A-?-(rrt5a, WJ 3 r4TBa t-a-Bi?.gc-g:gr iJtlsi- K--j?iv.,"'? i" rv u . '' . I- h Stone in -Bridges.' - -r In this age of steel, stone has by no means been put out of use in building Important viaducts and bridges. The secyid largest stone arch bridge in the world was recently completed at Salcano, Austria, its span is 279 leet. WHO SHE WAS SKETCH OF THE LIFE And a True Story of How the Vegetable Compound Had Its Birth and How the "Panic of 73" Caused it to be Offered for Public Sale in Drug Stores. This remarkable woman, whose maiden name was Estes, was born in Lynn, Mass., February 9th, 1819, com ing from a good old Quaker fainilv. For some years she taught school, and became known as a woman of an alert and investigating' mind, an earnest seeker after knowledge, and above all. possessed of a wonderfully sympa thetic nature. In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham, & builder and real estate operator, and their early married life was marked by prosperity and happiness. They hail four children, three sons and m, daughter. In those good old fashioned days it was common for mothers to make their own home medicines from roots and herbs, nature's own remedies calling in a physician only in specially urgent cases. Ity tradition and ex perience many of them gained a won derful knowledge of the curative prop erties of ' x various roots and herbs. Mrs. Pinkham took a great interest In the study of roots and herbs, their characteristics and power over disease. She maintained that just as nature ko bountifully provides in the harvest fields and orchards vegetable foods of all kinds; so, if we but take the pains to find them, in the roots and herbs of the field there are remedies ex pressly designed to cure the various ills and weaknesses of the body, and it was her pleasure to search these out, and prepare simple and effective medi cincs for her own family and friends. Chief of these was a rare combina tion of the choicest medicinal roots and herbs found best adapted for the cure of the ills and weaknesses pecu liar to the female sex, and LydiaE. Pink ham's friends and neighbors learned that her compound relieved and cured and it became quite popular among them. All this so far was done freely, with out money and without price, as a labor of love. But in 1S73 the financial crisis struck Lynn. Its length and severity were too much for the large real estate interests of the Pinkham family, as this class of business suffered most from fearful depression, so when the Centen nial year dawned it found their prop erty swept away. Some other source of income had to be found. At this point Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound was made known to the world. The three sons and the daughter, with their mother, combined forces to W. L. Douclas 3J?&3?SHOESiH, W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line cannot be equalled atany price. w. l. omtmiAM make mCm'SSS.SOMMpESTHAMAmr OTHER flMAYMFACriMBr IM THE WOULD. C1 fl flflfl REWARD to anyone who can I UjUUU disprore this statement. M I eoud take yoai Into any three large factories art Brockton. Mass., and show you the infinite care with which every pair of shoes is made, you weald realize why W. 1 Douclas $3.50 shoes cast snore t nuke, why they hold their shape. fit better, wear loafer, and are of greater Intrinsic valae than aay other $3.50 shoe. W. L. Ommglam Mtrmmm AWaMfo Shmmm fw jmm, miTso, ti.oiT. Bmyschia. Ot , SX.MO. $2. St.7M, SI. SO CAUTION. Insist upon having W.L.Doug- las shoe. Take no substitute. None genuine without his name and price stamped on bottom. fast Color Fuelets used ; they unit not wear brasty. Write for Illustrated Catalog. W. I. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. .....THE . prices JTl r -. qJB?- Capital a.soqooc and Iron Mountain Route OFFER THE FOLLOWING VERY LOW RATES to Certain Points in the WEST AID SOUTHWEST, Tutsiays, March 6th and 20th, 1906' Special Hemeseekers' Tickets at Less Than One Fare for the Round Trip Final LIsalt of Ticket 21 Days, With Stopover Privileges. On the Sane Date Special Oaf-War Celoalst Tickets WILL. BE OX SALE TO CERTAIN POUTS IX THE WEST AXD SOUTHWEST AT ALMOST IIAL.K THE REGULAR OXE-WAY RATE. Oat Sale DAILY treat Febraary 15th to April 7, laelaslsv, SPECIAL OXE-WAY COLONISTS' TICKETS TO CALIFORNIA. For Farther Iafermatlea, Maps, Folder. Etc., Address T. F. GODFREY, Paaseaiccr and Ticket Aarat, Oataha, Xcb. TOM HUGHES, Traveling Paaaeager Acat, Oataha, Xeh, H. C. TOWXSEXD, Gea. Pass, aad Tkt. A., St. Lewis, Me. r v Drape Hearse in. Green.1 At Lancaster, England, the other day, at the funeral of W. Wingate jSaul, a former army surgeon, tne hearse was draped In green, the driv ers wore green and chestnut horses were used. OF LYDIA E. PINKHAM restore the family fortune. They argued that the medicine which was so good for their woman friends and neighbors was equally good for ths women of the whole world. The Pinkhams had no money, and little credit. Their first laboratory was the kitchen, where roots and herbs were steeped on the stove, gradually filling a gross of bottles. Then came the question of selling it, for always before they had given it away .freely. They hired a job printer to run off some pamphlets setting forth the merits of the medi cine, now called Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and these were distributed by the Pinkham sons in Boston, New York, and Brooklyn. The wonderful curative properties of the medicine were, to a great extent, self-advertising, for whoever used it recommended it to others, and the da mand gradually increased. In 1877, by combined efforts the fam ily had saved enough money to com mence newspaper advertising and from that time the growth and success of the enterprise were assured, until to day Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vege table Compound have become house hold words everywhere, and many tons of roots and herbs are used annu ally in its manufacture. Lydia E. Pinkham herself did not live to see the great success of this work. She passed to her reward years ago. but not till she had provided means for continuing her work as effectively as she could have done it herself. During her long and eventful expe rience she was ever methodical in her work and she was always careful to pre serve a record of every case that came to her attention. The case of every sick woman who applied to her for advice and there were thousands received careful study, and the details, includ ing symptoms, treatment and results were recorded for future reference, and to-day these records, together with hundreds of thousands made since, are available to sick women the world over, and represent a vast collabora tion of information regarding the treatment of woman's ills, which for authenticity and accuracy can hardly be equaled in any library in the world. With Lydia E. Pinkham worked her daughter-in-law, the present Mrs. Pinkham. She was carefully instructed in all her- hard-won knowledge, and for years she assisted her in her vast correspondence. To her hands naturally fell the direction of the work when its origina tor passed away. For nearly twenty five years she has continued it, and nothing in the work shows when the first Lydia E. Pinkham dropped her pen, and the present Mrs. Pinkham, now the mother of a large family, took it up. With woman assistants, some as capable as herself, the present Mrs. Pinkham continues this great work.and probably from the office of no 'other person have so many women been ad vised how to regain health. Sick wo men, this advice is "Yours for Health" freely given if you only write to ask for it. Such is the history of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound ; made from simple roots and herbs ; the one great medicine for women's ailments, and the fitting monument to the nobis woman whose name it bears. mmmmmmmmmmmmnm HAKES BEAUTY Among the ladies no other medi cine has ever had so strong a fol lowing, because, excepting pure air and exercise, it is the source of more beautiful complexions than m any other agency, as Lane's Family Medicine the tonic-laxative. It puts pars blood in the veins, and no woman can be homely when the rich, red g Sold by all dealers at 25c and sec wmmmmmmmmtmrnum HOLD UP! and consider POMMEL tax ALL. Towfaij. WKTCRniOOF CLOTHING. Ismadrofthrbtst rmlcrialiiilkkxdlew rrMtdtrjMmterd B 5TICKTDTHE SIGN OFTHE FI5H I-Town ouurwiuxna ajtowxk co. TojwmcAjjtsJiijmllg mfT' the wSr-fX FISH W BSANOsSXsJ fATkw "giSp m j) vm PENS NOW MADE OF TANTALITE. This Substance Said ts Be Unaffected by the Ink. In December the widely known elec tric firm of Siemens & Halske of Ber lin obtained German letters patent for a new writing pen, advises Consul General Guenther of Frankfort-on-the&ain. This pen Is made of tantalite, an extremely hard metal, according to the Boston Transcript. On Jan. 17, 1905, the latest progress in lamps, the new tantallte lamp of the firm ot Sie mens & Halske, was for the first time exhibited before the Electro-Technical association of Berlin. On this occasion Dr. "Werner .von Bolton delivered an introductory ad dress concerning the method by which he had succeeded in producing the metal tantalite in a pure state and de clared that it possessed a very ex traordinary hardness. Sheets made of tantalite were so hard that with a diamond drill, which worked for three days and three nights with 5,000 revo lutions per minute, hardly a noticeable impression was made and the drill itself was dulled. At that time it was stated that the firm intended to manufacture tools and other articles of tantalite. This latest patent is the result of experiments to make use of the properties of tantalite. The tantalite pen resists chemicals to a very high degree. It is much' harder and more elastic than the steel pen and on that account indestruc tible. It is even more elastic than a gold pen and it is predicted that if it will be placed upon the market at a moderate price it will supersede both' steel and gold pens. REPORTER NOT ALL TO BLAME. Correspondent Sent Wrong Man to Secure Interview. David Jayne Hill, the American min ister to the Netherlands, is one of 'the most brilliant scholars in the dip lomatic service of the United States government. When he was assistant secretary of state a reporter was sent to him for a story about the foreign policy of the government. It was one o'clock in the morning when the re porter reached the home of Dr. Hill, who leaned out of the second story window and gave the desired informa tion. Dr. Hill used a great many French, Latin and Spanish phrases. The next morning Dr. Hill read the story in print, and was surprised to see that the reporter had written ex actly the reverse of what he had been told. Later in the day Dr. Hill met the correspondent who had sent the re porter to Dr. Hill. He asked: "What kind of a reporter was that you sent to my residence last night? He en tirely misunderstood what I told him." Dr. Hill was asked to repeat the story. He did so, using the same French, Latin and Spanish expres sions that he had used the night be fore. "Oh," said the correspondent, "I made a mistake. I should have sent a linguist instead of a reporter." A Ballade of Pianos. What becomes of the needles and pins Out of commission or worse for wear. Fashioned, they say. to punish our sins? Nobody knows nor seems to care. Another puzzle that hits us whore We hunt in vain for some light to its mysteries, for they're deep. I swear. Where do all the pianos go? Sad is our lot when discord grins From some upright or rusty square. And the amateur's clumsy "fins" Waken the demon from his lair. Shadows of maestros hover there. Voiceless in their o'erpowering woe They could tell, as they vanish in air. Where do all the pianos go? Sewing machines and cotton gins. After having performed their share Of work, are moved to the scrap iron bins. Soon to melt In the furnace flare. But the pianos say. ladies fair. Revelling in the shimmering glow Of the virtuoso's ambrosial hair Where do all the pianos go? L'ENVOI. Rosewood, mahogany, walnut rare. Still pour forth in the factory's glare. Reckless of Lethe's undertow Where do all the pianos go? Eugene Geary in New York Herald. What Was He Thinking Of. "I went to dinner with some friends out in Missouri one night," said Col. Bill Zeveley of the Indian territory, "and the man of the house was a bit late in getting home. We all sat around the parlor waiting for him. The mistress of the house, a charm ing lady, and a fine musician, played a bit of Chopin on the piano to amuse us. "After she had finished and the hus band hadn't appeared she turned to a man who was sitting on her left. 'Would you like to have a sonata now?' she asked. " T guess I could stand It,' he said, 'although I had a couple on the way up.' " Irrepressible. "Do you think, there is any further revenue to be drawn from impolite personal journalism?" "We needn't be impolite," replied the editor of Town Whoppers. "There isn't any law to prevent us from com plimenting people, is there?" "No." "Well, I imagine most any promi nent person would be willing to pay to keep from being complimented in my publication now." Washington Star. Seek Gen. Nogi's Signature. Gen. Nogi, of Port Arthur fame, is paying the penalty of popularity at the hands of autograph seekers. But the form which this has taken in Japan has about it a touch of senti ment, inasmuch as the relatives of soldiers who fell before Port Arthur are seeking the general's autograph inscriptions to place on the tomb stones of the dead. Largest Horse in America. "The largest horse I can find in the United States," says a writer in Farm and Fireside, "is Royal Prince, who was raised in Crawford county. Pa. He is a dapple gray, stands nearly seven feet high at the shoulder, weighs 2,800 pounds when fat, wears a No. 30 collar and a No. 9 shoe and is very finely proportioned." Prize Fighter Dies at 84. Bill Benjamin, who twice fought Tom Sayers, being defeated each time, died recently at .Shire Newton, Eng land. He was eighty-four years old, a remarkable age for a former prize fighter to attain. Habit-forming Medicines Whatever may be the fact as to assay of the so-called patent medicines con Gaining injurious ingredients as broadly published in some journals of more or less influence, this publicity has certainly been of great interest in. arousing needed attention to this subject. It has, in a considerable measure, resulted in tha most intelligent people avoiding such foods and medicines as may be fairly sus- Sicted of containing the injurious ingre ents complained of. Recognizing this fact some time ago, Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., "took time by the forelock," as it were, and published broadcast all the ingredients of which bis popular medi cines are composed. Thus he has com pletely forestalled all harping critics and all opposition that might otherwise be urged against his medicines, because they are now or mows composition. Fur thermore, from the formula printed on every bottle wrapper, it will be seen that these medicines contain no alcohol or other habit-forming drugs. Neither do they contain any narcotics or injurious agents, their ingredients being purely vegetable, extracted from the roots of medicinal plants found growing in the depths of our' American forests and of well recognized curative virtues. Instead of alcohol, which even in small portions long continued, as in obstinate cases of diseases, becomes highly objec tionable from its tendency to produce s craving for stimulants, Dr. Pierce em ploys cnemicaity pure, triple-refined glycerine, which of itself is a valuable remedy in many cases of chronic diseases, being a superior demulcent, antiseptic, aunuermeub buu supporting nutritive. It enhances tbe curative action of the Golden Seal root. Stone root, Black Cberrybark and Bloodroot, contained in "Golden Medical Discovery," in all bron chial, throat and lung affections attended with severe coughs. As will be seen from the writings of the eminent Drs. Grover Coe, of New York; Bartbolow, of Jeffer son Medical College, Phila. ; Scudder, of Cincinnati; Ellingwood, of 'Chicago; Hale, of Chicago, and others, who stand as leaders in their several schools of practice, the foregoing agents are the very best ingredients that Dr. Pierce could have chosen to make up his fa mous "Discovery" for the cure of not only bronchial, throat and lung affec tions, but also of chronic catarrh in all its various forms wherever located. Noblemen in Demand. Not long ago a Roman nobleman ad vertised in newspapers in Cbicago and New York, offering his hand (empty) and heart in exchange for an Ameri can heiress. He has thus far received 254 replies. Several correspondents wanted to know whether, in view of the prospective husband's title, they would be asked, father and mother included, to all the balls and dinners given by the king and queen of Italy. Harper's Weekly. Ice Preserves Body. In an almost perfect state o fpreser vation and easily recognizable, the dead body of a guide named Nagi, a native of Aosta, Italy, who fell into a crevasse in 1877, near the summit of Monte Rosa, has just been recov ered from the ice. Nagi was descend ing the mountain in company with two Milanese Alpinists when be sud denly disappeared, and the cord which bound him to the others was cut by a sharp piece of ice. Who Was Unknown Genius? The expression "to cut a melon" was bound to be used again when once heard, so charged is it with the lickerish suggestion of good things to be divided. But who was the. bright soul who started the metaphor on its juicy way has failed of record. Dated instances of the employment ol tbe expression should be supplied for the benefit of future students. Wanted Obedient Employes. This is told of James Lick, the ec centric San Francisco millionaire, who tounded the famous observatory bear ing his name. When taking anyone into his service he always asked the person to plant a tree upside down the roots in the air, the branches un derground. If there were an 'mest the man was at ence sent av-, I ick saying that he wanted only iix'n who would obey orders strictly. Rainfall in Chjna. In northern China the average an nual rainfall is under forty inches; it increases to the southward and de creases from the coast toward the in terior of the empire, and in individual years it is subject to large fluctuations. In Korea the annual fall is about thirty-six inches on the west coast and is generally more than forty inches on the east and south coasts. Originality a Requisite. You can never maintain a strong po sition in the industrial world so long as you are content to wait till some body else has done something good and then follow on the same lines. You can only get a real grip, says Mr. John Foster Fraser. when you are sufficient ly wide awake and enterprising to push ahead on your own account. Relic of Stranded Battleship. Near the town of Arica, on the coast of northern Chile, there are still to be seen the huge boilers or an Amreican man-of-war, the Wateree. This vessel was swept two miles Inland on the crest of the tidal wave accompanying the great earthquake of 1868 and stranded there. The bridge whist craze, which is Just now engaging society people everywhere, has been recognized by at least one railroad in the United States'. That road is the Colorado Midland, which has just issued neat little pads of bridge whist score cards, something which every player needs. These score cards are done in two colors, and will be sent to any ad dress on receipt of five cents in stamps to pay postage. Address C. H. Speers, G. P. A., Denver. Colo. Wild Animals Dying Out Few wild animals are left in New Zealand. The government takes good care of the remnant, and seeks to add new varieties. Among recent impor tations are chamois from the Austrian Alps, which ought to flourish in the mountains of New Zealand. Monopoly of Chinchilla Skins. Consul Mansfield of Valparaiso writes that chinchilla skins, much prized and highly valued in the United States, England and European coun tries, because of their beautiful color and the fine quality of fur, are a prod uct of Bolivia and Chili only. Remedies for Insomnia. For insomnia there is nothing more effectual than hair an hour's stroll after supper. A warm bath before re tiring is also usually efficicious. THE 8C00LMASTER SPEAKS. The wisest faces mark the shallow est minds. The condensed milk of haman kind ness is a dollar in charity. Language is like a harp. There's much music in it if you know how to play. Fame, after all, is a matter of press notice and what do we philosophers care? He is poor whose health is poor, and poorer still is the man whose con science is sick. Knowledge and the ability to do things right are the commanding cre dentials of success for a young man. It doesn't take some men long to say all they know, but it takes them a long time to get ove the conse quences of what they have said. When a man wears corsets to help his form, it is time he wore woman's clothes. Next to a tub of dough, noth ing resembles it as much as your male person with a desire for corsets and petticoats. A man fighting two battles, one without and one within, one with the world and one with himself; if he win the former he has yet lost all if he lose the last, for the conquest of life is self-command. Having that, a man dies game in any crisis and is great. Men and women are very much like clocks. Some are alwad on time, some are never on time; some are always in order, some are never in or der. And while you may be able to tell something of a family by its time piece, you can tell more by the nature of the dog that greets you at the gate. A dog grows up after the fashion of its master or its mistress; a kind gen tleman will not have any ugly brute on his place. Chicago Evening Post. 5 Tons Grass Hay Free. Everybody loves lots and lots of foddu. for hogs, cows, sheep and swine. The enormous crops of our Northern Grown Pedigree Seeds on our seed farms the past year compel us to issue a spe cial catalogue called SALZER'S BAROA1X SEED BOOS. This is brim full of bargain seeds at bar gain prices. SEND TUTS NOTICE TO-DAT. and receive free sufficient seed to grow 5 tons of grans on your lot or farm this summer and our great Bargain Seed Book with its wonderful surprises and great bargains in seeds at bargain prices. Remit 4c and we add a package of Cos mos, the most fashionable, serviceable, beautiful annual flower. John A. Salzer Seed Co., Lock Draw er W., La Crosse, Wis. Some men learn to fear treachery by studying their own natures. A GUARANTEED CUKE FOR TILES. Itching, lillnii. IHecUlnjr. ITotruilIiiu Piles. lrK gists are authorized to refund Dinner If I'AZO OINTMENT falls to cure lu C to U days. 50c. Some people think they appear wise when they seem only disagreeable. Lewis Single Binder straight 5c cigar made of rich, mellow tobacco. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. Some women are a choice combina tion of fool and fiend. Worth KbotoIbk that Allcock's are the original and only genuine porous plasters; all other so-called porous plasters are imitations. Sin is setting appetite before author ity. permanently cniwl. Nofltsornerronimfssafter I lv nm dav'miie of lr. KUne'Mireat Nerve Kmtor er. Send for FREE S3.00 trial bottle and treatlve. OK. K. U. KLIN E. Ltd.. 931 Arcb Street. I'hlladelptiU, l"a- Some people bore you until you feel like a sieve. Mr, f inslow's "ootlUna; Syrnp. for children teething, softens the suroa, retraces 4a OaamaUoo,alla;s pain, cures wind collu. 23cabotU Lots of people forget their Christ ianity when their clothes get shabby. EE&sdiEal :a M ..-.i..'V":r. .vfc-.'-?, -i-.-,-: JiKKvO '..o-.v-:-:v- 4r sf v3S'& j 5W1VV:! Z A "V" T'-i ...-, Loxiisville, Ky. sAVFn "MM CATARRH OF LUWQ l ? U SO COMMON IN WINTER BY TAKING PE-RU-NA. Sore Throat Develops Into Bronchitis Mrs. Addle Harding, 121 W. Bright on Ave., Syracuse, N. Y., writes: "I have been a user of Peru'na for the past twelve years. 'With me it is a sure preventive of colds and many oth er ills. ' Mn. Addle Hardlag. "Two or three times a year I am troubled with my throat, a kind of raw feeling, turning to bronchitis. I have had the services of my physician in each case. Two years ago, when I felt a spell coming, I tried Peruna to check it, and to my delight was not troubled with the smothered and chok ing feeling and never have been since. I can check it every time with Pe-' runa." That Gntmsunt af Cttaia Gives absolately FREE to every settler oae hun dred and sixty acres of land ia Western Canada. ZZ m& 8 Land adjoining this can be purchased from railway and land companies at from & to $10 per acre. On this land this year has been produced upwards cf twenty-five bushels of wheat to the acre. It is also the best of grazing land and for mixed farming it has no superior on the continent. Splendid climate, low taxes, railways convenient, schools and churches close at hand. Write for "Twentieth Century Canada" and low railway rates to Superintendent of Immigration. Ottawa, Cauada; or to authorized Canadian Government Agent W. V. Bennett. 801 New York Life Build ing, Omaha, Nebraska. (Mention this paper.) Illill.l'.ll CURES l5Qc. andSi.OO.l Swine Disease Hog Cholera Send for Circular with Direotions. I Or. EML8. SIMM, 115 Albany St .BostM.Mast. DEFIMCECild Water Starca makes laundry work a pleasure. 16 oz. pkg. 10c. When Writing Advertisers Kindly Mention This Paper. PRICE. 25Cts CURE THE OOP. IN ONE DAY ANIrWiNF nWllOBrWjifc To sweeten, To refresh, To cleanse the system, Effectually and Gently; CyalHI There is only one Genuine Syrup of Figs; to get its bene ficial effects Always buy tbe genuine Manufactured ky the miaFigSyrup(? Sm Francisco, Cal. The genuine Syrup of Figs Is for sale by druggists. The full name of the company Fig Syrup Co. is always printed of every package. Price Fifty Cents sSSMS. Mrs. VlrrUa Can Chromic Catarrh of Throat and Lump Mrs. Virginia Caviana. room 32 Cambridge Block, Portland, Ore, writes: "I was a sufferer with catarrh of the throat and lungs for a long time before Peruna was recommended to me. I gave it a trial, although I thought at the time it would be just like other medicines and do me no good. I was pleased to find that my improvement began in less than two weeks and continued until I was en tirely well. I gained nearly 15 pounds, have a splendid appetite and am grate ful for what your medicine has don for me." Backache gives woman some of her most miserable and wretched hours. , Along with the backache, gener ally come headache, waist pain, falling feelings, irritability, nerv ousness and the blues. Have you these periodical troubles? If so, you may know that they .are due to disease of some of the most important organs of ryour body, organs that should get help or, in time, through weakness, will wrecK your health and life. Help them to health with CARDUI WINE OF WOMAN'S RELIEF Says Mrs. Blanche E. Stephanou, of I 1228 S. 42nd Ave.. ChicaKO. "Isuf-l fered miserably for five (5) years with a constant pain in my back and right side and although my husband employed several of the best doctors in this great city, not one could give me relief. At last I took Wine of Cardui, which relieved my pain, pre vented an operation and restored me to health." It is a wonderful cura- I five medicine for all womens' ills. Try it. C 3 At all Dngbts &0O W. X. 1 Omaha. XO. 11 1! ANTI-GRIPIHE IS GUARANTEED TO CURE IMP, BAD COLD, IEABAGNE iU IENMUUL I wont aell Aat-Qrlplae to a dealer who wont Owrtn It. Call for your MOHET BACK. IV IT BOXT CVEK, V, W. Diemer. JfclMannfaoturerarlaigalcM, Mtk Dispels colds and headaches when bilious or con stipated; For men, women and children; Acts best on the kidneys and liver, stomach and bowels; ZlewYorkJtY. all first-class California on the front per bottle. A .r .3-