The "Blues." Can one help having the "blues?" Can one help having a bad temper? Certainly. Mooda are subject to the will as any mental faculty, asserts a woman writer. The difference be tween the successful, popular woman and the woman who, fay her dls agreeableness, drives everyone from her Is simply the power of the for mer to control her moods and her temper. Fluffy Hair. To arrange the hair Huffily and yet securely is an art which few women possess. An Infallible way of keeping the hair In position is this: Take a small strand at the middle of the crown, a trifle higher or lower, according to the style re quired, twist this closely and make it secure with hairpins, then brush and arrange the hair over this Ultle knot. A strand of perhaps two fin gers thickness should be used. It furnishes the solid something upon which to fasten the loose, wavy su perstructure and make It Becure. School Girl Luncheon. It is important. It should be simple. It must be nutritious. It depends on the breakfast. After a big breakfast It may he light. After a hasty breakfast it should bo carefully chosen. It takes a few years as a rule to turn a blooming girl into a sallow woman. The luncheon should consist of dainty sandwiches, half of brown or entire wheat bread, with meat or nuts and cheese, and fruit, or other nourishing, digestible food, and not of the crullers, cream puffs and other excuses for food which a girl "is likely to buy. Philadelphia Rec ord. Her Home Like a Camp. On even the coldest days in the coming winter Mrs. William S. Cowles, sister of President Roose velt, need exercise her imagination only a little to believe herself back In her camp In the Adlrondacks on a July day. She Is decorating her sit ting room so that it will be as near ly as possible a representation of a forest nook. It will have a dado of birch bark, and pipes, guns, hunting knives, alpenstocks and wooden drinking cups on the walls will heighten the effect. Bearskins will be the, rugs and the furnishings will be of rustic wood, Innocent of paint. With balsam pillows giving an aro matic odor and a few growing plants In the windows, one could Imagine the room to be in the heart of the mountains, instead of in a steam heated, electrically lighted house. New York Press. American Cvilization. "You would be astonished," said a manufacturer of firearms, "to learn how many New York women carry revolvers, particularly in the subur ban districts. I don't know what number the records of the police de partment show, and I don't believe It is an indication of the whole. Mrs. Mackay is the proud possessor of one of the moat beautiful revolvers in the world. Its barrel is silver of a hard, alloy, the chamber is silver of a purer grade and the grip is of gold, engraved handsomely. Needless to say it was made to order for her. Mrs. Adolf Ladenburg, since the fright her little daughter suffered goes armed when she rides along the bridle paths around her Long Island home, and she would not nest tate to use her weapon, I am sure, if any repetition vf the hold-up May Ladenburg experienced were to oc cur. Half the women of the Mead owbrouk hunt know how to carry a pistol and to use it, too. A well knowu society woman has had a brace of revolvers made for her au tomobile. She carries them In hols ters one at each side of the tou neau each ready for instant -use." New York Press. Marriageable Age. A woman's prospect of marriage is distinctly affected by age. The sta tistics of all centuries show that the great majority of women marry be tween the ages of twenty and thirty. Before reaching twenty a woman has of course a chance of matrimony, but the objections raised by the parents or frlcnd3 to marriage at a tender tge frequently outweighs the desire of the young woman to acquire a husband, and load her to defer a wedding day. All statistics that have been gath ered bear out the Blatemont that a woman's best chance to marry Is at the age of twenty-five, that over six tenths of the marriages take' place between twenty and thirty, and con sequently that a woman's chance In t creases up to twenty-five, and stead ily decreases after that ugo until it reaches the vanishing point some where about sixty. Out of 1000 mar ried women 149 marry before the age of twenty, 680 between the age of twenty and thirty, 111 between thirty and forty, the women in the thirties r.ot having so good a chance as the girl in" her teens; between the ages of forty and fifty the falling off is enormouB, only forty-one in 1000 contracting an alUauce in that de cade; while for the woman who has celebrated the semi-centennial of her birth has only nineteen chances la 1800. Yankee Wives. Fur Canada. "A Colonial" writes to the Lou don (England) Spectator calling at tention to the fuct that more men than women emigrate to Canada, and asking that tlio imperial and colonial governments do something to en courage the colonisation of lirltmh women along wlUt these znea in tot Dominion. The gist of his trouble is well expressed in the following paragraph: "The chances are that the major ity of young bachelors from Britain will settle In those districts where wbole families from the United States are taking up wheat lands in the Northwest, and naturally It fol lows that the young Britisher will find his helpmate in a woman born under the Stars and Stripes, and lit tle likely to engraft into the being of her family the traditions of a united empire. Canadian women of British ancestry are probably even more loyal to the British flag than are the women of the old land; their loyalty to the beBt traditions of English home life is proverbial, but Canadian women are a mere handful In that great West. It Is a heterogeneous mass of womanhood from which the English - emigrant to-day. has to choose." As for the fear that the intermar riage of these British bachelors with American girls will lead to a national annexation, that is hardly worth the ink it takes to record It. These in ternational alliances are quite as apt to work the other way. The British influence in the home has on Its side existing political conditions and all the commercial and industrial forces which make of our people such well established Imperialists, but if it were not for the intrusion of this British element the home made up wholly of American settlers might be impervious to these Influences. In any case it in the long run it does not appear to our people that they will be better off as British than as American, no amount of hereditary j prejudice can xeej) mem so, ana mis conviction for or against British con nection will rest upon facts quite as apparent to the German, to the American or to any other foreigner as to the son of old Canada or of old England. Montreal Star. The Scientific Housekeeper. Housekeeping, which is the most natural occupation of women, and by far the most Important, has been practiced by them without any scien tific training, and, indeed, without suspecting that any was necessary, since the days when Eve catered to Adam's comfort in the Garden of Eden. But now a change has come. Per sons who are rich enough to hire a managing housekeeper desire to have one who is as carefully trained for the position as a lawyer or a minister is trained for his work. This training must be obtained in. special schools, of which there are several in the United States. Some of them, indeed, are not schools merely, but well equipped colleges, with a thorough course in domestic science of four years in length. If means permit it is well to take the full four years' course. Tuition varies in the different schools and colleges, but $150 a year may be considered a fair estimate. Books will cost from $10 to $25. These Items are, of course, exclusive of the cost of living. When thlB expense makes a four years' course impossible, young women may prepare themselves ade quately In special courses of two or three years; and it is even possible now to acquire in the classes of some of the Young Women's Christian As sociations, and such institutions as the Cooper Union or the Pratt Insti tute, a knowledge of the science of housekeeping which is sufficient to secure" a position. The "science of housekeeping" em braces many things. The studies in clude domestic architecture, with ifpeclal reference to the arrangement of rooms and their equipment; sani tary science; cooking, including the chemistry, cost and proper prepara tion of food; dietetics; household management; sewing; home nursing; slold. And all these general subjects are subdivided into a multitude of subordinate branches. . The Echools which afford these courses make it a business to And openings for their graduates. The demands are of two kinds. One is from rich people with many servants who desire a competent per son who can take all the responsibil ity of conducting the house. The other results from the necessity of having such persons at the head of boarding schools and many public in stitutions. The duties vary with the kind of position which the house keeper is called upon to fill. In a private house the housekeeper hires, pays and discharges the ser vants, usually decides upon the menu and orders the food, and the linen aud kitchen utenull3 when they need replenishing. She must also assign the servants to their various duties, and see that those duties are properly performed. She ina;ie:ts the plumb ing at suitable Intervals and super vises the clennlng of the traps. If her training in slold has been suffi cient, she may eve j put. up a shelf or mand a broken chair. In some families the housl.eeper is made "one of the family," eating with the other members and having a room in the main portion of the house. In fami lies where the social lines are more closely drawn, she will have her meals served In her room. The wages of a trained housekeep er range all the. way from $25 a month this, of course, In very small families to $3000 a year and a pri vate carriage although this, too, Is; of course, exceptional. From $40 to $50 a month is an average salary. Whatever her earnings may be, they are net, except for the cost of clothes. The housekeepsr Is at no expense for food or lodging, and both are usual'; good. Moreover, her sur roundings are generally pleasant and wholesomo, and the life of which she becomes a part Is ouo which affords' opportunity for meeting people of cultivation and rcflied tastes. Ed ward Willlston Fi entz, In tbi Youth'fl Companion. , . . CHANCES OPEN TO Many Schools Whose Purpose Is to Put Men and Women and Children In the Way of Earning a Living. - It Is a poor workman nowadays 1 who cannot exhibit a diploma. The washerwoman may have her sheep skin and so may the Janitor, while the shop girl must graduate from the school of Instruction especially pro vided for her. This trend toward special training Is seen at its largest development In the various trade schools maintained by the Board of Education, but Inter esting phases are found In the small schools and classes organized and managed by associations and by the efforts of individuals. More Interesting, too, than the classes in which fees are exacted and the applicant must have some rudi mentary knowledge of the subject are those In which people are taken in all their crudeness and Ignorance and converted into skilled workmen with no cost to themselves other than the effort of learning. Hopeless, helpless dependents are made into ef ficient laundresses, men whose great est ability has been in running an ele vator are Instructed in the care of delicate electrical machinery, and crippled women are taught to make the finest lace and embroidery. The school for washerwomen es tablished by the Charity Organization Society, although less than four years old, is almost the oldest of these training schools for adults. Here womeji so shiftless as to make even this work almost beyond them are taught old fashioned, domestic wash ing. In the whole three floors of the old residence on West Twenty-eighth street that the school occupies there Is not a single piece of machinery with the exception of the humble wringer. There are tubs and soap and water, and the women are taught, only to use the things found in the ordinary home. The course of Instruction varies according to the ability of the woman employed. The greenest hand is started with the tubs at a dally wage of eighty cents. She spends perhaps a month or six weeks there before ene is put on plain ironing and her wages raised to si. Later, aB sne progresses upward, her wages ad' vance also, and when she attains the dignity of shirt irpner she receives $1.60 a day. Then she graduates. At least she graduates if she can be persuaded to do so. "Our greatest difficulty is in get ting rid of the women after they have learned all that we can teach them," said Mrs. M. A. Williams, the super intendent. "Of course, some of the women we keep right on to act as working instructors to the new com ers. " "One woman who has been with us BlmoBt from the first is now practi- sally the head of the ironing corps, She has only one arm, but in spite of this she is our best Ironer. "Of course many women are sent here for instruction and have places waiting for them when they finish. In fact, many of our patrons begin by sending us their laundry to do and end by taking one of our graduates and continuing our system in their own homes. "The women are of all ages, but most of them are mothers whose shildren are put in day nurseries while they are work. We have one woman of sixty-five In the school Just now, and she Is i.olng good work, too, and there are any number past fifty. "We average about forty pupils In the school, and have had as many as Bixty. The majority are foreigners. Last year we had 49S Irish, 100 Cer niaiis, 168 negroes and two white Americans." Another school clossly allied to the Charity Organization Society is the school for bsad workers maintained at the Home for the Aged and Infirm on Blpckwell's Island. Miss Emma Fowler goes over to the Island every day and teaches the crippled, par alyzed men and women to make their hands useful. The work that thee forlorn people do, once their clumsy fingers have be?n trained a bit, is remarkable. Elaborate bead embroideries, chains, b3lt3 and 'trimmings ara ma-Jo, while really beautiful bark2t3 are turcsd ou:. Eeginning with the head work, ether things have bsan added, vood carving, crocheting and knitting, until the collected exhibition of their work looks like a booth at a village fair. One old man who had been Epending bis life sitting beside his bed in hopeless ldlenesE, last, year knitted twenty-two shawls and thlrty eeven pairs of wristlets. With the proceeds from the salo of these things ha bought delicacies for h, son dying of tuberculosis at the Metropolitan Hospital, and later paid hl3 son's burial ' expens33. Nearly $1000 was earned la3t year by thesa old people, to whom, up to the es tablishment of this school, even the blessing of occupation was denied. The effort of department store managers to get more efficient clerks has resulted In the establishment of a echool for shop girls, where classes are held and teachers are employed for the sole purpose of Instructing the girls In tba duties that will be theirs behind the counter. "Not even the special clerks taken on for the holiday trade are per mitted to como in contact with cus tomers until they have bad instruc tion," said the manager of i Sixth avenue store. "We have from twenty-five to thirty young men and women in our classes all the time nd two men do nothing else but teach them the routine of chocks, C. O. D.'s, transfer cards, etc., and give them talks on salesmanship, conduct and attitude to customers. "From three to six days are given to this training. The girls who take places as cashiers spend even a longer time, for they era taught also to test money and to make change correctly. "Tho day they come Into the store the girls are put into physical cul THE HELPLESS . . . ture classes, which when the weather permits are held on the roof, and at other times in the store gymnasium. A girl who has once had tbls train ing for her work, whether she spends any time in the store afterward or not, is entitled to call herself ex perienced, and therefore to receive, wherever she may apply for work, the preference that is given to ex perienced help." The largest training school for adults in the city is the evening school on West Forty-sixth street. This is generally considered a school for negro men and women, but as a matter of fact it is open to all races, Of the 1300 registration nearly 100 are colored. The whites for the most part are foreigners, who avail themselves of the classes in the com mon branches and of the classes, full to running over, which teach English to foreigners. Americans make up the classes in manual training, thirty-one In all, of which those in dress-making for women, and those in the care of boilers and in electricity for men, are most crowded. There are eight dress making classes, and the course of four lessons a week turns out fin ished dress-makers in three years. The cooking classes are full of men aa well as women. Here is taught not only domestic and fancy cooking, but also institutional and restaurant cooking. Much of the present Interest in in dustrial training is due to the efforts of the settlement Workers. Green wich House in Jones street maintains a handicraft school where girls and women are instructed In lace making, weaving and allied crafts. The classes are under the direction of Miss Katherlne Lord and are held for the most part in her studio, an old stable discovered by Miss Lord in the rear of the settlement house, and so delightfully fitted up as to tempt one to become a lace maker, If only for the surroundings. These girls and women, Italian for the most part, though twenty na tionalities are represented in the block in which the school is located, can make, mend, alter and match various laces, Irish crochet, Carrick macross, Limerick and several kinds of pillow laces, and are now being in structed in Venetian point. "It has been a surprise to me to see how readily the girls have learned the lace work and the interest and pleasure they take in it," said Miss Lord. "One of the first who came to us was a pitiful little hunchback, who came in preference lo going to an ostrich feather place, where the work would soon have wrecked such frail health as she had. 'We almost hesitated about tak ing her. But you should see her now. She 1b one of our best workers, neat, quick and with real feeling for the lace cs it grows under her bands. "Her health is greatly improved, while her Joy in her work and In her surroundings here in the settlement is a pleasure to every one who comes near her." In old Greenwich Village, too, is the Needlecraft School, where twenty girls, mostly Italians, are learning to do fine embroidery in colored silks. The largest and most ambitious of the lace making schools is the one at Richmond Houss in Macdougal street. Although in a settlement building, it is not a part of it, and Is maintained by an entirely separate organization. Tbls school is closely allied with those lately established in Italy for the revival of lace making. among women and girls. Slgnorlna Marl, who assisted in organizing them, Is at the head of the one here. The twenty-four girls in her classes are taught the Italian laces, and especial ly the old Italian cut. work. The work is beautiful, but It Is far from expensive, and the person who expects to pick up Christmas presents at bargain prices here will be disap pointed. A small pillow cover or bag brings from $70 to $80, while bed spreads, curtains and similar largo pieces run well up into the hundrads. The pupils earn from $4 to $8 a weak while learning, aud as they gain In prof.;:ency their wages are steadily raised. Of the making of demonstrators there is no end. A woman may, If she chooses, take a course in gas stoves, with a good place waiting for her when she has finished, and is pre pared to demonstrate a stove's vir tues and correct its vices. She may receive spscial instruction in sewing machines, and forthwith proceed to earn her living by dissem ir.atlng he:- knowledge. She may learu to be a trained nurse maid or a mother's hslper, a lady's maid or a telephone girl, all at no cost to her self. Whenever there Is a ctrong public interest in any particular subject, Just as surely will there be chances to become experts In It. For the past few years every place that instructs chauffeurs has been full to running over, while receutly the demand for competent operators for motor boats has baen so great that a school has been organized with a regular course of instruction in that subject with full training In construction and prac tical drill lu operating under all cir cumstances. Some of tho railroads have opened schools for the instruction of their dining car conductors in deportment and conduct, as well as in the com miseary department of the service. One of the big retail cigar companies has a course of two weeks, which all the clerks are required to take, In treatment of customers aud the judg ing of tobacco. When It comes to special instruc tion where a fee is Involved, the op portunities are as the sands of the sea. One may study to bo a manicure or au actor, a real estate expert or a barber, a Wall streut luvestor or an office boy It Is simply a matter of tho price and the time Now York Sun. coram com Weekly Review of Trade and Latest Market Reports. New York. R. G. Dun & Com pany's "Weekly Review of Trade" Bays: . Holiday trade monopolizes atten tion, although there is a steady gain l:i distribution of Winter goods as tho temperature becomes more sea sonable. Some Irregularity Is still noted In collections, attributed to high money rates or failure to mar ket the crops. This would make the mo adverse feature of the commor clal situation indirectly due to tho three mast striking evidences of na llonnl prosperity scarcity of men, nioney and railway facilities. The inadequate supply of labor Is attested by numerous Increases In. wages at textile mills and In many other oc--upatlons, the financial situation Is -hewn by the heavy deficit of the Associated Banks and the sixth meas ure, of relief thlB year by the Sncre tnry of the Treasury, and complaints lliont frpliilit blockades are numer ous, one shipper at the South stat 'ng that hundreds of tons of pig Iron liave not yet started, although the a is were loaded In October. There :) little Idle machinery at. leading manufacturing plants, the urgency or quick delivery being most notice able at steel and cotton mills and nil are well engaged. At the exchanges dealing In the li udlng farm staples the only lm "ortant Influence of the week was 'upplle.1 by the oPlclal reports. While It. is somewhat early to have very definite Information regarding the next crop of Winter wheat, the Department of Agriculture has ap iroxiniHted final results so closely In the December reports of recent "years that Its promise of a new high record production had a natural tendency to depress quotations. Ine decline wns not severe, however, chiefly because mlequate railway facilities rontlnu- d to restrict, receipts at primary markets. Wholesale Market Baltimore. Flour Quiet and un changed; receipts, 6.SS8 barrels; exports, 3,739 barrels. Wheat Dull; spot, contract, 73 i ffr74; Spot, No. 'I red Western, 77 &. 77 ; December, 7 4 (i 7 4 ; January, 7o t 7 ; vs ; fcOVs; steamer No. 2 68; receipts, 11,920 poits, 56,000 bushels; May, SO ,i .?! red, 6SUs(rf bushels; ex Southern on grade, 68ft 73. Corn Easy; spot, old. 5 0 tij '5 0 ; new, 48 ',4 (ft 48 ; Dec-ember, old, i"0 fi'BOU; year, 48 V ?( 48 i ; January, 4 7 st 4 7 'a ; February, 4 7 (a 4 7 M ; steamer mixed, 4ofi46; receipts, So, 599 bushels; exports, 214. 685 bushels; new Southern white corn, 4 6 U ? 4 8 ',i ; new Southern yellow corn, 4 6 fi 4 8 4. Oats Steady; No. 2 white, 40 ; No. 3 white, 39V2' 40: No. 2 mixed, 39; receipts, 9,970 bushels. Rye Firm, No. 2 Western domes tie, 76(H77; receipts, 3,404. Butter Steady and unchanged; fancy imitation, 2 5 5i 2 7 ; fancy creamery, 33$ 34; fancy ladle, 22(fj) 23; store-packed, 19 (u 21. Eggs Firm and lower; 26?2S. Cheese Active and unchanged; large, 14; medium, 14; small, 14. New York. W h e a t Receipts, 102,000 buBhels; exports. 230.8..8 bushels; sales, 1,500,000 bushels futures,' 16,000 bushels spot. Spot steady; No. 2 red, 79 elevator, No. 2 red, 81 f. o. b. afloat; No. 1 Northern Duluth, 84 c. I. f. Buf falo; No. 2 hard winter 79 i c. t. f Buffalo. Corn Receipts, 42,925 bushels; ex ports, 157,710 bushels; sales, 10,000 bushels Buffalo; spot steady; No. 2, 53,4 elevator and 51 VI f. o b. afloat; No. 2 yellow, 53 ; No. 2 white, 53 Option market was quiet but steady, wlth West closing unchanged at Vic. net lower. January, 5 1 a 5 I , slosed 51; May closed oO7; De cember closed 53V4. Eggs Weak; State, Pennsylvania smd near by, fancy, selected, white, 40 42; do., choice, 37 ft 39; mixed extra, 35 37; Western, average prime, 31 (official price, 31 1: sec onds, 28 30. Philadelphia. Wheat steady, but quiet; contract grade, December, 74 V4 ft 73c. Corn 'fcc. lower; Decem ber, 47V4('(48c. Oats, firm anil In fair demand; No. 2 white, natural, 40 V ft; 41c. Butter, firm end In good demand; extra Western creamery (official price), 32c; street price, 3.V.!.ft33; extra nearby prints, 3 8. Eggs, steady but quiet; near by fresh and Western fresh, 29c, at mark. Potatoes unchanged; Pennsylvania, choice, per bushel, 53 ft 58c; New York and Western, choice, per bush el, 50 ft 5 3; do., fair to good, do., 45ft 48. Live poultry steady and In fair demand; fowls, llft'12Vsi old roos ters, 9; spring chickens, 11 ft 12; ducks, 13ft 13Vi; turkeys, 1718; geese, 13 14. Live Mock. New York. Beeves Dressed beet slow at 6 Vx ft 9 Vic. per pound; fancy beef, 10c; Texan beef, 5 Vi to 6VaC Calves Market very d is It ; prime and choice veal steady; barnyard calves nominal; medium to prime veals, 7.00 to 9.00; few fancy, 9.25; dressed calves slow and market weak; city-drcssed veals, 8 to 13 Vic. per pound; country-dressed, 5 to Sheep a.nd Lambs Sheep steady; lambs slow; choice about steady; others weak; sheep, 4.75 to 5.86; lambs, 7.50 to 8.00; yearlings, 6.50. Hogs Very few on Bale; feeling easier on Buffalo advices. Chicago. Cattle Market slow; common to prime steers, 4.00 7.40: cows, 2.65 4.75; heifers, 2.60 5.00; bulls, 2.40 4.50; calves, 2.75 8.00; stockers and feeders, 2.40 4.50. Sheep Market weak to 25c. low er; sheep, 3.00 if 6.00; yearlings, 4.60 6.50; lambs, 5.75 7.75. WORTH REMEMBERING Emperor William spends half a million yearly in traveling around his kingdom. A shark measuring nearly 10 feet long has been captured by a Calais flBhlng boat In the English Channel. Each day there are 910,635 rush fareB paid to the surface, elevated and subway railroads in New York City. Alphonse Daudet is said to have received tor "Sapho," published in 1885, the record price of over $200,-000. Itlili And I'oor. "When I was rich." said a Geor gia philosopher, "the least little thing annoyed me; when 1 wns poor I had to devote so much time to Just, being poor I didn't have a minute to spare for the little things. Which means that a man In the pov erty business la compelled to devote his entire time to It." Atlanta Constitution. . Oerman, which is spoken by up ward of 75,000,000 people, tanks third in number among the four lead ing languages of Europe, the first be ing Englisn, the second Russian and the fourth French. flOO Reward, KIO(. Th rradt-rsul tbispMpvr will be oifaed to learu tuat t litre it ai icaat one Unautu dia mut auvuee tiaa Ueeii aoie to una in all ilaaiugi-a, aud tdut la Laiau n. Hall .aiai m Cms v tua ouly puutive turn uuv, kikj.wi lo tut metlital iimtiuny. Catairu oeniu u con stitutional aweiiae, leipum it uouaiiiuuufial treatment. Haifa iataiTiicuieiianeu inter nally, acting unectij upuit tne u.uuu aim ii.it coUa aurtaceaoi tne sieiu, I1n.-1e.13 uraiim ing the foundation oi tne uieiie,uiiu ui inu tile putieut atreogto by burning up im- Coi elituuon and umiatiUK liatuie ill uomu ita work. Xlie proprietor buve ao iiiucii iditu in 1U curative powers tnat tney oner tine iiunureU Dollar Jor any uiae iiml it ,aiK iu cure, bund lur Iihi ot text iiiiuiiihii,. .V.uieaa . . , . J- Ciie.nkv oi I.O., loleuo, o. bold by Diugg-iata, lie, lake riall'a i-unu.y film lor voiiatipatiou. J. M. Boutwell, at present assist ant geologist, will take t-narge of the collection of statistics ou icad, tine aud quicksilver for the Uuitta States Geological Survey. riTS.St.Vitup'DftncerNprvonsPiseaw!" per tnanentlycured by Dr. Kline'" til-eat Nerve Kestorer. W trial Ixittle and treatise free. Dr. U. K, Kline, U.,K Aivh St.. i'liila., To. Firm Impressions of oVnlal student Iro Rt'Ulntn the beftt. To Cure u ("old in One Day Take Laxative Bmmo V'i"'"' Tablets. DniggintR refund money il it fails to cure. . W . Grove's signature, is on eacii box. U 3c. When I romp to Riving udvice Vic average nun I liberal. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teet hing, of tens t begums, fedm-esi anamina tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, aooa bottle A man Isn't necessarily an artist be cause ho draws tlie color line. A Great Outside Itiiily. Most pain are of local origin a "crick" in the back, a twinge of ilioum.itiHTn, a soreness all over arising from a cold n re all cured by outside appiicHtion. The quickent. aiet and most certain mpthtrfl is AUcook's Plaster, known the world over as a universal remeily for pain. They never fail, they act prompfly, they arc clenn and cheap. You can pn right ahead with your work while the hcaline nrocean goes on. Sixty years' use has given them a great reputation. If a man Is well und happy he ought to be willing to let it ko at that. TORTURED WITH ECZEMA. Treinandon Itching Over Whole Body Scratched. Until Bled Wonder- . ful Care by Cutlcur. "Lat year 1 sutfered with a tremendous itching on my back, wbicb grew worie and worse until it spread over the whole body, and only my lace and bandl were tree. For four months or ao 1 suffered torments, and 1 had to scratch, scratch, scratch until 1 bled. At night when 1 went to bed things got worse, and 1 bad at timet to et up and scratch my body all over until was aa lore aa could be, and until 1 suf fered excruciating pain. Xhey told ma that I was suffering from eczema. Then 1 mads up my mind that 1 would ute the Cuticura Remedies. 1 uted them accord ing to inttructinnt, and very aoon indeed I waa .greatly relieved. 1 continued until well, and now 1 am ready to recommend the Cuticura Remedies to any ona. Mrs. Mary Metzfer, Sweetwater, Okla., June 28. 1905." After doliiR onu thing;, clo you not often wlnli that oil had unite the other? Piles Cnred in 6 to 14 Days. Pazo Ointment is guaranteed tn cure any esse of Itching. Blind, Bleeding orfProtrui'ling Piles in 6 to 14 day a or money refunded. 600. There vmild hHrdly he any pl,?awure In being happy if everybody else wus. Itch cured ia 30 minute by Wooltoiil's Sanitary .'.oliou; never luiia. c-olu by JJi uk guta. .Mail orders promptly tilled by Ui. ijutcucn, Cruu-tordsvillL, Jud. 1. About 1,750,0X1 acies giow lb worla'a tobacco. Potash is the connect ing link between the soil and heavy crops. The most important plant food for vegetable growth is POTASM ) neiaiu . u ovuiaum m nm iff - iM.r.fin t lift Tinriiirn-rir"irr:i "Truck Farming" is a val uable pamphlet written by eminent men of scientific training and national repu tation. We mail it free to farmers who write for it; OERMAN KALI WORKS 03 Nnsacu Street, Mew York Dorct all n.Qht lon from toothache neureJ0ie. or rheumatism Sleeps Iviivinveivt kills -the pa-in quiets the nerves end Induces sleep AtdNeders Price 25c 50c &H00 Dr? Earl S.SIowv, Bostor.,MaiSS.US.Av A Sold Step. , To overcome the well-grounded ami reasonable object Ions of tho morn Intor llRcnt to tho use of o ret, mivliclnaJ eo miunds. Dr. R. V. pierce, of Buffalo, K. V.. some time ago, decided to make a bold depnrture from tho usual course pursued by the makers of put-up medicine for do mestic uso, and, so has published bread- cast and 01 y to the whole world, a fall and comp list of all tho Ingredient entering i m position of his wider? celebrated cs. Thus he has taken bis nutncri Irons and patients jnto his full xnus too ne aaa ra- moved. cdicines from among secret notr doubtful merits, and bmxw tlicmHicmctikt of Krnnvn Componuitm, HV this bold rtrn Dr. Pierce ha nhrnrw ot onlv due the ffmnrtpr nf mrv linttHl Of Dr. l'leri'c (loldi n Medical DIk-otctt. Iht fanuni niedlclnii for weak nma-h. tonrfJ liver or hlUoiisne-i and all catarrhal dbtt-asr) wherever loeatcd. have printed upon II, fn jilnln KnpHtli, a full and eomulete Pat of ail the liurrcdlcnt rompolns- It, but a mail book tia teen compiled from num-traa ntanriard medleal work'., of all the different school of piai'tlee, containing very uumrr ou extracts from tho writing of lradinar pract It loner of n.edlilne. uidorslnr i lit ffrolitfMt ixmrihlr. lam. 0H h and "e-vry ham--dlent contained In Dr. Plerre'a medlrliw-K. tine of thei llltlo book will lie mailed rrwt to any one M'ndln-r addre-,aon ptwal cantor by letter, to Dr. It. V. Pierce, MiilTaloi N. and recjucHtlnir the name. From Hit lit Ma book It will ti learned that Dr. Pierce' nn-o-lcliic contain no almhol, na-votlm. mineral agent or olher polsonou or Injurious aavnta and that, they are made from native, tm-dk-t-nal root of -treat, value; also that aome of the rmt valunlilo lnirredlent ronlalnef tn Dr. Pierce' Favorite Prescription- fur weak, nervous, Over-worked, 11 run-down." nervouit and debilitated women, were employed, km! yean ami, by tho Indiana for similar allmenot nfleetlnit their winaw. In f art. oo of the niot valuable medicinal plant enierlnr Into the conipollion of Dr. I'lerce Favorite Pre scription was known to the Indiana a "r-uuaw-Wccd." Our knowledeo of llw uw of rot a few f our must valuiihlo ntlvei. it! dlclnal plant was CBlned from the Indians. A made up by Improved and extu-t, pro cesses, lh"Knvorlie Prescription "I a no t nVicnt remedy for retfulatliiir all the wom anly function, -orrrctii-.s- dpla.-enient. aa u-Map-.uH. anteverslon and retorvemiwi. ovcivonilnir painful periods, tonim; up the nerve and hrinirlne alsiut a perfis t Mateof health, tvjltf by all dealers in mcdlcln-ra. Taidy 1-ralse tor r.o;mi!i: At a district: council msetlng member protested vigorously against the lethargy shown In commencing works which, he declared, were sore ly needed. A "scene" e:i3u?J. and the chairman tried to pour oil on tho troubled waters. "Mr. must remember." said he, "that Home wasn't built In a day." "I know It wasn't," rotorted the protesting member, "and If this com mittee had had the work to do ! wouldn't be built yet!" Tit-Bits. HICKS' CAPO BINE CUSES ALL ACHES Aod IScrwmaa Trtl bolt 10 H4nimtt0 f MY BACK la ao lame, Is a common complaint. Johnson's AnoftHNinent Rubbed on Briskly rnsoTf til limMifM tvnd iom$ of mm el. Mid quickly baa Is etite, burn, irwliaia, biUa avud briiiM. KsUblihd 1910. lie, three timra u much Mta, All dmten. 1. B. JOHN HON A CO., lUwtoo, Ham. Snotttifl (if Made under U&Govemmertt Inspection aba The Southern Cotton Oil Company , PVH.K1 1BK IX 'ItUs tAf KK. IT WILL Pit a u 6Z If ambled with weak eyta. Hat) Thompson's EyeWaftr ui i in imaaamajffl Suffer te nTotheco ftjifdicfi r s .7 OTinfiflTenr rTiiSytfi Wof tlTTT ils formiirj.srTfTJ iirVTTTTi, it (hat hn 1a nut aim id, to. fTTTTj.yt tTicm tft
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers