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JITwo deaf mutes were conversing. said the first mute, philoso phically, "we all have our troubles." How true that is, ’ said the second. "I have to tie my wife’s hands every might so she won’t talk in her sleep.” ▲ new directory by the Royal Ob servatory of Belgium shows that there mr® 1.55 G astronomers and somewhat over 650 observatories in the world. Of the observatories, more than 100 mre in the British Isles, with nearly m® many in the United States, the mumber in other countries beiug much ■mailer. No Need For Alarm. A. Barton Hepburn, at the conven tion of the American Bankers’ Asso ciation at Atlantic City, said of a cer tain argument: "But that argument fails to cheer. On the contrary, it fills us with gloom and foreboding. It is like the cry, Intended to be reassuring, that came to the farmer across the turnip field. “A farmer, on a frosty autumn af ternoon, went out into his turnip field and began to gather turnips. Th® •arly sun sank in the west, and as the bluish dusk came on, the farmer per oeived, at the other end of the field, two men who, laying down a bag, be gan to dig with frantic haste. _ "The farmer watched the pair in wiome perplexity. What could they be doing? And he was just putting his band to his cheek to shout and ask them their business, when one of them rose up and yelled, loudly and re assuringly: '* 'Don’t let us disturb you; we are only prigging a few’ ourselves.’ ” They who w’ork as if the Master was •ver near find Him always by them. H® has no real riches who does not put the treasures of friendship first of ■ll. In South Africa, where the thunder storms are terrific, lightning often ■trikes ironstone beds, and blue flames —sometimes firing buildings—are al leged to play about such outcrops two •r three hours after a storm. The practical limit of deep-sea div ing, under the best conditions. Is placed by Hill and Greenwood of the London hospital, at thirty-five to forty fathoms. A special study of eight years has shown these physiologists that the chief danger to the diver arises from the nitrogen absorbed by the blood and other body fluids, and that It is the absorbed nitrogen that produces the ill effects of rising too Quickly. The breathlessness and op pression felt by the working diver are results of poisoning by carbonic acid, Instead of direct effects of the great pressure. Witli special air pumps and extra precautions the experimenters descended thirty-five fathoms in a ■cotch loch, and, rising very slowly, were none the worse for the experi ence, but the oxygen required for regu lar working at such a depth is so great In amount that pneumonia and convul sions are commonly produced. # 1 Denver Directory everywhere for $27.00. Send for our free »'at alorue of naddlr-.H and harness. Lowest prices 111 tne tJ. S. The Fred Mueller Saddle & llnr ■eee Co„ 1413-10 Larimer St.. Denver. Colo. FAMOUS J. H. WILSON STOCK SADDLES Ash your dealer for them. Take no other. QTftl/C REPAIRS of every known make ®I v * of etove. furnace or rann* Oeo. V Fallen. 1331 Lawrence. Denver. Phone 725. vnrrp plants*. >kkds. Beston«-• th. I nrrN Free Cut log. In ern'l Nudum leu, I llwlsw Denver. Co.o. Agents Wanted. BROWNPA LACE HOT European Plan. SI.OO and Upward. AMERICAN HOUSE Union Depot. Beet U a day hotel In the West. American plan. The M.J.O’FALLON SUPPLY CO. WHOLESALE Plumbing: and Steanj Goods Boilers und rndlutors for heating residences and g* "c hulld ngs. General steam and water works | lies; plpo and fittings, valves and packing, i pipe, sewer pipe, cement, garden hose, lire : elc. Inquire for our special pipe cutting Write for general Inf* rmatlon. OFFICE, 1 FYNKOOI* STREET. DENVER, COLORADO. E. BURLINGAME & CO., ASSAY OFFICE aND LABORATORY ■ctabliehed in Colorado.lB66. Samples by mall or •sprees will receive prompt and careful attention Bold & Silver Bullion Concentration Tests- 100 , & t V,“ , t*s£.!#to 1736-I7X* Lawrence St.. Danger. Colo* MATCHLESS D. H. BALDWIN A CO.. Manufacturers of the World’s Greatest Pianos I factories; 6 separate makes of pianos. Capital end surplus 12.800.000.00. Buy from the manufacturers, the dealers do. Address 1484 California St.. Denver. PIANOS AND ORGANS Send your name with this ad. for Ihu of fin*- bargains In pianos and organs. Pianos from s7fi up. Organs from 115 to $25 up. rinver Pianos, can be uluyml by anyone, $450 up Instruments sold on easy ternrs to suit buyer. Victor talking machines sold at fac tory prices on easy terms. Write for catalog of our different Instru ments Till? KNfOfTT CAMPIIFI.L MUSIC COMPANY. 1825-31 California St.. Denver. Colo. HOWARD E. BURTON, .JsKS... Specimen prices: Gold, ilhvr, iuuu. $l. oWy\ ellvor, 75c; gold, 60c: sine or copper. Cyanide tests. Mailing envelopes and Mil price list sent on application. Control and umpire work solicited. Leudvllle. Celo. Reference. Carbonate National Bank. I Women as Well as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney and Bladder Trouble. Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, discourages and lessen s ambition; beauty, — vigor and cheerful ness soon disappear , when the kidneys are —UyilfvA, out of order or dis _ eased. Kidney trouble has k ecome so prevalent ril i** iat * 9 llot uncom_ /V ,uon * or a child to be Wlf wy&HMf- born afflicted with —weak kidneys. If the child urinates too often, if the urine scalds the flesh, or if, when the child reaches an age when it should be able to control the passage, it is yet afflicted with bed-wet ting, depend upon it, the cause of the diffi culty is kidney trouble, and the first step should be towards the treatment of [ these important organs. This unpleasant i trouble is due to a diseased condition of l the kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as most people suppose. ! Women as well as men are made miser able with kidney and bladder trouble, ! and both need the same great remedy. ; The mild and the immediate effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold by druggists, in fifty cent and one-dollar jfijfV...lTkjfr size bottles. You may have a sample Tmttlr by mail free, also a Homs of swamp-Root. pamphlet telling all about Swamp-Root, including many of the thousands of testi monial letters received from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N.Y., be sure and mention this paper. Don’t make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, and the ad dress, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. "* Very Much Alike. ! "See here Pat,” said Ills employes, “didn’t you tell me that when you was out west the Indians scalped you? and now you have your hat off I see you have an extraordinary quantity of hair! You certainly told me so, didn’t you, Pat?” "Oi did sor,” answered Pat, "but Oi bear in moind now that it was me brudder, Moike. It’s thot much we be aloike, that Oi think Oi’m Moike an’ Moike be me.” Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain Mercury m mercury will surely destroy the souse of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering •* through the mucous surfacos. Such articles should never he used except on prescrip tions from reputable) physicians, as the damage they will dots ten fold to the good you can possibly do five from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, <)., contains no mer cury, snd Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get tbs genuine. It Is tnken Internally and made In Toledo, Ohio, by F. J Cheney* Co. Testimonials free. Ljld by Druggists. Price, 75c. per bottle. Toko Ball's Family Pills for constipation. Nut Growing Industry of the South. I "Nut growing is a comparatively new industry in the south Atlantic and Gulf states, but it promises to de ' velop into one of the most important In that section,” said J. Z. Reid, a prosperous planter of Florida. "The | most popular nut is the pecan, and its popularity is probably due to the de velopment of systematic methods of grading it and cracking it with mar chinery operated by steam or electrle power. This makes possible the mar keting of the meats of the nut ready ( for use. "The demand is always much great er than the supply and many planters are now turning their attention to the nut raising industry. It is not un common for a tree to bear as high as 200 pounds of nuts in one season and most of these sell at from 60 to 70 cents a pound. It does not require much figuring to show that the pecan orchards which abound in some sec tions are paying investments." A Girl's Giggle. Samuel Shadwell, a touchy old man living in an Indiana village, had a pane of glass broken in his house one night not long ago and next day he had a ten-year-old girl named Minnie Dayton arrested for it. When the case was called In court he was asker how he knew it was Minnie. He admitted that he didn’t see her, but heard her giggle. When asked if her giggle was different from , that of any other girl he said it was, i but he couldn’t tell why. Neither could he imitate the giggle, and he lost his case. We all know what a girl’s giggle Is, but If any of us were asked to give an 1 Imitation of it we’d probably fail. A boy may titter, but when It comes to giggling only a girl can do that. WHAT WAS IT The Woman Feared? What a comfort to find It is not "the 1 awful thing” feared, but only chronic indigestion, which proper food can re lieve. A woman In Ohio says: "I was troubled for years with indi- ( gestion and chronic constipation. At , times I would have such a gnawing in my stomach that I actually feared , i I had a—l dislike to write or even { think of what I feared. 1 “Seeing an account of Grape-Nuts • I decided to try it. After a short time I was satisfied the trouble was not * the awful thing I feared but was still ; bad enough. However, I was relieved 1 of a bad case of dyspepsia by chang- ’ ing from improper food to Grape-Nuts. 1 "Since that time my bowels have 1 been as regular as a clock. I had also 1 t noticed before I began to eat Grape- j Nuts that I was becoming forgetful of ( where I put little things about the t house, which was very annoying. i "Bub since the digestive organs have t become strong from eating Grape- i ! Nuts, my memory is good and my ‘ mind ns clear as when I was young, j and I am thankful.” Name given by j Poßtura Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the littia booklet, "The Ro&d to Well- t ville,” in packages. a reason." c COLORADO NEWS ITEMS Charles A. Baldwin of Broadmoor, at Colorado Springs, has a new auto mobile that cost about $15,000. The Union Pacific has completed a large water tank at Platteville and will soon begin remodeling and enlarging the depot. The contract for the erection of the new city hall at Trinidad will be let January Ist. Additional ground for the site has been donated by Edward West. 1 An Illinois association was started at Boulder a few days ago, and now tho southerners are contemplating a Dixie club. The annual reunion of Union Colony pioneers will be held at Greeley De cember 7th. It is now thirty-seven years since the first settlers came. The entire switchboard capacity of the Florence telephone office is now oc cupied and the company is planning to expend $25,000 to enlarge the equip ment. The ladies of Greeley gave a banquet to the members of the Greeley Cham ber of Commerce on the night of No vember 22nd, at which plates were laid for 175 persons. Instructions have been given the po lice of Colorado City to rid the town of its opium dens and cocaine joints, and a vigorous campaign will bo op ened against such places. The citizens of Johnstown have voted unanimously for the issuance of: $20,000 bonds for the building of a water works system. The water will be furnished by the Highlino ditch. The town of Frederick in south western Weld county, has petitioned to become incorporated. Firestone, Frederick and Dacomah are coal towns, within a mile of each other. In excavating for the new addition to the Denver postofllce a few days ago the workmen found an old flint lock musket. Pioneers say that the ground was once occupied by Colonel Chivington’s cabin. Deputy Sheriff Robert Meldrum, who is charged with killing David Lambert at the Tom Boy mine, after the latter had fatally wounded Thomas Sullivan, was given a preliminary hearing at Telluride Saturday and his bond fixed at $7,500. H. E. Bald of Denver, who has been drilling for artesian water near Ora Junta, five miles north of Florence, re ; cently struck a big flow at a depth of , 105 feet. The well will pump gal lons a minute. Mr. Bald owns 120 acres which will be irrigated by it. The Arkansas river, which has been muddy for the last twelve years on ac count of placer operations near Gran ite, is clearer at present than for many years. The placer men have closed down the workings for the winter.'The tailings were all dumped into the river. Work has begun on the new I. O. O. F. hall at Eaton, to cost SIG,OOO. To erect the building a company was in corporated and bonds issued bearing 7 per cent, interest, payable semi-annu- i ally. Most of the bonds were taken by 1 the lodge, which numbers 140 mem- J ! bers. 1 Thursday, November 21ct, was i "Clean-up Day" in Fruita, in pursu ance of a proclamation by the mayor Nearly all the citizens turned out, and by night the town was "as clean as a whistle" and the workers ready for the big banquet tendered them by the women of Fruita. Application has been received at the Pueblo land office from James H. Pea body and others of Canon City for a right of way over government lands for the Royal Gorge railway. According to the statement made, the railway will be eight and one-half miles in length to the top of the Royal gorge. Much confusion has been current throughout the state recently in re gard to the use of the name of the State University. As It Is supported by the commonwealth the institution remains properly the University of Colorado although It may well be called the State University. But the school never was or will be "Boulder University.” The Colorado Agricultural College held during the year ending Novem ber 15, 1907, 113 Farmers’ Institutes with a total attendance of 19,790 per sons. Fifteen stops were made on the Santa Fe Institute train with an at tendance of 1,705. Through the Farm ers’ Institutes and the Institute train the college force has met during the year 21,495 people. The annual exhibition of the Pike's Peak Poultry Association will be held at Colorado Springs, December 9th to 14th. Denver, Pueblo, Boulder, Fort Collins and Canon City fanciers have made an unusually large number of en tries. W. F. Kendrick of Denver will show a large number of pheasants. Twenty-five silver cups and more than 100 special prizes have been offered. The magnificent bronze statue of Winfield Scott Stratton which is to be erected in his honor by the Strat ton estate executors in Stratton park, Colorado Springs, has just been com pleted by Miss Nellie V. Walker, a Chicago sculptress. It is eight feet high and shows Mr. Stratton in a standing position. The cost of the statue is $5,000. It will rest on a granite pedestal seven feet high which coßt $2,000. Three inter-state debates have been arranged this year by the University of Colorado. As is the usual custom they will all occur in the spring of the year. Only one of them will take place at the home of another institu- i tion—that with the University of Utah I which was contested in Colorado last j year. The other two debates which ; have been agreed upon with the Uni versities of Missouri and Kansas will both be held at the State University | at Boulder. Sculptor Macmonnies has notified | tho monument committee of the Colo rado Pioneer Society that in deference to the objections of a great number of the pioneers lie will not surmount tho monument with the figure of an Indian as he at first proposed. He asks the assistance of the pioneers in collecting any photographs of old-timers or pi oneers, or hunters, or trappers, or cos tumes, saddles, bridles, gloves, belts, pistol cases or old guns—in fact, any thing that might be characteristic o r the pioneer—worn or used in tlio life of the time. WOMAN KNEW HUMAN NATURE. Personal Experience Counted In Her Indorsement of New Pastor. A Philadelphia congregation was called upon not long ago to choose a pastor. The last three ministers had been persona non grata with most of the parishioners; and before selecting another the congregation did some pretty hard thinking. There was one woman of experience whose voice car ried particular weight. Preacher after preacher was invited to the pulpit for a trial sermon, and all, In the final analysis, were rejected by the female arbiter. At last there came along a possible incumbent who met with her approval. "The reason I am sure he will give satisfaction,” she said, "is because he has the right kind of a wife for a minister. She allows him to rant around all he wants at home and doesn’t sass back. I found out a long while ago—shortly after I was mar ried myself, in fact —that a man who hasn’t that privilege at home works off his spleen elsewhere. A minister venth it on his congregation. That was why we couldn’t stand the last preacher. This one will be all right. We won’t hear a peep out of him.” And upon that unique recommenda tion tho congregation really did give ( the man a call. According to last ac -1 counts both he and the congregation were doing well. The wife has not been heard from. BABY ITCHED TERRIBLY. Face and Neck Covered with Inflamed Skin—Doctors No Avail—Cured by Cuticura Remedies. "My baby’s face and neck were cov ered with itching skin similar to ecze ma, and she suffered terribly for over a year. I took her To a number of doc tors, and also to different colleges, to no avail. Then Cuticura Remedies were recommended to me by Miss G —. I did not use it at first, as I had tried so many other remedies without any favorable results. At last 1 tried Cuti cura Soap, Cuticura Ointment and Cuticura Resolvent Pills, and to my surprise noticed an improvement. After using three boxes of the Cuti cura Ointment, together with the Soap ! and Pills, I am pleased to say she is altogether a different child and the picture of healttli. Mrs. A. C. Brestlin, 171 N. Lincoln St., Chicago, 111., Oct. 20 and 30, 1906.” One of Many. An Atchison woman started out to buy her fall hat. First she visited the openings and looked and looked. Then she took a friend and went around to the millinery stores and j "tried on” again, saying, of course, that her "hair looked perfectly ter ! rlble.” Then she went home and 1 thought and thought, and, finally, went back to the stores and “tried on” once more; and thought, and thought, and then bought a hat which Is so grotesque and hideous that her relatives and friends blush with shame every time they see her wear it, and strangers stare at her, wonder ing what kind of courage it takes to wear such a looking hat. But she did the best she could. —Atchison (Kan.) Globe. Asthmatics, Read This. Xf you are afflicted with Asthma write me at once and learn of some thing for which you will be grateful the rest of your life. Rev. J. R. Rader, 822 Broadway, Denver, Colo. Every man has his appointed day and way; life is brief and irrevoca ble, but it is the work of virtue to ex tend your fame by youi deeds. — Virgil. One of the Essentials jf the happy homes of to-day is a vast fund of information as to the best methods of promoting health and happiness and right living and knowledge of tho world’s best products. Products of actual excellence and reasonable claims truthfully presented and which have attained to world-wide acceptance through the approval of the Well-Informed of the World; not of indi viduals only, but of the many who have the happy faculty of selecting and obtain ing the best the world affords. One of the products of that class, of known component parts, an Ethical remedy, approved by physicians and com mended by the Well-Informed of the World as a valuable and wholesome family laxative is the well-known Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine, manu factured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists. The most olmtuiatn caeo cf Eczema can b« qalckly and completely cured by tlie application of llt-ULell's Otuiic ,-tit. It alto curca Blotchy, Rough and I'lmpled j Skin, Erysipelas, Teller. Ulcers, and all other akin discuses. Le on* applying tlia ointment, bat ho tho parts affected, using llalakclrs Medicated Sonp. llcliLcll's i Weed and Liver I*lll* totio np tho liver and purify tho blood. Your druggist sells these preparations. Ointment, toe a box; Soap, 26c acuko ; pills, ■.v.en bottle. Send for book of testimonials and learn tv lint these wonderful remedies liavo done for others. JOHNSTON, HOLLOWAY ft «0„ 531 Camstacc Siam. Pnuoclfkm. P». M PUTNAM FADELESS DYES MfMar and hstereolora < than an* other dje. One 10c package colors all fibers. They dye in cold water better than any other dya. You cai, 4m •BI SttMnf Riilwui fining ipul Writ* tor ire* booklet—Now to Dye. bleach and Mu Colors. MO it ROE DRUG CO., Quincy, Illinois Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for , infants and children, and see that It i Bears the Signature of, In Use For Over HO Years. I The Kind You Have Always Bought A Delicate Task. "The newspapers,” said the orator 1 solemnly, "do not tell the truth.” "Perhaps not,” answered the editor, regretfully. "We do our best. But you know there is nothing more difficult than to tell the truth in away that won’t put It up to some one to chal lenge your veracity." FITS, St. Vitus Dance and all Nervous Diseases permanently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. Send for Free $2.00 trial bottle and treatise. Dr. R. 11. Kline, Ld., 931 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa. Slow Growth of Oyster. When an oyster is a fortnight old it is not much larger than tho head of a pin. At the end of four years’ growth it is fit for the table. SICS HEAOACiIE _- _ 4 Positively cured by CARTERS “T 1 ":- They also relieve Dis -8 T"IT IF tress from Dyspepsia, In ■OP 1 k M digest iou and Too Hearty ■3 E Vl* K Eating. A perfect rem- RH WSBI A edy for Dizziness, Nun- Ba rCIL«). sea, Drowsiness, Dad Side, TORPID LI VEIL They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE, Genuine Must Bear uflr.l ti.o Fac-Simile Signature ■K& ■J I REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. /KfT\ J BANK POWDERI 25 ounces for 25 cents m The original 23 ounce M KCfIJ can. Others have copied W the can, but K C quality has never been equaled wi. at any price, JAQUES MFG. CO. Chicago NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER I THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT. Jk J ] Capsicum-Vaseline. IIP" ' |||f I EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE lif I PEPPER PLANT TAKEN 'I Mi I DIRECTLY IN VASELINE I- ||jfl I DON’T WAIT TILL THE PAIN ">1 I COMES—KEEP A TUBE HANDY A QUICK. SURE. SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN —PRICE 1 Ee. —IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES MADE OF PURE TIN—AT ALL DRUCCISTS AND DEALERS. OR BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c. IN POSTACE STAMPS. A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster, and will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of the article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve Head ache and Sciatica V/e recommend it as the best and safest external counter irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and all Rheumatic. Neuralgic and Gouty complaints. A trial will prove what we claim for it. and it will be found to be invaluable in the household and for children. Once used no family will be without it. Many people say "it is the best of all your preparations.” Accept no preparation of vaseline unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it is not genuine. Send your address and we will mall ou- Vaseline Booklet describing our preparations which will Interest you. 17 State St. CHESEBROUGH MFG. GO. New York City j W. L. DOUGLAS E $3.00 & $3.50 SHOES t^orld fftwV*SHOES FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY. AT ALL PRICES. C 9 K ft (To any ono who can provo W. L. Wf PM, vl# ) Douf/ins doom not mako it moll ??rVto ) marc Man’a S 3 4C S3.SO mhova 'Y—- brfln ■tuvufcfft M \,thun any other manufacturer. yirajlk THE REASON W. L. Douglas shoes are worn by more people yhS£&k •; in all walks of llfo than any other innko, Is because of their \yC- Lgtffg excellent style, easy-llttlng, and superior wearing qualities. jBH YW Tho selection of tho leathers uml other materials for each par* ¥tViY «>f the shoe, ami every detail of the making Is looked after by the most coniplcteorgnnlzation of superintendents, foreiuennnd w'M skilled shoemakers, who receive the bigbest wages paid in the shoe industry, ami whoso workinnnship cannot bo excelled. a If I could take you into my large factories at Brockton,Mass., VyZ and show you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes are made, you w. 'fU'/V ■would then understand why they hold their shape, lit hotter, 'xS' wear longer and are of greater value than any other uuikc. f>r,x & My $4 .OO and 55.00 Gilt Erl pa Shoes cannot ha atjaxHcd at any prfc9m CAUTION! Tho genuine have W.L. Douglas name and price -i nup.-d on bottom. Tuk« No Substitute. Ask your dealer for \V. L. Douglas shoes. If lie • aniiot supply you, sena direct to factory. Shoes sent everywhere by mail. Catalog tree. W.L-Dougla*. Brockton. Mas I Agonies I I Of Pain I Bj Never five up, end think that H ■ an women, youraelt included, hers B| ■ to suffer pain, H ■ Thousands ol women have writ. H ■ ten io tell how they have cured ■$ 9 their womanly Ula, and relieved H H their peine; and over a million H have been benefited, In various ■§ 19 other forms ol female disease, dur* H ■ Inf the peel 50 years, by tbst H ■ popular and successful female B B remedy ■ t CARDUI WOMAN’S RELIEF 111 “I believe 1 would now have HI ■H been dead,” writes Mrs. Minnie BB Lambc, of Lebanon Junction, Ky^ M "if It hadn’t been for Cardui. I had suffered with bad cramping M spells, pains In my back, sides Ifl and arms, and awful bearing-down ■g H pains. Now these pains have ail ■ gone, as a result of using CarduL** yj At All Druggists | E9 WRITE FOR FREB ADVICE, B H statins ago nnd describing!: symp toms, to Ladies Advisor y Dept., HI al The Chattanooga Medicine Ca, KM Chattanooga, Tenn. E 39 A RAZOR AND STROP FOR $1 tVo nre r* mlltiK rarer ami ctrnp hr mall poat paid for II ml. 'Hit* razor l» of l«-si r.te-s-1 iruarantced to ho»d • perfect t«luo. If It ih.n't. M*tul It Imt-k anil net a oum. hollow grouml—ro'iiml or-'piara point. W \ trick Mad*, r iiioi-r lot'iUio. A Uoiilde l>«rl»-r rtrnp of lxat liom hide and tnnvai-.t; iiic'il-I ir.vlvel. Hold only by tl*a IC. W. Illiake ICii/.or < 0.. ttt N. Center Street. liradford. fk H PARKER'S HAIR UALSA?.I Clnnwi beauti lies tbr^halx; tfevrr Fails to iirr'oru vJroy Hair to Its Youthful Color. Cum ac-nlp cliaesre* to hr I bin*. : • , .U. • v PATENTS^iiijiS DEFIANCE STARCH ".“J'rocj'o.ru.Sf Thompson’* Eye Water W. N. U., DENVER, NO. 48, 1907.