e Mrs. Tupman, a prominent lady of Richmond, Va, a great sufferer with woman's troubles, tells of (her cure by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. “Dear Mrs. Pixgnay: — For some years I suffered with backache, severe bearing-down pains, leucorrheea, and falling of the womb. tried many remedies, but nothing gave any positive relief. “I commenced taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound in June, 1901. When I had taken the first half bottle, I felt a vast im- rovement, and have now taken ten bottles with the result that I feel ike a new woman. When I commenced taking the Vegetable Com- pound I felt all worn out and was fast approaching complete nervous collapse. 1 weighed only 98 pounds. Now I weigh 1093 pounds and am improving every day. I gladly testify to the benefits received.”— Mrs. R. C. TupmaxN, 423 West 30th St, Richmond, Va. When a medicine has been successful in more than a million cases, is it justice to yourself to say, without trying it, “I do not believe it would help me” ? Surely you cannot wish to remain weak and sick and discour- aged, exhausted with each day's work. You have some derange- ment of the feminine organism, and Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound will help you just as surely as it has others. Mrs. W. H. Pelham, Jr., 108 E. Baker St.,, Richmond, Va., says: “Dear Mrs. Prxxuax :—I must say that I do not believe there isany female medicine to compare with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound, and I return to you my heartfelt thanks for what your medicine has done for me. Before taking the Vegetable Compound I was so badly off that I thought I could not live muc longer. The little work I had to do was a burden to me. I suffered with irregular menstruation and leucorrheea, which caused an irritation of the parts. 1 looked like one who had consumption, but I do not look like that now, and I owe it all to your wonder- ful medicine. “1 took only six bottles, but it has ma me feel like a new person. I thank God that there is such a female helper as you.” sa - \ Be it, therefore, believed by all women who are ill that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the medicine they should take. It has stood the test of time, and it has hundreds of thousands of cures to its credit. Women should consider it unwise to use any other medicine. Mrs. Pinkham, whose address is Lynn, Mass, will answer cheer- fully and without cost all letters addressed to her by sick women. Perhaps she has just the knowledge that will help your case — try her to-day — it costs nothing. $5000 FORFEIT if we cannot forthwith produce the original letters and signatures of above testimonials, which will prove their absolute genuineness Lydia E. Pinkbam Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. An Unimportant Employe. “You have been with that firm a long " said an old school nswered together as and the | HOSSOmM und the ! ander ! forces and sympath develop f human ripen Ss ye employe Jut what's your “1 haven't any of is. When the thmg done he tells the ¢ ashier tells the bookl bookkeeper tells keeper, and the tells the chief clerk, an telly me.” ‘Amd what then?” “Well, I haven't anybody to tell, have to go and do it.” { legs crippled by rheumatism, lumbago, sc rec rt i atica, or neuralgia; hawking, spitting, nose ie WET WEATHER HATS bleeding, ringing in the ears, sick stomach, iy CURES RHEUMATISM th AND CATARRH E.B,. B. Cures Deep-Seated Cases Especial. Iy=To Frove It B. B, B, Sent Free. with aches and pains in back, agonizing pains in so 1 | shoulder blades, hands, fingers, arms and These diseases \ bones, joints and deafness, noises in the head, bad teeth thin hot blood, all run down feeling of catarrh are sure signs of an awful poisoned coadi- tion of the blood. Take Botanic Blood Balm. (B.B.B.) Soon all aches and pains stop, the poison is destroyed and a real permanent cure is made of the worst rheu- matism or foulest catarrh. Thousands of cases cured by taking B.B.B. It strength- ens weak kidneys and improves digestion. Druggista, $1 per large bottle. Sample free by writing Broop Batu Co, 14 Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advice sent in sealed letter. FREE CRE IS 81 IS AND HATS ol 38 An orange tree, in full bearing, has been known to produce 15,000 oranges, and a lemon tree 6000 lemons. ST AND ARD because able physicians declare thal it is the only absolute care for rheurnatism in its various forms, A prominent hysician recently said : “I have never been able to write a prescription that will cure rheumatism, owing to the fact that the usual reme- diea do incalculable harm to the digestive organs. RHEUMACIDE com- pletely overcomes this difficulty—benefits rather than injures the organs of digestion—hence it can be taken for an indefinite period, or as long as need be, to effect a permanent cure."’ The Doclor quoted covers the case exactly, ** Fheamacide ls absolutely havinless, Ail Druggists;, $1.00, or expressage prepaid. Bobbitt Chemical Co., » Baltimore Md4., U. S. A. Os A ER hae Hn ATH RT HO Feat Producing Flowers, snowbell of the plant about three bearing two pendant irmged white or violet bells on each | lower stalk. They may often be found { with the snow still firmly frozen round the and the question naturally {arises how did the blossoms, so much larger in circumference, make theirs { way through? Botanists tell us that { the plant forms its flowers buds under | the snow, and in the process of breath {Ing evolves so much heat that the en circling sn melted trickles down the round it fre Frequently AgaIn gradu ally a dome-shaped formed ound the process they continued The saldanella Alps is a dainty little {inches high, Or stem, and which Thus Cavity blossoms, and s till in many ucceed mm reac hing the A modified form of producing power m Ws stalk, ireczes the case uriace the same ay be noticed in the On a com r i Gl neat OX glove ly cool day, when little wind is stirring, a ther mometer inserted he bell-like lowers of a plant gr in a shady * will frequently a tempera 1 that parative PaTraiiy higher the ind even tarthn 0! "nt i pian are £511t Simple Safes and Inexpensive. and ty of the Po I'he trouble with an easy-going {ellos that i's 50 hard to get him started where bronchitis has become from want of proper treatment in in nothing so good 'nig's Hamburg Breast n with which ia strongly f St. Jace ys Onl as an out- ly ansials the other, and as intended, ey work in complete unison, The won lerful penetrating power of 8t. Jacobs Oil ¥ LO ies it to reach the a which rxion of foreign lines the bronchial tubes breathing more and As these adhesions become Jacobs (il break away, cuit and such adhesions enlarged, St to ion easier and more free, August Koenig's Hamburg Breast Tea, expeciorat slowly and very hot, soothes and cals the parts, is comforting and quieting, vagh i and This manner of stops the relieves the breathing treatment (and there is no her two remedies that will work together cessiully) and innde at Jacobs Oil reaches the roots of assists Dr. August Koe- Breast Tea in clearing them; then both remedies act in unison in healing and curing. The above remarks apply with equal force in cases of asthma, croup, whooping cough, enlarged tonsils and all bronchial affections. Every family hould have 8t. Jacobs Oil and Dr. August Loenig's Hamburg Breast Tea always in the house in order that they may be promptly used in the first stages. Often the maladies develop with wonderful ra pidity, and complications take place with equal suddenness. 80 #0 reaches the difficulty from utaide the the same me ot adhesion, and g's Hamburg The stations built originally along the Siberian Railway Lave already been $100 Reward. S100, The readers of this paper will be plansad ts earn that there is at least one dreaded dis. cane that selence has been able to sure in all Cure is the on the medics) Iv positive curs now known to raternity. Catarrh being a con. nal diseases, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's CatarerhCure is taken inter. nsily, acting directly upon the blood and mu. ous surfaces of the system. thereby destroy. ing the foundation of the disesed, and giving work. The propristors have so much faithin ite rurative powers that they offer One Hun. Send for list of testimonials, Address F. J. Cansey & Co., Toledo, 0. Fold by Drugeists, 750, Hall's Family Pills are the best, Delaware took its name from the river which fronts it, and this was named from Jad Delaware, who died off the coast in 1,000 Per Cent. Profit in Pocket, fTeartn Axp Prrasuns is paid by fresh, luscious, home grown Strawberries allowed to ripen thoroughly on the vines, We sell the Plants packed to carry fresh anywhere in the U8, Our160-page Manuai(freeto buyers) makes growing for pleasure or profit plain to all. Plantnow. Calalogue Strawberries, Asparagus eto, free, Conrinesrar Praxr Co, No. 12 Strawberry Heighta, , Kittrell, N, Q. Juse Tix Burren Coron makes top of the market butter, Connecticut has seven former Governors living. Massachusetts has but three, The chap who invents a flyin loean’t care about leaving any in the sands of time. Persona in Morocco are reaunired to pay the policeman who arrests them a fee of twenty-five cents, FIT narmanently ured, No fits or nervous. ness after rst day's nse of Dr, Kline's Great Nearvoloestorer, ¥2trial bottle and treatisefres Dr. RH, Kuise, Ltd, 931 Arch 8¢,, Phila, Pa. AR Sit Any fellow who uses his feet can walk with a measured tread. machine ootprints Mr. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forahildren teething soften the gums, reduces inflamma tion allays pain, sures wind colin. 2e. abottle be It's only natural that there should springs in the bed of a river. 1'iso’e Cure is the beat medicine wo ever nssd for nll affeations of throat and lungs, Wa, O. Exosiey, VanBuren, Ind., Feb, 10, 1000, Some wealthy men show their sharpness by eutting thew sons off, SILO ON A SHEEP rARM mm dairy farms, thought practical lairy cattle only, We have fed silage 0 sheep for six years, feeding it to all classes of animals, including breed. ing stock of both sexes and all ages and fattening lambs We have also fed it to all other kiuds of stock upon the farm ble for sheep as for cows. sconomical and bv many is or profitable It of harvesting and storing the corn crop, and the form in which stock will most nearly eat all of it When cut with a first class cut ter sheep leave one basket out of ten twelve, This will clean fed in too large quantities it takes of hay cally vield Is way " horaees if not and the place of an equal or dry fodder, that of the corn plant There ensilage about the sides practi all is made to iE nutriment is always spoiled 80 that there is but | harvesting : 8ii0, some Crop, ne other of know of method little I would that involves so : 108 not abandon « more storage {or advise any one to tear down or ribs, but wherever the corn crop is need advisable to build a is the cheapest which form in age can be made Eight acres the wan wil BEge Cor will fill I should not n average the corn « gilo as we feed from winter go not the tOCK are in and have during the s The most ghb RAMONE this problem One very of field i ETrOowes age of this method Z i Crop that seedling All that the corn Cron Fae follow the gen that would if It ing spring will prove a good facto farm management siloing conl Charcoal flowers at all Rowen fragra: then than color lastly brown unpleasant window, sometimes flowers profusion Cas propagat For a shaded i ch baltimore bel Thess ly and are hardy LE ut t wili vellow ed from cuttings prairie rose tennessee belle plant © FOReCS rapid mer blooming They are sum # bloom ol eat SO[RON extend for several should t Plant and 111 ANG iu as stand Weeks Peonies ies "er listurbed as little where they are to Rex begonia will ground The stroys the leaves with possible not thy open wind considerable i sun, it ize or you will destroy the the don’t touch the leaves with the {t can be grown from a ting stuck in sand Don’t trans till it has three leaves Verbena seed leven to f moisture and Don’t Don’t on no does well it leaves if sun shines loaf of its Of IRS or four germinates urteen days in Verbenag are sasily transplanted: apart: put where they will be shaded until the off in the morning if possible, will bloom frost, Geranium seed will spre=t a about two weeks and will continue to appear set fifteen inches dew is They seadlings will bloom in from Ivy geranium requires a in four months from seed -- TrIEAN WATER FOR SWINE. The value of clean water for swine sannot be appreciated by one who has aot tried both pure and impure drink. ing water with them. In swine raising we have come to realize that rapid growth on good, clean, sweet food pays much better than raising them slowly on filthy swill and garbage. The clover and hay fed hogs, toppad off with corn and skimmilk, pay better hy far than any of the swine raised in the pen where filth and mire make ip their environments and tain all their food. The hog may have a pretty good digestion, but It is possi Sle to injure it in time if we continue to feed it with bad food. That is practically what has been done for years past, and we have produced swine diseases, and what is probably ess important, slower growing hogs. T'o make the animals continue grow. ‘ng in a thrifty condition, we must {eed them good, wholesome food under proper sanitary surroundings. Now, water plays a most import ant part in the health of all animals, We must take a certaln amount of ilguid into the stomach to keep it in good condition. The modern clover. fed hog and cornfattened plg does not get as much liquid in his food as the old swill-fed animal, and it is necessary to supply the creature with | water to make up for the deficiency Clean water purifies the svstem washes out the stomach tending to { disintegrate and carry away the solid matter that may accumulate the | stomach Impure, filthy water clogs the system more and often causes in testinal irritation. The { parently drink filthy | readily as water {led some to think that it {tle whether | water trary fence, and in hog will water ap us has iit Just this mattered clean or dirty drinking was supplied fut it is to all teachings of sanitary and we have but to examine two filthy pure and con 801i { hogs raised on clean and to the difference, Ci pork are becoming year, and they car flavor water Bee nore of ciean { from E THE The generally dressing an ) by cooling too qi i undoubit« Merinos 1 ¥ heep by «ily tronger han Of mii induced f1 ing of Boot WE Of po 1 a4 Inrgs« ory ain makes the mes Lasts ing ade Th to both that foo mutton fed upo herbage there ars plants as a 11 £ Lag quality ' WOri lark {s black faced ; SUCCESS w John B and lime apple pea i with sulphur sprayed iW chards 1 and it wash 1 SE of Ben Davis aid sprave apples, 1 trees badly infested with Nearly the tres The 4] fie scale ov apple as ry was plastered with apples ook ed 1 smallpox § 3 14 5 » SDOLIed over ast vear arq the in March trees were sprayed when trees Our wash The lime and ne hour and k Wi boiled fifteen minut We mant was wa sulphar sger, b the ut It then added es longer in a hog scalder We put in sa made this wash One added fifty lime gallons and then slacked flowers fifty f water ana Wi any stone of pounds sulphur of salt fifty pounds then water when two more was then at ture to spray. We scalder all the time. out of 150-gallon boliing and barrels a nice tempera rept fire under We sprayed thie cask with » stirred well added of per day. Kept scalder re with more water all the time, but not until we had taken out the other. If you do not take out the material and go to make more, your lime will not slake, We were unable to find any scale except on about a hall dozen trees These were spots where the wash did not hit, and one tree that was only half sprayed. On this nearly every apple was covered with red spots, where the scale had the fruit, and the tree was completely plastered with live scales. Thi: ghowoed clearly that the work must be done thoroughly. Professor Smith has been to see me several times and has given me pointers about the wash for this orchard. We exacted to give the results of success or fallure te the public. Our peach orchards are almost entirely free from scale, so far as we are able to judge. They were badly infested The old orchard, In which we had such good results last year, was sprayed this spring, and it Is apparently free from scale. Professor Smith was sur prised to find such grand results from the wash. It is entirely safe to put on the most delicate ise or shrub while dormant.—U. P, Creely, in New England Homestead. barrels plenished co PA ——— i inmate News Happenings of Interest Gathered From All Sources. unt irove where ¢ { Post Snarks & Sons nds and $500 both the wrecked The d north into the will Ty fficers believe they haker, em- and Michael fought a “ness street a It Mussalier is . spital 3 Portalier 18s a fugitive. The tun men bad been to- gether during the day, and it is said they At night the hu { and koh om Hotel, en quickly drew stilet- tos and began to fight in deadly carnest on the street witnessed the encounter, but before anyone interfere Mussalier fell into the could slash across his face, a stab wonnd in the the ribs. When his victim ran into the crowd and below Portalier disanpeared. William Canary, a Civil War veteran, fet At the closing session of the Baptist Education Sociely at Greensburg these officers wore elected: President George Seatcherd, Philadelphia; corresponding secretary and general agent, Rev. Leroy Stephens, I). D.: recording secretary, Rev. J. G Walker, D. D.; treasurer, E. L. Tustin, Roy Olmstend, of Hired township, Warren county, is dead, the victim of a anning accident, Olmstead was train. ing his gun by hie side when the weapon was discharged, the charge of shot lodg- ing in hic hip. It took him two hours to drag himself home, where he lingered in ereat agonv until to-day,
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