I- ' T7!TIJS5SCTr7niNl " : . I : : v r lydla E. Ptnkham'a Vegetable Compound n a positive cure for all those painful Lirftaents of women. H will entirely ure the worst form of Fe mnle Com blaints, all Orarian troubles. Inflam mation and Ulceration. Falling and lspincemenis 01 tne Homb and con eqnent Spinal Weakness, and is iecn iarly adapted to the Cliange qf Afe. Every time it will cure It has cured more cases of Lencor hra than any otherremedy the world ias ever known. It is almost infallible In such ca:es. It dissolves and exnels ITumorS from the ITterno. in an nrlir itape of development, That uuaiDg pain, weipni ana ncaaacne, is Instantly relieved and permanently ,ured by its use. Under all nircum- tances it acts in harmony with the crcole system. It corrects Irregularity, nprresFcd or Painful Menstruation. Vtakness of the Stomach. Indigestion. bloating-. Flooding-, Nervous Prostro- on. iieuuacne, ueneral Debility. Also umzlasss, Fatntness, Extreme Lassitude, " don't-care " and want-to-ne-left-a!cne " feeling1, excit ability, irritability, nervousness, sleep- ssness, natuiency, melancholy or the Dines, ana Dai-Kncne. '.These are fure indications of Female Weakness, ,ome derangement of the Uterus. For Kldttsy Ccmplsfats nd Backache of titktr iex the Vcgeta- e loripouna is xnuqr.aiea. You can write Mrs. Pinkham about purself in strictest con thence. fCIl E. Pl.tSCll BED. to., Ijnsj. Eats. For Pieserviiisr, srifilng and Beautifying Jic Skin, JStito, Hair, and Hands. . Cotlcnr. R.-n oottiMh (lelleale inHriid .t -..1- Jfciit pniprnlr, o,lvad from CMhars, tb. (real skla Core, wllH tk. ant of inuln Inmdl-r! nd n BoalTttmhiiigollWrrfKloti. To Soon Ingnitm rlca oamwj i Mnllrloal ind Toll Sou lor Z ullar Dm a Chum. Corp., Sol. Prrnn- BortoiL MT alalM rroa, "All About Ilia Skin, air -. t FOR WOMEN troubled with Ills pecolU- to their sex. used at a datura fa cessftu. TDorontfily cleanses, kills 4isoase (arms, stops diacbaieet, fceala inflammation and local soreness, cures lsncoirlioea a'd nasal catarrh. Paxtine ia in powder form U- be dusolred in pare trater, and ia far more clean' t healing, aermicwlal and economical than liquid antiseptics for ail TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druffgiits, . cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. Thc ft. PaaTon Companv obton, ktaaa. PENSIONS. war. Mo hare recordi On aero at ts. ftvtl W ar. On disability and for wl H v. . Wo have records ot serrloa. Laws and adrice free. A, to. WrCOKdK at at suits. 18 Walnut tltreot, Inclnnatl, Ohio Bl ftHUt All tUt ItllL. Coafib Ijma. Tastes Ooad. Daa in iiaoa. bow nr flma . P. N..U. 20, 190B. If mmrnmi Thompson's Eye Water snta marvainueiv . 1 1 5 Celery In the Garden, Celery Is an Important crop for the home garden, es it occupies ground upon which some earlier crop has al ready matured. It can follow peas or spinach, for instance. It likes nltro gen In abundance and so does purtlcii- Iarly well as a second crop on the ground previously occupied by peas, which leave nitrogen in the soil. The Garden Magazine. Com Silarje. A dairyman who has long fed corn silage says: "Corn silage is nothing more or less than canned corn, and it is better than com stover for the same reason that canned fruit is bet ter thr.n diie l. The farmer who has built a good silo untl filled it properly never says lhat silape is not a good feed, but on the contrary, he cannot say too much in its f;ivor. He finds In the spring that his silage fed cat tie have coats as sleek and smooth as most cows do by the middle of June. It is a well attested fact that an animal with a glossy coat Is In variably In good health and properly nourished, and it is from the well- nourished cows that we get our strong and healthy calves." Oat, Straw and Butter. Some one asked for experience with oat straw, fed to dairy cows as to causing long churning. We have given oat straw as a rough ness, the only roughness, to our Jer sey cows for 4 months continuously, and have had long churning but once in that time. Our cow has been giv ing milk, without cessation over 13 months, and had all the bright oats straw she desired, also soft corn, cob and all, all the good fresh well water she wished and salt three times a week. We allow the cream to thicken and become somewhat acid and have it lukewarm before churning; use a balance churn, always rinsing with scalding water, and if weather is cold do not cool the churn much before adding the cream. When required warm water is added to the cream in the churn. Usually the butter is work ed, churn washed and put away in 45 minutes from commencement of churn ing. In zero weather I always poured a pint of scalding water to the gallon of new milk as soon as strained. E. C, in Indiana Farmer. To Beautify the Farm. TV lawn could be started the first year, and a tew trees planted as de sired about the house and at the driveway entrance, with perhaps suffi cient properly grouped in intermediate positions to relieve any bareness that might exist. 'J he next season shrub bery borders and groups might he planted with additional trses on the lawn for ornamental purposes. The flowor garden neeti not follow till later. Meanwhile, the pleasure ac companying developments would be going on with always some little thing to look forward to. Plant trees and shrubs that have permanent value end not too ordinary. Avoid the cheap, quick-growing trees which are invariably less satisfactory In the end and are short-lived. I will only name the oaks as being especial. ly worthy trees, and ones that will never bring regret. A few really rare plants will increase the Interest in your place wonderfully. Such beauti ful things as the Yellow Wood, Ging ko, Sophora and Japanese Varnish tree are not difficult to obtain, yet they are not common. An unused piece of swampy ground could be made beautiful by planting In it some flags and Japanese Iris, Mallows, Lythrums, Coreopsis, and even many swamp-loving shrubs like the common elderberry, White Fringe and Swamp Magnolia. The walls of your house would likely be very much improved by a clinging vine. The fence along the front of your property could have a few vines placed at some of the posts. S. Mcrdclson Mcchan, In American Cultivator. Blocking the Road, It is Important to bear in mind that highways are dedicated for the pur pose of travel only, and anybody that interferes and obstructs travel on thc highway throughout its whole width, from JJe line on one side to the lino on the other, who is not himself a traveler, is a wrongdoer, per se, and in case of accident resulting in dam age, he is not only barrel from re covering for his' damage because of his wrong-doing, but he is liable to respond in damage to the other. Un der this head may be cited the usual habit of some people of leaving their wagon, a pile of wood, their hay hock, or other truck on the side of the road. Another instance under this head that might be mentioned is the case where a teamster drives his team up to a hitching post on the ride of the street, ties them to a post and goes away and leaves them. At that mo ment he ceases to be a traveler and is obstructing ithe highway. Have I not a right, you will ask, to hitch my team to a post and go away and leave them? I would answer, certainly you have, only you must beware of hin dering travel, the road was made to travel on and if travelers can get by you by ordinary diligence, they, nor anyone! else, bave a right to coplain. Garden but, if they can't get by with ordinary prudence, you are the man to get out of the way, travel on, or suffer the consequences. I mention this case because I have observed some people in hitching their team to a hitching post, instead of pulling the wagon close up to the curb, to avoid interference with travel, leave the hind wheels far out in the highway. If such a person coming back found both his hiud wheels brok en, I don't think it would pay him to inquire who broko tliem. Alexander Caldwell, in the American Cultivator. Silnge Profitable for Cows. "The prevailing high prices of grain feeds In the face of very moderate prices for dairy products have reduced the dairyman's profit to the point where it is a question with him wheth er he enn make the cows pay for the large grain ration he ha3 been ac customed to feed. If he can dispense with half the grain he has been feed ing ithout materially reducing his production of milk, and butter fat, his chances for profits have increased. "To determine what effect the feed ing of more silage than is usually fed by dairymen, with a corresponding re duction in the grain portion of the ra tion, might have upon the production of milk, butter fat, gain in live weight, cost of the ration and consequent pro fit, the Ohio station conducting during the winter and spring of 1904 an ex periment with ten dairy cows. "The plan of the experiment was to compare two rations carrying practi cally the same amount of dry matter. In one over 50 percent this dry mat ter was derived from silage and less than 18 percent from grain. In the other 57 percent of the dry matter was derived from grain, no silage being fed. "The silage used was a mixture of one ton of soy beans and cow peas to two and one-half tons of silage corn. The silage as fed contained 18.63 per cent dry matter, 2.36 percent protein, 4.C8 percent crude fibre, 0.92 percent fat and 9.36 percent of nitrogen free extract. "The cows fed the silage produced 96.7 pounds of milk and 5.08 pounds of butter fat per hundred pounds of dry matter; those fed the grain ration produced 81.3 pounds of milk and 3.9 pounds of butter fat. 'The cost of feed per hundred pounds of milk was $0.Gfc7 with silage and f 1.055 with grain ration. The cost of feed per pound of butter fat was 13.1 cents with silage and 22.1 cents with the grain ration. Upon the conclusion of the experiment each lot of cows wes found to have pained in live weight: Silage fed, 47 pounds her !:ead, and grain fed, 57 pounds rer head. 'The fact3 reported seem to Justify the ermcitision that silage can ba made to tr.ke the place of a considerable portion of the grain ration." Ohio Slate Bulletin. Drainage a Simple Task. The oft-repeated remark by many farmers during seasons of extreme moisture, "I know I ought to lay a good many tile on my farm, but some, how I don't get around to it, and the fact is there is no professional ditcher one can hire," is heard from time to time and especially during a flooded season like the present. My good friends don't look for a "professional," for I have learned that only ordinary intelligence is required, or that pos sessed by any level-headed farmer. Make a beginning; select a portion of some field needing work of this kind, where your horses, farming im plements and yourself have often found it difficult to pass, locate the desired outlet, line out the direction of the ditch you wish to construct, be ginning at the outlet. Yourself and the ordinary farm help, supplied with the proper tools, consisting of a regu lar ditching Bpade, with long, narrow blade, one or two long-handed shov els, a long-handled, light, narrow shov el for cleaning out and grading bot tom ef ditch, and an ordinary pick is al! that is required for doing perfect work. Where the fail Is plainly visi ble (and for a beginner such a condi tion is preferable), no level Is re quired. A regular ditching plow has been found to be a great labor-saving implement in constructing a ditch in inrd, dry ground. With four horses Rttached to a long, strong, evener, two horses on each side of the ditch, the work can be expedited with much less expenditure of muscular labor. The ditch should not be less than 2 1-2 feet deep, even more would se cure a greater surface drainage. Hav ing finished the ditch, it only remains to properly lay the tile, making close Joints as possible. A light covering with the clayey subsoil is the only hand labor called for. With two horses attached to an ordinary farm plow, the remainder of the ditch can be filled in a short time. One having witnessed the wonderful transforma tion of unproductive and water por tions ot the farm into that which ena bles it to produce an abundance year ajler year, and that without the aid of usual fertilizing material required on cthpr portions of the farm, should be sufficient incentive to continue the work indefinitely as convenience and conditions demand. Irving Cook, in the Massachusetts Ploughman. Improving the Corn Crop. The testing of seed com is very Im portant and no farmer should plant seed of doubtful germinating quality. Good seed should give a test of ninety five per cent, or above and show vig orous germination. When purchasing seed corn, the farmer should insist on its being shipped in the ear. It may be difficult to get it from our seedsmen at this time, but they must he educated to the fart that the scoop-shovel method of selecting seed corn is not the method desired by farmers. Prac tically nil the seed corn will soon be put on the market in the ear, as the time has arrived when the corn grow ers will Insist on having their seed corn shipped in tills way. The greatest immediate improvement in the corn crop will probably be brought about by grading up promising varieties already grown within our State. Ty testing other varieties that seem especially adapted to our soil and climate, we may secure some staudiird varieties that will be of great value to our funnels a few years hence. The greatest advancement in rorn growing in other States has been brought about by the Individual former planting from year to year the same variety of corn and practicing right selection or seed ears. It seems ad vlsable for the fanner to have a nor lion of thc corn field for bis seed patch. This iniiy be one of several acres, but must be that portion where extra care lias been exercised, in the selection of seed. From time to time during the growing period, the farmer should carerully study the plants of tills por tion of the field, remove or detassel the barren stalks, and note the uni formity of stand and character of the plants in general. At the time the husks begin to turn yellow, if the farmer will occasionally go through his seed patch, and by tying a string around each car he desires he can select ears of early maturity and at the same time study thc character of the stalk and mark ears only that grow upon vigorous stalks with medium shanks and having other desirable characteristics. He may desire to grow a good fodder corn, as well as grain producing corn, hence should pay con siderable attention to the leanness of the plant. Some farmers make a mis take by going into the field and picking the early ears and retaining them for seed. The ear should merely be marked and then left until fully ripened. It can then be distinguished from the other ears by the string pre viously tied to It. I!y selecting each year from our seed patch one or two hundred ears in. this manner, supplemented by the test for uniformity and high oil mid protein content, we will have valuable corn for our seed patch the following year. The coin for the general crop should be nlso selected from that portion ot the field that has been plnr.icd with this carefully selected seed, but we do not need to spend so much time on the se lection of that seed as on that which we desire to plant for our special seed pntcu.-Frof. I!. A. Moore, in Massa chusetts Ploughman. The Culture of AstiRi-ncii There is no reason why any one hav ing suitable land for gardi ning should not grow his own asparagus. If "sets" are not procurable, he may ensily raise It from the seed, lleing a slow plant to come up, he will do well to mix them with radish sred and sow In drills. He can then tell where to cul tivate and thus prevent weeds from getting the start of youn:: asparagus plants. In othpr words, the radishes will do double duty, by first serving as a guide and afterwards making good table vegetables. When one year old, the asparagus plants may be transplanted to Iho permanent bed. This should be done by plowing out trenches eight inches deep and about three feet apart. Having sprinkled in the bottom of them from one to two inches of well rotled manure, cover with about one inch of soil, on which set the plants eighteen inches apart, with their roots well spread out in all directions, and cover them with fine soil until the crowns are at least two inches under the surface. Culti vate and hoe frequently, and as the plants grow, fill in around them until the trenches are even with the surface of the garden. In the fall nil the top growth wants to be cut and burned, and the bed then covered with a heavy coating of fine, well-rotted manure, to be carefully forked into the ground early the next spring. The second sea son clean cultivation should be given, and the top dressing of manure repeat ed again in the fall. The third spring some of the crop may be cut for use. provided it is painstakingly done and not continued too late in the season. Cutting off all growth and top dress ing with manure should, of course, take place again late in autumn. And as a pring top dressing for the bed, potash salts are excellent both as a fertilizer and having the ability to assist In hold ing moisture, including the extermina tion of a large number of weeds, while doing no harm to the asparagus. Salt alone will do likewise, except that It tarnishes no fertility. A light soil, well enriched, is preferable on which to make the bed, but if a heavy soil is thoroughly under-drained and deeply plowed, it will answer Just ns well and, indeed, may continue to produce a crop longer than the one on a light soil. Fred O. Sibley, in The Epitomist. The Hired Man rrolilem. This question is becoming a more serious one each year. Many young men are buying land and making farms for themselves. In discussing this matter a writer in Wallace's Farmer says: There are more sides to tb hired man problem than there should be. In the first place, there are men on both sides that are not satisfied with Justice. The hired man should be satisfied to do Just what is right, and his employer snouui De satisfied if lie gets Just ser vice from his man. Then If each can encourage the other to do a little better In cases of emergencies both should bo satisfied. Hut the hired man who has to spend his time in town until a late hour for three or four nights in the week and has to have several lost days in n month will be in very poor sliape to give his employer satisfaction On the other hand, the fanner that wants his man to work from four o'clock in the morning till eight or nine at night with only time to eat his three meals per day should not have any help. I was a hired man 'way back in the Ws, and know whereof I ntlirni. Also I have hired considerable help In the lust thirty-five years on the farm. I have also had many men under me in the building business in the Inst thirty-four years (I am a me chanic ns well ns a farmer), nnd I know there is a great difference in men on both sides. Last summer I let my sixteen-year-old boy work out eight months, and ns it was his first season away from home he probably did about as other young men in his work, but he only had three days' lost time on one of these days ho was sick. He saved nnd brought to me $S0 to pay on a smnll farm which he will have clear of debt in four years more, when he is twenty-one years old, if he does right the next four years. Hired men could save good money if they would. They do not realize what the small sum of $,')0 per year will amount to In forty years at six per cent, com pound Interest, keeping the interest and princlpnl working together and adding each year another $."0. But it would buy a good farm home of 12(1 acres at $."i0 per ncre, stock it with fifteen good cows, two or three good horses and nil necessary farm ma chinery. There nre thousands of men who have been throwing nwny the ?30 per year for the last forty years that now would be glad to have forty acres and a common team and two or three cows, Smnll Pen for Hojs Here Is a plan of a pig pen of suit able size to accommodate two brood sows and the fattening litters from these. '1 he pen is to bo built of stone nnd to stand east and west. In the accompanying plan thw i? provision for a partition in the brood sow pens for the little pigs to go In to feed; the partition is one foot from the floor so that the pigs can go under to be fed separate from the sow. The trough should not be over four Indies high for the little pigs; the other troughs should be six inches high The windows in nil the pens can bp placed above the doors that Is, ilio npppr part n window, am! tii lower 5S 1 anot'.ND FLOOR TLA. A. brood sow pens; It, pens for litters to feed in; C, pena for tutteninp hogs; 1), water barrel; E, feed box; F, feed uney; j, crouus. part a door. It is a good plan to hang the doors on hinges at top, so they can swing either in or out, so thnt the doors will uhvnys remain closed and pigs can go in or out at any time. If the doors are required to be kept open all the time they can lie hung up by a wire to the Joist. By having a windlass above th feed alley it can bo used for a slaughter room, nnd when not used ns such It may be closed by having trap doors above. A !iatliiKulahel Cltlsen. Chief Justice Fuller of the United States Supremo Court was on a visit to Maine some years ngo and while there was entertained by Joe Mauley. Mr. Munley was held In great regard by his fellow-citizeus all over Maine, mid especially in Augusta, his home. He took Mr. Fuller for a drive about the place, but before the drive was fin ished was forced by n pressing en gagement to leave bis guest. When Mr. Mauley disappeared the driver turned to the Judge, whom he did not know, nnd, drawing out a cigar, said: "I suppose you don't mind if 1 smoke? When w are delving Mr. Manley we never light up, because he's rather a distinguished citizen." I SrxlO"' '9frx 10" i I B I I B i 1 oil l c v J I i i !17".XI7'V' 1 3 1 ! c. , Our Cold Wave, We Americans are always talking about our mountains of gold and coal and iron, and our fat fields of corn and wheat, but' few of us ever realize that we have in our climate a great advantage over all other nations. In the cold wave which in summer and winter so often sweeps across the land and sends the thermometer tumbling thirty degrees in almost as many minutes, we have a constant, never diminishing asset of priceless value. The wave acts as a tonic, but unlike any tonic made by man, it car ries no reaction. No other land has cold waves like ours. To the cold, dry air of this periodic cold wave, wnicn brings extraordinary changes of temperature, weiwe much of the keen, alert mind, the incessant, un remitting energy of our American race. Century. Quay on the Gentleman Farmer. The late Senator Quay, amonir his other varied pursuits, was somewhat of an agriculturist. One day there was a discussion between several of his colleagues regarding the definition of a gentleman farmer. Some con tended that a farmer was a farmer, and the matter of his wealth could make no difference in the name. Presently one cf the speakers ap pealed to Quay, and nsked fcira If ho would define the difference between the ordinary farmer and a gentleman farmer. The Senator thought for a minute, nd said: "There's this dif ference between the two: One eats what he cannot sell, and the other sells what he cannot eat." Hnrper's Weekly. A Real Case ef Easy Money. W. K. Vnnderhllt vna futtnlnir nn a , Long Island road the other day. Aneaa oi mm was a man and a dog. The do? WAR nnalnc- nrnnnrl tho bushes, and Just as he started to cross the road the motor car hit him amidships, and doggie gave up the ghost straightway. Mr. Vanderbilt stopped the ma chine and, taking out his wallet, gave the man a 150 bill, remarking: "It was my fault: I Insist ttiat vou take the money." As the enr roller! awnv In rlmid dust, the man looked at the dead ani mal and said: 'I wonder who owned that dog, anyway." PITSnerminentlv nnrnrl Kn nto ness after first day's rise of Dr. Kline's Great ncrrnr.eBiorer,trlal boltleand treatise free Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd,,l)31 Areh St., Phila., Pa, California is well represented at the Lewis and Clark Exposition. Use Allen's Poot-Kase, It t the only cure for Swollen, Smartlncr, Tired, Aching, Hot, Kwentliiif Feet .Corns and bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken Into the shoes. Cures while you walk. At all Druggists nnd Shoe Stores, 25a. Don't accept any substitnto. Sample seat Fbei. Addresg.AUen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y. There is a revival of interest in lightning rods in France. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrnp for Children teething, soften the gunis.reduocs inOamma tlon.nllays pain.curoswind colie, 25c.a bottle. There ere 600,000 traveling men in the United States. Tlso's Curo for Consumption Is an Infallible mediclno for coughs and colds. N. W. Sauuei,, Ocean Grovo, N. J., J'eb. 17, 1900. Swarms of sevcntcon-ycrir locusts have appaarcd in Southern Wisconsin. AGONY OF SORE HANDS Crarkert anil Toi-lel-Witter anil Heat Causeil Intense I'aln Could Do No Housework Very Grateful to Cutlciira. "My hands cracked and peeled, and were so sore it was impossible for mc to do my housework. If I pat them in water I wa3 in agony for hours, and if I tried to cook the heeit caused intense pain. I consulted two doctors, but their prescriptions were utterly useless, Mow after usini one cake of L'uticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment my hands are entirely well. 1 am very prateful. (Signed) Mrs. Miiuiie Drew, 18 Dana St., Rosbuiy, Musa." Czar Holds American Stocks. The Czar holds some $0,000,000 worth of stork in the Pennsylvania railroad, the Nev .Terssy Central and the Canadian Northern Pacific, which yields him handsome returns. WE MANUFACTURE Gas Saving Gas Burners For Boilers find Hot Air Furnaces. Write for Catalogue. STAKDARO HEATING AND RADIATOR CD., PITTSBURC. PA. Truths that Strike Home Tour grocer ia honest and if ho carea to do so can tell you that he knows very little about the bulk coffee ha sells you. How can he know, where it originally came from, Sin DOUI (Lion package of LION COFFEE you get one full Pure Coffee. Insbt upon getting the genuine, sn every package.) . - (Bare the Lion-lieads for.Tolnable premiums.) . SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, CMta. . MISS GENEVIVE MAY. OF CUBED BY PE-BU4UL M-iBS Cenevive Mv- 1.117 S 1MI,. St., Indianapolis, Ind., Member Seconi) High School Alumni Ass'n, writea: "Peruivt U tie fluent rrnuljtornt a (Unordered stomach. I finra run found. It cei'tnlnlij dmervm It bib pialne, for U is skill full y prepared, "1 was in a terrible condition from neglected case of catarrh of the stomach. My food had long ceased to be of any good anil only distressed me after eating, i was nauseated, had hcnrtSnt-.i nnrl f,f.- aches, and felt run down completely. Hut in two weeks after I took i'ermia I w a changed person. A few bottles of the medicine made a great change, and ir three months my stomach was cleared of catarrh, and my entire system ia a betteir condition." Uenevive May. Write Dr. Hartman. President of Tfi Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio, for free medical advice. All correspondence held Htrictly confidential. 2 Cream Separator PORS2S.09 csUSrsttd DUM0EE Cieil SEPARATOR, rvparit. poinds ptr hour; SWaovaMlse pltr per hour for f 29.04 Ot rfor ow pounui capacity par ntm S34.O0. Gssraatsva taa auaf el Separators that RE TAIL EVERYWHERE at frsaa rs.OO ta SltS.Od. Ansa r-rrrn w wffl bM ,j uun urrens M.Maa- ,f ralar an ear 10 ars' fra trta plan, wiio ma Dinuinf vww. Standing and aarseaiant If saj ao not nua 07 comparison, MM and um tkat IC wlti skim clooer, skim colder nnUC skiro taster, run Ughaaraud skim ona-half mora aallk. .VVv. rator made, rsv caa fat mtm ma separator ia aa ai mmr expenee ana we WW bMns Slatelv return aay aaaaer you mar havepaM for fralafal charges or othorwlaa. Cot this ad. out at onro end atoll tn us. and vritl will reoolva trr return mall, free, postpaid, our LATEST SPECIAL CREAM SEPARATOR CATALOGUE. You win r oof kiisr offer and our free trial proposition end 70a wfw r rrlre the MOST ASTON I3HINOLV LIBERAL CRCAW SEPARATOR OPfER EVER HEARD OF. Address SEARS. ROEBUCK ft GO.. CHICAGO THE DAISY FLY K!I.LERrT? in tea ana uniirusa corn-hut Tr r ll-VUllesa. t'tiM. Okmn, Mnk -itti) will not tuk or .tilur nyihw Frf ; hem rmv ml y-ra. .. f..Tiiai.nai ;iXr..M.-i& .lAMnt, Html prmiuiir l!r or. IUK4M.U l.HHl UM ttfk.il ., Krfchr "1 ttted Concarett ind OM like a new mm. beiMi a uflVrer from dj-np'-t' and lonr toiswb for the lant two ytnrn, I have been takinc aMt ctn and othor drugs, but could find do relief mUjt for a ahort time, f will recommend Cam caret a ti my friend a aa tha only thing for Inclteeation an mur atomach and to koop th bowela in fooa dition. They are very nica to eat." Harry Stuck lay Uaneta. Cboak. T Best For The Bowels Ploaaant, Palatabla, Potent. Taate GoM. TaflnaA Kfv-r Bteknn, Waaken or Orf pe, I0e, SS Wo. Nat mld In bnlk. Tha gennlne tablet atamp4 COO. tinuranteed to enro or your money baokc Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.T. 99 MKUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES 1 3i PlfPP Sour Stomach ra(pfe. CDYCATrttftTIC Yi I How it wag blended or With What or when roasted? If you buy your coffee loose by the pound, how eon you expect purity and uniform quality 1 LION COFFEE, the LEAD En OF ALL PACKAGE COFFEES. Is of necessity uniform In quality, strengtti and flavor. For OVEB A QUAKER OF A CENTURY, LION COFFEE has been the standard coflee In tnlXUotis of homes. LION COFFEE Is carefully pawkctl at oar lac lories, sil utll apeacd ta yma bom, has bo chautc of being adnt tcralcd, or el coming 1st contact with (ast, elrf, gcrann, or nnclcaus hnn-rta
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers