University of South Carolina Libraries
ITS MERITJS PROVE! RECORD OF k GREAT MEDICIMI Prominent Cincinnati Woman T?U How Lydia E. Plnkbam's Vegetabl Compound Completely Cured Her. The great good Lydia E. Pinkham' Vegetable Compound is doing amon the women of America is attractin the attention of many of our leadini scientists, and thinking people genei ally. . The following' letter is only one o many thousands which are on file ii the Pinkham office, and pro to provi beyond question that Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound must be i remedy of great merit, otherwise i could not produce such marvelou results among sick and ailing women Dear Mrs. Pinkham:? "About nine months ago I was a great sul ferer with female trouble, which caused m evere pain, extreme nervousness and fre quant headaches, from which the docto failed to relieve me. I tried Lydia E. Pinli hain'B Vegetable Compound, and within i short timo felt hotter, "and after taking flv bottles of it I was entirely cured. I therefor heartily recommend your Compound as i splendid female tonic, it mates ine montm; periods regular and without pain; and wha a blessing it is to find such a remedy after ? many doctors fail to help you. I am please* to recommend it to all suffering women. Mrs. 8ara "Wilson, 31 East Sd Street, Cincin nati, Ohio. If you have suppressed or painfu periods, weakness of the stoi&ach indigestion, bloating, pelvic catarrh nervous prostration, dizziness, faint ness, "don't-care" and "want-to-be left-alone " feeling, excitability, back ache or the blues, these are sure indi cations of female weakness, or somt derangement of the organs. In sue! cases there is one tried and true remedy ?Lydia ?. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. The brave and fearless man manages t get there early and thus avoid the rush. FITS, St. Vitus'Dance: N ervousDiseasesper manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerv< Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free U L> r ,) IIJI A~s.hU* UKilo r>o No, Alonzo, a man isn't always a pluj because he wears a plug hat. Airs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Childrer teething,softens thegu ins,reducesinflammation, allays pain,cures wind colic,25c a bottl< He who has no faith in himself is dcs lined to become a successful failure. To Wash Glassware. Much of the imitation cut glassware ma\ be made to look almost like the genuine article if washed in the following manner: Make a strong suds of ivory Soap and im merse the piece of glassware in it. Rut vigorously with a soft brush, dip up and down in the suds and do not dry but lei drain. This will give a beautiful sparkle '-Eleanor R. Parker. Seeking an Easy Job. There are few easy places in the world; when we do find them thej aro at the end of the road over which one did some very hard traveling Even then we come upon them unex pectedly. The way to the easy plact is not by seeking for it, but by laboring hard until the work is finished and the ^ay is done. After laboi comes rest?and we should not seek it until labor is done. Yet the world is full of folks seeking soft places. In answer to a boy's letter, asking bira for help in securing an easj place in which he mighj: make his mark, Henry Ward Belcher onc-( wrote this striking paragraph: "You cannot be an editor; do not try th< law; do not think of the ministry; let alone all ships, shops and merchandise; abhor politics; don't prac tice medicine; be not a farmer nor t mechanic, neither be a scidier nor i sailor; don't work, don't study, don'1 think! ' None of these are easy; mj son, you have come into a hard world I know of only one easy place in this world, and that is; the grave.**?He formed Church Record. You Never Can Tell. A Peoria man killed himself be ofliiRP his wife wag not at home Some husbands would have sung i Te Deum instead of ending life.? Chicago Journal. N. Y.?32 Flying Wedge. "Great ScottJ" exclaimed thi drummer, who had put up in the oh farm house over night. "What wai that noise down below? Footbal rush?" 4 "Worse than that, stranger,' chuckled the old farmer, as h< snuffed out the candle. "Yeou see 1 have eight darters an' each one o them has a beau who calls on Thurs day nights. Wall, the flrst coupl that gets the parlor can have it That's why they are running." "NO TKOUELE" To Change From Coffee to Postum "Postum has done a world of goo for me," writes an Ills. man. y "I've bad indigestion nearly all m life, but never dreamed coffee wa the cause of my trouble until las spring I got so bad I was in miser all the time. "A coffee drinker for 30 years, i irritated my stomach and nerves, y? 1 was just crazy for it. After drinl lng it with my meals, I would leav the table, go r*it and lose my mes , and the coffee, too. Then I'd be a hungry as ever. "A friend advised me to quit co: fee and use Postum?said it cure him. Since taking his advice I r< tain my food and get all the goo out of it, and don't have those awfv hungry spells. "I changed from coffee to Postui without any trouble whatever, *fe better from the first day I drank i I am well now and give the credit t Postum." Name given by Postui Co., Battle Creek, I?Iich. Head tl little book, "The Road to Wellville, in pkgs. "There's a reason." % " ' .. >- . . V-' ' ? ' ' ? ! Hi New York City.?Unquestionabl the Eton is the favorite coat of th season. Here is one that is jaunty i the extreme and that is combine with a shapely and well fitting girdlt In the illustration it is made o chiffon voile with the collar and cuff I J Tl-'l '""ID 1 > of f.ilk and trimming of banding ani ? little frills of Valenciennes lace, bu its usefulness is almost "without limil It can be made from any seasonabl cuiting, linen or silk, as well as wool '! n " ? ? ? 5 j while again it makes a most satisfac 5 | tory separate wrap of taffeta, ponge< i : and the like. The collar and cuff > ! can be of lace, of the materia ; | trimmed, of silk, or indeed, can b< - ; treated in almost any way that fane; j uiay dictate. i I The Eton is made with fronts, side l fronts and back. Both the fronts anc ? : back are laid in pleats that extent r'< j for full length, and the outermost . | pleats at the fronts serve effectually 3' ! to conceal the seams joining then] to the side-fronts. There is a flal ! collar at the neck, and the sleeves I are moderately full, finished with j enapeu cuns. me giruje is tut iu _ ! five portions, the many seams allow> ' lug perfect fit. | The quantity of material required j for the medium size is four and one| fourth yards twenty-one, three and j Dne-balf yards twenty-seven or two | yards forty-four inches wide, with . I one-fourth yard of silk for the collar ~ 'and twelve and r one-half yards of ; braid to trim as illustrated. i 1 ? Medallions For Baby. . Place medallions of fine batiste e embroidery down each side of the j front of the baby's best dress and f j border them with insertion and a bit _ of hand work. A line of the same ?. j hand work around neck and each tiny sleeve completes a dainty dress. Pearl Belt Pins. Long, plain gold belt pins are set alternately with square cut amethysts > | and pearls. d Linen Embroidery. A linen parasol to match, ornay mented with an embroidered mono8 gram in white, and embroidered linen ;t shoes of the same color are desirable y accessories with such a frock, says the Philadelphia Telegraph. Liner shoes embroidered in self color art :t for sale in a majority of the liner shades or can be made to order. An e other experimental fancy in footwear * 1 though not so well calculated to wir LS favor, is the shoe of white canvas oi linen striped in pin stripes of coloi f- and tied with ribbons matching the d stripe. X. d Bead Necklaces. ^ There is a decided vogue for largt bead necklaces worn in single strings ** Some fit the neck closely and others are somewhat larger. Handmade Laces. H Handmade laces of various kinds are seen combined In curious but ar1 tistic effect with embroidery and Other kinds of laces. ? backs aDd side-backs, and is closed ^ e by means of buttons and buttonholes In I, worked in the hem. The fronts are da , \ \\ V E ' th - gathered at their upper edges and are e joined to the roll-over collar. The "j*? s three-quarter sleeves are shirred to < ^ 1 form frills, and the full length sleeves .?] s are gathered and finished with br f straight cuffs. be /monfifv r\f motfiriQl rannlrad ! T*n i at; vi iuatvi iui i v^u*t v\? " - for the medium si2e is four yards 11 twenty-seven, two and tluree-fourtb ^ ^ er yards thirty-six or txvo and one-eighth m . yard forty-four inches wide, with of ; three and one-fourth yards of band ing to trim as illustrated. ' W Princess Robe Style. ro One of the newest of princess robes cb is arranged at the girdle in alternate 01 1 plain and shirred sections. Quite a ^ ! high degree of skill is required to ' '< carry out this idea successfully, but 0lj 1 the result is delightful. th ! 0\ 1 Plaid Bathing Suits. of A little variation in bathing suits * 1 is seen in a suit of plaid trimmed ^ 1 with a plain color. co [ wi n?ainc TTVn? \"prlr. S6 Beautiful Parisian novelties in chains for the neck, pins and belt ^ buckles are fashionable. . ev ? Arm Garter Substitute. st ' 0 5 A substitute for the arm garter is ^.( an elastic bant] sewed to the upper ..j, edge of the long elovc and finished (-a with frills of lace. as \v< > Birth Month Ilrooches. , of I Brooches arc composed of the flow- jn ers of one's birth month. A s pa y Separate Coat Effect. dr 6 The jaunty little separate coat of M n color adds a pretty and fashionable d touch to the white lingerie gown. ^ 5- The color should be repeated in the rr, t hat. T< s gi Embroidery For Coats. T1 Bands of embroidery upon coats CI and gowns of lace seern like an in- th stance of carrying coals to Newcastle, c.^ but such is the furore for embroidery that even this extreme of elaboration tIl is not considered excessive. dr dc Breakfast Jacket. wi The becoming breakfast jacket always finds a place and this one has ^ much to commend it. The backs are m sufficiently fitted to do away with any disagreeable sense of a negligee, and h? the fronts are loose enough to mean m perfect comfort and relaxation, ea There is a becoming big collar at the nec"k, and the sleeves can be either ch in the fashionable three-quarter or as full length as may be liked. In this I instance the material is a pretty ba- j ja A!?1 - ttt < Vi cmhrnMororl i {y% libit) U1UJI1ICU nnu &U1U1 Viuwv? I lu banding and little frills of white I pi linen lawn, but there are so many th appropriate ones that the list is al- se most too long to be given in full Many washable materials, lawn and j* similar fabrics, are well liked, while c'0 China and India silks are exceed- 0l] ingly fashionable for garments of the w] sort, and albatross, henrietta and he d veiling all are correct. di t The jacket is made with fronts, TEh PUL01T. \ r BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY j THE REV. L. L. TAYLOR. d s c Subject: Cliildren's Rights. t Brooklyn, N. Y.?Sunday evening, c Puritan Congregational Church, t e pastor, the Rev. Livingston L. c lylor, preached a sermon in antici- c ition of Anniversary Day, on "Chil- c en's Rights." The text was from \ ark 10:14: "Suffer the little chil- t en to come un':o Me, and forbid em not; for of such is the kingdom t God." Among other things, Mr. c iylor said: \ Here is the Magna Charta, the 2 eat charter of children's rights. ( ie kingdom is their kingdom. The c irist is their Christ. He recognizes J eir right to be; their right to be I lildren; their right to a blessed * 'e as children. The kingdom can- t )t come except as children have c eir rights. Could we save the chil- c en of but one generation, the king- | c >m would be here. God does not 1 ark in just that way; but the klng>m will never come unless we keep ir hearts with the children and our ces toward the unborn. The world ust become better by being born rain. That is the way the kingdom is been coming. The human race akes progress by being better born ,ch time. The right to be well >rn should be secured to every ild and from birth on all its rights a child should be safe-guarded. Christ's blessing rests upon every ea for children's rights, upon every v/ enacted for their protection from human parents, guardians and emoyers; upon every provision for eir welfare when orphaned, or derted, or sick, or feeble minded, or iiinlprl nr In anv wav denendent. ? ifective or delinquent. But the lildren who are thus afflicted, the lildren who are beaten and sent it to beg and steal, the children lio are compelled to work long >urs and under unwholesome contion3, the children whose parents e dead or unable to provide for em, are nqt the only children who :ed to have their rights examined. what we call the best homes cerin rights of the children are in tnger of being overlooked, are in >ed of being declared, championed id secured. First and foremost, I would put e right of children to be children, ley have as good a right to be nureu a.s we nave 10 ue grown up ~ Iks; a better right, probably, lildhood is as much a part of the araework of this universe as earth sky or sea. The right to a child>od is inalienable. Your child has right not only to live but to live as child. We are not to infer that lul was ashamed of his childhood icause he said: "When I became a an I put away childish things." We are not to think the less of ildhood because we were meant to itgrow it. Such real men as Paul is are generally discovered to have id a real childhood. He certainly td had a childhood sufficiently arked to be well remembered. >me men and women are not so ruinate. They seem to have foritton that fhov ovor xuoro nr rorp eant to be children. But Paul id: "When I was a child, I spoke a child, I understood as a child, thought (or reasoned) as a child." nd there seems to have been no>dy to interfere with him. "Childlod and youth are vanity," saifl e preacher. But perhaps he wa? mply lamenting their brevity, lake the most of childhood and utn for they are soon gone." But we are to understand him as pro uncing vain and profitless the >Iden days of all our life, he is sadly it of tune with all the rest of the iblo. Vanity! Emptiness! The lness of life's worth and meaning nowhere writ so large as in the ul of youth. Is it just a lie writ rge? Oh, no, for God wrote it us: The men who retain childhood's use of t,he reality and eagerness of i 'c are the men who never grow ? d and never get through learning, t rhere is no substitute," says the ^ ight woman from whose charming i iok of nursery logic I have bor- c wed the title of thi3 discourse, \ or a genuine, free, serene, healthy, c ead-and-butter childhood. A fine t anhood or womanhood can be built ( . no other foundation." God says e foundation shall be childhood, hy, then, should we be impatient? hy should we fear to trust what e puts nethermost for all the rest ( stand upon? It is well enough to r ink of the manhood and the wo- j, anhood we want our children to j tain and to give to the world. But ^ am persuaded that we think less ^ an we should of the childhood s liich it is our first duty to give f em. r The second right of childhood hich'I shall mention is the right s be governed. By a real childhood io not mean an unrestrained child- s >od. A child left to itself will not tve a natural childhood. That t tiich is most distinctive and beauti1 in childhood is contributed to it, develoned in it. by wise and lov- c g restraint. The street Arab is >t the ideal child. Nor is the child [10 grows up in a home where the litical maxim that "governments (rive their just powers from the j nsent of th? governed" is accepted 1 applying to parental authority. (] The authority of father and moth- e is derived from the Fifth Com- i andnient and from the constitution t nature which lies back of that mmandment. There is no author- v / more august, more sacred, more I 3d-given than parental authority, e abdicate it to our shame and sorw, to the shame and sorrow of the lurch, to the shame and sorrow of ir children themselves. j But, having said this, let me make ( >ste to say that in the endeavor to t aintain the control of our children { ir steadfast aim should be to put j. em at last in control ol themselves. c ir control should be the scaffolding J self-control. A child has a right, t say, to an intelligent, Grm, consistt government that shall represent . a way, adapted to its years, the nditions under which some day it . ill nave to shift tor itsen. in a " Dse, we cannot begin too early to c it a child in control of himself; ' at is, to teach him self-control. f e have no right to gratify a child's ery wish. The child has a right to ! denied some things; to be rerained; to learn from us, in love, mething of the inexorable condi- a :ms of mature life. We have no r ;ht to interfere with the law of (1 use and effect to such an extent n to send our children out into tho f Drld unprepared for real life. r Tho third of the inalienable rights y children is the right to be taught, li volving the right to be ignorant, n child has a right to be ignorant fl .nd to be kept in Ignorance of many | hings. It is a difficult right to naintain in these days, especially ifter a child has learned to read. Jut I question whether our children lo not learn faore of the dark and inister facts of life from our own areless conversation than from what heyread. Andlspeaknotonlyofconrersation relating to gross crimes of ust and violence, but of unkind :riticism, of ordinary gossip, of disrust, insinuation and ridicule. Many >f us, I fear, are in no position to :omplain of the newspapers, nor even if the unwholesome books from vhich our children learn so many hings they might better never know. If only this right of our children o be spared for a time the disilosure of certain aspects of life vere more .clearly recognized and it the same time the safe-guarding )f their innocence more carefully listinguished from the foolish withlolding of necessary knowledge! -,et me say with all deliberation hat it should be counted as one of he most sacred of the obligations >f parents to give to their children, >r to provide for them, that physidogical instruction, the withholding >f which, entirely or too long, hrough our utterly false sense of >ropriety, has been for many generLtions, and is to-day, one of the chief :auses of human sin and wretchedless. The right of children to be taught las never been so fully recognized is it is in our day. It is felt to be a vrong and a disgrace if one child is eft without a seat in a school, or cept out of it. There never were so nany people interested in educationtl methods and institutions. There lever was such a widespread appre:iation of the value of education, rhere never was better teaching nor nore of it. XT -I ? t. X X ~ t, - X~..~1,X J ^ out me rjgm tu ue laugiit ucnands more than the privilege of ;oing to school. No school can reieve parents from their responsibili;y for their children. If shortcomings in their own education cut them )ff from giving the kind of asistance :hey would like best to give, they :an give that which is, after all, nost valuable, the help and inspirition of loving appreciation, of sympathetic interest. In the religious instruction of children there can be nQ substitute 'or father and mother. Sacred his;ory and religious truth may be :aught by others. Relationships vith others may be established vhich will greatly promote spiritual ife. Eut nothing can take the place )f a religious parentage and of parental instruction, in the religious development of a human life. The 'undamental truth of our religion is ;he Fatherhood of God. The only latural medium for the realization of ;hat truth is a godly parentage. We :oncede the right of every child to je well born. Is it too much to say .Licit cvc iy uunu xiao a 115111* iv ut jorn of religious parents? What is ;his but saying that no parents are n a position to do the best that night be done for their children uness they are truly religious persons, inless they know God and servo Him md represent His Fatherhood to .heir children? Among the rights of a child which should be considered A connection with the right to be taught, and searing particularly upon his religous training, are the rights of :hildhood's faith. How simple it is! low ready to conceive what we ;each! In childhood, faith has its jolden opportunity to establish itself for all life's pilgrimage. We lave no right to discourage a child's aith. It is wicked to make light of t to ridicule it, to embarrass it in l'ny way. But we have no right, on :he other hand, to impose upon it, ;o trifle with it, to burden it. It is ;he supreme right of children under he royal charter of their Christ to ;ome to Him. Their faith and their spirit are exactly what He wants. 'Suffer the little children to come into Me, and forbid them not, for >f such is the kingdom of God." I relieve that the threshold of life is neant to be the threshold of the iingdom and that our children have. 1 right to receive the sign and the seal of their citizenship in holy bap:ism. And can it be that the Lord fesus Christ will deny them a place it His table when they come to unlerstand what it means to sit down vith Him there, and desire to :ome? "Forbid them not! Forbid hem not; For of such is the kinglom!" He Was the Other Fellotv. A shrewd worldy agnostic and a Christian clergyman dressed in a nodest clerical suit, says Eli Percins, sat at the same table in the 3ullman dining-car. They Tero vaiting for the first course at tie linner, delicious Hudson River ;had. Eyeing his companion coldly or a moment, the agnostic? renarked: "I judge you are a clergyman, ir!" Yes, sir; I am in my Master's ;crvice." "Yes, you look it. Preach cut of he Bible, don't you?" "Oh, yes; of course." "Find a good many things in tha ild Book that you don't understand -eh?" "Oh, yes; some things." "Well, '. zt do you do then?" "IVhv mv f\e>nr friend. I simDlv do ust as we do while eating this deicious shad. If I come to a bono I iuietly lay it on one side and go on njoying the shad, and let some fool nsist on choking himself with the lones." Then the agnostic wound up his vatch and went into the smoker.? Evangelical Messenger. Keep Your Wings Dry. If ycu will go to the banks of a ittle stream, and watch the flies that 'ome to bathe in it, you will notice hat, while they plunge their bodies nto the water, they keep their wings ligh out cf the water ana, auer swimming about a little while, they ]y away, with their wings unwet, hrough the sunny air. Now, that is i lesson for us. Here we are immersed n the cares and business oi' the vorld; but let us keep the wings cf )ur soul, our faith, and our love, out )f the world, that, with these ucilogged, we may be ready to take our light to Heaven. God Knows. When you feel ill and indisposed, nd when in this condition youi irayer is cold, heavy, filled with esponoency, and even despair, do iOt be disheartened, or despairing, or tho Lord knows your sick and ainful condition. Struggle against our infirmity, pray as much as you ave strength to, and the Lord will ot despise the infirmity of your esh actf spirit.?Father John. " "\ How Brokers Work. \m ' Let's see what a broker is exactly. He's the mail whose services you must Beek if you wish to buy or sell ' stocks. You can't do a thing in Wall "( Street without that broker. You || 1 can't fill your own orders in Wall S| Street any more than you can fill g J your own teeth. The broker is to I you as a speculator what a dentist is I to you as a man with a toothache. f| Now, operations on the floor of the j| Stock Exchange are conducted by M j four groups ? first, by individual || speculators who trade on their own M account, and these are members of || the Exchange; second, by brokers g| Who lend money for banks; third, by j| j commission houses which buy and sell bonds and stocks for persons not If members of the Exchange, and 1 fourth, by specialists who are also || | called floor brokers, and oftentimes : "dollar brokers" or "two dollar broj bers," and who execute orders for : i commission houges. In turn commisj fiion houses are of two kinds?those I that conduct one home office, and : many branch offices connected by private wire, and those that conduct . a local and mail business. To a broker in one of these classes | your order is given. In executing I your orders, and those of others, the broker's earnings may be any sum I from $10?more usually $100?to 1 thousands a day.?Leslie's Weekly. Catches Mice With Her Tail. | "Did you know that if you cut a | cat's tail off she can't catch mice any ? , more?" asked a young woman ot an[ other. A j "I don't see why," replied the ? ' other, "and further, I can't imagine 3 what occasion you have had for cut- 1 ting off cats' tails to see." | ' "I haven't cut off any cats' tails, t y ( but an accident deprived our cat of u ' its caudal appendage. The feline be- ? j came as helpless as i. ship without a t a j rudder. When it tried to spring I c ' upon an object it would alight far to 11 one side. The look of pained sur- I 6 prise on the cat's features was pa- f a thetic. After a while it learned to I ? jump straight again, but it was a ie j long and painful experience for the | s poor cat. The balance of power and the power to balance seem to lie in the tail of the cat."?Kansas City pe] Times. uni Speaking of the Baker. "The baker," said the knowing youth, "is the happiest man ever. Everything he stirs up pans out well. Ca All he kneads is his, he has dough to burn, and bis stock is stiii rising. i He certainly takes the cake! He's tya stirring chap, and does things up cu: brown. Though he is well bred and somewhat of a high roller, he is not do above mixing with his hands. Be- thi sides, he is pious, and cheerfully Th icing his favors for everybody. The An baker is the original wise man of the ye; yeast."?Lippincott's Magazine. Pr DAZED WITH PAIN. ! The Sufferings of a Citizen of Olympia, Wash. ^ L. S. Gorham, of 516 East 4th St., Olympia, Wash., says: "Six years ago I got wet and took cold,and was soon flat in bed, suffering M I tortures with my fe ; iapBa back. Every move- B viw iiia5ML ment caused an ago- j | ziizing pain, and the 1 Wj3mSHb persistency of it exhausted me, so that for a time 1 was dazed and stupid. On the advice of a friend 1 j began using Doan's I Kidney Pills, and soon ! noticed a change for the better. The kidney secretions had been disor! dered and irregular, and contained I a heavy sediment, but in a week's I time the urine was clear and natural : again and the passages regular, i Gradually the aching and soreness j left my back and then the lameness, i I used six boxes to make sure of a cure, and the trouble has never re- i turned." U Sold by all dealers. 50 centsabox. w_ Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. It takes 40,000 tons of copper a month to satisfy home and foreign A demands. I SCRATCHED TILL BLOOD RAN. ^ al Scales on Face and Head?Threw Off Lit- di tie Watery Subntance? Complete II) Cure by Caticura Remedies. b] "1 will be glad to give anybody suffering J*1 from eczema any information regarding "< Cuticura .Remedies. When my little girl ? was about a year and a half old there de- ^ I veloped small pimples on her face, which p went into a scale which threw off a little _ I watery substance. Her head was also af- w j fected with it. She used to scratch until di I it bled, making very bad sores. We tried in two or three salves, including borax. They P; did not do any good, so 1 got some Cuti- lo cura Soap first, and then used the Cuti- pr cura Soap, Ointment and Pills. They com- j to pletely cured her, and we have had no I more bother with it. W'm. P. Knox, 1216 [ So. 35th St..Philadelphia,Pa.,June 10.1905." ! T1 Thompson's Eye Mfater V Chickens Earn If You Knew How He Handle 1 Whether you raise Chickens for fun do it intelligently and get the best resul is to profit by the experience of others, all you need to know on t he subject?a b mm ^ who made his living fo j * a! Poultry, and in thai: f i to experiment and spent i i lira the best way to conduct t Stamps., sum of 25 cents m p It tells you how to Det how to Feed "or Eggs, and also for Markt cor Breeding Purposes and indeed about iuiow on the subject to make a success. SENT POSTPAID Oh RECEIPT OP r<?5 CI BOOK PUBLmiiol 134 Leonard iPlll^ : : >>:q?l\ |H|^H , ^UffiH ;9^B " ^HijRH S^H ,^y&:>fe^^lSEB -!9^| : HH jMSf ^^SWbSBmI^Bb^HHpB1BW''-wBII ially in Hot \veather, tsVery DeprtsnnQ IK 3 the System. Pe-rurna is aT^UuequaUa "^jjHB eople Say About It. "\i| Mb !., Washireton, D. C., writes: ' hH ^ ? 'J ine and tonic unequaled. I have '. L. /Jfll rted it for a stubborn cold and',' 11 x sorts of other medicines and iaid several expensive aocto-r*, ills. Peruna cured me, strength ?ed me more Mum ever, aruJ-2 a red me money." 9k Irs. Clara Litterst, Seafield, Jnd.. Bays: v'^jH ast fall I took a severe cold. 1 took I ' runa, began to improve and kept on so . til I was able to do my work." S| ' - , . B Our Doctors. There are 215,000 physicians of -\-WR sorts in the United States and nada. Last year 2045 doctors id, and, singularly enough, re ta^en off by heart disease. For- fa H six committed suicide. Eighty suembed to senile debility and twenty en to appendicitis. The youngeff* ..'jH ctor to die in 1905 was twenty:ee years of age, the oldest 104. e average length of practice of Js B aerican physician is thJrty-ona irs and one month.?New York . enable you to make good meak oat cf B "hurry" meals. H Libby'j Food Products are ready ts H terve wnen you get them, yet are cookeJ as carefully and at well at you could do ' V| I it in your own kitchen. Ox Tongue, Dried Beef, Booed Chick en, Deviled Ham, Veal Loaf?these an : but a few of the many kindt your dealer I Try for luncheon or nipper tomorrow, '-^9 tome sliced Chicken Loaf. H Booklet, "How to Make Good . Thiol* to Eat," free if yoe writ* Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago. :fl You Cannot m dure! 1 inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal contions of the mucous membrane such as "?M asal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused I y feminine Ills, sore thrpat, sore louth or inflamed eyes by simply . jsing the stomach. "I nirc cfuhborn fi Ul y\J U OUJV1Y w. w fections by local treatment with 4 ,% 'axtine Toilet Antiseptic hich destroys the disease germs,checks i\ scharges, steps pain, and heals the flammation and soreness. axtine represents the most successful cal treatment for feminine ills ever oduced. Thousands of women testify this fact 50 cents at druggists, y ' Send for Free Trial Box J HE R PAX.TCN CO.. Boston, Mass, ? ? if|||TPnu'll('ll(' ?JO Hnskeln por III l%l I k hJ icre- Catalogue and sample* ? II W B Ll\'REF-SnlzerSeedCo.,Bo* VIII V kl * v< c#> La VrOHWt vV1B. ? Money! fT I rinem Properly- |k_ J I or profit, you want to HBSr ' | ts. The way to do this j I We offer a book telling Wf I ook written by a man ? j 11 r 25 years in raising [ time necessarily had ect and Cure Disease. ;t, which Fowls tc Save I : everything you must I tUtS NH STAMPS. |W ; ..^ '.y,rt.' '4