What Ails You? Do you fool week, tired, despondent, have frequent headache, contort tongue, bitter or Nid taste In morning, "heart burn," belching of gas, acid risings In throat after eating, stomach gnaw or burn, foul breath, dlay spells, poor or variable appetite, nausea at times and kindred symptom? If yoTNiave any considerable number of tnvbove&yntorn you are suffering frotnSrtlloumiKjqntd liver with Indl gMtlon0pert pr Pierce.'; fioMen tHfllt QI-ovr-rv Is mnde ill) of the must ...I.. v.l ......I i..! -i I tirl rii l;nnil'n til nvdlcal ycienre for lhg permiinenteiire in IT abiiornui condition. It Is amosl fill efticiunt liver invlgorator, stomach tonic, bowel regulator and nerve strenpthener. Tho'tJoMen 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 Is a fluid extract mado with pnre,.trlplo-reflned glycerine, of proper strength, from the roots of the following native American forest plants, viz., Golden Seal root, Stono root, Mack Cherrybark, Queen's root, Hloodroot, and Mandrake root. The following leading medical authorities, stnonir a hoM of cither, extol the fnreiroi no roots for thocurn of Just such allmpnts a tho iKivesymptomnlndlrtttc: I'rof. U. Kartholow, M I)., of Jetri-rson Med. ColWo, Thlla.: I'rof. II C Wooil, M. l..of I'nlv.of I'a.! I'rof. Edwin M. Hale, M. I)., of Holiwmann Med. tVWIrtro. Chloairo! Prof. .John King. M. I).. Author of Ainerii-un Dispensatory; I'rof. Juo. M. ft-ud-rter, M. )).. Author of Himcltlc MeUlolnes; I'rof. Laurence Johnson, M. II., Med. Dept. Univ. of N V.i I'rof. I'lnley KHIngwood. M. II.. Author of Materia Medlea and I'rof. In Bennett Medi cal Colleim. Chicago. Pond name and ad dress on Postal Card to llr. 11 V. I'leiw. Ituf falo, N. Y., and receive fm booklet Riving extracts from writings of all the aliove modl ral authors and many others endorsing. In tho strongest possible terms, each and every In gredient of which "Golden Medical Discov ery " Is composed. i)r. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and Invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. They may te used In conjunction with "Golden Medical Discovery " If twwels are much con stipated. The.v'r tiny and sugar-coated. Tills Kr-1 Propelled A limit. Charlos McCoy, while Ashing at Weseolang lake on Saturday, landed on eel weighing fifteen pounds after a hard struggle. McCoy found he couIJ not handle the monster, and, picking up a hammer, nailed the eel by the head to the stern of tho boat. In Its struggles the eel propelled the boat to shore. It was the biggest ever caught In this section. Dis patch. HICKS' CAPO DINE CURES ALL ACHES And Nervousness Trial bottteMc Aldrufittm V. L. DOUGLAS 3.50&$3.00 Shoes BEST IN THE WORLD W.LOouglas $4 Gilt Edge tins. cannotoe equalieaatany price To Shot 0alm : w, U DouglM Job bing Houm It the tnoit oooiptMe In (till onnnlry "Html for CtUtloQ SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PKICES. Man's Bnoea. $8 to (jl.10. Boy' hM. fa totl.SS. Women Shoes. $4.00 to Jl.gO. Hisses' ft Children's Show, UH8 to tl.OO. Try W. I.. Douglas Woinrn's. Mli ana Children' shoes I for style, lit and wear they exrel other make. II I could take you Into my large factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes are made, you would then understand why they hold meir snape, in dciici , wear longer, and are of greater value than any other make. Wherever yon live, you cn obtain W. L. Douglas hoe. HI name and price I (tamped an the bottom, which protect you against high price and Interior (hoc. Ta Are no iuiH Jure. Ak your dealer tor W. L. Douglaa hoe and insist upon having them. fast Coor iuelett uud; "III not wear bramy. Write for Illustrated Catalog ot Fall Styles. W. L. DOUULAS, UepU IS. Brockton, Mas. When you buy WFT WEATHER CLOTHING you want complete protection tnd long service. TViAeet jtnr! mnnv other good points ore comDirtea in TOWER'S CI CM HDAMn OILED CLOTHING You cam afford , to buy any other . wta "BUS nil inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con ditions of the mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, sore mouth or inflamed eyes by simply ' dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure these stubborn aueclions by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs.checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxlins represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. 50 cents at druggists.- Send for Free Trial Box THE R. PAXTON CO.. Boston. Mas Oh! What a Gold I HAVE. Tta CM quickly pi iM slit kr UMai Johnson's . Anoeinimcnt DROPPED ON HUOAR. It's as ttiiirh for latent! ss Kiteraal ear, ant for M ytiars has bs.it cunug oolits, coughs, oniiip, crimps and oollo. Try it. , 20 snl m OAiits. At sit UMilsrs. I. B. JOHNSON Jk CO., 1W..U, Mas. You Cannot KEW YGRKJff BY DAY. Some of tho Things Dons Daily in the Metropolis. Monkeys Run A Steamer. The British tramp steamer IjOW ther Castle reached this port Wed nesday from Yokohama. Chnng, a riotous ape, was in chains, but he looked like a grim fighter. Accord ing to Captain Llghtcllcr, Chnng precipitated a mutiny among the monkeys In tho heart of a severe storm In the Bay of Bengal. Kl Kl. Chang's mate, was missing for some days, and Chnng supposed the China men had thrown him overboard as nn offering to their gods to ally the violence of the Brm. He burst open the monkey cage and let loose 60 of the wildest specimens. They tore mndly from the hold to the bridge, where Donohue, the mate, stood In solitary contemplation. Donohue yelled "Murder!" and tho steamer's crew rushed to his' aid. For five minutes there was a pitched brittle between tho 30 Chinamen and the 60 monkeys. The monkeys were thrown overboard until only a few remained to tell the tale. Kl Kl was found a day later on the mast top solemnly contemplating the beauties of tho universe. Ill As Wife l.enrns To Cook. Breathless and excited, Marie Jen nings, 12 years old, of One Hun dred and Fifty-ninth Street and Jack son Avenue, ran Into the hallway ot Public School No. 10, at One Hun dred and Sixty-fifth Street and Eagle Avenue, and between gasps demand ed of Policeman O'Connell that sho be allowed to see her mother Im mediately. She said that Mrs. Jen nings was taking cooking lessons In one of the evening classes held lr. the school building, and tlint matter? of the utmost Importance demanded her return home. "Why, what's tho matter?" nskef O'Connell. I rapa s tanon nan wun jnaigos- tlon, replied the chlla. Mrs. Jennings was notified and de parted hurriedly. Womnn Lawyer Wins Case. For the first time In the County Court In Brooklyn a woman lawyer appeared Tuesday as counsel for a defendant In a crlmlanl action. She was Miss Ida Plmoff and the defend ant waa Harry Goldstein, charged with extortion. Mrs. Bertha Glass of Watkins and Vltklna Avenues, Brooklyn, Blleged that on August 1 Goldstein told her a gang of horse thieves was to steal her horses or poison them. He offered, she said, tot $150 to dissuade the men. Miss Plmoff so disconcerted the witness that she contradicted her direct tes timony. In granting a motion to discharge Goldstein, Judge Asplnall said: "Goldstein, you are guilty, but the skill of your lawyer has saved you from a prison cell." Dropped Ilox Of Torpotloes. Irving Granet, a laborer working on Tier 11 East River, was blown Into the air after dropping a case containing toy torpedoes on the plor. When Pollcemnn William F. Dris coll found him, Granet said he was well enough to go back to work, and refused to be sent to a 'hospital. Barely an hour later his limbs be gan to swell from the shock of the explosion, and he was taken' to his home, 719 East Third Street. Ho also had wounds under his chin and on his right breast. In the scramblo among the crowd on the pier which followed tho explosion Michael O'Donnell fell into the water, and was rescued by Policeman Drlscoll, who pulled him out with a rope, aided by three peddlers. Girl Kills Herself. "If you are bound to kill yourself, do It. I don't care. Anyway, I will never marry you," said a man to a weoplng girl, who stood with him at the foot of East Eighty-sixth Street. "I did love you and I will pay the nennlty," she cried, and rushing to. the river edge, which opens out on Hell Gate, sho threw off a costly cloak and hat, and leaped Into the water. Tho man ran away, and Capt. George 1j. Holden, on tho barge Clarence Iceland, lowered a smull hoat, but was unable to rescue tho drowning girl. The police have the Jacket and hat, and are trying to solve the mystery. A Moravian Ijove Kenst. Surrounded by all the parapher nalia of Its annual love feast, the Old Moravian Church at New Dorp, Sta ten Island, celebrated Its one hun dred Bnd forty-third anniversary' Wednesday afternoon, with Its twenty-fourth pastor, Hev. Dr. Grunert, In charge of tho ceremonies. The church was donated by the late Com modore Cornelius Vanderbilt. Hun dreds of Moravians Joined In the cel ebration. After a report of the year'-? work of the church was read, all present Jolnod in the social part, with music and the breaking of tho bread which Is yearly made for this special occasion. I Steal Spoons; Miss $10,1)00. Burglars entered tho summer home of Walter Keys, the book maker, at Hastings, on Saturday night and stole a do.on sliver spoons, ' but missed $40,000 casli wlilcn was I in a tin box in the library. Keys I won tho money on Saturday's races, i It is thought the robbers were after 1 Key's winnings, but were scared off before they hnd mado a thorough search of tho house. Klcvutor l-VU 11 Floors. Three men and a girl hud a thrill ing descent in an elevator car and a lucky escape In the Temple Bnr of fice building, at Court and Jorale mon Streets, Brooklyn. Tho cur had Just started down from the eleventh floor when something went wrong and tho operator lost control of It. The car could not be stopped, and It descended swiftly to the ground floor. There It rebounded from the air cushions, and the passenger and operator were thrown to the floor of the car. Chorus tJirls M"y Sew. Chorus girls ot tho Hippodrome aro to beconio seamstresses on the sldo If they wIbIi to add to their earnings in that way. The manage ment feels so ingenuouHly positive that they will that an extra largo room in the costume department has been set aside for their particular benefit. Three hundred grlls are en rolled at the Hippodrome in the pro duction of "A Society Circus. As they are not on the Btage more than half tho time, each of them can, if she chooses, get pay for Bewlng oti costumes. COMM. MLUiM.- Weekly Review of Trade and Latest Market Reports. New York. H. (iT Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade snys: "No unfavorable developments have appeared except the damage by storm at the South, which was al most entirely local In effect. Au tumn trade Is now In full swing, es pecial activity being reported In dry goods, millinery and footwear. Manu facturing plants are engaged far In t aavanco In all tho lending Industries, I tho metal departments making the J most, striking exhibits, and the ac tivity of transporters Is shown by railway earnings in September 9.2 per cent, larger than last year's fig ures. Crop returns are up to ex pectations, aside from some loss In cotton, which caused a violent rise In prices. "Scarcity of most forms of steel ind pressure for quick delivery tend to harden quotations, while the rise In pig Iron hns continued until the Inflnted position of a few years ago lernis about to bo attained. Practi cally all the plg-lron furnaces are now In blast and work will soon bo started on many new plants of tho apnn-hearth vnriety. Any decrease In demand for structural steel for buildings on account, of the tipproaeh sf winter is more than offset by tho urgent needs of car works, which sre falling behind with deliveries. High prices continue to prevail for minor metals. "Commercial failures this week In the Vnltcd States aro 183. against 188 last week. 200 the preceding week and lllft tho corresponding week last year." Wholesale Markets. Baltimore. FLOUR Steady and unchanged; receipts, 19,4 'i'i barrels; exports, F5,473 barrels. WHEAT Easy; spot, contract, 74 Mi ft 74 ; spot No. 2 red Western 1 1 'm & 7 8 ; October, 7 4 '3 0 7 4 ; November, 75 asked; December, 75 76 ; steamer No. 2 red, 69 (ft) 69. CORN Easy; spot, 54 '. iff 54 '4 ; October, 53 fil f3 ; year, 4 7 & 47; January, 47 (a 4T, ; Bteam sr mixed, 5 2 -14 (37 53 ; receipts, 38, 185 bushels; exports, 128,571 bush els; Southern white corn, 5 6 (iT 5 6 '4 ; Southern yellow corn, 53 (ff 55 OATS Quiet; No. 2 white. 39(fi Sai.i; No. 3 white, 38(U38&; No. 2 mixed, 37 A 37 ; receipts, 23,845 bushels. RYE Firm; No. 2 Western ex port, 64fi!65; No. 2 Western domes tic, 70T;71; receipts, 5,022 bushels. BUTTER Firm and unchanged; fancy imitation, 20 21 ; fancy cream ery, 25((f 26; fancy ladle, 18 20; store-packed, 16V4fil8. EGGS Firm; 24. CHEESE Quiet, and unchanged; large, 131,"; medium, 13 94; small, 14. New York. -WHEAT Receipts, 40,900 bushels; sales, 3,250,000 fu tures and 24.000 spot. Spot easy; No. 2 red, 78 Vs elevator; No. 2 red, 79 f. o. b. afloat. No. 1 Northern Duluth, (,6 f. o. b. afloat; No. 2 hard winter, 83 f. o. b. afloat. CORN Receipts, 62,350 bushels; exports, 3,101 bushels; sales, 30,000 futures. Spot barely steady; No. 2, 54 elevator and 55 f. o. b. nfloat; No. 2 yellow, 57; No. 2 white, 57. OATS Receipts, 130,500 bushels. Spot steady; mixed onts, 2 6 ft 3 2 pounds, 37 V4 ; natural white, 3033 pounds, 38VJ(fi)40; clipped white, 38 40 pounds, 39 6p4i. BUTTER Strong. Receipts, 7,700; street prices, extra creamery, 26 26; official prices, creamery, com mon to extra, 19025; do., heli seconds to extra, 21 jj 26; Stat dairy, common to extra, 18ff?24; renovated, common to extra, 16 iff 22; Western factory, common to firsts, 16 iff 19; Western imitation cream ery, firsts, 20. EGGS Steady; receipts, 10,917; prices unchanged. POULTRY Alive, easy; spring chickens, 13; fowls, 14; turkeys, 14. Dressed, firm;. Western chickens, 11 (dim; spring turkeys, 16 22; Howls, 12 ft 15. FEED Firm; spring bran, 20.85, October shipment. LARD Firmer; Western prime, 9.1 5 9.25; refined firm; continent, 9.55. COTTONSEED OIL Firm; prime crude f. o. b. mils, 31; do., yellow, 42. Live Stork. New York. BEEVES Medl ,ni and common slow but not lower; bulls steady; cows dull and wesb; steers, 3.90 5. 90;-bulls, 2.503.0; tpwB, 1.10 3.20; heifers, 3.30 3.75. CALVES Veals steady to 5.00 9.00; culls, 4.00 4.50; Western calves and grassers lower; Westerns, 3.25 4. 50; grassers, 3.00; dressed calves slow; ity-dressed veals, 8 13c. per pound; country-dressed, 7 1 2c. HOGS Receipts, 6,200; market firmer; State aid Pennsylvania hogs, 6.957.10. Chicago. CATTLE Common to prime, 3.75(ff 7.00; cows, 2.704.50; heifers, 2.60 5.35; bulls, 2.40 4.50; calvos, 3.00 8.00; stockers and feeders, 2.25 4.40. HOGS Choice to prime heavy, 6.70 do 6.85 ; medium to good heavy, C.55rrf6.65; butchers' weights, 6.70 ft 6.85; good to choice mixed. 6.50 Cn 6.65; medium mlxej packing, 6.35 6.50; pigs, 6.50 6.60. SHEEP Sheep. 6.00 5.25; year lings, 5.656.00; lambs, 5.50 7.35. WORTH REMEMBERING Kissing a woman's lips is a gross Insult in Finland. Tho Ashantls of Africa are per haps tho most cruel and demoniacal of the race3 that people the earth. Their drums aro decorated with hu man skulls and bones. Most of tho larger towns in Che klnng, China, are establishing chain hero of commerce; these are semi uncial bodies, being under the su porvislon of tho local bureau of ogrl. culture, trade, industry and mines. Tho Australian mound bird hulldo the biggest nest in the world. It sometimes mukes mounds 150 feet In circumference in which It buries Its eggs five feet deep. A largo Portugese wheat crop U reported, and foreign wheat, which was imported in large quantities -luM year, will not likely find a market Portugal this year. Umii . nrovldes for privilege ot . study and travel one voar in seven for the public school f a tanj-hui- draws a Dart I I nalury and has regular position on return. rworth knowing; iM- ,-?afrs.-- In Russia an extensive domestic industry consists of the manufacture of wooden spoons, of which as many as 30,000,000 are made unnually. They are nearly all of birch wood. A camel begins work at four yeart old, and frequently continues in use for over half a century. It will carry 1000 pounds on Its back, while few horses can carry more than 250 pounds. Near Bowling Station, on the La narkshire and Dumbartonshire Rail- way, Is the unique spertacle of the I highways of the world road, liver, j canai ana railway side ny side, und well within an ordinary stone's throw ot each other. Among tho most picturesque fig ures In the kaleidoscopic street 1 of Constantinople aro the Arab chief tains from Turkey's more southern possessions. Theli tonne, white rolies aro brightened by gay scarfs, jeweled scabbards and lances, and by orna mental headdresses, heavy with or naments of precious metals. j Lnte statistics show that a Span iard lives less than two-thirds as long as a Norwegian. Tho average duration of Jlfo is: In Norway, fifty years; England, forly-five; Belgium, forty-four; Switzerland, forty-four; France, forty-three; Austria, thirty nine; Oermany. thirty-nine; Bavaria, thirty, and Italy, thirty-two. J. Marshall Brooks, a Callfornlan recently arresLed in Mexico, just over the border, bribed his jailer to allow him to escape with three $100 Con federate bills. When the jailer after wards came over to San Diego to cash one of the bills it was his turn to get into trouble, and now he Is in I a Mexican Jail himself. j In Holland potatoes aro not re ceived In tho parcel post, Denmark will not receive almanacs, and Egypt will not permit sausages to be posted. Germany refuses anything of Ameri can origin, and hns some clauses di rected against Japan; while airguns, maps, wax matches, rosaries, relics and Jewelry are the miscellaneous lot barred by Spain. Street car lines leading out of San Francisco demonstrated the effects of the recent earthquake In' a peculiar way. Photographs ot the lino show the track apparently undisturbed ex cept that in spots the rails are twist ed or buckled longitudinally. It was as if each rail had been pushed to gether toward the. middle from the end, with the result that tho steel rails bent as if they had been mere wire in the hands of a man. The buckling on this line occurred in spots over a distance ot three miles. A course which is designed to fit teachers to conduct children's gar dans is presented in tho summer school of the New York University. There are several gardens laid out for the use of pupils In and around New York City, but tho authorities are at a loss to find men or women trained to conduct them. The phe nomenal growth and success of this work In Philadelphia has led to an extension of school gardening in many cities. HYDKOPHOBIA FItOM SCRATCH. Easy Mode of Contniiiiiintiou Which I is Often Overlooked. It is an erroneous notion that hy drophobia appears only in conre quence of biting, or more rarely in consequence of licking surface wounds. There Is also a third nnd easy mode ot contamination by scratching. Dr. Uemlinger, of the Insliture of Bacteriology, Constanti nople, has just published several ob servations that establish tho existence of such an origin of tho hydrophobic infection. This origin is easily ex plained. A certain number of ani mals (tho dog and the cat iu particu lar) have, in the normal state, a habit of licking their paws. It has been proved that the saliva of rabid ani mals is virulent several days before the appearance of the first symptoms of hydrophobia. When tho disease is declared, a now factor intervenes! The saliva that, especially If it he chained up or confined in a close place, soils It paws or its claws. Cn the other hand, the scratch lays bate ' numerous nervous fibres upou which the poison Is very easily sown. Every person scratched by an animal rabid ,.9 1, tn. L.V,n..t.l l. Ul DUnj'CLlUll Ul UCIlltj DU DWVIIIJM IJU inoculated by tno Pasteur method with as little delay as possible. Xo Censorship. Tho Hobart (Okla.) Ncns-riepi!)-Hcan last week received a loiter slgucd by all tho physicians of the city lubisllng that the pa, oar should not mention their names in connec tion with surgical operations, burns, accidents, or anything ot the sort, unless authorised in writing. The NewB-Ilepubllcun expresses Itsolf as j uuciiuuig 10 at ceiu iuo ceusorsuip established by the docto-s or any one else, but docs announce that it wU hereafter omit tho prefix "Dr." when refcrrius to Iho liobart pill rollers in ilu personal columns, and will shove 'em nlosc with the com- Won herd it they tro so averse, to free advertising ns their letter would lui- ply. Western Publisher. ! Wealth in Stolen Tic. -., J. C. Bolaucuu, tho Southern Pa cific detective, huj been tie hunting for the company for several weeks and bus located sontu 5000 Southern Pacific ties on ranches ami at mines, some of thorn foriy miles, from tho ! Southern Paclfio right of way. Ha also found niuny Snuta Fa ties vest of Doming, whore they had been car lied by floods. An untreated tie costs tho Southern PcciCc on 1U New Mex- . Ico division when put o9 the car one dollar, and a treated tie costs a dol lar nud a quarter. Albuquerque 1 IN. M.) Cltiieu, Monoy flnosn't ktow on trnpn. but much of It in obtiihwd by grafting. TERRIBLE SCALP HUMOR. nad Corrrrd With Ilmnnr Dorps, With Loa of Hall Another Hprtriy Cure . by Cotlru.ia Itt'tiirdlra. "All my life 1 hnd been troubled more or less with humor iu my scalp, but about year ajo it became worre. and my ;;!( wat covered with little notes, which itched so it nearly made me crazy; my hair also heian to get dry and full out. 1 tried oil kind of hair restorer with no effect, and 1 a nearly disrourojjed, but one day 1 waa reading in n paper what the Cuticuru hcnuiiira had dona fir sculp diseases, and decided to make a trial. 1 Cot a cake of L'uticiir.i Snap, a box of Cu ticura Ointment and Culiruru Rcaolvcni Pills. I used Hum according to direc tion!, and soon noticed n difference ; tin: tiny sores on my t;alp beijan to heal. th itching stopped, and my hair becan to grow thick. 1 linve ued only the one calte of Cuticiir.i Soap, one box of Oint ment and one via! of Pills, and now I have no humor on my 's.p and my hair is soft and silky. Jliss Mivzie C Atkins. Ho:; 32, Kant Orleans Mass., AW. 10, lfKJj." 1 1 iid Tho .Name Wrong. The family In the flat ulio'e the Smiths in the Round-proof (?) apartment-house walked so very much lil:e elephants that Mrs. Smith Instantly christened them the Llghtfoot family, without tho least knowing their name. Mr. Smith Is an absorbed gentle man, so Interested in his business that he listens to thlnrs at home in Bort of a dream, and particularly he takes what his wife says as a matter of course, without question. The other day lie met the man from the tint above In the elevator. '"Mr. Smith,. I believe," said the man from the flat above, genially. "I am not waiting for an introduc tion, because we have many mutual friends. I live right above you In this house, and I think we should be acquainted at least." "Oh! It Is Mr. Llghtfoot," replied Mr. Smith, cordially. "I am very happy to meet you!" "Not Llghtfoot, Brown." corrected that individual, smilingly. Mr. Smith's brows were knitted. "My wife told me your nnme wns Llghtfoot, I wonder why?" he asked. "Queerest thing, she Is usually so exact," and then he caught the glre of wounded dignity on his compan ion's face, and luckily he bad reached his own landing, and so he bowed himself out nulckly and went In to reproach his Innocent better-half for getting him in trouble. A Daily Trouglit. Our love Is Inwrought In our en thusiasm as electricity is inwrought in the air, exnlting its power by a subtle presence. George Eliot. IXTEBF.STIXG CONTEST. Heavy Cost of Unpaid Postage. One of the most curious contests ever before the public was conducted by many thousand persons under the offer of the Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., of Battle Creek, Mich., for prizes of 31 boxes of gold and .".00 greenbacks to those making the most words out of the letters Y-IsO-Grape-Nuts. The contest was started in Febru ary, 1006, and it was arranged to have the prizes awarded on Apr. SO, 1006. When the public ahnotincement appeared many persons began to form the words from these letters, sometimes the whole family being occupied evenings, a combination of amusement and education. After a while the lists began to come in o the Postum Ollice, and be fore long the volume grew until it required wagons to carry the mail. Many of tho contestants were thoughtless enough to send their lists with Insufficient postage and for a period it cost tho Company from twenty-five to fifty-eight and sixty dollars a day to pay the unpaid post age. Young ladies, gsnernlly those who had graduated from the high school, were employed to etamlne these lists and count the correct words. Web ster's Dictionary was the standard, and each list was very carefully cor rected, except those which fell below 8000, for it soon became clear that nothing below that could win. Some of the lists required the work of a young lndy for a solid week on each individual list. The work was done very carefully and accurately, but the Company had no idea, at the time the offer was made, that the people would respond so gsnsrally, and they were compelled to fill every available space in the offices with these young lady examiners, and notwithstanding they worked steadily, it wan impossi ble to complete the examination until Sept. 29, over six months after the prizes Bhould have been awarded. This delay caused a great many inquiries and naturally created some dissatisfaction. It has been thought best to make this report In practi cally all ot the newspapers' In the United States and many of the maga zines in order to make clear to the people the conditions of the conte-jf. Many lists contninsi enormous numbers of words which, under the rules, had to be eliminated. "Pea gar" would count, "Peggors" would not. Some lists contained over 50, 000 words, the great majority of which were cut out. The largest lists were checked over two and in some cases three times to insure ac curacy The tlOO.OO gold prize was won by L. D. Iteeae, 1227-15th St., Denver, Colo., with 9941 correct words. The highest J10.00 gold prize went to S. K. Fraser, Lincoln, Pa., with, 992 1 correct words. A complete list of the 331 winners with their home addresses will be sent to Bny contestant enquiring on a postal card. Bo sure and give name and address clearly. This contest haB cost tho Co. many thousand dollars, and prohnbly has not been a profitable advertisement, nevertheless, porhaps some who had never before tried Grape-Nuts food have been interested in the contest, and from trial of tho food have been shown its wonderful rebuilding pow ers. It teaches In a practical manner that scientifically gathered food ele ments can be selected from tho field grains which nature will use for re building the nerve centres and brain In a way that is unmistakable to users of Grape-Nuts. "There's a reason." WHOSSi SKETCH OF THE LIFE And a True Story of How the Vegetable Compound Had Its Birth and How the "Panic of '73" Caused It to be Offered for Public Sale in Drug Stores. This remarkable womnn, whose maiden no me was Estes. wns born In Lyun. Muss., I'Vbrutirv tt.h, 1M1K. com ing from a good old Quaker family. For some years she taught school, and became known as u womnn of an alert and investigatinfr mind, an earnest seeker after knowledge, and above all, possessed of a wonderfully sympa thetic nature. In 1843 she married Isnac Pinkhnm. a builder and real estate operator, nnd their early mnrried life was mucked by prosperity nud huppincss. They lmd four children, three sons and a daughter. In those good old fashioned days it was commou for mothers to make their own home medicines from roots end herbs, nature's own remedies calling in a physician only in specially urircnt cas'-s. iiv tradition nnd ex perience many of them gained a won derful knowledge of the curative prop erties of the various roots und herbs. Mrs. I'inkhum took a great interest in the study of roots nnd herbs, their characteristics and power over disease. Slio maintained that just as nature so bountiiuUy provides in the harvest fields and orchards vegetable foods of all kinds; so, if we but take the rain', ) to find thcra, in the roots nnd herbs of the field there are remedies ex pressly designed to cure the various ills and weaknesses of the body, and it was her pleasure to search these out. and prepare simple and effective niedi cines for her own family and friends. Chief of these wtts a rare combina tion of the choicest medicinal roms and herbs found best adapted for the cure of the ills and weaknesses pecu liar to the female sex. and Lydiu E. l'inlt buin's friends and neighbors learned that her compound relieved and cured and it became quite popular among mem. All this so far wnsdone freely, with out money and without price, us a xaoor oi love. But in 1873 the financial crisis struck Lynn. Its length and severity were too much for tho large real estate interests of the Pinkham family, as this class of business suffered most from fearful depression, so when the Centen nial year dawned it found their prop erty swept away. Some other source of income hud to be found. At this point Lydin E. Pink-ham's Vegetable Compound wus made known to tho world. The three sons and the daughter, with their mother, combined forces to lx.yrS...,-. yfjl.yqc , For Emergencies at Home For ihe Stock on the Farm SIo&tcs Liiximervt Is & whole medicine chest Price 25c 50c 6 1.00 Sand For Free Bookler on Address Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass. rw??:,r i:.Vr.t-J -law. G a STONES. KIDNEY STONES. f.RAVFI on rrnwF im ALL thf ri AnrtFR Awn J,; r," .T PENSION FORAGE. riler a lieu. writs meal ones lor blanks ana lnstnu'tloiiH. Ft ul .:lir(i. No i'anslnu, No I'ay. Addii... w. H. u.1.1, nun uiiiiuina, I s li.linu Av Wai.li. uglou, 1. U- tataula aua TraaUark buUUIml, Raaulling rrom Hlliousorss pnslll.aly our.d by CRAEMF.l'S CALCUlUS uTl? Wrh. o! .T.UI. WM,CRAtMLfi,4IOO N. GRAND AVtNUE. fcT. LOUI. MIBCOUn?. iEWA OF LYDIA E. PINKHAA1 restore the family fortune. They urfri'cd thiit the medicine which was so piHHl for their woman friends and neighbors was cfptivljy good for the women of the whole world The I'inkhams had no money, and little credit. Their first laboratory was the kitchen, where roots and herbs were steeped on the stove, gradually filling a gross of bottles. Then came the question of Relling it, for always before they had given it away freely. They hired a job printer to run off some pamphlets setting forth the merits of the medi cine, now called Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and these were distributed by the Pinkham sons in Boston, New York, and Brooklyn. The wonderful curative properties of .the medicine were, to a great extent, self-advertising, for whoever used it recommended it to others, and the de mand gradually increased. In 1 877, by combined efforts the fam ily had saved enough money to com mence newspaper advertising and from that time the growth and success of the enterprise were assured, until to day Lydia E Pinkham and her Vege table Compound have become house hold words everywhere, and many tons of roots and herbs are used annu ally in its manufacture. Lydia E. Pirjchara herself did not live to see the great success of this work. She passed to her reward years ago, but not till she had provided means for continuing her work as effectively as sho could have dono it her:elf. During her long and eventful expe rience she was ever methodical in her work and she wns always careful to pre serve a record of every case that came to her attention. The case of every sick woman who applied to her for advice ami there were thousands received careful study, and the details, includ ing symptoms, treatment and results were recorded for future reference, and to-day these records, together with hundreds of thousands made since, are available to sick women the world over, and represent a vast collabora tion of information regarding the treatment of woman's ills, which for authenticity and accuracy can hardly lie equaled In any library in the world. With Lydia E. Pinkham worked her daughter - in - law, tho present Mrs. Pinkhnci. She wus carefully instructed in nli her haid-won knowledge, and for years she assisted her in her vast correspondence. To her hands naturally fell the directiorrof the work when its origina te r passed away. For nearly twenty, live years she has continued it, and nothing in the work shows when tho first Lydia E. Pinkham dropped her pen, nnd the present Mrs. Pinkham, now the mother of a large,family, took it up With woman assistants, some as capable us herself, the present Mrs. Pinkham continues this great work. nnd probably from the office of no other person have so many women been ad vised how to regain health. Sick wo men, this advice is "Yours for Health" freely given if you only write to ask for it. Such is the history of Lydla E. rink hum's Vegetable Compound ; made from simple roots and herbs j the one great medicine for women's ailments, and the fitting monument to the noble woman whose name it bears. Horses.Cattle.Hofis S rVsuttry. i.r!t HhiL 'l? I I All "NllBLACE-i " Loaded Black Powder Shells Shoot Strong and Evenly, Are Sure Fire, Will Stand Reloading. They Always Get The Game. For Sale Everywhere. mi mi icmhcc o ak. l,.., c. mni.i., ".... .'1' andsllSlomsehWubl a I DVKKT1SK IH tUU FAPKtt. IX WILL PAY S NU 42 ir ami, ed wilb wrak eyva. um UlltfVUll OLJO tllslSfi