mper- »d his v man, know e hid- wheat + lack b to Soon, . shall lack s, the is no nerce. “1 e cal- ing it bring ingly: a win- of as- 0 put order peated Ninter e de- to the t, bee a. e, he 4 came from wr 1” ex- ful to oken? other er and s they y into elphia cross very 1 help ced all n she . bush . me,” / to be S ape id car- were, 1d her et her r scat. f in a d com- it was backed n, but to so} EN » * at last nan so roubles S. shion,” lorning a plece things. it, she or out kK, my rooked ut into wheels ., it oft- er and ra saw pretty * pain,” le poor r once mirror. 1 found cheeks. ou are old wo- full of h their put her 1 utter- 1ey nad ry was child,” t that well.” 1 poor care of L” { h pain.” at you - to thoroughly mix the food with the — . - jg—— —— N— IN CONSTANT AGONY, VESUVIUS MURDEROUS. Yastated Torre del Greco for the third PRETEND TO OPERATE. Pronouncing lowa. Two Eye Openers. A West Vieginfan's Awfal Distress ine, Fake Surgery Tried With Success in | The Pronunciation of “Towa is | An aged Scotch minister, about to Through Kidney Troubles, W. L. Jackson, merchant, of Parkers. burg, W. Va., says: “Driving about in bad weather brought N\ kidney troubles on me, and I suffered \ twenty years with \ sharp, cramping pains in the back and urine. ary disorders. I often had to get up a dozen times at night to uri nate. Retention set in, and I was obliged to use the catheter. I took to my bed, and the doctors failing to help, began using Doan's Kidney Pills. The urine soon came freely again, and the pain grad. ually disappeared. I have been cured eight years, and though over 70, am as active as a boy.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. J An Item Forgotten. The Rev. Madison Peters, in an elo- quent attack on the marriage cus- toms of the twentieth century, relat- ed an anecdote. “A beautiful girl and her mother,” he said, “were discussing the eternal marriage question. “ “Well, there's Charles Adams’, murmered the mother, thoughfully, after a long pause. “ “Charles Adams!’ sneered the girl. He is old, he is ugly, he is mean, he is a coward. Charles Adams! Why, he has nothing, nothing in the world to recommend him except his wealth.’ ““ ‘You forget his heart disease,” said the mother softly,”’-—Washington Post. £100 Reward. $100. The readers of this paper will be pleasedto Jearn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science has been able to cureinall jtsstages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now knownto the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a cone stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cureis taken inter nally acting directly upon the blood andmu-« cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy« ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con- stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faithin its curative powers that they offer One Hun- d Dollars for any case that it fails to cure, 8end for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Cuexzy & Co., Toledo, O, | Bold by Druggistz, 75¢. . Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation Death Rate at Panama. In 1882, the second year of the French occupancy of Panama, says Country Life in America for March, the death rate was 112 per 1,000, and the French had a force of only 1,900 men. In August, 1905, the second year of our occupancy, in a force of 12,000 men there were eight deaths, or two-thirds of a man to every 1,- 000. We have sent the death rate down from 112 to 8 by vigilant sani- tary precautions. BABY'S AWFUL ECZEMA. 8kin Peeled Off Hands and Face—En. dured Tortures-—-Cured by the Cuticura Remedies. “lI can truthfully say that just two cakes of Cuticura Soap and two bott.es of Cuticura Resolvent surprised me, as the skin was peeling off my baby’s hands and face, and he was suffering awful. When the eczema first appeared he was very healthy, but as soon : hr was covered with 1t he lost flesh rapidly. But as soon as I comrenced to use the Juticura Reme- dies he started to mend. I keep on using the Cuticura Soap, as I think it is an in- dispensable article around the house. As my baby weighs thirty-seven pounds and is only -eventeen months old, you can im- agine the torture he endured. My neigh- bors can ouch for this statement as be- ing correct. Mrs. Alex. Weeks, Jr., 268 North Water St., Newburgh, N. Y., Sept. ¥, 1905.” Floating Dust. When anyone with normal eyesight stands at right angles to*a ray of sun- light it is easy to see floating dust particles which are not discoverable with the aid of the strongest micro- scope. What is seen by the unaided eye is not the. particle of solid matter, but the cone of light reflected from it and occupying a much greater space. STOPS BELCHING BY ABSORPTION =NO DRUGCS—A NEW METHOD. A Box of Wafers Free—Have You Acute Indigestion, Stomach Trouble, Ir- zegular Heart, Dizzy Spells, Short Breath, Gas on the Stomach ? Bitter Taste—Bad Breath—Impaired Ap- petite—A feeling of fullness, weight and in over the stomach and heart, some- ‘B¥mes nausea and vomiting, also fever and sick headache? MWhat causes it? Any one or all of these: Excessive eating and drinking — abuse of spirits—anxiety and depression—mental ef- fort mental worry and physical fatigue— air—insufficient food—sedentary habits —absence of teeth—bolting of food. If you suffer from this slow death and miserable existence, let us send you a sam- le box of Mulls Anti-Belch afers abso- Patel free. No drugs. Drugs injure the stomach. : It stops belching and cures a_ diseased stomach by absorbing the foul odors from undigested food and by imparting activity, to the lining of the stomach, enabling it tric juices, which promotes digestion and cures {be isease. This offer may rot appear again. 626 GOOD FOR 25c. 145 Send this coupon with your name and address and your druggist’s name and 10c. in stamps or silver, and we | will supply you a sample free if you have never used Mull’s Anti-Belch { Wafers, and will also send you a cer- tificate good for 25c, toward the pur- chase of more Belch Wafers. You will find them invaluable for stomach trou- Ble; Syres by absorption. Bre a vrs Grape Tonio Co. & Ave., Rock Island, LiL @ive Full Address and Wrile Plainly, 50c. per box, or by mail price. Stamps accepted. All druggists, gpon receipt of THOUSANDS OF LIVES CLAIMED BY VOLCANO IN 1,827 YEARS. First Known Eruption in A. D. 79 De- stroyed Herculanaeum and Pompeii ~-8ince Then Some Villages Have Been Overwhelmed Twice and Thrice—Ten Years of Activity— Fatality of 1872. Vesuvius has been more than ordi- narily active within the past few years, offering a spectacle of keen interest of which tourists Lave not failed to take advantage. In 1895, 1899, and 1903 the moun- tain's energies have been violent enough to convey dreadful suggestions of possible disaster, but happily they were only suggestions. The present eruption, which began thirteen days ago, has been heralded by many signs of trouble, extending back to last spring. At one time, last June, the Prefect of Naples felt suffi- cient apprehensions to cause him to warn the teeming population about the sides of Vesuvius to be prepared to abandon their homes at a signal. The fertile slopes of Vesuvius have attracted from the most ancient times a swarming population of vine-growers and farmers, and a great number of hamlets and villages dot the country about, together with the large towns of Portici, Resina (on the site of an- cient Herculaneum), Torre del Greco, Torre Annunziata, Oltanjo, Boscoreale, and Anastasia, places of 10,000 to 2 000 inhabitants. The magnificent scenery, with its charm of outlock upon the Bay of Naples, has led hundreds of persons to build handsome country seats along and near the shore, one of the most noted being Favorita, the chateau oc- cupied by Ismail Pasha, once Khedive of Egypt. . The first recorded eruption of Vesu- vius was that which destroyed Hercu- laneum and Pompeii, Aug. 29, 79, A. D. Sixteen years before that an earth- quake seriously damaged those two cities, both populous ‘‘summer re- sorts” of the wealthier Romans. On the fatal day, familiar te all readers through Bulwer’s tale, the mountain burst and buried under ash- es and lava the two cities and all the surrounding vilages. It is estimated that 60,000 perished then. It was by that eruption that the present peak was formed. Before that, there is good reason to believe what is now called “Monte Somma,” a rounded crater surrounding the cone, was the extreme height of the moun- tain. The height of Mount Vesuvius va- ries from 3,900 to 4,200 feet, according to the growth or subsidence of the lava cone. Vesuvius rested for 124 years. Again, in the year 203, under Septi- mus Severus, there was an eruption worth recording. In 472 the volcano belched ashes, which fell in all then known parts of Europe and even in 5, Africa. Other violent disturbances appear in the records of 512 and 982. The first reported discharge of li- quid lava appeared in the year 1036. Down to the year 1150 there had been nine eruptions in all. From that year to 1631 the volcano was quiet, but in that year there was a tremen- dous flow of lava, with violent explo- sions and the discharge of torrents of boiling water. This eruption over- whelmed the places now most in peril —Torre Annunciata, Torre del Greco, Resina, Portici, and Boscoreale. There are authentic and detailed descriptions of this eruption. Vesu- vius was wholly covered in that year with woods and bushes, and cattle were taken to graze within the crater. On Dec. 16, 1631, a huge cloud of smoke and ashes arose in conical form, making day like night in Naples, ten miles from the summit. The cloud extended over the whole south- ern portion of Italy, as far as Taren- tum. Heavy stones were thrown ten miles. Ome weighing twenty-five tons fell in the village of Somma. The earth was convulsed by terrific earth- quakes and seven streams of lava poured out, overflowing the doomed villages. In all, 3,000 lives were de- stroyed in this disaster. From May to August, 1707, the vol- cano was in constant eruption, show- ering ashes upon Naples and keeping that city in a long-continued state ot panic. Vesuvius was again persistent- ly active from 1717 to 1737. In 1760 and 1767 active, severe eruptions oc- curred, the latter sending lava into Portici, five miles southeast of Naples, and scovial fell in the city itself. Red hot stones in vast numbers were hurl- ed 2,000 feet above the crater in 1779, spreading terror throughout the again populous neighborhood of the moun- tain. Again the lava flow claimed many human victims in 1794. This eruption was the first to be observed in the modern scientific spirit by men of Franklin’s cast of mind. The streams of lava precipitated themselves into the sea beside Torre del Greco, and more than 400 persons perished there. Ashes from the volcaro fell as far away as Chilti and Taranto. This eruption tore a hole in the side of the mountain near its base, which filled up with molten lava. One of the lava streams was estimated as containing more than 46,000,000 cubic feet. Leopold von Buch observed the eruption of 1805, and Humboldt that of 1822. In the latter year the whole top of the cone was blown off, and a chasm 3 miles in circumference and more than 2,000 feet deep was formed. After inferior eruptions in 1850 and 1855 came the impressive demonstra- All the hospitals: and almshouses in Berlin are regularly supplied with flowers from the city. tion of 1858, when the cone sank 195 feet below its former height. On Dec. 8, 1861, another violent outbreak de- Asia Minor and the northern part of | After a decade of quiet, the sleeping glant's fury again burst forth, begin. ning in January, 1871, and culminat- ing in the great eruption of April 24 to 30, 1872, During this terrible week lava was ejected on every side of the mountain, At the Atreo del Cavallo (horse cave), a deep sickle-shaped valley be- tween Monte Somma and Vesuvius proper, a crowd of tourists were col lected to wateh the eruption on April 26. Suddenly a huge stream of lava burst out of new vent close by them, and caught by and perished in the molten torrent. Many others were injus:d by a shower of hot stones from the sum- mit. A tablet near the Royal Observatory on a shoulder of the mountain close by, commemorated this disaster. The tablet itself may have been destroyed by Sunday's upheaval, The torrent which killed the tourists in 1872 partly destroyed the towns of Massa and San Sebastiano. It ran twelve miles in three hours. At the same time, amid terrific thundering, a huge cloud of smoke and ashes was emitted, which arose to a height of 8,000 feet. The lava flow of this erup- tion covered an area of two square miles, and averaged thirteen feet in depth. This destroyed property worth $600,000. The series of eruptions of 1897 and 1898 did not proceed from the main summit, but burst new and small cra- | ters from the side of the mountain looking toward Naples, from which city the glow of the fires within could be seen plainly at night. The series of 1903 was spectacular and even alarming, with frequent lava overflows.—New York World. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. half. According to the British Medical Journal the total number of crema- tions in Great Britain in and 475 in 1903. Malesherbe, the renowned French author, found himself in a dream at- tacked by a rowdy whe stabbed him in his left breast with a dagger in an area where the following evening he felt the first attack of severe pneu- monia. Twelve million six hundred thou- sand is the estimate of the number of the famous: Rocky Ford cantaloupes | shipped from the Rocky Ford district in Colorado last season. Seven hun- dred cars were sent out, as against 592 car-loads the previous year. It is believed that a piece of wood unearthed in excavating for the foun- | dation of a big office building near the | lower end of Manhattan Island must have come from a tree which stood where New York is now before the glacial period in North America. Australia produces about as big trees as California. A giant in Aus- | tralia has been named King Edward. VII. by the government of Victoria. A tablet proclaiming its royal dedica- tion has been affixed to its trunk, which has a girth of 87 feet at the base. On the isthmus of Tehuantepec is a flower called the “botanical clock,” which changes its color three times a day. In the morning it is white, at noon red, and at night blue. It is claimed that time can be taken with some accuracy from the tint of the flower. A Japanese fisherman has caught at Honolulu, Hawaii, 8 new and strange fish, which, so far as known, is unique. The fish is called the frog fish, because of the fact that besides fins and gills it has four well develop- ed legs and feet, the feet being even provided with toenails. Switzerland is the only eountry in Europe that spends more for schools than for the army. Belgium spends three times as much for the army as for schools. Germany five times as much for the army. Holland five times as much. France six times as much. Great Britain eight times as much. Captain Reid of the British steam- ship Auchenerag when in Philadel- phia from Iquique and Tactal, South America, said it had not rained there in the last fourteen years. The houses there as a rule have no roofs. A Ger- man firm recently sent a shipment of umbrellas to Tactal, and would have met with a total loss had not a local dealer remarked the invoice Ypara- sols.” The Road to Success. Thus the public schools in the last five years have taken a new place in the lives of the children for whom they were created. Not only do they teach the three “R’s,” but, step by step, they help boy and girl along the royal road to success that leads out from the highway of liberal education. The girl learns to be strong, womanly and wise, versed not only in the wis- dom of books, but in the knowledge that every housewife, every mother, needs. The boy is schooled in the practical gospel of self-help, self-re- liance and a clear perception of the duties that fall to the lot of a manly man.—From Charles C. Johnson's “Training Both Head and Hand” in St. Nicholas. twenty of the spectators were! While Europe has 107 people to the; square mile, Asia has but fifty-eight, ! Africa eleven and Australia one and a | the year | 1905 was 600, as against 566 in 1904, | Some Cases of Hallucination. According to a Detroit surgeon, there are many sane persons who, be- lieving that they are threatened with some dangerous disease, insist on un- dergoing severe operations in order that their lives may be saved “We do not really perform these operations,” he explains in the News Tribune, “but I have assisted at many imaginary ones to gratify the whim of a patient suffering from some form of hysteria. “We had a young girl here a year ago with a most obstinate attack of hysteria which took a very curious form. She would never lie down in her bed, but invariably sat bolt up- right with her back against the foot rail, constantly turning her head from side to side like an automaton. “l had watched her do this many times, and one day I asked her why she continued it, to which she re- plied that there was a string in her head which pulled it from side to side, and that until it was cut she would have no rest. “This remark gave me an idea, and I asked if she would allow me to ex- amine her head. She was perfectly willing, and after an inspection last- ing twenty minutes 1 gravely an- nounced that she was quite right, and that the only cure was slight opera- tion in order to sever the string. “She clapped her hands with de- light like a child and declared that it was what she had told several doe- { tors, but that they had all laughed her. Would I perform the opera- { tion at once? I thought it better, | however, to defer doing so until the morning, after I had consulted the visiting surgeons. “Having explained the circumstanc- , the imaginary operation was agreed upon, and the following morn- ing the young woman was led into the surgery, placed upon the operat- ing table and anaesthetics were ad- ministered. Part of her luxuriant brown hair was cut off, and a portion of the back of the head two inches above the nape of the neck was i shaved smooth. “Then, in order that there should be something to show for the imag- inary operation, the scalp was 'lanced until the blood ran, leaving a cut about two and a half inches in length. This was bound but not strapped and the patient was conveyed back to her bed, where she remained for forty | minutes before returning to con- sciousness. i “Meantime I had taken a piece of at es an ordinary E vielin string about four inches long and soaked it in water until it resembled a raw sinew, the object of this, of course, being to show the patient the actual string taken out of her head. When she re- turned to consciousness she was told how entirely successful the operation had been and shown the string which had been the cause of all’her trouble, after which she fell into a natural sleep and awoke perfectly restored. From that day to this she has been entirely cured of her hallucination.” Racer Now Missionary Yacht. Securely moored to her berth in Manning's yacht basin, South Brook- lyn, surrounded -by modern craft il- lustrative of the fastidious tastes of the yachtsmen of today, lies the old schooner-yacht Fleetwing, she whose reputation was made on the broad Atlantic nearly half a century ago, but instead of trying to win silver cups, as of yore, she is now used as a means of winning souls. Little is known of the quiet, but nevertheless effective work that is being carried on within the cabin of this old-time racing craft, in the ef- fort to redeem the misguided sailor and bring him to a closer relation- ship with his Maker. Barely any change has been made in the old boat below deck, but otherwise there is lit- tle to impress the visitor and suggest anything of her former character. All standing rigging has been stripped, and in place of her fore and main masts there are two poles which serve the purpose of flying any flags that may be desired. The main cabin still retains much of its old-time ap- pearance, the only suggestion of the present service being in the hanging of scriptural quotations on the sides of the cabin and the presence of a parlor organ, which is used during the divine service. The circumstances which led up to its present use are interesting. Former . Alleviating Circumstances. It distressed Miss Willing to find how much the little girls in her Sun- day-school class thought about dress and outward adorning. She never lost an opportunity to tell them how slight was the importance of such things. “The reason I didn’t come last Sun- day was because my coat wasn't fin- ished,” said small Mary Potter one day, when questioned as to non-ap- pearance the week before. “My old one had spots on it that wouldn't come off and a place where the buttons had worn through.” “But, Mary, dear,” said the teacher, gently, “you know it’s not the outside that really matters.” “Yes'm, I know,” said little Mary, “but, Miss Willing, mother had ripped the lining out, so there wasn’t any in- gide to look at!” Involved. Miss Lacy—I don’t feel comfortable in this waist at all. Miss Ascum—Why not? Miss Lacy—It makes me feel un- comfortable because it feels too com- fortable to be a good fit. —Philadelphia Press. causifig considerable discussion these days, At the first annual banquet of the Towa soclety of New York an of- flelal pronunciamento was f{ssued in favor of ‘“loway.” The matter has been complicated, however, by the various and pleturesque methods em- ployed by senators who have frequent occasion to use the word these days. The stellar parts played by Senators Allison and Dolliver in the proceed- Ings on the railroad-rate bill make reference to the ‘senator from Towa” frequent. Senator Tillman in- variably calls the State “BEyeoway.” Senator Teller says “Eeowa,” with a long “0.” Senator Overman uses as his favorite “"Eyeowa.” Senator Bai- ley's version is the most musical. He dwel's on and emphasize ‘he second syliable, the “0 long, thus “l-o-wa.” The native son begs the question by simply calling it the best State in the Union and letting the pronuncia- tion go hang.—Des Moines Register and Leader. A Chained Library. Wimbourne, Ireland, is noted for many things, but its famous chained library is, perhaps, the most notable of its curiosities. The library pos- gesses unique interest, as being one of the earliest attempts to dissemin- ate knowledge among the people. The collection was made accessible to the people in 1686 and numbers some 200 volumes. The scarcity of books and the value of the collection are both indicated in the care taken for their preservation, and especially against loss of such treasures by theft. By means of chains and rods the books were securely fastened to the shelves and these chains, it is rather surprising to learn, were not renewed until 1857. Among the in- teresting works of the collection a copy of the first edition of Sir Wal- ter Raleigh's ‘‘History of the World,” 1614. It has suffered from fire, ¢ tradition says that Mathew Prior responsible for its present the story being that he while reading it once upon a time the pages were burned hy dle. eep and his can- Aluminum Paper. cally a new article of producti said to preserve the sweetness of but- ter that is wrapped in it for a very long time. FITS, St. Vitus’ Dance: Nervous Diseases per- manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. #2 trial hottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. KLINE, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Two thousand uninhabited isl nds lie be- tween Madagascar and the India ast. Mrs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25¢. abottle In Japan fish have to be sold a'ive, and they are hawke i through tae streets in tanks? The borough of Malden, England, has decided to levy a special tax, the proceeds to be devoted to the adver- tising of the town's local attractions. , bad the weather: ,OR SLICKER Yoon: Tor the SIGN OF THE FISH AJ TOWER CO. BOETOM US A R CANADIAN CO LTO TORONTO CAN You CannoT CURE all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con- ditions of the mucous membrane such as nasalcatarrh,uterine catarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, sore mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure these stubborn affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs,checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. so cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box THE R. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mass. marry for the fourth time, was exs plaining his reason to an elder. “You see, I am an old man now, and I cannot expect to be here verra lang. When the end comes I wad like to have some one to close my eyes” The elder nodded and said: ‘“‘Awell, meenister, 1 have had twa wives, and baith of them opened mine." -=Lons don News, A WOMAN'S ORDEAL DREADS DOCTOR'S QUESTIONS Thousands Write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass, and Receive Valuable Advice Absolutely Confidential and Free There can be no more terrible ordesl to a delicate, sensitive, refined woman than to be obliged to answer certain questions in regard to her private even when those questions are ask: by her family physician, and many PS PY | continue to suffer rather than submis | to examinations which so man, is | physi- cians propose in order to intelligently treat the disease; and this is the rea- son why so many physicians fail to cure female disease, This isalso the reason why thousands upon thousands of women are corre- sponding with Mrs Pinkham, daughter- in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. To her they can confide every | detail of their illness, and from her great knowledge, obtained from years | of experience in treating female ills, | Mrs. Pinkham can advise sick women Aluminum paper, which is practi- | ion, is | more wisely than the local physician, Read how Mrs. Pinkham helped Mrs. T. C.Willadsen.of Manning, Ia, She writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: ‘‘1 can truly say that you have saved my life, and I cannot express my gratitude in words. Before I wrote to you telling you how I felt, I had doctored for over two years steady, and spent lots of money in medicines besides, but it all failed to do me any good. had femaletrouble and would daily have faint- ing spells, backache, bearing-down pains, and my monthly periods were very irregular finally ceased. I wrote to you for your ade vice and received a letter full of instructions just what to do, and also commenced to take ydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and I have been restored to perfect health Had it not been for you I would have been in my grave to-day.” Mountains bf proof establish the fact that no medicine in the world equals Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Come pound for restoring women’s health. W.L. DoucLAS $3204 *3 2° SHOES W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line cannot be equalled atany price. WA00UGL4g ~ SHOES r ALL [I ess X Il 7 vz 3 ns / er 19 A ( JAZ | [BEST IN THE , |worto f i Z| nausHeD = uly g 1876: ve. . .6, 18 X25 CAPITAL $2,500, W. L. DOUGLAS MA MEN'S 80 SHO MANUFAGTY wn DRLD. REWARD to anyone who ca wi $10,000 Sarin this Statement. cou! e t th at Brockton, Mass., and show you the Huitette care with which every pair of shoes Is made, you would realize why Ww! L. Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hoid their fit better, wear longer, are of fatrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe. W. L. Douglas Stron, ade Men, $2.50, wo Au a CRUTIQ: hist cron Earns 91.50 las shoes. e no substitute. None genuine without his name and price stamped on bottom. Fast Color Eyeiets used ; they will not wear brasey. Write for Illustrated Catalo 48 p. book free. Highest ref, Fitegeratd wo W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mase. P ATEN TS Jong exieHence. &Co.Dept. 54, Washington, D.O P. N. U. 22, 1906. If afiiteted with werk maw Thompson's Eye Water Poultry, and 25¢ Stamps, know on the subject tomake a success. Chickens Earn Mone) If You Know How fo Handle Them Properly. Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you want to do it intelligently and get the best results. The way to do this is to profit by the experience of others. all you need to know on the subject—a book written by a man who made his living for 25 years in raising in that time necessarily had to experiment and spent much money to learn the best way to conduct the business—for the small sum of 25 cents in postage stamps. Ittells you how to Detect and Cure Disease, how to Feed for Eggs, and also for Market, which Fowls to Save for Breeding Purposes and indeed about everything you must SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS. —— ETERS ETUDES 0D BO ee BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 134 LEoNARD ST, N.Y. CITY. ! | We offer a book telling
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