Plymouth Tribune, Volume 6, Number 6, Plymouth, Marshall County, 15 November 1906 — Page 7
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Dyspepsia of Women Caused by Female Disorders and Cured by i Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound A great many women suffer vrith a ' form of indigestion or dyspepsia which does not seem to yield to ordinary treat- j ment. While the symptoms seem to be ! similiT to those of ordinary indiges- ! tion, yet the medicines universally pre- j scribed do not seem to restore the patient's normal condition. Mrs. Plnkham claims that there is a iind of dyspepsia that is caused by a derangement of the female organism, and which, while it causes a disturbance similar to ordinary indigestion, cannot be relieved without a medicine which not only acts as a sxmach tonic, but has a peculiar tonic effect on the female organism. As proof of this theory we call attention to the case of Mrs. Maggie Wright, Brooklyn, N. Y., who was completely cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound after everything else had ft. iled. She writes : " Fdr two years I ufferd with dyspepsiA which so degenerated the entire systam that I was unable to attend to my daily dutie. I felt weak and nervous, and nothing that I ata tasted pood and it cansed a dMurbar.ce in my stomach. I tried different dyspepsia cures, but nothing seemed to help me. I was advised to give Lydia E. rinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial, and was happily surprised to find thac it acted like a fine tonic, and in a few. lays I be?an to enjoy and properly digest my food. Jty recovery was rapid, and in five weeks I was a well woman. I have recommended it to many suffering women." No other mectfeine in the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement or lias inch a record of cures of female troubles, as has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. 17- L. DOUGLAS 3.50&3.00 Shoes BEST IN THE WORLD W.LDoug!n $4 Gilt Edga lino cannotieequalledaianj pries . To S A Da!rrs: W. I. Uoatfl' Jobbing Hoaw is Hie most upit in this country H0S FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PEICLd. M.n's sum, 3 to 81.60. Boys' aöoj. 3 toSl.SS. Womn'i Bho. SVOO to ff.BO. , UluM' & Cblidrea'S $2.23 to fl.OO. Try W. L. Iougls Women', Miiw and Children's shoes ; for stjle, fit and wear they eicel other makes. If 1 could take you Into my brzo factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes are made you would then understand why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of jreater value than any other make. Wbtrtver yoa lte. jna cma obtain W. l Dovfrlaa shoe. Hi mom and prtco l tamp-rd a the bottom, which protects yoa tfaiost high rices and Inferior shoes. Tak no tubal tu tm. Ask yoar t!ler tar W. L. Dong Us shoes ml insist upon Hnrin them. fast Color Eyelets usei; thty will net wear brassy. Write (or Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styl. " W. 1 DOUGLAS. Dept. 14. Brodtton. Mas. Heffiiowsr the kind of '. Waterproof I; ; OfledClcthindi that stands the v. hardest service , 1 D6uIihowV Made for all kinds of wet work or ort SOLD EVERYWHERE fOal m c r a- - o v o - c Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Dear Signature of 5ee Facsimile Wrapper Below. Tory mn a&d es eeey to take cs rosx. FC 3 HEAD AC HL FOX DIZZINESS. FOR BIUCUSKESS. FOB TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION ttSim I Txacttf YefetaDle.r CURE SICK HEADACHE. TEgSPri New Wheat ?fW Lands INTHE Canadian Wcs1 rnnn additional miles of railway this yea JUUU have opened up a largely increased territory to the pr'; .ssive farmers of Western Canada, and the Government of the Dominion continues to give 180 Acres free Is Every Settler. The Country Has No Superior Coal, wood and water in abundance; churches and schools convenient: .markets easy of access; taxes low; climate the best in the northern temperate zone. Law and order prevails everywhere. For advice and information address the Superintendent cl Immigration. Ottawa, Canada, or the authorized Canadian Government Agent, W. D. Scott, Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or W. H. Rogers, vl Floor Traction-Terminal Build. nar, Indianapolis, Ind., nd H. M. Wilhams, Room ao. Law Building, Toledo, Ohio, Authorized Government Agents, f l4M sa where 70a saw tola advertisement.
I Atrs.M. Wright 1
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fliSOLUTE SECURITY.
CARTELS rinrtE 1 1 IVER PILLS. JL-H
EOY'S HEAD ONE SOLID SORE.
Kair All Came Out Under Doctoi Three Months and No Better Cuticura Works Wonders. Mr. A. C. Harnett, proprietor of a perioral store In Avanl, Oklahoma, tells in the following grateful letter how Cuticura cured his son of a terrible eczema: "My little boy had eczema. His head was one solid sore, nil over his scalp: his hair all came out, and he suffered very much. I had a physician treat him, but at the end of three months he was no better. I remembered that the Cuticura Remedies had cured me, and after giving him two bottles of Cuticura Resolvent, according to directions, and using Cuticura Soap and Ointment on hi;n daily, his eczema left him, his hair grew again, and he has never had any eczema since. We use the Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and the- keep our skin soft and healthy. I cheerfully recommend the Cuticura Remedies for all cases of eczema. A. C. Barnett, Mar. SO, 190.V Jost Walt. The picture post card is the ready made clothes, the canned goods of correspondence. The letter follows the spinning wheel out of the home. There is no time for it in this specialized age. There were mailed in Germany last year 1, 100,000,000 picture post card. A strike of employes of the. French postofBce, owing to the extra demands uion their efforts of a flood of picture post cards, was narrowly averted last year. These little lessons in geography and biography have not yet overwhelmed the American postoffice, but the school bell has but Just now rung. Wait until American politics sees its opportunity. Nebraska State Journal. A Loftr Death. Asama Is a volcano In Japan. A young man of that country grew despondent the other day and threw himself into the crater, leaving this letter: "Suffering a feeling of despair Impels me to throw myself into the crater of vehement Asama. thus winning a splendid deatn and ascending the mountain's smoke to a lofty life above the sky." HOW DEBILITY SHOWS And Why Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Are "a Specific for Dangerous .Physical Declines. The symptoms of general debility vary according to the cause but weakness is always present, a tendency to perspiro and fatigue easily, ringing in the ears, .sometimes black spots passing before the eyes, weak back, vertigo, wakefulness caused by inability to stop thinking, and uure freshing bleep. Tho canso of the trouble may bo some drain on the system or it may be mental or physical overwork, sometimes iusufüoicnt nutrition due to digestive disturbauce. In the latter case there is generally a loss of appetite and a coated tongue as well aa general languor and debility. Miss LulaM. Metzger, a stenographer, living at 71 Mill street, Watertowu, N.Y., suffered for over a year from general debility. "It was caused by overstudy," she says, "and I had no ambition, didn'fc want to go anywhere, my iood didu t itaste cood, I was rnn down, lifeless and listless. I took medicines but they failed to heln me. Fnially friends recom mended Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to my mother and she got somo for me. I took them for some time and was entirely cured and have had no return oi the trouble." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cure debility because- they actually make new, red. rich blood, and as the blood carries nourishment to all the organs and tissues of the btxly, nerves as well a- muscles. the new blood stimulates the organs to do the work that iratnre expects of them nnd normal health follows. Not only is this treatment sufficient to cure de bility but many severe nervous disorders as well. The pills are sold by all drnggists, or will be sent postpaid, on receipt of price, 50 cents per box, six boxes by the Dr. Williams Medicine tJo., benenee tady, N. Y. Send for free diet book. Difference In Kind. "I think," said the first Washington ian. tliat our Senators should be se lected by popular vote." G'on!" exclaimed the sporty one. "what kind of a ball team could we git that way?" Philadelphia Ledger." The Artful Squirrel. You may find many a squirrel In the course of your tramp, but no two alike exactly In their method of at tempted escape or concealment. The ways and means of the little rascals are legion. One may flatten himself, out against a gray patch on the back of a tree trunk, absolutely motionless; and unless in your earnest, steadfast looking you can detect an ear or a shoulder in relief against the sky you might as well abandon the search. An other may II along a bough flattened at full lengh; but here tho telltale ears are more easily silhouetted. Still another may crouch drawn up in a fork; and here the thing to look for Is the fluffy tip of that little signal flag which always works and waves and Jerks and signals so bravely when dan ger is not in the air. Or one may gath er himself up in a bunch to Imitate a knot or knob; and here he can very well tell when you have spied him out. He will catch the eye of an acquaint ance in a crowd, and will instantly 11m ber up for headlong flight, leaping fron tree to tree, till be vanishes over the ridge. Field and Stream. IT'S THE FOOD. The True Wr to Correct Nervoaa Troubles. Nervous troubles are more often caued by Improper food and Indigestion than most people imagine. Even doctors sometimes overlook this fact. A man says: "Until two years ago waffles and butter with meat and gravy were the main features of my breakfast. Finally dyspepsia came on and I found myself In a bad condition, worse in the morning than any other time. I wojM have a full, sick feeling in my stomach, with pains In roy heart, sides and head. "At times I would have 110 appetite for days, then I would feel ravenous, never satisfied when I did cat and so nervous I felt like shrieking at the top of my voice. I lost tlosh badly and hardly knew which way to turn until one day I bought a tox of Crape-Nut food to see if I could eat that I tried it without telling the doctor, and liked it fine; made me feed as If I had something to eat that was satisfying ami still I didn't have that heaviness that I had felt after eating any other food. "I hadn't tlrank any coffee then in five weeks. I kept on with the (JrapeNuts and in a month and a half I had gained 13 pounds, could eat a!most anything I wanted, didn't feel badly after eating and my nervousness was all gone. It's a pleasure to be well again." Name given by Fostum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the book, "The Road to Wellvllle,- In pkgs. There'! a reason.
No greater mistake can bo made than mossing and tbon calling it thinking. flet that manure spreader if you have to get one or two neighbors to take stock in It. Sheen require a clean place to eat and must have it or else their health will be Impaired and food wasted. Horse improvement In a locality re quire more than the buying of a huso hulk of a stallion and paying a hu?er hulk of a price for it. The large, handsome reach horses are popular for the farnl and they always sell high. A pair of fueh horses seem to Ik? a trotting advertisement. Pick ail small, slow-growing lndiffer ent appearing pullets and save them for broilers. Keep for maturity only the best of tho whole lot of pullets. A horse, especially If he is nervous, is much more likely to be alarmed by the sound of a noise he cannot see than by the sight of thingä he does not understand. The man who Is ever ready to do others is often fighting a trust and at the ame time is looking for a trust he can join so he can carry on his busi ness of doing others. If tho stallion ruddier were as care fully analyzed to find his vices as most men are analyzed by their neighbors to fl Iscover their faults the first would not be tolerated very long. Every worm's nest in the orchard should be cut from the trees ami burned ttefore tho wori.s mature, scat ter and fnln their cocoons. It is a case of a stitch iu time saves nine. Sheep men are still In high feather. "Wool is high and so are Iambs. West era sheep are bringing as high as $U r hundred weight 011 the Chicago market, and spring lambs as high as The chicken business now seems to be the leading business for profit if the manacer understands it. Prices were never better for all kinds of poultry than row. In tome places they are al most prohibitive. Working In the rain does not pay. It is barely possible that saving can be often made by prolonging the labor In the rain, but there comes a day when one "may have to balance his books against his health. Some persons seem to have the idea that any kind of "skate" hog Is a good bacon hog. It takes as much skill to produce and feed u gooI bacon hog as It docs one of the lard tyr as good blood and as careful breed! n; , The red raspberry plant u sturdier and more mature than the black rasp berry tip, but the jerni that makes the new canes begins growth so early In the Fprlng, and is so tender and easily broken, that it is advisable to plant In the fall, if possible. Although the tobacco plsnt Is very sensitive In IU nature, yet It readily adapts Itself to different soils and varying climatic conditions. It Is also more highly specialized than any other farm crop and Is grown successfully under the Intensive system. Clover hay cut a little on the early ide, or the leaves which fall off while unloading, will make a capital feed for young pigs and breeding stock. The tea made by steeping such hay in boiling water has shown Itself to be nearly as valuable us sklramllk for young IS. . A prominent citizen of Wilmington, De!., was recently, saved from death from the attack of an enraged bull by his twelve-year-old son, who flashed the reflection from a new milk pall In the animal's eyes, thus putting him to flight, when pitchforks, clubs and shotguns had been of no avail. The best way to keep up the credit of a farm is to never send anything to market that Is not In the very best condition. An unsound cow, horse, pig or a bushel of anything that Is not In a strictly first-class condition should never be marketed. Get the highest prices by selling the best That Is the rule. Milk absorbs bad odors very readily, consequently as soon as it Is drawn remove at once from the stable and take to the mllkhouse. Always milk In a place free from objectionable odors. This Is especially Important when silage is being fed. Do not milk while the fresh silage Is In the mangers. Milk before feeding. The keeping of a careful book account of the farm receipts and expenditures for the period of a year, including the classifying of the various Items of expense, would bring many a farmer to the point of Inaugurating reforms along several lines, the adoption of more up to date methods, the keeping of letter stock and an elimination of a good many sourees of previously unappreciated lei'k and waste. There Is probacy no common weed In the central western states that gives the gardener more trouble than crab grass. Coupled with a remarkable vl talitj-, It Is deep rooted, practically drought proof, and. due to Its habit of rooting wherever the Jmts of stems come In contact with the earth. It quickly occupier, the ground and strangles the life out of anything in the garden which comes within lis grasp. The only way to get rid of It Is unrelenting warfare with sharp hoe and seeing to it that none of It goes to seed. Th Golden Sclf-Ulauchlng is the best variety for general use when winter celery is not wanted, tilant Pascal Is probably the best winter celery. Cel" ery will stand a good deal of frost, but before hard freezing It should be taken up and stored In boxes In the cellars, with soil on the roots. If it Is not blanched, it will finish blanching In the
f. i 9- . '
cellar. The SelMUanching and White Plume varieties will not keep longer than Christmas. Careful tests which have been made seem to Indicate that silage properly secured is just as valuable a ration for the steers in the feed lot a It Is tor il:? dairy cows. Increase in the price of land, coupled with the appli cation of a greater measure of intelli gence to agricultural matters. Is going to make the silo a necessity through the entire corn belt. When to Skim. Milk should be skimmed as soon a! the least degree of acidity can be de tected, as the cream will all have been precipitated when that stage is reach ed. Cream requires freouent stirrini if even ripening is to be secured. sjiouKi De smooth and velvety aro pleasantly (not decidedly) acid to the taste, and Is then ready for the churn Much of the success of the butter manor uepeuds on the proper ripening 1 of the cream. Country Gentleman. I I. ale Corn for Knullaife. I planted corn 011 July 3 last year one peck to tho acre, in drills, 40 inches apart, and got corn well sup plied with nubbins that made excellent ensilage; better I think than the rod tier corn mat produce no ears, says an Ohio man. The corn was on good soil aud kept clean of weeds; and though the season was not adapted tc quick growth, yet by September 15 the nubbins had passed the "roastin.s stage," and the whole crop would have made excellent fodder If there had been no silo to put if In, but I prefer tc store corn In the silo to any other way. (nrntroroa Plant. One of the most interesting of that little group of plants known as "carnlvorous," from their curious habit of trap1 ping animals, and apparently feeding on them, is tho bladderwort. In July and August its yellow flowers may be seen adorning many of our ponds nnd ditches. The little narrow-necked bladdors which It bears under wntw. nnd from which It gets its name, are veri table traps for the smaller inbahlt.ints of tho ditch. The animals most fre quently caught in them aro those min ute crustaceans known as water-flea. Occasionally, however, a young fish is ffmd Inside. In a recent number of a Herman sclent iric in-riodical W. Bath describes plants of the bladderwort winch have caught tadpole. Some he found caught by the head, and some by the tail. In other cases the animal had got entirely inside. It 1.4 found that the Imprisoned animal may live some . . days Inside tho bladder. Winter Dairying;. Wintpr dairying is each year grow ing in ravox with farmers. . They have round that the cost of keeping a winter nmiier is very little more than of keeping a cow that Is to calve in the spring. The cows in the summer-milked dairy dry off In November nnd by December the dairy is a dry one, un profitable, yet requiring a great amount of feed and care. He.w much better It is to have the cows come In fresh In October, keep them well fed and In comfortable stables and secure a unlforiu flow of milk through the winter until gra.ss comes again. This work has been made easier since the silo has cone Into use, and plenty of succu lent feed Is always at hand. When an old dairyman comes to real ize what it cost him In the past to winter an unproductive dairy the labor and the thousands of tons of hay ex pended to bridge the dairy from one sensoji to another. Just to get the cow.s J chP Kss and low prices-It looks hke ,tt f0"URe Ene the lat- ' nrodlK'tlvo when thn fnnd tl wiuu, lilt- CUWS are IOOSl larePIV . iUlj luusuiuc Is dearest and prices best. Corn Fodder Valuable. Altlwugh corn fodder Is not consid ered a complete food, nor equal to hay, yet It can be made to materially afelst In carrying the stock over the winter by good management On soie farms the practice 1 to stack the fodder and straw and give the stock free access to it, but there are better methods of utilizing It. Every ounce of corn fodder or straw that Is fed, especially when properly prepared, is a Having In hay. Seme may object to feeding such poor stuff, on tho ground that It contains but little nutrition, but if grain or ground food (which Is concentrated) be used In connection with It, the bulky food will answer for the purpose of distention and also furnish more or le.is nutriment. As long as the animals do not dislike the fodder and they gain flesh, one need have no fear in regard to feeding It The manure, too, w ill be better thin when the material Is tq, be trampled or slowly rotted. By parsing such material through the animal the digestive organ assist to reduce It and render It tine, and every farmer knows that the Öner the condition of the manure thj better It Is. !eeda Kxhattat the Soil. The farmers who grow flax do so at greater cost 0 plant food than do the growers of wheat corn or other grains. The same reasoning, therefore, shows that, as grains of all kinds draw their phosphoric acid from the soil, these cjly seeds will rxhaust the soil of Its phosphates to a much greater degree than the grain crops; hence loo pounds of linseed will carry on about twice as much phosphoric acid from the foil as will 100 pounds of wheat. Put the same circumstance supplies an additional reason why the manure of full-grown store stock fed upon oilcake is so much richer than that obtained by the use of many other kinds of food. Linseed meal Is rich as a food and a manure producer, because the proortion of protein comiounds (albumen, etc.), In the ollcuke Is greater than the fattening animal can appropriate, and thus much of them pass off In a more c.r less changed state, and Is mixed with the manure. The oil Is In larger proportion than can at times be laid on their bodies, even by fattening stock, but this excess adds nothing to the fertilizing quality of the manure. Tho full-grown animal, however, appreciates scarcely any of the phosphate, the whole of these therefore which the animal consumes . In it food appearing again In its manure. The oilcakes, being richer In these phosphates, weight for weight, than any kind of grain used for food, the manure thus made Is also richer In phosphates than that which Is ojbtalned from animals fed upon other kinds of foods.
LUXURY IN RANCH HOUSE.
Cat Glum and Silverwa uttly Gift for Guest. A little one-story, six-room, longranch house In Lander, Wyo., with sage-brush land stretching away from it in all directions and with only a lumbering mountain stnjre toac:i, it drawn by four horses, connectin with the outside world, has in it more than any other house, public or private, in the State. Arapahoe boasts not near fifty souls r. II told. But the traveler going by stage from Lander to Shoshone will find its ranch an uncommonly good one at which to stav over night, for Mrs. Pecker, its gracious hostess, does not spend all her money on ornaments for her t;dle. She always makes enough to pay two first-class Chinese cooks and to supply her tabic with delica cies. Many ranch houses look neither nior: nor less inviting from the outside than does this one. Dirt, poor food, cracked dishes, wretched service aud insufferably bad leds comiose the ac commodations. The traveler Is agree ably surprised, then, when he finds the wealth of cut glass, china and silverware which graces Mrs. Pecker's table, excellent service, every delicacy that a city market affords, cleanliness ev erywhere, casv chairs and couches, beds fresh and comfortable, and an at inosph?re of refinement Mrs. Becker'r. cut glass, china and silverware are the pride and the de light of Arapahoe, and all the coun tryshle round about It. Even the In dians who have got a glimpse of then regard- them with a sort of proprietary interest. Nt lone aco Mrs. Pocket sent an order to New l'ork for n thou sand dollars' worth of cut glass, and that thousand dollars' worth Is not all she has. Besides her valuable collec tlon of cut glass, china and silverware, Mrs. Pecker has many hundred dollars' worth of Navajo blankets and Indian curios. She made an army otlicer'g wife a present of $o00 or.$G00 worth or üianüets anu curios recently an thought nothing of It. SliC is a Weit orn woman and does things in a West eru way, ot long ago Mrs. Pecker gave a l'arty at her ranch house, to which she invited some of tho best known folk iu Lander, and army officers and the r wives from lort Washakie. It was a unique society function. Each of the numerous guests went home with a costly gift from the hostess. One young lady was given a saddle, nnother a beautiful and costly souvciir spoon, with an elk's tooth set in she handle, and others received gifts equally valuable. Galveston News. PRUNES CUTTING OUT PRISMS. Supply of Frult C'oiulna; from Cali fornia EnronrnKtnK to I.nntllaille. When one thinks of all the bojrdinchouse breakfasts in the conntrv it I--Is not surprising that more than 100. OCO.OOO pounds of prunes are eaten yearly In the United States. Prior to P3Mi the supply came al most wholly from France and the Dan ubian provinces, and sold under the designation of French and Turkish prunes In that year prunes of American growth appeared on the market and with each succeeding year the supply has increased, until the Imiiortation of foreign fruit has been reduced to extremely small proportions. Most of our prune supply Is from California. In Santa Clara County alone there are 3,700,000 trees grow lng on 37.ÜOO acres, 300 treo3 to the acre The quantity of prunes there exceeds 110,000,000 pounds more than enough for the requirements of the wholo country, but the excess Is need ed to supply the export demand In September the fruit riiens and I3 gathered by spreading sheets under the trees and shaking the branches. The fruit Is taken to the warehouse. here It is craded in size, an.l ivismml through a boiling hot liquid. In ivlilch I(roces8 It is cleaned and the outer skin I Lnftana ! la thnn unn.l .. I.. I win mu, i 10 luiu C'IVUV UUl IU trays 0 xeei Dy j ieet in size, anu exosed to the heat of the sun for three to eight days, depending upon weather conditions. Ten thousand trays of fruit spread out In one unbroken tract may be seen in Santa Clara In the drying season. When sufficiently cured the prunes are stored in separate bins and there al lowed to sweat, this ryooess taking from ten to twenty days, when they are ready for marketing. What to Eat. IN HURRY FOR THE SHEETS. Hotel 3t lore Said Ther Were Wanted tor Ue at Tablseloth. Dr. Irv'.ng A. Watson, secretary of the New Hampshire State board of health, and Dr. Edward French, suer Intendent of the Medfleld Insane Asy lum, relate an interesting Incident of their travels together sone j-ears ago through the interior of Mexico. Auer n long uorseoacx ride up through the mountains they arrived In a small village whose apology for a public Inn looked as though it had see: the sorest of hard times. But thor oughly tired out, the medical men were very glad to find a place to rest for the night and, retiring, told their host 4ft . A S. mat iney rqouiu proDaoiy not arise until late the next day. xneir protraciea siumners were broken when the morning was well ad vanced by a pounding on the door. "What's the matter?" asked one of the still sleepy doctors. "It's most dinner time and we've go to have those sheets for tablecloths," was the somewhat startling reply. Boston Herald. Don't Fool with That Cold. You've caught a cold, haven't you? me I 1...M.. ... xou icei Muuy uncomiorrauio as though your head was a union depot and tho ticket office had b?ea closed. Dj you know what a cold is? A cold Is a letter of Introduction to Influenza, a recommendation to Pleu rlsy, a merry meeting with (Jrip, a lov ing embrace with Pneumonia, a throng ticket to tho place where the dairies grow and a slide down the cellar door with Death. Now, aren't you sorry you didn't take that overcoat? Cot rid of that cold quick! Don't fool with It. Fooling with a cold is like breaking rocks In a car of dynamite. You remember the Immortal verse of the poet: " Twas a cough that carried him off ; And a coffin they carried him off In." Albany Times Union. Content. "Don't you sometimes wish you had jrour life to lire over?" said the pessimist "And go through that spefl of hot iveatber again?" rejoined the optimist "Not for aujtlilng." Washington Star.
What Do They Cure?
The above question Is often asked conrerning Dr. Pierce's two leading medicines, "Golden Medical Discovery" and Favorite. Prescription." The answer is that "Golden Medical Discovery " is a most potent alterative or blood-purifier, and tonic or invigorator and acts especially favorably in a curativA wav nnnn all tho mucous lininsrsurfaces, as ot tho nasal passages, throat. croncniai uioes, swiuutu, wvicjo bladde&vcurinjr a. large per cent, of catarrhal caXs whether ije disease affects the nasal paSaes, the thxnat, larynx, bronchia, stomachNfas catarrI dyspepsia), bowels (as murnuy-; bladder, uterus or other pelvic org3Trr Even In the chron Of "Wrativr ctntr-PS r.f thrsa flftections if. often successful in atfectr hM "Kav.rlt Prescription Is p.dvlsed SSrBtSBBBMI t 1 " TI r'!jLi!K' class 01 diseases iqom lacunar veakjl'erritfeTnV-n'ts amj lresnjl2ili2-i is a powerful yet TgcnUy aeuhg vigöratinrr tnnip sind nervine, l or weak worn out, over-worked women no matter what has caused tho break-down, Tavorito Prescription "will bo found most effective in building up tho strength, regulating tho womanly functions, subduing pain and bringing about a healthy, vigorous condition of tho wholo system. A book of particulars wraps each bottle giving the formula? of both medicines and quoting what scores of eminent medical authors, whoso works are consulted by physicians of all the schools of practice as guides in prescribing, say of each ingredient entering into these medicines. Tho words of praiso bestowed on tho several ingredients entering into Doctor Pierce's medicines by such writers should have moro weight than any amount of non - professional testimonials, because such men aro writing for tho guldanco of their medical brethren and know whereof thov srv.ik. Both medicines are non-alcoholic, nonsecret, and contain no harmtui nanitfnrmlnsrriruirs. beinn composed of clyceric extracts of the roots of native, American TnvHHnAl fnrest nlants Thev are both sold by dealers In medicine. You can't afford to accept as a substitute for one of these medicines of known composition, any secret nostrum. Dr. Pierce's Pellets, small, snear-coated. easy to take as candy, regulate and in vigorate stomacn, liver ana Dowejs. I.ovr Hunter)' Kate via Nickel riate lload. Nov. 9th to Nov. 30th. Low round trip rates to parties of three or more to Payne, McComb and Intermediate points. Also to South Whitley, Wil vale and intermediate points. Full in formation of Agent or address C. A Melin, T. P. A., Fort Wayne, Ind. , (1018) t An Ingenious Expedient. In 1SG4 President Lincoln was great ly bothered by the well meant but ill advised, efforts of certain good North eru. men to bring about a termination of the war. An old gentleman from Massachusetts, very bland and entirely bald, was espe' lly persistent and troublesome. Again and again he appeared before the President, and was got rid of by one and another ingenious expedient. One day, when this angel of mercy had been boring Mr. Lincoln for half an hour, to the Interruption of Important business, the President suddenly rose, went to a closet and took out of it a large bottle. "Did you ever try this remedy for baldness?" ho asked, holding up the bottle before his astonished visitor. No'; the man was obliged to confess that he never had tried it Sir. Lincoln called a servant bad the bottle wrapped up, and handed It to the bald philanthropist "There," said he, "go and rub somo of that on your head. Persevere. They say it will make the hair grow. Come back In about three months and report." And almost before he knew it, the good man was outside of the door with the package under his arm. PUBLIC DUTY. Jlonpellcr, O., 9fan Feeln Compelled to Tell III Experience. Joseph WilguR. Montpelier, O., says: MI feel It my duty to tell others about Down's Kidney Pills. Exposnre and driving brought kidney trouble on me, and I suffered much from Irregular passages of the kidney secretions. Sometimes there was retention ' ' and at other times pas sages were too frequent, especially at night. There was pain and discoloration. Doan's Kidney Pills brought me relief from the first, and soon Infused new life. I give them my endorsement." Sold by all dealers. r0 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. Liked the Irishman. A good story Is told of Frances Lady Waldegrave, who long since paid her debt to nature. She was a woman of quick repartee and many husbands. It was soon after her fourth matrimonial venture with Chichester Fortesque, an Irishman, that she appeared In a Dublin theater with the bridegroom. From the gallery a man shouted down to her: "And which lr the four do you like best?" From her box her answer rang out, "The Irishman, of course." And the Irish-peopled house rang with applause. Cleveland Leader. $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to-learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science has ben able to en re In all Us staices. and tb.it Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure 13 the only positive cure now known to the medical frsternlty. Catarrh betnjr a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Core Is taken internally, acting directly opoti the blood and raucous surfaces of the System, thereby destroying he foundation of the disease, and jrfvlng the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature In dolus Its work. The proprietors bare so much faith In Its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that It falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Bold by Druggists, 7.V. Take Hall's Family rills for constipation. Senlptors Potboilers. They were walking past a beautiful iluk-and-white house In New York whose door cap was most exquisitely Tarved. The sculptor pointed to It -My work," he said. "That's the potboiling I do while I work on my masterpiece. It Is nothing unusual with sculptors to do such work, Two of the finest pieces that were sold to the Metropolitan Museum last winter were done by a man whose regular business Is to make door caps. Marlon Hnrland. The celebrated authoress, so highly 3teemed by the women of America, says on pages 103 and 445 of her popular work, "Eve't Daughten; or. Common Seme for Maid, Wife and Mother": "For the aching back should it be slow in recovering its normal strength an AIlcock'8 Plaster is an excellent comforter, combining the sensation of the sustained pressure of a strong warm hand with certain tonic qualities developed in the wearing. It should be kept over the seat of uneasiness for several days in obstinate cases, for perhaps a fortnight." "For pain in the back wear an AIIcock's Plaster constantly, renewing as it wears off. This 13 an invaluable support when the weight on the small of the back becomes heavy and the aching incessant.' The number of deaths ench year in London was, 1T.0 years ago, fifty-one a thousand. In 1S20 it was twenty-nine a thousand, and it now is about eighteea a thousand. V:Mrs. Wlnslow's SQA-vVa Rthcp for ChlUrsn teaching; ofien th uv jorM inflmmUaa, aJImj piio. oarw wind ooi) jnu botU.
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PUTNAM FADELESS DYES CaJor sort ooods brighter sad faster colors tkao nj otW dye. One 10c package colors all fibers. Titer in H coM wit er better tfcs err alter fye. Tea ua fr Ol larmeat wttbout rlpplon apart. Write far free booakt-Kov ta Dye, CUad as Klx Colon. MOM -ROE DVC Cd, VmienMt
LONDON'S DESERTED MANSIONS.
On Fashionable Residence District Falling; Oct of Favor. Various reasons are assigned by those most directly Interested the house agents for the migration of peo ple from one of its chief centers, Lancashire Gate, says the London Mail. One has only to take" a stroll through that district of store palaces to see that it seems to have lost favor with not a few of its former inhabtants, for in every direction one Is confronted with the familiar black and white sign of the house agent appealing for new tenants. The number of those vacant pala tial residences is increasing surprising ly, and this fact is having a depressing effect upon the Maida Vale and Paddington rates. The loss last year to Maida Vale rates was no less than 7,037, and in Paddington 4,071. It was learned from house and estate agents that the causes of this desertion of the large houses are vari ous, une well-known agent nttriDUteu it to the increasing popularity of fiats, to- the servant difficulty and to the general spirit of economy which had been prevalent since the end of the war in all classes. Regarding the first, he said that London now possessed magnificent suites of flats, the rents of which ran up nearly to 1,000. They were elegantly fitted, and required far less domestic help than the large house. There was no dearth of tenants for houses renting at 100 a year; in fact, for each house of this kind there were a score of applicants; it was the 450 to 7JjO a year house that they found on their bands. As for the servant question, many women had told him that "the more servants the less comfort." Many large houses had been almost reconstructed internally to meet the requirements and convenience of the modern servants, but all in vain; they would not stay in spite of enormously increased wages. Kept III Promise. She (weeping) Five years ago, as a bride, you promised to love me for an eternity, and here we are on the verge of divorce. He Well, the past five years have seemed like an eternity. Fliegende Blaetter. Fifty thousand persons visited Robert Burns' cottace at Ajr last year. ft. You Cannot all inßamcd, ulcerated and catarrhal conditions of the mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh-uterinccatarrh 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 discharge, stops pain, 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. X Send for Free Trial Box THE K. PAXTON CO Boston, Mass A Positive CURE FOR rrv GATtfiRU Ely's Cream Balm is quickly absorbed. Gives Relief al One. It cleanses, soothes, heals and protects Am 5fr tbe diseased membrane. It enres Catarrh and drives away a Cold in the Head quickly. Restores tha Senses of Taste and SmelL Full eize no cts. at Dropgists or by mail; Trial size 10 cts. by mail. EW Brothers, 5ß Warren Street. Kew York, TOUR OWN SIGNATURE Made In a Cushion Kubler Stamp for signing letters. Vouchers, etc. at the low price of 11.25. fcend for particulars. Lock Box 219, Fort Wayne, Ind. fq)JU Mull
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Sale Ten Million Boxes aYear.
THE FAMILY'S FAVORITE SECISirTS
IOC. 25c, 50c BEST FOR Do yea want a Self Inking Dating Stamp for 75 cents? Address. Lock Box 219. Port Wayne. Indiana.
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RJRJA IFOR CATARRH OFTHE Headthroat yLu;;GS.STo:mrai U-UUHÜ5.BLC1JUC14 AND CHICAGO. FT. WAYNE, FOST0R1A, FINDLAY, CLEVELAND, BUFFALO. NEW YORK. BOSTON AND ALL POINTS i EAST and WEST Reached Most Quickly and Comfortably vU th Nickel Plate Road. Three Express Trains every d&r In tbe ytsr. Thru Pullman Sleeping Cars to Chic. go, Kcs York and Boston. Comfortable high tack seal coaches and modern Dining Cars sc rring meala on Individual Club Plan rangln? in prices from S5o to 1 1.00. Also s la Carte service. Colored Porters In uniform to look to ths. comfort of first and second class passengers and keep cars scrupulously clean. ! Direct Connections with Fast Trains at Chicago and Buffalo. All Agents Sell Tickets vis this Popular Route, Write to C.A. MELIN, Trav. Pass. Ag nt. Ft. Wayna, tnd Low Rale One Vay AND Round Trip Tickets FIRST AND THIRD TUESDAY to Arkansas Colorado Indian Territory Kansas Texas Fiew Mexico OXIahoma Missouri Old Mexico and many ather points. For prices and ticket conditio write nearest Wabash Agent, or address C. S. CRANE, G. P. & T. A. ST. Ul'lS. MO. J
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and the Muscles and Joints lubricated by using
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Price 25c 50c & U.00 Sold by all Dealers
Treatise On The Horse"Sent Free Dr. Earl S.Sloan,Boston,Mass. THE BOWELS F. W. N. U. - Na 46 1G08 Wben writing to Advertisers please say yoa tnw the Atfvertlaemrnt In thli paper
