dis 1' 'hi lift-"¢':» L' ‘lla ~, *ggi -.~ .fl , gi; , 'l ill" l. ~ _€,,,;l§,_ __ = 3 .,_`_, r A ,ah _ j ,~..'_-_Lg M alt. .-rf ~s _‘,. ._ , . ,/, A. A , 1 . _ v ' , 1-Q-1. ` Sores and Scales All Over Face and Body-Could Not Teil What She Lookcld Like-Unable to Sleep -‘Grew Worse Under Doctors. cum-:D BY cuncun/l 1 - - - iN._.0N.E_ MOM". Q A grateful mother, in the following letter, tellsof another of those mlrve - lens cures by Cuticura: "When my _baby was fpnr months old her akin bro e out with a humour. I took her to a doctor, who treated her for ec- zema, but she kepgrofetting worse. Her little face and y were so eov- ered with sores and large scales you could not tell what she looked l ke. No child ever had a worse case. Her face was being eaten away, and even her finger nails fell off. It itched ao she could not sleep, and for many weary nights we could get no rest. At lost we got Cuticnra Soap and Oint- ment, first bathin herin warm water with the Soap, and then spreading on the Ointment with soft cloths. I saw a- change in a week. The sores began to heal, and she could sleep at night, and in one month al\e had not one sore on her face or body. Any mother having children with eczcma..or hu~ monra will find a friend in Cuticura Soap and Ointment. (signed) Mrs. Mary Sanders, 709 Sp ng Street, Camden, N.}., Ang. 14, x9o4." INSTANT RELIEF For Baby and Rest for Tired, and Fretted Mothers The foregoing statement justines the oft-repeated assertion that Cuticnra Soup and Ointment afford instant re- lief, and permit sleep for baby and rest for tired mothers. and point to speedy, permanent, and economical cure in the most torturing, disfigur- ing, itching, bleeding, scaly, and crusted skin and scalp humours of infancy and age, when all else fails. c..‘u.-.nr sm... nr.l|L..&.`1,“ ni.; gijpnua gg lgsum l)'h..$'li'i'|»Di5i`il'i'/...»'ir-iii n. revs; s ca., llyasq. rw.. nn.; a cam.. carp., semi.. sammy. armlied l’m,"Buw |oCunDacyl1amcar|.' nnad Gouda.. Panama; company _ dent J aiming bo JUST, IlPABm1;lAl`.. nam laurmau- rife but ransom cc wah _ 'M' 'rm P.Armsl.» snemralwmismouwmihmnwaw &°?%v‘25..'?ii‘.°hé2til..°§3?‘w°.?£“-3L“&E%‘a‘i»,'%5',L»°T:::'.'.'_°.'.'_':::f:::#$ _ ~..E“£2?i'}‘§&'di6$&°E.”~?.‘”ét7£.&“%n‘&s'”»K¢"&“.h‘;i“£°itt * ' _ .' ,.'- _,, , Bunch Offices al Sammerdls, Alkrton, no Stolb. Besllll UW Telephone l38b- ' Editorial and liars Telephone i83a. _ \ ` r Ofboollours s.m.oo |,\.m. -_ 0loaHouro.|l|p.m_.to'0p.n\._;lp.m.to!a.m. _ . ,|_ p, noon, Mv¢n,n.n.|» up, '. - J.l.B. Koultllanv, lunar. » A _ . F R. NEWSOH Subscription Mgr. > D.B. lfoRAl. News lldiior. _ , . . ‘ r \ ' ' rum crrannorrsirows cualgnrau I rr ns :uw/ws New. ly of Industrial Exhibitions. ‘The same big pumpkins and squash, apples, pour.- toes," they say. And yet oven those arc not tho same, howovor like they mrw seem. They are new products of nature's` bounty this'yoar. And toone Dian ob servant turn of mind endless novelty and variety will _present itself nt the Exhibition. 'Every year brlngsin ruany‘ new exhibitors, many new visitors, new tacos, new experiences. The shy awk- ward youth you mot wandering through the building at some previous show is hardly tobe rwvllllzed In the confident, manly young man, wcaringn mustachb now and proudly showing his best girl through tho sights and scones. As for hcr, how sho has grown and improved* sinus you saw her at last year’s fair. And some of tha middle aged have grown old-' cr, and some that. wcrc old last year are a' little whiter now. And there is agay young fellow of last Year, a llttlc more sedate and dignified now, and hc has his wife with him. And there is the widow-` er on the-look out, a little hotter groomed than when you rnet him last yenr,(notn' widower thcn)an