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Show I AN HONEST ADVISED PE-RU-N- DOCTOR MOUNTAIN SCALING A. HYLVKHTEU K. BMITII, Room MILSB, Oranlto Block, St. Lou!, Mo., Rerun U tbo beat friend & write Kick man can litre. A fe w months ago I came here In a 'wretched condition. Exposure and dampncas had ruined my once robut health. I. had catarrhal affections of t he bronchial tube, and for a time there arts a doubt as to my recovery. My good honest old doctor advised me to take Rerun, which I did and In a abort time my health began to improve very rapidly, the bronchial-troublgradually disappeared, and in three months my health was fully restored. Accept a grateful mans thanks for his restoration to perfect health. for Ills Patients. A. W. Perrin, M. D. S., m Halsey Pe-m-- na Ht., ?. iklyn,N. Y.,sayst I am using your Peruca myself, and am roeom mending it to my patients la all coa of catarrh, and And It to be moro than you represent. Rerun ran I s had now of all druggists In this section. At the time 1 began using it, it was unknown. TALES OF PERILS BY WHO KNOWS. ITS WOMAN A Difficulties and Danger of the Acent Mutt Be Carefully Weighed by the One Who Would Climb the Height. I have sometime been criticised for dwelling overmuch on the tragical side of Alpine climbing, and perhaps with some reason. Yet if anything I have written deters a would be mountaineer from testing his skill and strength against the difficulties of a lofty peak, then I care not, for surely he is not of the stuff from which the true climber is made. Every disaster on the mountains, if properly understood, should teach a lesson, and if in a few cases a catastrophe was unavoidable, its very rarify should convince us that the sport may be a comparatively safe one If we will only make It so. An example alas! It is but one amongst many of a catastrophe due to venturing on a mountain too soon after a heavy fall of snow occurred on the Wctlerhorn in 1902, when a Scotch gentleman and his guide, Knu-belost their lives. The party on the Wetterhorn, in addition to Mr. Brown and Knubel, included another amateur, Mr. Garden, and a young guide, Imboden by name. They reached the summit at length, but-othe descent they began to realize that the steeper portions of the snow-slope- s &ere becoming unsafe. The snow In the couloirs grew worse and worse, and they were anxious to get to safer ground as quickly as possible, fearing that at any moment an avalanche might start beneath their feet, or rush down on them from above and overwhelm them. And presently It came! Knubel was the first to perceive It, and he had barely time to shout to his companions before it was upon them! They were Instantly swept oft their feet and dashed down the couloir. For over twelve hundred feet the four helpless men were hurled down the precipitous gulley, and then, while they were still on the surface of the Enow, it came to rest. Mr. Garden and Imboden alone lived to tell the n Sausage YouVe never tasted the best sausage until youVe eaten Libbys Vienna Sausage Ifs asausage product of high food value! Made different! Cooked different! Tastes different and is different than other sausage! tale. The narrative from which I condense the following account was written for the Alpine Journal by the survivor, Mr. Stuart de la Rue, a young man of seventeen. The object of the excursion was to explore an untried route up fthe Cima di Rossi, a fine glacier-clapeak near the head of the Forno Glacier, in the Maloja district. Mr. Way, his son of thirteen, and Mr. de la Rue, without guides, had spent the previous night at the Forno hut. They started at 6:30 a. m., and took with them two short ropes Vienna Libbys like all of the Libby Food Products; Sausage, d is carefully prepared and cooked in Libbys Great White Kitchen It can be quickly served for any meal at any time! It is pleasing, not THRIFT over-flavore- d and has that satisfying taste! Try it! - ID ESN fr IN HIGH LIFE. you know. ITCHING HUMOR ON BOY His Hands Were a Solid Mass, and Disease Spread All Over Body Cured in 4 Days By Cuticura. that our little with Itching out boy was all broken sores. We first noticed it on his little bands. Ills hands were not as bad then, and we didnt think anything serious would result But the next day we heard of the Cuticura Remedies being so good for itching sores. By this time the disease had spread all over his body, and his hands were nothing but a solid mass of this itcha ing disease. I purchased a box of of Cuticura Soap and one box Ointment, and that night I took the Cuticura Soap and lukewarm water and washed him well. Then I dried him and took the Cuticura Ointment and anointed him with it I did this every evening and in four nights he DonThe Most Dangerous Snow of All I was entirely cured. Mrs. Frank New Snow Exposed to Hot Sun, Or, ahue, 208 Fremont St, Kokomo, Ind., Sept 16, 1907. Worse Still, to Warm Winds. One day we noticed Cut!-cur- This was done, and the two ends joined with a reef knot The rope was now paid out, Mr. de la Rue holding the end till Mr. Way was about forty feet above the two others. He called to those below that the rock was loose and rotten. The boy was standing unroped. As he realized the awful dis aster about to occur, he cried, Oh, These were the poor my God! childs last words, and an Instant later he was swept away. A moment after the fall of stones Mr. Way fell from his ledge above. Mr. de la Rue succeeded lin holding the rope, and trusted that, after all, he might have managed to save his companion, but what was his horror, when the cloud of dust cleared off, to find that he had only a loose end in his hand! The knot had given way. Hurrying down as rapidly as the difficult ground allowed, he discovered the lifeless body of the boy about five hundred to eight hundred feet below. Mr. Way could not be found, though the young man followed the course of the avalanche for some distance, but the body was recovered that night. MRS. AUBREY LE BLOND. sured by her husband that he never had a wife who put up such a front with so little expense to him. Puck. For though she was on pleasure bent She had a frugal mind. Cowper. " MOTHERS SHORTCAKE. Palgrave, said she, to her butler, a word with you on business. The shortcake mother used to make and Palgrave bowed courteously, Ah, you will wisely say with a fine absence of ' condescension That In those days my appetite ' Was always with me, day and night;.-Tha- t or patronage. - J, ) t tis but fancys play! Kindly inform all the'v servants, Well, have your fling! Say I have lost The joy of eating for the sake she went on, that I shall expect them, me a to satisfying hunger which over to turn perhenceforth, Youth only knows! But, O! the rich, centage of the tips which they receive Rare shortcake mother used to make! from guests at my house-partiebutler to The shortcake mother used to' make It put even the high-bre- d Was built three stories tall. t his resources to conceal his astonish-ment- . I never had to search with care To find the juicy beri'ies there. , Nor were they green or small. if should what they But, madame, when I craved a second piece. And decline? he objected, as gently as he Defying any future ache, ' I got it without extra charge. might Remind them, in that case, her re- For it was free as well as large. The shortcake mother used to make! ply was all in the manner of firmness, S. E. Kiser, in Chicago Record-Heralthat I have the inviting of the guests, and that it is possible to find eligible There are more than 25,000 sailing never who tips. of over' 50 tons on the oceans give vessels people to as was be reward sweet at And her present. Not the Chair. He was a collector for an Install ment house, new at the business, and sensitive about performing an unpleasant duty. He was particularly embarrassed because the lady upon whom he had called to perform this unpleasant duty was so exceedingly polite. Still, the van was at the door, the lady was in arrears in her payments, and . he remembered his duty. Good morning, said the lady. Its a beautiful day, isnt it? Beautiful, he agreed. Wont you take a chair?" she said. Er no, thank you, not this mornIve come to ing, he stammered. take the piano! Exchange. TEA New York is too far from Japan; San Fran- cisco is nearer. Your grocer returns your money if you like Schillings Best; we pay him. Readjusted dont Conditions. "Do you think these trusts and mer gers have put the great capitalists on terms of friendship? Not as a rule, answered Dustin Stax. It has simply brought the fighting to closer range. Washington Star. -- Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago. PC instead of one long one. After they had climbed for about two hours and a half the rocks became very steep and difficult. They did not return, however, having determined to try to reach the summit, Mr. Way was leading, his son was second, and Mr. de la Rue last Their progress was barred at ibis point by a hard hit of rock, and in order to get up this mauvals Publisher The third chapter la this two other advanced, make the before pas manuscript Is so blurred I cant Mr. Way required a longer allowance It out. of rope, lie proposed, therefore, that Author Yes; that ia where I used Mr. de la Rue should unrope the boy, London atmosphere. That Is the fog, -- e l, Libbys Vienna HAZY, UVE STOCK AND MISCELLANEOUS Electrotypes IN GREAT VARIETY FORj SALE tAT THE LOWEST PRICES BY tf s. . d. A.N.KELLOGG NEWSPAPER CO. 73 W. Adams St., Chicago WIDOWSwader n EW PENSIONS LAW obtained VSSKA.M&R- - |