Plymouth Tribune, Volume 6, Number 23, Plymouth, Marshall County, 14 March 1907 — Page 7
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'Vi.''.. ifiilillMMllllli m - tst ; r .'-v.-.-.-:-,v V V.V V.V.'.V.V IM mmmm W. A. Mitchell, dealer in general merchandise, Martin, Ga., writes : "My -wife lost in weight from 130 to 3 pounds. We saw she could not liTe long. She was a skeleton, so we con sulted an old physician. lie told her jo try Peruna. "She grad ually commenced imProving and getting a little strength, ihe now weighs 106 pounds. She Is aining eTvry day, and does her own housework and cooking." 1 EffiHLETEÄivj FOR WASHING WINDOWS L'se hot wafer and 20-MILE-TUM CORAX - wipe dry and polish with old newspaper. All dealers. Sam pi. Sonrenir Picture in io colors an J booklet sc and dealer's name. Address PACIFIC COAST 'BOKAX CO., New York. MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POVDHRS FOR CHILDREN, A 0t4h0nl FTer)stiacsa CtltJ, He darb, PUaach Trablei TMihiif Plaartlara. od Destroy Warn. Tby Break ap Colda ia 34 Boar. At all Prncri". iicta. Sanol mmilad FRK iddraan, A. S. OUaSTZD. La Rorfi Y. f Wzr Cray, rain Ca:!iirm' Horn. mmw York Civ.
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IF YOU WANT WHAT YOU WANT WHEN YOU WANT IT ALWAYS KEEP A BOTTLE OF
IN THE HOUSE AND YOU WILL HAVE A QUICK. SAFE AND SURE REMEDY FOR PAIN WHER2 YOU CAN GST AT IT WHEN NEEDED. PRICE 25c AND 50c
$300
s500
to
from land costing but $25 per acre. That 5 what they are doinff in the Texas Gulf Coast Country. It's easy there, because this land yields double crops every month is a producing month a money-making- month. Thinl: of it! $500 per acre in cabbage $600 per acre in onions S400 per dcre in mid-winter tomatoes. These and many actual every-day accomplishments in fruit culture also, can be proved to you I can give you the names and addresses of people who are doing these things while ycu arc reading this advertisement and the snow and cold weather are keeping1 you idle. Warm, Dry- Climate, the healthiest in the country. Irrigated land the kind you can buy ro at f2o per acre-is the richer in productiveness. The railroad facilities will place j-our products in the markets ahead of every other section of the country. lie ilth and prosperity await you. . Let me send you an 80-page ilTflP tVltTCßf" rVIWOT5iL!ft lustrated book about the Texas Gulf i ast Country, and tell you about
Uf Ö2H GTAOSr iCa tne M vt
FAINT YOU) VEHICLES FhorMy or w Bther-beten crrfce. buyit-s. xleighs or other Vf hiclp detract a gTeat d;il Iron the eiwre they houid aßupj. You can make such Ttbiclcs look like new at a triihes tot with one ccat of BefM Carriage and Buggy P&Iett nixed ready fcr "..e. No rubbin? or TarnLshinjr necessary. Specially ma'le for palntin? buggies and rarriuire. and can In; easily applied br anyone who cuin handle a brush.
jmes qmcKiy ana rjarri ana jnves you a Drxtm, giiy. piano nnifli. nnequaled by any other fint on the market. The kind of paint that wears and resists the ravages of the
weather and raudily roads. Maie in eight
ment ground in the tt and most durable roach vamish. Insist on pelting Buffalo Crrlne and Buggry Paint. If vour dealer uot keep it. Knd n his name and we w:Jl send you our color chart and our beautif ul Buffalo-head Stick-pin Free. Euifalo Oil Paint & Varnish Co Sole Makers
Builalo Boston dilcago San Francisco
W. L. DOUGLAS 03.00 AND S3.50 SHOES TI Tk "WORLD W. L COUGIAS $4.C0 CILT EDGE SHOES CANNOT BE EQUALLED AT ANY F3!CE. SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES:
Maa'a Shoi, 3 to i.fto. Hoya' Shoen. S.I to SI. 25. Woman's S:o. 94 tt SI. AO. Mioses' & C hildren's Shoea.K2.25 to I.OO.
W. L. DoOjjlAS s!oes are recognized by expert iudges of footwear'
W bo me ueii jn ny le, nt ana wear produced
part of th shoe and erery detail of the making is looked after
sna watcoea orer br skilled fctoemakera, lim r tost, n i couia taK yra into my
.tsrocKton, Mass., and show yoa Uow- srefullr W. L. Donla Ä'ALiiiayAa
ghoes are made, you would then understand
wear ionror, auu ro oi reaier vaiue man any otnr ma - W. I DoartM nam an4 prtre is iltmprd on th bottom, which y
SADDEST FACT ABOUT GOTHAM.
It 1 the I'renenrr of the Man .AItthj-si FannlnK for a Tip. William Alltn White writes of New Ycrk City and Emporia (his hon-.e town) in the American Masnzino. Following is Mr. White's jimmnt of tbe saddt-st thin he seis in New York: "Couatry-ihvellin: American mo iitnl niot of .the women are instinctively democratic. And, being democratic, the citio-i sadden us country I'cople. For the city and New York i typical of urban America fosters t o much of the sham rehiion hot ween men that one finds where class lines are set. The eternal presence of a nerving class, whose manners may some day petrify into servility, the continual discovery that the van who l-rings the food or sweeps the street or drives the cab considers wholesome conversation with him from his patrons a3 a sijrn of low breeding, the presence of the man who lawns for a quarter, all these make the countryman in New York desire to rush home and organize a Sitting Bull I-odge of Aneient and Amiable Anarchists. "It is not the extravagance of the rieh, but the limber knees of too many of the poor, that disgust the countryman in New York. The saddest thing in that great city to one who comes from the frank, wholesome, clean, happy faces of the country is not th" eyes, not the overfed, puffy-neeked figeyes, not he overfed, puffy-necked figures o tne lazy, respectable, hoteldwelling vomen.. who get no more exercise than stuffed geese, not the besotted faces of the men about the barrel houses though a merciful flod knows they are sad enough ; but sadder than they are the loathsome wooden faces of the men who stand decked out like human manikins in purples and greens and what-not of modish silliness and, for a price, surrender themselves to be made part of the landscape. For years Mickle, the painter, was the lowest form of humanity we had in Emporia, lie was the town drunkard, once they fined him for boating his wife; drink made him a loafer and a brute, hut some way one felt down in Mickle 'here was the soul of a man; some way ne knew that he would not do certain ,h'n;rs for money; some way one always understood that Mickle couM always look into depths of personal degradation below him and tell whoever te'i;ted him there to go to . But, en the other hand, some way the thinly is just a flunky and he seems to have given up the right to resent personal insult when he assumes the miserable part. And for a man to commercialize h's American birthright seems a heart-breaking tragedy." Only One "HROMO (It'IXIXE" That Is LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine. Similarly named remedies sometimes deceive. The flrt aad orix'pl Cold TaMet is a WHITE PACKAGE with black and red lettering, and bears tha sicTiatura of E. W. GROVE. 5c. N'o Wonder. Caller What an intelligent looking little doj! His eyes are as bright as .stars. Miss Tartnn So they ought - to be. He's a skye terrier. To recover quickly from bilious attacks, sick headache, indigestion or colds, take Garfield Tea, the mild laxative. Guaranteed under the Pure Food and Drug Law. The new docks in Gibraltar are lare enough to hold the biggest vessel in the British navy. King Alfonso is the best of the royal riders of Europe. an Acre Yearly Net Profit! N xe.TY l0.w exculon rates for inWrite roe TO-DAY. Sixteen carloads of people went down on our excursion of January 15th. ACT NOW. JOHN SEBASTIAN, Pass'r Traffic Mxr. - 'V' - t - .lWU LI 1 WS. Caota S6, La Salle Sta . I j Room W. Frisca Bid, f ST. LOCIS CHICAGO POCK ISLAND-FRISCO LINES colors and black. Made from thf finest r.if. m this country. Each without rc?ard to lr?e factories tltj why they hold their shape, tit better, kes. roteettth wearer araltiBt high net tnoe aeaira ererywliere. v.
I
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! Verdict for Dr. Pierce
AGAINST THE Ladies1 Home Journal. Sending truth after a lie. It is an r'd raaxim th;it ":i li will travel seven loasues while trut'i is p:rt.tiiv; it"5 ho:?ts on," and no doubt hundreds of tln"Tis;ii;Js of pood people read the. unwarranted and malicious attack upon Dr. II. V. l'ierco and Iiis" Favorite Prescription "r ullilied in tho May UtxHuiumlw r of the Ladies' Home Jt-urnal, with its preat black display hadins, who never saw the: hur.ible, groveling retraction, with its inconspicuous head in sr, published two mouths later. It was boldly churned in thesdanderous and libelous article: that Dr. Pierce's Fa vor i to Prescription, for the cure of woman's weaknesses and ailment?, contained alcohol and other harmful ingredients. Dr. Pierco promptly brought suit against tho publMiers of the Ladies Home Journal, for f JOO.OOO.OO damages. Dr. Pierce al!cl that Mr. Uok, the editor, maliciously published the article containing Mjch false and defamatory matter vitx the Intent of Injuring his businecrfurthei more, that no alcohol, or other fujurious. or habit-forming, drugs are, or VÄer iere, contained in his "Favorite res(fiption,'; that said medicine Is mady Ivbrn native medicinal roots and containVno ha.rmfyl ingredients whateveiv ad that Mr. Uok's malicious statemcy were whol'y and absolutely false. Irrtheretrnct'on pH tori hvnu .rrjr t ney worq lorcedto Cknoxylcdg hat t ney n"! p)danJ"jiTuivse s TT f "Favorito PreSerietjon, fröirii7ieit ehcppst, lj'öj wiio'n crhMed triTt', it did not con ttrgj. cTTtiol ntaiiyof thi '.'l-qf-d hartnfnljTriijT "These fäctsweiTe alj niovcn in theTnal uT tho action In tho Supreme Court. lJut tho business of Dr. Pierce was jrrcatly Injured hy the publication of the libelous article with its great display head i ups. while hundreds of thousands who read the. wickedly defamatory article never saw tho humble erovelin retraction, set In small type and made as inconspicuous as possible. The matter was. however brought beforo a jury in the Supremo Court of New York State which promptly rendered a verdict In the Doctor's favor. Thus his traducers came to grief find their base slanders were refuted. His Ilenson. "'Why do you drop the 'h out of youi name?" asked one of his acquaintances. "Not because Fin a cockney." answree Pen Jonson with spirit, "but for purp)ses of identification. If you look in the direc tory you will find there is altogether to much Johnson in this town." Subsequently, by way of further distinction, they carved "Hare Ben Jonsoa on his tombstone. CASE OF ECZEMA IN SOUTH. S n fir ml Th rT Yearn llnnd anil Kye 3fost Aftreted ovr I1 and Is Gratefol to Cntirura. "My wife was taken badly wttn eczema for three years, and she employed a doctor with no effect at all until she employed Cutieura Soap and Ointment. One of her hands and her left eye were badly affected, and when she would stop usin Cuticura Soap and Ointment the eczema came back, but very slightly; but it did her a sight of good. Then we complied with the instructions in using the entire set of Cuticura Remedies and my wife Is entirely recovered. She thanks Cuticura very much and will recommend it highly in our locality and in every rook and corner of our parish. God bless you for the sake of suffering numpnity. I. M. Robert. Ilydropolls, La., Jan. 5 and Sept. 1, 1900." Sninrlcnlly Competent. "I want ter git ine cou.-ln Mike Flannery on the poliss force," said the ward heeler. "What? exclaimed the machine boss. "Why. he's almost blind and he's lame, besides. "Well, he kin draw his pay all right Philadelphia Press. Clover A Grass Seeds. Everybody loves Jots and lots of Clover Grasses for hogs, cows, heep and swine. We are knon as the largest growers of Grasses, Clovers, Oats, Parley, Corn. Potatoes and Farm Seeds io America. Operate over 5,000 acres. FREE Our mammoth 14S-page catalog is mailed fre to all intending buyers; or send 8 CENTS IN STAMPS and receive sample of "perfect balance ration grass seed," together with Fodder Plants, Clover, etc., etc., and big Plant and Seed Catalog' free. John A. Selzer Seed Co, Box C, Crosse, Wis. "Hob Ieter to Ijr ranl." The crminron expression . "Pobblnj IVter to pay Paul." found its origin it Ixndon lit JÖÖ0 when an uppropriatior was made from Saint Peter's Cathedra' (now Westminster Abley) to make nj a deficiency in the accounts of Sain! Paul's, the other famous I'nglish ca theilral. The nction roused a pcood clea of adverse criticism on the pnrt of tlx people, who coined tho phrase for th occasion. SAVE US FROM OUR FRIENDS. Mary, I have sold the farm for $50,000, and we will now move to the city and enjoy the balance of our life in comfort. Tive Years Later. It Is all over. Mary, I must pay John IJrown's lKnd, which will take every dollar I own and you and I will have to go to the poor house. MORAL. Do not sign a friend's bond, and when you require n bond, buy it Write for particulars or see our agent at the County Seat. WE ISSUE SURETY BONDS. The Title Guaranty & Surety Company, Home Office, Scranton, Pa., Capital and Surplus over $1,000,000. Perennial. Ruggles Is Lolliper as full cf good stories as he used to be? Kainagf You wouldn't think he'd bo. He has unloaded them on all his frieudj at least a dozen times. Put be is, 1 J unfiles ; he ia. At Monte Carlo. Again a player breaks the bank, Jlut this is not surprising; It simply shows the banker knows lie needs the advertising. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Involution. "As yoa go through life, Clarence," ßaid his elderly relative, "you will learn that one of the L.Trdest things in the world is to say : I was mistaken.' " "Hard to say. grandfather?" p.nswered the gTammar sehol boy. "It ousht to lr impossible to say. It isn't good L'nglish."
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" .-' j A small amount of sulphur fed to the ttoultry during the winter will keep the blood In condition. Keeping the skin of the work horses clean enables them to sweat freely, and this is essential for their health. Jte mare that is suckling a colt is dolrig a double duty and should not be required to terform as much hard labor as the other horses. Give the pigs a fair start in life by feeding the sow upon milk-producing rations. There Is nothing much better than skim milk mixed with shorts. liulldogs and six shooters arc in about a par when it comes to fi dir a place for them in the home. IJoth are nastly, ugly propositions and as a general thing prove to be "loaded." A preat deal of hay is sent to market that is full of weeds. Such bay brings the lowest price, and also Indicates that the fanners who ship it are not only careless, but also Ignorant of the true methods of farming. The wood lot, whether of artificial er natural planting, is best handled by a careful and judicious thinning, whicb thus gives the remaining trees aiope room for growth as well as ail Increased supply of light and moisture. Wne it not for the operation of a law o' natural selection and an elimination of the fruit of weaker vitality, apple trees would be broken to the grouml could they furnish nourishment sufficient to bring all the fruit that sets to maturity. Where th garden is plowed w ft hont being manured and not rich enough to produce a z wd crop of vegetables neit season It i? best to cover the plowed ground witli a coat of manure in the fall and work It in with disk and cultivator in the spring. Iu the building of the silo it Is well to to St thnt the structure is well braced with a view to wind resistance, as one located nef.r the home of the writer was blown down lately during the progress of it heavy thander and wind storm. Ts) much wood Is usually left to graiiTlnes. The old vines nee l to be pull Ml from the trellis and all of the old vines trimmed away except thiee or four shoots eighteen Inches to two feet long, owing to the age and strength of the shoot. Ctrw3 should bo io fed that their milk flow will not vary much during the year. This is a possibility which some dairymen accomplish. Cows often decrease steadily In their milk flow. This should not be. Too much dry feed and not enough succulent ration is given. Satisfies say that In the State of IndKma the iercentage cf loss annually fron disease In swine herds Is twice as great as In other classes of farm animal. The records further show that thesp losses reach an average figure of $2..iY!,000, while the total In one single year was estimated to have been nearly $,000.000. Discussing the German method of planting iwtatoes. with ample distance and with eyes under, so that the stejis may grow w idely apart, a foreign grower asserts that it not only saves the seeds, but produces more and , Itetfer crojy;. Often a dozen tubers are iwd where only one would be enough, but It is difficult to make some new pzrdeners helleve It, TV sow that will fetch a Utter of evcYiteen pljrs is usually found on farw which have a dairy, a s'lo, clover meadows and raise- eighty bushel of com to the acre, being the product of a somewhat prosperous and leisurely tyj of agriculture which docs not make it iKccssnry for the sow to raise a litter of pigs in-fore she Is a year old. A Western orehardist says: It Is not ü wise policy to buy trees for planting that have been grown on river or fmk bottom land. The prent depth and richness of poll there always produce coarse growth of wood and long taproots, which must be cut off In replanting. The tree never fully recovers from the effects of this. This is especially true of trees intended for planting on high land. Where It Is jto.ssible to do so there Is uo w ay of keeping the growth of grass down along the tree rows in the orchard that excels a heavy mulching with coarse manure or straight oat straw. This mulch will not only serre to check and practically prevent the growth of the grass, tut will keep the ground in a moist condition favorahle P the prowth of the tree?. While mice and rabbits miclit lind a harbor In the straw during the winter months, damage from them can be guarded against by wrapping the trees with wire screen or wooden shields. Irrlsratliiar Sweet Vorn. One farmer ly Winchester, Mass., who grows ten acres of sweet corn, plants his corn five feet apart. He Irrigates the corn with water puniped by one of those pumps which deliver 120,000 galllons a day. He says It cost him not over $. a day to supply the water to the corn. Ills corn rows are about 000 to 700 feet long, and the water will run from one end of the ple.e to the other without going out of sight. As soon as his corn Is picked, about the 23th or the 2oth of July, he sells the whol thing to milkmen in the neighborhood, plows the ground and plants It to celery five feet apart, and he Irrigates for the celf ry In the same way. Hoto to Feed a I'alry Cove. A practical dairyman writes the Jersey Pulletin on feeding his cows. He says: "Our herd numbers in all fifteen head. Our cows are grained the year 'round, have the run of pasture In summer, and are well housed in winter. Our Stimmer ration for a dairy cow is
barley chop, about four pounds per diem. In winter we use shredded fodder i'or roughage: grain ration, eight pounds per day per row of a mixture of cornrr.oal, barley meat mixed in the n-ouired proportions to produce a food which would analyze one part of protein to six of carbohydrates. Our cows fire not allowed to stand alongside a straw stack for shelter when the thermometer shows something less than zero, but are kept in the stable, and even watered there." IIow to Trent (inrjlcn JolI. There is no other piece of ground that has to grow such a variety of crops as the garden patch. It Is hard to find a small plot that will lo ideal for all plants. There are plants lik"? the tomato, melon and bean that would likewise- te benefited by such a soil There are others, such as late cabbage, parsups. beets and other slow-growing plants, that would be better on a hea' soil With a north slope. As a light soli Is more apt to drj our in midsummer, It is advisable ro have water handy, to turn on If necessary or to give eonstant cultivation to form a dust mulch In case the la;:d is to be occupied in midsummer. Py planting to have the extra early truck on the s.".ndy south slope it will le go.ie in time to put melons, early sweet crrn and similar crops on the same ground. The garden soil should le r:th. Fine, well-rotted manure wljl give ridtness and ru.uus. . If the sand pit is bandv the farmer can haul a few lottos when not busy and scatter that over a portion of the garden if it needs warming up. F.y all means keep the soli in fine filth, so the wheel hoe will work ersil.v. Poultry and sheep manure are jrnod for th" pardon. Coai-so manure or w.ed stalks half plowed under ar an abomination and cause much los of time and crops. Grntvtiiff Apple on Ronctt Lan. TV owner of a hillside in Pennsylvania who found his land too rough to cultivate at a profit writes that he has found a way out by planting fruit tres. He ttinks the loose stone? are no injury tn tlv trees, but on the contrary rather a berefit, as they serve as a mulch to help obtain moisture. He plants Ms apple trees thlrty-slx feet apart, thirtythree trees to the acre, the distance being giVnt enough because the trw? do net grow quit so fast as in tilla.? land. His pear trees he plants fortyeight io the acre, thirty feet apart, and his poaches nineteen feet apart, 134 to the arre. lie reckons on 200 bushels an acre from his apples or pears, ajd 300 baskets of peaches. The land Is not cultivated at all, but the trees were mulehM and fertilized when young vd protected from borers and mice. The soil Is fairly good, but Is supplied with plant iood enough to keep the trees in vigorous growth. In this way the hillsides are profitably used, and the h5t part o? the farm given to general on jjs and dajry farming. The trees are headed low, since cultivation is not required, and tie fruit -is easy to pick, while spraylu; can be done with slight inivnvenienve. Dfnonncf Ooaa-ItreedlnK. At t. recent Mve stock meeting In Topeka, hi the cross-breeding of Uie Shorthorn cows with a Hereford bull. Col. J. W. Rob! son denounced it a a a step backward. He said: "Takp the best Shorthorn bull In America end the best cow of any ot'.cr breed tjnd cross them and you have in their j reduce destroyed the quality and value of both breeds. You h.'v Introduced the system of scrub breeding, aikl you cannot correct or undo in a lifetime v hat you wen. able to .toeompliih In ore Illy-advised cross. "A t-3 the color In certain hrcwls, Shorthorn cattle, Percheron hört, etc., I disprove the color idea entirely as having anything to do in Indicating quality in ;be aulmal. In horses be demand is 'or black color west of ihe Missouri river and graj' back east in Illinois Ohio and Pennsylvania. O.u? is as .rod as the other color, only r. matter of fancy. We must raise purebred s:ock on our high-priced laud. The cvub animal will not pay, aad the cros breed Is nothing hut a pciqh when viewed from a breeding ptawlpoint. "In Shorthorn cattle tho color v.ill not materially affoct the quality of the animal, because all colors red, white, roan, rt-d and white or spotted prevs.il. and the matter of eolor in this br.ed of cattle is a fad or fancy. Any n of these eolorr, or all of them, rry come from the same parents." Jnrifflne I,lve Stock. In the fat stock shows, and also In the large stock yards, experts umn quickly select the best animals for the butcher, and, according- to the ahiJty of the judge, be should be assisted to select an animal by the sense of fading, and, in Judging enttle, the touih, as well as the eye, is, therefore, broujjt Int.") requisition. Except in regard fu certain points of conformation and color, some experts are by no meatus ivrt that "touch" is not the most important qualification. The skin and the fifs'a can only te fully examined by toucL or handling in ascertaining If the bojact are well covered with flesh, and tK3 if the latter is soft to tho touch Aad ample in quantity on the examined Ioints. The squeeze of the palm of tho hand Is not so delicate as the toucl of the tips of the fingers; the former ascertains the quantity, the latter juries the quality. The touch may be liard or mellow, thin or harsh, good or had a9 it Is frequently termed. A slow f etil or is said to be marked by having a ttdekset. hard, s'.tort hair, which constitute a bad touch; a thin, meager, paiery skin, covered with thin, silky Lair, though opposite of the one Just 'Mentioned, does not constitute a good tojcli, but is indicative of weakness of co:i stltution, 'Lough probably of jjnod breeding qualities. ood touch will be found in a thick, loose skin, cat o layer of soft fat, yielding to the l?ast pressure, tprlng back toward th fingers like a riece of soft, thick chaniol leather, and covered with thick, t;oft, glossy hair, which looks rich and beautiful and seems warm ami comfortable to the animal. A curly pile of soft hall indicates a vigorous constitution and also a propensity to fatten. The sensation of a fine touch Is very gratifying to the handler; the animal Is lifted, and more especially If it is accompanied by a symmetrical form. Long practice Is required to appreciate a fine touch.
flreat Cropm r"lne Cllmnte. The Texas Culf Coast Country Is now offering the greatest inducement to fanners and other settlors who are pouring inlo lh:it section from all parts cf thv norta and west. A genial cli1'iale, two crops a year on land costing only $2." an acre. Th Pock IslandFrisco lines are sending an SO-pa go book descriptive of this great country and making very low round trip excursion rates to all who write to John Se-
hastian. Paseivefr Traffic Manager, Room r.o La Sallö station, Chicago. An They Impressed Her. Little Kitty, who had hapiened to be the only one at home when the strangers called, was trying to describe them. "One of 'em was a good deal younger than the other," sh. said, "and he's the one that did the talking. He wanted to know when you'd be back." "How did he look?" asked her father. "Did he have any beard?" "No; he was barefaced." "How about the older man? Was he barefaced, too?" "Kind o" said Kitty, remembering bis shaggy brown beard; "only he was grizzly bear faced." DOZS YOUR BACK ACHEf Cnre the Kidneys and the Pain Will ever ICeturn. Only one sure way to cure an aching Lack. Cure the cause, the kidneys. Thousands tell of cures made by Doan's Kidney Pills." John C. Coleman, a prominent merchant of Swainsboro, Ga., says: "For several years my kidneys were affected, and my back ached day and night. I was languid, nervous and lame in the morning. Doan's Kidney Pills helped me riht away, and the j,rcat relief that followed has been Vermanont." Sold by all dealers. r0 cents a box. Foster-Mi Iburn Co., P.uffalo, N. Y. And lie Lout a Sale. The aristocratic young lady was lookii' at some dress patterns. "Here is a piece of goods," said the man lK hlnd the counter, "that I can especially recommend for service." "Sir," rejoined the fair party of fhe stepping part, i.:i!ightily, Ml am not g !ng out to service." Worth Knowing Ahont. If toii need a first-elas laxative, there Is nothing better nor safer than that old family remedy, I'ramlreth's Pills. Fach pill eontiiins one prain of solid extract of arsaparilla, which, with other valuable regetable products, make it a blood purifier of excellent character. If yon are troubled with constipation, one pill at night will nfforil great relief. Prandreth's Pills arc the same fine laxative tonic pill your grandparents used. They have been in use for over a century and rre sold in every drug and medieino store, either plain or sugar-coated. Political Chat. "I expect the successful candidates -111 be fearfully tired after the election is over." "Yes, but they can stand It. Thcj won't be half so tired as the unsuccessful candidates will be." Detroit Free Press. A MID-WINTER VERDICT. "BrlKbt Sunahlnc All Winter' Ia IVhnt Western Canada Lady Maidstone, Sask., Canada, Feb. 4, 1007. C J. Broughton, Esq., Canadian Government Agent, Chicago, 111.: Dear Sir Being so well pleased with Canada we wish my father and brother to come here. Will you please send them reading matter on Canada? We have been here nearly a year and are delighted with this country. We have lived in Illinois, Iowa, and Michigan and we find Canada away ahead of any of them. We have had bright sunshine all winter so far. only two nice easy snow storms. If it was not all right you know I would not want ray father and brother to come here, but we think It Is grand. Yours truly, (Signed) MRS. F.D. TR0LTB. Trnnnelence. How fast our chances fade away! How swift our hopes are banished! Pre you've hitched up your horse and tdeigh. The Know, ala. has vanished. Washington Star.
The General Condemnation of SoCalled Patent or Secret Medicines of an injurious character, which indulge in extravagant and r unfounded pretensions to cure all manner of ills, and the National Legislation Enacted to Restrict Their Sale have established more clearly than could have been, accomplished in any other way The Value and Importance o! Ethical Remedies. Remedies which physicians sanction for family use, as they act most beneficially and are gentle yet prompt in effect, and called ethical, because they are of Known Excellence and Quality and oi Known Component Parts. To gain the full confidence of the Well-informed of the world and the approval of the most eminent physicians, it is essential that the component parts be known to and approved by them, and, therefore, the California Fig Syrup Company has published for many years past in its advertisements and upon every package a full statement thereof. The perfect purity and uniformity of product which they demand in a laxative remedy of an ethical character are assured by the California Fig Syrup Company's original method of manufacture, known to the Company only. There are other ethical remedies approved by physicians, but the product of the California Fig Syrup Company possesses the advantage over all other family laxatives that it cleanses, sweetens and relieves the internal organs on which it acts, without disturbing the natural functions or any debilitating after effects and without having to increase the quantity from time to time. This valuable remedy has been long and favorably known under the name of Syrup of Figs, and has attained to world-wide acceptance as the most excellent of family laxatives, and as its pure laxative principles, obtained from Senna, are well known to physicians and the Well-Informed of the world, to be the best of natural laxatives, c have adopted the more elaborate name of Syrup of Figs and Elir.ir of Senna, as more . fully descriptive of the remedy, but doubtlessly it will always be called for by the shorter name of Syrup of Figs; and to get its bentficial effects, always note, when purchasing, the full name of the Company California Fig Syrup Co. plainly printed on the front of every package, whether you simply call for Syrup of Fig or by the full name, Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, as Syrup, of Figs and Elixir of Senna is the one laxative remedy manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Company, and the same heretofore known by the name, Syrup of Figs, which has given satisfaction to millions. The genuine is for sale by all leading druggists throughout the United States in original packages of one 'size only, the regular price of which is fifty cents per bottle. Every bottle is sold under the general guarantee of the Company, filed with ihe Secretary of Agriculture, r.t Washington, 1). C, the remedy is not adulterated or misbranded within the meaning of the Food and Drugs Act, June 30th, 1906.
Louisville, Ky.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Cater sjort 900 briptrtrr aad faster color th aay ottr ye. Oae 10c patkaoe rotors all fiber. Tttey tre I cold water better ttoa tty athtr tfy. Tot caa in SUttraMt wltUoat rtpaicu wart. WrtU Ur m toatttt-baw tt Dye, Beach aad Uix Colott. MOjiUQE WR VG CO, VianviYa. MLumri
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ALCOHOL 3 PEK CENT. J ANcgclablePrcponilionrQrASsinilatinj tftcrcctfairJRegu'a(inptc Stooclis aalßovdsof 5" Promotes Di$esticnhccrfur ness and RestontaLts neitiur Opnmi.Morphirte ncrMiacraL Not Narcotic. i&ipe cfouikswiirnzzni ri sol ! 2Kü :l;ü! fimyJuu Sfca' .'tScva jlnistSetd ifpennbitiMUiboiwtiuut H'rm SrrdCtcnDrd Suqnr VÜJfcyTert tTtmr. bail ;". .1 in r . Apcrfcct ncmcdy forCoRsnpalion . Sour Stoiaach.Dlarrhoca AVorrasjCorrvTilsioüSJCNTnsii ness aniLo ss or Sixer TacSLntib Sinarure of -vri o NEW YORK. Guärardced under ü Exact Copy of Wrapper An Inferenee. "I soe the Eskimo women are dying off in large numlers this year. "Alas! And has the craze for elbow sleeves struck the polar regions? PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMENT Is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching. Blind. Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. Nineteen pianos, every one e? tvnieh was a wedding present, are in the possession of the Prince and Princess of Wales. Garfield Tea, Nature's remedy for a torpid, inactive or disordered liver: for constipation, sick headache, indigestion. New York City now has twelve regular schools for nurses. Mrs. WlnsloWa Soothiko Stbcf for Children taetbine; softens the rums, reduce lud am niituoa. ei11 s t cur wind eolio. mi oente e bottle. A Positive (SnjARStf! i Ely ?'s Cream Balm is quickly absorb td. Civet Relief at Once. It cleanses, soothes heala and protects the diseased membrane. It cures Catarrh and drives away a cold In the Head quickly. He11 AY FEVER stores the ßenaesof Taste and SmelL Full 6ize CO cts., at Drue:, gists or by mail ; Trial Size 10 eta. by maiL Ely Brothers, 56 "Warren Street. New York. Farms That Grow No. 1 Hard Wheal (63 Pounds Io Ihe Bushel) Are situated in the Canadian West where Homesteads of tboacre ran be obtained irce br every setir willing and able to comply with the Homestead Regulations. During the present year a large portion of New Wheal Growing Territory has been made accessible to markets by the railway construction that has beea pushed forward so vigorously by the three great railway companies. For literature and particulars addrens the Superintendent cf Immigration. Ottawa, Canada, rr the authorized Canadian Government .-gent. W. D. Scott, Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, er W. II. Rogers, d Floor Traction-Terminal Building, Indianapolis, Ind., and H. M. Williams, Room 20, Law Building. Toledo, Ohio, Authorized Government Agents. l'lease say her joa saw this adTertuement.
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CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
San Francisco, Cal. U. S. A. London, England.
Hi
f For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought. Bears the Signature of in Use For Over Thirty Years 15) JU TH C CENTAUR COMPANY, MC TOUR CITY. Grandfather's Cure for Constipation REAT medicine, the Sawbuck. Two hours a day sawing wood will keep anyone's Bowels regular. No need of pills, Cathartics, Caster Oil, nor "Physic," if you'll only work the Sawbuck regularly. Exercise Is Nature's Cure for Constipation and. a Ten-Mils walk will do. If ycu haven't got c. wood-pile. But, if you will take, your Exercise In an Easy Chair, there's only one way to do that, because, there's only one kind cf Artificial Exercise for the Bowels and Its name is "CASCARETS." Cascarets are the only means to ciercise the Eowel Muscles without work. , They" don't Purge, Gripe, nor "upcet your Stcmach," because they don't act like 'Physics., They don't flush cU your Bowels and Intestines with a costly waste cf Digestive Juice, as Salts, Castor Oil, Calcrtl. Jalap, cr Aperient Waters always do. No Cascarets strengthen and stimulate the Bowel Muscles, that line the Food passages and that tighten up when food touches them, thus driving the food to its finish. A Cascaret acta ou your Bowel Muscles as If you had just sawed a cord of wood, cr walked ten miles. Cascarets move the Food Naturally, digesting it without waste of tomorrow's Gastric Juice. ... The thin, fUt, Ten-Cent Box Is made ta fit your V.st pocket, or "My Lady's" Purse. Druggists 10 Cents a Box. Carry tt constantly with you and take a Cascaret whenever you suspect you need ons. Be very careful to get the genuine made only by the Sterling Remedy Company, and r.ever sold in bulk. Every tablet stamped "CCC." 73 F. W. N. U. - - - No. 111907 'A "hen wrlt'nj t Advertisers pleasa say you mw tbe Advertisement la tbls prer. Do you want a Self talcing Dating Stamp for 75 cents? Address. Lock Bx 2 IP. Port Wayna. lodUaa. New York, N. Y.
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