FACTS GUARANTEED Neuralgia and Anosmia are Cured by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. For nearlya generation the people of this country have known Dr. Williams' Pink Pills , during which time proof of thousands of curefi by this remedy has been published and confirmed and not one person has been harmed in the slight est degree by their use. The pills con tain no opiate , narcotic or stimulant , nor any drug which could injure the most delicate constitution. 4 'For ' ' Miss Charlotte over a year , says Van Salisbury , of Gastleton , W.Y. , "I Buffered from neuralgia and palpitation of the heart. My skin was pale and sal low and I was troubled with dizziness , fainting spells and fits of indigestion. 1 was very nervous and would start at tli slightest sound. At times a great weak * ness would come over mo and on one oc casion my limbs gave way under me and I fell to the sidewalk. " Of course I was treated by onr local physicians and also consulted a noted doctor at Albany , but nothing they gave me seemed to benefit me. One day I read in a newspaper about Dr.Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People and I imme- iintely gave them a trial. I soon felt much'better and my color had be un to return. I continued using the pills and by the time I had taken eight boxes 1 was entirely cured. " My sister , Sarah Van Salisbury , suf fered terribly from autemia. She was pale and thin and we feared that she would become a victim of consumption. She tried Dr.Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People and in a short time she be- rau to gain in strength and weight. She is now strong and well and we both heartily recommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to" all who are in ill health. " Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all druggists or sent , postpaid , on receipt of price , 50 ceuts per box , six boxes for $2.00 , by the Dr.Williams Medicine Co. , Schenectady , N".Y. Descriptive pam phlets free on request. Didn't Make GootlT" Tess Don't you think Mr. Galley is awfully handsome ? Jess Huh ! "Handsome is as hand some does. " He told me last evening that he was going to kiss me before he leftTess Tess The idea ! Weren't you indig nant ? Jess I should say I was. When a man promises to do a thing he ought to keep his word. Philadelphia Press. Money Money--3,000 ways to make money with little or no capital. Any one will make you wealthy. Our book , 3CS pages , tells you just how to do it In that many different ways. Grasp this opportunity. Price 50c postpaid. Central Supply Co. , 67 Clark St. , Chicago cage , 111. Pardoned. "Who Is that distinguished-looking man ? " asked the stranger. "Dat man save me a good deal of trouble once , " replied the man on the corner. "He interrupted me in de mid dle of a sentence and " "Ah , I see. You were going to say something improper and " "Naw ! I wuz in de penitentiary an' he wuz Governor of de State at de time. " Philadelphia Ledger. Chnntnaqua Lnke , K" . T" . Two special excursions from Chicago , $14.00 round trip , on July Gth and 27th. limit 30 days.Particulars and reser vations , City Ticket Office , 234 Clark street , Chicago. , Afraia to Anlc Too Much. Legislator I see a Kansas man ared "a pass is a bribe , and any ce cee man ou 1jt to be to ° b'S to accept such enc -a small br/be- nc Second Lt 'Sislalor Well , of course , fr 'that's true , tix. ' * 5t would Jook kinder In " ° further and ask the re s small fer us to b" reT ' ' ' T ] to UK fcr ri(1In' wouldn't tHSSJpggyJs puy Ii jt ? Kansas jgljy.TIn/08- be " PRESERVED. beT NOT DOTTED MEAT" T ] w < jUanufactnrers' Association we N e ; Itnry Inspector So Rtfflo. beef The following extracts from J of the National Manufacturers' ofmi miCe elation and Inspector Hedrlck , Inspector of the City of Chicago , refute' the sensational charges made against the canned meat packers : Our investigation of the Canned and Potted Meat part of the packing industry showed that the methods used make the use of preservatives unnecessary , and in dicated that no preservatives or artificial coloring is now used by the Canned Meat packer. 'The meat is first partially cooked in large kettles , then the fat and bone is .trimmed off and the meat packed into tins. The air Is then withdrawn with vacuum pumps and the cans sealed in .vacuum. . Nest they are put into large cookers , where the cooking process is fin ished. In the packing of some products it is necessary that the cans be reopened and the steam allowed to escape , the vent hole being immediately resealed while the goods are hot , so as to retain the vacuum. The entire process is quite similar to that used by the family cook when putting Co .tip fruits and vegetables , except that tty meats are sealed in tin cans instead of ket being put in glass jars. We found that she the solder in making the cans and in sealing them is all placed on the outside a of the can and does not come in contact the with the contents. of We were informed that much of the Ilk cause for complaint in canned meats was aft because of the mistaken idea that the of goods would keep in perfect condition af vei ter they had been opened. This would fro be the fact if they were preserved with de chemicals , butt as they are only kept in condition because of being sealed in vacuum lea uum tins they spoil just as readily as fresh meats do after they have been lln opened and exposed to the air , but will lea teep Indefinitely if the can is not punc Jus tured. It is also a well-known scien or tific fact that decaying meat generates the a gas which -will explode any package th which is hermetically sealed. Sanitary Inspector Hedrick submitted tri to Commissioner Whalen his analysis of at conditions in the Libby , McNeill & Libby elo plant. He found "with reference to gen- > * ral conditions , that the floors , halls , lea ijtairs , tables , etc. , are kept clean , " and art ' that the entire department viewed from ehi ; nr standpoint was in a satisfactory con tin dition. All workrooms are light , and have do TtoUlatinn. " an ERA OF EQUAL EIGHTS IS AT EA1TD. By Jose oh W. Folk. Political revival is .going on all over the land to-day on the subject of the rule of the people. The people ple of Philadelphia , Cincinnati , Pitts- burg , Pennsylvania , and Ohio have been fighting to regain the. govern ment they had lost. The people are beginning to awaken to a realization of the fact that the government of the city , State and nation belongs to JDS. w. FOLK. them , and they can take the sovern- tnent Into their own hands whenever they wish. We need more respect for existing laws rather than more laws. The only way the people can rule is through the laws made by their representatives. If these laws are not obeyed , then , instead of .1 government by the people , there is a government by those with wealth or influence enough to obtain o/flcial nullification of the laws. Had Providence ordained that Adam , the first man , should have life eternal here , and as the ruler of his millions of descendants he had received a salary of S175 a day , his 0,000 years' savings would not bring his fortune up to that of Mr. Carnegie. Yet the wages of < he average man is nearer $1.75 a day than $175 , and instead of living 0,000 years the span of his life hardly reaches 40 years. If a man were to receive a salary of . ' 310,000 a year , and save every cent of it he would have to live 5,000 years before he could match his fortune > vith that of the prince of oils , acquired through the sys tem of special privileges. How Is It that men can accumu late in a few years as much as under normal conditions it would take tens of thousands of years to obtain ? This could not have been done if the doctrine of equal rights prevailed ; it is done because of the ruje of the special privilege. MAN SHOULD LHTE A CENTUKY. By Sir Satxucl Wilks. It is remarkable why a dog should be worn out and old after his ten revolutions , a horse after twenty , and man when he has had his three score and ten. According to one scien tist an animal's age is fjveJimes that of the period taken to reach maturity. Tn the case of the elephant , which the zoological society sold to Barnniu , and which was shortly after- uj iitciueni ; , tue sueieton and which was shortly- afterward killed by accident , the vras again brought lo England in a show , and it was then seen that the long bones were still distinct and separate. This accorded with its supposed age of 22 years when It was sold. According , therefore , to the authority referred to man ought to live to be 100 years old. There seems nothing opposed to the possibility of the age of man having been greater than now in the time of the patriarchs. There is a doctrine as old as Aristotle that asserts that the function conies first and then the organ. I may remind the reader of the large muscles of the blacksmith's arm or the dancer's leg , and that they are therefore proportionately strong , and that this in creased development came in consequence of their being put to greater use when they were of normal size. Just as we use our muscles if we wish to retain their strength , so likewise must we continue to use the brain in order to preserve it in working order. Use brings MODERN HAYMAKING. fork In the Ilayilelcl Xot the La borious Process of the Past. Haymaking is not the laborious pro- jss that it was fifty years ago , or ren ten years ago. Every step can sw be accomplished by machinery , rom the cutting to the final storing i the mow or stack , except the ar- mging of the hay on the wagons , hese conveniences permit rapid band og and enable the farmer to malic the ; st use of every dry day or half day. he side delivery rake combines the ork of the dump rake and tedd'er , avlng continuous windrows that can > taken up by the loader. The curing timothy is a comparatively simple atter If rains can be avoided and ere are no coarse weed stalks mixed Clover hay is more difficult blood to the organ , and so its nutrition is kept up and its healthy state is retained. As a result of this it may be said that , as a rule , professional men , or judges , or legislators , whose minds are continually active , live longer than those who retire from business at an early age and have no pccupation to employ their leisure. Occupation may therefore be considered as one of the necessities of long life. ' POSSIBLE TO FORETELL THE FUTURE. ' Bv H. G. Wells. Why should things cease at man ? Why should not this rising curve rise yet more steeply and swiftly ? There are things to suggest that we are now in a phase of rapid and unprec. " "entcd development. The condi tions under which men live are changing with an ever increasing rapidity , and so far as our knowledge goes no sort of creatures have ever lived under changing conditions with out undergoing the profoundest changes themselves. ID the last century there was more change In the conditions of human life than there had been in the previous thou sand years. And now if It has been possible for men , by picking out a number of suggestive and significant looking things In the present and comparing them , criticising them , and discussing them with a perpetual insistence upon "why , without any guiding tradition , and , indeed , in the teeth of established beliefs , to construct this amazing search light of Inference Into the remoter past , is is really , after ail , such an extravagant and hopeless thing to suggest that by seeking for operating causes instead of for fos sils , and by criticising them as persistently and thor oughly as the geological record has been criticised , it may not bespossible to throw a searchlight of Inference forward instead of backward , and to attain a knowledge of coming things as clear , as universally convincing , and infinitely more Important to mankind than the clear vision of the past that geology iias opened to us during the nineteenth century ? MARRIAGE MISERY IF WIFE HOLDS PURSE. During the first year of married life people ought to settle the scale of domestic economy upon which they propose to live. It Is better to set this scale below , rather than above , the mark , since it can be far more easily raised than Jowered. From the first the wife should be careful to. pay her bills every week. The first few months of married life are the hey- dey of a wife's power. Let her use it not merely to get concessions , presents , or any Immediate advantage , but to make her husband the sort of man and husband he would like himself afterwards to be. Prominent among new doctrines in this era of strange gospels Is that which holds that the woman is bound to contribute to the support of the family by earning money as the man does. Which is , on the face of it , contrary to nature. It Is the province of the woman * to make the home , of the man to furnish the materials wherewith it is made. The wife who does her whole duty within the walls of her own home is a true helpmeet , and , while her loving service can be repaid only in love , she is also financially well worthy of her hire. A physician , who addressed the recent health congress in Europe , declared that "A home pursuit for women would work miracles in thousands of cases of nervous disease. " leaves remain green and strong , the work of pumping the stems goes on un til the whole plant Is dried out. Mon treal Star. In the Meerschaum Mines. Few of the smokers to whose hearts a meerschaum pipe is dear know any thing of the history of the material. Some interesting particulars of its source and treatment are given in the Bo rd of Trade Journal. The district of JJskischehir. Asia Minor , supplies the whole of the meerschaum used throughout the world and the industry gives employment to about 4,000 per sons , mainly Kurds and Persians. The best yield is obtained from mines , but supplies are also still obtained from the sea. The methods of working are prlmi- porary home of Major L H. Tomlinsor. who has lived since the recent unpleas antness in a cistern at the corner ol Broadway and Jones street. The cistern is in the summit of a hill onthe Demarest estate and Is reached through a short tunnel. A rough opening has been made in the wall , and in this primitive doorway the occupant may be seen smoking the pipe of con tentment , as indifferent to earthquakes as were his ancestors or the stone age. A cat shares the subterranean apart ment and pictures from the magazines have been pasted upon its walls. It had been the intention of tne owners of the property to make a curio room of the cistern , whlcb Is about ten feet , across , anci its walls had been covered with whitewash. T&e smoke of . : -.r * ! , - . : / = ? : MODERN HAYMAKING WITH SIDE DELIVERY RMvE AM > LOADER. dry out and on this account its qual- is often impaired , bringing its niar- ; price considerably below what It ) uld be. SUP and wind both play part In the curing process , though j wind Is the more important factor the two. Indeed the sun alone is ely to bleach and discolor the cleverer : er It has been cut. The hot rays the sun withers up the leaves , pre- itlng the natural escape of the water im the stems. To illustrate this more arly by an example , take two trees it are cut down in June , when the .ves are in full vigor. Have the ibs removed from one so that no .ves remain. Allow the other to lie st as It fell. Examine the trees two three weeks later , and you will find it one trunk contains far more water in the'other. One tree was sucked 7 by the leaves , the other was mmed of leaves , and no pumps were work to drain the trunk dry. When iver hay is spread out to the sun the .ves which contain these little pumps put out of action , because tbey are rlveled and dried up , and cxnnot do lr duty. If , soon after cutting , the iver Is piled In fair-sized windrows , d left fairly open to ttie wind , the tive and no attempt Is madeto secure Immunity from accidents , although these occur from time to time. Batdies of from three to fifteen workmen are set to sink a well about one meter in diameter and no propping up Is effected until they strike at a depth of twenty , forty or even sixty meters a bed of red clay , in which is found meerschaum mixed with serpentine in pieces rang ing from the size of a hazel nnt to that of an apple. The extraction of these , pieces is often attended with great dif ficulties , but work Is carried on day an. } night When purchased by the wholesale merchants the meerschaum Is humid , heavy and of a yellowish tinge * It has , therefore , to be dried , either in the sun or In a kiln , according to the season of the year. This causes two-thirds to waste away , but turns it a snow-white color. It is afterward rubbed with hot water and sand and finally polished with wax and Is then ready to be placed on the market. London Tele graph. A Cistern His Home. The spirit of the cave dwellers is not dead. This is shown by the tern- great conflagration , however , converted ! ! thisto black. Major Tomlinson has found the solid be&rock in which his- abode is sunken an admirable seismn-graph , and says that he has detected more than 100' temblors since the great earthqzake. But neither fire nor seismatic disturb ance has terrors la the cistern , which , would withstand a Kansas cyclone. i San Francisco Chronicle. Harm Done. Judge Here are three witnesses who heard you call this man a liar. Have you any excuse to offer ? Prisoner Wtb.y , your honor , they were all good friends of his ; they knew it already. Translated for Tales from Faniilie-Journal. The Best Method. Medical Professor ( to student ) Give me the best method for re-establishing the circulation. Student- Call a cop. Translated for ( Tales from Le Rire. Unfortunately a man with aa eaaj going disposition Is apt to be "no ac count. ' ' Life insurance , Standard Oil , coal road "stock , deviled ham. What next ? Milwaukee Sentinel. The anarchist is an enemy of the humAn - mAn race , and should be dealt with as such. Philadelphia Press. San Francisco school children are to go to school in tents. Will they ever be able to enjoy a circus in after years ? New York Commercial. No doubt the Pullman porters run ning on the Pennsylvania linea are now jealous of the higher officials , who en joyed the coal stock graft. Houston Post. Post.Mr. Mr. Rockefeller goes abroad in a ? 700 state room , but then it must be remembered that he is taking a spe cialist physician along. New York World. President Baer now takes up the muck rake. If the practice" spreads pro fessional wielders of that implement will find their occupation gone. New York World. It is reported from Washington that Senator Beveridge is troubled with in digestion. Been reading the beef com missioners' report , eh ? Philadelphia North American. Some old letters of Rockefeller havd Just corue to light , and show that he was in favor of the simple spelling be fore Carnegie ever thought of it. Philadelphia Ledger. That old , old joke about the sausage jumping from the butcher's hook when whistled for and called Fide proves to have been grossly flattering to the saus age. New York Press. Trust magnates may be very smart men in their own offices , but on the witness t ° .nc ! tiv ! do net r.pp2.r to have any more sense than ordinary naeTr.-STVashington Star. , , A Salt Lake woman who was com pelled to chose between her husband and her dog stood by the latter. It's not an easy matter to get a really good dog. New York Herald. The business talent of some of those railroad clerks was so pronounced that if they had not been found out they might have owned the road in a short time. Philadelphia Press. Mr. Cassatt is reported lo be per turbed over that railroad graft busi ness. This is disheartening , as folks believed that he would be at least agi tated. New York World. Jesse -E. James of Missouri , son of the notorious Jesse James , seems to beef of quite a different sort. lie has just been admitted to the bar. Outlaw and in Jaw ! New York Commercial. The Anthracite Trust has put the price of coal up lo cents just to show that the miners aren't the only persons who can be magnanimous to the public. Philadelphia North American. Why should there be sympathy for a railroad clerk who is dismissed for accepting coal stock ? Such gifts are the inalienable prerogatives of the "men higher up " New York Herald. San Francisco makes the sinister an nouncement that its marriage license bureau and the detention ward for those suspected of insanity are in.the same building , New York Herald. J. Pierpont Morgan has purchased the noted art collection of Rudolphe Kann for five- and a fifth millions. Which reminds as that some Kann and some can't Neir York Commercial. We have not been able to decide whether the conviction of the packers on the charge of rebating is anarchy in the courts or a Wow at our agricultural interests and foreign trade. Philadel phia North American/ If the Panama Canal is really tobe dug to music , th re ought to be a splen- ad chance down there for some leath- er-iunged band to put the finishing touches to "Everybody Works But Father. " Washington Post Sarah Bernha dt took a day off at Coney Island to shoot the chutes and do other girlish stunts. It gives us hope that there aire many , many positively farewell tours yet in store for the country. Philadelphia North Amer ican. - * * - - J/ The Sultan o Turkey is a great col lector of canaries. The King of Bavaria receives $1,350- 000 a year for his royal services. Sir Charles Wyndham and his com pany will make a tour of this country nest year. London's lord mayors have , , during the last decade , collected more than $100- 000,000 for charity. The Duke of Bedford is the premier peer of Scotland and hereditary keeper of Holyrood castle. Prince Louis Napoleon is a general in the Russian army. This is not a re minder of Moscow , 1812. The Czar o Russia is paid § 0,750,000 a year for his private use , while each grand duke receives $1,000,000 a year. Emperor William's latest fad is photog raphy in three colors. He has a studio in his palace of Monbijou , where he works. Earl Cromer is one of th moat thor ough students of the Bible whom the English public have among their promi * nent men. MY LIFE'7 PRAISE FOR A FAMOUS MEDICINE Kra. V/illadscn Tells How She Tried Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Just In Time. ' Mrs. T. C. Willadsen , of Manning- , Iowa , writes to Mrs. Pinkham : Dear Mrs. Pinkhnm : u I can truly say that you have saved my life , and I cannot express my gratitude to you in words. "Before I wrote to you , telling you how I f alt , I had doctored for over two years steady and spent lots of money on medicines besides , but it all failed to help me. My monthly pe riods had ceased and I suffered much pain , with fainting spells , headache , backache and "bearing-down pains , and I was so weak I could hardly keep around. As a last resort I decided to write you and try Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound , and I am so thankful that I did , for after following your instructions , which you sent me free of all charge , I became regular and in perfect health. Had it not been for you I would be in my grave to-day. ' ' I'sincerely trust that this letter may lead every suffering woman in the country to write j'ou for help as I did. " When women are troubled with ir regular or painful periods , weakness , displacement or ulceration of an organ , that bearing-down feeling , inflamma tion , backache , flatulence , general de bility , indigestion or nervous prostra tion , they should remember there 13 one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. * No other femalc-medicine in the world , has ceccivcd such widespread and un qualified cndo"rse5icn"t. Refuse all sub stitutes. * * " * - . -J " For 25 years Mrs.Pinkham , daughter- in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham , has under her direction , and since her decease , been advising sick women free of charge. Address , Lynn , Mass. Kothln * Doln' , The hobo approached the pompous citizen and asked for alms. " 'Go to the ant , thou sluggard , ' " quoted the p. c. " 'Tain't no 5se , mister , " answered the hobo. "Me aunt's jist as tightfisted - fisted as me uncle an' all de rest uv me relashuns. " BOY'S TERRIBLE ECZEMA. ilouth. and Eyes Covered with Crusts Hands Pinned Do-cm Miracu lous Cure by Cuticura "When my little boy was six months aid , he had eczema. The sores extend ed so quickly over the whole body ; that we at once called in the doctor. We then -went to another doctor , but. lie could not help him , and in our de spair we went to a third one. Matters became so bad that he had regular holes hi his cheeks , large enough to put a finger into. The food had to be giv-i en with a spoon , for his mouth was- covered with crusts as thick as a fin ger , and whenever h-2 opened the mouth they began to bleed and sup purate , as did also his eyes. Hands , arms , cnest and back , in short tha wliole body , was covered over and over. We had no rest by day or night. Whenever he was laid in his bed , wa iad to pin his hands down ; otherwise he would , scratch his face , and make an open sore. I think his face must iave itched most fearfully. "We finally thought nothing could fcelp , and I had made up my mind to send , my wife -with the child to En- rope , hoping that the sea air might cure him , otherwise he was to be put under good medical care there. But , Lord be blessed , matters came differ ently , and we soon saw a miracle. A friend of ours spoke about Cuticura. We made a trial with Cuticura Soap , Ointment and Resolvent , and -within ten days or two weeks we noticed a decided improvement. Just as quickly as the sickness had appeared it also began to disappear , and within ten ; weeks the child was absolutely well , and his skin was smooth and white as never before. F. Hohrath , President of the C. L. Hohrath Company , Man ufacturers of Silk Ribbons , 4 to 2O Rink Alley , South Bethlehem , Pa Tune 5 , 1005. " Poor Financiering- . "Maria , we'll have to give up tha < summer trip. My account at the bank ii already overdrawn. " "O , John , you are such awretchel financier ! Why didn't j-ou put your aa count in a bank that had plenty of money ? " SOMETHING NEW. Daily Through Sleeper to Dnrton , O Route , Erie R. R. to Lima , C. H. a D. to Dayton , commencing June 2 leaving Dearborn Station 9:30 p. arriving Dayton 7:55 a. m.r direct line to Wapakoneta , Sidney , Piqua and Troy , serving breakfast on cafe cat * before arrival if desired. Particulars and reservations , Erie Ticket Office , 234 Clark street , Chicago. An En Iisa n.IIItt.j * * .cvessfully test ) ed the vi.al.ry of < oiue wheat which waj srown in 1S33 r.n.-l carefully preserv * since. iW tar Chili iWUs Juvenile crime in Franca has by 30 per cent among boys and 42 cent among girls since 1881.