& i S. f:' I'. -. 1 .- - 4 ICN And nervous prostration is something you don't want, that's certain. Then don't have it. A perfect Sarsaparilla prevents' this distressing and dangerous disease, and it cures it, also.. It keeps you up when especially pressed with work. It cures, dyspepsia, and it must be a perfect Sarsaparilla to do this. learn, there isn't but one in the world, and "The only Sarsaparilla made under the personal supervision of three graotiatess a graduate in pharmacy, a graduate in chemistry, and a graduate in medicine." JLOOafcottlc JU1 rsffbls. " I, first treed Arer's Saniparilla in the fell of 184!. I case eat of the Mexican War run dowa in health and badly wed us. It did we to much good then that I have always taken it erery spring as a blood-porifying medicine. I BtUasjtt toy robust aaaka at 1 to the use of your Sanaparilla every apriag." S. T- Jokes, Wichita, Kaas., March 09, 1900. AkNEW TRAIN EAST The"New York 1i Boston Limited" VIA BIG FOUR NEW YORK CENTRAL TO J EASTERN CITIES. (Effective April 29th, 1900.) Lv. ST. LOUIS - 8:00 A.M. Lv. PEORIA .......................... ,j : 30 A. M. At. INDIANAPOLIS 2 : 25 P. M. Ar. CINCINNATI 6:00 P.M. Ar. COLUMBUS, 0 8: 10 P. M. Ar. CLEVELAND, 0 9: 55 P. M. Ar. NEW YORK 2 : 55 P. M. Ar. BOSTON 4: 50 P. M. "KNICKERBOCKER SPECIAL" still leaves St. Louis at Noon. Ask for Tickets via Big Four Route. feUMJLsWr.AMYGenirssAgt. WARREN J. LYNCH. Genl Pass. Agt., fit. Louis. Cincinnati. BILE IN THE BLOOD them. You will find you wfll be well by taking k CtlNDY CATHARTIC BBBBBBBBBraBBBBBBBa. SBBBmBBBBBBBBBBBaWBBBBBBBBr tn-WK&BPfKWSKzX&hm&0' 25r sarTMmlMSMiMMMM Ti dm mraiaf aa'TirinrfmrnfrtnTT1 You know ill about it. slave to your work. the day and worry There s no time to eat and no time to sleep. Already you have fiinrnnc Hvcitfftcfi firvnne Cflr ( kafmr "v t m i - v tPJrJ headache, and neuralgia. Your food distresses you. You depression. The outlook is dark and for bidding. You feel sure termination to this That's Nervous Prostration builds up exhausted nerve tissue. But it AYERS No matter tow pleasant your nsrroanfings health, good health, fc the foundation for en joyment. Bowel trouble causes more aches and pains than all other diseases together, and when you get a good dose of bilious bile coursing through the blood life's a hell on earth. Mfflions of people are doctoring for chronk ailments that started with bad bowels, and they will never get better tul the bowels are right. You know how it Is you neglect get irregular first suffer with a slight headache bad taste in the mouth mornings; and general "all gone" feeling during the day keep on going from bad to worse untul the suffering becomes awful, life loses its charms, and there is many a one that has been driven to suicidal relief. Educate your bowels with CASCARETS. Don't neglect the slightest irregularity. See that you have one natural, easy movement each day. CASCA RETS tone the bowels make them strong and after you have used them once you will wonder why it is that you have ever been all your other disorders rommrncf. THE IDEAL LAXATIVE troubles and loo poor to bay CASCARETS , Chicago or New York, sacatioainf You are a perfect It's rush through through the night. suffer from terrible there is but one So far as we can Qacer Joseph Cawea Dead. Joseph Cowen, the English journal ist who died not long ago, numbered among his friends Mazzini, Garibaldi anil Kossuth, and Mr. Gladstone once pronounced him "a wonderful fellow." He began life as a brickmaker, and al ways dressed so as to look like a work ingman. Important to Mathers. Exaalne carefnlly every bottle of CASTORM, a aafe and rare rcsaedy for infants sad children, and see that it Bears the Signatare of la Use For Over 3 Tears. The Kind To Hare Always Boaxht In proportion to its size Britain has eight times as many miles of railway as the United States. lOO.OOO AGENTS WANTED. Men and women, boys and girl, all over tbe United States. Big money, easy work. Valuable prizes in addition. Writ C H. Marshall & Co., Dep't 10, Chicago. Ninety people out of every hundred. masticate their food with the teeth on the left side of the jaw. Magnetic Starch Is the very best laundry starch in the world. Within a few weeks the Canadians and Australians fighting in South Africa for the British flag will number 5,000. Many causes ladaee gray hair, but Pabxsb's Hani Balsam brtnga back the yonthtsl color. Hmdkbcosss, the beat care (or corns. IScta. Illinois is second in coal production. For starching fine linen use Magnetic Starch. Boers make good servants. Tour clothes will not crack If yon use Magnetic Starch. to get better at once, and soon ALL DRUGGISTS tbau Aiinn && FAEM AND GABDEN. MATTERS OP INTEREST TO AGRICULTURISTS. Asms Cat- THIeall The scienUf c name Is HaTrlataui Americana. The caterpillar it quite destructive to the foliage of the grapevine. The eggs are deposited ia clusters of 20 or more. The cater pillars of the Procris do not scatter alter leaving the eggs, bat feed side by side on the under side of the leaf, their heads all directed towards the margin of the same. These little black and yellow insects eat at first only the soft tissues of the foliage, leaving the fine net-work of veins untouched; but as they grow older aad stronger all but the large veins are eaten. The c I caterpillars reach their full site in August, and measure at that time about six-tenths of an inch. The little moth is a bluish or greenish-black color. It has very narrow wings, which erpand nearly an inch across, and files during the warmest hours of the day, when it frequents Sowers. Its flight is rather peculiar, and is quite slow and unsteady. Wher ever this insect occurs in large num bers it becomes quite injurious, but as It leads a social life in Its caterpillar state it can readily be destroyed by the ase of arsenical poisons. HerMealtaral Okserratli It would be perhaps a good thing If our horticultural and other similar so cieties would give more attention to drnamental gardening. It Is one cf the needs of our Western farm life. To surround a family with beauty fre quently means to make them contented. Trees and flowers affect tbe character 3f those that live among" them. If a :are of such things Is necessary In the Sast, where trees and plants naturally abound, it is the more necessary In the West, where homes have been estab lished on plains that were once treeless ind swept even now by drouth-breeding winds. In planting trees in regions that have before been treeless many adverse conditions have to be overcome. In the first place the soil is covered with a sod, and this Is not a promising condition for tree growth. The soil Is not naturally In the condition where it will hold water, for it lacks humus. The best way to overcome these ob stacles Is to plant the trees close to gether, so that it will be impossible for grass to thrive in their shade. This of course does not Include such trees is the cottonwood. In planting thick ets it is advisable to get rid of the grass at the beginning and give the trees a fair chance. e e In the effort to change bleakness into beauty the greatest' ally is the Tee. The tree is the easiest to estab lish because it can send down its roots long distances into the moist subsoil, ind will exist when smaller plants per ish with the drouth. The trees once established protect smaller plants that are afterward set out and become the sturdy barriers against destructive winds and withering heat Trees, however, must be themselves protected and fostered till they have obtained a firm hold of the soil and have estab lished the ability of appropriating the soil water. It may not be generally known that heavy snows sometimes do great dam age to planted groves of forest trees. At Fargo, the location of the North Dakota experiment station,' the trees of the grove are protected by a row of willows ten rods to the north and rai ling parallel with the grove. The mow drifts in the lee of the willow trees Instead of In the grove. Beneflt of Tea Giaftlaa (Condensed from Farmers Review Steno graphic Report of Wisconsin Roundup Institute.) George J. Kellogg read a paper on top grafting, in which he said in part: I have probably 50 varieties now growing top-worked on different stock. Twenty of these varieties are on Duchess stock. I find Tetotsky worthless as a stock. Transcendent Is a good stock, but I find that winter apples on this stock tend to early ma turity of fruit. Many kinds are a suc cess on transcendent crab, and I have great hopes of seedlings grown from this crab to give us roots that will better stand our dry winters. For suc cessful top-grafting we must have vigorous stocks, and for this reason I have great faith in the .Virginia and other strong growing crabs; for they get hold of the soil and get all there is in it Virginia crab has particular ly strong limbs, and Is much the best of any I have seen. Shields' crab Is the best one I have tried in the nursery, as ona scion will form a top; but a Virginia crab, with a leader and four arms grafted is worth many times its ooat for an orchard tree. Thare is no limit to this top-grafting enterprise. I am told that In tab orcnard of Mr. Burbank ia California, mere is one tree that has beta grafteu witn 525 different varieties. What sight that tree will be when it coses into bearing! , My success with pears and plums has not been as good as with apples. I have increased the productiveness of Miner by grafting one-third of the top with DeSoto. I find no' plasa stocks equal to Americana; the Mariana is a failure. There are a few pointers that lead to success in top-grafting. After the stock Is established the sooner it Is worked the better. It stout enough to hold the scion firmly, scions no larger than your finger are best Avoid grafting limbs needing the saw. When top-working the Virginia crab the scions should be inserted not score than six to twelve laches from the e1t t' I fl&ttl . 1 111 JrJ&Klny - mfBfMnjjSmaMaaamuaaa MB fy aatmr tmz sbbbbbbbbsbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb f Ik g'?IMflaT"aai Cm hf - body. The earlier la spring the graft lag can be done the more saccs tal la It likely to be. for it yoa wait Ul Jane the scions are likely to be a little off. Bat even In Jane, If the sckme are la perfect condition, I have had IS per cent of the grafts live, when they were oa apples aad pears. Plums aad cherries, for beet results. must be grafted before the frost Is out Liquid wax, applied warm, I consider best; aad to protect from sun and keep off the birds, a piece of newspa per wound about the wax Is a benefit Some prefer waxed cloth, but In what ever way the wax Is applied, it is of more importance than the setting of the scions. Scions may be cut in October or any time after that except when the wood Is frosen. They may be cut ia the spring when the buds are swollen, if Immediately Inserted. Great care is necessary to have the scions in perfect condition. Old trees are not profitable to top work, not even Duchess of Oldenberg, while Duchess may do fairly well when yoaag to use as a stock. I Grawsas as Cora. The demand for pop corn Increases every year, yet the crop is never equal to the market, says Joel Shomaker In Indiana Farmer. Farmers do not con sider the profits of this special crop or there would be more grown for sup-: plying home demands. Pop corn re quires about the same soil as that de manded by the sweet and field vari eties. A sod or vegetable mould, con taining more sand than clay and hav lag previous clean culture is best adapted to corn growing. If plowed la the fall or winter and left to freeze until the spring weeds begin to grow before planting, the land will be in fine condition. This crop wants plant food like all others, but can get along with little nitrogen. "jAn average fertilizer might contain about 8 per cent each of phosphoric acid and potash and per haps 1 per cent to 2 per cent nitro gen; from 400 to 600 pounds per acre would be considered a fair application. Another popular' fertilizer for corn U a mixture of about 350 pounds of fine ground bone and 100 pounds muriate of potash per acre broadcasted and well mixed with the soil before planting time. Pop corn may be planted closer than any other varieties. His plan of plant log Is to make the furrows three feet apart and have the corn stand one stalk in a hill, 14 inches apart in the rows. If the corn is planted very early or late it will not suffer so much from the worms as the medium planted crops. Where irrigated, care must be taken In keeping the water from the stalks and not give the plants more than two periods' of Irrigating during the growing season. The poor ears can be fed to poultry with profit and tho fodder is relished by the cows, sheep and horses. Tfca KagUsfc Fig-atlas; Preservatives, Reports from England indicate that the British government has taken up the fight against preservatives in milk. Boraclc acid, as well as the more in jurious preservatives, is to be brought under the ban of the law. This will be encouraging to the Americans for the English example has been con stantly urged as one reason why we should not have more stringent laws regarding preservatives. In some in vestigations made by the government one scientist said that he believed this promiscuous dosing of the public by ignorant persons to be very dan gerous. That is the most potent reason why preservatives be not al lowed in milk. We have no certainty as to how much acid is used, and it is to the interests of the manufacturers of the preservatives to have as large doses as possible used. This is par ticularly dangerous in the case of chil dren living on an exclusive milk diet We will never know how many lives have been cut short by this "promis cuous dosing of the public by ignorant persons." Stagserbash. This poisonous shrub is called also kill-lamb. It Is a weak-limbed, de ciduous shrub, two to four feet high. iPUtit Mriaas). M-tUri with thick, conspicuously veined leaves and showy clusters of tubular white flowers. It is frequent in low, dam? soils near the coast from Connecticut to Florida. Give the Hoc Coaafort. It pays to make the hog as comfort able as possible. Do not think be cause he has a thick hide because he belongs to the order pachydermata that therefore he will endure all kinds of weather and all kinds of treatment as to his comfort and still return a profit for his keeping. Some of us have come to regard the hog as a col lector of all refuse and an endurer of all hardships. No matter how much lye there is in the dishwater, it is good enough for the hog. One would think that the hog had found a use for soap, the way it is sometimes 'fed to him. The dirty sty under tbe stable Is not the place for a respectable hog. There is no reason to be surprised If hogs treated as some, treat them take dis ease and die. Give the hog good feed and a clean abiding place. He will repay the cost with good interest That the profits of beet sugar grow ing are uncertain is proved by the resolutions adopted at a recent meet ing of the Michigan Sugar Beet Grow ers' Association, which stated that the business bad be? n conducted at a loss, that the price of beets had been too low, and that the association could not raise them for less than 5 per ton for beets showing a 12 per cent sugar son tent "Crulkshank" shorthorns have low. broad, deep forms, heavy flesh aad xnnssy coats. Fm.tt tWaggailwaa ssst 'a "u emens m tmcr cttrs. itatBtoatriea Fllle FaaMlaMM far C lag Tear. BEATRICE. Neb., May 12. The Wo men's Relief Corps at the business ses sion yesterday finished the election of otlcers of the department for the en suing year aa follows: President Mrs. Sarah C. Sweet Creighton; senior vice president Mrs. Fredericks Cole. Beat rice; junior vice president Mrs. Lillian Ludl, Republican City; treasurer. Mrs. Alta Wainwright, Blair; chaplain. Mrs. Elizabeth Hull. Omaha; councilor. Mrs. Mary E. Morgan, Alma; secretary. Mrs. Alice C. Dllworth. Omaha. Executive board. Mesdames Elizabeth Barber. Kearney; Sarah Felt. Superior; Mary E. Ward. Lincoln; Kate Pond. Red Cloud; Amanda Marble, Table Rock. Delegateat-large. Miss Etta Brooks. Lincoln. Alternate-at-largc, Mrs. Lib bie Lesche; Beatrice. Delegates to na tional convention: Mrs. Carrie M. Pe ters:. Beatrice; Mrs. Diana Potter, Litchfield; Mrs. Lucy J. Barger. Heb ron; Lucy O. Austin. Tekamah; Mrs. McCain, Kearney; alternates. Mrs. Maust, Falls City; Mrs. German, Wy more; Mrs. Cleaver, Neligh; Mrs. Bol shaw, Lincoln. A resolution was presented and adopted to have Daughters of Vet erans Incorporated in the Women's Re lief corps. The resolution will be pre sented to the national convention. The convention then adjourned to Paddock opera house, where a joint installation of Grand Army of the Republic and wo men's Relief corps was held. General H. C. Russell was installing officer for tho Grand Army of the Republic and Past President Mrs. Rupiper for the Women's Relief corps. The conven tions then adjourned to attend the benquet at the armory of the national guard, given by Rawlins post, Women's Relief corps. The Ladies of the Grand Army elect ed the following officers for the ensuing year: President Mrs. Anna E. Mar shall, Hastings; senior vice president, Almlra Dale. York; junior vice pres ident, Etta A. Tyler, Arapahoe; treas urer. Inez Yarton, Omaha; chaplain, Rebecca Walsh. Stockham; conductor, Wllda Nichols. Scnbner; council of ad ministration, Marian Cramphin, Lin coln; Jennie Knights, Lincoln; E. F. Foster. Ord; delegate-at-Iarge, Clara Lyons, Omaha. Delegates to national convention: Mesdames L. S. Stone, Scribner; Rebecca Walsh, Stockham; alternates, Ollvo Heckman, Loup City; Isabella French, Lushton; inspector, Mrs. H. Gray, Harvard; councillor, Mrs. S. A. Mason. Ord; sergeants, Miss W. E. Hessie, North Platte; Mrs. H. H. Chase. Shelby; guard, Mrs. M. E. Blackburn, Minden; assistant guard. Mrs. Cole, Crete; conductor, Mrs. Wil de Nichols, Scribner; secretary, Mrs. Ruby Stout, Hastings. The Staadard Oil Case. LINCOLN, Neb.. May 12 The at torneys for the Standard Oil filed a brief in the supreme court in the case brought by the attorney general to dis bar the company from doing business in the state. In opening the brief pleads that the company is the victim of popular clamor against trusts, and says It has been forced into court as a result of agitation. It goes on: "Instructed by public agitation it is competent for the legislative branch of the government to enact statutes of whatever wisdom or unwisdom in fur therance of principles, doctrines, ideas and notions which are to the public good. But when questions of the con stitutional validity come into court, if justice is to be done, they will be ex amined in a very different spirit. It is not the business of the courts to inaugurate! or assist popular preju dices and popular theories. In the calm and serene atmosphere of the court room the imperative duty is to exclude such influences and apply set tled rules of law and constitutional provisions so as to give to all the equal protection of the law." Tho brief then continues to argue that toe act known as the anti-trust law -1b unconstitutional, alleging that it violates the fourteenth amendment, which says that "no state shall deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." It Is contended tnat the statute violates this amendment by the distinction which it makes between traders, man ufacturers and carriers on the one side and assemblies or associations of labor ing men on the other, and also between different classes of laboring men. State Capital Notes. LINCOLN, Neb., May 12. Acting Governor Talbot issued a requisition on Governor Shaw of Iowa for the re turn of W. W. McClusky. who is want ed in Omaha to answer to the charge of grand larceny. McClusky is under ar rest at Sioux City. The populist and free silver central committees have issued calls for a county convention in this city May 17. Auditor Cornell has been asked by tho treasurer of Washington county to cancel the delinquent taxes outstanding against that county for the reason that most of tbe people against whom the taxes are assessed have died or moved away. McXallea Stabbed by a Traaap. SIDNEY, Neb.. May 12. Robert Mc Mullen. employed, in one of McSbane's grading camps, got into an altercation with an unknown tramp this afternoon at the Union Pacific stock yards and tho latter stabbed McMuilen in the right lung and tonight the doctors re port his condition precarious. Nobody was present when the stabbing occur red. County Attorney Capen has tak en an anti-morten statement and the description tallies with a fellow who has been about town several days and the authorities think he is the same roan responsible for some of the recent holdups. Child Drinks Anaoala. HUMBOLDT, Neb.. May 12. The lit tle 4-year-old son of D. H. Blakeney, t liveryman of this place, got hold of a bottle of ammonia yesterday and drank quite an amount, but prompt medical aid prevented serious results. Pent Weaaaa Kills Herself. PERU, Neb., May 12. Mrs. Boiling, wife of a farmer living near here, com mitted suicido Monday morning by shooting herself through the heart. She was in a delicate condition and her husband came to town for a phy sician. Saaallpex Near Celaaabas COLUMBUS, Neb.. May 12. A gen uine case of smallpox "well developed waajound in the graders' camp on the new double track work of the Union Pacific about seven miles east of t..s city. Medical aid was summoned from this city and a strict quarantine has been established. As the camp is in Colfax county, it will devolve upon the authorities there to keep the case in hand. When the case was pronounced to be smallpox a number of the men on the work fled from the camp. The patient's name is O'Brien and he late ly camo from southwest Missouri. Prepare a Welcesae for Otis. WASHINGTON, May 12 Represent ative O'Grady introduced to the presi dent a nr.mber of prominent citizens of Rochester, N. Y., who came to in vito him to attend the reception and banquet to be given to General Otis on his return from the Philippines on June 15. The president spoke of Gen eral Otis in terms of high praise and said he would esteem it a privilege to join in doing him honor. He question ed, however," the propriety of his doing so. No one, in his judgment, should k. ,... iii hr r9cnn nf his su- perior rank, would necessarily share the honors which were intended for General Otis alone. The Fatal Kles. "Electricity is a funny force," sad the observant motorman to his con ductor as he boarded his car. "Last aight nearly all the current was sud denly cut off from the wires in the barn, and after a minute came on again. Soon an odor like that of an overcooked dinner filled the power house. On examination two chickens were found slowly roasting to death on the main wire. For hours the feath ered pair had rested in safety on sepa rate wires. The minute chanticleer reached across to give a good night kiss to his dear Biddy, on an opposite wire, a deadly current was forced through their bodies, and hence the odor of roasting chicken." A Paris dispatch says that the Drey fus case is to be opened again. Ate Tee Vstas; Alleafla Peet-Kaset It Is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting. Burning, Sweating Feet Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores. 25c Sample sent FREE. Ad dress Allen S. Olmsted. LeRoy, N. Y. The Infallible Prophet. Samue.1 dough, who edited "The New England Almanac" at the very be ginning of the last century, was a good example of a prophet who intends to make no mistaxes. "Perhaps," says he, predicting the weather from January 15 to the 23d. 1702, "it will be very cold weather, if it freezes by the fireside or on the sun ny side of a fence at noon." In April he hazards: "Perhaps wet weather, if it rains. Now fair weather, if the sun shines. Windy or calm." And in July he ventures a small advertisement for the town of his residence: "If now the weather do prove fair. People to Cambridge do repair." Try Magnetic Starch it will last longer than any other. Ihe daughter of Mrs. Mirv Ellon Lease is now making political stump spttches. Xfrs. Wlaalov'a Soothlas; Syaaw Far cBll&rea teething-, noftcna the ijntn, -dnrea In aaauBatk9B,aUryapaiB.cttreswlndcoltc. 23c a bottle. There may be two grand English opera companies in New York next year. S20.00 A WEEK AND EXPENSES to agents celling our household goods. Sell on sight. Write C. H. Marshall & Co., Chicago. Burglars secured $5,000 from the vaults of the Bank of Coultcrville, 111 , and escaped. Hall's Cstarrh Core Is a constitutional cure. Price, 75a Eighty-five per cent of the adult Cu bans are unable to read or write. PIso's Cure cannot be too fctehly spoken of as a cough cure. J. W. OIIrien. 3! Third Ave., N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900. The Klondike district is also very rich in copper. A Beek or Choice Keelpea Seat free by Walter Baker Co. L'jL. DorckeeUr, Mats. JIent!ot tola paper. The navy department has asked for bids for 100,000 armor piercing shells. Use Magnetic Starch it lias no equal. Riley's ITalqne License. The town trustees of Benton. Ky.. have granted George Rile- a license to open a saloon on an agreement that he is to keep his doors open all the time, use no screens whatever and that no one be allowed to "treat" or set 'cm up" in his place of business. Every man who drinks must pay for his own liquor. Gained Pounds "DEARMRS.PtNKHAM I was vmry thin anal my fHmmtls thoatgM I was m "Ha ooatmual hmmm- aokma, backaoha amttfaiS- "Evary ona aotioodhow maarly lootod aad I was advised to tako Lydia . Plmkham's Vegatabla "Ome boida reitavad aad after taking eight m mow a healthy woausa; have gained ia weight from 95 poinds to 140; everyone asks what makes me so stout." MRS. Aa TOLLE, 1946 Hil ton St., Philadelphia, Pa. MrsaPinkham has fifty theusand suoh letters from grateful women. r 45 I s.ooiv g: JEb out!) C tcs2 "or your family's comfort W. -. sndyoarown. m V HUES Roottieer k JC will contribute more to It than B ffffjs, tons of r and s cross of tooM. SM t 5 gallons fo r Si cen ts. 4iTM .W Write for !l of premiacu oSnwt ABKI vN free 1-r l.h.1. aBBKl Vfc. CBUELEAE.HIKESCO. sBBBBwBB C Malverw, em. jaWL 1 Examine the Package ! i In view of the many mislsadr.g sr.d unscrupulous imitations of " Baker's Chocolate " which have recently been put upon the market, we find it neces sary to caution consumers against these attempts to deceive and to ask them to and make sure that our name and place WALTER s y DORCHESTER, MASS., and cur j b Qocolatiere trade-mark " m SUP If vcur CTOcer does TaaocwA in know, and we will getting it. Send for a copy of our Choice Recipe book, milled free to any ap plicant who mentions this paper. WALTER BAKER & CO. caraausNce irso. M, MMlHrs MIME Is Sought by Female Suffer ers from Ocean to Ocean. Mrs. F. W. Goalder, 1306 4th ave., Rock Island, 111., writes: "I was af flicted for five or six years with catarrh al difficulties and was grow i n g worse all the time. I began taking your 1'eruna with a marked im provement from the first. Independe n t of curing that, the Pe r u na has greatly im proved my general health." "Every bot tle of Peruna is worth its weight in gold ; espec ially to me, for I owo m y present eood health to Peruna." All over the country there are women who have been invalids for many years, suffering with female derangement which the family doctor cannot cure. What a boom t such woatem is Dr. tfmrtmaa's free advice I S tmrntBua has Ms skill made him thai hardly a hamlet ar iewm In the camatry eat knows his mame. He cares teas at thovsamd. am he afters to every womam who will write to him her symptoms aa a history of her tremble tree aaWks and treatmeat. The medicines he prescribes can bo oLtainctl at any drugstore, and the cost is within the reach of any woman. He describes minutely and carefully just what she shall do and get to make a healthy, robust woman of herself. The Doctor has written a book especially for this class of women, en titled "Health and Beauty." This book contains many faets of interest to women, and will be scnt-free to any ad dress by Dr. Martmam, Celmmhas,' O. Magnetic Starch Ik Wafer KtkMt It Stiffens the Goods It Whitens the Goods It polishes the Goods It makes all gnrments fresh and crisp aa when first bought new. Try a Sample Packas-o You'll llko It if you try It. You'll bur t f yo tr " You'll use It If you try It. Try It- .. So!d by all Grocers, W. L. DOUGLAS S3 &3.SO SHOES ' Worth S4 to $6 compared. wnn otner manes. Iadorsed by ever l,0O0,ev wearers. Tike omuin bare W. L. I Douglas lume and pHcel i tamped on bottom. Take 4 no substitute claimed to be as good. Your dealer should keep thun t. not. we will send a nair' on receiot of price and ztc. extra for carriage- State kind of leather. rST sixe, and width, plain or cao toe. Cat. free. Mm w. b vuuvuw onvc i., vnKvm. i IM I MIIM .0 ,IMF A L. I IN 3 OR 4 YEARS MWDEKHENCE1SSWIEI If yoa taUe up your boiacH ia Western Can ada, the land of plenty. liliKtrated pamphlet. kIvIdk experiences of farmers who haTe be come wealthr In urow lni; wheat, reports of lli'iv etc.. nnd full tuionnuuon as t p-duwd rallwar rotes can be had on application to trie SuperlBtrndcnt of Iniinisration. Department of Interior. Ottawa, anada. or to if. V. Ilcnaett, 801 Xaw YcrlC Life aide. Oaoaba, Neb. nciicinii& st YurPMsiM raiaiuna BOUILE QUICK Write CAPT. O'FARRELL. Peastoa AMflt, 1435 flew York Aveaaw. WASHINGTON. D. C. ALUMINUM CREAM SEPARATORS autl up-i-ajitc chums. The i rpr- tir i nave worn peneciij. v,. lurai, Allegheny Co..Pa. Circular free; wrlin Mi inlcKiy. OIIWIP.THii.nn"' ru. ,!., uimodms, a-a. BiO Israeli011 w.metisna, LlwnMUIwTwraaklBWtea. St.C. Wk3HllZ&Rl&!?& 1 3 v rin ciTtl war. t) iutludicatins rlaiiu. at t r mc. nDODCVKM DISCOVERY; tfvon f Vf9 quick rellerandrarewort cane. Book of testlmnnlasa nl la ! trentmen. raic. aa. b. a. taars-s sess. as a. auaau. ua. If afflicted :Sil TktajisM's El Wafer. xxe ejes. According to a French newspaper. Anglican ladies :irc making petu ot Japanese mice, which cost 1100 apiece. There are at the present moment be tween 800 and 900 commissioned offi cers in the army who have risen from the ranks. Queen Victoria always has her new boots worn a few times by one of her dressers. who?c foot is the same size as her majesty's. A London ankrupt has been ordered to pay a debt to a green grocer at the rate of 5s per week. It will take him thirty-seven years to do it. The depopulation of Peru is illus trated by the fact that the Valley of Santa, which In the days of the Incas had a population of 700,000, now has only 3.000. examine every package they purcnase. it has on the front a yellow label, with of manufacture. BAKER & CO. Ltd, wv f on thi back. not keep the genuine article, please let endeavor to put you in the way of Limited, Dorchester, Mai. lvailSBflaii:DniUL':::::.'4 E&'nae'9BaFBBMJBjBja!! .ijS E2S0BSpaBBBBaBBBBvBBt 'n.sB KthiaaataaaaaaamsaamizTM I BBSSaasSSSSBSSSSSSSSSSSwl (BsSEiSBBPBBB jasinajsjffissa fsTal w eJaaaTwaa mr " V- AsBBsl M ralL . saTv K aasWal H GSSfflM w isj 'A 4 C