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FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN Il 11 MbH No other medicine has been so successful in relieving the suffering of women or received so many gen uine testimonials as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. In every community you will find women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg etable Compound. Almost every one you meet has either been bene fited by it, or has friends who have. In the Pinkham Laboratory at see the files containing over one mil lion one hundred thousand letters from women seeking health, and here are the letters in which they openly state over their own signa tures that they were cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has saved many women from surgical operations. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is made from roots and herbs, without drugs, and is whole some and harmless. The reason why Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound is so successful is because it contains in gredients which act directly upon the feminine organism, restoring it to a healthy normal condition. Women who are suffering from those distressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to restore their health. Ont of the Dim Past. Nebuchadnezzar was eating grass. “But I’m not yelling ‘Ee-yah I’ and pre tending to like it,” he said. Regardless of what the fans in the grand stand and on the bleachers might think of him, he continued to tear up handfuls and chew it because he hadn’t anything else to eat.” Singular Effect. Ruffon Wratz —I dremp* last night I wuz John D. Rockefeller. Say mold Storey—l told ye I could smell kerosene on that cheese you wuz eat in’ yist’day.—Chicago Tribune. Uncle Allen. “When the office starts out to seek the man,” said Uncle Allen Sparks, “the man generally meets it a little more than half way.” Ig KID NEY 3 &, PILLS J Low Rates J“* Idaho. Utah. Colorado. Montana, Wyoming •nd other Western States, on SHIPMENTS OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS AND EMIGRANT MOVABLES. Addrea. THE AMERICAN FORWARDING CO., 188 Madisaa SL* Chicage, 111., er 355 Ellicott Square. Buffalo. FLY* APTTI rrxn WANTED—Laxd for Sate. Tract. * I 11« to ■“’* purchasers. 160 to 5000 acres. \ L I I I LIJ\ Only aceucy located away from towns. \1 111 I Il A Nine miles west of Kress. Will meet Illi prospectors and return them to railroad ULI I LLI without cost, IF WE T K Al>E. Don t Kaliev, them. See m. for * square deal; have been here for many years, know the land and the people. _ W anted, man to help handle propositions, with money and ability, hor particu lars address JOHN ESTES, Twist, Swisher Co., Texas LlVwMw RINnFR STRAIGHTS*CIOAR ajjual «• ooo• oo o Your Jobber or direct from Factory. Peoria.l CAIfCDUMEkIT I Alin 2.000,000 Acres near Uv VklfRRIkR I LARU railroad, open for entry. Bend 50c money-order for map and description. Dept. A, Wash ington Information Bureau, B. 1108 Broadway, Seattle, Wash niVriDCF OR CORPORATION EAIVB of South UITUKvL Dakota OI.UO. Consultation by mail. South Dakota l.egal Bureau, Box 174, Pierre. So. Dak I nwcon’c “Remedy” and other investments ana- LUWjvIJ 3 lyzed, dissected, "boiled dowu";‘2c stamp or Booklet free. MARK E. DAVIS, IUO4 Broadway, Oakland, Cal FKBISQiSiL AN UNSURPASSED REMEDY I 3 Piso’a Cure is an unsurpassed re medy for coughs, colds, bronchitis, LhU asihma. hoarseness and throat and | W lung affections. It goes direct to Igg the seat of the trouble and generally gyjgg Re restores healthy conditions. Mothers P--A can give their children _Rso s Cure with perfect confidence in its curative al P? wew and freedom from opiates. ■w Famous for half a century. gf*#-"’** |Rla At all druggists*, 25 cts. jffij ♦eU'RW We Cannot Sins 01 4 Songe. “What I can’t understand, and what all foreigners traveling here can’t un derstand about you Americans Is your indifference to your own songs,” said a German-American. “You have plenty of good songs that are typically Ameri can, but nobody knows them. You try very hard tb learn the German lieder and students’ songs and the folk songs of France, Russia and Italy, and even .Scottish and Irish ballads, but somehow you think it shows provincial ism and poor musical taste to know your own songs. Such a sentiment doesn’t exist anywhere else in the world. You get a band of Germans or Frenchmen or Russians together and they can sing their native songs for hours without either words or music. They are learned by heart from genera tion to generation. It is a shame that you Americans can’t do the same thing. Last night I was at an informal affair made up of Germans and Americans. They kept a young German chap ham mering away at the piano half the time. After a while he switched from the songs of his own country and struck up ‘Old Kentucky Home.’ There wasn’t an American in the crowd that could sing more than two lines of it. If I were an American I’d try to put into the hands of every child a book of the best American songs and see that he learned to sing them.”—New York Press. A King’s Hobby, Of all the manias that afflict mankind the most ancient and curious is prob ably that for collecting. The victims collect pretty nearly everything from books to shoe buckles and from pots to postage stamps, but giant collecting was the hobby of Frederick William 1., king of Prussia. Nature designed him for a recruiting officer; destiny made him a monarch. All were fish who came into his net— Saxons, Austrians, Hessians, Turks, Swedes, Englishmen, Irishmen, Afri cans —provided they were at least two yards long. Some of his specimens were seven feet long. Now and then he obtained one still more prodigious. The Saxon cabinet minister Wacker barth, foreseeing the possible advan tages of standing well with so near a neighbor, in 1715 dispatched to Berlin a recognition of his Prussian majesty’s birthday. Aug. 14, no less flattering than unique, since it consisted of a large bundle of tobacco leaves, two handsome Turkish pipes and a bagful of fragrant Latakia, all committed to the hands of a seven-foot passenger, with a missive imploring the king’s gracious acceptance of these trifles and the Cupid who bore them. —St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Didn’t Want Congratulations. The late Duke of Westminster once received when at Stack, in West Suth erland, a telegram from a friend, ex pressing the hope that the duke’s horse would win a certain big race. The duke had 30s to pay for the carriage of the telegram from the nearest office. He instantly wrote his thanks for the attention, adding, however, that his friend need not trouble to wire again if the horse won. The friend at once telegraphed in reply, “All right,” which cost the duke 30s more. The horse did win the race, and his grace netted £lO,- 000; but it is doubtful if he ever for gave his friend the little joke which cost him £3. Malching Rosen. Your roses will come through the winter in much better condition if you will give them a heavy mulching of manure. Put on enough so that when it has settled there will be a 6-inch mulch. Do not apply the mulch until the cold weather has come —the middle or last of October. —Garden Magazine. An Artist. The hotel cook was a doughty man. He scoured each pot and he rattled each pan; At his glance the scullions all turned pale, And often he made a sparrow quail I —Cleveland Leader. • - ■ NOT A MIRACLE Just Plain Causo and Effect. There are some quite remarkable things happening every day, which seem almost miraculous. Some persons would not believe £hat a man could suffer from coffee drink ing so severely as to cause spells of un consciousness. And to find complete relief in changing from coffee to Pos tum is well worth recording. “I used to be a great coffee drinker, so much so that it was killing me by inches. My heart became so weak I would fall and lie unconscious for an hour at a time. The spells caught me sometimes two or three times a day. “My friends, and even the doctor, told me it was drinking cqffee that caused the trouble. I would not be lieve It, and still drank coffee until I could not leave my room. “Then my doctor, who drinks Postum himself, persuaded me to stop coffee and try Postum. After much hesitation I concluded to try It. That was eight months ago. Since then I have had but few of those spells, none for more than four months. “I feel better, sleep better and am better every way. I now drink nothing but Postum and touch no coffee, ano as I am seventy years of age all mj friends think the improvement quite re markable?* “There’s a Reason.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read, “The Road to Well ville,” in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. GRANT COUNTY HERALD, LANCASTER, WISCONSIN. BAKING BREAD FOR AN ARMY. How 11,000 Loaves a Day Are Fur nished at Fort Riley. “I’m looking for my nephew,” in quired an old man at the headquarters of one of the militia regiments at the maneuver camp at Fort Riley,” says the Kansas City Star. “His father and I fought together in the civil war, and I want to see what kind of a fighting man you are making of the nephew. Inquiry developed the fact that the sought-for relative was detailed for service at the division bakery. “What, learning to bake bread?” re marked the old man, contemptuously. “I thought he was learning to fight” To keep the 5,000 soldiers in the big maneuver camp supplied with bread has been one of the vexing problems. Various methods have been tried. Per haps the one most used was to buy bread from the bakery at Fort Riley. But it was a long trip from the camp to the post and it was decided this year to bake the bread at the camp. So it is that three men from each com mand on duty in the maneuver camp were detailed to the division bakery. They usually arrive a day or two ahead of the commands to which they belong and report for duty at the row of clean, white tents on the river side of the road just at the west entrance of the maneuver camp. The bakery force includes four in structors ond fifteen graduates from the bakers and cooks’ school at Fort Riley. This force is supplemented by the men detailed from the various regiments. Twenty-four ovens of the knockdown type, tireless cookers and field chests were installed for the pur pose of supplying the whole camp with bread and for experimental purposes. Each of the regimental organizations has, of course, its own kitchen, for the bakery supplies only bread —no pie or pastry is on the bill of fare of the sol dier at the maneuver camp unless he is Invited to sat at an officers’ mess. The battery of regimental bake ovens Is divided into four sections, with a daily capacity of bread sufficient to feed eight regiments, or about 11,000 loaves. There are eight men to each of the four sections, a chief and seven men. These men alternate in the va rious duties of making fires in the bake ovens, mixing the flour dough and bak ing the bread. Each section has its store tent, where the bread is piled in neat racks. The entrances are screened and no housewife, however particular, could complain of lack of cleanliness. s’he floors are sand-sovered and ev erything is as spick and span as a bride’s kitchen. Most of the bread is baked in the size known as double ra tion; that is, bread for two men for one day. There are four pans in each oven, each capable of holding twenty eight double ration loaves. It takes 200 pounds of flour to mix bread for one run in three ovens. The bakery has been furnishing the bread for the entire camp with an average of two bakings a day. The bread is distrib uted on order from the commissary de partment. Gipsy Trades. Nothing indentifies a Gipsy with cer tainty except his language. The true Gipsy speaks Romany, and nobody but a Gipsy ever speaks it. But there are other matters of great moment,, de clares A. T. Sinclair In the Journal of the Gipsy Lore Society; for instance, their occupations. In the Orient sieve-making for coun try farmers is entirely In the hands of the Gipsies, and they make wooden spoons, bowls, and such like utensils. All the common people In Syria, Egypt and parts of Persia are tattooed. The Gipsies ar© the experts, and do most of It, even among the Bedouins. The Gipsies are the showmen of the East, where there are no circuses, the aters nor concert halls. The Gipsies fill their place. If people wish to buy wild animals or snakes In Egypt, they go to the Gipsies, who either have or catch them. Arab Gipsies from Syria and Egypt are frequently seen all over Europe. They are easily recognized by their shows, music and tattoo marks. They are found all over the United States and Canada, even in Winnipeg. Dr. William T. Hornaday, director of the Zoological Park, New York, writes that he has seen these Arab Gipsies, with their light yellow Syrian bear, which has a mane of stiff hairs between the shoulders, and sometimes a white ring round the neck, in many parts of the United States,—one camp he struck as far west as Salt Lake City,—and he has always recognized them as Gipsies. Most of them speak a little German, Italian and French. This indicates that they have spent some time in those countries on their way here. Their wanderings are world-wide, but every where It is the same race, and the lan guage is the same. Recognized the Line. Two girls were talking over the ’phone one afternoon, the subject of the conversation being a lawn party to take place the following day. Both were discussing what they should wear, and after five minutes had come to no decision. Right in the midst of this “import ant” conversation a masculine voice interrupted, asking humbly what num ber he had. A stern reply that the wire was busy did not successfully squelch the inquirer, for he asked again for the number. One of the girls now became Indignant and with supreme scorn asked, “What line do you think you are on, anyhow?” “Well,” said the man, “I’m not sure, but judging from what I’ve heard I should say I was on a clothes line.” facts in tabloid form. The fourteen public libraries of Chi cago contain 1,432,931 volumes, not in cluding pamphlets and maps. A Danish expedition has gone to Greenland to teach the Eskimos how to fish profitably by modern means. There is no important seaport be tween Portland, Me., and Portland, Ore., that has not one or more through railway passenger trains from Chicago daily. Under the revised law governing the employment of women and children in Italy, night work is forbidden for all females and for males of less than fif teen years. The Young Men’s Christian Associa tion of Chicago, the second largest in the world, has a membership of over 13,000, sustains eighteen branches, and owns property valued at $2,022,000. China is very particular that the quality of the foreign goods it buys shall be fully up to sample, but pays very promptly for what It does buy. A Chinese merchant’s word is as good as his bond. In 1905 the sum of $27,608,000 was expended by employers in Germany for the direct aid of their employes. More than two-thirds of this was given as voluntary contributions by private firms and individual's. New York city has twenty more school buildings for the opening of the new school year than there were last fall, and they will accommodate 26,000 children. Before the close of October there will be four more schools for 6,550 pupils. The total enrollment this year is 640,000. Tea drinking in the German army is to be encouraged in future, on the sug gestion of the Emperor. In many can teens tea has been regularly serve*' for some time. The new military in structions state that the serving out of tea as well as of coffee on long march es at the field kitchens,is considered advisable. Every year the annual of the Swiss Alpine Clubs tells of the fatal Alpine accidents for the preceding twelve months. In 1907 there were fifty-eight deaths, but no guide or porter met with a fatal accident, and of the thirty tourists killed on the higher mountains, twenty-five were without guides, and seventeen persons were killed while gathering edelweiss. Old-time hotel rates in England were low. For Instance, in the days of Queen Elizabeth the charge at the “George Inn’’ for a feather-bed, a night was 1 penny. Dinner cost sixpence (12 cents) and offered choice of “beef, mutton or pigge or fish.” 'ln Stuart times each room owned a name, instead of a number, chiefly those of inn signs, such as the Cross eys room, th® Bell chamber, the Adam and Eve room, and so forth. When the British Association paid its visit to South Africa three or four years ago the eminent seismologist, Prof. John Milne and the celebrated Cambridge pathologist, Prof. Sims Woodhead, took clubs and balls to the Victoria Falls on the Zambesi river, and there the man of earthquakes es tablished a noble record by being the first to drive a ball across the falls, representing a very excellent carry of a hundred and sixty yards.—London Standard. After being conducted through an old church by the verger a visitor was so pleased with the official’s courtesy and Information that he insisted on giving him a liberal tip. The man shook his head sadly. “Thank you, sir,” he said, “but-it’s quite against the rules.” “I’m sorry for that,” said the visitor, about to return the coin to his pocket. “But,” added the verger, “if I were to find a bit lying on the floor it would not be against w the rules for me to pick it up.” Numerous cases of snakebite have been reported by the weekly State pa pers during the summer, and there is every reason to believe that the crop of reptiles has been the largest seen here in many years. The manager of one of the big plantations in Coahoma County, who has been clearing up new ground at every spare moment, states that he has killed more than 700 snakes since the plowing season began, several of them rattlers, cottonmouths and moccasins.—Jackson (Miss.) Clarion- Leader. Matrimonial troubles were under dis cussion. The oldest son of a rich man ufacturer remarked: “I hold that the correct Thing for a husband is to be gin as he intends to go on. Say that the question was one of smoking. Al most immediately I would show my intentions by lighting a cigar and set tling the question forever.” “And I would knock the thing out of your mouth,” cried the imperious beauty of the group. “Do you know,” rejoined the young man, “I don’t think you would be there.” Many of us make a great “to do” about too much armament, etc., and yet the truth of the matter is that we are literally beating our weapons of war into plowshares and other useful instruments to help the farmer, the builder and the housewife. The gov ernment always uses the best steel in making cannon, so that as soon as these weapons are out of date it can sell them to foundries. At the foun dries the old cannon are broken up and reinelted, after which they are made into plows, structural iron, roofing, household tinware and a dozen other things of a peaceful nature. —Philadel- ohia Record. CUBE AT CITY MISSION. Awful Came of Scabies —Body a M»s« of Sores from Scratching—Her Tortures Yield to Cutlcura. “A young woman came to our city mission in a most ww*"jl condition phys ically. Our doctot- examined her and told us that she had scabies (the itch), Incipient paresis, rheumatism, etc., •brought on from exposure. Her poor body was a mass of sores from scratch ing and she was not able to retain solid food. We worked hard over her for seven weeks, but we could see little improvement. One day I bought a cake of Cuticura Soap and a bottle of Cuti cura Resolvent, and we bathed our pa tient well and gave her a full dose of the Resolvent. She slept better that night and the next day I got a box of Cuticura Ointment. In five weeks this young woman was able to look for a position, and she is now strong and well. Laura Jane Bates, 85 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y., Mar. 11, 1907.” A New Amphibian. Several examples of a zoological para dox—a fish which would be speedily drowned if placed in deep water —have just been added to the collection at Re gent’s Park. This is the African walk ing fish, which spends the greater part of its existence upon the mud ‘banks of tropical rivers. Its method of prog ression has ‘been described by natural ists as the “hop, skip and jump” va riety, and when journeying inland, as it does over long distances, it climbs by means of the breast fins over the roots and even into the boughs of trees. These curious creatures, which belong to an important group known as lung fishes, form a connecting link with the higher forms of life, the air bladder be ing converted into what is practically a lung. When the rivers dry up in the hot season they bury themselves in the mud, breathing in the air like a frog or a newt. In Australia there are several varieties of lung fishes, one of the larg est, which is much esteemed as an ar ticle of food, sometimes attaining a length of six feet. —Daily Graphic. THREE WEEKS Brought About a Remarkable Change, Mrs. A. J. Davis of Murray, Ky., says: “When I began using Doan’s Kid ney Pills, kidney disease was slowly S poisoning me. Dizzy spells almost made me fall, sharp pains like knife thrusts would catch me in the back, and finally an attack of grip left me with a constant agonizing backache. Doan’s Kid ney Pills helped me quickly and in three weeks’ time there was not a lymptom of kidney trouble remaining.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Voster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Insisting on Accuracy. “Did you arrest this man?” asked the police justice. “I did not, your honor,” answered the officer, formerly a resident of Boston. ‘Obviously I could not arrest him, for he vas not in motion at the time. I merely ffected his capture, your honor.” Insuperable. “You say you don’t object to me on ac count of my age, Miss Ginevra?” “No, I don’t mind your age a bit, Mr. Rypun.” “Then what is the objection, may I ask?” “You look it.” SIOO Reward, SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assist ing nature in doing its work. The proprie tors have so much faith in its curative pow ers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for tny case that it fails to cure. Send for list f testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold bv all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. Recollections. Adam Zawfox —Jewer work on a farm ? Job Sturky—Wunst, when I was about half growed up. I lasted three days. The farmer said I had a hired man’s appetite, all right, but he didn’t think I’d ever learn to work up to it. You Can Get Allen’s Foot-Ease FREE Write to-day to Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y., for a FREE sample of Allen’s Foot- Ease, a powder to shake into your shoes. It cvres tired, sweating, hot, swollen, ach ing feet. It makes new or tight shoes easy. A certain cure for Corns and Bunions. All Druggists and Shoe Stores sell it. 25c. Gains Distinction in Queer Way. Newitt—He’s anxious to be considered a man of some social distinction. Bunker —He's taking a queer way about it. Newitt —Why ? Bunker —He says golf is “merely tom my-rot.”—The Catholic Standard and Times. For Example. Lotson —Do you believe that “all an orator needs is a voice?” Slathers —Sure. But it’s different with a baseball umpire. He doesn’t need even a voice. All he needs is a husky roar. Look at Sheridan. In all the civilized countries of the world 60 per cent of the persons over 10 years of age have to work for their living. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Siguat'jre of Answered. “I want to know,” said the callar, “if you can tell me whether or not hazing has been abolished in our institutions of learning.” “Has the millennium come yet?” snajh ped the information editor, turning again to his desk. Mrn. Winslow’s Soothing Strup for Childrea teething; softens the gums, reduces inflammation, a> lays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. gyruptffigs Cleanses the System Effect ually; Dispels Colas andJleaA ack es due to Constipation; Acts naturally, acts truly as a Laxative. Best forMenW)men and C nil A ren-Youngand Old. To its Denejicial Effects Always buy the Genuine which has the jull napxe o|the Com '"CALIFORNIA JJq Syrup Op. by whom it is manufactured. printed on tn® front oFevery package. SOLb BYALL LEADING one size only* regular price 50? p«r bolt ln» wL.douglas S3OO SHOES 5350 \ 1 fj I f ’ W. Xm Douglas make* and Sells mors 1 men’s 93.00 and 53.50 shoes than any other manufacturer in the world, be cause they hold their shape, fit better, and wear longer than any other make. Shoes at All Prices, for Every Member of th*. Family, Men, Boys, Women, Misses & Children W.L.Douglas >4.00 and $5.00 0 It Edge Shoes cennet be •quailed at any price. W. L. Douglas fS.SO sad $2.00 choee are the best la the world JF*<mS Color EveMt Veed Jltooluaivoty. aj-Take A'o Substitute. W. L. Dourle* name and price is stamped on bottom. Sold everywhere. Shoes mailed from factory to any part of the world. Catalogue free. W. L. DOUGLAS, 157 Spark St., Brockton. Mass. DYSPEPSIA “Having taken your wonderful •'Cascarete” for three months and being entirely cured of stomach catarrh and dyspepsia, I think a word of praise Is due to “Cascarets’’for their wonderful composition. I have taken numerous other so-called remedies but without avail and 1 And that Cascarets relievo more in a day than all the others I have taken would in a year. ’’ James McGune, 108 Mereer St., Jersey City, N. J. Best for The Bowels . CANDY CATHARTIC Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, 10c, 25c, 50c. Never sold in bulk. The genuine tablet stamped 000. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 391 ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from un healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin fecting and deodcr • izing toilet requisite of exceptional ex cellence and econ- 111 omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, 1 - throat and nasal and [3 <. uterine catarrh. At || //p -*& ■. drug and toilet I uhm stores, 50 cents, or u -Ja | by mail postpaid. Urge Trial Sample WITH "HEALTH ANO BEAUTY” BOOK BENT PRES THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass. A SICn of Beauty Is a Joy Forever. DR. T. Felix Goureud's Oriental Cream or Magical Beautlfler. 3SSJ Removes Tan, Pimples, “xa-S"* 'dV Freckles, Moth Patches, Rash, and Skin Diseases, ** o— ’ anrl fcVer y blemish W l on beauty, and de- S * Vi’ 6 fles detection. It Ms a o AV 111 has stood the test vjl of 60 years, and a “ 3 t J I” harmless we tasteittobesureU * •* 5 In I Is properly made. o jj ol Accept n&connter /'xf An ' f elt \ same. Dr. L. A. yyyT - 1 \ Sayre said to a y Aj 1 * I lady of the haat- J ton <• P a tient) s y : ta i J “As you ladle* i j k will use them. I recommend ‘fiourmid’H Cream’ as the least harmful of all th* •kin preparations." sale by all druggists and Fancy- Goods Dealers in the United States, Canada and Europe. FEfID. T. HOPKINS, Prop., 37 Great Jones Street. Mew fork, NEW MEXICO LANDS Weown2«,OOO acres< holee Valley and Prairie Land selected from a 76,000 acre ranch on the Santa Fe Railroad in Eastern New Mexico. Soil and rainfall same a* Texas Pan handle Crops sure. Why go North West, with long winters and high prices when you can get a mild, healthy climate, cheap lands and easy terms. Will double in value quicgly. Write immediately. Dubuque Land (?•., Dubuque, lows CATHOLIC COLONY Productive soil, healthful climate, abundant water, goofl market; two yea re' crop* pay for your land. Resident priest For further particulars write to Southwest Catholic C olonlzutlou Co., box CAII or any LIVER DISEASE— i tvHil wri ‘e me ALL about it. tJAVIILkJ Will tell of a cure FREE. Addraaa Minnie Covey, IL F. D. 5, l.unslng, Mleh C. N. U. No. 43—1008 WtitlM WRITING TO ADVERTISERS PLEASE SAY n jf*n taw lb* gdverli*eme*t la Ibis **p*r. 7