- DON'T MIND ME. ¢ “Don’t mind me,” he told the iceman: “if you want to raise yo price mar Go ahead and put ber, and 1 will not say a wor I am merely the consumer; 1 have heard a baleful rumor That the cost of ice this summer will go soaring like a bird. Ralse it hourly. daily. wee ¥C wi find I'll stand it meekly, For I'm learning te be with the patient irking thing >, Show me no considers elevation- ; give your price the - . Do your wors O Iceman, and, 1 beg vou, don't me!’ : And the iceman “1 won't soul, man,” oa ‘More for s he asked the meat man “We hav at n. So go on i my bacon Why, you n vhat 1 have to ; Or for ribs « ick r for liver or for lamb Raise the prices, tis no for time Thus 10 the itt st Ss man mhber of the ther € mber : bins the » calm- mention not heard i Lie Ir and be fig ‘ you For yon « beg beg you. And the « Wor 10e RARAALL LLL LRA LAR AR LULL LAR RL RARE LALA RAR AC RAG a0R2 x 3 f A RACE AGAINST TIME. | 8 3 . e x 3 x 3 ; x = By George C. Wallis. x 3 ¥ - BREPEPEEEERERIVEEERERREERRY, UREN ERE At of the incident 1 am [I said, desperately. “If I can get a about occurred, 1 was a | ‘special’ within the next hour, I might clerk in a prominent ban - | get to Liverpool scon enough after tain northe: | e 5.12 to catch the ship. 1 can pay I believe, and wit | for one. early promoti 2! “You know it will be difficult to 'get with a char Jae said Mr. Winter. in life mad T | Yes, but do try, Mr. Hemsworth,” hand appesa zj.C Lucy, enc ouragingly that I ous. On my sal- | s ve ed if I had been, less ary I had to s h and “But you mustn't waste any the thought 01 inter io} Uu be my wife was i dream | didn't. At 29 minutes past of the future. | six. accomg 1 by a policeman in Ope ever-memoratle morning Mr. | plain clothes, I left the station on a Winter, who kept a large balance with | “special.” us, came in with some bills and a Allowing a quarter of an hour to get check he wanted cashed. His ac-| down to the docks at the other end, count was a good one, but he pre- | we must be in Liverpool by 7.39. ferred having an advance ainst “Seventy-five miiles to do in 70 min- these bills. I happened to be- taking Jones’ place that morning as payer, and the manager assured me the tran- saction would be all right. 1 cashed the check for £500, and entered the bills, Mr, Winter being very cool tow- ard me on account of Lucy. About half an hour before closing time he came in again hurriedly and asked for a check Ig He filled it in ‘quickly thanked me courtly as I handed him the notes ana hurried cut. When. after shutting the doors and balancing up for the day, we found it overdrawn. This was strange. Although he was known to be “scund,” and his had always been more cor les ly,” 1 commented on the deficiency to the manager. “We can let him overdraw a little said Mr. Kerridge, eas “There are the bills. Let me hay a look at them.” I brought them to him. “But these are not Mr. Winter's!” said he; blankly. “Look at the en- dorsement—Cramp & Co. “There can’t be anyt thing wrong,” 1 ventured, in despair. I ‘Winter came in twice, and the last time he was smoking a cigarette carelessly.” “Mr. Winter never smokes ettes. You ought to have known This is a cleverly planned fo personation. The bills he showed you at first were all right. you st Did you let them out of your hands? Dic the supposed Mr. Winter take them up cigar- thal and Terry again to look at them before he went?” “Yes,” 1 answered, remembering the circumstances: “but I did not think anything ——” “Never mind; the thing's plain enough. Off you go at once, after I've taken the number of these bills, so that I can set the police at work. Don’t lose a moment!” I needed no urging. for if the mat- ter was not righted, ruin stared me in the face. Acadia Villa, Fulwood road, was right on’the other side of the city, and the break neck pace of the han- som I rode in seeme like an inter- minable crawl. It w nearly 5 when I got home, and found Mr. Winter— and Lucy—at home. © » both looked grave when I told them ail. “Clever trick!” exclaimed Mr. Win- ter. “Didn’t see any difference between the impostor and myself? Hard lines for you, young man, I'm afraid. Dis- missed at least, eh?” “I daren’t think all it will mean me, sir,” I said, looking at Lucy. Before her father could answer, Lucy put in: “I think I can perhaps help you a little in tracing the thief, Mr. Hems- worth. Just betore you ceme in my friend Dollie telephoned to me from Coutt’s Tea Hove: —she’s fond of that sort of thing, vou know—and casual- ly mentioned that s seen father walking up the apr to Victoria Station. I was strange and meant to ask f: r about it. It must have been the man who person- to ated him.” “It must,” said Winter, consult- ing his watch. that « Mr. Hemsworth, ubtles to the Liverpool tre Powe one leaves at 5.12 and gets in at 7.20. And a steamer leaves—let me see, we've the sailing list here—the Britannic, at 7.54. Cut his time pretty fine. Got his ticket beforehand, I expect. You can telegraph; but if he’s so clever at making up, not much use.” For a moment I there was no o I knew until too late to catch 1 possibly identify the other tra But — “There is way, Mr. Winter,” said utes,” 1 manage it?” Just try ing at the fireman. to the driver. “Can you wink- you flyer, her, he said: “We'll get No. 149 is a sir)’ there, you'll see. you bet.” We rushed over bridges, creased perceptibly, gine, with a stead pounds, tore along creature. “She goes wel “Not yet,” said the till we get on a bit. he continued. addressing the police- man, “had better sit over there by the coal box, if you don’t feel comfort- able on your feet.” i on and ana in- en 112 through cuttings soon the paes The great pressure of like a huge living rked. driver. And 1 rema “Wait you, sir,” My companion was and had He evidently not spoken a word complied I ease, the start quest, an of the journe y. and of jarring points, we swept through Peni- stone. The station clock was at 6.42. Thirteen les in 13 minutes. The looked at me, for the roar and rattie began to make talk difficult, and cpened the regulator valve a trifle. The engine responded at once, and rushed on toward the long Woodhead tunnel with a terrific laboring and jolting. But we were rising, and when we reached Dunford Bridge it was already 6.48, and we were still behind time. At Geodle as we swerved to the left. at the nction, I found that we had at last begun to gain It was just 7 o'clock—we had come 33 miles in 31 minutes. Still, I felt doubtful as to the end. The driver smiled at the telltale ion on my face, and opened ive a trifie more. She felt the effect at forward. At Warrington we were three min- utes ahead, and at Sankey we had in- creased that gain. At last, with the front red hot, we were swinging round the long curve into the second port of the kingdom. Only a mile in front or us when the driver wiped his brow with a piece of cotton waste and be- gan to slow down as we rattled over the multiplicity of peints. And it was only 7.35. “Told you she'd do it, sir!” he said, once. and leaped with quiet triumph. “Seventy-four miles in 66 minutes is not bad—eh? What —” The expression of his face changed suddenly, and he dashed to the han- dles. In a few seconds we had slack- ened speed, and with the brakes hard on, came to a standstill several hun- dred yards outside the terminus, “Last signal against us, sir. Some- thing wrong in the signal station. like- ly. I'm afraid this will spoil our trip.” Every moment seemed an age, and the hands on my watch seemed to fty. One—two—five—six—eight—ten —twelve—fourteen minutes passed, and then the signal changed io “clear,” and we slowly forged in—ioo late, after all! 1 was in a dazed, numbed condition as we stepped out on the ple thing—that orm, cons ious only of one after g all our strenuous, successful effort, vic had been | snatched from me A police i two plain clothes men were i “Slight accident iting for us. outside the sta- tion, blocked ne and dg you,” said the ijuspector. fortunate, but I fear we hip now. n?2¢. By 11 20 on Friar didn’t Jove! You 1d friend here, 7. out not I fiy many ¢ | hood | need | nerving There was a “brief scuff snap, and, to my inten ment, my traveling companion, handcuffed and under ar: “No need to bother the ship now,” said the inspector, as we made our way through the crowd to the cab that was waiting to take us to the police station. The prisoner, seeing that the game was up, confessed all with the greatest coolness, and I was possession of the facts, and was better, the money and. the bills. Friar John—as he was known to the fraternity and to the police—was out on ticket-of-leave, and the Liverpool inspector had recognized him as an old acquaintance, and at once divinea his guilt. been, as we had suppos the, steel city by the changed his mind and pe plain clothes officer in or« cut what we were doing in The idea of accompanying erpool on the engine had as a brilliant and daring had trusted to putting scent at the journey’s end his own escape. But for the good fort- une of the inspector there is but little doubt that he woula have succeeded. That was® the end of my race against time. My success in recover- ing the money, added to Mr, Winter's kind intercession on my behalf, saved me from dismissal, and the promo- tion, though delayed, came at last. What Lucy said to her father about me she. has never fully divulged yet, but it must have been very ‘persuasive, for his previous ccolness disappeared. I became a constant visitor’ at Aca- dia Villa, and Lucy is now Mrs. Hems- worth.—New York News. stood est! to v.14, jer to struck coup and me off EURNING TROLLEY CARS. The Right and the Wrong Way for Motormen to Act. It is not an uncommon - experience for a motorman to so retin hts ma- chinery with an excess of: current as to burn out a fuse. or the purpose of protecting the mo- tor from injury when the ioad is put on it suddenly, for an overload de- velops heat, and the heat is liable to damage the armature of the motor. To avert the necessity for costly re- pairs, the trolley companies put in fuses, which work on the principle of a safety valve. Ordinarily, the only effect of melting a fuse is temporarily to disable a car, but occasionally the electric flash which occurs when the fuse is de- stroyed has a chance to ignite com- ustible material near at hand. Once in a while, therefore, the car itself is set on fire in consequence. For the former class of accident the motor- man is usually prepared. He has an extra fuse in his pocket, and puts it in the place of the one which has been “blown out.” The other class of trouble, however, will generally take him by surprise. before saw such a gets into a panic, therefore. and loses his head. Many motormen think that the best thing to do in such an emer- gency is to put on all speed and run for the car barn. That. practice was recently condemned by The. Electrical Review, which said: Very likely he never thing happen. He First, a fire is most easily extingu- ished when it is just starting; second, the motion of the car only fans the fiames and makes matters worse; third, the accident to the car alarms the passengers, and all that is need- ed to throw them into a panic is to shut them up in the car ang to rush through the streets at a high speed. It would be an exceptional crowd in- deed that did not lose its head in such a case, with the smoke coming up from the floor, the car running at full speed, the motorman ringing his gong to warn persons on the street, and the conductor blocking the way out. The simplest plan to adopt in case of such an emergency would be to stop the car, so that the passengers might get off before they became ex- cited. The car’s crew, in the mean- time could be extinguishing the fire. If the fire is taken in hand quickly, and is not too inaccessible, a bucket or two of sand would probably be all that would be necessary. It is desir- able to avoid water if possible, but even should this be necessary it is not likely to do any permanent damage to the equipment. A breakdown which causes a fire usually means that the car must be pushed to the car shed by the next one behind, anyhow, as the motors are pretty sure to be put out of service temporarily, for only when the car happens to be near the shed when the "accident occurs can it hope to reach it before a complete breakdown takes place. Every prac tice which tends to produce a feeling of insecurity on the part of the pas- sengers should be avoided. This is one. Strengthening the Nerves. The nerves are strengthened, first, by being regular in all things, espe- cially in a systematic change between work and recreation. Second, by providing enough rest and sleep, which not alone strength- ens the nervous system, but also re- freshens the entire body. Third, to eat and drink moderately, also leave these so-called riends whose only pleasure in life consists in late hours, and who are themselves physical wrecks. Last of all and most important of all is the will pow which is the chief aid in restoring health. Whoever wishes to lose his ma and become a nervous only to continue with pleasure, and he will sail along with time and be those who refused to heed the call of nature.—The Naturopatl recognizing him | Fuses are put in | wreck | life’s un- | astonishb- | His original intention had | d leave ! but. he had | rsqnated a | find | the matter. | me to Liv- | him the | and making | { wrecked with THE EEAR AND THE SEAL. | i Once there lived a Polar Be N here he North's mag Creamy white his trousers ey i, his Sasbion) fond appeal fashion. dispised Scorning every In the coldest Serenades in vain he Vainly corybantie, Danced the arctic fling and made 11alf the I'enguins frantic ed the Pole that coyly "shuns Ixpedition aders : jJegeed imagi 'v buns From pretended feeders. played, she turncd shot he her nose curled her ver could iske Up in pride, whiskers, abide Down ; Ho and grew More and more dejected. Ilesperate he To an i ~ the Continent n she started “A rnen”’ (such was *Let made his way £. his name}, us not be parted!” Ah! too late repentance came, For the berg had started. Algy soon in sunny France Drew large audiences Nang his so and danced his dance, fore ti paid expenses. But the little Seal, bereft. Couldn't stand the racket, Pined aw 1 naught was left Save a sealskin jacket Wayward beauties! For yourselves a warning: Waywardness may cost you dear, Take no pride in scorning. She. whole haughty maidenhood Jade her say she wouldn't, When at last she thought she wonid, Found, poor dear, she couldn't. —Punch: Notice here “Miss Sillye, what do you think of this automobile scorching as sport?” “I think it i§ just killing.”’—Baltimore American. Mr. Subbub—What's new, dear? Mrs. Subbub (dejectedly)—The cook’s gone! Mr. Subbub—My dear, I asked what's new ?—Puck. “Dr. Reaper told me that last month he performed over a hundred opera- tions.” ‘Were they successful?” ‘‘Oh, ves. He got paid for every one.”—Life. Young Wife (excited and horrified)— Jack, mother says she wants to be cremated! Jack—All right. Tell her to put on her things and I'll take her down at once.—Life. Mrs. Jawback—You're a wretch, but 1 suppose if I had my life to live over again I'd marry you just -the same. Mr. Jawback—TI'll bet a dollar you wouldn’t.—Cleveland Leader. This is a delicate way of putting ix, isn't it? “My dear,” he said to his wife at table, ‘I begin to think there are a few misprints in your cookery book.”"—Glasgow Evening Times. “Which is it— ‘Winter lingers in the lap of spring,” or ‘Spring lingers in the lap of winter?” ‘Don’t remember; but of late years I should say it bad been lap and lap.—Brooklyn Life. First Sweet Thing—The Snobbinses claim to be connected with some of the best families in town. Second Sweet Thing—Yes; I understand they've just put in a telephone.—Chicago Daily News. “Gee! Some of these roustabouts are strong. See how easily that fel- low raises that barrel of buckwheat flour.” ‘That's no trouble. That's self-raising buckwheat.” — Cleveland Leader. “What we want,” said the practical politician, “is a safe man.” “And what is your idea of a safe man?” “One who won't give up anything ex- cept in response to our combination.” —Washington Star. “I just wisht I wus bigger,” said mischievous Willie Smart. “Indeed!” asked his mother. ‘How much big- ger?’ “Oh, just big enough to do all the things I git blamed for doin’ now.” —Philadelphia Ledger. “I suppose you are ready to stand between the public and the railroads?” “I don’t know,’ answered Senator Sorghum, thoughtfully. ‘What is the use of deliberately getting caught in a collision.”—Washington Star. Mrs. Henpeck—They can’t punish bigamy too severely. No one should have any sympathy for the man who takes one wife too many. Mr. Hen- peck—The idea, Maria! Do you think I should be sent to jail ?>—Philadelphia Press. ’ Judge—What is your trade? Prison- er, (who was caught in a gambling- house raid)—I'm a locksmith. Judge —What were you doing in there when the police entered? Prisoner—I was making a bolt for the door.—Glasgow Evening Times. Mr. Softleigh— Tommy, do you real- | ly think your sister likes to see me better than she does Mr. Biggs?” Tommy—I'm sure she does, for even- ings when he’s in the parlor she turns the light down so low she can’t see him at all—Pick-Me-Up. Mistress (after many remonstrances on unpunctuality)—Really, Mary, you must try to be more punctual about serving the meals. When they are late, your master blames me. Mary Ah, well, mum, of course I can go, but you're a prisoner for life—Punch. The Young Man—It’s awfully kind’ vou, Miss Snapley to let me have s waltz, when I'm the awkwardest Young Wom- foot that, to The spped on her how can you You hardly touch the fioor at all—Chicago bune floor. as he s incer on the (winecing say seem KEYSTONE STATE CULLINGS SIX BURNED IN ACCIDENT. Three May Die as Result of Gas Ex- plesion in Diamond Mine, Near Scranton. An explosion of gas in the Diamond mine of the Lackawanna Coal Com- pany at Scranton. burned six men, three of them seriously. The men were engaged in placing carriage fans in position when the mine gas became ienited and the explosion oc- curred. I'he seriously injured are: Edward Owens, John Kelly and Thomas Reece. All three were so badly burned that their recovery is doubtful. Three others were slight- ly burned. torn to pieces burned by an explosion the Shenandoah city the Philadelphia and and Iron Company at Three and 12 badly of dynamite colliery of Reading Coal Shenandoah. A box of dynamite which a work- man was carrying fell from his shoulder and caused the explosion which ignited the mine gas. There was about 50 men at work in the past gangway the shaft when the explosion occurred, but so far as known all escaped except those work- ing on the first lift. It was several miners were in of hours before the last miner was brought to the surface. The injured men, who were at work on the lift when the accident occurred, were first taken from the shaft and hurried to a he pial As soon as this was ac- co hed the s directed their tats: to 1 who were near the bottom of All of the killed ang re foreigners. But little was done to the mine. Two immense y eagles that have been preying on sheep flocks in East Finley township, Washington County, were shot by farmers. Rob- ert Donaldson shot one bird and William Cotterell winged the other. One eagle measured six feet seven inches from tip to tip, while the other measures 11 feet, 5 inches. Each bird had a young lamb ready to car- ry away when shoi. The eagles are the first seen in this section for many years. E. J. Edwards and Max Friedman, members of Select council from the Second and Seventh wards respective- ly, and Samuel Frankel representing the ®ighth ward in the Common branch of Pittsburg, will be placed on trial before both bodies. The charges against them were included in reports made to councils as a re- sult of the efforts of the investigating committee during the past two weeks. The official board cf the Methodist Episcopal Church of Franklin, adopted a resolution calling upon the who worship there, to re- hats. The action was the complaints of many men could not see the preacher yriad of bonnets. There st the resolution, women, move their result of that they through the my was not a vote a though three married men on the board failed to vote. Bdith, the 17-year-old adopted daughter of Mr.. and Mrs. George Roberts, was burned to death in her home near West Alexander. Upon retiring she had locked her door and turned her lamp low. The lamp ex- ploded, throwing oil all over the bed. She was unable to open the door, and before the family was aroused fatal injuries had been Infiicted. The house was burned to the ground. Deputy Revenue Collector Rada- baugh confiscated 5,000 unstamped stogies consigned to dealers who were supplying foreigners working in the stone quarries in the southern end of Dauphin county. Efforts are being made by the revenue officials to trace the manufacturers of the stogies. At the annual meeting of the Con- neaut lake Exposition Company, H. 0. Halcomb of Brie was elected presi- dent; F. W. Henninger of Pittsburg, secretary and treasurer; John W. Depinet of Erie, manager oI park; Frank M. Grier of Greenville, chief of police. The United States Senate in exe- cutive session confirmed the appoint- ment of Major William H. Davis as postmaster of Pittsburg. Major Davis will probabiy assume his duties on June 1, when George 1.. Holliday will step down out of office. A movement is on foot to organize a national bank at Springdale, with L. A. Burnett, Vice President of the Farmers & Mechanics’ Trust Company of Greenville, at its head. Joseph Heidenkamp and other Springdale people are interested. Over 300 members of the Veterans’ association of the Pittsburg division of the Pennsylvania railroad held their annual reunion at Altoona. The members living between Altoona and Pittsburg came on a special train. The cracker bakery of Meade Brothers, at Red Lion, York County, was burned with a loss of $15,000. Albert Keener, a fireman, was injur- ed by a falling Boh George Sontum, 16 years old, was struck by a New Castle-Sharon street car at New Castle and killed. He was the son go Sontum, of Un- ion township.’ . Twelve | Chur treet bridge, Minooka, Scranten. and explod- ed at 2 © k in the morning. For- tunately the attempt was not sue- cessful, as » desperadces were evi- dently I'S ced the dy- that it had The win- were shat- 1e to other side of the Th- Point of the Proverb. ‘An old proverb advises the sho& maker to stick te his last. It means that a man always succeeds best at the business he knows. To the farmer it means, stick to your plow: to the blacksmith, stick to your forge; to the painter, stick to your brush. When we make experiments out of our line they are likely to-prove expensive failures. It is amusing, liowever, to remark how every one of us secretly thinks he could do some other fellow’s work bet- ter than the otiiter fellow himself. The painter imagines he can make paint better than the paint manufacturer; the farmer thinks he can do a job of painting Detter, or at least cheaper than the painter, and so on. A farm bard in ene of Octave Thanet’s stories tells the Walking Del- egate of the Painters’ Union, *‘‘Any- body can slatber paint;” and the old line painter tells the paint salesman, “Nene of your ready made mixtures for me; I reckon I cought to know how to mix paint.” The farm hand is wrong and the painter is wrong: ‘Shoemaker, stick to your last”. ‘The "fancy farmer” can farm, of course, but it is an. ex- pensive amusement. If it strikes him as pleasant to grow strawberries at fifty cents-apiece, or to produce eggs that cost him five dollars a dozen, it is a form of amusement, to be sure, if he can afford it, but it's not farming. If a farmer likes to slosh around with a paint brush and can afford the time and expense of having a practical painter do the job right pretty soon afterward, it's a harmless form of amusement. 1f the painter's customers can - afford to stand for paint that comes off in half the time it should, they have a perfect right to indulge his harmless vanity about his skill in paint making. But in pone of these cases does the shoemaker stick to his last. There is just one class of men in the world that knews how to make paint properly and have the facilities for doing it right; and that is the paint manufacturers—the makers of the standard brands: of ready-prepared paints. The painter mixes paints; the paint manufacturer grinds them to- gether. In a good ready-prepared paint every particle of one kind of pigment is forced to jein hands with a particle of another kind and every bit of solid matter is forced. as it were, to open its mouth and drink in its share of linseed oil. That is the only way good paint can be made, and if the painter knew how to do it lie lias nothing at hand to do it with. A paint pot and a paddle are a poor substitute for power-mixers, buhr-mills and rolier-mills. The man who owns a building and neglects to paint it as often as it needs paint is only a degree more short- sighted than the one who tries to do his own painting or allows the painter to mix his paint for him. P.G. - Richest Gold Field. Kalgoorlie, Western Australia, is one of the newest and richest gold fields in the werld. The following advertisement was prominently dis- played in a recent issue of the Kal- goorlie Miner: ‘Watch the progress of the British elections. Balfour, the coercionist, is defeated. Should his mate, Chamberlain. be also defeated, all comers can indulge in a little ‘light refreshment’ free of charge for a period of six hours, from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m.,, at Paddy Whalen’s* Sham- rock Hotel.” ULCERS IN EYES. Awful Discharge Fromm Eyes and Noses Grateful Mother Stromgly Rec- ommends Cuticura. “I used the Cuticura Remedies eight years ago for my little boy who had ulcers in the eyes, which resulted from vacecina- tion. His face and nose were in a bad state also. At one time we thought he would lose his sight forever, and at that time he was in the hospital for seven or eight: months and under specialists. The discharges from the eves and nose were bad and would have left scars, 1 féel sure, had it not been for the free use of the Cuticura Remedies. But through it all we used tne Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Resolvent, and lots of it, and I feel grate- ful for the benefit he received from them. The Cuticura Resolvent seemed to send the trouble out, the Ointment healed it outwardly, and the Soap cleansed and healed both. He is entirely cured now, . but since then I have bought the Cuticura Resolvent to cleanse and purify the blood, and the Soap I cannot speak too highly of as a. cleansing and medicinal beautifier. Mrs. Agnes Wright, Chestnut St., Irwin, ra., Oct. 16, 1905.” The Universal “Wash-day is Monday where,”’ said a globe-trotter. He made a gesture of amazement. “How strange that . is,” he said. ‘We believe in the Bible, the Al- gerians believe in the Koran, but both of us believe in the same wash- day. “The Germans, English, the Scuth Americans, Arabs, the Japs, the Chinese, all have Monday for wash-day. Go where you will over the world, and on Monday clothes, white and wet from the tub, flap lazily in the wind.—Philddelphia Bulletin. every the French, the the TWICE-TOLD TESTIMONY. A Woman Who Has Suffered Tells How to Find Relief. The thousands of women who suffer backache, languor, urinary disorders and other Kidney ills, B will find comfort in the words of Mrs. Jane Farrell, of 606 Ocean’ Ave, Jersey City, N. J., who says: “I reiterate all I have , said before in praise of Doan’s Kidney : Pills. I bad been 5% 4% having heavy back- ache and my general health was affect- ed when I began using them. My feet were swollen, my eyes puffed, and dizzy spells were frequent. Kidney action was irregular and the secretions highly colored. To-day, however, I am a well woman, and I am confident that Doan’s Kidney Pills have made me so, and are keeping me well.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Washday. : a Man; walking cess of ft is ex or in centres Ni A Wi don po describ makes for her mission cure Style The Tuxe Fine Chen Velve Chan Chiff —Phila Neve to be c Therefc plate, v hall m: two sh giver a recipier costing ever is kind is says H rose he Dresde! opposit The at thei tion fr against escort protest profess Tile. lence : Nothin; of the | pending erts, Ww mors i student don Da I wis of the willing at the p a wom: after he demand of affec herself to any heart How. c: a court busines only ex sire for humilia There : buy an has bee of the learnin; Bradee: Jd Girls a jewe treasur Buckles perchec in fact, a wisp and yc Rough ing por hue an low sui Why Chea; cheap f women finery t can’t a dress a is the well, re as on everyth is as long Dp Expe dress v buy—o: has a fashion lent in axiom for rict hats a French true th thirds study ¢ week oO wearin;