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A es Ae Saito! iS te ea te a a ef the lake, That jew -els rare, They 1. The Lil - lay on ®. Then fin - gers, flashed with mir-reed the heay - ons o part-ed the wa - ters sc she mur-mured, “Oh could plucked from her bed-ding the Lil = a 4 e ealms forstrange scenes bright and new.” The wea - day = may yeet-est words te her The Lil cp the | +. avd, by the Awcricen Melody Company, New “or* No Stropping, No Honing Set consists of 12 double-edged blades (24 keen cutting edges) with triple silver-plated holder in velvet lined case. Each blade good for an average of more than 20 satisfying shaves. Han- dle and blade guaranteed to be perfect in material and work- manship. Sold by leading Drug, Cutlery and Hardware dealers. e Inquire about SPECIAL FREE TRIAL OFFER. Gillette Sales Company, 21 Times Building New York City. have taken place uy CORSETS The W.B. Reduso is the ideal garment for over-developed figures requir- ing special restraint. It has an apron over the abdomen and hips, so boned as to give the wearer absolute freedom of movement. REDUSO STYLE 750 for tall, well- loped figures. Made of a durable coutil in white or drab. Hose sup- porters front and sides. Sizes 22 to 36, PRICE, $3.00 Ss REDUSO STYLE 760 BS) q | for short, well-developed fig- S35 ures. Made of white and * drabcoutil. Hose support. ers frontand sides, Siz: 2gto36 PRICE, $5.00 W. B. NUFORM and W. B. ERECT FORM CORSETS are built hygienically— do not press or strain anyw 4 Their lines are your lines, their shape that of your own figure. make a bad figure and Erect Form 744 (i233) “Exat™ $2.00 Nuform 447 (iicis) “cma* 3.00 Erect Form 720 (S25) xix, 1.00 4 Nuform 738 (SiS) “Cxiverase 2.00 , ¥ Nuform 406 (sit) ite 150 WEINGARTEN BROS., Makers, 377-379 BROADWAY, N.Y. CITY HAS NO CEMETERY. Metaline, Wash., 22 Years Old, Never Had a Death. Spokane, Wash.—Twentyttwo years a city and vet no cemetery within a radius of 40 miles, is the claim ad-| vanced b: residents of Metaline, | w ro make the claim even, more | re . the city has been dead for | 22 although it had at mineral at its finger tips, awaiting its awaken- ing. But within the last week it has shown signs of com to its own, Metaline is unig many respects. The absence of a cemetery is a case in point. Colville, 40 miles distant, is said to have the neares: cem It was solemnly told by old-4time citizens | that there h uieral there since the c and that not one pe One must go aw the way they put it to on sickness is ‘Dead Man's has fivé graves ak this Is occ: own there, below the falls, the shore, but drownings that river toward ting to this are thrown on the din the ground with- sioned wpe fic casket int to a great future s now wholly depend- upon the stea: ats that ply reg- between Newport and Ione, aj} ce of 50 miles. The boats can low lone, which is five miles | | the rapids impeding | above M urther 1 HOUSEKEEPERS FORM UNION, Will Resist Exorbitant Demands of Servant Girls and Fix Wage Scale. ist what they re-| New York.—To r gard as the exorbitant demands of | house servants, the women of Norris- | are planning to organize | Protective union, and } ganization will shortly | proposed that the women | » not to pay more} for certain classes | in this way it is hoped | either to drive out the high-priced | servants or to make them agree to a| new scale of s | “The servant question,” one woman | deeply interested said, “is now one that bring: cept the intelligence office and the undertaker it is emptying our pockets, breaking up our homes and making our lives such a burden that; it is breaking down strong women. “The servant problem must either | be solved so that people in ordinary: circumstances can employ them or} las, descendant of the marquis else we will become a people abso-} Queensbury, wh lutely without home life.” The women say that im 1901 wait-| resses received $12 a month, while the same class now demand $20 to | $25. In 1891 it was si } cian at the medical | liver that could © good to any one ex-| breast of a belle, wind hast-ens on there ‘mid the charm and ca - ress «+ es the trees, The bird spreads of the ball - room’s rich spell, She drooped, and if rallentando molto. eer eee eer 2a s— s ——— +4 main, The bird spreads its wings far a - main, fer died, She drooped, and un-heed - ed she died. OO ee VUUTT | would do the laun $14 and now the cook will work for i not do laundry w QUESTION OF HEN’S IDENTITY. Man in Court Relsased When Mother Proves Fowl Is Her Proverty. Boston.-—lpen the identification of a hen, a bic bu‘f-colore cochin and eight fluts e chicks d the | fate of Jchn C of Dedham court, where on a ch and look« d overt chicks with a crit ical eve. while Cullen waited in anxious ©x)) The hen was] finally iderti s. J. P. Cui of Garfield = stre the defendan mother. and he was discharged Cullen we in De a1 with a hen | under « us peeping m. A su soun¢ ‘I ens.” spite of prot me of the o Gers thrust his hand into the man’s chic! Culley a t nuffin’ or no chick n accosted. In mot and to her t Good News For Gout Victims. London.—Suffere from gout need not abstain from ¢ of their favorite foods with the idea of humoring their enemy, was ta tement made by Dr. Hale mdon_ physi- ess at Ex eter. He conte > was not an atom of evidence at any particular food influences chronic gout. Physi- cians sometime: bade sufferers to including, of ~ was it, he t i less com- mon uow, while the consumption of Meat has enormously increased? As to 2 how patients suffere teetotal s of the be distinguished bed to alcohol. from that asc In a Chinaman? E After 690 venire. a jury of 12 men ill hear the evi- a Chinaman. Truth N Los Angeles men has been found whc dence of Dr. G S$ charged with ora medicine without a license all of the 678 veniremen who ai? noc qualify de- clared they fould not beiieve a China ad be ca | man under oath English Lord Now Drummer. Detroit, Mich—Lord Sholt@ Doug- of framed the present | prize ring rules, is now a traveling salesman for a Detroit jewelry firm. ’ He has dropped his title as well as his money and is known as just Sholto Douglas, drummer "| inal costs the public at least $1,200 a the appoir BILLION LOST ON CRIMINALS. GIRLS OUST MEN FROM JOBS | Caring for Yicious Costs More Y-arly | Than Nation's Wealth Grows. Canadian Civil Service Monopo! by Members of Fair Sex S' rhis country spends 000 annualiy on the crim- inal, pauper and vicious classes, and | the annual increase of wealth is only | $5,000,900,000. Does not that look as | if the public were b: rup! | This s tw made in a lec- ture by Dr. Charies J. Bushnell, who | is conductir model public play- ground here. He is a graduate of Heidelberg university and an author- ity on civic matters. Bushnell’s fi ays, from Mont examinatior unmarried ¢g Canada, in con civil service co other ten years at the increase there wi e girls in the inside ser The commission of 188 ed the question of female and found numerous objections tot employment The con ported that the gi placed in rooms der the immec sons of their ow Subject to thi no objection to | as clerks of the th ater es are taken, as he sources and | represent years of careful study. He ehallenges anycne to disprove their ; accuracy. He and his wife have made | @ special study of what they call the “social illness” of the United States. | Continuing, Dr. Bushnell said: | z “Why, the $6,000,000,000 that this | 7esulations as mi | nation spends every year on its erim- | ‘he ee oe | inal cases equals the amount spent on as pete teens. Wome S |all churches, public libraries, the , ©V¢TY department of si | Young Men’s Christian association, | ®® Toms in commor | the Salvation Army, public hospitals, king no | | asylums for the insane and all benev- nt to es | olent institutions. The average fac- Lee ee | tory hand earns $440 a year, while dar, an | it is estimated that the average crim- | ?©WSPA4per re; | year.” women in the se ‘ AMERICAN ROADS MOST DEADLY United States Leads in Number of , Vironment. Life Persons Killed on Rails. social condition th met marriage. They f Berliu.—Herr Guillery, an official of | {¢W years in the the archive bureau of the Prussian | that practica railway administration, has prepared | ©2t and places ther a comparative table of statistics of | ©f the avera those killed and injured by railways | ™@rry, wh in various countries. He finds that | rings its the railroads in the United States are | of freedom the most deadly. The United States PUrdens az has more mieage.than all Europe, Otherwise pleasurable ED.°PINAUD'S HAIR TONIC (cvivine LILLIAN RUSSELL, the beautiful actress, says: “Without i indispensahle adjunct lady's pebpreng wn pxcecdingly mentorions # preserving the hair and causing it to retain its lustre.” You can make your hair beautiful and improve your personal iar ance by using ED. PINAUD’S HAIR TONIC rey # cures dandruff and stops falling hair, because it goes to the ‘ot trouble. FREB! A sample bottle of ED. PINAUD'S # TONIC (3 applications) for 50 cents to pay postage and packing ED. PINAUD’S LILAC VEGETAL od An exquisite perfume for the handkerchief, atomizer and bec. by women of fashion in Paris and New York. sshd Send 10 cents (to pay postage and packing) for « free =p containing enough Lilac Vegetal Extract for 10 seria Write to-day to ED? PINAUD’S American ae 2 ED. PINAUD BUILDING, NEW YORK CIT? dur dealer for ED. PINAUD'S HAIR TONIC and LILAC VEC