Oyspepsiaof Women Ciused by Female Disorder and Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound A great many women suffer with a form of indigestion or dyspepsia which due not seem to yield to ordinary treat ment. While the symptomsseem to be similar to those of ordinary indica tion, yet tlio medicines universally pre scribed do not seem to restore the pa tient's normal condition. Ofrj. M. Wright Mrs. Plnhham claims that there is a kind of dyspepsia that is caused by a derangement of the female organism, end which, while it causes a disturb ance similar to ordinary indigestion, cannot be relieved without a medicine which not only acts as a stomach tonic, but lias a .poculiartonic effect on the fe male organism. As proof of this theory we call at tention to tho case of Mrs. Magpie Wriirht, Brooklyn, N. Y., who was . i a 1 . T 1 1 XT' Til 1. ' COmpu'ieiy cured iy Kjtua rj i juk ham's Vegetable Compound after every thing else had failed. She writes : " For two years I suffered with dyspepsia which so dcKonoriUed the entlro svitein that I was unaliln to ottpnd to iny litily duties. I felt no ak and nervous, and nothing that I ate rusted (food and it caused a disturbance in my stomnch. 1 triwd diireront dyspepsia cures, Imt nothing seomod to liolp m. i was ad vised to pive I.vdta E. I'inlcham'a Vi-(rctn.hle Compound a trial, and wn happily surprised to Arid that it acted likn a line tonic, and in a fowilavs 1 bciran to en joy and properly difrest mv food. My recovery was rapid, ami in flvowerlrsl wns awll "woman. I have rec ommended it to many sitlTvring women." No other medicine in the world has received such widespread and unquali fied endorsement or litis such a record of cures of female troubles, ns has Lydia E. I'iukhaiu's Vegetable Compound. mm CAPUDINE '7 .' 7 IMMEDtATR.LV CUKES HEADACHES Brra,hsup COLDS IN s TO II HOURS avie 10s. At DruSanis Sneezing is the best brain clearer known. Many persons conclude an attack of faintnesB or fainting with a violent sneeze. Our ancestors took snuff from a belief in the efficacy of sneezing. But tobacco so taken is in part absorbed into the blood and hurts the system. There Is more Catarrh In this section of ths rountrythunull othHr iltsHiisay put together, and until tan last fow your was supposed to helnourahle. Jfora irruat many years doctors pronouDondit a local disease and proscribtid local remedies, aud hy constantly failing to cure with local treatmont, pronounced it In curable. Koience has proven Catarrh to be & constitutional disnase and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, maim faotu rod by V. J. Clmnwy h Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only oonstltntiousl oure onthemurknt. It Is taken internally In ilo.ma Irom 10 drops to a tonspoouful. It acts direct ly on tho blood and muoous surfaces of ths system. T hey olTor one hundred dollars for any case it fails to euro. Sond for oirciilurs niiii testimonials. Address t J, Ciikney Je Co., Toledo, O. fold by Drutrulst, 7ric. Take bull's Family Pills for constlpatlou The city of St. Petersburg is pro ceeding vigorously with tho develop ment of its urban transportation sys tem. An order has been given for 180 Britlsh-mado electric trolley cars. The Ideiil l-'amlly Ijtxntive is one Hint can be flsed hy the entire fiimilv. young and old, weak and strone, without any dander of harmful eHecta. it should have properties w.iich insure the same dose always having the same elicit, otherwise the quantity will have to bo in creased and linally lose its effect alto gether. These properties can be found in that old family luincdy, ilnindrcth'i Pills, because its ingredients are ot the purest herbal extracts, and every pill is kept for three years before being sold, which al lows them to mellow. ve do not believe there is n luxttive on the market that is so carefully made. lirandreth's Tills are the same line lax ative tonic pill your grandparents UHed. They have been in use for over a century and are sold in every drug store and medi cine 6tore, cither pluin or sugar-coated. With the exception of the stnffe vil lain, everv mun hns hlH (food points. A Woman's Back Has many aches and pains caused by weaknesses and falling, or other displace ment, of tho pelvic organs. Other symp toms of fomalo weakness are frequent headache;, dizziness, imaginary specks or dark spots flouting beforo the eyes, gnaw ing sensation In stomach, drugging or bearing down in lower abdominal or pelvic region, disagrccnhln drains from pelvic ortrans.fulnt spoils with general weakness. If any considerable number of tlio above symptoms are present there is no remedy that wIHjtive quicker rcllej or a more pcr maient cjHfs than Dr. I'lerce's Favorite PreVWHTOJt has a record of over forty years of cureS It Is the most potent invigorating tonc iipn.suengtlienlnn U'J- Viuc known to medical science. uTs mudo ol TTie glyceric extracts ofnuflve medici nal roots found in our forests and con tains not a drop of alcohol or harmful, or habit-forming drugs. Its Ingredients arc all printed on the bottlo-wrapper and at tested under oalli as correct. livery ingredient entering- Into "Fa vorlto Prescription" hus the wrltton en dorsement of tho most emlnont medical writers of ull tho several schools of prac tice ninro valuablo than any amount of non-professional testlmonluls though th latter nro not lucking, huvlng been con trlbuted voluntarily by grateful patient In numbers to exceed the endorsement given to any other medicine extuut fol tho euro of woman's Ills. you cannot afford to accept any medicine of unknown composition as a substitute for this well proven remedy otr known comi-obITion, oven though tho dealer may make a little mere prollt thereby. J'our Interest In regaining health Is paramount to any selllsh Interest of hi and it is an Insult to your Intelligence for him to try to palm off upon you a tulwtltuto. You know wbut you want and It l his busi ness to supply tho article called for. I)r Pierce's Pleasant Pol lota aro tho original "Llttlo Liver Pills" first put np by old Pr. Pierce over forty years ago, much Imitated but never equaled. Mttla sugar-coated granules-easy to tuke as candy. Investigating the Nutritive Value oi Meat. ; By ELIZABETH A billion and a halt dollars are spent every year by the people of the United States for the meat they eat -about a third of the whole amount expended for raw food materials. This Immense sum Is used to pur chase a food of whose nature and dietetic Talue very little is known. Every one thinks he knows from ex perience what suits him best, or at any rate, as one woman expressed It, "likes to eat what he likes, and not what Is nourishing." It has proved financially profitable to study the food of plants, to an alyze the soil where they are to be grown, discover what food element Is lacking, and by supplying this produce a more perfect and plenti ful crop. Extensive experiments are carried out to determine by what system of feeding the moBt market able steer yielding the largest profit can be raised. Even the question of whether the corn should be ground into a meal or fed to the animal on the cob is thought worthy of con sideration and experiment. This, be cause the value of such care and ex periment can be demonstrated in the returns In dollars and cents. A man's health, strength and efficiency depend upon the food he eats, but It Is less easy to show the results of experiments with human beings than with plants and the lower animals. In matters of food more than in anything else the human race has been content to follow its Instincts. Now, however, the time has come when It does not seem sufficient to appreciate the abil ity of science to first interpret the leadings of Instinct, and then dis cover means ot Improving upon them. Through the domestic science move ment many of the more intelligent housekeepers have come to realize the need for more accurate Informa tion regarding th nutritive and economic value ot different foods, of methods of cooking, and related sub jects. To supply this need the Gov ernment, through the Office of Ex perlment Stations of the Department of Agriculture, has established a sys tem ot Nutrition Investigations. These include studies of the food consumed by typical individuals, families, and groups in colleges, hos pitals, and other institutions, to de termine representative food habits, to discover the principles underlying the natural selection of food, and to establish a rational basis for such se lection. Whilo very few people In civilized .countries actually starve, many have less food than they need, and multi tudes have less than they would buy If they could. On the other hand, many people have more food than they should have. Careful prepara tion and skillful cooking fits much food for use which would otherwise be thrown away, aud makes what is already edible more easily available, and therefore more valuuble to the body. We do not, however, know a great deal about tho effect of cooking upon food and its influence upon dl gest.billty. Moreover, whenever money is scarce and the most should be made of food, there the ignorance, carelessness, and incompetence of the cook are proverbial. Therefore the nutrition investigations have in cluded researches upon the prepara tion of some of the most Important articles of diet, particularly bread and meat. It seems especially suit able that the Investigations upon the chemistry ot meat should bo carried on In Illinois, which contains the greatest distributing centre for this food in the world. At the University of Illinois several laboratories of the Department of Chemistry are devoted to this study. Not only are different cuts and kinds of raw meat analyzed to discover differences in composition and there fore in nutritive value, but they are also cooked in various ways to deter mine the comparative value of dif ferent methods of cooking, the lossos and changes in composition which occur, and the influence of these upon the digestibility of meat. A standing rib beef roast, for in stance, is shown by analysis to con sist of forty-two per cent, refuse or inedible material, bone and gristle, twenty-four per cent, water, twenty six per cent, fat, sevon per cent, pro teid (muscle-building substauce), 0.7 per cent, organic extractives. There fore, If one pays seventy-five csals for a five-pound roast of this char acter, thirty-one cents goes to pay for waste material and 43.5 cents for ed ible meat divided as follows: eighteen cents for water and 25.5 cents for tho actually nutritive material. The same roast, boned and rolled ready for cooking, would weigh about three pounds, forty-four per cent, of which would 1- water, twelve per cant, protcid, 1.4 per cent, or ganic extractives, forty-one per cent. Tat, and 0.6 per cent ash. A'jt cooking it would weigh two r..i.l halt pounds if cooked very rare, Mid contain forty per cent, water, four teen per cent, proteld, forty-three per cent, fat, 1.5 per cent extractives, and 0.7 per cent. ash. Having lost more of water than of the other con stituents during cooking. It has be come more concentrated, and a pound of tho cooked meat contains as much nutritive material as eighteen ounces of tho raw meat. It is difficult for tho uninitiated to appreciate the extent of the work in volved in such investigations, but some idea may be gained from the fact that a single cooking experiment, including the analysis of the meat before and after cooking and of tho accompanying broth or drippings, means that one hundred and forty chemical determinations must bo made sufficient work to take all of one man' time for three weeks. Moreover, each cooking experiment must be repeated a number of times, In order to collect sufficient and indis putable evidence to justify definite conclusions. In the courso of these Investigations nearly a hundred raw meats have been analyzed, and three hundred cooking experiment per formed. Results which are of prac tical as well as scicntiuo value have boon obtained. C. SPRAGUE. When meat Is cooked In water, It may loose from ten to fifty per cent. In weight, depending upon the condi tions of cooking. Moat of this loss Is due to tha water cooked out of the meat. Almost half of the water pres ent In tho raw meat is lost In this Way, so that It is not surprising that boiled meats should seem so dry. Meats cooked by roasting lose from thirteen to thirty-seven per cent, ot their total weight. Only about a third of the water is lost under these J conditions, leaving the meat much ' more Juicy. Tbn roasted meat loses I very much more fat than does the boiled meat, but this is not Import ant, since It may saved In the drip pings, and more fat probably remains in tho meat than will bn eaten. The loss of the organic extractives a class of substances about which very little Is known, except that they are responsible for the flavor and stimulating effect of meat Is quite a different matter. When the meat ia broiled or roasted only a small part of theso exude, but if they are cooked In water morn than three-fourths of them are dissolved and pass Into the broth. The meats from which the soluble constituents have been re moved are very much less effective in stimulating the flow of the diges tion juices, and therefore have a lower dietetic value than those which retain more of these substances. The juciness, tenderness, and flavor of a roast or porterhouse steak are of sufficient physiological importance to Justify to some extent a preference for these, even at the higher price one must pay for them, than for meat for boiling or stewing. In cooking meats in water the losses incre'ase with the length' of time and temperature of cooking. The smaller tho size of the pieces in which tho meat Is cooked, the greater also will bo the losses. In roasting tho losses Increase the mora thor oughly the meat 13 cooked. Meat that is cooked well done loses fully twice as much as that which Is left rare. This means that the latter i3 not only nioro juicy, but contuina more of tho soluble flavoring constit uents than the former. Being In a condition that resembles raw meat, It is more easily though not more completely digested than is the well done meat. All meats, irrespective of the method of cooking have a high food value when judged by the kind and amount of nutritive ingre dients present. Scientific American, SOMH ADVANTAGES OK LATIX. Reasons Why Doctors Use Dead Tongue in Prescribing. Why does the doctor write hl3 pre scription in Latin instead of English? In tho first place, Latin is a more exact and concise language than Eng lish and, being a dead language, docs not change, ns all living tongues do. Secondly, since a very largo pro portion of nil drugs in use are bo tanical, they have in tho pharma copoeia the same names that they have In botany the scientific names. Two-thirds of such drugs are with-i out any English equivalents for their Latin names. They cannot, thcre fors, be indicated in English. The third reason is a very practical one. Suppose a physician should write a prescription in English. The patient, if it is to bo supposed, reads the prescription, thinkB lie remem bers it, and so tries to get It filled from memory the Becond time. It may, for instance, have called for iodide of potassium, which tho pa tient, a careless or uneducated man perhaps, confuses with cyanide of potassium. Of the first drug ha could safely take ten grains, but one grain of the second would kill him. Perhaps tho above Is an extreme assumption, but It will serve as an illustration. In this respect Latin is a positive protection .and a safe guard to tha patient. The average patient, not being able to read Latin, cannot therefore have recourse to his memory. The final reason is this: Latin is a languaga used by scientific men the world over. No other language Is so honored. A Latin prescription may be filled in any country on the face of the earth where there is - c:-uj stors. Whnt Sho Remembered. Husband "Many people at church this forenoon, dear?" Wife "Yes, a large number." "Good sermon?" "Delightful." "What was tho text?" "It was it was well, really, 1 have forgotten." "Humph! Was Mrs. Purling there?" 'She was." "What had she on?" "Well, she had on a fall wrap ot very dark Pompeiian red cloth, with narrow insertions of black velvet in tho sides of tho skirt. A small yoke trimming or the velvet covered the upper part of tho chest, and was out lined with mixed tinsel braid. A nar row braiding girdled the waist, and the cuffs were ornamented In the same way. It had a cape attachment pleated upon the shoulders, and at tached by other pleats at tho waist lino, giving a doiman appearance to tho back. She " "That'll do. I don't wonder thnt you forgot the text!" Pally Pica yune. Fees For Tccluiicul Examination. The foes for the examinations ot the Oertuan technical high schools have been fixed on the following scale: For the preliminary diploma examination, sixty marks for natural ized Germans, 120 marks for foreign ers; for the diploma examination, 120 marks tor Germans aud 240 marks tor foreigners; for the doctor of engineering examination, 240 marks, of which the first halt Is to be paid wuou the examination thesis is hand ed In, and the remainder before the oral examination u taken. comebcwcoluii Weekly Review of Trade and Latest Market Reports. H. O. Dun's "Weekly Review of Trade" says: Traffic delays, high money and who unrest In the ranks of labor have not yet cheeked commercial pro gress on the whole, although In spec ial Industries or localities that the re straining influonco of these adverse factors are felt. Some Irregularities of temperature also provide the week's trude reports with less uni formly glowing descriptions of retail distribution. AVage earners aro agi tating for morn pay or Bhorter hours in sevoral Industries, especially In the railway service. Already manu facturers and dealers are making plans for tho greatest business on record in Jewelry and other holiday lines. A further advance of about fifty cuts per ton in tho price of pig Iron Is the hr:t evidence of continued prosperity n that Industry. Improvement In tlio primary nmr kots for cotton goods hns gone so fnr that conservative operators begin lo express a f'-ar thnt a set-bnek will bo encountered through tho curtail ment, of consumption. "Bra.lstreet'H" says: Business failures in I ho United States for the week number 184, ocainst 170 last week, 178 in the like week of 1905, 180 In 1904, 217 In Ifinn and 104 in 1002. Wheat, including flour, exports f"om the United States and Canada for the week aggregated 5,188,817 bushels, aninnt 4,831,841 laBt week, 4.2(17,109 tbls week last year, 1.479, 61S In 1904 and R. 872. 888 in 1901. Corn exports for the woek nre 1,405,111 bushels, npalnst 1,319,030 last week, 70s. 138 a year ago and 449,151 In 1904. Wliolcsale UTarketi. Baltimore, Md. FLOUR Steady and unchanged; receipts. 13.725 bar rels; exports, 18,705 barrels. WHEAT Firmer; Rpot contract, 75 U ?t'75; spot No. 2 red Western, KOffeRO'; October. 75 V't f 7'. " ; November, 75 (ff 757i; December, 77 V ft 77 ; steamer No. 2 red, C9 i CORN Firm; spot, 52 (77-52; October, 52 52; voar, 47 rv 47; Jantiarv, 47 4 7T 47 ; Febru ary, 47; stpnmnr mixed, 51 V ffl 51 Vi ; receipts, 62,222 lunhels; exports, 17, 142 bushels; Southern white corn, 54 J5G; SfV'-orn yellow corn, 54 55. OATS Quiet; No. 2 wt.ite. ?..; fi394; No. 3 white, 37 Q 3 S U I No. 2 mixed. ?,T(ci 37. RYE Firm; No. 2 port. 00 iii 6 7;. No. 2 Western Western ex-do- niestle, 72ff?73. MUTTER Steady and uncharged; Taney Imitation, 21 t!i 22: fancy creamery, 27 CT 2S; fancy lnrlle, 18 20;'Btoro uacked. lB'itiilS. EGGS- Kirm, 24. CHEESK Active and unchanged; lnrt,u, 13; medium, 13; small. 14. SUGAR Steady and unchanged; nnrso granulated, 5.20; fine, 5.20. New I'-rk. MUTTER Firm: street price, extra creamery, 27; of ficial prices, creamery, common to extra. 1 9 tfr 2 0 ; held seconds to ex tra, 21(TO2fi; State dairy, common to fancy, 1 9 fi) 25 ; renovated, com mon to extri, lfl(fii22. EGGS Steady; Western firsts, 25; offlclnl price, 24 ft 25. POULTRY Alive, quiet; Western chickens, 11; fowls, 13; turkeys. 14; dressed. Irregular; Western chickens, 10(?i15; spring turkeys, 11 14; fowls, 10(f?132. LARD Firm: Western prime, 9.55 (ft) 9.65; refined, steady; com pound, 7f?7. POKK Firm; short clear, 1G.757; 18.50: mesq, 1 8.00 (ft. 1 8.75. COTTONSEED OIL Easy; prime crude, f. o. b. mills, 29; do. yellow, nominal. SUGAR Raw, stendy; fair refin ing, 3; centrifugal, 96 test, 4; molasses sugar, 3; refined, steady. POTATOES Irish, steady and un changed; sweets, wei.k; Jcracys, per barrel, 1 .00 & 1.50. WHEAT No. 2 red, 79 eleva tor; No. 1 80 f. o. b. afloat; No. 1. Northern Duluth, 87 f. o. b. afloat; No. 2 hard winter, 82 f. o. b. afloat. CORN No. 2, 54 elevator and 55 f. o. b. afloat; No. 2 yellow, 55; No. 2 white, 55. Option market was without transaction, closing net unchanged; January closed 50; May closed 49: December closed 51. OATS Mixed oats 26fo32 pounds, 38; natural white, 30(n5 33 pounds, 39 & 40; clipped white, 38 4ft pounds, 39 43. Live Stock. New York. BEEVES Feollng dull; dressed beef in fair demand; ratlvo sides, 79c. per pound; Texan beef, 6ffii7c. CALVES Westerns and grassers not wanted. Veals, 4.60 8.50; culls and little calves, 3 504.00; West erns and grassers, nominal; dressed rnlves, dull; city dressed veals, 8 13c. per pound; country dressed, 7 12e. Chicago. CATTLE Fancy steers 0.75 Oi) 7.30; common to good, 5.00 W 6.65; cows, 2.75Cf4.P0; heifers, 2.50 5.25; bulla, 2.40 1.25; calves, 4.75 7.75; stackers and feeders, 2.25 ffi) 4.50. HOGS Choice hPi'vy shipping, 6. 55 6.62; light butchers, 6.50 6.60; choice light. 6.456.55; light mixed, 6.30 6.40; packing, 6.50 6.40; pigs, 5.25 6.15. SHEEP Sheep, 4.60 5.75; yearl ings, 5.5006.25; lambs, 6.007.60. WORTH REMEMBERING i raveling ui opum ia nui expen- give, the charges In comroitablo hotels being only $1.35 a day. The Canadian wheat crop for this season is estimated at 90,000,000 bushels by a Montreal writer. Tho 1906 crop amounted to 85,000,000 bushels, J. B. Martin, an Ohio man, who own large mining properties In Alas ka, assorts that he will give J.'iiiO, 000 a year to the cauBe of prohibi tion. Lord Townshond, declared an Im becile by the L'liglish courts and re strained from managing his own af fairs, retains his seat and vote in the Hoiiso of Lords. The Bengal government pays a re ward for sharks caught In the Gan ges. This varies Irom 25 cents for cmaller sharks to '$1.50 tor those six feet long. A man has been doing good business la London peddling "bright green American tree frogs" at 65 cents each. When the color wears off they are found to be ordinary English frogs. --.'x-,.. r-r v.s. '-j.'.. ... '.-(..1 t . m u.yA Louisville; Ky. PUTNA Wlr l ii-rtj r f n Uolor mru km1h hrmhicriunl funtor colon limn uny otber !.yi. iiih- ik !tu'Uuk'' color,, all II hern. Thcj t Oil) aii guriueuC without niiping uy;trt. Wnlu lor iroo booklet How u li c, Lluuch aud Mis Color, Drought and tho Invasion by locusts is causing damage to the grain areas in tlio Province of Santa l'e, Argentina, reports Consul Gen eral dole. The drought Is so bad In one Boction that one meat-freezing company hus had to suspend killing, due to a shortage of suitable ani mals. The winter wheat estimates ts 420,534,000 bushels, or about 1,000. 0'0 more than last year. Spring wheat promises 211,000,000 bushels more than in the 1905 harvest, ho that tho combined wheat outlook U for a harvest of I!0,000,000 bushels greater than last year. A man Isn't willing to admit he Is exclti-il even when Ms Im cussing like n llrate liefort- bin children. I RHEUMATISM I NEURALGIA I nun MAM. ST. jaco: OIL The Proved Remedy 4 For Over 30 Years. Jjj r tic 25e and 50c X heat PERFECTION (Equipped Willi Smokeless Device.) is an ornament to the home. It is made tn two finishes nickel end Japan. Brau oil fount beautifully cmbowed. Holds 4 quarts ol oil and burns 9 hours. Every heater warranted. Uo not be satUlied with anything but a PERFECTION Oil Heater. If you cannot get Heater or Information, from your dealer write to Dearest agency for descriptive circular. all-round household use. Gives S clear, steady light. Fitted with latest improved burner. Mads oi brass throughout and nickel plated. Every lamp warranted. Suitable for library, dining room or parlor. If not at your dealer's write to nearest Sgency. ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY -rS".S i"vT TheWjnmng Stroke ft If more than ordinary skill in playing brings the honors of the game to the winning player, so exceptional morit in a remedy ensures tho commendaticn cf the well informed, and as a rea sonable amount cf outdoor iifs end recreation is ccrJuciva to the health ar.d strength, so deer apcrfact laxative tend to one's improvement in cases cf constipation, biliousness, headaches, etc. It is ail important, however, in selecting a laxative, to choose cr.o cf known duality and excellence, like the ever pleasant Syrup cf Figs, manufactuied hy tha Calif orr.i?, F'g Syrup Co., a laxative which tweetens and cleanses the system effectually, wltn a laxative i3 needed, withcut any unpleasant after effects, as it acts naturally and gently cn the ir.ttrr.al organs, simply assisting: nature when nature reeds assistance, without griping, irritating or debilitating the internal organs in any way, as it contains nothing cf an cc.iectionable ci .njurious nature. As tho plants which are caromed with the figs in the manufacture cf Syrup of F:gs are known to physicians to act most beneficially upen the system, the remedy has met with their general approval as a family laxative, a fact we.; wcrth considering in maki..g purchases. It Is because of the fact that is-Y fiUP GF F8GS is a lemedy cf known cuality and exce.lence, ar.d nppicvea by physicians that has ied to .'ts use by so many inilJcns of weii informed people, who wcuid not vse any remedy cf uncertain Duality cr inferior reputation. Every family sncuid have a bottle of the genuine cn hand at all times, to use wnen a laxative remedy is required. Fiease to remember that tne genuine Syrup of Fig3 is for saie in bottics of one size only, by ail reputable druggists, and that full name of the company California Fig Syrup Co., is plainly printed on the front of every package. Regular price, 50c per bottle. g'(UF9RNiA Fig Syrup C'--: "err f e i .1 c o FADELESS DYES STAND FIRM When you luyan OILED SUIT ok SLICKER demand "Wfaw Its the easiest end only way to get tne best Sold everywhere .dsxaraaasn A FACI full of pimples polla Ufa for many one. (Jet rid at them by aiUiiiu digestion with Parsons' Pills They aMirt distortion, help the llvr to do iu work, and cure coratipatlon. Put up In eI&m viali. Prioa 29 cenu. For ula bj all dealers, L 1 JOHNSON 4 CO, lothw, Bui. amen Let It (iriiw. First Bur Who on earth Is thnt ionK-haired Individual? Second Dug That's Mr. Cater pillar. He made a freak election pledge 10 years ago never to cut his hair again until V. J. Firefly be comes President. Kansas City Times. Where Anonymous Writers Go. Miss Gush Oh! guard, what is the name of that handsome prisoner? Tho Guurd Number 2204, miss. Miss Gush How queer! But, of course that's not his real name? The Guard No, miss; that's just his pen name. Brooklyn Life. JF3V There aud not bs a cold room ia the house if you own PERFECTION Oil Heater. This is an oil heatct that gives satisfaction wherever vied. Producci intend- without smoke or smell bccauie it a i i i J it a w equipped with smokeless device no trouble. do danger. Eaiily carried around from room to room. You cannot turn the wick too high or too low. As easy and simple to care for si a lamp The Oil Heater Ices the boms rivnt. Is the safest sod best lame for A 'I-. AX'S A I i jteiMai-i-.'J WMi..ftlifV e In cold water r"thjr Umn r.ny otli;r dye. You caw ill ON It UK m.tU CO., luioavillu, tUinnuiwi W. L. DOUGLAS 3.50&3.QO Shoes BEST IN THE WORLD tf.LOougtas $4 Gilt Edge lino. cannotLaoquaiieaaianif price y To Xiuit ltraifr$ .- W. U Dolnrlu' Job tang Hon- it Hit most Oouif'lftL lr: tine i-oiinlry YftM for t'at-ili-Q SHOES FOR EVEKYB0PV AT ALL PEICE1 Men's Sllofte. S5 to ri.fiO. Any' UhoeH, S3 loSl.5. Women's lio, S4.00 to SI. 50. alJ.-t,:!' & ChildrqiTs Shoe. $u 3ft tn Sl.OO. Try W. L, IJoiiKlftM Woim-u'M, MImim itnd Children's hlim-n; for Mlylt., lit uud wewtr limy XLtl other limkes. If I could take you Into my large factories at Brockton, A".ass.,and show you bow carefully W.L. Douglas shoes are made, you would then understand why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any other make. Wherever you live, you can obtain W. L. Douglas shoes. Hit name and price l. stamped an the bottom, which protects youas-ainst high prices and Interior shoes, TaA-e- no tubMti tut e. ' Ask your dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes and Insist upon having; them. fast Goior t yaltts uittf; IA,i will Itrtt war brassw Writ lor Illustrated Catnlo(o) Fall Styles. W. i DOUULAS. Do-. a, (track ton. Mass. You Cannot all 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 affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs.checlis discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxlins represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testily to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box THE R. PAXTON CO.. Boston. Mas. Standard of Quality ( st. na a. 1 k: Mado Under U.S. iM ,7 I Government Inspection i: i (The Southern Cotton Oil Carriiiay) DVKKTIWt IU mi fafKU. JT u, 1IX PA - . u 4a PENSION fORAGtavS 11. WIUK, Kills iliUWIua. a, -J liulmu .v... iligtou, si. C. Psi.nl. ,u3 Trado-alai-li. ".licUad. DROPSY"" lC0VEKTt . lit. 11. 11. immra sunt., . u, snui, sw u m i'") " J lill'ii li'lir If '1 fe mips HOG1 LESS'