A VETERAN UF FHE BLACK HAWK, MEXICAN AND THE CIVIL WARS. ' X?' - ' ! -.v.-,,f. ? :r. . ..:::: .; . v.' '. : .: 1 CAPT. W. W. JACKSON. RuPrrini Wert Prnlrar'et anil Sever Tried h'n'ri Known Hemedy Without hrlirf Sfftnttn Stotnarh Trou'il Cumd by Three llotilm of peruna I fW. W. W. Jackson. 7(15 G St., N. W., WiiKlutitfton, I. C, 'ritpn: "I am eighty-tlirt-e years 1I, a veteran of tin' Black Hawk, Mexican and the f'ivil Warn. I am tiy profession a physi cian, hut abandoned the same. "Some yearn ago I wait Herloimljf affected with ealarrk o the Htomiclt. M u nuflerl nri were protraeteil and Htvere. I tried every known remedy v It it oat ohlainln.fi relief. 'In desperation, I began the of your I'eruna. 1 began to realize immediate though gradvaHmprove ment. "After tlic line of throe bottles every appearance of my complaint win removed, and 1 have no limitation in recommend ing it as an infallible remedy for that dis order." W. W. Jackson. Address Dr. S. IV Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, phio. J ' Concenlra'ed Crab Orchard WATER Nature's Great Remedy KOR DYSPEPSIA SICK HEADACHE CONSTIPATION BUmtilate tb Llvar, regulates the liowe'ls and keeps the entire system In a healthy condition. k Natural Produet with a raoord of a Cen tury. It afflicted try It. BOLD BY ALL DRI'OGISTS. CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO., LOCIBVII.LK, KY. FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to Itam tez, used as a douche is maivoloaslv eac- tops dilcUiigtb, bcals inflammatioa and loud soteoess, cuici leuconhaa and naul catanh, Pailinc Is in pnwdcr tutm lo be dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleansing, healing, scnnicuidl and economical tiuo liquid antiseptics fur all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES r'or sale at druggists, GO cents s boa. Trial Boa and Book ol Instructions Prsa. Thc R, PaaroH CowpaHT Boston, Maaa. Americana and Britons. An Englishman In Canada writes borne In considerable excitement as follows: "The majority of Canadians never read an Engllfih paper of any kind whatever; all their literature Is American. All the booksellers' shops are fllleil with American books, Ameri can reviews. American papers. And with what result? There can be only one result Canadians will think Amerlcaly.' " Liberia' Liquor Bill Large. In the first quarter of 1904 Liberia's bill for Imported spirituous and malt llquors waB 114,815. That's more than Liberia paid out In the time for flour, biscuit, bacon, canned meats and fish all put togather. "The statistics," notes the chronicler, "do not Include the rum made In local distilleries, nor the wines made from the palm and bamboo trees by the aborigines, which are drunk In large quantities." A WOMAN'S MISERY. Mrs. John LaKue, of 115 Pattrson Avenue, PaU-rson, N. J., says: "I was troubled for about nine yeara, unt) wua 1 suf no one ever I iiwd every reme tared. WJ11 know, about known dy that In viild sto be good for '.kidney com plaint, but without deriv ing iicriiiimcnt 'mJ7 v:S vt ben alone In the house the back a din has been so bad that It brought tears to my eyes. The pain at time was so Intense that I was compelled to glyo up my household duties and lie down. There were head aches, dizziness and blood riiHliln to my head to cause bleeding ut the nose. The first bos of Doau's Kidney Pills benefited me so niurh tbut I continued the treatment The stinging pain In the small of tny back, the rushes of blood to the head and other symptoms disappeared." Doan's Kidney Pills are for sale by nil dealers, DO cents per box. Foster-Mil-parn Co., Buffulo, N, Y. ml ft r THE KEYSTONE STATE Latest News of Peaasjlrania Told fa Short Order. Picking up a corked calsup bottle st dinner, Misn Rctta Cessna, daughter of V. A. Cessna, landlord of the hotel at Rainsburg, Hcclford county, attempted to open it, when it exploded, scattering the glass and contents in all directions. A fragment struck her brother, Raymond, i:i the right eye, destroying thc sight. Another fragment passed through her check, cutting a hole, two inches in length, while a third piece laid bare the bones on the back of her left hand. Jarcd Mnrtncr, of near Glenvillc, York county, has just begun to read thc Bible through for the nineteenth time. Re cently he hushed his eighteenth reading of the Holy Book. Bortner began his Bible reading thirty years ago, and in all that time has never failed to give a considerable part of each day to the work. On Sunday lie spends many hours in reading, lie uses an ancient Bible, printed in German, and as he sits on the porch of his lvinic is a character fa iviliar to many persons. Although near ly oo years old, Bortner only lately re tired from active work at his trade, slioe;n;.kiiig. lie has selected the text for the sermon to be preached at his funeral. A runaway car loaded with boards crashed into the engine of a passenger train on the Blof.msburg and Sullivan Railroad mar Coles Creek. The car was traveling at a mile a minute rate and Engineer James Casey saw it barely in time to reverse his engine when the crash came. When the car struck the lumber shot ahead and stripped the en gine of smokestack, whistle chest, bell, sand box and cab. The engineer and fireman stuck to their posts and escaped injury, although several of the passen gers were cut and bruised by the col lision. The engine was wrecked. Death pursued a log train on thc Buf falo and Susquehanna Railroad, and finally caught up with it at Mcdix. Soon after the train started Brakcman Ed ward l-'letcher became ill. Harry Ford took his place, and in less than an hour was retired with one arm crushed, hav ing been caught between thc bumpers. Simon Geary was then called out. Six miles from Mcdix the train ran away on a heavy grade, but was finally stop ped without any one being hurt, but in the yards at Medix Geary was caught between thc engine and a car and crush ed to death. While watching companions swim, 10-ycar-old Eddie Miller, of Bethlehem, grew alarmed at the blowing off of steam by a passing locomotive, and, falling into thc Lehigh Canal, was drowned. Elias W. Gilmer, a contractor, of Eas ton,. while at work on his "last job," building himself a home, fell headfore most irom the second story to the ground. He fractured his right hip, re ceived bad contusions on the back of his head and was injured internally. His condition is critical. Mr. Gilmer, who is 72 years old, fell off a house some years ago and fractured an arm. He was also seriously injured by falling off Pardee Hall. Miss Catherine Snyder, 8 years old, was probably fatally burned at her home, in Lancaster. An accident happened to an oil stove, and her father was in the act of hurling it into the yard, when he collided with his daughter. Her cloth ing caught fire, and she was so terribly burned that her condition is precarious. A victim of heat prostration, Lewis R. Hartman, a son of ex-County Commis sioner Jeremiah Hartman, died in a hay mow in the barn of John Seidel, in Al sace Township. He was 28 years old. . Pottsville has begun suit against the Tostal Telegraph and Cable Company for failure to pay tax on poles. The company will fight thc case in court. J I ....li T.'. ,.l P,,ft.,.,!L i;,.c . o I critical condition from blood poisoning ' that resulted from his picking his gums with a brass pin. He will probably lose all his teeth. The Bcrwyn White Coal and Coke Company, of Philadelphia, has taken an option on a tract of land in East Holli daysburg, adjoining the new freight classification yard of thc Pennsylvania Railroad Company. It is said that a large pressed steel car plant will be erected on this land. Thc theft of a score or more of horses recently in Lancaster county is regarded as evidence that an organized band of thieves is operating. Thc latest victim is George Wilmer, of New Providence, whose roan mare was stolen from his barn. Under the will of the late Mrs. El mira Rohrcr, probated at Lancaster, thc following charitable bequests arc made: Strasburg Methodist Episcopal Church, $500; Sirasburg Presbyterian . Church, $500! Mennaiiite Welsh Mountain Mis sion, $500. Bloodhounds are being used in the ef forts to trace robbers who broke into the store of Clothier Greenwood, at Lu zerne, and carried away much clothing. Joseph Bianco had a hcarinc before Alderman Barrett at Pittston and his 7- 1 jear-oicj daughter Alary told how he had shot his wife last week. Mary was the only witness of tht crime and on the basis of her story Bianco was com quitted on a charge of murder. Frederick A. Sterling has been ap pointed postmaster at Aston Mills. Town Council has declared void the ordinance granted the Bloomsburg and Millville Trolley Company. The com pany did not begin operations within the time specified in the ordinance. During her absence from her home, in Norristown, a thief stole $-soo worth of jewelry from the bureau drawer of Mrs. Harry Burner. Among the arti cle taken was a diamond-studded gold watch.1 One life lost, four persons severely burned, two houses entirely demolished and two others partially destroyed, is thc record of a gas explosion at 3834 Liberty Avenue, Pittsburg. Mrs. Titos. Dillon, aged 59, is dead. Her husband, Thomas Dillon, aged 64, is not expected to live. In a crash at a grade crossing at Dun more Mrs. Melvin Wheeler sustained a compound fracture of thc skull and will die. Austin Wheeler, her I -year old son, was killed, and Harry, her 4-year-old son badly injured. Mrs. Barbara Spangenherg, her sister, was injured, but will recover. Knives of a mowing machine cut off a foot of a 7-year-old son of J. Milton ine, o East Hopewell Township. The ad made no outcry, but climbed upon tVSt 'Sec' I have The largest black snake killed in Mon roe county for several years was that encountered by Henry Manhart abo three miles from Cresco. The recti le measured seven feet eight inches. v While he was oiling a stationary tn ginc at the Star quarry, Bangor llarr . son Heard was taught i the' wnee . and killed. He had just started to work! Tile Draining. There Is plenty of land In cultiva tion that ne?ds drainage, some of It Is drained with open ditches which are very unsatisfactory, Very little we lins been made of druln tile In this State. It Is time our people r. wakened to the need and profit of tile drain age. The following 0,11 the subject Is from the Southern Farm Miignzlnc: The drain tile Is an Invention of the last century, 11 nil wrs (Trst Introduce)! Into thp Vnited States In 1KMI, but it did not come Into general ue until the rise In the price of land made it more unprofitable to Increase the fer tility and producing powet of the farm than to extend tht area. The beneficial effects of draining soils Intended for cultivation were known to the Romans, who were care ful to keep their nrnlilo lands dry by means of open trenches, ami there are some reasons for believing that they employed covered drains for the name purpose. There Is no question about the fact that they constructed under ground channels by uiear.a of tubes of burned earthenware. Recent Invest! pillions also show that the British furmers used covered channels cen turies ago for drying their land. Bnt It was not until 1S2."j that Jumes Pmith. of Deanston. put In practice what Captain Walter Blithe sngsested two centuries before. By his Influence and example a complete revolution in the art of draining win effected, and his system, with some modifications, Is still practiced. It marked an era in agricultural progress. Instead of at tempting to dry extensive areas by 11 few open cuts, ho Insisted that every field should be provided with a com pute system of underground chan nels running In the line of the great est inclination of the land, and placed so near to each other as to carry off all surplus water through the drains. He showed 1hat '.he distance be tween the drains must bp regulated by the absoi'pllvencss or retentlveness of the soil operated upon, .-nirl gave ten feet 11s the minimum and forty feet as the maximum of thrse distances. The depth suggested by him for the par allel drains was thirty Inches. The bot toms of these were filled with twelve inches of stone small enough to pass through a hree Inch ring. The great labor and cost of procuring stones in sufficient quantity nml of the proper size, and the difficulty of carting them in wet seasons, led to the substitu tion of tiles and soles of rartlienwaie. At first the cost of these tiles wug very high, and for a time this circumstance checked the progress of the new sys tem of drainage. In the meantime the Marquis of Tweedale end others in vented a tile making machine, there by reducing the cost of tiles, and gave a mighty stimulus to this fundamental agricultural improvement. Draining is a costly operation, and it should be executed in a v.-ny to be ef fectual and permanent. English writers advocate a minimum depth of four feet for the drains, becance it is alleged that thirty inch drains in thousands of Instances have failed, to dry tin land, and after all the outlay tit;- al ternative was presented of having the land Imperfectly drained or of execut ing the work anew. The distance npart for the most retentive clays need not be over eighteen feet. It is thought by the best English authori ties on the subject that with a decided porosity in the subsoil and in propor tion to the degree of that porosity the space between the drains may with safety be lncrea.-e d to twenty-four, thirty or thirty-six feet. Thp practice in this country has been toward a greoter width. The drains nre usually cut about two rods apart, ond the cost of draining when complet ed, Is about $30 to S3"i per acre, though the cost may vary greatly with the character of the subsoil, the presence or absence of rocks, the price of labor, tiles, etc. Throughout a great portion of New York, Ohio. Indiana and Illi nois tile-draining is very common. Fertile lauds, which were formerly too wet to work until late in thc spring, have now, by a regular system of tile draining, been fitted to plow as soon as the frost disappears from the ground. The value of the land has been doubled, tripled and even quadrupled In many instances. The entire cost for draining Is usually met within the per iod of three years by the increased crops, to say nothing of the advan tage of huving a much earlier start in spring. Management of Motrins; Land. Discussing the use of fertilisers for grass lands. Professor Brooks, In the May crop report of the Massachusetts Board of Agriculture, says, that on most farms the barn yurd manure can be used to better advantage on the tilled fields than on the mowings. Of the commercial fertilisers nitrate of soda Is the most valuable for increas ing the growth of the grasMS proper. About two hundred pounds per acre Is us much as It has been found prof itable to apply. It may be applied alouo with good results, but it seems best to combine It with some substuncp to give bulk, which is not too expen sive and which will supply potash and the phosphutc. Basic slag meal, which can b pur chased at about I5 per ton, is rec ommended, using from 300 to &O0 pounds of the meal per acre, with 150 to U00 pounds of the nitrate. Professor Brooks adds that it is possible to grow good crops of the clovers without mini tires or fertilizers supplying nitrogen, and gives the kinds and quantities that have proved most profitable on the collcgf farm. Liuie is frequently nec essary lu order to bring our soils Into a condition that will allow the clovers to thrive. There U tendency to itnevcnncss In mowings, the result of frost and other agencies, and occasional rolling is rec ommended. In the case of non-sod-fonuing grasses condition may be bet ter maintained if some seed in occa sionally sown. Greut care should be used in purchasing grass seed "to "se cure that which is free from trouble souh weeds. When weeds obtain a footing rescedlng Is likely to 1 prove helpful, the best results being ob tallied by plowing lu midsummer, har rowing repeatedly until Into August, then enriching liberally and i eseodlng. The article closes by describing t1, common weeds the white and yrllow daisies, wild carrot, sorrel, dock, horse tail, etc., and giving thn appropriate treatment foi each. American Cultivator, Bnjrlns; Cotrnntrrrl Musi, The first thing to look for is the guarantee tag, required by law, giving the name of the manufacturer and composition of the goods. A first class cottonseed meal should contain over forty per cent, of protein and about nine per cent, of fat. It should be a light yellow color. If It Is dark in color with many fine black specks, it indicates that ground hulls have been added. If It is a rusty brown col or, it Indicates that the meal is old or the material has at some time under gone fermatation. Such meals are not safe to use. The texture of the nioal should be about the same as finely ground corn free from cotton lint. The presence and amount of Hut can be determined by sifting n portion in n Hour or tural sieve. The lint and hulls ate also quite easily detected by stirring the meal up with water. Tnt one teaspoon ful In half a glass of water, mix thor oughly and allow the mixture to stand a few minutes to settle. The black hulls will be found on the bottom and can be seen through the glass. The good meal will be In the next layer and the lint on top. A first-class nica.1 should show only a few black hulls and scarcely any lint. An expert can Judge very well of the quality of cottonseed meal by means of tasting. The best fresh meals have a very 11 green hie nutty flavor not found In inferior goods. The presence of much fibre Is readily noted by thp sense of touch In the mouth. The absence of the nutty flavor and the presence of a rancid taste indicate that the meal is old. .T. M. Bartlctt, in Massachusetts Ploughman. Smnkrhoiiso In a llarrel. M. W. T. Please publish a descrip tion of a small, cheap smokehouse, suitable for a fanner to smoke u few hams, etc. A large cask or barrel may be used for smoking a small quantity of meat. To tniike this effective, p. small pit should be dug, and a Hat stone or a brick placed across it, upon which the edge of the cask will rest. Half the lilt is beneath the barrel and half is outside. The head and bottom may bp removed, or a hole larger than the portion of the pit beneath the cask. Thc bead or cover is removed while the hams art being hung upon cross slicks, as shown in the Illustration. The cross sticks rest upon two cross bars made to pass through boles bored in the sides of the cat-k. The head Is then laid upon the cask and covered with moist sacks to confine the smoke. Live coals ure put into th pit outside of the cask, and the fire is fed with tine brush. The pit is covered with a flat stone by which the lire may be regulated, and It Is removed when nec essary to add uioro fuel. Montreul Herald. Wnterpronflni- For Fanners, Farmers and gardeners from the nature of their work arc often ex posed to wet feet. Some object to greasing shoes for thp purpose of keep ing them soft, saying It causes the leather to rot and so makes It more pervious to dampness. My own ex perience lias not confirmed this view ami I give 11 formula used by an old New England fisherman in his trade for over seventy years: One pint of boiled linseed oil, one-hnlf pound of mutton suet, "fresh;" six ounces of yel low beeswax, "dean;" four ounces of yellow resin; melt and mix well, ap ply with soft brush, warm but not so hot as to shrink the leather. You can stand in water for hours and your feet will not be damp. It. M. Field, lu The Epitoniist. Worth Thinking- About. I am fully persuad-d that eight or ten reasonably good sows will pay any man well who will give them reason able care and feed. They will often make it profitable to employ a man throughout the year, more than paying for his wages, nnd getting work done that is left undone. They will bring in 11 regular monthly Income. The feed on the farm sold to the cows ut tho market price will return from $1.50 to $2 worth of butter fat at the creamery price for each dollar's worth of feed consumed. The skillful man with the best cows may even do better thau this. In otbET words, it costs $2: tao $30 to feed and pasture; good cows should return from $10 to $im worth of butter fat, leaving, the manure, skim milk and calf to offset the Interest, depreciation and labor. H. E. Van Normun, lu Iu diuna Farmer. Kreetl Carefully, The old saying, "the sire Is half tho herd," does pot always express the whole truth, said Professor Eraser, of Illinois University, In a recent address. In a siro whose ancestors bavo been bred for dairy purposes only these characteristics have become firmly fixed und when crossed on cows of no special breeding will produce calves more like the sire thau the dam. In this cas) tho sire counts for inoro thau half. A dairyman may start with notb. lug but tho most ordinary cows, and by simple breeding he will, In a few years, huri a tins working herd. Do not misunderstand me. 1 am advocat ing' grading but not crossing breeds. Great harm has been dono and is still being dono by the dairy cattle of tno J couuu j uy aossjug. v ecuiy tVUUCgs. BAIUtEIIi SMOKEHOUSE, Worth More Than Shs Thought. Two stamps wore once put Into an offertoiv box by a lady In Georgetown. They were 2-cent stamps. Issued In British Guiana in 1850. The lady had come across an envelope among her papers bearing two of these stamps. The Incumbent, Canon Josa, sold the envelop with the two stamps on It by auction and It realized 205. Tho following year tho tame two stamps changed hands at 650, thc first pur chaser making 445 profit on the deal. The new purchaser sold thera for 780 to a Oerman dealer, who sold them to a Russian nobleman for 1,000. London Tit-Bits. FITpTrrjftnnntW 'virr-l. o fit!" of-norr-ni. peas fi'iAr first ilriv V 11 - or !r. Klln' flrr-a Narvel:o.Hnrnr.Jtri.il Wt learnt treatise trrn Dr. ft. II. Kmne, I.td.,!l Areh t., I'hlln., I'n. There arc SM.rVli depositors in thc sav ings banks of ( .iti.id.i. I llws Can IVanr si,s On sin smtllor after usln : Allon's Fno1 Fose. s powdur. It makes tK'it or nn shos e.iv, Cure sw.illnn, hov. nrr itinc, nehlio' feet. lnrotriii7 n ills, orus and bunion. A' all ilriK-sists ai.l fios store", 2.V. Jion't ae. eept imv .iiMtltutn, Trliil package FnRi by mall. Address, Allon 8. Olm-tml, LeKoy, N.V. Vienna ha ("(nblislieil u circulating li brary for the blunt. Mrs.Winslow'sKonthlne Syrup for ClilMrnn tentliltur. soften tho minis, reducer Inflamma tion, allays rnln.euroswiiid nolle, 'i.V.u bottle The eyeball rests in a cushion of fat, by which it is surrounded. JdonobbnllBve l'lso's C.nrn ?or Honsamp llonha.anerual for coughs un.t '-olds.-- Joss F.JJoraR. Trinity Hprtnifs. lad., Feb. 13, :H3i. African epicures consider the tongue of a young girafiV a great delicacy. BABY'S TERRIBLE SORE ltorty Haw With Hnmor Caaseil Untold Aaon3wloetor lld No (load Mother DtftrnurHft-edCatlritra Cnred at Onc. "My child was a very delicate baby. A ternblc snre and hiininr broke out on hi body, looking like r.iw tiesh, and taumg thn child untold ugony. My physician pre scribed various; remedies, none of which helped at ail. I became discouraged and took the mutter into my own bands, and tried t'uticurj Soap and t'uticiira Ointment with almost immediate, success. Before the second week bud passed the soreness was gnne. not leuving a trace of anything. Mrs. .leannelte II. Block, '.'81 Roscdule St., lluciicstei, X. Y." New Anesthetic from Japan. A new anesthetic Juice has recently been discovered In Japan, the product of a plant growing in that empire. This anesthetic has been called sco polamine and is said to be superior in Its effects to all other articles of this kind. It is administered hypoder mlcally and produces a deep sleep lasting from eight to nine Lours. Cures KIocmI 1'tti-oe. 'it ncis-r, ITlcers. If you have offensive pimples or erup tions, ulcers on any m r of the body, a"li ing hones or joints, f illing huir, mueou pnti'hi-K, swollen gluniis. sL.d itehos ant burns, sor Hp or gums, ruling, festering sores, sharp, gnawing pains, ttum you suf fer from serious lilood poison or th begin nings of deadly cancer. You may be per manently ctin il by inking fiotunii; lilood Baliu (II. B. B.) ma le especially to cure the worst blond and skin diseases. Heals every sore or ulcer, even deadly cancer, stops all aches and pains and reduces all swi iling. Botanlo Blood Balm oures ail malignant blood troubles, such its eexeina, seabs and scales, pimples, runninu sores, carbuncles, scrofula. liriiKgisls, tl per largo bottle, 3 bottles tl.50, 6 bottles ifrfi, express prepaid. To prove it cures, sample of Blood Balm sent free and prepaid by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlantu, (ia. Iiescrlbe trouhle and frcs oieuioa! advice sent lu sealed letter. GIFTS IN PROPER SPIRIT. Significance of Recent Benefactions to Colleges. After all, tho principal u.so of the college Is as a place where the next generation is to get rlgl- ideas of what is worth while in life Itself. The mere facts which, to the ignorant, seem tho advantages of education, are of minor Importance. We hear much In the periods of college commence ments of the necessities of the mod ern university in the way of enlarged endowments and increased equipment. Some of this talk is, of course, rea sonable enough. It Is addressed main ly to the rich as a demand for tho recognition by them of a duty of gen erosity, one which in our days haa had a most remarkable response. But apparatus Is an Impossible substitute for Ideals, and the best endowment of a college ia the character of Its graduates. The $2,000 bequest, for example, to his Alma Mater, which the will of the late William H. Bald win contained, was small if consider ed as a mere matter of money, but bis character and the Ideals of public service which his life expressed form part of that permanent endowment which alone makes a university great. The memory of a railroad president ready to sacrifice, If need be, his posi tion, rather than lose an opportunity fof usefulnes on an unpaid committee of citizens banded together for Im portant civic service, Is a rarer and more precious contribution to the fiber of university life than any mere material bounty from ravenous lin gers unclutched by hypocrisy or the fear of death. George W. Alger In the Atlantic Monthly. COMES A TIME When Code Sbows What It Baa Been Doing, "Of late years coffee has disagreed with me," writes a matron from Uouie, N. Y., "it's lightest punishment was to make me 'logy' and dizzy, aud if seemed to thicken up my blood. "The heaviest was when it upset my stomach completely, destroying my ap petite and making me nervous and irri table, and sent me to my bed. After one of these attacks, in which I nearly lost my life, I concluded to quit and try Postura Food Coffee. "It went right to the spot! I found It not only a most palatable and refresh ing beverage, but a food as well. "All my ailments, the 'loglncss' ami dizr.luoss, the unsatisfactory condition of my blood, my nervousness and irri tability disappeared in abort order and my sorely afflicted stomach began quickly to recover. I began to rebuild and hove steadily continued until now. Have a good appetite and om rejoicing in sound health, which I owe to the nee of Postum Food CcZce." Name given by Tostum Co., Ba'tle Creek. Mich. There'rv. reason. Bead the little book, "The Road to JVellviUY' fouud in each pkg. Cure ForThe Blues ONE UEDICINE THATJJAS NEVER FAILED Health Fully Restored and tho Joy of Life Regained When acheerful, brave, liglit-hearted woman is suddenly plunged into that perfection of misery, the ULCUS. It la a sad picture. It Is usually this way : She has been feeling "out of aorta" for some time; head has ached and back also ; has slept poorly, been quite nervous, and nearly fainted once or twice; head dizzy, and heart-beats very fast J then that bearing-down feeling, and during her menstrual period she Is exceedingly despondent. Nothing pleases her. Iler doctor says : "Cheer up: you have dyspepsia; you will be all right soon." But she doesn't pet " all right," and hope vanishes; then come the brood ing, morbid, melancholy, everlasting B LI' EH, Don't wait until your sufferings have driven you to despair, with your nerves all shattered and your courage gone, but take Lydia E. Pinkham'n Vege table Compound. See what It did for Mrs. Rosa Adams, of S19 lath Street, Louisville, Ky.. niece of the late Gen eral Roger Hanson, C.8.A. She writes: Dear Mrs. Ptnkhnm: " I cannot tell you with pen said ink what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Oomiwund has done for me. I sutl'ered with femalo troubles, extreme lassitude, ' the blues,' nervousness and that all (fone feeling. I was advised to try Lydia E. l'inkham's egetable Compound, and it not only cured my female derangement, but It has restored me to perfect health and strength. The buoyancy of m" vounger days ha returned, and I do not suf fer any longer with despondency, as I did lie fore. I consider Lydia K. PinkhnnVs Vege table Compound a boon to sick and suffering women." If you have some derangement of the female organism write Mrs., Plnkham, Lynn, Mass., for advice. PENSION FOR AGE.; A new order will give pen sion lor aatf. Write me at once lor blanks anil Instruction. t Tvv ol churire. No Pension. No Par. Address . II. H ILLS, Willi Huilding.bW Indlnna Ave, Watditugtuu, it. C s'uteiiu aud 'IruUtt-Murlsi bullclleu. LI,,!,-; MHtKr Mil tlSt ril.S Best t ouith fctrup. Tom &nl. Cbc In timft. H ua dt nroriri"T. Faels Arc Stubborn Tilings Uniform excellont quality for over a quarter of a century bas steadily increased the sales of LION COFFEE, The leader of all package coffees. Lion Coffee la now used in millions of homes. Such popular success speaks for ibst-lf. It is a positive proof that L10 COFFEE has the Confidence of the people. The uniform quality of LION COFFEE survives nil opposition. LION COFFEE keep Its old friends makes new ones every day. LION COFFEE has even than Its Strcntjlh. Flavor and Qual ity to commend it. On arrival from the plantatIon.lt Is carefully roast ed at our factories and securely packed In 1 lb. sealed packages, and not opened again until needed for use In the home. This precludes the possibility of adulteration or contact with germs, dirt, dust. Insects or unclean hands. The absolute purity ol LION COFFEE Is therefore guaranteed to the consumer. Sold only in 1 lb. packapes. Lion-hoad on every package. Buve these Lion-head for valuable premiums. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE apamMssasass.saa.ps,sa asssssfssajiw f Liuoy, McNeill & BEST FC? VS-aVU j i CATHARTI3 OUARANTl tu CUKtv for all bowel troubles, appendicitis, blliouaoesw, bail breath, baa blood, wln4 on ths stomach, bloated bowels, foal rooath, headache, lnHro"tioa. pitapnas, palna after eattna, liver trouble, sallow akin and iliinsrss. When your bowels don't ine ( refuUily you are alck. Constipation kills more people than all other (Jlae tos-otftet. X 1 tarts chronic ellmsnta and lone years ef auforinc. No matter what ails yon, start t ,' CA8CABET8 today, lor yo will sever f.t well and stay well until you ft your b .. right Take our advice, start with Caacereta today aader absolute fuerata ra c- e mooey refunded. The ernulu tablet stamped C C C. Never sold la bulk, ti mmtP a 4 booklet free. ' Addrrae Aierline Remrdy Company. Chlcare or N-w York. r- . MAY BE USED FROM THE HOUR OF BIRTH i(t Ha Baby, Physicians, nurses, pharmacists, and chemists throughout the world endorse Cuticura Soap because of its delicate, medicinal, emollient, sanative, and antiseptic properties derived from Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, united with the purest of cleansing ingredients and most refreshing of flower odors. For preserving, purifying, and beauti fying the skin, as well as for all the purposes of the toilet and bath, Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuti cura Ointment, the great Skin Cure, is priceless. Guaranteed absolutely pure, and may be used from the hour of birth. Two Snsp. fn rtnt at nne prw esmrly, a MNfidnttt and Tnilrl Soap tur a. Pi.trrr lliuc a Chrm. Curix. . '., n,. uu,d p- -uow tu t, J ifcilir s Skin, Scslp, sod au." OUR SPECIALTY 3 4 5 Three two dollar shirts for f ivs dollars. MADE TO VOUR MCASUSIC. Writs for suairlr-3 and ineastuf-tiont liloLks. MODEL SHIRT CO.. l'ept. 8, Iwdinimsolts. lad. DDflPCV "EW DISCOVERY; Ssms. Bo, ut tMlln.slsl. s 0 dsTl' Ua.UnnS k-r.e. sr. a. a. sum's loss, ti a, luuis. as. ADVEKfisE1? lv" i'f Pa irs nnd more 'if . msj VOOLSON SriCE CO., Toledo. Ohio. Natural Flavor; bodProducb Don't Be Without Them la Yoer Hone ' They Are Always Beady to Serve Lunch Tongue Veal Loaf Boneless Chicken Dried Beef Brisket Beef Soups Jellied Hocks . Bexked Been Tli Itookltt "llote to Mak Good TMnf to Eat'' sent free. Libby, Chicago THE BOWELS r