Merman A SOCIAL LEADER OF KANSAS CITY Attridutes Her Excellent Health to Pe-ru-na. MRS. W. H, SIMMONS. W. H. SIMMONS, 1119 E. 8th Kansas City, Mo., member cf National Annuity Association, \ RS. a1 se, the Writes: “My health was excellen. until about a Joa ago, when | had a complete collapse ym overdoing socially, not getting the proper rest, ahd too many late suppers. My stomach was in a dreadful condition, and my nerves all unstrung. “l was advised by a freny to try Pe runa, and eventually | bought a bottle. I took it and then another, and kept using it for three mouths. “At the end of that time my health was restored, my nerves no longer troubled me, and | felt -ayself once more . ad able to assume my social position. | certainly feel that Peruna is deserving of praise.” There are many reasons why society women break down, why their nervous systems fail, why they have systemic or selvie catarrh. [ndeed, they are especially jable to these ailments, No wonder they require the protection of l'eruna. It is their shield and safeguard. PATENTS 2:37 HOW AD LAL © yen wish w about I'EN to know about PAY and HICKS’ APU DINE CURES ALL ACHES And Nervousness Trial bottle 10c Al drug stores fool's er: “My son 2 half old, began to hay when ab year and fa Th ee race i DCY on his arms, then on then one came on hi eat wor other parts of his body, and se than tho anthers Still 4 a . At the end of about a y a half of bad had to tie his han suffering is in scratch. Hea got he grew so ciothe at night to keen hin £05 im from ine th nd . 3 § ing the se and tear hh ox rin ne oan to be a mere skel was hardly able to waik I sent t¢ he drug store and got a cake of Cuti oap and a box of Cuti- cura Ointment, and at the end of about He has never had any sores of any kind since, and | ean that the Cuticura prov two months the sores were all wall sincerely say only for Remedies my child . = % would have died from those terrible sores IOUS one cake of Soan and al boxes of Mrs. Fghert iden. R. F. D.. No.1. Wondville, Conn 1 srr - 1 used omle gt Ointment In reply to an f woman t a week, a received advertisement ypist at a salary of $2 London firm, on Marc! fewer than 397 replies "ie no all adi : What Ails You? Do you feel weak, tired, despondent, have frequent headaches, coated tongue, bitter or bad taste in morning, "heart- burn,” belching of gas, acid risings In throat alter eating, stomach gnaw or burn, foul breath, dizzy spells, poor or rariable appetite, nausea at times and kindred symptoms? efficient liver Invigorator, stomach tonic, bowel regulator and nerve strengthoner, The "Golden Medical Discovery * is not a patent medicine or secret nostrum, a full list of its Ingredients being printed on its bottle-wrapper and attested under oath. A glance at its formula will show that It contains no alcohol, or harmful habit-forming drugs. It 1s a fluid extract made with pure, triple-refined glycerine, of proper strength, from the roots of the following native American forest plants, viz, Golden Seal root, Stone root, Black Cherrybark, Queen's root, Bloodroot, and Mandrake root. + The following leading medical authorities, among a host of others, extol the foregoing roots for the cure of just such aliments as the above symptoms indicate! Prof. RB. Bartholow, M. D., of Jefferson Med, Collage, Phila. ; Prof. H.C Wood, M. D., of Univ.of Pa; Prof. Edwin, M. Hale, M. D., of Hahnemann Med, College, Chicago: Prof, John King, M D.. Author of American Dispensatory: Prof, Jno. M. Scud- der. M. D., Authoro! Bpecific Medicines; Prof, Laurence Johnson, M.D, Med. Dept. Univ. of N. Y.: Brot. Finley Ellingwood. M. D., Author of Materia Medica and Prof. in Bennett Medj- cal College, Chicago. Send name and ad- tiress on Postal Card to Dr. RV, Plerce, Buf- falo, N. Y.. and receive free booklet giving extracts from writings of all the above medi fecal authors and many others endorsing, in the strongest possible terms, each and every Ine gredient of which "Golden Medical Discove ery "is com vl, Dr. Plered’s Pleasant Pollots regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. They ay be used in conjunction with * Golden fedical Discovery "If bowels are much cons stipated. They're tiny and sugar-coated ' GIRLS Blac whicl of the schappel,” wears only on occasions of mar christening or some high fea in effect it is a tow it § ring 1 with gold silver on covered nd mixed here flower A { Herald give up i poor health that nl its would 0 80 she started fen One day weeds out of the ea 1 and tearing a hole in It Wi going int the off pair of in the when stumbled seine pps ner house to take the torn dress she soticed a hanging truck her that entry, they overalls the thought the thing for a while working in the She lost time In on, found a great on the just woman to wear garden no putting them them clumsy skirt, door tasks around her estate, A farmer's wife that raising near turkeys is Oil stock. last week and went home pocket full of gold. with ard, living seven miles southeast of Parsons. Last spring she started fo raise this year's crop of turkeys with a big flock of young birds. She work- months to keep the rats and rain from getting away with them. Last fall she looked upon the flock of fine large birds. When she round. ed them up and brought them to Par. sons to market there were 133 of them, and, as the average weight was ten or twelve pounds each, at the market price she received more than $160 for the two loads they made, Parsons (Ind.) Sun, mer LIFE WORTH LIVING. happy, hopeful, buoyant, from the 8 DLs of thoughtful ind eccen- ingle weel's effort fhe goprano is to receive more This royalties, but iteed the sum, the President of the and the total amount probably will be far in excess of that figure. New York Herald $60,000 for singing a will be week, company United States, WOMEN'S ALTERNATIVES. Some women frankly admit that youth of the day, but that if they snub him, as he frequently deserves to be snubbed, they get left without partners at dances or anyone to tas to at “teas which is only another the fact that man and not ~ From the Ladies’ Field, FASHION NOTES, Draped bodices continue in high favor among slender girls. Plaids naturally need very little trimming, and that generally is sub. dued colors. The scarf must not be confounded with the vell (now worn very long and bordered round the edge.) Tans, very light modes and grays are the best shades to buy in gloves if you want to be right up to dats in your dress, The lithe lines and small waist de manded by the fashionable figure make careful corseting imperative. The truly fashionable woman now: In keeping with the elegance and trimness of her costume, HARRIS HORNS ON BHOR" of Kansas, who is one informed men al Short il 4 recent 0 the Scotch and breed aid; vion, shire ewes were more prolific any of the other breeds and fourth cross Merin 'O88es, except the Shropshire rams on a foundation “One year-old not so lific as those wo-year-old Ewes Average a ger percentage of in. lambg after they reach full maturity, at three vears of age, until after they are six years old, when the rate of increase diminishes, “The amount of service required of the ram in breeding has an influence on the percentage of increase in off- spring of the ewes that produce lambs. Ewes bred early in the sea- crease in a larger percentage of lambs than those near the latter end of the sea- " MATCH UP THE HORSES. This does not imply that those of the same markings or game color are to be worked together. Matching farm teams is more dificult than matching driving teams. A slow walking horse should never be put with a fast walk- ing one, for you will have to constant. ly urged the slow one, and this soon irritates the other one. Match gaits; match temperaments, and match horse power. These fre the essentials to keep In mind when matching up the team for heavy work. Never put a young horse to very heavy, steady work, such as plowing, alongside an old staid horse. The youngster is apt to do more than his share, in spite of all you ean do to equalize the work, When breaking a colt 1 have always found it best to put it alongside a steady even-tempered horge that is not easily “rattled.” Such a mate colt confidence to the coll. and he readily falls into work without much trouble A correspondent colt give the at first That is risky farm work arrowing. hitcl } uch CARE OF STOCK ial can remain at a to its owner. If the gtand- gaining, then the labor wasted. If the animal pound in weight then r suffers that which ad, and he must incur addi recover that addi tional pound, but the time can recovered facts show the importance of keeping the stock in | good condition and having an animal ke an increase daily, When there a falling off In weight, or the | yield of milk is reduced, the cause { should be sought, and if an error has occurred, or there is fault in the man- agement, a change for the better should be made without delay. THE PEACH TREE BORER. The peach borer is a wasp-like in. sect, with transparent wings and a richly-ornamented body, banded and | striped with gold, and deposits its eggs about the badge of the trunk of the tree. The eggs hatch out, the larvae bore into the sapwood, and cause an exudation of gummy matter, which appears in masses about the base of the tree. The larvae seem partly to live in this gummy substance and partly in the sapwood of the tree, Sometimes three or four are found on the same tree, occasionally girdling and destroying it, but always inducing more or less of a diseased condition and impairing its vigor. Al together it is a very objectionable and destructive insect, Though bitten twice by a monkey und warned that a third bite would be fatal, Mrs. Powell, of Bath, Eng land, refused to part with the animal She was bitten again, blood poisoning set in and death from heart failure followed, There is talk in England of cele brating the bicentenary of the birth of Charles Wesley, which occurred December 18, 1707. loss of expense to lost not be These the How to Open a Can of Salmon, can of Argo Red Salmon can on its side, in- the seam, then nd, and pressing work the can top, removing the ou will then come To ope properly, lay the sert the can wo Ha opener at Mahin, of Notting- nation is in- Britain, the num- being 742 in $015 it cre; Deafness Cannot Be Cured bylocal applications as theycannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is ouly one way to cure deafness, and that is by consti. inl remedies. Deafness iscaused byag med condition of the mucous lining of » Hastachian Tobe When this flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper- fect hearing, and when it 1s entirely closed Deafness is the re and upless the inflam. mation can and this tobe ro. | condition, hearing will # out of ten hingbutan noone purfaces, ! Dollars for any 5 (caused byeatarrh that can. by Hall ure, Send for F.J.Cnenxy & Co., Toledo, QO tywr | rey ~r wy Druggists, Ti tube is in. ILS « De ta n out Take Hall's Family Pills for ox nstipation, iameq who the He FITS, 8t, Vitus’ Dance :Nervons Diseases per manentiycured by Dr. Kline's Great Narve } treatise free, Phila., Pa. printed in fish that United Snuggling Up. f 3y Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo. Explaining Who He os eads ov) are in the Kansas Not The Real Thing. the at w ROMANTIC DEVONSHIRE I'he Land Made Famous by Phillpotts’ Novels. » Phiipotte has made us familiar with romantic Devonshire, {n his fas. cinating novels, “The River,” “Chil dren of the Mist,’ etc. The charac A writer at Rock House, von, “For 30 years 1 drank coffee for breakfast and dinner but some 5 years ago 1 found that it was produce uaking me restless at night, “When I realized this, 1 made up and having recd of Postum, 1 cone I bad it carefully md of a week, that I no longer suf fered from either indigestion. heart burn, or brain fag, and that I could . Since that time we have entirely of Postumi ns time goes on. My di- much better now than before, a re satisfied. “As a table beverage we find (for refreshing and agreeable, of delicious flavour and aroma. Vigilance is, Lowever, necessary to secure this, for are likely to neglect the thorough to extract the goodness from the Name given by Postum Co., Head the little book, “The Road to Welliille,” in pkgs. "There's a venson.”