I THINK OF IT ! Tin's Vrrlh) Matron Had Hrnd ache- and Hitckache, and Uc.r Condition Mas Serious. PE-HU-XA CURED- RWmm I ; V MRS. M. BRICKNER. tUerenlh Street, 1 .WUiraiikre, iris. ( ".4 nhart time ago 1 found my con dltlonvero KeWoiix. I hadheadarhex, pa Inn in the. bach; and frequent dizzy upellHwMckfirew worse every month. 1 tried two remedlf before 1'eruna, and won discouraged when 1 took the flrsf done, but ttii; courage norm retumrd. In le than fw month my health wan restored." Mrs. M. ISrickner, The renson of no many failures to cure caws similar to the above is the fact that diseases peculiar FEMALE TROUBLE NOT KEC0GN1ZED A8 CATARRH. to the female sex are not com monly recognized a uciug cuiisra py caiarrn. -Catarrh of one orpan is exactly the same as catarrh of any Aiher o.-gan. What will cure .catarrh of the head will also cure , catarrh of the pelvic organs. J'eruna cures these cases simply because it cures the catarrh. If you have catarrh write at once to Dr. Hartman, iTi'ng a full statement of your case, and nt will be pleased to give you his valuable advice jjratii. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium. Columbus. O. Paid Batter Than PreaqWhg. About 18 fiionths ago Rev. H. W. Knickerbocker, of Trinity Methodist Episcopal Church, Los Ance.es, Crtl., was deposed for heresy. He went to a mlnlns camp, where he got work as an ordinary miner. After a time he purchased some claims for a few dollars, hter selling them for $1,400. New he is worth .$100,000, owns 30 claims outright and has an interest in as many more, besides doing a large brokerage business. A School of Sculpture. Samuel Bowles, a banker, will es tablish a school of modeling in Rut land, Vt., which he will endow with a sum sufficient to pay its running expenses. His purpose is to educate American children in the art of sculp ture hi order that it may not be ne cessary for Vermont marble manu facturers to secure foreign workmen in this branch of the industry. The Fastest Animals. Thompson Seton classifies animals as follows regarding speed: First, the greyhound with a record of 34 miles per hour; the race horse, 32; Ameri can pronghorn antelope, 30; Jack rabbit, 28; fox, 2G; coyote, 24; fox bound, 22, and American gray wolf, 20. A man's best speed works out at about 14 miles an hour. These animal speeds were determined by ac tual observation with a stop watch. The African black antelope and the hunting cheetah are said to be near the head of the list as regards speed. Royalty and Horses. King Edward wants a horse named Cyclone. His predecessor, King Richard III. wanted one also, but did n't mention the name. Boston Tran script. FITBnormnnentl v enred. o(It or norvons- nsssafter first (lav's use of T)r. Kline's Great NerveHestoror,if!2trialbottle and treatise free., Dr. It. H, Klimk. Ltd.,931 Arch St., Talla., Pa. Very few persons understand the value of regularity of habits. The Emperor of Oermany lakes his meals with hiz whole family. . Mrs.Winslow's SoothinSyran forchlldren tsethlnc, soften the turns, reduces inflamma tion, allayspatn, euros wind collc,26c.abottle. Professor Hollander has been investigat : ing Dominican finances. riso's Cnre Is the best medicine we evernsa lor all affections of throat and limes. Wn. . Erdblet, Vanburen. Ind.. Fob. 10, liKW. Bishop Iieckwith, of Georgia, was fond of shooting. The Dog Knew the Tune. A dog taken from Medford, Mass., to Dunham, N. H., remained quietly In his, new quarters until one day a hand organ man came 'to the front of the house and played the air, "Home, Sweet Home," which the dog had frequently heard in his own home at Mdtord. Shortly after that he vanished, and his whereabouts was only discovered by a letter from a family in Chelsea, MasB., who had kindly taken care of him, to his own ,er at Medford, whose name was in scribed on his collar. He had evi dently walked all the distance from Durham to Chelsea in an attempt to find his Medford home, where he is again now happily resting from hi3 long journey. Philadelphia, Tele graph. pahs TRADE-MARKS DESIGNS and COPYRIGHTS. I BECUUKD OR FKK UbTTKKED Bend postal for our new bonk. Just out : Whnr to Invent, flow to Invent, How to obtnln lfnl eut. How to sell your I'atvnt when obtnitmilt" Instructions relating to assignments, shop rights, county and stale rlehl.and royalty contract. JOHN S. BUFF1E & CO., Pat. Atti.. Washington, D. C. ' 4 CUIUS HUM 1U Ci.SE FAILS. J I Best Conga Bjrop. I'aswattood. Cm f I J J Id tltno. toltf r druRffra. Ti Wants a Convict Wife. If there is some young womaa in Missouri who has bow in the pen! tentiary, tuil who wishes to become the wife of an ex-convict who has a splendid record for good behavior while in prison, she may find het affinity by communicating with Gov. Folk. In the governor's mail recent ly was a letter from a man who Btated that he had "done time" at Jefferson City, but that now he was looking for a wife. "She must be a blonde," he wrote, "and weighing about 140 pounds, and who has done time. I don't want a woman from either St. Louis or Kan sas City, but one who was raised in the country. Experience has taught me that tho less a girl Knows about city life and city ways the better wife she makes." Kansas City Journal. A Forestry Investment. Under the direction of Philip W. Ayres, state forester of New Hamp shire, 20,000 white pine seedlings shipped from Sturgeon Bay, Wis., are being planted in Bedford, on the banks of the Merrimack river. Thw trees .will be set out on a portion of a 200-acre tract which was cut over tv.'o years ago by one or the great lumber companies, and the actual cost, Including the first cost of the trees, which was $77.00 at the nurs ery at Sturgeon Bay, express charges of $5.75, and the labor of planting will be $0 an acre. Boston Tran script. Side Lights on War. New and Interesting side lights on the Civil War are promised in the June Century: "What a Boy Saw of the Civil War," by the Rev. Leigh ton Parks, rector of St. Bartholo mew's, New York City, with glimpses of Robert E. Lee; a curious and sur prising article on "Boys in the Union Army," by George Langdon Kilmer; "A Pupil's Recollections of 'Stone wall' Jackson;" and "Recollections of Jubal Early," "by one who followed him." These articles, with several stories, including "Miss Sally and the Enemy,' a war-story by Gonvrn eur Morris, and "In the Virginia Room," by Arlo Bates (the scene laid in one of the rooms of the Confeder ate Museum at Richmond), make up a number of special interest in the Memorial Day season. Are tho Packers Receiving Fair I'la.vT When the Gnraelcl report on the business methods of the packers ap peared, after eight months' investiga tion, it was severely criticised ami roundly denounced. After three months of publicity it is significant that those who attempted to discredit it have failed to controvert the figures con tained in that exhaustive document. The public is beginning to notice this omission, and the feeling is . rapidly growing that the sensational charges out of which the "Beef Investigation" arose were without foundation. If the official statements of the report are susceptible of contradiction, a good many people are now asking why the facts and figures are not furnished to contradict them., This truth seems to be that most of the charges contain unfounded sensa tional assertions. A flagrant example of this appeal 1 in a recent article In an Eastern magazine, to the effect that "forty Iowa banks were forced to close their doors in 1003-4 by the Beef Trust's manipulation of cattle' prices." Chief Clerk Cox, of the banking de partment of the Iowa State Auditor's office, has tabulated the, list of banks given in the magazine article and has publicly denounced tho statement as utterly untrue. Ho gives separately the reasons for each failure mentioned and officially states that they have been caused by unwise speculations and by reckless banking methods. It may be well to suspend Judgment upon the packers until the charges against them are proved. Star Rockets and Aerial Torches. As a means of illuminating a field of battle at night, the searchlight had one serious defect, and that was its tendency to cast black shadows into ravines and depressions of the ground. In order to illuminate such places the Russians made use of star rockets and aerial torches, which shed light directly downward Into natural or artificial depressions of the ground which the horizontal rays of the searchlight could not reach. Some Accommodation There. One of the developments of Glas gow's municipal street car system Is providing private early morning cars for bringing home dance parties. A car requisitioned for such a purpose comes at any required hour to the point nearest the place where the dance is being held, and takes the dancers to any desired point on the road. EVERY WALK IN LIFE. A. A. Boyce, a farmer living three and a half miles from I'renton, v "A severe $SmLI?I cold settled account of the aching in my back and sides, for a time I was unable to walk at all, and every makeshift I tried and all the medicine I took bad not the slightest -effect My back continued to grow weaker until I began taking Doan's Kidney fills, and I must say I was more than surprised and grati fied to notice the backache disappear ing gradually until it finally stopped." Doan's Kidney fills sold by all dfal ers or by mall on receipt of price.' 50 cents per box. F oater-MJlburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y. iu my. -zmwmm&? MINISTER'S GOLD- QUEST. Successful in the Klondike-allardsliips and Good Fortune in North. AY not up for yourselves treasures upon earth," says the Scriptures; but the Rev. Hiram Vroomnn, lately pas tor of the Itoxbury New Jerusalem Church, preach er, author, philosopher, moralist, Presi dent of the Feredation of Religions, hns been heedless of the Injunction to a degree which makes the priestly vow of poverty seem like a Jeu d'esprlt or the baseless fabric of a theological dream. But the Rev. Mr. Vrooman, though he be Just back from the Klondike, where within a few months he has added to his worldy possessions In gold dust nnd staked claims about $100,000, is not nfter riches as an end solely; he would, he says, make It a means large ly to further the work of the Federa tion of Religions, about which he hns thought anil written much. A Boston Hera ltl reporter called npen him in his studio In Clarendon street tho other day. "Yes," said Sir. Vroo mau, "I have recpntly returned from the Klondike, whither I went last spring, after resigning my pastorate in Roxbury. That I have done well I cannot deny, nnd certainly expect to do vastly better next season. My properties are on the Hontallnqun River, Yukon Territory, which is part of the gold bearing district commonly called tho Klondike country. I get to the place by goin.g from Seattle on n steamer 1000 miles north to Skagway, and thence by railroad across White Tass 110 miles to White Horse, which is on the headwaters of the Yukon River. Steamers leave there for Daw son and other points. My rich find Is about 150 miles from White Horse." Mr. Vrooman talked interestingly of his travels and adventures, in which there was considerable of suffering. If the "tenderfoot" from this time hence doesn't rank higher In the esti mation of the strenuous world, then it will not be this minister's fault. "We consumed," he said, "one month at White Horse in making preparations and getting my equipment together. I arrived there on June 10 nnd left on July 7. I purchased from the railroad and steamship the front or bow end of the river steamer Sibyl, which had been cut In two for purposes of their own. This made a satisfactory scow for floating my mining machinery. It was sixty feet long, and at the stern twenty-seven feet wide, coming to a point at the bow. "From White Horse to the mouth of the Hootalinqua River I had a distance of ninety miles to go down stream. With equipment nnd provisions nnd six men aboard the scow we were taken this distance by the current and the wind." Mr. Vrooman here described the trip in detail, telling about the passage of Lake La Barge in a high wind, nnd said: "The anxiety of the three days con sumed in going down these ninety miles caused utter exhaustion. I shall never forget the sense of thankfulness and relief experienced when wo were safely tied to in an eddy at the month of the Hootalinqua River. "While the work of 'lining the scow tip the river was in progress two old time prospectors appeared on the scene. They were profoundly impressed at the sight of my machinery, nnd said that they had made discoveries where gold was sufficiently ricli to yield great returns. One point in particular was n liNlo river nbout 175 miles up from where we were. I decided to accom pany these men. Upon reaching the little river they mentioned I found that the gold was there as they had de scribed it, but I also found thnt the bowlders were so large as to prevent any dredging machinery doing suc cessful work. "In going with the two prospectors up the ,river I carried nothing but a roll of blankets, a supply of food and a few cooking utensils to use on my return trip. It was understood thnt they would build me a raft upon which to come back, fortunately, however, for returning I secured from them a rowboat. In the arduous work of tak ing the canoe up I started the first day to do my share. My part was to use tho oars wherever it was necessary to cross the river, and to pull the canoe, with a rope over my shoulder, wherever the conditions permitted walking along the shore. Many miles I did this pull. Ing, while wading knee deep In the swift water over slippery gravel with gum boots. "On mj return trip, which I had to make alone, there was a distance of forty miles on Lake Teslin thnt I was obliged to row. About noon of the first day I reached an Indian camp. These Indians immediately began begging for some of the moose meat I had in my boat, which I was taking back to my crew of men. I felt obliged to accept the urgent invitation of one of their number to accompany him into his wig wam. He introduced me to his two squaws, and with much pride handed me some documents. They were what we call letters of recommendation, written by Canadian officers who had had dealings with him. "The fact that night would soon be upon me, and that I had to sleep some where mi tile shore, gave me a desire to reach a point as far distant from this Indian camp as possible. Sleep ing outdoors qn the rough and damp ground did not seem eo bad when In company with two Btalwart men and two line dogs, which were vigilant watchers In the night; but to sleep out under the trees alone, as I did on my return trip, 250 miles from the nearest postoffice, was accompanied with a El! queer sense of loneliness and a peculiar longing for the 'fleshpots, of Egypt.' "I had been rowing for two days on the lake, and was floating the third day on the river, when at evening, Just as I was beginning to scan tho shore for a favorable spot for spending the night, the whistle of n little steamboat com ing down the river gave me a happy surprise. The tramp steamier was mak ing its first return trip, and for a con sideration picked me up and conveyed me to my destination, where my men on the scow awaited me, "A few miles further up the river from tlii9 point I stopped to wash some paus of gravel from certain benches on the river's shores, where prospectors have worked by hand during the last twenty -years, earning from ?3 to $10 a day. On these benches, Which are nbout six feet above the water, the! seam o gravel Is about two feet deep, and extends back, to my certain knowl-. edge, a distance of 1000 feet, all of which is gold bearing. I knew that my little equipment of machinery could secure the gold from these benches where there was no current of water to interfere. "These benches were nbout ten miles further up the river. The season at this time was well along, and as it was imperative for me to return to White Horse at that time, I left instructions for the men to continue as rapidly as possible with tho scow and machinery to the benches. Upon arriving there thry could stake out claims upon this property for me, and then make a thor ough demonstration of what my ma chinery was able to do in securing tho gold. "The nearest recording office for claims is Livingstone Creek, n little mining settlement over the motintaiu, a distance of about eighteen miles from my property. It was understood that upon my return trip from White Horse I would reach Livingstone Creek on n certain day, and that two of the men should meet me there for the purpose of recording the claims they had staked. They arrived at tho property and I arrived at White Horse on sched ule time. "In returning I went by stenmer, of course, to tho mouth of the Hootalin qua River. On leaving tho steamer I started upon my tramp of sixty miles afoot, with a distance of twenty-five miles to mnke that day. I arrived at the seventeen-mile point at 10.45 a. in., which was fairly good speed. 1 then began to feel symptoms of rheumatism or strained muscles in my knees and hips. At this point 'I also confronted a bear, and, after yelling and shooting at htm, as be did not run, I tried to. "My rheumatism, probably caused by sleeping so much out of doors, grew rapidly worse, nnd It was only by the utmost exertion, and with every step accompanied with the severest pain, that I succeeded in reaching the little cabin at Mason's Landing that night Of course, I was not able to pursue my Journey on the following day. For tunately, however, there was a man there who was going to Livingstone Creek that day, and he carried a letter from me to my son. "As good fortune would have It, the same little steamer that had picked me up on tho river before was making its second trip down, and stopped at this landing late that very afternoon. It took me about one minute to strike a bargain with the captain, and within fifteen minutes I was on board, going up the river to my scow. "When the two men nt Livingstone Creek received my note announcing thnt I was sick abed with rheumatism, they walked over to Mason's Landing the next day, only to lenrn that I had gone back to the scow on the steamer. The following day they attempted to save one day's time by cutting across lots through tho woods, which proved to bo a cold and rainy day, and before reaching their destination night over took them. They were compelled to stand around a campfire all night, nnd reached the scow nbout 11 o'clock the next morning. They stood the ex posure of their trip better than I stood mine, and all went to work again with a zest. "As cold weather was sotting In, and as my muscular aches and pains were continuing, I was anxious to return at the earliest opportunity. I therefore remained only long enough to demon strate positively that the machinery was able to do the work at that point. The demonstration was what I wanted. In my presence the machinery worked satisfactorily. We secured at the rate of one ton of tho black sand from every 125 cubic ynrds of gravel that we washed through the sluice boxes. "I had the remainder of the men stake out claims for me, and on the morning thnt I started to float down the river on a raft in coming out these other men started for Livingstone Creek on foot to record these additional clnlms. I left Instructions for them to work until September 22, and to ac cumulate as much of the black sand containing the gold as possible during that time." ,But Mr. Vrooman, as has been said, is not altogether wrapped up in tho hunt for gold. Surrounded by his books, he thinks and studies and peers into the infinite. It is his dream his faith that a basis can be found upon which all warring sects can be brought together, But the work, the propa ganda, needs money; and the Klondike Is being tapped, not in a spirit of sordid commercialism, but rather of altruism. Warts and moles are regarded as dangerous iiy a Philadelphia physician. Junt J)leriiulniittaii lit JUntUray ltntus. All railroad men qualified to speak on the subject In a responsible way are likely to agree with f resident Sam uel Spencer, of the Southern Railway, when he says: "There Is tio division of opinion ns to the desirability of stop ping all secret or unjustly discrimina tory devices and practices of whatso ever character." Mr. Spencer, in speaking of "unjust ly discriminatory" rates and devices, makes a distinction which is nt once apparent to common sense. There rony be discrimination iu freight rates which Is Just, reasonable and Impera tively required by the complex com mercial and geographical conditions with which expert rate makers have to deal. To abolish such open and honest discrimination might paralyze the in dustries of cities. States nnd whole sec tions of our national territory. This distinction between Just and unjust discrimination is clearly recog nized In the conclusions of the Inter national Railway Congress, published yesterday: "Tariffs should lio baod on commercial principles, taking into acoount tho special conditions which boar upon thn commercial vitluo of the services rendered. With the roservntloa thnt rates staRll bo chnrged with out arbitrary discrimination to nil shippers itllko under like conditions, the making ot rates should ns Inr as possible have nil the elasticity necessary to permit the develop ment ol the traHIc and to produce tho greut est results to the public and to the railroads themselves." The present proposal Is, ns Mr. Wnlk er D. Mines, of Louisville, showed in ills remarkable testimony the other day before tho Senate Committee at Washington, to crystallze flexible and justly discriminatory rates into fixed Government rates which cannot be changed except by the intervention of some Government tribunal, and by this very process to Increase "the tempta tion to depart from the published rate and the lawful rate in order to meet some overpowering and urgent com mercial condition." New York Sun. Dog With Hoofs. A dog with hoofs like a cow is owaed by Daniel Brown, and is a cross between a shepherd and a spaniel. It was purchased by Brown from Miles Dickey, a Panhandle en glneer, three years ago, when a pup. but not until recently did the hoofs grow on his feet, and the owner is at a loss to know how to account for them. The growth hns appeared on all four feet and is ns hnrd as horn. When the dog walks across the board floor of the saloon where It Is kept there is a sound like the pattering ot a couple of children with wooden shoes. Indianapolis News. Good Results. Under a law passed by the Illinois Legislature in 1899 the State has maintained four free employment agencies, three in Chicago and one in Peoria. The report of these agen cies for 1904 indicates that they have been doing commendable work and have been of conspicuous advan tage to the employer seeking for help and to the employe In search of an opportunity to earn wages. In six years the number of applications for employment has been 203,890, and 172,843 positions have been secured for the applicants. The aggregate of applications for help was 205,802, of which 32,959 were unfilled. BABY CAME NEAR DYING From an Awfnl Skin Humor Scratched Till lllnml l!an Wasted to a Skel eton Speedily Cnieil by Cnlictira. "When three months old my boy broke out with an itching, watery rash all over his body, and lie would scratch till the blood ran. We tried nearly everything, but he crew worse, wnttinz to a skeleton, nnd we feared he would die. He slept only when in our arms. The first application of Cut intra soothed him so lliat lie slept in his cradle for the first time in many weeks. One set of Cuticura made a complete nnd permanent cure. (Signed) Mrs. M. u Maitland, Jasper, Ontario." Business Colleges. The business of college education Is one of the greatest businesses of the country. The 42G colleges and uni versities, in which are enrolled 175,000 students, represent an invested capital of $250,000,000 and give employment to 25,000 persons as teachers and officers. Tlio Sensation In Her Knees. Ernia was riding with ner father. They reached the railroad track just In time to cross -before a frelpht train rumbled by. Little Emm was quite frightened to hear tbs tram eo close. In telling about it she said: "My knees were just dizzy when we got over that track." Little Chronicle. Btiteof Ohio, Cirt or Toledo, I Lucas Cocxtt. Frixk. J. Cheskx uiake oath that be ti senior partner o( tne tlrm of r'. J. Ciiknky Co., doing business iu tne City o! Toledo, County and Stuta atoreaid, and that said llnii will pay the sum ot oxk hundokd dol hhs for eaaa and every cast) ot ciTinsa that cannot ba cured by the use of iIill'j Citabbh Cube. t'ttiNK J. Chenev. bwora to before mo and subscribed in iny - i- , presence, this (Hn day or Deceiu i seal. fcer.A.P., A.W. Jleasox, Hall's Catarrh Curois ta'csu intern tliy.aul ctsdireatly on tae blood aud mucous sur laces ol tho syj:9 n. Sand la- tetiihaul:ilt, tree. i J. Chesei & Co., Toledo, O. Bold by all i)ru joists, 7j'- Take anil's family tJtlU lor eoistip-itioi, i'rcparotlncss. Begin the inorniug by saying to thy self, 1 shall meet the busybody, the ungrateful, arrogant, deceitfu", envious and unsocial, but 1, who have seen th nature of the good, that it is beautiful, and thnt of the bad, that it is ugly, can be injured by uoue of them. Mar cus Auiciius. An Old Book. Orland Dalton, of Banbury, N. H., has quite a library of old books, the oldest having been issued 2GG years ago. The title is "The Mirror Wulch flatters Not." It was written by Sieur de la Serre, of Trance, . trans lated in English and printed in Lon den in UiX "Backache, Both. Symptoms of Organic Derangement fa Women Thousands of Sufferers Find Relief. IIow often do we hear women say: "It seems as though my back would break," or "Don't speak to me, I am all out of sorts?" These signl Rcant remarks prove that the svstcm requires attention. Backache and " the blues" are direct symptoms of an inwnrd trouble which will sooner or later declare itself. It may be caused by diseased kidneys or some uterine derangement. Nature requires assistance and at once, and Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Com pound instantly asserts its curative powers in all those peculiar ailments of women. It has been the standby of intelligent American women for twenty years, and the ablest specialists agree that it is the most universally success ful remedy for woman's ills known to medicine. The following letters from Mrs. Holmes and Mrs. Cotrely are among the many thousands which Mrs. Phik ham has received this year from those whom she has relieved. Surely such testimony is convincing. Mrs.J.G. Holmes, of Larimorc, North Dakota, writes: Dear Mrs. Fmkhnm : " I have suffered e cry thing with backache end womb trouble I let tho tronhle run on until my svstem was in such a condition thnt I was untitle to be about, and then it was 1 commenced to use Lydia E. finkhmn's Vege table Compound. If I had only known how much suffering I would have saved, 1 should have taken it months sooner for a few weeks' treatment mnde mo well nnd strong. Jiy Imckaches and headaches are all gone and I suffer no pnin at my menstrua! periods, whereas before I took I.ydin E. l'inkliam's Vegetablo Compound I suffered intense pain ." Mrs. Emma Cotrely, 109 East 12th Street, New York City, writes: Ask Mrs. Pinkham's Advice-A Woman Best Understands a Woman's IDs. Say Plainly to Thnt you want LION COFFEE always, and he, being a square man, will not try to sell you any thing else. You may not care for our opinion, but ' What Abont the United Judgment of Millions of housekeepers who have used LION COFFEE for over a quarter of a century ? Ia there any stronger proof of merit, than tho Lion-head on every package. Save theoo Lion-heada for valuable premiums. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. -rid FOR few hour' work and tbe little bit of our fparc time It reqtilrea, we will irlve you either S 1 0.00 in caah er yar chctce of many equally er mere valuable article, miblert only to the vet y liberal condition" onr booklet explain. ADA DC nnnnDTIIUITV r mmn wh ar c,,ltn n farmer and ethera, derwerymert, aeMcltora, oU ilAnC UrrUil I U 111 I 1 (actor. anta, auperlntandente and feremen ef faeterlca, llvryinen. Ifralm men, ottlemen. eipreaa and railroad aifente, avtiool teacliera. nrearhera. doctor and other who are constant! calling or belnir railed upon; an eireptional opportunity for any man or woman In any position to (ret a WATCH, OUH. ICWINO MACHINE er ether valuable article or J Q.00 " CASH far a very little effort for onlv handing; out 15 of our llg Free CATALOGUE), aubject to the dlre tlonn and condition explained In our FREE BOOKLET. A 1 1 n CDCC firCCD Cut thka ad out and aend to ua, and we will aend you a epeclol booklet by return mail, UU II rnCC UrrCni rKatpald,fiwlthourwmpHmenU.fullyexplalnm(rtheeremelyllberal condition kt which we ueJ tin oc in cah. or give Tirimi valuable article ror each 86 catal nomee that ar distributed for ua Address. SEARS. ROEBUCK & CO.. CHICAGO. ILL. MILLIONS HEvSftfrefe'fidd. LATEST NEWS 8 AMPLE CDCC RELIABLE- PAPERS COl'IKS tUkb Bend tii Sr. fit&mp for sample copies best Tmpeni and other literatnra. :onnlt us frwly fT reliable Information. Adrires- all bininesa communications to our Han Francisco onVe. NEVADA IWINEKS' ASSOCIATION, 820 Kohl IIIiIk., Snn Franeiars. THE DAISY FLY KILLER J'mj all th. 'omrnrt to eterv home In d'.ning; room, sleeplnc win inl all placet where I'.en are irnutne uma Clean, neat tml will not K1l r iiinm Nnvthuiir Trv jeT lioin (dice and yoo. Diem. 11 not kopi by ntur.ent iirmitud Lor J"r. MAHUI.b MlHfltn, lib liokHlb i B-hl MOTHER CRAY'S SYs'EET FOWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A Certain Cnre for FpTerltbnet 4'nnetipatton, II e oil arhn, Stomach Troubles, Teeth. n pi.twrw.er a, and Denlr of Wormx. TlioyBrnk unt'l1 hi H boar. At all i'raiffriita, voi Sample niatled FKB.it A-iai K.wi-asauiu. A. S. OLMSTED, La Roy, Mothar Ortr. NanwinOhild- "The Blues 99 Dear Mrs. Flnkbam: " I feel it my duty to tell all suffering women of the relief I have found in Lydia E. Fink hnm's Vegetable Compound. When I com menced taking the Compound I suffered everything with backaches, headaches, men strual and ovarian troubles. I am complete ly cured and enjoy the best of health, aud I owe it all to you." When women ere troubled with irreg ular, suppressed or paiufnl menst,rus tion, weakness, leucorrhcea, displace ment or ulceration of the womb, that bearing down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, bloating (op flatulence), general debility, indiges tion and nervous prostration, or are be set with such symptoms as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excitability, irrit bility. nervousness, sleeplessness, mel ancholy, "all gone "and ' want to-oe-lcft-alone" feelings, bines and hopeless ness, they should remember there in one tried and true remedy, Lydia E. rink ham's Vegetable Compound at onca re moves such troubles. No other medicine in the world hns received such widespread nnd unquali fied endorsement. No other medicinsj has such a record of cures of femulei troubles. Refuse to buy any substituto. FKIE ADVICE TO WOJIEK. Temember, every woman is cordially invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham if there is anything about her symptoms she does not understand. Mrs. Pink ham's address is Lynn, Mass., her advice is free and cheerfully given to every ailing woman who asks for it. Her advice end medicine have restored) to health moro than one hundred thou sand women. Your Grocer IB Confidence of the People and ever increasing popularity? LION COFFEE Is carefully se lected at the plantation, shipped direct to our various factories, where It Is skillfully roasted and carefully packed In sealed pack ages unlike loose coffee which Is exposed to germs, dust, In sects, etc. LION COFFEE reaches you as pure and clean- as when It lelt the factory. Sold only In 1 lb. packages. A FEW HOOKS' VVOS? IrWC 1911 I D H V ""7 wsirnan. r oj wr airi tjvwr 9 years sji Kt IflLL rMl 910. OQ IN CASH, orynnrotiot.- of any one of nwity T&lunble artlelM of miTiIininlUa. iu.-b ax Sewing Machine, Guiib, StovM. 51 un leal I muniment. 8rlHvi. Harnem. WitchM, Furniture, Mlcjrclei and similar valnatlt artlrleti. all irlvtn free of any coat to any man, woman, or boy or girl ovpr IS tear of aire, wlio will band otit V of our lai-pe jmneral mrr cliandlw cataWifrutn frro to thrttr friend and ncl((tibori, aubject to th' ary tr y conditio ni viplalnvd In our tpeolal booklet, WE SEND YOU 25 CATALOGUES tlXXWZZ th parti e to whom you giv the cjitalofruea pay nothing for thttm; thay ar abaelutelr fraa. You rimply distribute the K booke a we ri Inert, and for ttia ",ln Cnsearets w Insomnia, with wh eh 1 liove been aflllct. il for oer tw.nlV rears E'? 15!" r l-'Me.rets have (iren mo mu'i relief than ane other remedy I havo erer tried! I shall certainly recommend thorn to my friends aa baiul all they an represented." a 'i'hos. GUlard, Elgin, III. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicgo or N.Y. my ASX'JIL SALE. TEX MILLION BOXES P. N. U. 22, 1905. If sifnietel Thompson's Eye Water ' with weak u.t ffjjfM Best For 4 kiaJ e Bowels Candy cathartic -