3 YEARS INDIGESTION AT A CHINESE 3 Boxes Little Digesters-- Eatirely Cured It was a lueky day for Mr. Pays, whose portrait a rs below, when he saw a "Littie s" advertise ment in the paper, for it marked his fisst step ou the road fo health. what be says about it himself: , Ont., Nov, Tez Soa nots] Co. Gentlemen, -- Saving suffered for three years with 1 Asthing could relieve me, having seen your vertisgments in the for 'Little Digesters," took three, was entirely cured. I feel com- vineed that anyone anyone suffering with same to try "' Little Di " PHILIP PAYN, Junior. 'Little Digesters" are dainty little tablets of the purest and best in, mts for the relief of stomach troubles. They are positively gusratiesd to cure even Shrosie cases Indigestion or Dyspe or will be refunded. is ney In little red boxes--25¢. from 0d druggist or by mail from Coleman Medi- cine ,» Toronto. _---_ ORE ORDERS ARE EN- TERED AND BILLS REN- DERED, THAN THERE ARE LETTERS WRITTEN. HENCE THERE 1S EVEN GREATER NECESSITY OF HAVING IN YOUR OFFICE AN UNDER- "50D BILLINC TYPEWRIT- ISK THAN THERE IS OF HAV- ING. A. CORRESPONDENCE MACHINE. .IT IS A MONEY- MAKER. UNITED TYPEWRITER (0. LTD, J. RC, DOBAS, KINGSTON, pe m-- The Moonlight Sonata. The story runs that Beethoven's "Moonlight . Sonata" --always so call ed, though he so rarely gave pn des- eriptive name to any of his works-- was compo; on an occasion when he had heen plaving to some stran- gor folk by chance. Walking with a friend, he overheard in. a huntble house someone, playing feeling a 'bit of one his sonatas. He paused to listen. In a moment the music. cogsed and a girl spoke Jou ingly of her wish to hear some really good Souenit, The voice was ho nb wa'tng att composer st Cvithout hesitation to the door and knocked. Admitted to the ing host, he said. "I will vou," and played wonderful the lamp burned out. Then, with the moonlight filling the room, he hegan to improvise--the mysterious, delicate breathings of the beginning of that wonderful sonata, then the tricksy, elf-like second part, and the wlory of the close. De. John T. M. Johnson, president of a Kansas city bank, bifieves that J. Pierpont Morgan may be induced to give $10,000,000 to the laymen's move ment for the Christinuizing of the world. The story is in ciceulation that Mrs, J. B. Taylor, Watertown, N.Y., only whild of the late Gov. R. P. Flower, has begun an action in New York for divorce. There ave three children, Efiort and grit are elements nece. sary te achieve sucess, Prepare For Lumbago If You Have "Nerviline" Handy One Rubbing Will Care the Pain, Thousands Use Nerviline. The "strike" of lumbago is like bolt = lightning--you Saver now when it is where it is going to rh the one certain thing about lumbago is the fact it can be cured by Nerviline--the g & fai i fel | | with much | wonder | finy ny THE CELESTIALS HAVE A PROFOUND BELIEF IN DOCTORS. Doctors and Drug Shops Abound Everywhere ~How a Hospital Was First Opened in Amoy by an English Physician. Quiver, : The Chinese have a profound belief in {doctors and in medicines. * The conditions 'in which they spend their lives largely ac- seount for this. During the greater part of tie year they are engaged in a perpetual con- flict with diseases that threated their lives, and they fly 10 anyone that will give them 2a prospect of relief. The most teying times are during the hot months, When the sun glares down with terrible heat. ph the in- sanitary cities and on the natrow alley-ways, and the crowded dwellings, which, unswept and uncleansed, are reeking with the germs of disease and death. - It is often a surprise to foreigners, from countries where sanitation is looked on as a science, that the Chinese are not swept off in larger numbers than they are Their houses are always dirty; those of the peerer classes are fifthy in the extreme. No lan- guage can adequately paint the picture of a Chinese home, with its dust and dirt and tlittle heaps of refuse, both inside and outside the door. The Chinese never dream of be- lieving that such a state of things has any danger in it. Germs, bacilli and bacteria are terms unknown to them, and even the word infection is so loosely understood that when 1 people are warned against coming in contact 'with fever or cholera or even plague patients, a look of amusement flashes across their yel- low faces, as though the idea were an exceed- ingly comical one, To meet the needs of the community, doc- tors and drug-shops abound everywhere, and are patronized with unwavering faith by all classes, It must be premised here, however, that from a Western standpoint the greater number of the medical profession are not only illiterate, but they also grossly ignorant iin regard to the subjects they profess. They have absolutely no knowledge of physiology, they have never studied anatomy, and the delicate and subtle functions of the various | organs of the human frame are a mystery | that they have never attempted to solve. The (reason for this is .obvious. Throughout the tength and breadth of China there 'has never been nny system for the education of medical men; no universities where students could be trained in the knowledge of medicine, and po (schools of minor importance where doctors of reputation .oould instruct those desirous of becoming masters of the healing art. -It must not be inferred, however, that the Chinese are destitute of plans for the training of their uoctors. They believe that they have a system which places China in the forefront of every other country in the world in its proud 'attainments ih medical science. The professors who have silently® lectured to the profession during the centuries are the fa- mous Asculapiuses who appeared in the dawn of Chinese history, and left their writ- ings and prescriptions for tie beneht of pos- terity. These, unlike the treatises, in the yest, never need revising, and daring would be the man who would venture even to sug- gest that succeeding ages could possibly im- prove on them, { / You go into a druggist's shop to bup some medicine, and there enshrined as a god you see the image of one of those famous doctors, 4s the presiding genius of the business. He is a squat little figure, and typical of the mien who lived in the dawn of the Empire's life. "A few incense sticks are stuck in front of him, and their fragrance as they burn fills the grimy, musty room with.a pleasant odor. The treatise that he wrote lies open on the eounfer, to be referred to in case of need, #nd when a difficult problem comes as to ' what medicines should be given in some ob- geure disease the dispenser places his two hands together in an attitude of prayer, and bows reverently to the silent image, as though pleading for inspiration to enable him #> come to a decision. : When an. English doctor first planned to open a hospital in Amoy, his initial difficulty was to find a house spitable, for this work. Affer considerable delay one was offered him, and eagerly accepted as the best that oould be hoped for, It was ds forlorn and dilapidated as could be. It was fifteen feet in length, and so shadowed by other houses that only a feeble glimmer of light entered at each end, whilst the centre was always enshronded in gloom. The most distressing thing, hewever, was its unsanitary condition. The walls were black with accumulated dirt. The earthen floor was -ill-smelling: and had (been worn into ruts and little hollows and miniature mounds. A numbed of coalies Were employed » clean out" 'Jhis Stable, and on the day appointpd the doctor was in readiness for his patiefits. | His pla- cards, posted in corspicuods parts of the town, had been received with suspic The Well-to-do would have noth . TO with bit, as they were quite able to employ the Rative doctors, who, they believed. were far better qualified than this barbatian doctor to deal with disease. - The scholars, the think- ets of the country, who hold the key of knowledge in their hands, looked on Wis ace tion as a piece of unmitigated impertinence which they were bound to resent. The doc- tors of the town were up in atms, and warn- ed people of the danger they would incur were they to put t es dn the hands of amin whe, being a barbarian and untguched J xivilizin ng influences Middle King "had ncithet the knowledge nor the benevolence to qualify him to cope with disease. © An hour | { I ' opening men or 0 before the 10 the = HL Augean - | eases came from far amd near to be treated. | commodious building now used as knot of peeple ut the entrance the door-keep- er pointed to the empty benches and invited them to be seated. This they did wontil twenty-four bona-fide cases had gathered. The first to come. up to the doctor's table was a man with inflamed eyes. He was forty sears of age, and belonged to the working classes,' He was very poorly clad in the cot- ton choth woven by the women all over the country districts, and dyed with the popular blue color that has a charm for the people of China. In reply to the doctor he gave him a few details as to how long he had been trombled with his eyes, and what were the peculiar sensations. He was comforted with the assurance that there would be no difficulty in giving him relief, and the doctor proceeded to drop a little lotion into his eyes. The man was terrified for thé moment with the sudden pain that rushed through them. He felt convinced that all the warnings of his friends and neighbors, that the barbarian would destroy his eyésight if allowed to touch his eyes, were about to be realized. The ekcitement among the spies at the door was intense. When they saw the man writh- ing with pain, they felt they were on the verge of a great discovery and would soon unmask the evil designs of this foreigner. Somewhat to their disappointment, the man began speedily to recover from the spasms of pain, and to assure the doctor that his eyes already felt easier, and that the burning sensation had oonsiderably subsided. With a friendly clap on the shoulder the doctor assured him that if only he carried out his orders he would be all right in a few days, and his eyes would be as well as ever. The next patient was a slim, delicate-look- ing man, with a face out of which all the blond had seemed to rum, so that there was not a trace of the color that nature inher kindliest moods delights to infuse into it. He was narrow-chested, and had a perman- ent stoop that prevented him from holding himself erect. By occupation he was an artificial lower maker, and the sedentary life that this demanded had evidently induced a disease only too common among the Chinese. The doctor made up a mixture for the poor sufferer, and said: "I am very sorry that 1 edn de so little for you. Your disease de- mands generous food, freedom from over- exertion, and as much of the open air as possible. Medicine can only give you a temporary refief. = What 'you ought to do is to go away for a holiday, and do absolutely nothing for several months. Just ramble about on the hills and-get as much fresh air as yon can." The doctor might just as well have told the man to take a journey to. the moon to consult the lady that the Chinese believe to be the presiding genius there. 'As for going off to ramble about whére he would not be able to work and earn money, that was an original idea that seemed to him full of the subtlest humor. The Chinese never dream of taking a change for mere health"s sake. There are no seaside resorts and no watering places' to which crowds flock when they feel run down. For the masses 'it is one eternal grind, un- broken by any Sunday rest, for heathenism knows mothing of such a day; and it is only when disease overtakes a man that he lays down kis tools and waits sadly and patiently for better health. While the doctor was attending to the rest of the patients, and withing goldeh opinions from all by his plédsant manners and sym- pathy, a little comely was being enacted at the door--a comedy invariably layed in every place when the foreign physician first begins 40 treat the Chinese after Western methods, The actors in it were the men who had gathered there in order to fathom the evil designs of the barbarian doctor, Some of 'them did 'not dare'to enter the building, Test an evil eye should be cast on them, and they should edie unter the spell of magical powers and BE whirled away into some far- off space fro which they could nevermore return. As edth patient came out of the hos- pital, he was pbunced on by this public-spirit- ed group and closely questioned. "What have you got there?" they asked the man with the inflamed eyes. He held up his bottle atl showed them the lotion. "We strongly advise you," said one of them, a sharp-fea- tured, villainous-looking fellow, "to throw that away instantly. Don't yoii know that that lqwd has a most fatal effect on the eyesight, and. that in a few days your éyes will be entirely destroyed? Pour it out at once, and be thankful that you have someone who knows how to advise you." The man was so nefvous and excited by this confident statement that he dashed to the ground the bottle containing the lotion that would have cured him, and hurried home congratulating himself that he had escaped imminent peril. This process was tried 'with each patient, and with almost equal success. i The men with the quinine powders were so terrified when assured that they contained a must deadly and subtle poison that "they scajtered them on the mud of the sireet. Fortunately the patients suffering from ulcers and abrasions, which had been washed and bandaged by the doctor, giving instant relief, could wot be influenced by the men at the door, and so they passed on to give a favor- able verdict to their friends and neighbors 8s to the value of the new system of medical treatment, t In course of time the prejudice against the foreign doctor began slowly to melt away, so that men soon recognized the hospital as a benewslent institution. ' The cures effected had been so miarvellous and so well authen- ticated, and so much suffering amongst the' poor had been alleviated, that the old an- tagonism died out of the. hearts of those most violently opposed to it. Its reputation, too, had spread to the towns and villages in the interior, and patients there who had despaired of ever being healed of their dis- As the result of this change in public opinion, it was found possible to obtain the lafge and The hospitals established by the societies in China are a veri godsend to the sick and diseased. With the. poorer class €s life is a very distressful thing, marked by however, when a man falls ill that hic true sorrows 'begin. There is really no room for him in the narrow quarlers into which 2 family is crowded. and as the Chinese are ¥Hdure the severest agony without showing y continual struggles to make ends meet. Tt is, | fi by which the sick should be treated. A tian lias a whole bed to himéelf in a, room that for space and cleanliness nright'be part of a royal palace. Then, too, he:is waited on with an attention that he hag never had in his life, and if he is seriouslf.ill watchers attend during the whole of the might to moisten his lips with tea and "¥5" ive him little comforts that will ease his pain. It is an'undoubted fact that the Chinaman is "seen at his best when lying in hospital suffering from some severe physical test. You feel then that he has an immense amount of character to enable him to endure what men of a feebler race would absolutely col- lapse under. No hero in the world ever bore pain more grandly than do these common laboring men and women. It is pitiful some- times to see, and yef it raises one's estimate of "our «common hwnanity, how a man will by any audible sound that he is suffering. Not a cry will break from him, and hardly a sigh escape his lips. The only signs that would let one know that he is in the direst extremity of pain is the green-yellow hue that suffuses his countenance, the twitching of the muscles of the face, and the occasional grind of his teeth. Beyond these expressions of pain he lies like a log, without exhibiting other symptoms that he is passing through is a tremendous revelation as to the new the severest trials to which the human frame can be exposed. The 'hospital, now that 'it has spread into many provinces of the Empire, has become a most beneficent power in the lives of the people wherever it has been established. It is the ohe unselfish force that takes no thought of character or position, but, filled with a mighty pity, aims only at mitigating human agony and human sorrow. It is the hatidmaiden of the Gospel, and many are the men ahd. womien in the church to-day who first had their hearts taptured by the thrilling story of Christ's love as it was téld tv» them so eloquently in the practical benevolence of the hospital wards. The Leavening of the Mass. Revigw of Reviews. America his been the meeting-place, for the first timé in history under entirely favor- able conditions, of the two great "pposing | branches of the Christian faith. The Pro- testants were first upon the ground and put ito ag¢tual practice the contention which was largely responsible for their historic origin at the period of the Reformation, free- dom to worship" God 4s the individual con- sciehce dictated. Into the nation thus es- tablished have come great numbers of Roman Catholic immigrants. In the passage of the Atlantic and the freer air: of the republic, the narrowness of their religious convictions has been greatly decreased, and the modifying effect of the two great elements each upon the other appears to Have been in general highly beneficial to the nation, and probably 'unique in the World's history. Meantime, if the cersub rettirns are to be accepted as trustworthy, these influences have been at work in the mahnet described without affect. ing the enthusiasm and religious activities of the community. Tn 1906 almost exactly half of the population above the age of ten yeats were membefs of religious bodies. In this period of alleged lack of interest in things spiritual the future of the republic continues full of promise when so large a proportion of its citizens are identified with institutions the sole aim of which is to eles vate and 'benefit the human race. : -------- . 'The Historic Bridge of London For gentiries Old London Bridge, with its dodhle "fow of housks, was the homie of netabions who, lived and traded over the Jhamges; ers. , Holbein lived ard painted thera; er ine prentice lad, [leaped throhighi a window in the house of his master, Sit Willian Hewel, to the rescue of Sir Wil- liam'sy daughter, "Who had fallen into the swollen' flood 'Bf the river below, and, by winfiing her for his wife, laid the foundation of the Ducal house of Leeds. Crispin Tue- ker had his shop on the bridge, to which Pope and Swift and many another author of fame 'made pilgrimages t6 purchase books, and gdssip with fie waggish shopkeéper. "Crotker's Dictipnary" was printed "at the Looking-glass on Londoh Bridge"; and gi the structure, not many yards from the won- derful. Nonsuch House, a huge wooden pile land. Sueh in beief outline was the London Bridge Which liked the twelfth with the Qu its 'last totter hg legs was removed within the Mmettiory of many still living to give place which i§ said to be *nearly double that em- ployed in building' St. Paul's Cathedral." & Nun Kne!t to Brady. In he Kiliainkam Gaol the "Invincibles" concerned in the jandined, and edit. One of these was Sep rady, ito the conspiracy by the iden : dupes: and sent them to the gal- lows '4G save -his own neck. Down to the else, doggedly refused to forgive Carey. The :P igifi "wis: greatly distressed, and ag'a last rest he asked a relative of ore of tie victims of the tragedy, who was a visit Brady and appeal to him. Brady still provéd 'obdurate, .Of powerful physique, he noureed Carey.' -Swddenly the lady dropped on her knees. an? Bégged the man who had brother" to forgive the base conspirator and informer., The appeal was successful; Brady for, and the unhuppy man went to his doom forgiving even Carey. ganti¢. corn-mill§ domindted the south end of with turrets ard .cupolas brought from Hole cighteerith century, and which, when it was to jis fine successor of our day, the stone in bie er pcre et: : "How A @nix Park tragedy were ; Jamet. 'Gatey, who afterwards be- trayged: his eve of his exttition, Brady, penitent in all aged. pfison ¢ Sister of Mercy in an adjoining convent, to paced his cell like a caged lion' as he de- takel part ig the murder of her own foster broke 'down and 'wept; the chaplain was sent ite -------- ad 000,008. acres. of land in Prussia is over fo national forests, and the yield of tintber- ins of falling off, as in America, is st et 0 Jt wes 20 cubic ' "acre. 1] ft is 65 cubic feet. The alt ly improving also. Net returns have increased mn 28 cents to $250 per acre When forest heavy sleepers, and have fever been acens- timed to night netsing, it may easily be imag'ned how long and weary the with only! the sounds of % nights are orestry | 'woods 1 in rey train" 3s to travel thromgh Weer i crops, and is happy in the QUARTER OF A CENTURY. General Gordon's. Blood the Seed of the Church. _ Twenty-five years ago the news of Gor- don's death reachyd England. Khartoum had fallen, and in the dawn of that fateful morn- ing the noblest of the Victorian soldiers *" 'neath 'the biue that burns o'er Libyan sands Put off the burden of heroic days." The relief expedition for which Gordon had day after day scoured the northern horizon with his field glasses; {roni~the flat roof of the palace on the Blue Nile, had come within sight of Khartoum, but only v hear the na- tives bn the river banks chanting paecons of triumph over the fall of the city, and to re- ceive an insolent message from the victorious Mahdi bidding them surrender. They were too late. In the eleven months' race te Mahdi had won by two days. None of us in whose time it fell will soon forget the thrilling echoes of that "too late" which chosed in the deepest note of Attic tragedy the finest epic of bur generation The justice of time has wrought a singular- ly impressive epiidgue to the bloody drama of Khartonm. In the centre of the Khedivial Avenue 'in the now resurrected city stands a statue of Gordon. From the back of a drome- dary the hero is looking south to the vast Borrisd ar ™™g Seaines, Buoa Pest. Nukeany oils and Pimples. Whenever your complexion is unnat. anal, your skin in an unhenithy condition, your face covered with uiotehes and pimples, when boils snd festering sores abound then vow bind is vd. You oan best cleanse it with that purely vegetable compound, Burdock Bloud Bitters, which saicty sand prouptly ren- expanse of flat horizon whence the Dervish hordes sprang up as if by magic, and swept | over the feebly held defences of the starving | town on the morning of January 26, 1885 | But the land on which the monument looks | is no longer in the grip of desolating | savagery. Gordon's blood has freed and | fertilized it. In its avengement his spirit has triumphed almost as splendidly as he himself | may have dreamt. The whole land has been | reclaimed for civilization, and not only civili- | zation, which is .sometimes hideously Fike | barbarism, but for real justice, humanity and | loving kindness, inspired by the memory of the martyr-hero to whom it owes its greatest | fame. The tribes and the churches are at peace, and the country smiles with bounteous | security of al strong and even-handed administration. i Omdurman, the shambles of Mahdiism, 1s] now the greatest native market in North-| eastern Africa, counting its inhabitants by | hundreds of thousands Khartoum itself, which was levelled with the dust by . the Mahdi as a haunt defiled, fit only for the jackal and hyena, is now a handsome, mod ern city, with broad streets, imposing public buildings, "and plateglass fronted. shops, Jit by electric light and traversed by electric trams, which, thanks to the judicious aMud- iriat of the late Governor, Colonel! Stanton, earn a large profit in diminution of the | rates. It is, moreover, the seat of a govern ment nominally Egyptian, but really in the hands of a devoted body of Gordon's com- patriots, who are not insensible to the stir- | ring example of Gordon's life. Perhaps the most, dramatic revenge in this transforma-| tion is that the new city is planned in the shape of a double Union Jack. a ocal Colonel Gorringe, as he chalked it out one day in the shadow of the ruins of the old palace, was that Maxims placed in centres of the oonverging streets would always be able to hold the town against internal dis- order. The late Sirdar is, however, a man of grim humor, and perhaps he felt the need of Stamping thus indelibly on the Soudan the flag and the Cross for whose honor Gordon died. Of the dramatic events of twenty-five years ago the new Khartoum possesses few relics The battered walls of the old palace, in which Gordon watched and fumed and prayed and ultimately was butchered, were still standing when Kitchener and his avenging army final- ly. smashed Mahdiism at the battle of Omdur yinan. There, under the trees, the memorable memorial service was held by the troops on Sept. 4, 1898, when the British and Egyptian flags were hoisted. The minute guns boom i= h | greatly tmubled | 4 The idea was Kitchener's, and thé reason he gave for it to! ovates the bivod sud invigoraies the entire systemn. F444 4 Mr. C. A. Mussen, Dawlif, a $+ Ala. wnic 1 Secon o 4 nead Burdook bioou sats > Cured. <4 ters us being the Lest blood F44444 punter there uw. ALoW three years sgo | was with 1s and cur drug- ist advised me to try Burdock Biloed Bitter and after taking two bottles | have not bad a Loil or even & punpie" 4 3 Mr J Morehouse, fea- land Station, N.B., writes: "My face and neck were Cured. 4 covered with pimples, and 44444 1 tried all kinds of reme gies, but they did me no good. 1 weni to many doctors, but they could not cure me. | then tried Burdoc Blood Bitters and | must say it is a won- derful remedy for the cure of pimples" For sale by all dealers. Mui utactured only by The T Mibu Co.. Limited, Toronto, Ont. 3 ' Pim + L '$ This Week's - Arivals $- mean ee SUNKIST ORANGES Are Juicy ana Sweet. N Try some from On the Corner Brock and Wellington Stas. img from the gunboats across the swollen waters of the Nile, and mingling alternately with lament of the pipers and "Abide With Me" of the 11th Soudanese band, fitly marked | the end of the old and the dawn of the new | epoch in Soudanese history. The ruins have now been cleared away, and in their place | stands a stately modern palace, wherein Gor | don's memory is kept green by a tablet mark- | ing the fatal spot where doe to | death. The. chief memorial of Gordon in Khar ! toum is the Gordon' College, which has al-| ready obtained for itself a high reputation | thronghout the Soudan. Its object is to train | the sons of Arab and negro Sheiks for com-! missions in the Khedivial army and minor | Government appointments in the Soudan, | which are now entirely héld by Egyptians. | In a sense, too, the Khartoum Cathedral, for | the completion of which the Sirdar has jast | he was Appreciation of Gordon's deeply" religious | life could not be more fitly signalized .than | by a generous response to this appeal. It is | almost a scandal that the building should still | dpounds ian church built by the American mission, mosque, a large Coptic chusch, a Presbyter- | and a Roman Catholic church Khartoum boasts of a magnificent They Practised Odd Faith Cure. * A respectably dressed woman, with an in- | fant in her arms, entered' the cathedral at] Antwerp ome morning when the priest was | alone. She addressed him in earnest and | affecting manner, and with due humility un- | folded her.tale of sorrow. Her child was! suffering ffom some mortal malady; the skill | of the physician had been in vain, and she | was at last convinced that nothing could save | her beauteous babe from tie jaws of death! but being placed for 2 moment in the arms! of her totelary saint. The saint was up in a | niche of the wall with a neat balcony before ! him, in the form of a goodly marble statue. | The priest was moved by her entreaties; he procured a ladder, ascended to the sacred niche, entered 2 balcomy, and, placing. the | babe in the arms of the statue, asked the | grateful mother if she was satisfied "Per | fectiy "so," said that lady; and removing the | adder she walked coolly out of the chureh, | leaving her rosy infant, the astonished priest, | and the unconscious saint all equally elevated, there to remain till the next brother of the' cnmmunity should arrive, . : Henri Bourassa's sew Montreal paper is and Wiles, accompanied by a staff TS to emecurage the egg i cess of the first week's profits. @ issued an appeal, is also a Gordgn, memorial. || be roofless for the want of a few thousand | being sued for $200,000 % 'sum slightly in ex. i tran SECURITY, Cenuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Pus: Boar Lignuture of Sos Pace imile Wi pper Below. BURR SICK HEADACHE. DRUGGISTS MUST BE CHARY, They Sell All Kinds of Hair Prepara- tions, and Fear to Discriminate, Druggists sell all kinds of hair pre parations, and as a rule they are wisely chary of giving pretences to any partienlar one, but many' of them bave come out plainly for Newhro's Herpicide, the new treatment that absolutely kills the dandruff germ H. Swannell & Son, Champaign, IH. "ay One customer of ours who did nol have a hid on top of wis head when he began to use Herp vide, row bas a fair start towards a good head of hair We believe Her picide 10 be by far the best prepara tiog of its kind on the market." Hun dreds of similar everywhere, Sold by leading druggists. Send 10e. in stampy for sample to The Herpi- cide Co., Detroit, Mich, One dollar bottles guarantesd. 'GC. W, Mabood, special agent. J. E. Hutcheson AVCTIONTER and APPRAISER. testimonials from ------ A card sent to 517 Albert Street or order left at 1. Waddington's or J. Stores will receive Pt attention tuferences given '