V Moth er "My mother was troubled with consumption for msny years. At list shs ws iven up to die. Then he tried Ayer's Cherry Pectortl, nd wit speedily cured. D. P. Jolly, Avocs, N. Y. No matter how hard your cough or how long you have had it, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is the best thing you can take. It's too risky to wait until you have consump tion. If you are coughing today, get a bottle of Cherry Pectoral at once. Tarta tliM I 13c, Mr., 1. All n.frli. rrni.nlt ywir lrtclnr. If hs tslii it, thn do as he tT. If h toll, you ant In utf It. thvn aun t taka It. II aoows. Lasts II with Mlm. Vts r willing.. t. O. ATP.R CO.. Low. II. Mm. Liver Pills That's what you need: some thing to cure your bilious ness. You need Ayer's Pills. Want your moustache or heard a beautiful brown or rich black r Use Buckingham's Dye Ocll el drurf 'tto R P H.I' It Co . Nuhul N H 8CARCITY OF TOMATOES. Last Year's Pack Exhausted and De mand Heavy. It Is thought (tint there will ho a Plight scarcity In canned tomatoes this season. In view of the fact that last year's pack has been entirely ex hausted, and thin year's demand will have to be supplied altogether from his year's pack. Tomato parking this year began during the last week In June, whtrh Is several weeks ahead of the usual time. This was due to the low condition of the stoek. Even at that time, it is stated, the park of 190t was practically disposed of. Canned tomatoes are now quoted at 8f rents a dozen for spot No. 3 stand ards and 82V& rents a dozen for Sep tember. October and November deliv ery, whleh prices are slightly higher than the corresponding period 1st year. There Is also somo scarcity of ranned pineapples, and iirlee-s are firm. The packing of pineapples be gan In June and continued through out July, and the purchased by Job bers and distributers up to the pres ent time have -been about 75 per cent of the season's pack. A New York paper haB been Investi gating the Four Hundred and prints a number of receipted bills of the last century showing that a Stuyvesant old handkerchiefs ; a Depeyster, beans; a Rhinelander, hats; n Bre voort, pewter spoons; a Heekman, mo lasses, and a Roosevelt, lampblack. TO YOUNG LADIES. From the Treasurer of tha Young People's Christian Tem perance Association, Elizabeth i., i'aine, Fond dn Lac, Wis. "Drab Mrs. Pinkhau: I want to tell you and all the young ladies of tha country, how grateful I am to you for all the benefits I have received from using Lydta K. lMnkbam's Vege table Compound. 1 suffered for MISS ELIZABETH CAIKK. Ight months from suppressed men struation, and it effected my entire . system until I became weak and debil itated, and at times felt that I had a hundred aches in as many places. I only used the Compound for a few weeks, but it wrought a change in mo which I felt from the Tory beginning'. I have been very regular since, have no pains, and find that my entire body is as if it wan renewed. I gladly recom mend Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vege table Compound to everybody." Miss Elizabeth Cains, 69 W. Division 8t., Fond du Lao, Wis. fSOOO farftlt If mbov9 Utttmoniml It sat gtitutnt. At such a time the greatest aid to nature is Lydlo, E. Pinltham's Vegetable Compound. It prepares the young system for the coming change, and is the surest reliance for woman's ills of every nature. Mrs. Plnkbam Invites all young women -who are 111 to write ber for free advice. Ad dress Lynn, Mass. WJNtS Wlilst AU USf FAILS. roiu ny arugtiHt. DROPSY,1:!! ... sums, of tMtuaonial. .1 ' HEW DIRCOTOBY; im nick r.ll.f ud oarss wont u. .lid 111 ...,.. bt. aw. a. a. asua'isoss. a. ausau, ft. P. n. u. ar, lit aSsisteS i Thompson's Eyo Wttor wo.a thlrfca. Chickens when first hatched should not be hurried nut of the sitting ne.tt. For 24 hour at least from ine time the earliest commence to show them selves. It Is better to leave them un der, or with the hen mother. They need no fond for a day or a day and a half, usually. When they get strong enough to venture from benealh their mother's wings. It Is time to movo the brood. A Soil Mmivator. The soy henn adnpts Itself to a wide rango nf soils und Is chiefly used ni'. land too poor to grow clover. It Is an annual and makes a good yield of folinge lor sltnpo and hay, whllo the benn If allowed to ripen Is one oT the richest feeds for growing st.uk nnd a valuable suxlllnry as a part of Hie full feed ration. The use of the plant as a soil renovator has bec-nno widespread. Helng a legume, It pos sesses the property of nitrogen gath ering. Sandy loams aro best suited to Its growth. Yatlia nf Tnharro Dust. The value of tobacco dust as an aid to succicasful truck growing Is too lltilo appreciated. If there Is one In secticide which should ho on hand and used by the truck grower all tho time It la tobacco dust. Aside front Itu Insecticide value It Is worth prob ably all It costs as a fertilizer to any soil or crop to which It mny be sp plied. Any good fertilizer drill will answer for drilling It Into the soil tn 1o which seed are to be sown later on. I'se at the rate of -WO pounds per acre with the seed when drilled In. A rir.t-f. luss Itiihymnn. I have In my mind's eye a certain man who Is a llvlnp example of what study and tare wi'l do for thn da'ry man. This man was going along with a few cows of common stock, like the most of his neighbors, lie mndo ends meet, but that wail about all ho did do. Ona day ho mndo up his mind that life was too short and time too valuable to bo spent in a slipshod way. Then he turned over n new leaf, and he turned It clear over, too. He sold every cow he had and began to nullil up a dairy. His choice happened iO fall on the Jersey. At first ho went miles away from homo to get a calf from first class stock. If ho heard ot a good cow of the breed ho fancied he went and bought her, no matter if he did havo to pay a good round sum. This ho kept, up year after year, untu now he stands at the head of his profession In tho section where ho lives. Now men go to him fjr stock. Hla cows two years ago brought him In $H5 each for the sea son. I have not heard the (Inures since. Now, what is the reason the rest of us cannot do Just as well'.' New York Tribune Farmer. Managing Swarming In Out. Aplarlrs. Tho great problem In running out aptarlea for comb honey is that of managing f warming. It Is too ex pensive to go out each day or to send a man. A western beckeopor, who has Beveral out-aplarles run for comb honey, clips tho queens' wings during willow or apple bloom and then equal izes all colonies so they are of about equal strength. This fallows all colo nies to bo treated in the sanin wjv and brings tho swarming In a hunch. '1 ne supers aro put on about a week before the main hnrvnnr ami rows of sections are fll'ed with bait combs to get tho bees started wbrk Ing In them earlier. Plenty nf sur plus room Is allowed. Whllo tho sec tions are possibly not quite so well Ailed, and there may be moro unfin ished ones at tho end of the season, there will bo less swarming and moro honey In tlio aggregate. Provide shado for each hive, which ! a armor help to keep tho swarming down. Ho visits each yard every alternate, duy. When swarms emerco thev noon r- turn If the queen Is clipped, and will generally Jesuo aga n tho next iIjv so If tho yard is visited every second day they can be hived. Treated in this way ho can, with the aid of a 15-year-old boy, take care of 4'JO colo nies. American Agriculturist. Wild Itarley a llait Wtml. During tho last 10 years wild ,r. ley has spread with alarming rapidity to nearly all sections of Iowa. I have Decn ramillar wlm it In Wisconsin and Illinois for 16 years. It reached western Wisconsin about 1887 but was common near Madison in 1SS4. It now occurs across the continent, btlng common in many western states. The weed is an annual, though claimed by many o be a porennial. It forms compact bunches from 1 to 8 feet high. The leaves are from 2 to 4 Inches long and resemble those of Hue grass, but aro of a paler hue. The flowers are in spikes 2 to 4 inches long, and are of a palo green or pur plish color. When maturo the spike breaks into Joints, each Joint having from S to 60 seeds, a single seed giv ing rise to an enormous number of plants, as wild bailey has a great ca pacity for spooling. It Is not difficult to exterminate, If kept down. Thne is never any trouble In well tilled fields, because cultivation very readi ly destroys it. In pastures it Is al lowed in many cases to go to teed. Hers the remedy Is a simple one. The plant should be cut with a mower or scythe before the seed ripens. Ths awns ars Injurious to live stock, especially to sheep. The awned heads when taken into the mouth break into numerous joints which ad here to the mucous membrane and work fhelr way Into the flesh; InflamJ matloii follows, the teeth become loon ened and In severe cases drop out. ii. 11. Tammel ot Iowa, In New Eng land Homestead. rara af Rprlna t.ainba. Where spring Iambs are to be ths chief crop, It Is necessary to make summer preparations lor them. With the lambs born In the lnle fnll and midwinter, It should lie the aim of thn grower to provide proper food for them. (ood farming crops raised in the summer should keep the ewes In good rondltion up to tho time of the breeding season, and when the lambs arrive they will also have an abund ance of food. If one must go to work ami huy all this food the profits In spring Inmb growing will be disc-out, t ed. Clover or nlfalfa hay should be raised In abundance. A good crop of either will save many a dollar Inter. As tho lambs aro to bo fed cracked corn generously. It Is necessnry that a corn crop should bo added that of the hay crop. The ewes themselves should be fed freely and generously to mnko them do their best. They should hav In tho fall and early winter a good ration of clover hay and shelled corn a id In an In the morning, and corn aud rowpea ensilage at noon. In the evening they should have rrn fodder, some grain and some msngles or oth er root crop. Such a ration fed sys tematically will produce excellent rc mills. The ewes will prove Rocd mothers, and bring into the world tho finest spring lambs. Ily good feeding it Is possible in time to secure a flock of ewes which will produce many twins. The ewes which show a tendency to produce twins should be carefully selected1 and fed separate-. By breeding turefiilly In this way the profiti of the work will be nearly doubled. Hut It should be remembered that rwes not well fed cannot bring Into the world twins In healthy condition, nor can they rear them successfully after they are born. Consequently perfect health of tho ewes Is the first great step townid success. Cnless one raises his win ter feed In abundance ho will not glvo the sheep the amount and quality of food that they demand for this pur pose. When we have to purchase food In the market we feed so eco nomically that we are hound to de prive the animals of their rightful alllowanee. Provision for next sea lion's spring lamb should, therefore, be made now. K. P. Smith, in Am erican Cultivator. Practical Tomato Cnltam. Anyone who persists In adhering to the old Idea of allowing tomato vines to sprawl over the ground at random ran hardly expect to rnlso such fruit as the thorough gardener who ties them up to flakes and trains them according to system. Tho for mer is sure to lose tomatoes, slnco those coming In ronlact with the ground will rot moro or less. It i.i true that when tomato vines are tiained upon stakes they may not leld any more fruit In proportion to the vino than when left upon tho ground, but they will generally pro duce larger and better fruit less like ly to becoino defective before matur ing. Here are two points of vital Im portance In favor of training tomato vines upon strikes. Whether one raises tomatoes on a largo or a small scale, it Is by all means ndvUablo to stake them In Boine manner. By so doing tho work of picking is simplified, and If they are trained on a sort of trelllswork along the rows one can walk between the hills nnd gather them quickly. One can also watch tho condition of the vines more readily than when they ore permitted to sprawl all over the ground, aud it is less difficult to keep tho worms and grubs away. Slaking is really far superior to the old method In every respect, and when it is done in time It is always comparatively easy, Wonderful to relate, the longer the tomato Is grown on one kind of soil nnd In the samo place with good rare tho better it will thrive. If possible, therefore, ground suitable for tomato culture should bo selected and kept for that purpose. The ground having bfen well prepared In the spring, u ulake should be driven Into the soil at intervals of 10 feet and so arranged as to present long rows about two and a half feet apart. The tomatoes should then be planted In hills along these rows, and as the vlnea begin to Bpread strong twine should bo run on nails from one stake to another liko who on fence posts. On this strong twine the tomato vines ran be trained as grapes are trained on a trellis. 1 rained in the manner described the sun reaches all the tomatoes, causing them to rlncn cvenlv. nut this is not all. Now fruit will keep coming on tho vines when thus trained longer than it otherwise would, affording Just as manv nran tomatoes in autumn for picking as If oniy a lew ripe ones had grown dur ing the season. Prunnlng the vines will mnk ihn stocky, and in that case the vitality of the plants will go Into a fewer number of tomatoes. Hence a.tvan. tagos can be derived by pruning if targe tomatoes are desired, but for general field culture I would not rec ommend it An ordinary nl erly trained will usually produce to matoes large enough for market with out any pruning. Cut off dead branches, trim where the vines are too thick, and where they have a ten dency to go all to stem. The result of such thoroughness will be plenty Of KOOd fruit. Which Will flnrl rcri sale In any market. Agricultural Ep itomise WHAM NOT IN DEMAND rEW LEVIATHANS LEFT AND THEf ARE NOT MUCH HUNTED. It Wat Haw RanTnrd That Cleared tha aat af K.arlh'a l.argaat Crcaiaraa II Wat Mr. Harkalallcr Who ftliowtit Ilia World How lo Lit Without M hulas For the whale these are, In thn lan guage of Jack Miller's farewell, "Hap py days and many of "em." exrlnlms the Boston Evening Tranperlpt. After a strenuous life of four centuries this Is the rnlTee-and-clgnrs, the easy-chalr-ond sllppers period of his existence. Since the time when Columbus crossed the Atlantic he has been hunted and harried from Arrtlo pillar to t topic post, but the economic rycln has passed and for the present the whale Is en Joying a period of rompnratlvo secur ity, when he may ronm the waters In peace, multiply and people once more the depleted seas. Let none begrudge til in his repose. The whale deserves well of the world. What, he ha In hln humble way contributed to tho Intel lectual development, of the human race only tho Imaginative ran compute, only tho ungrateful deny. For four cen turies he fed the scholar's lamp and the victor's torch. For so much of literature and of science aa we owe to "midnight oil" the thoughtful and the generous will give tho whale due rred lt. But the service he has long per formed Is now done better by another agency, and he enjoys a comparative ly unmolested rest. One day last March, a tale came up from the tropics as weird as the rank est yarn that ever rame out nf a f Vr's'lo, but verified as arrurately as a government report. Tho New Bed ford whaling hark Kathleen was float ing ciilinly In a placid sea, when she rnught the attention nf a giant fin back. He swam up In his majestic, way, and when within a few yards of the ship he dived Just below tho sur fsco and moved slowly beneath the keel. Then he rose quickly and sav agely. In the manner nf a bucking bronco, until the ship was sheer above the water. It toppled over on Its side, thn whale moved on a few feet and then, with an angry flip of his tall, knocked the bark to smithereens. Now, that may be considered the des perate parting shot of a maddened, long-hunted fugitive, the climax of an ancient feud. Only In order to look on It In this way, we shall have to give the whale credit for rarrylng about In that huge head of his a kind of Mach iavellian subtlety and a mind for deep planned revenge. And as every old whaler knows, the only thing In a whale's head Is somo three or four tons of liquid spermaceti, worth In the New Bedford market about $50 a barrel. It Is a pity this prosaic fact is so, for lit forbids us to Indulge In tho poetic fancy of Imagining the whale as entertaining a feeling of gratitude to tho Standard Oil com pany and erecting monuments In the deep to the glory of John I). Rocke feller, who la chiefly responsible for his emancipation. The petroleum age for the world spells golden ago for the whale. Down on tho ancient business streets of Boston, Purchase, High and India, and along tho old wharves, you will find a scoro perhaps of weather-beaten gilt signs which proclaim that those within sell, among other things, "Sperm and whale-oil, sperm candles and whalebone." But those signs tell not the truth. They aro slgnH of noth ing at all but the conservatism of tho Boston business man, who changes hla wares to meet new demands, but changes not his sign above him. The prowling newspaper man who asks the junior partner for Information about the whale-oil trade Is met by an anuied stare and a half-indignant "Great Scott, man, wake up; this Is 11)02. We don't deal in whale-oil. Wo sell mineral oils." And when you call his attention to the sign which he has seen with unseeing eyes theso twenty years ho explains that that Is of the past, and refers you to "Smith & Co., around on India square they handle the whale-oil, I think." And then Smith, the commission draler, Bays: "We don't carry any whale-oil; oh, yes, there is an old fellow out In central New York that orders a barrel once every six nionthB or so. We or der It for him from New Bedford, but wo don't know what ho dors with It. Somo old Hip Van Winkle, I guess, that Btlcks to the old ways." After diligent search you find the one or two houses that do make a business of whale products, and you learn that there is now Just one staple use for sperm oil minors' lamps. Then, too, a few railroad companies like it for their signal lamps, and for certain curious purposes, like temper ing steel, the universal mineral oil Is Improved by a slight admixture of spermaceti. In New Bedford you will hear the ssme story. In the grocery stores and on sunny porches tho old whaling captains, deep-eyed, hawk-nosed, re hearsed old times In "the Western ocean." The plcturcsquo population that made New Bedford's wharves the most genuinely cosmopolitan spot in America is gone forever. Frank T. Bullen has written their requiem: "From all the isles of the South they came sturdy ot limb and clear of eye from Polynesia; lithe, sinewy and cruel-vlsaged from Malaysia, black with the blackness of soft coal from East Africa, stolid and haughty from Arabia, and last, but greatest both in number and in importance, the stately, cavaller-like Portuguese from that Atlantic cluster of jewelled Isles, the Azores, Cape Verde and Madolra." Finally, those argosies of clumsy whal ing barks, "built by the mile and cut off In lengths as you want 'em," have fallen to such base uses as carrying coat from Philadelphia anJ lumber to New York. But all this talk of departed glory is told In statistics. In 1846 thers were 7.10 vessels rarrylng tho Ameri can flag (practically all were from New Bedford), hunting whales In every rorner of tho watered world, from Okhotsk lo Arabia. That was a mighty fleet. Of It today aro left but 3H small barks and schooners. Jan. 1, irr:i, a year neroro ute rivn war n.v gan, there were 625 vessels; by I860, the figure had fallen to 2fi.1. The annals of ruined New Bedford frtune will tell how much of tho decrease was caused by tho vindictive Alabama. The whalers would be com- I Ing homo from fonr-year-long cruises In the Arctic. They knew nothing of , tho war that had begun since they left in peace. They were loaded down with oily rargo, and the crews reefed and tacked cheerfully enough to tho thought of homeward bound. Tben would romo the astonished encounter with the Alabama, nnd the whaling captain would pnee the Confederato's deck a prisoner and watch the fruit of his loll roll off ncross tho sea In big billows of detiso black smoke. The Alabama scourge wns artificial. After tho war the trade picked up. In 18(19. there were 3118 vessels. Then rame tho striking of oil In Pennsyl vania, and the whaling industry was doomd. . Of the remnant of the fleet still afloat 24 hall from New Bedford, four from j Provlncrlown, two from Boston and , ten from San Francisco. Theso are ' scattered through thn North and South Atlantic, In Hudson Bay and In the Japan and Okhotsk Seas. With the sailing vessels thn old fashion of long voyages that took a large gap from thn sailors' lives still persists. Some nf tho New Bedford whalers havo been away from port slnco 'Jiti. But on tho Pacific roast are half a dor.en steam whalers which go out for but a few days at a time and tow their prizes to shore to be rut up and boiled. This mot hod will soon entirely super sede, tho old one, and the steamers will monopolize what is left of the whaling Industry. Theso figures are for America (and In the whaling business, "America" meant New Bedford, until a compara tively few years ago, when San Fran rlsro hegnn to hunt for whales with steamers.) Indeed, no olher railing In tho world demands t.'io highest quali ties of courage and daring. Compared lo ft soldiering, even In time of war, Is a comparatively serene buslncES. The percehtnge of casualties on an old-fashioned whaling trip would make thn battle of Colenso look like a child's pirnlr. It Is only natural that such a railing should attract thn most self-reliant men In the world, the men who sought fortune in an unpeopled world, and (ho descendants of those men. As early as 1775 New Bedford, with a fleet of 350 Bhlps, mon opolized the whaling business of the world. This monopoly Is maintained so long as tho Industry lasted. It Is estimated that In 1846, when New Bedford had 7o0 ships on the water, tho total Investmrnt of money was $70,000,000, and the number of people dependent on this harvest of the sea was 70,000. Comparatively the Industry has dwindled to a mere nothing. It may even dwindle yet more. But It will never entirely disappear. Thore will always be some slight business in the product of the whale. But New Bed ford will not be its headquarters. The twenty-four ships that sail from New Bedford will disapprar one by one. Tho whaler of tho future will hunt with nteam. Ho will build his boiling establishment on somo Bhore near which the whales congregate. From this station he will go out every morn ing, shoot his whalo with a harpoon gun, rnstend of in thn old manner, and tow him In to be cut and boiled the next day, whlie he steams off after more gume. Within tho past five years this proecsb has been Introduced et three places on the coast of Norway, on thn Pacific coast of the United States nnd on the coast of Newfound land. M ailer Srolt an a Vnlunla.r, Tho recent discovery In Edinburgh of a summons railing upon Sir Walter Krott, advocate, to attend and Join tlio Edinburgh army reservo dining tho troubled period of 1803, has been followed by tho unearthing of Scott's reply, paled from I.a,swado Cottage, July 22. ISn;:, and addressed to Mr. Jiimeg l.alng, clerk to the lieutenancy of tho city of Edinburgh, tho letter read ha follows: "Sir As I observe by tho enclosed summons that I am drawn a soldier of tho army of re servo, I beg to Inform you It Is my Intention to claim the exemption pro vided In favor of volunteer cavalry, having been for 12 years a member of the Edinburgh troop of the R. M. I.o.;lilan V, Cavalry. I understand fiom Col, Hundas that the adjutant, Mr. Adams, Is to supply the lieuten ancy with a list of the corps. In which you will find my name regularly In serted. If further verification of the exemption Is requisite, have the good ness to acouaint Mr. Adams for mo. I remain, sir, your obedient servant, Walter Scott." In spite ot iis lame ness, Scott was an enthusiastic and Immensely popular volunteer, and used to turn out to drill at five In ths morning. London Chronicle. Am Intlll(cnt Ulrrt. The yakamlk, or trumpeter of Vene zuela, a fowl of the crane species, is a bird of extraordinary Intelligence. The natives use It limtead of sheep dogs for guarding and herding their flocks. It is said that, however far the yaka mlk mny wander with the flocks, it never falls to find its way home at night, driving before it all the crea tures intrusted to its care. PRESBYTERIAN PASTOR PRAISES PE-RU-NA. l Catarrhal H wit' 1 il 1 i flfl S-t! First Presbyterian Cborch of Ureentboro, (Ja., and Its Pastor aud Klder rilHE day was when men of prominence X hesitated to give their testimonials JU .proprietary mpiiirinea for publication. This remains true to-day of nrnat proprie tary medicines. Hut Periina lina become so justly famous, ita merita are known to ao many pcnple of high and low stations, that no one heaitatea to are his name in print recommending Prruna. The higlirat men in our nation have given Prruna a strong indorsement. Men representing all claaaca and stations arc equally represented. A dignified representative of the Pres byterian church in the person nf llev. K. ). Hmith doea not imitate to date pub licly that he has used I'rruna in hia family and found it cured when other remodir failed. In this statement the Hev. Smith ia aiipported by an elder tn hia rhurrh. Hrv. K. (J. Smith, paatnr of the Presby terian church of (Ireennborn, (ia.. writfo: "Having used l'eruna in my family for some time it gives me pleamire to taatify to its true worth. "My little boy, seven years nf age, had been suffering for some time with catarrh of the lower bowels. Other remedies had failed, hut after taking two bottlea of l'e rani the trouble alinont entirely disap peared. For this special malady 1 con aider it well nigh a specific. A skeleton dug up In Texas has an eight-Inch Jaw. F. J. Chanay k Co., Toledo, O., Propi. of Hall's Catarrh Cure, offer tlOO reward for any rasa of catarrh that canuot be nurad by taking Hall's Catarrh ('urn. Hend for tentl mnnials, free. Hold by Druggists, 78c. About ninety-nine per cent, of the starch made in the United States ia made from corn. ' FITH permanently no red. No fits or nervous, eess attar flrgt day anas of Dr. Kline's Oraat Narvalteatorar. t2t rial brittle and treatlaatras l)t. It. A. Ki.ihi, Ltd., Wl ArchHt.,l'hlla., Pa. The average duration of life in towns is calculated at thirty-eight years; in the country fifty-five years. Mrs. Wlnslow's Hcothlng Pyrup for children taathlng, soften the gu ini,rduries In "anima tion, allayspaln, cures wludoolle. 25c. abottla One of the greatest rivers of the world, the Orinoco, ia also one of the least known to Kuropeans. lam sure Tlso's Cure for Consumption saved my life three yanra ago. Mas. Thcihas lloa SIMS.Mapla fit., Norwich, N. If., Feb. 17, ltKK). British Columbia logger are preparing to export cedar in large quantities to all parts of the world. Genuine stamped C C C. It ever gold In Hlk. tiewars of the dealer who tries to sell ''something just ss good." 'FOR WOMAN'S EYE The Sanative, Antisep tic, Cleansing, Purifying, Beautifying Properties of CUTICURA SOAP render it of Priceless Value to Women. 13"-Much that every woman should knot wrapped about Uia bOAf. "An a I oiiic for weak and warn ant prnpl ft Unit a few or no Canute." Hrv. K. U. Smith. Mr. M. .1. Kowman, a prominent mer chant of Oreennboro, (ia., and an elder in the Presbyterian churrh of that plare, has uwd l'eruna, and in s recent Icttxr to Tho l'eruna Medirine Co.. of Columbus, Ohio, writea aa follows: "For a long time I was troubled with ca tarrh of the kidneys, and tried many rem edies, all of whirh gave me no relief. Pe tiina was recommended to ma by vrnr friend, nnd alter tiaing a few bottlea I am pleaded to any that the long looked for relief wns found and I am now rnjolnif better' hratth than I have for yrarm, and ran heartily recommend I'eni . n to all nimtlarlv aflltrted. It 4m certainty a grand medtcin.'M.J. ftoasman. Catnrrh ia essentially the same wherever located, l'eruna cures entarrh wherever located. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the urn of Parana, write at once to Dr. Ilnrtinnn, diving a full statement of your eaae and he will bo pleased to give you hia valuable advice gratia. Addreaa T)r. Ilartman, Preaideat of The llartinan Sanitarium, Columbu, Ohio. THERE: IS NO .i22! SUCKER LIKE W Porty year a?o arid after many ytors or use on ine eastern coast, lower '3 Waterproof Oiled Coats were Introduced n the West and were called stickers by the pioneers and cowboys. This eraahic some has com into such General use that at is frequently thoujh wrongfully applied to many substitute You want the ocnune jh-, I.OOR ior me jign or ir. r un.ono the fuvrvz lower on the buttons. MAM W KACI JUC TIUOW AJS) OOLD CY nePRSSSNTAnvt TRACE TMt WOULD OVeR. A. J. TOWW CO. ROSTOM. MASS. stji m g mere i aj raws If moro snleg of Itlpnn Tubules arc mudo dally than of any other medicine, the reason may bo found In tho fact that there Is scarcely ny condition of 111 health that is not benefited by the occasional use of a Hipims Tnbnlc, and a pnckiige, con tnlulng ten, U obtainable from any druggist for five cents. At druggists. The Five-Cent packet is enough for so ordinary occasion. The family bottle, 60 cents, contains a supply for year. Is told la 1 A
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers