I How He Won Her. From the Bohemian. Tie was a fisherman, and in love. He had angled for Angelina, and caught her. He had angled for fish also the live-long day. and caught one ephippid, that is, a porgy. That night he went to see Ange lina's father on the delicate question of matrimony. He was nervous, and could not bring himself to the momentous ques tion. so ho talked about the weather and fishing. The old man asked presently: "What luck?" "Only a pound psrgy," replied the suit or. "My boy!" exclaimed the happy father, "I know what you have come about. Tako her, and be happy. No man has ever con fessed to such a truth before. You are a piscatorial George Washington. Thrtt settled it, though, as a matter of fact, the porgy weighed only half a pound, -- i A String to It. From the London Globe. "I was walking along State street, Chicago (the windy city), when a sud- > den gust relieved me of my straw hat I I turned, gave chase, and after a lengthy run at full speed pounced upor. It. At the same moment a strangei (also perspiring and almost breathless) look it from me and thanked me kindlyi 'But It’s my hat,’ said I. ‘No,’ said ho, 'yours is hanging down your back on a String.” His Party. From tho Argonaut. A matron of the most determined char acter was encountered by a young womail reporter on a country paper, who wai rent out to Interview leading citizens as to their politics. "May I see Mr. -7” sh< asked of a stern-looking woman who opened the door at one house. "No, yov can’t,’ ’answered the matron decisively* “But I want to know what party he be- I Jongs to," pleaded the girl. The woman ! drew up her tall figure. “Well, take a good look at me," she said. "I’m the partj he belongs tot" WHY TAKE ANT CHANCES with torn* untried medicine for such troubles m dlarr* has*, crnrape, dysentery, when for 70 years PninkUief (Perry Deris’) bee been relieving millions of casss. Globa Sights. From the Atchison Globe. It Is as difficult to select the best auto mobile as It Is to select the best canta loupe. If a young husband falls to kiss his wife when he comes home, all the girls notice It. | You can’t tell the size of a man’s bank , Account by the length of his daughter’s feather. Have you ever noticed that you no soon er get one trouble off your hands than another comes along. A young mother In Atchison has a baby boy a year and a half old. "I hate this baby's wife already,” she says. If we. kept a hotel, we would not buy a piano for tho parlor. Every guest who cannot play always tries a hotel piano. Lately we are hearing less of mean hus hands, and more of the manner In which married daughters Impose on their hus bands. If you are not saving a portion of your salary, no matter how small It Is, you are not following In the footsteps of your rich uncle. An Atchison retail grocer, who has been selling cigars for 20 years, smoked a really good cigar lately, and It made him sick. What has become of the old fashioned child who followed the other children when they went anywhere, and cried to be taken along? All the "healers" have been placed In the background by a South Atchison woman who can cure a burn by simply blowing her breath on It. When a woman gets married, It Is not because she loves anybody, but because she wants to get a red lamp shade and a house of her own In which to "entertain." There is usually more or less typhoid among the young people every summer, and doctors claim It la due to camping out parties. Few spots, they contend, have the water and drainage that make them a fit place for camping out. Going In wading and swimming In stagnant water will also cause typhoid. THREE REASONS. Each with Two Lr(i and Tea Placers. A Boston woman who Is a fond itttther writes an amusing article about her experience feeding her boys. Among other things she says: "Three chubby, rosy-cheeked boys, Bob, Jack and Dick, aged 6, 4 and 2 years respectively, are three of our reasons for using and recommending the food, Grape-Nnts, for these youngsters have been fed on Grape-Nuts since Infancy, and often between meals when other children would have been given can dy. "I gave a package of Grape-Nuts to a neighbor whose 3-year-old child was a weazened little thing, ill half the time The little tot ate the Grape Nuts and cream greedily and the mother continued the good work and it was not long before a truly wonder ful change manifested itself in the chlld'B face and body. The results were remarkable, even for Grape Nuts. "Both husband and I use Grape-Nuts every day and keep strong and well and have three of the finest, healthiest boys you can find In a day's march.” Many mothers instead of destroying the children’s stomachs with candy and rake give the youngsters a hand ful of Grape-Nuts when they are beg ging for something in the way ol sweets. The result Is soon shown in greatly increased health, strength and mental activity. "There’s a Reason.” Look in pkgs. for the famous little book, "The Road to Wellville" Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time They are genuine, true, and full ol human interest. HE WILD GEE by Stanley J.We^man. (Copyright, 1909, by Stanley J. Weyman.) CHAPTER I.—Continued. For a ful minute the girl vented her aitgor on Og, while he stood sulky but patient, waiting for an opening to de fend himself. When he obtained this he seemed to the two on the deck ol' the sloop to appeal to the big man, who said a word or two, but was cut short by the girl. Her voice, passionate and Indignant, reached the deck, but her words. "That should bo Flaxta McMucr rough!" the colonel murmured thought fully, "and Uncle Ullck. He's little changed, whoever’s changed. She has a will, It seems, and good impulses.” The big man had begun by frowning on O'Sullivan Og. But presently he smiled at something the latter said, then he laughed; at last he made a Joke himself. The girl turned on him, but he argued with her. A man held up a tub for Inspection, and though she struck it pettishly, it was plain that she was shaken. O’Sullivan Og pointed to the sloop, pointed to his house, grin ned. The llstners on the deck caught the word “dues.” and the peal of laughter that followed. Captain Augustin understood naught of what was going forward. But the man besldo him who did, touched his sleeve: "It wero well to speak to her,” he said. “Who Is she?” the skipper asked Im patiently. "What has she to do with It?" "They are her people,” the colonel answered simply—"or they should be. If she says yea It is yea, and if she says nny It is nay. Or so It should be as far as a league beyond Morristown." Augustin waited for no more. He was still In a fog, but he saw a ray of hope. This was the chatelaine, It seemed. He bundled over the side. Alas, he ventured too late. As his feet touched the slippery stones of the Jetty the girl wheeled her horse about with an angry exclamation, shook her whip at O’Sullivan Og—who winked the moment her back was turned—and can tered away up the hill. On the In stant the men picked up the kegs they had dropped, a shrill cry passed down the line and the work was resumed. But the big man remained and the skipper, with the colonel at his elbow, made for him through the half naked kernes. He saw them coming, how ever, guesse* their errand and, with plain Intention of avoiding them, he turned his horse’s head. But the skipper, springing forward, was In time td seize the stirrup. “Sir.” ho cried, “this Is robbery. Nom de Dleu, It is thievery.” The big man looked down at him with temper. “Oh, by heaven, you must pay your dues," he said. "Oh, yes, you must pay your dues.” “But this Is robbery." "Sure It’s not that you must be say ing.” The colonel put the skipper on one tide. “By your leave,” he cried, “one word. You don't know, sir, who I am, but”— “I know you must pay your dues." Uncle Ullck answered, parrot like. “Oh, ves, you must pay your dues!” He was tlearly ashamed of his role, for he ihook oft the colonel's hold with a pet ’.lsh gesture, struck his horse with his •tick and cantered over the hill. "Vaurlen,” cried Captain Augustin, shaking Ills fist after him, but he might is weel have sworn at the moon. CHAPTER II. MORRISTOWN. It was not until the colonel had passed over the shoulder above the Itonewalled house that he escaped from ;he Jeers of the younger members of Ihls savage tribe, who, noting some thing abnormal In the fashion of the Granger’s clothes, followed him a space. On descending the farther slope, how tver, he found himself alone In the sil ence of the waste. Choosing without hesitation one of two tracks. Ill trodden, but such as In that district and at that period passer for roads, he took his way along It at a good pace. A wide brown basin, bog for the most part, but rising here and there Into low mounds of sward or clumps of thorn trees, stretched away to the foot of the hills. The tower on the shoulder behind him had been raised by his wild fore fathers. Soil and sky, the lark which sang overhead, the dark peat-water which rose Under foot, the scent of the moist air, the cry of the curlew, all spoke of the home which he had left in the gayety of youth, to return to It a grave man. older than his years, with gray hairs flecking the black. No won der that he stood more than once and, absorbed In thought, gased on this or that, on crag and moss, on the things which time and experience had so strangely diminished. The track after zig-zagging across a segment of the basin, entered a narrow valley, drained by a tolerable stream. After ascending this for a couple of miles It disclosed a view of a wider vale, enclosed by gentle hills. In the lap of this nestled a lake, on the upper end of which some beauty was con ferred by a few masses of rock partly clothed by birch trees, through which a stream fell sharply from the upland. Not far from these rocks a long, low house stood on the shore. The stranger paused to tal*p In the prospect; nor was It until after the lapse of some minutes, spent In the deepest reverie, that he pursued his way along the left bank of the lake. Ky and by he was able to discern, amid the masses of rock at the head of the lake, a gray tower, the twin of that Tower of Skull which he had left be hind him, and a hundred paces further on he came upon a near view of the house. “Two and twenty years!” he mur ! mured. “There Is not even dog to bid me welcome!” The house was of two stories, with a thatched roof. Its back was to the slopes that rose by marshy teraces to the hills. Its face was turned to the lake and between It and the water lay a walled forecourt, the angle on each side of the entrance protected by a tower of an older date than the house. The entrance was somewhat pretentious and might—for each of the pillars sup ported by a heraldic beast—have seemed to an English eye out of character with the thatched roof. Rut one of the beasts was headless, and one of the gates had fallen from its hinges. In like manner the dignity of a tolerably spacious garden, laid out beside the house was marred by the proximity of the fold yard. On the lower side of th road, oppo site the gates, half a dozen stone steps that, like the heraldic pillars, might have graced a more stately mansion, led down to the water. They formed a resting place for as many beggars, en gaged In drawing at empty pipes, while twice as many old women sat against the wall of the forecourt and with their drugget cloaks about them kept up a continual whine. Among these, turn ing herself now to one, now to another, moved the girl whom the colonel had seen at the landing place. She held her riding skirt uplifted In one hand, her whip In the other, and she was bare headed. At her elbow, whistling idly, and tapping his boots with a switch, lounged the big man of the morning. As the colonel approached the man and the maid turned and looked at him. The two exchanged some sentences and the man came forward to meet him. ‘‘Sir,'' he said, not without a touch of rough courtesy, “if it is for hospitality you have come, you will bo welcome at Morristown. But if it is to start a i cry about this morning s business I you’ve traveled on your 10 toes to no purpose.” The colonel looked at him. "Cousin Ulick,” he said, “I take your welcome as it is meant, and I thank you for it.” The big man's mouth opened wide. “By the Holy Cross!” he said, “if I’m not thinking it is John Sullivan.!” "It is,” the colonel answered, smil ing. And he held out his hand. Uncle Ulick grasped it impulsively. "And it’s I’m the one that's glad to sec you,” he said. “By heaven. I am! Though I didn’t expect you! And faith. I’m not sure that you will be as wel come to all, John Sullivan, as you are to me.” "You were always easy, Ulick,” the other answered with a smile, "when you wore big and I was little.” "Ay? Well, in size we're much as we were. But—Flavia!” The girl, scenting something strange, was already at his elbow. “What is it?” she asked, her breath coming a lit tle quickly. "Who is it?” fixing her eyes on the newcomer’s face. Uncle Ulick chuckled. “It’s your guardian, my jewel,” he said. “No less! And what he’ll say to what’s go ing on I’ll not be foretelling!” "My guardian?" she repeated, the blood rising abruptly to her cheek. “Just that,” Ulick Sullivan an swered. “It's John Sullivan back from Sweden, and as I’ve told him, I’m not sure that all at Morristown will be as glad to see him as I am.” Uncle Ulick went off into a peal of Titanic laugh ter. But that which amused him did not appear to amuse his niece. She stood staring at Colonel Sullivan as if she were far more surprised than pleased. At length, and with a childish dignity, she held out her hand. “If you are Colonel John Sullivan," she said, in a thin voice, “you are wel come at Morristown.” He might have laughed at the dis tance of her tone, but he merely bowed, and with the utmost gravity. I_— “Flavia flicked her with her whip, as she would a dog.” "I thank you,” he answered. And then, addressing Ullck Sullivan, "I need not Bay that I had your communication,” he continued, “with the news of Sir Michael’s death and of the dispositions , made by his will. I could not come ■ at once, but when I could I did, and , I am here. Having said so much,” he went on, turning to the girl with se rious kindness, "may I add that I think it will be well if we leave matters of business on one side until we know one another?" , "Well, faith, I think we'd better,” Ullck Sullivan chuckled. ”1 do think so, bedad!” The girl said nothing, and restraint fell upon the three. They turned from one another and looked across the lake, which the wind, brisk at sea, barely ruffled. Colonel Sullivan re marked that they had a little more land under tillage than he remembered, and Ullck assented. Again there was silence, until the girl struck her habit with her whip and said flippantly. "Well, to dinner, if we are to have dinner.” She turned and led the way to the gate of the forecourt. The man who followed was cleyer enough to read defiance In the pose of her head and resentment in her shoulders. When a beggar woman, more importunate than the rest, caught hold of her skirt, and Flavin flicked her with her whip as she would have flicked a dog, he under stood. There were dogs In the stone paved hall; a hen, too, finding its food on the fleer and strutting here and there as if it had never known another home. On the left of the door an oak table stood laid for the midday meal; on the right, before a carved stone; chimneypieee, under which a hugo log smouldered on the andirons, two or; three men were seated. Those rose on the entrance of the young mistress j —they were dependents of the better . class, for whom open house was kept at Morristown. So far, all was well; yet It may be that on the Instant eyes ( which had been blind to defects were opened by the presence of this stranger j from the outer world. Flavia's voice was hard as she asked old Darby, the butler, if The McMurrough was in the house. "Faith, I believe not.” said he. "His Honor, nor the other quality, have not returned from the fishing.” “Well, let him know when ho comes j in." she rejoined, "that Colonel John Sullivan has arrived from Sweden, 1 and," she added, with a faint sneer, J “it were well If you put on your uni- ; form. Darby.” | The old butler did not hear the last words. He was looking at the new comer. “Glory be, colonel.” he said, “it’s In a field of peas I’d have known you! True for you. you’re as like the father I that bred you as the two covers of a 'book! It’s he was the grand gentle man! I was beyant the Maloney's great gravestone when he shot Squire Crosby in the old churchyard of Tra lee for an appetite to his breakfast! More by token, he went out with the garrison officer after his second bottle that same day that ever was and the creature shot him In the knee—bad luck to him for a foreigner and a Protestant—and he limped to his dy ing day!” The girl laughed unkindly, "touts opening your mouth and putting your foot in It, Darby,” she said. "If the colonel is not a foreigner” “And sure he couldn't be that and his own father's son!” cried the quick-witted Irishman. "And if, bad luck, he's a Protestant, I’ll never be lieve he's one of them through-aiyl through black Protestants that y *u and I mean! Glory be, it’s not in r'le Sullivans to be one of them!” The colonel laughed as he shook the old servant's hand, and Uncle Ulick joined in the laugh. “You're a clever rogue, Darbv,” he said, “Your neck’ll never be in a rope, but you lingers will untie the knot! And now, where'll you put him?” Flavia tapped her foot on the floor; foreseeing, perhaps, what was com ing, , , "Put His Honor?” Darby repeated, rubbing his bald head. “Ay, sure, where’ll we put him? May it be long before the heavens is his bed! There's the old master’s room, a grand cham ber fit for a lord, but there’s a small matter of the floor that is sunk and lets in the rate—bad cess to the dogs for an idle, useless pack. The young master’s friends are in the south, but the small room beyant that has the camp tackle that Sir Michael brought from the ould wars, that’s dry and snug! And for the one window, that's airy, sure, ’tis no drawback at this sayson.” “It will do very well for me, Darby,” the colonel said, smiling. “Well," Darby answered, "I’m*not so sure where’s another. The young mas ther” “That will do, Darby,” the girl cried impatiently. And then, “I am sorry, Colonel Sullivan,” she continued stiffly, “that you should be so poorly lodged —who are the master of all. But doubtless,” with an irrepressible re sentment in her voice, “you will be able presently to put matters on a bet ter footing.” With a formal courtesy she retreat ed up the stairs, which at the rear of the hall ascended to a gallery that ran right and left to the rooms on the first flocr. Colonel Sullivan turned with Uncle Ulick to the nearest window and looked out on the untidy forecourt. "You know, I suppose,” he said, in a tone which the men beside the fire, who were regarding him curiously, could not hear, “the gist of Sir Mi chael's letter to me?” Uncle Ulick drummed with his fingers on the window sill. “Faith, the most of it,” he said. “Was he right in believing that her brother intended to turn Protestant for the reasons he told me?” “It’s like enough, I'm thinking.” “Does she know ? The girl?” “Not a breath! And I wmuld not b« ---■—--I the one to tell her,’’ Uncle Ulick add so, ■with some grimress. "Yet It may bo necessary?” Uncle Ulick shook his fist at a par ticularly Importunate beggar who had ventured acrcss the forecourt. “It's a gift the little people never gave me to tell unpleasant things,” he said. "And If you’ll be told by me, colonel, "you'll travel easy. The girl has a spirit, and you’ll not persuade her to stand In her brother’s llgh, at all, at ail! She has It fast that her grand father wronged him—and old Sir Mi chael was queer tempered at times. The gift to her will go for nothing, you’ll see!” "She must be a noble girl.” “Never a better!" “But If her grandfather was right In thinking 111 of his grandson?” "I’m not saying he wasn’t,” Uncle Ulick muttered. "Then we must not let her set the will aside." (Continued Next Week) Cedar for Pencils. From the Washington Post. "Down In my state there Is a patch of territory about 25 miles square, near the town where the battle of Franklin was fought during the civil war, which Is practically the only section In the United States where cedar Is grown for no other purpose than to furnish stock for the lead pencil Industry," said Thomas Green, of Nashville. “In that section cedar trees seem to spring spontaneously from the soil, and the peculiar thing about It Is that they do not grow In any other section of the state to amount to anything. These forests give employment to many wood I choppers and planing mill workers, who prepare the cedar for shipment to lead : pencil factories in the Eastern states and to Europe. An Immense amount of I the wood Is cut, planed, sawed and shipped oqt of the town of Murfrees boro, Tenn., every year. There have 1 been many fortunes made In that sec , tlon out of cedar. Cedar trees are cul tivated as Is any other crop. The i groves, conserved as they are now by ; the wise owners, will last forever, and will be furnishing the close grained, . fine fibred wood for pencils a century ; from now." Dramatic Humor in China. From the Shanghai Mercury. I At most towns we have called at ! theatricals formed one of the sights. : The din and discord of the band at ! traded us more than once even If the I play had no fascination. It matters j little or not at all to a foreigner what the plot Is all about, as this drags on | for two or three days, sometimes long er. We witnessed a screaming act which was evidently the punishment inflicted on the villains of the drama. Three men In almost a state of nudity ; were being soused with buckets of wa ter and making funny grlmnces as the cold douche was dashed In their faces. ! Judging by the frantic shouts of the : audience this "situation" wan evidently ‘ the height of dramatic humor, and as i we strolled away the poor villains were t still taking their punishment as stage I villains should. II --- ■ | The United States ranks third among [the nations In Importation of *%u MODERN METHODS OF ADVERTISERS How They Reach the People With Whom They Wish to Do Business. MAILING CIRCULARS ART I — There Is No Longer the Old Fashioned Hit and Miss Methods of Send ing Out Literature Per taining to Business. - _ From the New York Sun. Few industries have grown so fast as that of advertising by circulars, let ters and pamphlets through the mails. Last year, it has been estimated, more than $30,000,000 was spent for postage on such communications, and an ad | vertising authority familiar with this field asserts that every other letter carried by Uncle Sam is an advertise ment. | Formerly mall advertising was car ried on more or less in the dark. The advertiser simply got a city directory or blue book or telephone directory, copied the names on envelopes, stuck in his circulars and let them go, hit ting old and young, men and women, rich and poor, learned and unlettered alike. Today that sort of advertising j would be regarded as criminally waste 1 ful. The city directory is now an adver tiser’s last resort, used only when the whole population of a city is to be | reached with some great proposition. Even, the blue book and telephone di rectory, while regarded with more fa ! vor, are clumsy in comparison with newer ways of getting names and ad dresses. I An advertising letter nowadays must hit the recipient on some special in- I terest. It often echoes what one ha3 | in mind with a certainty that smacks j of soothsaying on the advertiser’s part, j I For, if you live in a small western ' town it will not at all be out of the way for you to receive a circular ad vertising stove repairs, mentioning the make and number of your stove. Or such a missive may call attention to the fact that your piano, of such and such a make and age, is getting rather out of tone, and ought to be replaced with another or helped out with a piano player. Or perhaps you live in a city and have lately taken a flyer in stocks or purchased a few bonds for investment. Other investment propositions will come to you by mail, and the advertiser who sends them mentions your recent operations. How are advertising letters made to strike home so accurately? In ways altogether simple and logical when you know them. To make his advertisement hit clean ly, the advertiser begins with your name and address. That is the key to his whole system—getting you on his mailing list in your proper classifica tion. The business of securing names and addresses is now carried on separately by large concerns, that furnish to ad vertisers lists of any sort desired, from one including 250,000 farmers west of the Mississippi river to another enum erating 1,000 persons in a given state who have automobiles. Do you wish to advertise baby car riages to families with babies? The ad vertising list concern will sell you the names and addresses of 10,000 families , in a certain city who have children under two years of age and incomes j pver $5,000. Are you a maker of artificial limbs? | Every day he will furnish you a list i of persons throughout the country who have lost arms or legs. Are you in the musical line? You can have lists of persons anywhere who 1 play any sort of instrument, from the gently plinking mandolin to the stren- I uous bass drum. I Such lists are obtained in various j 1 ways. To get 260,000 farmers in a cer i tain territory the address specialists ' usually go to county tax lists, where j names and addresses are accurate and , 1 complete. At such a source it is also . possible to grade the names accord ' lng to income,, estimates being made ; by the amount of property on which • j each person pays taxes. Among lists of this character you can . ! purchase the names and addresses of , 125,000 retail grocers, 121,000 physi cians, 25,000 flour mills, or any other general classification desired. Names and addresses of families with t children are secured by a systematic private census, made by the list spe i clalist’s own enumerators. All homes in a city are visited and the number > of children, their ages, etc., obtained, either from householders or the neigh bors. Janttors are a good source for information of this sort. A family’s probable income is easily determined from the neighborhood. , One of the railroads running out of r New York city for example, wishes to i advertise its suburban towns. A lit x tie monthly magazine is mailed for this 3 purpose to names taken from the mall . boxes of apartment houses in neighbor , hoods where rents denote incomes ■ ranging between $2,000 and $5,000. i ’ Advertisers are regular readers of r certain Information in newspapers, , such as deaths, births, marriages, ac 9 cldents. Every birth means a cent or ' two to the list concern, which forwards 9 it to a baby food manufacturer. J Five .cents is paid by a manufac 1 turer of artificial eyes for every report 9 pf the loss of an eye. Even deaths are 1 a matter of traffic, for families be 8 reaved are canvassed by the maker of f memorial cards. Some advertisers put 1 names of this character away for a " year, until the expenses attendant up 8 on a death have been met by the fam - Jly, and then approach the survivors - with a proposition to erect a monu 8 ment. y It Is easier to get lists of persons 4 who own pianos, stoves, organs, etc., I. or who play certain musical instru y ments. The advertisers employ chil dren during school vacations, paying them for filling out blanks with correct names and addresses of families In their own towns, giving name of piano, t make of stove and number, musical in 5. clinations number and ages of chil - dren, etc. e Since the telephone became a factor s in farm life the local telephone dtrec ,t tories are. in great request with cotn n pliers of advertising names. It is rea soned that the telephone directory of ■t a given community contains the cream it of its residents. ! Some of the queer lists for :'ile are v the names of thirty-three dynamite _ makers, twenty-two sandpaper manu p facturers, nine lead pencil factories, g and the like. Such lists are often sold .' for a dollar a name, being used by ad v vertisers who sell machinery and sup - lilies in large quantities. ' one list that has a peculiar fasclna " tlon for advertisers, it is said, contains ' the names of 300 millionaires. It is used again and again, though the ad dress specialist frankly considers it ona 5 of he least promising he has. WORTH MOUNTAINS OFGOLD During Change of Life, says Mrs. Chas. Barclay Graniteville, Vt. — “I was passing through the Change of Life and suffered from nervousness and other annoying symptoms, and I can truly say that LydiaE.Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound has proved worth mountains nef gold to me, as it restored my health never forget to tell my friends what LydiaE. Pinkham’s na has done for me during this trying period. Complete restoration to health means so much to me that for the sake of other suffer ing women I am willing to make my trouble public so you may publish this letter.”—Mrs. Chas. Barclay, R.F.D.,Graniteville, Vt. No other medicine for woman’s ills has received such wide-spread and un qualified endorsement. No other med icine we know of has such a record of cures of female ills as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. For more than 30 years it has been curing female complaints such as inflammation, ulceration, local weak nesses, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, indigestion and nervous prostration, and it is unequalled for carrying women safely through the period of change of life. It costs but little to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and, as Mrs. Barclavsays.it is “ wnrth moun tains of gold " to suffering women A Novel Museum. The German city of Frankfurt has added to its many institutions of learning, sciences and fine arts a new one of a novel character, namely, a museum of culinary art, according to Consul General Richard Guenther, of Frankfort. "The museum was opened last January,” said the consul general to a New York Telegram reporter. "Its ob ject is to cultivate the culinary art to the highest degree. “Every new dish of gastronomic in vention will be duplicated and tested in the museum, which in reality, will be a university for chefs, hotel keepers gourmets and producers and dealer* of fine food articles. The new institu tion has the hearty support of every caterer and chef in the kingdom.” The Old-Fashioned Bonnet. % How dear to my heart is the old-fashioned bonnet. The old-fashioned bonnet that Nell used to wear, Without any plums and red cherries stuck on it— The bonnet that didn't want false curly hair! The dishpan effect may be stylish and stunning, - The waste paper basket that's lately come in May be quite the rage and recherche and cunning. But give me the hat she tied under he# chin. —London Opinion. PROVED BY TIME. No Fear of Any Further Trouble. David Price, Corydon, la., says: "I v* was in the last stage of kidney trou ble—lame, weak, run down to a mere skeleton. My back was so bad I could hardly walk and the kidney secretions much disordered. A week after I began using Doan's Kidney Pills I could walk without a cane, and as I continued my health gradually re turned. I was so grateful I made a public statement of my case, and now seven years have passed, and I am still perfectly well.” Sold by all dealers. 50c. a box Foster-Mflburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Each to His Way. Philander Johnson in Washington Star. Says de butterfly to de bum’ly bee. "Why Isn't you all dressed up, like me? I hasn't a thing In de world to do ’Cep’ show oft de clothes dat look so new." Says de bum’ly bee to de butterfly, "Why doesn’t you work as de days go by. A layln’ up honey de way I does; You hasn't got even de grit to buzz.” And' tie bullfrog holler, "You stop dat fuss! ^ Dis’ world would be in a so’-nuff muss If de bees loafed 'round, on gaudy wing, /.n’ de butterflies worked an’ learned to sting.” The Chinese have astronomical rec ords which go back to 2356 B. C. A NOTRE DAME LADY’S APPEAL. To all knowing sufferers of rheumatism, whether muscular or of the joints, sgistlc*. lumbagos, backache, pains In the kidneys or neuralgia pains, to write to her for a home treatment which has repeatedly cured all of these-tortures. She feels It her duty to send It to all sufferers FREE. You cur# (•ourself at home as thousands will testify— no change of climate being necessary. This simple discovery banishes uric sctd from the blood, loosens the stiffened Joints, puri fies the blood, and brightens the eyes, giving elasticity and tone to the whole system. If , the above Interest# you. for proof address | Mrs. M. Summers. Box 3. Notre Dame. Ind. Mother's milk will supply the baby laxative enough, if she takes a candy Cascaret. And the laxative will be natural, ' gentle, vegetable—just what baby needs. Try one and you’ll know why millions cf mothers use them. | Vvst pMkil ket. 10 seats--at drag-stores. I fsatU Xja use a cafcbua bases SMtUv. m l m