lopes some he ef- parti- ative grade e this t, but 3° that , and thout ly se- there ldren heart tories y for rk, so " and it us. your lower venth ve us at a ready. 1 will lay is rk in n our ay in WOrry [each es af- atient as a 1 per- t was from , how a has * any- inited ing to 3, and h the ne in¢ ull of es off short, aurch, r sky+ hat of g By- d col- ilable ms in eekly. . Eng: tively their 1 gave led to e has tulate gayer merly, e. their ported h pre- ~Low nce of ry oF. / AILING WOMEN, Keep the IK'dneys Woll an (he Kidneys Will Keep Yoa Well, 8lek, suffering, languid women are learning the true cause ombad backs and Low to cure them. Mrs. W. G. Davis, of Groesbeck, Texas, says: “Back- aches hurt me so I could hardly stand. Spells of dizziness and sick headache were frequent and P] the action of the kid. = . te or" neys was irregular, Boon after I began taking Doan’s Kid- ney Pills I passed several gravel stones. I got well and the trouble has not returned. My back is good and strong and my general health better.” Sold by all dealers. BO cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Dict Kitchens. There has been established in Washington a diet kitchen under the direction of a woman. The patrons of this unique shop are mostly phy- sicians, who send their patients for such dishes or fcods as will best suit their needs, very much as they send prescriptions to be filled by the apothecary. It is a practical illus- tration of the belief that proper food is just as necessary as medicine. The patient who has not the hospital diet cook to supervise his meals may thus be treated and avoid the ill judged kindness of family and friends. . LIMB RAW AS PIECE OF BEEF. uffered For Three Years With Itching Humor—Cruiser Newark, U. S, N, Man Cured by Cuticura, “I suffered with humor for about three years off and on. I finally saw a doctor and he gave me remedies that did me no good, so Itried Cuticura when my limb below the knee to the ankle was as raw as a piece of beef. All I used was the Cuticura Soap and the Ointment. I bathed with Cuticura Soap every day, and used about six or seven boxes of Cuticura Ointment. I was thoroughly cured of the humorin three weeks, and haven't been affected with it since. IusenootherSoap than Cuticura now. H. J. Myers, U. 8. N., TU. 8. 8. Newark. New York, July 8, 1903.” Poison in Bees’ Eggs. M. C. Phisalix is well known for his researches on snake and other poisons. In the case of the toad and viper he has shown that the specific poison accumulates in the ova, and suggests that it plays an important part in development and inherit ance. His latest studies relate to the poison of the bee's sting. Bee's eggs, he shows, contain minute quantities of the poison. 475 eggs being required to furnish enough to poison a sparrow. It is a remark- able fact that the unfertilized poison containing eggs give birth to drones, which have no poison. — London Globe. Blind Student's Work. One of the most interesting figures in Harvard University is Edward Ray, a blind student who hails from a small country town in North Caro- lina. He has mastered the most dif- ficult courses in higher mathematics, in geology, won a degree from the University of North Carolina and is now working for the degree of M. A. at Harvard. Here he is taking some of the hardest courses in the curri- culum, Gothic and Anglo-Saxon. Costly Process. It is said that a lot of wine stored in San Francisco was greatly improv- ed in quality by the earthquake and fire. The incident is of interest to connoisseurs and also to scientists. But it is to be hoped it will not be found necessary to emulate the ex- ample of Charles Lamb’s Chinamen with their roast pig, and have an earthquake and fire every year for the improvement of the vintage.— New York Tribune. KNIFED Coffee Knifed an Old Soldier. ‘An old soldier, released from coffee at 72, recovered his health and tells about it as follows: “I stuck to coffee for years, although it knifed me again and again. “About eight years ago (as a result of coffee drinking which congested my liver), I was taken with a very severe attack of malarial fever. “I would apparently recover and start about my usual work only to suf- fer a relapse. After this had been rr peated several times during the year I vras again taken violently ill, “The doctor said he bad carefully studied my case amd it was either ‘quit coffee or die’ advising me to take Postum in its place. I had always thought coffee one of my dearest friends, and especially when sick, and I was very much taken back by the doctor’s decision for I hadn't suspected the coffee I drank could possibly cause my troubles. “I thought it over for a few minutes and finally told the doctor I would make the change. Postum was pro- cured for me the same day and made according to directions; well, I liked it and stuck to it and since then I have been a new man. The change in health began in a few days and surprised me, and now, although I am seventy-two years of age, I do lots of hard work and for the past month have been teaming, driving sixteen miles a day, besides loading and unloading the wagon. ‘Bhat’s what Postum in the place of coffee has done for me. I now like the Postum as well as I did coffee. “I have known people who did not care for Postum at first, but after hav- ing learned to make it properly accord- Ing to directions, they have come to like It as well as coffee. I never miss a chance to praise it.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Look for the little book, “The Road Childhood Elasticity. “I'svas Just en average little boy Of six or therealouts ; 1 left him full of pienie, Hie left me full of and doubts, He ate bananas, sandwiches, Sweet pickles, cake and jam, Fried chicken and potato chips, Ice cream and tea and ham, To these he added pink popcorn And quarts of lemonade ; Of what, then, was his little tum No wonderfully made? With bated breath I watched that child, Expecting aim to burst, But presently, though still 1 gazed, I ceased to fear the worst. I'or after endless candy from A green and sticky heap, That sated infant sighed and yawned, Then, smiling, fell asleep! —-Woman's Home Companion, What a Boy Needs. The two most iraportant parts of a trolley car are the motor and brake. Let either get out of order, | Presbyterian Record. Power to go, and power to stop—those are the two important things for a boy to have in his life journey. A clear, strong will —these are our motor and brake, and it is our business to keep them in first. class running order. If we don't— well, whose fault is the smashing up but ours? National Greetings. can you?’—Swedish. do you fare ?’—Dutch. do you stand ?”’—Italian. do you live on?"—Russian. do you perspire?’'—Egyptian. do you have yourself?”—Po- “How “How “How “How “How “How lish. “How do you find yourself?’—Ger- man. “How do you carry yourself?’'— French. “May thy shadow never grow less!” — Persian. “How do you do?’—English and American. A Chinese Toe-Play. Almost the first game your little Chinese brother or sister plays is “This Little Pig Went to Market.” The | action of the game with the Chinese mothers is just the same as with American ones, says the Washington Star. Taking hold of the toes one | by one, the mother says: We'll whip her, we'll whip her, we'll whip her. This little cow eats grass. This little cow eats hay, This little cow drinks water, This little cow runs away, | This little cow does nothing Except lie down all day. What is His Name? My first is in Violet, but not in Nook; My second is in Album, but not in Book; My third is in Language, but not in Flower; My fourth is in Envy, Power; My fifth is in Nature, but not in Man; My sixth is in Tinner, but not in Pan; My seventh is in Iceland, but not in Cold; My eighth is in Nugget, but not in Gold; My ninth is in Eternity, but not in Foretold, My whole is the name of a favorite saint. but not in The Sorcerer. This game is a little mystifying to those not in the secret. One of the party is placed behind a screen in an adjoining room, where he cannot pos- sibly see the players—or he may be blindfolded. One of the party must then call out: “Do you know Miss ?” naming one of the ladies present. “Yes.” “Do you know her dress?’ “Yes.” “Her fan?’ “Yes.” “Her slippers, her gloves and her bracelets?” “Yes.” “Her handker- chief, her rings?’ “Yes.” “Well, then, since you know her dress so well, tell me what article of her cos- tume I am now touching.” If the one behind the screen is acquainted with the trick he will answer directly: “Her bracelet,” the only article men- tioned which has the word “and” be- fore it. If the sorcerer be uniwitiated he will probablly name several articles be- fore the right one, and for each blun- der he must pay a forfeit. This Cat Came Back. A cat story going the rounds is to this effect: Not even a flood, in which several lives were lost, and property to the value of many thousands of dollars was carried away, can destroy the family cat and prevent it from com- ing back. This was illustrated by the adven- ture of a cat belonging to the famliy of John Barkley, a resident of Fort Pierre, situated at the junction of the Bad and Missouri rivers in Central South Dakota. The greater part of the resident district of the town was swept away by a flood last July, the flood being caused by a cloudburst up the Bad River. Among the buildings carried away was the home of Barkley. In the house at the time was the family cat, a big tiger-striped animal known as Tabby. Nothing was seen or heard of the cat until a day or two ago, when it calmly walked into the new home which Barkley had erected and took its place by one of the stoves. the | and there is danger ahead, says the , | the cat at the time of the flood was | carried by the swift current directly | across the island opposite the mouth of Bad River, where it lived on small game until it discovered that cross. ing the Missouri River on the ice was possible, when it ventured to the mainland and found its way to the Barkley home, Blind Illustration, A game for pencil and paper. The players may “match for partners,” drawing from two bowls filled with | bits of paper or cards, inscribed with the names of ladies and gentlemen, Or the hostess may pair her guests with a view to their congeniality by giving to each man upon arrival a card bearing a lady's name and a num- | ber, Chairs are set about the room in back to back or side by side, in opposite directions, and upon cach pair is a pad, pencil and India-rubber, The players take their and it is then explained to them that one of the partners must think of some simple object which he or she shall desgeribe in such a way that the other one will be able to draw it. one of seats, | but accurate of its out- | lines. On no account must the sketch be seen by the assistant until, upon its completion, the name of the object thought of is written at the foot of the paper and the number added which shall identify the artist. The question as to which one shall make the drawing and which describe the object to be represented, must be a matter for the partners themselves to decide. At the end of 15 minutes the hos- tess rings a bell as a signal for all to hand in their sketches. They are then placed on exhibition, and cards with numbered lines are distributed upon which each person writes his or her vote as to which drawing best portrays the object, the name of which is written beneath it. When the votes are counted, the first prize is awarded to the most successful ar- tist, the second to his or her partner, in recognition of that person’s powers of description. description The Story of Little Peep. For many years I have made a prac- tice of feeding the wild birds both in summer and winter, and it has been an unfailing source of pleasure to watch them eagerly picking up the tid-bits, and of wonder to note how quickly they lose their fear of man- kind as soon as they are assured no harm is intended. One of my most interesting experi- ences, writes a correspondent of the Indianapolis News, in this line oc- curred last summer. A member of my family, who also loves birds, came upon a tiny specimen lying at his feet, while doing some electric work in the basement of one of our big hotels. He picked it up and carefully placed it in his capacious pocket, car- rying it with him until he reached home at night When he heard a lit- tle peep in his pocket he came laugh- ingly, and laid in my hand a tiny brown and white sparrow. It was very much alive, although so young, as well as hungry. After feed- ing it carefully we placed it in a cage for the night, thinking if it lived to keep it until stronz enough to fly, then let it go with the flock which came daily for their luncheon to my back lawn. It could fly two or three feet only, but in a very few days in- creased the distance amazingly. In order to get it used to outdoor life preparatory to its flight to its native element, I would take it daily, place it upon the lawn or graveled walk, where it would busily pick at the gravel, insects and seeds, while I stray cat might have an eye upon my tiny birdling. What was my surprise and delight as well, the very first time I placed it so upon the lawn, to see one and settle upon the ground around it, eying it curiously. My heart was in a flutter, for I had become attached to little Peep, and looked for nothing but that when the birds flew away it would go with them. Almost uncon- | sciously I called softly, “Peep, Peep,” | and to my astonishment the little’ thing flew up and across the lawn | straight to my outstretched hands, : while all the other birds flew away. And so, each pleasant day for weeks I carried Peep out upon the lawn, | sometimes calling a neighbor to see! it fly from among the flock of wild! birds to me at the sound of my voice. | I am sorry my bird story must end | in tragedy. Little Peep was especial- | ly fond of helping itself to choice mor- | to be out of the cage at meal time. | One fateful day it insisted on sitting thought. thought I heard a little cry, and; door. had helped to brighten my summer, thought to all Hig dumb creatures. Barkley expresses the opinion that to Wellville,” in pkgs. Indianapolis. L. J. B. 8. i sat on guard upon the porch, lest some ! No hint | or help is to be given, except the bald | which a consumptive should wear is { kid, so transparent ({ Consul nitz that two German mechanics have Harris reports from Chem: invented a clever eleetrie device for changing hymn numbers in church Scientists say every stream—the entire water supply of the country-- {8 now infested with typhoid germs, a result of great carelessness and a large population, After a thorough test, the erude oil on country roads at Fresno, Cal, is declared to be a failure by local experts, and it is proposed to ro. place it with macadam. out of ten people stronger sight in one eye than other, In two cases out of five aye is out of line. Nearly use of have the one Seven axtent, and only onc pair of eyes out of every fifteen is right in all respects. A plant, native to Japan, which fur- nishes a sort of vegetable leather, is | being introduced into the States. The inner bark of this after being subjected to a Iv process comes as tough as French that one hrough it, and as pliable and calfskin. soft as n, Dr. Mangat, de the a A French physicia 2lares that the color of very important. The clot g shoul pe of a kind which allov st light to penetrate it, light having a favor. able effect on consumptives. Dr. Mangat recommends white stuffs, as they allow the largest number of chemical rays to pass through them, and absorb no colored rays. White linen, white velvet, cotton or cloth, but not white silk, may be used. and violet. In the disintegration of radium, by the giving off of helium, the amount of energy set free is 1,000,000,000 areat calories far one gram of radium. Now to reconstruct the dissipated ele- ments would require as much energy as was lost in their dissipation, and this explains the hopelessness of their nthesis, as no such amount of energy san be employed. How were these elements first constructed? That is a question for the students. A German ohysicist, W. Meigen, suggests that the dissipation of elements is an actuaily irreversible process, like the dissipa- tion of wheat. CANDIED FRAGRANT FLOWERS. Demand in England for Sugared Rose Petals. One of the latest developments of luxury is said to be the candying of fragrant flowers. The notion is not altogether new, for violets have been made into confections for the palate, as well as into bouquets for the ol- factory organs, from time to time for a long period. At any rate, says the London Globe, it seems that the fashion has got a new impetus of late, and a candied violet is coming to be regarded as an acceptable “bonne bouche” to be presented to a lady. There is also, we are told, a demand for sugared rose petals, which is being catered for by some enterprising artists in sugar. It can hardly be pretended that flowers made into “sweets” are ask rose leaves have long held a recognized place in the materia med- ica. ‘Whether the violet has any thera- peutic qualities does not appear, ‘though the leaves (not the flower) side the medical faculty—as a cure for cancer. The best that can be hoped for, if flowers are to be eaten as well as to be seen and smelled, is innocuous. It is a nice question guide. Perhaps the modern craze is, after all, only a form of luxury. A candied violet or a dish of rose leaves cun- uingly prepared for the tea table : i could not possibly enter into the cate- our usual flock of birds come one by | gory of cheap sweets for the mil lion. * What Makes the Sky Blue? The sky has long been a puzzle to physicists. There are two mysteries to explain about it—its reflection of light and its color. The old view was that the blue of the sky was due simply to atmospheric oxygen. Oxy- gen has a faint blue tint, and the idea was that several miles of the gas, even when diluted as it is in the air, would have a bright blue color. But this did not account for the intense illumination of the sky, and of recent years Tyndall's ‘dust theory,” or some modification of it, has been gen- erally accepted, This regards the blue sels from the dinner table if it chanced | €0lor as an optical effect, like the color of very thin smoke, due to ex: cessively fine particles floating in the upon my shoulder at dinner, so I: air, which would also account for the carried it from the room, placed it in | }arge proportion of the cage, closing the cage door as I; from the sky. Recent calculations by I passed through the dining- | Professor Spring, of Liege, Belgium, reflected light room door and shut it behind me. 1 | however, indicate that the dust in the air is not sufficient in amount, nor found that I had bruised it in the finely enough divided, to support this It talked to me and ate same e©Xblanation, and he rejects it for this crumbs, but from that, Peep, that and other reasons. He has gone back to the old oxygen theory, and accounts soon lay in its last sleep in my hand, for the general illumination of the sky Since we know that our Father notes ©n the hypothesis, first advanced by “even the sparrow’s fall,” it is not Hagenbach, that intermingled layers to our discredit that we give tender of different density, in the atmosphere give it the power of reflecting light.— Success Magazine. one-half | of the people are color-blind to some | can see | clothes | Next to white the best colors are blue | of any medicinal efficacy, though dam- | have just mow some reputation—out- | that they may in all cases prove to be | whether the perfume is always a safe | The Parisian French, It Is popularly belleved that the French who live in Paris and who speak what is usually described as “Parisian French” represent the gen- uine, simon-pure type of French blood and tradition, The famous Le Petit Journal, however, draws attentition to the fact that Paris has the small- est indigenous population of any European capital, and that according to the last census only about 36 per cent of the total population of the Frnch capital are Parisians, abori- ginals, or people born in Paris. Sev- eral European capitals can show a far higher rate of indigenous popula- tion, St. Petersburg, for example can show 40 per cent, Berlin 41 per cent, Vienna 45 per cent and London 65 per ceunt.—Boston Globe. Franklin's Kite Experiment Commenting on Benjamin Frank- lin's kite experiment, which proved that lightning and electricity are the same, a scientist says: “It was one of the most brilliant examples of luck vet recorded. To attempt the ex- traction of lightning flashes from a lowering sgky was almost suicidal. Even at this late day timid persons occasionally fly to feather beds, sit | on glass-legged chairs or find refuge in rubber boots during thunderstorms. A repetion of Franklin's experiment cost his immedate imitator his life.” Cestly Boarders. It cost $17,000 to feed the animals in the Lo n Zoo last year. The principal items of food were 207 | horses, 270 goats, 34,921 | fish, 25,196 eggs, 6,855 quarts of milk and 137 loads of hay. ietals Found Together. | Silver and lead are generally found | together, and some scientists think | that lead distinegrates into silver, Gold and copper are also often found together. In New South Wales the Great Cobar mine furnishes copper { containing four ounces of gold to the | ton. FITS, St. Vitus’ Dance: Nervous Diseases per- manently cured by Dr. Kiine's Great Nerve Restorer. £2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dx. H. R. Kring, Ltd., 931 Arch 8t., Phila., Pa. John I. Snyder, a Seneca Indian, has received permission to take the New York State bar examination. » for Children luces inflamma- ind colie, 25¢. abottle Mrs. Winslow's Soot teething, softens the tion, allays pain, cur Real Absentmindedress. Billy Duggan of Palms, loaned his seed drill to someone and has forgot- ten who it was. he got it from. As the matter stands, Billy, who can’t identify his drill, is likely to lose it altogether.—Lexing- ton, Mich., News. lin will have 800 beds. The attending physicians will have salaries from $1400 to $800 a year. How’s This ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure, F. J. Carxey & Co,, Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F, J. tions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their flrm, West & T'ruax, Wholesale Druggists, To- ledo, O. Warping, KINNAN & MARVIN, Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall’s Catarrn Cureis takeninternally, act ingdirectlyuponthebiood and mucuoussure | laces ofthesystem. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle, Sold by all Druggists. Ten years ago, with a population of 32,000,000, Prussia maintained nearly 3000 technical schools, representing all the principal industries, with an attendance of over 200,000. His Experience. An aged Scotch minister about to marry for the fourth time, was ex- plaining his reason to an elder. “You see, 1 am an old man now, and I canna expect to be here verra lang. | When the end comes wad like to | have some one to close my eyes.” | The elder nodded and said: “Awell, | meenister, I have had twa wives, and baith of them opened mine!” BOX OF WAFERS FREE-=-NO DRUGS —CURES BY ABSORPTION, Cures Belching of Gas—=Bad Breath and Bad Stomach-=Short Breathe Bloating=Sour Eractations- Irregular Heart, Etc. Take a Mull’s Wafer any time of the da or night, and note the immediate good ef- fect on your stomach. It absorbs the gas, disinfects the stomach, kills the poison erms and cures the disease. Catarrh of the head and throat, unwhoiesome food and overeating make bad stomachs. Scarcely any stomach is entirely free from taint of some kind. Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers will make your stomach healthy by absorbing foul gases which arise from the undigested food and by re-enforcing the lining of the stomach, enabling it to thorovihly mix the food with the gastric juices. This cures stomach trouble, promotes digestion, sweetens the breath, stops belching and fermentation. Heart action becomes strong and reguiar througa this process. Discard drugs, as you know from experi- ence they do not cure stomach trouble. Try a common-sense (Nature's) method that does cure. A soothing, healing sensa- tion results instantly. We know Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers will do this, and we want you to know it. ‘'L'his offer may not appear again. 696 GOOD FOR 25ec. 142 Send this coupon with your name and address and your druggist’s name and 10c. im stamps or silver, and we will supply you a sample free if you have never used Mull’s ~Anti-Belch Wafers, and will also send you a cer- tificate good for 25c. toward the pur- chase of more Belch Wafers. You will #ind them invaluable for stomaci trou. ble; cures by absorption. Address Muir's Grape toxic Co, 328 3d Ave., Rock Islana, 1. @ive Full Address and Write Plainly, "All druggists, 50c. per box, or by mail upon .eceipt of price. Stamps accepted. i not take filth How strange that one who would into his mouth will gladly take it into his brain! The fellow who bor- | j rowed it can’t remember who it was | @ Cheney for the last 15 years, and believehim | perfectly honorable in all business transac- | A CRITICAL PERIOD INTELLIGENTWOMEN PREPARE Dangers and Pain of This Critical Period Avoided by the Use of Lydia Il. Finke How many wo | men realize that the most critical period in a wo- man's existence is the change o! life, and that the anxiety felt > women as this time draws near is not w! hous reason ? If her system is in a deranged condls tion, or she is predisposed to apoplexy or congestion of any organ, it is at this time likely to become active and, with a host of nervous irritations, make life a burden. At this time, also. cancers and tumors are more liable to begin their destrue- tive work. Such warning symptoms as a sense of suffocation, hot flashes, diz- ziness, headache, dread of impending evil, sounds in the ears, timidity, pal pitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities, constipation, varia. ble appetite, weakness and inquietude are promptly heeded by intelligent women who are approaching the period of life when woman's great change | may be expected. pounds of | The new Virchow Hospital in Ber- | i The total cost | 4 of construction will reach $5,000,000. ! §§ Wholesale | 8 We believe Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- etable Compound is the world's great- est remedy for women at this trying period. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound invigorates and strengthens the female organism, and builds up the weakened nervous system as no other medicine can. Mrs. A. E. G. Hyland, of Chester- town, Md., in a letter to Mrs. Pink- ham, says: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — “1 had been suffering with a displacement for years and was passing through the change of life. I had a good deal of soreness, dizzy spells, headaches, and was very nervous. I wrote you for advice and commenced treat- ment with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound as you directed, and I am happe to say that all those distressing symptoms lefs me, and 1 have passed safely through the change of life a well woman. For special advice regarding this im- portant period women are invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass She'is daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years has been advising sick women free of charge. Her advice is free and always helpful tQ ailing women. La he cradla fo the bahy chair”? om HAVE YOU A BABY? I so, you cughi to have a PHOENIX WALKING GHAIR (PATENTED) § “AN IDEAL SELF-INSTRUCTOR." UR PHOENIX Walking Chair holds the child sccurely, pre- venting those painful falls and bumps which are so frequent when baby learns to walk. “BETTER THAN A NURSE." The chair is provided with a re- movable, sanitary cloth seat, which supports the weight of the child and prevents bow-legs and spinal troubles; italso has a table attach- ment which enables baby to find amusement in its toys, etc., withe out any attention, we “As Indispensable as a cradle.” | It is so constructed that it pres vents soiled clothes, sickness from drafts and flcor germs, and is recommended by physicians and endorsed by both mother and baby. Combines pleasure and utility. No baby shotld be without one. | Call at your furniture dealer {i and ask to see one. En— MANUFACTURED ONLY BY PHOENIX CHAIR CO, SHEBOYGAN, WIS. Can only be had of your furniture dealer. Drill for Water Prospect for Minerals Dri) Testand BlastHoles. Goal We make DRILLING MACHINES For Horse, Steam or Gasoline Power. Latest Traction Machine, LOOMIS MACHINE CO., TIFFIN, OHIO, THE DAISY FLY KILLER {moat aflords comfort to every home, One 0c. box iasts the en. tire season. Harm. jess tw persons, Clean, neat and will kW not soll or injure i them. 1 not kept *f by dealers, sen prepaid for <0e, [§ HAROLD SOXKKs, i 149 DeKalb Avenue, Brooklyn, N. ). JOHN W.MORRIS, Washington, D.G peneenalur frosee gytes Slams: fils rain 2ivil war, 15 adj adicating claims, atty since REE-! will send free of charge advice and prescriptions to men and women suf- fering from disease or weakness of any kind. Sell no medicines nor do I ask a cent from any Le DR. ARVEDUS, Bridgeport, Conn. NEW DISCOVERY; D R Oo P SY gives quick relief and cures worst eases. Book of testimonials and 10 Days’ treatment Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS, Box B, Titania, Ga, P. N. U. 23, 1906. 48 p. bock free. Highest ref; Long experience, Firgeral &Co.Dept. 54, Washington,D.