***** RHEUMATISM AND NEURAL6IA OIL The Proved Remedy For Over 50 Years. Price 25c and 50c I ? 2 i I JACOBS t i t W. L. DOUGLAS *3.50&’3.00 Shoes BEST IN THE WORLD n>k plaint, Infantile Eczema—Mother Praises Cuticura Remedies. “Our baby had that dreadful com plaint, infantile Eczema, which aff.ict ed him for several months, commenc ing at the top of his head, and at last covering his whole body. His surler ings were untold and constant misery, in fact, there was nothing we would not have done to have given him re lief. tVe finally procured a full set of the Cuticura Remedies, and in about three or four days he began to shew a brighter spirit and really laughed, for the first time in a year. In about ninety days he was fully recovered. Praise for the Cuticura Remedies has always been our greatest pleasure, and there is nothing too good that we could say in their favor, for they cer tainly saved our baby’s life, for he was the most awful sight that I ever beheld, prior to the treatment of the Cuticura Remedies Mrs. Maebelle Lyon, 1S26 Appleton Ave., Parsons, Kan., July 18, 1905.” Point Won by Flattery. Gen. French, the English officer who represented that country at the recent French maneuvers, received the following letter after his tri umphant return from the Boer war: "My Dear French: You are a great British general. I want your auto graph; but, whatever you do, don’t let your secretary write it.” Needless to say, the boy got the autograph, and a signed photograph of his hero to boot. Successfully Paints on Metal. Carl Lunde, a Norwegian artist, haa made himself famous by painting on metal, an art eveD the Japanese have failed in, great as they are as metal workers. Lunde decorates ordinary tin with characteristic designs in col ors and illuminates an ordinary tray or plate that would otherwise be cheaply japanned. The method is his secret and only one of many clever nesses he employs to render utility artistic and decorative. STOVE POLISH ALWAYS heady to use. no DIRT. DUST. SMOKB OR SWELL. NO MORE STOVE POLISH TROUBLES A woman’s Health depends so much upon her functions, that the least upset of them affects her whole system. It is the little things that count, in woman’s life and health. The little pains, and other symptoms of womanly disorder, soon lead up to big things,—serious pains, serious diseases. It is for just these ordinary, common, womanly troubles, that the use of a gentle, strengthening, female tonic, like "* CARD!) I Woman's Relief has been found so successful, in thousands of cases, in relieving and curing. “I had been troubled with female complaints for 12 months,” writes Mrs. Bettie Arp, of Ballplay, Tenn., ‘‘and although I was under doctors’ care for four months, they did but little good. I took one bottle of Wine of Cardui and one dollar’s worth of Thedford’s Black Draught, and now I am better. I believe Cardui saved my life. We are poor people, but I shall always keep it in the house.” It relieves woman’s worst pains and regulates fitful functions. Try it At All Druggists in $1.00 Bottles X WRITE US FREEI and frankly, in strictest confidence, age. We will send you FREE velope, and a valuable 64-page MENT FOR WOMEN.” Chattanooga Medicine Co., joooooooooooooooooooppoaoooooooooocoooooocoooooooooor* ON FASHION’S HIGHWAY By FRANCES RIVERS 'jgoqoBooosqaoBoacsogaBgoBooBBBggoooogBogBBcowwuw*1 (Copyright, 1906, by Joseph B. Bowles.) Toward five o clock, on a supremely hot July day, Mr. Godfrey Boyne strolled leisurely along the gravel path of the promenade. He loitered, seemingly at random, making his way slowly between groups of animated people, stopping for no reason, and remained idly agaze over the heads of the crowd on fashion's highway. At any rate, he thought, applying this recollection as healing unction to the scratches imprinted on his vanity by the acid of such general forgetful ness, Audrey has remembered; and he, smiling, recalled the facility with which intimacy with Lady Annandale had been resumed; the friendly informal ity with which she had reentered into relations with him; the bewildering immensity of her social influence; the celebrity which, at first as the wife, then as the widow, of a viscount, no torious in career and memory for his many vices, 'she had acquired. He had taken himself to Fash ion’s highway, the purpose of joining Lady Annandale being less distinct in his thoughts than the wish to see her. So immersed was he in reflection that he failed to notice that a victoria had stopped opposite to him. Suddenly a footman addressed him; “I beg your pardon, sir,” said he, “but her ladyship sent me to say that she wishes to speak to you.” Godfrey turned; Lady Annandale was stepping from the carriage. “You can go home,” said she to the footman. “Very good, my lady.” Then she gave to Godfrey her hand. “This place—” she glanced round at the radiant prospect—“seems scarce ly the spot suited to serious discus sion. We might, perhaps, over there.” So, side by side, Lady Annandale and Mr. Godfrey Boyne walked across the soft, green turf and established themselves upon chairs under the sweet-scented lime trees, whose shel tering boughs masked them from ob servation. He beamed amiably round. “I have brought you here, that you may continue your last night's inter rupted account of the woman with whom you were in love,” said she. "Was in love? It's absurd to use the past tense. I am in love with her. Love is not a state from which you can recover as from an epidemic. I am, of course, speaking of the real thing.” “I see; something other than flirt ation.” “Flirtation is but the froth of love.” Lady Annandale laughed. “Passion! floes your real thing include that?” “Passion is love's dregs, besides being Cupid's pseudonym for the work he is ashamed to acknowledge.” “I had no idea I was speaking to an expert; but how, may I ask, did you come to study the subject so pro foundly ?” “In Ceylon, beyond love's influence, I devoted some attention to the sci ence.” She raised her eyebrows. “Is that all you learned?” "That, and to make money.” “To make money?” “Certainly. I'm a wealthy tea-plant er of Ceylon.” “A wealthy tea-planter, did you say? But to return to your love,” she suggested. “You can’t return to a thing you've never parted from, can you?” "Then you know more of the sub ject?” “A great deal more.” “How much?” “Here it is. I see a boy and girl, the joyful intimacy of their childhood deepening into the poetry of youth—” "And, of course, the girl knows that the boy loves her?” “Naturally; since not an hour of the day passes but he tells her so.” “Tells her? Surely not.” “By every means in his power, ex cept his tongue. He doesn't put it into words, because he knows that to do so would be hopeless if she doesn’t understand without that." “Don't you think she might make a mistake if he says nothing?” “But she must know that he dreams his dream of the future, in which, hav ing made a nest and lined it softly with down, he will come to her and say: ‘It awaits you.’ Then he hopes that, with the gracious spirit mani fest in all her bearing, the girl, with love and tenderness shining from her eyes, would, putting her hand in his, say; ‘I am ready.’” “Your vision is charming, idyllic; but how about the girl and her dreary days of waiting, for I suppose the boy to have gone ofT into the world?” “He had to go into it to fill his man's part.” “Before going he should have told her in words of his love.” “You really think that his doing so would have made any difference— when all that he was then in a posi tion to ask was faithfulness?” Lady Annandale sighed. “This particular girl was probably brought up to marry, as, had she been a boy, she would have been brought up to some profession. In your vision, what became of her?” “She fulfilled what I see you con sider to have been her destiny.” “Marriage?” “Yes; she married a peer.” “And was happy ever after, accord ing to the formula?” “I suppose so. Isn’t every woman happy who achieves rang and is an acknowledged beauty?” “And the boy?” “Woke from rosy dreams in the sun light to find that in the time of his slumbering the sky had become over cast” “And blamed the girl for a fault that was his own?” “No; he didn’t blame her, but for a time he was heartbroken.” “Did he lose sight of her altogeth er?” “Not altogether; for when, in the fullness of time, she was again free, he came back to her.” “And he found her the same? “This woman's beauty is a fact of an astonishing order, and she is ten times more lovely even than she was.” “Her nature. Has that deterior ated?” Lady Annandale spoke earnest ly; her face was grave and sad. “To test that is very simple.” "Really?” “I have but to say to her: ‘Marry me, and let us together renew the simplicity of our youth.’ The nest— you remember that I spoke of a nest—?” She bowed her head. “Is fairly lined. Will you with it accept my heart and name?” Lady Annandale's arms of aggres sion, even of defense, were possibly close at hand, but she made no at tempt to reach them, and was not maladroit in thus leaving them un touched: for this harmlessness of at titude on her part induced Godfrey to lay aside his buckler of suspicion, and in reply to her “Then this visit of yours is, I take it, a tribute—a small tribute to youthful sentiment, to a dead love?” he, as lightly rejoined: "By no means. Love, amongst the other attributes which I have enu merated, resembles a sachet, with the scent of which we are so familiar "I Couldn’t Go, She Interrupted. that it is advisable sometimes to shake it up anew.” Then, seriously, he added: “Oh, my dearest, we have lost ten years!” “You would wish to take me to Cey lon?” He saw the pupils of her eyes con tract at the unattractiveness of the suggestion. “Of course, if—” If Godfrey had come to her with the intention she believed, or even if this intention had teen caused by the spell of proximity, he must be no longer mistaken in her meaning. “I couldn’t go.” she interrupted. “Then we will leave Ceylon to take care of itself,” he said, carelessly, tak ing no more notice ol her words than if she had not said them. “You seriously mean that?” “I was never more serious in my life. I will abandon that nest and make another over here.” "Then we come to the second count —your heart. Are you quite, quite sure that it is negotiable flesh, not in a battered condition?” “I swear—” “You needn’t; for, oddly enough, I Deneve you. ‘ You are the only woman I have ever cared for.” “Does not every man tell every woman that?” She looked into his eyes and laughed. Then, across this chasm Lady Ann andale lightly threw a plank, accom plishing with a woman's dexterity, more in one moment than Godfrey had been able to do in weeks of ardu ous work. Vaguely, in a tremor of unformu lated hope, Godfrey saw that that which had appeared to him as the end might really be but the begin ning. “In all the phrases, creeds, common places which you have said of love, you have omitted to enumerate the only attributes that woman recog nizes,” said she, and paused to beg him, by a little Sphinx-like smile, to pay attention to her words. "These are its power of over-riding every obstacle; of conferring upon woman a title higher than that of queen.” “Go on, please, go on,” he stam mered. She looked straight into his eyes. "You are dense and stupid if you cannot understand bow dear to some women may be the name of ‘wife.’ ” Quaker Had No Passes. One of the most famous of Ameri can shipping lines in the palmy days of our marine was the Cope line, which ran between Philadelphia and Liverpool, says the author of “Me moirs of Charles H. Cramp.” By this line John Randolph of Roanoke deter mined to go to Russia, when he had been appointed minister to that coun try by President Jackson. Entering the office of the company in Philadelphia, he . said to a clerk in his usual grandiloquent manner; “Sir, I wish to see Thomas P. Cope.” He was shown to Mr. Cope’s office. ‘I am John Randolph of Roanoke,” he said. “I wish to take passage to Liverpool in one of your ships.” If he expected to be tendered a pass he was grievously disappointed. “I am Thomas Cope,” replied the head of the line. “If thee gets aboard the ship and selects thy stateroom and will pay $150 thee may go.”—Youth’s Companion. Her Dear Friends. “But Miss Matewer has what you might call a first choice among the young men, hasn’t she?" “Yes; any young man is her first choice.”—Chicago Tribune. Many a man's popularity is due to hia lack of self-respect. Mr*. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. Per chiiaren teething:, softens the gums.e-euuces In. flamxn*tion mllAjB pidn. cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. Written by Woman-Hater. Women may be outspoken, but they are never out-talked. Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar. Made of extra quality toliacco. Your dealer or Lewis’ Factory. Peoria, 111. Jacob Stadfeldt, for more than 50 years in the employ of the San Fran cisco mint, has resigned. He received the highest salary of any mint em ploy in the givernment service. How’s This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. O. We. the undersigned, hare known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 rears, and believe him perfectly hon orable ;n all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by h:a firm. Waldixg. K inn ax & Marvin. Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. O. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per Dottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. Honey Vinegar. One of the latest food products com ing from Holland, that land of agri cultural industry, is honey vinegar, which is now manufactured there on a commercial scale. The particular characteristics of vinegar made from honey are its agreeable aroma and pleasant taste. HAD TO USE A CANE. Weakened Kidneys Made an Elwood. Ind., Man’s Back Give Out. R. A. Pugh, transfer business, 2020 “Kidney trouble kept me laid up for a long time, and when I was able to be up I had to use a cane. I had terrible back aches and pain in the shoulders. The kidney secretions were dark colored. " After doctoring in rain, I began using Doan's Kidney Pills. Three boxes cured me entirely, and I am glad to recommend them.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Playwright’s Method of Work. Mr. A. W. Pinero has an unusual method of writing his plays. His work day does not begin until that of the average city man is over. In the morning he goes out, preferably on his bicycle, returning in time for early dinner. Then he has a comfortable sleep, and on waking up, late in the afternoon, he prepares for business. After a cup of tea he goes to his desk and remains working at his play until far into the night A Good Record. Out of all the external remedies on the market we doubt if there is one that has the record of that world renowned porous plaster—Allcock’s. It has now been in use for sixty years, and still continues to be as popular as ever in doing its great work of re lieving our pains and aches. It is the remedy we all need when suffer ing from any ache or pain resulting from taking cold or overstrain. Allcock’s Plasters are sold by Drug gists all over the world. John Stuart Mill. James Mill, his father, was a hard man, a clever man, and a crank—a hedonist capable of making himself thoroughly disagreeable about the greatest happiness of the greatest number; a theorist who regarded his clever son as a suitable object for ed ucational experiments. He would not send him to school because schools were the fortresses of “prejudice,” and taught the wrong things in' the wrong way. He pro vided him with no playmates, and al lowed him no holidays, lest “the habit of work should be broken.”—Francis Gribble, in Fortnightly Review. AVtgetahte Preparationfor As - similating tfceFoodandBcguIa ting the Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes Dii’eslion.CheerfuP ness and Best.Contains neither Oprum,Morptune nor>Iineral. Not TJaucotic. A perfect Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoca Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of BAST03IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. TWC CENTAUR COMMRV. RCW TOM CITY. Doftt Suffer fcJl ni^ht lon0 from toothache neurad<$iex. or rheumatism Liiunveivt kills the pain — quiets the nerves eoid induces sleep At eJI dealers. Price 25c 50c &H00 Dr Ewl S.SIodLiv, Bostor\,Ma.ss.U.S.A» [hold up*! I SLnd can&id&ir | fig, POMMEL bkJ^SLICKEH HKE ALL -TOWEn-S W\TERFROOF CLOTHING, is made of the b?st malfriiihinHickor/tllow —If d«irrs wrmmfrt 07 5TICKTDTHE 5JON OFTHE FISH TOWW CANA9MK CO^iNTO AJ TOWER CO. Tboiipson’s Eye Water W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 44, 1906. Canadian Government Free Farms Over 300,000 American farmers who have set tled in Canada during the past few years testi fy to the fact that Can*, da is, beyond question,/ the greatest farming land in the' world. OVER NINETY 1 MILLION BUSHELS of wheat from the harvest of 1906 means good money to the farmers of Western Canada when the world has to be fed. Cattle Raising. Dairy ing and Mixed Farming are also profitable calW ings. Coal, wood and water in abundance; churches and schools convenient; markets easy of access. Taxes low. For advice and information address the Super intendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or any authorized Canadian Government Agent. W. V. BENNETT, SOI New Tot* Life Bnildiag, Omaha, Nebraska. • •• ——tmmmmsmmSBSBBSSBiSBSsmam*^— ••• [What JoyThey Bring V / To Every Home ts with joyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play—when in health—and now conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they enjoy the deardy, regular habits they should be taught to form and the wholesome diet of which they should partake. How tenderly their health should be preserved not by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injuri ous or objectionable nature, and if at anytime a remedial agent is reauired, to assist nature, only those of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs has come into general favor in many millions of well informed families, whose estimate of its quality and excellence is based upon personal knowledge and use. Syrup of Figs has also met with the approval of physicians generally, because they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputa ble physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs, obtained, by an original method, from certain plants known to them to act most beneficially and presented m an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Californian blue figs are used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret remedy and hence we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who dc not approve of patent medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication. Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs always has the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.—plainly printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in bottles of one size •y; Aany deaIer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size, or having pnnted thereon the name of any other company, do not accept it. If you fail to get t*1®genume you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family should always have a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial for the parents and the children, whenever a laxative remedy is required. ’ •••