TERT, 3INE pendent irrent of of inde- ests into any. The said, will & Steel 1, Iron & Sheffield n Works. as presi- & Tin as being the new strength- the con- ‘ennessee company idward N. the con- 3elle Iron res. The exercised, O4l has 1 cousoli- RIKE s Unions nt. on Christ-"' d men in ork, when ry union, usesmiths a trade ree years, 1 next. ; have of- ke of the le prevail- the com-~ house car- creased 30 et’ makers 22 cents, THREAT $2,400 or mm Up. eof the a, N.Y. ge letters , ends to be nd, threat- 1se’s house in a cigar »f his resi- the night. ver to the that dyna- rt. Crouse’s t would be vmily, if he Y. VENTS. is. practi- s have con- the, govern- Petersburg th Deposit s robbed of eveloped to am in con- has been in- road to de- >e yek was felt rd New York leted, giving 2. - v “York that ny. will in- 00,000,000 to <, which has ‘0 throw on- church and S. a Angeles at icans © were d at Diaz, by the Mexi- signed the tion bill and that bonds present. David and s, -aged 70 § home ' at .¢ They ate ° ng on a tin , the Peoria, iter, has been held by Ed- icago banker, » penitentiary. convicted of » secure $25,- Metropolitan York, was s in prison. sband prayed death so that oT. 7, of Norfolk, tter in which bigamist and for two wives, head. ierican fishing adian revenue or alleged fish by a decision Great Britain. ia Line. ailroad Com- . the Secretary N. J. iacorpor- a & Newark tal $500,000, to _ n a railroad middle of the nton through Middlesex and to a point in the northern and there con-v n line of the several fa — ~CON’'T DESPAIR. Bead the Experience of a Minnesots Woman and Take Heart. If your back aches, and you feel sick, languid, weak and miserable day g after day—don’t wor- ry. Doan’s Kidney Pills have cured thousands of women » in the same condi- tion. Mrs. A. Heiman of Stillwater, Minn, says: “But for Doan's Kidney ™ilis I would not be living now. They cured me in § 1899 and I've been well since, I used to have such pain in my back that once I fainted. The kidney secretions were much disor- dered, and I was so far gone that I was thought to be at death’s door. Since Doan’s Kidney Pills cured me I feel as if I had been pulled back from the tomb.” : Sold by all dealers, B50 cents a box, Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, . N. Y, . Ether and Matter. The densest matter is more or less porous. Gold will absorb mercury as a lump of sugar will absorb water, showing there must be interstices or interatomic spaces in it, but the ether shows no such property. -If a drop of water could be magnified sufficient- ly one would ultimately see the dif- ferent atoms of hydrogen and oxygen that constitute the molecules of water. If a small volume of ether could be magnified the indications are that the ultimate part would look like the first, which is the same as saying that it is not made up of dis- crete particles, but fills space com- pletely. This is expressed by saying that ‘the ether is a continuous me- dium and is hence incomparable with matter. StaTE OF OmHio, City oF ToLEno,! vcAs COUNTY. Frank J. CueNey makes oath that he is genior partner of the firm of F. J.CHENEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL- LARS for each and every case of CATARRIX that cannot be cured by the use of HArv’s CaTasrE CURE. RANE J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subsoribed in my ~~, presence, this 6th day of Decem- i sev. | er, A.D. 1886. A.W.GLEBASON, — 8 Notary. Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally,and acts directly on the blood and mucous sur- faces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. ¥.J. Cuenex & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. } Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. 83. A Story of Alexander Dumas. This story is told of Alexander Dumas: It is well known that he could ‘not refuse a request—at least not often. One day he gave a man a letter to one of his intimate friends in Brussels. The ‘friend, a wealthy merchant, received him as though he had been Dumas’ own brother intro- duced him to his circle of acquaint- ances, placed his stable at the man’s disposal and did everything in his power to make life pleasant for Du- mas’ friend. After the ° lapse of fourteen days the man suddenly dis- appeared and with him the best horse in the merchant's stable, Six months "later the merchant visited Dumas and thahked him for the kind of people he recommended to his consideration. “Dear friend,” he added, ‘your friend is a shark. He stole the best horse in my stable.” Astonished, Dumas raised his hands toward heaven and cried, “What, he stole from you too!” Trinkets From Land of Llama. Tibetan idols and trinkets are among the souvenirs that Rastern travelers are bringing home, The mysterious land of the Grand Llama will furnish a theme for talks in reading clubs this winter. The Brit- ish Ambassador’s brother, Sir Edward Durand, who returned recently from China, has presented a few specimens of embroidery to the embassy in Washington. They are quaint and surpass even the Japanese in delicacy of color and design. Dull gold pins with radiating rays like those of the sun are among the ornaments the British officers brought from Lhasa. Some of these have been given to American army men—New York Press. MALARIA? 27? Generally That is Not the Trouble, Persons with a susceptibility to mala- rial influences should beware of coffee, which has a tendency to load up the liver with bile. . A lady writes from Denver that she suffered for years from chills and fever which at last she learned were mainly produced by the coffee she drank. “I was also grievously afflicted with headaches and indigestion,” she says, “which I became satisfied were like- wise largely. due to the coffee I drank. Six months ago I quit its use aito- gether and began to drink Postum Food Coffee, with the gratifying re- sult that my headaches have disap- peared, my digestion has been restored and I have not had a recurrence of chills and fever for more than three months. I have no doubt that it was Postum that brought me this relief, for I have used no medicine while this fmprovement has been going on.” (It was really relief from congestion of the liver caused by coffee.) “My daughter has been as great a coffee drinker as I, and for years was afflicted with terrible sick headaches, which often lasted for a week at a time. She is a brain worker and ex- cessive application together with the headaches began to affect her memory most seriously. She found no help in medicines and the doctor frankly ad- vised her to quit coffee and use Postum. «For more than four months she has not had a headache—her mental facul- ties have grown more active and vigor- ous and her memory has been restored. “No more tea, coffee or drugs for us, go long as we can get Postum.” Name given by Postum ' Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Read the little book “The Road to Wellville” in pkgs. ~ In a Parliamentary paper on the pro- gress of East Africa, it is stated that one or two lions have been run over by trains, evidently while asleep on the track after feeding. A doctor of Southwark, London, summoned for debt, said that he could not pay because so many doctors in the district were charging only sixpence (13 cents) fees that he was unable to ‘make a living. In the village of Verjux, near Chal- on-sur-Saone, France, a couple, aged {100 and ninety, respectively, have just celebrated the seventy-fifth annivers- ary of their wedding. which they cailed their platinum wedding. A brown African goose in Norfh At- tleboro, Miss., lately amused its owner by producing an egg of extraordinary size. Around its longest circumference it measured eleven and seven-eighths inches, and ten inches around its shortest. The goose weighs nieteen pounds, Carrier pigeons released during the recent eclipse of the sun in Europe seemed much puzzled by theMarkness. Some of them started off in a direction directly opposite from that in which their cote lay. When, however, the eclipse had nearly ceased other pig- eons tool the right direction at once. "The flight of several of the birds was most eccentric. They first ascended to a great height and then descended on the roofs, to mount again soon after- ward, deseribing huge curves in space, alternating with extraordinary zigzags and dizzy plunges. A Canadian farmer has rigged up a novel device to keep his cows out of the corn. A framework of light poles is ‘strapped over the cow’s nose, muz- zle fashion, and studded with larg nails. When the cow iries to ged through the fence the mails catch against the barbs and effectually keen her out of the grain. The device has been widely copied by the farmers in that section of Canada where the fences are at best but poor, and trav- elers can see scores of cattle carrying these novel headgears, often with birds roosting on them. . The Best Way to Rise. Young men are always being advised to “rise in the world.” Which may or may not be good ad- vice. It depends upon: How the young man rises. ‘What he rises upon. ‘What he rises to. ‘What he takes up with him. If your idea is to rise in the world by making money and having people look up to you on that account, it is easy enough. If you want to go up like a man, however, put some foundation besides dollars under you. What will you rise to? Something worth while. Ideals are worth while. And one way to de- fine ideals is to say they are what your mother wants you to be. When men go up to ideals they are the light of the world.—Chicago Journal. Year a Record-Breaker. The year 1905 stands out as a record breaker—“a year of superlatives in the business world,” as Dun puts it. Prices of the sixty mest active rail- way securities have reached the high- est point on record; the output of pig iron in the first half of 1905 not only far surpassed any preceding six months’ production, but exceeded very full year prior to 1898; prices of hides are at the highest position since the Civil War; wool quotations have not " been as strong since the early 80's: shipments of footwear from Boston are close to the maximum, and includ- ing all shoes centres the movement this year is beyond precedent. Ior- eign commerce in July surpassed the corresponding month in any previous year. American Hotel Life. ‘At heart Americans still enjoy hotel life immensely, in spite of much re- proof from foreigners who consider it in bad form. The American has not really acquired the country-house habit, although he is trying to do so. It does not as yet satisfy his longing for a constant change of scene and entire independence. Hotel life, con- demned as it is by the finely discrim- inating as unhomelike, flaunting and too public, still appeals to the average American as a very diverting inter- lude to domestic exclusiveness. They even prefer it in reality to entertain. ing or being entertained after the hospitable but somewhat responsible European fashion.—London Telegraph. A Tough Proposition. The following letter received at this office to-day has been referred to the Lancaster Literary Society: “I married a widower and went to live in the home where he had lived -with his first wife. I find a number of her clothes in a closet, to wit: One brown dress skirt, two petticoats, three pairs of stockings, one pair of slippers and a black silk waist. How shall I dis pose of them in a way that will be satisfactory to her relatives and the neighbors ?’—Atchison Globe, Architect Had His Joke. On taking their seats for the first time on the bench at the newly erected courthouse at Delmerhorst, Germany, the judges were much perturbed to find that the architect had ornamented the portico with the sculptured head of a fox on one side and that of a sheep on the other. fertile oases, THE REAL SAHARA The Vast Depressions of Sand Are Unin- viting and Unpopular. The Sahara is not at all as popular belief pictures it, a vast plain of mov- ing sand, dotted here and there with somewhat like a leop- ard’s skin. From Tunis westward it is a vast depression of sand and clay not much above sea-level, in some parts perfectly level, in, others hilly, with low depressions containing water saltier than the sea, which gen- erally evaporates, leaving a coating of brilliant crystals, which appear like snow in the distance. The rivers from the Aures Mountains on the north serve to irrigate the oases of Ziban; sometimes they flow above the surface, but often below it. There is a fas- cination about the desert that is inde- scribable and which none can under- stand unless they have spent several weeks with a caravan. At times the heat is very great, but being perfect- ly dry, it ‘does mot enervate as our humid atmosphere does at a tempera- ture forty degrees lower. Near mid- day the desert appears t8 be a molten sea of dazzling, vibrating light. Now and then the mirage appears and the tired eyes of the stranger are refreshed with visions of beautiful lakes near the horizon, even sometimes of trees and moving caravans. Alas! ihis7is a case where seeing is mot believing. After many disappointments of this kind, the camels suddenly raise their heads and sniff the air through their curiously formed nostrils and move at a quicker pace, instinct telling them that water is near. ‘In the far distance a low black line indicated palm trees, and in a few hours the oasis of Sidi Okba appeared distinctly relieving the doubts of those who feared it was only a mirage. Our dragoman kicked off his slippers and climbed very nim- bly up a fine palm to get some of the luscious fruit growing at the top.— From “Shrines of the Desert,” by D. F, Elmendorf, in Scribner’s. Treland’s Wealth of Peat, Treland’s wealth, in the form of her 2,800,000 acres of peat, is at length to be exploited and utilized. Several at- tempts are being made at the present time to convert the peat into a more convenient form of fuel, and among those may be mentioned the work of the Electro-Peat Company, of Kilberry, near Athy, Kildare. As regards the amount of available power represented by Ireland’s bogs and mosses it has been calculated that one acre-will sup- ply the equivalent of 1828 tons of coal. Taking the average annual output of coal in the United Kingdom as 225,- 000,000 tons (the figures for 1900), the Irish peat converted into suitable fuel would supply this for something like twenty-two years. The importance of her peat to Ireland is rendered greater by the smallness of her coal supply. Ireland, indeed, has fared hardly in the matter of coal. Its great central plateau is formed of the lower carboniferous rocks known as the mountain limestone, and was once, like the limestone of the Pennine Range in this country, covered by coal measures. Had these remained Ire- land would have been as rich in coal fields as she is in peat bogs to-day. But the ceaseless work of denudation —rains and rivers—has washed away the coal-bearing strata, leaving only a few insignificant patches. — London Globe. Old Time Fire Glories Passing. Pittsburg will look still less like “hell with the lid off” after the first of the year, when the hot slag trains from the blast furnaces of the Carnegie plants will be discontinued. Hereafter the slag will be moved and dumped cold. These slag trains are about the last of the old-time fiery glories that made Pittsburg’s environs picturesque at night. Years ago the “Canada tops” put a stop to the great bursts of flame that used to come from the blast fur- naces when charges were dumped into them in the old fashioned way and, in- cidentally, saved the heat. Then open hearth steel furnaces began to dis- place Bessemer converters with their magnificent towers of golden flame, the open hearth furnaces showing no fire at all. The slag trains continued a picturesque feature of the Mononga- hela River banks at night, but now they, too, are doomed. By the mew process slag is passed under a spray of water as it is poured from the furnaces into the cars to be removed. This causes it to break into fragments and cools it so that the trains loaded with it are no more pic- turesque than trains loaded with pig iron. The granulated slag is used for railroad ballast and other purposes.— Pittsburg Dispatch. Mammoth’s Skull and Tusks. The skull and tusks and the bone of one of the forelegs of a mammoth were brought to this city yesterday by J. M. Taverind, a carpenter on the United States revenue cutter Bear. These fos- silized remains were dug out of the sand in the bed of one of the rivers on Ketchabue Sound, Alaska. They were found by native Esquimaux last July and were taken to the Bear to be traded. Taverind, recognizing the value they would have in this country, at once purchased them. The skull is nearly three feet through and weighs nearly 150 pounds. Both tusks have been broken or have disin- tegrated, but even now one of them is seven feet and three inches long, while the other is four feet two inches. When the animal was alive they must have measured about nine feet in }-ngth.—San Francisco Chronicle. Eminent as Scientist and Golfer. Professor W. D. Miller, of the Uni versity of Berlin, who recently arrived in this country, besides being famous as a bacteriologist and dentist, holds the golf championship of Germany and Austria. Deadly Trades. “Tobacco workers are prone to deadly mervous diseases. I have pever yet seen a tobacco worker who is mot a nervous crank; who is not off in his head,” complained the owner of a large Bowery cigar fac- tory. “I don’t know why it is; I used to be a worker myself, and I have never recovered from the ef- fects of the trade. - Half the time my men are away sick or dying, they are always ill-tempered and flighty, and a public agitation makes idiots of them. I don’t know the reason, as I said.”” He was advised to consult a physician and find out. The forman in a stone-cutting yard, when questioned, was better informed as to the evils of his trade. “See those dust clouds all over the yard,” he said. “Consumption there! and quick, at that.”’—Technical World Magazine. Epitome of Whole World. With the United States sending ma- caroni wheat to Europe, and wines: to France, the proverb about sending coals to Newcastle seesm to be practi- cally realized. It is not surprising, however, that this country thus com- petes, in various markets of the world, in products hitherto confined to ex- clusive and remote localities, for the extent and variety of the American domain are such as make it a prac- tical epitome of the whole world. There is scarcely a soil or a climate, apart from arctic and tropic extremes, that is not found here—hot or coid, wet or dry, constant or variable.— New York Tribune. STOPS BELCHING BY ABSORPTION =~NO DRUGS—A NEW METHOD. A Box of Wafers Free—Have You Acute Indigestion, Stomach Trouble, Ir- regular Heart, Dizzy Spells, Short Breath, Gas on the Stomach? Bitter Taste—Bad Breath—Impaired Ap: petite—A feeling of fullness, weight and pain over the stomach and heart, some- times nausea and vomiting, also fever and sick headache? What causes it? Any one or all of these: Excessive eating and drinking—abuse of spirits—anxiety and depression—mental ef- fort—mental worry and physical fatigue— bad air—insufficient food—sedentary habits —absence of teeth—bolting of food. If you suffer from this slow death and miserable existence, let us send you a sam- ple box of Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers abso- utely free. No drugs. Drugs injure the stomach. . t stops belching and cures a_ diseased stomach by absorbing the foul odors from undigested food and by imparting activity to the lining of the stomach, enabling it to thoroughly mix the food with the gastric juices, which promoces digestion and cures the disease. SPECIAL OFFER.—The regular price of Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers is 50c. a box, but to introduce it to thousands of sufferers we will send two (2) boxes upon receipt of 75c.. and this advertisement, or we will send you a sample free for this coupon. Tris OFFER MAY NOT APPEAR AGAIN. 1606 FREE COUPON. 128 Send this coupon with your name and address and name of a druggist who does not sell it for a free sample box of Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers to Muir's Grape Toxic. Co., 328 Third Ave., Rock Island, Il. Give Full Address and Write Plainly. nf Sold by all druggists, 3c. per box, or sent by mail. All He Saw. A man had been sent by the home agents to take an inventory of the drawing room furniture. He was so long about his task that at last the mistress of the house went to see what was taking place. She found the man slumbering sweetly on the sofa with an empty bottle beside him. It was evident, however, that he had made a pathetic, though solitary, at- tempt to dao his work, for in the in- ventory book was written, “One re- volving carpet.”—The Tattler. UNSIGHTLY BALD SPOT Caused by Sores on Neck-—Merciless Itch= ing For Two Years Made Him Wild —Another Cure by Cuticura. “For two years my neck was covered with sores, the humor spreading to my hair, which fell out, leaving an unsightly bald spot, and the soreness, inflammation and merciless itching made me wild. Friends advised Cuticura Scap and Oint- ment, and after a few applications the tor- ment subsided, to my great joy. The sores soon disappeared, and my hair grew again, as thick and healthy as ever. I shall al- ways recommend Cuticura. (Signed) H. J. Spalding, 104 W. 104th St., N. Y. City.” Dancing in Miles. A young man fond of dancing rec- ently took a pedometer with him to a ball, and found that in the course of the evening he had covered 13 1-2 miles. The average length of a waltz has half a mile, of a polka three- quarters of a mile, of a galloy or schottische a mile, and of a lancers a quarter of a mile. A girl usually dances more than a man, and is cal- culated to cover more than 16 miles in a single evening. First Woman Engineer. The first European woman to adopt engineering as a profession is Cecile Butticar, a Swiss, 2 recently passed her with honor at the Lausanne. examinations University of FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous- ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer, $2irial bottle andtreatiseiree Dr.R.H.KLINE, Ltd., 931 Arch St.. Phila., Pa. A modern widow's mite is veported ab a church at Blackpool, England. Robbed in Church. Just think what an outrage it is to be robbed of all the Lenefits of the services by continuous coughing throughout the congregation, when Anti-Grinine is guaran- teed to cure. Soid everywhere. 25 cts. ¥. W. Diemer, M. D., manufacturer, Springfield, Mo. It costs London $20 a year to educale a child in-school. A Guaranteed Cure For Piles, Ttching, Blind, Bleeding. Protruding Piles. Druggists are authorized to refund money it 1 Pazo Ointment fails to cure in 6 to 14 days. 50c. An attempt is being made in England to popularize the dogfish. Mis. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softensthe gums, reducesinflamma- tioa,allays pain, cures wind e.25¢.a bottle. A new typé of bullet is being served to the French infantry. Piso’s Cure cannot be too hizhly spoken of gsacough cure.—J. W. O’Briey, 322 Third Avenue, N., Minneanolis, Minu., Jan. 6,190) The London Zoo has just received its first humming bird. The Language of Monkeys. Prof. Garner is not the first man to study the speech of the monkeys. This honor belongs to Sir Richard Burton, the famous Orientalist and the translator of the “Thousand Nights and a Night.” Lady Burton tells in her biography of her distinguished husband that Sir Richard believed firmly in monkey speech, that he had forty apes con- tinually with him for several years, and : that he had ‘written down a monkey vocabulary of sixty words. This vocabulary, unfortunately "was lost. Prof. Garner can. make ‘a strange monkey drink by saying a certain word, and with another word he can make it eat, and with another he can frighten it, etc. = But Sir Rich- ard Burton could do all these things, too. His vocabulary, furthermore, was larger than Mr. Garner's. Ern- est Haeckel, the great German scien- tist, is in hearty sympathy with to study of the monkey language. He says he believes firmly that such a language exists.—Philadelphia Bulle- tin. The New Drydock in the Orient. ‘What will probably be the largest drydock in the Orient for several years has just been completed at Na gasaki. It can accommodate such monsters as the Minnesota and the Dakota, having a length of 722 feet and a depth of water on the sill at high tide amounting to 34 feet. Its chief patrons, no doubt, will be the Japanese, who will now be encour- aged to build bigger vessels than they possess at present. The floating dry- dock which has to be towed from the United States to Manila is considera- bly less capacious, though able to handle any warship already in the service or likely to be constructed within the next decade. Gossip. Gossip is a bumming bird with eagle wings and a voice like a fog- horn. It can be heard from Dan to Beersheba, and has caused more trou- ble than all the ticks, fleas, mosqui- toes, coyotes, grasshoppers, chinch bugs, rattlesnakes, sharks, sore toes, cyclones earthquakes, blizzards, small- pox, yellow fever, gout and indigestion that this great United States has known or will know when the universe shuts up shop and begins the final in- voice. In other words it has got war and hell both backed up in the cor- ner yelling for ice water.—Guernsey (Wyo.) Gazette. Dynamite for Power. Noting the rapid change in motive power Sir Alfred Hickman states that in his own works 24 valuable steam engines have been replaced within a few years by electric motors driven by gas engines. This is estimated to have brought a saving in fuel alone of $37,500. ° If the future motors are to be driven by explosion, he sug- gests the use of powder or dynamite, and predicts fame and fortune to the man harnessing dynamite for power. To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure, E. W. Grove’s signature on each box. 25c. Jacob Steiner, of Brooklyn, has a collec- tion of rare pistols. were the said, before Chrysanthemums, it is cultivated in China eleventh century. $00000000090000000000000060 0000000063060 e003000C0000000 ® THE WHOLE LOT LUMBAGO STIFF NECRH P00UP0000000CR0GP00000 If we don’t heed prevention, we will need a cure. St. Jacobs Oil is ready always for all forms of muscular aches or pains, from IT CURES ALIKE THE WHOLE LOT. POCE00000000000 000000000000 000000000060 ’6060000GG0000 The Old-Monk-Curs RHEUMATISM to SPRAIN 90000000000000000000000 IPINE IS GUARANTEED TO CURE GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND REURALGIA. I won't sell Anti-Gripine to a dealer who won't Guarantee It. Call for your MONE F. W. Diemer, H.D., Manufacturer, Springfield, Mo. Y BACK IF IT DOESK’T CURE. years old, who | ; | tiger the other day, near Jaipur, cn Prince a Good Hunter. The Prince of Wales made a good impression on the Indian rajahs by his gun sheoting. He killed his first the run with a long shot. sas CRISIS OF GIRLHOOI A TIME OF PAIN AND PERR. Miss Emma Cole Says that Lydia B Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has Saved Her Life and Meade Her Wel} How many lives of beautiful young girls have been sacrificed just as they were ripening into womanhood ! How many irregularities or displacements have bee: developed at this important period, resaiiing in years of suffering | Girls’ modesty ‘and oversensitiveness often puzzle their mothers and baffle physicians, because they withhold their confidence at this critical period. A'mother should come to her child’s aid and remember that Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound will at this time prepare the system for the comin change and start the menstrual ay in a young girl's life without pain or irregularities. Miss EmmaColecf Tullahoma, Tenn., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — “1 want to tell you that I am enjoying bet- ter health than I have for years, and Iowe itall io Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Corr ound. & Whén fourteen years of age I suffered al most constant pain, and for two or thre years I had soreness and painin my side eadaches and was dizzy and nervous, am doctors all failed to help me. ¢ Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compoune was recommended, and after taking it m health began to improve rapidly, and I thi it saved my life. Isincerely hope my experi- ence will be a is to other girls who are pass- ing from girlhood to womanhood, for I know your Compound will do as much for them.” If you know of any young girl whois sick and needs motherly advice ask her to write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., and she will receive free advice which. will put her on the right road toastrong, healthy and happy womanhood. Brill for Water Coal Gas Prospect for Minerals Drill Test and Blast Holes Many kinds and many sizes of improved Drilling Machines For Horse, Steam or Gasoline Power Results Guaranteed LOOMIS MACHINE CO. TIFFIN, OHIO SAL FE There arc unseen things about this Saw. You cannot sce the fine texture of the Steel; takes a Suarn, cutting edge and holds it louger than any other Saw. You cannot see the toughness of fibre; bends without a break or a kink. SILVER STEEL, the finest crucible steel in the world, is made on the Atkins formula, tempered and hardened by the Atkins secret process, and used ¢ ily in Atkins Saws. You cannot see the perfectly graduated taper of the blade; runs easily, without buckling. 3 But you can see the Atkins trade-mark and it is your protection when youbuya Saw. We are saw-makers and our trade-mark on a Saw means that it is our own make and that we are justly proud of it. We make all types and sizes of Saws for all purposes. Atkins Saws, Corn Knives, Perfection Floor Scrapers, etc., are sold by all good hardware dealers. Catalogue on request. E. C. ATHINS ®. CO., Inc. Largest Saw Manufacturers in the World. Factory and Executive Offices, Indianapolis, Indiana. BRANCHES: New York, Chicago, Portland, (Oregon), Seattle, Io ears Memphis, Atlanta and Toronto, (Canada). Accept nd Substitute—Insist on the Atkins Brand IN SOLD BY GOOD DEALERS EVERYWHERE * La AUSTRALIAN FOUNTAIN PENS e at Something Entirely New od 0 3 Sc., $1.00, Postpaid ny Sample Axi. ¥ New Zealand Fountain Pens, 5c. # Moving Picture Outfit, in good conditim. tate lowest price. Frank Durkee, Springfield, Ohio. : FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to Ld. their sex, used as a douche is marvelously suc- cessful, Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs stops discharges, heals inflammation and local sorenass, cures leucorrheea and nasal catarrh, Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for af TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. THE R, PAXTON COMPANY Boston, Masa. D RO PS quick relief and cures worst cases. Send for book of testimonials and 10 Days’ treatment £Tee. Dr. H. H. GREEN 'S SONS, Atlanta, Ga. The Life Saver of Children With Croup, Coughs, Colds and Pneumonia i yao 5 | ghs, Colds is Hox- sie's Croup Cure. it prevents Diphtheria and Bon. branous Croup. No opinm. No nausea. 50c. Mailed postpaid A.P. HOXSIE, Bufiaios N. Y. SW NEW DISCOVERY; gives 48 p. book free, Highest refs, Long experieace. Fitzgeral &Co.Dept.5¢, Washington, D. P. N. U. 1, 1906. Color more goods brighter and fas'er colors than an PUTNAM FADELES other dye. One 10¢c package colors all fibers. 2 They dye i ean dye any gavment without ripping spart, Write for free booklet—How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Colors. 1d batter any other dye, Yon nc walter batter than NROE DRUG CO., {/nioaville, Missouri, ®