org, an gentine York, official Repub- by the encour- ies and Valberg He has but the lomatic ye for a of trade Captain e were to the lay. In have a agricul- vesting Brazil inds of South tunities greater » ans are hen we United of our coming ds, and to the roducts at trust he pres- the sup- y is so the de- a rem- try, the millions roaming >» would is coun- ight and ne price Western D. » Papers Filipino ntries is depart- it shall of their hite has he case > of Ma- st reach- man ap- rin, Ger- Or pro- lor’s cer- roof hav- Edward ilippines es, he is 1ate pro- 1 to aid of Penn- an-multi- nza min- n $62,500 Lambeth le formal ion from, and Cap- . ewhat in ratio for -ains fall- ease ma- rernor of 2pted the he Trans- r . South land, who t Castle is so far ill return d regard- mtinue to ill remain >s, Isle of vill return oronation. a station, mouth to oria and eyed from ilway sta- re was no e with the | at Luck- edition in a jput regi- ved to be 1ankarpur, who was in Nepaul t says the considers 1ile should of Italian been sug- wide man- Ise the for- temple in ed the of- land. James C. wT. Gra- ruiser Cin- uaira July rrested by while go acas. The being held ir compan- vn, Africa, of the ex- ange River 000 before h her hus- a pitiable Yo - i. we . % haut WATCHED LIKE HAWKS. France Increased Her Naval Force and England Went One Better. The British naval squadron in New- foundland waters this year will be in- creased to five ships. A few years Rgo the service was regarded by both - France and England as merely patrol work, for which obsolete wooden corvettes and then slightly more mod- ern ships were detailed. After Fash- oda, the French vexation found evi- dence in sending out the powerful armored cruiser Isly, the British re- taliating by calling home the anti- quated frigrate Cordelia in the middle of ths season and sending out instead the splendid third-class battleship Charybois, a match for the Isly in every respect. The French the next epring reinforced the latter with the Fulton, a rain-bow, fast-steaming gun- toat. The ‘British equalized matters by detailing the Pylades, a ship more than a match for her. The next step of the British was to add a fourth ship, both powers having as their third a small gunboat. The fourth Britisher was an armed sloop, the Co- lumbine. RUSSIANS IN MANCHURIA. It Is Unlikely That They Will Give Up Their Grip There. . The number of Russian troops In Manchuria is said to be 91,200, but it is difficult to believe that the czar has had an army of such magnitude there. As for railway guards, it is said that 800 will be left in Shinking, 700 in Kirin and 550 in Amur, or 2,000 in all, says the Chicago Daily News. These guards are to be of the nature of po- lice rather than of soldiers. Russia, it is alleged, will hand back New: chwang to China in December, but only the most famous admirers of Muscovite policy believe that the great northern power will ever prac- tically retire from Mgnchuria. It is not its policy to draw back from any land that it has once occupied despite treaties and agreements to the con- trary. Polo is probably the oldest of ath- letic sports. It has been traced to 600 B. C. Ladies Can Wear Shoes One size smaller after using Allen’s Foot- Tass, a powder for the feet. It makes tight “‘ornew shoes easy. Curesswollen, hot, sweat- ing, aching feet. ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. At all druggists and shoe stores, 25c. Trial package Free by mail. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. You can’t aiways judge a man’s temper by the way he treats his wife before com- pany. FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous- ness after first day's usesof Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer. #2trial bottle and treatisefree Dr. R.H. KuiNg, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. The mosquito 1s not blase, but he con- siders life a bore: E.B.Walthall & Co., Druggists, Horse Cave, Ky., say: “Hall's Catarrh Cure cures every one that takes it.”” Sold by Druggists, 75c. Even the shoemaker objects to awl work and no play. . Mrs. Winslow’s Scothing Syrup for children teething, soften the gums, reducesinflamma- tion,allays pain, cures wind colic. 25¢. abottle Hamburg's shipping trade with Austra- lia doubled in 1901. | Pigo’s Cure cannot he too highly spoken of as a cough cure.—J. W. O'BRIEN, 322 Third ‘Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 190) The fisheries of the German Ocean yield a year. = 9 3 Hair Falls “1 tried Ayer’s Hair Vigor to stop my hair from falling. One- half a bottle cured me.” J. C. Baxter, Braidwood, Ill. Ayer’s Hair Vigor is certainly the most eco- nomical preparation of its kind on the market. A little of it goes a long way. It doesn’t take much of it to stop falling of the hair, make the hair grow, and restore color to gray hair. $1.00 a bottle. All druggists. If your druggist cannot supply you, send us one dollar and we will express you a bottle. Be sure and give the name of your nearest pos office. Address, CO., Lowell, Mass. Headache? Appetite poor? Bowels con- stipated? It’s your liver! Ayer’s Pills are liver pills. Want your moustache or beard a beawptiful brown or rich black? Use Buckingham’s Dye 50cts. of druggistsor R. P. Hall & Co., Nashua, N.H. CANDY CATHARTIC BEST-FOR THE BOWELS og » 50e. rien, Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold in balk, Beware of the dealer who tries to sell ¢something just as good.” P.'N. U. 80, 02 IE COT TOE i/o NWI Lea ALL DRULGGIS DR 0 PSY JET DISCOVERY: gives quick relief and cures worst oasss- B of testimonials end 10 dave’ treativent Free, br. E KE. GREEE 680XE, Box B. Atlanta. @p. Say eo 2 AGRICULTURAL - Cleaning the Well. The fall is the time to clean the well. Because water is clear is no reason for supposing it to be absolutely free from impurities. All surface water should drain away from the well and it should be protected against toads and insects. Anything that will dissolve in water will go wherever the water goes. The filter removes only the suspended mat- ter, Pneumonia in Cattle. According to the Kansas bulletin, pneumonia is caused by dusty hay and fodder. The bacteria that live normal- ly in the air passage increase rapidly under the irritation, causing inflamma- tion. The animal has a cough that is dry at first, but afterward accompanied by mucus. There is a tendency to lie down, and sometimes to rest the lower jaw on the ground, Give good protec- tion, pure water, and laxative, nutri- tious food. Dampen the hay, and let the animal lick a little daily of the fel- lowing mixture: Salt ten pounds, sul- phur one pound, air-slaked lime one pound, hyposulphite of soda one pound. Bran mashes enriched with oil meal are excellent. To Make a Good Whitewash, Slake with boiling water a half bushel of lime, cover during the opera- tion to keep in the steam; after strain- ing add a peck of salt which has been dissolved in warm water; then add a thin paste made of three pounds of ground rice, stirred in wiile hot; then add a half pound of Spanish whiting and one pound of glue previously dis- solved in water. Add five gallons of hot water to the mixture, stir well and allow to stand for a few days, well covered. This whitewash must be ap- plied hot. The above is almost as good as paint for preserving wood, and keeps white almost as long. Houses and fences can be made to last a life- time by using this wash once in eight or ten years. A Handy Stanchion. The standards a are bolted at the top and bottom by two by six picces. These are made of two by fours and extend even with the top of the horizontal two by six to which they are bolted. The movable two by four, which when closed holds the animal, is bolted only to the bottom two by six, this bolt act- A GOOD CATTLE STANCEION, ing as a hinge. 'This piece b is several inches longer than its mate, and ex- tends above the upper horizontal two by six. Where a stanchion is built to hold a number of animals, all the mov- able two by fours are bolted at the top to a horizontal two by four extending the length of the stanchion about three inches above the top horizontal two by six. At one end of this horizontal two by four c is a lever @ b which all the animals can be fastened in simul- taneously. This is a very convenient arrangement. A great improvement over the old way of fastening the closed stanchion in place when closed with a pin is a simple automatic lock. It is made of a short piece of two by four bolted to the side of the bar by one end, the other lying on top of the two by four horizontal c¢. The end of ¢ is notched to let the end of the block drop into it when the stanchion is closed, holding it in place until lifted up. The lever d can they be thrown back and the stanchion is opened.—J. L. Irwin, in Orange Judd Farmer. An Experience in Spraying. In 1896 I bought a first-class brass pump to use in a pail, as my orchard was small and young. I used one tea- spoonful of London purple, four tea- spoonfuls of flour and about fourteen quarts of water, spraying once when the orchard was just out of bloom. One Baldwin tree I did not spray. Sixteen barrels of fine apples were picked in October, and were put up and marked. As the commission house failed just then I put them in the cellar, nailed up tight; fifteen barrels from the sprayed trees and one from the un- sprayed. In early March, 1897, I sort- ed and sold the lot. The fifteen barrels of sprayed fruit turned out fifteen bar- rels; they could have been shipped without sorting. The one barrel of un- sprayed lost one half. Spray by all means.—J. E. Way, in The Epitomist, Tame the Coit. There is no place where education counts for more, except in the child, than in the young horse. The fright- ful accidents, loss of life and property, which are the result of runaways, at- test this fact. With the colt, as with the child, early education and impres- sions are lasting and more easily im- parted than at any other period of life. Hence the necessity of commencing early. The colt should be accustomed to the ways of man. before he is a week old. At this age he can be handled without danger. Leaving a horse to mature before he is broken is about the poorest economy one can think of. Not only the danger attending the handling of a wild horse when fully grown, but the further fact that the horse is never safe. ‘The safe horse is always in demand at much better fig- ures than the half broken one. As the expense of producing horses is destined to increase, we eannot afford to put our horses on.the market unless thor. oughly broken.—N. J. Harris, in Twene tieth Century Farmer, The Best Hog Pasture. The cheapest, quickest and best hog pasture is the alfalfa. It is a rank grower and keeps ahead of the hogs. This is an important feature, to have a pasture that is a full supply for the herd of swine. In pasturing hogs it is best to -have small inclosures and ar- ranged so the herd can rotate in graz- ing, taking one pasture one week, an- other the next, and so on, thus keeping on practically fresh grass all the time. A few acres can be made to pasture a large number of hogs when confined to suitable lots. The. hog pasture is an auxiliary to the feed lot. It should not be made to take the place of the feed lot or the corn crib. The hog raiser who makes a success of hog raising and hog feed- ing will use the pasture to help in the growth and health of his hogs. A large hog lot with adjoining pastures is a convenience that the hog raiser should provide on the farm. The hogs can thus be let on to the pastures at will and sHut off to suit the demands. The pasture is almost as important as the feed lot. If you have not the alfalfa hog pasture you should lose ne time in starting one. Some sow rape for the hogs to pasture on, others sow rye, while some sow sorghum. Any green crop is better than a dry lot. Swine of all ages should be sup- plied with a liberal allowance of green feed, and the more permanent this supply can be made the cheaper it will be and the less liable to neglect in this important feature of hog feed.—Ne- braska Farmer. Fence Posts. In many sections of the country where timber is scarce the question of fence posts is a serious one. In tim- berless regions where soft woods are grown for the purpose, about four years apparently ends the usefulness of a post that is cut and set in the usual way. If well seasoned before setting, another year or two may be added, but the post problem is very un- satisfactory. The posts may be doubled or more, in durability by a simple process of sat- uration by lime. A pit is dug three feet deep, and three inches of fresh quicklime is spread on the bottom; the posts, already pointed for driving, are set on end in the pit close together, with as much lime scattered among them as is possible—up to the level of the ground. A ridge of earth is raised around the stack of posts, and water is poured in upon the lime, to slack it. The slacking of lime causes consider- able heat, by which the moisture of the timber is driven out by the expansion. The cooling of the posts and lime, after the slacking is over (care being taken to make the lime sufficiently liquid) causes the timber to absorb moisture again, and thus the liquid lime is ab- sorbed by the wood, the acid of which is thus neutralized; as it is this acid which causes the otherwise rapid de- cay of the timber, the destruction of it by the lime avoids this effect, and the timber is very much increased in dura- bility. To get the best results the posts should be seasoned. If they are laid down in the trench the whole post will benefit by the treatment.—The Epito- mist. ermine mmc A Practical Brooder House. The average farmer does not wish to go to the expense of a hot water sys- tem for brooding early chickens, but there are many who would like an eco- nomical plan for brooding a few hun- dred early chickens. The cut shows a house built against a bank that can be twelve feet or more in length. The cross section shows exactly how the CROSS SECTION OF BROODER HOUSE. home made brooder is located, with re- spect to the run for the chicks. Set on legs as it is, the attendant does not have to stoop over his work, and with the raised run for the chicks, they are brought on a level with the brooder, so they can easily run in and out. This run is coated with gravel, and cemented. Allow six feet for each brocder and pen and you have three feet at the end of each brooder—suf- ficient space to give access to each pen, which can be cleaned froma the EROODER HOUSE. walk with a short-handled Loe or rake. The house is twelve feet wide, the walk or alley six and the run six. The top of the brooder is hinged, te give easy access, and the partition ip Der of the fire department a few days front of the rums is tight, to keep in; the warmth that is produced by the sunshine coming in at the window. a bank of earth is not at hand, earth can be heaped up to form a bench on which to locate the runs. Such a bank of earth makes the interior of the building much warmer.—American Ag- riculturist. If | MULTIPLE TALKING MACHINES. The Instrument’s Efficiency Greatly Ine creased. Much of the strained and unnatural quality of sounds reproduced by the or- dinary phonograph or gramophone, es- pecially in the case of the human voice, is due to the fact that in order to make the reproductions as loud as possible, the original must be of abnormal ef- fort. Emile Berliner, the well known electrical inventor, has, however, de- vised a reproducing machine, wherein this trouble is remedied. It is com- posed of a number of separate gramo- phones operated simultaneously. The art has advanced so far that the rec- ords may be made exact duplicates of each other, even to the minutest de- ‘tail. The only difficulty in operating several machines is to have them regis- ter exactly with ecacli other, so as to insure simultaneous cperation. A table or support is provided, on which there are mounted a number of rotary tables of the usual gramophone type, and adapted to receive the well known rec- ord tablets of commerce. "These tab- lets are generally arranged in a stag- gered row, each. being supported on an upright spindle or shaft journaled in a standard fastened to the table. Upon each shaft just below the table is secured a disk having equally spaced radially projecting pins of its peri- phery. The disks are all of the same size, with the same number of pins, and they are driven together with the tables at the same speed by means of a belt, having perforations spaced to fit the pins ‘and operated by a motor of any desirable construction. The regis- tering devices make it possible .to in- sure the contact of each stylus with a corresponding point of each record, by the mere act of placing the stylus on the proper line. Power being applied to rotate the records, identical sounds issue from each of the horns, and the combined body of sound may be made as great as desired by using an appro- priate number of records. Therefore, it is possible to provide an exact repro- duction of the human voice or to make it louder or softer. The Weight of Ocean Cables. The cables of the world aggregate about 180,000 nautical miles. While the bulk of this is the property of pri- vate = companies, something in the neighborhood of 20,000 miles is owned or actively controlled by the differcnt colonial powers. The British Empire and France have about 500C¢ and S000 miles respectively, Germany 2000 and Italy 1000. Spain was credited with 1700 miles, but a considerable’ propor- tion of this must now appertain to the United States. The laying of a cable across the ocean is not nearly so simple a matter as might appear at first thought. There are a number of things to be taken into account. The enormous weiglft of any considerable length of cable (say, for instance, sufficient to reach from Hawaii to an island of the Ladrones, or what would be only one division in a direct cable between the United States and the Philippines) is an important factor. The Great Eastern was able to carry enough for the whole distance between Valentia, Ireland, and Heart's Content, Newfoundland, and success fully laid it after two attempts. Bul this is not so great a distance as our illustration, and, moreover, modern ca- bles differ from their predecessors in being made much heavier and in va- ried types to meet certain conditions. What is known as “deep-sea cable” weighs about two tons to the mile, while the inshore variety weighs four- teen tons to the mile. There are other intermediate grades. Instead of using monstrous vessels it has been found expedient to lay long-distance cables in sections.—Percie W. Hart, in Lippin- cott’s, A Frequent Cause of Fire. “Children playing with matches cause a great many fires,” said a mem- ago after returning from a fire that had been caused in the manner stated. “Thoere is reason for such fires,” the fireman added. “It seems that people ought to keep matches out of the reach of children and it would be a very easy matter to do so. Match safes could be hung on nails or pegs driven so high above the floor that children could not reach them, even if they stood upon chairs. By taking alittle precaution in the matter many disastrous fires would be prevented and some fatalities avoided. . “Only a few days ago, the fireman said, "a child was seriously burned while playing with matches, and only the early discovery of ‘the flames pre- vented what might have proved a serious conflagration. Many p@ople are entirely too careless in this mdtter and by the exercise of ordinary care much serious damage would be avoided. “If people would only take this mat- ter seriously and act accordingly, they would find at the end of the year that there will be a good showing made so far as the fire fatalities are concerned.” —Washington Star. Syrian Asphalt. Asphalt is found in the provinces of Syria on the banks of the Dead Sea, floating on the surface of its waters. Through the action of earthquakes the asphalt has been torn from the bottom of the sea and driven toward the shores, especially to tle: east. "The nar- ratives of the Greek and Roman his. torian to the effect that asphalt small islands was upheld by the salt water and driven over the surface o. the sea are without doubt true. This asphalt, and generally the oriental ot Egyptian, is pure and expensive, and used principally in the manufacture as ef a certain kind of varnish, but for general purposes, owing to its brittle- ness as well, is useless in the asphalt 1 industry.—American Asphalt Journal, | THE MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 red $ 8 9 Rye—No. 2... 66 67 Coin—No. 2 yello 8 74 75 No. 2 yeliow, shelle 2 Mixed ear..... 71 Tg Oats—No. 2 white. 6016 61 . 3 white....... 57 58 Flour—Winter patent.. 390 34 Fancy straight winters. 3 90 4 00 Hay—No. 1timothy.................. 16 75 17 00 sioyer No. 1... ............... 950 1000 KFeed—No. I white mid. ton........ 2300 2400 Brown middlings............... A 50 2200 Bran, bols,... 0 i. 19 00 1959 Btraw—Wheat .. 62% 63 Oat... el LL 6% 6 50 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery. ........ $ UU jo creamery...” ...... ... 204 WH Fancy country roll. . 21 21 Cheese—Ohio, new.................. 103g 11 New York, new................ 1 1144 Poultry, Etc. Hoens~periv........................ 8 12 13 Chickens—dressed ... ,.............. 15} 16 Eggs—PFa. and Olio, fresh. ......... 18 19 Fruits and Vegetable Green Beans—per box........... a" 125 Potatoes—Funcy white per t 100 Uabbage—per bbls. 115 Unious—per barrel 27 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent ................§39) 415 Wheat—No. 2 red 70 71 Corn—mizxed... vi34 24 Begas........ .........0..... vin. IT 13 Butter—Ohio creamery. ............. 2 We PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent...... .... ..85 50 400 Wreat—No, 2red.. lg 98 Coru—No, 2mixed 72 v3 Quts—-No. 2 whi'e......... Hilg 60 Butter—Creamery, extr NE v3 Eggs—Penusylvania tirst 19° 193% NEW YORK. Flour—Fatents..........: ........-$390 . 410 WEhest—No, “2 76. ine erieaisie 80 804 Corn—No. 2......... Oats—No, 2 White.. Butier—Creamery ................... ve Kggs—Stateand Feunsylvania........ LIVE STOCK. Central Stock Yards, East Liberty, Pa. Cattle. Prine heavy, 1'(6 to 1€00 lbs.......$ 740 7 60 Priv e. Ltt ws Iubv bs oo 615% 73 Mediu, Ja 10 JoW abS.inn.. nu... 660 700 Ira beliers irae saan OU0 6 50 Butcher, £00 to 1600 11 8. {50 5 80 Common to fair... =. ............. 3 00 450 UXen, common 10. fab... ......... 800 49) Coniwon to good tat bulls and cows 2450 5 00 Miichcons, each... ............0 20) 3500 Extra milch cows, each............ 1803 5000 J . Hogs. Prime heavy hogs_............ 8 00 Prime medium weights. ©... = 790 Best heavy yorkers and medium... 785 Good tachoice packers. ....... : 715 Gocd pigs and lightyorkers... 7 785 Pigg common togood......... 7 795 Commonto fair... ............. 75 7 80 Rouphs......x. 0.00 sa bis 67 7 60 Stags... nd a 6 50 Sheep. Extra, medium wethers, 440 Good to choice .... ....... 415 Megium..... ................ 375 Lommon‘tofair.................... 250 : Lambs. Jambselipped.... ...... .... 650 700 Lambs, good to choice, elipp hb) 625 Lambs; common to fair, clipped... 20) 60) Bpringilambs.... 0 Ln 500 675 Calves. Neal, estrai: ll 0, 0. 69) 800 / ea, good to choice. .... 400 575 Veal, common heavy. 85H) 50 V eal, common to fair...... 25) 40 SERENE TRADE ASPECTS. Prospects of Early Settlement of Strikes Greatly Improve the In- dustrial Outlook, R. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: Settlement of numer ous labor controversies and prospect of early agreements as to other strug- gles have greatly improved the in- dustrial outlook, while agricultural conditions steadily improve. As these have been the only unfavorable in- fluences for some months, the pros pects for active trade are decidedly encouraging. Preparations for un- usually heavy fall sales are being made, and confidence grows stronger. Mills and furnaces that have been idle on account of the usual overhaul- ing, resumed as rapidly as needed re- pairs could be made. Financial con- ditions are sound, the midyear divi- dend distributions producing no stringency, and speculation has been heavy for the season, both in securi- ties and staples. Pig iron continues to command full prices, supplies fall- ing below requirements, and furnace deliveries failing to fill contracts. Scarcity of fuel is still the principal drawback, while car and motive power shortage are additional causes of delay. New orders are reported for distant delivery, running about a year ahead. Prices are fully main- tained for the raw material, but bil- lets weakened slightly because of for- eign selling. Importations have reached a considerable aggregate, and nore are expected. Structural ma- terial is still the feature, new busi- ness being offered in great bulk. Rail- way needs do not diminish, despite the enormos amont of work already placed and agricultural implement makers are fully employed. A general advance in prices of machine tools has occurred, averaging nearly 10 per cent. It was expected that mills and foundries would resell pig iron, owing to the high premiums obtainable, but this factor has had no appreciable ef- fect as yet, most consumers requiring all the material received. Manufae- turers of cotton goods hold nrices steady, and there has been a distinct increase in demand during the past week, although buying is only for im- perative requirements. Some cur tailment of spinning is reported at scuthern mills, the tendency being to wait until the crop cotton comes for- ward. Export trade has increased through buying for India, but China is less of a factor than usual. New lines of light weight woolens and wor- steds have opened at unchanged prices and the increased activity of mills has aroused more interest in the raw material, which tends to advance. Eastern shoe shops receive more or- ders, some of the larger producers refusing contracts calling for deliv- ery before October. Prices are firmly held. Failures for the week number 213 in the United States, against 193 last year, and 20 in Canada, against 32 last year. Bradstreet’s says: Railway earn: ings are really flattering, June returns on nearly 100,000 miles of road show- ing an aggregate gain of 8 per cent on last year. { WHERE DOCTORS FAIL To Care Woman’s Ills, Lydia BE, Pinkkam’s Vegetable Come ound Succeeds. Mrs. Pauline | udson Writes: “DrAr Mrs. PINEHAM : ~—Soon after ty marriage two years ago I fou myself in constant pain. The doctor said my womb was turned, and this caused the pain with considerable ine flammation. He prescribed for me for 3 (— i Zam MRS. PAULINE JUDSON, 3 Becretary of Schermerhorn Golf ‘Club, 4 Brooklyn, New York. : four months, when my husband became impatient because I grew worse instead of better, and in speaking to the drug- gist he advised him to get Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound and Sanative Wash. How I wish I had taken that at first; it would have saved me weeks of suffering. It took three long months to restore me, but it is a happy relief, and we are both most grateful to you. Your Compound has brought joy to our home and health to me.”— Mrs. Pavrixe JUDSON, 47 Hoyt Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. — $6000 forfelt If above testimonial is not genuine. It would seem by this state ment that women would save time and much sickness if they would fot Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound at once, and also write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for special ade vice. Itis free and always belpss A man not ced the small amount of food I was taking at breakfast a d my evident dislike for eating. He said, “You need Ri ans Tabules.” That proved the best p escription I ever received. I bought two five-cent pac ages and they benefited me so much that I continued to take them. My dyspepsia has disappeared—and where before I could get only a fox hours’ sleeo in the warm weather, Ripans Tabules also make my sleep refreshing so that I feellike goinz to work after resting. At druggists. The Five-Cent packet is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle, 60 cents, contains a supply for a year. G00D THINGS TO EAT From Libby's famous |" hygienickitchens. We employ a chef who is an expert in making LIB Natural Flavor Food Products We don't practice economy here. He uses the very cholcest materials. A supply on your puntry shelves enables you to have always at hand the essentials for the very best meals. LIBBY, McNEILL & LIBBY CHICAGO, U. 8. A. Write for our booklet “How 70 MAKE Good Tings To aT,” N 7 RENN Nak 222) JG W. L. DOUGLAS 50 UNION $3 &$3:50 SHOES !!2 Vv. L. Douglas shoes are worn by more men in all stations of life than any other make, because they are the only shoes that in every way equal those costing £5.00 and $6.00. W. L. DOUCLAS $4 SHOES oh CANNOT BE LLED. sales, ¢ 156 months, $1,108,820 | 1202 sates: 2,344,000 Best imported and American leathers, Heyl's Patent Calf. Enamel, Box Calf, Calf. Vici Kid, Corona Colt, Nat. Kangaroo. Fast Color Eyelets used. Caution ! The genuine have W. L. DOUGLAS’ ; name and price stamped on bottom. Shoes by mail, 25¢. extra. Illus. Catalog free. W. L. DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. L ELSE FAILS. Tastes Good. Use Sold by druggiats. ES WHI A Best Cough Syrup. in time.