I V t J TORTURED WITH GRAVEL Since Using Doans Kidney Pills Not a Single Stone Has Formed Capt S L Crute Adjt Wm Watts Camp Tj C V Roanoke Va says Nervous I suffered a long long time with my back and felt draggy and list less and tired all the time I lost from my usual weight 225 to 170 Urinary pas sages were too frequent and I have had to get up often at night I had headaches and dizzy spells also but my worst suffering was from renal colic After I began using Doans Kidney Pills I passed a gravel stone as big as a bean Since then I have never had an attack of gravel and have picked up to my former health and weight I am a well man and give Doans Kid ney Pills credit for it Sold by all dealers HO cents a box Poster Milburn Co Buffalo N Y Some men get as tired of being mar ried as some women do of not being Perfectly simple and pimply perfect is feeing with PUTXAM FADELESS DiES 10c per package Many a widows heart has warmed over by an old flame CRIED EASILY been Mrs Winslows soothing Hjrup Forchildien Ueiiunir soflens tje gums leuuccs In Bammatiou allays pain cures wind colic Eoca tottlo Villains invariably get what Is com ing to them on the stage PILES CURED IX O TO 1 1 DATS PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to euro any case of Itching Wind UiecdlitK or Protruding Tiles in U to 14 days or money refunded fiUc They are countless roads sides to the grave Cicero on all Garfield Tea is made of herbs a great point in its favor Take it for constipa tion indigestion and liver disturbances German Output of Chemicals Germany leads -the world in the pro duction of chemicals The total output for the year amounts to 357000000 This includes a million tons of sul phuric acid and half a million tons of soda Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOR1A a safe and pure remedy for infants and children and sec that it Bears tlio Signature of dL la TJse For Over 30 Years The Kmd You Have Always Bought Known as Memory Bells Memory bells are toys given by the Japanese youths to their sweethearts They are constructed of slips of glass so delicately poised that the least vi bration sets them jingling The deli cate tinkling serves to remind their owner of the giver hence the pretty fanciful name JAP YOUTH ON SCHOOLSHIP Will Get Thorough Training on American Boat an The first Japanese youth to be ad mitted to the crew of the schoolship St Marys is Katzern Artyoshi Art yoshi who is 17 years old has been in the revenue cutter service on the Pacific for the last three years As it is necessary for all foreigners who wish to become members of the schoolships crew to have a guardian Artyoshi was forced to get one before he could be admitted to the crew He succeeded in getting Capt Osborn to act in that capacity Capt Osborn will coach the boy along and help him over the hard points in his lessons Artyoshi has not made up his mind yet whether he will remain in this country or go home to Japan after he has been graduated from the school ship A term on the schoolship fits a boy for service in the merchant ma rine Artyoshi says he likes the United States and may stay here but if Japan ever goes to war he will re turn home quickly as possible to take part in it Woman Stopped Coffee and Quit Other Things No better practical proof that coffee is a drug can be required than to note how the nerves become unstrung in women who nabitually drink it The stomach too rebels at being continually drugged with coffee and tea they both contain the drug caffeine Ask your doctor An la woman tells the old story thus I had used coffee for six years and was troubled with headaches nervous ness and dizziness In the morning upon rising I used to belch up a sour fluid regularly Often I got so nervous and miser able I would cry without the least rea son and I noticed my eyesight was getting poor After using Postum a while I ob served the headaches left me and soon the belching of sour fluid stopped wa ter brash from dyspepsia I feel de cidedly different now and I am con vinced that it is because I stopped coffee and began to use Postum I can see better now my eyes are stronger A friend of mine did not like Postum but when I told her to make it like it said on the package she liked it all right Name given by Postum Co Battle Creek Mich Always boil Postum well and it will surprise you Read the little book The Road to WeHville in pkgs Theres a rea son a - THE LIE CHARITA BY HARLAN EUGENE READ When It came to the point of ac tually carrying out his intentions on that wonderful May afternoon Mr J Spencer Parker seemed to accomplish no more than a hunting dog chasing a rabbit In f 3 tall rye continually jumping up a down and never get ting anywhere A dozen times he walked resolutely toward the brass door knob of 1316 and as maay times ho concluded to saunler languidly past as if he had no other reason for appearing in that neighborhood than simply to sun himself But finally he summond up courage enough to pull the bell knob and an imitation cow bell tinkled in the back of the house J Spencer Parker upon my word exclaimed the middle aged woman who came to the door And pray what brings you here to day She spoke in a sweet musical tone in pleasing harmony with the diffi dent demeanor of her guest whose every motion was quiet and respect able and whose voice sounded strange ly like hers as he replied Just vis iting maam I wished to pay you my regards Mrs Simpson and to con gratulate you upon Mr Watkins who is coming to board with you Congratulate me cried Mrs Simpson Why I am indeed delight ed to hear that Do you know I have never seen him yet Yes The look in Mr Parkers eyes was far away as he replied and his body bent forward attentively I have known Mr Watkins Jeremiah Watkins maam from a boy 1 am glad he is come to such a home as yours Indeed you please me Mr Parker returned Mrs Simpson I shall be especially happy to tell our boarders what sort of person they may ex pect Mr Parker gave a sudden start but carefully recovered himself Ah he said thats what I came to tell you of Indeed Yes Mr Watkins is a a a gen tleman Again the courteous speaker leaned forward as he spoke struggling awk wardly for the next word but I want you to know that he is a a gentle man Ah returned Mrs Simpson with ready intuition Then he is perhaps eccentric Not exactly replied Mr Parker thoughtfully and sweetly but he looks let me say he looks rougher than he is But he is Yes said Mr Parker He is a gentleman Half an hour later the door closed softly and J Spencer Parker came down the front steps of 1316 at first smiling and then sadly walking with slow unsteady step As he passed by the little corner grocery store he paused and smote himself pathetically on the breast Liar he said groaning Liar And yet it had to be done God forgive me Anyone who had happened to see Mr Parkers friend Mr Jeremy Wat kins on the next day when he came with his trunks to 1316 might have been excused for cherishing the sus picion that he was not exactly a Beau Brummel or a Lord Chesterfield He cursed the baggage man for letting his trunk fall roughly to the ground and quarreled with him over his fee and to further give vent to his feel ings he strode to the door and gave the bell knob a vicious jerk There was not a look on his face or a ges ture of his body that did not reveal him a coarse ill mannered young man properly of the stable rather than the house His square rough face with its loose mouth and broad nose his burly shoulders and big hands and his clothing inviolate with re spect to any previous contact with the whisk broom bespoke a vulgarity of person that he did not attempt to con ceal It seemed almost impossible that he should be a friend or acquaint ance of such a person as J Spencer Parker Mrs Simpson radiant sweet and fresh appeared at the door and gazed at him for a momenL Then seeing his trunks she extended her hand and said Mr Watkins I suppose Yes J Watkins was on the point of asking her who in h I she thought he was with two trunks right there before her eyes but something in her ladylike manner evidently different from what he had been accustomed to checked him I am so glad to see you she went on So glad to know that we are to have you here We are almost like a family here and so you can imagine how much 1 was pleased to learn that our new lodger was a cul tivated gentleman Watkins flushed angrily supposing that she was making sport of him but one glance at her frank ingenuous face convinced him of her sincerity Some one must have been here he stammered uncomfortably telling you about me Yes replied Mrs Simpson Mr Parker was here yesterday He thinks highly of you Again the surging suspicion that Mrs Simpson was mocking him and again the sweet and straightforward look from her I have known him a number of years maam replied Watkins in a subdued voice JDJLJl So he said returned Mrs Simp son and it is indeed delightful that those who know one well can speak so well of him But come your1 trunks must be taken care of I will call our man The man came a wizened man whose face was wrinkled into a con stant smile and as he bustled about assisting Watkins with the trunks he talked pleasantly and respectfully You will be pleased here sir he said as they stopped panting t the top of the stairs If I do say it myself there are no more gentleman ly or lady like people in the world than at 1316 Watkins who had been just on the puint of cursing the man roundly for dropping the trunk on his foot at the top landing contented himself with blaspheming inwardly instead At dinner there was a general hush when he entered the room and he was introduced to the lodgers one by one A sweet looking girl sat next him who said It will be so delightful to have you here Mr Watkins Mr Parker who called here yesterday tells us that 3ou spent two summers in Europe Memories of rough debauches in London and Paris and feverish gam bling at Monte Carlo came flooding to his brain His only subjects of conversation in regard to European travel heretofore had been coarse ones But now coloring he spoke Mr Watkins of Notre Dame and the Louvre of St Pauls and Windsor The unaccount able influence of this slight creature beside him brought to his memory scenes of beauty and interest that he had looked on only in passing and had long forgotten He talked with out roughness and even found him self thanking the waitress for things she passed him He felt pleasantly uncomfortable He walked that evening with two of his fellow lodgers for a little exer cise before retiring One of them was the young lady whom he had sat next to at dinner The other was a young lawyer who occupied the room next to his in the hall Their talk was wholesome and happy They asked him about his home and his business not as curiosity seekers or idlers but as people sincerely inter ested In him They never talked of themselves but answered his ques tions frankly When he returned to his room there was a nower on ms oureau rue gas was burning low The windows were slightly opened and the fresh pure air surrounded him He found a pitch er of cool water at hand and a glass stood near it Presently Mrs Simp son knocked at his door It occurred to me she said sweetly that you might not yet have unpacked your books Watkins looked apprehensively at the cheap trashy literature that adorned his shelves N no he said slowly I havent If you would like to use any of our books just go down into the library and help yourself You need not bother to return them to their places if you get interested Just leave them here in your room Upon the following Sunday one of the neighbors met Mr Watkins in front of 1316 I suppose this is Mr Watkins ho said cordially offering his hand I am indeed glad to meet you for I have heard of you from your friends Come up to morrow to 1324 three doors up and have dinner We shall be glad to add another gentleman to our list of acquaintances And so time passed until one bright day three months later there came again to 1316 Mr J Spencer Parker He pulled the door knob with some trepidation and heard again the faint tinkle of the Imita tion cowbell in the rear He talked again to the middle aged delightfully beautiful woman who answered his call He left again in about half an hour But this time as he passed the little grocery store on the corner he was seen to slap himself enthusias tically on the leg and to smile ra diantly The Extent of His Generosity Generous Why hes the stingiest man I ever knew Yes but he gives himself way whenever there is a call for any out lay of money Houston Post rveep your Bloou Pure No one can be happy light hearted I and healthy with a body full of blood that cannot do its duty to every part because of Its impurity therefore the j first and mo3t important work in hand is to purify the blood so that every organ will get the full benefit of a healthy circulation There is no rem edy so good as that old family rem edy Brandreths Pills Each pill con tains one grain of the solid extract of sarsaparilla blended with two grains of a combination of pure and mild vegetable products making it a blood purifier unexcelled in character One or two taken every night for awhile will produce surprising results Brandreths Pills have been in use for over a century and are for sale everywhere plain or sugar coated Those things on which philosophy has set its seal are beyond the reach of injury no age will discard them or lessen their force each succeeding century will add somewhat to the re spect in which they are held for we look upon what is near us with jeal ous eyes but we admire what is farther off with less prejudice Sen eca Chlnene Superior to Japs Discussing the little rumpus with Japan Senator William A Clark ex presses the opinion the Chinese in this country are superior to the Jap anese I have loaned thousands of dollars to Chinamen said the sena tor and never have I known one to fail to meet his obligations He em phasized his opinion as to the superior ity of the Chinamen by calling atten tion to the fact that the Japanese in their banking institutions employ Chinamen in positions of trust in preference to their own countrymen ELEVEN YEARS OK ECZEMA Hands Cracked and Bleeding Nail Came Off of Finger Cuticura Rem edies Brought Prompt Relief I had eczema on my hands for about eleven years The hands crack ed open in many places and bled One of my fingers was so bad that the nail came off I had often heard of cures by the Cuticura Remedies but had no confidence in them as I had tried so many remedies and they all had failed to cure me I had seen three doctors but got no relief Final ly my husband said that we would try the Cuticura Remedies so we got a cake of Cuticura Soap a box of Cuticura Ointment and two bottles of Cuticura Resolvent Pills Of course I keep Cuticura Soap all the time for my hands but the one cake of Soap and half a box of Cuticura Ointment cured them It is surely a blessing for me to have my hands well and I am very proud of having tried Cuti cura Remedies and recommend them to all suffpring with eczema Mrs Eliza A Wiley R F D No 2 comb low c - nn Horses Still in Demand Happily the horse has a faculty for upsetting the gloomy predictions that he is fated to be put out of business by the automobile The horse business has kept right on developing in spite of the fact that the automobile indus try has been engaged in similar un dertaking The demand for horses is still great The supply of some classes of them is inadequate The prices are high The automobile may scare the horse into the ditch but it isnt likely to crowd him to the wall There will always be a field for the horse as there will always be a field for the automobile Hartford Times Rothschilds Never Prosecute While the Bank of England makes it a point never under any circum stances to relinquish the prosecution of those who have defrauded it in the slightest degree being willing if need be to spend thousands of pounds to capture and prosecute people who have robbed it of even a few shillings the Rothschilds make it a rule never to appeal to the courts or to the police in such matters Of course they are like every other banker occasionally the victims of dishonesty but neither the police nor the public ever hear about the matter This has always been a principle of the heads of the house who take the ground that it is better to bear the loss in silence than to disturb popular confidence in the safety of the concern by allowing it to be seen that its treasures are not adequately safeguarded POSTUM CEREAL CO LTD Guarantee On Their Products We warrant and guarantee that all packages of Postum Cereal Grape Nuts and Elijahs Manna hereafter sold by any jobber or retailer comply with the provisions of the National Pure Food Law and are not and shall not be adulterated or mis branded within the meaning of said Act of Congress approved June 30 1906 and entitled An act for preventing the manufac ture sale or transportation of adul terated or mis branded or poisonous or deleterious foods drugs medicines liquors and for regulating traffic there in for other purposes Postum Ckkkal Co Ltd C W Post Ghairman Battle Creek Mich Dec 12 1906 Subscribed and sworn to before me this 15th day of December 1906 Benjamin F Reid Notary Public My commission expires July 1 1907 Our goods are pure they always i have been and always will be they are not mis branded We have always sincethe beginning of our business primed a truthful statement on the packages of the ingredients contained therein and we stand back of every uackage Art In Hand Made Articles Oscar S Straus the new secretary of commerce and labor is a connois seur of pottery and porcelains Ma chinery ho said has robbed us of our useful arts to a great extent In machine made things there can be no artistic quality no Individual expres sion In hand made things even the humblest there is always an oppor tunity for art to show itself No Advance in Wisdom Mark Twain tells how four years ago he was Invited by the University of Missouri to go out there and receive the degree of LL D At the same time he visited Hannibal his boyhood home Just as he was about to leave being accompanied to the station by a crowd ofcitizens Tom Nash a school fellow came up white headed but still a boy He shook hands with his friend of many a year and nodding toward the crowd said People of this town are the same blamed fools they always were aint they Sam 1 STOVE POLISH N 1 ALWAYS READY TO USE NO j I DIRT DUST SMOKE OR SMELL 1 NO MORE STOVE POLISH TROUBLES TiP irJUTruilWMiiw 11 TTIIlVlW I Til II W N U OMAHA NO 1 1907 IGK HEADACHE ARTERS 1M3I ITTLE HIV PILLS LflL H GARTERS HlVER PILLS r mmmm r mmw SaSdSSSaSSJ i I SI0000 REWARD is OVER Positively cored by these Little Fills They also relievo Dto trcss from Ityspcpsia In digestion and Too Hearty Eating A perfect rem edy for Dtalncsa Nausea Drowsiness Bad Taste In tho Mouth Coated Tonguo rain In tho SIdo TORPID LIVER They regulate tho Dowels Purely Vegetable SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE SMALL PRICE Genuine Must Bear Fac Similo Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES Canadian Government Free Farms Over 200000 American farmers wlio have set tled in Canada during the past few years testi fy to the fnctthnt Cana da is tevonI rmebtioa the greatest farming laud in the world NINETY LLION BUSHELS of wheat from thu harvest of 1906 menus good money to the farmers of Western Cauaic vrlicn t lie world has to be fed Cattle Raising Ua try ing and Mixed Farming are also profitable call ings Coal wood and water in abundance churches and schools convenient markets easy of access Taxes low For advice and information address the Super intendent of Immigration Ottawa Canada or any authorised Canadian Government Agent W V BENNETT 801 New York Life Building Omaha Nebraska u S NAVY enlists Ior four years youim men of kooU ctiaracter anil bimml pbvsieal condition be tween ttiu nKfs ot 17 anil i5 as apprentice sea men opportunities for advancement pay Jlti to 71 a inoniu Klectr cians machinists blacksmiths coppersmiths yeomen clerks carpenters thipiiticK firemen uiiiHiclaiiK cooks etc between 21 and years enlisted in special ratings with suitable pay hospital apprentices la to 2S years Retirement on three fourths pay and allowances after ill years service Applicants must be American citizons First clothinu onttlt freo to recruits Upon discharge travel allowance t cents per nine to place of enlistment It nus four months pay and increase in pay upon ru eiiiistmeiit within lour months of tlischirxe unices at lincotn and Il istlncs Nebraska Also ounnK winter at IVs Miilnts and Sioux 1iti lowi Address NAVY RECRUITING STATI0NP0Bldg0MAIIA FARMS FOR REHT tl J MtiLHArL SIOUX CITY JOWA mjr You save money ra Jm and avoid failures in your m baking if you use BjL iw iSvwA r rxt tP 2 S gjgajK grgg Epsfe uupa llilljitei 25 ounces gv 25 cents IS IK TT w SSW H w wsi i nere is true economy i ou cannot ar ounces te sure every time or have your Mi Kisw r i i 111 S tgll some if you pay less or MF fllxPW P1 a substitute MR vJwsaSjSsgSP msrl JAQUES MFG CO tfiS1 qggPSgir Chicago nPgCTrejraff TWqjrjgrgM II I III II MHII 1 1 IIIM Wf Nothing pleases the eye so much Y t sK stiffljMflm a a wel1 made dainty Vi I I rjPW v t j Y ll if properly laundered j toM W To get the bet results f I I P V V a 35a I Vi ijatls necessary to use I m I ii the best laundry f fByit1 i Iff lr c MihMJZs I gives that finish to th lothes that all ladies de -ire and should ob tain It is the delight of the experienced Isurdress Once tried they will use no other It is pure and is guaranteed not to injure the most delicate fatric It is sold by the best grocers at ioc a package Each package contains 16 ounces Other starches not nearlv so good sell at the same price per package but they contain onlv 12 ounces of starch Consult your own interests Ask lor DEFIANCE STARCH get it and we know you will never Ube any other Paid for the proof of any misrapresenta tions tn our Literature abuut in the GULF COAST COUNTRY IN SOUTH TEXAS Our Farmers make nre croo of from Sooo to S10000 Der acre and two or three crops a year SUFFICIENT RAINFALL PRODUC TIVE SOILS ARTESIAN WELLS HEALTHFUL CLIMATE No Ulizzards in onr Country like in the Pan handle Land sells NOW at Suoo to Sis 00 per acre on ea r trnns WRITE TO DAY for FREE LITERATURE and LATFT TEXAS MAP ndvertisinz Department D FALFURRIAS IMMIGRATION COMPANY KANSAS CITY MO LETS SHOW YOU