Wabash hington "many ncluded ty Coal rs near Wabash )) acres any, ad- by that lage on George Jos Co and the was in mewhat quality ught in ). Heavy in the ooklyn, during er New 0 were Te res- i naval e hoats f Fifty- Kate Peter ht; her 10, and | niece, son, 16 nd Ma- 1. ake an olumes 11] mine a. and | years, overed 0st ex- are lo- where en out, ruished 1ibtedly heard of the ed at ese in- or Ta- Their om the ogress s who of the 1as ap- stward boring hanese 11 lose being t has ese in- men Caro- killed Scran- «+ 1a8t tlantic and scaped illing, ntiary ought 3, the It was ght it umbia n ap- chers, aring d the 1d or- o de- and a puties then 1 him. e 100 ed by near {ings- nit of letail- ‘mous nveys o Co- JOwer been en to [0 en- ident water yle to S en- rsons , was ick it Spire, , was ve to orid’s rday, se of z and e for 4 - GERM FEAR IS A CRAZE. PUBLIC FRANTICALLY DEMAND- ING DEVICES FOR PRO- TECTION. The Antisentic Fad Is a Feature of the Twenticth Century—Miliions of Germs Destroyed Daily, but Sci- ence Finds New Millions. Germ fear is a feature of the 20th century, declares the New York Tri- bune. There is an antiseptic or germ destroying craze. The public, or a part of it awakened, at last, to the ex- istence and the peril of germs, de- ‘mands—a little. too frantically, per- haps—germ protection. In response to this demand there are offered to the public many strange and ingenious devices. The object of these devices is the prevention of all such diseases as arise from the swal- lowing of germs, or their touch, or their inhalation. Thus: There are on the market money scoops—silver instruments of pocket size—wherewith to handle unsterilized coins. There are germicide doormats. These, being stepped upon in the right spot, emit a spray of highly volatile fluid that is supposed to render harm- less the millions of disease germs gathered on the shoes amid the dust and mud of the cities. There are wing veils, for men no less: than women, to be worn over the mouth afd nose as a preventive of the inhalation of germs. There are fumigating attachments for letter boxes. ‘These, on being com- pressed, are guaranteed to sterilize the recipient’s mail before he touches it. There are hanging tabular baths for hallways. The ends of canes and um- brellas, dipped in these baths, come forth clean of germs. There are aseptic communion cups, with tiny rotating brushes that wash the cups’ edges as they pass from one communicant to another. There are generators that sterilize carpets, walls, clothing, books, etc. There are pocket lamps that emit a germ killing vapor. These are for the cleansing of cups at public drinking fountains and for other such pur- poses. It may be doubted if so great a fear of germs as all these devices indicate is altogether sane. But it is at any rate, a fear that does more good than harm. Between the general sanitary conditions of the present and the past the contrast is amazing, and in the bringing about of that contrast the public fear of germs plays its part. In one of the London hospitals they still preserve as a relic a bed 14 or 15 feet wide. In that bed in the past a dozen patients -would lie side by side, one with consumption, another with smallpox, a third with typhoid fever, and so on. It is different today. To- day contagion and - infection are guarded against as thoroughly as thieves are guarded against by misers. And still these precautions increase. Every month, every week, some new preventive of the spread of disease is devised. And there has sprung up the germ hunter—the health faddist—who hunts germs as a sportsman hunts game. In- numerable are the weapons wherewith the germ hunter seeks his prey. A good pdace to examine these weapons. is a surgical instrument shop. A surgical instrument dealer, on be- ing asked to exhibit his various germ destroyers, pointed to a doormat. It was like any other doormat of rubber, only a lemon shaped rubber bulb was attached to it. “What,” said the visitor, bulb for?” «1’11 show you,” the dealer answered. He stood upon the mat and he com- pressed the bulb with his toe. Imme- diately a silver colored mist arose. For an instant he stood in this mist ankle deep. Then, as quickly as it had arisen the mist disappeared, leaving’ the man’s shoes and the bottoms of his trousers quite dry. “pid you notice that spray of vola- tile fluid?” he said. “Well, that was a spray of germicide, or disinfectant. This is a patent germicide doormat. This mat cleans your feet when you come in of the disease germs gathered in the mud and dust.” “A remarkable mat,” said the visit- or. “Dozs it sell?” “It sells well,” the other answered. “All germ killing devices sell well in this age. This is the age of germ fear.” He took from a case an armful of glittering objects. They were of glass “is that and silver, and their shapes were strange.” “All these instruments,” he said, “kill germs or ward off germs. I will explain them to you.” He pointed to a small silver scoop. “That is a money scoop,” he said. “A number of health faddists carry scoops in their pockets. They know that the average coin has on it about a million germs—germs of consump- tion, of smallpox, of typhoid, of diph= theria—and therefore they will not touch a coin with their fingers until it has been sterilized. When you give them change they receive it in their scoops instead of in their hands. Thence it goes ‘into their sterilized purses, to be thoroughly fumigated at home. I know three men and two women who use these money scoops. The scoops are made of silver and they cost a dollar apiece.” He took up a tiny lamp—a lamp with two wicks that rose out of a cake of sulphur. In the middle of the cake of sulphur there was @ vial of trans- parent fluid. “This is a. pocket fumigator,” he said. “You take the stopper from the vial and light the two wicks, and thereupon a vapor deadly to every kind of germs arises. The pocket fu- migator is applied by the germ hunt-. er to the public drinking cups in rail- way stations, to plates and goblets in dubious restaurants, to towels in doubtful hotels. The germ hunter krows that many persons have con- tracted incurable and dreadful diseas- es from the use of public cups and towels. He knows that a small towel may have a germ population as great as the human population of the world. Hence you see him, in a washroom or a railway station, bringing forth his lamp, lighting it, and directing its rather vile smelling vapor on the tow- el or cup he purposes to use. He bends over his task with intent brows. He pays no attention to the .inquisitive stares of the people. He is often in- terrupted by ignorant policemen or special officers who say: “ ‘Here, what are you doin’ to that cup? or ‘Do ye want to set that towel on fire, mister? ”’ The dealer, smiling, sets the little lamp down. “This object here is a germ. prcof wind veil,” he said. The wind veil had meshes unusually fine—it rather resembled cloth than veiling—and in the back it buttoned. “If, on a windy day,” said the deal- er, “you examine under the microscope a cubic inch of the air of the average city, you find that this air is a squirm- ing, writhing mass of dangerous germs. The germs of consumption predominate in that mass; more than half of them are tubercle bacilli, or consumption germs. It is therefore a good thing, if you are afraid of con- sumption, to wear on windy days a germproof wind veil Without this veil you are bound to take down into your lungs millions of consumption germs. You wouldn’t put a hungry cat in a room with a raw beefsteak if you wanted the beefsteak to remain intact, yet you put down in your lungs swarms of tubercle baeilli, though you know that the destruction of lung tis- sue is the sole object of these terrible little creatures’ lives. “In that way,” said the dealer, “the faddist argues, and on windy days he wears his wind veil. I know three men in New York, four in Chicago and two in Philadelphia who wear these veils. The veils, each time they are taken off, are washed in a steri- lized solution. “We have generators,” he went on, “of all sizes. Some cost $2, and some cost $50. Here is a generator. it looks like a small stove or like an up- right chafing dish, doesn’t it? You feed it with this fluid, light it up, and it emits a germ destroying vapor. Peo- ple with these instruments fumigate sick rooms, carpets, clothing, books, paper money, and So On. I know a man whose clothes are fumigated daily.” The dealer laughed. He gathered up the germ killing devices and put them back upon their shelves. RADIUM MAY HEAT THE EARTH. Young British Scientist Startles and Interests With a New Theory: The New York Herald's Euxrdpean edition publishes the following from its London correspondent: Is the heat of the earth due not to the fact that it is not a molten mass, which has been slowly cooling for millions of yeas, but to the presence in it of that mysteriously fascinating element radium? Pref. Ernest Rutherford, a young but already -distinguished pupil of Prof. J. J. Thomson of Cambridge, who first measured the mass and ve- locity of radium electrons, threw out the latter suggestion in ar*lecture be- fore the Royal Institution on a recent night. Lord Kelvin had calculated that, as- suming the earth to pe a molten mass when it first started its own career, it would take one hundred millions of years to cool down to its present temperature, but, added the lecturer, inclining his head toward the gray headed scientist, who was present, Lord kelvin had shown a -prophetic insight when he added, “Provided a new source of heat is not discover- ed.” Mr. Rutherford thought that ra- dium was proved to be in sufficient quantities in the earth to supply a new theory as to the source of the earth’s heat, so that we should not require the many millions of years which geologists and biologists had reasoned out as the time taken in the cooling process before life on the globe was possible. This startling new theory, ventured modestly, was not discussed after the lecture, but the scientists went away greatly interested in a proposition which in effect means a reconstruc- tion of hitherto accepted facts. The Paily Mail points out that Mr. Rutherford’s calculation leads to the conclusion that the earth may have been habitable for many millions of years, and that it further upsets all accepted theories as to the duration of life, since a millionth pdértion of radium only exhausts itself in fifty million years. Courting a Girl in Spain. Courting in Spain is conducted on principles that might almost be de- séribed as unique. The Spanish, girl of any attractions is almost aiways attended by a young man who is known as her novio, and who has the privilege of squiring her on her waiks, although by a singular anomaly no formal engagement exists. So long as this state of things continues ti young lady has to be loyal and c dient to her gallant. But he 1 cease his attentions at any time 1 openly transfer his attentions to some other lady. Although the vantages of such a custom are all on the side of the male, very few Span- ish girls would care to be without a novio, however fickle—London Globe. ad- NEW WAY TO TELL TIME. eres ee ANCE ND TRADE EVEN and Minute in Figures. Samuel Powers Thrasher of New Haven, Conn., has an invention that bids fair to make Yankee clockmakers green with envy. In fact, Mr. Thrash- er proposes to tell time in figures the same as we real on the time tables of every road in the country. No longer would he have us say it is “quarter of 3” or “half-past 2,” but as we look at his invention he proposes and in- sists that we must say 2:45 or 2:30. In the Pronioh eX hustle and bustle this proposal seems likely to meet with more than mere approval. Mr. Thrasher proposes to reconstruct the familiar face with which Father Time has been wont to remind us of the passing hours and do away en- tirely with the quaint old dial with its Roman numerals in use from the middle ages and likewise take away the old clock’s hands. Instead of pointing the way and letting us figure out the time for ourselves, Mr. Thrash- er’s new timepiece will tell us in plain figures at a glance just what time it Clock That Shows Time in Figures. is. It will be no more trouble to tell the hour the minute and the second than to read the A B Cs or see at a glance in the time table the hour and the minute. Any one with eyes and the ability to use them can tell time and a mere comparison with a time table and a knowledge of figures and the ability to read them will be the only essential to know the precise mo ment when a train is supposed to ar rive or depart or any event is to take place. Three sets of figures, one each for the hours, the tens and the units of minutes revolving on separate rolls with measured accuracy and appear ing in a given space at the proper time, give us the hours and minutes on this wonderful new clock. A point er constantly traveling in a half-grad uated circle tells the exact seconds The pointer and the rolls interlock and the whole is impelled by a de vice which is simpler than the sim plest clock mechanism ever made which seems impossible to get out of order and never needs winding. To Grow a Miniature Forest. It is quite possible for any one tc own a forest of miniature oaks, whick may be grown even without the aid of soil. In order to rear a miniature for est procure a shallow dish and cover the base of it with moss an inch thick. Then set a number of good acorns in rows about two inches apart, and a perfect little forest of oak trees can be raised. The moss . must always be kept very moist and the acorns will begin to grow in the spring. By June or July they will have rais ed themselves six to eight inches high, and will form a charming sight for any lover of trees. A Singular Chilean Spur. The photograph here shown is taken from one of a pair of beautiful Chilean spurs in the possesion of A. M. Robin son of Birkenhead, at one time a resi They were taken to The rowel dent of Chile. England, however, in 1826. is seven inches in diameter and has the sounding “ring” dear to the Chil- ean ‘“jinete” or rider. Spurs of this kind are seldom worn now except on high-days and holidays. Loneliness Drove Him Insane. Some time ago a Russian lady died in Paris, France, and bequeathed a sum of $40,000 on condition that a mausoleum was erected over her grave and inside was to be a small chamber, in which the aspirant for the legacy was to take up his residence night and day for twelve months; and watch by her tomb. A man was found who ac: cepted the post, but was unable to en dure the mental strain and loneliness and he is now confined in a lunatic asylum. The strangest flag under which men ever fought is that of the Macedoni- an insurgents. It is red on one side and black on the other. The black side is intended to be symbolic of the iniquity of Turkish rule, and should the Macedonians ever gain independence or autonomy, the flag would be changed. Girls War on Mosquitoes. The Leap Year Girls’ club of Bever- ly, Mass., have undertaken a crusade against mosqg at that place. They will adn er a coat oal oil to two ve mos- girls in sc | {& i ie pur- Mississippi river and is now in pro- CROP CONDITIONS. ~ | Corn Growing Rapidly—Wheat Har- vest Interrupted by Rain. in Iowa and in the principal corn | States eastward of the Mississippt ! river corn has made good progress | and is well cultivateq, rapid growth be- | ing generally reported. Rapid growth | is also reported from DMiissouri, Kans- as and Nebraska, but in these States cultivation has heen hindered. A large crop is practically assured in Texas, but drought has impaired the outlook in the central and east gulf and south Atlantic States. The progress of wheat’ harvest in Kansas and Missouri has "been inter- rupted by rains, but this work has pro- ceeded without interference east of the i i gress as far north as the southern portions of Illinois ang Indiana and in Virginia and Meryland. Some’ lods- Ing and rust are reported from” Ne- pbraska and Missouri, and dry weather has hastened maturity in Michigan, but elsewhere the crop has advanced, favorably, well-filled heads being generally reported. in California har- vesting continues witn light yields in most sections, in Oregon and Wash- ington heads are filling nicely. While the general condition of spring wheat is somewhat less promis- ing than previously indicated, the out- look continues encouraging in the spring wheat region east of the rocky mountains, the least favorable reports being received from Iowa. In portions of these Dakotas the crop is weedy, but in these States and in Minnesota it has made good growth and the early sown is beginning to head. On the North Pacific coast the prospects for spring wheat have ie2en materially lessened by dry, cool weather and re- cent frosts. Oats continue promising in nearly all districts. In some of the most impor- tant oat states, however, the crop is heading short, with less favorable prospects than preveously indicated. Harvest has begun in Southern Mis- souri, Tennessee and North Carolina. While a fine crop of grass is prom- ised in the States of the Missouri val- ley, recent dry weather in portions of the lake region and Middle Atlantic States has materially checked its growth. MARI ETS. PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2red...ccccesrmns. ssseseened 99 100 Rye--No. %.......... sl 82 Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear. 56 7 No. 2yellow, shelled. 55 55 Mixed ear........... 5d 55 Oats—No, 2 white 16 47 No. 8 white...... 45 46 Flour—W inter patent. 52) 52 Straight winters . 5 00 5 Hay—XNo. 1timothy.. 50 1340 Clcrer No. 1!..... 100 1150 Feed—No !white mid. 00 2500 Brown middlings...... 23 00 23350 Bran, bulk ........ 200 280 Straw—Wheat ..... 950 1000 atl, Ln eh. . wiih 950 1000 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery 20 21 nio creamery............ Jr I= Fancy country roll.............. 3M Cheese—Ohio, NeW .......coeee mene S$ 9 New York, new................ 8 9 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per Ib... 8 14 15 Chickens—dres 16 17 Turkeys, live...... . 2 23 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh .......... 18 19 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes—Fancy white per bus...... Cabbage—per Bbl..........cceemine.... 2 2 Onions—per barrel .. Apples—per barrel.... BALTIMORE. Flour—W inter Patent $493 52) Wheat—No. 2 red..... 100 102 Corn—mixed........ 57 58 EES oootee ries errsicsreisenson sve suman 7 18 Butter—Creamery ... .c..co..eo eee 19 QU PHILADELPHIA . Flour—Winter Paten we $5 535 Wrteat—No. 2red......... 101 102 Corn—No, 2mixed.. 54 55 Oats—No. 2 white. .......... 43 49 Butter—Creamery, extra 17 18 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts... 17 18 NEW YORK. Flour—Patents,............ 5 0) 5 5p Wheat—No, 2 red... 5 107 Corn—NO. 2...ceeue. 0 o8 ats—No, 2 White... 44 Butter—Creamery .. BEgB—:.esarasartaransariias $ 20 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Prime heavy, 1450 to 1600 Jbs......$6 6 20 Prime, 1500 to 1400 lbs. ...... 575 600 Medium, 1200 to 1300 1bs 540 570 | Fat helters........ Gh 410 485 Bfitcher, $00 to 1000 Ios 45) 500 | Common to fair....... 300 3 | Oxen, common to fat ~ R00 408: Common togood fat hulls and cows 250 3350 } Mfich cows, ®ach.................- LL. 2d) BBW Prime heavy hog: . 55 Prime medium w aast 555 | Best heavy yorkers and medium 555 | Good pigs and lightyorkers 515 | Pigs, common togood......... 485 1 Roughs .-. 0... Fh... 440! YY SOR RE ge ST 82 Sheep. Extra,medium wethers 465 | Good to choice ......C.. 440 | Medium...... .... 46) | Commoz to fair. 550 | Spring Lambs. .................... 650 | Calves. Veal,eXtra.......; ::--2.-::00 000 423 57 Veal, good to choice “BO 400 Veal, common heavy.............. 30 35) Trebizoned. 1 The city of Trebizoned is one of the most important cities and ports in the ! Black Sea. .It is about 480 miles from ; Constantinople and 100 miles from Ba- | toum. It is the port of entry as well; as the distributing point for the in- | terior, viz., Erzerum, Bitlis and Van, | Persia. American Goods in Asia Minor. Articles 6f American manufacture’ which are finding a market in the is-| lands of Asia Minor are cotton goods ! (sheetings, gray drills, canvas and | calicoes), hardware (carpenter’s tools, locks and nails), timepieces, cheap’ jewelry, agricultural implements, ma- chinery and windmills, sewing-ma- chines and various novelties. and for the caravan route to and from x | : Curicus Phenomenon. A curious phenomenon has been no- ticed in the tropics that can never be seen at higher latitudes. A min- ing shaft at Sombrerete, Mex., is al- most exactly on the tropic of Cancer, i and at noon on June 21 the sun shines to the bottom, lighting up the well for i a vertical depth of 1,100 feet or more. FITS permanently cured. No fltcornervouss ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline’s Great NerveRestorer,§2trial bottleandtreatisefrece Dr. R.H.KLixg, Ltd., 231 Arch St., Phila. Pa The United States leads all countries as a consumer of «coffee. ’ Dowager Queen Margherita of Italy has q lace handkerchief worth $10,000. H. HO. Greex’s Soxs, of Atlanta, Ga., are the only successful Dropsy Specialists inthe world. See their liberal cffer in advertise- went in another column of this paper. Gold is being electrolytically refined in the Philadelphia mint. : Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma- tion, allays pain,cures wind colic, 25¢.a bottle *The mileage -of the railway system “of Mexico now aggregates 10,078 miles. IamsurePiso’sCure forConsumption saved my life three years ago.—M=s. THOMAS Rob- E1xs, Maple St., Norwich, N.Y,, Feb. 17, 1000. China has at present about 830 miles of railroads. On .a tombstone at the head of a grave in one of the dog cemeteries in Paris is this inscription to the mem- ory of a brave St. Bernard: . “He saved the lives of forty persons and was killed by the forty-first.” Catarrh Cannot Be Cured With rocAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrhisa blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surface Hall’s Catarrh Cure isnot a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physi- cians in this country for years, and is a reg- ‘ular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mu- cous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients 1s what produces such wonderful results in curing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CuexNey & Co., Props., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, price, 7c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation One morning four-year-old Margie had pancakes and syrup for breakfast. After she had eaten the cakes there was some syrup left on her plate, and she said: “Mamma, please give me a spoon; my fork leaks.” The anniversary has just been cele- brated in Berlin of the day when, in 1832, the old law forbiding anyone to smoke in the streets was repealed. Household Remedy SCROFULA, Cures °Gicens, SALT RHEUM, EC. ZEMA, every form of malignant SKIN ERUPTION, ~ besides being efficacious in toning up the system and restoring the con- stitution, when impaired ‘from any cause. It is a fine Tonic, and its almost supernatural healing properties justify us in guaranteeing 8 cure of sll blood diseases, if directions are followed. Price, 81 per Bottle, or 8 Bottles for 85. FOR SALE BY DBUGGISTS. SENT FREE BOOK OF WONDERFUL CURES, together with valuable information. BLOOD BALM CO., ATLANTA, GA. ) booklet free. 1% BR i srond p shld ans aT GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel troubles, appendicitis, biliousness, blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizziness. regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together. It starts chronic ailments and long years of suffering. No matter what ails you, start taking CASCARETS today, for you will never get well and stay well until you get your bowels right Take our advice, start with Cascarets today under absolute guarantee to cure or ‘money refunded. The genuine tablet stamped CC C Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York. ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE For Hot, Tired, Aching, Swoilenr Feet. ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE NUE az INTO YOUR SHOES Allen’s Foot-Ease, 2 powder. painful, smarting, nervous feet and ingrow=- "ing nails, and instantly takes the sting cut of corns and bunions. It’s the greatest come fort discovery -of the age. Makes tight or new shoes easy. A certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching feet. 30,000 testimonials. Tryit to-day. Sold by ail Drug- gists and Shoe stores, 26c. Don’t actept a substitute. ‘I'rial package FREE. Address, Le Roy, N. Y,, U.S. A. Genuine bears above signature. FREE to WOMEN A Large Trial Box and book of ine structions absolutely Free and Post= paid, enough to prove the value of Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic 2% Paxtine is in powder form to dissolve im watcr — non-poisonous \ and far superior to liquid anticeptics containing B\- alcohol which irritates inflamed surfaces, and have no cleansing prop- erties. The contents of every box mal more Antiseptic Solu tion — lasts longer — goes further—has more (4 uses in the family'and Pp doesmorcgoodthanany z antiseptic preparation you can buy. The formula of a noted Boston physician, and used with great success as a Vaginal Wash, for Leucorrheea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, and all soreness of mucus membrane. In local treatment of female ills Paxtineis invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash we challonge the world to produce its equal for thoroughness. Itisarvevelationin cleansing and healing power; {it kills all germs which cause inflammation and discharges. All leading druggists keep Paxtine; , 50e. @box; if yoursdoesnot, send to us for it. Don’ take a substitute — there is nothing like Paxtine. Write for the Free Box of Paxtine to-day. 8. PAXTON CO., 7 Pope Eldg., Boston, Mass. 1 PAY SPOT CASH FOR sounry LAND WARRANTS BOUNTY Write me av once issued to soldiers of any war. FRANK H. REGER, Barth Block, Denver, Coia JOHN W.MORMKIS, El ISI 0 Proseoytes Claims. cCe: y Pr ytes ims. ER TC tre Boras DROPSY jr psrorensi eos quick relief snd cures worst cares. BOOK of testimomels and 10 days’ treatment Free. Dr. HE. H. GREEN 'S8S80XS. Box B, Atlanta. Ga. , P.N.U. 23 1904. vi PISO’S CURE FOR HD CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS, (5 Best Cougl rup. Tastes Good. Use PEN le in time. Sold by druggists. Lh se CANDY CATHARTIS bad breath, bad foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, When your bowels don’t move (IA! Never sold in bulk. Sample and 502 xX % % ¥« % % %*% % *» x * % %* k * * * * * Xx * * % % % WN ov RR RR Rk kk RRR kk RAT RR & : * You . 2 k! * saiGIWN I NIS DOOK:.* x _— * _* IT SHOULD BE IN EVERY HOUSEHOLD AS IT MAY x BE NEEDED ANY MINUTE. * xx A Slight Illness Treated at Once Will Frequently Prevent a - x Long Sickness, With Its Heavy Expenses and Anxieties. * + a | * * i 3 EVERY MAN HIS OWN DOGTOR - Xo By J. RAMILTON AYERS, A. M., M. D. » « This is a most Valuable Book for the Household, teaching as it does the » & easily-distinguished Symptoms of different Diseases, the Causes and Means. X* | x of Preventing such Diseases, and ths Simplest Remedies which will alleviate. Or cure. 698 Pages, Profusely lllustrated. * x This Book is written in plain xg Vox every-day English, and is free from x» x the technical terms which xender * most doctor books so valueless to » * the generality of readers. This » * Book is intended to be of Service : x in the Family, and is so worded as * ‘ 3.52 be readily understood by all ha « rk nly x 5 Post- » «| SO Cts." * & = aid. » * : The low price only being made x x possible .by the immense edition wn x printed. Not only does this Book contain so much Information Rela- w x tive to Diseases, but very properly * : x na a Complete Analysis of every- = % x thing pertaining to Courtship, Mar- x - D riage and the Production and Rear- * x SE of ad ing of Healthy Families; together hy — “ with Valuable Recipes and Prescrip- x tions, Explanations of Botanical Practice, Correct Use of Ordinary Herbs. ¥ & New Edition, Revised and Enlarged with Complete Index. With this »¥ x Book in the house there is no excuse for not knowing what to do in an em- ergency. x Don’t wait until you have illness in your family before vou order. but 2) WH x send at once for this valuable volume. ONLY 60 CENTS POST-PAID. Send postal notes or postage stamps of any denomination not larger than * cents x 2 * BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE 134 Leonard St., N.Y. XK % * % * %* F *¥ * *¥ * ¥ ¥* kx *k * 3 * * =x
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