KUROKI SON OF A FOLE. Father On Deathbed Atked Him To Get Vengeance On Russia. Gen. Ktirokl's nephew, JopnVo Ofht- Wa, a student at the Berlin Technical University, hns written to the Tatce blntt rorroetlnn a story which ap' reared In the Pat.rlo of Paris, to the effect that KurokJ Is half French. Otihlma snys (Icnrral Kurokl'a father was a I'olltth tioblemnn named Kurnwsril, who after the revolution of 1831 flVil trom Hussla and after be,' inn In tho Dutch service In Portico settled In Japan, where he married a Japanese- woman. On his deathbed. Oshlma adds, the father of Genernl Kurokl rhiirgrd his sun to avenge the ivrongs or Poland upon Russia. FITR permanently enred. NoflteornstTmis tMi ftr first dny'unseot Dr. Kiln' Grrst Xsrreltntorar.tl rial lMtlA and trfttlK(rn Dr. K.H. Hum. Ltd., Ml Aroh Ht l'tilll.,!'. The Internetinnnl Snmcn'i Vnion baa 0,000 affiliated memben. riso's Cure Is thBhetmdlelnMreevornd for all affwtlons of throat and lunn. Ww. O. tlDLltT, Vanlmrnn, lnd., Keb. 10, 1!)00. Neuralgia n said to be aucceeefiilly treated in Italy by the me of blue light. Giant in Indian Territory. One of the delegates sent by Indian Territory to the Democratic national convention was C. A. Skeen, who stands six feet three Inches In his atocklnirs and Is a big: man even for his stature. Mr. Skeen, a most vera cious man, It would appear, said In aft Interview) "I am sorry that none of the bin men of the territory waa able to attend this convention. They were all busy, and so they said that the little fellows, who aro not much use at work, must come along. Some of the men 'in the territory are so big that they aro not able to travel. The car seats and the hotel beds are all too small for them. So they stay at home. But that Is no hardship for a man who lives in Indian Territory." Oldest Clock In England. Peterborough cathedral has tho old est working clock In England. It was erected about 1320, nnil Is probably the work of a monastic clockmaker. It Is tho only one now known that is wound up over an old wooden wheel. This wheel Is about 12 feet In circum ference, and the galvanized cable, about 300 feet in length, supports a leaden weight of 300 hundred pounds, which lias to be wound up dally. TORTUR NG PAIN. Hlf ThU Mnn'a NnfTrrlnare Wontd Hw Killed M:iny It I'oraon, But Demn'l Cnrl lllm. A. O. Sprngtie, stock denier, of Nor mal, III., w rites: 'Tor two whole years 1 was dnluc nothing but buying niedl- 65 ...v lull's ill vmr my kidneys. I s:? -rJl do not think ''Vs.!L;ii5ll I evor suffered as I did and lived. MymUAl The pain in my s; back waa so bad that 1 could .W night I could a. c. prRAciirp. not riue a norse, and 8omoliin?s was unable even to ride In a cnr. My condition wns critical when I sent for Donn's Kidney rills. I used three boxes nnd tliey cured me. Now I ciin go anywhere nnd do as much as tiny body. I sleep well and feel no discomfort at all." A TKIAI. I KICK-Addrcss Fostcr Mllliurn Co, ltnffiilo, N Y. For suie by all dealers. Price, TiO cts. A Blow to Heiress-Hunters. A French court has decided that the Tiuko do Valeneay has uo claim to tho fortune settled upon him at tho time of his mnrrlugo to Miss Helen Morton of New York, who recently secured a divorce. It is still better news that tho nobleman is forced to pay a',1 tho costs of tho divorce suit. AH Duchess do Vnlencay had to do was to give up her title. It Is a notlcablo fact that all the dukes and counts who aro dying for love of American girls aro also pinch ed for a llttlo ready "money. Perhaps tho French court's decision will dis courage the heiress-hunting business or f t leai't lend tho successful hunters to treat their captives decently. It is to be hoped that the discouragement mentioned w'lll eventuate, for this counu-y has room for all the good American women, rich or poor, who are born Into It. Thero is such a thing us carrying tho foreign mis sionary spirit too fur. Oh,lo Stato Journal. E3 OTA MIC BLOOD BALM The Great Tested Remedy far the ipeeriy and permanent cure of Scrofula, Klieiima lim. Catarrh. Ulcers. Eifeina. Sure a kmr.. f-l Hum, Weakness Nervous nets, and ail f BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES. T It Is by far the best building up Tonic end Dlood I'uriher ever offered to the world. Jt X maicet new, rich blncd, inpate renewed vi X taiitv, and possesses almost mira-ulou Piuv n. virnu iur duuh ui Fi un der lii I Cures, icnt free an application. If not kept by your Tot al druggist, send $i. no for a larfte battle, nr $5 on fur sta bottle, and meciiciiie will be lent, freight paid, by ff 111 I ' I J blood liALia co.t Atlanta, Ga. DaociDg EASY AND SURE Send 6 2 cent stamp fur tirnt lev on and cle ncritiv matter fully expluitiioK our wyit tem. We uuaruntce to teach any ball room dunce Holected or re turn tutttou. We refer yon to Second Nation al Hank, Akroui t'eu tral 8avitiK" Hank. Akron, or W esteru Ke aerve Security Co.. Ak ron, aa to on r rcttpuubt--bill t y, Address THE BARRON CORRE SPONDENCE 6CHO0L AKRON, 0. TangM By Ml Coiia-h ajrup. Tail Uoud. iJaa Id tlrua. Sold br druuiH. MM. FifipiaiKPEN Ahout Tillage. While thorough tlllrRG docs not add strength to the U, it does nld very materially In r'-ndeilrg plnnt food 1 reaily In the soil iv;illah1e. It Hlso al lows the roi;is of tli plftnts to spread more nnd to go d-ejrr In their search for r'tt"' f'1""'' !In i measure tt also aids In ahum-bine iltrogen from tho air. Thorough tl'laf- helps to bring the elements of plifit food into sp and fit them for the panls to feed upon. Staking Tmato Plants. Begin early Tith staking tomato plants, so as to keep them off tho ground (as thry wer a large space when matured), nd keep the ground somewhat damp.whlch is not desir able. If the plans have plenty of room, and arc hed tyi off the ground by stakes, more ar Aill clrculato and the fruit ripen eerllriand better, as well as being mo-e ei'mpt from. dis ease than when tie vkes arc. on tho ground. Plant Seed in Mctot Soil. Never plant seels in try soil, or in soil that is less moist t.an the seeds, as the dryer soil will extort the mois ture from the seeds, andtjht germ will die. The failure of enf seeding In sandy soils last spring wi due to this. Farmers put. in the seed I in a t ime of drouth, to "have It ther all ready when the rains should coie." Coming late. It found the seed aJif dried In an oven and with the gerwn all dead. Especially was this the rase where the seed had been soaked 10 hasten ger mination. Midland Fr.rmer Raising Bulbs. Nearly all the flower bulbs, such as hyacinths, tulips and daffodils, are of Dutch production. The Nrw York agent of extensive Holland growers as serts that practically every florral greenhouse In the country grows tho product of the Imported bulbs. Porno attempt has been made to produce bulbs In southern Virginia and Cali fornia, but with limited success. The Holland growers claim that our cli mate Ik too changeable to produce good results in bulbs, but other au thorities believe these profitable crops could he grown In America if attempt ed by those who thoroughly under stood the proper mothoda. When Cutting Short Grain. When cutting very short grain wilh a harvester, considerable difficulty Is often experienced, as the t-hort cut grain will accumulate upon the slrkle bar In such quantity as to clog the sickle. And it will be found that If tho reel Is lowered enough to prevent this, the short grain la thrown too far back upon the platform snd scattered so badly that It. ranno' be properly bound Into bundles without great loss. To avoid this, get son very heavy canvas, ten inches wide, and fnstcn it with tacks the full lcn';i;i of the reel slats, nnd this will swi ep the grain gently onto tho platform and thus avoid waste. Farm Journal. Sassafras a Pest. Sassafras Is one of the worst pests that can find a hold on a Held. Cut it. down, or even grub it up. and it will reappear almost unexpectedly, growing rapidly and taking possession of the land. Thero is a time when It can bo removed to the best advantage, how ever, and that is by grubbing about the first of September, removing tho roots, and then clearing off the field. Should any plants appear next spring, go into the field and touch a little sul phuric acid on each half a tenspoon ful will answer nnd repeat should any routs appear lutcr, firn cutting off all plants that show above ground. Tills la also nn cxeellen method of eradi cating thistles and oilier weedb that arc difficult to remove. Coughing of Animals. Naturally the dairyman Is ever on the lookout for trouble with his cows and one of them with a cough excites lilm very much, because his first thought is of tuberculosis. It is quite natural for cows to cough mnre or less during cold weather, but it does not fovtow that their lungs are affected. If the -cows are properly fed and stubled, liopt out of draughts of cold air, yet furnished wilh good ventllnted quarters, any cough l hey may have docs not, as a rule, proceed from tho lungs. If the animal cats well and Is in good ganeral henlili she is probably Hll right. If, on tho other hand, tho cough continues and she gets off in her feed, them lose no time In consult ing a veterinarian, for the chances are Bomcthing serious ii troubling her. Disking Land for Corn. A correspondent writes us that hav ing heard of quite successful corn growing In Illinois without plowing the land first, inquires whether one tun saTely disk the corn land, list and plant without tho usual breaking. Sometimes tho lighter prairie noils are prepared In this way unci corn is plant ed and does fairly well without first breaking the land. This has been so, however, in seasons following deep whi ter freezing, and little spring rain to run the soil together. Only the llcht blank soils mixed with some sand have I been successfully grown to corn by disking, rather than breaking. In wet spring tteusons some risk Is takea even with these boIIh to plant in this way. It Is far safer to break the ground first nnd pulveri.e it. for corn. And tho clay loam Bhould be always so treat d, and it Is best to break them fieeply. Disking heavy sol In and list ing for planvlng would be a great roifr take In any kind of a season. These, sollg aro run together and hardened by the usual spring rains more than oth ers are, nnd our correspondent would make a mistako to undertake corn growing on his clay loam lands ty merely disking them. The Turnip Crop. The turnip crop should be a leading one, as a large supply can be secured from an acre of land. The growing of turnips for winter is during tho sum mer season, but while the Rrowlng of turnips Is done somewhat carefully af ter the ground is ready for the seed, the proper preparation of the ground Is not always made. Weeds grow rap Idly during warm weather, and to pro tect tho turnips the land should be plowed now, harrowed, and tho weed seeds permitted to sprout, using the harrow as often as may be necessary to destroy' them. Just before seeding the turnips the land should be worked deep with a cultivator, and then har rowed down again as fine as possible. This will not only cause fewer weeds to appear, hut will also Increase tho crop of turnips, both In the yield and quality. The Black Locust. On every farm that In more or less devoted to stork grazing there Is great need of shade In each pasture; feuc?s strong and durable are needed to re strain the stock. There Is one tree of all others that Is admirably adapted to meet both requirements, and that Is the black locust. Growing In grdv3 in the pasture, it does not Interfere In any way with the production of grass, for being a legume of a lofty habit, grass will grow close around the trunk nnd be of nearly full strength from an abundance of simshine near the roots. Closely grown, nature does the prun ing: otherwise they should be trimmed Tn nearly a whip. They grow well on thin rough land, such as is found on thousands of farms, growing worthless Fhrubs, briers and weeds, whli'h might be the most remunerative acre on tho farm If planted thickly In black locust. In realitv there need bo.no waste land. The post crop Yiay he seven, eight, ten or even twelve years In maturing, but all tho time post timber Is getting scarcer and higher. At seven years one post may be had, but- often It Is peiilcy to keep the ax off mull the tenth mile stono has been parsed, when tho tree will have Increased In height and diameter rufflctently to make three or four posts. A tall tree that will clear 32 fent will rut four sections of eight feet each; the first may bs quartered, the second may make two or three, the third one or two and the top section one, making eight or ten posts, according to glze of trunk. Locust posts aro very durable, being good for from 15 to 40 years, ac cording to diameter and ao when cut. Another point, they hold nails and ataplos as firmly as most woods do screws. Another place where tho lo cust eloes its dual purpose stunt admir ably Is as a shade tree along the high way. Farms so beautified and provid ed attract buyers. E. V.. J. in tho Epltomlst. POTATO WATER HAIR TONIC. Other Remedies Suggested as a Cure for Baldness. "Take half a dozen white potatoes," said the barber, "and pare them lengthwise from end to end. Instead of crosswise, as is usual. Roil them in a quart of water. Drain the water off into a boitlo and add a teasp-mnful of salt. This liquid, this simple com pound of boiled potato water and salt will. If it is rubbed Into tho scalp three times a week, change a thin moth eaten head of hair Into a thick and vigorous crop." The bald listener laughed. "Potato water Is a new one," he said fcornfully. "Nrw and fine," returned the barber. "Do you see how good my hair is? Well, 1 was nearly as bald as you aro once. I used potato water three times a week for three months. Look at the result." "I'll tell you somo of tho tonics that have been recommended to me," said the bald head. "First, coal oil coal oil, rubbed into the scalp every night before retiring. Can you imagine any man sinking a coal-oll-drcnched bead among his pure white pillows? "Sago tea. I made some sago tea once, and the mixture had so vile and forbidding a look that I could not ap ply it- "Onion juice. That, no doubt, is a good tonic. But what would my friends say if I should always be thrusting under their noses a head accented with onions? "Black molasses. A Kentuekian ac tually udvlsed me last year to try black molasses. "Hemlock soap and vinegar that is a tonic that a Maine barber swears by Seaweed and apple seedB boiled in sea water is a sailor's recipe. Dandelion tea, plantain lea, and a tea mado of honeysuckle, aro t!ie tonics that a Boston masseur suggested to me." Washington Potst. Water Everywhere. "Water exists in nearly everything," said a temperance lecturer. "The doomed sailor, dying of thirst on his raft, contains a pound of water to every pound of flesh. Thus, if he should weigh 140 pounds, tho poor fellow would yield, under hydraulic pressure, no less than 75 pounds, or five pails, of pure water. "lu tho air this sailor breathes thero is water Jive gralus of water to every cubic foot. There is water even In the ring upon his hand. It Is an opal ring, and opali are coin pc sen of water and fllut " IIE STOLE A KINGDOM, "BOBRIKOFF THE THIEF," FINNS CALL THE DEAD DICTATOR.' Was Trying to "Russify" Their Coun try When Assassinated Death Pre vented Report That Would Have Brought Down the Oar's Wrath. In Finland they cnlled Mm "Bobrl koff tho Thief;" and now they have shot I ho great dictator who, with con summate cunning, stole Finland for tho Czar of Kussla inch by Inch. And thero Is good reason In tho Finns' minds for tho shooting of Bob rlkoff. Tho dictator bad iroro lnla ter designs on Finland's freedom than any ho had yet practiced, says a writ-' cr In the London Express. By tho order of the czar ho was to report before the closo of the present month whethir Finland were tractable or not. The Finns knew what Bobrl-, koff would report, and they knew that his report would be followed by an actlvo military occupation of their land. So they have saved Bobrikoff the trouble of making his report, and have given their own answer to the question In the shapo of revolver shots. Strange Indeed Is tho story of this theft of a nation and Its dramatic out come, and I learned It in this way some few months ago. li was ono of thofo days of brilllanj sunshine bathing unsullied snow that make Helaiiiffors so beaulful in win ter lime. From tho window of the room In which I sat I could see the white painted houses of the Finnish capital rising from the white snow, while from tho shore, for 20 miles, the froz en sea lay beneath a carpet of snow that might have been woven with countless diamonds, so brightly did It gleam. Overhead tho benign sky, undecked by a stnglo cloud, was blue as the summer heaven of Venice, Helslng fors. Indeed looked for all the worlel like somo pretty, frosted, cheerful Christmas card. Vpon the floor two children laughed as they sprawled about, and between myself and my companion, a Finnish woman of gentle birth, a little tablo bore a samovar, brewing tea and singing of good will and peace. But there was neither good will nor peace In tho face of the woman on the other sldo of the table. "Yes," she said, "we Finns call him Bobrikoff the thief, for llttlo by little he has filched from us our country and all our rights. "Clod knows my heart Is not evil when I say that till Bobrikoff came to Finland I did not believe In hell " Here she looked up at tho sky, and It is untrue to say that blue eyes can hold no passion. Hers were steely, and In them one could see passion thnt. bitterness hnd frozen. "Somo day," she went on, "Bobrikoff will pass even the limit of our pa tience, ad then thero will nrlso a man who " She did not finish the sentence, but I understood, and murmured "Quite so." And now they have shot Bobrikoff. "If you will come out with me," my companion continued, after a little pause, "I will show you why wo suf fer." So wo went out. and crossed a snowy square and came up to a great white building. As wo passed up the steps a Russian policeman stared nt us and then yawned. A r.:a'.i unlocked the heavy doois for us nnd wo went into a white hall, where even fie echoes seemed quite Mart led at tho unaccustomed sound of footsteps. We came to a big dim room, round which were ranged In a seml-clralo Kcorcs of llttlo gold-legged, fold backed chairs. VTliip," said my companion, "Is tho Mall e f Nobles." nnd in this silenco and tills emptiness you can rend the tragedy of our land. Year by year those little .chairs stand waiting for our nobles to sit on them and give us laws and Justice. But they will nev er sit there again for Bolirlkoff lias dissolved our constitution. "lie rules instead as an autocrat and by ninrtlal law." "And what manner of man la this Bobrikoff V I asked. "I cannot tell you what lie looks like," she said, "because tho only time he passed me I turned away my head. Wo always turn away our heads when ho goes by. It is all that wo can do. "I believe, however, that In 1:1a priv ate life ho Is a kindly man. I am told it Is quite touching to seo tho lovo and trust between him and his pretty daughter. "But his private llfo is nothing to us. llo Is here to serve tho autocratic machine, and he serves It well." Thou in tho Hall of Nobles I was told the talo of tt.o stolen nation. lTp to 1S08 Finland, though part of the czar's dominions, was autonomous. It prospered prospered so greatly that .t be.'camo an eyesore to needy and jealous St. Petersburg. So St. Petersburg sent down Bobrikoff, nnd Bobrikoff swallowed it up. Ho' took such gentle llttlo mouth ful s at first thnt tho Finns scarcely understood what was happening. But they understand now, for Bob rikoff forpot to summon the represen tatives of tho Finnish council. Instead ho created a hired senate, and dis banded the Finnish army, with the exception of the guards, .Them he sent to Poland. In 1902 ho called for Finnish vol untoer army to servo lr. Russia. The young men of Finland declined to verve on those terms, and a bordo of Russian troops was sent down to Finland. Then the czar ordered that Bobrikoff should drag tho Finns to the conscription booths should b not be ab'e to report tnem tractable bf the tt d of the present month. ' lantlmo Bobrikoff had been bnsjr at tho ronrenlal task of "Russifying" Finland. Ho decreed that Russian must be taught In all the schools, and ono by ono he removed every Finnish official, down to tho postmen and the police. Russians reigned In their stead. Thousands of secret agent canto down from St Petersburg, and lurked nnd pried all over tho land. Never a week passed but some Finn of stand ing was suddenly missed from home. You could find them If J'oil searched for them In Siberia. An army of Russian policemen me;ets and speeds every train nnd every vessel, t'nder the guise of peace there Is a reign of terror. At the end of her recital of Fin land's wrongs my Finnish lady threw out ber hands appcalingly. "Could you, as an Englishman," she cried, "live under such conditions? ''Every night we U down and won der what there may be in store for us next. And as we lie and wonder the answer seems to como to us, for we can hear the heavy tread of the Rus sian police on the frozen street be neath our windows." As she said this tears were falling down hT face. And now Bobrikoff has been shot. STATISTICS OF WORKERS. Nearly Two-Fifths of the Entire Popu lation In Gainful Occupations. A special report of the Census Bu reau on occupations shows that In thi continental United States tho total number of persons engaged in gainful occupations In 1900 was 29,073,233, which was one-half of the population ten years old and over, and nearly two fifths of the entire population. The total number comprises 22,489,425 men, 4.833,630 women and 1,760,178 children, of whom l,2i4, 411 were boys and 485, 767 glrla. Those of foreign birth ag gregated 5,851,399, or one-fifth of the totnl number of gainful workers, and tho statistics show that tho immigra tion of 20 years has not increased the proportion of the foreign born In the working population of the country, Those of foreign parentage aggregate 11,106.361, or over 38 percent, almost equally divided between immigrants nnd children of immigrants. Manufac turing, trade and transportation and the professions show an increasing number of workers of each sex, while the agricultural class represents a di minishing proportion. All the statistics given are for the continental United States, which ex duds Alaska, Hawaii and tho mili tary and naval stations, abroad. In cluding all these, but not Including Porto Rico, the Philippine Islands or tho Islands of Guam and Tntulla, tho total number of persons engaged In gainful occupations In the United States Is given as 29,287.070. Tho ag gregate for t;io continental United States Increased over 24 percent slnco 1890, In which decade tho total popula tion Increased almost 21 percent. Tho proportion of those gainfully employed to the total population Increased al most 3 percent. Almost 40 percent of the men employed were engaged In agricultural pursuits, 24 percent in manufacturing and mechanics, 18 per cent in trade and transportation, al most 15 per cent in domestic and per sonal service, and 3 1-2 percent In pro fessional se rvice. About 40 percent of the femnli'3 employed were in domes tic or personal service, 25 percent in manufacturing and niechnnlcs, 18 per cent in ngrleulturi', 9 percent in trade and (raninjutatlon and 8 percent in professions. The pereeutngo of fe male workers is especially high wher ever tho nostra clement is prominent. Of the men, (ill percent of tho single, 94 percent of the married, 77 percent of tho widowed end 89 percent of the divorced were employed, while unioiig the women, 31 percent of tho single, ti percent of tho married, 32 percent of tho widowed and ,"5 percent of tho ell vorved were employed. Lofty Mountain Lakes. Tho most lofty mountain lakes are found among tho Himalaya Moun tains in Thibet. TIieT altitudes do not, however, seem to have been very accurately gauged, for different au thorities l:ve widely different figures regarding them. According; to some, Lake Manr.sarowar, ono of tho sacred lakes of Thibet, Ib between 19,000 anil 20,ii,i( feet above (lie level of the sea and If t:i!s Is s undoubtedly the lofti est In the world.. Two other Thibetan lakes, those of Chatamoo and Eurakoi, aro said to bo 17,000 and 15,400 feet in altitude respectively. For a long time it waa supposed thnt Lako Titicaca, In Soulh America, waa tho loftiest in tho world. It. covers ubout 4500 Fouare miles. Is 32,000 foot abovo tho sea. In splto of the Inexactitude with regard to the measurements of the elevation of the Thibetan lakes they are no doubt con siderably higher than this or any oth or. Philadelphia Ledger. Sympathy. Ruffun Wrats Biiy, mister, I hain't had nut bin' to eat fur two days, an I'm Fellairo (formerly ftusty Rufus) Dying of thirst, uro you, old chap? Well, here's a quarter for the sake of old times, Now pet out of my sight as quick as you can, you greusy old fraud, and you'll save me tho troublo of kicking you out of It. Chicago Tribune. The Cuestlon. A music hall performer now appear lng in lmdon has stated that alio was offered JL525 a week to stay In Chica go. M'hother this sum was offered by Loiyum or Chicago has not transpired, oudon Punch. Miss Hapgood tells how she was cured of Fallopian and Ovarian Inflammation and escaped an awful operation by using Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. "Dear Mns. Pinkham: I nuffered for four years with what tha doctors called Salpingitis (inflammation of tho fallopian tubes) and ova ritis, which are most distressing and painful ailments, affecting all the surrounding parts, undermining the constitution, and sapping the life forces. If you had seen me a year ngo, before I began tnkirig Lyrila, E. Plnkhnm's Vegetable Compound, and bad noticed the sunken eyes, tallow complexion, and general emaciated condition, and compared that person with me as I am today, robust, hearty and well, you would not wonder that I feel thankful to you and your wonderful medicine, which restored me to new life and health in five months, and saved me from an awful operation." Miss Irens IIapoood, 1023 Sandwich St Windsor, Ont Ovaritis or inflammation of the ovaries or fallopian tubes which adjoin the oraries may result from sudden stopping of the monthly flow, from inflamma tion of the womb, and many other causes. The slightest indication of trouble with tha nrnrlps. indicated bv dull throbblnir nain in the sida. AAAOmnnnlAd by heat and shooting pains, should claim your instant attention. It will not cure Itself, and a hospital operation, with all Its terrors, may easily result from neglect. "Dear Mrs. riNtmAM: I can truly say that you liave saved my life, and I cannot express my irrntitticle to you in words. " Hcfore I wrote to you tolling how I felt, I had doctored for over two years steady and spent lots of money in medicine besides, but it all failed to do me any good. My menses did not appear in that time, and RtLjkiA f M pound, menses appeared, my womb trou- VTp' Vj fir lies left me, and I have been regular ever 6 v since. I used fourteen bottles of I i t1 tf Lf V " I will always recommend your wonderful remedies, and hope that these few lines may lt?nd others who suffer as I did to try your remedies." Mits. T. C. Willadsen, It. K. No. 1, Manning, Iowa. Such unquestionable testimony proves the power of Lydia E. I'Ink" ham's Vejretnlde Compound over diseases of women. Women should remember that thy are privilcg-ed tn consult Urn. l'lnkuam at Lynn, Mass., about tticlr illness, entirely lreu. Chickens Earn Honey ! Ef Yon Know How to Handle Them Propsrly. Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you want 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 for io years in raising Dnt.l.v. .nil wr llint lim. n .-.CF 1 ,ll if 1,14. gJjJC I to experiment and spent much money to learn in 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 teed 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. SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS. book puMshiTgTouse, 134 Leonard St., N. Y. City. HAVE YOI ANY TKOl W,E lu kitting a Ooiitl I tuindry lUllfT A Itluu that will OeitUrrtk or mt Ihn t loiliM - If a cut out ihl Mil. pm to it ft tip i ( pr giving vour utHri-K, t-n-4'lnMwlth 4 dime Mild get hf itihII a box t'uiiialulOtj Ti Ihk jtml woottrn tiol tu keep the Uliic In. tut rue qiiuuiliy a vu rewulurly p.ty &10 for. have money and get tho oU reliubl Teji HI j. M H. TWEED. 1 126 Ptnn Ave, Pittsburg, P. fT&K YOURGR WHY SO MANY EAT , : such-nut : Sliced Bacon, diced Beef, S Orap Jam, Cranberry Sauce, Orange Marmalade, Strawberry Jain, e Put up la Vacuum Glue Jan. i BEECH-NUT I ' PACKIHO CO., j tanajonane.H.T. ! Jlamlold with .V.WJU Thompson's Eio Wattr VMUt I suliered mucn pain. 1 would daily nave fainting spells, headache, backache and bearing down pain, and was so weak that it was nard for me to do my work. "I used your medicine and treatment as directed, and after taking three bottloa of LydlnE. 1'lnklia.m's Vegetable Com- Lydia 15. Plnkham's Vegetable inmpnnnn mm iiinim a'uniier together, and am now restored to perfect health. Had it not been for vou. I would have been in hit trrave. A "I And CnB-arta ao fM thai I wrraM not b without them. 1 waa troubled a great deal with tor uid liver and Lina-lacha, Kw alnc taking Caararata randy Cat It Artie 1 fnal vury tunou bttr I ahall eartaialr ruoomaiend iliora to taf frlanda M tha baat tuetllclna I hav avar aona." Add Baa.net, Oabura Mill Mo. I. Fail Oivar, aUffc Pleaian. Palatable. Potn. Tatu Clool DnQoM, Never Hloken. Wankou or Urlpo, lite. foe. Nc. Krvee oM In bulk. The genuine laltlet iteuipeC C U C. Quaratiteeu to eure or four uouey lfc. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.T. Sol All HUAL SALE. TEH MILLIOH BOXES P. . U. 85, 1804. DROPSY ru back m Imiimm MEW DISCOVERT; flew miek relief eud earae ware! eeoil tOdaye treelne! 7 LAZY Li If The Bowels jV Canov GATnaanc rrew. pt. m. m. ! i aOSt. lea a.4Ual,