V TWENTY YEARS OF IT. Emaciated b.r ltalmta; Tortured With Gravel nnd Kidney l'alna, Henry Soule, cobbler, of Hammonds port, N. V., says: ''Since Doan's Kid ney rills cured me eight years ago. I've reached sev enty and hope to live many years longer. But twenty years ago I bad kidney trouble so ,, bad I could not work. Backache was persistent and It was agony to lift anything. Gravel. whirling headaches, dizziness and ter rible urinary disorders ran me down from 168 to 100 pounds. Doctors told me I had diabetes and could not live. I was wretched and hopeless when I began using Doan's Kidney Pills, but they cured me eight years ago and I've been well ever since." Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. T. For sale by all dealers. Price, 60 cents per box. Some Strange War Bets. Some extraordinary bets have been made on the Japanese-Russian war. A number of Jupanese officers have bet that they would be killed in battle. The money was to go to their widows. One officer, on start ing for the front, made the following wager: If he were killed within a month his heirs were to receive 1500. After that date he was to pay his opponent 10 yen ($5) a day until he had survived 100 days, after which the bet was to cease. He undertook to expose himself to danger only when military conditions demanded! It; In other words, he would not wil fully let himself be killed. Kansas City Journal. Trap for Auto Scorchers. A photographic police trap for the apprehension of scorching automobil lsts has been Invented in England. By the pressing of a button a pho tograph is made of any passing car with the time and date. A pair of these Instruments with synchronized timing arrangements used at each end of a measured piece of ground would, it Is believed, give absolutely accurate data as to the Epeed of automobiles. GRATEFUL TO CUTICURA For Instant Keller and Speedy Care of Raw and Scaly Humor. Itching Day and Night Suffered For Month). "I wish you would publish this letter no that others suffering as 1 have may be helped. For months awful sores covered ray face and neck, scabs forming, itching terribly day and night, breaking open, and running blood and matter. 1 had tried many remedies, but was growing worse, when IVarted with Cuticura. The first application gave me instant relief, and when 1 had used two cakes of Cuticura Soup and three boxes of Cuticura Ointment, 1 was completely cured. (Signed) Miss Nel lie Vander Wiele, Lakeside, N. Y." Japanese Favorite Tune. "Marching Through Georgia" is said to be the favorite tune of the Japanese soldiers. Native music has no marches, as k Is without "time." Patriotic composers have, however, since tho war began, remedied this defect by adapting various foreign pieces. The soldiers have picked up the new airs and sing with great de light the Japanese words fitted to them. Kansas City Journal. J'lso's Cure Is the best meaiclnewe evorusea lor all affections of throat and lungs. War. O, Endslkv, Vunuuren, Ind., Feb. 10, l'JOi). Labor organization haa until lately made low headway in Spain. Mrs.WInslow'e Soothing Syrup for Children teething, solton the gums, reduces Inflamma tion, allays puin.oureswlud oolio, 25o.a bottle , Books were not bound in cloth until 1823. $H S:22 Cream Separator elbratcd DUNDEE CREAM SEPARATOR, rapacity, SOQ M pounds per hour; JI50 nmindnrtw uimcltj per hour for 129.00: WW pounrli capacity per hour for 34.00. OuarantMtf t h qua! of Separators that RE TAIL EVERYWHERE at Iram 7B. 00 ta 1 18,00. our offer. smss rater n urSO alaya' fraa trial plan, with tho binding under standing and aarosmsnt If yoti . ao not nna dt comparison, cast and urn tuat it will skim closar, skim colder mi lit. akim easier, run Ihrbterand kVm one-half mora milk than any other uroam Repa- ralor made, yau can rsturn tha Saaaratar ta us at aur expanse and we will lmmt ' d lately return any meney you meyhavepatd fer freight ehargea er etherwise. cut en is aa. one at once ana man ta ua. and van will receive fcfr return mall, free, postpaid, our LATEST SPECIAL snaaai c rnnn iur v i u av. u win Kn uui biff olfar and our f re trlaJ propoettlon and you will re eeTre the MOST ASTONISH I HOLY LIBERAL CREAM SEPARATOR OPFER EVEC. HEARD OP. Addreei, SEARS. ROEBUCK CO.. CHICAGO. FOR WOMEN troubled with Ills peculiar to tbeir tez, used as a douche is marvelou&lr sac- Tknrmi atiluAlsan.u f, ill Ai A A M- stops discharger), steals inUammation and local soreness, cures leucorrhosa aud nasal catarrh, Paxtine la in Dowder form to be dissolved in rmre water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal ana auoomiui uwh hvjuiv iapttwa w u TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sals at druggist! , GO cents a box. Trial Bos and Book of Instruction! Prae. TH PaXTOH COMPANY BOSTON. MM WE SELL A $300 P'jWOFOR $195 w auawuu'wa wauv .OUU CKt O UII ference. . Easy terms. Write us and we'U all -II la- HUHMANN'8 MUSIC HOUSE. 031 Smlthflehl Htrewt. Plttabure;, Pa. I Boat ixntffb Bymp. Ttuta KVHta Rnui an, ia,M lAIM. t (Xniffb Bymp. Tasts Good. Ui la time, awad by tmirma. P. N. U. 82, 1905. It aflttetea' with mk Yea two Thompson's Eye Water ETTflT (t If 3 w 1 . GARDEN Reseeding the Pasture. For a permanent pasture timothy, redtop, orrhard grass and white clover are generally used, as these grasses seem to hold out as well as any. Other kinds may he added, if preferred, but the three mentioned should never be omitted. The fall or early spring is an excellent time for reseeding tho pastures, but in so doing the farmer should use clean seed, use it plenti fully and scratch it in If possible. One of the best plans to assist a pasture Is to sow white clover seed on the bare places, as it will make growth where some seeds will full. Sowing Rape In Corn. Farmers, where corn is grown as a principal crop, are frequently advis3d to combine sheep or pigs in their op erations. The advice usually tendered is to pop In some catch crop like rye as soon as the land is clear of the corn crop, and wherever the plan has been tried it haa been very successful. Mr. F. M. Webster of New York State, who is an ardent advocate of cultivat ed pasturage, has been trying to save time by sowing rape broadcast among the growing maize just before horse hoeing it for the last time. The rape thus sown does well, and by the time the grain is harvester there is a fine Trimming. Trees should have .he branches shortened in when planted. "I hate to cut the branches back," exclaims the well-meaning planter. "It spoils the looks of the trees." So It does tempor arily; but at the end of the season the trimmed trees will have made twice the growth of those untrimmed. It is of the utmost importance that each kind of tree should be trimmed in accordance with its tneeds. With apple trees, shorten back three-fourths of the growth of the side, branches. Leave a dominant center so that the next set of branches will be at least a foot above the present set of branches. Cherries should be shorten ed as to the side branches to three strong buds. Peach trees should have the branches shortened to one bud at the base of the branch and the trunk of the peach tree, no matter if five or six feet in height they should be short ened to 30 or even 24 inches. Rural World. Drawing Buttermilk and Washing. When the granules are of the right size, and if salt in the buttermilk is not objectionable, the addition of this will make It draw better, but I have seldom been troubled that way and there Is no need of losing a single granule as a strainer, or better, a hair sieve should be used in drawing. When this Is done, about the same amount of water from 50 to 55 degrees should replace the buttermilk (if the granules seem very soft 45 degrees may be allowed); the churn should be turned a few times. Unless It Is de sired to harden the granules the water should be drawn at once. It is a big mistake to leave the butter to soak In water for hours. As a rule, two rinsings should be enough and indeed some of the finest butter is made with out rinsing at all, relying on the work ing to remove tne buttermilk. Tho Danes used to do this, but now they rinse the granules by dipping them from the buttermilk with a hair sieve and then removing this gently in a tub of cold water, thus washing the but ter only once and only for a minute or bo. As In most other matters, the best road lies in the middle course. J. H. Monrad. New York. Feeding Silage. In his recent elaborate enquiries in to the cattle feeding problems, Prof. Mumford of the Illinois agricultural college station reports in circular 92 on the subject, the experience of an old feeder In Henry county that state, from which we take the following: "I am now fattening my fourth car of beef using silage as one feed per day and with such satisfactory results that I expect to continue its use as long as I am in the cattle feeding business. As to the method of feeding, we feed one-half bushel of silage per head In the morning and Bcatter five pounds of bran per head over it and itir It all up together; then let the cat tle Into the shed to the feed. Thus they all have an equal chance to get their share. At noon we feed a hun dred hills of shock corn per car of 20 head, and at night a peck of ear corn per head, broken In the boxes, aiming to feed only so much at any one time as the cattle will eat up clean before they leave the racks and boxes. The amounts of shock corn and ear corn are varied some so as to give the cat tle all they will eat up clean. I find that cattle fed on silage as a part of the ration, while not ready for the market quite as soon as those fed a straight corn ration, make more growth per month during the fattening period than when fed clear corn as Is the general practice in this country." This feeder buys in the fall steers weighing 800 to 900 pounds, feeds them tlx to nine months, and reports aver age gains of 60 pounds per month. He pmlts stlapie from the ration during ,he last .jnth of feeding. His cattle graded "choice" when fat, selling from 40 to 50 cents per hundred weight be low the "top" of the market. Indiana Farmor. Separating Cream. The temperature of the milk when separated ought to be uniform. If there is a variation of ten or more de grees when the milk is run through the separator at different times the richness of the cream will vary with the temperature. In some cases, owing to some delay, the separator may not be started so soon after milking aa in others; the milk then cools oft be low the proper separating temperature, and unless due allowance is made for this loss of fat will occur. The speed at which the separator Is turned has considerable Influence on the thoroughness of separation, and upon the texture of the cream. If at any time the work is hurried, and more milk Is run through the machine In, a given time than is usual, the qual ity of the cream will be changed. The amount of sklmmilk or water run through the machine when the sep arator is about finished, will influence the quality of the cream, depending upon whether the machine Is flushed out with a little or a large quantity of water or milk. After a person be comes aware of the effect of each of these things upon the texture of the cream, he can, if he likes, run the separator each time, so that bis cream will be fairly uniform. Sometimes the separator is started as soon as milk ing is commenced. This is all right If matters are so arranged that the machine is running at full capacity all the time, but when the supply runs out, and the machine has to be stopped, or to run empty until a fur ther lot of milk is brought, then we get a cream that is not uniform in composition. The chief points in running a sep arator so as to obtain uniform results are to watch the speed at which the machine is run, the temperature of the milk, and the amount of milk skimmed per hour. The American Cultivator. Sound Clover Hay. I prefer to cut in the afternoons, for the reason that clover has but very little chance to cure before the dew falls and will not be affected by It as if it were partly cured. The next day, after the dew is off, go over your clover, giving it a good turning, either by hand or by a ted der, and if the clover is heavy It will be well to give two turnings or ted dlngs. By this time the clover will be gin to show signs of being partly cured, and still it isn't dry enough to break off the leaves, heads and smaller stems which are the best parts of the hay. Then start the rake and rake it into medium-sized windrows. I prefer to do my raking in the mid dle of the afternoon and avoid raking in the evenings. Next day, if you are not sure the day is going to be such as to finish curing - the clover in the windrow, take your fork and slightly tear tho windrows apart, letting the sun have a better chance to shine on the clover and the breezes to pass through which is a great aid in cur ing hay. After the dew Is off, lift the clover off the ground and invert it Then after dinner, if it is well cured, begin to draw In and mow away. A good way to test this matter Is to take some stalks and twist them together and if they show no signs of moisture generally your clover is all right. If the day has been a bad one I would prefer to leave it a day longer by bunching it up. Last year I spoiled what would have been choice hay simply by draw ing It in when it was too full of mois ture. The weather was threatening, and I did not care to leave it In the field over Sunday, so drew It In; but next time I have hay under similar cir cumstances I shall bunch it together and take my chances with the rain, and last year it didn't rain after all. The stock eat It and seem to like it as a change, but It is not choice hay. C. F. B., in the Boston Cultivator. A Few Poultry Notei. When alfalfa cannot be had, give the chicks a chance at red clover. Poultry raising is now the fad in Florida, where the industry has long been neglected. Quarreling hens should be separ ated, as a hen that is worried will not do her best at laying. Give the hens and young chicks a chance for an occasional dust bath, which will drive away lice. An ugly rooster should be disposed of. He is as dangerous In the flock as when running at large. When killing fowls, let the blood drip Into a pail of bran, as the mix ture makes a splendid food. Grit, oyster shells or a baked mix ture of salt and charcoal should al ways be available for the hens. . It will soon be time to dispose of the old hens, which should be done along In the summer when they quit laying. A poultry raiser gives the following combination for morning feed for lay ing hens: Mash of bran and dry cut alfalfa, equal parts, 5 percent meat and blood meal, same . ampunt of crushed charcoal, the whole seasoned with salt. The first Insurance company wu established in 1706. rort'LAR HYDRANGEAS. The choice of varieties Is perplex'ng because there are hundreds of lovely shrubs, but there Is a list that the be ginner may tie to. It contains those good old stnndbys thnt nre sold by the million ami which nre sure to give you your money's worth. First of all, the hydrangea, undoubtedly the showiest of all shrubs nnd the only one for au tumn flowerlug. Its huge flower clus ters nre a foot long or more and when cut will last n year -without water. The change of color from white to purplish, with brown nnd other tones, Is delightful to watch. Don't plant this In the middle of the lawn as most folks do. Put It in front . of bigger bushes, so that the flowers will have a background. GLOVE TURNING. A good deal of time and energy may be saved both on the part of tree and grower by rubbing off the young, ten dor growth with u gloved hand, which is commor.Iy called "glove pruning.' Every young tree should be visited at this time, both in orchard nnd nursery, and tho surplus sprouts removed. It Is also a good plan to examine the old trees and take off the water sprouts while small. This work should be looked after several times during the growing season. Dorninnt buds, where budding was done last season, should also have attention now: the stock should have been cut off above the bud and care should be taken that ali sprouts are rubbed off but tho one coming from the bud which was In serted. Top grafts should also be looked after. When grafts have made a growth of from four to six Inches the string should be cut, nnd In cases where the growth promises to be ex ceptionally vigorous It is advisable ta pinch out the top, as otherwise it is liable to get broken off by winds or by birds alighting on them. Grafts should be gone over three times each season in order to be sure that suckers do not get a start and rob the scions. Cor. Colmun's Rural World. GARDEN COLUMBINES. There are very few old fashioned gardens that do not contain sonic of the columbine, it is such an old-time favorite. Formerly the old purple and purplish white sorts were mostly seen, but since the Introduction of the blue and yellow one from the Rocky Mount ains, and tho growing under cultivation of the wild scarlet one of the North, tho number of kinds has greatly In creased. It is not nlonc those men tioned that have been added. When grown close together, as these sorts have been, they hybridize one with an other, the result being that numbers ot varieties differing from the parent forms have been obtained, some of them of great beauty. Any one pro curing a collection of a half dozen or a dozen sorts would be surprised to see the diversity of color and habit ol growth'. The wild scarlet one of tlso North Is one of tho first to flower, and it is yet one of tho most distinct of nil. The blue and the yellow ones of the Rocky Mountains nre also fine, and the yellow one has the character of continuing flowering for some time af ter its main crop. is over. It takes year for columbines to flower unless the seeds are sown in the summer as soon as ripe, in which case the plants will flower the next spring. This is also the case with many other peren nials. ORCHARD ITEMS. The codling moth nnd tipple maggot can bo made well-nigh harmless In keeping swine, sheep or fowl in tho orchard. John L. Chase, Cumberland County, Me. In Canada they leave tho discussion of the details In fruit growing to the smaller meetings and institutes r.r.d make the large meetings business i;f fairs, at which only the experts and leaders in horticultural matters are ex pected to take prominent part. A. McNeill, Ottawa. Ont. I expect to see an adjustment of or chard lands. We shall go back to the rougher bill lands, leaving the valleys to gardening. I expect to see apple growing leave western New York for rougher lands. Lands far from sea board at a high value will not com pete with high land worth little. H. W. Collingwood, New Jersey. I had an experience In thinning Kieffer pears for three years. I take tJt in July and August from forty to fifty bushels, and my pears in the fall are double the size of those in my neighbors' orchards. I have had pears weighing twenty ounces; they will bring moi'e money than the small pears will, and there is not so much trouble in gathering them.-W. C. Car lin, Illinois. All those fruit growers that have not adopted the plan of spraying are initio- iienvilv. Oue great trouble with far apple market this year is that there are so many iow-graue uw"-, which the market does not want Spraying will not only produce the best fruit but it will help wonderfully. Prune your trees, let them in the sun and air, and plow and dress your or chard every year to keep up its fertil ity; look right after it all the time as you would your stock.-A. A. East man, Penobscot County, Me.-The American Cultivator. Bright red spectacles, accompanied by internal doses of calomel," form a aew German specific agent against sea licknesa. , TEAR FOR NIAIiAlU, immense; VOLUME OF WATER Db S ' VERTED FROM FALLS. Cointnrrclal Knterprl.ea Are Mnklnnr ' Heavy Drain, on 1'hla Famnn Miiw llac Ita Trrinendnu. Electrical row er tha Inducement. Niagara Falls, August 7. The vol ume of water being diverted from the historic Niagara Falls is reaching such proportions that the people of the State are trying to pass laws which will pre vent the possibility of a practical wip ing out ot this sublime natural spec tacle. Water sufficient to develop nearly five hundred thousand horse-power continuously, tw;enty-four hours per day, for Industrial purposes, Is now be ing taken from tho river above the Falls, and further developments re quiring more water nre contemplated. Trobably tho Inrgest user of the elec tricity produced by the wnters of the mighty river Is the concern which by the five or six thousand degree heat of the electric furnace brings lime and coke Into unwilling union, thereby pro ducing what is known as Calcium Car. bide. Dry calcium carbide is lifeless as so much broken rock, but In contact with water it springs into activity and be gets abundantly the gas Acetylene. The light resulting from the ignition of acetylene is the nearest approach to sunlight known. These facts, though of comparatively recent discovery, were soon seized by men with an eye to the commercial possibilities and to-day calcium carbide it being shipped everywhere and used for dispelling darkness in buildings of all descriptions, from the ordinary barn of the farmer to the country villa of the wealthy, as well as for lighting the streets of a large number ot towns. Acetylene can be easily and cheaply Installed, and the manufacture and sale of acetylene generators has become a business ot recognized standing, has assumed large proportions and Is stead ily growing. To Ward off 8 tings. Hornets and bees are not so apt to sting a person if he keeps absolute ly still, but this is not necessarily due to the fact that they do not see read! ly, but simply that they do not recognize an enemy In a perfectly stationary body. The accumulated in tell'igcnce of generations has shown them that still objects, like posts, stones, or trees, are not enemies, nnd that disturbance of their nests is al ways occasioned by objects having power of motion. It thus follows that if a hornets' nest be disturbed or If a wild bocs' nest be agitated, dang er of stinging Is much less If the per son keeps perfectly still. St. Nicho las. Beat the Machine. A father, with his three children, was In a waiting room In the north of England, and stopped before one of the weighing machines placed there, Lifting his children he placed them one by one on the machine until all three were on it. Then he put one penny Into the slot. The figure Indi cated was 125 pounds. Lifting one of his children carefully off he found tho other two together weighed to pounds The difference, therefore 47 pounds was the first child's weight. In tha same way he discovered the weight of the other two. and then went off highly gratified with his success. Tit Bits. Pneumatic Tire Armor. Dr. J. A. Vanslokles, of Jefferson City, has filed application for patent on a pneumatic tire armor. The The armor is composed of light steel plafcs which overlap each other In such a manner as to render the rub ber tiro of an automobile or carriage puncture-proof. The parts of the armor are small and are held to gether by rivets, rendering it as flex ible as the pneumatic tire Itself. Kansas City Journal. Japs are Gymnasts. Every Japanese barracks has a gymnasium, and the Japanese sol diers rank among the best gymnasts in the world. In half a minute they can scale a 14-foot wall by simply bounding on each other's shoulders, one man supporting two or three others. Preferred Algiers. Once the late Bishop of London was ordered by his physician to spend tha winter In Algiers. The Bishop said it was impossible; he had so many en gagements. "Well, my Lord Bishop," said the specialist, "It either means Al giers or heaven. "Oh, in that case," said the Bishop, "I'll go to Algiers." BABY'S INSTINCT Shows He Knew What Food to Stick To Forwarding a photo of a splendidly handsome and healthy young boy. a happy mother writes from an Ohio town: "The enclosed picture shows my 4-year-old Grape-Nuts boy. "Since he was 2 years old he has cat en nothing but Grape-Nuts. He de mands and gets this food three times a day. This may seem rather unusual, but he does not care for anything else after he has . oaten his Grape-Nuts, which he uses with milk or cream, and then he is through with his meal. Even on Thanksgiving Day he refused tur key and all the good things that make tip that great dinner, and ate bis dish of Grape-Nuts and cream with the best results and none of the evils that the other foolish members of the family experienced. "He is never sick, has a beautiful complexion, and is considered a very handsome boy. May the Postura Com pany prosper and long continue to fur nish their wholesome food." Name given by Postuut Co., Battle Creek. Mich. There's reason. Bead the little book, "The Road to WelkiUe," la very pkg. BIBLE IN 8TONE. Buddhists Carved Their Holy Words on a Hundred Temples. Great as has been the amount of labor expended on the various Bibles of tho world, the palm for execution must be given to the Kutho-daw, which is a Bwlhlst monument near Manda lay in Burma. It conslts of about 100 temples, each containing a elag of white marble on which the whole of the Buddhist Bible, consisting of more than 1,000,000 syl lables, has been engraved. The Bur mese alphabet Is used but the langu age is Pall. This wonderful Bible is absolutely unique. The Kutho-daw was erected in 18D7 by Mindon-Min, the last king but one one Burma. The vast collect-ion of temples together forms a square, with a dominating temple in the center. Each of the marble slabs on which the sacred texts are Inscribed Is surmount ed by an ornamental canopy in pag oda form. Prerogatives of Jack Tar. Uncle Sam is a tolerant old gentle man. He permits the sailors on his battleships and cruisers to keep pets. No ship in the navy is without its mascot. The other day a big cruiser came into Brooklyn Navy Yard and the sailors proudly displayed a big moose for a mascot on board ship! Within the last three months ships have come into the navy yard with all sorts of curious animals for mas cots. One had a jackass from Brazil, another a monkey from Algiers, still another a game cock from Liverpool, while a fourth had a stray dog res cued In port from the waters of the harbor at Southampton. Meteor for a Tombstone. One the oddest tombstones In Amer ica is above the grave of T. B. Lane, at Akron, O. A dozen years ago a meteor fell upon the Lane farm, at Talmadge, burying itself 16 feet in the earth. It was dug out, and on the death ot Mr. Lane was utilized as a tombstone. The metoer, which re sembles a mass of iron ore, is mount ed on an oblong pedestal of polished granite, and is in marked contrast to the crude sculptures found In other parts of the cemetery where the grave is located. New York Herald. Foreign Circus Performers. Although the circus is an institution peculiarly and typically American, over 90 per cent, of the circu9 perform ers and specialists are foreigners. Mr. Bailey calls attention to this In his proFpectus, stating that In Europe the struggle for existence is so snarp that people will attempt things Jn which i failure means death, and ' wnich no American would think of undertaking In order to fit themselves for the trapeze or the ring of some American circus, where they are certain of a good salary. Century. Sleep and Death. An animal deprived of sleep dies more quickly than from hunger. One of the cruelest of Chinese punish ments Is to kill a man by preventing sleep, he dying insane about the fourteenth day. All animals sleep for some period of tho 24 hours; how nnd when they do so depends upon their natural habits. But they all have this in common, that after any unusual exertion they sleep longer. FITRpernniinnntlv cured. No fits or ni-rvoii... ress after llrst day's nsa of br. Kline's Groat NerveItestorer,t2trial hottlenuil trentlsefroe Dr. R. 11. Kmkk, Ltd. ,331 Aroh St., I'hlla., Pa. Buhl work is aid to be very popular now in Eneland. Irish Justice. An Irish Judge stated that If any women wore brought before htm on a charge of slapping or scratching a man's face because he had attempted to kiss her, he would at once dis miss the case. He, however, only awarded one shilling damages against a man who had kissed a widow without getting scratched. f Truths Stmt Tour grocer is honest and if ho cares to do bo can tell you that lie knows very little about the bulk coffee he Bolls you. How can he know, where it originally came from, Jm.iiLWHj! ju II In each package of LION COFFEE you get one full pound of Pure Coffee. Insist upon getting the genuine. (Lion head on every pnekage.) (Save the Lion-bends (or valuable premiums.) . SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, CMo. MimmjiiMgWJffl WINCHESTER RIFLE AND PISTOL CARTRIDGES Winchester Rifle and Pistol Cartridges of all calibers are. loaded the shells, supplies the exact quantity of powder, and seats the bullets properly. By using first-class materials and this up-to-date system of loading, the reputation of Win Chester Cartridges for accuracy, reliability and excellence is maintained.., Ask .for them. HEY. SHOOT S , A :-.V0M ANS : ORDEAl! DREADS DOCTOB'S QUESTIONS Thousands Write to Mrs.Flnkhhm, Lynn, Mass., and Receive Valuable Adviot Absolutely Confidential and Free There can be no more terrible ordeal to ft delicate, sensitive, refined nomas than to be obliged to answer certai questions in regard to her private Ills, even when those questions are asked by her family physician, and man ontlnue to suffer rather thaa submit to examinations which so many physi cians propose in order to intelligently treat the disease ; and this is the rea son why so many physicians fall tot oure female disease. i This 1b also the reason why thousand upon thousands of women are eorre sponding with Mrs. Pinkham. at LynnJ Mass. To her they can confide every detail of their illness, and fronj her great knowledge, obtained frons years of experience in treating femalal Ills, Mrs. Pinkham can advise women more wisely than the local physician. , Read how Mrs. Pinkliam helped Mrflj ' T. G. Willadsen, of Manning, la. She) writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " I can truly say that you have aved my life, and I cannot expresa my gratitude in words. Before I wrote to you telling yoa how I felt, I had doctored for over two year steady, and upeiit loV of money in medicine besides, but it all failed to do me any good. I had female trouble and would daily have faint, ing spells, bankacha, bearing-down pains, and my monthly periods were very irregulav and finally ceased. I wrote to you for your ad vice and received a letter full of instructions Inst what to do, and also commenced to take ,ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I have been restored to perfect health. Had it not been for you I would have been in my grave to-day." Mountains of proof establish the foci that no medicine in tho world equals' Lydia E. Pinkhnm's Vegetable Cony pound for restoring women's health. "I hare tied fpur Taluable Cnwcnret and And them perfect. Couldn't do without them. I have uietl them for lonfi time for indigcatinri nI Ml en in-m tur fjonin nine mr in'jigaftunn inn dii HiHfieM and am nnw cmnpletfliy cured. Hecom lend them in everyone. Once tried, yoa Will ever be without tln-m in the family, ' Edward A. Man, Albany, N.T in nil tli Am in nvarvnti One triad, (mil walk never I Best For The 5 owe 1 3 Pleaaant, Palatable, Pntent.TaiteOoort.DoOoM, Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, 10c. 2.".c,50c. Neve old In bulk. The gflnntne tablet a trim pod O 0 U Guaranteed to care or jour mouey back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 6oa ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES THE DAISY FLY KILLER n iiiuh inn iiortia cfrnifari to every imtne In dint nit riHm, alMplnjr. roont tud all plnce where) ihfti are trouble 'nm. Clean, naafc nil will not Mil a in lure anvthlair.Try T..ai mice and rom wlllnevflrbewltbeut um. It not kept b dBuJem. awnt nreoalil forttU HAIU4I.UHONKI1M. Mil llokalb ,, HrMkl j, K, 4 PENSIONS. "-Ms u iiHiwiiHi anil for wlrtDwa any wnr. AVe hare rocords ol Borvlce. Law and advice froe A, t. MrCOKIIIOK ti BOiNg. SI8 Walnut Hi reft, Cincinnati, Ohio. Sirike Home Ri imiQnooG UI1IUUOIIOOO i CANDY CATrURTIC how it was blended or Wltri Wnat or when roasted? If you buy your coffee loose by the pound, how can x 1 MLm expect purity ana unuorm quuuty t LION COFFEE, the LEADER OF ALL PACKAGE COFFEES, Is ol necessity uniform In quality, strength and flavor. For OVER A QUARTER OF A CENTURY, LION COFFEE has been the standard coffee In millions of homes. LION COFFEE U earefnlly packed at our factories, and until opened la jrour home, haa no chance ol being adul terated, or ol coming In contact with duat, dirt. Oerma, or unclean hands. 11.. 1 i.fr-T by machinery which sizes WHER E YOU HOLD 1 f