Your Liver is Clogged up TWe Why You're Tired- -Oul ml Sorts Have No Appetite.. CARTER'S LITTLE. UVETt PILLS wil' put jroa right in a kw cuyt. Thrydo their dsty. Cure Bil. UeiMil, Inajgeitiea, mi Sick BasaacV. SMALL PILL. SHALL DOSE. SMALL rRICl GENUINE must bear signature i HIS WISH. ! J' I Pi iW4tf Mrs. Henpeck Ah Henry, when I'm t:one you'll never get another wife like me. Mr. Henpeck (sotto voce) I hope not. A BURNING ERUPTION HEAD TO FEET FROM "Four years ago I suffered severely With a terrible eczema, being a mass of sores from head to feet and for 6lx weeks confined to my bed. During that time I suffered continual torture from itching and burning. After being given up by my doctor I was advised to try Cuticura Remedies. After the first bath with Cuticura Soap and ap plication of Cuticura Ointment I en Joyed the first good sleep during my entire Illness. I also used Cuticura Resolvent and the treatment was con tinued for about three weeks. At the end of that time I was able to be about the house, entirely cured, and have felt no ill effects since. I would advise any person suffering from any form of skin trouble to try the Cuti cura Remedies, as I know what they did for me. Mrs. Edward Nennlng, 1112 Sallna St, Watertown, N. Y, Apr. 11, 1909." Well, Wasn't He Right? The minister was addressing the Sunday school. "Children, I want to talk to you for a few moments about one of the most wonderful, one of the most Important organs In the whole world." he said. "What is that that throbs away, beats away, never stop ping, never ceasing, whether you wake or sleep, night or day, week in and week out, month In and month out, year In and year out, without any volition on your part, hidden away in the depths, as it were, unseen by you, throbbing, throbbing rhythmically all your life long?" During this pause for oratorical effect a small voice was heard: "I know. It's the gas meter." Looked Like a Pattern. "My dear," asks the thoughtful hus band, "did you notice a large sheet of paper with a lot of diagrams on it about my desk?" "You mean that big piece with dots and curves and diagonals and things all over It?" "Yes. It was my map of the path of Halley's comet. I wanted to " "My goodness! I thought It was that pattern I asked you to get, and the dressmaker Is cutting out my new shirtwaist by It!" Chicago Evening Post. He Had Been Observing. "Why don't you call your Invention the 'Bachelor's Button?'" I asked my friend, who was about to put on the market a button that a man could at tach without needle or thread. "I fear that the appellation would Imply too much restrictiveness," he answered. "You see," he went on, giv ing me one of his knowing smiles, "I expect to do just as much business with the married men as with th bachelors." Tactful. A woman with a pronounced squint went to a fashionable photographer. He looked at her and she looked at him and both were embarrassed. He spoke first. "Won't you permit me," he said, "to take your portrait In profile? There is a certain shyness about one of your eyes which Is as difficult in art as it is fascinating In nature."Beacon. Delightful Desserts and many othfT pleasing iii -h' s can be made with .55 Toasties A rrisp, wholesome food always ieady to serve. With fruits or berries it is delicious. "The Memory Lingers" A little book "Good Things MaJe with Tuasties" in packages, tells how. So'.l by Crorers pkjs. 10c ind 15c. ItiSTUM CEREAL CO., LTD. Battle Creek. Mich. r TPs. I Carters! I ti IV CK How Phillips Phl Beta Kappa Address at Harvard in 1881 Composed While He Lay Stretched Upon a Sofa Couch. Accoinpnniccl by my friend of other day?, the late John Boyle O'Reilly, the poet, I wns walking through Ks bpx street, Boston, one afternoon in the summer of 1SS2 when my atten tion was attracted to a faro in the window of a typical bow-windowed Boston home. It was a face like t hat Of a graven linage, perfectly mot ion less, and there was an expression of severe dignity, and yet of pertect re pose upon It. I turned to Mr. O'Reilly. "That looks like Wendell Phillips," I said. "It looks like Wendell Phillips be cause it Is Wendell Phillips," Mr. O'Reilly replied. "That is his Boston home. Here he has lived for many years, resisting the inevitable march of business, which Is soon to swallow up the few remaining homes upon this and neighboring streets. "Mr. Phillips." Mr. O'Reilly went on, "Is very fond of sitting in that window. Sometimes he occupies his chair there for hours, seeming scarce ly to move, and I have been told that frequently when In that perfect repose he writes mentally portions of an ora tion or address. "But even more interesting to me was the manner in which Mr. Phillips wrote his now famous Phi Beta Kappa oration, 'The Scholar in a Repub lic,' delivered last year nt the centen nial anniversary of the Phi Beta Kap pa society at Harvard. You may recall that the address was one that stung. He spoke for civil and religious lib erty, and he made a bitter accusation against men of scholarship who took 80 Uttie part in public affairs, and who when they did, usually sided with the aristocratic and the rich. "Well, In tho room at the rear of the one In which you saw Mr. Phillips Friendship Helped Save Union How Archbishop John Hughes Unwit tingly Performed Great Service for the Nation by His Loy alty to Weed. This is the hitherto unpublished story of the archbishop oT the Reman Catholic church who, because he would not permit a close personal friend to be put in the way of being humiliated, unwittingly performed a great service for the Union at a most critiual period of the Civil war. This church dignitary was John Hughes, from 1850 to 1SG4, the year of his death, the head of his church In New York city. Shortly after the outbreak of the jfc'ar President Lincoln, as history states, determined to send abroad, to Great Britain and France, a special embassy to work for the cause of the Union and against the foreign com missioners of the Confederacy. One of the men he appointed ou this com mission was the late Charles P. Mc Ilvalne, Protestant Episcopal bishop of Ohio, and another was Archbishop John Hughes, an ardent friend both of the Union and of Lincoln, and also a very energetic and earnest worker and a most eloquent speaker. These two dignitaries, when they met In Washington shortly after they had been formally notified of their aelectlon by the president, were under the Impression that the third member of the commission was to be Thurlow Weed. But the archbishop had been In the capital only a day or so when he began to suspect that It was not the purpose of the secretary of state, William H. Seward, to clothe Mr. Weed with full plenipotentiary pow ers, notwithstanding the informal re port that had been printed that the three Bpecial ambassadors would be the two ecclesiastics and Mr. Weed. Now, Archbishop Hughes and Mr. Weed were close personal friends and the more the archbishop thought about the matter tho more excited he be came. At last he determined to beard the secretary of state in his ofllce and have it out with him as regarded hi s friend's position upon the commission. The archbishop lost no time In coming to tho K!nt, once lie had gained Mr. Seward's presence. "Secretary Seward." he said. "I un derstand that the commissions of Bishop Mcllvalne and myself as spe cial ambassadors of President Lin coln to Great Britain and France are about to be made out. But I have also No Escape. A. J. Drexel was aimojed, during his recent visit to New York, ln'cause be had to pay, at his hotel, $1.70 for a breakfast of two eggs and a cup of coffee. "It is all very well," Mr. Drexel said to a reporter, "to talk about the rising prices of foodstuffs, labor and what not; but the high cost of living over here is so excessive that 1 can't but think Borne one isn't playing fair. Same one seems to be interpreting the rule of fair play as a little Philadel phia girl interpreted the Biblical rule. This girl was pushing her dolly's coach In Rittenhouae square. A gen tleman came out of a great, pale house fronting the square, and stopping the little girl, whom he knew, he began to tease her. "He teased her till he was tired; then, taking leave, he said: " 'Good-by. 1 don't love you.' "'Oh, but you've got to!" the little girl cried. "'Got to? How?" be asked. "Doesn't tho Bible say,' she de manded, "that you must love them that hate you? Well, I'm sure I bate you.' " Wrote Oration sitting nt his window a moment apo there Is a sofa couch. After Mr. Phil lips had accepted tho Invitation to ad dress the Harvard Phi Beta society, he shut himself up In his room, as I have been told, for threo or four tlnys, and most of the time he lay stretched out upon that sofa couch. Occasion ally, somo member of the household chancing to pass through the room, would see his lips moving, but they would hear no sound. Tbey knew that he wns writing his oration for the Phi Beta Kappa anniversary cele bration writing it mentally, although I should add, that one of my friends is of the opinion that the address thus composed was not the one delivered to the Harvard students and alumni, but was another one. "But as I have the story, nt the end of the three or four days Mr. Phillips arose from tho sofa, which he had not left except to take his meals, or his night's sleep or to perform some de May Confessed He Admitted To a Curious Friend That He Read the Proofs of "The Bread Winners" and Ended Mystery. It was in 1S83 that there appeared anonymously the novel called "The Bread Winners." At once a deep in terest was taken in the problem of establishing the identity of the au thor, and while from time to time through the years many persons of authority attributed the novel to John Hay, the literary world generally did not know for a surety until after his death that he It was who wrote that once popular story. "But long before the general public knew for a certainty that Mr. Hay was heard that Mr. Weed Is not to be ap pointed as a fellow commissioner." "Yes," said Secretary Seward, "we have decided that we will appoint Mr. Weed as secretary of the commis tlon." "Secretary of the commission!" ex claimed the archbishop. "We don't need any secretary. Why is not Mr. Weed appointed full commissioner?" "Well," replied Secretary Seward, "ho has no official character, repre sents nothing but himself, and it seemed to me that for this reason it would be the better part not to name him as onu of the commissioners." Instantly the archbishop fired up; he was a large man, physically, as well as Intellectually, and of Impetu ous temper. "Mr. Secretary," he cried he after ward admitted that he spoke a little excitedly "Mr. Secretary, I want to say just one thing to you either Thurlow Weed goes as an equal mem ber of this commission, in authority and representative capacity, or I don't go. Now, you decide that for yourself. I shan't make any other argument There will be three com missioners, of whom Thurlow Weed Is one, or I will not be a member of the commission!" For an appreciable space of time the two men sat facing each other, In silence. Then, since the administra tion deemed it absolutely necessary that Archbishop John Hughes should be a member of the commission, he received assurances that Thurlow Weed would go to Europe with him and Bishop Mcllvalne as a fellow plen ipotentiary. And one of the greatest romances in all our political history is that which tells how Mr. Weed, a j few weeks later, prevented the Em peror Louis Napoleon from declaring that France would recognize tho southern Confederacy. (Copyright. J310. by E. J. Edwards.) Worry Is the Real Enemy. A busy life is a healthy one, and few rnffer from overwork. Mental strain Is the worm that undermines health; worry and annoyance and Impatience are not wholesome, and when a worn on meets her duties with such weapons sli? can hardly expect to find happi ness and contentment. Investigators are continually telling us that we waste both time and strength, and tome of us are bi ginning to believe t hem. English Women and Clothes Dredging Foreman Could Pass Away With the Consciousness of Victory "Won. An army officer, who had been in Panama recently, w-lls this story, says the Washington Post, of Laurent Uoquebert, who was general foreman of dri (lging at the Paeiilc entrance to cuna! for 1!0 years, llu went to the Isthmus under the old French com pany, and had remained on the job ever since. 1 A short time ago he was badly crushed In one of the -dredges, and lay In a critical condition In the A neon hospital. One of the engineers went to see him. "How many yards?' said the injured man, feebly, referring to the dredging account for the month. Wlun told that they had taken out more cubio yards than In any previous month, he smiled and whispered: "And the Gopher, what did she do?" The Gopher, like the dredge-mautw, voted service for bis Invalid wife, and he arose with tho address completed. Yet ho had not put pen to paper; he had not a scrap of memorandum of what he had planned to say. But the) address every word of It was indeli bly printed upon tho tablets of his mind, so that he read it clearly and without error, when he came to de liver It, with his mind's eye. Conse quently, at no time that ho was deliv ering that superb and classic oration did he run any danger of forgetting any portion of it a great danger that Is constantly before anyone who writes out an address on pnper svnd then commits it to memory." "But 'what you have said does not explain Mr. Phillips' wonderful, melo dious voice, his perfectly distinct enunciation, and his apparent conver sational tone," I said. "Ah," answered Mr. O'Rolliy, "God gave him that exquisite vocal organ for public speaking, and he was ever mentallv practising enunciation, and the lurking power that is in tho ap parently uncontemplated gesture." (Copyright. li10, by K. J. KJwards.) to Authorship the author of 'Tho Bread Winner, I became morally certain that he was, and In a rather amusing manner," said to me sometime ago that veteran Journalist and lecturer, William II. McElroy, who was once associated with Mr. Hay in editorial work for a. number of years. "At the time that 'The Bread Win ners' appenred," continued Mr. Mc Elroy, "I was thoroughly familiar with Mr. Hay's literary stylo and methods and his views upon political and civic questions. So at tho first reading of the book I couldn't help thinking that John Hay was its author. Yet 1 was somewhat perplexed by reason of the frequent, somewhat technical and cau tious denials from Mr. Hay's closest friends that he was the author of the story; and this perplexity lasted until a year or so before Mr. Hay went to the Court of St. James as our ambassa dor, he was entertained In Buffalo by an Intimate friend of both Mr. Hay and myself. "This friend, like many other Amer icans, had puzzled his head greatly over the identity of the author of the book, and he, too, had como to the personal conclusion that It was the work of Mr. Hay. So all the time that the latter was his guest he burned to ask him: 'Did you write "The Bread Winners?" ' Yet he did not know ex actly how to do this without Beemlng to Infringe a little upon the rules of hospitality. "But upon the last day of Mr. Hay's visit bis host took him for a long ride in the suburbs of Buffalo, and when they were far out in the coun try said to him: " 'I am going to be discourteous enough to ask you one question, and first of all to ask you if you will an swer any question I put to you.' . "Mr. Hay laughed heartily, and as he turned his face towards his com panion his eyes twinkled merrily. Then he said: " 'I will answer any question you are likely to put to me except one.' . ' 'You think I am going to ask you If you wrote "The Bread Winners?" queried his companion.' "'My experience would Justify that suspicion,' laughed Mr. Hay. "'Well, you are mistaken; I am not going to ask you that question, was the good-natured retort. " 'Well, then,' cried Mr. Hay, 'go ahead and put your question. I'll answer 1L' " 'My question is this: Did you read the proofs of "The Bread Winners?'" "Again Mr. Hay laughed heartily. Then, finally, he said: " 'That's a fair question. I'll an swer It. I did read the proofs.' "'So I suspected,' exultantly shout ed our friend. 'And I'll never need again to ask anybody who wrote "The Bread Winners."" (Copyright, 1910, by B. 3. Edwards.) Happiness and Sorrow. In happiness there are far more re gions unknown than there are In mis fortune. The voice of misfortune is ever the same; happiness becomes the more silent as It penetrates deep er. He is the happiest man who best understands his happiness; for he Is of all men most fully aware that it Is only the lofty Idea, the untiring, courageous, human Idea, that separates gladness from sorrow. Maeterlinck. Death Rate Among Armies. The average annual death rate among the armies of the world is nine in every 1,0'JO. was handed down to tho Americans by the French. This old dredge of the Scotch ladder type had been at work at the Pacific entrance almost eontinu-' ously for twenty-five years. The Frenchman for years was mas ter of this dredge, and he gloried in the fact that it was the best on the Job. A few months before he met with the accident, however, Dredge No. 1, of the Colon fleet, had surpassed the old French relic's record. That pained Roquebert and he had watched devel-, opments anxiously month by month. 'The Gopher?" replied the visiting engineer. "Why, she holds the record by more than 3,000 yards!" The dredge-master closed his eyes, smiled, and said: "I'm very happy." A Wonder Worker. Sap'igh Ah, speaking of electiio Ity, that makes me think Miss Keen Really, Mr. BaplelghT Isn't It remarkable what electrlclt can do? DOINQ THE THING RIGHT. rail 4J Mr. Parvenue Going to church this morning? Mrs. Parvenue No, I've got a head ache. Mr, Parvenue Then call the butler and send him. The family should be represented. Controlled Newspaper. The Atchlon utulemya that no ad vertiser has ever tried to control Its ed itorial policy, the remark being occa sioned by the charge often made nowa days, that the big advertisers direct the editorial policy of newspapers. Tho experience of tho Globe la the experience of most newspapers. Th merchant who does a great deal of ad vertising is more interested in the cir culation department of a newspaper than In the editorial department. If a dally paper goes to the homes of th people, and is read by them, he Is satis fied, and it may chase after any theory or fad, for all he cares. He has trouble of his own, and ho Isn't trying to shout der those of the editorial brethren. There are newspapers controlled by people outside of the editorial rooms, and a good many of them, more's the pity; but tho people exercising that control are not the business men who pay their money for advertising space. The newspapers which are established tor political purposes are orten con trolled by chronic offlceseekers, whose first concern is their own interests. There are newspapers controlled by great corporations, and the voice of such newspapers is always raised la protest against any genuine reform. The. average western newspaper usu ally Is controlled by Its owner, and he Is supposed to be in duty bound to make all sorts of sacrifices at all sorts of times; thero are people who consider It his duty to insult his advertisers, just to show that he Is free and Inde pendent. If he shows a decent respect for his patrons, who pay him their money, and make It possible for him to carry on tho business, he Is "subsi dized" or "controlled." The newspaper owner is a business man, like tho dry goods man or the grocer. The mer chants are expected to have considera tion for their customers, and they are not supposed to be subsidized by the man who spends Ave dollars with them, but the publisher is expected to demonstrate his courage by showing that he Is ungrateful for the patron age of his friends. It is a funny com bination when you think it over. Emporia Gazette. Statistics Go Lame. " 'Pears t' me thar's somethln' wrong with stertisticks," remarked the oldest Inhabitant as he dropped into bis usual place on the loafers' bench. "What's wrong with 'em?" queried the village grocer. "Wall, ercordln' tew "em," continued the o. 1., "we orter hev had a death In teown ev'ry six weeks fer th' past tew years." "Is that so?" said the grocer. "Yaas," answered the other, "an by ginger, we ain't had 'em!" TAKE A FOOT-BATH TO-NIGHT After dissolving one or two Allen's Foot Tabs (Antiseptic tublets for the foot-buth) In the water. It will take out all soreni'K. smarting and tenderness, remove foot odors and freshen the feet. Allen's Foot Tabs Instantly relieve weariness and sweating or. Inflamed feet and hot nerv ousness of the feet at night. Then for comfort throughout the duy Hhake Allen's Foot-Ease the antiseptic powder Into your shoes. Bold everywhere I!5 Avoid sub stitutes. Samples of Allen's Foot-Tabs mulled FKKhS or our regular sle sent by mall for 2m:. Address Allen 8. OltiiBted. LeKojr, N. V. "FootTabs for Foot-Tubs." Coming Down to Earth. "Happiness," declaimed the phil osopher, "is in the pursuit of some thing, not in the catching of it." "Have you ever," interrupted the plain citizen, "chased the last car on a rainy night?" Important to Mother Examine careiully every bottle of CASTOK1A, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Rears the S 0 . ySfJ . . M- Blgnature pi UZaSYT&ZrA In Use For Over lit) Years The Kind You Have Always liought. Real Reform. Knicker What is your idea of mu nicipal government? Docker First provide an auto and then create an ofllce to fill It. 'or Heil. Mchlnit Kyrllils. (), Sires Falling KyeliiRhes nnd All Kves Th.it Nee.) due Trv Murine Ke Htilvr. Asep tic TuIh-n Trial Hx, -div. Auk Vmir Drug gist or Write Murine F.ye Uemedy Co.. Chlcaro. Kind words are often wasted where a s'.vilt kick would have been more ef-fcttive. Stomach Blood and Liver Troubles Much sickness starts with wcok stomach, aud consequent poor, impoverished blood. Nervous and pale-people lack good, rich, red blood. Their stomachs need invigorating lor. after all, a man can be do stronger than his stomach. A remedy that makes tha stomach strong and the liver olive, makes rich red blood and overcomes and drives out diaesse-produciog bacteria and cures a whole multi tude oi disease. Crt HJ of yoaf Stomach Wcahnea mad Llwr Lasiammm by taklot m courso of Dft Ptarefa tioldma ttedlcat DJsoottry tha irumt Stomach Hmttoratlva, Livr tarljorator mad Blood Ooaater. Yob eaa't afford to accept any medicine of unknown mpfiliiom as substitute lor "Golden Medical Uisoov ry, which is medioin or inown composition, having oumpleta liat ol ingredients In plain English oo its hot-lie-wrapper, same being attested as correct under oath. Cs Ptaraa'a Wuuil IWWa . . - - .w ROOSEVELT RETURNS AND IS GIVEN AN OVATION SBDOM EQUALED The Mighty Traveler Goes Duoyantly Through a Long and Trying Reception-Parade, Showing Lively Interest in Everything American The White Company Receives Unique Compliment for the Sturdy Reliability of Its Steam Car , From Mr. Roosevelt and Family .. r A :;-.' -O "V '-"vTTLj Theodore Roosevelt and After fifteen months' absenc, exact ly as scheduled, Colonel Theodore Roosevelt disembarked from the Kal serln Auguste Victoria, Saturday morn ing, June 18, at 11 a. m. To the keen disappointment of a large group of newspaper correspondents, Mr. Roose velt absolutely refused, as heretofore, to be Interviewed or to talk on politi cal subjects, but his rapid fire of ques tions, showed the samo virile Interest in public affairs as before. If the welcome tendered by the vast throng may be considered a criterion upon which to base a "re turn from Elba," surely thero was no discordant note In the immense recep- tion-parade, nor in the wildly clamor ous crowd which cheered at every glimpse and hung on his very word. The incidents of the day in New York were many, but perhaps none better illustrated the nervous energy and vitality of the man, the near-mania to be up-and-dolng, which he has brought back to us, than the discard ing of horses and carriages for the swifter and more reliable automobiles. The moment the Roosevelt family and reads i Perfection.' '. ''.V . iii if m Cantlonary Note : Be sure if a ' you get this stove see js that the name-nlsts l u Oil Ceok-stove Civet no outside heat, no smell, no smoke. It will cook the biggest dlnnef without heating the kitchen or the cook. It is immediately lighted and immedi ately extinguished. It can be changed from a slow to a quick fire by turning a. handle. There's no drudgery connected with It, no coal to carry, no wood to chop. You don't have to wait fifteen or twenty m'nutea till its fire gets going. Apply light and It's ready. By simply turning the wick up or down you get a slow or ar intense heat on the bottom of the pot, pan, kettle or oven, and nowhere else. It has a Cabinet Top with shelf for keeping plates and food hot, drop shelves for coffee, teapot or saucepan, and even a rack for towels. It saves time, worry, health and temper. It does all a woman needs and more than she expects. Made with 1, 2, and 3 burners; the 2 and 3-burner sizes' csn te had with or without Cabinet. KTeiyuesler everywhere; If not at youri, write for UeacrlpUTe Circular to the nearett uKtncr of the Standard Oil Company (Incorporated) STOCKERS & FEEDERS' Choice qnullly; rule unci roaim, while fiift'rt or uiium biul'lit ou I oriirr. TfriM uf TUniihUiiila to i heleiH from. Sutlhfuciluii (iiuir auli'i'il. t'orrenpuiiiU'iu'e InviivU. Cuiue and wee fur yuurnclf. National Live Stock Com. Co. At either I Kanaaa City, Mo., Si. Joseph. Mo. S. Omaha, Nob. THE GREAT (JAIN HAY TOOLS ARE THE BEST. ASK YOUR DEV.ER 01 JOHN DEERE PLOW COMPANY, OMAHA, NH3. The Old Line Banker's Life of Lincoln, Nebrukka, wauls a mans' wliolu lime lu your ni-lKhborliood. liood pay .write u. W. N. U., SIOUX ..... . . . wvyorww anMim, LIYir Me Host:. CITY, NO. 29-1010. I fmijm I E H.l jsvi jJ . " ft . II ki IBB y pssaa -i L ;'T v. :- jr M i-f ( If , f .,iV i ' : ; . 'i N 4.J ..7-1 yfth b. ... r- IF-: Party In White Steamer.) Immediate party landed, they wer whisked away in White Steamers ta tho home of Kirs. Douglas Robinson at 433 Fifth avenue. A littlo later, whe the procession reached the corner t Fifty-ninth street and Fifth avenuev Colonel Roosevelt again showed hl preference for the motor car in gen eral and the Whlto cars in particular,, when he, Cornelius Vanderbllt and Col lector Loeb transferred from their car riage to White Steamers, which wertv lu waiting for them. After luncheon at Mr. Roblnson'av hotiKe, tho entire party, including Colonel Roosevelt, again entered White- cars and were driven to Long Island City, where they were to take a spe cial train to the exrrosldent's homa at Oyster Day. The supremacy of the White cart with tho Roosevelt party was a gala demonstrated on Sunday, when the party was driven to church In the White Steamers, and a group of somev forty prominent Rough Riders were taken in a White Gasoline Truck to clambake at the Travers island club house of the New York Athletic Club, Many Womeii wlio are SplesnsM Cooks dread having to prepare an elab orate dinner because they are not sufficiently strong td stand over an intensely hot coal range. This is especially true in summer. Every woman takes pride in the table she sets, but often it is done at tremen dous cost to her own vitality through the weakening effect of ' cooking on a coal range in a hot kitchen. It is no longer necessary to wear yoursclf out preparing a fine dinner. Even in the heat of summer you cats, cook a large dinner without belcar worn out. Up-Set ' Sick Feeling that follows taking a dose of castor oil, salts or calomel, is about tha worst yoa can endure Uch it gives one the creeps. You don't have to have it CASCARETS move the bowels tone up tho liver without these bad feelincs. Try them. Sl4 CABARETS loc a box for mk' trri'tiiiem. nil dnlt.'rst. Hirprst wllrr iuilicMoild. Million boxes a uiunLb. DAISY FLY KILLER SXlVJttXZ hetu. clean, of nam i. Readers Wt; anything adver. tued to itt columns should insist upon having what they stk lor, rcfuiiog all ubnitutea Of imitations. M. Splesberger & Son Co. Wholesale Millinery Ike Bast la th Wait OMAHA. NIaU PATENTS Instou, ll.-O. buukalrm. Hhk. eat metauoaav DEFIANCE STARCH "'MarifiT'aun