THE DISCOVERER Of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, the Qreat Woman's Remedy for Woman's His. No other female medlciDe in the world baa received such widespread nd unqualified endorsement. .. ' No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles or such hosts of grateful friends as has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It will entirely cure the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovarian Troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration. Falling and Displacement of the Womb, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change of Life. It has cured more eases of Backache and Leueorrhcea than any other rem edy the world has ever known. It is almost infallible in such rases. It dissolves and expels tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of de velopment. Irregular, Suppressed or Painful Menstruation, Weakness of the Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration, Hesdache, General Debil ity quickly yield to it. Womb troubles, causing pain, weight and backache, in stantly relieved Bnd permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it invigorates the female system, and is as harmless as water. It quickly removes that Bearing-down Feeling, extreme lassitude, "don't care" and " want-to-be-lcft-alone " feeling, excitability, irritability, nervous ness, Dizziness, Faintness, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy or the "blues" and headache These are sure indications of Female Weakness, or some de rangement of the Uterus, which this medicine always cures. Kidney Complaint and Backache, of either sex, the Vegetable Compound always cures. Those women who refuse to accept anything else are rewarded a hundred thousand times, for they get what they" want a cure. Sold by Druggists everywhere. Hcfuse all substitutes. ALWAYS CALL FOR A CIGAR BY ITS NAME MEANS MORE THAN ANY OTHER NAME BR OWH Bi.TOS GOOD FOR PRESORTS "Largsst lelltr la tba World." messm 1.000 Plants for I6c. DOIT ginirni aim ini mn mo " , , .' . -M , M KRM70r'C orttw tnan mnj mnvr 111 Plrnrira. The.rff Is rftAHOn for till. i U'm ..wii Afr IYO.TG fcrre for ttlft Pr I rtoctlon of onr wurriiiilrd tpd. jln onler to intiwo you to try iem, w For IB Cmntm Potpml4 ItOAO ftln Jwtey T -,, KM RuUTUUIN JlttWI npfcfHii.l UBSM. 1K Hart tat! KiIWM, 10(10 ti.ortMalr BrillUut riM. Above eve:i packfcfff contain tmffl , cfont to (trow 1&.O0U plfi!i. fill ntchlnir buhel of brilliant 4 lltwrnui'l lots and lot or choice Trtrtable,to(retherw1thnar(ir fl cmtnloiEjtrinngallfcbout Flowers, W Bourn, Small Friitta, etc, all for . 0 in lUnipi ana en is notiM. m Big ltttft0ctalfftuoQte. JOHI A. SAUER SEER CO, 1.0-u L.S croeee, wia. BAD BLOOD I tatd trouble with my bow It which mad a my blood impure. My face was eorered with pimplea which no external remedy con Id reaoTe. I tried ynnr Canrareti and great waa my Joy when th BimitUl A la mnfiiroii frjt sa BiAntk'i lUail mm m. r bare rernmmetided them to ail mi Mmndm atntt f oi a few have foaWl relief' C. J. Poach. K7 i'mrk Arm,, Vaw Torfe City, M. I. . Best For The bowels Wwant. Palatable, Potent, Tatte Good. Do flood, Never "Sicken, W oaken or Gripe, 10c. Re, Wc. Never old in bilk. The gnnnlne tablet tamped 0 C 0. Guaranteed to eon or your money back Sterling Remedy Co., ChicafO or N.Y. 6oo AXKUALSALE. TEN MILLION BOXES t TAKE CARE OF YOUR HAIR BY USINQ J MONTGOMERY'S HAIR RESTORER. O 0 Promotes the growth. Restores Its w Natural color. HreYouts the falling. 9 Fres from dandruff tTsd fifty years. T Sold by all drumtlsts. SI .00. 9 9 WM. C. MONTGOMERY CO. n O S36 N. 8th Street. Philadelphia. Pa- X BttlCMMC OnsM at z OItII War, oroaalia rCIIOlUna bllltT.anrwar.and for widows. Han records of moat lojiu mildleis' eervlre, and nf Oblo men. S? yrmrt praelfre. Lawi and advice FHEE a.W.Jio oaaica a Koki. (IB Walnut at.. Cincinnati, 0 FEND STAMP Uet deaorlptloa nf rtehrapeat tarma In pblo. II. N. Bancroft, Jeffereoa, O. P. N. U. 4. 1905. "CliiO" aAva w CANDY CATHARTIC f Ewisicasa. America has retaliated upon Sir Ed ward Clarke and his proposal to call the Great Republic "Usona." "You're another," says the United States of North America to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and all the Rritish dominions beyond the seas i "Ewisicasa! Yah!" For we are Eng- land, Wales, Ireland, Scotland, India, Canada, Australia, and South Africa, though we may not all approve of the order of the initials. But if we ad dress our letters to "Usona" the re ply will come to "Ewisicasa." Lon don Chronicle. Day and Year the Came. The latest tests of the motions of Venus indicate that astronomers have hecn correct in believing that the plnnet rotates on its axis in tho same time It requires for a revolution around the sun. That is to say, a day in Venus is tho same as a year in time. Among thong who have received the high rt award the Grand Prize at St. Louis World's Fair, was the A. .1. Tower Co.. the makers of the Fish Jlrand Slicker. Manv of our readers who went to the Fair, will rerall their fine exhibit in which water proof pirmentB were shown adapted to so many uses that almost every department of the world's work was suggested. The (irand Prize was a deserved tribute to one of the oldest manufacturing concerns in the country. The Mexican dollar is disappearing from international circulation. Alcohol from Peat. A company has recently been or ganized at Rendsburg, Prussia, for the purpose of distilling alcohol from peat. According to its process the. company will bo able to distill ale hoi cheaper from peat than it can b-! obtained from any other substance and will, therefore, be ablo to ss'l its product for fuel purposes. It will also be in a position to do an export business. " All British public men have popu' lar nicknames. The recent arrival of Dr. Jameson at Cape Town was an nounced as the "return of Sunny Jim." CONSTANT . ACHIKC. - Back aches nil the time. Spoils your appetite, wearies the body, worrits the mind. Kidneys cause it all and Doan's Kidney rills relieve and cure It. II. 1$. McCnrver, of 'Ml Cherry St. Portland, Ore., in spector of frelcht for the Trans-Con-tlnental Co., says: "InsedDoan'a Kid ney Pills for back ache and other symptoms of kid ney tronble which bad annoyed me for months. I think cold wag responsi ble for the whole trouble. It seemed to settle in my kld- I ru-ys. , Doan's Kidney Pills rooted It out. It ii several months since I used them, and up to date there has been no recurrence of the trouble." Doan's Kidney Tills for sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents per box. ro ter-Mllbnro Co.. Buffalo, N. Xi bl f ii a w ) FARM TOPICS. FKI2D Til EM BONE. Bone is one of the best substances that can be fed to the lions, tlrouml or broken bnne is highly lellKhi'd. It lint only contains lime for slii'lls, lint also nitrogen ii ml the pliospliutcH. It should be kept before the hens In boxes all the time. a (iATh srrronT. All of our Kates are hung as In tlin nccoiiipnnjiiiK cut. and we ill id It to be the best way we have yet seen to prevent sagging. Believe the Idea was originated from seeing something along the same line In a railroad gate. In any case we have never found any thing that will bent H. Dr. L. E. Kerr, In The Kpiton'iist. FEEDIXO MILK TO POULTRY. Farmers who have more or less skim milk and a generous supply of sour milk enn feed both profitably to laying liens during the winter. Milk should be given as other things are fed, with a view to having as much variety as possible. While the fowls rarely tire of the milk, it generally brings the best results if the preparation of It is somewhat varied. For example: When the weather Is cold, give the birds a lot of warm milk In the morning, put ting it in a trough. Tho next night feed them a warm mash, but mix the bran with milk in stead of water. This is an excellent way to use the sour milk or milk that is too thick to feed alone. Another time cook a lot of small potatoes, chop them flue and mix with the sour milk, then feed warm creamed potatoes In a way. One has no Idea how laying hens enjoy such variety and what a decided difference it makes in the egg production. Indianapolis News. PLASTERING HENHOUSES. This is the question sonic are raining, and I note thnt some one says, "Ycn; plaster Uiem." I wonder if the man who says that really ever did plaster one of bis henhouses. If so, there is one question I would liko to ask blui, and that is, "How did you keep the hens from digging the plaster off and devouring it?" Perhaps the answer may be that if I were to glvev bens the right kind of feed, especially of grit in some form, I would not need to do anything further to ensure the permanency of my walls. I admit that few of us are likely to err on the side of giving too much grit. Hens seem to be able to take and take profit ably a large amount of such kind of feed, but I never yet saw a lot of hens so well supplied wl:h grits t'int If they could get at a wall of sand and lime, they would not dig it to pieces if tliey ever got a break in it anywhere. The lirst crack that appears is the signal for them to break for it if it is any where within their reach. If I were to plaster a henhouse, I would certainly board it up high enough go that the hens could not reach the wall to peck at it, or I would make it of adamant or some substance that the bens do not love as they do sand and lime. E. L. Vincent, in The Epitoniist PROGRESS IN KNOWLEDGE. One of the greatest contributions of science to agriculture is the demonstra tion of the means through which nitro gen is fixed in the legumes. Even when It was determined that the acquisition of nitrogen was through the agency of forms inhabiting root nodules of leg umes, the character of these organ isms was a source of discussion be cause of the difference in form from that common to bacteria In general. But now their bacterial character is admitted and farmers are understand ing that these invisible plants are the agents for getting the nitrogen, and that without them on the roots the legumes have no more power than other plants to get It. Of course, it is the reading farmers, the student farm ers, the book farmers who are learn ing these things, and the fact that they have learned them is the great reason for their getting In advance of their neighbors who still refuse to study and learn. In the early days of agri cultural colleges one president of a college declared that farming was merely an art and that it could not bo taught In a college. But nil the Col leges have come to realize that farm ing is a science that can be taught, and that the more a farmer learns of the discoveries of scientists the bet ter is he prepared to be an expert In ills profession. Farming Is no longer a mere art or trade, but a procession involving more learning than any of the professions which formerly arro gated to themselves the title of learned. The chemist may understand his profession, the biologist his, nud the physicist his, and know nothing outside of them, but the farmer must know something of all of these ,nad more. In no department of human knowledge has there been a greater advance In raodcrn times tNan In agri culture, the nost complex of all the sciences. Practical Farmer. Tho French postal department has decided to replace its mall coaches by electric motor cars. ( Influence of Balnte-Beuve. - Balnte-Beuve Is the foremost literary critic of tho nineteenth century In the Influence he has exerted upon his fel lows. In a very real sense Matthew Arnold in England and - Tnlno In Franco are his dlnclpleii or ut least ho Is their literary anctPtor. They do- rive from him, and the doctrines they Tnivo mado explicit nro often Implicit in him. Tho part of Talne's critical theory wliich hits withstood tho test of tlmo is t Mr. t which Talno acquired from Ssilntc-lliMive; uud not a few of tho points which Arnold prcs.'icd In Blstently on tho nl I tin Ion of nil who tcud English he took over from bis French prrcedessor. There uro no real critics of literature of our time, from Mr. James In America to M. Brunetlere in France, who have not come under Ms spell at some period cf their own development, anil who have not ah.npened their own vision by a more or less deliberate iippliea lion of the methods of Snlntc-Bcuve. Century. PITSrnrmanenllv eurinl. Vn fit" nnrvons ressnfler first rlnv's ns o' Ilr. Kline's Ornat Nervelleslore.r.l'litrlrtl hot! Icaml tr"atlnf-e Dr. It. II Kmsk.LM. "fit Aw'iMt..rhlln.,I,. Hoof ynnles ere now common feature! in houtliera t. aiifmnir.. A Gtiarnnfcft'l Cur Irnr I'llas. Itchintf. Illlnd. B'eeiliin or I'rotntding Piles. Dmgimts will refund moner if I'sto Ointment fails to cure in 1 n 14 ilnyi. Sue. A FormoM man mupt have a license be fore he is allowed to smoke opium. Mnny Selinnl fltlltlien Are SlcVW. Votlierflrnv's Sweet Powders 'or C!lililren, ttsed by Mother flray. n uursn In Children's Home. New York, break uneo'ds In V4hours, eure Feverlshn-ss, OnstlTttlon, Htomsnh Troubles. Tenthln Tilsonlnrs and Destroy Worms. Atnllrlruepl"t.2f)e. Ritmp'o mailed Fnr.r.. Address Allen H. Olmsled,Lltoy,N.Y. Vienna lias the largest public bath in Europe. Mrs. Wlnslow's S'oothlne; Svmp for nhlldran teethlnsr, soften the rums, 'educes Inflamma tion, allays palu. nitres wind colic, SSc.sbottls The first United States mint was estab lished in 1792. J do not bellevo IMsn's t'nre for Consitmn tlonhas anenuul for coughs and colds. Jotit F.UoTR,Trinltv Kprltt7S. Tml.. Feb. 18, 190J. Smith Africa exports 28.no,OOI) worth of diamonds to London nnnimliv. A Good Move. The United States department of agricultural which has been rather active of Into In its experiments with articles of food, willtake up tho ques tion of good coffee this winter and learn from experts the best methods of growing the berry and preparing It for the table. It is said some of the processes that produce Turkish cof fee are secret, but thero nro vurlous methods In vogue In other countries which will be disclosed to tho pub lic. HO Itn. Mnenronl Wlient Per Acre, introduced by the U. B. Dept. of Agr. It is a tremendous cropper, yielding in 8ood land in Wis., 111., Jit., Mich., Intl., I., Pa., N. Y., 80 bu. per ocre, and on dry, arid lands, such as arc found in Mont.. Idaho, tho Dnkotas, Colo., etc., it will yield from 40 to 00 hu. Thia Wheat and (Spelts and Hanna lint ley and itromus lnerniis and Billion Dollar Gruss, makes it possible to grow and fatten hogs, bhecp ana cattle wherever soil is found. JUftr HKND 10c AND THIS NOTICE o the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., and they will send you free a sample of this Wheat and other farm seeds, to gether with their great catalog, ulona worth (lOU.OO to any wide-awake farmer. A, C. L. Thrones of Europe. There are 15 thrones In Europe, and eight now promise to pass from father to son. The latter are those of Great Britain, Germany, Denmark, Portugal, Norway and Sweden, Bul garia, Russia and Italy. The Sultan may be succeeded by a brother and tho King of Spain by a sister. The Emperor of Austria, the King of the Belgians and the King of Roum.'mla look to nephews, while the, ruler of Holland has no visible successor at present. DISFIGURING ULCER People Looked nt Her In Amazement Pronounced 1 ncurnble r'aco Vow Clear a Krcr Tlmnks ! For C'utlcurn. Mrs. P. Hackett, of 400 Van Buren St., Brooklyn, Ji. Y., aay: "1 wish to givo thanks for the marvelous cure of iny moth er 'by Cuticiira. She had a severe ulcer, which physicians had pronounced incur able. It was a terrible tiisllzurenient. and people would stand in amazement and look nfter her. After there was no hope from doctors she lieean using Cutlcura Soap, Ointment and Pills, and now, thank (Jod, she is completely cured, nnd her iacc is u smooth und elenr as ever." His Simple Secret. A complaint was made that people had been travelling on the railroads without a ticket, and the companies had a detective employed to discov er the offenders. Tho detective trav elled up and down for some days without discovering the culprit. At last two men got Into his car who began talking in a whisper, and one gave the other a coin, and they alighted at the next station; so the detective, thinking ho had got his clue, followed the man who had gi eti the coin, and said he understood they had been talking about travelling without a ticket, and as ho (the de tective) was a very poor man, he should be glad to kivsw how they managed. The other eyed him suspiciously, nnd then suld, "If you make It worth my while, I thluk I can tell you." Tho detective then offered him fifty cents, but that he refused. "Seventy five cents?" "No." "Will you take a dollar?" That offer was accepted, and the money paid. Then the man said, "Do you really want to know what I do when I wish to travel without a ticket? Well, then, I'll tell you. I walk." , . THE AMERICAN GOOSE. The Ancestors of Our Natlv Blrd-rier Lay Inn Abilities. Geese are raised all over the country and can be bought nt the poultry uiar- ketB; nud nil of our people who come, from iicross the water give hlin the preference over turkey, nt the same time complaining Unit much of the sweetness of flavor Is lost in the birds raised here. The flesh Is white, like the turkey, and very different from the (lark meat of the duck, nnd In size the goosp Is half way between the other two birds. Of the breeds raised In our country, tho African goose Is perhaps the most prolltable, giving best and quickest re turns for the least amount of labor; but each of the other varieties has points to make It popular. The Chi nese goose, If it lay not the golden egg, at least lays so diligently of the nor mal kind as to be a marvel In the poultry yard, sixty In a year being the ;-u ut of some of their best layers, Then there is the Toulouse, which gives attention to weight rather than eggs, and so successfully that at least one pair was exhibited with the record of sixty pounds between them. For a good, all-round bird, not given to stunts In nny direction, but easy to raise, lay Jug well, and having excellently flav ored flesh, tho Canada goose tcannot be matched. Nor must we overlook those geese or no particular breed, the descendants of the birds brought over by the early settlers to America, which, If they were siilllelently 'interested, could probably trace their line with less trouble than some members of the more aspiring man world. Augusta Kortrccht, In Good Housekeeping. The. Newspaper Ail, Rnllcltor. The newspaper ad. solicitor, to In sure success In Ills particular line, must be a student of human nature. As we are told that the proper study of mankind is man, go the proper study for the nd. solicitor Is the business mnu and bis business methods. The knowl edge necessary to successfully solicit ads. Is of such n diameter that it Is only by those thnt possess the faculty of studying systematically the many methods practiced in the operation of commercial life that success Is at tained. The solicitor, must not only possess a thorough knowledge of clr cut .tlon, rates, character nnd field of the particular paper which he repre sents, but also In like manner nil other -newspapers Issued In his Immediate vl rlnlty. In the operation of business It Is found necessary to practice par ticular methods In particular lines, and the expert solicitor will pursue certain methods that will prove successful in certain lines. The method that will produce good results In one case may prove an utter failure in others; hence the necessity of a genernl knowledge of the character of the particular busi. ness for which an advertisement Is solicited. The solicitor must be thor oughly hnnost In all his business deal ings. He must possess nnd cherish the good will of the people with whom he comes In contact, value bis honor and reputation above all else, and by his conduct prove himself worthy of the confidence of business men. rress and I'ritiler. Hewers of Concrete, In digging the New York subway the men uncovered many sowers which had to lie rebuilt. At first they built the new sewers of brick. Pres ently the bricklayers, who were re ceiving $3.20 a day, struck for higher w-ages. The -work stopped. The In- dispensable bricklayers left the sub way. But the old adage came to Mr. rarsons' mind, "There nro more wnys to kill n cat than by choking him with cream." Concrete work was cheap; why not build the sewers of concrete? Experiments were unexpectedly suc cessful. Thereafter concrete was used almost exclusively a new kind of sewer had been evolved, cheaper than the brick sewer nnd better. This is one of the many contributions the building of the subway has made to cnglnecrjng. M. G. Cunnlff, In the World's Work. A Scrapbook of Real Vnlti. To devote a scrapbook to one sub ject makes it much mt Interesting and valuable and -when you begin to gather material on any one theme you will be surprised nt the amount which will coine to hand. Suppose-that you want to know all about some famous person, either in the public eye at present, or tome one of past times. From magazines and other sources can be collected articles, portraits, perhaps poems, in relation to the subject, etc. When matter Is clipped the scrapbook maker may copy It neatly with a pen into her book. The educational value of such a book is something worth while, as well as the satisfaction of having gathered oneself so much infor mation ou a single subject. The Smallest Picture. A Flemish artist has produced what Is said to be the smallest painting In the world. It is n picture of a miller mounting the stairs of a mill aud carrying n sack of grain on his back. The mill is depicted as standing near a tprrace. Close nt hand are a horse and cart, with a few groups of peasants Idling in the road near by. All this is painted on the smooth side of a grain of oriHnnrywhite corn. It Is necessary to examine it tinder a microscope, nnd it is drawn with perfect accuracy. It does not cover a half-Inch square, and it is in many re spects one of tho most remarkable art products of the day. Police Are Punished. After a students' demonstration near the Kazan Cathedral, at St. Petersburg, the police arrested twelve girls. Gen eral Foullen, the prefect, on hearing of this, ordered their release yid the punishment of the men who tad them CAUGHT BY THE GRIP RELEASED BY PE-RU-NA. VVreVVreVVWeVrerrVVVVVVeV La Qrippe ii Epidemic Catarrh. i i' npurea no cluss or nationality. The cultured and the ignorant, the aristo crat und the iiuiincr. the musses and the classes are ulike subject to la gripjie. None are exempt un are name. iirip is wen nameil. Hie original r renin term, la gripie, has been Hhnrtcncd by the busy American to read "grip." Without intending to do so, a new word has been coined thut exactly describes the case. As if Home hideous giant with uwful grip had clutched us in its fatal clasp. Men, women, children, whole towns and cities arc caught in the baneful grip of a lernole monster. Have you the grip? Or, rather, has the grip lettei gut your 11 so, read the following CIS. These testimonials speak for themselvea as to the cfiicacy nf i'eruna in cases of la grippe or its after-effects: A Southern Judge Cured. Judge Horatio J. Goss, Ilurtwell, Go., writes: Home five or six years ago I had a very severe spell of grip which left me with sys temic catarrh. Revival JT Roller 8kating. Forty or fifty roller skating rinks have been built and opened to the public In New England, New Jersey and other stuies within tho last year. All are well patronized and their pro moters believe that this sport, ne glected for 20 years, will again become popular. In the late '70s and early K0a roller skating almost attained the dignity of a national amusement. No person was too old or too young to use the rinks. The hockey games, endurance races, and exhibitions of fancy skating arranged by rink owners attracted big audiences for four or five years before the popular appetite was satisfied. Then, and almost in a moment, roller skating fell Into disfavor. Only children clung to It, and on them It hns never lost Its hold. This sud den loss of popularity was due sim ply to the fact that the passtime was worked to death, for although a good many harsh charges were made by solemn moralists against It, these never could have killed It. Now it is returning, as a novelty, with another generation of pleasure seekers to ap peal to, but it Is improbable that it will ever regain the glory It once had. The out-of-doors cult has made great progress since 1885, and roller skat ing is an Indoor game. New York Sun. Apple and Anolfitetf. George 111. was wondering how the apple got Into tb; dumpling. "Because the policeman on our beat prefers it that way," explained Queen Charlotte. From that moment the King's mind began to totter. New Xork Hnn. How's Tills? W ofiar On Hundred Dollar Reward fo any case of Catarrh that cannot b cared b H alt's Catarrh Cure. . J. Chiset & Co., Toledo, O. We,' the undersigned, have known J. Cheney for the last IS years, ami believe him perfectly honorable in all business transac tion. and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their Arm. West 4 Troax, Wholesale Druggists, To ledo, O, Wjldixo, Kixxa A Miavi, Wholesale Druitgists, Toledo, O. Ball's Catarrh Cure Is talcea Internally, act ing directly upon, the blood and mucoussur- laces ot the system. Testimouials sent free. I'rlce, 75c. per bottle, gold by alt DrugsrisU. 'lake Hall's Family Pills for constipation. No Notion or Heal Tronble. "I bet 1 get into more trouble than any man in this State," volunteered the young fellow. ".Nothing in the trouble line overlooks me. Why, I'd be afraid to marry" "What! Ain't you married?" ejacu lated the elderly party. "Boy, you don't know what trouble Is." Louis ville Courier-Journal. Railroads Kill Most. The railroads kill more people than battles. For the fiscal year ended June 30, 1904, 55.130 persons were killed and injured on the railroads of I the United States and as many more In Europe. The capture of Port Ar thur is estimated to have cost 80,000 men. The killed, wounded and miss ing nt Waterloo were 54,400. Peace hath Its dangers. One hundred more double stars have been discovered and measured at the Lick Observatory. "A friend advised me to try your Pe runa, which I did, and was immediately lieiiRiiled and cured. The third bottle com pleted the cure." H. ,1. Goss. Cured in a Few Weeks. Miss .lean Cowgill, Oriswold Oir House, Troy, N. ., is the leading ladr with the Aubrey Stock Co. She write the following: "During the pant winter of 1001" I suf fered for several weeks from a severe at tack of grip, which left a serious catarrhal condition of the throat and head. ".Some one suggested I'eruna. As last resort, after wasting niurh time and money on physicians, I tried the remedy faith fully, and in a few weeks was as well as ever." .Jean (owgill. Saved by Pe-m-na. Hon. James K. Guill is one of the oldest and most esteemed men of Omaha, Neb. He has done much to make it what it is, serving on public boards a number nf times. He endorses i'eruna in the following words: . "I am GB years old, am hale and hearty and i'eruna has helped me attain it. Two years ago I had la grippe my life was de spaired of. i'eruna save me. J. R. Gaill. COLOR BLINDNESS COMMON. Many Young Men Rejected at Naval ' Recruiting Station. Many American youths full to get into tho army and navy because of physical defects. Lieutenant S. M. Price, who is In charge of the Clev land naval recruiting office, stated that --there were enough applicants for the naval service, but that the majority were rejected for physical reasons. A very common defect among the young men Is color blind ness. Lieutenant Price says it is a very frequent occurrence for an ap plicant to be unable to tell green from red. To Care a Cold In On Pay Take Laxative iiromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. K. VV. Grove's signature is on box. 2.rie In 1903 we were Switzerland's best cus tomer. Coal and Railroads. The total coal production of the United States is now at the rate of 1,000,000 tans per day, and the consumption of coal fiy railroads is equal to 40 pep cent, of this, or 400,000 tons per day. The fuel bill of a railroad contributes about 10 per cent, of the total ex pense of operation and 30 to 40 per cent, of the total cost of running the locomotives. A locomotive will con sume on an average $5,000 worth of coal per annum, and for a road hav ing an equipment of 1,000 locomotives the coal bill is approximately $5,000, 000. A new marine reptile has been dis covered in the Hosselkus limestone in the upper triassic of Shasta county, California. - - - THERE IS NOTHING ? more painful thsa Rheumatism $ and Neuralgia J but ther It nothfpf wrer to - i our tbaa T I St Jacobs Oil ! TH eld meek cure. It ts s traant, prompt sad aafatdnc. Pric 5o. asaat 50o. ttitttlttMitttlHttlltttt ir wit a
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers