Crooked River. . : The River Jordan baa long been considered the most winding river In the world, but it Is not In the nne class as the Whlto river In Arkansas. This river flows 1,000 miles in going SO miles as the crow (lies. FlTSpermanentlvenred. Noflts or nervous Bessnfter first dty's use ot Dr. Kline's Groat Nerveltetoror,'i'Jtrittlbottle and treatise 'ree Br.K.U.KM!it,lJtrt.,9ai Arch St., Phil., Pa. The consul of rhildrcn in Oklahoma tb .ast year was 204,720. Chaffee's Spectacles. Lieut. Gen. Chaffee has the most re markable pair of spectacles In Wash ington. They are of enormous size, perfectly round, and are encased in heavy rims of blade tortoise shell. When ho puis them on they impart an unusually severe look to his strictly military features. Best British Gunner. Able Seaman Samuel Ilollinghurst is said to be the best gunner in the British fleet. Firing with a six-Inch gun, while the war ship Drake was going at' full speed! he put seven suc cessive shots through a target measur ing six feet by eight, at a distance of l,000fcet. Prisoner Can Wear Queue. Judge Hogors, of the United Stntes District Court at St. i.ouis, has given a Chinaman under sentence lor pass ing counterfeit money, permission tc wear his queue in the penitentiary. IMTEBESTEMG LETTER WRITTEN BYAK0TABLEWOMAN Mrs. Earrth Kolloger of Denver, Color Boarer of the Woman's Relief Corps, Sends Thanks to Mrs. Pinkham. The following letter was written by Mrs. Kellogg, i of 1628 Lincoln i Ave., Denver, !olo.,toMrs.Pink- (liam. Lvnn.Mass.: ' Dear Mrs. rinkham:- ' fur five veal's I was troubled with a tumor, which kept SarohHellopo F"nln& ''"""'"IS ' Sa intso luronv and "rrest mental doprnssion- I vna unable to at tend to my house work.and life became a bur den to me. I was routined for days to my bed, lost my appetite, mr courage arid all hope. " I could not boar to think of an operation, and in my distress I tried every remedy which I thought would Ire of any use to me, and reading of the value of Lvdia E. I'inkham's Vegetable. Compound to sick women decided to L'ive it a trial. 1 felt so discouraged that I had little hnK- of rcoverv. and when I began to feel better, nfux t lie second week, thought it only meant temjirnrv relief; but to my great fiurpriso I found that I kept gaining, while the tumor Itwonrd in size ' The Compound continued to build up my general health and the tumor seemed to be absorbed, until, in seven months, the tumor was entirely pone and I a well woman. I am so thankful for my recovery that. I ask you to publish my letter in newspapers, so other women may know of the wonderful rnrative powers of'Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound." When women are troubled with irreg nlar or pain ful menstruation, weu kness, leucorrheea. displacement or ulceration of the womb, that bearing-down feel ing, inflammation of the ovaries, back ache, flatulence, general debility, indi gestion and nervous prostration, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. LydiaE I'inkham's Veg etable Compound at once removes such trouble. .No other medicine in the world has received such widespread and unquali fied endorsement No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine: Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. Health is too valuable to risk in ex periments with unknown and untried medicines or methods of treatment. Remember that, it is L.vdia E. Finkhara's Vegetable Compound that is curing women, and don't allow any druggist to sell you anything else in its placo. PAHS TRADE-MARKS DESIGNS and COPYRIGHTS. BKOI'KKDOR FEB ItF.Tl RFt) fiend postal for our new bonk, just out : Whnf to Invent, Haw In Invent, Hon tn ohlnln n Pat ent, Haw cased jnnr Patent when ohlnined;" with Inamirlluns relmihn to mwlnnmema. shop rliilils, county nd suite ritfitnand royalty contracts. JOHN $. DUFf It i CO.. Pal. Mtyt.. WasMimton. I). C. 'Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Lata Prln oloal Eiminer U.S. Pension Bureau. 3yr la civil war. lt mU iilicatiuc rlniuiN. ut at if P. N. U. 23, 1905. I CUHtS WHtltl ALL LlkE ft LS. I Best Couxh Syrup. Taaleti ttontl. Use in tltno. enin nj nnijurws. vm jm ftM hi y t. .VVji V s am DOr.DC V NEW DISCOVERY; rs ItUrO 1 ouierht and ourat wont aaMa. Sand for book of taitin ..niala and lOllnya' toaaimant Free, Dr. 1. aim OHi.itlaata.ea Airy. Pope Hartford; Pope -Tribune Modern Casoline Cars and Runabouts at Moderate Prices. liaeksd bj (7 Tears of MamifHctarinit Kxprrlenca. 6tol6H.P; Prices, $500 to $1600 Simple Construction, Luxurious Equipment. AddrMS Dept. A For Complete Catalogues. Pope Manufacturing Co., HARTFORD, CONN, A, 1 M. A New Death Test Although physicians assert that the possibility of being burled alive can only occur where a medical examina tion has not been made, German papers state that a stronger, abso lutely reliable guaranty for discerning actual death is still demanded. The discovery of a new medium for ascer taining death, with perfect certainty, will therefore attract attention. It consists in injecting n solution of lluorrscinc deep into the tissues. If circulation exists the skin and muc ous membranes become very yellow and the eyes assume the color of emeralds; if the circulation has censed, none of these results occur The discoverer, Dr. Icard, proposes that at least two hours before bodies are placed In coffins such an injec tion with fluorcsclne be made. If life is not yet extinct, the Injection does no harm, and the coloring disap pears. Medical Record. Spend Much for Beer. age earners in Haden, Germany, spend much of their earnings for beer, especially at places where credit is extended. A government re port referring to the subject cites one quarry where many of the men were securing from fi to 9 quarts n day. A limit of 3 quarts has been fixed bv law since the report was made, the cost of that quantity being from 20 to zb per cent, of the wages receved. It Is to Smile. "Does your paper get out a color ed supplement on Sunday?" ar.kci the northern visitor of Col. Rlnn.l. leigh. "Not nt all! The negroes veae tne same paper as the whites!" re plied the distinguished editor. .New urleans Times-Democrat. Post Offices in the AIds. There are several post offices among the Alps at a height of b.uuo or 7.000 feet. One letter box from which the postman must make collections four times daily, is 10,000 feet above the level of the sea. Appendicitis Fad. It is all the fad to have appendicitis at London now. Princess Victoria was operated on for the disease a short time ago, and it set the fashion. The leading; English surgeons say they are besieged by women who claim to be suffering with appendici tis and must be operated upon. ULCERS F0RTHIRTY YEARS l'ainfal Krnptlnns From Knees to Feet Seemed Incurable Catlcura. F.ntls M isery. Another of those remarkable cures by Cuticura, after doctors and all else had tailed, is testified to by Mr. M. C. Moss, of Cainesville, Texas, in the following letter: "i'or over thirty years 1 suffered from ii in ful ulcers and an eruption from my knees to feet, and could lind neither doc tors nor medicine to help me, until 1 used Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills, which cured me in nix months. They helped me the very first time I used them, and 1 am glad to write this so that others suffering as I did may be saved from miseiy." Koreans Like Cigarets. A taste which has enormously de veloped in Korea of recent years is that for cigarets. Native tobacco is used by the countrymen in their long pipes, but In the cities and even amo-ng the laboring classes, when they can afford it, the use of the cigarette has become almost universal. To lianntler Delicate Mnsllna. Many muslin dresses may be successfully laundered at home, whie'h, if put in the ordinary wash, would lie hopelessly ruined. Wash quickly through warm Ivory Hoap suds; rinse, dip in rice water, and ijry In doors, as the air will frequently fade del'ieato colors; Iron with a moderately hot iron. Eleanor It. Tarker. The Pekin robin is becoming naturalized in the parks of London. Use Allen's Foot-Rasa, It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting, Tired, Aching, Hot, Sweating r'eet.Corns and bunions. Ask for Alloa's Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes. Cures while you walk. At all brujretsts and Shoe Stores, JSa. Don't nooept any substitute. Sample sent t'BEK. A.ldre.w, Allen s. Olmsted, Lelioy, N.Y. Students at Japanese universities arc not obliged to serve in the army. H. H, Green's Sons, of Atlanta, Ga are th". only successful Dropsy Specialists In ths world. Seo thoir liberal offer in advertise u. eat in another column of this paper, Japanese dead are buried in a squatting posture, chin upon knees. Mrs. iVi!nio'sdoo:aln; Syrup lorohililrea leatula.soitau taea.n, reduoos iuttamtna uou,'illu3:mtu.,curoi ndd uolia.'Zjc.abotlie. Koine lias seminaries representing eighty sevcu orders. l'lso's Cureo:;uaot be too highly spokea '. esaeough oure. J. W. O'Beies, sTnlrJ Avenue, S Minneapolis, Minn., Jiiq.O.ijjj, The American Academy i Fine Arts in Rome M ten years old. I in I I III II I -1 , r- A Few Useful Hints. Ho careful that the, harness fits the fliilin.;! for which it Is intended; tills will prevent a great ninny of the well known Ills. If possible, pudding should lint lie used In the collar, as it inter fores with the free eiivulation of air, and lieciinies foul from the accumula tion of dust. I'ewiire of rough, rusty or dirty lilts, for they will surely give the horse flic sore mouth. See that the stable Is well ventilated anil has plenty of light. A deep man ger is best, while the stall should be live feet wiilc.-Llna C. Aleut I, i:i The Lpiloinisl. 1 Some Dnlrv Uinta. After scalding wltii lint water, n sunbatli Is the thing for all vessels used in tin. dairy Industry. Sterilization will destroy all germ life in milk, if it is heated ami held above the boiling point a few minutes. If mill: is taken up to Lit) F. in pas teurisation ii ml retained at that tem perature for thirly minutes, the germs of tuberculosis, diptheria and typhoid fovrr are destroyed. The dairyman should always bear In mind that milk is one of the most deli cate articles of food, and if he under stands its physical and chemical na ture it. will be an aid to him in pro ducing a sanitary mill;. Indiana I'arimr. Nmnlirrln" Inrntmlor Fees Many w ln use incubators for the first time lind they are often in trouble in turning the eggs, not knowing just which have been turned if their atten tion is distracted from the work for a few minutes. While there are sev eral plans for turning eggs and a num ber of appliances, there is one way which is absolutely sure. When plac ing the eggs in the incubator, number each one on four sides, 1, Z 3. 4. Place them all with the figure one up; in turning, place all so that tho same number, whichever it is, Is on top, with all tin eggs, and so on as each turning is done. Iii this way of doing things, there Is little chance of missing any of the eggs. Indianapolis Xews. Skim Milk Rmt PIKs, An old reader of the Farmer, near Decatur, Illinois, writes us that some thing over a year ago lie was im pressed by rending a letter from n cor respondent of the Indiana Farmer, which we publish, to try the hand cream separator, as be then had ten cows, lie soon found that lie had been losing a good deal in the old way of petting, and that In feeding his sweet milk from the separator he was now growing the healthiest hogs ho ever did. and has added twelve more cows to bis dairy herd. lie writes that since he began feeding skim sweet milk from separator to his hogs he has never had any swine disease, though his neighbors have suffered from swine plague all around him. Several other correspondents have alluded to the fact of never having swine disease since they begun feed ing sweet skim milk. The fact is, pigs, like the human animal, are not susceptible to disease when in perfect physical condition. Feeding skim milk with corn or meal keeps them in this condition, and though disease germs may be present, in perfect condition they- throw them off by good and per fect health, and digestion.-Indiiinn Farmer. The Fanner and strawberries. Who has n better rlirlit to nil the strawberries he can eat than the farmer? If he does not have them. whose fault is it? Xo familv frnrdnn is complete without tliem: it is iust as easy to grow strawberries as it is to grow anything else in the garden. They are the very first fruit to ripen, coming at a time when the wife Is nt her wits' end to know what to have, to help her prepare a complete meal. Aim there are inanv wavs In which they can be prepared for winter use. Let us figure it nn and see how much it will cost t ie farmer to keep a big family well supplied with strawberries all the year. Four hundred plants will ue ample, and they should be selected from the earliest to the latest varieties, so the table can be supplied with fresh, rich berries all through rlio sen son. The cost of this number of nl.nits would not exceed $3: tiiey v ill 'occupy about ten sotiare rods of crnnnd nmt one man can set them out in about two hours. After this, thev rennlre about the same amount of remit n vegetables; the yield should be nt least M) quarts. Figure this up at ten cents per quart and you have grown f50 worth of strawberries, and this same bed of plants will do fully as well for one more season. However, we should not figure thorn in money value, for the pleasure of contributing such good things to the family's happi ness counts far more than money. -Frank E. Brat-, iu Vpto-Da'te Farming. , Crops to Meet Conditions. When the prices for farm com modities fall materially, there is al ways a feeling on the part of the grower that he should change his crop to something that brings a higher mar ket price; particularly does he feel so if the prices are low for two seasons in succession. In souc localities potatoes are selling, at this writing, for quite a little less than they brought at harvest time. Goodness knows the consumer is not buying them propor tionately less, but there is a trade com bination lowering the prices, which the producer and the censumer can not light, so the potatoes have to go for what they vill bring. Within two weeks, sot lest than twenty potato growers have told, the writer that they would not grow potatoes another year. et these men are, all of them, expert potato grow ers, and only ordinary growers of other farm crops.. Under such con ditions, it would seem sensible to con tinue the growing of potatoes and try to find some way of getting n better price for them, as, for example, selling them nt harvest time, Instead of storing them. True, the same sea son of low prices may again be repeat ed, but how much better off would the grower be if he changed his crops to something for which his soli was not particularly suited and which he could only 'grow with Indifferent success. It certainly is not wise to make radi cal changes without serious considera tion. Indianapolis News. Klnilloir Puns. The old-fashioned way of setting milk in the ordinary six-quart shallow pans has nothing to commend It ex cept the cheapness of the outfit. The pans take up a great deal of room In the dairy, and inakrf a great deal of work in washing, although the new pans, pressed out of one piece of tin ware, are not so hard to wash as the old ones that were mailt.' out of four or five pieces, and had a seam around the bottom and two or three' up the sides. Leaving out of consideration the large amount of room that forty or fifty pans take up in a dairy, which is a big item on many farms, we find other strong objections in that puns last hut a few years, they cause lots of mess from spilling and leaking, nnd the milk sours and thickens before tlm cream has tim.e to rise. The last point is the greatest objection, nnd a very serious one t j the use of shallow pans In dnlric of half n dozen cows or more. Just - ow much butter, fat or cream Is lost in the milk, the average farmer does not know. He thinks that it is only n little, nnd that It does not amount to much. But really it amounts to a good deal, and may be the whole of the profit. The following experience shows the loss through setting milk In open pans: A herd of fourteen cows was in milk, and giving about 2.10 pounds o" milk a day. The pans were set in a cool room and al lowed to sland for thirty-six to forty eight, hours. The skimming was test ed, nnd it showed that nearly all the cream rojo in the first twelve hours, no difference being shown between that set twelve hours nnd that set thirty-six hours. But the amount ot butter fat which was lost was some thing appalling, amounting as it did to eight-tenths of one per cent., or about ono-slxth of the whole amount of the butter in the milk. This loss is not surprising to one who has op portunity to make such tests, and it is going on every day on hundreds of farms in tills country. In this case It amounted to two pounds of butter per day, and nearly all of this could have been saved by the use of a separator. Massachusetts rioughmaii. Incub.ttnr Practice, In operating an Incubator to the best advantage it will bo found that, even with the lit . machines, the most ac curate regulation of heat In the egg chamber is to be bad in a room where the temperature is constant and the ventilation good. A cellar is about the best place, us a rule, that can be found. Good ventilation is rsrentlnl, since the little chicks require a considerable i mount of oxygen for the vital func tions and the lamp of the machine exhausts the supply in Its immediate vicinity where the ventilation Is im perfect. The following are a few points which nre worth observing iu the running of an incubator. Bend the manufacturer's directions ami comply with them. Set the machine up level, and see that it remains level. Ilo not allow a draft in the machine. Use good oil, and trim the lamps at least once a day, and oftener If the oil is poor. Remove Infertile eggs nnd dead germs on the sixth or eighth day, and test again about the fifteenth day. The second day commence turning the eggs twice n day, morning and evening, nt regular intervals, and con- Untie the turning until the eighteenth day. Bun the machine nt 102 degrees throughout, allowing the temperature to run up Just before hatching to 104 degrees or 103 degrees if it is Inclined, not endeavoring to check the rise until it gets beyond 108 degrees Its max imumwhich temperature will not be too high wheu the chicks are coming out rapidly. Under no ordinary circumstances should the machine be opened when the chicks nre hatching. It Is of the greatest importance that the tempera-1 ure and humidity should remain con. stunt at this particular time, and none of the chicks should ever require as sistance in leaving the shell. Shouli' the machine be opened the rapid evaporation causes a sudden coolinj: of the egg chamber and also dries it off, so that many chicks Just pipped stick to the shell and do not batch. When Uie hatching is well over, thf machine should bo opened, and the unhatclied- eggs removed. It is oui practice to allow tho chicks to remalr in the machine for the first twenty-font hours at a temperature of ninety de grees to ninety-four degrees, trans ferring them to brooders about th time they should receive their firsl feed. Massachusetts Ploughman. Over 100,000 people are employed lr the cork wood industry in Andalusia , souiuern cpam. GOVERNMENT LIGHT. HIST0SI3 C'HICKAMMJC. PARK ABLAZE WITH ILLUMINATION. Cnltad Stsln Pratrtu of T.lrliMn- "still, tnrr l'nat rrnnnmira.l flrntlfylncly Sllrrecahll SIX nml Ona-llHir Miles nf Mnlns Slxtr-Vlve Street I.lilita. Chleknmauga Fark.Cn..May31. The Tlnited States Government has here In operation one of the largest acety lene gas plants In the world. The mil itary post at the ent'-anee of the his torical Chlckainaugn outfit-field, where thirty thousand Union and Confederate soldiers were lost In the memorable battle nf September 10 and 20, 18C3, contains about one hundred buildings, the seventy-five principal ones of which nre lighted with acetylene. To accom plish this six and one-half miles of mains and two miles of service pipes arc In use, while sixty-five street lamps brilliantly illuminate the nvenues of the post. In 1003 the War Department in stalled n test ncetylcne plant nf, Fort Meyer, Virginia. The results were so gratifying and the superiority of the llluminant so evident that the Govern, meat, March 20, 1!K)4, placed Ibo con tract for the Chickamiiuga plant, in which every cltlitenof the United States should have his pro rata of pride. But the Government has not confined Its acceptance of acetylene to this mili tary post. Since becoming satisfied of the elllelency, superiority and econom ical advantages of tills particular il luiiilnant, tile United States has in. stalled a number of plants In Indian schools and other Government insti tutions. Acetylene gas is me of the simplest as well as the most perfect of artificial lights. It is made by the contact of water and enrbid-s tn manufactured product for sale nt a nominal price), is absolutely safe and gives a beautiful white light soothing to the eyes and nerves. It can be produced anywhere in the farm home, the village store, the town hall, the church and is so easily maintained as to be practical Tot all classes. It is a matter for national congratu lation that in beautifying so historic a spot as C'llckaniauga. nothing but the best, Including the lightir.g system, has been deemed good enough for the American people. First Woman Ordained. Rev. Antoinette Brown Blackwell, of Elizabeth, N. .1., the first ordained wo man minister In the United States and probably in the world will pass her eightieth anniversary May 20. In June she means to attend the National Woman Suffrage convention at Port land, Ore. No Goods Marked With Star. The Turkish government has is sued an order to Its customs authori ties not to admit any foreign goons which bear the mark or design or .i star. It is supposed that the reason for this is that the representation c a star is part of the Turkish co-it of arms. What Whiskey Does. Mr. S. M. Hussey, in his "Reminis cences of nn Irish Land Agent," gives the following quotation from a parish priest's sermon: "It's whiskey makes yon bate your wives; It's whiskey makes your homes desolate; it's whiskey makes you shoot your land lords, and with emphasis as he thumped the pulpit it's whisltey makes you miss them." When He Feels Rich. Wlren a man has paid all his fam ily bills and has a dollar and a quar ter left over, he feels as If ho hac? Inherited a gold mine. New YorK Press. Ttntlrnsvt Kate I,Tla1n,ttoit. Testifying before the Senate Com. nilttee at Washington, Interstate Com merce Commissioner Tronty said in discussing the proposition to give that commission the power to regulate rail way rates: "I think Uie railways should make their own rates. I think they should be allowed to develop their own busi ness. I have never advocated any law, and I am iwt now in favor of any law, which would put the rate making power into the hands of any commis sion or any court. While it may bo necessary to do that some time, while that Is done in some States at the present time, while It is done in some countries, I am opposed to it. The railway rate is property. It Is nil the property that the railway has got. The rest of its property is not good for anything unless it can charge a rate. Now it has always seemed to me that when a rate was fixed, If that rate was an unreasonable rate, It deprives the railroad company of its property pro tanto. It is not necessary that you should confiscate the property of n railroad; it is not necessary that you should say that it shall not earn three per cent, or four per cent. When yon put In a rate that is inherently un reasonable, you have deprived that company of its rights, of its property, and the Circuit Court of the United States has Jurisdiction under the four teenth nmendment to restrain that. I have looked at these cases a great many times, and I can only come to the conclusion tlrtit a railroad company is entitled to charge a fair and reasonable rate, and If any order of a commission, if any statute of a State Legislature, takes away that rate, the fourteenth amendment protects the railway com pany." No Tainted Money Wanted. The Rev. Campbell Morgan gave notice directly In his London pulpit that gifts from brewers and other persons engaged In "unholy traffic" were not wanted. "Your minister," be said to the congregation, "does not believe in shaking the devil's tree to put money on the Lord's tabla." Washington Star. Color at Harvard. W. E. Curtis, writing on colored men at Harvard, made this observa tion: There are about a dozen col ored students nt Cambridge at pres ent coming from different parts of the south. They make no claims to social recognition, and none is offer ed them; but in the class room, in the "gym," and on tho athletic field there is perfect equality. No colored student wil visit the rooms of a white student unless he is specially Invited. Colored students do not expect to be admitted to the social clubs, or to live In the same boarding houses as the white men, nlthough the Harvard baseball team .threatened to leave a hotel In Washington last summer be cause the proprietor wanted Mat thews, one of their number, to take his meals In his room. In scholar ship nnd in athletics, no distinction is made on account of color, either by the faculty or the students white or black, the best man wins. But no colored man ever appears at a ball or a dinner, or any other social function. How He Avoided Trouble. When a Scotch schoolmaster en tered the temple of learning one morning he read on the blackboard: "Our teacher is a donkey." The pupils expected there would be a cyclone, but the philosophic peda gogue contented himself with adding the word "driver," and opened the school as usual. Chicago Journal. Studying Psychic Lore. Rnl Kezir, a Hindoo, who is visiting the large cities of the country, is ill Boston. He belongs to Benares, In dia, and his mission in America Is to investigate the progress made In various cults in the .larger cities who have engaged In psychic research. Decline of Fox-Huntlng. Fox-hunting seems to be on the wane In England. Some attribute this to the Inroads of the automobile and others to hard times nnd "the loss of many hunting men during the South African war." London has dicovered, to Its hor ror, that the big electric lamps on the facade of the Mansion House, the Lord Mayor's official residence were "made In Germany." Facts Are Stubborn Things T"niform excellent quality for OVCT 8 quarter of a CCntury lma steadily increased the sales of LION COITEE, The leader of all package coffees. Lion Coffee ia now used in millions of homes. Such popular success speaks for itself. It is a positive prooi that LION COFFEE has the Confidence of the people. The uniform quality of LION COFFEE survives all opposition. LION COFFEE keeps Its old friends makes nv ones every day. LION COFFEE has even tban Its Strength, Flavor and Qual ity to commend It. On arrival from the plantation, it is carefully roast ed at our factories and securely packed In 1 lb. sealed packages, and not opened again nntil needed for use In the home. This precludes the possibility of adulteration or contact with germs, dirt, dust, insects or unclean bands. The absolute purity ol t LION COFFEE Is therelore guaranteed to the consumer. Sold only in 1 lb. packages. Lion-head on every package. Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE Natural Flavor FoodProducte Th prrtlt1n fl"r "4 Mttflfrlnft qaalttr of LIBBT'H POTTED ATO PttVTLKD MKATS l da to ih skill ot tba Libb? ehf and to th pun if and Knnith of lh ingradlauM and, Libby's (li5SSfi Food Products For Brsakfcst, Dlnnar &rd Supper. Corned Beef Ha.sK Brisket Beef Boneless Chicken Veal Loe.f Soups Vienna. Sa.usa.ge They art rmady to1jmn)iyour Grocer haj Ihmm Llbby. McNeill & Llbby, Chlcaio f0 BEST FOR TRE BOWELS 4JT' j I CATHARTIQ GUARANTEED CURB for jll bowel tnrablea, appendicitis. bilioueneM, bed breath bid blood, wind on the nomech. bloated boweia, foul mouth, headache. Indi.eetioaT nimouL pains after e.un,, liver trouble, aallow akin and diineaa When Tour boinonTmnS ref ularly you are sick. Con.tip.tlon kills more people than all MhSdiJeI tiJlh.? I? atarta chronic ailm.nta and Ion. v..r of ki " ' . " a "easee together. It CA3CARETS today, far you wflf never f et Take our advice, .tart with Caere.. tod.y uuief absolute JuirlSeVto refunded. The genuine tablet stamped C C C. Nererold lFI SJlSI free. AddreM Bterlln. Remedy Company, ChicneoTr N?w V.",- monev booklet , MISS MARIA DUCHARME. Every womanin America in Inter ested in This Young Gid's Experience. m mil OS? ' V .-a i-.w.ov.,v) l rfj-J'USSMWk DUCHAKI'lt. ..T'vant peal. can. . PELVIC CATARRH WAS . DESTROYING HER LIFE. PE-RU-NA SAVED HER. Miss Maria Ducharme, 182 St. Elizabeth street, Montreal, Can., writes: ' "I am satisfied that thousands of women, suffer because they do not realize how hint they really need treatment anil feel a. natural delicacy in consulting a pliysieian "I felt badly for years, had terrible pains,. . nd at times was unable to attend to niy" daily duties. I tried to cure myself, but. finally my attcntion.was caused to an ad vertisement of 1'eruna in a similar case to mine, and I decided to give it a trial. " li imrorciucitt betan a suun as I stai tad I o nne 1'erumi and soon. I wan a well woman. 1 j eel that I mew my life and my health tn your icon derful medicine and gratefully ar knnwledye this act." Maria ltuch arme. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Ilartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio, for free medical advice. All correspondence strictly confidential. and more 'i WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio, weil'.nd 1 st.v vrell u-m JJSTSi'S Mil SL lit flu hi If I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers