i mm foe m UOBSED LYDiA E. PINKHAM No other medicine has been so luccessful in relieving the suffering1 of women r received sa many gen uine Mtimaniills as has Lydia E. rinkham's Vegetable Compound. In every community you will find women who have been restored to health fcy Lydia E. Pinkhatu's Veg etable Cauripoiirid. - Almost every ne Vou meet has either been bene fited by it, or has friends who have. In tne Pinkham Laboratory at Lynnaa, any woman any day may tee the 115 containing over one mil lion o6e kundred thousand letters from "WtJnen Beeking health, and here are the letters in which they openly state over their own signa tures that they were cured by Lvdia E.-Pinkham'8 Vegetable Compound. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has saved many women from surgical operations. Lydia E. Ilnkham's Vegetable Compound is made,- from roots and herbs, without drugs, and is whole some and harmless. The reason why Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound is so successful is because it contains in gredients which act directly upon the feminine organism, restoring it to a healthy normal condition. Women who are suffering from those distressing ills peculiar to their lex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound io restore meir m'P.iui. a a Settler Can Secure In WESTERN CANADA 180 Acres Cr.in-C.mwirif Land FREE. SO to 40 Bethels Wheal to the Acre. 40 to 90 Biuheb Oats to tfie Acre. 96 to 60 Bu.hela Barle la the Acre. Timber for Fencing and Buildmt FREE. Coed Ijgn with Low Taxation. Spleodjfl Railroad Facilities and Low Rates. School and Cti arches Convenient. Satisfactory Markets for all Production. Good Climate and Perfect Health. Chance for Profitable Inroitmenta. Sortie of thelcboloest Kraln-produclnr lands In Saskatchewan and Alberta may now bo acquired in theie most heallhful and prosperou aectiont tinder tba Revised Homestead Regulations by which entry may be made by proxy (on certain conditions), by the ntrfcr, mother, son, daughter, brother or sister o itcndlnsr homesteader. Entry fee In each case is $10.00. For pamphlet, L"Vt BeHt West," particulars as to rates, routes, bet v Be to go and where to locate, apply to ''"i D. Scott, Superintendent o( Immigration, l-.wa, Canada, or E.T. Holmes, is Jackson 8 fet. Paul, Minn, and J. M. MarLachlnn, Bus lib, Watcrtown,, bo. Dakota. Authorized Govern ent Agents. . JNesse sbi where roa sew this adTertUement, Save The Package Tops nd Soap Wrappers from "20-KULE-TEAM" B0BAX Product and Exchange them Free ' For Valuable Premiums 40 pace Illustrated Free eawloeue of L0Q4 snleles. Addjos PAurlC COAST 0IAXCOCi?CeCllL Kitilicfidw f .m". Thompson's Eya Watar lori The Suspicious Man' Fate. "To be unfair, to be prejudiced, to be uspk-louB, Is aJwnya to Judge wrongly," aid Gov. ShfMon of Nebraska to tlie Indianapolis Star. "The suspicious man falls Into error and makes a fool of himself. "There was a very suspicious eoun trymnn who went to New York ' to see the slgitU. Coming to the Metropolitan Museum, he was mnnzed to And that the admission to this splendid building cost' nothing. He mounted the steps and entered. "'Your umbrella, sir,' said a uniform ed official, extending hi bund. "The eountryin.'ui jerked back hit nmbrella, laughed scornfully and turn ed on his heel. "'I knowed there was some cheat bout It when ye not In free,' he said." Deplorable Hualneaa Error. "Did you ever make a uistuke, doc tor ?- "Yet, once I wan called In by a pa tient and diagnosed his cuse as stom ach ache I only learned the following day that he was rich enough to huve appendicitis" Die Muakete. CASE OF ECZEMA IN SOUTH. aaTere Three Years Hands and Ere Moat Affected Now Well aod la Gratefal to Cullrara. "My wife was taken badly with ecze. m for three yearn, aud she aiployed a doctor with no effect at all until she employed Cutleura Soap and Ointment One of her hands and her left eye were badly affected, and when she would top using Cuticura Boup and Oint ment the eczema came back, but very lightly, but It did her a tight of good. Then we used the entire set of Cuti cura Itemed Ut and uiy wife is entire ly recovered. Klio thanks Cuticura very much and will recommend It high ly in our locality and In every iwiok nd corner of our parish. I. M. Robert, ilydropolla, La., Jan. 5 aud Kept. 1, ffpff Tiiiwiuir;i'f Whmk Opinions of Great Papers on Important Subjects. THE EBBING TIDE. I'C'II baa beeu wrlttou Ml la umber of linuilgrantt who sought the hoa pltable stores of the United Htntes In 1007. Much lets hat been m-adc of the number of aliens who returned to their native laud, yet thtt It In luany respects the more In teresting fact of the two. During last year more thaa half a million returned to Europe from Unit ed State and Canadian porta; and in the last ten years the number reaches the astonishing total of two and half millions, or nearly one-third as many at the num ber of Immigrants in the same time. Much has been discovered by the national comnilaslon appointed last year, even during its one year of service, at to the Influence of this returning tide on European life: Nearly all of it is of a sort to stir the hearts of Americana with sympathy and pride. Not only have families been raised to a higher plane of comfort by the labor of certain member lu the great "land of promise," but whole villages have felt the Impetus and enjoyed the benefits. The United Btates Is thus becoming a world power In a new sense, and a leader among nations by ways which Involve no military oppression and no diplo matic selfishness. No man need grudge to the returning Immigrant the money he carries with him at something lost to the United States. It hat been earned, In most casea doubly earned, by the hardest kind of labor, of which this coun try bat had the benefit. The more becoming attitude Is that of the man toward the garment which had served him for fifteen years. "Well," he said, as he finally re linquished It to the ragman, "It doesn't owe me anything for board." Youth's Companion. BEHIND CLOSED DOORS. OYV much better it would be for the Ameri can people If the courts here were to close their doors occasionally and shut out the public when gross details of Immoral rela tions or of crime are required to elucidate the issues Involved In celebrated cases I As long as the doors remain open publicity Is 2D la inevitable. The better class of newspapers prune and trim down their reports as far as they can,, and even yet there will remain at times a residue which offends the finer sensibilities. The loss considerate press treats its readers to the full dish of nauseating stuff. Mean while the courtroom is lacked with a morbid crowd of sensation seekers, gloating over the spectacle of shamed womanhood or wretched manhood and carrying away the most demoralizing Impressions to be scattered broad cast by word' of mouth. Washington (D. C.) Star. INTERNATIONAL MARITAL LAIN people sigh when tbey reusl of a now internntlou.il marriage between an Ameri can heiress and a European of title. What the title may be. or what they may happen to know about the contracting parties, sig nifies little. They distrust these marriages and are apt, when they hear of a new one. to think that another Ajnorlcau girl Is about to make a bad bargain. We must remember, however, that the International alliances that turn out disastrously aud end' '.tx the di vorce court are those that make the most noise, and also that our own divorce courts at home are kept pretty busy hhTfirst'' The roar of a Hon,, hunting, lsj a never-to-be-forgotten sound, declares Miss Agnes Herbert' It? "Two Dianas In So mnliland." She describes hearing the lions, following them up through the jungle, and the nearly fatal results to herself in their capture. In one tense second I realized that I had seen two monstrous moving beasts, yellowish and majestic. They were very close, and moved at a slow pace from the bush ahead Into a patch of atill thicker cover to the left. I remem ber that though the great moment for which we had planned aud longed and striven was really nt hand, all my ex citement left me, and there was nothing but a cold, tingling sensution running about my veins. The Jungle cover parted, nnd with lithe, stretched shoulders a lioness shook herself half-free of the density, then crouched low again. Down, until only the hat of her skull showed, and her small twitching ears. In one mo ment more she would be on us. Sighting as low as I could on that half-arc of yellow I pulled the trigger, and Cecily's rifle cracked simultaneous ly. The head of tho lioness pressed lower, and nothing showed above the ridge of grass aud thorn. The lioness must be dead. And yet, could one kill so great a foe so quickly? Then I did on inanely stupid thing. It was my first lion-bunt,-' and my ig norance and enthusiasm carried me away. I . ran forward to investigate, with my rifle at the trail. I had for gotten that the bush contatuud another enemy. A snarling road, and almost before I could do anything but bring up my rifle and Are without the sights, a lion broke from the side of the brake. My nerves teemed to relax, and I tried to hurl myself to one side. There was no pow er of hurling left In me, and I simply fell sideways, and that saved me. For the great cat had not bargained for a victim slightly to the right or left. Ills weight Tell on my legs merely, and bit claws stuck In. IJefore he had time to turu and rend me, almosrinstantaneously my cousin fired. The top of the lion's head was blown to smithereens, and the heavy body sank. The whole world seemed to me to be bounded north, south, east und west by lion. The men pulled the heavy carcass away. I sat up, feeling indescribably thaky. I don't remember anything else until I found myself in my tent, with my cousin rendering "first aid." f'ollteuesa and t'hllvarr. 'OS Who's that awful old frump over there? '00 That, sir. Is my mother. 08 Er ab oh, yes urn. Well ahem you just ought to we mine! Harvard Lumpoon. A word that we dislike very much It that word "natural," when used by women In describing the appearance of corpse. separating the mismated in whose antipathies race dif ferences navo do part Furthermore, tume of our girls who have married titles have accepted with them uieu of tuch demonstrated wortble.wucM that there was no chance of living happily with them. Such women had not sense tcotigu to make good niarrlagea anywhere. Harper's Weekly. about the enormous OVER HE minal, to Kef West Is 150 mile. Of this distance 104 miles will be constructed on land ; counting, of course, the coral formation of the keys as land. The rest of the route, which will connect the string of keys, will be constructed over swamp and water, of which about twenty-five miles may be considered swamp aud twenty live miles open wnter. On the entire route fifty keyt must be crossed. Some of these are of considerable size that is, they Lave an area of several square miles, but the larger number can be measured in square yards. The distances apart vary considerably, and the depth of water between varies from a depth of thirty Inches to thirty feet, the average being about six and one-half feet. Included In the 150 miles will; l e six miles of con crete viaduct and tome eighty' miles of embaukment, which rites about thirty-one feet above tlie water, this height being considered ample to protect the track from the action of the storms. I'opular Mechanics. niT tfn ever known before. The fixed capital represented lu the agricultural Industry to-day Is approximately $U.V 000,000,000, or more than four times the capital in vetted In all of the manufacturing Industrie In the country. From the position the American farmer now occupies, no financial disturbances, no business failures In the outside world, no failure of any one or Keveral crops, no hysteria or iwlitical agitation, can hope to dis lodge him. Van Norden Mngnzlne. VALUE OF COLLEGE EDUCATION. MIXES. EVEU tion for the larger life. The college course slionlil pre cede the technical nnd the professional course, and any omission of college work in the hope of a short cut to practical success Is n mistake. In the future profcu fttonal men must lie better equipped than ever before If they expect to hold their own aud to rise to distinction. Indianapolis News. MOURNERS ON SKATES ; STRANGE FUNERAL CORTEGE. Among the Wends, a remnant of Spreewald, a region enclosed by an arm of the Spree about fifty miles south of Berlin, Germany,' all the traffic la carried on waterways. In winter fu neral processions pass along the ice. The colli n Is carried on a sledge, and is drawn by six mourners, who wenr long lilnek streamers on their hats. The whole company goes on bkates, and Urn women wear the ancient na tional costume. THE CHORUS GIRL. Her Life a Hard One but She Has the Manner of a "(iraods Dime," There are lots of chorus girls, says Rose Stahl, struggling, plucky, spunky, straight aud good-hearted. They , are funny, but they are pathetic, too, and they havo a hard life. I studUl the chorus "lady" on aud off the stage for years. It's a sight for the gods' and humorists to e her at a lunch counter on the road. She falls off the train and rushes into the station to get a sand wich and a glass of milk, or a dough nut and a piece of pie. Sfle gives her orders as King Richard might call for his horses, or Cleopatra her barge, and heaven help the joor attendants if they do not fly to do her blddlugs. She Is disdainful of her food and scathing In her comments on the service. She pays her check with the air of an Injured queen and stalks out, leaving the lui'.chniom menials under the Impres sion that they have failed to please Mum. Duse or Sarah Bernhardt. ' Then she goes back to the train and will sit up half the night sewing frills on her costumes, to make a brave showing on the opening night In the next town, and then, after a nlgit of work, she trudges out of the station in the chilly dawn to search for a cheap lodging. These girls have a long Idle summer to get through on their sivings of the winter, und many of them huve a youur,er sister to look after or a moth er a': home to help, and they manage sojnehow to do it. And most of them run atrulght and turn down the John ules who think, like the villain in the play, that they can pay for the havoc they cause. Where does the chorus lady come from and what beom of her? Why not ask, what become of the THE SEA ON CONCRETE. rreiit ocean rullwav Unkluir Florida's I mainland with Key West and bringing I I Cuba 100 miles nearer the United States Is Ufailllfl WUIlJlt'UVU. I 11 IT UliUrilBHIUg lO doubtless the most remarkable piece of railway building now under construction. The distance front Miami, the Florida ter AGRICULTURAL PROSPERITY. vph re nt nrosiicrltv that tills conn. I try hat enjoyed since 1897, aud the revo I I tlon which has been wrought In the aerl- era. I i ... i injH.ian t 1 , 1. n 4 ... t can farmer In a imsltlon of financial and economic Independence tuch as the rural population of this or uo other country lnu was the need of a college education Nl for all who would engage in professional I wort more widely recognized. Then? has I .... i i Ufl'll 11IUI.1I 1UIII1I1I IM tllC UltriUilllH III 11111 technical fields of labor, but there has never been a time when a good nld fnsV loned education was not the best prepara A vis- fV'.r r v: the ancient Slavonic race inhabiting the plnsV She comes from the country as a rule. The mirror over the washstund la her farmhouse bedroom told her that the country was no place for her, ho she packed her carpetbag, bought some high heel rdines and a big twit, and came to town to show It what real youth aud beauty are. Hurl month Tale Hevived. A while ago an item started the rounds of the college pnpers, begin ning, It appeared, with the Dally mi ni, at the University of Illinois, and working like a soft-nosed bullet both ways through the college publications. The story was about what was culled a recent happening at Dartmouth. It detailed how the tax assessor of the district of Hanover, X. H., decided re cently that the students of Dartmouth College ought to pay taxes. There upon the students decided that If they could be taxed they also could vote. So at a town meeting the students, who far outnumbered the other resi dents, united lu suport of two proj ects. One was to have erected shoolhouse MM) feet long and one foot wide, and the other to huve laid a boardwalk from Ilunover to Ibanon, alMiut five miles away. Immediately thereafter the tax assessor made up his n 1 1 nd that the students need not be taxed. "Well," said a Dartmouth 'OS man, wheu he wus told about the anecdote, "that used to be favorite story when I was In college. I wonder who start ed that up again." If all the people In the world should agree to sympathize with a certain man at a certaluNiour, they could not cure his headache. . The only way for some people to get Into society Is to break lu. Te tlcaenrtt Slelrpnlra. Ab tpparatuinror measuring the aov-tnty-mlllloiith ptirt of nn Inch has been made by Dr. r. S'mw. or Nottingham Unlverslly, England, tayt Technical World Magazine. It works upon the principle of electric touch, aud co.i tlsts of a line micromotor screw and tlx lever. The apparatus is t seusl tlve and delicate thai It la Impossible to manipulate It before an audlcnc. It la hung by rubber bauds, covered with thick felt, ar.d must be worked tt dead of nlghr. when tbcrx 1 no trallic er factory working. The smaPest dl tauce tliut this inn bnulsm ineuauret la about tue dstuuc U'lWevii a solid und liquid molecu'u. Dr. i'mw'a l;r. edi tion was 111 st made lu UOO, but It great Improvement of lute Las made It the wonder of physlc'.ttt throughout the world. There It more Catarrh It this aactlM ot tbe country than all other diseases put lu ((her, and until tit last few yesrs was sup posed to ItirurMUl. For a crest ninny .Tears doctors pronounced It a local dlstas and prescribed local remeilr-s, and hf con stantly f illing to rure with local treatairnt. prunounred It Incuralile. Sclrnce has provrn catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hull's ( atati'b Cure. Bisnutactured by K. J. t'lieney a Co., Toledo. Ohio. Is the only con stitutional cute on the market, it Is tnkeu Internally In doses from 10 drops to a l-s-. spoonful. It acts directly on the blood antf mucous surfaces of tbe system. Tbey offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. Send for clrcnlsrs and testimonials. Address: K. J. CUICNKY A CO., Toledo. O. Hold by lriiK?lst. Toe, Take Hall's Kamlly Pills far constipation. A Sheep's I.eirs. A nobleman against whom Insanity was Imputed by his relatives wns asked flwlng the examination by Lord Irtish borough, "I low many legs bus a sheep?" "Does your lordship mean n live or dead sheep?" asked the nobleman. "Is It not the same thing?" said the chancellor. "No, my lord; there la much differ ence. A live sheen baa four lees, a dead sheep but two. Tho others are tuouiders." The tlillicultles of sending wlreKs ma aagca during the hours of daylight have been (.verennieto a great extent. WHAT WINTER WHEAT IS D0INO FOR SOUTHERN ALBERTA. Splendid Crops on the Former Handling Plalna of Canadian Meat. That portion of the country In Weat ern Canada formerly recognized at ranching country has developed Into one of the best whiter wheat districts In the continent. Yields are quoted running from 30 to 00 bushels to the acre, and giving a return to the farmer of from $25 to $,"0 per acre. These lands are now selling at from $12 to $1.'0 per acre, nnd pay well nt that fig ure. II. Howes, of Magrath, Alberta, Western Canada, had 50 ncres of land lu wheat, which averaged 45 bushels to tbe acre; his yield of oats was 35 bushels. The value to hi in per acre of wheat wns $35. J. 1 Haycock of the same place says, "I had 05 acres of wheat, D5 ncfs of oats and 4 ncres of barley. My average yield of oats to the acre was 80 bushels; wheat winter 00 bushels and Ued Kyfe 33 bushels, nnd barley 50 .bushels. The value to me per acre was wjieat, $28; oats, $32, and barley, $24." J. F. Urad shuw, of Mugrath, had i,03i) acres of wheat In crop that averaged 39'j bush els to the acre, his oats 32 bushels, barley 53 bushels. He threshed 31,000 bushels of wheat from 510 acres. He also had 250 tons of sugar beets from 25 acres worth $5.02 per ton. W. S. Sherod, of Lethbrldge, says, "I came to I.ethbrldge from Sourls, North Da kota, in April, 100", hnvlng purchased 000 acres of land In this district last fall. I had 128 ncres of Alberta Ued Winter wheat, which was put in on breaking in the fall of 1900. which yielded lorty-one und a hulf bushels to the acre, for which I received 8"Vi cents per bushel, which pnld me $30.30 per ncre. I had 100 acres "stubbled In;" that Is, disced lu on the stubble, which yielded 22 bushels to the acre at 87 ',i cents per bushel, which pnld me $U).25 to the acre. I also had 350 acres of strictly volunteer crop, which It was intended to prenare in the sum mer ; but when U was seen thnt It wns a good-looking crop, it was allowed to go. From this we threshed 15 .bushels to the acre, which paid us at tbe rate of 87 Vj cents per bushel, or $13.12 per acre. Our total crop yielded us 14,742 bushels of Qrst-clast wheat. Taking It as a whole, I consider that I bad a Urst-clays crop all through ; and, taking Into consideration the fact of part of the crop having been "stubbled In," and part strictly volunteer (which was never touched at all until the binder was put Into tt) I consider I had heavy crop. I might tay that I was in North Dakota five years, and I never grew as heavy a crop during that time. This Is the 25Ui duy of November, and my teams are still ploughing, and from the uppeurance of the weather, will be for some time yet." R. W. Iiradsuaw, of Magrath, says, "I bad this year 400 acres in crop; viz., 200 acres of wheat and 200 acres in oats. My average yield of oats to the acre was 50 bush els, ami wheat 22 'j bushels. The value to me per acre for wheat was $19 and ats $L7. The highest price obtained by me this year or offered me for my grain was for wheut 82 cents per bush el 'and $1.05 per hundred for oats. I also hud 100 tons of hay worth $12 per ton, and will say my wheat waa all volunteer this year. Lot of wheat It averuglng from 50 to 00 bushela per acre on summer fallow, aud on new breaklug. when tbe breaking was done early In tbe spring." Writing from Spring Coulee, Alberta, W. L. Thomp son anys, "I had tbla year 3,000 acrea In crep; vIk., 2,000 acres of wbeat and 1,000 acrea of oats. My average yield of oats to the acre wus 30 bushels und of wheat 35 bushela. Tne value to me per acre for wheat was $27 and for oats $15." , (Information regarding tbe districts mentioned, best way to reach tbem, low rates, certiorates, etc., can te se cured from any agent of the Canadian government, whose advertisement ap pear! elsewhere. Ed.) k. . x. r. . No. II I HUH. mTW-. tt -.C..B1. , Write lor fret Booklet "How to Dyt. Bltaei n Xli Colon. P B Vift IBIftftQQi 11 1 IV 00101 doubl .uantity of r,ooda-end better fur tano price J W-fMWVVwlwliMiij ordinary dya At your druggists, 10 ceott, or tent on receipt of price. with Putnam Fadeless Dyes Macroe Drug Company! Ouincy, llllstlj F a lea for Panama Itnia. Mr. William C. Hesse, who Is the gov ernment authority on Panama bats, gives the following rules for the care of your beat Panama, aaya Technical World Magazine: "Don't crush up Panama bat though It were a cloth cap. It can not stand such treatment; It will break. The stories of the Indestructibility of I'annma hats are untrue. kkiu't attempt to clean a Panama ha: yourself except with eonp and wc;"., It It fully to uftp lemon or acid orv-tbla tort of hat. and It la the height of folly to U't the Irresimusible and Ig-iioi-aut street fuklr do your cleaning, for be Inevitably uses the rankest acid. Don't fall to brush your Panama hat at least once n day. Straw hats should be brushed nt often at derby hats. I brush mine twice n day. and It Is nt clean at the end of the summer as It was at tbe beginning. Don't fail to remove a crease that mny lie auj where in your hat. Such crease Is bound to cut the straw. Don't be on relets pf your Panama hat. Trent It with consideration, and it will last you all your life." - K Only Lark. Xrvndu Muu I tell you, sir, naturt baa done a great deal for this Stntr. Tourist tfroiu the Katl Why, yea. All you need la to get a few peoplp to come and lrv lierr.Cuirngo Tribnna.' ALCOHOL 3 PER rrsT A.e(ableIVppM!(aiuTAs slmilaluTgiatRxidandlWula (mguicStoniutlsandBoMsor lromo!csDige3Honhfrrur ncss and Rest.fnnt.iltu nplthrr Opium.Morphlne rraruoeraL Jrfll! nu i ii au i u i ii. aBBaaaaeassaiaaBBBaaSB seaaajBBBavaaaaaaa finfimSitd jilximm feEaJWr A nnrTnet HrtmorUr fnr fVlTKfltlfl- linn Crvit R'-flllaV Wnrmt I nilVTIKimHTPVPTlSB- ness and Lossof Sixer Facsimile SigTinmttof ... NEW YORK Exact Copy of Wrapper. NO MORE MUSTARD THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN 'MM t " m ii'iMi r 1 ii 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii in i in -i 'If iISSO GunrarAeedlwlheFo0 I J a.a ialT saiiaaaaaaaeaassaeaaeaeaaaeaeaeM VA. aaeaiatcar ' iiSaasiau. , Capsicum-Vaseline EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE PEPPER PLANT TAKEN DIRECTLY IN VASELINE -lauasiinaiaai anann nni'maiiat DON'T WAIT TILL THE PAIN COMES KEEP A TUBE HANDY A OUICK.SURE, SAFE AND ALWAYS REABY CURE rOR PAIN -PRICE JSo. IN COLLAPSIBLE TUPBS MADE OF PURE TIN-AT AI L DRtJGGlSTS AND DEALERS, OR BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c IN POSTAGE STAMfS. A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster,. and wUlo blister tho most delicate skin. The paln-allaylng and curative qualities, ol the , article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relitvt Head ache and Sciatica. Wo recommend It as the best and safest external counter irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stqmadh and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Couty complaints. A trial will ptove what we claim tor It, and It will be found to be Invaluable In the household and for children. Once used no family will be without It. Many people tay "It la the best of all your preparations." Accept no preparation ot vaseline unVaaa the same carries our label, at otherwise it is not genuine. Sen your addraaa nd we will mall our Vaeellna Booklet daaorlblng our preparations whleh will lttwat you. 17 Stat. St. CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO. Ntw York City1 them like candy, and they will work gently while you sftep, They cure, that means they strengthen the muscular walls of tho bowels, giTe them new life. Then they act regularly and natuf ally. ' That's what you want Cure guaranteed. Be sure yo get Cascarets. Sample and booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Coaopuy, Chicago or New York. jtS) HOC AT ALL wlg '.jl HOC AT ALL tret, ron KVMV WCMSiaOfTHI FAMILY. MEN, BOVS, WOMEN, MlttC AND CHILDREN. vrp W. L. Douolmm suM awtaf mmnm mmn'm 9. Ait, 9a. UU atraf 9S.SO shoes Ihmn mtiy at hum ntmnui 'mnlrmr In tho SZPmworM, bmimumm Ihmr hold thmlr "d ahmpm. IH aWfatrv svaap IcMtffatrV ataf Rcrpa are ml prmmtor vmlum Ihmn mmjr mthmr mm- mhmmm Gthm iwmrld lm-mtm w. M W. L Oouirlat t4 ind'SS GUI lit, Shott Cannot r-tTA I I'lOM. W. I IVf.iifl as nam and pries chki ny 1 ne tkn anon neairs mjvtj taeeeee. "Tea, tlr, this town Is bonmlng," talf the promlnet citizen, proudly. "Only last week the new railroad was 0 Ithed and started running trains," "And Is It tueccsnful?" "Ton bet It Is. Just ask that nil r there r "Who's he?" "The receiver." Cleveland Leader. Tea f rs l.M Atlea'a I'est-Cast ritBU W'rltt c( In Allen Olmsted, Ray, K. V, for a rrtKR sample of Allen's rae Kase. a powder to shake Into your shoe. It cures tired, sweating, hot, swollen, ach ing feet. It makes new or tlirht ahoaa easy, A certain rure for Corn and Dunloaa. All Uruglsts and Blloa Stores sell IC Me. Srveu hundred dollar skirt it oat t tbe item in a bill for $3,UM) for clotbaa which Mrs. Howard (Sou Id wants her bat band to pay as rjocewniiea of lift. Only. Oao 'BROMO QVINIIfE" rhattaCAXATIVBBHOMOQTJININn. Un. for the signature of B. W. O ROTS. Deed tbe World ever to Cure's Celd la One day. Me, t'nrle Allea'a Clesmy Foreeaat. "They say," reflected Unclt Alletv Sparks, "that this new stager what's Iter name Tcttery something or other Tetrtxtlnl, it It? Thank you well, thty ill say she'a a rrenter sincer than PattL Chat's going to make trouble. The. Brat 'bine you know, Tatti will come bA to tliia country and five another farewell lour. Just to show 'em It ian't te 'jucka !" Clilrneo Tribune. , For Infants and Children, Tho Kind You Havo Always Dcurjht Bears the Signature of In Uso For Over 1 Thirty Years tat oaarava aersr, new vaaa errv. PLASTERS TO BLISTER EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT. About the first thine the doctor ears How are your bowels ? . Then, "Let's see your tongue" Because bad tongue and bad bowels go together. Regulate the bowels, clean up the tongue. Wo aU know that this is the way to keep well. You ; can't keep the bowels healthy and regular with purges or bird-shot pills. They more you with awful gripes, then you'ro worse than ever. Now what you want is Cascarets. Go and get them today Casca rets in metal box cost ZOd Eat Be Eaualled At Am Pilot Is aUmpea ob doiioss. -s bikv rtm mmmmntptm. 'aajajaa, sv apaeaBW w m aW (