ER. elect a n State ssion at 1sly, ex- at 9:40 0. Daw- or over after a of the ronment. ority of ounced, ». Teter, hat the \mation. partisan ssed re- fter the ext day, 1vention y after than 11 the plat- er taken form in n. The ed: of Min- f Pleas May of chools— rles W. — Frank VI. Saun- ge — Dr. ‘ames A, >S. Interfere ny kly sum- follows: has cone Missouri part of lsewhere ry favor- revented ly inter- e lower pi and s of the 1d lake cen dam- and Mis- he coast Oregon, yeen ma- greater as made ed rains nd much or wheat rom con- lebraska, Missouri, was seri- lodging, ling and so great- weather ississippi onditions n in the i valley. nder fa- Pacific RTED. ve Been An corre. July 12, received attacked and were sses, not ing killed i that a y reoccu- Port Ar- >d by the Jovik and military ) retire. zreat bat- 1 side of that the es which casualties by - and act- s remark- juotations , XX and e; No.l, fine, un- 14-blood, shed, de- nd above, ). 2, 28@, ec: Uh, % T@27%¢C; 3c.: Ken- 14-blood, Territory, fine, 14@ medium, 21 c. vn. Socialists ce in the garrison lists were he officers ed the of- elebrating icers used >d that 20 fight. id. 1e interior ribe made two days’ ous. The Owing to the neigh- El Torres, n the new rection at ued. The d Tangier ae yy pore 1 PLUCK, ROMANCE 3 N AND ADVENTURE. A » | CRUSE SAVED THE WA NGA HOMAS CRUSE, quarter- 1, master’s department, Uni- © Q ted States- Army, got an- ¥,, J other step the other day PIOR™ and once more changed the little image in his shoulder strap. Colonel Cruse has been a long time in the staff department which has to do with army muies, tents, canteens and ‘haversacks. When he first left the line for the staff friends said he couldn’t stand it, but when a man has. fought more than most and licked all that he fought, it)s not overhard to urge him to take the soft side of a pillow. They say in the army to-day that Tom Cruse can’t pick up a sample shovel that some contractor has sub- mitted for inspection without coming to an “advance carbine” with it, and later trying to cock the thing. Cruse for years was an officer in the Sixth Cavalry. Out at Fort Sheridan the other day a retired. enlisted man who bad served under Cruse some years ago, told the story of how the quarter- master officer won the little bit of bronze which on certain occasions he wears pinned to ‘his ‘blouse. In the early summer of 1882 Cruse was a second lieutenant in “K” Troop of the Sixth Cavalry. He was out scouting after Apaches down in the very hottest part of Arizona. The command had trailed along till it came to the rocky basin known as the Big Dry Wash. Cruse had something less than a corporal’'s guard with him. Nhe little band had not seen a sign of an Indian since it set out, but then Apaches are not given to making signs, nor do they wait for formal in- troduction before extending warm greetings to those who would cross the threshold of their rocky desert fastnesses. Beyond the basin of the Big Dry Wash was a natural fortification of rocks. Cruse sent a man by the right flank to take a peep behind the bowl- ders before crossing. The trooper re- turned and reported there was nothing there. Then ‘ the little command rushed down into the basin, and hades opened from behind the rocks to their front. The fire was concentrated and terrific. Two of the six saddles were emptied and the mounted command gave way and sought the shelter of the rocks to the rear. Under the trumping hail of bullets, Cruse lifted a wounded trooper to his saddle and bore him back to shelter, where the men dismounted and took what count they could of their hidden enemy pcross the basin, It was supposed that the second trooper who had fallen in the open was dead. While looking out across the waste between him and the am- bushed savages Cruse saw the fallen trooper move. Then there happened one of those things which a single line in the medal of honor list tells about. but to which a whole volume can not do justice. Cruse, carbine in hand, stood straight up, a fair and easy mark for a bullet A tawny face showed beyond and an eye glanced along a rifle barrel. Before the weap- on spoke, Cruse’s carbine sent a bullet straight through the Apache's head. Then he rounded the rock in front and strode across the open toivards the wounded soldier. At every stride he fired. He was one of the crack shots pf the army and the bullets scared the rocks close to the heads of the lurk- ing reds. They had seen their comrade's head gplit clean at 150 yards. They dared, not expose themselves enough to take careful aim, but they answered the officer’s challenge with a scattering volley. He reached the moaning trooper. Behind him had come two of his men. “Pick him up, boys,” said Cruse, “and I'll cover the retreat.” He stood there facing the enemy’s lurking place. A savage braver than the rest stood up and fired. The bul- let scratched Cruse’s arm, but an ounce of lead crashed into the Apache's head. Cruse walked backward, while behind him his two devoted men bore their stricken fellow. Ballets tore up the sand, but the magnificent nerve and courage of the soldier who sent back true a shot for every volley palsied the Apaches’ aim. Back to their breastworks the sol- diers went with their burden, Cruse standing erect and sending one last shot before sinking to cover. Then re-enforcements came and eighteen savages were put to flight. To-day it is nothing but two cents’ worth of bronze and a bit of ribbon that re- minds one of the gallantry on that July. day in the basin of the Big Dry Wash. —Edward B. Clark, in Chicago Record- Herald. ! BABY PLAYS WITH A SNAKE. Undismayed by a blacksnake that crept into the clothes basket in which she lay in the yard, Eva Buelah, three years old, daughter of Feter Buelah, a’ River Hill, Pa. farmer, hailed the intruder as a pet and earessed it as she would a kitten until rescued from ‘her dangerous position by her fright- ened father. Her years were too few for knowledge. of the scrape her proto- type had got into with connection with a serpent, but little Eva perhaps was wiser than Eve; for, whereas the mothér of the mace let the constrictor do most of the talking, the baby kept up an interrupted flow of prattle to the snake. From the moment in which it dragged its four feet of length into her wicker paradise she was the most delighted youngster in those parts. She coded to the sable playmate, rapped it over the head with her rattle and Jaughed with delight when it wrig- gled over her. Her parents heard and saw her, but they didn’t perceive the snake until the father walked from the door of the house toward the basket. Then he dashed. to her side. Buelah snatched the little one from” the bas- ket and gave her a fling that sent her rolling over the grass. Then he raised a clothes pole and swung it on the snake until he had beaten the reptile to a pulp. He wds astonished to find Eva unharmed. There was no danger of poison; but the snake, being of the constrictor species, easily might have choked the child in its folds. WOLVES ATE THE DOUGHNUTS. Wolves have been particularly ag- gressive this past winter in the North. west, and many narrow escapes of hu- | man beings have been reported. A sleighload of people in Cass County, Minnesota, were pursued by a pack of wolves the other day. The pur- sued dropped doughnuts along the way, and the wolves fought so hard for the delicacies‘that the whole party got home in safety. Two lumbermen in the employ of Sam Simpson, a log- ger operating in the neighborhood of Duluth, Minn., heard the howl of a wolf when they were about a mile from their cabin. The men hastened toward camp, but did not apprehend any real danger. - In a few minutes a wolf was heard at much closer range. Then several were heard at various points. The men could think of ndbody that the wolves had in view for supper but themselves, and they broke into a run, They arrived breathless at their camp, three wolves following them to within 150 feet of the cabin door. Ten minutes later the howls of wolves in the vicinity indicated that a great pack had assembled. “If you want to get a record as a first-class runner,” said one of the lumbermen who had escaped, “just get out some place and get yourself chased by a pack of wolves. You will find that you have more muscles in your body than you have any idea of, “You want to imagine every jump that they are about to spring on you, and wonder whether or not it will hurt wken they are gnawing the flesh from your bones. “I know that I can beat the tens second class of runners ih a walk.,’— Chicago Inter Ocean Correspondence. WILD RABBITS SAVED BISHOP. Wild rabbits saved the lives of Bishop Peter E. Rowe, Episcopal Bish- op of Alaska, and his companions, in March, while they were en route over the new mail trail from Fairbanks, Alaska, to Valdez. Bishop Rowe made the journey with a mail carrier named Karstens and John Chilson. They went through Golcona Valley to Copper River. At the top of the divide they were to meet and obtain provisions from a mail carrier named Frayne, bound from Valdez to Fairbanks. Either Bishop Rowe's party or Frayne missed the trail and they passed each other miles apart. Their food was exhausted, compelling the Bishop and his comrades to depend upon their gun for sustenance. Rabbits formed their sole diet for three days until they reached a mining camp and obtained food. The trip was very hard, tiring both dogs and drivers. Bishop Rowe seemingly enjoyed the hardships, hav- ing become inured through thousands of miles of arctic winter travel while visiting his widely separated missions. Each day he steamed rabbits while his tired companions rested. r ALONE, MET CHARGE OTF 700. A dispatch from Gyangtse, Tibet, gives the details of the Tibetan attack on Kangma post, in which one Sepoy killed and six wounded formed the total British losses. The onslaught of TiDetans began at dawn. They de- scended a hill in two solid masses. A part of the troops had already started to march from the post, but those out- side the fortifications immediately ran back to cover, save one Sepoy. He re- fused to budge and received the charge of the whole 700 Tibetans. After shooting five of them he was cut down, despite a heavy fire from the post. The Tibetans reached the walls and attempted to climb over, hacking at the men at -the loopholes with their swords, and even seizing the muzzles of the protruding rifles. Meanwhile those behind kept up a furious fire with matehlocks and Lhasa rifles. The Tibetans kept up the attack for half an hour with the utmost ferocity. They then withdrew, the garrison pursuing them. . Kindly “Dogs of War.*’ The latest movement of the Russians to provide further aid for their wound- ed, which is badly needed, is the util- ization ef dogs. The German Emperor has presented three Scotch dogs which have been trained in ambulance work to the Russian Dog Breeders’ Association, and after they have been tested they will be sent to the I'ar East. It is also intended by the association to teach a number of the animals to be .of assistance, either by remaining at the side of a wounded man when they have found him and attracting the attention of the ambulance corps and conducting it to the spot where the wounded man is lying. Each animal is to carry a wallet strapped on his back containing ban- dages, restoratives and water, thus fol- lowing the old custom of the hospice at St. Bernard. Only Two Residents. Thus far New York has contributed only two Presidents by election—Van Buren and Cleveland. New York has contributed nine Vice-Presidents, how- ever—Burr, Clinton, Tompkins, Van Buren, Fillmore, Wheeler, Arthur, Morton and Roosevelt, FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW STRIKE INJURES BUSINESS. Crop Prospects Improved and Prices for Farm Products, Promise Good Returns. R. G. Dun & Co.'s “Weekly Review of Trade” says: “Traae conditions were gradually becoming mcre normal after the conclusion of political con- ventions, when a new disturbing factor appeared in the strike of packing house employes and allied trades. This en- hanced prices of meats and added many thousands to the already large army of unemployed, weakening the purchasing power of the people still further. Aside from this unfavorable development, the news of the week contained much encouragement. Crop prospects improved and the general level of prices for farm products prom- ises a large return to agriculturists, which means better business for all industries. Confidence grows with the crops, retailers showing more dis- position to ‘prepare for the future as the ‘season advances: with ‘no serious setback to the farms. A few manu- facturing lines are more active, al- though there is still much idleness at the shops and mills, and pig iron out- put for July will be smaller than in any recent month. eports of increased plans for erection of buildings are not accompanied by any noteworthy ex- pansion in demand for structural ma- terials as yet. Railway earnings for the first week of July are only six- tenths per cent. less than last year, and foreign trade at this port showed gains of $530,286 in exports and $1,906,- 724 in imports, as compared with the corresponding week a year ago. Tex- tile manufacturing plants are operat- ing scnrewhat irregularly. Export buying has again provided the best feature of the market, stocks of heavy sheetings and drills being fairly well cleaned up. In woolen goods the week has brought the opening up of new lines of medium grade men’s wear at about last year’s prices. Footwear markets are more active, many West- ern buyers having appeared in Boston and a fair volume of supplementary fall orders have been placed. Tan- ! ners who were short of hides are un- able to secure deliveries on account of the strike, and the situation threatens to become serious if the struggle is prolonged. Failures this week num- bered 225 in the United States, against 213 last year, and 20 in Canada; com- pared with 16 a year ago. i ee ee ee eee ee ee ee MARI FECTSS, PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat— No. 2 red......... Sienn$ 99 Rye--No, 2........ HL Corn— Ll 2 yellow. ear.. 56 No. 2yellow, shelled.. 55 Mixed Ear... b4 Oats—No, 2 white 16 No. 8 white...... 45 Flour—Winter patent.. 52) Straight winters 5 00 Hay—~No. Jymomy, 1B 5 Dover No. 10 11... .. HY it 00 Feed—No font mid. ton........ 28 0) Brown midaimes Bran. bulk . Strawv—W heat Oat Dairy Products. Butter— Elgin creamery $ 20° 21 hio creamery. . 7 fancy country r 3 oH Cheese—Ohio, new. 3 9 New York, dew. 7 8 9 Hens—per 1b Chickens—d r 16 17 Turkeys, live. R0 23 Eggs—Pa. and Ohi 18 19 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes—New Ig bbl Cabbage—per bbl Onions—per barrel . Apples—per barrel. BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent... Wheat—No. 2 re 101 102 . 57 o8 17 15 1 WU PHILADELPHIA . Flour—W jnier Patent $515 53> Wtreat—No. 2red... 101 lu Corn—No. Sere i 54 55 Oats—No. 2 white....... - = 48 44 Butter—Creamery, ext 17 13 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts. 17 18 NEW YORK Flour—TFatents, +h 0) 5 by Wheat—No, 2 re 1 06 1 Ul Corn—No. 2......... or 3 ats—No, 2 White 41 a4 Buttor—Creamery 17 18 Eggs—............... ee 18 2J LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Prime beavy, 142010 1600 Ibs......56 07 6 20 rime, 1300 to 1400 ibs. . 5% 6 00 Medium, 1200 to 1300 lbs.. b 40 5 TO Kat helters. 4 ou 4 85 Butcher, $00 Tol00ins. ll 450 00) Common to fair... .............. 300 37) xen, common to fat. : we 200 409 Common to good tat bulls and cows 250 3 5 Milchecows,each.................... 250) dBuv Hogs. Primeheavy hogs.................. $590 60" Prime medium weights. ...... 59) 610 Best heavy yorkers and mediur du 61) ood pigs and lightyorkers 570 Pigs, fommon togood....... U 48; Houghs............... 14y Baars .- cated. 32; Sheep. EXxtra,medium wethers 84% Good to choice 450 Medium ..... 369 Commoz to fair. 25) Spring Lambs... ......... 0... 400 Veal, extra... Veal, ggod to Yeal, common as Heaping coals of fire on your ene: my’s head is just as effective now as it was when the old saw was invent- ed, and it makes him feel just as small, and mean and foolish now as it ever did. An election under the Brannock law was held in Youngstown, in precinct A of the Fourth ward. The “drys” were successful. It was the first elec- tion under the Brannock law ever held here. The consoclidation of the Youngs town Foundry & Machine Company and the Youngstown Steel Castings Company has been effected under the name of the former company, which will operate both plants. Josiah Rieger, of Nerth Bentc near Alliance, was found dead in cellar of his home. He was a bache- lor and lived alone. THE WEAK SPOT. A weak, aching back tells of sick kidneys. It-aches when you work. It aches when you try to rest. It throbs in changeable weather. Urinary troubles add to your misery. No rest, no comfort, until the kidneys are . well. Cure them with Doan’s Kidney Pills. Mrs. WW. M. Dauscher, of 25 Water St, Brad- ford, Pa., says: “1 had an almost con- tinuous pain in the small of the back.. My anisler, feet, hands and almost my whole body were bloated. I was lan- guid and the kidney secretions were profuse. Physicians told me I had diabetes in its worst form, and I feared I would never recover. Doan’s Kidney Pills cured me in 1896, and I have been well ever since.’ A FREE TRIAL of this ott kid- ney medicine which cured Mrs. Dauscher will be mailed to any part of the United States. Address Foster- Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y¥. Sold by all dealers, price 50 cents per box, ARGIant Cartoonists. The London Chronicle, is reproduc- ing in its columns some Egyptian war eartoons 3,000 years old. Pharaoh's chariot is drawn by dogs, his soldiers are represented by rats. The enemy’s army is composed of cats. A single combat between a rat and a cat, each armed with a sword, is graphically de- picted. It is explained that the draw- ing was the work of a caricaturist of renown Jin the year 1100 B. C. An- other cartoon represents a donkey and a lion playing a war game of draughts. The caricaturist was also a writer. He describes the soldier of the period as the victim of “bad victuals” and water. This would indicate tnat, like Uncle Sam, the Egyptians had their ‘“‘em- balmed beef” problem. Many of the ideas expressed by the ancient cartoon- ists in their productions are found in the drawings of modern caricaturists. There is nothing new under the sun. A wise man once observed that all the funny stories are based upon and are variations of five humorous stories originating with the ancients. Ap- parently the cartoonists and the joke makers of the twentieth century are revamping some mighty old material. —Paltimore Sun. Edwa street as a broker while in his teens. He mastered the broker's business and became a private banker, organizing a banking house, which passed later over to his brother and cousin,with Nichglas Fish as a special partner. The high financial plane which he is now on has Leen achieved since 1893. To Exploit African Falls. A company has been formed to exe ploit Victoria Falls, in the Zambesi, and will built a hydro-electric generat- ing station, with the expectation of supplying power to the Waukie coal folds, Suluwayo, the Gwelo, Sebas- kive and Hartley gold fields, all of which are within 300 miles. #100 Reward. $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis- ease that science has been able to cure in all itsstages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con- stitutional disease, requires a constitutiona treatment. Hall’s CatarrhCureistakeninter- nally, acting direetly upon the blood and mu- cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy- ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building’ up the con- stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One fiun- dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address _F. J. CuexEy & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, Tse. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. To Protect Montana Waters. Citizens of Montana living in the valley of Milk River are gravely con- cétned over the proposed extensive diversion of the waters of that stream in ‘Canada, and are importuning the government to intervene in order that their prior rights to the water may be protected. Metal Reduced to Powder. Visitors to the ruins of St. Pi have observed the following surpris effect of the erupion of May 8. W some parts of the walls and other mains of masonry still stand nothing remains of metallic constr an impalpable powder. John D. Rockefeller began his busi- | § ness career at 16 as a clerk in a commission house in Cleveland, O. In rd H. Harriman went to Wall | J | tacked and is not afraid of | uctions but E three years he had saved $1,000 and borrowed another thousand from oD father, with which he went into th same business for himself. His aii veature in oil refining was at Cleve- land in 1860. 8. BoA Household Remedy RB Cures S§ SGRDEYLA, SALT RHE Hee. ZEMA, every form of malignant SKIN ERUF ION. besides eing efficacious in toning up the system znd restoring the con- stitution, when impaired : from any cause, It is a 2 fine Toric, snd its almost cupernatural healing M properties justify us in guaranteeing a cure of all blood diseases, if directions are followed. I'% Price, = per Bottle, or 6 Bottles for 83. 3 OR SALE BY DRUGGISTS. : SENT FRE BOOK OF WONDERFUL CURES, J together with valuable information. 3L60D BALM CO., ATLANTA, GA. D O P SY NEW DISCOVERY; gives quick relfef and cures worst canes. BOOK of testimonials und 10 days’ treatment Free. Dr. E. E. GREEN E30NS. Box B. Atlanta. Ga. PN. U. 33 1904. Vice Presidents Who Became Presl- dents. ‘ot the 25 persons who have been elected Vice President of the United States, about one-third of them, or eight, have attained the Presidential office, either by subsequent election or by the death of the President, and nve of them died in office. Those who were elected Vice President and were afterward elected to the Presidency are John Adams, who was Vice Presi- dent for two full terms, and was then elected President; Thomas Jefferson, who was Vice President during the term of Joan ‘Adams; Martin Van Bu- ren, who was Vice President in An- drew Jackson’s last germ and was then elected to succeed him. If Mr. Roose- velt’s electors should be elected in November next that would add an- other to the list. Those who have gone into the Exec- utive through the death of the Presi- dent are Jchn Tyler, who became Pres- ident upon the death of William Henry Harrison about one month after the latter was inaugurated, and so served nearly a full term; Millard Fillmore, who succeeded Zachary Taylor 1 year and 4 months after the inauguration of Taylor; Andrew Johnson, who served all of Lincoln’s second term but one month; Chester A. Arthur, who suc- ceeded James A. Garfield and served three and one-half years, and Theo- dore Roosevelt, who succeeaed William McKinley six months after his second inauguration. A peculiar “glass disease” has brok- en out among the windows of York Cathedral. Some of the thirteenth and fourteenth century glass in the edifice has been removed in order to arrest the “disease.” The outbreak is ascrib- ed to a fungus. FITS permanently cured. No {itsorne=vous= ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer,®2trial bottle and treatise free Dr. R.H. Kraig, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Pkila., Pa. There i is no earthly power greater than a woman's smile. Ask Your Dealer or Allen’s Foot-Earse, A powder. It rests the feet, Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Sore,Hot, Callous,Aching Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen’s Foot-Ease makes new ortight shoes easy. At all Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents, Ac- ecpt no substitute. Sample mailed FREE, Address, Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. Port Arthur same latitude. and Cincinnati are in the © Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children teething, soften the gums, reducesinflamma- tion, allays pain,cures wind dolic, 25c.a bottle The Korean gape: al has a Japancse quar- ter known as the Shingorai. Piso’s Cure is the best medicine we everused for all affections of throat and lungs.—War. Q. kxpsLey, Vanburen, Ind., ¥eb. 10, 1900. London bridge is crossed every day by 220,000 people. Rabies Very Rare. The fear of rabies is almost mythic- al. In the last three years the New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals has cared for near- ly 160,000 dogs and not one case of the disease has been found. The mal- ady is extremely rare and, contrary to popular superstition, a mad dog never attacks man or beast unless first at- water. Even this almost unknown disease is ‘not dangerous to the public, if the suf- fering animal is left alone. Old Indian Capital. Tahlequah, which used to be noted on the maps of all old geographies as the capital of Indian Territory, is a town of about twenty-five hundred people, and the majority of its popu- lation are Cherokee Indians. The Cherokees arc of all shades of com- plexions. Some coal-black negroes boast of being Cherokee Indians, but the prevailing color is a dusky brown, | a little darker than that of a Japanese, or a yeliow somewhat lighter than a mulatto. The Best Qualified Graduate. It is the custom of the graduating class of the medical department of Queen’s university of Kingston, Cana- da, to designate by ballot the fellow=- student who they believe cold be ex- pected “to do the right thing under all circumstances.” The successful stu- dent is honored with a special prize by the faculty. We believe that such a man is really the most capable of his class, and, if not identical with the gold medalist, is probably his superior in all that goes to make up the scien~ tific and successful practitioner.—N. Y. Medical Journal. Especially Mothers The Sanative, Antiseptic, Cleansing, Purifying, and Beautifying Properties of Assisted by CUTICURA Ointment, the great Skin Cure, are of Priceless Value. For preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of fall- ing hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes and cha- fings, in the form of baths for an- noying irritations, ulcerations, and inflammations of women, and many sanative, antiseptic pur- poses which readily suggest them- selves, as well as for all purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery, CUTICURA Soap and CUTI- CURA Ointment are priceless, Sold throughout the-world. Cuticura Soap. 25¢., Oint- ment, 50g., Resglvent, 50c. (in foxm of Aan “Coated Fills, Zc. per vial of 60). Depots: London, 27 Charter~ house Sq.; Paris, 5 Rue.de la Paix; oso, 137 HS Ave. Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Proprietore. BF Send for * How tu Preserve, Purity, and Beautify.” mt TE A ad BY a Zin SEAT er GUARANTEED CURE for all Borers? tie. appendicitis, any bad breath, bad ¢ blocd, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, he pains efter cating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizziness. regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more people thzn all ether diseases together. It starts chronic ailments and long years ef suffering. ache, indigestion, pimples, 3 When your bowels dcn’t move ‘No matter what grils you, start taking ' CASCARETS today, for you will never get well and stay well util you get your bowels § booklet free. right Take our advice, start with Cascarets today under absolute guarantee to cure or money refunded. The genuine tablet stamped C@ C. Never sold in bulk. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago-or New York. 502 Sample and § Chickens Eam If You Know Hew to Handle Them Properly. Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you want to do it intelligently and get the best results. is to profit by the experience of others. all you need to know on the subject—a book written by a man who made his living Poultry, and in how to Feed for Egos, and also for Market, which Fowls to Save nO? for Breeding Purposes and indeed about everything you must know onthe subject to make: a suceess. SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS. EEE IEEE IIR ERELL Rook PUBLISHING that time necessarily had to experiment and spent much money to learn in the best way to conduct the business—for the i j Seanins § small sum of 23 cents in postage stamps. — oe It tells you how to Detect and Cure Disease, 134 L sonido 37. N. r. erry. = ES gnay ! The way to do this We offer a book telling for 25 years in raising HOUSE, | i 5 ! & # $ 8 SRS Sn ETI A AA TA