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' : WPS GREAT wi A CHARACTERISTIC GLIMPSE OF How to Make a Line Dryer. The line dryer here described will r?tr (in. be iouna a useiui aumuun an.* gler's tackle-box. and any one constructing same will be amply repaid for the time so spent, as its use will ft j-ic'jn d ^ L Mr.6 , FIG S ', ' v. \rtut) ^ add greatly to the life of expensive lines. Cut from a board of half-inch ctnfp +ten ctrinc ( a. Fie. 1) one inch I wide, and of such length as to fit tackle-box, jointing them together firmly at right angles as shown in Pig. 1, also boring a small hole through tbe centre of same. Then fasten to each of the four corners lengths of heavy brass or copper wire .(Fig. 1), three of them being the same length with small loops turned on one end (to keep line from slipping over the ends), the fourth being made a little longer so as to form handle for turning (B, Fig. 1). The method of attaching wires is shown by A, Fig. 2, the ends of the wires being filed to a sharp point and a hook formed which is then driven in, as shown in B, Fig. 2. To use the dryer simply assemble as shown in Fig. 1, passing a large screw eye through the hole made in the centre (C, Fig. 1), also placing a leather washer on either side (Fig. 3) to make it turn more freely, then fasten by means of screv; eye to some stationary object (B, Fig. 3). When not in use it may be taken apart and placed in large compartment of tackle-box.?William A. Anderson, in Recreation. I-SER LITTLE w . -P-l-?A_T_o.<ljf_ " T tr ntvnr it! TKn + fnn 1 ?11*7 l>aut* JL x\av, r* aw. i uai iWJ again."?Sketch. Auto Tire Made in Sections. J An automobile tire that bids fair! to be popular, especially among motorists who have many punctures, is the sectional tire designed by a Wisconsin man. This tire is made in a ' Cheap and Easy to Repair. NTER PLAYGROUND. ? m Bl'. .- V;. OUTDOOR LIFE AT EXGELBER Novel Toy For Children. Children who have been watchli the circus parade this season wi bulging eyes and, have seen the lio and tigers pacing their cages mi themselves own a cage with a restle lion in it if their parents are so fort nately situated as to be able to bi them one. A Michigan man has d signed a toy which fills the bill, consists of a little wagon, model* faithfully after the usual circus cag inside which is an oval track. C this track is mounted a lion or son other one of the animals that Colon Roosevelt is busily engaged in shoe ing. Pulleys running under the bo< of the wagon connect with the wheel and as the child draws the wag< around the nursery floor the anim circles the track inside the cage f all the world like one of the restle ' ?| I * i \ ! ! ' I ' ' 'I man-eaters in the circus parade, now remains for the Michigan genii to so improve on his invention thi Leo will give forth blood-curdlii roars as he stalks about.?Washin ton Star. Great Britain in 1908 sold $20C 000,000 worth of coal to foreign n tions. MISTAKE. 5"VAy' '^ \p. * , - :. %V '.'*<? Jvif ;> ' S;^v%- .* y-<i *> ;<r- ^ .ViMi- * '% -- > S&i.: . . .; "-?- \. ? .,*. ;.' . : '.-" . ; . I of a Giles has Jet the old bull escai number of sections, say twelve, an each piece is absolutely independei of the others. Each section has i own valve and is inflated separatel and when all are blown up they hoi together as firmly as if they wei one solid piece of rubber. The ai vantage of this invention is readi: apparent. When one of these se tions is punctured or otherwise dan aged it can be taken out and repairei If it is so badly damaged as to be us' less it can be thrown away and ai other section, of which several exti ones are carried, put in its plac This sectional tire is not only easy 1 fix, but is cheaper than the old styl inasmuch as irreparable damage 1 one spot does not make the who' worthless, but that weakness can L repaired in a few minutes and wit ir.ue cost.?niiiuutixniiu xvecuru. The success of the electrically i luminated baseball grounds at Cii cinnatf, Ohio, has been so pronounce that it is now proposed to have foo bail games as well 011 the illuminate lielci. Pe8?0GSC00C0?9?0eB00030009 t * e ; I The Experiences of a S i? Piano-Tuner. ? { ;? ? J >annnno?MAaAn>A?aA?aeillfiaA(ia L ; VWWWW a ! The piano-tuner was in a reniinis- I ! :ent mood, and tiie "story of his life" j | vas in order. The many peculiari- J t j ies of the trade were discussed, and c i he conclusion reached that a good t j Mano-tuner is born, not made. A r j nost acute sense of sound vibration ; s absolutely indispensable, for no ori linary mortal would ever be able to r j letect a variation of one-tenth of a L ; :one in a piano, and yet an expert [ I :uner can do this. v Frequently pianos grow discordant c rery suddenly, and in many such ^ases obstructions are discovered to lave lodged among the strings. Some j )f these finds are extraordinary. "If I had kept and converted into T noney all the articles of value that 3 I've found in pianos I've tuned it ? ?vouirf make a very neat sum for me [ ;o fall back upon in my old age. This s especially true with reference to ;rand pianos in the. homes of the ^ wealthy. "A few years ago I was summoned in tiiriA a trfanznlar niano in the resi J ?? ience of a wealthy family here, and G. >n making a preliminary run over the | ? seys I instantly detected an odd jangling in the upper register. This 3g jangling, it seems, had also been deth cected by the young women of the ns family, but none of them had taken * ly the trouble to investigate the cause ss of the unusual sound. u- "It didn't take me very long to c jy pick out from beneath the strings a c e- diamond and ruby bracelet. A serIt vant of that household was even then \ sd I languishing in the Tombs on the e ;e, charge of having stolen that brane)n lei. ae "When bangle bracelets were fash- ' el ionable I used often to find, between ' it- the piano strings and even sometimes 1 Jy underneath the keyboard, small coins ; Is, and medals that had been lost from c 3n the bracelets. A famous Chicago ' al woman, prominent in society in this r or country and abroad, suffered such a ? ss loss while visiting at the homfe of a 8 N'ew York family. { "It was a small gold Roman coin, with the head of Domitian, valuable from the numismatic point of view, s but of many times greater value to the Chicago woman because it had been given to her by Carmen Sylva, the Roumanian Queen. She had lost it from her gold bangle bracelet of antique coins. "I found the coin underneath the i keyboard ^)f the grand piano in the I house at which she had been visiting j here several months after she had ! missed it. When the coin was re- j stored to her the lady sent a most j heartfelt letter of thanks and a sub- 1 stantial check."?Harper's Weekly. ! WORDS OF WISDOM. It as If you want to borrow trouble, go ! at to a money lender. i I The downward path is always a g. blazed trail. Even the weather man should lay : by a few predictions for a rainy day. | It is also a long lane that has no ? I a- returning. i i Somehow or other fortune never ' ? seems to call on our days at home. ; ' It is hard to teach an old dog new ' tricks. In fact, it is still harder to J find the new tricks. ( I Women are changeable, but you , can't always change them when you > I want to. j If people only said what they i thought, there wouldn't be much talk- | iDS" , ! Patience is a virtue, but more often ! it is a necessity. ; Occasionally you will find a man so lazy that he would rather pay rent ; than move. i A man has to go to the dentist to have his tooth pulled, but he can go almost anywhere and have his leg ' pulled. j Any man who lives in an apart- | I ment house will tell you that it takes j a pretty good cook to roast a jani- j ' tor. When a fellow says he doesn't care i what happens to nim, he probably I i v means it?till he meets some other j gl1- ... une woman can meet anoiner wum en for two minutes, and describe what she had on for two hours.? From "Dyspeptic Philosophy," in the New York Times. t c ' Took Him For a Ghost. ? Some years ago Frank A. Munsey i hired a private secretary. Speaker 1 Reed dropped into call on Mr. Mun- ? sey, who was an old friend of his. ? The secretary said that Mr. Munsey c was engaged. I "All right," said Reed. "I'll wait." At the end of half an hour Munsey's j door opened and the publisher ap- ( peared, showing his caller out. i Seeing the Speaker, he grasped his hand and dragged him into his office. ( An hour later when Reed had gone, ^Mr. Munsey called his secretary. [ "Look here, Block,1' he said, "what do you mean by letting Speaker Reed j wait unannounced half an hour?" t >e "Wa-wa-what that Mr. Reed?" "It certainly was." . ? "Why, I thought it wath the Rev id Dr. John Hall," said the secretary, it "Dr. Hall has been dead twc ts years," answered Munsey, severely, y. "I know it," replied the yecretary; id "tbath why I thought it wath .tho very peculiar."?Success. ' 3 ly Germany's Growth. c" The United States, with its stream of immigration, grows fast, but what shall one say of the increase in the ^ population of Germany, which, ae3" cording to the Statistical Yearbook a of Germany, was 63,880,000 on June e* 30, 1909? The last census of the 0 | empire was taken in December, 1905, c' when the population was 60,641,278, ? In the three and one-half years since ^ 'e that census the increase has been ,e 2,250,000. and since the founding of k the empire in 1871 the increase has been 23,000,000.?Army and Navy Journal. l ^ The largest electric sign in the 4 , South advertises the city of Mont- ; t_ goniery, Ala. The sign is seventy,d five by eighty-five feet and contains B 1 about 2500 lights. j. ^^^opular\' ^ ft SCIENCE .> J? A Sv.-ede has constructed an aerial orpedo which is claimed to be capable of destroying a fortification or he biggest battleship afloat. It reigns twenty-two pounas. # A botanist in Chile has found a ! ilant on mountains and tablelands which yields a good quality of rubier. It is claimed as a special adrantage that extracting the sap dees | tot injure the plant. Eoomerangs are now made of celuloid and hard rubber. Celluloid is >etter than cardboard because it is waterproof, light, very hard to break, tnd can be worked into the peculiar :urve and twist so necessary to give he boomerang its peculiar properties. Holland compound is a solution of ive parts of soda water glass and one >art of carbonate of soda, or a powler mixture consisting of three parts >f calcined soda and one par^of dry jotash water glass. Ten parts of this nixture is sa.u to be sufficient to renler 100,000 parts of hard water soft. Santos Dumos has been making ex :ellent cross country flights near Pars of late with a new monoplane, fited with a thirty-horse-power doubletpposed-cylinder motor. The machine :omplete weighs cnly 242 pounds. The Clement company is building a lumber of these machines, to sell for Lbout $1250 each. , A dressmaking establishment in 3oston almost entirely operated by ilectricity has an electric cutter capable of cutting out 250 thicknesses >f cloth at once, a button sewing mashine which puts on three thousand juttons a day, a buttonhole machine naking four hundred an hour, sleeve sewers, tucking machines, waist and ikirt machines making 1800 to 3000 ;titches a minute. Eefore starting to teach Lieutentnts Lahm and Humphries the opera;fon of the recently acquired governnent biplane, Wilbur Wright tried ;he machine out on October 9th and lad his pupils time him for a dis- I ance of a kilometer in a closed cir:uit. This distance, including the :urn, was covered in 48 3-5 seconds, )r at a speed of exactly forty-sir niles an hour. Allowing 100 meters ;xtra for the turn, the speed was fifty niles an hour. Thus it seems that ;he new government aeroplane is juite as fast as the Bleriot or Cur:iss machines, which made over fortyseven miles an hour at Rheims. FURTHEST UP. Hen Have Ascended 6 7-10 Miles, Instruments IS Miles. The unprecedented elevation of 95.250 feet, or eighteen miles, was attained by an unmanned registering balloon which was recently released it the Belgian meteorological insti:ute at Uccle. At this elevation the barometric pressure is only two-fifths )f an inch. The greatest height ever ittained by a manned balloon is about 5.7 miles, or 35,400 feet. The Berlin aeronauts Berson and Suering, ivho established this record, were unconscious when they reached the lighest point of their flight. The Belgians adopted Hergesell's ?lan of attaching the instruments to ! i small and partially Inflated balloon, j suspended from a larger and fully in- , lated bag. The large balloon rises j jntil it bursts and the small balloon I :alls slowly, so that Jt can be easily j observed, and brings the instruments ; safely back to earth. At the maxi-1 num elevation, eighteen miles, the , ;hermometer recorded a temperature )f ?S2 degrees F., but a lower temserature, ?SS1^ degrees F., was regstered at the comparatively small elevation of eight miles. These observations appear to support the hypothesis that some of the ultra red solar *adiation is absorbed by the higher strata of the atmosphere, but additional observations will be required ;o solve the, question.?Scientific American. Man's Rights. The Philadelphia Telegraph has started a campaign for man's rights. Some of the planks are "the right to imoke anywhere in the house built or ented with the money we ourselves lave earned;" "the right to one-fifth ipace in all closets and bureau drawers;" "the abolition of spindleshanked, gilded furniture made to ook at and not to sit on," and "the tbolition of the rule that we must go n the parlor and 'be nice* to those of )ur wife's callers for whom we chersh a mortal antipathy." May we add: ! The right to throw newspapers on j he floor. The right to have one's desk or ta- I )le as untidy as one tarnation pleases, j The right (a) to wear a board or j nustacne; <.d; 10 aDsiam irum ouulay shaving. The right to decline to try to ex)lain a political situation. And many others.?New York Mail. AH Knew the Answer. A young English suffragette tells J )f a funny incident that happened at j i meeting in the Scotch Highlands. 'Speeches had been made to a large :rowd. Questions had teen replied .0 amid applause. Imbecile young nen making remarks about minding rabies and mending socks had been ;ilenced. Then, just as there was a j emporary lull Deiore tne puiung 01 a i esolution, a great bucolic Scotch J roice from the back of the crowd ; asped slowly in with the inquiry, ob- J riously the result of prolonged ru- ; nination, 'Wha made a mess of j \.dam?' "?Rochester Union and Ad- | rertiser. ? Almnct nil nf thfi rnrrprt fashions ! un backward, and it is not surprisng to hear from Paris that an atempt is being made to revive ornanental gloves. Gloves in many oldirne designs aro shown in Paris hope, and the most popular are those 1 )atterned after gloves .worn by Afary Jueeu of Scots . A Calamity. Many stories are current in legal circles regarding ex-Judge W. T. Wallace, one of the best known jurists in the history of San Francisco, but here is a new story vouched for by Billy Barnes, at one time District Attorney. It runs thus: "Wallace was examining a candidate for admission to the bar. All the questions had been satisfactorily answered and the lawyer-to-be had passed so brilliantly that Wallace de cided to put a simple question to terminate the ordeal. Gazing benignly at the young man, he asked: " 'What is ths liability of a common carrier?' "Although lav/yers the world over and frora time immemorial have labored with this problem, though millions cf words have been taken' into the record of various cases in which this unanswerable question was involved, the fledgling calmly eyed the Judge and at last solemnly replied: " 'Your Honor, I must beg you to withdraw that question. I did know the answer, but unfortunately I have forgotten.' "For a minute Wallace eyed the young man, then turning to the lawyers who were grouped around Mm, remarked: " 'Gentlemen, this is a sad case, in TV*a a?1w Hvlntr mor* 1UCX a uaicllilltv. X UC UUIJ uuug who ever knew the liability of a common carrier has forgotten.' "?San Francisco Call. Feats of Clever Chemists. Two remarkable instances in which the chemist's laboratory has supplanted the farmer , and the field are worth mentioning. There was a time when India produced large quantities of indigo every year on plantations The planters were warned that ovev in Germany chemists were at work making indigo, but they only laughed. Then the announcement came that cynthetic indigo, made in the laboratory, was a commercial success. II was absolutely the same as the natural indigo, only, if anything, a little bit purer. Now India no longer supplies the world with indigo. A German laboratory makes the whole supply, and even India buys in Germany There was a time when lar^e areas in Prance were devoted to the cultivation of madder root, from which the red dye alizarine was made. Again a German chemist improved upon nature and made artificial alizarine at a cost of less than one-third that of the natural product. It wasn'tj an inferior imitation; it was the real thing. Now Germany supplies the world with alizarine. The only red cloth you will see to-day that is dyed with the natto in tho trniifs^rc Ctf thfi UlCil U/t io * u IMV V* VMXW.W w*. French gendarme. And this is purely for sentimental reasons. The French Government maintains a farm and grows a few acres of madder, that the French army need not be dependent upon its old enemy, Germany, for anything it uses.?Tit-Bits. A Himalayan Arcadia. In Kulu, India, it is possible to get a climate suitable to all conditions of men and their many diseases by moving up or down the valley only a few miles, and there are places where hot sulphur and mineral baths can be had, all free to the world, where one can undergo a "cure" under one's own conditions. For sport there are bears, black and brown,' panthers, ibex and t&br (wild goats), burrhel (wild sheep), barking deer, musk deer, six Kinds or pneasanis, mree kinds of partridges, wild duck, woodcock and snipe, so that the sportsman can have shooting practically all the year round. Living is cheap, too, and it is possible for a man with a very limited income to have a winter residence at 4000 feet, a house in which to spend the rainy Beason at 7000 feet, and tents to camp about for sport on the mountains during April, May and June and from the 15th of September till the 1st of November. Where else on earth could a man keen on sport find such a country??Wide World Magazine. Parisian Politeness. "That the French are the politest people on earth I was convinced by a ronont infidpnt in a Parisian dentist's office. "I entered the dentist's anteroom just as a patient ? an exceedingly woebegone expression on his countenance?was approached by an attendant. "Whom, m'sieu," inquired the attendant with the most sympathetic of inflections in his voice?"whom shall I have the misery of announcing to the doctor?"?Lippincott's Magazine. SOME HAKD KNOCKS IVoman Gets Kid of "Coffee Heart.'The Injurious action of Coffee oi? the heart of many persons is well known by physicians to be caused by caffeine. This is a drug found by chemists In coffee and tea. A woman suffered a long time with severe heart trouble and finally her doctor told her she must give up coffee, as that was the principal cause A LI. oi me iruuuit;. ouo niuco. "My heart was so weak It could not do its work properly. My husband would sometimes have to carry me from the table, and It would seem that I would never breathe again. "The doctor told me that coffee was causing the weakness of my heart He said I must stop It, but it seemed 1 could not give it up until 1 was down in bed with nervous prostration. "For eleven weekB I lay there and suffered. Finally Husband brought home some Postum and I quit coffee and started new and right Slowly 1 got well. Now 1 do not have any headaches, nor those spells with weak heart We know it 3s Postum that helped me. The Dr. oaid the other day, 'I never thought you would be what you are.' I used to weigh 92 pounds and now I weigh 158. "Postum has done much for me ttiJU 1 WUUIU ilUL VWJLI.WV again for any money, for 1 believe it would Kill me if 1 kept at it. Postuin must be well boiled according to directions on pkg., then it has a rich flavour and with cream is fine." Read "The Road to vVellvllle," found in pkgs. "There's \ Reason." Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human , interest. 4 <jgr sr &r v&m&r *\t\m from woman's ailments are invited addresses here given, for positive pre Vegetable Compound does curc femal< Tumor Removed. Chicago, 111.?lira. Alvena Sperling, 11 Lang- Go* don Street. CM< Llndley, Ind.?Mra. May Fry. Pa* Kinsley, Kans.=Mrs. Stella Qlfford Beaman. Flu Scott, V.Y.?Mrs. S. J. Barber. OornwallTllle, N.Y.?Mrs. Wm, Boogbton. Cofl Cincinnati,0.?Mrs. W.K.Housh,7EastTiewAT Ctui Milwaukee, Wis.?Mn. Emma Imse, 883 lat St., German. . Cle' Chance of Life. South Bend, Ind.?Mri. Fred Cert la, 1014 S. Lafayette Street. Noah, Kentucky.?Mra-Llzzie Holland. n Brookfleld. Mo.?Mrs. Sarah Lousignont, 207 S. Market St. Hei Pateraon, N.J. ? Mrs. Wm. Somerrille, 195 Wii Hamburgh Arenue. Philadelphia, Pa. - Mrs. ?L E. Garrett, 2407 Bal Nortli Garnet Street. Eewaakum, Wis.?Mrs. Carl Dahlke. Eoj Mnfcernlty Troubles. __ c)a Worcester, Mms.- Mrs. Dosylva Cote, 117 Southgate Street. n Indianapolis, ?id.?Mrs. A. P. Anderson, 1207 ^ E. Pratt -y*eet. T.v Big Run, Pa.?Mrs. W. E. Pooler. L*c Atvater Station, O.?Mrs. Anton Muelbaupt. ctV Cincinnati, Ohio.?Mrs. E. H. Maddocks, 2135 tw Gilbert Avenue. M02adore, Ohio.?Mrs. Lee Manges, Box 131. Dewlttville, N.Y.-Mrt. A. A. Giles. . Vln Johnstown,N.Y.?Mrs. Homer N. Seaman, 108 _ . E. Main Street. Gai Burtonriew, IIL?Mrs. Peter Langenbahn. Avoid OperationsHampstead, Md.?Mrs. Jos. H. Dandy. Pla Adrian, Ga.?Lena V. Henry, Route N0. 3. Indianapolis, Ind.?Bessie v. Piper, 29 South mi Addison Street. Louisville, Ky.?Mrs. Sam Lee, 3523 Fourth St. South West Harbor, Maine. ? Mrs. Lillian nnl Bobbins, Mt. Desert Light Station. Detroit, Mich. ? Mrs. Frieda Rosenan, 544 ccc Meldrum Avenue, German. jja. Organic Displacements. Moiler, Dls.-Mrs. Mary Ball. ^ Llgonler, Ind.?Mrs. EllxaWood,R.F.D.No.4. Melbourne, Iowa.? Mrs. Clara Watermann, R. F. D. No. 1. ?01 Bards town, Ky.?Mrs. Joseph Hall. Lewiston, Maine.?Mrs. Henry Clontier, 66 v" Oxford Street. Minneapolis, Minn.?Mrs. Jdhn G. Moldan, On 2115 Second Street, N. Cai Shamrock, Mo.?Josle Ham, B. F. D. No. 1; Box 22. J01 Marl ton, N.J.? Mrs. Geo. Jordy, Route No. 3, Pk Box 40. , Chester, Ark.?Mrs. Ella Wood. ' Ch Oellla, Ga.?Mrs. T. A. Cribb. Pendleton, Ind.?Mrs. May Marshall. R.R. 44. P? Cambridge, Neb.?Mrs. Nellie Mosl&oder. Or These women are onty a few of th< the power of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege diseases. Not one of these women eve tko lion nf flioir nomM in t.hl X.\JI. ULL iUi buu UOU VX vuwu iw?.?w ? VM. ing that we should refer to them b do other suffering women to proi .Vegetable (Compound is a reliable ant statements made in our adve'rtisemei truth and nothing but the truth. Unquestionable Probity. rp A hojisewife who had met with un- | pleasant experiences through a, dis- I honest servant took the precaution before filling the vacancy, to write to the applicant's last employer for explicit information as to the girl's honesty:, "I believe Mollie?.to be thoroughly honest," came the prompt freply. "I certainly never knew her to take anything, not even my orders. She didn't even take pains." Montaigne was astonished, when he visited Switzerland in 1580, to find that "at all meals they put on the [L table as many spoons as there are ? people present." N.Y.?46 ?ye The Ideal PALATAL ^Cr?am?clT IT' Cathartic 1 ? Castor Oil M _Jf. mM I irKTHK SPOON. Kell?T??It?tulracy,.Correctf %0 I Piwtl?n. 23c. ALL DKtJQOlsTa. j I J As we get older the blood be< rles and ioints stiffen and acl easier. Sloan's Liniment qtii< up the muscles and joints and with astonishing promptness. Proof that it is Best i Mrs. Daniel H. Diehl, of Maiui's Ch< " Please send me a bottle of Sloan's Linime: It is the best remedy I ever knew for I can'l Also for Stiff Mr. Milton Wheeler, 2100 Morris . ,4I am glad to say that Sloan's Liniment joints than anything I have ever tried." Sloar T.imTni is the qickest and best remedy tism, Sciatica, Toothache, Spi and Insect Stings. Price 25c., f>Oc., and $1.00 at A Send for Sloan's Free Book on Hon DR. EARL S. SLOAN, BOS' MBMMMIII I I'll! Illllllli MMIIIIMIIIIIill CHICKENS EARN M( Whether you raise Chickens for fun or pr< get the best results. The way to do this is t> We offer a book telling all jcct?a book written by a MMaw 25 years in raising Poultry, had to experiment and spend $4 way to conduct the business? jfjg^ SSa CENTS in postage stamps, and Cure Disease, how to Market, whirl. Fowls to Save indeed about everything von must know on t POSTPAID ON UKCKIJ'T OK 25 CENTS IN Book Publishing House, 134 K/fU to write to the names and >of that Lydia E Pinkham's Jills. tri-m Painful Period*. / . ' hen, Ala.?Mr*. W. T. Dalton, Ront?No.ai eago, 111.?Mrs. Win. Tulljr,4C6 Ogden At. 7 Paw, Mich.?Mrs. Emma Draper. ihlng, Mich.?Mrs. Bart Lojd, R.F.D. No. 3 ; care of 1). A. Sanborn. ; ' 'eerille, Miss.?Mrs. S. J. Jones. linnati, Ohio.?Mrs. Flora Ahr, 1362 Emtf Street. , ' ^53 reland, Ohio -Mjsa Lizzie Stelger, 6510 Fleet Ayenue, 8.E. r sleyville, Pa.?Mrs. Maggie Ester,IU.D.l, , irsburg.Tenn.?Mrs. Lue Hilliard, R.R.L rlleld, Va.?Mrs. Mayme W indie. ' Irregularity.. rln, 111.?Mrs. Cbas. FolkeL ' V icbester, Ind.?Mrs. May Deal. sr. Ind.?Mrs. Win. Oberlob, R. P. D. No. L timore, Md.?Mrs. W. S. Ford, 1938 Lanadowne Street. 1 cbury, Mass.-Mrs. Francis Merkle,13 Field Street. rkidale, Mo.?Miss Anna Wallace. rsTllle, Ohio.?Mrs. Ella Michael, R.F.D.J. rton, Ohio. ? Mrs. Ida Hale, Box 25, National Military Home. anon, Pa.?Mrs. Harry L. Kittle, 233 Lehman Street. t-? es, Tenn.?Minnie Hall. rolt,Mich.?Mrs. Louise Jcng^2Chestnnt St. Ovarian Trouble. 1 ' ^ cennes, Ind.?Mrs. Syl. B. Jerauld, COS & >,*i Tenth Street, i 'V? diner, Maine.?Mrs. S. A. Williams, R. V. D. No. 14; Box 39. M ladelphia, Pa.-Mrs. Cbaa. Boell, 2407 K. tj Garnet Street. ttsburg.Mlss.?MlssVernaWllkes,R.FJ)X '/ J Female Weakness. Ilimantie, Conn.?Mrs. Etta Donovan, Box 299. ' . - . odside, Idaho.?Mrs. Rachel Johnson. :k)nnd, Maine.?Mrs. Will Young, S Cot !<,; j umbia Avenue. .'.*3 ttTUle, Mich.?Mrs.J.G.Johnson,R.F.D.* ?ton, Ohio.?Mrs. F. R. Smith, 431 Elm St. e, Pa.-Mrs. J. P. Endlich* R. F. D. No. 7. irer Falls, Pa.-Mrs. W. P. Boyd, 2109 Seventh Avenue. rchance. Pa.?Mrs. I. A. Dunham, Box XSX . ... t Hunter, Pa.?Mrs. Mary Jane Shatto. it Earl, Pa.? Mrs. Augustus Lyon, R.FJ).S> '. inna, W. Va.?Mrs. Emma WuestoB. it-'- M Nerroni Proetratton. i > >nogo, Mo.?Mrs. Mae McKnlghfe^ ^ Ddec, JN.<J."?inrs. nuie naten. v>i . >; i?v?, ty Street. teph, Oregon.?Mrs. Alice Hoffman, llsdelpbU, Pa. ? Mrs.. John Johnston, 2It Slegel Street rlstlana, Tenn.?Mr*. Mary Wood, B.F.D. I . " No. 3. . r . / MR eos, Tezaa.?Mr*. Ad* Young Eggleaton. ' !jj anitovllle, Vt.-Mni. Cbaa. Barclay, IUJ). ' Dusands of living witnesses of i table (impound to cure female ;rreceived compensation in anr . s advertisement.?but are willecause of the good they may re that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vij 1 honest medicine, and that tht v its regarding its merit are the . M A For Sore Throat a i ii ' \ Nothing will do more good in to ebort a time with - 'j/'.fofll! \ so little trouble h Hale's Honey Sold by Drjagists ^ WTben ha tches again toy rites i rSTtionipson's Eye Wafer ITEHTSSffi^.. '; \f? /i Keumatic iins * ' dzarn < 'i.i ;/ Vr. V Vff'&fh ' ? ,_V'| * . . ? *. A; u-. rkS ' " .? :omes sluggish, the mus- /. les and pains take hold :kens the blood, limbers ^ stops any pain or ache : ' . M or Rheumatism. sice, R.F.D., No. I, Pa., writes:? at for rheumatism and stiff joints. ; t do without it." / Joints. ' i Ave., Birmingham, Ala^ writes:?, has done me more ^ood for stiff, \ L'S B' 1 3nt m for Rheuma- (Q| I j -ains, Bruises I ill DeUcrs. J ; leg. Address i ' rON, MASS. IbmI |ury| If You Know How t? 'HE t . Handle Them Properly :>fit, you want to do it intelligently and a prolit by the experience of others. you need to know on the sub3 man who made his living for and in that time necessarily much money to learn the best for the small sum of 2T* It tells you how to Detect Feed for Eggs, and also for. for Breeding Purposes, and* lie subject to make a success. SENT STAMPS. - Leonard St., N. Y. City* i J A