It, contains only about 20- out of the 75 or more ele ments, and of these 20 only eight are present to the amount of more than 1 per ceat. of the whole. , From Bloemfonteln comes 1 the news that a trek Is being organized from the Orange River Colony to British East Africa. The first pariy will consist of a hundred Boors, fully equipped with wagons, oxen and horses. An English bread-making compe tition has recently been in progress In London. It aroused the inttnxst of 4,000 bakers in England, Ireland, Wales, the lslo of Man and th Chan nel .Inlands, who made entries in the several classes. The requisite weight, of the louf was 1 94 pound coU. ar.d various prizes wore offered. Young Vomen'Sd' securing young glrlB as caddies. So there's another masculine occupation changing hands. The players Bay they never had a boy attendant yet who didn't either giggle, laugh, excliilni or criticise when the golfer mnde un off hit. The boys, too, were apt to run off after stray squirrels, or else were too busy to come at tho very time their services wore most desired. Accord ing to Good Housekeeping, those Who have tried girls find them more respectful, more companionable and more conscientious. Their strength seems equal to that of the boys. while their manners are decidedly j tllil-A aml I, In r 15 1. llntL.K !o I.r.n.1 ' The greatest length of time which nny bottle has been known to remain afloat Is twenty-one years. A bot tle containing a message, which was thrown overboard by an American I sea captain off Newfoundland In 1878, was picked up off the weal coast of Ireland early In 1 899. nvlncnl nnpHcritioTrai tlioy ''annol. rni"' fr, ili'-iWMil portion of t tic un-. TliMroi i onl v n-n way to cure iloifn'Ms, an 1 n u ,y cn uti 1 1: t io iim I rorn' lli'.. Jx.-ii'.. -, .mM., i,v .i Inllaniqil cn i ;ti,i!i of t i- H n I i - . ' tlm Eustachian Tube. ,l !ils tulm tsl. flamed you havo.i rtnnMhi mil or innmr. feet hfirPr. ii'id urivi I: "UirMv liml IieafricKS int'i" reult, anil uule the iiitlri'n. matlon can ho takin on nt 1 thin tube re. stored to Its normal cond'tlon. liearln-; n-ll! he lestroyoil forever. Nine iiet out of i are can"il by catarrh, whleU Is notlilii : but ft-i Inflameil condition of the nmeon ui'rne,. Wo will irlve One Hun.lreil Ilollnre 'or any pane of IieatnoAsieanurd hy catarrh that erin not be cured by Unit's ' itnrrh Cure. fo: circulars free. F..I.''tiKXKY A Co.. Toledo, O. Sold by Dmc'lits, 7Se, T;;fco Hall's Family Pills for countlpatlon. Postal facilities In China are re ported to be Improving through the service on fast trains between Polrin and Hankow. These are expected to make the run In thlrty-slx hours. A Good Ilrrorcl. Out of nil thr externa remeriirn on th market we doubt if lhr in one that ha the record nf t tin t world-renowned poroin plnster Allcock'i. It h now heen in up for Hixtv years, and still continue to he an popular ns ever in doing its prent work of relieving our pains nnd aches. It is the remedy we all need when suffering from any form nf ache or pain resulting from taking cold or over-strain. Allcoek'n (Masters are sold hy druggist in every part of the civilized world. Ttflbles are the links that bind moth ers to ht-i'.ven and rIho keip them at home when they want to go ahoppiiiK SKIN ERUPTIONS 35 YEARS. Suffered Severely Villi Kezeliln AH Over Body ATlioumiurt Tttnnki to Cutlcura lteinedleii. "For ever thirty-five years 1 wn a se vere euUerer from eczema. The eruption was net confined to any one plnce. it was all over lny body, limbs, and even on my head. 1 am sixty ?c?.m old and an old sold er, and have been examined tiy the i;oernment iionrd over tifcen times, and they taid there was no cure tor me. 1 have taken all kinds of medicine and huve spent large sums of money for , doc'ors, without avail. A abort tune m;o 1 decided to try the Ctiticura Kemcdies, and after using two cal;e of C'uticuru Soap, two ooxes rf utieura Ointment, and twe hot ties of Cuticura Kcsoivunt, two triatinenn in all, 1 am now well und completely cured. A thousand thanks to Cu'icura. 1 cannot apeak too hiphly ot the Cuticura r.emcdics. John T. Uracil, Richraondcle. Ross Co., Ohio. .July 17, 11)03." In timea of peace girls prepare their weiunnif trouHHeaux. jr. Winslow'sSoothinK Hyrnpfor Children allays puin, cures wind colic, 'ioca but tle) Some men haven't troubles enough or ineir own. so tney nei married. There is no satisfaction keenm- thnn hpinn rlrv 1 1 i &nd comfortable . when out in the hwdest storm YOU ARE SURE JfcMl .. -,', VMS"- (IF THIS IP Vnil "(V 1 ISltS mxm, WEAR WATERPROOF I i .i Wlll'vl. I CLOTHING iA BLACK OR YCLLOW I On sale everywhere I -fi2L You Cannot all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con ditions of the mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused by feminine ilia, sore throat, sore mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure tlicse stubborn affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease gcrms.checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtin! represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box THE R. PAXTON CO.. Boston. Msaft DoKt all niht lon0 from toothkche, neuraJcjicx or rheumedisift Slo acres Lirviiiveivt kills the pzvin quiets the nerves cxnd induces sleep At eJI dealers! Price 25c 50c bHtiO Dr? Eexrl S.SIowv, Bostoi,MakSS.U.SA., HEALTH . SPEEDY CURE CF KISS GOOSE 8b e Is Mnde Well by Lydlft E. Pink ham's Voifetablo Compound, and Writes Gratefully to Mrs. Plr.kham. For the wonderful help that she has fonnd Miss Cora Urxxle, 235 E. Chicago Avenue. Chicago, III., believes it her duty to write the following letter for publication. In order that other women afflicted In the same wny may be 1 KS r, ?73T"! .MtlU, Jlliss Cora Goode J beneflten as she wns. Miss Goode i-i president of the Hryu Mn'vr Lawn Tenuis Club of Chicago. She writes; Penr Mrs. Plnkhnm: '' I tried many difTcrcnt miiedlm to build up my sy!"'. wliic'n bad Iwcome run down from lowii.f proficr ri'nt ami umvasoii ablH bourn, but iiutiiiiik; Sdiuuil to hnlp ute. Mother is a groat nilvociifco of Lytliu K. Pink haai'n Vcgctiil.lo Cotiiriound for fcinnle trou bles, having used it hurM-lt Home years oko with p'ont nuccpvic. So I lienn to tnko it, and In i titan n month I wo.tsbl to be out of bed an i out of doors, nnd in three month 1 wn.s Vntirelv well, flcally I liavc never feit so strong and w ell as I have since. " No other medicine lias such a record of cures of female troubles as has Lvdia K. I'iulvhain's Vegetable Compound. Women who are troubled with pain ful or irregular periods, backnche, bloating (or flatulence), displacement of organs, inflammation or ulceration, can be restored to perfect health and strenpth by taking Lvdia E, l'inkham'B Vegetable Compound. "Mrs. Plnkhnm invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Iler experience is very great, and she gives the benefit of it to ull who stand In need of wise counsel. She istbo daughter-in-law of Lydia H. rinUbam and for t-venty five years has been advising side women free of charge. Addrcs;;, Lvnn, V.it i. E or Sore Muscles due to Colds, , Slrcins or tlhtL ilsni will hnT the inflammation that rmnoii the lam 1 quickly removal h limt birthing Willi hot nftfer, then rutibii.g ou briskly Johnson's ' It wonderful power to df-stmv iain bai vault! il fiiinoim shire lSlu. -25c., tlina tinwa u murh SOo. All denier. I. 8. JOHNSON Sc CO., noton Maw, I t( fH I of l UnnillK UWilV frnm v.nr w.irk, try to Um nn tnsiir wav of doitiK it. That's one of the secrtts of KUCC't'KR. HICKS' tod ss n n 15 'Jibuti iiAv JTVx . ,,'-" L riini r 4 ..'.'fr.&fC" mm m m TAa ALL WlMtt! And IS'ervouaoess Trial bailie 10c At drug More L. DOL'OLAS 3.50&3.00 Shoes BEST IN THE WORLD W.LOouglas $4 Gilt Edge lino canMHpeequaiiBQa.anyprice, 7b Hu4 l)altrt: W. lM Douk.iu' Job htnff Ilotme m ine most eotiipUMtt in Ui:g i-oiiiiiry Send for Vufu.'oQ SHOES KOR EVERYBODY AI ALL tRICEii M..D-. Sliuea, f to Sl.SO. JSoyr Shoan, .! U.S125. Woman's E.'iim. (. OO to Si. 60. )Li4a' At Chi. Jrsn'a Khn.. QK ,n 1 Ct Try W. L. lourlas Women's, MU anct Children's huea; for ntylo, fit uud wemr tliry escel other makes. II I could take you Into my targe factories at Brockton, Mass. .and show you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes are made, you would then understand why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any othfr make. Wherever you live, you era obtain W. t Doutlu hoc. Hla name and prka U atamped n tna bottom, which protects yuu against hlg-n BtIcm and Inferior hoc. Takr nm aiao.fi. (uf. Aik your dealer for W. L. Douglas shtxt Snd Insist iipon havlnr litem, fast Color f uelett mtj; tiu will mot war Sraiasw Writs tor fllustrated Catalog ol Fall Styles. W. L. DOUGLAS. Dept. I , Brockton, Mass, PENSION FOR AGE. Writs meat onc fir nlsuks and InntnitlluiK. F rliTjje. No rVii.l.ii,, No l'ay, AdilrvM W. 11. W ILLS, Will Uillhllnu, S Indians av.. Wash. iiiHluu, Ll. U. falcnts aud TruOo-slarks bollcllvd. UVthUas. i: lUla fAfk.it. U WILL PA( M U 44 Suffer I5 R-4 IB : 4':ua;;-ji..t.-tAtiuz?r'-!iM--&. mm miumM
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers