Abinet V -i ■ n*l»t |«!«r in ant* T taJ rw-j*r» n!l>f 't-kr a r'< ' «s* Uu<* H tt» fc'/Wt Htr: 'tl* •* tun art !n«Hr u»* a j*i» «*T trjtm m m ft n* t*ar of the op« « t* *_e tie « M* It *■»—f« nVa nats* ■&* book.. »• % **—**» fa > |m j* tie '* t}« aa* iim frm_ tie n-*' •«» a Fs.-r n raven* noe a «MMr*4 cm* •*■>#»*■ *«, r»wrMia e»* nit* * !** 4 S t * D t ■d tr* *Un in r»an4 !-os emuk te* am *•« ir •«*» >.*5 it ■Ur tt* cins. m tea *at»* r.jr -j -»- » *c.fi*C •» a *• me c>4» cur i-jer iUCr-4 rf af»: ..>kjL4SC pa*a naM tar* t» tt* *• i* «f fte rccifc If js bar! nark II *^t arl'i* after '?# Cnrten tn a'antet M *->-g» tn*r m# an a V-rdex (Mr '■7 »*■ M U te-» a Mjgn>«r if seat **-•**» is '** krn*x 3j** *» aw* an * .S*» J C*k if *>' K out *"ft3t 'in •b;«w «k4 »a»S B aa awos. an Ti* bapr* assy te- bij-s** *»• *• 'fe* arr*** u tmfn faan 'hr *** asd Mi % Ante »Li i _* a cm’ latorr> * A fiiT| * • *.-<*k*k arr»e* •* a atJte «<**» tnta «< Maur mm iaesnai nt «»***. ** x-tkn* a fteanBS <.sk4> *«*■* ’*• u;t tkat «t.af emaos j# ■ <* 'S MMBMi laataur a !* j* a urn. ■ r* I'M- a faiiiK » UMdaat 4** a Jra ” »'-*!» «< *» * sc? j ■safl* dr tfija-c tctu ■ ajnnrtaft «*» «!•«• a *n*t Tt;» *"■■» i-tral 1* :1c ■ noswMlMi cif tec*, nd-ttar six, **•**■«_ art* an a foe* t*j* pfea'j ;nnats Tn rS»a*. (u* {>«m arttk ISHn •rsMt>* sat «i;»■*»» trjr :1m imnluai a W «rf « .ras Bants vitt srad'sm an# »ini' «t <-u? lssU « in tef Sewrr »«-» tl'ttfc ttoe ckxrn oa. ■ •* t- y tfwn f*e— tij.» tn arwt '•(:< ckm*-# la ft* sir 'or a lea: ■ <• '. u> am tteip> -fiAf Ite» aatf £ mal ** natnrt «r»-a«* left -■* r*:*. t-eakSnns aaalMt ikelarmm v .ik»"T T_»e «ntaJ farfc > * rte ' »tl tea Mi a L-fir ripr. ► it* amt tint (t tan **c* asj r-t-nairt ■Ik t» ritr a l*arf Ut-'er !lake is *• tat SW : t—»t t.-tln > *a-: »iu» n Ut* 4»tef. »l*t aerre# tJ • m . f . ■: t, : , fen. «■» **1 *i W*' T m 1m ll»» toa-jK limit a***. - fe *to—" L I'na-rML AM fcwl. of K n* A f'< . Bstac-fi* »Wk prtrpmr rar« .! tar* *«e r^*r» Kmr r»B up ** *•»*** »*n: ««>!. a* tfc* On ror » -*;4 Md K otS mwfc t* ffe* fc4d> mis • *- **-»♦* .5* to ton tt tfrlp • «!» f»tt »*»"»» tarn K ku^r rej • •* Ito til" toSMT irtrt fess ft.*" U*jt ato t? *»r mm* <*rml »i.a r* tb* ai*fc I- to rc-fy tnr Hu ttoi* «to fcao* 'hr *rr 1t~f * t> 'tto :v :>h* raw* «# it t* jn, • «*5 :*-il eak** ■ crat-t- • * eau of -► * A 'Cortot **jr tc L*u >t:« ** loan -*» *«*r ttorir ksbo* *. f] pet ttot s 'i.VsBy and tat*- -t» wt.trfc »-.* - -uats ct«*r to- (Mr raru*-t* ar* ai n»i »* 3 ir*+m» i It to an macor •t taor to* to **»*»• fair* of iton to *'t*. to Wa*to* Hi* ; ropli. t-H *nrr tc »*r* k r£ tf '!* !**«? penytor •r* . _*to«r MS* cturkif cafe** a 7*4 tut « *ir*< wi or (cm >(•■**. to - r • 4 mnwCy *w tfe*» trwoblr it*- TV- Was t * t ..ft-sj !,«•-!* c* MiMW'M* »HI ST'-iwmS mao**? Wtoo* (I* *■-*-•» »nlhwtlj tt t ar* cafen «a.jr* tbet ts*f.y ttto that » -to* mx* («*f lt> ar- rataH (rua r**«»f tot* to mltor* fairy u* •'*dy oar «# ptoMb tote* pr 't tr i»«j aba** lor a m to* ot a »«♦*. «a» Or* to kop 'tors to •Atop* If pun ctoBJHJt mZutC a f- * ■ tot* *l«* tot-tcl toudi is tt* ikfra •<*> ftrnmm M * »*•? Msort t*» totocto ato»* tn wrt in •*>,-* «*r, r*wf» t«»F *ro*s *t* #**. tttoi rut arICfc a Isttto rwwm o3 act tiny tor KI 1 oc ar *t--r Sto.«a atooeM to* **r*M a* *Hi a* ckMtiac *»s oTtoesr I*---! Ota a tlto aitos'fjo* at certs t® Tte Wwi T»*c a T«m *l*i jam kits* Uat msA ■ «»■*» » ar* fW •«» is Airte*— UM u» fn*M *■ »• e;-i*T Bar« ta.“ np!iad Uf< ♦4-oTtw. "TV blewru ywi - jf.ia-4 ai. Acincfccr Laws — St^camt V*i •c*« af t»« (ant Ttor* to a lower is tJba Ctrerr t -3x» «r a » a *r* a&< touts to*ssas i*-r»l*e» CM kiadto rlarsy tAss ts# ICu* rbe w«sM wit a® our reacts fctoea 'ml *be tetter tar tmr ilrtwc. Au. ctoilrr i« oar —J <3. Wuitw. Cu Suppest c-t Masted pouton are suet a eotERoa as — -i.par •=.«•£• for roast poultry or t- —a steak *ua* H seems surprising l: - tew rooks s*-r»* • he® property, res b * it. ra;:iiy boiling water * * a tablespocetwt of salt to a quart f «mirr Tfcej > hi*ak a bet. cooked fall - a c» »y dim a* the first b’ow at "!« E-a ter Afer draining the® re Jt ••♦ the «wer an! slake over the f ' to ail moisture then ruast t ' smooth add::.g tie create, or milk * *e_ :t»r tfce butler arid salt Pile - t*? aloes into a hot dM> bat do ***** pat down that Irak"* then: heavy. Potato* s masked and served is this ~ acse-r are a strung contrast to tbo oectaor? mashed potato** as served *i it* pcopi* ike «• ked nesakn tor ' h'jse a few suggestion* nay be * elrte ♦ Whet: the? jet a little tot '■oars*- of seed u- serve siloed part esc » jcv in lengthwise quarters en.r out ail the seed* and cook then • » i" - »it*-d MBat until 'bej are tender, then drain, butter tte: . *e a,. » a-fth if* ass pej per anJ serve m narrow isrsgth* of toast we! bet’e-red Prv . cae-.as.bera are very appetizing 1 for a * reakfast dish Prepare the® a. • e except !t the nastier of edcir.g i* av* the® U, half inch slires Sprtnki* * . »it and jep**e» roll In cracket crag b* and frr quickly on bets sides m : ■ ■ tact’s fat. Tht se are delicious served a :'h a i-h'-ese one let Here are some new catsups. at i- ait tew to sone Pear Catiic A : : two tat .eijKtohfuis of stick c:n aat: op. two teaspmnfdla each of c res and Rate to three- cupfuls of wa’-r a: d simmer IS minutes: pare t_v* at.J core a cites rich, late ;*«■► lay is a baking c.*h and ;*our '•■ *;.<*-,* mat. r over them, cover ' — ah'! bake uv:l the fruit Is *•: .■ * but not soft. atid shim out. Ke tun. the sirup to the fire., and simmer c:.v. redtK**d to one pint. s*raia. tie tfc* » .'«■* is bar* ^rt _* ^ on* U.tt IW ». A Child's B rthflay Party. A cti*mi'( party u do- »!»*»■ aa ■ * *mj ok to arrange. but the pleas -**■ t g.**» the telle >*opie more than r«jif« one for tl! lb* troolik. Of roan*, tber- atm In- ice cream; H mould b»- so party aitboui it A simple plain tee cream is tb* if *t tor item. e jC too neb or n ned • •• a a tauc« if "Be can afford wn* • • t a i.Ul* elaborate, it » n»o* lo eerie tb* iroa it eput i-ugar nests. 1 bee* l»i be bought or made at t Ta- and add as elegiac* to lb* d sfc of ere* to urhk-fc is a d- ..g*.t to a child. Very pretty little tab* * may In- pre f-tred by using the angej food re< ipe a: : ; a* tb* misfire througs a pos tube c* to tb* baking sheets In at Cet red form. it. t babe a oe.ical* br- ara N< at to cake is importance lo tbe palate of tie child is tie eand«:tb They are sure u> like sands ;cbe* ear-1 oma may < ret lake the j -are vi cate Home-made bon bens are al says a treat and are mack mere shoe case mat tie land bought at tie confectioners A great ranery of them mar be sad. »ill tie fondant, flavored They i Bay b dipped is melted lond&nt, fla vored and colored 7 mate tie fondant. boil Ho and on* half pounds of sugar and a cupful of * ater. a ball teaspeoaful of cream of tartar, a it bout silrThEg. until n • Tt a soft sasy bail la safer Turn cut ol a aabi* slab or large platter and sten cool m-erk aitb a wooden tpocn until c* raise Put it into a bos2. and let It rase corered lor a day to n;» t It ;» fbe« ready to c :.le .nto any d* ::red candy Tie charm ct tbe party sCi rot be fu.iy appreciated ustii the Lirtaday _k* appears. br-gbtened by its rosy candle*. A i ard that may be kept for year* and e rre for any cumber of birthdays may tr made lroa tbe top of a candy pa:- Port hole* not tjtnte through, t.f t *;. • t _g: to hold a rtsal! can d-‘ upr-g* t. tearing tb* ceater for tb« plate »;tb tb* cake. This board may c« : * to* gr-a:grandmothers birtb Car rale as »elh lor tie candles UdJ tbe story of tie years Daily Thought. err out to Provtde&ce U 70-. ' ill S'O i M of settle*. £»t op quick **d .oak far a lock leaf. Tiase to cry *• ProtMrtt* l» tket you're ;e a ti ><■ - eawt t»t oat of rumded * — It* Three fc'ott^rt Bri*ht Child. V *:tor—“1 do tfcmk your net is sc Pro-C XuQht—"Ah. yes he **+* *> hard at bis boohs I fca»e t*** t!nM be would dereiop tbs lancbt t twite "—The Widow. ONE 0*F THE “OLD GUARD” One of the surprises of the recent primary election in Michigan was the defeat of Julius Cae sar Burrows for renomination to the United States senate. Senator Burrows has been a long time in politics and was one of the -old guard.” ! being associated with Aldrich. Hale and the Sena- ; tor Allison in running the upper branch of con- ‘ grJfes. He entered congress in 1873 and has been a member of the senate since 1895. Senator Burrows was born in Erie county. Pa., in 1S37. He went west at an early age and read law while living in the western reserve of j Ohio. In his early twenties he removed to Kala- • mazoo and has since been a resident of Michigan He has practised little at the bar. having been in j politics ever since he returned home from two years or service in the cmi war. witn me nrsi Michigan regiment- It is recalled by the old Inhabitants of Kalamazoo that Mr Burrows made a successful prosecuting attorney in the two years he held tt-e '.fllce immediately after the war. As h:s reputation as a debater and speechmaker grew. Mr. Burrows ; ga-ned political tower, and at the close of his term as prosecuting attorney ■ miJ> ■PPOinted si:)x-rvit-or of interna! revenue for Michigan and Wisconsin, , but :-oared the office. In 1872 the opportunity came that he wanted in the of his first nomination to congress In the house of representatives Mr. Barrows rose slowly. He was not a • a ;-r and he was not given membership in the most important committees ; at. : late in his career, but he early attained a reputation for being an excel lent par.iair.entarian and good presiding officer. As a senator Mr Burrows has t> -on conspicuous chiefly as an opponent c' - -“*‘‘1 s-tnc t. the 1 tah senator accused of Mormonism. and as an opponent : • tariff changes that were said tc b- against the interest of the Michigan eugar growers. Senator Burrows was temporary chairman of the Re putr.,.-an Nations convention at Chicago and delivered the keynote speech of j the campaign which followed and which placed President Taft in the White | b us*- The deleaf of Burrows by the insurgents is thus an event of na tional importance Be: ator Burrows is chairman of the senate committee appointed to lnves- i t -gnie the charges against Senaicr Be rimer ‘BUTCHER’ WRITES BOOK With ar. unpardonable lack of tact or a sinis ter sense of humor Gen. Yaleriano Weyier has al-( lowed the pubiishei to print the title of his sen sational book Mi Mando in Cuba" (“My Com- ji stand in Cuba * in letters of gcry scarlet on a pajier cover of livid gray. Whatever she motive may have been that 1 prompted such a choice, that bloody “eye catcher" of a line fitly symbolizes the man and his work. Weyier has been on trial before public opinion for butchering his enemies instead of fighting them; and he flaunts in our faces the ugly stains that show where be wiped off his knife. Captain general of the most fertile province i of Spain (and a province which more than once , mamftrted her intention to throw off the Bour- ; Don yoke i. tie ma.-:es such a case against the coantr> that bays bis services as no citizen ot the United States could have t-ver ma.- to justify America’s attitude in the Cuban mix-up. Wej ler was the best hated man In Cuba when the government of this nation finally recalled him. This book will cause him to be cursed the length and breadth of the peninsula. 1 wrote it. he says, “to give all the facts about my conduct as general ln- hief. a cc: dnn admired not only by army officers, high and low. who wrote ■e Iwmisnhle letters, but by privates, who. on their return to the penin- | sula. spoke of ire with a enthusiastic f nor fer which 1 can never thank j them enough. Various reasons prevented me from doing years ago (when 1 couiu not have freed my mind from a certain bias) a work which I can now do la perfect peace of mind, thanks to the time that has passed, and wliefc hat soothed the irritation due to the injustice I suffered at the hands : of some men. •Furthermore. 1 did not wish to sa-tjen Senor Sagasta by retelling the story of our c .onial disast.rs; neither did 1 feci any pleasure in censuring the illustrious Genera! Martinez Campos. my predecessor in Cuba, however uncharrab ; he acted toward me after bis return to the capita!.’’ A perusal of the bock fails to prove that Weyler kept his promise to treat the subject with perfect moderation A POPULAR ENGLISH PRIEST One of the best known priests in attendance ] aT the Eucharistic congress at Montreal was Rev. | Father Bernard Vaughan of London. England, j whose denunciation of the smart set has deeply stirred the world's metropolis. Everybody in ! London lotes and honors Father Vaughan, yet he j is the pulpit scourge of the town. He preaches ! truths that terrify, yet an hour before he speaks the seat® in the church are jammed and crowds line the walls. He is as well known on the continent as in Great Eri'ain. and although he has become uttra famous localise of his lecturing and speaking, still be finds time to devote many hours a day to ministrations among the joor. At the Montreal conference Father Vaughan erra sensaijon uy nis denunciation of race >'-ir ie “We are living in a day,” he said, "'of headlines, snapshots, taxicabs ; and music halls. In a day when the fcranble for the prizes of life has become ! a mad passion. It is a day of fever, fret and fume. Competition for earthen toys is so keen and the margin of profit in commerce has become so fine that the one cry beating through the air is •hurry up.’ We are living in a day »hen the high ideals of old arc fast yielding to the pressure of creature comforts, when principle Is being exchanged for expediency; in a day when i the Christian sens, of sin is being regarded as a bygone superstition; In a i day when it matters not what you believe, but only what you do. and when j you may do what you like, provided you are not found out; in a day when the relations between the sexes take one hack to pagan times; in a day when there :s no empty place hut in a cradle, not room in which to move but in the churches." Father Vaughan is a brother of the late Cardinal Vaughan of England ’ and ts sixty-three years old. DEVOTES LIFE TO THE POOR The Grand Duchess Elizabeth, widow of the ; Grand Ihike Sergius of Russia, is regarded as an j angel of i: rcy by the poor of Moscow, among j whom she labors unceasingly. The grand ducbes3 is a German princess by birth, a sister of the reigning grand duke of Hesse and also of the Czarina. H°r husband was assassinated upon the streets of Moscow on February 17. 1905. being shattered by a bomb thrown at him. He was ; killed within a stone’s throw of the palace and his wife, bearing the report, rusher! to the spot and fell fainting upon Sergius’ mutilated corpse After that terrible experience the grand 1 duchess withdrew from all the gayeties of life I and set to work to ameliorate the sufferings of the ■ poor in her adopted country. She has founded hospitals and nursing homes. She herself directs ! r per**, ions and devotes eight to ten hours a day to the laborious work of su: eriatending the different branches of her charitable activity. She de votes virtually the whole of her vast income, amounting to about 5625,000. to lhe cause of charity, and tbe suffering of the poor in and around Moscow and in the vicinity of several of her e'tates in other parts of Russia have : . raed to regard her as a living saint. Not content with directing opera tions. she also participates in the active work of her Various institutions. Sometimes she works as a nurse, sometimes as a visitor to the poor sometimes she attends as a domestic servant the destitute harbored in her refuges for aged paupers. On such occasions she dons the dress of a nurse or servant and performs the necessarv duties without revealing her identity to the inmate* of the different homes. In many eases the other nurses or members of the staff have been unav^re of her identity, so that in this way ae has convinced herself of the inner woorkings of the institutions and has revealed breaches of discipline and good conduct ou the part of the staffs, especially with regard to the treatment of the patients. Sea es cf Justice. Grocer’s Widow—‘Could joo please nfonn me when my 1st? husband's af fairs will be wound up? It's now over a year ” Artomey's Clerk—‘ Ob. you'll find no abort waits here.”—Life. A Quiet Berth. ‘If I buy a seat in the stock ex change will you agree to go to work?" I ain t crazy for work. dad. Make it a seat in the senate."—Louisville Courier-Journal. NOT CUT OUT FOR SOLDIER Widow Healy Indulges in Some Plain Speaking to Her Devoted but Timid Lover. The courting: of the Widow Healy by Terence Corcoran was a tedious affair to every one in M a gray place, most of all to the widow herself, who tried various expedients to assist her timid admirer. “I'm thinking I might go for a sojer," Terence announced one night, when his fancy had been stirred by a newspaper account of a military pageant. “I'm not so old but I could do It. I was wanst in a school regi ment." “You go for a sojer!" cried the Widow Healy In mingled scorn ’and alarm. “A man that calls on a lone widow for two years and more, wid out pluck enough to spake his mind, hasn't the makings of a dhrummer boy in him." BABY’S SKIN TORTURE “When our baby was seven weeks old he broke out with what we thought was heat, but which gradually grew worse. We called in a doctor. He said it was eczema and from that time we doctored six months with three of the best doctors in Atchison but he only got worse. His face, head and hands were a solid sore. There was no end to the suffering for him. We had to tie his little hands to keep him from scratching. He never knew what it was to sleep well from the time he took the disease until he was cured. He kept us awake all hours of the night and his health wasn’t what you would call good. We tried everything but the right thing. “Finally I got a set of the Cnticura Remedies and I am pleased to say we did not use all of them until he was cured. We have waited a year and a half to see if it would return but it never has and to-day his skin is clear and fair as it possibly could be. I hope Cuticura may save some one else's little ones suffering and also their pocket-books. John Leason, 1403 Atchison St., Atchison, Kan., Oct. >19, 1909.” His First Lesson in Economy. “W'ben 1 -was a very email boy and a dime looked pretty big to me. 1 met John H. Farley—who had always been my good friend—cn the street one June day,” says Frank Harris. “ Frank.' he said, the Fourth of July is coining soon. You’ll want some change then. Let me be your banker until then and you'll have some money for firecrackers, torpe does. lemonade and peanuts.' "I emptied my pockets into his hand and every day thereafter until the Fourth I turned over to him my small earnings. When the day of days came around I had a fund that enabled me to celebrate in proper style, while many of my plaunates were flat broke. It was my first lesson in thrift and it was a good one. Hundreds of Cleveland people would be glad today to testify to the fact that when John H Farley was a friend of a man or a boy he v. as a friend indeed."—Cleve and Leader. Pleasant Place to Prosper. TO THE EDITOR: We want to hear from people who would appreciate se curing a fruit, dairy or poultry farm in the Kuhn irrigated tract in Sacramento Valley. California, at half the true value. Rest water right in state. Low mainte nance cost. Work costing millions now actually being done. Roads. drainage and water light included in price. T-n month’s growing season. Ten tons alfalfa per acre. Splendid dairy conditions. Sou hens earn glut) a month or better Oranges lemons, grape fruit, figs. English walnuts and a thousand other fruits, nuts, vege tables and flowers grow here. Gardens winter and summer. Charming place to live. Very healthful. Who wants such a home” Land selling fast. Work for ev erybody. Write us for enthus.asru. H L Hollister * Co.. La Salle St.. Chi cago. or 345 Fourth Ave.. Pittsburg. Pa. New Version. “Now. Harry,” said the Sunday school teacher to the brightest boy tn the class, ’ can you tell me how Elijah died?" "He didn't die at all,” replied the youngster. “He was translated from the original Hebrew.” If Yeu Are a Trifle Sensitive About the stee of your shoes, maxtv people wear sma’.ier shoes by using Allen's Foot-Ease, the Antiseptic Powder to shake imo the shoes. It cures Tired, Swollen. Aching Feet and gives rest and comfort. Just the thing for breaking in new shoes. Sold evert where. S5r Sample sent FREE. Address. Aliens. Olmsted. Le Boy. N. Y Latest Mine Horror. The Doctor—Of course, if the oper ators in the anthracite and bituminous Seids form a coalition— The Professor—Then there will be nothing for the consumers to do but coalesce. (SIow curtain.) Not Strictly Orthodox. Police Justice—Young man. what is your religion, if you have any? Chauffeur (arrested for overspeed ing)—Something like Jim Bluisos. your honor—never be passed on the highway. The Only Way. "How can 1 win you for my very own?” "You fellows might get up a raf fie." answered the summer girl. “I'm engaged to seven of you.*' The World on Wheels. “Well, I mortgaged my home yes terday.” “What make of auto «re you going to get?"—Houston Post. Beautiful Post Cards Free. Send 2c stamp for five samples of our fiery best Gold and Silk Finish Birthdav r lower and Mrtto Post Cards: beautiful rplors and "loveliest designs. Art Post Card Co., 731 Jackson St.. TopeiA. Kan. Onions a Healthy Food. Onions are more nourishing than any other vegetable. JEr*. Wlnum'i Soothing Symp. Fbrcfc.iarrn :****ihin* aoftenstbe num*. r jocf*s*a Ummf maAintT> uo.q.cures*void^a ooiue. People are happier for a lot of things they don't know. Lewis’ Single Binder straight 5c cigar on pay 10c for cigars not so good. ▲ man of few words usually says j them as if they were more. r AWFUL. Blanche—Poor Grace! She out-mar ried herself Maude—Indeed! Blanche—Yes. She married a duke, you know, and didn't have enough money to pay his bills. Now They Sleep Inside. George H. Beattie, Jeweler in the old Arcade, a$d L. E. Ralston, auditor of the News, have jointly and several ly decided tnat sleeping out in the open Isn't all that it has been declared to be. says the Cleveland Leader. They were both in a deep snooze out at the Beattie farm, near Chagrin Falls, the other Eight, when a runaway team from the county fair city turned Into the lane leading up to the Beattie es tate and came along at full speed. Sound asleep, but dreaming of im pending danger. Ralston rolled out of i his cot toward the north, and Beattie from his cot toward the south. The runaway horses dashed between the sleepers, oversetting everything In the way, but missing Beattie and Ralston by margins too narrow to be meas ured. Since that night Ralston has slept in his town house and Beattie has found shelter under the ample roof of his house on his big planta tion. Statt or Ono crrr or Touaxj. 1 Llcas Cower. f 55 Flaw j CBeszt maits osih th»t Sr b »«:** partner or U» fcoa of F. J Ckenet A cte. c ■-!* DUS£>esB ta lh‘ t'.ly of Toirtio- County ami State •f'rrsa'i. and tnat said arm wi. pay tbe sutc of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for fact and rvrry case of Catackh that ran rot be neat by Cx aa of ■ Balls caiakek Crsi. FRAXK J. CHENEY. fror. to befo-y nr and snbsmbrd la my prjseaee. ties »tb day of Droeobcr. A. D., :s*t 1 A. W. GLEASON. 1 S~AL t Notast Prauc. Ha'r» Catarrh Ccrr Is tabm lcfem”T and a-ts llrrrt y unoa tbt b:ood and rcurous surfaces of tne SysL'.i. send for trsunontair. Tree. F. J. CHENEY A CO- Toledo. O. Soid by ali Pnimsts. rse. Tare Ball's Famcy Flits for cosstlpauoo. Illiterate Immigrants. Ellis island records show that of 52.727 immigrants who arrived here in July 12,895. or about 25 per Vent., are illiterates. Illiteracy is no bar to an immigrant so long as he appears phys ically able to care for himseif. Only 1,127 persons who sought to enter the country were barred at this port last month.—New York Press. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOR1A, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature ofi In Use For Over 30 "Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. Same With Political Pastry. Teacher—Now, Willie, which would you rather have, two-sixths of a pie i or one-third? Willie—One-third, miss. Teacher (sarcastically)—You would, eh! And why so? Willie—'Cause if you cut it into ! sixths I'd lose more of the juice. TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY for Red. Weak. Weary, Watery Eyes and Granulated Eyelids. Murine Doesn't Smart—Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy. Liquid. 25c, 50c, $1.00. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 25c. $1.00. Eye Books and Eye Advice Free by Mail. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. Every Time. “What do you do when a woman asks you what you think her age is?” "Tell her what I think it isn'L”— Houston Post. When a young man admires a girl's hair she thinks he is hinting for a bunch of it to wear in his locket. The more mystery there Is about a i woman the more attractive and scary ! she looks to a man. DOCTOR ADVISED OPERATION Cored by LydiaEPiokham's Vegetable Comp 1(1: Mt I Galena. Kaas.—" A year uo last March I fell, and a few davs after there was soreness la rny right s>de. In a short time & bunch* came and it bothered me so much at nicht 1 could not swji it kept crowing larger ~nd by fall it *w is large as a ben’s ecf. I could not f»o to bed without a hot water bottle applied to that side. 1 had one of the best doc tors in Kansas and be told mv husband that 1 would haTe to be operated on as it teas something like a tumor cansea cy a rupture. 1 wrote • to you for advice and y-u t< k! me net - to pet discouraged but to take Lydia ' E. Pinkhatn’s Vegetable Compound. 1 did take it and soon the lump in my • ride broke and passed away. * — Mrs-' R R Huey, 713 Miner*] Arc., Galena, Lans. Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetal' !e Com pound. made from roots and herbs, has proved to be the most successful remedy for (runup the worst forms of female Els. including displacements, inflammation. fibroid tumois, irregu larities. periodic pains, backache, bear ingrown feeling, flatulency, ir.diges tion, and nervous prostration. It costs but a trifle to try it. and the result has been worth millions to many suffering women. If you want special advice writ^ forit toMrs.Pinkham.LvmuAIaas. It is free and always helptuL. w.TTdouclas HAND-SEWED CUACC _process Onvto KE3TS $2.00. *250. SJ.00. *550, SEOC, i*J» WOMKS S $2.50. $3.$5.50. $4 ^--s. ' *uia sx so a. so oc THE STANDARD FOR 30 YEARS They ir? absolately the most pepulnrahd best shoes for the price in America. They are the leaders everv wrhere because tier hoid their shape, fit better, look better and wear lan- ' fr than other makes. J They are positreely the I most economical snoea tor yea Jc bey. W.U,' DocpUs tint and the reta.. price m stamped* on the bottom — value ensranteett. TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE! 11 ,VOT,? Um oi our Z. inch. ’•*▼7 bo'nUx hair switch. We do avl affC^lr tend on approval for the *e'iaiviit# and except >oua- «• et|f«* (*f tMK'p roods carnot Of exbaQod. Re ni:UKTS w.U> On rrsnir ?:♦.%**. ret tr will be wfaaVd if yk< a» gu*» aiiteed. or or'.i 0 n.' %t%r friends in lOOav* and obtain y^rs free, thk iukAmI 'fttr.'Waw** t MbfC Md Omo ttunpiea tacr Powder and o:« new »»» euvu^traxUadfioe upoa receiptbl saan.a STOCKERS & FEEDERS Choice' quality; red* and ‘ while faces or anfvs boat Uf eu » orders. Tens of Tsob»4:kS u> select from. S«U9t.«rnoo axiieed. i\>rrfspon^nw, hivltel ... Come and see fvj jcutw.I, National Live Stock Coco. Co. At either KnisasCty.lM.. St. Jwwepk. Mo. S- Oeifci.lN^ [ UVt STOCI A5B MISCELLANEOIS In grott nPfT f«r wtmii TTwvr.rv* B A TTIIT ,a*“ «*j»**' Kw* rklcRTsK.»s PATENTS W. N. U„ OMAHA. NO. «1-.19ia , ‘I i Womans Power Over Man Woman’s most glorious endowment is the power to awaken and hold the pure and honest lore of a worthy man. When she loses it and still loves on, so one in the wide world can know the heart agony she endures. The woman who suffers from weak* ness and derangement of her special womanly or ganism soon loses the power to sway the heart of a man. Her general health suffers and she loses ber good looks, her attractiveness, her amiability ana acr power ana prestige as a woman. Ur. K. V . Pierce, of Bufi&Jo N Y with •he assistance of his staff of able physicians, has prescribed for end cured ifcafi* v thousands of women. He has devised a successful remedy lor woman'smd- - ments. It is known as Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, It k a positive specific for the weaknesses and disorders peculiar to women. It purifies, re#u lates, strengthens and heals. Medicine dealers sell it. No kmrsi dealer wiQ advise you Co accept a substitute in order to make a little Urfer profit. IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG, SICK WOMEN WEIX. Or. Pierce’ • PeJIrts COLT DISTEMPER TTTT TSf Mck m tm!. u4 «r rthm a mw.Bimtiwr bo«r•miamrd-tert f->«= kar_»» is, ej*. by «un« SMSSrs UQCli> i>t?n3rat CVKLIIIx « AXLE GREASE Keeps the spindle bright std free from grit. Try a box: Sold by dealers everywhere. ' STANDARD OIL CO. IlMBfoIMfiU