Plymouth Tribune, Volume 4, Number 35, Plymouth, Marshall County, 1 June 1905 — Page 7

THINK OF IT! This Pretty Matron Had Headache and Backache, and Her Condition Was Serious. PE-RIMMA CURED.

, y i V v. 1 MRS. M. BR1CKNER. 99 Eleventh Street, ) Milwaukee, Wis. S "A short time ago I found my condition very serious. I had headaches, pains In the back, and frequent dizzy spells which grew worse every month. I tried two remedies before Peruna, and was discouraged when I took the first dose, but my courage soon returned. In less than two months my health was restored. 'Mrs. M. Drlckner. Thp rensnri of go manj failures to FEMALE TROUBLE l0T RECOGNIZED AS CATARRH cure cases simi lar to the above is the fact that diseases peculiar to the female sex are not commonly recognized as beiDg cau?isl by catarrh. Catarrh of one organ is exactly the same as catarrh cf any other organ. What will cure catarrh of the head will nlso cure catarrh of the pelvic organs. I'eruaa cures these cases simply because it cures the catarrh. If you have cat.irrh write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, anJ he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. "Yes" Churches School Houses and Homes eught to bo decorated and made beautiful and healthful by using A Reel: C jienf l?ÄSd,ss cot rub or scale, destroys disease germs and vermin, No tig of walls after once apJ plied. Any on- a brush It on mix with cold water. Pi' inting aol whitening, and the most efcboru relief, stencil work and frescoing may be uone with it. Other finishes bearing fanciful n.iraes and mixed with hot water) do not have the cementing property of Alabastlne. 'They are stuck on with Cine or other animal matter, which rots, feeding disease germs, robbing, scaling and spoiling wall, clothing, etc. Such finishes must be warned off evety year cost ly, filthy work. Bay Alabastine only in nve-poand. pack, tires, properly labeled. Tint card, pretty wall and ceiling design, "Hints on Decora deg, and our artists' services in making color plans, free. - ALABASTINE COMPANY, (hand Rapids, Mich., or 105 Water St, N. Y. Positively cured by these Little Pills, They al30 reSeva Distress from Dyspepsia, Indlgestlon and Too Hearty rating. A perfect remedy tor Dizziness, Kausea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste la tho Mouth, Coated Tongue. Pain In the Side. TORPID LI VEIL They CARTERS rilTTLE IVER PILLS. ZÜ regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SlULLFILL SUALL DOSL SLUUlFRiCL Genuijtt Must Bear Fas-Simile Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. No Hnrry About It. Tlje Sunday school class had just finished sinking "I Want to Be an Angel, and with the Angels Stand." The teacher, observing that one little fellow had not contributed his voice to help swell the sacred refrain, said: "Johnny, don't yon want to be an ungel?" "Yes, ma'am," answered Johnny, "but not just no-y. I'd rather be a baseball pitcher a good deal first." MERCILESS ITCHING. Another Speedy Care of an Itching Hnmor with Losa of Hair by the Cutlenra Remedies. "For two years my neck was covered with sores, the humor spreading to my hair, which fell out, leaving an unsightly bald spot, and the soreness, Inflammation, and merciless itching made me wild. Friends advised Cuticura Soap and Cuticara Ointment, and after a few applications the torment subsided, to my great Joy. The sores soon disappeared, and my hair grew again, as thick and healthy as ever. I shall always recommend the Cuticura Remedies. (Signed) Harry J. Spalding, 504 West 101th street, NewYork City." And That's No lite. "Ever notice it?" queried the man who asks questions on the installment plan. "Did I ever notice what?" asked th party of the dens a part. "That the ball player who hits the most "balls" at night always hits the fewest in the next day' game?" continued h of the prologue. Pays 6 per cent The Realty Syndicate of San Francisco Paid-up Capital, $4,600,000 Assets, til, 130,895.32 - : Incorporated 1895 tnr.tcent Certificates issued in sums of $100 to $10,000 Interest 6 per cent pr annua Payable semi-annually rate to The Reslty Syndicate IIa. II Szntotzs Ct, Gn Fracizco Ci

3

''-""" .... um i

CARTERS C"Jittie WW-

k 1

ASPARAGUS CULTURE. The following is part of 'a paper read by Edward Y. Teas, of Centerville, at a recent meeting of -the Wayne County Horticultural Society: I consider asparagus the most delicious product of the garden, as well as the most healthful, least understood and most neglected. My first attempt to make an asparagus bed was more than fifty years ago; to be exact, in 1853. We dug a trench three feet deep. In the bottom of this we laid boulders about a Toot deep and then- filled in wtih soil and manure and in thi3 planted the roots. In spite of this labor and expense, we had in 4u9 season asparagus for our table. In later year I have planted asparagus seeds to raisa plants in the nursery for tho general nursery trade, p.nd I find plants that are grown by planting the seed, like you would beets, or beans, yield quite a cutting of young shoots the second year from seed, and thereafter good enough for all practical purposes. If the plants do not stand too thick in the tow the yield will be satisfactory for twenty years or more. Rich soil is essential to the production of fancy stem, and that the plant should be a reaonable distance apart for the proper development of each. If I were making a permanent bed in the family garden, 1 would have the rows two feet apart and the plants one foot apart in the row, setting the crown of the plant about three inches deep. Cultivate the same as you would other garden stuff the first year. In November Temove all the tops and cover the bed with an inch or two of stable manure, this to be lightly forked under the following spring. After this, little cultivation is required, only to destroy the weeds as they appeax. An occasional mulch of manure Is desirable, but not every year. Mr. Conover, an enterprising gardener of Long. Island, planted a field to asparagus scrce y-.?ars aso, sotting the plants four feet apart each way, cultivating wtih a horse. The result was that he astonished New York markets with shoot, cr gra33 as it" is termed, of such extraordinary size as to command fabulous prices. Mr. Conover sold the seed and roots from his famous garden at Conover's Colossal, and this for a Joen years was leading variety. Since that time, others have obtatnei shoots of extra size by careful cu'.t.atioa. and now we have Palmetto, Barr's Mammoth, and Columbain White Mammoth, the latter of a decidedly light shade of green. All these are good, the size d?pDding large1. 7 ou soL and cultivation. I would not advise any cutting the first year. Some may be taken off the second year. In cutting over a bed or row I aim to cut every stalk, thinning out the inferior ones so the bed is smooth and clean as far as I go. We usuahy begin cutting tne last of April, and continue until the middle 'of July. This allows the plants to make considerable growta the latter part of the summer, and recuperate so as to be ready for the next spring'3 work. Our first cutting of asparagus this year was on April 4th, and we expect to have a supply for at least four months, from our rows of two year old plants. Indiana Farmer. . : POPULAR TOULOUSE GEESE. By far the most popular of the varieties of geese is the Toulouse. It has been longer known than some other useful kinds like the African, and is a very rapid grower and reaches a large size. The standard weights are twenty pounds for full-grown ganders and eighteen pounds for females, but even this weight is often exceeded. The color is gray In some strains a light gray, other darker, the under parts and fluff white, bill and legs redish orange. As layers the Toulouse rank medium, being rather les3 prolific than the African, but more eo than the Emden. The season's output is from twenty to forty eggs per bird, geese two or three yt-ars old laying more than very young geese. Their disposition is quiet and they are less troublesome ttf care for than some other breeds and will get a?ong rery well in a field without much water.' A cross of the Emden and Toulouse has been pronounced the best all-round cross for general market purposes for both early and late markets and for the production of larga geese for" the holiday markets. The cross breds are large, rapid-growing and make a good-looking carcass. Geese are generally considered mqre profitable that duck, although only a small number can be kept, because they require wider range, but when provided with" sufficient pasture they require little attention, and will secure a good part of their living if they have access to marshy lands or small stream. Sometime they begin to lay as early as January, but ually not to any extent until March. At nesting time they should be provided wtih barreU containing straw or. hay, so that they will nest where they can be Kept in sight. The first litter may be taken away and hatched under hens or by iücubator,- after which the goose will lay another litter. Breeders usually keep the geese laying as long as possible, haichig mot of the eggs with hen. The eggs hatch ;in thirty days, and a goose of average size will cover about fifteen, Fur the. Qrst ferär'tlavs they are liable to -be chilled, but after the first week they are more nardy and rc(iu!re little care. , The '.usual plan is to confine them in spall pons or yards which can oe moved to frSa grass every day. be-cau-3 they require cccldcrabis pasture. Besides the gras3 or clover, Cxcy ere fed ca a rturs.cf Iivllan Ctal and shorts mixed with water ll'Jt sr;QCicd dic-t entirely ri ta

fore feealng. When three or foui weeks old. they should be given wide Tange, but within an enclosure. When fattening, they are confined, j and fed a mixture of ground grains with beef scrrps, gradually increasing the proportion of corn meal and beef scraps until the food is about ten per cent, beef scraps and ninety per cent. meal. Toulouse geese reach a weight of ten pounds at ten week3 of age, and as a rule are sold more profitably at inat weight as green geese. The market for these begins in June and lasts until March. O. B. F. in Massachusetts Ploughman. MARK THE BROODING HENS. Where one keeps the one breed of hens, there Is difficulty in distinguishing one sitting hen from another, so if they exchange nests the way to tell is a great help. If one is supplied with numbered leg bands and will put the number ou a card with the date of sitting, and tack the cord in a conspicuous place, on or near, the sitting hen, the difliculty Is overcome with but little trouble, but all are not possessed of them. Different colored strings tied around the leg, would serve the same purpose. Of course no long ends will be left. Make the cord something like this. April 10th red if the hen is set fn the tenth of April and ha. a red string on her leg. This all necessitates lifting the hen, with perhaps disturbance of the eggs; some otherwise gentle hens, resent being lifted, a dab with a paint brubh will lo the work; but one must have several sorts of paint, or else touch plainly on paper or cardboard, back of the comb, andther on back, one on left wing, one on right and so forth; this toucii of paint will not injure or inconvenience any of the hons or anything, and will last until the brooding season is over. Whatever mark is decided upon, whether string, paint, leg band or even clipping certain feathers, be very sure to mark the distinguishing touch plainly on paper or cardboard, and tack securely on or near the sitting place. You may be sure to remember just where each hen belongs, but it may happen that some one else will need to see after the sitters some da; then there might be trouble. Keepers of pure breeds have trouble that the keepers of "all sorts and some mixed" have no idea of, but these very troubles teach us to be careful and methodical. By a look at the card anyone can tell when the chicks are due, and whether the nght hen is on the right nest. To be really sure, it is best to have the nests numbered, and the nest number, together wtih date and distinguishing mark, written in a book kept in a safe place; so should a card be destroyed, you would yet know. E. C, In Indiana Farmer. SCOURS IN HORSES. - In nine cases out of ten the cause of scours in horses is due to improper feeding, and while the trouble is a bad one to deal wtih at any time, it is especially bad at a season when considerable hard work is expected of the horse. Some horses are given to scouring easily, and when such is the case, care must be used not to furnish much feed that h laxative in character, and also to feed more largely of concentrated foods than of roughage. A horse that scours and is doing ? hard day's work should have whole oats mixed with a small quantity of bran as the main grain food, and the morning food should be whole haj, all that he will eat in half an hour, then what water he wants within reason, and then the grain making the ration the quantity experience has shown is proper for the particular animal. The same feed should be given at noon and at night, ' but the quantity of watea may be increased at night. In working a horse liable to attacks of scours, begin the day wtih him in än easy manner, and for the first two or three hours do not push him. Handkd in this manner he will probably go through the rest of the day in good shape, and do a fair day's work. Such horses should be well groomed after a day of work to keep up the circulation of the skin, and the bedding should be clean and plentiful Indianapolis News. ' RAISING UOL.TS. There Is room for reform in the usual method of raising colts on the farm. The quite prevalent practice of leaving the colt in the barn whne the mother does a half day's work In the fields is very bad. The colt (require food oftener than that. Hunger makes it lmputlent and restless and cultivates in it a vicious disposition. Eesldes tlie long fast makes it feed to excess when the mother comes, generally over-filling its stomach, with over-heated milk, impairing its digestion and laying the louii'datlon for present and future disease Up to Date Farming. Those Good Old Days.. According to one of the old English chronicles, royalty in 1234 had nothing for a. bed but a sack of straw. Evsn in the day of Queen Elizabeth at least half of the population of London slept on boards. Blocks of wood served as pillows. The sleeping chamber of the Queen was "daily strewn with fresh rushes. Carpets were un-k known. Henry VI., Immediately on arising, tossed off a cup of wine. Tea, cofTee and chocolate were, of course, unheard of at that time. Sugar was o be had only in drug stores and tfc'ea "jy tie ounce. PnyL. .j of Eng land are complaining that the competition cf departments Vi hcspitsls, is ruT-O'Uily xlt.'?" -

CREAMED EGGS. Cook six eggs half an hour. While they are cooking, make a cup of white sauce. When the eggs are done cut them in quarters arrange on bits of thin buttered toast, dip the sauce over them, and send to the table piping hot. POTATO SALAD WITH CELERY. Six or eight cold-boiled potatoes, one-third the same bulk of celery, one egg, one teaspoonful of salt, one teasponful powdered sugar, one-hall teaspoonful of white pepper, one scant teaspoonful dry mustard, two tablespoonfuls salad oil, four of vinegar; stir salt, Mi gar, pepper and mustard Into the beaten yolk of the egg; add the oil a little at a time, then the vinegar, lastly the beaten white; cut the potatoes and celery into small bits, mix and pour the dressing ovei ihem. Garnish with parsley or celery tops. SPINACH AND EGG SALAD. Prepare and mould the spinach. Havo ready, also, some cold boiled egg and mayonnaise. Turn the spinach from the moulds on to nests of shredded lettuce. Dispose, chain fashion, around the base of the spinach, the whites of the eggs cut In rings, aid press a star of mayonnaise in the centre of each ring. Pass the yolKs through a sieve and sprinkle OTer the top of the mounds and place above this the round ends of the whites. ROSE JELLY. Charming decorative pieces are made of the transparent gelatine jelly and wild rose, or rose petate. .Make the plain lemon jelly, flavoring with rose. Pour a very thin layer of the liquid jelly into individual round oval moulds, and let it harden. Then lay upon it a single briar rose or a grouping of rose petals, and fill the mould with the liquid jelly. Set away for several hours in the ice chest to harden. When turned out the pink rose gleaming through the thin cover of transparent jelly gives a beautiful effect. As the makiug of marmalade is one of the most easily achieved exploits in the art of preserving, few cupboards need be without their supply of the home-made delicacy. Tho two receipts that are given here have been tried and found true many a time and oft. For the first, take twelve Seville oranges and two Valencias and shred them finely. Allow two quarts of water to every pound of fruit, and letthe result stand for twenty-four hours, then boil it until the chips are tender. Again leave it to stand . for another twenty-four hours, and boil it with one pound of sugar to each pound of fruit until It jellies. A second very good receipt is as follows: Take six Seville oranges and one lemon, or twelve Sevülle oranges and two lemons, shred the fruit very finely, having previously wiped it most carefully, and taken off any specks which may adhereto the peel. Place the fruit in a largo vesssel and add one pint of water for every lemon, and let the mixture stand for twenty-four hours, then boil it until it is tender and again allow it to stand for twenty-four hours. Next add one pound of sugar to every orange or lemon, ana boil it again until the mixture jellies. Remove it from the fire, put it in jars and cover it with airtight papers. The presence of the lemon in the ßecond receipt gives the confection a pleasant zest, and will be better liked by people who do not care for sweet preserves fcjan the first one. But both will be found excellent, totn for puddings, tartlets and on toasts or bread eaten in the ordinary manner. USEFUL HINTS. All oak furniture tooks nice if ruBbed with beeswax and turpentine. Put on thinly, and polish' with a brush. A pinch of salt added to the whites of eggs will make them whip up easier. ' Cream or milk that has turned, but is not soured may be made sweet by stirring into it one teaspoonful of carbonate of magnesia to each quart of milk. ' Landscape chlnUes are beautiful, and when artistically employed ma.e charming spring and summer upholsteries. When feeling faint or the symptoms of heart palpitation, bend the head downward. Some persons cannot stand so violent a. remedy, but it is effectual, aa It allows the blood to run to the üead. Do not attempt to clean suede gloves with gasoline. Draw them on Che. hands and scrub with a soft, old nail brush dipped in fuller's earth. Some cleaners combine equal parts of fuller's earth and powdered alum. Many people do not know how to rest when tired. If the waist is aching badly, lie down on a sofa or beul and tbrust the arm under the left knee while lying on the left side. Less scum rises on soup after the requisite amount of salt has been added, therefore arrange the skimming accordingly. s 'Ci A cup of cream added to a pot of beans the last hoar while baking greatly improves them. v, Bread is not indispensable in making stuffing'. Potatoes, rice, fruits and chestnuts answer tlie purpose as well. Pumpkin and squasa are better for -teaming than boiling. . On ironing day when space on the range top is valuable and It la also desirable to keep. the top as clean aa possible, chops, or Hamburg steak can be baked in the oven. A spoonful of water added before beating an egg increases the amount of froth; a pinch of salt hastens lta ccmt22. Oysters for frying may be srollsd

ATAXIA JSCURABLE EEPOETED CURE STANDS TEST 01 PULL IHVESTIGATIOU".

A Former Victim of Locomotor Ataxia Now Free from Suffering and Actively at Work. ' Yes," said Mr.Watkins to a reporter, it is true that I have been cured of ataxia by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." "Are you sure you had locomotor ataxia?" "The doctors themselves told me so. Besides I recognized the symptoms." "What were they?" "Well, the first indications were a stiffness about the knee joints that came on about four years ago. A few months after that appeared, my walk got to be uncertain, shaky-like. I lost confidence In my power to control the movements of my legs. Once, when I was in the cellar, I started to pick rip two scuttles of coal, and my legs gave way suddenly, and I tumbled all in a heap in a basket. I couldn't close my eyes and keep my balance to save my life. Then I had fearful pains over my whole body and I lost control over my kidneys and my bowels." " How about your general health ?" " Sometimes I was so weak that I had to keep my bed and my weight fell off twenty pounds. Things looked pretty bad for me until I ran across a young man who had been cured by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and who advised me to try them." "Did these pills help you right away?" " I didn't see much improvement until I had used six boxes. The first benefit I noticed was abetter circulation and a picking up iu strength and weight. I gradually got confidence in my ability to direct the movements of my legs, and in the course of seven or eight months all the troubles had disappeared." Do you regard yourself as entirely well now?" " I do tho work of a well man at any rate. I can closo ray eyes and stand up all right and move about the same as other-men. The pains aro all gone except an occasional twitch in tho calves of my legs." Mr. James H.Watkins resides at No. 73 Westerlo street, Albany, N.Y. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills can be obtained at any drug store. They should be used as sooij as the first signs of locomotor ataxia appear in a peculiar uumbuess of the f ecU Her Platform. She is not a female suffragist, Yet she has decided quite That one of the rights of woman Is the sacred marriage rite. Just Discrimination in Railway Rates. All railroad men qualified to speak on the subject in a responsible way are likely to agree with President Samuel Spencer of the Southern Railway when he says: "There is no division of opinion as to the desirability of stopping all secret or unjustly discriminatory devices and practices of whatsoever character." Mr. Spencer, in speaking of "unjustly discriminatory" rates and devices, makes a distinction which is at once apparent to common sense. There may be discrimination in freight rates which is just, reasonable and imperatively required by the complex commercial and geographical conditions with which expert rate makers have to deal. To abolish such open and honest discrimination might paralyze the industries of cities, States and whole sections of our national territory. This distinction between just and unjust discrimination is clearly recognized In the conclusions of the International Railway Congress, published yesterday: "Tariffs shonld be based on commercial principles, taking into account the special conditions which bear upon the commercial value of the services rendered. With the reservation that rates shall be charged without arbitrary discrimination to all shippers alike under like conditions, the making of rates should as far as possible have all the elasticity necessary to permit me development of the traffic and to produce the greatest results to the public and to the railroads themselves." The present proposal Is, as Mr. Walker D. II Ines of Louisville showed in his remarkable testimony the other day before the Senate committee at Washington, to crystallize flexible and justly discriminatory rates into fixed government rates which cannot be changed except by the intervention of some government tribunal, and by this very process to increase "the temptation to depart from the published rate and the lawfu! rate in order to meet some overpowering and urgent commercial condition." New York Sun. Kentucky's Girl Blacksmith. Miss Clara Medlin, of Pilot Oak, Ky., bears the distinction of being the only female blacksmith on record, says a St. Louis Globe-Democrat special. Miss Medlin is a comely young worn an with a wealth of dark-brown hair and a pair of bewitching brown eyes. She can shoe a horse or weld a tire as quickly as any smith, and as for neatness, no other smith will dare compete with her. , She is also an expert carriage painter. This is really her specialty, she having painted' over seventy buggies the last season. Notwithstanding all of this, Miss Medlin has not neglected to educate herself in housekeeping and cooking. EVERY WALK IN LIFE. A. A. Boyce, a farmer, living hre and a hair miles from Trenton. Mo., says: CSL. cold settled In my kld-K) neys and de- Q veloped s o 1 W quickly thatJI I ws obliged io lay on 4 work on aecount of the aching In my back and sides. For a time I was unable to walk at all, and every makeshift I tried and all the medicine I took had not the slightest effect. My back continued to grow weaker until . I began taking Doan's Kidney Pills, and I must say I was more than surprised and gratified to notice the backache disappearing gradually until It finally stopped." Doan's Kidney Pills sold by all dealers or by mall on receipt of price, 50 cents per box. Foster-Mlibura Co., CuJalo, N. Y.

- W yti

Tho Curious Limpets. The limpets are a curious kind of shellfish. They resemble the abalones In their habits. The interior Is mads of the most brilliant colors, bronzo and iridescent hues predominating. They are found on the west coast of Mexico and are so large that the people use them for wash basins. They are ferocious animals and prey with great ferocity on clams. The process seems slow, but the limpet always gets there. He gets his cover over the unsuspecting clam and puts his big foot on his shell, generally on a weak spot. Then he whips out a long, wiry tongue and proceeds to bore a hole in his captive. When this is done the shell flies open, and the limpet is free to feast on the poor clam's carcass. He eats but a part and leaves the rest for the fishes of the sea.

Are the Packer Itecelvlnjf Fair Play? When the Garfield report on the business methods of the packers appeared, after eig'ut months' Investigation, it was severely criticised and roundly denounced. After threa months of publicity it is significant that those who attempted to discredit it have failed to controvert the figures contained in tnat exhaustive document The public is beginning to notice this omission, and the feeling is rapidly growing that the sensational charges out of which the "Beef Investigation' arose were without foundation. If the official statements of the report are susceptible of contradiction, a good many people are now asking why the facts and figures are not furnished to contradict them. The truth seems to be that most of the charges contain unfounded sensational assertions. A flagrant example of this appeared in a recent article in an Eastern magazine, to the effect that "forty Iowa banks were forced to close their doors in 1003-4 by the Beef Trust's manipulation of cattle prices." Chief Clerk Cox, of the banking department of the Iowa State Auditor's office, has tabulated the list of banks given in the magazine article and has publicly denounced the statement a.i utterly untrue. He gives separately the reasons for each failure mentioned and officially states that they have been caused by unwise speculations and by reckless banking methods. It may be well to suspend judgment upon the packers until the charges against them are proved. Short Lived, Footlighte Did you say your friend was playing in "The Twelfth Night" yet? Sue Brette No; the company busted up before it reached the twelfth. Yonkers Statesman. Do Tour Pcet Ache and Burn? Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or new shoes feel easy. Cures Corns. Bunions. Swollen, Hot and Sweating Feet. At all Druifjrists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FKKK. . Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Uoy. N. Y. Probably the youngest general in the world is a nephew of the late Shah of Persia, a boy not yet 14 years old. lie holds the rank of full general in the Persian army. We use PIso's Cure for Consumption In preference to any other cough medicine. Mrs. S. E. Barden. 442 P street, Washington, D. C May 25, 1901. Refuse to be discouraged if the standard you have reached doe3 not satisfy you; that is a proof that you are an artist, not an artisan. Success Magazine. Clear white clothes are a sign that the housekeeper uses Ked Cross Ball Blue. Large 2 oz. package, 5 cents. King Edward has given the head of his famous horse Ambush II. to the Natural History museum of London. Dr. IteTld Kennedy's FTrlt Renedr earvd my wife ot a terrible diens. With vleaar I testify to tu mwreloa efficacy." J. Sweet. Albany, ü. V. If a man lacks enthusiasm it takes him twice as long to accomplish task. Mr. TTlnslotrs Soothtsq Srarr for Children teething; aoltens the ftnm, reduce inflammation, allay pain, cores wind colic 2i centa a bottle.

Say Plainly to .Your Grocer That you Tnmt LION COFFEE always, and he, being a square man, will not try to sell you anything else. You may not care for our opinion, but What About the United Judgment of Millions of housekeepers who have used LION COFFEE for over a quarter of a century ? Is there any stronger proof of merit, than tho

& s rr Oo o

Lion-head on every package. Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE TV00LS0N SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio.

Sale Ten Million Bones a Year.

TK3 FAMILY'S FAVCHITE CZT.Z'.T.Z A

CANDY CATIIArVTIC

BEST FOR THE BOV7ELG

c c I East Couh brmp. 'luux Good. Ca

LIVING 700 HASTILY ERICANWO MEN BREAK D OVn

Zrresrularitles and Ferna! Derangements Result Cured by Lydia U. Pinkham'f. Vegetable Compound. Owing to our mode and manner of living, and the nervous haste of every woman to accomplish just so much, each day, it is said that there is not one woman in twenty-five but what suffers with some derangement of tho female organism, and this is the secret of so many unhappy homes. No woman can be amiable, lighthearted and happy, a joy to her husband and children, and perform tho duties incumbent upon her, when she la Buffering with backache. headachet nervousness, sleeplessness, bearing, down pains, displacement of ti e womb, spinal weakness or ovarian troubles. Irritability and snappy retorts tako the pls.ee of pleasantness, and all sunShine Is driven out of the home, and lives are wrecked by woman's great enemy womb trouble. Head this letter: Dear Mrs. Pinkham : " I was troubled for eipht years with irregularities which broke down my health and brought on extreme nervousness and despondency. Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound proved to be the only medicine which helped me. Pay by day I improved in health while taking it until I was entirely tired. I can attend to my social and household duties and thorouhlv enjoy life once more, as Lydia U. PinklianVs Vegetable Compound has made me a well woman, without an ache or a pain." Mrs. Chester Curry, 43 Saratoga Street, East Boston. Mass. At the first indication of ill health, painful or irregular menstruation, pain ii the side, headache, backache, bearing"-down pains, nervousness or 'the blues." secure at once a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and begin its use. eHlTr ope Jire You Con? to Europe? Consult R. G. Thompson, Tass. and Ticket Asrcnt, Wabash It. IL, Ft. Wayne. Ind. Lowest current rates quoted, all classes, sinjrlw and return tickets. Revised sailing lists furnished on application. Prepaid orders issuwd, Following Atlantic lines represented, rix: forth Girntai Lloyd Conari lln Amtrica Lin Hamburg -Americai French Lint ujtro-Hmtrlcau White Sfar Lint Anchor Lint Holland America Atlantic Transport f abrt Lint Red Star line Dominica and C P. R. Lina Tho. Cock & Son, World Tsurt 6 Daily Trains to New York. 6 The Wabash maintains a high class fas through service to New York and Boston. Pullmans, Recllnlnjr Chair Cars, Dining Can. The best of everything. RAIL AXD OCEAN TICKETS TO ALL TBE WORLD Josh Billings, the quaint philosopher whose maxims are full of homely wisdom, once said : ' Tho longer I live the more I believe a good set of bowels are worth more than a good set of brains." Celery King helps ro&ke good bowels. 25c WArJTCn Men of ability to call on horselinil I ImU owners and introduce new article of merit. Peerless Mfg. Co., Hartford, Coun.

Not

Boh

Confidence of the People and ever Increasing popularity? HON COFFEE Is carefully selected at tne plantation snipped direct to oar various factories, where it Is skillfully roasted and carefully packed In sealed packagesunlike loose collee, which Is exposed to germs, dust. Insects, etc. LION COFFEEreaches you as pure and clean as when It left the factory. Sold only In lib. packages

r --

J F. 7. IT. U. - - - iro. 22 1CC3 Wbea wrltlcx to AdrcrtiMra pVf My y-3 mw the Adrertlsement la tkta paper. if t:;:';jrt.".iTr up,.c:rj Fi::, ki -AiU.i

t