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1 The Evolution of Household Remedies. The modern patent medicine busi- neee is the natural outgrowth of the old-time household remedies. In the early history of this country, EVERY FAMILY HAD ITS HOME MADE MEDICHTES. Herb teas, bitters, laxatives and tonics, were to be found in almost every house, compound ed by the housewife, sometimes assisted by the apothecary or the family doctor. Such remedies as picra, which was aloes and quassia, dissolved in apple brandy. Sometimes a hop tonic, made of whiskey, hop# and bitter barks. A wore or more of popular, home-made remedies were thus compounded, the formulae for which were passed along from house to house, sometimes written, sometimes verbally communicated. The patent medicine business is a natural outgrowth from this whole some, old-time custom. In the begin ning, wme enterprising doctor, im pressed by the usefulness of one of these home-made remedies, would take it up, improve it in many ways, manu facture it on a large scale, advertise it mainly through almanacs for the home, and thus it would become used over a large area. LATTERLY THE HOUSE HOLD REMEDY BUSINESS TOOK A MORE EXACT AND SCIENTIFIC FORM - Peruna was originally one of these old-time remedies. It was used by the Mennonites, o f Pennsylvania, before it was offered to the public for sale. Dr. Hartman, THE ORIGINAL COM POUNDER OF PERUNA, is of Men- nonite origin. First, he prescribed it for his neighbors and his patients. The sale of it increased, and at last he established a manufactory and fur nished it to the general drug trade. Peruna is useful in a great many climatic ailments, such as coughs, colds, sore throat, bronchitis, and catarrhal diseases generally. THOUSANDS OF FAMILIES HAVE LEARNED THE USE OF PERUNA and its value in the treatment of these ailments. They have learned to trust and believe in Dr. Hartman’s judgment, and to rely on his remedy, Peruna. F o P i f k e Younger Children.... NUMBER T _1ND. We write the numbein on our elates. And add them in a row. Then rub them out; and sevene and eights And all the others go Far away to Number Land, To the east and west of us; For they have their Slumber Land, Just like all the rest of us. Number Land is a pleasant place. Where beds are soft and aeep; And all the figures we erase Go wand’ring off to sleep Far away to Number Land, To the east and west of us; For they all have their Slumber Land, Just like all the rest of us. —Arthur Macy, in Youth’s Companion. G reat Trek of Caribou. The greatest herd of caribou ever reported In the Yukon Is now report ed moving southw a rd across the head of Sixty Mile River, 100 miles west of Dawson. The herd has been cross ing there for nearly thirty days. It is estim a te d th a t 200,000 caribou have crossed already. The end of the mam m o th procession is not In sight. T h e re may be half a million or even a larger num b er In the great moving herd.— T acoma Ledger. Pathetic. He was very sad. His confidence In some of his best friends had been rudely shattered. He had ju s t ac knowledged th a t he had been mis taken and they had not contradicted him. Bew are of Olntmentu F o r C a tarrh T h a t Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of tmell and completely derrnge the whole sys tem when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable phy sicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J . Cheney & (Jo., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of thesystem. In buying Hall’s Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It ie taken in ternally and made in Toledo. Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & (Jo. Testimoniala free. Sold by Druggists; price, 75c. per bottle. Take Hall's Family Fills for constipation. A u strian W omen Barbers. W omen barbers are adm itted to the A u strian Union, but they are re quired to apprentice themselves for three years before they can go Into business on their own account. Only One “Bromo Quinine” That is Laxative tiromo Quinine. Look for the signature of E. W. Grove. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. The expression, “ a canary bird appetite,*1 is a misnomer, for a canary bird eats more than its own weight daily. A s k Y o u r D e a l e r f o r A l l e n ’s F o o t - E a s e . A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen * Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoeseasy. At all Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Ac cept no substitute. Sample mailed F ree . Audrcss Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. The sale of women's gloves outnumbers that of men's seventeen to one. Truth and. Quality appeal to the Well-Iniormed in every walk of life and are essential to permanent success and creditable standing. Accor- ingly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of known value, but one of many reasons why it is the best of personal and family laxatives is the fact that it cleanses, sweetens and relieves the internal organa on which it acts without any debilitating after effects and without having to increase the quantity from time to time. It acta pleasantly and naturally and truly as a laxative, and its component parts are known to and approved by physicians, aa it is free from all objection able substances. To get ita beneficial affects always purchase the genuine— manufactured by the California Fig SytMp Cb^ only, and lor sale by all leading drug- BABY, MY SQUIRREL. In the month of July our house was destroyed by fire. Being left home less, we sought shelter In tents, pitched In a grove of large bay-trees, near the site of our form er home. And this Is where I found my squir rel. The gray squirrel, native of Cali fornia, builds his nest In the topmost branches of tall, slender trees, which sway in the breeze. One day the wind may have been stronger than usual, or perhaps an overbold youngster ventured too near the edge of the nest. W h atever the cause, the fact rem a ins— a baby squirrel was lying on the ground near the foot of a tree. The poor little fellow, too young to run or climb out of reafch, was easily captured. I placed him In a cage with a bed of cotton; but he clung, trem b ling, to the wires all day, and could not be Induced to take any food. Next m orn ing, however, he sucked warm milk from the end of a spoon, and I fed him four tim es dally In this m anner. At the end of a week he was quite fat, perfectly tam e , and apparently happy in his new surroundings. After a m onth or more he was able to eat nuts, sitting up w ith his tail over his back in regular squirrel fashion dur ing the process. All this tim e I had taken personal care of my Baby, as I called him, and he resented the presence of any stranger. His disapproval was m ani fested by burying himself In his bed, from which safe retreat he emitted shrill squeals or a low, malicious chuckle. Baby had a special antipathy for th e maid. W h enever she entered the room where he was kept, his angry squeals could be heard throughout the house. His ears, accustomed to the still ness of the forest, were extremely sensitive to sound, and he seemed to suffer from the various noises inci dent to domestic life. Baby never m ade a m istake in re gard to persons, and was unvarying in his friendliness tow ard me. When I would let him loose for exercise, he would scamper about and play like a kitten, rolling over and over when I tickled him, climbing up my dress, sitting on my shoulders, and In am bitious moments m o u n ting to the top of my head. W e had occupied a house during the winter, but with the summer our camping tim e returned. Baby had then arrived at an age of discretion, and I, being averse to keeping an anim al in captivity, decided to give him his freedom. For a few days I kept his cage sus pended from a tree in front of my tent. He was greatly excited by his surroundings; but, when he had be come sufficiently at home there, I opened the door and set him at lib erty. He scampered about on top of his cage for a while, and finally ven tured to climb a tree. The ascent was accomplished in safety; but, with the proverbial rapidity of the down ward course, he lost his grip and landed ignomlnously on the ground He was glad to be lifted gently and placed In his bed, where he slept the rest of the day. On the morrow he was lively as ever, do I let him out again. Experience had taught him caution, and he had no more falls. Every evening for a week Baby returned to his cage, but afterw a rd took possession of a deserted nest, which he repaired with sticks and bits of moss. Here he lived happily all sum m er, playing among the branches with the wild squirrelo, and coming to my tent every day for nuts. He soon discovered th a t I kept the nuts in a covered ja r on the bureau. If he came during my absence, I would find, on returning, the cover removed from the jar and the rem nants of his repast scattered on the floor. Three m onths have nassed since we left the camp, but Baby is tam e as ever. He has changed his place of abode, and now lives ta r up on the hillside, whence he comes In response to my call, leaping from bough to bough till he reaches the camping ground. Here he descends the tree nearest to where I am sitting and Jumps upon my knee, holding out his tiny hands for the nuts, which I bring daily. Baby is now full grown and very handsome. His coat of silver gray fu r is soft and sleek; his wide-spread ing tall seems to puff up w ith pride and satisfaction; and he enjoys, to the fullest extent of a squirrel's ca parity, life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.— Mary D. Barber, in the Churchman. WONDERFUL MOVING VINE.' Near the bank of the Guadalupe River, I saw something green upon the ground, and, hurrying forward. Bound s lerely vlee with leaves eeaU* i ' . . ’ M \ 7- er than those of the smilax, of a pale, tender green. The vine had Its root about five feet from the trunk of a tow ering cottonwood tree, and spread out on the ground four or five Inches wide, becoming a little narrow er as It approached the tree. I could see no stems nor tendrils, so thick was the grow th; and as I drew close to the tree I saw th a t th e vine branched ju s t above the ground and went clim b ing up the great tru n k and the branches. It grew m o re and more slender, until, far up, I could distin guish only a thread-like line of green. As I stood intently watching the delicate, graceful vine, I became aw are that It was pervaded by a curious, trem u lous motion. Then I saw th a t the Individual leaves were not stationary. Picking up a twig from the ground, I touched one of the leaves and found to my amazement th a t there was a brown ant under It about as long as my little finger nail. Each leaf was held in the mandibles of an ant In such a way as to con ceal th e body of the insect, and the ants were coming down the tree. The discovery came upon me with a shock. I had stumblqd on a nest of umbrella- ants. v Books had told me that such ants were found in the tropics, where they carried bits of leaves over their heads as If to protect themselves from the sun; but here, on the banka of a Texas river, I had found a colony of them , shading them selves where there was no sun, and completely hidden by their covering of green. Charmed at the sight, I turned back to call my companions, who were fishing in the river. W ithin a few yards I met my husband coming to look for me. He was even more excited over the phenomenon than 1 was, and shouted for the others to come quickly. On Investigation we found th a t the spot where the vine seemed to have its root was really the opening of the ant nest. The tiny creatures had by some instinct learned that the topm o st branches ol the cottonwood had put out their first sm all leaves. They had climbed the immense distance and had cut off and brought down their leaves— to feed their young ones, we supposed. The ants which issued empty-jawed from the nest made a long circuit to tha farther side of the tree and climbed up where they would not interfere with the leaf-bearing thousands com ing down.--—From “N a ture and Sci ence,\ in St. Nicholas. Welcome Proposition to Ladles I wx W ILL DRESS YOU BLEOAHTLY IN THE LAT ESTSTYLES asd FASHIONS o r P a RLS.LONDON AJfo il*T New™YorkC<M rth oil > c rest* a m»<l >t o A?11’ w h lto eh Petpet -Thl let w a ist 1» lawn. I panels, united by Vsl. m b i n e t o < i built of tine, Dvrarf-tuc<e<l . lace Inser tions, col yoke. Swiss e mbroidery of open and blind w o rk, fram ed In val. lace Insertions, constructs side arches and epaulettes on the shoulders. Tiny itatherlmr* fsll medium plaits enforcing , --------------- nine. Val. lace edging* finish the tucked collar a n d cuffs. Clusters of g rad u a ting pin tucks a lorn the back In semi-figure fashion. Buttons back. Made In w h i t e and th r e e - q u a r t e r H.eeves only. P r i c e S I i p o s t a g e tree. WAISTS from $1 to 115 each. G n a r a n t e e e g o w i t h e v e r y p o r c h n s c i all nur goods a re m ade In b right, c le a n w o rkroom s, thus elim inating all risks o f contagion. from the yoke a Irop from the sides, ei l e a t folds to the full blou i finish the elim inatin g al Should you you m ay r e ti you paid w! changed for ontagion. not be satisfied w ith yo ! to us and the t irchsso, ir n sam e to us an d th e m oney which 1 be refunded to you a t once or ex- tanged fo r other goods, which ever you prefer. Y o u F r o m (Jsi I ,t i d ie s ’ H u ite. N k irto , P e t t i c o a t s , and the finest and largest a s sortm ent* of L a d i e s ’ W a i s t s , C o r s e t C o v e r s . N i g h t G o w n s , etc. E X E M P L J F I K T ) SA T ISF A C T IO N : A r u - termer write*: “ / luivc received the Qtaxl* mile red. 1 a m delighted a n d mu friend* arc suritriiied at the beautu andclieaime** of the garment*. 1’nu rru clairr ,n ” are everything you claim to be.' WlL DO A MAIL OlttiER BUS1XESS EXCLOStVELV. W b u a v k no A oents ; n o b r a n c h e s . A fashion book, picturing and dcscribli styles a n d fashions of Paris, London amt ind -am ple* of m aterial for good* m ade to order; JRTH IS BEAUTIFUL ROOK Ing the latesc m New York LOUISE’S HAT TRIMMED. Until she was six years old little Louise had lived in the city. Then her m o ther moved to a sm aller town where the houses stood in large yards, and there were trees and flow ers and plenty of grass. Louise had a little garden all her own, and in it she raised one tom ato plant, one pea vine, two dandelions and a geranium. Think of that! There were many other things about her home th a t pleased little Louise. One was a swing with two chairs th a t faced each other, and here she and her sister used to sit and swing and play they were riding in the cars. One day Louise was sitting In the swing alone, when a bird plumped down out of the apple tree right upon the crown of her hat. Louise was a bit startled, but her m o ther, who sat near in the hammock, called out: “ D on’t be frightened, dear; it is just a baby robin! Keep still and see what he will do.\ So Louise kept still, and the robin perched on her hat and looked about. Then he seemed to think that he would like to take a walk, for he got down off the crown of Louise’s hat and hopped around the rim, until at last he tumbled off into the grass. Pussy saw the bird fall, and started at once to creep slyly towards him, but Louise’s m o ther saw her and scared her away, and picked the baby robin up and put him In the tree, where the old birds' were making a great fuss. They seemed glad to get their baby back again. Louise’s mother says she doesn’t like hats trimmed with dead birds, but If a little live bird wishes to trim a hat with himself, why, th a t Is quite a different m a tter!— Mary Wood-Al- leu. In Little Folks. s e n t F r e e . W r it e to - uay f o r t h is b e a u t i f u l book INTERNATIONAL FASHION CO.. Maker* and Creators of Fashion, 2fi-28 Washington Place. Dept. K. New York City As Genius Affects Women. A reviewer in one of the recent publications, calling attention to Mr. G ribble’s book about George Sand, says th a t “we still believe th a t gen ius, however it may palliate the crim es of a man, aggravates the wick edness of a woman. EPILEPSY ITS CURE New Discovery and Treatment will give them Immediate relief, and all you a re asked to do is to B e n d for Free Bottle of Eplloptleide Cure and Tent it. Complete direction* with F ree Treatm ent, also testim o n ia ls an d 64 page book. 4‘Epilep*y Explained,\ free by mall. G ire AGE and full addreaa. W. H. EAT, E. D.. 841 Pearl Street. New Yftrfc. A Good Modern Story. The reporter dashefl breathless up to the city editor's desk and gasped: “Awful runaw ay . . . carriage with spirited horses . . . driver loses control of them ^ . . anim a ls flee In frenzy through public highway . . . tear up vehicle . . . drag helpless woman for three blocks . . . driver throw n out and skull fractured . . . dies In a few m inutes . . . other vic tim finally grabbed from wrecked carriage by a policeman . . . uncon scious and at point of death . . . crowd cheers brave deed of officer . . . Ambulance called . . . injured hurried to hospital . . . big throng of people crowd around . . . horse continues wild flight down street . . . T h rilling story!” \W rite ten lines about It,\ said the city editor nonchalantly as he turned to the next reporter who had just ap peared. “W h a t you got?\ “An autom o b ile accident. Chauf feur loses control of touring car and runs Into a lamppost. Is throw n out and found dead with head crushed in. Machine badly damaged w ith front end sm ashed, axle bent, rig h t wheel broken, tires cut, hood dented and gashed. As far as I could learn the engine was not in any way Im paired. The batteries were jerked out of place and throw n to the street. Steer ing apparatus was still intact. Car- burator untouched. Gears were slightly damaged. The speedom eter was discovered on the sidewalk. Con trol and lever brakes were tw isted, lamps crushed beyond all recogni tion. Body of car was displaced to some extent.” \Good modern story,\ said th e city editor. “W rite a column and we’ll put it on the first page.”— John H. McNeely, in Puck. At a recent tobacco exhibition in Lon don, some Havana cigars were shown which were quoted at $5 each. FITS, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervous Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.H.R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.,Phila..Pa. Only thr6e per cent, of the world’s popu lation gains its living directly from the sea. DOCTOR PRESCRIBED CUTICURA A fter O ther Treatm e n t Failed— Raw Eczema on Baby’s Face Had Lasted Three M ouths. “Our baby boy broke out with eczema on his face when one month old. One place on the side of his face the size of a nickel was raw like beefsteak for three months, and he would cry out when 1 bathed the parts that were sore and broken out. 1 gave him three months* treatment from a ?ood doctor, but at the end of that time the child was no better. Then my doctor recommended Cuticura. After using a cake >f Cuticura Soap, a third of a box of Cuti- rura Ointment, and half a bottle of Cuti cura Resolvent be was well and his face ivas as smooth as any baby's. He is now :wo years and a half old and no eczema Has reappeared. Mrs. M. L. Harris, Alton, Kan., May 14 anu June 12, 1907.\ It is computed that the English language | Is spoken by 650,000,000. Piles Cured In O to 14 Days. ; Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any ca-seof Itching, Blmu, Bleedingor Protruding 1 Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. [ The world’s total hop crop for 1907 is j about 1.947,000 hundredweight. ! Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’e Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. I A cucumber weighing three and one-half j pounds was raised m Sawtclle, Cal. , Mre. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup forChildren ! teething, softens the gums, reduces intiarama- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. St. Louis and other W e s te rn cities expect to be able to feast on Mexican i o ranges every year from the middle i of October on, these oranges being ripe a m o n th or so earlier than the C a lifornia fruit. General Jackson's W ay. W h en General Jackson returned to j W ashington after the Seminole war his first act was to send for a fash ionable tailor of the name of Ballard to m ake him a pair of breeches. Bal lard was very fond of being recog nized by great men who had been his custom ers. A few days after he had finished Jackson’s garm e n t he saw the General conversing w ith a com pany of friends in front of Tennison's Hotel and stepped up pompously to speak to him. Jackson, thinking him some distinguished individual, very cordially gave him his hand, but, not rem e m b e ring him, in a w h isper in quired his name, to which Ballard re plied: “ I made yotf*r breeches.\ The G eneral, deceived by the sound, Im m ediately turned to the company and Introduced him as Major Breeches, a title which poor Ballard was after ward obliged to wear to the day of his death.— New York Press. LANGUID AM) WEAK. A BOOK COVER. Many of our boys and girls no doubt would like to have a neat cover to put on the books they read to keep them from getting soiled. Here Is the way to make one th a t may be Nised on any book of ordinary size. The girls can make it for themselves; the boys can ask th e ir sisters* good offlcea In the m atter. Take a piece of tailor's canvas eight Inches wide and seventeen and a half Inches long, and on one end of It em b roider an Initial or a monogram, as may be de sired. This should be done on the part of the canvas th a t will cover th e front of the book. Line the can vas w ith gold colored silk the same else ae the canvas, overseam ing It on all the way around, then bind It around w ith halM n ch crim son ribbon. Fold In about two inches on one end and fasten It at each edge. The back of th e book can be slipped In a t this end io th a t It will hold, and the other end, being unfolded, may be used to mark the place when the book Is laid aside. Of course the cover ■say be o f any else deal red. hut the qpe here described w ill answer for ■KWt books.—-ClUeego News. A Condition Common W i(h Kidney Trouble and Backache. Mrs. Marie Sipfle, 416 M iller St., Helena, Mont., says: \T h ree years ago my back grew weak and lame and I could not stoop w ithout a sharp pain. It was ju s t as bad when I tried to get up from a chair. \ I was languid and listless a n d h a d much pain and trou ble w ith the kidney secretions. This was my state when I began with Doan’s Kidney Pills. They helped me from the first and four boxes made a complete, lasting cure.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-M llburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. Even So. There are 8,000,000 telephone girls in the world. The duties of 6,788,- 943 consist In telling you th a t the line is busy. — Louisville Courier- Journal. C o u n t Tolstoy Criticises Dante. Count Tolstoy, criticising Dante, characterized the productions of the Italian poet as cloudy and unintelli gible. FOUR GIRLS Restored to Health by Lydia E. Plnkham’s Vegetable Compound. A e * a W h a t T h m y J a y . Miw Lillian Row, 530 East 84th Street, New York, writes: “ Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- i ble Compound over- lcame irregularities, pe rn odic suffering, and Inervous headaches, Jafter everything else j had failed to help me, and I feel it a duty to let others know of it.” KatharineCraig.2355 Lafayette St., Denver, Col., writes: “Thanks to Lydia E. Pinkham’s V ege table Com pound I am well, af ter suffering for months from netw vous prostration.** Misa Marie Stoltz- man, of Laurel, la., writes: “ I was ina run- downconditionandsuf- l/ered from suppression, indigestion, and poor circulation. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made me well ami strong.” Miss Ellen M. Olson, of 417 N. East St., I\e- wanee, 111.,says: “ Ly dia E.Pinkham’sVege- tablo Compound cured mo of backs, he, side ache, and established my periods, after the best local doctors had failed to help me.\ FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. rink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has b“en 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 ? M rs. P l n k h a m invites all sick w o m e n to w r i t e h e r fo r ad v ice. She h a s g u id e d th o u s a n d s to h e a lt h . A d d r e s s , L y n n , M ass. 6000 W.L.DOVGLAS SHOES $300 >350 MEMBER OP THC FAMILY, MEN, BOYB, WOMEN, MIBBEB AND CHILDREN. *s- zxs^sr.tozatretszi’** « a r zzHtrsSZJSt&te. -S* _ W. L Dougin $4 and $6 Blit Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price • V - e A U T l O W . W. 1. Donglxs nMne »nd pries li stamped on bottom. T n k e Sold by the best shoe dealers everywhere. Show mailed from factory to trated Catalog tree to any address. W . L,. D O U G J Fa*t Color Excluiatly. fife Anhstltute. ____ _ „ ____ f t l . j world, lim a GL.AB, Breehtou, Mass. CHICKENS EARN MONEY! I—.r,”\ Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you want to do it intelligently and get the best results. The way• to do thisis iss to profituiiv by the experience of other*. We offer a book telling all you need to know on the sub- ct—a book written bv a man who made his living for T' ^ and in that time necessarily much money to learn the i>e*0 for the small sum of 23 It tells you how to Detect iisease, how to Feed for Eggs, and also for 1 0 uo m i 1 0 pr 1 E C mg lect—a book written bv 25 years in raising Poultry, had* to experiment and spend wav to conduct the business— LTlNTS in postage stamps. and Cure Disease, how to •» *w. ~ .~» Market, which Fowls to Save for Breeding Purpose*, and indeed about everything you must know on the subject to make a success. SENT POSTPAID ON 'RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS. Book PublUhing House, 134 Leonard St., N. Y. City. Judge Not. Never pass final judgm e n t on any one from first Impressions. We are all such creatures of lim itations. Eyes are faulty, and the elem ents of character which elude us often more than compensate for the faults we see. Look again, look deeper. You will be surprised at the num b er of stars In the night sky If you look long enough. Most people have more virtues than are seen by snap vision. Be charitable and patient. Do not spoil your world by peopling it with Im aginary beings. Map Making. The earliest maps of which we have any knowledge were m ade In Egypt. They were wooden tablets, on which were traced land and sea, roads, rivers, highways, etc., M arinus, of Tyre, 150 A. D., was the first to at tem p t a map on scientific principles. The m aps in use by the Greeks and Romans were fairly accurate, so far as they went, but those In use during the Middle Ages were alarm ingly In accurate. It is only within recent years, say, since the middle of the last century, that it was possible to make a complete and reliable map of the world; and even yet the best map Is subject to slight changes.— New York American. N.Y.— 14 F o p S o r e T h r o a t Nothing will do more good in eo short a time with so little trouble as Hale’s Honey ol Horehoniid and Tar Sold by Druggists When It aches again try Pike’s Toothache Dropa Responsibility For W recks. The N e b raska State Railway Com mission now requires photographs and complete details of wrecks fur nished to It by all railroads In the j State. These are used to fix respon- ' slbility for disasters. Details of i equipment must be supplied to the i commission and the road m u st give ; Its opinion as to the cause of the ao- 1 old e a t. The Public Service Commle- i rion In this State also requires full Avfalia o f all aoridsata. is built of blocks of white coral. W hat Causes Headache. From October to May, Colds are the most frequent cause of Headaches. Laxative Bromo Quinine removes cause. E. W. Grove on box. 25c. The blind population of the world num bers sixty-four out of every million. Many Professional Men, clergymen, teachers and singers use Brown's Bronchial Troches for cur ing hoarseness and coughs. An electrical plant has been discovered in Nicaragua. To insure the direct and quick cleansina of the system take Garfield Tea, the Milo Herb laxative. It nurifies the blood, eradicates disease and brings Good Health Brazilian cocoanut palms live from 600 to 700 yeans. Money-Making Farms for Sale in 14 States An endless variety in size, price and pui Dose : stock and tools included with many. “Stroet'e Catalogu« No. 20,” our new 2 i(i-pac;e book of bargains, profusely illustrated, containing State Maps, reliable in formation of farming localities and traveling in structions to see pronertieH, mailed FREE, i f you Mention this pajxr. U'epay r a ilroadfarti. E. A. STROUT CO., 150 Nassau St„ N.Y.City* 1 E^Thompson’styeWaia There le Only One “Bromo Galnlno\ That Im Laxatlvo Bromo Qulnlno moot jo o o m a oolo m DAT. Always remember the full lor this rigaatura qe every Look lie. S W A - *