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j*. V TERRIBLE TO RECAlii. "Five Weeks in Bed With Intensely Painful Kidney Trouble. Mrs. Mary Wagner, of 13C7 Kossuth Ave., Bridgeport, Conn., says: ?"I was so weakened and generally run down with kindey disease that for a long time I could not do my work and was five weeks in bed. There was continual bearing down pain, terrible backaches, headaches and at times dizzy spells when everything was a blur before me. The passages of the kidney secretions were irregular and painful, and there was con titcTQhlo eoHimont and nrtnr T don't know what I would have done hut for Doan's Kidney Pills. I could see an improvement from the first box, ?ud five boxes brought a final cure." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. America's New Silver City. There is a new Silver City in the world. Just now it is only a "camp" city, called Cobalt, 340 miles almost due north of Toronto, in the icy stretches of Ontario, but 6000 men from all North America?landsharks, California placer-miners, pioneers from the Yukon, Canadian * 1 Avnorto lUfflDer-jacKs, aiiu jLUiiim& VU from the East?are rubbing elbows there as they toil over the wealth of ore. The city is booming indeed, and every train which runs anywhere near it sets down a new crowd to add td the population. Of the richness of the region there is no doubt. Geologists have proclaimed it the most remarkable silver camp in North America,-so far as ore values are concerned. It would take several acres of Coleman.Township, in which Cobalt Jies, to i-asture an able-bodied goat. If- is a wild country, perhaps as wild as any in the Canadian provinces. It is a country of beautiful" lakes, veil stocked by nature with pike and pickeral, bass and catfish. The forests are spruce and pine, white birch and tamarack. But the most strik ing thing to the tenderfoot and tne geologist alike lc the marvelous abundance of rock. You find it everywhere. It is in the bush, throughout the swamp-land, on the lake shore. Dig for it in the woods and you will hardly go three feet before you strike it. Perhaps we may have here the breast-hone of the continent. In this rock has lain for centuries some of the richest ores and minerals yet discovered by man. Here, mingled with the rich magenta of the cobalt bloom atfd the peculiar lizard green of nickel bloom, are bismuth, pyrite, antimony, native and ruby silver, and trr :es of copper and gold. Some of the ores are rich in cobalt, nickel and arsenic, but while these values are taken into account, fully ninety per cent, is silver.? Starr Bullock, in Harper's Weekly. Hounds and Fox Imprisoned. A curious incident in connection with the Tipperary foxhounds is related. Two of tbe pack went to ground with a fox in a deep culvert and were imprisoned for fifty hours. They were found thirty feet below ' 1 i-O tne suriace completely exuau&teu emu badly injured. One died soon afterward. The fox was discovered perched on a ledge just out of reach of the hounds and at once bolted on receiving his liberty.?London Telegraph. How to Overcome Fear. In overcoming your various fears, follow each one out to its logical conclusion thus, and convince yourseli lhat at the present moment the things! you fear do not exist save in your Imagination. Whether they ever come to pass in the future or not, your fear is a waste of time, energy and actual bodily and mental strength. Quit worrying just as you would quit eating or drinking something you felt sure had caused you pain in the past. BACK TO PULPIT What Food I)icJ For a Clergyman. i Administer of Elizabethtown tells how Grape-Nuts food brought him back to his pulpit: "Some 5 years ago I had an attack of what seemed io be La Grippe, which left me in a somplete state of collapse and I suffered for some time with nervous prostration. My appetite failed, I Jest flesh until I was a mere skeleton, life was a burden to me, I lost interest in everything and almost in everybody save my precious wife. "Then on the recommendation of some friends I began the use of Grape-Nuts food. At that time I was a miserable skeleton, without appetite and hardly able to walk across the room; had ugly dreams at night, jiq disposition to entertain or be entertained and began to shun society. "I finally gave up the regular ministry, indeed I could not collect my thoughts on any subject, and became almost a hermit. After I had been using the Grape-Nuts food for a short time I discovered that I was taking on new life and ray appetite began to improve; I began to sleep better and nrv weight increased steadily; I had lost some 50 pounds, but under the new food regime I have regained almost my former weight and have I greatly improved in every way. "I feel that I owe much to GrapeN.uts and can truly recommend the ffaod to all who require a powerful rebuilding agent delicious to taste and always welcome." Name given toy Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. A true natural road to regain health, or hold it, is by use of a dish of Crape-Nuts and cream, morning and night. Or have the food made into some of the many delicious dishes g^iven in the little recipe book found in pkgs. Ten days' trial of Grape-Nuts helps many. "There's a reason." Look in pkgs. for a copy of the; famous little book, "The Road to .WelJville." # ' ' - . . 10mf New York City.?Waists that close | in the back yet give a chemisette | effect are among the novelties of the,?? season and are exceedingly desirable ( from every point of view. This one is ^ among the best and includes trim- j ming of lace over the shoulders that T is vfery generally becoming. ]n the t illustration the material is white ] I linen batiste, with the chemisette ol t tucking, trimming of lace and of i banding, but there are a great many i thin silks that are in vogue, and these i as well as fashionable fabrics ar^ in < ; every way appropriate for the design, ] which, indeed, is one of those useful 1 Dnes that can he made available for < jverything seasonable. < The waist is made with a lining, hat is used or omitted as the mate- I ial renders desirable, and consists of t >ront and backs. The bn-jks are c .ucked for their entire length, the * "ront to yoke depth only, and the 1 I.emisette is arranged under the c vaist, the whole closing together at h<> hark Thp trim mine DortionS are f 'ut in one piece each and arranged f' jver the shoulders on indicated lines. e 'The sleeves are the favorite puffs inished will roll-over cuffs <-nd can >e cut off at the elbows or extended o the wrists, as liked. The quantity of material required ,or the medium size is three and onelalf yards twenty-one, two and threeJourth yards twenty-seven or one uid seven-eighth yards forty-four inches wide, with three-eighth yard af tucking for the' chemisette, two , ind one-fourth yards of lace four and one-half inches wide and three and one-half yards of banding to make is illustrated. No Gloves For Tennis. One doesn't of course expect a girl to wear gloves with her short sleeves when she is playing tennis or golf, but you do rather look for them ! when she comes down town. ]t i6 al; ready a common sight to see arms | burned to the elbow swinging along e boldly. Perhaps they are bony, ? scrawny arms, too, but the wearer * - - v j iares only for her comfort?anil a J j nonportable fashion it certainly is. 1 Irfire and Embroidery. Valenciennes lace and embroidered oiusliD are combined in nearly equal f proportions in some of the nicest of u tihe summer gowns. One of these has o sight inch insertions of lace bordered c by frills all the way up the skirt, s The lace bodice has a deep cage of * embroidered muslin at whose edge s ure buttonholed slits, run with bla?k b velvet ribbon. The ribbon is knotted c loosely in front and hangs nearly to a the hem of the skirt. The costume e can be varied by having an extra tie v of pompadour ribbon or a plain color n a becoming shade. Gingham Dresses. v Short suspender dresses of checked a gingham worn with low-necked i; guimpes are very satisfactory ptay t I frocks for children. a Hooks and Eyes. Place hooks and eyes alternately ipon the corselet skirt at the opening f you would insure its remaining v lose and smooth without gaping. lj I ?M Lace and Chiffon Waist. A baby Irish lacc waist made over iccordion-pleated chiffon, with yoke >f German Val. lace about one inch vide, the edge of the lace overlapring the under one. The effect was rery good. The sleeves were above he elbow and had a wide band of iberty satin around the arm. Homemade Waists. The girl who is skillful and ambl.ious but doesn't feel that she can )ay say two dollars a yard for one of j he stylish all-over embroideries, can ;volre a very handsome waist, yes, a >tunning one, from a fifty-cerrt batiste >y embroidering it with large coin spots which are first well padded. Place the dots far apart. Child's Coat. The littlo coat made of lingerie ma' 1 4 V? + wtVtiwtr* /\f lew io UJiC %jl me jaicoi vviiixuo \jl "ashion and is exceedingly attractive 'or the wee tots. This one is espejially designed for the flouncing in which it is shown, but could he made 'rom any plain material if the straight =dges are appropriately trimmed, al:hough the flouncing has certain advantages, notable among which is the fact that it reduces the labor of makng to the minimum. For the very .hin coats batiste is well liked and is ilways extremely dainty, but there ire also slightly heavier flouncings which can be utilized for the every]ay coats, while strll plainer garments can be made of the flouncing Lhat is finished with hemstitching )nly or of pique scalloped at th ?dKes. The coat is made with a plain bodj jortion to which the fuH skirt is atached. The eape is separate and :onsists of the yoke and frills and tho leek is finished with a turn-over colar. The sleeves are full with rolliver cuffs. The quantity of material required or the medium size (two years) is our and one-half yards of embroidry sixteen inches deep, with seven ignth yard of plain material; or, ve and one-eighth yards of material wenty-one, four and one-fourth ards twesty-seven or two and oneuarter yards forty-four inches wide. Serge in Colors. White serge is daily increasing in avor. Every suit that appears is alaost sure to sell the material for anther suit. Pure, clear white is as harming as it can be, but there is omething: especially soft and attracive about the creamy tint of the erges. Black velvet always adds a right touch to them in the form of ollar, cuffs, etc., but blue and green ,nd even red are becoming if in haroony with the complexion of the nearer. Cluny Lace Popular. There is no diminution in the popPinnv i nw in snrne I J Cli 1 L J VI i u 41 J uthorities claim that it is still gainng ground, so no one will make a niBtake by buying the real Chiny, xpecBive though it is, for trimming , handsome costume. Ornamental Handbag. Handbag of light blue leather, k-ith a catch of gold set with brillants. I < I 1HE PULPIT. ? is A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY rei THE REV. R. M'DONALS, ?v ha of of Subject: "Eeauty: How to Keep It.'' a : . ... : pa alt i w< BROOKLYN. N. Y.?Sunday even- Qe ing the Rev. Robert MacDonalri, pastor of the Washington Avenue Baptist Church, preached to young wo- ' men. His subject was "Beauty: How to Keep It." His text was from Pnv verbs iv., 23. "Keep thy heart with ^ all diligence, for out of it are the is- *7* sues of life." Mr. MacDonald said: . "What has such a text to do with beauty? Everything. T,he source is the heart. Beauty of character dep&nds on quality of heart. Every thought, desire, sentiment, ambition, that enters the heart is sooner or ?a! I ?? O + /-. M nn J M/tn. D 6 later tTAjJitrs&eu m tuaiauicr auu luuduct. All the life issues radiate from so' that center. And when the writer of sel ihe Proverbs tells us to keep the Pe heart with all diligence, he speaks the foundation word of all wisdom and !DS carries us back to the primary cause Jer of truth or error, righteousness or sei 3in. We have already seen in this series that beauty of character is a j|1< iivine possession, existing only where it truth holds sway. And that we can a,c never satisfy the claims of Almighty ?Xl God until we give back to Him that ]ar which is possible to us all?beauty ln of character, instead of informed, ^ bomeup, unsymmetrical lives. What thl Michael Angelo said once to a young re* artist about his statue applies to us all. "Do not trouble too much about th( the light on your statue. The light to jf the public square will test its vai- ' ae." So the light of the public square tri beyond, which is the light of God's Mc countenance, the unerring light of un Judgment, will be the test of our char- It acters. All modelling, all building, to should be with the light of eternity's on public square in mind. We arj all th< Under obligation, a contract based on sic and rooted in our very constitution, an to build for eternity, inasmuch as the no Creator has marked out a celestial ne destiny for us all, and it ought to be th< our chief business to conform to that coi graciou3 provision which will mean hl{ realization' along all infinite lines tri throughout the eternal years. Be ter carerui, men, on, ue careiui, in- we fluences you bring to bear upon the tri formation of your characters. No out- sh< ward embellishing, no exterior mold- els Ing, will suffice. It depends* upon be what, you Teceive in your heart wheth- be er your character will be perverted en and deformed, or true, well propor- gU tioned, beautiful. an You remember the precepts of last de sermon, those recommendations indis- tio pensable to the attaining of beauty, a ch: sense of infinity, fidelity to purpose, xei repose, which is the enemy of rest- no lessness and nervousness and discon- ov> tent, and that sympathy, balance, pro- wt portion that stand ever opposed to in erratic movements. We mention these "pi in passing, inasmuch as beauty of so] character must be attained'before it < can be retained, and until we are fa- ha miliar with the lines along which we1 lo^ can attain unto it, the lines along blc which it can be kept, will profit us Spi little. tra Numberless are the precepts that me suggest themselves just here. All the on Christian virtues bound toward us to its offer their assistance to help us keep ]ih that we have striven so hard to ac- thi quire. We gladly accept their help, otl but instead of packing your memories ter with thpsp multitudinous aids to thO -Tri, retaining of this high possession, let fat us fasten our thought on a few founda- chi tion principles. * all The first I would suggest is self- str control. No beauty of character can for be where there is no self-control, to Daniel Webster was oncc asked which we he thought the greatest virtue. It was ou: just after ono of his most powerful Th speeches, but in which, interrupted se< and contradicted by the opposing e0i counsel, he lost his temper, and also S0] the case he was pleading. That even- r ing, in the course of conversation, he Js was asked the question, and answer- rei ed, "Self-control, and it is the most co, difficult, too." 'Tis true, young wo- no1 men. It is an underlying principle, los including a host of greater virtues. ^ei Who has not felt sorely the need of greater self-control. Patience is rep- ^ Tesented in the Scriptures as the very rel fruitage of Christianity, but patience is only a constituent part of self-con- ^ trol?namely, self-control in pain, in nrf affliction. Very Christ-like it is. En- gQ| durance of wrong treatment. Misun- ne, derstanding. So easy to complain, and jje, be disagreeable when the sky is dull, and the way drear. I refer 'not to that patience that springs from our dQ"; natural disposition, which is purely w0 temperamental. Constitutional hero- joc Ism is good, but it does not stand the fitrain. A patience that falls at the hardest point, is weak all through. h Nothing short of the Christ type of CQJ patience will suffice. ^ But not only self-control in pain, str also in pleasure, another name for , which is temperance. Young ladles i,h mood tn he tpmnftrfltp as well as vnuntl men. I am not referring to the liquor . question, although never more need than to-day for temperance there, hut to the -whole problem of living. To he temperate in thought, in speech, ? in desire, in act instead of extravagant.' It is so easy to let pleasure r* run away with us and cause us to * think life has no value beside. Dissi- T. pation is only extravagance in pleasure. The curb has been thrown off 7*\ our necks. Pleasure was given too ' much license. We entertained It too freely, endowed it with our own personality, and before we were aware of it, it took us up in its arms and ran . away with us. We handed the con- w!l trol of the situation over to it. We W1 became dissipated. We are lost. Selfcontrol in pleasure as well as in pain 1 is the demand. Temperance as well as patience. ' jj? But a second requirement is self- tej command. This may be regarded as intensified self-control. Self-control Is passive. Self command is .active. The other is to force yourself on. Patience and temperance are good, indispensable to beauty of character. cai Forbearance and forgiveness are hard- ca er still. We speak from experience eVl in saying so. Controlling your speech, withholding the adverse criticism . when just dying to speak, to give ? your adverse opinion. We often think we are not saying anything worth while unless we criticise. Forbearance of the senseless gossip, and the < retailing of slander. Forbearance of bel /H cro err on 9 hlo TlPrfiflTl UAAO Uiwub? I' Then forgiveness of that -which It jjei is natural for you to resent. TV'e like 0VJ to hold spite. They injured me. 1 j. must get even -with them. And we never thought that the getting even with one who has injured us means to get uneven with ourselves and uneven with God. "I will never forgive," shells human nature. But' it also 1 pells basest sin. Not until -we can up ?tand -with JesuB and Bay, "Father, Ms "\ \ ? * fore the foundation of the earth t!o God's guest chamber. Forbid him trance, entertain less important ests, and the spirit is burdened, d the heart is sad. It is His resince, by both creation and redempn. And - still we are such foolish ildren -not to yield to God and find st. eternal rest, infinite calm, that turmoil in time or eternity can erthrow. All this helps us to see ly trust in Jesus produces beauty the life. He was the beautiful life ar excellent." All the virtues blosmed and emitted fragrance in Him. 3f -course, self-forgetfulness is ennced and made more sure through e. And faith and trust always issom into love exercised toward a iritual objcct. Love is the peerless tnsformer of our life. All else Is idial. Love only is ultimate. Love ly is all-powerful to mold like unto elf. Love God and you become Gode. Self slips out the same door it God comes in. They pass each ler on the threshold. The evicted lant goes out bruised, defeated, endless. The victor, ruler of our ;e, comes in with all strength of ser and grace of countenance, and wealth of blessing in His out* etched hands. No trouble henceth to forget self, and no difficulty be beautiful. In forgetting self forget our weakness and failures, - Jl?^nnoo Qnd flArmff5. r UlbtfppUlilLCU UUU WW.. en the soil is ready for the good id to be sown, for truth and rightusness to grow, for beauty to blosii. This array of foundation principles hardly complete without self-surider. The give-up principle in life ;ints for all. The reason we do t find is because we are afraid to le. We fail to take hold of truth 2ause we fail to let go of ourse'ves. rough obedience we become di\**.ie. , you say, you are beguiling us into igion. Just so. Did you dream 11 could possess beauty of character thout being religious? We desire to 3Claim nothing other than the old spel. But to set it before you in w dress and utder an attractive, witching title. A man hearing tho :ond sermon of this series forced i way to the pulpit after it was ae, and exclaimed, "I thought you uld be sensational. The subject >ked it, but you everiasuusu jached Christ to-night. I am both appointed and pleased." Yes. That'g iere the effectiveness of the gospel mes in. It refuses to be suppressed, i topic, if the preacher be true, can ike home, however roundabout the irney _ it takes, . without meeting rist somewhere in the way. And en the meeting takes place, Jesus vays gains the central place, and des into our consciousness as the pe of glory. Christ's place of rest' ace is in the heart. He is the Godstined Master of Ceremonies, He ects the life issues that, emanate im that citadel of. attack and delse. Let Him in and all.Js welj. en it is easy to keep the heart th all diligence. Remember, the art's emphasis is always right, aerson said another lasting thing, hat the heart deems great is great, e Master of Men as our Marter II see to it that all the life iss'uea II be true and beautiful. Sorrov II not corrode those outgoing tides affection. Sin will not weaken ?m. Death will not obliterate nor srwhelm them. Nor eternity exust them. God will recognize the auty and exclaim, "Well done; en into the joys of thy Lord." WpcIpv's Motto. 7obn Wesley's motto: "Get ail ycu a; save all you can; give all you a" should be taken to heart by eryone who wants to become efflcit in the service of God and to ow the joy of fellowship with God Christ. Accumulated Blessings. 3od is good when He gives; but tter when he keeps back in order give an accumulated blessing, iped, pressed down and Tunning sr into the bosom of His child in 10m Patience has had her perfect rW?The Rev. F. B. Meyer, Ail.'. How to Be Miserable. f you want to be miserable, perk your own will against God's.? iclaren. . "give them," have we any beauty ot aracter worthy the name. To hate human; to forgive is divine. To member that is to help Yourself er manv a hard place of temper and tred. It is an axiom that no beauty character can be where no spirit forgiveness abides in the heart, itred, anger, tying yourself un into knot, kills beauty. Forgiveness exnds the heart, ooens the mind, ex:s the spirit. Then beauty exist?, ould you be able to command self? t rid of sin. Bring in a stronger 11, God's, to reinforce your owd. \ third necessity In the retaining beauty is self-forgetfulness. This is passive quality, as Is self-controT. Is also negative. But It is neither ssive nor negative until certain ace graces and positive virtues enter and mike it so. I mean by selfrgetfulness the becoming oblivious those desires and demands of your ture, the remembrance of which ike you self-contained and ill at se. even miserable and sinful. To cotae so. possess faith, belief in me personality greater than yourIf. Belief in any objective fact op rson morp imnortant than yourself, d they all are. for you are a very significant factor in the life nrobn, a mere atom in the -midst of the nsualities, will producp self-forgetness. The greater the object of faith 9. greater the oblivion of self, for gives self a chance to expand )ng the line of the other person's cellence. and gradually a newer, ger self takes the place of the old your consciousness. It Is a forene conclusion that faith in God. rough Jesus Christ, enlarees and ?ulates the life as can no other peril, for you are immediately given i worthiest possible object on which fix your attention. Then trust. Do not be afraid, to ist somebody. Test, then trust, ire loss comes to us mortals through der trust than through over trust, is hard to believe it. just as hard believe as to believe that sins of lission are more unoardonable at 3 hand of God than sins of commis>n. Sins of omission are so vaguo d attenuated that thev cut little nr figure in our consciousness. We ed to be preached to that these are ; great lack among mortals in the nsciousness of Almighty God. The jher and grander the object of your LSt. the more beautiful the charac fashioned. Really remarkable that i are so constructed that we can ist beyond sense perceptions. It ows us to be snirit more than aught ;e. The heart in us all was destined Football Saved Him. "My knowledge of football methods is all that saved me from injury, possibly death," said President David Starr Jordan, of the Leland Stanford, Jr., University, the other day, when speaking of the railway accident he was in when two Santa Fe passenger trains came into collision near Corona Tuesday. Dr. Jordan was standing in the aisle, and he fell on his shoulder and rolled over in the best football style. He was able to arise and assist several of the injured in his car. Here is a brand new indorsement of the value of football from no less a person than the president of a university where the game has been popular. We are not told that Dr. Jordan ever played the game, but he gives testimony that his knowledge of the game saved his life by teaching how to fall without getting hurt. We can now count on Leland StanX a .1! -1 ' A ^ XI X luru aliening iu uie strenuous spori, despite the opposition of the faculties of the effete East, -who, if they got caught in a railroad wreck, would doubtless not know how to fall and would be smashed.?Newark Advertiser. Happy Paraguay. In Paraguay the women are in the proportion of seven to one as conpared with the men. The consequence is that the men are taken the greatest care of, and everything which is unpleasant or might be risky to the life of a man is done by the women. The streets are cleaned, snips are loaded, oxen are driven by them, and it is even said that they have taken part in their country's wars, actine as substitutes for their men folk.?Argus. A Valuable Food. Superior to any other vegetable food?even the cerealr.?as sources of protein are dried beans and peas. They rank among the most* economical of all foods and compare favorably with most meats in point of nutrition. Strap-Hangers Pay. Few street cars, other than the double-deckers which seat forty persons inside and sixty on top, are used in English cities. The American "strap-hanger" is the most profitable of passengers to the railway company. Cure For Conceit. When there is only one boy with Bix sisters in the family, the boy has no good reason to grow us conceited.?Somerville Journal. Whipped by a Jaybird. George Smith, street commissioner, stooped to pick up a nest of little birds, which had dropped to the sidev^lk, intending to remove them to a pf&ce of safety, when he was attacked by an angry jaybird, and was obliged to seek safety in a house. The nest had fallen :'rom a tree, and the mother bird resented interference.?Greenfield Correspondence Indianapolis News. \ Compromise. "I have a little granddaughter," said a Senator, "who is very fond of animals,'especially dogs. Her mcther has taught her to pronounce the word until it sounds like dahg. Her father sticks to the good old-fashioned dawg, so the child has compromised, and now every canine is a dahg-dawg."?Washington Star. FITS, St. Vitus'Dance: .N ervonaDieeaees permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. 12 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. E. Kline, Ld., 931 Arcn St., Phila., Pa. Pianos are to be found in the homes of many wealthy Japanese. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegnms,rednce8inflammation, allays pain,cureswind colic,25ca bottle There are now five British peeresses who were actresses. SPENT $50 WITH DOCTORS. Got Barber's Itch From Shaving?"Worse Under Doctor's Care?Cared by One Set of Cutlcura?Cost 81. "I want to send you a word of thanks for what the wonderful Cuticura .Remedies have done for me. I got shaved and got barber's itch, and doctored with my own doctor, but it got worse all the time. 1 spent in ail about fifty dollars with doc tors, but still it got worse. A friend of mine wanted me to try the Cuticura Remedies. As 1 had tried everything, 1 was discouraged. 1 bought one set of the Cuticura Remedies (Soap, Ointment and Pills, cost $1.00), ancl they cured me entirely, 60 1 cannot praise them too much. 1 would he willing to do most anything for the promotion-of a cause like the Cuticura .Remedies. They are wonderful, and 1 have recommended them to every one where occasion demanded it.. 1 think every family should' know about the Cuticura Remedies where they Lave children. Allen Ridgway, Station Master, the Central Railroad Company of .New Jersey, Barnegat Station, .N. J., Cct. 2, 1905." There is a growing demand in Japan for American pianos. Chickens Eari If You Know How to Han# Whether you raise Chickens for i do k intelligently and get the best re is to profit by the experience of others all vtiii tippH to Itnnw on the subiect?; who made his living Poultry, and in tha 25C I t0 experiment and spen fin | the best way to condu ^Stamps. I sma]i sum 0f 25 cents i] ^^iiw It tells you how ro 3 how to Feed for Eggs, and also for Ma for Breeding Purposes and indeed ab know on the subject to make a success. SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 21 BOOK PUBLISHING 134 Leon a, -WIS A PRETTY MILKMAfiEqk * Thinks Pe-ru-na Is A Wxulefrfuf < I j . MISS ANNIE HENDREN. | MISS ANNIE HENDREN, Rocklyn^ Wash., writes: ' "I feel better than X have for over four t ?earg. I have taken several bottles- of j eruna and one bottle of Manalin. "I can now do all of my work in t! house, milk the cows, take care of the": milk, and so forth. I think Peruna i? ? a most wonder Jul medctine. J "I believe I would be in bed to-day if I had not written to you for advice.. had taken all kinds of medicine, bat none ? did me any good. "Peruna haa made me a well diit happy girl. I can never say too muth ^ for Peruna." Not only women of rank and leisure i praise Peruna, but the wholesome, useful J women engaged in honest toil would nof; be without Dr. Hartman's world renowned remedy. ' ' - t T>Urn TVnt/.? V.00 it fni> thousand women every year and he fails to receive a multitude of letters the above;- thanking him for his idvice, < ' I and especially for the wonderful" b;n?fit6V|fl received from iPeruna. Smallest Atom. 1 The atom of hydrogen Is the *maall-'|j est of the "ultimate atoms" of thdyjl chemists, but it is 1780 times aflgjS large as the corpuscles which hava^|] recently been demonstrated as ttaVjuj elements o.' the atoms. 4 World's Oldest Ship. *?? The oldest ship in the worUI, tiKjraa mail schooner Vigilant, running intajSj St. Croix. F. W. I., although undT the French flag, was built I Essex oak, at Essex, Mass., in i802. Some saints try to prove their faiitb I by their ferocity. N. Y.?30 . J IT/^y FoodJf|l| Products I J IAD are telected meat*, prepared for I I your table in a kitchen at dean a* your I I Ready to ion any timo?fit to urn I i ja All are economical?end all tat fco* I I Whether your ta*te be for Beneleaa I J Chicken, Veal Loaf, Ox Tongue, Potted I 1 Ham, Dried Beef, there is no way you can I I gratify it to well as by asking for Libby'a. II TryLibby'? dehcrous cooludOxTongiie g ] ifor Mmdwiches or sliced cold. K &sn&2fc*?t a ^Ibby^IcNell^nJb^^M^J | You Cannot J1I CURB all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con- ; ditions of the mi^cous membrane such as ,.,'i nasal catarrh, uterine eatarrtrcaused by feminine ills, sore throat* sore > mouth or inflamed eyes by simply ! |j dosing the stomach. ^ But you surely can cure these stubborf V affections by local treatment with ? ( ;.? Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs,checlcf i discharges, stops pain, ?_cd heals thf inflammation and soreness. i - .'J Paxtine represents the most successful' local treatment for feminine Ills ever ; produced. Thousands of women testify . to this fact 50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box 4 THE R. PAXTON CO.. Boston. Thompson's Eye Water f IAIIIITrnWhe,It' 4,9 Bitabois p?r IRllnl I k IJacre. Catalogue and namplef ? ft ill 8 r l\i'Ku.Salzer8eedCo.iB?< v b m 1 h. 1 m At c f La Crows vv^s. . m?\ i Money !f^l e Them Properly, k i :un or profit, you want to jBCSrl suits. The way to do this | We offer a book telling my j a book written by a man 4 for 25 years in raising t time necessarily had t much money to learn 1 ct the business?for the n postage stamps. detect and Cure Disease, irket, which Fowls to Save out eveiything you must ft J t CENTS IN STAMPS. HOUSE W 1 flBuutHBSSHBHKfek^fll j -?m ,\