News Notes. Miss Mary Benedict, of Missouri, will become president of Sweetbrier Institute, Virginia. A homely girl always selects a girl homelier than herself for her bridesmaid. E. B. Smith & Co., have appealed to the United States Supreme Court to set aside the writ of error granted by Justice Harlan in the Bay Shore case. HOT EAGLES FROM A TRAIN. The Train Was Moving and the P'eat Was Done With a Rifle, Honest. When the Missouri Pacific passesger train was speeding on its way westward laBt Friday forenoon, Tom Kinney, a baggageman, saw an cag-e perched on the ci-obs arm of a telegraph pole some distance cast of Kingman and made the remark to himself: "I'll get that fellow this evening." He informed the train orew of the prospect ahead, and the engineer and fireman agreed to be on the lookout on the return trip in the evening. and if it should nrove thnt the Mr. Eagle In question was still there a little of the air pressure would bo applied and the train brought wown to about fifteen miles an hour, so as to give Tom the tip of the bird's presence as well as a fairly good chance to see what he could do with a rifle. When the train arrived near the placo mentioned in the evening, not nly the eagle of the morning was in tight but its mate had also come and taken up a position at the other end ?f the telegraph pole cross bar. Torn was given the tip by the steam being tpplied and he made ready for action The boys say that when Tom fired the two shotB it sounded almost like one, o quick did they follow In succession, and the result was that both birds leseended to mother earth, each plorurd by a bullet. They were taken on toard the train and Tom was the ero of the hour. And a feat in sLnoting of thlu kind is certainly worth nentionlng. The writer saw the two rlctlms of Tom's deadly aim ia the taggage car the next day and they sere fine specimens of the species tnown as "golden," and the largest treasured ten feet from tip to tip of ihe wings. Tom is going to have them nounted and keep them as souvenirs ?f his prowess.?Stafford tKar.) Itetubllcan. Made a Touchdown. The Yale man had undertaken to aeifi i> jui.iih vvuuiuii iu ?UL ;;i:-.cri: In a New York publishing house. He favo her several letters of Introduction and 6ho went the rounds. When ho asked her the result a week later ?he replied that nothing had developed, but that she was jurt as much obliged to him. "For what?" he queried. "Why, for all your kindness and trouble, of course." "Nonsense; I've done nothing; you have gaiued nothing," came from the former football player. "Well, you tried, anyway, and I'm obliged to you." she insisted. "My dear Miss Blank," replied the brawny son of Eli, "L wtb brought up at Yale, and wo were trained to cgre!" Tho next day oho received an offer from one of the firms f.hut had turned her away. Sir Patrick Keith Murray lias presented to the British nation an old cushion on which the crown of Sectland routed, &nd it lias been placed In the jewel room iu Edinburgh cas tlo. Walter Devero, of Winfleld, W. Va., flied suddenly after taking supposed guanine tab'ets aud poisoning is suspected. So. 23-'06 KNIFED Coffee Knifed an Old Soldier. 'An old soldier, released from coffee at 72, recovered his hee.lth and tells about It as follows: "I stuck to coffee for years, although It knifed me again and again. "About eight years ago (as a result ef coffee drinking which congested my liver), 1 was taken wllli a very severe ^.?1 1 - l c uwwr vi uiiiiuiini h'vit. "I won' 1 apparently recover nn<l tart about my usual work only to suffer n relapse. After this had been reHeated several times during the year 1 was again taken violently ill. "The doctor said he had carefully studied my case and It was either 'quit coffee or die.* advising me to take Post tun in Its place. I had always thought coffee one of my dearest friends, and especially when sick, and 1 was very much taken back by the doctor's decision for I hadn't suspected the coffee I drank could possibly cause uiy troubles. "I thought It over for a few minutes end finally told the doctor 1 would make the change. Postuni was procured for me the same day and made according to directions; well. I liked vt and stuck ti it and since then I have been a new nau. The change in health began in a f?w days and surprised ine. and now, although 1 nin seventy-two years of age, I do lots of hard work mi for the raat month have been teaming, driving sixteen miles a day. besides loading and unloading the wagon. That's what Fostum in the place of coffee hap done for me. I now like the Poatura as well as I did coffee. "I have known people who did not eare for Posturo at Arst, bat after linv[ lag learned to mnk<\lt properly accordr t?g to directions, they have come to like It as well us coffee. I never miss a chance to pralae it.'T Name given by Fostum Co.. Battle Creek. Mich. Lo+k for the little l^ook, "The Bond f? WellvUIe." in pkga. t V ' . \ [ivy \ REEKING WITH FILTH Big Packing houses a Menace (o Public health A BLOT ON COMMON DECENCY ' ? The Report is Only Preliminary, the President Being Anxious for Special Legislation?More is to Come ?Revelations That Will Concern The People. Washington, Special.?The report ! of Messrs. Reynolds and Neill, appointed a special committee by President Roosevelt to investigate tlio workings of the packing houses and stock yards, was presented to Congress hy the President. The report although confined to personal investigations and giving only such information as come under the personal observation of the committon some startling facts. Messrs. Reynolsds and Neill explain that the investigations are not yet ended and that many reports in connection with thj unsanitary conditions of the packing houses and stock yards are yet to come out. The Presidents Message. Tho Senate and House of Representatives: I transmit herewith the report of Mr. James Bronson Reynolds and Commissioner Charles 1'. Neill, the special committee whom 1 appointed to investigate into the conditions in the stockyards of Chicago and report thereon to me. This report is of a preliminary nature. 1 submit it to you now because it shows the urgent need of immediate action by the Congress in the direction of providing a drastic and thoroughgoing inspection by the Federal government of all stockyards and packing houses and of their products, so far as the latter enter into inter-State or foreign commerce. The condition shown by even this short inspection to exist in the Chicago stockyards are revolting. It is imperatively necessary in the interest of health and decent"" that they should he radically changed. Under the existing law it is wholly impossible to secure satisfactory results. W'lmn ..i?- - - " ' " 1 . it 11 viii iv/ii ;i- 111*51 11' rectcd to this mat tor an investigation was made under the Bureau of Animal Industry of the Depart nit ot of Agriculture. When the preliminary statements of this investigation were brought to my attention they showed such defects in the law and such wholly and unoxnectod conditions that I deemed it best to have a further immediate investigation by men not connected with the bureau, and accordingly appointed Messrs. Reynolds and Neill. It was impossible under the existing law that satisfactory work should be done by the Bureau of Animal Industry. 1 am now, however, examining the way in which the work actually was done. Before 1 had received the report ot" Messrs. Reynolds and Neill 1 bad directed that labels placed upon any package of meat food product should state only the carcass of the animal from which the meat was taken had been inspected at the time of slaughter. If inspection of meat food products at all stages of preparation is not secured by the passage of the j lagislntiou recommended I shall feel compelled to order that inspection j labels and cert ideates on canned products shall not he used hereafter. Premises not Kept Clean. The report shows that the s;oekyards and packing houses are not kept even reasonably clean, and that the method of handling and preparing food products is uncleanly and dangerous to health. I nder existing law the national government has no power to enforce inspection of the many forms of prepared meal food | products that are daily going from the packing houses into inter-Slate commerce. Owing to an inadequate i appropriation the Department of Ag' riculturo is not even able to place inspectors in all establishments desiring them. The present law prohibits the shipment of uninspected meat to foreign countries, but there is no provision forbidding the shipment of uninspected meats in inter-State commerce, and thus the avenues of interstate commerce are left open to traffic in diseased or spoiled mea'o If, as hay been alleged on tseemingly good authority further evils exist, such as the improve use of chemicals ami dyes, the government lacks power to remedy them. law is needed which will enable the inspectors of the general government to inspect and supervise from the hoof to the can the preparation of the i m^at product. The evil seems to lie much less in the sule of dressed carcasses than in the sale of canned and other prepared products. In my judgment the expense of the inspection should be paid by a feel levied oil each nnimnl slaughtered. If (his is not done, the whole purpose of the law cnn at any time be defeated through an insufficient appropriation; and wherever there was no particular public interest in the subjest in would be not only easy but natural thus to make the appropriation insufficient. If it were not for tins consideration I should favor the government paying for it. The alarm expressed in certain quarters concerning this feature should be allayed by a realization of the fact that in no case, under such a law, will the cost of inspection exceed 8 cents pe head. I call special attention to the fact that chis report is preliminary, and that the investigation is still i nfij.I.-hed. It is not yet posiibi ro report on the alleged abuses in the use of deleterious chemical compounds in connection w,;*.h canning and preserving meat products, nor on the nllcjed doctoring in this fashion of tainted meat and of products returned to the packers as having grown unsalable 'if unusable from aire or from other reasons. Grave allegations are made in reference to abuses of this nature. Can't Stop Abuses. Let me repeat that under the present law there is practically no method of stopping these abuses if they should be discovered to exist. Legislation is needed in order t<? pr< vent the possibility of all abuses iu tlie future. 11' no legislation is passed, then the excellent results accomplished by the work of this special committee will endure only so long as the memory of the committee's work is _esh, and a recrudescence of the abuses is absolutely certain. I urge the immediate enactment into law of provisions which will enable the Department of Agriculture adequately to inspect the meat and meatfood products entering into interState commerce and to supervise the methods of preparing the same, and to prescribe the sanitary conditions under which the work shall he performed. 1 therefore commend to your favorable consideration and urge the enactment of substantially tlie provisions known as Senate amendment No. 21) to the act making appropriations for the Department of Agriculture for the liscal year ending dune 30. 1007. as passed !>v tin* S.<n ate, for (his amend nu*?it being commonly known a? the Beveridgc amendment. THKOnOHK UOOSYKLT. The White House, dune 4. 1901). The Report. The ".eport of the special committee is quite lengthy, dealing with tho var'ous phases of the work of packing houses. It shows that they are unutterably tilthy and unsanitary. The rc\ 'latitats brought to light show that unwholcsotuc ami tlecayed meats are packed: that deleterious chemicals arc employed to freshen and prevent further decay, and that the government. inspection is used as a blind to perpetrate a fraud upon the customers. It is enough to shock the entire American people, and doubtless Congress will he quick to enact legislation to remedy the great evils found. TA Si ftmn Aitf A nnrohtr v Washington, Special.?The I'niled States will enter into an international compact for the obliteration of anarchy. Many American statesmen would endorse and actively support any movement, international or individual. among the powers, which look to the suppression of the comm.mi evil an 1 Congress would doubtless pass laws supplemental to legislation which followed McKinley's death in furtherance of such measures. Foul Play Suspected. Asheville, N. Special.?A telephone message from Waynesville says that Isaac West, an aged man, was found unconscious in the road near Kirby school house, seven miles from Waynesville, and thai foul play is suspeeted. The victim was covered with bruises, the most serious of which are on the head. He was found by Robert Lodbetter and was removed to Waynesville, where Dr Springfield was sunioned to attend the man's wounds. Mr. West i-. between Sit and MO years of age and lives near where he was found Thursday. It is believed that lie will hi i lord Offerings For McKinlcy Tomb. I Cat ton. O., Special. Among the 1 floral offerings placed at the MeKin ley toiub by Mrs. MeKinlov was t large wren til from I'n-ident Roosevelt. It was made of while earnaiious and hydrangeas. Mv order of \ iee President Fairbanks, William L. Day. son of Justice Day. look to tlio \t..is? 1- - i i < m iviiiiri itilllil 'I IIUIUIS'>1111* tribute. Another floral piece in the l'??rtn of h star came from Lieutenant Sionor of \V aco, Tex. Address to Kegio Students. | Hampton, Ya.. Special.'?A notab'c address was dclivctvd to the students ot' Hampton Institute by President Kooscvelt. He dwelt particularly on the necessity for the dcc\ hipment of character, not only in the negro, hut in the white man as well, maintaining that education would fit neither for citizenship unless accompanying it there was the right type of family life in the home. I I ? ??? The poorest kind of a man is the one who is made of money. r *. I "Seeing" London. I wish 1 could revive the first feeling of strangeness and astonishment which overcame me when I first arrived In ling land ana wnlch rails to the envied lot of every foreigner or every englishman who has beeu away from his country for a long time. I turn green with envy every summer when I see the hundreds of American tourists in the streets of T,-oudon ana remember that they arc undergoing ' an experience which will reLvain with them as an ideal memory for the rest of their lives, but which, K they remain here, will wear off. I used to see Mr. Pickwick and Sam Welierand Mr. Panics at every corner in Bloomsbury, and In Pall Ma.r I constantly ran across Col. Newcome and. Major Pendennis. For the first few weeks of my first stay in Ixmdon I haunted the Drury lane district for "types" which had become familiar to me in my youthful novel reading days. Tne strange .hing about it all is that, wlieiear. every American who comes hero at once points these people out to me and dwells with glee in tlio die :overy, I never ,??e them now. They have either become so familiar to the jaded view of the ingrained Londoner or they must have been merely the figment of the easily influenced imagination of the impressionable greenhorn.?Brooklyn Life. A Valuable Booklet. Watts' Official Railway Guide of tlie South i.i an almost indespcnsablc acquisition to every well-informed man, and especially everyone who travels A new feature recently added is drawing much favorable attention to the work. In each issue are given late ??nd complete colored maps of the Southern States, showing all railroads, towns and other matters of interest. It is a truly commendable work and (he Watts Publishing Company, of Atlanta, Ga., deserve all the praise they are receiving for their enterprise. TERRIBLE ITCHING SCALP Kcitiiii I'.roUn Out Also ?.n Hands and l.lmlis?Ait Jlhl Soldier llerlnrei: "Cutieurn ia a lllcsalng." "At all times snd to all people f am willing to testify to the merits of Cuticura. It saved me from woiae man the torture of hades, about the ycur 1P00, with itching on m> acalp and temples, and afterwards it commenced to break out on my hands. Then it broke out on my limbs. 1 then went to a surgeon, whose trcat...... J: j j i . . i rjciu uiu nit? no goon, nui ramer aggravated the disease. 1 then told hun I would go and see a physician in Eric. The reply was that J could go anywhere, hut a ease of eczcm*. like mine could not t>e cured; that 1 was too old (MO), i went to an eminent doctor in the city of Erie and treated with him. for six months, with like results. I had read of the Cutieura Remedies, and so *J sent for the Cutieura Soap, Ointment and Resolvent, and continued taking the Resolvent until 1 had taken six bottles, stopping it to take the Pills. I was now getting better. I took two baths a day, and at night 1 let the lather of the Soup dry on. 1 used the Ointment with great effect after washing in warm water, to utop the itching at Once. 1 am now cured. The Cutieura treatment is a l>le.i*ing, and should he used by every one who baa itching of the skin. 1 can't say any more, and thank God that He has given the world such a curative. Win. II. Gray. 3303 Mt. Vernon St., l'hilad.lphio, l'a., August 2, 11)03." Prof. James IJ. lteokords, father of John W. Rekords. accused of murdering Maurice Francis, died of pneumonia ,being the third member of his family to die in two Decks. FITS.St.Vitus' PaneeiNervous Diseases permanently curod by Dr. Kline's Oreat Nerve Restorer, f2 trial bottle and treatise free. 1>k. II. It. Klink, Ld.? U81 ArchSt.,Philn.,Pa. Some whaling ship n?ay yet blunder upon the North Pole by accident. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softens the ten nis, reduces influtniiKition. aliny.s pain,euro* wind colio,'26ca bottle Folly nrul failure roost on the same perch.?Chicago News. (.rent Distress Throughout tli? S'onlli Could be eliminated by the uso of I)r. JtigpT-i Hu< kleborry Cordial. It cures Dysentery, Diarrhoea, Children Teething. At Druggists '25o and t>0o per bottle. At. okapi, a rare jpccics of animal, has beer, found in the Congo Free Slate. AI-INC WOMEN. Kt-ep (he R'dnsjr* W?ll an I (he Ki<loe> Will Keep You Well. Siik. suffering', sjnguld women arc learning the true cause of Lad backs and how to cure Ihivls, of Groesbeck. TiPtjL aches hurt me so 1 WJi/mV i Spells of dizziness Hs^py. T and sick headache | wcrp frequent and ,K*,%ion *'ie ^ld** * neys was Irregular. Soon after I began taking Donn'a Kidney Pills 1 passed several gravel ?iuiu*<. . ?oi won ana tno trouble Iiac not returned. My back ia good and I strong Mid luy general health better." Sold by all dealer*. f?0 cents a beg. Foater-Mliburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y. A generation ago Mr. Parton predieted that the coming man would neither smoke nor drink. Yet, laments the Philadelphia Record, the internal revenue collections of tho United States Government increase apace, and instead of giving up his vices, man is reputed to have been joined bv woman. I ' Hatred is often the result of knowing but one side of a person. I v rAwqg^MW?PfM? BOX OF WVER8 FREE?NO ORUCS ?CURES BY ABSORPTION. Car** B*lekln| et Oat?Bad Brtatk aM/ Bad Stouasoh?Short Breath? HloaStwg?Soar Vruotatloas? Irrefalar Heart, jfftc. Take a Mull'". Wafer any time of the day or night, and note the immediate good eltect on your atomaoh. It abaorba the gaa. disinfects the stomach, kilia the poiaon germs and cures the disease. Catarrh of tlie head and throat, unwholesome food nnd overeating make bad stomachs. Scarcely any atoinach >a entirely tree from taint of eotne Sind. Mull's juti Belch Wafers will make your stomach heaithy by absorbing foul gases which arise from the undigested food and by reinforcing the lining of the stomaab, enabling it to thoroughly mix the food with the gastric juices. Vhis cures staunch trouble, promotes digestion, sweetens the breath, stops belching ana fermentation. Heart action becomes strong and regular through tbia process. Discard drugs, aa you know from experience they do not cure stomach trouble. Try a common-sense (Nature's) method that does cure. A soothing, bealtag aeusatiou results instantly. We know Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers will do this, and we want you to know it. TkU offer may not appear again. 008 GOOD FOR 25c. 1 tz _.eend coupon with your nam* and address and your druggist's name and 10c. in stamps or silver, and we will supply you a sanvile free if you have never used Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers, and will atso send von a certificate good tor 25c. toward the purchase of more Belch \Vaf?ra. Vou will find them invaluable for stomach trouble; cure* by absorption. Address Mull's Crack Tonic Co.. 328 3d Ave., Rock island. 'II. Give -full Address and Write Plainly. All druggists. 50c. per b->s, or by mail rpoa receipt of price. Stamps accepted. Budding genius doesn't always bear fruit. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanita.-v Ixition; never fails, co.d bv Drngfists. Mail orders promotly tilled by Dr. l. Detchon, Crawfordaville, Ind. $1. Tin thing that makes a man like a woman is he can never tell why. The new Vlrchove Hospital In Berlin will have S00 beds. Tlio total cost of construction will roach $5,000,000. The attending pliyslcinns will have salaries from $1400 to JSOO n yeur. Hotr'j Ttila T W*. offer One Hundred Dollar* Reward for any ease of Catarrh that cannot >"t> cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. j. Cuki.'xv a Co., Toledo, O. \N> the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last IS years, and believe him i perfectly honorable In ull business transae* tlons and financially ablo to carry out any I obligations made by their iirm. \Vast a Tbcax, Wuolesale Druggists, Toledo, O. yyaliuno, Rinnan a maiiyin, Wholesalo Druggists, Toiedo, O, Hall's Catarrh Cure is tafeoniaternally,act? ingdlroctiyupontheblood and tnuououssurlnces of the system. Testimonials sen*, free. 1'rlce, 76c. per bottle. Hold by all Druggist*, 'lake Hall's Family Pills tor constipation. Ten roars ago. with a population of 32,000,000, Prussia maintained nearly 3000 technical schools, representing all the principal industries, with an itttondnuee of over 2<H1.000. CAPUBINE, j 1 IM.'IFDIATtLY Cl'af.5 ^ j headaches i fK\r%^^Bre*K?<ipCCLDS u IN 6 TO 12 ,!OUKS fll ^tvw? Tin rBottlr 10c. At OrulStm 1 Don't Get Wet! ! tower's slickers will keep you dry as Tl.itlii.icr rlcr will Kccnn/ ? ? *:?" i Chey are the p- act of the best materials and ' ' S , . i seventy years experience in manufacturing. A. J. TOWER CO. Boston. U.S.A. . ' TOWXB CANADIAN OO., XA4. Toronto. Cut. KILL THE LICE1 At/-'CHICKENS wub ? J jSST PRUSSIAN I /1S83k LICE P0WDER ^ r vSjEj^rVA Sure Death to I.Ice and Vermin 11 hey can't live where it ia La.y to apply. Duat it id n "Killed every louie in my Pork of B 250 hWi.M- D.Perr^. Monroe.Wia. B* Price 25 and 50c a "WfU By trail. 00 aod 70r ? BP PnusauN Rkmkov CO., Sr. PAUL, MINN. MlWB #3 Dropsy si 4/^Kyla Itemovrn all swelling: In 8 to 90 ' 1 days; effects a permanent care I .jjTV tSiL In 30 to 6o davit. Trial treatment r^iVK -J^!fei?.plvcn free. Nutliinucan be fai:cr & i- Write Dr. H. II. Gi con's Sons. 1 tSSS'-Vooclallsls. Box El Atlanta. Ga. THE DAISY FLY KILLERJT?S j m, , - . einfur , t. ff?f| fy ?m,.? ()M U#r. bAg lWli 'jj^ | ! a a |ITP r* Addre*<. <?1 <t) persons01 i?rt \ml D lY I r I I Indian blood who ?re not llrNH ? Is I L U ,nr with any inbe. (*) ol uieu | who werrrd in th* Federal army, or <>) the I " " ii*?i >-! Kin ol Mirti soldiers or aailora, now Q?MM?1 NATHAN UlCKKOHi), Washington, L>. C. I I f^HICKEJVS E you cannot spend years anil dol buy the knowledge required by cents. You want them to pay t them as a diversion. In order to handle thing about them. To meet this want we of a practical poultry raiser for (Only 25 a man who put all his mind, and time, a en raising?not as a pastime, but as a bus ty-flve years" work, you can save many C J earn dollars for you. The point Is. that Poultry Yard as soon as It appears, and k teach you. It tells how to detect and cur fattening; which Fowls to save for bree you should know on this subject to make tvs cents In sVamp*. BOOK PUBMSIllN . M . .i A CRITICAL PERIOD lllf ELLI6ENT WOMEN PREPARK Dangers and Pain of This Critical Period Avoided by the Use of Lydtu, E. Pink, barn's Vegetable Compound. mex||WHSBH5339 flow many wo? men realizo that I ill l'1H most critical ' I ^ SI ,Run s existanoa I I I women as th5 WutmfsKb&S&Ew} lime draws near \AfrnA.HG ifyI an d y is not without * "" " reason ? If her system is in a deranged condition, or she ia predisposed to apoplexy or congestion of any organ, it is ut thi time likely to become active and, with a host of nervous irritations, make Ufa a burden. At this time, also, cancers and tumors are more liable to begin their deatruo wto worn, oucn warning sympiomt as a sense of suffocation. hot flashes. di?> ziness, headache, dread of impending evil, sounds in the cars, timidity, palpitation of the heart, sparks before tha eyes, irregularities, constipation, variable appetite, weakness and inquietude are promptly heeded by intelligent women who are approaching the period of life when womau'a great cliangS may be expected. We believe Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- j etable Compound is the woi Id's gre^a. J est remedy for women at this trying 4 peri oil. I Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable 'om- I pound invigorates and strengthens th?S I female organism, and builds up ths weakened nervous system as no other medicine can. Mrs. A. E. G. Hyland, of Chestertown. Md., in a letter to Mrs. I'inWham, says: Daar Mrs Pinkham:? j " I had lieen suffering with a displacement for vears and was passing through th* change of life. I had a good deal of soreness, disrT sj>ells, headaches, and was very nervous. I wrote you for advice and commenced treatment with Lydia E. Piukham's Vegetable Compound as you directed, awl I nm happy to say that all those distressing symptoms left me, and 1 have passed safi ty through the change of life a well woman." For special advice regarding this important period women are invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn. Mass She 1? daughter-in-law of Lydia E. PiiUtham ntid for twenty-live years haa been advising sick women free of charge. Her advice is free uud always h^lnfnl tn tnlintr tv/tmnn IAt a certaS.-i age, a'.! W girls need the help of i I pure, reliable, tonic H medicine, to establish a M regular habit, that it may Jf remain v/ith them |J through life. Much ter $ rible suffering, in after ft years, is prevented, and ? sturdy health assured, w PADillil uc uniiuui | WOMAN'S RELIEF B TO at this critical time of D H life. "1 gave Cardui to & my young daughter," 3 Ij writes Geo. Maston, of Greenwood, Neb., "and Ei now she is a rosy m cheeked girl, happy. I 3j light-hearted and gay " I Strongly recommended 1 for all female troubles. I fl At all Drug Stores S You Cannot CURE all inflamed, ulrrrafed and ditions of tht mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, soro mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure these stubborn atfections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs,checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box THE K. PAX TON CO.. Boston. So. 23-'06. img a BUTE ? _Agents. men and w ><n?n, VV An I tu "('III. make from II ww ?nd more per day. witli vro|*r effort. >11 11ln< e-?er?l PopUl?r erlfi lee. W rite *t ware THK AMEUlCAN HUEi'LV CO.. Kicbinond, Ve a r N MONEY If you "lv* tT,em n"'PYou cannot do this unless you understand them and know how to rater to their requirements, and lurs learning by experience, so you must others. We offer this to you for only a heir own way even If you merely keep Fowls ludlelously, you must know notneurr selling a book giving the -xperlanoe e.l twenty-five years. It was written by nd money to making a success of ChickIneao? and If you will profit by his twennicks annually, and make your Fowls you must be sure to detect trouble In ths now how to remedy It. This book will e disease; to feed for eggs and also for ding purposes; and everything, tntfood. It profitable. Hent postpaid for twontyGt HOUSE; 134 L*oa*r<I St., NsWTorkCtty I A ...