A KENTUCKY WOMAN How She Gained Fifteen Pounds In VAdghtand BacameWell byTaking Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. Women at forty, or thereabouts, have their future in their own hands. There will he a change for tho better or worse, for the better if the system is purified by such a tonic as Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. Mrs. D. C. Wedding, of Hartford, Ky., writes as follows concerning the diffi culties which afflicted her: “ I was seriously ill and was confined to my bed for six or eight mouths in all, during two years. X had chills, fever, rheumatism. My stomach seemed al ways too full, my kidneys did not act freely, any liver was inactive, my heart beat was very weak and I had dizziness or swimming in my head and nervous troubles. “Iwas under the treatment of several different physicians but they all failed to dome any good. After suffering for two years 1 learned from an Arkansas friend, about the merits of Dr.Williams’ Pinlc Pills and I decided that I would try them. The very first box I took made me feel better and when I had tnkonfoujrbuxesmorel was.entire.ly well, weighed fifteen pounds more than when I began, resumed my household duties, ami intve since continued in the best of health. I have recommended Dr. Wil liams’ Pink Pills to man* people on ac count, of what they did for me, and I feel that I cannot pause them too strongly.” Dr. williams’Pink Pills restored Mrs. Wedding to health because they actually make new blood ami when the blood is in full vigor every function of tho body is restored, because t he blood carries to every organ, every muscle, every nerve, the necessary nourishment. Any woman who is interested in thecureof Mrs. Wed ding trill want our book, “Plain Talks to Women,” which is free on request. All druggists sell Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, or they will be sent by mail post paid, on receipt of price, 00 cents per box, six boxes-for $2.50, hv the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N.Y. S CURES S1EK-HE4DACHE \ x Tablets and powders adve^sed > \ as cures for sick-headachc are gen- \ x erap_ly harmful and they do not cure \ J but only deaden the pain by putting £ V tlie nerves lo sleep for a short time w I through the use of morphine or V cocaine. 0 Lane’s Family < Medicine | the tonic-laxative, cures sick-head- W ache, not merely stops it for an £ hour or two. It removes the cause ^ of headache and keeps it away. i Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c. # m;,,f,'.“sd.’»Thompson’s Eye Water Teaching a City’s Poor. From Everybody's jylagazine. In the city of New Orleans are ap proximately 100,000 white men and boys. Of these, 1,500—three out of every 200 you meet on the street—are dependent for their education this year, tor the opportunity to learn to read and to write and so to advance their station in life—for all this absolutely dependent on one woman. This wom an, whose impontance to the city is so great that if by any sad chance her activity were to cease, 1% per cent, of Its White male population would find itself deprived of hope, is not rich, but poor. She is so poor that before she can give an hour and a dollar for the helpless ones who need her, she must give another hour to pay her own ex penses for the day. She is so poor that Blie has even earned her own education as site has given it out, studying some times but a day ahead of her pupils. She is frail, crippled, very weak; she goes about in a steel harness and on crutches. Though she is still under middle age, her hair is white as snow, from days and nights of unrelievable suffering. From morning till mid-aft ernoon she teaches in a private school to earn money for her charities. From mid-afternoon until evening, if able to work, she devotes herself to the needs of those poorer than she. From sup per time till 9, till 10, till midnight it need be, she faces the multitude of men and boys—boys of 9 and men of E0— who have come to her for help. Sometimes two in a seat, sometimes on boards between the seats, sometimes on the edges bf platforms and the treads of staiiways and against the walls of the hallways, they crowd her school house, while she and her assist ants are everywhere among them, hear ing recitations, giving aid and counsel, explaining, arguing, laughing, eneour Rgirfg—stirring the solid, sodden mass of the c&y's poor with tiie leaven of hope and possibility. Experiments are being made in Nor way vylth fish as food for poultry. If successful a new and profitable indus try will be established. RIGHT HOME. Doctor Recommends Poxtum from Personal Test. No one Is better able to realize the Injurious action of caffeine—the drug In coffee—on the heart, than the doc tor. When the doctor himself has been relieved by simply leaving off coffee end using I’ostuiii, he can refer with full conviction to his own case. A Missouri physician prescribes Pos tum for many of his patients because lie as benefited by It. lie says: "1 wish to add my testimony in re gal'd to that excellent preparation— l’ostum. I have had functional or nervous heart trouble for over 15 years, and part of the time was un able to attend to my business. "1 was a moderate user of coffee and did not think drinking it hurt me. But on stopping it and using I’ostum instead, my heart lias got all right, and i ascribe it to the change from coffee to I’ostum. "I mu prescribing it now In cases of sickness, especially when coffee dues not agree, or affects the heart, nerves or stomach. “When made tight it has a much better flavor than coffee and Is a vi tal sustaiuer of ttie system I si-rfTl continue to recommend It to our peo ple. and I have my own ease to refer to." Name given by I’ostum Co., Hat tie Creek. Mich Head the little book, "The Hoad to Weilville,” in pkgs. "There's a reason.” AN EXCELLENT HOUSE PLANT. Those who have successfully grown the rubber plant, one of the easiest of the or namental plants to grow indoors during the winter, will be Interested In the Gold Dust Dradaena because It Is quite as easy to grow as the rubber plant and is so dif ferent In form that It will make a decided acquisition to the plant collection. Not only Is it distinct from the rubber plant but It Is different In form from the other ■varieties of the same family; it Is more compact In habit developes from the base hence makes a pretty plant even when very young. The leaves are abundant, broad and rich dark green In color sprln kled liberally with sijocs of rich j-tllow from which peculiarity the plant gets its popu lar name. As the plant gets older these spots gradually change to a creamy white thus adding to the peculiarity and beauty | of the plant. The plants are not expensive and may be obtained from any florist. If potted in fairly rich soil with sufficient drainage in the bottom of the pot the variety will succeed in the hands of any one who grows the ordinary house plants with success. ABOUT THE SMALL FARM. So much is being printed concerning the desirability of the small farm over the large one, we have often urged It in this department, there is abundance opportun ity for one to get a wrong conception of the situation and make costly and almost fatal mistakes. With some readers the Impression seems to prevail that the ad vice is to turn to gardening on a few acres and let the rest of the farm shift for it self. This might be profitably done in some cases and in some sections but in the majority of cases it would be suicidal. There are many farms in the country on | which corn is the main crop. A man may | have fifty to 100 acres in corn and make a crop of thirty or forty bushels per acre while if he had twenty acres in corn he could readily increase his yield and, per haps, put the balance into meadow and make much more actual profit with much less work than he did on the larger area. Here is an instance of where he would gain by the change. On the other hand he might turn one-half of the fifty acres Into truck garden stuff and by reason of the added expense for help and fertilizers and his distance from market make less money and do more work than he did on the fifty acres in corn even with the low crop average. The mater of a reduction of the cultivated area must needs be looked at very closely and, if the change Is made, do it on the lines which will increase the profit and reduce the labor and expense else It is not a profitable move. FEEDING GREEN EONE. There is some misconception regarding the use of bone for poultry. Much dry ground bone is used which is of little value to tlie poultry. On the other hand the green cut bone, which Is readily broken into pieces suitable for the poultry to con Rurae, by the use of the bone mill, sup- I plies ...e fowls witli considerable nitrogen ous food in addition to furnishing the al bumen for the eggs and tho lime for the shells so that, in winter, when the fowls cannot get the necessary materials for these purposes on the range, the green bone is absolutely necessary to them for best results if one is looking for eggs. In addition, the cost is very small for bones can be had from the local butcher, as a rule, at little or no cost so that the ex pense is the cost of the mill and the la bor of operating it. Be sure the green bone Is fed in your hennery this winter if you would get proper egg returns. WINTER FEEDING OF SWINE. ! Some people feel that it makes no dif ference where or how the hogs are fed provided they have enough feed. This is not logical reasoning for unless the swir.e are fed in a manner and in a place so that they can eat comfortably the food does not benefit them as it would under other conditions. When cool weather begins we arrange our troughs under cover and place them on one side of a platform raised sev eral inches from the floor care being taken not to get them too high or the hogs will slip in getting up particularly as they get heavy. The idea of the platform is that after they have finished feeding they will get down on the lower level where the bedding is and where there is more room. In this way there is little opporiunity to soil ..ie troughs, we place them a little high so that the heavy hog would be some what troubled to get its feet in the trough, and nothing to tempt them to stay on the platform after they have finished eating. Troughs placed in the manner described also give one an opportunity to keep them much cleaner than would he possible in any otlxer way. The plan is worth looking into and few hog houses are so arranged that they cannot he planned to provide for this manner of feeding. MAN AND WOMAN FARM COM FORTS. 1 Tt must be confessed that on many farms throughout the country the man plans . things as far as possible so that his work can be conveniently done and with as little labor as possible. This is very prop er and it is commendable if he will also plan the house so that his wife will have convenience as well. A man does not dream of the number of steps a woman takes in a day in caring for her house. From dining room to kitchen and back perhaps fifty times a day; to the garden to the well, to the outbuildings, uR,„»taiis and down cellar over and^vef"again. It is as hanl or hardgj^timin plowing all day and yet lejy .o-f us men think so. Ofton Tittle rearrangement of the rooms, and at small expense, would solve the whole problem. Here are a few small, in the sense that they eost little either in time or money, improvements which will save the wife steps. Place range, sink and work table as close to each other as pos sible without rtek of bumping into one or the oth*r. Hare the entrance to the cel * I lar from the kitchen and the well Just out- j ' side the kitchen door or, better still, sd arrange that the pump can be In the kit chen; If one can have a driven well this! is easily managed. Arrange tables when It Is light and have one or more permane.nl tables low so that the wife can sit dowrt and do some of the work. If you want oth er suggestions for her comfort ask youi wife, she’ll supply them with alacrity and with considerable pleasure. SOW WHEAT AS LATE AS POSSI BLE. There has always been a question in th« minds of wheat raisers whether it is bettei to prepare the soil thoroughly fur wheat | independent uf any previous crop or to sow it on ground that has jnst raised a crop of corn. While experience must large, ly guide one in this matter, it seems logical to suppose that the prepared soil will give the best returns although, after all, it i« I largely a question of fertilizers or of tht natural strength of the soil. Our experi ence has been that when thesoil is properly prepared early, disked and harrowed and harrowed again and a liberal supply ol fertilizer applied we get a little better re sults than when we simply doill the wheat In the corn stubble after harvest early tr. October doubling the quantity of seed and largely increasing the quantity of fertiliz er. The amount saved represents the dif ference In the cost of the fertilizer. Eithei way we find it most profitable to do the j seeding as late as October 1, although we sometimes sow as early as the IlOth of Sep tember. Try both plans on a small plot j and see how they work out. USE THE DRIVEN WELL. If it is not possible to have wind mill power on the farm and one must depend upon the well by all means have a driven well rather than a dug well. Thene is no reason why this cannot be done for the 1 expense is but a little more than for the dug well, you can have it as deep as neces sary to get a good and unfailing supply of water and, best of all, can have It placed where you will. We have a driven : well which was put in by taking up a por tion of the kitchen floor, there Is no cel | lar under the kitchen, it is really a cov ered addition to the kitchen and gets suf ficient heat from the latter so that pipes do not freeze. There is no opening through which vermin can fall and no well to bo cleaned out periodically. Moreover, we had the pipes driven deep enough so that we get very much better water than our neighbors who have dug wells, and there Is never danger of water famine. This fall we are having a similar well driven in a portion of the barn and will have no more trouble on the water question. It’s worth double the cost of a dug well. WHEN ALFALFA FAILS. ! In ninety-nine cases out of mie hundred when there has been a failure with alfalfa it is due to two things: a sour soil and In sufficient inocculation with the alfalfa bacteria. There is nothing to do but tc sweeten the soil and if a partial stand of alfalfa has ben obtained it is likely that I from 600 to 1,000 pounds of lime per acre ' will be all that is needed to accomplish thin purpose. Inocculation, however, Is abso lutely necessary If one would grow a good crop of alfalfa and the best way to in- i oeulate is to obtain soil from a field In which alfalfa has been successfully grown for a considerable period. As we have said In this department before the cheapest way of accomplishing this is to look up the nearest man who has done the trick and buy some of his soil. A few bushels sown broadcast just before sowing the seeds of alfalfa will be suffleinet. Look I Into the matter carefully; better still, trav I el a hundred miles, if necessary, in order to have a talk with some good alfalfa grower and get the points from him nec essary to set you straight. One can hardly go to too much trouble to learn how tc grow alfalfa with success. THE BARN WINDOWS. Many of the discomforts of the horses and the cows during the winter are due tc the poorly constructed barn windows and now is a good time to put them in shape, If one can do nothing else they can con struct a window on ei’ther the inside oi outside of the building so arranged that it will close over the window now in place. An excellent window of this kind ia easily made by covering a home-made frame with building paper and hinging it on the inside so that it may be closed over the window of glass on very cold nights. Then look out for the cracks in the barn directly behind the animals. If you cannot cover them with strips of board or lath you can at least stuff the cracks full of bits or strips of newspaper and in that way add materially to the warmth of the barn. Remember every thing done in this way for the protection of the stock reduces your bill for food which is worth considering. THE DOUBLE HOUSE AND SHED. The writer is responsible for nearly all of the articles which have appeared In this department for several years in favor of the scratching shed and solely becausu he believes that the majority of those who keep poultry do not thoroughly apprelcate all the advantages of this plan. Even those who find fault with the scratching shed admit that it is necessary to give poultry a place, during the winter, where they may have light and as much sun as pos sible without exposing them to the cold and wind. If this is good argument then the question is, is there anything that will supply this light and sun in connection with protection any better than the scratching shed? The plan here proposed furnishes a maxi mm#* •'of light and sun, 1 when it shineg.,.-wffh a minimum of ex pense in ji&tfjr'.ng it and also reduces the cost by'*furn!shlng the shed for two flocks from separate houses with no expense ex cept the divison of (ho shed w.th wire net ting. The plan is simply to build two regu lar houses and place a scratching shed between them and divide this shed in the middle with wire netting. Make an exit from each house to the shed and the o> e curtain In front suffices for both division this curtain to be let down when the wi >d blows. If th** bottom board of th s dicis'on Is made high enough, eighteen inches will do, there s not likely to he any trouble or quarreling between the flocks. The it- 1 lustration snows the plan clearly. I Tho Hind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has home the signature of _and has been made under his per /'T* , sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and «Just-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with end endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What Is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worm? and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relievos Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Tho Children’s Panacea—Tho Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA . jj The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years THE CEBTAUB COM —ANT. TT MUAAAY .TBtCT, NEW YOB* CITY. | 1N§\ Makes the 1 | Load Lighter I E| An ounce of grease is sometimes the only difference between 1 j i profit and loss on a day’s teaming. You know you can t afford f H a dry axle—do you know as well that Mica Axle Grease is the 4 ■ * only lubricant you can afford? Mica Axle Grease is the most k ' economical lubricant, because it alone possesses high lubricating ' [ ^ property, great adhesive power, and long-wearing quality. J ! 1 Hence, the longest profitable use of your outfit is to be had, only i when the lubricant is Mica Axle Grease. 9 I Mica Axle Grease contains powdered mica. This forms a I. smooth hard surface on the axle, reduces friction, while a special- * ,• ly prepared mineral grease forms an effective cushioning body |§ between axle and box. Mica Axle Grease wears best and long- | J est—one greasing does for a week’s teaming. Mica Axle Grease saves 11 j M horse power — consequently saves IK \ Yfeed. Mica Axle Grease is the host * \ | j \UUimM lubricant in the w^rld—use it and ■ ;■ ■ i draw a douDle ioad it your dealer | | |y. nfl 1 *[@|1 does not keep Mica Axle Grease we wil1 tel1 you wno c*oc3 \ STANDARD OIL COMPANY PUTMAM FADELESS DYES Color moc^Qooits bright rr and faster rotors th*n any other dve. One lOr parfcace colors fl’l fibers. Thcv dve In co'd w’ter better than ary other rye. Y/RGE> DRUG CO.. A Positive CURE FOR is quickly absorbed. Gives Relief at Once. It cleanses, soothes, heals and protects the dise sed membrane. It cures Catarrh and drives away a Cold in the Head quickly. Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell, Pull aizo GO cts. fii Druggists or by mail; Trial size 10 cts. by mail. Ely Rrothcrs, GG Warren Street, Kew York. 1 ^ Sale Ten Million Boxes a Year. | i | *• V, 10c. 25c. 50< HE BO'