5?: MBS. EMMA. FLEIRSNER WkArMl Ovr Tvo YntrtUtath Wh$ to Preoarious Condittan Catised 6y J'tlrio Catarrh. in S 3'i HEALTH ANO STRENGTH RESTORED BY PE-RU-HA. Mm. Emma Flnissnor, 1412 Sixth Avenue, Seattle. Wash., Worthy Treasurer Bonn of ToinpTftnoo, writes : "J uuffereU over two yearn irtt ir regular and painful periodn. My health, wa Inavern pnearloua co it dltlon and J wait anxious to find tumethtng to rentore my health, and ttrength. "I whs rery Rind to try Poruna and do llghtnd to find that It was doing me Rood. I continued to mo It a Httlu ovor three months and found my troublm removed. "i eunntder ita aplentltd medtelne and shall never be without it. taking a dote occantonally when 1 feci run down and tired." Our Mob contain thouennds of testimonials which Dr. linrtmao has received from grate ful, nappy women who have been restored to noaitn py nie renio'iy, i nnipn. BACK OF THE ATKINS SAW Two onturls of patient and coniclentlnui f tTort to produce the Den ws in ino wona. Ten aftnrntlonsof blood and bralnt. The larett plant In the world exclusively devoted to SAW-maklntr, employing many hundreds of !d((h-clas, high-priced craftmfn and equiPtx-d. with oostty spvclal mauhlnnry. A woricf-wlrle builnens afftfrvgaUutf many millions of dollars every year. A ftiptiiatlon built up through two centnHes of steady (trow th, valued more highly tbun any other asnet of this tfrent inititution. The guaranty of this Company, which Is respected the world over. We make all types and sizes of saws, but only one gradethe best. Atkins Baws, Corn Knives, Perfeotion Floor Scrapers, etc., aro sold by all govd hardware dealers. Catalogue on request. C.v ATKINS OX CO., Inc. Largest Saw Manufirtnrtri In tb WorH. Factory mrl Executive Ofticet, fnditiupolit, Indiana atKANCHKH: Nw York, Ctl(a(i, Miuoe.ltJ, l'ortlanil, (Orfnom, ngattie, tsiui jranoiiKO, lttophla, AtlanU anJ Turuoto, tCaaiuliv). Accept no Substitute Int'ut on the Alktas Brand BY GOOD DEALERS EVER WIT-RE TheGenameTOWER POMMEL SLICKER HAS BEEN ADVERTISED AND SOLD FOR A QUARTER OF A C MUtt LIKE ALL It l mnit of the beat naterialv in black crjttiow. fulljr ouvantecd. tod sold by rcliwc detlcrs (er7nherc. 4IICH TO THk SIGN Of THE FISH. frOWtR CANADIAN CO. lluM. A J TOWCR CO, Medicine Made for Mothers use 0nJ LINIMENT For Internal aaJ External use. Cures croup, colic, cramps, coughs, sore throut, burns, bruises, hitesnnd oily soreness. 25 and 50 cts. At aU'dniRKists. ' I. I. JOHNSON & CO., lotion, Mm. r tin,,. Go Barehead to Church. The custom of going bareheaded which New York women have exttn slvely adopted this Bummer, has spread even to the churches. At serv ices which are' held week evenings a large contingent of women attend without hats. "I hope the custom will extend to the theaters this winter," said a West Side man. "Then women will not have to hold their hats In their laps. I always feel sorry for women when they take off their hats In the theater. Their hnlr Is usually disarranged, and taking care of a hat all evening is a nuisance. A woman never looks prettier than with a senrf of lace or chiffon thrown over her bead, and It Is no trouble to take care of that. Women wear thera In Lon don and why shouldn't they In New York?" A STRONG STATEMENT By Col. J, M. GulToy, Democrat! NhMou. al Vommltteeinan of Fonnayl ranln. Col, J. M. Guffey, of Pittsburg, Dem ocratic leader of Peonnylvnulu. nnd , one of the greatest 23S: producers In the Iff"' world of nil. con I 5 W and gold, writes: f'cntlc w; It Is a jYjj plwiiKure to endorse J1 noun's Kidney nils, rfil Ha vine found them LypWf of grvat value I have Ttf'M always been glad to MI i reooiiimeud tlicm to tU i& UIV f fii'uds. TLey ors excelleut. (Signed) j, M, GUFFEY. Poan's Kldiiny l'in, a speclttc for backache, bladder troubles and all kid nay disorders, ai sold by all dealers. Fifty wuta a box, FiwtiK-MUburn Co,, Buttalo, N. Y. V it A- The Over-Bnrdeneil Horn AVho bus not seen a horse staggering wlthtoogrcntnload, whipped by a nicr oIIcbs driver! Very often this Is the result of the owner of th horse plnc jng upon the horse (nnd the hired mnn as well) more than ho can do. It Is often the hired mnn thnt Is the driver of the overburdened horse, and the owner la the one thnt Is primarily re sponsible for the cruelty to the nnlinal. The man thnt sends his hired man to town over muddy ronds with n lond big enough for n horse drawing It ovet a dry road tnkes great chances with bis horse, not only of rendering him uncomfortable, but nlso of Injuring hlni permanently. Horses, ns well ns men, can be Injured by overdoing. Frnlt f or the family. The fanner that considers first the fruit for bis family Is wise. There are multiTudes of -Farmers thnt cannot af ford to rai.-'O fruit to sell in the general market that can yet afford to raise all the fruit they and their families can use. It would seem unnecessary In this givnt country to call the attention of any fanner to the Fact that he Is not raising all the Fruit he should, but we know that thousands of farmers do not raise enough fruit For home use. An abundant supply of fruit should be one of the things found always on every furin la a location where fruit will grow. liens on Hmall lrarms The hen can be made a factor for prout on small farms, and indeed on the small farm (he hen Is likely to re ceive the attention she should. On the very large farm the poultry busi ness Is dwarfed in comparison to the larger scale of operations, and we have not learned yet to manage suc cessfully fowls when kept by the thou sands. The small farm, too, has ad vantages of market facilities that the large has not, on account of the little farm more ofteti being found in the vicinity of cities or villages where tli? land Is high in price. Ventilation. Every building that is used In con nection with mill; production should he well ventilated. The stable In which the cows are kept and .sire milked should be well ventilated to keep the cows healthy and should be well ven tilated to keep bad smells from getting Into the milk. The rooms In the house devoted to the care of milk should be perfectly ventilated, nnd this should be true of every creamery In which milk or cream is handled. There Is now a general complaint that the ven tilation of crcnincrles lu so bad that aro always damp. This Is one of the Inevitable results of bad ventilation. Millet For 1'oultry I'ceil. In my experience millet seed Is one of the best things we can give our poul try for a grain feed. I think It Is espe cially good to put finish on birds being fitted for show, ns it contains a good deal of oil. It. is also not so rich in, starch as is corn and has in it more nitrogen. Young chicks find it more to their liking than corn, as the grains are smaller. The old hens cannot till up on this grain as quickly ns they can on corn, and then go and sit down in the shade and wait for another feed. If fed In chaff the fowls will have to exercise a great ileal to get a square hieal. A quart of millet seed to fifteen full grown fowls Is enough for a day's feed. Nellie Dawson, in Farmer's He iew. Curing Burkina Cows. There are many plans for breaking self-sucking cows of the habit, but some of them are complex, while with others the animal soon learns how to get the better of any device which is attached to her. There Is one ap pliance, however, which seems to work to perfection, and It is made and ap plied in the following manner. The usual halter Is placed on the head of the cow and a ring Is fastened In It just under her neck. Then a strap or a strong rope Is placed about her body Just behind her forelegs. From this strap or rope another strap Is run. hav ing at the end n crupper such as Is used on horses. This is placed In the proper position under her tall. Then a pole Is secured sullicleiitly long to reach nearly to the middle of her body to a Joiut Just beneath the ring fastened In the ha Her. A holo is bored In either end of the polo and it Is tied at ono end to I lit- ring In the Jialter and at the other end to the strap or rope about her body. The strap from the back to the tail prevents any slipping of the middle strap and the appliance is absolutely secure, making It Impossible for the cow to reach her udder with her mouth. The Illustra tion clearly shows the Idea. -Indianapolis News. Common lleaiis. All the common beans (I'haspolus vulgaris) that we have In our gardens are supposed to bo natives of tropica! America, and this will aecduut for their great tenderness in the presence of frost. It has been only after many years of breeding up that we have va rieties that can be made to mature In so short a time that they can le sown after the danger of frost is over and mature before danger of frost in the fall. It is a remarkable thing that a plant-like the bean can have Its nature so changed as to time of maturing that two or more successive crops of string beans may be produced Jn summer. Beans really ueed good soil to do their best, and above all things they must have an abundance r sunshine, as they had for untold centuries in their tropical habitations the tierce llht of the tropic sun. If they are Rjeu all the sun they need Iher. iminue'a 'crop much quicker thnn If they are not. It Is said by experimenters that there Is a difference of two weeks In the tlmo of ripening a crop given the sunshine It needs over a crop that has only par tial sunshine. Movable llonse Per Tnrber. Following along the line of argu ment advanced In these columns many times in favor of keeping the poultry on the range ns late In the fall ns possi ble, the render will be Interested In the movable poultry house here de scribed. The runners are formed by the fastening together of two hrnvy planks nnd the ends are trimmed so ns to turn upward a trifle. Then n hole Is bored through the end of carh run ner through which a chain may he slipped to be attached to n whlffletree so that when the horse Is attached the house may be drnwu to any portion of the range desired. The house may he made any dimensions desired, six by eight feet or eight by ten feet being the average size. When made for the use of turkeys, only the sides are of solid lumber, the back and ends being covered with strong wire netting lo permit free ventilation. The roosts are placed as high as is possible for turkeys, so that they will not strike ngainst the roof and to protect them from rain and storm a hood conifs down from the roof projecting over the front the entire length o'f the house. The entrance Is made quite large and is in one end of the house. This. is ar ranged so that a door may lie let down at night, and, if desired, locked, being held in place during the day by a wire and two eye screws. If designed for fowls the roosts may be made lower and a portion of the back side of the house boarded up to cut off a portion of the ventilation. The illustration plainly shows the plan of this bouse, which is to desirable. Indiana Far mer. Crne Fertilize. Whatever kind of fruit we grow It la best to plant it so that If possible it may get cross fertilization. We do not know how many different kinds of fruit need to be fertilized by the pollen from another species, but we have learned enough about It to know that as a gen eral thing the fruit is surer if cross pollennled. I could tell of pear or chards that bore little oi nothing for years till they were grafted with other varieties to give them the pollen. There is the Keiffer that has so ofto proved fruitless till it was grafted with Garber. The same Is true to a consid erable extent with apples, and It Is notorious that plums will sometimes not bear nt all unless cross fertilized. Now when I plant a pear, apple or puni orchard I put more than one va riety In the snme neighborhood. The planting of many trees of one variety in u block operates ngnlnst the pollen ntlng of the blossoms, and this is shown by the blossoms falling without iruit setting, or, if the fruit sets it falls off before it is very old. This is one cause, I believe, of the great fall ing of apples we have every year. It simply means that some of the blos soms were not pollenatcd and would have no seeds in them if they grew. In most cases the seedless apple docs not mature, though there may be a va riety that will mature Us fruit without seed. Bradford Hniglit, Uclmout Coun ty, Ohio. Mineral riant Food. I am convinced, writes J. T. Hudson, that mineral plant food Is present in considerable quantities In most of our soils, and that it is used up but slowly by the plants. I think that if we drain our land and let in the air in summer and the frost in winter the result will he the constant formation of new-plant food ,inder the working of the forces of the air. Water Is the universal sol vent, and I believe that where It is rllowed to stund In soil It dissolves much of our most valuable plant food. Where mineral plant food abounds we hear men say "the soil Is strong" and naturally bears a big crop If cultural conditions are right. In our rocky hillsides there Is an abundanre of min eral plant food, dud more food Is helm; constantly made. .Those that notice the grass on such hillsides know that It is of strong growth and that the sod Is frequently deep and closely woven. Failure of Subway Fane, Aiuither of the subway experiment in ventilating the tube has failed to do what the engineers thought It would accomplish, nnd has been abandoned. That Is the installation of the big re volving fans nt the Brooklyn Bridge and Fourteenth street stations. After being in use for two months tho four fans were removed last Sun day night from their positlons'nt either end of the two stations, and a fresh experiment is being tried by placing one of the fans in the tunnel' proper under the City Hall plaza, while the. one at the north end has been moved u nearly to the Worth street station. At Fourteenth street the same thing has heeu tried of scttlngthe fans above and below the station In 'a recess in the tunnel walls. New York Tress. I.lverted Servante. Housemaids In livery are the latest Innovation In smart London houses. The conventional costume for maids hluck dress, white apron and cap hna been In several cases superseded. One lady has attired her uuiids .In smart skirts, tight fitting bodices, with a smart, double breasted waistcoat of yellow and black stripes Willi tiny bras buttons on either side, relieved at the neck by a whlto linen collar. On her head a little French mob cap is worn, while the costume Is com pleted with a tuiall frilled apron. London Bystander, In Cheshire, Fngland. and the ad joining counties, mare than 25,000 tons of Cheshire cheese are made aunuully. WHO 18 KODAMAT Power Behind the Throne Says News paper Correspondent. If one asks who Kodama Is there are two answers; one, that he Is the chief of the general staff In the Japan ese army, and the other that he is, besides, a poor unlettered man, who, at 62 years of age, rules Japan and guides her armies. Richard Barry, the war correspond ent, says, in "Port Arthur," that this man thln'is while others sleep, and works while ofriers eat. He Is the power behind the throne, the adviser at the general's ear. Many public men In Sapan believe Kodama to be an unsafe person of second-rate capacity. He had been sent to Formosa, to "get rid of him." There he raised the place from sv agery to a commercial prosperity. He could have been prime minister. "No," he said. "I would rather pull strings than be one of the strings to be pulled. Russia Is peeping up over the border. Let us prepare. Give me a desk In tho war office." So the critics were glad to get the upstart out of the way. Rut when the war came, ono man had his finger on things, and knew when and where to strike. Ho knew the points In the Korean coast where an army could bo landed. Ho knew how soon It could bo transported there; where all tho merchant steamers were, and how long It would take to turn them Into transports; and he had the audacity of genius. He was not a very presentable man. He had never traveled, and spoke nothing but Japanese. He would laugh like a boy at what he liked, and frown over ' jat displeased him. And he scorned a frock coat and stuck to a kimono. But the emperor and the wisest heads about him knew what Kodama was, and although they could not, for pride's sake, give him the command of the army, they crowned him with power. Obedience a Help. There Is a woman down In Indiana who Is hale and hearty at the nge of 100, and when she was asked to what she attributed her age and health she replied, "Obedience." And this, too, at a time when the women are having the word "obey" taken out of the mar riage service and la other ways mani festing the most sapreme contempt for the old obligation. It is not to be be lieved that there are many women who will care to drag out an existence of 100 years In a stute of obedience, even If a fair degree 6f health Is assured. The holy scriptures do not tell us how long the women lived, although we know that Sarah survived until she was 127 and was so obedient that the Lord blessed her with Isaac wren she was 90. And It Is fair -to suppose thnt other good Hebrew wives were equally long lived and successful. Thus we see that obedience Is of the utmost Importance to the human race and ii tho source of happiness and prosper ity. Still the women of this age are extremely stiff-necked and unreason, able. Whole Town Charrged Location. We have been accustomed to hear ing of the bodily removal of houses, but it has been left for Russia to pro vide the spectacle of a whole town of some 5,000 inhabitants changing its location. This, however, is the case of Lepslnsk, a town in the district of Semlretsche, in ' Russian Turan. Twenty-two years ago Lepslnsk was founded on land provided for the pur pose by the governor general of the province. This land had, however, formerly belonged to the Semlretsche horde of Cossacks, who strongly ob jected to the transfer. For twenty-two years the dispute has continued, and now at last the Inhabitants of Lep slnsk, hearing of a suitable site thirty-five kilometres to the northwest of their present quarters, have decid ed to remove thither In a body, taking their possessions and as much of their habitations as possible along with 1 them. Insect That Sits on Eggs. A remarkable case of an insect sit ting on Its eggs Is recorded by F. P. Dodd In the Transaction of the Ento mological Society of London. This strange departure from the normal habits of the insect race Is exhibited by a species of bus. The female sits In a brooding attitude over her eggs for a period of three weeks. When the young begin to break through she retires an Inch or so from the eggs and remains there for some hours until the last egg Is hatched. She then departs, leaving the young ones to take care of themselves. During the whole time of brooding, and till all the young are hatched, the mcther rats nothing. It Is thought that this brooding habit may be a means of pro tection against the attacks of Ichneu mon flies. London Globe. THE SECRET OF YOUTH Pe Soto looked for the secret of youth In a spring of gushing, life-glv Ing waters, which he wag sure he would find In the New World. Alehem. ists nnd sages (thousands of them), have spent their lives in quest for it, but it is only found by those happy people who can digest and assimilate tho right food which keeps the phys ical body perfect that peace and com fort ire the mire results. A remnrknble mnn of 04 saysi "For many long years suffered more or less with chronic costlvoness and painful Indigestion. This condition made life a great burden to me, as you may well Imagine. "Two years ago I began to use Grape-Nuts as food, and am thankful that I did. It has been a blessing to me In every way. I first noticed that it had restored my digestion. This was a great gain, but was nothing to com pare in Importance with the fact that In a short time my bowels were re stored to free and normal action. "Tho cure seemed to be complete; for two years I have had none of the old trouble. I use the Grnpe-Nuts food every morning for breakfast and fre quently eat nothing else. Tho use has made mo comfortable and happy, and although I will be 04 years old next fall, I bnvo become strong and supple again, erect In figure and can walk with anybody and enjoy It." Name given by Fostum Co., Buttle Creek, Mich. "There's a reason." Read the little book, "The Road t Wellville," iu every pkg. stos BFLCKivc nr AP?OTl0N -NO DRUCS-A NEW METHOD. A f!n of Wa'ere Free Ifave Ton A rut Indtceetlnn. fftntneelt Tronlile, lr recnlar Heart, Dlnv Spelle, Rliort nreath, Oae on thm atomaelt Hitter Taate Bad Breath Impaired Ap petite A feeling of fullness, weight and pain over the stomach and heart, some times nausea and vomiting, a'.eo fever and irk headache? What cause it? Any one or all of thee : Exeeseive eating and drinking abuae of snirita anxiety and depression mental ef fortmental worry and physiral fatigue bod air insufficient food aedentanr habits absence of teeth bolting of food. If you snffer from thia ilow death and miserable eristence. let us send vou a sam ple box of Mull's Antt-BeVh Wafers abso lutely free. No drugs. Drugs injure tho atnmnch. It stops belching and cures a diseased tnr"ach by absorbing the foul odora from nndir'strd food and'bv imparting activity to the lining of the stomach, i milling it to thorouch'.y mix the food with the sastric juices, which promotes digestion and cure the disease. spRriAt. Offfji The regular price of Mull's Anti-1'.rlch Wefcrs is V)c. a dot, but to inf'nHuc" it to thousands of sufferers we will send two (2) bixes upon receipt of 75c. nnd this advertinctrent. or we will send you a sample free for this coupon. Tins Offer Mat Not ArrEAn Aoaiw. 102S3 FREE rocrox 118 Fend this coupon with your name and address and name or a drugg.st who r)n not sell it for a free sample box of Mu'.i'a Anti-Belch Wufera to Mull's Ohapf, Totio Co., 328 Third Ave , Rock Island, 111. (tive Full Adtlreft and Krlle Plainly. Sold by nil druggists, 50c. per box, or cent by mail. Subterfuge Get Interviews. Mme. Duse, who has a strong aver sion to being Interviewed, was recent ly beaten by tho Copenhagen report era. One acted as waiter at the hotel, another acted as shoemaker's assist ant, a third drove her cab, and the fourth was assistant stago mnchlnlst. and all used bits of conversation for long Interviews. FITSnermanentlvoured. No flto-ner'-'"i. nessaftor first dav's ne of Dr. Kline's Ctrent Nerve itestorer.tatrlal bottleand treatise tree Dr.U. H. Klihe. Ltd., 981 Arch Bt.. l'hlla..Pa In one year this country turns out 1501 books of fiction alone. Mrs. Wlnsrw's Soothing Syrnp (or Oillrtrei teething, 'oftensthegums, reduces Inflamma tion, allv s pnln.oures wind colic, 25c. a hottlo The word "bano.net" formerly meant dessert. liso's Cureaaanot be ton highly snotee i ' f laoough oure. J. W. O'Bbiick, SMThlr.t avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan.S.iaj). Tho cactus it coming into fashion in England und Germany. Taylor Cherokee Itemerty of Bweet Ouro and Mullen Is Nature's great remedy Cures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption, and ull throat and lung troubles. At drug gists, 25c., 50J. and (fl.00 per bottle. K. H. Green's Sons, of Atlanta, (la., ara the only auocessfal Dropsy Hpecuiliats In the orld. hco their liberal ofier in advertise ii ect in another column ot this paper. London has fewer suicides thou am o'.l.er sreat capi'nl. How's Tills We oner One Uuudrod Dollars Reward 'at anyooseot Outarra taut euuuot be oureJ hall's Jutaira Ouro. i . J. Cukkxv A Co., Toledo, O. We, the uuuerelgncd, have known F.J. Cbeuey lor the last Hyeais.aud beilevehim perfectly honorable In nil business transac tion uud ttuaaolally able to oarry out any obllKatlous made by tUolr firm. West 1'buax, Wholesale Druggists, To lodo, o, Waldino, ainxax A Martin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, U. Ball's OaturraUurois Saieu Internally, it Ingdlreotly upou the bloo.1 and muoous-dir-taoes o( t he srste. n. Testi inoniala sent free. rrlco,7io. perojttle. Koldbyali Drugs'Hts. lalit) Hull's Family l'llis lor uouatlpuliou. Finland has a large percentage of wood ed area. BABY'S AWFUL ECZEMA Fare Like I! aw Beef Thought She Would Lose Her ICar Healed Without a Hleniliti Mother Thanks Cmtleura. "My little girl had eczema very bad when he was ten months old. I thought she would lose her right ear. it. had turned black, and her face was like a piece offVaw meat, and very sore it would bleed .when 1 washed her, and 1 had to keep cloths on it day and night. There was not a rlar spot on her face when 1 begun using Cuti cura Soap and Ointment, and now it is completely healed, without scur or blem ish, which is more than 1 hud hoped lot. (Signed) Mrs. Hose lither, 2U1 t'cklord St., Brooklyn, N Y." The cost of feeding ihc animals in rlio London Zoo a year is $17,000. PENSI0NF0RA6E.i it r-te meat once for blanks and instructions, hriu t.f charge. No feuatoii. No Pay. AUdmi4 W. II. VilLLi, Will Building, S12 Indiana am, Washington. Ii. U I'atituljt sod Irado-Muriu builcltuU. , miinrrn nin rnc mm for n nAIuN 1 Ml" ll,..!-"! 1,1V. "'.MlUr.l. Ill Rr J Mil ' lU Annul., l'alti.ul.ily Wild J liirkcvB. Hiiji t'f.1-. tu. W V ilr. Ur. Crcii FreucU. N e' A.. I'eftliltwtun, U. C. nnnonv new discovert: J X J S 1 nia gMM. ImIi m9 tMllinoaltU t4 10 ttnye' lfinM free. Be. a. aaua't loaa. Kit, auute, e Somnambulist's Narrow Escape. ' ' Patrolman Jewell of Newark, N. J., noticed something white hanging from the sill of a third floor window of a house. Upon closer Inspection he found that the white object was an old man In his night clothes cling Ing to the sill. Jewell entered the house and, ran up to the third floor where he grabbed the wrists of the old mail and dragged him Into the room. He was George Tauwalt, $2 years old. The old man had walked In his sleep and suddenly found him self going out of the window. He clutched the sill and held on. He had been hanging tor fifteen minutes be fore his plight was discovered and his strength, which was wonderful for his age, was ' apparently exhausted when the policeman seized blra. The old man Is a somnambullEL HE ATTENDS TO BUSINESS who goes straight lo war It la cure ' . Hurts, Sprains, Bruises by the use of Th'ed, Nczvous Mothers Mah.e Unhappy Homes-Their Condition Irritate Both Husband and Children How Thousands of Mothers Have Been Saved From Nervous Prostration and Made Strong and Well. J J I'-Si '-KA;' $1; -.iyt ..itod$L-tm uanM Mrs, tester Curry A nervous, Irritable mother, often on the verge of hysterics, is unfit to care for children; it ruins a child's disposi tion and reacts upon herself. The trouble between children and their mothers too oftein Is due to the fact that the mother hns some female weak ness, and she is entirely nnflt to bear the strain upon her nerves that govern ing children involves; it is impossible for her to do anythinj? calmly. The ills of women act like a firebrand upon the nerves, consequently nine tenths of the nervous prostration, ner vous despondency, "the blues," sleep lessness, and nervous irritability of women arise from some derangement of the female organism. I)o you experience fits of depression with restlessness, alternating with extreme iiritahillty? Are your spirit easily affected, so that one minute you laugh, and the next minute you feel like crying ? Do you feel something like a ball ris ing in your throat and threatening to choke you ; all the senses perverted, morbidly sensitive to light and sound ; pain in the ovaries, and especially between the shoulders; bearing down pains; nervous dyspepsia, and almost continually cross and snappy ? If so, your nerves are in a shattered condition, and yon are threatened with nervous prostration. l'ruof is monumental that nothing in the world la better for nervous prostra tion than Lydla E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound ; thousands and thou sands of women testify to this fact. Ask Mrs. Pinkham's Advice A Woman Best Understands a Woman's Ills. PRICE. 25 Cts mww "1 W. L. Douglas '3?&'3':g SHOES ft W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cllt Edge Lino cannot bo equalled at any price. not! Tr Julys. 1. tW.L.OaunLAM MAKtB MHO SfLLS ' MORf MEN'S tH.RII SHOPS THAU AMY OTHER MANUFACTURER. tin nnfl REWARD to snyonswlte cin lUtUUU diaprove this statement. W. L. Douglas $ J. SO shoes have by their ex cellent style, easy fitting, and superior weerlna qualities, achieved the largest sale of eny SJ.AO shoe In the world. They are Juet ae good as those thet cost you 5.00 to $7.00 the only dlllerence Is the price. II I could teke you into my factury at H rock ton, Mess., the lergeet In the world under one roof making men s fine shoes, end show vou the cere with which every pair of uouglas ehoee l made, you would reellie why W. L. Douglas J 50 enoes are the best shoes produced la the world. If I could show you the (inference between the hoes made In my factory and those of other mekee, j u woutd understand why Douglas $.1.50 ehoea cn.t more to make, why they hold their shape, tit better, wear longer, end are ol greater Intrinsic value then any other 13.50 shoe on the merket to-day, W. L. Douolnm Strong Mmdm Shmmm fmr Mon. 02.6O, fJ.OH. ftowa' Sohoml Creae Shmmm, 03.60, fJ, tl.73,01. AO CAUTION;. Insist upon having W.L.Dnug ss shoes. Take no substitute. Knna genuine without his name and pilue stamped on bottom. WANTKI). A shoe dealer In avery town where W. L. IXumliis Khons are not mid. Pull Una of eamples sent free for Inspection uon request. fait Color t u,e7 tAeg avfff not war eraasg. Write f.r llluatraUd Catalog of rail Style W. 1.. lOUULA, Broekawn. Has. 0UIUf, HIBI All TltMAlliY" I f Cmgh ttjrnu. IVliu Uuod. Use eiij St 11 iVs. maj f"ls- H ONE DAY ml 1 mm B'fc&a9vfSL (E.lWlihediry; 1WTVS.SJ lis sir LvwIeBBaamJLseB AY ntac PRIM -'.-'. v.,'.- I ) t ?.vv'T-;. TIL ...y--.-, , J J 1 1 mm s Jrs.Chas.lF?8rown Mrs Chester Curry, Leader of tha Ladies' Symphony Orchestra. 42 Sara toga St., Kust Boston, Mass., writes: Dear Mrs. Plnkham: "For eight years I was troubled with ex treme narvousnesaand hysteria, brought on by Irregularities. I could neither enjoy life nor sleep nights-. I was very irritable, nervous and deyjiondent. "Lyoia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound waa recommended and proved to lie the only remedy that helped uie. I have daily improved in health until I am now strong and well, and all nervousness bos disap peared." Mrs. Charles F. Brown. Vice-President of the Mothers' Club, 21 Cedar Terrace. Hot Springs, Ark., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " I dragged through nine years of miserable existence, worn out with pain and nervout neea, until It seemed as thongh I shonld fly. I then noticed a statement of a woman trou bled as I was, and the wonderful reeulta she derived from Lydla . Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, I decided to try it. I did so, and at Die end of three months I waa a different woman. My nervouaneaa was all gone. I was no longer irritable, and my busband fell in lore with me all over again." Women should remember that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound la the medicine that holds the record for the greatest number of actual cores of female ills, and take no substitute. Free Advice to Women. Mrs. Pinkham. Lynn, Maas., invites all sick women to write to her for ad vice. Mrs. Pinkham's vaat experience wlta female troubles enables her to tell you just what is best for you, and she will charge you nothing for her advice. Farmers Say Is the Best Remedy on Earth. Kills a Spavin Curb or Splint Very Penetrating. Kills Pain. DR. EARLS. SLOAN, 615 ALBANY STREET, BOSTON, MASS. AITtVGI P DE IS GUARANTEED TO CURE GRIP, EAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA. X won't sell Aal-Ortplne to a dsaler who wen't ClnaraDtee It, Cell fer yuur NUMil HACK. If IT DOCI.V'T VKK. f. H'. Dimmer, JH.V., Manufacturer, Springfield, jr Dyspepsia, SICK HEADACHE, CONSTIPATION Promptly and Permanently Cured with Crab rchard A century's experlnnne with siioeessful results is the best testimonial. Bold by all druggists. ' Crab Orchard Water Co., LOUISVILLE, KY. FOR WOMEN troubled wlta Ills peculiar to their se.s, used as a eoucne is mai velotwly sao ceeefttl. Tboioughlvcleeases, kills disease germs.1 tope discaaigeB, heals inusmauitiua and local orsaeM, cures lettConhaand nasal catarrh. l-.siise Is In powder lovra to be ditaolved in pure wter. sud is far more deeming, healing, germkslel end economical llian liquid antuptlce lot all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL U8CS For esle at dniAgLu. W cents a boa. Trial box and Book of Instructions Pre. Tms N. Pastom comfasiv koeTON, Mae. CONRT INLAND MOI'TrNltt POT AUtlN. 8:i beautiful culoMd enen tnr 200 Ooiiii) ll.a.t fu.l.l Puril Cu . Cuuy I. lend. VI. ADVERTISE1 ITJ? IT PAYS Jacobs Oi! and saves timi, money and guts out of mbery quickly. Ptsoes, 3So and SOe.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers