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Show 7 ( T L BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATIONS Of America Use Pe-ru-na For All Catarrhal Diseases. Woman's Benevolent Association of Chicago. Mrs. Henrietta A. S. Marsh, President Woman's Benevolent Association, of 327 Jackson Park Terrace, Woodlawn, Chicago. I1L, says : "I suffered with la grippe for seven weeks and nothing helped me until I tried Pernna I felt at once that I had at last secured the right medicine and kept steadily improving. Within three weeks I was fully restored." Henrietta A. S. Marsh Independent Order of Good Templars, of Washington. Mrs. T. W. Collins, Treasurer I. O. G. T., of Everett, Wash., has used the great catarrhal tonic, Peruna, for an aggravated case of dyspepsia. She writes : "After having a severe attack of la grippe, I also suffered with dyspepsia. After taking tak-ing Peruna I could eat my regular meals with relish, my system was built up, my health returned, and I have remained in excellent strength and vigor now for over a year." Mrs. T W. Collins. It you do not derive prompt and satisfactory satis-factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hart man, giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give yon his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium. Columbus, O. CARBOLIC SALVE will prevent blood poisoning in Cuts, Wounds, Sores, Bruises, and heal them, too. 25 cents. Would you have TOOTHACHE for 15 cents? Our Japanese Jap-anese Tooth Ache Drops will rid you of both. DeCOSTAS LIVER FILLS is Health Insurance for 25 cents a policy. What is your health worth? All Lung Diseases start with a cough. If you will cough up a quarter for a bottle bot-tle of Cough Balsam you'll stop coughing Japanese Corn Cure will rid you of a dozen CORNS for a quarter. Which do you love the best corns or quarter? ALL DRUQQISTS OR STORES OR DIRECT FROM I I I I Z. C. M. I. SALT LAK OITV. C)M GET READY FOR BAD WEATHER. Cold weather is sure to ripen a crop of Old Aches and Pains. MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT cures aches and injuries. It ought to be in easy reach in every home. A SOUND ARGUMENT. Tooting up the praises of Three Crown Baking Powder. Extracts and Spices. Ask for them, yor aale everywhere. HEWLETT OR OS. CO PAY WHEN CURED. If you suffer from any of tbe weaknesses or diseases di-seases mch4 by Ifmor-ano, Ifmor-ano, exosss or contagion you ara to very paraon we want to talk to. Wa bave proved our kill In oaring all Chronle SB. G. W. SHCKE8. dlnts0i by pnb tlahlna thousands of voluntary testluv nl il cf bona peo-pla, peo-pla, giving names, pictures and addresses. We ean't publish our cures in private diseases because It would betray confidence. Hence wa have to prove our tklll tn this elaas of troubles in another way. This la our plan: Wa enr yon flrat and then ask a reasonable reason-able fee when yon are cored. Ton ean de- Knd npon our word : any nk la Utah will endorse It; thousands of patients have endorsed us. Now we want to eure j on with tbe distinct understanding that we will not demand a fee nntil wa cure vou. We DR. A. J. SHORSS. eure Lost Manhood. Seminal Weakness, Varicocele, Bpennatorrnoee. tronorrboea. Syphilis and all weaknesses of men. Consultation and advice free, by letter or in person. Call or write. WE CURE CATARRH and all diseases of the Lungs. Heart, Stomach. Liver. Kidnevs, Bladder. Nerves, Skin, Brain, and all Chronle dlaeaaea of men, women and hUdren. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Evening T to ft. Sunday a and Holidays 10 to IX DRS. SHORES a SHORXS, EXPERT SPECIALISTS. LYON BLOCK. 56 W. Second So. St. SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH JUNK GO hides, pens, beeswax, rab- . - - - u . . ; . 1 I, ft i I T I . K baaveopper. orass. am- W. N. U. Salt Lake No. 51. 19Q2. ri.atrfujuLDC . I tl vi f All IbUDLlJ ? Um.ni, IU.L y- Bert Cough Syrup Tmce Good. TJi III llTOq. fPiq Pv urutye. i HAD HIS LESSON LEARNED Pupil In Mr. Rockefeller 8unday School Gave Good Answer. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., as is well known. In an ardent Sunday School worker and superintends a gathering of youngsters every Sunday. His experiences ex-periences are not unlike those of other oth-er religious workers and the answers to some of his queries are amusing. In fact, one answer was embarrassing rather than amusing. He desired to encourage the members mem-bers of his class to commit to memory certain bible verses. Sometimes the teacher would quote a portion of the sentence, halt, and almost Involuntarily Involun-tarily the student would complete It. "The earth Is the Lord's?" suggested sug-gested the teacher. The boy could not continue. "And the fullness there " ei couraged Mr. Rockefeller. "Belongs to the Standard Oil company," com-pany," added the pupil. NO LAUNDRIES IN CHINA. Sailor Ponders Over What to Him l a Mystery. ' "It's the funniest thing to me," said an old sea captain who for many years was in the China trade, as he settled himself comfortably back in his chair and blew a few rings of smoke Into the air, "that nine out of every ten Chinamen who come to this country open laundries and engage in a business busi-ness which does not exist In their native land. "As everyone knows, the Chinese at home wear soft cotton and woolen garments, according to the season, and there is not a pound of starch in all China. Stiffly starched clothes are unknown, and the Chinese men do not do the washing, as they do in this country. Neither is there any regular laundry In the Flowery Kingdom. Therefore it is more than passing strange that Chinamen should all come to America to engage in a trade so. foreign to their home industries." Queen Exhibits Bantams. Eight varieties of bantams are being be-ing exhibited by the Queen of England Eng-land at a show at Barnstable. Many of us might be happy if we did not suffer from disorders of the liver. Then we ought to uie Dr. August Au-gust Koenig's Hamburg Drops, which cure the disorders and bring the whole system to a heaJt'; condition. Rarity Among Women. There may be some husbands whG will be filled with envy when they read that the deep melancholy in which the czarina is said to be leads her to preserve pre-serve silence for long periods even in the presence of guests. Certainly her alleged minia might take a more acute and objectionable form. I am sure Plso's Cure for Consumption savea my life three years ago. Mrs. Taos. Bobbins, Maple Street, Norwich. N. Y.. Feb. 17. 1900. Prof. Dolbear's Career. Prof. A. E. Dolbear of - Tufts college col-lege has Just celebrated his sixty-fifth birthday. For over twenty-eight years he has been a professor at Tufts. He was born . in the same house Ib which Benedict Arnold was born. To Cure a Cold in One day. Take Laxative Bromp Quinine Tablets. All Iruggists refund money if it fails to cure. 3Sa Preacher Also a Physician. The Rev. Charles A. Trotman, pastor pas-tor of the Church of the Redeemer, St. Louis, is also a practicing physician, physi-cian, having regular office hours during dur-ing the week. Mystery Cleared Up. A steam trawler on the Gare Loch, Scotland, has brought up the remains of a horse and a carriage and harness. Their recovery explains . the disappearance disap-pearance 16 years ago of a doctor's coachman. He went to meet the doctor, doc-tor, one wild night, and was never heard of again. At the time the belief be-lief was that he had be engulfed in the river and carried into the Gars Loch. In Winter Use Allen's Foot-Ease. A powder. Your feet feel uncomfortable, uncom-fortable, nervous and often cold and damp. If you have sweating, sore feet or tight shoes, try Allen's Foot-Ease. Sold by all druggists and shoe Btores, 25 cents. Sample sent free. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy. N. Y. Rather Ambiguous. George Seton, a London writer, has published a budget of anecdotes, one of which tells of a fashionable woman wom-an who appeared before Pope Leo in a very low-necked dress. His Holiness Holi-ness disapproved of the costume so strongly that he sent a cardinal to remonstrate re-monstrate with the wearer. The messenger made this rather ambiguous ambigu-ous explanation: "The Pope, my dear madam, is rather old-fashioned, you know, and dislikes seeinf any lady in evening dress. I, on th other hand, who have spent 6ix yeais of my life as a missionary among tf ,e cannibals, am quite used to it." w D To prove the healing' ' and cleansing power of Pa-xtirve Toilet Antiseptic we will mail large trial treatment with book of instructions absolutely free. This is not a tiny sample, but a large package, enough to convince any one that it is the most successful preparation prepara-tion known to medicine as a cleansing vaginal douche and for the local treatment treat-ment of woman's special ills, curing discharges dis-charges and all inflammation, also to cleanse the teeth, mouth, and cure catarrh. ca-tarrh. Send toJay; a postal will do Sold by dro e arista orcent postpaid by o, SO ernta larg-e box. Natlsfcton eruaranteed. THE K- PAXTON CO.. Boaton, Mass. S14 Columbus Ave. SUBSCRIBE FOR RES ssS METALS Tbe Leadlue Mining; Journal la the A Vest. 8'i.oo Per Y.ar in AJvauce. Sample Sntwcrlpilon. a Op for three montba WAN I EU-SOI.IC1IOKS In every i-ily in the United Sum. Vou ean make tt3 to alu M-r ia; commission. S.mt 10c In siuus tr sample omi and particular. O-Ufcd AND Mti'ALS, .M.niiii EicUange, .Denver. RELIABLE ASSAYS. Gold .., . .75 Gold and Silver ...-J1.00 Lead.... .? ! Gold. Wlv"r, Cop'r.. 1-jO Prompt re urns on mail samp es. Qgden Assay Lo. cw yW. coto. MOADCV EW DISCOVERY: pivej J r r 3 -1 quick relief and cures worst raee. Book of testimonials snd 10 DAYS' treatment. YJLKS. r.H.H. 8 S0S.ax B.,AUaat. Gj ce Thompson's Eje Water Corset a Foe to Health Writer Claims It Is Not Only Unsanitary But Disfiguring At Best Its Constant Wear Produces an Inartistic and Artificial Shape OME time ago Dr. Phlllippe Marechale attempted at-tempted to get a law into the French statutes stat-utes giving the government gov-ernment control of the sale of corsets. He made it a misdemeanor for any woman under thirty years of age to wear one, imposing a penalty of three months in prison or a fine of $200. He planned to have the manufacturer anj dealer submit reports to the authorities au-thorities of all persons purchasing thorn, on pain of having their property prop-erty confiscated. DMarechale evidently evi-dently was fully aware of the opposition opposi-tion this attempted reform would arouse among women, and he framed the law so stringently that no one I Tfe Catteripete Medici : could escape. It did not pass, however, how-ever, and women who are wedded to their corsets will not be divorced from them unless it should be decreed In Paris by the makers of fashion that suppleness, grace, natural curves and health should be among the requisites of a fashionable woman instead in-stead of the stilted, artificial, cramped cramp-ed a. rmities which the fashionable rnodistt now turns upon society. Boys are allowed to reach maturity without being made over, but girls are not. Education in the line of physical culture, however, is widening the horizon of American women, and many are adopting a healthful mode of dress and many more would if they could adjust their clothing properly. prop-erly. Discarding the corset is only half of the battle. If the heavy skirts hang from the waist and the band's are tight the discomfort is greater than the corset and the injury nearly as great. The muscles which have been weakened by the corset must be strengthened by systematic practice so that they will keep the body erect and firm and perform per-form the office of the steel and w halebone. Then, with un- rsg aerciotning ana . dress made to rvKTlSTlC correspond to 1 O TBT f Vl 111 11 . tv and natural 'GOW- form, the emancipated eman-cipated woman will grow strong, happy and attractive. attrac-tive. The degree of lacing in every country coun-try is like a barometer. Indicating the artistic and moral condition of the epoch. The earliest mention of girding gird-ing was made by that first dress reformer, re-former, the - prophet Isaiah. Israel, grown proud in prosperity, was given over to idolatry, social degradation and anarchy. An artificial shape of the waist among the Egyptian women accompanied accom-panied an age of extravagance. According' to Rousseau and others, compression of the body was not practiced prac-ticed by the Spartans. Women were considered part of the state and were placed under training scarcely less vigorous than the men; nor is there evidence of waist stricture in the succeeding period, that' of the worship wor-ship of the beautiful; but in the days preceding the destruction of the Greek republics, when patriotism and morals were forgotten, courtesans originating in this lowest order of society was adopted by women of rank. The Romans in their turn took up the fashion. During the early middle ages the custom was not practiced, but about the eleventh century the power of fashion began to be felt and extravagant extrava-gant dress and tight bandaging Increasing. In-creasing. A portrait of Henry III., son of Catherine de Medici shows that tight lacing was also practiced by men. After Napoleon's elevation to Imperial Im-perial power he adopted the most rigorous system of court etiquette. An attempt to resurrect the Medici corset was made by the ladies of Paris fashions, but it was opposed by the empress. - Napoleon said concerning the revival re-vival of tight lacing in 1810: "This wear, born of coquetry and bad taste, which murders children, tells of frivolous frivo-lous taste and warns me of approaching approach-ing decadence." Bouchant, a writer of that period, says: "Stays are not composed of whalebone or of hardened leather, but of bars of steel from three to four Inches broad, and many of them not less than eighteen inches in length." The corset was Introduced into England in tbe twelftb century, and Who worJt .. , at first was comparatively harmless. Its exclusive use characterized the reign of Queen Elizabeth. The body was incased in a stiff armor, and both men and women squeezed in their waists and swelled cut their garments gar-ments below. This age of literature was the dark, age of morality so far as the court was concerned. The folly in dress was unlimited. The ruffs for the neck were stiffened by metal wires and by colored starch. These were so immense that a spoon two feet long was necessary to convey food safely to the mouth. The hair was colored in divers hues or was shaved to accomodate ac-comodate wigs of various colors. Tbe Puritans made bitter warfare on "devilish fasaions;" the Puritan conscience barrisiied these follies with the Immoralities of the times," and our Puritan ancestors came to our shores without the stiff ruff and without the steel armour about the waist. As in other countries, the passing of simplicity and a vigorous industry marked the passing of sensible sen-sible dress, and in 1829 a writer in Boston describes the practice of wearing the corset day and night, tightening it when lying down and again in the morning. The corset of the present day is more flexible and less objectionable, yet it is still a relic of barbarism, writes Mabel Stillman in the Milwaukee Milwau-kee Sentinel. The cheapness of it puts it within the reach of every class, and the yearly output, not including in-cluding those which are imported, amounts to 60,000,000. - An Involuntary Dance. To have a slow-moving individual burdened with a cumbersome package oscillate on a crowded pavement when one is in a hurry, and make him a veritable jumping-jack, is not an uncommon un-common experience. . John Duss, the bandmaster, who made such a favorable impression in New York during the summer, had such an experience. He was hurrying along when his speed was impeded by a man carrying a large harp. He went to this side of the walk and then to that. So did Duss. The man with the harp managed to retard the musician musi-cian with the dexterity of a trained football player. "What does all this mean, Mr. Duss?" asked an acquaintance of thf pirouetting bandmaster. "Simply this," said the indignant musician, as he pointed to the sway ing harp, "I've been dancing to tha man's music when I ought to have, been dancing on it." The Crown of Roumanla. The crown of Roumania has a unique place in the history of monarchies mon-archies as the only crown which ha been refused successively by father and son. When, within the memory of the present generation, Roumania became a kingdom, Prince Leopold, the elder brother of King Charles, was declared official heir, but the prince surrendered his rights to his son, Prince William, the renunciation being formally registered in the senate 22 years ago. For eight years the son was heir to the throne and then in 1888 the prince, treading in his fath er's steps, gave up his rights in favor of his brother, and the brother, Prince Ferdinand, Is heir to King Charles today. to-day. - - Yale Man as x Missionary."-Dr. Missionary."-Dr. Samuel Guerney of the Yale medical school, class of 1901, will go to Oomgalli, Rhodesia," South Africa, to become a medical missionary. Ha is the man who took charge of Cook, the smallpox patient in Derby, two years ago, when no one could be found to undertake the nursing. For this hci was presented with a gold medal by the legislature. The mission at Oomgalli Oom-galli is one of the most important in South Africa. Dr. Guerney is now purchasing $10,000 worth of equipment for the manual training school and hospital. Henry Norman Educated Here. It is not generally known that Henry Hen-ry Norman, author of "All the Rus-sias," Rus-sias," is a graduate of Harvard. He is an Englishman and was educated in France, but chose to take his degree in America. It was he who started the agitation which resulted in making Niagara Ni-agara Falls a state reservation. He is a liberal and has represented South Wolverhampton in parliament for two years, but is best known as an authority au-thority on the affairs of Asia and the far east. It Helps. This country raised about a billion dollars' worth of value out of the bowels of the earth last year. This la considerably less than is raised from the soil but it all helps the prosperity prosper-ity along. Dry Enough, Surely. A Connecticut librarian has been using bound volumes of the Congressional Congres-sional Record in lieu of the coal he lacked. He says they are dry enough to burn well. " Charity. Make not thyself judge of any man. Longfellow. MMIMS Services Suddenly Ended Irate Father Breaks Lh Religious "Revival'1 on Street Meeting Was a Pronounced Success Until Interrupted, V KOOP-E-E! Hallelu- jah!" A slender maiden with very large eyes thus expressed her feelings feel-ings in State street last Sunday. With her were four other women. One of them carried a guitar, gui-tar, but in the events that followed she was not seen to play it. She seemed to be what circus people peo-ple call a "filler in the noisy" that is, her mission was to pretend she was playing the instrument, while as a matter of fact she didn't know one string from another.' ,The shouts delivered by the slender girl caused something bordering on a panic in State street. Men who had been walking quietly along two blocks from the scene of the queer revival turned upon hearing the yell and rarr ai though they were following a fire engine. Within half a minute after the slender girl had expressed her feelings fully 200 persons were around the little missionary band, pushing tor more room, treading upon one anoi.h-et's anoi.h-et's feet, and saying things not wholly l4 accord with a religious meeting." 'Jt was a queer quintet that attracted attract-ed the attention of the crowd. No erne seemed to be leading the services. One of them would start up with a song and the others would join in. Tby stood near the curbing, three of thorn In a line, and the other two at rifht angles. One of those who stood at right angles was a small wonran dressed in black. She was not very enthusiastic, but she seemed to take a keen delight in the shouting and dancing that was done by the others, "Whoop-e:e! Hallelujah!" for she smiled and clapped her hands whenever a particularly loud yell was uttered or a difficult gymnastic feat performed. The girl who stood next to her was rather tall and very pretty. Next in line was the slender girl; then the woman with the guitar and at the foot of the line was an attractive looking brunette. "Praise the Lord, I feel so good that I wouldn't give up religion if I was threatened with eternal damnation for keeping it!" exclaimed the slender-t girL Then she smiled happily at the crowd and began dancing. "We will all feel better when we repent," sang the tall, pretty girl, and the others joined her in the song. The woman with the guitar moved her lips and worked her fingers, but no sign of a tune came from the instrument. "Whe-ew!" suddenly shrieked the brunette. "Oh, it's such a pleasure to know your soul is saved ! " "Yes, and the Lord gives you that feeling," said one of the others. The brunette's shout brought In a batch of about fifty additional specta- The Brunette's Shout Brought In a Batch of About Fifty Additional Spectators. tors. She smiled as she saw them running toward the gathering, and then said: "Come on! Come from all sides. We want you to hear us, for the Lord wants your souls!" At this juncture the little woman In black knelt down and began praying. The crowd listened lis-tened in respectful silence, half a dozen men taking off their hats. One of the women started up a hymn. When this had been finished the slender slen-der girl began jumping up and down. "TJmp-tiddle ump-tiddle ump-tiddle dee. Hooray. My! How happy I feel," she shouted. The singing and shouting continued for about five minutes, and then came a lull. The missionaries had evidently exhausted ex-hausted their repertoire of songs. The slender maiden looked at the tall maiden and both of them blushed. The girl with the guitar suddenly dis- The Little Woman in Black Saved the day. covered that It needed tuning. The brunette began tying her handkerchief Into all kinds of knots. It was plain that the enthusiasm of the workers was in danger of dying out. But right at ' this point the little woman in black saved the day. Advancing Ad-vancing to the front- of the line she raised her hand. "Friends, it was not always thus with me," she began. "Once I was poor, and I suffered. Then I became rich and had all that the world could supply me with. Finally I found the Lord, and. now Lam happier than ever before in my life." "Hoor-a-y!" shouted the slender girl. A horse that was passing the crowd reared up on its haunches when she screamed. Three men who were eating eat-ing In a cafe across the street ran outside with their napkins around their necks. Even the little womn In black involuntarily caught her breath as the yell was uttered. Just then a red-faced teamster drove toward the crowd and stopped his wagon back of the girl. He gazed at her intently for several seconds, and with an exclamation sprang from the vehicle. "Now that I have been converted 1 want you all to know " "What on earth are you doing out here on the street, Florence?" It was the teamster, and he was very angry. Tears began welling into the large Helped Her Up on the High -Seat. eyes of Florence as she turned upon the man. - , - "I just wanted to do some missionary mission-ary work, pa," she sobbed. "Well, you just come home with me," said the teamster, and, seizing Florence by the hand, he dragged her through the crowd to the wagon, helped her up on the high seat and drove away. "Hoor-a-y!" shouted the pretty girL But there was no response from Florence. Flor-ence. . Her face was burled in a handkerchief. hand-kerchief. Chicago Inter Ocean. AN OLD MAN'S SCRAPBOOK Forethought in Laying Up Treasure for Declining Years. "Yes, my family call me a scrap-book scrap-book fiend and I suppose that's what I am," remarked a well-preserved elderly man. "I was a very delicate boy and my mother taught me to make scrapbooks to amuse and entertain enter-tain me while my stronger brothers were at school or at play. I have now about fifty scrapbooks, ranging through the great world of literature, music and painting, scrapbooks, also, on commerce, and the trades; patriotic patri-otic scrapbooks, too, and studies of foreign nations. There is no better reading than a good scrapbook, and it often outranks an encyclopedia in value. "The scrapbook I am making now, at my leisure, I call my 'Life Book'; it is really, however, an 'Old Age Book.' Years, are making their mark on me, but I am preparing an antidote. anti-dote. I don't propose to grow into a cheerless, discontented, disagree able old man a nuisance to myself. my family, and friends. So I am col lecting and pasting into my 'Old Age Book' all the good things said in print about old age and old men all the cheerful, inspiring, encouraging, or consolatory bits of prose and poetry that come to my notice. -Here are some of the titles: 'How to Stay loung,' 'Some Achievements of Age,' 'Beauty of Spirit,' 'Play the Game Right,' 'Years Do Not Count,' 'Keep Your Legs Young, 'Out of Door Ton ic,' 'The Contagion of Content, "Letting "Let-ting Go Gracefully,' and so on. - "There's going to be a lot of benefit derived from my 'Old Age Book, and I believe I'll give afternoon teas to some other nice old fellows I know. We will have readings from my 'Old Man's Consolation Compendium as Intellectual entertainment." His Friend Geoffrey. The Washington Post tells a eood story of a certain man who has a large collection of autographs. The envy and sometimes the skepticism of his friends have been excited bv the num ber of successful .authors who have set down familiar and flattering in scriptions m his books. Some earners have even gone so far as to hint dark ly at a similarity of handwriting throughout the collection. He recently purchased a rare edition edi-tion of Chaucer, and one eveninsr. when a party was gathered at his house, the precious book was Dassed from hand to hand. Its owner lost sight of it; but the next morning he round It lying on his library table. On the fly-leaf was inscribed: "To Jack , from his old friend and schoolmate, Geof. Chaucer." String Is Expensive. The bits of string that tie up the packages sent out from a great department de-partment store reach well into tho thousands of dollars a year. It has been estimated that the wrapping: Da per and strings used in John Wana-maker's Wana-maker's department stores in New York and Philadelphia cost that ereat i merchant something like $35,000 s year, reports the Detroit News-Trib une. Of course, this expense is provided pro-vided for in the cost charge of the goods wrapped. Otherwise Mr. Wana maker wouldn't be doing business for any length of time. The strins used by the British postoffice last year would, it is said, go around the earth three times. At any rate, the depart ment managed to spend $45,000 in twelve months for string, sealing-wax and paper fasteners. Worthy Wedding Celebration More than a few odd circumstances are woven into the lives of Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Dixon of Pine Brook N. J. They have just celebrated their golden wedding, having been married fifty years ago in the room where urover Cleveland nrst saw light. It Is their proud boast that neither ha spoken a cross word to the othpr in all their half-century of wedded life, and Mr. Dixon claims to have lishtpri the kitchen fire 18,263 times since he and his wife were made one. Chinese Government Advancing. The Chinese imperial government has taken another step in advance bj appointing a Japanese scholar of di? tinction. Dr. Unokichi Hattori, to j professorship in Pekin university. Th doctor was in that city during tht siege. He Is to be dean of the school of literature. The appointment is a sequel of the visit of the famous Chinese Chi-nese educator, Wu Ju-lun, to Tokio to familiarize himself with Japanese educational edu-cational methods. . Nobility of character manifests itself it-self at loopholes when it is not pro vided with large dooru.- -Mary E. Wil-klns. WHAT WAS SHE THINKING OFf Actress, in Fear of Death, Regretted She Had No Fan. Mr. Anderson tells a good story of Miss Elsworthy during one of his American tours. In the midst of something approaching the wreck of the ship in which the company was traveling from a northern port to New Orleans, Anderson, rushing to the saloon sa-loon to help the ladles, found Miss Elsworthy Els-worthy with her maid, both In an agony of fear which had cured their seasickness. The perspiration wa rolling down their faces. I assured them there was no danger. "No danger! dan-ger! No danger!" cried the actress hysterically. "Why, I can see the sky and sea through the ship's side. We are going down; the heat is suffocating suffocat-ing oh, dear, oh, dear; we are going dor n, I tell you, and and (looking everywhere around her) my God! 1 have no fan!" Engine Instead of Farmhand. The farm hand and the farm horse are rapidly being supplanted on the level tracts of the west by the traction trac-tion engine. The farms are large, comprising several hundred acres, sometimes 1,000, and usually without trees or stones. Under these conditions condi-tions the engine can do any kind oi work. It is a compart little machine run by gasoline, and not at all like the ordinary attachment to a thrash ing machine. It runs a "gang plow" with five in a row, three or four har rows at a time, is coupled when desired de-sired to a separator for thrashing grain, runs the mill for grinding cat tie feed, and hauls farm wagons tc market laden with grain. In fact, there Is scarcely a thing about farm work that the little traction engine will not do. Much Campaign Literature. Postmaster Hubbard of Boston fur nishes good evidence that the recent political campaign aroused considerable consider-able interest in Massachusetts. Near ly twice as much campaign literature was handled as was ever before known in his office. RECORD OF THE PAST. The best guarantee of the future is the record of the past, and over fifty thousand people have publicly testi fied that Doan's Kidney Pills have cured them of numerous kidney ills, from common backache to dangerous diabetes, and all the attendant annoy ances and sufferings from urinary dis orders. They have been cured to stay cured. Here is one case: Samuel J. Taylor, retired carpenter. residing at 312 South Third St., Goshen, Ind., says: "On the 25th day cf August, 1897, I made an affidavit before Jacob C. Mann, notary public. stating my experience with Doan's Kidney Pills. I had suffered for thirty years, and was compelled at times to walk by the aid of crutches, frequently passed gravel and suffered excruciatingly. I took every medi cine on the market that I heard about and some gave me temporary relief. I began taking Doan's Kidney Pills and the results I gave to the public in the statement above referred to. At this time, on the 19th day o" July, 1902, I make this further statement that during the five years which have elapsed I have had no occasion to use either Doan's Kidney Pills or any other medicine for my kidneys. The cure effected was a permanent one." A FREE TRIAL of this great kidney kid-ney medicine which cured Mr. Tay lor, will be mailed on application, to any part of the United States. Ad dress Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N Y. For sale by all druggists. Price 50 cents per box. NEEDED THE RIGHT MAN. How Professor Qualified a Statement He Had Made. Prof. William G. Sumner of Yale, instructor in sociology, devoted a recent re-cent lecture to woman's place in so ciety from the earliest periods to the present day. "The numerous occupations that are open to woman nowadays in the business busi-ness and Industrial worlds," said Prof. Sumner, "has created on her part a comparative Indifference to matri mony." As the clacs mads a note of this, the professor added, wagging a warn ing finger: "Mind you, gentlemen, I said com paratlve, because I never knew of one yet that couldn't be induced to change her mind if the right man tried." Btatb of Ohio, citt op Toledo, I T r-r i-t " TT T T T C Frank J. Chenev makes oath that be la ta senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney &Ca, doing business in the City of Toledo, County .j 04.t-n anw.nJri oni that cu-iH firm will nav the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for eacn ana every case m .inu curea Dy tne use oi nan s awrru v. . . Sworn t- before me and subscribed iu my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1884 1 1 ll 1 1 V .1 1 (II I 11 V U ' J .cf - - acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces 01 the system, sena iur imuaiuiu.ia, P. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, a Sold by Druggists, 7bc. Hall's Family Pills are the best Where He Slept. Hoax Sunday's such a slow day Why, I was in bed and asleep by o'clock last Sunday night. Jcax Huh! I was asleep at 7:45. "Come off You never went to bed that early.' "Oh, no; but I was in church at that time." Philadelphia Record. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for CbUdrem Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse in the Children's Home in New York. Cures Feverishness, Bad Stomach, -Teething Disorders, Dis-orders, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 30,000 testimonials. At all druggists, 25c. Sample FREE. Ad dress Allen S. Olmsted. Leoy, N. Y. The Mean Things. The editor of the Glasgow Echc avers he is not inclined to be much o! a sport, but he. says, when "we meet a cinch in the road we recognize it.' Thus habit led him to accept a prop osition made by a friend the othei day, and every time a passing womai felt to learn if her skirt was gapinj or tucked in under her belt the friend was to give the editor a nickel, whil for each woman'who did not do one o; these things in walking a block tht editor was to give a dime. "We goi J2 nickels," the molder of opinion con eludes, "and paid him one dime i lady with both arms full of parcels came along." Kansas City Journal Export of Rabbit Skins. Not everyone knows of the enormous enor-mous trade between England and the United States in rabbit skins. Over 3,000,000 were dealt with by one Bir-- Bir-- ningham dealer last year. The skins ire first sent to the Continent, where he long hairs are extracted by hand, the skins being subsequently prepared pre-pared for the making of hats. Ha Meant Well. "This bell," said a well-meaning sexton sex-ton when showing he belfry of an interesting in-teresting village church to a party of visitors, "is only rung .n case of a fire, a flcod, a visit from the lord bishop of the diocese, or any such calamities." TO WORKING GIRLS FREE MEDICAL ADVICE Every working' girl who is not well Is cordially inrited to write to Mrs. IMnkham, Lynn, Mass., for ad vice ; it is freely given, and has restored thousands to health Hiss Paine's Experience. "I want to thank you for what you have done for me, and recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetabl Compound to all girls whose work keeps them standing on their feet in the store. The doctor said I must stop work ; he did not seem to realize that a girl cannot afford to stop working. work-ing. My back ached, my appetite was poor, I could not sleep, and menstruation menstrua-tion was scanty and very painful. One day when suffering I commenced to take Lydia E. Pinlcham's Vegetable Vege-table Compound, and found that it helped me. I continued ita use, and soon found that my menstrual periods were free from pain and natural ; everyone is surprised at the change in me, and I am well, and cannot be too grateful for what you have done for me." Miss Janit Painx, 530 West 125th St., New York City. fsoooforftlt If original of about Ittttr proving gonulnenut can not bt produced. Take no substitute, for it is L,ydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound that cures. Negroes Will Reign Supreme. An American paradise for the negro is soon to be established on Long Island. Is-land. . It will be known as Beulah-land, Beulah-land, and the design Is to populate the colony with negroes from the Vir-1 ginias, Pennsylvania and the southern Btates. The object is to have a cooperative co-operative colored colony. The colored man is to rule everything. Three, hundred colored men and women will- come from Georgia and North Carolina' within a month. They will be established estab-lished in portable houses capable of accommodating five persons and cost-, ing (125 each. Negroes will own and, operate the factories, electric roads electric light, gas and water plants. THE ST. PAUL CALENDAR FOR 1903 six sheets 10x15 inches, of beautiful reproductions, in colors, or pastel drawings by Bryson, is now ready for distribution and will be mailed on re-reint re-reint nf twentv-five (25) cents coin or stamps. Address F. A. Miller, Gen eral Passenger Agent, cnicago. Her Words Came True. ! Senator Pritchard of North Caro lina, telling how healthy his section of the state is, remarked: "A mountaineer, moun-taineer, aged ninety-two, and his wife. aged ninety, were returning from the funeral of their oldest child, who had died at the age of seventy-one. They were both deeply grieved. As they were discussing their loss the wife said: " T always told you, John, that we would never raise that child.'" lHn. Wlnalow's Soothlner Hvmn.' For children teething, softens the gums, reduces hv flammaUon, allays psln, cures wind coilc XScabottia. Bertlllon Makes One Success. Bertillon, the expert, who won unenviable un-enviable notoriety in the Dreyfui case, has at last vindicated hi clalmi for his system of detection. A mysterious mys-terious murder was committed is Paris lately and no clew was left by the . murderer except certain fingermarks finger-marks on a window pane. The streaks were photographed and en larged and Bertillon Identified them as belonging to a man who had undergone un-dergone the anthropometric system eight years ago. The man was fouJ and arrested and the murder has been proved against him. Carpets can be colored on the floor with PUTNAM FADELESS DYES. STRANGE CASE OF PARRICIDE. Inhuman Act Committed In French Dependency of Algeria. Quite extraordinary Is the parricide which Is reported from Algiers, the capital of the French dependency ef Algeria. Not very far from that town dwelt an old man, upwards of 118 years of age, with three f his sons, the eldest of whom Is 75, while the youngest was to him, at least, a Juvenile Juve-nile of 65 summers. The three sons felt aggrieved because their father had not gone over to the majority and left his property to them. He was, however, still hale and hearty, so they, frequently exhorted him to divide his estate between them, a cool proposal which he naturally enough stoutly declined de-clined to entertain. A few evenings ago, as the venerable patriarch was returning homeward with a mule, laden with dates, his eldest son went, out to meet, and after confronting him with an ultimatum which he rejected with contempt, pulled out a pistol and shot him through the heart. The mur derer and his brothers then took flight, but they were captured after a hot, chase. They would inevitably have; been lynched if the gendarmes had not strained every nerve to protect them. 20 MILLION BOTTLES SOLD EVERY YEAR. . MARK Happiness Is the absence of pain, and mfl-Bons mfl-Bons have been mads hapny through being cured by St Jacobs Oiucf RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA. TOOTHACHE. HEADACHE. HEAD-ACHE. LAMENESS. SCALDS. BURNS. SPRAINS. BRUISES and all pains for which an external remedy can bo applied. It never fails to cure. Thousands who have been declared de-clared incurable at baths and in hospitals have thrown away their crutches, beinj cured after using St. Jacobs Oil. Directions In eleven language accompany every bottle. PA0CJ |