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Beauty0 Why tolerate ugliness when beauty can be obtained and increased daily by the use of Mme. Yale's Great Remedies? YALE BEAUTY PRICES. Mme. Yale's Skin Food removes wrinkles, $1.50 " u, r "*i es . $2.45 & $1.30 Mme. Yale's Complexion Cream makes rough skin smooth, 50 cents and $1.00 per jar. Our 79c ime. Yale's Hair Tonic restores health and natu ral color to hair, stops hair falling, cures dandruff and all scalp diseases. Creates a luxuriant growth. Scientifically antiseptic and hygienic. Neither sticky nor greasy. Now in three sines. 25 cents, 50 cents and $1.00 per ....*......79c., 44c.& 22c. Mime. Yale's Complexion Bleach. clears the com plezon of all blemishes. $.00 pr $1 85 b.ttle. o.r cut ,rice................ - lime. Yale's Hand Whitener makes ugly hands soft, white and pretty, $1.00 per bot pe. Our cut ,ice...................... - Mme. Yale's Special Lotion No. 1 cures pimples and blackheads. $1.00 per bottle. Our 22C. cut price........................ Mme. Yale's Special Ointment No. 2 cures skin diseases, $1.00 per jar. Our cut 83C price................................ Mae. Yale's Bust Food develops the bust, makes neck plump. $1.50 and $3.00. two es. Our cut $2.45 & $1.30 pries............. Mme. Yale's Corn Cure cures permanently soft corns, hard corns and callouses, takes soreness out of earns in half hour. 25 cents, gara- c. Steed to cure. Our cut price........... SMAme. Yale's Fruitcura, a tonic for curing women's complaints, restoring tone and vitality to the system, $1.00 per bottle. Our cut 83c. price.......................... Mme. Yale's Complexion Soap Is the best in the world because It is the purest and possesses the finest ingredients of any soap manufactured. By gienic, antiseptic, cleansing, healing and ex ceedingly beautifying to the skin. The best soap in the world for babies, 25 cents. Our 19c. price....... ....................... " O S L A I N F E . CONSULTATION FREE. Ladles desiring personal advice may consult Mime. Yale by mail free of charge. BEAUTY BOOK FREE. Mme. Yale will also mall her wonderful book free of charge to all who write for it. It is worth Its weight In gold; ovgreat aue to all wnmen. Address MME. M. YALE, 18 Michigan Boulevard, Chicago. AU. OF M.E. YALE'S OTHER PREPARATIONS AT EQUALLY LOW PRICES. SOLE AGENTS, S. Kann, Sons &Co. 8th St. and Pa. Ave. Wanted Bright Boys ith Bicycles for Messenger service. Apply Messenger Department, Postal elegraph Co. I 5 Pennsylvania Avenue. Brainl Hleart and Stomach Af fected. Life Hung by Thread UjntiI Cured by 'Dr. Miles' Heart Cure and Nervine. -Some years ago I was suddenly prostrated with what my dotor called an effusion of blood on the brain. Heart trouble developed shortly after and I became so weak that it was with great difficulty that I could walk ac ross the room. Eor two, months my lIfe seemed to be hanging on a thread when my attention was arrested by an ad. of Dr. Miles' Nervine in our church paper. I sent for a bot tie of Nervine, one of Heart Cuore at the same time wrote for advice. I was told to take in addi ti..n Dr. Miles' Nerve and Liter Pills. For ten years I have been terribly afflicted with constipa thon. I continued the remedies with short Inter. inittance for two months. Under God those rem edien have been the means of restoring me to good health and no one looking at me now would - dream that for two months I walked at the edge of the tomb from heart weakness and nervous prostration. I cannot say too much for the won derful properties that your remesies possess. I have tried many kieds of pills. but never any that equal the Nerve and Liver Pills for constIpatIon." lte,. W. A. ROBIN'.. Port Elgin. Oat,. A mistake in diagnosis Is common In cases of neart disease. Every heart that flutters, pal p tales, tires out easily (causing shortness of breath), ache. etc.. is weak or dissased, and treatmnent should not be postponed a single day. There is no remedy so safe and sure as Dr. Milss' Heart Cure which speedily cures. j All druggists selU and guarantee first bottle Dr. Mile's' ltemedles. Send for free hook on Nervous o and Heart Diseases. Address Dr. Miles Miedilsb C.., itkhart. Ind.a BETE TEAK BULI Ar the tseth. It prevent. decay. 14 U herdes the same sana parses as SAVES-TEETH ~ BURCHELU'S p "SPRING LEAF" TEA. Grown on the same plantation for Over 20 years. Carefully picked, cured and packed, its fine, evem, debcate flavor is unsurpased. N. W.BURCHmEL S Order 669 --if you'd take -the first and most -important step -toward success in -baking. With -"Ceres" Flour to --work with it's an -easy matter to -produce light, white, -wholesome bread -and rolls. "Ceres" -is the best flour -in the world. Sold by all grocers. Refuse substitutes. Wm. M. Gait & Co., Wholesalers of "Ceres" Flour, First St. and Ind. Ave. 1t Croft's Swiss Milk Cocoa" is not ordinary cocoa. It is made of finer cocoa beans. It is digestible. Croft & Allee Co., P6hdlplda. 'at wi s you gg. -the sasfr and mst -toarsuciess in. -bakin. Wia. Houswork t tsa Maeasy.te to -hlea somhe b rbe -rand Navyers Does the best andlon'urt -i theanorld Bod l ge dsallsoers.uc Res Consum tituterhs. Wholealersy, acers chron, isted, and n time.cor Swed, sb RDM 'SM is hgr nteor fdiar cca. it Itars madeuof fcatesfatest coco benso. Itrisldiestible wa in. oagr wth ss theWhoh t of 01 to 80 Pleasec-=--Benefits. 00 Cr in D M 1 C Cuimbachecr ti Plese -- ene-t. -t 11 ei SIT down to a good cigar and a c nce col glass of tedecous t have a treat-fit for a king. CUJLM- V9 BACHER, besides being palate D) pleasing, is rich in nutriment- P1 h n Aays keep a sup 24 pts. for $1.25. D Washington Brewery Co. I 4th and F Sts. N.E.'Phorne E.254 my -tn,thafs-40 ci PETER GROGAN. i Credit for All Washington. r ti We tack a . down all g r Mattings tt and other B floor coverings P free and on in ply~l o CUMATE eiebor. to economy in B e C buying Mattings ix by the roll, be- C cause we sell he them at lowest a Crndy for the Wasctn. quied tacovryor owns alr Reri-i eattis dIet for corabing All sizesare hrera fsrre and Go pattens. Dnglere BTe-e sovst ecosmye in kig ci bummer Mattntreof i caueeo sell h. dparment st or e Pricesrn chrgn * only89-o21-82 actual . Berteens and IS s tc a" -restreang.te -ldSordabiit.ell. ti pattengs. odaer.c Blue-fameSor.esth anB aole Sresk for2 sume cooin. ci evryatsoanndonce is FareweU R4qp in the House; .0. APPRORD TIONS TElT GRKAT INC IN TEB PAST EW U a. Xs '&ning Againt Carsiica tion ul-. travagame in aural lree Delivery $ervice, [n connection with the prpsent seai-o-nl restigation being. made.in the Post Office apartment, the fs,rewell speech in Con ess of former Representative Loud of Cal >rnia. who for many years. s chairman the House committee on post ofoes and at roads, had charge of the post o0ce ap opriation bill in the. House. - becomes of ,rticular interest. This is true especially cause Mr. Loud called attention to the ormous increases demanded by the Post foe Department, and of his particular la ant regarding the way the rural free de rery service had taken the bit in its teeth. L'his speech was delivered February 4 last, id while it is not lengthy, it Sums up the aclusions Mr. Loud had- reached through s long years of experience in postal mat ts from the legislator's standpoint. He id: The post office appropriation bill for the at fiscal year carries something over 53,000,000. When I look back over the ort period of time that I have been a ember of this House and can see that the aount appropriated when I first became a ember of the committee on post offices and et roads was considerably less than VU, 0,000 I am not so much i'eminded of the ght of time as I am of the enormous in ease in the amount of business transacted this country. . Increase in Appropglaties, rhe amount of money recommended by e committee for the support of the sev al bureaus and divisions .f.the, Post Office epartment are libesal, some of them. In y opinion, bordering at least on the verge extravagance. During the period from 4 08 and ending substantially with the fis it year of 1807 the appropriations made by rngress, recommended by the committee, ere at least leading in the direction of the i imping of the Post Office Department in e expenditure of money. There was, how rer, during that period one year in which e receipts of the department were less in tal amount than they were for the pre Kdng year. With the beginning of the fiscal year of 08, business being much improved in this 4 wuntry, the post office committee saw fit 4 > recommend to Cong ' and Congress Lw At to adopt, a more ral policy to ard the management .f the Post Office epartment. Up to 1805tbe post office ap opriation bill contalnf 'nd exceeding 10 ges. Moneys were apro{Ited in lump m for all branches ; Post Office epartment. Congress -Wund it very easy cut off $500,000 here 'and, 1500,000 there order to meet their viewe, regarding the anagement of the department Arbitrary PromotionsUnwise. That resulted, Mr. Che mai, in a general ttting down of salaries of postal employes hose salaries were not absolutely fixed by w. There was at that 'time and the pre ding year a clamor tbtpughout the coun y, very manifest upon this part of the wvernment, influences, detlanding not one an increase of salar, tut classiica mn bills which should increase their sala es by statute each year .of their service. believe I speak for theggst,o#s commit e when I say that thb commit" think it iwise to enact any legiiisla. thht shall 4 -bitrarily -promote everf person in the 4 stal service each. years until he shall 4 ach a maximum ststptory salary. So, then, some years ago the post ofioe mmittee took hold of this matter, keep g the law intact as it was, :segregating e various items, and appropriating direct each year for so many in each class, aving, as you will observe, Mr. Chairman, the executive department and to the stmasters, and ultimately for Congress, determine how much promotion there all be in the various branches of the stal service. That work I. with this bill mpleted. Post office clerks, railway mail arks, post office Inspectors are the last to classified and segregated this year in is bill, substantially all of which, how- q er, has been done within the statute that Ls been in existence for a great many are. The clamor for the passage of a bll clas- c ~ying the railway mail service has sub- ~ antially ceased. The law regulating the C by of railway mail clerks' Is fixed at a aximum salary of $800, $900, $L,000, $L,0 id $1400. In .1885. by reason of the small propriation for the Post Office Depart-E ant, that department was confronted with 't a situation of either creating a deficiency a cutting down salaries. I think It is due t that department to state to the House Ld the country that that bureau, almost one, has studiously refused to create a ficiency when It was possible to maintain C e postal service. A.s I say, they were met with this condi mn. They either had to create a deficiency decrease the salaries of the railway mail ark.. The salaries were reduced-class to $1,900 and class 4 to $1,1@0. Our first ep was to restore class 5 to $1,400 and t rmediate class. BelUeving that an ad tnce of $200 per year wias greater than the ~ Lessities of the service demanded, we sated a $1,300 class and an $1,100 class. ie result of that, however, was to give en in that service more rapid promotlonm A New Clasflcation Bill, With this bill we have created a new ass. I will say to the House that It is not arranted by law, but the committee was a ianlmous in Its recommendation. In view the dangers, in view ef the hardships, in ew of the extraordinary ability required r railway mall service' clerks, the com- t Ittee thought that a class of $1,500 should ~ created, and you will' find in this bill at we have created a class at $1,500 a I par. There goes into that class but 225 y en who will receive $15) a year., They t a mn who have charge of two railway y stal daeor more. 1 [n regard to this increag~e of salary and Il e complete classificatio of all the em- c oyes In this postal service, ou mnust re- 'I amber that the salas pos office d irks vary from 3500 year, the mini- t um in second-class or $600 a I ar, the minimum in fi offices, up 3 ore is the chance and of pre ot an In the mithl 'of e in'the g at offices, to furnishtieohm,1 encournge hitn to a ttofial I him, with the hopel he ny reach this covet Fhe railway mai slb casie even hundreds of-$660 to I ,000; and there is the fnene en beyond that to t ofassistant c vision superintenlb-a ,nd ulV year (a promotio totos be deserve It), whiecre omepds In thlabMll. . t A Deinuion ~ There is now before $~manittee on a e post eoces ad peat geds a Mil wMok il a n...ed the other Isemisve branch pro IEag for the compulsory%rwcogio of all yae who ater he.= om . i.. aow . Cam te lu il etgq.so em Ia tila tes tamitU 50 I e.and 6 of tnsesse qa,th 4 41 O O SN ew br o's Kills the germ that causes the da must be used before the hair foil "Consider why the cl You'll find it his mi Addison's familiar lines apply particularly to the unfor tunate gentleman portrayed in the drawing, for when he was a boy, Prof. Unna, Europe's greatest dermatologist, had not yet discovered that a microbe is the underlying cause of dandruff, falling hair and baldness. Indifference to baldness on the part of some young men is one of the surp ising conditions formerly met with, but there was a good reason for this indifference. The world did not know dandruff to be n, very contagious disease; In fact, it was re garded as a perfectly normal condition. The falling hair and Itching scalp, that followed dandruff, was regarded as a matter of course. Baldness often appeared to "run" in certain families, but a single overworked hair brush usu ally arranged this misfortune by planting the dandruff microbes in one scalp after another. Prior to Unna's dis covery, medical men shot the entire pharmaceutical alpha bet at falling hair, but it still continued to fall. Alcohol headed the list, then came Bay Rum, Borax, Bitter Apple and Bear's grease. C proved a favorite letter for hair treatment: it brought Capsicum, Castor Oil and the beau tiful green blistering bugs from Spain, called Cantharides. Cantharides was the king pin of all hair preparations dur ing the dark ages of scalp knowledge, but fortunately for IT A DELIGHTFUL HAIR DRESSING. WARNINC! The sucesu s of Newbro's Her- an pieide has caused the market to __ be flooded with so-called dandruff germ destroyers. Don't expect satisfactory results from some thing the druggist assured you was "just as good." Conscien- gt tious druggists never recommend substitutes. Applications of Her picide at principal barber shops. Citi Price, 31.00, at leading drug Ad stores, or direct from THU A Ueddft U* HERPICIDE CO., Detroit, Mich. See Wir EDWARD STEVENS', C letter carrier and only competent for a lags before the post ollector, his salary advances just as rap- see how extensive the ly as that of the most efmcient man in the has grown under star rrier service. tiln nraei ThBe Letter bariers' se:Iary mil. yuwo~1 ehr appropriating from for ow, in these closing remarks that I dollars a year for rurt aks to Congress, I hope (and I utter then have ample time ssh remarks only as a prospective citi- not having placed und n going out of public life, never to r.e- an ptmatrgnr rn, and having only at -heart the inter- most excellently earrn t of a citizen of this country), I hope rural free delivery sa at if you ever do take up the letter most extravagant bure rriers' salary bill you will strike from the anygermnsric esent statute that provision which pro- yWhoenenbt sedite otes compulsorily every one of these of- Wen wnte Pout ft a.ls annually. I believe that that law ine Wnteo aPot - day is costing us through an inefficient in thathsergcenialane rvice 35,000,000 annually, which will con-oftasevciss nue to increase as the service increases. PeneitU' frtemani 'o can see it yourself. You have removed bureauf of the second e incentive for a man to excel. He only general, we have caus s to do just sufficient to keep him in the we hve notgn a li Te post offce -committee. I think, should why I have not given: econgratulated by the House of Reprne. tailing of expenditures ntatives that it has steadily recommend- Fortunately or unfori against an encroachment of this char- of the service is not1 ter upon the efficiency of the public serv- the post office committ ; that it has steadily stood against service is managed by ese so-called "clasifcation" bills, which propriations. The sala e but compulsory promotion bills. That the number of employei mmittee has stood steadily against these what it should be. Th easures up to the present hour, and I say tion. It costs nearly gin I hope Congress will never remove service. Now, it migi at bar; that it will at all times have in did not cut that down, iew an effcient service for the best inter- wherever we dared to. sts of the people, which can only be ob- The post ofBece conl ained by holding out to man the hope of what every other obse emotion through his own efforts. 1ued-that when you 1 [ did desire to call the attention of the delver service It gou ouse at length, but wHi do so only in service itself depends asing, to the Increase in certain Items In TmJnsgtigal ear ao wfeea pponsdabl gtainnothing,. and the post. Congrs bout the enormous increase recommended no morm the amount of money paid to rai'lroad Hous will sustain It opanes for the transportation of- mai. passing that we havea at question was, I think, substantially the rural free delivers termned, at least for a time, or the agi- been attempted to be -n tion checked, by the report of the coin- Representatives. ion appointed to investigate that sub f any one will take the time to look at e increase of the various items in the icrease is left discretionary, substantially, tae tsortat,eill see tat where the icreased amount of business done de reass the pay per pound. then the in reas, If anything, is below the nor:bal. . t will be found that the increase In the t et omie clerk hire inoe 13i', including e fiscal year of 190S, has been more than per cent, while the increase $n tha mount of money paid to rathmads for the asprtaion of maD for the saae - d has been but am'e emnt. Take it aRl th'1ge otsata - ba e t bet done by soinge@tion, by etsstraet, and it e st e rif be found that whBle we are gsti i assie eU i ood servtee, the inersamme durng that es toe ige han waried bu very Mte, bem - n=tm ' uml Nmgge awgel g. here g s ether ~eet, ja wM I saito e.tasaaa m an I4R see - She Refused Him! But do you blame her? Mhe was young, and he ippeared, at first sight, ld enough to be her ather. It grieved her deeply, :oo, to realize that she ould never tell him that he cause of her refusal vas his single misfortune -baldness. Herpicide indruff and falling hair, but It Icles are completely destroyed. iange was wrought, sfortune, not his fault." the people, Its use is now confined to raising blisters on the skin. Speaking of it, a wen-known scalp specialist says: "What on earth gave Canthaides its reputation in hair tonics is more than I know. It is the tradition of a century. and it is all nonsense. It cuts into the scarfskin, causing inflammation, and it is made out of dead bugs, so that it furnishes the eiements of decomposition upon which scalp microbes thrive. Its use upon the scalp should be forbid den by law." Quinine was a popular hair tonic when the discovery of the dandruff microbe completely exploded the "hair tonic" fallacy, and proved the absolute necessity of a germicide in hair care and preservation. Newbro's Herpi cide is the first and only successful scalp germicide ever offered. It has teen tested by hundreds of physicians, who continue to use it in their daily practice. Once kill the scalp microbe with Newbro's Herpicide, and dandruff will disappear, Itching scalp will cease, and falling hair stop, 'thus permitting NATURE, the only true "hair grower," to do its work. In many cases of acute baldness, if the hair follicles are not completely destroyed, a full new crop of hair may be grown. Dr. N. A. Herring of Benton Harbor. Michigan, writes: "I have tested Newbro's Herpicide in several extreme cases of dandruff, and the results were very satisfactory." STOPS ITCHING OF THE SCALP ALMOST INSTANTLY. let a Sample Direct from the Factory. "'- CUT THIS OUT. Inelase 10 cents in stamps topapsag g6MO.ag upoa a sample of NEWBBRO'S me ............................................. et and No................................... and State.................................. [ress THE HERPICIDE CO., Detroit, Mich. As Umhedintft*i. dow at or. 9th S. and Pa. Ave. afesce committee and free delivery service routes, with a very cpenditure, those of few years from now, ty to fifty millions of _______________ a! free delivery, will and cause to regret splendid showing of afll h er the second assist- Latest Imported Hats and in conjunction withmaycrmn ceton which Is now being originated In our own work ed out by him, this rooms. You are sure to find irvice, which is the a becoming style here at a au ever organized in price to please you. iplate that the ex- Mrs. C. Stiebel, 1113(0 St. Ie' Department here m2etah2 l'or the msanagement ' reat as the total ex- You are abaolutsay gement of the whole Protected fr"om ir assistant postmaster - a to wonder whether :le too fast in respect FIRE FOB STA RCH Sme one a s rn O Clth,e m las yefottthcr-mosquito astting, ete. unately, that branch IT WON'T BURN mnder the control of Th only Be Sarch is Be. That part of the the wie the committee on ap- cosa asmmn.m tsaay .the ries are extravagant, -t,h is more than double -GUARANTEED. $,0m00nfo a field Frduh Iib an . Ce. it be askeil why we FeeikSe 4 o We have pared off luui..i., Eg, mittee has realied ouch the rural free dt seem that the very upon John Smith or ofce cm teehas "haesugfered with p11es fer thirty-aix years. i than it feels ~ o osials nthe asetarst esofa aekIoie nade the ony ct in weeks they1. not troul me at aU. Cascet Lade bythe Hops e e of "a nwman. Ges Krder, apoe,0 RRHI t&4. sol he ulk.The wses ls t55S Ceerae. Wammad Grie.o pe. 25 b. SOiagg hm.a' Ce,, 4Miam or N. K. -@ Annual Sale, Tea Million Boxes. Amm-es * netnand. Vkiiy. md' eakemP Wee, -tWeStr4ght a5ara ~id, Sa -at hd,ebs U , . esw. in wein is thes - jg1.s 350 M6 hub u a a eM. Va?S men at aswh ws j