PIMPLES Cured in FIVK DATS by the use of Dr. Thomas' Faci al Ointment, apply at bed time; cures while you sleep. BFora short time we will send a Fifty-cent box by mall, postpaid, on receipt of thirty five cents. Address, Baprr Crjen)i(;al Co., 1324 North 53th St., West Park Station, 12 5-20t. Phiadelphi , a In llnrd Lock. "Vex, Mrs. Iptodate is dreadfully worried." "Whst'j the matter?" "Why two new fads have made their appearance nt the same time and she doesn't know which to take up." Chi cago I'ost. Ilia Fnloytnent Limited. Mrs. Twaddle Why, Dr. Jalap, it's ages since I paw you! How have you been? Do you enjoy good health? Dr. Jalap Not in others, Mrs. Twaddle not in others. Boston Transcript. Avoid iiilutttTHtioti iin-l tvlmU-siile anl retail irotif t.y Imivimk your whiki-y direct from the iiinli!i'rv. nee the llayner Untitling Co. nti iinum-i'incnt lit this impiT, which fxpinltiH how ti k''l f-i'ir full imrt of pure Htvn-Year-1Mil liyv Whtikry. epr". ori-imid, for W.-O. They K0rifcntie pure r-ooiIh ami full uiiWMlre. THE REMINISCENT MAN. What would wi d (or things to ra4 about our public men? How could w learn their boyhood tralta and Bow they acted then? How could w kaow their whima and fada and other little thine About them, were It cot lor what a certain person brlr.si? All kail the chap who fills that cap In wIm Dam Nature's plan. The one who'a always In our view tha Reminiscent Man. Ha tells us of our Presidents, and what they did and said. Or what they didn't do or say, as w have of.en read: He cites remarks of heroes bold, long era they burst to fame. Which plainly show they were designed to bear an honored name; Ha knows the pages of the past no other person can Dig up as many facts as does the Reminis cent Man. Sometimes he Is the man who's styled the Old Inhabitant. And he can tell when Col. Bluff went out end laid a ha'nt; And then, again, he Is the man who battled side by side With MaJ. Blood, and now he tells about It with much pride; Or el.e he had a jury feat when Lawyer ChuRg was young All this the Ht mliiLsctnt Man has ever on his tongue. Perhaps he used to fit h along with Mr. Of Ilceseik. And when that man's a candidate he tells It by the week; He holds the wise reporter up and fills him full of talis The news may ptop. but, after all, the R. M. never falls. Somebody ought to write a book about the tnlky clan The bur.eh of people w ho make up the Rem iniscent Man. Josh Wink, In Baltimore American. Ileallatle I'erformnnc. Tapa Not quarreling, I hope, chil dren? Tommy Oh, no. We're just having tableaux, Tnpa What does this one repre sent ? Tommy Mamma asking you for a check. Tit-Bits. 8$THE $ 0 Jdefenseh X By W. B. BARRETT. X Ht:n .kkahi.k t i KK or hoi . A I.lllle Hoy's 1.1 re Novell. I lmvo r ffw words to Pay regard ing Cliuinl'tMlain's Cougb Remedy. It saved m.V lit tli l)ov'n life and 1 feel that I cannot praise it enough. I bought, ii bottle of it from A. K. Steele of (0;)d win, S. U., and when I pot home with it the poor baby could hardly Sri'utho. I gave the medicine as directed every ton min utes until he "threw up" rind then I thought sure ho whs going to choke to death. We had to pull the phlegm out of his month in great loug .strings. I am positive that if I had not got that bcttle of cough me dicine, my bov would not be on earth to-day. Job Dicmokt, Inwood, Iowa. For Bale by the Middleburg Drug Store. Gen. Wood has been mad a member of the Academ'yof Science of Havnn .The academy is one of the most xch sive organizations in Cuba. It is lim ited to 40 members, and each membrr is elected for life. A 'nre lor l.iiiiitmgo. W. O Williamson, of Amberst, Va.. says: "For more than a year I BuflVrel from lumbago. I finally tried Chamberlain's Pain Balm and it gave me entire relief, which all other remedies had failed to do. Sold by Midddleburg DrugRtoro. JnalBina;. Oh. I despise the fool who thinks That only money makes the man And yet how pleasant It would be 1: men had cause forjudging me I 'pun that foolish plan. liiiago Record-Herald. . Way Pa 1 elt. "A man and his wife are one, aren't thev, pa 7" "They tire equivalent to one, my child. She is one and he is nothing." J tiiige. The seiisihle way to buy whNkey fi to get it lire, i (nun the Di.tillery. Thin naves whole mile nnd retail dealer's profits, also Insure, pun; good Tha llayner instilling Co' will hin you four full quart. Seven-Year-Old Kye, ejlirex. prepaid, for 1 30. See large advertise ment in this issue Tho Polite Yonnaj Man. "Yes," said the haughty young woman who was a Colonial Dame as well as a Daughter of the Revolu tion, "my great-geat-grandsire fell at Bunker Hill." "Ice or banana skin?" inquired the polite young man from Milwaukee Cleveland rialn Dealer. A Question. Willie Boerum Pa. Mr. Boerum (desperately) I -will only answer one question, William, and then you must go to bed. Willie Boerum Well, then, pa, why don't the storks migrate south every winter like the other birds? Brook lyn Eajrl- BEST FOR THE BOWELS If yon ImTpn't a p-culnr, iift.lilry movement of tin IrOWfU evt rjr tlitv, ).n rv til ur will It-. Ki't'P youi bowel opt-ii. nt"! I" w II. rrvi tn 1 tu hn,ipif vio lent It ur pill it'iloii, It iLtnu't run-. 1 ho Kinooih i".t. i n'-t. niwi-t if i v iiy fi U t-iintf the bow ell clour ant) cleuu in lo ttttce CANDY CATHARTIC EAT 'EM LIKE CANDY riA..Mnt l'NlntoMiv lViti'tit .Trtwtp flood. PnOnnd Never Niekrn, Wruki'll .r ; i-i i - in. '.". nml M vrntl per Inn, Wrlto (jr five lainj!.-, an. I l.-u'Uet en iienllh. JtdilreM 'J grnu.no immnr numv, iiimi.ii or new ioiik., KEEP YOUR BLOOD CLEAN (Copyright, 1901, bjr authors SjrSdlcate.) II WAS Knowing when Kleanor re turned from the private view. The air was bitter, the wind wintry. She was glad to reenter the coziuess of her silent studio, its light, its warmth; to see the cheery welcome of the flicker ing gas log which in her bedchamber ail joining imitated in its humble asbes tos way the cordial greeting of pine, llurson, good clmp, had left her at the .studio door, though he had looked longingly nt the comfort within, and she knew he would have stayed if she had asked him more cordially. Still, she had asked him. Her con science must have been clear on the score of gentle hospitality else why .should she en petulantly have flung her sealskin cout across an easel and sunk listlessly-into a Morris chair which commanded nt once the speak ing study for a canvas before it and a view through the archwayof the blink ing asbestos. "He needn't have looked so wist fill." fdie murmured, discontentedly. "I did a.sk him to come in and get warm. I said: 'Perhaps it's too late, but yon can toast yourself a minute before you start for the north side, if you want to.' Ungracious? Well, why does he bother me? Didn't he have me the whole evening, and to supper, too? Isn't that enough? "And how he praised my picture! How all of them did, indeed. They were awfully good, and yet " She rose restlessly and walked up and down as a man might, Bohemian that she was, pausing at last before the easel in the semi-darkness. "And yet," she went on, in a passion ate multitone which still was little more than a whisper after all, "what good is it all? What do I care whether they praise or d'amn? What do I care whether my work is good or ill? What are wreaths nnd coronets when one's heart is hungry for love, and love is fled away, driven by a fool's laugh? Oh!" And now, in a storm of bitterness, she sank shudderingly upon the rug be neath her, her hands upon her eves. and a flow of tears wet them with their kindly solace. She saw again, in fancy, the gay crowding of the "view." A galaxy of beauty, gowned in the season's bril liancy of color, vied with the art which decked the walls. There had been a frou-frou of rich stuffs, a tinkle ( well-bred merriment, a hum of ventional compliment. Across it AO. blotting out the lights, the canvases, hushing the gayety, rose again his face, as Bhe had seen it that afternoon, across a vista of other faces, pale, im mobile, seeming to have suffered, seem ing still to suffer, bearing a cross and frozen into a grim nnd enduring ei lence. She had looked long upon that face, until her own color had deserted cheek and lip and fled back to the tu mult of her fast-beating heart, Then she had beckoned the faithful Burson and precipitately left the gallery. And now? Yes, now, what? Harold was back, after those years. But what was that to her; what could it be? She who had in ashes strewn her heart and hooded her face in sackcloth because one little "So" had changed her life and his, what was there now to do to set it right? Not upon a flaunting sleeve can a woman weave her heart. She had said Xi," nnd he had gone away. He was come again, but hr "Xo" must still be vocal and king in her cars its cruel harshness. She had cast him away, her pearl of men; it wai to art she would be wed, she had said, as if disdaining ingling human pulses nnd caressing a-Mis; to art, cold, lofty, high, exalted and exaltingart. Slip had aspired to be lifted up atu! tho little god had with the crooking of his tiny, remorseless finger cast her down nnd sown bram bles where his nrrow festered. Three years! Gods! How she had 6triven to ease the pain which cut her miwnnv u.lp o almost before Harold was beyond tB sea. And aeeu had come, aocceas undoubtful; a noble success, laureled and acclaimed. ' Tha lire of genius burned within her soul and lent im pulse to her heaven-gifted brush, the critics said. To-day had been the hour of triumph for her art. The salon's first prise decked ber masterpiece. . A host of friends and connoisseur! pre dicted for her a future wherein fame and laxury waited at her bidding and then came before her that stern white face, and its eyes held her trembling in their cold, unwavering stare. u She drew her hands from her face and looked fixedly at the dim study upon the easel above her as she crouched upon the jyg. In the faint light it seemed the fantastic home of elusive shadows. Yet as her gaze grew firmer the penciled lines started from the background and revealed them selves with clearness. "Repentance," a title read below. A woman in an October wood, half cleared. She was looking to the west, where a falling sun had nearly crept beyond her straining gare. Her hair had fallen in a wind-driven glory be hind her, her arms were stretched in a pathetic gesture of recall and invita tion, and across her face fella somber look of heart-wringing longing and re gret. And yet such is the divine touch of genius one who with clear eye could read, might have seen in some illusive, intangible line the birth of a golden hope that repentance had not corae too late; that the swift-falling sun would rise once more. There was a dignity, a poise and grace, nn inexpressible pathos in this lone figure of the wood which stirred the heart and moved the very soul to cry out that the mute prayer must find nn answer; that within the nshes of its crushed past there must lurk a spark which should rise to a living flame. One could not but know, as they faced each other, in that light of shadows, that these two women were in truth but one. She who sat disheveled upon the rug surely was none other thun the sun-imploring creature of the autumn wood. It was not that the likeness of linea ment was striking, but in the bit ter abandonment of pose, in the wild craving of their speaking silence, in the tender wooing of the arms which voicelessly called out their woe, they were the same, and indivisible, one the insensate shadow of a living cry, one the sensate Douuneni oi a life-wearing sorrow. Kleanor sat long, and still. What tempests tossed her heart in that deep communion cannot be told. It was herself, her soul, she had limned upon her canvased "Repentance," and in the revelations of the night it seemed all too plain to her that she had painted on a signboard the se cret of her heart and invited him who ran to read. The December sun shon in her window when she rose fom hpv strange vigil by the living dead. There was a new-born resolution in her look. She laved her face care fully to hide its stains of tears. Then she brushed her glorious crown of hair and put on her coat. "A walk will do me good," she said to herself. "The morning is splen did. As soon as I can after noon I will withdraw my picture from the gallery. It has told too much al ready. He, at least, shall never know." She put on her jaunty fur hat. A long look in her mirror told her the traces of the night of watching had vanished beneath the impulses of the morning. She was stitl benutiful, no doubt, despite her score nnd five of years; despite the tragedy of her heart. She tort the study of "Repentance" from its easel and thrust it upon the blazing asbestos log. Then she slow ly and thoughtfully drew on her gloves. The studio bell uttered a long, im perative summons. Kleanor started sharply. What impossible call was that? At sunrise? Who could it be abroad so early, or so late? Well, let them ring. She was not at home. Again the bell called her, as if in imperative demand. Its tone was masculine, demanding. Who could it be? Well She flung wide the door. Upon the threshold stood a figure. tall, maaly, strong, with bared head aa tof ahrlma. Out of the taifc fw Mt ia pallM frame (lane boraa la wfom Iter, 4ror4 her, snateoW p hor aylrtt aarcaiatiiif into its wild eartaa, am4 thai her lover came upon her with wM stretched arms, "Harold!" she cried. "Oh! Har old! Have you come at last.", And they set their faces to the east, where the risen sun spread a new glory across the snowy world. ; Navigation by Electric Llht. An important patent connected with the St. Lawrence navigation has been issued and submitted to Mr. Tarte, minister of public works, by whom it will be laid before tie cab inet, says an Ottawa special j to the New York Times. The pateni is de signed to do away with the1 light houses, buoys and in fact the! entire paraphernulia for night navigation between Montreal and Quebec, arid sub stitute a submerged electric svstem. The muin idea is to .ik an electric cable in the center of the navjignble channels, with power translnitted from a power house at Montreal, and lines of colored lights at or abJve the water level each side of the chjnnncl, the lights on one side being of a dif ferent color to those on thel other side. The lights will be supported by com supports. l.ooplnu, Gladys Is he badly "hit?" i.inci les; lies on the loop talks of nothing but cngngf-ment "rings. Judge. RJJ E L S1S7 cf Karsas Yrect to Dr. Grsni'j Nsnrun Co to tti Rem Mrs. P. Bourn, 1879 Third Avenuo, Kew York City, says: " I had a ctmMant bearing doim sain that audo aiofMl draatlf ully aorvona, and tha paia in a back waa something awful. I aaffarad torriblr ovary Booth. I also aof. orad from laflaat- matioa and had aatuiiaU aral dia. chary that kept ma tired all tho time. My kidnTi ann ptomaca wera effected and I waa alwava constipated. Krery little thine excited ma, and I waa o nervous I didn't feel a bit lika eeing or talking to anyone. 1 waa really In adreadf ul condition. No on knows what I suffered. Every morn ing I would feel so weak and tired I Could Imrdlr get up, and during tiiaday I would ei lame ana feelas though 1 should fall. 1 doetored try ing flrfct one thing, then an other, but nothing seemed to do me any irood. 1 was po discour aged and doirnhearted I didn't care uiucu what happened, or if 1 erer got well. " Finally. someone told in to take Pr.fi reene'i Nerrura Llood and nerve remedy, and said so much about the good itdid woincn'who suffered from female weaknes. that 1 decided to try it. I cannot sarennugh forlhin medicine. r.(ireene'a Kerr lira blood and nerve remedv is the best medicine on earth for nervousness and female weakness, and every woman who auffera from thes troubles ought to get IT. Greene to cure them. I took four bottles of Nervura and mj pains are all gone. My periods are regular every month, without the aliglitest pain, my backache is all gone and there isn't the slightest discharge an; more. Tha folks who see me now, who sr how contented and haiiiiyand strong I am, think itlsamiracls." Get Dr. Greene's Kervnra to-day for your trouble, nnd writo to Dr. Greene fur advice. Address 101 Fifth Avonuo, New York City. vy?r it i I VI f A iu a v . k 1 CKAIVDIM'S II1UT1IOAY. "Many hnppy returns of the day, grandpa; and mamma says if you give lis cachi 50 cents, we mustn't lose it!" Hurlem Life. Destroy the Vines Xovf. The best possible disposition that can be made of the melons, squash and cucumber vines is to pull them up, and, when sufficiently dry, pile nnd burn them. Left upon the ground they be come the shelter nnd breeding place of the next year's crop of beetles, and their value for manure will in no way compensate for the damage accruing if left upon the ground, lletter at tend to it at once Rural New Yorker. Try four full ounrts of Hnyner Seven. Year- Old (lye, express prepaid, fur W O. For parti culars, see announcement of the Hayncr IMn tilling Co., Dnyton, Ohio, which appears else where in this Issue. Friendly Treatment Dad Enough. Towne I'd hate to have that man for an enemy. Browne Who Is he? Towne I don't know; but ho punched my hend once. Browne Well, if he wasn't an ene my I'd like to Towne Oh, you see it was all mistake. After he punched me he said: "Excuse me, Buddy, I took yer fur a friend o' mine." Philadelphia Press. A Maater Stroke. Duffy Th' fit may be arl right, but how about th' color av th' coat match in' th' different colored pairs of pants I may want to wear wid it? Cohenstein Dot coad vil harmon ica Bit any color of der rainpow but orangel I vill pe honest mit you ohf I lose der sale! ruck. A poleu Caao. Lady What is tho matter with any husband? Doctor I cannot be sura yet. Hava you noticed him doing anything un Mual lately t "Let me see. Well, last evening, in stead of lighting hia cigar the mo ment he left the table, he walked in to the library and put on his smok ing jacket, amoking cap and slippers before beginning to smoke." "Hum! My, my!" "And, later on, when he wrote a let ter, he wiped the pen on a pen wiper." "Horrors! It's paresis!" X. Y. Weekly. Triolet to a Debataate. Ah. you are like this book I hold. 'Ti bound, you see. In lavish style; Wash how It Is adorned with gold; h, you are like this book 1 hold; The story through Its pages told Can wait we'll rend It after while Ah. you are like thla book I hold. 'TIs bound, you see. In lavish a'tyle. -Chicago Record-Herald. IT WOILD II B IMPOLITE. iccztnS rata To the time when she was plucked froJ the Terr crrasp of death, the natural iTl j puis of the womanly heart is tbanknu ; iw , nw-aiio woica save-a he- ana a aearc to neip other women in like case. Those are the 'motives which prompted Mrs. Eva Burnett to write the accompanying testi monial to the curative power of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. This is only one cure out of thousands. No one would dare say that the average woman was not as truthful as she ia good. And it is the truthful testimony of the average woman that " Favorite Pre scription" cures womanly diseases when all other means and medi cines absolutely fail. It estab lishes regularity. dries the drains which weaken women,? heals inflammation and ulceration anct cures female weakness. It tranquilizer the nerves, restores the appetite anc induces refreshing sleep. I have intended for some time to write i- you," say. Mr. Kva llurnett. of Kussellville. U gan Co., Ky ., and give a testimonial in regard u what your medicine has done for me. My r.h came in juiy, .nag, ana i naa congestive cnill and lay at death's door for ten long week. was in a dreadful condition and had six of IVf best doctors of the city. After everything V.ttl been done and I had been given iiptodi?: asked my husband to get me a bottle of lit1 Pierce' Favorite Prescription. He had nonncr in it, but he got it, and when I had taken it tw E week 1 was able to walk to the dining r"nt-r to my meals, and by the time I had taken thrc.f . Domes i waa anie to cook lor my lamuy oi lour I can never praine Dr. Pierce and his mediantf cnougn." i Dr. Tierce's Pleasant Pellets cure bili ousness. Doctor My old chum Bones writes me that he wants me to operate on him for appendicitis. Nurse Will you? Doctor Well, I'd hate to cut an old acqusin to nee. Chicago Journal. ONCE IS ENOUGH TO SEE Gustavo Dore's portrait of Dnnte is worth seeing once. But once is enough. Some such look you notice on the faces of those who have Buffered, and still suffer, much physical pain; people subject to rheumatism, gout, neuralgia, periodic headache, lumba go, or pain from some old lesion. This pain hubit puts its marks on them, as the custom of, handling ropes crooks a sailor's fingers; or as too much riding of a bicycle stamps a worried expression on certain faces. No wonder people said of the Italian poet as he passed along, "There goes THE MAN WHO NEVER LAUGHS." The complaints above named all yield to the action of Benson's Porous Plasters, and quickly too. Not ouly those, but colds and coughs, kidney and liver affections, all congestions and muscular strains, diseases of the cheat, asthma and all ailments which are open to external treatment. It is fre quently said that Jienton't Platter it Pain't Matter. It cures when others are not evsn able to relieve. For thirty years the lead ing external remedy. The old-style plas ters, as well as salves, liniments, oils, etc., have little or no efficacy as compared with it. Use it. Trust it. Keep it in the house. Ask for Benson's Plaster ; take no other. All druggists, or wo will prepay postuo on any number ordered in the United States on receipt of 25c. each. Seabury t Johnson, MXg. Chemists, N.T. CAX'T DO ANYTHING ELSE. ACwou a er om rue filiation. "I bave noticed that the sale on Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets is almost invariably to those who have once used them," nays Mr. J. H. Weber, a prominent druggist of Cascade. Iowa. What better re commendation could any medicine have than for people to cull for it wheuaeain in need of such a rem edy t Try them when you feel dull after eating, when you have a bad taste in your nioutl', feel bilious, have no appetite or b. n tivublod with constipation, and you aro cer tain to be delighted with the prompt rel;ef which they afford. For side by tho Middleburg Drurj Store, "Mamie," asked Mrs. Benham, "why do so many men reform and give up their bad habits at New Year's?" "Because." interrupted Mr. Benham. ' "they can't help themselves. They're 'broke' after Christmas. I Hla Roar. 1 McGorry (carpingly) Thim makers av al manacs hov got us be dhe t roats, bedadl Mrs. MoGAirry How d'yei make thet out? McGorry Make ut out? Here, now: We hov cowld weather New Year's, phwin we don't nade ut; an' do dhey rive us avea j a brith av frost on dhe Fourt' av July, phwin our tongues are nangia out wid dhe beat? Not so's yes cud notice ut, bedid! Judge. Not a rrnoraatlnator, "I shall not wait till New Year's to turn over a new leaf," said young Hoopler. "My grandmother sent me a Bible for a Christ mas present, and I shrewdly suspect that the dear old lady has hidden a few bank notes in it." Juilue. Only One Theory. "How in the world did she ever come to marry a mivn with one leg?" "I don't know, unless it can bo traced to her strong liking for dam aged goods that come cheap." Chi cago Times-Herald. The Scnle of Shrinkage. "Why don't you w ear all-wool under wear?" "My denr sir, no man can afford to wenr nil-wool underwear unless he has five sons growing up." Chicago Rec ord. ' f.o Plow. Make new resolves mildly, or else, I protest, When the time comes to keep them you'll run short of zest. Chicago liecord. Itnlber Dlaronraiting;. Maude Did Daisy Frcslilight give young Slowboy any encouragement at the New Year's ball? tiara No, I think not. She asked him to marry, her, tliat's all. Chicago Daily jsews. Should He Perfectly Happy. "I don't see why Long Jim Jones shouldn't be happy this New Year's day," said the Georgia native. "He's got six fiddles, ten children, an' a moonshine 'still' that ain't never been spotted by the government." Atlanta (Ca.) Conttitution, bsnaing rorwara. "Don t you think, dear, we might afford one of the horseless cart', riages?" , "We might take the horseless partff cow and wait for fortune to bring uiy the rest." Leslie'a Weekly. ; PURE WHISKEY DIRECT FROM DISTILLER TO CONSUMER. Four Full Quarts! $9? .20 5M - KB Express Prepaid. Saw Dtaltn' Pntllt. rrtvnti Adlf ration. OUR Wo wM HAYNEflS biT JSJ fsavoos sreasld. sM, rd CA ia olaia aetaaea, !!tUnUiitfl Jh Mkata i aaiiranonj. ii or fom sead tear Mil aoartfcottlao efNeyasrV 7-laar41M Daaata Cesser DhtiUso Bye for $20, ol eon tenia. Haet aatialactor weei receive, rater it at oar eaei wo will re tare year Such Whitkey can't tiha iluwlurt for lit t than $s la laRimcamcss: Third Nat'lBank.Dayten; State nai'i nana, bi. Liouis; or any oi in uo-s I THE HAYNER DISTILLING CO, BS0-S32 West Fifth St., Dayton, Ohio. 300.3M So. Seventh St., St. Louis, Mo. w (varante abave firm will do as It acre. Ed t " f: Saying; the Affable TElaa. Agnes Dorothy, you don't mind 11, that I didn't writ to you while I wai -gone, do you? t Dorothy No, indeed, Agnes; I'vi.- been so busv mvself that I'd havi.t 3 been mad at you if you had. Brook lyn Life. Meat and Vegetables. Dire Increasa In their cost we see. Ere long we will begin . To fear that pork and beans will b As rare as terrapin. Washington Star. OBSEHVAXT OF c I . r THE A ME XI TIES. I . Languid Leary Lady, won't youssv ftim'me ten cents? I hain't et anj-r thin' for two days. If Benevolent Old Lady Y'ou p.r, man! Y'ou can't get much of a meal; for ten cents. Languid Leary I've got enougli money for de meal, lndy. I want? do dime to tip de waiter. Brooklyn Eagle.. An Important Question. "I'd give my life to call you 'wife!' " The maiden, long Inured To caution, murmured: "Is the life Of which you speak Insured?" Philadelphia Press. DON'T TOBACCO SPIT and SMOKE Your Llfeawayt You can be cured of any form of tobacco usinf ' .sllyt be made well, strong, magnetic, full ol new life and vigor by taking MO-TO'BAO, that makes weak men strong. Many K" ten pounds in ten days. Over BOO.OOB cured. All druggists. CUre guaranteed. Buok let and advice FREE. Address BTWU.IN1 MKDY CO Chicago or New York.. Ul L T