LIVING PICTURES IN BROAD DAYLIGHT. One Real Living Picture Meets Another. ITbat She Took For a Spirit Was Her Friend. Ghosts don't walk in broad daylight. and vet when a woman finds herself suddenly confronted by the friend she has mourned as dead she is apt to ex penenee a creepy sensation that isn't down in the dictionary. In a case like this no amount of pres ence of mind or self-possession can ward off the mingled feelinrs of aston ishment, fear, joy and curiosity that win renaer a woman temporarily tongue-tied. It is only after seeing the cherished smile of greeting, after again TWO LIVING riCTCKES MEET, feeling that there is throbbing life be neath the dainty glove, and after again hearing her own name spoken in the ever familiar voice, that this strange sensation vanishes. THE STEAXGE MEETING. The meeting of the two women whose pictures are here given, shows that everyday life furnishes experiences as thrilling as those that come to us only in our wildest dreams. And the fact that such meetings occur every day points a moral that every woman in the land should take to heart Here was a woman in the prime of life, pursued by that sentinel which seeks its victim, among her sex alone. From a living picture she became, in less than a year, a wreck cf human wretchedness. From despondency to despair seemed but the remaining step, the last step. HEIt LAST FAREWELL Overcome by the presentiment that precedes a lingering death, she asked to be removed to her old home in the West, and spoke what to all seemed to be her last farewell. In the very pa per that chronicled her departure the doomed invalid found letters written by Mrs. Belle Dement, of Iroquois, I1L, Mrs. Minnie Smith, of Lowell, Ore gon, and others. Some of these letters are printed below. They told how cures had been found for cases like her own shattered health that had almost sapped life away. 'With no more hope than that which prompts the drowning man to catch at a straw for she firmly believed herself incurable, just as tens of thousands of women believe them selves incurable she followed the ad vice contained in these letters. The result is best told in the woman's own words: "In less than five months," she writes, 'I returned to my friends in the East, as well and strong in body and mind and as happy and free from pain as any woman- in the world. I had gained nearly thirty pounds in weight and was so changed in face and form that when one of my dearest friends met me in broad daylight she lmost fainted, for SHE BELIEVED ME DEAD." She adds. "I owe my whole life and happiness to Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescription, which cured me after doc tors, travel, baths, massage, electricity, had failed to even benefit!" This woman's case, remarkable as it may seem, is not an exceptional one. Thousands and thousands of just such cures have been made in every State by this same special remedy for women's peculiar disorders and diseases. This world-famed remedy is not recommend ed as a "cure-all" but as a most perfect specific for women s peculiar ailments. As A. POWERFUL, INVIGORATING TOJTIC, it imparts strength to the whole system and to the organs distinctly feminine in particular. For overworked, "worn out." "run-down," debilitated teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, 'shop-girls," housekeepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women generally, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the greatest earthly boon, being unequaled as an appetizing cordial and invigorat ing tonic As a SOOTHING NERVINE, 'Favorite Prescription" is unequaled in subduing nervous excitability, irrita bility, nervous exhaustion, nervous prostration, neuralgia, hysteria, spasms, chorea, or St. Vitus's dance, and other distressing, nervous symp toms commonly attendant upon func tional and organic diseases of the gen erative organs of women. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety and despondency. In complicated cases, or when the kidneys or liver are affected, or the blood impure, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medi cal Discovery should be taken conjoint ly with the use of the "Favorite Pres cription," according to directions, around each bottle. A GREAT BOOK FREE. When Dr. Pierce published the first edition of his work. The People's Com mon sense Medical Ad viser, he announced that after 680.000 copies had been sold at the regular price, SL 50 per copy, the profit on which would repay him for the great amount of labor and money expended in producing it, he would distribute the next halt million free. As this number of copies has already been sold, he is now distributing, absolutely free, 500,000 vcopies of this most complete, interest ing and valuable common sense medi cal work ever published the recipient ifuj f t! ! ' i J r 7r awq is president. this little COUPON KUM- I COUPON I BEB with twenty-one No. 161 (21) one rent stamps to cover cost of mailing only, and the book will be sentpost-paid. It is a veritable medical library, complete in one volume. It contains over 1000 pages and more than 300 illustrations. Several finely illus trated chapters are devoted to the care ful consideration in plain language, of diseases peculiar to women and their successful home-treatment without the aid of a physician and without having to submit to dreaded "examinations" and the stereotyped "local applica tions," so repulsive to the modestly sens itive woman. The Free Edition is pre cisely the same as that sold at 8L50 ex cept only that the boobs are bound in strong manilla paper covers instead of cloth. Send now before all are given away. They are going off rapidly, therefore, do not delay sending imme diately if in want of one. Whitest City la the World. There cannot possibly be a whiter city than Cadiz, unless it be built of snow. The best way to approach the port is to take a trip in one of the small steamers which ply between the ports of Morocco and Spain. As you near tbe coast you see in front of you a white mass which appears to be float ing upon the water, just as you are. The first thought of a foreigner is that he is in sight of an iceberg. The white mass glittering in the sun, and ren dered more dazzling by the blue sea and sky, looks exactly like a monster ice mountain partly melted, so that the outlines of castles and hills appear upon it; but only for a second does the illusion last, for you know there are no icebergs in that part, and you are quick ly informed that jou are looking at Cadiz. No other town in the world presents such a magic appearance. When Wrinkle Seam the Brow, And the locks grow scant and silvery, In firmities of age come on apace. To retard and ameliorate these is one of the benign effects of llostetter"s stomach Hitters, a medicine to which the aged and infirm can resort as a safe solace and invigorant. It counteracts a tendency to rheumatism and neuralpria. improves digestion, lectifies bil iousness and overcomes malaria. A wine glass before retiring promotes slumber. Dogs and Their Friends. It was Dr. John Brown of Edinboro I think, who spoke in sincere sympa thy of the man who "led a dog-less life." It was Mr. "Josh Billings, r' I know, who said that in the whole his tory of the world there is but one thing that money cannot buy, to-wit: the wag of a dog's tail. And it was Prof. John C. Van Dyke who declared the other day, in reviewing the artistic career of Landseer, that he made his dogs too human. It was the great Creator himself who made dogs too hu man so human that sometimes they put humanity to shame. I have been the friend and confident of three dogs, who helped to humanize me for the space of a quarter of a cen tury, and who had souls to be saved, I am sure; and when I cross the Stygian river I expect to find on the other shore a trio of dogs wagging their tails al most off in their joy at my coming, and with honest tongues hanging out to lick my hands and my feet. And then I am going, with these faithful, de voted dogs at my heels, to talk dogs over with Dr. John Brown, Sir Edwin Landseer and Mr. Josh Billings. "Three Dogs," by Laurence Hutton, in November St. Nicholas. There Is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put tog-ether, and until the last few years was supposed to be Incurable. For a great many years doctors pro nounced it a ?ocal disease, and pre scribed local remedies, and by constant ly failing' to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires consti tutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitu tional cure on tne market. It Is taken internally, in doses from ten drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces oi the sys tem. They offer One Hundred Dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O. Sold by druggists; 75c. Hall's Family Pills. 25c. The Tiniest Married Coo pie. "Westminster Gazette: On September 23 the wife of a dwarf by the name of Morris gave birth to twins at Blaena von, North Wales. Morris is only thirty-five inches in height, while his wife is even smaller in stature. They were married at Barthomley church last Christmas, and have since been traveling through the country as Gen eral and Mrs. Small, being the smallest married couple in the world. The mother and infants are doing welL Coe's Cough Balsam la the oldest and beat. It will breaJt up a Cold quleh er tbaa aro UiuiK elae. It a aJw&ya reliable Try 1U Aggravating: Days. Aren't there some times in your life when everything seems to go wrong, no matter how hard you try to have them go right? Those are the trying days when you want to blame all the trouble on the way you get out of bed in the morning. Another woman says she can make more enemies on one of these days than friends during the other 364. "Words may be forgiven, but they are not so easily forgotten. The unkind speech that is forced from you because you are not feeling quite well, or the pettish, annoying action that you in dulge in simply because you are nervous or worried doesn't do you one bit of good and makes everybody around you uncomfortable, and long stfter the words have been uttered or the deed done the memory will rankle and burn and you will wish vou had held on to your tongue and your temper before you got into such a scrape. The Atlantic Monthly for November will contain among other features three short stories of exceptional quality: In Harvest Time, by A. M. Ewell; The Apparition of Gran'ther Hill, by Eow land E. Robinson; and The Face of Death, by L. Dougall. No recent se ries of papers in the Atlantic has at tracted more wide attention than George Birkbeck Hill's A Talk over Au tographs. The fifth and last of the series appears in this issue. Lafcadio Beam's contribution bears the sug gestive title After the War, and is quite as readable as his other delightful studies of Japan. Poems, exhaustive JJook..Eeviews.andhe-nKnalrlna.rt.. A LIE WELL NAILED. TRUTH IS ALWAYS ON THE SIDE OF SILVER. A Sample of the Gold Standard Ing to Ml lead West. Rot With Which the Advocates mre Try the People of the One of the clearest and strongest of recent writers in the cause of silver res toration is S. S. King of Kansas City, Kansas. He is the author of "A Few Financial Facts," "Sample Silver Bricks," and other works on economic questions. He writes mainly from the standpoint of the farmer, and shows In the most impressive way how agricul ture, in nearly all Its branches, has been crippled since 1873. "Sample Silver Bricks" is a most admirable little pamphlet, in which several lines of in dustry are taken up singly, and the shrinkage in values presented in a most vivid and striking way. The first is entitled "A Soft Brick," and it deals with the alleged prosperity that has blessed the American people since the adoption of the gold standard. It is so suggestive and instructive that it is well worthy of reproduction. Accord ingly, it is given in full: "When was silver demonetized? It never was demonetized. But when was it deprived of its full legal tender power? In 1873. What has happened since then? The greatest prosperity this country has ever seen. In 1873 Kansas had 2,100 miles of railroad, 375, 000 people, and an assessed valuation of $125,684,176. Now she has 8,844 miles of railroad, 1,500,000 people, an assessed valuation of $337,501,722. This is only a sample brick. The whole country has enjoyed unparalled prosperity since 1873." "Mr. Charles S. Gleed, of Topeka, a prominent director of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railroad, recently contributed an elaborate gold-standard argument to the New York Bond Rec ord, of which the above is an extract. The article, though applauded to the echo by the gold standard folks, and even admired by some of the silver men, is as false in its statement of fact, and as faulty in its conclusions, as the above extract will appear when examined. Mr, Gleed should use a harder brick than he uses. Who owns the 6,700 miles of railroad that have been built? Not the people of Kansas, do they? Not the people generally of the United States, do they? Who do own them? If Mr Gleed will .investigate he will find, 1 apprehend, that somewhere from 90 to 100 per cent of the ownership of Kansas railroads is in the money centers of the east. The assessed values that he tells us have grown from 125,000,000 to 337,000,000 have fallen far short of the growth which he gives the population He should amend his figures at once Applying the simple rule or three, we have this formula: As 375,000 people (Kansas population in 1873) are to 1,500, 000 people (Kansas population in 1895) so are 125,000,000 of assessed values (1873) to 500,000,000 of assessed values (the required amount in 1895). As Kan sas has in 1895 337,000,000 of assessed values, instead of the 500,000,000, she should have according to Mr. Gleed's own figures, it follows that she is short 163,000,000 of assessed values. But in asmuch as Kansas (a typical Western state, in just the same condition as her sisters)) though distressingly short in assessed values, is distressingly long on the Interest bearing debts which Mr Gleed's friends hold against her, it is not surprising that he is satisfied with the peculiar prosperity which he has discovered. If the reader will turn to pages 293 and 294 of the Statistical Ab stract of the United States for 1894, published under the direction of the secretary of the treasury, he will find, in the figures pertaining to the several classes of livestock and their values, an interesting refutation of Mr. Gleed's statement of fact. Farm Animals of the United States. Jan. 1, 1870. Jan. 1, 1S95. 2,248,800. Horses .... 15,893,318 1,179,500. Mules 2.333,108 10,095,600. Milch Cows 16,504,629 15,388,500. Other Cattle 40,853,000. Sheep 26,751,400. Swine 34,364,216 42,294.064 43,892,708 102,516,800 . Total No .... 155,282,043 $1,822,327,377 . Total Value . $1,817,802,110 "This Is a wonderful 'brick of Mr. Gleed's. In the full flusn of his un paralleled prosperity 155,000.000 farm animals in 1895 are worth less than 102, 000,000 in 1870! Total number of farm animals increased 51 per cent. There should be a better demand now than then, because population has increased 79 per cent in the meantime. Our Bond Record man might do another sum thus: As 102,000,000 animals (the num ber in 1870) are to 153,000,000 animals (the number in 1895), so are $1,822,000, 000 (value in 1870) to $2,768,000,000 (the required value in 1895). Hence it fol lows that as our value of farm animals in 1895 should be $2,768,000,000 and is only $1,817,000,000, we are short $951, 000,000, in spite of Mr. Gleed's 'unpar alleled prosperity.' Let the reader im press upon his mind this little, simple object lesson. Growth of farm animals represented thus: 1870. 1895. C 1 Growth of farm animal values repre sented thus: 187C. I I 1895. L 1 "It may be objected that an animal of small value cannot fairly be united with an animal of large value in thus combining their numbers and prices. That Is true. But It must be noted that.Lsland .nn tiJcllsh eround). thev may the numbers, would appear much great er tian given here. A handful of in disputable facts is better evidence than a wagon-load of fine-spun, silken the ory; and if the distinguished writer from whom I have quoted is as faulty throughout, of which I have no doubt, as in the "sample brick" here exposed, his article, while yet the strongest from his side, is yet as visionary as 'dreams one dreams of having dreamed. And In this respect it differs not from tho golden sophistries of the average single standard argument, which is invari able made of the softest class of 'sam ple bricks. " In the above the writer has struck the nail squarely on the head. The "prosperity" of the last twenty years has been chiefly in spots. A few favored localities and a few fa vored individuals have acquired im mense wealth. The great money cen ters, the capitalists and speculators, have done a thriving business, but it has been largely at the expense of those engaged in legitimate industry. To the gambler on change it makes no dif ference whether the products in which he deals are high or low, in the abso lute sense. What he wants is fluctua tion, rising and falling so that he may profit by the changes. When this takes place, and the changes are in his favor, he gets rich. Then he builds a marble palace and a steam yacht, gives some impecunious foreign nobleman a few millions to marry his daughter, and thinks that any person who questions the alleged "unparalleled prosperity" of the country is an anarchist or some thing worse. National Bimetallism To Tay the Debt. Represented in interest-bearing se curities and due by the people of the United States in their individual and corporate capacities, would require: All of twenty-five such corn crops as the present one (2,000.000,000 bushels) at 25 cents a bushel, $12,500,000,000; all of twenty-five such wheat crops as the present one (400,000,000 bushels) at 50 cents a bushel, $5,000,000,000; all of twenty-five such cotton crops as the present one (8,000,000,000 bales) at 74 cents, $7,500,000,000; total debt at low estimate. $25,000,000,000. And this takes no account of interest. It would require twice the gold and silver produced in the country to pay "the interest on the foreign debt alone, and ten times the present production to pay interest on the entire debt. Can you comprehend the meaning of this? The producers must pay it all. Can you not see why the rich are growing richer, and the poor are growing poorer? And the security factories of Wall street are still grinding out stock3 and bonds, adding to this mountain of debt this burden on the people. Who is responsible? The corporations are created by law. They create securi ties under the law. The people's rep resentatives make the laws. The peo ple themselves are responsible for the laws. The people can appeal or amend the law. It is clear they should repeal or amend it. Money ? ? ? ? The Ralance Against Us. Since the sj'ndicate contract was made there has been sent abroad to cover an adverse balance against us all to be paid in gold or its equivalent. U.S. bonds,about $34,000,000 Of which there has been re turned to this country, probably .... American securi ties placed as a credit for"bill3, a s collateral rather than as investments ... Gold shipments 8,000,000 $26,000,000 102,000,000 31,000,000 $159,000,000 At the same time, imports of mer chandise are exceeding exports of our products. It is not an encouraging prospect, but it is better to look it in the face than to be taken by surprise. Money ? ? ? Did Yon Know Ton Owed It? Are you a laboring man with a fam ily of five? If so, then you are helping to pay a debt averaging $1,700 to every family in the United States, which has been created in various ways and which your labor is helping to pay Interest on. You are taxed for it in everything you eat and drink, in everything you wear, and in every luxury you enjoy. Are you a farmer with a mortgage on your farm? Do you know that the country has been loaded with an in debtedness, which you are helping to pay, of $340 for each man, woman and child of its population $1,700 for each family of five debts created without your knowledge or assent and for which you are laboring day in and day out to pay your share of interest? Do you know that you are paying it in the extra prices paid for transportation of every bushel of your products and by the additional tax upon every article you buy? Confidence. The way it works. If the people have confidence in the banks to leave their deposits with them, and the banks have confidence in the people enough to loan freeiy, and in each other so as to work to gether, everything may move swim mingly. But if one-eighth of the deposits should be withdrawn, it would call for all the actual cash in the vaults. It would compel the banks to call in loans in even greater proportion. It would mean hardship and trouble, especially for those who are weak financially and dependent on their credit. Or, if the banks become frightened. as they did in 1893 (and they always all the weak Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report i v r Arranging the Dinner Table. The table should be placed with due regard to the shape and size of the room and also with proper relation to light air and warmth. No laws are laid down for breakfast, tea and the ordi nary luncheon. These are informal occasions, and much latitude is allowed for the expression of individual taste; but the wise woman, she who "looketh well to the ways of her household," al ways sees that the best results, both in comfort and appearance, are obtained from the means at hand. Neither the size of the family purse nor the quality of the service at command, will prevent her from seeing that the family board is tastfully arranged and that the fur nishings and accessories are so disposed as to yield the greatest possible amount of comfort and convenience under the circumstances. A 60-CT CALENDAR FKEE. The publishers of The Youth's Companion offer to send free to every new subscriber a handsome four-pape calendar. xl0 in., lithographed in nine bright colors. The re tail price of this calendar is 50 cents. Those who subscribe at once, sending $1.75. will also receive the paper free every week from the time the subscription is re ceivea to January 1, Also the Thanks- civins. Christmas and New Year's Double Numbers free, and the Companion a full year, 5: weeks, to Jan. 1. 1-UT. Address The Youth's Companion, 199 Columbus Ave., Boston. The Potato's Genesis Unsolved. The early naturalists differed greatly as to the origin of the potato, writes John Gilmer Speed in November La die's Home Journal. In England it was held to be a native of Virginia, and in Spain it was said to have orig inated in Feru. Modern opinion holds that it is indigenous to the elevated table lands of Chili, Peru, Bolivia, Costa Rica, Mexico and southwestern United States. It probably got to Vir ginia by the hands of some early Span ish explorers. It is certain, however, that it was not cultivated in Virginia till far into the eighteenth century, and then it was introduced in the American Colonies on account of the esteem in which it was held in Europe. Currant Up a Tree. Quite a freak of nature can be seen L in a big elm tree in YVaterville, Me. In the fork of the tree, up a dozen feet from the ground, a large currant bush has taken root, and was recentlyloaded with currants. Piso's Cure is a wonderful Cough medi cine Mrs. W. Pickebt, Van Siclen and Blake Aves., Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 20, 94. It isn't the biggest best music. horn that makes the The man with the heaviest often has the baldest bead. mustache Do Yon Speculate? Then send for our book, "How to Specu late Successfully on Limited Margins in Grain and Stock Markets." Mailed free. Comstocx, Hughe & Company, Rialto Building, Chicago, Ill Many a supposed giant has turned out to be only a shadow. An Enigmatical Bill of Fare For a dinner served on the dining cars of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway will be sent to any address on receipt of a two-cent postage stamp. Apply to George II. Ileaford, general passenger agent, Old Colony building, Chicago, 111. The bearer of good news always has a sweet voice. Billiard table, fecond-hand, for sale cheap. Apply to or address, II. C. Akix, 511 S. V2th St.. Omaha. Neh. LL V iss ooooooooooooooooooooooooo 8 Queer Names. HS mm 8 0 Blue Spots " Dead Aches . T ' V O Oaroaxi icukaowuoiiie8ii, Done, -l and HiOscle. and easflv cured bv huuvuwu .-..-.. - J OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOO Timely Warning. Tho great success of the chocolate preparations of the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established in 1780) has led many misleading of their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter Baker & Co. are the oldest and largest manu facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are used in their manufactures. Consumers should ask for, and be sure that they get, the genuine Walter Baker & Co.'s goods. WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS. .WEALTH a perfect health, comfort, good-nature, baby-beauty. Scott's Emulsion is the best fat-food baby can have, in the easiest form. It supplies what he cannot get in his ordinary food, and helps him over the weak places to perfect growth, For the growing child it is growth. For the full grown, new life. B sure yen gt Scitfs Emuhien vrJUmy mnt it nJ nit u cAra tuistitute. ott & Bowhe, New York. All Dru:ists. 50c end Si. I ni ii . v MS H i) 9 ViiOv 170 A Prolific Cereal. In India, rice is really cultivated over but a small portion of the country; but from the fact that it is a very prolific cereal, and that where grown it almost monopolizes the field, if forms, as already understood, one of the most important crops of the entire country. In British Iiurmah the rit-e crop occupies about 90 per cent of the ground under cultivation, and in addi tion to what is consumed by the popu lation, the annual exportation reaches some 25,000,000 bushels. While the principal growth is in the lowlands bor dering the great rivers, another variety is cultivated which grows well upon dry ground, and as far up as the river valleys of the Himalayas. The IJurmah rice is of rather inferior quality, and but one crop a year is grown. A ChUd Enjoys The pleasant flavor, gentle action and soothing effects of Syrup of Figs, when in need of a laxative, and if the father or mother be costive or bilious, the most gratifying results follow its use; so that it is the best family remedy known, and every family should Lave a bottle on haai. J1ealth once Impaired la not eily rfjalnfd, yet Parker's tiing r Tunic ims attaluU ih s r 'su u la man j i-e. Good forevery weakness an J d atres One of the Lest he!j toward Leaven is a good mother. It la more than wendfrf u! how patie illy people fcullcr wiili corns. Got peaoe and comfort by removing tnem wita ilindcrorns. FITS All Fits stopped fre by Dr.Kllne'sOreas Kerve Restorer. Ko tils after tbe Ursl day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatiseami $2 trial bot : le f re-1- I Hearts. beudUiLr.Klineil ArclibU.i'Uiij-.l'lfc. Denver was named for Gov. James W. Denver, of Kansas. "Hanson's SXaeio Cora Salve." Warranted to cui or money refunded. Ask drugrglut for it. Price 15 cents. yoir Brooklyn is c al ed the City of Churc hes. There are more than 3U0. If the Baby is Cutting: Teetn. Ba rare and use that old and well-tried remedy, Mas. WtKSLOW'g SooTHlS'J Stbct for Children TeetMng- Snow, at a very low temperature al sort moisture. "Wisdom can live on what fools trample under foot. The Greatest Hedical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is war ranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are afrected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of "diet ever necessary. Eat the best you ca.i get. and enough of it Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed time. Sold by all Druggists. iAl IIIIV I II I to the placing on the market and unscrupulous imitations health signal. The baby's mission, its work in life, is growth. To that little bundle of love, half trick, half dream, every added ounce of flesh means added happiness and com fort. Fat is the signal of