i AILING WOMEN. Ksap tb Kldnryt Well an lb Kidney Will Keep You Well. Sick, suffering, languid women are learning the true cause of bad backs and bow to core them. Mrs. TV. G. Davis, of Groesbeck, Texas, says: "Back aches burt me so I could hardly stand. Spells of dizziness and sick headache , were frequent and the action of the kid neys was irregular. Boon after I began taking Doan's Kid ney Pills I passed several gravel atones. I got well and the trouble has not returned. My back is good and strong and my general health better." Bold by all dealers. 60 cents a box. Foster-Mtlburn Co., Buffalo, N. T. Diet Kitchens. There bas been established In Washington a diet kitchen under the direction of a woman. - The patrons of this unique shop are mostly phy sicians, who send their patients for such dishes or foods as will best suit their needs, very much as they send prescriptions to be filled by the apothecary. It Is a practical Illus tration of the belief that proper food is Just as necessary as medicine. The patient who has not the hospital diet cook to supervise his meals may thus be treated and avoid the ill Judged kindness of family and friends. LIMB RAW A3 PIECE OF BEEF. Suffered For Three Years With Itching Hnuior Crnlsrr Newark, V. 8. K, Man Cured by Cntlcara. "I suffered with humor for about three years off and on. I Anally saw a doctor and he gave me remedies that did me no good, so I tried Cuticura when my limb below the knee to the ankle was as raw as a piece ot beef. All I used was the Cuticura Boap and the Ointment I bathed with Cuticura Boap every day, and used about six or seven boxi-s of Cuticura Ointment. I was thoroughly eure' jf the humor in three weeks, and haven't been affected with it since, luse nootherSoap than Cuticura now. H. J. Myers, TJ. 8. N., TJ. B. B. Newark. New York, July 8, 1905." Poison In Beet' Eggs. M. C. Thlsallx is well known for tils researches on snake and other poisons. In the case of the toad and viper he has shown that the specific poison accumulates in the ova, and suggests that it plays an important part in development and inherit ance. His latest studies relate to the poison of the bee's sting. Bee's eggs, he shows, contain minute Quantities of the poison. 475 eggs being required to furniBh enough to poison a sparrow. It is a remark able fact that the unfertilized poison containing eggs give birth to drones, which have no poison. London Globed Blind Student's Work. One of the most Interesting figures In Harvard University Is Edward Ray, a blind student who halls from a small country town in North Caro lina. He has mastered the most dif ficult courses In higher mathematics, in geology, won a degree from the University of North Carolina and is now working for the degree of M. A at Harvard. Here be Is taking some of the hardest courses In the curri culum, Gothic and Anglo-Saxon. Costly Process. It Is said that a lot of wine stored In San Francisco was greatly Improv ed In quality by the earthquake and fire. The incident is of Interest to connoisseurs and also to scientists. But it is to be hoped it will not be found necessary to emulate the ex ample of Charles Lamb's Chinamen with their roast pig, and have an earthquake and fire every year for the improvement of the vintage. New York Tribune. KNIFED Coffee Knifed an Old Soldier. 'An old soldier, released from coffee at 72, recovered bis health and tells about it as follows: "I stuck to coffee for years, although It knifed me again and again. "About eight years ago (as a result of coffee drinking which congested my liver), I was taken with a very severe attack of malarial fever. "I would apparently recover and start about my usual work only to suf fer a relapse. After this had been re peated several times dnring the year I XTas again taken violently ill. The doctor said he bad carefully studied my case and it was either 'quit coffee or die.' advising me to take Postum in its place. I had always thought coffee one of my dearest friends, and especially when sick, and I was very much taken back by the doctor's decision for I hadn't suspected the coffee I drank could possibly cause my troubles. "I thought it over for a few minutes and finally told the doctor I would make the change. Postum was pro cured for me the same day and made according to directions; well, I liked it and stuck to it and since then I have been a new man. The change in health began in a few days and surprised me, and now, although I am seventy-two years of age, I do lots of hard work and for the past month have been teaming, driving sixteen miles a day, besides loading and unloading the wagon. That's what Postum in the place of coffee has done for me. I now like the Postum as well as I did coffee. "I have known people who did not care for Postum at first, but after hav ing learned to make it properly accord ing to directions, tbey have come to like tt as well as coffee. I never miss a chance to praise it." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Look for the little book, "The Road to TVellvIlle," In pkgs. 9 LI 1 1 According to a report of the Geologi cal Survey, an Alaskan glacier is mov ing at the rate of two inches a year. Magnetized plnccs spots attracting iron like the lodestoue are often no ticed in volcanic rocks. They have been ascribed by Folgueraiter to light ning, but he knew of no magnetized rocks that hnd been tested before the lightning struck. Two investigators had been testing rocks near Mount Etna when, during the night lightning fused a telephone wire, from which an uninsulated earth wire ran along a basaltic wall, which had previously shown scarcely a trace of magnetism. Next morning the stones of the wail were ttrongly mag netic for five inches on bor- sides of the wire, the polarity indicating that the current passed upward. To enable people to send their voices to their friends through the mails is the ambition of threa French inventors, who have united their ingenuity Id the production of a wax-like material called "sonorine," which may be spread upon a postcard. Spoken messages may be Impressed upon the prepared cards by placing tbem in a phonogra phic appnratus, into which the sender speaks, and the receiver of such a card has only to put it through a receiving phonograph in order to hear the voice of his friend as In a telephone. What la now known as hypnotism was hefwlded nearly half a century ago as of great importance in medical diagnosis and as a moral aid in train ing children, and much greater powers have been assigned to it in recent years. A late French writer has shown that its usefulness has been greatly exaggerated. It affects only wills too weak to be aided, and it can have no value in systematic education. Gras set has concluded that it is so often harmful that it should be employed only by the practiced physician. Forgery by phonograph is a new crime discovered in Hungary. The son of a wealthy peasant proved an oral will of his father by testimony of serv rnts who heard a voice from the dying parent's bed, saying, "I leave all my property to my eldest son, Alois, and my other children are to get nothing." Such, a statement is valid in Hungary. Subsequently, however, the police were informed that the voice the serv ants heard was not that of his father, but that Alois had 6poken the words Into a phonograph. He had placed the instrument under his father's bed, and when the old man lost consciousness called the servants in and set it going. The police searched his house and found the phonograph record as de scribed. Alois is now to be charged with fraud. While the transmutation of elements at will is still a dream, the alkali met als have given J. J. Thomson a sugges tion of control of the change. Emis sion from these metals in light has been long known, and he has now prov en that they give off slow electrons, or Beta rays, even in darkness, and that the process is greatly influenced by light, heat and chemical forces. These act as detonators, splitting up atoms which have become unstable. This atomic breaking up Is thought to be going on in all matter, with the set ting free of enormous energy, and It is calculated that if the action extends throughout the earth, the emission by every atom of an electron once in a thousand million years would account for the earth's Internal beat The atomic modification may explain the "fatigue" of platinum and other sub stances after long incandescence. British Clerk's Mistake. A story of British stolidity is going the rounds. A certain wealthy Amer ican in London dropped into a shop to purchase a set of decanters. As the purchase represented more money than he had on his person at the time, he gave his address at the hotel, and instructed the assistant to mark them C. O. D. The assistant made a note of the request, but the purchaser was surprised to find the goods left ft the hotel without demand for payment. When the parcel was unpacked, how ever, it developed that each decanter bad been beautifully engraved in twin ing letters, 'C. O. D." Face Carved by Lightning. On Crinnis Beach, near Austell, Eng land, a fisherman was struck dead by a bolt of lightning. The same storm is said to have loosened a quantity of rubble and rock fragments on the cliff Just above the satris. A human face, carven in the solid free of the cliff, ap peared after the avalanche. The "face," which is visible to thi3 day, 14 declared by the people ot Austell to be1 an exact likeness of the man who was1 killed by lightning at the base of the, cliff. The mouth is aga;o and the1 features frozen into the look of horror1 so frequently seen on the faces of lightning victims. Crowing tn Urate. Vice-President Fairbanks, in an ad dress, made the following hopeful statement: "I am a firm believer that as a people, we are growing in grace and expanding in all the ways which make for better men and better wom en, for more and better homes, for a better city, a better State, and a. better! country." A smoking prize was won in the) Concordia Club, of Berlin, a short time ago by a man who smoked half an nnnpA Af tnhnern. In . nln. rtf n fori ' - r-r- - .. tain specified size, in eighteen mln tea. Buying Paint. Springtime after the weather bat tecorae well settled Is painting time. There is no dust flying, no insects are In the air at that time ready to commit suicide by suffocation in the coat of fresh rainr. The atmospheric condi tions are also favorable at that season for proper drying and increased life of the paint. It should be a habit with every prop erty owner every spring to look over bis buildings, etc., and see If they need repainting, not merely to see if tbey "will go another year." but whether the time Las not come for putting in the proverbial "slltch in time" which shall eventually "save nine." For oue coat of paint appiled Just a little before It is actually needed will often save most or the paint on the building by preventing It from letting go and causing endless trouble and expense. Paint lets go because linseed oil which is the "cemeut" that holds all good paint together, gradually decays or oxidizes. Just ns Iron exposed to air and dampness will slowly decay or oxl dize. The water and oxygen In the air are the cause of the trouble In both cases, and the only reason, outside of Its beautifying effect, that we apply paint to wood or Iron Is because we .want to keep water and air away from them. Live paint, that Is. paint in which the linseed oil is still oily, does this very effectually, but dead paint. that is, paint in which the oil Is no longer oily, is no more impervious to air and water than a single thlckuess of cheesecloth would be. If then we apply a fresh coat of oily paint before the old paint Is dead, the oil from the new coat will penetrate the old coat, and the whole coating will once more become alive, and this method of reno vation may go on indefinitely. This explains why It Is better econo my to repaint a little before it becomes absolutely nec-issary than a little after. When the print Is once dead the fresh coat will pull the whole coating off. In the days when repainting meant a general turning of things upside down, a two-weeks' "cluttering up" of the place with kegs, cans and palls, a lot of Inflammable and ill-smelling mater ials standing around, etc., the dread of paintlug time was natural. So was the dread of soap-making time, ot shirt making time, of candle-mnuUlIng time and the like. But we live In an age when soap comes from the store bet ter and cheaper than we can make It, when shirts are sold ready made for less than we can buy the materials, iwben we ran burn coal oil or gas cheaper than we can make tallow-candles, and when all we have to do when iwe want to repaint Is to pick out our colors from the card at the store and pay the painter for putting on the paint. When It conies to picking out the fiaint it Is not necessary that one should be a paint chemist any more than one should be an oil chemist when buying kprosene, or a department store buyer when selecting shirts, or a soap chemist when buying soap. All that Is necessary to insure a fair show Is 6oine knowledge of the character of our paint dealer and the reputation and standing of the maker of the paint offered. Nor must one .?xpect to buy n pure llnsepd oil paint for the price of linseed oil alone. It can be taken for granted when any one offers to sell dollar bills at a discount, he is bait ing a hook for "suckers." So it can be caken for granted when any one whether mail order house, paint man ufacturer or dealer offers paint too cheap, be is bidding for the trade of "suckers," no matter what his prom ises. Rut paints sold In responsible stores tinder the brands of reputable manu facturers are all good products, differ ing from one another in the less Im portant matterof die solid pigments con tained, but practically alike In having their liquid portions composed essen tially of pure linseed oi:. The com petition of the better class of paints has driven inferior goods practically out of the market, and no manufac turer of standing now puts out a poor paint, under his own name at least. As to guarantees on paint, they can be taken for what they are worth. Any reputable manufacturer will make good any defect actually traceable to the paint itself and not.vo improper use or treatment of It. The really Im portant guarantee which the paint buyer should exact from his dealer is that the paint is made by a manu facturer that knows bis business and thai, the paint Itself has a record. If be secures this guarantee he can af ford to chance the rest of It the paint will undoubtedly give good service If properly applied according to direc tions. Puzzling Question. Sleep Is the state of rest and recu peration of the bodily and mental voluntary powers. So much Is under stood in a general sense. Now, what bas long agitated my mind Is this what functional disturbance of bodily or mental voluntary powers awakens a sleeping person? Leave out of con sideration all noiseB, odors, physical disturbances. Have the sleeper In a cozy room where all Is silence and comfort, let bis digestion be perfect, let him have a sane mind in a sane body; what revolution within him throws off his coma and arouses him to life? What brings him back in consciousness? .What mysterious in fluence resurrects him? New York Press. Chinese Yellow Snow. It Is reported in a Peking message, dated March 30, that "yellow snow," due to th dust In the atmosphere, has fallen for several days, causing much superstitious talk among the Chinese. They recall the ominous tradition that yellow rain fell at the time of the downfall of the Ming dynasty, and wild rumors are pre valent, one being that several assas sins have recently found their way Into the imperial palace. Korean Daily News. Whelps or Cubs. Infant lions and bears are now gen erally spoken of as "cubs," but In former times the word "whelps" would have been used. Every edition of the English Bible from Wyclif'a time to 1C11 gives "whelps" for the young of the lion or bear. A "cub" meant originally, in English, only a jjoung fox. But by Shakespeare's time it was possfble to talk of the "young suckHng tubs" of a she bear, and Waller even applied "cub" to a young whale, now known as a "calf." DUN'S WEEKLY SUMMARY Little Idle Machinery Reported at Manufacturing Establish ments. R. G. Dun & Company's Weekly Review ot Trade says: Business niuintnins wholesome progress and mercantile collections Improve. The week's aggregate transactions show a good gain is noted In comparison with the corresponding period of any previous year. Uncertainty regarding the crops caused unusual conservatism at the northwest until this week when the outlook became sufficiently encouraging to restore confidence. In many jobbing lines there Is no pros pect of vigorous activity until fall, but wholesale distribution Is now heavy and retail business Is only re tarded at points where temporary weather conditions are adverse. Little idle machinery Is reported at manufacturing plants. Railway earn ings thus far recorded for May ex ceeded last year's by 11.1 per cent, and foreign commerce at New York for the last woek showed gains of $1,704,681 in Imports and $491,743 in exports. Money Is returning from San Francisco and more gold has been engaged abroad but the security market rules comparatively quiet. Aside from the strike of founders and molders the Iron and steel In dustry Is In splendid condition. No decrease In activity of textile machin ery has occurred. Footwear factories are supplied with orders that will maintain full activity for two or three months and supplementary con tracts for fall delivery continually ar rive from salesmen or by mail. The higher prices announced last week on sole leather came as a surprise, ow ing to the dullness of the market and tended to make business still smaller. Failures the week numbered 174 In the United States against 198 last year, and 13 in Canada compared with 29 a year ago. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat No. red f M m Rye-No. J n n Corn No. 2 yellow, pur w m No. 8 yellow, shelled ft; ig tilled ear M 58 Oats No. 8 white 37 us No. 3 white 88 87 Flour Winter patent 4 id 4 15 Fancy striilirlit winters 4 00 4 10 Bay No. 1 Timothy 1ft 00 IS JS Clorer No. 1 10 75 II B Feed No. 1 white mid. ton ti 60 W0 1 Brown middlings 19 fto id 00 Bran, bulk at 00 21 50 Straw Wheat 7 AO 7 M) Oat 7 50 800 Dairy Products. Butter Elgin creamery I t!4 2!S tmio creamery m ill Fancy country roll 19 21) Cbrcao Ohio, new 12 18 Now York. new. 12 13 Poultry, Etc. Hens per lb f 14 16 Chlrkens dressed 16 IS Eggs l'a. and Ohio, trevb. . ; 17 18 fruits and Veoctablct. tpples bbl........... as1 5W itpiaiura ram-y null,? jior uu.... gj Cabbage per ton js m 15 Onlous per barrel 00 220 BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent f ft. At a a Wheat-No. red M M Corn Mixed 44 47 F.g IK jn Butler Ohio creamery w xti PHILADELPHIA. Flour Winter Patent f 50ft Wheat No. 8 red at ia Corn No. 2 mixed g . 54 Oata No. 8 white js 86 Butter Creamery yg Eggs Pennsylvania firsts ig 20 NEW YORK. Flour Patent! , 5 00 5 13 W heat N 0. 8 red 89 90 Corn No. S 67 68 Oats No. 8 white W SH Butter--Creamery 89 2.1 aggs state and rennsy ivania.... 10 10 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,450 to 1,600 be ; .... 15 60 l'rlnie, 1,kj tol,4iKl lbs 0 85 Good, 1,1(00 to 1,801) lbs 6 10 Tidy. 1,060 tol.lM) lbs , 4 0ft Fair, BOO to 1,100 lbs 4 40 Common, 700 to MX) lbs 4 40 Common to good rat oxen 8 7 Common to good fat bulls 8 60 Common to good fret cows 8 00 Hellers, TOO lol, IMIib SHI ttrth cows and springers 16 0) Sheep. j'rlme wethers I 6 6ft Good mixed 6 2:1 Fair mixed tws and wethers.... 4 IK) Cullsanu common 2 60 Culls 10 choice lambs 6 60 Hogs. I'llmehenTy hogs I 6 60 I'rime medium weights 6 lift Best henry Yorkers...., 8 66 liood light Yorkers 6 60 Figs, as to quality 6 jjft Common to good roughs i 40 Blags 4 00 Calves. Veal Calves (4 50 Ueavy and thin calves a 00 IB 75 6 60 6 80 6 1ft 4 7 i 4 61) 4 fto 4 1ft 4 00 4 Ml 50 00 5 80 5 BO 6 10 4 05 6 90 S 61 6 66 6 80 6 80 4 &) 5 4 bd Oil Markets. ' The following are the quotations for credit balances In the dirrerent Holds: J'eunfylvanla, $1 tH; Tlona, 1 74; Second rand, II M; North Lima, !: South Limn . 93o: Indiana. uOcj Somerset, ale: lUgland, 62c: Can ada, 1. as. Taste grows with what It feeds on. You can cultivate a taste for the best reading by reading only the best books. Switzerland Is the paradise of wo men students at universities, as far as Europe Is concerned. There are at present about 5,000 of them, mak ing 23.7 per cent of the total number of students. There was a sale of cast-off police uniforms at Manchester, England, the other day. Two hundred pounds of police buttons sold for $29. Sheep from Iceland are on exhibi tion in England. They stand 14 inches. The Parisian French. It la popularly believed that the French who live In Paris and who speak what Is usually described as "Parisian French" represent the gen uine, simon-pure type of French blood and tradition. The famous Le Petit Journal, however, draws attentition to the fact that Paris has the small est indigenous population of any European capital, and that according to the last census only about 36 per cent of the total population of the Frnch capital are Parisians, abori ginals, or people born in Paris. Sev eral European capitals can show a far higher rate of indigenous popula tion. St. Petersburg, for example can show 40 per cent, Berlin 41 per cent, Vienna 45 per cent and London 65 per cent. Boston Globe. Franklin's Kite Experiment Commenting on Benjamin Frank lins kite experiment, which proved that lightning and electricity are the same, a scientist says: "It was one of the most brilliant examples of luck yet recorded. To attempt the ex traction of lightning flashes from a lowering sky was almost suicidal. Even at this late day timid persons occasionally fly to feather beds, sit on glass-legged chairs or find refuge In rubber boots during thunderstorms, A repetlon of Franklin's experiment cost his Immed ate Imitator his life. Costly Boarders. It cost $17,000 to feed the animals In the London Zoo last year. The principal items of food were 207 horses, 270 goats, 34,921 pounds of fish, 25,196 eggs, 6,855 quarts of milk and 137 loads of hay. Metals Found Together. Silver and lend are generally found together, and some scientists think that lead dlstinegratcs Into silver, Gold and copper are also often found together. In New South WaJes the Great Cobar mine furnishes copper containing four ounces of gold to the ton. FITS, fit Vitus' Dance: Nervous Diseases per manently cured by Air. Kline s Ureal Nerve Jtestorer. fi trial bottle and treatise free. Da. H. R Kliki, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Pbila., fa. John L. Snyder, a Seneca Indian, bas received permission to take the New York State bar examination. Mis. Winslow's Soothing Byruri for Children teething, softens the gumfl.reducee inflamma tion, allays jifiln, cures wind colic, 25c. a bottle Rel Absentmindedness. Billy Dupgan of Palms, loaned his seed drill to someone and has forgot ten who it was. The fellow who bor rowed It can't remember who it was he got It from. As the matter stands, Billy, who can't Identify his drill, is likely to lose It altogether. Lexing ton, Mich., News. The new Vlrchow Hospital In Ber lin will hare 800 beds. The total cost of construction will reach 15,000,000. The attending physicians will have salaries from $1400 to $800 a year. How' This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any ease of Catarrh that cannot he mired by Hall's Cat art a Cure. S. J. Cbekrt A Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. j, Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him rerteotly honorable in all business transac tions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their Arm. Wist A Tbdai, wholesale Druggists, To ledo, u. Waldino, Kinwaw A Mabvir, Wholesale DrueKlstf, Toledo, O, Hall's Oatarru Cure Is takenlnternally.aot lngdlreotly upon the blood and maouoas sur faces of the system. Xestimonlale sent free. Prloe, 76c. per bottle. Hold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Ten years ago, with a population of 82,000,000, Prussia maintained nearly 8000 technical schools, representing all the principal Industries, with an attendance of over 200.000. His Experience. An aged Scotch minister about to marry for the fourth time, was ex plaining his reason to an elder. "You see, I am an old man now, and I canna expect to be here verra lang. When the end comes wad like to have some one to close my eyes." The elder nodded and said: "Awell, meenlster, I have had twa wives, and balth of them opened mine!" BOX OF WAFERS FREE NO ORUCS -CURES BY AB50RPTION. Cores Belelilos; of Oa Bad Breath and Bad BUimecU Short Brmth Bloating- Sour Kraetattona Irregular Heart, Etc. Take a Mull's Wafer any time of the day or night, and note the immediate good ef fect on your stomach, it absorbs the gas, disinfect tbe stomach, kills the pouton germs and cures the disease. Catarrh of the bead and throat, unwholesome iood and overeating make bad stomachs. Scarcely any stomach is entirely free from taint of some kind. Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers will make your stomach healthy by absorbing fool gases which arise from the undigested food and by re-enforcing the lining of tbe stomach, enabling it to thoroughly mix the food with the gastric juices. This cures stomach trouble, promotes digestion, sweetens the breath, stops belching ana fermentation. Heart action becomes strong ana regmar inrougo inis process. Discard drugs, as you know from experi ence they do not cure stomach trouble. Try a common-sense (Ntture's) method that does cure. A soothing, beating sensa tion results instantly. We know Mull's Anti-Belch Wufers will do this, and ire want you to know it. This offer may not appear again. GOOD FOR 25o. 142 Send this coupon with yonr name and address and your druggist's name and 10c. ia stamps or silver, and wa will supply you a sample free if yon have ajrver used Mull's Anti-Belch Wains, and will also send you a cer HfVte mod for 23a. toward the nnr- chaae of more Belch Wafers. Yon will 4nd ohom invaluable for stomach tron- nle; cares by absorption. Address mhx'a Grape Tonio Co.. 328 3d Ave., Kock Island, JIL Qive Full Address and Wrilt Plainly. All druggists, 50c. per box, or by mail pot) receipt of ones. StanuM accepted. How strange that one who would not take filth Into his mouth will gladly take it into his brain! . A CRITICAL PERIOD ISTELLI8ENTW0MEN PREPARE Dana-era and Pain of This Critical Porlod Avoided by tbe Use of Lydla a Pink, nam's Vegetable Compound. How many wo men realize that the most critical period in a wo man's existence ia the change of life, and that tht anxiety felt by women u this time draws near Is not wl ill out reason ? If her system Is in a deranged condt. tion, or she is predisposed to apoplexy or congestion of any organ, it is at thla time likely to become active and, with a host of nervous irritations, make Ilia a burden. At this time, also, cancers and tumor are more liable to begin their destruc tive work. Suoh warning symptoms as a sense of suffocation, hot flashes, diz ziness, headache, dread of impending evil, sounds in the ears, timidity, pal pitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities, constipation, varia ble appetite, weakness and inquietude are promptly heeded by intelligent women who are approaching the period of life when woman's great change may be expected. We believe Lydla E. Plnkham's Veg etable Compound Is the world's great est remedy for women at this trying' period . Lydla H. Plnkham's Vegetable Com pound invigorates and strengthens the female organism, and builds up the weakened nervous system as no other medicine ean. Mrs. A. B. G. Hyland, of Chester town, Md., in a letter to Mrs. Pink ham, says: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " I bod been suffering with a displacement for years and was passing through the change of life. I had a good deal of soreness, dtzzr spells, headaches, and was very nervous. I wrote yon for advice and commenced treat ment with Lydla E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound an you directed, and I am happy to say that all those distressing symptoms left me, and I have passed safely through th change of life a well woman. For special advice regarding this im portant period women are invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass She Is daughter-in-law of Lydla E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years has been advising siok women free of charge. Her advice is free and always helpful to ailing women, 1 Tram the crad'a to the baby chair" HAVE YOU A BABY? H so, you ought to hava a v; (FaWTO)) "AN lOtAL aiLF-INSTRUCTOR." OTJB PHOENIX Walking Chair holds the child securely, pre Tenting those painful falls and bumps whioh are so frequent when baby learns to walk. '"BETTER THAN A NURSE." The obair is provided with a re movable, sanitary cloth seat,wliloh supports the woight of the child and prevents bow-legs and spinal troubles; it also has a table attach ment which enables baby to find amusement in its toys, etc, with out any attention. "At Indispensable at cradle." tt is so constructed that it pro rents soiled clothes, sickness from drafts and floor germs, and is recommended by physicians and endorsed by both mother and baby. Combines pleasure and utility. No baby should be without one. Call at your furniture dealer and ask to see one. KairoTAortraiD oztly bt PHOENIX CHAIR CO. HE BO VP AM, WIS. - Can only be had ot your furniture dealer. Drill for Water n.-f n. II 1 n. ,a t Drill Test and Blast Holts. W Mk OROJJNQ MACHINES For Horse, ties si or s t 1 1 t Powsr. Latest Traction Machine. LOOM IS MACHINE CO, iirrii, vniu. THE DAISY FLY KILLER 3Sr5 fiord eomtort to homo. OtM tlOss. box looti tho on lire oawMoik norm. ibm to penoM, Olooa, noftt una will not Roll or tnltiro anything. Try innm one suul yon wiU rvflvor bo wltbool ibtu, If not kmpt Of dooiora, ' Mith nrooftUl nr fflt, HAROLD HOaiKJf, 19 Doftaib liMM. rnUi Is I. W until ilirto M, D.CV lly Prosecutes Claims. IHiUtiHimtiiig-'r'T nTrtnoa FREE-?; B fart n ir from ill wfll mod frm at charra rirlco atmI nrwftcrlLilionw to mon and woman nuO. fatinir from dlmmm or weokneon of Any kiwi. I ffWI no b no mnaicinro nor ao i bhk m cunt rrnm any mm. DROPSY ?..DIJS?2 I MM Bmmk UtonU, aM M Star' "''" . a, su saaas's suss, iw a, shmi a. P. X. V. 33, 1906. PATENTS M p. book froa. Hlfboat ntttv MnTKnusj, r usasrrausM ? o, .w mmatmtiucmhm I I I R7 Rt " ru i I Goal ft WW?