Miss M. Cartledge gives some helpful advice te young girls. Her letter is but one of thou sands which prove that nothing is so helpful to young girls who are just arriving at the period of womanhood as Lydia E. Piak ham’s Vegetable Compound. “ Dear Mrs. Ptickham :—I cannot prr.ise Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vege table Compound too highly, for it is the only medicine I ever tried which cured me. I suffered much from my first menstrual period, I felt so weak and dizzy at times 1 could not pursue rzy studies with the usual interest. My thoughts became sluggish, I had headaches, backaches and sinking spells, alsc pains in the back and lower linxbs. In fact, I was sick all over. “ Finally, after many other remedies had been tried, we were advised to ret Lydia E. Piikkam's Vegetable Compound, and I am pleased to say that after taking it only two weeks, a wonderful change for the better took place, and in a short time 1 was in perfect health.*-1 felt buoyant, full of life, and found all work a pastime. I am indeed glad to tell my experience with Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound, for it made a dif ferent girl of me. Tours very truly, Miss M. Cabti.eduk, 533 Whitehall 6t., Atlanta, Ga.” — SS909 forfeit If origin*! of 06000 letter proving genuine nose cannot 6*pro4*ood. A striking: contrast between Defiance Starch and any ether brand will be found by comparison. Defiance Starch stiffens,' whitens, beautifies with out rotting. It gives clothes back their newness, ft is absolutely pure, ft will not injure 'the jpost delicate fabrics. For fine things and ail things use tbe best there is. Defiance Starch to cents for id ounces. r Other brands k> cents for la ounces. A striking contrast. • TBE DEFIANCE STANCH CO, Omaha Nth^ NEW HOMES IN THE WEST Almost a half million acres of the fertile and well-watered lands of the Rosebud Indian Res ervation, in South Dakota, win be thrown open to settlement by the Government In July. These lands are best reached by the Chicago & North Western Railway’s direct through lines from Chicago to Bonesteel, 8. D. All agents uU tickets via tuis line.. Special low rates. HOW TO GET A HOME Bend lor a copy oi namphlet giving full informs lion as .d dates of opening and how to secure 100 acres of land at nominal cost, with full descrip tion of the soil, climate, timber and mineral resources, towns, schools and churches, oppor tunities for business openings, railway rataa, etc., free on application. W. B. KNISKERN, Passenger Traffic Manager, m>«u» CHICAGO. ILL. Voixosr two ruia.** TAKE THE WABASH SAINT LOUIS THE ONLY LINE TO THE WORLD’S FAIR DRAIN ENTRANCE. Bacgage checked to World's Fair srounds. BEGQS’BLOOD PURIFIER CURES catarrh of the ctoeiech. A Young Merchant Prince. J. E. Manis is 38 years old, and a native of Northampton, Conn. At 14 he swept the floor of a small retail store in that town and made himself generally useful at $2 a week. Up to about ten years ago he was a clerk of the Edward Malley company, of New Haven. Today he is president of a company that represents forty two large retail stores which do an anual business of $30,000,000. Here’s a self-made man for you. He worked his way from bottom to top. Associ ated with Mr. Manix is William T. Barr, son of Thomas Barr, vice presi dent of the Corn Exchange syndicate of banks. The head of the company wears no frills. He is the most cor dial, genial and approachable of men, worshiped by his personal staff of fourteen buyers. A Cowboy in New York. Charles M. Russell, a Montana cow boy artist, who visited New' Jersey re cently,- has returned to his Montana home, and in an interview says: “I’d rather live in a place where I know somebody and where everybody is somebody. The style in some of those New York saloons is something to re member. The bartender won’t drink with you even. Now, I like to have the bartender to drink with ine occa sionally, out of the same bottle, just to be sure I ain't getting poison. They won’t even take your money over the bar. Instead they give you a check, with the price of your drink on it, and you walk yourself sober trying to find the cashier to pay for it.” . A Product of Nature’s Art. In the fine mineral cabinet of John W. Campbell of Sellwood, Ore., is an figafee in which is printed the face of an Indian woman. The face and part of the figure are so clear cut and dis tinct that there is no question about them. The agate was a very com mon appearing specimen when picked up on the Siletz Indian reservation. He saw there was something below the rude surface and he had that side polished, when the face made its ap pearance. Mr. Campbell says that the face is nature’s photograph. “The sun caught the face and figure of the Indian woman as she was walking along the beach and fastened it on the agate.” The German War on Quacks. The German police have begun a systematic campaign against quacks and quack medcines. They estimate that in ten years the population has increased 58 per cent, regular medical men 76 per cent, and quacks 1,567 per cent. There are more women quacks than men. Nearly 30 per cent of the men cited to appear at the police bu reau have been in jail, of the women 15 per cent. More than 100 samples of quack medcines w'ere analyzed by the police, and over 80 per cent were of absolutely no medicinal value. New Scheme to Encourage Population. The latest scheme for the encour agement of copulation in France is that of the Paris, Lyons & Mediter ranean Railway company, which has adopted the following scale in the case of employes who have large fam ilies: Employes whose wages do not exceed 2,100 francs per annum, and who have three children or persons to j provide for, will receive a gratuity of $6 per annum; for a family of four, $16; of five, $30; of six. $48; of seven, $70; of eight, $82; of nine, $166. Jap Bullets Make Clean Holes. Russian surgeons say that the Jap anese rifle bullets, while possessing a great deal of stopping powder, make small, clean holes, which can be treat ed easily, and give excellent oppor tunities for the early recovery of the wounded unless some vital organ is pierced. There have been many cases of recovery after the intestines have been penetrated. Interesting contri butions to surgical science will follow the ending of hostilities. There 1* more Catarrh In thii section of the country than all other diseases put together, arid until the last few year* was supposed to be incurable. For a great many yean doctors pronounced It a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced It Incurable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional dis ease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J Cheney £ Co.. Toledo, Ohio, Is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken Internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address; F. J. CHENET £ CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists. 75c. Take Hail's Family PUla for constipation ' Was Uncle Sam’s Oldest Clerk. William O. Conway, who had been employed in the land office in Wash ington for fifty years, is dead, aged 73. Mr. Conway was appointed from Maryland and was the oldest clerk in point of continuous service in Wash ington. He was appointed to a posi tion in the land office in February, 1854. He began as a fclerk and was steadily promoted until he became a law examiner. Until last Tuesday he attended to his work at the depart ment. To the housewife who has not yet become acquainted with the new things of everyday use in the market and who is reasonably satisfied with the old. we would suggest that a trial of Defiance Cold Water Starch be made at once. Not alone because it is guar anteed by the manufacturers to be su perior to any other brand, but because each 10c package contains 10 oss., while all the other kinds contain but 12 oss. It is safe to say that the lady who once uses Defiance Starch will use no other. Quality and quantity must win. The recent death of an old and much loved teacher In Philadelphia revealed the fact that Bhe had been married sixteen years. She had kept her marriages secret, because she wanted to continue with her teaching, which the Philadelphia school law would not allow. Do Your Feet Ache and Bum? Shake into your shoes, AUen'B Foot" Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Swollen, Hot, Sweating Feet, Corns and Bunions. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores. 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad dress Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. Jonah has now been corroborated in part. A basalt stele found by Father Scheil In the Archeological museum at Constantinople has on it an Assyr ian inscription of King Nobonod, ol the sixth century before Christ, telling of the destruction of Nineveh, an event hitherto found on no monu ment. nsfi The Finsen Light Cure. United States Consul Frazier at Copenhagen, Denmark, reports that in the Finsen Medical Light institute, now a state sanitarium, 1,367 cases had been treated up to May, 1903, by the Finsen rays. Of these most were lupus vulgaris, and in about 1,000 cases the best results had been attain ed, so that “in most cases one may count definitely upon a cure,” to use the official language. The doctors at the institute are extremely conserva tive and never promise to effect a cure; but the records show that in a majority of the cases where sufferers have been encouraged by being ad mitted as patients cures have been effected. In the one case of the American patients where the physi cians have not yet determined wheth er they can give relief, it appears the patient is suffering from a rather deep-seated cancer, but the Finsen rays do not cure any but the most superficial cancers. Protects From Gases. One of the greatest dangers with which the coal miner has to contend is the generation of deadly gas in the chamber in which he is at work. His lantern is so made as to guard against an explosion of this gas and even to indicate its proportion in the atmosphere, but the miner himself does not take the same precaution to prevent inhalation of the gas, re lying on his ability to run out of dan* ger. Often he is overcome in his flight and then the companions who Supplies Oxygen to the Wearer. have escaped return to search for him and carry him to safety before it is too late to resuscitate him. This work is hampered by the presence of the deadly gas in the mine and often a man’s fellows not only fail in his rescue, but lose their own lives. There has recently been introduced an apparatus which makes it possible for a man to go safely through a mine charged with deadly gas and come out without feeling any effects of the fumes. As here pictured, it consists of an air-tight hood to fit over the wearer’s bead and shoulders, with a compressed air chamber and auto matic feeding arrangement attached to the hood. The air for breathing is dis charged gradually into the hood to re place the air which has been breathed The wearer of this apparatus can spend several hours, if necessary, in the presence of gas which would kill a man in a few minutes were it r& rr.'tted to enter his lungs. The vention may also be utilized to enter smoke-filled rooms, affording protec tion to both the lungs and the eyes. £xposure-Timing Device. To the professional photographer or amateur, who is constantly at work on his apparatus, making several ex posures every day, it is a simple mat ter to take account of the amount of light which is available for affecting the sensitive plate and gauge the time of the exposure properly without the aid of any scale or a watch. But for those who use the camera infrequent ly and are liable to change the brand of plates from time to time the.scale is almost a necessity. Then, after the proper amount of exposure has been ascertained, he must guess at the length of the fraction of a second called for, a very difficult thing to do without having previously studied It out by practice. Now, however, there is no necessity for experimenting and guessing when each picture is taken, the operation having been narrowed down to me chanical operation by the introduc tion of a camera attachment. This timing device is operated in conjunc tion w’ith the shutter-working buttons, being so connected that the act of opening the shutter sets it in motion and causes it to act on the closing button at the proper instant. This timer can be regulated to operate at any fraction of a second or any num ber of seconds desired, the operator laving only to set It by the gauge just before making the exposure. William E. Mulholland of Juneau, Alaska, is the patentee of this device. Atmospheric Electricity. Physicians have for many years rec ognized the fact that atmospheric elec tricity disseminated by thunderstoms keenly affects human beings, and in vestigators have shown that positive electricity produces vigor and a feel ing of general good health, while, on the contrary, negative electricity has a depressing effect. We are submit :ed to these contrary effects accord ing to the state of the atmosphere, sometimes negative electricity domi aating, at others the positive element, *t being possible to determine the elec ;rical condition by means of delicate .nstruments. Cable for Alaska. Oan. Greely, chief signal officer of the army, has, according to Electricity, decided to award the contract for about 625 miles of submarine cable to a New York firm. The cable will be used to connect Sitka. Alaska, with Fort fcdscum, near Valdez, on Prince William sound. It will be shipped by rail from New York to Seattle, and will probably be laid durrig the com ing summ'” FLOOR PLAN OF BARN. Roomy and Comfortable and Can Be Constructed Cheaply. J. J. F.—Please publish a floor plan of a barn ZO by 50 feet, containing three single horse stalls, one box stall, feed room, 10 by 12 feet, and stalls for about 20 head of c&ttlfe 2. A stone cellar with 2-foot walls admits frost. How would it answer to stud it up in side and line it with matched lum ber? Ans.—The accompanying plan should suit J. J. F. The upper floor would have- a 16-foot mow over the horse stable, a 12-foot drive floor and a 22-foot mow over the cattle. The basement contains 3 single horse stalls, and box stalls, 14 single cattle stalls, and feed rooms. The writer built just such a barn 36 by 48 feet in 1897, the carpenter work of which cost $110. 2.—If there were a four-inch brick wall built on the inside of the cellai Floor Plan of Stock Barn 30 by 50 Feet. with a three or four-inch hollow space between the stone and brick, it would make the cellar very much warmer, and would be far better than one lined up with lumber. If the top were ceiled over with matched lumber and covered with sawdust it would keep the cellar from freezing from the top. The only drawback to putting in a wood ceiling is that it decays very quickly. The writer has arched a good many outside cellars with a four-inch row of brick giving the arch a two inch rise to every foot in width, three-quarter-inch rods were placed through the cellar at the spring of the arch six feet apart to keep it from spreading. This was covered with earth or sawdust; the brick never rots and makes a clean pure cellar. Manure for Potatoes. W. D.—1. What is the best manure to force potatoes? 2. Will new- land not yet broken produce good potatoes? 3. Would lime help to warm the soil? Is there any fertility in it? Well rotted yard manure with an admixture of poultry manure is con sidered the best fertilizer for pota toes. An application of ashes is also good. 2. New land is well adapted to the growing of potatoes. A common method of preparing new ground is to plow it, harrow it down well and plant the potatoes with a hoe. 3. If the land is heavy and cold and appli cation of lime would warm and mel low it. Lime is not a fertilizer. It is necessary for land to contain a good stock of plant food before lime can be of any benefit; its function is to liber ate and turn over to the young plants that plant food contained in the ma nure or fertilzer. It is used also for correction of acidity in the soil. Be yond these mechanical functions lime is not considered a fertilizer in a strict sense of the word. A Frame Ice House. B. K.—How should the walls of an ice house be constructed, and with what should they be packed? How can the roof be secured to be cool enough for storing meat? The build ing is 12 by 12 feet, with 8 feet posts and a sharp roof. A frame ice house should have a space of six or eight inches between the inside and outside boards; this space should be filled with dry saw dust. In putting in the ice it should be kept six or eight inches from the inside boards and filled with sawdust or dry straw well tamped down. You cannot keep meat or anything above an ice house, the ice must be ibove *ends. You must have refrigerator separate from your ice house. You can get them already and shipped in sections so that you can put them together yourself. Walls of Basement Stable. J. J. C.—L How thick should the walls be for a stable 30 by 40 feet? 2. Could I use large stones in the bottom allowing them to rest against the bank as high as the surface of the ground? How many barrels of Portland cement would be required for two 40-foot walls, 7 feet 6 inches high? 1. The footing should be 18 inches thick and the walls above ground 9 inches thick. 2. Yes, it is only above ground that stones should be kept away from the face of the wall. 3. Two walls 40 feet long 7 feet G inches high and 15 inches thick at the bot tom and 7 inches thick at the top would require 17 barrels of Portland cement. This is for walls without doors or windows. The concrete would be one of cement to seven of gravel, with field stone as fillers. Looking to the Future. Among the large railroad systems to recognize the importance of tree plant ing In order to guarantee a supply oi ties for the future is the Illinois Cen tral. At a point near Duquoin, III., 200,000 catalpa trees were planted three years -ago. These trees are thriving and in a few years, when the thinning-out process begins, tranv of the ties in the Illinois Central rail road will be cut from this forest ere ated In the heart of the Illinois prairie. The same road is planting similar forests in Mississippi and con templates the establishment of otters. CATARRH IS THE CAUSE OF MOST KIDNEY DISEASES. PE-RU-NA CURES CATARRH. Captain James L. Dempsey, Captain 2nd Preeinet Troy Police Force, writes from 198 Ferry St., Troy, N. Y., as follows: “Frem my personal experience with Peruna lam satisfied It la a very floe remedy for catarrhal af fections, whether of the bead, lungs, stomach or pelvic organa. It cures colds quickly, sod a tew doses taken after undue exposure prevents Illness. ••Some of the patrolmen under me have also found great relief from Peruna. It has eared chronic cases of kidney and bladder troubles, re stored men suffering from Indigestion and then* matism, and I am fully persuaded that II la ag honest, reliable medicine, hence l fully endorse and recommend It. ” JAMES L. DEMPSEY. Officer A. C. Swanson writes from 607 Harriaof St., Council Bluffs, la., as follows: i “As my duties compelled me to be out in all Irindf L of weather I contracted a severe cold from time to I time, which settled in the kidneys, causing sever* l. pains and trouble in the pelvic organs. r> “I am now like a new man, am in splendid |w and give all praise to I'ttruna.’'—A. C. Swanson. Samuel R. Sprecher. Junior Beadle Court Angelina, 3,422 I. O. 0. F., 205 New High St., Los Angeles, Cal., yCj writes: ••I came here a few years ago suffering with catarrh K of the kidneys, in search of health. I thought the V climate would cure me, but found 1 was mistaken. \ But what the climate could not do Peruna could and did do. Seven weeks’ trial convinced me that 1 had the right medicine, and I was then a well man. I know of at least twenty friends and members of the lodge to which I belong who have been cured of catarrh, bladder and kidney trouble through the use of Peruna, and it baa a boat of friends in this city. ” SAMUEL R. SPRECHER. CAPTAIN JAMES L. DEMPSEY. Catarrh of the Kidneys a Common Disease — Kidney Trouble Often Fails to Be Begarded as Catarrh by Physicians. Catafrh of the kidneys is very com mon indeed. It is a pity this fact is not better known to the physicians as well as the people. People have kidney disease. They take some diuretic, hoping to get better. They never once think of catarrh. Kid ney disease and catarrh are seldom as sociated in the minds of the people, and. alas, it is not very often associated in the minds of the physicians. Too few physicians reeogni ze catarrh of the kidneys. They doctor for something else. They try this remedy and that remedy. The trouble may be catarrh all the time. A few bottles of I’eruna would cure them. Pe-rn-na Removes the Cause of the Kidney Trouble. Peruna strikes at the very centre of the diff iculty .by eradicating the catarrh from the kidneys. Catarrh is the cause of kidney difficulty. Remove the cause and you remove the effect. tVith un erring accuracy Peruna goes right to the spot. The kidneys are soon doing their work with perfect regularity. Thousands of Testimonials. Thousands of testimonials from people who have had kiuney disease which had | gont beyond the control of the phy sician arc received by Dr. Hartnaa every year, giving Peruna the whole praise for marvelous cures. Pe-ru-^a Cures Kidney Disease. Peruna cureu kidney disease. The reason it cures kidney disease is berauM i it cures catarrh. Catarrh of the kidnejt is the cause of most kidney disease^ Peruna cures catarrh wherever it hap pens to be located. It rarely fails. If yon do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable ad vice gratis. Address Di. Hartman, President at The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbua, Q. Natural Flavor Foods When £va are at J. low to know what to serve for hincbeo?— when yon crave something both appe tizing and satisfying, try Libby’s Food Products Aaaong tbs many Libby delicacies are Boneless Chicken. Melrose Pate. f Veal Loaf, Peerless Wafer-Sliced Dried Beef. Potted Ham and Corned '■ Beef Hash, etc.—wheisasme leads that are as dainty as they are good— as substantial sc, they are appetizing. ▲ik your Grocer far Libby’s. V Libby, McNeill L Libby _ M Chicago CONSUMERS OF SHOES | ALWAYS ASK FOR THE BEST WESTERN MADE SHOES. ! These brands will guarantee you a good shoe for men: | Star and Crescent E. Z. Walker / Comet Cock of Walk ’ Our PRAIRIE QUEEN leads all others in Women's and Children's Shoes. See that our name is on the shoes you buy. F. P. KIRKENDALL & CO. ""SSSSH? ta r ANTISEPTIC PILE CONES € DRUGGISTS. Sample Free. ANTISEPTIC PILE CONE CO., Crete, Neb. SLEEP. Austrian Officers for Persia. The Shah of Persia has made ap plication to the Austrian government for the dispatch of twelve competent military officers to supervise the re organization of the Persian army. The shah wants Austrian officers, because Austria has no political axes to grind in Persia. When Your Grocer Saye be does not have Defiance Starch, you may be sure he is afraid to keep it un til his stock «f 12 oz. packages are sold. Defiance Starch is not only bet ter than any other Cold Water Starch, but contains 1« oz. to the package and Mils for same money as 12 oz. brands. When a girl ’ angles in the matri monial sea she is apt to catch a Busk er Instead of a goldfish. Mrs. Winslow’s soothing Syrup. For children teething, soften* the part*, redness 1b> SJunm*tlott, all*?* pain, cure* wind colic. 25c a bottle, One good turn deserves another, particularly if it is a turn-down. Try me just once and I am sure ts epme again. Defiance Starch. Lawn Fence Iron or wire, many styles, for residence, church .school, cemetery: poultry and hoy fence: ferm yutea. Send for cataloytte. thyir. pier fro* art wire Works OMAHA. KEB. _ WlOBie-StleR LAUNDRY WT.r® won't spill, break, freeze nor spot clothe*. Costs 10c. and equal* Sue. worth of auv ether bluing PORTRAIT AGENTS-™.v Our good* the best. Price* the lowest. Promptabip ments. Delivery of all portraits guaranteed. Send for catalogue and agent*’ price Hit. Address ADAH J. KKOLL A CO., Hew £r* Hide.. Chicago. “•S^eV^M \ Thompsan’s Eyi Vatu SORE FEET SORE HANDS One Night Treatment with Soak the feet or hands on retiring in a strong, hot, creamy lather of CUTICURA SOAP. Dry, and anoint freely with CUTICURA OINTMENT, the great skin cure and purest of emollients. Bandage lightly in old, soft cotton or linen. For itching^ burning, and scaling ec zema, rashes, inflamma tion, and chafing, for red ness, roughness, cracks, and fissures, with brittle, shapeless nails, this treat ment is simply wonderful, frequently curing in one night. Complete Humor Cut*, rontiatlng at CTTKBJ** B*aei*«at, 40c. i In farm at ChacolaM CmM PUIa, Sc. Pr via! I.f * i,Oimn>r:it,.Wc.. Soap, »e. f>*pm»i LaaAaa, Chanrrht.ua* 8c. t I'aria, i Rue da la Pblxi Mamaa. U9 Cotambua Art Putter l)ru* a Cham Carp., lata hat bead lar “ iiow to Cutai-vai/ Utima* * W. N. U., Omaha. No. 25—1904