The Syracuse Journal, Volume 6, Number 8, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 19 June 1913 — Page 7

REFUSE TO MEET STRANGERS Peculiar Method of Trading Indulged In by New Guinea Tribe Who Keep to Themselves. No European has ever been able to meet in their own dwelling-place the Kukuhuhus, a shy, yet ferocious tribe of New Guinea. Other tribes of the country, while they have a great fear of the Kukuhuhus, manage to do a bartering trade with them. They bring aalt. earthenware, dried fish, etc., and deposit them in a certain indicated place. They then retire for a few houre, being notified to do so by a couriouß cry from the distance. The mountain dwellers then descend to view the goods offered for sale. If they want them they put down other goods, such as skins, feathers, and other Jungle produce, next to those articles wanted by them. Then they retire in turn, and when the way seems clear the coast dwellers approach again. If the latter are satisfied with what is offered in exchange, they take the goods put down by the mountain people and go away; if not satisfied thfey retire again as before with empty hands. RASH ON FACE FOR 2 YEARS Sioux Falls, S. D. —“My trouble of •kin disease started merely as a rash on my face and neck, but it grew and kept getting worse until large scabs would form, fester and break. This was Just on the one side of my face, but it soon scattered to the other side. I suffered a great deal, especially at night, on account of Its itching and burning. I would scratch it and of course that irritated it very much. This rash was on my face for about two years, sometimes breaking out lots worse and forming larger sores. It kept me from sleeping day or night for a couple of months. My face looked disgraceful and I was almost ashamed to be seen by my friends. “A friend asked me to try Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. I would bathe my face with hot water and a lot of Cuticura Soap, then I would put on the Cuticura Ointment. In less than two days’ time, the soreness and Inflammation had almost entirely disappeared, and in four weeks’ time you could not see any of the rash. Now my face Is without a spot 6t any kind. I also use them for my scalp and hair. They cured me completely.” (Signed) Miss Pansy Hutchins, Feb. 6, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card “Cuticura, Dept U Boston." Adr. „ Every Dody’s Doing It. The premier of Servia once upon a time had a round of official calls to make in the ministry building. His first visit was at 11 o’clock and he had allotted 15 minutes to it. He called on a certain high official, stood talking to him for what he thought was his 15 minutes, aid then proceeded across the hall to the office of another minister. On the way there he sought to look at his watch. It was gone. He burst Into the other minister’s office and exclaimed: “This is too much. Here I come to this place and call on a high official, and when I come out my watch is gone. I will not stand It!” “Excellency," said the other minister, "pray be calm! I will see what I can do.” Presently the second minister returned and handed the premier his watch. “What did the thieving rascal say when you made him return my watch?” asked the premier. “Oh,” replied the other minister, “h® did not know I took it.” These Revised Versions. Mayor Woodruff of Peoria turned with disgust from a revised versiog of “Mother Goose.” He said: “When one wishes to give a child a present — ‘Hans Andersen,’ or ‘Grimm,’ or ‘Slovenly Peter’—one finds these books all revised, all spoiled. “Give me original versions. I don’t like revised readings, which are usually as unsatisfactory as the young wife found them. “This young wife, after a stormy scene, cried: “ ‘lt was different before we married. Ah, yes, you loved me then—and now!’ “‘I love you now and then,’ said her husband, calmly. ‘Revised version, don’t you know.’ ” Information Wanted. A little girl listened quietly to ths serious conversation of her elders. At last, hearing her father make an statement anent the postal situation, she could no longer keep silence. “But, papa,” she asked, earnestly, “If the postofflce department doesn’t pay for itself, then it can’t have any. money, can it? Then why do they keep on advertising postal banks?” Carry Flint. The Norfolk peasants always regard pointed flints as thunderbolts. So consistent are the simple folks that they will often assure you that they picked them up red hot. They carry flints and stone arrow heads about with them In the belief that this custom will prevent them being struck by lightning. Poison Oak or Ivy Poisoning Is quickly relieved by bathing the affected parts In a solution of two teaspoonfuls of Tyree’s Antiseptic Powder to a pint of water. 25c. at all druggists or sample sent free by J. 8. Tyree, Washington, D. C.—Adr. Not to His Taste. “Why did you put mo at dinner between these two iomen? They nearly talked me to degth,” « “Why. I thought you were to fond of tongue sandwiches.” If a man has a right to be proud of anything, it is of a good action done, as it ought to be, without any base Interest lurking at the bottom of It— Sterne. Aim at independence of mind. There are some men who go in leading strings all their days.—Rev. J. Stoughton.

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HEN a naval aviator, Lieut. Ellyson was launched in an aeroplane from a catapult recently and his flying machine bore him gracefully aloft without slightest tendency toward stumbling it market an important advance in the use of airships in the navy. The aeroplane as an ad-

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junct to military operations has already shown its value both in Tripoli • and in Turkey. Besides dropping bombs upon Turks and Arabs it has proved of greater usefulness in reconnoitring the position of the enemy. The Bulgarians have gone a step furthers and have used the aeroplane for fire control purposes, enabling the battery commanders of the field guns to train their weapons so as to make them tell most effectively against the Sultan’s forces. This matter of fire control is as vital to a navy as to an army in action, especially when the guns of a fleet are searching out the weak spots in the land defences. But heretofore the aeroplane has been less Available for navy thafl for army use. The catapult tested in Washington | is the invention of Captain Chambers of the navy, and is the outcome of various lessons learned while trying to adapt the aeroplane to the needs of the navy. The practicability of sending aeroplanes in flight from a suitable platform on board ship was early demonstrated, but there were various minor problems to be solved. The launching platforms employed | were; both long and cumbersome. They j took up space that would not be avail- | able in <time of war, and they blocked the fire of some of the guns. The long runway or sloping platform was therefore prohibitive. With a short track substituted which covlffl be easily and quickly put in place and just speedily demounted and stored out of the way, there arose the question of a means of starting the aeroplane effectively. For this purpose Captain Chambers devised the catapult. For years he had specialized in torpedoes and was familiar j with the devices successively tried j in getting those weapons overboard from a boat. The catapult tried at j Annapolis last summer was a sort of | modified torpedo launching outfit of the earlier type, and compressed air was employed to give the initial push. The trial mechanism was of necessity rather crude, but this fact did not * deter Lieutenant Ellyson from sub jecting himself in, a hydroaeroplane to the extreme shock of the device in order to find out the effects of such a concussion, not only upon the air pilot, but likewise upon the “motor attachments and other fittings which might be wrenched loose or deranged : That test was entirely satisfactory m j. its lessons, but the aviator and his machine got a ducking. The catapult lately tried at the Washington navy yard is devised so j that the hydroaeroplane attains its j launching speed without violence, and this insures the launching of the ma-. chine without fear of deranging any of the apparatus or dislodging the aviator from his seat. The runway or starting track is short and can be put in position in several places en a ship without interfering, with the maneuvering of the guns or impeding any other operation of importance. Os -course the demonstration at Washington over the Potomac river under fairly ideal weather conditions is not a counterpart of what may confront the naval aviator at sea. but so far as the actual getting away from the ship is concerned that function can bo promised under any circumstances which on shore would warrant an aviator in trying to go up in the air. The other side of the problem is that of returning to the ship again, and here success is likely. Glenn H. Curtiss has'devised a form of float or* boat for his hydros which is capable of sustaining the flying ma-* chine when waves of considerable size

CUT OUT FOR A DIPLOMAT

A Labouchere anecdote which has not been done to death is given in the new volume of recollections by Sir Henry Lucy (“Toby, M. P.”>, to whom It was told by Labby himself. It concerned the younger son of a peer, who thought that a berth in the diplomatic service was as desirable a place as any for one who took Ilf© rather easily. He knew nothing of the special subjects upon which the preliml-

Uplift of Baseball. A hall game on a summer afternoon serves to take a man’s mind from routine matters and refreshes him. It gives him an ontlet for his feelings as well, for the opposing team and the umpire ar© the scapegoats of American grouches. But for the boys there Is another aspect of baseball. The player who ranks high must he in good physical condition and he cannot be In such a condition unless he cares for himself in the proper way. The boys of the large eUies have

are running, and this will be taken advantage of when the hydroaeroplane returns from its scouting expeditios. The aviator will alight with his machine upon the water on the sheltered side of the vessel, and, thus protected from the stronger sweep of wind and wave, the air pilot and his apparatus will be easily hoisted aboard. Developments in other directions are increasing day by day the reliability of the Aeroplane and its value as a military implement. Just as the self-starter has added to the convenience of the up-to-date automobile, a similar device is contributing to the efficiency of the hydroaeroplane as j part of the equipment of a fighting \ ship. With a good self-starter, by which the air pilot can set his motor ; going from his seat, and with a ! launching apparatus like that' devised by Captain Chambers, the aircraft will ; be able to assume its own propulsion j the instant it leaves the runway of the { catapult. It is not enough, however, simply to j get the flying machine into the air; ! the scouting aviator has a lot to attend to after he is aloft and started upon his mission. Until a short while ago the air pilot j had his hands dangerously full of j things to be manipulated in order to sustain him safely in flight, and a moment’s inattention was pretty certain to invite trouble if not disaster. He ! had no opportunity to make observa- j tion of the land beneath him or to release bombs intended to hit a eery tain spot on the landscape below. The ! airman therefore needed a companion whose duties should be limited to reconnitering and to dropping projectiles upon the enemy. Now it happened that the machines used by the Italians in Tripoli were not weight carriers, and it was there-1 fore out of the question to support a ; second person in them. Accordingly \ the aviator had to do all the work | himself, and this explains why bombs j dropped from aeroplanes so often j failed to hit their mark. The Italian dirigible balloons, on the other hand, j because they could he maneuvered j deliberately and could lift a number I of persons, were successful as bomb throwers, and what they did showed what could be expected of a flying machine properly built for military work. As a result of study a number of devices have been developed which make it possible now to insure to a large degree the automatic control of an aeroplane’s equilibrium, and other apparatus Is being perfected which reduces the demands upon the aviator. Quite apart from the military importance of these later inventions, the physical and nervous stresses upon the aviator are fewer. These have proved so exhausting during the war between Italy and Turkey that the pilots have become incapacitated after six months of service, and doctors declare a rest period of at least two years Is needful in order to insure their recuperation and fitness again for duty with the flying squadron. Among the helpful apparatus now being developed by an American firm is a gyroscopic device which gives promise of success in maintaining the stability of an aeroplane in flight, captain Chambers is engaged in the construction of an aerial compass which will not only give directional guidance, hut will also compensate for the drift or sidewise movement of the flying machine. On the other side of the Atlantic instrument makers have been working away at the same problem with more or less success. The market supply of such apparatus is not large. That there is need of just such an aid to aerial navigation is evidenced by the fact that a German firm was suddenly denuded of its supply by the demands of the war in the Balkans. It is safe ; to say that no small share of the effective aid rendered by the Bulgarian flying corps has been directly due to these instruments. In the past aviation generally has been encouraged more as a sporting

nary examination was based, but there was at least the promise of a As far as he could make out, he did not supply a single correct answer to the long list of questions. Nevertheless, he came out first in the competition. It was a surprise even for a confident yound lordling. Meeting one of the examiners at dinner a few days later, he ventured to ask how the thing came about “We at once saw

their heroes on the hall teams, and will seek to emulate them. And knowing that physical perfection, or anything approaching perfection comes only with abstemious living, these, young hero worshippers will be Influenced to care for their physical natures. Many a boy hopes to make a ball player of himself, hence will develop his muscles. This Is an excellent thing for him to do, for although in later years the halo about the ball player’s head grow dim, the foundation for good health wUI have been

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proposition than an art susceptible of practical benefits, and this has really hurt aviation more than it has helped. Speed has appealed pre-eminently to racing men and to what may appropriately be termed the nautical acrobats, and in some senses this speed has saved more lives than it has sacrificed under the hazardous circumstances of its employment. The viO torious Vedrines strongly advocates speed on the score that it makes for safety by offsetting or combating more successfully atmospheric vagaries while in flight, but this element of high velocity multiplies the hazard or difficulty of alighting as well as increasing the danger of engine trouble and shortness of the life of the motor. For war purposes an aeroplane motor should work efficiently at different speeds because varying drive power will he needed for dissimilar services. A motor of this sort would lend itself to relatively low speed so that the flying machine could return to tlid ground much as a vessel slackens her headway when coming up to her dock. Captain Chambers has a very definite opinion upon this subject, which he explains as follows: “A weight carrying aeroplane, such as a hydroaeroplane, necessarily needs a motor with considerable range of speed, and the same kind of motor is needed to reduce the danger of alighting. I think aviation would be improved if the terms of future speed contests were arrang«M so as to require each contestant to go over the course twice —the second time at an average speed 20 per cent, lower than his highest average.” The layman has heard so much of anti-balloon guns and other weapons for the annihilation of all kinds of aircraft, that he pictures the flying machine as being knocked into bits by the precise fire of these weapons. As a matter of fact, during the war in Tripoli the Italian aeroplanes were but seldom hit, never disastrously, and when up in the air three thousand feet they were not touched at all. American naval aviators, with their hydroaeroplanes, have proved that it is entirely feasible for them to reach this height, and so far as endurance of flight is concerned, they hold the record—Lieutenant Towers of the navy having traveled for six hours ten minutes and twenty seconds in a standard navy Curtiss hydroaeroplane. Inventors have developed an aeroplane wireless outfit of wery moderate weight, and with this equipment aviators are able to cover a range of fifty ipiles. The next naval conflict is likely to find hydroaeroplanes a feature of the essential equipment of all large men-of-war, and the flying machine must be considered seriously and not as a mere fad or a mechanical achievement of no material value. In peace-time maneuvers the French have clearly shown that the aeroplane Is capable of doing scout duty of an important character, detecting not only ships upon the water, but the presence of submarines supposedly hidden below the surface of the sea; and recent experiments with armor piercing bombs—dropped from aircraft —have turned a new page in the art of warfare. Old Fight Renewed. “My old barber has left the city.” “You seem very regretful.” “Yes; he had been trying to sell me a bottle of hair tonic for the last 15 years, and so far I had succeeded In standing him off. Now I shall have to start the battle all over with a new man.”

you knew nothing,” was the reply. “But your manner was so free from constraint under what to some pefeple would have been peculiarly embarrassing circumstances that we said to each other, ‘That’s the very man to make a diplomatist.’ So we gare yon a start on your career.” Ungallant Chinese Proverb. “A woman’s heart,” says tho Chinese proverb, “is like the moon. It changes continually, but it always has a man in it.”

strengthened. So let the national game, the greatest of all games, be upheld and kept free from decadent Influences, for it is worth our while. — Greenville (S. C.) News. One Indication. “Well, dear, do you think It is going to be smooth sailing with oar new cook?” “I'm afraid not. Jack. I rather think from the way she handled the supper dishes theriT are going fee he Meekers ahead,”

AmericEtfliii

Mr. William A. Radford will, answer questions and give advice FREE OF !X)ST on all subjects pertaining to the tubject of building, for the readers of this paper. On account of his wido experience as Editor, Author and Manufacturer, he Is, without doubt, the highest authority on all these subjects. Address all inquiries to William Radford, No. ITS West Jackson bouk /ard, Chicago, 111., and only enclose two-cent stamp lor reply. It is plainly evident to all observers that the number of people who take an intelligent interest in house planning and house building is increasing. The popular press reveals this tendency very clearly. Illustrations of modern houses and discussions of architectural subjects are overflowing from the technical press, finding a place in the newspapers and popular magazines. This growing interest among the people is all to the good. Architecture has suffered too long from popular ignorance and popular apathy. Generally speaking, people get the kind* of architecture they like and the kind of building they are willing to accept. There is enough architectural genius and enough skilled craftsmanship in our midst today to transform every town and village into a thing of beauty and to provide every family with a beautiful and healthful home. If a genius of the architect and the skill of the workman are employed, or wasted on unworthy objects, it Is because the demand for thi3 beautiful architecture has not yet become general and insistent. No doubt, it is also due to the fact that some who appreciate and desire good architecture have not the means to command It.

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But the want of money is secoadary. The matter of primary importance is that people should have right ideas as lo what constitutes good architecture and sound building, and should insist whenever they cause buildings to be put up upon having only those which are both well designed and well built. Good buildilng, the first essential, and here, no doubt, is a point of danger. The popularizing of architecture is a good thing so long as the demand is for good architecture. A great oninstructed public demanding ‘quaint” houses and “picturesque” bungalows would get what it wants, but the result is not likely to make for real progress in architecture, or for healthy conditions in the building trade. When the house-hunting man turns with disgust from the “desirable villa Kjtche>G F| ..<ni.Hr jr-i Bed Edom. mm *Vj OttuNHts' t=£ BDojinc Eooa \cedCocm la*>"»«g*r —bn ««nia« PtXRCH Floor Plan. residence” to which the house agents have directed his attention, to sell to him, and determines to r build himself a house according to his own and his wife’s ideas, he takes a very right and proper course, but he is apt to go about it in a wrong way. He invites an architect to design him a “picturesque” house with nooks and bay windows and overhanging eaves. It is to contain accommodations which might reasonably be supplied for $4.000, but it is to cost not a penny more than $2,000. That is to begin at the wrong end. If a man’s chief ambition is that all the landscape painters in the neighborhood should come and erect their easels before his house, he does well to concern himself primarily with gables and nooks; but If he hold with Bacon that “houses are built to live in and not to look on” he will do well to give more attention to the soundness of the walls and roof and the relative positions of dining room and kitchen. Let the man with $2,000 to spend determine that he will have as much good sound building as $2,000 will buy and therewith be content If this means being content with two sitting rooms instead of the desired three, or abandoning a projected ingle-nook, there is a solid consolation -in the knowledge that all the material used In the house is thoroughly sound and has been put together in a workmanlike manner.

When the essential building—is secured, a man may fin< it possible to indulge his fancies ii many matters of detail, but he shouM be warned against too earnestly striv ing after the ideal of the picturesque Having determined on the accommoda tion he desires and can afford, he wil he well advised to be guided in regarc to the design by his architect. The little cottage illustrated here with is an example of a building thor oughly constructed and arranged ac cording to the very best ideas for con venience; yet at the same time somt little thought has been given to makt the building attractive in appearance without adding materially to its cost. For $1,500 this five-room cottage hai been built, using the very best meth ods of construction and finishing th* building on the inside with oak, birefc and yellow pine. A glance at the floor plan will show the desirable features of its arrange raent. The living room and dinin* room are of large size and open to gether by means of an arch opening The kitchen is well away from the rest of the house, being separated from the dining room by the pantry, an arrangement which has been found to be very satisfactory. There are two good sized bedrooms very well placed. The bathroom is convenient ly located. The attic space in this cottage is valuable for storage purposes and since it is well ventilated serves tc keep the first story cool during the hot summer w eather. The exterior is sid ed with clap-boards, having band

I courses and corner boards used for on 1 namental effect. The cornice is rath er wide and is of open timbered con struction. Altogether this is an ex ceptionally attractive and economical little residence for the small family. Followed the Stars. In certain parts of the south, “all over hell and half of Georgia” signifies the limits of the known earth. Also, there are many who believe the myth that the Pleiades point the way home for the traveler—they lie always In the heavens directly over the haven where he would be. Both ol these were reasons why Uncle Tobe Braddlsh stayed in North Carolina, which, according to his bwn story, he hated. “Yes, sir,” remarked Tobe, “there come a time years ago, when I wanted to leave this place and go back to Tennessee. And soon’s the seven sisters come up, I went straight after them same as a bee martin to his hole. But along to’ards midnight they doubled back on me, and by the time I’d finished followin’ them at sun-up I was right back in this settlement agin. Every night for a year I traveled all over hell and half of Georgia after them stars, and never got nowhere but here. And I reckin I’ll stay. Have you got a plug ol chaw terbaccer?” Barnato a Skillful Actor. In the journal South Africa, Mr. Sutton Vane, the dramatist, who died recently, says reminiscently of Barney Barnato: “He was the best amateui melodramatic actor I ever met. A lifc tie rough; so is a diamond, hut the fire is there. He played Claude FroV lo In Victor Hugo’s ‘Esmeralda’ splendidly, I playing Quesimodo, the hunchback, with him. In the great scene on the parapets the hunchback tries to throw the jnonk (Frollo) into the Btreet. Mr. Barnato resisted vigop ously. He seized me by my hump, which came off in his hand. It was a sponge bag stuffed with various articles. He shook his fist at me, and then, with a quiet smile, threw * the hump from the cathedral roof. Looking over, he exclaimed, ‘Good heavens, I have killed a policeman.* Tra mendous round of applause from thr •audience.” Sunshine Kills Germs. Light, as well as heat, has disinfectant properties. It is well known that vegetables start their growth with difficulty when exposed to sunlight The covering of the seed is not only to secure moisture but also to favor the first steps of growth. It is well known that the upper thin layer of the soil is almost sterile. When possible, expose all parts of the house to sunlight. When this cannot be done, admit as strong a diffused light as can he secured. The common practice ol keeping the unused rooms of the house closed and darkened is an to insanitary conditions. Better have the wallpapers and gaudy carpets and rugs fade than to foster the germs ol tuberculosis. Let the sunlight in and the germs out —Good Housekeeping Magazine.

Barren Soil. Apropos of the ravages that time has made in the faces and forms of the veterans of the Civil war, Walter S. Morton, president general of tho Union society, said at a dinner la New York: “A veteran, talking to hie greatgrandson, a little lad of eight or olno years, remarked: “ ‘Nearly a generation and a half ago my head was grazed by a bullet at the battle of Chickamauga.' “The little boy looked at tho old man’s head thoughtfully and said: “ ’There isn’t much grazing thero now. is there, sir?* ” He Makes a Point. “Women will never get tho upper hand. Men are too smart.” “Can you point out one Instance of men being smarter than women?" “Well, men don’t handicap themselves with clothes that button op tho back.” His Confession. Judge Keuesaw Mountain Landis, of Chicago, confesses that he ooco worked as an usher in a theater.

EXPERIENCE OF MOTHERHOOD Advice to Expectant Mothers The experience of Motherhood is a trying one to most women and marks distinctly an epoch in their lives. Not one woman in a hundred is prepared or understands how to properly care for herself. Os course nearly every woman nowadays has medical treatment at sack times, but many approach the experience with an osganism unfitted for the trial of strength* and when it is owes her Bystem has received a shock from which it is hard to recover. Following right upon this comes the nervous strain of caring for the child, and a distinct change in the mother results. There is nothing more charming than a happy and healthy mother of children, and indeed child-birth under the right conditions need be no hazard to health or beauty. The unexplainable thing is that, with all the evidence of shattered nerves and broken health resulting from an unprepared condition, and with ample time in which to prepare, women will persist in going blindly to the trial. Every woman at this time should rely epon Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, a most valuable tonic and in vigors tor of the female organism. In many homes once childless there r\f are now children be- W( yj cause of the fact II if that Lydia E. Pink- II It* yjl ham’s Vegetable /4 Compound makes women normal, Jilllß C healthy and strong, If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Piukham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Yonr letter will be opened, reed end answered by » woman and held In strict confidence* ALBERTA PRICE OF Kflpmri BEEF J&S¥£f pklck ® Vi a nfZiOrAJU' »n»dit) ii« etc /” £ KanchlngCoUlll.TJ A. aril laimtUit' tfra.-n :!okli W—the cattto ncMjmg (riven place to the cxiitivaMoaot wheat,oats. Parley and ttai: eaHPPCU'q change has made many thuoaaads ; A el Americans, settled on these — j plains, wealthy, but it has Sn■R creased the price of lire shoes. There Is splendid opportustt? H Free Homestead 2.1-., ot 165 acres (and another a* apveiK'Sj! Vru.l * caption) In the newer districts filwm v and produce cithercattieor grain. M DOT U > The crops are always good, tbs climate is excellent, schools and churches are convenient, marltet* fe. CZtJs splendid, in either Manitoba,Sanhatebewan or Alberta. Send for literature, the lataeft 'an 4wShl Information, railway rates, eta. to IlsMl w - 8- NETHERY, nTSJliim «» GARDNER BLDG., T.M*, Olfe, ar WWmWt Mfa It IMI or address SuporlnteodeaC at , li/e |/|MtU Immigration, Ottawa.Gauds. CONSTIPATION may be either a transient or permanent affliction, arising from some error in diet of as a resold of constantly weak digestion. For temporary and obstinate ones the best relief is V^JdiaS THU NSW FRENCH REMEDY. Ntl.Ed.lA THERAPION Hospitals w*b r-at success, cukx»cmronic wsaknsss. lost nsn Via. SIDNEY. BLADDER, DISEASES. BLOOD INJJBOa. FILES. EITHER No. DRUGGISTS or MAIL St. BOBT 4 CIS POUOERA CO. M. BEEKUAN 3T.NBW YORK crLYM AM BEAD TORONTO WRITE FOR FREE BOOK TO DR. Ut CLEM Med. Co, haverstoce Rd. Hampstead. Lombok. Kao. TET FEW DRAPER ITASTELESS) FORMOF EASY TO TASK THERAPION feu THAT TRADB MARKED WORD TMtRAHOfi tB SuX.«OTT.tTAM* AFFIXED TO ALL OSMIUMS VAGUS* DAISY FLT KILLER £TES 5 Mfllsa. Rsat, al—a •» nam.ntal, ciawnltit cheap. Lasts all • aasaa. Had. si ovar; will net soil « Guaranteed eSsottwa EAKOL9 (OKIES. AM DsXalh Avs?Br»klyn. E. *. If yaur hair Is faUla* .ut, getting thin, turning gray or splitting and cracking at baldness threatening, then you need that wonderful remedy the Perfection Tonic.' Ms Sold by E. J. Klmmel Co.. Jackson. Mich. Agent, and District Manager, to Mil n sweet and beet selling household article on marketi showing sells it; exclusive territory aralgwad. write PALMER, 43 Broadway. Now York. Wanted—Men and Women to canvass home town with useful specialty. Each family bwye two and three. Agents make half. Write today. Leeds Supply Co., Bx. SOB. Kokomo. lad. I Afinrc Got wise. Improve your own beamy UUIU.O and appearanee. Particulars free. PBBM7S UKUUrT of. BEASFOKP BUM.. MMlSTttt, ra. PATENTS W. N. U, FORT WAYNE NO. 24-191*.