Plymouth Tribune, Volume 5, Number 38, Plymouth, Marshall County, 28 June 1906 — Page 7
C..-r fc Tlilck Ink. On the South Side is a Chinnmar who has not boon in Chicago !ons enough to master the English lansuajo, save that he has grapjoci the moaning of a few words. The other day he went into the store of a tradesman, but was unable to make any one in the store understand what he wanted. To the clerks he kept savin? "tlins tlin." After all had given up in des pair and when John was about to make his departure, the proprietor happened to make his appearance. At once tlir.g' to hira was string and he procured a section of rope the size of a clothesline. John looked at it for a moment, tooi it in his yellow fingers and then said "young tlinjr." Then the merchant went to a cabinet, pulled out a drawer and came bad; with a spool of thread. The Mongolian's face was at one? wreathed with smiles. He handed ovei his nickel and went about his business vWith the air of a man who had accomplished a great undertaking. Chicagc News. . The; Fox aril the Grope. Every schoolboy knows that the. fa. ble of the fox and the sour grapes is inaccurate from a natural history point of view, say3 a Loudon newspaper and, as usual, every schoolboy Is wrong. An eminent Oxford professoi on hearing the point discussed the oth er day actually brought some grape? and then went to the zoo, wher h tried them oa a, fox, who ate then greedily! . . - '
C PosIMtcIt cured by these Little Pill. They also relievo Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eatlrg; A perfect rea edj lor Dlzrineaa. Nausea, Drowsiness, Bail Taste La üia Xlotitli. Coated Tong-ua. Pain In the side. TORPID UYEJL . Tiev regulato tie Bcrsrels. Purely Vegetable. SHALL RLL SÜALLDOSL SHALL FR1CL Genulr.3 Must Bear Fas-Simile' Signature OZFUSE SUBSTITUTES. Food Products enable you to enjoy your meals without harinj to speed half your time between them oer a bot cook-stove. All the cooking is done in Libby's , kitchen a kitchen rs clean aifd neat at your own, and there' nothing (or you to do but enjoy the result. libby's Product are selected aeaU, cooked by cooks who know how, and only the good parts packed. For t quick and delicious lunch any l me. in door, oc out, try Libby's Melrose Pte wkh Ubby s Camp Sauce. Booklet free, "How to M.r j Good TW to Eat." Wota Uki7,McNeillQLibby,Chica CHICAGO, FT. WAYNE, FOS TO RIA, FINDLY, CLEVELAND, BUFFALO, NEW YORK, BOSTON iAND ALL POINTS: EAST and WEST Reached Most Quickly and Comfortably via thi Nickel Plate Road. Thr Express Trains every day in the year, rhra Pullman Sleeping Cars to Chicago, New York and Boston. Co mf or table high hack seat coaches and modern Dining Cars erring meals on Individual Clab Plan ranging In prices troza C5o to 11.00. Also a la Carte ssrrlce. Colored Forters in uniform to lcok to ths eomfort of first and second class passengers and keep cars scrupulously clean. Direct Connections with Fast Trains at Chicago and Buffalo. 13 Agents Sell Tickets via this Popular Roate. Write to C. A. ME LIN, Trav. Pass. Agent, Ft. Wsynt, !rd Pi n- n.J. HeJJr3 Pow-r Ur.il L:lb Gii CareOlstesst Price, 25 Cents. CrJre EarBMS an4 Collar OaTls, Barb vlr CatvProoA Fimth. Sorm. &ortcaa. OS12tC3BTtlJR w la vie wmb atei, years. Had byDr.Ch.L. Rca.KewTork City (owner of tha Dr. Raa Ranch of40.0uu acre ia ronton Co JCaoIr mI hy taa 4rmgftt t thlatawn. ALL WE ASK IS A TRIAL We know what your decision will be and you, with thousands of others, will agree that D-Zerta Jelly is superior in flavor, clearness and delicacy to any jelly dessert you ever used. Dissolve the contents of one package in a pint of boiling water and set to cool. Every flavor tastes like the fruit itself, and it is so easy to make attractive desserts by simply adding nuts, fruits, bananas, etc. If D-Zerta Jelly Desseit does not pleaso you write us and get your money back. Five fruit flavors Kaspberry, Strawberry, Lemon, Orange and Cherry. At grocers, 10 cents. D-Zkbta, Roche steh, N. V. nnnncv new discovf.rti mk I I f f I I 1 :if and luff worst um Bouk of WiiWr toitirBo.iUlt 10 Pay trtatmail t're. Jr.U.lI.t;KEfc.VSO!.n L'.Atlaata.Ca RUBBER STAMPS. All kinds of Rubber Stamps Made to Order. Slf-tnklatf Dter something: new. Ink and Inking Pails. Sentf for Catalogue to Lock Box 219, Frt Wayne, in J.
CARTERS 1 flVER PI M.S.
CARTERS I I SVEfl J
Geese and pigeons pair, but" ducks, turkeys and chickens do not. A little oilmeal in th stable will assist the curry comb, but it will not take its place. Xo.v. honor bright, is there any pood reason why a farmer should not jrrow pleniy of strawterries for home use? Keep fresh lime scattered around hos I as, feeding ikus and troughs. vIt is one of . the best and cheapest disinfectants. The man who is most benefited by what Jbe has heard and amed at farmers' institutes Ls the one who puts them in practice. Pork is what we make it. There is as much iu the feed as in the breed, doubtless, when it comes to producing wholesome and good-flavored meat. Maryland sheep raisers are urging the Legislature to pass a law to check heep scab. Thousands of dollars are lost yearly to the farmers through its ravages. Borrowing money ard borrowing trouble are two different things in the beginning, but tliey are very similar when it comes to paying. Then it usually amounts to the same thing. "Any old place"' never was a good place for a garden. More gardens are located there than anywhere else. Should this le the selection the yield ought to be "any old kind of a yield." The present outlook ?eems to promise a practical milking machine. Two different machines are being given a thorough test and the re:orts are very promising. None of th?se machines are at present on the market. The mortgage is going to stay or be rjnioved, according to tfce efforts put forth. It Ls going to stay when robber cows, 'loafer hens uuthr.fty bogs, diseased sheep and poor s?od are kept. The question is That will be done with the mortgage? Hog can be kept in better trim if tbey have a little charcoal to aid their digestion. A thoroughly charred log thrcwu in their icn or yard will an: iwer the purpose. It i? letter than wood ashes, and the danger of. choking Is reduced. A train boy sold an o'd 'armer some bananas. They did not suit his taste and be tbrtw them away. When the boy returned the old farmer asked him if ti bad any Ben Da arpls- 1Ie wanted to eat a few to take the taste out of his mouth. For starting early tomato and other plants In hore or hotbed, use sod cut In three-Inch cubes or old tin cans, with solder melted off, or HtMe paper boxes, which have only to te wet when placed In the ground. Transplanting can then be done easily without checking the growth. " In the dry, warm shed provided for the hen.- in cold or rainy weather, keep both straw and gravel. There will be no better dat bath for them than fresh coal ashes. If a box of this ls kept convenient, the fowls will rid themrpItcs of vermin and will rtnd necessary adjuncts to their raticps in the cinder which they pick out. . Nothing is more amusing than to pee a man backing out of an '.ndivieb-jj ho? house with an infuriated sow as the assailant There is a sort of dexterity that is unusual to say The least- ,The doors of such pen should bt made so one can enter easily and get out suddenly iu case of an attack. With some sows it Is a good plan to ?arry with one a hand hurdle. It is the general opinion among hen men that the hen that h'des her nest is more successful than the hen that does not. Should a hen hide her nest and come off with a large brood" of chicks she is held up as being all right, but nothing is said of the thousanJs of hens that hide away and are never found again. This probably gives rise to the saying that the hen that hides her uet is always sucvessful. The inside of the barn door may be a good place to keep accounts and records, but it is not the best place. Notches in sticks have their significance for the tine being, but they lack permanency and. it requires more or less memory to kevp accounts In this manner. The best way to keep accounts Is to obtain a book and keep account of all thing that are liable to slip the memory. The price of clover seed has been known to influence the area sown. Some times a failure to get a stand is attributable to the price when ranging from f8 to $10 per bushel. No failure to get a stand ought to attach to climatic conditions m long as there Is a tendency to economize In the amount of seed used because of dear seed. One ought to be honest enough with himself to point out why be made a failure. Tetlows must be reckoned with by the peach grower us one of the troubles he will have to fight itr, cause Is not yet knonvn, and no cure for a true case of yellows has yet beea found. Growers who have not studied the symptoms of this trouble often class all trees with a yellow foliage as "yellows" trees, and then say that with proper treatment a large number of yellows trees will recover. Yellow foliage is only cue symptime of the disease, and the one least dependable. lied rasiirtorry plants should be taken iwm a j-oung, healthy bed. Plants fron an old bed are less vigorous and more liable to be diseased. The proper distance between the rows Ls seven feet for garden culture, and eight feet for field culture. Thj plants should be set three feet apart with two plants In every hill. ThU will assure a better stand and will also give couble the crop the second year bct-aue tbey have double the amount of canes. Always choose a rich, heavily manured end well-tilled soil. Where possible to dv so, the preparation of the, potato ground should begin
two or three years previous to the yeai of growing the crop. It consists in keeping the soil clean so there will be few weeds to contend wit in potato cultivation. Sheep and calres are good agencies to use in cleaning potato ground. A clover pasture oi an old pasture of any kind will supply an ideal potato plat and should be plowed in the fall. Potato ground plowed In the spring should be p'owed late.
Many Soll eil No Dacterla. The Department of Agriculture after many tests of soils finds that there are many that need no inoculation in order to fit them for growing alfalfa and other leguminous crops. Bulletin No. '210. Issued by the department, fully explains this whole matter of nitrogen culture In regard to soils and growth of legumes. It is a valuable bulletin. Referring to the erroneous impression abroad on this subject, Prof. C. F. Curtiss, of the Ames, Iowa, Experiment Station, in a recent circular on the subject, says: "Barnyard manure and thorough tillage are worth more than all the nitrogen cultures on the market Put the soil In good enough condition to grow seventy-five bush sis of corn per acre; then sow twenty pounds of alfalfa seed about the middle of August, following a crop of small grain, and the question of cultures will take care of itself." Artichoke Valnnble Crop. The value of artichokes Is not generally understood. Last spring a Missouri farmer planted nine bushel of the tubers" en three-quarters of an acre and In the fall harvested 3CO bushels. This ' would make 400 bushels to the acre. Somcyoars ago this farmer raised COO bushels on one acre, with but very little cultivation. '.Not only do they make the cheapest, but in many respects the healthiest hog feed grown, being a natural sjcciflc for cholera. ,Once planted, the hogs will do the harvesting, and ifter the first year there will be no necessity for planting. Some think th:it artichokes can not Ik? exterminated, bur this Is easily accomplished by letting the tops grow about a foot high and then plcw them under. Dut why exterminate a crop, that will bring you $25 to $35 worth of hog feed every year without the trouble and expense of planting or harvesting? OTrfe! Chirks. In case you have overfed chicks on too much starchy foods till diarrhea has -resulted, the following ration has been found beneficial in eorrectius tho trouble : P.ran .three parts by measure, cornmeal two parts, cut clover two parts, meat meal one part. Let the birds have ! access to this at all times. Feed roots and cabbage, all they will eat. und one full feed of whole grain an hour before they go to roost. Let this be wheat one night, barley the next, corn ths third, and then go over the list again. (Jive no medicine. . Deep litter for exercise In getting the grain, with fresh water several times a day. When the anlmcl supply of food has been too small the birds fill up constantly on .starchy foods, overtaxing the liver and digestion. Diarrhea and breakdown are the natural outcome of this method of feeding. Growing birds will stand high feeding, but, when a bird has reached maturity more careful feeding is required. Small Fruit Farm. Small fruit culture will brint; the. family bigger returns, than any tiling else about the farm. Knowing this, it is strange that so many country peophprefer to buy dried fruits rather than grow them right in their own gardens. Any soil that will produce a vigorous growth of corn and potatoes will be all right for fruits. The currant is one of the most valuable of our small fruits. It Is hardy, easy to cultivate and yields abundantly. Good cultivation and severe pruning will Increase the size of the fruit. Flenty of old manure should be spaded In about the roots, and the soil should be kept clean and mellow. On account of Its hardiness the currant bushes are too often left to shift for themselves, and of course when left in this condition one need not expect big, fine-flavored , fruit. Currants do best in a somewhat protected location. The gooseberry bushes are also shamefully neglected, until blight and disease destroy the prospect of a crop. With sensible care, such as pruning, cultivation and the use of fungicides, the culture of this fine fruit may be made certain and even remunerative. So many of the best varieties are affected with mildew, that no one who expects to get well-developed fruit should neglect spraying. Southern Fruit Grower. I sri rv 1 1 ii srru vorn. 1 1 u The experiment station of Ohio furnishes valuable Information In a bulletin on the selection of corn for seed, the selection being made during the growing of the plant In the field, which ought to have the careful attention ol growers of corn everywhere Taking Dent corn for the purpose, it Is scored as follows: Vigor of plant, 20 Joints ; position of ear, 5 points ; weight of ear, 50 points ; length of ear, 5 points ; uniformity of plant and ear, 10 points, and shape of kernel and size of germ, 10 points. Very Important Is tb; note which gives the disqualifications, as plants growing under less than normal stand ; plant3 lying upon the ground or badly broken; plants diseased; plants maturing too late or too early. To select the seed corn from such plants Is fatal to the following crop. The vigor of the I plant Is indicated by the drcumfer- ' nr-e of the stalk below the ear; by Its pright growth tnd by Its leaf development and freedom from disease. The ideal position of the ear ls such j that It docs not pull too heavily upon J thf. nl.mt. The weight Of the ear 1 frt be determined by scales when the ear !s thoroughly air-dry. The plan of uniformity of plant and ear is based on the habit of growth and vigor of plant as well as size, shape, color and Indentation of ear. Corn growers everywhere-suould profit by these points, wbich will mean decidedly Imürored crops. Exchange.
t ESTABLISHED A PRECEDENT.
lirt to Ilnve Vermiform Appen dix Keninved I.IvIiik In Denver. Confined in St. Luke's hospital, bavin recently undergone an operation on ne of her lingers, which had become formed from a break and which was trajghtened, is Miss Mary II. Gartslde, who has the distinction of being the iirst person on record to have the vermstorm appendix removed. Jt was because of this operation, wLlch was purely experimental and which was resorted to in the last extreme, that the possibility of removing the appendix was discovered. Dr. W. W. Grant of this city was the surgeon In charge, says the Denver limes. The case is famous the world over. The Grant home. In Pennsylvania avenue, is one of the places In the city which the megaphone man on the being Denver automobile always point! DUt, commenting on the fact that then Jives the doctor who performed fh first operation for appendicitis and, he was In the habit of adding, the patient died, until one day last summer a tourist when told about the house became rr.uch Interested, and when the man added that the patient had died arose In her seat and denied the statement In vigorous terms, declaring that it was irjirue, as she knew the patient well The subject of that first known op eration for appendicitis Is Miss Gartside, who lives in Minneapolis, and today, at the age of 42, Is hale and hearty, with no sign of her formet ;rcuble. The case is written up In all :i;edical books, and the knowledge that Miss Gartslde is again in Denver Is a matter of Interest In the medlca world and she has been the subject of mucli attention from the physicians In the Mty. A history of the case is found in tb Colorado Medicine. The article Is pre faced by a note that states that Inves ligations show that this case antedates a1! others by more than two years, tthen the operation was performed In January, 1SS3, there was no antecedent cr contemporary history of such a case ami Dr. Grant, after studying the case decided that It would be possible to re rncve ttie appendix, and without the scratch of a pen to guide, him opened he abdomen and removed the appendix The operation was performed at the Gartslde home, in Davenport, Iowa. Two important decisions have recent ly leen handed down by the United States Supreme Court, establishing the ixmudaries between States. Louisiana and Mississippi went to law over the aiarsliy and once valueless Island extending eastward from Sr. Bernard parish, nesr the Chandeleur. Islands. I'earl Itiver is the -boundary between the States. When it was found that the islands were among the finest natural Dysler reefs in tho world, each St?te claimed them and set about organizing oynter police to control them. Mississippi held that its State line ran di reetly out to sea frpm the mouth of Tearl Itiver, and gave It all the islands Louisiana contended that the line turned eastward In the ship channel toward Cat Island The Supreme Court uas decided that all west of Cat Island belongs to Louisiana. As there are many canneries In Mississippi and the Louisiana law will prevent theii obtaining oysters in that State Mississippi will probably fill In extensive artificial reefs for oyster-culture ulong its own shore. The other decision wafc in a suit between Iowa and Illinois, crowing out of the right to tax railway bridges across the Mississippi Itiver. The boundary was the "middle Df the river." Iowa maintained that this meant halfway between the banks; XIIInois contended for the middle of the steamloat channel. The Supreme Court upheld the contention of Illinois, and recommended that the bounadry be officially marked wherever. iossIble, tc avoid c-onfusion from shifting anO fick e channels. ELEPHANTS GOING UP. Quoted at $280 a Vertical Foot Initead of S240 Two Years Ago. "A 5-foot elephant costs this sprlng,r said the animal exicrt, $1,400, as agiinst $1,200, for which such elephants could be bought two years ago. "Klephants, like all other wild animal?, re growing scarcer with the settlement of the globe, and their prices "end upward. More small elephants tl.nn big ones are Imported because t'jey cost less to begin with and becausethey are easier and safer to transpor: and showmen like them, too, because the young elephants are more trictable and easier to train.. And femall elephants are attractive anyway. "Then the elephant Is a hardy an!ui.il In captivity, and it Is naturally rg-llved, and the young elephant Increases In value with its growth; and so, with their prices tending upward, young elephants are good property." Women Who Wear Hxploalve GoWni "Science, which lately furnished z mechanical substitute for the horse has now set about putting the lowlv silkworm out of business." writes Clarence Ilutton. In Technical World Magazine. Almost unknown In the United States, the manufacture of artificial silk has been on a commercial basis in France for several years, the dally production being now about seven tons. In forming a chemical compound corresponding to the viscous fluid out ol which the silkworm spins his delicate thread, the French" chemists found, strangely enough, that the best substitute was a solution of g.. -cotton, which also serves as the basis for the most lowerful and deadly of modern explosives. To what extent this gun-cotton p'.lk is relieved of its explosive quailties before being woven Into laces and ilres.s fabrics, seems to be somewhat Duestlouable. Certainly a young woman gowned In gun-cotton and wearing a dainty nitro glycerine wrap about her white shoulders, would be a mast formidable, not to 'say dangerous, object If the ih"w fabric ever becomes popular in this country It will plainly be necessary to warn young men not to approach its tvearers with lighted cigarettes or other combustibles in their hands. And .(.parking will become a moat hazardous occupation. l'p to 1GOO." They have a new designation for the President In Congress now, says a Washington letter to the New York World. They do not speak of him as "the President" or as "the man In the White House." Instead they say, "the man up at 1C0O," and the explanation of It is that the White House ls No. 1000 Pennsylvania avenue.
: LEGAL INFORMATION. J
$ PATTERNS FOR THE A.
HOME DRESSMAKER Chic I)elKn from Varl. PATTERN NO. 1147. Tliere is a character and individuality nlKiut French styles that make them widely iopular, they seem suited to their wearers personally and not as though they were turned out by the dozen. We show here one of these designs for a charming blouse of pale blue batiste, the square cut neck rilled with dainty all-over Valenclenues lace and outlined with tine leading. This will be very pretty made up in lawn, mull, muslin, white poplin, pongee or other wash silks. Lawn or lace Insertion and all-over lace can be used, to correspond with the material of the blouse. The sleeves In this design are the latest model, a modification of the "leg-of-mutton." The pattern. No. 1147, is cut In sizes from "2 to 40 inches bust. Fcr medium size yards of material 21 Inches wide will l required, or Hvs yards -7 Inches wide, with Vi yard of all-over for chemisette and collar and yards of beading. The above pattern will be mailed to your address on receipt of 10 cents. Sei d all orders to the Pattern Department of this paper. He sure to give both the-number and i size of pattern wanted, and write vcrv plainly. For convenience, write your order on tho following coil on: Order Coupon. No. 1117. SIZE NAME ADDItESS Princes ret 1 1 coat for Small Girl. yATTERTY NO. 1413. While it is desirable that all garments should be hung from the. shoulders yet this Is especially essential with children's clothing and mothers are recognizing tbe fact more and more. A little princess nip like the one pictured here susiends the weight of the petticoat from the shoulders and, another consideration, is much easier to make than two pieces like an underwaist and f kirt. It is just the thing to wear under the little Russian frocks and in fact under any of the one-piece dresses that are most popular for children now. I'se a good firm cambric for tbe tody, wide embroidery for the flounce, and finish the neck and arm's-eyes with narrow edging. If well made it will test a long time and give excellent service. The pattern, No. 141Ö, Is cut in sizes for children of L 4 and 0 years Df age. For a child 4 years old 1t yards of material 30 inches wide will be required, with yards of wide embroidery. 2Mj yards of narrow edging, and 2 yards of beading. The abcc pattern will be mailed to jour address on receipt of 10 cents. Send all orders to the J'attern Department of this pajter. Pe sure to give lioth the number and size of pattern wanted, and write very plainly. For convenience, write your order on the following coupon : Order Coupon. No. 1413. SIZE NAME ADDRESS Interesting Item. The average Japanese soldier is not more than five feet four inches high. Censure Is tbe tax a man pays to the public for being eminent. Swift. Ilribery and corruption have been unearthed In tbe Swiss array, and oQicers of high rank have had to resign. It is thought that the game of whist was first played In the time of King Henry VIII. of England. Skating was tabooed for women in Berlin until the prima donna, Henrietta, set the bold example. At a sale of miniatures am! snuff Ijoxes at Christie's, in London, a Louis XV oblong gold snuff box by llainslln brought $32,000. . The Paris Academy of Medicine offers a prize every year for the discovery of an absolute cure for tuberculosis. o far, no one has won it. According to the British Medical Journal tbe total number of cremations in Great Britain in the year 1005 was i)0O, as against 5GG in 1'jOi and 475 in 1003. Water from an artesian well at Ostend which has been wasted for fifty years has now been discovered to possess medicinal qualities similar to tho waters of Vichy. Medical authorities In France have discovered that a fairly good substitute for quinine, for use in cases of marsh fever, or other malarial disease, can be concocted from tbe gentian
WH I i :
IEEPJBLE ITCHING SCALP.
Eczema Broke Out Also on Handsand Limbs An Old Soldier Declares: "Cuticura Is a Blessing." "At all times and to all people I flm willing to testify to the merits of Cuticura. It saved me from worse tli an the torture of hades, about the year 1000, with itching on my scalp and temples, and afterwards It commenced to break out on my hands. Then It broke out on my limbs. I then went to a Surgeon, whose treatment did me no good, but rather aggravated the disease. I 'then told him I would go and see a physician in Erie. The reply was that I could go anywhere, but a case of eczema like mine could not be cured; that I was too old (SO). I went to an eminent doctor in the city of Erie and treated with him for six months, with like results. . I had read of the Cuticura Remedies, and so I sent for the Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and Resolvent, and continued taking the Resolvent until I had taken six bottles, stopping It to take the Pills. I was now getting better. I took two baths a day, and at night I let the lather of the Soap dry on.. I used the Ointment with great effect after washing in warm waterNto stop the Itching at once. I am now cured. The Cuticura treatment ls a blessing, and should be used by every one who has Itching of the skin. I can't say any more, and thank God that He has given the world such a curative. Win. II. Gray, 3303 ML Vernon St.. Philadelphia, Ta August 2, 1905." II red Contempt. Girl with the Gibson Girl Netk Can't you see something familiar in the face of that man sitting on the oprcsite side of the car? - Girl with the Julia Marlowe Dimple Yes; it's his eyes. I wish he'd be a little less familiar with them. Low Jlomeceekers Kates Via Nickel Plate Road. West, Northwest, Southwest and South, 1st and 3rd Tuesdays in the month. Full informationof AgentoraddressC. A. Melin, T. P. A., Fort Wayne, Ind. (865) German Railway Official. The station master at Bomburg-Pom: burg standing erect In approved military attitude at the ead of the platform that bounds his dominion is one of the grandest sights in nature, says Everybody's Magazine. His magnificent uniform of blue and gold shines conspicuous In the Uli. His red cap of otlice is adorned with much gilt and the occasion, let us say, being festival, he wears with pomp and circumstance a massive sword. As Xajwleon upon the field of battle, he from his coign of vantage surveys the scene of actioncalm, imperturbable, majestic, full of thought and command. A long train Is 'drawn up to tho station, and he stands wr.ere all passengers can derive pleasure and edification from gazing upon him. He looks down tbe platform and observes tint his adjutants are, properly herding and showing about the low, degraded, third-class passengers, but he gives no sign. ALLEN S. OLMSTED WINS IU COURT. The Foot-Eae Trade-Mark Sum j talnetl. Raffalo, N. Y. The Supreme Court has pranted a permanent injunction with costs against Paul II. Hudson and others of New York City, restraining them from making or selling a foot powder which the court declares Is an Imitation and Infringement on "Foot-Ease," now ao largely advertised and sold over the count rj. Tbe owner of the trade mark "Foot-Ease," ls Alien S. OJmsted, of Le Itoy. N. W, aud the decision in this eult upholds bis trade maik and renders all parties liable who fraudulently attempt 10 profit by the extensive "Foot-Ease" advertising, in' placing on the market the spurious nnd similar appearing .preparation involved In the case, i bis the court declare whs designed in imitation and infringement of the genuine "Foot-Ease." It Is said that s'.mliar miits will be brought against others who are now infringing on the Foot-Ease trade-mark rights. Each package of the genuine Al'en's Foot-Ease has the facsimile signature of Allen S. Olmsted on Us yellow label. Hide and Seek. with, it Mountain. For the past two years a curious sort af a game has been played up in that little-known region of Chinese Turkestan, the ieat mountain ranges of Tian Shan.' Tbe chief participants of . the game, which has not partaken of the nature of play, were two, Dr. Merssbacher, an alpinist, and Khanteiigrl, the highest peak of the country. This part of the world has been enveloped In obscurity, and until Dr. Morzbacher's survey no good maps existed. The mountains are wild and picturesque, covering ground four or five times as great as the. Alps. Many of the peaks measure over twenty thousand feet In height. Khantengrl. the monarch, overtops all others by at least four thousand feet. The region is regarded as very hard of access, and old Chinese trarelers have left accounts of Its difficulties and dangers. Khan-teugrl had never been definitely located, and Dr. Merzbacher understood the task. For nearly two years his search lasted before he could pi a the elusive mountain down to topographical accuracy. It has been a veritable game of hide-and-seek, and the Interesting and curious part of It Is that often and again the mountain has been most difficult to trace, and the ?eeker realized that until he was actually at the mountain's base he could not show its relations to the rest of the range. After long mouths of hard travel and many disappointments, the mountain has been trapped and thi riddle solved. THE DOCTOR'S WIFE Att-ree with Him A Hont Food. A trained, nurse says: "In the practice of my profession I. have found so many poir.ts in favor of Grape-Nuts food that I unhesitatingly recommend It to all my patients. . "It Is delicate and pleasing to the palate (an essential In food for the sick) and can be adapted to all ages, being softened with milk or cream for babies or the aged when deficiency of teeth .renders mastication impossible. For fever patients or those on liquid diet I find Grape-Nuts and albumen water very nourishing and refreshing. This recipe is my own idea and is made as follows: Soak a teaspoonful of Grape-Nuts in a glass of water for an hour, strain and ferve with the beaten white of an egg and a spoonful of fruit juice or- flavoring. This affords a great deal of nourishment that tven the weakest stomach can assimilate without any distress. "My huband is a physician and he uses Grape-Nuts himself and orders it many times for his patients. "Personally I regard a dish of GrnpeiNuts with fresh or stewed fruit as the ideal breakfast for anyone well or sick." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. In any cause of stomach trouble, nervous prostration or brain fag, a 10 days trial of Grape-Nuts w'll work wonders toward nourishing end rebuilding, and In this way ending the trouble. "There's a reason" r.nd trial proves. Look in pkgs. for the farnou little book, "The Road to WellTille."
TEA GROUND UP AS POWDER.
Simple Infnslon the Form used In China for Centuries. Iiistory tells us that when coffee was first brought to the cities of western Europe the first makers of it were Turks. Their roasted and ground the berries and .served tbe liquor as it is served to this day in the east grits and all. We Ft ill drink coffee as we drank it then, with this difference, that we mostly omit the grits and drink an Infusion instead of a decoction. It was not so with tea. No Chinaman was imported with the first pound of tea tc teach us how to make and drink it. The consequence has been that we have never drunk tea in the Chinese way that is, as a simple Infusion. At first there seems tp have been great doubt as to how to deal with the new herb. It is even said that it was sometimes boiled, with salt and butter, and served up as a sort of spinach The old phrase "a dish of tea" seems to bear out this legend. Finally it came to be settled that the most ' wholesome and pleasant way to treat tea leaf was to make it into a kind of sweet soup, with sugar and milk and cream. 1 have personal knowledge of no country In Europe but one where tea is used as In China Fortugal, - which got Its knowledge of tea-making from a province of China, with which at that tiun no other nation of Europe was in con tact. - " It was while traveling jon horseback with a guide In the wilder parts of Fortugal, away 'from the shops and Inns, where we had perforce to make experiments in the most economical use of the few ounces of tea and coffee j that we could afford to carry with us. j that we hit upon a discovery. Having no milk, we drank our tea, as most Portuguese drink theirs, as a simple Infusion, sweetened with sugar. I remembered to have read, I believe in the travels of Abbe Hue, that when the Chinese desire to be thrifty In the use of the finer and more expensive teas they grind the leaf to powder and use less for the Infusion. We found that tea could be ground In a coffee mill as easily as coffee; that tea made with the powder Is as good as or better than when made with the whole leaf and that the powder, as it naturally would, goes further than the tea leaf. London Times, Kow's This? We offer One Hnndred Dollars Reward for .my case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. WALDJNO, K1NXAN & MARVIN. Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure ls taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous su'facos of the system. Testimonials sent free. . Trice 73 cents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Tiili for constipation. Momentary Relapse. "Mr. Spoteash," said the reformed sport, "we want to buy a thousand crul lers for the waifs picnic. Can you give us something?' "Yes," answered the merchant. "Here's "Thanks, Mr. Spotcasn. I told the boys, by George, it was do'lars to doughnuts you'd cough up liberal I" Free Duromer Oatins Booklet, containing list of amusement resorts and quiet homes on the Nickel Tlate road. Call on agent or address C. A. Melin," T. I. A., Fort Wayne, Ind., or B. F. Horner, G. P. A., Cleveland, Ohio. (857) Throughout the world, about 3 per cent of people gain their living directly from the sea. - Mrs. ATInsloW Soothtwo Stbup for Children teethinp; aofTsn th gnus, rdaca lofiamm feliaa, feiImjb poiu, cum wind ooiio. 2a cu boui. t J Germany has on an average of 800 or chard trees to the square mile. "IT SAVED W LIFE" PRAISE FOB A FOPS' LIEDICIHE Mrs. Willadsen Tells How She Tried Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Just in Time. " Mrs. T. C Willadsen, of Manning, Iowa, writes to Mrs. Pinkham : Dear Mrs. Pinkham : I can truly say that yon have saved my life, and I cannot express my gratitude to you in words. V Before I wrote to you, telling you how I felt, I had doctored for over two years steady and spent lots of money on medicines besides, but it all failed to help me. My monthly periods had ceased and I suffered much paw, with fainting spells, headache, backache and bearing-down pains, and I was so weak I could hardly keep around. As a last resort I decided to write you and try Lydia E. Pinkham's -Vegetable Compound, and I am so thankful that I did, for after following your instructions, which you sent me free of all charge, I became regular and in perfect health. Had it not been for you 1 would be in my (crave to-day. . " I sincerely trust that this letter may lead every suffering woman in the country to write you for help as I did." When viromen are troukled with, irregular or painful periods, weakness, displacement or ulceration of an organ, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation, backache, flatulence, g-eneral debility, indigestion or nervous prostration, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. No other female medicine in the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. Refuse all substitutes. , For 25 years Mrs.rinkham, daughter-in-law ox Lydia E. Pinkham, has under her direction, and since her decease, been advising 6;ck women free of charge. Address, Lynn, Mass. mi Erve r?nnTRnoü IraLaLaCaliJ VJ I UU I LaalUkä A Certain Cure for Jlnd, Hot, Aching Feet. DO NOT ACCEPT A SUBSTITUTE.
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A Case cf . STOMACH CATARRH. , ; ? 1 - 'im .,: mil V Miss Mary O'Brien, 303 Myrtle Ave Brooklyn, N. Y., writes: "Peruna cured me In five weeks of catarrh of the stomach, after saffering for four years and coctoring without effect. In common with other grateful ones who have been benefited by jour discovery, I say, All hail to Peruna.1 Mr. II. J. Hennexnan, Oakland, Neb., writes: "I waited before writing t you about my sickness, catarrh of thtr stomach, which I had over a year ago. - "' "There were people who to'd me ' it would not stay cured, but I anl sure that I am cured, for I do not feel any mort ill effects, ha,ve a good Appetite and aza jetting fat. . "So I am, and "will say to .all, I an tared for good. ' "I thank you for your kindness. "Peruna will be our house sitdU cine hereafter? Catrarh of the stomach is also known In common parlance as" dyspepsia, gastritis and indigestion. No medicine will be of any permanent; benefit except it remove the catarrh. ' , A Great Tonic. Mr. Austin M. .Small, Astoria, Ore., writes t "During the hot weather of thp nflst summer I losr mr imnetifp. I tried Peruna, and found it pleasant , to take, a splendid appetizer and a great tonic" WABASE RAILROAD offers for all Special Occasions reduced rates. If you are 'contemplating a trip, no matter where, first obtain Wabash ticket quotations and time schedules. Wabash tPassenger Service has a world-wide reputation for perfection. The "Free" . Reclining Chair Car feature , on this great American Railroad at once recommends itself to your favor. tritt Ktimt W.bash Iftsl er Address C. 5. CRANE, G. P. & T. A. ST. LOUIS, MO. j v.. You Cannot LAI alt inäamed, ulcerated and catarrhal conditions of the mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh, uterinecatarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat sore mouth or Inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surefvean cure these stubborn affections by loid treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs,checks discharges, stops pain, and eals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box ' THE R. PAXTON CO.. Boston. Mass. MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POIVDZRS FOR CHILDREN, A OwUia Orr for Fvrbaeah l Vi. in) ftr4ers m4 t)rtrr Mothtr Gray, Moria. Thf Break p CH hara in Child- boars. At iTl Prm"1'. 2ot tri 1 raHBies. 'leethia U RltntiU m..14 VDPtf LAA -- K.w York cw. A. &. OLUSTED. U Uo7l4 VnilD nV7?l ClßflATIIDC Made In luuii uiiii oiuunium. Cushion Rubber Stamp for slgninr Letters, Touchers, etc. at tu low price or n.. bna Tor Uculart. Lock Box 21. Fort Way ae, lnd." OTTER WHEAT. fcMferW mp , CttatofMM4iiaBM rill e4 I., fcx C, UtrwM, H la F. W. N. TJ. ... No. 261903 When wrttlnf fo Advertisers please aar rag aw tha Advertisement In this paper Do yu want a Self Inking Dating Stamp for 75 cents? Address, Lock Box 219, Fort Wayne, Indiana. r, rtsr ' oaarerjbox. FREE Trial Packt ra. Addre. Alia S. 01mste4, Le Rov. N. Y-
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