THE OMAHA .DAILY BEE: THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13. 1906. Free Catarrh Remedy Gives Instint Relief No More Bad Breath M- Secret Hrmrdr Qolekly Cori Catarrh." C. K. imm. Catarrh Is not only dinigeroiis, but It auses bad breath, ulceration, death and decay of bones, loss of thinking and rea soning power. kllii ambition and energy, often causes lo of appetite. indigestion, dyspepsia, raw throat and reaches to gen i rnl debility; Idiocy Hiid Insanity. It need attention at onrp. Cure It -with Oauss' Catarrh Cure. It Is a quick, radlral. per manent cure, because It rids the system of the poison (terms that cause catarrh. In order to prove to all who are suffer ing from this dangerous and loathsome dlsense that Ciauss' Catarrh Cure will actually cure any case of catarrh quickly, no matter how long standing or how bad. I will send a trial package by mall free of all cost. Send us your name and address today and the treatment will be sent you by return mall Try It! It will positively cure so that vou will be welcomed Instead of shunned bv vour friends. C. E. OAl'Sfl. .WW Main St.. Mi'ri'hall, Mich. Flit out coiiimn below.' FREE This coupon Is good for one trial package of Gauss- Combined Catarrh Cure, ninlled free In plain package. Simply nil In your name and address on dotted lines below and mail to C. K. UAI . .-! Vlsln Street, Marshall. Mich. Treatment At Small Cost A most natural and scientific treatment. "Work every day during treatment. Write or call for particulars. Dr. McGrev, Specialist Treats All Forms of Diseases of MEN ONLY Thirty Years' Experience Twenty Years in Omaha The doctor's remarkable succoss has never been equalled. His resources and facilities for treating this class of diseases are un limited, and every day brings many flatter ing reports of the good lie la doing or the relief he has given. Blood Poison Cured for Life All signs of the disease disappear at one. n.ioB on nfif!01"'" our n-dro- UVBT dU.UUlJ'1''- Varicocele. Strlc. warn ww,wvvturp tT1eeti Nervous De bility. Loss of Strength and Vitality, and ull forms of Chronic Diseases. Charges Less Than All Others Treatment by mall. Call or write. Box 7ii6. Office, m South 14th St., Omaha, Neb. wms has ran drink wsiaatr drink good whUkar, good vhi.ke eood for fan sod bd uukj is .4 lor you. ILERTS PURE MALT U prenrribtfd bf pbrnirMiis who know that fin iu)t hikj u lb nlrriffbs and proper whia4y to drink ftnl tbt llrr iemA lbm ft 1 1 im pur a. iMtm avail fourtl t)Me)nce It lust ot th marks for thtrtf fmmru svud i grvwiug im popu- OffertH a a rational Mlm ulant. uot a 44 "cure-all." Every Woman nuicnuiii sim uioQlrt know M4RVCL whirl inn Snr.u I Tas w Tarlaal Sertoli. A, ,JL (wsaa l .Wns. llol-(.'.,f Moot rourvntrnt. II1MHH luJUU a sw oouM a M. I r ha rinnui ui,itv tho MAR. fcl, octvH ui tKlirr. hoi aand lum. illiialrmlad book aaW4. f t run nmiraitnind'l iwt in,. roluablolo la.llra, MISVKI. to.. For Sale by SHERMAN A MoCoNNELL VRVQ CO, 16th sod Dode SU. MEN AND WOMEN. Dso ataf 41 for Bssotarsl dtacaroos.tstaSiaaou, trritauoaa or ulv-ai tiioM el sittii StoaikroBoo. " ' - ' - - Bo. ulr lb Ot. saal or sotooBsMS. Sail ky Brmma. or Boat im sAaiB vroyooo, . "f OKoraaa. sroso)d, lof I M. or kottl'o K II. CirosjiaaT tos oa roaoaad ".-- , Mill J tr. Xr, I - ea Jf o vnavi. r7oimla.UHbSlCl THREE TRAINS WRECKED Eiprasi ea 'Fritce Line Ron Into Box Cars Bear 1 olnmbni, Kansas, FAST MAIL ON MISSOURI PACIFIC DITCHED I'unr Persons Prrlonaly Injnred and Two Cars of Mall Destroyed In W reck ear Jef ferson ill. . VVHT SCOTT, Kan., Feb. 14.-TWO per sons Were burned to death, another died from over-exertlon and excitement In try ing to save victims, and five others were Injured In the wreck i'arly today at Colum bus of the. Joplln Express, northbound on the SI. Ixiuis & San Francisco railway. The train caught lire following the wreck and with the exception of tho 1'ullnian was con sumed. The dead: HA RHf nol'NDTItF.K. Fort Scott, Kan., express messenger; burned to death. J. II. 1(.CK M AKT, Joplln, Wo., newsboy; burned to death, A. M. IILKlvK, Weir, Kan., died of heart disease. The Injured: Harry Wood. Fort Scott. Kati., engineer; dangerous. W. F. Iltmyan, Fort Scott, Kan., tlrenmn; leg broken. C. a Waddcll, Tuscumbla, Mo., slightly. Two Joplln women, names unknown (not sent to hospital), slightly. The passenger train ran Into a string of box cars that had broken loose from a freight train and ran back down onto the main line. The entire passenger train, ex cept the sleeper, was burned. The wrecked train was known as the Joplln-Oklahoma express and ran between Afton, I. T., and Fort Scott. The 'train, which left Afton at 7 o'clock last night, was made up of bagguge, smoker and two chair cars. There were few passengers on the train. Wreck on Missouri Pacific. ST. LOl'lS, Feb. II. Missouri Pncltle fast mall train No. 7, which left St. Louis for Kansas City at 3:0T this morning. Jumped tho track at 4:50 a. m. while crossing the Gasconade bridge, eighty-eight miles west of St. Louis, the scene of the Gasconade horror of fifty years ago. The mall train is not scheduled to stop at Gasconade and was running forty miles an hour when the ( accident occurred. A spreading rail caused It to leave tho track 600 feet east of the i bridge. The engine ran onto the bridge and past the first two spans, crushing the cross ties and ten ring down a portion of the approach. The bridge Is of steel. The first two mail cars were smashed and took fire. Men from Gasconade, Herman and Morrison, adjoining towns, were soon on the scene and formed a bucket brigade, but despite their efforts the two cars of mail were destroyed. Five persons were Injured In the acci dent, as follows: John O. Burch. conductor. St. Louis, right shoulder broken, head cut ahd skull mav be fractured. Samuel Montague, brakeman, St. Louis, body and head bruised.. George Clifford, engineer. St. I.ouls, arm broken, head cut and bruised. Sr.muel T. Vieten. railway mail clerk, St. I,ouis. head cut and body bruised. R. F. White, brakeman, Kansas City, bead bruised and cut. A relief train arrived from Jefferson City and took the Injured to Scdalla. J The following statement was riven out at 10:30 a. in. from the office of the general manager: Our wires are down and the meager In formation we have received has been de toured in a roundabout - way. The en gine jumped the track 150 feet east' of the bridge and ran on to tho structure. Two postal cars of the six constituting the train, overturned and burned. The others were derailed, but kept upright. - Four per sons were Injured. They are Conductor J. O. Burch of St. Louis, Traveling Engineer Clifford of St. Ixiuis,. a brakeman and a postal clerk, names not known. " The approach to the hridge was consid erably damaged. Thla train Is the regular mail train that has been running between St. tenuis and Kansas City for twelve years and is not the new Texas fast mail train. Traffic will bo resumed within a few hours. Second Wreck on 'Frisco. ST. LOUIS, Feb. 14. While coming Into St. Louis at forty miles an hour this morning, two sleepers on a 'Frisco train took a siding, tore loose from the train and crashed Into a box car loaded with terra cottn. The passengora were hurled pellmell, hut none were hurt beyond bruises. . Charles Lewis, a negro porter, was badly Injured. The car of terra cotta was demolished. . ' hraska Boy Naves Train. GRAND ISLAND. Neb., Feb. 14-tSpe-clal.) The 12-year-old son of Milton Hud son, a farmer, residing near Elba saved a train from being ditched yesterday. The boy discovered a broken rati. About eighteen Inches of the rail .had evidently ben torn out by a previous train or in some other manner. Though the weather wus approaching that of a blizzard the ly managed to attract the attention of the engineer and the train was stopped within a few feet of the break. The mem bers of the train crew are confident that they would have had a bad spill but for the timely discovery and the Intelligent action of the boy. The train was quite a IL and Pot-still Scotch Huaro't. , b only dtmtlU Ur uupplylat whimky to lha HOUSE OF LORDS. Now Everywhere The Scotch with the Pear-drop flavor. T W kod of Riley Bros. t Co., aS at Qui, Ostes, HotrU tsd of Orakws. Tfe Cook 0 Bernheimer Co., KCW YORK, OU AGUXTS rOH V. S. A. DERMA VIVA whitens the skin at once or your money back, la us. d In place of powder; has same ef fect but does not show. Irruptions, Freckles or Liver Spots cured In 10 days. Derma Viva does not peel the skin. Red. Urown or Durk lace, neck or hands made whiter ut once. Sent prepaid for 6V. DEHMt VIVA CO., CkleasT. III. Huston Store, Drug Dept.. Omaha. J. P. "i'liunv unrruo: Iruui weak- neoMes which uu the tleaaurek of life ihoul.l lako Juren I'llit. due tmx wul wll a siory of marvelous result. 1 bis medicine has more rejuvenating, vitaliiliig force than baa ever befure been offered. Sent post paid in plain package only oa receipt of Vbl adv. and II. Made br its uriginaiora ('. I. Hood ' o . pro prietors liwoa'a artaparilla, Lowell. Maaa. I 1 VJ J long mixed train, but was gi ing at the rate of about twenty-five miles an hour at the time. . (KRXR OP AV Ol.n ' DI'AKTRR Fifty tears Ago Mtaaonrl ni ghoeked by Wreck on fiaoeeaada. ST. IX)UI3. Feb. 14 Fifty years ago, when the road that Is now the Missouri Pacific was opened a-. the l"aclnc Railroad, a special train conHlstlng of an engine and eleven cars, carrying officials, leading cltl lens and military to Jefferson City to par ticipate In a celebration of the completion of the roud, went through the bridge Into the Ousconada river, .where the accident occurred today. The disaster occurred Thursday, November 1, 1S.V.. and thirty persons were killed and almost every other person on the train was Injured., The temporary hridge sank down under tho heavy train. WOMEN A FACTOR IN INDUSTRY Mlaa Mary McDowell Delivers Address Hefore Ladles' Label I. ensue. "Women are not going out of Industry. There Is no use fighting them. There are only two things laboring men can do, either organize them and get their co-operation or marry them." This was the central theme of the ad dress delivered last night by Miss Mary McDowell of Chicago before a meeting of the Ladles' Label league of the city at Inbor temple. Mips McDowell madea plea for more consideration for women In the labor movement and asserted that thry were in Industry to stay and should be treated as it permanent factor. She ad vised organizing them rather than marry ing them. "For." she said, "when you marry them they very frequently drift back Into Industry after all." At the oulset she upologized for not ap pearing with her labor badges on. She an nounced that she was entitled to wear an American Federation badge and a Butch ers' union button. Then she recounted her reasons for taking up her residence In the stock yards district of Chicago during the strike. "I firmly believe," she said, "that you have a tremendous struggle before you In the union and perhaps one of the weak nesses Is that laboring men do not under stand that It Is an historic, struggle for economic democracy and social democracy. When 1 think how mixed the problem Is I wonder how tho butchers dared to go Into their strike In Chicago a few years ago at all. "I am only In the kindergarten In the movement. ' I have been led Into It by my heart and my head has followed. I went Into tho stock yards district to live, not because I believed 1 could lift them up or out of any Idea of superiority, but be cause I was determined to Jump over all of the fences that had hedged me In tny own social circle. I said, 'I will not al low anybody to put a fenre around nie and say I shall not know anybody Ood has made. Just because they are not within that fence.' I went to live among them berauso I wanted to know about the great movement. I did not believe that so much unrest could exist among so large a body of men without good cause." Miss McDowell had some speclflc reme dies to offer and one of these was an in vestigation to bo undertaken by the De partment of Labor at 'Washington Into the condition of womrn In Industry. She asked all tho local labor unions to pass a resolu tion asking congress to allow the depart ment to make the Investigation which Is to bo followed by state legislation. In re ply to a question isked by one of the audi ence she said Investigation In South Omaha In tho afternoon convinced her the condi tion of women working In the packing bouses was better there than In Chicago because ther was more' sunlight and bet ter ventilation. Chamberlain's Congh Remedy Abso lately Harmless. Every mother should know that Cham berlain's Cough Remedy Is perfectly safe for children to take. It contains nothing harmful, and for coughs, colds and croup is unsurpassed. PROSPECT HILL IMPROVERS Take Steps to Secure Partner on Hamilton from Tmenty-XInth to Fortieth. At a meeting of the Prospect Hill Im provement club last night a move was made toward the paving of Hamilton street from Twenty-ninth to Fortieth street. A large number of property owners Involved were present and expressed a desire for the paving. The city engineer has promised to have the profiles and estimates ready for the next meeting of the club Wednesday night and It Is probable petitions will be ready for signatures at that time. Terrlnc Fate. It'a a terrific fate tu suffer from serious bowel trouble. Ward It off with Dr. King's New Life Pills. 26c. For sale by Sherman & McConnell Drug Co. FORECAST OF THE WEATHER Fair and and Warmer In Iowa Today Tomorrow. Nebraska and WASHINGTON. Feb. 14.-Forocast of the weather for Thursday and Friday: For Nebraska and Kansas Fair and warmer Thursday and Friday. For Iowa Fair Thuraday( and Friday; continued slowly rising temperature. For South Dakota Fair and warmer Thursday; Friday, probably cloudy. For Wyoming Cloudy Thursday, snow In western portion, warmer In southern por- tion; Friday, probably fair, except snow In northwest portion. For Missouri Fair Thursday; Friday, fair and warmer. Local Record. OFFICE OF THE WEATHER Bl'KKAf OMAHA. Feb. 14. Official record of tem perature and precipitation, compared with the corresponding day of the lust three Vru: mu6. 19o4. Isu3 Maximum temperature .. ii & r jh 2 Mlrlntum temerature ... S o 2 XI Moan temperature 1 it 9 u Pieclpltatlon 0 .10 o T Temperature and precipitation departures from the normal at Omuhu since March 1, and comparison with the last two years: Normal temperature ; Deficiency for the day . " "3 Total excess xlnce March 1, 1!j6..- !l uai Normal precipitation OS Inch Uiticlency for the day oil Inch l'ie Ipitatiou fince March 1 i'S. 3? inches lK ficlency since March 1 2.W) inches Deficiency for cor. iierlod. 1!M... 4. 02 inches Excess for cor. period. lll 1. 05 inches Reports from stations at 7 V. W. Station and State Temp. Maxl- Rain. oi ivt'uiufr. j p.m. liisioarck, clear S Cheenne, cloudy 'JS I'Iikhkii. partly cloudy 12 Duvi-nport. clear 10 Denver, fiartly cloudy M Havre, cloudy 4 Helena, cloudy Ik Huron, clear 4 Kbiisas City, clear IS North I'latte, snowing u ("mala, clear li Rapid City, clear 14 Ht. Louis, snowing 3u St. Paul, clear 4 Salt Lake City, cloudy Mi Valentine, clear 12 Wlllixlon. clear 10 num. full. -4 .m :tx r is .01 14 M 4 .) 1 .Ml .) W .12 . ' .00 24 T AO 5 .00 . 1 1 . 'T" Indicates trace of nrerlnitafin. Indicates helnw sero. L A. WELSH, Local Forecaster. 2 C i VUri til 50 Cent Canister For Home Use. Sufficient to Last a Home of Six Rooms Two Months. TROUBLE FOR HAMILTON Legislative Ageat of Life Ininract Com panies May Be Brought Hone, FOWLER PAYING VISIT TO THE RIVIERA Alleard that Hamilton Most Make Accounting-, Make . Restitution or Face Criminal Chars; In Sow York. NKW roRK. Feb. 14. The Tribune today says that Thomas P. Fowler, chair man of the New York Life Insurance com pany's house cleaning committee, will de part for Europe March 1. . While Mr. Fow ler's trip Is ostensibly ,or pleasure. It is said he will see Andrew Hamilton, who by last accounts was In the Rlveria and de- mand of him, on pain of extradition, an Immediate accounting of 'restitution of tne ll.ooo.ono detailed In the Fowler report. Mr. Fowler, it Is said,, has been In close communication with Attorney General Mayer and District Attorney Jerome in tho lost few 'dais.' ""' The trustees of the New York Life will meet today when the T"owler ' committee reports on' campaigns may be submitted. Samuel Cntermyer last night vhen shown a statement that he had consented to act as counsel to the committee of policy hold ers of the New York Life, and Mutual com rranles, and that Thomsji W. I.awson had offered to turn over the proxies collected by him to that committee, raid that this was not acrurnte.. Mr. Untermyer did not deny that he had been asked to act as counsel for the company. It could not be learned precisely what answer, if any, he had made. It is understood, however, that he expressed his willingness to act provid ing the purposes and personnel of the committee should be satisfactory to him. SUNDAY SCHOOL1 INSTITUTE Work is Presented at Different Churches, with Miss Halnea and Prof. Meldlcy Speaking:. Yesterday afternoon Miss Mabel Haines spoke of primary Sunday school work at the Park Vale church, that service being part of the Sunday school Institute now being conducted here. Miss Haines is re puted ns a specialist In primary work and has made that branch a study for many yetrs. Prof. Steldley, secretary of the NeLrut-ka State Sunday School association, conducted the afternoon service at the Third Presbyterian church. Twentieth and Leavenworth streets. Prof. Steldley's for mer work along this line has been freely commented on. Lust evening Miss Haines spoke during the prayer meeting services at Westminster Presbyterian and Hanscom ParU Methodist Episcopal churches, while Prof. Steldley addressed those attending the mid-week services at St.. Mary's Avenue Congrega tional and First Raptlst churches. The Sunday school Institute being held In Omnha is proving quite a benefit to those inti rested in the work. r. it-.- -iaawo. There is no element of speculation in the quality of Old Uideroof Rye It is good beyond compar e, CHAS. DENNEHY & COMPANY, Chicago. MORE E WISH TO ANNOUNCE f pany of America, Chicago, III., exclusive right U manufacture under only perfect dustless sweeping powder 66 PER0LIN is the only compound that will effectively settle and absorb the dust caused by sweeping it will clean, brighten and preserve carpets, rugs and floorings save the curtains, pictures, tapestries and furniture from becoming soiled by dust kill disease-carrying germs found in dust and purify the air. PEROLIN is invaluable to Department, Dry Goods, Clothing, General Mer chandise, Gents Furnishings, Furniture, Jewelry and other stores having goods exposed to dust, because it protects tho goods from becoming dust soiled. PEROLIN is indispensable to Theaters, Schools, Libraries, Hospitals, Churches, and all places of assembly indoors, as a protection against infectious diseases. THE PEROLIN COMPANY, Dortmund (Germany). G. & W. LAMBECK, Proprietors: Beware of Imitations. Take only the original PEROLIN. For sale at all IH'imrtnifiit, Dry Goods, Furniture, Carpet, Hardware, Grocery, mid Drug Stores. For further particular, booklets, and prices on large quantities, telephone or write CARPENTER PAPER CO. Sole 12th and HOWARD ST Telephone Douglas 266. OUR LETTER BOX By Telephone. WAKEFTBLD, Neb., Feb. 13. To tho Kd Itor of The Ree: Some of our people In this part of the state who still have the Interests of Omaha at heart wonder If the business men of your city really understand the tel ephone situation as It Is. Ijist week the New State Telephone company bought the toll lines of the Northeast Nebraska Tele phone' company, thereby giving nineteen exchanges, from nineteen towns, Including Beveity-nlne farm lines, with over 2.000 phones, direct connection with St. Paul, Minneapolis, Des Moines. Council Bluffs, South Omaha and, most Important of all, Sioux City. It Is true that the Nebraska Telephone company maintains a "booth" In most of these towns, but If the business man can use his own phone from his own office and get what he wants, he is not going out t(J a "toth" with its loss of time and In- convenience for the sake of patronizing those whom ho might otherwise desire to deal with. Do the business men of Omaha realize that the Independent Telephone company has come to stay? That northeast Ne braska is a territory worth fighting for? That Sioux City Is now drawing trade from this territory that rightly belongs to Omaha? That as long as the Independent Telephone company is kept out of Omaha Just that' long Sioux City will reap the benefit to Omaha's detriment In this part of the state. Yours for Omaha and Ne braska, F. E. a Shriver & Bmening, dentists, 48 Barker blk CITY IS UNDER INJUNCTION Restrained from Acquiring: Park Board Property and Having Appraisement Made. A restraining order was Issued yesterday by Judge Kennedy to prevent the acquiring by the city until after the adjudication of points raised In the petition of about Jno.OUO worth of real estate by the Park board. The plaintiffs in the suit arc Elizabeth P. Shan non, James M. Woolworth, Caroline L. Toppleton and William L. Poppleton, trus tees of the estat of Andrew Poppleton. The property consists of tracts located at Nineteenth and Sherman avenue, in Bluff View addition. In block 14, between Four teenth avenue and the Omaha Belt line rail way, and in Sulphur Springs addition. The defendants are William Bartholomew, Frank B. Kennard, Martin Dunham, Mayor Moores and the members of the city coun cil. The first three defendants named con stitute the appraisers appointed by the mayor to place a valuation on the property. The petition enters Into a general denial of the powers of the city to acquire land for park purposes and questions the legality of the proceedings In the city council. It also contends under the law five appraisers In stead of three should be appointed, as the property is worth more than $50.ono. The order of Judge Kennedy restrains the ap praisers from making an appraisement or the city from taking any steps to acquire the property until further order of the court. - TT iy ky jjl o that we have appointed The Perotin Com- our sole agents in the IT. S. A., with the our patentt and formula the original and known as Distributers, OMAHA, NEB. Free Demonstrations Made Upon Request .o Rose Soap thoroughly and leaves it smooth, soft and healthful. Odor of natural flowers. James S. Kirk FT) C DOCTORS for MEN THE MEN'S TRUE SPECIALISTS To give a man his rightful place by birth and Inheritance among his fel low men Is worthy of the noblest ef forts of a physician's life, and every good specialist works earnestly to this end. Wo otter you this aid, this help, this certainty of restoration, and If you will come to us we will spare you the penalties associated with private diseases and weaknesses of men. We will help you to escape from the slavery that Is holding you captive and depleting your manhood. Do not be deluded with the Idea that diseases or weaknesses of men will correct themselves they never do. It Is useless to worry about the past cause after We have observed the i.rim bllshtinc Influences of abuses and Inrflaci-.. tlons In the young and middle-aged; sapping the vital forces: undermining the foundations of ioanliood. eloudlng the utigliirst minds and destroying all noble thoughts and aspirations: fsrualy circles disrupted and the poisonous fAngt reaching out and blighting even succeeding generations. We have devoted many years exclusively to treating this class of troubles, attended with the greatest success, and are enabled to give this class of sufferers the benefit of our extended experience in treating diseases of this nature. We have investigated and tested all known methods for the treatment and cure of private diseases and weaknesses of men, which give us the tight to Judge between the false and the true, between shallow pretension and solid worth, between substance and shadow. Musty theories cannot stand out against our mode of treatment, against progressive medical science, new dis coveries, and undisputed facts of diseases cured to stsy cured. Wo Cure Safely and Thoroughly Stricture, Varicocele, Emissions, Nervo-Sexual Debility, Impotency, Blood Poison (Syphilis), Rectal, Kid ney and Urinary Diseases and all diseases and weaknesses of men, due to Inheritance, evil habltV self abuse, excesaus or the result of specific or private diseases. M'e make no misleading statements, deceptive or unbusinesslike propositions to the afflicted, neither do we promise to cure tiiem In m few days, nor offer cheap, worthless treatment in order to secure their patronage. Honest doctors of recognized ability do not resort to, such methods. We guarantee perfect, safe and lasting cure In the quickest possible time, without leaving Injurious after-effects In the system, and at the loweM cost possible for honest, skillful and successful treatment. rprr Ceasultstlea If you cannot eaJl write for symptom blank, and gsaailasllesi Office Hours-la. m to k p. m. Sundays, 10 to 1 only. STATE MEDICAL INSTITUTE 1809 Fartuun SL. Between 18th and 14th Htm.. OMAHA, MED. TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER Heacbea the Live Stock Mea. 99 53.50 per WO pounds. Packed in WO. 200 and 250 Pound Drams for General Use. A delicate luxury for toilet or bath. Cleanses the skin & Company the"dlsease or weakness becomes nnn. established. The fact that the troublu now exists makes It necessary that there should be no apathy, no delay, no deferring matters until later on. Sexual diseases, or affections result ing therefrom, cannot be tampered with, owing to the natural tendency of every disease to Insidiously pro gress and tenaciously tasten ltsslf upon the system If proper treatment Is not secured to bring about a com plete and radical cure. It takes but a small leak to sink a ship, and in many cases an apparently small ali ment may All a whole life with fail ure, misery and woe. (TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER fl.OO rev Year,