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THE YALE EXPOSITOU FIUDAY, l)i:c. , 1007 MGIIT SWEATS, IMO APPETITE, USED PE-RU-NA. P l lA.AV liOITK, 1155 W. 1 XVX bt., Chicago, 111., writes: "I take pleasure in writinsf you these few lhu-s, thinking tlierc nisiy le other women MiITerinr the same hs l'cl itl. "I had niv complaints for over a year, night sweatsnll winter anil nonpn'etlte. I was run-down so far that 1 had to hit down to do my cookiuy, I was so weak. "1 tried many different medicines and doctors ilIko. JS'othin seemed to do me Hny pood. The doctors wanted to oper ate on me. "At last I wrote to Dr. llartman. I told him just exactly how I was. and he told me what ailed me and how I should take I'erune, "I did as l.e told me for four months, and now I am all cured. .xoonunn ten now tnanurni I am to him, us I had piven up all hopes of i ever petting- well ajrain "I am a widow and the mother of six small child r. mi who depend on my sup port. 1 wo."k all day uud seldom get tired. "1 took five bottles of Peruna in all. "Any woman wishing to know more about rnv ease may write to me and I will gladly tell all about it. "I thank Dr. llartman for what he lias drm for m' AS SHE HAD BEEN ORDERED. Domestic Cleared Everything Left Over Out of the Ice Box. There recently entered the service cf a Cleveland family a domestic of Scandinavian origin. She had never teen a refrigerator before, and the lady of the house, after initiating her Into Its mysteries, instructed her never to leave anything old or left over In the Ice-box. but to keen the refrigerator perfectly clean and fresh J by throwing the old things away each j morning. The very next day the mistress, I looking out of the window, observed I something peculiar In the yard. ! "What is that, Sophie?" she asked. I "And how did it get there?" j "That is o'.d Ice, ma'am," was the j proud response, "left over from yes- J terday. I t'rew It away lake you tol' j me." Harper's Weekly. A Real Schemer. I For six months she had been plead- j Ing with him to buy an automobile. j l0?;:hG ivoivu iui im: nuiiuuiau mm. ji i bought an automobile I would have to cut down our expenses." "What expenses?" she asked. "Why, table expenses. For instance, If I had an automobile I couldn't afford to have chicken every Sunday." She laughed. "Why, you goose! If you had an automobile you could run down ! enough' fowls to have chicken every day, to say nothing of big turkeys and nic roasting pigs. Why is it men haven't any brains?" And the next day he hustled around t the nearest dealer and ordered a racing machine. The Worst Was Yet to Come. A southern pulpit orator, one Sun day marnlng. was describing the ex perience of the prodigal son. In his endeavor to impress his hearers with the shame and remorse that this young man felt and his desire to cast away bis wicked doings, he spoke thus: "DIs young man got to thinking about his meanness and his misery, aid he tuk off his coat and frowed it away. And den he tuk off his vest aad frowed dat away. And den he tuk off his shirt and frowed dat away too. And den he come to hisself." Japanese Men Outnumber Women. Japan is one of the few countries where the men outnumber the women. The ratio there Is 9S0 to 1,000. -r iv xx m SPOT GA8H FOR SOLDIERS AND HEIRS AH fdenl noMlcri on4 Miloriwho nrrrl 50 dM b-wn anil Inwi unit who buiiipMwdrit plhn JM'm-re V-fnp' Jon'it. IS! 4. rrhMtll tm(lclit(.iil honifH-i(l rtjth'n whlrh 1 buy. If imlitlpr lfU'il. hi bfOri-an hp II. Tiilk loil1 l(llpr. wilwnfid hHrn. mil Hump. Bfiidipr rpitlTi who wpnt Wt r Hmith ii-r ttt war ant humps pr1m1 (oT'mmrnl land. Xifl tmf ami muk koiiip pay monrr. Wrtw Hrs KV J. Cofi, WaUiugUu, 1. C, lor farther particular. Detroit Trade School OFFERS Cocrsra In bricklaying, plastering, core making, moulding, machine shop practice, sign writing and plumbing. For printed matter and other particulars address, Y. M. C Detroit. Mich. th A 8 Till? 7 ITTI r iriL Mi ILL By ZOE ANDERSON NORRIS (Copyright.) Clifford was wait Ins for his laundry. That was how he happened to see her first. The clerk was busy turning over package, after package In his search for the one hearing Clifford's name. lie returned the littlo la undress' Klance with a quick flash of admira tion, she was so pretty, so unusually pretty, with so pathetic an expression in her hipr blue eyes. His glance swept across the Ironing-room filled with laundry girls of every age and descrip tion. Many of them were fairly pret ty, hut none of them came up to his little laundress for real beauty. She shone amongst them like a gem. 'Is this jour bundle?" asked the clerk. cnnoru looked long at the name, written seemingly in hieroglyphics ies, paid he, discovering at last some letters that reminded him dimly of his own name, and he still re mained after the clerk had counted out his change, looking at the pretty little laundress, patiently ironing away at the linen of worthless fellows like himself. Perhaps she had ironed his own. ' lie took up the bundle tenderly. It had suddenly become precious to him. Her face haunted him. How pretty she was! Entirely too pretty to work as she did. Heavens! Couldn't she find some easier work than that? To think of standing on one's feet all day long day after day ironing! He could hardly Imagine anything more tiresome. In liia studio, he found himself con- j slant ly drawing her face on bits of paper with a pencil. Failing in catch : lng the likeness, he tore up these lit- tlo papers and made numerous ; sketches of her in black and white, the lifelessness of which mocked at the beauty of her features. In the course of time the studio came to be strewn with these indifferent sketches and still he had failed to catch the features of the laundress in their rare perfection. "May I ask who it is?" Raid his friend Wonder Jy, who in the interim of his law studies made Clifford's stu dio hi loafing place. "My ideal," answered Clifford short ly, and indeed by this time that is what the little laundress had become. One evening as he stood on the cor ner opposite the laundry it had be come a habit of his lately to haunt those corners morning and evening worshiping her from afar she ap peared at the door and glanced up at the clouds. With her blue eyes raised thus, he thought the had the look of a madonna. ' He followed her at a discret dis tance, absoibed in the pearlincss of her skin, and the witching curls that hung cllngingly to her white neck. Was there ever anything so exquis ite. Meanwhile the laundress walked llHuUK' llfl D 11 !. tt,r,t 1,.,.. "ins her "a. entered a'cottage. exactly like every other cottage in the row, neat. K'iuare and covered with morning-glories. loosing her thus. Clifford turned beck and went home to his studio, where in the waning light lie tried in vain to reproduce her face. It eluded him like a will-o'-the-wisp. He squeezed out color after color again and again, mixing in brushfuls rather than with the knife to avoid muddying, but careful as he wa?, the colors were not to be com pared with the transparent beauty of her skin as he remembered It. He tossed his brushes aside In des pair, and flinging himself in a chair by the window, leaned out. The rain fell silently like tears. The smell of the wet grass rose gracefully to his window, mingled with the odor of a bed of mignonette on the plot be neath. These tranquil odors and the calm of the quiet night failed to quell his restlessness and disappointment. He had made a miserable failure. He was always making miserable fail ures. He wondered if all artists grieved over their mistakes as he did. He began to wish that he had chosen some other occupation In life. At that moment, a natty bank clerk ascended the .steps across the street, furled his umbrella, brushed the rain drops from his coat sleeves and en tered his boarding house. He had often seen him returning from his work and envied him. His life was possibly prosaic enough. In all prob ability he went through a daily tread mill of work mapped out for hfin with out variations, but he rented well when that work was done. There were no poor drawings to grin hideously at him from studio walls, no ruined can vases worse by far than skeletons turned with their faces to the walls In his Ktudio closets, no pictures to haunt him upon which the paint wa9 laid thick as slabs because of the faces painted one fbove the other a score or so deep. He had the best of It, that natty Jl'tle bank clerk. He had. Indeed! As the door closed upon him, Clif ford turned with a short laugh and looked back into the studio, which had suddenly become illuminated. It was Wonderly, who had turned on the In candescent. He stood calmly In front of the easel examining the portrait of the little laundress. He had a cigar ette between hla teeth, which was nothing unusual, and his head was cocked critically sldewise. "Why don't jou pet her to sit for rouT' he asked. Wonderly was always o LAUWOIUIOD good at suggesting. "You'll never make it In this way in the world." Clifford sprang to his fet, his face lighting. "I have never dared," he cried, "but I will do it; I'll do it right now." And snatching his hat and. um brella, he hurried out, leaving Won derly In possession of the studio. He strode rapidly along In the rain to the home of the littlo laundress. The small house was all alight when he arrived there, and there was a sound of music and dancing. Clifford stood at the gate watching the shad ows of the dancers on the curtains. These shadows wavered grotesquely, as if in the throes of a country dance. Presently the door opened and his littlo laundress came out, laughing and fanning herself with a folded newspaper. A young man followed her and they stood together on the narrow porch. "It's rainin' yet. ain't it?" she asked, and her voice grated unmu sically on Clifford's ear. It was the first time that he had heard it. "Sot much," said the boy; "Jet's sit down here on the steps awhile." And down they sat on the steps to gether, she lifting her skirts gingerly from the dampness, and He edging closer and closer to her side. Clifford crept away from the gate I into the shadow of a tree, and from that retreat he thought he heard the I sound of a kiss. I The girl giggled and put up her j hands, attempting playfully to ward i off another, la the light of the gas j Began to Wish He Had Chosen Son.e . Other Occupation in Life. lamp across the street Clifford could s'e those hands, and they were broad and thick of course, the hands of a girl who ironed, who held constantly the handle of an iron, how could they be otherwise? ' Quit now," cried the girl, giggling again; "quit now or 111 call maw." Hut he did not quit and she did not call "maw," and at that moment Cllf ford, who was apt to do most thlngi Inopportunely, sneezed. The young man leaped from his place on the steps, and ran angrily tc the gate. Clifford recognized him. He was no other than the butcher boy who daily -brought meat and tougb enough meat it was, too to his land lady. Seeing Clifford standing in th shadow of the tree, he rushed madly at him and shook his list in his face. "What yer doln here?" he demand ed. "I've seen yer sneakln roun after my gal M'riah mor'n once, an' If yer don't quit It I'll smash yer face. Dc yer hear?" He heard, and forthwith burst Into an explanation to the effect that he was only passing and stopped to listen to the music, which explanation the butcher boy received with open mouthed Incredulity, Clifford making his escape afterward with what grac he could muster. As he turned the corner he was fol lowed by a great guffaw of a laugh from the butcher boy, accompanied by a harshly gurgling giggle from "M'riah." Plupging along In the rain, he could" have wept, man as he was.' His beau tlful butterfly, exquisite creature ol his Imagination, had crawled back into Its cocoon. Wonderly wrfs quietly waiting In the studio, sitting at his ease, puffinc rings of smoke at the ceiling, his legs far apart and his hands in his pockets, when Clifford burat into the room. "What, back already?" he said, as Clifford, without stopping to take off his hat, began tearing down the char coal sketches that lined the walls; back already?" he repeated like a par rot, still puffing at his cigarette. Something in his expression brought Clifford to a standstill In front of him, his hands filled with fragments of tho charcoal sketches. A light flashed upon him. "You knew it all the time," ht stormed. , Wonderly took his hand out of his pocket and flipped the ash from his cigarette. "Well, what If I did?" said ha I a TTTvrrrfciprri o 8 r, 'Ill li ' i 1 -I A k J PROOF FOR TWO CENT3. If You Suffer with Your Kidneys and Back Write to This Man. G. W. Winney, Medina, X. Y.. In vites kidney sufferers to write to him. To all who enclose postago he will re ply telling how Doan'a Kidney Pills I cured him after he had doctored and had been In two different hospitals for eighteen months, suffering Intense pain in the back, lameness, t w I n g e 8 when stooping or lifting, languor, dizzy spells and rheumatism. "llefore I used uoan's Kidney Pills," says Mr. Winney, "I weighed 143. After taking 10 or 12 boxes I weighed 162 and was completely cured." Sold by all dealers. f0 cents a box Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, X. Y. HIS TURN TO CRITICISE. Youngster Felt Called on to Manifest Disapproval of Prayer. Littlo John, who, at the mature age of four, has learned the Lord's Prayer, Is often criticised by his sister, two years older, for slight mistakes which he cannot always avoid in offering the petition. A few Sundays ago. he was taken to church for the first time. When the moment for the prayer ar rived and the congregation bowed their heads John's mother took the precaution to whisper to him that he must be very quiet. "Listen." she said, "and you will hear the minister pray." This interested John at once, and his little face took on a look of serious attention, but his mother, watching him covertly, saw his ex pression chance presently to one of surprise and disapproval. A few min utes moie, and he could stand it no longer. What could this man be say ing? Not a word of the prayer did he recognize as the only formula ho had ever heard called by that name. "Why, mother," he exclaimed, in a tone audible over nearly half the church, "do you hear? Ho isn't say ing it right at all!" SORES AS BIG AS PENNIES. Whole Head and Neck Covered Hair All Came Out Cured in Three Weeks by Cuticura. "After having the measles my whole head and neck were covered with scaly sores about as large as a penny. They were just as thick as they could be. My hair all came out. I let the trou ble run along, taking the doctor's blood remedies and rubbing on salve, but It did not seem to get any better. It stayed that way for about sia months; then I got a set of the Cuticura Reme dies, and in about a week I noticed a big difference, and in three weeks It was well entirely and I have not had the trouble any more, and as this was seven years ago. I consider myself cured. Mrs. Henry Porter, Albion, Neb., Aus.5, 100G." EQUAL TO THE OCCASION. This, Servant Girl Was Evidently a Person of Resource. As a source of humor the Irish ser vant girl has long tdnco fallen from her high estate, a result probably duo to the better class of young women from the Emerald Isle who come here annually to help confuse the eternal "servant girl question." Rut now and again one of the old, naively ignorant sort turns up in a New York house hold, as was demonstrated the other day to a caller at a house on the West Side. The girl who responded to the bell was asked if her mistress was at home. To this inquiry Bhe surprised the caller by putting her arms behind her back and replying in a rich brogue, as she thrust her face toward the caller: "Put th tickets In me mouth, ma'am, an' I'll go an see. Me hands Is w eL" N. Y. Press. How's This? W offer On linndrrd Dollar Reward for any eaae of Catarrh lb at cannot be cured by llan'i Catarrh Cure. .w M . F-J.CnEXKTACO.,Tolelo.O. we. the underatgned. have knnwa F. J. Cbener for the last 15 yearn, and believe him berfectlr hon orable In all butlneae traDiactluna and financially bie to carrj out any obligation made by hi Arm. Wai.im.no. km N4K A tltivii, , Wboleale DruRBlma, Toledo. O Hall Catarrh Cure I taken foieroally, acting dlrertly upon the blood and mucou tarfereeof tbe tyctem. Trtliiinlai nt free. 1'rlce 3 ceou per Doltlr. SnM by all DruxijUU. - Take Uali'a family flu for count! pa tl oo. A Fascinating Game. A precocious little girl living on one of the crowded business thorough fares of the city was in the habit of gazing out of the wladow at the busy, street below for hours at a time. "What is It, Gladys, that you find so constantly Interesting In the street?" asked her mother one day. "Oh came the wise rejoinder, "Just watching the cars go pro and con."IIarpcr'a Weekly. The True Home. Homes are not built of brick and mortar. It Is the people, not the places. that make the homes; the face of a smiling woman, the patter of tiny feet and the music of children's voices, aye, even the barking of a dog fcnd the human look of Joy at our coming bring us the nameless charm that we call "home." Training Lion for Exhibition. It takes four years to train a Hon for exhibition work, but only one animal in four is available for training. A few accomplishments increases the animal's value five fold. The whole of virtue consists In Its practice. Cicero. 8 T 9 J m PRODUCTIVE POWER OF WESTERN CANADA SOIL Winnipeg Correspondence. There has never been any who have doubted the productiveness of the soil of Western Canada, but there are sometimes found those who question the fact of Its superiority. During the past season- It has been shown that In grain raising qualities It possessed the very best. The late spring nre- j vented grain being sown In many cases before the middle of May. Yet, a large percentage of that sown at that time produced excellent yields. Had it not been for the frost early in August, which visited most of tho north half of the continent, there would have been a magnificent yield In every dis trict in Western Canada, Throughout the Southern Alberta district where about 100,000 acres was sown to win ter wheat the yield will bo enormously large. There are vast tracts of valu able grain growing land in Western Canada that are available for home steads, the Canadian Government giv ing 160 acres free, and entry may be made by proxy, by any near relative, thus saving considerable cost to the American who may have entry made in this way. Any Canadian Govern ment Agent will give you the partic ulars. Your correspondent has Just re ceived the following letter from Cralk, Saskatchewan, which bears out the statement made in the first part of this letter. "Cralk. Sask.. Aug. 1907. "May 24th we planted a Dahlia root, which we brought with us from Min neapolis. Au 12th. SO days later, it wa3 In bloom. The plant is now 4' feet high and covered with blossoms. We never got half as many flowers on it in Minneapolis, even during Septem ber and October, although we had more time to attend to It there." I mention this only as an example of the great productive power of the soil here in Saskatchewan. Canada. Caught Whiskers in Safe. In locking his safe the other night prior t his going home for supper George Edgcmont, a paperhanger who lives at Jeffrrso street and Hermit age lane, Manayunk, shut the safo door upon his flowing whiskers and was held until released by his daugh ter, says the Philadelphia Inquirer. Kdgemont had been out collecting bills during the day. Returning to his office he opened his safe and placed the money in It. He then threw tho door shut, catching the end of his beard In the door. In the excitement Incident to his odd predicament ho forgot the combination and so could not release himself. With his chin resting on the safe ho was discov ered about an hour after tho accident by his daughter, who came to find what had delayed him. The safo was broken open by a locksmith. One Waiter wit!) Sense. Man in a restaurant happening In Just as a new shift of waiters came on. And. having eaten a very modest luncheon this man laid down a mod est tip, to be exact, five cents. And did the waiter shy off or sniff at this nickel? He did neither, but on the contrary he seemed to regard it as an augury of good fortune that his first customer should have given him something, and "Thank you," he said, politely, to the customer, and as he turned away he added to himself: "That's a start er." X. Y. Sun. Strange Disease. Two middle-aged women on a car were discussing the sickness of two children of one of them. "And what does tho doctor say ails them?" asked one. "The little child has some sort of a fever," was the answer, "and he said that the disease of tho other was epidemic." "It's a sickness I never heard of," responded mother number one. ONLY ONK "imOMO QITININK" That la UAXAT1VR M1M)M QL1S1.NK. Look fo llm aitrnniure of K. W. oHUVK. t'M"d the World oTer to Cure a Cold In One lAiy. c. The Saturday half holiday originated In England in the eleventh century. RHEUMATISM is most painful. What's good? STJACOBS OIL Gives Instant relief. Removes the twinges. USE IT, THEN YOU'LL KNOW 25c ALL DRUGGISTS 60c. SHOES AT ALL PRICES, FOR EVERY MEMBER Of THE FAMILY, MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. y'rv w. l. uoufJnm rnmfnm mnti mmi'm mwa rp-rw gttmWm $2. fit. t3.0U mnd J.BU mhom thmn mny other mmnufmctunr In thm JjCJ world, ttmemmmo thmr hold tholr mhupm, til hotter worn I on rro ff mod ' " ' promt or wmlum thmn mny Othor mvr mhoom In thm woHd tm-tlmy. UU Yf.L.Douol mm $4 mnd $3 Ctlt dgm Shmmm emnnmt bm mqumllmd mt mny prlcm. tVm CAI'TION. W. I TntirlaA nam and prlea Is lUtnpfd rn bttom. TaV No Snt Ptltnto. Kol4 by th N-t h tAlrs Trjwhr. Fho mullod from fartorv to any jar CtfUtaworlO. lilustraUU catalog tra. W. L 1MDIGLAS. Brockton. Maaa. SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. INDICTE?). Charged with Using Malls to De fraud and in Misrepresenting Articles Sold. Pes Moines, la. (Special) Sears, Roebuck &. Co. of Chicago have been charged with using the mails to de fraud. The indictment Is on three counts. It is alleged that tho com pany misrepresented articles in Its catalogues sent through the mails. The first count charg-3 that on June 13. 1907, the company devised a scheme to obtain money by false pre tenses from Dr. C. F. Spring of Des Moines by selling him white lead that Sears-Roebuck claim to have made. The indictment alleges It was made by others. A second count is on a ring bought by R. H. Miles, and the third count is the sending of an other ring, alleged to have been mis represented, through the malls. Shy Amateurs. "Splendid spectacles," that Is the definition towards which athletics in England are gradually drifting, and chiefly, it is to bo feared, upon the current of highly trained profession alism. The ordinary man, conscious of his own mediocre ability, i3 afraid to venture into tbe field.- North China Herald. Tobacco Thrown Away. It Is estimated by the head of one of the large tobacco establishments of New York that at least $3,000 worth of tobacco is daily thrown away in the city In unconsumed cigars and cigar ettes. Why She Went Home to Mother. Mrs. Newwed Isn't tho bread line In a great city pathetic? Newwed Very. I suppose it Is the only way the poor fellows can get any fit to cat. N. Y. Sun. World's Gold Production. Africa lead3 in the matter of gold production and tho United States Is second. rir.FS ( I KKI) I V O TO 14 DAYS. 1'AZl ( l.T1 KST Is (ruaraiil- (l to rnro uny ro t lirhiiirf. JSInnl. Hire linrf or J'rot rudiug i'lica 10 it to 1 Uayitor luoucy r. lunUoJ. &0c. The statesman load tho masses. Tho masses lead the politician. .ALCOHOL -i Pf.-u fi-V ANcfjclabrn'pnralionforAs simil.iiinrtiicFGOf!a;i(IRciu!a lw2 Hie Stomachs asdDwcIs of j- - in Promotes Dtecstianf hrfil .rtess and RcsiXontains neither upmnLMorprunc nomrral. Not Narcotic. JkcipeofOUDrSUZOnilXni Icppkm Sttd" st.'x i 'mim Ji'xfittftUtt- Jfifrmmf - JitlniU-Hwttbia ftrmStfd' Vuatrjittn tltmr. Anprferl Remcdv forCorsfina- linn . Sour Slnnuch.DiarriiDca Worms ,Comulsiov.s.Fevmsh ncss and Loss or Mxep. Facsimile Signarureof. NEW YORK. Exkxt Copy of Wrapper. llll At the County Fair. "Doing a land-oflice business, ehf remarked tho man from thj city. "What that you are selling, any way?" "Iilessed If I know myself, boss," whispered the fakir at the county fair; "it has zigzag lines all oer It and when a woman comes up I sell It to her as a skirt pattern and when a man conies up I sell it to him as a guaranteed and genuine map of Mara." To be happy, hopeful, buoyant from the depths of the heart; pure in word and thought and deed, and moderate in all methods of life, this is tha true art of noble living. Young. kmmwi S GK HEADACHE Positively cured bj these Little I'll Is. Tbry also relieve lJi tressfrom IJyspepsia.lr Uifccst ion and Too Heart Liith.j.'. A perfect rr;n etiy lor Dizziness, Jiai st-a. Drowsiness, lia Tante In the Mmitli, Coat ed Tongue, rain In tin Side, TOKPID LIVEU They ri prulute tho Ho wels. I'urcly Vegetable SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE, Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature KZFUSE SUBSTITUTES, W. N. U.. DETROIT, NO. 49, 1907. MTU! For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of' Use For Over Thirty Years ill ct ktuk eorr. view vomu crrt. Typical Farm Seen. Showing Stock Raiaiag- ta WESTERN CANADA Some of tb choicest land for praln growing, atock raiainif an. I mixed farming In the nrwdlr trifia of Naxkatolif wan ami Alberta hare rr cent) been Opened tor Settlement under tba Revised Homestead Regulations Kntry may now be male by proxy (on eertala eoii4in idiih). by the fat her, Mother, Hon.daurh ler. brother or alMer of an huenillnir borne ateader. ThniiamU of homestead) of IrtO a-ra ea. t are thti now easily available In theae (Treat rraiii-irrowlnir, atoilc raising and miied farming tiection. There yon will fln l healthfnt ellmate. gnod neighbors, hnr-he for family worahtp, iw hoola for yonr children, (jood laws, aplenditl cro, arwl railroad convenient to market. Entry fee In eoh eaae la 110.00. Tor pamptp' let. "Laftt Best Weat," particular aa to rate a, ron tea, bvait time to go and whera to 1 oca la. pplj to M. V. McI5SCS. f Arena Tnetfrt Black, Drtraff. Kichiftn; ar C. A. LAUIIEI, Stall S(a. Marie. Micfk. S30 m HOUR B 1 Bee ikea la Our MERRY GO ROUNDS We mannfar'nra Karri Itarrle. Striker, eta. 1 1 K II M 1 1 fc. 1 . 1.- M I .LM A X At.. .enerm 1 A . T Outflter. iH-t-t-M NoUIH TuMiWiMM. N. t PATENTS" in adz mar CARTERS tEplTTLE IVER PILLS. I (CARTERS fITTlE IVER PIUS. r' li In k A larurntatioa ot il:ES. ,w "