A WOM HSERY. r Mrs. John 1.1. Rue , of 111i Pl\tor'lJn ! Avenue , Paterson , N. J. , sn's : "I V"\S troubled Cor about nine yenrs , nnd . . what I sur- CC1'ed no ono will ever Imow. I used about e\'erl' lmown remedy - dy thnt Is - said to bo - good Cor ltld. 110Y complaint - plaint , but without de- r\'lng ! per- mnnent ro- Het. Often when alone 1n the house the back , ache has been so bad that It brought tears to my eyes. The pnln at times . was so 1ntenso that I was compelled : to give up my household duties nnd 110 t down. There were headnches , dlzzl- ness and blood rushing to my head to cause bleeding nt th.o nose. The first t box of Dorm's Kidney Pills benefited me so much that I continued the trent- ment. The stinging pain in the small . ; ! . . of my baele , the rushes of blood to the I head and ether symptoms disappear- ed. " Doan's Kidney P11ls for BRIo by all dealers. 1i0 cents per box. Foster- MUburn Co. , Duffalo , N. Y. Men's Heroines Generally "Cats. " T o herolno of the average male . noveHst Is fntensoly Irritating to the ordinary female render-sho is genor. (1111' ' a cat , often underbred , nnd eveL when her manners and methods and morals are nomlnal1y satisfactory you nro 10ft with the firm conviction that , If she happened to bo on your visiting list , you would find her elth r dull or disagreeable , or both I-Dora D'Es- paigne Chapman In London Globe. " ' " , Swordrmanshlp In England. Swordsmanship In one or the other of Its forms Is maldng marleed progress - . gress In Englnnd. New salles d'armes are being opened and tresh clubs formed year by year In London and i the provinces , and International ! matches have been arranged In which I the English teams at least borne them. solves well. Hereros Cattle. 't The native cattle of the Hereros In Southwest Africa , are tall , lean , long. \ horned and of llttlo value for beef or mille , but they are excellent for rid. lng and drawing loads. and , mee cam. ols , can travel for days without water and with Httle food. They are guided by reins attached t a stick through the noso. Grease the Nalls. Not long ngo 1 saw a person trying to drive a nnl1 through a piece o [ seasoned - soned oak an inch and a halt thick. ! rhls was impossible until 1 suggested grease the nal1. 1t was then driven . ' ; casUy and without bending.-Natlonnl . Magazine. The Best He Had. "Is this the best claret , lIfurphy"l" Mleed the Irishman of his butler. "It Is not , sorr , " was the nnswer , "but 1t.11 ' the beRt YO've got. " Greenland now has nearly 12OUO In. t.nbltants. FROM SAME BOX 7 . , , - Where the Foodo Come From. 'M " 4 - "Look hero. walter , honest now , don't you dip every aile of these flaked breakfast foods out of the same boxY" "Well , : res , boss. wo duz , all 'cept Grape-Nuts , cause that. don't 100lt Ilko the others nnd people lenow 'zackly what Grape-Nuts looles mee. But thero's 'bout a dozen different. on os named on the blII of fare and they are all thin rolled llalees so It don't. maleo . nny difference which one a man calls tor , wo just. take out the order from one box. " This talk led to nn investigation. Dozens of factories sprung up about three years ngo , making various Idnds of brealefast foods , seeltlng to talee the business of the original prepared brealefast fet > d..Grape-Nuts. : These concerns nfter a precarious existence , nearly aU faU"J. leaving thousands of boxc3 o ! thclfOGds in mllls and waro- houses. These were in several in- . stnnces bought lIIl for a song by speculators - ulators and sold out to grocers and ' . , hotels for mUe or nothing. The process - ess of worldng off , this old stoclt has been slow. One wlll see the names . on menus of flalwd foods that went out of business a year nnd a halt or two years ago. In a few cases where the abandoned fa torles have been bought up , there Is nn effort to resus. J cltate the d funct , and by copying the { 1 . \ style of advertising of Grape-Nuts , , . . " seelt to Influence people to purchaso. But the publlc has been educated to tl e fact thnt aU these thin flaleed foods are simply sealed : wheat or oats rol1ed thin and dried out and packed. They are not prepared Ulee Grapo- Nuts , in which the tliorough baldng and ether operations which turn the starch part of the wheat and barley Into sugar , occupy many hours and reo suIt In a food so digestible that smaU infants thrlvo on It , whlle It nlso can- ' # talns the selected elements of phose ; ' j phnto of Potash nnd Albumen that. unlto In the bOdy to produce the soft gray sub.stnnco In brnln and nerve centers. Thero's a renson for Grape- Nuts , and there have been many Imitations - tations , a few or the article ItseU , but many more of the Itlnd nnd character of the advertising. Iniltntors are always - ways counterfeiters and their printed and written statfjments cannot be ox. , ( pected to bo dlfforent. than their } It goods. This artlcle Is publlnhed by the PostuIrl Co. at DatUo Creok. Addltlon. al . ' ! donce or the truth can be M.P' I pllod In quanUties. . . . . . . . . . . , I. . . . . . . > " - - . . - ELIHU ROOT TAKES UP PORTFOLIO OF STATE . r \ rI I I I . , , 'I .EL/HCT .lOOT Elihu Root. . , whoso acceptance of the . portrollo of secretary of state Is offi- clnlly announced , was war secretary under President McKinley after the retirement of Russell A. Alger. Ho is a warm friend and compnnlon of President Roosovelt. He was born in 1845 , tlie son of a professor at Hamilton - ilton college. Ho was first a schoolteacher - teacher and then a lawyer. In per- sonaIlty Mr. Root is 1nellned to be austere and very much under self- control. Since March , 1883 , when he was appointed by President Arthur MANY CHANGES IN CABINET. How the Various Portfolios Have Been Transferred. Fo11owlng are the complete records of cabinet c.hnnges slnco McKinley's accession to the Whlto House , March 4 , 1897 : Secretary of State-John Sherman. TreasurcrLyman J. Gage. Secretary of War-Russe11 A. Alger. Attorney Genernl- Joseph Mc- Kenna. Postmaster General-James Albert Gary. Secretar of the Navy-John D. Long. Secretary of Agriculture-James Wilson. Secretary of the Interlor-CorneIlus N. DIlss. John 'V. Griggs succeeded : McKenna - na January 31 , 1898 ; W1l11am R. Day succeeded Sherman April 2 , 1898 ; John Hay succeeded Day September 20 , 1898 ; Elihu Root succeeded Alger August 1 , 1899 ; Charles Emory Smith succeeded Gary April 21 , 1898 ; Ethan A11en Hltchcoclt succeeded Dliss De. cember 21 , 1898 ; Philander C. Knox succeeded Griggs as Attorney General April 19 , 1901. . Roosevelt Cabinet. Theodore Roosevelt acceded to presidency September 14 , 1901. LesUe M. Shaw succeeded Gage Feb- runry I , 1902. Henry C. Pa'ne succeeded Smith Jnnuary 8 , 1902. W1l11am H. Taft succeeded Root February 1 , 1904. , W1l11am H. Moody succeeded Long . May 1 , 1902. On February 16 , 1903 , the Department - ment of Commerce and Labor was created - ated , with George D. Cortelyou as Its hend , and given a seat In the cabinet. Moody succeeded Knox as Attorney General JUly 1 , 1904. Robert J. W"nno succeeded pnyno as Postmaster General October 10 , 1904. . Paul Morton succeeded Moody In Navy Department July 1 , 1904. Charles J. Donaparte succeeded Morton JUly 1 , 1905. Victor M. Metcalf succeeded Cortel. you ns head of Department of Com. merce and Labor July 1 , 1904 , Cortel. you becoming Chairman of the Repub. Ilcan Natlonnl Committee. Cortelyou succeeded Wynno as Postmaster General 1\Iarch 7 , 1905. WOMEN SLAVES OF FASHION. Henry Labouchere Severe on Present Day Modes. Henry Labouchere , the audacious editor of Truth , which Is a periodical read by fashlonnble people , thus ex. presses his opinion of the fashions in dress : "Tho aim of dress malters Is to maleo money , nnd they find this easy , as they have to deal 'with smy people. Each 'ear they nlter the fashions and taleo care to do this in a way that the dresses of ono 'enr can not be adapted to thut of the next year. Women are the slaves of these Inte11llent harpies. They blindly accept - cept the fashions ordained by them and seem to bo cntlre ! ) ' Ignorant of the fact that what may suit ono woman - an does not suit nIl. Dressmakers have very little tnsto. Even It they have , It Is warped U ) ' their suuordl. nntlng It to flnnnce. Occasionally tJ.e fashion which they Inaugurate Is not I abI501utel ) ' ugly , but It Is ahva"s over- looleed In order that a largo price may be charged for the costume. " " , ' . United States attorney for the southern - ern district of Now York , Mr. Root has been almost continuously concerned - cerned in public aftnlrs. Ho occupied that position .unUl 1885. In 1894 he was delegate to the state constltu- tlonnl convention and chnlrman of the ! judiciary committee. Aug. 1 , 1899 , ho was appointed secretar ) ' or war by President McKlnle- and wns reappointed - pointed Mnrch 5 , 1901. He rcslgned In August , 1903 , to talte effect Jan. 1 , 1904. Mr. Root was ono of the leading - ing members of the Alnslcnn commis- sion. ALMOST TOO WELL POSTED. --L ngln er's Exact Knowledge Open to Suspicion. James J. IIUl lceeps the closest track of a11 . details regarding the prop. ertles which he controls and this fact is known to his subordlnatcs. While journeYing on the Great. . Northern road some tlmo ngo , examining work that was being done on an extension , ho nsked the division superintendent how many ties had been cut. The superintendent - perintendent did not lenow , but'ho'felt that 1t would never do to let Mr. HIlI become aware of the fact. HQ hesitated - tated a moment nnd then bOldly haz- nrded. "Up to this morning the count showed 78,000-78,420 , the 'exact number - ber , I believe. " The crisis WIlS passed , but the superintendent feared trouble wns ahead. At the next station ho left the car and sent this messnge to the division engineer who wns to meet the train at a Inter stop : "If J. H. nsles how many ties have been cut , tell him 78,420. " True to the suspicion - picion of the superlntondent , Mr. HlII later nslted the engineer how many ties had been cut. "Seventy.elght thousand four hundred and twenty , " was the rendy response of the engl- neer , evidently n lIttle to the surprise of Mr. HlII. WAS A FAMOUS HUNTRESS. Remarkablp Record Made by March. loness of Wnterford. The death at an advanced age Is announced of Christiana , downger mnrchloness of 'Vaterford , mother of Admiral Lord Charles Deresford and 1\1areus Deresford nnd one of the most remarkable horsewomen In the world. Although always mounted on horscs which could carry her , she did not attempt - tempt to go ncross country until she was 40 'ears old. This was at a meet of the Curraghmore hounds In 1866 at Owning vl1Iage. She was mounted on a mare ca11ed The Mist and had halted near 'V 'nn's gorse when the dogs passed close to her. It was an exciting moment which she could not resist. The marchioness turned the mare at the road fences and no ono went straighter or took the fences better than she. From thnt until the CurraghmQre hounds were given up nearly twent . years afterward she never mlssod a meet. She wns fuIly 60 'ears old when she quit. Her pow. ers of resisting fatlguo were } lhenome. nal , as were her courage , plucle and coolness. When Sleep 10 Needed Most. PerCect health demands not only a fixed amount of sleep , uut the observe ance of regular habits. And } 1erfect sleep for man can ue obtalaed only at night , as suggested by the rhythmical succession of Ught and darkness. There Is 110lnt to the old proverh : I "An hour's sleep l.Jefore midnight Is worth two nrter. " Those who arc In the habit of turning night Into day reallzo this to thlr cost. The hour before midnight that Is worth two at. tel' Is Crom 11 to 12. And inasmuch ns the human system Is more below liar at 3 a. m. than at any other period In the twent-four hours , sleep should cover at least two hours on each sldo of this time. When lIfo Is at stalte In the crises oC acute dlseaso nurses are Instructed to bClln El10clal stlmu. Intlon at midnight and to continuo It until G In the morning , In the hope that l1a lng energies may iHI sus. talned through this period oC SIlIJrerne rlADres lon.-Good Houaelr ( > (1Jlvr.- . [ : 'J . . . . , - - - . , , . - - . , , I , ' " ' , . ' ; "I ' , . . " " ' . , . t . - - SFCRETARY HAY AT REST IN SPLENDID fliAUSOLEUM The mnusoleum In which the - mains of Secretar ' IInr were lalll ro-I rust Is 'ono of the noted monu1l1onts In Lalto View cemetery nt Clovelnnd , Ohio. It Is In the severest Groolt archltocturo with a vestllmlo sUPIlOrt- od b ) ' Ionic pillars the entrance bolng - - . . . . . . . . . . . - . . . . . . . IN DEFENSE OF THE COYOTE. - Despised and Hated Creature Does Some Good Work. A good word for the despised and bated co'ote Is to bo Cound In a recent bulletin of the department of agrieul. ture , embod'lng the results of nn In. qulry Into the rolatlon of these IJralrlo wolves to stockrnlslng In the wost. This plnln and straightforward scion. tific statement of the cnso for and ngnlnst the coyote sllould empli slze anew the Importance of n tllorough study of every such problem before the hast ) ' adoption of plnns for the remedy of the evil. The one remedy which would satlsr ) ' the sheep herders Is the complete and Immedlato extor. mlnntlon of the coyote. which malccs great ravnges on their 110clts. This , radical measure Is moro easy to talle about than to carry Into effect. ; but were It possible It would bo well to remember that it Is an exceodlngly dangerous thing to upsot. the checlts and balnnces provided by nature. 'fho cattle or sheep owner whoso steele hns been decimated Is not apt to stop nnd think that in nddltlon to Ms mischief the coyote performs a great and 1m- portnnt work in leeoplng in eheclt the rabbits and other "sma11 deer" which prey upon the farmers' products.- Philadelphia Ledger. AGED MAN'S PECULIAR ADVICE. Brooklyn Centenarian Favors Drink. Ing of Whisky. Josiah ZclUln , a citizen of Drooldyn , who has just celebrated his ono hundredth - dredth birthday , offers a brand.now piece of advice to these who are de. sirous of reaching his ago. "Drlnle a lot , " says 1\11' \ . ZelUln , "and drinl , reg. ularly. I would have been dead twenty - ty years ngo had I fo11owed the doc- tor's advice and stepped drlnlelng whlsltY and beer. Don't give doctors a chance to worl , on : rou and you w111 Ilvo all the longer. " With a11 his senses In romarlmbly fine order , the old man steps as brlsltly ns though mtlo more than halt his ago. Ho Is a natlvo of Lodz , Poland , where ho mad a competence as a merchant , and came to Drooldyn eighteen years ago to live with a sister. In the course of a dny he talees perhaps a dozen rlnls of whlsley nnd boer , meanwhllo smolelng many cigarettes. Bread and Electricity , Many persons who 1l1ee white brend hnvo a mlstalten Idea that the whiter the bread the moro nourishment It contains. ' 1'he public has , as a consequence - sequence , received n less nutrItive food. The core or the wheat grain , which Is the chief constituent of bread , while producing the whitest flour , at the same tlmo contains the sma11est amount of albumen and 1s thus least nutritious. An nttempt has recently been made to secure a still whiter bread by the use of olectrlclty. Tlle fiour was brought in contnct with electrified all' , whoso ozone possesses efficnclous bleaching properties. The fiour subjected to electrIc Infiuence wns much whiter In color , but Its tnste and odor were fnr InCerlor to these of fiour treated by the ordinary moth. od. 'I'he amount of phosporus was the snmo in both , but the quantities of fatty and ncld substances varied large- ly. Colored Mrm's Quick Wit. At bls summer homo In New Yorle "MarIe Twain" hnd nn aged negro servant , who some time ago celebrat. ed his wedding nnniversary by InvitIng - Ing twelve friends to a 'possum din. ner , the deHcac ) ' having been supplled by rolatlves In the south. Twelve by " \0 means marls the extent of the 4Iervant's friends , and Ptose un bid dente to the feast concluded thnt after all they did not thlnle much of It. One of 'ho moro progresslvo stnrted the report - port that Instead of 'possum the host sorvel } plain coons. The 1Ixt ; ) day , with great sevorlty , Mr. c'et:1cns : ' : said ta Ule servant : "Jhn. 1'n 1.own , you 1\ tOng time nnd found yuu t truthful tellow. I wnnt 10U to te11 11. " honestly - ly which yet : had for dinner h1st night , 'possum or COCh Y" The olJ servant hesltnted , but In an Instant said : "Which do ) 'OU mean. Mr. Clemens , nn the tabln or nrnund the tnbleY" . by n door of I11nto glnss. 'I'hero Is no decorntlon of all ) ' I.llld , the \'er ) ' slm- 1111clty of the whlto marble stl'ucture sel'vlng to set It npart from all tllO other noted monuments In this cem- otor ) ' full of ma ulncent monuments to 1 the ( leparted gl'oat. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . " , . . . EMPLOY THEIR LEISURE TIME. - Public Men Who Make Every Mlnuto of the Day Count. Many men who nre In the publlc eye to-day nro noted for tholr ability to malee every wtOtlng mlnuto count. When President Roosevelt goes for a gallop he slhJ1 Into tho' poeleet of his rIding coat pallor nnd pencil. If durIng - Ing his rldo ho should Crame a reply to some dlfi1cult quostlon urought to his attention he jots It down lIul11edlatolY and do os not trust to his momory. President Loubet or li'ranco settlcs some of the monotonous questions at stnto at his brenl\fnsl table , when ho Is practically alone and before his reasoning powers are distracted by sma11 and 11Ctt ) . fl1lestlons. Lord Roth. schild conlll1encon his day's worle In hed. lIe receives his con1hlental ! men not only In bed , but while ho Is dress. ing aIllI brenlcfnsUng. Dr. Ingrnm , bishop of London , Is obllged to travel n. great deal nnd bo hl\s a Bpeclnl lelnd of olectrlc rending lamp fitted Into the Inside of his cnrrlage , so that whllo he Is bolng whlrlod through the streets or London In the ovenlng bo call leeop up his lIterary worle. BOMBAY AND NEW YORK. - Indian City In Some Ways Ahead of American Metropolis. Rastamjl Mnnekjl , n nnUvo of Dom- bay , India , Is a visitor In New York and complnlns of the heat ho 13 com. polled to endure there. The mercury docs not rise to Hlndoostan heights on Manhattan islnnd , ho snys , but ho cnnnot find a shndy spot In the omplre city which cnn bo used by the publlc In general. He sees too many "Iccep off the grass" signs In the parlm , and says : "It Is quite different In Dom. bay. There wo have subterranean sitting-rooms , slooplng.rooms and swimming pools innumerable , besides man ) ' ether plnces ono can go to , such ns t.ho bazaars , light refreshment rooms and so on. In the parIes huge tents are erected whoreln "ou cnn sit and lIsten to music nnd Inhale the sweet fragrance of 110wors whllo cooling - ing oft. 'I'ho city of Dombay provides tlleso things free of cost. " Woman Highway Overseer. Miss Desslo Daln , who Uves on a Carm near Chatham , ' N. Y. , has been appointed an overseer of highways In her district. Miss Daln declares she w1l1 see that the work was weU done. She intends to have tho' best tectlon of road 1n the township. She \1'111 superintend 1.ho work In person and put into efCect some orlglnRl f elts reI. ntlve to road construction. Miss Daln Is nn export with the reins and every morning drives a spirited team Caul' mlleR to Chathnm , when the mille from the farm Is dellvored nt a station. She is equnlly at home at the } llano or In the ballroom and Is a prominent member of Chatham and mnderhook society. State Judges In Silk Gowns. Deglnnlng with the fall to I'm or the Now Jersey court of errors and np- penIs , which opens In November , the jUdges will wear gowns or blacle sille similar to these worn by the judges of the United States supreme court nnd the United States court of npI1cals. 'I'hls will be an Innovntlon Cor New Jorse ) ' . It was decided upon after much discussion on the } Jart of the JUdges because of the difference In npparel which they usunUy wore when sitting on the bench. It Is 111\011' ' that the "gown habit" wlII now extend to ether courts of the stnte. Why Pastor Omitted Custom. About a 'ear ago Rev. Garbutt Read , pastor of 1\Iount Zion Mothodlst Church , 1\Iannyunle , Pn. , stabUshed the custom of Itlsslng all the uables presented for baptism. Last Sunday the bnbles were unuBualIy numerous but the mothers were astonished to find that 1\11' . Hond omitted the cus- tomar ) ' snluto. 'I'ho secret came oul w1l0n the Inst babe wns h"1nded up to thtJ pnstor. a } Jretty plclmnlnny , all blnck as coal , which crowed for all It was worth. It wus the first. . blnclt baby chrlstoned nt Mount Zion In fifty years. ' ! f' . ' ' , , " . . ; ,1.7 . " Jff ' ; , " . . . , r ' - , " " " " " " ' - ; ' 1 , ' ' " . ' . r , t'/ : ' ; . . THf TfACHfR'S ' rOI A LIPB ALWAYB THREATENED DY NERVOUS PROSTRATION. Onll " 'ho Urnkll nnun frnm Six YC'I\n of O\"arullrk TcU" limy She ] ' : Scnl'ell IIlbery ot llnrorcct1 Itllenell. II I bnl been tcncblns in tbe citY' lohoo1a stendlly 1'01' six ) -enrs , " said Miss J1\11I0S , whoso recent return to the work 1'ront wbloh she WI\II ( lrivon by nervous colll\pse has nttraotull attontlou.IITboY' were greatly overcrowded , cSIJoolnlly in tbo l1r1Il1I\1'Y 1l0pI\rtmout ot whloh I hnll ehargo , nUll I had bemt doing the work of two toaohOI's. The strnln was too muoh for 1111' llDrVCS and t\VO years ago the erisls cnmo. II I was 11rostmtollmoutally I\llCl pby. 8tcI\11 - , Bent 11l1l1)"l'OfiIHuntloIl1\1II1110VOr oXl1obtoll to bo nblo to l'Ofit1lll worle. It 800mol1 to 1110 then tlll\t I was the 1I10St mtsornblo W01111\11 on enrth. I was tor- turell by ucrvouflhoadl\oholl , worn out by Inl\bl11ty to 8loop , 1\1111 hl\II 80 llttlo bloOll that I WI\S 1\8 white as ohl\lIc. II.Aftor my neUvo.UCo , It wns hard to bear 1c1l0ncns , nUll terribly < 1lsoonrngiull to ) ecQp 11l\'lng out the savlugs of yenra tor 1I1011l0ln08 whtoh < 1111 mo 110 good. " 11lIo1ll1you got bao1c'our health 1" , II A bl\ro ohnnco aUlln lot of 1'aith ) od mo to fouro. . ACtor I 111\11 suffered : tor' ' 111l\ny months , nUll when I WI\S on the' ' voryvorgoof < 1ospl\lr , Ihn11ened to road 1\11 nceount of 1101110 eures effoctoll bY' Dr. Williams' llnlc Pills. The statements - ments were 80 convincing that I 801110- bo\v 1'elt I\asuroll thnt these Ill11s would help mo. Most people , I think , buy only ono box for 1\ trial , but I purclll\sod six boxes I\t once , nud wbon I hnl1 used thom up , I WI\II h1l10011 well nud had 110 uood of 11101'0 mo < 1lolno. "Dr. W11llams' l > in1c P11ls enrloho1 my thin blood , gave mo baok my sleep , ro. stored my I\ppot1to , gnvo me strength to walk long distances without fl\tlguo , in faot froOll1110 1'rom 1\11111Y lIUlllorous aU- monts. I lll\vo already tnugbt forso\'ernl months , nud I amUlet 81\Y enough in prnlso ot Dr. WnUallls' Pink Pills.II Ml s Ml\rgarot M. Jalllos III uow Uvlng nt No. 128 Olay troot , Dl\ytoll , Ohio. Manyof her 1'ol1ow tCl\ohorR hl\ve also usorl Dr. W11l1luns' Pinle P11ls 1\1111 arc ontlmlll\stlo I\bout their morits. Sound digostlon , stronHth , I\lIIultfou , and cheerful - ful spiritsqul01c1y follow tholr mlO. ThoY' are 801d 1n every drug store 111 the \Vor1d. Ink spots on Mahogany. Inle spots on mallognny mn.y bo rOe moved by holng touehod with n tenth- or < lIpped In all amI vitriol dllutod with twlco Its qunntlty or water. ' .1'hO spot shouli bo wall and Qulcldy rub bod. I "Yes" Churches School Houses and Homes ou bt t be dooomtod Bed mnd beau\lfuJ nna hoolthtul by ualni "ast.\ "ast.T , , ' II Rocr. Inwhlt ndboAu _ , l\ liaemenf t1tul tlets. Doell IJ rub or sCllle. VOitrn'S dlsonso germs nnd vrnnlu. No wnshlng of wallllllrter oneo npe pllod. Any oeo can IJrufth It on-mix , vlth colti water. l'laln tlntleg nu,1 , whitening , Bnd the most vlnlwrnto rellot. stencil 'fork I\nd frescoleg IIIIIY he done wltl ! It. Other IInlsh611 { boorlng fllllclCul lIamcs aml mlxCtI with hot waterl do 1I0tlu\\'o the or.melllll'llrolerty of A nbluUno. They nro stuclc on with Jltlo or other anlmnl mnttnr , vhlcb rnts , 100l1111 ! : .1I801&so I'orm" rUbi'hl" , IIcnllng llt1llwllln. . ! ; "lilli , C ( nihil , ! : , etc. Buch finlshclI must be wnshed oIl every yoor-cost- If. filthy worlc. ) ) uy Alllhn Ullo ollly 111 Ovo-l'o\llul } lnc1"o" . . JrollorlV : Inholed. Tlet card. jrctt } wall Rnd cellInI' { d0511n , " "Hints on DooomtJel\ nnd our artists' &er- "Ices In making color II \ nns , rree. ALABASTINE COMPANY , ( lr nd R l1ld , Mich. , or 105 Waler St. . N. Y. $ : Separator . Cream . I'OR'2 00 w. . .11 , , , , " celebrllteif' b1lftDftft C R ftA. . a I : PA RAT 0 R. ( 'lIpaelty. tOC poundl per hour , s.o L oundi ca. pl\Clty per hour for : ' 29.001 1 > 00 \ > ouodlCapaclty i' < 'rliuur fU' ' 34 00. Ou.rant..d . h . equ.t 0' Sep.ralorl 'h. ' Rft. TAIL IVERYWHERft a' frona STIIOO to : " 28.00. W.wlll.hll1 DUn OFFER ' ! : = : : : : i : rater on our o dy r r"\ ! . : pl.n. with the Llodlolf unde . . . 'J ' 1.lIdIOg and agrermont It YOII \ = do nnd . : ! " ! - oot by comparl.ollo , n' . teotandu.etlil\tltwJlhklnt r , ; . do.or. 'klm colder m11 ' " . . . . . 1 ' e n ' r 'S / ' . J : . : 1 'f , nlr . - , \ \ < . than allY other Cream 8rp&o _ , " , "t. , . rater mllde you Cln relurn , . , " ' , . ' , It _ . the Seplrltor to 101 .t our ( l t ' - < : : ! ' { ) expenee and We will Imm. . , I ' . . .jfJ . dl.lely relurn any mon. , . . , \ , ; sorl ) 'oum.YhllYep.ldlorlr'I ' ' ch.r.el or olherwl. . . , thll..1. out atoDceandm I to ue , alll you will recelv. by return mall f'fle roetpald. our LATEST SPECIAl , CREAM StPAI/ATOR / C'TALOOUe : . You wlllite' our LII : oller an. I our free trIal proo.llIon 111111 yoU . .111 re. celvo tbo MOST ASTOHIStllUOLY LIDERAL CREAM SEPARATOR O..r.R : r.VIR : IIEARD 01' . Address , SEARS , ROEDUCK Ct CO. , CHICAGO. TlfE DAISY FLY KILLER nlroN.comtort dr.troYlali the nles to oYery aud um&-In dllllnKroom. eletplnKroolD and placee where , . . . . . . , IIlee are , trouble. . ' . -.t l. eomeClean.Deat , cU , . , , , , . ; , . , , ; wllinuteollorin. " " ' - ' I . " ' : u re anything. 'Cry thenl once. YOI1 will liner be WIthout them. It ' Dot kept by deal. ers. lent prepaId ror 10c. 11.14 " ' " . . . . " . . .0 1I.KeI A..U"O' Jl.II.1' . , . , ' Prepare Your Own Baby fee , , f . : t with fresh cow's ml11 mnde nearly human - ' , , ' man by the TRAINEu NURSE IrOR- MULA. Cooltcd as needed , sterilized. Inexpensive. eagerly talten. this recipe bas sBved many InCant lives. By mall. U.OO. Trllhaetl Nurlle Co. , Iloom 14 , lliOIS UO'\"lnd St. , Olllllhn , Neb. . SMOKERS FIND LEWIS SINGLE BINDER S.CIAar better QuaillY than most 10' CI4ars YQUl Jollber or direct from Factory. I'oona. 111 MOL S and WARTS RfMOVfD , With J.NTI.MorI : . No I > l\ln , ! lOrene88 or . .t'lir. " ' , 'It AlL " 1IJU : : l'JIWANENT. : 11.00 bottle b7 IUI : ! ? oJ.lur Manutao\urlDI : Co , . Incoln. Nil"