Plymouth Tribune, Volume 5, Number 44, Plymouth, Marshall County, 9 August 1906 — Page 7

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high attainments, and regarded as the "John Marshall" of his denomination, had been trained as a preacher in the somewhat severe school of pioneer Methodisa, and in conducting public worship he preferred the simplicity of the primitive days. At one time lie vras unexpectedly called upon to preach In a suburb of one of the large cities, and consented. lie arrived rather late on the appointed Sunday morning, aid went at once to the pulpit, without having had an opiortunity to confer with the leader of the choir relative to the musical part of the service. The choir leader. In honor of the bishop's presence, had arranged an elaborate program. Unt aware of th.V, the bishop promptly rose, announced a hymn, and read It through. The leader of the choir, however, was not to be balked. The organist, instead of playing the tune appropriate to the hymn played a "voluntary " as usual. It was followed by a "selection," rendered by the choir, and then a soprano solo. Tb bishop, who had pat down when the voluntary besan, waited until there was a lull In the performance. Then he rose, and without, waiting for the singing of the hymn he had announced, began. "I wish to say to the congregation," be saW, Mthat I hid no part In arranging these opening exercif0.' Xw Ose en Him. Henry, aged U, never had happened tc ee a Mexican hairless dog before. "Why, it's a raw dog, ian't it?" he said. SO H) GO 11 W fj Hi . J Food Products A3 ire selected mead, prepared for your table m a kitchen as dean as your own. Remdy to serve any Time It to serve aaywkere. AH are economical -and all are good, Whether your taste be for Boneless Chicken, Veal Loaf, Ox Toegae, Potted Ham, Dried Beef, there is do way vou can gratify it so well as by asking for Libby's. Try Libby's delicious cooked Ox Tongue for sandwiches or sliced cold, BooUrf free. "Hew to MU UII7. KcTIrKI a Ully, Ch.'C You Cannot 3) LTV1 all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal conditions of the muccus membrane auch as - - I 4 1. 1 A. uuaiuiiarnuicnnccaiarrn caused by feminine ills, sore throat, sore mouth or Inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure these stubborn affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs,checks discharges, stops pair, and heals 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 TXXi: R. P AXT ON CO Doston. Uus, f WABASH. 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 Passenger 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. Writs Isirtit Wabash Iftat Udrm C S. CRANE, G. P.fiT.A. ST. LCC1S. KO. PosItiTely cured by these) LiUla Fills. They also rettere Diatress trrca Dyspepsia. la(üfesttoa and Too Hearty Eatlzig. A perfect rem etfy for Dlzzlaes. Kansea, Diwsiaess. tad Taste ta tho Monti, Coated TcmgTie, Pain in the Elle. TORPID JIVES. They regelate the Bowels. Purely Vegitafcla, SÜJtLLfilL StULL C3SE. STJJLLL Fr.IGE CARTERS Gsnur.3 Must Etear Fac-Similg Signature REFUSE SU0ST1TUTES. -FTTIE IVL-R pi u.a. Dt RRPB 4TAMP4. AH kinds el Rubber Stamps Mad to Order. SeU-iaktni Dter something new. Ink and fnkloar Paaa, Scad for CataJoffuo to Lock Bo 219. Fort Waroo, Lad.

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The hen needs more feed and drink when she begins to lay. Early and thorough training makes gentle, safe and tractable horses. A man is feeding his cow greenbacks when he feeds a cow with a low test or an inferior flow. The Incubator canpot bring a live chicken out of a dead germ. Neither can the old hen. The use of hand tools Is unnecessary In the preparation of a seed bed if the soil is worked at the proper time. Protect the young turkeys carefully from rain and dampness, which are fatal to them. Now Is the time when they are most delicate. It is unwise to let a colt follow Its dam to the field. A little training and careful management will result all right when tfie colt remains at the barn. Dairymen have observed that when there is too much wet weather the grass becomes "vrashy" and the tests run low. This can be partially overcome by feed. Wood ashes is an excellent fertilizer for young fruit trees. It contains large per cent of potash, which is the essential plant food most largely used by fruit. The best preacher Is he who practices what he preaches. The best teacher is he who knows what he teaches. The best farmer Is he who practices what he knows. A certain "would-be agriculturistheard of the egg plant and he bought a number of them. He says he is going to raise a lot of feed for his hens, and bt-Iieves that it is the thing for egg production. An "auto hog" ran over a Leghorn chicken belonging to a California woman. She collected $5 "at the point of a blacksnake whip." There's a new woman for you. She did Just what she ought to have done. To obtain strong, stocky plants. In hotbeds, they should be transplanted when two or three weeks old, and once again, later, into a cold frame. In this way the best and earliest cabbage and tomatoes can be bad. In cultivating large fields heavy teams will riot only keep up in better condition, but actually require less grain feed than the smaller class of horses that hare to work on their nerve day by day to do the work. In arbitrating troubles between yourself and neighlior it is a satisfaction to know that if you get nothing by the arbitration, you have saved some court costs. You probably have also saved the friendship of your neighbor. . An ideal table fowl is long In the body, wide in the back, full In the breast, and pi' imp over the keel, meaty all over. An authority says, taking its legs as a center, there must be more body In front of the legs than behind. The shape is a parallelogram. For the first three weeks of Its life the pig should be fed exclusively through its dam, and the dam ought to be fed with that in view. No one ought to expect a pig to eat and digest corn while at a tender age. The pig needs food that will produce blood, bone and muscle. When planting trees and -shrubs on the lawn for permanent growth, keep in mind the habit of the trees. Make the tops smaller than the roots of trees that are transplanted. Remove all broken roots when the trees are set. Cut broken parts off with a sharp knife. A good many hours per year can be saved by the use of snaps on harness wherever needed. In putting snai fn the brest etraps they should be put in so as not to catch in the neckyoke ring when unhitching. Some use a roller snap In the brest strap, and time is saved by it. The reason why morning's milk bould not be poured warm Into the light's milk is that the night's milk ;ontaln great numbers of germs which ite Just waiting for a little warmth in rder to develop and multiply. The less 3f these germs the ndlk contains the longer it will keep. Horse raising will be deficient in profit In exact ratio to the number of $1,000 draft stallions that from $2,r00 to $5,000 are paid' for. While horse raisers are ready to giye stallion grafters the bulk of their profits they should not expect to be entirely satisfied with their end of the business. Little danger exists of making the soil too wch for a vegetable garden, for although a total of ninety-eight loads of manure were appll?d to a half acre during five years, ncne of the vegetables at any time suffered In point of productiveness by reason of too rampant a vegetable growth. Skim milk is an exceedingly valuable feed for growing calves. It must always be fed sweet and must be as warm as the mother's milk, about 98 degrees. Four quarts fed twice a day Is sufficient for the first month. Add a teaspoonful of oilmeal to each feed. In addition to the skir. milk, let the calves have oats or shorts "ard hay. No more wasteful plan exists to winter pigs or hogs of any kind excepting brood powa than to feed simply to make them hold -their own. Successful pork production means good, wellbred hogs, good pasture in summer, good sheds, good feeding accommodations in winter, good feed, good water and good care. The hog stands ready to do the rest Winter wheat and rye plants have all the tenacity of life that can be found in a single plant. If one does not believe this, let him try to kill out volunteer wheat or rye where he desires to plant corn, and he will be convinced. All known tools disconcert it somewhat, but it soon conforms to the new order of growth and Is found In a thrift condition about the Um the

inuonndman feels that it has been kriled. When wheat or rye is found in corn fields It becomes a weed and take on the hardihood and proves to be ver much of a stayer. Ilunche on Cherry Tree. The best remedy for the large bunches which grow uim the limbs and trunks of cherry trees is to saw the wart off very smoothly, close to the wood. The wound will usually heal over as readily as when a limb has been cut away. As a preventive the tree should be kept in a rapid growing condition. Put Brain Into Farming;. Make farming a business. Tut brains and money Into Its management with the expectation that it will return a profit To run a farm in a half-hearted way, being afraid to make improvements or apply fertilizing material in sufficient quantities, for fear It will not pay, Is a sure way of having one's fears realized; while if the effort is made tc build up the farm by making it better year by year It Is pretty sure to be a success.

Milk la Good for F"ovrl. Sour buttermilk, or even whey, makes excellent feed for fowls, but it is much better to mix the ground grain with it than to place It where they can drink It, In order to avoid waste, as lnuc'j cf It Is rendered filthy if placed where the fowls have free access to it. An egg beaten In milk and thickened with ground oats and meal of any consistency will be eagerly eaten by young chicks, but if cooked as bread and crumbled It will be better. Taste Thin in Your Hat. Buy a farm, young man. No matter how small it may be, buy a farm and prepare it so that your land will provide you a living. Twenty years from now, the man that owns his farm will be Independent and will have at his command the means of a livelihood. The expansion of manufacturing cannot go on forever, and there will come a day In this country, as there has In others, when the supply will exceed the demand, and the only absolutely sure occupation will be farming. Fuy a farm while one may be had. Exchange. Killing; Dandelions. Many inquiries have been addressed to this department asking for advice on how to kill dandelions In lawns. The best means, of course, and surest, is to dig them up, root and all. This is tedious, however, and expensive. Try, In case the digging process Is not employed, the sulphate of iron-solution. Use a good-sized handful to thrre gal Ions of water and sprinkle this ove an area twenty feet square. It will not in Jure the grass and will kill the dande lion at least some of them. Penlmmon Without Packer.. A note from Washington, D. C, says. Persimmons without a pucker are now be!ng grown by the Department of Ag riculture. Owing to the chemical com position of the old-fashioned persimmon, which caused the Hps. to pucker after eating this fruit, the sales have been anything but gratifying to farm ers. In order to remedy this defect the Department of Agriculture Imported some Japanese persimmons and crossed them with the American product. A finer specimen has been produced, and In the near future the department wfll begin the distribution of persimmon trees which will produce fruit guaran teed not to pucker the lips. Con-peai for II rood Sont. A Missouri farmer echoes the opln ion of all who have tried cowpeas for hog,s when he says : I will give my experience with cow peas as a feed for brood sows during the breeding season. Having a field of cowpeas convenient to pasture with hogs, I turned them In, both large and small. There being clover, timothy and blue grass in the same field, I gave nothing else but water. The sows were In good condition when turned in and when the ieas were gone they would have weighed probably fifty pounds each more than when turned on the peas. The pigs are now arriving and the result Is from three to eight pigs to a litter where I should have had from eight to twelve per litter from aged sows. I have a neighbor who is having lJie results from same treatment. A Good Time to Derln. The market calls for a sheep with a dark face aud legs, and a close fleece Is aa advatage also. There never has been a time when a fair profit could not be obtained from the keeping of sheep. There are in the world to-day nil ety million fewer sheep than twelve years ago, and the consumption of mutton and wool is rapidly increasing, hence it is safe to conclude that sheep to the farmer Is a safe proposition. Do not start on a large scale; begin 16 w and work up. The Western farmer does not like to do this, and you are no exception. You have never planted the apple because you did not expect to stay to eat the fruit You must rush on and do big things. Do you not know that In the animal world; as well aa In the vegetable world, rapid growth means rapid decay? Plant this live stock business and give It time to strike its roots deep down, and after it Is fairly rooted allow the top to grow. Andrew Elliott Remedy for the Apple Scab. The Ohio Experiment Station has demonstrated that the apple scab I the chief factor In the destruction of the apple crop and that this fungus can be kept under control by spraying. Four splendid successive crops were produced on the sprayed trees at the station, while the fruit on the unsprayed trees In the same and neighboring orchards was worthless. The director, Prof. Thorne, however, calls attention to the fact that exhaustion ol soil fertility, want of water and insect ravages may all co-operate with scab or other fungus growth In shortening the crop, and says: "If our orchards are again to produce the great crops of early days, we must, In so fat as possible, restore the soil conditions of those days; we must avoid the waste of water in those sections where rainfall la scanty by preventing the growth under the trees of weeds and grass and by keeping the surface In such condition as to prevent rapid evaporation."

USES FOR COCOANUT OIL.

High Qualities aa a Food Appreciated In the Orient, The subject of coeoanut ell Is one of great Importance in the United States, where, from the fact that the Philippine Islands now furnish the largest supplies of the raw material, copra and its products must Inevitably take a position of commanding Interest. For many years coeoanut oil was regarded in commerce as an Industrial oil only. Its high qualities as a food were appreciated by the Orient, probably because Its people were entirely. satisfied with a rancid grease when they could not get better, and because in any event they alone could secure a fresh sweet oil, which, upon being exerted any distance or stored for any length of time, greatly deteriorated lu quality. Therefore, even for soap-making purposes, the exportation of the copra, or the raw material, always has been more general than the exportation of the finished oil. The manufacture of this oil has become especially Important In Marseilles. In 1005 Marseilles alone imported 104.5OG tons of copra ; in 1904, 8Ö.ÖGS tons, and In 1903, 109.071 tons. Indeed, the only limits to the buying capacity of this market are fixed by the crops of the producing countries. Exportatlons from Marseilles to the United States of the' oil product amounted In 1003 to $23,042, in 1004 to $25,000, and In 1003 to $82,153. The rapid increase In the quantity tiken up In the United States Is undoubtedly due to the progress made In the manufacture of the oil, In which two local firms have met with remarkable success. As the oil is upon the American free ILst It can, of course, compete advantageousJy with other IaM and butter substitutes upon the American market Coeoanut oil varies in color from snow white to reddish yellow, according to the freshness of the kernels treated and the refining method subsequently employed. In bot countries of production the oil is liquid and Is spoken of as an oil, while In Europe It would be more exact to describe It as a butter, since it solidifies at 18 degrees cent, and, if of good quality, of the whiteness of rectified lard. This particularly indicates that the extraction of the oil must take place with the application of heat The Tatagonians are tho tallest people In the world; the Laplanders are the shortest Among the trees the elm reaches an age of 335 years, the Ivy 450, the chestnut six hundred, the cedar eight hundred, the oak fifteen hundred and the yew twenty-eight hundred. A woman in Paris has established an agency for supplying bridcmuids to young women who need such attendants and who have no friends. Each girl receives $5tfor each time she acts as brldemaid. If the bride wishes her maids to appear In new clothes she has to buy the apparel herself. Fossil hair Is a zoological novelty. The Insects preserved In amber have long since been studied and described carefully, with the result that In most cases they have been found to approximate closely to living types. A German naturalist has now found hairs of mammals which suggest the dormouse, although, as it has not yet been found jtosslble to Identify them with those of any known genus, It has been suggested that they Indicate an extinct ancestral type. Some muck-raker should give his attention to the pure food problem Id India. In northern India tho favorite article of diet Is a gray shale. This Is excavated mostly at Meth, In Dikanlr, and Is exported to the Punjab at the rate of two thousand camel loads a year. In different districts dlfferenl varieties of clay are eaten, but if th natives have at one time a taste for 0 special kind of mud, as the habit Increases, the depraved appetite soon be comes satisfied with bricks and broker pots. White ant soil, with the nests and ants themselves, Is a great delicacy. The Maharajah Gaekwar of Baroda has been visiting the Congressional Library in Washington, and was naturally greatly Interested In that vast and excellent collect 'in of books. "How long." he asked Herbert Putnam, "would It take a man to read all these looks?" Mr. Putnam smilingly replied that no. one man could ever begin to road all the books in the library, some two millions In number. Then he made a rough calculation. He told the Maharajah that It had been estimated that no man, lu tho course of the average lifetime of seventy years, could read more than eight thousand books. Therefore, figuring on two million In the IIbrrry of Congress, a man would have to nave 250 lifetimes of seventy years each to get through with all of the Injoks and that woxdd mean 17,500 years. The computation seemed to amuse the prince. "And vhat would your Dr. Osier say to that?'' he inquired. A Sncceasfnl Experiment. A man of experience, known to a writer in ihe New York Tribune, declares that men, like plants, adapt themselves to conditions. To Illustrate his theory he told of the two men, one of whom said to the other, at a pleasantly critical period: "Do you think two can live as cheaply as on?" "Before my marriage I thought they could," was the guarded reply. "And afterward?" anxiously. "Afterward I found they had to. An Er Opener. "How does your father seem to regard my coming here?" anxiously asked Adolphus of little Bobby, while Miss Maud was upstairs getting ready to present herself. "He don't care nothln about It,'' replied Bobby carelessly. "So he has no objection, eh? But what did he say, my little man?" "He said If Maud had a mind to make 0 fool of herself, why let her." Pearson's Weekly. It Sometime Seema So. Tommy raw, what does the paper mea; by practical Christianity? Paw Practical Christianity is the kind that does not Interfere with a man's business. One of the common sights in summer is a young man and woman sitting together lu a hammock, and one of the uucommon sights is to see a husband and wife occupying one. Too many drawing-room smiles datcrlorate Into kitchen frown. '

HON. W. H. KELBAUGH OF WEST VIRGINIA PRAISES PE RU NA.

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Hon. W. rf. Kelbaugh. J. Cold at Any Time of the Year, J7vpecially in 11 ol Weather, is Very Depre$ing to the System. Pe-ru-na i an Uncqvaltd Tonic for Such Cases. Kead 'What People Say Alout It. t Hon. TV. II. Kelbaugh, Ex-Member JYV. Va. Legislature, 201 Oth street, X. 4E., Washington, D. C, writes: 7 T "You can use my name and Iword at all times for Per una as a I f medicine and tonic unequaled. 1 1 ihave tried it lor a stubborn cold I land badly run down system. I tried all sorts ol other medicines t Ta.ia paia several expensive uoc 1 tor bills. Peruna cured me, strengthened me more than ever, iand saved me money. Mrs. Clara Lltterst, i?eafiold. Inch, rayy: "Last fall I took a severe cold. I took Peruna, began to improve and kept on so until I was able to do my work." Dy Contract. Mrs. Flighty always knew what she meant, but her listeners were sometimes le!t in doubt . "Hot where we were last summer?" she echoed a nlnquiry made by a friend whO(had begun her annual search for a boarding place. "Hot! Why, I used to spend my afternoons under a great big oak tree, the loveliest, cool, shady spot you ever saw in all your life, and the thermometer there was almost always above ninety!" Ak Tour Dealer for Allen's Foot-Kaa A powder to shake Into your shoes. It rt the feet. Cure Corns. Rinlonn. Swollen. Sore, Hot, Callons, Aching, Sweating feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Uase make3 new or tlpht shoes e.isy. Sold by all Drujrglsts and Shoe Stores, 20c. Sample mailed FRER. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Conldn't Rattle Him. The Boston umpire had given a decision that did not please the players of the visiting team. Threateningly they crowded around him. "You can't call It a balk," protested the captain, "if the pitcher takes a step toward first base before he f hoots the ball there !" "That Is purely an academic question," he said, "which need not be adjudicated here. Resume your spherical recreation 1" Niagara Fall 'and Keturn Twentythird Annual Kxcumion via Nickel Plate Road Auk. 20th. Stop-over at Chautauqua Lake and interesting side trips to Thousand Islands, Toronto and Montreal. Full information of Agent or address, C. A. Melin, T. P. A., Ft. Wayne, Ind. (900; FREAK KANSAS WATER WELL Tbe Location, on Top of a Hill, Wai Accidental. One of the biggest water wells ever drilled in this part of the country is in tin? vicinity of the smelter here says tho Kansas City Star's correspondent at Cherryvale, Kan. The location of It was purely an accident. The smelter people were looking for a supply of water for the horses, and decided that It would be better to go to the top of a hill and run a gravity line down to the works than to drill on the flat and Install pumps. The drill had not been working mora than three hours when the water came with a great rush and nearly blew the tools out of the hole A six-Inch pipe was put in and this is barely sufficient to contain the volume. The pressure Is so great that tlu tank over the flre-englne house is filled without pumping, and then the well is not working more than one-fourth of the time. If It were to work all the time It would not only supply all of the departments of the smelter, but the entire town of Cherryvale in addition. The capacity of the well Is a mattei of gr.ess, because It has never been allowed to run all day, but it Is said tc be at least 4,000,000 gallons a day. The drilling of the well has been the talk of the farmers around in the neighborhood and more wells will be drilled io tLe hope of finding the same vein. The big well is another of the freaks which have been the bane of geologists sine the discovery of oil and gas Id this part of the State. If there. was any other range of hills around here, the presence of the water so near the surface of the ground on top of the hill to the northwest might be explained but how it happens that the water Is within twelve feet of the highest hill In the whole country and with no other hill at all within reach, is something the people, who thmk they know something of geology, have been unable to explain. "NO TROUBLE" To Chance from Coffee to Poitom, "Postum has done a world of good for me," writes an Illinois man. "I've had Indigestion nearly all my life, but never dreamed coffee was the cause of my trouble until last spring I got so bad I was In misery all the time. "A coffee drinktr for thirty years, It Irritated my stomach and nerves, yet I was Just crazy for it After drinking It with my meals, I would leave the table, go out and lose my meal and the coffee too. Then I'd be ar hungry ss ' ever. "A friend advised me to quit coffee and use Postum said it cured hir.i. Since taking his advice I retain my food and get all the good out f it, and don't have those awful hungry spells. "I changed from coffee to Postum without any trouble whatever, felt better from the first day I drank iL I am well now and give the credit to Poetum." Name given by rostuu Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. i "There'f a reason." '

NEW STANDARD OF LIVING.

II ott the PoMseaalon of Money Has Spoiled Simple Living. There are even in these days a good many families in tho United States who find it possible to do a certain amount of moderately high thinking and still cultivate some of the graces of life, says Scrlbner's Magazine. They may be obliged to live simply, and yet may not need to use up all their vitality in manual labor. True, they must walk when others ride, they must take thought to their apparel, that it b presentable at small cost, and when they entertain their friends they musl do It simply. But they have time tc read books and they have money tc educate their children. Oftener thar not they are persons whose family tra ditions Incline them to fastidiousness in social matters. They and their forbear have been accustomed not only tc well-bred, but interesting people and have kept in touch with what was going on In the world; in short, they' have a taste for the best society. Twenty-five years ago there was nc reason why they shouldn't maintaic their Inherited or acquired right to da it, but the tendency on the part of certain of their fellow citizens to whal has been characterized as "the habit ol getting rich" has changed all thaL 11 Is not only that the accumulation ol colossal fortunes restricts the financial chances of the moderately ambitious majority, but It deprives them of some Innocent and legitimate comforts and pleasures to which they think themselves reasonably entitled, by increas ing so tremendously the cost of living while the standard of luxury is raised lu proportion. This, to be sure, is ar old cry, but to the impecunious majority it does not cease to be a lire issue. Yet one cannot find fault with tut peopla who have made money to wanl to spend It; one cannot be surprised II their ideas are crude and if they fat to appreciate a refined simplicity. Mösl of us spend all the money we can af ford and we should not thank ay ont who should presume to dictate to us tc what we ought to buy with it Tht very rich do uit in the least intend tc make life hard for the rest of the world. In fact, from the klnd-heartec dea'.re to give pleasure we get some sin gularly bad results, such as, for la stance, the poor girl with rich tastes who, although sLe need not always bt a Lily Bart, yet is always in an unnat nral and demoralizing position ; and th young man who goes to the dogs In hit efforts to keep up the pace with his riet mate's. The Tollte Darmnn. In the cities of Burma, where the natives have been long In contact with Europeans, says the author of "Burma, Painted and Described," they have lost some of their traditional politeness; but lu the country districts old-school courtesy is still the custom. An . English gentleman who had bought a new pony was trying him out on a Burman road, when the animal bolted, and ran at top speed down a narrow road. In the way ahead was a native cart, In which was a family party out holiday-making. The pony dashed Into the back of the cart, threw his rider Into the midst of the merrymakers, and severely injured the Burman who was driving. .Before the Englishman had an opportunity to explain his unexpected onslaught the Burman picked himself up and boweit low. "My lord, my lord," he said, apologetically, the cart should not have been there." Misunderstood. "We should always try to lend a helping hand," said the benevolent man. "Stranger,"eald Three-Fingered Sam, "you want to go slow with that kind of advice In Crimson Gulch. It ain't been two weeks since we lost two of our leadln' citizens because one of 'em was caught lending a helping hand in a poker game.' Washington Star. 'eellen Suffering Tommy," said Mr. Tucker, layinjr. him across his knee and vigorously applying a large and muscular paternal hand, "it almost breaks my heart to do tbia." "Then why don't you let maw do It?" relied Tommy. ÄNfcgcfabie Preparatioafor Assimilating Uv:FoodandRcguIaling ihe Stacks and Bowels of Promotes DigestioaChccrfuIness andRcst.Contains neither Opium.Morphine norMincraL TOT NARCOTIC, nrrnTM 7V ZiM "FT. PTTTT jtbcSmuta Smut Jhf rminl JUCarianakSiJa. türm Srrd - Apcrfccl Remedy for ConsJlpa1 ion. Sour Stomoxh.Diarrhoca H brmsConvulsions Jcwrishncss and Loss OF SLEEP. fexSinule Signature of NEW YORK. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. Sale Ten Million

TIIS FAMILY'S FAVORITE BSCICIZS

CANDY CATHARTIC

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" iff BEST FOR THE BOWELS

BABY. COVERED WITH S0BES.

Would Scratch and Tear the Flesh Unless Hands Were TI?d "Would Have Died but for Cuticura." "My little son, when about a year and a half old, began to have sores come out on his face. I had a physician treat him, but the sores grew worse. Then they began to come on his arms, then on other parts of his body, and then one came on his chest, worse than tbe others. Then I called another physician. Still he grew worse. At the end of about a year and a half of suffering he grew so bad I had to tie his hands in cloths at night to keep him from scratching the sores and tearing the flesh. He got to be a mere skeleton, and was hardly able to walk. My Aunt advised me to try Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I sent to the drug store and got a cake of Soap and a box of the Ointment, and at the end of about two months the sores were all well.' He has never had any sores of any kind since. He is now strong and healthy, and I can sincerely say that only for your most wonderful remedies my precious child would have died from those terrible sores. Mrs. Egbert Sheldon, R. P. D. No. 1, Woodville, Conn., April 22. l'J05." Ilia Hard Luck. "Yes," said Mrs. Herllhy, pressing a damp handkerchief to her eyes, "he's an unfort'uate man, me Cousin Celia's man is. If Iver there's anny chanst of a good thing he's always a little to wan side. If It hadn't been for that he'd be in his home now, Instld of in .the hospital, ma'am." "Why, I understood that Timothy stepped backward off the staging and fell clear to the ground," said the district visitor, sympathetic but puzzled. MHe did said Mrs. Herllhy, with a fresh burst of tears, "but if he'd fell a bit mere to the right, there was a great pileo' bricks, an it would have broke his fall, annyway. DAZED WITH PAIN. The S n fieri nira of a Cltlten of Olympia, Wash. lu S. Gorham, of 51G East 4th St., Olympia, Wash., says: "Six years ago I got wet and took cold, and was soon flat In bed, suffering tortures with my back. Every movement caused an agonizing pain, and the persistency of It exhausted me, so that for a time I was dazed and stupid. On the advice of a friend I began using Doan'j Kidney nils, and soon noticed a chanze for the better. The kidney secretions had been disordered and irregular, and contained a heavy sediment, but In a week's time the urine was clear and natural again and the passages regular. Gradually the aching and soreness left my back and then the lameness. I tised nix boxes to make sure of cure, and the trouble has never returned." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, X. Y. o Compulsion. "Isn't it horrible to read that tu3 they're sending out from New York,, City now?" . . "I've no doubt it is. What do you read it for?" G. A. R. National Encampment Minneapolis, Minn. Low Kates via Nickel riate Road. Aug. 10th, 11th, 12th, and certain trains on the ISth. Good returning Aup. 81st. For full information and extension of limit call on Agent or address, C. A. Melin, T. P. A.. Ft. Wayne, Ind. (WS) AVoea of the Hoae Hunter. "Mrs. Newcome, have you shot the chutes since you came to town?" "Not yet. I've put in all my time flatting the flats." Chicago Tribune, Mr. Win slows Soothiko Star for Children teething; softens ths gums, reduces inllamm&iion. iUys p&iu. cares lad ooiic. 23 cents s botue. When lie Came Home Laie. "Did Luschman reahy build thai house? Well, well I I didu't think he could do such good work. No creaky floors or stairways there." "No. You see, when Luschman built that house he fully Intended to occupy It himself. He paid particular attention to the stairs." Philadelphia Tress

Tho Kind You Havo Always Bought, and which ka3 keen in use for over oO years, has borno tho cisnatnro of

and has ronnl - Allow

All Counterfeits, Imitations and" Just-as-good M are but Experiments that triflo with and endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment What Jo GÄSTORDA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Karcotio substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Woitos and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and "Wind Colic It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation . and Flatulency. ' It assimilates the Fooc regulates tho Stomach and Dowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend

ocauina CASTÖRBÄ aeavay

Bears tho

Wvir J&Ss

The KM You Have toys Bought In Use For Over 30 Yearo Tut ecNTswsi eoMMsr, rr murks am err, new tonn City

Boxes aYear. I ... . i :5. -

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TüfjßsecKGüsnsD 5r.i::;a c?Eem::3 v::::d. Unqualified Success of Lydia E. Finiham's Vegetable Compound in ths Case of Mrs. Fannie D. Fox.

One of the greatest triumphs of Lydia E. Pinkham"8 Vegetable Compound is the conquering of woman's dread enemy, Tumor. The growth of a tumor is so sly that frequently its presence is not suspected an til it is far advanced. So-called "wandering pains" may eome from its early stages, or the presence of danger may be made manifest by profuse monthly periods, accompanied by unusual pain, from the abdomen through the groin and thighs. If you have cysterious pains, if there are indications of inflammation or displacement, secure a'bottle of Lydia E. 1'inkham's Vegetable Compound right away and begin its use. Mrs. Pinkham. of Lyn Mass., will give yov her advice if yri will write her about yourself. She is the daugh-tcr-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years has been advising sick women free of charge. Dear Mr. Pinkham: " I take tho libertr to congratulate yon on the success I have had with your wonderful medicine. Eighteen months ago my periods Stopped. Shortly after I felt bo badly that I submitted to a thorough examination by a physician and was told that I had a tumor and would have to undergo an operation. Soon after I read one of vour advertisements nd decided to give Lydia E. Ilnkham's .Vigetable Compound a trial After taldnp; fi 'o bottles as directed the tumor i entirely gone. I have been examined by a physician and he 6ays I have no signs of a timor now. It has t!lo brought my period avruifcd once more, and I am entirely well." 7annie D. Fox, 7 Chestnut Street Bradford, Fa. CHICAGO. FT. WAYNE, F0STORIA, FINDLAY, CLEVELAND, BUFFALO, NEW YORK, BOSTON ;AND ALL POINTS: EAST and-WEST Reached f lost Quickly and Comfortably via the Nickel Plate Road. Three Express Trains eTery day In the year. Ti.ru Fullman Sleeping Cars to Chicago, New V jrk and Boston. Comfortable high Lack seal coaches and modern Dining Cars oerv'ng meals on Indlvluual Club Plan ranging In prices trom 35o to $1.00. Also la Carlo service. Colored Porters la uniform to loot to tae jocifort of first and second class jssengcrs and keep cars scrupulously clean. Direct Connections with FastTr&iasit Chicago and Buf falo. AH Agents Sell Tickets via this Popular Route, Write to C. A. McLIN, Trv. Pass. Ajant, Ft. Wayne. Ind Insist upon your printer usln; Cajle Linen Paper tor your Letter Paper. This is tbe proper thing. Take no other. been raado under Jiis pcrKnnr.rvisffiTi clnrn it fnfiinr-r. no ono to deceive you in this. Signaturo cl Ynun nw cißr atiide Mae m iuuii u 1 1 it giuimiuiik Cushion Kubber Stamp for Ignlnjr Lettra. Vouchers. etc. at tue low pno or i-i. (tsoa Tor j tlculara. Lock Box 219. Fort Waraa, Lnd. BJIkUrI '''nl tur wti wm. Bk et ZT . . . tinlt;ssn4 10 P7 trMtr.nl I re. Dr.II.II.tBLLVabO.Va, Bi L. AtUaU.V OTTER WHEAT. O ba.fc.-l. ,r .,. C.Ulr jut ad his I li ItLt )a!rrr c4 t kx Lmnik, Is F. 7. N. U. ... No. 32 19Q0 Wbea writing to Advertisers please y yum saw the Advertisement is this parr-. Da you want a Sell Inking- Dating Stamp for 75 cents? Address, Lock 9ex 219. Fort Wayna, Indiana.

SJrs Fannie D.Fox Q

c Let us do your Printing S using Eagle jNpf; Linen if, for your office stationery. You can get the paper s ) and envelopes to match. c

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