Making ft Lawyer. Miss Amy Wren, of Brooklyn, N. y g making good as a lawyer. Judge Chatneld, of the United States Circuit Court, has made her receiver for a business firm. It Is said that jhe Is the first woman receiver in this part of the country, and that her fees will amount to at least $3000. Nsturo's Concert. "If you would hear a beautiful concert, " said a country loving wom en, who had been exercising after n ice storm, "walk In the high tufts of grass and listen to the exquisite blmeg and tunes given out with the falling bits of Ice shaken from the blades and stems. Each, as it strikes the glazed snow, gives forth a fairy like note, and I have walked over two fields out of pure Joy In my dis covery." New York Tribune. Hon't Let Them Know It. One nf the best known women In society, who is remarkable for hav ing no enemies, laughingly said not? long ago that, she attributed her pop ularity to never letting those she disliked know of it by any word of hers. "I avoid discussing any un pleasant person," she continued, "and I also never Join . any social club where a member Is Included that I do not care to Invite to my house. By this means I am free to do as I tilease. and I also never offend my own friends by having persons that I know they dislike at my house when they are there, as that is ques tionable hospitality." New York Tribune. Thin Roods Pleated. Though Empire and Directolre models still prevail, some of the cot ton and thinner linen goods are made with pleated skirts, quite high of course, the pleats stitched to fit tne line meeting the short body por tion, and so neatly and smoothly ar ranged over the hips that they give the Impression of a plain skirt. The bordered goods and the flounc ing are materials that lend them selves well to this manipulation, and the style Is one especially becoming robe, and her latest expression In this direction Is a frock of Chinese blue. She takes honest pride in this gown, and not without reason. Chi nese blue Is the rarest and most beau tiful blue known, and It Is only for the woman with no limit to her ex penditures. Chinese blue comes only from China, unlike many of the al leged Chinese silks, and its rarity Is due to the fact that It takes two years to dye it. The gown Is of the finest possible texture and its material ranks as one of the costliest and at the. same .time most attractive man ufactured in the world. The process of dyeing the material has been a secret with the Chinese for many cen turies and it Is seldom any of the finished product Is exported. Mrs. Vanderbilt obtained her blue six months after she had placed an or der with a Fifth avenue firm. The frock Is of the princess design, and as Mrs. Vanderbilt says, "It is almost too lovely to wear." New York Press: THE INVASION OF ENGLAND. (John Bull's Latest Nightmare.) Kidney Ailment The Hearty Grip Again in Vogue. In a recent London pnpor it was said that the fashion in handshaking was changing; that tho wesk-armed, weak-minded, "elbow-shake" was go ing out. Its n"o to be taken by a more hearty and natural gesture. Hurrah for Damn Fashion! For I once she Is engaged In a good work. What could be more discouraging than to go up to a person, beaming with pleasantness and good will, and I be met by n lackadaisical grasp of the hand and a forearm motion, sug gestive of a severe chill. It Is enough to dry the springs cf brotherly feel ing. But it was fashionable, and so, In the words of a famous old lady, "it had to be did." The manner Is passing. Let us speed it on Its way. -When it Is quite gone, and it no longer has fashion's approval to back It, then let any body try it, and they will be met with a rebuff that will show clearly enough what people have been thinking all along, and have not dared to say. At most it was a chilly and unsocial mannerism. ' A man is known by his handshake, A if ' . 1.1- rr w j ' . ' f j r s s ' s s m j s s j 9 r s j s j r ss ' y s s s s s s y S s s w jcr s s 1 want Terr pernon who suffers wlttl nny form of Kliluny Ailment, no tnnlter bow many remtill, they hove tried, no nintter liow ninny doctor the have con mltcd, no matter how arrlnua the cine, to five Munyon'a KI.Iiipt Itemed? 0 trial. You will tie nrtm.l! hod to ne how qulrkly It relieves nil film In the harlt Inlna find groins rnnmrl t,v the kidneys. You will he surprised to ee how ciiilrlilv It reduce! the mvellin In the feet anil leg-a, alao ptifllnep under the ere, after tnklne a few do. f thla reniedv. You will be delighted to ie the color return Ini to your chick and feel the thrill of vl-or and pood rlirer. If ronr I'rlne H thick or milky. If It li pnleand fonmv. If It contalna sediment or tirlckdmt. If It la hlffhly colored or lu en offensive smell. If you urinate fre'im-nflr. yon should per slst In tnklm thin rviuW until all STinp tnnia dlxnppear. V helleve thla remedy hna cnrel morn serious kidney nllmcnt thnn nil the Kidney medicines thnt hnve heen compounded. Trofesor Munyon lie. llevea that the terrlhle denth rnte from Brlirhfa IHsenae nml Idnhetea Is unn"" esary and will be grcntly reduced by thla remedy. fJo at once to your d-r"irlt find purchase a bottle of Mnnr'-n'. KHr.ev remedv. If It fnlls to (jhe snfl'fnrtlnn I will riifunJ yonr money. Munyon. For aula by all Oruirglsts. Price 23c. Ilnnna's Tip To IMngJey. Nelson Dlngley was riding up one day In the trolley car from thu capi tol with Mark Hanna. He said: ".Mark, you are many years younger than I am and you have ninde mil lions. I never have been able to pet ahead of the game In life, and yet my legislation lins made rich men richer and poor men rich. Now, how do they do It?" Hanna said: "Dlngley, I can tell you right off how to make 25 per cent, tin your Investment." Dlngley turned eagerly to his sup posed benefactor nnd said: "For heaven's sake, Mark, how?" "Why," said Hanna, "these 5 cent tickets upon which we ride are sold by the railroad company in a bunch at 25 per cent, discount. There Is your fortune, if you Invest enough." Chicago Inter-Ocean. The Limit. Madame Jules, we have been married six months, and now you no longer love me. Monsieur My dear! I Madame oh, it's no use attempt ing to deny it. You should have married a stupider woman than I to make such a denial convincing. Monsieur (a little huffy) Well, It's not my fault. I couldn't find one. Le Hire. Consul General Thomas Sammons, writing from Seoul, says that there Is in established market for grass cloth In Korea, men, women and ililldren wearing large quantities of ! :his rubric. Caramel Sauce. An excellent caramel sauce for old fashioned batter puddings and sweet custards is the fol lowing: Mix together a cupful of water, a cupful of sugar, a bay leaf, a piece of lemon peel and a stick of cinnamon. Let It boil five minutes. While it is cooking put into a fry ing pan two tablespoonfuls of sugar and one of water. Ptir them until they become a dark, rich brown. Add half a cupful of boiling water, and when the caramel has entirely melted, add the syrup after removing from It the bay leaf, lemon rind and cinnamon. Send hot to the table. C-1 to CJ n. CO B o ' 3 a s 3 s to growing girls (whose figures are, of course, immature) and to slender women. The waist may be plain, but the effect will be better if a few leats are set on the shoulders. The Loud Dross. Cirls sometimes blame young men for insults or bold advances, when their own dress or conduct invites the same. The modest dress and plain hat is a protection to young women in cities. It is related that certain working girls who reside in suburbs often wear Deaconess bonnets, or the uniform of some order. Others wear the cross around the neck as mem bers of the order of King's Daugh ters. These things are a bulwark of defense to young women if they are bright and beautiful. When human male hyenas stand on corners when young girls pass, let the girls look straight ahead and attend to their own business. Loud dress and hat are bad. I re call a family of girls and their con duct was questionable.' They always wore the loudest and most brazen hats. If the fashion said "big hats," theirs were the largest.. Peculiar col ors were always their choice and when mutton leg sleeves were in favor, theirs were broader than others wore. It Is a fact that modest women will wear modest dress. It is an illus tration of one's nature. Lillle nice Stahl, in the Industrial Farmer. Old Fashioned Women. The old fashioned woman survives and JuBt as we had fancied the "new woman" was having it all her own way! At least one man says: "Wo men have a habit of-toying with a biscuit in public and getting really busy, so to speak, only in private. Headers of 'Pendennis' may remem ber Thackeray's remarks on that point. Then, again, there is another aspect of the matter. Women do not assail chops and steaks with the fury of the male, but they rage like de vouring locusts among the things on the counter at a confectioner's shop, which the average man will not touch. As a character In a contemporary re marks with some sadness: 'Even Ethel, when she's let loose among the marzipans and meringues, simply clears the counter while waiting for "a cup of tea and a plain biscuit, please." An Interesting light on women's methods regarding food Is thrown -by a passage in a recently published book. It has frequently been noted that women, when alone, dine on a cup of tea and an egg. This, according to our author, is not due to fairy refinements of soul but to pure slackness. Women grow so tired of ordering food for their fam ilies that, when relieved from that duty for a moment, they simply can not be bothered to order anything for themselves. " Is he right? Philadelphia Record. Mrs. Ynndcrbllt's Chinese Blue. Mrs. Reginald C. Vanderbilt Is -one of the few fashionable women who do not devote half their lives think ing of something new to wear. It is her rule to give herself almost com pletely into the bands of her dress- maker with regard to her attire. Probably her chief Interest is the big string of show horses of ber hus band. She Is essentially an outdoor woman. Occasionally, however, she rrllea an original Idea to her ward I perhaps. And yet we hesitate to be. lieve it, because of the really nice people whose manner of shaking hands leaves much to be desired. The "next most annoying" variety Is the person who shakes your hand for an inordinate time, until you be come conscious of tho fnct wonder if he Is ever going to stop, when he Is probably wondering the same thing and don't know how, and finally you fairly Jerk your hand away, followed by slight embarrassment on both sides you vow inwardly that hereafter you will bow and smile only. There is a third species, less feeble, and less disconcerting,, but genuinely painful. That is the man and woman, too, nowadays, who seizes your hand, wring3 it, until you imagine you hear the bones grind against each other and if they are a stranger you hope they did not see you wince, and if they are not strange Von hope they did, and then drops the hand with a final Jerk. It aches for hours, and again you decide to bow and smile only, but you don't. As a form of friendly greeting it has taken such a hold upon us that we shall probably suffer and be strong, for some timo to come. New Haven Register. Cartoon by Tripps, in the New York Press. ENGLAND HAUNTED BY GERMAN GHOST! President Butler's Remark That It is a Form ef Present-Day Emotional Insanity Strikingly Borne Out by Series of Absurd Events. for t?oM nml ;mi flick's fArt-IUNR Is the lit remedy relieves the oi'hietf nrd fi'eu-hni'... cures the Cold nnd rrMeres minimi cuiiilittnns. It' lliiultl effects liniiitUiuti ly. Inc., aio. aud Uic. attlruir moi-i-. Under exceptionally nood condl :ions of weather and clouds vessels 5f the Navy have exchanged searcli I iglit slgnuls at a distance of C.I miles. London. Tho speech at the Lake Mohonk Conference on International Arbitration of President Nicholas Murray Butler, of Columbia Univer sity, in which he described Great Bri tain's attitude to Germany as a form of "present-day emotional insanity," has been strikingly confirmed during the past week. Sensational stories of German airships, stacks of Ger man Mausers stored in a London cel lar, thousands of German waiters and hair dressers eagerly anticipating the Emperor's signal to deliver England to an invading army of their fellow countrymen, have been the main fea tures of the newspapers throughout the country. The Mauser myth, to which atten tion was first called by Sir John Bar low, has been contempuotisly dis missed by War Secretary Haldane in the House of Commons as "an excep tlonally silly story," but it has been quite surpassed by accounts of myth ical nocturnal visitations of a Ger man airship. The phanton "Flying Dutchman" soon developed into a large fleet, the competing papers vouching for the accuracy of their respective stories and giving signed statements circum stantially detailing the maneuvres of the mysterious and swift-moving dirigible at the same moment In va rious places on the east and west coasts, and even in Ireland. Captains of incoming steamers have been credited with statements that they exchanged flare signals with the aerial visitor in the North Sea, and some newspapers went so far aa to insinuate that the "scare ship" had Its home on a German war ship now in the North Sea at maneu vres, to which It returns after its nightly flight. Descriptions of the secret fly-by-nlght became more and more graphic, until certain advertis ers, who had been experimenting with model airships attached by ropes to motor cars, confessed their part in the affair and exploded the various theories. Meanwhile, Germany, as evidenced by the comments in the German pa pers on the latest panic, came to much the same conclusion as Presi dent Butler. Contempt, disgust and Impatience have been the prominent notes in the German editorials, which picture England as "the home of mere nervous degenerates, who are yielding themselves up to a frenzy, unworthy even of a decaying country." Over fifty venra of tiulilic cnnlidence nn.-. wrnil.iritv.' Thnt is the reionl nf llamlins vViznnl Oil. the world's standard renu-iW for nthes nml pains. There's n reason nnd only one merit. At present the reaction from the inflated 'speculative conditions pre vailing in Egypt from 104 to 107 has brought about a period of liquida tion and trade dullness which In gen eral merchandise, is likely to con tinue for another year. A Domestic Kyi Remedy Compounded by Experienced I'hysicinns. Conforms to I'ure Food nnd Drucs Lnwa. Wina Frienils Wherever Used. Ask Drue gists for Murine Evo Remedy. Try II urine. In forty years (1868 to 1908) Japan's foreign trade Increased from 20,000,000 yen to 814,000,000 yen. Iysentery, Choluratnorliiia Cured. By ft trial of Dr. IHn n H1' ilih'Trv Cor d.al. At DriiitUisti 'ITi mi l .'' 'wt bottle. TORE HIS SKIM OFF IN SHREDS Itching Was Intense Sleep Whs Of ten Impossible ."ured by C'u tieuni in Three Weeks. "At first an eruption of srnull pustules commenced on my linnils. Tliosc spread Inter to other pnrts of my body, nml the itchinit nt times was intense, i much so thnt 1 literally tore the skin of! in slireiis in aeekimt relief. The nwful itching inter fered u-illi my work considerably, mid nlso kept me itunke nir!its. 1 tried several doc tors nnd nlso used n number of dillorent ointments and lotions but received prac tically no benefit. Finally I settled down to the use of l uticura Snap, Cutkura Oint ment nnd Cutkura I'il'.s, with t lie result that in a few days all itching had ceased and in nbout three weeks' time all traces of my eruption bad disappeared. I have had no troluile of this kind ...ice. H. A. Krutskoff, 9714 Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111., November IS nml IS. W7." Potter Drui Them. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Hemedies, Huston, Mass. As a rule white blossoms are the most fragrant. U. N. U. 1M. 1 OPERATION HER ONLY CHANCE WasCured by LydiaEPink ham'sVcgetable Compound Adrian. Oa. "I suffered nntold misery from a female weakness and disease, and I could not stand more than a minute at a time. My doctor said an operation was the only chance I hud, and I dreaded it almost aa much as death. One (lav 1 was reading liow other, women had been cured by Lydla K. llnkliam's Ves. table Compound, and decided to try Hel'ore 1 had taken one bottle 1 was better, and nw 1 am completely cured." Lr.s V. IIknuv, Koute Xo, 3, Adrian. Ga. Why will worpen take, chances with .in operation or tlraif out a sickly, half-hearted existence, niissinff three fourths of the joy of liviiiff. when they can find lien It li in J.yilu L. l'iiiklium's Vegetable Compound y For thirty years it has been the standard remedy for femaie ills, and h.ts cured thousands of women who have been troubled with such ail ments as displacements, iiilkunmation, ulceration, iibroid tumors, irregulari ties, periodic pains, backache, indiges tion, and nervous prostration. If ymi have tli" xliirhtit doubt iliat Lyrtia K. l'liikJiain's Vi-ro-tahlo Compound will help Jti, wrilotoMrs. IMnUham nt Lynn, .Mass., for advice. Your letter will hi; absolutely confidential, ami the advice l'ruu. Hi it. Tho vineyards of Algeria produce the greatest yield to the acre. Mr. Winslow'a Soothing Syrup for Children teeth inu,aoflen lUetiuins, reilucesiittlainnui tiou, ullii ptim, euica tuiid colic. 20c a buttle. Yon Indoor People must give the bowels help. Your choice must lie be tween harsh physic and candy Cascarets. Harshness makes fVW.;il niftTEMPER U . . . . , . rintw. r","ww. . ..... . .. -. - - mv?iM' ro .uA vt'. Influrnri. l.oumit, uoin.. r WS" M.'lR AM0; vt u p,,,,,!,,,!, (.re.rnwj W"W"VA (lui kl cirrd b Craft DliU-mpfl .Ho Rr. te I 3 Well. Mnlt.ilnCt. !-'.'" 1 the bowels callous, so you need increasing doses. Cascarets do just as much, but in a gentle way. Vest-pocket box, 10 cents at rtru-tores. 83 Eacta tablet ot tba Kcouino li marked C C C. MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A Ortnln Onre for FeTerterineM, 'initlpltlon. II ea fine He, Slnmiirh Trouble, Teeflilnu In.nrllrra, mi II troy Worina. Tii- IlrenU up el'U , u i ml At nil Ilruswi.i". Uficit. W. H.,m.. rlaintile n; """."3 V M.w YorkCity. A. S. OLBia I . u Mother drat. Nr in i n u n A1QV FI V VII I FP t.-M.v.ft mmmm til aad h'lh Ni'iLt. t'lt-ati, ornftlTlPOtMl, ro T'Hifit, chea. IU nil Iflllll, Ma1 of rtiPt'ii, oitmot pill or Hit cirer. nl not t"(i or InJ'irn any tMrur (ion run lvHlrfTi'tiTo. Of all dfiWn or nut prepatu forirtc. JUlirULD MJ3tt.Ua, WO ltki vt. Rrwhlri. X. T. PATENTS F5 BOUNTIES Xna-M.trk, ()pvriifut yuiir Boofct, Wmmtn, lurm, to. Nw '( m to 14 j amy tor soldi art ai have Mkurwa ovMf tot tuvta. For biuK and .Uftirui'itona, Adurt, w, H. WdU, AU y- 1 w,(. Notary fuotioj ui uuuUiig, iiiliti. Av fT f D Q V yEW D18C0VEKT : EL 1 V a '- rnri m ort (-, llunh mt monlaU and IO lmj ' Itrve. lr. H. 11. KlkJt't au It, AtUoia. ba. BRITISH ARMY A SHAM, SAYS ROBERTS. Ulbbon watch chains are quite the thing Just now. Coats (or girls' suits are plain and almost straight. Whenjyou cannot afford to buy Jewels use beads. New gowns from ParlB have cor sets made In them. Plumes are only rivalled by flow ers as bat garniture. Wreaths and garlands are among the fancies of the day. Jet buttons are so much favored as to appear on white linen rigs. Many of the blouses are tucked, all over, bodice and sleeves alike. The fichu is one of the prettiest finishes given to the modern gown. The elbow sleeve with full ruffles it sometimes seen on evening gowns. Do not over-trim a baby's dress It makes him look fussy end unat tractive. The fashionable old-rose shads seems to be becomir.g alike to those of light complexion and to those whe are dark. Nutmeg brown is a color very much like the cplcy blossom, and will be a favorite, while every shade of taupe will be used. i For a young girl a strip ot heather bloom is quite as satisfactory as silk to wear under sheer frocks, and much more girlish. ' Buttons will become popular on cotton and linen gowns and will re main almost a necessity on silk and heavier fabrics. White pearl buttons In every va riety ot carving and some with a Frenchy decoration ot gilt lines and flowers are seen. Parisian styles are seldom adopted lust as they come to us, but aro first modified. This Is true of the fashion for Jet. By contrast we are using 11 moderately. . London. "Our army is a sham! We have no army!" exclaimed Field Mnrshal Lord Roberta earnestly In n debate in the House) of Lords upon the Duke of Bedford's motion for an inquiry into the condition of the re serve. Karl Roberts, who is known to favor compulsory military train in?, declared lhat ho Was amazed at the manner In which both houses treated the army as a party question and at the apathy of the nation re garding military deienBe. The na tion, he said, did not believe In the danger of Invasion, and no wonder, for their leaders told them there was no fear of J. He added: "I know perfertly well that tho leaders in both houses are anxious nbout the future, but they do not tell the country that we have neither an army to send pbroad nor to defend the country at home.'. While we aro sitting here, taking It easily and comfortably, tho danger is coming nearer and nearer to us daily, and unlesB you cease telling the peoplo they are living In safety and get an army fit to deal with any enemy we shall one day come to such utter grief that you will bitterly regret your in action. "It 13 a perfect marvel to me how anybody can see what Is going on around us In Europe and be content with the condition of our army. No country In the world would attempt to defend Itself with the paucity of men and with the untrained men we have got. You will never have a real army until you have taken the nation Into your confidence and tell them their danger. You may think you are safe, but you are not. Bo frank and tell the nation what is before them. They will respond." His admonitions were rddreased to the Government representatives. GLUCOSE TRUST MAY RUN CANDY STORES Nitional Confectioners Sea a Big Fight Coming For Control of tn Trader-Arranging For Factories--And Afterward, President Bedford Says, May Sell Their Product Through Its Own Establishments. New York City. The Corn Prod- , in advance of anything yet suggested nets Refining Comnany, of which E T. Bedford, of tho Standard Oil Com pany, is president, and in which .lames A. Moffett, F. Q. Barstowe and Charles M. Pratt are directors, and William Rockefeller and the late H H. Rogers were generally understood to be largely Interested, Is likely ta go Into -the retail candy business. As has heen generally known, tho directors at their last meeting took the preliminary stenB toward starting a project for utilizing the glucose manufactured in the' company's plants by establishing candy fac tories. This step, it was said recent ly, Is likely to be followed by the retailing of the product of the fac tories, through a company yet to be orsanlred, in its own stores. .The candy business has recently seen In a smaller way sl?ns of approaching organization on the modern lines of combination, but this step will be far One of the principal Ingredients In the making of candy In these days is glucose, of which the company manufactures between seventy-five and eighty-five per cent, of all that Is consumed In the United States. If the Corn Products Refining Com pany uses its glucose in its own candy factories and sells the product In its own stores, then . the smaller and hitherto independent candy com panies, such as Huylor's, Loft's, the Mirror and Ropettl's, will either have to go into tho bigger concern or com pote with it, if they can. Members of the Nat'onal Confec tioners' Association, who discussed the situation and there were many who snoko freely on the subject rotated out that tho candy trade in the United States looked as though It were going to take a similar course to that already takeu by this coun try's tobacco trade. Original Honest Man Lives the (irent State of Iowa. Des Moines, Iowa. William Wil son, a laboring man ot this city, found tl20 in greenbacks uuder a tin can several weeks ago. Did William Wilson spend that $120? No, he did not. Ho turned it over to Justice of th Pence Roe. made an affidavit as to how he found the money, and that's why he Is called Iowa's Orlslnol Honest Man. Wilson was picking mushrooms near Beaver Creek when he made the find. . , Sea Cuts Away Great Stretches of Capo Cod Const, Wood's Hole, Mass. The north east gale that for over a week blew steadily along the shores of Vine yard Sound and on Nantucket shoals rut up the beeches all alon; the shores of Cape Cod, and hotels and summer homes' along the coast will have to be moved bad-. Tho life-savers say that they never before witnessed such great changes la the roast line of Cape Cod. and ' where they formerly patrolled the 1 beach the tides now run riot. The World of Sport. Freshman track athletics at Yale last year'pald $129.65. It is a pretty good rowing roach whose men never get overtrained. Lou Dillon mads her first appear ance on a trotting track In Europe. "Joe" Jeanriette defeated "Bam" McVey In fifty rounds at Paris. France. Wisconsin's crew at Poughkeepsle will have an exceptionally long time of training there. With raold sirides the Montreal Jockey Club has bcroroe thu leading turf oi'3ocl:atloa In C&nads. Notes of the IMammtn. Almost every old crossroads team ha its Cy Youn. Roger Bresnshan his made a "re nounced bit with the St. Louis fans. The St. Louis club has Riven Catch er Wells bis unconditional release, - Vice-President Sherman is a dally visitor at the games In Washington. Duke Farrell said Jouett Met V in has more speed than any pitcher ho ever ssw. The Boston National Club has sold "iicher Kr.rl"v Ya-.-ti'. (Cy Ymiri tf. to the 0ib'joa:a ty Club, of tba Tsxcs Lcaz.-e. At Apollo Itchi'tirsiil. Director (in a thundering voice) Why on earth don't you come in when I tell you to? First bass (meekly) How can a fellow pet in if he can't find his key. Yale Record. A Poor Memory. "Have you forgotten that you owe me seven dollurs?" "Dear, nie. I have forgot'en. My memory Is miserable but wasn't it only $'6.39 ?" Fliegende Blaetter. WOXDEKFL'L RESULT. Gravel and Kidney Trouble of Years' Standing Cured. Theodore Ott. R. F. D., No. S. Elktou, Md., a largo property owner, says: "Six years ago a pain In the buck almost toppled uie over. My back got weak and ached most of the time. Sediment In the urine changed to small grains aud then gravel began to cause terrible painful attacks. 1 lost 29 pounds, and aa specialists did not help ma 1 grew despondont. I thought I would try Doan's Kidney Pills, and can't express my delight at finding they helped me. I kept on until the trouble was gone, and though 79 years old I feel strong." Sold by all dealers, fid cents a box. Fuster-Mllbum Co.. Buffalo. N. Y. ODDS AND t.Sua. Every Japanese war vessel has been equipped with a system of wire less telegraphy Invented in that country. The country's slate production last year amounted in vulue to $6,316,817, an Increase over the previous year of $297,597. Belgium's narrow gauge railways, connecting the smaller towns and villages with the main centres of population, are being electrified. Plans for the permanent Illumina tion of Niagara Falls include the use of 20 30-inch searchlights, and 12 60-lnch, totalling 2,500,000 candle power. The French government is about to spend $200,000 in the establish ment of a national weaving and em broidering school in the interest of tho silk Industry. Features ot the British navy's newest submarine are diving wings on either side ot the bow aud a more extensive deck than usual for use in surface cruising. Nothing has made more remark able progress In Japan in recent years than the demand for toilet goods with the general rise In the scale of living In the country. The Imports have Increased from $155,000 gold 10 years ago to $760,000 in lt0S, while tho exports last year were $1, 200,000 In value. 1 Arkansas claims to have the larg est peach orchard in the world and 1,000 men and 300 teams harvested the crop last year. Tba orchard Is In gevler County and has 200,000 trees. I: cov;rj 1.800 acres and 2.000 trees aro bra: Ing. Five hundred, freight cart weie used 13 haul the crop to nix rk n I ("nil? Of Misery. Here is an observation from Car lyle: "All misery in farulty mis directed strength that lias not yet found its way." This is undoubtedly true. All suffering and failure can he traced back to one getting out of the true rat i. It may not sometimes lio one's fault. Ignorance or envir onment may intervene niul lead ns astray. iti. all progress consists in one finding the true way of one's strength; lo see that the faculty U rightly directed. Finding this path !s the end f knowledge und civilization. This v.iinns doing the right thing physioM ly, mentally, morally; obeying God's law, that's it; that is all there s to it. That is what keeps the sMvncrth and faculty intact' and makes life worth living. The perfei test m ki iI Is the one whose faculty Is right ly directed and whoso strength has found Its way. It Is that ihat nia!;es the true, manly, useful, happy lli'e; thnt makes tho life last longer and Keeps It sweet and wlioloFome while It lasts. Ohio State Journal. Willing To Oblige. For many years Dr. Francis I.. Patton, ex-president of Princeton University, wore sid" whiskers. Whenever he suggested shaving them thero was a division In the fam'ly. One morning he came Into his wife's dressing room, razor In hnnd, with hlH right cheek shaved smooth. "How do you like It. my dear?" he aslied. "If you think 't looks well. I will shave the other hide, too." Everybody's Magazine. What He ( iiilcd To Say. "Mr. President," said the ca'.Ier at the -White House, "I do not wish lo boast, but I thought you would like to know that I was the original "Really, you must excuse nv, my dear sir. 1 have a pn ssing engage ment." "1 am very Sony. I merely '.ilioil to say thai 1 was the lust lna.i 'ha' ever " "1 am sorry, Kir: but I n-.illy n;it.-t beg t hat you exeus me." "Certainly, Mr. President, certain ly. 1 merely wished to say that I am the Mrs! golfer that ever male a "T.'.-vard I'rive with a niblio:;." "Dh: I thought you were go ng to .-.;. that you were the first man lb.it ever supported me for the presi de in y. Sit down sit down! liy tho way. c.m't you havo lunch lo re anil go out and have a game with me this afternoon?" Chicago H r.l Herald. .lust lii Time. A German shoemaker left th turned on In his shop one night and upon arming i:i the mortun Ktruck a match to light it. Th a-:iu n tftt'HHif evrilOKimt .111(1 i-'hoemaker was blown out through tne door aimy;t o uie iniuan the street. A iiasrerhv rrndtrd to his as nine, and alter helping him to arise, inquired if lie v:n Injured. The little Gorman gazed in at h's place of l'U3ie. which was now burning finite hriskly, and said: "No, I a i ii ri t hurt. Itut I got out sliust In time, .!,?" I.ippinco' l's. gas ere the of si-it- Trr-' " i -j irtrJr?-: l m Ued Appetite Calls For food which promotes a prompt flav; cf the digestive juices in addition. tp supplying: pcur ishment. Post Toaslics Is a most delicious answer 1 o appetite. It is, at the same tlrn;, full of the 'food-goodness 0f White Corn, and toasted to a crisp delicious brown. "Tbe'TfUte Linsert." Popular pkg IOcj Large Family tize 15c