TEA INSTEAD OF WHISKY " Harmless Beverage Served to Trav elers In Great Britain. Tei pardons nre established In Great llrltaln wherever possible, jn-lzes nre offered fur the best-kept premises, and lunch?nns nnd teas are nerved to motorists and cyellnts In bright, cony rooms entirely separntral from the bar. A decided difference la made, ns to the accommodations In the bar nnd those In the refreshment rooms; the former plain nnd clean, but not attractive, the later adorned with pictures and flowers blooming !n window boxes, nnd furnished with plpnty of little tables and comfort able ehnlrs, and In many cases daily pspers on file. Sales of liquor have fallen off, while tea, pofroe nnd food nre Bold In largo minntlMes. It la found that even these who have been In the habit of tippling will order tea nnd coffee rendlly. when tho cost Is the same nnd (he substitutes nre really good. Eight gallons of tea have been sold In one house before breakfast; In another, where only In toxicants had formerly been sold, luncheons and tens were sold lo 720 persons during the first five months of company mnnngement. Quaint, old-fnshloncd names for the 'Inns have been retained, such ns Royal Oak, Hare nnd Hounds, Red Lion, Green Man, Norfolk Hero, Rose nnd Crown. Rose nnd Portcullis, the Plume of Feathers, etc. Profits from the solo of liquors hpve pnld for Improved lighting, wa ter supply, drinking fountains, dis trict nurses, " Infirmaries, school funds, libraries, baths and small parks. In one littlo town a bowllns preen for tho pleasure of the villag ers who nre fond of the old-time but still popular game of bowls, la supported entirely from the profits of the Bale of liquor In the local public house. From "riritish Substitutes for SaIoon3" In Tho Craftsman. First Antipress Law. tinder the provisions of this law, any tuie who wrote, printed, uttered or published any false, scandalous or malicious matter ngninst the govern ment, the Congress or the President of the United States, or which tend ed to bring them into hatred or con tempt, could be punished by heavy lines and Imprisonment; and tho statute was so worded ns to penalize pot only honest criticism of the executive, hut even the free expres sion of opinion . No legislation more fatal to the popularity of Adams' ad ministration could possiblv have been devised; but although tho sole re sponsibility for Its enactment has frequently been charged to the Presi dent, It cannot justly be laid nt his door. His fussy, sensitive, conscien tious, crotchety, tactless nnturo had doubtless been more stung by the lampoons nnd critical nttaeks of tho pamphlets and newspapers than that u any oiner omeiai; dui me House 01 the press had been so general that scarcely a man In public life had es caped defamation, nnd the net had been rushed through both houses of Congress by a vote which distinctly stamped It with the approval of tho whole administration party. Harp er's Magazine. SO World's Best Timekeeper. This Is said to be the electric clock In the basement of tho Herlln Ohser Tatory, which was Installed by Prof. Foerster In 1863. It was Inclosed In an airtight glass . cylinder, and has frequently run for periods of two or three months with an average daily deviation of only 15,1000 of a second. Yet astronomers are not satisfied even with this, nnd efforts are made continually to secure ideal conditions for a clock by keeping it not only In an airtight case, but In an under ground vault, where neither changes of temperature nor barometlc pres sure shall evor affect It. Philadelphia Record. Home, Sweet Home. The chief reason for leaving homo Is that one may the better enjoy com ing back to it. Home' is the place we have so studiously suited to our own ueeds that it fits us like an outer envelope. In no other house .do we feel so absolutely ourselves. FEET OCT. She Had Curious Habits. 'When a person has to keep the feet out from under cover during the cold est nights in winter because of the heat and prickly sensation, it is time that coffee, which causes the trouble, to left off. There is no end to the nervous con ditions that coffee will produce. It shows in one way in one person and In another way in another. In this case the lady lived in S. Dak. She ays: "I have had to lie awake half the night with my feet and limbs out of the bed on the coldest nights, and felt afraid to sleep for fear of catching told. I had been troubled for years with twitching find jerking of the lower limbs, and for most of the time I have been unable to go to church vi iu ittciurcB uecaune 01 mm awiui feeling that I must keep on the move. "When it was brought to my atten tion that coffee caused so many nerv ous diseases, I concluded to drop cot fee and take Postum Food Coffee to see If my trouble was caused by cof fee drinkin?. "I only drank one cup of coffee for breakfast, but that was enough to do the business for me. When I quit it my troubles disappeared In an almost miraculous way. Now I have no more of the jerking and twitching and can sleep with any amount of bedding over me and sleep all night la sound, peaceful rest. "Postum Food Coffee is absolutely worth its weight In gold to me." There's a Reason." Read the little kealth classic, "The Road to Weil Vlllc," In pkga. TOt5 -Wit's :t:i'9r'A -A AND Crowding the Pigs. Crowding too many pigs together bns much the same elfect as crowding the chickens In too small a space. Professor Haywood, of the Pennsyl vania station, says that half if not more of the outbreaks of disease are due to the overcrowding of young shoals. The younger nnd weaker ones become bo unreslstant that finally they succumb to the germs of cholera or swine plague, which are always present even in healthy pigs. Sheep Profit. Undpr the caption, "Another Cood Sheep Item," the Paris, Mo., Appeal says; "Wat Woodson and Ed. Kills, of Stoutvllle turned a tidy profit on the sheep they bought last winter. They purchased two mixed cars of sheep In February, consisting of ewes and yearlings, thcro being 4 63 head, costing ? 1397. They sold sheep nnd wool to tho amount nt 1391 and have 240 ewes and over 100 lambs yet on hand, and this is their first experience in handling stock since they were boys." A P,:11 Weevil Dispute. A lively dispute has cropped out among the entomologists who ere ex perimenting for the best method of fighting the boll weevil in the cotton raising districts. A formidable array of authorities Ftite that while Paris green will kill some of the weevils It will r.ot produce enough Increase in the crop to pay for the poison, while just ns formidable authority declares that !f Paris green will kil. any wee vils at all it should bo used by the planters. One pair ot weevils, it la stated, multiplies to 134.000,000 weevils iu a year. Weekly Witness. Dairy Fnels. E. K. Slater, Dairy and Food Com missioner of Minnesota, lays down three propositions drawn from his ob servation of the dairy farmers of that State. Cold fact No. 1. The dairy farm ers of this county who do not take and read dairy and farm literature are the most unsuccessful in the busi ness. Cold fact No. 2. The dairy farmer who does not make a study of his business and the performance of his individual cows has always failed. Cold fact No. 3. The reverso of these is true. The dairy farmer who reads dairy and farm literature and lakes an interest In his business will succeed every time. A Good Calf-Rearing Mixture. The following Is one of tho most successful of home-made calf rear ing mixtures when used &on with a little linseed cake: Two parts, by weight, of ontmenl; two parts of cornmeal; one part of pure ground Gaxseed. These meals should be finely ground. It is prepared for use by boiling with water, or by scalding with boiling water, and allowing it to stand for twelve hours. The calf rearer is recommended to begin with a quarter of a pound per head dally for calves a month old, new milk be ing fed the first month. The allow ance may then be Increased to half a pound and more a day, as the calves become older; and tho meal may be supplemented profitably by half a pound to one pound of pure linseed cake per head daily. W. R. Gilbert, in the American Cultivator. Skinning Hogs. In Tates County, New York, says Goodall's Farmer, the farmers have found It more profitable to skin their hogs than to scrape them. ' This change In method was brought about by an enterprising butcher who found i market for hog skin. He began to skin hogs for farmers, taking the skins for pay, as they are worth from fifty cents to one dollar apiece. It Is a paying business, and from the standpoint of the owner of the hog It Is a good thing, too. He is not re quired to make any extensive prep arations at hutching time as before. No scalding platform to build, no wa ter to heat, no extra help to employ. Now the butcher drives Into the yard, kills, skins and cleans tho hogs and hangs them up ready for market. Tho loss In weight Is slight, from five to fifteen pounds, according to the size of the hog, and the butcher will pay one-half cent per pound more for pork skinned to cut up on the block, and for home use it is much better. The Farmer's Private Weed Pntch. A great many farmers while wag ing ceaseless warfare, no quarter given, with weeds In the field, man age to maintain a private weed patch well stocked with all the weeds that the country will grow. It is sure to contain dog fennel, a comparatively harmless weed, tho loud smelling jimson, cockleburs, and a dozen other varieties that are less harmless. Usually the farmer selects his feed yard or his garden or his orchard for his private weed patch, to keep in stock .plenty ot weeds that will give him trouble for years to come. We Biggest that it Is tlnje to drop this private weed patch business and r', i same kind cf warfare THFW against weeds in the orchard nnd the hog lot nnd around buildings ns he does In the fields. If he would sim ply mow these down before they seed a Job for some day when he can do nothing else he will add very much to the looks ot the fnrm and save himself very much trouble and loss in the years to come. A little timely effort even when work Is pressing will put a stop to this weed nursery business. On many farms there are now growing enough weed seeds, especially around hay stacks, to stock a ten-acre field. Mow them off. Plow the ground. If the yard Is Infested with these weeds, mow them down and thus mulch the trees against dry weather. You can not afford to grow theso jWeeds. Wallace's Farmer. How to Kill (lie Slii.3. Trofessor Gillctt, ot the Colorado College, claims that the so-called slugs that skeletonize the leaves of many different plants during the sum mer are all conipaiitlvely easy to de stroy. As the slugs devour the sur face tissue of the leaves In each case, they may be killed by a thorough ap plication of any of the arsenical poi sons, such ns Paris green, Loudon purple or arsenate of lend. Upon low plants it is ns well to mix the dry poisons in. twenty times their own weight of common flour and then dust them upon the plants through a cheesecloth sack held In the hand. In case of the fruits, especially cher ries, where ft is r.ot safe to use the above poisons, white hellebore pow der may be used Instead. If applied as a spray, put three ounces ot the powder In one gallon of water; as a dust it may be used without dilution In a cheescloth sack nnd a light appli cation made. The best time to apply the hellebore Is towards evening. The slugs can bo removed from cherry, pear and plum trees by thor oughly sifting fine rond dust or fresh ly slaked lime over the folligo In (he middle of a warm day, when the slugs are upon the upper side of the leaves. Begin In time, he thorough, and do not let the slugs destroy your trees or roses. The Hnms nnd Pen. There is every reason why we should keep our stables, yards and pens nice nnd clean so they will be in sanitary conditions, more espe cially when the weather Is warm, for In warm weather there are more bad effects from filthy stnbles and yards than when the weather Is cold. Rut I do not advocate the plan of letting the stnbles and pens go uncleaned for a week or more at a time as some farmers do, then haul direct to the field, but prefer to clean thorn all each day, both for the comfort and health of the stock, as well as the satisfac tion and pleasure ot having the sta bles look respectable. We should also use plenty of bedding for It sure ly pays to keep our stables well bedded, both for the welfare of our farms, by making more and better manure, for with plenty of bedding it will ahsord the liquid and will get to the field which otherwise would be wasted. If we run short there Is nothing that will pay better than to bry it. There Is always some neighbor far mer that has more straw than stock, and will sell at reasonable price to get it out of the way. By all means keep the Btock well bedded. The sleeping pens of our hogs should he kept clean, and the old lit ter should be removed and hauled to the field and fresh bedding put in. Never allow them to sleep in a wet, filthy bed for that is a grett loss as they would get in nn unhealthy con dition, mangy and lousy. Wheat straw Is the best bedding for hogs, as oat straw seems to be poison, es pecially to pigs. It is also very beneficial for the health ot horses, cattle and hogs to give stalls and pens a coat ot white wash, also the hen house when need ed, and last, but not least, keep the barn yard cleaned up. G. B., in the Indiana Farmer. What is a "Concerto?" A concerto is a symphony wherein one instrument is given persistent prominence; in other words, an ex tended instrumental solo with orches tral accompaniment, often taking three-quarters of an hour to perform. It is tho deification of a single in strument the highest achievement its player can attain. A concerto is to the pianist, violinist, or 'cellist what grand opera is to the singer. It is a tone-drama in three acts ener getic, tender, then climatic. There are brief intermissions between these three "movements," and during these pauses the player receives applause Ilka a "star" bowing and smiling until again the baton raises, the or chestra starts in, and the perform ance goes on. May Circle. The Lady or tho Tiger? It is always embarrassing to a girl when she goes into a fashionable Bhoe store to buy a new pair ot boots and cannot remember for the mo ment which stocking it Is that hai the hole In it. Somervllle Journal. T DUN'S WEEKLY SUMMARY Reports from Most Sections Show That Commercial Activity Is Fully Maintained. In most sections ot tho country com mercial nctlvlly Is fully maintained. Necviliatlons for fall and winter trade Indicate no hu-s of confidence, but nt a few points the weather has not favored the crops, which onuses con servatism pending more definite .Infor mation. Several New England mills lark adequate water nower because nf nrchinced drouth. Tho money mar ket retards numerous undertakings. Collections nre also sto-sei in some cases, because of the flnnnclnl situa tion, but the larga majority of reports nre fnvnrablo. New business constantly wppenrs In the market for rtr el products. Speci fications are large on old contracts, "rvernl Important orders were placed thin week, ncgregn'liig n considerable tonnage. Other plans ore under ne entlallmi. Wet-It on tho Panning cnnnl calls for heavy shipments of rails, nnd the rail roads furnish many new orders. Moi.t "f ihln business is for better nimlltlrs than were formerly taken, making the nveiage price of new business higher than the old standard (imitation of S2S. "Imports of billets for use In making finished steel for export testify to the difficulty of securing domestic material. They an nude possible by Jhe drqwbncjt. ' nnp niilmnlLn In the Jobbing dry goods market has made still stronger tho position of the textile Industries. Manufacturers of cm.on Bonds easily maintain prices nt tho high level re cently established. Scarcity of stocks n:;s Intensified bv the holiday of a wek taken by tho employes of New 'Ireland mills. Deliveries nre still more unsntisfiic lory. Buyers nre less disposed to de lay tho placing of orders, although froqiif nlly declaring that prices should reced;1. Although occasional Inquiries from (blna are noted, there Is no Im provement In (lie export situation. Quiet conditions continue in the ninrkets for woolens especially men's wear. .Modernle business In dress goods Is not of a character to deter mine the next season's trend. Tho mills have only lair orders on hand. Now England footwear shops are shlppliiK at about the same rate as In recent years. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Wheat Nn. a red t (II Hve No.!' 71 71 Corri Nn 2 follow, car 7-1 ;,i Nn. 8 yellow, abolled Ill Of, Mlied ear hi lii Oats No. S white M 6; Nn. a white M M Flnur Winter intent '61 4 71 Fanrj stralnlM winters 4 m 4 n liny Nn. 1 Timothy 1r' .r 10 V) (Mover Nn. 1 1 00 1(1 m Feed Nn. 1 white mid. ton 4 00 2", 6) Hrnwn mldillliiun l-fl! i:)5 Bran, hulk ? VII .10 Birnw Wheat "'u mm (-nt llai 11 5J Dairy Products. Butter Kluln creamery I '1 S7 llhlo creamery Si 21 Fancy rnuntry roll li Ml Cheeae Ohio, new It n New York, new It 1J Poultry, Etc. Bene per lh 8 1" IS t'hlckPiia drcBsed 1M an EgKs-Pa. and Ohio, trenh bu !il Fruits and Vegetables. Polatnee Fancy white per bu.... "1 M Cabbage per ton In Wl IB o( Onions per barrel 1 &J BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent ( ID 4 91 Wheat Nn. 8 red -I 71 Orn Mlieil 4 47 F.irite i i !!) Butter Ohio creamery it) t! PHILADELPHIA. Flnnr Winter Patent $ 4 '!) 4 7i Wheat No. 8 red 7 7-1 Cnrn No. 2 mixed 47 4.1 (lat Nn. 8 while 44 4" Hotter Creamery 8'l Eggs Pennsylvania arete IU NEW YORK. Plnur-Patent..; I 4 80 4 73 Wheal No. 8 red Cnrn No. 8 HJ M Ont Nn. 8 white 61 41 Mutter -Creamery 41 tj State and Pennsylvania.... " '' LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Euro, 1.4NMO Mil lb4 Its) 0 1'iime, l,mn to l,4;lllt4 BOO 114:) Hood, l.aio to 1.4 m in 6 7.1 5 do Tidy. 4,US0 tn 1.1MI lbs ft 3 5 Common, "00 to BIO I In 4 6. 4 00 I "son 8 4 I llulle 8 0) 4 7. t'ow 1 !,) 3 it lletfnM, 7im tn 1.101. S 6) 4H Fienh Lows and Springers lb UJ SJ 11 Hogs. Prime heavy $ 7 01 7 In I'rlino medium weight ! 7, Heet heavy Yorker 7 Si 7 H) Oood light Yorkers 7!i 7 8i ''K"-; 7 15 7 .'o KoUKliS 6,11 8 1, Stags 8 ) 4 00 , Sheep. Prime wethers, clipped $181 8 6) Onn.1 mite I 4 il 8 41 fair mixed owes nn I wethers 4 81 8 IU Culls and common got hii t'"l bit 7il Calves. Veal calves 8 0) 8 00 Ueavjr and nun calve ill) 4 jl In Franco the bill of a physician or druggist cannot bo collected if more than two years old. A Circus Victim'o Memorial. Each year the first circus that goes In the vicinity of Gorham, Me., sends a delegation to hold a memorial ser vice at tho grave of Clown Sylvester Reynolds. Who was killed by beins thrown from a horse while riding bareback, September, 1S26, and the event is published in "The Americas Clipper," cf New York, the showman's official paper. This year the service was performed by the Silver Plat Show, which exhibited in Norway. Kennebec Jonraal. MOTHERHOOD The first requisite of a good mother is pood health, and tho ex-, perlence of maternity should not bo approached without careful physicul preparation, as a woman who is in good physical condition transmits to her children the blebsings of a guod constitution. Preparation for hcnlthv mater nity is accomplished by Lydia K. l'liikham'a Vegetable Compound, which is made from native runts and herbs, more successfully than by any other medicine because It gives tone nnd strength to the entire feininiuo organism, curing displacements, ul ceration and inllamination. and the result is less suffering and more than thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's has been the standby of American mothers in preparing tor chlUltiirtli. NotewhatMrs.JninesChoster.offn W. 3.'.th St.. New York Rays in this letter: l)ear Mrs. I'lnkhnm:-"! wisli every, expectant mother knew about Lvdla E. I'lukham's Vegetable Compound. A neighbor who had learned of" its great value at this trying period of a woman's life urged me to try it and I did so, and I cannot say enough In regard to the good it did me. I recovered quickly and am in tho best of health now." Lydia E. I'lnkhnm s Vegetable Compound is certainly a successful remedy for the peculiar weaknesses and ailments of women. It has cured almost every form of Female Complaints. Drncirlnp; Sensa tions, Weak itaek. Fulling and Displacements, Inflnmmntion. Ulcera tions and Organic Diseases of Women nnd is invaluable In preparing for Childbirth and during the Change of Life. Mrs. Pinkhatn's Standing Invitation to Women Women suffering from any form of female weakness are Invited to write Mrs. 1'inltham, at Lynn, Mass. $3;50 J?HOF.?Jth world W -rut- C1MII V AT ALL PRICES. iV'-'ti.uca i Even NitiNjc.i.i v TUP FAMILY. AT ( To snyono who cn provn w. t. lUoMnins docn nut tnnka & son ' tfttjrWSIirGB (than any alhcr manutzcturcr. THE 1IKARON V. Ij. KnuRlon Klines nre worn !y more people In ull wulliHol llfo'lliun tmy othir make, In Imjcihi-o of their eienllent tyle, eny-iltiliiR, and mpurinr wimii-Iiir n,naliti:i. The ncleftlnn of tho lentliera nnd other iiiatrtriiilh tor ew-h part nf thoHltne, and every detull of the making I-" looked liflor hy the Hmstenmpleteorji:in!j!fitloti ot Hiiperintemlentit.fMremfiifltid fkilleil KhnimiaUor, who n-eeivo the highest v. v. p.iid in the time liulitKtry, ami wkoso work inniinlili' mount lu rxeollod, Jl leonlil ts'iko you Into my iiirjjn f:ietorlea (it Mro'klon.M!iM., nd dhow you how rnrefully W. I,. InhiuIiu nlioeririi made, you would llH-ii iiiidenitnnil why tliev hold their rhie, lit hotter, 1 .. ,.f nr,.,.'nr ...,lt. ,l,ft n,,v it, hot- tnnkn. CHI EtfBBBnd$8 Gold Bond Shova cannot bo equalled at anyprfee. CAUTION! J he itonuino luue W. I.. lloiiiihiK 11:11110 and price fUmd on bottom. Inke No Hubetlttile. Ak your denier for W. I.. InhibIwi nhoen. If ho .nniiot nui.ply you, ud dlreet to factory. Sliues sent ovorywhoro by mall. Catalog free. W.L.Oouglu, Brockton, Man. Weeds Grow Too Fast. Quick-growing vegetation In a groat trouble to railway coinpanloa In South Australia. Some $SO,000 a year is paid for removing weeds from the roadway. FITS, Rt.Vitus'DanceiNnrvonflDisfinseo per manentlycured by Dr. Kline's Oreut Nervs Restorer. SJ trial bottle und treatise freo. Dr. II. R. Kliue. LdH31 Ari-h Ht Puila., Pu, The proposed extension of the Yokohama pas works, at n cost of $S1 3,1)00 gold, Is stated in a Japan ese newppnper extract. , Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Ryrup for Children tnethinp.softenstlicgumfl, reduces! 11 flanitnn tion, ullays paia,cures wind colic, jca buttle Origin of Great 8alt Lake. Scientibts nre Interested in tha huee snlt beds recently discovered by the engineers who are building tho Western Pacific Railroad from Salt Lake City to San Francbico. Eight mllea wido nnd 40 miles long, this enormous saline -deposit present much the same appearance as a polar Ice floe. So closely nre the salt crystals packed together that Iho ties for the railroad nre laid on tho surface nnd the 130,000-pound engines pass over them without making any Impression on it. In placing the telegraph poles along the lino of the road It was found necessary to blast out the salt with dynamite, Its rock-like hardness making It Impossible to dig down the eight feet required to give secure support to the poles. Eight feet 3 the deepest boro which has been made hito the deposit, nnd its true depth remains unknown as yet. Engineers who have studied the to pography of this part of the country are Inclined to the belief that a large body of water underlies this enorm ous salt bed, and that herein lies the explanation for well-known saline quality oT Great Salt lake. The salt bndy Is situated 27 feet higher than the luko nt the Mormon capital, and the slope of the land near the deposit Is such that If water existed there It would flow In tlje direction of the lake. With this as a basis for their de ductions, the engineers who laid out the road have evolved tho Interesting theory that some large subterranean body of water Is gradually dissolving the great salt bed from underneath and carrying It away In solution through underground channels which lead to the Great Salt Lake. Chi cago Journal. College Honors a Woman. The degree of doctor of literature was conferred upon Mrs. M. E. Henry-Huflln, the author of "John Gildart" and "The North Star," at the 98th annual commencement of St. Joseph's College, Emmltsburg, Aid. DOES VOIT. BACK ACHE? Profit by the Experience of One Vhr Has Found Relief. James R. Keeler, retired farmer, of Fenner St., Cazenovia, N. Y., says: "About fifteen years ago I suffered with my back and kidneys. I doctored and used many rem edies without get ting relief. Beginning with Doan'g Kidney l. TIM 1 - V tnnnJ .aIIaI from the first box, kr1? stored me to good, sound condition. My wife and many of my friends have used Doan's Kid ney Pills with good results and I can earnestly recommend them." Sold by all dealers. SO cents a box. FosUr-Milbura Co Buffalo. N. T. ill -SSw. I If jjf MRS, JAMES CHESTER children healthy at birth, For more Vegetable Compound ller advice is tree. U er. M No More Industrial Fairs. With the mismanagement of the Jamestown Exposition tho style ot "fair" with which we have been cele brating more or less historical events should como to an end. The time has arrived when something different should be devised. The country is tired of having the government pay millions to ennblo private corpora thins to give "expositions," the chief features of which are exhibits of canned goods and near foods. Happily, there should be no occa sion for another "fair" until 1920, when Iioston may feel called upon to celebrate tho Inndlng of tho Pilgrims, an event of sufficient dignity to call for something new In the way of commemoration. Chicago Trlbuno. CHILDREN TORTURED. Girl Had Itiinning Sores From Erze inn Itoy-Torttired by Poison Oak Both Cured by Cuticura. "Lnt year, nftcr having my little piirl treated by s very prominent physician for nn obstinate case of eer.cmn, I rcnorted in the Cuticura Remedies, and wna so well pleased with the almost instantaneous re lief afforded thnt we disearded the physi cian's prescription nnd relied entirely o the Cuticura Soap. Cuticura Ointment nnJ Cuticura Pills. When we commenced with the Cuticura Remedies her feet and. limbs were covered with running snres. Inpiboht six weeks we had her completely well, nnd there has keen no recurrent of th trouble. "In July of this year1 a little boy in our family poisoned his hnnds and arms wilt poison oak, and in twenty-four hours hit hands nnd arms were a mass of lort-.irirv, snres. We used only the Cuticura Rem dies, and in about three weeks his handt and arms healed up. Sirs. Lizzie Vincet' Thomas, iairmount, Walden's Ridge, Tenn., Oct. 13, 1905." The Paris Temps reports that rails aro now laid for f2 miles on the rail way to the Interior on the ivory coast of Africa. Last year's record Every out of eltv graduate located In a satlhfaetory posi tion. We ran place you. Write for THE PROOF." The fl7ih year Hand Bnnk nf the fore most Business Training School mailed upoa request. I'itlsbnrg, Pa. for It. IV will send her absolutely free a large trial box of Paxtlne with bonk of Instruc tions and (tenulne testimonials. Send your name and address on a postal curd. Jisiu uuiUQ OUU BUUIC PAXTI e 1 e a nses es r Pi and heal m uco mem fectlons, such as nasal catarrh, pelvic nine Ills ; sore eyes, sore throat and I mouth, by direct local treatment. Its cur ative ower over these troubles Is extra- ordinary ana gives Immediate relief. Thousands of women are using and rec- oinmcnoi'JK it every day. Co cents at 1rucltsorby mall. Renu mber linwever IT :tSTS YOU NOTHIjro TO TltV IT. iliK it. 7AXTOM CO., iioston, Jkliiea. EVERY MARRIED WOMAN wi! md "ciiiidblna aa' mi painlraa. A anort. con-. tit.lrf.lij, coLlnlr, lh bell thoushtorfnrsirrwrilm oa this ubirct wtih arldltloo.l inform tfcoel f leaned from a larav oractirvi by the author. Practicins it Irach jno woman much iuflerin. Pn bv mail U no. w. H Baiter M.D..riabaii Bld.. SuffaloJI V4 P. 11 V. 8, 1907. If rtTlleted STlioiDpson'sEyeWatei vrltk mm Mituitni