1 J i l' ( ill 4 Pointed Paragrpns. '. r It is no use praying fof the salva tion of your grocer when he is sitting up nights thinking about your old biiis. - ; - ' ' 5 It is folly, though often appropriate to announce x the verse, ".Nothing in my hand I bring," just before the offering. The time will come when our sins themselves will be even more eloquent than our excuses for them. The Ranchwomarr. The success of Mrs. W. N. Sherman and the beauty of her hospitable home, the famous Minnewawa ranch in Cali fornia, should be an incentive to every woman to hold fast to the home in stinct while winning her way in the business world. In the face of much opposition and caustic comment Mrs. Sherman, soon after leaving an east ern college, bought a large tract of un improved land, near Fresno, deter mined by her own efforts to develop its.possibilities. ifer success is indicated by the fact that Minnewawa is valued at over five times the original investment. During the busiest season there are over 400 people at work on the ranch and in the cannery. Since discovering that by personal oversight of the. packing her grapes brought from $100 to $500 more per carload, than when left to the su pervision of others, Mrs. Sherman very sagely "concluded that a woman can be a real helper, even though she leave the care of the household to some one else. Mrs. Sherman has not confined her efforts to raisin growing alone, but has a national reputation as a stock raiser and fruit grower. Pil grim. His Dream. What might be termed "a mean trick" was played on a Kansas City young man at the race track the other day. One night, he had a dream In which he saw himself wearing a red carnation and playing the racss. In the dream he was winning big rolls of money. Yesterday morning he told one of his friends about the dream andaid he intended to wear a red carnation and play the races. In the meantime his friend told half a dozen of the young man's acquaintances about the dream, and they all wore red carnations to Elm Ridge. Before the first race one of the conspirators met- the young man who had had the ' dream. - ' "Say, Joe," he said, "I had a dream last night that that if I wore a red car nation out here to-day I'd win. Now I'm not superstitious " The young man swallowed the bait. "You did?" he said in amazement. "Well, Tom, we'll clean these book makers up." As they started for the betting ring five other carnations came in sight. "Siy, Joe," yelled their wearers in chorus, "I had asiream " But the young man nad fled into the crowd. Kansas City Times. Enterprising Young Yankee. - ' A Kittery, Me., woman offers the fol owing as an example of twentieth cen tury enterprise: "A few days ago I saw a youngster digging dandelions from my lawn. He worked away for an hour or so without paying heed to anyone and when the basket was full went to my pump and washed them. .When the cleansing process was over he calmly stepped to my floor and knocked. When I answered . the call he asked he if I wanted to buy he lot at 20 cents a peck." MAYHAP 'TIS TRUE. "I have noticed," says, the Hon. Alex Appleby, "that the brightness of the child, in cases where the ad mirer is a man, frequently depends upor the attractiveness of the moth er." Kansas City Timefcs. Deeds creeds. are the only dependable So. 38. : HONEST PHYSICIAN. Works With Himself First. It is a mistake to assume that phy sicians are always skeptical as to the curative properties of anything else than drugs. Indeed, the best . doctors are those who seek to heal with as little tise of lrugs as possible, and by the use of correct food and drink. A physician writes from. Calif, to tell how he made a well man "of himself with nature's remedy: "Before I came from Europe, where I was born." he says, "it was my cus tom to take coffee with milk (cafe an lait) with my morning meal, a small cup (cafe noir) after my dinner and two or three additional small cups at my club during the evening. "In time nervous symptoms devel oped, with pains in the cardiac region, and accompanied "y great depression of spirits, despondency in brief, 'the blues!' I at first tried medicines, but got.no relief, and at last realized that all my troubles were caused by coffee. I thereupon quit its use forthwith, sub stituting English Breakfast Tea. "The tea seemed to help meat first, but in tima the old distressing symp toms returned, and I quit It also, and tried to use milk for my table bever age. This I was compelled, however, to abandon speedily, for whi-e It re lieved the nervousne-s somewhat it brought on constipation. Then by a happy inspiration I was led to try the Posfum Food Coffee. This was some months ago, and I still use it. I am no logger nervous, nor do suffer from theWiins about the heart while my blue';have left me and life is bright to me We more. I know that leaving off coffee and. using Postum healed me, and I make it a rule to advise my pa tents to use it" -Name given by Pos jtom Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason- - soummN farm TOPICS OF INTEREST TO THE PLANTER. STOCKMAN AND TRUCK GROWER. Saving; jPoa-Vine Hay. The various iiethods of saving pea vine hay with the least labor and greatest valu demands the best thought of every farmer. Much labor and energy often go to waste by fol lowing the usuil plan to cut when the first pods begi i to ripen and let them lie and tedder till cured, or otherwise put in cocks or hang up on posts till ready for the barn,. If rain and dew falls, shattering leaves and stems and taking the aroma and green cast out of the vines, never mind that; toil on; they are well worth the cost, even if the half-grown pods are moldy, minus the leaves at feeding time. But the thought of th,p enormous labor expend ed or paid f or ju saving a green pea crop is by no means thrilling or encourag ing. It suggests and clamors for bet ter method;. The, very nature of the plant forbids the: idea' of . saving the succulent vines and green, half grown pods for hay except through a dry -kiln. My experience with others proves that there is a cheaper way of saving and increasing the value of the pea crop by letting all the pods ripen fully on the vines before cutting. It is evident that tin whole crop of ripe pods (say, five, eight or ten bushels per acre), cut and saved with the dry vines even, after frost gives more good feed than the vines and half grown, moldy pods. For several years I have been feeding the dry vines with all the dry pods, tliereon. It is the most sub stantial roughage I have ever had. It costs less to cut and put in the barn than any. I have ever saved. I plant all my oat land in peas in rows, and work them with a view of cutting af ter every pod is fully ripe and stems dry, even after frost. I then cut some fine morning till noon and haul direct to barn in evening. A sheet or tight wagen body will save all the shattered peas, and in rainy days I thresh out seed from this store of vines. The dry vines are interwoven with long, dry pods, so rich and nutritious that you wonder why you had not with com placency watched the showers and heavy dews ripen the crop into greater value to be quickly and safely har vested, instead of worrying when the first pods ripen. Our best farmers who realize the feeding value of dry vines and ripe peas grown in the corn fields, and the quick and cheap manner of saving the same, feed their horses and mules al most entirely on this foraga and sell their surplus corn to the more improvi dent. They usually plant corn in four to five foot rows, and at the proper time plant peas, liberally in the .middle of the corn rows, and after the corn is cut and shocked or otherwise gathered run the mower between the corn rows. In order to do this take an old mower and cut about two fee off the cutter bar and shorten all up so it will run between the rows without cutting the cornstalk: or new mower, cutting three feet can be bought that will run be tween the corn rows, thereby saving the dry peas and vines both for seed and forage after leaving portions of the field for pasture if desired. A short mower that will run between corn rows cutting vines and grass is one of the most valuable farm implements. M. F. B., in Southern Cultivator Killing: Insects. A subscriber at McLauren, Miss., asks what should be done about the plant lice, the aphids, that get ipon and multiply to a ruinous degree on many cultivated plants, cucumbers, melons, etc. Professor Smith, in his Economic En tomology, says: "As a general insecticide, nothing is better than kerosene emulsion, which, when diluted ten times with water, kills all the young forms and adults of the green species. ' "It has been found by experiment that the black or brown species are much more difficult to destroy, and one part of emulsion in six or eight parts of water is more likely to be effective. "Fish oil soap does the work at the rate of one pound in six gallons of water; or, as against the brown spe cies, one pound to four gallons of water. "Thoroughness of application is al ways essential. It must be remem bered that these poisons act by clog ging the spiracles the openings by which the breathing is done or by en tering into the body through them. "Unless the application is thorough, the insects may be weakened but not killed, or,' if rendered helpless for a time, they may recover, and a second dose becomes necessary, where one dose, more thoroughly applied, would have been sufficient.' "Where it is not advisable to apply either of the materials just mentioned, tobacco can be employed with good prospects of success, either as a decoc tion or as a very finely ground pow der." - A great idea about all this annoyance with plant lice, is that they ought to be fought "just as soon as they are no ticed; the longer the delay the weaker Reflections of a Bachelor. A man wishes for sons, but he gets his happiness out of daughters. . All a m-n has to hive never to be come a great man is a sense of hu mor. Infant mortality is reported to be greater in "Prussia than in any other country except Russia. The deaths the first year are 6 to 7 per cent, in Sweden, 15 in France and 23.6 in Prussia. ' - . NOTES the planets become and the greater the thoroughness required to reach all the specimens." Home and Farm. Winter Oats. The summer seasons are fraught with uncertainties till farmers are look ing more and more to winter crops and the summer crops, requiring but a short growing season. This leads to the planting of early maturing varieties of cotton, corn and cowpeas and other staple crops. Where' these have been planted here this year a fair crop has already been made. Oats are becoming one of the leading feed crops one of the most profitable in Georgia, for after oats a good crop of cowpea hay can be made or a crop of late cotton. By, growing oats a cover crop is kept on the land all winter, pre venting washing and destruction by rains, and if cowpeas are grown the land undergoes a continual process of improvement. Numerous experiments have been made with different methods of planting, and it seems as if we are to see a general idea prevailing that the ridge drill method is best. It is argued that it prevents winter killing. But all that is necessary to secure a good stand throughout the winter is to prepare the land thoroughly, put the oats in the ground early enough and. you will succeed nine years in ten, and if you want any more success than that try something else besides farm ing. Rhea Hayne, of Georgia, in Home and Farm. How to Keep Hosts Healthy. Below we give three good cholera prescriptions that our readers would do well to cut out and preserve. Choose one which you will have prepared to give your hogs, say, every sixty days, and at any time they seem unwell. (1) . Wood charcoal, 1 lb. sulphur, 1 lb.: sodium chloride, 2 lbs.; sodium bi carbonate, 2 lbs.; sodium hypohulphite, 2 lbs.; sodium sulphate, 1 lb.; antimony sulphid.llb. Pulverize thoroughly, mix well, and give one tablespoonful to each 200 lbs. of live weight of hogs treated, one a day for several days. (2) . Sulphur, 2 lbs.; copperas, 2 lbs.; madder, 2 lbs.; black antimony, lb.; saltpetre. lb.; arsenic, 2 oz. Mix with twelve gallons of water and give one pint to each hog. This will be sufficient to dose 100 hogs. (3) . Salt. 4 lbs.; black antimony, 1 lb.; copperas, 1 lb.;' sulphur, 1 lb.; salt petre, 4 lb.; wood ashes, i peck. Pulverize and mix thoroughly, mois ten and put enough in a trough to pre vent waste, and put where hogs can have access fo it at ail-times. If dis posed to have cholera they will eat it very freely; at other times they will eat less or perhaps none at all. Silos 3fow is the Tim to Bnild. This is a most favorable season for the building of silos upon the farm, and it should be done wherever a con siderable amount of stock is carried or green crops raised. Nothing has ever been invented that is so useful for the saving of green food for the feeding of stock as the silo, in fact, the means of preserving ensilage is of the greatest practical interest to every farmer, stock breeder and dairyman in the country, and is of commanding impor tance to the. agricultural world. This process of preserving vegetation is far more economical than the saving of hay or the growing of corn. The silo furnishes the means of laying by an abundance of forage for season of drought. More cattle can be support eded from a given acreage of land' by the use of ensilage than in any other way, and the quantity of manure can be' proportionately increased. The word ensilage originally meant the act of compressing into pits, trenches or compartments, which are called silos. It now means the materials com pressed. These silos may be built above ground "or in part below and in part above the ground. In the South ern States it is the custom to build them wholly above ground. Southern Farm Magazine, ...... Uaior-Back Fork. It is a fact, that can be proved by innumerable witnesses, that tfie flesh of a young razor-back pig which has been fattened for a few weeks in a pen, possesses a flavor that cannot be equalled by any Northern grown pork. We believe that if it could once be introduced to the notice of epicures, etc., in Northern markets, that the sup ply would not' equal the demand at prices that would pay a good profit. Florida Agriculturist. Fertilizer For the Garden. In gardens well manured in other re spects, a lack of potash may make them less productive than their condi tion otherwise will warrant. Wood ashes mixed with soil aid materially in keeping it moist. Gardens often dry up ;by an excessive application of coarse stable manure, and something else is often needed to counteract this effect. For the Curious. Miss Lona Dare, an Indiana school girl, makes $50 out of each acre of a small Indiana farm. j . . The: University of Chicago closed the year business with a balance of $24 in the cash box. It is expected that within a year wireless telegraph communication will be established between New Zealand and Australia. IN THE LINE G ASTRO N 0 M 1 CA L. Hot Ice Cream a New Dainty for the Fair Sex. "Have you-heard of the hewhot ice cream?" asked the woman wbo seems to know of all the new things almost before they come into existence. " "It sounds piquant," said her com panion, dryly. "Well, it is, and something more. It is served in one of the ea-and-chatter rooms, where you go after a shopping tour to pile all bundles on a couch and sit in a bow window and tell your companion all the things that you always thought that you would never tell to any one.. There are iron lanterns, instead of electric globes, and the maids wear linen frpcks and don't slam things down be fore you." "And the hot ice cream?" "I'm coming to that. It is really a frozen pudding. It is made of vanilla ice cream with boiled rice and ginger mixed with it and all frozen together. It hails, from the Chinese quarter of San Francisco, and it tastes good and doesn't give one indigestion, as the cold-all-the-way-through ice cream is apt to." "Do you know what it sounds like to me? The Frenchman's description of the Irishman's whisky . punch. He eaid it was called 'punc,' but it ought to have been called a 'contradiction,' because he put in whisky to make it "strong and water to make it weak, lemon ..to make it sour and sugar to make it sweet, and then he said, Here's to you!' and drank it himself!" Montreal Herald. A New Field. "Ah!" exclaimed the Senior Member of the Law Firm of Sharke & Sharke, "Things are coming our Way! Here's a . brand new and wonderfully lucra tive Field for Litigation opening up for Us." "What is it?" asked the Junior Part ner with great Excitement. "Scientists have discovered that the Vermiform Appendix is a highly nec essary Portion of the Human Body, after All. Now, we have only to seek out those Persons who have had their Appendices taken out on the Doctor's Representation of Superfluity and start a long Series of profitable Dam age Suits." Baltimore American. Is It Kight ? Is it right for you to Jose $4.20 that a' dealer may make 50 cents more by selling fourteen gallons oE ready-for-use paint, at $1.50 per gallon, than our agent wili make by selling you eight gallons o L. & M., and sis gallons of linseed oil, which make four teen gallons of a better paint, at ?1.20 per gallon? Is it right? .Sold everywhere and by, Longman & Martinez, ev. York. - Paint Makers for lvifty Years. Coal costs most in South Africa; least in China. DISFIGURED BY ECZEMA Woiiderf ul Chans: 'n a Night In a Month Face Was Clear as Ever Another Cure hy Cutlcvu. "i had eczema on the face for live months, during which 'time i was in the tuire of physicians. My face was so dis Jigured 1 could not go out, and it was going from bad to worse. A friend recommended. (Jutieuva. The first night after 1 washed my face with L'uticura Soap and used Cu tieura Ointment and .Resolvent 1 changed wonderfully. From that day 1 was able to go out, and in a month the treatment had removed all scales and scabs, and my face was as clear as ever. (Signed) T. J. Soth, 317 Stagg Street, Brooklyn, N. Y." For the Housewife. In housekeeping liberality is often the best economy, particularly at .the beginning of winter, when the wise expenditure of considerable sum on the season's food supply may mean the saving of many a dollar. Some practical advice in this direction is given by Isabel Gordon Cutris in the October Delieator, which contains many- features of housewifely inter est. ''Hallowe'en Party Novelties," illustrating delicacies for Hallowe'en refreshment and entertainment, is a seasonable item, and other culinary topics arc "Serving Game Dishes," "Celery Novelties," "Home-Made and Whole-Wheat Bread' and "A Rice Roundelay." In addition, Mary Taylor-Ross has some helpful notes on "Little Things of Housekeeping. DEATH SEEMED NEAR. How a Chicago Woman Found Help When Hope Was Fast Fading Away. Mrs. E. T. Gould, 914 W. Lake St Chicago, 111.,, says: "Doan's Kidney Piils are all that saved me from death .of Bright's dis ease, I am sure. 1 had eye trouble, backache, catches when lying abed or when bending over, was languid and often dizzy ' and had sick headaches and bearing-do w n pains. The kid ney secretions were too copious and frequent, and very bad In appearance. It was in 1903 that Doan's Kidney Pills helped me so quickly and cored me of these troubles, and I've been well ever since." ' Foster-Milburp Co Buffalo. N. 5. For sale oy all druggists.' Price, 50 cents per box. THE PURSTJJT OF THE PRACTT- CAL. "You are not saying as much about the trust as you used to?" "No," answered Farmer Corntossel. "There's altogether too , much temp tation for a man to keep chasm' oc topuses wnen he ought to' be pickin' potato hugs." Washington Star. It is easy to preach contentment after your salary has been raised. Tumors Coiiguered Unqualified Success of Lydia E,. PinKham's Vegetable Compound in Cases of Mrs. Fox arid Miss Adams. I One of the greatest triumphs of Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vegetable Compound is the conquering of woman s dread enemy, Tumor. So-called " wandering1 pains may come from its early stages, or the pres ence of danger may be made manifest by excessive menstruation accompanied by unusual pain extending from the ovaries down the groin and thighs. If von have mysterious pains, if there are indications of inflammation ulcera tion or displacement, don't wait for time to confirm your fears and go through the horrors of a hospital opera tion; secure Lydia K. rmkiiam s vege table Compound right away and begin its use and write Mrs. Pinkham of Lynn, Mass., for advice. Read these strong letters from grate ful women who have been cured: Dear Mrs. Pinkham : (First Letter.) "In looking over your book T see that your medicine cures Tumor of the Uterus. I nave been to a doctor and he tells me I ha ve a tu mor. I will be more than, grateful if ' you can help me, as I do so dread an operation." Fannie D. Fox, 7 Chestnut St ,Bradfofd,Pa. Dear Mrs . Pinkham : (Secon d Letter. ) " I take the liberty to congratulate- you on the success I havo had with your wonderful medicine. "Eighteen months ago my menthlies stopped. Shortly after I felt so badlyl sub mitted to a thorough examination by a phy sician, and was told that I had a tumor on the uterus and would have to .undergo an operation. 44 1 soon after read one of your advertise ments and decided to give Lydia E Pink ham' s Vegetable Compound a trial. After taking five bottles as directed, the tumor is entirely gone. I have again been examined Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vestable Consiwimd Greatest Trout Hatchery. - The greatest trout hatchery in the world will be located by the govern ment on the Grand Mesa, about twenty-five miles north of Delta. The an nual output of fish will not fall be low 25,000,000 within a year after the hatchery is completed. These fish will be distributed all over the west FIT3permanently cured. No fits or nervous, j ness after first da v'. use of Dr. Kline's (Jreafc ! T M. .3. r i f 1 ill .1 A a, I xierveii,05Luror,TF-s-riit uuuiuaua treatise I ree "Dr.R. H. KtrsE. Ltd.,931 Arch St.. Phlla.,Pa. The deepest gold mine in the world is at Bendigo. in Australia. Mrs.Winilow'sSootMncrSvrui for Children '.eothincsolfcea tiij jfums.reduoes inflamma tion, allays pain.cureswindoolic.Sc.a bottle, Japan is pushing the construction of railways in Korea rapidly. Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken o! eta cough cure. J. W. O'Bbikn, 822 Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6,190!). London and Liverpool are both at the level of the sea. For Mosquito Bites And the poisonous sting of all insecti Sloan's Liniment is th? great antiseptic. The Japanese Postal Savings Banks pay interest at the rate of 5-4 per cent. BEST BY TEST I have tried all kinds of waterproof clothing and have never found anything at any price to compare with your Fish Brand for protection from all kinds of weather." (Tb nam tnJ miirtm of tha writer of tfail woiieitS4letter may be had upon application) Highest Award World's Fair, lSftj A. J. TOWER CO. The Sign of the Fish Boston. U.S.A. CSftfER3 TOWER CANADIAN CO., LIMITED Toronto. Canada Uakwt of Warrant! Wat Weather Clothing " DONT teU others yonr froublea teU ns. We cast your HOROSCOPE, revealing important tratks. Address Natural Science, Room 2a, No. S3 Cortlandt Stree-t, Kew York. Enclose, stamp. CURES WHERE ALL USE FAILS.; Best Cough Syrup. Tastes 3ood. bse in time. 8old by druggists. mtmSmmmUmrBJLmmmmnmUmimtkwmA you cannot spend years and buy the knowledge required cents, xou want mem to. pay meir own way even u you merely, keep them as a diversion. In order to handle Fowls judiciously, you must know some thing about them. To meet this want we are selling1 a book giving the experience' of a practical poultry raiser for (Only 25c.)- twenty-five years. It wa written by a man who put all his mind, and time, and money to making a success of Chick en raising not as a pastime, but as a business and if you will profit by his twenty-five years' work, you can save many Chicks annually, and make , your Fowls earn dollars for you. The point is, that you must be- sure to detect trouble in the Poultry Yard aa soon as it appears, and know how to remedy Jt. This book will teach you. 1 It tells bow to detect and cure disease; to feed for eggs and also for fattening; which Fowls to save for breedinir purposes; and everything, Indeed, you should know on this subject to make it profltafc.'. Sent. postpaid for twenty ttve cents in strops. BOOK PUBM8HUQ HOEi 134 Leonard St, New York Citj. by the physician and he says I have no signs of a tumor now. It has also brought my monthlies around once more; and I am entirely well . I shall never be without a bot tle of Lydia Pinkharn's Vegetable Compound in the house." Fannie D. Fox, Bradford, Pa. Another Case of Tumor Cured by Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vegeta ble Compound. - Doar Mrs. Pinkham: 44 About three years ago I had intense pain in my stomach, with cramps and raging headaches. The doctor prescribed for me, but finding that I did not get any better he examined me and, to my surprise, declared I had a tumor in the uterus. 44I felt sure that it ment my death warrant, and was very disheartened. I spent hundred of dollars in doctoring, but the tumor kept growing, till the doctor said that nothing but an operation would save me. Fortunately I corresponded with my aunt in the New Eng and States, who advised me to try Lydia 13. Pinkharn's Vegetable Compound before sub mitting to an operation, and I at once started taking a regular treatment, finding to my great relief that my general health began to improve, and after three months I noticed that the tumor had reduced in size. I kept on taking the Compound, and in ten months it had entirely disappeared without an oper ation, and using no medicine but Lydia B. Pinkharn's Vegetable Compound, and words fail to express now grateful I am for the good it has done me." Miss Luella Adams, Colon nade Hotel, Seattle, Wash. ' Such unquestionable testimony proves the value of Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vegetable Compound, and should give confidence and. hope to every sick woman. Mrs. Pinkham invites all ailing women to write to her at Lynn, Mass., for advice. ; a Woman's Rsmady fer Woman's Ills, OUGLAS 3-JP& 3-o? SHOES VV. L. Douglas $4.00 cilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. ifistaMi8hed as. "JJ July 6, 1876. w.t .nntmr ax MAifws and sfum MORE MEN'S S3. BO SHOES THAU ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER. $10, flflfl REWARD to anyone who can UUU disprove this statement W. L. Douglas $3.50 shos bave by their ex cellent style, easy fitting, and superiorwearinsr qualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.50 shoe in tbe world. They are Just as good as those that cost yon $5.00 to $7.00 the only difference Is the price. If I couid take you into my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest in the. world under one roof making men's fine shoes, and show you, the care with which every pair of Douglas shoes is made, you would realize why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are the best shoes produced in the world. If I could show you the difference between the shoes made in my factory and those of other makes, you would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe on the market to-day. W. L. Douglas Strong Made Shoe fo Mmn. $2. BO, $2.00. Boys' School Dream Shoes, $2.50, $2, $1.7G,91.BO CAUTION .Insist upon having W.L.Doug las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuina without his name and price stamped on bottom. TVANTET. A shoe dealer in every town whers) Wi L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line of samples sent free for inspection upon request. -fast Color Eyelets used; they will not wear brassy. Writ for mustrated Catalog of Fall Stvlesw W. Im DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mag&- (FOR WOMEN,: troubled with His peculiar to ' their sex, used as a douche is marveiotuly suc cessful. The roughly cleanses, kills disease germs, stops discharges, heals inflammation, and local soreness, cures leucorrhoea and nasal catarrh. Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box. . Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. Thk R. Paxton Company boston. mai So. 38. If afflicted vrithweak eyes, uea Thompson's Eye water EARN MONEY you s6 eip uii.ii i ivriitvA You cannot do thyg. unless you understand them and know how to cater to their reauirements. an. dollars learning- by experience, so you must by others. We offer this to you for only 25 WB L. O ; i nnfs n in i nun n n mi i v .vi.: r-i c-.v. urn 11 1 i M. r -