Plymouth Tribune, Volume 7, Number 28, Plymouth, Marshall County, 16 April 1908 — Page 7
NO ONE CAN ALWAYS AVOID
pt Pe-rn-na Pre-lT2tffiPSfcrySrHt One Dose in
Ps-ni-na PreI vents Catchingr: Cold. Many rfoule persist in riding on the
by c lot bins. They t-fart out perhaps In the heat of the day and do not feel the nped of wraps. The rapi.l moving of the car cools the body unduly. When they board th car perh? ps they are slightly perspiring. When the body is in this condition it is easi y chilled. This is especially true when a ierson is sittinc. Teprinuin; a street car ride in the middle of the day and endins it in the evening almost invariably requires extra wraps, but people do not observe these precautions, hence they catch cold. Colds are very frequent in the pprinj: on this account, and as the summer advances, they do not decrease. During th spring months, no one should think of riding on the car without being provided with a wrap. A cold causjht in the spring is liable to last through the entire summer. CJreat caution should be observed at this season against exposure to cold. During the first few pleasant days of spring, the liability of catching cold is great. No wonder so many people acquire muscular rheumatism and catarrhal diseases during, this season. However, in spite of the greatest precautions, colds will be caught. At the appearance of the first symptom. I'emna should be taken according to directions on the bottle, and continued until every symptom disappears. Do not put it off. Do not waste time by taking other remedies.' Begin at once to take IVmna and continue taking it until you are positive that the cold has entirely disappeared. This may save you a long and perhaps serious illness later on.
Bad Effects from Cold. Mr. M. .T. Deutsch. Secretary Building Material Trades Council, 151 Washingten St., Chicago, UK, writes; I have found your medicine to be unusually efficacious in getting rid of bad effects from cold, and more especially in driving away all symptoms of catarrh, with which I am frequently troubled. "The relief Peruna elves in catarrhal troubles alone is well worth the price per bottle. I have used the remedy for several years now. Spells of Coughing. Mrs. C. E. Long writes from Atwood, Colorado, as follows : "When I wrote you for advice my little three-year-old girl had a cough that had been troubling her for four months. She took cold easily, and Nothing Too Good i For ho American People
rate of OVER A MILLION BOXES A MONTH, proving" that the American people recogni2e, that what is BEST FOR THEM is none too good. WL7 this enormous patronage ? The answer is simple: Cascarets are pure, clean, sweet, mild, fragrant, harmless but effective little tablets for the treatment and cure of Constipation and all Bowel Troubles. They are put up in neat little enamel boxes, easy to buy, easy to carry (in vest-pocket or purse), easy to take and easy of action, always reliable, always the same, they "work while you sleep" and wake you up feeling fine in the morning. They not only regulate the movement and stimulate the muscular walls of the bowels, bat they keep the ENTIRE CANAL CLEAN and antiseptic, forcing out and destroying all disease germs that breed in the accumulated filth unless promptly and regularly discharged. Therefore, they are a great preventive of disease, and may be takencontinuously as a precautionary meas ure. ' The new Pure Drags Act, adopted by Congress on June 30, 1906, and in effect January 1, 1907. is a GOOD LAW and means better and PURER drugs for the American People. We endorse it and will live up to it in SPIRIT and LETTER, an easy task, as we have always been actuated by the sanvi principles and no changes are required in our formula or pack'ge'Wc adopted OUR OWN PURE DRUG LAV in 1895 when the first box of Cabarets came on the market and have lived and worked and produced under it ever since. Today.after a record of nearly 100,000,000 boxes sold, Cascarets STAND the greater in PURITY, QUALITY and MEDICINAL MERIT than any other preparation for Bowel trouble in all the world. This should be a great argument for any one, to try Cascarets AT ONCE, and be healthier and happier for it Some people have CHRONIC CONSTIPATION with all the horrors derived from it; others have HABITUAL CONSTIPATION from carelessness and neglect, but nearly EVERYBODY has OCCASIONAL CONSTIPATION, which, if not promptly taken care of is -liable to result in its degeneration into the worts forms and cause great suffering and perhaps death. Cascarets, if taken patiently and regularly, will remedy all of these awful troubles, but if taken promptly at the very first sign of an irregularity of the Bowels, will act ar the FINEST PREVENTIVE ever discovered and will keep all the machinery running in good order. 7.y We advise you to get a little 10c box of Cascarets TO-DAY and carry It in your purse or vest pocket. Take one when you feel anything unusual about your bowels. Your own druggist will sell you the little box, under GUARANTY of satisfaction or money refunded. All druggists, 10c, 25c, 50c.
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FOR CARTON TOPS OR SOÄP WRAPPERS FROM "20-MULE-TEÄM" BORAX PRODUCTS. "20-MULE-TEAM" Bor. land 5 Yo. Csrtons. Boraio Bath Powder (10 and 25c tlns Violet Boric Talcum Powder. Boric Spanrles. Boric Acid. Boraxaid Soap Powder. "20-MULE-TEAM" Soap. Que on of Borax Soap, Boraxaid Laundry Soap. "20-MULE-TEAM" Soap Chips. Send for 40-page Catalog of 1000 Valuable Premiums We Give Free For Tops and Wrappers from the afccTe "20-MULE-TEAM" Borax Products. You wl!l find many articles cf Ho.yho!l and Personal use that you can obtain ABSOLUTELY FREE. AJ1 you have to doit to SAVE YOUR TOPS OR WRAPPERS. Address PACIFIC COÄST BORAX CO., Chicago
Vhase Money Iar TnlsT Five miles east of Wheeling, W. Va., . ! the old Larrey mansion. In March, 1900, Col. Ja. -s Harrey, the or.uer, vra$ murdered, t, object of the criminals beAng to secure a large sum of money believed to be In the house. For the crime two negroes, John Mooney end Harry Friday, were hanged. The mansion was bought by A. S. Bell and the deed Includes "the household goods and all appurtenances thereto." Last week carpenters engaged in making alterations found $11,000 secreted beneath a Coor. Harvey's heirs claim the money, but Bell argues that his deed covers it. An Interesting legal battle is probable. Too Polita to Interrupt. Police Justice You saw that cock5gbt? Why dida't you stop it and arrest the mm? Tolice Officer I did, y'r aimer afth?r th ght was over. a fCSOOR) L Wttft A "fThonipscn'sEyeWaier
ttfetrCei WWCfi Time. Saves i
street cars, insufficiently rxotectrd would wheeze and have spells of coughing that would sometimes last for a half hour. "Now we can never thank you enough for the change you have made in our little one's health. Before she began taking your I'eruna she suffered everything in the way of cough, colds and croup, but now she has taken not quite a bottle of Peruna, and is well and strong as she has ever been in her life." Pe-ru-na for Colds. Mr. James Morrison, (18 East ICth St., Taterson, N. J., writes : "I have given Peruna a fair trial, and I find it to be just what you claim it to be. I cannot praise it too highly. I have used two bottles in my family for colds, and everything imaginable. I can safely say that your medicine, is the best I have ever used." f There is NOTHING TOO GOOD for the American people that's why we started to make Cascarets Candy Cathartic. The first box made its appearance in 1896, and the enthusiastic endorsement of the people has been bestowed upgta Cascarets ever since. The sale today is at the (LnQVEN ÄWÄY M COMMENCING SUNDAY, APRIL 26. One Hundred Miles and Return $1.00 Via Nickel Plate Road. Tickets on sale Sundays to points within 100 miles. Ask Local Agents or write J. C. Melenbacker, T. P. A., Fort Wayne, Ind. (10) M'ne Nineteen Hole Golf Coarse. "Neatness Is essential on the links," said a noted golfer at a dinner In Chicago. "At Shinnecock Hills one day," he went on, 'I played behind two young and pretty girls. Overtaking them, I heard the younger say: "'How many holes on this course, Alleen?' "'Nineteen, dear said Alleen, 'including the one in your stocking.'" In Time rast. Julius Carsar was making a few changes in the calendar. "I could get along with the old one well enough," he said; "but the life insurance companies have begun to kick for something new in the way of advertising matter." Then, ostensibly to please the women, he decreed that every fourth year should be a leap year. Getting It All In. The prosecuting witness in the damaga suit against the city was giving in his testimony. "Now, then, Mr. Cleedem," said his lawyer, "you will please tell the jury where you were injured." "On my knee, in my feeling, and right in front of the city hall," rapidly answered the witness, fearing an objection on the part of the other attorney. Chicago Trib tne. There are always 1,500,000 people afloat on the seas cf the world. Do Your Clothe look Yellowf If so. use Rad Cross Bill Blue. It will maie them white as snow. Large 2os. package, C cent.
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In 1C0O the city of Philadelphia maintained a "town bull." Natural capability Is valuable only when furnished with the material with which to work. The permanent prosperity of all countries depends mainly upon the system of agriculture pursued. Sand is valued for farming purposes In proportion to the amount of plant food contained in the soil. A proper rotation and wise tillage will do much to keep the soil supplied v ith available fertility. A good formula for making grafting wax Is: Rosin 4 parts by weight; beeswax 2 parts; tallow 1 part. A horse welshing 1.000 pounds Is about right for farm work. It is not advisable to have him heavier. Breeding stock in the full prime of life and health always gives the best and most satisfactory returns. The citrus fruit crop of Florida for the year 1W7-8 is placed at 2.205,072 boxes against 3,S2G,01S for 1100. It seems the seedless apple is a failure. Horticulturists claim it Is only a novelty, and cannot be recommended. The Census Bureau estimates that there were 49,000.000 animals slaughtered at the various stock yards in the United States last year. The milk bringing better prices is all the more reason why you should weed out the poor cows and increase the margin of your profits. In very many instances poor results o the farm are due more to farming methods, or rather to the lack of them, than anything else. Throw out the stalks of corn that have fundus growths on the ear. Then burn them. These fungus-growth stalks Khould never be found with corn stalk shocks. Don't place any dependence on the free government seeds sent out by the congressmen. The best seeds are none too good. Procure the catalogues of reliable seedsmen and order from them. The total clip of wool In the United States for 1907 was 29S.29 1,750 pounds, Including the washed and unwashed product. Of the total o-it put there were 120,359.118 pounds of scoured wool, valued at $78,203,105. The Importance of gofnl feet on horses Is an old story. However, from the way peop'e. disregard the need of giving proper care to this matter In the colt, as well as the mature horse, it calls for constant reiteration. There Is no letter place to cart the ashes than the cabbage plot. They should never be used on the potato patch, for the reason that the lime in the ashes Is apt to assist In the pro duction of scab on the tubers. One set of people seem to be too lazy to breathe, while others are so busy with their business affairs that they forget that they have a body and a soul to care for. Between the two there is room for a very happy me dium. A South Dakota farmer recputl traded for a herd of Shetland ponies what Is supposed to te one of the largest horses in the world. The anlmcl In question stands eighty-one Inches high and weighs nearly 3,000 pounds. Tulerculosis germs die hard. Ac cording to scientists they may live for six months In dry, dead material. Nothing short of ten or fifteen hours of sunlight or an hour in boiling water will give them a care of pneumonia, while freezing seems to be Invigorating. If the failure to get a start In clover Is due to the same causes as with alfalfa, it is quite likely that in a good many cases Insufficient seed Is sown to give a proper stand. Especially Is this the case where no nurse crop is sown and where, If the clover plants do not get a good start of the weeds, tlm weeds will swamp the clover and emother it out. True, clover seed is expensive, but this furnishes additional reason why. If It Is worth while sowing the crop at all, enough should be sown to produce a satisfactory stand. Even Dada Grow Old. According to a government botanist nt Washington, there is reason to believe that buds share In the growing old of the parent plant. He illustrates his meanlrg In this way : Suppose the average life of an Individual plant say a tree to be 100 years, then a bud removed when the parent plant Is W) years old will also Im virtually 50 years of age, and If transplanted by grafting will be able to live on the graft only 50 years more. Women Dairy Inapectora. The lost office to te created for women in New Zealand Is that of dairy Inspector. There are now r4.0OO dairy cows in New Zealand, producing more than 52,000,000 jtounds of butter a year, besides 500 private dairies and eightynlno cheese factories. The Department of Agriculture appointed women inspectors to visit the dairies and factories and give Instruction and advice to the wives and daughters of the dairymen. i:net of Mother on Chick. Prof. Gowell of the Maine Agricultural College is one of our most able experimenters, and his methods could be followed with advantage by all poultry men. In addressing a recent gathering of poultry men he said : 'The const itirtlon that you find in a chick comes from the treatment the mother hen has. Constitution Is something tnat Is born with the animal, and you cannot get It Into the animal after It is born. It comes from Inheritance, comes from the parent that
roduoes the egg, and if that parent Is kept in a good state of vigor and health, we are able to get from it an offspring that will last." Camphor Tee. All true camphor is supplied by Japan and China, 80 per cent by tue former and 20 per cent by the latter. according to the Pharmaceutical Era. In obtaining camphor, the trees are destroved. Both countries have passed laws compelling the planting of yoviu camphor trees, China being more radi cal than Japan In this particular, r.s for every camphor tree that Is cut down, five new ones must be planted. Japan has planted 3.000,000 young tree ? since 1900, to which arc to be added 50O.C0O planted this year, and hereafter 750,000 annually. The Tavan Farmer. The Tuscan ptlisant stands in the peculiar position of being neither a proprietor nor a dependent, wrues Helen Zimmern In the Youth's Com panion, lie is, instead, tne parmei in an industry. According to this meth od of farming, which Is called mezzadrla, the proprietor of the land pays all the taxes, advances all money re quired, furnishes capital for the pur chase of rattle and keeps In repair the dwelling house. The peasant in re turn works the fields, attends to the live stock and to other home Indus tries, sells the products in short, is the absolute master of the land that is confided to him. He works the soil exactly as if It were his own, and then. at stated Intervals in the year, divides the products and profits with the real owner. Ravage of the Tick. Dr. J. II. Wilson, chairman of the State Live Stock Sanitary Commission, places the lss in the South as the result of the ravages of the fever tick at $24.000.000 annually. This is considered a very conservative estimate, as the loss has been placed at $40,000,000 by other authorities. These losses are not the result of the fever, for quarantined cattle do not have it. The loss Is caused by the ravages of the tick, which sucks the blood of the animal and keTs it In an emaciated condition, thereby preventing its full maturity. As evidence that the tick Is capable of reducing cattle to a point where short pastures and cold rainy weather during the winter season results in a heavy mortality, he has presented figures showing that during 1904 and 1905 the death rate among cattle In the tick Infested area was 8.33 per cent, as con pared vlth 3.12 per cent above the national quarantine line, notwithstanding the fact that the cattle above the line encounter severe winters. Tick eradication seems a necessity i! the Sotithern cattle grower expects tc receive the full reward of his labor, and both the national and state governments should come to the uld of the cattlemen in their efforts to get rid of the pest. San Antonio Express. Teatlna? Seeds for the Farm. The other daj- a rascal was found to have made a small fortune by chopping up palm leaf fans and selling the stuff at a dollar a packet, containing a pinch or two of the precious dust which waa said to be the seed of a rare exotic flower. So writes W. C. Fitz-Cerald in the Technical World Magazine. He advertised widely, and numbered professional florists among bis victims. True, lie disclaimed responsibility for the germinating power of his '"seed," but this Is si common warning even on tho wares of reputable seedsmen, so that the buyers planted, watched and watered with pathetic zeal until at length an angry lady laid the swindler by the heels. Now farm and flower seed of the? highest quality is costly stuff. So minute is that of the calceolaria that th.? actual cost of producing the finest strain exceeds Uh times the weight of the seed in purest gold. Mignonette seed, too Is by no means chenp, yet that of the begonia in at least sixty times dearer; and a liberal allowance for a $2 packet Is measured In a tiny spoon with an outside diameter of three-sixteenths of an inch. And yet iu that small spoonful there will be enough seed to produce more than 100 stately begonia plants. The writer goes on to describe the careful testing seeds undergo at the hands of the government inspectors, and an Interesting series of photographs illustrates the text Farmlnja; Old and tt. When the late Ko!ert G. Ingersoll was a farmer boy In Wisconsin the farm was not the place it Is now. He has left a description of early rural life as he recalled it: "They used to haul wheaf twenty miles In wagons and sell it for 35 cents a bushel. They would bring home about 300 feet of lumber, two bunchea of shingles, a barrel of salt and a cook stove that never would draw and never did bake. In those blessed days the people liven on corn and bacon. They had poor houses. The rain held the roofs In perfect contempt, and the snow drifted Joyfully on the floors and bed Thev had no barns. The horses were kept in rail pens surrounded with straw. Long before spring the sides would be eaten away and nothing would be left but the roof. Everjthing was done In the hardest way Everything about the farm was disa greahle. Nearly every farmer's bo.v took an oath that he would never ml tlvate the soil. The moment they ar rived at the age of 21 they left the desolate and dreary farms and rushed to the towns and cities." Those were the days before farming was a science. Now the bright youth Intended for agriculture takes at least the short course at the imlversitv. lie learns things al)out soils and crops and the selection and care of stock that the old-time fanners never dreamed of. He farms not by the sweat of his brow. but by the aid of machinery. The farm is equipped with commodious building?, and the farmhouse is a comfortable home, sometimes with pretensions to architecture. It has n telephone and it may be heated with hot water. There Is a rural delivery mall box not far from the front door, and good roads fa cilitate the easy transportation of the product of the farm to a not distant railway station. The Western farmer of to-day Is one of the most prosperous and independent citizens of the republic. Wisconsin Ihij-s of this generation should think twice before they desert the farm. The Evening Wisconsin.
One of ihe of the happy home3 of to-day ia a vast fund of information as to the best methods of promoting health and happiness 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 world-wide acceptance through the approval cf the Well-informed of the "World; not of individuals only, but of the many who have the happy faculty of selecting and obtaining the best the world affords. One of the products of that class, of known component parts, an Ethical remedy, approved by physicians and commended by the Well-Informed of the World as a valuable and wholesome familylaxative is the well-known Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists.
The Spleen as, Food. In France and Italy many persons eat the spleen, what we call in French "ratte." I have eaten it myself. Generally from a pig It weighs about eight ounces, and it is situated on the right side of the pig, touching the' liver. A spleen from a cow or bull weighs about two pounds, but is a little more spongy than the pig's spleen, which Is the best. If some cne should start the fashion we would after a while pay 73 cents a portion in first-class restaurants, especially if some person of mark should start the habit. Chef Valere Braghuehais in Letter to New York Tribune. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot roach the seat of the disease. .Catarrh Is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure It xou must take internal rem edies. Hall's Catarrh Cure 1 taken Internally, arid acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physician iu this country for years and is a reeular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined Tvlth the best Wood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect com bination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing Ca tarrh. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY St CO., Toledo, a Sold bv Druggists, price 70c. Take Hall's Family Fills for constipation, The Effect on the Nerves of Gambling. How can a man do his daily work quietly, which represents perhaps only the earning of a few shillings, when his anxious other neurotic self U wondering how a horse he has never seen, ridden by a Jockey he has only heard of, in a race he has only read about, is faring as to money ostensibly his, which be cannot afford to lose because he has not perhaps got it if he should have to pay? Is such an existence likely to add to the race value of our stock of fleeting patriotism? Pry's Magazine. Ask Your Grocer for Oar-IMe." If your grocer is one of the few who have r.ot "OUK-riE" Preparation in stock, send his name and 10 cents to D-Zerta Food Co., Rochester, N. Y., and they will mail you a full size, two pie package free. Three kinds, for making delicious lemon, chocolate and custard pies. Tut up by D-Zerta FooJ Co., Rochester, X. Y. FICTION AND FACT. The Message In the Story Deok and tn Real Life. In a magazine: "I don't like you any more." Harold Hoplite looked up at the quaint figure a boy of six, with a mouth smeared with huckleberry pie. Harold was glum. "I don't like you any more." -Why?" 'Cause you made sister cry." "Ethel cry ! I didn't I couldn't make her cry." "Well, she's crying now when you said nothing when you walked away. Why didn't you say good-bye and kiss her when you're going away? I always do." i "I will! Right now." And Harold hastened back to make up the lovers' quarrel. In real life: "Say, pister gave me a piece of pie to come down and see If you'd gone and if you hadn't to try to get. you back past where she was sitting on the porch getting ready to be crying." "Oh '."New York American. Giving Him a Pointer. "Xaj$?us," said Bonis, "you've seen that ftory of mine that's running through one of the magazines. How would you advise me to wind it up? I want to give it a happy ending." "Put all tie characters in the story," answered Naggus, "aboard an excursion steamer for a moonlight ride. Send the boat out to the middle of the lake " "Yes?" "And blow it up." , ,Jf One of the Dim I'ast. Alexander the Great had just subdued Bucephalus. "Anybody can bust a broncho," he said, "but it takes a man to put the snafDei on a Vig four-legged devil like this one." Being shrewd, politic fellows, the cowboys of that age allowed the impression tc go out that they were afraid to try tc ride the savage beast, and the subservient historians hastened to confirm thai impression. It costs fifteen thousand dollars to paint the Eiffel tower. LOST $300 DnyloK Medicine When Right Food Was ceded. Money spent for "tonics" ar.d "bracers" to relieve indigestion, while the poor old stomach is loaded with pastry and pork, is worse than losing a pocketbook containing the money. If the money only is lost it's bad enough, but with lost health from wrong eating, it is hard to make the money back. A Mich, young lady lost money on drugs but Is thankful she found a way to get back her health by proper food. She writes: "I had been a victim of nervous dyspepsia for six years and spent three hundred dollars for treatment in the attempt to get well. None of it did me any good. ' "Finally I tried Grape-Nuts food, and the results were such that, if it cost a dollar a package, I would not be without it. My trouble had been caused by eating rich food such as pastry and pork. "The most wonderful thing that ever happened to me, I am sure, was the change In my condition after I began to eat Grape-Nuts. I began to improve at once and the first week gained four pounds. "I feel that I cannot express myself In terms that are worthy of the benefit Grape-Nuts has brought to me, and you are perfectly free to publish this letter If It will send some poor suffervr relief, such as has come to me." Name given by Tostum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read, "The Road to Wellvlile," in pkga. "There's a Rea-son."
BABY WASTED TO SKELETON.
In Torments with Terrible Sores on Face and Body Tore at FleshCored by Cntlcnra. "My little son, when about a year and a half old began to have sores come out on his face. They began to come on his arms, then on other parts of his body, and then one came on his chest, worse than the others. At the end of about a year and a half of suffering he grew so bad I had to tie his hands in cloths at night to keep him from scratching the sores and tearing the flesh. He got to be a mere skeleton and was hardly able to walk. I sent to the drug store and got a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment, and at the end of about two months the sores were all well. He has never had any sores of any kind since, and only for the Cuticura Remedies my precious child would have died from these terrible sores. I used only one cake of Soap and about three boxes of Cuticura Ointment. Mrs. Egbert Sheldon, It. F. D. No. 1, Woodville, Conn., April 22. 1005." THE RATTLER. It Ilarely Sonnds Its "Sotc at Warn Ing Vntll Attacked. Contrary to the general belief, the rattler rarely gives its characteristic note of warning until actually attacked. In fact, the sharp, vibrant ring of its terminal appendage is probably designed more to assist this very sluggish serpent to obtain food than to sound defiance or warning. In the first place, serpents possess but the most rudimentary traces of auditory apparatus and are practically deaf, the deficiency in the sense of hearing being compensated for by an extreme sensitiveness of feeling which makes them aware of the approach of moving objects by the vibration of the ground. Hunters, treading cautiously upon a soft carpet of moss or leaves to avoid alarming game, will often step close to or over a rattler without disturbing It or receiving warning, and while many snakes are seen and killed by them it is probable that a far greater number of snakes are timid and would rather run than fight, and the rattler is not inviting certain destruction by advertising its whereabouts in the brush. Francis Metcalfe in Outing Magazin SPRING KIDNEY TROUBLE Vividly Described by One Who Has Suffered from It. Mrs. II. Mutzabaugh, of Duncannon. Pa., says:"I was sick and miserable all last Spring and as I did not know what was the matter I kept going down and down until I was a physical wreck. I had smothering spells, flashes of heat over the kidneys, and pain in passing the kidney secretions, which contained sediment. My husband urged me to try Doan's Kidney Fills, and at last I did so. They. did me much good and I used in all eight boxes, which restored me to perfect health." Sold by all dealers, 50 cects a bo Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. Crab Has 2,000,000 Joints. The crab known as the scale-tailed apus was believed to have become extinct in Great Britain o0 years ago, the last recorded specimens being taken in the ponds ou Hempstead Heath. But now it has turned up again in some numbers in 'two ponds on Preston Merse, near Southwick, in Kirkcudbrightshire. About two and a half inches long, the apus bears a very striking likeness to that remarkable creature, the king crab, and this because the fore part of the body is covered by a great semi-circular shield, or carapace, while, as in the king crab, it swims on Its back. In the great number of its legs the scale-tailed apus has few rivals, while In the number of Joints which these share between them no other creatures can compare. The naturalist, Schaffer, once essayed the task of counting them and made the magnificent total of 1,802.004. Latrelle put down the number as a round 2000,000. London Graphic. It DependeC English John and Pat were two friendly workmen, who were constantly tilting, each one trying to outwit the föther. "Are you good at measurement?" asked John. "I am that," said Tat, quickly. "Then could you tell me how many shirts I could get out of a yard," asked John. "Sure," said Pat, "it depends on whose yard you get Into." Petllt's Eye' Salve for 25 relieves tired or overworked eyes, stops eye aches, congested, iailmicl or sjre eyes. All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, X. Y. 'otkilnic More. 'They've come to blows, haven't they?" a?ked the undersized reporter, who was trying to force his way to the center of the crowd. "Yes," answered the tall man, who could see the two disturbers of the peace. "First one of 'em blows, an' then the other, but that's all. Tber' hain't been a lick struck yit;' Chicago Tribune. Ills Idea of One. The teacher in the Darktown school was hearing the class in geography. "What is known as the Great Divide?" she asked. "Cuttin a big watermelon!" answered little 'Rastus with a grin that showed all hia ivories. Chicago Tribune. Disputed the Proposition. "All that you are, my friend," said the lecturer, singling out an elderly man sitting in a front seat who appeared to be deeply interested "all that you are, I repeat, you owe to heredity and environment." "Gosh," exclaimed the elderly man, ! turning red with indignation, "I never had no dealin's with that firm in my life, and I don't owe them or nobody else a blamed cent !" Chicago Tribune. The entire native population of Siberia does not exceed 700,000. Garfield Tea cannot but commend itself to those desiring a laxative at once simple, pure, mild, potent and health-giving. It is made of Herbs. All drug stores. The heart of a vegetarian beats, on an average, fifty-eight to the minute; that of the meat-eater seventy-five. This represents a difference of 20,000 beats in twenty-four hours. Clear, white clothes are a sljrn that the housekeeper uses Red Cross Ball Blue. Large i'oz. package, 5 cents. The development of the watercress growing industry in Dorset, England, is enormous. Oae farm alone employs forty persons in picking, packing and preparing the cress for the market.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Celer siere istds riskier asi faster cslers lias ssy sfler i ye. Ose lie packaae esters all Users. Tsey e Is csM water setter Idas sty ether lye. Tsscaatfya say 1 ara est ablaset ritaiai start. Write fer krs kseUcl-Oaw it Bye, Heart aas NU Celera. HOJi'ROt VC CO,, Quincy, IUimis
25c ALL DRUCGISTS-SOe. NEARLY 300,000 NEW ARRIVALS 'IN CANADA IN 1907. About Sixty Thousand from the Vnlted States. Now that it is known that In the year just closed nearly sixty thousand from the United States declared their intention of making their homes Iu Canada, it might not be out of place to search for some reasons that would bring this about. These people are. but following the example of the fifty-five or sixty thousand who did the same tiring the year previous and an almost equal number who the year before that but followed the example of the thousands of the year preceding. An excellent climate, certain and positive crops of grain of all kinds, good markets for their produce, land and good land, too at low prices, easy terms of payment (not forgetting the .100 acres of land given free by the government, particulars of which the Canadian Government Agent, whose name appears elsewhere, will tell you about), and then the splendid social conditions. The situation is pretty well sized up by a writer in one of the magazines. Quoting from this article we find this: "Those of us who made good in the States," Interjected another settler as if to continue the story of , his neighbor, "have had It easy from the start; a little money is a mighty good thing on coming into a new country. But those who make an entry, or even buy lands at low rates, are able to square things in two or three seasons' crops. There are hardships in building shanties and then, with increasing prosierIty, getting things into shape for better homes. But affairs go much as In the States. We have the largest liberty In the world; there is more home rule In the provinces than In the several States of the republic. Taxes are light and with only a few million people west of Winnipeg we don't get In each other's way. One's friends over the line probably thought we would not live through the winter; and while it is cold, real cold, it is free from the moisture experienced in the East. Schools are good as encouraged by the government; the enterprising American promoter and Yankee drummer see to it that we take notice of the latest Improvements and best agricultural machinery. Altogether we are as near to affairs as we would be on our own farms in the States. Winnipeg bears the same relation to us as Chicago did at home; and Edmonton with the surrounding region advances as Omaha did In the days when we were as young as the boys yonder. We get together much as they did in the granges over the border; the government has established experimen- ' tal schools of agriculture, ud progress In every line Is stimulated. This is a great region for grazing," we hear the Calgary citizen continuing, "and then with building elevators of wheat at ?1 a bushel, many of us find time to go over to the live stock exhibition in Chicago or visit old friends during the course of the winter. Every man is taken for what he is worth, or for what he can raise; and In this good air and on this fertile soil we intend to show our old friends that we are made of the right stuff that we are chips of the old block who built up the American West." A Ron of Luck. Iluffien 01dv fellow, you look blue, are you on the wrong side of the market? Trumbull Market be hanged! I moved yesterday. The van man broke oworth of the furniture, I lost a fivepound Bank of England note, the gas company held me up for double the usual deposit, and I've Just been summoned on a jary. London Mall, The majority cC color blind peopl't curiously enough, belong to the educated, classes, of whom no fewer than 4 per cent have this defect. ; Vermont gets the credit of being the pranite State, but Pennsylvania leads in the production of stone, . wiih nearly 14 per cent of the total to her credit. Fi r q St. Vitus' Dance and all Nervoas I I v Diseases Permanently Cured by Dr. Kline's Ureat Nerve Sestorer. end for Kree 2 trial hotile and treatise. DU. K. U. KL.INK.Ld.. H31 Arch Street. Philadelphia. Pa, The right hand, which is more sensitive to the touch than the left, is less sensitive than the latter to the effect ot heat and cold. A suit of clothes which Mill float the wearer in case of accident at sea has been patented by a Norwegian inventor. Thoro to Only Ono
That la Lsuzsiüllw BrcDm (ülcnÜDdllüdO USED THE WORLD OYER TO CURE A OOLO IU OKE DAT.
Always remember the fall name. for this signature on every box. ran SHOES AT ALL PRICES, FOR EVERY MEMBER OFTHE FAMILY, MEN, BOYS. WOMEN, MISSES AND
yrt to". L. Dougl mmkmn mnd mm Ilm more 0mtTZgi men' S2.SO, $3.00 mnd $3.60mhom than any other manutacturmr In tha JwßJ world, bmcaumm thmy hmld thmlr mhapm, fit bmttmr, wmmr longa, mnd irT3 " or graatar valva than any other me? ahoea In tha world to-day.
W. L Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Hit Shoes Cannot
Wt'Al'TIOX. W. I DonKlas name and price Is stamped on bottom. Take Xm aHtltwN. Bold by the tut shoe dealers eyerj where. Shoes mailed fror furtory to any pat of the worM. lit. bated Catalog free to any address. W. JL DOt'OLAJS, UNckUa, Mass.
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FOR STIFFNESS, SORENESS, SPRAIN CR BRUISE, NOTHING IS BETTER THAT YOU CAN USE; LUMBAGO'S PAIN, RHEUMATIC TWINGE, YOUR BACK FEELS LIKE A RUSTY HINGE; SCIATIC ACHES ALL PLEASURES SPOIL, FOR HAPPINESS USE ST. JACOBS OIL.
CAUGHT THE THIEF. An Incident Which Illustrates Japanese Detective Methods. Itecently in the Tillage of TaharamTrTa, Japan, all t lie male Inhabitants cbove the age of fifteen years were assembled In front of the local Shint shrine at the call of the village chief. A thief had been making depredations in the local tobacco plantations, and the chief sought to discover him. Outlines of the feet of all the villagers were taken on sheets of paper, and then these wen compared with the tracks left by the thief in the tobacrs field. Nothing resulted from this experiment The next day the Inhabitants were called together again. A great hole was dug in the ground, an4 a raging charcoal fire was built In ft All persons present were ordered tm walk through the fire barefooted. It being declared that no person would bs burned except the guilty one. All advanced to undergo the ordeal except one, Shukichi Shibata, a man of evil reputation. He declined to trust hfs feet to the redhoat coals. Accordingly he was arrested and soon confessed bis guilt Mrs. Winelow's Soothlaa; Syrup far Children teethlnp; softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. Misunderstood. Of Henry James, who, to the distress of many of his admirers, is revising "Daisy Miller," "The Portrait of a Lnv dy," and Lis other early works, a Chicago publisher said the other day: "Here is something funny that bajH pened during Mr. James' visit to Philadelphia. Two housemaids in the dotrtown house where he stopped were discussing him. . "'He's a very finicky, fussy gentleman,' said the first " 'Indeed, you're right he Is, the otter agreed warmly. 'He caught m using one of his razors the other morning to pry open a stiff window wits, and kicked up an awful row. Sow folks Late a bit of fresh air.' " Th Modern Turkish Woman. The modern Turkish woman receives a far better education than many or Ler Western sisters. When the latter is busy visiting, going to concerts or even Indulf ing in sports the Oriental within the barred windows of her harem follows these movements Is spirit With a knowledge of seven languages, three Oriental and four European, foreign governesses and as mar books as she requires, little escapes btr attention. London Strand. Steel rails average 130 tons of metal to the mile; iron, 113 tons. If yon Buffer from Fits. FsIIin Sit 1 mtmm mm bpsams. or have Claldren Uxat dom mis New Discovery ss4 T will rfvsUem lis4taU rsttot. ss sU oa sr wkH to do i tosstia lor s Free Bottle of Dr. sUjr's EPILEPTICIDE CURE OompHf witb Food sad Dror Act ofOnnctsu) Jane3Uthl6. Complete dtiyrf ion. ilw'w timonil. of CCKKS. et., F RLE bf mU txprtt TrpauL faiirc ACiE tsU mi it I. L MAT. H. K Ml rurt Strttt. Im ha OH Illustration Showing- Mixed Farmlcf 6 cess tm UESYEtlTJ GflnADfl Some of the choicest lands for grain ixovtatv stock raising and mixed farming la the new districts of Saskatchewan sad Alberta hare recently been Opened for Settlement under tba Revised Homestead Degcbiks Entrr may now be made by proxy (oa certasa conditions). by tha father, mother, son.daozhftc brother or sister of ao Intending: bomesteadez. Thousands of homesteads of 160 acres each ara thus now easily obtainable la these treat trassKTOwina. stock-raising and mixed farming seev tions.' There yoa wf3 find healthful climate. reoS oeiehbors, churches for family v- arthip. schools, for your children, good laws, splendid cress, and raCroadi convenient to market. Entry fee in each case U $10.00. For pasrphlut. "Last Best West." particulars as to rates, rootsa, beat time to so sad where to locate, apply to W. D. Scott. Superintendent of Imsuaraüosi. Ottawa, Canada, or V. H. Rogers, Jd Hao Traction-Terminal liuildmz, Indianapolis, lasV. and 1!. M. Wilhams, koom so. Law BuUfac Toledo, Ohio, Authorized Government AgeaXs. I'Imm car where yoa taw tiki sdvertlMmeai. r. W. N. TJ. - - No. 161809 When writing ta Advertisers pleas say Mw the Advertisement la this pa?er. Look 25c. CHILDREN. Ba Eaualled At Ani Price
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