1 TJ I I I'kiALw nftho NkH'.!mC rrr-r : r----i:-i-iiJ hoc AJXTHlS 11 pif r IH IMF. XX TOR "OING ME ANY GOOD JOJ iMonron'a Paw l'nw PIIU conx tho Iver into activity by gentle method, 'hey do not scour, Rrlpo or weaken. They fcr a tonto to tho stomach, liver anil Derveg : Invigorate Instead of weaken, they enrich the Wnod and enable the ktomach to' Ret all tiie nourishment from food that Is put Into It. These iifllg con tain no calomel : they are noothlnir. heal ing and stimulating. For sale by all drus Biatn In 10c and "5c Cl7.es. If you need medical advice, write Munyon's Doctors. They will advise to the best of their abil ity absolutely free of Cnurse. Ml'X M Q'S, 53d and Jeficraon Sta., Phil tmfephla. Pa. Munyon's Cold Hemedy cures a cold In Eme day. Price 25c. Munyon's Khouma Usm Remedy relieves in a few hours and cures In a few days. Price 25c. KNOW THE CAUSE OF YOUR AILMENT FREE! Diagnosing disease, by analysing Hie urine bu proven a great benefit to suffering humanity as the teit of urine reveals the cause of your ailments. When the cause is removed, the road to health is short and quick. A. W. Van Byster veld, the chemist with this Company, has spent a lifetime in examining human urine and so " accurate has he become that the patient tells toothing, simply send in a sample of the urine, ' slating age and sex, he will locate the cause of four aches and .pains, describing them better than you can explain yourself. Mailing cases for sending urine and booklet sent free on tequest. Van Bystarveld Msdlclns Co., Ltd. ; 23 Sheldon St., Grand Rapids, Mich. Coarse foods will keep the bowels active. Fine foods cause need for Cascarets. Don't whip the bowels with a harsh cathartic. These candy tablets act in Nature's way. Millions know they ict exactly as coarse food would do. CUT TillS I OUT, Mali lt wUn yourad r dress to Sierllnc Humeri v Pmnnanv. ripany. dsome Chicago, 111., and receive a handsome toi souvenir gold Bon Bon Box KKEE. M OO'fJC IV, . hP i 5N I s ". iri i MIDELB. NOISELESS It is not a Burrey with a rattling air Cooled power plant. It la a regular Automobile, made in Jackson. Moderately high wheels, 2-Inch solid Tubber tires. Detachable rear ton qeau seat. A really handsome as well as strong car. It is not a racing car, but it climbs the big hills, handles the muddy roads and with top (storm front always included) it is a perfect "winter car. Pioneer Implement Co. COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. Send this ad. to us and we will send you a circular with full information. WESTERN CANADA a Senator DoIUver, of Iowa, tiyu-i TTh trtmra of eminranU from the United BUtea Utuada will continue. bentttor ixiiuver rorenur paid m visit V) nencrn iiu.ua and sayst inr i a land hunger In the heart of Eaij)ih neaklng poo- f ie; this will account for he removal of 00 many Iowa farmer to Canada. Our people are pleased with its Government and tho ice I ton admin la t ration of luw, and they are coming to you in ton of thooaanaa, and Uiey are till coming." low a oontrlbattttl large 1v to the 70.000 A inert farmers who made Canada their horn durlny lt09. bifid crop return alone durltijryear added toOieweuUti of tlkeuuuntry upward of $170,000,000.00 Grain rrowlna;. mixed f h ma in v, -:ittlo ritltny and dairying are nil ifrofttablu. FrM lloiue- ateda f 1UO acre ore to be aa in (tie very beat diHtrtrti, 00 jjktw prtwmptloiia at 43.00 r acre wltlilu ruJi-i mrva. .inoola nnd alinrth In PYwrY nltli'inent, cllniaU unficelleif, nil t lie rlrliPHt.iftood, wntcraud niUdliiv mutorlttl plentiful. h or mrl iculara ua to location, low pttlera' rnilwii rata ami oW-rlp. Iva iltimtntWtJ immnMut, "Liut (fwt WVt," and other infnrma ion. Write to Hup't of Imralura. tloo. Ottawa. Canada, or to thm fotlowlnf Canadian (ov t Agent: K. T. )litmM. Sid JankkMnHI.. M. Paul, Minu.. nd J. 11. M-lAhln, Box lis, wtttertowu, uhdu. ilmw auurM Bearaot you.) ay where you aaw this advertlMHunt. OEBTTS WAMTTED To introduce our Bauliful BprlnK bultlngH. Hllks ana 'ine i;otton sauries. i.are sample oui it Free, by express prepaid. No moiiy oulred. Liberal civil it to ivHponHihle kgents. Wrlta ami necure territory now. National Orenn Oooils Company (Dept. B), 260 West Hromlwav. jNew vorK t;lty. Veterinary course at home . f f )Hr suit npwBnii en Ik- malt tmhtuf mir ID I JZKJ V Vlr1ar7 ConrH tt bin i (JurtiiK .uro tsuf htls itmplMt Knllb; Dlplntna (rantml. o. mt all . aatutMUoa lotrtDlMd: n.rltt-ulr. frea. Oaurt ouubMlud rorwIlliilMI Ultifi:nwiwmtiii ri-ii fiMavi CmnrtMi SakMl, 10. I.Mi,luMa AlTrllTO WlsB.t'lin"ii,Wh IIR I lHTClliUJD.II.f. flook.ln. MikIi. I 14 I Kail lUnl nur.m Bt rwuiu Prove mm Allebr, nllr.,, ! Kxamlner What is an alibi? t candidate for tne uar An auoi m (rJfnmittlnK a crima in one placa when 'rvu are in another place. If you caa In two other place, the alibi la all a Ftaim i 1: i Mm Wm ITom 4 Uonfr in law. Puck. he Was Too Qalrlc. Thr were three at the title tM in tho cafe, a lady and two men. Suddenly the electric lights went out. and the lady, quickly and nolse WMy, drew back. Aii Instant Inter there was the mark of a compound klsa. As the electric llghta went up each man waa seen smiling comphiAantly. "I ' thought I heard a klsn," said the lady, "but nobody kissed me." Then tho men suddenly glared at each other and flushed and looked painfully sheep! jli-Cleveland Plain Dealer. WHY PEOPLE SUFFER. Too often the kidneys are the cause and the suffcier la not aware of it. Sick kidneya brins backache and side J pains, lameness and stiffness, dizziness, .,4 headaches, tired feel - jf lng, urinary troubles, ffvll I'oan-a Kidney Pills 4 th. cure tne cause. WrjtKiffrs Nathan R. Hill. S V"ri.V "Ut ' Stvyker, Ohio, says: iJ,l'ft "Kidney troubles pull ed me down until I kathan mix. wna gkn ana bone. I could not work and finally took to bed. Doctors said I had gravel and advised an operation. The secretions were painful and Bometiines almost stopped. Doan's Kidney Pills brought relief and ilnully a cure." Remember the name Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. FoHter-Mllburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. Supreme Tent "There," remarked the dentist, as he took olT the rubber darn, "you'll never chew on a piece of beefsteak tough enough to loosen that filling." "Hut. doctor," queried the sweet yoiinic thing with the tooth equally sweet, "will lt Btny In when I eat cara mels uml molasses candy?" TO CURE RHEUMATISM. Prescription That Cared Hundred" , Since Published Here. "One ounce Syrup of Sarsaparllla Compound; one ounce Toris Com pound; add these to a half pint of good whisky. Take a tablespoonful before each meal and at bed time; shake the bottle well each time." Any druggist has these ingredients or will quickly get them from his wholesale house. Good results are felt from this treatment after the first few doses, but it should be continued un til cured." This also acts as a system builder, eventually restoring strength and vitality. Jut IIke Woman! "The author of 'There Is No Death' has married an undertaker," says a contemporary. How does she expect her husburul to make a living? Charleston Xews and Courier. , FERRY DAVIS' PAINKILLER nonld im takon wIiIhiiu dfluy wti-n Mire rhpstand tlckllnir lliroat warn you that an onnovlnii cold threatens. At all druKitl stain &c, &c and &Jc bottles. Groirth of the Idea. "Remember, my son, there. Is no short :ut to learning." "O, yes, there Is, dad. All you hava. 10 do nowadays is to read five feet of pooks," A NEW TOWN EVERY WEEK. And a ew School Kvery School Day. The above caption about represents the growth of Central Canada. The statement was made not long since by a railroad man who claimed to have made the remarkable discovery that ench was the case. There is not a district of a lair amount of settlement in any of the three Provinces of Mani toba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, but has its school, and the railways have stations every seven or eight miles apart, around which group the towns, some large and some small, but each important to its own district. Schools are largely maintained by public funds and the expense of tuition is but a nominal sum. The final returns of the grain pro duction for Central Canada for 1909 are now in, and the figures show that the value of the crops to the farmers of that country is about 1195,000,000, as compared with $120,000,000 last year. American farmers or those who iiave gone from the United States, will participate largely in these splendid returns, and these comprise those who have gone from nearly every state in the Union. One of the many proofs that might be put forward showing the immense wealth that conies to the farmers of Central Canada is seen in the sum that has been spent during the past two or three months by the farmers who have for the time being ceased worrying over the reaper and the thresher, and are taking to enjoying themselves for two or three months. It is said that 50,000 people of these Western Provinces spent the holiday season visiting their old homes. Most of these passengers paid forty and some forty-five dollars for the round trip. Some went to Great Britain, some to the Continent, others to their old homes in Eastern Canada, and many thousands went to visit their friends In the States. The amount paid alone In transportation would be upwards of two million dollars. Some make the trip every year. It need not be asked, "Can they afford lt?" With crops yielding them a profit of $20 to $25 per acre, and some having as much as twelve hundred or more acres, the question is answered. The Canadian government agents at differ ent points in the States, report that they have interviewed a great many of those who are now visiting friends in the different States, and they all ex press themselves as well satisfied, and promise to take some of their friends back with them. There is still a lot of free homestead land in splendid districts, and other lands can be pur chased at a reasonable price from rail way and land companies. A Koul-Kltrrloic Novel. Yon uk Lady This novel Is heavenly. I never reud one with so tmtny roman tic unfortunates and iniaerubltt failures In it. Pi I ferule liliettcr. Free to Our Headers. Write Murine Eye Hemeily Co., OhlcairOk for tS paifB illuetmttHl Kye Bonk Free. Write nil about Your Kye Trouble and they will advise ub to the Proper Appli cation of Hie Murine Hemediea in Your Kpectul Cane. Your Druggist wjlj tell you that Murine ttelleves bore Eyas, StiviiKtlirna Weak Eyes, Doesn't Smart, Sootlma Kye Fuln, and aella for wOo. Try It la Your Kyes and In Baby's Urea tot ticaly Eyalida and Granulation. Ilnck to the I'nrni. There are three all-Important things to be weighed by the city man who withes to return to the farm. The first ia his wife. If she is In every sense of the word a helpmate, lovea the country and can give up what she has been used to in the city for the sake of the children and the building of a real home, then the prospects are fairly favorable to begin with. The second thing to be considered is your years and capacity for work; the third, what is your capital? if all these are favorable, don't lose a day In trying to get suitably located. If any one of these points is doubtful, deliberate well and move slowly. If you have a fat bank account and a wife tied to the fleshpots of the city you can do nothing in the country; but, cn the other hand, if your wife be ono with you heart and soul, then capital might at a pinch be forgotten. As to the second point that of years and capacity for work this is very important, because so many of those who art earnestly desirous of forsak ing th6 city to-day are well advanced In years, who think that the country would afford them an easy means of earning a living. There la nothing ensy on the farm. Loan on Farm Crops One to FiiiihI. Prof. W. A. Orton, in an article c-i the importance of the development of farm crops resistant to disease, justi fies his statements by pointing out that the present losses from plant dis eases are a heavy tax upon the farmer. He states that in the United States alone the average annual loss from oat smut is more than $G, 500,000; from loose-smut of wheat, $3,000,000, and from bunt, or stinking smut of wheat, more than $11,000,000. Loose-smut an nually diminishes the value of barley $2,000,000, a careful estimate of the loss In one State la9t year placing lt as 7 per cent. The combined effect of the various diseases of fungal origin attacking the potato diminish the yield of this crop over $30,000,000 each year. The above account shows that COW STALL Ji.iLJi ...li.Ai. J fl U r ' II. v.. LL hi i ii m J I I m : 1 1. t? r 4 A stall wuli movable wooden floor and fastening for the same. The ad vantage of this design will be appreciated in winter when the concrete is too cold for the comfort of cows. Two iron pins set In the concrete floor near the front corners of the stall keep it in place. The floor panel Is easily removed for cleaning. an annual loss amounting to over $55, 000,000 is sustained, due to the injury caused by fungi to cereals and pota toes alone. The Farm-Wife. . Where ends the road across the hill? I do not know I do not know; But all day long and all the night I long to go I long to go! It runs so straight beneath the sun. So white beneath the moon; It calls me from my work and dreams, And I must answer soon. I bolt my door, I do my tasks, I kiss my goodman's check Tet I cannot hear my baby's laugh For what the rond would speak. Where ends the road? I only know Here, from the pasture-bars, It Is familiar to the sun And mistress to the stars. Reginald W. Kauffman, In I.lppln cott's. Owls for Orchards. The fruit growers of New Zealand, after long racking their brains in vain to find some way of getting rid of the small bird pest, recently thought of trying owls, says the Sydney Mall. A hundred small German owls were or dered from Europe, and a part of the order was delivered last September. The owls were liberated In the fruit growing districts and immediately proved a wonderful success. They kill ed waxeyes, finches, green linnets, thrushes, blackbirds and sparrows; also mice, rats and young rabbits. They fed their young ':. caterpillars, grubs and beetles, and their only fault seemed to be an occasional fondness for a barnyard chicken. Mutter Fat and Butter. What is the difference, you ask, be tween butter fat and butter? Or how much butter will a given amount of butter fat make? Well, the difference la usually about 15 or 20 per cent that Is, eighty pounds of butter fat will churn about a hundred pounds of but ter. The amount varies according to the way of doing the work, for some butter has more water, salt and curds In it than any other butter. Anyway, there will be more butter than butter fat. Anliual Food for Poultry, Bones and meat secured from the butcher and cut Into fine pieces by means of a bone cutter are perhaps the best substitute for the Insects a ben finds when on free range. Horse meat, beln free from tuberculosis, Is probably slightly preferable to that from the butchers' ".tails. Skim milk Is a good substitute for meat, but be ing so bulky the fowls rarely eat enough of it to supply the required nutriment unions it Is (soured to a e!.K.l)ber and whey drawn off. Dried beef scrap Is a product of the packing- houses and If of assured quality makes a fair substitute for fresh meat. It should be fed in hoppers and should constitute about 8 or 10 per cent of the gialn ration. I-aadltiar Illocka of to. Ail easy way to take the blocks oi lee from a pond after they are cut is shown in the accompanying Hketch, from Popular Mechanics. A plank ten to twelve feet long, with a handle at tached to one end and a block of wood nailed to the other, takes the plate of Ice tongs. One person can take out a heavy block of Ice as easily as three men could with ice tongs. In reniov lns lee blocks with this board, the op erator will not get wet. Value of a Good (ianlcn. A good home garden Is a great Instl tutlon. It means more on many farms than the crop of wheat, corn or oats. It furnishes food for the family throughout the summer, and. If prop erly handled, a liberal supply for win ter. Some gardens are handled so skil fully that there is a surplus of vege tables for sale' almost every week. It means much to the farmer and his family and should be planned with tho utmost care and given the very best attention. InrrcnMliift Flow of Milk. It must be remembered that beyond a certain point grain will not Increase the flow of milk at all. The cow has a limit; she can use Just so much food and pay for lt, and no more, and It Is FOR WINTER. the business of the dairyman to find that limit, and he can readily do so- by very gradually Increasing the ration and keeping close watch of the cow's condition, of the voiding and of the milk yield. Every cow should be forced right up to her Jlmlt. She represents a sum of money j and when idle earns nothing, but has to be fed and Is taxi ble. Most profit comes from keeping cows busy, and at their best all the time that they are in milk. I'rofllable Hun Has NlrenBlh. The profitable market hog must pos Bess a good, strong constitution, for without this no hog can make a good .market hog. The hog that possesses a good, strong and vigorous constitution Is invariably extremely good through the heart and ohest, and here Is where he lives, and he cannot be strong and vigorous if huj lacks lu this essential of development. He should have a good strong balk, be broad and strong through the loins, for it is a mere chance if we ever find a profitable mar ket hog that is weak and poorly de veloped through the loins. Correct I ntr' Defect of Hoof. If the horse has defective feet keep them carefull trimmed and shod, If necessary. Tie soft hoof should be shd and re-tiliod every six or eight wtks in the ,wlnter when the ground is frozen, and at all times of the year where the ro.ids are rocked or gravel ed. By keeping the horse with poor feet properly shod lt will do good ser vice without loss of time. It Is best, however, to breed for good feet. Wlxdoad fa UultiaT Feed. When mueh food is to be bought the aim should be to grow so much coarse fodde that whatever Is bought will be bought in the shape of fer tilizer. The1 wisdom of doing this arises from the less cost of transport ing concentrates becauso of the less bulk which (they contain In proportion to their nutriment. The fertilizer may be very profitably used in growing the coarse fodders needed. ) HoUlsrt for Hrood Hags. A hen left to herself will get off her nest very) early lu the morning, when the air ij cool. She has the eggs heat ed to 103 or 104 degrees. She gets off the nest; and tho cool air, coming la contact with the warm eggs, causes the moisture to precipitate, and lt moistens them sufficiently without any addition al wetting. HOW Tt) KK.MOVK T1IK III.OCKS. i lErU CONVICT MADE GOOD. front y Mho Han Anay and F.araad F.nooah to Safe alater's Home. Out from the whirl of our material life come occasionally strange stories of human goodness in those whom so ciety has cast out. the Kansas City Times says. Ccnvlcts With hearts and loves and fine Impulses are by no means rnre. James O. Pogue was of this class. He wan a convict In the Kansas slate penitentiary at leasing, where he was sent for grand larceny. It appears that his only sister had mortgaged her home to provide funds for bis defense. But nevertheless he as pent to prison. Ills conduct as a .ciivlct was so good that he was made l "trusty," an ntllce that Is something at a sinecure and Is the only thing lhat makes prison life endurable to some men. But he never forgot about the sacrifice made for him by his sis ter, and when the mortgage became due he knew that the little property must be sacrificed. James Pogue wasn't a hero. He was a convict with years of Imprisonment before him. As a trusty ho could al most enjoy these years. If he sacri Iced the confidence of the warden he knew that the future would be black and terrible. But there was his sis ter's home that was In danger because of his wrongdoing. After weighing all the elements of the problem James Pcguc decided to make a supreme ef fort. He escaped from the prison and went to work. Wandering over the country, he did whatever his hands found to do. But always he saved and remitted regularly all he could spare. He worked in coal mines, in harvest fields, In railroad section gangs. Noth ing was too hard for hlni, and through lt all he never drauk liquor or' spent a cent that wasn't necessary. At last he had saved the amount needed to redeem his sister's home. In all It was'a little more than $!i."0. After that James Pogue could have gone far away and lost himself. But he didn't. He was no hero, but he knew his obligations to society and he was tired being in constant drend of capture. When his purpose was achieved he again returned to prison and to a servitude worse than he had before known. He could not be a trusty again. He could have no benefit for good behavior. But somehow James Pogue rises out of the muck of dis honor and claims respect. If he Isn't a hero he did something that was al most heroic. SHORT METER SERMONS. Conversion is no sugar coating over a rotten life. Itev. S. E. Young. Pres byterian, PIttaburg. Lack of forethought brings disaster in any sphere of life. Rev. H. Hep burn, Preebyterian, Aurora, 111. The world Is a mirror reflecting the. features we hold up to lt. Rev. G. C. Peck, Episcopalian, New York City. We have just as much religion as shown in our ways and doings. Rev. E. W. Smith, Presbyterian, Louisville. Laboring men should put Christ on their platform. Stand behind Him and the case is won. Charles Stelzle, n.-r:ht, Chlenco. Every heart can become a sanctuary of the eternal. Wherever there Is love there is holy ground. Rev. J. Sllber feld, Hebrew, Newark. Clean hearts, honest dealing and helpful efforts alone reach God's atten tion and gain Hia favor. Rev. C. F. Relsner, Methodist, Denver. God broadens life for us only so fast as we Intensify lt. What men de serve they sooner or later get. Rev. C. E. St. John, Unitarian, Philadelphia. There Is no other discernment of spiritual truth, but that which pro ceeds out of a pure heart and an obe dient mind Rev. W. W. Gillies, Meth odist, Brooklyn. In the school as lu the home, God, Christ, heaven, hell, faith, hope, char ity, duty, all theae doctrines and mors are needed. Cardinal Gibbons, Roman Catholic, Baltimore. Sin la that which separates ua from God, and that His holy eye is no re specter of persons, circumstances or conditions. Rev. Dr. Broughton, Con gregationalism, Atlanta. The commercial spirit of the world Is In the church. God cannot work through a church which Is dominated by the money power. Rev. A. B. Hoi derley, Baptist, Atlanta. Faith in God is the opposing fac tor in the great problems of life; faith in God is the determining factor in the development of man's character. Rev. F. W. Hinnitt, Presbyterian, Dan vllle, Ky. We must limit the value of money, lessen its purchasing power, to that money alone shall not be able to buy for men respect and honor and hom age. Rev. S. S. Wise. Hebrew, New York City. It is not a sin to enjoy Innocent amusement after attending mass Sun day morning, but men should not en gage In a business on that day only to make money. Rev. I. P. Whelan, Roman Catholic, Newark. So long as a man's liberty of speech and action Is not called Into question, be has a right to believe that he ban not exceeded the liberty of Interpre tation which the church permits, Rev. W. H. liabcock, Reformed, Bayonne, N. J. C navy's Vacatloa. Cafe "' wife was at the hospital, where r''e had undergone a very seri ous opt a Hon a few days before. Mrs. Kelly called to Inquire as to Mrs. fit ey's condition. "Is kI ) resting quietly?' Mrs. Kelly asked. "No. I. ut I am," said Casey. Na ttonal. In summer, a man with an automo bile 0!.:i make us feel envious, but In wlntu man wUi a sleigh cannot, howevt r many bells he may have. Joke from a show at the opera house: "Never run after a street car or a womun; there will be another along in a uiluuta." Another riivaaa To mho Jlasla. (Contributed by a depraved outsider.) A lion then sprang; Into view. And roared, "There's no use flyln'l I'm going to make a meal of you I" But be caught the lion lyln". BREAKS A COLD IN A DAY Aad t'nrra Any (una It That la (nra ble Noted Phlrlim' Formnlu, This Is said to be the most effective remedy for coughs and colds known to science. "Two ounces Glycerine, half ounce Concentrated Tine; put these Into half B'plnt of good whisky and use In doses of tcaspoonful to a table spoonful every four hours. Shake bot tle well each time." Any druggist has these Ingredients in stock or will quickly get them from his wholesale house. The Concentrated Pine Is fl special pine product and comes only In halt ounce vials each enclosed In an alr-tlght rase. But be sure It U labeled "Concentrnted." This fortnnl:. cured hundreds here lost winter. The poor children of Exeter, Rng land, are provided with break faun at lllieo! ut ti eopt of a furthlng. Dlatempcr In all Its forms, among all ages of horses and dogs, cured and others In the same stable prevented from having the disease with Spohn's DIstenipei Cure. Every bottle guaranteed. Over uOO.OOO bottles sold last year. $.r0 and $1.00. Good druggists, or send to man ufacturers. Agents wanted. Write foi free book. Spohn Med. Co., Spec. Con taglous Diseases, Goshen, Ind. The Purls motor omnibuses use a mixture of equal parts of alcohol and benzol for fuel. The average consump tion Is nine centiliters a ton kilome ter. Thl Will Intereat Mother. Mother" Orny's Sweet Powder for t.'lill ttren. un'il by Mother 5ray, u ntirae In Children' Home, New York, cure CoiihiI-r-Rtion. Fc erlHlmexH, Teething DiKordern. Stomach Trouble end iJemroy Wormx ; .10.0011 leRtlnmnlil of cure. All dinn KlHt. 2oi Sample FUKK. Addrecs Allen S. Olmnted, Le Kov. N. Y. tin on the Old Man. "Grandpa, bow many letters In the alphabet have more than one syllable?" "Let mo gee, Tommy; a, b, c, d. e, f " "You didn't learn your letter very well when you were u boy, did you, grundpu ?" Mrs. Wlnalow Soothing Byruo for children teething, aofien the kuiii. re duces Inflammation, allay pain, cure wind collr. 26o a bottle. Tt Might He Warta, Restleps Roger It always makes me sad, old put, to think that this earth la two-thirds water. Sandy Pikes O, cheer up! Suppose the rest of It was soap instead of land. Ally Sloper's. FOR nr.EF-NKATFI COl.HH and coubIih. Alt'n' f.uiid Katim mirn whiMi all oilier rniiirdlc!! fall. Thlmild iyIIhMh mi-dli'lna una lnn aolct lor Tired of the Uanae. "Bllllngsley tells me he has moved his gasoline tank Into his garage." "But thut's awfully dangerous, isn't It? The garage may catch Are at any moment." "That's what Bllllngsley hope." Cleveland Plain Dealer. tion or trade tite, and lay your nerves all V- IK ,an!!!",y lingering oough, bronchitis, or bleeding at tho lungs, it will bring about a cure in 98 per cent, of oil case. It is a remedy prepared by Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., whose cdvict it givtn frt to all who wish to write turn. Ilia great success has come from hi wide experience and varied practice. Don't be wheedled by penny-grabbing dealer into taking inferior substi tutes for Dr. Pierce's medicines, recommended to be ."Just as good." Dr. Pierce's medicine are op known composition. ' Their every ingredient printed', on their wrapper. Made from roots without alcohol. Contain no habit forming drugs. World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. ' I The shooting, tearing pains of neuralgia are caused by excitement of the nerves. Sciatica is also a nerve pain. Sloan's Liniment, a soothing external application, itops neuralgia pains at once, quiets the nerves, relieves that feeling of numbness which is often a warning of paralysis, and by its tonic effect on the nervous and muscular tissues, gives permanent as well as immedi ate relief. One Application Relieved the Pain. , Mr. J. C. Lee, of noo Ninth St.. S. F... Washington, D. C, write : " I advised a lady who was a great sufferer front neuralgia to try Sloan' Linl anent. After one application the pain left her and sh has not bean troubled with it since." oan's mim is the best remedy for Rheumatism, Stiff Joints and Sprains and all Pains. , At All Druggist. Pric 25c, 60c. nd $1.00. Sloan's Traatiae oat the Horn mt free. Addreaa DR. EARL S. SLOAN, BOSTON, MASS. MORE Added to the Long List dud to This Famous Remedy. Oronojfo, Mo." I was simply a tier. Tons wreck. 1 could not walk acrosg tho floor without my heart flutterlnai and I rould not evett receive a letter.) Every month I had' such a bearing down sensation, aa if tho lower parts would fall out. Lydia F4 I'inkham's vegcta ' bio Compound baa. ' tloue my nerves a' great deal of good and has alsorelie ved the bearing down. I recommended it to some friends and two of them bar been greatly beneiited by it." lira. Mak Mt Knight. Oronogo, Mo. Another rntoful Woman. St. Louis, Mo. " L was bothered terribly with a female weakness and bad backache, bearing down palm and iiains in lower parts. I began taking .,ydia E. Tinkliam's Vegetable Com pound regularly and used the Sanative) naslt and now I have no more troubles that way." Mrs. Al. IIf.rzoo, 672 ' l'rescott Are., St. Louis, Mo. Hecauso yuir case is a difficult one, doctors havinff dono you no pood, do not continue to suffer without giving Lydia K. I'inkham's Vcffctablo Compound a trial, lt surely has cured many enws of female ill3, such us in Humiliation, ulceration, displacements, libroid tumors, irregularities, periodia rains, baekuclio, that beariuir-dowa feelinfr, intligestion, dizziness, and ner. vons prostration. It costs but a trifle) to try it. and the result is worth mil lions to niuiy Buffering women. RUPTURE VrraDot If oiirtM In ft few dy without ft fit r it I ml onermttnn or iltMrntlon from hnxlnonn. No pay will t .t'tuii'l until ttt iUnt U Mtvpltl7 curti!. Writ or twit on DR. FRANK X. WRAY Ro.iaGdl.f L IT Bid,., Slot Cllr.lt. Don't Cough! -Use pis i CURE Will instantly relieve your aching throat. There is nothing like it lor Asthma, Bronchitik and lung troublci. Contains no opiate. Very pleasant to take. All Drueeiata, 25 cent. S. 0. N. U. No. 51910. Do You Feel This Way? 5srq aaaac am B W Do you (eel all tired outP Do you sometimes think you jutt ean't work iwir at Tour d refla any longer ? Do you have poor are- awake at nights unable to sleep P Ar gone, and vuur sComach too P Has am bition to forge ahead in the world left youP If so, yon might as well put a stop to your misery. You can do it if you will. Dr. Tierce's Golden Medical Discovery will make you a different individual. It will tet your lazy liver to work. It will set tliins rijiht in your stomach, and your appetite will come buck. It will purify your Mood. If there it any tendency in your family toward consumption, it will keep that dread destroyer away. Even after con sumption has almost fuiucd a foothold in the form of at Stop eurakfia Pains aMUstia)tftl cut N i