?enma Secrets You Should Know t Golden S:*!, tao root of the ?boro p?t-nt, la areryuseful medicine. Many people gather it in oar rich woodlands ? du ring th e summer. Pow. people know "bow valuable it is in dyspepsia, catarrh. ?ai as a g eneral tonio, b, ? dany thousand pounds of this root are UBI fd each year in th? famous catarrh remedy, Feruna. This factorplairifl why ?Torybodr tues Perrina for catarrh. Peruaa is sold by your local drug gisis. Buy a bottle today. Do Ton Love Your Child? Thea protect it .from the dan ;gsrs cf croup to which, every ?niki u subject. Keep DK.D.JAYNE'S EXPECTORANT ia yosr heme anthe time, then you're reedy for the sadden attacks of croup and colds. Neglect may cost yon the life of yorr child. Ifs safest to be on Toor guard. Dr. D, Jayne's Expectorant is the best remedy known for cr oap; it gires quicktat relief. Sold everywhere in tim? stet bottles $1.00, 50c. 25c Bather Flat. ls I wish I could think up someth ing new in the way of a football stcr^." " "Why not have the game end ia ? tie! Games in real life some times do, you know."-Hounston Chronicle. 1 j Ure you losing flesh through a reeking ??ough th.it you cannot check? 'Alien's Xuag Ballam will cur? the trouble. "When gold speaks all tongues are alftnt.-toench. So. 44-'09. Omatlpation caujiea and seriously aggra vates m's ny diseases. It is thoroughly cm -ci by Dr. Pierce's Pellets. Tiny sugar ccw.ted granules._ The supreme excellence is simpli city.-Longfellow. Hi HAVE BEEN DEAD Says Temple Clark, of Pope, Sad Kt Not Been For Cardiri, &?>w In Good Health. Pope, Tenn.-"As thc result of a fal! from a horse, I suffered intense ag l?ny for about 4 years," writes Mrs. ?Terapie Clark, of this place. "I was (irregular and had falling feelings and otlier womanly trouble. At last I was antluced to take Caratti, the woman's [tonic, an 1 it helped me a gTeat deal. I .certainly believe if it had not been for 'Carani and Thedford's Black Draught, [I would have been dead, instead of .paving the blessing of health. "I lovi; a dollar, but I have never ?seen one I think as much of as I do of a bottle of Cardui. I could tell a great .idell more and not get tired. I recom ?SMmd.it to all my friends, for I am attire it will cure others as it has me/ ?Remember that Cardui is a vege table extract, comp sed of valuable .medicinal ingredients, which build up ..vitality, ton: up t'.ie nerves and strengthen the womanly onstitution. For o?er 50 years, Cardui has been in successful use. Its merit, is proven {and known. Using it is ho nev/ ex ?peritnent. It has stood the greatest iof all tests-the test of TIME. ??OTE.-The Cardui Home Treatment tor Women consists of Cardui ($1), Thed .ford's Bl&ok-Draught (25c). or Velvo (50c) ats? the liver, and Cardui Antiseptic (50c). .?These remedies may be taken singly, by themselves, If desired, or three together, ?A a comjilete treatment for women's Ula. Write to: Ladles' Advisory Dept., Chatta pa Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn., Special Instructions, and 64-page c. Berne treatment for Women." sent $a plain ltrapper, on request. One of th? strong features of i Automatic Sn which makes smoke impossible, e a novice. Permits instant remo va! There is np danger of turning smokeless device prevents it. This means a perfect, odorles: tfort, cheer and satisfaction. Beautifully finished in Japan < Jlegs, l?ase and top stamped ouV .-aluminum metal window frame.' never hot Made in various styles Ev try Dealer Everywhere. If Net A to the Neareit STANDARD ? .? (loeon Ililli 11IUM W!miVl?BsMsssm Beneficail Read-Making. The importance of ror.d-building ia civilization will receive illustration in the completion pf 300 miles of mac adamized highways in the Philippines. These bring isolated barbarians into contact with populous centers. This is a modern application of the famil iar policy of Rome, whose roads were built so well that at many points they are today available for traffic. They penetrated the rayless gloom of Ger man forests, they crossed on viaducts the gullies of the Appennines, they provided a firm footing for the legion across the marshes of the Iberian pen insula, and made a straight path .through many a wilderness. Just as in our day civilization in a new country huddles close to the steel rails and the whistle of the locomo tive, so in the days of Horace and Virgil the' Goths and the Vandals flocked to their villages, and came to the meeting of the ways not merely to fight tbe Roman, legionary, but to learn of the "mercator" what th s rest of the world was like beyond their bristling mountains and rock bound estuaries. Thus in this day the head-hunters and bandits cf the Philippines will be taught the arts of peace. But the work, it is estin ?ted,. will .still require seventeen years for completion. The benefits of similar work in Porto Rico hav become ap parent. _. . Sweetened Faith. Recently the Register called atten tion to the testimony of a prominent physician that the proportion of the use of drugs is declining. Added evi dence now comes from England to the same effect. A proprietary pill wide ly used and popular in the United Kingdom has been found, on analysis, to contain nothing but pure sugar. Yet it cures, as the testimonials prove. There is no reason to doubt the tes timonials. We can't all be straight believers in the faith cure. Sweet is faith, but sweeter still is the faith that is founded on the sugar pill. No doubt they cure. Did not the old New England doctor, generations ago, make pills of bread dough, stain them without with rhubarb, and with them cure half the ills his patients evidenc ed? He was a tyro, it appears. The inventor of the sugar pill has greatly improved on him. Long live the su gar pill. May it march on to conquer all the ills of the flesh. It is cheaper than quinine, and produces no "head.'' Rarely sweet is sweetened faith.-New Haven Register. A WonderM Clock. An electric clock without hands is exhibited in Chicago. Its pendulum weights more than 3,000 pounds. It contains 5,485 colored bulbs and over a mile of wire. The minutes are in dicated by sixty series of lights, each series containing thirty-two globe covered bulbs, raidiating from an or namental centerpiece to the outer edge of the diaL Shorter rows of dif ferent colored lights indicate the hour, and these change their position twelve times during each sixty minu tes. The seconds are shown by sixty lights placed at equal distances around the extreme outer edge of the face. The hour figures are three feet high, outlined in colored lights. Each second the illumination in the outer circe of light moves forward one bulb, and when the dir1, has been entirely circled, the lights indicating the min ute also advance, and the hour- hand, formed by lights, makes its-slow jour ney at five minute intervals. CURES RHEUM ATI: M TO-STAY-CURED. Rheamarlde (liquid or tablets) , removes the cause and stops the pain 1 quickly. An internal (blood) remedy, which has cured thousands of bad cases. At all dru wrists. Trial bottle tab ets by mail 25c. Send coln or lc stamps. Booklet free. Addrr is.Bobbitt Chemical Company 316 WJ Lonfbard, St.. Baltimore. Md. For Stock Owners WHAT OTHERS SAY: As a horseman. & lover of horses, as well as an owner and trainer, I cannot do justice to your Medicated Salt Brick. I used and sold quite a lot of it Wore and since you made the Improvement, h ince you perfected lt I find it :asts loneer. and on thia account it Rives bet ter satisfaction. They are the thine for stock in Sprint:. Summer, Fall and all the time, cannot recommend it too highly. D- KINO. Detroit, Mich., August 14. loon, > To Blackman Stock Remedy Company, CHATTANOOGA, TENNESSEE If your defier doa't sol I lt ask him to writ? for prices. -ive From the moment you strike match and touch it to the ck, a powerful live heat radi os from the PERFECTION Oil Heater Equipped with Smokeless Device)' lich burns for 9 hours with e filling olf its brass font, lich holds 4 quarts. ht Perfection Oil Heater is th** new iokelecs Device ven when the heater is handled by I for cleaning. the wick too high-this automatic smokeless heat that carries com Dr Nickel-np cast iron to break of one piece of steel-damper top s that heat will not tarnish-handle ? and finishes. t Your?. Write ?or Descriptive Circular : Agency of the UL COMPANY ?orated) Foot Bot and Its Prevention. No flock can thrive where this is present, and as undoubtedly it is con tagious, it is wise .to submit all bought sheep (which should be few) to a thorough disinfecting before being al lowed to mix with the general flock. Generally - speaking, it may be said that foot rot is the outcome of lazi ness, and with due care it should rarely be present to any large extent. Passing the whole flock twice dur ing the year through a trough in which a solution of arsenic and pot ash, or some other equally effective Ingredient, is placed, is strongly rec ommended.-Inland Farmer. Eye Disease. Dr. David Roberts, Wisconsin State Veterinarian, says: ' Sore eyes may be due to various causes, such as injury or catarrhal infection, and when due to the latter .the entire head is apt to become af fected. It is advisable to keep animals thus affected in a. dark stable during the day, allowing them to pasture at night. ' The eyes should be bathed several times daily in an antiseptic solution, after which time an eye lotion should be injected into the eye. Give ani mals access to medicated salt. Lamb Feeding.' Corn and the bearded or Scotch barley, when ted with alfalfa, were about equal in value for mutton pro duction. Barley in this test proved to be a shade the better. Twenty seven per cent less alfalfa and twenty eight per cent, less grain was required where barley replaced ?mmer in a ration. Grade lambs with mutton sires made greater gains, conditions being similar, than did Rambouillet lambs, though a record of food consumption for each class was not kept. The Western stockman has a feed in barley that is bf great value for meat .production, and may be used to advantage as a corn substitute. Wyoming Station. Corn Versus Oats as Horse Feed. The Ohio station recently conduct ed some experiments to test the wide spread belief that oats are superior to other grain as a feed for horses. Six mature grj-.de Percheron geldings were fed on a basal ration of clover and timothy hay, three receiving oats and three corn as a supplementary ration. Estimating corn to be worth forty cents per bushel, oats thirty cents per bushel, and hay $8 per ton at the time the experiments were made, it was,found that the average cost of food per hour of work was 3.3 cents for the corn-fed horses and 4.54 cents for those fed oats. The use I of corn to the exclusion of other grain for a period of forty-eight weeks was 1 not found detrimental to the health of work horses and they endured hard work during the hot weather as well as those.receiving oats. When mixed (clover and timothy) hay was fed to mature geldings at general farm work,' ear corn was practically as efficient, pound for pound, as oats. ? drop in weight of the corn-fed horses coincident with the beginning of the use of shelled corn indicates that ear corn is to be preferred above shelled j corn for work horses. Feeding the Crops. j The noted millionaire farmer, David Rankin, of Missouri, says: I have been asked why I always feed all my corn, and I always say first, I find it profitable to feed it, be cause in that way I can get full value out of it, and secondly, I also gain an immense amount of fertilizer, and then to haul my corn to the railroad to. ship would be a big job. And, further, I do not believe in selling raw material. You see, I run my farming business something on the plan of the manufacturing industries of the country. I want to sell the finished product, and can do so only by feeding all I raise to stock. If by doing so, I gain only an average of SI a head for the cattle and hogs I feed, you see it pays me. But, of course, I expect to make more than that. I would recommend to every farm er to feed his crops rather than haul the grain off the place. My observa tion is that a great many farmers do not carry out. their work as far as they can. They sell too much raw material and not enough finished product, .f It is true, there are years that the return from a crop might be greater, but year in and year out, it will pay you to feed all you raise. Beautifying the Farm. At the last annual meeting of the Pennsylvania Horticultural Associa tion, S. M. Meehan spoke as follows on the "Beautification of Waste Places:" A dwelling place should be made a home in every sense of the word. The grounds immediately surrounding the house and beyond should be made attractive and lovely to those who live right on the spot. But then we must think of others, too. We want to please our visitors, friends and neigh bors, and in fact every one who passes by. It is rightly a matter for per sonal pride that our surroundings be made to speak our appreciation of the beauties of nature. A good expanse of lawn may be considered one of the chief aims, be cause when that is set apart, it offers many opportunities for development in detail and effects. Decide to have a flower garden not simply flower beds and borders around the grounds, but something of an enclosure into which one may pass and feel that he is In a different atmosphere, whore flowers are on every side inviting admiration and in terest. I know of no phase of garden ing that is more delightful, invigorat ing aud care-destroying than that which relates-to the hardy flowers. A carefully sei?*: ted assortment gives a profusion of flowers all the year, from th? very earliest spring days when some v\'ill o;;en their adventur ous blossoms al.uost out from the] snow, to the time when some will defy the lighter frosts of the autumn. A rose garden, which may be made a section of a general flower garden, is much more pleasing than where roses are simply scattered here and there. They are not fitted for pro miscuous planting, and always re spond better to definite treatment. There are many kinds of waste places. Perhaps one may be the stump of an old tree which would be beautified if a vine were allowed, tn clamber over it. Hard Milker?. Dr. David Roberts, the Wisconsin State Veterinarian, says this trouble is due to an abnormal contraction of the sphincter muscles at the teat and oftentimes reduces the value of 7-hat might have otherwise been a valu able cow, as no one wishes to pur chase or own what is termed as a hard milker, but if stock owners knew how easily this trouble could be overcome they would never think of disposing of a hard milker at a sacrifice, as is now being done by man}'. The mere fact that a cow is a hard milker does not indicate that she is not a good milker, but owing to the fact that she is a hard milker is of tentimes neglected at milking time by a disgusted milker who leaves a large quantity of the milk in her udder that should have been drawn out. Stockum who know how to handle such cases oftentimes buy valuable cows owing to the fact that they are hard milkers and by the use of a teat plug and a few treatments for hard milking, cause them to become splen did, easy milkers, thereby increasing their value many more times than the cost of the treatment. A milking tube should never be used in such cases, as-there is too much danger of infection and the results are not as good as from the use of the teat Plug. Curing Clover Hay. I have read a good deal in farm journals about curing alfalfa, etc., underlay caps, but have never seen my method published. While I do not pretend to say it is perfect, it gives the best results of any me.thod have ever seen tried, considering quality of hay and expense of mak ing it. I start cutting just as soon as the clover comes into bloom, and .try to arrange to have it all cut by the time the heads begin to turn brown. My haying outfit consists of one mower, one side,delivery rake, one hay loader and rack wagon, a two- heel cart at* tached to hoisting rope of harpoon fork. I have a seven-eigliths bolt set in. axle of cart, and a ring tied into rope, and whenever fork full of hay is dumped, the driver simply throws the ring off the bolt, and man on the wagon can have harpoon back and nearly ready with another fork full by the time the team gets back. In this way it takes only a few minutes io unload a large load of hay, usually about five forks full. ?! My way of curing is as follows: Cut what will make about four or five loads of hay. After the dew ls ' off start, say, at 8.30 or 9 o'clock. Throw it into windrows with a side' delivery rake just before the dev; falls in the evening. The next morning mow until about ll a. m., and then take the rake and tip the windrows, | made the day before, upside down, and immediately after dinner you can start hauling in the barn. With two men, a good hay loader and a boy to drive team on hay fork, you can have the four or five loads of cured hay in the barn in time to rake up what you cut in the morning, if you have but a short distance to haul. By following the system of cutting just what you think you can haul in the next day from noon till evening, you will be surprised how much hay can be put into the barn with little expense. My bill for hired help for three years has run from fifty to sixty cents per ton to put hay into the barn, all work hired except my own. And you will be surprised at the qual ity of the hay. When you throw down hay for the stock you can smell lt all over the barn. No dust, no musty smell, and lots of clover heads just as red as when cut. Horses and colts will winter on.it without any grain, and do fine. In case it rains and your hay ls In windrows do not scatter it out, but take your side delivery j-ake and drive alongside each windrow just close enough to kick it up into a fluffy windrow and let the wind blow through it. Do this about twice, and your hay will be ready for the barn, and you can scarcely tell it has been wet. If any one has a better system, I hope to hear from him, for good hay is a hobby of mine.-J. V. Perry, In Hoard's Dairyman. Colors For Houses. The safe colors for a house, besides red, arc white, gray, yellow and brown. Yellow or gray, with white trimmings, suits many a plain, pitch roofed or square colonial house. Grays and browns are good for ugly nondescript ones; the grays always being pleasanter on the yellow shades than on cold blue tones. White sug gests the formal type again. It is a very good color for a country house, showing it up from a distance in fas cinating glimpses, for it needs trees about it, ejad flowers to sparkle against its walls. Such a house will be attractive when the leaves are gone from the trees, for the bare boughs will serve to soften the effect.-. Scribner's Magazine. A Minifying Estimate. "Does your sen know the value of a dollar?" "Yes," answered Mr. Cumrox, "he has some idea of it. He knov;s better than to invite the scorn of the waiter at whose table he dines by offering him one a3 a tip."-Richmond Even leg Star. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pf Is tho best of all medicines for :he disorders and weaknesses peculiar to only preparation of its kind devised by ated physician-an experienced and sk the diseases of women. It Is a safe medicino ia any conditioi THE ONE REMEDY which conti and no injurious habit-forming dr creates no craving for auch stimuli THE ONE REMEDY so good ti ore not afraid to print its cvsry each outside bottle-wrapper ind truthfulness of the same under oe It is sold by medicine dealers everyw ?et it. Don't take a substitute of un kr KNOWN COMPOSITION. No counterfeit is i who says something else is "just es go< or is trying to deceive yon for his own s trusted. He is trifling with your moa may be your life itself. Sse that yo$t gt Woman's Questions. i They faced her with the gloom of death From breakfast time to midnight's breath; Where'er she stirs, at her they stare; "I wonder what I'm going to wear?1' With changeless and persistent will They haunt her on the stairs, the sill ; Grim as the changeless law of fate : "I wonder if my hat's on straight7*' Tn household hours of toil and play, In pastimes at the end of day, Re-echoing through th? realms of night : "I wonder if my hat's a sight?" -The Bentztown Bard. MUNYON'S EMINENT DOCTORS AT YOUR SERVICE FREE. Not a Penny to Pay Fer the Fullest Medical Examination. If you are in doubt a? to the cause of your disease mail UH a postal re questing a medical exam ination blank, which you will fill out and return to us. Our doctors will carefully diag nose your case, and ii! you can be cured you will ne told so; if you can not be cured you will be told so. You j are not obligated to us in any way; j this advice is absolutely free; you are i at liberty to take our advice or not us you see flt. Send to-day for a medi cal examination blank, fill out ard return to us as promptly as possible, and our eminentdoctors will diagnose ?your case thoroughly absolutely free. Mu ny on's, 53d and Jefferson St,'.., Philadelphia, Pa._ Stone walls do not a prison make, nor iron bars a cage.-Lovelace. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, al lay 8 pain. cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. . Set your sail according to your wind.-Italian. I Boo gb on Batu, unbeatable exterminator. Bough on Hen Lice, Neat Powder, 25c. Bough on Bedbugs, Powder or Liq'd, 25c. ?Bough on Fleas, Powder or Liquid, 25c. Bough on Roaches, Pow'd, 15a,Liq'd, 25c. Bough on Moth and Ante, Powder, 25c. Bough on Skeeters, agreeable in use, 25c; IC. a Wells, Chemist, Jersey City, N. J. 1 What is not necessary is dear at a P^ty.-German._ Sprains and Bruises, so likely to occur m icy feather., are quickly healed by Pery Davis' Painkiller. 25c, 35c. and 30c. An evil at birth is readily crushed, but! it grows and strengthens by en durance.-Cicero. - CURED ITCHING HUMOR. ~ Big, Pal if ul Swellings Broke and Did Not Heal-Suffered 8 Years Tortures Yield to Cutlcura. "Little black swellings were scattered over my face and neck and they would leave little black scars that would itch to I couldn't keep from scratching them. Larger swellings would appear and my clothes would afick to the sores. I went lo a doctor, but the trouble only got worsa. Bythis time it was all over my arms and the upper part of my body in swelling as large as a dollar. It was so painful that I could not bear to lie on my back. The second doctor stopped the swellings, but when they broke the places would not heal. I bought a set of the Cuticura Beroedies and in lesa than a week some of the places ivsre nearly well. I continued until I bad used three ec ti, and now I am sound and well. The diserse lasted three years. O. L. ! Wilson, Puryear, Tenn., Feb. 8, 1908." I Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, j of Cu ti cu. a Remedies, Boston, Mass. The Optimist. "Terrible cold you have!" "Yes!" answered the cheery citizea. "Isn't it lucky! I can't smell the moth balls."-Washington Star. Take a hint, do your own mixing. Boniah on Bats, being all poison, one 15c. box will spread or make 50 to 100 little cakes that will kill 500 or more rats and mice. It'? tho unbeatable exterminator. Don't die in the house. . Beware of imitations, substitut** aud catch-penny, ready-for-use devices. Noticed lt. "The horse laugh is going out of j polite society." "And instead?" "We have the automobile smile of superiority."-Kansas City Journal. JTor HEADACHE- Hick?? rAPUDlPflB Whether from Colds. Heat, Stomach or Nervous Troubles. Capudlne wlU relieve you. It's Ifould-pleasant to take-acts Immedi ately. Try lt. 10c., 25c. and Soc at dru? ito ea O 3 : lt ls a simple and effective ho from a disordered liver, lt is Head, Throat and Chest, and is benefit you, return the empty bo E Oxidlne has a direct action on orator and reconstructive, lt de . throw off the poison in thc sy kidneys, which often become eic form their natural functions. 7 people suffer from lt for yea "s always accompany malaria troi forms of Skin Disease, Piles, Er to Malaria, and can never be rel Heves by removing the cause. H restores the organs to -a norma' AS A CURE FOR A NO EQUAL. Made in Regular and Taste] cure of diseases, women. It is tho a regularly gradu ?lied specialist in i of the system, tics no alconol ugs and which ants. int its mahers ingredient on [ attest to the ith. here, and any dealer who hasn't it eon. 'jjvn composition for this medicine OF u1*?ood as the genuine and the druggist >d os Dr. Pierce's" is either mistaken elfish benefit. Such a man is not to br it priceless possession-your health what jw* ask for. For COLDS nd GRIP. . Blek's CAYomvn is the best remedy relieves the achina' and feyerishness-curej the Cold sod restores normal conditions. It's liquid-effects Immediately, lue. 25c and SOc.. at driur stores. Great trees give more shade than fruit. Stop guessing! Try the best and most certain remedy for all painful ailments Homlins Wizard Oil. The way it relieves all soreness from sprains, cuts, wounds, burns, scalds, etc., is wonderful. Pay Your Money and Take Tour Choice. The North Pole controversy has brought out all sorts of fashions, and among others "North-Pole dolls" for the youngsters are to be found, and one may take one's pick of Cook, Peary or an Eskimo. The costume is about the same-a close-fitting suit of imitation white fur, with a close fitting cap, only the faces differ. You can easily tell which are the Eskimos, but when it comes to a COOK or Peary it's a case of paying your money and taking your choice. Somewhat Belated. Little Willie: "Say, pa, what is foresight ?" Pa: "Foresight, my son, is the faculty of being around when there is a melon to be cut.'* Chicago News. Cured by Lydia E. Pink ham ?Yege ta bi e Compound Milwaukee, Wis. - "Lydia E.Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has made me a well woman, and I would like to tell thewholeworld of it. I suffered from female trouble and fearful pains in my back. I had the best doctors and they all decided that I had a tumor in addition to m; female trouble, ant advised an opera. _ tion. Lydia E. Hnkham's Vegetable Compound made me a well woman and I have no more backache. I hope I can help others by telling them what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has don* for me. "-MKS. EM?A IMSE, 833 Finit St, Milwaukee, Wis. The above is only one of the thou sands of grateful letters which are constantly being received by the Pinkham Medicine Company of Lynn, Mass., which prove beyond a doubtthat Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, made from roots and h orbs, actually does cure these obstinat? dis eases of women after all other means have failed, and that every such suf ering woman owes it to herself to at least give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound a trial before submit ting to an operation, or giving up hope of recovery. . Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn? Mass., invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health and her advice is free. The Ideal Dfl! ATAI AO roam of Cathartlo ?**?->* s Caster OH OHILDftCN LICK TH? 8 -OOH. K.M.... rt.talrncr, Co flrtplBf, Aid* DlstiHoc 200. ALL DKCOQIsTa. Oft PERFUMED POSTCARDS. Plctnret * O and Advertising Offer. 10c. S. WALLACE CHEMICAL WORKS, 45 La Salle St., Chicago, ni. CC Caa be base same atable disease, bri on toe tongi of all forma foal. One bo S5and$:0d< paid by mai free Booklet selling borsi 8POMW MEDICAL CO., Chet LIDIIS rn? remedy for ChMIs, Fever, Malaria, effective for Constipation, Indigestion, sold under a strict guarantee, ll the ttle to your druggist and get your mon? [OW IT RELIEVES the tiver, Stomach, Kidneys and Bowe 8troys the germ of malaria, stimulates stem, and flushes the stomach and bowe >gged and inactive in cases of Malaria I 'he symptoms of malaria are so numc without discovering the true source of ibles, and chronic Constipation, Rhi ifeebled Heart action and pains in all p ieved without first discovering and remo : goes to the seat cf the trouble, destr I condition, builds up the system and a ?ALARIA, CHILLS AND FEVEF (ess Forms, all Druggists. rTRAPPERS nuilee more' 'money Copy of Hunter-Trader-Trnpper, a monthly magazine, itiOor mon? peges about steel traps, snare*., deadfalls, trapping secrets, raw '-ra, dogs, big game hunting, etc., and a W page et* .tot, com alni ii? gnmo laws, camping hlnu*, etc., all for 10 cents. A. K. HARDING PU li. CU., Box 709, Columbus, Ohio. PIPE-VALVES FITTING AND SHAFTING, PULLEYS, BELTS. LOMBARD IRON WORKS,ADGSTA So. 44-'09. mmm m Rectores Cray Hair to Natural'Color? REMOVES OAHORUFr AMD QCURP Invigorates and preYenU the luiir from tailing off, Far Sal? by Druggists, or ..nt Direct by XANTHINE CO., Richmond. Virginia frita ?I Far Bottle tamala Battle jte. teas! ?ar Cbaaterf Save the Baby--Use SO'S CURE W: m BEST mimi YOE (?UGWS Should be given at once when tho little one coughs. It heals, the del icate throat and protects the lungs from infection-guaranteed safe and very palatable. , Ail Dragsjtta, 25 UKI "I find Cascare ta so good that I ?would not be without them. I was troubled n great deal with torpid liver and headache. Now since taking Cascare ts Candy C athar tic I feel very much better.' I shall cer tainly recommend them to my friends aa the best medicine I have ever seen.'":' Anna Bazinet, Osborn Mill No. a, Fall River, Mata. Pleasant, Palatable. Potent Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken or G ripe. 10c, 25c. 50c. Never sold in bulk. The a can ine tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to curt *r ??our money back. tZ8 ff afflicted with weak nyes? noe Thompson's Eye Waler An aching back is instantly relieved by an application of Sloan's Liniment This liniment takes the place of massage and is better than sticky plasters. It penetrates -without rubbing-through the skin and muscular tissue right to the bone, quickens the blood, relieves congestion, and gives permanent as well as temporary relief. Here's the Proof. Mr. JAMES C. LEB, of 1100 0th St., S.E., Washington, D.C.,irrites: "Thirty years ago I fell from a scaffold and seri ously inj ur ed my back. I suffered terri bly at times ; from the small of my back all around my stomach was just as if I had been beaten "with a club. I used every plaster I could get with no relief. Sloan's Liniment took the pain right oat, and I can noir do as much ladder work os any man in the shop, thanks to Liniment Mr. J. P. EVANS, of Mt. Airy, Ga., says: "After being afflicted for three ioars with rheumatism, I used Sloan's liniment, and was cured sound and well, and am glad to say I haven't been1 troubled with rheumatism since. My leg was badly swollen from my hip to my knee. One-half a bottle took tho pain and swelling out." Sloan's Liniment has no equal as a remedy for Rheu matism, Neuralgia or any pain or stiffness in the muscles or joints. Prices, 25c., 50c. and $ 1.00 Sloan's book on horses, cattle, sheep, und poultry acut ires. Address Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass., U.S.A. ..WEAK & INFLAMED EYES. SLOAN'S; LI NI MEN 1 SALVE ?SSARY. Price, 25 Cenfi?/9/^/>/i." >LT DISTEMPER lied very anally. The tick are curad, and all others tn no matter how "exposed," kept from having tho ming 8POHN"8 LIQUID DI8TOIPEK CUBte. Gtve> ie or tn feed. Act? on the blood and expela genna cf distemper. Best remedy ever known for mares In t tie guaranteed to cure one case. 30o and $1 a bottle;, >zen, of druggists and harness dealers, or sent tupi ese ?ufacturers. Cut shows how to poultice throats. Oar iglvet everything. Local agenta wanted. Largest' s remedy In existence-twelve years, nlsts sod Bsctsrlologrrts, a oe hen, Ind., u. e. A? T IEE* and all other diseases arising LaGrippe and Colds in the i first bottle does not great!/ if back. ?ls, and Is a powerful Invig thc liver, enabling it to ls. lt also strengthens the "ever, .;nd forces them to pc^ ?rous and varied that many their troubles. Chills do not sumatism, Dyspepsia, many arts of the body may be due ving the cause. Oxidine re oys the germs of the disease, ids nature. i REMEMBER IT HAS 50c Per Bottle.