A SCHOOL GIRL'S DRESS. fBOUlD NOT THINK TOO MUCH ABOUT THIS VEXATIOUS HATTER. Schoolgirls Too Young and Too Pretty to Bequire Much Ornament in Their Dress--Don't Worry About Your Figure If Your Drees Is Com- £ortable--Health Is the CtrcatBean- tiiler. BY MARGARET E. SANGSTER. "" *•; "Jessie has reached the age when llhe fusses and fidgets about her * j§ress, looks at herself in the glass, ' Worries because her cloak or her hat #r her jacket or something else, is year's style, and altogether be- tiaveu like a vain and silly girl," ex it d Jessie's aunt Marion, who had patience with such frivolous con- 4uct. "If Jessie had been the fourth slighter in & large family," said Mary lizabeth, looking up with a smile. !?she would have learned to be thank- for small favors. Until I had « -«)passed my thirteenth birthday I never '"'.fcnc® went out of the house with a ^>4f»a>tume every bit of which had been made for me. I usually wore Susan's . .last year's frocks and Mildred's last '.-•i jrear's hats, retriinmed and freshened lip, and when I had a jacket it had t>een worn before me by Ethel. Moth er always bought good things that rould last and they lasted until sev- children wo»e them out. I was cured of fussiness before so much as * wee leaf of it cropped up in my character. Generally speaking I had new shoes and that was a comfort" Jessie had listened to both speak ers with an air of serious attention. "I love pretty things," said she, *and I hate ugly one3. Why shall sis ter Louise, who is a young lady, wear • corset that gives her a good figure while I who have no figure at all am obliged to wear a corded waist and button my skirts to it?" By this time I was so stirred up that I was compelled to intrude my Tiews on the girls. "What on earth can you be thinking ®f, Jessie? A school girl's first duty to herself is to wear healthful dress «nd although' corsets are excellent «r.d suitable in their place for grown tip young women, they.are not parts hygienic dress for you. I hope that you'spend a good many hours every day out of doors, and that your director of physical culture superin tends your calisthenics and your Ex ercises in the gymnasium. The gym is &s much an educational place for you as the Latin class or the recitation room where you study and present any other abstruse subject in the cchool. For daily use a school girl needs well-made loosely fitting blouses and skirts, and the weight of her clothing should hang not from the liips but from the shoulder. "Deep breathing is your great ne cessity; your lungs should be filled daily and often with the purest air and your chest have abundant room to expand. As for shoes, you must have common sense lasts broad enough in the sole and low enough in the heel to enable you to walk with ease and grace. A school girl must not wear a tight shoe nor a high heel. You are too young and too pretty to require much ornament in your dress, and there is no sense in your fussing over shirt-waists and simple stocks, hair ribbons and belts. /J- * "Once your wardrobe IS Willed with what is comfortable an4 you have equipped yourself with a golf A Idiu-COat SHU « SNIIOR uttt, /OU ate ready for every occasion." "For receptions and commence ments and Sunday evenings at home?" queried Jessie, her dimples playing hide and seek as she archly glanced at me. "I beg your pardon," I answered. "A girl does need one or two dainty frocks for evening wear and they should preferably be white. The simpler they are the more suitable they are sure to be. A great many tucks, puffs, ruffles and lace inser tions are misplaced in a girl's dress while she is yet in her teens. There may be, of course, s6me unobtrusive decorations, but not very much is needed for she herself sets oft her gown. I like to think, too, that a girl who is growing up takes a little time now and then to bestow attention on the laundress who has to wash and iron the dainty muslins that are so elaborate and so beautifully finished with lace edges and delicate em broideries. "A girl who has once or twice done her own laundry work, washed and ironed a white muslin gown, or a duck skirt, will know by experience that it is far from easy work, and she will be somewhat more careful about fre quently sending it to the tub, than her friend who has had no such per sonal knowledge of the labor in volved." No young girl has £he slightest oc casion to worry about her figure if only she has a dress that fits her comfortably, if she stands up straight throwing back her shoulders and hold ing up her head. The figure will take care of itself. Health is the great beautifier and sensible dress is for young people its best ally. Fortunately for young girls, there Is no question about the length of their skirts. *or everyday wear frocks that reach the ankle, are comfortable and insure ease in walking, and im munity from contact with mud and dirt. For functions such as Jessie re-! ferred to in her naive question about receptions and Sunday evenings, a girl'Sv&est gown while she is in her teens may be instep length. Oirls never wear trailing skirts in these days. An excellent adjunct to clean liness, comfort and health is a whisk broom or a clothes-brush scrupulous ly used every time a dress is taken off. If we would carefully brusli our clothes and shake them out of an open window before hanging them in clos ets or wardrobes, we should rid our selves of the danger of germs that may have lurked in outside dust. Girls should be grateful that theii lot is cast in the twentieth century. An eighteenth century girl, or one born in the early nineteenth, wore a short- waisted frock with the skirt beginning under the arm-pits. It was of cling ing stuff and swept the floor as shs walked. Her shoes were thin slip pers without heels held on by strings crossed over the instep and around the ankles. On her head she often wore a construction of muslin and wire that was half turban and half cap. Her sieeves were short and her dresses half low at the neck, as a rule. Do you not think that you are much better dressed than she was, both for health and beauty? 'Copyright, 1906, by Joseph B. Bowles ) OADA*! WHAT IS A GOOD ROAD? A Discussion by Edward X. Parkin- - .'ion, and Comment by Editor - Country Gentleman. CONQUERING SQUASH BUG. Best Methods of Protecting the Vines from the Ravages of This Pest. • Advice About TeetK. Select the Brush with Care, Consult a Dentist Whenever Certain Symptoms Appear; So many people show little discrim ination in the choice of tooth brushes. It is equally wrong to have them too soft or too hard. This ought to be as certainable by the touch, and they fhould not be used for any length of lime, but at once discarded. Cheap . ̂ rushes with which the market is now hooded are an abomination, for the frairs are sure to come out and lodge feetween the teeth, causing much dis comfort, and, moreover, the bristles are often secured in such a way with Wire that it becomes dislodged, and rckB the gums. Teeth should always closely watched, and if the gums Recede or any decay is perceived, re- •gjourse should be had at once to a #entist, for In dentistry a stitch in time does not save nine but ninety. <hice let decay get any deep hold little can be done, but it is easy to arrest it St the beginning. Parents cannot be too careful in In stilling into their children early the necessity of care and attention to the fteeth. It seems quite a weakness in the young to shirk tooth cleaning, and, aaoreover, mothers • should watch the growth of the second teeth, th§t thete is no overcrowding. In early youth many defects can be cured by proper treatment. Teeth that^hre growing far apart can be brought together easily; it would be a far more difficult matter later on when the gums are harder and the teeth have attained their full growth, but care should begin before the first teeth have been exchanged. It Indicates something wrong if they decay, and It is a state of things ,that would be likely to repeat itself. The writer remembers how as a child an old nurse who had been in the same post for two generations took infinite pains to teach her charges exactly how they should clean their teeth. She always said that pastes and liquid dentifrices were all very well in their way, but that powder should be used once a week at least, and that there was a great art in using si proper brush, which should be small and soft, and not too big for the mouth. It should be not only passed from one side to the other, but up and down, and great care taken to clean the back teeth as well as the front; finally it was essential to wash out the mouth with water, to which a few drops of fragrant dentifrice liquid should be added. After the squashes, cucumbers and melons are well started the squash bug makes its appearance. Those who have a garden know the flat, rusty- black creaturc with its vile odor. In spring or early summer the eggs are laid on the leaves and stems of plants, sometimes singly, but usually in groups of from 12 to 50. They are brownish-yellow and easily found. Fortunately the insect confines its at tention almost entirely to cucurbi- tacaous plants. As the bugs grow they scatter over the leaves, molting five times before they reach maturity. Naturally tho plant is weakened by such attentions. A leaf that has nourished many bugs will turn yellow, and if the pests are numerous enough the whole plant may be killed. It is sometimes claimed; that the bug stings the leaf and kills" it, but it would be more to the point to say that the leaf Is tapped and its life-blood sucked out. In autumn the adult bug crawls under a board, stone or rubbish and remains till spring. The Nympha may be killed by a spray of kerosene emulsion or tobacco .water, as their bodies are soft and unprotected. But the old bugs are proof against this kind of treatment. Theii hard-shelled backs protect them. The most practicable remedy thus far seems to be hand picking, says the Orange Judd Farmer. It should begin with the first bug and be repeated at short intervals. The best time for it is in the morning while it is cool and the bugs sluggish. A convenient way is to drop the bugs into a can containing water with a little kerosene. The bugs will swim in clear water, buC the film of oil on the surface is sure death. Boards or shingles placed on the ground are an assistance in gathering the bugs. They will seek these shelters in mid-after noon and remain dormant till it is warm in the morning, when they can easily be gathered. Crushing the eggs cs the leaves is a preventive measure that should not be neglected. So far as my experience goes, the best way to guard against the bug is to plant the vines among potatoes. It has rarely found them there . I have grown good crops of squashes in this way and found few or none of the in sects, though in other places thoy were numerous. The best roads that have ever been built were those constructed by the Rouiaua tea or fifteen centuries ngo, and which are to-day almost perfect examples of what: roads should be. Their roads had a width of 30 feet, and pavements of heavy stone at the bottom, and often one or more layers of stone bedded in cement to make the road waterproof. The two cuts show the best types of ancient Roman road& It has "been argued that such roads would cost too much to build in these days of high wages. To be sure, the initial cost would be enormously greater, but the final cost would, on the other hand, be much less. Some of the Roman roads are 1,600 years old, and are still in fair con dition. I will say, for the sake of argument, that a modern macadam road will last 20 years without hav ing to be extensively repaired; at the end of that time, however, the road will have to be practically reconstruct ed, at least to the extent of half the original cost. So a new road will be built and paid for every 40 yeavs. Therefore in 1,600. years, the age ot some of the Roman roads, we shall have built and paid for 40 poor roads. Evan granted that a mile of Roman road could cost 40 times as much as a mile of our macadam road, which it doesn't, wouldn't the loss of money from obstructed traffic and inconven ience be sufficient reason for building roads that would last at least 100 years? The old excuse, that the con ditions are so different and our cli mate so hard on roads, does not seem to have much weight. The truth Is, we build our roads In such a hurry, and oftentimes with so little judgment on the part of the en gineers, that the wonder is, not that HAY DOORS IN BARN. Placing Tracks for Them on an In cline Will Facilitate Open ing Them. There has been great trouble In find ing a suitable method of hanging doors for unloading hay with fork or slings from the outside of building. The GOOD HAT BARN DOOR, method described by my diagram we thiuk the very best. Place your track on an incline with the roof, and put on rollers on the doors at the same in cline. They will open very easily, says Rural New Yorker, and 6hut hard, but they can easily be managed from inside. FROM FOREIGN LANDS. One Can Ytot Great Deal of Money In- I to Tiny Turn-Overs of quisite Make. ft Is strange what a little extra thrill mt delight one has in possessing a 4ainty article of wearing apparel that S w e d e n , t f r e t h i r d , o r d r a w n - work, from Mexico. But any of them could be imitated by a skilful needle woman. Stand Well. The woman who stands well must learn to hold her shoulders back and level; she must acquire the art of rest ing upon the balls of the feet; shs must learn that the chin should be held up and the head a little back; and that the hands should be main tained in some easy, conventional atti tude. When she has learned these things she can stand well. But to be seated well Is another matter. ; THREE EXQUISITE XL H.\ -OVERS. ' fpune from a long, long distance, wtttes A lady in the Ohio Farmer. The upper one of these three col lars shown in the cut came from Ar- SSenla. It is made of the tiny thread fjheels for which Armenians are so 4gplebrated. The second, or Hardanger, is iam i ' , ' . For Blackheads. _ The complexion brush used mr> night with warm water and castfie soap will keep the complexion free from blackhead3. Twice a week apply a saturate solution of sulphate of magnesia. Be careful of the diet, eat ing plenty of fre3h fruit*, drinking three pints of water a day. Bride's Luncheon. The uBual hour for a luncheon is half after one o'ciock. A bride giving a luncheon for her bridesmaids may , invite other friends* but It is not usaa? to da so. • , - r - v . ' ' ' 1 . * ' MUZZLE FOR CORN PLOWING Necessary Protection When Cultivat ing the Growing Crop. This wire muzzle is very easy to make and is much better than the nail muzzle. For c u l t i v a t i n g c o r n or drilling wheat in corn muzzling iB always neces sary, says a cor respondent of the Farm and Qorne, and I have made muzzles out of smooth wire, like cut, which have proved first class. They do not scratch the moss of the horses or trouble their breathing as do cloth bags, etc. IN CONSTANT AGONY. A West Virginian's Awful Distress , Through Kidney Troubles. W. L. Jackson, merchant, of Park- ersburg, W. Va., says: "Driving about i n b a d w e a t h e r brought kidnsv trou= bles on me, $nd I s u f f e r e d t w e n t y years with sharp, cramping pains in the back and urinary disorders. I often had to get up a doz en times at night to urinate. Retention set in, and I was obliged to use the catheter. I took to my bed, and the doctors falling to help, began using Doan's Kidney Pills. The urine soon came freely again, and the pain grad ually disappeared. I have been cured eight years, and though over 70, am as active as a boy." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. ALMOST A CATASTROPHE. Exuberanoe of Love Spasmodically Manifested Results in tiflcation. 4e JOTTINGS. Try to harrow as soon after plow ing as possible. Two good stalks of com la a hill is the best number. An even stand of three stalks of corn to the hill is desirable and will give better results than more or less. Most farmers take their chances on tbe ,germinability of seed. This fact is the cause of much loss every year. The quickest way to start sprouts of Irish potatoes is to cut them in small pieces, lay in fiats, cover with Band, and place them in a light, warm place Wny spend much time in trying to -make the bean poles set firmly? Just tie them together at the top in groups of four aad so form pyramid-shaped stakes. Poor Seed Corn. If late, poor seed corn is planted only an uneven stand may be expected, with lots of barren or unfilled stalks. Select ears which are even and well filled at both ends, then shell and run the grain through a fanning mill wiTh a strong blast to blow out the s m a l l , l i g h t s e e d . s i r The Dairy-Bred Steer. It has been demonstrated time and again that dairy bred steers, when properly cared for, make as many pounds cf beef from a given number of pounds of food as do beef steens. Only they don't put on as large a per centage of porterhouse steak and rib faasis TYPES OF OLD ROMAN ROAD. they dont last long, but that they last as long as they do. Macadam, who was one of the best modern road-builders, constructed his roads on the idea that when any road bed is thoroughly underdrained, so as to remain permanently hard, crushed stone alone may be used, the pave ment of Roman practice becoming un necessary. Please note--thoroughly underdrained, and crushed stone may be used. The point is, how many macadam roadbeds are thoroughly un derdrained, so that they remain per manently hard? I feel safe In say* ing not one in ten; in fact, the roads built outside of cities and suburbs are not, as a rule, underdrained in any way. In France, which has perhaps the finest roads in the world, the roads are divided into sections, and one or two men are put in charge of a sec tion to keep it In perfect repair. They are required to go over the road every day, and in every section there is a toolhouse, with a quantity of stone ready for repair work al ways on hand. The result Is the cost of rnaintenance is very low and the roads last for years. Edward K. Parkinson. In commenting upon the above ar gument by Mr. Parkinson, the editor of the Country Gentleman says: Mr. Parkinson has broached a sub ject that certainly deserves most earnest consideration. If a macadam road becomes rutted and gutted the first winter, it may be questioned whether it is very much better in the long run than the mud-bank it re placed--that is, it will shortly revert to a condition about as bad. On tbe other hand, the weight of expert opinion seems at present to be against the attempt to build Ro man roads in this country. Not only is the expense excessively great, but such solidity is unnecessary, with or dinary care in draining. Thus Mr. W. P. Judson, in his book on roads and pavements, says that the Roman roads "were remarkable fo»r theii strength and durability, and for lit tle else. If anyone were so unwise as to attempt to build similar roads now, the cost would be from four to eight times the present cost of our most expensive modern pavements, which are, in every way, better for modern uses, and upon which the cities of the United States are esti mated to have. expended half a bil lion of dollars." Similarly the late Prof. Shaler de clares that the Romans "built with an utter disregard as to the relations of strength and strain." He adds: "In the construction of the Roman road we note a crude perception of the solidity which stone foundations af ford, and also, in the cement layer, a recognition of the importance of keeping the road dry; beyond these half-formed conceptions there is, in these structures, no trace of engineer ing skill. . . . The sections of the Roman roads indicate that the con struction was often three feet or more in thickness even in places where ex perience should have quickly told, as it has taught moderns, that six or eight inches of stone would have served the purpose. In a singularly clumsy way they combined layers of different substances, one placed above another, usually with a block pave ment on top, in such conditions that no beneficial effect whatever could have been gained from such accumula tion. In general these roads, meas ured in the cost of labor in this coun try, must have cost from $30,000 to $100,000 a mile. It is not too much to say that at least three-fourths ^of the expenditure was really wasted." She was seated in the gloaming, a happy smile on her pretty, pensive face, when her elderly aunt entered. Then, as she looked upon the kind old face, a feeling rushed upon her that she must share her wonderful news with somebody--she must let someone into the secret which till then had een the sole possession of herself and arold. She sprang up and flung hei arms about her aunt's neck. "Oh, auntie," she cried impulsively, "you do love me, don't you? Kiss me, auntie, and tell me you do--kiss me!" But only an alarming gurgle came from the old lady for a moment Then she said, gasping Indignantly: "Kiss you. if you ain't careful I'll shake the life out of you. You very nearly made me swallow my teeth!" TORTURED WITH ECZEMA. Tremendous Itching Over Whole Body --Scratched Until Bled--Wonder- • -• ful Cure by Cuticura. "Last year I suffered with a tremendous itching on my back, which grew worse and worse, until it spread over tne whole body, and only my face and hands were free. For four months or so I suffered torments, and 1 had to scratch, scratch, scratch, until I bled. At night when 1 went to bed things got worse, and I had at times to get up and ecrdftch my body all over, until I was as sore as could be, and until I suffered excruciating pains. They told me that I was suffering from eczema. Then I made up my mind that I would use the Cuticura Remedies. 1 used them ac cording to instructions, and very soon in deed I was greatly relieved. I continued until well, and now I am ready to recom mend the Cuticura Remedies to any one. Mrs. Mary Metzger, Sweetwater. Okla_ June 28, 1905." NUGGETS OF KNOWLEDGE. There are ladies' smoking cars on English railways. Alligator, a popular native dish In India, tastes like veal. Yhe wood used in the best pianos has been seasoned 40 years. Those who reach 30 in good health are likely, statistics show, to last to 73. Over 200,000 pounds of humsn hair, valued at $500,000, is sold annually In Paris. Tie majority of criminals can draw and paint. That is why artists can rarely get credit. In many parts of Switzerland the government buries the dead, supplying coffins and undertaker free of cost. A Matter of Courtesy, Merely. Mr. Nervey--The object of my call upon you this evening, Mr. Goldrox-- Mr. Goldrox (sternly)--Yes, you've come to tell me that you wish to marry my daughter and I want to say right here and now-- "Pardon me. I come to tell you that I am epfng to marry yOur daugh ter. I convinced her and her mother that it was no more than fair to put you wise."--Philadelphia Press. •TATS or OBIO, CITT or TOLXDO, r ,1 LUCAS COUNTY. F "• FrtAsrc J. CniNKY makes oath that be !• teniae partner of tlie Arm of F. J. CHENBY & Co.. doing fcusluess In tbe City of Toledo. County and State Bfurcenld, and thiit i*ald firm win pay the sum of ONE m.'VDKED DOLLAHS for each and every case of CATARRH that cannot ba cured by tbe use of BALL'S CATABBH CVBX. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subaortbed In my pret ence, tblafiUi day of December, A. I). 1M6. .--•--, A. W. GLEASON, } 8KAL F NOTARY PUBLIC. Haifa Catarrh Cure tc taken internally and acta directly on tbe Mood and mucoua surface* of tlie •yetem. Send for testimonial*, free. F. J. CHENEY « CO., Toledo,O. Sold by al". DrtJfreistd. 75c. lak* Hail'a Faiuli/ Pint for conatlpatlon. Have Straight Row*. Don't be satisfied with crooked rows. Nothing adde to the appearance of a field more than straight rows, be tides they a^e QMjre eultiva&sA Renewing Youthful Joys. "Jigley says he enjoys watching a game of baseball now Just as much as he did when he was a boy." "Yes; .clever scheme of Jigley's." "What's that?" "WhY, he always carries Into the grandstand a piece of board with a knot hole In it, and he peeps at the gacae through that." -- Philadelphia Prsts. Low Bates to California. To accommodate summer tourists to Cal ifornia the Union Pacific has authorized the very law rate of one fare plus |2.00 lor the round trip to either San Francisco or Los Angeles. Tickets on sale June 25th ta July 7th. with final return limit Septem ber 15th, 1906. Aleo other low rates to California points during the summer, In quire of W. G. Neimyer, G. A., 120 Jsck- son Boulevard, Chicago, 111. Bum Restaurant. "Paw, what's that orchestra playing here for?" "Money, Tommy. They couldn't pos sibly be playing for the kind of meal they would get here."--Chicago Tri bune. . Boston, Mass. and Return--Low Bates via Nickel Plate Road May 31st to June 9th. Long return limit and stop-over privilege at Chautauqua I-ake, N. Y., Niagara Falls and New i'ork City. Full information of local Agent or address J. Y. Calahan, Gen. Aflt^ 113 Adams St., Chicago, 111. Perplexing. "Vot a kveer langviches!" exclaimed the foreigner, who was trying to learn the American tongue. "You say de man is 'all in' ven you mean he is all owdtl"--Chicago Tribune. Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c. Many smokers prefer them to 10c cigars. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, OL Hot air Is always succeeded tojr a eeld wave. SIGNALS FOR BRIDAL PARIS Which Convey Commands and der Sentiments in Public ' Places. '•:* Brtde to Gromn. One short jerk of Stag io&kl&g at that girl! : One long jerk of coat--Oh, see the pretty hats! One long hug--You look perfectly lovely to-day. One long hand squefeze--Honey, what makes you look so cross? One short hand squeeze--Some one's coming! Groom to Bride. One short jerk of sleeve--Stop look ing at that man! One long jerk of sleeve--Come on. You don't want to see tbe hats. One long hug--You look perfectly lovely to-day. One long hand squeeze--Honey, you ain't mad, are you? One short hand squeeze--Don't be a goose! Three sharp taps oh wrist--Take care, woman, take care! I will be master in ray own house!--Puck. "The American Medical Special;" The Lake Shore & Michigan South ern Ry., in connection with the N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. and Boston & Albany R. R., has provided a special train for the exclusive use of delegates and their families and friends who will attend the meeting Of the American Medical Association at Boston, June 5 to 8, 1906. The train will leave the La Salle Street station, Chicago, at 10:30 a. m. Sunday, June 3, running direct to Boston on fast schedule, ar riving there at 2 p. m. Monday, June 4. The rate for this occasion is one fare plus $1.00, good leaving Chicago May 31 to June 9. inclusive. Return limit June 18. Extension of final may be secured to leave Boston not later than July 16. , Laconic. •••"'.• ' She wrote: > '<«•:< "Circumstances over which 1 have no control compel me to reject your Otter of marriage. Yours, etc." He wired: "What circumstances? Reply pre paid." She wired: "Yours. Collect"--Cleveland Leader. Full of Wages. Yeast--At a meeting in Somerset, England, it was stated that, although Illegal, the custom still prevails ol giving cider in lieu of wages. Crimsonbeak--If it's hard enough, 1 suppose men are often seen staggering home full of wages.--Yonkers States- man. ______ When you see a man reading "Ho# to Make Easy Money In Wall Street," it's time to collect that quarter he owes you.--Puck. Many a fellow has made his mark by making a mark of some other fel low. SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relievo Dis tress from Dyspepsia, In digestion aad Too Hearty Eating. A perfect rcm-i edy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Ta3te[. la tlio Mouth, Coated1 Tongue, Pain In the Side, TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Borrete. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE, Genuine Must Bea^ Fac-Simile Signaturf^ . REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. CARTER'S CARTERS IVER PILL8. Boston and Return ONE DIFFERENTIAL FARE PLUS $1.00 May 31st to Via CANADIAN PACIFIC RY., passing, through Detroit, Toronto, Ottawa and Mon treal, and affording an opportunity to visit Quebec. Trains leave Wabash Railroad Station, Chicago, at 3:30 and 10:32 P. M., leave Union Depot. Detroit, at 12:30 Noon and 12:15 night. For information and literature, write A. C. SHAW, GwnlA|Mt, Cmrii»e Pacific Railway, Ckicage. PAH Al A A We list your farmorbusi- V* IIK AI _ llll ness and furnish you name • and address of every pur chaser on our books for properties in your locality PROSPECTIVE BUYERS make known your want*. We furnish lis! of prop erties and owners; free. Our plan brings Buyer and Seller directly together; saves commissions. LARGE LIST OF Bl VERS; need more farms. GREAT CENTRAL REALTY CO. 1222 Missouri Trust Building, St. Louie* A WOMAjfS ORDEAL DREADS DOCTOR'S QUESTI0RS Thousands Write to lira. Ptaldiam, Lynn, Meee., and Receive Valuable Adflee Absolntai? Confidential and Fm There can be no murkier i Ible orcfeal to a delicate, sensitive,'defined woman than to be obliged to answer certain questions in regard to her private ills, even when those questions are askea by her family physician, and many Mrs. TC WiSfadsen .f-^ continue to suffer rather than srtbmii to examinations which so many physi cians propose in order to intelligently treat the disease; and this is the rea son -why so many physicians fail to cure female disease. This is also the reason why thousands upon thousands of women are corre sponding with Mrs Pinkham, daughter- in-law of Lvdia E. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. To her they can confide every detail of their illness, and from her great knowledge, obtained from years of experience in treating female ills, Mrs. Pinkham can advise sick women more wisely than the local physician. Bead how Mrs. Pinkham helped Mrs.T. C.Willadsen of Manning,la. She writes; Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " I can truly say that you have saved mf life, and I cannot express my gratitude Jj& words. Before I wrote to you telling you how I felt, I had doctored for over two years steady, and spent lots of money in medicines besides, but it all failed to do me any good. I had female trouble and would daily have faint ing spells, backache, bearing-down pains, and my monthly periods were very irregular and finally ceased. I wrote to you for your ad vice and received a letter full of instructions iust what to do. and aljo commenced to take jydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I have been restored to perfect health. Had it not been for you I would have bean in my grave to-day." Mountains of proof establish the fact that no medicine in the world equals Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound for restoring women's healtn. W. L. DOUGLAS * 3 M &•3-^ 8HOES8& W. L. Douglas 94.00 Gilt Edge Lin* cannot be equalled at any price. juuriufi ; $10,000 ox St Bracfctoa, Mm., u4 Mow m St l care wMta which evary palrof *tioes Um wfcy W. L. DMKIM SJ.I «•»*£?!•'SMS upon bavl&1 las shoes. Take no substitute. sjanuln* without his name and price stamped OA bottom. Fait Color tyelett used ; thiy will mot mar fouagk Write for Illustrated Catalog. . W. L. DOUG LAS, Brockton, F A R M L A N D S I have some of the best farms in Soufc Dakota for sale. They are located in Aurora County in the south east part of State right in corn belt and artesian basin. Suitable for mixed farming, stock raisins and dairying. Countiy settled with good people and well supplied with schools and churches. W'ritrf B. H. SCLLIVAN, PLANKINTON, 8. D. Travel Right to Oklahoma • The Missouri, Kansas & Texas R'y has recently inaugurated addi tional daily train for Oklahoma City, Guthrie, Cleveland, Bartlesville, Coffeyville, etc. With this added service the M. K. & T. R'y is the logical line between St. Louis and Kansas City and all principal poi in Oklahoma. Change of cars ia da* ot th« (restart J inconveniences of travel. You don't ' J bave to change cars if you travel via the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway. Through trains »over its own rails} run between St. Louis and Kansas City and Oklahoma City, Dallas, Ft. Worth, San Antonio and Galveston. All through trains have Chair Cars and Pullman SUwiwra. ,; ^ • How to Go When you have occasion to travel, use tbe tame discrimination in buying a ticket that you would in buying anything else. Assure yourself ia advance of what you may expect in the way of comfort and convenience ea route. If there is any information you want about a prospective trip, write m I will gladly give you the information. Addrei W. S. ST. GEORGE- ^ General Passenger Agent, M. St. Louts, Missouri . , UBO. W. 8MITU. 316 Varqueua Bld|, Ctucago, 111. PATENTS Send for •• I uvea* tor' a P rimer' * and "Patau on I'HlioM. ** K s t a b i . s h e d 1 6 6 4 . MIL" tt. ». KV KNSitO.. PCMCIAMC *w uiu St. .wuUBfiM, d. c. r BnOlwlVO Braaskc* at Chicago. Cleveland. Detroit. Canadian Northwest Lands IN THE HICU PRAIR1K WHEAT COUNTRY Sasketckewan and Alberta Prorweai. I!uv these lands whilt prices are reasonable. 1HW and Small Tracts. We offer attractive U»lim>MI on easy terms. Correspondence solicits*; &J&13A AND SASKATCHEWAN IJtSft) Cft A. Ktrrr.Nctt. Kepr*s«ataUT«k Boom 8B-2K Dearborn Street. CHICAGO, IUU PATENTS for PROFIT mast fully protect sn invention. Booklet and Desk Calendar FRKE. Highest reference*. Communication* confidential. Established IJXL Maaon. fesvick * Lawrence, Washington, S. ft PATENTS FITZVaKKALU A CO.. LT»» SI W« At It afflicted with I na»aaaa'» Fua im «jea, UM I * A. N. X.--A (1006-418) 919% ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE < A CwtalM Car* ftr Tbvtf, IM, AekUf FML PQ NOT ACCEPT A 8UBSTITUTK.