Plymouth Tribune, Volume 4, Number 1, Plymouth, Marshall County, 6 October 1904 — Page 8

Faithful to tho Last. 'X lady's coachman a crusty old fellow wno had been In the service of the family in her father's time gave her great trouble and annoyance on several occasions by not carrying out her Instructions. At length his conduct became unbearable, and she determined to dismiss him. Calling him Into hex presence, she said with as much asperity as she could command: I cannot stand this any longer, John. You must look out for another situation. You will leave my service at the end of the month.' The old servant looked at her pa amusement for a minute, and then tho characteristic "loyalty" came to thi surface. 'Ns, na, my lady," he said. "I drove you to the kirk to be baptized, I drove you to your marriage, and I'll stay to flrive jou to your funeral I" Sure Cure at liast. Monticello, Miss., Oct 3. (Special.) Lawrence County is almost daily in receipt of fresh evidence that a sure cure for all Kidney Troubles has at last been found, and that cure is Dodd's Kidney Pills. Anions those who have reason to bless the Great American Kidney Remedy Is Mrs. L. E. Baggett of this place. Mrs. Raggett had Dropsy. Dodd's Kidney Pills cured her. "I was troubled with my kidneys," Mrs, Baggett says In recommending Dodd's Kidney Pills to her friends, "my urine would hardly pass. The doctors said I had Dropsy. I hat e taken Dodd's Kidney Pili3 as directed and am now a well woman." Dodd's Kidney Pills cure the kidneys. Cured Kidneys strain all the Impurities out of the blood. That means pure blood and a sound, energetic body. Dodd's Kidney Pills are the greatest tonic the world has ever known.

Unmistakable Indications. "Coy or girl?" they asked him as he nung his hat and coat on the rck In a downtown bank. "How did you know it?" flashed the man. "You didn't come in yesterday. "Well?" "And you were not sick." "Welir "You didn't slink In this mornlnj with the air of a man who Is afraid his excuse is too lame for the old man." "It's a girl " said the ycuag fathet sheepishly. New York Sun. A Notre Dame Lady. I will send free, with full Instructions, some of this simple preparation for the cure of Leucorrhoea, Ulceration, Displacements, Falling of the Womb. Scanty r Painful Periods. Tumors or Growths, Hot Flashes, Desire to Cry, Creeping Feeling over the Spine, Pain in the Back and all Female Troubles, to all sending address. To mothers of suffering daughters I will explain a Successful Home Treatment. If you decide to continue It will only cost about 12 cents a week to guarantee a cure. Tell other sufferers of it, that is all I ask. If the above interests you. for proof address Mrs. M. Summers, Box 105, Notre Dame. Ind. Brazil Has a Fine Tea, United States Consul Ayme writes from Para a recommendation of a Brazilian beverage, yerba mate tea, which Is prepared from the roasted and pulverized leaves of an evergreen forest tree. Yerba mate is largely consumed in Paraguay and in the Brazilian States, where it is made. It is extensively consumed In Argentina, in Uruguay, and to a less extent in Chili. There is a small consumption in other States of Brazil, a small quantity is exported to Europe and still less to the United States and Canada. Estimated exports may reach 43,000 to 57,000 tons annually. Yerba mate has a peculiar bitter, smoky taste, which is usually considered unpleasant, and tins has largely operated to prevent its more extensive use as a beverage, This smoky bitterness is chiefly due to the rude method employed for drying the leaves and it seems likely that the Improved methods of drying the mate on Iron or copper pans would give a much more delicate and agreeable product. Mate la said to have all of the best qualities of colfee and tea as a stimulating health beverage, without the disadvantage of either. It Is a more gentle stimulant than either and Is eald to be much used in the hospitals of Parts. The tree could probably be grown In southern California, perhaps In southern Texas, certainly In many parts of the Philippines. CAN DRINK TROUBLE That's One Way to Get It. Although they won't admit it many people who suffer from sick headaches and other ails get them straight from the coffee they drink and it is easily proved if tliey're not afraid to leare it to a test as in the case of a lady In ConneUsville. "I had been a sufferer from sick headaches for twenty-five years and any one who has ever had a bad sick leadache knows what I suffered. Sometimes three days in the week I would have to remain in bed, at other times I couldn't lie down the pain would be to great My life was a torture, and if I went away from home for a day I always came back more dead than alive. "One day I was telling a woman my troubles and she told me she knew that it was probably coffee caused iL She said she had been cured by stopping coffee and usisg Postum Food CoZTee and urged me to try this food drink. t Tltafc how I came to send out and Ct tome Postum and from tiat tins I've never been without It, for it suits xay tests and has entirely cured all cf tay old troubles. All I did was to leave off the coffee and tea and drini well made Postum In its place. This Change has done me more good than Terything else put together. "Our house was like a drug store, for my husband bought everything hs tcard cf to help me without dolsj znj cood. bat when I began on the Postum ny headaches ceased and tza ether troubles quickly disappeared. I Lara a friend who had an experience just Lis Elina and Pcstnn cared tti jzzt cs it did me. Tcstun not only cured the htad-cc-C3 but ny general health has tern fcaproved and I am much stronger than ttfore. I cow enjoy delicious Pc:tcn core than I ever did coffee. Circa by rcstuu Co., Dattls Crc:X llizzi. "Terra's a reason" and It'o xrzzih

Stasia IP ill

OLITICAL t-M-H t t 1 H IHI I'M! Parker's Letter of Acceptance. The Hon. Alton B. Parker's letter scceptlng the Democratic nomination for the Presidency is even more remarkable than his speech to the notification committee at Esopus last month. As regards the Democratic past, he enters a plea of guilty, with some extenuating circumstances. Concerning the Democratic future, especially during the four years from next March 4, he again lays emphasis upon the fact that the United States Senate la certain to remain Republican, and then the Democrats would be unable to do much national harm in case of a Democratic victory next November In a nutshell, Judge Parker declares that the gold standard must remain inviolate; that the tariff must not be tinkered with if by such tinkering business conditions are to be disturbed; that In his belief the existing laws for the regulation of trusts are adequate; that the Panama canal must be built, and quickly, along the route selected; that civil service re-

THE PIED PIPER OF ESOPUS.

form in the governmental service is here to stay. In what wise does the position of Judge Parker differ from that of the Republican party upon these questions? As regards the Philippines, he would give them a promise of independence as soon as the natives "'are leasonably prepared for it" IIow gloriously indefinite ;th!s sounds, when coming from a man to whom the Democratic hosts have looked for constructive leadership! And how gloriously impracticable such a promise seems at the present time! The Hon. Alton D. Parker's letter is no bugle call. It is no summons to aggressive action. It does not betray hope. It does not Inspire confidence. Its prevailing tone is one of resignation. In a word, it seens to have been written largely to keep the record clear. A candidate who puts forth such. a document certainly can have no strong expectation of victory. Chicago Inter Ocean. The "Party of the Dawn." There will be, at the polls in JJocember, something more than a million of young men, who have reached their majority since the fall of 1900, and who will therefore cast their first national vote in November, at the presidential election. This election is the beginning of their political life. How will they vote? Will they cast in their lot with the party of progress, the party that does things; or will they turn their faces from the sunrise to cast their lot with the party which acts as a drag on , national progress, which camps among the ruins of the past which this year has, with no more than a tacit acknowledgment' pitched Its tents on the heights where the Republican party drew Its battle line for the gold standard and honest money, eight long years ago, under the leadership of the revered McKinley? The strength of the Republican party has always lain in the fact that It is the party of national progress, of development along the natural lines of growth. This has, year by year, attracted to it the progressive young voters that element among the young men which embraces thi educated and enlightened part It Ly been so ever since the Republican party's birth, in 1854. One of the young men then was John Hay, who tzz teen Secretary of State since 1C3 the year of the Spanish war. Born la 1CZ3, he did not reach vottnj ass until 137 the year before that in which Abraham Lincoln was first elected Present He Is a eon of ths T7est, for he was born in Salem, Ind. TThen he started out in his early manhood, as a lawyer, in Illinois, ta ttis cne of the throng of young men . who pthcrcd about Abraham Lincoln In tl2 numerable struggle with CtcpLcn A. DccIi3 fcr the Ccnatcrr.hip frcm Cit Ctate. He teeamo cno cf ths trro rrivata cccretarica cf llr. Lincoln Czr-

(( OMMENT i

hls subsequent career is an inspiration, to all young men of ambition and of high ideals. Mr. Hay, who Is now regarded by all civilized nations as the leading diplomatist of the world, is anxious that the young men of the nation shall start with their feet in the path of American progress and national glory. In an address to young Americans, he says: "I want to say a word to the young men whose political life Is beginning. "Any one entering business would be glad of the chance to become one of an established firm with years of success behind it. "Everything great done by this country in the last fifty years has been done under the auspices of the Republican party. Is not this a priceless asset? "Lincoln and Grant, Ilayes and Garfield, Ilarr.'son and McKinley names SGCuro In the heaven of fame they are all gone, lc ivlng small estates in worldly goods, tut what vast possessions in principles, memories, sacred associations! It is a start in life to share that wealth. "In our form of government there must be two parties. "But what young man would not rather belong .to the party that does things, instead of one that opposes them; to the party that looks up, rather than down; to the party of the dawn, rather than of the sunset? "For fifty years the Republican party has believed In the country and labored for It In hope and Joy; "Has reverenced the flag and followed it; "nas carried it under strange skies and planted it on far-receding horizons; "Has seen the nation grow greater every year and more respected; "Has seen the country extend its intercourse and its Influence to regions unknown to our fathers; "Yet it has never abated one Jot or tittle of the ancient law imposed n us by God-fearing ancestors. The Constitution of our fathers has been the light to our feet Our path la, and will remain, that of ordered progress, of liberty under the law. "But we are not daunted by progress. We are not afraid of the light! The fabric our fathers builded will stand all shocks of fate or fortune. "While there will alr&ys be a proud pleasure in looking back on the history they made, the coming generation has the right to anticipate work not less Important. "We who are passing off the stage bid you, as the children of Israel encamping by the ;$ea were bidden, to go forward. We whose hands can no longer hold the flaming torch pass it on to you that its clear light may show the truth to the ages that are to come." Young men of the nation, first voters in national affairs, ponder carefully what John Hay has said to you. He began his life as the mass of other American boys began theirs. He had no inheritance to make his future secure. But be took his stand for what he held to be the right, and all other things came to him. Go thou and do likewise. Toledo Blade. Aphorisms of Roosevelt. It is almost as Irritating to be patronized as to be wronged. This is not and never .shall be a government either of a plutocracy or of a mob. The criticism of those who live softly, remote from the strife, is of little value. The loyalty that counts la the loyalty Tffcicli Ehows Itself in deeds rather than in wcrds. , Back of the laws, back of ths admlniraticn, - back of the eystem cf government lies the man. In every instanca fcoT7 ths 'after events of history have falsified the prelletiens of the men cf little faith! Tha wcrian who has torna, ani wtD fczs .reared tss they thould ta izzzzX a family cf cLU'ren, tiz la ti3 tzzzt emphatic nazrr- dercrved tt:U c Co rcputlle.

sx3 üD

V

4 Opinions of Choose Your Life's Vocation

HERE comes a time when every growing boy must face the question: What shall I do for a life work? It is an Important question, one that must be faced squarely and answered wisely. And yet there are many who shirk and turn away, trying to avoid a dirt an-

lT

( sww. leavlnsr tho KAlntlnr

will be a happy chance. Then there are sons who leave the solution entirely to their parents; and there are parents who leave it all to the sons. Each should consider the matter with diligence and frankness and come to a determination agreeable to both. In considering the problem It will be well to remember several things. In the first place, all real success must be founded in the economic principle of becoming a producing member of the great industrial scheme. There is no room In the world for a drone. Everybody must produce something. The man who produces what is most needed and most wanted receives the largest rewards. As a general rule it is wise to try to produce something of which the supply is scant In any case, it is prudent to avoid those occupations in which there is already a surplus of the product For instance, the world is not crying for lawyers, doctors, preachers or accountants. The so-called professions are overcrowded. There is a large surplus stock of legal advice on the market; also medical advice, and of bookkeeping. , Consequently the rewards are diminishing. The kind of man that Is most plentiful in the market is the one who knows no business In particular and wants something In which he can wear good clothes while at work. The man most In demand and least plentiful is the one who has had actual experience with som?

occupation which soils the hands and

at tho same time, has the capacity for planning and directing. A railroad manager who has tamped the ties and" built a trestle; a book publisher who ha et type; a lumber äealer who has served as a lumber a contractor who bas "measured in" and "checked out" In a word, the man most in demand and hardest to find is tho one who has learned some line of business from the basement to the "front oflce." The men who want to learn a business from the top down are plentiful. This is a great industrial era. There are opportunities for all. Every ten or twenty years the great industrial army must be recruited anew. The time has passed when it was not "respectable" to be anything but a "professional man." Science and learning bave become the handmaidens of the industrial arts. Tolay anything is honorable that is done well. Produce something give something to the world, and the world will pour its blessing Into your lap. Chicago Journal.

Higher Education. ANY parents must debate every year whether it Is wise to give tho years and the money required for the higher education; writers and business men start discussions from time to time whether the higher education Is worth while whether. In the language of the mart "it pays;" and the supporters of the higher ed-

9

acation are at pains, as In the case of the disquisitions by President Hadley, of Yale, on the subject to Justify the algher education and to try and convince the people that it ictually does pay, if not In immediate dollars, yet In moral ind Intellectual awakening, health, breadth, fervor and power which finally inure to the growth, strength and öeauty of the republic. By higher education is meant not the training of a technical professional or Industrial school or college. The nan who is studying to be a physician must take the" course (n order to qualify himself for a diploma; the student at a aw school is looking forward to admission to the bar and i license to practice; the electrician or mechanician is aiming to equip himself Just as the young artisan is getting ready to ply his trade when he goes to an Industrial school to learn the art of bricklaying, printing, carpentry or do

Although the Improvements in photography are made so rapidly nowadays that even the professional photographer can hardly keep track of them, there are many picture-makers, says the Century Magazine, who believe the world will turn back to the daguerrotype for its beautiful and most artistic portraits. 1 It Is more than sixty years since the scientific world was aroused by the snnouncemcnt that ,Daguerre, a Frenchman, had discovered a method cf fixing the Image made by the camera obscura. It was a crude method then. The first picture, of a tree standing In the sun, required half an hour or more of exposure. That was the same year In which Samuel F. B. Morse went to Europe to exhibit his new electric telegraph. The two Inventors met by appointment In Paris and explained their work to each Other. Daguerre's plate was of pure silver. It was thoroughly cleaned and polished. In a dark room it was next coated with a film deposited by the vapor of iodln, and then txposed In the camera. Still protected from the light It was placed over the fumes of hot mercury, which develcped the lmge, and It was then made permanent with Chlorid öf gold. This process was soon Improved, until on bright days the sitting for a daguerreotype was reduced to ten, sometimes to five, seconds. Even with this short exposure, however, the likenesses were remarkable. It Is possible to assume an artificial expression and hold it for the 'brief second before a modern camera, but to remain motionless for the long time required for a daguerreotype, It was necessary that the features should be In repose in their natural position. 1 " The daguerreotype was a positive, Impossible to retouch. It was of a soft flesh-like tone, which even to-day, in the specimens of the art preserved in collections and among family relics, wins admiration. The üaguerreotype gave way to the cheaper ambrotype, which was on glass, and required a dark background to show it off; and thij in turn was succeeded by tha Clars negt.tlvs and the paper pedtive print None of them hart ever attained thj delicacy cr the eoftnecs of tha daCUtrreotypa, and the Frenchman's crthod, expensive and slow as It Is, nay win Its tray back Into tha popularity It had more than half a century reo. - Irune Chipped to France. Cnzzz cf a foreign mima U p t:i in c-lrj ccr:-:. übles, üany a tzzz cf Z' "Trc-C tr3

Great Papers on Important Subjects.

Wisely. rett v.A v the clothes, and who.i ROM "s m UP I robbers think and willful action rrom the safe or covered, his sin and virtue meets a gone forever is her society. The young a credit to society. at a price that together with the label, convinces the critical Eastern housewife of the high quality of it3 contents, and puts it beyond the reach of the boarding house keeper. She buys "California' prunes, to the disgust of her boarders, who, did they but know it, are grumbling over fruit identical in quality with that set before the critical housewife's husband. For the French have a trick that while reprehensible, reflects credit on our product At Bordeaux, the real center of the prime trade of the world, the prune crop for 1003 was a failure. California prunes were bought by Bordeaux dealers, who repacked them in attractive form, made them lithographically French, and sniped them back to America. Albion W. Tourgee, American consul at Bordeaux, is authority for thtg state ment made in a consular report He says that the prune crop at Bordeaux last year was only one-twentieth of the normal output; yet in the last six months of the year the dealers there res hipped some $20,000 worth of California prunes to America, where their supposed origin and their attractive packing found them a ready market There is an obvious moral in this, which is that California prune growers should pack their fruit as well as the French do, and make it in every way as tempting in appearance. ' It might not be a bad plan, either, to put a copy of Consul Tourgee's report In each box. San Francisco Argonaut Getting the Money's Worth. Mrs. Lane was young and inexperienced, but certain principles of economy had been instilled into her from childhood. She knew that since one could send ten words in a telegram for twer.ty-fire cents and any smaller number cost the B&ne amonnt, It was an. obvious waste of money. to send less than the ten. She had also been taught by her emine.it practical husband that In sending a telegram one shoold 4ikeep the matter In hand," and avoid all confusion of words. On the occasion of Mr. Lane's first absence from home, he sent a telegram from Chicago, saying, "Are you all right? Answer. Blank Hotel, Chicago." 4 lira. Lane knew she must be wise, economical and speedy, for Mr. Lane was making a flying trip, and had told her he could not plan on his whereabouts long enough ahead to have a letter tent Che spent a few moments in agitated thought and then proudly wrctf the following message: "Ylm. Yes. Yes, I am very well Indeed, thank you." Tou are not having an uuretraized. Coed eld time lh eating corn c2 Ü3 ccb Giilczs yen have kemclj elzzv crcrJl to ths back cf ycur czrx

TT ck

4

signing of cotton cloth. There is, of course, in a physician's training some incidental broadening of the mental outlook to be derived from his studies, and so it is with the electrician and the lawyer, who must learn something of Jurisprudence, constitutions," governmental Institutions and history; but the higher education Is essentially something which is not positively needed as a means of earning a living; it is a course in general culture, a study of the humanities, a broad, liberal pursuit of Ideals, of great ideas, great movements, and, in a word, such instruction as is given in a university and college in addition to the training for a vocation. Philadelphia Ledger.

Mobility of the Japanese. N the matter of mobility and in the faculty of doing the right thing at the right time, the Japs clearly outclass the Russians. Whenever

the two armies come face to face there is an attempt at a flanking movement Although the Russians know Just what sort of trouble to expect they are invariably beaten. Before their

flanks can be placed for effective defense and properly reinforced, the nimble Japanese have secured the drop on them, and there Is nothing to do but back down. Although Russian retreats are always reported to have been made in good order and with no loss of dignity, the correspondents who view the field after an engagement describe the movement as a rout Troops which retreat In good order do not leave a trail of disabled artillery, blankets, guns and other marching accoutrements. When pursuit becomes hot and ill other fletires become secondary to the desire to get away, soldiers throw down their trappings and "skedaddle." The Russian is a gross feeder and a hard drinker. He has tremendous strength and great endurance, but he lacks the mobility of the plucky Japanese, who is trained to the hour for his desperate work; who Is able to take his rations on the march, without losing time, and keep up his jog trot movement for hours at a stretch, without a murmur of complaint. He Is an Interested soldier, who fights for patriotic reasons, and the Russian soldier Is a, mere machine In comparison, Detroit Evening News.

Wasted Opportunities. MiSSOUlfl. Mnt comp o etnr-v ' i.vj vi. uuiu tearing up the money they had stolen

Jl I and scattering in the sand of the desert the dia-

monus incy naa tauen rrom their victims. One is Inclined to look at the procedure of these robbers from a humorous point of view, and

of the effort and energy thev wasted

And yet it is an everyday occurrence. Day by day men are

throwing away diamond-like opportunities. Throwing them away, hoping to escape the consequences of some foolish

in the past. A young man enters a busi

ness house. . Through sacrifice and economv his father

and mother Save succeeded in giving him a good commercial education. But in an evil moment he abstracts money

drawer. Though it may be Ion": undis will surely be found out and cone for

ever is that opportunity for advancement and progress. He

has thrown his opportunity into the sand. A young woman

trained in a beautiful home along the lines of moralitv

smooth-tongued rascal, and presently opportunity for moving In the best of man, the young ladv. mteht have bpen They might have been the honored fa

ther and mother of a son whose name might have become historic, but they threw away their diamonds for the ake of a so-called liberty, which is after ail only license, and though with tears and bitter cries they search for them again, never shall they be found. When once the blush is driven from the apricot or the peach, no chemistry can bring it back. When once opportunities have been thrown aside, they never return. Never again does the same opportun? ty come to a man's door. Don't throw away your diamonds. Pittsburg Press.

I SELF-RELIANT SHEEP. Owen Wister says that in pursuing the Rocky Mountain sheep, with a gun and a camera, he once witnessed an accident full of discipline, encouragement and instruction. He describes it In "Musk-Ox, Bison, Sheep and Goat" A sheep and lamb were grazing along one of three well-marked terraces which were rimmed with walls of rock. After a proper period of relaxation, the mother judged It time to go on. She mounted the hill right toward me. not fast but steadily, waiting now and then, precisely as other parents wait for her toddling child to come up with her. Here and there were bushes of some close, stiff leaf, which she walk ed through easily, but which were too many for the struggling child. The lamb would sometimes get Into the middle of one of these and find Itself unable to push through; after one or two little efforts, It would back out and go round some other way, and then I saw it making haste to where its mother stood waiting. Upon one of these occasions the mother received It with a manner that teemed almost to say, "Good gracious! At your age I found no trouble with a thing of that kind." "While I was wonJering what on earth they would do when they found themselves stepping upon the terrace into my lap, the ewe found a way she liked better, but it was severe work for the lamtv The pother rot to the wall where she cotld make one leap of it It was done In a flash. Meanwhile, the por little lamb was vainly springing at the wall; the Jump was too high for li. Its xront hoofs Just grazed the edge, and back it tumbled to try again. Finally it Mated; but the mother deened this not a moment for indulgence She gave not the slightest attention to the cry for assistance. Therei jris nothing dangerous about the. pi ice, no unreasonable hardship In gettiig the best of the wall; and by her own processes, thought or Instinct she left her child to meet one of th natural dlöculties of life, and to gain self-reliance. The mother did undoubtedly not usa the wordj "self-re ianco" cr "natural difnculties," but lc'tia had not her eheep equivalent fr wLat thcra wcris impart, her sped53 wcld long a-o have perished off tie earth. The mcurK tain-thec? b a mi:t;r at tho art cf self-preservation. Tlio maternal lnetinct cf this ewe iIo her f crco the ycuns cjvj to climb for itadf. ff 1 "Tiers'. a Uo ci ccowlicro." vra fctard a m-n cay p-day. Hero tla4 r " it r-r r- 1

Rear Admiral Hichborn Recommends Po-ru-na: k Ä

U Ait Philip Ilichboru, Rear Admiral United . States Navy, writes from Washington, D. C, as follows: "After the vse ofPeruns for a short period, I can now cheerfully , recom mend your valuable remedy to any one who s in need of an invigorating tonic. "-Philip Hichborn. No remedy ever yet devised has received such unstinted eulogy from somany renowned statesmen and military men as Peruna. Our army and navy are the natural protection of our country. Peruna is j the natural protection of the army and I navy in the vicissitudes of climate and , exposure. If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from .the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give yoa his valuable advice jrratis. Address Dr. Hartman, Presideut of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. Hallway Supremacy. Texas is neck and neck with Illinois In the race for the largest railroad mileage. Illinois has been in the lead for some time, but it looks as if she would not long hold the supremacy. In the la?t authentic report Illinois Is credited with 11.503, Texas 11.4S9, Pennsylvania 10.S20, Iowa 9.S0O and New York 8.1S2 miles. By the rate of Increase Texas, which has only fourteen miles less than Illinois, will go to the head of the list As Indicating her possibilities for future development It may be noted that if she had as many miles of road as Illinois in the ntio of area she would have a mileage of 45.823. bnt If no more in proportion to population the number would be 4,210 less. Louisville Courier-JournaL THOUGHT SHE WOULD DIE. Afra. 8. W. Marine, of Colorado Sprint, Began to Fear the Worat Doan's Kidney Pills Saved Her. Mrs. Sarah Marine, of 428 St, TJrain street, Colorado Springs, Colo., writes: " I suffered for three years with severe backache. The doctors told me my kidneys were affected, and prescribed only a waste of time andmoney to take them, and began to fear that I would never get well. A friend advised me to try Doan's Kidney Pills. Within a week after I began using them I was so much better that I decided to keep up the treatment, and when I had used a little over two boxes I was entirely well. I have now enjoyed the best of health for more than four months, and words can but poorly express my gratitude." For sale by all dealers. Price tX cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y. The Lucky Day. "What day oZ the week do you think the luckiest to get married on?" queried the soft and sveet young thing. "The eighth," replied .the confirmed bachelor, refusing to be sentimental even for a minute. Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. 10d Beward, SI OO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there Is at lea&t one dreaded disease that science has been able to curs In all its stages, and that Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the onlv positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh beicjr a constitutional disease, reyulres a constitutional treatment. Hall's "atarrh Cure is taken Internally, acting dlrecUy on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing Its work. The proprietors have so much faith la its mrativa rtnwers that thov nffar On Hiin.lnJ - 1 w..v. vuw UUWUlWi Dollars for any case that it falls to eure, bend for list of testimonials. Address. V. J. CHENEY & CO Toledo, 0. Bold by Druggists. 75c. Hall's Family tiki are the best Very Homelike. Mrs. Quiverful Was that t tehfrm you boarded during my absence, at all nomelike 7 Mr. Q. Very. The children made. so much noise I couldn't hear myself tnlnk. Special Worlds Fail" Bates Via Nickel Plate Boad Every Day Until Not. SOth inclusive. Season, 60 day and 15 day tickets. Coach tickets good 7 days. On sale Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of 6 eb week until Nov. 24th inclusive. Stop-ovei at Chicago. Call on local ae at or address C. A. Asterlin, T. P. A., Fort Wayne, Int A Sample Pair. What fools these earthly mortals be! What freaks the human race begets I 'Mong others is the girl who paints. And the man who tackles cigarettes. RUBBER STAMtsI AH tlzli cf Rii.tr Stamps Vlaa to Ori r. Self-tlizJ Daters something new. Ink aai teklzz Paas. Send for Catalog so to Lock Cos 119, Port Wajrae, lad. Tvras Ever Thus. Dame Fortune is a fickle jade, Here t tmile and there a froTrrj Che boosts a man way up to-day And to-morrow pulls him down. nelp your wife to pet breatftst fsy tske borne Urs. Austin's Pancake Flur. Tear riocer waits to supply ,oa. Tis Prbtsss of Wales isTha n::t c liduouj of readers mcrj ti-i rcytl foully.

wmmm Wimm " i V&!.r Vs.- -Jf I

medicines for njtä'MW.Ü th&t it was