V .'ssis?- ( Miss Nettie Blackmore, Min. ncapolis, tells how any young woman may be permanently cured of monthly pains by tak ing; Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. "YotHiQ Womesi I hsd frequent headaches of a sere re nature, dark spots -before mv eyes, and at my men trual periods f suffered untold afrony. A DemVr of the lodge advised me to try Lydia E. l'inkhnm's Vc 7c table Compound, but I only scorned rood advice and felt that my case was hopeless, but she kept at me until I bought a bottle and started taking It. I soon had the best reason in the world to change my opinion of the medicine, as each day my health im proved, and finally I was entirely with out pnin at my menstruation periods, lam most priiteful." Nkttisj IIlack mork, 28 Central Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. f 8,100 fiwftlt If original of stow htUr proving gonuuioncot cannot bo proaucod. It there Is anything: abort your oas about which you Mould like) apodal odvlco, wrlto freely to Mrs. l'lnkliHtn. 8h will hold your letter In strict eonlidonce. She ean surely help you, for no person in America ean spenk from a wider experience In treat ing femnle UN. Slie lias helped hundreds of tliousnnds of women hack to health. Her address is Lynn, Mass.; her advice is free. Variable Stars Discovered. The researches bnlr.g carried on up on photographs of the two magcllanlo clouds bave resulted, the Harvard Ob servatory announces. In the discovery of more than one hundred variable tars in the so-called large ctoud. The two clouds have Ions been objects of careful study on account of tho ex-traordinel-y physical condition which prevails in them, but heretofore they have not been known as regions in which variable stars are numerous. The only place on earth where fresh water is secured from a salty sea is In the Persian Gulf. There are fresh water springs In the bottom, from which dlveis fill goatskin bags. MTHpermanuuily Mtred. No fltsomerrc-Hi-seas stter lint day's un o( Dr. Kline's (treat NerveiteHtoror.f atrial bolt lo find trentlsefrcs Dr. 11. H.Ki.tyn.l.t.l., Wl ArohSt..l'htln.,V;i. Tlie daily milenge of the trains of this country is 2,730.000. Care of the Ilnlr. It is now generally agreed that mn of the slmmpoos in use are injurious to til hair. The best treatment is frequent brushing unci absolute clcanlinesa. Wash the hair in s lather of Ivory Soap and rinse thoroughly. Ift the last water he cool. a it closes the pores of the skin and prevent Colds. ElKAMIR It. 1'AIIKKR. There is one doctor to every 800 inhab itants in Germany I amsurt-l'Iso'sCuro forOonsu mptlon saved my life three ysars iiko. M ss. Thomas Hon 11, Maple M., Norwich, N.V., r'eu. 17, 1100 Prussia has 20.1.1 associations of stenog raphers, with 51,21)1 members. Cascara Bark. Cascara bark peeling has become an active industry in the forests of West ern Washington, says the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. The bark is tak en from the barberry or chittlmwood trees that grow profusely in tho Grays harbor district. It has a commercial value of eight cents per pound. An ordinary tree yields from CO to 100 pounds of tho dried bark. Whole families are engaged in collecting tha bark end selling to dealers. Some men make $5 a day at the work. En tire sections are contracted by Eastern buyers, and poolers engaged to supply the bark. There 'is talk of petitioning, the Legislature to enuct laws for pre serving the trees, which are more val uable than cny timber grown in the native forest. The bark is used for medicinal purposes. It 'Is estimated that one pound of dry bark will make enough liquid extract to sell Ice $2 at wholesale. AN OLD MAN'S TRIBUTE. an Ohio Fruit Raiser, TS Years Old, Cured ot Terrible Com Alter Ton lean ul Sorfforlnir. Sidney Justus, fruit dealer, of Men tor, Ohio, snys: "I was cured by Donu's Kidney nils of a severe case of kid ney trouble, of eight or ten years' standing, 1 Buffered the most severs backache and '.'CI other pains in ''A the region of the i kldueys. These wi're especluliy m severe when toopluir to lift sips e jusius. ,Uy thing. snd often I could burdly straighten my buck. The acblutf was bad in the daytime, but Just as bud at ulgbt, sod I was always lunie In the tuurnlni;. I was bothered with rheu matic pains und dropsical swelling of the feet The urluury passages were painful, and the secretion wers dis colored and so free that often I hud to rise at ulgbt. I felt tired ull day. Uuif box served to relieve me, and three boxes effected s pertuuueut cure." A TUIAL FUEE-Address Poster Mllburn Co., Buffalo. N. V. For sals by all dealers. Price, DO eta. .1 'aY SAW BI AS'S ST. LOUIS NEW YORK WRITEK FINDS WORLD'S " ,FiIl YOND EXPECTATIONS t: Addison Steele. After a Week at the Exposition, Expresses Amazement at Many FeaturesSt. Louis Cool and Prices Reasonable. JHOV H. ADDISON STEELE, a jf I. well-known newspsiiei- and 1T n n"l""ine writer, of New w IV I S York, rerrntlv spent a week 1 ATj" Js st the World s Fair. H- sJOW turning home, he wrote tho following appreciative ac count of his impressions for iirooklyn Life, liioh should convince any reader that it is worth his while to ace this greatest of ex positions: n In the expressive lansiisge of the day. ft. Louis "hns the goods." I had expected much' of the Louisiana rurchn.se Reposi tion, for I hud kept in touch with the making of it from its very inception, five years ago; but after nearly a week of jour neying through this new wonderlnmi I must confess tlint in every essential par ticular it is far beyond my expectations. The bigxest and best it wns meant to be and the biatreat and best it is. The expo sition, rumors notwithstanding, is quite finished, www Those who imagine that the Columbian Exposition remains the last word in the wsy of a world's fair should remember eii n-iT ---.. that eleven years have rolled by since Chi cago invited all tho nations of the earth to come within her gates. These having been years of remarkable progress the mere fact that it is up to date would place the Louisiana Purchase Exposition ahead of not only the Columbian Exposition of 1 S;3 but the Puris Universal Kxposition of IthjO the only other world's fair of the period mentioned. The great development of noiseless vehicle, certain wonderful ad vances in the Held of electricity, the wire less telegraph, the submarine boat and the practicable flying machine all of which are special features at St. Louis are, for instance, matters of the period since the Chicago event. To my mind, however, the one distinctive feature which places it ahead of all other world's fairs is the com prehensive Philippine exhibit. Ahead also of any previous showing are the individual buildings of eight of the foreign nations and, taking everything into consideration, the architectural and landscape gardening achievements are greater sa they ought to be with the world older. www One of the greatest, and certainly one of the most agreeable, of my many surprises was the supreme beauty of the main group of building. For the simple reason that the camera does not exist which could take in the vast picture as the eye sees it, the early views of the group a bit here and a bit there gave a scant idea of the scheme as a whole. Nor did the early views of the ten individual buildings which muke up its component parts do justice to their nobility of architecture und general grandeur. Then atrnin in the ground plans and bird's-eve sketches the only possible manner of showing it tho fan-chaped ar rangement of this group looked still' and uiiMitisfyiug. Far from thut it is tiuite as remarkable in its way as the famous Court of Honor of the Columbian Exposition. In one respect it is even more notable, for in fead of two grand vistas it offers a doen. The main vixta is, of course, the one look ins up the I'lara of St. Louis whose COLDEN CHA NS. H," Mux Regis Wsrs olden Hitmlcuns Far Years. It will be remembered, snys the "Westminster Gazette, thut some years aco M. Mux Itogls was presented by n p-oitp of lady udmirers with a pair of gulden handcuffs, in eominetuorutiou of his arreBt und imprisonment In the great cause of Nationalism. The Au-tl-Semlte swore that he would wear the manacles as souvenir bracelets for the remainder of bis life. For some time be kept bis promise, and then it was observed that be bud abandoned bis decorutive fetters. Why? Vui it Infidelity to the cause, or what? Peo plo wondered, and could set no satis factory atiBwer, until a few duys ugo there wss a public sale of unredeemed pledges from the Mout de Piete. The golden handcuffs (weighing forty-live grammes) were included in the cata logue, M. Kegls having deposited them with f'nia tuute" to relieve a tempo rary indigence, and having neglected to recover them. To. complete the irony of the situation, they were pur chased by a Hebrew, who now wears thein in the streets of Algiers aud ex hibits them to all bis friends. Ir. Hale an LL.U. Dr. Edward Everette Ilule Is now an LL. D. of AVllllams College, from which bis futber gruduuted Just KKJ years ago. The doctor rend an exti'uct from his parent's graduating address, which dwelt with the question "Hus There Beeu a Progressive Improve ment In Hoclety lu the Last Fifty Years?" Dr. Hale Jocosely remurked that a eentury ago the boys appeared to be wrestling with the sums juou letus as are uow discussed. -jut l "i i X c r . - k! : ' "HAS THE crowning feature is tha great Louisiana 1'iirt'lisse Monument and across the Uiand llnsin to the Cascade Gardens. On the right nie the Vnritd Industries and Rice triuity. buildings and on the left the Manu factures and KiliKHtion. these with Trans put tation and Machinery still further to the right and Liberal Arts and Mines be yond at the left making up the body of the fan. For its handle the fan has' the Cascade Gardens Rising in s grand terrnce to s height of sixty-live feet above the lloor level of the buildings mentioned and crowned by the great Festival Hall, the Terrace of States and the Fast and West Pavilions and the Fine Arts building di rectly behind. www In the architecture of the group there is no uniformity of style. The very liberal use of great columns gives the four build inirs fronting on the Plata and llasin a certain architectural kniFhip, but the Mines building, with its two huge obelisks and somewhat Kiyptian aspect; the niuch turrcted and belfried Machinery building; the liiulily ornate Transportation building, with its gigantic arches and pylons, and 'JSMgUAWil.SlssTS.iS ssessRSsw PALACE Ol-' MIXES AND METALLIHGY. the Itomanesque Liberal Arts building have pronounced individuality. Yet in the general picture all theso buildings blend hnely. Nor is there any clushing in the case of the French Ionic style of the build ings of Cascade Gardens. Twelve hand some bridges across the waterways, which form a figure eight by running from the Grand Basin around the Electricity and Education buildings, further contribute to the architectural splendor of the scene. www Eows of fine, large maples set off the buildings in the main vista, adding im nieasunably to the beauty of tiie picture snd furnishing, one of the many demonstra tions of the superiority of this exposition in the matter of landscape gardening. There are also many trees to set off the other buildings of the group, shrubbery snd small trees have been used in prolu sion arouad tha entrances and the bridges snd there are handsome sunken gardens in two places. The landscape treatment of Cascade Hill is similarly line. 4 w w w The Philippine section covers no lesi than forty-seven seres, has 100 buildings and aome 75,000 catalogued exhibits, and represents an outlay of over a million dol lnrs. A week could easily be sient there to advantage. Entrance to the aection is free, but twenty-tive cents is charged to go into each of the four native villages, which are intensely interesting. The villages run along Arrowhead Lake, and the inhabi tants all have some way of entertaining their visitors. The Igorottes, who wear a little clothing as the law of even snvago lands allow; lloutocs, Tiuganues and Suy ocs are in one village; the lake-dwelling Morns and llogobos in another; the Ha. U Negritos in the third and the civilized Vis cayuim, who have a Catholic Church and a theatre, in the fourth. As a matter of ed ucation thut great encampment of the "lit tle brown men" is one thing that no Amer ican can auord to miss. WWW Eight of the numerous buildings of for- ONE HUNDRED FOR AN ECC. An Indian Game Fowl That Is Very Valuable. Not often does the price ot a single ess climb to $100, but this is whut was offered for each of the eggs ot a cer tain Indlun game hen, which wits brought to Euglund some time ago. For centuries the Indlun game, or Azcel fowls, huve been tho very npex of the game breed, for the puroness of blood u ud pedigree have been most carefully preserved for so long that the date of tha origin of the race hus been lost in tho past. It is almost impossible to procure specimens of the purest blood, for they tire treasured by tho Indian sportsman ut the highest value. As game fowl they are great fight ers. Those who huve seen them In In dia for the finest birds never reach our coldet IluiatciN tell of their prow ess and ungovernable e;.acl!y l.i but tle. With them It is always vl.-tory or death. Iu America, however, the game fowls ure seldom raised for lln'i'.ii.v pur poses, lut for show, und as !c!s und bobbles of poultry fuuclers. Country Life in America. , ' - ' A Modest KnicllhluilMlt. Like the traditional Kiiiilibhumn, Ar thur Stanley, Deuti of YclmiiiKtci-, wore home from his Orst visit to America an expression of amiixciiietit which only time could elfin". He was ut once beset by Interviewers, who Ubked tho usual questions. "Whut was the thing which most Impressed you in Amerlcu?" was one of these. Without s moment's hesitation Dean Stanley replied: "My own tguoiuuec." Argouaut GOODS." : eign nations would alone form sn expost lion worth the journey from New Yolk to St. Louis. Germany's building. Das Deutsche Hans, is a reproduction of Char lottenniirg Schloss, 450 feet long and linely located on an eminence overlooking Cas cade Gardens. The interior as well as the exterior is a faithful reproduction of the palace; Gobelin tapestries, the old Char lottenhiirg furniture and the Kaiser's wed ding silver having been brought over for the superb iitiaitnients. Nrar'y a mile to the westward France has reproduced, at s cost of half a million dollnrs, i lie Grand T'liiinnn, the building and great gurden covering fifteen acre. Great l'.iitain has a ropy of the baniiueting hull of Kensington Palnre; Japan, the Miishinden Palace, one of several buildiuira in a characteristic park, and China, the country seat of I'rinrs I'll I.un. Italy has a superb Grneeo-ltoman temple, Austria sn architectural gloritica tion of Modcrne Kunst, and Hclunnn a magnificent structure from an original de sign. Lesser reproduction of note aie the tomb of Ktmad-IKiwIah, by Fast India, and the new llungkok temple, by Siam. www , The Pike has in the Tyrolean Alps the finest concession that 1 have ever seen. There is a gnat sipiare Willi many ipiaiut build:ngs, a little village street, anil above the snow-clad mountains which look very real as the evening falls. Tho liest scenic railroad yet devised ulfords several tine glimpses of the Alps, und there is a very graphic exposition ot the Olierammergau passion play in the little church. The Cliff Dwellers' concession also looks very realistic at nightfall. It is elaborate in ar rangement, aud the courting, snake and other dances by the Southwestern Indians make it another of the l'ike shows which should be taken in by all. In Seville there is an amusiug marionette theatre and some feuiiine Spanish dancing. For the rest the 'ike offers iutiiiite variety, mid as a rule the full money's worth is given. The enor mous Jerusalem and lloer War concession) are not on the Pike. It is a case of dine at the German Pa vilion and die at the Exposition. In s beautiful Modcrne Kunst building adjoin ing Das Deutsche llaus the best lood und the highest prices on the grounds arc to be found, the table d'hote lunch and dinner costing t'2 and &i, respectively. There is also a la carte service. Everything consid ered the prices are not excessive, and at lenet one men) should be taken there for the experience. Another should be taken at the Tyrolean Alps, either outdoors or in the gorgeous dining room in the mountain side. 'The best French restiiuiaut is nt Paris, on the Pike, Lower in prices und in every way admirable are the two restaur l.iuts conducted by Mis. Korer in tho pa vilions of Cascade Gardens. The east one has waitresses and no beer and the welt one waiters nnd beer. For a bit of lunch Germany, France and I'ugland nil olfcr de licious pastry in the Agricultural building, 'i l;ese imv not free mis., but time-saving tips for the traveler. There are uoiend of re-ta u rn n t s to tit nil purses nil the grounds. THE SlLfcNCE OF BUTTERFLIES. This Insert Itepreseuls a Truly Silent World. After nil, the chief charm ot this race of winged flowers docs not lie in their varied nnd brilliant beauty, not yet In their wonderful series of transforma tions, lu their long und sordid caterpil lar life, their long slumber ill the cbrytulls, or tho very brief period which comprises their beauty, their love making, their parentage nnd their death. Nor docs It lie lu the fact t hut we do not yet certainly know whether they have in tho caterpillar shape the faculty of sight or not, ami do nut even know the precise use of their most conspicuous organ In maturity, the an tennae. Nor does It consist In this that they of all created things have furnished man with the symbol of his own luiiiiortullty. It rnther lies in the fact that, with ull their varied llfo and activity, they represent un absolutely silent world. All tho vust ar ray of modern Unowledgo hits found tfo butterfly which jinirmiirs with an audible voice and only a few species which cm even audibly click or rus tle with their wings. T, W. Illggln son, in Atlantic. Tlin I'luy wrlktit'a Complaint. A popular uutbor, who bus lately turned to pluy writing, has 'not suc ceeded ' in impressing maiuigers with the availability of his productions. Not long 'ago, thinking to get some useful pointers from tho current dra ma, he made au ohscrvallou tour ot tho theatres. "Well," liu remarked to a friend at the end of the evening, "I seem to bo the only man alive who can't get a poor play put ou." Harper's Wekr. ... ,V f .''.... " QUEER. AH records are brittle. For, by the same token, One ean not be lowered Without being broken. Catholic Standard sod Times. . ' TUB NEATl FUTURE. "Mnde a colossal fortune, you say! "Yes. He was the first man to pub Hsu nine-cent ningaxlue." Puck. WILLIE. Tailor "Do you want padded shout, ders, my little man?" Willie "Naw; pad do pants! Dat's .where I need it most." Chicago News. cuniosirr. "Professor," snld Mrs. Noosy, "what do you consider the most curious thing you ever saw?" "Woman, unquestionably," be re plied, Philadelphia Ledger, A VAGUE IDEA. ' Mrs. Itnrnllo "Your place Is so largo I wonder you don't keep fowls. It is so nice lo have freRh eggs e'ery day." Mrs. Clvlque "But fowls nre such a bother. Why couldn't we keep an In cubator Instead?" Brooklyn Llfo. WHOLE NOTES. "An American triumph? I don't tin derstnud you. None of the rust tnlU English, nono of the orchestra, nor the conductor, nor even the manager." "That's all right. Money is what talks, and the money Is American." TucU. I ' 1MMUNH. "Young 'man," said Rev. Goodmnn, "some duy you'll brlug your father's gray hairs lu sorrow to the grave." "No danger," replied young Ilakclyj "ho hasn't any. Worrying; about ms bns made his bead buldl" rhlladel pbla Ledger. NO COUNTIV ON 'EM. 11 -fJremie "Yes, my wife's upstairs getting ready to go out. Oh, here she comes! I'll bet anything she'll ask Aunt Jane If her hat's on straight." Mrs. Greene "Aunt June, I wish you'd sea If my skirt bungs even." Boston Trauscript BOTH IN rtllODE ISLAND. "Do you think you can cure me, doc tor?" asked the society woman. "I think so, with the help of Provi dence," replied the good physician, "Why not Newport? The climate there Is surely tho same as that of Providence." Philadelphia Press. AN IMMINENT DANGER. If hats and veils get uiuch bigger, what about tho muu iu tho middle? Punch. "See that poor anilcted boy sllttns In front ot yon shop? No doubt his tooth Is dancing with pain un ulcer ated tooth, perhaps. See bow ho holds his Jaws with both hands nnd sways from side to side. Poor fellow. "My dear, you are badly mistaken. Tho lad is perfectly happy. Ho is playing a Jew's harp." Tlt-BIts. A CLKVEU .MANEUVRE. KIrby "That mnn Beatty Is making money 'band over fist." Klinck "Why, I beard he put a now health food ou the market and It fulled to cntcu on." KIrby "So it did; but be immediate ly put up the stuff in bales and re-advertised It as 'Hygienic Horso Bed ding,' und it's selling afl over the country." ruck, NOT CHEAP. Merchant "Sho seemed to be very particular about those goods sho bought." Salesman "Yes, sho said sho wnnted to bo sura they were tho real thing; she didn't want any cheap imitation." Merchant "But they wcro a cheap Imitation." Salesman "Oh, no. I raised the price." Philadelphia. Press. KEASON TO LAUGH. Bangs "Funny about yoti. Too laughed as though you would spilt at that Joke lu the second act; but when 1 told It to you a wock or so ago it dldu'l seem to strlko you as a bit cuiulcal." Blugs "I paid money to hear thai Joke at tho theatre; when you told It it was not sought by me, People pay money for advice from the doctor, but they bave no use for gratuitous ad vice." Boston Transcript, MONTAUK RESISTS DYNAMITE. Old Monitor Is Not Easily Reduced To Scrap. Officials st the Navy Department fcave been much Jntercsted In reports from Richmond regarding the break Ins; up of tho old monitor Montntik, which was recently sold for scrap iron. Tho difficulty experienced In tearing; the old vessel to pieces is n revelation In rognrd to tho skJll of shipbuilders even when the metal ship was in Its Infancy. The iron sides of the Montauk will go into the melting pot at some foundry. Dynamite Js being used In the work, but even with this powerful agent progress is very slow. This old Civil War monitor was a fore runner of the modern steel battleships. After seeing service the Montauk went out of commission when the war closed. For many years, with other monitors, she lsy at anchor In the James river, below Richmond, but about five years ago was taken to League Island Navy Yard. At the out break of the war -with Spain these vessels were made ready for service, but were never in commission. Ho cently the Montajk, with several other old vessels of the same typo, was condemned and sold at public auction. The Greatest Living Orator. President Eliot Is as conspicuous ly the foremost American orator of this generation as Wendell Phillips was ot the lost, and Webster of the one pre ceding. His pro-eminence marks the changed temper of the public, which, though it may still be spellbound by revivallFts nnd by political speakers, nevertheless trusts those who, like Mr. Eliot, address Its reason and not its emotions. After 35 years all class es are mote eager than ever to hear him. Ills voice alone, ho rich, so cul tivated, with Us "cello notes, sots hlni in a class by himself. At first, you may miss the purple patches which you expect the orator to supply, bnt on acquaintance you discover that h hus the power to slate a fact, which you thought commonplace or value less, so that It shines Tike a Jewel as If he picked up a dull pebble, and through some bidden virtue in him, It turned to opal or ruby 1n bis hand. He never made a speech which you could nut read tbo next day or the next year wJthout wondering what had evaporated from It since you beard blm speak It. World"s Work. A Peculiar Accident. A peculiar accident occurred on the Huntington und Broad Top railroad, a few miles above Cumberland, Md., A loaded coul train was descending tho long grado below Petersburg when the axle of a coal sar broke, wrecking H and three other cars. The four cars Jumped the track and went over an embankment. The rear portion rejoined tho forw.ard portion of the tntln nt the bottom of the grado, the automatic couplers Joining tho train as If nothing had happened. The crew ws not aware of the accident. Three miles below three more care were wrecked. The trackwalker states the train wns coupled together when it passed hlra, but the brake rigging was dragging and this, It 4s supposed caused the second accident. Ruins of Crty Found. Mure than a thousand years ago thero was a great city in Central Afri ca which was the capital of the em pire of the BonghaJs in the Nigerian Sudan. The empire of the Songhals wus the largest and most powerful black empire which ever existed. Even after the fall of tho empire Kouklya wns a very prominent city, but about one hundred and fifty years ago It was utterly destroyed by tho Touaregs and Its very site was forgotten. The Academy of Paris re cently sent out a mission to discover tho ruins and they have Just been found by Lieutenant Desplngnes, about one hundred miles south of Gogo on the banks of tho Niger. While In a carpeted room In a tene ment house 75 germs settled on a three-Inch saucer In five minutes, after sweeping there woro 2,700.' 1 W C0sj''aslf iitv-isissm.js.msvavai. ., m m ".is tf.MEiT Wi n n UOTANIC si si iD.DiBLOOD BALM Th r..i T.t.J - . - w. - u xrmtir ir in ipacuy 3J """."""n. uiri, fcciemn, Seres. Erui I LUrou ilNU 5Rin UISE4SES. It ta ki (-; rl.. I, V... I -I. .. i- t , v I.' uuinuiig up ionic irii food I'tllit.er ever offer';.) ir. trii tt,,.slrl I. makes new, rich blood, inpatt renewnd vi- IftlltV Mr.A a '.oat.. i 5 i ' r 7 - niirHr-uTUUB S a i TS PrFr"e8; Wrilo for Bock ot Woo- 91 uwvm wurcB. fcur.i irit on ftppllCKlOn. i-fl , 11 V1 V1 "olif lo' "1 d'Ufijjwt, lend $3 fi oofgflUebM'e.cr5.ooforsTbottU( .Q ssuj rrtrdicui wi.l be icat, freight psud, by imuuBAia co., Atlanta, Qa. Ghickans Earn ftloney ! If Ycu Know How to Handla Them Properly. Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you vant to do it intelligently and get the best results. The way to do this is to profit by the experience of others. We offer a book telling all you need to know on the subject a book written by a man who made his living T J .1 s, am -j uuiuy, amu in mat time necessarily naa stLaidC I to experiment and spent much money to learn tu the best way to conduct the business for the small sum of 25 cents in postage stamps. It tells you how to Detect and Cure Disease, Stamps. how to Feed for Eggs, and also for Market, which Fowls to Save for Breeding Purposes and indeed about everything you must know on the subject to make a success. .- SEHT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT Of 25 CENTS IN STAMPS. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 134 Leonard St., N. Y. Cm. so way ft UNITED STATES SEMATOi, Used Pi-ru-m For 0$paps!& With Grsat Benefit. iBlilii 0 VV-iyvwC ;ViT. HON. M. C. BUTLER, . Ks-U tilled Btntua Ketmlor From South 'N,roltni. 1 X-U. 8. Senator M. C Butler, from South Cnrolinn, was .Senator from that Slate for two terms. In a recent letter from Washington, I). C, be says: 'J can reciniimcinl I'erunn for (ys pvpula and nlmnnvU trxihle. I huve been nnlng your m -tltvt ' 'ior( period (md I ferl rvi'u m itoi relieved. It In Intlcrd a iromcr; i: mmllolne besides a ao l Inula. ".If. C. Ihillrv, Pcriina is not simply a remedy for dys pepsia. Peruns is a cntnirli remedy, i'e runa cmea dyspepsia because it is gener ally dependent upon catarrh of tbe stom ach. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the we of Peruns write at once to Dr. llurtmnn, giving- a full statement of your case, and he will bs pleased to give you his valuable advice gratia. Address Dr. Hartman, President of Th Ilartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. ISFLiE'More BEECH-NUT diced Dsoan, diced Boef, J Grape Jam, Cranberry Bance, t Oraugs Marmalade, J strawberry Jam. Fat op In Vacuum Glass Jars. J BEECH-NUT PACKING COs, Canajoharie.H.T. BAD HOOD ! had Irovbl with my bowels which tnede mf birwd Impure. Uj fete wm eoverrd with pimple which no Mrntvl rem) could remove. I tried Tour C trot end ireet wu my Jo when the) rim pie t disappear aftr a month W'swIt nee, neve reeoiemeaded them to all bit trie ode d quit a few have round relief.'7 ti. J. iBscb, an lark Ae., Kaw York City, M. T. &e&f for Th Dowels. Ft Meant, Palatable, Potent. Taxte Good. To ft or it, Never Sicken, IVnekm or (J Hp". 10v 2..c. Meviif old In bulk. The f.-uulne tablet eUutpea CCO. buarantetid to aura cr jronr money litwlc Sterllnc Remedy Co., Chicago or N.V. 6oa AHKIML SALE, TEN f.ULL!0H SCX'S DROPSY,".! re. Look ol let iim an tela a NBW DISCOVEKT; tea reilt-f ena eurwe Wuret si limn' trtMuxuas tree. Dr. ft. ilKm ItONI tat . Atlaaift.ha. wyLSThompsen's Eyt Wafer P. N. U. 83. 1004. UUfUS Vb HLMl Uli H.CI rani uun vudho jrup, i'Siiw Uuua. limn. Rolf) D7 drriirifUre. for 25 years in raising ., , . S3-- lis. rt SM i