( i 0 j You won't tell your family doctor the whole story about your private illness you are too modest You need not be afraid to tell Mrs. Fink, ham, at Lynn, Mass., the things you could not explain to the doctor. Your letter will be held in the strictest con fldence. From her vast correspond ence with sick women during the past thirty years she may have gained the very knowledge that will Help your case. Such letters as the fol lowing, from grateful women, es tablish beyond a doubt the power of LYDIA IL PIN KHAKI'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND to conquer all female diseases Mrs. Norman R. Barndt, of Allen town, Pa, writes: I " Ever since I was sixteen years of age I bad suffered from an organic de rangement and female weakness; in consequence I bad dreadful beadocbes and was extremely nervous. My physi cian said I must go through an opera tion to get well. A friend told me about Lydia E. Pinltham'a Vegetable Compound, and I took it and wrote you for advice, following your. directions carefully, and thanks to you I am to day a well woman, and I am telling il my friends of my experience." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female, ills, and has pesiiirely cured thousands of women whe have been troubled, with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion, dizziness.ornervousprostration. John Milton's Cottag-e. One of the best preserved historic country houses in all England Is John Milton's cottage at Chalfont St Giles, to which the blind and aging poet fled when the great plaugue swooped down on London. That was in July, 1CC5, and Milton bad just finished "Paradise Lost" and received a five-pound note for it, with a promise of three more five pound notes if the poem sold four edi tions of 1,300 copies each. The cottage stands at the top of the village, and It Is in practically the saue condition as when MUton left It. Here the poet re ceived his distinguished guests during the latter part of his life. Host Cholera. The greatest drawback to the hog Industry which breeders In this country have to contend with Is what Is known as "hog cholera" and "swine plague." Hog cholera is a highly contagious disease and unless checked 1 -liable to carry off a great number of hogs in a ..very short time. Mr. A. P. Williams, of Burnetts Creek, Ind., tells of an erperience which he had with some hogs that had the cholera. "Five years ago," says Mr. Williams, "I was in the employ of Mr. J. D. Richardson, Lafayette, Ind., as bis barn foreman. Some fine hogs that I was feeding took the cholera. I gave them Sloan's Liniment and did not lose a hog. Some were so bnd' they would not drink sweet milk and I was compelled to drench them. I v have tried It at every opportunity since and always find it O. K." Write for Dr. Sloan's free book on the treatment of Horses, Cattle, Hop and Poultry. Address Dr. Earl S. Sloan, 015 Albany street, Boston, Mass. Austrian mines are provided with res cue chambers at convenient locations un derground. They are equipped with food and conveniences for miners in case of accident. A BEAUTIFIir, WATCH FOB FREE To those who ship us $3 worth trt bldre or to those who buv guns or traps to thut' amouut. N. W. Hide & Fur Co., Mluneup lls. Punctuation marks were first uted in 1490. Only On "BROMO QITIXINE" Fhat ta LAXATIVE BltOMO QUININE. Lot (or the signature of E. V. OKOVE. IJeed tht World over to Cure a Cold In One day. 2Gc Couldn't ijUe the Job. An Inlund graduate came to New lork to seek employment Through a friend he received an offer of a place as shipping clerk to a certain firm. In reply he wrote as follows: "I regret that I cannot accept your kind offer of a position as shipping clerk, but the fact is that I am nlways sick when on the water." Success Magazine. Neighborly Cordiality. Mrs. Gadder (rising to depart) Well, you must come and call on me some day. It's your turn now. Mrs. Chillicon-Kearney Yes; I think It has been my turn for the last five or six times, basn't it? Chicago Tribune. . 3 With a view to encouraging officials and workmen on the Imperial German Hallways, the government has estnh llshed a fuud from which awards are made to men who Invent any appliance which may be useful in railway prac tice; $3,750 was paid to employes last year from the fund. When a traveler in the grand duchy of Baden wants to send a telegram while be is on the train, be writes the message on a post card, with tbe re quest that it be wired, puts on a stamp and drops it Into the train letter box At the next station the box Is cleared and the message sent. It is now demonstrated, according to the Engineer, that the reason coin er and iron will not alloy is on account of the carbon that the Iron absorbs In melting. If the Iron and copper be melted together in a clay crucible, so that no carbon can be taken up, the re sulting alloy is perfectly homogeneous and free from any separated nodules. It has long been recognized that va rious forms of dust, when mingled with air in certain proportions, are capable of producing destructive explosions when brought Into contact nlth flame This danger sometimes exists in dour mills. A historic Instance Is the ex plosion of three flour mills at Minne apolis In 1S78. It was then demon strated, by experiment, that two ounces of flour in two cubic feet of conllned air, when Ignited, would cause a vio lent explosion, and It was calculated that the contents of a flour sack dis tributed through 4,000 cubic feet of air would cause an explosion capable of throwing a weight of 2,500 tons to a height of 100 feet. Recently S. F. Peek- ham has shown that any dust that will burn may cause an explosion. An in stance is known where sugar dust in a confectionery factory caused an explo sion, and In another case dry sonp dust proved equally dangerous. How hot is the sun's surface? This long-disputed question receives a new answer from Prof. J. M. Schieberle of the Ann Arbor Observatory. Formerly the effective surface temperature of the sun was estimated nt millions of degrees. Then came a revulsion from these extreme estimates, and lately the tendency has been to place the solar tmperature as low as 8,000 degrees Cen tigrade. Prof. Sehteberle returns to higher estimates. According to his calculations, assuming the correctness of Prof. Poyntlng's value for the abso lute temperature of the "small black particle" which serves as the basis of calculation, the sun's temperature would be 12,000,000 degrees. But he adopts another value for the black particle, from which be deduces a tem perature of 20,000 degrees. Prof. Schieberle uses for his researches a specially constructed reflecting tele scope of two feet aperture and three feet, focus, which he describes as "by far the roost powerful telescope for this kind of work ever constructed." He promises additional fucts and cal culatlons. In the meantime it seems best to say that we do not know how hot the sun Is. THE CRIME OP WORRY. How Thla Deadly Eplderalo Under mines the Health. Worry Is the epidemic of the day an epidemic more widespread and dead ly than any pestilence that has ever af flicted this long suffering world. Everybody worries nowadays. The man worries about his business, his fnmlly relations, and so on. The worn an worries about her household, her children, her clothes. Worst of all, even little children do not escape wor THE LAPPS. SMALLEST r A'T &m - t "m i!F-',','ny! Two Pictures in Upper Line Show Winter and Summer Homes of the Lapps. Lower Lapland Women; the Lapland Express, Most North ern Railway in the World; ( Reindeer Horn Seller. Among the strange people of the world ure Laplanders, regarded as the smallest Inhabitants of Europe. The Lapp calls no one country his honm, and he Is little concerned In the affairs that Interest other residents of his native land. Altogether there are about 28,000 Lapps, and they nre scattered bver parts of Sweden, Norway and Russia. Perhaps the greater number are Norwegians. Those In Sweden are closely allied to the Finns. They range In height from four to five feet, very rarely more than that. However, they are a strong and hardy race, and jwasessed of great powers of endurance. For untold generations they have lived lu the frigid climate of the far north, and, although they suffer severely from the Intense cold of their native land, they do not thrive at all in a less rigorous climate. The reindeer, made famous the world over In our Santa Claus talcs, Is the Laplander's mainstay of life. Without this faithful friend lie could not long exist Its milk and nVsh supply him with food, and from its hide and fur he gets his clothing. Imrlng the long winter it is liariifHcd to a bont ahaped sled, and will swiftly draw the sled and a load not exceeding 200 pounds over the frozen lakes and unywhere In the vast expanse of hard, dry now. This queer anlmul, whoso food Is necessarily scant throughout the win ter, will thus burdened travel at a speed of from nine to ten miles an hour for many hours at a time. It Is estimated there are about -Pio.OOO reindeers In Lapland. For the most part thene are In a scml-wlld state. These shift for themselves. To be sure, the reindeer Is found elsewhere In Europe, and four or five centuries ago was found in countries far to the south of the Arctic regions. Deer from Lapland have been taken to Alaska, where they art flourishing.' ' ry their lessons, their examinations, their little failures and punishments at home or school. In order to realize the deadly effects of worry we must remember that all the various activities of the body, breathing, digestion, blood circulation, elimination of waste and so. on thut nil these are under the Immediate con trol of the nervous system; and that the nervous system in turn is governed by the mind. Now, worry Is a kind of Intellectual pnndcmoulum a state of mental con fusion. Indecision and distress. Suet n condition of mind throws the nervel out of order and thus deranges th functions which these nerves control. Let us trace this In. a single case, fust as you are finishing dinner you .ecelve a telegram. You open It You end : ' r ather badly hurt Come borne Immediately." Your mind Is at once In a state of rreat distress. You plan a Journey, nd so on. All the functions of the !ody are disturbed. The gastric Juice, several quarts of which were flowing Into the stomach, Is at once stopped. The meal, therefore, cannot be digested. nnd the whole mnss breaks down and putrefies. In the course of this putre faction certain poisons are formed, some of which are exceedingly deadly. WW Mi, THE MAN WUO WOBBIES. These poisons are absorbed from the stomach into the blood and are carried by the blood to every part of the sys tem. They produce a wide range of symptoms, varying all the way from simple headache or dizziness to sudden death from what Is popularly called "heart failure." This Is the effect upon only one or gan. The Influence of worry upon the heart, Imigs, liver nnd other organs Is, however, Just as direct and as disas trous. Worry Is a curable disease, but he who would cure It must cure himself. First of nil, he must realize that worry Is never of the slightest use, but tbnt, on the other hand, by preventing clenr thinking, worry mnkes matters worse. So stop worrying. Think, plan, de cide, set. Then await the result Thought, decision, action these are for man. Results are with God. W. R. C. Latson, M. D. A Sensilck Hero. No man is a hero while seasick. Ln fnyette was sent 'by Washington and Congress to France to ask further sup plies of men and money for the Ameri can colonies. He snlled from Boston In the frigate Alliance, and a passage had to be cut for his ship through the Ice. Off the Newfoundland banks the ship was nssniled by a terrible tem pest, which threatened destruction, nnd Lafayette was very seasick. His ald-de-camp, the Chevalier de Ponflbaud. who relates the Incident in his memoirs, heard him soliloquizing thus on the hopelessness of the situation and the emptiness of glory : "DIable! I have done well, certainly. At my time of life barely twenty years of nge with my name, rank nnd fortune, nnd after having innrrlod Mile, de Nonlllcs, to leave everything and serve as a breakfaut for codfish !" PEOPLE IN EUROPE. 1 kAUk L. 1 !SC I J) 'in im r mu T Aim Straight Is llamas. I Anthropologists have remarked that! tnktng aim Is a human characteristic! that even the anthropoid sties cannot be said to share. Apes and monkeys frequently thrown nuts and sticks, BoTiiUinc with unpleasant conse quences to others, but they show little or no ability to take accurate aim. The bnboon Is said to excel somewhat In this respect, but Silll It would never pass for a marksman.' Accuracy of e.ve and the Judgment of direction nnu distance tbnt are Involved In real nlm Ing have been developed only by mar. and nre among the tokens of bis In tellectual superiority. St IajuIs Re public. Hlppophagr. Iltppophogy being In low water in these later days, somebody lias set him self to show what au exceedingly re spectable history attaches to the prac tice. Among the ancients, especially In China, eating horse flesh was general, and It was only killed in Europe by a Papal decree of Gregory 111., though why horse flesh should have been In terdicted does not npiear. It was only the famine caased by Xaioleon's In vasion that revived the practice in Ger many, where it has survied ever slue. London Globe. The rebuilding of San Francisco has been hampered greatly by the exorbitant wsse schedule. The rates exceed by a dollar per JfiJ tbe maximum scale in New York. PURE FOOD. 'o Food Commissioner of Any State lfaa Kver Attacked tba Absolute Purity of Orapa-Nota. Every analysis undertaken shows this food to be made strictly of Wheat and Barley, treated by our processes to partially transform the starch parts into a form of Sugar, and therefore much easier to digest. Our claim that It is a "Food for Drain and Nerva Centers" is based upon the fact that certain parts of Wheat and Barloy (which we use) contain Nature's brain- and nerve building ingredients, viz., Phosphate of Potash, and tbe way we prepare the food makes it easy to digest and as similate. Dr. Geo. "W. Carey in his book on "The Blochemic System of Medicine" says: "When the medical profession full understands the nature and range of the phosphate of potassium, insane asylums will no longer be needed. "The gray matter of the brain Is controlled entirely by the inorganic cell-salt, potassium phosphate. "This salt unites with albumen, and by the addition of oxygen creates nerve-fluid, or the gray matter of the brain. "Of course, there is a trace of other salts and other organic matter in nerve-fluid, but potassium phosphate is the chief factor, and has tho power within itself to attract, by its own law of affinity, all things needed to manu facture the elixir of life. Therefore, when nervous symptoms ariso, due to the fact that the nerve-fluid has been exhausted from any cause, the phos phate of potassium is the only true remedy, because nothing else can pos sibly supply the deficiency. "The ills arising from too rapidly consuming the gray matter of the brain cannot be overestimated. "Phosphate of Potash is to my mind the most wonderful curative agent ever discovered by man, and tho bless ings it has already conferred on the race are many. But 'what shall the harvest be' when physicians every where fully understand the part this wonderful salt plays in tho processes of life? It will do as much as can be done) through physiology to make a heaven on earth. "Let the overworked business ran take it and go home good-tempered, Let the weary wife, nerves unstrung from attending to sick childrea or en tertainlng company, take it and note how quickly the equilibrium will be restored and calm and reason asuert her throne. No 'provlngs' are required here. We find this potassium saH largely predominates in nerve-fluid, and that it deficiency produces well defined symptoms. The beginning and end of the matter is to supply the lacking principle, and in molecu lar form, exactly as nature furnlslio It in vegetables, fruits and grain. To supply deficiencies this la the only law of cure." Please observe that Phosphate of Potash is not properly of the drug shop variety, but is best prepared by "Old Mother Nature" and stored In the grains ready for use by mankind Those who have been helped to better health by the use of Grape-Nuts are legion. "There's a Reason." BRAIN POWER Increased by I'ruurr Feedloa;. A lady writer who not only has done good literary work, but reared a fam ily, found in Grape-Nuts the ideal food for brain work and to develop healthy children. She writes: "I am 'an enthusiastic proclalmer of Grapo-Nuts as a regular diet. I for- mei'iy had no appetite in the morning and for 8 years while nursing my four children, had Insufficient nourishment for them. "Unable to eat breakfast I felt faint later, and would go to the pantry and eat cold chops, sausage, cookies, doughnuts or anything I happened to find. Being a writer, at times my head felt heay and my brain asleep "When I read of Grapo-Nuts I be gan eating it every morning, also gave it to the children, including my 10 months old baby, who soon grew as fat as a little pig, good natured and contented. "I wrote evenings and feeling the need of sustained brain power, began eating a small saucer of Grape-Nuts with milk, instead of my usual Indi gestible hot pudding, pie, er cake foi dessert at night. "I grew plump, nerves strong, and when I wrote my brain was active ami clear; Indeed, tbe dull head pall never returned." POSTUM CEREAL CO.. Ltd. Battle Creak, Mich "Is the plot ct your drama taken from life?" "Oh, yes; tbe hero meets his death In a motor car accident" Lustlge lllaettor. Were you frightened during the bat tle, Put?" Pat Not a bit, sor. Oi klo fuce most anything whin OI have in buck to It. The Circle. "Your son Joined a college fraternity, didn't he?" "No, It was trlpitltig at tha top of Ave flights of stnlrs that laid him up that wny." Puck. Jones 1 am troliis to ninrrv an En glish girl. Hones You U1 never again hear me say that the English have no appreciation of n Joke. "She lias a very useful husband." How do you make thnt out?" "He can alwnys migKest something that he wanta for dinner." lMrolt Free Press. lie Nrll:er can speak ,the other'i 'angviuge. She How did they propose? He Ixive's Inugnngo Is the same all over the world. Cleveland Leader. Mrs. Allcnsh I was directed to you as u diamond expert. Mr. Wayupp Tcppe Just so, nin'nin. I'm a baseball magnate. New York Commercial Ad vertiser. Mrs. P.ncon Why, that piano has several keys that make no sound at nil. Mr. Bacon Yes: nnd there are some other good features about It Yonkers Statesman. Scribbler Fin writing a book called "I low to Live on Five Hundred Dollars h Year." Scrawler What's your ob Jtvl? Scribbler To get the 500. Philadelphia Ilocord. In several Instnuces women have lately figured ns footpads. There seems no way that a man may protect him self unless he go armed with a live mouse. Philadelphia Ledger. "You say that you have your own way about the house?" "Invariably," ujiswered Mr. Mecktou. "How do you mnmiKe it?" "By always agreeing with Henrietta." Washington Star. Mother Why did you not scream when Hans kissed you? Daughter He threatened me. Mother How? Daugh ter He said If I did he'd never kiss uie uguln. Meggendorfer Blnetter. "Young Goit makes quite a show with his speedy nutomoldling, doesn't he?" "Well, from the wny he keeps on getting arrested, the show Is something of a continuous lino performance." "You know, Jessie, the good book says 'Lovo your neighbor,'" spoke the mother to her little girl. "Yes, mam ma ; but that was written before the days of flats." Yonkers Statesman, t "What am I ever going to do with such a bud, bad boy?" sighed the fond mother. "O, you leave me alone," re plied the young hopeful. "I'm not half as bad as I can be." Brooklyn Life. The Monument Man (nfter several abortive suggestions) How would sim ply "Gone Home" do? Mrs. New weeds I guess thut would be all right. lt was always the last place he ever thought of going. Puck. Eph llow'd you git along rldin' In them there slecpln cars when you took jour trip? Simp Got along all right but I caught a colored feller trylu' to sneuk away with my boots an' mudo 'im bring 'em buck. Indianapolis Star. "So you enjoyed Venice?" said the traveler. "Yes." answered Mr. Cum rox. "It wop kind of pleasant, for a change, to be robbed by a gondolier in tead of a hack driver." Washington Star. "I kuow It breaks old Sklufllnt'a heart to part with a cent, so I am curi ous to know what he did nbout bis daughter's wedding gift. What did he give her when she got married?" "He gave her away." "Have you rend of tho thousands of pounds of quinine that ure sent to Pan ama 7" "1 have," answered the man who Jests ou serious subjects. "And yet some people have tried to tell us that the canal is no greut shakes!" Washington Star. Kldlng in nu omnibus up Revenl street recently, uu old lndy was annoy ing the other passengers by her re marks. The conductor remonstrated with her, saying. "Ma'am, remember you are in u public vehicle, and beuuva us such." Spectn tor. "All alone In u trackless desert," walled the heroine. "Not a tree, not a rock in sight Here coino the ferocious lions! Oh, what shall I do?" "Diva troo do trap!" shouted a friendly stage band. "Yurc standln' right over It, Jeddy." Houston Chronicle. "I tell you. golf Is going to be the salvation of thfl nation. It Is going to make athletic men and women of oui puny offspring und lengthen our day by decudes." "But our ancestors didn't go In for golf!" "And where ure they now? Dead! All dead!" New York Times. "It would please me mightily, Misi Stout" uld Mr. Mugley, "to have you go to the theater with mo this even ing." "Have you secured tbe seats?" usked Miss Vera Stout "Oh! coma now," be protested; "you're not so heavy as all that." Catholic Stundard and Times. "That was an unlucky thing that peck, the eugliH-er, dotie," said the brukeiuan. "They gave him one of them new engines yei-terday, an" hf earned it after Ids wife." "How was that unlucky?" osked the track-walker. "Why, the blamed thing blew him up this morning." Canadian Courier. KoreslKbt hud llellrntessen. In Chicago Is a woman who com bines the functions of eaten'r and trt.nce medium, serving her customers with refreshment psychical or physical, aevordfng to their wishes. Either she or the sign painter whom t.e employed must be a humorist, fur hr sign reads thus: "Mndnme Blank, caterer and trnnca medium. Groceries and Previsions." Patience Have you tried dlubola et? Put rice No; I never use any thing ou my teeth but pure water I Youkers Statusmuu, V --atf-''1---'- -"-"-',-"J11n isZTmsmhu- in iTim ' in in, in , I,-- J 2:.Jk3 ! ll Lcoiini. s;:" ""TTTT7i7TT7ihTn7rr- ANtgetablerVwlonttAi sIraUatfjirrvRxxrantJRcut tuig ul Jiuiiuims BIULUOWJSa Promotes DiitlonChtetuir noec anA Bout fnnfilnt mlWur OpiuniJarphine rnr Mineral. HUT Kl AH C U TI C. "BBBBBBBaBBaBBBBa VBBBBaMBaaaB jUx.Uma AMItUtt- AnlsMn Jfnja, IHfllldUUi OlUHIUUI.f imiih i 1' Worms jtonvuisronsamriitt- ncss omLossuroixtr. Facsimile Signmrtof NEW kk Exact Copy of Wrapper. vmm II n " n j NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN Capsicum-Vaseline. EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE PEPPER PLANT TAKEN DIRECTLY IN VASELINE DON'T WAIT COMES-HEEP A OUICK. SURE. SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN -"-PRICE 15e. IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES MADE OF PURE TIN AT AI L DRUCC1STS AND DEALERS. OR BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c. IN POSTAGE STAMPS. A substitute lor snd superior to mustard or any other piaster,. and will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying snd curative qualities of the article sra wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve Head ache and Sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external counter irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains In the chest and stomach and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty complaints. A trial will prove what we claim for It, and It will be found to be Invaluable tn the household and for children. Once used no family will be without It. Many people say "It la the best of all your preparation:.." .Accept no preparation of vaseline unless the same carries our label, as otherwise It Is not genuine. Sand your address and we will mall our Vaseline Booklet describing our preparations which will Interest you. 17 state St. CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO. Him Yemeni If ! They act BHOCS AT ALL PRICte. FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY. if a v v-v Mi jw ii ain i i a s.-for the Bowels lR tiCs , I ' HI' SUM ' y 1 Ssil II i i-ii-ii.I - MSN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. 'r?3 W' B"tftm mmkmm mud mm Urn morn "STjtl . ' tnn any IImm mmnu factum In tho UJJ wnrld. bmomumo I hay hofa thulrTlliJ mhmn-i 11 bmttmr, mrmm lmpr, mna on or nromtm vmm titan mnyainmr fO m,Mm Et ihm wmrld to. dm v. Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Eqidled At An; Piles l?Alfrill. W. 1. flnnulnl num. .ml nHM II itAinnnl ON hOltORI, TftfcfW pntu pt me nnt tiiae nntirri Trywnrtt, Bated Catalog tiwa to as; atlUnaa. bliue NO BELIEF FROM ECZEMA For Over Two Years Pateat Mccll . clnea, Quack Cures and Doctors Fall Optleura Hnpceeils. I wus very budly afflicted with eo teiou for more then two years. Tbe parts affected were iny Umbo below tbe knees. I tried all the physician In the town and some In the surrounding ' towns, and I alno tried all tbe pnter.t remedies tbnt I Heard or, besides all tbe cures advised by old women ani quack, and found no relief whatever until I commenced uslns tbe Cnticurr. Soap, Cutlcura Ointment, and Cutlcwra ReeoJveut. In the Outleura Remedies I found Immediate relief, and was boos sound and well. C. V. Beltz, Tlppd4r noe, Ind., Nov. 15. '05." IlerusTnled Ills Faillnc Woman of the IImie A big, strong fellow like you ought to be willing to work and earn his own living. Languid Luuncelot Tiuu'a wot aila me, ma'am. Me miim-lea la all right, but me will power in all gone. We Sell Opns and Traps Cheap, Buy Furs A IIian, or tan them for robes & ruga. N V. Hide & Far Co., Minneapolis It is estimated that in New York City there are 12,.HX dipq who were educated for the bar who are in various employ satnts eutalde of law offices. Mrs. Wlnslow'a Hoot hi ng Byrup for Cblld rru tPetliliiK, softens Hie KUius, reduces lo flMuitnuili.il. alluya palu, cures wlud colic. 25c a bottle A IMplomatlo System. "To what, sir," we nsUed a middle need, lininilly uiurrlcd man recently, "do you Hlti-lliiitc the uucvegs you buve made of your uiurrlcd life?" " "I'ls a bit of elenieniury wisdom, my son," ho replied. "When my wife I In tbe wronjj, I agree with her, nud all Is well. AVben she U lu tbe right, I argue against her; she emerges trt luupkuntly, proves me foolish, feels rood all day ond again all Is well. Learn tbls, iny son, 'eio you marry." Clsveland Leader. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Haver Always Bought J3ears Signature In Use: For Over Thirty Years P ill MS sew vaaaairr. EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT. TILL THE PAIN A TUBC HANDY like Exercise. 1. maili"! from (ir l any part or the woiw. I1UW What a Settler Can Sacur taj VESTEEM CANADA 160 Acres Crain-Growlnf Land FREE. 20 to 40 Hu.h.U Whsat to the Acre. 40 to 90 ButheU 0U to the Acre. 35 to 50 Buihcb Barley te the Acre. Timber for Fencing and Uuilding FRBL Uood Lawi with Low Taxation. Splendid KaUroad Kacilitie end Lew ftnlssl SehooU and Churches Convenient. Satisfactory Marketa for ell Productieas Good Climate and Perfect Health. Chances for Prof liable Invoatmenta. Bonn of thelchnlcest eraln-producrnsTlaada mm 6aikatL'hewan and Altwrta may now be aoqutreel In thcae moat bealtbful and prosperous asiillsssl under tha Revised Hoinesfead Re25h!i:3. by which entry may be made by proxy(oa eartaSS conditions), by the (ather, mother, soa, daearhteaa brother or alster o( intendlna bomesteadar. Kntry fee in each case Is aia.00. PorsjenpeifcaV "Last Best West," particulars as to rates, miilsa, best time to so snd where to locate, aptar s W. D. Bcott, Superintendent el 1 I'rrnrti Ottawa, Canada, or E. T. Holmes. 31$ Jettiasy St., St. Paul, Minn, and J. M. MacLacblsa. M 116, Watertowo, bo. Ualtota. Autherued P 111 seal loent Agents. fleaae saj ehere yoe aaw this adTerttasssaas, Northwestern Harness Co lUlabllthed 1J. M rears square dealla. 312-314 Pearl St., Sioux City, lowa Order direct from our Factor j and aare far yoiir-air an loboers' aasl c oeri iic prosia. K-Ud for eaUkg sla. i S27 Just as good us sells for 135.01) B. C. N. V. No. -II RifflielitfiCb AST m u ir b.Uteea. J-1 V w