Plymouth Tribune, Volume 7, Number 29, Plymouth, Marshall County, 23 April 1908 — Page 7

THE COMEAHD SEE SIGN

This sign is permanently attached to the front of the main building of the Lydia E. rinkham Medicine Company, Lynn, Mass. What Does This Sign 3Ican ? It means that public inspection of the Laboratory and methods of doing business is honestly desired. Itmeans that there is nothing about the business which is not "open and aboveboard." It means that r permanent invitation is extended to anyone to come and verify any and all statements made in the advertisements of Lydia E- Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Is it a purely vegetable compound made from roots and herbs without drugs ? Come and See. t Do the women of America continually use as much of it as we are told ? Come and See. Was there ever such a person as Lydia E. Pinkham, and is there any Älrs. Pinkham now to whom sick woman are asked to write ? Come and See. Is the vast private correspondence with sick women conducted by women only, and are the letters kept strictly confidential ? Coiae and See. Have they really got letters from over one million, one hundred thousand women correspondents? Come and. See. Have they proof that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has cured thousands of these women ? Come and See. This advertisement is only for doubters. The great army of women who know from their own personal experience that no medicine in the world equals Lydia E. Pinkhara's Vegetable Compound for female ills will still go on using and being benefited by it ; but the poor doubting, suffering woman must, for her own 3ake,be tätigt t confidenceforshe also might just as well regain her health. When you ask for the BEST COUGH CURE and do not get tap's Msm Yon are not getting the best and will be disappointed. KBITS BALSAM costs no more than any other couu remedy, and you are entitled to the best -when you ask for it. Kemp's Balsam will stop any cough that can be stopped by any medicine, and euro coughs that cannot be cured by any ether medicine. It is always the Best Cough Cure. At til druggists, 23c., COc. and $1. Don't accept anything else. What a Settler Can Secure la DIESTERN GAMM 160 Ami Craia-C rowing Land FREE. 20 to 40 Bosh-sla Whttt to th Acra. AO to 90 BtuheU Oat to th Acra. 35 to 50 Bushels BarUy to th Acre.' Timber for Fencing ml Cailding IHEZ. Good Law with Low Taxation. v SpUndid Railroad Facilities and Low Rate Schoo la and Churchc Convenient. Satisfactory Markets fey all Productions. Good Climate and Perfect Health. Chances for Profitable LarestaienU. Sonw of thelcboicest ETilo-prodacIng landa la Saskatchewan and Albert a mar now be acquired ta these moat healthful and prosperous sections ender the Revised Homestead Regulations by which entry may be male by proxy (on certain conditions), by the father, another, ton, daughter, brother or sister of intenäin? homesteader. m Entry fee in each case is $10.00. For pamphlet. Last Best West." particulars as to rates, routes, bast time to go and where to locate, apply to W. D. Scott. Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa. Canada, or W. H. Rogers, id Floor Traction-Terminal Building, Indianapolis, Ind., nd H. M. Williams, Kocm ao. Law Building, Toledo, Ohio, Authorized Government Agents. '1mm sar where too this adTartUamant. TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body tmtiseptically clean and free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, -a hich water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin fecting and deodorizing toilet requisite cf exceptional excellence and economy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and uasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Largs Trial Sample with "mcaltm and bcautv" soon scnt raic THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston.Mass. THE MAN WHO SWEARS BY THE FISH BRAND SUCKER b the man wno has tried to get the same service out of some other make Clean -Light -Durable . Guaranteed Water pro-i and Sold tveryvbera A Japanese man, who claims to be 170 years old, is said to be the oldest man in the world. Mrs. "Wlnslow'a Soothing; Syrop for Children teething; softens the gums, reduces Inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic 25 cents a bottle. England spends $40,000,000 Per Jear for egs and poultry, for one-half ot which she is dependent on foreigners.

6M

TIIE CALL OF THE SOIL.

Days of Financial Stress Malte Fan Lands Look Rich. A staff contributor of a Southern newspaper has taken up the question of the return to the farm of many who had forsaken it for the glitter of the city. He says: "It is a well-known fact that the history of this government shows that those men who have been most successful in life and who have left their impress upon Its people and its institutions as statesmen, soldiers, financiers, have as a rule hern those whose youth was sjtent on the farm, and it is to such as these that there comes with overmastering power. TT I C ("ALL OF TIIE SOIL. More especially does it come with redoubled persuasivej r.ess, greater power and sweeter plead ing to the man of affairs when the clouds of financial unrest begin to darken the sky; when the cry of panic causes people to lose their wits and act like stampeded cattle; when with reason or without reason there arises before him the specter of ruin, grinning In his face and waving its gaunt arm? i p threatening gesticulation. men were brought by the recent finan1 clal flurry, which happily Is now pass ed, suggests these reflections. Some were ruined and a very few became insane because of their losses. Two or three took their own lives. It is when such times come that the statesman, the great financier, and the man of affairs becomes tired of the struggk-. He lays down his pen, turns from his desk and listens to THE CALL OF THE SOIL. There are hundreds of cashes throughout the United States of those who Lave money in the banks and are looking for investment in lands. No Investment is better or safer. Take for instance, the lands in Western Canada that can be bought at from ?10 to $13 per acre which yield a revenue equal to and often greater than their original cost. These lands make a certain investment. During thex past two months large Investments in these lands have been made, some intending to use the lands for farming purposes of their own? others to re-sell to farmer friends. The rgents of the government of Canada located at different points throughout the United States have In their possession particulars of districts in which there arc free homestead grants of 1C0 acres, each accessible to railways, markets, schools, churches, ! etc. These are valuable lands. Tbesp agents will be pleased to give information to any desirous of securing and will tell all about the railway rates, etc. . An tlMuy 3Iark. W. E. Collett, secretary of the Colorado Trison Association, was talking In Denver about 50 autograph letters from widows that he recently received, wherein each widow offered gladly to marry one of Mr. Collett's proteges, a reformed convict in search of a wife. "I shall keep most of those widows autographs," said Mr. Collett "They are very Interesting. A collection of autographs of such a character would be worth having, wouldn't It? Different from the usual dull collection of i mere signatures, eh?" I He smiled and went on: "An autograph fiend who collects mere signatures Is rather a fool, and , he Is very easily taken In. Whenever j I think of him I think of a little story ' about him. According to this story, an autograph fiend walked Into an old curiosity shop and said: "Ttu advertise that you have autographs of Washington and Shakspeare for sale. If your terms are reasonable, I should like to purchase specimens of each of those autographs. "The proprietor bowed politely. Then be went to the back of the shop and said to a man who was painting a large canvas on an easel: 'Put away that Rembrandt for the present, Jim, and write me out an autograph of Washington and one of Shakspeare. Gentleman waiting outside. " Any 12 Year Old Girl Can make those delicious Lemon, Chocolate and Custard pies as well as the more experienced cook if he uses "OL'R-l'IE" preparation, -which is now sold by nearly all grocers at 10 cents per package. Just the prop- ! er lnzredlents In each package. Put up by lZerta tood Co., Kochester, J. Y. Appetite. Investor What's your idea in wanting to buy that trolley line? It doesn't compete with your system. It's merely a ff-eder. Railway Magnate Well, don't you suppose we want to do our own feeding? Von Can Get Allen's Foot-Ease FREE Write to-day to Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y., for a FREE sample of Allen's FootRase, a powder to Rhake Into your shoes. It cures tired, sweating, hot, swollen, aching feet. It makes new or tight shoes easy. A certain cure for Corns and Bunions. All Druggists and Shoe Stores sell It. 25c. At Ills AVorst. The Doctor (at the concert) Hear her squeak on that note? It's a crime for any one to try to sing who can't sing. ' The Trofessor It isn't a crime in her case. It's only A minor fault. Chicago Tribune. Garfield Tea, the herb medicine, insures a healthy action of liver, kidneys, stomach and bowels. Take it for constipation and sick-headache. Write Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y., for free samp'.M. Hyphen Understood. Small Grafter The boys haven't peached on us yet. How have you manrged 'em? Big Crafter Hush! Money. The use of muslin windows instead of glass in dairy construction is said to help matially in the fight against tuberculosisAH Up-to-Date Housekeepers Te Red Cross Ball Blue. It makes the clothes clean and sweet a. when sew. All Grocers. Prehistoric Ilacteria. Modern discoveries concerning the origins of diseases have brought the Hti tie organisms called bacteria Into such prominence that search has of late ; years been made to ascertain If they existed during the early geological periods. Not long ago a French scientist, M. Hegnault, announced the discovery of bacteria In coal. A long continued research confirmed the evidence that bacteria were probably coeval with the first appearance of organic liffc on the earth. These bacteria attacked vegetable tissues, as well as the bones and teeth of animals, but as a rule they belonged to species of bacterial organisms quite distinct from the? of to-day. Philadelphia Press. The artificial cultivation of snails is an Cltenivc an(1 flourishin" industry in France, no less than 2,500,000 pounds of th!- Bwrulent delicacy as Frenchmen fecasider it being consumed annually. It's Tettlfs Er Sslre, that gives instant relief to eyes, irrift?d J from dust. heat, gun or wind. All 1ruggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. The total value of the stone product of the country in 1900 was $0,378,794. an increase of $2,570,040 over that of 1903, and an increase of $42,413,505 over that of 1890.

There is no better time for setting trees than late in fall. Success on the farm depends ujon having everything done systematically and at the proper time. Once a v.-eek Is not enough to salt the sheep. Have It where they can get what they want every day. For the year 1907 the poultry prodacts of the country exceeded in value the whole of the hay crop. Do not disturb the farmer who is in the granary making a noise like a fan ning mill. "Go thou and do likewise. Land plaster is not a fertilizer, but will liberate potash, and shows a marked benefit on clay and sandy land to clover. It Is the March hatched chicks that make the November layers, which are the most profitable members of the whole flock. It Is not right to be more willing tt spend ?10G in making the farm profitable than to spend 100 cents in makinj the Lome pleasant. The man who pretends that he regards himself as a fool is almost ag big a nuisance as the man who thinks everybody else is a fool. Sheep and young stock should never be yarded together. The young stonlr. will be pretty sure to chase the sheeji, and that means trouble every time. The community that has a good horse-shoer in Its midst should show Its appreciation by not haggling over the price asked for first class work. Never drive a sheep body deep into the snow. If you do, make up your mind that loss will follow. It simply takes the tuck out o? a sheep to wadj In deep snow. The best method to cure sore backg on horses Is to dissolve one-half ounce of blue vitriol in a pint of water and daub the injured parts with it four or five times a day. Alfalfa has shown this season that It will stand all kinds of reverses and still make a big crop. Those who were lucky enough to have a few acres of it are preparing to sow more next spring. Anyone who buys an incubator thinking all that is necessary Is to load It, light the lamp and let it do the rest, "all by its lonesome," should take a few lessons in common sense from a sitting hen. v It is a question in some parts of the country which woald be the most profitable thing to do, to koop dogs or sheep. This dog nuisance is an old one and It is a wonder that more States do not come to the rescue of the sheepmen than already have. Cultivation is Intended to destroy weeds, prevent the ground from drying out, and to admit the air to the soil, so as to keep the plant food soluble. Cultivation does not add any water to the soil, but prevents that already there from getting away. Uncle Sam's unappropriated and unreserved acres for the American homesteader" amount to approximately 792 million acres. Such is the report. Not all of this is tillable, nevertheless there are still millions of acres that can be very profitably put to the plow. Hay scattered about on the ground for sheep is largely hay thrown away. They will tread It down and waste it. rut It into good racks. Give only.what they will eat up clean. Other stock does not like to eat hay that sheep have nosed over. Providing young stock gets plenty ot good nutritious food, they can stand a good deal of exposure and gain in constitution. It must not be thought, however, that animals can gain In constitution, where they are made to suffer hardships. A writer in a dairy paper in pleading for. better treatment for the hired man puts it In thU way, "Therefore, dairyman, put the club away, scold less, brace up, boost up the hired man. He Is Just as sensitive as your cow." It Is quite likely that there are some hired men that don't know whether the above is a compliment or not. Of different food products for farm animals a chemical analysis shows dry alfalfa hay . to be jr.st about equal pound for pound to bran. In a ton of the former there are 220 pounds of protein, 792 pounds of carbohydrates and 24 pounds of fat. In the same weight of bran there are 244 pounds of protein, 772 pounds of carbohydrates' and CO, pounds of fat. These figures explain why alfalfa Is such a boon to those sections of the country where It can be successfully grown. Red clover hay Is an excellent substitute for alfalfa, a ton containing 13G pounds of protein, 710 pounds of carbohydrates and G4 pounds of fat Trees and Lightning;. It apiears from the experiments of a French scientist that oak trees are In more danger than other trees of being struck by lightning. Beeches, on the contrary, are not good conductors of electricity. The danger of trees from lightning is great in proportion to the lectrical conductivity of their wood. Dead trees and dead wood generally form a much better conductor than living growing woods, which offer greater resistance. Dairy Xotcs. Home dairy butter making for private city trade is the most profitable way to dispose of tho dairy product. It imposes more work upon the dairy man and his family, but gives an lnde-l pedenee unknown to the market milk producer. Speakers at the Eastern dairy conventions and farmers' institutes are advising f finner to raise more grain. They say that the days of low-prlccti feeding grains have gone by, never to return. This is good advice for the average dairyman and stock keeper. There will be much cleaner milk If the udder Is wiped off with a damp cloth and the ers; hair clipped off tlw

udder and flanks and tail before milking. Cream cf low test simply contains more skim milk. Take a quart of cream testing 40 per cent and add a quart of skim milk and you have two quarts of cream testing 20 per cent. There is a cause for low tests. In' the Island of Guernsey three cows are kept cn an acre of land. The land Is very fertile and the cows are kept tethered and fed on the soiling system. The more food a cow can be indue" to eat, the more milk she will produc;-. Cows do not usually consume more food than they can properly digest.

The riasrue of the "White Tiun. From rresent indications it appears that the dreaded "white nun" butterfly, which in previous years caus-M such Injury to pine forests In Bohemia, is likely this year to reappear In even greater numbers. The Ministry of Agriculture has, therefore, appointed n commission of experts to consider how best to stop the ravages of this destructive pest. Beginning In the forests of Saxony and llohemia, the "white nun" has gradually spread over Moravia and Silesia, and even down to Lower Austria as well. As the forest lands In Austria cover some 24,000,0) acres, more than two-thirds of which are pine woods, the necessity for stopping this work of destruction is very urgent. Fertilising: the Potato Patch. Put on as much well-rotted stable manure as will cover the ground pretty evenly. Plow this under and at Intervals through the wluter, If burning wood, scatter the ashes over the ground, or Fare until there is a good load ; n couple of tons of these may safely be used to the acre. Apply before time to plant, plow again and pulverize the ground thoroughly so that manure anil ashes are well incorporated, then plant and the yield, even on ground too poor to grow white beans, will be surprising. It Is possible to grow from ten to twenty potatoes of marketable size in soil so treated, when using small potatoes for seed, thougL the previous crop öf ' potatoes hardly paid for the digging. If manure is not at band then humvw and nitrogen may be secured by planting a crop of cow peas and plowing Onder after the seed has been pickedIf still early enough to get a stand of rye this may be sowed as a cover crop, and when the proper season com plow the rye under and before planting apply a commercial fertilizer with a high per cent of potash and phophurlc acid. Green Foragre for Hoj;s. ' An especially timely bulletin has just been Issued from the Missouri Experiment Station by Dean IlQj. Waters, giving the results of some experiments to determine the value of different forage crops for hogs. Thirty-six pigs weighing about fifty pounds each were fed in lots on different forage crops in connection with corn until they were ready for market, accurate account being kept of the cost of gains made. In cheapness of gains the foods used ranked as follows: Corn and skim milk, cheapest; corn and alfalfa, second; corn and red clover, third; corn and blue grass, fourth; corn and rape, fifth; corn and shipstuff, sixth. A saving of about 73 per cent a hundred In the cost gain was affected by using green clover instead of fresh blue grass. A saving of $1 n hundred was effected by using alfalfa Instead of blue grass. When It Is realized that alfalfa comes on early and when properly clipped stays green all summer and until the very hard freezes of early winter Its Importance as a hog pasture is apparent. Clover yields more forage per acre than blue grass, and as shown by these experiments has a much higher feeding value. It is of the utmost Importance therefore to provide this sort of pasture for hogs rather than to require them to run on a blue grass pasture, or even worse than blue grass, a timothy pasture, or even far worse than this, to confine them in a dry lot in the summer time. 77j1s bulletin recommends a succession of crops for profitable hog pasture. The bulletin is for free distribution and may be had by addressing the Experiment Station at Columbia, Mo. Derelopment of Marshes. Louisiana embraces within Its boundaries an area which Is, In Its present condition, as useless to its peopl as a corresponding area on the high seas. Yet, according to the Southern Farm Magazine, this now worthless area, something over 7,000,000 acres, is tha greatest body of fertility In the worldexcept probably in the Amazon flood plain. The cultivated portion of the alluvial district south of Red River Is to day jjupportlng the densest agricultural population in the United States a popu'ation of 3G0 to the square mile of cultivated land, omitting entirely the urban population of New Orleans. Based upon what the alluvial lands are now doing, the undralned lands of Louisiana lands to-day wholly unoccupiedare capable of supporting, not counting the cities which would exist there, over 3,f00,000, a population exceeding any one of the forty States ol the American Union. Holland, on an alluvial area (2,750,000 acres) considerably less than onehalf of Louisiana's undralned area, and with a fertility not up to the Louisiana standard, supports about 3,000,000 people, and up to the highest standard of Europe. Holland is almost a synonym for wealth. Ucyond question, the drainage of the remaining marshes and swamps in tho United States Is the most Important natural development awaiting us, and Is sure to be done by the present generation. Scores of drainage projects are now actively under way, and thousands of acres have already been brought under cultivation with most satisfactory results. ) The production of these new landsfar exceeds that of the older cultivated lands of this famously productive delta, and, except where reclaimed by companies for the purpose of sale, they are rarely offered at any price. Here the drainage movement Is getting momentum, and it will not stop until south Louisiana has become the richest agricultural community of its size in the world.

SUBSTITUTES FOR TOBACCO.

Many of Them Have n Deleterious Effect I'pnn Health of Smoker. How would you enjoy a pipeful of wood shavings saturated with a strong solution of popper as an after-dinner 6moke? Strange as this maj' seem for a substitute for tobacco, it is, nevertheless used as such by Indians along the Alaskan coast, says Health. Their mouths are often made raw by the practice, and the eyesight of many is affected by the strong fumes. It is no uncommon practice among farmers to smoke the leaves of the tomato and potato plants. Whib these plants both contain a narcotic poison, the smoking of leaves in moderation is harmless. Exsessive use, though, produces a heavy stupor from which the smoker awakes with a terrific headache and a feeling of utter exhaustion. Insanity and suicide have often been caused by the immoderate use of these two weeds. Rhubarb, beet and even garden sage leaves are all suioked by farmers, but are perhaps the least harmful of substitutes for tobacco. , In Jamaica "ganjah," a variety of .Indian hemp, is smoked by all classes with terrible results. It is stated that it was this weed that was used by the leaders of the Indian mutiny to drive the sepoys into the passions of raging mania which they exhibited during the campaign. "Coltsfoot tobacco"' is smoked by the rustlqs in small country places In England and is called by them "the finest remedy on earth for catarrh." It is simply a powdered form of the leaves of the common coltsfoot, a plant found growing wild in chalky soil, although some say that it is injurious to the eyes, and it certainly does relieve difficult breathing. In Sweden a weed found growing in the hills, known as mountain tobacco, Is smoked in great quantities. Like "coltsfoot tobacco," it is powdered before using and causes the smoker to become a mental and physical wreck. Dried holly leaves, the bark of the willow tree and leaves of the stag's horn sumach are all smoked by the American Indians and are the least harmful of the substitutes for tobacco. "Indian tobacco" or the leaf of a kind of lobelia is smoked extensively and is extremely poisonous. "Tombeki," another species of tb lobelia largely used in Asia, is smokt d in a water pipe aiid produces a decidedly unpleasant oder. Those who smoke it regularly become intensely nervous and are subject to curious hallucinations. AN APPARITION. In the old days, when Boston, through her "plain living and high thinking," was earning the laudatory titles that have clung to her ever since, a certain woman of advanced Intellect and character, who may be called Miss Elizabeth Amory Pelham, came into town from one of the suburbs to hear a lecture on an abstruse topic. Her friend and schoolmate, Mrs. Y"ellmau, who was a brusque, lovable body, neith-" ex intellectual nor ambitious of being thought so, also went to the lecture, chiefly because everybody else was going. About 9 o'clock there came up a storm so violent that the lecturer and his audience had to go home In a deluge. Miss Pelham stood in the vestibule of the hall, talking to Mrs. Wellman, and lamenting that she must drive home that night, especially as she had to be in Boston early the next day to give a talk on physical culture. "Why do you go?" asked Mrs. Wellman. "Come round and stay with me." "But you're crowded," objected Miss Felham. "You've just been saying your house is full." "Oh, so it is, in a way; but 111 put you in Lavinia's bed. She's only 9, you know, and not very big, and she's been sound asleep now for hours. She won't know you're there till morning." Her friend accepted gratefully, and In due time crept into bed with Lavlnia. The next morning, while Mrs. Wellman, who was destitute of "help," stood coaxing her kitchen fire, a little white figure flew into the room and launched Itself upon her. It was Lavinia, no longer asleep. "0 mother," she gasped, "there's something dreadful in my room! It's tall and big and it's got great long arms, and it keeps waving them and waving them over Its head, just like a windmill, and it's awful !" Mrs. Wellman pushed her away, and shot a sulky damper Into place. "Go right along back and get dressed!" she commanded. "That's nothing but Elizabeth Amory Telham taking her physical exercises." The Cautions Reporter. "Young man," said the editor to th new reporter, "you lack caution. Yoc must learn never to state a thing as 8 fact until it has been proved a fact You are apt to get i s Into libel suits Do not say, 'The cashier stole th funds say, "The cashier who is alleged to have stolen the funds.' That's all. Ob, get something about that Firsl Ward social to-night." The next day, half-way down the social column, the editor saw the follow ing cautious paragraph: "It Is rumored that a card party was given' last evening a number of reputed ladies of the First Ward. Mrs Smith, gossip says, was the hostess, and the festivities are reported to have continued until 11 :30 in the evening. The alleged hostess is believed to be the wife of John Smith, the so-called 'highpriced grocer.'" Success Magazine. 1 A Quarrelsome Family. Mrs. Edgcrton Bluut But why did you leave j'our last place? Applicant I couldn't stand the way the mistress and master used to quarrel, mum. Mrs. E. B. (shocked) Dear me! Did they quarrel very much, then? Applicant Yes, mum ; when it wasn'l me an' Mm, it was me and 'er. . ot ICllRible. "Didn't that new nurse come that 1 engaged for little Mortimer?" asked Mr. De Style. "Yes," replied Mrs. De Style, "but she wouldn't do. She had nothing but blue dresses to wear, and blue, you know, is only for girl babies; pink la for boys." Philadelphia Press. The Qnarrel. "You call yourself a poet and write rhymes about the virtues of Peekaboo soap?" "And you call yourself an artist?" "Well?" "And make comic valentines." Cleveland Plain Dealer. And it Is a good plan to cultivate the habit of getting your money's worth.

V V V

Pattern Department UP-TO-DATE DESIGNS FOR THE HOME DRESSMAKER r- "i- v Fancy Bloase Waist. Mandarin sleeves of the modified sort are always charmingly graceful and are to tie extensively worn throughout the season. Illustrated is an exceptionally attractive blouse that shows them used to advantage, and which includes many of the newest fancies of fashion. The guimpe portion is made with a yoke of lace and the over blouse provides long and becoming lines, while the sleeves are shaped to 1k very generally Incoming and graceful. As illustrated crepe de Chine is combined with guimpe portions of chiffon in' matching color and yoke of lace PATTERN" NO. 5S30. jnnd Is trimmed with velvet ribbon and Iieavy lace applique. Almost every material that is adapted to indoor gowns is appropriate, however, and ivoile, marquisette and the many beautiful Liberty fabrics are all especially to be commended. The contrasting yoke allows of various combinations and would be handsome made of silk braided with soutache if something a bit more substantial than lace is wanted. The above pattern will be mailed to your address on receipt of 10 cents. Send ail orders to the Pattern Department f this paper. Be sure to give Mil the number and size of pattern wanted, and write very plainly. For convenience, write your order on the following coupon: Order Coupon. No. ÖS30. SIZE NAME ADDRESS Misses Seven Gored Skirt. The plain seven gored skirt is one of the later favorites for young girls as well as for their elders and this model can be relied upon as being exceedingly smart both for the present and for the coming season. In this instance it is made of Copenhagen blue broadcloth simply stitched with bclding silk, and the several rows of stitching are especially to be commended just now, but It can, nevertheless, be treated in a PATTERN JfO. 5872. variety of ways. It can be trimmed with straight bands or with braid applied over some simple design, or it can be trimmed with handing of any sort that may be liked. The above pattern will be mailed to your address on receipt of 10 cents. Send all orders to the Pattern Department of this paper. Be sure to give both the number and size of pattern wanted, and write very plainly. Order Coupon. No. 5S72. SIZE NAME ADDRESS Unfamiliar Facts. Greenland has a population of 1J,S0o. The tropical seas contain a greater percentage of salt than those of the more northern latitudes. There are 17,000,000 children In Russia between the ages of 0 and 14 receiving absolutely no education. A light of one candle power is plainly visible at one mile, and a light of three candle power at two miles. Savings banks are established in 228 schools in Scotland. There are 33,712 dcjwsitors, with $48,990 to their credit. An average of 800 persons are killed In the United States each year by lightning. This means one in every 100,000. Fraulein Richter has been appointed lecturer on philology at Vienna Unlver-sitj-, the first instance of a womau receiving such an appoiutmcut. A Government Commission is struggling with the problem of exterminating the Nun butterfly, which has become a plague in Ilohemia. Wagner's opera, "Die Meistersinger," was sung for the first time in America at the Metropolitan Opera House, Jan. 2, 1SSG. The Missionaries' Literature Association of England, now in Its fourteenth year, has scnt over 4.j0,000 periodicals to the foreign field in that time. Statistics show that, though fairhaired people are, as a rule, less strong than those who have dark hair, jet the former live longer than the latter. Ac-cording to a Japanese newspaper, 700 frogs were killed and 2,000 wounded In battle among themselves.

Bill

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MEN, fcOYS. WOMEN. MISSES AND CHILDREN. 3a Vi. I Douplam makmm and molfa morm mvn'a $2.50, $3.UU and 93.60r hoe than any ctho manufacture in thm . JZkS world, bmcauam thny hold thoJr i3 ahapom fit batter, wmar tonoor, and rvrco. arm of prmatmr valum than ny other rr ahoma In the world to-dar.

W. L Doucr'js $4 2nd $5 Gilt Etas Shoes Comet

(TOAtTIOV W. U Dooklas name sM pri stamped on bottom. Take m RalvtU4. Sold by the Nut ihoe dealers ererTWlicro. feboea moUe't frof factory to sny pan of ths worlrt. I Una. bated CataJwg Iras to any address. W, 1. iJOL CilAJs, ilrocktaa, Alas.

SKIN SOKE EIGHT YEABS. Spent aoo on Doctors and Remedies, but Got No Ilellef Cntlcara Cares In a Week. "Upon the limbs and between the toes my skin was rough and Bore, and also sore under the arms, and I had to stay at home several times because of this affection. Up to a week or go ago I had tried many other remedies and several doctors, and spent about three hundred dollars, without any success, but this is to-day th? seventh day that I have been using the Cutlcura Itenedles (costing a dollar and a half), which have cured me completely, so that I can again attend to my busl less. I went to work again to-nlsrht I had been suffering for eight years and have now been cured by the Cutlcura Remedies within a week. Fritz Herschlaff, 24 Columbus Ave., New York, N. Y., March .20 and April .6. 100C." SIxscore Now, I noticp," observed 'the sporting editor, "Bisbop Fallows sees the psalmist's three score and ten years and goes him fifty better. Well, the world has wised up and got a good deal niftier since David's time but I'm still betting on David. Chicago Tribune. . How's This? TVe offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any ease of Catarrh that cannot be cared by Hall s Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned. haTe known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations made by bis firm. W ALDI 50, KlNNAN k MAtTIX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. TTall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the Mood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Tills for constipation. The Cxeaae Saite! Ulm. The bear had grown conscientious. When he found the squirrel's stock of touts he hesitated. "See here," he cried, "where did you get all this hoarded nutriment?" "F-from the farmer's trees," stammered the frightened squirrel. The bear frowned darkly. "Did you permit any competition In the acquirement of the hoard?" "X-no, sir," replied the squirrel. "Then it Is predatory wealth," said the bear, and at once confiscated the entire stock. Cleveland Plain Dealer.

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For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought) Bears the Signatur( THC CSSTftU COIMMT, NSW TOB 7 Bo Eauallcd At Any Price Grandfather's Cure for Constipation REAT medicine, the Sawbock Two hours a day sawing voo vIIl fteep anyone's Bowel regular. No need of pills. Cathartics, Castor OH. nor 'Physic." If you'll only worh the Sawbuck regularly. Exercise Is Nature's Cure for Constipation and, a Ten-Mile walk will da. If yom. haven't got & wood-pile. But, if you will take your Exercise In as Easy Chair, there's only one way to do that, because, there's only one kind of Artificial Exercise for the Bowels and its name la ,'CASCARETS., Cascarets are the only means to exercba the Bowel Muscles without work. They don't Purge, Gripe, nor "cps your Stomach," because they don't act Ilka "Physics." They don't flush out your Bowels an4 Intestines with a costly waste of Digestrts Juice, as Salts. Castor Oil. Calomel, Jalap, or Aperient Waters always do. No Cascarets strengthen and stimulatt the Bowel Muscles, that line the Foo4 passages and that tighten up when food touches them, thus driving the food to Its finish. A Cascaret acts cn your Bowel Muscles as If you had Just sawed a cord of wood, or walked ten miles. Cascarets move the Food NaruralTy, digesting It without waste of tomorrow's Gastric Juice. The thin, flat. Ten-Cent Box Is mads) to fit your Vest pocket, or "My Lady's" Purse. Druggists 10 Cents a Box. Carry it constantly with you and take a Cascaret whenever you suspect you need one. Be very cartful to get the genulns made only by the Sterling Remedy Goto pany, and never sold in bulk. Every tablet Ctzmpcd "CCC." sä Let us do your Printing using Linen for your office stationery. You can get the paper and envelopes to match. It U the real thing. Take nm other. 4 TVnnfAfl .. tti.W.litr.taU.. mm m. I UI11UU evtsr Trrtus?fd Sand appoint fltib OLaTCdSS , f. tvaii'l 1 fr mmpim. torn. tttal CUOftS UFtt. CO., ei9 tk Stm Vark F. W. N. TJ. --- No. 171903 When writing to Advertisers Hat say ym saw Uit Advertisement la tbl passr. .

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