SADIE ROBINSON Pretty Girl Suffered From Nerv- ousness and Pelvie Caotarri--- Found Quick Relief in a Few Days. PAID PENALTY FOR HASTE. Messenger Boy's Speed Resulted Spectacular Tumble. district messenger boy big office bullding on and to the amazement of pass. , began to run. He hal not gone when his foot caught in gome ob struction end he fell. It wrdinary fall. It was a plcturesque, acrobatic performance. He lamded on with hands and legs out In A emerged Nassau was not the NERVOUSNESS AND WEAKNESS CURED BY PE-RU-NA. Miss llohinson, 4 \ Halden, Sadie Rand street, Miss, Peruna ’ year troubles pecu roeex, that all that f this medi { am pleased to endorse it true, & ‘oe it about seven nmended to me about remedy for the we 1 ine VAR Teo An eX ar t Wis sa Ago ax lent found Ws ancl “1 be an wa months ago for we tknes< and nerve ousness, caused from overwork and sleeplessness, and jound ‘hat in a Jew days I began to grow sirong, my appetite increased and 1 began to sleep betler, consequently my nerv- ousness passed away and he weak- ness in the pelvic organs scon dis- appeared and I have been well and strong ever since.’ Dr. 8. B. Hartm President of The Hartman Sanitanum, Columbus, 0., for free medical advice. All corres pondence strictly confid Address Lesson of Memorial Day. it is that on one dz year the hig soldier sl} people. service Public go to private good many Americans were all that they had to-day ought at least to t willing t forego mere personal advantage it can only be won at the expense of the land which we all This is the lesson of Memorial and it is one that we greatly learn, well ould Love wher Tame Ruffled Out of two hatched of Worcester ed and are in =apite raised in and have like fruit and they will jon of tame last hen Their Sufferings Are Usually Due to Uterine Disorders Perhaps Unsuspected A MEDICINE THAT CURES lispute wn arican ner are ften do we expres. “1 am so ner. itmecms as if uld fly; ¥ qr, n't speak to me.” Little things annoy and ‘make you irritable; vou can’t sleep, | you are unable to quietly and calmly | perform your daily tasks or care for | your children. } The relation of the nerves and gen- erative organs in women is so close that nine-tenths of the nervous pros- | tration, nervous debility, the blues sleeplessness and nervous irritability arise from some derangement of the | organism which makes her a woman Fits of depression or restlessness and irritability. Spirits easily affected, so that one minute she laughs, the next minute weeps. Pain in the ovaries and between the shoulders. Loss of voice; l nervous dyspepsia. A tendency to ery | at the least provocation. All this points | to nervous prostration, ; Nothing will relieve this distressing eondition and prevent months of pros. tration and suffering so surely as Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Mrs. M. E. Shotwell, of 103 Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.. writes: “1 cannot express the wonderful relief 1 have experienced by taking Lydia E. Pink. ham's Vegetable Compound. | suffered fdr " time with nervous prostration, back- ache, headache, loss of appetite. I could not sleep and would walk the floor almost ovary night. three doctors and got no better, and life was a burden. [ was advised to Lydia E. Pinkhaun's Vegatable Com and it has worked wonders for me, “1 am a well woman, my nervousness is all gone and my friends say I look ten years younger.” Will not the volumes of letters from women made uttong by Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound convince all women of its virtues? Surely you esanot wish to remain sick and weak and discouraged, exhausted each day, y he VOus I sh ‘1 you when you can bo as easily cured as other : the on at Cedar , where the sudden drop of mer when he ROing or two, It had just stopped raining and was slippery. In addi st rant gtrog cury took 80 struck 3 place, the roadway gan fashion, for a foot hands and feet being When the headway ted, the messenger and sadly His uniform was a finishe 8 i from the nds of b 5 3 tobog his brakes he Kept on 150d was arose natty iy is a1 collar to There iis hands and a ' trousers was 80: bark ofl gash in seemed to open protest against one mouth ment “That gaid to such what get fer boy sad as convenient hallway to cleanse hi with a “latest edition” hande by a sympathetic observer I the ly, he d to Making the Garden Pay. “This garden has a utheast posure,” sald Uncle Bob, “which is I shall have all of the of vegetables running north and that they will get the full b of the sun I am going to divid with a path running each way convenience, and [ shall enltivate tirely with hand tools. 1 rely ularly upon my combined double single wheel hoe, hill and drill see which saves me many an hour back-breaking, hard uncomforta ble work during the ex the bast rows 50 ol and summer “Lettuce and radishes may be sowed of garden nterfering with fail to the odd corners th other 8 crops come garden in mas places Yacancies Hid His Money in the Oven. Bu J of Pine irgess Jot Pa., his before no clr i Cre Wid teed the Dominio 1 ndigestion lly consisting of of seems to 11 IgPsT After dinner and other following bh breakfast would wear aways, only to re turn, however, next morning SY anions finally concluded to give it a I quit the nse of oatmeal and eggs made my breakfasts of Grap cream, toast and Posium. The 1 was surprising in improved health total absence of the dist # slr we that for so long a time, followed the ing meal. once more satisfactory ceased, and the old feeling gy returned. RBince that time, four years ago, I have always had Grape-Nutls food on my breakfast tabie. “I was delighted to ficd also, that whereas before 1 began to use Grane. m My digest became headn of 1h ti He Re came easily wearvied in the work preparing sermons and in study, a marked improvement (n this respect ro. sulted from the change in wy diet. 1 am convinced that Grape-Nuts food produced this result and heiped me to a sturdy condition of mental and physical strength, “I lave known several persons whe were formerly troubled as IT was, and who have been helped ns | have been, by the nse of Grapoe-Nuts food, on my recommendation, among whom may be sionary to Chinn.” Name given by Postum Company, Battle Creek, Mich, “There's a reason.” Read the little book, “The Road fo Wellville,” in cach nkg. CROSS-BREEDING SHEEP, George F. Thompson of the Depart ment of Agriculture in a recent inter- refers the matter of cross breeding encouraged by the Depart for the purpose of producing a breed more fully developed for fleece and The best such at cattle cross-breeding as Here is what bject to combined, upon Just mutton breeders look mistakes, as that to disaster as 1 . Know a rule leads Mr. Thomps “During ep w yn 84ys on the su America ’ Or the early jays in bred primarily the wool, and during recent years we have annually in addition $25,000,000 to $£20,000,000 worth been from importing i is are in tremely formance lificult to acquire ize and weight roadster, coacher saddler is by far difficult horse to produce that the market calls for. In addition to careful plans of breeding and high individual excellence in the resulting of handling, man- must be pursued figure a real facts i a gcarce, and because much breeding than The high-class per- more style or the most progeny, a course and training bef the horge will ly marketable animal must be thoroughly man we nering ire as These inderstood breed i market TESTING of (OWS The chief value makin of wool. But the wool Indeastry in this country a8 Come 1 he re | point he to raise There | pay alone } has, fort that an combination flocks on and therefore, been to ood breed in Ret would the Li i at | | iarge i { @ 48 80H range, furnish a fleece, the same time be a good mutton sheep, | I'bis has been a work of great diffi-| uity, and no Means vet accom- | plished lowa experiment sta has had Dr. J. W. Kenedy work- the breeding problem for sev Meri. and is by TY ine tion years, experimenting with nos for ol, and Southdowns 3 Shropshire 14 3, othe ' to date experiments pro- tive of any new fixed breeds which | would racteris up have not been have the dedired ct? and trans them progeny. the themselves to ti unchanged to The result ia that the onat stil! confining | eo English broods of which great | western Mex! ft | thotr Keil farmers of are iowna an are vy =f ye £41 sit fh * meat produce 111 he ranch depends on the oid can sheep which descendant the fine Spaniar the breeding Is game lines is found along the at the with perhaps suf ntermed UATenesEs BORAON grouped in relieve any The next and groups might addit on horders with mal trees rnamental pur garden need no lawn for pores flower Meanwhile ng devel simon ty ypinen with always somy that have too ordi rubs not heap qui k-gr invariably and are shor name worthy AKS and A increase will only the especially will never bring rare plants w in your place wonderful 4 beautiful things as the Yellow Wood, Gingko, Sophora and Japaneae trea are not difficult they are not common. unused piece of swampy grounds could t made beautiful planting in it some flags and Japanese Iris, Mallows, Lythrums, Coreopsis, and even many swamp-loving shrubs like the common elderberry White Fringe and Swamp Magnolia. The much improved by a clinging vine. The fence along the front of | your property could have a few vines trees ba regret 4 oe reainy wt oir ov Varnish ob yet An yr by very laced at some of the posts —8. Men- | delson Meehan, in Massachusetts Ploughman. FAILURES IN BREEDING HORSES. | Failures of course must occur in any business when careful attention | to details are not given. In horse | Mr. G. | of the | the domands of the market. M. Rommel, of the Department Agriculture, says to stand at auction market and note the horses that do not sell for prices to] them. predominates, if any breeding at all | Ak the dealer what | “Trotting and coach blood.” This Is | not because draft blood is more valu able, or that the blood of the light breeds is not wanted, for ithe great cry of the market at present is that recor 4 quantity and quali y afforded as to are paving keep expenditure reauires quis time is argument fact. that the ita time spent in be well adoption mais tegls hy the repaid ustrated testing is results of cows The and in Was At the close of the found th; the means paid ieep, 36 312.08, and $3.60 re sped the above 1! COWS had dispensed with ginning of the of the herd and the Would have obtained in the Cor Sta- wenty to year COWS the at netic of t i wi decided herd consisted COWS, 1589 it them it Ly i048 Was no 19 ie § 4 being tively hree been at the be total been of year tle profits ater, COWS ner would and been fave gra gr the Rome care room saved cannot afford to i BONS say they sell COWS, as good hard ® » good animals for t} ones »il ex pact LEH Mey can ig INeR afford to at the annot af previou water Te wi Spani Hie, fissolved which hy it e, with with water the poaking hanging over a ngin slo small kett] in a large Add 5 gallons mixture stand a It must Water io stir and ¢ § Py rom i few days ETO roase ily p on ENSI ER ng to AGE Fl ITT | iz comir i jtiir claim of men ens! tor-making and At the Ver 18 rondensing pur lairy meeting, an “expert” read paper und against ng ensilage, stating that fine but. could not be made from it. Af he scored the butter g canvass the winners showed that the high butter in every class wag COWS The “An expert the butter at flavor, call Upon ques MIAO R (AaRing strong gry "i ux est scori made from silage-fed same aunthority says: from Boston in scoring a Maine State dairy in ing it ‘ensilage flavor.’ tioning those who made the butter, it was found that not in a single case were the cows silage-fed. When confronted with this fact the expert said he knew nothing about feeding but did know that the flavor noted was what the market called “ensil Vanity and Elevators. The buliding inapector’'s office Is opposed to the mirrorlined elevators of the city, but no action has been code forbids in the of looking glasses elevator Deputy Bullding Inspector Fongee “They are usually placed at such an angle that a woman stepping up to one blocks the passageway,” sald he. “Often she will forget that a this way. Not only women but men are attracted by mirrors and are in. safety." Cleveland Despateh to Chi: cago Tribune. IN FSA By a recent census the population of Rome, former mistress of the world, is 506 840, This year Tasmania will export i 800,000 bushel! cases of apples. SHORT BKIRT AND ELBOW SLEEVE. Widely varying are the frocks; and juet as | styles are the materials In | those sames are be made up, says Newark Advertiser A glance backward at dressmakers were preparing time last year shows what a revoiu tion fashion has been going on right before our eyes, and which some of us have hardly realized even if we have noticed it. First of all the thease are really the I a frock and a photograph unerringly last year's unwielding wrist puff has vapished a thing for which one ought to be devoutly thankful newest thing in arm coverings smartest when they are shortest more abbreviated better style they Butterfly latest caprices of fashion 4 various as the which modes Lo the of one gleeves—for points which date is or The are thelr career are. sleeves among 1 They are just full puffs deeply shi nr plait éd Into the armsize, with a length- wise shirring featherbone cords right on arm, and little cording tacked to wut the material in Needless to add tha: above the ‘ade of lace frills wends its foamy iown ti Arm as A delightful style toon k y ty rock on pI are he rred done over the loops center of the of ih elbow, and a perfect mousaseline or chiffon Just far becoming for the short i or way as 168 may be gleaved ally Swiss, sulted to rgandies Jatisle i¢ chine fro« n even thelr the ombrel rovered agair than at first FABRICS FAVORE! air § AIH vainera: f have effects in AcClurers new arly hecked tints have t! there light shades tical and daints The checked and white, 11} white, etc Paris for ing frocks of bolero and plai skirt and nothing cou be for a summer moraing than of these | able stuffs, made sleeves, slashed up the outside untrimmed save for a flat collar {antique embroidered batisie and lace | A sheer lingeries must be | worn with the costume and a soft leather belt of the color appearing in | the check. The volle is delightfully | cool and wears well, and though fane vers CRIN riwaist or persuas! more walking lainty with sconomis one vat short loose blouse { than in darker shades | shake off dust very well | cleanses perfectly when it really | solled.~Philadeiphia Telegraph POSE AND POISE Figure is one thing, remember, and | | carrfage another. You may have a good figure without a good carriage | {and vice versa. Some one has called | | carriage the technique of the figure. See to it that your form acquires that | technique. 3 An odd compliment came to my | ears the other day. “That gir the best figure | ever saw for a girl | who hasn't any,” remarked a shrewd | woman of the world. The bull souna. ed a droll one, but upon a glance at its surfaco is ident what she meant. of consumption, dhd already she was spot on each cheek a worry sight for she had succumbed to the kness and KAISER pieazant German Recently emperor ¢ visited Saabruc Princess Louise cantime VEY io yK wil hunted in conceal the would do admirably Ltin- ane ®Ome and has 0 prove a boon to fo in Bras who thing vain wire for ile giver hats from gunmetal to shimmery stiver. Velvet, of course, may ised, but heavy for midsummer while silk is nothing so effective. For many other colors tulle, exactly to mated, forms the most effective inoffensive wire covering.--Iindiasapolis News he is FASHION HINTS Tiny rosebuds. made of Brussels lace, trim the yoke of an exquisite French blouse, and, in some way harmonize perfectly with the Valen ciennes lace that outlines the yoke. Coat collar and cuff seix are hav. a furore-—every other girl is wearing them. But there are sets quisitely embroidered ones looking vastly out of the class of the plain linen ones. Some of the collar and cuff sots are really lingerie sets and are meant to be worn with linen instead of cloth suits, A rose, sel in the center of tight, full cluster of heliotrope or forget-mes the side of those tiny toques that Is Most of the cloth dresses seen. of tallor-made styles, are made very tight over the hips.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers