Plymouth Tribune, Volume 7, Number 31, Plymouth, Marshall County, 7 May 1908 — Page 7

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TASIILY'S SKIN TROUBLES. the uussulmai:s.

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Warm baths with Cuticura Soap followed, when necessary, by gentle anointings with Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, preserve, purify and beautify the skin, scalp, hair and hands of infants and children, relieve eczemas, rashes, itchings, irritations and chafings, permit rest and sleep and point to a speedy removal of torturing, disfiguring humours when all else fails. Sf'S Sold thrvichout the world rvpot: London. 27. ChitT'Tr'is' n.: pans. f. Kiie de l.-t I'nix: Au.-tr I i, I. Ttin t o. fj:?1rfy: India. 1. K. P&ul. C.jlv;tti: t'Mna. Hone Xnne Lni to.: Jafian. ' J.aniv. Lti.. Toki'r rA Ferrein. Moow; 8. Afr:" I-nnon. Lid, Capr Town, etc.; I .S.A.. Pi.ltcr Jr jsf A Clwm. Corp.. Polr Props.. I-ostoa. Lf-Post i rt. Cuticura Uooilet on tue SJ.la. t A Sale and Sure $ t ' Coujjh Cure. t Does not contain Opium, ilorphine, or any other narcotic "hibit-formin' thru;:. There is no Narcotic in Kemp's Calsanu J Netting of a poisonous or harmful o chejacter enters into it3 composition. 5 Tti3 clcr.n ontl pure cotiU euro cryrcs coughs that cannot bo cnr by ary other medicine. It Li:j saved thousands from consumption. It Lo3 saveil thousands of lives. A 25c bottle contains 40 doses. At all dm prists', 23c, 5Cc and $1. Don't accept anything else. What a Settler Can Secure In ESTERN GAOADA 160 Aeroa CraiivCrowiA Laad FREE. 20 to 40 ßuh?b Wbttl lo the Acre. 40 to 90 ButboU Osts to the Acr. 35 to 50 BusbeU WUy to th Acre. Timber for Feactn and Cuildings FREZ. Good Law with Low Taxation. SpUndid Railroad Fliti and Low Rrt Schools and Churches Convenient. Satisfactory Markets for all Production. Good Climate and Perfect Health. Chances for Profitable Investment. Some of thelcholcest STaia-productaa lands In Saskatchewan and Alberta may now be acquired tn these mott healthful and prosperous sections under the Devised Homestead Regulations by which entry m ay be m ade by proxy (on certain condition s ). by the father, mother, son. daughter. brother or sister of intending homesteader. Entry tea in each case is 110.00. For pamphlet, "Last Best West." particulars as to rates, routes, best time to so an-1 where to locate, apply to W. D. Scott. Sur.erintendrnt of Immigration. Ottawa, Canada, or W. H. Rogers, vi Floof TracticL-Terminal Building, Indianapolis, In J., nd H. M. Williams. Room 20. Law Building. Toledo, Ohio. Authorized Government Agebts. Pleas oar whsr tos haw tbia ad vertiMmsat. TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and bod antiscptically 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 eye, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Urge Trial Sample WITH "HCAlTHaNQ IMUTY" BOOK CNT fRfC THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass. INSURE YOUR HEALTH and COMFORT on stormy days by veanng a . v cptj SUCKER Clean - Light Durable Gurim nteerl Waterproof 1' $300 Everywhere IVfTinWS'under n EW LAW obtained KAXVFJ by JOHN W. MORRIS, PENSIONS Washington, l. C

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I Let us do your Printing ; using Eagle M( Linen s for your office stationery. C You can get the paper and envelopes to match. ij $ it U (Ar ral thing. Take no other. ?

IVrrmii, Ilcitt Hash, anil cnlp AlTer littiiH AHiirt DliTcriMit Memlicrsi, lmt C'titiour (urm 'I lie in. ".My wife had cconia. fi-r livo or si -c yt:irs. It was on hvr face ami would oir.e ami p. We thought we would pive the Cuticura Ileaitnlies a trial. We did so and ht has never" had a siirn of irzi fha for four years. I myself used Outieura Soap and Cuticura Ointment some time npo for falling hair. I now have a very heavy head of hair. We used Cuticura Keir.edies for our baby, v.ho was nearly bald when youn. She i'.:s very nice hair now. She is very Ueshy, and we had so much trouble with heat that we would bathe her with Cuticura Soap and then apply Cuticura Ointment. It would dry the heat up so much quicker than anything else. Mr. II. D. Sprinsnjire, 323 So. Capitol Street. Iowa City. Ia.. July IG, and Sept. 10, 1000." lie A'nn Done Hut 1)11 -ot Stop. A lonjrwimbMl m?ni!er of the Massachusetts legislature was delivering an address in the town hall of a village near Boston. An old Scotchman, after listening for r-omc time, arose and left the hall. One of his countrjmen, who was waiting at the door with a hack, to drive the speaker to the station, asked : "I? he done yet, Sandy?" "Aye." Sandy replied, "he's done lang ago, hut he will no stop." One of the great faults of Americans Is that they talk too much and think too little. Many people fear that If they do not talk they will he thought

foolish or Ill-mannered, so they keep jabbering away whether they say anything or not. Sum s Magazine. ALMOST A MIBACLE. liaised Up When Science Said There AVa 'o Hope. C. W. L. Nesbltt. Depot street. Marlon. Ky., writes: "I was a chronic Invalid with kidney troubles and otten wished death might end my awful sufferings. The secretions were thick with sediment, my 1 1 ni h s swollen and my right side so nearly paralyzed I could not raise my hand above my head. The doetor held out no hope , ft 1 of my recovery and I had given up. hut at last started using Doan's Kidney Fills and made a rapid 'gain. After three months use I was well and at work again." Sold by all dealers. ii0 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. F.ulTalo. X. Y. SarWval u2 the I it nt left t. Science at last had ewlved the boneless j-had. "Just what I've been waiting for," said the (iernan carp. Subsequent events! show ed that there wasn't room for both, and the boneless shad parsed into history. If Yon Have Common Sore Kye", if lins blur or run to;ethT. yon nw! 1'FTTirS EYE SALVE. 2"c. All druggists or Howard llros., F.ufTalo, N. Y. 1sed n Counter Irritant. "F.ahhvin, you've been drinking!" 4tl don't show it half as much as you do. Itamlo. "That's because you sobered yourself by getting your safe open. It took you ha! an hour to work the combination. Y-e been watching you, you glaring old C'Ood Ifnnftrkeepera lue the neat. That's why tbey nse Red Cross lall Blue. At leading grocers, 5 rents. Oldest Weather Man. Dennis Horigan, who is connected with the United States naval observatory. Is perhaps the oldest weather man In the United States, says a Washington dispatch to the New York Sun. Ho has been keeping tab on the weather for fifty-two years. Long before the weather bureau was established Mr. Horigan was making observations at the observatory night and daj' every three hours, noting the temperature, the barometric pressure, the nature of the clouds and the direction of the wind. Appointed under the administration of President Buchanan, In 1S57, he has been in the service ever since. He is now old, yet In fair health, considering his long service and the fact that it included night work. II came from the old country In the '50s, and settled In Oe$rgetovn, then the most Important part of the District of Columbia. He was at the old observatory lr 1SG1 when Capt. M. F. Murry left tc join the south in the civil war. lit has served with many naval officer and scientists, among them Commander Maury. Capt. Gillis. Admirals Davis, Sands, Itodgers, Rowan, Shufeldt Franklin, Hol knap. Pythian, McXaJr, C. II. Davis and Chester, and Prof. Hall, Xewcomb, Markness, Eastman, Prisby and Skinner. A Perverted It roraldiom. "Oh, girls," exclaimed the gushing maiden on the crowded street car, "I've Just washed my hair and I can't do a thing with it!" Just then the car gave a lurch and she shrieked as the man in front of her stepped on her foot. "Heg pardon," muttered the weary Ftraphanfer who had done the stepping. "You see, I've Just washed my feet and I can't do a thing with them." Judge. FHIEUDS HELP St. rnul 1'ark Incident. "After drinking coffee for breakfast I always felt languid end dull, having no ambition to get to my morning duties. Then in about an hour or so a wpak, nervous derangement of the heart and stomach would come over me with sueh force I would frequently have to lie down. M4t other times I had severe headaches; stomach finally became affected and digestion so Impaired that I had serious chronic dyspepsia and constipation. A lady, for many years State President of the W. C. T. U., told me she had been greatly benefited by quitting coffee and using Postum Food Coffee f she was troubled for years with asthma. She said it was no cross to quit coffee when she found she could have as delicious an article as Postum. "Another lady, who had leen troubled with chronic dyspepsia for years, found Immediate relief on ceasing coffee and beginning Postum twice a day. She was wholly cured. Still another friend told ine that Postum Food Coffee was a Godsend to her, her heart trouble having been relieved after leaving off coffee and taking on Postum. "So many such cases came to my nttice that I concluded coffee was the cause of my trouble and I quit and took up Postum. I am more than pleased to say that my days of trouble have disappeared. I am well and happy." "There's a Reason." Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest.

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Trottet the meadows when they are soft. Tramping injures them. For a healthy growth of chicks, a warm, dry and funny room will compensate for a lack of sunshine. There is absolutely nothing in common between a dirty cream separator and a gilt edged butter product. In training a horse to walk fast he is not injured in the least for any other gait and can he taught to trot and gallop just as well as before. The very first symptom of kicking should lead us to dispose of the animal that does it. Life is precious. Never risk it with a horse that kicks. When a horse gets to gnawing at a manger the lest thing to do is to -over everything gnawable with tin. F.etter do It before the habit is formed, however. It will he very likely the same chap who failed to test his snl corn lefore planting It who will bo bemoaning his hard luck and missing the weather and Providence next election time. When an egg containing a live germ j !s surrounded by a lot of eggs contaln- ! Ing dead ones it is In r.o condition to j get the proper heat, and will have to be j u very vigorous germ if it hatches out ct all. In proportion to contents, there is more shell surface in a small egg than n large one, so that to run an incr.br tot to suit the s:r.all egg will be too damp for the larger ones, where moisture ia used, and vice versa. F.egin to work the horses carefully In the spring time They have been standing about till their muscles are all soft, and to get right down to hard work all at once may make them sick. Feed carefully, too. for n few ' days. Fetter underfeed them to give too muvh on the start. Flax undoubtedly has a place as a subduer of newly broken soils, but I a curse when used anywhere else. In Euro;ean countries, where this plant 1 raise! year after year and primarily for its fiber, an intensive system of agriculture is followed, together with a heavy fertilizing of the soil. iW-ause some farmers are not getting rich after having had telephones Installed for some years, is n- argument against the phone. The telephone haa simply put him in a position to meet competition of other business men whi have taken advantage of the service which may be gained over the wires. Pe careful in handling fowls, especially ducks and geese. Ducks hav very weak joints and it always Injures them more or less to catch them by the legs. Overfeeding, overcrowding and lack of ventilation cause much loss among amateur ioultry keepers. A large per cent of the thicks die and those that survive are runty and undersized. Give the boy two or three acres of ground to farm this year. Allow him to send to the State Agricultural College for some seed corn and assist him In preparing the ground and planting this seed. The work will be good for him, the information obtained will be invaluable and the profits will be ample for him to provide his own clothes for the coming year. Don't forget in starting the incubator to clean out the heat or flue pipe Into which the lamp chimney extends, to put In a brand new wick, to clean all the parts of the lamp thoroughly, having the burners as near as possible as bright as when they are new. Use good sewing machine oil on all the bearing parts of the machine after first carefully removing the dust and dirt. As a measure of economy, plan to prow plenty of vegetables for the family table throughout the year potatoes, peas. Leans, beets, sugar corn, tomatoes, onions, cabbage, etc. Study out a good truck patch now, and work it for all 11 Is worth. Ruy seed now if need be. Also grow plenty of roots for the eows, horses, sheep and poultry and save buying bran. It is the buying of foot things that keeps some farmers poor. A simple system of crop rotation that Is generally recommended and that not only tends to conserve the fertility of the soil, but results In a maximum destruction of weeds, consists of corn two years, oats one and clover one. Coupled with the points mentioned, the clover, in addition to belD a soil renovator. Imparts a physical texture that makes it possible to put It In the best possible condition for succeeding crop? of whatever kind. The fanner and gardener, even though he may not huve an aesthetic taste which would cause him to protect bird life for Its sake alone, if he has but a thought for tie size of his pocket book will do all he can to shield the birds of the community in which he lives from their many enemies. Never before has the place of the birds In the system of nature's economy j been more fully appreciated than now and never s high a value place! on the service which they render to mar. In judging horses, like men. you can generally depend a good deal on your first impression. When the first Impression ii good, you may sometimcr. discover things that for a while will had you to think contrary to your first conclusion. However, later on there will, as a rule, be discovered evidences to supjort the good impression at first gained. P.y the same process one maj start with a poor impression, bo argued into a better impression and possibly diseoer too late that the horse business is fraught with many dlsnp- ' pointments. We are learning that cattle are sure to take the feed we give them if they are lean and In poor rig and lay it on their backs, first of all; then after they are in good condition they will apply the surplus to the milk pail. It is always the surplus that we get. And there will be no surplus If we keep our

cows just on the verge of hunger. The Farmers' Voice well says that it is the cow which has leen kept well that puts the money in our pockets. Cows jioorly treated are our farm charges, to he maintained at the cost of what the best cows do. There should be no such charges; every cow should he a producer.

Cull neana for Pi. Regarding experiments in feeding cull beans to swine an authority states that the general conclusion from the Investigation seems to be that cuy beans, rightly used, may le a valuable factor in pig feeding, but that excessive amounts should not le fed, as beans have a tendency to produce soft pork. Poultry ItnlitnK. When the knack of noultvy raising ie once gained there Is no laore trouble connected with the business than there is in raising hogs. It is not a business that can le conducted without experience, but it is one that pays better for the money Invested than anything else in the way of breeding. Keeping; the Soil Looe. Until the ears of corn shall be well flilsd out, the crop may depend on one or two showers. If the rain shall fall a day or two before the silk appears th corn grains will be full. The crop 13 one that is subject to many clrcutustances, but rain at the proper time will make a great difference. This shows the lmortance of keeping the surface of the sail loose, thus affording a mulch and preventing loss of moisture. Cuttle Short, Meat Up. The report comes from Chicago that dearth of shipments of the prime grade of cattle Is responsible for the advance on moats, according to the packers. They assert that competition for the choice cuts is stronger now than before the financial pinch. Reef, veal and pork have been soaring upward in price for a week, but with "dressed sheep" quoted at 13 cents a pound to the wholesaler, chicken is cheaper than lamb or mutton chops. George Duddlest.m, a veteran wholesale dealer in the meat business in Chicago since 1S7U, says this is the first time sheep have been quoted at 13 cents. Dressed beef has advanced $1 a hundred. The latest jump in lamb and mutton was from 3 to 5 cents, and pork was Increased 2 cents a iound. Veal Is the only meat that has not increased. Profit in Poultry. One farmer down East, in order to find out where the leaks and where the gains were, kept an exact account with very department of his farm. He discovered that he was losing money oa his beef cattle, that hogs just paid for themselves, that shevp w re good if his lamba jime early, and that the poultry made the largest per cent of profit of any feature of his farm. The lesult was that he quit fooling with beef and hogs and put more money and time Into poultry. The increased prosperity on that farm was so marked that he wrote out for publication his experience. P.ecause a hen is small and a steer is big !s a child's reason for having contempt for the former and respect for the latter, says Farmers' Voice. One of the biggest money makers In the world is the street car business, which depends entirely upon Its income of u-cent sales. A stick of chewing gum cofts but a penny, yet just recently a syndicate was organized with over $1,000,000 capital to make "trust chewing gem." It will pay the farmer and his w If e to consider the money there may h made In poultry If wisely directed. Organize the hen on a business basis ; put up new, clean, airy quarters; get proper egg-making feeds; learn the vrdue of cleanliness, light, warmth and sunshine In winter; get a good Incubator and control your hatches so that 50U will have winter layers, broilers, etc., when they are most profitable. You will soon learn that for the money invested and labor required, the hen is the most economical and highly efficient converter of rough feeds Into money you have ever tried. Farm Profession. It Is well In the higher education that the candidates for all professions drink at the fountain of common knowledge. It Is only after acquiring an education that the mind Is broadened to choose n profession adapted to its innate taste and qualifications. It were better that the young man make a good lawyer or pharmacist than an Indiffereut farmer. The professions need to be recuperated from the sources of natural supply, which embrace natural qualifications inherited from national character. The fact that a boy is born on the farm does not necessarily destine him for an agriculturist, and education will bring out his latent talents and reveal to him self the profession bo which he is best adapted. The inhabitants of cities are made up of a population from All sources. The city-born boy may inherit the Instinct of a farmer and find his greatest success in life in following husbandry. He wants to get back to nature and live the simple life, free from the strife and tumult of a great city. He should l encouraged to follow his natural inclination and achieve the destiny for which he Is qualified by nature. While philosophy and general knowledge are taught in the public schools, the general curriculum should Include a primary course In agriculture. A profession which Includes nearly one-third of the population and produces more wealth than any 'other occupation should be exploited In the public schools. So Indissolubly Is agriculture associated with national prosiwrity in all governments of the world that the leading nations of Europe have added a primary course in agriculture to the common school curri culuni. If it accomplishes no other good it will inspire attention to the benefits of farm life as a vocation tc many who are pre-eminently adapted to the profession. It gives every boy a chance to see the advantages of husbandry and an opportunity to decide to follow agriculture or some other profession. To ie who is adapted tc agriculture husbandry is the most exalted and Independent of the professions, lut to one with innate talents for some other vocation fanning will prove a failure. Goodall's Farmer.

AFIilCAII BUSIIMZZI DOOMED. Jr. Kiulolf I'ocli to Make a Study of u i.ni)truri nyj Itut-e. A letter received i:i Washington from pr. Rudolf l'och, t lie weil known anthropologist, says: I am about to start, under the auspices of the Imperial Academy of Sciences of Vienna, to make a study

of the P.ushmen. The race is rapidly dying out. and the sole purpose of my exited it ion Is to add to our knowledge of this people before they become extinct. The fact has been recognised for some years that this African race is destined to extinction. This is all the more remarkable because everywhere else the African races are more than holding their own. Pestilence, war, and the evils that the whites introduce are powerless to obliterate them. Africa Is growing in native population. Hut the IUishiucn are now reduced to a handful, and every year thej are dwindling. Circumstances are toe hard for them, and it is not believed they could be saved, even by a change in their conditions. The Rushmen inhabit the great desert of South Africa. There is nc running water, and yet among the sand wastes there are depressions where the natives find water by digging, and In places it comes so near the surface tint vegetation flourishes and many animals find nurture in the desert. The Bushmen are only a few Inches taller than the pygmies of Central Africa. They live in rock caves or In huts ctf sticks and grass. They seldom wear more than a leather apron tc protect their legs from thorns. They subsist on the s"ant vegetation, on roots, and on the animals they kill. Clubs, bows and arrows, and a few spears are their only weapons. They are primitive, but they do not buy their wives; they have iteon faithful to these whites who have befriended them, and they paint and draw In an astonishing manner. Much has Icen written of the thousands of animal paintings with which they adorn the rocks and the walls of their eavrs. Why do they not abandon the desert to which they are confined? They could not if they would. They are hemmed around by pastoral and agri cultural regions, all occupied by stren.3 tribes, who kill them like vermin if they venture across the line. If they were free to leave the desert it is doubtful If they Would do so, for they are a hunting people, and sucfc tribes have never voluntarily become a pastoral or an agricultural community. Whenever cattle have been giver to the P.ushmen they have killed them, for they will not herd them., The whites have been even more destructive of the P.ushmen than theii native enemies. Late in the eighteentt century the Dutch used to shoot these little people as they would game. II Is recorded that In the ten years end Ing in 17:.' the Dutch killed 2.4S0 Rush men. They have always shrunk from con tact with civilization, and to-day, wher they see white protectorates planted all around them, they are retreating farther into the desert. The white? are invading the more fertile valleys are staking out ranches and building little settlement:, are killing off the game that Is the hereditary food of the desert nomads, plowing the place? whre the Rushmen go for berries ami edible nots, and narrowing the area In which they can live. They seem wholly unable to live un der new conditions, and the old con dltlons are passing away. All whe know them best say that their absolute extermination Is a question of only a few years. Washington Tost. THE DUST IN THE AIR. Without It the Heat of the un AVould Pi I'nbearnhle. The usefulness of dust is proclaimed by science despite all the housewives of all the ages. Dust Is part of the machinery that produces cloud and rain It is also a protection from the sun Without It the sun's rays would bo unbearable. The reason that sunburn h more easily acquired on the mountain than in the lowlands Is said to In? probably because of the comparatively dustless air of the mountainous regions. A dustless atmosphere duriLg rain would mean a. much greater degree of discomfort than rain ever brings. Trees and buildings would be dripping with moisture, our clothing and the exposed parts of our 1 idles would be constantly wet, umbrellas would be classed as useless curios, and instead of trying to conquer the dust In the house we should have to face a much greater enemy in wet fhiors and dripping walls. In every drop of rain and In every particle of cloud there Is a particle of dust. A sample of air may be taken anywhere and the number ol Its dust particles accurately determln?d. Dust, too, produces the glorious ?unset effects In the evening sky, thus causing the faint obscurity we call tw Might. Twilight Is always reflected glory. The light comes from the sun, which has in the meanwhile, sunk below the horizon. The reflector is an upper layer of dust. Were the air perfectly -Justless there would be no twilight. Darkness would immediately follow the sunset. The Ilent Jlen. "I can get an English coachman place twice as quickly as a German oi a Yankee coachman," said an employ mcnt agent. "Fach country-, I find, it supposed to turn out one kind of workman of peculiar excellence. Thus England's specialty is the stableman. "France's specialty is the chauiTeur. The cook, too, is a siecialty of France "Scotland is noted for Its engineers, and in the field of sport for Its golf coaches. "The Swiss are considered to be the best watchmakers. It Is never any trouble to get a Swiss watchmaker a job. "The Swedes are the best sailors. "Germans are at a premium as brewery ha mis. "Italians are In demand as plaster workers, a trade wherein they wonderfully exeel." Chicago Inter Ocean. A Question of rrvr, "Does it require much nerve to ask a woman to marry you?" inquired the inquisitive youth. "Not half as much as asking for a raise In salary," was the prompt reply. Detroit Free Press. When a man dies, It Is customary to say that he left a vacancy that will he hard to fill. There isn't any vacancy left If you take a cup of water out of the rlw, It leases no vacancy.

mm Cleanses tlo System Ejfectually;D'spels Colds ami Headeinlies duo to Constipation; J .cts naturally, acts truly as a jaxative. Best jorMcnmnn ana Cnila-ren-youn anil Old. To get its Beneficial Effects Always uuv the Genuine uhicli lias ilie jull name o j the Company 1 CALIFORNIA Fo SYRUP Co. byvvhom it is manufactured. printed on the front of every package. SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS. one size only, regular price 5(Kfr bohle. A Remedy for NeoralRla or Pain tn Nerve. For neuralgia and sciatica Sloan's Liniment has no equal. It has a powerfully sedative effect on the nerves penetrates without rubbirg and gives Immediate relief from pain quickens the circulation of the blood and gives a pleasant sensation of comfort and warmth. "For three years I suffered with neuralgia in the head and jaws," writes J. P. Hubbard, of Marietta, S. C, "and had almost decided to have three of my teeth pulled, when a friend recommended me to buy a twenty-five-cent bottle of Sloan's Liniment. I did so and experienced immediate relief, and I kept on using it until the neuralgia was entirely cured. I will never be without a bottle of Sloan's Liniment in my house again. I use it also for insect bites and sore throat, and I can cheerfully recommend it to any one who suffers from any of the ills which I have mentioned." Some Tliiii to Kememlifr, The fact that a parrot is green is no sure sign that he is not a bird of ripe experience. The great drawback about yellow Journalism is not that it is yellow, but that It is read. There is nothing so wonderful but that it might be more so. Niagara, for instance, would be far more marvelous If the water flowed the otlier way. Many a man is modesty itself until bis childrun are lorn. It Is then he begins to put on heirs. ' It may be true that money talks, but it is so frequently tight that its conversation is hardly worth repeating. There Is nothing that so destroys one's pride of ownership as the early morning call from the tax collector. John Kendrick Fangs, In "Success Magazine." State or Ohio, Citt Toledo, i Lt CAS Covntv. S Frank J. Cheney nukes oath that he Is senior partner of the ßrin of F. J. Cheney & fo., dolnsr business in th City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of OXB II UN I) It KD IN) L.T..AKS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FItAXK J. C1IKXEV. Sworn to lefore me and subscribed In my prmnce, tUU ttta day of December, A. D. ISSd. (Skal.) A. W. CLEASOX. Notar v Pcblic. Hall's Catarrh Cure I taken Internally, nnl arts directly on the Mood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. V. J. CIIEXEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Irugchts. 75c. Take Hall Family Pills for constipation. Quick Keflex Aetlon. Shocked and Grieved Parent Tommy, where did you get those beautiful little spotted eggs? You have Iteen robbing some bird's nest, you wicked boy! Tommy I'm goin to set the old hen on 'm, mamma, and raise some pretty little birds, so you can put some more of em on your hat. Chicago Tribune. In a lMncu, Le Allen'a Foot-Ease. A powder to shake Into your shoes. It rests the feet. Cures Corns. Itunions, Swollen. Sore, Hot, Callous. Aching. Sweating feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen'a Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. Sold by all IruKKists and Shoe Stores. 2."e. Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Koy, X.Jt. For-)( ii and Domestic Ills Wife (reading) I see they had a bread riot in Spain recently. Her Husband Yes; and we'll have one at home soon if there Isn't an Improvement In your biscuits. Don't Try Uneertaln Recipes. It Is entirely unnecessary to experiment with this, that and the other recipe. (Jet from your grocer, for 10 cents, a package of "OI K PIE" Preparation Lemon. Chocolate or Custard for making pica that are sure to be ko d. Iut up by D-Zerta Food Co., Rochester, N. Y. The IVkin Gazette, which has been published for 1,10!) years, is taking on fome modern features, such as an editorial page and half-tone pictures. The Society for the Destruction of Vermin is an English organization, with the object of warring on the rats in that country. The water of the Norwegian fjords Is fo clear that it is possible to discern small objects at a depth of twenty fathoms. Don't Spoil Vonr Clothe. t'se Red Cross Rail l?lue and keep them white as snow. All grocers, 5 cents a packageTommy's fllaiider. Mrs. De Smythe Tommy, do youj want some nice plum jam? Tommy Yes, mother. Mrs. De 'Smythe I was going to give you some to put on your bread, but I've lost the key to the pantry. Tommy You don't need the key, mother. I can reach down through the window and open the door from the inside. Mrs. Dp Smythe That's what I wanted to know. Now just wait till your father comes h nic. Catholic Mirror. Uncle Henry. "Uncle Henry, what is a socio rgist? "A sociologist, my boy, is a person who can inspect a garbage can and find enough material ia.it for a long lecture on the needs of society. PUTNAM

Color Bore tools trlgafer ad lavier colors that say other dye. One 1 0c sackago colors II liters. They ire I cold water setter tsas toy alter dye. Too cot dro) say itracsl wusot! rlaaiBa cyan Write lar tree eeekJet-Bew la CVe. Bleach aad Nix Celera. MOJVROZ 2K, lC CO Qemcy, Illinois

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They Are 3fot Kaslly DUtnrbed AVliile Snyliisr Tlelr Prayer?.

When saying his prayers the true j Mussulman is not easily disturbed, i Hans D'tering, in his account of his travels in Chinese Turkestan, writes: "It is an interesting sight to see a Mussulman perform his devotions. Through the piece of glas in my paper window, I saw the interpreter spread his carpet In front of his house just opposite the one in which I was living. His wife and child sat quite close to him talking loudly with some visitors, but this did not in the least disturb the old man at his devotions. "In spite of the noise the melodious chanting of the Koran was qute ar.dible. The worshiper kotowed several times and cried 'Allah. Allah. Allah!' then for awhile stood reverentially clasping his hands crosswise upon his breast, after which he joined in the conversation. "IILs wife then went through the same performance, doing exactly the same as her husband. This they do every morning and evening whether there are friends with them or not." Klnc Manuel a Sailor. Manuel II., the young king of Portugal, has been educated almost entirely under the direction of his mother, Queen Amalia. During the flrst ten years of his life he had absolutely no instructor except the queen, says the New York Sun. When the lad was ten the Marquis Lietao was appointed to teach him mathematics, the queen continuing his training in languages and literature. Three years ago he was appointed a cadet in the Portuguese navy and divided his time between service afloat and attendance at the Polytechnic high school in Lisbon, where he was still an undergraduate when his sud.len accession to th throne put an end to his studies and his dream of a maritime career. It is 40O years now since the reign of Manuel I. of Portugal U'X, to 1321. He was called Manuel the Great. It was in his reign that Vase da Gama rounded the Cape of Good Hope, Amoricus Vcspucius explored under the Portuguese flag the coasts of South America and Caspar Cortereal those of North America. The Portuguese people are inclined to superstition, and in the accession of a second sovereign of the name through wholly unforeseen clrcumhtances they see omens of a renewal of the old glories of the klugdom. Everything; "Vtn 'iVork, On a warm Tuesday afieruoon In February there are such In New York after "Polly of the Circus" had been at the Liberty Theater nearly two months, Frederick Thompson, detecting some carelessness In the work of two of his actors, called a rehearsal. The company, frightened Into unwonted alertness and activity, had reached the end of the second act when Mabel Taliaferro, the star, declared that she had been working too hard, and was going to rest for a while. "Working hard!" exclaimed her husband and manager. "Mrs. Thompson, do you know what work is?" "I certainly do," replied th wee actress iaily, "everything Is work." "Don't jest," said the manager. "Remenibcr that you are Miss Taliaferro In the theater, and not Mrs. Thompson." "Everything is work," said the little lady. "Is this work?" exclaimed Mr. Thompson, pounding the chair on which he was seated. "Yes, it's wood work," said his wife. She rested. Success Magazine. Holland has 10,100 windmills each draining on an average of 310 acres of tand. DIGESTIVE TABLETS Prom your druggist, or the GARFIELD TEA CO., Brooklyn, N. Y., 25c oer bottle.

How to Exercise the Bowels

Your Intestines are lined inside with millions of little suckers, that draw the Nutrition out cf food as It passes them. But, if the food passes too slowly. It decays before It gets through. Then the little suckers draw Poison from it instead of Nutrition. This Poison makes a Cas that Injures your system more than the food should have nourished It. . You see, the food is Nourishment or Poison. Just according to how long it stays tn transit The usual rem this delayed (called Constipation) is to take a big dose of Castor Oil. This merely makes slippery the passage fcr unloading the current cargo. It does not help the Cause of delay a trifle. 1 1 does slacken the Bowel-Muscles more than ever, and thus weakens them for their next task. Another remedy Is to take a strong Cathartic, like Salts, Calomel, Jalap, Phospate of Sodium, Aperient Water, or any of these mixed. What does the Cathartic do? It mere flushes-out the Bowels 1th a waste of Digestive Juice, setflowinglnfo the Intestines through the tiny suckers. But, the Digestive Juice we waste in doing this today is needed for tomorrow's natural Digestion. We cannot afford to lose it. That's why Cascaret3 are the only safe medicine for the bowels. um iV SHOES AT ALL ZjP PRICES. FOR EVERY

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MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. fx W. L. Dougtsn makes and es mora S7 men'm$2.&0, S3.00 and $3.50hooa . than any other manufacturer tn tha . Jy world, because they hold their mix aliape fit better, wear longer, ana trtTK a no et trreatep value than any other pt lAooa In the wtrerld to-du v.

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FADELESS DYES

mm ÄND Ä WOMAN'S WORK LYDIA E. PINKHAM. Xature and a woman's work combined have produced the grandest remedy for woman's ills that tha world has ever known. In the good old-fashioned days of our grandmothers they relied opon the roots and herbs of the field to cure disease and mitigate suffering: The Indians on our Western Plains to-day can produce roots and herbs for every ailment, and cure diseases that baffle the most skilled physicians who have spent years in the study of drugs. From the roots and herbs of th field Lydia E. Pinkham more than thirty years ago gave to the women of the world a remedy for their peculiar ills, more potent and efficacious than any combination of drugs. Lydia E. Pinkhains Vegetable Compound is now recognized as tha standard remedy for woman's ills. Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 513 X.C. St, Louisiana, Mo., writes : Complete restoration to health, tnans so much, to me that for the sake of other suffering women I am willing to make my troubles public "For twelve years I had been suffering with the worst forms of female ills. During1 that time I had eleven different physicians without help. Ho tongna can tell what I suffered, and at times I could hardly walk. About two year ag-o I wrote Mrs, liikham for advice. I followed it, and czn truly say that liydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Mrs. Pinkham's advice resxred heUth and strength. It ii worth mountains of gold to suffering women." What Lydia E. PinlihanTs Vegetable Compound did for Mrs. Muff it will do for other suffering womca. Zoological Pest Cards Second Series. If you are a collector or dealer of postal cards, you will be interested ia nn attractive set of eight cards just published, showing the most valuable will animals in the lliugling Pros.' Menagtie. a set will be mailed you fur ltic ( Special prices in lots to dealers. Tliera is a great opportunity to make money in selliujj these cards to collator or tl general public. Address The Evening Wisconsin Co.. Post Card Dep'L, Miiwaukee. Wis. The timber output of Maine last winter was JW.(HW.Ono.feet and the indentions r.re that these figures will be about equaled this year. The scarcity of labor prevented operations to a large degree. ' Father to the Man. The man who sighs for the bygone dajj When a ha re foot boy he ran Is the same old boy who usd to say: "Gee, I wish I was a man . The tariff of the Indian railways ars lowest of any in the world. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Hare Always BcqU Bears the eignsturo F. W. N. TJ. - - - No. 101903 Wbea writing to Advertisers idess Mr saw the Advertisement in this paper. They do net waste any precious fluid df the Bowels, as Cathartics do. They do not relax the Inteitir.es by greasing them inside like Car tor Oil or Glycerine. They simply stimulate the Bowel Muscles to do their work naturally, comfortably, and nutritiously. And. the Exercise these Bowel Muscles are thus forced to take, makes Hiera stronger for tha future. Just as Exercts makes your arm stronger. 0 Cascarets are as safs use constantly as they are pleasant to take. They are purposely put up like candy, so you must eat them slowly and let then go dewn gradually with the saliva, which is in itself, a fine, natural Digestive. They are put up purposely In thin, flat. round-cornered Enamel boxes, so they can be carried in a man's vest pocket, or tn a woman's purse, all the time, without bulk or trouble. Price 10c a box at all druggists. Be very careful to get the genuine. made only by the Sterling Remedy Company and never sold in bulk. Every tablet stamped "CCC." 7 pTFREE TO OUR FRIEND! I We want to rend to et.r friends a beavtiM Freoch-Ocsirnrd GOLD-PLATED 60NBUN BOX hard-enameled in colors. It is a beantr fcr the dressing title. Ten centsln stamps is asked ss a ineiscr of od faith sod to cover cost of Cascafets with which this dainty trinket is loaded. Send txlar. tnecti icirt this paper. Addrasj Sterin Kcnciy Comwry, Chicaco or Hew York. Coior . FyrlrtM Vied . Be Eaualicd At Ait Prld

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