———— —— a OODS vier Than 5 brought a series 1s at Pe- lives due ires took he end of April, and >d respon- 1ave been iy report- estructive r reports, ore than ecedented panese to ladron On ES : hip Fleet, es. tal of ap- will have tic battle- Hampton ng to es- | officials. e is that nd, 3,850 to be the over made he Ameri- for coal. r 16 days, that time e in touch cless tele MATS Spend $1,» ad. committeq to report r the pur- nbassy. le- ’s and pro- $1,000,000 . year for ar the bill > purchase 1d Mexico urchase of d Yokoha- TED? 1 Clutches here has ‘mation of on of Rais- ndit. Aec- ambushed tribesmen ne from a honor. it here are was am- mes while t. \SSACRED of Soldiers apes. cen receiv- ica, saying oops, com- rymen and was n a march an in the tion of one ading post enegambia. asonable. tant com- interstate 1e National rs’ associa- f the larg- in various and doing usiness of timore and and many iation com- on its pro- from 10 to hat the in- vitrary and CRED i Put 2,000 ches were > that the a town of ged 36 vil- people. ENTS. : Pa > American tion to visit 2ssmen to ziven $350,- ing by ex- pany books, indorsed sident, and mitting the did nct in- *, imported liest snake 3 extracted 1e demands rum for 50 en renewed ork chemist hand. ession. r Hughes e secretary calling the ~ session on roclamation ject which nd for con- ssion. down s of in- to support ams. Fe ALMOST A MIRACLE. Raised Up When Science Said There : Was No Hope. G. W. L. Nesbitt, Depot Street, Madrion, Ry writes: “I was a chroaie invalid with kidney troubles and often wished death might end my awful suffer- ings. The secretions were thick with sedi- meat, my limbs swol- len and my right side s0 nearly paralyzed I n could not raise my hand above my head. The" doctor held out no hope of my recovery and 4 had given up, but at last started using Doan’s Kidney Pills and made a rapid gain. After three months’ use 1 was well and at work again.” Sold by all dealers. 5C cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. ae Swedenborg’s’ Body Exhumed. The remains of Emmanuel] Sweden- “ borg, which were exhumed the other day in London, where they had lain ‘since 1772, were sent to Sweden for | final burial. ~ There was an imposing procession from the railroad station to. the waterfront, the coffin being es- corted by delegations of 8wedish and British naval officers and bluejackets and deputations from Swedenborgian churches and Swedish societies. TE ——— em 19 Winslow’s Boothing Syrup for Children Dl oe ana tion, allays pain,cures wind i f8ca bottle ¥ Keen Eyed Sleepwalker, An extraordinary acuteness of vi- sion in the sleep walking state has attracted the notice of Dr. James W. Russell in a girl of twenty-one, ob- served last August at the Birmingham (England) hospital. The patient, a teacher typewriter and music student, was reserved and more or less hyster- ical, and in three years she had had four season’s of sleep walking, with almost nightly rising in sleep for sev- eral weeks at each period. She usually left her bed between 1 and 2 in the morning. She was hot easily aroused, appearing wide awake, but recognizing nobody, and in this con- dition she attempted various tasks, playing the piano, tuning her violin, reading, studying harmony, crochet: ing and writing letters. It was found that this work was always done in almost absolute darkness. A let- ter was written to a relative, but on being asked to copy the address in the same light, when awake; she was unable to see, and wrote a confused jumble of lines, one over another. She crocheted well and wrote a very ac- curate musical essay. The eyes peemed normal. Another curious feature of her case was that, contrary to usual experience=3he would recall events of her sleep, seeming to have a very clear recollection of them. Effective Life Preservers. The improved lifebelt of Jack Fockety of Antwerp, which has been satisfactorily tested in Belgium and France, comprises two buoyant cush- ions, one of which rests on the chest and ‘the other on the upper part of the back, the two being connected by straps across the shoulders and held in place by a waiststrap. The belt, weighing six and a half to seven pounds, can be applied in three sec- onds.. The wearer's mouth and nose must be kept always above water, even if he should become exhausted and lose consciousness, and his arms and legs are left absolutely free for swimming or otherwise -aiding him- self. A special helmet resembling a Russian cap is designed to accom- pany the belt. It protects the head and neck and carries a small electric lamp, that gives a light easily seen 400 or 500 yards, and is of great serv- fve in night rescue. A small bat- tery feeds the lamp for four or five hours. What People Are Reading. Records of numerous public libra- ries in New York City show that in the last five years there has been a | remarkable increase in interest in sociology, political economy and Kkin- dred subjects. The reading and con- sulting of books relating to such matters have more than doubled in the last 15 years. FRIENDS HELP St. Paul Park Incident. “After drinking coffee for break- fast I always felt languid and dull, having no ambition to get to my morning duties. Then in about an hour or so a weak, nervous derange- «ment of the heart and stomach would come over me with such force I would frequently have to lie down. ‘At other times I had severe head- aches; stomach finally became affect- ed and digestion so impaired that I had serious chronic dyspepsia and constipation. A lady, for many years State President of the W. C. T. U., told me she had been greatly bene- fited by quitting coffee and using Pos- tum Food Coffee; she was troubled for years with asthma. She said it was no cross to quit coffee when she found she could have as delicious an article as Postum. ‘Another lady, who had been trou- bled with chronic dyspepsia for years, found immediate relief on ceasing coffee and beginning Postum twice a day. She was wholly cured. Still another friend told me that Postum Food Coffee was a godsend to her, her heart trouble having been relieved after leaving off coffee and taking on Postum. ‘““‘So many such cases came to my notice that I concluded coffee was the cause of my trouble and I quit and took up Postum. I am more than pleased to say that my days of trou- ble have disappeared. I am well and happy.” ‘““There’s a Reason.” Read “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time.\ They are genuine, true and full of human interest. ‘investigator. To get PEARLS OF THOUGHT. Manual training ought to be a part of the education of every child, rich or poor. When the rich and poor meet togeth- er in natural relations, they often form friendships which are highly prized. Theodore Parker was right in his conclusion that nobody could have in- vented the character of Jesus but Je- sus himself. We are old fashioned enough to be- lieve that the family church is, next to the family itself, the main defence of morality and religion. Why not have a directory of the quarters where misery and wickedness most abound, with the names of the men and women who own the property and derive income from it? The training of the physical senses and the skilful use of the hands helps in the development and education of the brain. Skilled manual labor, therefore, in some form is good for everybody. Our experience has been so unlike that of a well known literary profes- sor that we have frequently been sur- prised by the courtesy and kindness of hard-handed laboring men travelling’ in the street cars. For thirty years, at least, sharpers, have lived by an appeal to the gener-! osity and probable rascality of Ameri- cans, by showing how a fortune may be secured for some child whose fath-- er is in a foreign prison. Many rich men and women die be- fore their time because they have adopted conventionalities which pre- vent their getting access to the earth and refreshing themselves by culti- vating fruits and flowers with their own hands. We have heard of more than half a dozen cases of persons who have re- ceived from some one in Spain, al- ways bearing ‘the name of the person addressed, letters offering a chance to secure a fortune while rescuing an heiress from danger and distress.— From “Brevities” in the Christian Reg- ister. EARTH HOLLOW. Professor Revives Old Theory of En- trance at Poles. Under New York City, a few thou- sand miles, more or less, there's a land where there are no Rocekfellers, no railroad rebate questions and no base- ball tail-enders, according to Dr. Or- ville Livingston Leach, scientist and to this place, which is a land of great beauty, you have but to sail to one or the other of the poles, and quite without know- ing it your ship may go into an open- ing as if into a gaslight globe and come upon a convex land. Once there it'may be that you’ll never come back. The professor doesn’t say much about that. Arctic explorers who have never re- turned from the land of ice, mayhap, are now sailing around in the sea that lines the inner side of the earth. They may have found a port and dropped anchor and gone ashore. Prof. Leach looks some like Prof. ‘“Tody” Hamilton, the circus word-wiz-' ard. Like Hamilton, he is very sincere. He talks earnestly and with ‘enthusi- asm. “The possibilities of a land inside the earth was first brought to my at-: tention when I picked up a geode om the shores of the great lakes. The geode is a spherical and apparently solid stone, but when broken is found to be hollow and coated with crystals. The earth is only a larger form of geode, and the law that created the’ geode in its hollow form undoubtedly fashioned the earth in the same way. “Dr. Kane, the arctic explorer, found evidences of animal life that could not be accounted for. These, I am con- vinced, came from the unexplored country, reached only from the poles, whence come the northern lights.” Undergraduates of Brown univer- sity, with a scientific turn of mind, find time to drop in at Prof. Leach’s. They are always cordially received and sent away with something to think about. It is matter of fact, this inner world theory, as developed by Prof. Leach, is an old ome. It came into particular prominence early in the present century, when a man named Symmes, a resident of Cincinnati, pub- licly advocated it so persistently that it came to be known and ridiculed as “«Symmes’ Hole.”—Auburn (R. 1.) cor- respondence, New York World. Faint Praise. Jealousy is not- entirely confined to members of the : higher professions. Three laborers were _eating their noon- day meal. “Poor Mike is gone,” said one. “He were a strong man and a good shovel- er? - “Ie was -that,” said the second. “He were a good man in his home, and a good man outside, and he were a fine shoveler.” : “True for you, true for you,” said the third. “He were a good man at heme with his family, and he were a good man abroad with the boys, and he were a grand shoveler, but he were no faney shoveler.”—Browning’s Mag- azine. A Gem from Indiana. A reader for a New York publishing house gives the following, quoted from a story submitted by an Indiana authoress, as being about the choicest bit he has come across in many years. “Reginald was bewitched. Never had the baroness seemed to him so beautiful as at this moment, when, in her dumb-grief, she hid her - face.”— Lippincoft’s | FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW DUN’'S WEEKLY EEKLY SUMMARY Success of Recent Railway Bond Issues Is Considered as a Favorable Indication. New York.—R. G. Dun & Compa- ny’s “Weekly Review of Trade” says: Sentiment was greatly Lin financial circles - by the successful L issue of new railroad bonds, prices, sition since last October, but mercan- changed. The outlook for the steel” business needed work, and the good progress ture in all branches of business. In so far as current conditions are concerned, however, reports indicate collections. 2 Nominally there is no change in cessions. = Prices of finished ‘that concessions much deferred. business. West conditions are better. point of activity, the coke ovens do much less. of business. Increased curtailment at sufficient uncertainty courage procrastination. begin to ascertain the trend of mand. becoming more pronounced, tions. a record total. ‘Dairy Products. Poulin, Etc. Hens per Ibs. Frults and Vogerables, Oats—No. 2 white. Butter -Creamer; ory Eggs—State and Pennsylvania.. 8 4) LIVE STOCK. Unlon Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1450t0.1,603 1b3............ $680 700 Prime, 1,300 to 1,400 Ibs. 660 680 ood, 1, to 1.300 6 40 6 53 Tidy, 4,050 to 1,150 1bs.. 6 15 6 2) Common, 700 to 93) 1bs. 52 5 95 OXODy sive inccorvesiranaes 45 50) Jans Shines thera aN ests ie vu 80) 500 ser sitaoioeenas 33) 48) ows. 00 to 1,100.5... 83) 5 55° Fresh Cows and Springers. 132) 5590 Hogs, Prime heavy. . ervessed 8.0) 6 1 Prime medium Welght .. «- 00) 620 Best heavy Yorkers ...... << 600 62 Good light Yorkers.. 58) 590 Pigs..... 540 5 60 Si 47 5 20 Stags.... see 835) 44 Sheep. Prime others, clipped.....ccc....$ 5 50 Good mixed.. as: 500 525 Fair. xed ewes. and wethers, “4% 450 Culls and common. 50 IADB ces ces sr nresanans 1300 Ven! calyes............cis0vie0se ves Heavy and thin calves. .. weeess 8360 3 00 Our American wealth ig largely un: developed, while such old countries as Great Britain and Germany have been pretty well exploited, and every- thing has been fully appraised, de clares the New Orleans Picayune. The wealth of our country is so vast and yet so little known that its re sources will enable it to accomplish a destiny far beyond any in the ex perience of the human race. Bome famiiy trees seem to the Dal las News, never to bear anything but lemons, improved of securities attaining the highest po- tile and industrial conditions were net brightened when it was shown that the railways could borrow money for of the crops promises weil for the fu- a small volume of trade and only fair quotations of iron and steel, but pres- sure to dispose of accumulated stocks in furnace yards has produced several. sales of pig iron at substantial con- steel are usually maintained, although the opinion is expressed in many quarters would bring out Thus far’ there is practically no-increase in the active capacity of plants in this in- dustry east of Chicago. but at the ° Tin plate” mills’ contig” to lead in, leading pro- ducer reporting 90 per cent of capac-. -ity in operation, but few other de- partments are turning out over 50: per, cent of a normal production. ‘and Although the tome is improving. in! the primary textile markets, there is; little increase in the actual volume; cotton mills is-strengthening the statistical position, and buyers begin to appre- ciate that deliveries may-not be se- cured exactly as desired, but there is regarding the percentage of idle machinery to en- Men’s wear woolens are in a better position, marked improvement being. noted in duplicate orders, as clothiers de- Iron and steel industries show lit- tle change from preceding quiet con- ditions, except that talk of price re- ductions in the crude .iron branch is’ while finished lines hold at previous quota- Railway. tonnage is at a very low point; idle cars have increased to! MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Wheat—No. 2 Pod... sccccraerin wed 0 92: BNO. 2. rec chet onrasesvrens 72 73 Corn—No. 2 Si , 8ar.. 66 67 paws No. 2 212ow, orto, 61 65 Mixed ear.......... 66 67: ll ny 2 ith 53 54: 0.8 white....... ves 5) 52. Flour—Winter patent............ . 495 50) Fancy straight winters. 461 475 Hay—No. 1 Timothy. 145 155) ~ Clover No. 1.. 1500 1550 'eed—No. 1 white ‘mi £750 2800; Brown Inidalinge 2600 27 00: Bran, bulk,......... 255) 265) Straw—Wheat. Tinreees 95) 100% Sesrasansscesessy ese FW: 100) Butier-Biein CrOaimery : ves $ 31 $hio creamery g Hoi sssessensas . 3 2 ‘ancy country ro Cheeso—0hi io, new.. . 15 17 New York, DEW.r...cieee res . -18 17. ceerreansiene. $17 18 | the Tenth.” “Pojatoss—Fansy white per bu.. 73 Cabbage—per ton........... «oes 1507 18 0) Onions—per aol SF ictariises ee 12 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent, 563 5 8 Wheat—No. 2 re 97 i Fei devae 7 : 1 3 Pe iene ae oe 3 40 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. $533) 573 Wheat—No. 2 red. a7 Corn—No. 2 mixed 71 7% Oats—No. 2 while. 41 41 Butter—Creamery........ ; 31 33 ae A firsts....... . 3 42 NEW YCRK. Flour—Patents.......cceeeracensss 470 Wheat—No.2red......c.ccvoveee..s Corn—No. 67 The General Demand of the Well-Informed of the World has always been for a simple, pleasant and efficient liquid laxative remedy of known value; a laxative which physicians could sanction for family use because its com- ponent parts are known to them to be wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, acceptable to the system and gentle, yet prompt, in action. _ In supplying that demand with its ex- cellent combination of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, the California Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies on the merits of the laxative for its remark- able success. That is one of many reasons why Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given the preference by the Well-Informed. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine—manufactured by the Cali- fornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists. Price fifty cents per bottle. : TALL SPOOK TALES. Spirit Hands and, Luminous Clouds Seen by Sir William Crookes. : Let me tell you some of the results | Crookes got,” says” Hamlin Garland, writing about. spiritualism in Every- body's:--- He said (among other amaz- ing things) that he had seen a chair move on its own account, without con- pot with a medium.’ He saw David ome another medium with whom he’ had sittings—raised by invisible pow- er completely from the ‘floor of the room. Under rigid test. conditions, ‘he says he has seen “a solid, 'self- Iuminous body the size of an egg ‘float noiselessly about the room!” But: wait! I can quote from notes his. exact words. Here I produced my note book, hl continued: “I have seen a luminous cloud floating upwards toward a pic- ture. Under the strictest test condi- tions, I have more than once had a solid self-luminous, crystalline body placed in my hand by a hand which did not belong to any person in the room. In the light, I have seen a luminous cloud hover over a helio- trope on a side-table, break a sprig off, and carry it to a lady; and on some occasions I have seen a similar luminous cloud condense to the form of a hand and carry small objects about. During a seance in full light, a beautifully: formed small hand rose up from an opening in a dining-table and gave me a flower. This occurred, in the light in my own room, whilst I was. -holding the medium’s hands and feet. : I have retained one of these perfectly lifelike and graceful (spirit) hands in my own, firmly resolved not to let it escape, but it gradually seem- ed to resolve itself into vapor, and faded in that manner from my grasp. Under satisfactory test conditions, I have seen phantom forms and faces— a phantom form came from the cor- ner of the room, took an accordion in its hand, and glided about the room, playing the instrument.” A Curious Souvenir, : A short time ago, Pope Pius X gave an audience to a group of distinguish- ed Americans. While they were con- versing the reverend gentleman took from a compartment in a near-by desk, a piece of paper, and, handing it to one of the party said: “By the way, allow me to present you with a little souvenir of your visit to Pius The recipient, -upon ex- amining his treasure, found it to be the return coupon of a railroad ticket from Venice to Rome. It was the one purchased by Cardinal Giuseppi Sarto to attend the meeting of car- dinals at Rome after the death of Leo. As we all know, he has never return- ed to Venice.—Bohemian. FIFTEEN YEARS OF SUFFERING. Burning, Painful Sores Sores on Legs—Tor- tured Day and Night—Tried Many Remedies to No Avail—Used Cuticura; Is Well Again. “After an attack of rheumatism, running sores broke out on my husband’s legs, from below the knees to the ankles. There are no words to tell all the discomfort and great suffering he had to endure night and day. He used every kind of remedy and three physicians treated him, one after the other, without any good results whatever. One day I ordered some Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cuticura Resol- vent. He began to use them and in three weeks tall the sores were dried up. The burning: fire stopped, and the palns became bearable. After three months he was quite well. I can prove this testimonial at any time. Mrs. V. V. Albert, Unser French- ville, Me., July 21, 1907.” ; Private Privileges. Private interest is constantly chal- lenging the publie service. Proper preservation of the forests and the development of the waterways is like- ly to interfere with private privileges which have been abuses of public rights. But the ‘public begins to show discriminate. Private rights are guaranteed protection in the courts of the land, and cannot be disturbed by the lawmakers. Private privileges, however, must give way to the rights of the people.—Boston Herald. GARFIELD Digestive Tablets, 3 om our druggist, or the Garfield Tea Co., ro CN gt oF 25¢. per bottle. mples a request. —— Maine’s Timber Output. The timber output of Maine last winter was 900.000,000 feet and the indications are that these figures will be about equaled this year. The scarcity of labor prevented operations to a large degree. "| ment is building a breakwater that ex-’ ‘| &ppear to be the ones HUSKY VEGETARIANS. Can Crook Their Fingers More Times Than Meat Eaters. Two Belgian physicians who have been experimenting with the results of vegetarianism report in favor of that practice. They have published a pamphlet tracing the personal his- tory of forty-three vegetarians of Brussels. “For ther most part,” say the au- thors, “the vegetarians appear young- er than their age; notably the ladies are distinguished by their clear and fresh complexion.” According to Science very little difference was discovered between vegetarians and meat eaters so far as strength was concerned. In endur- ance, on the other hand, a very re- markable difference was found, the vegetarians surpassing the meat eat- ers from 50 to 200 per cent, accord- ing to the method of measurement. The Brussels investigators found also that the vegetarians recuperated from fatigue far more quickly than the meat eaters, a result also found in the Yale experiment. Building a Breakwater. In the construction of the new har-| bor at San Pedro, Cal, the govern- tends two miles out into the ‘open sea. Piling was first driven, on which a railway trestle was built, ‘and immense qualities of rock are being dumped on both sides of: it.- FITS, St. Vitus'Dance: Nervous Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottld and-treatise froe. Dr. H.R. Kline, Ld. %1 Arch, Phila. Pa, Discover New Rembrandt. Berlin —A new portrait ‘by Rem- brandt has’ been discovered by Prof. Alois Hauser, director ‘of the Royal gallery here. The painting, which is a picture of an ugly young man star- ing out from the canvas in an idiot-like manner. was found underneath a por- trait by an unknown artist. Prof. Hauser, before announcing that this portrait was by Rembrandt submitted it to experts, who agreed that it was authentic. How's This? ATURE AND A WOMAN'S WORK Nature and a woman’s work come bined have produced the grandest remedy for woman’s ills that the world has ever known. In the good old-fashioned days of our grandmothers they relied upon the roots and herbs of the field to cure disease and mitigate suffering. The Indians on our Western Plains to-day can produce roots and herbs ‘for every ailment; ‘and care diseases that baffle the most skilled physicians who have’ spent years in the study of drugs. From the roots and herbs of the field Lydia E. Pinkham more than thirty years ago gave to the women of the world a remedy for their pe- culiax ills, more potent. and effica- cious than any combination of drugs. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is now recognized as the bri i remedy for woman's Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 515 N.C. St., Louisiana, Mo., writes: * Complete restoration to health means so much to me that for the sake of other suffering women I am willing to make my troubles public. ‘For twelve years I had been suffer- We offer One Hundred Dollars Peward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O We, the undersigned, have “known wg Cheney for the last 15 years, and os; Lim perfectly honorable in all business transactions and Smancially Be to carry out any obligations made b fe by uis rm. WALDING, KINNAN ARVIN, Whole- sale Druggists, Foto, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act- ing directly upon the blood and mucuous sur- faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. ge bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. Lightning and Trees. A widespread bellef is that during a thunderstorm safety may be found under a beech tree, and that the dan- ger from lightning is fifteen times as great under a rescincus tree and fifty times as great under an oak: Dr. A. W. Borthwick, the British natural- ist, finds this view to be entirely with- out foundation. The beech is not avoided by lightning, which selects one species as readily as another, but the taller trees in a neighborhood liable to be: struck. The effects of lightning al- so are commonly misunderstood. The cells of a tree are not ruptured or: torn by the formation of steam, as so often stated, but they collapse or! shrink up, without tearing. The! roots seem to escape damage. : MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR Ll fi nr Ske Hin Slother 1 £3) or 8 ra Biome Sample bouts, 47 Ron or ae A. S. OLMSTE Brine TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from un- healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. germicidal, disin- fecting and deodor- izing toilet requisite Ti: of exceptional ex- § cellence and econ- § omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample WITH "HEALTH AND BEAUTY’ BOOK SENT FREE THE PAXTON TOILET ©0., Boston, Mass. ES 7 aE Las PENSIONS Vaningion, B & > P, N. U. 19, 1903, DROPSY =v Dsooveey, worst cases. Book of testimonials and 40 treatnient i a 7A 7 ns ing with the worst forms of female ills. During that time I had eleven different physicians without help. No tongue can tell what I suffered, and at times I ' could hardly walk. About two years ago I wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice. I followed it, and can truly say that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound and Mrs. Pinkham’s advice re- stored health and strength. It is worth mountains of gold to suffering women.” ‘What Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound did for Mrs. Muff, it will do for other suffering women. BABYS Favourite Skin Soap Warm baths with Cuticura Soap followed, when neces- sary, by gentle anointings with Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, preserve, purify and beautify the skin, scalp, hair and hands of infants and children, relieve ecze- mas, rashes, itchings, irrita- tions and chafings, permit rest and sleep and point to a speedy removal of torturing, disfiguring humours when all else fails. ra Sold throughout the world, Depots: London, 27, Charterhouse Sq.; Paris, 5, lia, R. Towns ree. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS, Box B, ant Ga, SHOES AT ALL PRICES, FOR EVERY EMBER OF THE FAMILY, M MEN, BOYS, our rN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. Tops., Bi Cuticura Booklet on the Skin. , , Le Cape. Potter Dru Chem. Corp., Sole Pi a are, poll BE world, “i "hecaise Thay hold hale "G8 SE nS a Tee es 3 BEF™ Shoes in the world fo- ig “a8 Coos £5, W.L L Douglas $42 and $5 Gilt Edge S Shoes, Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price Excidi. CAUTION. saa by the hest shoe Sealers JersN ers. h rated Catalog free to any ad: 3% ‘W. L. Douglas ams and pricsds is Samped on bottom. Take No Substitute. to any part of the world. Ilns- GLAS, Brockton, Mass. © mailed from fac J facto PUTNAM FADELESS DYES | Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye, ean 4 ye any garment without ripping apart, Write for free booklet— on to Dy One 1 ackage colors all fibers. They dye in Guid water better than any other dye. Yom e, Bleach and Mix Colors. MONROE DRUG CO., Quincy, Illinois