t ml Kl To be a successful wife, lo retain the love and admiration 01 ner misnana should be a woman's constant study. I she would be all that she may, she must guard well against the signs cf ill health. Mrs. Crown tells her story for the benefit cf all wivc3 and mothers. " Thar Mrs. Pinkitam : T.vdfn. R Plnkliam's Vegetable Coin pound will make every mother well, btrorig, healthy ntid happy. I dragged through nineyenrsof miserable existence, worn out with pain and wearinebs. I theu noticed a statement of a woman troubled ns 1 was; and the wonderful results she hud had from vour Vepe table Compound, and decided to try what it would do for me, and used it for three, months. At the end of that time, 1 was a dilferent woman, the neighbors remarked it, and mv hus band fell in love with me all over again. It seemed like a new existence. I had been mifferinir with inflamma. tion and fallins of the womb, but vour medicine cured that, and built up my entire system, till I was indeed Tkc a new woman. Sincerely vours, Jlns. Chas. F. Uunw.v. 21 Cedur terrnee, Hot Pnrinirs. Ark.. Vic Pr,,fc5,l,T, Mr,i,nl... Club SSnoO firftlt If ordinal of atcut If.tv BKND STAMP-Ot lescrtrtt"n of ST rhenrest farms in ouio. 11. r. isancroit, derrersou, u, v Gray's Peak by Rail. It Is now planned to build a rail road tip Grays Peak in Colorado. The railroad will bo the highest in the world, the last station being 200 feet above that on Pikes Peak. To Cure n Cold In One Pay Take L..aLivc liroino Quinine Tablets. All druggists rcnind money it it tails to cure. K. V. drove's licanlui-e is on bor. 25c. The Japanese are small raters, and indi gestion in almost unknown among tuora. Killed Medicine Man. TJnapacha Heecha, one of the great medicine men of the Flutes, is dead having been slain by tribesmen be cause he failed to propitiate the evil spirit and bring about better condl tlons among tho tribes which live along the Colorado nnd his slayer, Arda Mocha, has killed himself in obedience to the order of the ruling chiefs. Tho double killing occurred a few days ago north of Spear's Lake, 10 miles out from Needles. It appears that the medicine man had been eon demned to death because of his fail ure to drive away the spell which was rapidly killing off the tribe, and at a conclave of braves his death was de cided upon. He was first ordered from the land where his hut stood for many years. He failed to go, be lleving that as soon as he had step ped from tho boundary of his prop erty, which Is supposed to be conse crated, he would die. Media succeeded in getting him off, but desecrated the land by fight ing the medicine man in his own house, and after he had shot Heecha through the head he turned the gun on himself, blowing out his brains A great pow-wow followed, great hon ors being done to both bodies ns the funeral pyre slowly consumed them Denver Post. Canadian women are fald to eat too much sweetmeats. Their com plexions are almost invariably 'Jad, an authority says. In the French army soldiers are al lowed to have gardens in any spare barracks ground nnd grow vegetables, which help out their rations. HABIT'S CHAIN. Coriaiu Um1;u Unconsciously Formed and Hard to Ureak, An f:ion:ous philosopher estimates that the amount of will power neces sary to break a lifc-loug habit would, if It could be transformed, lift a weight of many tins. It sometimes rsrulres a higher decree cf heroism to bre:.k tho chains of a per nicious habit than to lead a forlorn hope in a blooCy br.ttle. A lsdy r. ;ites from an Indiana town: "From my earliest childhood I was a lover of coffee. Eefore I was out of my teens I was a rjiscrable dyspeptic, suf fering terribly ct times with my stomach. "I -was convinced that it was coffee that was causing the trouble and yet 1 could not deny myself a cup for break fast At the age of 3G I was In very poor health, indeed. My Sister told me I was in danger of becoming a ceffee drunkard. "But I never could give up drinking coffee for breakfust although it kept me constantly ill, until 1 tried Postum. I learned to make it properly according to directions, and now we can hardly do without Postum for breakfast, and care nothing at all for coffee. "I am no longer troubled with dys pepsia, do not have spells of suffering with my stomach that used to trouble me so when I drank coffee." Name given by rosluuj Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Look In each pkg,. for the famous little book, "The Itoad to Wcllville." Ammonia In Manure. T.nnd plaster or gypsum has un doubted value In holding the ammonia or nltrogene In stable manure, al though some scletlsts dispute this. Still kalnlt Is so much better for this purpose than the gypsum thnt It is a wonder any of the latter Is used. It is true kalnit is more expensive In first cost, but then it not only holds the ammonia better than the gypsum, but it adds to It a desirable plant food wliich gypsum does not. If one must, for any reason, store the stable manure for some portion of the winter, the bulk of Its value will be maintained If stored !n pits with cement bottoms, so that the liquid por tions are retained, and the mass treat ed with kalnlt occasionally. The cost Is small compared with the Increased value of the manure. Try it this win ter nnd you will become a convert o the practice. Indianapolis News. Feed Mill on the Farm. On any farm where there is stock to feed whether cows. Hitep, hogs or poultry, the feed mill or grinder is one of the best economizers of food one can have. These mills ere made In various sizes and suited to the large or tho small farm. With such a mill one Is in a position to give variety In form of feeding that is Impossible un less one Is prepared to buy various kinds of ground food. Where corn constitutes the main food as Is the care on most farms It Is plain to see that !t is not advisable to feed It In tho same form all the time. With the feed grinder it is possible to mix the several ground grains in small quantities which one would hardly buy., Where poultry keeping is n part of the farm industry there will be found abundant use for the feed grinder and it will pay a good profit on the investment. In diana Farmer. Increasing Manure Value. The Ohio experiment station has been doing some good along tho line of proving how the value of the stable manure may be Increased by proper handling. It Is peculiarly gratifying to the writer to read the report be cause It substantiates that which he has so persistently advocated for years. The experimenters lound that stable manure carted to the field and spread soon after it was made gave a crop return In value amounting to 85 cents a ton of manure value and that when crude phosphate rock was occasionally sprinkled on the manure a value of 18 cents mora was added. more than the coi;t of the phosphate. The crop on which the experiment was tried was on clover sod' plowed under for corn. In the experiments wheat and clover followed the corn without further fertilizing and with satisfnc tory results. This report Is one more proot that farmers are lightly losing many dollars tbey might save with little effort if they would give more time to studying their business. In dlanapolls News. Pumpkins a Profitable Farm Crop. In our experience nothing pays bet ter than pumpkins, the wor.. and cost considered. On good land they are almost a sure cropper, and If the seas on is right, very prolific. This year being cold and wet, the crop was not what it should have been; yet off a 20-acre corn field, that will average about 45 bushels of corn, we have al ready hauled out 1000 of the yellow lellows, and can safely say that there are six or seven hundred still in the field, to be got out later on. We are feeding them to our cows and hogs, and the sheep are doing a little along the line of eating them, but not with much relish. For a number of years we used to remove the seed before feeding them to the milch cows, but found it to be useless, as instead of drying the cows up they seemed to Increase the flow of milk. Don't understand me to mean that a gallonof the seed at a feed would be the right thing. But the seed In two pumpkins at a feed eaten with the pumpkins, in my opinion, will prove more of a benefit then a detriment. I have learned from experience that feeding pumpkins in moderation tends as a first-class conditioner to both cattle and hogs, and while I cannot vouch for this assertion, I have been told by others with more experience than I have had that herds of hogs fed upon pumpkins are never attacked with cholera or swine plague. I do know that for the last five years I have fed them and have had no dis ease. Of course, I do not attribute the fact alone to the pumpkin feeding, although it may be largely the cause. If some readers have never raised pumpkins as a cattle feed tbey should certainty experiment with them and they will be more than repaid. F. M. Minor, In the Tribune Farmer. Earning a Reputation. It would be space well used if by the devotion of this entire department to the one subject It would be pos sible to convince farmers, poultrymen, dairymen and fruit growers that the ordinary products of their business will bring only ordinary prices and, in the event of a flooded market, prove a drug which will hardly pay shipping expenses. On the other hand, tt is rare that the superior article does not bring a profitable price. More than a dozen years ago the writer visited a gentleman in Florida who had gone to thnt state from Ohio to engnge In growing vegetable for the northern markets. He had had varied experiences and to verify one of them he showed me a check which he had received from a commission man In New York, amounting to 92 cents, as the net return for some 20 crates of tomatoes. The cheek was In a pretty frame and hung against the wall. My friend admitted that while he believed the tomatoes brought a belter net return than 9i cents and thnt he had been cheated, he did not know at thnt time all that he learned later about tomato packing. The smnll return angered him nnd made him tie termined to put tomatoes in New York that would bring him an adequate re turn, so he thought out a plan of wrapping each tomato In tissue paper before covering It with the straw pa per, as was generally done. Then ho took a sample crate to New York and hunted until he found one house with a select trade who were willing to pay him a proper price for selected fruit attractively packed. To mnlte a long sjory short, my friend Is now. comfort ably well off and frankly ascribes his success to supplying a superior nrtl cle and obtaining for it a high price. Ho ha3 made a reputation nnd his name stamped on the tissue paper covering any fruit or vegetable ship ped by him as a guarantee of super iority and honest and attractive pack ing. Others can do the same If they will and the plan 13 worth trying. Indianapolis News. The Pasture Supply. On most farms pasture is either lacking or Is overabundant, owing to variable weather conditions, nnd the iarnier is unable to adjust the amount of stock he keeps to the Inconstant pasture supply. It is rare to find a mixed farmer who Is not too short In pasture at some period of the season, nnd the prudent man will provide for such lack by a catch crop of some kind. Many never do this, how ever, and suffer serious loss in con sequence. There In a class of farmers who are .lways short in pasture, ex cept potsibly for a short time in the best growing period, or when abundant rains make rapid growth. Most of us can secure more pasture than we do from the area In sod. Pas ture has the least consideration of any corp on the farm, while it is one of the most Important crops. The supply will never be better until farmers make a study of the crop and how to grow It best. Much land that should be used for pasturing only is con stantly kept under a cropping till crops begin to fail and thon seeded down and the grass allowed to got what It can from tho depleted soil. Not much pasture can be reasonably expected from such conditions, but usually more Is expected than is secured. The greater value Is placed on the grain crop. A better day would dawn If all lund that is uncertain for grain was put in pasture, then make It the recu perating crop by giving it a chance. Pasture should be fed, as other crops are, by barnyard manure and commer cial fertilizers. When manure is ap plied to pasture lands it never falls to respond quickly and profitably. The farmer who owns and works land can adjust the division of it to pasture and grain much better than the man that rents and must change often. The farmer, as a class, shotfld go more to stock and pasture, for they must act as a balance wheel to keep the whole area of country from being Impoverished. These farmers, locat ed In every community where there are renters. thot wont about all the land under the plow, and sell all they can, have a splendid opportunity to build up pasture lands by purchasing and feeding grain and roughnge on their farms. Farmers that desire to get a part of their land from under the plow because Impoverished or be cause, it is necessary for other reas ons, will find that purchased food and more manure made will help on every rapidly to a good soil on sterile fields. With the fall seeding of grain such grass seed as is suitable to the sea son should he sown, and in the spring others added that belong to the sea son. The time will doubtless soon come when farmers will feel about grass seeding as they do about wheat that they cannot afford to do it without the use and help of commercial fer tilizer. Where pasture comes to he the main crop an alfalfa meadow can be used to keep half In the meadow or as a soiling crop to carry over drouthy times. 'Many will find it advis able to have allage In store for these times and as a help to the pasture lands, for pasture stocked too heavily cannot give profit. I pass out these, thoughts to fnrmers that want more and better pastures. John M. Jami son in Ohio Farmer. Value of Two Heads. Merchant J think I shall take a partner in this new business venture of mine. "Two heads are better than one." Knox Yes, and then when you fail you can have somebody to blame it nn. Philadelphia Press. THKEi YcARS AF fEFii Eugene K.-I.ario, of T.'l Twentieth nveuup, ticket seller In the Union Sta tion, Denver, Col., snysi."You are at liberty to repeat what I first stated through our Denver papers about Dean's Kidney Pills In the summer of 1S'J!1, for I have had no reason In the interim to change my opinion of the remedy. I was subject to Revere at tacks of backache, al ways aggravated If I fat long at n desk. Dean's Kidney rills absolutely stopped my backache. I save never had a pain or a twinge since." Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. T. For sale by all druggists. Trice 01) cents per box. British Statesmen and Their Tips. There is a waiter in n big London restaurant who says that the biggest tip he ever received came from Mr. Herbert Gladstone, who bestowed 2 on him after he had attended to the wants of half a dozen gucHts at a luncheon party given by thut gentle man. Mr. Chamberlain has the ipptilntlon of being a somewhat generous donor of tips, though tho protectionist lead er very seldom dines nt a restaurant. One waiter, now the owner of a res taurant himself, declnn s that Lord lleaconslleld was very stingy with his tips, nnd that the great Conservative statesman would regard six pence ns ample conipt-nsatlon for attendance at dinner. London Mirror. The American Bluejacket. It has long been a tradition among the' navies of the world that the American man-o'-warsnien enjoy more material comforts than the sail ors of any other enlisted force. Their rntlons are better, their pay is high er, their privileges are more liberal and of late years their chances of ad vancement have been greater. These perhaps are Important, reasons for their superior efficiency nnd disci pline, though, as in all other chan nels of employment In this country, the higher average of Intelligence and the lower percentage of Illiteracy among the native born are the con trolling factors. New York Times. CUTlCURA SOAP. The TCnrM'i Creates! S!;lti Soap, tlia Standard of Kverv Natiun ot I lii. Karili, Millions of Hip world's best 'pennV 9 Culii-uia Soap, assisted by I'utii-uiu Oint ment, the pin est and sweetest of emol lient skin cures, for preserving, purifying and beautifying die skin, fur cleansing' the sealp of crusts, denies anil ilumhuff. and the stopping of failing hair, for sntteiiiiig; whitening anil snothini; red, lough and sore hands, lor biiiiy rashes, itelmigx and dialings, and many sanative, antiseptic purposes which readily suggest lliems'.'lves to women, especially mothers, us well as for all the pin poses of the toilet, bath and nursery. Transmuting Vegetables. The discovery of a means of metam orphosing radishes Into potatoes has been made in so solemn a place as the Academy of Si lence, Paris. M. Mol llard takes a very young radish, "Pas teurizes" It In a certain way and it grows up into a fine potato. More scientifically, the young radish Is cul tivated In a glass retort, after a process invented by Pasteur, in a con centrated solution of glucose. Starch then develops plentifully in the cells of tne radish, which swells out, loses Its pepperiness and ncnuires nrnctl- cally the consistency, flavor and es pecially the nutritive properties of the potato. St. James Gazette. rayclm'ogjf nr Die Salting lieu. The hen patientlj "sets" only through the overpowering pressure of a mys terious creative Impulse that masters her restless Impulses to be outside scrnfeliinj and cackling. Instead of working for posterity. Boston Her ald. stno Itewnril. utnn. The readers Otthls paper will bo pleased to learn that there Is at l?ast one dreaded dls easothtu soieme has hneu able to cure iuall itssta res.aui that Is O.iturr i. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive euro now known to the medienl fraternity. Catarrh beimr a con stitutional disease, re pilres n constitutional treatment. Hall's CatarrhOurnis taken lutor nally.a itin jelirntly unon thebloo l ami m l counsiirfin? of the syitom , thereby dmtroy Ingtlic found itlon of the illwi.se, ami glvlii; the natlout strenth by bulldinz ill) the con stitution and nssistlo? naturo In dolnn m work. Thepr jnrietor.s huveso mueli faith la ItsRiintlvo powers thai thev olTor One Hun dred Unlaw for.inv case that It fails to ouim. seuu ior list of testimonials. Addrnw F. J. CiiexF.Y & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Itrntrlst", 75 Tnko Hall's Family Pills for oonstinatiai Lnfty NtHltlo. A huge statue of the Virgin has bee. successfully plneed ou the summit of the Dent flu f.'mint n mnnnlnln It, Italy 13,000 feet high, near Milan. Di vine service v.-aa performed on the summit in celebration of the event lir the vicnr of Courmaycur. Bio Gold N Linnet. - ub-- One of the largest gold nucects ever round in Colorado was rccentlv nick ed up at Snowstorm placer In Park county, between Alma and Falrplav. It weighs 120 ounces and has a mar ket value or $2,000. Europe's First Mormon Temple. The first Mormon temple ever erected In Europe has Just been com pleted at Stockholm. It will accom modate 1,000 persons. Birth Rate Decreasing. Statistics show that the birth rate in the largest German towns is stead ily decreasing, notably in Berlin, Charlottenburg, Hamburg and Cre feld. An effort is to be made to bring to realization the long-discussed project of an adenuatp Shnlresnenm mitmndal In London. Subscriptions are to be I invited in all parts oi the world, and ' the promoters count on getting a large amount from the United Stft'cs. I ) FARM TOPICS. 4 f f 4 A HOW TO MIX FEBTILIZEItS. The study of plant food nnd the vn rlous combinations made to Ini-rens Its effectiveness and reduce Its cost tire important matters for consideration nt any season of the year. For a ion time much of the commercial plant food will be sold In the form of ready mixed goods, but there is n growing dc4uand among young farmers for for mulas to do home mixing, says a writer in Itural World. Using the kind and grade of material available a ton of 4-8-S goods could be nlade from nitrate of soda, 3J5 pounds; cottonseed meal, 2.'!5 pounds; add phos phate, H'M pounds; muriate of potash, li'M pounds. Tankage of the gTade known as nine and twenty could be substituted for Hie cottonseed meal, and for tobacco, potaloes and tomatoes, sulphate of pot ash should be used Instead of muriate. Some of the F.astern truckers prefer nitrogen basis from three sources; the mixture on this basis would become nitrate of soda, 1 10 pounds; sulphate of ammonia, 110 pounds; cottonseed meal, 310 pounds', ncld phosphate, 1120 pounds; muriate of potash. 320 pounds, Sulphate of nmmonln Is nt present the most expensive source of nitrogen and Is rarely found on sale In the South nnd West. Care must be taken to secure the right kind of tankage, as n great variety of material Is sold tin der thnt name and Its nitrogen content may vary from three to twelve per cent., In different grades. COTTON SEED MEAL. The Department of Foods and Feed lug has recently made a collection of cottonseed meal offered In Massachu setts markets. According to Jenkins, the rules of the Cottonseed Crushers' Association require "choice" meal to contain a minimum of (J.O per cent, of nitrogen equivalent to 42.2 per cent, protein, or if from the South Atlantic States, 1.2 per cent, of nitrogen equal to 38.C per cent, protein. About all of the meal now offered In this State is guaranteed to contain 43 per cent, pro tein (li.SS per cent, nitrogen) and nine per cent. fat. All of the samples collected were no. tlceiibly low In water, ranging from 5.27 to 7.80 per cent. The sample branded Dixie contained only 37.41 per cent protein and is decidedly Inferior. Several other lots scarcely met their guarantees of 43 per cent. Most of the samples collected were derived from the 1003 cotton crop. They had a bright yellow color and were quite free from hulls. A number of brands contained rather more "liuters," or short fibre than was desirable. On the whole the quality of meal may be re garded with satisfaction, and shows an effort on the part of manufaetuiera and importers to place standard goods upon the market. The price of cot tonseed meal has risen steadily since 1S!)0, when It could be bought for about $24 a ton. In spite of this fact, it may be considered nt present one of the cheapest sources of protein for feeding purposes, as well as nn eco nomical source tif organic nitrogen. J, R Lindsay, Hatch Experiment Sta tion, Amherst. AUTOMATIC FOUNTAIN. An Ohio man gives this description fit his poultry fountain: Every poul tryman knows how dillVcult it is to keep good, clean water for a large flock of hens shut up In a house or yard. If furnished In an open vessel it Is soon lowered out of reach or filled with dirt and litter by their scratch ing. Various small fountains are on the market which do for little chicks, but large fowls shut In a warm house drink a great deal and require lots of time nnd attention. The accompany ing cut shows' an automatic fountain W -kMt- fir rOCXTAIM FOB POCLTET. which I devised for use in my poultry house. It Is made of a ten-gallon keg. A pint tin cup is connected by a small tube to the lower end, from which the chickens drink. To till the keg the tube is corked, then the cork Is taken out of the top. When It Is fil'ed make the bung tight ond open the tube below. The water will not run out of the cup if the tuba-be on inch or more below the top. One cup will water a good-sized flock. Two or more cups may be nsed if necessary. The foun tain should be set on a box about eight inches high, just so the hens can reach it and not throw dirt into the cup by scratching. With this arrangement they have plenty of clean water and require our attention but once a day. Bulgarian newspapers give the names of two doctors of philosophy who have taken the teaching of Tol stoy's so much to heart that one ot them hasbecouie a cobblur uul the other a bootblack. ( .J ' i 'Jflr ' P ! S I s k: &,xr. SISTERS OF CHAlTY Uses Po-ru-na for Coughs, Golds, Grip and Calarrli-A Congressman's Leiier, In every country of the civilized world Sisters of Charity are known. Not only io they minister to the spiritual and intel lectual needs of the charges (.ontuiitted to their care, but they also ministei to their bodily needs. With so many children to take care of and to protect from climate and disfase, these wise and prudent Sisters have found l'eruna a never failing safeguard. Dr. Ilartman receives many letters from Catholic Sisters from all over the United Stales. A recommend recently re ceived from a Catholic institution in De troit, Mich., reads as follows: Dr. .S, It. Uartmnn, Cohimbim, Ohio: Dear Sir: "Tlieii(Hilrl who uki-U llw 1'rruna nan Mtflerliiu from lar y'ill In nml las of volt e. The result of I lie treatment wan moat Hntlsae tiiru. She found frent relief, and nfler further iikc of the medicine ue. hope to tie able to nay she In entirely cured." SMers of Charity. The young girl was under the care of the Sisters of Charity and used l'eruna for cataarh of the throat with good re sults as the above letter testifies. Send to The l'eruna Medicine Co., Co lumbus, Ohio, for t free book written by Dr. Ilartman. BEST FOR A GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel troubles, appendicitis, blllousnesii. bad breath, bd psins after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin regulstly you are sick. Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together. It atartn chronic ailments and long years of suffering. No matter what ails you, srart taklni C ASCARETS today, for you wilf never get well and stay well unlil you Ret your bowels right Take our advice, start with Cascnreta today under absolute guarantee to euro or rp,wrv,. ""ini" v. . .. never sola in bulk, sample ana booklet ire. Addresa Sterling Remedy Company, Chlcnrn nr Nw YnrV soa Returned with Thanks. It happened long ago, when Mark Twain was an editor in the West. The morning's mall had brought a bill from his tailor, not an unusual occur rence. The boy who went through the nfall called the future humorist's attention to it. "And," added the boy, "he has written on the back that he wants a settlement at once." 'You should know what to do with such copy without asking," said Mr. Twain. "Enclose it with the regu lar printed slip stating that all man uscript written on both sides of the paper is unavailable." x ji.P'rmaneniiycnrefi. r nts or nervous ness after II rat day's use of Dr. Kline's Great ervoiiestorer,2trial liotf.loand treatise free Dr. It. H. Kline, Ltd., 031 Arch St., I'liiln., Ta. v There are about 400.000 species of ani mals on land and sea. A Guarantee,! Cnrm For riles. Tlohinr 1M;,1 Tt'n..l:.. T....J: Pile. I)mr,(ila irill rntun,! n.An .f 1l - . .... - u.i.a iruiir, ,4 , Ointment fails to cure in 0 to 14 (lays, 30c. Tfoilmnnin ha ,r,tnMl fmn, IT ....... OftA held guns. PleVo S,.n , - " . : , -.. .-. v... . .j v-i-.-u in ,,i i, in i ,,, in imii iite medleiuo for couslis nnd colli?. . w. 'ahlt.l, uecan (irove. .N. J., Feb. 17, 1900. At one time Kinc Peter of Kervia v.-a a Socialist. Mrs. Window's Soothfnar Svmn for clilMrnn eethinff, soften the sums. reducVs Inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind eolif,25c.abottlo Last VCnr. in Tnrlia twetr rA fljVl r.r3Ana were Villed bv snake bites. Romans Wore Earrings. Both men and women wore ear rings in ancient Rome. The latter were especially extravagant. Seneca wrote that some earrines worn hv urn. men were so costly that a single pair was worm tne revenue of a largo es tate. A Turk from Smyrna has applied for membership to the New York Stock Exchange. He is very rich snd a heavy dealer in cotton in Asia Minor and Egypt. DRHPQY HEW omco'BR Y; ti. I V I O quirk rttllat sad raraa on aaaa. Sei-d for book of testimonial and IO fart' usumDt Frta. Br. 1. 1. Situ a 0S AtUala a JUkMMT4IM;flJa.-ij EKffcS KSiBf AIL I'&f Sll mm Best Couan Syrup. Taaua Good, baa l irmnio. acta e druavLra. The following letter is from Conieea man Mcokison. of Napoleon, Ohio: TIip IVrnna Medicine Co., Coin minis, O.: Oentiemen: J, have used several bottles of l'eruna and feel greatly benefited there by from my ca tarrh ot the head, and feel encouf aged to beiieve that Us ci, tin ned use will nilly e.-adicate a dis ease of thirty years' standing.' David Aleelcisnrfe Or. lldiiinau. uii- ol me hest known physiciuns and surgeons in t lie United, States, was the first man to formulate l'eruna. It was through his cemu and perseverance that it was introduced to the medical protrusion of this country. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the u.-e of l'eruna, write nt once to Dr. Ilartinan, jiving a full stntement of your case and be will bo pleased to give you bis valuable ad vice gratis. Address Dr. Ilartman, President of The Ilartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. THE EOWELS CANDY CATHARTIQ and dixxints. Whn un kn'u,.! Anr mnw. "From tho cradle fo ft baty ohalr" nm YOU A BABY? II so, yon oM to havs a PHOENIX WALKISS CHAIR (PATENTED) "AH IDEAL 8ELF-IN3TRUCT0R." QUR PHOEMX Walking Chair v holds the child seonrolr, pro Tenting those poinfd falls and tumps wliich are eo f rcqaent w hsa babv loams to Tralij.- 'BS fTCS : THAN A riUWZ." The chcir Is providotl winh a re movable, saaitary'c!oriiE9iit,'which supports the weight of tho child and prevents bovr-les and spinal troubles; it also ha3 a table attach ment which enables baby to find arnnsemcnt in ita toys, etc., with out any attention. "As Indispansatle si e eradlo." It is so constructed that it pro Tents soiled clothes, sickness from draita and floor gems, and is recommended by physicians and endorsed by both mother andbaby. Combines pleasure and utility. No baby should be without one. Call at your furniture dealer .and ask to see one. ataJTTiCTOUtD OJTLY BY - PHOENIX CHAIR CO. SHEBOYGAN. WIS. Csn only be hid of your furniture deals. P. N. U. 1, 1905. LEARN TELEGRAPHY IT FAYS. Operators tn demand. Our proapectna tella you U itv-.uj u J. Dnse Inar W n i THE MEREDITH COLLEGE. ZANESViSlLE. 0. "s ' ' David iMccJ:lson, KJ - 1