eISSSISsSSs SSSSS :-2Siii35 fc M if i. fc L h Mrs. Nnttie Htiffaker. HAD GIVEN UP ALL HOPE, CONFINED TO HER BED WITH DYSPEPSIA. I Owe My Life to Pe-ni-na, Says Mrs. Huffaker. Mrs. Mittie Huffaker, E. It. No. S, Columbia, Tenn., writes : "i was afflicted with dyspepsia tot several years and at last was confined to my bed, unable to sit up. "We tried several different doctors without relief. "I had given up all hope of any re lief and was almost dead when my husband bought me a bottle of Pe runa. "At first I couM not notice any ben efit, but after talcing several bottles I was cured sound and well. "It Is to Peruna I owe my 'He to day. "I cheerfully recommend it to all Fufferers. Bevised Formula. "For a number of years requests have come to me from a multitude of grateful friends, urging that Peruna be given a slight laxative quality. I have been experimenting with a laxa tive addition for quite a length of time, and now feel gratified to an nounce to the friends of Peruna that I have incorporated such a quality In the medicine which, in my opinion ran only enhance its well-known bene ficial character. "S. B. Habtsiax. M. D." FKOTH OF FUN. She "I think Mrs. Newcombe Is so sweet, don't you? You can read her character in her face." He "Yes, if you read between the lises." "Yea, I'm going in for teaching." "Going In for teaching? Why, I would rather marry a widower with half a dozen children!" "So would 1 but Where's the widower?" "Well, Emily, did you have a good time at the masked ball?" "Oh, I had a splendid time. I made my husband dress up as a knight in heavy armor, and he wasn't able to budge from one spot all night" Mr. Tubbs "Well. Bobble, how does your sister like the engagement ring I gave her?" Bobbie "Well. It's a bit too small. She has a bard job to get it off in a hurry when the other fellows call." She "Oh, that's the great prima donna, is it? Is she famous because of her voice or her acting?" He "Neither, but she has a motor ac cident regularly every week, and that keeps her name before the public." First Day of the Voyage. Steward Did you ring, sir? Traveler Yes, steward, I 1 rang. "Anything I can bring, sir?" "Y-yes, st-steward. Bub-bring me a continent if you have one, or an islanc anything, steward, so 1-lul-long aa it's solid. If you can't, sus-sink thi hip." Harper's Bazar. Small Wonder. "You say she has now been mar ried four times?" "Yes. poor woman. And she says she's growing tired of funerals." Milwaukee Sentinel. LIMB RAW AS PIECE OF BEEF. Suffered for Three Tears with. Itching Humor Cruiser Newark TJ. S. N. Man Cured by Cuticura. "I suffered with humor for about three years off and on. I finally saw a doctor and he gave me remedies thai did me no good, so I tried Cuticura when my limb below the knee to thf ankle was as raw as a piece of beef All I used was the Cuticura Soap and the Ointment. I bathed with Cuticura Soap every day, and used about six or seven boxes of Cuticura Ointment I was thoroughly cured of the humoi fn three weeks, and haven't been at fected with it since. I use no otbei Soap than Cuticura now. H. J. Myers U. S. N.. U. S. S. Newark. New York July 8, 1905." When a man doesn't complain abou. having to ride in the upper berth of s sleeper, it's a sign that he lives in a flat. Lewis Single Binder cigar richest, most satisfying smoke on the market. oiu dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria. 111. If men couldn't go into politics the would invent something else just as bad to do. N. Y. Press. Lewis' Single Binder straicht 5c cipar is cood quality all the time. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. The fact that a man is all puffed up with pride will not mitigate tSe jar .when he takes his fall. Mrs. Wiotlow't Sootmiu; Syrup. For children teething, softens the Rurag, reduces fa Bammatioa. allays pain, care wind colic 25c a bottle. A London man has invented an en ,glne to be run by air. Presumably jhet Garfield Tea. the herb laxative, is better .than drugs and strong cathartics; it cures. It's gasolene that makes the wsrld jap rsuad. 1 "- - TO THE CONSUMER. FACTS FOB, HIS CONSIDERATION XEGABDIXG HOKE TRADE. Patronage of Local Merchants Important Factor in Build ing Up a Commu nity. an Dear Mr. Consumer: The retail merchant in your community very often has much less at stake there than you have. The prosperity or lack of prosperity of the community may mean much less to him than it does to you. His investment in your community may be represented entirely by the stock of goods he Is carrying. If your particular community does not afford him prosperity according to his necessities it is a comparative ly simple matter for him to close out his stock and go elsewhere, taking with him that part of the prosperity jf your community which his capi tal added to it If you are a farmer, let us say since we are writing of mail order house patronage, and agriculturists are very large patrons of the mail or der institutions your holdings in your community represent many thou sands of dollars, so that Its continued prosperity is vital most vital to your own prosperity. It is true that many retail mer chants have property interests in the communities in which they live in ad dition to their mercantile interests. It is true also that many mail order house patrons have small financial in terests of any kind. It may be safely stated, however, that the interests of the average farmer, who is the great catalogue house patron, are more closely bound up in the welfare of bis community than are the interests of the average retail merchant. It must be plain, then, that you who have much at stake in your communi ties are placing responsibility on the wrong shoulders when you demand that In order to retain your patron age merchants who have comparative ly little at stake shall compete in the assortment of stocks, and to the ex act dollar and cent in prices, with some millionaire merchant in a dis tant city. If your local merchant be honest, and if he be making an effort, fairly, to supply your needs as far as it lies within his power, it is to your inter est that you should encourage him by every means you possess, not only to remain in you community, but to ex pand his business to further meet the requirements of your community in stead of placing upon him the burden of gratifying your every whim that you may be Induced to keep at home the portion of your money that be; longs there in any event We say to you. therefore, that It is your duty to yourself to purchase within your own community every dollar's worth of goods that it is pos sible for you to buy there at a price within reason; that it is your duty to yourself to give your home mer chant an opportunity to order goods for you that he may not have in stock; that it is your duty to your self to help your home merchant en large and widen the scope of his busi ness as rapidly as possible. If you cannot buy a certain kind of goods in your own community, it is your duty to yourself to join with your neighbors in a search for an en terprising merchant who will come into your community with his capital and handle that particular line of goods. At one time or another you may have contributed a bonus to bring a manufacturing establishment to your community. The retail merchant, in a smaller way, is as important a fac tor In the prosperity of your com munity as the manufacturer somes times a more stable one; he is a nec essary part of the whole. And he asks no bonus but your en couragement and the share of yout trade which it legitimately belongs to you to give to him. BOOK PLEASES CRITICS. "Evolution of a Great Literature," by Newton Mann, Universally Commended. "The Evolution of a Great Litera ture," by Newton Mann, of Omaha, ha been universally commended by critics as a scholarly and thoughtful work It is a natural history ot the Jewish ano Christian Scriptures. The author has summarized the results of the investi gations of students of sacred history and in a remarakbly able and clear form has set them down. The book is in no sense a polemic It simply gives such information as to the cir cumstances under which the Bible was composed as is accessible, and the re sults are exceedingly interesting and important Every devout reader of the Bible will be interested in this instructive volume. Trailing the Missing' Link. Scientists are again on the trail o! the "missing link." Two years age certain marks were found on a block of sandstone near Warranambool, in Australia, which were thought to be the imprints of the footsteps of a pre historic man. At the time this Idea was ridiculed, but a plaster cast was sent to Germany, and the inevitable German savant went out to investigate the matter. He now reports that in his opinion they were genuine human imprints, and this, taken in conjunc tion with the extraordinary human skulls to be seen in the Warranambool museum, is supposed to show that a link between humanity and the ape has been discovered. Chicago Record Herald. Japan's Military Heroes. Self-depreciation seems to be a common virtue of military heroes in Japan. In his parting address to his officers on the breaking up of the Manchurian army Marshal Oyama says: "That I, in spite of my de fective ability, have been enabled to avoid any signal failure must be pri marily assigned to the loyalty and fidelity of the officers and soldiers nu tter my command." THE POINT OF THE PROVERB An old proverb advises the shoe maker to stick to his last It means that a man always succeeds best at the business he knows. To the farmer it means, stick to your plow; to Jthe blacksmith, stick to your forge; to the painter, stick to your brush. When we make experiments out of our line they are likely to prove expen sive failures. It is amusing, however, to remark how every one of us secretly thinks he could do some other fellow's work better than the other fellow himself. The painter imagines he can make paint better than the paint manufac turer; the farmer thinks he can do a job of painting better, or at least cheaper than the painter, and so on. A farm hand in one of Octave Thanefs stories tells the Walking Delegate of the Painters" Union, "Any body can slather paint;" and the old line painter tells the paint salesman, "None of your ready made mixtures for me; I reckon I ought to know how to mix paint." The farm hand is wrong and the painter is wrong: "Shoemaker, stick to your last" The "fancy farmer" can farm, of course, but it is an ex pensive amusement If it strikes him as pleasant to grow strawberries at fifty cents apiece, or to produce eggs that cost him five dollars a dozen, it is a form of amusement, to be sure, if he can afford it but it's not farm ing. If the farmer likes to slosh around with a paint brush and can af ford the time and the expense of hav ing a practical painter do the job right pretty soon afterward, it's a harmless form of amusement If the painter's customers can afford to stand for paint that comes off in half the time it should, they have a perfect right to indulge his harmless vanity about his skill in paint making. But in none of these cases does the shoe maker stick to his last There is just one class of men in the world that knows how to make paint properly and have the facilities for doing it right; and that is the paint manufacturers the makers of the standard brands of ready-prepared paints. The painter mixes paints; the paint manufacturer grinds them together. In a good ready-prepared paint every particle of one kind of pigment is forced to join hands with a particle of another kind and every bit of solid matter is forced, as it were, to open its mouth and drink in its share of linseed oil. That is the only way good paint can be made, and if the painter knew how to do it he has nothing at hand to do it with. A paint pot and a paddle are a poor substitute for power-mixers, buhr-mills and roller-mills. The man who owns a building and neglects to paint it as often as it needs paint is only a degree more short-sighted than the one who tries to do his own painting or allows the painter to mix his paint for him. P. G. CLOTHES AND CONDUCT. Addison could not write his best un less he was well dressed. Every man and every womin feels the influence of clothes and appearance upon conduct Indeed, in a millennium of free clothes of the latest fashion we shall ail be archangels. You have heard of the lonely man in the Australian uush who always put on evening dress for dinner, so thai he nilgai remember he was a gentle man. Put a naughty girl into her bes: Sunday clothes, and she will behave quite nicely. Put a blackguard into khaki and he will be a hero. Pu: an omnibus conductor into uniform and he will live up to bis clothes. So Homelike. Some one said to Brother Williams: "They have a balloon fad now. and you can go up and cool off in the clouds." "Yes. snh." he replied. "En dar's so much thunder en lightnin' up dar, I reckon lots er 'urn will feel lak' dey wuz right at home 'specially de mar ried folks!'" Atlanta Constitution. W. L. Douglas 3-i?&3;SHOESggi W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line cannot oe equaHeg at any price. fifl (inn "3!" o vivw ensrsTB bm rauasaiK. nicasjM Ukereai teto say three If get weald realize why W. L. Deatlas S3.5S shoes 22X5 mktl? they Esi. their shape, SLS? .we2' ; aaad awe sf gfsster hrtrtMfcvadMttsMuy ether $3.58 sheet mmm, 33.BO, 99MI. Bmar? 9mmmml & CAUTION .Insist upon batting WX-Doog: sas shoes. Take bo substitute. Kone vennine wiuiuu. bib aun sou price stamped on oonom. rmmiyvivr cgeim HWta ; may mill MAX snueioriiiBaEraseauatajq W.LDOCeiJaS, i In i lll &at&&& H Cwtal 2jmm THE PASTORAL NAVAJOS. Habits of This Tribe of Indians and Their Homes in the Southwest. The Navajos are a pastoral, patri archal, semi-nomadic people. 'iheii whole culture and development centers in their flocks. Their reservation ol 12,000 square miles is desert, broken with mountain and mesa. On the mesa and low mountains there are consider able areas of pinon and cedar, and on the higher mountains a limited area of beautiful pine forests, writes E. &. Curtis, In Scribner's. Over this reelor the Navajos drive their flocks. At the season when the slight rainfall gives even a scant pasturage on ".he desert plains, the flocks are pastured there As the pasturage on the lower levels is both burned with the hot, scorching sun and exhausted with pasturing, the flocks are taken up into the highei mountains, where there is more moist ure. Again as the deep winter snows come on the sheep must be taken down out of the mountains to escape them. During this time they are kept on the wooded mesa, where there is less snow, and a plentiful supply of wood of which there is none on the plains below. Year in and year out the Nav ajo flocks are driven back and forth from plain to mountain-top, mesa snd foothills. While the Navajo's life is a wander ing one, he is not what could be called a true nomad. His zone of wander5 ing is limited; on the same grounds his father and father's father have kept their flocks. The average Nava jo coulu not guide you a distance tc exceed 50 miles. Last season the writer had with him two Nurajo men of middle age, who had lived their lives within a day's ride of tne mouth of Canyon de Chelly, and this was the first time they had traveled uie en tire length of the canyon. This seems strange, from the fact that it is a most remarkable scenic spot, and the large part of the great wealth of Navajc legendary lore centers in this canyon The Navajo family usually has three homes, the location of whica is determined by the necessities of theii life. One is the summer home, when they grow their small crop of corn ant" vegetables. The farming they do ii the narrow sandy washes, where, b3 planting to a great depth, they ge sufficient moisture to mature the crops In a few limited areas tbey have ir rigated farms. In Canyon de Ohelly which may be termed the "garden oi the reservation," there are tiny irri gated farms and splendid peach orch ards. CELERY GAINING IN FAVOR. Grows Best in the Kocky Mountains Where It Is Neglected by Farmers. Celery is a native of Europe, where it has always been much more used than, here, not only in salads and as a relish, for which it is still principally demanded in this country but as a seasoning for soups and other dishes and cooked by itself like any other vegetable. Its traditional place en the American table has heretofore been with the turkey and cranbsrry sauce at Thanksgiving and Christmas and other special feasts, but of recent years it has come into more general use at all times of the year, while as one of the ingredients of salad it is more than holding its place, despite the coming of so many new dishes of the salad family. The old discussion as to whether celery is properly a winter or a sim mer food is rapidly giving way !v - re. the generally accepted idea that it is a good thing to eat it whe:i-r it can be had. and in Philadelph". this means all the year. It is definitely established, too, as a nerve tonic harm less in large or small quantities. While it is extremely perishable after it has once been harvested, and loses rapidly the crispness which makes one of Its most delightful char acteristics, it can now be had after being only a little while out of the ground; also from many climates in rotation. Besides, there are ways of storing it and keeping it in good con dition before it is picked or, rather, pulled up by the roots until the mar ket calls for it. The all-season supply comes from as far south as Florida and as far west as California. Curiously enough, the Rocky moun tain celery, which is declared by com noisseurs to be superior to all" other varieties, does not reach this market or any other. This appears to be a case of a neglected industry among the mountaineers, who are too busy with mines and cattle and some fruits to raise more than enough celery for their own consumption. "Right in the heart of the Rocky mountains," says a man who has been thre, "where celery is so much better than any where else that It seems like a dif ferent thing, it is hard to set and high priced." Modern City TraveL Perhaps the next improvement in methods of travel in the large cities will involve the use of the pneumatic tube. Living parcels were expert mented with in Philadelphia not long ago, and the result was surprisingly successful. A bantam rooster was put in the carrier and forced through the tube to a station a mile and two .fifths away. The first thing he did when taken out was to crow, as if li .celebration of his achievement. Latef two puppies and two guinea-pigs were sent through, and a glass bowl filled with water containing several gold fish. None of the creature suffered in jury. Youth's Companion. Already Punished. The slum sociologist looked properly supercilious. "My good woman," he asked, Mdc you believe in the whipping post foi wife beaters?" "Naw," said the muscular matron "but I believe in the hospital for an wife beater that tackles me." Brook lyn Eagle. Evidence at Hand. J "Death often changes aversion Into love," remarked the man who has a mania for handing out quotations. "That's right," rejoined the ordi nary mortal. "I have an antipathy for hogs, but I dearly love sausages.' Chicago Daily News. A LAND OF OPPORTUNITIES. Inducements Held Out by Western Canada Axe Powerful. A recent number of the Winnipeg (Manitoba) Free Press contains an excellent article on the prospects in Western Canada, a portion of which we are pleased to reproduce. The agents of the Canadian' Gov ernment, located at different centres in the .States, will be pleased to give any farther information as to rates, and how to reach these lands. "Just now there is a keener inter est than ever before on the part of the outside world, in regard to the claims of the Canadian West as a field of settlement At no previous time has there been such a rush of immi gration, and the amount of informa tion distributed broadcast is unprece dentedly great. "In the majority of the States of the Union and in Great Britain the opportunities for home-making and achieving of even a modest compe tence are at the best limited. More over, according to the social and in dustrial conditions prevalent in those communities, the future holds out no promise of better things. It is not strange, tnen, that energetic young men should turn their eyes to Can ada's great wheat belt, where every man can pursue fortune without the hindrance of any discouraging handi cap. "The inducements held out by West ern Canada are powerful and made manifest by the great movement now in progress. That the prospects are considerably more than reasonably certain is borne out by the history of the country and its residents. The promise of gain is powerful, but when added to it there is the prospect of a corresponding social and civil eleva tion, it should prove irresistible to young men of a particularly desirable class for any new country. "The Canadian West is alive with opportunities for the young man who aims at becoming more than a mere atom in the civil and national fabric. Some of the eager young fellows who arrive on the prairies daily are des tined to become more than merely prosperous farmers. In the near fu ture great municipal and provincial development will be in the hanHs of the people. The stepping stone to both financial prosperity and civil prominence is, and will be, the farm. For every professional opening there are hundreds of agricultural openings. The Canadian prairies are teeming with opportunities for the honest and industrious of all classes, but they are specially inviting to the ambitious young man who seeks a field for the energy and ability which he feels in herent within him. The familiar cry of "Back to the soil!" is more than a vain soundng phrase when applied to Western Canada." locating the Blame. Tfy dear," said the trusting wife, "I don't think your rule3 of economy are any good." "You don't?" asked the fond hus band. "No," she replied, bending anew over the column of figures in her beautifully bound expense book. "You told me the way to save money was not to buy things that thus w would save the amount the goods would have cost us. So I have been careful to set down the exact price of everything I have wanted to buy but felt I could not afford. I find, in adding it up, it amounts to $535, but I only have $4.37 in cash on hand. There must be something wrong with your theory. Stray Stories. The Beginning. Knicker Primitive men plowed the earth with a sharpened stick. Bocker You don't mean to say golf dated back that far? N. Y. Sua. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, aa tbey cannot reach the d!s eased portion of the ear. There Is only one way te care deafness, and tbat la by constitutional remedies. Deafness la caused by aa inflamed condition of the mucous lining ot the Eustachian Tube. When this tube Is Inflamed you bave a rumbling sound or Im perfect bearing, and when It la eutlrely closed. Deaf ness la tbe result, and unless tbe Inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to Its normal condi tion, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which Is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) tbat cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. ., . F.J.CHEXEVsCO.,Tol0dO,O Sold by Drarjrtsta. 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. The man who flirts with trouble is apt to get it where Uncle Bill got the carbuncle. Garfield Tea purifies the blood, regulates the digestive organs, brings good health. The sun that shines rises In the heart. in the face Are You Tired, Nervous and Sleepless? Nervousness and sleeplsssness are 03 ally due to the fact that tho nerves are not fed on properly nourishing blood; they are starved nerves. Dr. Pierce's upiaen Medical Discovery makes pure, rich blood, and thereby the nerves are properly nourished and all the organs of the body are run as smoothly as machin ery which runs in oil. In this way you feel clean, strong and strenuous you are toned up and invigorated, and you are good for a whole lot of physical or mental work. Best of all, the strength and in crease in vitality and health are lasting. The trouble with most tonics and med cines which have a large, booming sale for a short time, is that they are largely composed of alcohol holding tho drugs in solution. This alcohol shrinks up the red blood corpuscles, and in the long run greatly injures the system. . One may feel exhilarated and better for tho timn hinr Set in the end weakened and with vitality ecreased. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery contains no alcohol. Every bottle of it bears upon its wrapper The Jsaaae of ITonestu. in a. fnii Hat nt oii it- several ingredients. For the druggist to offer you something he claims is "just as good" is to insult your intelligence. Every ingredient entering into the world-famed "Golden Medical Discovery" has the unanimous approval and endorse ment of the leading medical authorities of all the several schools of practice. No other medicine sold through druggists for like purposes has any such endorsement. The "Golden Medical Discovery" not only produces all the good effects to be obtained from the use of Golden Seal toot, in all stomach, liver and bowel troubles, as in dyspepsia, billiousness, con- StlDatlOn. Ulceration nf ctnmooh A bowels and kindred ailments, but the Golden Seal root used in its compound tag is greatly enhanced in its curative ac tion by other ingredients such as Stone root, Black Cherrybark, Bloodroot, Man drake root and chemically pure triple refined glycerine. "The Common Sense Medical Adviser," b sent free in paper covers on receipt of 81 one-cent stamps to pay the cost of mail ing only. For 31 stamps the cloth-bound volume will be sent. Address Dr. K. V. Pierce, BuffaloN. Y. J tree's Pleasant Pellets cure oon MnatioB, bilionsnflts and hssdsche. William Glyniie Charles Gladstone, grandson of the great commoner and heir to the Hawarden estate, has beea elected secretary of the Oxford Union society, a position which his Illus trious grandfather occupied 76 years ago." Young Mr. Gladstone comes of age in two or three months, and will then enter into possession of the Hawarden estate, which has been managed during his minority by his uncles, Herbert and Henry Gladstone. His One Hope. You'll find, my boy," said the wise old man, "that this world is full of quicksands." "Yes." replied the bright youth, "aa I expect to go into the sugar refining business I hope I'll find it reasonably full of get-rich-quick sauds." Phila delphia Ledger. What Has Reason to Do with Itf Joe But, my dear fellow, is your Income enough to justify your mar rying? Fred I'm afraid not "Then what reason have you for taking so serious a step?" "I have no reason. I'm in love." Stray Stories. Write Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn. X. Y., for sample of Garfield Tea. Mild laxative. Light-weight men always thiak they are heavy-weight thinkers. CORDIAL INVITATION ADDRESSEDTO WORKING GIRLS Miss Barrows Tells How Mrs. Pink ham's Advice Helps Working Girls. Girls who work are particularly susceptible to fe rn a 1 e disorders, especially those who are obliged to stand on their feet from morn ing until night in stores or facto ries. Day in and day out the girl toils. and she is often the bread-winner of the family. Whether she is sick or well, whether it rains or shines, 'she must get to her place of employment, perform the duties exacted of her smile and be agreeable. Among' this class the symptoms of female diseases are early manifest by weak and aching backs, pain in the lower limbs and lower part of the stomach. In consequence of frequent wetting of the feet, periods become painful and irregular, and frequently there are faint and dizzy spells, with loss of appetite, until life is a burden. All these symptoms point to a de rangement of the female organism which can be easily and promptly cured by Lydia . Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound. Miss Abby P. Barrows, Nelsonville. Athens Co., Ohio, tells what this great medicine did for her. one writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham : "I feel it my duty to tell yon the good Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Blood Purifier have done forme. Before I took them I was very nervous, bad dull headaches, pains in back, and periods were irregular, I had been to several doctors, and they did me no good. "Your medicine has made me well and strong. I can do most any kind of work without complaint, and my periods are all right. "I am in better health than I ever was, and I know it is all due to your remedies. I recommend your advice and medicine to all who suffer." It is to such girls that Mrs. Pink ham holds out a helping hand and ex tends a cordial invitation to correspond with her. She is daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years has been advising sick Women free of charge. Her long record of success in treating woman's ills makes her letters of advice of untold value to every ailing working girl. Address, Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. MOT YOUR HEART f If you think yon have heart dis ease you are only one of a countless number that are deceived by indi gestion into believing; the heart is affected. Lane's Family Meoicine the tonic-laxative, will get your stomach back into good condition, and then the chances are ten to one that you will have no more symp toms of heart disease. Sold by all dealers at 25c and 50c MAKEEVERY1W COUNT- , no matter how bad the weather you cannot afford to be without TOWER'S WATERPROOF! OILED SUIT ,0ft SLICKER When you buy looKforthe SIGN OF THE HSH ' ajTowtacaBOSTDNua. 0t CUM CO ITO TOBOXTO UN You Cannot CURE all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con ditions of the mucous rembrane such as asalcatarrh.uteririe catarrh caused by femiaiac ills, sore throat, sore mouth or iaflamed eyes by simply dosing tbe stomach. But you surely caa care these stubborn affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease gens,checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feaiiniae ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box IBB B. PAXTOJf CO, 11 1 Eire cnnT.cicc A Carta Cart far UrasJ, Nst, Aeaiaf Fast. OO MOT ACCsTP- SUBSTITUTE. tfMiaJitvFAtrran fv AVfti Mm wbfr&f'Px PrM 'm? wUh rd W am " .sTfl-2 TWICE.TOLD TESTIMONY. Woman Who Has Suffered Tells Ho to Find Belief. The thousands of women who suffer backache, languor, urinary disorders and other kidney; ills, will find com fort in the words of Mrs. Jane Far rell, of 606 Ocean Ave., Jersey City, N. J., who says: "I reiterate a.1 Ii have said before in praise of Doan's Kidney Pills. I had been having heavy backache and my general health was affected when I began using them. My feet were swollen, my eyes puffed, and dlazy spells were frequent. Kidney action was irregular and the secretions high ly colored. To-day. however. I am a well woman, and I am confident that Doan's Kidney Pills have made ma so, and are keeping me well." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. T. It is human nature to wonder how so many incompetent people succeed where we can't Judge. Cramps cause women some of their most excruciating ly painful hours. Mrs. Lula Berry, of Farming- ton, Ark writes: "I suffered with terrible cramps every month, and would sometimes lose consciousness for 4 to 9 hours. On a friend's advice I took CARDUI WIKE OF WOMAN'S BRIEF and as a result am now relieved of all my pains, and am dome all my housework." No mat ter what symptoms your female trouble may cause, the most reliable, scientific remedy for them, is Cardui. Try it At .dl Druggists CMl $20. AND LESS From St. Louis and Kansas City to all points South-west via M. K. Cy T. Ry. June 15th and 19th. Tickets good 30 days returning -with stopovers in both, directions. To Dallas. Ft. Worth. Waco. Houston. Galveston. San Antonio. Corpus Christi. Brownsville, Laredo and intermediate KOA points a9 To Elpaso and intermediate points .... $26.50 To Kansas. Indian Territory. Oklahoma and northern Texas points, one fare plus $2.00. but Qf) no rate higher than fiW Correspondingly low rates from all points! From Chicago, $25 from St. Paul. J.i i from Omaha and Council Iilufls, $22.5& Write for f nil )rticu!r. V. S. ST GEORGE General Passenger and Ticket Agent ST. LOUIS. MO. . A. MrNUTT. Blossom House. Kansas City, Mo. "SOUTHWEST Save the Pennies Vou Can Buy the Bis; Tan Cak Package of On Time Yeast for 5 cents, warranted by the On Time Yeast Company to give satis faction or money refunded. Two packages of "On Time" will cost you JO cents and are equal in weight to three packages of any other brand for which you will pay 15 cents. Ths extra nickel is worth as much to yon as to the manufacturer of the seven cake package. Use On Time Veaat and cat Ten Cakes for 5 cents instead of seren. AskYNr6nenfs0iTimYeasl PIT 4k FITLESS SCALES. For Steel and Wood Frames, 35 aad tip. Write os be: ore you buy. Wesareyoa money. Also Pumps and Wind Mills. KCKBU ISIS.. Ssa BshMS. I PATENTS for PROFIT most folly protect aa Invention. Booklet sad Desk Calendar FRKE. Highest references. Communications confidential. Established 1S6I. Haaoa. Feavsnck a Lawrence Waahiastea, S. C. DEFIUCE STUM for starchlns; finest linens. W. V. TJ., OMAHA, NO. 21, 1906. Fa FREt Tr ifl-arkara UadCXa3JL address. 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