ifiil tattoo's Total in Crops and Animal Production in 1922 is Worth $14,310,000,000. (v- Washington.---Te»a» led tiw country • jP11 *arm Production, combining crops 1° ;• 'r*' ^.4ii(l animal products, and Iowa was second state, last year, the Department of Agriculture reports. The value crbps, animal products and total Jtarm production by states for 1022 y&fMvwv •M" l.Vfc Jlew Hampshire.. 10,400,000 Vermont ilfassachUBettB .... , Rhode Island ..... Connecticut KTew York ....i... f ew jersey ....... ennsylvanla Itelaware I>l8t. of Colum.... Karylard Virginia .%'est Virginia .... Jtorth Carolina ..., Jfouth Caiplina .„ <Qeorgla - Florida Ohio Indiana Illinois Jlichigaa ......... Wisconsin Jlinnesota fowa Jffiaaourl Jforth Dakota .... jBouth Dakota ... •Nebraska •Kansas J^entuckjr Tennessee v.. .Alabama .......... Mississippi l^ouisiana Tfexas •... Oklahoma Arkansas Montana ^yominf .. ^Colorado ..., He w Mexico -Arizona .... Vtah Sfevada .... Idaho "Washington (Oregon Ohlifofnia .. • Total mas, 44,200.000 46,500,000 , 3,900,000 <8,600,000 291.800,000 68,900,000 858,300,000 16,WO,000 1.100,000 $8,100,000 ISO,800.000 •9,900,000 .hi.owmw 171,500,(W0 tt3.?00,0(X» 74,000,000 296,200,000 238,200,000 442,100,000 22C.700.000 #3,800,000 »>. 100,000 479.300,000 291,100,000 238,400,008 191,200,000 271,900,000 aoejuo.ooo . 231.200.000 ........ 229,100,000 2ffi.900.000 .* 2»,GOO,000.. I46,'W<.i,000 ......... 785.000.000 .4RI,600.000 I.. 245,700.000 ........ • fc.500.000 25,100,000 Ul ,700,000 • 19,100,000 28,400,000 24,800.000 11.300,000 77.fiOO.OO0 142.200,000 93,600.000 441,400,000 ucta 1 .000 19,400.000 •18,800,000 K.700,0«J 1,800,000 K.WO.OOO W,:oo,oco li.soo.ooo 1)1,400.000 ' t.100,000 '.•.f,100,000 H.600.000 ,11,000,000 58,700,OijO 0,100,000 , Jl.iW 000 ' 300,000 12,600,0(10 272.700,000 »,200,000 20,200,000 161.600,000 272,900,000 188,100,000 474,71)0,000 126,900,000 57.000,000 88,100,000 288.000, m 18,600,000 127.900,000 121,800,000 61,600,000 49,300,000 22,200,000 M, 500,000 13I,1'X),000 80.200,000 «,300.000 22,600.000 •4,500,000 S.60O.000 H.900,000. 26,400.000 10,71X1,000 46,800,000 68,800,000 Cl.800,000 148,400,000 tral states In 1922 a vtln of $2,079,000,000, an amount equal to 23-2 per cent of the total crop value of $8,961,000,000 ascribed to the entire country. The east north central states were second, with 16.6 per cent of the national total. The west south central states are a Utile lower, with 15.6 per cent of the total, followed by the south Atlantic division, with 13 per cent, the east south central, with 10.5 per cent; the Pacific, with 7.5 per cent; the middle Atlantic, with 6.9 per cent; thp mountain, with 4.5 per cent, and the New England, with 2.2. per cent. «( lb* Beuth's crop production In 1822 wa» SM0G.000.000, or 38.1 per cent of the tbthl for the United States. This •aloe was almost as great as the value placed on the crops produced In the northern half of the Mississippi valley, embraced in and the two east west subdivisions of the north central states, which was $3,505,000,- 000, or 39.8 per cent of the national total. The two divisions that constitute the East had a crop production valued at $812,000,000, dr 9il per cent of the national total. In value of animals raised and animal products produced In 1922, the west north central states again lead, with a valuation of $1,613,000,000, or 80.2 per cent of the total of all divisions, $5,349,000,000. The combination , of this division with the east north t central states gave a value of $2,917,- I 000,000, or 54.6 per cent of the national j value of animals and animal products, i The percentage for the South was j 212 per cent and for the East 12J5 par cent of the national totaL mu ILLINOIS STATE tmiPS Harvest ... .......$Mtt,000,000 $8,349,000,000 Total Over Eight Billions. v-:|5 Crops raised In the west north een- Experts Figure Cost for Dishonesty in Nation During 1922 Was $30 Per Capita. New York.--Dishonesty In the United States last year paid an army of burglars, robbers, forgers, bucketshop operators, confidence men and common thieves more than $3,000,- 000,000. Conservative estimators place the sum at $3,325,000,000. That Is approximately equivalent to the Internal revenue receipts of the federal government for the fiscal year 1922. It Is greater by $500,000,000 than the Imports of the country in, 1921. ItvIs an average tax on every-man, woman and child In the country of more than $30 a year. Lose $150,000,000. Merchants throughout the coantry last year, wholesalers and retailers, marked off something more than $150,- 000,000 In bad accounts. They charge this loss to operating expenses and the honest consumer foots th£ bills. Railroads of the country last year paid Veteran Ends a JRfty-five-Day Sleep ' f I i i ;V>^- I f Joseph J. Wright of Chicago, an ex-soidler and World war veteran, slept llfty-flve days. According to bis physician. Dr. A. J. Parker, he suffered with toxic meningitis and for neprly two months lay in a state of almost complete coma. Although such patients usually die. Doctor Parker Insisted that he would save Wright's life and as a result, a few days ago, Wright again began to show signs of life. Then he completely recovered consciousness and this exclusive photograph shows him with his aunt and Dr. Parker Upon his awakening. His first remarks were a loud call for a barber, --y<t.g that he was afraid he might be mistaken for 1. Hamilton Lewis. $12,200,000 In claims for foods lost by theft or burglary. They retrieve that sum In higher rates. During 1919 and the early part of 1920, according to an expert, piracy in the New York harbor and docks amounted to $50,000,000 a year and probably half as much for other seaports of the country. While that loss Is now reduced It Is still considerable, he says. Jewelers alone lost more than $1,000,000 In robberies in 1922. Ten train holdups and twenty malltruck robberies from April 8. 1920, to April 30, 1921, yielded bandits a haul of United States mall worth $3,000,390. Railroads of the country Inst year paid claims of nearly $12,500,000 for thefts of freight. In 1921 «•*>»<> Iocs was more than $20,000,000. Chicago's theft and robbery loss 111 1922, exclusive of automobiles, as reported by the police department, was $3,301,709, of which $2,173,952 was not recovered. During 1921, In Philadelphia, with approximately 1.7 per cent of the country's population. 10,- 206 robberies and larcenies were reported, with a loss of $1,509,088, exclusive of automobiles. Of that sum $1,269,624 was not recovered. In the same year 3,352 automobiles were stolen and 1,031, with a value of $1,- 686,716, were not recovered. In five cities In 1921. New York, Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland and Los Angeles, 8,420 stolen automobiles Were not recovered. On one day last year, December 20, New York's list of stolen property totaled $41,837, and Philadelphia's $28,529--a loss for the two cities at a rate of $25,000,000 a year. Bradstreet's records for 1922 show that 885 failures of business firms were due directly to fraud and speculation. Every other man In the jails and penitentiaries of the country Is there for a crime against property. Of the 111,498 prison population shown by the census of 1910 there were 5.000 robbers, 18.000 burglars. 3Q,0GQ ibleves, a total of 53,000, Would Arret! Wif* for Non-Support TIM usual order was reversed in 'a police court in Baltimore. Md., when Joe Vazalies, thirtythree, asked a warrant charging his wife with desertion and non-support. He protested that she left him with no one to help care for his son. Magistrate Jo* hannsen, however, denied his plea for a warrant 'Remembrance Parks" for Italy's Dead[ t- "Remembrance Parks" are being established throughout Italy wherein are planted trees named for every soldier W*,Italy who died In the World war. Not a single fallen hero Is forgotten. The movement Is fostered by Prince Humbert, heir to the throne, who has peAonaliy supervised tl» dedication of Qm memorial trees. ^ photograph shows one of the rememhrance parks. PALESTINE HAS 757,182 POPULATION o^nsus Shows 10 Per Cent of ^ Population Is Christian. Jerusalem, Palestlne.-*-Palestine has a total population of 757,182, accordtog to the figures of the recent census. This figure equals approximately the population of the city of Boston. Ten per cent of the people In Palestine are given as Christians, 11 per cent as Jews and 79 per 'cent as Mohamm^ dans. The figures for Christians and Jews are regarded here as about cor- 8fect, but there was such strong opposition to the census on the part of the Mohammedans that their number. It Is believed. Is considerably underestimated. In two cities only is there a preponderant Jewish population--Jerusalem and Tiberias. In the former city, •ut of a total of 62,000, 34,000 are Hebrews and the rest are about equally «»Wed bnnsia Christians and liofcammedana. It Is Interesting to note that Bethlehem Is the only town in the land in which Christians predominate. Here there are 5,838 of this faith, with 818 Mohammedans and two Jews. Nazareth has a population of 7,424. of which nearly two-thirds are Christian, one-third Moslem and only 58 Jews. •/ The principal seaport, Jaffa, has about-47.000 people, of whom there are 20,000 each of Jews and Mohammedans and about 7,000 Christians. The other large centers of population are very largely Mohammedan. The Palestine "Weekly, a Zionist organ, declares that according to Roman figures this country has supported a population of 7,000,000, hut when one considers that the area of Palestine is about equal to that of Vermont and tlu^t it has about an equa! amount of arable land one questions seriously whether, with the highest development of her natural resources It will he t possible for Palestine ever to support a greatly augmented population. Ver~ mont In 1920 counted -4T*^|28 ^people within the state. Billion Use Gotham Cars in '22. New York.--A billion ulck$ls were paid Into the. elevated and subway turnstiles of the Interliorough Rapid Transit company during 1922 A report shows Its mileage hi.» more than doubled since 1905. and that Its passenger traffic had tripled during the same period. Russian Toys in Oermanf. : Pet nigra d.--Russia recently hesran sending toys to Germany. The first shipment was valued at $25,000. The toys were all made by peasants and differ from the mechanical playthings manufactured extensively by tii^.J^rfcrto* Made by Hany. He seldom lives frugally who Uvea by chance. Hope is always liberal, and they that trust her promises make little scruple of reveling today on the profits of tomorrow.--Johnson. 5', , *> •* J V,' sl ' il /w • ; 7 A: • Peoria.--Phllanthopic societies of Peoria will receive the bulk of the fortune of $25,000 left by James H. Jones. The money is to be equally divided between the Salvation Army, the Volun* teers of America, the Home for the Friendless and the Crittenton home for the aged. Jones left his four children sums ranging from $1 to $100. He and his children became estranged through disagreements over money matters. Springfield. -- Maintenance ' of the present $1.33 Corporate tat rate in Illinois, a state-wide optional' city manager law, amendments in the local Improvements act and opposition to a .proposal to transfer certain motor vehicle lines from local treasuries to the estate treasury are planks in the legislative platform of the Illinois Municljpal league, announced here by II. M. .Story, secretary of the league. ^ Springfield--By the purchase of fen adjoining 208 acres of land the state fair advisory board, the board which governs the affairs of the state fair at Springfield, states that Illinois will liave the largest fair grounds in the United States. The purchases wotlld give the state fair grounds here a total space of 364 acres. Minnesota with 260 acres has the largest acreage at present. Springfield.--Pish donated to state institutions by the state game and fish department last year totaled 36,- 606 pounds, according to the annual report of the department. The department collected $232,196.94 from licenses, game and fish violations, penults and flshlns activities, and expended $204,455.93. The net profits, the report stated, were $27,741. Peoria.--Sergt. Frank Hillyet, Bertlllon expert of the police department, Is soon to "mug" his youngest victim. He announced he would take the finger and foot prints of a young man who came to the home of his daughter, Mrs. Homer Lynn, a few nights ago. He also will take the new grandson's photograph. Rock Island.--Protest of an order by the city physician, requiring all pupils in the public schools to be vaccinated, following the discovery of four cases of smallpox in two families of the city, was made at a mass meeting, addressed by Miss Lora Little of Chicago, representing the American Liberty league. Urbana.--Profitable egg production demands that pullets be hatched early in the spring, and conditions under the control of the feeder must be made so like those of the natural breeding season that the hens will respond by laying egg* that will hatcli, says L. E. Card, head of the poultry division,of the University of Illinois. Watseka. -- Continued Illness of Judge Frederic A. Hill of Will county, who was to have presided at the trial of Edward L. Helkes, former deputy sheriff, charged with shooting Earl Wendel, student of the University ot Illinois, while quarreling In the public highway, llus forced the postponement of the hearing until Monday, April 16. Springfield.--The postal conference convention to be held here April 19 for the state of Illinois, Is expected to be one of the largest conventions of Its kind held In any state. It will be attended by post office officials and employees In the state together with representatives of chambers of commerce and interested business men. Bloomingten.--Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sweeting have returned from a sixweek trip to Florida and Cuba with a sailfish measuring six feet four Inches and weighing 70 pounds, which Mr. 8weeting claims he caught five miles off Miami. The fish Is being mounted and will be placed on exhihlt'on. Rock ford.--Blasting of a St. Patrick's day romance was revealed here in the filing of a suit for divorce by Mrs. Fannie Swan against Henry Swan, the husband being accused of "excessive Intoxication." The Swans were married March 17, 1903, and the divorce bill was filed March 17, 1923 Bloomington.--In announcing May 29 and 30 as poppy days. Commander Charles Schick, department commander. American Legion, stated that the Illinois department has been res| K>nslble for collecting more than $2,- 500.000 In claims for former service men. Springfield--jln the first aeronautics bill ever introduced In the Illinois legislature at Springfield, Senator Jewell of Lewistown proposes several regulations for aircraft designed to make them amendable to laws of the lan'd and to protect persons and property on the ground. Polo.--Guy Gilbert of Polo defeated Lawrence Piper In an egg-eating con test, devouring 16 hard-boiled eegs and a slab of cake and washing thtm down with two cuofuls of coffee. Elgin.--Elgin will vote on a $35,- 000 bond Issue for the construction of a public swimming pool in Wing park, at an election to be held on April 17. Bloomington.--The fourth annual convention of the First District Lions' International, comprising the state of Illinois, Is to be held here April" 30. Laree delegations are exj»ected from Peoria. Danville, Springfield, Champaign, Decatur and other central Illinois cities." Addresses by men prominent In the order wlll feature the convention. ' V CO-OPMEASURE Marketing Bill Is Approved by i ^f.to 3. v rim'it w Centralis.--Margaret Sims, negro, who had passed the century mark in age, died liere. She was the mother of seven children born In the slavery period before the Civil war: Chicago.--Plans for the Innngnrat? on of ituiversKy training for public utility work were discussed at the recent Joint convention of the Illinois Electric, Gas and Electric Railways association held here. The meeting took on the aspects of ati open fontm for the outlining of the coun«e in pul»- Uc utility education which uie University of Illinois Is planning' te open next September. Urbana.--The Clifford Ja<*nfrs Drop Forge foundry was totally destroyed by fire. Tlie loss Is estimated at $75,- partially covered by insurance^) CHICAGOAHS VOTE UMIHST IT Woman Member of House Loses Fink «P*llt fer Her Eiglit-Hour Bill--. r House Passes $19,000,000 , Waterways Bill. Springfield.--When the LaBtfe operative marketing bill passed the senate by a vote of 34 to 3, farmer members praised it as one of the longest strides ever taken Tn Illinois toward a solution of the producer's distribution problem. All of the battling over the bill was done Tuesday when attempts wore made to amend It. Three city senators were the only ones that stood out against the measure: Hughes (Dem., Chicago), E. Webster (ltep., Chicago), and Masod (Rep., Chicago). Twice that many city senators voted for the bill. They are: Senators Boehm (Dem., Chicago), Denvlr (Dem., Chicago), Roos (Rep., Forest* Park), Piotrowskl (Dem., Chicago), Haenisch (Rep., Chicago), and Joyce (Rep., Chicago). In explaining his vote Senator Mason said that he did not like to be In the position of a metropolitan representative voting against a measure in the interest of agriculture, but with the bill containing the penalty clause against buying from u member who was under contract with the association he felt constrained to vote against Eleven or more persons may form nonprofit co-operative associations to engage in marketing agricultural products under the bill which provides also that they may supply members with machinery or other equipment. Mrs. O'Nell Loses Tilt. Representative Lottie Holman O'Neil (Rep., DuPage), Illinois' first woman legislator and champion of the women's eight-hour bill, lost her first parliamentary skirmish when she failed In an attempt to advance the measure to third reading In the house. A motion by Representative Leo O'Neill Browne (Dem, La Salle), to postpone consideration of the bill until April 10 carried by a vote of 68 to 67. Representative Browne declared that he and other members of t" • house had pot had an opportunity > consider the bill and that amendments probably will be offered. Waterways Bill Passes. The house pased the $11),000,000 reappropriation for construction of the Illinois waterways. While this was being done, the senave advanced the Glackin bill creating the "St. Ifciwrehce seaway" commission to represent Illinois tn the Great Lakes-to-Atlantic project. The bill carries an appropriation of $30,000 for the commission. | The house also passed the "speed validating" bill Introduced by Representative Weiss (Rep., Lake). The measure Increases the speed limit of automobiles on rural roads from 250 to 85 miles an hour. Asks New Bank Law Declaring Illinois' banking laws nei a tightening for the protection of depositors against mushroom institutions, Senator Harold C. Kesslnger (Rep., Kane) Introduced a resolution in the senate calling for the appointment of special committees of both houses to consider the advisability of a new banking code. Senator Kesslnger proposed that the committee consider the proposition to create a separate banking department in the state government. Upon completion of the proposed code Senator Kesslnger suggested that it be submitted to the voters next year. t ^ , Wants Board of Five. ^ his resolution made the following recommendations: "That the state bank board be composed of the state auditor, state treasurer, attorney general and two members appointed by the governor. "That the board be empowered to refuse charters if not satisfied with the reputation or standing of the incorporators of a proposed new hank, "That the hoard phali have authority to deny applications for charters for new banks in comnunities where there is insufficient hanking business to support another institution. Asks Temporary Charters. •That new banks be grant<;d onl; temporary charters for one year, to be followed by permanent charters If the state bank board Is satisfied that the Institution ftt on a solid financial foot- Ing." , Disclosures as a result of recent bank failures In both Chicago and down-state communities prompt!*! the resolution. Senator Kessinger said. <$> V'!:. ' fl>V, BT* vt V 'i/ i" fi' m .1 The appearance of your walls Is th« index of die impression, made upon others by your home. Walls soiled, dingy, common-place in appearance or Out of keeping with your furnishings present a handicap which the beet of housekeeping cannot overcome. Stick to plain, simple solid color .treatments or else decorate with the ALABAST! NE-OPALINE PROCESS, which gives such wonderful new effects in three .vcolor harmonies. Ask your ^dealer or decorator to ihowyou jColor samples of S7':£\V ^ rt ^ " '*•!*#' 'iff,| 111 fi* Makes Old Waists Like New I w Putnam Fadeless Dyes--dyss or tints as ysa wMfc Fin What (XNAEA has tooflferYOU! If your dream of success seems like a hopeless if you are discouraged trying to get ahead on high priced land, if your present location fails to give yon uppottaato; there is a new deal for you, a new chance in the fsirtil^ vtagm farms of Weston Canada, where wheat produces SO to 10 bushels to the acres, where the 1922 crop was biggest fat history, where oats, barley and hay and fodder crops are the basis of a great dairy industry, and a man's work brings him success and piuspatKjl. Low Priced Land--the Last Great West In Western Canada you still can buy virgin prairie land at $15 to HI per acre, on long terms if desired, near to town, railroads, etc. land suck as ha* for many year* produced the worM'a price winning whaaft, oats, barley, flax, tm alfalfa. Canada had no war time" land faooav prioaa are not inflated -- you aS around floor. if m 'M m la en the Taxes Favor the Farmer as Values Increase , The tax law* of Western Canada encourage the producing farmer. The tax on land Is reduced when it is brought under cultivation-- while on your buildioas, machinery, improvements, personal property, automobile, there ie no tax at all. A single crop is often Worth more, acre for acre, than the cost ot the land. Rent Now--Buy Later P|y Out of Profits kww fflCMM ON IIWUWWI MOK| what yoa have now isat so important/ H you>' capital is small, or yon cannot sag yoar present noldings to ahutannst m wrtfc Canadian farm and ^r? it oat for a l or two. Makeasoodl capital, and boy later. 1 froas eocoeeaful i Buy on Exceptional Terms--32 Years to Fay of thoea wishing to bay land a national i t st IIS tn SUpar wflHONpinMSi s? and rail way--mach ot i payment until third. bat mnchaser may pay op and aired. Interest six percent per annum an We Help Find Your Opportunity The <**«•••*<•• Government hifiiisntl u boreaus in leadine American centers, whsrt yo« can cattail information, without cost, about all p^taotCanada. Ths men fat charge are C tareetad only in the prospective settler. Get the Facts--No Cost, MAIL THE COUPON. Let tai know, something ot your position. receive free book with maps, free service of the Canadian < eminent Agent in your territory; also information how special rmil- »«» ean he arranged far a trio of inspection. Mail Ceapea te Nearest A<est: - - ;"C$ !*•*' C.J.Bnaa i.S«aW,*ssa •aU: i*,. 1aU. a --«.« , JrffcnM M Mat, asenM, SM. C. J. BKOl'GHTON, Itrolc W. loom 418, 112 W. Ydiun* St., Chles**, III.; J. M. MafLACHLAN, Desk W. It Jetferson Ave. East, Detroit. Mich. FREE HOMESTEADS an ctHlsTiiUbii I in mom locatitMs. Canada welcome, tcoomunltirUy f o--r «ynowur asenldf. see our -S. P. D. N*_ Iftlnola Stat* News lq Brlsft Geneva.--Claude Poole, fornieF ifief. Iff, who established a record In the matter of fees turned Into the Kane county tren surer, from the sheriff's office. announces he will sue the county for $2,000 for depreciation of value of his automobile and Interest on the sum he invested therein while be used It for the benefit of the count v. Lebanon.--Rev. .Dr. Cameron Harmon. of St'Joseph, Mo., prominent educator. was elected preshlent of MeKendree college. Elgin.--Sixteen m!l«s of concrete roads will he constructed in Kane county this year, according U» present plans, at a cost of abont $500,000. The roads to be built will link up all of the larger titles withlii Kane county ant' It., comities adjoining. The road patrol system will take effect April 1. Nine men are to be thus employed at the start. Freeport. -- Representatives of the farmers' Institute* of the six counties comprising the Thirteenth conpresaional district will meet at Freeport on April JO to select dates for 1923 Irsti if***.-;. He Puts Up "Front." Spinks Is a clerk In a downtown broker's office. His Salary is about $35 a week, but hia clothes suggest a. Fifth avenue tailor, and his general air Is that of a man of wealth. Once in a while he lunches at an expensive restaurant; the rest of the time be dodges info those armchair places. But anyone seeing him a little later as he nonchalantly draws a toothpick from its paper jacket would get the impression that an eitfrely different restaurant had been pri ced by Spinks' presence. Having taken the precaution to provide hln.self with a batch of toothpicks bearing the name of the rarely visited expensive restaurant and using them Judiciously he maikes his point.--New York Sun. . J ^ An Altruist "It la well to leave something for those who coine after us," said the man who threw a barrel in the way of the cop who was chasing him.--Boaton Evening Transcript It Is easier -to stay out V. ent.--Mark Twain. Juvsnils Evasion. It was drawing lesson and the task had been set the children to draw an imaginary river with a man sitting on the bank fishing. They all made brave attempts, except one little fellow, whose sketch showed no *ign oi the man. ,. *«Vhy,, Bobby.*; saiid the teacher, "Where's the fisherman 1 told yon to draw?" "Weil, you see, miss," answered the youngster, **I*m not very good at draw* ing people, so I've put up a notice^ Trespassers will be prosecuted.*» Boston E v e n i n g T r a n s c r i p t ^ ! ' " i " "•# • $ 'i'l Refreshes Weary Eyes bbh When You* Eyes feel Dull •nd Hsavy, mm Marina. It In- Kli glj omndyHillavesthsiTfcsdPsriUn -MtkasdbesaCW.fictcbttni Spartitag. Harmless. Sold 3 • ir Mimliiibf ABDinaskii EYES * CATARRH _ Catarrh Is a I.o. al disease rreatly hk* .Itaenced by Constitutional cotiUUiona HAIR'S CATARRH MEDICINE MBSlsta of an Ointment which gives Quick Relief by ItKal application, and the Internal Medhvne. a Tonic, which acta through the Blood on the Mu<-©us Surfaces and assists in ridding your &y*tMS •f Catarrh. ' M^ Bold by druairtets for over 4* Team . , ' ' F. J. Cheney A Co., Toiedo. <X -j ' ' * " Meals Delivered. The latest Idea in Chelsea la a sew* lop of houie-cooked meals (a la caHeit i table d'hote) at reasonable prices, de» ! Ilvered hot and attractive at yoor 1 •fuelling. A boy with a carrier hi* ode calls on request, hands a o>en% aiid serves you with the dishes dfe* 1 sired.--London Mail. Doet rob yourself by ; jaaple hard aana y.;t