:.,.. - . - ' . ' ....... ' i . r A W Alt KCHO. tVERY HONORABLE VETERAN DEERVCS HIS PENSION. fcnd Ibe I. one Limb Not the Ooly Keaaun for a Government Xewart Kitber. irum Jimrnal, iwiilrn, A'.) Samuel It. Junliiii haa jtiat given the, lounml no omit of Lis lift", vtliu li in rir-wof hi uln un-ly liard Jul for the tat, lew yearn will In- read wiili iiilirvat. " am 1 jeuia ulil m ml lime mIhu.vh bel iu .W i'ortlauil. 1 eiiiitJ in the iriny in IMil! hk n private in t'niiiaiiy A, Tvk-nty--n.'li!u Maim? Voluuti era. My kriny i'-ririii c injured my li.-tiltli to i, me cili ill, iillliuiictl I worked ut liluek iiiitiiiu;: some pun of the time, w hen mul (eiilr, neural year an. 1 wait iir.ia Iraied what u tit.- .li niiiaim pr.i- tuiinieil IKimiotor Ataxia At urt I toiiltl jret around Koniewluit jet the .li e proi(ri-wd iiite rnpidlr until I had kanlly any feelinc in my ! j mid feet, tney felt like nl H kh i.t wuml mid I crew to mui li ru' thut I roiil I imt mote I r three y i nr without lirlji. ;is niy in Ihliors Ih. I 'riemls 'mid ti'nl ify. I eiiiiluyed' "ver..l I'liyirmiii in iny i.iiti . ,m 1 flnew lii le. Ml.. I tliry nil t .Id llli-llillt In" I li llli-H W 'M!.I led help me. Mini ih. i-.ei; ! in nothing 1: ehi'. t .1 i lire Hllll Mull ill tillie I sh"'lid I'ei OIHe '! ir. ly til l ilev i he. II in- di. iilirHUi d. I II tn.lt i;mv to my wile and t ihihIs. Men ly alter I diet an eld ariuy e..u,rade. Mr. Aii. I n . lll. 11 reidt lit i.f M ntll',i, Miiili-'. liini hi hi.'i.lelitaily In ellnli. .1 le.w h' li.nl 1 r.-- ! lr. Y iHfiiiti' l ink Til's ;"..r a ne , r,. , (..,. fcf rheilliiat.lii mid .1 liil.n! rlli'l liulliiri.il trouhle. that he h:'d Vull.'i d nli , .,n,- queiit of inn I'tiuy hie. red had I n greatly heie Hied hy ih. ir i -e liy In fnrneKt teeoiiiiiieiidat ion I win. mdiieed ! try the illi. After taking iImiu lor time I heaii tu t .-l j.rii kly nihil 1 ioh ih my lt anil a return id Htreirth .-n i Collld IIHjve t lleiu a it'Je A I M. r II 1 1 ' Week I befall to 1. el II "marked il'lipl-'T riieiif in tllV eolldltioli. I M.oll uiih lia klvj 'i! tS itjj' ai''i'ii;d a. lMje with the In Ip pf rrUtlTle. AfleV lllktll: for li'ill'ie time I 1-mii now walk without; iruti-hrH. my ermml health i mmli iiii.ro e. ajid 1 Dave remained my old lime linr. 7 .iu walk hImuiI and enjoy life ouee uioiv for which I feel very thankful, and i d i happy riBult i due to the tiae of Ir Will Ihiiih' l'iuk I'illa." Dr. William' I'ink Villa for I'ale l'.-.i pie are nut a patent medicine in the i that name implies. They were tirxt com pounded a a preiw riptiou and iiwrt .- .icb in (etieral prai tice l.y an eininei l phyaician. S (treat was their eltii act that it tin deemed wiae to place tlu i. within the rem h of all. They are le w manufactured hy the Dr. Williniim' Med' cine Company. Hcheuectady . N. V.. and are Hold iu hoxea (never in l.i.me form hy the dozen or hundred, and the pnlilie nn; Cautioned airaiHKl iiuuhtoiim imilutioMi old in thia ahape) at .'( cenia a hox. or lix Wixe fur and inny he had of all druiriciata or direct hy mail from Dr. William' Medicine I'ompiiny. Every production of Renins must In the production of etithiiHiagm. GERM THtOH 1 OF DISEASE. The Position It Itccnpira and Atten tion It la Kcccivlin from tkientiHc Men. , The Rerin theory of the oriKin of dlsH-aae Ih a Miliji-ct which la at pres rnt attrnctltiu the attention of aclcti 'f Nv- . 'A n"n I" "H art of the world The chief liniioi-taiicp of thn genn the ory, however, in not that it shows the orltflu of (llaniBe but that It jKilDtH out the bent nieana to be employed to ef feet a cure. The tternis of dinette, from whatever Hotin'e they come, are lodfced and developed Iu the blood. The Wood, of cotirae, by clrctilatltur to every part of the body, la mire to acatter dis ease throughout the ayateui whenever It la I in pure, the weaken! and inot ails coptjble liarta be In it the Brat to HtifTer. It la becalm of scrofulous taint In the tilood, for Instance, that the aklu t' cHies covered with eruptlotia. D It lactic acid lu the blood which cauaea rheumatiain. and It Is biiiinse ihe blood doea not aupply proper nourish nient to the tierTea that people suffer ' With nervolliHUetia. The cure for :ill these' diseases, and of many others, can only be effected by purifying the Mood, and itbsoluiely deairoylux nil Kerrns of disease. No intellluetit per noti can doubt thut Ibsid's SarsupHi ill.t ba actually n ml permanently cured many thousand of cases of scrol'tiia, rheumatism, nervousness, dyspepsia nud other troubles, mid. n Its proprie tors claim, it Is all because this niedl cine purities the blood. As a matter of fact, Hood's Sars.ipurilla Is the only reliable blood purifier thut Is before the public to-day. and persons afflicted with impure blood or any of the (,'tv.ti variety of ailments which It causes, will be most certain to find relief and cure In Hood's Siirsnparilla because It Hssesses this peculiar power to purl fy, ourich and vitalize the blissl, and destroy the germs of disease. The new woman is simply the foul woman. Notice. Drs. II. II. Green A sons. Atlanta. ()a., ire. the greatest dropsy sM-ciahls in tlm World, rnre more patients llian the enlira irniy of physician scattered over this broad iaiid of ours. A alualile discover) outside iny medical Issik or pulilixhed opinion. A imrelv vinelable pn-patatiou. Ileutoves all lroi1cal k inploms rapidly. Ten davs' ireatmenl furnished free to every sufferer. See adverttseiuetit In other column of thin paper. One ahould believe in marriaire as in the Immortality of the soul.-Hal.ac The fear of pain and the dangers of parturition Alt L n Kf( I man) a woman 1 1 ml y Tirr. J ViJ no rcaaon whv Y'lhjZm childbirth ahouhl iZrSLJV be frautrht with daii(er and diatreaa. It i natural function, and should be performed in a natural way without tin auc MnVrinx. Nature never intended that women ahould be tortured in thia way. Taken durinf geatation' Dr. rierce'a .Favorite PreacnpUon roba chiMbirth of it danger to both mother, and child, hy preparing the ay stem for delivery, thereby ahorteainK labor", leaaening cai'a aa4 al brtriatiag the pcriad f -coaAaenienl. All mm f) IM TIMKhY FAKM TOi'JCS. MANAGEMENT OF THE FARM, GARDEN AND STABLE. Home Made Contrivance for the Farm-Wheat Growing- in the North went Unprofitable -Marketing Fruit Clean Water for I'oultry-Notea. Anti-Kickine Iievices. The accomputiyinj; sketches Illus trate device for breaking kicking cows and young heifers. A farmer can make the first iu au hour, and It will often save him many hours of time and many pulls of milk, to say nothing of ebullitions of teni)HT. With one of these, the Ameri 1- Ii. can Agriculturist says. Ifossy cannot ki'k. Take a strip of bard wood V't Inches thick. 1 inches broad, iind "JD Inches lu length. Dress il smooth with a plum- ji ii, I HI-e a hide In each end the narrow way ..f the board. 1'ass tliotit'li the hole a sinull rope or stout cord and tie a hard knot in the end. Put the other end tliron-li the other bole and draw up the rope until It is just lone; ellOlleJl l. jr,, y,.r (M (; j(,, wu. lu position, mill (ben put a knot In th.it pihI nlso. Sew or rivet on :i str;ii on the middle of tin- rope, as shown in tile illus tration. In the middle of the lanital on the flat outside puf iu a common wood screw and bare a hole In the leather strap la rue enoltcli to slip over the bead of the screw. This completes the de vice, which Is shown in fiu'ure 1. and hunre'J shows it ap plied to the ani mal. Another plan Is to place a strap, as shown in the hist picture. Buckle it a little tiejil. and If she kick then make It a little tighter and you will liml sh you any more. TIIK S I KA P. will not bother Formic Acid for Foul Hrood. lileaniiitfs In Hee Culture recommends the use of formic acid as an antiseptic In flic I hive. This acid Is an excel lent antiseptic. Thanks to It, honey preserves Itself for a long. time. There lias been found in Dresden honey un der the eaves of a house that is sup posed to date buck to the fifteenth cen tury. This age Is only guess work, and Is undoubtedly a mistake. Mice or other vermin would destroy honey long before that time. The slangy word "Hats:" appears to apply to such n statement. Hut. formic acid diluted with water and placed In the hives is used in Knropo to prevent the growth of foul brood. This formic add Is not takeu from fruit or flowers, but Is a natural pro duct generated In the bee. It Is also found still more plentifully In ants, and the word derives Its name rrom them. It Is the odor of formic acid which Is given off when either bees or ants are crushed. It Is said to make bees cross to crush any of their number, which Is natural enough, without supposing that the odor of formic acid has anything to do with II Clean Water for Poultry. Kvery poultry owner luis realized bow difficult It Is fo keep the drinking water clean where the fow ls can stand on the edge of the vessel or roost above It. An Ingenious plan for avoiding this dltHciilty Is shown In the accom panying engraving from a sketch lu the orange .luthl Parmer. A board bracket is nulled tu a post or to one of the studding limbers, and on the un der side of it is horizontally fastened a sipiare piece, of broiid board which serves IIS a shelf to keep the droppings from falling into the drinking vessel below. The vessel should be of such a height that the fowl cannot net la--tvveen It and the shelf so as to roost on the edge of the vessel. Blocks may be placed below It for this purpose. At the same time the shelf should be suf ficiently high that the fowl ne-.'d only lhVILK f"H Kt.l.l'IMl vt .t lMI I I.KAV. to stoop very slightly to drink. This simple contrivance will be found of great service iu protecting the drinking water which must Is- given to the fow ls lu t heir houses on stormy or very cold days. Parly Fiittt-ninu of Hons. It costs much less to make a pound of pork early than II does late, though If corn alone be fed, Iimi much of It while the weather Is warm is apt to In jure digestion. The great advantage of early fattening Is that II Is done while there Is usually plenty of waste vegetable, small potatoes, beets ami small apples, more or less of which go to the pig pen n ml vary the diet of the fattening hogs. After these are all stored In the cellar It Is very rare that any are taken out, and then fattening hogs soon cloy on their ration of corn without anything to make It more easy if digestion. A Unod Cow, A cow whose milk will make a pound of butler a day, or XVI pounds lu a year, is a very good cow. and would yield a profit after paying for lllieral feeding. One which yields :wl pounds a year la a good cow and probably a FIO. 1. "H ' profitable one, am. one tnat yields 2.V) pounds a year may pay for her keeping and care, but one that does not yield over ISsi pounds a year I a poor cow, and does not do any more than pay tor her feed at the average prices of bu.ter and of feed. Those who fall below .hat amount are very poor cows and unpro vable to the owner. Kven if ho can sell the milk for more than the feed costs, be had better replai-e her with a more productive animal. Thera la no excuse for keeping those whj do not pay for the labor of caring for thein as well as for their food. No Profit in Wheat Growing. The Commissioner of Agriculture oi North Dakoia has compiled some inter esting matter lu regard to wheat grow ing in that Slate. His figures show that a net profit was realized iu lsijl of $1o.!isUj per ucre and in IS'.rj the pro tits fell to.:.i:iJ. while in JMt.t the los per acre was cents. The prices for the ililTerein years at the railroad sta tions were respectively 71.4 cents, MM cents and oii.o cents per bushel. The estimates for Vs'.ii are not given, but at the lower prices which prevailed tin loss must have been greater than the preceding year. The liberal profit for IMil Was of course due to the heavy yield per ucre that ear. but with an average yield t here' would nave been a margin in the business for the pro ducer. North Dakota may be talieu us a fairly representative district oT the great wheat growing country of the Northwest. If wheat Is grown at a los in that Slate there Is no place in this country that It can be grown at a protit. It would be only natural to sup pose that lands stilted to the cultiva tion of oilier crops would be utilized in oilier directions vvheii wheat growing has ceased to be profitable. In this there may be a possibility of removing to a certain extent the competition' in our markets of the cheap wheat of the Northwest. Parmer and Stockman. Profit in K.itHituiEC. A writer In Parmer's Home says: "The profit In ensilage is chiefly In the greater economy of handling the corn crop In that way. Well-cured fodder Is just as nutritious, and Is eaten near ly as well; but it costs much more to save and feed the crop In that way. It requires, lu fit Id it Ion to the handling for the silo, busking and grinding the corn and stacking the fodder. If drv corn Is fed without griding. It Is not so completely digested; and If the fod der Is left In the shock until needed, half Its value Is lost. I would not ad vise building a silo for n herd of less than twelve or fifteen cows, or where the grain crops produced on the farm ulToril abundant rough feed for the stock. But If you have annually five acres or more of corn to be fed wholly to stis k. whether cows or steers, a silo is much the cheapest and tnosl satis factory way to secure it ami feed It.-' A Farm Callows. On most farms there Is more? or less cull for a gallows on which to raise can asses. . Por ordinary use, where It Is employed but once or twice a year, it Is doubtful If anything is cheaper or better than the old fashioned contrlv- TIIK K A It. VI OAl.t.oWS. mice. A six-inch pole that Is sound is placed in the crotches of two heavy poles well set. or ill the branches of two near-by trees. To Ihese tile gani brcls are fastened by chains, and this Improvised cylinder Is made to revolve and lift the pork by rolling It by means of a crowbar or strong stick which tils Into holes bored Into the pole at right angles This Is prevented from unwinding by a pin thrust Into a hole bored in tile post. Of course, pulleys and ropes arc better, but these Me nut always ow ned. - Par u .lourmtl. A u rlcll 1 1 urn 1 Atoms. (live the hen house a good cli-atiiug up and white-washing. Wool-growing is one specially, and mutton growing Is another. Wheat mixed with corn and oats makes a better f 1 than either alone. Beekeeping Is an Important adjunct to horticulture and floriculture; much more so than Is generally realized. Don't ihink because you have been In the dairy business for a number of years you cannot learn anything new. It would be well If farmers would eat more eggs ami less of the fat meals. It would promote digest Ion anil health. Dry earth Is the best deodorizer known. It Is also the best absorbent to preserve the manure In the least offensive way. The good that sheep will do In keep ing down the weeds iu the pastures and meadows Is not as fully under stood a it should be. After a long experience It Is found that American varieties of fruit ar, iu general, better adapted to American ciillure than foreign varieties. The beiietll resulting from the prun ing of trees and vines, and the pinch ing back of melons and tomatoes, has led to experiments with potatoes, it Is said that pruning them to two stalks iu each hill has produced larger tubers and a greater yield. , It Is known that rleiilng fruit ab sorb greater or lesser ipiantltles of oxygen and give off carbonic Held; that a certain portion of the fiber Is con verted into sugar and another portion Into water, and that the coloring proc ess depends much on the stlpply of sunshine while the chemical action la taking putc. ' ' T7 j ParsiMii Hoot -VI, kera. English women are teaching Ameri can women some important facts about 1 iotgear. We know today that a touch of patent leather removes the shoe from street ue, except in tne case, of walking to and from alteruoon teas or luncheon. That only seal or calf km Kui.s the pavements, that low slioeg are to be reserved fur summer wear, that spats are not good forn , ex cept for men. and thai laced shoes are t tie smart tiling for the forenoon. We have also learned to say "boot maker," instead of "slioeinan," and to place our boots carefudy away on "trees" in a row, instead of hanging tnein in the compartments of a. linen shoe bag. Hut when it comes to dressing the feet for the house corr. menu me to r'leneh art. Possibly there is no clique of fashionable women in the United States who acknowledge thisas univers ally as do the social leaders of ban Prancisco. There exists in one of the narrow avenues iu Paris a bootmaker who as serts that his San Francisco trade would reau him a respectable income if he had no other customers. He can exhibit on the shelveH of his little shop the wooden lasts of every society woman of the Gate City, with but very 'ew exceptions. Buying Pretudi house shoes is a monomania with these west erners, and the stranger invited into their ho-pitaole homes acknowledges ttiat the hostesses' feet are indisputably the most gracefully shoed on the conti nent. For instance, no Sail Francisco woman I mean among the set partic ular in this score- -wears kid, either glace or suede, indoors, iilack satin is the vogue. As soon as she enters her home, walking or driving shoes are tak eu off and her feet t lipped into dainty, shapely black satin boots, lined w ith heavy white satin and fastened with many polished buttons. It is only on very great occasions that the satin boot gives place to the satin slipper. These woinn have learned the French woman's knowledge of art and know that unless one possesses au exceptionally well turned ankle, slip pers emphasize the defects that boots conceal. None of the dressiness at tached to slippers is lost, for the long vamped, high-heeled, erfectly. fitting black satin boot gives distinction to the plainest house gown. Again there is no style of shoe that as seemingly diminishes size. The bulkiness of leather, the evidences of heavy stitching that are inescapable even in the best turned kid shoe, are done away with. The smooth surface bears padding on the instep and can be shaped upward into au incredible arch underneath. Tim Keefe has had the Harvard pitchers and catchers at work, for sev eral weeks.- Phil King, the ex-Prlncetonian, will play second base for the Orange Ath letic club this season. Seven of this year's Val team are members of the graduating class. What of the Yale team of iH'.Hi? Pliny believed in simple dinners, for, he said, many dishes bring many dis eases. It is easier to match pearls than to successfully eat an artechoke the tirst time. A delicacy at some of the fashionable clubs is codllsh tongues served as an entree. At a depth of one mile the pressure of ocean water is one ton to the square inch. The water of ths Mediterranean con tains a greater portion of salt than that of the ocean. Waves 20 feet high exert a force of about one ton to the square foot and are strong enough to move bowlders of l.'i cubic feet. Alter all, there is everything in out ward show. Sibyl Sanderson has a sister who goes iu for woman's rights. Sibyl does not bother about hers. She gets something like $1, DUO worth of 'em every time she sings. The virtue of the soul does not con sist in flying high, but walking orderly. Our dissatisfaction of any other so lution lathe blazing evidence of im mortality. F.aierson. f Lying is seldom done to cover up the faults f a friend. PSUU PBICE, i Ta. AIMflOTOM AHTI-PREEZINO TNRII- Weak, km a vary larf air ofaaibat, kaa a aatf oaa tea taraiaaaa aa? Malar lau aida Aaraatar afaai tor than. It la alwaya Aa a rala ba la a tm-elaaa. lira. raUakla. la oar aaiira IM of tkoaiaaai at agaata. AHMOTOM FORCE PUMP AT E4.E0, ETTEE THAN USUALLY SOLD AT OR 10. SaaJ face raap Catalog. Ray aotbiac bnl aa AaraMtar Paaaa, and do ttot par aaora than Aernstor price for h. Wa protect the public. W fnraieb U food fooda al low prieea. . Wa baea aelabHthwd twaaly breach bouaea la order Ibat II may (el gaowi cheaply aad prooiplry Yaa eaaaall year owa laiaroata by iaalaaja, aa aet saly AaraMtar octree bat AaraMtar aaata al Aarmoiar art oaa. U aar aaa aa ear rTL waal war of a ta Feed Catlar al laa. AERMOTORCO.iOr.IOMS.' Ralci no li Powder Reprt- Absolutely Pure Longseliow hhi AiuuMid. A correspondent of the Youth's Com part ion was strolling about Interlaken and stopped at a little shop to look at some photographs. The owner of the establishment was a lady - one of those women w ho, as our correspondent re marks, are recognized at once as ladies, no nntter on which side of the counter they may heppeu to stand. She fell into a friendly chat with her customer and presently took down one of tier small stock of books. 'A good many Americans buy this," she said. It is 'Hyperion,' by your poet Longfellow." Then she laughed, as if suddenly re minded of something that pleased her very much and continued: 'Once I had the pleasure of waiting on two very agieeable American gen- temen who were looking for something to read. One of them had blue eves and such a heavenly expression! I felt sure he would apqreciate a good book, so I offered him 'Hyperion.' 'It is by your Mr. Longfellow,' I slid. 'I know you will like it. It is full of beautiful descriptions and beautiful sentiments.' "I said a good deal more in favor of the book. 1 felt sure it would exactly suit him; but by and by I notices that both rren were trying to keep from laughing in my fHce. It was my poor English, I thought, and I was dread fully jmortHied. Finally the blue-eyed man burst ,ou! laughing and ran hur riedly into the street, followed by his companion. 'Those pueer Americans!' said I to myself. "But in a few moments the second man came back and apologized in the politest manner. "The truth is, madam, he said, 'my friend is Mr. Longfellow himself and the praise of his book and the droll Idea of having his own literary wares offered him were too much for his equanimity." "After," that continued the lady, "Mr. Longfellow csme here several times. He talkad very pleasantly and bought several books, but not 'Hyper ion.' " Salted peanuts have, to a greatextent, taken the place of salted almonds at dinner. After all, girls, the best way to get a husband is to pick out an eligible bach elor and listen with a pleased air to every word he says. New York Re corder. The death of a young woman from tight lacing is reported, but there is a strong suspicion that it is only an ad. vertising scheme of the dress reformers If you are boarding, order your eggs poached. An egg that isn't as fresh as a daisy can be boiled or fried, but it can't be poached. Men are always afraid to talk loud in the presence of au link now n woman who Is heavily vei'ed. A heavily veiled woman can get on a streetcar and stop every sound. People in big towns are so Bullish: We would rather live iu a little town, where the people sympathize with you when in trouble, and where, if yon have no trouble, they will look up some for you. The favorite tipple of Senator JJrice is said to be mineral water. Captain Hume of Tacoma is said to be the father of the halibut industry on the Pacilic coast. Lucierj "iaker, the new senator from Kansas, is 4H years old and is said to be worth about 8100,000. .T.F.Irwin of Oswego, N. Y., lia an interleaved Bible which cost him $10,000 . It is iu 20 imperial folio vol untas. For twenty years folks rheumatism, neuralgia, and all other pains and aches hy using St. Jacobs Oil. There must be something in it, for you couldn't fool all the people for so many years. "Cleanliness Is Nae Pride, Dirt s Nae Honesty." Common Sense Die tates the Use of , SAPOLIO $15EUCl(gJ jjQ t wj larga aawat of tka Rocky M amir ta (a ta aa Aari l4a - iwaka fellow; that la tha raaaeo raa aaa las aoa alow, aiapM, bakind tka- tiaaa v f sr Mr ATI FORCE PUMP -aa J a m m 'BaBBBBBB' m otttrmwl 1 1 baa a wtaaaull abal-a naalaiat II al tba aaova Brioa. - alar U agaat far aa,. Four ceu; cotton may, .-mer ail, liave been a blessing in dis'u. It ha taught the wor d that the proper plat to manufac-ure cotton i-i in c.o.-.e prox imity to Hie cotton fields. This is the year of all years tor south ern cotton planters to reduce the acre age of that staple iiiid oranize for itur purpose ot buyiu? about I.ijuO.OuO bales of cotton at three cents from Wall street sjssculators and force the delivered ot the same next fall. Arkansas Press. The highest knowledge can be noth ing more than the shortest and clearest road to truth. Collon. No longer talk about the kind of a man that a good man ougut to be, but be such. Marcus Aiirelius. The salary list of the New York clut this season will be larger than that ol any oilier club in the League. Khiikespeare was right when ht wrote, 'Unquiet meals make ill diges tion." 1 'roper manufacture of mayonnaise is an art almost akin to ciiina painting A Chinese dish, successfully repro duced here, is broiled ham with honey sauce. Fruit as a restorative is receiving more and more attention from medical men. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products t the'needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is clue to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taske, the refreshing r.nd truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax ative; effectually cleansing the system,, dispelling colds, headaches and levers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the inedk:al profession, because it acts ou the Kid neys, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from ' every objectionable substance. Syrup of Fipi is for sale by all drug gists in 50c and tl bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accent anv substitute if offered. fhe St. Joseph and Grand la la ad E. Rl SHORTEST and QUICKEST LINB TO ALL POINTS NORTH WEST EAST " SOUTH A5M?hT Union Pacific System ,IS THE FAVORITE ROUTE To f'aliforui ti. Oregon Hinl all Western Points, Knr infortnmtion ryurdl ig rate, etc.. call o or ad'lrcss any agent r b. M Aisit, L. 1'. Ko n in son. Jr , Gen. I'nwa. Agt Gtu'l Mkinak'tr, St. Joseph, Mo DROPSY TREATEO FREE. l oitiw.Tv T KKI Willi V u e t m bl Itemed 1 1 s. Mv ur'"1 in an v thoiiMirifl protj.iMM', it Imii.. ion. V "lu n st done KTnUfr. 1'tnis :jmMv 'liKuitpi'ur. and in t- u day at la!st t(-tlin-'i ot all xviMptmu hi'h r'niuMl HOOK nt tt'KtiiuimiuJ nt immculoiift nireg ye,at FKKKk Ten Days Treatment Furnished Free by Mail It. I. I CHECK I 301 SrtCllllSTS ITtlltl CtOICII jay FOR PI.KASANT WORK emllT tfi-arerf thronrt H I an Mrlj application for Lo'-nl Atretic? i imI! tt DAVIS CREAM SEPARATORS to Kantian, ami lian yiiinn. One Btyle wa tfcowu In laat number of thin Journal. Another will ioon I uMiril out. Mranwhlle, write tor HnrKlaoma Ulna. tratfnl Book Fr. I'AVIH .V KAN KIN Ftl.UC AND Hrtl. CO.. Sole Manurarlurem. Mil W. Lake St.Cbicafo, . '. V. No. 331 --10. York. WHTN WRlTINli TO A l KKTIsKK plraiie mj f ou hi the vdrCiMiuMit In t Ilia patter. all over the world have cured A few eaathaa. u titer anacwaat Of evana, b) It batter lo ao to aa tbiac ywa taay waat which ha hand taw. ba la aa Aaraaatar aaeai. It la doubtfal ML fallow. Wa faaaiab alas a aPaTQIA(