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BOY’S TERRIBLE ECZEMA. Mouth and Eyes Covered with Crusts —Hands Pinned Down—Miracu lous Cure by Cuticura. “When my little boy was six months old, he had eczema. The sores extend ed so quickly over the whole body that we at once called in the doctor. We then went to another doctor, but he could not help him, and in our despair we went to a third one. Mat ters became so bad that he had regu lar holes in his cheeks, large enough to put a finger into. The food had to be given with a spoon, for his mouth was covered with crusts as thick as a finger, and whenever he opened the mouth they began to bleed and sup purate, as did also his eyes. Hands, arms, chest, and back, in short the whole body was covered over and over. We had no rest by day or night. Whenever he was laid in his bed, we had to pin his hands down; otherwise he would scratch his face and make an open sore. I think his face must have itched most fearfully. “We finally thought nothing could help, and I had made up my mind to ■end my wife with the child to Eu rope, hoping that the sea air might cure him, otherwise he was to be put under good medical care there. But, Lord be blessed, matters came differ ently, and we soon saw a miracle. A friend of ours spoke about Cuticura. We made a trial with Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Resolvent, and within ten days or two weeks we noticed a decided improvement. Just as quickly as the sickness had appeared it also began to disappear, and within ten weeks the child was absolutely well, and his skin was smooth and white as never before. F. Hohrath, Presi dent of the C. L. Hohrath Company. Manufacturers of Si'k Ribbons, 4 to 20 Rink Alley, South Bethlehem, Pa., June 5,1905.’’ Money talks, especially when you give it to charity. PUTNAM FADELESS DYER do not stain the bands or spot the kettle, except green and purple. Sargent’s Pictures Rare. Only three pictures by John S. Sargent have been offered at auct on In recent years. A head of a girl wearing a red shawl brought $750 at Christie's. A portrait of lillen Ter ry, which fetched $0,000 and was sold subsequently for $ if?,000, and a half length portrait of a lady sold in 1903 for $685. Still Seek “Treasure Island.” “Treasure island” is still.a mystery. The steam yacht Rose Marine, which left England in October, 1903, to search for the treasure which tradi tion says pirates concealed on Cocos island, in the Pacific, has returned to Southampton. Capt. Mathews, the 6kipper, is reticent as to the results of the voyage, and only says that his belief in the project has been strength ened. The work of searching the is land is very difficult. Was Willing to Change. According to Harper's Weekly, Mar shall P. Wilder tells of a young man in Wilkesbarre who had aspirations to the hand of a daughter of one of the wealthiest men in that place. Re cently the hopeful one had an inter view with the father for the purpose of laying the matter before him. “Well,” growled the old man, ''what I most desire to know is, what pre paration have you made for the fu ture?” "Oh,” exclaimed the suitor, fn a confident and obligl-g tone. "I am a Presbyterian; but, if that denomina tion doesn’t meet wifh your approval, I am quite willing to change.” PHYSICIAN SAYS Children Thrive on Grape Nuts and Cream. A Mass, physician has found a cure for constipation in children — citing fifteen cases—by feeding them Grape Nuts. ‘'Some time ago,” he writes, “I be came interested in your food, Grape Nuts, as a cure for constipation in children. Having tried it in my own family, I have advised it in fifteen cases in which all suffered with con stipation more or less severe. The re sult has been absolute relief in all. “I write this that other children may be benefited.” How much better it is thus to bring about a healthy action in the bowels of growing children by natural means, than to feed them with improper food, requiring some kind of cathartic at intervals to overcome constipation. Grape-Nuts gives energy to the en tire nervous system including the nerves that cause the natural con traction and relaxation of the bowel muscles, that propel the food mass aJong. it is predigested also, and the blood easily absorbs the food as it goes through the body, storing up vitality and force for the functions of all the Organs. I Children especially, should get the right start as to habits of living. They should grow into bright, strong, cheerful men and women. Grape-Nuts solve the question of the start; a wholesome appetite will do the rest, i Childrens teeth are benefited by chewing Grape-Nuts, also. Your dent ist will tell you that a certain amount of exercise in chewing firm food, is necessary to grow strong, beautiful teeth. Teeth need exercise just the same as muscles, if they are to grow Strong and firm as nature intended. Grape-Nuts gives the exercise and also gives material from which good teeth are made. • There's a reason.” Read the little HE WANTS MORE PAY But He Never Gets a Clianc; to Say So ITT again?” said the leather goods salesman, as the coffee and spice forerunner came down the aisle to ward him. ‘‘Out again, in again, on again, off again, Finne gan,” said the coffee and spice man, dropping hin two sample cases cases in the space between the re versed seats. ‘Off again aiyi work again and don't vaii <V»inlr nf H raise again.” "Didn't get it, eh?” "I didn't ask for it. I feel pretty confident now that I could get it if 1 asked for it, but I didn’t feel that way when 1 saw the old man. Talk about your tough propositions! Do you think I’m lacking in nerve?” "You don’t strike me that way. After the bluff you made in that game at the Peelmnkle house I'd hardly think it.” "Well, I'm a violet,” asserted the coffee and spice man. 'Tin a timid fawn when I go in and buck against the old man with designs on the net profits. I ain't new. I've been with my house for two years now and I ought to have rubbed the edge off my "WITH A RADIANT, WELCOMING SMILE.” shyness, but somehow I haven’t. After every phenomenally successful trip I've made (which means every trip), I’ve gone into the lion's den with my mind made up that I'd come out lired or raised and every time I come out feeling grateful that I'm not fired. Oh, he’s a wonder! He’s the smoothest proposition ever I ran across.” ‘‘Turn you down hard?” “Not a turn. He sees you coming and he don't give you a chance to get yourself turned down. “I go in. He jumps up from his desk with a radiant, welcoming smile and grabs my hand and shakes it till my cuffs work loose from the but tons. Then he pulls out a chair and spins it toward me and says: 'I’m glad to see you, Billister, very glad. I'm busy as I can be just now, but I've got to talk to you a little. Let’s see!’ Then he pulls out his watch and looks at it. ‘H'm, yes! Now, look here, 1 don’t want you to think I’m finding fault with you. I appre ciate the work that you have been do ing for me. Understand that. Under stand that distinctly. But—’ ” "Then he butts you?” “You're dead right. There's some thing I’ve sold too low. ‘There might be a little profit in the coffee at that price and it’s quite true we allow our salesmen a little discretion in such matters. But there doesn't seem to be any good reason why we should not have got from a cent to a cent and a quarter more a pound for it. A good salesman should be careful about such matters. Speaking of care fulness, there was that bill you sold to Wrigley at Bilkersville. Now, Wrigley’s rating isn’t just what it should be, and Mr. Stebbs’—Stebbs is the credit man—‘Mr. Stebbs was rath er worked up about that order. He may pay for the goods—’ “ ‘I looked him up at the court house,’ I says, ‘and he seemed to me good for all I could sell him and about $20,000 over. He's got a first class reputation, too. Paid off every cent he owed when he sold his land and got hold of a little cash.’ “ That's as it may be,’ he says. ‘Understand, I'm not finding fault with you. On the whole, perhaps, you've done as well as could be ex pected. Perhaps better. But you must understand distinctly that you must be cautious. I don't approve of recklessness. Your order from Gammer was a rather small one com pared with some he has given us.’ “I explain that I stocked him up to the limit only about a month be fore and he says: 'Keep on stocking him to the limit. Don’t relax just be cause you have done fairly well once before. I like our salesmen to keep up a steady pace, not to do business spasmodically. You think over what I have said on your run. And now— wrell, well, it's past. Go and talk with Stebbs now. Good-by.’ “He shakes hands again as friendly as ever, but he's hurried. And you know it's time to go. Sometimes he tells me a confidential tale of woe about the falling off in business gen erally. I'm told that if you break through his guard and get in your request he asks you to put it in writ ing, so that there will be a record of it, if he can't stave you off by tell ing you that such things adjust them selves automatically. I have not got beyond the first degree yet. flut wait till I go in from this trip.” “It was a pair of deuces you bluffed on at the Peehankle house, wasn't it?” asked the leather-goods man, insinu atingly.—Chicago Daily News. TWO WRITERS OF BIOGRAPHY. Johnson and Boswell Exponents of Different Schools. It is an interesting fact in the his tory of literary genres that two of the great examples of biographical writing occur almost side by side. Less than a decade separates the com pletion of Johnson’s "Lives of the Poets”—happily honored in the new edition of the late Dr. Birkbeck Hill —from the publication of his own life by Boswell. Yet with the latter book a new type of biography came into being. Johnson, in the main, had, like most of his predecessors, fol lowed a simple narrative and exposi tory method, prefixing a plain story of the poet's life to a systematic ac count of his character and a critical estimate of his works; he gathered his fadts and impressions together and spoke for the author and for him self. Boswell, on the other hand, making use of a more dramatic method, succeeded in his attempt to let the author reveal himself, and, in stead of an exposition of character, painted a picture of personality, to which his own comments were sub ordinate. What we see as a type of mind and character in Johnson’s work, we see as a living man in Boswell.— The Forum. India's Cotton Crop. The cotton crop of India was larg er last year, 1905, than the general average. About 20,000,000 acres were planted in cotton and the yield was about 3,500,000 bales. During the year there were exported from India to other countries over 2,125,000 bales of raw cotton at a value of over $81, 000,000, the four countries, Japan, Ger many, Belgium and Italy, in the order named, being (he largest purchasers, they together buying nearly 1,500,000 bales of Indian cotton, while Japan alone took nearly 500.000 bales. AVegetable Preparationfor As - similalmg the Food andRegula ting the Stomachs and Bowels of iNKAN IS/tHILDKfcN Promotes Digestion,Cheerful ness and Rest.Contains neiltier Opium,Morphine nor>lineral. Not Narcotic. Jbape of OU Dr SAMVEL PITCHER frmp!in Seat' Slx.Smtui ♦ KxkrUtSJk yfaar Srrfl * HS/m Strd - Ctonfod Sugar Winlrrytrrn now. Aperfecl Remedy forConslipa flon, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signalure of CtL&ft&ZZUr. NEW YORK. EXACT COPT OF WRAPPER. -mOM CASTORIfl For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of TMC CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY. © o © as with joyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play—when in health—and how conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they ' enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and the wholesome diet of which they should partake. How tenderly their health should be preserved, not by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injuri ous or objectionable nature, and if at anytime a remedial agent is required, to assist nature, only those of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs has come into general favor in many millions of well informed families, whose estimate of its quality and excellence is based upon personal knowledge and use. Syrup of Figs has also met with the approval of physicians generally, because they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputa ble physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs, obtained, by an original method, from certain plants known to them to act most beneficially and presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Californian blue figs are used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret remedy and hence we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do not approve of patent medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication. Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs always has the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.— plainly printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in bottles of one size only. If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size, or having printed thereon the name of any other company, do not accept it. If you fail to get the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family should always have a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial for the parents and the children, whenever a laxative remedy is required. a © © v M. Combanaire, the French explorer, recently was lost in the forests of Cambodia. He got separated from his party and wandered through the soli tude for eight days without any other nourishment than the water he could get from the marshes in the jungle. This Is No Joke. Hunt’s Cure has saved more peo ple from the “Old Scratch” than any other known agent, simply because it makes scratching entirely unneces sary. One application relieves any form of itching skin disease that ever afflicted mankind. One box guaran teed to cure any one case. In the course of conversation one must change the solid gold of one’s thoughts into countless pieces of such small coin that one invariably ap pears poor.—Carmen Sylva. A Harmless Laxative. If you must take a laxative, take a harm less one. Lax-Fos does not gripe, therefore does not irritate. Irritation is what does the harm. Price 50 cents. The real test of virtue conies after office hours. SICK HEADACHE -^Positively cured by these Little Pills. Tliey also relieve Dis tress trom Dyspepsia. In digestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect rem edy tor Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue. Pain In the side, TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL POSE. SMALL PRICE Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. Ancestry of Dion Boucicault. The name of Boucicault is French in origin. Dion Boucicault was the son of a French refugee who fled to : Ireland and married an Irish girl. He j was named Dion after his father’s ; friend, Dr. Dionysius Lardner, a noted British writer on physical science. \ Are You Just As Well As You Wish to Be ? Every subscriber to Good Health is privileged to submit questions on health topics to the editors. The most interesting of these questions are an swered in the Question Box. a monthly department of the magazine. Others are answered by letter without cost. This is but one of many interesting features of. Good Health, the oldest health journal in the world A big, handsomely illustrated monthly magazine. A quarter and this ad. with your name in the space below will bring you this handsome health magazine for the next three months. Sample copy ten cents. GOOD HEALTH PUBLISHING CO., BATTUE CREEK. MICH. Name 60 Bus. Winter Wheat Per Acre That’, the yield of Salier* Red Cross Hybrid Winter Wheat. Send 2e In stamps for free sample of same, as also catalogue of Winter Wheat., Rye. Rarley. Cloven. Timothy, Grasses. Bulbs, Trees, etc. for fall planting' ■ALZEBSEEDVO., Rng.I.LnCrene'wii. A. N. K.—I (1906—32) 2138. (PILES no money till ir^l VeVdhJDBSTHOftHTOU t MINOR'1C AFTER ITS ' FIRST BATH WITH (ID SOAP, A Physicians, Pharmacists,and Nurses endorse Cuticura Soap because of its delicate, medicinal, emollient, sana tive, and antiseptic proper ties derived from Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, united with the purest of cleansing ingredients and most re freshing of flower odors. For preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, as well as for all the purposes of the toilet and bath, Cuti cura Soap is priceless. Abso lutely pure and may be used from the hour of birth. Sold throughout ths world. Cuticura Soap, 25c.. Oint ment, 50c., Resolvent, 50c. (in form of Chocolate Coatfd Pills, 25c. per vial of 60), may bo had of all druggists. Potter Drug Jr Chem. Corp., Sole Props., Boston, Mao Maiied Fret, “Ail About the Skin, Scalp, and Hair rz-——- a SWISS' Wintersmiths Chill Tonic CURES Chilis AND MalariA ON A Positive Guarantee. IS BETTER THAN QUININE AND PLEASANT TO TAKE. SOc and $1.00 Per Bottle. Ask Your Druggist for It. If he can not supply you send price to Arthur Peter A Co » General Agents. LOUISVILLE. KY. It will be sent by express prepaid 1 was a Victim of Dyspepsia for a number of years, and suffered from loss of appetite, headache and pains in the lower bowels. I used many different treatments but was unable to get the com plaint under control.” This was the experience of Mrs. Georgia Anna Arties, of Shan non, N. C., and she writes of the result of her continued ef forts for finding relief: “I was advised by friends to try St. Joseph’s Liver Regulator which I did, and before I had taken one package I found that I was being greatly benefited. I have used three boxes and stand ready to pronounce it the best and finest medicine I ever used or heard of, and I am tell ing all my friends about it.” St Joseph’s J,lver Regulator has been on lie market for twenty-five years—it is PJJ* p in large tin boxes—It Is guaranteeea 0 give satisfaction and keep its mil irength in any climate. It should be uteo 1 all eases oi Indigestion. Constipation, B lusneas. Dyspepsia. Sour Stomach. Drop ■ .iver Complaint. Heart Palpitation. On nd Fever, and all derangement* oi the li •* nd kidneys. BERSTLC MEDICINE CO, Chattanoofa, Tans. At all Dealert, la 2i~eaat Bain.