SB SK" P. P. 51 Gas Light for Country Homes. Small country Iiouips, as well as large ones, may lifi lighted ty the best light known- ACETYLENE QXS It is easier on the eyes thuu auy other llhiiiiluant. cheaper than kerosene, as convenient as city pas, brighter than electricity und safer than any. . No ill-smelling lamps to clean, and no chimneys or mantels to break. For Ught cooking it is convenient and cheap. ACETYLENE is made In the basement nnd piped -o all rooms and out-buildings. Complete plant costs no more than a hot air furnace. ". iK !(,: If J? T1TT sTim Automatic 1 XJLiV 1 Generators make the gas. They are perfect in construction, reliable, safe and sim ple. Our booklet, "After Sunset, ' tells more about ACETYLENE sent free on request. Dealers or others Interested In the sale of ACETYLENEappara tus write us for Belling plan on PILOT Generators and supplies -it is a paying proposition for re liable workers. ACETYLENE APPARATUS MFG. CO., 157 Michigan Averu:. CHICAGO, ILL. The Mid-Day Rest. Don't neglect the 10 minutes' rest during the day, with the feet raised. It gives the whole body a great sense of repose and works wonders in smoothing out tho lines on the face. FITS perm antra 1 1 y on red. Is'o fl t or nervotn. nftflfl after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveKestorer,2lrliil bottleitnd treatise f re Dr.R. H. KLisE,I.td.,!):nArk St., l'hlla.,l'a, Coal has been discovered near Adrian Dvlcva ia tho Transbaikal. Telephones and Microbes. The repeated complaints that tele phone receivers and transmitters are a Bource of death-dealing disease germs caused a test to be mndo re cently by a prominent physician. The transmitters and receivers of seven telephones located at widely different points, wre put under the severest tests. The telephones are in conslant dally use by people of all classes. The doctor expected to find thousands of germs, but he was agreeably sur prised, as he did not discover a single one. At first he felt convinced that some mistake had been made, and ho conducted a very thorough second test, with tho same result. The tests were made at tho instance of a woman patient who uses tele phones a great deal. Notwithstanding the satisfactory showing, the physic an advises that the receivers and transmtters of all telephones be washed and disinfected at least once a week. Philadelphia Record. Launching Japanese Ships. When a Japanese ship is about to be launched there is suspended from tho bow a huge cage, into which are crowded a score or more of birds. Just as the prow cuts the water tho side of the cage is thrown open, and the vessel enters her native element with her prow crowned by a living garland of birds, whose free flight through space is emblematic of the spirit of the ship. WRONC SORT Ferhaps rinln Old Moat, Potato nd Bread May lie Ac-ninnt You For a-Tlme. A change to the right kind of food can lift one from a sick bed. A lady in .Welden, 111., says: . "Last spring I became bedfast with severe stomach trouble accompanied by sick headache. I got worse and worse until I became so low I could scarcely retain any food at all, although I tried every kind. I had become complete ly discouraged, had given np nil hope and thought I was doomed to starve to death, till one day my husband trying to find something I could retain brought Lome some Grape-Nuts. "To my surprise the food agreed with me, digested perfectly nnd without dis tress. I began to gain strength at once, my flesh (which had been flabby) grew firmer, my health improved in every way and every day, and in a very few weeks I gained 20 pounds in iweight. I liked Grape-Nuts so well that for 4 months I ate no other food, and always felt as well satisfied after eating as if I had sat down to a fine banquet. "I had no return of the miserable sick stomach nor of the headaches that I used to hnve when I ate other food. I am now a well woman, doing all my own work again, and feel that life is Korth living. "Grape-Nuts food has been a godsend to my family; it surely saved my life and my two little boys have thriven ta It wonderfully." Name given by Tos tum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Get the little book, "The Bond to iWcllvllie," In each pkg. V Tie- ISP MII.K AND VITALITY. In his recent address to the Hoi-stein-Eresian Association at Syracuse, , N. Y., rresident Cortelyou of the as sociation touched upon the vitality of cows and their milk. He said: "The most important work of a public nature which, in my opinion will operate to advance the Interest of owners of Holbein cattle, is the promulgation of a better knowledge among consumers of milk, of the diet etic value of the grade of milk pro duced by our io-.vs. it Is a well known fact that the offspring of those breeds of cattle whose milk is rich In lMitter fat arc reared witit the greatest difficulty. Such offspring ap pear to be deficient in vitality and especially subject to stomach and bowel troubles which are fatal in many cases; and It. Is now bclnr; more generally recognized by physicians and consumers that, milk rich In butter fat Is an Improper food for young children and Is deleterious In its ef fects and produces generally the fame effects in human beings as in animals. These irsuIH are now said by scien tists to be due to several causes and primarily to the excess of fat in the milk, and in the cas of children, par ticuiarlv. are probably also due to ttae extraordinary character of the fat globules, which in these small breeds of cattle are extraordinary large, and entirely unlike those of Ho'.strin milk which nearly corresponds with human milk in its solid contents. It Is also becoming widely recogniz ed that the milk from the large and vigorous races of cattle specially Hol Btein's, possesses another quality, characterized by Professor Carlyle. as vitality, and that this quality is com municated to the consumer, whether man or beast. Thus we have large, strong, vigorous calves when reared upon Holsteln milk, and puny, weak ones from those reared upon milk rich in fat; and human being?, fed upon milk possessing the character istics of Holsteln milk, are likewise healthy, strong nnd vigorous. The investigations of the Storm Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, as published in bulletin No. Rl wholly confirm these assertions and I commend Hits bulletin to you as worthy of most careful study. Professor Carlyle was right in af firming that "there Is such a thing as vitality In milk and that it Is of equal, if not greater importance than Its chemical composition, especially for the milk supply of cities, and thrro can he no question hut ttiat the vital ity of the animal producing it. Indi Sria Farmer. HOW TO INOCULATE FOR AL FALFA. Prof. TTopUlns, of Illinois, one of the most, distinguished soil experts of the country, advises in inoculating for alfalfa to use at. least 100 pounds of Inoculated soil to tho acre. The soil should be scattered over the field, ho says, with some degree of uni formity, but. it is not like seeding grain, and It Is not absolutely essen tial that every square yard in th? field should receive Its due portion of in fected soil. Some care should be tak en In spreading It over the higher places in tlic field, but If places should be missed on slopping land or on lower lands the bacteria will soon be carried over them by the surface drainage waters. Indeed, if all the watersheds In the field that Is all ridges and high places are well In oculated the "entire field will ulti mately become infected, the bacteria being carried by soil washing, but tho infection is more rapid of course, If the Infected soil Is spread over the entire field with some ncgree c.t uniformity when It. Is first applied. If possible, the soil should he ap plied at about the time the alfalfa seed is sowed and then harrowed in with the seed, but it may be applied a month or two before sowing the alfalfa or at any time afterwards and It Is not absolutely necessary that I: be harrowed in, although that is ad visable. If applied to a field wliere the al falfa is already a year or two old the infected soil may be mixed with the soil of the field by harrowing or disking (the disks being sot straight, so as to cut off the alfalfa roots). The infected soil may be applied !n any way to get ft over the field as by hand (throwing ft, from the wagon), with an equal gate seeder, if the soil Is dry enough and sufficiently well pulverized or an any other way wliich may be found convenient. The results obtained during the past year fully confirm the results previously reported by the Illinois station concerning the importance and value of Inoculation for alfalfa. The information which we now have strongly indicates that if it Is provid ed with the proper bacteria alfalfa can be successfully grown on any soil where both corn and red clover are successfully crops. HILLSIDE BROODEP HOUSE WITH FLOOR. The Connecticut station brooder house is described by F. H. Stone burn, which has proved very success ful. The house Is built on a side hill, and Its essential feature Is an ele vated chick floor, which is 3.5 feet above the level of the alley nlong the side of the building. This ar rangement Is secured by taking ad vantage of the hillside for the level of the chick floor and digging out the space for the alley as much as necessary. If built on the level the author notes that special attention must be paid to securing good drain age in the alley, which ulrt then have to be dug below the surface. The elevated chick floor effects a saving in the amount of heat required to maintain a given temperature, since It diminishes the enclosed air space, which must be heated, and brings the chicks near the ceiling, the warmest part of the room. Tests have shown that In cold weather the temperature at the level of the alley floor was fourteen de grees lower than at the chick floor. By building on a hillside an amount of side wnll exposed to the weather is considerably diminished which is an advantage from the standpoint of heating. The plan followed has a dis advantage In that the chick pens are low, nnd o It was rather inconveni ent for the at'endant to enter them when it was necessary. Massa chuetts Ploughman. CAKE OF TOOLS. Farmers make a great mistake if they fall to provide a place where the tools can he stored carefully and kept from the weather. So many fanners allow their hired help to be careless with the tools when they are through with them, to throw them down in the field where they must tike the sun and the rain; or if car ried to the tool house at all. are left with dirt on them, so that they will rust and ruin. This ought not to be so. Every tool, as it has served its purpose, should be cleaned and put In the tool house in its place. It can then be readily found when needed, and will he fit for use. Carelessness with the tools means loss of time and money. A plow costs eight dollars; the hired man leaves it in the field; it rusts and the consequence is It requires a half day to clean It, for It refuses to turn dirt when rusty. The plow is injured, whereas, five minutes would have sufficed to clean it and put it away, thus keeping the plow uninjured and saving the wages of the hired man while there should have been a lot of work done with the plow. All the tools should bo kfpt in order. Nothing should be laid away out of repair. It will save your temper as well as your cash, it a rule is adopted to care for tho tools properly and keep them always ready for use. As Foon as yon are done with a mower, binder or harrow, put it under shelter. The small tools should he krnt in a tool chest: they are then all together and ready for use. These are seemingly insignin cant matters; but they count for much in the aggregate. Lojs of time means loss of money and tools cost too much to be rejected In this way. Sirs. Lou J. Duncan, in the Ep'.tomist. GOSLINGS PAY 'WELT,. Young goslings should be put on a lot where tho grass Is vigorous and tender, and should be given hesldes all the meal and shorts they will eat and some meat scraps. They arc al lowed to run in a half-acre lot until the flight feathers reach the root, of the tail, then they are kept In a small enclosure with some shade and fed for about three weeks all the corn meal with one quart of meat scraps that they will eat In the morn ing and whole combat night. They have all the water they will drlnlc and a box of clear sharp sand. When ready for market, they should be dressed-carefully with the head on and leaving the flight feathers and a'hout half the neck unpicked. They should bring from eighteen to twenty five cents per pound and averago nine pounds each. A goose that will lay fifty eggs a season is almost as profit able as the average cow. An extra profit Is the feathers which amount to about seventy cents per ten gos lings. Massacbuestts Ploughman. A HANDY CONTRIVANCE. To hold cow's tail while being milk ed, string a wire above and a little back of the cow and then take three or four short wires about 20 to 24 inches long and make a hook on each end, one small one to go on the wire and the other to hook on the tail. Etna Burgress, in The Epitomlst. The Word "Jinrikisha." The word jinrikisha comes from three Japanese roots, jln-riki-sha, meaning respectively man, power, car ritge, but it Is not of Japanese ori gin. So recently as 1S70 the incon venience of the slow, lumbering two wheeled carts turned the thoughts of English residents to the ease with which the hardy natives could pro pel a lightly constructed vehicle, and one was invented, some say by a missionary, others by a newspaper proprietor's son. Ever since then tho heavy carts have been entirely dis pensed with. The population of Chicago is now 2,272,700 people. mm topics tniTrriTTTrri''i ttttttt SHEEP AS SCAVENGERS. A sheep is not a scavenger In th sense that the pig is. They will pass through a pasture or a field filled with all kinds of weeds, eating of this and that by way of variety, or as a tonio to theii systems. The dandelion, which is so abundant in our pnaturos, is relished by sheep, and they will scarcely let any of it go to seed, so diligent are they in eating it down. Most weeds are somewhat bitter to the taste, and the liking for what Is bitter seems to be a peculiarity of the heep, which often leads It to eat plants that arc poisonous if allowed to run where poisonous weeds grow. It tins been stated upon pretty good au thority that sheep have been poisoned by an overdose of cherry, peach nnd almond leaves, all of which contain prussic acid, nnd are poisonous when eaten in any considerable quantity. VALUE OF A SLED. A sled Is more convenient for many uses of (lie farm than a wagon. Every farmer should have at least one two borse sled capable of bearing heavy loads and about two oue-hnrse sleds for hauling light loads. There are many forms of sleds, some very costly nil serviceable. One cheap form is made from two planks (about 2 or 3 Inch) 1 foot wide and about 10 feet long fut a two-horse clod, (1 feet for one-horse. Crocs pieces about C feet long may be milled across the top foi bunks, and slani'r.iV.s for box may be nailed on or mortised Into tho runners and tlie rlcd drawn by means of n chain fastened to the top of rumors. The runners should bo well sloped np in front and if (shorter bcariug is wanted may bo sloped at both front nnd back. If soled with old wagon tires it will last a long time. All sleds should be made wide, as a narrow one is easily upset. A. N. Horn, In The Epitomlst. USING THE SKIM MILK. Much of the skim milk which is fed on the farm Is given without much idea of its value or what it should ac complish. It Is n by-product of the farm, and the main Idea seems to be to feed It and get it out of the way In our experience the best results in feeding it come from a combination of grains, except when it is fed to poul try. In this feeding several interest ing experiments have been made, and the conclusion reached that the egg re turn is best when the grain is fed by itself. The skim milk is Invariably fed In tho morning nbout 10 o'clock, and we have had the entire flock of poultry come in from the range for their feed of skim milk. In the winter we feed the warm mash in tho morning, mixing It with a mixture of equal parts of water nnd skim milk; at 10 o'clock we give them skim milk in the trough, trying to dole it out so that each bird will gut nbout n cupful; at noon wo feed tho whole grain in the litter in the scratching shed, and at night whole grain again, arranging It so that three or four sup pers out of the seven are c.f whnie corn heated in the oven and fed nearly hot. For swine the best results come from milking n mixture of finely chopped vegetables, middlings nnd enough skim milk to make the mass like porridge. In the summer this Is fed cold, and In the winter ns warm as tho swine can swallow It Indian apolis News. HORSES OR OXEN. The New Hampshire Experiment Station has lieen keeping nn account of the cost of fending a horse, tlml weighed 1200 pounds, for a year, he being kept at moderately hard work, and say that It costs $7-1.32. In round numbers, then, it costs $1j0 a year tc feed a pair of such horses, and thecosl of shoeing would be about $15 more, while repairs to harnesses and keep ing them cleaned and oiled would make another $10. Then the ordinary farm er will not make such a pair of horses last more than ten years, and many would use them up in half that time, Say that they cost $;!00, which is not a fancy price, and j et does not mean a cheap pair that can not do a fair day's work. Can they do any more work on a farm than a yoke of good four-year-old oxen? Can they do any work that the oxen cannot, unless it bo on mowing machine or reaper? Wo know that the oxen can work best in swamps or among stumps. It costs less for tho yoke and chains than for a harness. They are more easily taken care of. When not at work they can feed in the pasture, and they require little grain feed, unless working very hard or being rattened, and if well cared for after three or four years at work they can be sold for beef for much more than they cost at throd years old, while if the farmer raised them himself they seem to have cost him nothing. More than one farmer who fails td make much more than a fair living ai his business will find upon Investiga tion that it costs him from $300 to' $400 a year, and some of them much more than that for a horse team to do the work that his father used to do with his oxen. Ills father raised his calves, trained them and worked them. Sometimes he gold one or two yoke of steers, sometimes a yoke of fat oxen. When he did so it seemed al most like finding so much money, and often he put it in the bank or let it out on mortgage. Now the son has to Ec to the bank or raise money by giv ing a mortgage every (ew years to purchase a new team of torses. American Cultivator. 0 COLLEGE HUMOR. Willie saw some dynamite, Couldn't understand it quite Curiosity never paj-s; It rained Willie seven days. Princeton Tiger. CAUSE OF THE TROUBLE. Miss Justin "Do tell me! What is the newest thing in swell gowns?" Sliss Tartun "Why, dear, you are." Chicago Tribune. ANOTIIER DANGEROUS STAGE. Medical Student "What is the sur est sign of convalescence?" Old Prnctltloner "When the patient ibegins to make love to his nurse." Town Topics. HIS WAY OUT. ' Pond Mothcr-"Wcll, Mr. Crlticus, what do you think of Mary's voice?" Mr. Crlticus "Astonishing volume, madam! its volume is simply wonder ful." Somerville Journal. AT 11 I. M. Mr. Borem "Everything sticks so this humid weather." Miss Patience "Is that the reason you can't pull yourself awny, Mr. Borem?" Cleveland Plain Dealer. NO ROOM FOR DOUBT. White "Why do you think Smith looks upon marriage as a failure?" Gray "I heard him say not long ago that he would never go to the peniten tiary for bigamy." Detroit Tribune. CLEAR AS MUD. Mrs. Chiigwnter "Joslah, what is the meaning of the word 'equinox?' " Mr. Chugwater "It comes from 'cquus, horse, and 'noxious,' bad. Bad for horse. Will you never learn to use your own mind?" Chicago Tribune. DECLINED WITLL THANKS. Ilcr Father "I regret to say, young man, that circumstances over which I have no control compel me to decline your offer for my daughter's hand." The Young Man "What circum stances are those?" Her Fnthor-"Yours."-rick Me Up. NO TIME TO EXPLAIN. "You have quit complaining about tho price of meat." "Had to quit," answered the indus trious citizen. "I nm kept so busy hustling for the price thnt I no longer hnve time to complain." Chicago Journal. A RABID VIEW. "Now, professor," said Miss Kay, "you know something of human na ture; at what age does tho average man of intelligence marry?" "Dotage!" promptly replied tho crabbed oldfellow. Philadelphia Tress. FELINE. Tcss "Do you like the cut of my new skirt?" Jess "Very much." Tess "Do you, really?" Jess "Yes, indeed, I had three just like it when they wcro in style." Philadelphia Press. COUNTING THE COST. Eacon "Do you believe that time is money?" Egbort-"Certalnly I do." "Well, if you had a dollar watch.nnd had to wind it up for a week, how much would a dollar watch cost?" Yonkers Statesman. A GENTLE REMINDER. Mrs. Blue "My husband is so tired liaaflnff ahnu nnnl KtTla 41,n4- T 1 ' I aare meunon it to mm again ana we re all out. What shall I do?" Mrs. True "Let him freeze for a while and he'll think of it himself." Detroit Free Press. SUFFICIENT CAUSE. "Snbbubs' house was all lighted up tight," said the first suburbanite. ""Yes," replied the other, "they were Celebrating a silver Jubilee." "Nonsense they haven't been married twsenty-five years." "No, but they have had one cook for twenty-five days." Philadelphia Tress. AN EVIL BLUNDER. "I made a serious mistake to-day," said the doctor. "What was it?" queried the drug gist. "I charged a stranger $2 for a con sultation," answered tho M. D., "and nfter paying it he said ho fully ex pected to pay $10." Columbus Dispatch. THE TURN OF L Dread Diseases Intelligent Wohien PreparO for It. Two Relate their Experience. The "change of life'Ms the most critical period of a woman's existence, nnd tho anxiety felt by women as It draws Hear is not without reason. Every woman who neglects tho caro of her health at this time in vites disease and pain. When her system is In a deranged condition, or she is predisposed to apoplexy, or congestion of any organ, the ten dency is at this period likoly to become active and with a host of ner vous irritations, make Ufa a burden. At this time, also, cancers and tumors are more liable to form and begin their destructive work. Such warning1 symp toms as sense of suffo cation, hot flashes, head aches backaches, dread of impendijig evil, timid ity, sounds in the ears, palpitation of the heart, parks before the eyes, Irregularities, constipa tion, variable appetite, weakness and inquie tude, and dizziness, are promptly heeded by in telligent women who are approaching the period in life when woman's great change may be expected. These symptoms are all just so many calls from nature for help. The nerves are crying1 out for assistance and the cry should be heeded in time. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound was prepared to meet the needs of woman's system at this trying period of her life. It invigorates and strengthens tho female organism and builds up the weakened nervous system. It has carried thousands of women safely through this crisis. For special advice regarding1 this im portant period women ere invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn. Mass., and it will be furnished absolutely free of charge. Read whnt Lydia E. rinkham's Com pound did for Mrs. llyland and Mrs. Jlinltle: DenrMrs. Tinkhnm: "I had beon suffering with falling of the i'nb for years and was passing through tho Changa of Life. My womb was badly swol len; my stomach was sore; I had dizzy spells, irk headaches, and was very nervous. Lydia E. Pinkhan's Vegetable Compound Succeeds Where Others Faijp 'L Pittsburg, Pa. TM10M atirl rclinltli- fn.tltittlrm hm prr-p-ired thouf n nd of .vnrnis mm nnd womrn fr th active dull or. Hit, Xu those la waut ul a uu-rul, iriuail'iil cilui-iitt ju, clrr ulnrs will tm M-nlmi application. T. DUFf- 3c SO r. Burglary Doesn't Pay. As a hint to the knights of the Jimmy, tho American Rankers' as sociation gives out the cold facts that bank burglaries in tho past year net ted on an averago but a little over $1,000 each, whilo the burglars who were caught are now serving senten cts aggregating 150 years. I!rs.Wlnslow's!5oothln!f Syrtin for Children teethlng.soften tha gums, rcMluees inflamma tion, allays pain,ourewInd ;oiie, 23c. a bottle, The phosphate rock is found in pockets, not veins. Jdonot believe Plso's Cure for ronsimn tionhasanequai for uoutf lis and eolds. Jon F.iiOTSB.TrtnityHprln',', Ind., Keti. lj, l'JOJ. The capital invested in electric lines of the United States is $2,167,031,01)0. RAW ITCHING ECZEMA Blotches on Hands. Kars and Anklra For Three Years Instant Kellrf and Speedy Cure by C'uticnra. "Thanks to Cuticura 1 am now rid of that fearful pest, weeping eczema, for the iirst time in three years. It first appeared on my hand, a little pimple, growing into several blotches, and then on my ears and ankles. They were exceedingly painful, itching, and always raw. After the iirst day's treatment with Cuticura Soap, Oint ment and Pills, there was very little of the burning and itching, and the cure now seems to be complete. (Signed) S. B. liege, Passenger Agent B. & O. 11. K., .Washington, U. C." Does it For Prestige. The postofllco department has drawn a warrant for one cent In favor of Adriel L. Stuart, of Freedom, N. H. This Is Stuart's salary for carrying the mall3 over the seven-mllo route be tween Freedom postofllco and the railroad for four years. He mads this low bid on account of the prestige which the sign "U. S. Mall" gives him in bis passenger business. LOST 72 POUNDS. Waa Fast Drifting Into the Fatal Stages ot Kidney Slcknesa. Dr. Melvln U. Page, Page Optical Co., Erie, Pa., writes: "Taking too many Iced drinks in New York in 1S05 sent me home with a terrible attack of kidney trouble. I had acute conges tion, sharp pain in the back, headaches S'and attacks of diz- ziness. My eyes gave out, ana with the languor and sleeplessness of the disease upon me I wasted from lf4 to 122 pounds. At the time I started using Donn's Kidney Pills an abscess was forming on my right kidney. The trouble was quickly checked, however, ond the treatment cured me, so that I hnve been well since lStill nnd weigh 188 pounds." Fostor-Milburn Co, Buffalo, N. T. For sale by all druggists. Price. 60 cents per box. vuBaaaoiDttaoaa9CiMoaBaaoiaQK " I wrnts you for advice and commenced treatment with Lydia E. Pinkhanrs Vege table Compound as yon directed, and I nn happy to say that all those distressing symp toms left me and I havapaxscd safely through the Chanjro of Life, a" well woman. I am recommending your medicine to all my friends." Jlre. Annie K. U. Uyland, Chester town, M'.l. Another 'Woman's Case. "DiHng change of life words cannot ex press what I suffered. My physician suid 1 had a canrerousronditioii of thowomb. (Ja day I read some of tho testimonials of women who had been cured by Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I derided to try il and to writo you for advice. Your medicin made me a well woman, and all my bad symp toms soon disappeared. " I ndvise every woman at this period of 1if to take voiir medicine and write you for ad vice.'' Mia Lizzie Hinkln, Salem, Ind. What Lydia E. Pinhbam's Vegetable) Compound did for Mrs. llyland ami Mrs. Hinltle it will do for any woma. at this time of life. It has conquered pain, restored health, and prolonged life in cases thai utterly bamed physicians. The Cigaret Evil. A La Grange young man, when go ing a-swimming recently, left a lighfr ed cigaret too near his clothes. He walked home after dark. Kansas City floiirnnl. WE SELL A $300 PIANO FOR $195- To introduce, liny direct and savotliedif fereneo. Kasy terms. Writo us aud wo'lT toll yon all ahout it. IIOI'KU NN'S MUSIC HOUSE, IS. '17 KinltlifirM Ktrpnt. l'lttliirfr. Pat. "For rtvr nln. rears T tmff.red with ehronle eon -ttpntinn nnd riurina this ttmo 1 had to tnko aa injection of warm water ono every 2 hours bofor 1 could have nn action on mv bowela. Happily I tried Cabaret., and today I am a well man, Inrin(r the nine years before I n.ed Caacareta f puffered ontold miaery with internal ptlea. Thank to yon I am free from all that thia morning. Yoa eaa uta tula lu behalf of miiTerlng hiimanitr."' B. V. t'iauor, Roanoke. 11). Plean. PlaaWe, Potent. Taste. Good. TV) OooaT Never blcltca, Weaken or Gripe, 10c. 25c, SOe. NoveV old in bnik. The (Tannine tablet atamped COCl Quaranteod to cure or your money baok. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. Sot, ANNUAL SALE, TEH MILLION BOXES . FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar ta their acx, used as a doucho la Burvelously suc cessful. Thorouffhlveleanaea Irill iliuau stops discharges, heals inflammation and local soreness, cures leucorrhcea and nasal catarrh. Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in par, water, and ia far more cleansing; Sealing, eermicidae and economical than liquid antiseptics for all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL, USES For sale at druggists, 60 cents a box. Trial Boa and Book ot Instructions pres. The B. faxTow tvaaisiaHT osjton, Maask THE P A ISY FLY KILL Eg Wen, . uina ana Mliora S'il twmfon to Dfrf tiornoiit dlniBsf ''ivnm.tlMpinfr nura tnd all plftco wher .'lim ar truulilt OIIUS. ClPND, DMt Mill Will Dill toll or riTininir. try Si m om' nd f0" muiisrwiwuiipm ' (era. li Dot kpi bj or !. uU. iZ"iZTi. PENSIONS. S On age at IB. riYil war on disability a.1 fn wl.,.. -. war. We tiara racnni. nr .....- .... i i advice tree. a. w .u.l .iKrtl, k ao.NS, 61 Walnut Htreet, I Inrlni.atl, ol,l. P. N. U. 34, 1005. CANDY CATHARTIC 4f rrnmlr.tr 3 with weak ejea aaa Thompson's Eye Watir