Airs. Rosa Adnms, niece cf the late General Roger Hansen, C.S.A., war.l3 every woman to know of the wonders acccm rlishcd by Lydia E. Pir.kl'fim's Vegetable Compound. 'I)cAn Mu. 1'iNKMAM: I cannot ell run with pc" nnd Ink whnt pood I.villti V.. PiiiMiiun's Ycfrt'tttlile Comttoiiml "'.rt fr mo, Mtfl'orinij from tho ills peculiar to the ncx extreme lassitude anil that all rrone feeling. I would rise from iny bed In the ir.ornlnff feolinff more tired than when I went to bed, but Ix'fnrp I uod tWO lwtttlCJI of I.yc.Iu H. IMnUtmm'A Vcprotnblo Compound, I Ixxan to feel the buoy ancy of my vounprcr days returning, became lrulnr, could do more work Mid not feel tived than t hud ever been able to do before, no I continued to r.so It until 1 win restored to perfect health. It Ih Indeed a lmon to sick women and I heartily recommend it. Yours very truly. Mils. HoR.v Aiuin, R19 12th St., I.oinsTille, Ky." SCOO fc'rll Iterlolrnlof 6ov letter prpjina rnuimncu cannot a produced, FKEE MKOK'ATi ADYICK TO won i:n. ron't bosltatffl to write to Tilr. Pinktiitiit. Slio will imlc-rstnnl your rune porlVH ly, ami will trout you with Kit! tin es. IIr nilvlon i free, nnd tlio nthlross Ih Lynn, MWi No v.oniiMt ovor roa:r'ted liavlnfr written iier, and Hho has hel;)l tUoiiBUttila. Homicides In the United States. In bis charge to tho grand Jury of Montgomery county, Alabama, last week, Judge William II. Thomas spoke strongly of the Increase In the number of homicides not only in tho South, but throughout tho country. Accord ing to the JiKljro there Is an average of 10,405 homicides In tho Lnlted Stales every year, or twins as many deaths from that cause S3 from appendicitis or smallpox. Evory year homicidal mania clalni3 mni'i victims than sear-1 let fevor. "If," c.h erved .Tudeo Thomas, "fearlet fevrr v.ere near our homes we would harden to rvmove our children from its contagion. Do wo nrp'colnte nnj co our duty In tryinK to put down n disre gard for human 1'ife that takes off annually a third riore c.C tho citizen ship of tho United Stints than thU dread rrrinrRge?" Allegheny county. Pennsylvania, in which Pltt3uiirg Is located, has had 51 murders 'm the flrBt nine months of tho present yoar. It teems Kenlucky Inn't '"tho limit." Typhoid and Vermin. In a recent Is-ruo of Medicine Is pre sented a pnprr by nr. Uosa Engol niann, who ijscur,sc8 typhoid epi demics. Insects, it Is declared, play a largo part In the dissemination of disease. Kltasato and other Japanese aclnntfRta have found that fleas, bed bugs and files are active factors In spreading tho plague. As the' cock roach Is omnipresent, his rote, as re spects dlRcase. If any, must be Jm portant. Miss Engtlmann in 1902 made an Investigation of a house epidemic of typhoid in Chicago. The disease was raging In a hlgh-clcss apartment In one of the best neighborhoods, where many cases had occurred. Near it was a like apartment houso where no casns occur rvd. The cause of tho presence of the fever In tho one house and not in the other was simply, it is urged, that the one was infested with cockroaches while tho other was not. The vermin had access to the water used 1b culinary operations and con taminated it with germs obtained from same source. In the south of Ireland, near Inch igeolah, Is tire "Cats' Well," the wa ters of which nro supposed to exert marvelous remedial effects upon ail ing tabbies. Manila has a total population of aomethlng like 800,000. about 10.000 being American and European born. The American population is estimat ed at about 0,000. Tht Shortest War out of an attack d Rbesiznatfsrn , i vv."-;-'.'!? I V L7.'i -ft JVV - fW.VUW TRA0C btoiuo StJacobsOil Whkh ffcrd fKt only fre relief, but prompt cut, t fctliet, ubduoo, and ;)di th eolioruif. Prico, 25c. end 50c DROPSY; NEW DISCOVERY, miwm out ok r)Uf Mtd eurwt won fir. A. ft. iJUI,ftt4l.w A,AUMi4,ilft. 7 Irr.mlgrattort Breaks fteeord. Immigration figures this year fcrcak tho record. According to the annual rrpo't of Commissioner Rargwnt, the number of aliens who tome to tho) United Stales during the fUcal year ended Juno 30, v.as fi2t,M5. Tlrts I not only tho 1iIr!i mnrk, but It 1b 1C5, 04.1 greater than Una previous high r.mrk. At tho burial of a Smith London man his Fix doirn, draped lu black, followed the cortege. FTTrernnont'V'trn t. n flianrnnrvwa. pen irtor !lr il-iv'a no oMlr. Kllno'a Omit Ncrc'li'itir'.!'!!" l 'xvtlotal trmtliefrne Dr.lt. II. Ki.inh, Ltd.. !Ht Iimq si., Villi i., P, It in rlaim'd thnt Canada can furnUh wood for pulp 810 yt'.na. Mi WlnVnw'a Nootliln tyrnn for ehlMrei t'-pihln. aoftun thTU im, rd'i iron In flam 'n.i tloti.nliuy ialn,ntirn windmill". 9f,3. it bottle Th" popidntion of tne world Is about l.S.hl.'KM.OHO people. rio'n Cure for l'oinmn1 Inn lnn InfnllP'le meilt-'lno for rouehd ntil cot N. W, ISAMtd., Omnn firovn, N. .1., !. 17, l'.MK). Stork Kxrlinnpe Renin, which Hold a year BO for 8W.0i.Ki, nrc ipioted at ?.;),00l). Fruit fin will tint itmn soodt dyed witb i'fiSAM Knpirs Dvr.s. jAinnlett Ten. Tea culture experiments have proved succissfiil in Jamaica and it Is now hoped that thi9 most unlucky Island will prove an ldcul place for the growth nnd cultivation of tea. The Chinese varieties grow luxuriantly, but more hope Is placed on the Asunni nud Ccjion hybrids. Mexican Herald. tea itftwur.i. mi. Th ridnrs of this pai.nr will Ijo o!nMt le.iintiit tnara tt at Iv.iit ono ilr.-ilt.l lh enre tlint salinoo mi ntmii iiie to ctiro iti ill U.s.!lii!;iH, un 1 that In tJacirrii. anil's Cut'irnl Curs is tlie only poll tlni euro now tnmiitu liie mf'Hcal TrittwrnUy. liitiirr.i bolnif n eon ntitutionul dH"o, reiiiin'!i u eooititutioti.il tr.Mtnieot, U uli'i IJntarriK.ii ro l tukt-u Inior ti:uly, a'tlnicdiiM(itiy uoou i;ioniood ;iim! ni'i cousHurfuoeAof tiiu.-iytoin, tnoroby thwiroy Iuk tUo tound it Ion ot i.i''liHfvi'), unil uiviti ( tto pitilont Himncli ny t.i t . i i ti up tho on SlUuMixi anl ii!.MitLu ; n i'.uro lit iloiii' tti W irK. 1'ne propriotor.4 huvo ho :iu:cii (:iltiiia 11.lr:t.tVU pOtl'0 ttl:lt tllt'V Oll'or UllM UUU- ilie.l Uouur.'i for Any c:vi tlirit It laliA to oiUM. bund tor lint o toitl noiihiLi. Ad'lnm t J. CnKNKt Co., int)Jj, O. Soldliy Dni.rnlstH, 7.w. Uali' FiiMiliy 1'illu iini tho h'i. Mtl (.In Rouie. l)r. J, W. tin., on oi Levin, Coryell County, Texas, has an nil-Iron gin houso. The frame posts are to be drlv c'l Into the ground about two feet; the corners and Joints ur to be fastened toelher with lin ks nud holts similar to bed locks; the wal's nnd cover are to be ot corniita ted sheet Iron. SpeaVlns cf old ln.!uslr.les going out rf exlbteiii-c one has just died out In liolton, England, namely, that ot tho hard mule, which was at one time pit extensive form of the spinning in dnstry. It 13 absolutely unknown now. HAPPY V.'OV.EN. Mrs. Pare, wife or (J. H. ni a prominent res ident of ;Ijs gow. Ken bles. He sides a bncl hnplr 1 had a great deal jt trouble with the secretions, whlclj were exceedingly variablo, sometimes excessive and at oilier times scanty. The color was high, nnd passages were accompanied with a scalding sensa tion. Don n s Kidney Pills soon regu lated the kidney secretions, maklug their color normal, and banished tho Inflammation which caused tho scald lug sensation. I can rest well, my buck Is strong and sound, and I feel luuen better In every way." Foster-Mllbuni Co., Huffnlo, N. T. For sale by all dealers, price CO cents per box. Czar Is Superstitious. Th Czar of Itussia is said to be very ouperstltlous and to bave great confidence in relics. Ho wears a ring in which he believes is embed ded a p'ieco of tho true cross. It was origilnally one of tho treasures ot tho Vatican, nnd was presented to an ancestor of the Czar for diplomatic reasons. Tho value which ita ownor sets upon the ring with ita embedded rci'.c is shown by the following facts. Eor.ic years ago bet was traveling from St. Petersburg to Moscow when ho sii(iil"!:ily discLvcred that ho had forgotten the ring. Tho train was Etuppcd immediately and a special messenger sent hick In an Express for it, nor would the Czar aiiow the train tu move until, eifcht hours after waul, the messenger icturued with the ring. Tid-Liis. The First Evolutionist. While the announcement of tho doc trine of evolution by Charles Darwin, in his "Origin ot Species" brought tho Idea to tho universal attention ot the Btudeuttt of science throughout the world, the first announcement of this law of nature was mado by an Aineil can, J. tltfinley Grimes, In a book pub lished lu Bo.'itou in 1817, entitled "Geotiomy. or a New Theory cf the formation of Ctmtlnenls." Copies of the original edition of this book are In the po:;setiion of i'iltshurgers. Out of the many thousands of cla dtdatcg declined for tbe liiitisli army each year by far tho largest number are rejected on account of being .un able to pasn the authorized test for eyeeight. Smokdleris powder, machJne guns anl quick-filing rifles tend to make the attacking of small States by pow erful cues more and more Imposmble. .-' -V. y r. U ttieky, siiys; f i'-y- -Vu a I was snf- i forlng from ! l.f:MKW I n coinplica- t lion of kid- - . . '.Vw'i V 'J ney trim. KhJ'ti'J ViS I J1 MdfeoSt When to Water Cows. Experiments at the Pennsylvania station failed to show that there Is any partleulcr advantage In having watr constantly before cows In the atahle. If they are turned Into the yard once or twice a day they will give as much milk and do as well as when they have axe;s to the water at all times. Leges In Siloing Corn. The changes which occur In the silo are acrompinled by a material loss of organic matt r. ami such loss Is largely proportionate to the amount of oxy gen or air admitted to the mass. The more perlvctly tho moss be compacted, and the tnoio nearly air-tight the silo, the less the loa;. The necessary, or at least un ivoidubio loss under practical conditions, seems to bo approximately 15 percent of dry matter. H. J. Wa ters, Missouri Agricultural College, Fattening Turkeys. To fatten mrseys 1 Iced corn and wheat mixed part of tho time and cleur corn for a cliajige. The grain Is given twice a day ut morning and noon. At night I i;lvo a mash of boiled meal and bulled sweet apples all they will eat. To dr ;u turkeys, put them In a bag so that they will not flutter, draw the hcid through and bleed in tho neck, l ick dry, leaving on the wings. Take out crop, remove the Intestines and put ball .-u gizzard, liver and heart. Cut oif tho hci1 and tie the skin down over the end of tho neck. For tnrii. yB liutiiied and dressed in this way 1 receive :!" rents per pound. Mrs. Marshall Stetson, Hampshire County, Mats. Spread Manure After Harvest. Aft-T the hanosilng of the grain crops, and before tiio corn Is ready to cut, farmers uMu.lly have tlmo which they etui give to hauling manure on the land before fall plowing. Spread the manuro directly from the wagon or Im mediately after hauling It to tho field. If left In small plica in the field for any length of time tho liquids will leak nnd bo absorbed only on tho Bpot covered. Mt.nuro should be evenly spread over the surface. Again, man uro which Is left in hills for a long time will pauk, and It will b3 (illileult to scatter it wlu n you are ready to do that work. Fields which are foul with thistles and otticr wecd3 should by all means be plowed tnriy If tho season be dry. G. II. Wilson. Muccovy Ducks. Thfci breed was at one time very popular umong tho duck raisers of Long Inland, but has been mostly su ptrrfedod by the Pckin. Some growers, however, still pi'oler the white Mus covy, or a cro:-H of this variety with other brecdn, on account of ita lnrgi sbo and rapid growth. The pure breed his white plumage, light beak and yellow legn. The stand ard weight Is 10 pounds for a grown droiko compared with eight pounds for a Pokin drake. Their defects consist ot poor laying quality and an extremely vicious . and quarrelsome disposition. Tbe pair shown in tho illustration are members of the flock at Exmoor farms, Lebanon, Pa. The bare red patches about the face are charctcrlstic ot the breed, and give the bird a fierce ap pearance which Is fully justified by tho lighting qualities of the males. Open Air for Horses. The Creator intended the open air for the horse's element. A uorso con demned to Imprisonment in a dark stall, without exercise, wituout fresh air and the glint ot tho bright sun shine on his coat, will become as weak and useless as a prisoner who shows tbe pallor of years of Incarceration behind dungeon walls, says tbo Ilorsj Breeder. Light exercise sends tho good, warm, blood flowing through channels to evory part of the body, do Chying tissues are. rebuilt by tho life current that has been purified In its contact with the froiih air in the lungs. The dlgeslivo organs perform their sev eral functions more perfectly, and so more rich, red, nourishing blood is made. A sound horse docs not neod "limbering up" In the strict senso of the term, but it is nature's decree that the muscles of the animal, as well as the human body, should not be allowed to soften and decay by reason ot lack of work. Hog Pasture. It Is not safe or even desirable to rely upon a sluglo crop to furnish pas turo for our hogs throughout the en tire season. It is hotter to arrange for a succession of pssturca from the be ginning of the season until the hogs are ready for market, making the feed richer and more concentrated toward the close ot the season, and as we ap proach the finishing of fattening peri od. For this purpose tho following crops aro recommended: Ited clover cr alfalfa, rape, cowpeaa, ney beans. On lands adpted to alfalfa It will undoubtedly prove to bo bettor for hogs tnan red clover, Inasmuch as It will produce a largo quantity of food of a Bomowhni higher value, Inasmuch aa wo have not yet loirued to grow al falfa successfully on tho majority of our soils, wo shall be forced to rely chiefly upon clover. It starts earlier In the Bprins than any hog pasture we have excepting alfalfa, and would therefore be used first, and should be used aa long as it is succulent and palatable. Usually not later than the middle of June the crop will have be come ao mature that the bogs will rel- Ish sj change for the time being;, ana the surplus clover should be cut and removed, go as to allow the second or fall crop to itart promptly. Profit in Vetch Seed. Winter vetch Is one of the best cropg for late sowing. It lives through the winter, stores up the nitrogen of the air like clover, and Is especially use ful as a pasture fur farm stock, a cover crop In orchards, or a (teen manure for plowing under to enrich the land. The fodder Is relished by all classes of animals, and It Is an extra good feed for hogs. The great drawback is tho high cost of the seed, which Is Im ported from Germany and sells for $5 per bushel. There appears no reason why all the seed should not be raised in America, the price could be reduced and still leave a good profit for the grower. For three years In succession at the Ontario experiment farm vetch has been sown In the autumn and rip encd the following season, giving an average yield of 10.8 bushels ot seed per acre. Its cultivation is as simple as that of rye or wheat. It Iz likely to becomo quite popular, and with a good demand for the seed, especially from orchardlsts. A borne grown supply would quickly be bought up by seedsmen, or could be sold direct to consumers by advertising in farm papers. Here Is a chance for a few enterprising farmers to work Into a crop much more profitable than grain, and one which will tend to Im prove the fertility of the farm. Food for Cows. In a paper on "Breeding and Feed ing for Milk," contributed to an Eng lish dairy and farm journal by Junn Evans ot Lincoln, the following feed ing methods are given for a breeding herd: Summer In May and June, If grass is plentiful, about two pounds cotton cake, and later, If grass Is scarce or dried up, three pounds or four pounds of mixed meal or bran with It, nnd elthrr cabbage or lucerne thrown in tho fields; towards autumn change ot past m o If possible, usually grass ed dish. Winter Rations Four pounds cotton cake, two pounds malt culms, two pounds dried grains, two pounds bran, three pounds mixed meal (generally oats and wheat). Very heavy milkers or fatting cows, 2 pounds linseed caito extra. In Autumn Forty pounds to CO pounds cabbage. Later 40 to SO pounds swedes. After Christmas, 40 pounds mangles, when ripe, cut oat straw, long hay once a day, rait wnter always bo fore them, a trough between two cows. Method of Feeding Dried grains nnd malt culms steeped 24 hours. Then theso wet grains and culms, tho bran and mixed meal, with a very few pulped roots nro mixed with tho cut oat straw 21 hours before using, a fow haudfuls of salt thrown In. Tho mix ture ot tho steeped groins nnd culms and tho pulped rootB soften the whole lot, but this head of food must not bo allowed to ferment, or It will make tne milk ta-,;te. Cows receive two feeds of this a day. This Is necessary to ena ble them a ralso t..o cud. The cake Is given dry, roots or eabbago are given twice, morning and evening. How to Improve the Farm Flock. There are a number of ways In which to Improve tho farm Hock. The cheap est and surest methods, where ono does not wish to Invest largely lu strictly pure breeds. Is to secure from somo reputable breeder early In autumn a few pure bred cockerels that score up well In tho 90s. By buying early you ran get birds that would perhaps soil In the spring for three times the price asked for them now. As no breeder, no matter how much experience ho has had In the fancy poultry business, can foretell Uie qualities of a fowl, the chances are nine out of ten that a bird! will develop nearer standard require ments than to develop disqualified. When pure bred males aro uaod on mongrel hens from one year to an other for a fow years, they show quite a decided effect upon the flock. In se curing males It would be well to look well to the utility qualities of the birds. You can build up a heavy lay ing strain In a very short tlne If a llttlo precaution and good judgment are used In buying males. . Tbe most common practice among farmers In buying males In to accept tho cheapest price quoted, regardless of quality. This is a wrong Idea. Our experience la that tho cheapest Is t..o dearest In the end, and tho man that buys good quali ty and pays for It will realize more in tho end than the man that loses $3 to save i. A flock of choice fowls can not bo maintained with a mongrel hen not bo maintained with a mongrel male at the head for a breeder. Remember, strictly choice thorough bred males cannot bo had at market prices, they cost more and are worth more, an their breeding qualities will prove, more profitable to you t the close ot tho season. Insist upon the best you possibly can afford and buy no other, and you will be amply re paid for your extra cost and trouble. J. C. C, in the Indiana Farmer. An Efficacious Device. Two Highlanders, being In Glasgow for the first time, were having a walk through tho city. Turning a corner, V.if.y were much surprised to soa a wa ter cart wotting tho struct. Not hav ing seen anything like It before, Tou pal, under a mistaken Idea, ran after the cart, and cried to the driver: "Hey, man hey, man, yer losln' a yer water!" His friend, annoyed at Tougal'g want of knowledge, ran aftor Mm, caught him by the arm, and said, rather testily: "Tonga! , man, Tougal, dinna be showln' yer ignorance. D'yor no gee it's to keep the laddies off tbe back o' the calrtT" Argout SCIENCE NOTES.. A : t The next meeting of the Internation al Congrcf of Hygiene will be held la Berlin in 1907. The congress has been invited to meet In Washingtoa in 1909. .W. O. Tight, the president of tho University of New Moxlco, has made the ascent of the Orata, In Bolivia. This Is the first time the peak has been scaled. The fine chemical laboratory of the University of Modena, Italy, wn re cently completely destroyed by lire, and the library of scientific works In connection with It, comprising 60,000 volumes, was also lost. In order to circumvent thlovlBhly dis posed Individuals whose weakness Is tho electric Incandescent lamp, a pro tective socket has recently been brought out, which makes It practical ly lmiKisslble for unauthorized persons to remove the lamp. W. W. Asge, forester of the North Carolina geological survey, has spent several days with Professor C. U Um ber of the normal school faculty, Kutz town, Pa., and they have found and de scribed 30 new species of hawthorn, which, they claim, are new to botan ists. Count de la Vnulx and Count d'Outre mont descended In a balloon near Hull, Yorkshire, England, having1 Journeyed from Paris In 17 3-4 hours. While the channel has been crossed previously In balloons from England, this is the first time the trip has been made from France. Regarding tho ine.ln channel of In fection In the case of tuberculosis, med ical men are now divided Into two campB, one holding that the greatest danger comes from dried sputum, tho other that thera Is more potency for harm In the droplets thrown off by a consumptive patient during coughing. It has been noticed that dust has a tendency to collect on electric light fit tings and wires, and on walls and ceil ings near them. The cause Is believed to be two-fold partly the Influence of Rlr-currents Induced by local beating, and partly the electrification of the dust particles. The Paris correspondent of a Lon don journal states that particulars of a New nntl-tubcrculosis serum wui shortly bo communicated to the Acad emy of Medicine by tho discoverer, Dr. Marmorek, of tho Pasteur Institute. The new serum la said to have been tried In tho Paris hospitals and to have cured severnl comparatively advanced cases of tuberculosis. Llentcnnnt-Colonel Bruce, who, with Dr. Nabnrro, was dispatched from Lon don lu February last on behalf of the government and the Royal K'oclety to study tho sleeping sickness In Ugan da, lias left MomboBa for Englnnd on the conclusion of his mission. Lieutenant-Colonel Bruce Is reported to havo stated the.t tho ravages of tho disease are unabated. A London Journal Rtates that Major Powell-Col ton, who has been explor ing in Africa for the past year, arrived safely art Wndelal on the Upper Nile, In the middlo of July, from Mount El gon, where ho bad been studying the cave dwellers. Major Powell-Cotton had had BntlBfactory Interviews with the Congo officials and was then pre paring to start on an expedition In Boarch ot okapl. MUNICIPAL REPAIR PLANT. A Now Department of City Govern ment Suggested for Brooklyn, George W. Tllton, chief engineer of the city ot Brooklyn, has made the suggestion to establish a municipal asphalt repair plant to do the city' work liiBtcad of giving It out to con tractors. He has gone Into the matter very thoroughly, and says the work could be done for G2 cents per cubic foot of material laid, whereas the prli'O now paid to contractors Is 05 cents. There are about a million yards of asphalt pavements out of guaranty now and the area is increasing an nunlly. During the present year about 70,000 cubic feet of material will bo UBed. This will require for Its produc tion a plant with a capacity of about 450 cubic feet per day now, which should be capable of extension to 1000 cubic feet. Tho city owns land on which It can bo located advantageously and tho tolal cost, with two steam rol lers and other plant, Is estimated at $20,000. Interest at 3 1-2 percent and depreciation and repairs at 10 percent produce a fixed charge of J2700, or 4 cents per cubic foot of output at th present requirements. New Rubber Producing Plant. In tbo French Congo territory ol Africa has been found a now plant, which may In the futuro bo looked to as another source from which to ob tain rubber to meet our ever increas ing demands. Whether this plant will produce any changei In the price of this commodity i& as yet difficult to determine, though tt will probably be found In English West Africa, and samples have been sent to Nigeria for the purpose of ascertaining If It grows thero also. Tho plant grows un der ground, and It Its bark be broker, the rubber keeps the pieces together, and Is of extraordinary elasticity and unsurpassed quality. Ordinarily tfio roots when about a month old contain from six to six and one-halt percent of rubber, which lies directly beneath the aurfaoe of the bark. If the latter U removed tho percentage is iraige4 aom 12 to 16. MARSHALL FIELD Cured of Catarrh of Kidneys by Poruna, wlSWSJfeflf HON. J(HX T. SIIEAHAS, OF CHICAGO. ITon. John T. Blicnlmn, who ha been for ieventcen yenrs nmnnier of Mat-ahull Field ft Co.'a wholi-ialn warifhou.e, and in corporal 2d Regiment Infantry, I. N. U. writes the following letter from 3753 Indiana avenue, Fiat Six, Chicago, 111. I Vtrnna Mndiolnn Co., C(iii(m, Ohio. Gentlemen" I. nil aumiiter I ean;it a cold which seemed to nettle tit mg fc(dne. a ii. I afl'.-ote I them bntllt. I trletl a couple of kidney remeiilrg tiirnrlv advert land, but they did not help tne any. One of mu foremen told me of the great help he had receive i in titling Peruna in a gfrnttar oitse, and 1 at once procured inie.' "it wa Indeed a b'enxtn? to me, an tarn on my feet a large part of the dVt, and trouhle sue' aa I had affected me eertnuHly, but four bntllee of 1'eruna cured me entirely and 1 would not be without tt for three month eularv..rHI T. 811 LA II JV. Mr. Jacob Klein writea from 44 Sumner avenue, liiouklyn, N. Y.: " I am now a new man at the age of eeventu-flve yearn, thanka to tour wonderful remedy feruna." Jacob I'letg. Catarrhal inflnmmntinn of the mucona lining of the kidncya, alao railed "llrignt'a diaeue," may be either acute or chronic. The acute form prodiicea aymptoma of Our Chinese Trade. The Commercial and Financial World Insists thrtlt our trade with China Is too largo and la too rapid ly Increasing for us to consent to its extinction In largo part by tho clos ing of the ports of Manehur.ln. Our exports to China in 1R80 were worth ?!, l'H, 383: In 18!)0 they were worth $2.!40.2i9: In 1!00 they had grown to 15,250,1G7. nnd In 1!)03 they were worth $13,003,309. Last year tho Lnlted States was fourth In tho lis! of countries from which China drew hrr Imports. Tho slgnflcance of the Chinese trade Ties, however, In the fact that It in susceptible ot vast do vclopment when tho 400,000,000 sub Joels of the Son of Heaven come into relation with the outsido world. Our present trade of $18,000,000 is not one-tenth of what it may grow to be after a few years. That pnrt of China Manchuria which lies near est to the United States is the only part with which we bave so far de veloped much trade, but tbe other parts aco similarly promising. Black and White Sheep, A great deal Is being made by cer tain newspapers of the fact that after the suicide of a man who had been very prominent In church work In New York, It is discovered that he bad mnde away with the trust funds of tho church for which he was treasur er. It Is a aad revelation, to Tie sure; hut over against this there are thou sands of men serving their churches who havo never misappropriated a dollar and who hold to their trust most sacredly. That there Is a black aheep now and then only proves that the majority of them are white. Buf falo Commercial. There aro four millionaires In RrltaJn to one iti France. Coldi " I bad a terrible cold and could hardly breathe. I then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and it gave me im mediate relief.' W. C. Layton, SidelL. III. How will your cough be tonight? worse, prob ably. For It's first a cold, then a ccugh, then bron chitis or pneumonia, and at last consumption. Coughs always tend downward. Stop this downward tendency by taking Ayer's Cherry Pec toral. Tbreaalwai Ik., Mc.,tl. Atlamtfltta. Oomnlt your doctor. If ha aara talc It, than dv a. Iio any.. If u tall, fvu nut tit taica ii. iiit.i uon c iaa it. no Kuewa. I It l,l, l.l.n W. Bpu .IIH,,d J. C.AYKK CO.. Luxall, Maaa. P. N. U. 40, '03 r.ilrlfji toHrflf All IKt fiiiQ Ml Contfh Urup. T auuta Good. Ua iu tnutv j a ot arutff ma. AND CO.'S WAREHOUSE MANAGER anoh prominence that the among nature of the diaeaae ia at once auapected, but tht chronic variety may come on ao gradually and inaidioualy that its presence ia not aut pectcd until after it haa faatened Haelf tl. irouithly upon it victitna. At trio appearance of the first eymptora Pcrnna should he taken. Thia remedy atrikca at once at tbe very root of the dia .eaae. A honk on catarrh aent free by The re runs Medicine Co., Columbus, O. A3K YOU!) DEAltP. FOB TH 6LICEIE:& MADE FAMOUS BY A CEPUTATION A EMENDING OVED MO&E THAN, HALF A CENTU9Y. TOWtR'S Barmentj anf Mi ere m&de of the best L:-A material in black or yellow l I 4 J for all kinds of wet work. II 'I JAIUFACTION 1$ GUABAIfriED l YOU 5TKI TO THF- SIGN OF- TKF- FL'.H ' A. 3. TOVE1 CO.eOiTON. mass .u y A TOt CANADIAN CO.! ..! TOJOMTO. CAM aataaWMHaPgJaWam:aHaragmag "HtiTinf t1tn jrwir wnlrfnl "CMearM' tot thr9 mouths) mfl Win enttro.y cnrxl of a w roach Catiatrrti mml it v-.-r.4l. i tuink ft word of pral It dui to ",rarttH,'f or their wood rful rvtnipov.tk'm. I )av takau numerouft nthT nn-cftllM remt-ilict bnt without voii uti J I find that f'tiitmrfH iWlert more Id tUr that ail th otlirs 1 liav takoa wM In jr'-iir." f au. iicUuua, lot Ueretr Bt.. Janr City, K. J. Pianft. Pil RUM. Pntnt. Taut OrvxJ, Da OrwL JiTr bii'kea, nr Urfptt, Ilk. Ke. Ma. ftaavoi 'll tn hulk. Tho r'nnln tMet taropMi CUUt uaxuut('4i to cure or your ttuunj back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or K.T. fM ANNUAL SALE. TEN MiLUOH BOXES ni;ansT.ibulesari. the beat dyspepsia medicine ever mode. A hundred million of them have bee'i sold in the United fttateg in a single year. Every Itlnesa arising from a disordered stomach is relieved or cured by thflr use. So common la It that diseases originate from the stomach it may be safely aa sorted there la no condition of ii health that will not be benefited ci cured by the occasional uae of Rlpan Tabuies. Physiciaug know them and sneak highly of them. All druggists sell them. The five-cent package la enough for an ordinary occasion, and the Family Itottle, sixty efuta, contains a household supply tor a year. One generally gives relief within twunty minutes. V. L. DOUGLAS $3.L&3SHOESS You can aava from $3 to $ yearly b wearing W. L. Douglas $3.60 or 3 ehoea. iliey Kuul tlioso that havo been coat ing you froui Sl iio to S3.U0. The im mense aulo of V. L. lkmnlaa aliot' pruvca their auptriortty over all other luuke.H. Hold by retail ahoa dealers everywhere. Look for name aud prica on bottom. That Doatlaa aa Tar. al'iilt protra Iki-ra la vaia iMtaaiaa .aoaa. i l'raa la taa klahaaK frad rat.Laalker aaOa. I rim luwBiriiriwAl, Our 14 Hilt Idut I imm romm Mom kr "all, ga raata eitr. lllaalral-4 vaianif uta at. t uvukikaa. auwawa, i "iJV. CANDY C ATttAATtC
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers