How many American women in lonely homes to-day long1 for this blessing to come into their lives , and to be able to utter these words , but because of some organic derange ment this happiness is denied them. Every woman interested in this subject should know that prepara tion for healthy maternity is accomplished by the use of Mrs. Maggie Calmer , of West Union , S. C.writes to Mrs. Pinkham : "I was greatly run-down in health from a weakness peculiar to my sex , when Lydia E. Pinkhiim' s Vegetable Compound was recommended to me. It not only restored nc to perfect health , Taut to my delight I am a mother. " Mrs. Josephine Hallof , Bardstown , Ky. , writes : " I was a very great sufferer from female troubles , and my physician failed to help me. Lydia- . Pinkham's Vege table Compound not only restored mete to perfect health , but I am now a proud mother. " FACTS F < D8 SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound , made from roots and herbs , has been the standard remedy for female ills , and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled'with , displacements , inflammation , ulceration - tion , fibroid tmiihrs , irregularities , periodic pains , bar-kache , that bear ing-down feeling , llatuleney , indiges tion , dizziness orix-ryous prostration. "Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all side " \vomen to write her for advice. She lias guidftxl thousands to health. Address , Lynn , Mass. Save Tfee Package lops J K and Soap Wrappers from " 20-KULE-TCAM" Products and Exchange them Free For Yai&sMs Premlens \ 40 page i'lustralaJ Free cisk > En of l.OOO artless. Addresc PACIFIC COAST BOBAX CO. . CHICAGO. ILL Local Aaenls Wanted. Wcke lor Moner Mafciea Plan NEW LAW obtained JOHN W. MORRIS. Washington , D. 0. , l. i rine Illustrated Souvenir 1'ostal Cards all Iiy null prepaid for only 3tip. Just what cvor\li > il\ is buying. Si-nd I' . O. stamps. .Al-o lariro iroc oatitk'iiuo of sheet juusic \vlit-re \ < m can l > m rhf.ip. Address L. C. DKAX , South Oinaln. Neb. < ff afflicted yriib ' isen'sEyeWater core Eyes , use \ Woman's AVit. / ' An emperor of Germany besieged a city which belonged to one of his re bellious noblemen. After the siege had lasted for a long time the euopwor de termined to take it by storm and to de stroy all it contained Uy fire and sword. He did not , however , wish to injure the defenseless women ; therefore , he sent a proclamation into the town , sayIng - Ing that all the women might leave the place unhurt and carry with them whatever they held most precious. Tbe nobleman's wife instantly decided to take her husband , and the other women followed her example. They soon is sued from the city gate in a lees pro cession , each one with her husband on her shoulders. The emperor was so much struck with the nobla conduct of the women that he spared all ; even the city itself was loft untouched. liiHtrnmentiil Munlc. That a word may convey vastly dif ferent meanings when differently useu is amusingly illustrated by a story from the Brooklyn Life. "Have ye heard me daughter Mona sing lafelyV" asked Mr. Dugan. "Both lately and earlj * , " said Mr. nogan. " 'Tis the fine iusthrumental music she do make. " "Ye ignoramus ! Sure , singing ain't instrumental music ! " indignantly re plied Mr. Dugan. "Keegan told me it was insthrumen- tal in causing bim to move two blocks away from yer house. " The sum of $ . " .7. > 0 was paid in London the oilier day for an orchid on Odonto- ( glossum Crispium Pittoiiuiu. s PRICKS AT HIGH MAF.K. Level for 1007 T\venty-17ine Par Cent Above Average for Years. It will be of intiTc.sjt to tli'.sevlio were busy hist year in kecpiui : the wolf from the do < , r to know that Hirurcs < .n wholesale prices of ± 18 representative articles reached tbe apex of tistica are for the eighteen years be tween 1800 and 1007. The annual report on this subject of the Commerce ami Labor Departments shows that the average for the year 1007 was .1.8 per ceit higher than for 1000 ; 44.4 per cent higher than for 1807 , the year of lowest price- ? during the eighteen-year period , and -0.5 per cent higher than the average for the ten years from 3S90 to 1800. Prices reached their highest point during the eighteen-year period in October. 1007. the average for that mouth being 1.2 per cent higher Uian the average for the year 1007 , and ! 2.S per cent higher than the average for December , 100.1 , the mouth of highest prices in that year. year.When When the commodities divided into nine groups every group shows an Increase in price in x ] 907 as compared with 1900. For farm products taken as a whole this increase v is greatest. nameJy , 10.9 per cent ; for food , -1.0 per cent ; for clothes and clothing. H.O per cent ; for fuel and lighting. J.t per ceit ; for metals and implements. G.I pel- cent ; for lumber and building materi als , 4,9 per cent ; for drugs and chem icals. S.o per cent ; for house furnish ing goods , O.S per cent , an-1 for the mis cellaneous uroup. . " > per ceit. The effect of the money stringent y in the latter part of the last year is re- llecled in the decrease recorded in all commodities during November and De cember. the average price showing a decrease of 3.5 per cent below October. Of the 258 articles for which wholesale - sale prices were recorded 172 showed nn increase in the average prices for 1007 as compared with lOJfC ; thirty-five showed no change and fifty-one showed a decrease. Hydrophobia is in reality so rare and so terrifying that its symptoms ami treat ment are little understood. As a. matter of fact , the commonly accepted expivsj sion of madness in a dog ; is often mislead- ing. The real mad dog does not slum water - , tor , as it is said. On the contrary , mad dojrs often rush to the water and drink eagerly , if they are able to swallow. The mad dog does not froth at the mouth. It does not ran amuck , snapping at in its . everything path. j What , then , are the indications of the mad ( los ? To these familiar with a siven Oog the surest symptom and tihe one which ' would excite closest attention is a dis tinct and unaccountable change in the clog's disposition a stajd clog becoming excitable and a frisky one dull. That condition - dition does not necessarily mean rabies ' but it w suspicious , and if. in addition. | 1 the dog 'has ' trouble in swallowing as . though it seemed to have a bone in its | throat beware ! That dog should be in-1 | stantly tied up. because if it he rabies it' takes but a day or two for ferocious instincts - , stincts to develop. | ' The unmistakable evidence , however , of ' a dog with rabies is the sticky , whitish ' saliva which1 covers the teeth and sliow < j on the drawn lips. The eyes glare and | , are red ; the dog has paroxysms of run ning fury , during which it barks hoarsely , which alternate with periods of temporory exhaustion. Caspar Whitney , in Outing for July. Doctors IHscu.ss Industrialism. The effects of the present-day tendency i of women , to eater into economic compe tition with men came up for nn airing be fore the Chicago meeting of the American Academy of Medicine. Several of the [ male physicians deplored the fact that "too many women uusexed themselves by forsaking home lifo for work in shops , stores and factories , " and one said that the lack of servants and housewives was disrupting society. A woman doctor , Helen C. Putnam of Providence , came out squarely for woman suffrage , holding that every woman had the right to develop her best faculties , to seek education and to enter a business field where she might se lect a father for her children on terms o social and intellectual equality. Dr. IJur- rell of Boston , the new president of the association , took strong ground in favor of educating the public as to general hy giene and sanitation , saying this was the duty of the medical profession. The House of Delegates of the association recommended the croalion of a commis sion to watch and oppose legislation against vivisection. A Heavywolslit Ticket. In spite of the act that Secretary Taft has oftea laughingly dadared that "no real gentleman weighs moro than 800 pounds , * hU solid bulk combined with the compact frsumo of his running mate , James S. Sherman , makes tha henvit'st ticket ever put forward by any national party. The two men together tip th scales at something not far short of T > OO ponnds. Tlie record before this waa held by tha Democrats on the strength of the avoirdu pois of Grover Cleveland. When nomi nated in 1892 Mr. Cleveland weighed about 275 pounds , hjit tha small figure of Adlai E. Stevenson kept the total around 425 pounds. Jones' noomerimj : ; Flle i. Charles 0. Jonre made a remarkable trial flight in his airship Boomerang , starting at nammondsport , X. Y. lie sailed first to WaUcins. twenty-sis miles , and then on to within six miles of Bath , where he ran into a tree and ripped his gas bag. The novel features in the Jones ship are the use of a second gas bag trailing behind to replace the sup ply of the main bag. which is 93 feet long and cigar-shaped , and a system of oallast moving that employs a little sand car moving on tracks. Don't borrow too nruchv It is more satisfaction both to yourself and your neighbors to have tools of your own. The animal that lias a full , bricht eye is apt to be healthy. And a moist nose is another indication of health. If the farmer pays too much atten tion to the glibtongued'agent he Is liable to buy moro machinery than will have standing room on his farm. A young lady of New York has bought a farm on Long Island and i ? planning to raise humming birds for the market. She says they make good pets and are easy to raise. Give the cows that are rather thin in flesh a little better care than the rest. Don't neglect the other cows ; just bear on a little harder with the ones that are not doing well. That's all. A number of prominent farmers ii Douglas County , S. D. , have organized a Farmers' Telephone Company and uill build lines in that part of the State. The company is capitalized at F10.000. Always give the hired man a chance to attend the institute meetings and see i ! I that he goes. lie will be pretty sure to hear something that will make him . a better farmer and that will be to i . your advantage as well as to his. The average farmer , constituted as most of them are , will have better suc- 1 cess if he devotes his energies to the j raising of either a strictly beef or dairy breed of cattle rather than to what is generally understood as a dual purpose breed. It Is better to dilute liquid manure with water , for the reason that the wa ter partially prevents loss of ammonia and also because urine is too strong for ordinary plants. An excellent mode j of treating urine , or liquid manures of j any kind , is to add twice its bulk of water , then add a pound of kainit lo four gallons of the mixture. If the slugs start to work on the currant and gooseberry bushes , they may be dusted with powdered white hellebore , or the same may be applied as a spray , made by mixing one ounce of the chemical In two gallons of wa ter. Paris green is also effective and may be applied in the form of dust , using one pound of the poison to twenty - ty pounds of Hour. If the dust spray is used , it is best to apply it when the dew is on the leaves. To prepare onion seed for planting , pour it into a small vessel containing luke-warm water. Do not reverse it and pour water over the seed. Let stand ten or twelve hours in a warm place. It will do no harm if the seed bursts open. The seed can be dried by sprinkling fine ashes over them , and will then be ready to sow. If the ground is properly prepared , the onion will have no trouble in getting ahead of the weeds and grass. While European and Asiatic coun tries have forms of animal and bird life to bo found nowhere else , the American continent seems to possess an exclusive monopoly of humming birds. Of the four hundred odd vari eties nearly all are to be found in the tropical regions. Only eighteen cross the borders of the United States from Mexico , and all but one or two vari eties spend their summers in the south ern states. While this tiny bird does secure some honey from flowers , Its food consists chiefly of small insects which are found In tlio vicinity of flow er beds , many of which are injurious to the flowers. Thus in the case of this smallest representative of bird life it seems to have been created not only as a thing of beauty , but for the perform ance of a helpful mission. Big Carriage Horses. As foreign conditions have their ef fect on the horse industry in this coun try , the views of a writer in a London paper are of some interest here. This correspondent claims that the wealthy Jobmasters of London are unable to let or hlro anything but big carriage horses , and In the absence of home breds they by them in America or on the continent of Europe. The number they now require could be expressed In thousands and the checks they send would amount to something more lika millions. Ho thinks breeders need have no doubt about future markets for any stylish , full sized carriage horses they may be enabled to put upon the Lon don market In advocating the produc tion of such full sized carriage horses as now appear In tbe parks and fash- lonablo streets of London he does not disparage tn | fashionable hackney which adorns the elegant victoria , but wants the larger type to be bred In equal numbers. How to Secure and Itctnln Zt The importance of getting moisture into the soil and keeping a sufficient amount in store there for all demand of crops is conceded by all farmers , and jet there are wide differences of opin ion among tn m : is ro tne ties : to re.tfh that result. Grass. rnl clover und alf.ili'a njots are Ircquently im > n- .tioned as channels to conduct iir > isturo down into the soil. It is true they may have the force to push themselves down into the subsoil to a greater distance than most other vegetation.but in order to determine their utility in this respect their conductive ability must be ascer tained. It Is evident that the roots must be very small while forcing their way into the hard soil , but notwith standing their threadlike size , they do not easily penetrate it , and if they suc ceed in their search for moisture they increase in size in spite of tluir com pressed surroundings. It is evident that in the course ot growth through very compact material the roots will have inado no channel for water nor for anything but themselves * selves , and when the surface soil is plowed they die , and when decay has reduced their size they leave a channel for water , but the holes they leave are very small and are quickly closed by a dashing rain and the sediment thus created , and thus the channels produced by the decayed roots are stopped and sealed before much water has found its way into the hard undersoil. Still it is true a little water has thereby gone deeper into the ground than before and a little is better than none ; but it is evident that the above method is not effective and a better way must be found. Starting with the self-evident propo sition that water easily finds its way down In loose soil , it follows that a way of making the soil loose further down than it is commonly plowed , so that a largo supply of water can be taken in as fust as a heavy downpour can fur nish it is the proper method and can be done with the right kind of sub soil plow. It has a great advantage over grasses , alfalfa or clover , is a better rooter than all of them combined , and furnishes immensely better chan nels tluin they do for water storage. It has been shown by experience , how ever , that it requires good judgment to properly use the subsoil plow , and an other most important point is to get the right kind of a plow. But when this is done and the work accomplished you may property feel a degree of inde pendence never before enjoyed. The Foreisrn Market for Grain. The influence of European agriculture on the welface of American farmers is strikingly illustrated in a bulletin re cently issued by the Department of Ag riculture on the cereal production of Europe , by a special European agent of the bureau of statistics , giving complete ofiicial statistics , as far as they have been published , of the acreage , produrv tion and average yield of the various grains in each country of Europe fur the last twenty-five years. It appears that wheat and corn are the two grains that Europe imports largely from abroad. European produc tion of rye , Imrley and oats is practic ally suflicient for national require ments. The growing dependence of for eign countries for much of its grain supply Is illustrated by the fact that during the last twenty years Europe has increased its average purchase of wheat more than 100,000,000 bushels , or about SO per cent , and has doubled its annual purchases of corn. It is only in Northwestern Europe that the dependence on foreign agriculture is increasing. The wheat production of those countries has remained practical ly unchanged during the last twenty ycars , while their requirements have been steadily increasing , so that they now require from foreign sources 190- 000,000 bushels a year more than they did twenty years ago. It appears that the average yield per acre Is the high est In those countries where wheat cul ture Is least generally practiced , and where the acreage under that gi'ain shows the smallest Increase. The ex tension of the wheat area , on the con trary , is the most marked where the yield is lowest. A high average yield , such as is ob tained in Northwestern Europe about twice as high as the best average yield recorded in this country presupposes the use of valuable land , justifying a large outlay in labor and fertilizers , as well as an abundant supply of good , but cheap , labor. These conditions of intensive culture , however , are much more favomWe to the growth of corps other than grain , which give the great est profit when raised on a large scale on now and comparatively cheap land. It appears that the average crop in Germany Is worth about $ -10 , and from an acre of sugar beets $00 , while \\hoat yields onJy $29 and rye $21 per acre. In France the value of hops reaches $153 , tobacco $93 and sugar beets $47 , against only $21 per acre for wheat. In the Netherlands the gross return per acre of wheat , $20 , is far over shadowed by returns from tobacco , $213 ; potatoes , $74 ; sugar beets , $52. Wheat bread is increasing in use much faster titan rye bread. For all Europe the annual percaplta consumption of rye twenty years ago was a trifle un der S bushels , and it is now only a trifle more than that amount Dur ing the same twenty years the wheat consumption increased from 4 to more than 4 % bushels a year for each in habitant Only Russia , Germany , the Netherlands and Scandanavia now uss rye more largely than wheat r'IMtM'yJrL - I l jMSii- * TMI i 'i ' CnS- ' CnS3 " 3 * 4 SaJi asKi For Infants and Children. a& ! ' ! ji B5agrf r o S r- < SuraW 2500 . ! ' ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT - - > 200 A gejablefteparalhinlarAs- nSf So * , ' sirailaiing iteRjotfaralRegula Bears the fe ' ting Ute Stomadis aMBowelsoT Signature Proraoles DigestfonJCheanfl-j of ness and Rest ontainsneilteri OpiunuMorphinc narMiDEiaLi NOT NARCOTIC. flnapkin SccJ- jilx.Scwa + , , , vir > JkchtUeSdk- E'S ' y P § . . * MfM i f/\ * J ( KL il ClorJicd Sugar . ItiutErtai Hartf" ApcrFcct Remedy for ConsRpa- tion , Sour Stonmch.Diarrlicei Y/orms.CoiTVuIsions.FcvcrisIi- i 8f 2c o ness andLoss OF SHEER j a & I Facsimile Signature of " ? * - - 6 # ffi ! ninv ars NEW YORK. 320 Gtmranteeduncroc 4y&c ! ! - - . _ . - . , . .uj.55j.cjai5iaotiv' Exact Copy of Wrapper. rv-c YOBH CITY. nfral Line TO and Every Thursday Until Sept. 24th inclusive o VJA "LAKE SHORE" OR "MICHIGAN CENTRAL" o , o VIA "BIG FOUR ROUTE" Good for return 30 days Correspondingly low fares to Canada , Adirondack Mountains and St. Lawrence River WARREN J. LYNCH , Passenger Traffic Mgr. , CHICAGO CHICAGOJ Itooulc ? Mnzzle. They were like fairy helmets little wire helmets no bigger than a walnut. "They are rooster muzzles , * ' said the city fanner , as he led the way past the pea beds on the window sills-the potato tate field on the back porch , and the flourishing musJi-oom crop under the outhouse. "Rooster muzzles ! " "Even so. Muzzles not to prevent roosters from biting for even the ganiest fowl has never been known to snap but to prevent them from crow ing. See here. " They had reached the tiny chicken run. The city farmer caught a rooster and gently slipped a muzzle over its fierce head. "Now , " said he , "it can't crow. It can't wake the neighbors with its crows at daybreak. Hence , thanks to this muzzle , it is at last possible to keep chickens in the most crowded city quarters. Harrison Weir invented the rooster muzzle. A rooster , to crow , you see , stands erect , flap ? his wings , throws back his head , and opens his beak wide. If he can't open his beak no crow can come from his little red throat" Chicago Inter Ocean. The Whole The determined suffrage leader bit off her words in verbal spikes. "You Insignificant men , " she hissed , "don't know how much we brave wom en have on our heads. " And the great big loafer who Ind sneaked in to warm his hands stretched himself and responded : * "Yes , we do , lady. De last new hat I piped looked like de main circus tent and de animal tent combined. " Keeps the breath , teeth , mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from un healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors , which water , soap and tooth preparations alone cannct do. A germicide ! , disin fecting and deodor izing toilet requisite ( b f f t f of exceptional ex cellence and econ omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes , throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores , 50 cents , or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample WITH "HEALTH AND BEAUTY- BOOK BENT race THE PAXTON TOILET CO. , Boston , Mass , S. C. X. U. - - Xo. 2 ! ) 11)08. DAISY FLY KILLER f73 ; clem , ornamental , cccvealeut , choip. I.ant * all Benson. Ab luUif harmieifi wUl cot toil or in * e ff e c 1 1 , All < ien 1 ern < v rt'- r - - nd for 20 < j. HnrnM homer * . , 149 lleKalbutZ BrooUj-n , > . Y. > TO = NIGHT BEST rCS THE BSSUS D UVES