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11: r. ll S'! 'S $•* *&r «ri |%c tl^ -jif, gk" 35^ ift\T J? fx 4 *ie Ktii' *w tosKv. f. if I' V'" 0, r* x- W-A '."- t7 A io Secretary Daniels has appointed Commander Victor Blue of South Carolina to be chief of the bureau of navigation, navy department, in place of Capt. Philip Andrews, resigned. the Incumbent of that office has the rank and pay of a rear admiral. Before the navy personnel had •'fe-jfhlrly recovered from the surprise caused by the change in head of the navigation bureau. Secretary Daniels Issued a fresh order that will have far-reaching consequences. That makes sea service an absolute cpndl tion for promotion. It took the fopn of an instruction to the naval exam •wtnlng board, requiring: 'r "That officers coming !up for pro motion shall have had sufficient sea .services In the grade from which they are to be promoted, to Insure beyond do4bt that they are fully qualified, and experienced sit sea to perform the sea duties of the next higher grade." The United States mail Is sug gested by William G. McAdoo, secre tary of the treasury, as the best means of applying for a Job in his [department of the federal govern ment Driven .almost to distraction by the rush of the hungry to his pie counter during the first days he waa In office, he clipped back the other night to New York as a haven -of refuge from the mob. Mr. McAdoo returned the next morning sufficiently rested and-refreshed, but the army of Job hunters also had a good rest In Washington diiring his absence, and they swarmed about him thicker than ever. I |OUl 1 jdlsot tlnuc Exhibit. Exe—"So now he has a breach of promise on hie hands and the woman la showing letters of his saying he'd 'do all sorts of things for her." Wye— •"Sort of promissory note, eh?" Exe- j~Ym, with ths accent on the 'sorry.'" //Siiii»i*\\«*s SECRETARY BRYAN JOKES OF OFFICE ued, his eyesi twinkling, "that it would be a good thing to appoint only Repub licans to offices in'the diplomatic service. I might manage to get. enough Republicans out of the "United States to insure Democratic success at the spoils four years from now." Mr. Bryan, as is known, is never averse to telling Jokes on himself.' In fact, he seems to make it a point to get an audience to laugh with him over something that happened to himself, I?* "The reason President Wilson put me in the cabinet Is because he needed shaker of hands," confided lir. Bryan'. "He knew I had probably shaken mor4 hands with less efTect than any other man in the country. "This Democratic victory has rather revolutionized things In the Com moner office I told my Btaff the other day that we would have to make a radical change In our editorials. As' long as the paper had existed it had criticised administrations. It was now gping to turn rfquarely around and support one." NEW HEAD OF NAVIGATION BUREAU The new chief of the bureau of navigation has had a conspicuous career In the navy. .4 During the.Spanish war Commander Blue was promoted for heroism aa a ''result of daring reconnbltering tours around Santiago to locate the enemy's fleet. Later he was commended, for conspicuous gallantry while commanding the gunboat Alrarado. During the past two years he has been on duty with the general board in this city. ^^Captaln Andrews probably will be given command of a battleship. BACK TO FARM IS PLAN OF MOORE came a compositor and later a reporter on one of the Binghamton papers, and then went to Burlington, Iowa, where he continued to do newspaper work. In 1886, at Closter, N. J., he married Miss Mary Lozier. Norwich Uni versity In 1896 gave him the degree of LL.D., and ln-the same year the Uni versity of St. Lawrence made him a doctor of science. Before this was done, however, he had Joined the weather bureau forces, which were then a part of the United States signal corps, and began watching the clouds and the sun and other meteorological adjuncts of, the earth. He rose in the weather bureau to be, local forecast, official at Chicago, 1891-94. Since 1895 he haB been chief of the central bureau at Washington. McADOO SUGGESTS USE OF MAIL Mr. McAdoo, in desperation, gave I jout this statement: •Without any disposition to be obliging, I am compelled to discon tinue my effort* to receive personal {applications for .office. I have tried fit for ten days and I find that it 'consumes my entire time and leaves me no chance to attend to important 'public business. Besides, it is absolutely futile, because none but a superman [could remember at the end, of a day every one who has poured a story into !his ear. "While I fully appreciate and sympathize with the very natural and 'proper desire of those who are seeking places, nevertheless, It should be made clear to them that nothing Is to be gained by haste. Ample time is going to be taken to consider all applications. "Applications should be made. In writing and mailed-to the secretary of 'the treasury. They will be filed and receive much more careful consideration {than if pressed in person. "The secretary will be glad to receive others having public business with the department between the hours of 10 a. m. and 1 p. m. Every business day except cabinet days, Saturdays and holidays. He cannot receive visitors in the afternoons. The public business is paramount and will nbt be neg lected for any consideration." It Is apparent that Insistent efforts to obtain appointments will be futile, jwhlle the least suspecting may be tendered important posts. -William Jennings Bryan is heartily enjoying his new position as secretary of state, according to the Impressions he gave a number of friends with whom he conversed the other day. Dixon Williams, president of the Southern club of Chicago, which enter tained the colonel, is telling a number of anecdotes which the secretary related. "Thisnew position of mine has put me in a place where 1 can get back at my critics," said Mr. Bryan in the course of a conversation. "All I have to do is to appoint them to some diplomatic post. •*You see^-there are a gTeat varie ,ty of posts. If I want to get a man Qut of the country all I have to do la to send him to some remote place. The trouble is that I can send him* only 12,500 miles at one time. If send him any farther he'd be coming back.' "I'm beginning to think," he contin Willis h. Moore, chief of the weather bureau, whose resignation, to take effect July 31, has been accepted by the president, broke winter camp In the Powhatan hotel the other day and supposedly started on a hike to his Rockvllle home. A .large and profitable estate li owned by the chief of the weather bureau near Rockvllle. That lie *111 devote his attentions to this, and his Virginia place 1s generally expected Professor Moore is a- native of Scranton, Pa., wfiere he was born January 18, 1856. At the age of eight years, his father having Joined Grant's army, and being unable to bear the separation. Young Moore Joined the troops in the field, where he supplied them with newspapers. He was educated in. the Bingham ton public schools, and science seem ed to be his strong point However, he didn't take it up aa soon as he launched into manhood, as he be Lucid. This is the notice which the mis tress of the house, returning home af-. ter a brief absence, found posted up on the front door by the English maid, "Wrap. Do not wring. Thif belle Is out of border." 1 American Girl Tells Experiences as Wife of Prince Thus an American girl Issued her defiance to a king. It was her retort to the khedlve of Egypt'B plea, one we have all heard more tidies/than we have dollars, or even pennies: "A, woman's place is In her husband's home." Be it ever so unhappy," she fin ished, adding to the discomfiture of the occupant of Cleopatra's throne. They were saucy words to be spok en to a monarch, and the speaker might have been punished as are the contumacious women of Turkey—-by a sack and silence and the waters of: the sea. She Is an American, though she bears the title of princess, bestowed upon her by her husband, the Prince Ibrahim Hassan, cousin, of the ruler of Egypt She is primarily an Ameri can girl. She was a Californian, and one of the handsomest of that state of handsome women, before she be came a princess, and to a woman the habit of saying what she thinks cllngB. That is the reason why she said without fear and without wavering: '"An oriental.husband Is like a small, boy that delights in tying a tin can to a kitten's tall or in pulling fly to pieces, wing by wing, leg by. leg. eye by eye. There 1b something in him: that makes him like to see suf fering." Princess Hassan was explaining why she is In this country. Almost Immediately after the mar, riage ceremony 'I noticed a change In Prince Ibrahim. Before all suavity and almost cringing deference, he turned dictator. He was the Jailer of my prison. When he wanted to see me he expected n)e to be within call. WILL ACT AS MATCHMAKER Pastor In Muskogee, OkJa., Will Pro pose In Behalf of Young Men of the Congregation. Muskogee, Okla.—Rev. E. D. Cam eron, pastor of the Central BapUst church o| Muskogee, has offered to take upon himself the duty of propos ing marriage to any young woman of the congregation in/behalf of any young man In the church who desires to marry her. OLD MAN LOSES HIS BRIDE7 Young Wife ...akes Mistake In Room and He Directs Three Hours' Night 8earch. New York.—Passengers on the Kronprinzessin Cecllie, when the ves sel reached 'port from Bremen, brought an amusing story of an elderly bride groom who lost his nineteen-year-old bride for three hours one night on the voyage. SENSATIONAL WALKING SUITS IN PARIS Parisian designers have reached the limits of dictation as to what fash ionable women shall wear. These photographs were taken at the spring meet on the Long Champs race course in Paris, France, and show (on right) a front view of the "pantaloon"' skirt, and (on left) a rear view of the "glove skirt The "pantaloon" skirt is slit to the knee in order to permit the wearer td get about The "glove" skirt will necessarily teach the wearer a new walking step even more mincing than that in vogue by wearers of the hobble skirt DON'T WED ORIENTALS (... Pound Cousin of the Khedive of Egypt 8ubtle, Cruel and Treacherous Af ter Msrrlage—Was Compelled to Leave Him. New York.—"I told him that there was something else in this big world for me to do than to be shut up and ... cry® The most foolish act a girl car women who are thus spoken of as commit, except suicide, Is to marry an oriental," said the tall woman in black velvet and gray fur,( her tiny foot tapping. "The inhabitants of these opposite sides of the world are as unlike as oil and water, and they will assimilate no better. "In America a wife has a chance In a mental contest oryin a conflict of wills-with her husband. In Egypt or Turkey or any other part of the orient the American wife is powerless, for he used against her the mighty weap on of concentration. "Association with Europeans is slowly doing away with the harem. The younger princes do not, often avail themselves of Mahomet's per mission to have four wives. "But," Princess Hassan lifted eyes that have wept "they are unfaithful. My hus band had no harem. I am his only wife, but he continued old flirtations and associations. While Prince Ibra him was wooing me I was a goddess. He approached me figuratively on his knees. But afterward he was very different. "It Is true I lived In a palace, but 1 soon learned that It was a prison. The bride said good night and left '. A. "V*".' .Jt-i *-4 "•JtTr, When he did not he expected me to efface myself. "When we visited Paris he never allowed me to go about alone. If he was not with me his slave, Sellm, was always following me, watching mei with the unwinking gaze of the basi lisk. "We Quarreled finally, because, tir ing of my rooms in the hotel, I chose to dine in'the public dining room. 1 left him." ADMITS ATROCITIES IN PERU Official of Company Involved,' How 'ever. Blames It All on Subor dinate Employes. m. London, England.—Julius Caesar Ar ana, the "rubber king," appeared be fore the committee investigating the atrocities in -the Putamayo rubber fields in Peru. Arana has been held responsible for the system by which many Indians were killed or cruelly maltreated. He admitted In his testimony that the forced labor of the Indians revealed In a book written by an American civil englner and In consular reports was true, but declared that the cruelties had been exaggerated. He vserted' that he and the British directors of the company were ignorant of the con ditions in the rubber fields until they learned of them through con'sular re ports. Arana said the guilty persons were employes of the company. Dealer Says Only Mrs. Khok'aiid Mrs. French Reach. Ideal bearing size 1AA, which Is described as the "perfect size." are Mrs. Hugh Mrs. Philander C. Knox. -.VTV'' Roland French, wife of a British army officer, and Mrs. Philahder Knox, the wife of the former secretary of state- Mrs. French, who is the daughter of the former Consul General to Lon don, Robert J. Wyrihe, waa recently The same proposition applies to the young women if they desire to submit such .proposal to young men, but as this is not leap year, Mr. Cameron ac knowledged he did not expect to have any cails from the young women. "This proposition is made for the reason that there are at least two dozen young men in the church who should be married before the end of June," said Mr. Cameron in outlining his plan. "The only conclusion to be drawn from the fact that many of these have been keeping company for her husband of seventy-two years in the smoking room. Half an hour later he decided to go to his stateroom. He was startled to find his bride away, and after waiting fifteen minutes gave an alarm. Seven stewards searched the liner for two hours, and brought the report that she must have been drowned. Then the husband led a search par ty himself. After awakening the oc cupants' of seventy rooms he found his wife peacefully sleeping in an unoc cupied stateroom next to his own. TWO HAVE PERFECT FEET "T* Washington.—According to state statement of a leading shoe dealer there are two women in Washington who possess the perfect foot The STEAD Daughter of Dead Journalist Re ceives Another Message f'Some Are Quiet Spirits, Some Are Impetuous Like Myself," Say Vic-' tlm of Titanic Disaster—Com munlcation Is Not Easy. London.—"Those are together who think together. Some are quiet spirits, some are impetuous like myself." This was one of the "messages" from the late W. T. Stead, which his daughter, Miss Estelle W. Stead, de livered to a crowded gathering of the London Spiritualistic alliance In the salon of the Royal Society of British America. Miss Stead, who explained that she was neither a lecturer nor a public speaker, made a very promising debut In both capacities. In proclaiming "what spiritualism means to me" she said the one fact that stood out clearly was individual responsibility and the unlimited power. of self-de velopment In this life, while away ahead lay a long road of development for the soul. As to the possibility of communion with those who had passed over she was as certain of it as she was of anything. For some the veil betw8en was very thin, and she herself had had some of the most splendid proofs of authen tic messages. It was sometimes very difficult, how ever, to get Into communication with those beyond. Her father, in a recent message, said: "Would that you could see how rare it is for clear direct spiritual inter course to take place. I see people sitting in circles who ore the victims of the lower spirits." Her father, said Miss Stead, found It difficult to communicate through her, because her mind was apt to jump to conclusions, but many messages had come through others. In one of them he spoke of the horrors of the battle field and "of all those hurried oyer here unfitted for the spiritual life. They come in great bands and even the archangels are powerless to raise the spirit—it must grow of itself." In another, message he spoke of the harrowing .scenes witnessed by him during the war. "Some of the victims," he said, "were higher- than others in the spiritual-'plane, but most gravitated to the prison houses and the darkness of the spheres." '"I think," Miss -Stead remarked, "that my father has found it more dif ficult to ^et absolutely correct state ments through' than he had any Idea was the case when he was on this side. Many things that we may have taken to be correct then, I feel now, with the greater knowledge, he wishes me to be careful about He has since told me that some of the earlier mes sages were distorted because his emo tion In getting .back to earth condi tions made it impossible for him to hold the medium's brain, and hiB mes sages were colored by the thoughts of the sitter. Just now I am very in terested in some messages I have re ceived from America, for my father has corroborated them In a very won-, derful manner, which I did not think possible." These messages Miss Stead hopes to make public later. 01 Price Jsrs Rockefeller! Sea Breeze, Fla.—William Rockefel ler was obliged to pay 25 cents a gal lon for gasoline at a garage here, the owner and manager seeing no reason why Rockefeller should not pay the price he asked. The oil magnate re marked that he would like to have a 'motorboat in Florida, but thought the price of gasoline too high, described, as being one of the two mpst beautiful women In America, this was the verdict of the well-known New York author, C. W. de Lion Nlcholl. The other woman who approached the Ideal of beauty 1s Miss Kathleyne Elliott of Racine, Wis., who is spend ing her first season In Washington as the guest of Mrs. Henry A. Cooper, the. wif? of.the Wisconsin congress man. It was during the recent southern relief ball that the author discovered Miss Elliott and pronounced her the most beautiful woman In .the country save one. She 1b a perfect type of a blonde, and is the daughter of Mrs. Lucius J. Elliott of Racine. In making the statement regarding the feet of the Washington women the dealer remarked that his custom ers had, as a general thing, very small feet and that the average size shoe worn by the belles of the capital was a 3, and that very seldom was anything over a 6 asked for. Girl Thief Blames Hypnotist. ., Seattle, Wash.—Asserting that she 'was*under the hypnotic influence of Peter Berharaz when she committed the crime of which she is accused. Miss Emma Williams, alias Pearl Tur ner, eighteen years old, has confessed that she committed 12 robbers in Van couver and seven in Seattle. Five'Words In Dog's Vocabulsry. Rangely, Me.—Charles W. Berry has a Scotch collie with a vocabulary of five words, "Oh, no, how, papa, and out," and his words can be distin guished plainly. One of the animal's tricks Is to answer the telephone with a loud "bow" when his name is called. months Is that the young men are too bashful to ask the Important ques tion." Utmost secrecy in all negotiations was promised by the paBtor. Police Raid Opium Joint Trenton, N. J.—After battling fiercely with the police In an effort to escape, twenty-eight Chinamen were arrested In a ''police raid on a gambling and opium den. The police were forced to club many of the in mates Into submission. She had made plained. a mistake, she Historic Tub In Demand. Washington.—The big ^porcelaln lined bathtub, used by Captain Sigs bee on the battleship Maine at the time that vessel ^as destroyed In Havana. harbor, is in great demand. Nearly, a dozen cities have asked the navy department to sei.'i it to them, not to promote cleanliness, but as a relic. -N/ "THE GRANARY OF NORTH AMERICA." Stothe 1 GOVERNOR 8ULZER 8AYS THAT OF "WESTERN CANADA. The close ties of friendship exist ing between the United States and Canada were dwelt upon in addresses by Premier Robert L. Borden, of Can ada, and Governor Sulzer, at the an nual dinner of the University Club of Albany. "Canada and the United States," said Premier Borden, "have a common heritage in the language, the litera ture, the laws, the institutions and the traditions which have come down to them from the men of bygone days. "Perhaps no more instructive object lesson ever haB been given to the world than the four thousand ^niles of undefended boundary line from the Atlantic to the Pacific, which bears silent but eloquent testimony to the mutual confidence and respect of the two nations. Time will shortly place' upon the brow, of each nation'the lau rel of one hundred years of peace. It matters not so much as to the form of the outward celebration, but let us hope that Its full significance may sink deep Into the hearts of both na tions, and that, whether north or south of the boundary, we may stand with bowed and reverent heads, offering grateful thanks for the Divine blessing of peace, and earnest prayers that in the century to come, mutual confidence, good-will and respect may .truly ani mate the ideals and aspirations of botlx nations." Referring to the natural resources possessed by the United States and Canada, particularly along the St Lawrence River, the premier urged that they be "preserved and developed for the people." Governor Sulzer predicted that the "Great Canadian Northwest is designed to become, before long, the granary of North America." "Many of our best citizens, I regret to say," said the governor, "are leav ing the States of the west and going the Canadian northwest, because fertility of its soil, the lib erality of the Canadian government and the ability of those people to bet ter their conditions here. "We should extend to them a help ing hand in their onward march of progress. Instead of closing our doors by tariff barriers against these coun tries and their products, in my opinion, we should open them wider and do everything in our power to facilitate closer commercial relations. We want their products and they want our prod ucts, and all restrictions to prevent a fairer and freer exchange of goods, wares and merchandise should, in so far as possible, be eliminated."—Ad vertisement Short Hatpin Law.' We have observed a disposition In the newspapers outside of Massachu setts to belittle the law against long hatpins that will become Effective early in April. There is one excep tion, however. The New- York Sun, -which used to boast that It "shines for all," takes a sane view of the mat ter. "The protection of life and limb," declares the Sun, "cannot he-deemed sumptuary legislation. Is it not rea sonable to approve the Massachusetts statute? Just passed providing that the deadly end of hatpins worn in public shall be sheathed. The rapier is not lesB beautiful with a foil. The hat pin scabbard can be made esthetic the fears of man can be allayed, his miserable life spared. Sovereign wo man can still slay with her eyes she needn't put Out the other fellow's." No, she need not and It Is within her power to make the penalties, of the new law harmless by setting the fa Bit ion of wearing a protector. Let her heed the advice of the Sjyi and make the scabbard of the hatpin esthetic. As already suggested, let the feder ated clubs address themselves to this troublesome problem and the affair can be settled to everybody's satisfac tion within a very short1time.—From the Lynn Item. FACE ALMOST COVERED WITH PIMPLES AND BLACKHEADS Atchison, Kan.—"For a number at years I suffered very greatly from skin eruption. My face was very red and irritated, being' almost covered with pimples and blackheads., The pimples were scattered over my face. They were a fine rash with the exception of a few large pimples on my-forehead and chin. My face burned and looked red as if exposed to either heat or cold. It was not only unsightly but very uncomfortable. I tried several remedies but couldn't get any relief. I was recommended to use Cutlcura Soap and Cutlcura Ointment "I applied the Cutlcura Ointment In the evening, leaving it for about five minutes, then washing it off with Cutlcura Soap and hot water. I wash ed with the Cutlcura Soap and hot wai ter also several times during the day. After about four months of this appli cation, my face was cleared of the pimples. I still use the Cutlcusa Soap." (Signed) Miss Elsie Nlelson, Dec. 29, 1911. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card'"Cutlcura, Dept L, Boston." Adv. Great Writer Unappreclative.' The Italian poet D'Annunzio is evi dently not a very gracious person, but there is nevertheless something to admire in his refusal of the villa offered to him by his native tgwn o( Pezeara. But he might have couched the refusal in terms a little more suave. "I do not resuire either world ly or spiritual presents," he wrote. I am perfectly satisfied with myself, and live where I like, in houses chos en by myself." Edgar Knew Them. The teacher was hearing her class of small boys In mathematics. "Edgar," she said, "If your father can do a piece of work In seven days, and your Uncle William can do it In nine days, how long would it take both of them to do it?" "They never would get it done." an swered the boy, earnestly. "They would sit down and .tell fish stories." Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see thst H. Bears the Signature of In Use For Over SO*YearsT Children Cijr ior Fletcher's Castoria No End to This. "Pa, what is meant by 'ad infini tum'?" "That's the same thing, my son, as frery valet having a valet" If it's a woman and the shoe pinches, she buys it 1 Nursery Maids The Michael Reese Hospital offers a course of training to-girls which pre pares them.- to care, for babies and children as nursery maids. The course Includes care of children and babies In the wards and nurseries of the hos pital also classes in preparation of ba bies' food. In cooking in sewing and in laundry work. Apply personally to/ the superintendent of the training school. MICHAEL REESE HOSPITAL, 29th and Groveland Avenue. Chicago, Illinois. Youthful Diplomat Lola, five years, old, wanted a pair of skates, but as she was very naughty In school an'd always seated in the last row, father would not get them for her He compromised, say ing that If she were bright enough to get in the first row she could have them. A week later she came home saying she was in the first row. Father said: "Fine! How'd you do It?" Lola said: "I told teacher I couldn't see the blackboard from way back there, and she put me In the first row." 1 She Was Tired. The enrvqus old lady approached' the' porter in the sleeping car anx iously. "Oh, porter, porter, where do I sleep?" "What Is de numbah ob yoiiah berth, ma'am?" he asked- She looked at him questioningly for a moment, then said: "I don't see- what that has to do with It but If you must know, it Is third there-were a brother and a sis ter born before me." Lass on Rollers. Llttl^ George, aged five, had never seen roller-skates or anyone skating 7 on them. His favorite toys were hl^g, engines and trains of cars. At the window, one day he chanced to see small Nancy of seven, his spe cial playmate, skating on the asphalt street with steel rollers. Rushing to his mother in great ex citement, he exclaimed: "Mudder, look! there goes Nancy on a train of cars!" Ellptical Language. "I see where' the firm of Hook & Took are about going up." "Yes, they are fast going under." Have you learned lessons 'only of those who admired you, and were ten der with you. and stood aside for you? Helping a Woman Generally means helping an entire family. Her back aches so ahe can hardly drag around. Her nerves are on edge and she Is nearly wild. Headache and Sleepless, ness unfit her for the care of her family. Rheumatic Pains and Lumbago rack hec body. But, let her take Kidney Pills and' all these ailments win disappear. She will eoon recover ber strength and healthy activity for Foley Kidney Pills are heeling, curative, strengthening and tonic, a medicine for aH Kidney, Bladder and IMuv Diseases that always ana Corn Planting mmf take some of haVe D11«ip«r. Do, you wonder that over a half million NEW PERFECTIONS are now In use? Ask your nearby dealer to demon strate this stove ,to you. Have him sbow you its splendid equipment the odorless broiler, the special toaster, etc. Have him explain how the NEW PERFECTION'S Wick Blue Flame produces the maximum intensity of heat—how the construction of the barner serves to concentrate that (142) (AN INDIANA CORPORATION) W. L. DOUGLAS •OO *3i§0 *4:00 A.BO ANO »R.OO SHOES FOR MENAND WOMEN 8CSTB0YSSH0E8 In tti WOULD $3.00. 42.BO an* t3.00. The ttrgest makers of Men's *3.50 and $4.00 shoes In the world. Ask your dealer to show yc W. L. Douglas S3-M, M.OO •4.BO «hoes. Jmt as good in style, flt [f TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE W. X. -I A Weak Stomach? 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Removes fatty bunches, goitre, enlarged glands, wens, cysts, weeping sinews, etc. $1.00 and #2.00 per bottle at druggists or delivered. 4 Book 3 free. W.F.YNnglP.D.F.l310Tinpl*St.,Sprii!|fieM,l You Need .., NO ••SPRING MEDICINE" kH, y..r ,lv#r aclive. y#lir Wu9Mlm regular aa* year dlieitlM Regulate the Bowels Stimulate the Liver Improve Digestion end Purify the Blood SPECIAL TO WOMEN Do you reajUze the fact that thousands of women are now using A Solable Antiseptic Powder as a remedy for mucou^ membrane' af fectlons, such as sore throat, nasal of pelvic catarrh. Inflammation or ulcere tion, caused by female ills? Womea who have been cured say "it is wortb Its weight in gold." Dissolve in watef and.apply locally.• For ten yean the Lydia E. Plnkham Medicine Co.! has recommended Paxtine In their private correspondence with women. For all hygienic and toilet uses it has no eQual." Only 50c a large box at Drug, gists or sent postpaid on receipt ot price. The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston. Too can make all ktndi fN 8 to 15 cents per ponad. Paa# 91 for book, or writ* for-fi COMFAin?HJS pr W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 1S-1Q13. SPOHN'S DISTEMPER CURE la your tniV eafeguard—• ea*e ae well aa pievenUve—SSe and SMt boitle 6.00 and llO.00 do— delivered. 1 Large la am than twlee tM saallersUe. DoatpatitoC. Octlt.Drauiata—oeaendtoMirafkatwae* laehaf»ileal Co.. OSsMi•sllirliililntilfr, Goahaa. U., UJA -Distemper amoag the maj be. nur tlmo la toaMu—Distent planting Bay he late if your The Oil Stove With a Dandy Cabinet Top! Note this picture! Was ever gas stove or coal range more complete?—or better designed to make' cooking pleasurable and easy? Note! the NEW PERFEC TION'S Cabinet Top which gives it both the: appearance ana the usefulness of a coal range.' Note the drop shelves, the towel rackSi the special oven.' Ana then consider that in the NEW PERFECTION we have a cook-stove that does away with the'eoal range's feverish heat, ita dirt, its ashes, its draughta, its uncertainties, its Jabor in carry ing fuel and its delay In staging fires.-. Consider, top. that it Is cheaper tni to gasoline stove. And much clean* er and safer, in the bargain. Oil Cook-stove Lt and wear as other make* coating SS.OO to V7.00 —the only difference Is the price. Shoes In all leathers, styles and shapes to suit OTerybody. It yon conld visit W. I. Donglms large facto ries at Brockton, Mass* and see for yourself how carefully W.X. Douglas shoes are made, 1 would then understand why they are warranted better, look better, hold tneir shape and wear longer than any other ma^ie tor the price. W. JL Dong)** sboe* ara not direct from the factory and 1 Shoe* foreraruianibsrotC. PUrcel Poit, poatagafne. Writaftrlllaitninl CkMlof. It will Ahowyou Dow to order by mall, and why yon cut save money on yoor footwear. DOTOLAI lig operate than either gas or ilii Braektaa, Km TNFLUENZA. Pinkeye, Shipping Verer. Oouflh». Colds, oto. hare no terror to the hbneman who knows the aBiMli- merit ot the old reliable, snaraateed CrafPm Mifssysr Remedy II do« Ik* boilBM mIUbi «hi vflL Yoa tak* No Odor, Smoke, Ashes or Delays heat and to prevent the over-heating of the kitchen. See our exclusive Oil Reservoir with Indicator and observe how the NEW PERFECTION'S Oil supply can be replenished without extin guishing its fire. See for yourself and then judge if you have seen its equal. Valuable Cook Book Send 5 cents to cover mailing and gat Otir latest 72-page Cook Book. THE STANDARD OIL COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILL. no CAuntm Seethat MfcDougla* name!» stamped on the bottom. risk tn Ucitaf Craft*. Sold oa a money bMk TQ&ranWa. Mar b* rivea to brood narva* stalUoMor eotte. Fzlca 90ea&4 S1.OO1. Tf daalar can't rappty 70a •aad iotu. Thraa TalaabU Tatoriaarr Books FRKK. Writ* for ihtm. 3 UFUVITTI, IMD.