Plymouth Tribune, Volume 7, Number 4, Plymouth, Marshall County, 31 October 1907 — Page 7
Girlhood to Lydia E. Pinkham's
ELLEN Th3 responsibility ior a daughter's future largely rests with the mother. The rig-ht influence and the information which is of vital interest to the daughter imparted nt the proper time has not only saved the life but insured the success of many a beautiful girl. "When a prirls thoughts become sluggish, with headache, dizziness or a disposition to sleep, pains in back or lower limbs, eyes dim, desire for solitude; when she is a mystery to herse'f and friends, her mother should come to her aid. and remember that Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs, will at this time prepare the system for the coming change, and start this trying period in a young girl's life without pain or irregularities. It has been thus depended upon for two generations. Hundreds of letters from young girls end their mothers, expressing gratitude for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for them, are constantly being received. Miss Ellen M. Olson, of 417 East St., Kewanee, 111. writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkhnm: 'I have had the- brst doctors in our town for my sickness and they all thought that an operation was necessary I had headache,
ul OLSON CLARA t.
No other remedy has such a record of actual cures of female ills. Thousands of vromen residing in every part of the United Stetes bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtuo of Lydia R Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and what it has done for them. Lydia E. PirMiam's Vecretafctc Compound; a Woman's Remedy for Woman's Ills.
New end Libera! Homestead Regulations IN Western Canada NEW DISTRICTS Now Open for Settlement Sens cf th choicest lards In the grain erowln? belts of Saskatchewan and Alberta have recently been oper.sd for settlement under tho Revised Homestead Reri!ati3ns cf Canada. Thousands of hornestsads cf , 1 60 acres each are now available. The new regulations make tt Feasible for entry to be made by proxy, the opportunity that many i the United States fcav been waiting for. Anyrnember cf afmtiymay rr.alce entry for any other member cf the lamiiy who may be entitled to male entry for himself cr herself. Entry may now be made before the Agent or Subr it cf t he District by proxy (on certain conditions , 9. the father, mother son. thughter, brother cr sisle'r ri an Intending homesteader. "Any eren numbered section of Dominion Lands in Manitoba or the Korth- West Provinces, excepting 8 and 26. Bit reserved, may be homesteaded by 1 17 person the sola head of a family, or male over lSytars of ace, to the extent ol one-qcartx section , of 160 acres, more or less." The fee In each case w!ü be $10.00. Churches, srhoolsand markets convenient. Healthy climate, erleniid crops and good laws. Grain gTOwine and cattle raisin? principal industries. Fcr further particulars as to Rates. Routes. Best Time to Co and Whare to ' Locate, apply tc W. D. Scott. Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa. Canada, tr V. II. Rogers, d Floor Traction-Terminal L.tldirtf, Indianapolis. Ind., and 11. M. William. Koora 20, Law Building, Toledo, OLio, Authorized Government Agents. tlMr.Mur where joufcawthi arivwrtiaemenc Don't Push The horse can draw the ,Vj' load "without help, if you reduce friction to almost nothing by applying 1 1; 1 yyj 1 to tne-wneeis. ri No other lubri cant ever made wears so lonrr and saves so mach H.N horsepower. Next time try Mica Axle Grease. 1 Standard Oil Co. 1GLX DE&DA0QE Positivelr cured by these Little Fills. They alsa relieve Dl tress trom, Dyspepsia, Ia C!?e2tion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect remedy for Dizziness. 2?ansea, Drowsiness, Bad Tasto la tho Month. Coated ToDjmo. Pain In tHe side. TOIHTD UYHL The reyolAta tto Bowels. Purely Vetahlo. SIULL FILL SMALL DOSE. SUAUFH1CE, CARTERS r7lTT'.E I J IVER I PILLS. Genuine Must Bear Fas-Simils Signaturt REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. 25c -ALL ERUGGI3T5-&0Q.
11 .irf
iCAtflTR'Sl
kllTTLE
IVER PILLS.
I
W- L. DOUGLAS
$3.00 & $3.50 SHOES
fv?'HOES FOR EVERY MEMBER OFr THE FAMILY, AT ALL PRICES. tint (To tnyono mho can prove W.L. ffPl'n CTi moroMen'm$3A$3.6Qhoea m than any other manufacturer. THE REASON W. L. Dou-las shoes arft worn by more pvle in aJl walks of life thai, any other make i because of their excellent style, easy-fitting, anci eurwrior weari g qualities. 1 ho selection of tho leathers and othr materials for eac part cf the shoo ar d every detail of the making is looked after v the most complete Organization of uperin tendents. f ore nen and Stilled shoemakers, who receive the highest wages paid in the ghoe ir.dastrv, and who-e workmanship cannot r e. excelled. If I could take you into rayUrze factories at Brockton. Mass.. atnd ohow you h-rw carefully V. C. Douitla shoes are made, voa would then understand why they hold their ahape, fit better, weir loreer and are of rreater value than anv othe- ma'e.
My S4-OQ and S3.00 GILT EDOEShoma cannot bm mouaHmd mt any nrlom CAUTION 1 The genuine have W. L. Douglaa name and price stamped on bottom 1'nke HoSmbatltute. Ask your dealer fcr W. L. Douglas shoes. If he cannot supply you send direct to factory, Stocs seat everywhere by aaU.Ctlog free. W.UDou'to.BrocktonMaM.
Womanhood Vegetable Compound
DARM STÄDTER. sideache, and my feet were- so sore I could hardly stand. I took two bottles of Lydia E. rinkham's Vegetable Compound when my periods wen established and now I am perfectly well. Mama says she wont bo without your medicmo in the houso. I have tld mo girl what Lydia E. Pinkhain's Vegetable Compound has dono for mo and she is taking it now." Miss Clara E. Darmstadter, of 453 Ereckcnrldgc St. . liuff alo, N.Y. , writes: Dear Mra. PLakham : "For about a year, except during the past few months, I suffered with severe pain3 every month, with tnckaehts and headachos. I had the blues so bad that I was in dfspair. It is a pleasure to tell you that Lydia' E. rinkham's" Vegetable Compound has cured mo. The change in my appearanco is wonderful and I desire- that this good may come to every sufferer. Any ono desiring to know further details may writo to me and I shall be glad to give them." If you know of any yonng girl who is sick and needs motherly advice, ask her to address Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., and tell her every detail of her symptoms, and to keep nothing back. She will receive advice absolutely free, from a source that has no rival in the experience of woman's ills, and it will, if followed, put her on the right road to a strong, healthy and happy womanhood. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made from native roots and herb3 cures where others faiL Claimed n an Antique Also. A charming hostess of one of the "big houses," as they are called by those who are 'welcomed iuto them, has the added beauty of prematurely white hair, says the Washington Star. That which seems to her contemporaries an added charm may apiear to the crudely young a mark of decline, at least so it appears In one Instance of which the hostess herself tells with enjoyment. The lady is a connoisseur of antiques. At one of her teas a debutante rich with the glow of youth, but sadly constrained with her sense of her own novelty, was handed a cup of tea. The cup- was beautifully blue and wonderfully old. The hostess, desiring to lighten the strain of her youthful guest by a pleasing diverting remark, said. "That little cup is 150 years old." "Oh," came the debutante's high strained tones, "how careful you must be to hare kept It o long." Getting Information, Softly Ma I hrve jour company at the hop to-night, Ethel? I'tliel Not ,on your electrotype.' Softly And why uot, Ethel? Ethel Well, ma says that If you want to projwse to me, that you should do It right here at home. Softly But I didn't want to propose. Ethel Well, in that case I can't spare the tim. TnWc Tilade. Thoae Helielou Lei:;on Plea. The kind that "make your mouth water" are easllj made with no fussin? and at least possible expanse If you use -OUR-PIE" Preparation. Don't hesitate. Try It and tell your friends. At jrrocers. 10 rents. Everybody la pleased with "OUR-PIE." IIa Its Compensation. "You're about It ywirs old, aren't you, Frank?" Raid his employer. "Xo, sir," answered the office boy. "I'm nearly 15." "You don't look it, by four or five years. Isn't it a bit mortifying to ba taken always for a little boy?" "Xaw! It's a good t'ing. I gits t're cent rides on de street cars." No IIorseaboeM. Postmaster Yes, stranger, the crowd of old fogies that loaf around !ie postoflice are bitterly opposed to the automobiles. They be afraid that in time they will displace the horse. Drummer What of that? I'ostnaster What of It? Why, where are they goins: to get any boss-shoes to play quoits when the boss becomes extinct? lllrcal. Ethel That lG-year-old boy asked me to marry him. Kdith And you threw Lim over? Ethel Yes; told him It was against the law to catch lobsters so young. Judge. ' I'ncle Allen. "Many a man," said I'ncle Allen Sparks, "who goos hustling and bustling through this world has nothing to show for it but a lot of barked places on his shins."
s"5s PAIN
FOR STIFFNESS, SORENESS, SPRAIN OR BRUISE, NOTHING IS BETTER THAT YOU CAN USE J LUMBAGO'S PAIN, RHEUMATIC TWINGE, YOUR BACK FEELS LIKE A RUSTY HINGE J SCIATIC ACHES ALL PLEASURES SPOIL, FOR HAPPINESS USE ST. JACOBS OIL.
BCST IN THE WORLD
.Vu. . rf CX 1 Hu UMiiMi nyApples that uro being stored for winter cannot be handled too carefully. Dry cornstalks make very poor feed for cattle, but used in the silo in proper condition, they are valuable. Where too large a proportion of the farm is kept under plow the Foil soon becomes Impoverished and unproductive. e When .the cost of keeping a good article is no more than keeping a oor one it is certainly advisable to keep the better. The young stock should be given plenty of good bright hay and some bran and middlings to keep them growing and make good bone. A horseman says one of the best remedies for worms is to give the horse one and. one-half drains of pulverized sulphate of iron at a dose twice a day In a bran mash, and continue it for two weeks. The difference in the weight of a large turkey and a small one is an important matter, as the turkey Is an industrious forager, and picks up the greater portion of Its food, which brings the actual cost of production to a low sum when large and small weights are compared. What a splendid thing It is rMt the tastes of men vary so much. If everybody liked the same breed of Logs, for example, and tue sanio breed of cattle and horses, what a monotonous showing it would be at or big fairs. The man who likes the Iicrkshircs has little use for the Tola ml China or the Du roc, and vice versa, and each has his followers. On the farm there should be a place for everything. If all the minute wasted searching for tools that are hurriedly wanted for use could be computed they would amount iLto hours, and even dys. In the course of a year. A convenient place fur every :ool, froap n mowing machine to a screwdriver, would save much annoyance. It is often the case that tools must be purchased because those used the year before-have been placed where they cannot be found Poiiit.t In DalrylnK. It is claimed that dairying exhausts the soil unless considerable foot! materials are brought on the farm, which is a fact easily sustained, but hundreds of dairymen produce upon their farms all the food required for their cattle. The farm may not be as liable to loss of fertility by dairying as wnea It is devoted exclusively to the growing cereals, but It can be exhausted of certain elements, which are carried away in the milk sold, and which are not returned in the manure. Milk Is a complete food, being rich in nitrogen and mineral matter. This is derived from the rood, whether it be grass or grain, and milk Is as much a product as any other substance that leaves the fann. It Is nothing more nor less than the changed form of the food consumed, and as milk can only be produced from food. It Is the result of the conversion of one into another of a more concentrated and salable character. When the food Is converted Into milk much of the nitrogen, phosphates and potash pass into the milk. The manure also consists of a proportion of the foods, but the larger proportion of the valuable elements of food must of necessity assist to create milk, and the fact is also demonstrated that, while we may be blessed with an abundance of manure, the value depends upon its quality and not upon the bulk. American Ilornr ol the Future. An Interesting experiment In horse breeding Is under way In Colorado under the direction of the Government Department of Agriculture. It Is claimed that Colorado was selected as the location because of special adaptability of soil and climate, but It Is more likely that it was chosen because the man who outlined the plan is a resident of that State. The idea of developing the American types of live stock under Government supervision originated with Hon. E. II. Grubb, of Carbondale, Colo., who, with other agricultural Interests of the State, succeeded in securing the co-operation of the United States Department of Agriculture. A start has been made with a number of breeding mares of the best type of American stock and the stallion Carmon. The Idea is to breed a new and thoroughly satisfactory type of American carriage horse, combining speed, great style and high quality, sutlicient substance to look well In heavy harness, and to be able to go long distances in little time, and with no undue amount of fatigue. The work in Colorado is supplemented by operations quite as interesting to farmers in the attempt to revive Interest in the Morgan breed In co-operation with the Vermont Experiment Station. A 400-ncre farm at Waybridge, Yt, Is being used as a stock farm for development of the Morgan horse, and If this splendid all-round typo of horse is revived and greatly increased In numbers, the effort will be of great permanent value. Live Stork Quality. Every fanner should possess a k?u wl edge of tho qualilk-ations of his stock rublic tests of celebrated dairy cows may be of but little value to the aver age farmer, as he does not practice the modes of feeding during such tests, nor give the same care and management to his stock. Hut the tests are valuable, as indicating what an animal crn be forced to do if the conditions ess -ntial to success are complied with. The farmer's business is to discover what are the conditions essential to success. He day have the examples of others as guides, which will materially assist bim, but there are conditions, however, peculiar to his own circumstances, to which he must conform, and In which no one can assist him. Ills soli, climate, buildings, water, shade, ftnality of pasture, method of feeding
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and kinds of foods used are all impor tant factors to be considered. So far as the denial of the utility of public, tests is concerned the fact remains that they serve as lights in the direction of which all must steer. It signifies nothing that the product of the cow may apparently exceed the nutritive value of the food consumed, but the figures point unerringly to the possible realization of the objects sought, and, though the high-pressure public tests may be of the kind not approved of by the farmer, yet they open up to him a wide field for reflection, and teach him that, while he may not hope to equal such, yet he must also test his stock, if he Is to succeed, without regard to capacity. Heredity In Plant. The general principles of heredity formulated by Mendel give much promise In the way of crop Improvement through more systematic methods of breeding. It is believed by many biologists, says Harper's Magazine, that Menders law offers in part n solution to some of the perplexing problems ir. plant and animal Improvement. It i:i too early, however, to predict what benefits can reasonably be expected from its replication. This law attempts to reduce to a mathematical basis the characteristic of the progeny of plants and animals; a certain percentage having the individual characteristics of each parent, and a certain percentage the blended characteristics of both parents. It Is not too much to expect that the proposed law, with modifications, will do mu?h to place the science of plant breeding upon a rational basis. In the case of corn, careful selections of seed has resulted in the production of plants which have a tendency to produce an additional ear, thereby increasing the yield 10 to 25 per cent. Also ears of larger size and more uniform character are secured by breeding and selecting the seed corn. One of the best examples of the Improvement of a crop by selection and breeding Is the sugar beet, which has been developed from the common stock of garden beets that contain only a small amount, of saccharine material and are unsuitable Tor the manufacture of sugar, until high-grade beets containing lu to 18 per cent of' sugar are secured. InrnbnliT CItlekena. In a bulletin !.i.st spring by Trof. C.owell, of the Maine station, the writer says: Where an appetizing bran mash was once given hot and the hens gorged on it, became fat, laid softshelled eggs and learned to cat them up, now the same materials were kept before them all the time in dry form, and while they ate what they ncedtxl and used the time necessary to grind coarser feed In maklngv eggs, they were not overfed. This combination Is IVO pounds wheat bran, 100 each of coriuueal. linseed, gluten, middlings and meat scrap. Kight quarts whole grains are given daily. The hens are kept in pens with three sides built of double Walls filled with sawdust, fourth, facing the south, having two windows and a space 10x3 feet that is open all day am! closed at night by canvas door. A v.arm bedroom Is built, the floor being raised three feet from tho floor of the pen; here the birds roost nt night and are shut in with another canvas door. Ventilators at the top furnish air. Conditions are Ideal, no dampness anywhere, and the hens have vigor and vltaltty. Eggs are more meaty and hatch better. Chicks are fed grit first, then small, hard grains and a dry mash, very similar to that furnished the hens. Cockerels are separated at ten weeks, fed a moist, appetizing mash and are ready for market at twelve weeks. Pullets are then accustomed to their brooder houses and then let out on the range, troughs of tho dry grains being always near, clean water also available. Work at the experiment station poultry plant Is progressing well. About r00 chicks have been hatched and twelve Incubators of 3G0-egg capacity are being run at full capacity. The colony brooder houses have been made ready for the young chicks, and with a continuation of good weather It Is expected that this spring's work will be very successful. About 2,000 birds will be reared thU spring. Value of Compost, At the North Louisiana Experiment Station, Calhoun, La., the following results were obtained. The land, normally, would produce one-fourth bale of cotton, and seven to ten bushels of corn. By the annual application of thirty bushels per acre of a compost, composed of stable manure, cotton seed, acid phosphate and loam, this yield has been Increased from one-fourth to one and one-half bale of cotton and fifty to sixty bushels of corn. The annual expense of applying this compast amounted to a little over $1 per acre. Build a shed of any kind, out of old material for a roof. Ir It leaks some, all the better. Spread on the ground In a layer ten inches thick ten bushels of stable manure, wetfing thoroughly. Over this scatter 100 iounds of acid phosphate; then follow with another layer of manure and phosphate, etc.; continue these alternate la3-ers until all material Is used up, or until the pile has become Inconveniently high; then cover the pile, bon top and sides, with four inches of forest mold or good loam, taken from the fence corners. If stable manure or mold are not available, use straw, leaves or any waste material. een weeds. He sure and wet all thoroughly. After the heap has stood from four to six weeks It should then he worked over and well mixed. This Ls best done by beginning at one end and cutting It down vertically, throwing the material In a pile behind. Wet again and cover again with loam. It will be ready for use in three or four weeks. The above proportions are for use with cotton. Where It Is desired for corn the quantity of phosphate can be reduced; use only fifty pounds instead of 100 to each layer. Thirty bushels, or one two-horse wagon load, per acre of this compost will produce very marked results. When this quantity is used It Is best applied lu the drill, Just prior to planting. If preferred, the rows can be marked off, the compost distributed In this funw and then bed It. Be careful, however, not to bury It too deep. It Is safe to estimate that this quantity of Buch a compost will more than double the crop on poor land the ürst year.
VALUE OF CHEESECLOTH.
For Cleanlnir It la the Very Beat of, Fabrics. Cheesecloth should be used more commonly for household purposes than 't is. The material has the special nerit of being firm, yet so loosely woren that grease comes out readily in washing; thus It is more easily kept Mean than linen or crash, for which it nay many times be substituted. An unbleached quality that costi. not more than 5 cents a yard is quite as good for general use as more expensive fabrics. The best kind of dishcloths are made of it. The material shouli be doubled, raw edges turned in and stitched on the machine. This will wear, and because it cleans so easily, Is most sanitary for warm weather. In that it will 20t become saturated and smell of ;rease, says the New York Evening Telegram. Kinsing in soap and water .vill be all that is necessary for cleansing. For nice furniture. It is the best kind of cloth for cleaning, and all cabinet makers keep three sets for work. The 3rst is used for applying the oil, the second to rub it off, and the third is the polisher. Similar treatment for lining-room tables, will keep them In the pink of condition. Cheesecloth will save the daily use 3f an egg in !oilcd coffee, merely by having small bags of the cotton kept n the kitchen. Tut the grounds Into 3ne, and twist the top aronnd tight fvith thread, a spool of which should be handy foi the purpose. The same :ag may be used many times. There Is nothing In the cleaning line for which It is not good. Windows and mirrors will never have a speck of lint on their shining surface if cheeseclotn Is used, and for all kinds of work it will be found Inraluable. A bag made of It should always be kept In the kitchen for straining soups. Tissue paper Is another valuable household asset that all housekeepers :Io not appreciate. All of It that comes Into the house should be saved. Moistened with alcohol, It polishes mirrors to perfection, and even dry will make them shine. Silver, all hardwoods used for furniture, and steel, also brass, if not badly tarnished, will respond immediately to treatment with tissue paper, and for packing of all kinds it is most useful. Lace, silk and all ribbon should always be Ironetl between two layers of it, for the materials will not then be shiny. The acquisition of the life estate by the reversion Is held, In McCreary vs. Coggeshall (S. C), 7 L. It. A. (X. S.), 41, to merge the fee In him, and to cut out an Intermediate contingent remainder, unless an Intention that it shall not do so appears. That there Is no implied exemption Df State bonds from taxation is declared in State Nat. Bank vs. Memphis (Tenn.), 7 U K. A. (X. S.), GG3, and an attempted exemption of such bonds is held to violate a constitutional provision that all property shall be taxed. Personal property of a non-resident, which, for the performance of a railroad construction contract, is in the State on the day taxes are to be assessed. Is held, in Eoff vs. Kennefick (Ark.), 7 L. R. A. (X. S.), 701, to be subject to assessment, under a statute making taxable all real and personal property in the State. Failure to obtain the. father's consent before administering an amesthetlc to a youth 17 years old, who, in company with adult relatives, has applied to a surgeon to Ik? relieved from a small tumor. Is held, lu Bakker vs. Welsh (Mich.), 7 L. B. A. (X. S.), 612, not to render the surgeon liable to the father for the death of the boy'under its Influence. The removal of a suit from a State to a federal court is held, In Young vs. Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company (S. C), 7 L, It. A. (X. S.), 501, not to confer upon the latter such exclusive jurisdiction that, upon Its entering an order of discontinuance, plaintiff cannot Institute a new action upon the same cause la the State court, laying the damages so low as to prevent a second removal. The defctive condition of the track upon which cars are run in a mine, by reason of which a car. loaded by a miner who is paid by the amount delivered at the pit mouth, gets off the track, is held. In Cavanaugh va. Centerville Block Coal Company (Iowa), 7 L. U. A. (X. S.), Ü07, not to be the proximate cause of an Injury due to his pinching his fingers between the car and an Implement which has been employed In attempting to get the car back on the car track, where he was at liberty to suit his own convenience and employ hs own methods in replacing the car. A "CURE" FOR CUSSING. The renitent Scotsman Found Ills Load n Heavy One. A clergyman in Scotland observed with much perturbation that a member of his congregation was greatly given to the use of strong language. Over and oer again lie remonstrated with the man to give up the bad habit In time the man himself came to see the error of his ways, and desired no less earnestly to break himself of the uso of bad language. The dilneulty, however, was to find a method of doing so. One day the clergyman hit upon a happy thought. "Get a bag," he said to the man, "and every time you swear put a pebble into it. At the end of the month you will bring that hag to me. , I will count the pebbles and see what the effect has b"cn." The man accepted the idea with alacrity. He got a bag, and, religiously, every time he swore what Mr. Gilbert in the 'Tinafore" calls a "l ig. Hg D," in duly put a pebble Into It. At the end of the month he went vo the clergyman, taking the bag with him. It was not an easy task, for, as any ono might see, the bag was very full and very heavy. He went into the clergyman's study and put the bag on the table. The minister looked up with a serious expression. "This is very serious, my friend. I am sorry to sec you have so many pebbles in the bag." "Hoot, minister!"' exclaimed the man cheerfully; "this is only the 'devil's' the 'damns' are all at the dikeside In another bag. They were over heavy to bring up !" Excelsior. How ugly a flower looks when It In going to seed I
jj LEGAL INFORMATION.
Physicians Recommend Castoria (OASTOKIA. lias met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharmaceutical societies and medical authorities. It is used by physicians with results most gratifying. The extended use of Castoria is unquestionably tho result of three facts: The indisputable evidence that it is harmless: Second That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimi-j lates the food: 7 It is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor Oil' It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotio and does not stupefy. It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman's Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, etc. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, however, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by regulating the system not by stupefying it and our readers are entitled to jthe information. Rail's Journal of Mealtlu nTHTTn in i ar mwm.
Mm9sm ALCOHOL 3 PEU CENT. AVcgelablePreparationfarAssimilating ihcFocdandMatrag lite Siontac&s aadßavreiscf ProrootcsDigestionJCkenU ness and RestContatas neither OpiuniIorphinc norMiocraL not Narcotic. Jbmptia Seed' JMcffe&tSf JlpptrminfUi twbnck Stdj Item Srrd CanThti Supr h'atmirmiilimr. Ancrfect Remedy for Ccnsfipa p3 lion , Sour StomeluDiantei Woira.Coro'ulsionsJcYTnsir nessaidLossorSLEEP. ftcSimÜc Signarare cf NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper. BABY IN" TEBKIBL3 STATE. Awful Ilnmor lint Ins Array FaceBody a Man of Sores Cutlcurn Cnrr In Two Week. "My little daughter broke out all over her body with a humor, and we used everything recommended, but without results. I called In three doctors, but she continued to grow worse. Her body was a mass of sores, and her little face was being eaten away. Her ears looked as If they would drop off. Neighbors advised me to get Cutlcura Soap and Cutlcura Ointment, and before I had used half of the cake of Cutlcura Soap and box of Cutlcura Ointment the sores had all healed, and my little one's face and body were as clear "as a new-born babe's. I would uot be without it again If It cost five dollars. Instead of seventy-tive cents. Mrs. George J. Steesc, 701 Coburn St., Akron, O.. Aug. 30, 1003." "I don't know about waiting on that rustomer out there," wid the lunch counter ffirl. "His order is something fierce." "What does he want?" nsked the cook. "Smothered onions, beaten biscuit, deviled egffs. and whipped cream." Otarrn Cannot Be Cured with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh Is a blood or constitutional disease, and In order to cure Jt you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Core Is uot a quack medicine. It was proscribed by one of the best physicians In this country for years and Is a regular prescription. It Is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood puriner, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients Is what produces Buch wonderfnl results In curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials, frM. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, price 75c. Take Hall's Faiullj Pills for constipation. Familiarity In Daslneaa. "Familiarity, In business or out, breeds contempt between men and women," says Anna Steese Richardson in a rojnarkable article on "The Influence of Women on Business," in the Woman's Home Companion. "It Is all very well to say that the modern girl Is happier in the end for losing some of her illusions regarding men. Perhaps. But if she gains along this line she loses by having no more Illusions about womanhood, wifehood and motherhood. Only the woman who can hold these sacred for herself and the man she loves enriches the home life in America and leaves to her country the heritage of well-balanced sons and daughters. "The woman embittered by the contempt which follows familiarity with men In business sees In matrimony only relief from irksome toil. For her, marriage does not represent the fulfillment of her highest destiny, the most wonderful opportunities of womanhood. She is not reaching out for the crownlug happiness of her life: She is grimly trying to choose the lesser of two evils." MI can't boar that man Graball," declared the steel magimte. "Why not?" asked the ice- magnate. "His very attitude Feems to say: Tin more entitled to immunity than thou.' " YYflPhlnston ' Tlernld. New York has 07,000,000,000 gallons of water stored away in its mountain reservoir. - If you wish beautiful, clear, white clothes use Itcd Cross Ball Blue. Large 2 oz. package, 5 cents. There are about 350 volcanoes on this arth that have had eruptions in modern tiuioat Sir. WlnaloWB Boothis siixr rr Chlldrta Uathinsi aoftaa th rams, reduce iofUmmtuoa. V Urs Ml, ium 14 oolia. 24 muu bonis. The average family in the United States has four and seven-tenths persons. FS St. Vita Dane an all HarTooa twiaaaaa I I O FHiUr tired IjIt. Kit i Ura Fra Rutorar f.nd tot Free 8 trial bottl uA tn. BM. Mm U. Kia 14.. Ml ir.a llri FkUa4tbl, Fa RUBBER STAMPS. All kinds of Rubber Stamps Mad t Order. Sclf-lnklng Daters sosaethlaB; new. Ink and Inklaf Pads. Send for CaUtofut to Lock Bos 210. Part Wayne. Iadtaaa.
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5253 Guaranteed under the i-ood;i X HU
Letters trom Prominent Physicians
addressed to Chas. II. Fletcher.
Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chicago, III3., Bays: "I Lavo prescribed yoxir Castoria oftca for infants during my practice, zzl Und it very satisfactory." Dr. William Belmont, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: Tour Castoria stands first In its class. In ray thirty years of practice I can Eay I never .tavo found anything that bo filled the place." Dr. J. II. Taft, cf Brooklyn, N. Y., says: 1 have used your Castoria and found it an excellent remedy in my household and private practice tot many years. The formula i3 excellent" Dr. It. J. Hamlen, of Detroit, Mich., Bays: "I prescribe yoar Castoria extensively, as I have never found anything to equal it for children's troubles. I am atvaro that there are imitations la the field, but I always Eee that my patients get Fletcher's." Dr. "Win, J McCrann, of Omaha, Neb., says: "As the father cf thirteen children I certainly know something about your great medicine, and aside from my own family experience I have la my years of practice found Castoria a popular and efficient remedy in almost every home." Dr. J. IL Clausen, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: The name that your Castoria has made for itself la the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorsement of the medical profession, but I, for one, most heartily endorse it and believe it an excellent remedy." i Dr. IL M. "Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., Bays: 'Physicians generally do not prescribe proprietary preparations, tut in the case cf Castoria my experience, lihe that of many other physicians, has taught me to raaho an ex ceptlon. I prescribe your Castoria in my practice because I have found It to be a thoroughly reliable remedy for children's complaints. Any physl clan who has raised a family, as I have, will join me la heartiest recommendation of Castoria."
GENUINE ASTORIA ALWAYS
un You Have
I r in use ror THI OCMTAUH MIMMT) TT WRITE TO FATHER. I hare been running ro engine on the Nickle Plate K. It. for twenty-three years, and for thirteen years I have been afflicted with a very bad case of ASTHMA, diabllnc me many times from performing my duties as engineer as long as four weeks at a time. Last December I was baring a very hard spell when I was Induced to try Father's . Lung Elixir. The result was a very happy ' surprise. It gave me relief Inside of thirty I six hours and in four days 1 was back on ; my regular run and have been making It j ever since. 1 cheerfully recommend this j remedy and urge upon every asthmatic to at least try one bottle ror it win give greai relief almost from the first dose. Chas. F. Mkhrtktt. 2 Third St.. Fort Wayne. Ind. I speak directly of myself. I wish to say that father's Lung Elixir Is all that Is claimed fur iL 1 had been a victim of Tubercular Consnmption for about a year. I t-eally thought that the end bad come. I passed many a dreadful hour and work was xceodlngly difficult Then I was led to the use of Father's Lung Elixir and found the wonderful cure. The fourth bottle convinced me that I was saved. Should any one wish for any further information, they will be at liberty to address me at any time. Miss Minnic Kiel, 2407 Force SL, Fort Wayne. Ind. Address Lock Dox 219, stating your case fully, and you will receive Information as to the proper treatment to be given. Java's Fire Island. One of the greatest wonders of Java, "the fire island," a large lake of boiling mud. Is nearly two miles In circumference, and In the center immense columns of soft, hot mud may be seen continually rising and falling like great black timbers thrust forth and then suddenly withdrawn by. a giant's hand. Besides the phenomena of the columns, there are two gigantic bubbles near the western edge, which fill up like huge balloons and explode on an average three times per minute. About $80 per year Is charged for an unlimited telephone service in Paris, but in addition to this the subscriber must purchase his own instrument, which may be any one of a number of different kinds. 0 v A . . THE MAN WHO SWEARS BY THE FISH BRAND SLICKER Is the man who has tried to get the some service out of some other make ROWERS Clean -Light-Durable Guaranteed Waterproof ?nd Sold LverytiiieB 43t $390 fltOrnuTTD CATAIM IM tot THt a 4 iwwn av v ft a A Skin of Beauty Is a Joy Forever. ,R. T. Felix Ooursud's Oriental Cream or Magical Deautmor, Remove Tan, Pimples, rrecUes, Mota Faicbea, Kaub, sod bkia Diarsrea, ana every Die iuim en beauty, sod defies detect Inn. It bas stood lb tet ol W rears, and Is to karmlfil wt taste It to be aar It Is proper!1 maris. Accept no counter felt ot similar tame. Dr. L. A. Parr said to lad 7 nf tb bant, ton (a, patient) t A I 7u ladle! Will UM th. I vrameaes4 nariaya Oreim' as Uis feast harmful of all tb skia preparation." For sals by all JrnirW ssa i sscr Ooodi De&lsrs In the United Sum, Ca&sd and Xurop rcm.KCPOS, f o. 87 &d to Sirst fold
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Always Bought uver ou Tears. MURRAY TRCrT. KW VOM CtTT The Handy Doctorin Your Vest Pocket DTS a thin, round-cornered little Enamel BoxWhen carried In your vest pockat it means Health-Insurance, It contains Six Candy Tablet of pleasant taste, almost as pleasant as Chocolate. Each tablet Is a working dose of Cascaret, which acts like Exercise on the Bowels and Liver. It will not purge, slckwi. nor upset tho Btoni--h. Becauso it Is not a "Bile-driver." like Salts, Sodium, Calomel, Jalap, Senna, nor Aperient Waters. Neither is It like Castor Oil, Glycerine, or other Oily Laxatives that simply lubricate the Intestines for transit of the food stopped up in them at that particular time, The chief cause cf Constipation and Indigestion Is a weakness of the Musclea that contract the Intestines and Bowels. Cascarets axe practically to the Bowel Muscles what a Massage and Cold Bath are to the Athletic Muscles. They stimulate the Bowel Muscles to contract, expand, and squeeze the Digestive Juices out of food eaten. They don't help the Bowels and Liver la such a way as to make them lean upon similar assistance for the future. This Is why, with Cascarets, the dose may be lessened each succeeding time Instead of increased, as it must be with all other Cathartics and Laxatives. Cascarets act like exercise. If carried In your vest pocket, (or carried In My Lady's Purse,) and eaten Just when you suspect you need one, you will never know a sick day from the ordinary Ills of life. Because these Ills begin In the Bowels, and pave the way for all other diseases. " Vest Pocket" box 10 cents. W Be sure you get the genuine, made only by the Sterling Remedy Company, and never sold In bulk. Every tablet stamped "CCC." Fr7 f"3f3 To eonvlnee any H j woman that PaiI I 3 t,D AnUsptle III I Pi 1 Ii tniproTe her bralia L aol do all wt claim UUUL3(or Ui Wa will send ber absolutely free a larre trial box of Paxtlne müh book of Instructions and genuine testimonials. Send your n&ma and address on a postal caxd. feetions, such as naJ catarrh. jItIq catarrh and inflammation cauad by feminine Ills ; sore eyes, tor throat and mouth. b direct local treatment. Its curaUe power oyer these troubles la extraordinary and fives ImmedlaU relief. Thousands of women are using and reo ommendlng tt every day. 6o cents at drupgistftorbvmail Remember, howeyer. IT COSTS TO 17 NOTHING TOTKTItI TUX lt. FAXTOX CO., Boston. Alas. Let us do your Printing using QrD C5 Eagle Linen for your office stationery. )Tou can get the paper and envelopes to match. It U th real thing. Take mo other. SEND 12 CENTS .VSf U;,!.9; r.'S receive by mall TIVE CHRISTMAS P0SI4L CARDS of Beautiful Deslln. 1 liny Acre, sell lots and doable your money In Tat-oma, the growing city ; st ud for list of acreage and lots. D. 2i. Jacobs, LJ0V, C St., Taoorca, Wash, F. W. N. TT. - - - No. 441907 When wrlt'nff ta Advertisers rJeass say yea saw th Adhrsrtlssf ent la this piper rf L-V.. .Thompson's Eyo Vator
