ui ii j." ., . . waaaMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaai iniTlTTnrwtTi n r m ttnii r i BBBfCTJtJHh- w: - H)... WiWiji , . ,,., ,. .., ',,.,. .m.. 'L - - ' - $ N Columbus Journal R. a STROTHER, Edfter. P. K. STROTHEIt, M COLUMBUS, I Without good blood we cannot he " Wealthy, or live long. Plaia. healthy ood, .moderate exercise, and fresh -air jiake good blood; pastry , candy, aad 'Jie rich aad dainty dishes which are considered the masterpieces of the wok's art, cause numerous ailments s well as bad blood. It naturally fol-t ows that to eat nutritious, wholesome .'ood, and breathe pure air would la ture'pure blood. There is" another :hing to be 'considered, however, says New York Weekly, and 'that is the casting out of waste material that ren iers the blood impure. This is usual -.y performed by the bowels, the kid neys, the skin and tbe lungs. If, then, .ve would have pure blood, we must see that these organs are kept active. Oreathc pure air night and day, being careful to wear no clothing which ia the least interferes with deep breatb ng. Eat plain but substantial food, use a moderate quantity at regular times, and absolutely nothing between msals. Keep the skin active by bath ing often, the kidneys active by drink ing freely of pure water, and the bow els active by right food and exercise. Keep a clean conscience and a serene mind, and you will have pure blood, and the ruddy tint of health will glow In your cheeks. Good Manners Dying Out? Hurry and bridge baye killed the art of polite conversation; hurry has robbed correspondence of its grace; hurry is fast transforming the once sedate city of London into a pande monium of whirring noises, whirling wheels and evil fumes. Dignity, grace, repose are banished from our midst, and we are as yet only at the be ginning of this breakneck race through life. Perhaps some dusty memoirs of our period will cause the men and women of he future to say: "Those people were very punctilious, very slow, very sedate." That, says Adolphus Vane Tempest, in Nine teenth Century, may be the opinion held in the not very far distant days when contending areoplanes crash '.into one another without an apology, land myriads of motor cars sweep over 'the prostrate bodies of pedestrians (without inquiring if they are hurt. iBut there will be less difference be tween the people of that day and the jpeople of ours than there is between us and the powdered, courteous gal lants and dames who worthily upheld the traditions of good manners. when the first gentleman in Europe was '"the glass of fashion and the mould of form.' Most of the tortoise shell of com merce is obtained from the hawks-bill turtle, m-hlch is taken chiefly in the Caribbean sea. Turtles caught in these waters vary in size from one to four and one-half feet long, with a maximum weight of 150 pounds, and the average weight of shell obtained Cram each is from six to seven pounds. The commercial value of tortoise shell depends upon the thickness and size of the plates rather than upon the brilliancy of the colors. The price of shell in this market fluctuates from three to six dollars in gold per pound. As the best prices are obtained in England, the largest amount of the shell shipped from these parts goes to that country. The San Bias Indians, aowever. trade a large amount of shell to coasting schooners, which is partly carried to the States and partly to Colon. There's a Pittsburger in New York looking for a site for a Fifth avenue some, and he thinks he has a griev tnce because he cannot find any va cant land for less than $100,000 a lot Setween Fiftyninth street and Lenox library, at Seventy-second street, he found no available land at all, and from Seventy-second to One Hundred tnd First street he found only 14 lots sffered, at prices running up to 93f. MO, aad that is too rich even for a Pittsburger who has the price. It has been announced that the Keil zakaH is to be widened at a cost of many millions In order to enable it to admit vessels of the Dreadnaught type. The Kaiser Wilhelm canal was opened in 1895 by the German em peror. It is 4 mMes long and has locks only at its extremities at Holt can aad BrunsbutteL The width is 17 feet Its naval value to Germany Js said to be equal to 15 men of war. - A German article describes a loco motive equipped with feed-water heat ers which has recently been put into service on the Egyptian state rail ways, and effects a saving In coal con sumed of 2L4 per cent, or over I1.M0 per year per engine. The German scientist who predicts that in 300 years water will be worth 15 cents a drink surely expects bath? tubs to go entirely ont of fashion. At .the very best they will be found ouy in the homes of billionaires. Routes of commerce are generally also highways to amity. The an noHncemest that France aad Spain nave agreed upon three new railroad lines across the Pyrenees te connect the neighboring countries promises jwt only an increase of trade aad kravtrt tat stronger friendship. Fret Matteacci denies having said jthe earth win sow be bumped by a frnmet, and the people who were afraid krf being jarred ont of fat political Jobs -cam breathe easier. V L ? '" iv ' jJaaaaaaammV Xfc A f5mP-r5Bsmk jJammmmmmmmmmBrnV if 'lBmmmmmmr:BmW5,Psm!amBV I ' " 'BBBBj ,mBBBBL sCSsmmmmn -Jr mmmmmmmmmJHLf AmmmmBmmL THE DELUGE ftmSKSHT J9QS-b&, XXX1L - i ."MY RIGHT EVE OFFEND ME.". Next day Langdon's stocks wavered, going np a little, going down a little, closing at practically the same Bgares at which they had opened. Them I sprang my sensation that Langdoa and his particular clique, though they controlled the Textile Trust, did not own so much as one-fiftieth of its vot ing stock. True "captains of indus try" that they were, they made their profits not oat of dividends, bat ont of side schemes that absorbed about two-thirds of the earnings of the Trust, and out of gambling la its bonds and stocks. I said ia conclu sion: "The largest owner of the stock is Walter G. Edmunds, of Chicago an honest man Send your voting proxies to him, and he can takeTafce Textile company away from those bow plun dering it" 1 As the annual election of the Trust was only six weeks away, Langdon and his clique were in a panic They rushed into the-market and bought frantically, the public bidding against them. Langdon himself went to Chi cago to reason with Edmunds that is, to try to find out at what figure he could be bought And so on, day after day, I faithfully reporting to the public the main occurrences be hind the scenes. The Langdon at tempt to regain control by purchases of6tock failed. He and his allies made what must have been to them appalling sacrifices; but even at the high prices they offered, comparative ly little of the stock appeared. "I've caught them," said I to Joe the first time, aad the last, during that campaign that I indulged in a boast "If Edmunds sticks to you," re plied cautious Joe. But Edmunds did not I do not know at what price he sold him self. Probably it was pitifully small; cupidity usually snatches the instant bait tickles its nose. Bnt I do know that my faith in human nature got its severest shock. Fortunately, Edmunds had held out or, rather, Langdon had delayed ap proaching him, long enough for me to gain my main point The uproar over the Textile Trust had become so great that the national department of com merce dared not refuse an investiga tion; and I straightway began to spread out in my daily letters the facts of the trust's enormous earnings and of the shameful sources cf those earnings. In the midst of the adulation, of the blares upon the trumpets of fame that saluted my waking and were wafted to me as I fell asleep at night in the midst of all the turmoil, I was often in a great and brooding silence, longing for her, now with the im perious energy of passion, and now with the sad ache of love. What was she doing? What was she thinking? Now that Langdon had again played her false for the old price, with what eyes was she looking into the future? Alva, settled in a West Side apart ment not far from the ancestral white elephant telephoned, asking me to come. I went, because she could and would give me news of Anita. But as I entered her little drawing-room. I said: "It was curiosity that brought me. I wished to see how you were in stalled." "Isn't it nice and small?' cried she. "Billy and I haven't the slightest diffi culty in finding each other as people so often have In the big houses." And it was Billy this and Billy that and what Billy said and thought and felt and before they were .married, she had called him William, and had declared "Billy" to be the most offensive com bination of letters that ever fell from human lips. "I needn't ask if you are happy," said I presently, with a dismal failure at looking cheerful. "I can't stay but a moment," I added, and if I had obeyed my feelings, I'd have risen up and taken myself and my pain away from surroundings as hateful to me as a summer sunrise in a death-chamber. "Oh!" she exclaimed, in some con fusion. "Then excuse me." And she hastened from the room. I thought she had gone to order, or perhaps to bring, the tea. The long minutes dragged away until tea had passed. Hearing a rustling in the hall, I rose, intending to take leave the In stant she appeared. The rustling stopped just outside. I waited a few seconds, cried: "Well, Im off. Next time I want to be alone, 111 know where to come," and advanced to the door. It was not Alva hesitating there; it was Anita. "I beg your pardon," said I, coldly. If there had been room to pass I should have gone What devil pos sessed me? Certainly in all our rela tions I had found her direct and frank, if anything, too frank. Doubtless It wss the influence of my associations down town, where for so many months I had been dealing with the "short card" crowd of high finance, who would hardly play the game straight even- when that was the easy way to win. My long, steady stretch in that stealthy aad sinaous company had put me in the state of mind ia which it is impossible to credit any human being with a motive that is decent or aa ac tion that Is not a dead-fall. Thus the obvious transformation ia her made no impression on me. Her hanghtl aess, her coldness, were gone, aad with.thent-had gone all that had been least like her natural self, most like the repellent conventions! pattera to which her mother aad her associates had melded her. Bnt I was saying to myself: "A trap! hack to his wife. I leved her UEeazzo&za&y? "Never," thought I, "has she shown so poor an opinion of me as bow." "My uncle told me day before yes terday that it was not he but you," she said, lifting her eyes to mine. It is inconceivable to me now that I could have misread their honest story; yet I did. , "I had no idea your uncle's notion of honor was also -eccentric," said I, with a satirical smile that made the blood rush to her face. rThat is unjust to him," she re plied, earnestly. "He says he made you no promise of secrecy. And he confessed to me only because he wished to convince me that he had good reason for his high opinion of you." "Really!" said I, ironically. "And bo doubt he found you open wide to conviction now." This a subtlety to let her know that I undertsood why she was seeking me. "No," she answered, lowering her eyes. "I knew better than he." For an instant this, spoken in n voice I had long given np hope of ever hearing from her, staggered my cyn ical conviction. But "Possibly she thinks she is sincere," reasoned my head with my heart; ."even the sincer est women, brought up as was. she, al ways have the calculator underneath; they deny it they don't know It often, but there t Is; with them, calculation Is as involuntary and automatic as their pulse." So, I said to her, mock ingly: "Doubtless your opinion of me 'TOU DO NOT BELIEVE has been improving steadily ever since you heard that Mrs. Langdon had re covered her husband." She winced, as if I bad struck her. "Oh!" she murmured. If she had been the "ordinary woman, who in every crisis with man instinctively resorts to weakness' strongest weakness, tears, I might have a different story to tell. But she fought back the tears in which her eyes were swimming and gathered herself together. "That is brutal," she said, with not a touch of haughtiness, but not humbly, either. "But I deserve it." "There was a time," I went on, swept in a swift current of cold rage, "there was a time when I would have taken you on almost any terms. A man never makes a complete fool of himself about a woman but once in his life, they say. I have done my stretch and it is over." She sighed wearily. "Langdon came to see me soon after I left your house, and went to my uncle," she said. "I will tell you what happened." "I do not wish to hear," replied I, adding pointedly, "I have been waiting ever since you left for news of your plans." She grew white, and my heart smote me. She came into the room and seated herself. "Won't you stop, please, for a moment longer?" she said. "I hope that at, least, we can part without bitterness. I understand now that everything is over between us. A woman's vanity makes her be lief that a man cares for her die hard. I am convinced now I assure you, I am. I shall trouble you' bo more about the past. But I have the right to ask you to hear me whenJjsay that Langdon came, and thatXmyself sent him away; sent him back to his wife." "Touching self-sacrifice, - said I, ironically. "No," she replied. "I cannot claim any credit. I sent him away only be cause yon and Alva had taught me how to judge him better. I do not despise him as do you; I know too well what has made aim what he is. Bat I had to send him away." My comment was aa incredulous look and shrug. "I must be going." I said. "You do not believe me?" she asked. "Ia my place, would yon believer replied L "Yew say I have taught you. Well, yon have taught me. too for in stance, that the years you've spent on yonr knees ia the musty temple of LtionaUty before false geas nave v mmsmfo -z w rw ;H- iXlt amnBjK .nmnanasw-smnmnrnk . L K7 V EBmBmH W dRW lamnmnmnmnmnmnmnmnmsnlm nmnmfmmma yon fit only for the sort of thing. Ton can't learn how to stand erect, aad your eyes cannot bear JWJisfci" I .' ' K I am sorry," she said, slowly, hesi tatingly, "that yonr faith in me died just when I might; perhaps, have justi fied it Oars has been a pitiful series of misunderstandings' "A trap! A trap!" I was warning myself. "You've been a fool long enough, Blacklock." And aloud I said: "Wen. Anita, the series is ended bow. There's no longer any occastaa for our lyiag or posiag to each other." Any ar rangements yonr uncle's lawyers sug gest will be made." I was bowing, to leave without shaking hands with her. But she would not have it so. "Please!" she said, stretching ont her long, slender arm aad. offering me her-hand-. What a devil possessed me that day! With every atom of me longing for her. I yet was able to take, her hand and say. with a smile, that was, 1 doubt not as mocking as my tone: "By all meaas let us be friends. And I trust you will not think me discourteous if I say that I shall feel safer In our friendship when we are both on neutral ground." As I was turning away, her look, my own heart, made me turn again. I caught her by the shoulders. I gazed into her eyes. "If I could only trust you, could only believe you!'- I cried. "You cared for me when I wasn't worth It" she said. "Now that I am more like what you once Imagined me, you do not care." Up between us rose Langdon's face cynical, mocking, contemptuous. "Your heart is his! You told me so! Don't lie to me!" I exclaimed. And before she could reply, I was gone. Out from under the spell of her presence, back. among the tricksters and asssKBins, the traps and ambushes of Wall street I believed again; be lieved firmly the promptings of the devil that possessed ma "She would have given you a brief fool's paradise," said that devil. "Then what a hideous awakening!" And I cursed the day when New York's insidious snobbish ness had tempted my vanity into start ing me on that degrading chase after "respectability." "If she does not move to free her self soon," said I to myself. "I will &Z8&'S y jr iwwxk i ; a rmmt MEr SHE ASKED. put my own lawyer to work. My right eye offends me. I will pluck it oat" CHAPTER XXXIII. "WILD WEEK." "The Seven" made their fatal move on UpdegraflTs advice, I suspect But they would not have adopted his sug gestion had it not been so exactly congenial to their own temper of ar rogance and tyranny and contempt for the people who meekly, year after rtbir, presented themselves for the the shearing with fatuous bleats of en thusiasm. "The Seven," of course, controlled directly, or indirectly, all but a few of the newspapers with which I had ad vertising contracts. They also con trolled the main sources through which the press was supplied with news and often' and i well they had used this control, and . surprisingly cautious had they been not so to abuse it that the editors and the pub lic would become suspicious. When my war was at its height, when I was beginning to congratulate myself that the huge magazines of "The Seven" were empty almost to the point at The Ears of Said te Differ Widely from These of Normal Persons. Before the annual congress of German anthropologists at Gorlitz. Prof. Blau, a well known authority on diseases of the ear. read an interesting paper on the formation of the ears of criminals sad lunatics. Prof. Blau has token accurate xnessurements of l.l ears. Of these 265 are the ears of lunatics and 343 those of male criminals. The examination, moreover, was confined to men of one race and one country. The professor comes to the conclu sion that In the vast majority of cases the various parts of the auricle, er external ear. are larger ia the ease of crimiaals and lunatics than In the case of normal persons. This is espe cially noticeable in the helix, or in curved outer border of the ear. aad also la the lobe. According to Prof. Blau, the larger the helix Is the lower the state of mental development The hearing faculty, oa the other hand, is keener, aad Prof. Blan fllastratos his theory by reference to the auricle of apes, who are all la possession of this whlehthey mast sne for own terms, all la four days 43 of my S7 aewspepers and they the most mv Dortant notified me that they would no longer carry ont their contracts to publish my daily letter. They gave as their reason, not the real one, f "The Sevea," tat fear that I iavolve them ia miaous libel suits. I who had legal proof for every state meat I made; I who was always care ful to understate!. Next, one press associatkm after another censed to send out my letter as news, thoaj they had been doing so regularly for months. The public had grown tired of the "sensation." they said. I countered with a telegram to one or more newspapers ia every city aad huge town in the United States: " The Seven are trying to cut the wires between the truth aad the pub lic. If you wish my dally letter, tele graph me direct and I will send it at my expense." The response should have warned "The Seven." But It did not. Undei their orders the telegraph companies refused to transmit the letter. I got an injunction. It was obeyed in typi cal, corrupt corporation fashion they sent my matter, but so garbled that It was unintelligible. I appealed to the courts. In vain. To me, It was clear as sun in cloud 1 less noonday sky that there could bej but one result of this insolent and despotic denial of my rights and the rights of the people, this public con fesslon of the truth of my charges. I turned everything salable or mort gageable into cash, locked the cash up in my private1 vaults, and waited for the cataclysm. - Thursday Friday Saturday. Ap parently all. .was- tranquil; apparently the people accepted the Wall street theory that I was aa "exploded sensa tion." "The Seven" began to preen themselves; the strain upon them to maintain prices, if no less than for three months past, was not notably greater; the crisis would pass. I and my exposures would be forgotten, the routine of reaping the harvests aad leaving only the .gleanings for the sowers would soon be placidly re sumed. Sunday. Roebuck, taken ill as he was passing the basket in the church of which he was the shining light died at midnight a beautiful, peaceful death, they say. with his daughter reading the Bible aloud, and his lips moving in prayer. Some hold that, had he lived, the tranquillity would have continued; but this Is the view of those who cannot realize that the tide of affairs is no more controlled by the "great men" than is the river led down to the sea by its surface flotsam, by which we measure the speed and di rection of its current Under that ter rific tension, which to the shallow seemed a calm, something had to give way. If the dam had not yielded where Roebuck stood guard, it must have yielded somewhere else, or might have gone all in one grand crash. Monday. You know the story of the artist and his Statue of Grief how he molded the features a hundred times, always failing, always getting an anti climax, until at last in despair he gave up uus jiuyiflsatuic suu uuwuvu tu statue with a veil over the face. I have tried again and again to assem ble words that would give some not loo inadequate impression of that tre mendous week in which, with a succes sion of explosions, each like the crack of doom, the financial structure that housed 80.000.0W of people burst, col lapsed, was engulfed. I cannot. 1 must leaye it to your memory or your imagination! For years the financial leaders, crazed by the. excess of power which the people had in ignorance and over confidence aad slovenly good-nature permitted them to acquire, had been tearing out the honest foundations on which alone so vast a structure can hope to rest solid and secure. They had been substituting rotten beams painted to look like stone and iron. The crash had to come! tbe sooner, the better when a thing is wrong, each day's delay compounds the cost of righting it So, with all the horrors of "Wild Week" in mind,-all its phys ical and mental suffering, all its ruin and rioting and bloodshel, I still can insist that I am justly proud of my share In bringing it about. The blame and the shame are wholly upon those who made "Wild Week" necessary and inevitable. In catastrophes, the cry is "Each for himself!" But in a cataclysm, the obvious wise selfishness is generosity, and the cry is: "Stand together, for, singly, we perish." This was a cata clysm. No one could save himself, except the few who. taking my often urged advice and following my exam ple, had entered the ark of ready money. Farmer and artisan and pro fessional man and laborer owed, mer chant; merchant owed banker; banker owed depositor. No one could pay be cause no one could get what was due him or could realize upon his property. The endless chain of credit that binds together the whole of modern society had snapped in a thousand places. It must be repaired, instantly and se curely. But how and by whom? (To he Continued.) "Criminals. extended outer border. Prof. Blsa added the curious remark that an ab normal development of the outer bor der was more noticeable amoag crim inals charged with sexual crime than among other classes of criminals. First Use ef Ice Cream. Though the ancient Greeks and Ro mans used Ice for table purposes to get through the hot.moaths of sum mer, they kaew nothing of "ices." These were introduced into Franco from Italy about 1660 and were known at first as "fromages glaces." iced cheeses, although they were made of strawberries and apricots, and con tained not a drop of cream. From 17CS the use of "glaces 'la the plural was sanctioned by the French acad emy, but not before 1825 did "awe glace" force its way lata recognised acceptance. "Ices" are referred to from time to time ia the eighteeath century in English people's letters from abroad. "Iced creams." how ever were kaowa as early as lttf , sad by the middle of the eighteenth tary "ice csam" figured in hooks. CARE OtVTHE SICK ROwH. AH the Watts Kept Dry. When the i sick there is aa added why ex be need to keep then condition. hi a thoroughly sanitary Above an things, the bedroem should never be damp. It should he nice and dry. always warm aad winter, cool aad airy hi bright aad sunny some parts cf the day. ' If there is any suspicion of damp ness ia a bedroom it is probably due, if there is wallpaper oa the wall, to the abserptioa of water by the paper which frequently acts as a Wotting pa per aad holds aaaatiUee of water ia it The use of wallpaper Aa walls Is to be deplored; it meaas disease, ill health aad aahappiBessr It isfre aeatly the cause of laag trouble, net only because of Its dampness' tat also because of its power to retaia infec tion of many kinds. The desired' method of treating a bedroom wall is to tint it for the ala bastiaed wall is a perfect walL. It never flakes off. chips or peels. It ab sorbs moisture aad expels It, it opens the pores of the plaster and makes a room livable and breathable. The floor in the bedroom should have light, cleanable. dainty rugs that can be easily shaken and a floor that is thoroughly oiled or varnished, that will not absorb moisture. The cracks in the floor should be thoroughly filled and covered. Woodwork la the bed room should be.atteaded to carefully, window sills should be thoroughly var nished'or waxewraadUhe window cas ings kept in perfect order. The doors should be wiped off .frequently as also should be aU the standing woodwork in the bedroom, as the presence of dust oa woodwork is a menace to health as weH as aa evidence of poor housekeeping. - i WOMEN IN NEW FIELD. . British Smart Society Takes te MHea aing" Woman Veterinary. Work ia the hop fields is the latest "rest cure" fad for London's smart set. and the luxurious society "hop pers" claim that a week's hopping is far better and more pleasant than n rest at any well-known health resort. The tents of these well-to-do pickers are expensively furnished, and easy chairs, soft beds aad up-to-date camp ing outfits are among their hopping appliances. In Berlin there is a woman veter inary surgeon who is an omcial in spector of animals. She rides through tbe streets on the lookout for animals suffering from any disablement aad before reporting a horse as unfit for work, she examines its injuries and whenever possible applies remedies to alleviate its pain. She carries a leath er case filled with bandages aad other surgical appliances. Refuses en Ment Blanc Losing one's self on Mont Blanc will soon be counted among the van ished Industries. In recent years a number of fine refuges have been built ia various parts of the mountain by the Alpine clubs of England,, France aad other countries aad by private individuals. These have made it almost impossible for a man hav ing a bump of locality of average size iw uc mmt, M OfMlv w aval J OBftOlo W blinding snowstorms, caused by sud den changes of temperature. nausfa catftBy evny battle ef CASTOUA. ! naiijfrr Watt MSc-aawa. sat m that it hlwlkr Over SO Ycmra. Sat Kind Yes Mm Abaca aaaris. New Yerk Births and Deaths. There is a birth in New York city each five minutes in the day and a death each seven minutes. TRY OR. WILLIAMS' PINK PILLS FOR STOMACH TROUBLE. Convincing Evidence Sopeorted by a Guarantee That Must Convince The Most Skeptical. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are a doctor's prescription, used by an eminent prac titioner, and for nearly a generation known as a reliable household remedy throughout the United States. Need lemtosay.no advertised medicine could retain popular favor f or so long a period -without having great merit and it is the invaluable curative propertiesof the pills that have autbem a standard remedy ia every civilized country in the world. Addedtotliisis the absolute gunraatee that the pills contain ao harmful drag, oputo, narcotic or stimulus. A recent evidence of their efficacy is found ia the statement of Mm. N. B. Whitley, of Boxley, Ark., who says: "Iliad suffered for a good many years from stomach trouble. For a longtime Iwassnbjectto bsd spells of fainrnww aad lack of breath ncconqnaaed by'un iadencTihshln feeling that seemed to start in my stomach. Whenever I was a little run-down or over-tired, these spells would come on. They occurred frequently bnt did not last very long. "I was confined to my bed for ten weeks one time and ihe doctor pro nounced my trouble chronic inflsmmn tkm of the stomach aad bowels. Since that time I have been subject to tbe fainting spells and at other times to flat tering of tbe heart aad a feeling as though I was smotliering. My general health was very bad aad I was weak aad trembling. "I bad seen Dr. Williams' Pink Fills meationed ia the newspapers aad de cided to try them. Wlien I began taking tbe pills I was so run-down in strength that I could hardly do any hoses work. Kow I could walk tea miles if neremsry. Bcthmyhnsbaad aad myself think Dr. Williams' Pink Pills the best medicine made aad we always recommead the pills to our friends." nDr.Wmaa'PinkPUk actually make Hooa aaa give screagu ana tone to part of the body. They . . m.. .--.. rsoc the blood They garner wilt be by the Dr. Will-asm HOMEST MEDCI paralysis, looceaotor ataxia, 8t. SS mtoirssx. xney are sotasyau arac- t,postmnaVeaiw8Siat aa. avaaaa, a .N.T. Ida Lewis recently celebrated ef the ia the Newport. R. L As a girl Ma Lewis has lived a Her bravery 'aad skfli ia well knows aad her as the great la the worm. reVnta was the credit ef lS.Hvesv ef her rescees having bean effect ed ia the face ef extreme danger and fat winter. aaaelated ia bravery aad record the death of her has shewn herself dent as-a of the few SLEEP BROKEN BY ITCHINdW "For a year I have had what they call iicicmi I had aa Itching aR'over my body, aad when I would retire for the night tt weald keep me awake half the aight, aad the more I would scratch, the more it would itch. 1 tried all kinds of remedies, tat eoaM get no rensC i ased eae cake ef Cuticura Soap, one box of Cuticura. aad two vials of Cuticura Resolvent Pills, which cost me a dollar aad twenty-five.ceuts in all. aad am very glad I tried them, for I was Completely, cured. WsKW. Paghmch. 27 N. Rohey St.. Chicago. ID.. Oct. 8 aad 1C, 1MST Fanny Faaay Crosby; the hHad writer, celebrated her 'eighty-seventh birthday in Bridgeport, Cean. Misa Crosby received many presents and congratulatory messages from all parts of the country. She says that the wsy to keep yoaag Is la bo cheer ful, keep working aad love maaklnd. She declares that she does aet feel much stave 4 aad that' she has net her dinner ia a y Fainting for rTOOT. lis one wiB caestion tbe appearance of well-sainted property. The question that the property-owner asks is: "Is tbe appearance worth the cost?" Poer paint is fcr tesaparary appear ance only. Paint nude from Pure Linseed Oil and Pare White Lead is for lasting appearance and sar protection. It saves repairs and repUceaents cost ing many tiaes the paint mvestawBt. The Dutch Boy trade anrk i. fcand only on kegs containing Pace White suae ny the Old Dutch Process. SEND FOR BOOK ATi rt. 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