rv i F|naBy «!ssr by taking £. ' MBUmmTS ^,s'-f--:- • : Ss«MM«o4W.Va.--"Forscrmknig '&X Teml iBftnd fcom afemale trouble BIhIKKXIIIA^BQVK ®0 liodo* "hsasewwi!! 1 ronsMtrid nwril doctors h«t soil* , assail to wra me fT8! i Bl" ? Whi M * SSPhLk"h*im*i YLye<gHe*- le Ooapoand ao I dedded to try it, before the first i&ggsS&iMhottle was gone I Hound great relief to _ it untu I had taken _ Now I am very well and can do my own housework. lean ' V reeoeamandLydiaK. Pinkham'sme hj^. to coffering women."--Mra. Bam R-P- D-. Reveaewood, W. Va.' } Thearcfinary day of moat hoosewma < ^ & Is a ceaaokaa treadmill «f washing, S"-'^ r KBoehnarde* tbetaske when noma depve , *rangerae&t of the system caossa head- W^jyp aches, backaches, bearing-down pains and nanrooiMB. Every such woman ' ' _ & should profit br lira. Lfering*s exparieooe. Remember this, for over forty " ' jean Lydia E. Rnkham'a Vegetable Ooapoand baa been restoring health. 4^1$"'. ht v"' jL^ Mk M: a^UMOit PETROLEUjM JELLY For sores, btokeil ousters. Burns, curs and all skin ini* f \ 3 t a t i o n s . < -- • ; ^ g ; ; „ ,C>< ( Also izmmxieraUt v., t*' •: toiiet uses. rf VBFUSB SUBSTTTOTEi • ' • Ife m ^sst - 3-1*5*' "v »v*1 :,$rV • ww.. cmesBSBSes«»ea ftatt Street New York Cnticora Talcum ** PitclstllBgly Ffiiftil- Always Healthful Soap 25c, Oiirfwuit 2S ami 50c, Takun 25c. FRE6KLES^S Reindeer's 8kin Valuable. Not only is the reindeer prised highly for its flesh, but the skins are valuable for glove-making. Tanned with the hair on, they are very light, and robes made from the soft tanned skins with the hair on are for weight probably by far the warmest covering known. These might become extremely useful as automobile robes for winter in colder parts of the country. •Wv •<£C S* '*>' % iV -- ' A Contradiction. *£.%"? Witness--He looked me straight In the eyes and-- s|ir ' Lawyer--There, sir, you've flatly ^ contradicted your former statement. Witness--How's that? Lawyer--Tou said before that he fjjfc-i • bent his gaze on you. Will you please k|:,| explain how Ue could look yon straight in the eye with a bent gaxe?--Edlnfi7x>~ . burgh Scotsman. * Traveling Hint. "ll^there are bottles to go In hag or trunk and you fear the corks will come out, beat your sealing wax in a flame and run the melted part : around the cork where it meets the glass. Thus it will be held in tightly and only a smart twist Unnecessary to remove it when you arrive at your destination. Great Britain has somewhat :iMfe than 800.000 motor vehicles. A new form for big-game signed. It 4* <0* It supers^dsa, ifce old soft-neeed bullets to whidl there were many objections. Iq f ata Ny. tip" is made of metal, and upon imp^v|« .|a«Mi,. ^ck into the cover, eTpandhlt point of the bullet, whhdi i« Netted in such a manner that it cetatna tta pointed shape until this impact occurs. This is unlike the old soft-nosed bullets which, from their nature, were liable to be deformed by handling before they were loaded into a rifle. The weight of the new bullet is 180 gr^ which is generally considered about the best shooting. Dorr FEAR ASPIRIN IF IT IS GENUINE L«*k lor Nam* "In*" «i» TabM% Tim Yw Nmd Nmr Worry. To get genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" you must look for the safety "Bayer Cross" pn each package and on each tablet. The "Bayer Cross" means true, worldfamous* Aspirin, prescribed by physicians for o^er twenty-one years, and proved safe by mllHons for Colds, IleadP ache, Eansche, Toothache, Neuralgia, Lmnbago, Neuritis, and for Palm In general. Proper and safe directions are in each unbroken "Bayer" package. --Advertisement. Indlviduallsttv Ton «an give other people ytnr advice, but you can not give them your experience. You can give them your remedy, but you can by no means give them its effect, upon yourself. Perhaps ttys is just as well, since each is to live his individual life and make his own best achievement out of it The man with the ten talents could probably have taken care of those of his fefiow-servants as well-- then there would have been no loss, but also there would hmr Irnitq nir use for the other servants. * BOSCHEFS SYRUP Allays Irritation, Soothes and Hasls Throat and Lung Inflammation. The almost constant irritation of a <*>ugh keeps the delicate mucous membrane of the throat and longs in a congested condition, which Boschee's Syrup gently and quickly soothes and heala. For this reason It has been a favorite household remedy for colds, coughs, bronchitis and especially for lung troubles in millions of homes all over the world for the last flfty-flve years, enabling the patient to obtain a good night's rest, free from coughing, with easy expectoration in the morning. You can buy Boschee's Syrup wherever medicines are sold.--Advertisement. -------------- ^ -s_; Resurrection Flowery In Egypt is a plant callcd the resurrection flower. It is seen as a little ball hanging on a fragile stem, resembling in color and shape a shrunken poppyhead. Sleeping, but not dead, the flowers are aroused by being immersed in water, and then supported In an upright position. Soon the fibers began to stir. Slowly they unfold, until, with petals thrown, back, it becomes a beautiful starry floatar, not unlike an aster. Yolk Pigment. It is reported that a chemist abroad has succeeded in isolating the yellow pigment of the yolk of egg in a crystalline state, and finds that it is closely related to the xanthophyl of leaves. This is regarded as an important scientific discovery. To extract four grains of crude pigment the investigator employed the yolks of no less than li.000 eggs. The cryst&Ulxed pigment is known as lutein. Pleased With Begging LetWC "When the old shah of Persia visited Kngland in 1873, some 8KK)0 begging letters were posted to him during his sojourn. He was much pleased with them and felt highly honored to receive so many'letters, each of which he treated as a compliment. He had all of them securely .packed into trunk and dispatched to Persia, where they were deposited in his museum. Transporting Power of Water. The transporting power of flowing water varies as the sixth power of the velocity. Thus if the velocity of the water la doubled, its transporting power is increased 64 fold. This < plains the effect of a river In flood la carrying all things before It. Why guess about it When you can know about it? ±»,l ••• yr {***»•• tf- " *F-- ?, ¥4,&\f « '•4. ?%*'". • V:n •- \\ •», r.:4sr.' Mi- V- - - - • *.*. #g«Me s«M---* ^ "This way there's a safe and pleasant jdad to your destination, with no risk* Or IxouMee on the way,"and-- :'9, "That way there's a road that a good many have stalled on and turned bade from, but you may get through.*: ^ C 1 " ------ iS?- Which would you" take? & • • C " P o e t u m is a thoroughly agreeable and - fidtisfying meal-time drink, and you're sure that it's perfectly safe for health. r Coffee contains drug qualities which distnfb and harm the health of many. " v - Postum or coffee? Why guess when you can know?' Which roadK ' ,P'f li T' know?"? -£ •"fe'V'5 • • ' Potum cobms in twofonns: InstantPoattim(littins) dfftad* ioMantly in tba cap by the Addition of boiling walsi. Pottam Canal (in packages of larger balk, for tbosa irba pnftr to awk* th* drink while the meal is being prepa--4) for 20 aiipaiM. Soldier aU^ppp,..^,^ • a Reason i StAKBEW ON MANY RACES Later news from Parts brings all sorts of data about established styles for the fall and Winter season. First, observes a fashion critic^ we are always confronted bewildering display of varied fashions, and the trick is to keep our heads until we see exactly what la going to stand the stress of time and selection and Judgment. There are a few canny ones who can sense this thing, bit they are very few and far between. The others stand around and fear that, before long, we may all be dressing In Spanish regalia Or trailing our skirts along the streets. Usually there happens a happy medium which is quite thoroughly satisfactory to all concerned, and which does not revolutionise the ways o£ dress so completely as may have been predicted. So with two modes which are aftertbe- season creations fresh from Paris. They are about as unstartling as any two fashions could be, and, on the otber hand, they are Just about as smart as could be hoped for. After all, It is simplicity that counts 5n the long ran. The French aiways come back to that standard, no matter what may be their little excursions Into the space of a more cluttered era. The lines are longer, to be sure, bat they are simply and quietly lengthened, with every attention given to proportion and the blending of one line with another, until there results that harmony which Is always satisfying and which, authoritatively handled, is becoming to whatever figure happeps to wear It. Bodies That Are 8impte. A cable from Paris, about the opening of the collection of Madeleine Vlonet, says thqt all of her models are as simple as can be, and fhat they follow rather closely the lines laid vjc,. •. •' ,? s : t • :*$r 'j ?5$. , Salt 4 Beige WooCRatlns Trimmed With Seal. down by her last season. Not much of any startling change there. Vlonet Is the couturlere who has been most (Mstlnctly exclusive in showing her designs. She makes her models for the wearer only. She will not consent under any circumstances, to admit to her establishment any buyer from the And the consequence la that her gowns are sought above all others, for there Is some assurance then that they will hot be copied and altered and distributed to every portion of the earth. < Mine. Roland has one of the most popular models of the season, and It has nothing but straight and classic lines to make It famous. It is made of a heavy black crepe, with applied, narrow panel trimmings of black velvet, which are attached by fagoting In heavy black silk thread. The neckline Is one of those that reach In an uncompromising line from shoulder to shoulder, and the belt Is one of those hunky affairs that are made of a succession of black velvet cabbage roses. This season, the one salient note that has been added to the straight dress, with the exception always of wide and varied sleeves, is the belt that accentuates the waistline In the frankest manner. Colors Are Prominent. Colors, and brilliant colors at that, am prominent In all of t£e initial/and in the later showings. But the messages from Paris hint that women there are Just as loyal to black as they were during last summer. They cling to It as though It were the only color. In the world, and It Is. too, when one considers all the side lines of economy and becomlngness which must necessarily be taken into account when the last word of smartness In woman's attire Is being thought about. Callot, who always produces the very most notable gowns of any season, is showing along with her gowns of flashing color, some that are all black and of the simplest draped lines. Callot always does the draped gown beautifully, but site Is apt to drape It on straight lines and to forego the temptation of gathering the folds Into any upward or sidelong movement. One of her evening gowns is made with a heavy black satin foundation swinging from the shoulders to a very long hemline, and following the lines of the figure quite closely as It wends its way down. Then there is a fiat cape collar across the front, falling from a straight neckline that Is high. This collar and a draped apron are made of heavy embrolderlngs of Jet and steel beads placed In a gorgeous Persian pattern. The back of the gown Is practically plain, of the black satin, but the neckline is low and square, and just between the shoulder-blades is posed a thick, black velvet rose. Cerise and Qold Brocade. Another of Callot's gowns, just to prdfae that she can go to the other extreme with the greatest of ease, is made of cerise and gold brocade. A tight foundation skirt erids many inches from the ground, and Is then furnished with a band of gold lace left quite transparent and almost reaching the floor.- An oversklrt Is full and honed about the bottom, so that It gracefully keeps Its houffant shape. H Is just about as long as the underskirt, and It, too, has an edging of the same gold lace that bedecks the sister skirt. You can see what great charm the transparency against the thickness of the brocade muat give, and the evenness of the hem affords a decided relief from all of the upward and downward trends that we see In that direction. Polret's collection In tills country Is causing quite a furor, because it Is so decidedly different from anything else that has been shown here. He finds the picturesque note In whatever he Is doing, and the costumes which he has sent to as are particularly <-T>nrming In this respect. * . ®f Mo* Nations, as MatUr - »f Met, Are the Revert#, lit .';- . Their Reputations. Tbe origin of national slanders Is a mystery. Some one starts them, others continue them, and tbe rest of us accept them as gospel, and gfve them further currency. • 5 Englishmen are alleged to be supershy and reserved. Our life on an Island Is said to be responsible. Rubbish I We have been, and are, the biggest travelers of all nations, observes a writer in London Answers. If Englishmen were shy and reserved they wouldn't have been the pioneers in colonization, empire building, conquest, commerce, and the like. As a matter of fact, the average Englishman Is supersociable, and If any proof of that Is needed It Is to be found In the fact that this country Is, par excellence, the home of sport. Sport demands sociability. Imagine a tennis boom among "super-shy, reserved" people! Scotsmen are alleged to he mean-- unco' careful wi' the bawbees. Thousands of jokes have been built upon that slander. But, as a matter of fact, the Scot, as all who have had to do with him know, is extraordinarily generous and kind-hearted. Ask the treasurer of any hospital. There's the test. The Irish are dbubly slandered. They are alleged to be a gay, witty race, carefree and careless. This Is a slander. The Irish are a sad people. All their beautiful melodies ate In a minor keyv "Irish humor" doesn't really exist The Irish are really Intensively gerlous. And as to being "careless," It Is a fact that they are thrifty, clean, and supermoral. The French are supposed to be irresponsible and excitable. An obvious slander, which the great war killed-- or ought to have killed. Then there is the "wily, unspeakable" Turk. For a fact, he is about as simple as they make 'em! The Dutch are alleged to be "stolid," and all that the term Implies. It's a slander for the Dutch are very much all thpreJ The tale might be continued, but the result would be the same, whether dealing with the "cute" Yankee, the "emotional" Welshman, the "treacherous" Spaniard, or the "gay* Italian. Slanders all! 7M WRIGLEYS Newest. Creation msSk'i JSsi-- n C A deddoos teppermtat flavored suaar Jacket around peppermint flavored cbsw> + ' -- bis sum. • & Melba Gives Way to Youth. Mme. Melba said at the close of a concert In Australia, a Melbourne dispatch reports, tliat she must now make room for younger singers. Melba made her debut In Melbourne (her birthplace) when she was 6 years old. Owing to her father's opposition she sang only once more In public before her marriage. She was considered in those days to have greater talent as a pianist than as a singer. When she was 20 years old she went to England, where Sir Arthur Sullivan told her: "In a year I'll put you In the 'Mikado' If your performance accords with your promise." Within a short time, however, she was a brilliant success In grand opera. Her career in London began May 24, 1888, with a performance of "Lucia." Melba Is reputed to be very wealthy. Her jewelry alone is said to ha arorth $1,000,000. Use Bands of Fur for Coats Brocades for coats are a passion with Pol ret. He makes the coats with long and slightly fitted waists flaring Into circular, flaring skirts. On the bottoms of the skirts are narrow bands of for, and the sleeves, which •re more or less tightly fitted, have corresponding bands of fur, while the collars are straight and high, by preference covering the chins of their wearers. The brocades are In wonderful colors of old blue, silver, gold bronze and clever touches of red In all Its shades. They look like some fabric filched from a museum, and they make one wonder bow Polret ever hunted them out or whether he said a charm over the weavers wbife |hey were creating them. i Polret sends us one very Interesting blue serge dress, which Is gladly welcomed because we. In America, delight to have a new Idea for this type of frock which we love so well. It has a long bodice which seems to have no Idea of fittti%, and this meets a straight hanging skirt which Is fuller than those we tire accustomed to see gad just simply gathered under a narrow belt of the serge. So far nothing startling. The bateau neck line is then edged with a puffy band of blue fox that gives a quaint, becoming character to the gown, and in tbe direct center of the front of the long bodice there is an oval embroidered medallion in shades of light blue, with touches of black to make the color tell. Upward from this ornamentation and downward in a longer line there are two arrows of the same embroidery. The sleeves are tightly fitted and long. Altogether the frock has a decidedly new air about it* and It seems to be the sort of thing that will find favor here In America, even though it is quite decidedly different from (he things we have been seeing. Another blue serge has a skirt made of lengthwise folds, each about four inches wide, lapped loosely over each other and ended In points at the bottom. The skirt has quite a tailored look about it, even though the folds and tbe polnta hob quite carelessly to and fro. ' FOOTWEAR IS VARIED IN STYLE r Btyle Creators Devias Color of Stitohto Match Milady's (Mom 40 Any Hue.' *f. *" • Some brilliant stylist has discovered that magnetism and personality can ha made to reveal themselves In the decoration of hands and feet The ;atai Idea !s that u&nua wiiii gloves, rings and fans give quite a acope to feminine charm and likewise pretty footwear has possibilities. A creator of fashions In Paris puts a sole on the foot and makes the up- *par with as little leather as possible. In some instances going to the extreme "Of combining the sole with a bracelet id calling It a "day's creation." Straps lu themselves have permitted Of the study of footwear art the like which has not prevailed since tbe day of the ancient Greeks. Although black has been heralded as tbe fall color In footwear, style creators have blade and varied tbe stitching threads in color so tbat if the spot of color on milady's dress Ja xiag, .jAg ahOe Is stitched to match. C- . C" v" Veils of Feather. ^ J - Feather veils are attached to the brims of the new hats. One late example of the vogue shows a wide round hat of black panne with the vpII of black ostrich hung from silver quills which encircle the under side of the brim and drop before the face below the chin line. On another hat of tete de negre pannfe, which is high and pointed at the front, two plumes sweep around tbe sides from front to back with extra length flues tied on so that a veil of feathers sweeps down to touch.the shoulders. Carries Aid to Minera. Because the California mines an inacce&sible to the standard mine safety railroad car, a special rescue truck has been provided by congress for that state, says Popular Mechanics Magazine. The car seats ten men and carries an oxygen-breathing apparatus for each man; a supply of oxygen totaling 600 cubic feet, distributed In six cylinders, two oxygen lnhalntnrs; ten safety lamps, two army stretchers; an ample supply of regenerating material; caustic soda and sodium hydroxide, for use in oxygen breathing apparatus; a high-pressure power pump, to pump oxygen Into the bottles for the breathing apparatus; a complete first-aid kit, and a 1.00IK foot life line. Gas masks are, not included, since they have been found useless in mine fires. Wonderful Liberality} Passengers in one of the sleeping cars from* Hot Springs were aroused before daylight recently by the announcement of one of the passengers that he had lost his ll-csr&t rub; stickpin, which he asserted wss worth $10,000 or more. On demand of the passenger a telegram was sent to tbe St. Louis ponce. When policemen met the train at Union station they were informed that the pin had been found by the porter in an upper berth, a few seats from the lower which the Little Rock man occupied. The owner said the mistake was his, and gave the porter a quarter for finding the pin.--St Louis Post-Dispatch. , : Will aid ybor appetite and digestion, polish your teeth and moisten four throat. ^ .tsl The Flavor Lasts True ^ "Artists paint sheep a good deal." "Well, they're good posers. Stay In one position a long time." Not Exactly. 'What is the name of this The Pied Piper.*" 'Another pie comedy T' 01 Never say "Aspirin" without saying "BayeRff%jt || WARNING! Unless you see name "Bayer" on tablet% you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over 21 years and proved safe by milions for Colds Headache Rheumatisnf\ Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis ^ J Earache^ Lumbago Pain, Pain ^ •mtept only "B<yerM package which contains proper direeffanfe Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets--Bottles of 24 and 100--All druggists. Aapiria la DM trad* nark at Bajrar lfanafaetan ut lkwatttloiddiM« at SaltayttMaH - 3*. Nature's Polios Force. The following excerpt from Fahre's "The Story Book of the Field," gives a little Insight Into the many beneficent uses of the commoner field animals ; "The bats deliver us from a host of enemies, and they are outlawed. The mole purges the ground of vermin ; the hedgehog makes war on vipers; the owl and all night birds are clever rat hunters; the adder, the. toad and the lizard feed on the plunderers of our crops." Thus nature supplies^ the husbandman with anN efficient police force.--Brooklyn Eagle. That Settlea It. - - - Oelwwd Parson (soliciting ftonds}-- Bruddern, dis church hab got to walk. Deacon (In amen corner)--Amen, hrudder, let 'er walk. Parson--Bruddern, dlS church hab got to run. ' Deacon--Amen, brudder, let 'er run. Parson--Bruddern, dis church hab got to fly. Deacon--Amen, brudder, let' er fly. Parson--Bruddern. It's gwinter take money to make dis church fly. Deacon--Let 'er walk, brudder, let W walk!--Nashville Tennesseean. New Dinner Frocka. Muter dresses are most freqaenfty seen with tbe straight shoulder-toshoulder neckline, no sleeves and a lowered walsttes^ same times Moose# at 'the hack* -.j The Symptoms. 'Whs Mr. Grabcoln In hi* office when you called?" . "No, he must have been playing golf •' "Are you sure about that V "Reasonably sure. The office force seemed to think he wouldn't be back soon. Most of the clerks had their feet up on their desks and three Stenographers were making 'dates' by telephone."--Birmingham Age-Herald. ' Freedom's Beginning. The free institutions of ancient Greece und Rome had long been dead when our Anglo-Saxon forefathers, iu the little island in the North sea, Began holding their witenagemot, or assembly of the wise men of tbe kingdom. In the early days of tbe Normans, when feudalism was in flower, national affairs were dealt with by a natiohal council, composed of the high ofllcers of state and feudal barons, and presided over by the king.--Montreal Family Herald. • Cutlcura for Sore Hand*. Soak hands on retiring in the hot of Cutlcura Soap, dry and rub in Cutlcura Ointment Remove surplus Ointment with tissue paper. This is only one of the things Cutlcura will do if Soap, Ointment and Talcum are used for all toilet purposes. Advertisements Ashanti Rich With Mahogany. It is estimated that the gold coast and Ashanti^ could supply over 00,000 logs of mahogany and cedar a year if the Internal communications were bet- Still an Open Question. ^Doesn't your mother object to fa«.< staying out until 2 or 8 o'clock in the morning?" the young lady was aataft| "I don't know," the young lady *a»i; plied. "She might If she knew abostf ? it. but I always beat mother in.** Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION Simple Origin of Namea. To primitive man the cow seemed to "koo"--hence the animal's name The Greeks imitated the crow's sound with the word "korax" and from this, by way of the "corow" springs our nams for the bird. The caekoo named Maself. • ' lASCaR.' sc*mh-- sa dt aUs rMt-fmc 6BCLLAM* Mot water SureMtef ELL-ANS 2Sj and 754 Packages. Evrywhm^ BETTER 7 DEAD -nUff : - * life is a burden when thftfe ia racked with pain. ^ Ewryd worries arid the victim bqcoaMM despondent and downhearted* IDs bring bade the sunshine tshs GOLDMEDAL Th« National Remedy of HoQaadfori 200 years; it is an enemy of all psisa salting from kidney, liver and ails 4 trcsbles. AS thin ataasu. Leak far tba *>m« GoM 1 ami accept aa I EASY TO KILL |iWVT |Mliaitiel.M BMi»Mlwilrfak s W, B. HU COMPACT DRIM Nl|it Meralaj, MMSNSA ffcafcy £>M.IftfaeyTtr%Itch. Smarter Barn, If So** ._ _ ___ Irritated. Inflamed or IRtltj Granulated,ueeMuziat often. Sooth**, Kefrashaa. Sals fcr Infant or Adult Ma&Drunlst* Write for Ptoe Eye Book. htel|iTWrCk,Ok«i Gmmmm STEARNS? ELECTRIC PAiTK •/•'M i' «* ysg: