Nursing Mothers and Over-burdened Women In all stations of life, whose vigor and vitality may have been undermined and broken - down by over - work, exacting social duties, the too frequent bearing of ldren, or other causes, will find in Dr. erce's Favorite Prescription the mosé tent, invigorating restorative strength ver ever devised for thelr special bone t. Nursinggnothers w y valuable Ih sustaining and promotingan akundant the child. will find it a priceless system for baby's coming and re e ordeal comparatively painless. state, or condi @ system. plicate, nervous, weak women, who suffer from frequent headaches, back- , ache, dragging-down distress low down in the abdomen, or from painful or irreg- ular monthly periods, gnawing or dis- tressed sensation in stomach, dizzy or faint spells, see imaginary specks or spots floating before eyes, have disagreeable, pelvic catarrhal drain, prolapsus, ante- version or retro-version or other displace- ments of womanly organs from weakness of parts will, whether they experience many or only a few of the above symp~ toms, find relief and a permanent cure by using faithfully and fairly persistently Dr. Pierce's Favorite Preseription. This world-famed specific for woman's weaknesses and peculiar ailments is a pure glyceric extract of the choicest na- tive, medicinal roots without a drop of alcohol in its make-up. All its ingredi- ents printed in plain English on its bottle- wrapper and attested under oath. Dr, Pierce thus invites the fullest investiga- tion of his formula knowing that it will ba found to contain only the best agents known to the most advanced medical seience of all the different schools of prac- tice for the cure of woman's peculiar weaknesses and aliments, If you want to know more about the composition and professional endorse- ment of the "Favorite Prescription,” send tal card request to Dr. R. V. Pierce, uffalo, N. Y., for his free booklet treat- ing of same. You can't afford to accept as a substi- a secret nostrum of unknown compost tion. Don't do It. Autos Spread Glanders. of automobiling in Great Britain ls of glanders among horses in the country. The accusation was brought at a meeting of the Central Associat- reporter of the cattle diseases com- mittee said that glanders was form- erly almost entire confined to London Stare or Omo, Crry or Torzpo,| Lucas Couwry. { Feawx J, Caexey makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cuxxxy & Oo., doing buciness in the City of Toledo County and State aforesaid, and that sal firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL- Ans for each and every case of cATARRE that cannot bs cursad by the use of Harv's OCaranzu Cun. maxx J. Onewxr. Sworn to before me and subseribed in my ~ie presence, this 6th day of Decam- i SEAL. { aD, 1886. A. W.Grmasox, a Notary Public Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and astadirectly on the blood aad mucous sur- faces of thesystem. Send for testimonials, free. F.J. Cuzxzy & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all Drugeists, 75. Hall's Family Pills are the best. ss, Tom's Last Fire Run, Tom, the night horse of engine No. 39, which has quarters in the Fire Headquarters Building in East Bixty-seventh Street, died in harness an Wednesday night, after twenty years of faithful service to the city ite was a roan and was of powerful suild. He loved the service, and even In his old age he was as quick to take hiz place in front of the engine at the sound of the gong as either of the two younger horses that pulled the machine with him it was this enthusiasm that caused his death at the end of a run to a fire Tom was the first to get under the drop harness when the alarm sound ed. The metal collar dropped to the floor before the animal was ready to receive it. One of the crew sprang forward to pick it up, but Tom put down his head, poked his nose under the collar, and threw it over his neck, and the fireman snapped it in place The alarm called the company Eighty-second Street and East End Avenue, Jack Leamy, the driver, gent off the aparatus with a rattle and a warning toot of the whistle. . Tom acted as though he knew that Fire Commissioner Lantry was thinking about retiring him for a younger horse, The fire commissioner had fearned of the horse's long service. Tom kept his nose just a little in advance of Jerry B. and Bull, up Third Avenue, up at the hydrant. At is stopped, old Tom gave a lurch and dropped to the ground. One of the crew went to help kim to his feet, but he was dead. New York Sun. POSTUM CEREAL CO., LTD. Guarantee On Their Products. We warrant and guarantee that all packages of Postum Cereal, Grape- Nuts and Elijah’'s Manna hereafter sold by any jobber or retaller, com- ply with the provisions of the Na- tional Pure Food Law, and are not and shall not be adulterated or mis- branded within the meaning of “sald Act of Congress approved June 30, 1906, and entitled, “An act for pre- venting the manufacture, sale or transportation of adulterated or mis- branded or poisonous or deleterious foods, drugs, medicines, liquors, and for regulating trafic therein for other purposes.’ Posrom Cerear. Co., Lap. C. W. Posy, Chairman, Battle Creek, Mich. Dec. 12, 1906. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 16th day of December, 19086. Bexsavix F. Rem, Notary Publle, My commission expires July 1, 1907. Our goods are pure, they always have been and always will be, they are not mis-branded. We have al- ways since the beginning of our busl- ness, printed a truthful statement on the package of the ingredients con- tained therein and we stand back of every package. SHREP ON SMALL FARMS. Sheep are now the most profitable stock a farmer can keep. A good ewe will produce herself and will yleld more than enough wool to pay for her keep. Besides this, sheep are valu able in cleaning up the rough spots on a farm and keeping® down the weeds that horses and cows will not touch, The statement is made that of six hundred plants common to a section of lowa the sheep eats five hundred and fifty, against eighty-two for the horse and fiftysix for cattle. In many places the farms are sald to he “sheep hungry'--that is, they need just this kind of grazing to keep the foul stuff down. It is comparatively easy to care for sheep. There is little to do in feed- ing them, and no stable to clean. This does not mean, however, that they need no care at all, but with a sheep- tight pasture fence they will do well with Jess attention than any other farm stock, There is a present tendency to un- dertake sheep culture more generally upon small farms, A company with large capital has been recently or ganized, which will let out flocks to the New England farmers to keep on shares, and a similar movement is taking place in other sections of the country. Sheep are high in price now, and the likelihood is that they will re main so, as the demand for mutton and lamb has grown enormously with. iz the past few years. The sales for marketing purposes Chicago for one recently more than double those week of six years ago. however, begin with a few breeding ewes, and by the time his flock has reached the size he wishes he will be experienced in caring for them. Bwes years old are the best age to purchase in starting. Younger than that they should not bred. The teeth indicate their age; ings have one of broad teeth: two-vear-oids, two in week were three be pair {front For strong, healthy lambs the should be In physical condition when bred ram possible to good for building that four pairs Rox The ewes best blooded mpne flock LOO lambing time where they wind, They should plenty of room and air water, Their quarters and pasture shoald be dry underfoot. Clover hay with some oats make good feed them.—The Circle, except at in a shed from the MILK AND CREAM FOR MARKET Our dairy consists of pure bred Jer- use our best endeavors from filth. The and sawdust for bed. are in constant The man- into the basement di- underneath, on which swine Ld prevent heating The stable is well lighted and ven- lated. and our cows have always heon from disease We have never lost one except from accident, dehorned {re and we them brush 8OVS, X MY to keep and free HE" droppeq re Kept to Pog iree and since they have been acciaents quent We 11 a m., ¥ 10 are very much less water but once a day, at several tods away at a intain that seldom freezes, supplied from a warm spring of pre running water except watered in the barn from they a deep wel are the and the exercise ng and morning after milking. In afteg we cold, they ap We feed « fara evening the milking, feed after grain results, ¥ or hungarian yal satisfactory sve ample time to masticate same the and digest the We still yse deep setting fo aizsing oream and if butter fat on Sour hours, thers will be We ao skimmilh n' trial that there is selling milk at five at twent } at twenty five of Lutte fat, We the more cents per all being taken from the arp round, hundred, with other according animal, inch rod hoops and mea $1.75 proved YER hrands to quirements of “he one-half inchas jong, with each end to drop over the stanchion, a opisco of chain on top of iepgth with rings between links, and piece on the lower out rigs with 4 snap in the end for fastening, ana mads correspond with size of animal to be tied. | hsvo gtallz for two, ons tied on each side, with partings hHetween, With sach chains they cannot sunlest each oth FE. Chadbourns, Cumberland Me Wi rings i another Oo OF £ fC ominty, ; CLEAN COWS There 12 a man in one of the East ern States, who passes among his neighbors as a “good” farmer, whose cows always appear in fine condition when they go to pasture. He keeps acm during the winter in a dark stable with low ceiling and no venti. tion, and they are usually too flithy for description, but just before “turn ing out” he has his boys @o over them with the horse clippers and re. mave everything except the bide He Las a secret idea that he has “fooled” i Dis oeghbors, but if he would have the bows groom his stock every day and keep them in sanitary quarters, he would learn that he has deceived himself more than any one else, This 1s an extreme case, but there are many farmers who do not appre- ciate how much good it does the cows and how much good it will do them: selves to keep them clean. It has been demonstrated over and over again that grooming increases the flow of milk. It keeps the cow in bet tar health and she does hetter work, and her milk will be purer and richer, Cows do no: at the start, take kindly to the operation if a curry comb or a stiff brush is used, but by beginning gently they soon come to enjoy it, and will repay the cost of the effort in more ways than one Cleanliness is essential to the high est efficiency of man or beast. The best work is not possible where vital ity is diminished by air or foal pores any more than a4 machine can do good work with bearings gummed with oil and clogged with grit Fastidious care of cows adds fit to the dalry, and any business comes more pleasant when it is fitable.—~—The Circle. foul pro he. pro THE BEST EGG PRODUCER First, we must mind that health is the foundation laylog, and that exercise is the guarantee of a healthy condition, These facts simplify the matter, for it brings it within the reach of all to have healthy, and laying fowls with out physic and without any expense to speak of A orated frame movable posts an equa! distance floor aad, with a slats a half | to be about ir by right for fifteen or twenty should be placed bear in for two feet on HEY from the ground or glatted bottom, the ineh frame is about fowls. It deep elevate It BO 0 an apart, the fon six feet, under a shed with a base-board a foot and a half high, on the open shed front. The floor should be earthen and dug up loosely to a depth of three to inches and thoroughly littered with and straw Then the frame mentioned should be filled half way up with the same kind of and stood In center Within this grain for the od and turn should have follow four leaves material shed the the of the elevated crate all chickens should he scatte i od feyed with a ar ‘he top re main open for the birds to free The goon icarn to to the shed and to trash in the crate and Of course, a gifts ACCeSs the feede the pounce iin on Tn | make of things fly the grain itaves por through down trash below willing tion and they are below | among the and in workers ghort time after it down also It makes a kind of self feeder which keeps the hems at most of ‘he day and keeps them toned up to a | high pitch of and activity dispelling ».i and listless i ness, There is nothing sold name of “Eg3 this arrangemont 25 =» laying. It keeps the hens in soon brings the pullet: to i—H. B werk CAROIness lethargy under the that equals stimulus 0 and nest Produces tone the (jeer i FOUL BROOD IN BEES | Foul brood is the most contagious | and fatal disease that are sub | ject and is sure to spread | immediately stamped out, not only to { all other on the plage, but to | those on neighboring farms. The best this season is not to try 0 | cure it Hut dig a pit and at nignt | build a fire in the pit and drimnstone the bees of all diseased colonies Do { not let a single bee escape and con heeds to uniess boes plan at | sign all bees, combs and honey to the | pit and after they are burned, shovel the Alrt no hee from the hives got any of the in { back { healths { fected honey, | start the disease in A common mistake careless beekeepers is to become weak {rom the disease healthy colonies oat the and earry the disease to all of his and his neighbor's bees and cause the de struction of all. It is hard, even for an expert to cure foul brood and it ia useless for any one not fully acquaint | ed with it to try to cure it, a8 by so | dofreg he will only destroy his healthy Many competent beekeepers their empty combs under the yrood nests and let them remain till S00 aan as one drop of it will other hives ignorant or colony and honey i i of let a rob bees | put in some shed or out If the combs are stacked till spring { and i house the moth will be destroyed and { ture use.~—The Epitomist, TO BREAK COLTS. Firat teach them to lead by tying them at the side when driving the mother When a year or eighteen menths old, put the harness on while standing in the stable, allowing the traces to reach almost and dangle about their heels a few hours each day before hitching them up. Then hitch them to a small drag. then to a large one until they know they have to pull a pretty good load. Afterwards hitch them by am old steady horse and they will readily ly broker to work both single and double at the same time 1 known very fractious colts made good quiet work horses by this treatment. Welltrained Spanish women [ears to handle the sword from their earl est year, and as & result they have admirable figures and an easy walk a. degrees warmer than the surrounding air. HS SA SOO The Wonder By Professor R. K. Duncan. HE commonest thing in the every-day vegetable world is cellulose the material of which are made the cell walls of every plant, which one-third of plant life on the globe, is capable, like gold and of resisting the efforts of When pure, it neither but endure through all generations, Yet, common as it is one of 1ae least understood of substances, and its greatest wonder Iz the fact that every tiny chip of knowledge we have Leen able to extract from It has led to the establishment of some new industry, and has added enormously to th: resources of mankind Linen is almost pure cellulose, and so is cotion, and so is silk; the chemical to same. thelr structure ig very their qualities vary structure. The paper on which Is printed is made and this would be true linen or cottor or can be extracted either or chear ically from the wood cellulose is gO Or as as cotton celiuloze The chemist distinguish w lies, yet a fortune awaits the man how to good as the other, The entire cotion were a :nastered thet even a simple to enormons changes which is pure Cellulose, makes un ihe silver, time, Isis nor decays, can is, it yet although different The Companion whether It werd sh anierall meciasnitcaii substances are and with from wood-pulp paper It Wood cannot who can discover the 11 cellulose not as nerein the the one mane industry is based upon celinjoge, and do connection with ence: vet so little we know about it can still discovered that pollution discovery in John Mercer celluloge, be i in a cellulose unites water, cotton fifts cent tronger. and it has under tension cannot silk. A goods Liven, cellulose, © of weeds muster the Cellu will dissovie in a h sticky sir When forced throug cipitates a fine threaa gs descent jamp Papo ized fil Dissoived renders place rong with the per greate] 80 i great industry ha jute and wo l dozen or a ned srore of plant hich ave lear of equa thelr ch nnonent an wWwret of ef of Ww naon wi oaked goods dipped in bullet-proof ch Bi solved nitric acid, i slightly different treatment it One of the nawes! i of artificial bon «isulphid in threads which the spinning and per's Magazine gheats in the silk fron Force &F A Women’s Co-operative Store By Velina Swanston Howard. or Lae Fred the Woman Oa Apri cad, Was shout $6. 000 went y in a side to hau The Wife of a Brilliant Husband By Mary Stewart Cutting - A no & ef a » when she ent new jet is a She can to the home when with him. defiantly, with way!" i and aciousl at is the let he people tions, gets he and srong thing and that bey fooks and talks ilxe he knows it NO one Can iif b precept but and magazines of tae article may sometimes call ont a real about it -—Harper's Bazar © &F Japanese Morality. By J. Ingram Bryan, M, A, M. Litt, Professor ot English in the Imperial College of Commerce, Nagasali, APANEEE influence in China, and the statement is The average Japanese who has any betweon religion and another, scant message for the twenlieth of Japan is Ancestor Worship—a reverence for, and service ol departed ones whose spirita are believed ever to pour mighty forces into the life of today To a large number of the more in telligent Japanese, this creod is no more satisfying to the spiritual natn whan the anniversary of a funeral would be to us, ana as for the masses they are slaves to the most blood-eardling superstitions, amounting in man} casas to a worship of demons. In a very able article in the “Shin Jin” (New Man). Mr. Ebina contends that notwithstanding its philosophical excellence level smile, or 3 know sydd! joeq hat } tala he be fitted either one's mind can day and talking learn & observers assert that at present of Japan the differen that Buddhism hase century. ¢till more true conception of one feels AANNY © rtd a Tl NX Paty religion NN a MANLNN The real thet anity. and that influence has conspicuously followed the flag into Formosa, Kore: and Manchuria. and fillal plety, are consecrated by the social service of a pure and nobh in statesmanship, but in religion and morality, as sho continues so, she will ® lack one of the most essential requisites of as sured CUOCess, must prove a potent factor. greateat menace to her advance, — SL A - I. ha I SSI In the Tyrolean mountains two The Tartars regard onions, leeks Dr. Emil Reich's theory of balaness is that it is due to the stifling of the imagination your imagination, and vou need never use hair-restorer The London remarks that it certainly is that one {ne {iiohe sizaificant never sees a bhald-headed policeman giving evidence in a speed limit caze burglars were captured the other day who had made a specialty of breaking into the Alpine refuge huts and steal ing the provisions and wines stored there, Tartar will rub a piece of freshly cut onion on her hands and over her countenance to enhance her attrac. tons, The comme cans is and European {ear of the ultimate suprem acy thi expression if Italian w» ma ang 11 relal prowess of Amer! recognized the genera of Cont disclosed by ar Prof Gustav Coen, an Rivista Maritti SBimpion tunne riter Speaking future Husiness Bay i8ieg quick 10 a« enorte war Det ween mus? t school que chool q Japan only for # still too exhausted with Russia Bn Japanese interests a] that he offoris of the two Govern CppoRite of rights Americar femands i nited the Zeitung, mus developments alleged discovery in Potte: Pennsylvania, of & parasite that destroys the Colorado beetle bane of every potato raiser, has been heralded with satisfaction by all the farmers of that section Time wae when the potato crops of the northern tier of counties were the most import ant raised. The soll was particularily adapted to the tuber hen came the Colorado beetle and the fight has been so strenuous that attention has devoted to other crops The potato-raising farmer of the presem day in that vicinity sets aside even year a certain portion of his income to buy paris green the same as for timothy, clover and other seeds. {f the State Zoologist finds a way of pro pagating the destroyer it may eng the ceaseless warfare which potato-raisers throughout the United States have waged for more than a quarter of a century County, 3 we been One of the reasons for the succonss of American products abroad may be found, declares The Circle, in the re port of Consul Rufus Fleming, of Edinburgh. He says: “For many years American lawnmowers have been sold jargely in this part of Scot- land. Soon after their introduction they gained a reputation for excellent work, lightness, and durability, which has been steadily enchanced by the experience Gf an increasing number of purchazers, A dealer informs me that on the polnt of durability the Ameri oan lawnmower has a remarkable record.” The American-made machine is maintaining its supremacy, altho a cheaper mower of Scotch manufac ture is on the market,