I B B. put. (free Brr' 4- TI.J Goldeu has been will be SOUPS Tomato Chicken Vegetable and ten other kinds. Delight ful natural flavor and made from the very best materials, i with the care of experienced chefs,lnthe great White Enam eled Kitchens. Llbby's Soups are ready for immediate us by adding an equal portion of hot water Ask your grocer for Libby's Soaps Ubby, McNeill & Libby Chicago While a Baltimore society girl was making a speech on woman suffrage her hair caught fire. Hot-headed peo ple, those suffragists. Washington Times. i Mrs.Winslow's Soothing Symip forChildren M teething, softens thegnnifl.reiliiceHinflamrna t 8 tionaJillJ',Pamcure wmdcolic,2Scs, bottle. 24 Best Sleeping Hours. The first sleep Is said to-be the Roundest after the first hour the in j. tensity of sleep slowly diminishes W hence the value of 4 winks after din- ner In quickly recuperating shattered . powers. Temperature ana vitatuy are lowest at about 2 a. m., so that two hours' sleep before midnight are worth four thereafter. Nature has no rule as to the amount of sleep It requires, except that men can get along with less than women. Women are the - more sensitive creatures of the two, on1 a nmmon'a i no tiAstii AirA 41mA. T t ' mlmif. (tin. A mnn rti,M 8 ' sleep should be Just so long that when r we wake in the morning a stretch and a yawn only are necessary to land us a daytime of bounding vigor. As D1H early rising, it is comforting to come , irn from an eminent physician that " M ais habit has gone far to wreck the constitution of many a growing youth. O' I Washington Herald. More than three million pairs of blankets are woven in the United Kingdom annually. MOTHERS ' WHO HAVE DAUGHTERS Find Help in Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound Hudson, Ohio. "If mothers realized the good your remedies would do deli cate girls I believe there would be fewer weak and ail- inr? women. Irreg ular ana painiui periods and such troubles would be relieved at once in many cases. lAOia E. Pinkham's Vege table uompouna is fine for ailing girls and run-down wo men. Their delicate organs need a tonio and the Compound gives new ambition tnd lifo Irom the first dose. "Mrs. George Steicklee, Hudson, Ohio, R. 2io. 6, Box 82. Hundreds of such letters from mothers expressing their gratitude for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound has accomplished for them have been received by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company, Lynn, Mass. Young Girls, Heed This. ' Girls who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, backache, head ache, dragging-down sensations, faint ing Bpells or indigestion, should take Immediate action io ward off the seri ous consequences and be restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. Thousands have been restored to health by its use. 3. R. Wilson i- H West Revrr I v ii you j Ntfo'$'y ( fctt ts ' If you would like special advice your case write a connacn itter to Mrs. Pink bp tn, at Mass. Her advico la Iree. and always livliriul.. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. Many a headstrong man Is weak minded. No, Cordelia, rain checks never check the rain. Flytlme is responsible for a good many elopements. And much is done in the name of charity also many. He is a cheap man who lets his ac tions give him away. Woman is a thing of beauty and an expensive Joy forever. Doesn't a chicken fight come under the head of fowl play. A man always tries to conceal his view under his virtues. The smaller the man the bigger the horn he tries to blow. The proper place for low-cut gowns is on the bargain counter. He's a poor house painter, who is unable to put on a good front. Some people try to demonstrate their intlllgence by finding fault. Make your own footprints instead of following in the other fellow's. A fool and his money are. seldom parted by the same method twice. Money Is about the only thing that can get tight without taking a drink. Men love goodness, but marry beau tyand the divorce mill continues to grind overtime. Women like to do things out of the ordinary, but they never hold their tongues for that reason. Even the girl who gets angry be cause a young man tries to kiss her can't help but admire his excellent taste. Pessimists tell us the world iBn't growing better even though the "coon song" craze has bumped the bumps. From "Pointed Paragraphs" in the Chicago News. WOMEN OF BURMA. Gentler Sex In That Land Enjoys General Freedom. For woman Burma is a veritable heaven on earth. No country else where furnishes her more freedom, more opportunity. Even occidental countries cannot vlo with Burma in this respect. Mrs. Hurman outshines everybody and everything. Moreover, she is ubiquitous. You find her here, there and everywhere. You stop at the jewelry store containing millions of dollars' worth of pearls and ru bies and precious stones, and the per son in charge of the establishment is a woman. The salespeople are also women. You go to a fruit Btall and it is a woman who owns and conducts it, and sells you a banana or a man go. ' At railroad stations a Burmese wo man sells you the tickets, and a fair daughter of the land is ready to take your dictation and do your typewrit ing if you are looking for an amenu ensis. The Burmese woman is not only an efficient business woman, but a good mother. Her duties as mother and merchant do not interfere with each other in the slightest degree. Added to her superior intelligence, the Burmese woman has good looks. She has eyes of a deep, liquid black, or brown bordering on black. The forehead is usually high and well filled out, and there is a purity of ex pression about the face. Her head Is oval and shapely, this effect being heightened by the manner In which she dresses her hair in a big knot on top of her head. Her dress is white, with a tight-fitting jacket, with large sleeves; the lower part of the body is covered by a single bright silk' petticoat, which also is tight-fitting and displays the figure like a mod ern sheath skirt. The woman of Bur ma is cautious about wearing jewelry. If she wears any at all it must be of gold. She powders her face un sparingly and adorns her hair with a few flowers, usually artificial ones. Southern Workman. Chivalry In Georgia. A placard In an Atlanta office build ing's elevator says that men passen gers (in the elevator) need not pull off their hats because women are present "Men of Atlanta," shouts the Georgian, in holy terror, "shall a foolish placard sound the death knell of a custom which has been for threa full centuries one of the distinguish, ing traits of' the gentle South?" We fear that undue excitement has got the Georgian a little mixed a3 to facts. We do not believe that it hag been the custom in the South "for three full centuries" for men to pull off their hats in elevators when wom en are present. "Three full centuries'' would take us back to the year 1610, and we are satisfied that at that time no man, in the South or elsewhere, ever took off his hat in an elevator. We'll go further and risk the as sertion that George Washington him self never took off his hat in an ele vator, because there were women pas sengers, and he was certainly a typi cal Southern gentleman.. We might venture to risk deduct ing two full centuries from the Geor gian's figures and assert that even at that time it was not the custom of Southern gentlemen to uncover their heads in elevators, for the very sim ple and sufficient reason that there were no elevators. "Atlanta sets the pace for the South," Bays the Geor gian. If that were true, one might well say, "God help the South!" Atlanta is the least Southern city in the South. It has less of Southern manners and customs and courtesy than any of its neighbors. No South ern city takes its manners from At lanta. Each, of them has Just as good manners of its own. Savannah News. OIL DISTRIBUTION AN EXACT SCIENCE fully a Million Dellarsa Week In Foreign Gold Corns to This Country to Pay Fop Standard's Produet That la Paddled to tho Doors of Hut and Pataoe, Accord Ing tor tho Rockefeller Plan of International Barter. This Rockefeller Foundation, to make a story of it. Is In reality Just this it is the dream of a poor boy come true. It is the happy ending of an American novel of real life. It is the climax of one of the most dra matic and Impressive careers that this country, or any other, has ever known. The dream or the novel or dra ma, whichever you like began more than half a century ago. It began In a shabby little bonrdlng house In Cleveland, In the brain of a Isd of eighteen who was clerking for a shipping and real estate company. There were at that time about a million other American boys of the same age, and not many of them had received fewer privileges than this one. He had been educated partly In the public schools, but mainly at home, by his mother and father. His pay, at this time, was sixty cents a day. His hours of labor were from breakfast until bedtime. For his room and meals he was paying $1 a week, ro that his net Income the basis of his dream of fortune and phi lanthropy, was not more than $135 a year. Even at this time, and with this Inceme. he built a tiny little founda tion of his own. Out of the sixty cents a day, he set aside a few pen nies for the church, or for some hun gry family, or to drop Into some hat that was passed around In the office. The notebook In which tlnse little philanthropic entries were made Is still In existence. It Is known by the name of "Ledger A" In the Rock efeller family. It Is a completely worn out little notebook, with bro ken cover and tattered pages of faded writing, but It Is one of the most precious treasures in the Rocke feller vaults. It has more than a personal Interest now. It has sud denly become historic, .because It re cords the origin of "the moat com prehensive scheme of benevolence In the whole history of humanity." The managerial Instinct was so strong In this boy that he was not satisfied with merelypnylng his share Into the contribution boxes. By the time he was nineteen he had ripened Into an organizer of benevolence. He was a member of a mission church, which was fast breaking down under the weight of a $2000 mortgage. This sixty - cent - a - day youth undertook to collect the money, and he did It. "That was a proud day," he said in later years, "when the last dollar was collected." Little as he knew It, the boy was then at work upon the fulfilment of hiB dream to become perhaps the greatest getter, and the greatest giv er, of his generation. Later, when he became a prosper ous man of business and large af fairs, he still retained the habit of organizing his giving as well as his getting. He even went so far as to organize his family Into a sort of foundation. At the breakfast table he would distribute the various ap peals for help among his children, requesting them to Investigate each case and make a report to him on the following day. In this way his children, and especially his son and namesake, who is destined to distrib ute the revenue of the Rockefeller fortune, received a Spartan training In "the difficult art of giving." The whole bent of the Rockefeller mind seems to have been inclined from the first toward the working out of this problem of distribution. The business of the Standard Oil Company Itself Is much mora a mat ter of distribution than of production. It was unquestionably the first com pany that undertook to sell its prod uct directly to the users on a world wide scale. For the most part. It de livers its oil, not to wholesalers and middlemen, but to the family that burns it, whether it be In the United States or in the uttermost parts of the earth. It has, for instance, no fewer than 3000 tank wagons travel ing from door to door In the twenty countries of Europe, selling pints and quarts of liquid light to whosoever demands it. Fully $1,000,000 a week, in foreign gold or Its equiva lent, comes to this country to pay for the oil that Is peddled to the doors of hut and palace, according to the Rockefeller plan of international dis tribution. Consequently, both by natural ap Htude and business experience, Mr. Ilockefeller was well prepared to I rork out the problem of distributing the surplus money of the rich in a systematic and efficient manner. His lew foundation is no afterthought. D; is no sudden change of mind or change of heart. It Is the natural re sult of fifty years of experience and experiment. What he began to do as a poor boy In a Cleveland boarding hfiuse, he Is now about to complete oi an international scale that is the explanation of the new plan that has excited so much comment and so much curiosity. A Sure Shot at Livers. " hear, doctor, ' that my friend Brown, whom you have been treating so long for liver trouble, has died of stomach trouble," said one of the phy sician's patients. "Don't you believe all you hear," to pile the doctor. "When I treat a man for liver trouble, he dies of liver trouble." Everybody's Magazine. The Revolutionary War. ' As time goes on it becomes, more and more apparent that the American Revolution was a great mistake both from a legal and an ethical standpoint. We belonged to England jUBt as fairly and squarely as anything just as fair ly as we now belong to the trusts, or as fairly as the Philippines belong to us. England was in the business of ownlnj; us and making us pay for the privilege. We had no right to inter fere. Many a widow and orphan had en interest in us. It may not be too late to make restitution. Puck. MEESTER MARKA TWAIN. Dey ay eet was hees Job for Joke An poka fun at seempla folk. 1 don'ta onclrnatnn', 1 nevva read w'at'a een hees book; I only see da way he look 1 only know ua man. An' evra time lie passa by He show to me so kinda eye Eees beautiful to see; For dough I'm dnmba Dntjo man, Bo strange, so queer een Ueesa Ian', He nevva laugh at me. And dey dnt any he only Joke An' nuka fun weeth seempla (oik Eees mebhe so dey He. Eos mebbe so dey no could see How monclui swecta charity Eos smlln from hees eye. An' now dat he ees gon' an' change For 'nudder lund dat eesa strange To heem as eet can be, I can knylleve dey dere are kind To heem, poor strnnKer. as I And Dat here ho wu to me. T. A. Daly, in The Catholic Standard and Times. SHEARS NONSENSE "Do you eat onions?" '"Only in self-defence. My wife is very fond of them." Detroit Free Press. "Scriblt has started to writing poet ry." "He ought to take something for it" "He would, but nothing's offered." Birmingham Age-Herald. "Please take a chance? We're get ting up a raffle for a poor old lady " "Excuse me. Have you any chances on Borne rich, young ones?' Cleveland Leader. "Ma, what is self-abnegation?" "It Is when you see something you don't need that is marked down, and you don't buy it, my dear." Chicago Record-Herald. "The Grovers have lost their cook" "What was the matter?"1- "Grover list ed himself as the bead of the family when the census man was there." Chicago Record-Herald. "I shall never marry!" said the girl in blue with decision. "Oh, my dear," refilled the girl in gray, "you are really riot so bad look ing as all that!" Home Notes. "YTou say she is no longer editor of the Women's Corner?" "No. She wrote so many articles on how to make over last year's hats that her readers began to suspect she was a man." Puck. "Poetry," said the literary girl, "is the art of expressing intense feeling in figurative speech." "In that case," replied Miss Cayenne, "the man who writes baseball news is sure a poet." Washington Star. "Did they do anything to make the family and neighborhood safe after your daughter had the diphtheria?" "Oh, law, yes'm. The doctors came and we had the house variegated," Baltimore American, The Widow Oh, sir! My poor hus band has died, and I've chosen you to omciate at his funeral." The Preach er But, madam, I never knew your husband. The Widow That's why I chose you. Cleveland Leader. Shopman Whose badge Is that you're wearing, missy? Missy It's Hosklns's. He's up for the election for the District Council. -Shopman But it's the wrong man. Missy Yes, 1 know; but it's father. Punch. First Horseman (bringing up the rear of a large field) I thought you were going to make the pace for us? Second Horseman No fear, old chap! If one of that crowd in front comes down, I'd rather be on top than at the bottom, thank you. Punch. "Lady," said Meandering Mike, "you're thlnkin right now dat if I'll chop some wood or cut de grass you'll give me some lunch.". "Correct! you can go right to work." "Oh, I ain't choppln' or cuttin'. I'm a mind read er an was practisin" a little." Wash ington Star. "What I want," said the man who was looking for a home, "is a place with a fine view." "Well," replied the real estate agent, "I've got what you want But it'll cost you several thousand dollars extra." "You're sure the view is all right " "Couldn't be better. By clinmhing on the ropf you can see the baseball games." Washington Star. Their Joint Knowledge Freshley In the class this morning the professor of English literature said something about Beaumont and Fletcher. I know who Beaumont is, of course; he's tha new outfielder for the Cubs. But who the Saf Hill is Fletcher? The Other Why, you bonehead, he's the guy that says you must chew your victuals 136 times before you swallow 'em. Chicago Tribune. Morse Worth Only $1,000. Justice Blanchard, of the Supreme Court, in New York City, has - r,p pointed Frank Hendrick as receiver of all the property of Charles W. Morse, who is serving a firteen-year sentence in the federal prison at At lanta. According to the application to the -court, the property of Morse, whose fortune was once estimated at $22,000,000, now amounts Ho $1,000, and the receiver's bond was fixed at the latter amount The application for the recjlvershlp W. Houck, a creditor, to collect a Judgment for $28,525 obtained against Morse in the Supreme Court In De cember, 1908. A sheriff's execution against Morse's property on Houck's judgment was returned unsatisfed last December. The house at No. 835 Fifth avenue; formerly owned by Morse, was dirh- ' aged by fire recently to the extent oi ' $5,000. Two weeks ago it passed Into the, hands of John Huber, at No. 2 I West 70th street. It was in cfcarge cf , a caretaker. A Poor Weak Woman As she li termed, will endure bravely snd patiently agonies which a strong man would give way under; The fact is women are more patient than they ought to be under such trouble. Every woman ought to know that she may obtain the most experienced medical advice free of chart and In absolute confidence and privacy by writing to the World's Dispensary Medical Association, R. V. Piercer M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce has been chief consulting physician oi the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y., for many yean and hat had a wider practical experience in the treatment of women's diseases than any other physician in this country, ' Hit medicines are world-famous ior their astonishing efficacy. The most perfeot remedy ever devised for weak and deli cate women it Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG. SICK WOMEN WELL. The many and varied tymptomt of woman 'a peculiar ailmentt ere fully set forth in Plain English In the People's Medical Adviser (1008 pages), a newly revised and up-to-date Edition oi which, cloth-bound, will be mailed free on receipt oi 31 one-cent ttampt to pay cost of mailing tnly. Address as above. ; Cool Kitchen Perfect Cooking Oil. Cook-stove has a Cabinet Top with a shelf for keeping plates and food hot , There are drop shelves for coffee pot or saucepans, and nickeled towe' racks. It has long turquoise-blue enamel chimneys. The nickel finish, with the bright blue of the chimneys, makes the stove ornamental and attractive. Made with 1, 2 and 3 burners ; the and 3-burner stoves can be had with or without Cabinet. CAUTIONARY NOTE : Be sore yon gel this stove ste thit Hie nsme-plale rr ids " NEW PERFECTION," Every dealer everywhere ; if not at yours, write for Descriptive Circular to the nearest agency of the The Atlantic Refining Company Standing Room Only. A New York woman had her father committed to an insane asylum he cause he babbled of baseball. If this precedent is to he considered as estab lished every State Bhould begin to enlarge Its asylums right away. Den ver Republican. Ask For Allen's Foot-Ease. "I tried Allen's Foot-Ense. the Antiseptic Powder, and have just bought another sup- Ely. It has cured my corns, and the hot, uming and itching sensation in my feet which was almost unbearable. I would not be without it now. W. J. Walker, Cam den, K. J." Sold by all Jlruggists, 25c. How Blase We Are Nowl Passing through the tall of a comet is nothing when you get used to It. Chicago Tribune. For Red, Itching Eyelids, Cysts, Styes, Falling Eyelashes and All Eyes That Need Care, Try Murine Eye Salve. Aseptic Tulws, Trial SiieL25c. Ask Your Druggist or Write Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. Great 'Britain ranks second In the total number of patents Issued. 1ETALLIC HEELS AND COUNTERS Made of Stool For Miners, Quarry men, Farmers and All Men Who Do Rou jh Work Save money. Outwear shoes. Lighter than leather. Easily attached. Support the ankle. Any cobbler can put tnem on. Your shoe deafer has shoes already fitted with them. Send for booklet that tells all about them. UNITED SHOE MACHINERY CO. BOSTON, MASS. DAISY FLY KILLER eSStE S sum. Aran, cimn, ornqmeuUil, con venient, cheap. LmU all . Mad or metnl, Owniiet nplll or tip orar. will Dot mil or Injtiro any tta.njr. Qtiaran tfffl pfTeotlT. Of atidln or aanft J prepuia for Mo. UAHULA tMllfcsU, 10 Dtkmil) Art. QftMllyB, ft. T. , A iiwihm' iimixiKiilon, nmkitiK 010 dull). bun i pie fire. Km-lt two-rent tarnii, rilKUeLAIN CO., HarrUburK, fa. PATENTS Wntnnn K.Cotrmnn.AVafh. LiKUtii. HX', JkiukMfree. 11 itchy em reference, iiest rwulta, nPflDQV NEW DISCOVERT ! la f I W ti.M ,a!rk roller ad flare rani MJtt. Hesli or ImIImobIiIs and Dava treclmal Vm. Dr. U. U. .KkM.V iu.la, Mm . aUula. tia, 1 I The housewife with' years of experience the woman who knows how to cook finds, after practi cal tests and hard trials, the New Perfection Oil Cook-Stove is her idea of . what a good cook-stove really ought to be. She finds it requires less attention, costs less, to op erate, and cooks ail food ' better than any other stove she has ever tried. She finds the New Per fection oven bakes and roasts perfectly. The A FLAYOK that Is nmd ttm mime as lemon or vanilla. Tty dissaving grairalatM) eager in WBtersnd adding Uapleinetadelirioasnyrap la tnade and a syrup better than maple. Maplehia Is sold by grocers. Send io etauip for sample and recipe book. Crescent Mfg. Co.. Seattle. If you 'but! I L t 1l Knew,wijat narsn cathartics do, you'd always use Cascarets.' Candy tablets, vegetable and mild. Yet just as effective as salts and calomel. Take one when you need it. Stop the trouble promptly. Never wait till night as Vest-pocket boa, 10 eents at drac-storee. Bach taMat of tba amain. Is marked ccc. " New Encland Vacation Resorts" Prenfmts the most complete Information on Wlior. to Go, Where to Star, Wbat It will Cost, and What to See la VACATION LAND Including SEA8HORE, LAKE A MOUNTAIN RESORT3. Ideal Hotels, hundreds of Seaside homes and Country farm houe retreats offering excellent aooonunodatloDS to suit every taste and puroe. iT-a FREE Foa Thi Assin. Other Publication, descriptive of and illustrating each section will be lnlndt for (be oost of mailing. LET US KNOW HOUR WANTS TO-OW. Address RURAL DEPT., NORTH STATION, BOSTON. O. SI. BURT, I f i. P. N. U. 24, 1910. mm m na Send postal for IF K Vs tr Free Package I 1 1 Bn If of Pastine. Belter and more economical than liquid antiseptics FOR ALL TOILET USES. Gives ona a sweet breath ; dean, white, germ-free teeth antiseptically clean mouth and throat purifies the breath after smoking dispels all disagreeable perspiration and body odora much ap preciated by dainty women. A quick remedy for sore eyes and catarrh. A little Paitine powder dis solved in a glus of hot water makes a delightful analeptic so lution, possessing extraordinary mm w cleansing, germicidal ana ness. (j U J ing power, and absolutely hamv jL ft 1 less. Try a Sample. 50c a large box at druggists or by (faaiL THE PAXTON TOILCTCO., Boston, Mass. You Settle The Vacation Question lr WhenYbu Send For This BookTCjT1