RR )ITIONS Testifles Agricul- the re- 's to be eport re- Chicago lest was n, Man- ompany, ized secretary the De- Ice came g began. 11 denial. s in the 1 in the ymmittee 1 a week f condi- 1 be the gain a onditions sugges- said, had . by the sanitary canned ater to Ison said . in this. ere were butcher- Handcar Engineer Nez, ran inson cut . lling two are Ital- ing south came on 11d jump. dred feet \ the way | rs are at. y serious AWS. ‘ench bis- the vati- of affairs tment of rch and uccess of he parlia- convinced | prelates he people wurch and NTS. ermitting conduct 3 Court. ill of the enchburg, men and ee others. \Vy. 1 election stitutional ge to the feated by jured and y a torna- > of Stod- were de- damage ind of the Southern two ' en- ent forces d General reinforce- Democrats will be in- tendered Madison rn from a n appoint- ven South- of divert- o that sec- making an diplomatic mors that Russia and > an alli- cted. a success- Stock Ex- e last few is fortune, home in ieclined to looking to 1e methods before the’ ited at In- y General nd regula- and the Falls was suspension 11 creating rt Arthur, wife, mem- pe, were at a hotel t holes in that Grin- as Davis, iilled him- Scale. ill] end the » on in the pril 1 was mmittee of perators at Jaute, Ind. et the 1903 ded when amer Lusi- liner, was the Clyde A 3 . oe pm iy, AR KIDNEY TROUBLE Suffered Two Years— Relieved : Months, in Three R. C. B. FIZER, Mt. Sterling, Ky., writes: : ‘Ihave suffered with kidney and bladder trouble for ten “Last March 1 commenced using Peruna and continued for three months. 1 have not used it since, nor have 1 felt a pain. “1 believe that 1 am well and 1 there- fore give my. highest commendation to the curative ‘powers of Peruna.” : Pe-ru-na. For Kidney Trouble. * Mrs. Geo. Ll. Simser, Grant, Ontario, ., Writes: “I bad not “een. well for .about four ears. 1 had kidney trouble, and, in Years past. y rach, Jelt badly nearly all the time. ” This summer "1 got so very -bad.cl . thought I would try Peruna, so I, wrote to % and began at once to take — % eruna Manalin, “I took only two bottles of Peruna and “one of Manalin, and now 1 feel better than 1 have for some time. , “I feel that Peruna and Manalin cured me and made a different woman of me al- together. 1 bless the day I “picked up the little book and read of your Peruna.’ 1t is the business of the kidneys to remove from the blood all poisonous materials. They must be active all the time, else the system suffers. There are times when they need a little assistance. Peruna is exactly this sort of a remedy. It has saved many people from disaster rendering the kidneys service at a time when they were not able to bear their own burdens. : King Alfonso’s Lineage. Alfonso XIII. of Spain unites in his veins the blood of the houses of Bourbon and Hapsburg. He goes straight back to Hugh Capet (A. D. 987) of France, founder of all that line of kings whose weal and woe culminated in the French revolution, and he can claim lineage with the long line of the Louis of France, St. Louis, Louis XI, Louis XIV. and all the Philips and Ferdinands of Spain, including our own patron, Isabella. In his paternal line are great men, wise rulers and good men, and also monsters of tyranny, debauchery and every human frailty. Such names as Philip II., Alva, Torquemada, Crazy Jane, Isabella the Catholic, St. Louis, all suggest possibilities of inherited tendencies that may have come to this amiable youth from his paternal line. Alfonso bears in his face to a striking degree the physiognomical marks of his lineage. The high nose of the Bourbons, the pendulous lip of the Hapsburgs and the emaciated fig- ure of the Spanish line are his. He has given no evidence of that foolish pride which cost the life of one of his ancestors because the grandee whose business it was to attend to the fire did not happen to be present when the fumes of the stove threatened the monarch’s life. On the contrary, Al- fonso XIII. seems to be a good deal of a democrat.—Indianapolis Star. Morality and Price of Whisky. “Raising the price of whisky seems to have brought about a wave ° of moral reform,’ remarked a police official to the Toronto Globe. Only two prisoners charged with being drunk appeared before Magistrate Denison. They were two old-timers. The price of whisky was raised by the hotel men, and the reports from the different police stations yesterday morning disclosed the fact that fewer arrests for being drupk were made on Monday than for scfl. time past, . In- spector William Davis of the Court street division stated that his divis- jon had a clean slate, not one drunk being chronicled. “This is the first time in the history of No. 1 division that I have never seen at léast one prisoner arrested for being drunk,” ‘'gaid Inspector Davis, “and I have been attached to the division for several years.” Wanted in Wyoming. At the International Sunday school convention, at Louisville, Ky., in answer to the roll call of states, re- ports were verbally given by the var- jous state chairmen. When the Lone Star state was called, a brawny specimen of southern manhood step- ped out into the aisle and with stri- dent voice exclaimed: ‘We represent the great state of Texas. The first * white woman born in Texas is still living—she now has a population of over three millions.” There was a pause of bewilder- ment for a moment, and then a voice from lhe galleries rang out clear and distinct: “Send that woman out to Wyoming —we need her!”’—Everybody’s Maga- zine. Russia’s Naval Loss. The total value of the Russian war ships either sunk by the Japanese or captured by them in the recent war has been found by the Russian Min- istry of Marine to amount to no less a sum than $132,850,000. Trouble in Mailing. An official of the New York post- office relates a story of the sad pre- dicament of an Irishman who entered that office for the purpose of mailing a letter to his fiancee. He had paused in perplexity before a board containing three letter slot bearing the words “City,” “Domestic,” ‘‘For- eign.”’ “Faith,” he muttered, “this is a pretty problem. Maggie's a do- mestic, she lives in the city and she’s a foreigner. What beats me is how I'm going to get this letter in the three holes at wanst.””—Harper’s Weekly. "'"" The Neglected Farmer's Garden. . A farmer’s garden is often neglected until the last thing, and then the wives and children have the most of the work to do. While I would say noth- ing against their working in the gar- den, at least they ought to have all the advantages that a carefully thought-out plan and proper prepara- tion will give. With but very little trouble or expense, says Farming, you .can have fruit the year round in con- nection with your garden. In my own family we could do without it. At one side of the garden, or some con- venient place, have a bed of aspargus, a, strawberry bed and blackberry, raspberry, currant and gooseberry bushels enough to supply all the fresh fruit you can use during the season, with some for putting up in winterk with some for putting up for winter. Saving Manure Fertility. Many farmers throw the manure up into a great loose pile, where it fer- ments so rapidly that it becomes fire- fanged, and those materials that go to form humus in the soil are destroyed. The right way is to first see that the ground is level, or hollowed out 80 that there is a slope from the out- side towards the centre; cover this with straw, or other absorbent, and spread the stable droppings over i; tramping solidly each day as a fresh supply is added. This may be done by the cattle when they are turned out for a little exercise each day. By placing ‘a couple of rubbing posts on the top of the pile they will soon be induced to aid in keeping the heap in a solid condition, thereby preventing excessive heating and consequent loss of ammonia. . The object in doing this is to pre- vent the air penetrating the manure, it teing one of the essentials necessary to fermentation. Heat and moisture also assist, but may be largely coun- teracted, and reduced to a minimum if some form of a shelter has been pro- vided, and a liberal supply of suitable absorbents is used.—J. H. McKenney, Corinth, Ont. Reducing Cost of Production. At one of the Illinois meetings Prof. Curtis, of the Iowa station, in the course of his remarks said: “We all know that, valuable as corn is, it is not a complete ration, and if we expect to produce the best results in growing animals, and in dairy stock, and in de- veloping horses, and in maintaining the breeding qualities of our animals, we must have a variety of feed stuffs. We must have the constituents that go to build up the bone and muscle and properly develop the animal in the highest form and highest state of ex- cellence. These things are absolutely essential; never so much as today, in view of the high-priced land that we have, in view of the quicker returns that we must get from these animals, and the higher excellence that we must produce in the finished product. In the fact that we have higher-priced feed products the problem presented is, how we may cheapen the produc- tion of these animals by the rations we use, or the methods we employ in growing and producing them on our farms, and produce the finished pro- duct at comparatively a lower cost and without sacrificing any of the ex- cellence. I believe that the grass crop affords today the jsurest and most practical means of accomplishing cheaper production. Feeding the Land. After the home resources in the enrichment of the soil have been ex- hausted it is time to turn to commer- cial fertilizers to supply deficiencies. It is a very simple matter to spread around the trees each year the con- tents of a few fertilizer bags. This is much easier than spreading several loads of manure or sowing and plow- ing under a green manure Crop. It takes less time and less worry. Hence, many people who own a few fruit trees come to rely upon commercial fertilizers alone, neglecting the other sources of fertility that have been mentioned. This is a great mistake. The home fruit grower should use com- mercial fertilizers to supplement—not to replace—tillage, green manures and barnyard manures. Some fruit gar- dens, like some farms, are fertilizer sick. They have been dosed with large quantities of high-grade fertili- zers, but the humus content of the soil has not been kept up. If fertilizers are used, and usually they must be, let them be in conjunction with man- uring. The purchaser of commercial fertilizers is in the way of many pit- falls, for some fertilizers, like many breakfast foods, are not as nourishing as the advertisement suggests, and they are very frequently used with- out definite knowledge of what the goil needs or what they contain.—S. W. Fletcher in the Garden Magazine. Farm Philosophy. Prof. Davis, principal of the Dunn County (Wis.) School of Agriculture, publishes a bulletin from which the following terse sentences are selected: Up-to-date methods’ in the home and on the farm save ten times more than it costs to learn them. Invention has keeping the heap broad and flat, and robbed the farm of most of its pitiful drudgery and made it possible to de farm work with despatch, economy and pleasure. Mistakes in feeding are sc common that we wonder the list of really poor farmers is not greater; skill must be exercised in feeding all types of stock. The farmer is as good as any one; agriculture is coming to the forefront of the world’s attention; young people should get an education along the right line now. Throughout the country agriculture is now experi- encing a wonderful intellectual uplift; it is suck a forward movement as no other calling ever received and no oth- er age has ever witnessed. Only the educated farmer will have :a chance in the sharp competition of the future, but he will live so much better and make so much more than the farmer of today that it will make most of the farming of the present day seem prim- itive. ist; education counts fer as much as experience in the preparation for prof-’ itable farming; young farmers should get both the school training and expe- rience. There is a demand for sci- entific information on soils, crops, breeding, feeding and an awakening to the value of improved breeds of stock of all kinds, remarkable inter- est in the farm institute work and a growing appreciation of the fact that agriculture offers a wider field and richer returns for a man with brains and education than the so-called pro- fessions. The Hardy Perennials. The hardy perennials appeal strong- ly to the farmer's wife, as they are so easily cared for and once established will last for years. To real flower- lovers it is a good deal of satisfaction to feel that when frost comes and de- spoils our garden of its beauty, it is only for a few months; after the win- ter’'s rest they will awaken to new life and beauty without any further effort on our part. : Whether the season is favorable or otherwise, the perennials and smaller shrubs may be depended upon to pro- duce a wealth of bloom, while the an- nuals require a favorable season and especial care to give best results. While shrubs require spacious sur- roundings for best display the peren- nials are well adapted to small gar- dens, although in planning for the hardy border one should allow as much space as possible, as in a few vears a single specimen of some vari- eties will form a good-sized clump. Instead of buying as many varieties as one’s means will allow, it is advis- able to plant several roots of a kind, although perhaps different varieties of the same species. The massing to- gether of several plants of a kind makes the border more harmonious and pleasing to the eye than a miscel- laneous collection of plants. Of course the taller kinds must be planted in the background; do not plant in straight rows, however, but group the plants as naturally as possible. The first two or three seasons the space between the plants may be filled with low:growing annuals. : One may ‘begin with a few plants adding to them from time to time un- til in a few years the result is a choice collection of plants that will not only add to the beauty of the home but to its value as well.—Ella L. Layson, in the Epitomist. Farm Paragraphs Comfort in the stables means ser- vice in the fields. Individual experience requisite in a good horse. Sore shoulders are the cause many horses becoming balky. Put little blankets of flannel on the lambs if the weather is very cold. Water is as important as food and should be supplied clean and fresh. Gravel should always be supplied to fowls being fattened in confinement. Animals that are uniform in ‘age and size will feed and fatten more easily. . Chickens should never be allowed to go on the roosts until ten or twelve weeks old. Before the planting is finished, the manure should all be gathered up and hauled out. So far as is possible, feed the chick- ens early in the morning and late in the evening. is the first of When the hens are laying abundant- ly, lime should be kept before them at all times. It is a good plan to feed wheat as the grain food at this time as corn is too fattening. Lime is a purifier and should be used often as a wash to coops, perches and nest boxes. ‘hickens are the most profitable animals on the farm, but they general- ly receive the least attention. In marketing fruit, it should always be the rule to prepare it and place it upon the market in the neatest and nicest condition possible. Excess of salt is not good for fowls; when they can get to it they some- times eat it in fatal quantities; but a little salt, as for instance, in their food, is beneficial. | unless repairs The farmer should be a special- FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW DUN’S WEEKLY SUMMARY Reports for May Show Large Gains Over Last Year's Figures —Crop Situation. R. G. Dun & Co.’s Weekly Review of Trade says: Current distributlon of merchan- dise is largely dependent upon the weather, which varies widely, accord- ing to locality. On the whole the week's results were encouraging, and monthly reports for May show splendid gains over last year’s figures. Prices of commodities rose to the highest point in 20 years, $106,794 on June 1, comparing with $106,069 a month previous and $98,759 a year ago. Railway earnings in May were 11.2 per cent heavier than in 1905, and foreign commerce at New York City for the last week showed a gain of $1,346,180 in exports and a loss of $11,508 in imports, as compared with the corresponding week last year. In the iron and steel industry there is not only little idle machinery at the present time, but little prospect of any shutdown in the near future, necessitate such ac- tion. Official and other indications of’ a large cotton crop and the further decline in prices of that staple pro- duced no definite effect upon the primary markets for manufactured. goods. The outlook for their absorp- tion is far from uncertain. Footwear factories receive only a fair volume of new fall business. Leather is steady at the recent advance. Hides are nominally unchanged, yet an easier tone is in evidence. Failures in the United States are 206, against 174 last week, 188 the preceding week, and 216 the corres- ponding week last year. Failures in Canada number 18, against 13 last week, 8 the preceding week and 20 last year. Bradstreet’s say: Grain crop re- turns become more irregular as the season progresses, but that fact has not deterred purchasers to any ex- tent. As a whole the situation is equal to a year ago. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. + Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 red........cce00ee..8 80 Rye—No.2............ oh 7 73 Corn—No 2 yellow, ear.... 60 61 No. 2 yellow, shelled... 55 56 Mixed ear.............. .e 5% 58 Qats—No. 2 white.......... 3 37 38 No.3 white........... “ 37 Flour—Winter patent... 4 10 415 i 4 00 4 10 1500 1525 107 1125 y 2:50 230) Brown middlings........c...en i950 2000 Bran, bulk....... rssssesrsuseve's 2200 2150 Straw—Wheat. tres ineiarenns TT HO 7 50 OAL... dirs saesnncsesnvissivnsas 7 50 800 Dairy Products. ; Butter—Elgin creamery........... $ 24 25 Oh10 CTOAMerY.....coxssvassers 230 21 Fancy country roll............ 19 20 Cheese—Ohio, NOW......cevereenrsn 12 13 New York.new................. 12 13 Poultry, Etc. ‘Hens—per 1b..... Ra $ 117 15 Chickens—dresse 16 18 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh....... = 17 18 Frults and Vegetables. ADDIS DDly,screrspricavess saerseen Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 35 99 Cabbage—per ton............ -- | 1300 Onions—per barrel.............. .- » ” =» 3 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 3 < Wheat—No. 2 red.......c.cocunuenen > % 8 >» Corn=——M1X0d..... cece sseesssansses 46 47 BBB ceeorrenncctannnnannn 16 20 Butter—Ohio creamery............ 2 28 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 8 Wheat—NoO. 2 red......ccoceanennen ? 0 5 85 Corn—No. 2 mixed......coceeveneen 85 54 Oats—No. 2 white.... . 85 36 Butter—Creamery............c.coe 29 32 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 16 20 NEW YCRK. Flour—Patents.. 5 15 Wheat—No. 2 red 90 Corn—No. 2...... 68 Oats—No. 2 white. 38 Butter -Creamery .............ceee 28 25 Eggs—State and Pennsylvania.... 6. 18 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,450 101,600 1bs....... ..... $500 $ Prime, 1,300 101,400 1bs,. 5 35 Good, 1,200 to 1,800 1bs.. 510 Tidy. 1,050 to 1,150 1bs....... Fair, 800 to 1,100 1bs.... Common, 709 to 400 1bs...... Common to good fat oxen Common to good fat bulls Common to good fat cows oa nn =] Bb i 1 OY OY OF ER Heifers, 700 tol, 1001bs. ........... R5 4 50 Fresh cows and springers........ 16 00 50 00 Sheep. Prime wethers 5 65 5 § Good nixed, ...l...... ce. 5% 3 3 Fair mixed ewes and wethers.. 4 60 5 10 Culls and common 2 50 4 05 Culls to choice lambs. .... 5 50 6 90 Hogs. Primeheavy hogs................. $6 60 6 75 Prime medium weights - 07 6 80 Best heavy Yorkers...., O15 Good light Yorkers........ . 650 6 65 Pige, as to quality........ . D2 5 80 ommon to good roughs.. \. 3 40 5 30 BIBER... ce. intra ienene 200 435 Calves. Veal Calves. xv... .;..,0.......... $450 6 50 Heavy and thin calves............... 3 00 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, 98¢c: South Lima. 93c; Indiana. 90c; Somerset, 91c¢; Ragland, 62¢; Can- ada, $1.38. A French horticulturest; has dis- covered that roses and mignonettes cannot live together. Rose and mig- nonette, placed together in a vase, both wither within half an hour. RADISH AND OLIVE SALAD. Put two cup-shaped lettuce leaves together on a small plate, one for each person. Slice a small radish thin and lay round in a circle in the cen- ter and on this put a spoonful of minced or shredded olives. Make a dressing from one level teaspoon of salt, a salt spoon of paprika, a few grains of pepper, six tablespoons of oil and three tablespoons of vinegar. Pour over the salad at the moment of serving. - The Provincial New Yorker. Adding millions to its population and stories to its skyscrapers every decade intensifies, rather than de- creases, the -provincialism of New York city. No new point of vantage is gained of what the 75,000,000 other people of the Nation are doing. To] the New Yorker the universe bound-- ed on the south by the Sandy Hook light-ship, on the north by the Har- lem, on the east by Jamaica bay and on the west by Hcboken. (Al few stars are thrown in overhead and stories are told of people who inhabit the places where this little world sloughs off beyond the horizon. In the nar- row confines of New York city lack of knowledge as to the remainder of the Nation constitutes no drawbacks and extreme provincialism is a virtue.— Detroit Free Press. FITS, St.Vitus'Dance: Nervous Diseases per- manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dz. H. R. KLINE, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. : No Cure No Pay. The head of an Eskimo - family gives his doctor a fee as soon as he comes. If the patient recoyers it ig. kept, if not it is returned. i Washing Feathers. Make large bags of thin cotton and empty . the feathers into them. Dissolve half a bar of Ivory Soap in a tub of moderately warm water and put a bag of featbersin. Let soak for half an hour; then work well with the hands and rinse through two warm waters. Lay , on airing. table” to "dry.— ELEANOR R. PARKER. Tay It is thirty years since Rysdyk's Ham- bletonian died. . * Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25¢. a bottle Good Labor Laws. Legislation has made possible in Lombardy the application of rigid laws governing the employment of women and children in factory labor, in the protection of workmen, in compulsory insurance and pensions, and in better housing for the labor- ing class. Women’s hours for labor and the age at which children may be employed are definitely fixed. TORTURED WITH ECZEMA. Tremendous Itching Over Whole Body —S8cratched Until Bled—Wonder- ful Cure by Cuticura. “Last year I suffered with a tremendous itching on my back, which grew worse and worse until it spread over the whole body, and only my face and hands were free. For four months or so I suffered torments, and I had to scratch, scratch, scratch until I bled. At night when I went to bed things got worse, and I had at times to get up and scratch my body all over until I was as sore as could be, and until I suf- fered excruciating pain. They told me that I was suffering from eczema. Then I made up my mind that I would use the Cuticura Remedies. I used them accord- ing to instructions, and very soon indeed I was greatly relieved. I continued until well, and now I am ready to recommend the Cuticura Remedies to any one. Mrs. Mary Metzger, Sweetwater, Okla., June 28, 1905.” Automobile Spectacles. There were 19 different styles of automobile spectacles and goggles on one tray In an optician’s window, an interesting proof of the benefit of motoring to this trade. The opticians are quick to cater to the patrons in every sport and some of the automo- bile spectacles seemed the first cousins of scrts first offered to bicy- clists. They sell, too, glasses with a special clip for golfers, warranted not to fall off when playing a shot, be- sides special spectacles for rifle shots, field gunners and fishermen, the latter of opaque glass to offset the sun’s reflection from the water. Yachtsmen and horsemen are also customers for special spectacles as well as for field glasses.—New York Sun. STOPS BELCHING. Cures Bad Breath—Positive and Instant Cure Free—No Drugs—Cures Ly Absorption. A sweet breath is priceless. Mull’s Anti-RBelch Wafers will cure bad breath and bad taste instantly. Belching and bad taste indicate offensive breath, which is due to stomach trouble. Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers purify the stomach and stop belching, by absorbing foul gases that arise from undigested food, and by supplying the digestive organs with natural solvents for food. They relieve sea or car sickness and nau- sea of any kind. They quickly cure headache, correct the ill effect ‘of cxcessive eating or drinking. They will destroy a tobacco, whisky or onion breath instantly. Thov stop fermentation in the stomach, acute indigestion, cramps, colic, gas in the stomach and intestines. distended abdo- men, heartburn, bad complexion, dizzy spells or any other affliction arising from a diseased stomach. We know Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers will do this, and we want you te know it. This offer may not appear again. 6166 GOOD FOR 25ec. 143 Send this coupon with and address and your dri and 10c. in stamps or si vour name | S name | and we st’s er, will supply you a sample free if you have never used Mull's Wafers, and will al | tificate ood for Anti-Belch | Iso send you a cer- | 5c. toward the pur- | chase of more Belch Wafers. You | | ind them inv ble for stomach trou- 1 3H ble; cures by absorption. Address Murr’s GrarE Toxic Co., 328 3d Ave., Rock Island, Ill. 74 1 All druggists, 50c. per box, or by mail upon receipt of price. Stamps accepted. Give Full Address and Write Plainly. Good Whitewash for Outbuildings. Place one bushel good fresh lime in barrel and add 20 pounds beef tallow; slake with hot water. When the lime is slaked the tallow will have disap- peared, having formed a chemical compound with the lime. Dry colors may be added to make any color de- sired. Add the color before slaking the lime, or if after slaking, mix with alcohol and then add to the strained wash. Thin to flow nicely from the brush. A coat of this wash will last as long and look almost as well as | much of the lead paint. Queen's Face on Pearl. A wonderful pearl bearing the ex- act likeness of the late Queen Vic- toria of England was found in a fresh water mussel in the Mississippi riv- er. The pearl is now on exhibition in the windows of local jewelers, 407 Nicollet avenue. The pearl is of ir- regular shape, and its lines corres- pond with those of an old portrait of Queen Victoria, which shows a full prefiile, as if carved by hand, so true has nature observed even the small- est “detail of the queen’s likeness. The pearl weighs about six grains. It was picked: up near Davenport, Towa. The pearl will be sent to the English correspondent of the firm in London.—Minneapolis Jourfial. IN STRICT CONFIDENCE. Women Obtain’ Mrs. Pinkham’s Advice and Help. She Has Guided Thousands to Health. - How Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Come i pound Cured Mrs. Alice Berryhill, It is. :a great oe Batisfaction for a woman “feel that she can write to another telli her the most pi $9 vate and confiden- tial details about her illness, and know that herlet- ter will beseen by a woman only. Many thousands of cases of female diseases come be- fore Mrs. Pinkham every year, Some personally, others by mail. Mrs. Pink- ham is the daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years under her direction and since her de- cease she has been advising sick women free of charge. Mrs. Pinkham never violates the con- fidence of women, and every testimon- ial letter published is done so with the written consent or request of the writer, in order that other sick women may be benefited as she has been. Mrs. Alice Berryhill, of 318 Boyce Street, Chattanooga, Tenn., writes : | Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — = he “Three years ago life looked dark to me. I had ulceration and inflammation of the female organs and was in a serious condition. “ My health was completely broken down and the doctor told me that if I was not op- erated Xpon I would die within six months. I told him I would have no operation bu: Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable. Compound. o tried to influence me against. it but I sent for the medicine that same day and began to use it faithfully. Within five. days I felt ralisf but was not entirely cured until I used it for some time. | “ Your medicine is certainly fine. I have induced several friends and neighbors to take it and I know more than a dozen who had female troubles and who to-day are as well and strong as I am from using your Vege- table Compound.” Just as surely as Mrs. Berryhill was cured, will Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound cure every woman suffering from any form of female ills. If you are sick write Mrs. Pinkham for advice. It is free and always help. You Cannot CURE allinflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con- ditions of the mucous membrane such as nasalcatarrh,uterine catarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, scre mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure these stubborn affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs,checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. go cents at druggists. : Send for Free Trial Box THE R. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mass, THE DAISY FLY KILLER %avaaa ic. box lasts the em- tira season. Harm. 4 1f not kept by dealers, sen repaid for 20s. HAROLD SOMERS, 149 DeKalb Avenues, Brooklyn, N Wheat, 60 Bush Is per acre. Cutalosue and samples FREE. Sulzer Seed ('0. HoxA.¢., La Grosse, Wis P. N. U. 24, 1906. PATENTS gs p. book free, Highest refs, ong experience. Witzgeral mineral If afflicted min wesk Thompson's Eye Water
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers