Plymouth Tribune, Volume 7, Number 37, Plymouth, Marshall County, 18 June 1908 — Page 7

. - t

flilfS iiiiieii

. . r ... J : t 1 1 5 ä

T3 m4

mmThe back is the mainspring of woman's organism. It quickly calls attention to trouble by aching. It tells, with ether symptoms, such as nervousness headache, pains in the loins, weight in the lower -part of the body, that a woman's feminine organism needs immediate attention. In such cases the one sure remedy which speedily removes the cause, and restores the feminine organism tc a healthy, normal condition is VEGETABLE C0MP01HU--idrs. Will Young, of G Columbia Ave., Rockland, Me., sajs : " I was troubled for a long time vrith dreadful backaches and a pain in my side, and was miserable in every way. I doctored until I was discouraged and thought I would never get well. I rend what Eytlia IL Pinkliam's Veg-etable Compound had done for others and decided to try it ; after taking three bottles I ean truly say that I never felt bo well ia in 3" life." Mrs. Augustus Lyon, of East Earl, Pa., writes to Mrs. Pinkham : I had, very severe backaches, and pressing -How n pains. I could not sleep, and had no appetite. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Cora wund cured me and made me feel like a new woman." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from root3 and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and ha; positively cured thousands of women who have l)een trqubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion,dizziness,or nervous prostration. What a Settler Cain Secure In iTESTERQ mmm ISO Aeret Graln-Growinf Land FREE. 20 to 40 BulvsU WK.t to the Acre. 40 to 90 Bnshela OaU to U Acr. 35 to SO BuSU Dort? to the Acr. Timber for Fencing and Cu.ldings FREE. Good Lows with Low Taxation. 5p!Bdxl Railroad Facilities and Law Raten. Scboob and Churches Convenient. Satisfactory Market for all Production. Good Climate and Perfect Health. Chance for Profitable Investment. Some of tbelcboicest zrain-produc'.nff laea ra Saskatchewan an1 Alberta may now be acquired tn these most healthful and prosperous sectiom enUer the Revised Homestead .epilations by which entry may be made by proxy (on certain conditions), by the father, mother, ton. dauffbur. brother or sister of intending: homesteader. Entry fee in each cae Is $10.00. For pamphlet, "Last Best West." particulars as to rates, route, best tiaio to go and where to locate, apply to W. D. Scott, Superintendent of ImmizTatioa, Ottawa. Cicada, or W. II. Rogers, d Floor Traction-Terminal Building, Indianapolis, lnd and H. M. Williams, Kccm 20, Law Building. Toledo, Ohio, Authorized Government Agents. yimtm sar i.are too saw this adertissosBt. A Skin of Deauty Is a Joy Forevor. R. T. Felix Oouraud's Oriental Cream or M4.ical Ooautifler. Retnors Tan, rimplea, . reckl, il.AQ Yilcben, HMh, ad bt:a DisrMes, an1 tttry tlen.isii I co beaut jr. and ileI ties Cetfcttm. It Las C.uod the tet t t'f tt) jenrs, and I to bsrmk'M w tisieit lotiesureit is proprrly mails. Accept nocoumerfett of sixilar rvue. Dr. L. A. hvrs tsid to lady of tbe baut t o (a pfatient): Ai you ladles will cm them, I reeummend nonrnm!,s Oram a the 1art brn ful of all tb skin cryiarai ions." f r rais by all dnigirirtj M Fancy. Oooda Dealers In tlie United States, Canada and Europe. rOlT.ECPLKS, P.t, 37 fcsai Jsaes Statt HewTxlt miEJ ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body mntiscptically clean end free from unfiealthy ger.r.-Iife and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations lone cannot do. A. germicidal, disinfecting and deodorizing toilet requisite of exceptional excellence and economy. Invaluable for inßarncd eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug find toilet stores, 59 cents, or by mail postpaid. Largs Trial Sampta WITH HCITH AND BCaUTY" BOOK (INT rCC THE PAXTOfl TOILET CO., Boston. Mass. Let us do your Printing " using Eagle dff Lin:n for your of fie stationery. You can get the paper and envelopes to match. It is the red thing. Tale no other. DAISY FLY KILLER n anrh. sttrHs nd kill all Bi; , eln, ornmnUl, eonTnint, chsp. Ita all wtH. will not nil or Id Jur njü inf Guar sntr1 ff r t i t . All Jralrri or mm rrpi4 ft.r rtlil om, Harold Mmrn, -msii .y 14V IHhtlk, BreeWlja. JJ. Y. WIDOWS'' fie W LAW obtained nv-w-czvrBrcj JuHN W. MORRIS. The product cf tbe British shipyards mounts to 20 or 25 pe: rtnt of tJba whole.

.7.7

If

C li

llaci: rrcniKo spots on fach

rhyniolnn f"nllcl It lirmn in Wort I 'or 111 I'ationt Depnireil of Cure 4'utlMirn It'nt'llo. Cure! Her. Alut f'ur years si.co I was afllioted with Lliic-k splotilios all over v.:y face r.nd a few covering my Iwnly, which produml a severe itching irrüati n, and which caused me a ?:rt':it deal f suS'erinjr, to sueh an f xtt lit that I was fiTc-cil to call iu two of the lea.liü physicians of . After a thorough examination f the dreatll cv:nIlairit they announced it to skin eo:e:n:i in tho worst form. Their treatment tlil nie no pood. Finally I lectnie desfoiulent and decided to discontinue their services. My hushnr.d juirl:avel a single set of the Cutieiir. Kcnuslif-s. which entirelj- stopped the hniakinj out. I coPtiimed the use of the Cuticura Rometlios for six niontlis. ami after that every splotch was entirely .sror.e. I have not felt a symptom of the eczema since, which was three years azo. Mrs. Lizzie 11. Sledco, Jones Ave.. Selma. Ala.. Oct 2S. 100C." . nir niictl. The odlter was dreaming in his "den" when the door opened and a rather tern-visaed woman entered, without 2po!ogy, says a writer iu the Daltimoro üun. "Will you kindly explain," she heran, srimly. thrusting a newspaper flipping under the editor's nose, "why I our reviewer refers to my recent Look .is a "History of J'emale Suffrage by a new Historical Writer?' " "Quite unpardonable," uabl the editor, gravely. "Of course the word should be spelled with .1 y. " rrople Tell Vach Other Abonl Good l'hlti. Twelve years nzo few peepl in the world knew of siuh a preparation as a lWdfr for tbe I-Vot. To-lay after the genuine morit of Allen's l"cKt-Kas li:is been told year after year by one gratified ITson to another, there are millions who would as soon po without a dentifrice as without Allen's Foot-Ease. It is a cleanly, wholesome, hoalinz. antiseptic powder to be shaken into the shoes, which has given rest and comfort to tired and achiag feot iu all parts of the world. It cures while you walk. Over CO.t.KJO testimonials of cures of smarting, swollen, perF)irin fet. It prevents friction and wear of the stockings and will save in your stocking bill ten times its cost each year. Imitations pay the dealer a larger profit, otherwise, you would never be offered a substitute when you ask for Allen's Foot-Kase. the original powder for the feet. Imitations are not advertised because they are not permanent. For every genuine article there are many imitations. The imitator has no reputation to susrtain the advertiser has. It stand to reason that the advertised article ii the best, otherwise the public would net buy it and the advertising could nqt be continued. When you ask for an aitic!; advertised in this paper, see that you get it. Refuse imitations. A Startling Debut. A comedy of errors describes the first appearance on the sta?e of Huntley Wright. He was supposed to impersonate the wanler of a mad-house, and the scene opened with the brutal ill-treatment of the hero, and It ended with a gunpowder explosion. In his nervousness the warder dropped his cap. and, picked up the pan of gunpowder Instead. It Instantly blew up, nearly frightening him out of his wits. He rushed from the stage and collapsed, as he thought, on a stool in the wings, which turned out to be a fire bucket fall of water! London Answers. Chocolate Pie! Chocolate Tie! The more you eat the more ron want If tlioy are made from "OrK-Plk" Pn-para-tl'n. Try It ami tell your friend how ea; it Is to make delicious chocolate pies. Three varieties Lemon, Chocolate and Custard it trrocT. 10 cents a package. Tut u? hj V' Zer'a Food Co., Kochester, X. Y. Good Skater. It is probably safe to say that Austria has produced more fine skaters than any other country. One may instance O. Hugel. who won the world's championship on three occasions; G Fuchs, who obtained that honor Ii 1S1XJ; Edward Kngelmann, twice European champion, and Max Boh at sen, who has likewise been champion of Europe. Apart from these, Austria has provided inanv skaters quite In the lirst class. As befits a nation of dancers, its skaters display remarkably delicacy, lightness of touch and harmony, and in skating to music their rhythm Is matchless. Hungary also has produced several notable skaters, the best being T. von Foldvary of Budapest. Switzerland has few figure skaters, and none of distinction. To Sweden belongs the disli net ion of bavins provided Ulrich Salchow. who holds the remarkable record of having won the world's championship five successive years. The Norwegians skate, as d the Swedes, strenuously and with much vigor. They favor speed rather than the figure department of the sport. The Dutch, of course, are a nation of skaters. "But, good as the Dutch are," E. W. Syers, the English authority, has declared, "they have now no chance with the Swedes and Norwegians; and we, In turn, arc Just as far behind the Dutch." According to Mr. S'yers, no English skater would have the remotest chance of being placed In any first-class contest abroad. Westminster dazette. "TWO TOPERS." A Teachfr' I'xperlrnee. "My friends call me The Postum Preacher, " writes a Minn, school teacher, "because I preach the poiel öl Postum everywhere I go, and have been the means of liberating many cofl'ee-iot slaves.' "1 don't care what they call me 0 long as I can help others to see what th,iy lose by sticking to coffee, and ean show them the way to steady nerves, clear brain and general good health by using Postum. "While a school girl I drenk coffe. and had fits of trembling and went thtcugh a siege of nervous prostration, which took me three years to rally from. "Mother coaxed me to use Postum, but I thought coffee would give me strength. So things went, and when I married I found my husband and I were both coffee topers and I can sympathize with a drunkard who tries to leave off his cups. "At last in sheer desperation, I bought a package of Postum, followed (lirer-tions about boiling It, served it with good cream, ami asked my husband how he liked the eofft'c. "We each drank three cups apiece, and what a satisfied feeling it left. Our conversion has lasted several years and will continue as long as we live, for it has made 1x3 new nerves are steady, appetites good, sleep sound and refreshing." "There's a Reason." Name given by Tostum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Bead 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.

PiLS ( -fifth

A high selling price decs not lesson the cost of production. The mnnurial value cf foods corresponds to their nutritive value. California raised a large potato crop In lfH7, many farmers charing from Jf'JÖO to $0(10 per acre. Stock-proof, time-wearing fences are the only kind. The worry they save is rutTcient while. to make them well worth The hen is a faithful advocate of advertising. If you dn't believe it plan to be in the vicinity of the hen house about a. m. In a test at the Kansas experiment station It has been demonstrated that alfalfa and Kallir corn meal make the very boit ration for the dairy cow. The ,"CO-pound fat hog is getting to be quite unsalable at the market. He Is big In more ways than one. The local buyer will take hSm only ea a big margin. The man who keeps hi. 5 troubles to himself is better thought of than be who burdens his neighbors with them. The neighbors have their own' troubles to think about. Five unemployed men of Monessan. Pa., recently left with their families for Portland, Tenn., where they will begin farming on the community plan. Other families are preparing to do the same thing. It't like trying to break an old horse to new tricks to teach an old farmer after a lifelong use of ink and grarhlte, how to wag his hands properly over a typewriter to produce legible results. Some farmers are trying the trick. Give the corn planter a square deal. In other words, oee that you have the seed pcoperly graded and sorted before you expect the planter to drop three grains to a hill ninety-seven times out of a hundred. Butter is made In this country by 9,000 creamerymen. If the Influence of this aggregation' ever becomes well combined It ean Indeed be made an Important factor for the good of the dairy Industry. Any man can afford to go to extra expense to get his corn land plowed early so as to give the weeds an osportunlt to grow and In turn get them destroyed just before planting. Nothing will beat the disk as a wwd destroyer. Every man has bis own way of raising hogs, but one of the worst ways is to allow a big bunch of sows to run together when the pigs are young. This results In so much stealing that the pigs are runted and it Is hard on the old sows. The feelings of regret that arise within the farmer who makes a test of his seed corn after it is shelled and finds that only GO per cent of It will grow must be experienced In order to be understood. Words fall to describe them. The matured mind is slow to grasp new ideas. It is in the youthful mind that the seeds of reform along any line can be best planted. It Is for th! reason that the work of our agricultural college extension departments ir the common schools will bear such superior results over that done in the short courses and institutes. If the present generation of coming farmers Is properly grounded is the principle? of g.od farming, the. change which will take place for Improvement will be hard to Imagine. Cinv Sivdlluiveil a llrooinntlck. A novelty In the way of surgical operations has been performed ou a cow by a veterinary at Iron Mountain. Minn. While eating last fall tho bovine got a turnip lodged In her throat. Her owner attempted to relieve her by pushing the obstacle Into the stomach, lie was successful, lu'.t the broomstick he used broke ofT, and about 20 inches of It dlsapjK'ared with the vegetable. Recently the stick was noticed to have worked up to a point Just back of the cow's right shoulder. The veterinary made an incision, and by spreading apart two of the ribs was enabled to extract the stick. Tho cow Is convalescent. Chicago News. Treat I ne Corn for Crow; The coal tar treatment of scodScorn to prevent crows from pulling It up !s recommended by those who have tried It. The method of application Is given as follows: Take a convenient sized box or other vessel, in which place a peck or ime-half bushel of corn at a time. Dip the end of n stick In a vessel of coal tar and stir the writ with Ulis. If stirred thoroughly it will take very little tar. The grains do not need to Ik4 completely blackened, but even If this is done it will not Injure the seed. After stirring In the tar completely a little dry ashes or dirt ean be stirred in to prevent sticking of the grains if necessary. Crows or even hogs will not disturb corn that has been thus treated. Wornm um IMuoter. Many readers may recall the surprise they felt on reeding Darwin's book on earthworms to find how the great naturalist had lent an Irresistible charm to Si apparently unpromising 1 suIh ject. It led them to entertain a respect they had never previously ft It for the h amble Imrers in the earth. It now appears that earthworms must he regarded as useful otherwise than as simple cultivator.; and renewers of the soil. According to E. A. Andrews they the tree-planters also. They draw the flat seeds of the silver maple into thei." burrows, and such seeds, In districts too dry for them to germlnat if left upon the surface, sprout frow the worm holes, and grow Into seedlings, which, under favoring conditions, may become flourishing trees. Fnte of the l"nproKrftS-e Far rue p. The agricultural colleges are reaching 50,000 homes a year, the federal lecture courses a million people a year. What will the effect be In a generation or two? It is disappointing to

ev

mi have to reco.'d that the old-line fannen are reiuaiuln practically untouch: ly the new nioveuient ; hut the r.e) generation and the new West are quickly adopting scientilk' inethHN. One of the richest nun In the West to-day U puttins; his dauphter Oirouh tho full four-year agricultural course that she may he ahle to manape the estate that will fall Into her hands; and a foremosf physician of Chicago, who ha just txiupht a 7.".(KH-acre farm in Mexico, is having his lxy take not only the four-year university course, hut a two years' post-graduate as well. What will happen to the old-linei fanner, who refuses to take up the new methods, will he just what ha already Kfailen the old-line mechanic who refused adopt s-Ientie machinery. With the handicap of mortgaged farm and Iiis own Ignorance, he will simply drop out of tin procession and heroine the successful farmer's hired man. Outing. St.irtlitK Alfalfa. In tho matter of laying down a field to alfalfa the Ontario experiment station gives the following suggestions: Select land having a clean, mellow, fertile surfaco soil overlying a deeply drained subsoil having no acidity. Use largo plump seed free from impurities ! and strong Li germinating power. Inoculate th seed with the proper kind of bacteria, providing alfalfa has not been grown successfully on the land In recent years. As early In tho spring as the laiul Is dry enough and warm enough to bJ worked to god advantage make a suitable seed bed and Immediately sow alMut twenty ounls of alfalfa seed l or acre from tho grass seed box placed In front of the grain drill and about one bushel of spring wheat or of barley per acre from the tubes of the drill. Smooth the land with 1 light harrow or with a weeder, and If. It Is very loose and rather dry also roll It and again go over it with the harrow or the weeder. As soon as ripe cut the grain and avoid leaving It on the land longer than necessary. CJlve the alfalfa plants every opportunity to get a good start In tho autumn in preparation for the winter. If for hay, cut eaoh crop of alfalfa In the following year as soon as It starts to bloom. ; In curing try to retain as many of the leaves on the stems as' possible, to protect the crop from rain. Never cut or pasture alfalfa suHiciently close to the ground to remove the crowns of the roots and thus injure or possibly kill the plants.) If these directions are followed the alfalfa may be expected to produce large and valuable' crops for a number 0 years without resocding. Getting Mont Out of Farm. There are different views of how tf go to work at most anything. One man looks at it one way, another arthe-r. It is that way with farming. There are men who seem to think rbat If they can skin the farm down to the very quick every -eor they are making the most out of farming. These men think more of the money they get than anything else in the world. Money is their supreme object in life. For that they work themselves and their horses and their hands from daylight till dark. For that they will scrimp themselves and their families till they have little of tlr real man-' IkxmI left in them, for it Is a fact that such narrow living stunts all the better elements of one's nature. They die at last, leaving a good bank' account, but that is all they leave, and tbe world soon forgets them. That Is not getting the most out of the farm. What Is? The man who gets the most out of the farm is the one who makes not simply a fortune out of it, but makes a life. Ha works for that day that is coming, as well as for the day that now is. His aspiration is to leave the farm a little better than he found it. This he can do by a system of thorough farming, by means of which he maintains the fertility of the soil, giving as well as taking, every year. He studies the hearts of his wife and !Utle ones, just as much as he thinks of the care and keeping of his land and his cattle. He takes an Interest In the welfare cf the people about him and is ready to do all that he can to insure gvd government. The man who does these things may not lay up quite as much money as the other one, but he will have the respect of all who know him. and. the lest of it all Is, Le will be worthy of that respect. Kansas City Journal. Some Separator Conelunlons. In conclusion, let me say that th hand separator has made possible a marvelous growth In the dairy industry. It has extended the butter producing territoiy from the one hundredth meridian to the Pacific Coast. It has reached up int the Far Northwest and has dipof. down Into the Southwest. It has made iossible the marketing of dairy products in regions which would never have been reached by whole-milk system dairying. It has stimulated and encouraged the introduction of improved dairy breeds and It has brought to thousands of farmers millions of dollars which it would have been imiossible for them to accumulate had it not leen for the hand separator. The hand separator users are a vast throng, and their influence should be used to improve their position. They should Insist, where their cream Is marketed for butter making purjoses, that It be graded according to its quality and tested for butter fat by accurate methods. They should take an interest In all the operations that are necessary to place this product on the market to the best advantage. They should give care to its assembling and care to lis receiving. There are many opportunities oion for co-operation ; hut co-operation can only be carried on where there Is a desire r?n the part of all tj work in harmony. This Is ssible whore the right spirit exists, .;id It seems to nie it Is well worth the trial. In the assembling, receiving and griding there Is a fair field for co-operation. Where cream Is shipped In large quantities from towns one man could receive, grade, test and ship all the product. This would do away with the half dozen cream buyers often found In a small town and Mould provide a more skilled marl at better pay and housed In a building constructed for caring for cream. A. L. Ilaecker, head of the Dairy Department, University of Nebraska.

V V

Pattern Department UP-TO-DATE DESICJNS FOR THE HOME DRESSMAKER V V V C.irl'M (ulinpe l)rc. Girls dresses that give the princessc j'ffect in one way or another are among he latisr that have appeared and are .wcccdingly charming in effect. This PATTERN NO. one shows a full length panel at the front and can he worn over any gulmpo, while the frock itself Is adapted to almost every seasonable material, v Tho alove pattern will be mailed to your address on receipt of 10 cents. Send all orders to the Pattern Department of this paper. lie sure to give both the number and size of pattern wanted, and write very plainly. For convenience, write your order on the folic ving coupon: Order Coupon. No. oO.IO. SIZE NAME ADDRESS nrr-nkfnnt Jaekrt. The need for a pretty, tasteful, und becoming jacket always exists. Mid each new one is therefore certain of lis welcome. Here Is a very charming model that is tucked after a most satisfactory manner, that Las the rollover collar which is so comfortable and the three-quarter sleeves that are the In-st of all for garments of the sort. PATTERN NO. ,"S71. In the illustration it is shown made of dotted clmlüs and held by a riblnm belt, but cashmere, veiling, all similar light weight materials, the pretty India silks ami the Inexpensive ash fabrics, that many women like at all seasons of the year are appropriate. The jacket is made with fronts and back. The above pattern wlllbe mailed to your address on receipt of 10 cents. Send all orders to the Pattern Department of this paper. Re sure to give both the number and size of pattern wanted, and write very plainly. For convenience, write your order on tho following coupon: Order Coupon. No. .Vi"!. SIZE XAME .., ADDUKSS LITTLE ABOUT EVERYTHING. Wheat matures in Canada in from J0 to 100 days. Southern California yields 2,000 tons of salt 1 kt year. In Denmark girls insure against, becoming old maids. Canned shark is one of the delicacies on sale iu India and Japan. The largest insect is the stick insect of Romeo. It is thirteen indies long. So late as 1S13 the East India Company decided that trade with Japan was not worth cultivating. Rabylon was probably the first cily to attain a population of a million. The area of the city was square miles. The members of the Yorkshire (England) brigade of volunteers have been asked by the colonel to cut off their curls. Labor unions are no new Invention. Accurate records of thvir existence in Roman times have been dug up in Pompeii. The reason cats dislike water is that there is nothing oily altout their fur. Consequently it Is easily wetted and does not dry quickly. Spain is to spend J? 10,000niO on th? improvement of her naval dockyard. and the construction of three new battleships of 1Ö.0OO tons each. When starching anything which has a fringed edge, fold the article in four, ami gather the fringe tightly into one hand; hold it firmly and dip the center of the piece Into the starch. Whn dry, shake the fringe well and comb carefully with a coarse comb.

AV7AY WITH HITCHING POSTS.

Why Thpy Shonld Itc Abolished and Shed V Provided In Thrtr Place. Clarke M. Drake of Prattsburg, N. Y., who wants the village hitching post abolished, writes as follows to the Farm Journal : To many a horse the hitching post becomes a freezing post. It will have to go as did the old time whipping post. In the gales that often sweep through the principal business streets of a village or town a blanket will not ordinarily stay on a horse. If a sudden raiu comes up, the men and women seek shelter, but the horses have to soak. The horses are fastened to a post, and no one could blame them for breaking away and finding a place which their faithful service has purchase!. Many of them are driven hard to and from the village and severely suffer at the post from ths effects of wind and storm. In return for slackness in not providing sheds for the horses the village people have to endure a stable odor on their streets whenever the weather is right for it. These odors drift into the stores, and when the droppings arc dry and fine the winds blow the particles in also. Some villages provide well built sheds with feed mangers, where horses may not only enjoy freedom from wind and rain, but also have the protection of, their blankets and the pleasure of eating a bite before returning home. If goods are purchased, they may be placed in the vehicle and be kept as dry as when they came from the store till the owner is ready to go home. It is very unpleasant to think of riding home sitting on a wet cushion and under wet blankets. Strong Wind and Sand Storm eansp granulation of the eyelids. PETTIT'S EYK SAL.VE 'soothes and quickly relieves, 20c. All druggists or Howard Eros., BufTalo, N. Y. THE FAVORITE ROOil . Mrttcrlon I'opulnrlf y Attaches to Thla Alluring Nook. Most houses of the slightest pretension have a favorite rooni.v Popularity Is its distinguishing feature. It need neither be the smartest nor the largest nor the best furnished, but is possessed of attractions that are entirely Independent of the painter or upholsterer. The builder may have had a say in it, however, and the architect. It is much easier to describe the 'favoritet room negatively than positively, but the whole genus have one marked peculiarity they grow into what they are of themselves. No one was ever so clever i s to make a favorite room by trying to do so. The thing Is Impossible. Favorite rooms become what they are of their own accord. , Very often they begin quite humbly; that is, they rise in life like soldiers from the ranks. In novels the "favorite" room has nearly always the same origin. It was once the nursery, and ends by being an apartment sacred to taffy-pulling by the heroine and her brothers and sisters, but In real life superannuated nurseries are generally refurnished and turned Into smart boudoirs or extra bedrooms for the growing-up family. One thing, the favorite room Is never by any chance a gloomy room. Indeed, it is altogether alluring. Ball frocks for the young ladies were "run up" in it and always came out successful ; students for the stiffest examinations "read up" in It and never failed to pass. In short, the room was as comfortable as it could le, and good luck appeared to cling to any of those who took it into their heads to use It Ar Your Clothe Faded? Use Red Cross Dali Blue and make them white agalnt Large 2oz. package, & cent. Conscience money received yearly by the chancellor of the exchequer, in l'ngland, in default of unpaid taxes, averaget $30,000. O, No! "Paw, what is the white slave traffic ? "Buying and selling baseball players, Tommy."

8 mj

0& m

" In a Pinch, list Allen's Fcot-Ease.

SoU by all Prugfäta everywhere for 2.- cents. FOOT-EASE ÖANITAKY CORN'PAD. a ne

1. A Friend in Need!

j' . iiüw-':jw . yy it-- f. T,.rrg7T!CTarTrci -zxynwrv r -' ' .' - i'.;.1.1 " ''"'"""1

I ' '"' "GC?sfe,,.t uv Six

II IIB

ZTTHAT thin, little. 10-cent

Box of Cascarets. When carried

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

TT -Ml AW .mm i i I.

11 "-,!.-'

ALCOHOL 3 PK CENT AgetablelVcparalionrcTAssimilaiing thcFocrfantfRcgulatiagtlie Stomaclis aaißowscf

s'ao O , BEBST Proitiolcs Di$estfcnllffny ncss and RretXontaias ncita OpirniuMoqihinc norJlhcral. Kot Narcotic. IV3Ü ''jii fvr, I Pumfk'ji Seta' jttx.Sema JtzhdUSdttJtprermetr- . IfiLarioadt-ba Herri Srrihutujtta llanr. A nirf.rt Rempdv for CöäSfiüa tion , Sour Stomch.Dlarrtp Ip-wS YonusJCon-ulsior.s.rcTrisa-,-3" Vm ncss mdLo ss OF fcHSP. Facsimile Sinamre cf NEW YORK. f HliaitiiMii j ' ikm 1 '!' Vi !' Gtiaranleed under the Foe Exact Copy of Wrapper.

TS

FOR

LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE

know how good it is. SerJ us 25c. for a trial trip, and we will mail you three issues of this great magazine, containing three first-class complete novels, sixteen strong stories, fifty pages of new humor, and fifteen remarkable articles. Send to-day. Our current issue is fine.

LIPPINCOTTS MAGAZINE SHOES AT ALL PRICES, FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY.

I ii ami in 1 iiin laa 11 1 ii iimi m 11 ii im 11 1 j rCSSX. I V!SSV SHOES AT ALL VVlSS . r 8 Zm PRICES. FOR EVERY - O - t-- V,.K X

MEN, COYS, WOMEN, MISSES ANO CHILDREN. mon'm$2.60, $3.00 and S3.50 mhoaa than any othef manufacturer in thm awm. world, becauam they hold their ah a pa. tit better, waar longer, and rec mra of oroat a r value than any ether rr mJromim In tho worrf to-dmv.

W. L Dcuirlas $4 and $5 Gill Elte a Shoes Cannct

erlAl'TIOV. W. T- Iouk1h nm fcnti prW 1 KtmTM on bottom. Tkr b.tltnf. Solrt by th Hrt hoe dealer ererrwbere. btioe auuld frorr fTjU m.nr part of the wM. I Horn. Ualed tu leg tiMWuj address. W. J J0 C4ilAJ, Untktw, alaa.

III Monej' Worth. A pentieman Interviewed the laundry in an in regard to lost Raiments, says a writer In Harper's Weekly, with the following result: Laundryman I regret to tell you, sir, that one of your shirts Is lost Customer Hut here I have iald you twelre cents for dolns It up. Laundryman Quite right, sir. We laundered It before we lost it. Ill atnral Urnt. Mrs. Chillicon-Koarney Your husband, it seems, is quite a rounder. Mrs. Goodsole A rounder? O, yo'j mean his shoulders. Yes roof dear Gregory just can't straighten up. He wa always that way.

A powder to be shaken into the shoes. Your feet feel swollen, nervous, hot and get tired easily. If you have aching, smarting feet, try Allen's Foot-Ease. t It rests the feet and makes new or tight shoes easj ; always uso it to Break in New Shoes. It cures swollen, hot., sweating feet, blisters, ingrowing nails and callous spots. Relieves corns and bunions of all pain and gives Rest and Comfort. It cures while you walk "Wo have over thirty thousand testimonials. Try it to-day. Sold by all Druggists everywhere 25 cents Don't accept any substitute for Aliens Foot-Ease. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, He Roy, N. Y. European Branch. Office, Peterborough, England. ÄP5MIVI(, Success brings imitations. Scores of " JLVInI Hrl7 worthless imitations are sometimes offered for eale. Insist upon having Allen's Foot-Ease. The Original powder for tho feet Twclvo years before the pubHc. Annual sales over two million packages. Do not accept spurious- substitutes claimed to bo just as good.n Imitations pay the tleaie a larger profit otherwise you would never bo offered 9 substitute for Allen's Foot-Ea&o. Axk for Allen's Foot-Ease, and insist upon having it. Remember, Allen 'sFoot-Ease is sold only in 25 cent packages bearing yellow label with our trade mark and facsimile Ei4riiatiiro

For FREE Trial pacltacre, also Free Sample of tba

new invention, address Allen LiVtft. Cure Constipation KS'li : i.Slti tA.i'.. - -r y.i,-y .;;' jy - o constantly in your Muscles that pro and that squ natural

, I mj&W for 1()C

r)

m a

Digestive Juices

of the body into Food. Cascarets ward oif , or

cure, the following diseases.

Constipation Biliousness Indigestion Dyspepsia Torpid Liver Appendicitis Rheumatism

The Vest Pocket box carried constantly with you, like your Watch, or Lead Pencil, will' in sure you against sickness. But, don't forget that "a Cascaret in time is worth nine." At all Druggists. 10 Cent? a box.

(fan (ft

11

U KU For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have i Always Bought. Bears the Signature of in Use For Over Thirty Years IS) TMt ccMTAua co a Fakt, acw row crrr .mi.' tiin never sells for less than 25c a copy. Cut we want you to CAST WASHINGTON SQUARE PHILADELPHIA - - PEN N A. art Bs Ecuaüed At Ait Prfca The oldest building ia Wall street. New York, is the government aay offire. Immediately east of the subtreasury, yet 11 is only eiffhty-rhree years old, bavin, been erected in 1S2.X ( Chemists ay that papers written with the ink in feneral uss ill b illegible ia 27 year?. Sicily produces about ."fX',000 tons of ?u!phur annually, or K0 per cent of tit Lire production of the vorld. The fong of the bird was originally cry of alarm. F.W. N. U. No. 25 19C8 Warn wrltlaK to AdvertUera aleaaa may you aavr the Adv. la this paper. S. Olmsted, Im Itoy, N. Y. Shots Catarrh Hives Colic Jaundice Bad Breath Nausea Diabetes l 'eriigo Headache Scrofula Diarrhoea Womanly Flatulence Troubles Worms Piles Ulcers Pimples Blotches Eczema Dysentery 4

AW

r

'S.

fjü

B

Jfor 10c

E!Fooa.m eeze the V&

Viol