Plymouth Tribune, Volume 5, Number 51, Plymouth, Marshall County, 27 September 1906 — Page 7

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--uifA PRAISED.

m mm -. ..-.-.-.y.-.-.v.v.v.s'.v- ? x: :::;:': MR3- ESTHER M. MILNEP. Dox 321, DeGraff, Oh!o. Dr. S. B. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio: Dear Sir: I was a terrible sufferer from pelvic weakness and had headache continuously. I was not able to do iuy housework for myself and husband. I wrote you and described my condition a nearly as possible. You recommended I'eruna. I took four bottles of it -and was completely cured. ' 1 think Peruna a wonderful medicine and have recommended it to my friend with the very best of results. Esther M. Milner. Very few o the great multitude of women who hare been relieved of some Ielvie disease or weakness by Peruna ever consent to give a testimonial to be read by the public. There are, however, a few courageous felf-acrificiag women who will for the sake of their suffering sisters allow their cures to be published. Mrs. Milner is one of these, i In her gratitude for her restoration to health she is willing that the women of the whole world should know it. A chronic invalid A GRATEFUL LETTER TO DR. HARTMAN brought back to health is no small matter. Words are inadequate to expnu complete gratitude. 17. L. DOUGLAS 3.50&3.CO Shoes BEST IN THE WORLD V.LDoug!2S $4 Gilt Edge lina. cannoiso equaiiea at an j prtca . To Shot V'alrrt : W. L. ItuuUa Jobbing Hoan6 U tti most complete in tbia country Stndor Catalog 6H0E3 roil EVERYBODY AT ALL PEIOE4. lira's Siioes. 3 to f 1.0O. Boye Büces, 53 to$L25. Wotnen s Shoes. $4.00 to f 1.50. KLie' ts Cblidrvn's BMoe. $2.25 to 31.O0. Tit W. Im Dnagl Woman's, Mi- and Children's shoes; for style, fit and wer they excel other makes. If I could take you Into my large factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes are made you would theo understand why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater valuo than any other make. Wherever you live, you can obtain W. L. Douglas shoes. His name and price U stamped on the bottom, which protects you against high prices and Inferior shoes. Take no tubstl tut. Ask your dealer for W. L Douglas shoes and Insist upon having them. fait Color Stielet used; they milt not wear brasrj. Write for Illustrated Cctalorof Fall Styles. - W. l DOUGLAS, Dept. 14, Brockton. Mas. CHICAGO, FT. WAYNE, FOSTORIA, FINDLAY, CLEVELAND, BUFFALO, NEW YORK, BOSTON AND ALL POINTS EAST and WEST Reached Most Quickly and Comfortably via (he Nickel Plate Road. Three Express Trains every day ia the year. Tlini Pullmxn Sleeping Cr to Chicago, New York and Boston. Comfortable high hack eeal coaches and modern Dining Cara serving meals en Individual Club Plan ranging In prices from 15c to 1 1.00. Also a la Carte service. Colored F Erters In uniform to look to the comfort of first and second class pa&engers and keep ears icrupclously clean. Direct Connections with Fast Trains zt Chicago and Buffalo. All Agents Se'I Tickets via this Popular Rents, Write to C. A. M CLIN, Trav. Pass. Agent. Ft. Wayna. Ind You Cannot i er" Salaf all indamcd, ulcerated and catarrhal conditions of the mucous membrane such as nasalcatarrh.uterinecatarrh 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 tvhich destroys the disease germs,checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ill.? ver produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box THE R. PAXTON CO- Boston. Maasw HEARTS jpvjöi are Liccd of IVtDGStOlONEIQr Axn all KnDa or job PMirnNC CITE US A CALL 4 MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A Certain Cnra lir jTeverUh ('tipBtioat, Ilaadarbe, Ktaaaarb Trauhle. Tcethiaar ' 1 Disorder. ad Destroy Mother Gray. Worsas. The Break ap C olds knH in Child- ia nars. At II L'rairr. ctSi ren's Hm. bam pie nai.ed rK0.it. Adlreaa. rock Cxtg. A. &. OLUSTEO. La Uot. ti Y. RUBBER STAMPS. All kino's of Rubber Stomps Made to Order. Self-lmkis? Deters sossethinz new. Ink sod loJdnr Pods. Send for CoUIogue to Leek Box 219, Port Wayne, lndlaaa,

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THE SECOND VICE PRESIDENT.

Her Purpose1 IV a netter than Her Parliamentary Practice. "It was a real pood ueetin?," said Mrs. n.-eckley, casting wide her bonnet strings and lxjrinninjr to hip slioll the icas. She added, "Tranqniila iIo:;t iiresideiL" "Sol" cried her sister, excitedly ens't lr.g a pcxl in the pau and Us contents on tin piazza floor. "Yes." asserted Mr.. IJrekley. "The p Tsitlont flnd first vice prcident wore both ii'isont. ?o slie hail to. She was norv.ii-5, hut ehe ha.-? the Morse prldi f r .--ll hor soft little ways, and slio sal n : 'me and straight when she took ti;s chair. 'Xow well begin. If you please, la Iis,' she said, patting tttose pretty white iT.rls of hers and smiling roun.l on u all. P the secretary murmured 'Records,' and read them : and when she finished Tranquilla novlded to her sh? ustnl to be in Tran.-piilla's Sunday school class, you know and said sweetly. Thank j-ou. deary- Next!' "We certainly were am.ised; but f liked it. Mess her old iieart! Anna r.racy she's keen on parliamentary !.v, too laughed right out in a de üghtful sort of ripple, and then she stood up promptly, as '.f she'd been called on to recite, and began tellin? alwut the annex for aged couples shf wants added to the home. It was a pretty full presentation, but of course we expected other speeches and discussion. Not a bit of it! The minute Anna sat down Tranquil'a leaned forward, all pink, and her yes shining, and said she: 'Why, Anna, what a beautiful Idea! Of course we'll all vote for It. Let's do it right away. Now, ladles, if everybody who wants Anna's annex will piecse hold tip her right nand. we'll I able to provide a haven where some -i these poor old faithful couples she's told us about can end iheir lives together In reace and comfort. All vote ia favor, now, ladies, if you please!' "Well, we voted all In favor; and the secretary thought to call for 'con trary-niinded, so it would be legal ; hut t!iere 'weren't any. Then we adjourned, because Tranquilla had left the chair and was congratulating Anna, and everybody was laughing and congratulating everybody else, and full of enthusiasm. We'll settle details later when Tranquilla doesn't preside. "All the same, Suan, good-will and readiness are more than pood machinery ; and though I can't -ay I'd recommend her methods for general adoption. I can tell you this: If anybody hut our own selves dared make fun of our see'-, ond vice president there'd be trouble!" Youth's Companion. At the present time fifty German war ships and one torpedo boat have been fitted with wireless telegraphy apparatus. There is no satisfaction lcfpnpr thivn reinn rlrv t i when out in the Irz&ah hardest storm . '? . I YOU ARE SURE J4Y,rMfc CF THIS IF YOU MmTfctä, WEAR CLOTHING BLACK OR YtaOW 7 On sale everywhere 90,000,000 BUSHELS That's the WHEAT CROP IS Western Canada This Year This with nearly 80.OCO.000 Eushels cf Oats and I7.003.ooo Bushels of Ear ley means a continuation of good tiroes tot be farmers of Western Canada. Free Farms Big Crops Low Taxes, Healthy Climate, good Churches and Schools, Splendid Railway Service The Canadian Gorernment offers 160 acres d land FREE to every settler willing and able to comply with the Homestead Regulations. Advice and information may Le obtained free from W. D. Scott, SairiDtenunr of Immigration. Ottxwn, or.U H . lio.r, 3J F oor. Trkct iou-I rmin) lauding. IndiauHpoJi, Ind.. and II. M. WUImm hoona 'At. Law buildicg, Toledo, Ohio. AotLorlzed üo rnmeat Agents. TlesM ar her joo mw thi advertiaement. THE BEST COUGH CURE No cough Is too trifling or too serious 10 oe ireaiea Dy toe rly ni i method, and the right method is th use of the best cough cure, i which is ; Kemp's Balsam ; 1 1 This famous preparation cures coughs, colcls, bronchitis, grip and consumption in its first stages. Irriration of the throat and bronchial tubes is immediately removed by the use of Kemp's Balsam. Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c. A !??LtIve CATARRH bund TT"Zjp!,est""?nX y's Crääm Balm "8faöfi? U quick If absorbed. Gives Relief at Once. It cleanses, soothes heals and protects the diseased membrane. It cures Catarrh and drivos away a Cold in tLo Ye TTpa,1 nn.rtlv Ttr-IW ST 4 S"" Btores tha Series .-f il H I 9 S V La 3 1 Taste and SiaelL Full tize 50 ct?., tt Dm gists or by mail ; Trial Size 10 cts. by mail. Ely Brother?, Cö "Warren Street, ICew York. SSiSSThoinpson'sEyaWater

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A rain In the pround Is wcrtli two 311 the hay in the windrow. Do not "stuff" ronr chicks in your endeavors to make them prow. Tucy will do more harm than gxd. If horses are nut in pasture to rem edy feet or legs, remove their shoes: and do so if they are to remain lonp m pasture for any reason. KiH the head lice of the chicks with raseliae. Creae their heads slightly and sje that none pets In the eye. Repeat the dose In ten days. Bad roads are unprofitable. They pyt a farmer out of business and make tvothinp for any man. Who Is responsible for a bad condition of the roads? There Is always more profit in raising one good colt and In raising it right than In raising half a dozen mongrels and not r Ising them as they should be raised. The man who goes to his stable, wa:ers his borses and gives them a light feed the last thing every night before be retires, always has round, sleek, good-looking animals. Low-headed trees are growing In favor, not only because they are likely to suffer less from the -wind, but beause thoy protect the bodies from sunicald. Early prunings should be made to produce these low heads. ' Frovlde shade for the fowls and :blcks. In the absence of natural shade, build pome frames six or eight feet square and cover the top with old boards, leaving all four sides open so that the air will have free circulation. The up-to-date farmer is not a miner of the soil, digging out wealth, aftertvards abandoning his farm, but be a manufacturer. The m'ner alwayj leaves a location as soon as it Is workrd out Not so with a farmer who 1 onto Lis job. It has been stated that prosperity la so pronounced In Nebraska that th farm jrirls wear diamond rings and re rently . cow was slaughtered to get a, diamond which she had accidentally eaten -vhlle being fed by a diamondringed lassie. A Lalf-dozen good roots of rhubarb should be set. out very early and heavily manured, spading the manure in the soil before netting out the roots. If well caied for, a few uslngs may be made the first year, but It is best to wait until the second. If "the head of the house" cannot ?ee the benefit of cultivation In an orchard, or thinks he must use the orchard fa, pasture or meadow, see what can be done by pruning the trees for two or three years. Try pruning on the near approach of the growing seaSun. Milk ai a food for pigs has a feeding value far beyond Its actual food elements If given in the proper combination with other rations, but It Is a great waste to raise pigs exclusively upon It, no matter how plentiful It may b. Middlings and grass should le fed with It, and so double the number of pigs kept with the same amount of milk. A successful fruit grower says: "I plow my orchard every year. By plowing It I got a good growth on the young trees, and get rid of a great many pests that would otherwise hinder their grcwth. I find that orchards not plowed have small apples, and the trees are stunted In their growth. It is a good plan to trim out all broken-down limbs, for Insects will hide In the splinters?. Eight ajlons of water a day Is the average quantity required for a cow, and thf iriilk given is about 87 per cent wattr. In some pastures there Is no water, tbe cows being supplied night and moralag, which forces the cow to drink tour gallons at a time In order to be snnplled. As the cow does not know that he muM drink four gallons, she may u?e less, and' she will reduce her milk supply accordingly. When hay has been put In the barn in a damp condition E-i out of ten persons will leave the doors of the mow oien so It will cool oft. The opposite Is the correct thing to do. Hay that Is heating Is safer and better by having the mow closed up tight, with opmIngs. if any, at the op. The moisure In the hay will rise as vapor and will make its exit at the top, as the roof Is kept hat, but In the other case it would condense at the top of the hay by the, cooler air admitted through the doors. Lime for Inoeclo. Dry hydrate of lime forned by slaking f?eh lime with just water enough to crumble It Into a fine powder is used as an Insecticide. It Is still very caustic and fatal to the larvae of asparagus boetJes, slugs or currant, pear, plum, et?., and other larvae having a moist surface, says an exchange. Application.? are best made In the morning, while plants and Insects are yet a little damp. To Itootore Darren Fruit Treao. If you have any old trees that hav failed to give profitable crops of fruit dig the soil up thoroughly, apply a good dressing of well-rotted stable manure atjd -work It thoroughly Into the soil. Then, if you have thc;r apply a dressing of wood ashos. If those fall to revive the tree, after giving a good pruning, It is past redemption and should give way to something better. Good rich soli for three or four years can be profitably plantitl to some crop while the trees in the orchard are growinf, but after that the best plan In either to seed down to clover and tise as a bog pasture, or to cultivate without allowing any crop to grow. Dully Food for Hos. TLa function of bulk In the feed Is mor6 than the mere furnishing of nutriment, for in a mechanical way It aid digestion. Tig require less bulky feed, than other domestic animals, but recent experiments show that to a certain extent hay feeding Is very valua- ' In pork production. Where herbiv-

erous animals have been maintained for an extended inriod on feed which was exclusively of a concentrated nature, derangement of digestion has resulted. (J. M. Kommel.

Value of t'ovvpen for Hay. The cowpea is to the farmer south of the clover belt what clover Is to the farmer In the clover belt, and southeastern Kansas Is pretty nearly on the line between the ranges cf these two iegumes, says Wallace's Farmer. Either may Le grown as a forage crop, or as a seed crop, or as a fertilizer, or as all three combined. The cowpea is an an nual ; clover a biennial, or, If not allowed to go to seed, a short perennial. Clover will stand the winter's frost; the cowpea Is killed by the first severe frost Therefore the cowpea belongs to the South and clover to the North. There Is not much difference in the value of cowpea and clover hay. Tbe Supply of Potash. Most of the potash used In fertilizers in all countries has come from the Ger man mines, which, strange to say, seem to have a monopoly on this mineral. Lately, however, tbe attention of scientists has been called to this fat and active search made for deposits elsewhere, In order to escape the prospect of the higher prices which the German potash mine owners are trying to force on the fertilizer makers of the world. It appears that there are seven localities In the United States which indicate the presence of potash mines. Most of these places are in the far west, but there Is one In New Jersey and one In Massachusetts. The actual extent of potash In these deposits can be determined only by boring and rather costly development work. The probability Is that potash salts are fairly common, but the location Is ' hard tc determine on account of their oxlPtenco belov tbe ground with no prominent signs appearing at the surface. AToldlnv; Hot? Cholera. An Illinois stockman tells the following story anent bis experience in ralslng hogs amid menacing conditions : "I ? believe Implicitly in the proposition that nn ounce of prevention Is worth a pound of cure. Our neighbors bogs wjere dying of cholera and of course It was only a question of time, we thought, when the disease would attack and decimate our herd, liut we took a stitch In time and It saved the entire herd. We gave the bogs calomel. It acts as a physic, thoroughly purging the bowel, and this U of the most vital Importance. Place ten grains of calomel In a piece of "crackling" about the size -of a walnut and see that each animal gets his dose. One dose Is sufficient In most cases, but no harm will be done if another be given a few days later." It Is scif -evident that If proper measures be iJtforted to prior to the Introduction cf the disease into the herd It may be avoided. When once It has attacked the hogs there Is little or no hope of suppressing It. Hog cholera may successfully be combated, however, by buttressing, as it were, the herd so tliat the germs may not find congenial lodging places. Farmers' Voice. When lloraea Have Indlueatlou. Horses are subject to attacks of indigestion aud sometimes the trouble it almost wholly due to the bad condition of the teetli. Every horse on the farm should have Its teeth examined at intervals by a competent veterinarian, and put in projer condition. If the stomach trouble is not due to the teeth, look .closely to the diet of the 1 orse. Change Its food entirely, and see that the bowels are in good condition. Add frequent feeds of root crojö to the daily ration. . The roughage should be of the best quality, and If It Is hay it would be well to try moistening it with warm water before feeülng, dividing it iaro two parts and feeding onehalf of it chopied quite tine. As a tonic and digestive give the following: Take two parU of powdered wood charcoal, one part each of powdered hydrastlc 'canadensis and ground ginger root, and oue-half part of bicarbonate of soda. Mix these ingredients; thoroughly and put a tablespoonful of the mixture In the ground food twice daily. See that the horse has proper exercise, and that It is not worked too long or too steadily. The stable shooJd be comfortable and well ventilated t.nd the beddin' abundant Clover iu Xurlhcrn Cllniatea. It wag found at the North Dakota exicriinent station that seeding clover, or clover and timothy, with a grain drill, give much greater assurance ol a stand than broadcasting. With one exception during nine years, inedluir red clover seeded with a nurse croj passed through the first winter without killing out Allowing the second growth to remain as a winter protection gave good results In preveutluj winterkilling aud reinforcing the stant by means of tho new seed. It was observed that the average stubble field was In most seasons efficient as a winter protection. Inspection after eact of eleven winter seasons did not reveai a case of heaving by frost Where ar ice sheet covered the plants, however the clovers, alfalfa, timothy, and red top were killed out, while brome grasi and tbe weed quack grass had withstood thig adverse condition. Satlsfae tory results have been obtained from using fifteen pounds of clover seed pei acre, and a mixture of five pounds ol red clover seed and eight pounds ol timothy has given a mixture of from one-half to three-fourths of tlmothj plants In the resulting stand. Ter pounds of Mammoth clover with foui pounds of timothy seed have given ar average of more than three-fourths clo ver In the hay. The results for foui years show a difference of only ninety one pounds in the yield of hay fron: medium red clover and from a mixed crop of clover and timothy. Red clovei also gave promise of good seed production while clover from Southern growr seed or from most of the forelgx sources was less satisfactory. Ited clover alone and grown with tlmottj as a mixed hay crop gave in ten trlali an average yield of 3,37G pounds ol hay per acre. The average yield ol hay from Mammoth clover for twf years was 3,033 pounds.

DOCTOR DESPAIRED

Anaemic Woman Cured by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Recommends the Pills to All Others Who Suffer. Anaemia is just the doctor's name for bloodlessness. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills euro nnaemki as food cures hunger. They cured Mrs. Thomas J. McGann, of 17 Lincoln Place, Plainfield, N. J., who says: 4,In the spring of 1903 I did ray usual house cleaning and soon afterward I began to have tho most terriblo headaches. My heart would beat so irregularly that it was painful and there came a morning when I could not get up. My doctor said I had ansexuia and he was surprised that I had continued to live in tho condition I was in. I wns confined to my bed for nearly two months, the doctor coming every day for tbe first few weeks, but I did not improve to amount to anything. Altogether I was sick for nearly two years. I was as weak as a rag, had headaches, irregular heart beats, loss of appetite, cramps in the limbs and was unable to get a good night's sleep. My legs and feet were so swollen that I feared they would burst. Before very long after I tried Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I felt a change for the better. I have tt.ken about twelve loxes and although I was as near the rfmve as could be, I now feel ns if I had a new lease of life. ' I have no more headaches, the heart beats regularly, my cheeks are pink and I feel ten years younger. I feel that I have been cured very cheaply and I have recommended the pills to lots of my friends." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all druggists, or will be sent by mail 011 receipt of price, 50 cents per box, six boxea $2.50, by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. "Without." The German girl who presided over the soda fountain In Heckelmeyer'a drug store was accustomed to patrons who did not know thejr own minds, and her habit of thought was dlfilcult to change. "I'd like a glass of plain soda," said a stout man, entering one day in evident haste as well as thirst. "You have vanilla, or you have leraon't" tranquilly inquired the young woman. "I want plain sodawithout sirup. Didn't yr J understand nieV" asked the stout man,' testily. "Yas," and the placid German face did not vhansre In expression or color. "But wat kind of sirup you want him mitout? Mitout vanilla, or mjtout lemon?" DISFIGURED WITH ECZEMA. Brushed Scales from Face Like Powder "Worse Under Physicians Cuticura Works Wonders. "I suffered with eczema six months. I had tried three doctors, but did not get any better. It was on my body and on my feet so thick that I could hardly put a pin on me without touching eczema. My face was covered, my eyebrows came out, and then It got in my eye. I then went to another doctor. He asked nie what I ras taking for it, and I told him Cuticura. He said that was a very good thing, but that he thought my face would be marked for life. ' Hut Cuticura did its work, and my face is now just as clear as it ever was. I tcld all my friends about my remarkable cure. I feel so thankful I want everybody far and vide to know what Cuticura can do. It Is a sure cure for eczema. Mrs. Kiumd White, 041 Cherrier Tlace, Camden, N. J., April 23, 1103." rrobably AVrnt All It I Kb t. "J. Smith, Famished Geological Structure. III." This was the address on the lettct postmarked "Boston, Aug. 27, lüfKl." "Try Starved Rock," wrote the educated railway postal clerk just below the address. Chicago Tribune. WHY GEN. MIN VAS HATED. Tianton Cruelty of the Officer AaaaaInnted In Russia Sunday. Gen. Min, who was shot to death In St Petersburg Sunday by a young woman who afterwards said to the police that she was but on-i of 10,000 women who are ready to die that Russia may be free, was one of the most heartless of all the repressive agents Df the Czar. His cruelty bad made him hated by the icopIe. Mln was the commander of the Seminovsky regiment, which poured a terrible tire into the parading workmen near the Technological . Institute, in St Petersburg, last October. For that bloody work he was raised to th rank ot general and sent to Saratov to quell the disturbances following the assas?natlon of Lieut Gov. Sakaroff. One o the first acts of Min after arriving In Saratov was to order the flogging of all the men In a large village. lie sat 3n his horse like a statue while Cossacks carried out his terrible Instructions, and with women and children pressing around pleading for leniency for his victims. It was Min who crushed the revolt last winter In Moscow, lie spared none susrected of revolutionary sympathy. All persons found carrying arms were tried at drum-head ?ourt martial and shot THE WAY OUT. Chanjre of Food ItronR-lit Success and Happiness. An ambitious but delicate girl, after falling to go through school on account of nervousness and hysteria, found In Grape-Nuts the only thing that seemed to build her up and furnish her the peace of health. "From Infancy," she says, "I havo not been strong. Being ambitious to learn at any cost I finally got to the High School, but soon had to abandon my studies on account of nervous prostration and hysteria. "My food did not agree with me, I grew thin nd despondent I could not enjoy the simplest social affair, for I suffered constantly from nervousness In spite o all sorts of medicines. This wretched condition continued until I was twenty-five, when I became Interested in the letters of those who had cases like mine and who were being cured by eating Grape-Nuts. "I had little faith but procured a box and after the first dish I experienced a peculiar satisfied feeling that I had never gained from any ordinary food. I slept and rested better that night and in a few days began to grow stronger. I had a new feeling of peace jrnd retfulness. In a few weeks, to my great Joy, the headaches and nervousness left me and life became bright and hopeful. I resumed my studies and later taught ten moiiths with ease of course using Grape-Nuts every day. It Is now four years sine I began to use Grape-Nuts, I am the mistress of a happy home and the old weakness ha? never returned" Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. "There's a reason." Read the little book, "The Road to Wellvllle," In pkgs.

Dahl, alluding tr the scarcity of them In an article in a recent number of the Naturwissenshaftliche Wockenschift relates pome Interesting experiments which he made with a monkey. He colored some sweets with a certain colored dye and some bitter substances with that of another color and declares that after a few attempts the monkey learned to leave without even tasting these rrtk-les of food colored with the dye which indicated bitter-tasting substances and seized at once upon those which indicated sweets. Varying the experiments sufficiently, he found that the monkey distinguished all the different colors readily save only dark blue. Dahl calls attention to the fact that Mayer has stated that

many savage tribes cannot distinguish dark blue from black and that even children do not distinguish this color until later than all others. Scientific American. Continuous Polities. "We must have a leader," said a member of the mob. "What for?" "So that we can have a revolution." "And thenV" "We'll put him in authority." "And then?" "Another leader, of course, and an other revolution." Washington Star. Low One Way Kate West and Northwest via Nickel Plate Road. I Aug. 27th to Oct 31st inclusive. Full Information of Agent or address, C A. alalia, T. P. A., Fort Wayne, Ind. (031) Gentle Knock. Miss Quilpen (poetess of passion) Have you sen my "Lines on. August?" Miss Capsicum No; August who? VinloW SooTHiwo Stkcp for Children teething; aoften the Rami, redoce inflammation, alia? I pain, cores wind ooiio. 23 cenu botUe. Do Yon Open Yonr Mouth Like a young bird and gulp down what ever food or medicine may be offered you ? Or, do you want to know something of the composition and character of that which you take into your stomach whether as food or medicine? Most intelligent and sensible people now-a-days insist on knowing what they employ whether as food or as medicine. Dr. Pierce believes they have a perfect right to Insist upon such knowledge. So he publishesifciiadcast and on each bottlewrapper, whatj7?tadiclnes are made of anavexifie9jtrmiar natT& This he feels he can wNyilicrd to do been use the mrn thc tngredients of which his medicines aremade are m iTi ied nI understood tfTe mure, wiirthe ir superior curative virtues T or the cure of woman's peculiar weaknesses, irregularities and derangements, giving rise to frequent headaches, backache, dragging-down pain or distress in lower abdominal or pelvic region, accompanied, ofttlmes, with a debilitating, pelvic, catarrhal drain and kindred symptoms of weakness, Dr. Tierce's Favorite Prescription is a most efficient remedy. It Is equally effective iA curing painful periods, in giving strength to nursing mothers and in preparing the system of the expectant mother for baby's comiojf, thus rendering childbirth safe and comparatively painless. The "Favorite Prescription " is a most potent, strengthening tonic to the R-eneral system and to the organs distinctly feminine in particular. It is also a soothing and invigorating nervine and cures nervous exhaustion, nervous prostration, neuralgia, hysteria, spasms, chorea or St Vitus's dance, and other distressing nervous symptoms attendant upon functional and organic diseases of the distinctly feminine organs. A host of medical authorities of all the several schools of practice, recommend each of the several ingredients of which "Favorite Prescription" is made for the cureof the disenses for which Jtlsclaimed to be a cure. You mav read what they say or yourself by sending a postal card request for a free booklet of extracts from the leading authorities, to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Invalids Tlotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., and it wllfcome to you by return post Doubled the X amber. In criticizing some proposed changes In a bill before the Senate, changes which seemed to him to be alterations In phrasing rather than in meaning. Senator Tillman told a story which the Milwaukee Sentinel report, of a lady who was looking at a house for rent "The house suits me very well," she said to the landlord, "but there Is one thing I object to." "Well, madam, any reasonable alteration," the landlord murmured, suavely, ''would, provided you took a three years' lease " "I'd take a three years lease," she said, "if the house had more closets." "The number of closets shall le doubled,' said the landlord. "Very well," said the woman, and she signed the lease. After she had gone the landlord said to his clerk, "John, take a carpenter aver to number thirty-seven and have him divide each of the closets in two." MAT

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as with joyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play when in health and how conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and the wholesome diet of which they should partake. How tenderly their health should be preserved, not by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injurious or objectionable nature, and if at anytime a remedial agent is required, to assist nature, only those of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs has come into general favor in many millions of well informed families, vhose estimate of its quality and excellence is based upon personal knowledge and use. Syrup of Figs has also met with the approval of physicians generally, because they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputable physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs, obtained, by an original method, from certain plants known to them to act most beneficially and presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Californian blue figs are used to promote the pleasant taste ; therefore it is net a secret remedy and hence we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do not approve of patent medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication. Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs always has the full name of the Company California Fig Syrup Co. plainly printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in bottles of one size only. If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size, or having printed thereon the name of any other company, do not accept it. If you fail to get the gc- Jne you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family should always have a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial for the parents and the children,

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whenever a laxative remedy is required,

Tited, Nezvous Motheis MaKe Unhappy HomesTheir Condition. Irritates Both Husband and Children How Thousands of Mothers Have Been Saved From Nervous Prostration and Made Strong and Well.

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Jlln. CAester Curry A nervous, irritable mother, often on I the verge of hysterics, is unfit to care for children ; it ruins a child's disposition and . reacts upon herself. The trouble between children and their mothers too often is due to the act that the mother has some female weakness, and she is entirely unfit to bear the strain upon her nerves that governing children involves; it is impossible for her to do anything' calmly. The ills of women act like a firebrand upon the nerves, consequently ninetenths of the nervous prostration, nervous despondency, " the blues," sleeplessness, and nervous irritability of women arise from some derangement of the female organism. Do yon experience fits of depression with restlessness, alternating with extreme irritability? Are your spirits easily affected, so that one minute you laugh, and the next minute you feel 1 like crying ? Do you feel something like a ball rising in your throat and threatening to choke you ; all the senses pervertsd, morbidly sensitive to light and sound ; pain in the abdominal region, and between the shoulders ; bearing-down pains; nervous dyepepsia and almost enntinuallv cross and snappy ? If so, your nerves are in a shattered condition, and you are threatened -with nervous prostration. Proof is monumental that nothing in the world is better for nervous prostration than Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound; thousands and thousands of women can testify to this fact. Ask Hrs, Piskhan's AMce-A

Sale Ten Million Boxes a Year.

TK2 FAIIILT'O FAVC"ITE CZZIZI"!

CANDY CATHARTIC

BEST FOR THE BOWELS

CpEGINNING Aug. 27th And continuing on ssde djuly vntü Od. 3 Ist, 1906, tbe WABASH R. R. v& sell single trip tickets t Greith Re du ted Rites to points in cArisonx. Pexdx. California, Oregon. SMordtriA, Utah. Washington nd 'British ColumbU. ::: Write nearest Wbsh cAgent or address C. S. CRJiNE, General Passenger Jigent. St. Louis, Mo.

On the Material Plane. Mabel You have been eating onions. Jack If you can nonce such a thin; us that when I kiss you, Mabel, you don't love me that's all. CASTOR I A Tor Infants and Children. Tbe Kind You Hate Always Bought Bears the Signature of

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3tm ) Mrs. Ctas. K grown Mrs. Chester Curry, Leader of the Ladies' Symphony Orchestra, 42 Saratoga Street, East Boston, Mass., writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " For eight years I was troubled with exh tiM-vn lsnf&a And Ttivsteria. b rou 2" tit on by irregularities. I could neither enjoy lif nor 6leep nights : I was very irritable, nervous and despondent. " Lydia E. PinkhamV Vegetable Compound was recommended and proved to be the only remedy that helped me. I have daily improved in health until I am now strong and well, and all nervousness has disappeared.' Mrs, Charles F. Brown, ice-President of the Mothers' Club. 21 Cedar Terrace, Hot Springs, Ark., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " I dragged through nine years of miserable existence, worn out with pain and nervousness, until it seem'wl ax though I should fly. I then noticed a statement of a woman troubled as I was, and the wonderful results she derived from Lydia E. IlnV ham's Vegetable Compound, l aeciaea to 117 it. 1 aia so, and at the end of three months I was a different woman. My nervousness was all gone, I was no longer irritable, and my husband fell in love with me all over again." Women should remember that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the medicine that holte the record for the greatest ntwnber of actual cures of female ills, and take no substitute. Free Advice to Women. Mrs. Pinkham, daughr-ln-law of Lydia E. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., invites all sick women to write to her for advice. Mrs. Pinkham's vast experienc with female troubles enables her to advise you wisely, and she will charge you nothing lor her advice. Ccst lti:rstls a tfcza's IU IL Creeps

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low Rates to the Pacific Coast . wnsnsH r. r.

YOUR OWN SIGNATURE Made In ft Cushion Rubber Stamp for sixainjr Letters. Vouchers, etc.. at the low price of i.5. Send rev pur1 ticulars. Lock lloxio. tort wavne, ma. DROPSY rir ST.W niSCOVF.RTl (! unir relict t1 cure worrt Ctfo. itk cf I a&WA t.timni.l. .f.d 1 a trMtB.nl I rw. Dr.II.H. WUtt.N'hONis n l.AtUaut Aim F. TT. N. U. - - - Ko. 39-1900 When writing to Advertisers pleat ay yoi aw the Advertisement In tbU paper. Do you wtnt Self Inking Dating Stamp for 75 cents? Address, Lock Box 219. Fort Wayne, Indiana. rr I om

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