——— ED Great y has on of rOvVern- points ounced a sat- d from ling to it com- imitate he sec- ceived 'nment which topo~ th the ) as to ec stat- n from rection miles e Brit- the re- on to factory ill be LEY ospect- spector rip in- finding nen at . * One scribed ring miles one of > bone in an tantine es out prings, Vounds f. ppoint- ss H. rT in rth of ge of ed one others, lubbed to the and, , shot .D /ictima e nine family Milton, n chil- rs: old, ir bod- home. arents’ itizens d as a of the t. and a y are parket. ntered orm of TOWers consid- 1s are wools e and "oreign tations lo 33c; juarter ; one- ned de- ed de- Near tement prepar- f staff, nissary ive in- nd the rongest being y, Ancisco with t was nd the ts 100 tht of 111 be vide or hall be Close. lass in e their ).. . The | fuel Ss. All have tion. rer of andotte out his ntiary. years Mrs. Mittie Huffaker. HAD GIVEN UP ALL HOPE CONFINED TO HER BED WITH DYSPEPSIA “I Owe My Life to Pe-ru-na,” Says Mrs. Huffaker. Mrs. Mittie Huffaker, Lh. RB. No. 3, Columbia, Tenn., writes: “I was affiicted with dyspepsia for seveyal years and at last was con- fined to my bed, unabhie to sit up, “We tried several different doctors with- out relief. “1 had given up all hope of any re- lief and was alinost dead when my. husband bought me a bottle of Pe= rund, “At first 1 could not notice any benefit, but after taking several bottles 1 was cured sound and well. “It is to Peruna 1 owe my life to= day. “1 cheerfully recommend it to all suf- ferers.” Revised Formula. : “For a number of years requests have eome to me from a multitude of grateful friends, urging that Peruna be given a slight laxative quality. I have been ex- perimenting with a laxative addition for Juss a leigth of time, and now feel grati- fied to announce to the friends of Peruna that I have incorporated such a quality in the medicine which, in my opinion, can only enhance its well-known beneficial character, S. B. HaArryman, M. D.” Queen Alexandra's Attendants. There are in all 15 ladies in per- sonal attendance upon Queen Alex- andra, the first being mistress of the robes, then the ladies of the bed chamber and maids of honor. DON'T MISS THIS. A Care For Stomach Trouble—A New Method, by Absorption—No Drugs. Do You Belch? It means a diseased Stomach. Are you afflicted with Short Breath, Gas, Sour Kructations, Heart Pains, indigestion, Dys- epsia, Burning Pains and Lead Weight in it of Stomach, Acid Stomach, Distended Abdomen, Dizziness, Colic? ; Bad Breath or Any Other Stomach Tor- ure ? Let us send you a box of Mull’s Anti- Belch Wafers free to convince you that it cures. Nothing else like it known. It’s sure and very pleasant. Cures by absorption. rmless. No drugs. Stomach ‘I'rouble can’t be cured otherwise—so says Medical Science. Drugs won’t do—they eat up the Stomach and make you worse. We know Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers cure and we want you to know it, hence this offer. This offer may not appear again. GOOD FOR 25ec. 144 5266 Send this coupon with your mame } and address and your druggist’s name and 10c. in stamps or silver, and we will supply you a sample free if you have never used Mull’s Anti-Belch | Wafers, and will also send you a cer- { tificate good for 25c. toward the pur- chase of more Belch Wafers. You will find them invaluable for stomach trou- ble; cures by absorption. Address Murr’s Grape Tonic Co. 328 3d i Ave., Rock Island, i. Give Full Address and Write Plainly. "All druggists, 50c. per tox, or by mail upon receipt of price. Stamps accepted. In Milan there are 38,000 families living in one room each. W.L. DOUCLAS 13223 LEHOES TH W. L. Douglas $4.00 Ciit Edge Line cannot be equalled atany price. vl Wo (2% TUES Gagyrper smo YJ { W. IL. DOUGLAS MAKES & SELLS MORE MEN'S $3.50 SHOESTHANANY OTHER MANUFACTURER IN THE WORLD. $10,000 "HE. a Rotman If I could take you into my three large factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you the infinite care with which every pair of shoes is made, you would realize why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe. W..L. Douglas Strong Mzde Shoe for Men, $2.50, $2.00. Boys’ School & | Dress Shoes, $2.56, $2, $1.75, $1.50 | CAUTION.—In las shoes. Take no without his name and pr Fast Color Eyelets used ; ‘Write for Illustrated ( og. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. pon having W.L.Doug- itut None genuine amped on bottom. ey will not wear brassy. r Walking at Nigh. When I wake up alone at night I feel as if I had no eyes: y I stare and stare with all my might, But only blackness round me lies. the faintest sound, gh I strain with either ear, silent all around: as if I could not hear. 1 listen for And. then ark k s just But if I lie with limbs held fast, 5 A sort of sound comes like a sigh— >rhaps iarkness rushing past, 'erhaps the minutes passing by; Perhaps the thoughts in people’s heads, That keep so quiet all the day, Wait till they're sleeping in their beds, | Then rustle out and fly away! is poise like whirring wings, with the first streak of light, May be the sound of baby things, All growing, growing, in the night. Children, and kitty-cats, and pups, i Or ever little buds and flowers, Daisies. perhaps. and buttercups, All growing in the midnight hours. ' Ana yet it seems of nie a part, And nothing far away or queer— It’s just the beating of my heart, | That sounds so strange as 1 lie here! | IT do not know why this should be: When darkness hides the world from | sight, | I feel that all is gone but me— i A little child and the black night. i — Mabel Dearmer in the London Spectator. | Greediness of Herons. A trapped heron, weighing scarcely four pounds, was found to have swal- | lowed two trout, one weighing two | pounds and the other a pound and a | half. Another heron, which was only | four months old, had put away three small trout—total weight two pounds and a quarter—at a single meal. Smallest Sheep in the World. The smallest sheep in the world is the tiny Breton sheep. It is too small to be profitable te raise, for it can- not have much wool, and as for eat- ing, why a hungry man could eat al- most a whole sheep at a single meal. It takes its name from the part of France where it is most raised. It is the dearest little pet imaginable. It is very gentle, and because it is so tiny it is not such a nuisance about the house as the famous lamb which belonged to the little girl named Mary. Any little girl could find room in her lap for a Breton sheep. One of its peculiarities is its extreme sympa- thy with the feelings of its human friends when it has been brought up in the house as a pet. If its master or mistress is pleased about anything the little sheep will frisk about with every sign of joy. On the contrary, if tears are being shed the sympathe- tic sheep will utter the most pitiful | “Ba-a” ever heard.—Washington Star. Alfred's Prayer. “Mamma,” said Alfred one night, as he was going to bed, “I prayed that God would leep us children from quarreling, but he has not answered that as yet, for sister Daisy and I quarreled dreadfully today.” “Ah, my son, you will have to help the Lord to answer that.” “Help the Lord, mamma? do everything?” “He won't make you good against your will. IH you choose to be -a naughty boy, God will be sorry for vou, and when Satan tempts you to quarrel, if you turn right to God for strength to resist him, and then fight like a good little soldier to keep down the naughty temper, then God will give you victory. But He won’t do the work for you.” “Oh, I didn’t understand,” said the | little boy. “Yes, my dear,” continued mamma, “you have something to do yourself, when you pray such a prayer, to help God to answer it. You must watch and pray, and fight against tempta- tion; and if you do this, you will be able, by and by, to come and tell me that God has answered all your prayers.”—Kind Words. Can’t He What We Know of the Sun. spects, mysterious object is the sun —a typical star, the nearest one, and not so far away as to prevent us from studying it in detail—and yet present- ing conditions so different from those we can obtain in our laboratories that to a considerable extent it defies our reasonings and renders our con- clusions merely conjectural. Certain facts, however, have been established beyond any possible doubt, and must necessarily form the foundation of all reasonable theories and opinions. We know, for instance, that its mean (average) distance from the earth is very closely 93,000,000 miles; that its diameter is about 866,500 miles, or 109 1-2 times that of the earth, and its bulk about 1,300,000 as great as that of the earth. We know also its mass weight is about 330,000 times that of the earth, and that conse- quently gravity upon its surface is about 27 1-2 times as powerful as here; a man who here weighs 150 pounds would weigh more than two tons upon the sun, and there a squirrel would not be able to jump any more friskily than an elephant here. Experiments with burning glasses make it certain that the effective temperature of the sun's surface, tak- en as a whole (doubtless the actual temperature varies widely at different | points), is much above any which we can produce by artificial means; not even the electric furnace can rival it. Carried to the sun and kept there for a few hours only, the earth would melt and pass into vapor. The estimated temperature is about 12,000 degrees, but that cannot be regarded as ex- act.—Western Christian Advocate. A very wonderful and, in some re- Duck-on-a-Rock. : This game has been the delight of many generations of boys. A large rough stone is chosen for the “rock,” and each player provides himself with a stone—about as large as can con- veniently be held in the hand. A line is then drawn about 10 or 12 yards from “the block, beyond which is home.” They then “pink for duck’—that is, each boy throws his stone toward the rock, and the one whose stone is farthest from it becomes “It” and must place his stone on the rock as a mark for the rest. This is the first “duck.” “It” places his stone on the rock and stands near-by. The rest in turn throw their stones, says the Phil- adelphia Record, so as to try toc knock off the duck-stone. ! When one succeeds, there is a gen- eral stampede for “heme”; but if “It” can replace his stone and then touch anyone before passing the home line, the one touched becomes “It” and. places his stone on the rock for the rest to aim at. Occasionally a fleet runner, so touched, will put his stone on the rock and touch the former “It” before he has had time to get his stone and reach “home.” If all the stones fail to dislodge the “duck” their owners cannot touch them. They are to for- feit to “It” and must make terms with him to recover their stones and carry ‘them home. One may be allowed to “jump” home —which means to hold the stone be- tween the feet, and, so loaded, hop home. Another may ask the privilege of “kicking.” The stone is worked onto the foot and kicked homeward. Or “heeling” may be allowed. This is a backward kick of the stone toward home, made with the heel. While the test is going on no other player may go home. The right to try these various. feats is eagerly sought, and the first one who fails in getting his stone home must become “It.” The Kildeer. A Kildeer is 2 member of the fam- ily Charadridae, composed of the plovers. This family has in it about 100 species, of which eight are found in North America. Birds of this fam- ily have large heads with moderately long and slender bills, which are shaped somewhat like a pigeon’s; short, thick necks and plump bodies; wings long, pointed and extending to the tip of the tail, and in some in- stances with spurs; tails short, broad and generally even; tarsi usually long and slender; the outer and middle toes are more or less united at the base, and the hind very small or en- tirely wanting. Indeed, it may be said that they are three-toed birds, and that this cannot be said of any other fam- ily of birds. The kildeer gets its name from its notes of “Kill-dee, kill-dee, dee, dee, dee.” In appearance the sexes are alike. The color of its bill is black; eyelids, "red; iris, dark brown; the head above and the upper parts of the body are light brown, with a greenish tinge; around the neck is a black ring, or collar, from which comes its name of “ring neck” plover; a spot at the upper part of the base of the bill, a line over the eyes, ring around the neck, the under part of the. throat, the under parts of the body, spots on the shorter primaries, the secondaries and the tips of the four middle feathers of the tail con- stitute its white markings. The killdeer is a migrant, com- ing north in February or March, and returning to the south in November. Its range extends from Colombia and the West Indies, north to Manitoba and Alaska. It breeds throughout its entire range. In the southern states it begins breeding about the first of April and a month later in the middle states. The nest is a mere depression in the ground in pastures, cornfields, prairies or on gravel bars above the ordinary summer flood, and 1s difficult to find because of the fact that the eggs are of a mottled creamy coler, and much resemble their surround- ings. Four of these constitute a set, and a peculiar fact is that the small ends are laid together, so as to form a Cross. The young are able to run early af- ter they are hatched, and the parents are very devoted to them—so much so that the female will resort to all sorts of ruses and maneuvers in or- der to divert one who approaches them. She will throw herself upon the ground two or three yards in ad- vance, raise and flutter with one wing quite helplessly and cry piteously, in order to lure the intruder away from her young and give them a chance to hide, and the male will fly overhead in a circle about the intruder and scold him in the most vehement way with his “kill-dee, kill-dee, dee, dee, dee.” The migration of birds is, perhaps, the most interesting of birds is, per- haps, the most interesting subject con- nected with their study. What be- comes of our summer birds? Where and how do they spend the winter? By what route do they travel and how do they travel to their destinations? How do they find their way? These are questions which have been puz- zling the brain of man for centuries. Some of our shore birds seem to make traveling their chief occupation. Not- ably among these is the American golden plover, a cousin to our killdeer plover.— Indianapolis News. FINANCE MD TRADE BEHIEW MANUFACTURING BOOMS Returns Indicate but Few Strikes and Little idle Machinery—Railway Earnings Increase. R. G. Dun & Co.’s Weekly Review of i | i i Trade says: i “Higher temperature accelerates i the moveirent of seasonable mer- chandise and improves agricultural conditions, except where the precipi- tation has been insufficient. The season was somewhat backward on the farms until this. week, but lost ground is being regained, although the scarcity of labor delays opera- tions. “Customary quiet prevails in cer- tain lines that are between seasons, and mercantile collections are still irregular, yet the future is regarded with increasing confidence. Manufac- turing returns indicate few strikes and little idle machinery, some sec- tions of the iron and steel industry having secured contracts covering output more than a year ahead and . shipments of fecotwear . from . Boston are surpassing all records, while tex- tile mills operate freely, notwithstand- ing the high prices: for raw materials.’ “Despite the coal strike and inter- ruption” to freight handling at lower lake ports, railway earnings for -the first week of May were 10.2 per cent. larger than in the corresponding week last year. Foreign commerce in April surpassed the same month in any pre- ceding year. both as to.exports and imports, and it is especially gratify- ing to:note the gain in shipments of manufactured products. At New’ York Tor the last week imports gain- ed $3,421,829 and exports lost $1,280;- €09 in comparison with last year's figures. ‘Strength still prevails in the hide market, although large tanners are’ not operating freely, but numerous small orders make a good showing: in the aggregate, and there is no evidence of trading below full rates. Leather is well maintained on the whole. “Failures this week numbered 211 in the United States, against 234 Jast year, and 16 in Canada, compared with 11 a year ago.” PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 red........onnvnensss 83 Rye—No.2......... 73 Corn—XNo. 2 yellow, ear 5 61 No. 2 yellow, shelled...... 56 Mixed ear 58 Qats—No. 2 whi 28 4 white 37 Flour—Winter patent........ 415 Fancy straight winters... 10 4 Hay—No.1 Timothy............... } 1525 Clover No. 1............... 1 Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton... 50 23.0) Brown middlings......... i950 20 0) Bran, bulk............... 2 21 5 S8!raw—Wheat..... ........ 750 750 Oat... on. 75) 809 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery 24 25 Ohio creamery.......... . 20 2] Fancy country roll..... 19 20 Cheese—Ohio, new........ 12 13 Now York. new................. 12 13 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per 1b................v.e... 14 15 Chickens—dressed Fi 16 . 18 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 17 18 Fruits and Vegetables. Apples bbl,,,.....ec0rceree secnreee 85) 550 Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 5 80 Cabbage—per toN......c. eve. - «+ 1300 1509 Onjons—per barrel.............. «+. 200 292 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 5.95 Wheat—No. 2 ted....... -- 2 2 2 Corn—Mixed... . .. 46 47 Bggar.... coi 00 000 a 16 20 Butter—Ohio creamery............ u 28 : PHILADELPHIA. Flou Vinter Patent............. $500 52 Wheat—No. 2 red......... 84 £5 Corn—No. 2 mixed 85 54 QOats—No. 2 white ses - 85 36 Butter—Creamery.......... 29 32 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 1 20 NEW YCRK. FIOUr—PatentS.,...: csueevsvesons--$:500 515 Wheat—No.2red........ .. 89 90 Corn—No. 2.............. 67 63 Oats—No. 2 white....... 36 38 Butter--Creamery cee 28 25 Eggs--State and Pennsylvania.... 16 18 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,460 10 1,600 bs. ........... $75 $5 80 Prime, 1,800 101,400 1bs,... 5 50 57 Good, 1,200 to 1,80 1bs.. 5 30 5 50 Tidy. 1,060 to 1.150 1bs.. 4 65 515 Fair, $00 to 1,100 lbs... 4 40 475 Common, 709 to $00 1bs....... 4 40 4 60 Common to good fat oxen........ 27 4 50 Common to good fat bulls........ 2 50 415 Common to good fat cows........ 2 400 Hetfers, 700 tol, 1001bs. ........... 250 4 50 Fresh cows and springers........ 16 00 5000 Sheep. rrimeweihers,.................... $$ 5 80 Good mixed....,. 5 50 57 Fair mixed ewes and wethers. 475 b 2 Cullsand common 4 00 Culls to choice lambs 6 90 FPrimehe avy hogs.......... $680 6 & Prime medium weights 6 90 . Best heavy Yorkers... 6 9 Good light Yorkers. 6 85 6 90 Pigs, as to quality.... 6 75 6 80 Common to good rough 3 40 5 90 Bg... ee 4 00 4 50 Calves. VYeaiCalves... ... . .. .. $5 00 6 50 Heavy and thin calves. .............. 3 (0 4 50 Oil Markets. The following are the quotations for credit balances in the different fields: Pennsylvania, $1 64; Tiona, $1 74: Second Sand, $1 64; North Lima, 98c: South Lima. 93c: Indiana. 90c; Somerset, 91c; Ragland, 62¢; Can’ ada, $1.38. The sport on the diamond attracts through no side issue of the betting: book or of purses for events. Its appeal is made, declares the New York World, by the measurement of man against man in strength, skill and quickness. Men who play for Chl cago or Boston one year are cheered neartily on appearing for New ‘tne ‘k or Pittsburg another national, The the interest very name on the uniform ly for local color. 1e is 181. | sugar { strength Voters Emigrating. San Marino, the smallest republic in the world, will soon be without voters if its rate of keeps up. It has only 1,700, inciud- ing widows, but it is still a good republic. Recently its assembly de- cided to abolish the executive coun- cil, the members of which have been elected for life. Hereafter memebrs will be elected by the people for three years only. Richest Senator. Senator Clark, of Montana, the richest man in the Senate, and one of the richest men in the country, is the most solitary man in public life in Washington. He has no close friends. FITS, St. Vitus’ Dance: Nervous Diseases per- manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. KLINE, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Between 5,000 and 6,000 alcobolergines are now in operation in Germany. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for ‘Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflainma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c. abottle The premium on gold in Haiti now varies between 400 and 500 per cent. Good Field for Surgery. : The surgical operations on the skulls of boys in Philadelphia and Toledo, by which they were con- verted from incorrigibly bad boys to models of good behavior, suggest that the scientists might find a field vf work in the Senate. There is a possibility that they might discover some pressure on the brains: of Senators at times. Thereis more Catarrh in this section of the country thanall other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to beincurable. Fora great many years doctors. pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it in- curable. Science has proven Catarrb to bea constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure onthe market. Itis taken internally in doses from 10 dropsto a teaspoonful. Itacts direct ly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials, Address F.J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. i Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation Sunerstitions of Farmers. Farmers ‘stick te the moon” in regard’ to planting corn and other crops. Some of them will not under any circumstances plant corn in moonlight nights, claiming that corn planted then will produce a tall stalk with a shert ear. Others just as successful plant when they are ready, when nights are dark or moonlight, as the case may be. Other notions are indulged in, such as throwing the cobs inrunning water to keep corn from firing. Some farmers would under no considera- tion burn pinder hulls, the seed of which is to be used for planting; they must be scattered along a path ocr highway, to be trodden upon in order to secure a good crop. Green butter bean hulls must be thrown in a road after being shell- ed for table use from day to day to insure a good crop the following sea- sen.—Charleston News and Courier. The New Postal Postmaster General Cortelyou's new postal note of small denomina- tions, designed to obviate the busi- ness necessity of transmitting stamps through the mails in lieu of coins, includes special forms for 1, 2, 3,4,5,6,7 S and 9 cents, to be sold at their face value without a fee. The regular postal notes would repre- sent sums fom 10, 20 and 25 cents, graded by fives and tens up to $1, be- sides notes of $1.50, $2 and $2.50: Mr. Cortelyou has asked Congress to appropriate $150,000 to establish the change, commencing with the new fiscal year, July 1. Notes. BREAD DYSPEPSIA. Th: Dig:sting Element Lefl Out. Bread dyspepsia is common. It af fects the bowels because white bread is nearly all starch, an¢ starch is di- gested in the intestines, not in the stomach proper. Up under the shell of the wheat berry Nature has provided a curious deposit which is turned into diastase when it is subjected to the saliva and to the pancreatic juices in the human intestines. This diastase is absolutely necessary to digest starch and turn it into grape- sugar, which is the next form; but that part of the wheat berry makes dark flour, and the modern miller cannot readily sell dark flour, =» nature’s val uable digester is thrown out and the human system must handle the starch as best it can, without the help that Nature intended. Small wonder that appendicitis, peri tonitis, constipation, and all sorts of trouble exist when we go so contrary to Nature's law. The food experts that perfected Grape-Nuts Food, knowing ! these facts, made use in their experi- ments of the entire wheat and barley, including all the parts, and subjec.ed them to moisture and long continued warmth, which allows time and the proper conditions for developing the diastase, outside of the human body. In this way the starchy part is trans- formed into grape-sugar in a perfectly natural manner, without the use of chemicals or any outside ingredients. The little sparkling crystals of grape- can be seen on the pieces of Grape-Nuts. This food therefore is naturally pre-digested and its use in place of bread will quickly correct the | troubles that have been brought about | by the too free use of starch in the food, and that is very common in human race to-day. The effect of eating Grape-Nuts ten days or two weeks and the discontin- uance of ordinary white bread, is very marked. The user will gain rapidly in and pbysical and mental i health. “There's a reason.” emigration Hall’s Catarrh | CORDIAL INVITATION ADDRESSEDTO WORKING GIRLS Miss Barrows Tells How Mrs. Pink. ham’s Advice Helps Working Girls. Girls who works are particularly susceptible to fe- m ale disorders, especially those who are obliged to stand on their feet from morn- ing until night in stores or facto- ries. EN SERA : ‘Day in and d iss Abby FBarrow, out es toils, and she is often the bread-winner of the family. Whether she is sick ar well, whether. it rains or shines, she must get to her place of employment, perform .the. duties exacted of her— smile and be agreeable. Among this’ class the symptoms of female diseases are early manifest by weak and aching backs, pain in the lower limbs and lower part: of the stomach. In consequence of frequent wetting of the feet, periods become painful and irregular, and frequently there are faint and dizzy spells, with . loss of appetite, until life is a burden. All these symptoms. paint to. a de- rangement of the female organism which: can be easily and promptly cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound. . Miss. Abby F. Barrows, Nelsonville, Athens Co.. Ohio, tells what this great medicine did for her. She writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham :— “I feel it my duty to tell you the good Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Comuerind and Blood Purifier have done for me. Before 1 took them I was very nervous, had dull headaches, pains in back, and periods were irregular, I had been to several doctors, and “sk did me no good. : “Your medicine has made me well and 1 can do most any kind of work strong. | without complaint, and my periods are all right. i am in better health than I ever was, | and I know it is all. due to your remedies. i recommend your. advice and medicine to all who suffer.” It is to such girls that Mrs. Pink- ham holds out a helping hand and ex- tends a cordial invitation to correspon with her. She is daughter-in-law o Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years has been advising sick women free of charge. Her long record of success in treating woman's ills makes her letters of advice of untold value ta every ailing working girl. Address, Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. has stood for the BEST during seventy years of increasing sales, Remember this when you want water proof oiled coats. suits. hats, or horse goods for all kinds of wet work. WE GUARANTEE EVERY GARMENT. 415 A.J TOWER CO. BOSTON, MASS. U.S.A. TOWER CANADIAN CO. Limitzd TORONTO, CAN. TE “From the cradle to tho baby chal” HAVE YOU A BABY? If so, you ought to have a PHOENIX {| WALKING CHAIR EE a — (PATENTED) “AN IDEAL SELF=-INSTRUCTOR." UR PHOENIX Walking Chair holds the child securely, pre- venting those painful falls and bumps which aresofrequent when baby learns to walk. ‘BETTER THAN A NURSE." The chair is provided with a re- movable, sanitary cloth seat,which supports the wcizht of the child and prevents bow-legs and spinal troubles; italso has a table attach- ment which enables baby to find amusement in its toys, etc., with- out any attention, wm “As indispensable as a cradle.” It is so constructed that it pre. vents soiled clothes, sickness from drafts and floor germs, and is recommended by physicians and endorsed by both mother and baby. Combines pleasure and utility. No baby should be without one. Call at your furniture dealer and ask to see one. CET — MANUFACTURED ONLY BY PHOENIX CHAIR CO. SHEBOYGAN, WIS. , Can only be had of your furniture dealer. mo od 2455 pan the | Drill for Water i Prospect for Minerals Coal G Drill Testand BlastHoles. We make DRILLING MACHINES For Horse, Steam or Gasoline Power. Latest | Traction Machine. LCOMIS MACHINE CGC. TIFFIN, OHIO, P. N. U. 21, 1906. D rR 0 PSY NEW DISCOVERY ; . gives quick relief and cures worst cases. Book of testimonials and 1© Ways’ treatment Free. Dr. H. Hl. GREEN'S SONS, Box B, Atlanta, 6a. 48 p. book free. ghest refs, f Lon xpevience, Fitzgerald &Co.Dept. 54, Washingtop,D.Q