NEEDS GREAT COURAGE of the lii_. PERIU8 PACED BY RAILROAD BUILDER8 IN ALASKA. • Storms, Glacier* and Mud Are Some of the Difficulties Which Ar^ Overcome in the Far North. The building of the Copper River railway In Is something new It the record even o' pioneer con struction. The road goes Into the heart of a region where. "living" glaciers discharge millions of tons f ice a day and rhere, according o a writer In the Overland Month ly, the builders laying off the perma nent roadbed Itself on Ice. There are several thousand square miles of glaciers still In Alaska. If the walking were good enough one could tramp northward from the «ea BOO miles without leaving the ice and could branch off on side trips of sev eral hundred miles in various direc tions with Ice always under foot. But It Isn't the Ice, at least not as Ice, that has made the task of the railroad builders so hazardous. Every summer masses of the glaciers break off so that they are rapidly retreating. But that only makes conditions worse for the men who are fighting their way across this remnant of a frozen age. For not only is the ice reduced from a fairly permanent to a most un stable and dangerous material by the summer warmth but the land Is re duced by water to Its least navigable condition. The pushing of the railroad over the Copper river flats Involved enough dogged courage to supply a dozen books of old-fashioned romance. These soft, shifting silt beds, with their innumerable river channels and Quicksands, are impassable in sum mer to either man or beast This was Winter work. "There were twenty miles of storm swept flats, covered with eight or ten feet of snow, alternately flooded with water and frozen solid. Over or through this It was necessary to moye not only men and horses but hun dreds of tons of supplies, timbers and pile drivers. Sometimes rails were laid on brush piled on the snow. In -other places ten feet of snow was •hoveled away for track laying. As spring broke the flats became a lake of slush and water and still the work went forward. The moving of supplies ahead of track laying became Increasingly difficult with warm weather. To get in horses, for in stances, scows just large enough to hold one animal were built and towed by launch across the river channels. Long lines were then attached and the loaded scows towed by force of main strength over the soft mud and Quicksand where men could hardly And foothold and horses would hope lessly mire. A mile an hour was Dften good average time for this trav eling, even with a big crew of every horse, and it went on hour after hour ind day after day. But this was all below the glaciers. At the three-mile face of Miles gla cier the river is contracted within a fleep narrow channel. Hour after hour through the summer this glacier dis charges bergs into the stream, making a wash that climbs a hundred feet up the opposite bank. Nothing can stand before It Just above Miles glacier the river makes a sharp double turn and on the other side meets another great dis charging glacier. Between these two Ice cliffs the railroad runs. The prob lems involved are unique in railroad construction. Where the river is bridged between the glaciers the chan nel is 1,500 feet wide, and piers must be set that would withstand the pound-, ing of the enormous bergs from Childs besides the field ice which is In a fif teen-mile current often six feet deep. These piers were built of solid con crete reinforced with heavy steel rails set a foot apart all around and y they were carried sixty feet to bed rock. Their greatest horizontal di mension also Is sixty feet. In addition the piers are protected by concrete breaks also sunk to bedrock and of nnexamplied solidity. Just above the river at this point a long and rather high trestle was re quired, and in order to fulfill a con tract this had to be built after win ter had set in. With the thermometer around zero and a fifty to sixty-mile' wind beating a heavy snowstorm al most horizontally the men worked on this trestle, while on the level the wind gathered snow and gravel Into a frightful mixture and hurled it at the workers with terrific Airy. One hour was a long shift. Engines were stalled and had to be dug out. Shovelers sometimes could make no headway whatever against the flying drifts in digging out supplies. For days the wind blew more than eighty miles an hour and then no man could face it Eighty miles of warm wind Is too much for most people. At sero and well mixed with ice and gravel It is too much even for an Alaskan. Useful Pincers. Pincers patented by a California man include a hammer and punch on either side of the jaws, dividers at the ends of the handles and a gauge to set the dividers so that they may be used as calipers. Money Tight Drug Clerk--I've been docked a week's salary for making a mistake and killing a duul Lend me $5, wont you? Friendly Policeman--Couldn't pos sibly. I've just been suspended a week for killing another one.--New York Weekly. Motor-Propelled Vehicles. More than 30 per cent of all vo- hides in Massachusetts are motor propelled, a greater proportion than in any other state. STOP CRUELTY TO TRUNKS Railroad Brings Millenium Nearer by Supplying Cushion Upon Which Baggage May Drop Painlessly. By devising a cushion upon which trunks may be dropped painlessly, the Cumberland railway In Pennsylvania almost persuades us that the millen nium is at hand. Thousands of summer tourists who effectionately kiss their trunks good- by after strapping and roping them In eighteen directions will offer up a prayer lhat the Cumberland railway's plan may be universally adopted be fore another year rolls around. The new cushion for the prevention of cruelty to baggage 1s made of pieces of airbrake hose mounted on ash strips. This mat can be dragged wherever a car is to be unloaded and affords a soft lighting place for the precious trunk stuffed with milady's "finery. It some kind genius will only devise a pneumatic-cushioned truck upon which baggage can be loaded and will provide pads to be placed between the trunks when they are piled high as the tower of Babel in transfer stations a great strain will be taken off the nerveB of travelers. Baggage-smashing Is the most cruel of trades. The butcher isn't half as brutal in his methods as the baggage man. Here's success to the Cumber land railway official who is trying to save passengers from the awful sounds which the baggage hustlere produce every time a carload of trunks is turned over to them. MEN'S BRAINS ARE AT FAULT Railroad Official Declares Human Fea ture Enters Into All Modern Train Wrecks. "No matter how perfect the me chanical department of a railroad and how strict the rules and regulations given the men, it is impossible to get awaj* from the fact that we have al ways to depend on the brain of one man. It is the engineer in the cab." This wss the statement of George A. Cullen, general traffic manager of the Lackawanna, after hours of effort In trying to place the blame for the dis aster near Corning, in which forty-two persons were killed. "Railroad men have studied this problem for years," he went on, "j|nd always we come to the same question: Is there any other means than human agency that will protect perfectly the lives of those in trusted to our care? No, there must be the human mind--the man. In ev ery accident it is some human mechan ism that is at fault, some brain forgot or neglected to work at the proper time. The steel and wire mechanism is never at £ault. That was the case In this terrible catastrophe. Our sig nals worked perfectly; all the men on the road performed their prescribed duty except one, and he says, in ex planation, that he did not see the signals. He blamed the fog. He was the. engineer of the express which tele scoped the Buffalo limited." Lives the Longest. What machine lives the longest? It would seem to be the railway engine. The state department of France, which is concerned with the manage ment (or mismanagement) of rail ways, has found on the western rail way fourteen locomotives which are as old as the line itself. They were built in 1864, when that portion of the rail way between Rouen and Paris was in process of construction. Further, they are ascribed to the atalier of an\Eng- llsh engineer named Budlccon. The name does not appear English or Scotch. Still the work of the bearer remains, for those locomotives of the vintage of 1864 drag trains about the environs of Mans and Rouen today.-- London Chronicle. Queueless Chinese Demand Hats. The wholesale cutting of queues, which was a consequence of the rev olution in China, cooled the heads, at least in a literal sense, of the Chi nese to such a degree that there arose an enormous and unprecedented de mand for head covering. The na tive hat Industry, being but little de veloped ,was unable to keep up with the demand made by the shears, and Japan, where the industry is flour ishing, was flooded with orders. The Japanese factories have been work ing night and day for months to fill the unexpected need of the new re publicans. Jumps Ralls, Then Returns. A remarkable railway accident oc curred recently on the Nickel Plate system, near McComb, O. During the night a car In the westbound freight train jumped the tpick, was pulled along for a quarter of a mile, and then, on reaching a road crossing, took to the rails again in some unac countable manner. All this* occurred without the knowledge of the train men, and was not discovered until next day. All the bolts in the splice bars connecting the rails were cut by the wheels of the car for the entire distance, and one rail was broken. Game for an Elizabethan Banquet. Peacock pie, which figured at the Elizabethan banquet held to celebrate Midsummer day, is not a delicacy likely to tempt all epicures. Still, most of us would rather cat peacock than some of the other birds con sumed by our forefathers. In the thirteenth century the heron, the crane, the crow, the stork, the cor morant and the bittern were consid ered excellent for the table. Yet the hare and the partridge were de spised as food, and neither was ever served in the houses of the wealthy Thankful for His Escape. "It's useless to urge me to marry you. When I say no I mean no." "Always?" "Invariably." "And can nothing ever break youi dftermlnatlon when once you make up your mind?" "Absolutely nothing." Press for Stamps. A press has been Invented In Ger many to print postage stamps In rolls for use in coin In the slot rendlni machines. LIVE STOCK FIRST CARE OF BROOD SOWS Should Be Kept in Thrifty Condition Without Laying on Much Fat-- Making $7 Cot. The first care of the brood sow should bej^keep her In a thrifty con dition laying on much fat. A week or to days before farrowing time put her in a fattening pen and let her get accustomed to her new quarters. Feed a little bran each meal, which has a laxative effect and makes farrowing easier. Scratching and petting a sow while feeding is time well Bpent, although It may seem ridiculous to some, writes Edward B. Chalk in the Farmers' Mall and Breeze. By treatment of this kind I have in one week tamed an old sow that looked like a man-eater so I could handle her pigs. I prefer the hog cot or the individ ual hog house. While the large house WEED OUT 'GRADE* STALLIONS Effect of Breeding Prom 8*th Stock la Apparent <n Very Low Grade of Horses Produced. The education of the average far mer as to the Importance of good breeding in the production of horses makes slow progress. The majority --and this Is not over-stating the fact --are not yet prepared to pay a de> cent price for stallion service, pre> ferring to use scrubs because they are cheap. Some of the states have passed stallion laws containing some excel lent features. Wisconsin has a cense law which prevents the preva HINTS ON THE FORMATION OF FARMER'S MBRARY AND BOOKS IT SHOULD CONTAIN CRITICAL TIME •N* 5S&. Itt • I The Hog Cot in Sections. Is convenient and has other advan tages, it is hard«to keep clean, and if a contagious disease breaks out the chances are that all the herd will take it. The bottom timbers of my hog cot are 2 by 6's, placed up eight inches and made to lap over at the corners, where a pin holds them In place when set up. The top timbers are 2 by 4's, made in the same way. The dimensions of the cot are 8 by 8 feet, 6 feet high in front and 4% feet at the back. I find that such a house can be built for $7. It is best to make such a house of matched lumber, but inch boards a foot wide and well battened are good. I place a guard along the wall of each cot, a 2 by 6 that extends outward and is six or eight inches above the floor. This protects the pigs from be ing rolled on when they are young. I have five of these cots now and will build five more. They are easily kept dry and clean, may be moved aboflt where wanted and when not in use for hogs may be used to house chickens or calves. REMEDY FOR LICE ON CATTLE A "Grade" Perchoron. lence and distribution of grade stal lions in the state. Minnesota has a law framed alone the lines of the Wisconsin measure. Pennsylvania and Utsh have adopt ed similar laws and other states have restrictive measures under considera tion. The effect of these laws is to make the owner of each non-registered stal lion declare his horse a "grade." On handbills that are posters so that no one may be deceived as to his pedi-one £ (TM The situation abroad is very much better than In this country. In fact, practically no scrub, grade or non- registered stallions are used for pub- lis service. In the Investigations of this matter carried on by Dr. A. S. Alexander of Wisconsin It was found that of all the stallions In the state, 60 per cent were grade stallions and only 40 per cent, pure bred. Some of the specimen horses used for public service are remarkable ex hibitions of wretchedly bad. run down and diseased animals. The illus trations are from photographs of a "Grade Hambletonian" and a "Grade Percheron," which traveled through out the state for service. One is 13.3 hands in height and weighs 650 pounds, and he is not the worst in the lot, by any means. The effect of breeding from such Btock is apparent in the very low In the Library of Frank I. Mann. By E. P. HERMANN, Student at University of Illinois. The modern minister, doctor or law yer would not think of trying to prac tice his profession without the text books and professional periodicals that his library affords, nor could the en gineer, the manufacturer or the mer chant do as good work without the help of the previous experience of oth ers, largely found in books. But just as valuable as law boohs to the law yer are the works on agriculture to the modern farmer. A few practical suggestions as to the start may be In order. Write to your congressman asking for the agri cultural year book, with back numbers if he can supply them, and for a list of the bulletins and circulars of the department of agriculture. When you receive this list check off those which you wish and send htm the list. Also ask for such reports of the other de partments as would be of advantage to a farmer's library. Ask to be put on the permanent mailing list for an nouncements of new publications. Write to your state experiment sta tion for reports and for a list of cir culars and reports In the same way. Write to the secretary of your farm ers' Institute for Its report and other publications. Ask your state super intendent of public instruction for such documents as would be of value to you. Write to the extension de partment of your state university for information as to the extension work that they are carrying on. The similar departments of other states publish other material and will usually send It on application. Subscribe for a few of the best farm papers and magazines. It will some times be well to have these bouad in a simple inexpensive manner. Join your county horticultural soci ety, your local grange, the stock breeders' association and similar or» ganizations which exist In your local ity and receive their publications, as well as th« other benefits which they offer. These four sets of suggestions will enable you to get your library started on the professional Bide. The matter should not be allowed to rest here, however, but some of the more thor ough and connected discussions on the various phases of agriculture should be purchased to help out Neither Is the farmer's library com plete if It contains nothing but pro fessional material. There should he some good general, children's and household magazines; there should be story books and cultural books--in Bhort, there should be a "weN-round- ed" collection of books that will grovt more valuable every day. PRINCIPLES OF DIET AND VARIETY OF FOOD A "Grade" Hambletonian. grade of horses produced. Water can not rise above its level, neither can f grade stallion raise the blood level o: his progeny above that of his own veins in quality. The use of such sires, therefore means a retrogression and a great damage to the farmers of any state. Application of Crude Petroleum Will Kill These Pests--Same Treat ment Good for Swine. Calves and yearlings with bald spots around the head, neck and along the spine and under the stomach are In fested with animal lice. Lice prevents growth and weakens the strength of the animal. Give each one a good washing with warm water and car bolic soap. Use a good, stiff brush to cleanse the skin. Take time so that thorough work can be done; wipe dry, then rub In crude petroleum. One application, If the work is well done, will be sufficient. Strong cider vinegar may be used In place of the petroleum. Crude petroleum can be had for 12 cents per gallon. It is valuable for healing cuts and sores on 6tock. The same treat ment should be given to sows and Pigs. Lice hatch In the woodwork of stables and pens. Give the stable a thick coat of hot lime wash; mix one ounce of carbolic acid in each bucket of wash. Get the wash well Into the cracks. Clean out the pen and dust the floor of the pen and also the yard with dry air-slacked lime. Hogs and r>>£3 should have a grass pasture with a low shed to go under at night and during hot days. If you wnat to see a pig grow, give him plenty of clover and freshly made mill- fed slop, mixing one handful of lin seed meal in the slop once or twice a week. Give fresh, pure water and charcoal or burnt wood. Diarrhoea In Little Pigs. The cause of this trouble is usually an abrupt change of feed, either of the mother or of the pigs. An ex clusive diet of alfalfa Is responsible for some of the Intestinal Irritation, s><own by a watery green diarrhoea ap pearing a few days after feeding upon alfalfa. Most animals recover after several days purging, but succumb from weakness. Another source of the trouble is dirty, unsanitary sun> roundings with stagnant water for drinking purposes. Treatment naturally should consist of. b change of the conditions so far as possible. A Change of feed should be given gradually, and In alfalfa feeding a little grain is Indicated un til the little pigs become accustomed to the alfalfa ration. Indications of Poor Pasture. A horse will indicate that it fcas been left in a scanty pasture and forced to fight files by its lean, stunted appearance. Shade for Calves and Hogs. Make a shade for the calves and hogs. Neither can do well when fight ing sun and flies together. Pumpkins for Hogs and Cows. It Is surprising that more pumpkins are not fed to pigs and cows which lave access to alfalfa pasture In the fall. For brood sows and shoats, and even for fattening hogs a ration of jumpkins will give good results. It has been found that raw pumpkins will give as good results as though thev were cooked. If cooked and some grain sprinkled over them hogs will eat more of them, which Is the ouly advantage. In feeding cows the seeds should be removed If fed in large quantities, for the seeds, If fed in considerable quantity, will Inter fere with the digestion and cause a decrease in the milk flow. Serious Mistake. Don't make the mistake of thinking that any dirty thing Is good enough (or the hog Just because he has the reputation of being a dirt-loving ani mal. No doubt this common mistake has caused more disease among hogs than any other one thing. Getting Moat Profit. The ultimate end of the hog Is pork and the quicker the growth to mar ket maturity, the more profit there is in it for the feeder. Don't overwork the mare; it won't pay. It Is as easy to teach a colt good manners as faulty ones. If grasB is short, be sure to feed a succulent ration of some kind. The manners of the horse usually reveal the temper of his owner. A good Shropshire flock should av erage nine to ten pounds of wooL Unless a man has a great love for a horse he should not handle colts. The cause of unthrifty pigs "f often be traced to a filthy swill bar rel. No animal that gets only feed enough to support life can make a gain or profit Silage is highly relished by young stock and by idle cows, as well as those in milk. A five cent straw hat filled with leaves dipped in water may save % $200 brood mare. \ Silage is well adapted for fattening lambs and for a part ration for Win tering breeding sheep. Don't leave the sheep in a dry, short pasture. Give them a chance in • fresh pasture, or give a good grain ra tion. Most horsemen have had unfavor able remits from feeding silage tt horses. A few report it a satisfactory feed. Fine-wooled ewes crossed with one of the mutton breeds will make s sheep possessing both wool and ton qualities. At Work in Household Science Department Kitchen, UnlVbrelty of Illinois. By SU8ANNAH USHER, Assistant Professor of Household Sci ence, University of Illinois. The rise In the cost of living has made the cost of food of vital concern to most of us, and the numerous die tetic cults have set us to thinking along the line of diet In relation to health. We may be somewhat bewildered by the contentions of the meat eaters, the non-meat eaters, the chewers and the raw food advocates, but fortunate ly we have some landmarks in the wilderness. Until authorities can agree It may be wise to take a middle course- By careful observation, each one can decide to some extent how much and what kind of food keeps him In good condition for his particular work. We know that we need for energy In proportion to the amount of muscular work of the body, Internal, such as di gestion, assimilation, circulation of the blood and respiration, and external. This has been worked out by scientific experiment. The question of variety is often a puzzling one to the housekeeper, es pecially If the market Is poor; In this case she Is thrown back on variety In the preparation of a few food ma terials rather than variety in the ma terials themselves. Different methods of preparing a few simple foods are well illustrated by some work done by a class at the University of Illinois. These students were given four sim ple foods, beef, potatoes, cabbage and apples, from which to serve 12 meals without twice preparing the same food Good Investments. Every dollar spent in buying needed equipment for the farm is an Invest ment that the farmer should be glad to make. It Is the duty of every farm er to keep posted upon new lmple- tnents, and whenever one is found that saves labor and brings returns buy it for the farm. Pigeon Keeping. Pigeon keeping is remunerative and instructive work for the boys. They like the work, which is one of the first requisites of success. Care of Separator. A clean canvas or oil cloth cover for the separator will help keep the machine clean and improve the quality of the cream that comes out of It Alfalfa. Alfalfa will grow on nearly all good, well-drained soils, but best on a rich, sandy loam. Skimmed Milk. Skimmed milk finds its best market in the pig pen. in the same manner. The following were prepared and served: 1--Porterhouse steak, mashed pota toes, cabbage salad with nuts, baking powder biscuit, apple pie, coffee. 2--Roast rib of beef, baked potatoes, cabbage salad (sour cream dressing), plain bread, baked apples with cream, coffee. 3--Shepherd's pie, creamed cabbage, white muffins, apple sauce with whip ped cream, cocoa. 4--Short ribs, French fried potatoes/ steamed cabbage, graham gems, apple dumplings and cream, coffee. 5--Hamburg Bteak, rlced potatoes, escailoped cabbage, graham bread, ap ple tapioca, coffee. 6--Beef loaf, creamed potatoes, cold slaw, nut bread, Dutch apple cake with cream, coffee. 7--Tongue, cabbage and potato sal ad, popovere, apple turnovers with cream, tea. 8--Creamed dried beef, stuffed po tatoes, creamed cabbage with peppers, brown betty with cream, coffee. 9--Corned beef, boiled potatoes, boil ed cabbage, butter rolls, apple pud ding, coffee. 10--Rolled Btuffed steak, browned potatoes, hot slaw, baked apples, cream, jelly, nuts, coffee 11--Corned beef hash, potatoes with butter and parsley, cabbage an gratln. entire wheat muffins, Dutch apple cake, lemon sauce, tea. 12 Pan broiled flank steak, escol loped potatoes fried cabbage, Frensh rolls, apple short cake and cream, cocoa. Dirty Cows. To prevent the cows from lying down and getting dirty between clean ing and milking a throat latch of rope or chain should be fastened across the stanchions under the cow's neck. From 40 to 50 Years of Age» How It May Be Pasted is. Safety* Odd, Va.:-- "I am mfajing better* health than I have for 20 years, and 1. believe I can safely say now that I am a well woman. I wa» reared on a farm and had all kindaof heavy work to do which caused the trouble* that came on me la ter. For five years during the Change of Life I was not able I 1 to lift a pail of wa- --* ter. I had hemor rhages which would last for weeks and I was not able to sit up in bed. I suffered a great deal with my back and was so nervous I could scarcely sleep at night, and I did not do any housework for three years. "Now I can do as much wort m any woman of my age in the county,, thanks to the benefit I have received from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I recommend your remedies to all suffering women."--Mrs, M.4R7H&, L. Holloway, Odd, Va. No other medicine for woman's Ufa has received such wide-spread and unquali fied endorsement. We know of no other medicine which has such a record of success as has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. For more than SO fears it has been the standard remedy or woman's ills. Tf yon have the slightest donhtt that Lydia E« Pinlclmm's blc Compound will help yon, write to I..ydte EPinkhnmM^lfine Cfr (confidential) ipni Mass*, foraa-- vice. Your letter will b«ep«ited^ read and answered by a woman* and held iu strict- confidence*. V SMn m * ' ^ J! •" % Jgg Resinol Soap is a real baby soap because it is absolutely free from the harsh, injurious alkali present in most soaps, while it containa- the same soothing, healing, anti septic balsams as Resinol Oint ment, so that it is usually sufficient, to prevent rashes, itchings, chaf- ings and other distressing baby skin and scalp troubles. i Your drugrtst sella Realnol Boep (Kc) and Resinol Ointment (8©e>. For - •ample of each write to Dept. 1SK, Resinol Chemical Co. Baltimore, Md. flea* Qumlk Lar««*t VuMy MOD cu ll] mituwu SHOES. • t»G£i '->• '-i- -• ^' • •a * "GILT EDGE," tfte ouiy U<W ifeued.Mttuthatpoa- ivdv contains OIL, Black* atsl Fowba UcW iitj booti «nd attinc* without rubbing. 25c. "Fr*nch CioM," 10c. "STAR** combination (or cInaiMuil pnfcUnn al Limit of ruMcl or Ua show, 10c. "Dudy" me25«. • qUICKWHITE" (in liquid form with ««•>) ^mekijr ^CUUI ud w kit ens dkty cutm Ami * ("clcana »d wtrfHnu eurmAow. la round white caltei pacLcd in zinc-tin boxw,with > , 10c. lu Wmcisotneiuse alununu.ni bo»e». with tpwtfe, 2 5c. If your 'if i!ri iut kr-rp lh*- kind you want send ti# price in fur a fuliauepack*£e. changes paid. WHITTEMORE BROS. A CO. 20-2G Albany St., Cambridge, Mat*. The OiJsii uttd Largest in ihi If arid Value of Tile. A line of tile often converts a swale of rushes Into a meadow of the finer* grasses If mown twice a summer fc several summers. Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when fhe Hver tl 1 right the stomach and bow< right. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER ¥axs gently butfirmly com pel a lazy liver tOj' do its duty. Cures Con-„ •tipation, ln-^ digestion, Sick Headacht, and Distress after Eating. SMALL FILL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL PBICB. Genuine must bear Signature, Cartel ITTLE IVER What About California? Do run waaft aatkaatle, Qf-to-tet*. «nbi«nit formation? Clason's Guide and Map qurstiuus abootCalifornia. BrsuitofM Milk in Bottiea. Milk sold In bottles is more likely to be clean than that which is other wise sold. Nevertheless It la well to ba sure it Is clean. Wearing Out. There are few people who never wear out; but there are plenty of them who rust and rot oat. Demand for Poultry. The demand for good poultry and eggs 1b growing every year and will undoubtedly oonU&ua to grow. Ott twstof jM*p«sr,d?>nib:T expense, la tailed prenald €LAS<m M »Ai>WAT, and uaap p4UJ at prvat expense ~ BKOAUWA OD rvoffji' of : LOS ANtitLtA, CAI» hair balsam Claaaw. ';<* Iliir to !'.» iYotraca bair ftilli; - too, i tutir lfc ICWfC'SINOIJE tk tm qttUii r BINDER mrnmatim AUMY? seuabia A GOOD PROPOSITION THOMPSOM '̂SUgS EYE WATER SSlfaF*® l. THOMrso* assart*.. Tw*r. M. V* W. N. Mi CHICAGO* mo. ^ • '.1. ' , • ?T"