f BUFFALO McKINLEV MONUMENT To Be Dedicated During "Old-Home M'eck," September 5. The beautiful white marble chart erected by the State of New York In Niagara Square, Buffalo, N. Y., to the memory of President McKInlcy, Is to be formally dedicated Thurs day, September 5, and the event wilt be the central fenture of Buffalo's Old-Home Week, September 1 to 7. Former residents of Buffalo and the public at large are cordially invited to attend the dedication and the guy 'i carnival that will run all the week. tu The McKlnlcy ' monument was Tinned and executed under the di rection of a commission of prominent men nt a cost of over $150,000. Buffalo's Old-Home Week will be succession of civic and military pa geantry, carnival, sports and games, and the electric city will be ablaze with twinkling lights and patriotic decorations. Former residents of Buffalo are asked to send their names and addresses to James W, Greene, chairman Old-Home Week Committee, Buffalo, N. Y. A beauti ful souvenir invitation will be mailed to each. The railroads will offer ex cursion rates to and returning from Buffalo. BOY KNEW HIS RIGHTS But Did Not Think Very Much About His Duties. A boy went Into a shop to wwk for a man. He was a lad of consider able Intelligence and knew himself. Hesldes, ho had large ideas of his personality, and had thought a great !eal over what were his rights. Ho knew exactly whnt he was entitled to nnd what the other follow was en titled to, and between the two there was a deep definite division. He ob served this line very closely, nnd did not cross It for an Instant. If en cased cn a piece of work, nnd quit ting tliue came, he quit right then, even if he could have finished it In three minutes. In doing so lie never thought for a moment of having talked with Bill Jones for fully 20 minutes that very afternoon about a basoball game that came off the day before. He was simply looking to bis rights and no one else s. This was his way. Of course ho didn't stay long. He hadn't appre hension enough of Ills duty or a suf ficient regard for his service to put him In sympathy with hia work. He wib a misfit. He did as littlo as he could for his employer. Ho stood tin his rights and no more. That was Borne years ago. Now he is driving a team up in Cleveland for $1.50 a day. When he left the shop another boy vent In. He knew his rights, but he didn't inRlst on them too much, for he believed In doing things. If time was tip and he could finish a thing with a few minutes over work, he would do It every time; he made himself worth something. Pretty soon that employer saw he couldn't pet along without him. He kept ad vancing his wages and finally took him Into partnership, and now the business is a great one and that boy has a grand home, a big salary and a lovely family, all because he was a boy of get up, gumption and thought more of his duties than he did of his fights. 82 Solomon' Temple Reproduced. Joseph Doctorovltz, a teacher of Hebrew, and a student of old Jewish Institutions, has put on exhibition in New York a complete reproduction of the Temple at Jerusalem. It Is 15 feet square and Includes the several courts and palaces of the priests. SOAKED IX COFFEE Until Too Stiff to Bend Over. 'When I drank coffee I often had sick headaches, nervousness and bil iousness much of the time, but when I went to visit a friend I got in the habit of drinking Postum. "I gave up coffee entirely, and the result has been that I have been en tirely relieved of all my stomach and nervous trouble. "My mother was Just the same way. We all drink Postum now and, without coffee in the bouse for 2 years, we are all well. "A neighbor of mine, a great cof fee drinker, was troubled with pains In her side for years and was an in valid. She was not able to do her work and could not even mend clothes or do anything at all where she would have to bend forward. If she tried to do a little hard work she would get such pains that she would have to lie down for the rest of the day. "At last I persuaded her to stop drinking coffee and try Postum Food Coffee and she did so, and has used Postum ever Bince; the result has been that she can now do her work, can sit for a whole day and mend and can sew on the machine and she nev er feels the least bit of pain in her side. In fact, she has got well, and it shows coffee was the cause of the whole trouble. "I could also tell you about several ether neighbors who have been cured t7 quitting coffee and using Postum in IU place." "There's a Reason." Look In pkg. for the famous little book, "The Road to Wellvllle," m0mi and . mMm Soil Formation. All soils are formed from disinte grated rocks and organic matter. Of the latter, soils contain from one to more than seventy per cent.; it is, however, only in bogs or beds of peat that the amount last named Is ever present. The best wheat lands con tain only from four to six per cent, of organic matter; oats and rye will grow in soils containing only one or two. The Intelligent farmer should endeavor to ascertain what is want ing in the soil and supply it, remem berlng that he can make no possible mistake with barnyard manure. Do Justice to Poultry. Poultry should now be filling the egg basket, Biid will, If they have Justice done them. It is not enough that they are well fed; other condi tions nre required. Their houses should be well cleansed, their nest boxes thoroughly washed and a little quicklime sprinkled In them. The floors of their houses should also be well sprinkled with quicklime, and the roosting poles whitewashed. All these are necessary to purify the at mosphere and destroy the vermin that infest these places. The clean ing process should also be applied to tho horse, cow and sheep stables. You Cannot Afford It. No farmer can afford to do without a good garden. It Is not to be ex pected that every one will be a fancy gardener, hut every one should give sufficient nttentlon to the subject so as to produce all staple vegetables earlier than can be produced in the field. It is not only essential to the health and proper enjoyment of the family, but It is actually a matter of profit. Could your whole farm be made as smooth, dry, rich and as well cultivated as a good garden, the in creased product would pay a large per cent, of profit upon the outlay. In the garden, or In a separate apart ment, may be cultivated strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, currants, grapes and dwarf pears. They can all be had at a very small cost of money or labor, and will add im mensely to the enjoyment of the household. Good Malt's Demnnd Good Care. We should not "give a rap," as the saying is, for a "rooster" that is not gallant enough to give his mates first privileges when it comes to eat ing. The rooster that is always ready to "lick" another one that happens to cross his path, the rooster that does not hesitate to show his vocal capabilities by frequently crowing, and tho rooster that Is courteous enough to believe in "ladles first," and stands and calls his mates nnd then steps aside while they eat the dainty morsel he has found that rooster Is one after our own heart. Show us that kind of a rooster and we will show you a rooster that Is capable of strongly fertilizing eggs from a maximum number of females. But here, dear friend, is often the "rub" a male bird of this kind must secure In some way Just a3 much If not a little more to eat than does his less gallant brother and, un less fed separately, he will become so run down in condition in two or three weeks of breeding service that he will begin to be seriously lacking In sexual strength; therefore, It be comes necessary to remove him from the females every day or two and give him a generous feed of corn and meat of some kind, that is, green cut bone or ground beef scraps. That is the only gallant way for you to treat a gallant rooster, and you will find at the same time that it is the only profitable way. Poultry Editor, in The Epitomlst. Feeding a Horse. The Journal of Agriculture gives some figures of the cost of feeding a horse In the West. How do they compare with the cost of keeping one in this Slate? What docs it cost to feed the work horse during the year? It Is claimed that when timothy is worth $18 per ton; wheat bran, $17.50; corn, $22; dried brewers' grass, $17, and gluten meal, $29 per ton, that a horse can bo fed during the six months when the hardest work Is done for $31. During the remaining six months tie cost of feed is put at $24.70. It will be noticed that the cost of timothy Is figured at about double the price it sells for on the average farm. This is because the authorities who made the estimates live near the large centres, where prices of feeds are higher than in the outlying sec tions. Where mixed hay retails for $8 to $9 per ton, corn for fifty cants and oats thirty-five cents per bushel, it Is fate to say that the average work horse, weighing 1400 or es3, can be fed the entire year and kept in good flesh for $40. In the first estimate made above It will be noticed that the price on glu ten feed is quoted. It has been found that this material can 'be fed to horses with excellent results, especially In the spring, when the animals need a variety. A- ration composed of one part gluten feed, one part oats and two parts corn make almost the Ideal Blxtura for the work horse. The an imal should have enough of mixture to maintain his condition, however. About one pound per day for each 100 pounds the anlmnl weighs is con sidered the proper amount. Fertile vs. Infcitilo Eggs. The Country Gentleman referring to the statement of a Montreal wom an in a poultry Journal that she has been able to distinguish between eggs that will produce males and those producing females by locating the air cells, those haviug the cell directly across the large and hatching cocke rels, while those having the cells slanting slightly contributed pullets, thinks scleutlHts might well devote some time to experimenting to de vise some easy method of distin guishing fertile from infertile eggs before they are placed In the Incuba tor or placed under tho hen In fact before they leave the hands of the seller if they are bough ten. This would save a lot of disappointment. The common custom Is to test eggs after four or five days, removiug those not showing Indications of fer tility. These are not in the least in jured by the few days' heating. But this latter business, while It saves a part of the hatch, does not do away with the disappointment at paying well for valuable eggs only to have too large a percenlago prove infer tile. Incidentally it is worth men tion that even the experimenting Montreal dame does not explain how she arrives at the conclusion that tho straight across air cell produces the cockerel, since the hatch of four teen simply showed them equally di vided in sex R3 the air cells indicated they would be. Variety nnd Profit. The farmers should make slock raising more profitable by growing a variety of crops, instead of depend ing mostly upon grain and hay, for variety gives the farmer more ad vantages. If he grows turnips he secures them late in the season (usu ally after llablity of dry weather has passed), and a lurge Bupply of roots will enable him to economize with the grain and hay. He can also grow late corn fodder, cow peas and rape, the latter affording excellent pas turage for sheep and swine when grass may not be abundant. But it Is not so much the growing of various crops for use at all seasons that the farmer should consider so much as the full bins and storehouses of suc culent food for winter use. It is in tho winter season that the farmer has the advantage of using the crops he has grown, and increasing their value by adding thereto his labor. Many farmers object to certain meth ods of feeding because they claim that the thorough preparations of foods are too laborious, but if all farmers will consider that the more labor they can sell in the form of some product the greater their In crease, they will not hesitate to glva more attention to food preparation. Lost time Is really lost labor, aud tha farmer who Is not employed every day is losing something. If he can save food and make larger profits he will be more than recompensed for his labor, and the best time when one can be well paid for the work la in the winter, as the foods, thi man ure heap, the repairs of buildings and implements and other indoor work are then the most important matters. Dry Foods. In winter many animals are com pelled to subsist largely on dry ra tions, the sameness of diet being such as to some times cause loss of ap petite. In fact, in many cases of live stock being "off their feed," as it Is termed, the cause Is due to lack of sufficient food, or insufficient variety from the regular routine. With the supply of ensilage this difficulty is not so largely met, but some farmers will not build silos, preferring to adhere closely to oil methods. A few acres of beets, carrots or turnips will not fail to be of valuable assistance, not because such articles are highly nu tritious (which Is not the case, as they are composed largely of water). but ratucr because they contain a large per cent, of water, are easily digested, ind provido an agreeable change of diet from dry food ' to some thing more palatable thereby increasing tho flow of milk becauso they stimulate the appetite, promoto digestion and luduco the animals to cat more. Invention has ulso less ened tho cost of preparing foods, as cutters and slicers rapidly, reduce carrots and other roots to a condition in which they can be fed to the ani mals without danger of choking thera. The corn fodder supply, if well cured, and cut down in the field at the proper time, will also bo more highly relished if cut into shorts lengths. Farmers depend upon hay, but they use too much hay, because they cither waste other valuable foods, or do not prepare such for tho stock. It a bushel of carrots can ba reduced almost as fast as they can be fed into the chopper, as may ba done, the labor of cutting them Is very Inexpensive, and the benefit of J feeding a vtrlety will ba very lotlce-1 abl I DUN'S WEEKLY SUMMARY Trade Reports from Leading Cities Compare Favorably With Thoee of Corresponding Week Last Year. Trade reports from tho leading cities are singularly uniform In mak ing fnvornbla comparisons wllh tho corresponding week In nny previous year. At most western nnd southern points the Improvement In the crop prospects has brought out liberal fall orders. There Is evidently more con fidence In the future than at nny time since It was found thnt many of the principal farm products had made a bad start. Jobbing houses are preparing for winter trade on a scale seldom equal ed. The consumption of reasonable goods promises to deplete stocks most satisfactorily. Manufacturers are still receiving orders In abundance, few clothing cancellations appear, and it is tho ex ception when plants have smaller contracts than a year ago. More de tailed reports for the first half of 1907 add to the earlier testimony that all records for six months were far surpnssed. Settlement of the ore strike re moves uny danger of interruption to activity at pig Iron furnaces, which promise to establish a new record of output during the second half of the year . According to the regular re port of tho American Iron nnd Steel Association, all previous figures were surpassed during the first six months with nn aggregate f 13.478,044 tons, an Increase of 753,103 tons over the previous mnxlmnm. - Vigorous activity continues at cot ton mills. Prices nre fully sustain ed by the volume of orders on hand with the hlsl! quotation of raw cot ton, and confidence In well maintain ed consumption. Export Inquiries are noted, but no actual business re sults because of the high position of quotations. Woolen goods make slow progress, although practically all lines are now open. Some branches move satisfac torily, liberal sample pieces nre being taken, but nany clothiers do not ap pear prepared to operate freely. In terest Is most noteworthy In the worsted division. "Footwear factories are well en paged on old orders, but buyers In the ltopton market did not purchase as freely an was anticipated. Leather 13 quiet. Shoe manufac turers show no disposition to antici pate needs. Demand is therefore lim ited to Immediate requirement. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Whom No. U rod f Hi V) Ht Nil.'.' 7! 71 Corn No i yellow, nnr n M No. i follow, lii'llnd CJ (H Mliod enr H M Oats No. while M f, No. it white M M Flour Winter patent 4 (ij 4 71 Fancy straight winter 4 'I 4 vi Hay-No. 1 Timothy 1 on il yi Clover No. 1 I" 01 10 m Feed-No. 1 white mid. ton V5 00 Si Si Drown mlddllnita -'!) 215, ltran. hulk -I 0) 2ft 110 Biraw Wheat Will 111 5,) Oat 10 jo 11 yj Dairy Products. Butter Elcln creamery f M 27 Ohio creamery il 21 Fancy country roll is a.) Cheese Ohio, new 1 1 IS New York, now 14 15 Poultry, Etc. Hens por Ih J 1 ! II Chicken droesed 11 17 EtBo l'a. aud Ohio, fresh 1 IS Fruits and Vegetables. Potato Fancy white per bu.... 01 C'ahbuifft iwr ton 15 Ul 11 1 Onions per barrel I 4J I ti BALTIMOrtE. Flour Winter Patent 4 4 SI Wheat No. 9 red "I 71 Corn Mliod 49 47 V.Kgn ti 81 butter Ohio creamery 17 li PHILADELPHIA. Flour Winter Patent 3 4 'O is Wheat No. U red 7' Corn No. ! mixed " ' Onts No. white 41 4i Butter Creamery sf J !( Unto Pennsylvania firsts 17 1' NEW YORK. Flour-Patents .". 9 4W 4 70 Wheat-No. red ! Corn No. 51 Oats No. U white i 41 Butter -Creamery ' " Ksge SlalB and Pennsylvania.... 1? Is LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, MM to l,1) t $ 0 CO 0 8i I'rtme, to l.uil lln 6 V. til (food, l.iSKI to l.s-r.i 1 tin ft 'J 1 6 li Tidy, 4.0..0 to 1,1. b HI 51 Common, "00 to U lbs 4 Si 4 91 Oxen a 7 1 4 5 1 Bulls 8 01 4 ') Cown 1 .VI 0 75 Heifers, 700 to 1. vry lit 4 1 1 Kiesh Cows and bprluvers 10 uu iJ ) Hogs. Prime heavy pi) -, Prime medium weight a 110 0 7, Best heavy Y"rkr 0 frl 6 70 Oood light Yorkers...., 6 7) 7 I'lft" 6 7J b 71 Boughs 5 oj i r. Stags 4 0) 18 - Sheep. Prime wethers, Clipper 115!) 5 r.1 Good mlxe.l 5 at ft4i Kalr mixed ewes and wothers 4 .") 5 10 Culls and common if 01 B 11 Lambs ; 4 5 ;it Calves. Veal calves 5 (k) 751 Heavy and thin calves UJ til CHERRY SOUP. This Is a popular Swedish and Ger man csli, most refreshing on a hot day. Crush a quart of cherries, add to thorn iiM jutas of two lemons, two IhvpI tnliL-wnnnofnla t:ni!ln or finr'O and susar to tast. Simmer in a Quart of water lor half an hour, then rub' through a puree sieve. Keheat, add a pinch cf salt, then cool and place on the ice before serving. Save a few Spa cherries to mit in the iced soup at the last. Tain quantity will make neatly two quarts of soup. Washington St;r. MRS. A. M. HAGERMANN Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made from simple native roots and herbs. For more than thirty years it has been helping women to be strong, regulating the functions per fectly and overcoming pain. It has also proved itself Invaluable in pre paring for child birth and the Change of Life. Mrs. A. If. Ilngermann, of Hay Shore, L. I., writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham: "1 Ruflered from a displacement, excessive nnd painful functions so that I bad to lie down or sit still most of, the time. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has made me a well woman so that I am able to attend to my duties. I wish every suffjring woman would try Lydia E. l'iukham's Vegetable Compound and ee what relief it will .give them." Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women Women suffering from any form of female illness are Invited to write Mrs. Plnkharu. at Lynn, Mass. for udvice She is the Mrs. Pinkham who has been advising sick women free of charge for more than twenty rears, and before that she assisted her mother-in-law Lydia E. Pink- 1 in advising. Therefore she women back to health. B Irsxoa $300 & $3.EO SHOES tS"worlo i&:;?Hons for every MEMntn ofp7 THE FAMILY AT ALL PRIOF8. ( Tn 9n onn wrfto doom nut ir3Vttira9rJf )n:oru fAmn'm $3 a fctt mass ( 'than nny other THE KE So W. h. Douglas fliw nr worn ) more tieoplo In all waiiiK n iitn tit. 'in any other make, is )i;:iuho of their excM.I'-nt n:yi', ;ty-littlnt;( nnd fuier(.r pariiij( (ju.'ilitie. T 'it- clfrtioii of tho lectin taitl ntlior in:ttriiiN d.r f:H'-h part of ttit; Miioe, tVi.l tnerv (let nil of tlio making is lookfxl Hft'T by thff moft com iMe or jaiiii!'it inn of Miprrliit'MioVnt.'on'men.'iTtt. tkilloil jtlMUMtmiterM. thn receive tho hl((lit wnfH paH In tho 6iife fnluitry. ami wlumn M'nrkinatiitliip rHiinot he ,xr-Hel. If I fnuM t ikt! yon int't inv l trif" fan. often tit IJro kton.Mawi., nnl r-h'nr yon how ear fully W. I,. IioiikIiik ulioe are inmle, you wouM thcii umtMrtaiti why tliev h'iM their hapo, tit hetler, xre-ir loiiL'r ami are nf pre:iter v;i1n than rinY tttliBr make. C?v S4 Gilt EUaomnd .1 Gold Bond Y. L. JtouhiH htaliiKJt hi natnn ait'l price on I ho bottom to protect von ayHliit hi'h prices Ui interior hh'rf-H. Take No Knhtlti.t. Shl by tho twwt "hoe tteaWs everywbfir. tiist (Jutor Ku'Lelt utert txrlurivelv. Catalog mailed free, W. 1. JIO l,'4J t. AS, ISi-m Utnit, Maao IMPORTANT DISCOVERY English Chemist Succeeds In Degrad ing Copper to the First Mem ber, Lithium. Sir William KaniKay, the distin guished chemist, has promised to ronimnnicato In writing in the near future to the chemical society the results of his researches Into radium emanations. In this connection the announcement is made that he has succeeded in degrading copper to the first member of its family, that 13, lithium. The Lancet says the discovery marks an epoch In the history of chemical science and believes it is a realization of tho transmutation of metals. The announcement Is likely to re awaken the discussion of the trans mutation of elements which raged a year or sj ago, when several prom inent scientists repudiated the trans mutation idea, wliile others Just as strongly supported it. TIHE1J HACKS. The kidneys have a great work to do in keeping the blood pure. When they get out of order It causes backache, headaches, dizziness, languor and distress ing urinary troubles. Keep the kidneys well and all these suffer ings will be saved you. Mrs. S. A. Moore, pro prietor of a restau rant at Waterville, Me., says: "Before using Doan's Kidney Pills I suf fered everything from kidney trou bles for a year and a half. I had pain In the back and head, and al most continuous in the loins and felt weary all the time. A few doses of Doan's Kidney Pills brought great relief, and I kept on taking them un til In a short time I was cured. I think Doan's Kidney Pills are won derful." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Profit in Flowers. If report Is true there are vast sums of money to be made In the cultivation of flowers in the Riviera. In one season alone 12,000,000 worth were shipped away to foreign coun tries, and, oddly enough tho majority were sent to England. It U a long journey for delicate blooms to make, but they are so perfectly packed and kept cn route that they reach their destination in excellent condition to gladden the hearts of aud adorn Eng land's fairest women. FEARFUL BURNING SORES. Doy in Misery 13 Years Kzcemn In IJongli Scales, Itching nnd In. flu mod Cured by Cnticura. "Cutictira has put a stop to twelve year of misery J passed with my son. As an in fant 1 noticed on his body n red spot and treated same with different remedies for about live years, but when the spot began to get larger 1 put bint under the rare of doctors. Under their treatment the disease spread to four different parts of his body. During the day it would get rough and form like scale. At niftlit it would be cracked, inttamed and badly swollen, with terrible burning nnd itching. One doctor told me that my son's eczema was incura ble, and gave it up. 1 decided to give Cnti cura a trial. When I had used the first box of Cnticura Ointment there was a great im provement, and by the time 1 had used the second set of Cnticura Kcmedies my child was cured. lie is now twelve years old, and bn skin is as fine and smooth as silk. Michael teinman, 7 Sumner Avenue, llrooklyn, JL Y., April 19, 1905." The Bank cf Englaad prororty cov en over two acres. iK.733 mm ALL WOMEN SUFFER from the same physical disturbances, ami the nature of their duties, In many cases,, quickly drift them into thu horrors of all kinds of fcnmle complaints, organic troubles, ulcera tion, falling and displacements, or perhaps irregularity or suppression causing bacUache, nervousness, ir ritability, and sleeplessness. Women everywhere should re member that the medicine that holds the record for the largest number of actual cures 01 female ills is is especially well qualified to guide nmi fTroe IV. L. ttrehrt A malt $&.tiO shoes irtnnufsicturar. Shorn cannot bo oauoltod nt nnv orfao Opium Consumption Increased. Opium Imports into China Increas ed from C.!)22.fi'i7 pounds in 1905 tr 7,213, R00 pounds in 1900, find it Is stated that the use of native opium also showed a general Increase, whll'i morphia importations, in spite of 200 pt r cent duty, have grown larger, al though the total volume reported is insignificant. FITS,St. Vitus'DancerNprvous Dieeafee per manontlycured by Lr. Kline's (treat Nerve Restorer. !i trial bottle nnd trcRtira fre. Dr. II. R. Kline. Ltl.,KU Arch St., I'hila.. lf There has been a marked falling off In the Sunday school attendance In New York city In the last five years. Mrs. Winslow'sSoothing Ryrnp for Children allays pain, cures wind colic, 25cabottje Suicide Among Children. A report made by Prof. Emlcnberg, an eminent German authority, upon nervous diseases, may well engage the careful attention of all pnrents. It seems that there has been an epi demic of suicide among German chil dren, and Prof. Emlenbcrg has beon Investigating the matter. He states that In the last 12 years he has traced 1,152 cases of children's mit' rides, and that In more than one ha!f the reason for the rash act was to be found In tho failure to pass school examinations, or overwork at school. THE DAISY FLY KILLER ittrov, n th. nietfaau &2uriJs comfui t toevei j mnue -id riming- ruom. ,iFriini room S'd ftj . laces hre flt-s trs trouhlr-.om. t i.i. n. DMt. and will not tvi or Injure anything. 1 rv then onre a rut von will ntv ?r be withont . T. I - Jbv nralcin. wits prennifl fr Mr. IIAKOI.D SOMEU8. 149 IMUIS i'-. Snetlra. B. T. "I hr nffxrm! wllh pflM for MrtT-1 yn. ( rear aco last April I hfan talftnf Cafart for oonitlpatlon. In th emirie of iwnk I not. fch pile bran to dl appear anil at tha end of its waeki thaj did not troabt ma at all. CaacamM have dona wonder for nt. I am antirolT wd ao4 iMlUkiaoawmM." Goo if kryilar ftapolooii. Ok P1anBnt. Palatahl. Potmt. Tact0vxj. DoOvwL Kr 8trkn, Wnaiftt or Grip. tte. 2&v ftte. Nito! old tn bnlk. Tho g-ntiti.no tab lot n tarn pod CCflC uvjumntood to euro or roar money bacK. Sterling Remedy Co., Ch eago or N.?. 99. ASHUALSALE, TEN MIUION BOXES To eonrtnao any woman that ru. tine Antivptle will Improve her boal'.ti and do all we claim r .. . 1 ti- 1 , , send her absolutely free a large trial box of Paxtine mth book of Instruc tions and avnulne testimonials. Send your name aud address on a postal card. PAKTIFJEil feetlons, such as na4 catarrh, pel0 catarrh and Inflammation caused by (eijw nine Ills sore eyes, sore throat and mouth, by direct local treatment. Its cur ative power over these troubles Is extra ordinary and gives immediate relh-f. Thousands of women are using and reo ommemling it every day. M eents at lruinltsorbTinail. Remember, however. ana. A. Wn Jsoston. P. N. 0. 32, 1907. If amine with weak Tbompsoo'sEyeWalei ire, aa .S"rl3ww,jiajk swaaTa. OLE ff JJr The Bowels jA. 1. Cahctt cvrruirnc