Plymouth Tribune, Volume 4, Number 3, Plymouth, Marshall County, 20 October 1904 — Page 7

Sadie robtnsoit. Pretty Girl Suffered From Nervousness and Felric Catarrh Found Quick Belief in a Few Days

V 1' .-.vW-.-'-' 4 v .-. v.-.'Shi--.w.v '.V,V.V?. NERVOUSNESS AND WEAKNESS CURED BY PE-RU-NA; Bliss Sadie Robinson, 4 Band jrtrwt, MakJcn. Masi, writes: "Peruna was recommended to me about a jear ego as an excellent remedj for the trophies peculiar to our sex, and es I found Chat all that was said of this medicine was true, I am pleased to en dorse it. began to use it about seven months ago for weakness and nervousness, caused from overwork and sleepless r.ess, and found that In a few days 1 began to gre w strong, my appetite in creased and I began to sleep better, consequently my nervousness passed away and the weakness In the pelvic organs soon disappeared and I have been well find strong ever since. " Address Dr. S. B. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0 for free medical advice. All correspondence strictly confidential. A Talo of Two Cities. Notwithstanding the disparity la size between Seattle and Tacoma, the rivalry in other respects between the two' cities is as keen as in their earlier days, when they were young "boom' 'towns. A curious instance of this is seen in the names by which the towering mountain that lifts its tall peak to the southeast is known "in the two places. In Tacoma it is treason to call it anything else than "Mount Tacoma," while in Seattle it Is "Mount Ranter." A traveler when about half-way between the two cities saw two boys . fighting by the roadside. Before he could separate them one of the boys got the other down, and after banging the victim's face Into the soft ground, sat panting but victorious astride of him. "What's the name o that mountain now?" the victor demanded in exultant tones. "It's ,7 humbly replied 'the vanquished lad. The effort to free his mouth from the mud and grass which Lis opponent had rubbed into it made the answer unintelligible to the traveler; but the victor was satisfied and let him up. CURE YOUR KIDNEYS. When the Back Aches and Bladder Troubles Set in, Get at the Cause. Don't make the mistake of believing backache and bladder ills to be local ailments. Get at the cause and cure the kidneys. Use Doan's Kidney Pills, which have cured thousands. V nunter, or jsn- ' due No. 14. Pitts burg, Pa., Fire Department, and residing at 2729 W y 1 i e avenue, says: "It was three years apo that I used Doan's Kidney Pills for an attack of kidney trouble that was mostly backache, and they fixed me to fine. There is no mistake about that, and if I should ever be troubled again, I would get them first thing, as I know; what they are." For sale by all dealers. Price ZO cents. Foster-Mllburn Company, Buffalo, N. T. A Society Romance. Clara How under the sun did Edith happen to marry Mr. Awkward? Dora He wa3 the bane of her life at every ball she attended, and I presume she married xim to keep him from wanting to danc jrith her. . , Mrs. Austin's Pancake Flour, makes lovely pancakes, muffins and gems. So good yon always ask for more. Arrangements of Hooks. . Have yon ever tried putting together the books that suit special moods? The amusing books, the stories of adventure, the home stories tying grouped so that vhea you feel like reading some partlculir sort yon may at a glance see ail your treasures that appeal to thai momentary Interest? It is not a bad. plan. But the possibilities of. arrangement are endless, and we all have out favorite plans. I wonder if there is any book lover who can refrain from putting in one row his most attractive bindings? thegay, gilded leather covers that make a little court of nobilities? If there is any reader who can refrain from this harmless pageantry, be must be the owner of an unusually logical mind, or else lacks the soul of crder. St. Nicholas. CASTRDA Per Infcmts and Children. D Kt3 Ya C:i3 C::;!:! Dears tfc.3 CCro cf jzF?ii t"l fzzT rrt-trr wlrj Cz?.t LL.C3 Tcz-T t:r ycrr Letter Ptfr. TLLt b tlj

GARDEN MUTTON CHOPS. If when a lamb is born the ewe is found to b& short of milk, the secretion may be increased by feeding a hot mash of wheat bran, with a tablespoon ful of linseed meal. Put a little salt in the mash. If the ewe has no milk, the lamb must have its first milk fnem some other ewe, if possible, to start the natural action of the lamb's bowels then it can be nursed along on oow's milk until the ewe cornea to her own. The milk frcm a new mildh cow is best, and should be diluted with onethird water at first. LICE PREVENTION. To keep chickens free from lice and diseases, wash the roosts with coal oil and whitewash the house inside and out every month. Sweep the droppings frcm under, the nests every morning and sprinkle slaked lime over the ground. Always keep a piece of red cedar under the nests to keep vermin away from the setting hens. Have the nests so you can clean them well. Never hare straw Der them but fill with nice, fine, dry dirt and shape it like a straw nest. Empity every time a hen 6ets anl hatches end you can set hens all summer on these dirt nests. I have always done this and have never 6een a House or had a young or old chicken to die from that disease. Fauna Billingsley, in the Epitiomlst. EGG FOODS. The majority of egg foods are composed of these elements that enter largely into the composition ct the egg, and their success depends upon the fact that they supply material that is often overlooked by these who keep poultry. Per instance, ground bone, ground meat, salt and charocal are Ingredients. The first supplies the phosphates, the second the albumen, the third that which is not cf ten supplied, and the fourth is a corrective. Hence, two pounds cf ground bfones, two pounds of ground meat, half a pwund of salt, a pound of charcoal, two pounds of linseed meal, with an ounce each of sulphur, bread soda and ginc?r. make a very gacd egg food, which may be 'given fco six fowls daily, using a tablespoonfuL This is very cheap, which Is an advantage over some preparations. SAVE MONEY WITH GOOD PLANTS. The planter should always remember that it costs exactly the same in labor to cultivate and care fcr a poor plant as a good one. In buying of trees, vines and plants generally the comparative cost should cut no figure. One strawberry plant may cost a cent while another may ocst only onefourth of a cent In the light of the production cf a good or bad variety hidw much does a cent count? The same is true in the buying of trees. A good variety should be secured, and it is never necessary to pay a fancy price for any of the good standard varities. But frequently poorer varieties, being in larger abundance in the hands of the nursermen, can be bought cheaper than the standard variety. The fruit in a single season may be worth a dollar more on the geed tree than on the poor one and that will more than equal the difference in ccsL The chief concern of the ttree planter should be to get a tree that will bear an abundance of the right kind of fruit. Saving a few cents per tree may prove disastrous in the end. The Farmer's Review. FEEDING OLD HENS. As long as the eld hens will lay it is not wise to market them, but they must be closely watched, especially after they go into winter quarters, so that if the stop laying they can be prepared for market as quickly, as possible. It has been found that old hens will lay into the winter fcr a considerable periled if some pains are taken to feed them during late summer while they are on the range. One of the best foods for thi3 period is peas, using the field peas and feeding them raw after being cracked or cooking them and feeding as a mash with bran. .This feed incites egg prcduction and keeps the hens in good conditScm without making them over fait; at the same time they are In such good condition that should they step laying, they can be fattened ficr market at small expense. The plan is wtarth trying for one cf the losses of the poultry business comes from speeding too much in fattening the hens for market after they have stepped laying. BREEDING SOWS. The Indiana Farmer has called attention to the experiences c-f good swine breeders to tLe fact that it is too frequently the case gacd breeding sows are fattened and disposed of from the herd before they do their best many times. A good swine breeder in our oolumn3 from Decatur county, Indiana, called attention to this matter in his excellent discussion under the head of "Laying the Foundation for Breeding." In on9 of cur exchanges another ' hog breeder takes a similar view of the matter and says: "Breeders generally are not wise in sacrificing their sows too young. It would not be safer, pocsibly, however, to keep brcod sows to too great an egvi. Nta safer rule can probably be given than the following. If the sow proves a first-class breeder and breed3 regularly and is of a quiet disposition she should be kept until lndiciticc3 manifest thetncelves that her breeding powers are beginning fco vrcn3. Such indications will be found in Irregular breeding, in the quality r-r-j in tha size of the indlvidcalj & Ho littcra cd inability to feed the Utters to the beet cd venture. Ti.cc 3 lz.ll eitlere da not usually eceur la a C-Dod treed zznr under tia cf iz'zz to cix ycc rz."

FEEDING TEAMS FOR HEAVY WORK. Beflcre taking a horse or team out for a hard drive, or for heavy werk) almost every one gives an extra feed. No one feels like undertaking a job of heavy work cr startling cfC on a race just after eating a hearty meäl. Probably an "extra heavy feed has the same effect upon a horse. How many of our readers know the practice, of 'loggers, tie-men and turpentine operators when feeding teams in their camp? The teams are fed but once a day. After the day's werk Is over the teams are fed all the grain and hay that they will eat during the night. In fact some have a rule that if, in the morning, the feed troughs are found to be empty then mijre feed must be given the next night: Fed in this way the teams eat all they want and then lie down to rest. In the mcraing they no doubt eat again before the teamsters come to take them ov.t to work. To those who have been accustomed to feeding liberally three times a day it would seem like cruelty to animals to only feed once a day. But owners of large gangs of teams are sure to use the methods shown by experience to give the best results. The fact that this methicd has been so generally adopted Is strong preemptive evidence 'that It Is the most satisfactory one that has been found.

BEAUTIFY YOUR LAWN. In city or country there Is nothing more delightful to look at than a nice, well-kept lawn. Of course, It requires some attention and labor, for there are few things beautiful or. useful in this world of ours, that does not cost in labor or money, but it will repay all the labor and attention lt3 costs. The lawn need not be an extensive park. If only a few feet in depth, and the width of the house, it can be made very attractive. If space permits there should be a few shade trees, and care should be used in their selection, transplanting and trimming. In trimming the work should be done so as to give the tree a symmetrical appearance, and Increase its leaf power. The lawn should be well set in grass, and that, If closely cut, may be made to have the appearance and touch of velvet. To give it this bright, green color, and velvety softness, all the dead grass must be carefully cleaned away after each cutting. All visitors to Washington. tD. C, are delighted by the beautiful swards around the government buildings, and in the smaller parks of the city. This beautiful appearance is, caused by the fact that government gardeners pay as much attention to the gras3 as to the flowers. Flowevi. should not be neglected in this IawL for your home, but should be a feature. Nearly every woman has her choice of flowers, as she has of colors fpr her gowns, so the choice and variety of the flowers must be left to the individual taste. The flowers can be put in tasty beds or to border the walks, and with a little care In the selection you can have flowers in bloom from very early In the spring until heavy frost comes in the autumn. A vase of flowers In the family room, In the parlor, or in the dining room adds a wondrous beauty and lifo to each of the rooms. The farmer's wife and daughters are Just as much "entitled to have things beautiful about them as are the wives and daughters of those who live in the city, and what Is more, they will enjoy them Just as much. In the summer time, when tfce evenings are long, and the housework is done for the day, a wonderful sight of enjoyment can be had sitting out on a beautiful lawn, where the eye can feast on the beauties of nature. Why, such a lawn is a great humanizer. The wife and daughter will be 'happier for an evening spent on such a lawn, and the farmer himself would soon- grow to be thankful for the pleasant shade, and the bright colored flowers, and to think that a vase of flowera on the table at meal time makes everything taste better. There Is no other way a farmer can make his family so contented and happy; as by beautifying their home. It would be earjy for him to get the trees, if they are not already growing on the lawn. The work of transpalnting would not be very heavy. The grass and flower seeds would cost but a trifle, and the return in pleasure, happiness and contentment would be a thousand fold. Cut Rates. "Some people are mighty hard to suit', says a clerk In a local hotel, "and I had four possible customers tonight about whom my thoughts are not fit for publication. They came from away down south and they arrived here all dusty and hungry. The- first thing that the head of the party did was to register and then to dicker for cut rates" because there were four in the party. I scaled down the rates for him, but he was not satisfied and said he'd go to another place. He went and had trouble there, and finally wound up at a third hotel. "We don't have many of that sort, but there are people from the rural Tegions who believe that there is no set price for anything anywhere and that it is throwing money away, not to have a man make a special price. I've known men to make the rounds of all the Louisville hotels in an effort to make the clerks shave down rates." Louisville HeTald. Great Catch of Whales. From some unknown cause whales are . unusually plentiful on the west coast of Shetland, and the steam whalera are reaping big harvests. It is only a few days since a great drive of whales, resulting in the slaughter of fifty, was recorded, and now it is reported tiat the week's operations have resulted la tha killing of no fewer than 164. Among tboseykilled were one sperm wfcato and one humpback, bbth very cccrc3 in that region. London Newa A prominent citizen o New Zealand left last month with his family, for Ireland, where he says he can get land cheaper and make mora nencj.

New Train Service, Chlcngo to St. Louts. The Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad now runs night and day trains to the Exposition City, which represent the highest type of railroad construction. When you go to the World's Fair, be sure your ticket Is made good over this line, and you will enjoy every mile of the short trip. Your local ticket agent will giadly make your ticket good this way if you request it Anxious to Know. Mr. Graybeard You say you have been using the "Housewife's Never Fail Cookbook" for twenty years. I am delighted to hear that. I am the author of that book. Have you tried many of he recipes? Mrs. Homebody Nearly all Mr. Graybeard Glorious! You are Just the person I've been- wanting to meet Did any of them work? A Notre Dam a 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 or Painful Periods, Tumors or Growths, Hot Flashes, Desire to Cry, Creeping Feeling over the Spine, Pain in the Back and all Female Troubles, to ftll 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 tufferers of it, that is all I ask. If the above interesta you, for proof address Mrs. M. Summers, Box 105. Notre Dame, Ind.

Some Are Dear at That. "I suppose," said the inquisitive person, "you find that brain work pays well?" "Not always," replied the great author. 'Yo4 know one is frequently offered but a penny for his thoughts." I caa recommend Tiso's Cur for Consumption for Asthma. It has glren me t reat relief. W. L. Wood, Farmenburjr, Ind.. Sept 1901. One Woman's Way. Miggles My wife never says a word when I go to a lodge meeting. Naggsby Neither does mine. But she makes up for it when I come home about 2 a. m. Friends of Lord Curaon predict that ha will yet be the grand lama of Tibet No trouble to prepare quick breakfasts If you have Mrs. Austin's famous Pancake Flour. Beady in a moment. Other men's sins are before our eyes; our own are behind our back. Seneca. Mr. WlnsloWs Soothuto Stbup for Children tecthincs oftoas the gums, reduces inflammation, ai lr p&ia. onrw wind oolie. 25 oenU bottl. UMrs. Anderson, Jacksonville, la., daughter of Recorder of Deeds, West, wko witnessed her signature to the following letter, praises Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. "Deas Mbs. Pixkiiam : There are but few wives and nothers who have not at times endured agonies and such pain as only women know. I wish Buch women knew the value c! Ivdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It is a remarkable medicine, different in action from any I ever knew and thoroughly reliable, I have seen many cases where women doctored for years without per mancnt benefit, who were cured in less than three months after taking your Vegetable Compound, while others who were chronic and incurable came out cured, happy, and in perfect health after a thorough treatment with this medicine. I have never used it myself without gaining great benefit A few doses restores my strength and appetite, and tones up the entire system. Your medicine has been tried and found true, hence I fully endorse it" Mrs. E. A. Asdebso:, 225 Washington St, Jacksonville, Fla. $5000 forfeit If original cf abovt teittr proving gt ruinenett cannot bt produced. No other medicine for women has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement , No other medicine has such a record of cures of female' troubles. Eel use to buy any substitute. u n It Caret Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Croup, Influenza, Whooping Coach, Bronchitis and Afthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first etagee, and a enre relief in advanced stages. IJee at once. Yea will ace the excellent effect after takle? the first done. Sold by dealers everywhere. Large1 bottles a ce&U and fiO cents. MEXICAN Mustang Liniment: is a positive cure for Piles. On ihz Tril I followed the trail from Texas a,VJ a Fish Brznd. R!2S8 t f Slicker, need for FcmmtloltCker overcoathea ccld, a wind Govt when windy, a rain coat when It rained, and f:r a ocver at nicht if we trot to bed, and I will ear that I have fotua mors comfort out of your slicker than any other one article that 1 ever owned." ( TU Biae sad aderas ef tl writer of Ula eaMttdwa let Ut mr be a apyUcatlae).) Vrt Weather C armen ts for TSXzZ, AVtlr-, Wcrlirj, CT v, tportlnj EMCaefCena A.J.TOVEH CO. - rea. V.M. A. yTC . CO, Limit id ,n

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HOUSEHOLD TALK.

CHINESE BREAD. Separate two eggs; add to the yolks one cup of sweet milk, one tablespoon of butter, melted, one cupful of boiled Tice, one cupful of white corameal and half a cupful of flour; beat well; add half k teaspoon of salt, oae teaspoon baking powder; mix and- stir in the well beaten whites of tbe eggs. Pour into a' shallow, greased pan, having the batter half an inch thick. Bake thirty minutes, cut in squares and erve. TROPICAL, TOAST. Cut rounds of crustless bread onefourth of an inch thick. Beat one egg very light and gradually beat Into It a cup of milk. Lay tt'& rounds on a platter and pour the mixture over them. Turn them eo as to moisten both sides. Then saute them in a little hot butter until brown. Serve with the following sauce: To a cup of seeded raisins add two cups of water. Cover and cook slowly half an hour. Then add a half cup of grated pineapple and half a cup of orange pulp cut In small pieces. Serve a spoonful of the sauce on each round of toast SOUR MILK DOUGHNUTS. Put four cups of sifted flour into a bowl and add to it a .teaspoonful of salt, a teaspoonful and a half of soda, a teaspoonful and a half of cream of tartir and a teaspoonful of mixed cinnamon and nutmeg; rub in lightly with the fingers one cup of sugar, then add two well beaten eggs and a cup tf sour milk; stir into a soft dough, toss on a well floured- bread board and roll out lightly into a sheet an inch In thickness; cut out the doughnuts, using a large and a small cooky cutter, in order to make them in rings, and fry in deep fat. Turn as soon as they come to the top, then lift out by a fork passed through the ring and drain oa brown paper. These should bo crisp, tender and free frtem any suggestion of grease. SOUR CREAM BISCUIT. Sift together two cupfuls of flour, half a taespooaful of salt, a teaspoonful of sugar and a rounded teaspoonful of baking powder. Put into a bowl halt a cupful of sour cream and half a cupful of sour milk and- beat into it half a teaspoonful of soda dissolved in a tablespoonful of cold water. As soon as It stops "singing" stir in with the sifted flour, mix gently but quickly with a spoon and turn cut on a well floured board. Pat with the floured hand- until a smooth cake is formed, then cut into shapes with a small biscuit cutter or canister top lid. Lay in a greased dripping pan and bake in a hot oven. If ycu have no cream rub a spoonful of lard or butter in the sifted flour before adding the cup of sour milk and soda. Keep the - dough as soft as possible, so that the biscuit will be tender and delicate. Buttermilk biscuit are made in the same wray, using a tablespoonful of shortening to a quart of flour. HOUSEHOLD HELPS. When making silk or satin blouses line with thin flannel or flannelette. It will prolong the life of your blouse and make a thin silk warm enough for winter wear. To clean leather chairs rub over with hot milk, and when clean and dry polish with beeswax and Wrpentine melted to the consistency of thin cream. For a kitchen floor covering it Is always best to buy a good quality of linoleum. Never wash it, but polish with beeswax and turpentine. "When dirty and greasy wipe over -with paraffin and polish with cloths. To clean velvet procure a small square of pipeclay (such as soldiers use to clean their uniforms) and scrape a little off upon the velvet; then take a brush made of the same material as the carpet, . whisk and lightly brush it off. This raises the pile and restores the bloom. Potato peelings, if dried In the oven, are said to be very useful for fire kindling. If sufficiently abundant they may be used Instead of wood, but in any case, they will economize it. A bit of glove powder costs but a trifle and by Its constant use the life of gloves will be greatly prolonged. The powder helps the glove to slip on easily and prevents dragging or pulling of the leather, besides keeping the hands cool and dry in hot weather. The little soft ootton dish mops make excellent dusters. The wax from dripping candles can be removed from table linen by a generous application of alcohol. A little soap fixed with stove black ing will produce tetter and more last ing lustre than without. Cold rain water and soap will re move machine grease. To remove peach stains soak fabric in spirits of camphor before wetting. i. TLv smart woman saves time and patience by keeping a shoe horn with the children's rubbers to make their donning easy. If stovepipes are well rubbed with lard and tied In several thickness of newspapers, they can be safely stored without fear of rust. Alum the size of a hickory nut, dissolred in a pint of starch will bright en the Color in muslins, ginghams and calicoes after washing. Grass stains on linen should be soaked for a few moments in kereosene then washed in very hot water with a generous supply of soap. If non-rust hairpins are used to fasten them down, curtains can be as nicely dried on a thick grass plot a3 In regular stretchers. Several thicknesses of newspapers laid between the bed springs and mat tress are Bqual in warmth to another mattres3. Laid between the blanket and quflt they equal an extra blanket. Medicine can be easily administered to a cat by mixing it with lard and rubbing It on the forelegs near the shoulders where it can be licked but not rolled on. An experienced cook states t that eour milk in which soda has been thoroughly dissolved, In the proportipn of one-quarter teaspoonful of soda to one cnpful milk, can be used as sweet cailk, if only a little less baking powder is used in the flour than with sweet milli.

BLOOD WILL TELL A THEOET SUPPOETED BT FEESH, COIiOLÜSIVE EVIDE1T0E

A Recent Instance Proves That a Woman's Happiness Is Largely Dependent on the State of Her Blood. .When the blood is disordered every organ of the body is affected unfavorably and fails to discharge its functions properly. In the case of every woman nature has made special provision for a periodical purification of the blood and so I Dug as this occurs her health and spirits unfailingly reveal the beneficial results. So slight a cause as a cold or a nervous shock may produce a suppression of this vital function and until it is restored she is doomed to misery. The remedy that has proved most prompt end effective in all disorders peculiar to the female sex, is that which brought Buch great relief to Miss Mattie Griggs, of No. 807 Indiana street, Lawrence, Kansas, concerning which she speaks as follows : "In the winter of 1902, fr ivm some unknown cause, there, was a cessation of functions peculiar to my sex for a period of four mouths. I became very weak and could not get up stairs without help. I had nausea and pain and a constant headache. I was under the care of a physician for three months, bet he did not succeed in curing me. Then a lady friend told me about the merits of Dr.Williams' Pink Pills which she had used in her family and she induced me to try them. It was in May when I first began to use them and in June I had fully recovered my health, and have since remained perfectly well." In all cases of delayed development of young girls ; in anaemia or weakness due to impoverished blood and showing itself in pallor, lack of ambition, despondency and nervousness ; also in the great constitutional disturbances attending the period known as the change of life, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are invaluable for women, whose health' is always closelv dependent on the stata of tha blood. They are sold by all druggists. A booklet of valuable information, relating to the care of a woman's health at all important periods, and entitled "Plain Talks to Women," will be sent free in a sealed envelope to any one who chooses to write for it to the Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y.

When

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The old monk euro, strong, straight, sure, tackles Hurts, Sprains, Bruises

The muscles flex, the the soreness dies out. Pure Food Factories that Talk on Advertising by CW. Post to Publishers at Banquet at Dattle Creek. In his address to Publishers at the Battle Creek banquet Mr. Post likened the growth of a modern commercial enterprise to the growth of an appletree. Good seed, plenty of work and water are needed, but the tree will not bear apples without sunshine. The sunshine to the commercial plant is publicity secured by advertising. It la Impossible even with the heaviest advertising to make "a success unless the article has merit of a high order. Merit is the good tree and sunshine makes the apples grow. A good

JllllL

"BAIMER BLUE LIMITED

BETWEEN Chicago and St. Louis WABASH R., R. Leaves CHICAGO - - 1103 am I Leaves ST. LOUIS (Unloa Station). 2 00 pm Arrives 5T. LOUIS (World's Fair SlaJ, 643 pm Leaves ST. LOUIS (World Fair Sis.), 214pm Arrives 5T. LOUIS (Union Station), - 703 pm J Arrives CHICAGO, - - 900 pm WABASH IS THE 0RIG1KAT0R OF THE SEYEH HCJ3 CHIMGO-ST. LCD1S SCHEDULE CONSIST OP TRAIN: , COriBlNATION BAQQAGB & snOKINO CAR. COMBINATION DINTNfJ & BUFFET CAR, COnBINATION COACH & CHAIR CAR, COMBINATION OBSERVATION & PARLOR CAR " Painted In royal blue and aold; veetlbuled throutfieut; UMed by electricity; cooled by electric fans; finished In African Mahoeany, Inlaid with hollyj windowed with bevel olate and cathedral Jewel Rlass; furnished with Wliton carpets and upholstered wiA auk Sh; HavUn eMna and Toledo cut glass: pantry, kitchen and ,ehef department specially designed; every car euppUcd with hot and cold wator and heated by ateam.

J. RAMSEY, C S. CRANE, Gem Pass, and Tkt. AU H. V. P. TAYLOR, A. Q. P. and T A-,

Sale Ten Million Boxes a Year.

TUS F!LV3 FAVCITC CC::3 s

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BEST FOR

r- r-i r. XT. II. TJ. - - - 270. C3 1C01 . a Ti-rn-ri, , P Wfcea Wrltlnj to Advertisers please scyyi ZZX cÄLtl U:a w to Advertisement In Ms pcrer. L t t:n Ej::. Kt hJ& SL) JV.U A

Western Canada's MAGNIFICENT CROPS FOR 1904 Western Canada's Wheat Crop This Year Will Be 60,000,000. BUSHELS AND WHEAT AT PRESEilT IS WORTH $1 A BUSH El The oat and barley crop will also yield abundantly. Splendid prices for all kinds of grain, cattle and other farm produce for the crowing of which the climate is unsurpassed. About 150,000 Americans hare settled la Western Canada during the past thre years. Thousands of free homesteads of 160 acre each still available In the best agricultural districts. It has been said that the United State will be forced to Import wheat within a very few years. Secure a farm In Canada and - become one of those who will produce it. ' ipplf for Information to Snportntendont Immlfrmtloa, Ottawa, Canada, or to Aathorlnd Canadian Oovamaiont Af.nti J. O. Ponran. r.oom 6, Bl Fonr FTJ, TnAlanar?):, Lai.; Ii. ILWliiiuni. Law Building. Toledo. Citlo.

1 CHICAGO, FT. WAYNE, fOSTO RIA, FINDLAY, CLEVELAND, BUFFALO. NEW YORK, BOSTON ALL POINTS I EAST and WEST Reached Most Quickly and Comfortably via tha Nickel Plate Road. Three Express Trains erery day inhe year, thru Pullmaa Sloping Cars to Chicago, New York and Boston. Comi: rtable high tack seat coaches and jnodwrn Dining Cars serving meals on IndlTidnal Club Plan, ranging In prtcea from 35e to 11X0. Alio a la Carte senrice. Colored Porters In uniform to look to ihm comfort of first and second class passengers and keep ears scrupulously cln. Direct Connections with Fast Trains at Chicago cad Buffalo. All Agents Sell Tickets via this Popular Route, Write to C. A. ASTER LIN, Trav. Patt. Auant. Ft Wayna, Ind. RUBBER STAMPS. All kinds of Rubber Stamps Made to Order. Self inking Daters-some thing new. Ink and Inking Pads. Send for Catalogue to Lock Box 219. Port Wayne, lad.

acolbs Oil

kinks untwist, Price 25c. and 50c. make Postum and Grape-Nuts. salesman who knows how to talk with his pen can present the logic, argument and salesman ability to thousands of customers at one timo through the columns of the newspaper, a stryig contrast to the old-fashioned way of talking to one customer at a time. He spoke of the esteem of the advertiser, for a publisher that takes especial interest in making the advertising announcements attractive. Advertisements should contain truthful information of interest and value to readers. The Postum methods have made Battle Creek famous all over tho world and about doubled the population. 99 Jr., Präsident. - . - St. Louis, Ma. St. Loots, Mo. TEIG EOVELS

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