SUFFERED cTAt 0f lMN?? JJh k JUAXJWJW SO COMMON IN WINTER CURED BY PE-RU-NA. W -m llwll I P $ Mm liJii if A PLAIN TALK On a Plain Subject Plain Language. in The coming winter will cause at least one-half of the women to have catarrh, folds, cough, pneumonia or consumption. Thousand of women will lose their lives and tens of thousands will acquire some chronieailmont trom which they will never recover. Unless you take the nec essary precautions, the chances are that you (who read this) will 1m one nf KEEP PHIUNA IN THE HOUSE. the uniortunate ones. Little or no risk need be run if Pemna i kept in the house and at the first appearance of any symp tom of catarrh taken aa directed on the bottle. Pernna is a safeguard, a preventative, a specific, a cure for all cases of catarrh, acute and chronic, coughs, colds, consump tion, etc. N For free medical advice, address Dr. R. B. Hart man. President of The Hartman Panitarium, Columhus, Ohio. mmm ! '! :'' ' -i: '-.'i .. ... r .?:'i.1 ft - -- - - ' " ' - " (PATEKTES1 "AN IDEAL er-LF-INSTRllCTOIt.n QTJR PHOEXIX Walking Chair v hoil8 the child secnrelv, pre wonting those paiaful falls and bumps 'which are bo frequent when babv learns to walk. ''BEITCft THAN A NUR6R." The chair is provided with a re movable, sanitary oloth seat.which supports the weight of the child and prevents bow-legs and spinal troubles ; it also has a table attach ment which enables baby to find amnsement in its toys, eta, with out nny attention. "Aslndlspenseblo si cradle." It is so constructed that it pre vents soiled clothes, sickness from drafts and floor germs, and is recommended by physicians and endorsed by both mother and baby. Combines pleasure and utility. No baby should be without one. Call at your furniture dealer and ask to see one. - KAStrf ACTOBXD OKLY BY PHOENIX CHAIR CO. SHEBOYGAN. WIS. . Can only be had of your furniture deals. LEARN TELEGRAPHY IT PAYS. Operators Jn I demand. Our prospectus tells you all shout It. Ex 1 pon-.es low. Write today. THE MEREDITH C01LE"E. Z1NESVILLE. 0. o -: oo - o-Q-0-R-r TAKE CARE OF YOUR HAIR BY USING 9 MONTGOMERY'S HAIR RESTORER. O 0 Promotes th prnwlh. Restores Its O Natural cilnr. Prevents th falling. Q S- Fr'es from dandruff l?sd fitly years, x Sold by all druitslsts. 'Jl (10. Q WM. C. MONTGOMERY CO. q f 635 N. 8th Street. Fhl'adelphia. Pa. X Br Successful ly Prosecutes Claims. Laiit KrinolDnl Bomlner u B. tmalou Burfeau. 11 3 jrriu atru war, it tuU Miicauuc cltuaiB.mtii lno r DODGY NEW hiscovbry; J IT W O I qtilAk ! and earM worst P. N. U. 8. 1903. " HAVE YOU A SABY? f U to, you ought lo have a E PrSOEJ.fi IX WALKIUQ CHAIR n IpWrn Jaby niartm t CCLD ON THE LIWS THREATENS TO BLCCME SERIOUS. Pe-rn-na Brings Speedy Relief. Mrs. II. K. Adams, ex-l'rcaident Pul inelto ('lull, of New Orleans., a., writes from 110 (iarlie'.d Court, South lletid, lud., as follows: " am pleased to endorse l'ervtin, as I took It about a year iif o anil it noon brouiiht. me relief front a void on mu lun-jn u hich threatened to be SerioMS. "The lungs were sore and inflamed, I roughed a couple of hours every niijlit, and I felt that sniiictliMin niiiiit be done before my runs became aHeeted. "l'eruna was suggested by some of my friends who hail used it, and acting upon their advice 1 tried It and found that it was able to bring about a speedy cur. You have my highest endorsement and thanks for the good it did me." Scan ling- the Praises of Peruna. Mrs. Frances Wilson, 32 Nelson St., Clinton, Mitss., writes: "Had you seen me nt the time of my ill ness and now, you would not wonder that 1 take delight in sounding the praises of l'eruna. "My ailment was a severe cold which at tacked the bronchial tubes and lungs. "J followed ymir sperlal directions and afteruslivj sljr bottles of I'enma, I van on mil f--tt aqaln. 1 Ihinh Pf-runa a wonaerul merfli ine. " Helen Gould's Charities. Her law school course illustrates an other trait In her character. Bhe Is careful, judicious, an excellent busi ness woman even In the bestowal of her charities. The misdirected fer vor of the sentimental giver of gifts Is not hers. She is fortunate that it is not. Emotional philanthropy would long ago have made her a bankrupt. Her fortune, at a conservative esti mate, is about $15,000,000; If she complied with all the requests for money which she receives, It would take her something less than two years to dispose of It. She receives about 100 letters a day asking for sums which make a weekly total of about $150,000. She is asked to buy vessels for old sea captains, to raise mortgages on Western farms, to train the volceB of embryo Pattis on the prairies, to educate young men for the ministry, to contribute to ladies' aid society fairs in country villages, to endow all sorts of Institutions. Herself a strikingly unextravagant woman in matters of dress and all personal expenditure, she is asked by prospective brides- to provide sums re.nging as high as $2,000 for their modest trousseaux. Parents write her enthusiastic letters describing the charms of young Helen Miller Gould Smiths or Joneses, and saying how gratefully a nucleus for these 'young ladies' future dowries will be received, in one banner week the begging pub lic including, of course, the respec table beggars for worthy charities as well as the mere preyers on unso phisticated kindness asked for a million and a half dollars. Harper's Eazar. MIGHT HAVE SAVED IT, A Lot of Troublt From Too .Haoh Starch Food. A little boy of eight years -whose parents did not feed him on the right kind of food, was always nervous und suffered from a weak condition of the stomach and bowels. Finally he was taken down with appendicitis and after the operation the doctor, knowing that bis intestinal digestion was very weak, put hint on Grape-Nuts twice a day. He rapidly recovered and about two months thereafter,' his Father states, "He has grown to be strong, muscular, and sleeps soundly, weighs G2 pounds, and his whole system is in a fine con dition of health." Name given by I'ostum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. It is plain that if he bad been put on Grape-Xuts at an earlier period in his life, and kept from the use of foods that he could not digest, he never would have had appendicitis. That disease is caused by undigested food decaying in the' stomach and bowels, causing irritation and making for the growth of all kinds of microbes, setting tip a diseased condition which is the active cause of appendicitis, and this Is more marked with people who do not properly digest white bread. Grape-Nuts is mnde of the selected parts of wheat and barley r.nd by the peculiar processes of the cooking at the factory, all of the starch is t,urncd into sugar ready for immediate digestion and the more perfect no jrishment of 11 parts of the body, articularly the brain and nerve cent.es. Read the little book, "The Itoad to Weilville," found In each pkg. The Cow and Calf. We turn our cows into a box stall a eek previous to their calving and change a liberal bed every day. If our calves show any disposition to white scours we doctor them at once. We have tried a half dozen remedies. We have lost a good ninny covs, and I believe the loss of calves in the United States by white, scours is about $4,000, 000 per annum. So we made nn objett ot raising calves, and wanted to find the best remedy for this disease, and we kept trying until we found this one to be good, and In about three out ot four cases it is successful. As soon as it is discovered that the calf has the scorns, which will be soon after It is boru, give it twenty drops of laudanum; In sis hours give it twenty drops more, and if no relief Is mani fest at the end of twelve hours more give it forty drops, and in ten hours more you will have a dead calf or a live one, and In three cases out of four the calf revives. This has been my experience for five years. We raise twenty calves per season. George Campbell in the Maswhusetts Plough man. Gathering and Packing Eggs. Eggs should be gathered every day In summer and oftener in winter, un less the henhouse Is warm enough so that the eggs will not free;-.e and burst the shell. Put the eggs Into a basket with the small end down until ready to pack in boxes for shipping, and keep in a cool room. Then pack In the box with the card-hoard separators, with the small end down. They will keep fresh longer If packed In this way than If put Into the boxes in a haphazard manner. The reason fur this Is found in the fact that the yolk cannot settle to the shell when the small end 13 put down and the air cannot strike the yolk as long as it does not touch the shell. When eggs bring a good price It Is better to sell the eggs than to raise chickens to sell, for the profit is good and there is not so great an outlay. By all means raise chickens when eggs do not bring a very good price. Among 4he most prolific layers will be found the Black Spanish, the Black, White and Brown Leghorns, Poland, Ham burg, Creve Coeur and La Fleche which are larger than Black Spanish but somewhat similar to them. Cetil Abel Todd in the Epitomist. Packing the Soil. Thoughtlessness and over-anxiety to plant early in the season has led many farmers into the injurious practice of plowing so early that the furrow slices glisten in the sun and when a handful of the upturned soil can be compressed In the palm of the hand like putty. In this way very good clay uplands are so badly ihjured in a single season that years of clover seeding are needed to restore their friability and value for cultivation. Trampling land by stoi-k in winter Is a practice far too com mon. It is the custom of some farmers to allow their stock to range over the fields as soon as the latest crops are gathered, and even during winter with out regard to the condition or the ground, whether it is water-soaked or not' There is no practice more gen eral and none which destroys the very life of the land more quickly than packing clay soil when it Is wet, con verting it into a cenii?nt-like substance with its fertilizing elements rendered almoeul wholly Inoperative. The graz ing of animals In wet fields and plow ing when the ground Is too wet are practices almost universal among ten ants, who are often careless and Indif ferent if not Ignorant as to the result upon the land which is far more In jurious than excessive cropping with out fertilizing which Is quite common throughout the western and southern states. D. B. White, in the Epitomist. The Horse's Shoe.. As a ranch-boy, driver and freighter in tt west, I can agree with many who declare that bad shoeing has done more to injure and ruin good horses than all other causes. Freight horses, patiently hauling their great loads of merchandise over rocky roads, are fre quently made to wear shoes that must, be as painful to them as the Chinese Btock Is to the heathen 'lady of the Orient The shoeing of horses Is a business that falls properly to the blacksmith, not alone' In the west, but over the entire country, yet many of these blacksmiths exercise as little oare in shoeing' a horse as they would in fastening a piece of iron to a lot; Many of them are men who know abso lutely nothing about the anatomy of the horse's foot. They pare down the frog and sole, and tear off the crust of the hoof with a rasp. J have seen them heat the shoe to a red heat, suf ficient to burn the hoof, and hold It to the horse's foot to make a Jevel sur face and a qulcli job. No wonder the poor horse goes limping out of the shop in a much worse condition than when he entered. Among the long list of ailments with which the horse Is afflicted, many are the results directly or indirectly of bad shoeing. Navicular disease, lamlnltles, founder, contracted hoofs, thrush, cracks, and various other ills, can all be traced to this source. Men who shoe horses ought to be made to pass an examination, or at least prove their ability in some way be fore they spoil a score of good ani mals In learning the trade. But In the meantime it Is well for every owner and driver of a horse to study shoeing Just ft little. Your horse's hoof de mands a certain kind of shoe, anU it can easily be ruined by being shod Just as all other horses are shod. It has been found that a heavy shoe, which keeps the frog from the ground, will wear out as soon as a light one that allows the frog to touch the sur face, that It is much more likely to come off and be lost, and that It great ly Increases the labor of the horse In tiaveling. Light nails should always be used. They will held the shoe as long as It ought to remain, and will not injure the hoof as much as large and heavy nails. As the Bhoe protects that part of the hoof It covers, while the remainder is constantly wear ing away, it becomes necessary to re move It occasionally, and by paring off the more rapidly growing part to bring the different portions into their relative position. Some horses need to be shod more frequently than oth ers. Horses that are kept on the road, draylng or hauling, need new Bhoes every month or six weeks; hut animals that spend a greater part of their time in the stable, and are driven out only occasionally need not be shod as fre quently as this. Neither the frog nor the sole should be removed in shoeing, and the wall of the hoof should be cut away only enough to take off the sur plus growth. The rasp should never be used on the wall of the foot, either for making a groove, for sinking the nail clinches or for the purpose of Im proving the ' looks of the foot. The nails should not be driven too tight ly, and in removing the old shoe, care Is needed to prevent injury to the hoof. Dennis H. Stovall, In the Epitomist. Work In the Wood Lot. A wood lot that will furnish plenty of fuel for home use, and where there is sufficient growing timber for the lumber that will be needed for repairs or the erection of new buildings, is a valuable part ot the farm and should be highly prized and Judiciously cared for by the owner. It does not require a very large area of thrifty woodland to afford a plenti ful supply for the household. By care ful management there should be a suf ficient amount afforded each year with out detracting from the value of the lot, as there will usually be trees that are past their maturity or dead and that Bhould be removed, to give place to a young and thrifty growth that will soon make its appearance. It will require a little more work and care to move these separate trees a:id not Injure the other than if the trees were to be taken clean, but It will fully pay for the extra work required. In all old wood lots there will bo large trees that have long ago attained their growth and maturity and would better be removed. They may be huge, unwieldly and difficult to reduce to the proper size for the stove or f'jrn ace, but as this work is now largely done by the use of power-sawB, there will be little difficulty In the matter, and one of these trees will make a large amount of the best kind of fuel, solid and lasting. Some farmers have their fuel sawed and, at least, partly split in the wood3, and this naves some work and makes it easier handling the wood In drawing. Occasionally it may be better to cut off all but the small trees from a portion of the wood lot, and allow a new growth to take its place. Where stock is kept off these denuded places the young growth will start up thriftily and soon present a very flourishing appearance. The time for cutting, drawing and selling wood by the cord, which was at one time largely practiced In some parts of our state has gone by. There' was a great destruction of the forests and the winter season witnessed much activity In this business. Too much of it was done and now, in consequence action is being taken for the preserva tion of the woodlands as a most val uable part of the farm property. Before there is much snow Is a good time to select the timber for the pur pose, as well as to cut and prepare It for drawing in logs or to reduce to fire wood on the ground. To make a job complete the brush should be piled or otherwise disposed of. A clean, well cared for wood-lot or forest area Is pleasant to look upon and a credit to the owner. The writer occasionally passes a field by tho roadside where there is an ex tensive addition to a sugar orchard made by the setting out of a large num oer of young maples by the owner. It is on common pasture land and the trees were placed In fairly regular or der. They seem to have done very well since, are in a tttrlfty condition, and there were only a few failures, less than would have been supposed in a Held where cattle are pastured. Some lime these trees will make a fine ad Jition to the adjoining sugar orchard. I think this is the first and only in stance of the kind that has Come un der my observation, but if It will prove successful in this case, then it may be in others, and perhaps by its aid some unproductive land may he put to a good use. E. R. Towle, In The Massachusetts Ploughman. Caught. Snapne Yes; I believe I did say you were always lying about yourself. Bragg Sir, I am not accustomed to hat kind of talk. I'm a gentleman, sir. Snappe There you ar again. London Tit-Bits. fNTHODUCTIVE FIU'IT TREES. Great luxuriance In growth of fruit trees is often the cause of unfruitful ness. No tree commences to flower and fruit until Its vegetative exuber ance has been partially checked. Those who understand the art of fruit cul ture thoroughly can bring these way ward trees Into bearing by root prim ing them. This may be done by dig ging a trench around the tree and then filling it up with the earth Unit has bwn thrown out. The cutting off the ends of the roots cnuses cheek to the extreme vigor, and the result is the production of flowers Instead of branches. The distance from the trunk that the trench should be dug will, of course, depend tipon the age nnd size of the tree. sd nlso its ratio of luxuriance; the aim should be to dig so as to cut off about one-third of its roots. Itoot pruning may be done nt any time during full or winter. E. 15. Rice, in The Epitomist. SINGLE- WHEEL TRUCK. With this truck one ca! pick up a barrel or bag ot grain, fruit or vegeta bles and wheel It away, even over a rough path, something almost liupossi lile with the small, double wheeled grocery and freight trucks. A black smith will mount a wheel beneath a frame, as shown In the int, and fhe PINOLE WHEEIi TitrcK, frame ought to be within the ability of any one handy with tools. A mc- 1 1 n in sized single wheel truck will do much work and do it easier than Is possible with n small double wheel truck. Orange Judd Farmer. EKOWN ROT. This Is one of the most troublesome diseases which affects the plum or chard. When u fleeted with It the fruit rots at the time of ripening, showing the first indications of the trouble where, two plums touch each other on the tree. In moist, warm weather the disease develops most rapidly, the fruit turns brown and a gray mold or fun goiis covering will be observed. Jlueli ot the fruit drops off, but some of it will dry up aud hang on the trees over winter. Not only is the fruit affected, but often the leaves and tender twigs of the trees will be attacked nnd blighted where the disease assumes nn aggravated form; sometimes killing the trees outright; but more often weakening them to a degree which de stroys their future usefulness, yet leaving life enough to perpetuate ami rtislribute the disease the following year. All diseased fruit and twigi should be removed and destroyed as soon as observed, as well as the trees which have been so badly damaged as to be half dead from this cause. As a preventive measure the Irees should be sprayed with Bordeaux mixture early in the spring when the buds com mence to swell and again after flic falling of Ihe calyxes, or green siieallis nt the base of the blossoms. While this will not entirely prevent the dis ease In a year In which It is preva lent. It will altogether with the pre cautionary measures above recom mended nnd a juiliciotr thinning of the fruit go far toward keeping it in subjection. National Fruit Grower. ABOUT TRANSPLANTING. In the West irees do better when planted in November or December, or early in the spring. A lieighbor of mine set out twenty acres of apples last year in December, and lost none of theuj, and over 500 acres more will be set out this De. tMiiber by apple growers of-this section of Oregon. Cloudy days are preferable for setting out trees, and here in Oregon, where someone has said it rains thirteen months of the year, cloudy days ure plentiful in De cember, but In other States they limy not be so, and It is best under those circumstances to do as much of the work as possible late in the afternoon. Roots should be dipped in water, and set in freshly-stirred soil as soon after removal from the nursery as possible. It Is imperative that the soil be pressed firmly around the roots. It is a good plan, when digging holes for trees to set that removed near the top to the side, and place this first about the roots. Trim oft' carefully all broken or mangled roots, and cut back the tops in the same proportion that the roots have been curtailed. The holes should be of sufficient size to allow the roots to spread in the natural condi tions, and deep enough to have the trunks stand a little lower than they stood In the nursery. Mulching a circle somewhat larger than that occupied by the roots of the tree is of great ad vantage, especially In dry soils. The transplanting of trees from the forest is a much more difficult matter than that of trees from the nursery, as the latter have already been removed from their parent seed-bed, and hence forced to keep their roots compact In tak ing up such trees care should be taken to secure good roots and to leave as much earth on them as possible,-D. U. Stovall, In Tua Epitomist. M , JL I LAST INC RELIEF. J. W. Walls, Bupei lntendeut of Streets of Lebanon, Kj says: "My nightly rest was broken, owing to Irregular action of the kidneys. I was suffering Intensely from severe fmlns In the mnnll of my hack and through the kidneys and annoyed by painful passages of abnormal secre tions. No amount of doctoring relieved this condition. I took Doan's Kidney Pills and experienced quick and lasting relief. Doan's Kidney I'llln will proTe a blessing to ail surrerers from kidney disorders who will give them a fair trial." Fosler-Sriiburu Co., Buffalo, N. Y., proprietors. For sale by all drusslsta, p-lco CO cents per box. Rhinoceros Butts Train. A collision recently occurred jon the Uganda railway, British East Africa, that would be possible nowhere else on earth. A huge bull rhlnoctr ob rushed out of the bush and charged at full speed the so-called "Up-rnlx-ed" train, which was Blowing down as It approached the station Sultan Hnmond, 218 mlU's from Mombasa. The train' was stopped, and the "rhino" was discovered about 100 yards down the track. Slowly he re turned to the Jungle, and was lost to sight. He did not escape unharm ed, for pieces of his thick skin were found adhering to the train, but the fierceness of his assault smashed the engine step and splintered the Inch-and-a-halt footboard of the first car riage. A Fortune in Orchids. Miss Ames, of NoUh Easton, Mass., has the finest private collection of or chids In America. It Is worth be tween $300,000 and $400,000. Many of the specimens were brought direct from Borneo or the Indies. BABY'S TERRIBLE SORE Body Unir AVHIi I!uinnrransfl t'ntnld ARony UfiL-tnr Did No flood Mother JHflcouraged Ciitlcurn Cured at Onre. "My child was a very delicate baby. A terrible sore and humor broke out on bin body, looking like raw flesh," and causing the child untold agony. My physician pre scribed various remedies, none of which helped at all. 1 became (liscourr.zrd and took the matter into my own hand?, and tried L'utkura Soap and Cuticura Ointment with almost immediate success. Before the second week had paired the (nrenegs was gone, not leaving a trace of anything. ln. Jeannette 11. Block, 281 Rosetiale St., Rochester, N. Y." John D. Crimmlns Is endeavoring to arrange for the exhibition In New York city of the Irish exhibit at the St. Louis fair, and has obtained an op tion on a building In which to put the exhibit on show. Among the property enumerated by ex-President Paul Kruger In his will was a bottle of snuff, an ear tube, a silk hat, a straw hat and purses con taining about $20 in Transvaal and Brltistl coins. Itgllroariins: In Japan. Japan has 4:i(J miles of railway, of which 1!10 miles were constructed in 1!W3. Tho number of passengers car ried on these railways in 1!)03 was 110,000,000, the freight transported was 10,122,071 metric tons and the rash receipts amounted to about $23, SO0.0OO. Beware of Ointment For ctrr!i Thai . Contain Mercnrr, os mercury will surely destroy the sense o! smell and completely derange t be whole yj tern when entering it throutrii the mucom surfaces. Such articles should never housed except on prescriptions from reputable pny Mciuns, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarru tiire. manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, actios; directly upon the blood and mucoussuri'aces olthesystem. In buying Hall's Cntaarh Cure be sure you i,-et the genuine. It is taken In tornally, and made In Toledo, Oaio, by i J. Cheney ft Co. Testimonials free. bold by br'JKKists; price, 75c. per bottle. 'lake Hall's Family Pills for eonstiatio3. Germ Day. The State of Utah has established a holiday in honor of germs. It is called Ueneral Health Day and is the first Monday in October. On this day ill theatres, churches, public hallf, hotels, boarding houses, etc., must be thoroughly disinfected. To Car a CoM In One Dar 'J ake Laxative Itiorno Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money it it fails to cure. E. V. Grove's signature it on box. 25c. There are 44,000 hotels in the United States. The Minister of the Interior at San tiago, Chile, has granted a concession for extending the railroad across the Cordilleras to Mendoza, Argentina. Chile guarantees the interest oavment of 5 per cent on the construction capital of $7,500,000. blood, wind on the. tom.cn blo.T,d tai. f CA8CARIT8 tod.r, for rou Miff nfbaaW. 1 ST FOR IKE BCWE 4-I " j( CATHARTIC jy Hia Views for Sale. . The story is told by President Hd ley, of Yale University,' who enjoys good story none the less If be hlmeelii ' be the victim. Mr. Hadley was traY eling in Yellowstone Park wheq ha chanced upon a young man, who from his appearance be Judged was a stu dent "This is a wonderful scene, isn't it?" said the Professor. The stranger smiled, nodded to his questioner and turned without speak ing to look at the view. "Do you think," asked Professor Hadley, now confirmed In his Idea that he was talking to a student, "that thla chasm was caused by some great up heaval of uattire, or Js It the result of erosion or glacial action?" What are your views" , "My views," said the stranger quickly, opening a bag he carried con taining photographs, "are only 2 a dozen and are cheap at the price. Let me buow you some samples." Prof. Samuel b. Prescott, assistant professor of biology in the Boston Ins titute of Technology, has been ap pointed to the list of collaborators of the leading bacteriological journal In Germany. He has been recognized as an authority In this branch of science. FITS nermnrwntlT etirnd. No flti or nervous liessnfter flr.-it ilny'H i:so of Dr. Kline' Great Nen-eRn.itQrer.jitrl.i' hottleand treatise free Dr.It.H Ki.iXE.Ltd.,98IAreliHt..rhlli.,Pa. Cavalry of the west coast of Madagascar ride oxen. A Gnnranteefl Cnrff For Vll. ltehini. Blind. Bleeding or Protruding Piles. Drtigiriiti will refund money if Paio Ointment fails to cure in 6 to 14 days. SOo. All the soldiers in the army of Argen tina arc forced to play football. Mrs. Winslow's Soothlnq Syrup for ehlldrea teethlnc, soften the gum, reduces Inflamma tion, allays pain, euros wind nolle, 25c.a bottle The cost of living has doubled in Spain in the last few years. I'lso's Curecnnnot be too hltthly spoken of tr a cough eure. J. W. O'Hriss, 822Thlrd Avenue, Miunenpolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900, At a "smart" dinner in New York but ter is not served Storm Periods. Jtuch Interest has been excited in, scientific circles by the investigations of E. W. Maunder, superintendent of the Greenwich Obscrvntory, In re gard to the periodicity of magnetic stormB and their recurrence at inter vals coincident with the tl for a spot on the sun to go once around and reappear opposite the earth. The conclusion reached is that magnetic storms, like the spots on the sup, are very likely to come every 27 1-3 days, or at Intervals exactly di' visible by that time. The Sultan of Turkey and the Queen of the Netherlands are the on ly total abstainers among European sovereigns. rn', Another club woman, Haute, of Edgerton, Wis., tells how she was cured of irregulari ties and uterine trouble, terrible pains and backache, by the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. "Dear Mas. Pinkham: A while ago my health began to fail because of, female troubles. The doctor did not ' help me. I remembered that nay mother t had used I.ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound on many oc casions for irregularities sod uterine troubles, and I felt sure that it could Dot harm me at any rate to give it a trial. " I was certainly glad to find thai within a week I felt much better, the terrible pains in the back and side were beginning to cease, and at the time of menstruation I did not have nearly as serious a time as heretofore, so I continued its use for two months, and at the end of that time I was lika a new woman. I really have never felt better in my life, hare not had a sick headache since, and weigh 20 pounds more than I ever did, so I un hesitatingly recommend your medi cine." Mas, Mat H a ui.e, Edgerton, Wis.. Pres. Household Economics Clutx SSOOO forfeit If original of abov lotttr promof ttnumtnoas cannot ba product. JEND STAMP Get (tescrlptlon of sfteneapett larms In ttlo. H. N. Bancroft, JeSerson, O. ' ?ppd,ci?' '""n4. bad breath. b4 u; l1.'.' X, SPAWNS ' fail
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers