iistssi Tic Bisi "uiisaly ol Merit b Opea PoMictty. _ __ of Dr. Pierce's flamed 'medicines lesTing1 the great labo- i'>- ratory st Buffalo, N. Y., has printed U /e opon Its wrapper all the Uwredients » >- r- entering tote its composition. This fact aOoneplaces Dr. Pierce's Family Medi- SfeS •, A «ines <w a class all fry themselves. They fp:. ̂ „-»;«annot be classed frith patent or secret ,5 <* !medicines because they are neither. This " Is why so many unprejudiced physicians prescribe them and recommend than to their patients. They know what they »re composed of, and that the ingredients V' «re those endorsed by the most eminent i ' " medical authorities. ' The further fact tlutL neither Dr. y Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, the "* , great stomach tonic, liver invigorator, v' t Eeart regulator and blood purifier, nor his *.. J' i ••'Favorite Prescription" for weak, over- V>" » , worked, broken-down, nervous women, ' contains any alcohol, also entitles them jit •' *o a place all by themselves. I Many years ago, Dr. Pierce discovered if/ that chemically pure glycerine, of proper E - etrength, is a better solvent and preserv ative of the medicinal principles resid ing in our indigenous, or native, medi cinal plants than is alcohol; and, further- ,, <; room, that it possesses valuable medicinal t'" r ' , "properties of its own, being demulcent, « • - nutritive, antiseptic, and a most efficient *ntiferment. /v** „ Neither of the above medicines con- >v'V • Cains alcohol, or any harmful, habit- * " jfirut ing drug, as will be seen from a fiance at the formula printed on each ' fmttle wrapper. They are safe to nse and § i (potent to cure. feVv - Not only do physicians prescribe the V -v\-«bove, con-secret medicines largely, but itftf^£>r?<ths most intelligent people employ them if,. --people who would not think of using lX-~\"the ordinary patent, or secret medicines. JEvery ingredient entering into the com- $.• " cositlon of Dr. Pierce's medicines has 5"-'*v..;,'*he strongest kind of an endorsement Iv^'^'from leading medical writers of the k," ' several schools of practice. No other a/;- medicines put up for like purposes has ' r " amy such professional endorsement. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure con stipation. Constipation is the cause of many diseases. Cure the cause and yon <cisre the disease. One "Pellet" is a gentle laxative, and two a mild cathartic. Drug* agists sell them, and nothing is "just a* «ood." Easy to take as candy. W. L. DOUGLAS *3" & *3™ SHOES K5. *W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Lin* cannot be equalled at any price. AV®°uGC«J SHOES JULY 6 ,87®- Capital *2.50qqm W. L DOUOLAS MAKES A SELLS MORE .MEM'S 08. BO SHOES THAU AMY OTHER SMAMUFAOTURER W THE WORLD. (111 nnn REWARD to anyone who can VI U|UUU disprove this statement. HI could take you into my three large factories «at Brockton, Mass., and show you the Infinite •care with which every pair of shoe* Is wade, you -would realize why W. L. Douglas $3.80 shoes •coat more to make, why they hold their shape, 4lt better, wear longer, and are of great*! (Intrinsic value than any other S3.SO shoe. CAUTION .--Insist upon having W.L.Doug, las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine 'Without hie name and price stamped on bottom. Fast Color Eyelets used; they will not wear brasag. Wilts for Illustrated Catalog. W. I.. DOUGLAS. Brockton. HEAL JS8TATK. Come to Southwest Texas, mVSmc'JJS Ko snow or Ice. Vegetables grown all year. Best -farming propositions in United States. Cheapest lands. Libera! terms arranged. Write us. Let us tell you. EARNEST & DANIEL, Cotulla, Texas. FAR fill F Ranch--640 acres, rich, level, plen-rlirs QHU tlfully watered; hay. grain, veget ables and fruit !n abumlanee; all Improved, good buildings, large free raune, excellent for sheep; finest climate, Southern Idaho near Salt Lake, 4 miles from K. H. Liberal terms. W.G. Btarbuck, Lima, Ohio. TOR TEXAS LANDS S/UCE We own and eoatt-o! several large traols of rich i-smls in Texas which we desire to sell from rSS.OO per acre up. Kasy terms. We l^O handle ranches, «»•«!« and tltjr pro|»«rty. ' Timber, ranch and mftiifral landc in Ola W"xlco from 2U cents per acre up. We •nrrcf, ulut. and colonise your lands. SutlbfaatlMt buitruutreil. Call on or wrlie us. OLIVER LAND & IMMIGRATION CO., Bob Pyron, Manager. Ft> Worth, Texas* KEW WEST, FLORIDA Best^ad^rtlsgdCttjr Improved real estate forsale. Will pay groea 11) to 13 per cent a year (net 6 to 8), besides Increasing rapidly In value. Unimproved real estate sold with Aiiaraoty of 10 per oent. a year profit. Cash or easy 'Mrm«. Our co-operative plan enables you to shara i» these uroflts on inveetm >nts of II UU and over. * JB. Bt. HAHT1.\, Seeretatry, m Tin Bovsranant «f Canada G i v a i a b s o l u t e l y FREE to •very settlor ono hun dred and sixty acres of land in Western Canada. Land adjoining this can be purchased •from railway and land companies at from $6 to 110 per acre. On this land this year has been produced upwards of twenty-five bushels of wheat to the acre. It is also the best of grazing land and for mixed farming it has no superior on the continent. Splendid climate, low taxes, railways convenient, schools and churches close at hand. ' Write for "Twentieth Century Canada" and low railway rates to Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada; or to authorized Canadian Government Agent-- C. J. Broughton, Room 430 Quincy Bldg., Chicago, 111.; W. II. Rogers, third floor, Traction Terminal Bldg., Indianapolis, Xnd.: or T. O. Currie, Room IS, B. Block, Milwaukee, Wis. indention this paper.) The World's Standard DE LAVAL CREAM SEPARATORS 700,000 In Use. Ten Timet AH Other* Combined. 8*v« SIO - per Cow Every Tear of Use ever all Gravity Betting.Systems aadSS-perOew over all Tseitatisy Separators 8w* Mr mw ISM Oatslsgae TIE DE LIVM. IEHIITII CO. Oaaal ft Randolph Sta. I 74 0orU*»4t Street CHICAGO I NSW YORK ».sos aauwn ASB LOCAL ABPCIM. I WK PAY FIEIIHT eive s Uo«e ount on N ro" FROST FKKCB. __ . _ pve you a tones tkat looks better ad w ear* longor than any etfeev make. Writ* at once Coroatalogaa. wiu vnca co., fii iini, (IMi. BQ-KOBALM palntul jctfnta and sen • it dmnrista,tto. nni * OO, til Mth Street, OfelMf m A Diamond Well. A diamond well! Yes, I have one, a> real, genuine, pare, sparkling dia mond well. Not of sparkling stones, bat of pure sparkling water. I have seen articles from time to time for quite a number of years past in differ ent farm papers treating of the im purities of farm wells, but the article in last week's Review is responsible for this one, and the following is how I came t6 have my diamond well. About ten years ago I found it neces sary to dig a well for family water supply. The ground surface is about level for say one-eighth mile all around, thten slopes slightly to the east and west, and rises to the north and south. I dug a hole about four feet in diameter through six feet of yellow clay, then six feet through blue clay, when I struck a blue shale or slaty rock, some call it soapstone rock, the grain of which lies flat or hori zontal. Some streaks are very hard and flinty, and others soft and rottdn. About four feet down in this dock J got a small supply of water, say about a gallon every five minutes. At that I stopped digging, and in a few days I felt proud of my well of clear, cold, pare sparkling water. It kept rising in the wen until it came within about six feet of the top, then I had ten feet of water, but in about two weeks the water began to get warmer and did not taste so good. Then I drew it all out and it was again all right until it again came near the top of the well, then got warm, insipid and virtually stagnant. If I could have used the water as fast as it came into the well it would have been all right, but as it rose so high in the well and stood so long exposed to the air it became unfit for house hold use. Well, after five years it became necessary for me to move onto another piece of land, but only Just over the lot line, not mors than one hundred feet, so that I would have to dig another well. But the problem arose, "How could I fix it so that the water would always be good?" I would have to put a lid on, so that the water could not rise to the top and the lid would have to be water tight. Well, after studying on the matter a year, I got all material at hand and then went to digging. Of course the conditions were same as first well--yellow clay, blue clay and blue rock. When I got to water 1 arched over at top of blue rock with stone, then placed a flat stone on top with a three-Inch hole^ through the center, and over this hole I placed a glazed three-inch sewer pipe. Then I began filling in the clay ground around the pipe and trampea it hard every five or six Inches until I had the well filled to the top, putting of course one length of the pipe on above another and cementing each joint so that no water could get in nor out at the joints of pipe, then 1 put a 1%-tnch galvanized pump pipe down inside the sewer pipe, then packed inside sewer and outside pump pipe with clean cloths and presto! I had it a pure diamond well, always "cold, always clear, always pure." I would not take five hundred dollars for it and have to use a common open well again, for there cannot any horses, cows, hogs, sheep, dogs, cats, rats, mice, frogs, toads, beetles, bugs, worms nor microbes get into it; no drainage nor seepage from any source above whatever, without first going through ten feet of solidly packed clay. I believe I am justified in nam ing it my "Diamond Well."--A. A. Fradenburg, Cuyahoga Co., Ohio. Oat Smut. We hope that none of our readers that have oats to plant this spring will neglect to treat the seed for smut. The smut is * increasing in nearly all of the oat growing region, and it is a trouble that is easily checked. When smut takes a head of oats it entirely destroys every grain. It does not skip any. The loss is much greater than most farmers suppose, because the smutted heads do not stand out as do the good heads. The loss runs up as high as 25 per cent of the entire crop. Is it not absurd that this loss should be permitted to go on and nothing be done about it? One way to treat the seed is to dip it in hot water, letting it remain for only 15 minutes. The water should be at a tempera ture of from 130 to 135 degrees. On account of the difficulty of keeping the water at just the right tempera ture, the formalin dip is preferred. This consists of half a pound of for malin to 30 gallons of water. The seed may be dipped in this or the solution may be sprinkled over the pile of seed oats spread out on the floor. The oats should be thoroughly wet and then shoveled together and covered with sacks or other conve nient covering and left so for from two to twelve hours. It will require only thirty gallons of the solution for 100 to 150 bushels of the grain. The formalin is sold under the form of formaldehyde, being composed ol about 40 per cent pure fopwUp and 60 per cent water. Arrangements In the Poultf^ Mouse. All tbe internal arrangements in the poultry house should be movable, as in that way only is a man able to wage a successful war against mites, lice and disease. If he has a dropping board under the roosts, this dropping board should be merely hinged ot bolted to the wall so that it may be readily removed. The things under it should be removable and so should the roosts themselves. It really re quires very little work to make the arrangements as above, and after the work is once done it will be a great saving In time in the cleaning out of the poultry house and in its thorough fumigation when disease comet. Southdown*.. The Southdown is accepted as the aristocrat of mutton sheep, not for its si«», but for its smoothness and plumpness of body and sweet, tender and juicy meat The quality of the lambs of this popular breed always command the highest price in the market--R~ EL Roberts. GENERAL BLANCO PA33ES AWAY Successor of Weyler as Governor «f Cuba Dies in Madrid. Gen. Blanco, formerly governor-gen eral of Cuba, died at Madrid, April 4. Whiflham's Experience With Blanc*, H. J. Whigham, who was a corre spondent in Cuba during the Spanish* American war, says of Gen. Blanco^ whose death is reported from Madrid: "Gen. Blanco made a name among the journalists by threatening to shoot any American reporter caught inside the tines. He kept me personally in pris on for a week with Phil Robinson, cheerfully informing us that we might be shot any morning. Blanco was 6£¥ &C4ACO really a charming old man and had no intention of carrying out his threats. When I saw him in Havana after our release I found him delight ful and too kind-hearted for his posi tion." (Ramon Blanco y Arenas was sent to Cuba to succeed Gen. Weyler, whose conduct in suppressing the re bellion in that island had shocked the humanitarian feeling of all the civil ized world. He started on a policy of pacification, but the Cuban people did not trust him, and his experience on the island was not happy. Wben the war with the United States broke out Blanco did not enter upon the de fense of the island with much hope of success, and as soon as the war was over he resigned and returned to Spain in November, 1898.) IS QUEEN IN HER OWN REALM Bertha Krupp Head of Large Army of Dependents. Miss Bertha Krupp, the righest wo man in the world perhaps, is now known as "Queen Krupp" all around Eosen, where are located the vast cannon factories which she inherited from her father. In that place alone she has 40.000 workmen toiling for her, who, with their families, make more than 200,000 persons dependent upon her now. If other concerns be added we have a total of 300,000 de pendents. She owns gas works, rail ways, telegraphs, telephones, her own bakeries, slaughter houses and general stores. She has even her own army, regularly drilled, with stern rules of discipline; it is called a fire brigade, but is as much a body of picked troops as any in Germany. Her army num bers more than 900 men, well armed. Finally, she has her ambassadors in every court in Europe. They may not be known in the regular diplomatic world as such but they are there all the same. Jail for Reckless Chauffeurs. Some accidents . are unavoidable in this world busy with traffic. People will get under the wheels of the slow est going vehicle. The dray, as wjell as the motor car, has a record. De spite this fact, the truth remains that the person slain by a reckless auto- mobilist generally is the victim of a worse, a grosser, a more heartless cal lousness than Is the one who suc cumbs to the impact of the trolley. The simple and easy way to rid the highway of the peril that lies in the drunken or brainless direction of the swiftly moving automobile is to treat the guilty chauffeur as the criminal he is and to hold him and his accomplices on the charge of manslaughter at least, as well as responsible for all the material damage wrought.--Philadel phia Ledger. Cheap and Filing Food. Now, these be the virtues of the cereals; they are cheap, easily swal lowed and of moderate nutritive value. There is an element in the average human mind, half puritanic, half stin gy, which is Inclined to count as a vir tue the Ingestion of any food which is rot especially attractive but believed to be nutritious. In fact, to eat that whlc|i is.cheap and filling is one of the petty vices.--McClure's Magazine. Busy Days In the Country.v ~ A Minneapolis farmer who heard somebody say that men of his calling had nothing to do in the winter replied that winter was the busiest season of all, for while in the summer every farmer attended to managing only his particular share of ground, in the win ter he had to spend all of his time tell ing the President how to run the whole country.--Minneapolis Tribune. Berkman to Be Watched. Police plans are being made Id Pittsburg for the surveillance of Alex ander Berkman when he leaves the workhouse May 18, after having served fourteen years for the attempt to murder H. C. Frick. Wherever he goes in any portion of the world his every movement will be watched. It is said he succeeds Herr Most as head of the American anarchists. It is said that Mr. Frick will pay a detective $10,000 a year for a constant watch on Berkman. Not So fasy. "What I want," said the constitu ent, "is a nice easy position." "My friend," answered Senator Sor ghum, "give up that idea. When an easy position is discovered, so many people arc after it that a man has to fight ten hours a day to get' it and twelve hours a day to hold on to it." The Philosophy of Folly. It would be a hard thing to persuade the average workingman that Satur day night comes just as often as Mon day morilng.--Cleveland Leader. The Spring Canker Worm. Through the ravages of the spring, canker worm we sustain severe losses each year. These insects not only at tack fruit trees, but a number of other valuable trees as well. In our orch ards the apple, peach, plum, cherry and quince suffer the most severe ravages. The leaves when first attacked be come perforated with small holes, and these Increase in size as the leaves develop until finally the pulpy part of the leaves is devoured, leaving the skeleton of the leaf, comprising the midrib, veins and stems, giving to the trees an appearance of having been scorched by fire. By noticing you will find that the eggs of this insect are of an oval shape, yellowish with a pearly luster, and are usually deposited in irregular clus ters or masses on twigs or at the base of large branches. These eggs hatch between March and the middle of April. The adult (male) is a brown ish gray moth with a spread of wings of little more than an inch; the front wings are of a pale ash color, much lighter than the former. The female is unlike the male, being wingless. Her body is of a grayish color, and she is more robust than the male. The moths Issue early in the spring from Um chrysalides In which state they iiHU&CH CELEBRITIES. Apple HMSWorm. a. b. worms, c. eggs. d. cocoon, all natural site. pass the winter. Tou can see the male moth flying about the lights In doors during the warm evenings of early spring, which is a sure indica tion of the approach of the pests. The female moths being wingless, must climb to the branches and twigs to deposit their eggs. As soon as the larvae hatch from the eggs they begin to feed ravenously upon the leaves of the tree. I have watched these pests closely and I find that the larvae, when first hatched, are from one- eighth to one-fourth of an inch in length, of a dark olive-green color, with black shining heads, changing slightly with the different moults. When they are not feeding they can be seen suspended from the leaves by fine silken threads of various lengths. The large larvae, after their period of feeding is over, descend to the ground, either by means of the silken threads or by looping their bodies and crawling down the trunks of the trees. When they reach the ground they either pass into the ground or into the rubbish, or under the leaves where they pass Into the chrysalis state, to emerge as adult moths the following spring. These pests have a number of enemies found in certain parasites which feed upon the eggs of the larvae. Birds are helpful agents in destroy ing eggs and they are always welcome guests in my orchard. In combating the canker worm, two methods are employed, both of which when used intelligently afford ample and effec tual protection. The first measures we must take are to prevent the ascent of the wingless moths. This can be done In two ways. First, to entangle her feet so she is held; sec ond, to prevent ascent past a certain point on the trunk of the trees, so that she will die from exhaustion. In the first instance a number of substances of ft sticky nature are employed, com prising such mixtures as printer's ink, pine tar, or a mixture of resin and castor oil, at the rate of three pounds of resin (white) to two pounds of castor oil, melted together. The above mixture must be applied either direct ly to the trees in bands or upon bands of stiff paper. These bands should be put on during the first warm days of spring and renewed as occasion de mands. The second method that can be fol lowed is to use collars of tin, paper, etc., so fastened around the trunks of the trees as to admit of no passage ways at the collar. I have had a great deal of experience In fighting the canker worm and the most effec tual remedy I can find in ridding my orchard of this pest is in using arseni cal poisons by the use of a sprayer. The mixture I use is four ounces of paris green, four pounds of blue vitriol and four pounds of Mme to fifty gal lons of. water. I obtain the very best material in preparing this mixture, as this Is of very great importance, es pecially in procuring paris green. In applying the spray to the trees I keep the mixture thoroughly stirred, and avoid drenching the foliage, giving a fine misty spray until the leaves are well covered with the mixture, which la indicated by slight droppings .from the foliage.--J. S. Underwood, John son Co., 111., in Farmers' Review. Do Not Spray Blossoms. Trees should not be sprayed when In bloom. The spray will kill many of the blossoms and also the bees that may be visiting them. "Hie bees are the agents that cross pollenate the blooms. After the petals have fallen Is time enough to spray, but it should be done then immediately. We hive as yet hardly begun to study our grasses, of which mariy (raw wild in the United States. A lectern of carved wood tls to be placed in the new All Saints' church, Ap- pleton, as a memorial to Amos Adams Lawrence, of Boston, founder of Law rence university, in Appleton, Wis. Ex-Representative H. Kirke Portet, who represented Pittsburg in the last congress, will make a tour of the world to raise $1,500,000 for Baptist missions. This money will be used to endow schools in foreign lands. Rev. P. Bonvin, S. J., the eminent mu sician of Canisius college, Buffalo, has written a new mass, the manuscript of which was submitted to Rome for ap proval, and at once received the Im primatur of the committee of cardinals having the matter in charge. Rev. Dr. William S. Rainsford, widely known as the "'strenuous parson," who has been successful in building up a large institutional church work in New York, has resigned the rectorship of St George's Episcopal church, In Stuy- vesant square, on the ground If ill health. Rev. Robert Harley Is the only Con gregational minister who Is a member of that famous London club, the Athsnaeum, and he is also a F. JR. S. It Is curious to reflect that whereas he haa made a world wide reputation as a mathematician he showed but little ap titude for mathematics as a boy, and was 14 before he really knew his multi* plcatlon tabla BOYS SHOULD NO*-- Laugh at the suggestions mad* by the man over you. Attempt to put a wrong construction on a girl's wordB. Imagine assurance will supply the place of knowledge. Sneer at those who are trying to give you good advice. Refuse to try an experiment because you think it has no merit Refuse to explain honestly why you fall to keep your appointment Think It makes you appear large to belittle the ability of others. Bpeak slightingly of the man who wants to curb your enthusiasm. Write a letter in a way that an expert Is required to decipher It Spend your cash recklessly with the Mm of deceiving those around you. SAVED BABY LYON'S LIFE. Women in Our Hospitals Awful sight From That Dreadful Com plaint, Infantile Eczema--Mother Praises Cuticura Remedies. "Our baby had that dreadful com plaint Infantile Eczema, which afflict ed him for several months, commen cing at the top of his head, and at last covering his whole body. His suffer ings were untold and constant misery, in fact, there was nothing we would not have done to have given him re lief. We finally procured a full aet of the Cuticura Remedies, and in about three or four days he began to show a brighter spirit and really laughed, for the first time in a year. In about ninety days he was fully recovered. Praise for the Cuticura Remedies has always been our greatest pleasure, and there is nothing too good that we could say In their favor, for they cer tainly saved our baby's life, for be was the most awful sight that I ever beheld, prior to the treatment of the Cuticura Remedies. Mrs. Maebelle Lyon, 1826 Appleton Are., Parsons. Kan.. July 18, 1905." rt-iCFr. • Appalling Increases tn the Number Performed Eacfe Operations: ; May :jt - v;»f J : _,-'r "5t : jtojRuby Mushr tisH Goto? through the hospitals In our ! large cities one is surprised to find such & large proportion of the patients lying on those snow-white^ oeds women and girls, who are either awaiting or recovering* from serious operations. Why should this be the case ? Sim ply because they have neglected them selves. Female troubles are certainly on the increase among the women of this country--they creep upon them unawares, but every one of those patients in the hospital beds had plenty of warning in that bearing-down feel ing, pain a fc left or right of the abdomen, nervous exhaustion, pain In the small of the back, dizziness, flatulency, dis- {>lacements of the organs or irregular-ties. All of these symptoms are indi cations of an unhealthy condition of the female organs, and if not heeded the penalty has to be paid by a danger ous operation. When these symptoms manifest themselves, do not drag along until you are obliged to go to the hos pital and submit to an ^ operation-- but remember that Lydia E. Pink* ham's Vegetable Compound has saved thousands of women from surgical operations. When women are troubled with ir regular, suppressed or painful periods, weakness, displacement or ulceration of the organs, that bearing-down feel ing, inflammation, backache, bloating (or flatulency), general debility, indi gestion, and nervous prostration, or are beset with such symptoms as dizziness, lassitude, excitability, irritability, ner vousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, "all-gone** and " want-to-be-left- alone " feelings they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E PtakhWI VtieNtt• „ , . : The following letters eanaot fril ^ ; « bring hope to despairing- WOONHI* ' , y t \ Miss Ruby Mtishrua&f ot fttt ; ' "f Chicago, IncL, writes i ', - \ Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-- " I have been a great soffanr wiffcfmguhuK periods and female trouble, and abont tbrea months ago the doctor, after using the X-Ba£ ; on me, said 1 had an aboess and would havii • to have an operation. My mother ' me to try Lydia E. Pin Wham's Ve_ Compound as a last resort, and it not ca ved me from an operation but made me edl tirely wall." ^ Mrs. Alice Berryhill, of 81S Boyo# Street, Chattanooga, Tezm., writes x ' Dear Mru Pinkham:-- ; 1 "Three years ago life looked dark to mat 1 M ulceration and inflammation of tibtf female organs and was in a serious condition,. " My health was completely broken dowifc . and the doctor told me that tr I was not op» --11 eratod upon I would die within six mon*^? - ^ 3 1 told him I would have no operation would try Lydia R Pinkham s Veget Compound. He tried to Influence me it but I sent for the medicina that and began to use it faithfully. Witt days ! felt relief but was not entirely until I used it for some time. " Your medicine is certainly fine. I havt induced several friends and neighbors totak# it and 1 know more than a aoaen who ImmK female troubles and who to-day are as wtif and strong as I am from utingyour Yflg» table Compound." ^' Lydia E. Pinkhaaft Vegetable Goo* pound at once removes such tronblea. Refuse to buy any other medicine, fo$ you need the best. . • Mrs. Pinkham, daughter-in-law ol ! Lydia E. Pinkham, invites all sick WQ» men to write her for advice. Her ad vie* and medicine have restored thousand^ to health. Address, Lynn, Matt. WIM» Otkan M Anxious. •"Whan eome gixia get a new calendar,1* remarked the Observer of Events and Things, "they s!™sys !csk fsarfully through it to see if, perchance, they have Eut her birthday in red letters."--oaken tateunan. •_ Important to Mothers. y--»fiw» carefully ereiy bottle of CASTORIA, a cafe and care wurtj far infants and chlldr«a, sad sm that it . TTpside Down. -tfc vtm don't believe In Obttagt cation? "No, air. After graudation I nearly •tarred to death practicing law." "But you look prosperous now." "Yes, air. I went into vaudeville and made a fortune balancing a barrel on my' feet while standing on my head."--Detroit Free Press. You always get full value In Lewis' Single Binder straight Bo cigar. dMler or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, HL Your Brains are a good ballast for evea a to have. Mrs. Wln»low'» Boothia* Spray* For children imUiIbk. aoftani^he *um«, ™da«M to- iammstloa,all»fep*in, cures wind wile. Kc a Dottle. Borne peoplt lave themselves almost to death. Bears the Signatore of IS UW For Over SO Years, Ska Kind You Have Always Boagfcfc Overshooting the Hark. Mm. O'Brien---Phwat medicine did Mike find the beat? Mrs. Riley--Divil a know Oi know. He took bo much av it he was sick for tin days after he got well.--Boston Traveler. The man who spends his money as he makes it may argue that a bird in the hand is worth a whole aviary in the hands of his executors. mm ill mui>Btlyww!l- ?fo flt* or nil leniBMiaflat f ITS Sntdir'liueo! Dr K\ine'*Ur®«t Ner»« KMtor. „ HaBI< for FKEK SS.OO trial bottl« and treatlM. DB. H. H. KL1NK. Ltd., 931 Arch street, Philadelphia, Pa. Some very prominent financiers have suf fered quite as much as humbler folk from getting into bad company. Lewis' Single Binder straight So cigar tna/i« of rich, mellow tobacoo. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, I1L we see a man fr CURES INDIGESTION When what you eat makes yott uncomfortable it is doing yon very little good beyond barely keeping you fuiver Digestive tablets are worse than useless, for they will in tjmfi deprive the stomach of all pqprer to digest food. The stomach mult be toned up--strengthened. The herb tonic-laxative, Lane's Family Medicine will do the work quickly and pleas antly. Sold by all dealers at ajc. andjoc. © FREE Oh, Boys! Oh, Boys! Earn thil newly invented BBKICH LOADING GUN or BASK BALL OUT FIT, comlittog of lugs Mitt, Cap aaf flno Base Ball, by MlUas S4 •plMdtd lead pencils at Sc. each. IfadMd aaan boy* we trust you. write forsMMU aaa circular showing' Qua, Indian Swlt^ Target and other premluma. T h i r t e e n t h S t m t L a a d C o m p a a f l i 889 w lth Straat SfW TOME. W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 15, Every now and then eo tired of resting that work. he is When Answering Advertisements Plesse Mention This Paper. AND -- OTHERS. • x >4- ' The better claw of-druggists, everywhere, are men of scientific attainments and high integrity Who devoto their lives to the welfare of their fellow men in supplying the best of remedies ana purest medicinal agents of known value, in accordance with physicians' prescriptions ana Scientific formula. Druggists of the better class manufacture many excellent remedies, out always under original or officinal names and they never sell false brands, or imitation mediciiws. They are the men to deal with when in need of anything in their line, which usually includes all standard remedies and corresponding adjuncts of a first-class pharmacy and the finest ana bedt of toilet articles and preparations and many useful accessories and remedial aPP^iaD®ff* The earning of a fair living, with the satisfaction which arises from a knowledge of the benents conferred upon their patrons and assistance to the medical profession, is usually their grea reward for long years of study and many hours of daily toil. They all ^ know tbat yruP ® Figs is an excellent laxative remedy and that it gives universal satisfaction, and therefore tney are selling many millions of bottles annually to the welkinformed purchasers of toe c 01® remedies, and they always take pleasure in handing out the genuine article bearing ® name of the Company--California Fig Syrup Co.--printed on the front of every pa g • They know that in cases of colds and headaches attended by biliousness and constipation ana Of weakness or torpidity of the liver and bowels, arising from irregular habits, indigestion, o* over-eating, that there is no other remedy bo pleasant, prompt and beneficial in its Byrup of Figs, and they are glad to sell it because it gives universal satisfaction. -TW» • Owing to the excellence of Syrup of Figs, the universal satisfaction which it give Iflamonse demand for it, imitations have been made, tried and condemned, Individual druggists to be found, here and there, who do not maintain the P . P' of the profession and whose greed gets the better of their judgment, and who - to recommend and try to sell the imitations in order to make a larger profit. Such sometimes have the name-" Syrup of Figs»-or "Fig Syrup 'and of some pi atica ^ncern, or fictitious fig syrup company, printed on the package, but they never ha imitations the Company--California Fig Syrup Co.--printed on the front of the package. The lmita M •hould be rejected because they are injurious to the system. In order to sell the lmita s they find it necessary to resort to misrepresentation or deception, and whenever a.dealer passes off on a customer a preparation Under the name of Syrup of^ thn'n&rk&im. does not bear the lull name of the California Fig Syrnp Co. printed on the front of the £<*«•, be ia attempting to deceive and mislead the patron who ha» beep bo nnfortunateaai to enter •tablwhment, Whether it be large or .mall for if the dealer reaorta to and deception in one case he will do eo with other meduanal agente. and in physician.' prescription* and shonld be avoided by everyone who valnes lealAand happwjk Knowing that the great majority of druggists are reliable, we sopply the ^ for our excellent remedy entirely through the druggists, ofwhomit may p Where, in original packages only, at the regular price of fifty cents per bottle,, but.as aoeptioiUB exist it is necessary to inform the Public of t^e ^t8' in.?r?" ̂ In nf th* tamum*-- anv imitation which may be sold to them. If n does * . . _ . California Fig Syrup Co.--printed on the front of every package, do no. hes a^cle^nd to demand the return of your money, and in future go toone^eb^ok^ druggists who will sell you what you wish and the best ol everything in his line at reaaonableprioaa^ . A V'j 1 I ' iir I.' Wl .