SUFFERING WOMEN.1 : Mrs. ,.is3ipW0i55ScSSSfg : AMKKICA is the land of ner-vou- women. '1 he prc.it majority of ner vous wortn-n are so lx:i auso they are sutlcring iroiu some form of female Mrs. r.mma Mitrholl, 520 Louisiana treft. Indian.-ijiolis. Ind., writes: '1'eruna has certainly tcn a blessing In disguise ti m f'r whea I first l-an taking it for troubles peculiar to tins sex and a RTteralljr worn out system, I Lad little faith. "For the past five years I have rarely beer: without pain, but Pc run a has changed all this, and in a very short time. I think I had only taken two bottles before I began to recuperate very quickly, and seven bottles made me well. I do not have headache or back ache any more, and have some in terest in life. I give all credit where It Is due, and that is to Pe runa. Emma Mitchell. By far the Rrf-.-itest niralier of female troubles are caiwd directly by catarrh. cartridges and shot shells are made in the largest and best equipped ammunition factory in the world. AMMUNITION of U- M. C. make is now accepted by shooters as "the worlds standard for it shoots well in any gun. .7 'our dealer sells it. The Union Metallic Cartridge Co. Bridgeport, - - Conn. FREE TO WOMEN! rwjw J i m T prove the b'-j.mc and I ! T.t 1 1 'I 2 1 cleansing power if laxtlna ' '"M fJ I lollet Antlarptle we iUSL ( mntt a Hrv" trial package xitn inK or in urueitons ir'iinri iree. i nis is nni a tiuy samp', but a larvo portage. cnouch to con lnce anyone of it value ry. arv uruisinir I'axtlur for what r-TIklM-i!- it hiH (ton-) in le;l trrat- "mfiit or irnii Id, rurin? All Inflammation arnl ilischarv's, wonil'Tful as a clan-inr vak-in:.l liui-h for sirn thnmt. rasal nd whi'ti-nthc tth. fet-nu "today; a rotal card ! will do. ; nnl(in,nrn,;I,or.fr,po.lpa7n,.. , mrnnt. ltrc Im. s.ctrirlla cii:rnt-c THE it. l AXTO.N CO.. Ilmtoa, Mall. 1 1 4 Colurabn Af WE DEMAND YOUR ATTENTION. If anyone offered you a .good dollar lor an imperfect en would you take it? If anyone offered you r.t good dollar lor 75 cents of bad money would you tike it? ,We offer you to ounces of the very best starch made for 10c No other brand b so good, yet all others cost fOc for 12 ounces.' Ours is 4 business proposition. DEFIANCE STARCH b the best and cheapest. Wc gtiarantec I satisfactory. Asi yor grocer. The DEFIANCE STARCH CO, 0maJa Nibv IThoapson-s Eyo 7alci When AnrArermy Advertisement Kindly Mention This Paper. W. N. U., Omaha. No. 23 1903 3 C Jaf s Mil iLl Baat cotitfQ arrup. in ilnf. S-' t t '! ry dn.."if I t 1 t iLl USE MILS. IL-I . Use m 3 Tired, Nervous, Aching, Trembling, Sleepless, Blood less Po-ru-na Renovates, Regulates, Restores Many Prominent Women Endorse Pe-ru-na. They are catarrh of the organ which is affected. Therrf; women despair of re covery. Female trouble is so common, so prevalent, that they accept it as almost in evitable. The greatest obstacle in the way of recovery is that they do not understand that it is catarrh w hich is the source of their illness. In female complaint, ninety-nine cases out of one hundred are nothing but catarrh. 1'eruoa ourcs catarrh wherever locato 1. Chronic invalids who have languished for years ou sick beds w ith some form of female disease begin to improve at once after be ginning Dr. II art man s treatment. Among tho many prominent women who recommend Perunaare: Belva Lockwood, of Washington. 1. C; Mrs. CoL Hamilton of Columbus, Ohio; Mrs. 1. E. Warren, wife of ('. S. Senator Warren, of Wyoming. If you do not derive proript and satisfac tory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full state ment of your case, and he will be phased to give you his valuable advtce gratis. Address Ir. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. William Never Said It. A denial has been made by a Berlin print that Emperor William made the remark recently accredited to him that, "It z only Americans that come up to my requirements," but. it is added, this does not prevent the Ger man emperor from recognizing to the fullest measure the qualities of the Americans which have secured for i I hem so important a position in the world of conquerors. Do Your Feet Acne and Burn? Shake into your shoes, Allen's Foot Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes feci Easy. Cures Swollen. Hot, Sweating Feet. Corns and Bunions. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores. 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted. LeRoy, N. Y. Will Entertain a King. Thomas F. Walsh, who expects to ! receive a visit next fall from King , Leopold, of Relgium, and to entertain ' the royal personage at his splendid ! home on Massachusetts avenue, in 1 Washington, is a millionaire who made ! his wealth out of Colorado mines. He was born in Ireland in 1S51 and came to America at the age of 18. He went to Colorado soon afterward, took up mining and by industry and gaod luck aecumulareo a vast fortune. To Cure a Ooll in one (lajr. Tiller Jjixative Kromo tannine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. '. To Find Raphael's Works. Professor Franz Wirehoff. of the I'niversity of Vienna, has been charg ed by the Vienna Academy of Science to visit all the public and private pineries of Europe to discover how .. wr.rk nf Ranhael thev nany gcnttine contain. The professor, who is an ex pert, declares that of the pictures and drawings attributed to Raphael not more than lo( are genuine, the rest being either imitations or works of his pupils. Any act by which a man makes one enemy is in the end a losing game. j )!r. WlnIonr-f wxrTiln;r ynip. BtnuiualioD, a. lay pain. cures wind colic ii5cbotUa It's only a matter of time till the undertaker lets you in on the ground floor. This country can struggle along without kings and queens as long as i it has a few political bosses. When Your Grocer Say be does not have Defiance Starch, yon may I e mire he is afraid to keep it until his stock of 1 2 os. packages are sold. Defiance Starch is not only better than any other Cold Water Starch, but contains 16 o. to the package and sells for same money mm 12 ox. brands. I A Juror's Tribute to Hoar. j Senator Hoar of Massachusetts says that the highest compliment he ever I received was the remark made by a juryman many yeas ago. Mr. Hoar i was attorney in a case tried before j twelve good men and true in a Massa chusetts court. After the verdict had been returned one of the jurymen gave this as his reason for voting as he did: "Squire Hoar told us that it ' wa3 right and just." The senior sen ! ator from the Bay state is quoted as ! saying that he would rather have earn t ed such a tribute of homely confidence as that tnan all the panegyrics which '. biographers . have bestowed upon fa ! nous advocates. Many who formerly smoked 1Sj cigars. ; now smoke Iewis" "Simile Binder" straight j c cikiar. The b-t combination of the best tobaccos. Lewis' Factory, Peoria, I1L A woman who gushes over a man when he !3 tired and hungry is due for a term in a padded cell. The average man cant realize how easy it is to pass the contribution plate and forget to chip in until he tries It. Those Who Have Tried ft win rise no other. Defiance Cold Water htart h has no sxpial in (Juantity or Qual ity lij oz. for 10 cents. Other brands cja taua oalv 12 oz. The wise missionary secureth an ap pointment among the vegetarian type of heathen. , THE DIFFERENCE He stole a tart - Krnm the bakar'a cart fe "Oh, what a thief V they cried. ,?v-t -f tZ&1 vT& "rnt him Ja" vcrjrL tv r And publtxhcd U far and wide. V-C-j Ktole aome gold ztf i fijrL They aald. "What a financier!" 5 . Tr 11 Tiey aet him .n hlKh 1 -) V.Zjmr V With worahlpful eye. AWT QL&itv And huatld his pant to the rear. 31 SJOr i - I Juleanor 11. I'orter in LJjplncott'a. UTiK II 1 The Yellow Streak Ellsworth never knew until some time in March how near Mrs. Ells worth came to marrying the other fel low. The other fellow's name was Grldley. Ellsworth did not know Grid ley, but he hated him, and felt that nothing would make him quite so hap py as to show him up in his true light. He did not know what Gridley's true light was, but ho was confident It must be a bad one, and he wanted to shine by contrast. He began the disillusioning process by making Gridley's acquaintance. In cidentally he inquired secretly into his pedigree, social and financial. This in vestigation, however, resulted in noth ing discreditable to Gridley, with the exception of his having been in love with Mrs. Ellsworth, and that was a crime for which not even Ellsworth, when reflecting on the matter in his saner moments, could consistently blame him. But the budget of testimony elicited in Gridley's favor did not alter Ells worth s conviction that he was a rascal. "All evidence to the contrary," Ells worth declared, "I still think the fel low has a yellow streak somewhere in his make-up, and I am going to find H if it takes ten years." It did not take ten years to get track of the saffron-tinted streak. One day in the latter part of April Ellsworth and Gridley happened to be in Phila delphia on business. They met in the Broad Street station and came over to New York together. On the way Grid ley got confidential, and before they crossed Cortlandt Street ferry Ells worth had found the yellow sreak. After dinner he told his wife about it "I saw a friend of yours to-day," he said. "Who?" she asked. "Ed Gridley. He asked about you.; Mrs. Ellsworth flashed him an in quiring glance out of the corner of her eye. She had never told Ellsworth that she had been engaged to Gridley, and she wondered how much he knew of that arrested romance. "Oh, yes." she said. "Mr. Gridley and I are old friends. But I did not know you were acquainted with hlml How do you like him!" "Not very well," said Ellsworth. "I think he Is a cad." "That is strange," she said. "He never impressed me so." "Tb-t is because you do not know him as men know him. Just wait till you hear what he to!d me this after noon, and you will change your mind. He told me a funny thing that hap pened three years ago, when he was courting some girl up in the country somewhere. He did not mention the exact locality, and I forgot to ask, but it doesn't matter. Anyway, he and the girl were pretty sweet on each other, and one evening when they were out driving they made up their minds to get married. They were then several miles from the hotel where the party was staying. About halfway be tween the village and the point in the road where they happened to be when the matrimonial notion struck them was a parsonage occupied by a young Baptist peacher, and they de cided to stop there on their way back to the hotel and get him to perform the ceremony. They were In a hired rig. The horse was a big, long-tailed bay that was noted for his peaceful disposition. A woman could drive him. Although Gridley and the big bay had been on several jaunts together they had never got very well acquainted, so when Gridley in his anxiety to reach the parsonage in good time on that par ticular evening, touched the whip light- Got confidential. Iy to the big bay's back, the bay re sented the familiarity. He quickened bis pace, which was what Gridley wanted him to do, but he quickened it too much for comfort and safety. He did not actually run away, he just cantered along at a lively gait, and no amount of wheaing -.rl lerking at the reins could induce b?m to slow up a bit. "By and by they drew near the par Bonage. Gridley sawed on the lines with all his might so as to pull the bay to a dead stop by the time they reached the front gate. But the big bay's temper was up. He had been Insulted by the application vt the whip, and iht if If) while he was very careful about where he went and gave Gridley and the gir! to understand that he did not mean to break their necks, he was also care ful to let them know that he in tended to keep on going till he got ready to stop, and they might as well make the best of it. He carried them right past the parsonage and never let up trotting at his dead level gait till he reached the hotel, and then he turned in at the driveway and stopped in front of the porch as un concernedly as if that was where Grid ley had headed him for at the start. "Gridley was hopping mad. He wanted to thrash the big bay and then hire another horse that was not preju diced against matrimony and go back to the parsonage and get married after all. But the girl wouldn't do it. She was inclined to be superstitious, and she argued that Fate had directed the maneuvres and that the bay horse had been inspired by Providence to break off the proposed marriage. Gridley I am more firmly convinced now than ever, that he has a yellow streak." didn't agree with her. He gave the the devil the credit for the perform ance rather than the opposing power, but the girl was set in her opinion and wouldn't give in, so they never got married." Ellsworth paused and looked at his wife curiously. Her face was flushed, and its expressions ran the gamut of emotions from suprised indignation to hysterical mirth. "But I don't see," she said presently, "why you should dislike Mr. Gridley on that account. Perhaps It was not exactly honorable to propose a sudden marriage as he did, but the girl seem ed willing, and I don't see why you should put all the blame on him. Many other men indeed, I may say most other men would have done the same thing." "Oh, I'm not finding fault with him for that little escapaae in itself," said Ellsworth. "What I blame him for is the fact that when he was trying to persuade that girl to marry him on the sly he was engaged to some one else." Mrs. Ellsworth's eyes opened wide, then narrowed ominously. "He was?" she cried. "How do you know that?" "It is easily figured out. That took place in the late summer of 1900." "Well," she said, "what does that prove?" Ellsworth stood up and looked at her fixedly. "Prove?" he echoed. "It proves everything. It proves that Grid ley's got that yellow streak I always credited him with. I've never said anything to you about it, but I know lots of things you think I don't know. I know Gridley was iond of you. In short, I know you were engaged to him at that very time, and I oh, hang it all, can't you see what I mean? I don't so much mind your having been engaged to him a fellow expects a girl to figure in two or three little affairs of that kind before she finally settles down with the right one now adays. It is the fact . tnat he was about to play you a mean trick and go off and make love to some other girl and marry her' while you were down here in New York or some place else believing him steadfast as Gibraltar all that time that makes me hot. You were a million times too good for him, and when I think of the way he was about to play you false I could wring his neck with real pleasure." Mrs. Ellsworth spread her hands be fore her face and peeped at her hus band between her fingers. "Oh, Tom," she said, "what a great big goose you are. And what a good fellow into the bargain. When you began that story I thought you knew what you were talking about, but it seems you didn't. I never meant to tell you. but I can't help myself now. Mr. Gridley wasn't engaged to any body else at all at least, I don't think he was. I. was the girl he tried to marry, and if it hadn't been for that horse " The revelations took Ellsworth's breath away for a few minutes. "Well," he said, when he finally got it back, "he came nearer getting you than I thought. I must say that under the circumstances the fellow had gall to tell me about it, and I am more firmly convinced nxsw than ever that he has & yellow streak." Emma M. Wise, In New York Times. .Ill A'hll'll . M IB! BRAVERY OF AMERICAN SAILOR. Here of One of Moat Notable Deeds Ever Performed. What threatened to be one of the worst disasters in the history of ship ping was the burning of tho Ocean Monarch. The fire was discovered in her fore hold an hour or two only af ter she left the Mersey. There was a strong breeze and she was headed for the Welsh coast. By pome unluc ky accident an anchor was dropped and the big ship was brought up all standing, head to the wind. The flames came roaring aft, where 600 passengers and crew wera crowded. A Brazilian frigate, a yacht and a pilot boat were near, but they only attempted to pick up those who jumped and swam. Suddenly up cams an American clipper, and rounded Into the wind barely 200 yards away. In her first boat was Frederick Jerome, only an able seaman, but one of the bravest seamen that ever lived. In a flash his boat was alongside the burn ing ship and he climbed on deck amid the scorch and smother. There he stayed until the last soul of COO was saved. His clothes were on fire seven separate times, and he was scorched almost beyond recognition. Ex change. IS A SERVICEABLE INVENTION. New Discovery Which Will Greatly Help Builders. A new building material which promises much for the future is called uralite. It is the invention of a Rus sian artillery officer and chemist, named Imschentezky. Uralite is com posed of asbestos fibre, with a proper proportion of silicate, bicarbonate of soda and chalk, and is absolutely fire proof. In a soft form a sheet of ural ite is like an asbestos board; when hard it resembles finely sawn stone and has a metallic ring. Besides being a non-conductor of heat and electri city, it is practically waterproof (and may be made entirely so by paint), and it is not affected either by atmos pheric influences or by the acids con tained in smoke, which rapidly de stroy galvanized iron. It can be cut by the usual carpenter's or wood-worker's tools; it can be veneered to form paneling for walls or partitions; it can be painted, grained, polished and glued together like wood; it does not spilt when a nail is driven through it; it Is not affected when exposed to moisture or great changes of temperature, and it can be given any desired color either during the process of manufac ture or afterward. CAUSE OF FLAT WHEELS. Carelessness Arouses Ire of Old Rail road Trainman. "Flat wheel," growled the old rail road brakeman as the trolley car in which he sat went thumping along at twelve miles an hour, shaking the pas sengers uncomfortably at every revo lution of the wheels. "What makes flat wheels?" asked the man sitting next the old brake man. "Darn fools," said the brakeman. "It's this way: If a man doesn't know how to stop his car he makes a flat wheel. On the steam roads some brakemen flatten a wheel every time they put on the brakes. When the wheel suddenly stops revolving and the momentum of the train carries it on, the wheel slides along the track "and a flat wheel is started. Next stop, perhaps, makes it worse, and so the thing goes until the wheel is no good. If a brakeman knows his business he need never make a flat wheel unless he has to Etop suddenly to avoid an accident. If he keeps his wheels turning slowly they don't flatten. Now these fellows on the trolleys take no care at all, and every, other car in some places has a flat wheel." Down On the Farm. When fiercely smites the brazen sky. And pavements parched, and scorching lie. 'Tis then the countryside invokes Its pilgrimage of "city folks." The locu.st, through the golden days, His strident hurdy-gurdy plays; The fireflies furnish, through the nightt Their myriad electric lights. The flow'rs that deck the meadows o'er Eclipse the gayest milliner store; They're wholly free to all who pass No copper yells "Git aft the grass!" The cows that 'mid the pastures walk Are fed on buttercups, not chalk! No gong they ring, but gently moo. The milk they serve is white, not blue! Here winds no plodding caravan With hail "Fre-e-esh fish!" "Banan be- nan : . But hens strut forth on sturdy legs And kindly cackle. "Eggs! Fresh eggs!" Edwin L. Sabin in the Four Track News. Old Darky's Liberal Offer. On several occasions last summer Mr. Joseph Jefferson had with him as a guide an old colored man to whom had reached dimly, and from afar, the fame of "Rip Van Winkle." One day. when the two were out fishing in a rowboat, he hazarded a few remarks. "Boss, Is it a circus you are in?" "Not exactly a circus," said Mr. Jef ferson. "Yas, Sir. Ye can act, can't ye?" ' Mr. Jefferson made a modest reply. "Well, sar, I never git to New York, but I'd powerful like to see ye act. sar, and I'll give fifty cents if you'll cut up right now!" New York Times. First Schoolhouse Flag. It is claimed that the first flag raised on a schoolhouse in this coun try was hoisted, on Catamount Hill, Colerain, Franklin county, Mass., in May, 1812. Recently a party of patri otic citizens of the town placed a stone slab oa the site of the old loQ scnooinouse, and U is to be suitably inscribed and "unveiled" with appro-' priate ceremonies. The flag raised in 1812 was made by Mr. and Mrs. Amasa Shippee, Mrs. Alden Willis and Mrs. Stephen Hale, from material spun and woven in the different homes of the neighborhood. Method in His Madness. Shortun Congratulate me, old man, I'm engaged to Miss Boodieton. Naggem Why, she's fat, forty, and anything but fair. I don't see what you want to marry her for. Shortun Well, I have a million rea sons for doing so. and each one 1 them resembles a dollar. WERVK WORN KIDNEiTS, Pnnn'i KMnry Tills nk rrpr1m front Rial, liry trouble pokklblff. Tliejr curry a hlutl of rietllratlon to 111 kll lirya tlutt brings a bright ray of hope to (lrairritl caea. Aching back ore rttwd. Hip, bark, and loin pains STf-rrome. bwulllng of the (PIP 1 JW""""1" IlfO, a rt.c,c limbs and dropsy signs vauisb. Uk-( Have, Ta. Mrs. t V. Ainmuuien writs : "A ffufvn-ki S I sent for a trial box of loans KMncy I'll Is for injrwlf, and thry lil s'i lh-y arc Kai.l to do. My Lunbuud was kicliOJ last full STATK For frm trial hnw. riill tbU roupon to Faalrr-Millxini 'o , lluiritlo. N V. Ii L. tf14e la IliauAlrtatit, wilt rvaa on -fft. rat ftJJp. Take -Down Don't spend from $50 to $200 for a cun, when for so much less money you can buy a Winchester Take Down Repeating Shotgun, which will outshoot and outlast the highest-priced double-barreled cun, besides being as safe, reliable and handy, iour dealer can show you one. They are sold every where FKEEt Our 160-Pmqt Elattrjited Catalog at. WINCHESTER REPEATING ARM3 CO. NEW HAVEN. CONN. b arsjora Clear Head & BROMO&ELTZER It Converted the Moonshiner. The fate of those Arkansas farmer boys who poisoned themselves with "whisky" made from wood alcohol made such an iiipreasion on John H. Brumley, moonshiner, that he loaded his still into a wagon, drove to Hot Springs and surrendered it and him self to the United States commission er. His whisky hatl always been pure stuff, he said, but ho wanted to get out of the business. ALT. UT-TO-IIATH Iiai'StKEKPERS Use Red Cron Ball Bine. It inakra clothes dean aud tweet us wheu uew. All grocers. Insanity Among Women. A German professor has been in vestigating tho causes of insanity among women, and has come to the conclusion that if women are admitted into competition with men the in evitable result will be a tremendous increase of insanity among the women. He finds that the percentage of women teachers who become insane is almost double that of ths men teachers. Why It Is the Best fa because made by an entirely different process. Defiance l?tarch is unlike any other, better aud ouf-thlrd more for 10 ceut New York's Thinnest Cooper. New York's thinnest policeman was') retired the other day at his own re quest. The department had informa tion that he weighed only forty-seven pounds, but this information proved incorrect. The officer jumped on the scales after getting his papers of re tirement and pension certificate and he tipped the beam .t forty-eight pounds. Delicate is the material that the dream of a feminine bathing suit is made of. King Stole a Cook. La Figaro, of Paris, states that the members of the Jockey club of that city have a serious affair to settle with Leopold II. of Belgium on his next visit to the French capital, which will occur toward the end oi the pres ent month. It seems that when Ihe king was last there, in February, he dined at the club off a "canard aux navets," which he pronounced to be the finest he had ever eaten, and the next day be chef of the club disap peared. It was later learned that he had been kidnaped by the Belgian monarch and is now in charge of the royal kitchens at Lachen. Then the Jockey club met and resolved some disagreeable things about the old royal rogue, with more to come. Russell Sage's Brick. Russell Sage boarded a Sixth avenu- elevated train at Rector street one day last week. He carried under one arm a sample brick wraped in a news paper. It was one that the builder of the Emma Willard seminary had taken to the financier's office. Re pairs to Mr. Sage's hall are to be made and Mr. Sage wanted to see the brick that is to be used. It was worth per haps 2 cents. At Twenty-eighth street a sporty looking youth, who evidently .knew the great man, reached down, seized the brick, dashed to the door, was down stairs and away before Mr. Sage, much annoyed, could get to the door and breathlessly explain to the guard what had happened. "I felt sorry for him," said the latter, when he told of the experience. "He looked ! real sad at losing that brlct, but I'd have given a dollar to have seen the face of the other fellow when he cut the string." A Good Story. Frederika, la.. July 13th. Mr. A. S. Grover of this place tells an interest ing story showing how 6ick people may regain their health if they will only be guided by the experience of others. He says: "I had a very bad case of Kidney Trouble, which affected my urinar organs so that I bad to get up 'every hour of the night. I could not retain my urine and my feet and limbs began to bloat up. My weight was quickly running down. "After I had tried many things in vain, I began to use Dodd's Kidney Pills, a medicine which had cured some other very bad cases. "This remedy has done wonders for me. I tave gained eight pound3 In two months. The bloat has all gone from my feet and 'legs, and I don't have to get up at night. I took in all about ten boxes before I was all sound." Those who suffer as did Mr. Gro ver can make no mistake in taking Dodd's Kidney Pills, for they are a sure, safe and permanent cure for all Kidney, urinary disorders- Money makes the mare go, but Its peasuasive, powers are often wasted on the automobile. . ty a liorar ami imAij hurt Ms M wua fiNi'tur)il sui aftT lir ifimirnl tin was la melt miat ry trmt lie could Lirtlly walk, ai d to t4Kp rauail lilmaiu Ii dlKtira that tie lliuuct.t lit- ow hi liaa to t;tilt. woik also, 11 aftrtt hla blhvrt'tt-r, ami ,r was tin. ablft to makx hla water with, out iiiin li illafrcaa. I In sist rxl ihi Ilia K-tlinf a tins of oiirgiilla ami frying tlirui. mo J v.-wit to Muaoti a I'riiif htorr and r"t a mt The 5lr t lii brljxfl him so tii'K.U thiii 1 koI thr at'i'oiid ami also thi tlnnl, ami now lu Is my-tlr-ly w il Mrs. I- W. Axau'iiKI, lM'k lluvro, la. SEX rmmsmm Repeating Shotguns Fitch's Drama of Christ. Clyde Fitch wrote a drama of the Savior's life and death which N'-w York may never see, but oul I" Cali lornia tho students of Santa !lnr-i col lege, his ulnia mater, have jrlvei a week-lnng series of presentations rif the drama to great and reverent auM ences. Reginald Do Kov-n Hnd Ho hart Chatfield Taylor's piny. "The d!? Baron," was nlso given its first pre rentation by students. The artorH win. playad it last week were all Hludenti of the Chicago Medloiu college. Inalat oil ;-lllnc It. Fome frriwers n;iy th- lnn't Uc; I flmicH St;irMi lii-caupt! 1 1 1 - y liavt n nto In liaiid of Z 07. tr;iiiiln. wtil' Ii Hk-v know ciiiriot be 1I to u niMn'rior vli hH onoo iis.ct thf Id iz. lf. I)1i.um Starch for ha sutiie nioiiuy. If a woman Is uii3ble to think d anything else to say he repeat! w.k r.ho said to other people. After a man hustles until I;' tiecurck a political job he assumes I ho role of n'irso. Hall's Catarrh Cure Ii taken internal!. J'rire, Every young nan has p great future ahead of him, but tho trouble n it f usually persists in Ktayinfj there. Fortune awaits a poker playing palmist who can accurately read tilj opponent's hand. Some women can keep a secret easier than they can keep money. More Flexible and Lasting, won't shake out or blow out; by uafng Di'fianre tStnrch you obtain better result thnn poKMibla with any other brand i-id one-third uioro for tanie rr.ti.ey. Occasionally a woman thinks her figure is ono o nature'3 miscalcula tions. Promoted by Shampoos of Cuticura Soap And Dressings of Cuticura tho Great Skin Cure Purest, Sweetest, Most Effsctlre Remedies for Skin, Sca!p mi Hair. This treatment nt once stops falling hslr, remove. crust, scales aDd dan druff, destroys hair parasites, soothes Irritated, itching n.irfkres, (stimulates the hair follicles, loosens the rfcalp kJp, ruppll"S tho roots with energy end TKjurJ.shment, and makes the b-ir pror npon a sweet, wholesome, healthy scalp when &!1 else fails, Millions of women nov rely on Cotl cura Soap assisted by Cuticura Oint ment, the great fkln cure, forpresei vins, purifying and beautlfyiu- the fekiu, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, wales and dandruff, and the stopping ol falling hair, for softening, whitcnltg and soothing red, rough and sore baud, for buby rashes. Itching and chafing, r annoying irritations, or too frre or offensive pcrwpi ration, for ulcerative weaknesses, and many aDntlve, anti septic purposes whit.-li readily sugge st themselves, art well as for all the pur poses oi the toilet and nur?ery. Cutlctira remedies are the standard skin euros ind humour remedicr- of the world. Bathe the fleeted parts with hot water and t'utlcnra tSoap, to cb-uuse t!io surface of crusts and S'ales and pofu-n tho thickened cuticle. Dry, witliout hard rubbing, and apply Cuticura Oint ment freely, to allay itching, iriitatiori and inSammaiion, and sootLe and beat, and, lastly, in the severei forms, take Cuticura Resolvent, to cooi and ckanu the blool. A ungle sot Is offn n.fl clent to cure tl.e mott tort J' Ins. lis flnrins skin, pralp :Vd blood liuiin:rs, from pimples to wrofr.Ta. from Infancy to age, whou all else falls. Hold f-murhnul th. w-M Cuftrum Rm!-t. f I Inrvn of Clivn.i't CntM PHI. p- of O'l. 0,r. mnt. W . hnmrt. r. f .ptt. : TxQri.i. ST Oiarrh''ja4 t-q i P-i. A Rii- l U Pan : R-.fn. IT Co!uuibua Am Ptfl-rr Dfiif ft I h-ni. Cnrp . fole Vr VfMad tot "Ham la Cur ti Humour." The S' rCor. I9fi nd jrg lrvfrmort St -rIAeeley jre j - m - "Tnn. ms. The only polt!e cur for 7-.anknns, Iltoff-t'tlnff and the Toliarro U'lt- Cor- reunc!euce fcUlct'.y ronlUIi-ntial. WM. IU liUliXS. ilan.cr. CH4KPI0H TRUSS EASY TO FIT. EASY TO WEAR A-k Vour I'tT'lcUo- AJvUc. H011KI.KT Hi KB PaO!elphia Truss Co.. tlQ Zaoust Bt, fbil.. It. HAIR GROWTH