Plymouth Tribune, Volume 4, Number 40, Plymouth, Marshall County, 13 July 1905 — Page 7

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Assisted by Cuti;ura Ointment, thegreat Skia Cur :tfo preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings, and chafings, in the form 'of baths for annoying irritations and Inflammations, or undue perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative, a ntiseptic, purposes which readily suggest themselves, as well as for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. So!d thrtmont the iror'd. Potter Pruz & Cbem.Corjw Boston. aV-Usiicd Iree, "A. Book tot Women ForSäoiltailier A FREE BOTTLE OF nil's Grape Tonic TO AIYOIE WHO WILL WRITE FC'rf IT MOW Have you Constipation, Stomach Trouble, Indigestion, Dyspepsia., Blood Poison, Skin Diseases, Sores Sudden Bowel Trouble, Diarrhea, Cholera, Etc? No one whose bowels are healthy and active contracts these complaints. Invariably they are the result of Constipation which means decayed, poisoned and dying bowels or intestines. Check diarrhea and you are liable to fatal blood poison a physic males you worse. There is only one right course and that is to treat the cause. Re vive and strengthen the bowels and intestines. We will prove to you that M all's Orape Tonic cures Constipation and all the; s terrible Bowel troubles because it cleauses the Blood and makes the intestines practically new. It feeds the starved condition and brings them back to life nothing else will. For bot weather ills it has no equal. WRITE FOR THIS FREE BOTTLE TODAY Good for aiünj children and nursing mothers. FREE COUPON Send this coupon with your name and address and your druggist's name, for a free bottle of Hull's Grape Tonic, Stomach Tonic and Constipation Cure. ' To Muü's Crape Tonic Co., 21 Third Ave., Rock Island, III. Give F til Address and Write Tlainlp The Jr.ou bottle contains nearly three times the 50c size. At drug stores. The genuine has a date and number stamped on the label take no other from your druggist. Your Children's Health IS OP VITAL IMtfORTAXCE. A large part cf their timu is spent in the schoolroom and it becomes the duty of erery parent and good citizen to see to it that the schoolrocTis are free from disease breeding germs. Decorate the walla with Cleanly, sanitary, durable, artistic, and safeguards health. fl Desk Cement &SS?Sf Does not nib or scale. Destroys disease germ and Termin. No washing of walls alter once applied. Any one can brash It on mix with cold water. The delicate tints are non-poisonous and ere made with special reference to the protection of pupils' eyes. Beware of paper and genn-ab-sorbing and disease-breeding kalsomines bearing fanciful names and mixed with hot water. Bar Alabastine only in fire pound packages, properly labeled. Tint card, pretty wall and celling design. M Hints on Decorating. and our artletar eexTices In making color plans, free. ALABASTINE CO., Grand Rapids, Mich., or 105 Water St, N. V. inn 11 Positively cared by these Little Pills. . They also rellere Dl tress from Dyspepsia. In digestion and Too Hearty Eating; A perfect remedy for Dizziness. Kau?a Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongrue, Pcm in the Side, TORPID UVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Yejetatle. SlüUirilL SLULLDf. SlLLFuCE. 1 1 1 Gsnast; Just Beer FaSimi!e Signature &IFUSE CONSTITUTES. FAfV'Q FflD AIC Good orodoctire well li.ii.J lUll CALL improved farms in Ohio and Southern Michigan, from $L3 per acre np. Some exceptional terrains at present; terms arranged. Write far list. Address UM1 K-X, ftm trrtw, li!;slc, Cila. Ycun ov;;i sigiiatuuE saw.: Rubber Stamp for !nlnr Letters. Vouchers, etc at ta low prlc of U-ä End tct par-

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CARTER'S IVER PI M.S. r.- 1

GARTERS 1 I IVER

HOW TO WIM SUCCES&

Governor Douglas of Massachusetts Gives-Advice to Hoys. From a place at the cobbler's bench at a mere pittance, William L. Douglas has risen to the highest executive position In the State of Massachusetts, that of Governor, and has made himself a millionaire. Ills rules and precepts of success are given by him through the Boston Sunday American The Gorernor Is interested in boya and declares that these rules are given for the benefit of boys. The Governoi 6ays: Recently, in talking to a delegation oi bright-faced boys, I told them that thej should, ia order to make the most of life, obey the old maxim, "Stick to your last." If you don't you'll find that old ogra called trouble, bobbing up in your pathWay every now and then, and you'll never get to be on speaking terms witb success. Fortune, yoa know, farors th brave. In the battle of life the really brave man is the one with couras enough to "stick to his last" in the fac of early rebuffs and temporary reverse He's the fellow wha will eventually b able to laugh at trouble and to get chummy with success. What would you think of a shoemaker who, after making part of a shoe on one last, became dissatisfied and started another shoe on a different last, keepiag up this method untS he had finally spent all his money foi stock and had nothing but a lot of halffinished shoes to show for It. Foolish way to do, isn't it? But it's no more foolish than for a young man to tackli a new line of business every little whilf. until he grows too old to learn any business thoroughly. Everything in nature is fitted to do om thing well and spends Its whole life doing it. You never hear of the ant going into the honey-making business; nor oi the bee building ant hills for a change. Each one knows its place in the world and sticks to it, and that is what boyi must do if they would accomplish great things. Nearly every boy at an earlj age displays an aptitude for something, and if that aptitude is properly developed the process of selecting a last is simplified. And remember always to keep your ambition, up to the top notch! Whatever you do, try to do it bettei than the other fellow. At school maki it a point to stand at the head of youi class: and at play don't be satisfied until you can jump the farthest or throw thi straightest. Then when you enter business life this matter of getting ahead will become a habit. Now another thing to think about ij this: Don't try to do what you like de what you can. That's a good companion piece for "stick to your last." Don't let the attraction of something you don't know lure you away from the thing you do. Do what you can and stick to it. That's wisdom. Peace After the Battle. The wife of a well-known Western Senator is a Southern woman who was married to the Senator late in life. While still a young girl she left her native State and came North to live; but from, time to time she would revisit her old home. On one of these occasions shortly before her, marriage she happened to meet the old colored "mammy" who had been her nurse, and who was vastly surprised to find that "Miss Mary" still Tvas unwedded. "Lan Miss Ma'y!" she exclaimed, "ain't jo married yitr "No, not yet, Aunt Sally," was the answer. "My, my! Who'd a-thou.?ht it? An yir," she mused, determined to soften this disgrace, "iftah all, dey does say dat ol' maids has de happies' life; dat is, aftah dey quits struggling " TORTURING, DISFIGURING Ha mors, Eczemas, Itchings, Inflammations, Burnings, Scaldinga and Chafings Cured by Cuticura. The agonizing itching and burning of the skin, as in eczema; the frightful scaling, as in psoriasis; the loss of hair and crusting of the scalp, as in scalled head; the facial disfigurements, as In pimples and ringworm; t awful suffering of Infants, and anxiety of wornout parents, as in milk crust, tetter and salt rheum all demand a remedy of almost superhuman virtues to successfully cope with them. That Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills are such stands proven beyond all doubt by the testimony of the civilized world. No Pension Tct. "Well, to be honest with you," said the tramp, T can't exactly say that I'm a veteran and have witnessed the horrors of war, but I think I deskVe a pension, though." "For what?" "WelL I was once locked in a freight car for a week, with the weather at zero and nothing but a frozen turnip to eat, and nothing but blocks of building stones to keep me warm, and If I am not entitled to a pension nobody else ought to have one. The horrors of that old turnip beat ine horrors of a battlefield all to pieces." LJlced to Be Fright eneff. They were seated In the dim UghC of a conservatory. She was playing with her fan and he was murmuring soft speeches In her ear. Suddenly he leaned forward and Impressed a kiss on her soft cheek. "Oh, Charlie," she cried, "how you frightened me!" Then after a few minutes she said: "Frighten me again, Charlie." Splitting Headache Can be often relieved by a nerve sedative, but the scientific way of treating a headache is to go right down to the real cause, or root of the trouble, and cure it with Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Tepsin. It 13 the only perfect cure for headache, dizziness, constipation, and Is free from the dangerous after-effects, which so frequently follow the use of headache powders. Try It Sold by all druggists at 50c and $1.00. Money back if it fails. Answered the Purpose. The woman whistled at a car, It stopped with sudden jerk; j Iler whistle was a failure but Iler face got In its work. Cool Spots in Warm Weather, Write U3 and we will send you a booklet containing list of Summer Boarding House j, Camping and Fishing Grounds, Hotels and other attractive places on the liae of the Nickel Plate Road. W. A. fiherer, T. P. A., Ft. Wayne, Ind., or B. F. Horner, G. P. A., Cleveland, Ohio. (627) A half hour's sleep after dinner is, to many women, worth two hours' sleep in th racrnlng.

MATURE IS A KIND IIOTHER.

CURIOUS METHODS BY WHICH SHE MENDS ANIMAL INJURIES. The Earthworm Grows a New Halfbody to Replace the One Drowned by a Robin for Breakfast Lizards Can Grow New Tails. How many weak and timid creatures there are in the world, with neither teeth and claws for their protection, armor for their defense, nor speed with which to escape their enemies! One can hardly understand why they have not all been killed and eaten up Jong ago. Nature is, however, kinder to these poor animals than she seems; for If she has left them defenceless against attack, sho has given them a marvelous power of recovery from injuries. When a tiny lizard has to scamper for his life in search of a crack in the rock, he often has "so close a call" that his pursuer snaps off his tail just as he whisks into safety. A loss like this would kill most larger animals, but not the little lizard. He simply -waits round quietly until . a new tail grows, and then Is as well off as before, except that the new tail has a flexible rod of cartilage where the old one had a backbone. If an earthworm happens to be retiring to his hole when a robin is out looking for breakfast, there is apt to be a lively tug of war between the eater and the breakfast. Not infrequently the bird gets the tail nd of the worm, while, the other half crawls away into safety. Not even a lizard could survive such treatment as this, but the earthworm is, in ability to recover from injuries, almost as much superior to the lizard as the lizard is to us. He grows a new halfbody to replace the one which has been devoured, and seems to mind his loss no more than a body minds having his hair cut. There are, besides, some snail-like water worms which quite outdo the earthworm. If one of these chances to lose his entire head, in a week or so, sometimes in only four or five days he grows a new one, brain, eyes, and all, and is as well off as ever. Even if a hungry fish gets two bites at him, so that he loses both head and tail, the worm can patch himself out with new members and go about his business as before. They have even been known to get divided into two pieces about equal in size, and each piece grow a new half-body, so that there were two entire worms in place of one. After this it will easily be guessed that If the head end of the worm happens to be split half way down he will grow two new sides and become Y-shaped with two heads. Or if the tail end Ts split new sides grow and a two tailed worm is mad. Sometimes one Or two new heads develop close behind the old one in the angle of the Y. Indeed, the little creature seems to have a sort of mania for making new heads and tail3 wherever he finds a chance. If, therefore, the worm, after receiving . several wounds, manages to escape with his life from tha cuts which happen to open forward, little heads grow out, and from those opening backward lit tle tails no doubt greatly to his embarrassment. But -rhat of the cut-off heads and tails? Do they make new bodies and become whole animals again? Not usually . The severed head seems to become confused, so that it does not know what to do. If it lives it 13 most apt to produce another head like itself, and change into two heads placed neck to neck so that they look in opposite directions. So, too, the severed tail, equally foolish, doubles itself and becomes two useless tails growing end to end. But isü't this really quite impossi ble? A head or a tall or even a haltf body cannot get food. If it camv eat it cannot grow; and that is 11 there is about It. Well, It is true aat a fragment cannot eat. But stlii It can make the new part out of its own tissue. So the animal keeps getting smaller as it becomes more nearly complete, until, when the new part Is finished, the whole body may be no fhore than the tenth part of its proper size. The reconstructed animals are, therefore, forced to begin life over again like young worms. In time, however, they grow up to full size. When a head er.1 makes a new head instead of a tail, or a tail makes a new tail Instead of a head, the little creatures must necessarily, waste away and die. From Nature and Science in St. Nicholas. WATERS OF HAMMAN. Baths in Galilee Which Have Been Used Since 1350 B. C. Stooping, I put my hand in the water. It was hot so hot, in fact, that the thought took hold of me, if I entered that water to bathe, I might peradvei.ture stay there to be boiled. But knowledge cometh only by experience; so I removed my garments. and dipped an experimental foot in the steaming fluid. It needed some resolution to give it the company of Its fellow; and there I sat humbly on the stonework, awaiting courage for further immersion. Gaining confidence by degrees, anon the two English bathers stood upright on the margin of least depth fetching their breath how they could In the cloud3 of steam. Then my brother, plunging headlong, swan across the bath, and, he returning none the worse (but, indeed, . much uplifted In spirit), 1 found heart to copy his behavior. So that presently the pair of us were swimming in full enjoyment to and fro across the little bath, drawing 3jacul?.tions of enthusiasm from the Bedouin bathers, who, It would seem, could not put thoir ains and legs to such service. That water, hot from the Inside of the earth, had a soft and silky feel though pleasantly sulphurou? to the taste and smell. From dur new point of view the dome was seen above this iisk of water, bo that In form the hath I though thA nwAnt hnlMt a only Eonoe ye(y years old) resemDie? t;::3 cr. antiquity. In iubf4ucnt soapinss and 8lu.c-

ings by a bakshish-expectant attendant, experiences in a Turkish bath found their counterpart. A notable shortcoming of the establishment then revealed itself. It had no dressing room. An apartment of a lower temperature was manifestly essential if the burden of clothes were to be resumed in any comfort, and if one were to confront the cold night air with confidence and closed pores. We had perforce to take the risk and, indeed, we did not contract the chills we courted. 1 Lave sinc seen the Hamman in full daylight. You hear the water gurgling within the closed-in remnant of a former bath, and chinks in th ancient masonry give out evil smells from the pent-up sulphur fumes. Several springs gush forth openly beside the shore, the copious supply of hot water being available to all who may desire to profit by its use. At one of th'i steaming pools 1 saw two industrious Arab women washing the bright raiments of those they love; and water at a temperature of 144 degrees Fahr., must be excellent for the purpose. It remains to state that since 1330 B. C. these hot baths have been credited with a great efficacy in rheumatic complaints, though neither my brother nor I was qualified to test any virtue of that sort which may belong to them. We have made acquaintance with another hot spring of Galilee. In a little boat we sailed northward over the small, calm sea, gliding by Tiberias and the flowery shore that lies beyond. And the day being gloriously warm, we dropped anchor and bathed. This was to have experience of two sorts of water one luxuriously warm, the other benumbingly cold. We were but thirty yards from the shore at a point where a hot stream came tumbling over dark stones into the sea. So considerable was the volume of this tributary that its waters were spread far over the surface of Galilee. We swam into patches of warmth, and the water between and underneath felt, by contrast, icy.

VICTORIA AND NIAGARA. There is No Possibility of Comparison Between the Two. It was on the 22d of November 1833, t'aat the friendly natives with whom he was traveling brought Dr. David Livingstone for the first time within sight and sound of the wonderful cataract on the Zambesi River now known as the Victoria . Fall3. Before finding It, the good missionary had journeyed for nearly two years, and from his point of departure at Ktiruman. In Cape Colony, had traveled quite 4,000 miles of hitherto unknown country. Today one take3 the train at Cape Town on Wednesday, passes through Kimberley on Thursday, reaches Buluwayo on Saturday, and late in the afternoon of Sunday begins to see in the distance, the rising pillar of mist from the great cataract. The natives call it "Mosi-oa-tuni," meaning "the roaring smoke." Twenty miles away the spray thrown back from the depths of the tremendous cavern into which the river tumbles appears like a column of smoke from a burning village, and during the last mile of the railway journey the roar of the falling water becomes noticeable. Finally, when the edge of the chasm is reached, if the river is in flood, the eye and ear are assailed by a combination of phenomena that probably cannot be duplicated as marvels anywhere else on the planet. The first question that is asked of an American who has seen this African wonder generally is, "How does it compare with Niagara?" There is no possibility of comr-arison. The two are as different as day and night. Niagara is a perfect picture in a lovely natural framework. Every point and line and curve of motionless trembling verdure and gliding water is a touch of majestic beauty. Victoria is simply a phenomenon, a terrific gash in the floor of an- apparently unending plain, which, as one gazes, simply swallows a river in a manner that produces almost a thrill of horror. From Theodore F. Van Wagenen's "The Victoria FU13," in the Century. Dangers of Traveling. One of the best stories told about Artemu3 Ward concerns a journey which the humorist took on a little "one-horse" railroad line In the Middle West. After the train had crept from station to station at a snail's pace for half a day, Ward beckoned to the conductor as he passed through the car. "Say, conductor," he drawled, "do you mind if I give you a little advice?" "Well, what is it?" said the conductor pruffly. "Seems to me," continued Ward, "It would be safer to take the cowcatcher off fho engine and hitch it to the end of the rear car." "What for?" demanded the conductor. . "Well, I've been thinking it over," said Ward, "and I don't see what's to prevent one of them cows out there from coming into the car and biting t.e passengers." Harper's Weekly. Whispering She Would Ne'er Consent. If the crinoline comes, the most courageous of women will have to wear it. She will begin by declaring that nothing will induce her to adopt so meaningless and so hideous a fashion; and for several weeks, no doubt, the knowledge that she possesses greater courage than other persons will sustain her as the ballrooms and reception roms become every day more crowded with silk-covered cages and Venetian-blind ccirivances for the nice disposition of steel-ribbed skirts. But tue weeks will go on until one day, In the utter desolation of her unfashionable prettiness. It ia impossible to contemplate the end without emotion. London Speaker. A man Is easily carried back to a.i old love affair by the appearance cf forgotten photograph. In Brazil the black bean Is as Important an article of fo&i as the potato ia ia Aurora.

Marketing Potato Crop In line with the classic case of the oyster shippers, cited by President Hadley of Yale University In his book on Kallroad Transportation, is the case of the Aroostook potato growers brought by Fresident Tuttle of the Boston and Maine railroad before the Senate committee on interstate commerce. Kothing could better show how a railroad works for the Interest of the localities which it serves. A main dependence of the farmers of the Aroostook region is the potato crop, aggregating annually eight to ten million bushels, which find a market largely in Boston and the adjacent thickly settled regions of New England. The competition of cheap water transportation from Maine to all points along the New England coast keeps railroad freight rates on these potatoes always at a very low level. Potatoes are also a considerable outDut of the truck farms of Michigan, their normal market being obtained in and through Detroit and Chicago and othar communities of that region. Not many years ago favoring sun and rains brought a tremendous yield of potatoes from the Michigan fields. At normal rates and prices there would have been a glut of the customary markets and the potatoes would have rotted on the farms. To help the potato growers the railroads from Michigan made unprecedentedly low rates on potatoes to every reachable market, even carrying them in large quantities to a place so remote as Boston. The Aroostook growers had to reduce the price on their potatoes and even then could not dispose of them unless the Boston and Maine railroad reduced its already low rate, which It did. By means of these low rates, making possible low prices, the potato crops of both Michigan and Maine were finally marketed. Everybody eats potatoes, and that year everybody had all the potatoes he wanted. While the Michigan railroads made rates that would have been ruinous to the railroads, had they been applied to the movement of all potatoes at all times, to all places, they helped their patrons to find markets then. The Boston and Maine railroad suffered a decrease in its revenue from potatoes, but It enabled the Aroostook farmers to market their crop and thereby to obtain money which they spent for the varied supplies which the railroads brought to them. If the making of rates were subject to governmental adjustment such radical and prompt action could never have been taken, because it Is well established that if a rate be once reduced by a railroad company it cannot be restored through the red tape of governmental procedure. If the Michigan railroads and the Boston and Maine railroad had been subjected to governmental limitation they would have felt obliged to keep up their rates as do the railroads of France and England and Germany un";r governmental limitation and let tho potatoes rot. Exchange.

In the Morning. Reggalerly, every day, When my poppa's gotten up, I can see him far away Mixin sumpin in a cup; I can hear him slappy-slap With a knife against a strap. He is such a funny sight In the mirror on the shelf. With his chin all blobby white, Makin faces at himself! But I mustn't laugh, or he Comes and rubs it oQ on me! Poppa says, when I'm growed up. With some troubles an' a wife, I can have a mixer-cup An a shiny, crooked knife; Bat he says I must begin Gettin' prickers on my chin. Success Mazazine. Do Tour Feet Ache and BnruT 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 Drujrglsti and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample Bent Fit EE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, L Koy, N. Y. Between the Lines. "I have been making a study of palmtry for some time," said the young man In the porch rocker, "arfd as a result have become quite a fortune teller. Let me have your hand, Miss Clara, and I " "Why er really, this is so sudden," interrupted his fair companion. "However, you have my permission to consult papa." Special Low Kates to Chautauqua Lake and Return. July 28th via Nickel Tlate Road. Long return limit. Full information of Agent or address W. A. Sherer, T. P. A., Fort Wayne, Ind. (609) The Usual Way. "Shall I send the gown C. O. D.r asked the salesman, as he removed the price tag. "Sure," answered the fa!r maid. "C. O. D. means call on dad for the money, doesn't itr Piio' Cur for Consumption promptly, relieves my little 5-year-old sister of croup. Miss L. A. Tearce, 23 Filling street, Brooklyn, N. Y Oct. 2, 1901. Ain't It a Shame? And now the dude discovers. To his sorrow, doncher know. That his tailor won't accept The checks his trousers show. Don't spoil your clothes. Use Red Cross Ball Blue and keep them white as snow. All grocers, 5 cents a package. Soak lamp wicks ia vinegar, then dry them thoroughly to keep the lamp from imoking. ' lr. 1t!4 Kea4y's Farrtte Jltmtdr I xrI. lent for the lirer. Cared me after eight Tear of afierlsg." 8. fepron, Alban. N. Y. World Famous. $1. Lamb chops are delicious if dipped in lemon juice just before broiling. Mm. Wlnslows Soothh Btrct for Children teething; aoftena the cum, reduces inflammation, aj17 pain, core wind oolio. 2ä cwti a bottla. 10 mm, If you hare not tried the new Celery King Tablets (the tonic-laxative) get a box at your druggist's for 25c Celery King is the most satisfying medicine. Druggists sell it In Ilerb and Tablet form. 25c. V

Fora

used erery washday win make your clothes white as snow and as beantifnl as when new. The most competent housekeepers in tha ccz-try cz3 Red Crocs EiJl Ulzs aad to otttr. Just try it cca zzi yoa will tea tha dijreaco. Ail rjoctrs etU iL Larya packr-3 3,

IN STRICT CONFIDENCE.

Women Obtain Mrs. Pinkham's Advice and Help. Ehe n&s Guided Thousands to Health. How L.ydla E. Plnfcham'a Vegetable Com pound Cared Sirs. Fred Seydel. It Is a great satisfaction for a woman to feel that she can write to another telling her the most private and confidential details about her illness, and know that her letter will be seen by a woman only, a woman full Of Sympathy for her sick sisters, and above all, a woman who has had more experience in treating female ills than any living person. Over one hundred thousand cases of female diseases come before Mrs. Pinkham every year, some personally, others by mail, and this has been goingon for twenty years, day after day. Surely women are wise in seeking advice from a woman of such experience, especially when it la absolutely free. Mrs. Pink-ham never violates the confidence of women, and every testimonial letter published is done so with the written consent or request of the writer, in order that other sick women may be benefited as they have been. Mrs. Fred Seydel, of 412 North 54th Street, West Philadelphia, Pa., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: 44 Over a year ajjo I wrote you a letter asking advice, as I had female ills and could not carry a child to maturity. I received your kind letter of instructions and followed your advice. I am not only a well woman in consequence, but have a beautiful baby girL I wish every suffering woman in the land would write you for advice, as you have done so much for me." Just as snrely as Mrs. Seydel was cured, will Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cure every woman suffering from any form of female ills. No other medicine in all the world has such a record of cures of female troubles as has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Therefore no prudent woman will accept any substitute which a druggist may offer. If you are sick, write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for special advice. It is fres and always helpful. Do yoa want a Self Inking Dating Stamp for 75 cents? Address, Lock Box 219, Fort VVavn. Indiana.

Say Plainly" to Your Groeer That you7ant LION COFFEE alwaysd he, being a square man, will not try to Bell you anything else. You may not care for our opinion, but What About the United Judgment ot Millions of housekeepers who hare used LION COFFEE for over a quarter of a century ? Is there any stronger proof of merit, than tho

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

To anj one that knowi It, the coffee doei Ita own talking. It it a blend of tha highest-grade lelected berri.'S ttt cvtne to the American market, packed whole neither cut nor ground retaining their full strength and tempting aroma. But in order to place a package of Climax on thousands of pantry helves where it has not been before, we are spending thousands of dollars in placing a costly, beautiful, or useful PRESENT IN EVERY PACKAGE These presents are piactlcal, and itenld offer a real inducement for any discriminating housewife to give Climax one trial. That one trial hat made it a necessity with thousands of coffee nsers. You're next, so better take it up with jour grocer at once. Among these presents are GENTLEMEN'S WATCH, Stem-winder, Case and Movement rnaranteed. PAIR OP SCISSORS SCARP PIN SLEEVB BUTTONS PEN KNIFB LADY'S BROOCH LADY'S RINO with atone setting DINNER BELL SCREWDRIVER SPOOL OB EMBROIDERY SILK CAN OPENER TBA SPOON CARD OF SAFETY PINS BEAUTY PIN with atone Mttlnj. PACKAGE OP HOOKS AND EYES LADY'S NECKLACE of Fancy Beads. STICK PIN, enameled and atone setting LADY'S HANDKERCHIEF, with lac corners. AND MANY OTHERS. To be had of all vise grocers

Price bo higher

Coffee an

CLIMAX

BaKing Povd

Indianapolis, Climax Baking Powder Absolutely Pore

Sale Ten Million Boxes a Year.

TIIS FASII.ro BEST FOR CUatS Wftl AIL USE FAILS., Beet Cough Brrup, Tastes Good. El In time. Bold tj drartrlsts. t vT" lL

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C'ruCAGO, FT. WAYNE, FOSrORIA, F1NDLAY, CLEVELAND. BUFFALO, NEW YORK, BOSTON sAND ALL POINTS: EAST Me WEST Reached Most Quickly and Comfortably via tht Nickel Plate Road. Three Express Trains every day in the year. i"hru Pullman Sleeping Cars to Chicago, New Vork and Boston. Comfortable high back seal coaches and modern Dining Cars serving meals on Individual Club Plan ranging in prices from 36c to $1.00. Also a la Carte rrlce. Colored Porters in uniform to look to thi comfort of first and second c'm3 passenger and keep cars scrupulously clfn. Direct Connections with Fast Trains at Chicago and Buffalo. All Agentj Sell Ticket! via this Popular Route,' Write to VV. A. SHERER. TRAV. PASS. AGT. FT. WAYNE, INO. EUROPE Jire You Going to Europe? Consult R. G. Thompson. Tass. and Ticket Afrent, Wabash R. K Ft. Wayne. Ind. Lowest current rates quoted, all classes, single and return tickets. Revised s&liinz lists furnished on application. Prepaid orders issued. Following Atlantic lines represented, vii: lorth Gerrcan Herd Zwvi lln Arrerlcin lint Hamburc-Amettcti French tint Austro-lmtrictui Whit Star Lin Archer Lim Holland America Atlantic Transport Fabn tint Red Star Itna Comlnton and C. t. R. this Thos. Cook & Sen, World Ttan 6" Daily Trains to Neva York. 6 The Wabash maintains a high c'as fart throuph sen-ice to New Vork and Boston. Pullmans. Keclininjr Chair Cars, Dining Cars. The best of everything. RAIL AND OCEAN TICKETS TO ALL TSE WOCLD RUBBER STAMPS. All kinds of Rubber Stamps Made to Ordefv Self-inking Daters something new. Ink ani Inking Pads. Send far Catalogue to Lock (to 219. Port Wayne, lnd.

Confidence of the People find ever Increasing popularity? HON COFFEE Is carefully selected at the plantation, shipped direct to our various factories where It Is skillfully roasted and carefully packed In sealed packagesunlike loose coffee, which Is exposed to germs, dust. Insects, etc. LIONCOFFEEreachcs you as pure and clean as when It lelt the factory. Sold only in 1 lb. packages.

YOU'RE. NEXT! We are daily adding thousands of patrons to the already large number of constant users of CT T M A Y PACKAGE JLy 1 IM J. 2. coffee; (Nerer Sold la Balk.)

than otäer racktg FAVCIUTE CECICISS j AD THE BOWELS F. T7. N. TJ. - - - No. 281903 When writing to Advertisers please say yea saw tho Advertisement In this paper. lÄSSTIsoinpspn'sEyaVater

Cofteee I

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Indiana For Quick, Sore Baking.

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