Plymouth Tribune, Volume 7, Number 26, Plymouth, Marshall County, 2 April 1908 — Page 7

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TWO MILES A MINUTE. fuhiou iiulioi: on child.

Restored to Health by Lydia i:. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Read What They Say. Miss Lillian Hess. 5"0 ! East ü4Ui Street, w i 1 ork, writes: " Lyth i E. Pinkhani's Vegetable Coiu pound overcame irregularities, periodic suffering, ani nervous headaches, after everything else hal failed to help me. and I feel it a duty to let others know of it." Kathr,rincCrai?,23ö5 Lafayette St., Denver, Col., writes: "Thanks to Lj ilia E. Pinkhain's Vegetable Compound I am well, aftersuff erin for mouths from nervous prostration." Miss Marie Stoltzman, of Laurel, la., writes : " I was in a run down conditionand suffered fiom sup pression , indigestion, and poor circulation. Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Comxxmnd made me well and Etrong." Miss Lllen M. Olson, of 417 N. East St., Kewanee. 111., says : " Lydia E. rinkham'sVegetable Compound cured me of backache, side ache, and established my periods, after the best local dofctor h:kd failed to help me." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements,innammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear-lng-down feeling', flatulency,indigestion,dizziness,ornervous prostration. Why don t you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write lier for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. A rejulir Mr. Malfcprop recently came hone from Ills fifst visit to Europe, lie grew enthusiastic about Home. "It vrpi fitx-," he declared, "to go Into them churches over there and see the old tombs cigarophagnsses, they call 'em. And then the Sixteen chapel is great and as for the Vaccination, where the Pope lives, well!" But his stock of compliments gave out when he got to the subject of beggars. "I always refused them pennies," he laid, "because, you Bee, I didn't want to set' a bad prestige!" New York limes. ' Deafness Cannot be Cured ty local applications, as they caanot reach the diseased portion of the err. There is only one way to cere deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness Is caused by the Inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you hare a rumUln? sound or Imperfect hearing, and when it U entirely closed. Deafness Is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out nd this tube restored to Its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever ; nine cases out of ten are causel by Catarrh, which Is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous unrfacs. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by Catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free., . F. J. CIIENEV& CO., Toledo, O. Sold br Drupzists. 7.V. Take Hall's Family I "Ills for constipation. Marriage IMclnrjner In Honorary. In some iarts of Hungary it la the custom for the bridegroom to pay a sum to the bride's parents, and in case the parties cannot agree, the mayor nets as arbitrator. A major, who is a cattle dealer, recently had to decide a case of this kind, and after inspecting the bride decided that the bridegroom must Vy the parents at the rate of half a crown for each pound that the brid weighed. The verdict was accepted, and the -woman weighing eightyfix pounds, the bridegroom handed over the equivalent of $."3.73. after which the wedding ceremonv was performed.' ' 1 . the skin is sallow, the toczue coated, andi when headaches are frequent. Ilovr to L"ae a Spoon. Mläs Freshleish I'm sure I, don't encourage that young Mr. Hankinsoc, but be insists on being spoony. What ought I to do? Her Chapercn Move him from yon, my dear. That is the correct usage in society. FiTQft. Vitus Dance and all Nerroos O lijsease Permanently Cnrwl by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve üestorer. S nd for Free 2 trial buttle and treatise. 1K. K. 11. KLLNü, Ld.. Val Arcb Street, i'hilatlelphla. Pa. Some Very Pretty Names. Ilere are some names taken from a Jury list in the year in which Richard Cromwell succeeded his father aa protector of England: FaintNot Hewitt, Redeemed Compton, Stand-Fast-on-the-IIigh Stinger, lie-Courteous Cole, Search-the-Scriptures Moreton, Kill-Sin Fimple, Re-Faithful Joiner, Fight-the-GooI-Fisht-of-Faith White, More-Fruit Flower, Weep-Not Billinj, Repentance Avis, and 60 on. Constinalion May tcpcnruirurnll overcome Improper personal c0orts vy'ttritKc assistance cftheono Iruy benejicial laxative remedy, Sjrup olfi anj Kl'ur cjSevna, wKicK enabled one to oTm regular Kalnt cl ally $o tKat assistance To tia iure may he raJual) disperse4wtfH vricn ho (oner neec)ec) a$tKe icstof remcdies,wKcn veauired, are to assist nature ana1 net to supplant the natur a) unctions, hicn must depend ulti mutely upon propev noutisriment, proper efJortsawA riKt livinentral. To get itÄ tenrjtcial effects, a?UayS buy the genuine SyrupcfKgsEKxirSennci aanuatrci ty the California "Fig Syrup Co. only SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGCISTS ouesae owy, ruiar prcc 50T ir Bottle Get your Letter Paper and Envelopes printed at this office, m m Wc can give yoa the EAGLE LINEN PAPER and ENVELOPES It Li fin and will suit you. Try It.

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A mere ways lost. maintenance ration is alIf possible buy stock that is at least 1 year old when mated. It is never wise or profitable to keep any animal in poor flesh. No preat increase In fertility will follow a field set to clover that is pastured closely from spring until fall. The man who deals with you most Justly is the vne who gives you the greatest value for your money. More damage is done the ui covered strawberry bed during the months of February and March than in the earlier portion of the winter. Geese do not mate as readily as ether fowls, and it is therefore advisable to procure them several months before the laying season arrives. I'e careful in handling fowls, imperially ducks and geese. Ducks have very weak joints and it always Injures them rsore or less to catch thcru by the legs. Hickory timber is fast disappearing and it is said to bo more difficult to replace than any 'other wood. There Is no substitute that is as tough, elastic, or as durable. The amateur vineyardist must do violence to his feelings when pruning, for he dislikes to cut back, but severe pruning is essential to the future usefulness of the vine. About the easiest money made on American farms, entailing no drain upon the fertility of the soil, Is that return secured from from the flocks of sheep which consume the largely waste vegetable growths to be found thereon. Fresh eggs and freshly laid eggs are ordinarily considered synonymous. The grocer, however, knows better and, as a rule, is very particular to get the right term painted on his show window. A square Oval between father and Ron would soon put an end to this paper talk about how to keep the boys on the farm. The principle of the square deal is synonymous with that set forth In the Golden Rule. There are four things that a farmer of good health is justified in going into debt for namely, tilling the wet acres on his farm, a manure spreader, fences that will enable him to keep sheep, and a soft water eiste? for the good housewife. Oil of lemon in alcohol and plain kerosene are both highly recommended for use In treating seed corn just prior to planting for the purpose of preventing damage by the wire worm. About a tablespoonful of oil is used to a planter box full of seed. Take cuttings of hardy roses and shrubs, as well as the currant and gooseberry. Cut slips iix or eight Inches long and plant them in a sheltered and well drained sjot, leaving one bud above the ground. MulcJi with Btrawy manure when the ground freezes. There Is one thing that Is in worse tas.'-e than sending a statement of account or "dun" to a debtor, and that Is for the debtor to allow the account In question to run until his creditor finds it necessary to resort to this means of collecting. There are many who seem to take offense at a dun who are not able to see the other side of the proposition. If the $200.000, more or less, that is spent annually In the farcical dlstribtitlon of seeds of very Indifferent merit by the Congressmen who hope thereby to better their chances of re-election were divided equally among the several States and territories for use in practical and helpful experiment station work. It would bo a far more serviceable disposal of the money. Of an estimated total forest area In the confines of the United States of 700,000,000 acres the amount in State or national reserves Is placed at 22 per cent, while the rest is in unreserved public lands or private tracts. The total area, however held, is deeemd sufficient with right management by those who have made a study of the subject to eventually supply the lumber needs of the country, and this in spite of a continually increasing demand. The common red squirrel is a relentless enemy of bird life, and the farmer and gardener will bo ahead at the end of the season If he exterminates all tH-se animals that frequent the wood iots In the vicinity. It Is probably because of these graceful and cute yet cruel little rascals so many varieties of birds shun wood lots as nesting places, preferring rather to ruVie their homes nearer the dwellings of man, whither these enemies come less frequently to disturb them. Squirrels re all right In a pie; elsewhere we prefer the birds. Work In the Poultry Yard. Neglecting to cleanse the drinking vessels Invites disease. Fall Is the best time of year to purchase geese for next year's breeding. Send all surplus poultry t market ns FOC'U as the fowls are in proper conti! t ion. Forgetting to provide grit causes indigestion and after a while It turns to cholera. y Some people make the mistake of selling all good birds an 1 retaining the poor ones. Un'ess one understands the process of forcing, it Is seldom wise to wait for prices to go up. Cull out the ' backward-looking pub: lets, keeping only the best and most promising for egg production. Carelessness In the matter of cleanliness about the roosting quarters Is a very common cause of disease. The Hat IMnarnr. In th course of the vigorous antiplague campaign which has been waged in San Francisco by the State and government authorities an army of rats has been destroyed. It has been a wellgrounded suspicion that the rodents are

trie greatest cause of the dissemination of the disease, and for this reason a special battle has been made against them, in the course of uhith alwut 1.000 animal:; have been caught and destroyed. Thirty-five thousand six hu.idml and forty-two rats were brought to the laboratory of he Ileiilth Department. Of this number, 11, "9 1 were examined by Icuteriologists for plague? and 1CV found to be infected. Over $200.000 has been expended in a campaign of sanitation, and the monthly pay roll at present is about SKUiO, of which the Federal government is paying three-fourths. The results achieved seem to Indicate that the disease has been practically stamped ojt.

I""ool Fraud, The attention of farmers is called to that portion of the pure food law found in Subdivision (. Section 4. S I. 47, Session Acts. 1:07, pages 2.TS to 212. and to Section 14 of the same act. It Is :i grave offense to sell bad eggs, or milk or cream or butter which is dirty or was produced from a diseased cow, or is below grade, or to which a preservative hr.s bn added: or meat to which a preservative has been added; or meat of animals which have died otherwise than by slaughter: or vinegar whicli is lelof standard; or fruit under false names as to variety or place of production; or to sell short measure or sbort weight foml of r.ny klnd. The farmer is primarily a producer of food and must expect to abide by the food law, the same law that protects him when others sell to him. Monotony Break Them Down. If the figures are reliable which ar. repeatedly published that of the Inmates of insane hospitals farmers' wives constitute a larger per cent than any other single class of people it would seem to be worth while to inquire into some of the causes which are responsible for this condition. While all farmers wives who do their share of the work have their time pretty fully occupied. It would not seem to be this so much as lack of change and variety that Is responsible for the mental depression referred to. Keen use of household responsibilities which the good wife cannot well escape from she leaves the house less seldom than her husband, who goes to market with grain or stock. On this account every effort should be put forth to give her variety and change and relief from her houselwdd cares as often as is practicable, liefore the hair grows silver on the temples and the shoulders are stooped with overwork the considerate husband, son and daua&ter will d nil they can to relieve tile mother of the heavy burdens which she has borne so long and uncomplainingly. Any relief of this kind while she can ajipreciate it wiü be sweeter to her than hot tears and lovely flowers on her coffin Md. Make the lives of these tired mothers as bright and happy ns may be, and but a poor return will be made them for their unselfish and loving ministry. Instructive Stntlatlrs. The government Crop Reporter for January coutains some very interesting data in tables which show the average yields of grain per acre in thcUnlted States during the forty year period beginning in 1S(JS and ending with the close of 1007. During the first five years of this period the average yield of the leading cereals was as follows: Com, 27.0 bushels; whet, 12.3; oats, 29.2; barley, 23.S; rye. 13.8. In the last live years of the period from 190.'! to 1007 the yield of the same cereals was: Corn. 27.5; wheat, 13.9; oats, 29.0; barley, 2G.5; rye, 10 bushels respectively. There are some helpful deductions and lessons that may be (irawn from the figures given. Among them Is this that a more exact and scientific type of agriculture has not during the period served to counteract the loss in fertility of soils that to begin with were marvclously prodigal and responsive. The figures given also emphasize the fact that those who are engaged in the good work must continue preaching the gospel of g better type of agriculture which will restore to the soil its lost estate of pristine productiveness. Another fact that is brought outj is that Vhere must be a read of redhanded agricultural sinners who are prosecuting a wretchedly unprofitable type of agriculture to bring the yields of the cereals nr.nied down to so low a figure. Every farmer In the country shouJd consider It his personal, religious and patriotic duty to raise such crops as will put him on the upside of these paltry averages to be a lifter up Instead of a puller down. Cat Ont the Robber Cottm. The establishing of test accommodations in Wisconsin will enable the dairymen to eliminate the unprofitable cows from their herds and help them to get better cows and make half the number produce as much milk and butter as the whole number of the average cows on the farms of Wisconsin are now doing. We must weed out tLe robler cows and the only way to do that is through the use of the milk scale and that sun? and unerring detective, the IJabeock tester. I doubt if there Is more than one farmer In twenty that knows the amount of butter fat eavh cow In the herd Is producing every year. Fvery farmer should have a milk scale hanging in the barn, and by the side of this a milk sheet with names or numbers of cows, enabling him to keep a daily record of each animal. It cosfji but very little more to keep a cow that will produce 400 pounds of fat per j-ear tlian one producing 100 Ittund?. The most extravagant thing a dairj-inan can do is to head his herd with a scrub sire. This is a step backward and becomes a continual slide us long as he continues such methods. There can be no advancement or grading tip without a pure bred prepotent sire. Improvement comes only through the suierlor quality of the male used. Experience in my work shows that cows kept at a good profit to their owner are not allowed out of the barn In winter more than one-half hour per day In fine weather, and are kept in warm, well lighted and well .ventilated stables. They are watered In stable cold days and fed food of a succulent nature, such as ensilage or mangel, with all the alfalfa or clover hay they will consume without waste, and a balanced grain ration of not less than one iound to every three pounds of milk given. II. C. Searles.

Hundred Mile nn Hour Already Attained by iernini Klcctric Car. A seventy-foot car on the BerlinZossen High-Speed Electric Railway, a military road lK?tween the Herman cities of Iierlin and Zossen, made the remarkable speed of ninety-nine and a half miles an hour in a test on Nov. 1C rhe car which established this new record for railway speed, steam or electric, was built in Germany last rear, a cd has attracted world-wide attention because of Its unique constructive features of having three trolleys, und the expectations of its builders that it would run 124 miles an hour, Dr more than two miles in a minute. In running at the rate of ninety-nine and a half miles an hour the three,ihase, or three-trolley, electric car em

ployed 10,000 volts of electricity, 2,000 rolts less than the capacity. The current was furnished by the Oberspree rvntral station of the Berliner Elktrictaetswerke, the distance from the central station to the nearest point on the line conductor being 0.3 miles. The transformers are carried by the car itself, a low voltage (435) being used for the motors. In a paper before the international engineering congress at Glasgow, Scotland, A. Lasche, one of the builders of the Berlin-Zossen road and its equipment, says It Is still questionable whether to mount the heavy transformers on the cars, or whether It Is not better to reduce the high pressure 50.00V volts by transformers alongside the track to a medium pressure of about 3.000 volts, and to wind the motors for this latter voltage. The car which has come within a half mile of 100 an hour was built at Colegne-Deutz to accommodate fifty passengers. Its length over all Is GO feet, and the distance between Its buffer plates Is 72U feet The full width of S feet 0 Inches. The windows of the car are closed, ventilation taking place through the side window of the lofty skylight. The apparatus Is In the center dividing the car into two apartments, though passengers may pass through the apparatus room while the car is at full speed. The trucks, carrying the body of the car, arc 43 feet and 7 Inches apart. The diameter of each truck wheel is 49.2 Inches. Each truck has three axles, the two uter axles carrying the motors. The distance letween the wheels measures 12 feet and 0 Inches. The load for each axle is a little more than fourteen tons. Each of the eight motors Is adapted or a normal output of 2Ö0 horse powx, and for a maximum output of 750 horse power. The speed of the motor Is about 000 revolutions p,r minute, which corresponds to a car speed of 140 miles an hour. The tension of 12.000 volts, at which the current is surpllod from the overhead wire, Is reduced In the transformers to 435 volts. The Hesperian. llonenty and Homes. Dishop Totter tells a good story. One concerned a vestryman who spoke in the most laudatory terms of the honesty of a certain Individual. "I am glad to hear it," the bishop remarked, "for I have just bought a pair of horses from hhn." The vestryman looked a little uneasy. "Well, you sec that's different!" he said. A similar story was current In Calcutta forty years ago, says a correspondent of a contemporary, which gives it as follows: "Bishop Wilson of Calcutta, preaching one Sunday morning on 'Honesty,' at St John's, the old cathedral, said, 'You hardly know what some people will do. Now there Is my dear friend, the archdeacon, a holy man, so you think. He sold me a pair of horses for 1,000 rupees that were not worth 10 annas. In the evening the archdeacon preached, and com-men-l his sermon by 6aylng that h must allude to some personal remark? of the bishop. 'It was quite true, be Faid, 'that he sold Bishop Wilson a pair of horses for 1,000 rupees, but unfortunately it was also true that the bishop had never paid hira even the 10 annas which, according to him, they were worth.' " The Trnth Revealed. Here are the results of ßome actual Investigations made by Woman's Home Companion In Us campaign for clean grocery stores: "I asked the grocer whose customers could not afford to buy package goods bow he sold the best grade of rice In als stock. He weighed out a pound )f large, plump-grained rice at sixteen ?ents. I duplicated that pound at another store In a dust-and-germ-proof package at fifteen cents. "He did have both the bulk 'and package oatmeal. I bought a pound of sulk at five cents, and a two-pound package of a recognized brand at len cents. On reaching home I welgh xl both. The bulk, poured Into the scales, weighed an ounce less than a pound. The package weighed exactly two pounds out of the carton. The honest grocer handles package goods that weigh as much as advertised without the carton, understand." Could We Live on 3Iarat The physical conditions on Mars are in many ways intermediate between those found upon the earth and the moon, aud It seems plausible that the life existing upon It should similarly be of a higher tj-pe than that found at present on the surface of the earth. Even If the physical conditions, as w understand them, were equally favorable with those In the earth, civiliza tlon would by no means be a necessarj consequence. Had it not been settled by Europeans the United States would still be a wilderness. How much less should we hasten to accord civilization to a planet of which we know little, except that If we were transported there ourselves we should Instantly die Professor W. II. Pickering In Harper'i Magazine. YVUe Inaecta. In his experiments to determine whether It Is the color or the odor of flowers that attracts bees and other Insects M. Plateau, the Belgian zoologist, bethought him of trying a mirror. He selected a flower of striking color and strong odor and placed it before an excellent glass in which the reflection was perfect. All the Insects went straight to the real flower, and not a single one approached the reflection In tho mirror. Youth's Companion. The l'oet'i Son. "Why, Freddy, how dirty you are, and only yesterday you wrote a versa for papa's birthdaj', promising always to wash your hands clean." "Well, mamma, that was only a poetic license." Fliegende Blatter. Some womeu gain a great reputation for shrewdness and economy by asking the price of everything they see. Some men are like gas meters; they Just can't help lying.

The title of Winston Churchill's new novel is "Mr. Crewe's Career." Mr. Churchill's previous story, "The Crossing," was published in 1004. Mr. Kipling is writing a series of articles, on his recent experiences in Canada, which will be published under tlr; title, "Letters to the Family." Sir F. Burnand in his "Records and Reminiscences' says of Browning that he was not at all the sort of man one would take for a poet ,"It is expected generally of a poet that he should be of somewhat eccentric appearance. He should be above the prevailing fashion and dress and wear a costume entirely of his own creation and the tailor's make. Now there was nothing about Browning of the Tennysonian ruggedness. He was in every way 'neat but not gaudy, faultlessly dressed, and if there is one epithet above another that could be chosen to exactly describe him it would be the adjective "smug." Joseph II. Adams, author of "Harper's Electricity for Boys," believes that the study of practical science cultivates both mental resourcefulness and the habit of hard work. "I should like every boy Interested in electricity to hear what Thomas A. Edison once said to me when I was a boy working in his laboratories," Mr. Adams says. "I asked the great Inventor if Invention was not made up largely of inspiration. He looked at me quizzically for a moment, and then replied: "My boy. I have little use for a man whq works on inspiration. Invention Is twq parts inspiration and OS per cent perspiration. " The Stratford Town Shakspeare, which Is to be brought out soon in thl country, Is the only complete edition Shakspeare piblishetl In his native town. In 1507 Shakspeare purchased New Place and in the same year Julius Shaw obtained a twenty-live years' lease of the house standing two doors from New riace. Shaw was a friend of Shakspeare and one of the witnesses to his will. Though parts of the house occupied by Shaw have Iecn renewed the main structure of the building is unchanged. It is from this old Tudor house where Shakspeare must have been a frequent guest that the Stratford Town edition of his works has been Issued. Concerning the "Hundred Best Books" Clement Shorter says in his recent volume of "Immortal Memories' that there is no possibility of choosing them for any large number of readers, because there are very few books that are equally suitable to every kind of intellect Temperament as well as Intellectual endowment makes for sc much In reading. "Take for example the 'Imitation of Christ. George Eliot, although not a Christian, found it soul satisfying. Thackeray, as I think a more robust intellect, found it well nigh as mischievous as did Eugene Sue. There are great books that can be read only by the few, but surely the very greatest appeal alike to the man of rich intellectual endowment, and to the man to whom all processes of reading are incomprehensible." The list which Mr. Shorter gives as that of his own choosing begins, as most lists do, with the Rible. TRINITY'S SPIRE WAS TALL Before Adjacent Strnetnre 3Inde It Look Like n Hole In the Ground. "When I was a youngster," said a middle-aged man to a Sun reporter, "I came down to New York. I got some Idea of the size of the city by riding in the horse cars. By the way, It is one of the few cities In the world where you can still ride in horse cars. "I visited most of the show places and went to all the theaters. I went to Brooklyn by ferry. I devoted a day to going to Harlem by the Sylvan Glen or Sylvan Stream, or Sylvan something on the East river. "Hut the thing that Impressed me nost was the view from the steeple of Trinity church. f "Away up there, where the lookout holes were, I could look down on the lower part of the city, could see the river on either side, the upper bay and tho Brooklyn and New Jersey shores. "At that great height I discovered that others had been there before me; for on the timbers were cut the names or initials of my predecessors. I had a distinctive way of cutting my Initials In monogram, and this monogram ornamented the smooth trunks of various birch trees in the woods of my native region. "This I cut on a vacant space high up in the steeple of Trinity and then looked at it and thought that daring spirits of remote future generations would climb to the same height and perhaps- see it among the other Initials. "I have never been up In the steeple of Trinity Church since that memorable ascent. But the other day I was walking past the church and I saw typewriter girls looking down on ihe apex of Trinity spire from windows that seemed to be several hundred feet alove it. , "I then thought of the monogram I had carved on the inside of the spire and noted the location of the little lookout windows from which I had seen such a wondrous panorama forty years ago. "I had no Inclination to make the interior ascent of the spire, but from my position on the Broadway sidewalk I should say that if I had gone up and looked out of the same little windows I could have seen at the farthest nbout sixty feet, except In one direction, before the view was shut off by walls of steel and stone. "Perhaps adventurous climbers will no more carve their initials up among the timbers of Trinity's steeple. It would Involve less exertion to cut them on some beam in the cellar, from which position the view would be almost as extensive, and then to take an express elevator and see how the apex of Trinity's spire looks from a point a few hundred feet above it." Satan Terrified. There is as great genius displayed iE advertising as in the higher branches of literature. No problem daunts the modern advertising man. In the window of a little book store In Eighth avenue, New York, was recently heaped a great pile of Bibles, marked very low never before were. Bibles offered at such a bargain, and above them all, in big letters, was tho Inscription : "Satan trembles when he sees Bibles sold as low as these." Woman's Home Companion. Some men Bit with their eyes closed rctlier than see a woman stand In a crow ded car.

Itching;, RleodlnK Sore Covered Ilody Xotliln Helped Ilrr Cutlcar Cores Her in Five Da vs. "After my granddaughter of about seven years had been cured of the measles, she was attacked about a fortnight later by a furious itching and painful eruption all over her body, especially the upper part of it, forming watery and bleeding sores, especially under the arms, of considerable size. She suffered a great deal and for three weeks we nursed her every night, using all the remedies we could think of. Nothing would help. We tried the Cuticura Remedies and after twentyfour hours we noted considerable -improvement, and after using only .one complete set of the Cuticura Remedies, in five consecutive days the little one, much to our joy, had been entirely cured, and has been well for a long time. Mrs. F. Ruefenacht, It F. D. No. H. Bakcrsfield, Cal., June 23 and July IK), 100C." A. Heuiluiscmre, It Is not what one finds in nature, but what one brings to it, teaches Emerson. The reflection depends not wholly on the object, but In part on the mirror. The response awakened by music is gaged bj the receptivity of the hearer, says a writer In the Philadelphia Public Ledger. A hard-headed old Pittsburg manufacturer, yho made his fortune, as he expresses it, "with his coat off," was induced by his daughters to accompany them to a Wagner concert, the first he had ever attended. The next day he happened to meet an acquaintance, who said : "I suppose you enjoyed the concert last night, Mr. Smith?" "Yes, it took ine back to the days of my youth," the old man said, with a reminiscent sigh. "Ah. summer dajs In the country girl In a lawn dress birds singiDg, and all that?" "No, the days when I worked In a

boiler shop in Scranton LANGUID AND A Condition Common wllh Kidney Trouble and Backache. Mrs. Marie Sipfle, 410 Miller St, Helena, Mont, says : "Three years ago my back grew weak and lame and I could not stoop without a sharp pain. It was just as bad when I tried to get up froha a chair. I was languid and listless and had much pain and trouble with the kidN ney secretions. This ".... T"ati.v was m v state whpn I began with Doarf's Kidney Pills. They helped me from the first and four boxes made a complete, lasting" cure." . Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. 3To Smoker. The bishop of London, at a dinner In Washington, told a story, as the cigars came on, about one of his predecessors. "When Dr. Crelghton was bishop of London," he said, "he rode on a train one day with a small, meek curate. Dr. Crelghton, nn ardent lover of tobacco, soon took out his cigar case and with a smile, said: "'You don't mind my smoking, I suppose?' "The meek, pale little curate bowed and answered humbly: 'Not if your lordship doesn't mind my being sick." Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething-; softens the gums, reduces Inflammation, allays rain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. Insurance and Politic. In an address the other day Gov. Hughes spoke words of wisdom before a convention of insurance agents. The Governor said the first object was .- take the Insurance business out of politics. He said he knew the severe teiuptajtions to which the managers of Insurance companies were exposed when they found their business threatened by ill considered legislation, but that a policy of protecting the business by Indirect and Improper means would only bring all business into confusion and corruption. "This is a democracy," he said. "You have got to live by fhe principles of democracy. If It occasionally hurts you, stand It. But believe in the uncorrupted voice of the people and keep our Legislature pure." Ninety-six per cent of the coal is produced north of the equator. A Friend in Need

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THAT thin, little, 10-cent Box of Cascarets. When carried constantly in your Vest Pocketf or in ' my Lady's" Purse it will ward off ninety per cent of Life's ordinary Ills. , Eat one of the six candy tablets contained in that "Vest Pocket Box" whenever you suspect you need one. It can't hurt you, and is sure Insurance against serious sickness. When you have Heartburn, Colic, Coated Tongue, Suspected Breath, Acid-rising-in-throat, Gas-bclching, or an incipient Cold, take a Cascaret. Remember, all these are not merely Discomforts, but indications of a serious Cause. Nip them in the bud eat a Candy Cascaret. Cascarets don't purge, nor punish the stomach like "Bile-driving" Cathartics. They act like Exercise on the JSowel-

PUTNAM- FADELESS DYES Cslsr nsre ssois trlobler sad lasier eslors Ibaa asy slier dye. Ose I Oc pickiie cslsrs all filers, Taej ir cU wafer effrr ! say slber iru Tta csa iy UJ umcsliliilnipiaa iMrt. ttiile lor Ire l(klc-0tw I Dye, Oie.cfe tad HU Cslor, MOJ1HOE, DKVC CO.. Quincy,lllinoU

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PAIN AND $16 AN ACEE WAS REALIZE!) On a Crop in Weatern Canada TLnst Year Another Farmer Iteallse 22.50 per Acre from 151 Wheat Crop. Charles McCorraick, of Kenville, Manitoba, writes: "During the season of 1007 I had 100 acres In crop on the S. Y. quarter of section 18, township 35, range 27, west of the Principal Meridian, Western Canada, yielded as follows: Eighty acres at 22 bushels per acre, which I sold for 90 cents per bushel, and 20 acres oats yielding CO bushels per acre I sold for 35 cents per bushel, so that my total crop realized $2,004. From this I deducted for expenses of threshing, hired help, etc., $400, leaving me a net profit on this year's crop of over $1,000." , ' Thomas Sawatzky, of Herbert, Saskatchewan, says: "The value of my crop per acre of wheat is $22.50. I threshed 1,750 bushels of wheat from 70 acres, and was offered 00 cents a bushel for it; oats, 15 acres, 500 (bushels, and barley, 5 acres, 80 bushels. I do not know If I have been doing the best In this district, but I know If all the farmers were doing as well. Western Canada would have no kick coming as far as grain growing is concerned; and I further say that If you want to put this In one of your advertisements, this is true and I can put my name to If Four Water Color riet are Free. To introduce "20 Mule Team" Boraxo Bath Powder, to the greatest number in the shortest tlme Unit all may become acquainted with Its qualities as a toilet, bath and nu."sery necessity, the Pacific Coast Borix Co. has secured the exclusive control of a series of four beautiful water color pastels, size 14 xl7 inches, printed in ten colors of tha softest and most beautiful of flesh and flowery tints. So artistic are these pictures, that if they were obtainable in the shops, they would readily sell at $1.00 each. The Tacific Coast Borax Co. ofTcr them free. For full Information how you can obtain them free, address a post card to Faeiflc Coast Borax Co., New York City. Same mm lloraeflcsh. Rustic What makes these blamed things go? v Owner of Automobile (who had jirst paid a repair bill) Money. Eating Coconnnt-Cuktard Pie. Everybody praises Cocoanut-Custard pie If it's made right, but a sogzy pie will spoil the rnttre meal, tlrocera are now Rollins "OUR-IME," each 10-ent package containing Just the proper Ingredients for two plea. Jet the Custard for Coooanut-Custard plea. Put up by I-Zerta Co., Rochester, .'. V. The United States ranks first in the matter of coppur production and Japan second. . rettlt') Kye Salre lOO Years Old, relieves tired eyes, quickly cures eye aches, inflamed, sore, watery or ulcerated eyes. All druggists or IlowarJ liros., Uulalo n. y. . .I, Ninety-three per cent of the theoretical heat of coal is wasted, and only C-0 per cent of that of oil. Tticro la Only Ono

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That to USZDj THE YSORLD OYER TO CUZZ X COLO IX OLE DAT, Always remember the full name. Look flDf if for this signature on erery box. 25c. J-'O l

'''""''"''''''BbWBbsssMb yJCPaVY. Vlli SHOTS AT ALL S 8 ---PRICES. FOR CVCRV Q C V. : f Q

6HOCS AT ALL PRICES. FOR CVERV MEMBER OFTHE FAMILY.

MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN, fps tV. L. Dotpram ma km a and mail a mora mn'a S2.ÖÜ, S3.00 and S3.60 hoa ,-J than any other manufacturar In tho Xo mrortd, bncauaa they hold thalr ahapa, tit batter, woar I on oar, and mro of omatar valuo than any othor tshows in tho world to-day.

W. L Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot

rtUlITlOX. W. I Dffliklas nama and prioe Is stumped on bottom. Take KaHtlta. Fold by the Ix-rt shoe dealers eTrrywLera. JShoea nuulM frotr fsrtory t- nf pun of tho world. lUus Ualed Catalog free to any address. W. I. i0 ViiLJk.ti, UrwktM, Mas.

rC UVtfX XF 3T"tATrieiTll I Cure Constipation Si ri5w. f. ."- o

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Muscles that propel Food and that squeeze th natural Digestive Juices of the body into Food. Cascarets ward off, o

cure, the following diseases.

Constipation Eiliousntsi Indigestion Dyspepsia Torpid Liver Appendicitis Rheumatism

The Vest Pocket box carried constantly with you, like your Watch, or Lead Pencil, will insure you against sickness. But, don't forget that "a Cascaret in time is worth nine."

At all Druggists. 10 Cents a box.

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"OUCH" OH, MY BACK IT IS WONDERFUL HOW QUICKLY '

STIFFNESS CO WHEN YOU ' H tea THIS WELL-TRIED, OLD-TIE REMEDY FILLS THE BILL 25c. ALL DRUGGISTS. 50c. CONQUERS PAIN Illustration Sltoainsr Mixed farming- Scene la DESTEOfJ mW Some of the choice st lands for grain growing:,, stock raising and mixed i armies in the new districts of Saskatchewan and Alberta bave r. eenUy been Opened for Settlement coder tba Revised Homestead Ceguhti: Entry may bow be made by proxy (on certain conditions ) , by the f ath sr. ra other, son. danch ter, brother or sister of aa intending homesteader. Thousand of homesteads of 1G0 acres each are thus now easily obtainable in these great graingrowing, stock-raisin and mixed f&rmm? section. There you wfn find healthful climate, good Deihbors, churches for family worship, schools for your children, good laws, splendid crops, and railroads convenient to marVet. Entry fee in each case is f 10.00. For pamphlet, "Last Best West." particulars as to rates, routes. best time to go and where to locate, apply to V. D. Scott, Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or W. H. Korers. i Floor Traction-Terminal Buildir.tr. Indianapolis, InL, and H. M. Williams. Koom ao. Law AuildiDg, Toledo, Ohio, Authorized Government Agents, risue say vhere you sa this adrertiaemanl. TOILET ANTISEPTI8 Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disinfecting and deodorizing toilet requisite of exceptional excellence and economy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Simple WITH "HCaiTH NO BCSUTT" IOOH CNT rncC THE PAXTOH TOILET CO., Boston, MassJ MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A Ort in Car tar Ferf-rfsbaeea, ('nntlpatten, llenaarbe, Stosaarh Treablea, TeetLiatr piaaraera, ami Dtsir or Werna. They Break up ( old in M hours. At sil Druyri'. ätöota buipl vi:!! PKEK AddraM. A. S. OLMSTED. La of. H Y, Mother Graf, Nor in Cbild rrn'i Hon. Km York Cut. Ladles make yourself an Insulated oven. It cooks or kps tuod hot for hours Tvithout fuel. Simple and cheap to make Send fl-00 for blueprint and Instructions. G. S. Wilbur, 32 "Wellington St., Boston. r. W. N. U. - - - Mo. 141003 Vhen writing- to Advertisers ptaasa aar saw ths Advertise '(lent la this paper. f Fmtt Coin Be Equalled At Anj Price f i Shots Catarrh Hives Colic Jaundice Bad Breath Nausea Diabetes Vertigo Headache Scrofula. Worms Piles Ulcers Pimples Blotches Diarrhoea Flatulence Wchianly Eczema Troubles Dysentery 633

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