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Too SBBgeHve. 'ou look discouraged," remarked the Visitor. "And I feefit!" sighed the manager of the great .Pacific Slope Prune company. "After ill the time and money I have expended proving to the public that the prune is no longer a fake, that miserable old editor has to step in and wreck my assertions." "I hope he didn't run your ad. in the hu morous column?" . . "Worse than that! He ran it under the boarding house notices." Chicago Daily fews. The Pan-American Exposition Will be the greatest this country has ever seen. The entire machinery will be run by power furnished from Niagara Tails. Al though the power required is enormous we believe this cataract is equal to the task, the same as Hostetttr's Stomach Bitters is equal to the task of supplying the body with mo tive power when it is run down. There is no medicine in the world so good for dys pepsia, indigestion, constipation, flatulency ind nervousness. Try it. Pleasure of Amateur Gardening:, "William, I wish you would go and weed out the flower bed.': William went out and inspected it. Then he returned. "It would be a simpler job, Marie," he aid, "to flower out the weed bed." Chi cago Tribune. - Beat for the Boncla. No matter what ails you, headache to a cancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right. Cascarets help nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. Cj stamped on it. lieware of imitations. Baiting: Him. TRodrick It seems incredible that the rise Bostonian should have been duped by the grafter' stgams of three shells and a pea. Van Albert It is easily explained. The pea was discarded and a bean substituted. Chicago Daily News. Do Yonr Feet Ac lie and Barn? Shake into your shoes, Allen's Foot-Ease a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes Feel Easy, Cures Corns, Itching, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Smarting, Sore and Sweating Feet. All Druggists and Shoe Stores sell it, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad dress, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Hli View of It. jMc.TiRger I thought your wife was- eco nomical. Thingumbob Such ignorance! My dear man, no woman is ever economical. She is either extravagant or stingy. Philadel phia Press. Laundering Thin Dresses. To launder the exquis"te creations of mus lins and lace in which this season abounds lias become quite a problem, yet t'e most delicate materials will not be injured if washed with Ivory Soap and then dried in the shade. But little starch need be used. Eliza R. Paeker. Hardships of City Life. "Pa, what's a metropolis?" "A metropolis, Jimmy, is a place in which It costs you about 25 cents street car far to gel out where you can pick, clover." Chicago Record-Herald. I do not believe Piso's Cure for Consump tion has an equal for coughs and colds.. John F. Boyer, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15. 1900. It is worthier to be honored by the wise few than to be flattered by the foolish many. Wellspring. Every actor in a play ought to have at least u part interest in it. Philadelphia Bulletin. A great deal of nerve is sometimes neces sary to keep from being cranky. Ateiiison Globe. . It isn't politeness that makes a detective exemplify the expression: "After you." Philadelphia Bulletin. The book binder cannot always afford to "disdain another person's leavings. Phila delphia Bulletin. May the best man win the pretty brides maid. Chicago Daily News. Marriage is often the result of a mutual misunderstanding. Town Topics. It is an easy step from gossip to lying. Atchison Globe. A BROTHER'S LOVE. Lostant, 111., July 8. James Watt, of this place, by one little act, has given a splendid example of that never dying love which exists be tween brothers, no matter how far apart they may be. Mr. Watt was a great sufferer from Kidney Trouble and - Nervousness. He was very much used up, and al though he had tried a great many things, he had found nothing that .would in any way relieve him. Some one suggested Dodd's 'Kidney Pills, and he used six boxes, and was com pletely cured. His first thought was for a brother in Belfast, Irelanu, whom he knew to be afflicted in the same way that he had been. Mr. Watt immediately sent a supply of Dodd's Kidney Pills to this far-away brother, together with, his recommendation based on his fortunate experience. W EAT H ERW I S E, OTHERWISE! OII.E.D CLOTHIN& AND KEEP DRY? BEWARE OP IMITATIONS. LOOK FOR A80VE TRADE MARK. ! . CATALOGUES FREE Ohowins Full Line, of Garments and Hats ! 4A.t. TOWER CO.. BOSTON. MASS. I Old Soldiers ! Now is yonr opportunity! The rixht to enter 5.000,0a acres of cboice lands in Oklahoma is to be deter mined by a government drawing. Ex-Cuion soldiers mar register and file by litem. Send Us and 1 will prepare yoor papers and register your names. II claim Is secured, an additional fee eqnal hi A per cent. . I tbe value of tbe claim wiil be cbarced foi selecting the land and alius tbe Declaratory Refer to any banker or pnblle official In Oklahoma. Address XMCK. T. MOttGAA, Perry. O. 1 AHASCESISSIp!1- lief and POS1T1VK I.Y CBUE8 For free snmp'o address "ANAKE8I9," Trib une building, Mew YocS EDUCATIONAL. forself-Mtpport while educating- himself at the KASSA CITY tMVkUSIl'T. frl&ay tutientg here tret eranloyiueni yielding frum three to ten dollars per week for tw Lourlaiorper day. Term opens fcsept- tu Adiirtii V. B. bi'EJ-'Hls.MS, Chancellor, Kanaka City, kduu y. -a it r . miiv'rftrtr' mm, womAn police sergeant. lira. Mary E. Owens, of Chleago, HoId Thin Rank, and la Earnine Her Salary, Too. Sergeant Mary E. Owens, of the Chicago police department, is the only woman in the world holding such ra"nk and title, and if she is not a good offi cer six mayors of that city have failed to find it o.ut. She-is on the regular police pay roll, wears sergeant's badge No. 97 and reports daily to Chief Col leran, of the detectives. Nobody, from the chief of police down, gives her or ders.: In the language of the street, "she knows her business," and it is an open secret that she knows it so well that she can wear her badge and draw her salary as long as she likes. She began her official career in 1889, cays the Chicago Record-Herald, soon after the death of her husband. The Bupport of a family of three young children devolved upon her suddenly, while she was yet ignorant of any pro fession, trade or method of money making. Her husband's friends brought enough pressure to bear to have her chosen one of the five worn en.health officers appointed by Mayor Cregier. She did the rest herself. When the women were dropped by the health department -Mrs. Owens had made herself so conspicuously useful to the police that the elder Carter Har rison told Chief McClaughry to ap point her patrolwoman, with a special assignment in the sweatshops, depart ment stores and shopping districts, where most of the violations of the child labor and compulsory education laws were being violated. "I never arrest anybody," said Mrs. Owens, laughing, "and it is mean to say that I am 'the shoplifting sleuth. I have nothing to do with general detective work and never had. "For years I have been attached to the 'board of education as a spe cial officer. Of course, I have full police power, but I find myself more than busy 'rounding up truants, look ing after cruel parents and prevent ing violations of the child labor law. Sometimes I arrest tots whom I find peddling around the saloons or sleep ing in down-town doorways when they ought to be at home in bed. One night, ,not long ago, I picked up a mere baby dozing in a doorway, all MRS. MARY K. OWENS. played out and with a box of chewing- gum she had been peddling. I took her to the Harrison street an nex, and when we got there the child's father and mother suddenly appeared and claimed their baby. Of course they had been hiding in some adjacent doorway while their little one worked on the sympathies of passers-by. I kept the child all night, and the parents, protesting in vain, waited for her. But they never again Bent her out to peddle among saloons or on the streets. "If a truant is reported at the echool headquarters as having gone to work under the legal age I make a round of stores and find the child, The affidavit of the parents stating that the child is 14 years old or older must be forthcoming or I send the little one' home in a hurry. "I can generally get the truth out of the children, and storekeepers are rsually anxious to aid me. I have known cases where the earnings of a child 12 or 13 years old were abso lutely necessary to the support of a widowed or invalid mother." I don't push the law too hard in such cases, and so long as the affidavit -is there I don't bother them." - Mrs. Owens is nearly 35 years old, out sne iooiis younger and is en thusiastic over her peculiar situa tion. She has four children, three boys and a girl, the eldest of whom is 18 and the youngest 12, - She is giving them all a good education, and her housekeeping is done by a hived maid. City .officials agree in stating that, aside from her police work, she has accomplished great good in ue cause of charity. Every factory employer, manager and owner of store in the" business district of Chi cago knows Mrs. Owens, and she has made most of them her friends, -. Carry Tour Own Luncheon. It is very curious to nctlce how the custom; of carrying a lunch on a train is steadily coming back into favor. At -first everybody did it, just as they now do in England, on ac count of the absence of dining cars Yhen these were introduced the really fashionable people immediately began to patronize them, and left the lunch- basket to these who could af ford nothing better. Now, however, it is considered the correct thing to have one's -lunch put up in a dainty basket by a good caterer. STATE ECHOES. Forty counties in Texas are without a resident attorney. Xew Hampshire pays a bounty cn dead grasshoppers at the rate of" ore dollar a bushel. A Santa Barbara (Cal.) manhascver 1,000 turtles, with which he expects to srtock a "turtle ranch" in that eccr.iv. The Pennsylvania supreme court has decided that the governor has the right to veto in whole or in part any item oi appropriation that the legislature may make. LANGTRY'S HAT. Famous Enclisa Aelreaa Xnanara rated m Millinery fashion That Should Become Popular. From across the . water comes the news that Mrs. Langtry has a wonder ful hat which she wears with stun ning effect in her new play, "The Roy al A ecklace. It is a leghorn, that charming straw of smooth, delicate weave which is beloved by every wom an who ever looked into a hat window. It is heavily trimmed with a simple wreath of May flowers. As every woman knows, these "sim ple" effects are not simple at all, but simply maddening" to arrange. Since MRS. LANGTRY'S NEW HAT. Mrs. Langtry has set the style it is likely that -there will soon be a raid on American millinery counters for these particular hats. There is .something deliciously charming about a hat of this style. It is so distinctly feminine and "its waving brim can give an air oi co quetry to even the most uncoquettisb face. Correctly, it should be worn with a dimity or organdie gown of many ruffles, with silk mitts which are quite the vogue and with a para sol that is a fluff of chiffon and a foam of flounces' or a great big slapdash boquet of real lace. Probably no style of .hat is so becom ing tcTall ages and all types of women the leghorn. It is pretty on the petite girl with her fluffy pigtails tied with ribbons. It is picturesque and lovely on the large girl the Mrs. Langtry type, for instance. Even on elderly dames it is not en tirely out of place, and everyone knows how cunningly lovely the leg horn hat is on babies, its waving, lilt ing brim shading kissable" curls and sweet laughing eyes. All hail the leghorn! Mrs. Langtry has not tucked it back in feminine hearts, because it has never been out of them, but she has re minded womankind of its perfections, and for that womankind will be more than grateful. THE ATHLETIC GIRL. Her Prestige Is Being Slowly But Snrely Usurped ly tbe Soft, Clinelng; Maid of Yore. Backward and forward swings the pendulum of fashion. We fancy we have put away certain frivolities for ever, and, presto! here they are back again as pronounced as ever. The fact is that the man and woman in esse have not changed at all. Circumscribed as we are, therefore, by the limitations of our humanity, we find in our orbit that now, as in the days of Solomon, "there is no new thing under the sun," and fash ion must perforce swing around in an erratic circle of periods the Vic torian, the Napoleonic, the Louis XVI., the Renaissance, the Grecian, etc. to gratify the love of change. This -may seem like a rather elabo rate preamble to an analysis of the coming summer girl of 1901, but it is curiously apropos to observe that the athletic girl's prestige seems to be more or less on the wane, and that a soft feminine creature, like the grandmother of 50 years ago, who does nothing but look supremely pretty in her muslins and laces and makes herself entertaining, is com ing very much to the fore. ' A couple of years ago. it was gen erally thought that the athletic movement which was so pronounced all over the country would develop a new woman, and that the fluffy summer girl of yore had vanished forever, but to the great joy of the maidens (and they are not a few) who have all along secretly detested sport, it seems now quite on the tapis that they may be as much in the fashion this summer as their more amazonian companions and may openly avow their preference for shady corners and tete-a-tetes without incurring disapprobation. Chicago Daily News. . AFTER HALF A CENTURY. Sirs. James QoinH, of Sew York, lie united to Sister Who Had Been ' Lost to Her for S3 Years. After a separation of' more than half a century, in .which each thought the other dead, two sisters have been reunited and expect to pass the re mainder of their life together. One is "Mrs. James Quinn, whose husband is a prosperous contractor, and the ether Mrs. Mary O'Xeil, who has just arrived on the Teutonic from her home in County Cavan, Ireland. The women and one brother are the siir- Tiring children of Owen O'Xeil, who 5&. vears ago owned an extensive es- rtate in Ireland. His wife died and he followed her two months later.- The children were left practically helples and an uncle had the girls placed in an orphanage. Mary was three years old, and Annie, now Mrs. Quuin wa-s 12. ' Through the kind offices cf another uncle Annie was brought to New York citv. where she has since lived. She lost all track of Mary -and her broth rs. A few years ago she learned tha two of the brothers had died, and re: centlv heard that the third brother still lived in the town of hss birth Throug-h him she found that Mary had been taken from the orphan asylum 45 years ago ac.d was a servant in a well-known family. - Mrs. Quinn at once sent money and a ticket for her sister to come to New ,Vrk city. She met Mary on the pieT ' find irok her to her own home, where he no j1w!is in contentment. NATIVES JOIN IK NOISS. Fourth, of Jaly Was Celebrated by New Colonies' of United States in Far Distant Climes. '. Washington, July 6 Not only the United States but its colonies as well celebrated the Fourth of J my this year, and the boom of the cannon, te snap of the firecracker, and the glare of fireworks, for thi first time in his tory, encircled tb- whole lobe in honor of independence day. In Porto Rico, the Philippines, Hawaii, Guam, Tutuila, in the Samoan group, and in Alaska, all now territory of the Unit ed States, elaborate celebrations of the day had been arranged. In Cuba, too, the Fourth of July was observed in true American style, and it is prob able the island republic will make it an annual holiday;;. . . At all capitals in Europe and in large cities in every part of the world where even a few Americans are liv ing the Fourth of July was cele brated. Special exercises were held in London, Paris, Berlin, St. Petersburg, Rome and Copenhagen by the Amer ican colonies and -visitors. At Pekin the holiday was observed. In Mexico and the South " American republics citizens of the United States cele brated Independence day. DOWIEITES MALTREATED. Twenty-One Disciples Assailed with Ejrg-s, Vegetables and Otber Missiles and Driven Out of Evanston. Chicago, July 6. Twenty-one dif- ciples of John Alexander Dowie visit ed Kvanston, a Chicago suburb, last night and, despite the efforts of tbe entire police force of the place, a mob. of 1,000 people drove them -out of town. Several days ago four o! Dowie's missionaries were egged and driven out of Evanston and last night's visit of the 21 was intended to convert the people of Evanston and show them the error of their ways. J.he instant the uowieites ie- gan their meeting last night they were asailed with eggs, vegetables and other missiles. The guard of po licemen was too small to afford much protection and the crowd soon began to hustle the missionaries along the street and both women and men were liberally bespattered with eggs and mud. The Dowieites finally fled from the town. " ' RETURNS NOT ALL IT?. Cbieajro Tribune Presents a Preliminary Report of the Killed and Wounded on the Pourth of Joly. Chicago, July 6. The Tribune pre sents reports from all over the coun try showing the number of person killed and .injured as a result of cele brating the Fourth of July. Tne num ber reported killed is less than last year, being 19 against 30 then. The number of injured is considerably larger, the figures being 1,611, against 1,325 in 1900. The real list of fatah ties will, however, not be known un til the number of deaths resultins from lockjaw caused by toy pistol wounds come in. A WHOLESALE HANGING. Four Nesr es Expiate Their Crime of Mnr- .. der on the EcafTold at Ver non, Fla. Chipley, Fla., July 6. At Vernon. 16 miles from here, four negroes" Belton Hamilton, John Simmons, Jim Harrison and Will Williams, were hanged yesterday for murder. The.; had been convicted of killing a helr- less negro and almost killing his wife. During the trial Hamilton, on cross examination, confessed, saying: .1 am guilty, before God I am guilty. and ought to be hung until dead Several Persons Drowned in tha Tai ji. Seattle, Wash., July 6. The steam ship Dolphin arrived from Skagwaj yesterday with 80 passengers and $800,000 in- gold. The Dolphin brings news of several drownings in th Yukon rjv-er. A. L. Itiekstead and Dave Valentine were drowned' by thf overturning 'of their canoe two weeks ago. Last Monday an unknown San Francisco man and Phil Jordan met death below Lake LeBarge. Theii cance upset during a squall. A laud Office Reelster Arr sted. Oklahoma City, Ok., July 6. Sey mour S. Price, register of the Uniter1 States land office here, was arrested yesterda-v and taken to Weatherford. Ok., in custody of a deputy sherif! of Custer county, on the charge of having obtained money under "false pretenses. He is charged with having sold certain real estate in Weather ford which did not belong to him and receiving therefor $300. Kansas City's Public Bath. Kansas City, Mo., July 6. Kansas City's free public bath and swimming pool is now open. The bath is located in one of the public parks in the cen tral part of the city. The pool of the bath has a capacity of 160,000 gallons and its dimensions are 4uxau ieer. 11 President and Wife Go to Canton. Washington, July 6. sThe president and Secretary Cortelyou were" busy Friday closing up odds and ends of business prior to the departure of the presidential party for Canton at ;4 o'clock in the evening. Prepare for Free Trade. San Juan, July 6. In a joint session lasting fhree hours the Porto Eican assembly unanimously passed the free trade resolution. The assembly hall .was crowded with people and cheers greeted the announcement that Gov. Allen had signed the resolution. ;reat Britain's New Battleship. London, July 6. In --the bouse oi commons Friday t he secretary "of the admiralty announced that the year i shipbuilding" programme included three battleships, six cruisers and ten improved torpedo-boat destroyers. Postal -Clerks Killed In lows. Mason City, la., July 6. The tender of an Iowa Central passenger-train jumped the track near Hampton, de railing the mail, baggage and smoking cars. The raail car was crushed and Postal Clerks Kendall and McEenzie, of St. Paul, -were Killed. Wave of Cnme at Mos?oes. Muscogee, J. T., July C. A wave of crime seems to have struck this sec tion of Indian territory, no less than seven person having been killed with in a radius of 20 miles of this place in the past Wfec. ELEVEN PRISONERS ESCAPE. fhej Got Oat of -the Federal Jail at ttath- rie by Overpowering the Gaards. Each Taking; a Una as They iMtU Guthrie, OkJ, July 6. The 11 prison ers who made their escape from the federal jail did so by overpowering the guards. Friday is known as bath day. Being extremely hot the door of the cell was left open to admit as much air as possible. One prisoner at time is taken by a guard to the bath room. . As Lee Stanfield's turn came he made a lunge and STabbed the guard's gun. Covering the guard he called to all who wanted to- go, which they did without ceremony, each arming himself with a gun as he passed by the gun rack. The alarm was given, but it was some time, as the prisoners had. taken the precau tion to cut the telephone wire. By dmt "of good work on the part of the federal - officers and the citizens all of those who broke jail at three o'clock were recaptured and locked their cells at seven o'clock last evening, except Lee Reed and Bob Harden. They will be taken soon. BEACON ON PIKE'S PEAK. Monster Patriotic Flame Set Off from .. Mountain Top Is Seen 200 Miles.' ' Distant. Pike's Peak, Col., July 6. A fiery beacon, 500 feet long and blazing hun dreds of feet in the air, was set off on the summit of Pike's peak at dark July 4. The weather across the en tire state of Colorado was clear, and the immense blaze, over 14,000 feet a"bove sea" level, was visible from Chey enne, nearly 200 miles north, to New Mexico, the same distance south. Hun dreds of thousands of persons were able to see the patriotic beacon, which was the .culmination of the display on the peak. Several bow kites, six feet across, were sent up to over 18, 000 feet, carrying the American flag, which was visible in Colorado Springs and adjoining towns as well as in the Cripple Creek district. A snowcloud settled around the kites and wrecked them at 17,500 feet. This elevation was the greatest ever attained by the stars and stripes. ' CLUNG TO THE ROPES. Iowa I.ad Showed Remarkable Braver When Accidentally Carried Up by a Balloon at West Liberty. Muscatine, la., July 6. Carleton Meyers, a small boy living in West Liberty, la., became entangled in ths rigging of a balloon that ascended there as a feature of the Fourth of July celebration and was carried five miles and dropped unhurt in the ad joining county. When the balloon shot upward the aeronaut, seeing the lad's perilous position, yelled to him to hang on. All through the perilous flight the boy clung to the ropes and was finally safely landed. Among the crowd that witnessed the boy s hair raising experiences a collection was taken up and a purse of $100 was raised as a reward for his bravery. JURY WOULD NOT CONVICT. Twelve "Good Men and True" Refused to Send a Man to Prison Who Had 'Kissed a GlrL Columbia, S. C, July 6. For the first time in the South Carolina courts a man has been prosecuted for kissing a pretty girl. The offender was C. C. Hopper. The victim is Miss Maggie Cudd. ag-ed 16. Hopper is married. There was no doubt T" kissing. Miss Cudd convinced the jury. The jury found Mr. Hopper not guilty be cause it. did not want to send him to the penitentiary. Crime Decreasing: in the Territory. Ardmore, I. T., July 6. -Govern ment officials' reports for the fiscal year ended June 30 shows that crime has decreased fully 30 per cent, since last report in the territory. Three hundred and fifty-three persons were convicted during the year, 2S acquit ted and 110 dismissed. Social 'condi tions show a marked improvement Many of the convicts were Indians. The introduction of liquor was the greatest class of crime. Mrs. Carrie Nation Again. St. Louis, July 6. Mrs. Carrie Tfa tion's threat to wreck the saloon of Oheim Bros, last night resulted in her arrest by Patrolman Florida. She was conveyed in a patrol wagon to the Central district station, but was released bv Capt. Reynolds, who in formed btr that if she created another disturbance she would be locked up, Thief in Guise of Ff male Servant. Kansas Citv, Mo., July 6. Sadie Ward, colored, has been identified at Dolice headquarters as the- woman who has robbed a number of houses Sadie's specialty- was to obtain em- nlovment as. a servant, . steal some thing of value and leave. In this way she gathered several hundred dollars' worth of jewelry and other articles Comptroller Dawes Resigns. Washington. July 6.--Comptroller of the Currency Dawes has tendered his resignation to the president to take effect October 1. Mr. Dawes re signs his office in orde.r to -enter the Illinois senatorial corest this fall. Carnegie's Offer to San Francisco. San Francisco, July 6. Mayor Phe- lan is in receipt of a letterfrom An drew Carnegie offering to give $oO 000 to the city of San Francisco for a library buildinjr, providing the city furnishes a suitable site and appro priatcs 75,000 a year for maintenance Injured by a Jfatnral G i Eip'.nslnn, Cincinnati. July 6. Four ?men were fatally and three others seriously in jured by a natural gas explosion pit No. 1 of the series of;-shafts the new waterworks at Torrence road late yesterday 'afternoon. - Overcome with Firedamp. Pittsburg, Pa., July 6. Four Italian miners, while on a spree, went to abandoned coal mine at Castsburg. about a mile from Monongahela City, early yesterday morning. They were avercome with firedamp . and v iound dead later in "the Tay. Two Clondbantts in Montana. Helena, Mont.. July 6. Two cloud bursts between Miles City and Wibaux caused floods that washed cut five bridges and several dumps. Three work trains find 1.C00 men are rfpair ing the daucaee- BEAUTIFUL LADIES GIVE VALUABLE ADVICE TO SUFFERING SISTERS. Peruna the Great Tonic Cures - Catarrhal ' Dyspepsia of Summer. KATHLEEN GRAHAM. Miss Kathleen Graham, 1459 Florida Ave., N. W. Wash., D. C, writes: "At the solicitation of a friend I was ad yised to use Peruna and after the use of one bottle for dyspepsia I felt almost entirely cured. I take pleasure in rec ommending your remedy to anyone who needs an invigorating tonic " Kathleen Graham. Dr. S. B. Hartman, President of The a prominent authority on women's catarrhal diseases will take charge of as many cases of female catarrh as make months. Advice free. Address Dr. S. - 1 -Mm-Mi mi.,., on i r mini j. ijufMk!ise-w.j H.hL ,.ri-ii T- n V " ; ' ' i! 1 MILLIONS OF MOTHERS! TTSR nTTTnrPA SOAP ASSTSTFn RV fTJTI- I CURA OINTMENT THE GREAT SKIN CURE For preserving:, purify ing and beautifying the skin of infants and children, for rashes, itchings, and chaf ings, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, -whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore liands, and for . all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Millions of "Women use Cuticura Soap in the form of baths for annoying irritations, inflammations, and MccoMations. for too free or offensive oersoiration. in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, ana for many sanative, antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women, especially mothers. IMo amount of persuasion can induce those who have once used these great skin purifiers and beautifiers to use any others. Cuticura Soap combines delicate emollient properties derived from Cuticura, the ereat skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients anc the most refreshing of flower odors. It unites in ONE SOAP at ONE PRICE, the BEST skin and complexion soap and the BEST toilet, bath, and baby soap in the world. C05P1ETE EXTEBTTAIi ASD ISTEE5AL TBEATJEE5T FOB ETEEY BTXOB, Consisting of Cutiuuka. Boap, to cleanse the skin of crusts eff g la J3 and scales and soften the thickened cutic!e,CuTICDKA OUMV ment, to instantly aliay itching, inllanimation, and irrita-tirm-anrl flnrithA and hp.nl- anri CrrrT.iTTW.A TcT5SOT.VE2rr.tO THf PFT - rnol and elpansa I llU wCI cient to enre the 111?. and Scaly EKin, scain, auu "i"" uuuuuia, win iuuui. nail, miouii wot " Sold throuehout tfce -world. British Depot: P. NewuekV & 60S3.27-23, Charter- 11 liousa Sa - London. tVTXES DBOQ JO man who rvesirs Snwrrr's rMiekere. They're msde of epeciai'7 wovea cooaa, aoooie throughout, double and trtpla stitched, vmrroiued wraxetm procU are soft crd smooth. Win nctcruck, peeled cr tecoise auckr. Xtalogue free I.A. M. Sawyer & Son, Solo K,'n. Jy East Cambridge, Mass. I For Ills Peculiar to Women, Peruna is an Invaluable Remedy. FLORENCE ALLAN. -Miss Florence Allan, 75 Walton Place, Chicago, 111., writes: "As a tonic for a. worn out system Peruna stands at tha head in my estimation. Its effects are truly wonderful in rejuvenating tha entire system. I keep it on hand all the time and never have that 'tired feeling as a few doses always makes me feel like a different woman." Florence Allan. Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. application to him during tbe summer B. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio. the blood. A firvm.i? Set is often Bufli- most torturing, disfiguring, itching, bo.ni- CHEH, IXS?, cole Jrrope JoOSum, u.Cfe A. ffi Ilf RIFLES, FEVOLVEBS, FisniNG Tacki.b. Nets and Skines. Hack Bam, Dawn Tennis. Ciwxjri-rr. HAii:or-Ks.TKXTP, Wagon Covbhs, 8P01lTIXGiSl)ATBU.Tirti')SIi'ilT;!IVUl:TUPT10i-. Sonci for Oatnlosruo. " Ut.u.rst.lntrly Artim Co., Si. JuteejtU, Mo ELECTROTYPE GUTS Suitable for all purposes. Order through your local newspaper. A. N, KELLOGG NEWSPAPER CO.. v KiSMsriTV.no. BEAEERS OF THIS PAPER " DESiHING TO BUT AMTTHIHQ ADVERTISED IN ITS COLUMK3 SHOULD INSIST UPON HAVING WHAT Til 1ST ASK iXR. KEKUSIKS AT T. SUBSTITUTES OB IJ1ITATIOK5 A. N K. D 137S please tat-e thet yor caw ths uS.overtl n this paper