TWO OPEN LETTERS IMPORTANT TO MARRIED WOMEN Mrs. Mary Dimmick of Washington tells How Lydia K. Pmkham'a Vegetable Compound Made Her Well. It is with great pleasure we publish the following letters, as they convinc ingly prove the claim we have so nmny times made in our columns that Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass., is fully quail f.edtogive helpful ndvicetosick women. Read Mrs. IMmmick's letters. Her first letter : Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " I have been a sufferer for the past eight years with a troulilo which first originated from painful periods the pains were excruci ating, hithinnamumlion and ulceration of the female organs. The doctor says I must have an operation or I cannot live. 1 do not want toubmit to nn operation if I can possibly avoid it. I'lcase help mo." Mrs. Mary Dinimick, Washington, I), C. Her second letter : Dear Mrs. Pinkham: , " You will remember my condition when I last wrote you, ami that the doctor said I must have an ojteration or I could not live. 1 received your kind letter and followed your advice very carefully and am now entirely well. As lny ense was so serious it seems a miracle that I am cured. 1 know that I owe not only mv health but my life to Lydia E. Pinkhnm's Vegetable Compound and to your advice. I can walk miles w ithout an ache or a pain, and I wish every suffering woman would read this letter and realize what you can do for them." Mrs. Mary Diinmit-k. Sltth and East Capitol Streets, Washington, I). C. How easy it was for Mrs. llimmick to write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., and how little it cost her a two-cent tamp. Yet how valuable wus the reply! As Mrs. Dimmtek says it saved her life. Mrs. Pinkham has on tile thousands of just such letters as the above, and offers ailing women helpful advice. .L. 3S&3?SHOES!8i W. L. Douglas S4.00 Cilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price, W. L. OOUOLAS MAKES SELLS MORE MEMS $3. BO SHOES THAU AMY OTHER MANUFACTURER IN THE WORLD. 1 il flflfl REWARD to anyone who no IU)UUU disprove thu statement. II I could take yoa Into mv three large factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you the infinite care with which everv pairoi shoes is made, you would realize why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are ol greater Intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe. fV. L. DiHiglnu Strong Mmdm Shoom for Mom. $2. BO, S2.HO. Boy' School S DroShooB,$2.BOr$2,$1.7B,$1.60 CAUTION. Insist iinm bavini: W.l..loii(i. Ias shoe. Take no suhntitute. None freuulue without his nsmo and price stamped on bottom. Fast Color fueefft weed ; thetf will not wear brasty. Write for illustrated Taming. W. I DOL'GI.AS, Brockton, Mass. Mo doubt you'll need a TOWER'S FISH BRAND I SUlTor SLICKER this season. Make no mistake it's the kind that's guaranteed to keep yoa dry and comfortable in the hardest storm. Made in Black or YeU low. Sole by all reliable dealers. lie dealers. I co, JL A. J. TOWER CO, oston, u.a.A. COWU BAR AOIAIt 00., LU. r . XMBN, USB. Hoxle's Cough Disks Check a cold In one hour, lis cents at druggists nrmalleil. A. '. HDXIK, HnHalo. V Y. PATENTS 46 p. book free. Htrhesr refi. Lonfr experience. Kluperald Uo.Iept.t4.Wublngua.D.C W I N C i " .U(,UH'"N II I II X ! . SHOES -f- f ' C'X , rsicts Jt" 3 ft ' V MM .v6l8r. SM?$H lllllCA'TAt- ,no,oM it m "LEADER" AND "REPEATER" SHOTGUN SHELLS Carefully inspected shells, the best of powder, shot and wadding, loaded ' machines which give invariable results account for the superior ly of Winchester ''Leader" and "Repeater" Factory Loaded Smokeless Powder Shells. Reliability, velocity, pattern and penetration are determined by scientific apparatus and practical experiments. They are THE SHELLS THE PRICE, j s,25 Cta SifflttlTIEGHPl IN flMF HAY El .JNOHEDAY IS r,lU I Ha .TFPftPl J IIS MIP. BD COLD, HEADACHE ralll ! IMLIon twoa'lMll Aail-ertiaeoseslerl "KM 10 lima nf'ie'uiar lY' Ceil tor yu MOVfcY ACJK. IF I Daisies Follow Railways. ''Buttercups and daisies follow rail roads the world over," said an engi neer. "In India, In central Asia, In Rrnzll, the parallel rails rim continu ally between meadows white and yel low with home flowers. . In the con struction of all foreign railways American or English engineers have a hnnd.. These men know that Rood home grass Is the best, thing for holding together the earth on em bankments. Grass is totiRh and last ing. It strikes root so easily that It practically cements the most flimsy rnvh works. So grass seed from home Is sown on railway embankments all over the world by the koiue) engineers helping to build them, and thus In the most tropical places, among gor geous orchids and palms and giant cacti, you will see mile after mile of wholesome, clean home grass, stud ded with white daisies and yellow buttercups." Where Babies Swim. '1 spend my winters in Samoti," said a traveler. "It is always sum mer there. There the babies swim. Can you Imagine a quainter, a more charming sight than a host of babies, none over two years old, laughing and crowing and swimming like fish In pools of clear sea water? You will see this sight In Samoa. Samoan women believe sea baths benefit bab ies, and in that equable climate they bathe their little ones daily the year around. The youngsters soon learn to swim. They can swim before they can walk. And to see these pretty brown babies swimming in the sea Is well worth a o.OuO mile trip to Samoa." Philadelphia Bulletin. FITS permanently cured. N'o fits or nervous ness nftertlrst day's use of Dr. Kline's (ireat Merve Restorer, i triolhott lenndt reatlsaf roe Dr. K.H. Kline, Ltd. ,931 Arch 8t.,lhlla., Pa Abraham Lincoln was nine years old w hen his mother died. Useful Like the Rest. Statutes representing the various nations on the earth are being hoist ed to the top of the New York custom house. As laborious attempts; tire being made to explain them, it. will lie seen that they are as useful in a representative capacity as most fig ures of the sort. Exchange. 10O Itewkrd. I00. The renders of this paper will be pleased to learn that therein at least one dreaded dis ease that science has been able to cure in all its st ages, and that is f'liturrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure i the only positive curenowknowato tbt medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's (iitarrhOure Is taken Inter nally. iKtingdirectly upon the blood anil mu cous surtnecs of the system .thereby destroy ing the foundation of tint disease, and giving the patient strength. by buildingup the con stitution and assisting nature in doing Its work. The proprietors have so much fuithin its curative powers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars for any case that it fails tocure. rM'nd for list of testimonials. Address V. .1. Chunky A Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Pruggists, 7;V. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Curiosity Led to Fortune. The curiosity of a woman, who ex amined some colored rock she noticed in San lternardino county recently, resulted in the unearthing of a tur qunis mine. It has just been sold for $24.inM) to C. V. Haldwiti of New York. To Cure a Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, l'ruggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. drove's signature on each box. ioe. Nearly .TOOfl miles of railroad were built here during 1(X.". .IT. H. Gauss's Hons, ot Atlanta, Gs., are theonly successful Dropsy Hpecialists in the. world. Wee their liberal offer in advertise ment in another column of this paper. There are no newsboys in Spain. Women sell newspapers on the street. Salt, the Civilizer. The use of salt as a necessary supplement to diet has had much in fluence in shaping the civilization and exploration of the world. It is most probable that the oldest trade routes were created for the Bait raf fle, as salt and incense formed the chief necessaries of the aneient days. This was certainly the case with caravan routes In Libya and the Sa hara, while the mines of north In dia were the center of a. large trade before the time of Alexander. Another Interesting fact Is that salt has played a considerable part in the distribution of man. When It became absolutely necessary to him. as it did at an early stage of his de velopment, he was forced to migrate to places where It could be obtained. This brought him to the seashore, where he gained his ideas of mari time commerce. Lastly, the preser vative effects of salt on flesh food made long oceanic voyages possible and thus opened up the world to com merce and civilization. r m, for felc worth of leadlnr lsuo novelties InObolo . k eM tardea Seeds. U't worth of UulTraeiec. I uinim Cbiiuu free witb etery order. HOiAllA jU'b atkl) S iUKh. BALXietOBE. I f afflicted wit weals eyes umm Thompson's Eye Water H E S T E R CHAMPIONS SHOOT CCAKANTEED TO CURE AND NEURALGIA. who wont e?emraat It. Cell tor yu atltl MA-CM. iriTMIU'TiVBI, jr. W. glmir, M.M., Manufacturer, BpringJIelS, Mo- Sun in Poultry Houses. If those who raise poultry would realize that fowls that have had free access to sunshine during seven, eight or nine months In the year miss it greatly during the months of confine ment, they would do some changing in their methods of house-building and arrangement. Unfortunately many writers are decrying the scratching sheds, claiming that they are not suffi ciently valuable to warrant their cost and maintenance. Of course, if one has r large poultry house, well light ed and so arranged that all the sun possible enters, then possibly the scratching shed is superfluous. Rut how many such houses the there the country through? One may have a very small house proper, and by the aid of the scratching shed raise a good many fowls. But whatever the ar rangement of the poultry quarters, plan so that they will have all the sunlight possible, and you will see a decided gain In the egg production. Indianapolis News. A Forward Movement. The American Shorthorn Hreeders' Association tuok two great steps for ward at its annual meeting lust week, says National Ktoiliiniin. The first was in udniltting to registry animals from ancestors recorded In the 40th volume of the herd hook Instead of the 2flth volume, published in 187:1. This admits to record many valuable cattle which were shut out under the old rule. The second step was the recog nition of the milMng Shorthorn. An appendix for the registration of dairy Shorthorns was pnnhled for and it was decided to marli with an asterisk the name of liny cow giving X.dOu pounds or more mills in a year. Dairy classes nt pIiows will also lie encourag ed and aided financially. There seems to be a general feeling that Shorthorn hreeders should get back to the dual purpose idea in breeding and that breeders of milking strains deserve financial encouragement. Moreover, tanners are demanding .Shorthorns that give mure milk rather ihuu (hose of extreme beef typo. The association acted wisely In taking steps to perpe tuate general-purpose cattle. Keep All Machines in Working Order. Let us give some of the much abused Implement manufacturers credit for placing on their machines, in plain letters, at least one half of the recipe for implement longevity': "Keep nuts tight," and "oil all bearings." Vet I fear that through very familiarity with this important advice we often neglect It. IVir surely no one who has handled farm machinery and observed Its decline In his own or his neighbor's hands, will ask argument as to the necessity of oiling the hearings and keeping nuts tight. There are many things to look after upon the farm, and If one Is not wide awake some thing is apt to suffer neglect. Anil this when It applies to machinery, consti tutes a great farm "leak." From the vibration of many ma chines, and from the shrjnking of wood parts In all of them, there Is a constant tendency for the nuts to work lose. If care is taken In the first place to keep things snug, so there is no "lost motion," the vibration will be much reduced, but It Is sometimes a very good plan to put on an extra nut where there is continued trouble the two will stand a lot of shaking, do over all machines, some wet day and tight en everything that ought to he tight. But if you will fail to have wet days, then do It before starting to work. It will surely pay, for, even If no perma nent damage Is done, there is great los of time when one must stop in the middle of a field and chase his shadow half a mile for a bolt. Another case in point: A wagon Just coming out of Its newness was neglected until one day a solid hour was needed to replace lost nuts and holts. Ten minutes would have done the work earlier. Little and often is a- good rule In oiling. I think more farmers are more careful in this direction than in watch ing the nuts. Windmills, however, are liable to suffer, simply because they are so high headed. Don't let them queak It's harder on your pocket book and still harder on your neigh bor's nerves. Plows on being put away, should have their shares and shovels carefully smeared with axle grease or a good heavy oil. Coal oil will not answer; though It Is good to cut rust It will not prevent It. Paint is a paying protection on both wood and metal parts, for It can he bad cheaply and is easily applied by anyone. Two years ago the writer purchased for five dollars a second hand breaking plow. The share was very rusty and the original paint was gone entirely. We finally persuaded It to "scour," gave it a' good coat- of paint, used it a year, and sold it through the same man for seven dol lars. One may not always wish to sell, but I believe It pays to paint just the same. Last, but by no means least, give all machinery the kindest of care as re gard shelter. It it really surprlsng to see tools standing outdoors, so self- evident are the results. If you hav little room, take the larger implements somewhat to pieces, and in that way quite a lot of machinery may be stored in a small space. Then, aa you value your self respect, don't allow the chick ens to roost over any tool. If no space Is available, It will pay to build a cheap shed rather than let things go without shelter. Finally, treat each piece of ma chinery os a special friend, nnd your reward, in dollars and cents as well as in satisfaction, shall be in accord therewith. H. T. M. in the Indiana Farmer. A New Farm Crop. Four years ago I bought a two ounce package of a new grain called speltz. I afterwards learned that its true name was emmer. I knew nothing about it and sowed It about the 23lh of May, by which time it should have been a foot high. It made a small shock nnd It. stood out In rainy weath er and fell down, and while it probably would have made a peck of seed it was so damaged that I threw it to the hogs. The plant resembles barley, with a larger grain nnd somewhat larger head, t did not think it would be worth while to grow it, but Ihe next year I read something about It and found it was identical In name with emmer, which was largely grown in ihe Northwest and is taking a promi nent place as a money crop. The fol lowing year I sowed a bushel of It and It yielded at the rate of forty-four bushels to the acre. I raised enough of it to test it us food for horses, cattle H nil poultry. It grows better than oats and, ground and mixed wlh an equal bulk of brim or corn nnd eobmeal. it seems to give us good results either for laying on flesh or for mill; for dairy cows; and, mixed half and half with oats, was found an admirable food for horses. The third year's crop was fifty-three bushels to the acre, and I grew several acres; but my crop for 190!, sown on very thin land, made a lighter yield than before, but still It thrashed out over thirty bushels to the acre, and, ns it weighs eight pounds heavier (bun oats to the bushel this can be added to the yield when we esti mate the amount of feed it will pro duce. The crop is one adapted to the semi arld lands, and Is not ns likely to be cut. down in the yield as otits by a dry spring. It has Ihe hardy properties of oats and can be sown just os soon as the ground can be worked in the spring and con be harvested at. the same time as oats. I have sown oats and emmer on the same day every spring that. I have grown the emmer. and they me harvested at the same time. We sow at the rate of two bushels to the acre and think it a better crop to sow clover with than oats, ns It does not shade the ground as much. In my judgment, it. is one of the best and cheapest .poultry foods that can he grown, and, either soaked in hot water for twelve hours or ground and mixed with corn, It is a cheap and excellent food. From my somewhat limited experience with It, I would say It. is a crop well worth growing by farmers generally. If soaked It can also be fed to young pigs and brood sows. The grain of oatfl being much smaller than emmer, and the first that I planted having been mixed slightly with oats, I find the proportion of oats has Increased ever since, so that now it Is perhaps 1(1 percent oats. While this does not hurt it for feeding or reduce the yield materially, it is a dis advantage when grown for need. Even with this mixed emmer and oats It would take but a short time to pull Ihe oats out of the shocks where seed was to he saved, and I shall do this another year In order to get a pure stock of seed. The straw from emmer is fully equal to barley straw, being soft and bright, and It Is eaten Teadily by stock. One disadvantage f of feeding the straw, however. Is that there is such a large proportion of beards In It that it some times makes the horses' mouths sore, and we cannot separate the beards as easily with the machine now used with blowers as we could with the old ma chines. I have not made any test of ihe feeding value of emmer which would enable me to speak positively in re gard to It as compared with other grain, but In corresponding with a manufacturer of oatmeal I find that o-.ils give .'0 to 55 percent of grain when hulled, while emmer gives 78 percent, there being two distinct grains in each hull. This can be readily dis covered by rubbing out a few heads of each in the hands. In running oui emmer through the fanning mill we get out bushels of almost pure hulled grain. Waldo F. Brown in th Tribune Farmer. Easy Way to Carve. Freddy lived In a boarding house near where they had been excavating for the subway. One day when he saw his mother struggling with a particu larly toitgh steak the boarders were convulsed to hear him pipe out: "Mima, why don't you blast It?" His Own Wedding. This Is the first instance In several years of newspaper work that the writer has dared to tell the truth about a wedding for fear of getting licked and does so now with a keen relish. The grtiom is nn editor and Is not an accomplished and popular Tender of society; in face, be doesn't know ns much about It as a rabbit. His hair Is red and the freckles on his face crowd each other for room. Me has never considered that, the fu ture looked bright nnd promising. The bride, judging from the job she has token on her hands, is a young lady of more than ordinary nerve. Gny lord (.Kan.) Sentinel. Feople now demand ihe right to know exactly what they eat. To be told by maker or retailer that the food Is "pure" is not satisfactory. Candy may contaln"ptire" white clay or "pure" dyes nnd yet he very harm ful. Syrups may contain "pure" glu cose and yet be quite digestible and even beneflclnl. Tomato catsup may contain a small amount of salicylic or borncle acid as a necessary preserva tive, which may agree with oue and be harmful to another. Wheat flour may contain a portion of corn flour and really he Improved. Olive nil may be made of cotton seed oil. Butter may contain beef suet nnd yet be nutritious. J lie person who buys nud eats must protci't himself nnd family, anil he lias a right to, and now demands, a law Milder which be ciiu make intelligent selection of food. Mirny pure food bills have been In troduced and some passed by State legislatures; many have been oneretl to Congress, hut all thus far seem ob jectionable. It has seemed difficult for politicians to formulate a satisfactory bill that would protect the common people anil yet avoid harm to honest makers and prevent endless trouble to retailers. No government commission or officer bnt the right to fix "food standards" to de fine what the people shall and shall not eat, for what agrees with one may not agree with another and such act would deprive the common citizen of his per sonal liberty. The Postiim Cereal Co.. Ltd., perhaps the largest makers of prepared foods in the world, have not urally a close knowledge of the needs or the people and the details of the business of the purveyors, (the retail grocer) and, guided by this experience have prepared a hill for submission to I'ongress which is intended to accom plish the desired ends, ami inasmuch ns a citizen of the V. S. has a right to food protection even when be enters anotlier State it is deemed proper that the gov't take control of this matter and provide a national law to govern all the Slates, a copy of the bill is herewith reproduced. Sec. 1 governs the maker whether the food is put up in small packages sealed, or In barrels, W)xed or otherwise. Sec. 2 governs the retailer, who may open a barrel and sell the food in small quantities. When he puts the goods iufo a paper bag he must also enclose a printed copy of the statement of the maker which was atlixed to the original pkg. and inasmuch ns the re tailer cannot undertake to guarantee the statement of ingredients he must publish the statement of 1lie makers and add his own name and address as a guarantee of his selling the food as it is represented to him which relieves the retailer of responsibility of the truth of the statement and throws it upon the maker, where It properly be longs. The remaining sections explain them selves. The Postnm Cereal Co., Ltd., for ex ample, have from the beginning of It? existence printed on the outside of each and every pkg. of Postum and Grape Nuts food a truthful nnd exact state ment of what the contents were made of in order that the consumer might know precisely what he or she was eat ing. A person desiring to buv. for in stance, strictly pure fruit jellv nnd willing to pay the price has a right to expect not only nn equivalent for (he cost but a further right to certainty as to what he eats. Or he may be willing to buy at less cost a Jelly made part of fruit Juices, sugar and a portion of glucose. But he must he supplied with truthful information of the lngre- HIE rilentM nnrl ho riMrmHlc.il In hlo fonal liberty In neiect his own food accurately. The people have allowed the slow murder of infants and adults, by tricky makers of food, drink and drugs to go on about long enough. Duty to oneself, family and nation demands that every man and woman join In an organized movement to clear our people from this blight. You may not be able to go per sonally to Washington to impress your Congressman, but you cau, in a most effective way tell him by letter how you desire him to represent you. Remember the Congressman Js In Congress to represent the people from his district and if a goodly number of citizens express their views to biin, be secures a very sure guide to duty. Be member also that the safety of the people is assured by insisting that the will of the people be carried out, and not the machinations of the few for selfish Interests. This pure food legislation is a pure movement of the people for public pro tection. It will be opposed only by those who fatten their pockets by de ceiving and injuring the people. There fore, if your Kepreseuiative In Con gress evades bis patriotic duty hold him to strict accountability and if necessary demand equitable and bonest service. This is a very different condition than when a faction demands class legisla tion of the Congressman.- Several years ago tbe butter interests of the country demanded legislation to kill tbe oleomargarine Industry and by power of organization forced class leg islation really unworthy of a free peo ple. Work people wanted beef suet butter because it was cheap and better than much unclean milk butter, but the dairy interests organized and forced the legislation. The law should have pro Tided that pkgs. of oleomargarine bear the statement of ingredients and theu let people who desire purchase it for Juit what it Is, and not try to kill It by a beavy tax. Manufacturers some times try to force measures In their Smalle-st Coin Used. The natives of the Malay Peninsu la hAve In use the smnllcst current coin In the world. It Is a sort of wafer, made from the resinous Juice of a tree, and Is worth about nne twenty-tliousttndth of a cent. The smi'.llest coin in circulation at the present day is the Portuguese three reis piece, worth six one-hundredth of a cent. Chicago Tribune. How Russian Poor Live. Nine-tenths of the peasants in Russia live in huts without floors, and too low for a tall man to staqd In. owrl interests but contrary to tbe in terests of the people and the lnbor trust Is always active to push through bills drafted in the interest of that trust but directly contrary to the Interests of the people as n whole. Witness the nntl Injunetlnn bill by which lnbor unions seek to tie the hnnds of our courts and prevent the lspno of any order to re strain the members of that trust from attacking tneu or destroying property. Such a bill Is perhaps the most Infam ous Insult to our courts and the com mon people ever laid before Congress nnd the representatives In Congress must be held to a strict accountability for their acts relating thereto. But when bills come before Congress that are drawn in the interest of all the people they should receive the aetive personal support of ihe people nnd the representatives be Instructed by the citizens. The Senators also fhotild be written to and Instructed. If. there fore, you win remember your privilege and duty yo- will nt once now write to your Congressman nnd Senator on this pnre food bill. Clip nnd enclose the copy herewith presented and nsk them to make a business of following it through the committee considering It. Urge Its being brought to a vote ami requesting that they vote for It. Some oppressively intelligent snd envplng critics may sny this Is simply au advertisement for Postum and text of rrnE food bilt,'. If It meets npprnvat cut it out. sign name nnd address nnd send to your Rep resentative In Congress. Buy two or morp publications from which yon cut this. Keep one for reference and send the other to one of the IT. S. Senators from your State. Ask one or two friends to do the sntne and the chances for Pnra Food will be good. ; A TO REQUIRE MANUFACTURERS AND SHIPPERS ' OF FOODS FOR INTERSTATE SHIPMENT TO LABEL ' SAID FOODS AND PRINT THE INGREDIENTS CONTAINED IN SUCH FOODS ON EACH PACKAGE THEREOF. Be It enacted by the Senate and Mouse of representatives of the Diilteal States of America in Congress assembled. That every person, firm or corpora tion engaged in the manufacture, preparation or compounding of food for human consumption, shall print in plain view on each package thereof made by. or for them shipped from any State or Territory, or the District of Columbia, a complete mid accurate statement of nil the imtrc.diontB thereof, delined by words in common use to describe said ingredients, together with the announcement that said statement is made by the authority of, and guaranteed to be accurate by, the makers of such food, and the name and complete address of the makers shnll be affixed thereto; all printed in plain type of a size not less than that' known as eight point, and in the F.nglisli language. j Sec. 2. That the covering of each and every package of manufactured, pre pared or compounded foods shipped from any State, Territory or the District of Columbia, when the food in said package shall have been taken from a cover ing supplied by or for the makers nud re-covered by or for tbe sellers, shall bear upon its face or within its enclosure a;i accurate copy of tbe statement of in gredients and name of the makers which appeared upon tbe package or cover ing of said food as supplied by or for the makers thereof, printed in like manner as the statement of the makers was printed, and such statement shall also bear the name and address of ihe person, iinu or corporation that re-covered sucto food. , Sec. 3, That It shall be unlawful for any person or persons to purposely, wil fully and maliciously remove, alter, obliterate or destroy sjich statement of In gredients appearing on packages of food, as provided In the preceding sections, and any person or persons who shall violate Ibis section shall be ghilty of a mis- demeanor, and upon conviction shall be fined not less than one hundred dollars nor more than five hundred dollars, or imprisoned not less tbun one month nor more than six months, or both, in the discretion of tbe court. Sec. 4, That tbe Bureau of Chemistry of the Department of Agriculture shall procure, or cause to bo procured from retail dealers, and analyze, or cause to be analyzed or examined, chemicully, microscopically, or otherwise, samples of all manufactured, prepared or compounded foods offered for sale in original, un broken packages in the District of Columbia, In any Territory, or in any State other than that in which they shall have been respectively manufactured or otherwise produced, or from a foreign country,' or intended for export to a for eign country. Tbe Secretary of Agriculture shall make necessary rules and reg ulations for carrying out the provisions of this Act, and is hereby authorized to employ such chemists, inspectors, clerks, laborers, and other employes, as may, be necessary to carry out tbe provisions of this Act and to make such publica tion of tbe results of the examinations and antiylsis as he may deem proper. And any manufacturer, producer or dealer who shall refuse to Bupply, upon op plication and tender and full payment of the selling price samples of such arti cles of food to any person duly authorized by tbe Secretary of Agriculture to receive the same, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction shall bo lined not exceeding oue hundred Uollu.a, or imprisoned not exceeding ono hundred days, or both. Section 3, That any person, firm or corporation who shall violate sections on and two of this Act shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction snail bo lined not exceeding two hundred dollars for the first offense' and for cacJi ' subsequent offense nut exceeding three huudred dollars or be imprisoned not exceeding one year, or both, lu the discretion of the court. See. 0, That auy person, firm, or corporation, who shall wilfully, purposely ot maliciously change or add to the ingredients of any food, make false charges, or incorrect analysis, with the purpose of subjecting the niukers of such foods to line or imprisonment under this Act, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and upoa conviction shall be lined not exceeding ono thousand dollars uor less than three hundred dollars, or imprisoned for not loss than thirty days nor. more than one year, or both. . , Sec. 7, That it shall be the duty of every district attorney to whom the Sec retary of Agriculture sbull report any violation of this Act to cause proceedings to be commenced and prosecuted without delay for tbe tine ami penalties lu such case provided. Sec. 8, That this Act sbull not be construed to interfere with commerce wholly internal in any State, uor with the exercise o their police powers by the several States, Sec, 0, That all acta or parts of acts Inconsistent with this Act are hereby repealed. . Sec. 10, That this Act shall be In force and effect from and after tbe first day of October, nineteen hundred and six. The undersigned respectfully requests the Representatives' from bis district and Senators from bis State to support tliis measure. 8I8nd City Staie The Inventor of Standard Time. On Sunday, November 18, 1883, for the convenience of the railroads and the traveling public, what Is known as standard time was, adopted. Stan dard time was established on prin ciples Hriit suggested by Charles F. Dowd of Saratoga. The United States, beginning at lis extreme east ern limits nnd extending to the Paci fic coast, was end is now divided In to four time sections, eastern, cent ral, mountain nnd pacific. The population of Egypt on July 1, 1004, was 112,417 foreigners and in, :iS(!,423 natives, besides about i;02, 000 nomadic Bedouin?. Orane-Nuts. It Is true thn. these ar ticles are spoken of here 1n a pnbllo manner, but they are used ns illus trations of n manufacturer seeking by example, printing on each pkg. a truthful, exact statement of Ingredi ents, to shame other makers Into doing the fair thlnz by the common people, nnd establishing nn era of pure food, hut that procedure has not yet forced those who adulterate nnd deceive to change their methods hence this ef fort to arouse public sentiment and show n way out of the present condi tion of fraud, deceit nntl harm. The undersigned is paying to thn publishers of America about $20,000.00 to print this announcement In practi cally all of the great papers nnd mng nxiues, in the conduct of what he chooses to ierm, "nn educational cam paign," esteemed to be of greater di rect value to the people thau the establishment of many libraries. That Is held to he a worthy method of using money for the public good. Tell the ppopln facts, show them n way to help themselves nnd reiy upon themr to n-t intelligently mid effectively. The reader will be freely forgiven If be entirely forgets tbe reference la Postum nnd Crape-Nuts, if he will but Join the pure food movement nud do things. C. W. TOST. BILL