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Show ,. f ... . . . .. y " - - - - '.-'-'-: &r-t?rz4t'- - ; - ? c. . -4 'PLEASANT GI50VE NEWS A GIRL LOVES... Above all other earthly poseeeeions A DIAMOND RING. Now ia a food tima for yon to give har - ana. our Chriatmaa atock ia lai-iaind eur eneea tha loweat. Write a at enoe. - '""kVMAIM IT. . w lass ant 41X4H Hia Receipt. ;'-;" A "southern bankeftreeeutly told the r loltowlns: abit'JsiAeaeQld -soar- ,, ma ooy nadiaew.iuyi.ted to spend a week with sonv? .little friends in .the -country. "Stay and keep me com- g;6eilfaveling this week.aad I shall b all alone. Here Is a $5 bill. lor you Instead of the visit." a Jack promptly closed with the offer, of-fer, acd the banker -as promptly. tor-rowed tor-rowed the 5 at current interest, therebX-keieDinges he observed when telling the story, both the' boy and -"the money -in the family.-- Spate-4we months latJr Jack wanted to recall the loan. " "What $5 do you mean?" asked tha banker. . . "Why, the Jo I gave you." . "I haven't any 5.' "'But I gave it to you. Mother, didn't I give him f 5? You saw 'me. "I certaf nly did", she" replied. ."Where's your receipt, then?" demanded de-manded his father; "Do you mean to say you'va been lending money without -getting-.-black -and - white to show for it?" Mamnrie.-aaJd-the-boy, appealing to his nurse, "didnt I give papa 5?" "You poh little lamb!" Indignantly . exclaimed the old woman. "Co'se you done gib It to him, honey." Therer--papri-ad--b building lawyer, triumphaaiy,-"there's the black and white of It.'" From the Delineator. Father Wat "Wise" to Game. A student at the yniversily of l'onn- sylvania had been going a fast pace " with tha boya of hia class and lrater- city and had had-frequent Interviews with father concerning debts and other financial troubles occasionally by the drain hit pleasures had mads on his source of supply. Several times the "governor" had been compelled to get various articles of value back from the boy's "uncle,1 and the relation of , provider and spender was strained. One day the fjudent wired father that his watch had fallen Into dvp water In the Schuyklll river and he wanted "at once" 25 to hir a diver to recover It. The answer came as follows: "Xothlna: on' (be 125. Chap?r to soak the watch where It Is." Every-Woman Knows. That Salome Isn't so b4 as she thought it was going to be. - That her present gowns are wholly Inadequate to the occasion. That it is a greit mistake not to buy a new motor car every year. That her own family physician Is the only man who knows anything about medicine. That her own particular husband Is not so large hearted and groruui as the husband of mnno oi!i-r woman. Life. - . -LI The -WoitiH'i Fwtt "You told m"' he .d'y said, "Whvo you peru!-l mo to elope with you that you would, amef per-mU per-mU anything to com Ut wr us that you would r-nerteh my a I your d, "and that I tuld save caue to regret tar a moment that I had placed my h itio- la your kefplr.g." -Oh. il, confound It" b tepllel -obit's the m barllng on that If you hadn't kept a lot of your faults bidden from tu I'd never uwve fallen la love with yos or wasted you to elope, so yoa have iy yourself to blame." What's in s Name. "Maria, who la the young aquJrt that eBMw here elmi it eight la ths wek to see BenI? "Toad Wtter pwk tittle nwa respectfolly. Jaha, of lh young mas who Is Mkely to b your la la." "All right. Maria; what the adfta-tursr's adfta-tursr's eanir Sinag" Trtboa Why! "WbB 1 ww a child." s4 th tn ho waet4 to do aU the talking atd claim aU the atti-afkw. I was so dl let that pass's were afrall thy woatd st b aiW- to rsiaa ma." "Why." atktd tSe HU maa fea4 lrtknJy Ws oiS' to g't s csaace to say aaytkiag, thy a.rlir WMt ts U't Wctir forgt that h os s i tt?r ThtS 6Jble. ho IntfJt taat ha o li'" -r H WmI Bia tt. Un4 atatft . TM Ftfc"ie yy pn f . Hut," ae ' Sf4!s crr ret 1 rra ; "Well, I s . CHKisia,' f Tl.ti br c ta t Set are sp-il I a rm4 r ra tty em v w s s-- Hswf s ye"i srs"-! . ye S-'eepT Stw r-i'i s t f ri tf k e4t 'r. mi t to tie .'it" TrV dirAiH)EN. HOW TO BUHD BRICK.C1STERN Should Be Underground and for Durability Dura-bility and BeSt of Service Be Made : Circular. . ' (FRKD O. SIBLKY.) A cistern for the collection and storage of roof water should be under ground and, for durability and the best.of service," be made circular. Dig a - hole ten o fifteen feet-deep, "and from six to eight feet in diameter, depending de-pending on the quantity of water one wants to store. , The site selected should be dry, for while a cistern can be EuIItsd as to hold water Tt is al- most impossible to keep water out of it If there is a spring where the hole Is dug. . - -. ; Take" opsins that the hole is dug sym metrical, the sides smooth, and the bottom oval. ' For- a foundation, a stone about two feet square should be used. Beginning on this lay a two-inch two-inch brick against the earth until the wall Is nearly to the top of the per pendicular sides where jthe thickness should be increased to four Inches. About five feet from the top the wall should be drawn . in by tipping the and until the upper outside of them is at an angle of about 45 degrees when ihearc.h Js flniBb.LA- gQadmasQB can easily do this. The top of -the arch should be about two feet below the surface of the ground. The circu lar neck should extend to or a little , Underground Brick Cistern. above the level of the surrounding soil and be furnished with a cover. An opening should be Wt near the top of the arch for an inflow, provided with a short piece of iron pipe which, cemented into the wall, rises an inch or two above the surface of the ground. On the same level with the inflow where It enters the cistern Oiere should be alao an outflow, consisting of a joint of iron pipe carefully cemented ce-mented Into the wall, and conducted1 swsy until there Is aT good outlet By! having this pipe extended to the bottom bot-tom of the cistern water that contains the tuottt Impurities can be taken out, but Id ordnr to prevent the water from being alplnKied out, as would occur If the outlet vre lower than the bottom of the cistern, a hole mutt be drilled In the pipe st its highest point. Good cement mortar Is required to lay th brl k and when completed Its Intfrtwr should hav- an application of tu-eU of emit-nl. The hint one, a liglit coat, should be put on before th first Is dry It Is host finished off with a whitowash brush. MAKING AX HANDLE SECURE Ai handles commonly wear out next to tl h 1. pTlally where, the at 3 tt; hraa. f t0 Is ued for splitting split-ting Drive a spike Into the ax under the handle as ahoaa la the cut. which will This will serve to " Secure, save the a far keep the head tight oa the handle. FARM NOTES. Plow the tardea this fall I'otaro graving is proving more profitable Sav ad from the best pumpkins and sqaee.. , ... Sort oat seed potoes from moat prod tr tl bill I Harare sarvt coca for sewd If tt shows a tra- of fi!4 cora. j fie that kat lakf a s-cosd growth at spoiled I th table. j Vter sfp?y aatmr to the gardes sow tbaa to wait aatii sprfsg. ( j te store potaioes foe the att W days. ' A inter U a good SiiU'ltste for a i potato dt. r. it Is tttr thas a plow I mm It ha a doL ib44 h(mt4, a.kre. . r V.lm It tor-ji to fca.t;.g cr.atar tr, rvtaot mTi to du It la ar.y oaf way tha arth a sjfea.Jet We u4 I tu tt,!tk e t&M. mi raaU4 c.,r gaMC. N neea c4 ja-oe arv ferf 1 t j-"f'-:T la t, a--i h"s Tl s,i t ry s-U 1 f r ne ia tit frusa aJ ; -'aa'txg V4 Ut ts a ik ;;f'f f : w f'' ta tie fU Tf t - ts. at4 ii:t to li mu tr ixt tit i?t n it, I ' k- x. 'vi S -Tr "f V. ' :A mL 1 J; METHOD OF. .PULLING STUMPS lllustration Showing Device by Which SOO or More Stubs May Be Re- ? - moved in One Day;" . (CHARLES J. MILLS.) . A very handy device, for.. pulling peach, stumps from old orchards, and can pull 200 or more a day by Jhis lueans, is shown in the illustration. The limbs are cut oil and the stamps, e, left as long as possible. A short!" Tackle for Pulling Stumps, ' rope or chain with a single pulley is attached to the top of -thtrstumpr The- anchor rope, b, which runs through tb pulley fastened thirtntto of a stout stump, a. A pair of steady "horses Is attacheo to the rope nd alwaysVpull toward the anchor stump. With a steady pull theret Is no jumping or jerking, and. they will walk right off as if pulling a loaded wagon. We use about'60 feet of one-Inch rope, which costs $2.40 and the pulley 11.75. making-a total cost of $4.15. . ' ALFALFA IffeALL CLIMATES Has Proven Its Adaptability to Grow Everywhere and on All Kindt of Soils. While expert8.have been declaring that alfalfa would only 'grow in cer tain solL-and In certain climate it has proven adaptability . to nearly alt climates and" almost alt soils, says Coburn's Book on Alfalfa. It pro duces with a rainfall as scant as 14 inches, and in the gulf states flout ishes with 65 inches. It gives crops at rn elevation of 8,0p0 feet above sea level, and In southern California It grows below sea level to a height of six feejt-or over, with nine cutting a year, aggregating ten to twelve tons An authenticated photegrapn in pos session of the writer shows a wonder ful alfalfa plant raised in the (Irrigated) (Irri-gated) desert of southern California, 60 feet below sea level, that meas ures considerably more than ten feet In height. Satisfactory1 crops are raised, but on limited areas as yet. In Vermont and Florida. New York has grown It for over 100 years In her clay and gravel; Nebraska grows It In her western sand hills without plowing, as does Nevada on her sage brush desert. The depleted cotton soils of Alabama and rich com lands of Illinois and Missouri each respond generously with profitable yields to the enterprising farmer, while its ac cumulated nitrogen and the sub-toil ing It effects are making the rich land more valuable and giving back to the crop-worn land the priceless elements of which It has been in successive generations despoiled by a conscience les husbandry. TRELLIS WILL STAND ALONE Plant Support as Shown In the Illus trations Is Very Handy In Any " Garden. A plant support or garden trellis. such as shown in the Illustrations la very handy In the fp . . . .- Tl . garden. The dou r- .l' ble form of trellis tan be folded up and takes very Utile . room. All trellises and stakes should b gathered ss soon as the crop is har vantrd and stored under cover until the next s-atn. They are useful fot tomatoes, beans, peas, cucumbers, etc The double trellis Is built of twa pieces of 2x3, which are bolted to Trellts Stands Aoe. gthr for earh teg sad the tos belt ia place by a piece of stricg or wire . Costly Distribution. TV.tt are ataay thtegs that fail H aupptrt the view that city consumers tsy h'sh prices for supplies beesus fsrurs sra a bealfkled claas Whi sVal know bow to prepuce tbisn efx4fclsUy. We bate already cite the raae of milk, which coats tha v sar several tls what the pro Cjtrt frtj fir It. scd thr sr erst) 0frf lrUre. 4 tt UrUtion Aarkss Tc'"-tia that tbe pro d. er f Tl eeita s crste rati tt rr6.iB.r ii rs;-rags tin tt ptiir-r f-r t' to 't rets rr r-t tte ro;xr ft .tl, sr-4 at on. W r;t tfcst wvfil pri it. t v-tt la W t.n b!aa "1st tii',j i- tt:,tl fot tie prWa roe vmn n n U. J f'.T tte 4t Wbf UI both '" Tsliae thu sad o 1 btt thtsgs - Late C Fe-Jie. tie (4 m cf U'e om f Wlv fa it rf t-rvV c4 )m0 5. t M ! e r 1 t t'. t ts a k 4 .rvfary f:j tM ort -.. ta?iJ g raae. H JaX. h. J - 2 S 3 2 Q OT i By MARJORIE ?... (Copyright, by Short There were three men. "five ponies, and a nondescript dog with a .bushy tail. For daxs. they had been observed of the hawk and the eagle, trailing patiently pa-tiently over (he shoulders of the hllla, as little spiders might crawl up a man's coatsleeve.- Twice or thrice the winds had been minded to brush the toiling insects away, but haft thought better of it; they were so very Insignificant, Insig-nificant, these littleblaqk specks up on the edges of the wpows. At last the three men and the ponies and the taciturn dog-climbe4p above the Clouds, and came out upon a bare or sott crumbled rocTi ending in a thtrty-foot wide ledge and a clear drop, of nearly eight hundred feet "Well, sirs," said Macavoy, the tall brown man with the black beard, own er of Taya the dog. ''Well, sirs, I've brought you here safe. Now you have but to scratch i' the ground, for the whole face o the hill's riddled , wj' veins and pockets tf gold." I've done my part So to-morrow, by your leave, Taya and HI be goin our ways. "Stay with jis," cordially entreated Dalsworth, artist. Journalist, and wan derer to the ends Tit the eartb,-1'sty with us, and work on shares. When ToirneirTistorsTaceyou fairly laid fprtude in our hands." And wag paid tor .so om , an swered Macavoy with his slow smile, "paid liDerally. aeeordln' to our agree- ment. I'm but the- guide;- TwIee-r thrice feared I was astray, for it's three years since I was here. No, I'll not stay, thankin' you none $be less. We 11 be goin" our ways, me and Taya Eh, old lassf The dog laid her head on the man's knee, and curled her lips back expect antly. . it. you don t mind, said young Urquhart abruptly, "I'll call that dog Monna Lisa. She has the same bony forehead and superior smirk. Oh, I know It's heresy, Dal, but don't you see the likeness? You could esteem Monna Lisa, but you could never love her. Give me a dog, likewise a worn an, that you can chuck under the chin." , Macavoy looked from one- to the other, a puzzled crease on his weath erbeaten forehead. "Taya has wolf blood in her," he ventured; "maybe that's why she's different from oth ers.'" k "To go back to what we were speak Ing of when Urquhart cut In," said Dal worth, "why won't you stay? Oh. our agreement doesn't matter. Chip In with us. When you came "away from this place before, you threw aside a fortune. Don't let It go a sec ond time." "I thank you very kindly," said Macavoy with no hesitation, "but I'll be goin in a day or so. 1 mean no offense to you who think different. but' to me, a shadow and a sorrow would go with this gold. Yes, I've been here before. That's why I'll not stay here now." You -hinted of nooks before," said Dalsworth with a friendly Impatience, "but surely you weren't In earneat? Go to with the utory." Macavoy bent his head, and absent ty fingered Taya s upstanding ears. "I know no story," be said la a low voice: "the story lies in what I do not know, and can but guess at la an tbat I snail never know for sure. If Taya here could spesk, she'd tell yoa more than i can. Dogs at times can hear and w more than men, and snes a woirs eyes and ears, rd a friend once, a Frenchman, who said that a wolf could hear the very foot falls o' the Ar,. of Death. You'll mind that, ha I told you o this plac. I said there was a shadow over K? 1 can hut Ml yoa what that shadow may be "I've thought much oa the matter. fitting fa fact with fancy. Ml at length and at last, f got a story that'll serve. It may be far from the truth. But there's naught left to verify It, save the maty pick you saw. Mister Urquhart. lyia- in that little bole la the hillside. "Ye, rve thought so long on tt, that at last Its ir,f u seem as tf Id seen tt all seen the hill wbea there ts no little hole there, seen him who owes the puk." "Hlmr said IteUworta. "him? Who? A hermit ia the Uderaese T "The Slwa!..- have a name for hlsft." said Maratoy a a very low vote, "which caa best translate as He-Wb la Xot - - "!! Wb!s Not r ah4 Dalsworth a gala with a riwtg tafiectkw oa the words. "Y. aald Karavoy simply, -far yow as, sirs, t e fer dead aow attr o Ur years. 1 take ML- Msravoy drpt4 his aaads heavily his kaeea t rest hia soJ.- he said softly, -c.4 reat hia symO. as the Irish .say.. iutit. .m ..Tar., O sJrs. wfca t wt Tlka:hy i'ke a trlgfet tWil Ut, id aim, and I;f?4 his f to the ar. be was a daosaed Bssa! He tJ4il thai rteftnae stooi wasa his t tcp o' U cxr.s taias. bet. wta Ftortwa took ket ' wtass trtm before her fa', sA locked at hia tie eye tf" De:. j paltworth t his tre:i a hardly. hard-ly. 4 gttM4 mt ih ws4rfnl world s sal "-; of ciewd sad ta:a-fte ta:a-fte sky, whkk jrci4 ti:r Usf fa Jf'tt 0z4 to tat scttied. a wisJW hm-4:.$ ;raet, ti ssrttigf feiEs, -n-Ji '"J8 ? 2 J P 2 2 2 L. PICKTHALL Stories Co. Ltd.) "I can see him him that's called by the Si washes He-Who-Is-Not i can see. him, whatever his name may have been, coming upon just N this place, as we hayafter him. Perhaps he greeted wi' joy, or maybe he prayed, or maybe he swore. Tis all pne--now." He began his boy's pickln' made his untidy camp on1 this ledge, llaven't ye seen many and more o' such slovenly, pitiful, 'tenderfoot camps? , scraped and scratch the ocks, his heart fair burstln' wl' joy, maybe, two,- threer-eren four days. Ye can tell by the size o' the hole, though it's part filled up now through the wash o' .the weather And then one. night he flung his pick- own,7TOaybe. andenTiBd stood on -the brink p" this verj -ledge, lookiu' out upon the hillB.tbefore he got his supper. -:: "Perhaps 'twas Just such a night fts this, with a round moon ridln clear, and the chasm all one-white flat sea o cloud. Perhaps, as he stood there, stretchln his stiff arms proudly, a stone caught bim between the shoulders, a stone thrown "from -th hand o- that wolf-shadow that had followed hfm andhtrtedttmutwardsffoni"the ledge, as the storm whirls a bird from its cliff-nest. I seem to see that black whlrlln' shape rushln' down, down, down a vast sprawiln' shadow out ?a4rDonthe . flooroL:cloud beneath. be-neath. I seem to see the shape and jts shadow rushin' together, growin" smaller, becomln' one; and no more. For that chasm, sirs, would take the whole tragedy, wi' little but a faint stir T that green fur o pines, so far below." Urquhart looked out at the chasm, a pot of silently bubbling pearl beneath be-neath the moon, and shuddered. Taya whined again. "God rest, his soul,' said Dalsworth softly. "But does It rest?" whispered Mao-avoy. Mao-avoy. His eyes glittered strangely In the red glow of the fire. "Does It rest? 1 cannot see that wolf-shadow who followed him. whose hand sent him into in-to eternity, very clear. But I do know that the Siwash got no payment for his crime. He never stayed to take any. "When I came upon this place nearly near-ly three years sgone, I . found the wreck of a little tent on thla very ledge. No, not here, Mister Urquhart, at I' other end where, yon big rock slopes down. It was battered by. -a winter's weather, but by the snow, ye understand. I read the algns of ft It had a tenderfoot for owner, by the truck in It Such truck ye never see, chiefly in bottles. I mind there was chlorodyne, ammonlated quinine, plain ammonia, and whisky good whisky. Aye, I bad the bottles to my nose, and besides there were the labels. But tbey were air empty, and flung about In a muddle o' rotted blanket Taya had 'em to her nose, and growled. readln' more than I. "Siwash, bid lassr I says to her, snd she growls again. Some unclean thing had nested nest-ed In that tent, drunk all them mixed liquors, and then gone, as If In fright. touchfn no more net even some bits & gold In a little brown ranvaa bag " "There was thst about the matter that weighed upon me so that I tent all the tent and everyhln' in It over the rocks there. I'd seen .the pick a the hllla ids, and by this and that I'd read the story plain. We'd lived among cleaner, kinder things, me and Taya, and we'd no mind to meddle wf gold which had that shadow on It We'll make enough out of It by tellln other" folks.' I says to Tsya. welt have ao finger In this pie, old lass. Tls cursed from the beglnnln' "The tnccain" came up clear be hind Tsalekulhye, snd Tsya and I went our ways. We carried the cm o the gold with us and more tbaa that, more tbaa that. I had heard. Taya, maybe, had both seen and beard, tor she looked at ma wl' her yellow eyes and tried to tell me what abe knew. Aye. as the gold aac draws that poor fool. Ifvla', so It drew bim, dead-" He pawed, and agala one of th resUesa ponies whickered la the si leace. - "Do yoa snes a thst He-Who-Is Not walks r asked Dalsworth at taat Muatly, Macavoy nodded slowly. l bar not s-r-ea. ye oaders'sad," be as swered. "1 oaly hear. Hut 1 know that H- Wh U Not Beds ao rvst." "Poor fool." said Uwjohart softly "poor yovat font Your sorry fr him. eh. Moaaa Lias?" The do nr.e4 trrwi tfc fire ts the bUrk sWpe above where the start baag fa spiewdor shove th last fsiot cret I esow, I rqvkart foi5owd bet gm, a deeper Into his fcUshe. Put -tret I dost se " bra Dais worth argteUOvty, Tiea Basest said Macary, Tt. Dalsworth listened. Andes odd ereMiosi daad fa kts eyes, sad freealoa) if fttfsJ. k:t tswffemSeies, bcity wosw!ri4t Sof-Jy. fce took c t lis rsf. as takes it J fa las jsteixe of lie dad. Ihla. 4asi yet st t b atttke. that t t er! V m w tk tt':i, tthrah' 4 a fcte-y-s k ta toe stois? The mJDjrc optional Equipment C4theJlifornia Fig Syrup Co. and the Si scientific attainments of its chemists have 4' rendPred possible the production of Syrup-of Syrup-of Figs and Elixir-of Senna, in all of its1 excellence, byobtaining the pure medic- . inal principles of plants known to act most . beneficially and combining them most skillfully, in the right proportions, with its wholesome . and refreshing.: Syrup of California Figs. - - -As .'there-'is. only one genuine Syrup.of " . Figs and Elixir of Senna and as the gen- uine ia manufactured by , an original method known to the CaliforruaTig Syriip Co. only, it is always necessary, to buy the genuine to get its beneficial effects. A knowledge of the above facts enables I one to decline mutations or to. return them if, upon viewing the package, the full name of the California Fig SyrupCo. is not found printed on the front thereof. . BUT SHE HAD ENOUGH. - CHILDREN Hfllf MCE-h Johnny Mother, let's go in here and buy a baby; they're cheap to-day. TORE HIS SKIN OFF In 8hreds Itching Was Intense- Sleep Was Often Impossible. Cured by Cutlcura In Three Weeks, "At first an eruption of small pus tules cemmenced on my hands. These spread later to other parts of my body. and the Itching at tlmea was intense, so . much ao thatl literally tore the skin off In shreds in seeking relief. The awful itching Interfered with my work considerably, and also kept ma awake nights. I tried several doc tors and used a number of different ointments and lotions but received practically no benefit. Finally I set tled down to the use of Cutlcura Soap, Coticura Ointment and Cutlcura Pills, with the result that in a few days all Itching bad ceased and In about three weeks time all traces of my eruption had disappeared: I have bad no trou ble of this kind since. II. A. Kruta- koff, 6711 Wabash Ave, Chicago, III, November 18 and 28; 1907."' FoHar ttra- Cata. Corf, Sola rnec Baatoa. Hypnotism Long Recognized. Hypnotism has. been recognlxed by the medical profession since the fifteenth fif-teenth century snd in the last 100 years has been experimented and tested test-ed out in thousands of cases by such savants as Charcot In Paris and Bern-helm Bern-helm in Nancy, yet with all these years of. trial Its results have not justified jus-tified its practical and general use In sUkneas. New York Press. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured tot tnejL am icATtova M tw mm m Utr Mt at IM aanw. C'.tonS a tend sr man tuuixuu . a l ftr- u r h r uu fciferiMl rrawdM. H.u fktenk f"ure to UM Bv tmur. and m 4miw th. biul rm. II m pmrrttwi hj ao at Urn b-M ptnmrm m um mtotrr mm ot m rruiw prampibA tt m mi4 erf ih- kieir kn. nkH itn in br t,'j iwriVf mnum d-(f tm tm i immmu m kt (mim aura sTfa i kuta M rw taunt iwatf immoaiM. fna. . , Mt.vt v a tw. I, a t hr immu pn Vi. urn lieu? i u is t "tr'Wu ... He Knew the Rsen. . "I can say one thing in favor of Mr. Featberly." remsrked Mrs. Hendricks, the landlady: "he never takes the lsst piece of bread on the plate." "NO, In deed, Mrs. Hendricks," assented Dum-ley, Dum-ley, cordially. "Featberly alat quick enough." I la tar. Important to Mother. Eiamtnw carefully every bottle of CASTOftlA. a safe and sure remedy for Infanta and children, and see. that It Bears the Slgnatare of CLSTZfezful' la Use For Over 30 Year. The Kind Tou litre Always BomghL Lest One thewid Fait, It la well u moor your bark two anchors Publlus Syrus. wile The west time yoa hare a eU oa the htng try rat-oiag Huard Otl oe your rhrrf ami aea how qatekly it will draar out the mfiaauaaUoa sad break Bp the cold. The tews a maa knows about women wom-en th more be thinks he knows. wsrv torst n nn isr A wlae sasa suppreaaew fuHy thtrds of his optaloas . tw mm m A'ffiT -; JRwar-" B 1 rr - 1 at a m i jf m I ii ft jmiui & j , j - |