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f ' HtlWQOSNESS Aid tteAKNFSS CURED . BY FE-RU-JIJL Minn Sadie IiMiih, 4 Rand Mnet, llsl 4n writes: "rerun* ?u inmmbM to mm about % year mo as m nodlnt remedy for the troubles peculiar to our aes. and aa I foaad that all that was said of thin medicine wae tm, I am pteased to endorse it. *?4 fie mm to km U steal w?ra Msalkt s s <sr sflmssn mmd ?rre? omnn*?s c'tumel /Vest oreriewk sai ?foej?/? ?s??4a. a tut /bs <d Mot l?* a /Inv Warn f 4*oim to <?? o?e ot? on, wv SMMttt* larTM* -d aw I 1 fcrpaa tm afooft Me'lrr, tos^fa^MKy wy serv* ?mmea* yassrrf airayaud Me ?ro ?le ssm la <M yeivte or ssa wwaiils* apfNwrM a?4 f fcas# tesa ?ceU awd Otetrmy OMP rtsw." Address Dr. 8. B. (lartman. President o( ?The klartman Sanitarium. Columbus. O.. fdtr free medical advice. All oorrespond ones strictly confidential. PILES B?al for The Bowels CAMOVC49MMme Sterling Rmm4jp Co., Chicago *r M.Y. MS SHOAL SALE, TEN MLUOt MIES Sharps and Flats. The harbor of Spesia. Italy. Is to be Improved by dredging and the construc tion of additional wharfs. Involving an expenditure of over $200,000. The religion that makes a man too good for common people is born of the Pit. A Mmw Mm?* A Vienna society has been formed to aid persons with short memories. A card Is Issued; upon which the purcbss er writes the date of an engagement and posts to the society's office. By the first post on the dsy of his en gagement the card la received by the purchaser. (ears ov Osio, Citt or Toudo, ? Loots Uodktv. (' "? Pbamb J. Casvsr make oath that t?e U senior partner of the llrin of P. J. Cbbxk* c Cow, tlolac business io toe City of '1'oloC >, Oosaty sad Htats aforesaid, u*l that Mil In will pay the mtn of omb boxdbbd i?oju um for emoa and avory oim of catabii t that oaanot be cured by the use of aIall * Gatasbb Cobb. Pbanb J. Obbnev. Mwora to before me and Butooribed In my .?... presence, tbU tttn dsy of Deoem? - IMal. ? Der,A.i>? ltttM. A.W, vIlbabox, ? *???? ? notary Public. ?all's Catarrh Csro Is taken Internally, an J i direotly on the blood and mucous ?ur i of tae system. Mend for testimonials, f. J. Cmbbbt A Co., Toledo, y. Mold by all Druggists, 76u. Take *1 ail's Family Fujs for oonstlpatioa. Kwlsw Adapt* Brlllah Malt*. The Oermaa Emperor haa ordered dram a Berlin firm a quantity of pri vate notepaper stamped with The Im* ferial eagle surrounded by the rlbbvu the Order of the Garter (of which ta Is a Knight), with Its motto, "Uoul ?K ?ul mal f pease." ?*. VmesrnuMMatiyearei.Hefltsoraervoiis* mm after tint d?*? ueeen*. Klloe'a Or*at ?lleetecer,tmrtal bettleand treatise f me R. H. KfcmajAd.,?lArohgt., Phils., Pa. te every eae aaeevess tea flesh si lamsarePleo'sOare forCoaen'aptloesevM n life three years ago.?Mas. Taonas Ko? MapleK.. Norwich,N Y.. Peb. 17, 1I0J The life ef a bicycle, if rtgularly assd. Is isar years. Wde makes the cross a crushing walght. Bo. U. CUHC TOUW WI3WCYS. 'tba Salt Arka* aa4 R|Ml4at TiaaMae Sat (a* Oct at the Can?. Don't make the mlatake of believing ?ark ache and bladder Ula to be local allmenta. Get at the cause and cure the kldneya. (Jse Doan'a Kldne; PI' which have eui thousands. Captain 8. D. D outer. of En gine No. 14. Pitta* bnrf Pa., Fire Department and residing at 2721) Wjrllo avenue, taya: "It was three years ng? that I awed Doau'e Kidney rills for no Attack of fcklney trouble tbat waa mowtlx back ?cb?, and they flxad me op flne. There # no aalataka about tbat, and If I jlbmiM frar bt troubled again I would jH^tbeaa ftrat thlas. aa l know what fW mI# by an dealera. PrW M Un ?( tfca TMth. Take the chicks to a dentist every ?ix mouths If you can possibly man age It. By the removal ot on* or two aide teeth, nndue prominence and pre mature decay la ofttn avoided in the front ones, and if a tiny spot of decay la atopped at once, a toolli will some times last good for years. Many people think It quite unnecessary to risk a dentist until toothache acta as au un pleasant reminder. This is a mistake, and often meana the loss of a tooth that mlcht have been saved If it laid been attended to earlier. Olrto. Wilt eh Yonr S|wrVI What old-fash loued folk called "tricks" of speech or manner are de plorably eaay to cssutne and extremely difficult to break off. Several to which Kirlsare more or less prone are these: Repetition of a sentence or the point of ? story. telling it over again almost In the same breath; the usage of "you know" or "don't you know?" for em phasis. and beginning a laugh with such haste that It entangles Itself In the speech and the final words are de livered In a giggle. All these and similar mannerisms may be more read ily dropped in youth than latet In life, and every girl would be wise to watch herself lest she fall Into them or their like.?Philadelphia Inquirer. Chimploa o? Woman's Rl-rbtn. On August 4 Germnn women cele brated the seventieth birthday of Ma thllde Clasen-Sehmld, author and champion of woman's rights. She waa born Jn 1S31 in the little village of Wlldenfela (which name she lins as sumed as her i;on de plume), and after attending the higher schools In Leip zig she settled In Russia as a teacher. On her return she published her first novel, "In Russian Circles," which was followed by "Genre Pictures and Sketches." Madame Clascn-Schmid has busied herself very much with women's affairs, especially female cos tume. Among her many book* on this snbjcct may be mentioned "Female | Costume?Practical, Conventional and Aesthetic." In 1800 she helped to found the "Leipzig league of Feminize Writers." She la also an active spirit in the "General Society of German Women." Thn Wom?n of RiimI*. According to Dr. Wolf von Schier brand, writing In the Delineator, the curious and appalling discrepancy be tween the lot of the grande dame in Rtissia and that of the women of the middle or lower classes la the result, not so much of greater wealth as a complete reversal of standards. The Russian aristocracy ia -cosmopolitan, and its women are, like the women of the powerful advancing nations of Western Eurooe, an independent foree, leading In society and domestic life; bnt the women of the bulk of the na tlou nre still Oriental, and more the slaves than the helnmates of their husbands. The condition of these women Is miserable in Its degradation and hopelessness. As the author con cludes. "Their outlook and their op portunities seem to be less advanced and their socinl status on a lower plane than in almost any other lSuropean country." r<>nov?'ln? rhtfofi. White ch'.ffon that has become soiled may often have Its service prolonged by dyeing. The domestic dyes, to be hud in packages In every drug store, nre useful for fills purpose. Don't give no the chiffon, however, even if quite soiled aud mussy, until you have tried to wash It. Let It remain, of course, without any sort of rubbing, and not even much squeezing. In a lather made of a good white soap until the soil of the water shows that the dirt tins left the fabric. Press it gently out of that water, and rinse through several clean waters, adding to the last rinrtng water a very little gum-arable. From this last bath take the chiffon ont, let ting as much water drain awny as possible, then spread between layers of old ronslin, ami press the rest out with the hand. Finally smooth with n moderately hot iron, spreading a 'sheet of thin tissue paper over the chiffon. If the directions have been carefully followed, the end of this pro cess should show the fabric almost equal to new.?Philadelphia Inquirer, < Flour 4* Pecti*. Ton roust hove a loose Jacket or bo lero for your late afternoon drive. The white cloth jacket Is still In high favor, but a rival has arisen In the beautiful poach-colored broadcloth, called by the Importer "liner de pecbe"?literally flower of the peach. The cloth is the tint of the Inside of a ripe peach, warmer than white, but not actively yellow nor pink. It Is not ro much colored as champagne, but is liked as being "off" the white. A loose half-long wrap of "flenr de peche" cloth Is lined with satin to match. There is a seam In the centre or loose back, ard others under the arms. The cost has plain sleeves with turn back cuffs and Is fastened down the front quite simply with pearl but tons the size of a quarte. dollar, ar ranged in pairs. Pet ween the buttons are loops of hussar braiding in white silk, attached to frogs of the same at both ends. The hat to went with this cont Is of peach-colored felt, very flue and !lght of weight, so as to be suitable to the season, late August or early au tumn. A wreath of very tiny Mareclinl Nell roses Is set directly about ?he ridge left by the sunken crown and a long bow of blark velvet ribbon Is set at the baek. The felt lint Is faced with white taffeta, heavily stitched with peach-colored silk.?New Haven Register. ftomlnlr Clint. Married women manage men with out making known how they do It. A woman disposed to be Insolent wonders why co many persons dislike ber. Tht woinau Who decorates uu fact feels sore no om but she knows It. It the women's Hobs really h*<l tht exciting times they are reported to bar* according to tbe uevsispers, | there would be a wild stampede a fur memberships bj men. It la op to tbe homely girl to ctiPi rate a dispoaition which will so irra diate her ujiluess that It is trans formed Into seeming bcauly. Some womeu are so nures sons hie that when, their husband actually praise their cooking they cry and ask tbe men it that's all they married thtm for. Imagination is the thing that makes a man whose wife Is swsy at tbe sea shore think of her as worrying ovei the hard work be is forced to do, and tbe wife draws pictures of her husband wearing himself to a skeleton thinking of her absence. A woman strike breaker was con splcuons at Chicago among the work ers imported to the stock yanls. She is Harriet Heaton, and she came from Cleveland to go into tbe employ of the Armonr Company as a forewoman in tbe labeling room. 8bc came in on o train over the Lake 8bore, whlct brought 170 men for the compauy.? Cincinnati Enquirer. Girls, please uon't attempt to pm your experience against that of a woman much your senior; assume tbe languid airs that seem to be born of indifference; put on, an affected drawl with the idea that it denotes big) social standing. AfO Tnr \Tnm?n to Women are discussing to-day an In terview jnst given by Governor Kd ward Wariield, of Maryland, who de clares that from twenty-four to twen ty-six years is the proper age for a woman to marry, says the New York Telegram. He made the statement in address ing the graduates of the high school at Wilmington, Del., recently, and fol lowed it up with the foliowiug re marks: . . ? J ?My advice to girls is not to marry too early. If asked the age when girl* should marry, Fshould any from twen ty-four to twenty-six. Tbe latter was tbe age of Mrs. Warlield when 1 mar ried her, and I bave said to my daugh ters that I should not give my cousent to their marriage until they arrive at that age. "Marriage for tbe pnrpose of settling a daughter iu life is. as a rule, a failure and an unhappy one. No parent, and especially no true and loving mother, will wish to push her daughter into matrimony before she is fully matured and fitted for the grave responsibil ities of married life. Girls just out o! school are not equipped for the ordi nary household duties of wives and for the cares and trials of motherhood They should, after leaving school, spend some time with tbe'r parents giving their parents the pleasure of their companionship and learning som?' thing of tbe everyday work that will be theirs as wives. "The girl who marries too early misses many of the pleasures of life. She is doomed to spend bcr youthful dnys in tbe trying and taxing ^are? of motherhood and household dut.es ?with broken health and run dowr nerves, before she baa passed out ol her teens. "I believe in mnrrlage and would like to see every man and womac mated in congenial companionship foi life, but I am opposed to early am! thoughtless marriages. "I was thirty-eight when I mnrr!e< and my wife was twelve years my junior. We are liaopy and contented with our lot, and have four children ?three girls and one boy?all rigoroui and healthy physically and mentally Hence my reasons for advocating ? mature age before marrying." FiKtUS The narrow belt Is a thing of tb? past. The new stylos call for button trln> mine. Panne velvet belts arc shimmeringl) pret'.y. Plenty of bastlste Is used, and aoj amount of lace. Jeweled luce is. to bj nscd for yo?cs tabllers and fronts. Braided handles In brown tones ap pear on the newest tan bags. | To match coslumes in various shadci there are bags of mottled seal. | Crushed velvet and velveteen belt* are among the neveltles for autumn. { Chameleon taffeta is the modern name for the old-fashioned shot silk. The kimono nhape remains a favoriti for smart cloaks for day and eveuln( wear. i I)ust clonks are now regarded n* de serving of as much attention as th< frocks themselves. | Tlie bird of paradise plumes will til vide favor with the ostrich feather dur . Ing tlie coining season. Chenille braids In various colors anC In itiiaded effects will figure largely in next season's millinery. ? All-over shirred effects are the latest comers In bcltdoni. Borne are on a? ' clastic frame; others have a piece ol elastic at the hack. If the fad for ornamental leathci really prevails in the fall, us some us serf, one may us well be turned out al the book binder's, and have done. Every tone ef mauve and cverj shade of brown mixed with yellow and green figure 0:1 the drosses and In tlif millinery for summer wear, although white is the leading hue. Women who llko simple clothe* would like to llee to a desert Island un til the Dlrectolre styles, with theb ? multiplicity of cuffs, revert am basques, have passed bj. I N many puts of the Middle Wnt then is is iwti need of rsM improvement as anywhere die In ihf world, a ad II Is no wonder that tbs people of this ser tlon hare gone Into ?? l?oa imu? 1 movement with enthnalaam. | A Stat* good rAada convention ha* Just been bel?l at Springfield. Ill, an.. although it la the bnay aeaaou wit. the farm era, there waa an atteodau<-? of about 200 drteg* tea. bealdea wan visitors. Senator Latimer, of Boat Carolina, waa the principal speaker and he delivered an able and etoqn*?i address. Naturally he devote?t cor aiderable attention to the principle o National aid aa embodied In the b I introduced Into Congress bj bimsc . and Colonel Brownlow, of Tenne**f>?* Tbe 8enator la strougly of the opln 01 |'that the t>ov^ruineut abonld cuntrlbu ' aome of lta surplus revenues to aid th States In building good roads. ai: be' haa malty cogent, reasons to oner* in aupport of that proposition. At the close of his addreaa 8enator latlmt" asked all preaent who agreed with him to atand up. and all but three or four ?prang to their feet. There waa aome opposition, however, led by Professor Baker, of the Stste University, and ? protracted discussion followed iu wb ? h the professor came off decidedly secoiu best. One of the great obstacles to road Improvement In some parts of the Mississippi Valley la the acarclty of material for building roads. In large portions of Illinois. Iowa. Arkansas and aeveral other States, there la neither stone nor gravel. All the ma* terial used in surfacing hard roads has to be shipped In. which adds consider ably to the expense. But the bottom less mud roads of these sections are such a burden that people are willing to tax themselves heavily to secure re ' l!ef. If the National aid plau should be adopted, the next few years will see an enormous improvement In the roads of the Middle West. Where there Is good local material considerable progress lia* already been made. In Missouri there are hundreds I of miles of fine hard ronds. The same ! may be said of Minnesota. In some lo calities excellent roada have been built of mining alag. Gravel is employed where available, and in Southern Illinois deposits of novaculite are ? drawn upon and some very tine roads I have been constructed from this ma . terial. On the whole, however. It must be said that only a beginning has been made, and the agricultural Industries of this section ure greatly hampered by the expense and dltnculty of get ting farm products to market. Il?tt?r KmmIi and Hotter School*. The farmers of East Tennessee are aroused on the subject of road Im provement, and especially enthus'icstlc for the plan of co-operation between the 8tate and Nation. The Brownlow bill la unanimously Indorsed. The measure is especially commended as a a means of improvement in the coun try schools. This 1m one of the strong est reasons for the systematic Im provement of the country roads. Un- | improved roads are. perhaps, the great est drawback to the succeas of rural schools. When the season of bottom less roada arrives the attendance at school becomes small and irregular, the classes become discouraged, and 'but little progress can be made. One of the principal reforms of to day consists in the consolidation of , rural schools so as to do away wl.b . the greater number of small unsatis factory schools and replace them wl.b larger centrally located schools. This would reduce the expense and grently increase the efficiency of the country schools. In many places the people have adopted the plan of sending out wagons at public expense to bring In the children on the various roads. But this plan ia only feasible where the roads are uniformly good. Hence, the had roads which prevail In most sec tion? are a great bar to educatloua) progress. Wl<ta Tires Foi Farm Wtfni. The subject of wide tires la one of great interest and Importance, and It is being thoroughly discussed by tbl* office In connection with various roar associations and others Interested. Im portant investigations of the Unlvers. ty of Missocrl will soon be given to th? public, and will show vary clearly th* advantages of wide tlraa on Jbe farn aa well as on the road. Th#; Office o Road Inquiry, being ssk?r*fo recom mend legislation upon the aubect. bit proposed that the width of the tic equal to the aquare of the diameter o the iron or steef axle at the shoulder and exactly the same .width for th> wooden axle of the same strength. A one method of enforcing the change, I is suggested that after a certain dat all sales of new wagons whose tire fall below the standard estsblisbei shall be taxed, and that a rebate oi taxation be allowed for old wagoi<> altered to this standard. Ibis won'.i bring no additional tax upon the farm cfs. but would place (he burden upon tho wagon builders. Under this plan, they would promptly build up to the standard, and their agents would be come advocates of wide tires. There Is already very general progress throughout the country lu thla direc tion. ?OOO Photograph* a Kttnnil, The latest wonder of photography Is I a machine which Is capable of receiv ing Impressions at the rate of 2000 a second, or thirty or forty times as fast as the ordinary cinematograph. One of the chief purposes to which this wonderful Invention Is put Is tho pho tographing of insects' wings In mo tion, by which It Is hoped that the problem of flight tnny at last be solved. A Town Piiono InvlM, The town council of gueenstown. Cape Colony, contemplates putting up a plant for telephone und water worka aervice; the aatimatad cost Is nearly UM on tie Tna?81k?rtu Railroad ??? Toewt teat itemr te still un twM H? wh bellevad to have cart* CM Irkutsk, wblthec ths body vu ???*. ?Uy to te ratnaed to Tomsk *te pollo>. Once mar* It was seat to btitak and ones mora returned by tte police mm being unknown In Three Strikes. The old adage thst "llgntning never strikes twice in the same place" has often been disproved. H?re Is an in atancc In point: In the summer of 18S4 the farmhouse of H*nry Axtcll In Chemung County, N. Y., was struck by lightning three times In one day. First It split the chimney from top to bottom, ruined stove and pipe and ' bored Beveral holes in the floor. An hour later a "bolt" struck the gam? I bouse and tore a milk bench, upon [ which several cans of milk were set ting, all to pieces. The same evening a third flash entered the roof and tore the legs from a bedstead.?Mid dietown Tim?u. Innumerable telegrams were sent ?nd replied to, no town would receive tte body, which wu sent hlthw sod thither by railway, always being re turned to Tomsk. At laat It was of fered to tte Anatomical Museum at Tomsk, where it waa preserved for nine montba. ro one daring to disaect It without permission from the higher government. Nosr the* museum la bc!-| rebuilt and Ao body baa been once more landed over to the Tomsk police, rbev again refuse to bury It without he documents w'thout which nothing mn be done In Russia, and the un happy body. Which Is said to have al ?oadj traveled over 11.000 miles, la >nce more upon its unending travels. Wsys of the Orient. There Is nothing very remarkable -n the report from Japan that a move nent la on foot, aupported by many amlnent' men, to found a church pro Thriatlan In character, but independ ent In Its lines. When Buddhlam was dlsestsbllsked and disendowed In the early '70s of last century, owing to the momentary ascendency of 8hluto, which Is merely vsgue ancestor and nature worship. It eras prophesied by acute foreign obaervers that japan would either adopt Chrlatlanlty or be come frankly materialistic. It will not be owing to any lack of energy on the part of European and American mlaalonarlea if the former course Is discsrded. Here Is one forecast pub lished fourteen yeara ago: "To make all Japan Christian by edict some fine morning la not on tte program of the Japaneso statesman of the hour. But that something of the kind should happen within the rext twenty yeara Is not nearly so unlikely as msny things that hsve actually happened In thla land of realized improbabilities.'* DOCTOR3 MOVE GIRL'S HEART. Organ Rsatered to Normal Condition j Thcuph Shifted Six linchea. Annie Riley, a 13-year-old daughter of Jamc3 Riley of Dickson City, Pa., became ill with pleurisy about a year ago. The family physician found the whole left side of the child's bedy over the lungs bloated. Ho removed the matter and the girl began to get well Soon, however, a second gathering appeared, which decayed the ribs on the left side. Curing this second ill aess the girl's heart moved over to the right side some six inches from Its proper position. The girl was taken to a hospital, where physicians found it necessary to remove four whole ribs and parts of I four others. I The physicians restored the heart to Ita natural posltiun. but the operation left the child weak and for two weeks sho was in a dangerous posi tion. but new It Is believed she will recover. 8harpa and Flats. The longest ears of com on exhibi tion in tho Palace of Agriculture at ho World's Pair were raised within -ho corporate limits of St. Louis, and ire displayed in the Missouri exhibit, lames Adams, of Weliston, yesterdav ent to Superintendent Matt W. Hail three ears of yellow field corn, two of which were 17 inches long, whllo the >ther lacked but a fraction of an Inch >f that length. Wealth won by tricks vanishes by 80. 43. SAFEST FOOD la Any Tim* of Trouble la avapa-lfaSs, Food to rebuild the strength and that Is pro digested must tfe ielected when one Is convalescent. At this time there Is nothing so valuable as Grape-Nuts for the reason thst this food is all nourishment snd Is also all digestible nourishment. A woman who used it says: "Some time ago I was very III with typhoid fever, so 111 everyone thought I would die, even myself. It left me no weak I could not properly digest food of any kind and 1 also had much bowel trouble which left me a weak, helpless wreck. "I needed nourishment as badly ns anyone could, but none of the toulcs helped me until I finally tried Grape Nuts food morning nud evening. This not only supplied food that I thought 1 delicious as could be hut It also msde p me perfectly well and strong again so I enn do all my housework, sleep well, ran eat anything without any trace of bowel trouble and for that reason alone Grape-Nuts food Is worth its weight iu gold." Nuine given by l'ostum Co., Battle Creek, .Mich. Typhoid fever like some other dis eases attacks the bowelsand frequently sots up bleeding and makes them for months Incapable of digesting tho slarcbrs and therefore pre digested Grape-Nuts Is invaluable for the well known reason that In Grape-Nuts a!! tho starches have boon transformed into gr?.pe sugar. This means that the Ilrst stage of digcsliou litis been me chanically accomplished In Grape-Nuts food at the factories and therefore auy? I one, no matter bow weak the stoma"!!, [ can handle It and grow strong, for all the nourishment Is sllll there. There's a sound reason sad 10 dsjrt trial proves. Mrs. Haskell, Worthy Vice Templar, Inde pendent Order Good Templars, of Silver Lake, Mass., tells of her cure by the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. " Dkai Mrs. PotnuM: Four years ago I wu nearlv dead with inflam mation and ulceration. 1 endured daily untold agony, end life wis a burden to tea. I had need medicines and washes internally and externally until 1 made u* my mind that there was no relief for me. Celling at the home of a* friend, 1 noticed a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Ve{etable Compound. My friend endorsed it highly and I decided to give It a trial to see if it would help me. It took patience and perse Terence for I was in bad oondition, snd I used Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for nearly five months before I was cured, but what a change, from despair to happinees, from misery to the delightful exhilarating' feeling health alwaye brings. 1 would not change back for a thousand dollars, ana your Vegetable Compound la a grand medicine. "I wish every sick woman wonld try It and be convinced." ? Mm. Iti Haskxll, Silver Lake, Mass. Worthy Vice Templar, Independent Order af Good Templars. When a medicine has been successful In more than a million eases. Is It Justice to yourself to say, without trying It, 441 do no* believe It would help me"? Surely you cannot wish to remain weak, and sick and dis couraged, exhausted with each day's work. You have soma derangement of the feminine organism, and Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will help you just as surely as It has others. firs. Tittle Hart, of Larimore, N. D., says: *? Dear Mrs. Pimkham : I might h??? bin ?pared many months of suffering andpaln If I had known of the efficacy of Lvdlft E> Pink* ham's Vegetable Compound a few months sooner, for I tried many remedies without lad ing anything which helned me before I tried the Vegetable Compound. 1 dreaded the approach of the menstrual period every month, as It mesnt much suffering snd pain. Borne montha the flow ws? eery scanty ana others it was pro fuse, but after I had used the Compound for two months 1 becsme regular and natural, and so I continued until 1 felt perfectly well, and the parts were strengthened to perform the work without sasistsnce snd pain. 1 am like a differ ent woman now, where before I did not care to lire, and 1 am pleased to testify as to the good your Vegetable Compound has done for ma. ** Sincerely yours. Mas. Tn.tiK Bast, Larimore.N.D Be It, therefore, believed by all women who are 111 that Lydla E. I'lnkhnm's Vege table Compound Is the medicine they should take. It has stood the test of timet and It has hundreds of thousands of cures to Its credit. Women should consider It unwise to use any other medicine. Mrs. Pink ham. whose address Is Lynn, Mass. will answer cheerfully anil nithmit ?est au letters Addressed to lier by sick women. Perhaps she has Just the knowledge that will help your case? try her to-day ? It its nothing. GENTLEMEN, WE CAN CURE YCU? 20 yean* of ?nocewafal prnrtiss la ? pretty j fond reottrd, Don't yon ililnkT OUR SPECIALTY IS CURING "TO STAY CURED" * "Diseases Peculiar to Men* CmoltalloB Md ?x?inln?tlon fra*. Writ* or rail. All correspondence tteatod confidential. DRS. LEATHERMAN & BENTLEY. Cor. M?N*tU mmI Komyth St*., Atlanta, fla. What a Bird Likes. Birds like a little sunshine?toe much Is fatal. A bird after bathing may be hung for fifteen minutes in the sunshine to dry bis feathers, but should not remain longer, saya House hold Animals. Do not hang birds in a window. All windows are draughty. Do not per mit a draught from an open window to atrlke your bird. Do not allow the temperature of tho room where the bird la kept to drop suddenly. Permit your bird to go to rest at tusk, keeping it oat of a lighted reom. Keep canaries In a temperature of f6 to 70 degrees. Never make a quick mdYe about a bird or soft It suddenly. HORTH - SOUTH* BAST' WEST I ill mm WATLBPROOF oulp cumiiN< , mmrwRtu. TV tot ttoBfa < Jd wahtn v4 timnsssfstt fcr U) the mvU Oicr TbQT MV tttkm Maa?rjeJlowfer network iOSVKSP1 3I6N Of Tj?>f*l ofamtotfu ?we y* lUWjj outmunaiMik ?cun?iifraaii ftO~ABQK TVNM.2B? JJtWILSON HCOM+mmy \ CNARUS1M ft. C. / t\IM UltATiaHAMai/'tf ELIXIR BABEKJ* Tb? Quick kn4 Sw? Cmrm |r?# MALARIA, AND h I* I Unk ?4 iff t iw W|U evr* itu Ur?d ffiiiiif Palna In Rft'k, Mi -?>a a ad ?'ca?1. I* a mn ly vrflmb ? eoni on a?. a Ml HallalRlRtnr Amalc. rr*pmti-4 kr KLVIZKWISI A m? Waakla?tM,?.f). Dropsy? Retnovea *11 awaiting in Hon CURED 6)"3t at tfaya; effecta a permanmt cur* In y> to 60 <tava. Trial treatment given free. Mothinr<an He fair** Write Or.iif. H. H'aan'a Son*. ?Molallat*. 0n? m Atlanta- 9* A Training Hrhnol. Ootdxy Cullrs* la a P.ui>lnr?? y ?) HlmrthanA Sri iIimi ii>?K? ? i? 4 irnlnli-f Iff ?tn?vn ? tor-MITMNKWDUCf K M " l??r?< unfea with two llrnm. Ann ? itt? from rli. to New v<tk Writ?fur catalog*"- Andrew: Qirltlry ColU'U*, bus fe/W, \\ iliiiiiiKlou, l>rl ,TDMr ruu.iit V '*' t uluuip with-ul <f tNO.OOo n ?. OftUI?f<? an<< -M#. li'I"*! a<Mr*?? monarch QltUBRKU CO., Trmm, Is. ??0. 48. " TrM?""^!--Tki?M?'> Ff| Vittf