THE OMAITA ILLUSTRATED REE. December 25. lCKi For and Til Hatel Habit. NOTICKABi-E phase of the hotel I habit so conspicuous In New V I Torv city la the number of proa- perous women from out of town who flock to tha coMUrst hoatel- rf for pleaaurc and display. A corre spondent says that tha acme of bliss In many minds ia to be able to par tha price for tha "royal aulta" In one of the awell hotel. A young man and his wlfa re cently hired aulta of rooms In a new hotel at tha rata of $100 a day, exclusive of meals, a circumstance that created far more envy In tha breast of most women than If they had learned that this same man had hired a large eetate at the same price. Aside from those who have rooms In the hotels, thousands throne the corridors daily merely for the Joy of participating tem porarily In the coveted glories. They make appointments to meet their friends In the empire gallery, the red room, the gold lobby or the green aalon. They sit In the comfort of those luxurious quarters by the half day, wander luxuriously about the gorgeous corridors and public compart mentf. "Peacock Alley" one famous hotel corridor la named because, of the display to be seen. The varloua dining rooms from noon until evening are thronged with wo men, many of them unattended by men, who find In this public eating and drink ing an agreeable substitute for social func tions In private houses. A Mtssoarl Girl's Lank. Tn return for acts f kindness to a strug gling mine prospector seven yeara ago. Miss Goldle Adams of Joplln, Mo., hss Just come Into possession of a copper claim valued at 1100,000 nesr Coppertgu, N. M. When W. J. Bkee was here years euro and expresxed confidence In the eventual, success of his ventures In copper many per sons regarded him as a, dreamer, lie mas able to aecure little encouragement. One family only, that of Ooldle Adams' father, befriended him. The daughter, then a littju girl, was especially kind to the poor but ambitloua prospector. Bkeed returned to New Mexico and set to work diligently on his vein of copper. The returns came slowly at first, but recently the mine hss yielded copper of such excel lent quality and In such abundance an to establish Bkeed a man of lndepenint wealth. In his success he recalled the kln l offices of the Adams family and the gift to Miss Adsms waa made as a token of ap preciation. The property Is 100 miles east of Jerome, Arts., where Senator Clark's great property, the United Verde copper mine, Is located. It Is a continuation of the Arlsona strata ef ore. Very little has been said of the rich deposits of copper, as the find has been kept secret so far as possible. There is aald to be a veritable mountain of copper ore In sight. The ore Is st the base of Mount Pedgwlrk, an extinct volcano In the Zunt range. The copper assays i per cent at a depth of ten feet In the mountain. Lesg anarch for Wedding Ring:. A Chicago woman to whom was given a beautiful diamond ring by the man whom she -afterward married missed It. She felt sure It had been misplaced. Bhe emptied everything she thought might contain the article, but without avail. She had moved once or twice and every time she tore up things tn the old house and replaced them In tile new she kept on hunting for the lost ring. One day while she was dusting the bric-a-brac something inside a vase rattled. Bhe turned It upside down and out fell the lost ring. Today aha does not know how or when she could have put It there, but now H le more treasured than ever. A Dixon. III., woman recovered her wed ding ring months after It had been lost and all but given up. The loss of It made her so til she wasn't the same woman, her neigh bors say. Bhe had looked In every nook and corner of the house without avail. One day her husband went Into the pantry to get a cup. There were plenty of them on a lower shelf, but something led him to reach up and get one from the top shelf. The wed ding ring was In It. The wife believes she lost It there while she was wiping the dishes. It was loose on her finger and It dropped off without her noticing It. Beneficial Diversion. A Westfleld, Mass., woman, Mrs. Clara Iouiee Kellogg, carried out a novel scheme last summer for giving an outing to about forty Westfleld boys, and for finding the rest and recreation which rhe needed from her literary labors. Bhe Instituted a berry picking cump In which the boys were re quired to work so many hours a day, and the experiment amply paid expenses, which was more than was expected. In Otis, a town about twelve miles from Westfleld. are hills covered with blue berries. Mrs. Kellogg leased 200 acres of this land and advertised for boys to form a camping party. Bhe received numberless applications And out of them selected forty boys ranging from 13 to 17 years of age. An old hotel, containing sixteen rooms, waa rented and turned Into a boarding house. Kach camper carried with him blankets and a temporary supply of food. Mrs. Kellogg boarded at a hotel. Three cents a quart was the price paid the boys for gathering the fruit, which was unusually fine, hard, large and firm ahd grew on bushes four feet high. The SAVE YOUR FACE Age. tidtrtiU. overwork, trouble th6se deadly enemies of woman's dearest treasure (her beauty and complexion) are rendered well nigh powerless by ' MIS. NXTTIE HARRISON'S LOLA MGNTEZ CREME A great scientific discovery food for tha skin, replacing wasted tissues, tilling out wrinkles, causing tha skin to thro off what is unhealthy and discoloring, and to assume tha beautiful transparency and velvety softness of youth and health. Pot lasting three months, 75c, at all druggists. If aa kvaaa daaac taa akin, scan ar eei sksaitfc. write sm. Corraapoodaaca aoitciud. Mrs. NFTT1E HARRISON, Dermatologist lea Uaary bL, Francis 1J Wast 27th t., New VerkCtty For sale by Sherman A McConnell Drug Co.. H. W. Cor. ltth uud Podge, Omajia. BEAUTY TO took H take care of your coaapl.ato. loiHt allow un it (hOy alnplas.blackhaaJs, tan, fhacklM tu btaoi lab your akin. Derma-Royale will amove ttieae like Magic. (.urea ccwt ae Knar. soap, a perfect sua U Insured. . Dsrate-Rey ale . . . .fl-M ' Psrata-keyaleSMB, .U PorVaits and tcttiisusiali sent oe nquest TUB DWW-ROYALE CO., Cincinnati. 0 Bald r '' Drag Cm. mm all ' traarglste. r as. ig A. . a About more Industrious chaps picked on an aver age seventy quarts a day. . The terries were shipped to Westfleld, Springfield and other markets and, although the distance of the berry field from the railroad was an obstacle from a business point of view, the venture was far from a losing one. The boys found leisure for boating, swim ming, fishing and base ball, and much pre ferred this vacation, with Ita berry pick ing task, to a summer of Idleness. Mrs. Kellogg found that the experiment gave her enough diversion to make her thouroughly rested for her winter's work. Bhe has a national reputation as an au thority on needlework and she contribute to eighteen publications. Bhe Is at the head! of the Westfleld school of design and is now engaged upon a work which will be entitled "Artistic Stitching." The plates for the book were made abroad, whero Mrs. Kellogg has spent many of her sum mers. Although Mrs. Kellogg found the boys excellent berry pickers, she believes that arrm m-miM hn mors of a success as thev would be more nimble with their finger and more attentive to their work. A Worn a Constable. Clark precinct of Washington county, Colorado, has Just elected Mrs. Mary Clark Justice of the peace and Mrs. Belle Welnlg constable. Both women were nominated by republicans and endorsed by the demo crats, but neither made an active can vas. I shall carry a big stick when I am serving as constable," said Mrs. Welnlg. Many cowboys reside in the Immediate neighborhood and, although usually or derly, they become hilarious at time. The new constable waa asked how she expected to suppress men who "shoot up the town." "There "will be less trouble than If I were a man," she answered. "I shall invite them to come to Jail, but If they do not I shall ask for help. At any rate, I can uao a gun If need be." Mr si Clark said she had great confidence In the new constable, hence It will go hard with any offender these women arrest and try. Both women are receiving many con gratulations from suffragists In Colorado. supreme Quality of Repose. "Much has been said and written In praise of what is at once the rarest and most desirable characteristic of womankind the supreme quality of repose," says Nixola Greeley-Smith in the New York World. "There are two varieties of repose one the simple inertia which results from stu pidity; the other the product of perfect balance, the equilibrium thai results from self perfectly controlled. "They are often Impossible to distinguish one from the other, and, because of this difficulty, a man who admires the serene type often finds himself married to a woman whom he thought personified It, only to discover that she has the stupid Immobility that results from a mind too small for an Idea to turn around In, "But even this Is probably to be pre ferred In a life association to the unbal anced nerves that so often mark the more intellectual woman. For she Is apt to make a very small extra allowance of gray matter the, apology for every short coming under the sun and to feel that a smattering of Greek or Iat!n atones for the Inability to make a bed or cook a beef steak. "We are all more or less born to repose. There is nothing more placid under the sun than a perfectly healthy, contented baby. But few of us are In later life able to re tain even a trace of that serenity, deep and unmoved, as the surface of a wood land pool on a mid-June afternoon. "There are aome stoics who believe that It Is the part of a hero to meet misfor tune with a smile. But this savors more or less of the theatrical, and seems rather to be overdoing it. To greet It calmly with the poise of a well balanced charac ter that surveys at once the extent of the disaster and the possibilities of remedy, seems the better part. And this only the quality of repose will enable us to do. "Men have more repose than women. Perhaps the superior endowment Is not a natural Inheritance, but the result of busi ness training and the systematic fore thought of good and evil fortune that it entails. - "Women fret and worry continually where men haven't time to. And worry is the death knell of repose. "To the beauty culturUt pining for adipose It should be mentioned that In repose lies the supreme flesh food, and (hat she who has taught herself Immunity from trifling cares may become a veritable Hebe without the1 aid of gymnastics or Bpeclal diet "It may be that to be Just naturally stupid Is half the battle. But stupidity is often the better part of feminine valor, anyhow, and it yet remains to be demon strated that it is not as well her choicest inheritance," Society Women at the Market. . Leslie's Weekly reports that the Balti more society woman goes to market as regularly as she attends church, and in many tnatsnces her face is much more fa miliar where the good things for the inner man are to be found than it is at the place of worship. Although she may have an excellent housekeeper and a retinue of ser vants, yet milady prefers to personally se lect the meats and vegetables for the family table. On Tuesday and Friday mornings of each week Lexington market is the Mecca for many women who are members of the Monumental City's wealthi est and most aristocratic families, and a long line of carriages such as might be found where a reception was In progress is strung out along Lexington and Eutaw streets. As early as 10 o'clock the woman who the night before has been the hostess of some brilliant function alights from her cur-' rlage. usually at the Eutaw street end of market, sometimes accompanied by her butler, but more frequently she enters the marketplace alone. Uolng from one stall to another, testing the youth of the poul i try, the tenderness of the beef, the nrm- nes of the totamo, and the freshness of the rruit, she brushes shoulders with the wife of the poorest laborer, for this is a mar ket patronised by all classes. Usually her purchases are sent to the carriage, which ia left in charge of a coachman. , vYossas) Keeper of l.lghthoaae. For thirty-eight years a womau tins kept the light off Santa Barbara, Cal. The light house Is situated about two miles south west of Santa Barbara, on a low point of land, the light being ITS feet above the sen. The tower rlsea from the center of a small white building with the usual red roof and green shutters, with a tiny porch opening toward the sea. , The building was erected In ISM, and Its first keeper was Albert J. Williams, the husband of Mra. Julia F. Wllllama, the present keeper. He received hla appoint ment when Franklin J. Pierce waa presl dent. The light la a fixed white of the first order and may be seen seventeen mile at sea. Just as the civil war waa closing. In 16, Mra Wllllama waa appointed keeper In place of her huband, who had died, and she haa lutd the longest service of any keeper on the coast, Mrs. Williams haa been away from her yott lut two nights in twsnty-seveo years, the Women Folks nd does not go away In the daytime save ,on Sunday, when she rides Into town to attend the Congregational church, of which she has long been a member. The family came originally from Maine. When they came to the lighthouse In 1856 Mr. and Mrs. Williams had two little daughters, and while there two sons were born to them and one child died. The Baalaess ml Meadlag. The washerwoman has long been estab lished In business, but the work Is so hard and the pay so small that this occupation does not hold out many Inducements to women who are looking about for employ ment. The conditions surrounding the work of the dressmaker (save in the higher branches of the art) and seamstress, are similar. There is, however, a field of en deavor not yet exploited to any great ex tent that Is open to those willing to work with their hands as well as their heads, the business of mending. Here Is what one woman said concerning the possibilities In this occupation: "Everything I have In the world, so It seems this minute, needs repairing, and I can't find any one to do It "I began early this morning to hunt for some one to help me out, asking the cham bermaid at the hotel where I live if she did not want to make a little extra money by taking home a dress or two and putting on a new braid for me. No, she couldn't; neither could she tell me of any one who would come In and put hooks and eyes on some shirtwaists, mend a great tear In the lace of one, shorten a skirt and run sev eral draw strings In white skirts. These are easy things to do if I had time, but I haven't, and would pay well' for the service of a professional mender. " 'Take them to a tailor,' you say. So I could, but I don't, neither do hundreds of other persons I could tell you of. The articles aro cast aside one after another until a great pile Is to be found, practically useless, because a little mending is needed. "Many a woman who leads a busy life and likes pretty things to wear would be glad to have a professional mender come to her once a week and attend to whatever she may have laid out for her. "I live in a hotel full of women, and I know that a mender Is needed here Just as much as the washerwoman who comes regularly every Monday morning. I took this washerwoman because she takes the clothes of the other occupants of this floor. I would hire a mender in the same manner and she would have more work than she could attend to In this one hotel alone. Other hotels would furnish employment In like manner." The few women who have taken up mend ing as a business are doing well. One woman got the Idea through being forced to take in washing or send her children to a charitable institution. She ventured to mend the clothes she washed and added a few cents to the bill. There was no objec tion; then she sent a note saying that it garments to be mended were put with the wash she would attend to them. Later she added cleaning gloves, mending laced, darn ing ugly tears and cleaning and renovating men's clothlnt,. Finally she shifted the general washing to a regular washerwoman, got others to help her, opened a shop In her own house at first and afterward launched out Into a regular emergency business. Another woman advertises herself as an emergency maid. She Is ready to go out on short notice- by the hour and serve In the capacity of nursemaid, table waitress, shop per or errand girl. Leaves from Fashions Vote Book. As long as the motor erase lasts, and the end Is nowhere In sight, the long veil will probably continue In fashion. Copper and silver represents a combina tion of metals that Muds many admirers, steins of copper, mounted with silver and lined with gold being a favorite example. It is becoming more and more the fashion to wear the thinnest of fabrics for winter house gowns. Many girls and young ma trons affect muslin gowns in the coldest weather. Bilk has never been called a winter fabric, hut there is a fad this season for light silk shirtwaist suits or utility gowns, as they are now known. These gowns are correct for at-home wear. Although the long coat is the smartest form of the walking suit there are plenty of women who prefer short Jackets. For them three-piece suits of skirt, blouse and short fancy jacket are provided. Three-piece suits of fine veiling, almost like crepe de chine, are favorites for visit ing and matinee gowns. The blouses of tliege are elaborate affairs and are often of white lace instead of crepe or silk of the gown color. Stiff linen collars are to the fore again. Moreover, it is said, they will be accom panied by linen ties. Some of these are very pretty, made of cobweb linen, and BEAuTYand STRENGTH! Brain Workers, Nervous, Fretful, Weak and Care worn people restored to health by the use of fERVAR TABLETS The Great NerveTonic Produce n'mmonesa. round out bollowneia. all who take them rujoy good health and strength. Kirvin Tablet correct Stomach, Bladder ns Kidney dltordorss create natural appetite, and sood, rich eloed I cure Nervousness and Induct restful alees, Kerrsn Tablets act on the nerves and blood. No remedy In the world to aqua them. Take a law and note the wonderful effect. They give you a sood appetite, renew life oells In young aud old, and restore vigor aud vitality. They tone up the whole lysttm, and make you feel like a new person. Price gl.ee. or B hexes a.TS. Ale NEBTAM LAXATIVE LlfEH PILLS, m CENTS. Far trill package ef Tablets two dnyt' treilmtnt and teitlmonit.il, Itnd 10 aentl to THE NERVAN TABLET CO., Cincinnati, Ohio. Sold bjr Beaton Drag Co. and all durgglsls, or we send, prepaid, ob receipt of price. . You are throwing money away when you buy cheap stationery. Good stationery adds tone, dignity . and power to your correspondence. . TELEPHONE 1604 trimmed with frills of real lace. They might easily be made at home by a deft hunded alrl. The favorite fashion ef wearing the hair is a low figure , the knot covered with a fine hair net. The new neta are made ot natural hsJr. and are expensive The re vival of nets is probably due to the crate for automobiling. It Is nextU Impossible to keep the hair In order when speeding, even when close caps are worn. Bilk pettleiats now match the gown In stead of being of a harmonious shade. For evening wear a great deal of latitude Is al lowed, and white taffeta, exquisitely trimmed with lace and ribbon la worn. For all other occatlona there is a well-defined policy of simplicity In the matter of petti coats. It Is not now considered good taste to- display bright or light colors under a tailored gown. Chat Aboat Wesse. Helen Gould has sent a complete dinner set of solid sliver with gold-lined cups, to lir imm.aiU. mile Helen Oould Bell. daughter of General Sherman Bell of Den ver. Miss M. "medley Is on her way -to this country to ask what the government win do about tu offer of a Bite for sn Ameri can national Institute mads by the Paris Municipal Council. Miss Alice Seymour Browne of Boston hss been appointed an American missionary In tha nnrth China mljtnlon. She IS the daughter of Rev. and Mrs. 1. Kenrtsll Browne, who have been on the eastern mission since 1876. and Is a graduate of Mount Holyoke college, class of 1J0. Mrs. MatiMu A. Pereau of Nashua, N. H., who has Just celebrated her Kith blrth dav. la the mother of fifteen children, has sixty grandchildren and sixty-eight great grandchildren, Mrs. fereau is) a warm aa mlrer of President Roosevelt and delights to tell her friends that on November S lust thirty of her offspring voted to elect Mr. Roosevelt as head of this nation. Ueraldlnia Bonner In the Ban Francisco Arennnut vi thut ItaJv Is tha on v coun try where she has seen the women smoking out of doom and evoklna no comment. At the out-ofSoors restaurants In Venice she has seen both young girls and grown wo men wind up their lunches with cigarettes Just ss men do, and without attracting attention: many of them are Russian, who have smoked for many years, as every one knows; but English women she has seldom seen engaged in smoking, and Americans never. ()n f the nntaworthv characters at the national capital during the sessions of conKrees Is Mrs. Marsaret Dye Ellis of Newark. X. J. now In Washington to work for reform legislation now pending In the senate and house. Mrs. Ellis Is the na tional superintendent of legislation for the Woman liirlstian 'J'emperance union ana is well and favorably known in Washing ton as "the W. C. T. U. lobbyist." She watches closely every move In congress touching the various reform measures which the Woman's Christian Temperance union has at heart and Is quick to send out notice to her constituency throughout the nation when their help us needed by petition or pleas to their national con gressmen and senators from each state. Mrs. Roger A. Pryor, now a silver-haired but still cn arming matron, is we oniy wo man who from start to nnlsh of the civil war was In confederate camps. Her hus band was one of the most distinguished southern generals and thus it was that she enjoved the unique and perilous privilege. Besides being a social leader, Mrs. Pryor Is an author of national note and Is also the possessor of what is acknowledged to he one of the sweetest voices ever heard. One enthusiastic admirer declares that "her tones are like molten sunbeams poured on a bell of virgin gold." Mra Pryor through the last year of the war lived within a stone's throw of Robert E. Lee's head quarters. One of her most treasured tro phies Is a picture of the great general on his world-celebrated charger Traveler. KELIGIOIS .NOTES. The Episcopal diocese of Michigan at present enjoys the distinction of having no clerical vacancies. The Methodist Episcopal church expects to raise &3,6oo,00O for foreign and domeetlo missions in lwo. According to the annual report of the Volunteers of America, of whom Ballington Booth Is the leader, the congregations at the 35.0UO services during the year within the Volunteer halls and buildings reached 11,1103,955 persons. Rev. Ir. George Lawrence Splnlng of Orange, N. J., has Just returned home from Arixona, where lie was sent by President Roosevelt to Investigate the condition ot the Pima and Paneao Indians on the Saca ton reservation. In an Interview he says he don t think the Indians are fairly treated. After twenty-five years of continuous service us pastor of the Clinton Avenue Congregational church of Brooklyn, N. Y., Rev. Thomas B. McLeod has resigned and has g:ne to Washington to make his future home, ins congregation presented him with a check for l-'O.Ouu and a gold watch and chain before he left. About S75O.00O will be required. It is esti mated, from Anglican and Roman church men to bring their school buildings In Lon don up to the standard fitness for school uses. Failure to do this cuts off all claim upon the public treasury. This will be one of the unpleasant consequences to church men of the education act. Bishop Mallalieu, who haa Just passed his seventy-sixth birthday, Is one of the hard est workers among churchmen. Aside from his duties as bishop he is writing a book, "Moses, the Man of God," is at work on a long article on Dante's "Divine Comedy," In which the religious attitude of that au thor will be compared with that of Milton and Shakerfpeare. and is preparing three volumes of translations of the sermons of the well known French Protestant, Bersler. and Blood Remedy brlnr the bloom of youth to the cheeks, and n THE XXTH CENTURY fin ;JUi.lN Kit, , SEVEN GRAND PRIZES (Highest Awards Obtainable) BY THE INTERNATIONAL JURY AT ST. LOUIS, TO THE SINGER MANUFACTURING CO. For FAMILY SEWING MACHINES Especially for "No. 66" absolutely the lightest running lock stitch machine in the world. For Embroideries, Laces and Tapejtries made en Singer Sewing Machines for family ute. For Greatest Progress and Most Recent Improvements In sewing machines for manufacturing purposes. Two Hundred Different Sewing: Machines shown in . ODeratlon for Erery Stitching; Process. in X A S1N OP PEAtTV 1 A JOY fOPPVPB, DR. T. FELIX OOURAPD'S flXIKNTAT, CBI1M.OR MAtilOALi BKACTIf IEB aimoTH Tan, Fltnpiaa .Fraoklan, jamn aKOfia. juin, ana CUB aianaara. sna avarjr Diajniae n uaauiy, ana 4tetlon. II piai atood tha Urt of M vara, ana It to harsiltt wa tut It to tx tort It It properly mad a, Accept no countafr felt ( alalia! name. Iir. L. A. Sarra laid la a lady of Uia banW ion ia MUflni 1 At you lad It dltl in, 1 t a 4 wlU baa Hum, tlllBBI '6ttirtud'l Crus)' at tot least harmful of all tot tain pranaratlona. For aalt by all Drugglita and Fancy uoeda Iwaiers In the U. S-, Canada, asd Enropa. FEW). T. HOPKINS, Frtp'r. 17 firtat Jonat 8t. N. I, Uricsol the Only Cure for Rheumatism If J9V are suffering from rheumatism there is a chance for you to become ab solutely cured. Ton may cure yourself snd do it quickly If you will lay aside your prejudice aud skepticism. Sherman & McConnell, the Omaha druggists, 16th and Dodge Sta carry Uricsol, the Callforrrfa remedy, and we hereby authorize them to guarantee a cure. TJrlcso cures rheumatism la the only possible way )t can be cured. Uric Add and Urates sre tha causa ef rheumatism. These are deposited la the ilssoea, blood Teasels aud Joints ef the body. These deposits most be dissolved and eliminated from the system before cure can be accomplished. Uricsol is a solvent of these and tones np the system, stimulates the kidneys, llyer and bowels and thus drives tbea from the system. Uricsol is harmless snd no Injurious resnlts can possibly come to any part ef your body. Write vs today for Boomer, contain. tec racomnaendad dice for raevmanca. URICSOL CHEMICAL COa Los Angeltrsr. Cal. toAdvertisers New Dressmaking Shop remember It only takes an extra stroke or two of the pen to mention the tact that 7011 taw the ad. In The Bee. r -S3 aei Hi to m We Want a Live Boy in Every Town THE ILLUSTRATED We will start any boy in business, by sending him 10 COPIES FREE. After you sell these, you make. 2 cents on every copy. This boy makes 60 cents every Saturday afternoon at Guide Rock, a little town of 400 people. Max McGill, another boy, at Albion, Neb., sells 3 5 each Satur day. These are bright boys, but there are plenty of others just as smart. Are you one of them? For full particulars write The Omaha Bee, Omaha. Neb. SEWING MACHINE "Follow the Flag " SSL Holiday R TICKETS ON SALE Dec. 2f-25-26-31, Jan. 1-2, 1905 Homeseekers' Rates To many points in the South and Southeast. Tickets on sale First and Third Tuesdays of each month. Low Rates to fill Winter Resorts Tickets on sale daily. Shortest aud Quickest lloute to the South and Southeast. Tor full information, call at Wabash City Office. Harry E. Moores, G. A. P. D. 1601 Farnam. 1 f aklVlllj Wttlli LiOTIO NAl 1 1 ITN For Oonerrhmt, Sltet. Ltucorrhoai. Iptrsiitor thai, Plltt and All Unhealthy Sttual Dltchtrgtt. rio pain. No stain. NO STRICTURE. FREE SYRINGE. Swa-A rt Prerratlv mt nUrm aa.-ea At Irux(!iti, or aunt to any addreaf for SU MSIVDOR MFC.CO.. Laneactar, 0.. U.S.A. You Can Do What This Boy Is Doing. WAiM cwvd JUX uc-u-hruinr Jkruss) asm troXcs f ixAKER BROS j v WONDERFUL STOYmakViH VdOiitlAflMfanRtk. CutnmrUltKhtt with llarriMH Hlnlw nil-ram 14 far mmklsrt kUl Tun., I I I 1 - III 3L" Uo WW 3 Irt, r Jr?! i ! noaool Mil. or inif- 11 v nu t 9 nnr, P1W IUii w "J for oookfnf rnrvmftH ntrenr. Kaiilr imriittvt rvitt1 Kf tl 1-sJSnp, wHlf- 4 ntnlnv rr F. mn4 rv-'Mt Jfld'r. i lmrln GOAT LYMPH TREATMENT Cure Nrnr. lib.. Pirvou frustration. Brain Far. I.ofmnotnr Ataxia, Hhaiimatlftia.' It 7J tVaiamnpllml and (nral DeMlltT. Our 1 1 JMTI1.IW t i vmimi TAhl.aina araltia ortirtnal preparation of tioal Lraad Tratat In labial tnrm. II a imnm, imatpaia. vnaviiiiii ii CO., Itoat. , II noirkara l. , I Ulrtira, for IHSS moipla. Sold bv Sherman McConnll Drue Co. 'I T Btes Relieves rCidnev ! & uiaaaer tumbles at once. 1 Cures in 40 Hours" URINARY DISCHARGES l'ath Can. ulc liaars ilia name I1T flrwarr if mplrvt rnnnlr'frii,. S BEE