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GIRL COULD NOT WORK s How She Was Relieved from Pain by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Taunton, Mass.-" I had pains in both sides and when my periods came I had to stay at home A from work and suf fer a long time. One day a woman came to our house and asked my mother why I was suffering. Mother told her that I suf fered every month and she said, 'Why g" don't you buy a bottle of Lydia E. "' Pinkham's Vegetable Compound?' My do mother bought it and the next monthI " was so well that I worked all the month da without staying at home a day. I am in good health now and have told lots of " girls about it"--Miss CLARICE MoRIN, "f 22 Russell Street, Taunton, Mass. ar Thousands of girls suffer in silence to every month rather than consult a phy- 't sician. If girls who are troubled with a' painful or irregular periods, backache, "o headache, dragging-down sensations, ii, fainting spells or indigestion would take t I Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- lil pound, a safe and pure remedy made from roots and herbs, much suffering Il might be avoided. Write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine it Co., Lynn, Mass. (confidential) for free t advice which will prove helpful. tr Sth The Army of Constipation Is Growing Smaller Every Day. dl CARTER'S LITTLE ,1 LIVER PILLS are ' responsible - they le not only give relief r pi - they perma- ITC ES nentlycure CsI ITTLE spei... Mill. IVER lions use ePILL them for $ilisses. Indgestie., Sick H.adache, Sallow Sky. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature CC ZNA' 'Haun t's Cres s arausted to ef. ble Itching It Is coin pounded for that arpos. and 0aor oneo witll s promptly V"uIded witbdut qucetion It Hunt OCure falls to care Itch. reaaraTetter. Hine Wonn or lm oiter mosn u Te e re ae t.. boa -or ele by al drug store. or by mail from the A.1. l"chards Medicine Co.. Sherpae. Tex All the Comforts of Home. "I shouldn't ca:ll this a desirable ent," said the lady who was looking for rooms. "There's a saloon Sonly three doors away." 'That's just the point," replied the agent. "Think what a comfort It will be to know that your husband is never far from home."-New York Globe. More War. Mrs. Styles-I want one of those new military bonnets. Mr. Styles-How much are' they? "Only nineteen dollars." "I can't afford that. and I don't see why you want a millitary bonnet. You're not going to fight, are you,. my dearrT' "I am if I don't get the Icnnot." The Limit. "What a pessimist he is' "Yes, indeed. Even misery 1sh111s lsIl company." THIS IS THE AGE OF YOUTH. l You will look ten years younger if you darken your ugly, grizzly, gray hairs by t using "La Creole" Hair Dressing.-Adv h Instead of running away from your f work try to find a more efficient way of doing it. That Is the secret of suc- t esas. ti Red Cros Ball Blue, made in America, " therefore the best, delights the housewife. All good grocers. Adv. la lo If a alck woman is able to sew she's ih on the men,'. sl OHI MY BACK A stubborn backache is cause to sun pect kidney trouble. When the kid neys are inlamed and swollen, stoop' b ing brings a sharp twinge in the small n , of the back, that almost takes the 7 breath away. Soon there may be other S qmptoms; santy painful or too tre quent urination, headahes, dizziness, ft or rheumatic pains. Don't wait for II ts treublts to become srior--p , Dean's Kidney Pills at one. You' 1 . " nod better-recommended remedy.i An Arteanes Cmy xMr Petsr suser. si, i , e i. Thred st..al Tex rka. , Ar k., ·ar: "I swuly hay dM e wult rom Down'I Kidney P 1l,/ In Pini. My bac y pimed m terriblye at ttme and my WfDbmm didn't act died hand I notI e ~rned of DA's i sh lamy PiNSs in I tine. use d MthemN sad they rid me of . te trouble so thoroughly that it has av retarad." I mst Des ks asn k t a ·, I DOAN * s "Atl *,n EverWoman Want t, PMOntAL HYGIDE ,.,,,eimdby LydlL r Showing Dainty Bridal Garments Shops Make Lavish Display of Pretty Things That Once Were Made at Home. FINERY THAT IS EXQUISITE Artistry, Frivolity and Originality Have Been Combined With Wonder ful Results-Gorgeous Colors Rule in Most Cases-Empire Styles Have Popularity. While :acknowledging that the young bride' of today is justiiled in selecting for her trioseai ;i only those bits of lin gerie tlhat are suitable for tlihe fashins of thle hour. still, one h;a pleasant tnenories of the prleparation of a dozen of each, th:at was th e sunm and subiIstance of a wedding chest of other days. (cuie thinks of the piatitence. eager ness andItl joy hic.h went Into the work of nmakilng those dozens of garments and the long hours spent by the family together, cutting. Iasting. stitching and putting on thet hanlwork. It was always a task of love. Ilhis pireparationi of the underlinen for a girl in the fum Ily, and ill her intimate friends added their share. lBut this iffeectlonate task, like tiany )ither tlilngs that were once coiinsidered necessary ill the famtily lifer has gonel by the board. The shops do our work for us, and it is all a part of the substitution of the radiator for the open fire, the elec tric stove for the charcoal and wood, the re:ady llllnle gowns and suits for the hole ewing Iroom and the Imachine stitc(hing for thli threaded needle. Women Have More Leisure. In every way women are' finding that drudgery is loosening its hold on their lives. and soll all they will hliave to do is 'i\ve their tillite tio social serv lee, renalitai l . ! the lighter forms of plen sure. In the Ia st few montsli the smart shops halive madeIi a stronlg efoirt to in ALLURING PART OF BRIDAL TROUSSEAU •. i , i S ' ',,. . "' .'% / , ,.c Icyi~ .b or wnhte cnItnton |aIud wl n pink and edged with white b marabou, with belt of pink roses. The cap is of lace, wired to points and _half covered with a floating tulle veil. troidu'.e original hoIuse robes. They have gone to Venice and to Moscow for their inspiration. There are negligees that look as though they had been filched from the stage of the Itusian hallet. and there are others that could easily be worn in a more formal litanner. That which is known as the wrapper is dead. The calico Mother Hubbard of practical life has absolutely no place in the modern finery. Even with her simplest combing sack, the bride-elect sees to It that it is touched with artis try, frivolity and originality. Displays Draw Customers. The outpourings of the shops today in matinee, sleeping sacks and breakfast gowns, allure the most eco nomical and conservative women to their windows. One of the attractive negligees made for an October bride is of white chiffon lined with flesh pink chiffon and edged with wide bands of white mara bou. It is girdled above the waist with large pink roses, from which fall at one side loops and ends of nattier blue velvet ribbon. Invented to go with it is a piece of Rich Fabrics to Be Worn Velvet and Satin Brocades Among the Materials That Will Be Pop ular for Fall. The mention of velvets and woolens In summer is usually avoided as If it were an indelicacy, yet at this season we have to begin thinking about heavy fabrics and planning a fall wardrobe. Even in America there is less rac ing, less public life, and more and more of festivity screened behind the shel tering walls of villas, as in Italy. The echoes that reach the outside world bring little news of change and no in spiration, hardly even the old demand for sonmething new. Lines are second in importance to fabrics. If I could have taken you with me through three of the grt:etest fabric houses in the world you would realize that the dye has already been cast and that the wonderful silks, vel vets, brocades and cloth of gold shot with silver and Iridescent colors, man ufactured by these houses, mean a re headgear which Is neither cap aor crown, but which borrows a suggestion. from each. It is made of a fine pattern of .%hite lace, with broad points run ning upward and wired to stand. Lightly hbrushing the tips of these ipoints and floating away to the shoulders sad back, is a veil of white iulle. The mules are of flesh pink colored silk, with satin heels, and are touched at the instep and toe with pink rose buds. Gorgeous Colors for the House. For the same trousseau there is png other negligee made of white Llerre', draped over American beauty satin. In this the arms and neck are also hare, but there is a comfortable shotl de(r cape which keeps one from catch ing pneumlonia. This cape is caught at the bust with an Atnerlian beauty rose, and the lace which falls away from the high waist line has two long points at the back which are weighted with crystal tas sels. Along with this negligee go silk stockings of American beauty pink and cloth of silver bedroom slippers. One of the fancifu' caps which aee supplsed to be worn by the bride-elect in the morning when she has break fast, is a curious cross between a nurse's cap and a Brunhilda helmet. It tits well over the forehead, but leaves the back of the head in full view. Of Really Novel Design. The cap in question shoots upward fromn the forehead ia broad panels of embroidered satin, and there is a wired frill of white tulle that aspires to the heavens. It is tied on the head by a hand of silver ribbon which begins with a pink rose betweten the eyes and finishes In a flaring bow at the nape of the neck. No one who goes out to buy the un derlinen for a trousseau can be guided by what has been worn before or by what tradition once laid dohwn as the proler equilpmnent for a lady. It is best to go throug(h a few of the shops which laake a pleciaity of original under clothes, and If it is uot possible to pay the price, to duplicate the garmewa elsewhere. (One happy solution of this problem is that the department shops get out, at small prices. iln amnlazing assortment of dainty and fashionable lingerie. Colors Most Favored. What is the tendency today? Well, it is toward flesh pink as a color, hemstitching and picot edging as trim ming. blue ribbon against a pink sur face and a flash of roses wherever it can he placed. Whether or not the first empire styles will come into our afternoon and evening gowns, they are certainly here in fashionable lingerie. One might think that Josephine's famous white satin robe had been taken as a model for the new nightgowns. Some of these have the puffed sleeves, although the tendency is Gre cian. There is often a surplice bodice, back and front, and draped armholes finished with hemstitching or picot. There are crepe de chine gowns that are cut out in the form of a mandarin Jacket, with a long, round decolletage edged with picot. turn, at least in materials, to the days of the second empire; there are vivid reds and robin's egg blues bro caded with huge silver roses; there are stiff, plain velvets and satins brocaded In velvet. The mixed or Persian bro cades are passe, and the rage is for the single flower or motif. MoS(t beautiful of all are the ribbons with velvet flowers on satin founda tion': they are intended for entire gowns. There are also superb bralds that are almost like lace, with designs in rose patterns. Stiff and rich as are the materials for evening wear, the new fabrics for the street are mostly of clinging weaves. Woolens are soft. often ribbed: the variety is not great, but they meet the American woman's d mand for supple weaves for street wear.-From a Paris Correspondent Ih Harper's Bazar. Broad-belted Russian coasts e ev more than ever in taves ALFALFA WEEVIL SEEKS NEW TERRITORY WORK OF LARVAEALFALFA WEEVIL ENLARGED WORK OF LARVAE-ALFALFA WEEVIL, ENLARGED. (PieEpared by the U'nited States Depart- I ment of Agriculture.) The alfalfa a eevil. which. since its accidental introduction into the United States in 1!)n4. has been contined to alilftii fields in the great basin of the Wi st. has now spl'read beyond the Iliits of this natural division and is advanciing so steadily, in spite of ef forts made to combat its mnouement, 1 that entowLologists of the United States department of agriculture fear that sooner or later every section of the country will be invaded by the pest. The spread of the weevil outside the great basin has been north into por tions of Idaho lying in the Snake river drainage system and south into por tions of Utah lying southwest of the continental divide. Thollgh entomolo gists of the department look on the spread of the weevil across the conti nental divide as denoting the passing of a landmark rather than as the sur mounting of a barrier, they point out that the pest is, nevertheless, many miles nearer to important alfalfa-grow ing districts which have hitherto felt safe from attacks by the insect. Description of Weevil. A descriptionl of the alfalfa weevil and method of combaiting its ravages are contained in a new publication of the Unitcedl States depa.lrttment of agri culture, F+'artiers' ullletin 741. The spread of tile pest has, as a matter of fact, been slower than was at one time feared, but its progress has been steady. In Utah and in small portions Spray Pump in Use. of Idaho and Wyoming, where It now exists, it has caused at times a loss of 50 per cent of the first cutting of al falfa and a total loss of the second cutting. In order that farmers in those sec tions in which the weevil has not yet appeared may be able to recognize the pest and to protect their crops fromt it, the bulletin already mentioned contains details of its habits and of its uppearance in the various life stages. The weevil is most easily dis ccoered in the form of the full-grown larva. It is then a green wormlike creature one-fourth of an inch long with a black head and a faint white stripe down the middle of the back. It feeds upon the leaves of the alfalfa mainly during late May, June and early July and may be found by sweeping the tops of the plants with an insect net or by looking for the notches in the leaves where it has fed. When the larvae are nuIterous they destroy most of the tender growth and cause the. tops to appear white, making the field look as if frostbitten when viewed from a distance. The adult insect is an oval, brown beetle three-sixteenths of an inch long, I with a prominent snout. Its color fre quently is nearly black. This beetle Is I harder to discover than the larva, but, on the other hand, it is present in the field the whole year around. In winter it can be found by digging around the crowns and roots of alfalfa plants. Control Measures. The altalfa weevil does not hiber nate definitely. When the weather is cool tht adults are quiet, but with warmer temperatures they quickly re slune their activities. Egg laying be gins In early spring, and is usually ended by June 10. One efficacious method of controlling the pest, there fore, Is to destroy the eggs by pas turing the first crop up to that time. A similar result may be obtained by cutting the alfalfa green and feeding it as a soiling crop. if this is not done the larvae hatch in large numbers about the last week of Mauy or earlier, and eat the alfalfa leaves so rapidly that the plant is un able to outgrow the Injury. After the field Is cut the larvee which have been feeding upon the tirst crop gather upon the buds of the smthble and fre quently consume all of the second crop. By that time most of the insects have completed their growing period and have gone into the pupal or rest Ing stage. The later growth of the crop, therefore, does not suffer from them. To protect the crop pasturing, it has been said, is effective In the early part of the season. The field should be divided into two or three lots and each lot should be pastured alternate ly, the animals being left in it until the alfalfa has been eaten down close to the ground. The number and size' of the lots should be proportioned to the producing power of the field and the number of animals to be pastured, so that each lot may be grazed about once in two weeks. Pasturing should hbe continued until most of the weevil eggs have been laid, which, in prac tice, means a little later than the usual cutting time of the first crop. This method has the additional advantage of providing an economical method of fattening live stock. Combined with the proper feed of grain, alfalfa pas tore is excellent for putting on weight anti it is said that many farms would probably: be more profitable if their nun:igement centered about the pas turing of stock on alfalfa with the growing of enough other crops to pro vide grain and forage throughout the year. If the weevils are not killed early in the year they may be destroyed after the first crop has been removed by get ting rid of all the vegetation In the it-eld, crushing the clods, and filling the cracks so as to expose the entire sur fr,ce to the sun. This is best done by covering the field with a dust mulch. the dust being an additional means of killing weevils. Success obviously de pends upon doing the work when the ground is dry and the weather warm and bright. The second crop may also be protect ed by spraying the stubble. Spraying may also be resorted to in the spring. From .50 to 10) gallons per acre of a mixture of arsenite of mInc and water in the proportion of 4 ounces of pow der to 100 gallons are used for this purpose. The apparatus best suited for alfalfa spraying is described in detail in the bulletin already men tioned. Still another recommendation made in this bulletin is the stimula tion of the growth of the alfalfa by cultivating the field in the spring. This does not destroy the weevils but It serves to produce a larger and ear lier yield when their attacks make early cutting necessary. Up to the present, hovever, more farmers are concerned with I revent ing the alfalfa weevil reachin; their fields than they are with control nlag It in them. No one knows exactl3 how the weevils spread, but certain facts in regard to this matter have been ascertained. It is known, for exam ple, that the Insects are often found in green alfalfa fresh from the field; and in second-crop hay and among po tatoes which have been In contact with it. They are found also in cured alfalfa hay, especially that of the sec ond cutting. Potatoes often are hauled in cars upon a bedding of green al falfa hay and there is danger that the weevil may be transported In this way. On the other hand, however, there is no evidence to show that the weevil spreads more rapidly along rail roads than elsewhere. CARE OF INCUBATOR" CHICKS Favorable Temperature and Bits of Shell Are Just Adapted to Help Disease Germs. Did you ever think that an incu bator incubates disease germs as well as chicks? The favorable tempera ture, bits of shell, and moisture from the hatching chicks are just adapted to help germs of disease to develop and multiply when they gain access to the incubator. Always wash the hands after handling ailing chicks or poultry of any kind before turning the eggs or handling chicks in the incubator. Also disinfect the incu hator throughout after every hatch. HAVt FEW GOOD BRGOD SOWS Excellent Business Proposation for Ev. ery Farmer When Pork Sella Around Ten Dollars. With pork selling around the tea dollar per hundred mark, It Is the part of good business for every farmer tc have a few good brood sows which will bring in a few hundred dollars easiet than you could make It In any othe' way. PULLETS IN STUBBLE FIELDS Insects, Tender Weeda and Clovel Furnish Nearly Half of Their Food Requirenents. Make a trial of colonizing the devel oping pullets alongside the corn and stubble fields. The insects, tendei weeds, and clover will furnish nearly half their food requirements for sev I eral months. A few dollars Investec I In poultry wire for temporary yardlnL around the colony houses will be wel. spent. GRAND AMERICAN HANDICAP Th Greatest Trapsheetlng Evet of the Year, Won with Winchester "Repeater" Shells. The Grand American Handicap, the trapshooting classic, equivalent to the World's Series in Baseball, the highest honor the world has to bestow in trap shooting, the event that marks the cli max in the trapshooter's career, was won by Capt. J. F. Wulf, of Milwau kee, with the wonderfql score of 9xz100 from the 19-yard mark. In making this great win he shot Winchester "Re peater" loaded shells. The National Amateur Champion ship was won by F. M. Troeh, of the State of Washington. Mr. Troeh also took second place for National Ama teur Championship at Doubles. He al so won the Mound City Overture, and the General Average on all targets, and General Average on 16-yard targets. In winning all these events, Mr. Troeh used a Winchester repeating shotgun. The Women's National Champion ship, the first event of the kind ever staged at a Grand American Handicap, was won by Mrs. J. D. Dalton, of War saw, Indiana, with a Winchester re peating shotgun. The Dunspaugh Trophy, emblematie of the Professional Championship, was won by Phil R. Millet with a Winches ter repeating shotgun. The Hercules All-round Amateur Championship was won by Edw. L. Bartlett, of Baltimore, with Winches ter loaded shells. This was a hard match to win, as it called for 50 singles at 18, 20, 22 yards, respectively, and 25 doubles at 16 yards. This was a great cleanup for Win chester guns and shells and a demon stration of their wonderful shooting unalities. Paradoxical. "That fellow has a screw loose." "He doesn't mend matters by get ting tight." Save the Babies. NFANT MORTALITY is something frightful. We can hardly realise that I of all the children born in civilized countries, twenty-two per cent., or nearly one-quarter, die before they reach one year; thirty-seven per cent., or more than one-third, before they ar five, and one-half before they are fifteen I! We do not hesitate to say that a timely use of Castoria would save a majority of these precious lives. Neither do we hesitate to msy that many of these infantile deaths are occasioned by the use of narcotic preparations. Drops, tinctures and soothing syrups sold for children's complaints contain more or less opium or morphine. They are, in considerable quantities, deadly poisons. In any quantity. they stupefy, retard circulation and lead to congestions, sickness, death. Castorla operates exactly the reverse, but you must see that it bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher. Castoria causes the blood to circulate properly, opens the pores of the skin and allays fever. Genuine Castorla always bears the signature of Thousands of Suffering Women a SteFllVit This dais les aratee to do for OU what It haas d fee ethers. It errme the t ee uwle" elielr to womatardtmiesteag. astv illes the wmlraa tustia restus th a. petits elear. the eomsplezao, ad bals up the mwam easesig. Your mosay beak If yare ad Mh ead ed. Get t today. $1 at your dealrs'. Year dealer will erplai the seen tae. THACHER MEDICINE CO., CHATTANOOGA, TENN. Smuggling Cotton. Since cotton became contraband all sorts of ingenious dodges have been I tried to get it through the blockade. 4 One ship which was intercepted car ried what purported to be a cargo of flour. Certainly there was a great deal of flour in It-and a great deal of cot- I ton as well. Some of the first sacks examined panned out correctly. Then an officer kicked one midway. The sack yielded oddly to the impact of his i 6fot. No dust flew out and it seemed, as he expressed It, like kicking a pil low." At once the sack was emptied, and what a revelation! The middle part of it contained only cotton. All the other sacks gave up a like secret. There was flour at the top, flour at the bottom-and cotton in the middle of them all. To Fortify the System Against Summer Heat Many users of Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic make it a practice to take this old standard remedy regularly to fortify the system against the depressing effect of summer heat, as those who are strong withstand the heat of summer better than those who are weak. Price Soa. Who Said Hash? Bacon-A museum of the horse, pre seiting a complete history of that anl nail from the earliest known period to the present, has been established in Paris. Egbert-Well, from all reports, Paris is a proper place to look for the re hash of the horse. His Meal Ticket. "I met Mr. Blinks at the Van Gelts' dinner last night. Isn't be a most fas cinating man?" "He has to be. If Blinks didn't get invited out to dinner three or four times a week he'd starve to death." Cheap. "How did you make out with your garden this year?" "Fine. I raised so many vegetables that the exercise I got out of working In It cost me hardly anything at all." SAVE A DOCTOR'S BILL by keeping Mississippi Diarrhoea Cor dial handy for all stomach complaints. Price 25c and 50c.-Adv. David Cline of Philadelphia has com pleted without an accident 45 years as a railroad engineer. Nothing so enhances the value of a thing as difficulty in obtaining it. I Cu.LLToNIc gold omar 49 ygam F- MlmR Chlle anrd Foems. Alw a Fbin. GeseOil Ub0a**-. .b asaLg. Sg0dashig$am FR WEAK MlM A medicinal prepraties lib Dr. Kil mir's Swamp-Root, that has real earatiaw value almost sells itself. Like au edlem chain system the remedy is recommeaded by those who have been beadted to thee. who am is need of it. Dr. Kimer's 8wamp-Root is a i eisa' prEm riti. It has be Mst for years and brought remslte to count. lee nmbers who have snfered. The seeues of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is due to the bet that it fufllle almost er my wish mi overcoming kidneyJi and bladder disemes, corrects ri troble and eutralises the urie acid whi'h ceases rhumatism. Do not sofer. Get a bottle of Swamp. Root from say druggist now. Start trea met today. However, if yog wish firt to test this preparation send ten cents to Dr. & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be smre and mention this paper.-Adv. Worth Trying. "I don't understand what is the mat ter with this machine," said the man whose car was stalled at a croosnag. "The agent told me a child could ran it." "May be the agent was right at that," growled the traffic cop. "Why don't you hire a child?" Its Purpose. "So this is the prison laundry?" "Yes, ma'am." "I. suppose you wash and iron the convicts here." Mrs. E. B. Clarkson, ninety-six, Al ton, Ill., has not missed a Sunday school session in 36 yenrs. Wash day is smile day if you use Red Cross Ball Blue, American made, therefore the best made. Adv. Don't expect a soft answer when you call men hard names. Feed on Corn. "What a ridiculous idea setting those hens in the cornfield !" said the farm er's wife. "Nothing ridiculous about it. It's a great idea of mine," said the farmer. "Don't you see the hens won't have to leave their work to get their meals?" NO MALARIA-NO CHILLS. "Plantation" Chill Tonic is guaranteed to drive away Chills and Fever or your money refunded. Price soc.-Adv. A check of brass may enable a man to acquire gold. NOW IS THE TIME "iver siuneo wa a small boy I have ee troubled with aethma" 'ry8 Mr. J. W. lth. rie. Dandern. Tase.'] - "tried everythi a that we reommended but notin sereme to ive me permanent relief. In 1I5S Lung Sw reomeded I have taken four TO TAKE bottles sai hvnt hd a spell of asthma this gres id to health In eonsumdLoaan astbmua? It so. you are depriving YOUia SiLl of a fair chance. G(t a bottle from Pour dealer or I t he hbua't It order dires ODAY . Fifteen-day treatment SIN; thirty-day treatment 71 7. Bookiet puon orequest. NIASVILLnMNDICIfU 0. Dept. T. Nahvllle, Too. LUNG-VITA For the Complalate of the Seeth. The prescription of a well known old Tenneqsee and Civil war phy sIclan who for yeare dealt sue cessfully with Malaria. Bllbo ness. Torpid Liver and IILs eom mon to low, swampy sections of the South. 2e Brinags Gemnerems ettle tespid. If you feel languid, achey, dlasy or suffer from constipation. sued Sic for regular slse bottle. Quar anteed it directions are followed. Money back if they tall. Write today SWAMPLAND MEDCINEM CO., ADA. OKIA. I Smaillpoz. Am TYPHOID ` -... he almadt mmlae a ei ali ind i, or Atlu p Vanhses. e ke losed now peI Ir bhp'aim. pea bam IrY b Typhcdd telihtag t Typheoid Ymcie, sseti we d d Te 4hm Type Cui PredeIss Vasesss and Serms under U. L Lepes TheO Cler L~brsr w, S Iwh . Cal. Cwis IIL HAI . ".NU I MIATS"I R K N. - 1': W. N. U., LITTLE ROCK, NO. 39-1916