CURE THAT GOLD TOE) AY ea i of a aatloa tliaa be Ita ruler." Jit. - voar. Thousands o. people who are siifferinR With colds are about today. Tomorrow they may be prostrated with penumonia. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Get a 25 cent bottle of Mun yon's Cold Cure at the nearest drug tore. This bottle may be conveniently carried in the vest pocket. If you are not satisfied with the effects of the rem edy, fend us your empty bottle and we will refnn-1 your money. Munvon's Cold Cure will speedily break up all forms of colds nd prevent sxippe and pneumonia. It checks discharges of the nose and eyes, stops sneezing, allays inflammation and fever, and tones up the system. If yon need Medical Advice, write to Munyon's Doctors. They , will carefully diagnose your case and advise you by mail, absolutely free. iProf. Mnnyon, 63d ani Jefferson streets, Philadelphia, Fa. VvMEmLLIC HEELSio C0UNTR5N Made ot Steel For Miners, Quarrymtn, Farmers and AO MenWho Do Rough Work Every man should wear them. They :ave shoo money. Lighter than lea ther. Easily attached by any cobbler. Outwear the shoes. Your shoe dealer has shoes already fitted with them. Send for booklet that tells all about them, . , . . UNITED SHOE MACHINERY CO. . BOSTON, MASS. . TWO WORLD FAMED GKANN1ES One of These Talented Women la 6arah Bernhardt and tha Other ; " Ellen Terry. . . Two famous grandmothers are dis tinguished visitors of this country. Re ) ferrlng to these talented ladies the Rochester Post Express says: "One of the grandmothers Is Mme. Sarah Bern hardt; tho other Is Ellen Terry. Both actresses have reached an rge when it Is permissible to retire from active life; but the French actress Is said to he as energetic as a woman half her age, while Ellen Terry is "declared to he as young as ever she was In the palmy days when she and Henry Irv ing, ruled the theatrical world of Eng- , 1 r i m i l i . . iuuq. jviiBB terry naa reurea irom me stage so far as acting is concerned, and has taken to lecturing on Shakes peare's heroines. And who cruld do better than she who has played so many of the womanly women of the great dramatist? Readers of her breezy biography know what she thinks of Portia, Beatrice, Voila, Rosa ' land and other famous women of the tragedies and comedies, but no print ed page could charm as does the won derfully expressive features and the velvet voice of the greatest living English-speaking actress." His Means. "You are charged with vagrancy, prisoner at the bar." "What's dat. Judge?" "Vagrancy? Why, you have no visi ble means of support." "Huh! H can's mah wife, judge; Mary, is you visible?" It's a pity that more sermons are Dot as deep as they are long. Gives Breakfast Zest and Relish Post Toasties A sweet, crisp, whole some food made ci Indian Corn, ready to serve right from the box with cream and sugar. Flavoury Delicious Economical "The Memory Lingers" Settle Greek, USek. M ACTRESS WEDS WEALTHY AMERICAN. I ...mm Guia27E s&mowJi JbiAt&s I NEW YORK. A cablegram from Paris announced the wedding of Char lotte Katherlne Palmer to- James C. Parrlsh, Jr., a relative of the Van derbilts. The Parrishes are very wealthy and have a beautiful home near Southampton. Mr. Parrlsh, Jr., is a Harvard graduate, and was ad mitted to the bar this year. Miss Palmer formerly was in "Wang," and also with the Lew Field forces. In London she numbered Mrs. Oscar Lew isohn, Mrs. nenry Lyndhurst Bruce and Sir George Prescott among her de voted admirers. English Court Refuses to Aid The atrical Press Agent. Faked Expulsion of Women Who In sisted on Wearing Big Hats in Theater Galled by Judge a Fraud on Justice, . London. British courts of Justice must not be exploited for the pur poses of advertisement. This legal de cision was given in a case brought by Thomas feumley Dann, a press agent, against Frank Curzon, the theatrical manager. The evidence revealed the remarkable manner in which the pub lic wsb "spoofed" over a certain matt nee hat incident which occurred at the Prince of Wales theater In London some months ago. This incident was manifestly a fake to all those who are Initiated into the ways of theatrical advertisement. Mr. Dann in his action claimed $500, which he alleged was the sum Mr. Curzon agreed to pay him for arrang ing the affair, while Mrs. Dann, who assisted her husband in the affair, claimed $262 in payment for her ser vices. Mr. Curzon admitted that he agreed to the incident being arranged, but denied that he agreed to pay these sums. The Judgment of Judge Woodfall, who tried the case, explains the na ture of the incident. He said: "In the early part of'thU year, when the plaintiff wag employed by the de fendant as his press agent, he sug gested to the defendant that it would be an excellent advertisement both for the theater and for the defendant as manager, if the following scheme were carried out: Two ladles and a gentle man were to be engaged, the ladles were to occupy two stalls and to wear ultra-fashionable hats. The gentleman was to occupy a stall immediately be hind them, and during the fall of the curtain peremptorily demand of them that they should take their hats oft. "The ladle's were to refuse, and the gentleman to urgently and audibly In sist, and the disturbance was to attain such proportions that the defendant should be sent for and Invite the trio outside In the corridor, and demand of the ladies that they should remove their hats or leave the theater; that the ladles should resist the demand; that defendant should thereupon eject them by a technical assault ot laying his hand on the shoulders of one of them; that the ladies should leave and summon the defendant before a magis trate for the assult and that the de fendant should plead the right to protect the convenience of his audi ence. - "The defendant consented, and the scheme was carried out In every de tail, the price of their seats which they had not paid for was ostensibly returned to the ladies, and In pursu ance of the plot tbey proceeded to summon the defendant for assault. "The magistrate heard -the charge and dismissed It, holding that the de fendant was Justified In what he had done. The plaintiffs now allege that the defendant agreed to pay them for their services In carrying out the ven ture. "I am of opinion that the agreement alleged Is Illegal, being contrary to public policy, and that no action Is maintainable upon it And this for two reasons: (1) The spectacle of two ladies being peremptorily and brusque ly treated might well have aroused In terlocution on their behalf and led to a serious breach ot the peae-a. (2) The ..: an,, Invocation ot a court of law to punish an offense which, to the knowledge ot the parties, had not been, even tech nically committed, was In the nature of a fraud on the administration of juRtice. I therefore dismiss the two actions, and leave each party to pay his own costs. 1 "In case of a successful appeal against this decision, and to save the expense of a second hearing, 1 will state what otherwise would have been my decision. , I And that the defend ant did agree . to pay the plaintiff 105; that the defendant's setoff is valid, and I should have given judg ment accordingly for the defendant, with costs, t find the defendant did agree to pay Mrs. Dann 52 10s., and I should have given judgment for her, With costs." EASY MONEY IN LIMA BEANS One-Eighth of an Acre Yields Crop That Sells for $162 Sold to Big Hotels. Cooper, Pa.-Mn eighth of an acre of lime beans on the truck farm of Albert E. Rlnn, former deputy clerk ot quarter sessions, has yielded $163 to Mr. Rlnn. His lima bean patch comprises two and a half acres, but the accounts were kept only from an eighth of an acre to ascertain if the raising of beans would prove profit able. The bean 1b a small French lima. None of the beans were sold for less than fifteen cents a quart, and for the extra fine ones, $6.50 a buBhel was realized. The principal custom ers during the summer were eleven large hotels In Atlantic City, a num ber of hotels in Philadelphia and New York, in addition to families in Allentown. MANY OPERATIONS ON HEART Have Become More or Less of Com monplace In Medical History -100 Cases Recorded. New York. Surgical operations upon the heart have become more or less of a commonplace in medical his tory. Something approximating 100 cases of the sewing' up of heart wounds are on record, and the recov eries have been considerable when one considers the highly dangerous character of such work. Hitherto, however, heart surgery has been lim ited to accident cases. In a recent issue of the Annals of Surgery one ot the workers at the Rockefeller Institute ot Medical Re search discusses the possibility ot treating diseased hearts surgically. He has made numerous experiments on animals and believes that such op erations will be successfully per formed on human beings in the near future. His tests have convinced him that the heart can be opened, scraped out (cleaned, so to speak), sewed up and started off on Its "beating" path again without any great, at least In superable, difficulty. By an ingenious system of side piping and new chan neling he Is able temporarily to cut out of the circulation portions of such Important vessels as the descending aorta, the largest artery In tha body, without killing the animal Among his suggested operations Is one on the coronary arteries of the heart for tha cure of angina pectoris. This doctor has apparently proved to his owa satisfaction on anlmala CHILD 1SJDRII APE Lecturer Explains Working of Bi ogenetic Law. Elucidates Many 8trange and Absurd Instincts That Come and Qo Dur Ing Human Infancy, Child hood and Adolescence. " I Chicago. J. Heward Moore told members of the Socialist league a lot about babies the other night Mr. Moore discussed "The Biology of the Child" at a meeting which was held at 160 Washington street "There is a law In biology called the .biogenetic law. It was discov ered by Haeckel. It Is one of the most Important InwB of the organic world. It Is this: 'Each organism In its individual development repeats the life history of the race to which It belongs.' "No being comes Into the world full grown. Every being goes through the performance of what is called growing before It is a complete organism. Every being commenced as a small, simple and rather shapeless bit of protoplasm. The gulf between this condition and maturity is bridged in by a longer or shorter series ot changes in size, form and architec ture. The remarakble thing about these changes Is that they are strik ingly parallel to the changes which the race has undergone In Its evolu tion 'from the beginning of the earth. "The biogenetic law applies to men tal phenomena . as well as to physical. Only in the light ot this law Is It possible to understand the many strange and absurd instincts that come and go: during human In fancy; childhood and adolescence.' It has been said that the child Is born savage. This is not quite true. It Is worse than that. Only after a rather long and Inglorious prelim inary as a quadruped Is it able to walk with its pront feet In the air. and rightfully lay claim to the title of savage:" Mr. Moore said the general Ideas of the child. Its conception of Itself, and Its outlook on the weld are essen tially the same as those of the savage narrow, mystical, and naive. The child believes in ghosts, fairy tales, magic and miracles, much as the sav age does. Among the points brought out by the lecture were the following: The human baby antedates the sav age by several hundred thousand years. The child Is a born ape. The instinct of the baby to cling to everything within reach Is the Instinct ot the monkey. A stick In the hands of a baby be comes a club. A baby's attack on the cat Is a relic of the club stage In man's de velopment , A child's love of camp fire; the forming of gangs among boys, the de sire to stone dogs and snowball ped dlers, and the strong love for a bow and arrow are remnants ot the ear lier man. BOYS KICK $75,000 ABOUT 8quad of Players Used Parcel of Bonds as Pigskin Polio Look- ' Ing for Owner. New York. The police of an up town station have in their possession a parcel of bonds worth about $75,000 which was picked up by a patrolman after it had been kicked two or three blocks by a squad of schoolboy foot ball players. One boy gave the parcel a final kick which sent It under the stairs leading to a subway station. There the policeman found It The bundle was addressed In pencil on the man 11 a wrapper: "Don A. Dodge, Yon kers, N. Y." The Yonkers police were notified, but were unable to locate the owner. that successful surgical interference with the great vessels and the heart Itself Is a possibility. It Is, of course, a long step from these experiments to actual operations on human beings, but there is every Indication that the latter feat will be attempted In the near future. The intractability of cardlao affections and their high fa tality make the proposed new surgery a thing of great general Interest, and may justify the extreme boldness of the proposal. ' PLAN ODD BOBSLED-AIRSHIP Belief Is Expressed That Phenomenal 8ped May Be Acquired by New Experiment. Springfield, Mass. A unique experi ment In near-aeroplanlng Is to be tried In the Berkshire Hills this winter, un der the ausploes of the Williams col lege and the Berkshire aero clubs. Several typical biplanes without en gines are to be constructed with bob sleds at their base. These aeroplane sleds will be taken to the tops of some of the long hills, In charge of expert coasters, and as soon aa the sleds reach a speed of 40 or 50 miles an hour, the elevating planes will be tilted. Then by man ipulating the planes the sled will leave the ground and can be kept a few feet above tha snow, just skimming tha ground until the bottom of tha bill fa reached. Chambermaid Repartee. First Chambermaid Look! You let your pillow slip. Second Chambermaid Not the cov erlet It Exchange. - - Dr. Fierce' Pellets, small, supir-conted, easy to take as candy, regulate and invig orate stomach, liver and bowels and cure constiDation. There Is no playing fast and loose with truth, In any game, without growing the worse for it Dickens. Itch Cured In 80 Minute by Woolford s BanltaryLotlon.N'ever falls. At druggists. The girl in the silk stockings never gets her skirts muddy. ALCOHOUr3 PtR CENT ' Avertable Preparation for As similating (he Food and Regula ting the Stomachs and Bowels of n: KM KM Promotes Digestion,Cheerful ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral Not Narcotic tmjiktn $ JlxStmnm Aitin SttJ JliCtuivMlSMU Hvrm Setd Wmkrfrnm Fttvtr. J' i?. A perfect Remedy for Constipa tion . Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ncss and LOSS OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of The Centaur Company, NEW YORK. few IW . Ttie). Kayo Lamp are J am pa that v zs sre I .JiUifWMir'' d MM t I li M M fi a miA H I I j JiiarantteJ under jhe Foodanj Ermct Copy of Wrapper. ; wg m .u,,. mlMvn CMMiaZlMalZII!!!aIoMaZiT ' Mm n mrxf O l ' W. DOUGLAS 3.00 3.50&'4.00 SHOES oRiS BOYS' ' BHQCB, 9Z.OO. VZ.OO AND S3.UO, It I lara-e mrhloh apar prlnolpmlly to folo Immlhmr, and tho ratfaroetf tmrtll on nolo lomthor, how onmblom mo to 0rat tho assiw mora vmluo of Afst smwtajr, hot tor end lonprnm woorlng 3, 93.BO ond $4 aroaa thmn I ooula ghro hint oro trfotra to thotorlftrovlohm. Maas, or at.w Do yon realise that mrihoMbMalMnn th years : that I make and sell mere S3.00. S3.S0 and S4.no shoes than . ,P t 'J ' ' p"S-ift 4wAUTIONI.aaT NO SUBSTITUTE U your dealer tauuot supply you with I,. Dniigln. Hhoea. write for Mall Order (intalos. JH. Ms. JIUUutAS, 146, pttrkt.ljklo$, JIiMa, EUREKA eld by HARNESS OIL I Household Lubricant J 1 mil THE ALL-AROUND OIL , IN THE HANDY, EVER-READY TIN OILER 1 Is specially selected for any need In the home. Saves tools from rusting. Can can not break. Does not gum or become rancid. ron sals av i Atlantic Refining Company (Inc.) Philadelphia. Pa. Pitubarg. Pa. Dtalsri Ertrrsliiri fA RAW FURS THE OLDEST FUR HOUSE IN AMERICA. JOSEPH ULLMAIJN, 18-20-22 West 20th Street, Kew York Brines Establishments under 8AMB NAME at LEIPZIG, LONDON, rAltlH, Clermany . England France Bnylnr and telllnf representatives In all Im portant Kur Markets of the World, dlstrltratlnc each article wnere best results are obtained, en able na to pay blgbest market prices Xor raw fura at all times. Our Raw Fur Quotations, Shipping Tags, etc., will be sent to any adieus on request. fteferencea: Any Mercantile Acency or Bank. PLEASE MENTION THIS PAPER WHEN ANSWERIN0. W. N. U., PITTSBURG, NO. 51-1910. Forjnfantg end Children. . The Kind You Have a Always Bought Bears Signature in Uso For Over Thirty Years is a hlsh trade lamn. sold at a low netr. cost more, bat therei a no better lamp made at ar the k-'v. uiuiiiuvifu u, sunn orBs; dicebi pmioo eatuiT sept o)ani a eraammit to any room In any bones. Therelanotblne known to tho art of lamp-making that con and to thnyalne ot tbe K A TO Lamp a a Habt- VJf ?.STlli?- PT"r' dealer orerywhera. If not at Tonrs, writ fas' desorlpUTSoinralar to tbs nearest agenoT of ths ' ATI ANTIC REFINING COMPANY Oncorporatad) " ' BEST IN THK WORLD. could take yon bito my factories at Hrockton. and show you how oare- iuiiv w. ij. jjongias stioes are made, thesuperlor workmanship snd the high grade leathers umhI, i yon wouia men understand wliy Itollar for Dollar (limrantoo My Slioes to hold their shape, look snd fit better and wear J lonzer than any other $3.00, 3.60 J suoes you oan out mtnntirit rn,A,..w Will Keep Your Harness soft as a glove tough as a wire black as a coal Dealer Everywhere ron. sals by Atlantic Refining Company (Inc.) ' Philadelphia. Pa. Pittsburg, Fa, COLT DISTEMPER lOmi tie lwndMd Terr eaeltT, The stok ere enrnd, mad all utliecs tm ha nmi nuvDia, no manor aowexpoMa," cope irom Qaavuafj we OiS W by nilng dFUHN'S LIQUID DISTfclMPEK CUHJBTOlve oa Wtfce wnjrue,or In fed. Act oa the blood end expels germs of ell forais of dlsTtenpw. Beet remedy erer knows, for veree la tamL One bottlo TU&nvn tood to car one cam. toatui It e botUei M&nd lodoton of drucffliteejid hrneai dealers, or sent eTpreapld by mtannfavctarerm. Cat shows how to poultlre throets. vur free iKie.trireeeverytniBe;. imu sencs wetttea. LKrwesi wiling rse remedy In ealitenos twsiTs years. APOHM MIPIOAU COCemiei i.hhh OtMlWH lruk U.S.A. AXLE GREASE Keeps the spindle bright and free) from grit Try a box. Dealers every where. For sale by ' THE ATLANTIC REFIX.SS C3. LUeorewrta shllsKlelphle, Pa., anal Pitta bHraj, fm.