——— POLICE nd Tweive Arrest. ted. ' the suf- reached on when an parliament treets lead- was Mrs. secretary e socialist ~ of parlia- oor of the tegy. The 1g a bill to aret smok- ed past the in front of outed shril- 1ildren and ’ rs. Symons r. She was r and dis- e coup, an hereafter ted to the whatever, toric grille pectators. the suffra- 50,000 per- parliament 1g was the yet. Not at number e of siege. police was des of the 1ding. The rmed with terrace in by water, tempted. A s also pa- ches. in London obilized at ds of hav ets fir the » force, to- ry and ma. han 5,000, z the push- especially with vege- n a few urred, but and 12 of ced under ted in the | upon and ASE Want an vention of nion was 15. Dur- ale agreed e and ap- as handed demands lete recog- > Workers egotiate a he United shall have nethod we on of rev- no reduc- nined and )0 pounds. .50 or less per cent paid more 2 per day vdvanee. 0,000 and, Adds itions. usands of en to the H. Sever- ded $100,- Mrs. Flor- ey to be vment for training two pret- y be used ies while be known honor of nd, while h Adams, Cleveland, ‘be used t will be home, in nother. : DOSE 1d Nurses Poison. 1 G. Nei- the Phil- les, died r having remarka- centrated stake for using in ough. He until the and then, yan work- sract the for four he young ted their s AGES | Because Stone of $40G ver- Western compell- 1a Jim iis is the tried in her $4 a e The ~ General Demand of ithe 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. -* *° i. 52 ng In supplying that demand with its ex- cellent combination of Sytup 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. - DEAFNESS AND CATARRY CURE. NBALENT CATARRHAL JELLY Cures Deafness and Catarrh. Trial treatment by mdil free. REA CO.. Minneapolis, Minn. Kentucky Tobacco Districts. Tobacco is grown in several dis- tinct districts in Kentucky, and there, as elsewhere, each district has by reason of soil or climate a virtual monopoly cof its own type. Down in the southwestern corner, in the. so- called Black Patch, embracing sever- al counties of Tennessee, a dark and heavy leaf is grown and fire-cured for the foreign trade. This: is bought by government, or so-styled ‘‘regie” buyers. North of this is a heavy leaf stemmed for the British trade. North and. east of this is the region in. which a dark air-cured leaf is grown for domestic uses. East of this, embracing all Blue Grass' and extending to Maysville, is the. Burley district, in which is grown the famous red and white Burley tobaccos. Bur- ley tobacco is a light, fine-fibered leaf, which has to a large degree the prop- erty of absorbing licorice and other adulterants., It is, therefore, used for making sweet chewing tobacces, plug, twist and fine-cut. Because of its peculiar fitness for this the tobac- co companies have for 40 or 50 years made use of it in this way, and the popular brands, which are asseis of no mean value, are based upon the public taste for this manipulated Bur- . ley—J. L. Matthews, in Atlantic. - — 43 Gigantic Lemons. _ It is not regarded as a joke to be “handed a lemon” in some parts of Mexico, where this fruit grows to enormous size. To carry one of these monster lemons is no small task. These lemons do not bear shipment as well as those of the smaller variety, but they are in much demand in tie localities where they are grown. They are full of juice, and one Qf the larger size has been known to afford enough acid for a whole barrel of lemonade. gigantic lemons are found growing wild in a remote part of Mexico sev- eral years ago. Specimens of the tree were obtained and introduced in- to other localities until the fruit is now becoming common. Experiments are now being made with the view of increasing the thickness of the rind and firmness of the fruit, with the view of giving the lemon more stable qualities for shipping purposes.—In- dianapolis News. =» Will Exolore- Amazon Country. An expedition organized in Boston by George M. Boynton will explore the great unknown regions of the southern watershed of the Amazon river between the fourth and tenth parallels. _ Bacteria on Paper Money. W. W. Hilditch of the Sheffield Scientific School has by laboratory tests ascertained that the bacteria found on paper money, while running up into the thousands for each bill, are .not usually of an infectious or virulent type. NOT A MIRACLE . Just Plain Cause and Effect, - There are some quite remarkable | things happening every day, which seem almost miraculous. Some persons. would not believe that a man could suffer from coffee drinking so severely as to cause spells of unconsciousness. And ‘to find com- plete relief in changing from coffee to Postum is well worth recording. “I used to be a great coffee drink- er, so much so that it was killing me by inches. My heart became so weak 1 would fall and lie unconscious for ‘an hour at a time. The spells caught me sometimes two or three times a day. a “My friends, and even the doctor, told me it was drinking coffee that caused the trouble. I would not be- lieve it, and still drank coffee until I could not leave my room. o “Then my doctor, who drinks Pos- tum himself, persuaded me to stop coffee and try Postum. After much hesitation 1 concluded to try it. That was eight months ago. Since then I have had but few of those spells, none for more than four months. “I feel better, sleep better and am better every way. I now drink noth- ing but Postum and touch no coffee, and as I am seventy years of age all my friends think the improvement quite remarkable.” “There's a Reason.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. Ever read theabove letter? A new one appears from time to time. They + are genuine, true, and full of human interest. {CiassiFien ADVERTISEMENTS) : These | ELEPHANTS AT WORK Hundreds Employed in Sawmills---May Give Place to Machinery. To see the working elephant in all his glory one must go to Burma, the centre of the teakwood industry. Some of the great sawmills of Maul- main and Rangoon employ hundreds of elephants, somé with and’ others ‘without a mahout or driver. 5 The companies own immense tim- ber concessions, and each year a cer- tain number of trees are marked for cutting down. Those so marked are girdled to prevent the sap rising. This causes the tree to die. In three years it is quite séasoned and dry. It is then cut down, the branches are lopped off, and one, two or three elephants are attached to it by chains to haul it to the nearest stream. ee The creek in which the elephant has deposited its log, says the Circle, may be dry in the timber cutting sea- son; nevertheless the creature con- tines to pile up log after log in the bed of the torrent against the time when the monsoon shall break and wash the accumulation of logs into one of the main rivers. ; When this is done men collect at various points and examine the vari- ous owners’ marks. The logs are sorted and bound into rafts, and a family of Burmans forthwith installs | itself upon each, and builds a little hut of bamboo and leaves in which to live while the big raft of teak lozs is coming down the river to Rangoon. When the rafts arrive opposite the saw yards herds of working elephants are in waiting to heave the logs out of the water and take them to differ- ent parts of the mill. They display an intelligence almost human; and when the dinner bell rings at midday logs are dropped in every direction and the ground fairly shakes as hun- dreds of tuskers scamper off to dinner like playful children let out of school. . When the logs have been sawn oth- er gangs of elephants move dexter- ously about among the huge circular saws, avoiding them with extreme care, clearing away debris, and in a marvellous manner discriminating between mere rubbish and the sawn planks. Then the elephants stack the latter so carefully that the edges are not injured. : Most amusing is it to see one of these working. elephants tackling a huge squared log and placing it on the stack. First of all he estimates its length and its weight as it lies on the ground. Then he digs his tusks under it at one end, curls his trunk over and tries to drag one end of the log on to his tusks. Should he find the task beyond him he ‘will give a queer little trumpet note, and up comes a colleague to help him at the other end. In a mo- ment the two elephants have swung the big log between them, walk in step to the pile, and then one of them, apparently . by preconcerted agree- ment, places his end in position on the stack, while the other rams home the log. ; : Every timber yards has its own particular show elephant, more in- telligent than the rest, and one be- longing to Messrs. MacGregor & Co., of Rangun, was in the habit of turn- ing on a water tap and helping him- self to a big drink, though he never could be induced to turn the water off again. Similar obstinacy and oc- casionally bad temper is shown, and the mahouts are very highly paid, for they live always in the risk that the huge brutes may turn upon them and kill them, particularly if the mahout has at any time shown cruelty or un- kindness. A Hindu mahout was employed with a working elephant at Bangkok, Siam, and frequently used a steel goad, in defiance of all warnings. The result was that his elephant made frequent attempts to kill him, and finally the man was discharged. Nearly four years afterward, by a most remarkable coincidence, both elephant and mahout met again in Maulmain, Burma, and no sooner was the big tusker cut of sight of the saw mill and well into. the forest than he curled his trunk up backward, seized his old persecutor by the neck, hurled him to the grcund, and in an instant a mighty forefoot had crushed out his life. \ Each working elephant represents a value of $1500, and years of ex- perience have shown that until quite recently this was the inost profitable form of labor that could be employed in the great forests of ‘Burma and Siam. Now, however, highly ingeni- ous American, German and British machinery—-chiefly portable railroads. and steam hoists—are gradually tak- ing the place of the giant workers, and in another decade the independ- ent elephant laborer may be entirely extinct. eee mes aii Auto Cars to Stay. The motor car has come fo stay. Its speed has come to stay, for the ability to travel in a road vehicle at a rate of twenty-five, or even in em- |, ergencies seventy-five miles an hour, : is a modern improvement of general benefit. How to reconcile speed with safety, how to obtain the motor’s utility without disturbing the rights of others who have equal standing on the road, is a question really more practically urgent than many of the subjects which have position in polit- ical platforms. Drastic laws like those of Austria amount ‘to prohibi- tion, destruction of valuable property and social backwardness. A progres- sive people will not tolerate such laws, but something must be done to} parmonize the conilicting interests and rights of the highway.— Philadel. phia Record. FINANGE TI REVIEW WEEKLY TRADE SUMMARY Prices Are Lower on Pig Iren Con- tracts—Few Orders Placed for Steel” Rails—Car Builders Want Plates. New York.—R: G."Dun & Compa- ny’s “Weekly Review of Trade” says: - Moderate improvement is indi- cated in reports * of “s.current’ trade from most séctions” of the colmiry, -with confidence regarding the future. “Progress is slow-in the iren and steel industry. Export business con- tinues liberal. . . . “Ore movement on the lakes is about over for the season and ship- ments will probably amount to little more than 22,500,000 tons. Prices of pig iron are somewhat lower on contracts for this year’s delivery, but neither producers nor consumers are eager to operate for shipment in 1900. “There is a similar reluctance about forward contracts for coke, makers asking better prices than are offered. There is a fairly good demand for structural shapes, while plates are wanted by car builders. Only a few orders for steel rails have been plac- ed this week. “Improvement is pronounced in the primary market for cotton goods, buyers exhibiting more interest, and it is generally believed that prices cannot be expected to go any lower. “Conditions in the footwear indus- try were unsettled by the labor con- troversy at Lynn, and some other fac- tories are closed for inventories. “There is no controversy regard- ing prices. Similar conditions exist as to heavy leather, small stocks be: ing carried by the shoe factories, and quotations are well maintained. Light sole and upper leather Is more abun- dant, sales of the former being made at’ pronounced concessions. Expert demand has sustained the market for glazed kid, but domestic trade is poor. Weakness in hides is more noticeable.” “Bradstreet’s” says: : On balance, industry is slightly more active, some branches of the iron frade having increased forces, while building is more brisk. Rail- way tonnage is heavier, and current gross eapnings show smaller de- creases. “Business failures in the United States for the week ending October 15 number 244 against 256 last week, 194 in the like week in 1907, 170 in 1906, 178 in 1905, and 227 in 1904. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Wheat—No. 2 red... Rye—No.2...... Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear. y 95 93 No. 2 yellow, shelled. , 87 ns Mixed ear........... “er 77 73 Oats—No. 2 white . 54 55 . 3 white........ . iQ 53 Flour—Winter patent.... 580 5 9 Fancy straight wintors. Hay—No. 1 Timothy...... 140) 15 Co over No.1............. « JEBY 125) Feed—No, 1 white mid. ton. . 3000 3100 Brown middlings 270) 2830 Bran, bulk 250) 259 Straw—Wheat 70) 8:0 Caticre. on bite iviies 700 800 Bairy Products Butter—Elgin creamery........... 8S 0 22 jo Creamery... ... exec sean. 24 26 Fancy ceuntry roll............ : 19 22, Cheese—Ohi0, NOW......c.cvuernsan 14 15 New York, new................. 14 15 Poultry, Etc. Hons—per 1D... cu ci isecnrrerssasess $ 1 15 Chickens—dressed.........cecuuu..s 18 20 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 25 2 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes—Fanasy white per bu.... 8) £5 Cabbage—per ton............ «Tees - 1.8% 1.50 Onions—per barrel............,. «“ 200 23 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent ve 3 7 5 80 Wheat—No. 2 red......... 102 Corn--Mixed.,... ........ 3 71 76 i a 17 1% Butter—Ohio creamery............ <8 =° PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent $560 5 7 Wheat—No. 2 red..... 97 Corn—No. 2 mixed.. 88 8 Jats—No. 2 white... i3 54 Butter—Creamery......... 30 31 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ <6 29 NEW YORK. Flour—Patonts..................... $ 58 527) Wheat—No. 2 red.. “14 Corn—No. 2........ 90 9 Oats—No. 2 whito. 54 5 Butter -Creamery .. 30 32 Eggs—State and Pen 21 33 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. CATTLE Extra, 1459 to 1600 pounds Prime, 1300 to 1490 pounds.......... Good, 1200 to 1200 pounds........... Tidy, 1050 to 1150 pounds. Fair, €0) to 119) pounds .. Common, 70) to 909 pound Bulls Cows L160) @5400 00 @6 10 5. 575 5 5-60 I5@5% 75 @5 00 2) 57 0 17 Prime wethors.......... 0 iu vin 400@ 4 10 Good mixed: .............. ei -.350@ 885 Fair mixed ewes and wethors. .300@3 40 Culls and common............ 180 @25) Spring lambs . 40) @6 2 Veal cualves.. ees 50 @7D Heavy to thin calves .300 @4 FRENCH CHALK FOR SPOTS. If a girl is away from a cleaner’s and she finds one of her best frocks spotted with grease, she can try the simple remedy of French chalk an: a hot iren. The chalk is spread thickly over ‘the spot until all the grease is absorbed. Then a piece of blotting paper is put over it, and a warm, not hot, iron is held over it to draw the grease into the paper. Rub off the chalk with a soft silk or mus- din raz and the spot will probably have disappeared.—Public Ledger. smoked 55,000,000,000 cigar- “We ettes last year,” remarks the New , York Mail. - Well, confession is a step toward reform. |. every five days. Piso’s Core is an un: medy for coughs, colds, : hoarseness and thro 2 lung affections. It goes direct to 8 the seat of the trouble and generally restores healthy conditions, Mothers 3 can give their children Piso’s Cure with perfect confidence in its curative wers' and freedom from opiates. 3 Da for half a century. At all druggists’, 25 cta. NE The Jury System. : Sometimes it is a question whether the jury system furthers the vpera- | tion of justice or hinders it. In an] Ohio case recently the trial was halted because a juror announced from the box that he wouldn’t believe the prosecuting witness under oath because he was a drunkard. As this statement was said to prejudice the jury it was excused, and the prisoner remanded to jail to await a new trial. ~His attorneys are now trying “to get the case dismissed on the ground that he has been placed once in jeopardy and cannot be so placed again. Thus, if the man is guilty, justice may be defeated, and if he is innocent, he is compelled to serve a term in prison which he does not deserve. Jurors rarely recognize the importance of their acts, and, lacking the intelli- gence to do this, it is sometimes ques- tioned whether they possess enough | { intelligence to be intrusted with a man’s life.—Washington Post. ‘Woman Promoter. Western Texas is proud of Mrs. Anney McElroy Brett; a woman pro- moter. Today she is the telephone queen of the Southwest. She is pres- ident ©f the Southern Independent Telephone and Telegraph Company, and president and general manager of the Brett Construction, Telephone and Telegraph Company. These com- panies, representing more than: $500,- 000, were organized by her without a dollar of capital to start with. same manner in V . proceed to write a letter on an “or. A CURE AT CITY MISSION. Awful Case of Scabies—DBody a Mass of Sores from Scratching—1Iier Tortures Yicid to Cuticura. “A young woman came to our city mis- sion in a most awful condition Physically. Our doctor examined her and told us that she had scabies (the itch), incipient pare- sis, rheumatism, etc., brought on from ex- posure. Her poor body was a mass of sores from scratching and she was not able to retain solid food. Ve worked hard over her for sever weeks but we could see little improvement. One day I bought a cake of ‘Cuticura Soap and a bottle of Cuticura Resolvent, and we bathed our patient well and gave her a full dose of thé Resolvent. She slept better that night and the next day I got a box of Cuticura Ointment. In five weeks this young woman was able to look for a position, and she is now strong and well. Laura Jane Bates, 85 Fifth Ave.,, New York, N. Y., Mar. 11, 1907.” Japense Street Railways. Yokohama has its electric tram- ways, Tokio, the capital of Japan, has a fine system of electric railways. The railway engineers and directors are Japanese. Shanghai has recent- I completed a splendid system of tramways, and Hongkeng has operated street railways for several years with good results. There are many other cities in Japan and China which will undoubtedly follow the example of these cities. Good Appetitec.” Here are some figures from a lum- ber camp up in Greenwood which give an idea as to the appetite of husky woodsmen: There are thirty- five men in this crew and the cook reports that he makes each day 300 large biscuits, 150 doughnuts, thirty- six pies, bakes six quarts of dry beans, with potatces, vegetables, ete., in proportion. A large beef is eaten New Warshios. When completed and ready to go into commission the North Dakota will represent an initial outlay of $10,000,000. Nearly $1,000,000 of this will be spent for guns alone. There are 10 12-inch guns at $65,000 each, and 14 five-inch guns at $10,000 each in the main bat!yry, besides 12 rapid-fire guns and minor pieces. Not Particularly Good. A keen retort is credited to the late Dr. Haig-Brown, master of Char- terhouse, says the Youth's Compan- ion. His brother-in-law, Dr. Porter, the master of Peterhouse, another famous English school, wrote to him inquiring his precise meaning in a certificate that a boy's character was “generally” good. “When I say gen- erally,” he replied, “I mean not par- ticularly.” Where Clove Trees Thrive. There is no place in the world where the clove tree thrives as well as in the islands of Zanzibar.and Pem- ba. It is the prineipal product of the idands, and, together with copra, and the ivory brought from the main- land, cloves form the pricipal item of export. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegums, reduces inflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25¢ a bottle. The Farmer Not Worrying. About” the only person who does not seem to be particularly concern- ed just now over the future of the farmer is the farmer.—Providence Tribune. making Farms For Sale 6ooo Money. ed gin 14 States. Strout’s mame g : moth illustrated catalog of bar- Eoa@ =3210s with State maps mailed free; we > SRE fpayr.r. fare, E. A. STROUT €9., World's Largest Farm Dealers, Land Title Bldg., Philadelphia Color more goods brighter and f. can dye any garment without AM ster ripping apart. Write ’r colors than any othe: dve, TELEGRAPH ING TYPEWRITERS New Instrument Sends and Receives Without Making Mistakes. The latest device in telegraphy is a telegraphing typewriter. It can be attached to and placed under any or- dinary typewriter, says the Electrical World. When so connected it be- comes a complete sending and re- ceiving telegraph instrument, and both sending and receiving instru- ments record the message. : The cnly experience required is that of an operator working a type- writer. The message is sent in the | which you would dinary typewriter. This same mes- sage will be received on the receiv- ing typewriter exactly as it appears on the sending one. -. - In some respects it resembles the familiar stock ticker and other print- ing tlegraph instruments, ‘but unlike thes® it makes possible:thé use of capital and small letters as in ordin- ary letter writing. . The receiving machine records the message just as written and gives what corresponds to a carbon copy made on the origzi- nal machine. There is said to be no chance for mistakes. The machine takes down the message just as sent. There is no human receiver to make a mistake by faulty hearing or carelesness or neglect, as is the case with the pres- ent Morse system of dots and dashes in use all over the world. $100 Reward, $1090. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis- ease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and thatis Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con- stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cureis taken inter- nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu- cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy- ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con- stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative ‘powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take all's Family Pifls for constipation. Cuba’s Orange Crop. One half million crates is the most recent estimate of this year’s orange crop in Cuba—the largest in the his- tory of the island. Until a few years ago thousands of crates of oranges were brought to Cuba from Florida and California every year, but for the last three seasons these ship- ments have become less, and will possibly cease entirely within an- other year. scientific scale did not begin in Cu- ba until about eight or nine years ago, and may be considered in its in- fancy, but is progressing rapidly, and even at the eary stage is naw in po- | markets. | fition to supply the local The crange business on the island is controlled amost entirely by Amert cans. Profits of Banking. The Bank of England is August were only about How Oklahoma would like such a bank as that do Cleveland Leader. to make THREE WEEKS Brought About a Remarkable Change, Mrs. A. J. Davis, of Murray, Ky., says: “When I began using Doan’s | Kidney Pills, kidney | disease was slowly | Diz- | poisoning me. zy spells almost made me fall, sharp pains like knife me in the back, and finally an attack of grip left me with a constant agoniz- |4=— Doan’s Kidney Pills | ing backache, helped me quickly, and in three weeks’ time there was not a symptom of kidney trouble remaining.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box, Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Innate Savagery. The inheritance of innate savagery in human nature seems to crop out in the fact that the first speculations as to the practical use of flying ma- chines are in the direction of the availability for wholesale killing in war.—Pittsburg + Dispatch. Nv IF YOUVE 3 ay NEVER WORN ‘ — OVERS “ry pans® you've yet / to learn the bodily st comfort it gives in \ the wettest weather MADE FOR —— HARD SERVICE AND GUARANTEED WATERPROGF S300 AT ALL GOQD STORES CATALQG FREE AJ TOWER CO. BOSTON. USA. CANADIAN CQ. LIMITED. TGCRONTC. CAN 8 = MADE BY aay FamFREol Shy mommy Rec. Us Sar. oem. FA Oae 1c, tor free book Orange cultivation on a | said to | have had a bad half-year, because its | profits for the six months ending with | $3,250,000. | stunts.— | thrusts would catch | If you want a pair of shoes that you don’t have to squeeze your foot into and wear a week until they get stretched into th 5 buy SKREEMERS. — human foot where your weight comes, and thay 1ave the style to suit you, no matter how par- ticular you are. Look for the label. FRED. F. FIELD CO., Broc ton, Mass, SS DYE No other medicine ‘has been so successful in relieving the suffering of women or received so many gen- uine testimonials as has Lydia E. | Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. In every community you will find women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- etable Compound. Almost every one, you meet has either been bene- fited by it, or has friends who have. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn,Mass., any womanany day may see the files containing over one mil- lion oné hundred thousand letters from women seeking health, and here are the letters in which they openly state over their own signa- tures that they were cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has saved many women from surgical cperations. ° Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is made from roots and herbs, without drugs, and is whole- some and harmless. The reason why Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound is so successful is because it contains in- gredients which act directly upon the feminine organism, restoring it to a healthy normal condition. Women who are suffering from those distressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia | E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to restore their health. [ W. L. Douglas makes and sells more men’s ¥3.00 and £3.50 shoes than any other manufacturer in the world, be- cause they hold their shape, fit better, and wear longer than any other make. Shoes at All Prices, for Every Member of the Family, Men, Boys, Women, Misses & Children W.L.Douglas $4.00 and $5.00 Gilt Edge Shoes cannot be equalled at any price. W. L. Douglas $2.50 and $2.00 shoes are the best in the world Fast Color Eyeleis Used Exclusively. 57 Take No Substitute. VV. LL. Dongias name and price is stamped on bottom. Sold everywhere. Shoes mailed from factory to any part of the world. Catalocue free, W. L. DOUGLAS, 157 Spark St., Brockton, Mass. TOILET ANTISEPTIC | Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and frec from une healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin- fecting and deodor- izing toiletrequisite 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 Sampis { WITH “HEALTH AND BEAUTY' BOOK SENT FREE | THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass. Er low. Write quick. DR. ¢ P. N. U. 43 1993, | Forst cases. Book of testimonials and 0 Days’ treatment Dr. H. H. GX N'S SO. ree. EN'S 1 D R oO PS Y Yow SgovEny; XS, Box B, Atlanta, Qa, to ¢ shape of your foot, They are made to 4¢ the GC Ye in cold water better thar 1 - MONROE DRUG CO. Qu