. ,tr. v: T. P srf """ T" ?fJ- T ST'fr - Bifc-- Jl b . H, IK V k . PWi aaaaa Columbus Journal jt . amoTHsn, p. k. stuother; Clothes. la respond to a petition from the 'sailors, the secretary of the navy has appointed a committee to recommend chances in the uniform of the men. The sailors say that the pancake cap '' which they are compelled to wear can not be kept on the head in a high wind, and affords no protection to, the eyes iia-a glaring -sun. The blouse, with a wide'coliar tiedby a long neck erchief, is also charged with trouble breeding possibilities in the wind. The collar blows up about the head 'anii .faceaad the neckerchief gets tangled in the hands, and is a general nuls ance. No protest has been made against the flaring,,, trousers, as the fare makes it easy to roll up the legs when the sailors scrub. the decks. The men ask for a vizored cap-and a coat Whether their-demands are granted now or not, some change in the sail or's uniform is inevitable, declares the Youth's Companion. A garment that interferes with a man's work has out lived its usefulness. There wus a time when men wore silken hose, lace-raffled shirts and flowing lace cuffs with silk or satin coats. One has only to imagine a man clad in that way Stalk ing the streets "of a modern city or running a high-powered automobile to understand why silks and satins have gone oat of; fashion for men's gar ments. That 'laces and silks and sat ins are still woven and worn by wo men is the world's tribute of apprecia tion for woman's ornamental capabili ties. Her usefulness is never doubted. Clothes also show the progress of democracy. It was the gentleman who wore laces and silks. The peasant dressed in woolens of sober' colors. Class distinctions were forced unon the attention of the most careless ob server of the passing throng. Nowa days It is impossible to distinguish be. tween the rich and the poor as they walk the streets. It sometimes hap pens that the poor man dresses bet ter than his employer, "that he may make a good impression" a utilitari an reason for good clothes as truly as the demand for a vizored can bv the I sailors Is based on business reasons. Tallow "Dip" More Used Than Ever. The "tallow dip" of our grandfath ers is no longer made of tallow, exact ly, writes William Hard in Technical World Magazine. It is made of stearic acid, which is only one ingredient of the tallow that grows in the sheep and in the steer. Neither is the "tallow dip" of to-day a real "dip." They used to take long wicks and dip them in hot tallow, time after time, till the can dle had acquired the proper thickness. To-day they run hot stearic acid into monlds and make a hundred candles instantaneously. The "tallow dip" on the market to-day therefore would be I more accurately described if it were called a "stearic acid mold." But nevertheless it remains a tallow prod uct. It Is the direct lineal descendant of the "tallow dip" of our grandfath ers. And it is still so popular that just about 136,000,000 pounds of tal low, according to the calculation of one of the best-informed manufactur ers of Chicago, are consumed every year in the candle factories of the United States. -Although gas and ker osene and electricity have deprived the candle of a large part of the popu larity to which it might'have consid ered itself justlyentitled it is proba ble that in both hemispheres to-day there are more candles shedding their mild and humbte radiance than in any previous period of the world's history. A churchman in England takes the trouble to write to a newspaper to say that the presence of farthings and halfpence in offertories does not nec essarily -mean that the contributors are stingy. He says that he 'has sev eral times seen people give several coppers, and that he himself has put. farthings with other coppers on the plate. It is obvious to anyone who thinks that ten cents put on a con tribution plate are just as good as a dime, and they make more noise. Italy is among the countries whose people are enjoying comparative pros perity. Because of the great number coming to America, particularly from Sicily, laborers there are enjoying a 150 per cent, increase in wages, get ting "75 cents a day where they for merly got 30. Emigrant relatives in this country are sending liberal remit tances., the tendency being to create a firmer belief than ever that this is the land of promise. And now we are told that men after they are 40 should not eat red meat Still, it will be no rarity to see many who have passed Dr. Osier's age limit ordering, rare roast beef with dish gravy, instead of calf meat or the steamed rooster that is masquerading as spring chicken. The woman who brought her pet dog I ..-vt ..-J?.. . . f to the Newport Casino decked out In a white collar and a bine four-in-hand neck scarf, was evidently jealous of Ae society monkey. Psychic phenomena are claiming the attention of some of the most eminent and respected scientists. Neverthe less a certain amount of doubt con tinues to assert itself concerning peo ple who .undertake to produce super natural demonstrations on demand for a prescribed fee.' ' " , Dr. Wiley says the average genera tion to-day is "40 years, instead of 33. as it used to be. . That shows what can be done when we have a Dr. Wi!ey to look after us. - . -.- -"4. $zX "VJ.-V OURAMERICAN KINGS FARMERS THE BACKBONE OF MMERCE AND INDUSTRY. FEEDING THE OTHER MATKMCS Greater Need of Study of Economic Principles by the Tillers of the , SoilBuilding Up the Towns. . -r American farmers are the wealth nroducers of the nation.. In the United States annually the products or the farms exceed in value all the gold the country has produced in xa score of years. ' If the term can be used in a free republic the farmers are, the American kings.' The results 6f their, labors feeds not alone a single nation, but assists in supplying sustenance for a large part, of, the people of nearly all lands of the earth. 'Tig 'the prod- nets of the farms that give the means of support to the great' railroad sys tems, that keep the thousands of great steamers plying the oceans, that make possible the thousands of great enter prises. While, the farmer is among the most independent classes of the land, too often he fails to reap full reward for the 'work he has accom plished. - He must fight combine after combine, and pay taxes to support iri-' stitutions. from which he receives no benefit, This; is because of the con centration of capital in the hands of a comparatively few iniarge financial centers. But is not i',, the farmer to blame for this, condition to a great extent? uoes ne not maae u possioie for the" concentration of wealth n large cities? He certainly does' lend his support to the builaing up, of trusts, and to capital concentration, when he falls to patronize enterprises in his home town, and refuses to help build up its Industries. There is 'a "penny wise and pound foolish" 'attitude on the part of farm ers in many communities that is de structive to their own interest's. It is seeing a profit, quite often purely imaginary, and in striving to gain it lose sight, of the truth that they are wielding the sword that will eventual ly inflict a serious wound to them selves. This is the practice of pur chasing goods at trade centers distant from home. Towns and communities are made wealthy by retaining as great a part of the earnings of its - ".S ' people as possible. The' larger the- town can be made, the more valuable becomes the farm located near It, be cause the home market is made bet ter and higher prices are secured for products. Money earned by the farmers and the business men, if retained at home, generally finds investment in new en terprises that give employment to la bor, and add to the wealth of the community and assists in lowering tax ation. On the other hand, when the earnings of a community are sent away from it, thctowns are deadened, and farm values lowered, taxation is made greater and the small imagined gains to those sending away the profits of their labor react against the sender, who assists in concentrating money in large financial centers in the hands of those who pay' no local taxes. Generally the monied powers of those distant cities dictate to the farmers what prices shall be received for the products of their farms, and to the laborer .the compensation he shall receive for his labor. Is not this proposition plain? , D.-M. CARR. TRADE'S MAGNET. Virtue in Right Kind of Advertising in the Home Papers. w There is no apparent reason why the merchant in the average town should not be able to sell goods, class and quality considered, as 'low as the large city stores. He is under less expense, and if he is enterprising and up-to-date, he can buy his goods at as low a figure as the retailers in the large cities. There is laxity-observed in the management, of business ,by some merchants in rural towns. They depend too much on trade drifting their way without making the right kind of effort to gain it. A merchant in a western state who took itjn his head to use large advertising space in his town paper, found that within three months, by persistently follow ing up a plan of using a half page in the local paper for the publishing of prices and describing goods, increased his trade more than a third. From the position of doing about the fourth amount of business of any store in the town, he rapidly raised to first place. He is on the road to prosper ity, and has been a benefit to the town in general, drawing trade to it that was never enjoyed before. This was done within 30 miles of one of the large western cities, and with the de partment stores of the city advertis ing in the. same paper. A Town Convenience. Only for the farmers, the laborers and others that comprise the great part of .the population, the merchants of the towns would have, little excuse for being in business, and the mer chant is a wonderful convenience to people of his neighborhood. One can not well get along without the other. 1 The merchant depends more upon the success of the farmer and the laborer than do either of the latter on the suc- ZL . Zt Z "" there 8hW t greater harmony. In towns that are noted for activity and progress, particularly in agricultural sections, it will be found that it is the united efforts of all classes of workers that win. - DIDN'T THINK HELP NEEDED. Simple iFsherman Had Heard ef the Wonders ef Science. H.'G. Weils, the novelist, spoke at a Boston club about the wonders of modern invention. "So thick and fibt," he said, "these new inventions come, life grows rather confusing for plain and" simple folk. There was an old fisherman rowing in his boat one day when an automobile canoe sprung a leak near him and Immediately sank. -i'Vi. 3? CITIES AND TOWNS. How TKey Are Built Ud and What Gives Thein-erinartoncy, - .j i. Towns and cities are built where exist thegreatesfnatural advantages. Growth and importance depends on en vironments and, conditions.., Require ments are that there-be some manner of employment for their population. ibus cae Business ui uw pisce iucb lut standing. It is, then evident that the greater are the resources of a country and the more enterprising its people, the more impbrtant will be its cities and towns. Some locations have fa vorable conditions for certain lines of manufacture, and single, industries support thousands like -the textile W do8tryat Fall. Bi vex. andjthe manu facture of jewelry' at Providence, R. I. Others have shipping facilities that cause them to become great commer cial centers. No city can exist within itself, free and independent of tribu tary territory, but must depend, upon a large scope of country to supply it with the products' necessary for the sustenance of 'its people, and for' the marketing of its articles of commerce, and its manufactures. Towns and cities decay when their business interests are destroyed. In the west,-particularly 'in the-mining sections, can. be found hundreds of ex amples illustrative. of this fact, The discovery of a mine is sufficient to gather people to compose a city. With the' exhaustion of its mineral re sources business is destroyed and 'the town becomes, deserted. In agricul tural sections exist commercial towns, made necessary by the development of, the surrounding country- Such towns are-supported by the trade that can be attracted, from a certain scope of territory, and industries that can .be established to employ labor. With development of tributary country, and expansion of industries, and the exer cise of enterprise many of these towns attain the magnitude of cities and be come important commercial and finan cial centers. With their growth farms adjacent increase n value. The truth of this is In evidence In nearly every state of the union. While within the boundaries of the United States proper there are more than 86,000,000 of peo ple there is room for millions and mil lions more. There will be hundreds! and thousands more cities pulsating with business come into existence. Reader, is not' your home town one that may become a great city if you only do your part to assist it toward greatness? - HOME ENTERPRISES. Trusts Cannot Well Compete with the Products of Local Mills. Never in the past has there been .such opportunity for the establish ment of small enterprises in the cities and towns of the United States as is now presented. There is barely a lo cality which does not possess some advantages for certain lines of manu facture or commerce. There is little prospects for over-production as the population of the country -is increas ing at an enormous rate, and new mar kets are being opened continually in foreign countries for American prod ucts. Imports are decreasing ex cepting of raw materials, and each year shows an increase of imports. Many lines are supposed to be in the hands of combines, but these so-called trusts can never prevent the success of local enterprises in similar lines if the masses of the people will close ly follow the home trade principle, and as far as possible give preference to local products. The great agri cultural sections produce the wheat, corn, barley, and other cereals which find their way to large mills in far off cities, are converted into flour, starch and innumerable kinds of foods, and in their manufactured state are returned to the sections where the grains were grown and sold at prices that leave a large margin of profit. How much more economical would it be to convert cereals into flour and other foodstuffs in mills, located in the districts where the grains- are grown. Would not the farmer receive fa benefit in increased prices, the sav ing of freight rates, two or more profits that result from marketing, and would there not be a great benefit derived from the keeping at home wages paid to .laborers and the reten tion in general of profits that go else where? Beware of Peddlers., ' It will always be found best to avoid dealing with wanderers through the country who have something to dis pose of particularly those who are not known to you as thoroughly hon est. For years stoves, furniture, books, and hundreds of articles have been hawked about the country by itinerant agents. Some have more or .less merit, but all are sold at enor mous profits, far greater than would be required by some home dealer.. When money is paid to the come-an-go traveler, just so much money is liken away from circulation in a com munity, and it is gone to remain. 4 The ' Telephone. Rural telephones are a boon to the farmers. They can keep in close touch with the markets, and all the doings of the outside world. One the uses that the 'phone can be .well put to, is the getting" of Iatejnarket news from the home town.' There are very few farmers who cannot use the telephone with profit during the marketing sea son. The Home Market. Good agricultural towns afford a steady market for eggs and otlur pro duce, thus keeping prices even. There is a poor market in a. poor town, and prices are uneven. To the indignation of the canoe's, oc cupants, the old man paid no heed to them, "but rowed calmly on his way,; pufilng an old clay pipe. However, the' wrecked 'canoeists managed to swim, toj nun, ana as tney clambered into nis boat one spluttered angrily: 'Confound! you, why didn't you lend us a hand?' Didn't you see we were sinking? The old man took his pipe out of his mouth' and stared at them in astonishment j 'Blest if I didn't think ye wuz one o them 'new-fangled "submarines, he said." &V"$ sgar-r reas&ftyssKgg '&f.na ;-; .&& HAS A, MECHANICAL FACE. .. SUBStaTUtt' French! .Surgeon Exhibits 'Subject, of Remarkable Oporation ." Paris, France. In consequence of the bursting ef a gum whjle out, shoot ing, a man had his chin, the lower part of his jaw. a oortkra of his tongue and the whole of his upper Jaw and nose blows; away. Dr. Delaire of the Preach Aeademv of Medicine. . has replaced the missing organs by artificial parts, and his. work, which Is considered a marvel of mechanical .ingenuity, has been exhibited bofore the academy. PronV 10 ,to 1$ feet distance,-even In a Weil-lighted room, the. mechan 'ical.face appears quite natural, and the man .is able to masticate, his food and sneak,, with comparative ease. Every, day he takes off his -artificial face.andwashes it with soap and wa ter. This face consists of four parts. The first is a silver groove, intojwhicb some of the lower teeth are fixed. This Is attached to a dental apparatus of tin, into which are fixed the remain ing teeth. The second piece consists a dental apparatus in vulcanite and gold, for the upper nine teeth. This is fitted in two small -protuberances, which, fit into the nasal cavities. This also fills up the right sinus, which wm smasnea in. At the bacK is a piece of gold mechanism with hooks, used to fasten on the face pieces. The third piece or the mechanical face consists of the chin and lower lip. This is of India rubber, painted' to re semble nature. Over the chin a false beard is fixed. At. the back are a couple of small bolts, which pass through holes of -of the teeth and fix the lip to the ar- unciai lower, jaw. Tm? fourth and last piece of the apparatus consists of the upper lip and goose, also in India rubber, and painted, to which is attached a false mustache. At the back are two small clasps, to which the upper piece and jaw are fixed. MEN IN BEAUTY SHOW. Japanese and a Jamaica Negrc Among the Competitors. London, Eng. Folkstone has just done, something original in the line of beauty shows. Under the auspices of the town council 1,500 spectators gath ered at the Victoria Pier pavilion tc vote on the handsomest man among the 0 competitors exhibited on the stage. Among' the 60 were a Japanese, a Hussar and two bir men of th Fif. "ty-fc-Hrth battery, R. YL. A., two stal wart visitors from Cornwall, Isle of Man, and Norwich, and a Jamaica negro. The competitors regarded the situa tion very seriously and without co quetry. When the curtain went up the audience beheld a pale young man standing in a velvet frame. He was very serious indeed, the more seri ous a competitor appeared the mer rier grew the audience. Occasionally the gallery became personal and called attention to what it considered phys lical shortcomings of the competitors. When all was over the prizes were awarded with much hilarity, five young women having in the mean time kept account of the votes. The first prize winner was Sergt. W. T. Hodgetts, Seventh Hussars.' School of Musketry, Hythe. The second prize went to Bernard Fudge of 5 Elm ter race, Constantino road, Hampstead, and the third prize was won by Her bert Fudell of 75 Lupus street, Pim lico.' Haunted House Is Sold. .Chicago. Haunted by the grewsome memories of wife murder, the home of Adolph Luetgert, scene of one of the greatest murder mysteries of Chi cago, has been sold. The building, which formerly stood at 207 Hermitage avenue, in rear of the factory where Luetgert is said to have disposed of the remains of his wife in the sausage making vats has been moved to Diversey Boule vard, near Paulina street, by August Blain, its purchaser. A new coat of paint and a thorough renovation is believed to .have so changed it that not even the1 ghost of Mrs. Luetgert. which once-was said to haunt it, will know it again. For years after the murder the house was vacant, and "when tenants appeared they. remained only a short time. Even after Luetgert died at Jbliet penitentiary no one could be found who wanted to live in the house. The factory itself was partly destroyed by fire. It is now used as a woodworking plant. Eight Suffer for Boy's Fault. Norfolk, Va. Blazing away with a shotgun at a boy who was robbing his melon patch. R. T. Powell, a farmer near here, injured eight employes of the Jamestown exposition, who were en route for the fair grounds on a trolley car. - The boy jumped from the car when it halted on a switch to wait for sig nals. In the fusilade which followed nis ram on me melon paten he es caped uninjured. The victims were shot about the face, one of them, a young woman, is in a serious condition. The farmer will be arrested. Eagle Starts Field Fire. Los Angeles, Cat. A destructive field fire, which occurred on the Tejon ranch, near Rose station. Kern county, was -started by a great American eagle. That is the report that comes from Bakersfield, and is verified by one of-the ranch hands. The eagle alighted on an uncovered power wire of the Edison company, and somehow caused a short circuit Instantly the feathered biped was a mass of flames. It dropped into some stubble, and the fire spread with rapid ity. All. hands were summoned, and after working all night the flames were extinguished. Six hundred acres of pasture land were swept clean. The body of the great bird of prey, burned to a crisp. Is on exhibition at the Tejon ranch. Snakes Pets for Children. London. Snakes are coming Into great demand In this city as pets for society children, according to a dealer in animals. They are not expensive, the highest prices being about seven shillings, or $1.50. Green frogs, tor toises aad lizards of bright 'hues are also greatly favored. frtp rtlC? yEFJS &-f Pagodas are outstanding features steeples are in America. This one is IS QUEEN HARRISON FISHER LAUDS AMERICAN GIRL. THE Type Immeasurably Superior in Every Way Over Her French "and Eng lish CouincrFun ef Spirit and Intelligence. New York "French women are ar- Uncial, English women are wooden. The American girl is the; only type I care to draw." So said Harrison Fisher. American illustrator, whose drawings of lovely women are known all over the world, when I asked him in his studio about the war that France and England have recently declared on the American beauty, writes Nixola Greclcy-Smith in the New York American. "I have been away two months." continued Mr. Fisher, "and during that time I made absolutely no drawings of foreign women's faces. If they are so beautiful I could not have resisted sketching them. I made a few sketch es for backgrounds, and of two or three old men I saw in the Latin quar terone of them Rodin's model." "And you saw not a single. French or English woman you wanted to draw?" I asked, incredulously. "Well," Mr. Fisher conceded, "I saw one or two beautifully dressed French women that might have looked well in a picture. But they were worn .en of fashion and would not have posed for me. American women are indifferent in that respect. No matter where I meet them, they generally are willing to pose. I have sometimes asked a wealthy woman I happened to meet at a reception to pose for some illustration I was making, and she has invariably said she would be glad to. "The model that posed for this pic ture," and Mr. Fisher held up a draw ing of a slender, dazzling blonde in a black riding costume, "is a little Brooklyn girl. She is a college grad uate and says that after she had prac ticed her music two or three hours a day her time hangs heavily on her hands. So she poses for illustrations and earns her pin money that way." Then Mr. Fisher showed me an other drawing, this time of a tall girl of slender stateliness, coated in fall regalia, drawing on her long kid gloves. This was the typical Harrison Fisher girl. f "That is the type of American girl I like best to draw, he said. "Was there an original Harrison Fisher girl?" I asked. "Oh, yes," the artist replied quickly. "She was Miss Franklin, daughter of a man who ran a small circus out west I paid her a salary for years just to pose for me. But she got married and gave it up. "You see," Mr. Fisher elucidated, "the American beauty is so cosmo politan: She has the whole world to draw from. One of my models is the daughter of a Scotch father and an Irish mother, and she is a typical American beautjr." "And if she had been born in Scot- Girl Sent a But North Woburn Man Refused Marry Proxy Sweetheart. to ' Boston. Henry Smith, living in North Wobura7, when he was in the old country had a sweetheart He came here, saved his money and sent a ticket abroad to the girl of his heart Dorothy Margerre. Dorthothy re ceived the ticket, but in the meantime she had been married, so she gave the ticket to Annie Jansen, another belle of Dorothy's country, to come to America and see Henry. Accordingly Annie was forced to declare she was Dorothy. Smith came to meet her, all afire with the anticipation of once again greeting the sweetheart of his youth: He was rather indignant when he found that he was meeting another, and that the faithless Dorothy was al ready wed. After mature deliberation he began to feel that perhaps Annie would do after all. but then she re fused him point blank. Smith went, home aad other-North r it "-- - j jr - a " r w-iii k . -c-i l .,- 4tm v - Z ' ' -T - .- X . 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SPTJssRStBBsmBmmTBsmmmvSHyafJl mbIbIbIPPIM MPjfejBMBaglBKSSPlJ MWeeJESKS3liBBJPJB --"-fcx.j 4 3 ?1W &5f Vi-3 '-: -. ...irJV"-'.' ZL22Zr2z WC rwi '-Tivi.' H W-r-r- rwsoMS' Si -w Kf vvk3u,Xk"5'i of the Chinese landscape just as cnurch in Peking. OF BEAUTY land or Ireland she might not have been near so beautiful?" I said. "Don't you think the spirit of America, its freedom and equality, have much to do with it?" "Yes," asquiesced Mr. Fisher. "I do. An American model L, mean a' pro fessional model can pose for a wom an of fashion and look the part She has only to put on the' clothes. A French or English model could never do' that. Models over there are a class apart - A model in Paris has one dress, one hat frame, on which she pins a veil, and a few stock poses. . "American women not only have more beautiful faces faces with spir it and intelligence, besides beauty but their figures are 'much better. French women have over large busts and very slender limbs. The Ameri can girl is taller, straighter. broader shouldered and much more evenly de veloped." 'CARRY THEIR CALL BOXES. t Policemen ef Ludlow, Mass., Small Chance to Loaf. Have Ludiow. Mass. The Ludlow town fathers, have established a remarkable system of police call boxes, reversing the custom prevailing in large cities. Instead of going to a box and opening it with a key the ordinary procedure the patrolmen carry the boxes under their arms and visit a series of sta tions which consist of an iron pole to which a key is attached by a chain. The boxes are opened with the key which registers on a small time clock within the box the hour at which the key was used. The boxes or time clocks are cumbersome, but 'the police men find the ridicule to which they are subjected more galling than the personal discomfort involved. Each station or pole must be visited once in two hours and the stations are so situated that the patrolmen find it occupies their entire time to make the connections with the keys which are necessary for the time clock impres sions, i The remarkable device, which was sanctioned at a recent town meeting, is said to have been designed by wily individuals solely to fit the case of Patrolman Hall E. Storer, who, be sides drawing a policeman's full sal ary, is tax collector, justice of the peace, sealer of weights and measures, deputy sheriff, surveyor of 'lumber. pound keeper, fish warden and fence viewer, and In addition modestly ac knowledges holding a few other town offices of lesser importance. Jealous critics of Mr. Storer have been unable to comprehend how he could earn so many salaries in a 24 hour day, and in the interest of sci ence, asked the town to make an ap propriation for purchasing the neces sary equipment. Storer is game, and instead of re signing has bought himself an electric searchlight to assist in finding the key stations on dark nights. Substitute. Woburn people who knew Annie at temped to get her out, but the immi gration commissioner refused to work on the case. Meantime some South Boston friends found a husband for her and got Smith to sign a paper re signing his rights, bnt when Smith "woke up" he procured an attorney who broke up that game. The final outcome was that Annie was allowed to go to North Woburn to live with her friends aad to wed as she likes. Millionaire Recluse Dies. New York. George C. Taylor, son of Moses Taylor, who was considered one of the wealthiest merchants of his time. Is dead at his home at Great River, L. I., after being In feeble health several years. He was about 72 years old. He had lived in strict re tirement at Great River for nearly 20 years, having moved there from this city, where his father had accu mulated his fortune. The Taylor place is one of the finest on the island, - 0 rat -vS sKaLsSS g" f ,' 'i""--5-' rwmtmjnxAtmm Dysftfna Is Often Caused By Catarrh ef the Stomaek Peruna Relieves Ca tarrh of the Stomach and Is Therefore a Remedy for Dysfefsia. T Hon. M. C. Butler, U. S. Senator' from South Carolias for two terms, , in a letter from Washington, D. C, writes to the Peruna. Medicine Co., f tas follows: j "1 emm reemmmem Permmm Hrl I dyspepsia mb4 at mmc trmmbl. if I hare heem mslpgymmr tmedirtme Am- 1 a short period mmi lite very mtmcMl I oaedtcime. betimes juW JMfc." " ATARRH of the stomach is the cor- rect name for most cases of dyspep sia. Only aa internal catarrh remedy, such as Peruna, is available. kei A professor at the University of : Virginia was endeavoring to impress upon the youths of his class the mes strous crime of using the adverb "badly" where the adjective "had" should be used. "Now," he said, after an exhaustive explanation, "if a man, should say to you 1 feel badly,' what would yoa thinkr "I'd think he had the, grippe, sir." responded the wag of the class. Starch, like everything else, is he lag constantly improved, the patent Starches put on the market 25 years ago aie very different and inferior to those of the present day. In the lat est discovery Defiance Starch all in jurious chemicals are omitted, while the addition of another ingredient, in- -vented by us, gives to the Starch a strength and smoothness never ap proached by other brands. Sea Trout Fattened. A sea trput was caught at Aberdeen recently, which swam 120 miles in 49 days, and doubled its weight on the way. It was marked and put in:o the Coquet in-Northumberland, and when recaaght at Aberdeen., its length was not Increased. Its rapid gala in weight being due to corpulence. Haw's This? W oSar Om Hoadnt Dalian Bewart far aay eaae of Catarrk that caoaot fea carat by Haifa Catatrfe Catc F. J. CHKNBV a CO., Toledo. O. We. tka imifgaiiS. fcave kaowa P. J. Caeaey' for the last 15 nan. aarf baltere him perfectly aon erabla la all Doataeae tranf ttona aod financially able to cany act aay ubdcatloaa made by his Arm. Waldiho. Ki!(X.x a Maktic. Whuievale Draagteu. Toledo. O. Hair Catarrh Care to takes (menially, actlaar directly apoa tb blood aad atacoo surfaces of iba tyMecB. TentlmoBfaie teat free. Prtee'Sceuu far bottle. Sold by all Droastata. Take Hir Family Pill fur coaarjpattoa. Whether you be men or women, yoa. will never do anything in the world without courage. It is the greatest quality of the miad, aext to honor. James Allan. Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar is good quality all the time. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. Wisdom is the sunlight of the soaL German. BKi eawrap a ft Deateai Ca ntuM I f.AA.1 feUyereiyatwIocTwaaT 1 auwnMKsaaaB. ". Bney, rye. track, yea, mta,frttm,ocrranpea.ete. ArteataawVlls MSfUaamay. ImaeoTed faraalaadaSSI toStt aaaoe. Piadia.a.twMf 7jWh aTeaehaoT. wRh nut atteailaBee af XJSfl; atata em For aeaerlatfee Uteratara aad Uataf iBLJi Jly . write AKSS COMKAXT. I Infca Axte tteiseJ I A lengthens the life of the UM I B iragon saves kotst Ml lBBA per. Bestlabrieaatia mil " the world coatsaaa mil Hlmw powocregguca mWli herd coating oa axle, aad Wf ths axles wit Mka VI I c--V"-V ;. -r i.-(.jVS , mummmmmmmmimmmaaammmmm .-"-a-- '-s.p-.-- BSBjgBSABJ , r s-l OF ' ' AM t -it ' , . J I ' V i I J i I K m t ' i - f JUT I --' V K , l'.'.sf '?'.- ' r ii" F !' s. I??--" n i1. -L' w.V.N 1. .Ji.. s- v. . ----?- -, - - - V - r- 'zft.ti --, ii ii i tiX, -V ,t.r4- r V f W'