Plymouth Tribune, Volume 6, Number 44, Plymouth, Marshall County, 8 August 1907 — Page 7
MRS. A.
M. HAGERMANN
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
made from simple native roots and herbs. For more than thirty years it has been helping women to be strong, regulating the functions perfectly and overcoming pain. It has also proved itself invaluable in preparing for child-birth and the Change of Life. Mrs. A. M. ITagermann, of Bay Shore, L. I., vmtes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham: "I suffered from a displacement, excessive and painful functions so that I had to lie down or sit still most of the time. Lydia E. Pinkham'o Vegetable Compound has :nade me a well woman so that I am able to attend to my duties. I wish every suffering woman would try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and see what relief it will give them.'" Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women Women suffering from any form of female illness are invited to write Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass. for advice She is the Mrs. Pinkham who has been advising sick women free of charge for more than twenty years, and before that she assisted her mother-in-law Lydia E. Pinkham in advising. Therefore she is especially well qualified to guide
Bictt. women u;icK w x.eaiin.
W. L. DOUGLAS $3.00 & $3.50 SHOES T" woSld ?SHOES FOR EVERY MEMBER OF-rr THE FAMILY. AT ALL PRICES. rtOff f n f I To any om who can pro re W. L. iGafß 90Jf Douotaa dorn not makm 4 me.ll Dfr0Wt9 I rnoro Man' a $3 S3. SO ahooa aJM than any other manufacturer THE REASON W. L. Douglas shoes are vorn by more people In all -walks of life than aiiy other make, is because of their excellent style, easy-fltiine. and superior wearing qualities. The selectiou of the leather and other materials for each part of the shoe, and every detail of the making is looked after by the most eompleteorganizationof superintendents, foremenand skilled shoemakers, who reeeire the highest vanes paid in tho hoe industry, and whose workmanship cannot be excellent. If I could take you into my large factories at Brockton. Mass., and shov you how carefully W.L. Iiouglas shoes are made, you vould then understand why they hold their shape, lit betttr, wear lonsrer and are of greater value than any other make.
My $4 Gilt Edae and SS Cold Bond Shoea cannot bo c availed at anv nrlce
W. iNMiglas Utmpit his name and price on the bottom to protect you against high priced and inf.rior shoes. Take No Substitute. Sold by the best shoe dealers everywhere. fast Cobr viiU td exclusively. Catalog maxkd Jrte. W.L DOUGLAS, Uruckloa, Mass
mm "Havlne tkn yonr wonderful "Cutarot' for tbre mootbs and Verne entirely rnrl of torn.ct eaterrh od dyapepsia. I töink a word of praise Is due to"Cueart.''for their vonderfnl composition. I have taten mmrooi other so-called remedies bat without avail tad I find that C.scarot. relieve more in a day tb.n all the others I have takea wonid in a year " . James McGune. 108 Marcer St., Jersey City, N. J. Best for The Bowels rTeaaan. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good, Do flood. Ferer eken, Weaken or liripv, lttc. 23. 50c. Never oldie bnlk. The gennin. tablet atamyeU, QCC Goaraateed to care or yoar money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 59a AI3HUAL SALE, TEH MILLION BOXES 1 Mica Axle r-, urease v?-'! WW m-m -w t ueios me vaaoa xm the Hill C The load, seems lighter Wagon ard team wear longer You make more money, and have more time to make money, wherj wheels are greased with 1 ii The longest wearing and most satisfactory lubricant in the world. STANDARD OIL CO. Iaatrerat4 PositiTelf cured by these little Pills. Ttiej also reliere Distress fron Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A. perfect remedy lor DlTzinesa. Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste In tno Month. Coated Tongue. Pain In the side, TORPID LIVER. They reyulaxa tbo Dowels. Purely VegetaUe. SHALL RLL SMALL DOSE. SHALL FHICE. i CARTERS Gsnuins Must Bear Fas-Simils Signature I flVER PILLS. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. send her absolutely free large tri' box of Paxtlne with book of inftrr tions and irenuine tMtimon!als. Se jour name and address on a postal cuu. J I m e m - brane affeetlona, such as naal catarrh, pelvic catarrh and inuammation caused dt lerntnine ills ; oro eye, sora throat and mouth, by direct local treatment. Its curative power oyer these troubles Is extraordinary and gives Immediate relief. Thousands of women are using- and reo OinmendiiK? IS every day. Co cents at druggists or by mail. Remember, however, IT COSTS YOUNOTHUSO TOTItYIT. TXIiC 14. PAXTON CO., Boston Maaa. A Skin of Beauty Is a Jsy Forever. jR. T. Felix Gouraud' Orlantel Cr am or Magical Beautifler. Kenovec Tan, PlmplM, rrecxlca, ilotä rV.ti.e, Buh. aaJ bkln Ditas, aac every (Mcnaa on beauty, a ad tintea UictiQ. It bu itocd tho 1m: of 09 years, cd Is ao fcarmlca taste It .oburit Is proprrty made. Accept oo counterlelt of aimliar luune. Xr. L,. A. r-ajre, ald to a la-ly cf th hue.t'n (a patient): "As ytra laJin vrkl 05 th'.ti. I recoramend 'Rreraad'a Crexm aa tha 1tt barmfal ot all tla akla preparOona.-' fr aal by all iraggirta and Fane y uooda DeaJera la ua Laitca miin, tuia .arop ; RSILHSF CH3, Prrjfc. 37 6rat VrA, Ea Tori ThC Daisy SaS I room. M(ing rooia and all 1cm hr I". i ar reub icauina. (laan, ntal, and will nut mil or inj rainythinäT. Trrthtraon T nd you williierb witnoatttxai. If not k.pt by rtcklert, cent prpaiiit 2Qe. Har44 Sonar. 149 DfiUla Ava., ravkiju. a. 1
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CARTER'S rilTTLE 1 flVER PILUS. JL-n
r?rr f J fZJ To convince ny I I 1 M ) I I I I woman that rai. I I yJ I 3 -j tine Antiseptic will I I p I Hi r- f hnproTe her health H II Hill i and do all we claim
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SEND 25 CENTS Wayne, Indian. aa4 receive by maU FIVE POSTAL CARDS of Beautiful Design"""wTiiornpson'sEyflVatei
ALL IV GM SUFFER
en
from the same physical disturbances, and the nature of their duties, in many eases, quickly drift them into the horrors of all 'kinds of female complaints, organic troubles, ulceration, falling and displacements, or perhaps irreg-ular-'ty or suppression causing backache, nervousnc&s, irritability, and sleeplessness. Women everyAvhere should remember that the medicine that holds the record for the largest number of actual cures of female ills is fl A Powerful Indorsement. Many years ago there was considerable illness in Harrisburg, which was attributed to the waters of the Susquehanna river, then the source of the city supply. One of the members of the legislature for that year, upon his return to his constituents, was interviewed concerning the plague. He soon settled the question. "Upon my soul, gentlemen," he declared, "the report of the foulness of the water was a dander on the city of Harrisburg. I absolutely know the water to be perfectly healthful, for during the session I drank the water on two different occasions, and I never experienced any 111 effect whatever." rittsburg Tress. YELLOW CLOTHES ARE UNSIGHTLY. Keep.tbein white with lied Cross Ball Woe. All grocers sell large 2 oz. package, 5 cents. Her Given Aire. Bacon The average age of persons arrested In New York City Is 224 years and one out of five Is a woman. Egbert I suppose the age liable to be given by the woman brings the average away down. Yonkers Statesman. Mrs. Win slow. CooTHrSü sitcr Tor Childre tmhina aofvana the trams, red ace inflammation. .V laja pala. corea Lad colic 2 oeuia . bo cue. The Croked Son. William Knoepfel, of St. Louis, has invented and hopes to patent a secret plowing method for the cure of baldness. "A genuine cure for baldness," said Mr. Knoepfel the other day, "should make a man very rich. Why, men grow rich on fake cures. It is amazing, It really is, what fakes some of these cures are. Yet there's money in them." Mr. Knoepfel gave a loud, scornful laugh. "In their profitable crookedness they remind me," be said, "of the third son of the old eccentric. Terhaps you have heard the story? Well, an old eccentric died, and left his fortune equally to his three sons. But the will contained a strange proviso. Kach hilr was to place $100 in tho coffin immediately before tho interment. "A few days after the Interment the three young men met and discussed he queer proviso and Its execution. Well," said the oldest son, my conscience Is clear. I put my hundred in the coffin In clean n?w notes. 'My conscience is clear, too,' said the second son. 'I put in my hundred In gold.' !, too, have nothing to reproach myself with, said the third od. I had no cash at the time, though; so I wrote out a check for $300 in poor dear father's name, placed it in the coffin and took in cbtnge the $200 in currency that I found there." Juit Like 111m. "The latest from old Skaddsman, youi kinsman, is that he has employed a law"To draw it up? Wei!. I'm not surprised. I never expected him to relax it the slightest degree in my favor." SOAKED IN COlrTEE Until Too Stiff to Ilend Oyer. "When I drank coffee I often had sick headaches, nervousness and bil iousness much of the time, but when I went to visit a friend I got in the hab it of drinking Postum. "I gave up coffee entirely and the result has been that I have been en tirely relieved of all my stomach and nervous trouble. "My mother was Just the Fame way We all drink Postuin now and, with out coffee In the house for two years. we are all well. "A neighlwr of mine, a great coffee drinker, was troubled with pains in her side for years and was nn Invalid. She was not oie to do her work and could not evi.n mend clothes or do anything at all where she would have to Ut.J forward. If she tried to do a little hrrd work she would get such pains that $ae would hae to lie down for tie .est of the day. "At last I persuadMl her to stojt drinking coffee and try INtuni Food Coffee and she did so and ha used Postum ever since; tlie result lias Leon that she can now do her work, can sit for a whole day and mend and can sew on the machine, and she never feels the least bit of pain in her side; in fact, she has sot well, nnd it shows coffee was the cause of the whole trouble. "I cou'd also tell you about several other ne ghbors who have been cured fcy quitting coffee and using Postum in Its place" "There's a Reason." Looi In park: a for the famous little book, "The Road to Well vile."
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The farmer's road to success is pav ed with good resolutions. A well-filled woodshed and a conven ient water supply go a long ways toward promoting domestic tranquility. In some joultry houses it is a light between the man and the house to see which gets the most good out of th? business. Lie down and stretch out a few min utes every day. Shut your eyes ana let the world so. It will do you more good than anything else. The most recent idea in branding tock Is to burn the telephone number in the skin. The owners of stray cows may then lx easily located. At the sale of G. W. Fink, of Maryville, Mo., thirty-five head of AberdeenAngus cattle brought $4.200, an average of $12:1 for each individual. Sip the cold water you drink these days. A lot of cold water gulied down will be apt to bring on colic. You haven't the time nor strength to waste in that way. This is the time of the year when it takes the tuck out T ti e boys to work much before breakfast. Don't cxiect to do a half day's work on an espty stomach. You wouldn't think of treat ing the horse that way. If the corn cultivator undergoes as much improvement in me next ie years as it has in the past, it will . A f . A. . almost be a white shirt job to plow corn. Tlie tlusties.s leaiure nnouiu ue next given attention by makers. "Farming and politics" is a combina tion to which 170 graduates In a large eastern college have announced as their future life work. Running for office and farming are commonly associated, but not iopularly after such a prepara tion. The reason why wool merchants always request the tying of fleece with cotton or hemp cords Instead of binder twine is because tlie twine fibres get mixed in with che fleece and In dyeing refuse to take the color. This makes extra work la picking out the objectionable fiber. Italian farmers are suffering from scarcity of labor more thau the American farmers. During the past two years 2."Ü0.0(:0 laborers from the prov inces of that country have emigrated to the United States, but most of these stop in the big cities and do not work at farming. The old way of growing garden truck. In little square or oblong beds, is out of date. Long rows are far the best. Then the horse and cultivator can do a lot of the work we used to do by hand. Life is too short and too busy to admit of much hand work anywhere in these days. Hundreds of years ago, Tull said, "Tillage Is mai ure," and while he was mistaken as to this, he was thinking along correct lines. The fact Is, the more finely divided the particles of the soil are, the greater the moisture content of that soil and the more soluble the plant food. For all one can tell nowadays his cultivators and curry -combs may le made of old wagon tires and bootjacks picked up anywhere between Maine and California. The old iron gathering industry has become an extensive one and In large cities may be found acres of scrap piles awaiting remelting. The value of the farm telephone was strikingly shown recently In the case of Mrs. George Stech, of Centerville, Iowa. A tramp broke into her home when she was alone with her baby, but lefore he smashed in her front door she ran to tho telephone to give the alarm. The tramp attacked her before she could do so, but the receiver being off the hook, her screams were heard by many of her neighliors along the line and assistance soon came. Drenching Cattle. If a cow's head Is raised as high as possible and her mouth kept open by the drenching bottle or horn, some of the liquid is very apt to pass down the wlndpiiK Into the lungs, sometimes causing instant death by smothering and at other times causing death to follow In a few lays from congestion or inflammation of the lungs. Give all cattle their medicine hyiodonnlcally or In feed. If they refuse the feed, give the medicine dry on the tongue. The proper method of giving a cow medicine Is to stand on the right hand side, placing the left arm around the nose, at the same time orten ing the mouth and with a spoon, place the medicine, which should le of a iowdered form, well back upon the tongue. Trenttne (Jrapevlne. Since the remarkablt exierlnients of M. Charles Truchot, instituted first in 1JK)1, the employment of potassium permanganate for the cryitogamous maladies of the vine, has attracted more and more attention among ;:dvanced cultivators. At the outset the experiments attempted in HauteGerönne, either with simple or cumlound solutions, were not attended with the wished-for sueves. On their renewal in V.C and ItMiC, he obtained on mildewed othelios such favorable results that his views on the virtues of this renudy have become a fixed religion. Tlie chemical product is known to hare antiseptic and antimlcrobic properties that are particularly energetic. The bolution M. Truchot now uses is composed of 12.' grams of potassium permanganate, .'1 kilograms of lime and 1 liters of water. The mixture is prepared in earthen or metallic receivers. It is applied with a sprayer, and rather slowly. The vines are not Inundated. When a coating Is required
a i a wtho quantity is doubled. The treatment Is also advantageous In preventing too hasty a growth. In proitortion as tho reaction occurs, the solution changes color, passing from violet to brown. After complete evaporation, brown tnu-e are found on tlie leaves and fruit. These are quite characteristic, and are seen a long time. Tests, according to the method of M. Truchot, have not yet been widely extended, and have been made chiefly for odium and mildew. Its efficacy may, therefore, not be considered as entirely demonstrated, for all the maladies cf the vine, but there are grounds for the supposition. American Tobacco. The American tobacco crop has within the past few years assumed greatly increased Importance. Quality as well as the quantity has improved. The farmers in some parts wf the South, where this crop has been taken up, are making money beyond their fondest dreams in the cultivation of tobacco, and it Is said that the unusual sight has been witnessed there of the agents of the large manufacttiring companies practically on their knees lagging 1 )T a few bales of tobacco. In southern Georgia the value of land suited for tobacco growing has increased in value tenfold, and towns which were insignificant a few years ago are now Important shipping centers. One place in Georgia, which it would be difficult to find on the map, enjoys the distinction of having shipped $1,000.000 worth of leaf in the course of one year. The Florida crop, it is stated, could have been sold twice over. The latest figures to be had show that the value of the tobacco in this country annually is valued at a little more than $2.",000,00t. Iloshouaeit. Pulletin No. 10U of the Illinois Experiment Station discusses the location, construction and operation of hoghouses. It gives numerous drawings and pictures to illustrate the same, and the bulletin Is summarized as follows: 1. A hogliouse should be located so that it is well drained, well lighted and gives access to pasture, good shade, pure running water and clean mud wallows. 2. The two principal kinds of hoghouses are the individual houses and the large houses with individual pens. Each has jvoints of advantage. 3. For sanitation tho building should be constructed so that It Is dry, ventilated, free from dust and drafts, and so that the direct rays of the sun fall upon the floor of the ikmis at the time the winter crop of pigs Is farrowed. These rays should also be excluded in summer. 4. The building should be made serviceable by being built so that It can be used every day in the year, and be arranged so that the largest amount of work may le performed with the smallest amount of lalor. 5. For large houses, gates and partitions of wire are best, because they do not obstruct the light and heat rays from the sun, do not hide the pigs from view of the attendant, nor from each other, and do not furnish lodgment for disease germs. d. The large house is operated so that two litters per year are farrowed and grown for market, and so that the pigs are put on the market at the most favorable season. This is a practical bulletin on a subject that should interest every farmer who raises hogs, as it contains many useful hints and suggestions about hoghouse construction. llnmna Hulda Water. Decayed and decaying vegetable matter in the soil greatly increases the power of the soil to hold water. This is a fact of such large consequence that our agricultural scientists are paying more and more attention to it. One of the professors at Cornell University undertook to prove the great value of humus as a holder of water. He took two samples of soil from places about twenty feet apart. Everything about the location suggested that the two samples should show the same watercontent. Iut In one of the locations three successive crops of crimson clover had been turned under. The sample of soil from the place where no clover had been turned under analyzed 8.75 per cent moisture; 1.91 per cent humus and .12 nitrogen. The sample from the soil where the crimson clover had been turned under analyzed 1.1 per cent moisture; 2.01 per cent humus, and .21 nitrogen. This was a gain of 0.25 in moisture content; 1.0.'l humus content and .01) nitrogen content. There are very few people that stop to consider what this means on an acre of land. Taking the soil to a depth of six inches it means that this d.25 ier -ent increased moisture would equal 'J.'J,7Ü0 iounds or 41 tons of water. This amount of additional water would mean a great ileal in a dry season. The turning under of an occasional crop of some green stuff means much, If it does nothing else than hold up the water content of the soil. It would take a great deal of sprinkling from a hose to put on 4J tons of water. Many of the soils that are now unproductive would, says Fanners' Review, Ik? productive If they had enough water to carry them over the dry siell of summer. Hut by lad fanning methods the humus has been exhausted and this has reduced the capacity f . the soil for carrying crops through the dry season. The crop start well in the spring and seem to be doing nicely till the summer dry spell begins, when they at once drooi: as if some insect were assailing them. The trnible really is that the moisture supply was so light that It was sjou exhausted and the sjil could not supply more. This loss of water holding capacity has really lu'cu at the lottom of numerous crop failures in different lo'-alities. The humus supply of the soil can be kept up by growing deep rooting crops and by fertilizing them so heavily that they will develop great masses of roots. The plowing under of crops grown for the pun ose, ot course adds much humus to the soil, but most farmers do not like to lo-i the use of the land for even a season. This may be avoided by growing sonic leguminous crop in tlie cornfield late In the season and turning under tlie soil late In the fall or early in the spring, notations of crops help to keep up the humus supriy, if there is a grass sod to turn under occasionally.
STAR BEHIND THE CURTAIN.
lenidfft Technical Knowledge Sh Munt l'osmcM Diplomacy and Tact. The star lady who now comes from he front of the house, feeling her way o the stage with the box-office gentlenan guilding her footsteps through the lark and the assistant stage manager 'dling to the electrician for "house ights for Miss X " this star lady las learned the necessity of watching hat unruly member, her tongue, and ilso of picking her friendships with Unering aim, says a writer in the Booknan. Repression, diplomacy, instinctive iidging of men and women are some of Jie unadmitted qualities that make a ;tar. It is not all bursting genius and :echnical knowledge of the stage. She must be a diplomat and a business woman. If the company is small, as a rule, all other members are presented to her. Many of them she may know, and she moves from one group to another, recalling old associations and laughing over old-time escapades. The head of a company is no snob. She may conduct herself before her people :luring the working hours with dignity and reserve, she may confer with the leading actors, showing them much deference, while with the smaller members she may have very little to dc, but In her friendships she gives herself great leeway, and the girl with whom she Is most Intimate out of the theater Is more often than not a subordinate in her company. ".Vheii the reading of the play begins she sits by the side of the author at the table, the company fills the half circle and a great quiet falls as the portfolio containing the manuscript Is opened. A playwright will find no more critical audience than this first one. Each actor listens for the appearance of his own part in the play and eagerly follows the development of the plot to see how deeply he Is concerned hi it OUR HASTE IN BUILDING. We Are Now Taking; 31 ore Thoneht of Stability nnd Permanence. To the European eye American towns and villages have the appearance of temporary structures. Even In New England, rich in stone, most buildings, except In the crowded parts of large cities, are of wood. Old and much traveled highways cross streams over wooden bridges, which last but a few years. During the first three months of this year the fire losses In the United States and Canada amounted to $GI,000,000, $10,000,000 more than for the corresponding three months of last year. Every year cities on the inland rivers sustain enormous losses from floods, losses greater in the aggregate than the cost of preventing by proper embankments and other means the disastrous effects of the floods. Everywhere Is evidence of n disposition on the part of Americans 'to hulltl for today raMier than for to-morrow. The reason for this Is that America has not wholly outgrown the spirit of pioneer days, when shelter had to be thrown together for the night People needed houses faster than they could )uild them. There was not time to ue brick and stone. Tin; habit of hasty, Impermanent building Is fastened uion us; wooden houses of the flimsiest kind rise and, decay like mushrooms. Permanence and stability come with age. The American is taking more time to think of the future, he is beginning to build more solidly. One sign of thbs is the attempt to Introduce Into many American cities architectural plans for streets and water fronts wheh shall give order and direction to growth for a thousand years. The American Imagination Is gaining in scope and steadiness. WITCHES AND PLANTS. Many Lesend and Traditions that Link Them Together. In all countries in which the witchcraft delusion now exists or in which it prevailed in former times we find rdklore stories connecting those mysterious bogles with the plants of those particular reglous. Even the great Shakspeare causes his witches to discourse learnedly on the diabolical properties of "hemlock digg'd l dark" and of "slips of yew silvered in the moon's eclipse." They are supposed to have had their favorite flowers as well as plants, and In England at the present time foxglove is spoken of as "witch bells" and harebells as "witches' thimbles." The common ragwort Is well known as the "witches' horse," the tradition being that they mounted rank growths of that" species of weed and "rode the skies," just as the dame with the pointed hat rides the broom in the familiar picture. In Germany and throughout northern Europe It Is the belief that witches float from place to place on beds of hay, composed largely of witches' blossoms and "devil spikes," this last being a species of dwarfed slough grass. St. John's wort, which is now so popular for shoulder and buttonhole bouquets on St. John's eve, was formerly worn for tho express purpose of averting the crafts and subtleties of the witches, bogles, ghosts and spirits which the European peasantry believed walked abroad on "that nlsht of witching mysteries." London Spectator. The Caoae of Slnmnicrlnff. "Stammering Is often more the result of habit than from any defect of the vocal organs," says Prof. B. L. Pavyer, an authority uihhi the subject. "It is generally. If not always, caused by a spasm of the larynx, resulting from nervous contraction of th: organs, thus refusicg to permit a proper flow of the air current producing tone. People rarely or never stammet when singing, for then the attention Is divided between words and music, the nervousness is momentarily forgotten and the passage of tho air current through the larynx Is continuous and unobstructed. Stammering very oftcu is the result of imitation, sometimes Intentional, sometimes unconscious, and the affliction Is much more general than might be supposed. In one comparatively small section of one city there are thirty-five stammerers, and every one of them is able to demonstrate to his own satisfaction not only that hf does not stammer very badly, but tha: some other person he knows stammen a great deal worse than himself. Kv cry stammerer Is Intensely sensitive about his infirmity, rarely forgives and never does forget any allusion to II which in his mind savors of ridicule." Unto the Ilo. "Don't you think," suggested the old friend of the family, "that you would do well to keep a watch on your son?" Imiossible!" replied young Galley's father, "It wouldn't Ik? long before he'd exchange it for a pawn ticket." Philadelphia Press. Opportunity rarely comes to the mac y ho spends all his time waiting for It
A. Most Valuable Agent. The glycerine employed in Dr. Pierce's medicines greatly enhances tho medicinal properties which it extracts from native medicinal roots and holds in solution much better than alcohol would. It also possesses medicinal projcrtk-s of its own, being a valuable demulcent, nutritive, antiseptic and antifcrmont. It adds greatly to the e fficacy of the IJlack Cherrybark, Illoodroot, (iolden Seal root, Stono root and Queen's root, contained in "Golden Medical Discovery "in subduing chronic, or lingering coughs, bronchial, throat and lung affections, for all of which these agents aro recommended by standard medical authorities. In all cases where there is a wasting away of flesh, loss of appetite, with weak
stomfh, as in the early stages of consumntu n, there can bo no doubt that glycerinc acts as a valuable nutritive and aids ie tlplden Seal root. Stone root, 's root and Ulack Cherrvbark in Que prom icestlon and building ur tho flesh at: rength. controlling tho cough iz about a healthy condition and brin of the whle system. VI course, it must not be e cted to work miracles. It will not cure nsumntion except In its earlier Stages. It will enr rv ceyere. obstinate. hnng-tTti clirome conclig. bronchial and laryngeal troubles, find chronic sore tTTTTTfrL w a h h en rscnes. In acute cougus it Is nou so eüeetive. Ids In the lingering hang-on coughs, or those of long standing, even when accompanied by bleeding from lungs, that it has performed its most marvelous cures. Prof. Finley Ellingwood, M. P., of Bennett Med. College, Chicago, says of glycerine: " In dyspepsia it serves an excellent purpose, rioldtng a fixed Quantity of the peroxide of hrdrojren in solution, it Is one of the best manufactured products of the. present time in Its action upon enfeebled, disordered stomachs, especially If there is ulceration or catarrhal paetritls (catarrhal Infi animation of stomach). It is a roost efficient preparation. Glycerine will relievo many cases of pyrosis (heartburn) ani excessive gastric (stomach) acidity." "Golden Medical Discovery" enriches ana purifies tho blood curing blotches, pimples, eruptions scrofulous swellings and old sores, or ulcers. . Send to Dr. R. V. Tierce, of Buffalo. N. Y.. for freo booklet telling all about the native medicinal roots composing this -wonderful medicine. There is no alcohol In it. Musical Xotc. The young man who was better posted on baseball than on opera was rather out of his element In the gathering of Intensely musical folk, yet he managed to keep himself and others cheerful. "I see that they played 'Parsifal In Bayreuth yesterday," commented the lonjr-haired person with the newspaper. "Did they? Who won';" queried the young man. "We've just been to a concert to hear a solemn mass," remarked the soulful young lady. "Who was he?" the benighted young fellow Inquired, with a great show of interest. Selected. TIBED BACKS. TT The kidneys have a great work to do in keeninsr the blood pure. When they get out of order it causes backache, headaches, dizziness, languor and distressing urinary troubles. Keep the kidneys well and all these sufferings will be saved you. Mrs. S. A. Moore, proprietor of a restaurant at Waterville. Mo., says: "Before using Doan's Kidney Pills I suffered everything from kidney troubles for a year and a half. I had pain In the back and head, and almost continuous in the loins and felt weary all the time. A few doses of Doan's Kidney Tills brought great relief, and I kept on taking them until In a short time I was cured. I think Doan's Kidney Pills are wonderful." For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Viirnlllnff Refuse. Cardinal Wolsey had fallen. "Ha!" ha exclaimed, with a grim smile. "My enemies think I'm a-11 in, do they? I'll show 'em!" Summoning his stenographer, he dictated a favorable reply to a flattering offer from the managers of a Chautauqua circuit. Domestic Tranquility Threatened. "Jack, aren't you going to see the pretty Miss Gurrley oftener than is necessary these days? "I suspect I am. She told me last night that her mother had begun to view me with alarm." The island of Capri possesses a unique cave of the blues, wherein the air is like a twilight of blue fire, and waves, and grotto walls, and boats, and people everything and every one look blue. Ask Tonr Dealer fr Allen's Foot-Kaoe A powder to shake Into your shoes. It rests the feet. Cures Cjrns, Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous. Achlnp. Sweating feec and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. Sold by all Druggists nnd Shoe Stores, 20c. Sample mailed FltKR Address Allen S. Oimted. Lö Koy, N. Y. Longevity. "My State," said the Virginian, "is the mother of PreciidentR." "Yes," said the Ohio man, "but the old ladj- has outlived her boys half a century or more." Knew lieft er. Nan O, that Etory looks too long. I don't want to read it. Pan Yes, you do. It's a story about a woman you don't like. t '!' " t"i I "' 1 ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. AUgelab'IVcpariionlbrASsbiüluthcFoodandRcöula ling Uie Siontacis aMIJowels of Promotes DigeslionJChf eruir' TlfCo nnrl Pcf rnnf-rlncnoifrw 4 1V. fcJw7 ULI IVA VL7t.VUA4lVAäl AKL4U.U4 OpiuTiuMcrpfonc rwrÄraL nui i.x Ait u u l it;. aaanMMaaaa) a a aaMaaaaaaMw Urptia Ava" jt-zstSied ok.Tfyi sup . tim Aperfeci Remedy for Ocnsfipa tion Sour StoiaacibDlarrtwca m w. 9 f 17vvtli. Worms .tonwsiuusa on isuness cndLoss of Sleep. lac Simile Sirure of im? NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper.
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rOUGHT IU A FOG.
A Duel In Which Neither Principal Could See the Other. The most laughable duel ever "fought" in France was that which took place in November, 1878, at riessisFiouet between Messrs. Gambe tta and De Fourton. Some heated words had passed between the two distinguished gentlemen in the chamber of deputies, for which, according to their ideas of honor, nothing could atone except a duel. The men met therefore on the fieia attended by their seconds and the surgeons. A look over the field was enough to convince any one present that there would be no occasion for the doctors' Ferviccs. A thick November fog hung over the scene so thick, indeed, that one could hardly see his hand before tils face. The arrangements for the duel required that it should be fought ct thirty-five paces. Nor was the fog the only circumstance that tended to place the combatants out of sight of each other. On the way to the field M. de Fourton is reported to have said: "M. Gambetta has but one eye, and I am shortsighted, so the game will be about even." It was, of course, rendered still more "even" by the fog. Neither man could see the other, and the sole danger was to the seconds and the doctors. Almost miraculously the two bullets that were exchanged missed the ierKons In attendance. Everybody's honor was satisfied and the whole party went home. Gambetta said that tha affair was as near to being a skirmish in the dark as anything he ever saw. Philadelphia Ledger. Gay Fnneral It I tea. The funerals of young unmarried ladies in Brazil are grewsomely gay, so to speak. The color of the coffin Is bright scarlet, and bright scarlet, too, are the hearse, the livery of the driver, the harness und the plumef that nod on the heads of the horses. But for a gay funeral we must go to the cremation of the dead in Slam. When the body is that of a prince the proceedings are most elaborate. Gold carriages galore abound, and the pyre is ultimately lighted by the king himself with candles which have been ignited at the sacred lamps in the temples of his palace, which burn night and day. The lighting of the funeral pyre Is followed up with sports and the lotus dance. The king promotes the mirth by tossing limes to the people, by whom they are eagerly fought j for, as inserted in each are current coins of the realm. Darkness having at length fallen over the land, fireworks and gay Illuminations conclude these curious funeral rites. The Smell of the Dawa. Of all hours of the day there is none like the early morning for downright good odors the morning before eating. Fresh from sleep and unclogged with food a man's senses cut like knives. The whole worlds comes In upon him. A still morning is best, for the mists and the moisture seem to retain the odors which they have distilled through the night. Upon a breezy morning one Is likely to get a single predominant odor, as of clover when the wind blows across a hayfield or of apple blossoms when the wind comes through the orchard, but upon a perfectly still morning It Is wonderful how the odors arrange themselves In upright strata, so that one walking passes through them as from room to room In a marvelous temple of fragrance. American Magazine. Presence of 311 nd. "Gregory," simpered Dora, toying with her spoon, "if yoa say anything more like that I shall have to refer you to papa." "Mr. Hope," called out Gregory to the elderly man at the other table, "can Miss Dora have Fönie more ice cream V Choice of Term. "Is Mr. Bliggins a good golf player?" "No," answered Miss Cheyenne, "I happened to be sufficiently near to hear his language when he made a bad stroke. He may be an expert player, but he is not a good one." Washington Star. 24th Annual Niagara Falls Excursion Auk. lUth Via Nickel Plate Koad. Special train leaves Valparaiso 12:43 p. m.. stopping at all stations to Cleveland inclusive. Free stop-over at Chautauqua Lake. Cheap side trips to Toronto, Thousand Islands, Montreal and Quebec. Write for interesting booklet. C. A. Melin, T. P. A., Fort Wayne, lnd. 17 Altrays Than. "Throjslus, have you named the baby yet?" "Yes, I've, named her Nancy Jane, but her mother prefers Veronica Angelina, and that's probably what the poor little thing will be christened." IF TOlf USE BALL III.I7C, Oct Hed Cross Ball Blue, the best Hall Blue. Large 2 oz. package only 5 cents.
Tho Kind You Ilavo Always Bought, and "which has been in uso for over 30 years, baa borne the signature of
and has
V2" ßonal supervision einco its infancy X S'CC4cA4wZ Allow no ono to deceive von in lhl.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-groodar but Experiments that trifle ivitli and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castoria Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, l?aregoric, Drops and Soothing: Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Fevcrishness. It cures Diarrhoea and "Wind Colic. It relieves Teething: Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates the Stomach nnd Bowels, giving: healthy and natural sleep, Tho Children's Panacea The Mothers Friend. GEKÜ1KE CASTORIA ALWAYS
S) Bears the
The Kind You Haye Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Yearo tmk eiarrua oommnv. tt muhkat vrairr. mvm rem err.
FEARFUL P URNING SORES.
Boy in HUtrr Twelve Year Ke In Roach Scale, Itching nud lm tim med Cured I17 Cntfcam. "Cuticura has put a stop to twelr years of misery I passed with my son. As an Infant I noticed on h!s tody a red spot and treated same with different remedies for about five years, lout when the spot began to get larger 1 pot him under the care of doctors. Under their treatment the disease spread to four different parts of his body. Duping the day It would get rough anS form like scales. At night It would be cracked. Inflamed and badly swollen with terrible burning and Itching. One doctor told me that my eon's eczema was incurable, and gave it up. 1 de cided to give Cuticura a trial. Wben 2 had used the first box of Cuticura Ointment there was a great Improvement, and by the time I had used the second set of Cuticura Uemedies my child vrus cured. He is now twelve years old, and his skin is as fine and smooth as silk. Michael Stelnman, 7 Sumner Avenue, Brooklyn, N. 5T April 16, 1903. H Warn "It." The valor of the Individual does not depend on the size. The scrap of fco manity mentioned in the newspapei was not to be judged by a scale ot Inches. The small boy was dressed In foofc ball costume, and with a jaunty all he walked Into the office of a country newspaper and handed to the editor dirty scrap of paper. On It was a briet account of a juvenile football mate which Lad taken place that aftemon Glancing at the report, the editorial eye caught the words: "Mannington kicked a magnificent goal the finest ever seen on tüa ground." "Who Is Mannington?" asked th editor. The human atom turned the tbmru of his right hand proudly to his breast "I am Mannington!" lie said, Cain ly. Privileged. Picky Tour dad always goes to tltrp in church. Gf-orgey My dad has a right to go t sleep in church, If he wants to. He give more to the preacner tnan any oiaer in the congregation. F Q St. Vita Dvot U irrmia aVt I 1 O lwmMtly re4 by I. )! !- latimr Send (or t'r S trial bottl tt4 rm St. Um U. KLLKK. 14- tut ank ktra. filliiilpli tf The "Word Etjqaette. The very high sounding word etiquette had a very humble origin, for etiquette meant simply a label. It received Its present signification frcca the fact that a Scotch gardener wbo laid out the grounds at Versailles for Louis XIV. was much annoyed at tb courtiers walking over his newly mad paths, and at length had labels placed to indicate where they might pasa. At first these labels were not attended tv but a hint from high quarters that la future the walks of the courtiers xnnct be within the "etiquettes" or Jabols was promptly attended to. To kee within the etiquettes became the correct thing. The meaning of thephrasa was afterward wldened. When Lord Curzon traveled as viceroy, of India he was usually accompanied hy 120 attendants. Get your Letter Paper and Envelopes print rd at this office, m Ve can give yoa the EAGLE LINEN PAPER and ENVELOPES tt ls ftma mmd milt slt ym. Try ft. F. W. K. U - - - Ko. 32-1007 When wrltliifr to Advertiser plmM r T aw th Advertisement In thla paper. RUBBER STAMPS. All kind of Rubber Stamps Mate U Orte. ftelf -inking Dateraaomethlng nw. taJc aar Inklag Pads. Send far Catatorua ta Lck 21. Port Wayne. U4. t x been made under Iiis perSignature of
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