Newspaper Page Text
! Hand
I r * ar e the skirts with from
| Very sn3 ‘ gores, each seam
!•*“ theater Bide, so that it
I ild> cd -t. a narrow bias band.
t<,,n irrect these skirts should
|f tlcVel T,H'he from the ground.
L r . have been extremely
I These " (I,), summer, and in
M i< ”I„ihts 1 „ihts will he worn during
or two.—lndianapolis
tie * st 1
I To lb's!' l ' 1 h’iesh.
nyo overstout, don t use
, Jf J' 0!1 a
I bring on another evil
I The)' r - 'I h
I *on flesh.
*** L flpsh brush. Get a square
"Id clothes brush of manila
corD ere
I Jbr /; first the skill will be sensitive,
‘ I the brush gently and steadily
I w hi not irritate.
v l attention to the muscles of the
,dp r c and arms, and especially
f®L k of the n?ck where that un
tt* f n o-.md of flesh rises.
“menever you can walk, do so.
wa gine that the trolley car engen
aprs disease.
When vou feel sleepy go out in the
sunshine on an interesting mission.
Do your sleeping at, night and omit
afternoon nap. New Tork
Times. _
g!j C Can Gossip in 13 Tongues.
Marteina Kramers, of Rotterdam,
ranks among the first of women lin
“ists she can read and speak thir
teen ianguages, and there are few
men in the world who can equal that
record. Besides, she has sufficient
knowledge of seven other languages
to converse in them, and she has
planned to add anew language to her
list every six months for several
vears. Miss Kramers also ranks as
j ne of the most influential suffragette
in Europe. She is editor of Jus
Suffragii, the official organ of the
International Woman Suffrage Al-
Fish For Invalids.—A nice way of cooking cod for inva
lids: Wash and dry the fish, sprinkle well with flour, a little
pepper and salt and put in a dish which is well greased with
butter. Pour over sufficient milk to cover bottom of dish
about an inch in depth (more if liked). Cover down and
cook in a hot oven until quite loose from the bone, basting
frequently all the time. This makes a tasty dish, generally
being eaten with relish, as it is quite free from fatness and no
favor being lost. The milk serves as a sauce, being thick
ened with the flour while cooking.
Our Cut-out Hucipe.
rasle in Your Scrap-Book.
I liance, which has several branches In-
I this country. Miss Kramers is one
of the most optimistic of the workers.
| She believes that within ten years
I America and all the countries in Eu
rope will extend suffrage to women
on equality with men.—New York
Press.
• - - r-
-
Here’s a Golden Girl, Indeed.
Laura White, of San Francisco,
expects to become the richest woman
in the world. After several years of
prospecting she has discovered a gold
, v in in Nevada, and now is directing
mining operations personally. The
pluck and thoroughness that have
made woman so successful against
men in the world of work tell the
story of Miss "White’s winning of
wealth. She saw nothing in a future
as a clerk in a San Francisco office, so
she studied mineralogy and struck
°ut into the Nevada mountains. She
ttet the disappointments that seem
to come to every prospector, but her
confidence never waned, and finally
8 e marked down a gold vein on a
mountainside that had been searched
Scores oi men. She filed her claim
, Was ready for work before news
J‘ 0 ber r ' c b find reached the public,
ail when men rushed in to stake out
! “| ,ILs 't was found the young woman
;u obtained control of every square
? 01 Promising ground. Miss
fp,. 1 (^re ets the work of a large
iv; ! miners, and it is said that
‘on below ground she wears men’s
Ciothes. New York Press.
■rWr Told by the Hair.
'iu v ah blue eyes and straw-eol
auri b ail . genera lly have a far calmer
*ith p?* 6 ' 1 ' life ’ as a ru * e ’ tfi an those
Plc\iop JlS UUk eyes olive com-
The fain , .
level ■ u >, ‘ rl 1S almost sure to be
to ma 63 and in . he ” love affairs, and
till bf a s ' nsible marriage, but she
dark ,! nilca more fickle than the
not h o hll ’ bj( ' L ' ause her feelings will
DarV° desp and Passionate,
love i’V iS are more emotional;
their f ‘?. ns so lllllc h to them that
ing tv- " "I s is (iee Per and more last
tbMearnlhe IOVe of fair Sirls, or so
Bru>v <t ' 111 Ruc ‘ l matters say.
and <w e ' ,omen make very loving
do not*, URtrative mothers, but they
Women t^ derstan and discipline. Fair
a Pfoaaic tUeir child,en best for
It and every day life.
easier to? I .'- 1 * ka * children are
their aii, Jlllls U 1) * llan dark ones, as
iess Hkei >' to be
to r esist more vitality
theml/T 1 " ° f eitker s ex fret and
innf lUotlonal w °rries in a
Phlegm Pi UnC^ lmon amon S the
1 tair ‘ skinile and people.
Utlse d aim- ' P eo Ple must be
saußhter$ au Bhter with The mother of a
( ar k eye s ln ' \ r , uddy sold locks and
lr °ubie T' l ' Je 011 t be lookout for
run. cours<? of true love
smoothly for the dark-
eyed, auhuni-haiied giil.— New York
Telegram.
We Angered English Suffragist.
Mrs. Cobden-Sairderson still is try
ing to convince the English that
American women are interested only
in themselves. It is the dull season
for the suffragette in England, and
probably that is why Mrs. Cobden-
Sanderson is raking over the old
coals. She was not especially grati
fied by the results of her mission
hero, and she has deemed it wise to
glow moie emphatic in her criticism
of the American women than she was
a few months ago, when fresh from
hei fruitless \ isit to this countrv.
Mrs. Cobden-Sanderson and Mrs.
Humphry Ward agree that there is
little prospect of a campaign here for
the ballot box for women, but the
novelist has been more reserved in
her accounts of her meetings with
American women in their clubs and
homes. Of course, woman is entitled
to her own opinion; still it seems the
part of a blind courage, if not audaci
ty, for an Englishwoman to stay here
a few' weeks and then return to her
home to deliver a verdict upon Amer
ican womanhood. The trouble with
Mrs. Cobden-Sanderson and Mrs.
Ward is that they have not weighed
the radical differences in the posi
tions of women in this country and in
England. The incentive to agitation,
to the baiting of legislators and Cab
inet members, does not exist here as
in England, where women still
main more or less vassals in the eyes
of the law'. —New York Press.
Overcoming Carelessness.
A group of mothers xvere lament
ing about the carelessness of children
and men in eating, and the drain
these hard times of big laundry bills.
“My family scarcely spot the cloth
any more,” laughed one of the moth
ers. “They find it too expensive! I
used to have a tablecloth a day in the
wash, and then could scarcely keep
them respectable looking.”
“The laundry bills were huge, as
my one girl could not possibly do
them at home, and the wear and tear
on the linen w'as as bad.
“Finally I hit on the plan of mak
ing each member who made a spot
cover it with money, pennies for the
children from their own allowance
and silver from the grown-ups.
“We voted what to do with the
money. I was for the hospital, but
the rest preferred to devote it to
something for the table, so we started
a fund to bay new table linen and
china. For the first month or so we
had a flourishing bank, but now alt
have grow r n so careful that our fund
grows slowly.”—New York Press.
fez&Q M FWEST
Newer than the ribbon band about
the coiffure is the pleating of gold
braid.
Gray paste pearls as heads to long
hat pins are worn with light colored
satin hats.
Pocket handkerchiefs have wide
colored centres and hems, the initials
done in white.
Russian fish-net veils in dull bronze
are cut entirely square and go over
the entire hat.
Borderanto is the name of the new
chiffon auto veiling. It comes in
handsome colors with dainty hairline
stripe borders.
Ball gowns, especially some of Gre
cian design, are worn without gloves
eve* though their sleeves are merely
geologies for sleeves.
A large brown felt hat has no other
trimming than six great brown roses,
some pale tan with golden hearts,
others deeper in tint.
Narrow belts of soft suede in pa
tel colors, to wear at the top of big
directoire skirts, are finished with ob
long silver and gun-metal buttons.
Pretty, but injurious to the eye
sight, are the Breton lace veils, loose
ly draped round the hat and capable
of being thrown back over the face.
Three-inch belts of braided sou
tache, with wide buttonholes, through
which a satin sash is run, tying at
the side, are finished with tassels of
soutache.
Black suede button shoes will be
a good choice for feet that can not
be described as of Cinderella propor
tions; the dull surface tends to re
duce the size in the kindest manner.
Blouses are cut like a long yoke,
as fullness underneath the skirt will
interfere with its proper fit. A tin
band of the macerial, or better sti
of silk ribbon, is used as a finish rv
ie hooßvd at the back.
A 53 MILLION ACRE FARM.
And a Prosperous One Too Is Kansas
—Barns Full, Banks Fuller,
Crops Big
Kansas is a farm and it is little
else The rooster is dts fitting herald.
It is .a farm of 33,000,000 acres that
up to 1860 had less than 100,000 peo
ple, men, women and children, with
in its confines, and even as late as
1890 had barely turned the million
mark.
It has come through more tribula
tions than almost any State in the
1 nion. Jt has had floods and winds
and crop failures and insect plagues
and the racking fortunes and misfor
tunes of war, general and particular,
to combat.
There were years when th’e w’eak
kneed of its population turned from
it, hungry and heartbroken, haggard
and hollow eyed, cursing its treeless
prairies and cruel seasons; there
were other years in which its bold
est and most earnest picked up their
belongings and trekked to populate
other and newer States—Oklahoma,
for example.
Even today its population, down
to the last negro roustabout or Chi
nese laundryman, numbers barely a
million and a half. But last year
its farm products alone, upon con
servative calculation, were worth
$463,648,607.58.
Its barns are full, its banks are
fuller, and its great crops are even
now rumbling to market to bring m
more money. Its total of recorded
mortgage indebtedness is only $47,-
609,807, and most of that, outside of
the big lump (in Kansas City, is for
the buying of “more land.”
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's
sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists.
HIS METHOD.
'Sandy Pikes; “Say, pard, tell me
ihow it is dat you get such rich
hand-outs of pie and beefsteak at ev
ery gate you tackle?”
Gritty George: “Sh! it’s a secret.
I tell dem if they don’t give me
de best I'll jump into de town’s res
ervoir.” —New York Tribune.
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollftrr. Reward
for any cage of Catarrh .hat cannot be
cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Cos., Toledo, O.
We, the U' dersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe
him perfectly honorable in all business
transactions and financially able to carry
cut any obligations made by their firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists.
Toledo, O.
Waldino, Rinnan & Marvin, Whole
sale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act
ing directly upon the blood and mucuoussur
faces of the system. Testimonials sent Lee.
Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
Dividing The Spoils.
“I like that other waiter,” she said
at the little -cafe, “but I hate this
one. He takes special delight in
bringing me cold soup, half a portion
of spaghetti and the wings of the
chickens. I’ve the greatest notion not
to tip him to-night.”
“If you don’t,” said he, “yclni he
hitting the waiter you like, too. When
the dinner is over all the waiters on
the place divide up the tips.”—New
York Press.
HAD ECZEMA 15 TEARS,
Mrs. Thomas Thompson, of Clarksville,
Ga., writes, under date of April 23, 1907: “I
suffered i5 yea-s tormenting eczema;
had the best doctors to prescribe; but noth
ing did me any good until I got tetterine.
It cured me. I am so thankful.”
Thousands of others can testify to similar
cures. Tetterine is sold by druggists or
sent by mail for 50c. by J. T. Shuptbink,
Dept. A, Savannah, Ga.
LOSING HOPE.
“You'll wake up some day and find
3 r ourself famous.”
“Well, I dunno. I’ve been going
out for a long time now.”—Pittsburg
Post.
Capudine Carets Indigestion Pains,
Belching, Sour Stomach, and Heartburn,
from whatever cause. It’s Liquid. Effects
immediately. Doctors prescribe it.
25c., and s<Jc., at drug stores.
A soft answ'er may turn away
wrath, but, it won’t even stop a bill
collector.
BED-BOUND FOR MONTHS.
Hope Abandoned After Physicians
Consultation.
Mrs. Enos Shearer, Yew and Wash
ington Sts., Centralia, Wash., says;
t“For years I was
weak and run down,
could not sleep, nay
limbs swelled and
the secretions were
troublesome; pains
were intense. I was
fast in bed for four
months. Three doc
tors said there was
no cure for me and I was given up to
die. Being urged, I used Doan s Kid
ney Pills. Soon I was better and in a
few weeks was about the house, well
and strong again.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Cos., Buffalo, N. Y.
“A good-by kiss,” says Andrew
Lang, “Is a little thing.” Yes, indeed.
One of the little things that tell, con
fesses the New York Mail.
i n f the most serious character have been pennaaeotly cured with Pise's
HI “j" e T oua hs. colds, hoarseness, brouchms and asthma quickly respond Ig*.
if voU have a cough or cold, if you are hoarse
M t 0 wdiikulw with your breathing, get a bottle of P.so’sCure, Imme- jgj
KraiSl havedimcu y / dose. Continued use generally brings com- fSjg
Ua For nearly half a century Pise’s Cure ha. demonstrating ||f
3 S?,he most advm.ee/forms of chrome chest complamts g|
CAN
One of ihe
Essential'S
cf the happy homes of to-day is a vast
fund of information as to the best methods
of promoting health and happiness and
right living and knowledge of the world’s
best products.
Products of actual excellence and
reasonable claims truthfully presented
and which have attained to world-wide
acceptance through the approval of the
Well-Informed of the World; not of indi
viduals only, but of the many who have
the happy faculty of selecting and obtain
ing the best the world affords.
One of the products of that class, of
known component parts, an Ethical
remedy, approved by physicians and com
mended by the Well-Informed of the
World as a valuable and wholesome family
laxative is the well-known Syrup of Figs
and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial
effects always buy the genuine, manu
factured by the California Fig Syrup Cos.,
xnly, and for sale by all leading druggists.
“Americans are insufferable,” says
the tactful authorine, Marie Corelli.
Apart from that, presumes the Rich
mond Times-Disnatch, they are all
right, though, aren’t they, Marie?
ECZEMA CURED.
J. R. Maxwell, Atlanta, Ga., says: **l
Buffered agony with a severe case of ecze
ma. Tried six different remedies and was
in despair, when a neighbor told me to try
Shuptrine’s tetterine. After using $3
worth of your tetterine and soap I am
completely cured. I cannot say too much
in its praise.” Tetterine at druggists or
by mail 50c. Soap 25c. J. T. Shuptbinb,
Dept. A, Savannah, Ga.
Toads become torpid in winter and
hide themselves, taking no food for
five or six months.
Drive Out Malaria and Build U|
the System
Take the Old Standard Grove’s Taste
less Chill Toxic. You know what you
are taking. The formula is plainly printed
on every bottle, showing it is simply Qui
nine and Iron in a tasteless form, and the
most effectual form. For grown people
and children. 50c
Sharing His Celebrities.
The management of the various
children’s libraries have taken a leaf
from the Arabian Nights. At any
rate, each library now boasts a mod
ern Scherazade in the person o-f a
professional story-teller, -whose mis
sion it is to entertain the small bor
rowers at stated intervals by the re
cital of tales wise and otherwise.
On gne cf these occasions recently'
the story was Mrs. Peary’s Snov/
Baby. The narrator mnst have been
more than ordinarily vivid in her de
scriptive passages, for at the end of
the ceremonies a little Italian boy
came forward and made his mode3t
plea. “Mrs. Peary,” he began, win
ningly, “please c-ome around to my
nouse with me? I’d like my mother
to look on a la* that had lived in
such cold places.”—’New York Press.
Panorama Headache,
Caused by constantly shifting gase,
as by moving pieture shows, traveling
in rapidly moving conveyances and
the like, is cured by external applica
tion to the eyes of Dr, Mitchell’s Eyq
Halve, It strengthens them and stops
the burning sensation, Automobil
iets use Mitchell’s Eye Balve, 250,
In the United States some Western
States have granted women the privi
leges of the ballot box. Everywhere
in our country, remarks the Boston
Herald, bands of earnest women are
enthusiastically advocating the rignt
-of their sex to fu” suffrage. When
the women of this country as a whole
demand the ballot there is no doubt
it will be given to them, but not
before.
NO SKIN WAS LEFT ON BODY.
Baby was Expected to Die with Ec
zema—BJocd Oozed Out All Over
Her Rody—Now Well—Doctor
Said to Use Cutieiirn.
“Six months after birth iny little srirl
broke out with eczema and I had two doe
toi’s in attendance. There was not a particle
of skin left on er body, the blood oozed
out just anywhere, and we had to wrap her
in silk and carry her on a pillow for ten
weeks. She wag the most terrible sight 1
ever saw', and for six months I looked for
her to die. I used every known remedy to
alleviate her suffering, for it was terrible
to witness. Dr. G gave her up. Dr.
B recommended the Cuticura Remedies.
She will soon be three yeara: old and has
never had a sign of the dreacWrouble since.
We used cakes of Cuticura
Soap an#,;* I '*see boxes of Cuticura Oint
ment. James J. Smith, Dumid, Va., Oct.
14 and 22, 1906." _ .
NEEDED A BUSINESS AS TRAIN
ING.
Father: “So you want to attend a
business college?”
Hopeful: “Yes, sir; I want to
learn how to get more money out
of you. M —New York Sim.
The Frenc-h people keep up their
reputation for considerate fore
thought, with the Washington Star,
by not requiring aviators to risk
their lives on sharp turns.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. One 10c, package colors all fibers. They dy ein cold water better than any other dye. *Yow
’.pi any c-arjn#*)ir without ripPIUK bdu*v. Write for frso booklet—flow to L)y€ t Bleaco und Mix Colors. MON itU£ JL It G *U '
Weak Women
frequently suffer great pain and misery during the
change of life. It is at this time that the beneficial
effect of taking Cardui is most appreciated, by those
who find that it relieves their distress.
-URDU!
It WiU Help You
Sirs. Lucinda C. Hill, of Freeland, 0.,' tvrites:
“Before I began to take Cardui, I suffered so badly
I was afraid to lie down at night. After I began to
take it I felt better in a week. Now my pains have
gone. I can sleep like a girl of 16 and the change
of life has nearly left me.” Try Cardui.
AT ALL DRUG STORES
Wei! Named
“The only thing that, kept me from
being furious,” said the woman, “waq
the title of one of the pictures. It
was called ‘The Unexpected Return.’
My husband’s cousin bought the pic
tures from uis, ‘The Unexpected Re
turn’ and five others, for next to
nothing. When she got the pictures
home the rest of the family did not
like them, so without a word of warn
ing she packed them up and express
ed them back accompanied by a po
lite kittle note requesting me to re
fund the foney. What amused me
was the appropriateness of that title,
‘The Unexpected Return.’ That struck
me as being so funny that after I
got through laughing about it I for
got to be angry.”—New York Press.
To the Dallas News: One of tho
most discouraging things in the
world is the waste.
This woman says she was saved
from an operation by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
Lena V. Henry, of Norristown, Ga.,
writes to Mrs. Pinkkam:
“ I suffered untold misery from fe
male troubles. My ddetor said an opera
tion was the only chance I had, and I
dreaded it almost as much as death.
“One day I read how other women
had been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, and I decided to
try it. Before I had taken the first
bottle I was better, and now I am en
tirely cured.
“ Every woman suffering with any
female trouble should take Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges
tion, dizziness or nervous prostration.
Why don’t you try it ?
Mrs. Pinkbam invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
v : *f.
- rY :
/0\ THE JJ. WATKINS MEDICAL CO.
/ ,j £7?* \ ——in WINONA. MINNESOTA. --■
f li?-V' fc2jiv\ k' iM<ikr> 70 l>lffVei lillfWx'. Isoiehold Reme<iie, Flnvorlnc
fe-' Kxtriid* nil KliuU. Tll*( FiTpurutloiu, Fine Sons)*, Ete.
CcM’Vaf'Serf fVanted in K'Very County;
best proposition
j jj|L4M[ !lH^9
w * '#l - Ik Sgs 3p & . flpi | : %
• mIV vw ItmkKv^
■
r -- -■ • 9 ■* r
.jjn ■ '' '* b JHBL v
nv. iv. - ‘KK* •■’'>> >*.<**■>-.>• w %fr£ - •- - - f**“- '-‘Aft*- • * 7 A/.*:*>f
The top of a shoe determines its style. It’s the part
& IvJB.jLJI • y Qur foot rests upon that demands the proper lines g*
to assure ease and comfort. The difference between SKREEMER shoes and 3
others lies in the fact that they are made on a special, natural foot-form H
model. They fit exactly, and for that reason are absolutely comfortable. JS
Look for the label. If you do not find these rhoes r *
readily, write us for directions how to secure them. IP-Ult'flSf MAMBV I
A SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT FOR
Whiskey, Drugs, Cigarette and Tobacco Habits.
Also NEURASTHENIA or NERVE EXHAUSTION. Administer®*
by Specialists for thirty years. Correspondence confidential.
The Only Keeley Institute in Goorjxia.
229 Woodward Ave., ATLANTA, GA.
TOWER’S FISH BRAND
E WATERPROOF
OILED
GARMENTS
are cut on langa
patterns, designed
to give the wearer
,the utmost comfort
LiGHTDURABLECLEAH
CUARANTEFj)'^AjERPR OOf
\ SUITS *322
SLICKERS *322
1 U if/fif Tff[ CA.9#f*r_
' you n*vr sues m
s/cm or m nsH. !4**-**
A ; TOWER CO BOSTOH ISA
100 TOWW ONAOIAA CO llWTt# TOROMTO CAH
The blind population cf the world
numbers 64 rut of every million.
Mrs Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Childre®
teething, softens the gums .reduces infiamma
tion .allays pain. cures wind colic. 25c a bottt®
The constitution in China is th®
beginning of anew era in which
Occidental civilization shall have
larger part, prophesies the Pittsburg
Dispatch. The awakening has begun.
We may not anticipate a duplication
of Japanese development, for th*
Chinese nature differs in important
particulars. But, we may expect s
wonderful metamorphosis, with moro
faithfulness in copying the American
model.
LOOkMa or
IAT THIS PRICE Bfl W
| It buys a Strictly iff
Hic?h-Class M Ik FPJIOf!
SEWING §L|“
[MACHINE JlvEff
I’gu a ran teed” io^eaSS
I And has all the up-to-date improvements that
9 every lady appreciates. It is splendidly built o£
8 thoroughly dependable material and handsomely
1 finished. Has elegant Oak Drop Leaf 5-DraweT Cai>-
§ inet, complete Set of Attachments, full instrwv
I tions how to use them, and the outfit will be eeaft
g H you “Freight Free” on •
9q"mys" free "triaS
r Wo sell DIRECT at ONK
g PROFIT, saving you tbm
B Jobber’s, Retailer’s sad
j Ugp B Agent’s profits and sell
fi ing expenses. & exactly
the same machine they
1 a "' p^3r will ask you 830.00 fotu
Send at ONCE for OU*
BIG NEW FREE
B SEWING MACHINE
CATALOGUE 4
Most complete and in
structive book of It#
character ever publish-
B ed in tho South. It pict
§ ures and describes every
part and particular oC
Itively High-Grade Sewinjf
We are' tho largest Sowing?
i the South, and, at price#
Hteed. our Machines are un*
ogue describes and price#
ans. Steel Ranges, Oookinar
Phonographs, Dinner and
ipments, safe delivery &a#
l, or your money l*ck.
SHIPP & CO.,
Street, ATLANTA, GEQR<3>
MCI p Insist on Having:
for Dr. HAKTtL’S Preparation
ni/MtAEfSI f* The Standard Remedy.
WO BVS El# AT I>RU<K?ISTB.
Mend lor book, ‘‘Relief lor Women.”
FRENCH DRUG CO., 30 W. 32d St., N. Y. City.
■>i Ifta ATIVM now curable; thousands cured; re
ft ULU Jim 11 OiU su itß speedy ;guarantee given; prlc#
low. Write quick. Thk WRIGHT MED. CO., Peru lad.
sir^Thompson’sEyeWater
(At-48’09)