TOVS EMINENT DOCTORS AT VOUR 8KRVICE FREE. t Fenny f o rf For the Fullest Jleillonl ExmlnHn. tf you are In doubt as to the cause i tour dlRca-jo mnll us a poBtnl re nting aniedienl exnmlnntion blnnk, hlch you m fl" out aml return to i Our doctors will carefully dlng .e your raso, and If you can be !,,red ou l" l8 tol(1 B0; 11 5"511 can- t be cured you will be told so. You HI not obligated to us In any way; .gdvlce Is absolutely free; you nre t liberty to take our advice or not as an tee At. Send to-day for ft medl Li exiimlnatlon blank, fill out and return to us as promptly as possible, . our emlnetitdoctora will diagnose tour case thoroughly absolutely free. Munyon'B, DM and Jefferson Sts., pbila'elllhla' The Real Thing. Howe Har about tho boy who as flung into a threshing machine hv a man he had been teasing? wise I suppose it ltilled him ln- ftantly. , . . Howe No; strangely enough, he came through the machine not much ,tip worse for his experience, and is Hill alive, so I understand. WI8CVhat's his addrcRS? I want nim for my football team. Sprninn and Hniisrn, so likelv to occur tn jrr we.iMicr, arc quickly henled by I'errjr Davis' 1'ainkiller. 25c., 3jc. and 50c. Man is of a forgiving disposition in some ways; one good cantaloupo will cause him to forget a dozen bad ones. forllFADAf IIF-Hli knTA Pt niNK WlifUiir from Colds. Heat. Stomach or Kfrvoiu Troulilex. Cajmdlnn will rcllcvi- you. It's llyntd nloaMint to tQkp nets imini'iM Itflv. 'fry It, IOC., 25c. toil 500. at drug Bore. you often see a fool giving advice to reasonably sensible and modest i.eople, and abusing them because they don't accept his advice. Are you loning flesh through a racking eou(h that you cannot check? Allen's Long Balsam will cure the trouble. Iiiitter-Puy KplgruniM. Every time a wife tells her griev ances against her husband they In clude the charge that he refuses to pav her doctor bills. They tell of a man who lay dying and whose eyes followed his wife around imploringly. "What Is It?" she said, bending over him, thinking he wanted to say something comfort ing about meeting her in the next world. "You will get all my money," he gasped, and added with all the fierceness he could muster into his last breath, "and you are such a fool!" Lawyers And Doctors. Most lawyers take a keen delight trying to confuse medical experts In the witness box In muder trials, and often they get paid back In their own coin. A case is recalled where the law yer, after exercising all his puzzling tactics without effect, looked qulz rically at the doctor who was testify ing and said: "You will admit that doctors sometimes make mistakes, won't you?" "Oh, yes; the same as lawyers," was tho cool reply. "And doctors' mistakes are burled six feet under ground," was the law yer's triumphant reply. "Yes," he replied, "and the law yers' mistakes often swing In tho lr." Two-thirds of Russia's population Ire peasants. - v . ExvcSSewwa cxiWxc ow&s; deawscs ftvG system &55ecuo ; To 6e'tis bcue$eo MAMuraCTURCO B THE Fig Syrup Co. SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS 50' A DOTTLE Save the Babjr Use CTITJF! Should h. !v.. u .i.. utile on coughs. It heal. the del throat and protects the lungs worn Infeotioo Juerentetd ! sod very palatable. All Drwesku, Xt LAZY LIVER Krea, Z T. lhe-m- 1 w" troubled Now si ,0;pia Iivera,,d headache. He 7fF ukm8Cascareta Candy Catbar. iu lv ery Tu beUer- 1 -best medicine I have ever seen." t Anna Bazjnet OsbornMillNo. 3. Fall kiver, Mass. Of y0u bibo,t sjg ' WANTED. JecciKf" Hand Eag$ end Enrlap, ay Mad, lay Qaautlly. Inywaere. RICHHOHD BAG CO., Richmond, Virginia. siir-iSTfcKsipsca's Eye Walar THE HUNTING SEASON OPENS. I COMMERCIAL Weekly Review of Trade and ' I Tlie Fanner's Annual Job. Cartoon by Godwin, in the Pittsburg Dispatch. WHO OWNS THE AIR? A Pressing Problem That Must Be Settled at Once is Whether an Aviator Has the Right o! Way Over Private Property, the Ownership ol Which in Every Case, According to the Old Roman Law, Extends Upward Indefinitely. ffew York Cily. How high must an aviator fly to be safe from the con sequences of illegal trespass? and a great many othsr questions, not burning now but considered as soon to be hot ones, were treated by Lit tleton Fox, a lawyer, in an address to members of the Aero Club of Amer ica. The answer was that he aviator would have to be out of sight. He must dodge the police. The old Roman law which gives to tho owner of land absolute ownership also of the air above it is responsible for this. The law must b- changed, he added, or the courts win be ruin ously congested. As masters stand, there having been no changes in the law for several hundred years, a man in a flying machine has no rights that a man with a plow is bound to re spect. The question is how best to bring the attention of the judicial system to this unfair discrimination against the flying portion of the race. N i mac can fly as things now stand without, technically breaking the law, unless he gets special privileges from the landowners. It is a problem that bristles with novelty, says Mr. Fox. In the event of pedestrians being hit by ginger pop bottles dropped by tho passing aviator or by other objects, includ ing '.he aviator himself, the man be low would have redress at law. Mr. Fox believes the Aero Club should urge the Wright brothers, for In stance, to consent to be sued by the owner of land over which they have flown (and thereby trespassed), so as to bring the whole subject before the courts for settlement. The suit should be a friendly one, he said, the object being to modify. If possible, the law of aerial trespass. Another way might be to condemn the air by legal procedure, and thus knock over the historical fossil. A discussion that followed the ad dress of the evening resulted in the members arriving at the firm belief that the air should be considered a highway, and there was preliminary talk concerning an attempt at legis lative enactment. To avert suits for aerial trespass Mr. Fox suggests that the State con demn and buy a stratum of air as a highway for flying machines. The fact that Count Lambert in his flight across Paris violated a police regula tion forbidding neroplaning over the city shows that the French have al ready applied the law to cover one phase of the question. By leaving tho aerodrome for his Paris flight Lambert Incurred a penalty of $4; at the Rheims meet an aviator was fined for reckless driving. The military airship will necessi tate new provisions in international law to meet the new problems of in ternational relations which it will raise. France has now seven air ships, Germany eleven and Italy five In course of construction. Given a fleet of Zeppelins arriving unan nounced above a British port, will the act constitute a cause of war? If the aeroplane develops the power to carry explosives for dropping on an enemy's fleet, will the practice be permitted under the rules of war? The interesting fact In connection with tho suggested regulation of air travel is that It is already mado nec essary by an invention only yesterday in Its Infancy which threatens a re vision of the statute books along with its revolution of traffic. In advocating arrangements for a test suit. Mr. Fox seems to believe that after the existing legal status of an aerial trespasser has once been clearly outlined the law may be so modified that the air will be pro nounced a public highway. Legisla tion of that kind, however, would be unfortunate if it were not very accur ately limited. There is a wide differ ence between navigation of the sea and navigation of the air. If a trans atlantic steamship Is badly handled those who are on board her may suffer, and she may Injure an other craft which is on the same level. There Is practically no chance, however, that she will harm anybody or anything directly under her, at the bottom of the ocean. She can discard ashes, ballast or any other material without fearof doing mischief. If such things are dropped from an airship, there will always be a possibility of danger a danger which 13 enhanced by the temperamental characteristics of those who engage In aerial naviga tion for sport. Editorially the New York Times says: "Will the invasion of the air by aeroplanes be repelled by suits for trespass? "We think not. The first success ful human flleht made the air a high way a possibility not contemplated in the Roman law. Besides, there can be no effective possession of tho upper air by a land owner. Where posses sion neither Is nor has been, there should be no ownership. At any rate, this is assumed in Germany and Switzerland, which have passed stat utes establishing rules of the aerial road." COFFINS TOO CHEAP, MAKERS COMPLAIN The Burial Casket Men Say Cost of Dying Has Not Kept Pace With Increased Cost of Living. Cincinnati, Ohio. The burial cas ket manufacturers and jobbers, In convention here. Rre dissatlsfled be cause the cost of dying has rot. kept pace with the increased cost of living They deprecate cut-rate funeralB. and are proposing to establish uniform prices lor the retail trade In coffins. "We coffin makers want the under takers to help us out more than they do," said one delegate. "We want the undertakers to make stiff er bills, and then we can get more for our llpods. Why should we have to pay double what we used to pay to live and let people die cheaply? It Isn't fair and it Isn't logical. There are too manv undertakers. They are cut ting each other's throats to get busi ness, and, what Is more to the point, they are cutting prices. Another thing, the supply of coffins Is greater than the demand; that's what makes 'em bo cheap. "If a man wants a decent burial he ought to be made to pay a decent price for it. It isn't as though it was n steady drain on the family purse. Coffins are bought only occasionally, and when the occasion arises they ought to ba willing to do tho thing handsomely." FOREGOES CLOISTER TO FIND LOST FATHER Mies Swar.ton Discovors Him in Jail as Burglar and Will Now Seek to Procure His Parole. St. I.ouls. Miss Elsie Swanson, of St. Louis, renounced. her aspiration to become a nun because she believed her duty was to search for her father, whom she had not seen for eleven years. She found him In the County .Tall at Joulin, a few minutes after be was convicted of burglary and lar ceny and sentenced to two years in the penitentiary. Swanson did not recognize hi daughter, but she picked him from a crowd of prisoners In the main cell room. Father and daughter wept In each bthers' arms. She will now try to obtain a parole for him. and as be was convicted solely on his own ad mission of guilt it is possible her plea for clemency will be granted. Mi83 Swanson, who Is twenty-one year old. Is the ward of the Rev. C. C. Stahlmann, who took her from the custody of her father when she was ten years old, Swanson having been declared uufit to care for ber. She was educated In a convent here. Kentucky Slate Troops fiuurdlng tho Hurley Tobacco Region. Lexington, Ky. Night riders have asaln become active In the Burley to bacco region. Governor Willson has ordered o'lt State troons and they nre scattered in the counties where night rider warn ings have been given. In Mason County warnings were left at the homes of Fred Adams and Harry Allen, both of whom were giv en five days In which to pool their crops or suffer the consequences of thoir refusal. , . 81 ub Ends of News. ' The Uudron-Kulton celebration, moving up the Hudson Valley, closed t Troy, N. Y. Frank H. Piatt testified In a suit that he bought 2,000 shares of Uni ted States Express stock for E. H. Harrlraan. ' .Japanese newspapers' do not credit the rumor that the United States will protest against tbe Chinese-Japanese agreement. , Herman Dshsel. an editor of tho Berlin Wahrbett, and a woman aeent war convicted of blackmail nd sen tenced to prison. Flcrgcn County. N. J., Begins Work on $000,000 Improvement. Hackensack. N. J. Bergen County hns received $37,920 from the auto fees paid Into the State fund, and to the Brewster Construction Company, of Hackenaack, w-as awarded four contracts amounting to that sum for work to he done on roads much trav eled by New York autoistg. The Board of Freeholders at a re cent meetlug voted to establish a road system that will cost about $600,000 and insure etcellent roads in the dis trict close to New York. The Field of Sports. Frank Kramer defeated "Jack" Clarke In straight heats In their championship cycle race. Curtis Redden, captain of the 1805 Michigan eleven, arrived at Ann Ar bor to assist "Hurry-Up" Yost In coaching. Fat Dunne has been angaged to act as presiding- judge at a meeting of 110 days to be held at Tampa. Fla., this winter. At West Point, N. Y., tbe polo team of Squadron A, of New York, defeat ed a picked team ot arm officers by a score ot 8 to 7. Market Reports. R. G. Dun & Co. s Weekly Review ' of Trade says: "Renewed buying of rolling stock by tho rallronds i.s the conspicuous I development of the week in the iron ; and steel trade. Reports indicato that orders arc being placed with : some urgency and that considerable now busineBB is under negotiation. Activity at steel works is reflected In continued heavy purchases of pig iron at many points and further ad vances In prices are announced. One contract for 20,000 tons of Bessemer at $19 is reported. The structural shops are receiving a moderate amount of now business. "Trade In dry goods shows steady gains and tho higher prices in tho primary markets, forced by the sus tained high cost of raw material, are now quite freely paid. Trading in white cloths continues active and ! prices are fully on a level with the 1 cotton market. Export trade Is 11m- : lted by tho higher prices." , Bradstrret's says: 1 "Improvement is the order of the i day in trade, collections and Indus try. Colder weather, freezing tern- 1 peraturc, light snows or killing ! frosts, coupled with freer crop move- ment. have helped retail trado and ! collections at the West and North- j west, while lower temperatures and high prices nnd free marketing of cotton have helped distribution at the South. Jobbing trade has been i colncldently benefited by reordering to All broken stocks, and tho dis tributive trade sido accordingly pre- ' sents a very favorable appearance." Wholesale Ma:kct3. j Xcw York. Wheat Spot strong; j No. 2 rod, 127V2C. asked clevatoi". I No. 2 red nominal f. o. b. afloat; No. 1 Norllurn Duluth, 1.15 nomi nal f. o. b. afloat; No. 2 hard winter, I 1.23 Vs nominal f. o. b. afloat. I Corn Spot firm; No. 2, G9 eic- i vator domestic and 69 Vi delivered; No. 2. 69 f. o. b. New York; No. 2 yellow, 70 nominal. Option I market without transactions, closing 'fee. net higher. December closed 68 c. I Oats Spot; mixed, 2 G 7t 32 lbs., 42 H 43; natural white,' 26fr32 lbs., 43M5'i; clipped white, 34 i: 4 2 lbs., 4 3 Mi ('I 4S. Philadelphia Wheat Firm, lc. higher; contract grade October, 117 Lt'118c. Corn Quiet but steady; No. 2 yel low for local trade, 6SVa('t69. Oats Finn; good demand; No. 2 white natural, 4i'ic. uuttor unlet but ateady; extra Western creamery, 32,j.c.; do., near by prints, 34. Eggs Steady; good demand; Pennsylvania and other nearby firsts, f. c, 27c. at mark; do., current re ceipts, in returnable cases, 25 at mark; Western firsts, f. c, 2 7 at mark; do., current receipts, f. c, 23 26 at mark. Cheese Firm; good demand; New York full creams, choice, 16c; do., fair to good, 15 ri) 15. Live Poultry Quiet but steady; fowls, 14(f?15c; old roosters, 10 la fall; spring chickens, 14 a 14; ducks, old, 12 13; do., spring, 13 14. Dressed Poultry Steady; fresh killed fowls, choice, 1616c; do., fair to good, 1514 (rpl6; old roosters, 12; broiling chicker.s, nearby, 16t20; do., Westorn, 15 18; do., Jersey, 22 ft 24. Itultimoie. Wheat Smull baa lots, by sample, brought from 97 to 12'Jc. per bush. A cargo of 1,050 bunli. of No. 3 red sold at 1.16. Tho market for Western opened easier. Spot, 119 c; October, 1.11; December, 1.10. A firm er tone wan noticed at the mid-day call. Spot, 119c; October, 1.13; December, 1.11. Com Contract opened easier; year, 62 ft 62 lie; January. 61Vjf'd 61; February. 61. Mid-day call found prices firmer. Spot, 67c ; year, 62 (n 62 ; January, 02 (f 0.2; February, 62. Tho closing was strong. Year, 63 & 63 t; January, 62 ftf 62 ; February, 62. Sales, 6,000 buHh. year, 62c; car yellow (domestic), in elevator, 69; two cars yellow (domestic), 68; car spot (export), 6l. Oats Choice No. 3 white, heavy, in elevator, 4 4c; car No. 3 white, medium, in elevator, 42; car choice No. 3 white, medium, in elevator, 4316- Hay We quote, per ton: No. 1 timothy, large bales, $17.50; do., small blocks, $17.50; No. 2 timothy, as to location, $16.50&17; No. 3 timothy, $14.50'i 15.50; choice clo ver mixed, $17 (ft 17.50; No. 1 clover mixed, $16.50i?i,17; No. 2 clover mixed, $14.50 15.50. Butter We quote, per lb.: Cream ery fancy, 31&32; creamery choice, 29ifi30; creamery good, 2728; creamery imitation, 21; 25; cream ery prints, 3167 35; creamery blocks, 23 32. Eggs Wo quote. pr dozen, loss off: Maryland, Pennsylvania and nearby flrstH, 26c; Eastern Shore, Maryland and Virginia, 26; Western firsts, 2G; West Virginia, 26; South ern (North Carolina), 25; guinea, 13. Live Poultry Quoto: Chickens Old hens, heavy, per lb., 14c; young, do., 14l4li; light. 13. Ducks Old, per lb., 12c; white Peklngs, old, 13; spring. 3 lbs. and over, 13c; do., small, do.. 11 12. Geese Western and Southern, per lb., 11 12c; Maryland and Virginia, do., 12; Kent Island, do., 134P14. Live Stock. Chicago. Cattle Murket slow and dull. Steers, $5.00 8.90; cows, $3.50 5.25; heifers, $3.50 6; bulls, $30 4 25; calves, $39.75; mockers and feeders, $3.76 ffj 5.50. Hons Market steady. Choice heavy, $7.70 7. 80; butchers, $7.70 (.(7.80; light mixed, $7.15 7.35; choice light, $7.60 7.60; heavy, $7.4b7.55; pUs, $57; bulk of sales. $7.407. 0. Sheep Market steady. Sheep, 34 6.50; lambs, $6 7.35;- year Kngs, $5 gB.50. Kansas City. Cattle Market steady.- Choice export and dressed beef steers, $6.608.76; fair to good, $4.40 6.25; Western steers, $3.40 6.40; stockers and feeders, $3.406.40; Southern steers, $3.65 4.S5; Southern cows, $2.60 8.80; native cows, $2.60 4.7$; ratlve bolters, $3.10 5.15; bulls, $2.75 3.75; calves, $3 5008. Hogs Market strong to 6c. high er. Top, $7.05; bulk of sales, $7.30 7.65; heavy, $7. 60 7.6314 ; pack er and butchers, $7.15 07.6$; light. $C. 85(?7.45; pigs, $5?6.Z5. CURED ITCHING HUMC.l nig, Painful Swellings Broke and Did 1 Not Ileal Suffered 8 Ycnr j Tortures Yield to Cutlctira. "Little black swellings were urnttciH. j over my face nnd neck and tiny would : Kno little black sears that would ite'i o 1 couldn't ken from acratcliinu them. , l.n!fcr welling would appear and my ilotlicH would utick to tho orc. I went to n doctor, but the trouble only got wome. Pv t!iis time it wns all over my arms nnd the ii per part of my body in swelling hi large na a dollar. It wan so painful thut 1 could tint bear to lie on my buck. The second doctor stopped the swellings, but when they broke the places would not heal. I bouglit a set of the ( uticura Kemedies and in lens ttinn n week some of the places were nearly well. I continued until I had used three sets, nnd now I ntn sound and well. The disease lunted three years. (). L. Wilson, Puryc.ir. Tcnn., VuU, 8, 13)8." Potter Diuk & ("hem. Corp., S.lc Props, of (.'uticura Hemedies, Boston, Mass. 5 SH Every Hon hunter exaggerates tho danger. Take a hint, do your own mixing. Ron-th on lints, bom' HH'piiismi. one 1."c. box will Mirewl or mak- Mi t" tun little ckes tout will kill Wi or more rats and mire. It's tho unheatablH exu i inuuiior. Don't (tie iu me liuliHO. Bt-WHre ol inn liitious, substitutes aud catch-penny, i-emiy-un-naa Uuvices. Spain's CongrrRs of Deputies con sists of 406 unpaid members. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Is the best of oil medicines fir ('..? cure of i''a?-, disorders cr.i v.cr :.-crscs peculiar to women. It is tho only prepsrnttnn cf its I:ind deviled by n r?ihrlv ,rndu Bted physician fin experienced and sl.illej specialist in the diseases of women. It is a safe medicine In any. condition of the system. THE ONV. RHMKDY which contains no alcohol nnd no Injurious liahit-formirid drus and tvhicu crentes no craving for such stimulants. TJfjLPE..B:MEIY .0 Dod that it. maker, re not afraid to print it. every Ingredient on ach outsido bottle .wrapper and at:e.t to tua truthfulness cf tho some under oath. He! i n y m,cillc,ne Scalers everywhere, and any dealer who hasn't it can , u. Don t taUo a substitute, of unknown composition lr this medicine or " composition. No counterfeit is as good a. the jicnuino and the drufitist who says something else is "just as f.ood Dr. Pierce's" is either mistaken or is trying to deceive you for his own setnsh benefit. Such a man i not to bo irusteu. lie is trilling with your most priceless possession your health may be your life itseH. Set that ytrn fel what you est for. JP For COt. OS and UlitI'. Pick's r'AI'tl'iNK W the tiest re.ncdy relieves the acl.irL' him! feverNhne- cui-ei the I'olil si ill rev1 i.s 1 1 'Mi, at lomllilons. It's lloulil etiecls Ih'iin finitely. loc., lifjO, auu Utc., t drug stor, Wages arc higher in England than in Germany or Franco. '.L4, 1 Li ive Heat Stop gucsinj! In- the h"t and mot rertrn remedy fee a nainful n'linenls I'smliti" Wizard (HI. The way it relieves all .'irene"" fmm snrains. eet. wounds, burns, scalds, etc., j wonderful. In 25 years the population of Ber lin has tripled itself. Constipation eaiise many serious dis eases. It is 1 iiorniik'tiiv rureii tiy ur. Pierce's l'leasant I'elliia. three for cathartic. One a laxative, The first stone of St. Petersburg was laid in 1 703. Mrs Winsiow's booming Sympfor ChiMren tHtlitnioftenstneKUi;i,r"liu!iinliiimi:u tiou, alluye paiu,cuiv wuiflcolK'oc a but'.; ) An I'liboai'iible Novelty. "So Lewis Waller is i;.iing to tour America! He'll main.' u hit hiiv. He's so dashing."- The spiaker, a New York man ager, smiled nnd n sinned: "Waller will now be able to tost, the verisimilitude of his American stories. He has, you 1. now. a host of them. One Is about the piinlng town of Tin Can. "According to Waller, a ivuderfoot entered Tin Can on an August day in white duck trousers. The resi dents at once surrounded him. bound him hand and foot, and thrust, him Into a buRgitge car of a departing train. " 'Never,' said tbe Mayor, as the train drew forth 'never you come back here, pale face, under no con sideration agin. We can stand biled shirts, but when it conies to biled drawers wow!' " A girl who marries In haste does not always have time to repjnt at leisure. With her own wasV.liig, sew ing and cooking to do, and all the babies to take care of, a woman hasn't leisure for anything. AFTER SUFFERING ONE YEA From the moment you strike i a match and touch it to the! wick, a powerful live heat radi-; ates from the PERFECTION! Oil Healer (Equipped with Smokeless Device) which burns for 9 hours with one filling of its brass font, which holds 4 quarts. Cnc cf the strong features of the Perfection Oil Heater is the new Automatic Smokeless Device which make? smoke impossible, even when the heater i.s handled by, a novice. Permits instant removal for cleaning. There is no danger of turning the wick too high this automatic' smokeless device prevents it. This means a perfect, o lorless, smokeless heat that carries com fort, cheer and satisfaction. r.er.ulifully finished in Jcpa:i ur Nickel r.o cast iron to break k'K. base and top stamped out of one piece of steel damper top aluminum metal window frames that heat will not tarnrsh handle never hot. Made in various styles and finishes. Every Dc.iltr Kverywheri-. If Not At Ymirs. Writ,, for Descriptive Circular lo the Nearest Agency of the THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY . (Incorporated) COLT DISTEMPER Can ! h;iilltI very wolly. 'I he irkan'ftircil, an all oihtr In ,'i",. M'i.HVs I.I.Jl lH I.WTKMPKK Cl-Rj.. OI. .XiA? llf"riii."OUmiier. llit retwly Merknnwti fr mam In V fnui i,. mmr.uilf.! loi-iir.. iiii,'-. i"' ! 1 ulKrttle: ' I smiil10 U.i..n.c.f.lriiitKlliiui1hnrri.,l'-iiler.i.rfrilex.re 'j I 7mld l niuiiifa-liir, r. rut .l,..w how l.i l oulll.-e throKU. Our I r,. HoUllKlv everything. went" wanted. Lament wA t.. ...... pBmM.lv in li.tfiire twelve v.'arft. .D,CAL CO., Chmliti tnrj BactetlolotitU. Oohn, Ind.. U. . . Cured by Lydia E. Pinlv ham'sVegetable Compound Milwiiukpp, Wis. -- "Lydia K. I'iiik ham's Vepptalilo Compound 1ms iikuU- '.-' rill! R U' Willi Mil nnd I would list' tn tell tliewholcHurki of it. siitli'i'fil t'romfemuletroiiMc and fearful painsir inyback. I had the lipst doctors and tlicy all deoi'ti'd that I had a tumor in addition to my female trouble, and advised an opera tion, l, yd in K. i nk tut in ii V eirctalili' Compotiiul made me a well woman and 1 have no more liaekache. 1 hope 1 can help ot l-.ers by telli'iiu them what Lydia K. l'uikham's Vegetable Compound has done for riH." Mits. KmmaJmse, Ho.i First St, Milwaukee, Wis. The above m only one of the thou sands of grateful letters whleh are constantly beinf? received by tl' I'itikham Medicine Company of Lynn, Mass., widen prove beyond a doubt that Lylia K. llnkham's'VeKetalrle Com pound, made from roots and herbs, actually does cure these obstinate dis eases of women after all other means have failed, and that every such giir eriuff woman owes it to herself to at least (rive Lydlu JJ. I'inkliam's Vegeta ble Compound a trial tx-fore submit ting to an operation, or giving up hope of recovery. Mrs. l'inkliuin, of Lynn, Mass., Invited all nick women to write her for advlco. She lias ruiilil thotiHuntlH to health uu il her advice In free. BODNHB tut-as, to. H w tut to tyjuuif f aoiiii titi lliitr rtWAiiftM, fluo .ti tit ,i vu ?, hfr -mmi- 'f i, - luff I4tu. JTo o.nlu d ium.-..oihi'u, 14 U. tlilia, Aii'y ,b.l H..I tiUU-Uug. liili ftVUiuU'WU. OL urr Ho Knew The Family, Mr. Thompson (at Newrleh's musl cale) Uld you notice with what style and grandeur Miss Amelia New rich sweeps Into the roouiT Mr. Kane Yes, but when It comes to sweeping: out a room she Isn't one, two, six with her poor old mother. The world's rtoord flight of a kite Is 23,111 feut above sea level. Th? kite started from a mountain to; where the temperature was 7b de grees above zero and at Its highest point reached 4.5 degrees belour lero He lliiln't Know. He was telling three or four of us about once belonging to a baseball team, when the liuin with the bad cigar observed: "Hut did any of you fellers ever see a game ot tootball?" "Great Scott, man, but you don't mean thut you haven't?" exclaimed the story-teller. "Well, 1 d'.miio. Sometimes I think 1 have, aud sometimes 1 doubt It. It wns one time years hro. It was in a tiebl. There wns a heap of people there, and they did a heap of yelling. I yelled, too, but 1 dunno what for" "How did it go?'" was asked "Well. H lot of fellers come out with H hie bull. Thev stood and mo. tloned and Jawed for a while, nnd durin ; this time someone picked my pocket of $S." "I see." "Then one of the fellers kicked the ball and everybody begun to boi ler. I hollefd. too, and while I was hollering someone stole my watch." "Co on." "Then two felt-rs ran nnd jiimiied on another feller. Then three fellers tumped on the two fel lers. Then the whole pns Jutnp "rt en the three fellers. T'.iev hid tM ni'"r P"d over na'i. 1'very time they kicked the ball the Hneeta tors yelled, livery time thev kb'ked each other thp spe-tntn-s 'tiled t'- harder. I thlk tWv ket f "i 'or two hours, and then nn undertaker came ' ""ut what for?" "H 'va gclni? n sv he'd -pn-v thp il-id rnr go much, but thev run him off. tied n polleemnn arrested me for bln"iv, nnd m nutn tmpted 'er tlrR. and ten woion ''nted ivn-. fpt I've never been fible to fleure out what sort of a game Is was." Is pnlii thnt after everv bt" S"-"-rnln the hpnnpolro'l husbands buy another lot of revolvers. Franco hns recently launched the largest submarine. U. N. I'. 41. For We ALL Know Ttml thnrt m OmpuiiumIiIp! TM'iitii n-w, III Oi ixt-ulnllvt) Hint litfiiMi iit n'li, for the ut-. qtiiriiiH tr ,HrvD 1'rulua, fur tl.j vumuUiilao ot Furiuiit- FEVVor us(Jndcrstand i Juat hnw tuuij,iul il. We TELL You tl.rou.--ti THE C0PPR CURB AND MINING OUTLOOK, 7 Trinity Pla c. N. V. CKy. A 32page Weekly, Dc voted to Mine, MinlnK and Curh Stocks. fcpd for HIKK eiAMrl.K J'tiPV. An aching back is instantly relieved by an application of Sloan's Liniment. This liniment takes the place cf massage and is better than sticky plasters. It penetrates without rubbing through the skin and muscular tissue right to the bone, quickens the blood, relieves congestion, and gives permanent as well as temporary relief. Here's the Proof. Mr. .Iamk l.i k, or mo nth 8 i:..Wa.,lillit't'in, U.O., wrltea : " i'lilrlT yelrg a.i 1 lull from a aralloM atnl rf. oiuly injured my mck. I au!1tred tprri t'l v at ti ; frum the mull of my t..-u U all arf.iiii't my atouiaoli ir.ia jmt ua if I liad b?m txtatu witb a rlub. I ii'tnl ivwry plnat'T 1 cnul. I jet wuh no rln-f . rll'wn'a Liiiimunt tooli ilia pain ritflift O'.it, and I eun now do aa mucli lanu r work aa any man In tbo aLop, tUauka to Sloan's Liniment Mr. J. P. Evana, of Mt. Airy, Ga., Hti: "Aftor tiring arltU'twl for tlirr y.'aia wtlti rbeunmllaiu, 1 uial Sloan's l.iiiiinent, and wits curod sound and wi'll, and am glad lo aay I hxin'l Wii troublvd Willi rlieiimatUm allies. My ljf waa badly iwolln from my hlf' to my kiiM. Ons-balf a bonis took lbs i:tin ana swelling out." Sloan's Liniment has no equal as a remedy for Rheu matism, Neuralgia or any pain or stiffness in the muscles or joints. Pflcsi, 25500. and $ 1.00 limit's bosk ffWi mii'sra, eactl. itiwp, "a poultry itil fr. Address Dr. Earl S. Sloai, Boston, Mm., U.S.A. TRAPPERS PATENTS S ntOB i.rit amm.Wuii. I make mure MaaHa V" 'M " sliU'r t I iMlfr" I I nil ,.(, 4 tiH'itlhly initliit, )Mior nit o pv" n i ft it -'f-l trn., ,i.', ,l..si m, (r.iMu s -rt . rj fur, hi tiiiiii-iist, vU, mu I n 4 ft- tHMttirf, niu stt.'iiatf b iiih tmtmli.; hni , k- nil rr ) trul. A, K. Ii V KDlM. I'l it. t 0 Uoi 7bu, UiiHiWktt, Uul. ChScks Dosrag WcSi ? If Not, Learn Why Prom a Book Con tin a Lean Than the Value of One Chicken........ Whether you rais Chit kens lor lun or profit, you want to do it mlsiligently and get thi beat, results, 'ilia way lo do Mils la iu piulit by tu rxpvrwuc ol oloei. U oilsr a tioulc telling all you neeJ lo know on I lis subjsiv a fmufc wntten by a ni..u bo niaUe bis living tor 25 yniis in lUtising i'ou.try, aud in tbst mu nsesasan. lid to xpaTimeiii and apsnti niiirh money to loam lbs twt way lo conduct lbs buaiiiasa (nr ttit small auiu ol lb CE.V1S in postage stamia. It tells you bow lo IMsct and Cure Disease, how to r'eed for Kxxs, and also for Market, which fowls to Save (or Ureeil- ing iurpon(s, and intef aiiout everi'thine you nuiai know on the suhiei to make a survea. HfcNT mKTl'AIJl N ItKl'KH'T Or 23 CKNT BOOK PUBLISH1NO HOUSE, 13 IN HTA&II'S. Lsionard St., N. V. City. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color mnrr tuixla hrlslitrr and liul-r KtAun than M other dra. Oas lun. pakaf solors sU abera. Itir. die la mid watsr twitrr than asr Mhrr Aya, Tost eau i, mir it-uumm wiUiout rtvWiw aiuti. Vnw (or .'ros bsjfcWt-Uow ui wt liWsa aud Uls L'olora, ilOMlOU ulitu CUH siswr, llllas