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Show r p . ? ; 1 i : A --MADE WAY TO RENO-VAT- E STRUCTURE. Some Simple Alterations" Which Ren-de- r It Unnecessary to Tear Down and Rebuild Room for Many-Heaof Cattle. d 'w '4 13 Mrs. 1 ; Weisslitz, president man Womans Club of Buffalo, N. Y., after doctoring for two years,wasfinally cured of her kidney trouble by the3vuseof Lydia Jb Jrinkliam s Vegetable Compound A- -J Of all the diseases known with which the female is afflicted, kidney disease is the most futaL In fact, unless prompt and correct treatment is applied, the weary patient seldom survives. living fully aware of this, Mrs. Pinkham, early In her career, gave careful the subject, and in producing1 her great remedy for woman's ills .study to12. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound made sure that It conJLyrtia tained the correct combination of herbs which was certain to control that dreaded disease, woman's kidney troubles. The Vegetable Compound acts while in harmony with the laws that govern the entire female (system, and PJnk-liam's there are many so called remedies for kidney troubles. IjVtlla K. org-anis- 1 Vegetable for women. f T&- - R6ac Compound is the only one especially prepared I-y- Dalton, Mass. for advice. Mrs. Pinkham Invites all sick women to write herMass. Address Lynn, She has puUIed thousands to health. ol rORPriT tf w ' ApAnn HI aluim Mil 1 1 1 OwUUU "n- -'" 1 eannot forthwith prodne tha or1tna.HUri sad signature nrnwm their gmniliietica. at-r.- lute h Ljdlm E. riakbau Medici. Co. Lyon, Hut. HALL'S CANKER AND DIPHTHERIA REMEDY Mm THl STOMACH MOUTH, THUOATi NEVER FAILS- BOWSLS.... AND Tito FREE Homestead LANDS OP nmm An U - WOm BALE BY ALL AND Drug Ca.t General Agents. NeJden-Jit- a uanaoa STAB ATTRACTIONS far 1904. Otf Million of arret of wmi6cent Gf.in and . a I r. ifl. or i t purchase to t Jn4 land Rail Companie. Lnd Corporation, etc hi DRUOaiBTS atNCAAL STORKS....... Salt Laka City, Utah. Homesickness in the Navy. The medical officers of the navy who have been making a study of neurasthenia, which has disabled so many officers, ascribe it to the conditions of the life in the navy now Imposing upon officers long tours of duty on remote stations, where the opportunities for diversion are not many and where homesickness' and discontent, combined with the uncertainty of detachment, have produced this distress of mind and body. Where Minority Rules. THE GREAT ATTRACTIONS The Magyars rule Austria Hungary, IWvrl Crop. iil(titfal cllmat, pfrnlld aw hoot ay.tem. prrfWt arlil mnrllLWma, although they number but 6.000,000 or rllwf drnltrt, and wealth 7,000,000 In a total of 43,000,000. a4 T ffla)frar of vooil. Wftern br irrtmirmion daring y,mi bein American. lnrrad tbs cut year, over Canada Wfit to nware! anthm!ef! Canadian CioTftent and otht information Canadin Afent for fcr addr SnpV ef lmmirairtn Ottawa. Canada) laJe. Koom Dunn Block, Central Great Fall' Montana. Arenoe, FLOOR OGDEH'S BEST MIQMf ST CASH PRIOf PAIS PO RAW raits FURS ano GAME HEADS MEHfcSY, THE FURRIER, o aaica iiT. malt tax oitt.wtm I PAY MILITARY BOUNTY mm; mm i "? ,rs What Mrs. WeisslitzlifeSays. was "La simply a burUna. 1ixkiiam : For two years my across f and malo my back and troubles, with so suffered den, I pains loins. The doctor told me that I had kidney troubles and prescnicd for me. For three months I took hb medicines, but grew steadily worse. Hy husband then advised mo to try Lydia li. Pinkham'a a bottle. It is the greatest . Compound, and brought home Vegetable "Within three months I was a home. to our ever brought blessing had complexion became woman. my disappeared, My pain changed entire in and good shape." ilns. Paula. my system clear, my eyes bright, Y. 2f. 170 fceueca Buffalo, St, Weisslitz, Froof that KiJnrj Treble can te Cared by Lydia E. rinita'g YrgetaJIe Conjoint the good I feel very thankful to you for "Pkar Mrts. Pixkham: was and for doctored me. steadily had dono I mcdicino years has your with my kidneys, and two doctors told erowing worse. I had trouble not me I bad Bright disease : alo had falling of tho womb, and could was and I all the ached head and back time, walk a block at a timo. My so nervous I could not sleep ; had hysteria and fainting spells, was tired all the time, had such a pain ia my left side that I could hardly stand at time s without putting my foot on something. any. I doctored with several good doctors, but they did not help moComI linkham's Vegetable I took, in alL twelve bottles of five taxes of Liver rills and used three packages of Sanative pound, and feel like a new woman, can eat and sleep welL do all my own Wash, can walk two miles without feeling over tiled. Tho doctors and work, tell me that my kidneys are all right now. I am so happy to be well, and I feel thafl owe 'it all to your medicine." iiua. OrxL strong, "Dear E. M. B. I have an old barn, 30x5G feet, which I wish to build over and enlarge so that I may have room enough to store winter feed for them. I have nearly enough lumber and timber on the farm so that It need not cost excessively. How would you advise me to go about this undertaking? Please publish a plan for the basement. Answer There are two ways that I have seen barns made wider without taking them down. I have built basements for barns that were originally only thirty feet wide; tbey were sawed into two parts plumb from the peak down and each side moved back fourteen or sixteen feet and purline posts put in with girths between them. The rafters were continued to the peak. But a better way is to raise the barn up and build the walls out fourteen feet on one side and put up a frame work on it, joining it to the old barn, the posts of the new frame to be the same height as the posts in the old barn.' The posts of the old barn are used for the purline posts and the opposite purline post can be put in between the beams. If a hip roof is put on a barn 44x5G feet, with a basement for stock, it will vi large enough for the average farmer with 100 acres of land. Unless one knows how many beuts there are in a barn, and their distance apart, it is hard to draw a plan for a basement for stock, for fear the posts in the basement might Interfere with tin, stalls or gutters. I think the plan shown would be a convenient one. The manure Is taken out as desired. In this plan the man ure would be at the north end of the barn and the straw stack at the east side. But if desired the stalls can be SPOT CASH FOR LAND WARRANTS -- AND- PHOENIX HIGH OSOB. PATENT M1LUN3 & ElIYATOH CO. 2 rut 1 1 ' Ground Plan of Made Over Stock Barn. made to of the basement and all the manure taken out on the same side that the straw stack stands. To make It fifty-sifeet long, add a couple of feet to the horse stable and two feet to the passage behind the cattle ad a feeu alley along the south end. I might say I have built a good many basements, barns and stables, and 90 per cent of them had their rows of stalls running cros3wI.se. The stalls are single ones, but can be made Into double ones if desired, N. B. A., In Montreal Herald. e - The harvei (I about 1,000,00 i;f three months of th) least 10,000 women pare food for the w vest of other crops but the entire numll needed In gathering United States has hi City Policeman Explains Cause of Un usual Gathering. Two lusty Italian women the other day were gathering Into a pile a quantity of refuse lumber being taken from a Philadelphia building preparatory to making extensive alteration. Many of the sticks were too long to carry handily, so the daughters of King Victor Emmanuel were rending them In pieces in various ways. If they did not yield by striking them across their knees, they placed them across tha gutter and jumped upon them. The women were possessed of remarkable strength and the ease with which they made kindling wood attracted a crowd of fully 2u0 men and boys. As the Bidewalk was becoming blocked a policeman hastened to the scene and ordered everybody to move on. A gentleman happened to come upon the dissolving throng, and being curious to know the cause of the gathering, asked a son of Erin what It all meant. "Sure, an' it's only a coopla uv Italian ladies breaking wood," ho replied. white-whiskere- x that 1,520.700 Dyeing is as eas PUTNAM used. FADKL had lost his voiced suddenly recovering! Having gone to this J ment he was hlIiK drollness of tho tfo ment he made an eff. his feelings, and, to) Jqyr fovnd his voice' d i 1Wr. WlnylowV For children Keibl:iC. fUuuuikllun.aUiiyN RUSSIAN Western Woclgrower. Newcastle, Wyo.. Dec. 21. There Is a man in this place who claims that no ono need suffer with backache, as he has proven in his own case that itcan be completely and pernianpJCured. His name is he Is a stock rais'T5JJlgrower. "I wafijear;-- o sheep at the time the first jula came on," Bays Mr. Hoist. "I was so bad for two years afterwards that I could hardly sit down, nd when once down it was almost impossible for mo to get up again. "I tried ali the medicine I could hear of and several doctors without help, not even for a moment. I used Dodd's Kidney Pills and they made a new man out of mo. I felt as if there was new blood in my veins. I am as stout In the back as n mule and can lift and work as hard as I please without an ache or pain In ODy part of my body. "It is now over a year since they cured me and I can say there ia not a healthier man In Wyoming than I am, and before using Dodd's Kidney Pills there was not a more tompleto physical wreck in the whole country than I was." So Many c E.tand-- , or-tin"- Fasting Is a -- bi sia, for fish, mil bidden as well a la that the marker are largely cut off'foH of the year, and da comes unprofitable, ance of fasts. a with the people tha other feature of our Yale Review. 1 THE CALLS Good Rea-c- n Could At the - b champion is p tage. Despit Torts, he Is t'ir rni I At . r "Ha, li from the ra this the man ri roo-d.llo- cra .ur.r.. ce V c fx ho wa being so Ivories!" 1 Here the champion dil on the table and turns i. ful one: "Yes, I am tho man!" he rc am the man who Is celebratp-adcrtness at nurrlr.g tie tf some scoundrelly cj.cmy h?- wo-idtrrJ- .iir. Bo'.d liv Driirr.rl TheY? of Pro' of progress in Ruw out reckoning ort and Fridays, whicy days, there were t f did not fall un.V other, and manyr sides the which, however,; eight days long have three eliorU one of nineteen fourteen days, li er of thirty thrt; and December, single days of are also holiday Deafness Cannot bs Cured. tiu'd That The jEtaTuT?eVi cannot rocli tho dla- local ai'DllmCona a nr one wjr to caaad nortt-- Of l!ie ear. Tliere l ia cure a'i'l t'tat ilea. iuiinni roie i.y I of U l ))e.(nnaa la can-- " J I) an h.rti'Ut-i- ! rumilLJo U ..cnt:ili of TnV. tbi lin'nit KunuaPtjii fnuoma lnflni:J yoa bat e tanliln ouudJ orIef-nex- a t liearln?, an t wfen It la tit.irciv , tlie loSammatioo ran ( oniraa li tha ta'o-out ani tMa t'ltj rximt i I l( enrinitl I In forrrrr. Mrif lieanua iKrr!i. tt- li toiuiii but by pat cf i" a aro c iui"4 an Inflanted onrtit ;on of t ne mumi a f one liunlfil We in f..r any Pcfneia ghe by c rrh)l iti.it r.ni"t l curcj f re. Uail'e 0jIi :b t 'ire. rn-- for ct i f". Ji CtlKVhV at COTolodo, O. ' if H paiu.oi FASTS r "rrySalso Sjprand 1 V Reccy.ered Kis A case in recordV A hr Is. farmers that resdi. and aid in 'tho New Process Armor Plate. The Illustrated Zeitung says that Krupp has outdone Harvey in armor plate with a new process that secures even greater results. The new process enables armor plate to be made much thinner than formerly. ' J Hanf TWO LADIES AT WORK. OVEK BARN INEXPENSIVE , V-- Ha.raYarulir i'lila are the beat. Moorish Water Clocks. Among the curious features cf To ledo which unfortunately remain no longer, wcro water clock3, devised by ' ' ii ii i Concrete Curb for a Well. a1"1 a Moorish genius named P. C. A. Could cement tiles twenty-fou- r who placed them on the banks 01 tLTT New York Times, Inches in diameter and twenty-fou- r Tacus so that the reople co ud read (,' Stop the Vnig;h Inches long be used for- curbing the time. Tbcy were run by water orr tu work .xia up a well forty feet deep? How thick cower, and were to famous that Daniel Laxative Hromo Utiiuls ''nA--should the tiles beto stand the pres- Merlae, an English astronomer, camo I I sure, and what proportions of cement til the way from Oxford la 11 Sj to new Trirocii iq and gravel should be used in their study them. he main icature rf l 111 - construction? Answer Tilet, two feet by twenty-fou- r Inches and four Inches thick, would be of sufficient size to curb the well, providing the ground Is not quicksand or liable to cave, if such Is the case the tile should be six laches thick at the bottom of the well and near the top four Inches would be sufficient. One barrel of Portland cement would make about three tiles four Inches thick, making the concrete one of Portland cement to three of gravel (not sand). The gravel should be screened and have no stones larger than half an Inch in Have tho concrete well diameter. rammed when put into the molds. Preserving Meat for Poultry. have a healthy horse in good condition which was injured, and has to be destroyed; how can I pre serve his flesh for feeding to poultry! Answer. As only an Inexpensive method of preservation niay be used profitably, the ttfe of Ice and borax Is suggested. Where tho weather Is cold enough to freeze, the carcass may be cut up and kept in a frozen state until wanted. Where tbe temperature does not reach the freezing point and Ico can bo purchased reasonably, we would recommend boiling the carca in pieces, then, after cooling, dust it Vlth powdered borax and pack in irr. The cooking will sterilize the fl"h. and the borax will preserve Vie outside, aided by thelow temperature. The borax could be washed offsVefnre tha meat Is fed. What advice Late readers to offer on this .sabject? Sub.l Enjoyment Somewhere. Did he enjay his trip to the elty?" "Well, If he didn't, the bunko man l telegraph system of Plao's Cure cannot tx too fetehlr ap""", cf um Scoui h cure. J. W. O ltKiEit, 323 Third Ave, K., luinticlia, lllao., Jan. 6, ivJ0, KNEW Hl-- 1 OY Ptjston I a sifting devil Ilertzlaa wave goncn transmitting fci)tinae(ii it and between th5 and the receiving clro er hand, whereby all wuN except those of the desirl are suppressed at the scJ. and at th receiving waves ar permitted to vo.it eclvcr. REPUTATION. Why Archdeacon Was AsVed What H Would Have to Drink. Archdeacon Sinclair told Jha "Semi-TeetotPledge association" of tho diary of a Scotch shepherd, which read: "Sunday Up In the morning at C a dram tmhisky). Went out to see the sheep a dram. Came borne to breakfast a dram. Looked round the bouse a dram. Washed and dressed for church a dram. Took a brandy tefore golr.s to kirk, lest I houll smell of whisky In the bouse of the Lord!" Tho name of the association was responsible for the archdeacon's own experience. He was once lunching alone In ihu houe of a friend confined to his room by an accidenL The housekeeper brought tip a tray of good things, and asked the archdeacon what he would have to drink, for, sho said, "I've 'erd you're not a temrrc.;x gentle man. al Us. Quit Con thin Why cough, wfccil.tor IS rtiiioe you e"t i c!fe of f lut'-lgtiarant! tottjeh rtjie form, tio'fpnM. iJll. SICll y LA CROSStL W 13. f Dr. Parker's N'emffHai. The etalnf d rlai wia?-t memory of Dr. I'arker In th pie, London, rpprpsents Et- - Pa well to the elders at Epbe-- v faces of tha elders frr,'j7;bTe " striking iro"p. m all yn-jnat- ! Op--- ' The old surety, thro'irh it? penetrating R ffcniptly cures Pie, 2Sc,an4 -- did" n ) words: Sorroirig r.o it rintt'i con rita rarrt m mrr. the lower pael thre is a vf,f,' lonrari or ur. i'arKer. j TV lhv 'J poerf if SOc. J t y |