CRETS ‘estifies at and. n of Pitts- ated with Company, the devel- industry, . ing of the zainst the | refinery certain itput was increased. rofitable,”’ Standard, 1sit. Com- s high as hich. kept independ- was the or the in- uted the ndent re- wever, to Charged tters Kocho- e foreign vnard, O., and two d offense 5 coming which he neney. te letters local for- nd, frau- ictions to address. 1 of per- so it is that the several of dollars Maynard E Buffalo ge. . Horna- an Bison letion of of pure- rojected range, he Flat- . North- aday has ciety to a herd rmanent rease to nen now Ar] Grey Ameri- DATE “Party's © John A. t he is ic nom- if his it is the through he man ance tao 50 place "oppor: mature 1 wisest > no. ef. t-of the ed rec ting in been to long is pun: d to be appear he gov- id, -and 1st few led the Thirty ustody, f of po- among da. : move: }'is in popula- ed and The romises an in- } that ormons ational T'S. lerman ed in or, but of Co- nction of La- Gener- mittee f earn e East West of the ication rerally situa- to re- \y SYS- arstate se Te- ile the ent by to as S was 5 been Truth and Quality appeal to the Well-Informed in every -walk of life and are essential to permanent success and creditable standing. Accor- ingly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of known value, but one of many reasons why it is the best of personal and family laxatives is the fact that it cleanses, sweetens and relieves the internal organs on which it acts without any debilitating after effects and without having to increase the quantity from time to time. It acts pleasantly and naturally and truly as a laxative, and its component parts are known to and approved by physicians, as it is free from all objection- able substances. To get its beneficial effects always purchase the genuine— manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug- gists. : . Will Hold 70,000 Spectators. London has completed the steel structure of its great stadium where the Olympia games are to be held thig year. Jt is designed to accom- modate 70,000 spectators. An English minister says that Lon- doners are developing into a race of dwarfs, owing to smoking and riding in tramways. . What Causes Headache. From October to May, Colds are the most frequent cause of Headache, Laxative Bromo Quinine removes cause. BE. W, Grove on box. Sic. Making Perfumes. Perfume manufacturing of Italy every year consume 1,860 tons or orange blossoms, 93C tons of roses, 150 tons each of jasmine and violets and 15 tons of jonquils. How Her Life Was Saved When Bit- ten by a Large Snake. How few people there are who are not afraid of snakes. Not long ago a harmless little garter snake fell on the wheel of an automobile which was being driven by a woman. The woman promptly fainted and the car, left to its own resources, ran into a stone wall and caused a serious acci- dent. The bite of a poisonous snake needs prompt attention. Mrs. K. M. Fishel, Route No. 1, Box 40, Dills- burg, Pa., tells how she saved her life when bitten by a large snake. “One August 29, 1906, I was bitten on the hand twice by a large copper- head snake. Being a distance from any medical aid, as a last resort I used Sloan’s Liniment, and to my astonish- ment found it killed all pain and was the means of saving my life. I am the mother of four children and am never without your Liniment.” Rolling Stones. The “rolling stones’ of Australia, placed on a fairly smocth surface will soon roil together in a group. They contain a magnetic ore. DOCTOR PRESCRIBED CUTICURA After Other Treatment Failed—Raw Eczema on Baby's Fate Had Lasted Three Months. ““Qur baby boy broke out with eczema on his face when one month old. One place on the side of his face the size of a nickel was raw like beefsteak for three months, and he would cry out when I bathed the parts that were sore and broken out. I gave him three months’ treatment from a good doctor, but at the end of that time the child was no better. Then my doctor recommended Cuticura. After using a cake of Cuticura Soap, a third of a box of Cuti- cura Qintment, and half a bottle of Cuti- cura Resolvent he was well and his face was as smooth as any baby’s. He is now two years and a balf old and no eczema has reappeared. Mrs. M. IL. Harris, Alton, Kan., May 14 and June 12, 1907.” New Use for Potatoes. A substance made vf potatoes is replacing wood for pencilmaking. It is cheap and is more easily sharpen- ed than a pencil of wood. ; Many Professional MeL. clergymen, teachers and singers use 3rown’s Bronchial Troches for cur- ing hoarseness and coughs. Insects, as a general rule, have lit- tle or-no sense of sound. The ant is the insect with the best developed hearing organs. To insure the direct and quick Geis of the system take Garfield Tea, the Mil Herb laxative. - It purifies the blood, eradicates disease and brings Good Iealth. fp 14 The atmosphere of Natal is so clear that it is scmetimes possible to see thirty miles. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softens thegums, reducesinflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle Football in Venezuela. The game of football is gaining a steady foothold in Venezuela, and bids fair to become a popular form of outdocr amusement. The scout cruiser Birmingham dur- ing her speed test made an average of 24.32 knots an hour. Her contract called for 24 knots. $5.00 POCKET ¢ KNIFE TOOL KiT I 2.50 Absolutely the latest. Genuine leather pockets Look, containing Knife, Reamer, File, Saw, Chisel, Screw Driver, made of best material Any tool can be attached to knife or detached in sexcnd. This outfit s 3, Li .e or a cund money order and will 1 send %1 an: will celiect when You receive package. Your rei will wonder, PARIS SPECIALTY CO0., 487 Brcadway, tlew Ycrls Loss On Chickens. Chickens lose one pound in five when killed and dry picked without being drawn or bled. When they are pre- pared for cooking, one-third of their weight is lost again. Out of cone hun- dred pounds of live weight, fifty-four remain to be cooked. This is when they zo without feed thirty-six hours before being killed. If they are fed right up to killing time, the difference between live and cooking weight would be larger.—Progressive Farmer. Poultry Seasons. There is no such thing as poultry seasons. Every day in the year poul- try raising should be conducted as a business. If there are no eggs to sell, there will be fowls. If no young broil- ers, there may be fat and lazy hens. Have something to sell the year around. It is an old but true saying that the cow and the hens can keep a farmer going when nothing else is busy on the farm. Poultry and eggs are cash at all seasons, and the only reason why the winter is selected as the best time for giving more attention to fowls is because other work on the farm is at a standstill.—Farmers’ Home Journal. * Sheep to Increase. There is no danger of any person getting into trouble in predicting that from now on the sheep is to be return- ed to its proper place on the farms. And why not, when it makes by far more money out of the grass and the weeds and the seeds, the roots, the grains, the hay and anything else fed to it than any other kind of animal we raise, and it does that without one needing to milk or grind for them? All that is required is to give the feed as it comes from the field, only that turnips had better be cut. Does that not tell, and tell materially, when the labor saved is considered, how we can farm, farm well, and cut down ex- pensive labor bills?>—John Campbell, in the Indiana Farmer. A Few Pointers on Feeds. For concentrated food there is none better than ground wheat and oats, one part wheat to three parts oats, g # ind together. If corn fodder or corn silage is fed that is not rich in grain a little corn meal can be added, or corn can take the place of the wheat, or low grade barley ground very fine and mixed with the oats. The principal thing to always bear in mind while feeding these home grown fgeds is that clover and cats are of a nitro- genous character, while corn and corn fodder contain a larger proportion of the carbonaceous materials, and that it is not only econcemy to combine the two different materials, but very neces- cary to the health and thrift of the ani- mals fed.—Weekly Witness. The Care of Calves. Calves can not be made or kept thrifty in dark badly ventilated barns without sunshine and fair exercise. They need warm, dry quarters, out of the wind, and as much sunshine as they can get. If the hair begins to turn the wrong way, you can make up your mind that your caif is not doing right; and; if it is a matter of quarters or sunshine, all the feed you can give it will not put it in condition. Let the calves have'the run of the barnyard, give them plenty of dry straw for bed- ding, and then feed to keep them growing. It never pays to allow a calf to go back. Ground cals, nice sweet clover or alfalfa are good. Fresh wheat bran and a little corn meal may be fed .to good advantagz, but keep them coming. Some farmers are apt to let calves hustle for themselves—in stalk fields and around straw stacks, holding that such method makes them hardier and gives them a stror:zer constitution for future feeding. We have heard it con- tended that the meanest looking, pot- bellied calf would turn cut the best two-year-old feeder. But that won’t do. In the first place raise calves worth taking-care of, and then feed them and house them to make the most out of them, and above all keep them growing so they will retain their calf fat till finished.—Indiana Farmer. Creameries and Dairies. The management of a smal cream- ery differs in no respect from that of a .well-appointed private dairy. The on- ly respect in which a creamery is dif- ferent from a dairy is that it does the work of several dairies, and in doing this work it greatly reduces the cost of making butter. If we follow up the work of a small creamery of, let us say, 10) cows, we shall find that one person, with the partial help cf another, will be able to do all the work for this number of cows, which would probably be otherwise done in 20 separate dairies. The advantage is obvious. Do not work butter too much nor too fast. Work slowly until all salt is thoroughly and evenly aksorbed. Other- wise the butter will not be of uniform color. Working tco fast will destroy the grain, and the butter becomes salvy and lard-like in texture. Let it stand or put it away in the tray for 24 hours. Then work it enough to remove all the buttermilk or surplus brine, so that the butter may bzcome dry or like a piece of cheese. Mold into rolls and set them away for 24 hours, or until they become hard and firm. Butter should never come in contact with the bare ee ST Cases ee ST a == THE FARMERS HOME AND Va hand. When in bulk it can be easily handled with a ladle and flat paddle. dle. By having this number of cows the product is all alike, of even quality, racked similarly and marketed through one agent; so that all through the work there is saving of labor and economy of expense. This of course reduces the cost of making butter and at the same time haires the income to the highest possible point. Instead of selling the butter to the village grocer at a very low price, the aggregate product is sent off at short intervals and- while fresh in refrigerator cars it reaches the mar- ket in such a condition as to realize the highest prices.—Mrs. T. C., in the Indiana Farmer. Hominy Chcp for Horses. Oats is the natural grain ration for horses. This year’s crop of oats is ab- normal, inasmuch as the oats did not “fill,” That is to say, the hull grew to its normal size, but the meat did aot; thus, while the average lowest weight- of a measured. bushel of oats (clipped) last year was thirty-eight pounds, this year it is thirty-two; therefore, the bulk of a horse's feed. of oats this season should be increased over last season’s in order for it to get the same amount of nutriment, thus making it necessary for it to digest considerably more hull in order to get the usual amount of meat. Not only are cats this season of an inferior quality, but they are extraor dinarily high in price, occasioned by the failure in size of the crop, as well as in quality, it being estimated that we raised only one-half of what we did in 1906. Next to oats comes corn as a grain ration for horses, especially work horses, during cold weather. Hominy chop is made. from nothing but corn. It is not a waste product but a by-pro- duct from the manufacture of white corn grits. Corn grits are made from the flinty part of the corn kernel. Hominy chop is made from the starch or sugar, the germ or oily part, and the bran, all of which ground together | make a most desirable horse feed. Then it is kiln dried, which adds to its val- ne, as it reduces the amount of mois- ture to 12 percent, whereas corn ordin- arily contains a. this season of the year 15 percent. to 20 percent. Therefore, in buying hominy chop you are buy- ing less water than when buying corn or cornmeal, We are by no means advising the substitution of hominy chop for oats, but we think it can well be fed in conjunction with oats, especially this seascn, when oats lack “body,” and we think it a better feed than corn or cornmeal; adn a ration composed of oats and hominy chop would be the best possible. There are different qual ities cf hominy chop. The “Blue Rib- bon” brand is especially adapted to horses, and if your grain dealer does not sell it, he ought to.—J. E. Soper, in the American Cultivator. Farm Notes. No one kind of plow is best under all conditions. The mold-board plow is the best for breaking sod land. The disc plow pulls more easily than the mold-board plaw, but disc manu- facturers sometimes exaggerate their claims about this feature. A disc, by its revolving motion, will wrap heavy growths of weeds up and bury them better than can be hoped for from the mold-board plow. If the land is to be broken year af- ter year, with the same plow, the mold-board plow will keep the land in better condtion than will the disc. In wet regions the mold-board plow is preferable to the disc, while the disc will often enable the farmer to plew when it is too dry to use the mold- board. - For turning under long vines, like those of hairy vetch, a disc does much better work, cutting off the vines, while a mold-board plow would very often choke up with them. It is best not to use a disc over twenty-four inches in diameter. It is better ito use two discs to cut a total of sixteen inches, if desired, than to use one thirty-inch disc to turn the same width of land. Disc plows will not have to be sharpened as often as mold-board plows, and are therefore cheaper to op- erate. Time is nct lost in having them sharpened and the blacksmith does not have to be paid so often: for deing the work. The disc does not throw as much sour sub-soil on top of the ground as does the mold-board plow; hut when the deep plowing is done in the fall the r£oil has a chance to weather be- fore th2 crep is planted, this is of lit- tle importance.—Frcm Plow Point's in the Progressive Farmer. Beauty of Nagasaki. Nagaseiki proved indeed a fitting ciimax to the voyage. No matter who has written about it, one half of the beauty of Nagasaki harbor has never been told. Every nation that floats a ship has a representative here, and the fiaunting of the various gs, to- gether with the firing of salutes, maxes a veritable water carnival.—- From “Three Years Behind ths Guns” in St. Nicholas, a sd FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW BUYERS ARE CONSERVATIVE Best News of Week as to Manu- ufacturing Conditions Is from Leather Industry. New York.—R. G. Dun & Co’s weekly review of trade-says: “Retail trade in spring goods has made further progress and the con- servative buying by dealers in pre- paring for current distribution is now providing a good supplementary de- mand from wholesale and jobbing houses. Unusually advanced weather in many sections stimulates business, and agricultural] work is making an early start. in the leading indus- tries there is evidence of gradual increase in contracts, many plants preparing. for greatir activity on April 1, while proposed reductions in wages have produced no threats cf strikes. “The best news of the week as to manufacturing conditions comes from one leather industry; although ship- ments of footwear through - Boston are only about two-thirds those of the same week last year. Dispatch- ¢s from ,the West &nd South are most favorable as to the general commercial situation, a few cities re- porting the volume of business fully equal to last year’s, and these state- ments are. supported .by bank ex- changes at these points about the same as in 1907. There is still com- plaint regarding mercantile. collec- tions, although improvement is noted. “Progress in the iron and steel in- dustry continues irregular, activity increasing in the wire and plate de- partments, while heavy lines await a revival of normal demand. The outlook is encouraging, however, be- cause improvement in the financial - situation continues. “In the primary markets for tex- tile fabrics there is more inquiry, es pecially for small quantities of cot: tons to be shipped promptly. Ur- gency of demand for immediate ship- ment indicates that stocks in dis tributing = channels are light and goods must be secured for delivery on orders that were taken but that lower prices would be named by pro- ducers before retailers called for them. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. . Wheat—No. 2 red..................3 D) 9 Rye—-No.2...:cn.... 7+ 7% Corn—Non 2 yellow, ear. 66 67 No. 2 yellow, shelled. . Gt 65 Sed ear... ..... 66 67 Oats—No. 2 white 53 ad No. 3 white..... 5) 52 Fiour—Winter patent..... 1 95 50) Fancy straight winters 16) 473 Hay—No. 1 Timothy....... 150) 155) Clover Ro. Y........o00 1500 155) eed—No. 1 white mid. ton 275) Wp Brown middlings........ 60) x70) Bran, bulk....... cs B55) 26 5) reir 935) 110) 39 103 Bairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery........ nal 31 Ohio creamery......... ‘ 22 21 Fancy country roll.. x 13 29 Cheese—Ohio, new................ . 13 17 New YOrK¢ DOW... .v sveunn snes 16 12 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per Ib........cceunees 4 3 Chickens—dressed....... 12 13 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fres 18 rol Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 7) v6 Cabbage—per ton............ ees 189).13.0) Onions—per barrel............,. .. tio) 1-8 BALTIMORE. lour—Winter Patent 3h 38 Wheat—No. 2 red 67 Corn—Mixed...... Th 73 3) 32 35 40 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............: $5 50> Wheat—No.2 red...........ovc.as. 97 Corn—No. 2 mixed. Ti TS Oats—No. 2 white.. 41 4) Butter—Creamery............ 31 33 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts 33 42 NEW YCRK. Flour—Patents, £3 tT Wheat—No. 2 red. 10 5 Corn—No. 2....... 65 61 Oats—No. 2 white 5: 57 Butter -Creamery . 3 33 Eggs—State and Pe 38 4) LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1.45010 1,60) 1b3. ....... .... $64) 6 50 Prime, 1,300 t0 1,49) 1b3 . .... . 0%) 6 4) Good, 1,200 to 1,30) lbs... > 610 © 2; Tidy, 4,050 to 1,132 lbs.... . D7) 6 JO Common, 700 to 9)) lbs. . 500 57 4 50 5 0) 30) 50) TIER 353) 18> sn amen 253) 5 50 Fresh Cows and Springers........ 13)) 5) : Hogs. Primeheayy.. colo nn 359 593 Prime medium weight ....... *59) 600 Best heavy Yorkers ........ 60) 62) Good light Yorkers... 5 4) 55 4 10 510 +7 53) 40) 4b) Sheep. Prime wethers, clipped. ...........3 6 00 71) Good mixes ....... 0... . 60) 62 Fair mixed ewes and ,wethers..... 5 2 550 Culls and commen..... ....... Fe 8) 3 0 BIDS... ee a iy iy: 90) 1800 Calves. Veal calves .......... er eassve seven 50) 3 5 Heavy and thin calves. ............ 3 J) 33) He!red Him. A physician out west was sent for to attend a small boy who was ill. He left a prescriptica and went away. Returning a f:w_ days later, he found the boy better. “Yes, doctor,” said the boy's moth- er, “tne prescription did him a world cf good. 1 left it beside him, where he couid hold # in his hand most of the time, and he can almost read it now. You didn’t mean for him to swallow the pamper, did you, doc- tor?”’—Harper’s Weekly. The killing of 5,000 persons and the injury of 76,286 would make any read: er of a newspaper shudder if he had read theses bloody figures ia the ac- count of a battle, asserts the Water- bury American. This is the 12-month record of our railroads, one far bloodier than that of most Dbattle- { fields. hd » HOW FLIES CARRY TYPHOID. cepted on Way to Milk Bottle. That the an who wishes te prevent - and various in- fantile disea y will do well to ma tment in window znd fcr the coming summer, the les- sons { the meeting of the rating committee of the C league of New York learned. gs.” Dr the audience, “and one was examined was its legs 100,000 diseased bac- bot- John fly which ing cn teria and making straight for a dle cf milk.” Cnly One “Bromo Quinine” That is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look for the signature of E. W. Grove. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 23c. Population of Antung. The permanent population of An- tung comprises between 15,000 and 20,000 Chinese, 6,000 Japanese, 20 Eu- ropeans and Americans, and a number of Koreans. There are 110 Chinese, 15 Japanese and 3 occidental busi- nes: firms wor agencies of importance, while the Hu Pon, or Chinese Gov- ernment bank, and threes Japanese banks have branches in Antung. Ask Your Dealer For Allen’s Foot-Ease. A powder. It rests tho fee!. Cures Corns, Banions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching Sweating Feet and Ingrow.pg Nails. Allen’s Yoot-Ease mskesnew ortichtshoes easy. At sll D-uggists and Shoe storas, 25 cents. Ac- cept no ~ubstitute. Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen 8, Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. Dr. Fernando E. Guachalla, who is a candidate for President of Bolivia, is well known in this country, having been Minister to Washington. Itch cured in 3) minutes ‘by Woolford’s Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. “At druggists. Taking into consideration the pro- portionate weight, the wing of a hird is 20 times stronger than the arm of a man. PRE 25¢. tins), Violet Borie Talcum Powder, ‘20-MULE-TEAM” Soap, Queen of MULE-TEAM” Soap Chips. S SHOES AT ALL #" PRICES, FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FA ns W. L. Dengias makes and selis One Carrying 100,000 Bacteria Inter- | ' FOUR GIRLS Restored to Health by Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Read What They Say. Miss Lillian Ross, 530 East 84th Street, New York, writes: * Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta~ bla Compound over- § came irregularities, pe- ®riodic suffering, and §ucrvous headaches, after everything else had failed to help me, and I feel it a duty to let others know of it.” KatharineCraig, 2355 Lafayette St., Denver, Col., writes: “Thanks Begto Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound 1 amweil, altersuffering for months froin ner- vous prostration.”’ Miss Marie Stoltze man, of Laurel, Ia., writes: ‘“‘Iwasina run- downconditionandsuf- fered fromsuppression, indigestion, and poor circulation. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound made me well and strong.” 8 Miss Ellen M. Olson, dof 417 N. East St., Ke- iwanee, I1l.,says: ‘‘ Ly- Zh KATHARINE CRAIG] CF TEESE UM FOR CARTON TOPS OR SOAP WRAPPERS FROM “20 MULE TEAM’’ BORAX PRODUCTS. $“20-MULE-TEAM” Borax, 4, 14, 1 and 5 1b. Cartons, Boraxo Bath Powder (10 and Powder, Boric Spangles. Boric Acid, Boraxaid Soap MiLY, TAEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. more men’s $2.50, 33.00 and $3.50 shoes “EB than any offer rmanufaciurer in € diaE.Pinkham’sVege- § table Compound cured me of backache, side ache, and established my periods, after the best local doctors had failed to help me.” FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera- tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic paing, backache, that bear- ing-down feeling, flatulency,indiges- tion,dizziness,ornervous prostration. ‘Why don’t you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. GIVEN AWAY A= § ELLEN M. OLSON | M.OLSON Borax Soap, Boraxaid Laundry Soap, ‘20- Send for 40-page Catalogue of 1000 Valuable Premiums We Give Free For Tops and Wrappers from the above *20- find many articles of Household and Personal use that you can obtain ABSOLUTELY FREE. All you have to dois to SAVE YOUR TOPS OR WRAPPERS. Address MULE TEAM” Borax Products. You will he BaF” world, Becauso they hold their “Ef § shape, rit Seifar, Wao banger, and ¢ ¢ Lot o5= are of grealer valve than any other x z pyelet ~—F shoes in the woriu to-day. “EQ oor: AF fei 3 1 » . : $ 2 \%.L. Douglas $4 end $5 Bilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price Aerrstvely, 7 CAUTION. W. L. Douglas name and price is stamped on bottom. Take No Substitute. Sold by the lest shoe dealers everywhere. Shoes mailed from factory to any part of tne world. Illus wraied Catalog free to any address. TW. DOU Not in the Hoarding Class. The man with a wife and several erown daughters seldom hoards his money.—Chicago News. The boilers of the steamer Maure- tania, placed end to end, would make a string 547 feet long. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days. Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Liles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. What's in a Name? It is noticed that the Town of Boozy, 'W. Va. is as “dry” as Qeor- gia, and Coldwater, Mich., has been carried against prohibition. The next thing you’ll hear of the water wagon going ‘“‘wet.”’—Youngstown Vindicator. Beware of Ointments For Catarrh That Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole sys- tem when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles So never be used except on prescriptions from reputable phy- sicians, asthe damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of thesystem. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken in- ternally and made 1n 'I'oledo, Ohio, by I. J. Cheney & Co. "Testimonials free. Sold by Druggists; price, 75¢c. per bottle. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Peace at Any Price. The fact that South Dakota has taken in $5,000,000 from the divorce business in ten years shows that money is no object when people feel that they must break loose.—Phila- delphia Press. re 14 The enjoyment of what we have de- pends largely on how we get it and what our conscience thinks about it afterward. There is Only One is Bromo That is GLAS, Procicion, Biass. Partugal’s Valuable Crown. When King Manuel of Portugal will be crowned the ceremony will include his assumption of the most valuable crown in Europe. Taken at a jewel- er’s estimale, the Portugucse crown is recorded as being worth £1,600, 000. In share and size it is almost a fac-simile of the Spanish and the old Polish crowns, although in the value of its jewels its nearest rigal is the Czar's diadem, which is sgp- posed to have cost £1,300,000.. The crown placed upon.the English King's head is valued at a mere £360,000: FITS, St. Vitus’Dance: Nervous Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bettle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. A Great Smoker, A Pittsburg millionaire dinner: “I lunched with Sir Thomas Lipton at the Ghezireh palace in Cai it before he set out for his tea planta- tion in Ceylon, where the ex-Empress Eugenie was to visit him. “When the. coffee and Tarragone came on I opened my gold case and offered Sir Thcmas a beautiful arom- atic cigarette fresh from the factory down the street. “*No, thank you,’ szid he 1 a with one possible exceptisn, the big- gest smoker in the q t never smoke cigars uer ‘““ “What do you “ ‘Bacon,’ he ans zajd. at . . at iro SU - If you suffer from Epileptic Fits orFalling #8 Sickness or have Children that do so, my New Discovery and Treatment will give them immediate relief, and 1 you are asked to do is to send ior Free Bcttic of Epllepticido Cu and Test it. i | | Qesimmine®’ Laxative Bromo Quinine USED THE WORLD OVER TQ CURE A CGLD iN ONE DAY. Always remember the full name. Lock (7 / i for this sicnature on every box 26a. of 4 { b = TA SOY Cs oh 4 a 7 - 8 fe NN