Plymouth Tribune, Volume 5, Number 41, Plymouth, Marshall County, 19 July 1906 — Page 7

From Philadelphia. The visitor from Philadelphia had been taken in hand by his Pittsburg fridnds and shown the sights of the city, from the Carnegie Art Institute to the belching furnaces of Homstead together with other points of semi-historical inte rest. The visitor was naturally impressed with the action and nappiness of the city. "Now," said the visitor, gratefully, "I must try to repay you for your courtesy whenever you come to my town. By the by, have you ever been in Philadelphia ?- "Yes," said the Tlttsburger, "I spent several years there in one afternoon ! Pittsburg Gazette.

Li rann n ä liii, V'i .. . i. -L?f? Physicians, Pharmacists.and Nurses endorse Cuticura Soap because of its delicate, medicinal, emollient, sanative, and antiseptic properties derived from Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, united with the purest of cleansing ingredients and most refreshing of flower odors. For preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, as well as for all the purposes of the toilet and bath, Cuticura Soap is priceless. Absolutely pure and may be used from the hour of birth.v Sold rootot tS var4. CwrVmra So. fSc OU00c., JUaoi, . (la tjras mi Oracolaw Co. tad rTl. Ue. pr ritü of Ar, mar bm kad of all Jra(f1a, Tottmr lru Carm. Corp.. bo' Prepay Boatoa. Mm -Malted Tiw.oAil Abo UM Skin, aoalp, aad Ha You Cannot Ö) LAI all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal conditions of the mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh , uteri ne catarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, sore mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely can curs these stubborn affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs,checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills eer produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box THE R. PAXTOM CO.. Doston. Uui. CHICAGO, FT. WAYNE, FOSTO RIA, FINDLAY, CLEVELAND, BUFFALO, NEW YORK, BOSTON Avrt ALL POINTS EAST and WEST Reached Most Quickly and Comfortably via the Hickel Plate Road. Three Express Trains every day In the year. Thru Pullman Sleeping Cars to Chicago, Jfew York and Boston. Comfortable high back teat coaches and modern Dining Can uerrlng meala on Individual CI ab Plan ranging In prices from 35c to 11X0. Also a la Carte service. Colored Porters In uniform to look to the comfort of first and second clais passengers and keep cars scrupulously clean. Direct Connections with Fast Trmias it Chicago and Buffalo. A3 Agents Sell Tickets via this Popular Rente, Write to C. A, ME LIN, Trav. Pass. Agent, Ft. Wayne, Ind RUBBER 5TAMPS. All kind of Rubber Stamps Made te Order. Self inking Daters something new. Ink and Inking Pads. Send for Catalogoe to Lock Box 219. Fort Wayne, Ind. km fcaGrcat English Remedy DLAin'O PILLS Saf:. rrc EtfectiTC 50c. UMj tiRVGGliTi, e W Hnry 6C, BfOak!y,K.T. DHOFSY 5EW DISCOTEHTj ir- ialck rauaf aat cum wrt cam Boot of tatiionia! ind 10 Dara' traataiant Dr.n. IL 4i H EC ' U fa, Bx V . A tlaa t, C Youn own sigiiature Woi Kubber Stamp for signing Lettere, Vouchers, etc. at the low price of 11.25. Bend for particulars. Lor Lax 119. Fort Wajne. Ind. lTI:";-cn'sEyol7atßr

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SPIDE3S THAT CATCH BIRDS.

Native of Ceylon Mountains Snares Prey . Some Sice. Far up In the mountains of Ceylon there is a spider that spins a web like bright, yellowish silk, the central net cf which Is five feet in diameter, while the supporting lines, or guys, as they are called, measure sometimes ten or twelve feet. The spider seldom hites or sting, but should any one try to catch him bite he will and though not renonous his Jaws are as powerful as a bird's beak. The bodies of these spiders are hand-5omelj-decorated, being bright gold or scarlet underneath, while the upper part is covered with the most delicate slate-colored fur. So strong are the webs that birds the size of larks are frequently caught therein and even the small but powerful scaly lizard falls a victim. A writer sajs that he has often sat and watched the yellow monster measuring, when waiting for his prey with his leg stretched out, fully six inches striding across the middle of the net and noted the rapid manner In which he winds his stout threads round the uyfortunite captive. He usually throws the coils about the bead until the wretched victim is first blinded and then choked. In many unfrequented dark nooks of the jungle you come acrosi skeletons of small birds caught In thes.! terrible snares. Pearson's Weekly. ; BAD COMPLEXIONS Depraved Blood Causes Pimples and Boi!s-Dr. Williams' Pink Pill Make New Blood and Cure Follows. I abused my stomach, my blood got ont of order and then my face broke out with pimples and boils," says T. E. Itobertkon, üf 197 Addison street, Washington, Pa, "This was over two years ago. My stomach was ia bad shape. After eating I would have to rest awhile or I would suffer the most severe pains in mv stomach. On arising I would often be so cizzy that I could hardly stand up. The fIightet exertion would start .my back aching so that I often had to sit down mid rest awhile. At times I experienced a pain around the heart which alarmed me but which I suppose came from my stomach trouble. "I began to break out on the face with pimples and later with boils which confined, me to the house a week or more at a time. One day I saw Dr. Williams Pink Pills for Pale People ndvertised in a Famphlet which was left at the door and thought I would give them a trial. I took several boxes of the pills before all the pimples and boils left me, but I am now glad to say that my blood is good. I lo not have any eruptions and I no longer have the head and stomach troubles I have described. I am very Eratef al for what Dr. Williams'Pink Pills ave done for me and I have recommended them and n'ways will advise those who are suffering from bad blood or stomach trouble to try them." If yon wont good health you must have good blood. Bad blood is the root of most common diseases like anaemia, rhenmatism, sciatica, neuralgia, St. Vitus' dance, nervonsuess, indigestion, debility, partial paralysis and locomotor ataxia. Dr. Williams Pink Pill are sold by all druggists or sent, postpaid, on receipt of price, 50c. per box, six boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N.Y. Xo Com ii on Ground. The fluffy young woman tr ( the hostess aside. -Mrs. Caliper," she said, "I tried to talk to that man who took me down to dinner, but I couldn't understand a word he said." Presently the man with the white forehead and bronzed cheeks took the hostess aside. - "Mrs. Caliper," he said, "that girl yon paired me off with uses a language with which I am not familiar." "How stupid of me!" exclaimed the bostess. "I forgot that she talks nothing but golf, and that you talk nothing out automobile." Chicago Tribune. UTTERLY WORN OUT. Vitality Sapped by Years of Suffering with Kidney Trouble. Capt J. W. Hogun, former Postmaster of Indlanola, now living at Austin, Texas, writes: "I was afflicted for ye'ars with pains across the loins and in the hips and shoulders. I had headache also and neuralgia. My right eye, from pain, was of. little use to me for years. The constant flow of urine kept my system depleted, '' erf KM causing nervous chills and night sweats. After trying seven different climates and using all kinds of medicine, I had the good fortune to hear of Doan's Kidney Pills. This remedy has cured me. I em as well to-day as I was twenty years ago, and my eyesight Is perfect" Sold by all dealers. Ü0 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Iiuffalo, X. Y. Leap-Year Episode. Fred Miss Elderleigh has proposed three times within the past six weeks, but I can't make up my mind to accept her. Joe Has she srot money? Fred About $50.000, I understand. Joe Well, you are taking desperate chances, old man. Suppose she should 6top proposing? FOUR YEARS OF AGONY. Whole Foot Nothing but Proud Flesh Had to Use Crutches "Cuticura Eemedies the Best on Earth." "In the year 1S90 the side of my right foot was cut off from the little toe down to the heel, and the physician who had charge of me was trying to sew up the side of my foot, but with no success. At last my whole foot and way up above my calf was nothing but proud flesh. I suffered untold agonies for four years, and tried different physicians and all kinds of ointments. I could walk only with crutches. In two weeks afterwards I saw a change In my limb. Then I bexan using Cuticura Soap and Ointment often during the day and kept it up for seven mouths, when my limb was healed up just the same as if 1 neer had trouble. It is eight months now since I stopped using Cuticura Remedies, the best on God's earth. I am working at the present day, after five years of suffering. The cost of Cuticura Ointment and Soap was only $G; but the doctors bills were more like $GO0. John M. Lloyd, 71S S. Arch Ave., Alliance, Ohio, June 27. 1905." Low Homeseekcrs Kates Via Nickel riate Road. West, Northwest, Southwest and South, 1st and 8rd Tuesdays in the month. Full Information of A Rent or address C. A. Meiin, T. P. A., Fort Wayne, Ind. (8t5) Speaking AVltkln Bounds. This certainly is the limit!' taid the detective, as he raided a "fenca " Mm. TVlnnlow's Soo-ranro Btbc for Children teaching) ofteu tti guma, redac inflftmr&aUMB, hiln pala. cuw v!a4 bo ha. tb Mats betU.

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Hogs will turn grain Into money juicker than any other farm animal. Ileauty In form and appearance is no pufe indication of a sow's good breeding qualities. Experience has taught that themost profitable kinds of poultry to raise for market are the quick -growing, earlymaturing breeds. Hecaue there Is no profit from it, many farmers do not provide t nice lawn. This is neither good business nor good sense. E. X. Rail, socrvtarFof the Michigan Merino Sheep Breeoers' Association, ays Michigan sheep breeders are confident of the future. Spinach is a much-neglected crop ic the kitchen gardens of the rural districts. It is found on sale in the city markets, however, at nearly all the season of the j-ear. In btirning stalks no available fertility goes up In smoke. The loss In smoke is earlfon. There Is very Httl nitrogen in stalks. There is more humus, and if a soil lacks humus th. stalks will be a help to it It Ls all right to look for ease and to plan to have an easy time, but In th? meantime it is safer to work on. It I not always the one who doew the in6? t work who thrives, but the one who doou the best and most timely work. The goose is a very careful mother, and the job of Incubation would bolter be left to her. She can Ik? allowed to swim in breeding season, because she is orderly and knows where she puts her eggs, but a duck will !ay anywhere. Hotter not permit access to water, but keep breeding ducks In a yard. Some of the "safe schemes" advertised are safe. One man Invested in one of theee "safe schemes" and his money is apparently safe, for. It Is there yet and no indication that he will ever get It out again. It is a well-known fact that the safest schemes do not have to be advertised as "safe schemes." Farm land In a certain locality was selling at about $100 per acre and n trolley line pased along through that locality and land now sells at from $125 to $150 per acre. This Is the way it helps the land 'owntr. The land Is more valuable, and it Is the demand for it that causes it to enhance In value. It Is a good plan to sometimes get away from the crowd. Last summer many were induced to toro eggs because the crowd was doing It. For the past few years many lamb feeders have been making money feeding lambs; this year there has been a los in some cases because feeders stuck too closely to the crowd. Each tree should be rareful'y examined early In the spring, say in March, for the presence of bo.vrs which have been 'at work during the past six months. They can be found by scraping the dirt away from the tree and noticing closely for the sawdust trail. If that is found the borer must be cut out and killed. It is almost always a good plan to keep the harrow close up to the plowIhg, a.s it closes up the avenues of escaping moisture, thereby hastening decomposition of all litter and mulch which will add still more moisture to the soIL There are many problems going on all the time lu the soIL We want to get some of them in our heads. "In lSaS Japan only used a little over one thousand pounds of American flour. Last year she took 50,000,000 pounds. Jt seems that breech clouU and' chop sticks have made way for pants, plnj; hats and baking powder biscuits, aid more than ?.ny other nation to-day Japan Is adopting the American type of civilization." remarks a writer in an exchange. Oat smut is caused by a microscopic plant life that lives on the oat plant It is propagated by fine spores that are like dust. These find lodgment In the hulls of the oats and are sown with the seed. They grow In the plant and nothing 1 seen of them until It Is manifested it the ripening grain. "An enemy hath sot sown" this, but one Is responsible for it in the selection of his seed. Sefcd oats can be treated so as to le free ftom smut spores. The question is, will It be done? , Fapert not ;osted on the status of the Angara Industry are liable to print some strange news thereon. The following from the American Cultivator is a casft in point: "The popularity of 'ic Anra goat seems to have bee. a short-lived affair. Some of the larger concern have gone out of business, declaring that the young stock could not be aedd. Others have offered goats nt $1 ptT head. Probably the truth Is that th boom in sheep has side-tracked the 4,-oat business for the time IIVvy Milker la ProHJnble. A balanced ration is the ration that s best for the purpose. A cow that produce milk requires more protein in its food than one that is not a producer. A steer that is being fatted for market should have more carbonaceous material in her food. There Is no ration that will serve all purposes and as no two animals are exactly alike, no kind Df ration can be said to be "balanced" to provide the substances demanded by every tuimal In the herd. The farmer should endeavor to use a balanced ra: io:i as far as it is possible to do so, :;:t he must be a close observer of Ids live stock and endeavor to know every animal and its characteristics. Varied Ilnllons for Hoc:. I logs will consume more and assimilate It better when a variety of food Is furnished them. The proportion of the different kinds of feed must be determined by observation and judgment. The price of the various kinds of f&djttuffs, the time it takes to grind some of them, the relish with which they are paten, the amount consumed, and tb apparent gain made must 11 be taken into consideration. Of course the great

er the gain in a given length of t!m the preater the profit. The larpest pos sible return for feed and labor 'is what every feeder is after. Some j.'-ople use stock food, to great advantage as they believe. They claim that it stimulates appetite and aids digestion, increasing the vigor of the animals. I'roflt In Keeping Hoki. The ho is the poor man's friend, and yet son;- men think they are too ior to keep a pig. I know men with families and n small farm who sa;, that it does not pay' to keep a hog, so they have to bly all of their meat. Is this not short-sightedness? I am quite positive that in my case, at least, It has paid to keep, hogs and I have always had to purchase more or less grain. I would not now think of farming without keeping some hos, no matter how small my farm niisht be. I consider them among the most profitable stock a farmer can keep and adapted to any kind of farm. On many farms the bog does not receive the attention It deserves. Cleaning Ekk f-r Market. The best way to have the eggs clean is to see that the nest material in each box is kept clean at all times. If but a few eggs are soiled these should be kept at home for use and they may be safely washed if they are to be used within a few hours afterward. If it Is necessary to cleanse the shell of the e?gs which go to market a good plan Is to take them In hand as soon as they are brought in and with a canton flannel cloth go over them. If the soil still sticks breathe lightly on the egg and wipe it again, always with the dry cloth. Eggs which are wet spoil very quickly and the moisture removes the bloom from the shell.

flatter from Coat' 3111k. Replying to an inquiry In Hoard't Dairyman ns to the value of goat's milk for butter, Trofessor Farrington says: "I know no reason why goat's milk, if the goat Is healthy and receives souvd, wholesome 'ood, is not as valuable for butter as cow's milk," and If the milk I.' well taken care of, and has no bad odors, you probably will never know the difference if some goat's milk is added to the cow's milk which comes to your factory. You can yourself judge as to the advisability of accepting the goat's ralli; by inspecting it before you receive it. I certainly do not know why It should Injure the' butter, neither do I kfovr of any law that forbids the maklLj cf butter from goat's milk. If the goat'a milk is richer and Increases the test, the patron bringing such milk should get the cre It for the Increase, and I do not see why this should be an objection." , To Destroy Bark Lice. A cheap mixture which has been tested with excellent results is to dissolve five iounl of potash in five gallons of boiling water, adding five pounds of lard at tb same time. In another vessel slake one peck of stone lime in five gallons of boiling water and add a pint of crude carbolic acht While hot mix the two solutions. The mixture may be kept In a barrel, to be used as required. When about to be applied to trees take one gallon of the mixture, add two gallons o boiling water and swab thetrees with It or apply with an old broom, while the mixture Is warm or as hot as It can be applied. It may be used as i'iequently ns necessary, both on the trunk of trees and on the roots, after remoring the top soil. It loosens the old bark, destroys bark lice and make th trunks smooth. The odor of the carbolic acid Is enduring, and is especially distasteful to insects. Drhornlnjr Young Calves. The deLcrning operation may be easily and painlessly performed when the calves ar from two to five days old. The only Instrument necessary is a stick of caustic potash. Roll a strip of paper around one end of this to protect the fingers, moisten the other and slightly and rub the tip of the horn ior a half minute, or until the potisli has made a slight impression in the co',er of the horn. Repeat this treatment two or four tlines at Intervals of atout five minutes, and if during one of these Intervals, after one or more arp-licatlons, a little blood appears in the center of the horn. It will be necessary t give only another very light rubbing tilth the potash. FaiUcular pains shoUd be taken to rub the caustic in the ccater of the horn and not nrcund the sides of It, and the stick must not be too moist, else the caustic will f-pre&d on the skin around the horn and destroy the flesh. For th same reason the calf must not be allowed to get wet for a few days after the operation, and the wound protected so the mother wfll not lick It. The operation should not be attempted except on calves under eight days old. S. J. Marsh, In Massachusetts Ploughman. Beetle and Das:. Rose beetles appear some time In June and in sandy localities are liablo to cause very 6erlous Injury. It Is difficult to destroy these Insects either with poison or a whale oil soap solution, and. as a rule It would pay to shield more highly prized plants by covering them with mosquito netting. The striped cucumber beetle and tho nauseous squash bug begin operation about this time. Young plants can bit protect ed for a while from both with light screens. Trap the squash bug under shingles laid near the plants, and kill the bugs each morning. The striped cucumber beetle is held In check by spraying with a poisoned P.ordeaux mixture or even dusting heavily with land plaster or ashes. The asparagus beetles and their grubs are frequently abundant at this timj and young plants at least should Ik thoroughly protected with a joisoned spray. The young of two of our common scale insects, the scurfy scale and oyster scale, appear the latter part of May or early In June, and there Is no better way of keeping them In check than by thorough spraying at this time with an insecticide like the whale oil soap solution, one pound to five or six gallons of water, or the standard kerosene emulsion d.'lited with about nine parts of water.

LINCOLN'S FIRST CANDIDACY.

In Sancramon Hirer Improvements II- Found an Opportunity. The people of New Salem, like those of all other Western towns, took a keen interest in politics; "politics" meaning, in that time and piee not only who was to be President or Governor, but concerned Itself with questions which came much closer home to dwellers on the frontier. "Internal improvements." as they were called the building of roads and clearing out of streams so that men and women who lived In remote places might be able to travel back and forth and carry on trade with the rest of the world became a burning question in Illinois. There was great need of such' improvements; and in this need young Lincoln saw his opportunity. It was by way of tho Sangamon Rlv er that he entered politics. That uncertain water-course had already twice befriended him. He hnd floated on It In floodtime from bis father's cabin into Springfield. A few weeks later its rapidly falling waters landed him on the dam rt. Rutledge's Mill, introducing him effectively if unceremoniously, tc the inhabitants of New Salem. Now II was again to play a rart in his life, starting him on a political career thai ended enly in the White House. Surely no Insignificant stream has had a greater Influence on the history of a famous man. It was a winding and sluggish creek, enjumbered with driftwood and choked by sand bars, but It flowed through a country already filled witt ambitious settlers, where the roads were atrociously bad, becoming In rainy perisons wide seas of pasty black mud, and remaining almost Impassable for weeks at a time. After a devious course the Sangamon found its way Into the Illinois River, and that In turn flowed Into the Mississippi. Most of tho set tiers were too new to the region tc know what a shallow, unprofltabb stream the Sangamon really was; foi the deep snows of 1S30-31 and of the following winter had. supplied It witt an unusual volume of water. It wa natural, therefore, that they should re gard It ns the heaven-sent solution ol their problem of travel and traffic witt the outside world. If it could only b freed from driftwood, and its channe straightened a little, they felt sure li might be used for small steamboats dur Ing a large part of the year. The candidates for the Legislature that summer staked their chances o success on the zeal they showed foi "internal improvements." Lincoln was only 23. He had Ixvm In the countj barely nine months. Sangamon Count was then considerably larger than th whole State of Rhode Island, , and In was of course familiar with only i small part of It or Its people; but b felt that he did know the river. H had sailed on it and had been ship wrecked by it; be .ad, moreover, beer one of a party of men and boys, armec with long-handled axes, who went ou' to chop away obstructions and meet small steamer that, a few weeks earlier, had actually forced its way uj; from the Illinois Rler. Following the usual custom, he an nounced his candidacy In the loca newspaper In a letter dated March 15 addressed "To the Teople of Sangamor County." It was a straightforward manly statement of his views on ques tlons of the day, written in as gooc English as that used by the averagt college-bred man of his years. Tht larger part of it was devoted to argu nents for the Improvement of the San grwi.;on River. Its main interest for in lies in the frank avowal of his persona ambition that is contained in the clos ing paragraph. "Every man is said to have his pecu liar ambition," he wrote. "Whether 1 be true or not I can say, for one, thai I have no other so greet as that of be Ing truly esteemed of my fellow-men bj rendering mysslf worthy of their es teem. How far I shall succeed in grat lfylng this ambition Is yet to be devel oped. I am young, and unknown t many of you. I was born, and havt ever remained. In tbj most bnmbb walks of life. 'I have no wealthy oi popular relations or friends to recom mend me. My case Is thrown exclu sively upon the Independent voters ol the county; and if elected, they wit have conferred a favor upon me foi which I shall be unremitting In my la bors to compensate. But , If the good people in their wisdom shall see fit t( Keep me in the background, I have beer, roo familiar with disappointments to b very much chagrined." From Ilelet Nlcolay's "The Boys Life of Abrahan: Lincoln," In St. Nlcholcs. NEW IDEAS IN ROLLING PINS. Common Smooth Surface Replncec vrlth One HaTlnff Projection. History states that rolling pins have been in active use for so many years that the date of the birth of the first one has long been forgotten. Ancient records show that J Noah had such an implement u I down on his list. In the inB I tervenlng time the shape hat ' not hc-en nltrrod. the rollinc n "V pin of to-day being Identical with the one used before the flood. Naturally, a change . ,j .m mm would seem useless, as it ful4 ly serves its purpose in its f present form. Still, an up-to-date inventor deemed otherwise and designed the rolling pin illustrated herewith. A m mtl J radical chance in shape t adopted, the time-honored smooth surface being ills if I ' placed with one having lnnuUm e r a b 1 e protuberances .- These protuberances act or - the dough like a meat tender does on tough meat A sec ond glance will convince the readoi that this rolling pin will not suffer it comparison with the common one II will be just as useful to the housewife In subduing her over-zealous husband In lact, it should have a higher rating as it Is bound to make a lasting Impression vthen skillfully wielded In ths hands of i.n irate wife.

A Good Word for Ilah. C'iurch This meat Investigation is proving to my mind that there arc worse things in the world than board Ing house hash. Gotham How so? "Weil, wheu you find a hairpin or t shoe button in your hash you know what jou've got, but you don't know what you're getting in this canned meat, it seems." Yonkers Statesman. About the only things In the house which the women regard as important not to disturb are the cream and the baby. When gir! can paint a tree so thai everyone knows what it is, her friends say she has a "rare Insight into nature." Ev?r notice that an old debt is hard to pay?

LEGAL INFORMATION. 0 NWVSW

Taxes on real estate do not have to bo paid by but one of Feveral successive owners, during a year. In the absence of agreement, a landlord is not obliged to make repairs. A tenant takes the property as he finds It. If a man dies leaving a widow but no children, she takes nil of flie personal property and one-half of the real estate. If goods are sent to a persoc to be sold they must be paid for or returnexl, even though misrepresentations may have been made by the sender. A man has no right to shoot hogs oi turkeys which are trespassing on his land. He can bring suit against their owner and recover for all damage done. If a person gives his note to a brokei for commission for services In procur ing a money loan for such person, the note is for a good consideration and must be paid. If the prosecuting attorney refuses tc take action against a person lelieved to be guilty of perjury, it would be besi to consult an attorney there. Perjury is, usually, hard to prove. The known boundaries mentioned in a deed limit the amount of land which passes, not the number of acres. If the wording of a deed has been fraudulently changed by the grantee, a bill in equity can be brought and the conveyance set aside. If a woman dies owning land In Texas leaving a husband and one child, the husband will take only the use of ione-third of the property for life, the remainder goes to the child. The child Is entitled to two-thirds of the Income from the proierty. The husband cannot give a deed and pass the title to the property. If a railroad company takes land by tirtue of the right of eminent domain, and takes the matter Into court as allowed by statute, the owner of the land will be allowed to show the full amount of his damages. The owner of land oaiiLot prevent the railroad from taking the amount of land necessary If the damages awarded by the court be paid. An attorney should be employed to represent the owner In court On the death of th husband the wld ow takes the homestead for life, then the same goes to the children. Of the n-malnlnj; property, both real and personal, the widow takes one-third and the children the balance. If a daughter works for her father with the. understanding that after bis death she shall receive her wages from bis estate, her claim may be contested by the other heirs. It would be better to have the father sign a contract agreeing to pay the daughter certain wages from a certain time. A note may be given by the father to cover the wages to the present time. PACIFIC TONNAGE INCREASES. Ilemarkable Change In Shipments Noted In Iteeent Year. Ralph IX Paine In an article entitled 'Steam and Sail on the Pacific" in the Outing Magazine, makes an Interesting comparison regarding the Increase In tonnage, of American vessels on the Pacific. ' When Mr. Taine first crossed the Pacific to act in the capacity of a war correspondent In the China-Japan war, he found in use a few boats which had proved too small and slow for use in the Atlantic service. Revisiting the Pacific coast last autumn in the interest of the Outing Magazine he found the following remarkable change had taken place. In 1807 the toal tonnage of Ameri can steam vessels engaged in the Pa clllc Ocean was 23,42(5; In 1003 it had Increased to 149,GS5, by which time more vessels In foreign trade were owned In Washington than in any other State In the Union. From Seattle now sail the magnificent steamers Minnesota and Dakota, built for James J. Hill, which would Icom as giants on the swarming Atlantic, and from San Francisco steams the new fleet of majestic liners of the Korea and Manchuria class, created by the Pacific MalL Out of Tacoma voyage westward the new ships of the Boston Steamship Company; the China Mutu.'.I Navigation Company has Invaded the field with-a monthly line from Puget Sound to Liverpool and Glasgow via oriental ports, and the Germans are building up a new service out of Portland.. Besides these regular lines, unattached freighters under steam and sail are hurrying to and from these ports in greater fleets each year. Far to the southward the breakwater' at San Pedro stretches out a mighty arm to she!ter the coming squadrons of commerce. New ships are building to meet new demands, and yet with almost every voyage the liners leave behind them waiting cargoes for which they have no space, whose bulk is measured by hundreds of carloads. In the first half of last year ten ships were filled with freight left behind by steamers out of Seattle and Tacoma. Vegetarians claim that hair grows loss luxuriantly on the heads of meat eaters. Some of the largest ocean steamers can be converted into armed cruisers In thirty hours. Beethoven became deaf, and long before his death could not even hear the drums In the orchestra. The sound of a bell which can be heard forty-live thousand feet through the water can be heard through the air only 45C feet To ascertain roughly the length of the day and night at any time of the year, double the sun's rlslnj, which gives the length of the night and double the time of setting, which gives the length of the day. Locusts are devastating Southern Algeria. The swarms are so great as almost to defy Imagination. It Is not easy to conceive of an almost solid phalanx of Insects 125 miles long by six miles wide. Unfortunately, the devastation which such myriads of voracious insects must create In vegetation is not so difficult to appreciate. Wherever the host has passed nothing green remains. Even the houses are becoming uninhabitable. The Orau Province seems doomed for this year. Ilerlslns the Jailer Ilemark. "Once in the penitentiary, always a :rook," ,ays one of experience. "Once j crook, not always in the peniten- j tiary," is the way it strikes the mere I Dbsdfc-er. Philadelphia Ledger.

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l V L- Mill Äketable Pr epatalionfor Assimilating tticFoodandncguiiting the Stomachs aMBowels of Promotes Digc3tion.CheerfurnessandRestContains neilhcr Opium.Morprtine norJIineral. OTAItCOTIC. ' Ik CtvUmUmStctf aUtrym flaw. f Apcrfecl Remedy forCcnslipnnon, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverishncss and Loss OF Sleep. Facsimile Signature ct KEW YORK. fc '4tV it'ti 1; EXACT CCPY OF WRAPPER. A Certain Cure tor Tired, Hpt, Aching Feet. DO WOT ACCEPT A SUBSTITUTE.

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Rrnlnr Desperado. Rodrick It is an injustice to call the driver of an automobile a chauffeur. We should; call him a motorist Some high authority in France tells us tbat the word chauffeur is pn vincial and means "outlaw." Van Albert Well, old man, look ?t the chauffeurs who act like outlaws. Low Hate to St. Panl, M inn., via Nickel , Plate Road. Tickets on sale July ZX 24 and 25. Good returning July 81st. Full information of Agent or address, C. A. Melin, T. V. A., Ft. Wayne, Ind. (900) In Doubt. "Senator, do you intend to try for re-election?" "Hardly know yet Some of the ! boys say that legislatures have gone up. "Still, as you've done good serrJce " "Oh, well, I'll probably drop around ind make a casual bid." Philadelphia Public Ledger. Life's Prime la mt Fortr. J The larger part of tbe great fortunes of this country bave boon accumulated after their amassers have passed 40. In fact, the first forty years of a man's life are the preparatory years the years of training and discipline. A large part of this time. he is laying tbe foundation just getting ready to reir the superstructure. Many of us stum-, ble around many years Hfore we get Into the right place and then for additional years we make many mistakes. Most men do not get wise until they have passed 40. They may get knowledge before this, but not much wisdom. Wisdom is a ripening process. It takes time. At the age when Dr. Osier thinks men are becoming useless Lincoln was trying to get an appointment as a land t commissioner and failed. At the same age nobody outside of his own little community knew Ulysses S. Grant lie had not then accomplished anything of note, and yet be became the greatest military figure of his day. Every man makes his own deadline. Some reach it at 3T, some at 40, some at 50 ; some do not reach it at SO, some never reach it, because they never cease to grow. O. S. Marden, in Success. OUTDOOR LIFE Will Not OfTaet the 111 Effect ot Coffee When One Cannot Dijj-et It A farmer says: "It was not from liquor or tobacco that for ten years or more I suffered from dyspepsia and stomach trouble; they were caused by the use of coffee until I got so bad I had to give up coffee entirely and almost give up eating. There were times when I could eat only boiled milk and bread, and when I went to the field to work I had to take some bread and butter aloug to glvo me strength. "I doctored with doctors and took almost everything I could get for my stomach in the way of medicine, but If I got any better it only lasted a little while until I was almost a . walking skeleton. "One day I read an ad. for Fostum and told my wife I would try it, and as to the following facts I will make affidavit before any judge: "I quit coffee entirely and used Fostum in Its place. I haTe regained my health entirely and can eat anything that is cooked to eat I have Increased in weight until now I weigh more than I ever did ; I have not taken any medicine for my stomach since I began using Postum. Why, I believe Fostum will almost digest an Iron wedge. "My family would stick to coffee at first, but they saw the effects It had on me, and when they were feeling bad they began to use Tostum, one at a time, until now we all use Fostum.' Name given by Tostum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Ten days trial of Fostum in. place of coffee proves the truth, an easy and pleasant way. 'There's a reason." Look In pkgs. for a copy of the famous little book, "The Road to Well-vUla."

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For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of a J In Use For Over ihirty Years hi) T&3 inatar For FREE Trial P&ckan, WWöU-UiO B.rerjbox. Adurot-, A lira S. Olrnttci, LtRoy. N. Y. IVA BASH 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 Tassenger Service has a world-wide reputation for perfection. Hie "Free" Reclining Chair Car feature on this great American Railroad at once recommends itself to your favor. Writi Icirttt Wifctsk ipnt tr lid mi C S. CRANE, C. P. L T. A. ST. LOUIS, KO. Ths Greifest Docrdir.a CoIIecs IN THE WORLD university oi lie m Notre D&me, Indiana We rart tw pBtM Ovr p tad rat utmdy aa4 vr atademt kekaT I hr tmrnr 1 ra 18Bu0dlr.;s 75 Professors COO Students Ccarara In Anrlmt pi Kndrra Lanraaffm. Ei(1isa, Hiv Vry,an4 Lcinmtr Chrntifttrr, biokarv, raaraiarv. Civil, iLiectriril, and H achanirol EurlnaatiiiK. Arctitoctiua, Law, Khoribantt, Bovk aaaj.lng, Tjpa-arrilinf . Special DcpartBeil ler Bays later Thirteei TERMS: Boards Tuition, and laundry, $400. Send ten cents tiie Secretary for Catalogue. Dr. Ilea's nd Call Cure Ohtssrt Price, 25 Cents. Cora Earn mb ani CV Har OaTU, Barb Wire CuU,Frood 1 Iwb. tkrf, berate tit, l Gr Ute I, C OEUfCaBBairD etc U tu SO cur, tat by Dr. Cba. L. Kea.New York Cltj (owtrrot the Dr. Rr Ranch of .i.QuO avert la G anion Co., &ao. aa). Vor U fcy Iii dmrylat tu lata fw. THF ni ST FY lilt C0t.-ii " a. atf.iv, ik, nibkb.ll .fort toavrrr hoew; 1 K 0 boa laU the astir raann. H.rK M m parasna; Uta, itaaa aad will nat anil ar injur anythiB. try Ith. mr ana Ta will nvtrar La wn aat that. If art kvl bjr 3 !-. aaot pra. paid (or Kr. Ilarata ttaaim, 149 Dra,. Aw Sraallj, k. f 500 Virginia Farms, l1 markets, future. Grains. trucWln?, dairyim?;, Diultry. Great opportunities f-r tai-nitr. SVme for Krai Estate Herald. Pyle fc C'j Petersburg, Va. F.10THER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERO FOR CHILDREN, A Oar-tain Oar for FTrHknMa ('tiptatjoft, lirittarhr, Mettlach 1 rouble, Tret bin; IHaoralera, and Iieatroy Verrn. Thy Itrruk r 1 .M in S4 hours. At all Prwgfftata. bam ola ma;ld "TURK A Unu, A. S. OLMSTED. U CoyTH Y. Mother Gray. Mars in Child raa't Horn, YvaCiu. 60 Das. Winter Wheat Per Aero Tht'i Mi jil nf ALXtK8 I'KUIKO! HTKUID WIM t K WUr AT. k.nt i rtnta Id iu-i fur fra aaip'.a of aama, ai alao cataloraa of lntar haata, K f. fcaf . C'lorr, Timothy. Oraaura, Biilha Trara, ate. fur f H tlantmf ALZCR SLED CO Dax C, L scram. ttiKessti JÜ1CHT FARKS FOR SALE. Larc Hat; Information ' ree. Howartf-PackarS tana Ca., Kclaia. (Kxh. F. 7. 17. U. - - - No. 2P 1Ö00 When writing to Advertisers p!ee y yoa) aw ths Advertisement In this paper Do you want a Self taking Dating Stamp for 75 cents? Adiress, Lck Cos 219. Fort A'bx &v Indiana ,

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