Plymouth Tribune, Volume 7, Number 22, Plymouth, Marshall County, 5 March 1908 — Page 7
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of the ha pny homes of to-day is a vast fund cf information as t j the b?st mcthoJ3 of promoting health end harpines3 and right living and knowledge of the world's best products. Products of actual excellence and reasonable claims truthfully presented and which have attained to vorid-wida acceptance through the rpproval of the Well-Informed of the World; not of individuals only, but of the many who have the harpy faculty of seiche "ng and obtaining the beit the world auords. One cf the product of that class, cf Lnown component parts, an Kthical remedy, approved by physicians and commended by the WcII-Informcd cf the World as a valuable and wholesome family laxative is the well-known Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial cfTccts always buy the genuine, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists. CHILDREN TORTURED. Girl Und Rannlns Soren from Eczema- Coy Tortured liy Poio:i Oak Hot It Cared by Cnttciirn. "Last year, after having my little girl treated t n very prominent physician for flu cLstiuafe case of eczema, I resorted to the Cutietira Remedies, and was so well pleased ith the almost instantaneous relief iifi'orded that we di.ardetl the physieiais prescription and relied entirely on the Cuticura S'ap. Cutieura Ointment, and Cuticura Tills. When we commenced with the Cuticuta Remedies her feet ami limbs -ere covered with running sores. In about six weeks we had her completely well, and there has been no recurrence of the trouble. "In July of this year a little boy in our family poisoned his hands and arms with poison oak, and in twentyfour hours his hands and arms were a mass of torturing sores. We used only the Cutieura Remedies, and in about three weeks bis hands and arms healed cp. Mrs. Lizzie Vincent Thomas. Fairmont, V.'aMen's Ridge, TennM Oct. 13. Wlin: Strack Ulm. An inquiring lady, known to a writer in III ack wood's Magazine, recently lsked a private soldier to tell her some of his experiences in war. Tommy, who was Irish, tried to get out of it by saying that nothing had ever happened to him, but the lady was persistent. "Something mnst have happened,' ihe declared. "Now tell me. In all jou experiences in South Africa what was It that struck you most?" "Well, ma'am. said Tommy aftei jome cogitation, "th thins tnat sthrucx aae most was th number of bullets that missed me." The Norwegians are the loncst-livrd of European nations and the Spaniards the shortest. I Positively cured bj these Little Fills. tress troai Dyspepsia. la. dstlya and Too Hearty Eins. A perfect reiitüj t r DtPtB zsg. Kaosea. Drowdness. Bad Tasts la ih.9 Mouta, Coated TosrQ9 P&tn In ttie Fldo, TORPID 1XYKBL Ihsj regulate tls cwe!a. Purely Vetatle. SMALL FiLL SMALL COSL SUAaPRIOL Gcnutr;3 Must Bear Fas-Simils Signatur REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. fOYOUHNOW . .y V. A A THE yYET WEATHER COMFORT AND PROTECTION afforded by a SLICKER? Clean -Light Durable Guaranteed Vaterproof 32 Everywhere : 'J i im i 341-1 PZSfTSTo eosTlnce any j) Iii H woman tJ.ut I'ai. ti lino Anti-eptic wilt UT7)rov her health rifil do ill we chiim for It. V.'e will send fcer absolutely free a laro tr5ül box cf Pa it ms with Lock (,t in?trufttons and g'nuin testinionla'?. Send your caw3 and auciress on a postal cat a. mucous M i . l I I if-nm, siion as na; caiarrn, pi.ic ciUrrh and i:iSamrr.:tiion Ciued bytemi- M l.iü Iii", CJff SUiw ll.'l J.lb Cli'i mouth, by d rect Io'-al trentment. Its nirativj rov.er over tl.esu tront-ics is rxtr.v ordinr.ry sni 'vp Icuiic-Mato relirf. i i aou-anos cf pnnin aru using an! reo omrncn:.;i;; it tverr clav. fi cents at drt:?L'H'5orbyr.:iil. JTeynmtr, however, T1IJC Ii. VAiloi. Ci.. I Got vsür iLctür Paper ard Ervelope pr;rd:ti Ii j a tin's efnf. itt Vc cjn f vor; th? EAGLE LINEN PAPER and ENVELOPES It is fin and. mill suit you. Try If. iÄlSThGmpsoD'sEyaWater
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ruitorr ArrnzciATrs canals. t'ranrr, Inlitnt and ;jriii.n j TIcve Spent Million in WalcrHayii, Since vv begun the ik-,iect ar.d tibandonmeut of canals. Train-o lus quadruple,! her waterways, s-.iys tli (Vr tury. Ao'ori'.in to litres furnished by commercial associations, I'.ritlsli Isles have N,;CO miles .f canal. ::nd it dot's not all antedate the rallnvid. Tin-MaiK-hoster canal was built at a eosr of $".", hX m ;0 to reduce froirht rals for a distance of thirty-five mile.-, and while it did not prove a pd intcresibearing itivcstniout on such a large expenditure, its indirect and more permanent bcnotlts aro said to have warranted it. Germany has .'J.tX'O miles or canal, carefully maintained, besides 7.M.K) miles of the other waterway. Trance, with an area less than we would consider a larsce State, has .0it miles of canal; and in the northern part, where the canals arc most numerous, the railways are more prosperous. Kurland, Germany, France. Holland and Re-ljriuai ate all conteinohitin;; further extension and improvement of their canal systems. Any class of water transportation Is Incomparably chcajuT than land transportation, unless something bet! er than the modern railroad is invented. For this reason the greater part of our domestic, or inland, tonnage has been and is carried by water and not by rail. For that reason the railways own the largest steamers on the lakes. The wheat trade was lost to the Mississippi not by competition, but lxvause the railroads did not bring it there. The Mississippi alove Cairo is decadent not for lack of ability to comictc. but for lack of coin:nere, which Is to ray, accessibility by means of its own tributaries. Animal Post Cards. A set of tight attractive post cards. In ßve coltrs, showing wild animals in hf Washington Park zno. in the city of Milwaukee, will bo mailed to you on the receipt of twelve cents (coin or stamps). Interesting to yrowu people and children. Address The Evening Wisconsin Company, Milwaukee, Wis. Men, Women and Adjectives. Certain adjectives are reserved for men and others for women. A man is never called ''beautiful." Along with "pretty" and "lovely" that adjective has become the property of women and children alone. "Handsome" and the weak "good looking" are the only two adjectives of the kind common to either sex. Even "belle" has no real masculine correlative In English, since "beau" came to signify something other than personal looks. It is singular that "handsome" should have Income the word for a strikingly good looking person, since its literal meaning is handy, dexterous. Rut "pretty" likewise comes from the Anglo-Saxon word meaning "sly." Low Houicscekcrs Kates Via Nickel Plate Koad 1st and Crd Tuesdays in March and April to points West. Northwest. Southwest and South. Call on A;jent or write .1. C. Meienbacker, T. P. A., Fort Wavne, Ind. 13J Han de Cologne. It is stated in a foreign contemporary that the chief condition to the achievement of a perfect .preparation of eau d cologne is prolonged storage. The production o' tills world famous article in its original home in Cologne is carried on in the simplest manner. The ethereal oils are first mixed with the wine spirits, and the mixture, after two months' digestion, is distilled at gintle he ir. The preparation is then placed Pi kejjs and removed to tbe cellar, where it lies five or six years, and only then Is jlaeed on the market. Side Lights on Illfttory. Tb Washington estate had just been namd Mount Vernon, in honor of Admiral Vernon of the British navy. "You'll have to stand for it, (eorp, aid Major Lavi-nr-e Washington to his younger brotha. "The patriotic American of the future, when he comes her to do honor to this spot as the sacred shrin of his country' liberty, will think it was named 'Vernon' on account of its abundant greenery." George said nothir.r, but his face instantly assumed that stem, commanding expression so familiar to all of us in the portrait on the 2-cent postage stamp. The Furnier. Let us never forgot that the cultivation of the earth is tbe most important labor of man. Man may be civilized In Home degree without great progress In manufactures and with little commerce with his distent neighbor?, but without t!je cultivation of the earth he Is, in all countries, a savage. Until he gives up the chase and lixes himself In fcome place nud seeks a living from the earth he is a, roaming barbarian. When tillage begins othpr arts follow. The farmers are the founders of civilization. Daniel Webster. '"Tie best security against chronic ill Health is Garfield Tea! It insures a normal action of liver, kidneys, stomach and bowels, overcomes constipation and purifies the blood. VcrMattle Women of tb Stae. "We seo some very talented women In musical comedy these days." 4,I should say so. They -an rido, shoot, swim, design gowns, fence, iso, write, and I don't know what all." "Just so. Home of thcai can even sing a little." Louisville Courier-Journal. rn.Es cuhe ix c to 14 mays. TAZO OINTMENT 1.4 g-urantped tonireany caie of Itbinj. Blln.i. IJicilins or I'rotrKtI: I'iles in t to 21 Uajs or monr refundeL Mlx".t .tl:ikf n Hit. The Manager I've got a now idva for a melodrama that ouht to make a hit. The Writer What is it? Tin Manager The iIea is to introwill kill Wo:-!;!y. ail the actors. Harper's Nothing ?o cheap for a good, wholesome, hr-arty breakfast, as Mns. Austin's pancake flour. At all grocers. Ii2jet-. Tbf I::i'y Tinwvlerl lt reporter trho so:)!'tin:es iiop;x .1 into verse invaded the lair of 1 he n'al iot of il.e staff. "Kondelle," lie s;iil, "I'm lost for a word. I.e: me lo k at your rhyiuln? dictionary a n.io: r.t."' i:!:yruLi d!.' ;c::n ry '." csclaimed th ivjl i of. "Sir:" what CAtsKs in: !.r:iu:. r-o'n Ml v. '(!' ar' ti. n ; freeni Tt -n; f He- lache. LAX ATI VI; IlItOMlJ V; ..MM; -cai ves ca use. K. W . ' to v o u Lio x Hie ;tli;!t, l , (Visfomer ( Trobi"in WJn.;erin-.' -h t -I c;i::ie hen neennse i nave r en told that vow are an ho:i"st pawnbroker. A v'lii; u'.ir Patriarch (with a deprecatory s.'i.il'i My friend. so:r"1.ody h.n Lt ( n trii"!. to lnv- f ri with o:i. P I -p o S. Vitus' r ince and all Nervous I I O ls iv i t rm.i'it iitlv Cured I y Dr. K:iii'"s real Nerve 't stirer. S ri-1 for f rvv r -ttrt.il UHtle ;in l treatise. Ilf. I. II. KLIN L, Ld., 'Ol Arch Mreet. l'Lliaaciijbla. I'a. Ilimhurs holds the record for the number of its fires.
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o 5 o o o o o t Z o o o Cdn bo cured only by ' a remedy that will r remove the caus. Tho cf'-euer you fcton it with headacho Iowdcrs or pills tho quicker wiil it return. Generally, headache comes from r disturbed stomach or irregular bowt Is, and alniObt invariably Lane's Family Medicine (a tenia laxative) will cure head- $ 6 the bowels acd reuavigoratuig tbe 2 i. 5 stomacn. C It is a great blood medicino 1 O and the favorite laxative ol old jt O ana young. S At druggists', 23c. end 50c. i SuMtnlnin 111 nepatation. A stcrj- is told of the Prince de Ccnti. whose reputation for cruelty stood hi:h. lie was going to mass with some ladies when bis bailiff asked for instructions concerning a poacher vfho bad just been caught on the grounds. "Give him 100 stripes and imprison bim In a dungeon for two years," was the answer. One lady, ho?rcr stricken, went to the bailiff afterward, but he onlj laughed in her face. "The prince only ?aid that to keep up his reputation. His royal highness raue to me directly after masjs and begjred me to see that the poor wretch was only sent away from the neighborhood for two n- tilths and that his family was well looked after during hlu absence." Deafness Cannot be Cured ly loeal applications, ns they cannot retch the discasM portion of the ear. There H only one way to care deafness, anl that ia ty constitutional remedies. Deafness Is caused by an inüamed condition of the mucous lininjr of the Eustachian Tube. When Di4 tuto 1 Inl'ained you have a ramllTn pound or lniperfeet hearinr, and when it 1 entirely closed. Deafness is the resu't, mkI unless the Inflammation can be takto out and this tule restored to Its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nB4 cr.ses out cf ten are caused by rctarth. which Is nothing but an lnnamej condition of the mucous surfaces. We wl'l plve One Hundred PoMars for ny case of Deafness (caused by ratarrh) fiat cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cvre. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CIIKXEV & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Unionists, 7."c. Take Hall Family Tills for const IpatlT-n. A suit of i-iothes which will float tht wearer in case of accident at sea has breu patented by a Norwegian inventor. TM Will Interest Mother. Mother Cray's Sweet Powder for Children, used by Mother Cray, a nure In Cililren's Home. New Vork. cure Constipation, Feverlshness. Teething IMsorders, Stomf.u Troubles nn l Destroy Worm : 30.000 teMlrnonia!? of cures. All drut.lsts, "."c. Suplo Fitt:. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Itoy, X. V. A rubber tree 4 feet iu diameter yields twenty gallons of sap, making fotty pounds of dry india rubber. Those Delirious! Lemon Pies. The kind that 'make your mouth wattr" are easily made with no fussing and at lcift possible expense if you use "OUH PIE" Preparation. Don't hesitate. Try lt l.nd tell your friends. At srrocers. io cer;ts. Every Lxly Is pleased with "orrt-Pii:." j.'ut up by 1 Zerta Food Co.. Kochester, X. Y. Coatlr 'lari;et Practice. A single big gun of the many nvsr being put in place for the protection of seacoasts costs a large sum. Some interesting figures on this sulJect n:ny he quotd on tbe authority of an cvdnanee expert at Washington, says the Philadelphia Keoord. A 112-ineb breech loading rifle, with its disappearing carriage, costs 000; a 10-ingh breoehdoader, $;)D,i50, and an Slnch, $72.(.t). The figures show that modern high-powered gjjts eost great sums, and th" cost of firing them Is proportionately large. The report of experts who have Inspected these guns and the devices for securing an accurate ahn, shows tbat great saving Is eucted by modrrn rangf-firing and position-finding Jevioes. The demoralizing effect of a hit r.s compared to a miss cannot, It Is pa.' " be reduced to a money value, but It eosts big uionoy to shoot a Mg gun ard then miss the mark. For example there may be cited the case of the 12Inch gun. To miss the mark Is to sljnply throw away $.-1.70. With the 10Inch gun the loss is $P,2J.40, and with the S-inch ritle it Is SDUCj. I.aeklnc In Xerif. Chuggcrton How's your new chauffeur? Carr Had to fine him ; he used to be a niotorman. Chuggcrton Too reokless, eh? Carr Keckh ss, nothing! Why, I couldn't breaK lit in of the habit of slowing up at crossings. Purk. OLD SURGEON Found Coffee (anted Hand to Tremble. The surgeon's duties require chvr judgment and a steady Hand. A Kp or an unnecessary incision may do Irreparable damage to the patient. When he found that coffee driuk1ng caused his bands to tremble, an Iljs. surgeon conscientiously gave It up Sd this is his sfory. "For years I was a coffeo driniter until my nervous system was nearly broken down, my hands trembled & I could hardly write, and insomnia tortured me at night. "liosbb'S, bow could I safely perform operations with unsteady bands, usMig knives nud instruments of prc-isicn? When I saw- plainly the bad effects of coffee, I decided to stop It, and three yours ngo I prepared somu Postum, of Which I had received a sample. "The lir.,t -upful surprised me. It was mild, soothing, delicious. At this time I gave some I'ostum to a friend who was in a similar condition to mine, from the use of offee. "A few days after, I met him aed h was full of praise for Posiuni, declaring be would never return to coffee Put stick to Tost urn. We then ordered a full fujiply and within a short time, my iiervousnes.i and consequent trembling, a well as ins-mmia. disappeared, blood circulation l-ecam normal, no dizziness i;T heat Hashes. ".My l'ri'-'id became a I'ostum enthusiast, his whole family using it e.Iuiveiy. "It would bo tin fault of the one who brewed the Postum, if it did nut t.kio good when served. "The l.esr f;od may be seni!. d if not properly made. Postum should be boiled a'c(.nl;ng to directions on the pkg. Then it is ail right, anyone can rely on it. It oitht to become the national drink." "There's n Iieas:i." Name given by Posttun Co.. P.attle Creek. Mich. Head "The Poad to Wellvihe," In pkgs.
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Liming ti;'. help. soil which i sour will The amount consumed above the life sustaining point brings the profit. Liberally fed animals not only product more but better iiir.mire than poorly-fed ones. The practicable line of production is to maintain govl health with early maturrty. F.ettor methods, J.ttter stock and better tools have doubled the product ious of more than one farn. Proper shooing of tbe horses in the winter means much to their comfort ::s well as to the sound condition cf their hoofs. Plan the beginning of a system of crop rotation next season. Keep a record of the results and see whether It does not give better crops and leave the Mnd In more productive condition. Denatured alcohol Is not very cheap as yet, and the great lenefit that the new law was supposed to be to farmers has not shown up yet. It Is possible that the industry has not got properly under way. Let the sunshine in into your soul and into the cow stable as well. The first, the sunshine of God's love, will sweeten life, and the other, the sunshine of God's sun. will sweeten the stable and contribute to the health and contentment o the animals. P.rlstles are all right, but do you like to see them on the back of a man? They will grow there, though, if you don't give your hogs the lost care you can. The man who makes a hog of himself for the sake of saving 2 cents today will find that he will lose $2 tomorrow by not having pork to sell. When you are feeding out a bunch of hogs there Is nothing pays better than the use of a tank heater. It Is surprising how hogs will go through a severe spell of weather on dry corn and water with the chill taken off. It is cheaper to warm the water with cobs, wood or coal than to do lt with corn after the hog drinks it Some onion growers claim that carbolic acid emulsion often gives satisfactory results in combating the .onion maggot. Dissolve 1 pound hard soap or cue quart soft soap in a gallon of liolling water; add one ioint of crude carbolic acid, and emulsify by agitation. One part emulsion is used to thirty parts of water applied at the root. There are no better friends to have Jn the garden or on the farm than tbe toad. If they could be protected and encouraged to live there, ihey would eradicate many of the gruls and cutworms. The creat enemy tf the toad Is the small boy who kills many every year of the useful animals. The boy tegards this as Innocent sport, oot knowing that the toad Is a most valuable Insect destroyer. No one with the Instinct of self-preservation should attempt to drive a horse without first assuring himself that tbe animal Is under proper control, ami no horse should be considered as fulfilling that condition unless he can be easily and comfortably be held with one hand. A good test of this may bo made, says Suburban Life, before mounting the box by taking bold with one hand of both reins between the horse's mouth and neck, but not nar enough to the bit to pinch tbe Jaw, and trying to make him back; If this can not be done without much effort the horse Is not fit for a novice to drive; either his mouth Is too hard, or, more properly, he Is Improperly bitted. The I'nrm Iloune 'Walk, Muddy walks will make a nagging wife sooner than any other single feature in farm life, unless it le ioor wood. Many who have the front yard in good condition wade through mud and slush from barn to kitchen many times in a week, every time tracking mud into the house. A few loose boards are the primitive remedy. These are easily misplaced and look bad. C. ravel Is In many localities a neat and clean remedy, the great objection lelng that It is hard on the shoes. Coal ashes also offer a cheap walk, but with the same objection, though to a less extent. Yet as they suggest utility for a product usually in the way they find favor Iu many instances. At a very small cash outlay the farmer may as easily have a cement walk as Ids city brother. He would perhaps have only the cement to buy, sand as a rule being easily obtained near home. The work is easily done ami the pleasure of attaining neatness ;u:d permanency is worth a little trouble. Aride from tbe saving of labor In keeping the kitchen clean the economy on floor covering Is worth considering, for dust and dirt wear out carpet and oil cloth quickly. The saving of footgear will iu a year or two pay for the first cost of the walk. Tvy it In the back yard first and it will soon be extended to the front. TriirhiiiK Hoj' tJrow Alfalfa. The Farmers' Institute of p.rown county, Illinois, is doing a g.od work by teaching the boys how to grow alfalfa. They are giver th study cf bulletins and books upon blfalf.i written by competent authorities ::nd are then required to pass a written examination rpon th' ir knowledge of Ute s::me. (lood pri.ts are offfivil Ur th.- '.tt papers upon the subject. Tii first niv:hi:u is the payment of all expenses a attending tho fdiort courses at the college of agriculture and other premiums are given for second and third best : apers. The Illinois Farmers' Institute has done excellent work In teaching tbe firm boys how to grow corn and the broadening of the Work b:v extendi g Pistructlou to other crops is an exainpbthnt might well be followed by other State institutions.. lrln Mlih Hurley. At the Montana experiment station 'ie avarafco results of a two years' t?
with twenty-three varieties of barley showed that Guv Ma vie, a dark-kernel-etl hull-less variety, gave the largest yield. New Zealand, a two-rowed highgrade brewing barley, stoixl second. The hull-less varieties produced the largest quantity of feed. Tho tworowed varieties gave much larger yields than the six-rowed varieties, and in the six rowed sorts large yields of grain wire associated with large yields of straw. Tho average results show a yield of 1.25 pounds of straw for each IKund of grain in the two-rowed varieties, pounds of straw to each pound of grain In the six-rowed varieties and one iKiund of straw to each pound of grain In the hull-less barley. Fatly maturing varieties gave ia general, light viehls.
The llorxe or Siofor f On the ordinary farm the animal I still of greater service than any mechanical force. The steam plow is good on the large area, but the man of small means and having under bis control a small farm will depend on the horse or the ox. the mule or the cow. Which kind he shall use must le governed by the conditions under which he works. It may be surprising to those living on the prairies of the West to learn that even oxen are still used for the work of plowing. Put on hilly, stony land the ox Is still valuable for a plow animal. The fact that he is slow makes him the more valuable, for when th? plow is moving among stones and roots it is better that it move slowly lhan rapidly, llut on the lands of the West, says the Farmers' Review, a fast-moving animal is needed, and the ox is outclassed. The same variations apply to the use of plows drawn bj' electric motors and to greater plows driven by steam. Some experiments have recently been made in Germany to determine at just what point the steam plow is more valuable than the plow drawn by horses or oxen. The conclusion is reached that it is Impossible to make an estimate. In the report the cost -of power machinery for plowing and cultivating small farms is said to be prohibitive, but where farmers owning large areas can co-operate and buy a steam plow this Is declared to be a matter of economy. Moldy Corn. Not a few farmers are of the opinion that the mold lives in tho soil or in the rubbish of the field, especially if the moldy cars are thrown down when found or are left In the field, and thus is carried over from year to year, says a writer In the Ploomlngton rantagraph. Perhaps the mold is not so apparent this season as usual, because of a lack of just the kind of weather to propagate it. One of the best corn experts in the state (II. A. Winter of Wenona) said last year that he believed this dry rot may have lecn the cause of so much loor seed corn. It frequently happens that an otherwise good-looking ear has a trace of mold around the tips of th? grains just next the cob, perhaps only on one side or one end, and so is overlooked when the seed selection Is made. It seems as If It wpu'd be a good time to stamp out tbe ihold when there Is a small amount of lt, by destroying every ear that can Ik found. From what Is known of this disease it certainly would be a safe and practical thing to make special pains to prevent any of the moldy ears from remaining In the field or the corn crib to contaminate sound corn. Instead of dropping a moldy car to ground, or letting It remain in the hurl; oa the stalk, when discovered, every such ear should be snapped and thrown Into a box attached to the side of the wagon. When unloading at the crib, every ear at nil affected with the mold shoidd le separated frpm tbe other corn, throwing It Into a box or barrel provided for tbe purpose. There Is very little feeding value, even for pigs and chickens. In corn so damaged, and it would better be destroyed by burning. Bee In Yi'lntcr. It la not necessary to go to the ex pense of buying the finest grades of white granulated sugar, for a straw colored sugar will answer just as well provided it is crystallized. Molasses sugar should, however, he avoided, because it contains burnt or caramel sugar which Is Injurious to bees. In feeding, the writer prefers to use the feed lukewarm If possible and late In the day so that the bees will gather the feed mainly by night. This helps against robbing. The entrance to each hive should be small during feeding operations as a further precaution against robbing practices. In wintering out of doors there is nothing better than a double-walled hive jxicked with chaff, straw or paper. Roofing paper fabrics afford excellent protection to exposed hives, says tlv Farmers Voice. Some protect hives by placing them In a row and covering them as they would cabbages. Others put them in clamps. Tbe main idea, of course, is to protect again.-t long continued cold weather. F.ovs cannot stand cold, at least not lower than To degrees. Put the best plan of wintering bees in most of our Northern Slates Is by means of a dry cellar in which a temperature of, .".0 degrees Fahrenheit can be steadily maintained. In addition, it slnuhl be daik, noisehs. and well ventilated. Where there Is a door to the cellar inside a building it is best beoatise this door to the stairway can bo left open and Jet i:o li-rht can get In. If In addltio-i to ih;.; there is ie tli durli. M.ce of the bee.-, during th-i r i ng sleep, it i.; likely they will come through ivAc bnpii oil men! with litt.e lo-. ) very little food n t pounds peril ap'?. A 1 1 ma h s winter, so niai-v s. -() esitte more rcqulrii: than te during . o he IP- a! : litold die ing to a Vginner. veterans, and In v. They Jfc the y case would of o'd ago ai l bard work, so do not be alarmed, a space 1 m lead bees to space affoi i . for the be Ihiug like : . warmer th.' ; Soot' icteepors provhV it it t:.:- frames for th? ,'a!l i ,to and the sam; j u c client opportunity cluster together somci ' ' - there. They are i 1- ; ' separated by the the cluster oeva1fi. r ;eod, but soon re- .;: r.ob-'s iu the cluster. combs. TI , s tonally to ' tin" to the;r They murmur e had to contend '"id night i 'e;,:. dly as if all thev v. ith was one lon,
I TEfaPERAKQE WORKER. Sei' I'-i;:-n: " o YaJ.'.nUr A'crtv awl lil'jud llcmalij.
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.y,; .v: . : v--.v:J.':i'':: 'M lnv... ...... : MISS EESSIE FARRELL MISS P.KSSIE FARRELL. 1011 Third Ave, P.rooklyn, N. Y., is President of the Voting People's Christian Tenuierance Association. Slie writes: "Peruna is certainly a valuable n'rve and blood remedy, calculated to build up the broken-down Irealth of worn-out women. I have found by personal experience that it acts as a wonderful restorer of lost strength, assisting the stomach to assimilate and digpst the food, and building up worn-out tissues. In my work I have had occasion to recommend it freely, especially to women. "I know of nothing which is better to build up the strength of a young mother, in fact all the ailments peculiar to women, so I am pleased to give it ray hearty endorsement.' Dr. Hartman has' prescribed Peruna for many thousand women, and he never fails to receive a multitude of letters like the above, thanking him for the wonderful benefits received. JIan-a-Lin the Ideal Laxative. WHIZ" A New Parlor Game For the Long Winter Evenings FREE Cfo to your dealer and buy a pound package of "'20 Mule Team" BORAX. Cut off the top panel from package and mail to Pacific Coast Porax Co., Chicago, lib, with 4c In stamps and the WHIZ game will be promptly sent you Prepaid. WHIZ, the New Parlor Card game, is composed of 44 handsomely printed cards inclosed In a flap case with full and complete rules for playing. Entertaining, instructive or educational, and can be played by all the family. Similar games cost SOe in the shops. You can get It FREE. ot n Mere .Man. "The English aristocrat is very proud of his lineage, but not nearly so proud as the (iernian." said a nnr-h traveled man. "A (Jeruian once fell from a Hamburg-American liner into the sea, and a salbT, seeing him disappear with a splash, shouted: ' 'Man overboard !' "The (Iernian as soon as be came up yelled haughtily to the sailor: "'What do you mean with your 'man overboard? I'raf Hermann von Finkensteln.'I)u:ke of Suabia and Prince of the Holy Roman Empire, is overboard.'" HEP- GOOD FORTUNE. .tfter Yearn Spent In Vnln Ifl"ort. Mrs. Mary K. II. House, of Cambridge, X. Y., says : "Five years ago I had a bad fall and It affected my kidiu'ys. Severe pains iu my back and hips bcame constant, and sharp twinges fob jnweu any exertion. Vl T'ie kidney secretions VH I. . 11 .18-,.. vn.'xir lAiuiy ui.Noidered. I- lost flesh and grew too weak to work. Though constantly using niHli1 4 cinp I despaired of being cured until I brgan taking Douifs Kidney Fills. Then relief cam.e quickly, and in a short time I was completely cured. I am now iu excellent health." Sohl bv all dealers. T0 cents a box. Fuster-Milburn Co., Kuffalo. X. Y. A Substitute. Customer Will you give me a copy of "The Art of F.olng Happy at IIorneT Librarian I'm afraid it's out, but I j have here a little treatise on jiu jitsu, which makes an excellent substitute for it. Feie Meie. For an early breakfast, take home Mrs. Austin's pancake flour. Ready in a minute. The population of the prairie districts of Canada has doubled within the last live years. Only One "IHtOMO QITIXIXE" That is LAXATIVE IUIOMO yri.NINE. Ioos for ttie signature of E. W. fJKOVE. I'sed the World over to Cure a Cold in Oue day. 25c In most large cities death rate in winter is niiK-b crenter lhan in summer. Mrs. Wlnslow's SoeriUNü EiBt'F Tor Children teething ; softens the gums, reduces Inflnmiuallon. allays pain, cures wind coitc. 5 cents a bottle.
-A CASE
throw your liver out of gear, and make you act mean to those ycu love. Y our stomach is sour, your skin yellow, your breath offensive, and you hate yourself and all mankind. Winter cr summer it's all the same, when you are unclean inside, you are unhappy and so is everybody near you. The cure is pleasant, quick, easy, cheap, never fails. Cascarets, the world's greatest bowel cleaner and liver tonic. Cascarets are guaranteed to cure constipation, lazy liver, bad blood, bad breath, sour stomach, biliousness,
and all summer and winter bowel troubles. Don't be unhappybuy a box today. All druggists, JOc, 25c, 50c. Write for health booklet and free sample. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York.
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Iii AVinter V.'bcjtt Crop Idealized $3S Per Acre 511 O.tti Per Acre in Soatliern Alberts. Coablale. Aha., Nov. 10th, 1D07 Fir I beg to say that this year we had .111) acres of grain, consisting of i;7 acres of spring wheat and jtcres of oats. The average yield of wheat was ."S bushels per acre and eas 74 bushels. We were offered $1.00 per bushel for wheat and .() cents for oats, making the acre values for the two crops SjJS.OO and ?.17.00, respectively. We also had 00 tons of hay worth $i:;.0 per ton, and obO bushels of potatoes, worth (JO cents per bushel, tbe latter off acres of ground. Our Itest yields this year were 107 acres of wheat, making 41 bushels per acre at $1.00 per bushel, would be $11.00 per acre; 47 acres cf oats, yielding !)." bushels per acre were sold for r cents per bushel. Proceeds $17.00 per acre. I might add that o0 acres of our oats were "'stubbled In." During the spring of lOCKJ wc hired about 300 acres broken by steam. We put in and harvested o.1 acres of grain last year, but did tho remainder of our breaking, worked up the ground and seeded this year's entire crop ; put In 1 acres of aifalfa, and 5 acres of garden potatoes, trees, etc., all with on?
four-horse team. During harvest we hired other teams; but, aside from this and part of the breaking, the one team did the work of raising practically 10.-1 C00 bushels of grain, worth $12,000. Yours truly, W. II. PAWSON, JR. Winter WLeat 25 to 30 Duihol to The Acre In Southern Alberta. Warner, Alta.. JaD. 0th, 1008. Dear Sir This is the first year of farming in this settlement. Mr. A. L. Warner raised twenty-five hundred and fifteen bushels of fine winter wheat on one hundred acres of breaking:, and Tenny Brothers had sixty acres that went thirty bushels per acre. The winter wheat that Is Iu this yerr looks fine. Spring wheat here went thirty bushels per acre; oats, fifty to eighty; barley, fifty, and flax ten to fifteen on sod. The settlers here are all well pleased with the country. The stock have not required any feed except the grass up to this date ami are all fat. Yours truly, F. S. LEFFI XG WELL. Information as to how to reach these districts can be secured of any agent of the Canadian government, whose advertisement appears elsewhere. Ed.l Billion Dollar Graw. Most remarkable grass of the century. Good for three rousing crops annually. One Iowa farmer on 100 eres sold $.V 800.00 worth of seed and had 300 tons of hay besides. It is immense. Do try it. FOB 10C AND THIS NOTICE pend to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse. Wis., to pay postage, etc., and they will mail you the only original seed catalog published in America, with samples of Iiiilion Ikllar Grass, Macaroni Wheat, the sly miller mixer. Sainfoin, fhe dry soil luxuriator. Victoria Raj, the JOc a ton green food producer. Silver King Uarley yielding 173 bu. per acre, etc.. etc.. etc And if you send 14c we will add a package of new farm seed never before teen by you. John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis. C. X. U. Red a red Colonist Rates. One-way tickets at special low rates on sale daily throughout March and April, from all points on The North Western Line to San Francisco. Los Angeles, Fortland and Fuget Sound points. Daily and rersonally conducted tours in tourist sleeping cars via the Chicago, Union IV.eific & North Western Line. Double berth only $7.00, through from Chicago. For full particulars write S. A. Hutchison. Manager," Tourist Dept.. 212 Clark St., Chicago, 111., or address nearest ticket agent.
RHEUMATISM is most painful. What's good?
uiüufapjiwf "HVhJJMTigtti'rrTirrwT
Gives instant relief. Removes the twinges. USE IT, THEN YOU'LL KNOW 25c ALL DRUGGISTS 50c.
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SHOES AT ALL 0?Zr PRICES, FOR EVERY
Nitmutn ur i klf amilt, MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. men's 92. SO, S3.GO and $3.ßO shoes than any other manufacturer In tho J&Cs venrld, becauao they hold their mXijt shape, fit better, wear longer, nnd nTxz are or greater value than any other rahoea In the world to-day.
W. L Dour-las $4 ar.d $5 Gilt Edtrc Shoes fennct
W "A IJTIOV. W. T nuula name nd pri li stumped on Vttom. TT lie Wwh.f Itwf . Sol.l by the ix-st hoc dpulrn "verywlierc bbues niaUf't fri fa'norr to sny pn of the vorH. Illus. Uated CsUüög Irce to any atMreis. W. 1. DUltiLAü, UrwkUii, Mom.
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Arc you happy? Not if your liver and bowels don't work. Happiness depends on the bowels. Every time you eat, yo'i put into your body not only good material for repairs and . fuel, but a mass of useless stuff that has to be removed promptly or it will clog your machinery, poison your blood,
q2 CANDY CATHAPTIC iJli.
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After suf ferin?: for seven years, this woman was restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compoundi Head her letter. 3Irs. Sallie French, of Paucaunla, Ind. Ter., writes to Mrs. Pinkham: " I had female troubles for seven years was all run-down, and so nervous I could not do anything. Tho doctors treated me for different troubles but did me no good. While in this condition I wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for advice and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I am nov? fctrongand well." FACTS FOR SICE; WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink'Jam's egetablc Compound, made ,- m vnAlo o th 1 horlic Ima lion Tita gnrd rcmedv for female iHs. i,; AHiS women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear-ms-downfeelirg, f!atu!ency,indigestion,dizziness,ornenons prostration. AVhy don't you try it? Don't hesitate to write to "Mrs. Pinkham if there is anything about your sickness you do not understand. She will treat your lcttcrinconfidcnceandadvisc3-oti free. No woman ever regretted writing her, and because of her vast experience she has helped thousands. Address, Lynn, Masfl Illustration Showlnr MJxnl Fanning Seen te ÜESTEEH .GflnODA Some of the choicest lan3s for grain crowing, ttock raisins: and mixed farming in the new district of Saskatchewan and Alberta bare recently been Opened for Settlement under th Revised Homestead neguhtiens Entry may now be mado by proxy (on certain condition!). by the father, mother.soo.danghtor. brother or sister of an Intending homesteader. Thousands of homesteads of 1G0 acres each ai tht:s now easCy obtainable in these great graiagrowing, stock-raising and mixed f armicg sections.' There yon wHl find healthful climate, good neighbors, churches for family worship, schools for your children, good laws, splendid crcps. and railroads convenient to marke. Entry fee In each case Is $10.00. For pamphlet, "Last Best West." particulars as to rates, rontaa, best time to go and where to locate, apply to W. D. Scott, Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa. Canada, or W. II. Ropers, d Moor Traction-Terminal Building, Indianapolis, led-, and Ii. M. Williams. Koom ao. Law Building, Toledo, Ohio, Authorized Government Agents. riMMiW wher roaMwthia adertiaeuiMt. RUB3ER STAMPS. ATI kinds of Rubber Stamps Ma da te Order. Self-inklnf Daters something new. lak and Inking Pads. Send fir Catalogue to Lock Box 119. Feit Wayne. InX A paper kettle which can be used eight times, a Japanese invention. Is being introduced into the German nrmy. F. Vr.N.TJ. - - - Ko. IO 1008 When writing to Advertisers Heaso say yew saw the Advertisement In this paper. SVtf Color lint Be Ecua'lcd At Anj Prlc9 xelbttvc!p. bowel: 3 I
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