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WOMEN WHO SUFFER' ' Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills the One Remedy Particularly Suited For Feminine Ills. jk To women who suffer Dr. Williams’ • Pink Pills are worth their weight in x gold. At special periods a woman needs medicine to regulate her blood supply or K her life -will be a round of ]Miin and snf- fcriug. Dr! Williams’ Pink Pills are : absolutely-the finest medicine tliut ever f a woman took. They actually make Knew 'blood. They are g«>od for men too but -they -are good in a special way - ■ ifor women. A’ “Jtwas three years ago last spring "that my health faile<l me,” says Mrs Arthur Conklin, of No. 6 Coldwater ■street, Battle Creek, Mich. “ I suffered Mtrmn leueorrhceu and other troubles •that, I presume, were caused by the ‘weakness it produced. I Imd siuking *cpells, nervous headaches, was weak :*nd exhausted all' the time and looked •like a walking skeleton. •“My back and limbs would ache al most continually and there were days when I was absolutely helpless from sick headache. I tried one doctor after another hut cannot say that they helped me at all. My liver was sluggish and I was troubled some with constipation. “ One day n physician who has now retired from practice met my husband on the street and inquired about my health. He advised my husband to get some of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for me, said they were a good medicine, better for my trouble than he coaid put up. J tried them, improved steadily nml soon was entirely cured. As soon ns the leucorrhoen was cured the headaches and other pains stopped. lam entirely well now hut intend to continue to use Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills ns u -spring tonic.” The genuine Dr. Williams’Pink Pills are sold by all druggists and h.v the Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Schenec tady, N. Y. "I don't think the editor read a lino of my story.” "Neither do I; I notice that his magazine comes out as usual!” AWFUL ITCHING ON SCALP. Hair Finally Had to Be Cut to Save Any—Scalp Now in Good Condition Cured by Cuticura. "I used the Cuticura Soap and Oint ment for a diseased scalp, dandruff, and constantly falling of hair. Fin ally I had to cut my hair to save any at all. Just at that time J reud about the Cuticura Remedies. Once every week 1 shampooed my hair with the Cuticura Soap, and I used the Oint ment twice a week. In two months’ time my hair was long enough to do up in French twist. That Is now five years ago, and I have a lovely head of hair. The length is six inches below my w.aist line, my scalp is in very good condition, and no more dandruff or itching of the scalp. I other remedies that were recommended to me as good, but with no results. Mrs. W. F. Griess, Clay Center. Neb.. Oct. 23, 1905,” Many a glum man smiles - but only the bartender sees him do it. Mother Cray’s Sweet Powders for Children. Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurso in tho Children’s Homo in New York, cure Constipation, Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders, move and regulate tho Bowels and Destroy Worms.OvorJHMXW tes timonials. At all Druggists, 25c. Sample FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Lclioy,N. Y. Any man who waits for something to turn up will have a lifetime Job. Storekeepers report that the extra quantity, together with the superior quality of Defiance Starch makes it next to impossible to sell any other brand. "There goes the head of the firm.” "I should Judge by bis looks that he was its stomach.” A GUARANTÈED CURE FOR PILES. A »■- i r.r.if ■ It< lihur. Illlml.. meriting, I’retrudlmt flic*. ■ci*t* hre authorlz<*<l to ti-fuiul money If I‘AZO OINTMENT f«ll» to euro In #to 14 d*y». *>c. It Is a long leg that has no more pulling. Lewis’ Single Binder straight 5c cigar made of rich, mellow tobacco. Your dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, UL Diamonds are vulgar, especially If you haven't any. Hundreds of dealers say the extra quantity and superior quality of De fiance Starch Is fast taking place of nil other brands, others say they can not sell any other Btarch. Jack- \nd do you always sneak the truth about your friends? I*ola —Yes; hut not until after they are gone. OPEN PUBLICITY THE BEST GUARANTY OF MERIT. When the maker of a medicine, sold through druggists for family u-e, takes his patients fully Into his confidence by frankly and fearlessly publishing hroaa cast as well ns on Its bottle wrappers, W a full list of all Its Ingredients In plain EtmlLnh, this action on his part is the liest possible -evidence that he Is not afraid to have the search light of Inves tigation turned full upon his formula .and that it will bear the fullest scrutiny and the most thorough investigation. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription for tho cure of the weaknesses, periodical pains and functional derangements of the or gans distinctly feminine. Is the only medi cine put up for sale through druggists for woman’s special use. tho maker of which is not afraid to tako his patients Into Lis full confidence by such open and honest publicity. A glance* at the -published Ingredients on each bottle wrapper, will show that it i< made wholly from native. American, medicinal roots, that It contains no poi sonous or habit-formiDg drugs, no im cotics and no alcohol—pure, triple-refined glycerine, of proper strength being used Instead of the cocnmouiy employed alco hol. both for extracting and preserving the active medicinal properties found in the roots of the American forest plants employed. It is the only medicine for women’s peculiar diseases, sold by drug gists. that does not contain a large per centage of alcohol, which is in the long run so harmful to woman's delicate, nerv ous system. Now, glycerine is perfectly harmless, and serves a valuable purpose by possessing intrinsic value ail Its own, and besides it enhances the curative effect of the other Ingredients entering Into the "Favorite Prescription." Some of the ablest medical writers and teachers endorse these views and pVaise all the several ingredients of which "Fa vorite Prescription” is composed rec ommending them for the cure of the very sain*- diseases for which this world farr.eii medicine is advised. No other medicine for women lias any such vro fCKHlotuil endorsement —worth more than any number of ordinary testimonials. If Interested, send name ami address to Dr. R. V. Pierce. Buffalo. N. Y.. for ills little of extracts from the works of medical writers and teachers, the several ingredients and telling just what Dr. Pierce's medicines are made of. It's free for the asking. Id evict where »u ctsr rjm* PJ Ka Best C'oagb byrup. Twei «ood. L*« 13 FOR NORTH POLE AIRSHIP PLAN OF WALTER WELL MAN AND SANTOS DUMONT. ALL MODERN APPLIANCES Chicago Record-Herald Correspondent Has Orders to Go Ahead With the Scheme—To Start Next Summer From Spitzbergcn. Chicago—“ Build an airship, go And the north i>ole and report by wireless telegraphy’ and submarine cables the progress of your efforts.” This was the startling assignment given a few days ago to Walter Well man, the Washington correspondent of the Chicago Record-Herald, by Frank B. Noyes, editor-in-chief of the paper, and the commission lias been accepted by Mr. Wellman. As an assistant on this daring expedition Mr. Wellman •will .have tho services of Alberto San tos-Dumont of Paris, who will have charge of the-construction of the air ship and will act as aeronautic director and pilot for the ship on its voyage to ward the north pole. The airship, the order for which has been given, will be built by Louis God ard of Paris under the supervision of M. Santos-Dumont, and will he com pleted by the end of next April. No definite date has been decided upon when the explorers will start on their journey, but it is expected that every thing will be In readiness to get away next July or early August. After com pletion the airship will have several trials in or about Paris, and In June all the paraphernalia will be assembled In Spitzbcrgon, where the explorers will await a-favorable opportunity for the dash for Ihe pole, which, according to Mr. Wellman, should the expedition meet with a good run of luck, should be reached in less than a week. In announcing his acceptance to night. of the proposed expedition, Mr. Wellman said: “if I did not believe that tho chances of success were greater than those of failure, I would not accept the com mission. Mr. Noyes acted on no sud den whom or impulse when he gave me the order to try and locate the much sought nortli pole, as he had before him a report submitted to him as to the-outcome of two visits to the inner polar regions. “The problem of reaching the pole by means of an airship does not re quire high speed, and the present state of the art of aeridl navigation by gna buoyed and motor-driven ships—is am ple for that purpose. From an easily reached base of operations in northern Spitzbergcn we have but 550 geograph ical iniics to go to the pole and a like distance for the return voyage. It we take the whole at 1,200 miles It means but 100 hours or motoring at twelve miles an hour. Santos-Dumont has fre quently made from nineteen to twenty three miles an hour with small air ships equipped with relatively small motors. “The airship In which we propose to attain the north pole will be the largest practicable airship ever built. [ --it will carry 5,500 pounds of gaso- I line and Its distance capacity during ! calm weather will be eighteen mile* I more than equal to the distance from Spitzenbergen straight across the pole and the whole Arctic ocean to Alaska. | As our airship will be constructed it 1 will be able to make headway against two thirds of nil the wind* that blow, even though squarely adverse, and it is part of our project to motor only with favorable winds and to anchor our ship to the ice,and 'lie to" in all unfavorable winds of velocity exceeding one-half the normal speed of our craft. The ship will be equipped for safe anchor age in the highest winds ever known in the Arctic regions. In fact, the ship will be subject to the will and hand of the navigator. Just like a steamship upon the ocean. I “Besides the 5.500 pounds of fuel | mentioned, the ship will carry also five 1 men, a comfortable car to live in. | (which is also a boat in east- of need). ; food and supplies for seventy-five days, sledges to draw them over the ice. and. j In fact, a completely organized and i equipped sledging party, ready at any j moment., should it l»o necessary, to abandon the airship and take to the ice. “■Wireless telegraph stations will he ) established at Spitzbergcn and at Ham- I inerfest, Norway, GOO miles distant. 1 Further than this, a wireless equip ment will be carried in our airship, and it. will be our effort to s *nd dally dis patches to the outside world through out all the time the expedition is in the Arctic regions, even from the pole It self. should w cbe successful in reach ing it.” Printers Strike is Begun. New York.—Twelve hundred union printers, the employes of forty-four hook and job printing concerns in New York city, went on strike Tues day and began the struggle for the eight-hour day which had been de clared to go into effect that day. Mem bers of the local Typothetae. against whom the strike was declared, as serted that hundreds of non-union printers from various parts of the country are hurrying to New York to take the places of the strikers and to secure the high wages paid In tills city. Representatives of the Typograph ical union say that the eight-hour day principle* has already been won in New York and that tho percentage of men compelled to strike is very small. Scott Murderers Arrested. Colorado Springs, Colo—The mur derers of Frank L. Scott are under ar rest and have confessed. Charles Es sick, aged eighteen years, of 313 South Wahsatch avenu \ fired the shot that killed Mr. Scott on the night o 4 De cember 20th. His partner in the crime was Leslie Francisco, aged twenty years. Both are In the county jail, in their confessions the young men state that they did not intend to murder Scott. They started out to hold up someone. After ordering Mr. Scott to halt, Essick, in his excitement, invol untarily pulled the trigger. The crime was committed on Wednesday night, December 20th, in front of the resi dence of Frank N. Strong, 420 East Pike’s Peak avenue. Petitions Against Smoot. Washington, —Petitions signed by more than 1,000,000 American women praying that Reed Smoot of Utah he expelled from the Senate, will he pre sented to that body immediately after the committee on privileges and elec tions presents its rc port on the Smoot case. Thousands of similar petitions from churches, religious organizations and citizens generally have already been received. The petitions obtained through women's organizations have been bound and are now embraced in twenty-eight large volumes. CONDENSED TELEGRAMS Fire January 2d destroyed the larg est portion of the business district ol Apalachicola, Florida. A grand jury has been sworn in by the Supreme Court of New York to consider 1,000 cases of alleged election fraud. The Stato Department has been for mally notified that the Olympic games will bo held at Athens, Greece, from April 22d to May 2d. The annual tournament of the In door Rifle League of the United States will bo held at Grand Ha]dds, Michi gan, Febiuary 12th to 17th. The executive committee of the American Bar Association has decided to hold the next uunual meeting in St. Paul, August 29th, 30th and 31st. The precious Madonna Del Popolo. by Lippo Memmi, which was stolen some time ago from the Church of Santa Maria De Servl, has been re covered at Siena. A new high record price for a seat on the stock exchange was reached December 26th, when |95,000 was paid. This, with the $2,000 initiation fee, brings it up to $97,000. Charters taken out in eastern state* during 1905 represent a total capital!- | zation of well over $2,000,000,000, ac ' cording to figures Just made public, the exact figures are $2,153,334,811. A series -of earthquake shocks were felt at about 5:30 a. m. at Agram, Gilli, Lalbch, Marburg and Gratz, in Austria. Buildings cracked and tho In habitants fled panlc-sti icken from their houses. Lieut. Gen. -Count Von Moltke has been appointed chief -of the general staff of the German army, succeeding Field Marshal Count Von Schleiffen. Von Moltke is a nephew of the great commander. Spaniards, Cubans and Americans in Havana fraternizod in celebration of the new year. The reception given by President Palma at the palace was largely attended. Many Americans were present. Japan’s first ambassador to the United States will be Viscount Suzo Aokl, now a -member of the privy council, a close friend and adviser of tho Mikado, and one of the foremost men of his country. The trackmen of tho Canadian Pa cific railway have secured an increase of 5 cents a day to the sectiton men and ten cents to the foremen. The in crease will apply to all the Tines from Fort Wiliam to the Atlantic coast. The controversy between the city of Knoxville, Tennessee, and its water company, as to the right of the city to establish its own water work?*, has ! been decided by the Supreme Court of the United States in favor ot the city. | An advertisement appearing in a I San Francisco paper, offers for sale I Funning and Washington islands, in I the South Pacific, under instructions of tho register of the British high com- I iniHsioner's court for the western Pa- I eifle. I Robert 11. Todd, mayor of San Juan. I Porto Rico, has sailed for Washington, as a delegate from the Porto Rico Mu nicipal League, of which lie is presi dent, with the object of asking Con gress to pass a law creating an el©3- live senate in the island. The peasants on the immense oe tates of Count Stro&anoff at Perm, in Russia, met and coolly arranged to di vide major portion of the lands among them selves. They sent to the count a notification of the portion they I will allow him to retain, j After a division of almost 100 years, steps were consummated December j 29th in the joint session of general : committees at St. which, when I formally ratified, will unite the North era Presbyterian Church, U. s. A., and the Cumberland Presbyterian Church. I The Crito Del Pueblo of Guayaquil. I Ecuador, reports that there have been simultaneous outbreaks at Riobamba I capital of Riobamba, at Latacunga capital of Leon, and at Guaranda, cap ; ital of Bolivar, in favor of General A! 1 faro, former president of the republic. | George Washington, youngest son of 1 the late John Augustine Washington, who was the last individual owner of Mount Vernon, and tin.* last of the dis tinguished Washington family to be morn at Mount Vernon, died December 31st at his home in Charleston, West Virginia. The government weather station a! North Head, Washington, was stmcl by lightning December 2Gth. Opera tor Kelliher was knocked senseles* temporarily, the ineterologieal instru ments were destroyed, and the houst set on fire and every pane of glass in the building shattered. The Interborough Rapid Transit Company, which operates the subway and elevated roads of New York City, raised the pay of its employes January J st. The increase ranges from 15 to 25 cents a day, with two days off with pay each month for employes who work twelve hours a day. A letter has been received in San Francisco from one of seven vessels frozen in the ice near Herschel Island. It came from Reuben Spencer and Sam uel Redmond, engineers on the steamer Bowhead. At the time it was written. October 15, 1905, the crews of tho ves sols had been reduced to half rations. At the New Year’s reception at Copenhagen King Christian of Den mark asked the American minister. Thomas J. O'Brien, to convey his kind sentiments to President Roosevelt. The Crown Prince Frederick also asked the minister to convey his con gratulations to Miss Roosevelt on her engagement. The political troubles of Breathitt coientv, Kentucky, appear to be ended. Judge’ S. S. Taulbee, recently elected coupty judge, whose olfice was contest ed by former County Judge James Har gis, noted leader of feudists, has come to an understanding with Hargis and both have agreed on the re-establish ment of law and order. During the yen 1905. the total num ber of vessels which arrived in the port of New York, according to the books of the government at the barge of fice, was 11.399, of which G.OG4 wm steamers and 5.335 we re sailing ves j sols. The arrivals at New York for the past year show an increase of 120 ves- | fids over the year 1901. Charles T. Yerkes, the noted street railway financier of Chicago and Lon don, died December 29th in his apart- j ments pt the Waldorf-Astoria hotel, j New York City, where ho had bee n ill i for more than six weeks. Mr. \erkes j built the magnificent Yerkes observa tory at Lake Geneva. Wisconsin. The members of Hazleton, Pennsyl vania Union No. 3, United Mine Wot h ers of America, have decided to pre sent to Miss Alice Roosevelt as a wed ding gift a carload of the best coal that can be found In the anthracite region. In appreciation of her father's services in ending the great strike in 1902. SUNDAY CLOSING LAW HOW GOV. FOLK ENFORCED IT Salcocn Keepers of St. Louis. Kansas City and St. Joseph Who Resisted the Law Lost Their Licenses. Governor Folk set about to enforce the Sunday-closing law. which has been on the Missouri statutes forty years unamended. He lias control of the police boards in tlm-i first-class cities in Missouri —Kansas City, St. Jo seph and St. Louis —and also the con trol of the excise commissioners there who have absolute power u, revoke a saloon man’s license at will The Su preme Court has decided tliut the Sun day-closing law is inoperative against every business except the saloon, and the saloon men could not compel other stores and shops to close because the saloons were shut up. That weapon was denied them. Ami when the order came to close at midnight Saturday, they closed. The first Sunday a throng of drunken men and women crowded the St. Louis bridge mining and going to Illinois, where liquor could lie bought. The sec ond Sunday the saloons closed. Then, after the custom in such cases, a few of them opened their back doors. Their licenses were promptly revoked by the excise commissioner. The throng on the St. Louis bridge was not so large that Sunday. The third Sunday— which is the Sunday when Sunday-clos ing spasms generally cease, a few more back doors opened, and Monday morning the keepers of those places lost their licenses. Then- were a few convictions also in conn for violation of the law. The crowd on the bridge was gone. The people were getting used to the law. And from that time on St. Louis, Kansas City and St. Jo seph saloons have been closed on Sun day and the excise law has been ob served as well as the law against lar ceny or against murder. And the Ger man-Anierlcan population of St. Louis —which is supposed to la- particularly obstinate in its demand for beer, law or no law, is larger in Si. Louis than in any American city of Its size. The German-Americans are there obeying and upholding the law. The story that they are law-breakers is a saloon keeper's scarecrow to frighten weak kneed politicians. Outside of St. Ixrtils. in St. Louis county, win re the amuse ment parks are located, the governor’s display of iiollcemen at the Delnmr race-track put the fear of the law into the saloon-keepers and restaurant men so completely that the law is observed there strictly. The hotel bars and till drinking places are closed on Sunday in the first-class cities of Missouri for me first time in the history of the state. And to-day Missouri is probably the only state in the Union without a dead-letter law on its statute hooks William Allen White, in McClure's Magazine. A New Being. Shepard, 111., Jan. Stb (Special)— Mrs. Sarah E. Rowe, who is residing here, says she feels like "A New Be ing,” although she is in her fifty-sev enth year. Why? because she has taken Dodd’s Kidney Pills, that well known medicine that has put new life into old bodies, and has rome ns a God-send into homes of sorrow and suffering. She says: “No one knows whal awful torture I suffered with Rheumatism and Kid ney Trouble, until I pot cured by Dodd's Kidney Pills. This grand rem edy drove the Rheumatism out of my body, nothing else ever did me any good. Dodd's Kidney Pills are worth one hundred times their price, for they have made me, though I am fifty seven years old, a new being. I am in better shape now than I have been for many years ami I owe It all to Dodd's Kidney Pills' NEGRO BUSINESS MAN. Raised Seventy-two Thousand Bushels I of Potatoes Last Year, * Booker T. Washington hds an arti cle in the American Illustrated Maga zinc for January, entitled "The Negro in Business.’ He tells of the really remarkable success «*f n particular negro. Groves by name, ami then foils what Groves ri.u about it. Mr Washington says: But why is Mr. Groves called “The Negro Potato King’’ Let mo answer. Last year, he produced upon his farm 72,150 bushels of white po . tatoes, averaging 245 bushels to’ the iicre. So far as reports show, this was 12,150 bushels tyore than any other individual • grow, r in tho world produced. And besides ‘ the potatoes raised on his own farm, Mr. Groves buys and ships potatoes on a large scale. Last year he bought from j white growers in the K.iw Valley, and shipped away twentj two cars of white potatoes. He also bough: fourteen cars of fane, seed potatoes in North and South Ik.kota, which he sold to growers in th< Kaw Valley, and In Oklahoma and the Indian Ter ritory. Mr. Groves says that ho ships potatoes and other farm products to nearly every portion <>r' the United States, and to Mexico and Canada. At the recent meeting of the Na tional Negro Businc!-.- League in New York, Mr. Groves was asked how he was able to conduct so varied and large business enterpris.-s, when In had had no education ;ih a business man. "You have children, haven’t you?" Mr. Groves replied. “Yes," said the oth< r. "Some of them are grown up now.” “How do you manage your grown jip children? ' “Oh, I get along wi - it them," replied his friend. laughing. You see I have known them a long time." "That's just the wa> with my busi ness," said Mr. Grove > I started in with it when it was a baby, and I’ve had a chance* to g*-t thoroughly ac quainted with it as i*' l, w ffp.” Child Slavery Increasing. j Prof. Felix Adler, s iking at a ban I quet before an chic..* "< iery-in New-. York said, among oil.* things.-; • A new kind ( : which lias grown up in the last n w years is the* employment of yoiin- children. In southern r.iills tint* • 60,000 child reu under the age «>f fourteen, work ing front ten to fotitt'in hours a day. besides being compelled '<> work al termite nights. Four or five years ago there were* only - • There are also 8,000 children we ing in and about mines, and thou 'ids employed in clothes factories wit* it 'hey should he at home, and thh- terrible foim of slavery is spreading. Don't try to preset-v<- your temper by keeping it in constant use. DOES YOUR BACK ACHE? Cure the Kidneys and the Pain Will Never Return. Only one sure way to cure an ach ing back. Cure the cause, the kid- I neys. Thousands tell ! of cures inude by J Doan's Kidney Pills. John C. Coleman, a prominent merchant of Swainsboro, Ga., says: "For several yearn my kidneys were affected, and my back ached day and night. 1 was languid, nervous and lame In the morning. Doan's Kidney Pills helped me right away, and the great relief I found has Leeh permanent. Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. roster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. “Pa,” said little Willie Underthum, "what does a man's ‘better half' mean?” “Usually, my son,” replied Mr. lTndertluitn, “she means Just what slio Buys.” The Value of Ideals. The life of every person will be made better and brighter by choos ing a high ideal, and then seeking conscientiously to live up to It. The Ideal dish for breakfast is Pillsbury's Vitos, which Is full of stored-up en ergy and nourishment. How often It happens that the cream of society is made up of people who have money, but are unable to re member how they gut it. Ask Your Druggist for Allen’s Foot-Ease. “I tried ALLEN'S FOOT KASK recent ly and have just bought another supply. It has cured my oorn.i, and the hot, burning and itching sensation in my feet which was aljnost unbearable, and 1 would not be with out it now.”—Mrs. W. J. Walker, Camden, JJ. J.” Sold by all Druggist.--, 25c. A man who profits by wrongdoing always has an excuse ready. Robbed In Church. Just think what an outrage it is to be robbed of all the benefits of the services bv continuous coughing througout the con gregation. when Antl-viripine is guaranujod to euro. Sold everywhere. 25 cents. Many a man’s excellent reputation is due to the fact that his wife doesn’t tell ujl she happens to know. Every housekeeper should know that If they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time, because it never sticks to the Iron, but because each package contains 16 ox. —one full pound while nil other Cold Water Starches arc? put up Ir* % -pound packages, and the price Is the same. 10 cents. Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all Injurious chemicals. If your groc.-r tries to sell you a 12-ox. package It Is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts In Defiance lie knows that Defiance Starch lias printed on every package In large letters and figure's “16 ozs.” Demand Defiance nnd save much time and money and the annoy ance of the iroa sticking. Defiuuce never sticks. It costs twice* as much to live now ; as It did a hundred years ago—but It s j ■worth every cent of the* difference. Don’t vou know that Defiance Starch besides being absolutely superior to any other. Is put up 16 ounces In park nge and sells ut same price as 12- ounce packages of other kinds? ROOSEVELT’S GUIDE. Granted Special License to Conduct a Hunting Lodge. Jacob Borah, the veteran guide of Colorado, who has iiad charge? of more than one of President Koosvclt’s fam ous hunting expeditions in the state*, has be>e:i granted by ttic* government a special personal license? to continue conducting a bunting lodge at Deep I.ake, on the* White* River forest reser vation. This is the* notice received by j Deputy United States District Attorney Knaebel from the* secretary of the* l>*-| partment of Agriculture. As a result the proceeding brought by Mr. Knaebel asking that tlie regular licens • which was secured by Borah to conduct the* ] lodge in the first place be canceled were dismissed. It seems that Borah -once sold the place to other, parties, who turned it into a questionable resort. He after ward bought- It back, but the* fores' rangers feared be? might sell it again to Irresponsible persons and made the application for canceling the license. In the letter of the secretary of agri culture It is stated that the guide has given sufficient personal assurances that he will never again let it go into other hands and would take charge of it in person. Tlie lodge has - been for several years the rendezvous of lovers of hunting and It was through the efforts of some of these that the government granted Borali the privilege which he has ob tained. When a man boasts of having sown his wild oats he never pauses to ex plain just what he means. INCIPIENT CONSUMPTION. How Fcod Headed Off the Insidious Disease. The happy wife of a good old fash ioned Michigan farmer says: "In I lie spring of 1202 I was taken sick—a general breaking down, as It were. I was excessively nervous, couit] jiot sleep well at night, rpy food seemed to do me no good, and I was so weak I could scarcely walk across the room. "The doctor said my condition was due to overwork and close confine ment and that he very much feared that”’ consumption -would " set In. For several months I took one kind of medicine after another, but with no 'KOdrt. trfTpct—tn fact, I seemed to grow worse. "Then I determined to quit nil. modi ctryis. give up coffeo and see what Grape-Nuts food would do for me. I ■ began"- to eat Grape-Nuts with sugar and cream and bread and butter three times a day. "The effect was surprising! I be gan to gain flesh and strength forth with, my nerves quieted down and grew normally steady and sound, sweet sleep came back to rue. In six weeks’ time I discharged the hired girl and commenced to do my own housework for a family of six. This was two years ago, and I am doing it still and enjoy it.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Road the little book, 'The Read *c WellvIIIc,” In pkgs. Biggest of Kites, After experimenting for a number of years at his laboratory at Bienn Brough, Braddock, with flying kites of ; the tetrahedral form of construction, j Prof. Alexander Graham Bell an nounced recently that ho had suc ceeded In having his latest designed ’kite rise In the air and carry a wc iglit of 227 pounds, this including a man weighing 165 pounds and ropes and lines weighing sixty-two pounds. The kite itself weighs sixty-one pounds, making a total weight of 283 pounds. The kite rose to a height of thirty feet nnd remained there steadily until pho tographs were taken of it. Dealers say that as soon ns a cus- , tomer tries Defiance Starch It is 1m- ; possible to sell them any other cold water starch. It cun be used cold or i boiled. “Birds of a feather flock together." .That’s true. Many swallows usually accompany a jolly lark.” Btats or Ohio. City or Toledo, I „„ K*A\-k J * I hkn K V ’makea oath that he ta aenl>>r partner of tin- Brin »f K..1. <" r , N *'* ‘.'.’.i *{,'!«!?. liualur** In Hie City of I • U-.l *. i mmiy ami aforesaid. anil Hint -al.l firm will pay the ONE 111 NDKKI* Pol l Alts f r and riery , him- Of 4 *at a hum tliat i-aniiol be cured !•) Hie ure of llai.i.'h Uatakhii Oi he. rKA?fK j ciIENEY. Sworn to before me and Mib..rll.«*«t In my prra •nUtbU Sth day of December. A. j aea 1. J- Notary PUBLIC. IlairiT'catarrh Cure la taken Internally and art* directly on the blond and ;"i* aurfacea of the ■»*““• » " >r VmXKY* CO . TOW., O. Sold by all I>ruggl*t*. "So. Take Haifa Family I'll la forcooatlpallon. Even the lowly hog wants the lion’s share. Lewis* Single Binder straight Ik*. Many smokers prefer them to 10c cigars. Your dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111. Then* is i ids In he said about n pepper-nlid-salt suit—it is always sea sonable. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing syrup. For children teething, aoften* the gums, reduce* Tty Hammaliou, allay a pain, cure* w.'nd collu. »*-. a bottle. It is easier i«» run In debt than to crawl out. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE OAY Take LAXATIVE ih:<»'ih i **••>■'**- t' r '*g- I glut* refund money If It fall* to cure. h. W. LiKOVETJ algnature la on each box. 25c. Eve in.ln. *-.l Adam to eat. but lie took t<> drink of Ills own accord. p|HO * Cure Is the heal medicine we ever used for all affections of the throat ami lungs. Wm. O. li SUBLET, Vanburen, Ind., I-Vb. 10. IUOO. Even a white He is nevei as white as it Is wlillcwi.sited. If you don’t get the biggest ann IPs your own fault. Delian.-.* Starch is for sale everywhere and then* Is positively nothing to equal it in qual ity or quantity. A stunning-looking girl isn’t nee-.-v --.-arily shocking. Important to Mothers. Examine car.-rully every bottle of G’ASTORIA, a aafe nnd sure rwmedy for infante and children, and *ee that It Hear* the Signature of In L'ec For Over «•> Years. Tim Kind You Uavc Always Bought. It requires a strcmio is carpenter l» d.."i i>ouill- i. Lydia Em Plnkltam’s Vegetable Compound is n positive cure for all those painful I ailments of women. It will entirely cure the worst forms <»f Female Com plaints. Inflammation and Ulceration, Uni ling ami Displacements an.l conse quent Spinal Weakness, and is peculi arly adapted to the Change of Life. It will surely cure. Backache. It. has cured more cases of Fcmnle Weakness thun any other remedy the world has ever known. It is almost in fallible in such eases. It dissolves and expels Tumors in an early .stage of development. That Bearing-down Feeling, enusing pain, weight and headache, is Instuntly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circum stances it acts in harmony with the female system. It corrects Irregularity, Suppressed or Painful Periods, Weak ness of the Stomach, Indigestion, Bloat ing, Nervous I'rostj-ation, Headache, General Debility. Also Dizziness, Faintness, Extreme Lassitude. ” don’t-care ” and “ w’nnt-to-hc-left-alone ” feeling, excit ability. irritability, nervousness, sleep lessness. flatulency, melancholy or the ’* blues,” and backache. These lire sure indications of Female Weakness, some derangement of the organs. For Kidney Complaints and Backache of tither aex the Vegeta ble Compound is unequalled. You can write Mrs. I’inkhain about, yourself in strictest confidence. LYDIA t. I*l NK HAH MFD. CO., Lyaa, Uti*. ySEED?^ M D. M. FERRY & CO.. Detroit. Wich. \ PRICE. Cf. MM f fUfHQliir AW 3 i"hSi3r IHfc i irn rniraiir 4 if is guarantekd to cure ANlHffi nNr GRIP, BAD cold, headache and neuralgia. I won’t sell Anll-ortpine to * dealer who won't Ooermateei TIASMO tfll!/IFOR HtAIVKRE It- CAllforyourMOXEt BALE IF IT DO.VT CCMM/ —y, w. Metner, Jtf. D., Maaufaoturcr. Hprlng/leUt, Mm. The more we know of our ills, the easier and sooner relief will come. Pains and aches of the flesh, joints and muscles are Rheumatic 1 The mission of the Old-Monk- Cure St Jacobs Oil is to cure, and the world knows it does it safely and surely. Price, 2.5 c. end 30e. I __ UNSEEN IN A. SAW There nr«* nnneon tiling* about tbiaSmv. You cannot b. h tlit? Hum luxiun* of the .su?el; fake* n nliur j>. nulling «*■l :« uml hol.l* ii longer than .if ’fibre; Ix-nd* willio.it a brink «r a kink. SI I. V Kit STEIX. Uni IlncHt crucible steel In the world, I* iinidn on the Atkin* foiiniila, tempered nnd hardened by the Atkin* secret prone**, mid HB4*tl only In Aiku* Sum You i-MMiint *.*«• the imrfectly rrn.loated i.,|wr of the Idade; run* ca-ily, witbout bmk ii g. ll.it you •*au #ne the Atkina trade murk mid It l« your protection when you tiny a hi, w. We are aaw-uiaker* mi.l our trad.- murk on n Suw mean* that it i* our own make and Hint are jually jiro.id of It. Wo umko uil lyp.** ami *ize* of Hnn* for all pur|M>ie*. A IK In* Saw*, Corn Kulve*. I'crfentlon Floor fv*ra|H-r». el.*., arc *o|.| by ull gotxl hardware deui.-r*. Catalogue on request. 1 E. C. ATKINS CEL CO.. Inc. Largrtf mv klanufaciurcia in thr World. Factory and Carcutive Ofltcca, lodianapolii, Indiana liltAN.'lirS New York, Chicago. Mlnneapolla, I'MI llarnl. .Orego.l), N -nl.li , Man I'mnrlaco, MeuipMa, AI In iila ami T0r.,m.., i<;anai!a>. I Accrpt oo SuLatCule l.iu I on lie All no Dracd (f MH.n IJY COUD DIAI .IJVS l\l JIVYMfI J/T fl BSE I To tie 6lien tor Reliable Information We have *et aside g $1,000:°° to lx- apent for information and will LWgitr five dollar* for a Postal Card Hk ; hi k’ the first reliable new* of a in trll a horizontal Hon rr(iu- ol ■I •- •» *')>•. will.in «.uf >ai. c e ol rv Wr do lief wji.i in.|umr» at ittis lime lor rriucil. traction or ga* encinea. lATLAS ■ ENGINES AND BOILERS |r .] r O , D....1 r.«i|.:.o> In.* . r and > Lj * • " •• » •<«•■ n.an ifa. turii.( r. ,n Ef Atlas Engine Works .|B f * : . i.i li. < ji.r, INDIANAPOLIS , MB . . Va .. Aul.ai.atlr, 11.,1. Sj., , , ■ T 1i.,.a.. Male. I .ia. Tu- L'-ai and I'i.ilai I, lu„i,ra Alla, In wm.a 3.«n.nr*) |l r MigM Aria* hul.ar, in aaiti.c «,.*«> onu || r>. J)enver Directory "tint logy of Western Ore llepimll*.’’ I.v f Armor 1... Mea . . ..... ... ' The K end riel. II . I ..r,. v Co | I’rl.-e >2,50 poMoald. kav'li :,J. H. WILSON SIOCK SATIIES | Ark your dealer for them Take no other STOVE make 11. I : I I 'tw ren.-e. I)rinr, i'l. ..... ; AMERICAN HOUSE T .« &\£s" BRUWN PALACE HOTEL . K.iro|>«-nri iilun. ll.liO and upwartl. l ' Oxford Hotel l';;v i ST. ELMO HOTEL V,,'i StfiafTs? l.'b *«l , I ten ter. Sen lire iir.Mtf Hnll.llog Kurort •an plan I All out»lde room*. T. eta. anil SI. THE DILLON IRON wnFrs cn Engineer* uml Mntiufnt'liirera. Mn.-lilnery of ail kiiidn built amt i repaired. Spe.-Jal ma l.lnes liuiit to order. Mine Cages, Switches. Frogs, Hoists Rolls, Screens, Jigs, Concentrators Mr it ut nnd U filer I'onrr I'lunta. ripened IHK7 Hook k rc|«! rig. Hhortlinml. Tel- Std Rnleiiirae Illdx., Denver. « rloT E. E. BURLINGAME A CO.J ASSAY OFFICE ,I,D LABOnATOny Ratabliahed in Colorado. WA. Sample* by mailor exprens will receive prompt nnd careful nttmf lon Gold & Sllrer Rullion Concentration Tests lo '*- .Hl6-1138 Lawrence St.. Dtutc. Colo tj »H t ,U IVI aIIS-»IV1 I* I rie A-Id l*ol*onln*T 11.-..1- .■ the In A.-I I and 11 *lfuu' *kriow , tlih| ,,,r ' ' r r' it IJRICSOL 'rill* modern remedy doe* not OlMturb ihe >i..hm, l> it • -ontaio* till fodl.lee, Siilh-y -inle*. or I'oletilcum. and al wb>m ingki'H a eompleie - urn of l(li<-umail*ni l*« !*-•■ |l Ou t,.-i bottle s. nd for Book '. I telling all about 11. The Schoitz Orug Co. Agenl*. ■ for. 16th uml « urtl* St*. . I >«-n v*-r. Colo. I lie I rii'Niil Cliemieal Co.. | M fir . I.i* Angele*. Calif. PENSIONS W r!u Nathan Bickford, Pit F St., Wuahlngton. U C.' t Eyo Water V. "u.—DENVER.- NO. 2.—1906. v* hen Answering Advertisements TKir Pp-ier.