ERMISH I want rxeiy rlironlc rlirnmattc to throw w.iy ull Dii'rtUlnps, all liniment, all plnntfrs, pnit r!vo MUNXON 8 KHKUMA 5'ISM ItHMUDY a trlaL Mo matter what our doctor may fay, BO matter wut your frirnds wif W DO matter tow riejmllied yoa may be acnlnst all advxr-ilw-a roniP'IlfS. p nt on; to r;i;r arrt r'"t and pot a uottto cf the KIIELMA 3 ISM I!KMi:rT. If It fn!1 to Rlv Mtl (artinti.I will Tvfnnd yonr Biony. Munyon Remember this remedy contains no Rl Ipylle nrt.l, no opium cc-alne, morphine or ither linrtnfnl droit. It i put up tinder th goaruutce c the Pure JTood aud Vrug A?or sale ty all drocelsta. Price, a5c Cf) I? A l R"1np'1 raya. We pnbllfth flml V aj I iI monthly,:.- pap? hutry l'atir, ma arlne atyli, M lid ft, a ynar. Kor trial, n.ml l.s rta. In tanii for a moril-lis. nml a umjila high . rail., HtlTftr. plal.d upoon. warranti-d for 10 yearn, ty leading Biajitifarturrrit; r'r.TH h dray" or lirlpht nntiili. Suut tKatialfl. Will toll yon bow to (ret t be whole net, SOUTHWESTERN DAIRTfUJf, tta k JkHm, SL rial. Kim. It Btmrti with 1 Thompson's Eya Watar aoraeyea. use It Is ploasnnt to grow old with good health and a Kood friend. Socratoa. Conptipalinn causes and apRrnvates many erioim discasri. It is thoroughly cured by r. Tierce's Pleasant Pellets. The favor ite family laxative. We often hoar the expression,' "as poor as a church mouse." Hut even a church mouse doesn't have to live on the collections. There are somo rich men who have made their fortunes honestly. Also you may have heard of fbe needle Id the haystack. Queen's High. "Does Dligglns ever bluff when he plays cards?" "Never until he gets home and ex ilains where he has been." Her Tribute. Randall How did you like the mili tary parade, Ida? Miss Rogers Glorious! J never Baw enougu men In all my life before. Harper's Bazar. The Family Growler. "Why are you weeping, little boy?" "I broke do pitcher." "Well, there's no use crying over npilt milk." "G'wan! Bis wuz beer." Louis ville Courier-Journal. Fable of Pan of Biscuits. A Vassar girl married a Kansas farmer. Two weeks later a cyclone made the happy pair a friendly call. It cavorted around the premises, ripping up the fences, scattering the haystacks and playing horse with the barn, but when It looked through the open window it drew back In alarm. There lay the bride's first pan of bis cuits. "I ain't feelin' very strong this morning," murmured the cyclone. And with another glance at the ter rible pan It blew Itself away. A Logical Landlord. Many a teuant will sympathize with the man In this story, from the Phila delphia Record. He was renting a small house which the landlord had refused to repair. One day the owner came to see him. "Jones," he said, "I shall have to raise your rent." "What for?" asked Jones, anxiously "Have taxes gone up?" "No." the landlord answered, "but I see you've painted the house and put In a new range and bathtub. That, of ".ourse, makes it worth more rent." Money for Tuberculosis Work. The National Association for tho Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis gives forcible illustration of the way In which a small sum spent In educa tion has secured large appropriations from state, county, and municipal of ficials. The New York State Chari ties Aid association In the three years, 1908, 1909, and 1910, has spent in the up-state portion of New York about $55,000 In arousing the people to the dangers of tuberculosis. As a direct result of the public sentiment pro duced by this outlay, the state, coun- ty, and municipal authorities have al ready appropriated for tuberculosis work $1,500,000 and appropriations for hundreds of thousands of dollars are pending. Hundreds of hospitals beda have been provided, and the assocla tion already aims for "No Uncared for Tuberculosis in 1915." Thus, the National association says if $1,000,000 is realized from the sale of Red Cross seals, millions more will be added to it from the public treas uries. Last year 25,000,000 stamp were sold. It Is aimed to sell four times aa many this year. When It's "What for Breakfast? Try Post Toasties Serve with cream or milk and every member of the family will say "rip ping" good. And don't be surprised if they want a second helping. "The Memory Lingers" Fuattutu rtl t Yiiupauy, Ltd., HU. Crrek, Hu h. KEEPING THE CHOLERA PLAGUE OUT NI"W YORK. Dr. A. H. Doty, health officer of this port, nnd his assistants are untiring In their efforts to pre vent the cholera plague from gaining a foothold in the t'nited States. Kvery person on every vessel mat ar rives from the infected districts of southern Furope Is examined with the utmost care and not a suspicious cuse gets beyond quarantine. Several ca9es of cholera already have been discovered nt the quarantine station, and the Kteerne passengers on the boats that brought them were removed to Hoffman Island. NEW GUINEA PEOPLE Natives Found Entirely Ignorant of Use of Metals. No Form of Government Exists Among Them Except Advice-Giving Coun cil of Elders Bark Paved Streets. The Hague, Holland. The latest expedition In New Guinea under Prof. Lorentz, which succeeded In ascend ing the range of snow mountains, has published some interesting particulars about a non-Malayan race living to the south of the mountains. These people have Caucasian or European features, although their color ls black. They speak a language entirely different from that of the surrounding Malayo- Polynesian tribes; Indeed, it is the first time that such a race and lan guage have been encountered In the Dutch Indies. The people were entirely Ignorant of the use of metals before the Dutch expedition came Into their territory; but once having made the acquain tance of European knives, they clam ored for them and would bring quan tities of fowls and game, pigs, fruit and fish to exchange for steel knives or iron of any description. All their own Implements were of stone, fish bone, bone and wood, sometimes beau tifully carved. Prof. Laurentz says that this is perhaps the last race of people existing In the world still In the "stono age." If, from this fact. It were to be argued that they must be on a very low level. Indeed, It ls surprising to hear that, on the contrary, they have reached a fair standard of civilization. DENY WOMEN BATH PRIVILEGE West-Enders Not Allowed a Dip In Royal Park Issue Is to Corns Before Parliament. London. Parliament Is to be asked to look Into a matter which is agitat ing the girls at Bayswater and South Ker,ington, who have a grievance in that they aro not permitted to bathe In the water of the Serpentine. Only men are allowed tho luxury of a dip at the royal park. The Lonijon couuty council encour ages women bathing In the parks, and at Victoria park the women are re ported to excel the men. What tho daughters of artisans enjoy In the past is denied the daughters of trades men and professional men in the west if London. One of the trio who went to the Ser pentine the other day and were denied the privilege of bathing states that they intend to bring the subject before parliament, as an up-to-date illustra tion of many one-sided systems in London that prevent women sharing he same rights as men. "It ls absurd," she said, lndlgnant y. "1 was told the rule was imposed luring the reign of one of the Georges, but 1 am sure the present George ioesn't know that It ls still in force." Long Walk on Honeymoon. New York. A walking trip around the world ls to be the honeymoon Journey of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Humph ries, a young English couple married here a few days ago. They left New York dreshed in heavy khaki walking suits. They declared they expect to be back In four years. HAIR CUT BY Continental Barbers Eschew Use of Scissors on Demands of Fas tidious Customers. Ixmdon. "I am compelled to go to Paris or Vienna when I want my hair properly cut. The use of tho razor Instead of scissors, which ls an Infin itely superior way of cutting hair, seems almoBt nnknown in Ixmdon." So says a Londoner, who complains of the difficulty of obtaining a really satisfactory and artistic "hair cut" at the hands of an English barber. Inquiries In the West End revealed some interesting facts concerning the use of the razor iu the place of scis sors. "Although the practise has been in vogue in Paris and Vienna for a great many iur:-;," said a tonsorial expert with a wide experience of hair cut ting and hulr dressing, "It Is very common lu England. I cnly know of one or two places lu London where balr Is cut with a razor, "The advantages of the proc, ar "1 - .... ; - They are not nomadic, but live In well-built villages, where even the streets are paved. Some tribes use for this purpose the bark of trees, while others simply place palm leaves over the roads to keep the dust down. Their villages and houses are kept clean and near each house gardens are planted, In which many kinds of flowers are grown. Those people are extremely fond of flowers, and always wear some in their hair. They suc cessfully practise agriculture, and their decorative art Is of considerable beauty. Strange to say, nothing at all like, any form of government could be de tected. There are no chiefs, and the only thing approaching known insti tutions is a sort of council of the old est men of the tribe. These, however, do not rule the people, but their ad vice Is asked in important matters. Notwithstanding this, the utmost good order prevails, everything being done according to custom. Their family life ls peculiar. Kvery person dwells alone; the young un married men have separate houses, the wives have their own homes quite apart from their husbands. When a married man wishes to speak to his wife It ls not etiquette for him to go to her house and call on her, nor to speak to her when he meets her in the village. He must inform a woman neighbor of hers that he wishes to talk to his wife, and the go-between then arranges a meeting for them In tho near-by forest. Taking these facts into consideration it ls not surprising to learn that domestic peace is never disturbed, occasions for quarreling be ing extremely rare. The Dutch explorers named this race the Kaya-Kaya, because on meet- FRESHMEN EAT LIVE FROGS Forced to Believe So, but Get Oysters Instead Other Novel Amusements. Philadelphia. The latest device for torturing freshmen at the University of Pennsylvania Is to blindfold the victim, and, after propping open his mouth with a small oblong block, to tell him that he is on the verge of having a frog dropped down his throat, and then in its stead to feed hiui a large raw oyster. Raw eggs are used when oysters are not available. This method was found to work effectively after twenty blindfolded freshmen had been forced to chase frogs in the lily ponds in the biological gardens. A small hazing party, at which three "freshles" were Introduced to several novel and entertaiuing amuse ments, proved to be merely prelim inary to a well organized and con certed attack on all the first year men In the dormitories. Beginnisg at 1 o'clock In the morn ing, they scoured the dormitories from the new Provost tower, at Thirty-sixth and Spruce streetB, to the apex of the Triangle In search of freshmen, and by 5 o'clock, when their operations ceaBed, more than a score of sad, hum bled and forlorn "freshles" crept quiet ly back to the rooms, dripping with the wet and mire of the "fp)g pond i" In the Biological gardens. College had lost its rosy glow for (hem after four hours of torment at the hrmds of their tipper classmen. "Come along, fresliie hoys," th' sophs coaxed, as they 3ii:.ml v doors RAZOR STYLISH unquestionable. With a razor you can 'thin' long, Ktrong hair in a manner quite Impossible with p lasers. The beauty of the practise when properly carried out ls that you cannot po. -si bly detect, after the thlnntri:: process, where the long hnlr ends and the short, begins. "I'sually only the tiuh of hi ; !.c:.i! are treated with a razor. Holding u comb in the hair and th'.- dge ot a razor Just below It, you delicately shave down on the hair, fcruip.'ally yet surely thinning It with perfect uni formity. "For people who wear their hair long and thick, yet do not wish It ui appear in tho least untidy, the method cannot be surpassed. "The Parloii.n v.tuis his hair more 1( osely thuii Hie EtiglLihiiiuii ; he likes It to Mund i.w.iy Irom the rrmwi of his bend in u distinctive fashion These various forms of coiffure are almost Invariably due to skillful uge of tbe razor." OF AMERICA Ing the natives they always shouted hope words, and it was thought that It probably was the name of tho race. Arterward it was discovered that the words meant -good friends" and were Intended to convey thi'lr peaceful tontfuns toward the expedition. ... nt-tn ir.i i rn nw . a i . i BIG BEAR KILLED BY WOMAN Mrs. Weston Adams of Stoneham, 'Me., Outruns Bruin, Gets Rifle, and Shoots Pursuer. Norway, Me. Tho bravest woman In Stoneham, near Norway, is Mrs. Weston Adams, sho has lain low the biggest bear seen hereabouts for many years. Alone, blueberrylng, on Spreckland mountain. Mrs. Adams, a frail but cour- ngpous woman of 30 years, ran across me tj,aj yOU i,nli taken your stenog-lii-uin in a startling manner. She had rapher out to lunch or done some nearly filled her pail with berries when oer terrible thing." she heard an ongry growl and looking tip saw a huge blark bear standing on a h dpe less than 20 feet nway. The Song of the Wheelbarrow. Mrs Adams stood her cround. She The typical small boy. with his dls- knew that to run would be a signal tlnct preference for boota that squeak, for the bear to attack. Tho bear would no doubt have an understanding growled ferociously, and Mrs. Adams of the Chinese character that is lack tried to drive it away by shaking herlng to the grown-up Occidental. Mrs. pail of berries at it. A. S. Roe, in "China as I Saw It," de- IVa. ing that tho bear would attack scribing her surroundings in Chef oo, her any moment, the brave little worn-otP8 the prevailing taste in wheelbar an did some quick thinking. She re- rows. memberod that bears cannot run fast Thero are few sounds In the air down a steep hill and knowing that Bave the murmur of the sea and the her rifle was below her she waited un- BleePv tinkling of the passing mule til the bear had turned its head, at- le". and. were 1 a Chinese, I should trrcted by a nolHO further up the dl the "music" ol the "scissors-grind-mountainsand then she ran for here" screeching In the willow trees and mu the squeaking of the wheelbarrow She planned it well. Bruin angrily wheels, pursued her, but Mrs. Adams had a There are numerous wheolbarrows good start, because of its lumbering at Chefoo, used for heavy roads, and gait the bear could not overtake her. he wheels always squeak. A squeak Just in the nick of time Mrs. Adams's lky. and is, moreover, a pleasant came to the tree where she had left sound In the ears of a Chinese. A her rifle, ard taking steady aim sent wheelbarrow without a squeak Is like a bullet into the oncoming bear, a dead thing. Some one overheard two barrow men discussing the merits and climbed through windows bj means of ladders conveneniently at hand from the recent building opera tions. All were ullowed to put on clothes, but tho more obdurate, who refused to dress were forced brus quely out into the chill night air clad only In pajamas. Those who were dressed wore their coats turned wrongsido out and their trousers turn ed up to their knees. All were blind folded and marched In military for mation to tho "Biological gardens." They were forced to imitate boiling teakettles, to offer supplication to the moon, sing songs and cheer for the sophomore class. They struggled un til breathless with lmaginnry foes and were forced to deliver orations on ab surd subjects. In the Biological gardens they were forced to rush furiously through the shallow ponds overgrown with lilies, In chase of frogs nnd, with the thought of frogs well in their minds, they were subjected to the torment Of imaginary swallowing of batrachians. Pumpkin Weighs 125 Pounda. North Yakima, Wash. L. A. Dash Is the owner of the largest pumpkin displayed in North Yakima this year, measuring six feet and four inches In circumference, more thnn two feet In ilimicter and fourteen Inches in height. Tlio pumpkin, which is of the French viuiety, weighs exactly 125 pounds and was grown without "milk feed ing." which is frequently used to caiiie extra growth. RATTLERS WEIGH 50 POUNDS Jersey Hunter Makes Big Consign ment of Reptiles to New York Zoological Garden. Newton, N. J. -Harry Trauger's an nual shipment of rattlesnakes, fifty po;:i:dj of them, got awuy from here cafcly The rattlers, safely boxed with a wire netting nailed tight all around, are destined for the New York zoological garden. The snakes' buzzing sounded like a distant sawmill all the time the wire was being tacked on. The character of the shipment was noised around, and by the time tho express car came along half tho town was trying to get a peek at tho box. "We have had one line season for rattlers," said Trauger. "I don't think 1'vo seen more since I've been in the business. Don't tell me the rattle snake is disappearing. It ain't so in Sussex. There wasn't a day In the mountains I didn't see at least one, and to I picked out ouly the buj I ue." LIFTED WEIGHT FROM BOTH .rbuthnot's Confession of Bin Gra ciously Pardoned by His Better Half. "Margaret," said Arbuthnot War burton, "I have a confession to make, but before I speak I want you to prom iso to forgive me." A wild look of alarm came Into the big soft eyes of his lovely wife, and a deathly pallor overspread her beautiful faro. Ovrrconio by a sudden feeling of falntness, she sank Into the soft cush ions upon the davenport and stared at her husband. Sho was unable to speak. -,Tvl me," he pleaded, sitting be side her and taking her Uttlo cold huuds in his own, "that you will be generous that you will not despls mo when I have told you all." "Oh," sho cried In tones that were full of anguish, "why did you tell me? Why did you nut let me continue to ho happy? If you had only kept on deceiving tin ! Arbuthnot! U Is ail a cruel Jest. Tell 1110 that It Is." "No, darling, it is not a JcsL But I have not deceived you." "How can you say that it you have a confession to make?" "Tell tne that 1 shall bo forgiven, and you shall know all." "Oh, Arbuthy. Arbuthy! How could you?" "It was a hard tiling to do, but 1 ac complished It." "You accomplished It? 1 don't un derstand." "No, little girl! Women are not supposed to understand these things. Shall 1 ton you how It was? "t Hnn't knnu I'm nft-nlil Pnrtiflllfl whcn , know , ( shaH (W you Pornap8 lt W0llld be belt(,r lf , nev. ef ,, No no BWCrthrart don.t BaT that TpU me you wl . yo me You ,n-must ..you flr hniMltK my noart! , nave n,ul R premonition all day that some terrlblo calamity was hanging over me. How could you be so cruel so heartless?" "I haven't done you any wrong at all, dearest. I merely wanted to tell you that I had made $500 today by taking an unfair advantage of another man, nnd that I Intended to hand the money over to you." "oh, Arbuthnot!" she exclaimed, throwing her soft, white arms around bia nock, "why have you Jested with nu,T j thought you were going to tell of their respective barrows. "Ah." said one, regretfully, "I had a good barrow once! It would carry three hundred catties, and sing all the time like an army of crickets." The sound of the cricket means to a working man In China toe happiest time of the year, when the fields are ripening to harvest and he can rest a while from his strenuous labors, basking In the sunshine. Youth's Companion. Right Action. - "What!" a wayward youi might perhaps answer. Incredulously, "no one ever gets wiser by doing wrong? Shall I not know the world best by trying the wrong of lt, and repenting? Have I not, even as it ls, learned much by many of my errors?" Indeed, the effort by which par tlally you recovered yourself was pre cious; that part of your thought by which you discerned the error was precious. What wisdom and strength you kept, and rightly used, aro re warded, and In tho pain and the re pentance, and In the acquaintance with the aspects of folly and sin, you have learned something; how much less than that you would have learned In right paths can never be told, but that It is less ls certain. Your liberty of choice has simply destroyed for you so much life and strength never regalnable. It Is true, you know the habits ot swine, and the tasle of husks; do you think your father could not have taught you to know better habits and pleasanter tastes, iV you had stayed in his house, and that the knowledge you have lost would not have been mori;, as well as sweeter than that you have gained; Raskin. Perfectly Impossible. The Princess Nerlssa's eyes were luring, flashing, witching, Intoxicating Her laugh was contagious. Her form was ravishing, seductive, spinning. 'Ilie perfume of her hair was sense stealing. And her waist was positively wasp like. Now. whi n a young American civil engineer of a hero is plighted by the author to such a combined Amazon, goddess, (lend, vampire, forceress, 'vine bibber, Bource of Infection, and I'aln'B fireworks, what Is there for the poor chap to do but pluugo from the edge of pare 43 Into tho leiherinust pit of nothing? You would think that was his only fo"ipt row vou'dii'i "on? Yet what docs Mired! :h Maor Mc Cutih do hi:t marry him ulT to thin princess of a tiioi'sacd Hdjvctiws and lntlmutu that they lived happily ever afterward. Fudge an.d caramels! There's too much Ink a .patter on i the basks of the Wubash, Completely Pauperized. Albert W. IlebberO, New. TorVH charlly expert, said at a recent din ner: "The great danger of charity ls IU pauperizing effect. This effect must bo avoided, or the recipients will all become Jack Handles. "Jack Hnnch. on the score of bad health, never worked, and the pastor of the Mtliodlrt church, a man whose heart sometimes outran his head, sent the idler and his family weekly gift cf (ood and clothing supported the whole irew. In fact. "A church visitor, after listening to Jnek'a complaints ono day, said: "'Yes, of course, you have had bad i ealtli, we know that; hut ono thing .it hnst you ought to be thankful for, and that U our pastor's kindness In si Miliim ou all this bread and meat rtn.l jelly and blankets, and so on. t iin't yem think It la pood of him to look ait i' you so well?' "(food of him?' said .lark, Imps ti'-Mty. 'Why. what's lie for?" Deadlock. "Who In that man who has been slt tlus behind the bar day after day?" Inquire! the stranger in Crimson Gulch. '"ri.it's Ptafio Coach Charley. He's In a peculiar predicament. He went to tovn lat. week and got his teeth Used. Then ln came here, and, beln broke, ran up a bill on the strength of Ills seven dollars' worth of gold flllln'. Charley won't submit to havin' the nuggets pried out an' the proprietor won't let him git away with the col lateral, and thrre you are! At the First Try. "What do you think of my dough nuts, George?" "Dar, you aro a wonder!" "Do you think so, really, darling?" "I certainly do. Scientists have been trying for years to produce arti ficial rubber, and here you do It the first rattle out of the box." Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Benra tho Signature UiaTZeJUV. In TJse For Over 3() Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought Both Unpardonable. "Agnes says she will never have anything more to do with Gladys." "Which did Gladys recommend? A dressmaker or a summer hotel?" Harper's Bazar. 1 Pettlt's Eye Salve Restores. No matter how badly the eyes may be aisea'cd or injured. AH aiugHiHts or liow ara uros., uuiiaio, m. x. A business firm advertises a shirt without buttons. That's no novelty Many a bachelor baa worn them for years. Mn. WtnsiwWs ftootfitn Syrop. yViretillilreo ti'MJilnif. anftmia tho wuiua, rt'ducentn flaninf t1"" n...i.n .iM.i.aiuwiiiiu... Sicabuuia, Anything left to be done at your leisure seldom gets dono. 3. Martin. lis1 W hen a woman speaks of her silent seoret suffering sho trusts you. Millions bave be stowed this mark of confi dence on Dr. R. V. Pierce, ol Buffalo, N. Y. Every where there are women who bear witness to the wonder working, curintf-Dower of Dr. Pierce's Favorite which saves the from tain, and 1 frapplea with woman No woman's Dm tHercu'a nf MlttB ladm Plea W. L. DOUGLAS 3 'S'l? & S4 SHOES ."WoSK Boys' Shoes, $2.00, $2.50 & $3.00. Best in the World. IV. L. Douplmm 03.OO, tS.BOand 04.OOmhoom mm momlllwrnlv tho bmmt mat9 mad moat looo' ulam altoaa for thm prlom In Ammelcm, and arm thm maat aoonomleal noe lor you fa buy. ara juu rnKiixvinai my an cm nave Men AMi-ai. li u k I ... .La a .All ao ehora thnn any othor manufitrtnmr In tha MM., nnd that HOL I.AK KIK IlOI.I.A It.I UUAKANTRK M Y HUOKS to hold tholr Shane, look and lit hotter.aod wear luntrnr thxn any other SUJ.OO, 3.SO or SU.OO ahoea you run bnv t Oimlilv niiinta. lt baa made ntv elioaia Til K I.K4IIKKH iP TIIK VVOKI.I). You w 111 be Dleaaed when von tin v m.ihM, wr.nu t. . an. urn. pprarauin, ana wnen ii riitnna "u ui iiHir, you win oe more maul the laat on. wure ao wtill. and rata von hi CAUTIOM1 wiTiom w. i.. n-,,, ,!.....,, i " 'iS,r'i" '.iaL-a X'J"1""?TS' ".'' '"' '? TUnat Coital Moonm on ys?l'r",''?",,'"', If which can be kept at full or low heat for a short or lone time. Four quarts of oil will give a glowine heat for nine hours, without 6moke or smell. An indicator always shows the wnount of oil r. tho font. Filler-cap does not screw- on; but is put in like a cork in a boela and is attached by a chain and cannot get lost. An cutomatlc-Iockinfj flame spreader prevent tta wick from being turned high enough to smoke, and is easr to remove and drop back so that 1; can be cleaned in an Instant. The burner body or gallery cannot become, wedged, acl csn be unscrewed tn art Ins ant for rewfeking. Finished In Japan or nfckcl, stronR, durablefwS tnade. nuilt far errvl mrl.., i.ki..j ... ..' '''.. .. , . (v. Dtoltn Bmrytn. H tM ot 1 IM araM (t MOTHER CUED By Lydia E. Pinldiam's Vegetable Compound Black Dnck, Jlinrt "Abont a yrat airo I wrote you that I was sick anoj couul not do any ot my housework. Mr sickness was railed retroflexion. When I would sit down X felt as if I could not (re tun. I took Lydia E. nnkham' Ve Rotable Com pound and did jus) as you told me an4 now I am perfectly cured, and have biar babv bor."- A:yH- ' Mrs. Anna Axdkrsox, JJox 19, lilarjf Duck, Minn. Consider Tills Advice No woman should submit to a snrcia cal operation, which may mean death, until she has given Lydia E. rinkham'g V ejpetahlo Compound, made exclusive ly irom roots and herbs, a fair trial i This famous medicine for women has for thirty years proved to be tba most valuable tonio aud invijroratorof tho female orcraniatn. Women resid inffin almost every city and town 1 the United States bear willing testW monv to the wonderful virtue or Lydl E. lMnkliam's Vegetable Compound.' It cures female ills, and creates radV ant, buoyant fenialo health. If you are ill, for your own sake as well aa those you love, pivo it a trlaL Mrs. PinUham. at Lynn, Mass., Invites nil sick women to vntito licrforndvico. Ileradvioeisfre. and ahvaya helpful. Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine time in ten when tKe CtcT ! fi&t uW stomach and bowel ara right CARTER'S UI LIVER FILLS gently but firmly rel a luy liver I do iu duty, t Cure Coll' tipation. Indiges tion, Sick Headache, and Distress sftar Eatinav Small Pill, Small Votm, Small Prk Genuine sbf Signature S3 PATENTS War R.Clfiman,Wa lnilton, U.O. Boutoln. Hlia. at tefcinaooa. iicat riTta W. N. U SIOUX CITY, NO. 44-1810 . ; 3 Honored by Women Prescription " y : suffering set J Vf J successfully f v - 'A Lf I 's weak t r ',t i nesses snd ttubboru ills. IT MAKES WEAK WOnEN STRONG1 1 IT flAKES SICK WOMEN WELL. appeal was ever misdirected or bec ndenoe misplaced when she wrote for advice, to the World's DursNSAsr Mudical Association, Dr. R. V. Pierce, President, buffalo, N. Y. mild amturml bowel mortmtnt oncm m dtfk tne alanilaru (or over iV iia at-, n . t . i a. . . . lime for you t ue for you to pur- pP t 1 i pleaaod Imwmu-m. pCq71TVtzyfZ4 10 uiurli comfort. w L. Do! tavi da. Donicui ,i.k..,7..." i A&ri. ran tiiifvi iTiiTir . left iuara, ktu-eoi. Itrmiiatoa. Ma the side of the hniicr. vhena. f .,. isf, . a Aa . . :ii winter blasts strike hardest always has a lower temperature than tno rest of the house. There are times, when It is necessary to raise the temperature quickly or to keep the temperature up for a long period. That can't be done by the regular method of heating without great trouble and overheating the rest of tie house. The only reliable method of heating such a room alone by other means is to use a E-5 Absolutely KtokeletM araJ aAmlm auu vruuiicniai. nas a cool Cinaio. w, mitt dcx . it ittmy e tin t J