The Syracuse Journal, Volume 6, Number 9, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 26 June 1913 — Page 7

BEAUTIFUL SPIES LEARN SECRETS. FOR RUSSIA SR,

USSIAN women are noted for their charm: they have for centuries exercised over men a fascination greater than that of the women of any other country. American women attract easily, but not with | the power that belongs to the Russian. The Russian woman's charm is almost hypnotic. This power of fascinat-

Ing is regarded as a great asset by the czar’s government; the heads of the state play it as a trump card. Russian women are sent as spies the world over, to learn secrets of state from men whoso heads they, turn. These beautiful secret service employes receive large salaries in addition to generous gifts for special work. The Russian government has employed women spies so? well nigh a hundred years; it is even said that as long ago as the time of Ivan the Terrible princesses were sent to distant lands to learn the truje sentiment of ; foreign courts toward him. Members of the present feminine | secret service corps are found in j every civilized country in the world. ! The Russian is a natural linguist and learns to speak fluently all languages. > In every. instance, these spies are women of fine judgment of cool, cal- i culating minds; although apparently ' they are only gen&ie; negative crea- j tures of boundless charm and helpless- i . ness. Their insidious temperaments ! are brought to bear upon ’ statesmen and officials of many lands, I and the fact that Russia's i methods are well known, it usually ’ happens that the victim suspects nothing until he finds he has been betrayed. Naturally the lives'of these «tmen are filled with adventure. Many of them have had very narrow escapes, but they are fearless and daring. They are prepared to play any* part —to wear men's clothes, to dress in rags or satin, to go into all sorts of queer and dangerous quarters, to take long, hazardous journeys. One of the' most famous qt these women is Mme. Seski Hunegan, who has been in the service of the Russian government many years. Upon the death, of her husbandj who was an officer in the Russian army, she was left in very straitened circumstances. Her case was brought to the attention of the government, and as her loyalty and strong, steadfast character were well known, the officials determined to make use of her as a spy. She gladly to|ok advantage of the opportunity and departed at once for Paris, to commence her work. , Thence she was sent to the Riviera, and later, about eight years ago. to America. She lived in Washington two years and was a friend of the Countess Cassini. Soon afterw'ard she toured the world, traveling as an American. In Japan she was received as- such, and thus was able to send valuable information to her government. She is now ' living in London under an assumed name and passes as an American. Baroness Makowa, although of noble birth, has lived for years as a . dancing girl on the Russian border. I Her mission is to watch Turks, Greeks j and Bulgarian, and her simple, light- ■ hearted manner averts all suspicion. I She has won the heart of many a for- ■ eign officer. She is an accomplished ' dancer. Prince George of Greece was greatly attracted to her, much to the chagrin of Princess George —and he never suspected that she was a noblewoman, and a spy at that. Probably one of the most fascinating women ever sept forth by the Russian government upon secret missions Is Zenaida Petrovitch. She would j have made an admirable character study for Turgeniff. She was born in a little town about" 20 miles from Moscow. Her father was a scholarly, poetic school teacher, who loved to dream among his books. He married the daughter of a country nobleman, a young woman of great beauty, who later deserted him and their infant daughter in favor of a grand duke. The dreamy, poetic father brought u|p his little girl quietly. But she had Inherited her wayward mother’s beauty, as well as her nature. She never I learned to understand her father. At i the age of seventeen, when she could endure her tame, uneventful life no longer, she ran away to find her mother. She found instead a handsome officer who married her and took her to St. Petersburg to live. ' • There she met grand dukes, and, like her mother, she also deserted her husband for one of them. With him

HOW TO GROW TALL

A man's organs and those of his tones w hich are not subjected to pressure grow, continuously until he is forty years old; that ia to say, the heart should become stronger, the capacity of the lungs increase, and the brain should develop steadily until the fourth decade of life. Also one should wear a larger hat at the age of forty than at thirty. A man ceases to grow tall, howevpr, at the beginning of

Originality. Many people spend lots of time trying to do just what other people do. They do not consider originality as a happy part of humanity. It makes them unhappy. What will people say? That is the great question, and if the answer is, they will criticise it, then they will yield their happy conceits and join the ranks of uniformity. That is to be regretted. Individual tastes are to be encouraged. They make society interesting. Os course, originality must be a

fe Li _ .. / W Ik 18/ corwrt&s

she went to Paris and soon afterward f iltered the government service. She spends her time largely at the great watering places of Europe. King Edward fell under her spell at Biarritz, and had not his watchful attendants drawn him away, .there is no telling what she might have wrung from him. She is regarded by her government as a most valuable asset. Two widely different types of the Russian women spies are the cousins Tatiana and Pavlova Pozharsky. They look like sweet, fresh country maidens, and they are ready to give their lives in the service of the czar. They do their work for the government within the confines of the Russian empire. They go to Finland, Poland, to Siberia and Manchuria. These women are remarkably fearless and self-effacing; they have lived in huts in frozen Siberia and endured great privations and discomforts to perform the duties imposed upon them. They are in danger of their lives every hour, for to watch the revolutionists is their special duty’, and if they were suspected they w’ould be killed at once. The cousins %re educated, and, like their sister spies, they have had many love affairs; in fact, it is usually upon a love affair that these women depend to obtain the best of their information. The countess Korolerviez. who has had a dozen other names which she assumes at different times for the convenience of her w’ork, lived under the assumed name of Mrs. Janet Dudley

° 'jf V

Breathed Life Into Child

Breathing new life into an infant, a young ambulance physician, Dr. Benedict Willis, attached to the Bellevue hospital in New York city, saved an apparently dead new born baby the other day. The surgeon placed his lips close to those of the baby and forced his own breath for 40 minutes into and out of the lungs of the infant. When Dr. Willis reached the house, that of a man named Moca, the baby boy, less than an hour old, was cold and blue, and several women there told him the infant was dead. He thought so himself, he said, but nevertheless started the work of resuscitation. Not until he had worked for 40 minutes, using hot water and moving the arms, did the spark of life manifest its return. Then the little body began to grow warm and soon there was a lusty cry. This brought joy to the mother. The boy was her first born. She had recovered quickly

the third decade, because after that time the downward pressure exerted by the weight of the body while in the erect position compresses the vertebra® or small bones in the spine, the discs of cartilage between them, the pelvis and the thigh~~bones, and this pressure overcomes the natural elasticity of the discs and the growth of these bones. However, a well-known scientist contends that were man a

part of common sense. A would not want to do a thing absurd in itself.* He wouldn’t want to paint his homo red, white and blue, or serve snails at a dinner party. Originality respects others, but it does not feel it is necessary to follow them on this account. All greatness is original. It thinks for itsfelf, and has things its own way, but has a care not to trespass on the rights of others. Mr. Jones has a love for cats, and he likes to have them about, and it is well he indulges his fancy; but U they

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for eight years in various cities of the United States. She caught on to American mannerisms, and speaks English in perfect accent.' At the outbreak of the Russo-Jap-anese war she was sent to Japan. She traveled with a conducted party of tourists, and when her destination was reached she decided to lengthen her stay in Japan. 3he adopted Jap-

her stay in Japan. adopted Japanese customs and Costumes. So attractive and charming was she that the Japanese took her straight to their hearts, little dreaming that she was a Russian and a spy. She mingled with the families of Japanese -officials. She learned their tongue so rapidly that within a fewmonths she spoke volubly, and understood almost any conversation. A Japanese statesman fell victim to her charms, and she led him to believe that she might marry him, but she put him off from time to time, and in the interim the Russian government was receiving some very important information. Mme. Korolerviez remained in ’Japan throughout the war, and the people do not suspect to this day that she was other than a pretty American woman. The Japanese lover was thrown out like an old glove when it was time for her to be sent to another land. Mme. Midgi-Hume is a Russian woman well known in London society. She has entree to exclusive hous-as, but none of her hostesses suspects that she is entertaining one of the most accomplished spies of Russia. She is elegant and cultured in her manner, but she has lived in squalid settlements in various places, and once traveled on a very dangerous mission to Mukden in man’s attire. She has gone hungry and cold and has been thrown among the roughest and most uncouth people. King Edward knew her well, and was often seen chatting with her, but he did not knew that she was in the secret service of the government.

from the shock, and was so grateful, after having been told that the boy w-as dead when born, that she confer* red upon Dr. Willis the honor of name ing the child after himself, Benedict That there should be no delay the mother insisted upon an immediate christening. A Bible was procured and Dr. Willis read the baptismal service and christened the laby Benedict. St. Vitus a Turkey Trotter? If Gerald du Maurier is to be believed, the “one-step,” the “turkey trot” and the other ragtime dances are only variations of the oldest dance in the world, that named after St. Vitus. We do not care to indorse this assertion offhand, but it is quite possible that the future historian will regard the contemporary mania for ragtime from much the same standpoint as we look on the Tarantism or dancing mania of the middle ages. quadruped, and therefore freed from the downward pressure produced by his weight upon his spinal column, h® would continue to grow in height for ten years longer than he does at present, since it has been found that bones not subjected to compression increase up to the fourth decade. The Family Horse. A family horse never seems to going anywhere in particular until it is going home. —From the Maryville Tribune.

shriek at night he would drop his original taste right away. So with things of sight. One man’s ideas of beauty may differ from those of another, but when his ideas offend others, then he should drop them. But as a rule intelligent originality is pleasing to everybody.—Ohio State Journal. Kind to the "Jags-” St Louis provides a restroom in the city hall for intoxicated persons picked up by the police.

STOWES of

BRIEF HISTORY OF 20TH U. S. Organized by Order of President, May 4, 1861, and Made Up Wholly of Volunteers. In response to a request for a brief history of the Twentieth U. S., the Nar tional Tribune makes the following jeply: The Twentieth U. S. was organized by order of the president, May 4, 1861, as the Second battalion of the Eleventh U. S. It remained part of the Eleventh U. S. during the war, and in 1866 was separated from that regiment and completed as a separata regiment. At the time of the reorganization of the Eleventh U. S. into a three-battalion regiment, the commander was Col. E. D. Keyes. It was made up wholly of volunteers and officers appointed from civil life,-the only veteran at Fort Independence, where it was organized, being Orderly Sergeant Parr. Some sergeants from the regular army were detailed to get the men in shape, and who finally became lieutenants. The Eleventh V. S. had a very important part in all the battles of the Army of the Potomac, and at the conclusion of the war was stationed at Richmond, Va., under the im mediate command of its major, Thomas H. Neill, brevet brigadier general The first field officers of the regiment were Col. Frederick Steele, Lieut. Col Louis D. Watkins and Maj. Thomas H Neill. These were all generals in the volunteer army. The captains had also attained high rank during the v ar, and included such men as Gen. A. S. Webb, Charles S. Russell. Charles C. Pomeroy and John C. Bates. The regiment remained in Richmond, patrolling the city and acting as police for the preservation ol order and property. In 1867 it was transferred to Baton Rouge, La., and then distributed to various posts in that state, where it remained for tws years on reconstruction duty. Lieutenant Colonel Watkins commanded the regiment until his death, March 29, 1868, and was succeded by Lieutenant Colonel George Sykes. In 1869 the regiment was transferred to the department of Dakota, with headquar tens at Fort Snelling, Minn. It had a troublous times in keeping the Sioux in order, and in 1877 was transferred to the department of Texas, with Colonel Sykes establishing headquarters at Fort Brown. Colonel Sykes died at Fort Brown, February 8, 1889, and was succeeded by Col. Etwell S. Otis. In 1881 the regiment was transferred to the department of the Missouri, with headquarters at Fort Leavenworth. In 1885 the regiment was re turned to the department of Dakota, with headquarters at Bismarck. In 1891 company I, which had been disbanded, was re-established as an Indian company, and filled up with enlistments from the Sioux, Gros Ventres and Assiniboines. This experiment proved unsuccessful, and the In dian company was eventually discharged. The regiment is now commanded by Col. James A. Irons, Lieut. Col. Arthur C. Ducat and Majors William P. Burnham. Richard C. Croxton and Frank D. Webster. Could He Tell? A “high” private of the- 140th Pa, wounded at Chancellorsville, was taken to Washington. One day, as he was becoming convalescent, a whisper ran down the long row of cots that the president was in the building and would scon pass by. Instantly every boy in blue who was able arose? stpod erect, hands to the side, ready to salute his commander-in-chief. The Pennsylvanian stood six feet seven inches in his stockings. Lincoln was six feet four. As president approached this giant towering above him. he stopped in amazement, and, casting his eyes from head to foot and from foot to head, as if contemplating the immense distance from one extremity to the other, he stood for a moment speechless. At length, extending his hand, he exclaimed: ‘ Hello, comrade. How do you know when your feet get cold?” And That Finished Him. After Hunter's defeat at Lynchburg. Va., and on our retreat, we passed through a little town about four miles from Lynchburg. One of the Thir-ty-fourth Ohio boys, seeing a woman standing in a doorway, swaggered up to her and in a loud voice said: “Madame, what is the name of this city?” She answered very politely: “Little Lick.” “Well,” said he, “how far Is It to Big Lick?” ' “If you had brains in proportion to your impudence, you would know that you just came from it,” was her reply. Hew He Reasoned. During the excitement attending the failure of a sutler with the Army of the Potomac, who was being closed out by the sheriff, an Irishman who had deposited his month’s wages with the sutler was asked why he did not draw out his money. t “Faith, an’ I won’t dhraw me money cut at all, at all.” “An’ don’t yez know he’ll lose yer money of yez don’t dhraw it out?” “Shuie, an’ ain’t he better able to lose it than I am?” His Conclusion. A raw recruit met his colonel in civilian clothes and did not salute. The officer called him back. “Why didn’t you salute me?” “Sure, colonel, phin 01 saw ye in plain clothes Oi concluded ye’d bought your discharge." About Timeplecea. Clocks often stop, but they seldom stop with the hands at any one hour. Clocks and watches are said to stop when their owners die. bnt such cases are scarcei f

MUST HAVE KNOWN JOHNSONS Raymond Hitchcock, the Actor. Tells of a Conversation He Heard on Train in the Wsst. Speaking of hospitality a few nights ago, Raymond Hitchcock, the actor, told of a conversation he once heard on a local train in the west. Just before the train reached a certain small town, Mr. Hitchcock declared. a’nice-looking young man with several grips, several cases and several umbrellas called to the conductor: “Mr. Conductor,” said he, producing his transportation, “will this ticket allow me to stop over in the next town?” | “It altogether depends,” replied the conductor, examining the ticket. “What do you want to stop for?” "I want to visit some rather distant relatives of mine,” answered the young man. “Their name is Johnson.” “I see,” returned the conductor, handing back the transportation. “You will have plenty of time. The ticket is good for the next train.” “The next train!” exclaimed the young man. with a jolted expression. “Do you know how long I intend to stay?” “No.” was the prompt response of the conductor, “1 don't know how long you intend to stay, but I know the Johnsons.” ITCHING AND BURNING Iberia, Mo. —“I was troubled with scalp eczema for about five years and tried everything; 1 heard of, but all of no avail. The doctors told me Pwould have to have my head shaved. Being a woman, I hated the idea of that. I was told by a friend that the Cuticura Remedies would do me good. This spring I purchased two boxes of Cuticura Ointment and one cake of Cuticura Soap. After, using one box of Cuticura Ointment I considered the cure permanent, but continued to use it to make sure and used about onehalf the other box. Now lam entirely well. I also used the Cuticura Soap. “The disease began on the back of my head, taking the form of a ringworm, only more severe, rising to a thick, rough scale that would come off when soaked with oil or warm water, bringing a few hairs each time, but in a few days would form again, larger each time, and spreading until the entire back of the head was covered with the scale. This was accompanied by a terrible itching and burning sensation. Now my head is completely well and my hair growing nicely.” (Signed) Mrs. Geo. F. Clark, Mar. 25. 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 52-p. Skin Book. Address post-card “Cuticura, Dept L. Boston.” Adv. ■ — Substitute tor Grass. An interesting experiment in horticulture was made some time back at the garden laid out at the site of the King Edward VII. memorial statute in Delhi, India. In order to ensure a green surface at the time of the stonelaying ceremony, “methi” (trigonella) seed was sown when the grass was planted. The “methi” sprang up in about a month and maintained a green surface throughout the cold weather, which could be smoothly mown and did not interfere with the growth of the grass. The ground was allowed to get dry at the beginning of the hot weather, and within a week the “methi” had died out, leaving good lawns in its place. The “methi,” belonging to the order of “Leguminosae,” acts as a manure and leaves the soil richer in available nitrogenous matter. Factories That Float. Floating factories have become an Important part of the development of the forest resources of India. In certain parts of the country forests are only accessible through the watercourses, and the great expense of erecting land plants for the utilization of the lumber resources makes such a course impracticable. .Therefore sawmills and other manufacturing establishments are built on floating platforms and moved up the streams as they are needed. After the lumber is prepared in a sawmill it can be packed in away that makes transportation much more economical than any system of logging. Plants for the preparation of tannin extracts have also been establish in this manner. The plants are !>uilt on flat boats, 200 feet long, by 27 feet wide, capable of carrying a load of 470 tons. “Pleased to Meet You.” The Americans have a polite habit, on being presented to a new acquaint«nee, of uttering the words, “Pleased to meet you,” although upon what the pleasure can rest, or how they know’ that ft is a pleasure, or why an ordinary incident which is not the fulfillment of any anticipation, and which may turn out to be very disagreeable, should be pronounced at sight to be pleasant, I have never been able to understand.—Saturday Review. e Point of View. “They used to call him a bonehead.” “That was before he succeeded.” ,“Yes. Now they express it differently. They call him a man of hard, solid sense.”

Save the Babies. INFANT MORTALITY is something frightful. We can hardly realize that of all the children born in civilized countries, twenty-two per cent., or nearly one-quarter, die before they reach one year; thirty-seven percent., or more than one-third, before they are five, and one-half before they are fifteen! , _ . ~ We do not hesitate to say that a timely use of Castona would save a majority of these precious lives. Neither do we hesitate to say that many of these infantile deaths are occasioned by the use of narcotic preparations. Drops, tinctures and soothing syrups sold for children’s complaints contain more or less opium or morohine. They are, in considerable quantities, deadly poisons. In any quantity, they stupefy, retard circulation and lead to congestions, sickness, death. Castoria operates exactly the reverse, but you must see that it bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher. Castoria causes the blood to circulate properly, opens the pores of the skin and allays fever. ff' y Genuine Castoria always bears the signature .

PUTNAM FADELESS DYES

I,i nU Si® |ii| 111 i& H a ! fflfh li ' iwWliLi \WSSk Jm i Thus Sealed, They Cannot Spoil |h 1 !]| Seal Jellies, Preserves, Vege- contents of each jelly glass. M | i: tables and Catsup With Paro- Dip tops of jars and bottles i wax and they will keep indefi- in melted Parowax. No mould !!■; nitely, and retain their natural or fermentation can result. ! :;i flavor. 'ihu® Sealing with Parowax is much {g simpler and easier, too. No ,’s H struggling with tops. No fuss, is Indispensable in the laundry- I ? no bother. Not even paper both for washing and starching | covers need be used. a s we n as ironing. Pour this pure, refined paras- Costs but a trifle. Sold by all ‘i’!® i ||| fine directly on the cooled druggists and grocers. I II llb* Free Book of R««'P«S . m ~‘ - - ffllMrs. Rofer’s prize rec’.i I Rurrs s WCETABLES l! iJ i p 9 P^sf°rpreservesan<l jeb ')!!>! !,f I .L: ITO , Itt-adMuponrequest. jj -SZ KJ STANDARD OIL | i!|| P I X, ■ i. r 'lp/" 71 COMPANY I I ? * |Z ' (AN INDIANA il CORPORATION) ■ ; Bill 'H r= . '_f CHICAGO. ILL hiilpll

AN OPIUM BONFIRE IN CHINA Paraphernalia Confiscated From Smokers by Authorities Is Burned Once Every Month. A quantity of opium pipes, lamps, and paraphernalia for the preparing of the drug, to the total value of more than I ’'.GOO taels, was publicly burned in the presence of Chinese officials and a squad of soldiers on the empty space of ground behind the British concession in Hakow. The goods represented the results of a month’s raiding in and about the city. The opium, whieh was the native product, and the other articles were piled in a heap opposite the Ningpo club and were thoroughly soaked in kerosene and packed round about with firewood. This was set fire to, kerosene being pOured on the bonfire when the flames showed signs of dying down. Not a clay vial was left. The burning is carried out once a month, this being the second time, and a different place is sejected for each fire. The opium and utensils were wholly confiscated from smokers. The smokers were fined or imprisoned. Affection Causes Dog’s Death. Natural affection on the part of a dog was instanced in, a remarkable manner at Beaumont, in the pi-ovince of Soane-et-I.oire, France, a few days ago. One of the inhabitants drove out of the town into the forest to gather firewood, taking with him the dog. which he left to guard his coat and basket of food while he wandered about gathering wood. In his absence the dog gave birth to three puppies, and the wood gatherer, when he started home, forgot to place the, puppies in the cart with their mother. During the night the dog jumped over a fence and ran the .whole distance, some ten miles, to the spot where the puppies had been left, and brought one- back in her mouth. Then she made two more journeys in order to bring back the other two. Altogether she covered a distance of about sixty miles in the night. The next morning her master found her dead in the yard by the side of her puppies, whieh were alive and well. Where Women Run Cars. The suggestion that women may be employed as street car conductors in Philadelphia has brought out the fact that the women of Latiu America, usually thought of as sheltered, retiring and unprogressive, have been doing this kind of work for years. During the war between Chili and Peru, when all the men of Chili were needed at* the. front, women took their places on the street cars, and Santiago, Valparaiso and several other cities have had women conductors ever since. Duty as a Reformer. There is no such reformer as an exacting duty. Note the asceticism of athletes and scouts. The ravages of drink are abated as machinery, with its demand for a clear brain and steady nerves, is multiplied on every hand. Each new stress of business and professional rivalry puts a fresh premium on sobriety and wise restraint. Literal. “Does Jimps ever make a move at the club meetings?” “Ever make a move? Why, that man’s never still.” The only consolation failure has is to sneer at success.

Square Foot and Foot Square. There is no difference in area between one square foot and ene foot square, though there may be a difference in the shape and dimensions ol' the surfaces. For instance, one square* foot may be inclosed by a circßlasliae, a hexagon, a triangle or a rectangle. One foot square is an ares*, of fixed form, the four sides being' equal and, the four angles all right, angles., A physician rarely uses all his trtgr words on his poor patients, ,

Saskatchewan Your Opportunity I is HOW ■ A l in th * Pro * in P* ® f | Saskatchewan I I Western Canada 5 i l Do you desire to get u ! ACRES of that we'd 1 IfC SnßSfaSk! known Wheat Laud' A® The area is becoming more Uuu'.ed fa'Gb&SraM hut no less valuable. NEW DISTRICTS have recently been opened up ter TSurt IffjJ settlement, and into these rail- I W’liiWaG roads are now being built. The ( la’w’vWrl day will soon come when ‘Awce < rA will be no . . Freellornestesd.-. ■•, Aws* "Smi land left- _> l i/.,- .-HM A Swift Cnrront, Saskatchesraa. fe. ,S«S’ ft <»■ farmer writes: "I came on any ijc homestead, March 1906, with aboui Vvar’W' sl.o(ll) worth of horses and maehla ery. and just $35 tn cash. Today I I fc wIWWiWH have‘JOO acres of wheat, 3W acres ct;i ’ a;1<1 M acres of il«x Nt B tiiwJSKjj bad for six years, but only an inst i TRZsK®W stance of what may be done la 'i'"' Western Canada in Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Alberta. -y Send at cnee for Literature, ■ V <- Ballway Bates, etc., tv W :, Ws2 W. 8- NETHERY, sis (ujwtnt mog,. Toi»<i». ini,. or ' SlSTraeliia Terminal 3Mg.,ladlA**|ieU* Canadian Government Agents, or address Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa.ionu, j Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the Ever is? right the stomach and bowels are rights CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS b gently but firmly pel a lazy liver to AnTrn'C ! do its duty. _ Cures Con- W j ypn F stipation, In- sggggajjjgSvr 0 * tl digestion, Sick V\ a—B £ Headache, ~ and Distress After Eating. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature The Alan. Who Pul Ibe /*"% E E s ln F E E T FT’ [S Look for This Trade-Mark Ftoture on the Label when baying Jgik ALLEN’S FOOT=EASE ffWEwKI The Antiseptic Powder for Tew-Trade-Mark. der. Aching Feet. Sold everywhere, 25c. Sample FREE. Address, ALLEN S. OLMSTED, L« Roy, N.Y. Save the Man TrrHAKVEY S “5 day” TREATMENT tor liquor or drug habit. The formula of anoted physician that for years has been successfully used li» one of the largest sanitariums for liquor and dru® habit in the country. Sanitarium price ®SC euy prlcoSli). If you are Interested, write us. Money re funded if the treatment should not do al I we- lai is, for it. HAKVEI TREATMENT CO-, County rights, sold to 169 River Street, responsible agents. Troy, N. T—DAISY FLY KILLER &£? “I’X & ties. N«»i. Clean. <Mnhmental.oenrsmsoL. K Ch cap. Lasts all ••»••» Made •* metal, can tsp.l. >rUje over, will net »e .> ««■ Injure anything Guaranteed elfeetlvaa. All dealers <’r® •««>» WMt—— Lt-~ ate-aw IgMW express paid for 3L3A HAKOLD BOMEKB, 159 Dekalb Avs., Breeklya. M. X. lilt llTrn Everybody suffering fro* WAN I Fll Mm, Fistula, FtssurosM. ■ Inil ILU ulceration. Inflammations.. Constipation,Bleeding or Itching write lor free trial of Positive Fatalensß Pile Cure. S.l'.TABXi:y, Auburn, ln«» General Hospital and Medical Practice far Sale. $15,000 business per annum; 3-*tor3r stone trimmed bldg. (75xl5s>. large ward, Ifr private rooms. Complete modern furnishings and conveniences. Established. Rawlins Gen. Hospital. Rawlins. tVyomla*. SEE YOI KSEI.F AS OTHERS SEE IOCSomething hew. Something practical. An adjustable dressing and shaving mirror. Wrlta for free partie. The Cly-Ed Co., Warsaw. TO. Wanted—Men and Women to canvass torn* town with useful specialty. Each family t>uy» two and three. Agents make half. Write today. Leeds Supply C“— Bx. 3SO. Kokomo. I nA. T inirc Get wise. Improve vour own beauty LAUItO and appearance. Particulars trsnu PtKPI'K SHStTAItT W. Bk.4DH>m> BUM.. HOI’STOIt, W. N. U-, FORT WAYNE, NO. 25-191 X