- "; ' .-r "T-sjj8'i1 !rfwpots?SB'r"',r,, V. - rss i 4 PROOF FOR TWO CENTS. If You Suffer with Your Kidneys and Back, Write to This Man. G. W. Winney, Medina, N. Y.. in vites kidney sufferers to write to hlia. To all who enclose postage be will re ply, telling how Doan's Kidney Pills cured him after he had doctored and had been in two dif ferent hospitals for ei ghteen months, suffering intense pain in the hack, lameness, twinges when stooping or liftinj languor, dizzy spells and rheu matism. "Before I used Doan's Kid ney Pills," says Mr. Winney, "I weighed 143. After taking 10 or 12 boxes I weighed 1C2 and was com pletely cured." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. NOT EVE'S FAULT THAT TIME. Childish Realism Instilled Into Story of Garden of Eden. Realism rules the nursery. A cer tain Philadelphia matron, who had taki'n pains to inculcate Biblical stories as well as ethical truths in her three children, heard, the other day, long drawn howls of rage and grief filtering down from the playroom. Up two flights she hurried, to find on the floor Jack and Ethel, voices uplifted. Thomas, aged nine, sat perched upon the table, his mouth full and his eyes guilty. 'Whatever is the matter?" asked mamma. "IJo-oo!" came from Ethel; "we were playing Garden of Eden. Boo-o!" "But what is there to cry about?" Then .lack, with furious finger point ing at Tom, ejaculated through his tears: "God's eat the apple!" Bohe mian Magazine. CARNEGIE'S RIVAL. "lie's a regular philanthro what do you call it?" "Wot's he did?" "Why. in de last week he's give away two dozen 'Deadwood Dick' an' a dozen 'Nickel' libraries!" Couldn't Fool Him. A custom house clerk, who. prior to his entry into Uncle Sam's service, was a schoolteacher "a good many years yet," as he proudly informs his associates, was standing on the corner of Fifth and Chestnut streets one cold day last winter, deeply engrossed in studying a legend which appeared on a dairy man's wagon, as follows: "Pasteurized milk," etc. His face wore a puzzled expression, but finally betraying evidence of dawn inc intelligence he remarked to a by slander: "Ain't these here Philadelphia milk men a-geitin to be just as deceitful as anything! Pasturized milk, eh? But they can't fool me. 'cause I lived in the country, and know you can't pusture cows in winter." A Mere Fad. John D. Rockefeller. Jr., was talking to a member of the famous Bible class about economy. "But economy, like everything else, may be carried to extremes may be made a mere fad of." said Mr. Rocke feller. "There is a farmer out near Cleve land who makes a fad of economy. Every time he drives into town ho carries a lien with him tied to the seat of his buggy. "A friend rode with him one day and found out the use of the hen When, at noon, the farmer lunched under a tree he gave his mare a feed from a nosebag. The hen, set on the ground, ate all that the horse spilled from the bag, and thus there was no waste." DIFFERENT NOW Athlete Finds Better Training Food. It was formerly the belief that to become strong, athletes must eat plenty of meat. This is all out of date now. and many trainers feed athletes on the well-known food. Grape-Nuts, made of wheat and barley, and cut the meat down to a small portion once a day. "Three years ago." writes ,a Mich, man. "having become interested In athletics, I found I would have to stop eating pastry and some other kinds of food. "I got some Grape-Nuts, and was soon eating the food at every meal, for I found that when I went on the track. I felt more lively and active. "Later, I began also to drink Postum in place of coffee, and the way I gained muscle and strength on this diet was certainly great. On the day of a field meet in June I weighed 124 lbs. On the opening of the football season in Sept., I weighed 140. I at tribute my fine condition and good work to the discontinuation of im proper food and coffee, and the using of Grape-Nuts and Postum, my princi pal diet during training season being Grtape-Xuts. "Before I used Grape-Nuts I never felt right in the morning always kind of 'out of sorts' with my stomach. But now when I rise I feel good, and after a breakfast largely of Grape-Nuts with cream, and a cup of Postum, I feel like a new man." "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. !; A) r aw Vfer y Tpnss'"nWsstw, " 'jflF4slBSsti THE STATE CAPITAL MATTERS OF INTEREST TO ALL CITIZENS. DEPOSIT OF PENSION MONEY A Former Rule Has Been Repealed and a New One Will Be Adopted by the State Board. New Rule for Old One. The rule requiring members of sol diers' homes in Nebraska to pay a por tion of their pension money to the cash funds of the homes, recently fought through the courts till its le iraiitv was sustained and then sus pended by the state board of public j lauds and buildings till turtner oruert,, has been repleaded by the board and a new rule will be adopted. At a pro longed session of the board this was decided upon and as the member of the board who was delegated to draft the new rule dees his duty the action of the board will be made official. The new rule which was tested in the courts and which was upheld and which is now rescinded proided that each member of the homes might le tain SI 2 a month of pension money and pay 10 per cent on all over $12 a month and not more tl an ?1C a month; 20 per cent on all over $20 and not more than $23; :50 per cent on all over $24 and not more than $29. and what ever the commandant anJ board shall deem just on all over $30. If a mem ber is helpless the rule provided that he should pay a portion of pension money deemed equitable by the board and commandant, unless he should have a dependent wife or children. An other rule that was never mentioned in the court proceedings provided that any member having a dependent wife or minor children who refuses to con tribute two-thirds of his penson, on de mand, for tile use of such dependents offers good grounds for his discharge. It was discovered by the board that the rule had not been enforced at the Grand Island homo, hut was enforce at the Milford Lome. As it was con sidered more favorable than the old rule adopted many years ago by the populist administration, the members of the present board supposed it would be satisfactory to all concerned. In this they were incorrect as shown by the injunction suit that was com menced by a member of the Grand Island home and backed by prominent politicians. Although the state board won the suit in tlie supreme court, the suit is still pending and the plaintiff has a right to file a motion for a renearlng. Until the suit is finally settled the board canot adopt a rule that would take any part of pension money, even if the members desired to do so. It is understood the rule agreed upon will provide that no veteran who is able to earn a livelihood or who has means of support shall be admitted to the home and that such veterans may be honorably discharged at ihe discretion of the board. No pension money will be retained, but if in the judgment of the board any member of the home is incompetent to handle his own pension money he flill be required to deposit all of it with the commandant and it will be paid back to him in install ments such as the commandant deeinr. necessary for the good of the member and when the member is discharged from the home he will receive back all his funds on deposit with the com mandant. Removing Dead Animals. Health Officer Rohde, who did much in the way of rescuing the flood vic tims Monday and Tuesday, made a tour inspection of the low lands. Fif teen large animals were found dead by the health officer and many hogs. The remains of innumerable chickens cover the yards on the flooded bottoms. Most of the larger animals were removed last week and the remainder and those that will he found will be taken care of. The team of mules, drowned on North Fourteenth street, were found, one on the roadway and the other a considerable distance from the point where they were lost. A horse was found north of the right of way about twentieth street and a team of horses nar the old East Lincoln mill on the Northwestern. The bodies of a few cattle were found in the west bottoms. Many more are exported to Te founa lodged in the debris where the stream is chocked at various bridges. Boats are Missing. Only twenty-three of the forty-one boats used by the city officials during the recent flood have been located and returned to their owners. Many of them are still in the hands of individ uals in the flood districts where they were used. The police are making an effort to find the missing craft and re store them to the people to whom they belong. Will Ask for Medal. Some of the men who witnessed the heroic work of Bert E. Small of Sagi nay. Mich.. In saving the lives of eleven people at Ashland, will petition Carnegie for a medal for the young man. Small is a sailor, about twenty four years old. and was on his way to the grain fields of Kansas where he ex pected to secure work. He rescued nine people from almost certain death, under most difficult conditions, and two men from perilous positions. Frank E. Schaaf. of 140 South Thir teenth street, witnessed the bravery. Coal Rates Away Up in Air. The intimate connection of freight rates with prices is well shown by the recent purchases of coal for the va rious state institutions. The following are the prices and quantities at four of the state institutions: Lincoln asy lum, 2,000. $2.69; Hastings ayslum. 6,000, $3.05; Kearney industrial, COO. 4.15; Norfolk avium, 2,000, 4.07. Ac cording to this the freight to Kearney is S6 cents per ton more than to Lin coln from the south, 78 cents more to Norfolk and 35 cents more tr Hastings. NEBRASKA NEWS AND NOTES. ! Items of Greater or Lesser Impor tance Over the State. The corner stone of the new Elks hiiiMinw of Ynrlc was laid last week. I We publish a list of Omaha business houses in another column. In writing or calling on them please mention this paper. By prompt action the farmers in the vicinity of Malcolm thing that they have succeeded in exterminating the Canadian thistle which recently threatened to become such a pest throughout the neighborhiid. The seeds, it is thought, were brought in in some eastern grass seed sowed in a certain pasture, and grew unnoticed for a season. Ninety per cent of the retailers in Nebraska who were asked by the Dry Goodsman and General Merchant (St. Louis), which paper issued a "prosper ity edition" about the business out look, replied that they expected to do as much or more business for fall than they did last year, while only fnn 50 to 75 per cent of the mer chants in other states gave as good as surances. Ditch matters are engrossing the at tention of the Dodge county author ities at present, a petition has been filed by owners'of property lyinz nrth of Fremont for a ditch seven miles long, varying from twelve to thirty feet in width and six feet deep. The proposed waterway will drain thou sands of acres which the signers al lege is now unfit for cultivation be cause of an excess of moisture. At the various scenes of the wrecks caused by the late storms, says a Ge neva dispatch, the debris is being gathered, this being an arduous task. At some of the pfaces new barns have already taken the place of the old. At the Mertiam farm a new barn is up and a large new foundation for a resi dence laid south of where the old home stood. Much of the corn and small grain on the lowlands is com pletely destroyed. An ordinary life policy in THE MID WEST LIFE of Lincoln. Nebraska, for one 25 years of age would cost $20.91 for the first year and $16.40 a year thereafter. Payments after the first year could be paid every quarter at a cost of $4.35 a quarter. THE MIDWEST LIFE is an old line com pany and1 is furnishing safe and sound insurance, good for all time, at a rate which is within the reach of all. Agents wanted. Write for particulars. D. Clem Deaver, superintendent of the homeseekers' information bureau of the Burlington is arranging for the winter trip of the exhibit car which will be started east about September 1. The car will contain products from Nebraska, Colorado and Wyoming, one-half the space being given to dry farming and the other half to irriga tion. Wisconsin will be added to the territory covered by the car, which last year visited Iowa, Illinois and northern Missouri. There is a lively fight on in Pleas ant Grove school district, Otoe county, I over the removal of the school house. At the election twenty-eight voted to move the same and seventeen against, but the law does not permit the mov ing of a school house unless it is three" fourths of a mile from the center of the district and both sides wifl have surveyors out there to ascertain just how near the center of the district it is located and may call another elec tion to decide the matter. A feature of the Fourth of July cel ebration at North Platte was. the pub lic wedding at high noon of Joseph Beirbower and Mrs. Walling, which was witnessed by several thousand, j The ceremony was performed by Justice Grimes of the district court on one of the main streets of the city. The groom was married with his hat on. The couple were the recipients of many and various gifts which had been offered to the couple that would get married on this occasion. "In behalf of the Territorial Pio neers of Nebraska I want to urge all the officers and members of the Coun ty Pioneer associations to make a special effort to get as many of their members and others to join the state association of Nebraska Pioneers," said President A. N. Yost of the Ne braska Pioneers at Omaha. "I would like also, to see a pioneer organiza tion in every county in this state, and there is no reason why there should not be. All it costs to organize is an effort, and a very small effort at that." The total fatalities from the disas trous wreck on the Northwestern line, near Clinton, a small station west of Valentine, has now reached thirteen, of which four were train man and nine were tramps, who were beating their way, and officials say there may be more bodies buried beneath the enormous piles of coal. The spot where the culvert was washed away has never been known to contain more than a foot of water at a time and when the double header plunged into the hole it was filled with nine feet of water. State Treasurer Brian has bought $500,000 worth of Caliornia state bonds at par to net the state 4 per cent interest He went to California the latter part of last week, in answer to a notice that the bonds were to be sold to the highest bidder. The residetns of the village of Smart ville, Johnson county, came into court with a petition and prayed that the name of the place might be changed to St. Mary. The request was granted and the postoffice department ac knowledged the new name. The Bur lington railroad company objected and still calls the village Smartville. Tabitha home, near Lincoln, was dedicated last month. A four days Indian carnival was held at Walthill. Four hundred and sixty-eight Omaha Indians camped in town during the entire week and many others spent several days visiting the exercises. A complete program of amusements was caried out every day, consisting of a ball game, horse races, a wild west show, a balloon ascen sion and an Indian dance. The In dians danced their ancient dances in their most fancy and gorgeous cos tumes. Many hundreds of people vis ited the town every day. Urn ItepJnyol 8 i J) The wiseacres of the neighborhood were discussing the question of com mon sense, sitting about the black smith shop, waiting for their horses to be shod, when a silence that had suddenly fallen warned old Limuel Jucklin that it was time for him to say something. "Yes," he remarked, "good, hard orse sense is of so rare a quality that it is nearly always taken for genius. All that most any man needs is a little jedgment, the very governor on the machinery of this life; and bein so needful it is what we seem to be most lackin' in. To know how to do a thing isn't much more inportant than knowin' what not to do. Knowin" when to do it is real genius. If you cut your wheat before it's ripe you get sappy straw for your labor. If you wait too long you get but dry straw. Jedgment comes from experi ence, and common sense is the wis dom beat into the heads of men that have gone before." "You leave out education," spoke up a schoolmaster. "Oh, no, I don't, for education is the experience of the mind. It goes back beyond all books, and the first book must have been written out of experi ence. But to read of the common sense of the other men don't always give us common sense of our own. In my house is a book written by a man named Kant; he calls it the 'Critique of Pure Reason.' Well, since I have more or less let up on hard work I've given a good deal of attention to the books that fortune and a little lookin' around have thrown in my way, but this here one stumped me. I read it forward and I tried it backward, up and down, and it seemed like I wa'n't goin' to get a thing out of it. My wife, seein' how I was bothered, begged me to throw it away and eat a boiled din ner that she put on the table. I did eat, but all the time I was thlnkin' about that thing all set out there in words plain enough, but what didn't appear to have any meanln. After dinner I took it up again and fought with It, holdin it this way and that, up and down, in the sun at the win dow and in the shade; but Til be hanged if I could get at the juice of it. Finally, however, I struck one thing that paid me for all my trouble, and it was this, as near as I can re member it: "A man may read all books and understand them, and he may be able to speak all languages, and yet all this cannot atone for a lack of what we know as mother wit.' Mother wit horse sense you under stand." "But how are we to get or rather I should say, after maturer considera tion, how are we to proceed toward the acquirement of that quality de nominated by the great German phil osopher as mother wit?" protested the schoolmaster, and old Lim replied: OME one with a taste for figures was telling me the other day that since the for mation of the United States somewhere back in the century be fore the last, only 26 Americans have become pres ident and not a single foreigner. Doesn't this fact put parents and teachers in rath er an unenviable position as re gards sincerity? Here we have to day at least ten million innocent children in this broad land of ours, and nearly every one of them has been told that he has a chance to become president if he will only regard his book and be a good boy and do more right thaa wrong. For my part, I think we ought to take our children aside and tell them frankly that they have mighty little chance. Think of a bright boy toiling on at school, avoiding athletics and burning the midnight oil and his brain as well for there's much con sumption of brain as there is of mid night oil in these nocturnal studyings think of his pushing on in every state in the union hoping for the presidency, while we know that Tor the next 50 years we can't expect to put more than five of the children of to-day into the great position. For my part I'd say to my child: "Rollo, there's the presidency. It's a lottery. No man ever knew from the beginning that he was going to get it Washington was real surprised, Hayes had his doubts even after election day, and Roosevelt often goes off by him self and says, 'Is it really possible that the former cowboy and literary man the hero of thousands of young men, is president of this mighty people and might be yet again if he were to al low his name to be used?' But, as I say, my boy, it's a lottery, and this counttry of ours is opposed to lotter ies officially. "Emerson," I would say, continuing the conversation for you to under stand that this is a hypothetical case (TW 0 'riT3 f nS. A x Y JfJ rt r-i w TMA. N XTA r " "I'll be blowed if I know." "Then education is useless," said the schoolmaster. "Oh, no, but sometimes it does seem like an experiment. There are two sorts of education, you know one of memory only and one that teaches a feller how to think for him self. I knew a feller that could hear a sermon once and could come away and repeat every word of it, but he didn't have ability enough of his own to write a notice and tack it on a tree announcln' that he had a mule for sale. He was like a blanket that is rained on. You couldn't wring out of him any more moisture than fell on him. Yes, sir, common sense is mighty nigh everything. And when it rises into a sort of enthusiasm it is inspira tion. Sometimes ignorance takes fire and in its light we see beautiful pic tures. If the man Is altogether un lettered we call him crazy. But if he can write he may prove to be a gen ius. It is a sudden lurch of common sense, an overbalancin', as it were." "Then you call genius insanity," said the schoolmaster. "No, not that, but It is a sort of passion that don't halt to reason by slow means, but that sees all reason in one flash. Now there was Shakes peare " "Written by Bacon: but proceed," broke in the schoolmaster. "I don't care if it was written by ham, lard or soap grease, its senten ces are staked off with stars, snatched out of the sky on a June night. It took the world several hundred years to catch up, and neither the railroad train nor these pantin' wagons that, bull-eyed, plunge across the country has outstripped that book yet. And what is it? A torch held high by com mon sense. A lantern ray flung into the black face of human nature. Up shows a grim countenance, and then we wonder how a man could have been so smart. Of course, the man that wrote that book had to have words, but common sense finds all the words that are needful to its purposes, all the words there is if there should be a demand for them, and then make a few." The schoolmaster shook his head. "Those immortal plays were written by a man of the world, and a world man, of that day, could have come from no place other than a univer sity." "That's all right and it may be true, but the university is a premium put on common sense. It's a flower bloomin' on the top of the buildin'. And I believe that It would be better for every man and every woman to go through a university. It is the warehouse of the ages. It might not teach us how to make a better livln. but it would enable us better to en joy the livin' we have. I don't be lieve in this fool idea that ignorance Thinking? ('J Charles and that therefore the boy has got to stand still and listen "Emerson said, 'Hitch your wagon to a star,' but you may make a mistake and hitch it to a comet and then, where is your wagon? "There are plenty of likelier horses, my son, and in these days of auto mobiles it isn't necessary to hitch your wagon to anything. Just make up your mind where you want to go, be sure you have motive power enough to get there, and then turn on the current. But put the presidency out of your mind once and for all." The presidency I am not talking to my son now, but just to you, dear reader the son escaped after all, hy pothetical though he was the presi dency is, as a general rule, equiva lent to a life sentence. Few there be who survive its term of office many years. There have been solid excep tions, but as a general thing when a man has passed through four years of hand-shaking and politician-shaking he is willing to wrap the drapery of his couch around him as Bryant did ot the age of 19. Bryant lived for some 70 years after, but no former president ever did. Not one. And on the other hand Bryant never became president. There's Bry ant who could and who did write "Thanatopsis" at the age of 19 and he's the only man in the history of the United States who ever wrote it, and he never became president, never in his life. And there's Andrew John son, who at the same age could neith er read nor write, and he became pres ident. Of course it's a lottery, and I'm opposed to lotteries on principle. There came a day in my own life when I gave up all thought of being president. I said to myself: "It will be hard work to get the attention of the public in this thing. Many will not know who I am or where I came from, and perhaps if I do get the nomination on the independent prohibition- or labor ticket I will wake up the day after election and find that some totally different person has won the prize, and I'll be extremely mor tified and absolutely put to it to pay my legitimate election expenses to say nothing of the illegitimate ones." So I put this possible honor from me. Heavens! it wasn't that I did not appreciate the honor. A man has a right to feel proud when millions of his fellow citizens, many of them unable to read or write or think, elect him to the proudest por.itio. ia the ZLA I Horse 5ense llWW'si- is any ways kin to bliss. I know what the sayin is, where Ignorance is bliss, and so on, but the world got it wrong and thought it was a plea for ignorance. And neither do I think that a little learnin' is as dangerous as much ignorance. If a man's gc little the chances are that he'll get more. If we've got mother wit, and it has come out of nature, let us thank nature for it and try to improve it. But trace it on back and mebby you'll find that it comes from some care that our forefathers took of themselves. One of these days we'll be forefathers, and right here, I want to say, rests somethin' of a responsibility. Let us all try to light up the future with common sense." Old man Brizintine said that he was willing. He was sure that he was In debted to his forefathers. His great grandfather had been noted as the best horse trader in the state, "and," he added, "if it hadn't been for him I might not have been such a good judge of a colt." "Yes, might not have been here at all," Limuel spoke up. "But, not wishin to do the old man an injustice, I may remark that horse sense don't particularly lend itself to horse swap pin.' " Brizintine had begun to swell with a resentful reply when the schoolmas ter spoke. "But giving genius the place of high common sense, undergo ing, I might say, some of its own and peculiar evolutions, don't you believe that it sometimes goes through this world unappreciated?" "Well, I have heard folks say that they wan't taken at their worth. I know some that haven't been taken at their word. Recollect old Gabner Hightower, over on the creek? He had a son that was a born genius. His name was Elihu and he looked it all right. They didn't want him to soil his hands for fear that it might smirch his genius. His mother wanted him for the church because he wan't strong in body, and his dad wanted him for the law, because his habit of silence would prove him a good jedge. In the meantime Jim, Elihu's brother, worked in the field. Well, they first tried the pulpit and then they tried the law, but Elihu had too much genius for either one. Then they thought he was designed by na ture to write hymns, and he tried his hand at it, but failed. They tried many things before they found out what he had a genius for." "And what was it?" the schoolmas ter inquired. - "Well, nothin' but for just lookin' like a genius. And Jim, his brother, invented an evaporator for makln' sorghum molasses and now owns about a third of the county. Yes, sir, hoss sense." (Copyright, by Opie Read.) feuP Battell Loomis UJ : I J gift of any nation. I weighed the whole thing pro and con and then I said, deliberately and firmly: "No, sir, I am going to lead Wagner's simple life. I'm going to get simpler and simpler and perhaps I'll die con tented." Fellow citizens, there comes a time to all of us who have an eye on the presidency when we must make up our mind to give up the contest or else accept the inevitable with calm steadfastness. I simply couldn't bear to be defeated for the presidency. Do you suppose that I could read in the papers that I was snowed under in every state in the union, and then calmly take a poem and try to sell it to the editor? No, sir! I'd use back streets for the rest of my life and write under a pen name. Cincinnatus hadn't been defeated for senator when he went back to the plow. The honor of election is great, but the mortifica tion of defeat is greater. Look at Horace Greeley. He was not content to be the Nestor of Ameri can Journalism; he must try to be president. Said he'd rather be presi dent than write. The result was too lamentable to jest about. I was a mere boy at the time, but it saved me from the presi dency. It was the turning of the ways. Like Rutherford B. Hayes, I went Into the egg business; but unlike him or maybe it would be more accurate to say that like him I never was president de jure. But that is a by gone. Twenty years ago if I had said that many people would have frothed at the mouth. Many people still froth at the mouth, but the froth is apropos of other matters. Significant name that froth. No, fellow countrymen, let us be contented. It Is not likely that over 20, at the outside, of those Americans who are now living will ever add lus ter to the presidential chair or even sit in it. Let the rest of us go about our business with contentment, and every four years let us elevate one of the 20 with a good grace, aid for four years thereafter Jet every man mind his own business and see that he has a business to mind and this country will stride forward as it has not yet stridden or Is it strode? (Copyright, by James Pott & Co.) Or Women, Either. The only man who can keep a prom ise is the man who never has to make one. New York Press. HIS WAY OF PROPOSING. 31 He They tell me you re great at' guessing conundrums. She Well, rather good. He Here's one for you: If I were to tsk you to marry me, what would you say? TWO CURES OF ECZEMA Baby Had Severe Attack Grandfather Suffered Torments with It Owe Recovery to Cuticura. "In 1SS4 my grandson, a babe, had an attack of eczema, apd after trying the doctors to the extent of heavy bills and an increase of the disease and suf fering, I recommended Cuticura and in a few weeks the child was well. Ho is to-day a strong man and absolutely free from the disease. A few years ago I contracted eczema, and became an intense sufferer. A whole winter passed without once having on shoes, nearly from the knees to the toes be ing covered with virulent sores. I tried many doctors to no purpose. Then It procured the Cuticura Remedies and. found immediate improvement and finalcure. M.W.LaRue, 845 Seventh St., Louisville, Ky., Apr. 23 and May 14, '07." Advice to the Lovelorn. An Albany politician was discussing the heart troubles that ofttimes draw famous men unwillingly into court. "If these men," said he, "would paste In their hats poor expatriated Abe Hummel's advice, they'd have no difficulty whatever. "Abe's advice, which he incessantly repeated to his clients, was: "'Never make love to a woman through an ink bottle.' " Important to Momero. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It T7aam 4Ya Signature CjutjfCcJuM in Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought Looking for Work. "Why don't you go to work instead of begging aud boozing?" "I will, boss, as soon a3 there's an openin' in my trade. An' I ain't got long to wait now, nuther." "What is your trade?" "I'm a trackwalker for aeroplane lines." Lewis' Single Binder Cigar has a rich taste. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. The romance of a spinster is apt to be one sided. Mrs. Window's Soothing: Syrup. For children teething, softens the Riimj, reduce H flammaiion, allays pain, cure wind colic 25cattUv The prettiest flowers are not neces sarily the most fragrant. U Allen's Foot-Kuan Cnrestlml.acriine. sweating feet. 'c Trial package free. JUS. UltusleU.Loltuy.N. Y. Music Isn't necessarily fragmentary because it comes in pieces. I A MOTHER How many American women in lonely homes to-day long for this blessing to come into their lives, and to be able to utter these words, but because of some organic derange ment this happiness is denied them. Every woman interested in this subject should know that prepanu tion for healthy maternity ia accomplished by the use of LYDIA E. PIN KH AIM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Mrs. Maggie Gilmer, of "West "Union, S. G,writes to Mrs. Rnkharn : "I was greatly run-down in health from a weakness peculiar to my sex, when Lydia E. Pinkham' s Vegetable Compound was recommended to me. It , not only restored me to perfect health, but to my delight I am a mother." Mrs. Josephine Hall,of Bardstown, Ky., writes : "I was a very great sufferer from female troubles, and my physician failed. to help me. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound not only restored ma to perfect health, but I am now a proud mother." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, andhas positively cured thousandsof women who have been troubled with, displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion, dizziness ornervous prostration. Why don't you try it? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address.- Lynn, Mass. AM