dale Tennis Club, Chicago, from experi ence advises all young girls who have pains | and sickness peculiar to their sex, to rely on ■ A Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound. How many beautiful young girls develop into worn, listless and hopeless Women, simply because sufllcicat attention has not been paid to their physical development. No woman is exempt from physical "weakness and periodic pain, and yonng girls iust budding into womanhood should bo carefully guided physically as well as morally. . If you know of any young lady who is sick, and needs motherly advice, ask her to write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., who wUI give her advice free, from a source of knowledge which is un- Cqualed in the country. Do not hesitate about stating details which one may not like to talk about, and which are essential for a full understanding of the case. Jliss Hannah E. riershon, Coilings wood, N. J., says: "I thought I would write and tell you that, hy following your kind advice, I feel like a new I* 51 " 8011 - 1 waa always tldn and delicate, W&f arid so weak that I could hturily do anything. \2/ ffi|f Menstruation was irregular, i WV, W "I tried a bottle of your Vegetable Com ||Jk p pound and began to feel better right away. I con \ tinued its use, and am now well and strong, and A menstruate regularly. I cannot say enough for what your medicine did fox mc." f How Hrs. Pinkham Helped Fannie Kumpe. " u j} EAI , ]\{ HS Piukiiam : I foel .it is my duty to write and tell you of tho benefit I have derived from your advice and tho use of Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound. The pains in my back and womb have all left me, and my menstrual troublo is corrected. I am very thankful for the good advice you gave me, and I shall recommendyour modicino to all who suffer from fenialo weakness." —Miss Faknie Kumpe, 1922 Chester St, Little Rock, Ark. (Dec. 10, 1900.) Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound will cure any woman in tlio land who suffers from womb troubles, inihtmma tlori of the ovaries, kidney troubles, nervous excitability, nervous prostration, and all forms of woman's special ills. Profit In Ostrich Farming. Prosperity in Canada. A flock of ostriches at Phoenix, The Canadian Dominion hums with Ariz, now numbers more than I.OOU industry. During the past six years birds. Their incroase is rapid, be- it 3 volume of trade has increased 96 cause a pair, barring accidents, wili per cent; that of the United States 48 raiso a brood each summer for 74) ;per cent; of Great Britain 25 per cent; HLVD'EARS. Each pair produces in feathers of Germany 32 per cent; of France 18 I and eggs about S3O a year. per cent. Canada's people do a for- eign trade per capita of $77 per ail- Longest Strike on Record. num, which exceeds that of any peo- Tho longest strike on record is not plo except tho British, whose ex yet ended. The 2,800 men and boys Changes amount to $lO2 per head. employed In Lord Penrhyn's 'slate quarries in "Wales went out two and a Tho necessity for special asylums half years ago. and tho settlement of for those addicted to the use of co tlie strike is now a question of British calne is being considered in British party politics. India. What Everybody Says. Ldrrsvn-tz, Kr - Bvcf y ono who UECB Bonn's Kklney , CmCAOOi , Llj . _ For a year or more .Pills free trial hes a good word When 1 received the . "J fo ' them-that's -™e£ ]** the small of my back wily they .arc most fluttering terribly with and kidneys; had prominent in the my back, was sick and tried a number of unfit to do anything, remedies but without publlcfiye. The several remedies t™ e DoL? C Kidns ' Aching backs arc cased nip, oack, and Pills, and purchased ? ln , pams overcome. Swelling of tho did " no Rood bu £ two boxos, aud am limbs and dropsy signs vanish. raider irritated th e JL to state that They correct urine with brick-dust sedi- trouble and mado me P* after talcing the two meat, high colored, excessive, pain in pass- worse. Before I had W boxoe of i)ills I was i n jr t dribbling, frequency, bed wetting, used up the sample I relieved of all pains, Dean's Kidney Pills dissolve and rcmovo " M ' s feeling bo much ?"n htT. Dat i'°, c ° calculi and gravel. Relieve heart palpita- better that I got more troubled since. Prior ~ , , n , , , 11 from the drug store, to taking there pills tlou . sleeplessness, hoodache, nervousness. x cou!d Bot s } cep at it was impossible for - night. Had to get up me to get a full FREE —HOPE FOR THE HOPEULSS. six or eight times, and night's sleep, but lam V* T' ' **•' '"v tho urine was so red, not exnerieucing any /3t-offlce Pills ten thousand v ✓ have made me all times. Mrs. E. T. \ right No other med- V?-'T... ( . " Gould, 914 W. Lake \ feme did mo any faSumUtii, Medical Advlcv Frcv-Strictly Cootldaotlil. * lu;u o ll4B ' l hDADPY XIVI1!1C0VERT;"< OIX 8 O I otnok relief end euro, worn u.jjgtr B4M- Book of and IO days' trcatnwni D Tdlg Tm. Dr. . H. ants". 08.. Cw * P. N. U. 21, !03. B lp thtie. Sold hy drugcli>ts. Jgß Eye Wafer for RACK FOR TOMATO VINES. Description of a rack to lay tomato vines on: We raise the Ponderosa to mato, and whenever one touches the ground it rots. So we made a lot of these racks and have used them sev eral years, and they have proven to be j a success. The illustration represents the rack in position. After use it is folded up to be put away. The posts are made of heavy fence lath sawed in two in the middle and nailed with one nail at the top, which serves as n hinge nnd the other strips are common lath. The side that has three laths on is to be put next to the vine and the vine laid across the rack. If the rack is set too straight the vine may blow off. but if they do blow off they can be tied on. —II. L. Bender, in The Epltomlst. BRINGING UP THE VINEYARD. While it is true that many vineyards that are unprofitable are so because they are old or because it is impossible to get them over the ravages of the rot, It is also true that the majority of the vineyards which are unprofita ble are so because they have not re ceived proper care. An excellent plan for bringing up tho vineyard is to use 300 pounds of muriate of potash with 800 pounds of acid phosphate rock and 100 pounds of nitrate of soda to the acre in the spring and 100 pounds addi tional of tho nitrate of soda alone in June or early July. Keep the soil well cultivated until the middle of August, tbeu sow between the rows one or two rows of field peas which, after culti vating until they get a start, should lie allowed to grow nnd this growth plowed under the following spring. 'Phis plan adds humus to the soil, and 5s especially recommended when there Js a dearth of stable manure, and la many cases it is quite as good as ttoe stable manure, particularly when the commercial fertilizers are used.—ta dianapolis New'. FERTILITY FOR PLANTS. Remember that plants cannot j-iake use of fertility in the soil, that Is, "plant food, until the fertility can be dissolved in water. There thay be phosphate in the rock, but the plant cannet feed upon It until the rock has been dis solved by sulphuric acid, and this work the fertilizer companies do Tor us. Barnyard manure cannot lie fnken up as plant food by trees, plants and vines until ft lias decayed. If we apply the dressing of fresh stable manure to a field this spring, which we plant to earn or potatoes, that manure will not be in 'Condition to benefit the crop until it rots, which will not occur untllmld-summer, and some of It will not'be acceptable to the plants during the entire season, a yiortlon remaining for the succeeding crop another year. The humus added to the -soli by the decaying manure may remain In the soil for several years. Most soils, par ticularly clayey land, contains at abundance of fertility to produce the heaviest crop, but the plant food in the soli is not often in a soluble condition, nnd therefore cannot lie taken up by the plants ns food. The winter frosts liberate much of the fertility of such soils, ns also does frequent cultivation, and the action of rain, sun and all - . Green's Fruit Grower. PEACH YELLOWS. The great authority on peach culture, J. H. Hale, has the following to say ol Southern grown peach trees: "A year ago I hinted at the possibility of ex cessive peach orchard planting the country over. The mad rush continues, and were it not for the disease known as 'yellows,' we should soon be face to face with such overproduction as would make It Impossible for tlic aver age cultivator to market peaches with out loss, must less profit Yellows, spreading with greater virulence thaD ever In 1897, made it clear that it was to be even worse in the future, nnd that ail through the Central and North ern States It is to be a hard light in future to maintain healthy and profita ble orchards. Only those who know the yellows, and dread it, and fight iti from start to finish, can hope to suc ceed. I have in fruiting orchards more peach trees than any man on earth, and I know -from sad and dearly bought experience that peach trees grown in any of the Northern or Cen tral States cannot be depended upon as free from yellows, and tlie only way to secure n healthy tree at the start Is to plant Southern-grown trees, from below the tainted district.' Know ing this as I (10, I have entirely aban doned growing poach trees at the North."—National Fruit Grower. PofttitßO Stamp Perforation*. We used to separate postage stamps "Willi shears. An Irishman of tlic name of Archer invented the machine which perforates the sheet and tried to sell it to the British Government, bnt for years its practicability was doubted. Finally he received an offer of S3OOO for his patent, which he refused. After long and weary contention bo got $20,000 for it. The invention is only about fifty years old. It seems singu lar that our revenue stamps of 1808 should not have been perforated like postage stamps, but punctured with delicate knives. But whoever gives n thought to these common thing* of everyday life?— New York Press, There is more fun in the world than most of us have any idea of. ; HAY STACKING IN NORTHWEST. Contrivances That Would Surprise an Eastern Farmer. In the Northwestern States where forage crops are cultivated for ex port the stacking and baling of hay is done largely by machinery, and the number of hands required to carc for the great crops that are grown is rel atively much smaller than in parts of the country where the size of the fields and the amount of the crop would not justify the investment of a large sum of money in plant. There are a dozen or more styles of stackers in common use, some of litem arranged with a masit on which a boom is rigged, carrying a fork. This fork, a huge affair which would pick up two or three Eastern hay cocks at one mo tion, takes the hay from the wagon racks and swings it up to the great stack in which it is to be stored. One mast and boom stacker carries a six tined fork. The mast is held in place by guy ropes from the top. The foot of the mast rests on a sled with run ners. which may be staked to the ground to hold it firm. The fork is worked by a team of horses, and does the work of a score of men. Another form of this stacker has a grapple fork, similar to the dredges used in sub-marine excavation, which runs on a trolley wire, much like those made familiar to New Yorkers by the ar-, rangements for handling the material excavated from the subway. Another form of stacker looks like a derrick from the oil fields, with a boom bal anced on top. The advantage of this form is that no guy ropes are neces sary, stakes at the base of the der rick poles holding it firm while in op eration. Some of these derricks ore mounted on sled runners, and some on wheels which are blocked when the machine Js in use. Another variation of this scheme is a derrick with a re volving pole > The hay racks in which material is Ijrought to feed these great machines are longer, wider and deep er than those in use in the East, but are built on lines much the same. A Remarkable Bridge. There is a remarkable bridge over the river Indus at Rondu, in Northern Kashmir. This fair looking structure —which crosses a rocky gorge, through which the river runs at a tremendous rate —consists of three ropes, one foot rope and two side ropes, joined to gether by short lengths of rope at intervals of a few feet. The three main ropes consist of long switches of brushwood roughly bound together, the two side strands being kept apart by forked stakes at intervals of 20 feet Ne-edless to say, the crossing of these swinging, swaying structures is not a very pleasant experience, and intrepid mountaineers have been known to run sick with terror in the middle, although the native coolies cross Most light-heartedly with heavy loads. The bridge has been described as 'cue of the worst in tbo Himalayas. FlTßpermanentlvoured.No fits or uerrous ®.rafterilrit day'suse of Dr. Kline's Or#*; Nerveitesturer.*2trJai bottleund treatlsetree Alrelt.li.Ki.iNa, Ltd., VSI Aroh St.. Phlla.,!'* lit is better to be on the level than to itruvel down hill. >*sk Yonr Denier Tor Alloa'* Foot-Feno, ' at this season of the year I*, iu \\\ that it is nearly impossible to £ youdo firornpt I- x he will pleased to give you ■ ill al lillflfct lit "1. raok. ■ 1 Address I)r. Hartman, Presi fljk ® '(w _ I dent of The llartman Sanita- . The average annual temperature of Sitka and Omaha Is the same. All creameries use butter color. Why not do A, they do use J UNA TINT BUT- Tkn Conoii. The manager who is looking tor a clean play will have to scour the market. Plso'aCure for Consumption is an tntalllhle medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W. HAM OKI-, Ocean Grove. N. J., Feb. 17, ISIUJ. Some men are sucii scrappers that they will pick a quarrel before it is ripe. Tlie output of the American furnace Is more than double that of the Brit- Just what it was 25 years ago, St. Jacobs Oil is now. The prompt, sure cure for SORENESS AND STIFFNESS Price, 25c. and 50c. |S I Su SOLO EyfftyjVffEfiE.