Plymouth Tribune, Volume 7, Number 39, Plymouth, Marshall County, 2 July 1908 — Page 7

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Should be inseparable. For summer eczemas, rashes, itchings, irritations, Inflammations, c h a fi n g s , sunburn, pimples, blackheads, red, rough, and sore hands, and antiseptic cleansing as well as for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are invaluable. Sold ft ortcmt t? world. IVpot? Lnodnn. 27. Chartert kmjs Jq.: Pan. 5. Roe de to Pan: Australia. R. Ttwos Co, bydny: India, B. K. Paul. Calcutta; Japan. Maruya. Ltd., Tokio; So. Africa. Lronoo. l4d..Car Town. etc. U.S. A Potter Drug Chem. Com ,. Sole Props.. Hoaton. C- fost-t; ee. CuUcuxa ixua ua Car of Sitla. Baseball Critic. Hoggins What has become of Fanning? Muggins Oh, he's laid up; a victim of baseball. Hujrgins I didn't know he ever played the game. Muggins He doesn't. He sprained his larynx telling the umpire how things ought to be done. B M H . Look to II Remembered. Ethel How did you like the ne minister, Maud? Maud He made an indelible Impression on me. Ethel How so? Maud IJe emptied a cap of tea or to my new white silk dress. AtkYoarDralerforAUen'a Foot-r.ae A powder to shake Into yonr shoes. It rests the fet. Cures Corns. Bunions. Swo!ln, Sore, Hot, Callou. Achln;. Sweating feet and Ingrowln? Nails. Allen' Foot-Lase makes new or t!zht shoes easy. Sold by ail Druggists and Shoe Stores. 25 Ran pie mailed FREE. Address Alien S. Olmsted, Le Koy, N. Y. Cad of the Rfton. Guest (In restaurant) I say, waiter, have you any oysters? Walter No, sah. We all ain't got no shell ish 'ceptin eggs, sah. lira. Wlnslow'H Soot binar Symp for Children teething: softens the gums, reduces Inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic 2S cents a bottle. Coacholoirlcal. "Still trying to muster cp courage to propose to the girl, are you, Algy? Don't be a clam. Deah boy, I catrn't be a clsm, doat yoa know. She says I'm a lobstah. French enterprise is gradually overcoming the difficulties of living on the Sahara. All Up-to-Oate Housekeepers Use Ked Cross Ball Blue. It makes the clothes clean and sweet as when new. All Grocers. The story Is told of a clergyman, who, after he had finished his sermon. heard one of his congregation say. "Yes, it was a good sermou ; but he stole it" A short time afterward the preacher called on the man, resented the accusation, and asked him to retract what he had sail. "I am not," answered the rcan, "likely to take back anything that I hav2 said; but in this case I will, for on returning home and rc-ferrir.g to the book whence I thought you had tnken your sermon. I found that It was iiill there. ertna acls oetulv vol n rompiv on me Dou Gis. cleanses me stemejjectually, assists one in overcoming habitual constipation permanently. To got its (beneficial effects buy the genuine. Manufactured the California pLG SYRUP Co. 5CLD BT LÜADI NO DRUGGISTS- 5C p-BOTTLt A CkJn ef Beauty I a Joy Forever. D R. T. Felix Gouraud'a Oriental Cream or Magical Beautlfier. Ramores Tan, Plinplw freckle. Moth Palcbc Ra.lt. and hta Diseases, a A 5 9 ana tvery oieruva on b utf. aod do iea detection. It baa stood lb test of eo yttn, and la ao karmleM I taste it to iure it la properly mala. Accept no counterfeit tf i.oiliar r.ame. Dr. L. A. fc.rra eaid to a lady of tb baut ton (a patient i "Al you ladies will nae them. I recommend nard r-r- mm' leant harmful of all Uta akin preparations." .r sale by all drorrirts ard Fancy Goods Dealers in ths Uclted Statsa, Ca-ada and Kurope. FEElT.KSPflli Prom 37 Great Jana S-sd Sew Tat Wanted Stocks of Merchandise, invoicing from 10 to SVJW dollars In txcha jjre for income property and some cash. Address Box 56, Marion, Ind. Invest $5 monthly In Oklahoma farm lands. Agents wanted. Write -r particulars. C. W. Deming In v. Co., nlsa, Okla.

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The milk dealer laughed. "That's pretty good, that is," he said. "1 often wish I could keep a straight face when I get off anything like that, but I can't. I always have to "snicker and spoil it.'. "That ain't any joke," said the bandy-legged man with the leather watch guard. "What made you think it was a joke? I mean it. I can afford to let j-ou have him for that, the way money is." "I wouldn't take advantage of you," said the milk dealer. "You've too easy. If I got that magnificent animal for $30 I'd be ashamed to look my wife in the face. I'd be a wolf to do It. No, you just load him right back into the stall and prop him up careful so's lie won't fall down, and then you wait till somebody comes along that wants to give you a hundred.' "I refused fifty for him." "You done right," said the milk dealer, approvingly. "Don't you let anybody take him away from you for fifty. If they keep com in' at you with $oO bills yo'.i borrow a gun somewhere and stand 'em off." "Maybe I'd better," said the bandylegged man, Ickoning to a boy. "Take him back to the stall, Hill. You've missed the chance of your life to get a horse for a little money, that' all. That's a horse that's speedy and good dispositioned. All that's wrong with him is that he's just off pasture. You take and grain him up a little and you wouldn't take seventy-five for him a month from now. Bill, If that feller that was In yesterday rails up while I'm out you tell him that the party I was saving the sorrel for ain't going to take biin and he can have him for Torty. "(live him my regards if he ca'ls up. Bill." said the milk teaiir. "Give him Ferguson's regards and tell him IM like to make his acquaintance." "I thought you said the sorrel might suit you," said the bandy-legged man. "Well, I ain't got nothin else. But I can get $40 for that horse any time, and that's no Josh." "What did you offer him to me for thirt.r-flve for thenV" asked the milk dealer. "Because you're a neighbor o' mine, an I wanted to accommodate you, replied the bandy-legged man. "Well, well get down to business and quit klddin," said the milk dealer. "I'll give yen twenty for him." "You mean quit talking business an' start In to klddin' don't you?" said the bandy-legged man. -"Why, I'm givln' you that horse at $,T5. I don't want to pauperize you worse than tiat. See here' you're taking up lots ' time. Just to cut it short I'll say thirty. Now, don't you never ask me to do the like again, because I'll have to turn you down. Thirty dollars, even money. I'm foolish to do It, but I'd like to see you get what you want, and then maybe you can do me a good turn some time." "If I did you that kind of a good turn you'd be hiring a lawyer to sue me.' said the milk dealer. "Still, Just to show you I'm a sport I'll come up a little .-nd take a chance. I'll give $22.50 spot cash and If he falls dead on me as I'm taking him out of the barn I won't come back on you. Is It a go?" "Thirty's my last prior," said the bandy-legged man. "Well, I won't stand on two dollars and a half. If you've got $27JjO that you want to hand over to me for n bill of sale, I'll get busy with the pen and Ink. You can't have him for a cent less, so you might as well dig up. "I've got a couple of tens and a five," said the milk dealer. "Want 'em?" "Hand em over," said the bandylegged man. Chicago Daily News. FEIEST KIND OF POTATOES. naked Variety Appeals Strongly to One Who Understands It. There are said to be 1.14S different varieties of potatoes. The best kind, far discovered, is the baked potato. Of course, the potato grows down In the chambers of the earth, away from the sunshine, the jolly zephyrs and the ongs of the birds. It Is down there imong the worms and the creatures of ihe dark, where the cold rains huddle about it. But, although Its environment Is distal and it holds no communion with ihe lovely visions of the air, dear old mother nature takes good care of it and suffuses Its humble being with many happy qualitksUhrough the mystic chemistry of the soil, which burst into all the exuberance of a flower when gently baked and broken open by l loving hand. Then that snowy, bosomlike tenderness exudes an aroma as delicate as a lily's and whets the appetite like a dish of ambrosia. One womlers how it -an be so, that this soggy tuber develops itself Into a concretion of creamy pray when submitted to the friendly heat of the oven. But there It Is spread out in raptures on the plate, and anointed with butter and sprinkled with salt, the fairest dish of health und virtue and loving kindness in all the menus of delight. There are mashed potatoes, fried potatoes, boiled potatoes, creamed potatoes, Saratoga chips and divers other sorts of greasy, watery, woody eonoootiong of the humble tuber, but nowhere resides the brooding tenderness of Its loving mother as when baked to the turn of an autumn leaf and breaking into a mile before you. But one must not bake a potato clumsily, dumping it into any kind of an old oven and giving it no care, no patience, no kindly touch. (Jive it these, and of th 1,1-18 different kinds of potato you will love the baked the best. Columbus Journal. Pie. "Why do they refci- to the government office as pie?" "Because," answered Senator Sorghum, "it's something that nearly everybody likes himself, although he thinks Its lad for nearly everybody else." Washington Star. tv Term for It. "Did the coroner's Jury bring in a verdi?t of that sudden death as lue to heart failure?" "No, they changed It a bit to breath cessation." Baltimore American. A man who Is loved by a woman has no liberty. A married man who looks at a pretty girl, except as he looks at a catfish, or a spring rabbit, or a turtle, or any other ordinary thing, is Untrue to his Plighted Troth.

KITCHEN AND HAPPINESS.

Another C'nae Where the Rentlal Han Pen Loat Sicht Of. Just as the hub is the ir-portant part of the wheel, although inconspicuous In comparison with the whole, so is, the kitchen, however shut off from the rest of the house, the vital part of the housekeeping and home-making domain, says the New Bedford Standard. Of coirrse the house that Is merely a place in which to rest and visit and get ready to go out can readily disj)cnse with a kitchen, but such a house is like a wheel with the hub disconnected and standing Idle and useless it is not ful filling its mission of making a home. But if the kitchen is the humble In strument that turns a house Into a home, it does not get the credit of its beneficent role. Rather, it is likely to le looked upon as a cause of a prolong ed series of vexations and annoyances imposing an almost endless round ot tasks that become burdens unless the spirit of the home-maker dominates the housekeejer. How to make the kitchen and its spe cial functions such a delight to the housekeeier that the danger of kitchens going out of fashion may le averted has been the problem of Nebraska uni versity in its household-economics de partment. In this connection the de lightful phrase, "the home foundry of happiness," has come into being, whether developed by the university or by the Omaha Bee. which tells of its investigations, we cannot say. But certainly the kitchen looked upon as the factory of home happiness is raised above the sordid precinct of pots and pans and grease. But even a university can go astray. All its wrestling with the problem of how to make the housekeeper fond of her kitchen and to enable her to turn off the work with such dispatch that she shall still have time and interest to te an Inspiring companion for bus band and children eventuates in this list of "absolutely needful articles" for the room's equlpnieut: A gas range with water front and loiler attached, a hood above to carry off odors and vaors, a kitchen cabinet, a refrigerator (outside Icing), a smnll table on rollers, a window box outside for use where there Is no ice kept, an Ironing board, three irons, a Berlin ket tle, two pudding pans, a sauce pan, a steam cooker, a meat chopper, a bread mixer, a soapstone griddle, two Freren frying pans, a muflln Iron, an Iron fry Ing kettle and basket,! a roasting pin. six pie tins, two baking sheets, an angel food cake pan, two-layer cake pans, a colander, four mixing bowls (assorted sizes), an aluminum tea kettle, an ice cream freezer, a coalhod, a fire shovel, a dustpan, a poker, a glass lemon squeezer, a rolling pin, a chopping bowl and knife, a fwtato sllcer, a wire potato masher, a funnel, a cream whip, a can opener, a corkscrew, n large grater, a small grater, two strainers, two dishpans, a draining pan, a vegetable brush. a hand basin, a quart measure, two glass measuring cups, two tin measur Ing cuis, a Dover egg beater, a wire egg beater, two spatulas, two paring knives, n French knife, two large spoons, two wooden spoons, six tea simoons, six tablespoons, six knives, six forks, a cake turner, a bread knife, a butcher knife, three molds, a dish towel rack, a roller towel rack, twelve glass Jars for food materials, a broom, a mop. Here we have the mistake that Is made right along of thinking that the. multiplication of possessions Increases in like proportion the degree of happiness. One has only to compare In ini agination some tincly equipped house of the restless rich with the modest little home of some contented $15-a-week couple to recognize that the implements of the work count for less than the spirit of the worker. Tools enough to avoid annoyance and vexatious delays there must bo; but pity the day when happiness seems tc deiend upon gas ranges with wate fronts attached, upon kitchen cabinets and multiplicity of knives and spoons MEDITATIONS OF A SPINSTER. Not many men can afford to lose any more money than leing married. When a girl says sLe will forgive n man it means she is ready for him to kiss her again. About the time a girl looks the most innocent is Just when she is going finally to land him. There Is one stage both in being poor and being rich wherein you step worrying about your clothes. A man Is always interested In the woman who will make him exert himself to talk alKut himself. Pretty shoes and stockings tend to make a girl forget some of the things her mother used to teach her. One inconvenient thing about kissing under an umlrrella, it generally take advantage of the matter and drips cold water down your neck. Philadelphia Telegraph. A Jost Ilebnke. The maiden in the flat above was singing "If All the World Were Mine" for the tenth time that eveuing. The man lelow could stund it no longer. "Say," he shouted at the top of hie voice, "you evidently realize that you don't own all the world, but for heaven's Kike where did you get the idea you were the only one in this flat?" Detroit Free Press. In Smart Livery. Housemaids in livery are the latest innovation In "smart" London houses. One fashionable woman has attired her maids In neat skirts, tight-fitting bodices, with natty double-breasted waistcoats of yellow and black, tiny brass buttons on either side. The It Ich Man Got It. Poormau That's Old Man Flint. I earned $." for him once. A scum You mean you earmil $." doing some work for him? Poorman Put it any way you like. I mean I earned the $5, but I never got it. Philadelphia Press. The Iteaaon. "Why do they call the principal pr.'son i:i this country of yours Sing Sing?" '.'Because It is there that people have to face the music." Toledo Blade. Aantralla's t'nex ploretl Itexlona. Australia contains more unexplored territory In proportion to its size than any other continent. The experience we buy is seldom worth the cost. Xfw Wear for I'onehers. English poachers have adopted khaki for wear during business hours. They find it" makes the evasion of watchful gamekeepers easier. 1

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Pattern Department UP-TO-DATE DESIGNS FOR THE HOME DRESSMAKER v v v ITrenkfat Jacket. Such a breakfast jacket as this one always is in demand. It can be worn with odd skirts and made from any pretty seasonable material, or it can be made with skirt to match, and it allows a choice of the three-quarter sleeves with frills and of long ones. In the illustration dotted challis is trimmed with lace anu banding, .but '.awn, batiste, French gi igham and all the inexpensive wash fabrics are adTATTERN NO. ,"015. Mlrahle for the purpose, and lace, embroidery or any preferred finish can b used. The above pattern will be mailed to your address on receipt of .10 cents. Send all orders to the rattern Department of this paper. Be sure to give both the number and size, of pattern wanted, and write very plainly. For convenience, write your order on the following coupon: Order Coupon. Xo. ÖOlo. SIZE NAME ADDRESS Glrl'a Drrit. The need of the dainty yet protective apron is an ever present one with the small girl, and such a pretty model as this Is sure to find its place. As illustrated It is made of lawn with the bretellos of embroidery and the little yoke of tucking. It can, however, be treated In a number of ways, as it is straight at the lower edge and consequently is well adapted to the hemstitched finish. TATTERX NO. 5S07. while it also can bo cut from flouncing and the bretelles can be made either of embroidery or the plain material trimmed. The apron consists of the yoke, which is cut in two jwrtions, the apron proper and the bretelles or shoulder frills. 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 n anted, and write very plainly. For convenience, write your order on the following coupon: Order Coupon. No. RS07. SIZE NAME ADDRESS LITTLE ABOUT EVERYTHING. Slam has an areaj of 0,000 square miles. The Mikado has a corps of CO doctors and 20 priests. The number of marriages in London last year was SUöSd. The telephone service of Switzerland is operated by the government. Antwerp and Amsterdam have the best health records of ail European cities. Ii Samoa nearly all babies are taught to swim tiefore they are two vears o.d. The British Museum in London has had as many as Oöl.öol vkitors in one year. An eagle can live twenty days with out tasting food, and a condor forty days. The average price of the American potato last year was (J 1.7 cents per bushel. A plant for manufacturing artificial marble was recently established In Ca tania, Italy. There are L'oo newsp:iiers In China, while ten years ago there was but one recognized as such. Cuban tradesmen have been holding mass meetings to urge tbe adoption of American money. A Siamese jungle is descriled as a forest of fish-hooks and kniv.es laced together with barbed wire. Of all the names given to male dogs in New York City "Teddy" now leads the list in point of numbers. The number of horses Is steadily In creasing in England, notwithstanding the multiplication of motor cars.

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Spain takes our wheat, bat refuses to buy American flour. An ounce of reconciliation over a line fence is better than a pound of lawsuit. Don't let money act as a padlock on your heart and shut in all the kindness and happiness. No man Is fit to boss his own farm until he has learned to boss himself. Some men never learn that. Bees help to make the crops and pay tfce farmer for the privilege. They are little trouble to keep and may bt the source of a good income. Little things on the farm amount to as much in the end as they do in any other business, yet the farmer as a rule does not pay asv much attention to details as does the city business man. While plowing ou the farm he had Just purchased Louis Hoffman of New London, Wis., turned up a pot of gold said to lie worth $00,000. The former owner of the farm has brought suit to recover the gold. Due to the presence of cattle diseases many of the work animals of the Philippine islands ai-c dying off. The asi sembJy has been asked to offer a prize of $00,000 to any one wno win mm a cure for the diseases. Oklahoma agriculturists have gotten tired of Johnson grass. The governor has approved a bill which makes It a misdemeanor to sow It and to sell hay or grain containing it without infor ing the purchaser. The little town of Canon City, Colo., 6hlpped over $000,000 worth of apples last year. The fruit growers of that section supplied the market with strawberries all through September and October and in some cases shipments w?r'j made for the Trauksgiving trade. Trofessor Getrgeson of the Alaska experiment station reports that the Galloway cattle taken there for the purpose of developing a general purpose breed are thriving in the Alaska climate. Seventeen calves have been dropped since the herd was taken there. . A proper combination of spade and elbow grease will make the worms working in the earth in the hen yard available for consumption as animal food. Tbe hens will not only be better off for the food which they get tuus, but the chap who works the spade handle will get exercise that will do him good. A good many municipalities place a minimum butter fat limit of 3 per cent for all ieddlcd milk. If the dignitaries who framed thoe ordinances had to rut up with milk that tested less than the above per cent in their coffee and on their oatmeal, a gotnl deal more vigor would le manifested in the prosecution of violators of the regulation. Specific instructions sent out with almost every cream separator put on the market are to the effect that the machine should be thoroughly washed and scalded each time it is used. When it is considered that in extreme caset slovenly patrons do not clean their separators of teuer than once a week it Is not surprising that the use of th? separator in some localities is not resulting in a materially improved dairy product. Canned Prunes. Those who have had opitortunity to pick the full ripened prune off the tree statu that It iossesscs a delicious quality aad flavor which are wanting in the dry product of commerce. In this connection considerable interest is felt both by growers and consumers of prunes in some exieriments which have been lately conducted In the canning of the fresh prune, as is done bo extensively with apricots, jnars and peaches. Some of tills canned product was sent to the, Philippine Islands, returned to the factory which put it up, and found, to be in perfect condition. This keeping quality of the prune when put up fi-esh Is a matter which seems to have been In considerable doubt1. Now, however, that the point has been determined. It is quite likely that prunes will be extensively canned. Amateur In Sheep Ituatneas. In going into the sheep business it is advisable to start with n sn ail floek. Fays an Oklahoma bulletin. Success Is largely Influenced by experience. The sinajl flock Is very easily handled and as it Increases the owner's experience lucriases, s that he is able to cope wit the problems that may present themselves. Many amateurs iake a failure of the business by starting in with a large flock, as they have neither the oy.perlence nor facilities for handling them. Even though sheep are easily managed, there are problems peculiar to the business which the shepherd Is best fitted to meet with the knowledge from practical experience. If you start with grades use only pure-bred sires of some one particular br,ed. Do not select a ram from one breed one year and one from another breed the next year, as no Improvement can be expected where such a method Is followed. The standard of a flock can be raised very rapidly by uffng good sires each year and culling out the Inferior ewe la nibs. Conserving Itesottreen. New Mexico is vitally Interested. In the plan to conserve natural resources and all thos-t acquainted with conditions and need. in this territory watchld with keen concern the deliberations ef the recent Congress of Governors at the national capital. It has been stated that in New Mexico there are iron deposits sufficient to construct the future navies of the world and enough coal to smelt and work the metal and furnish fuel for the fleets. We want those resources recognized, but we do not want them wasted. With coal lands we have been wasteful and extravagant; with timber lands we have been reckless and destructful. The States can do more to conserve our forests, and therein to

conserve our waterways and promote the irrigation projects of the Federal Government, than the nation. The Federal Government has only jurisdiction over public lands; while the States have full authority to Institute forestry systems, to establish reservations and to enforce their right of regulation of private lands in the Interest of the general public, to say waste, devasta tion or dangerous destructive uses. Las Vegas Optic. A Prnctleal Official. The New York Commissioner of Ag riculrure seems to be a person who views his office iu something more than a purely honorary light. During las j-ear he and his helpers Inspected dairy herds in forty-five out of sixty-one counties, finding t;2S dairy cows out of a total of 2,753 Inspected affected with tuberculosis. He inspected 235 milk receiving stations, 144 of which he reiorted in an insanitary condition The department of which he is heac not only attended to the above work but found employment for 443 single men and seventy-five families as hlrxl help. Data secured by the cpmrnis sloner showed that there were 22G.720 farms In the State, and that of this number 2,273 were for sale or rent Pasture for Hoes. Experiments show that as much pork can Ik? made from one acre of good pasture as from one ton of shorts or corn. The Minnesota experimen station says that clover makes the best hog pasture in that State, but Proi'es sor Waters of Missouri says that It is not safe or even desirable to rely upon a single crop, excepting alfalfa where it is an assured success, to furnish pas ture for hogs throughout the season He recommends a succession of pas tures from the beginning of the season until the hogs are ready for mjr ket, making the feed richer and more concentrated toward the close of the season as we approach the finishing or fattening period. For this purpose he recommends red clover or alfalfa, dv peas and soy beans. It will pay the farmer who is ris ing hogs to provide a good pasture, even If he is feeding them from other feeds, for clovers, cow peas and ioy beans are rich In protein and maka a good adjunct to any ration. The cheapest gaius that can be made In hog raising are where the hogs are fed skim milk and allowed to run on a good pasture of either clover or al falfa. Where possible to'do so a pas ture Is to be preferred to the dry lot for feeding hogs, not only in the In terest of cheapened gains, but also for the better health of the animals. Apple Cold Storage. It usually pays to store only the bist grades of fruit The poorer grades o: fruit are generally of low commercia value and do not warrant the expense of cold storage except when the apple crop is scam. Inferior fruit has ben found to deteriorate considerably in storage from decay starting In worm holes, around scab sinits and In othsr imperfections. A bruise or cut 'in the skin made with the finger nails, by dropping apples on each other in packing, by emptying them into the boxen or barrels and by handling the pack ages roughly becomes very conspicuous as the season advances and detracts from the appearance of the fruit, besides making an easy starting place for destructive rots. This is especially true of tender rkluned fall varieties, like the Wealthy. Most of the commercial losses in apples from decay are related primarily to the rough mechaui cal handling of the fruit Various temperatures for the storage of fruit have been tested. A tempera ture of 32 degrees gives the most satisfactory result in commercial practice, but the fruit keeps well for a shorter time In a temperature as high as 'M degrees If stored quickly after picking The most satisfactory result is te cured when the fruit Is withdraw.!. from cold storage and used while in prime condition. If held beyond this time it deteriorates rapidly after re moval from the low temperature, atd if withdrawn while the fruit Is prime it appear to.keo as long as appk8 in the same condition of ripeness that have not been in"cold storage. Experi ment Station, Ames, Iowa. Management of Dees. Bees may be managed for either the production of comb honey or for ex traded, honey. While they will pro duce more of the latter to the hive than comb honey, yet the higher prloe that comb honey will bring makes the Income from each amount the same. The difference in the management ';s that for comb honey little section boxes are placed In shallow "supers," or Ui per stories, in which the bees bulid nlKiut one pound of honey per box, while for extracted honey the upper story Is deeper and contains, instead of section boxes, large frames, in which the bees build their combs and store their product, the honey being extracted by the keeper and the combs used over again. In comb honey the bees have to bulM new combs each time, but for extract ed honey the sauie combs are used over and over again, and thus the bees have time to give more extracted honey per hive than comb honey. The method of extracting the honey is very simple, the first thing being to throw a puff of smoke from the smoker into the entrance of the hive, and In about two minutes the boos will lie sub dued. The next thing to do is to raist the top of the hive and lift out the frames one by one, and after gently brushing the bees off, to carry the frames to some room in which the extractor is kept All is now ready for extracting. Taking a knife especially made for tbe purpose, the lieekeepci shaves off the cappings, or tops, of the cells, and, replacing two combs In the extractor, he gently whirls them around for about five minutes, and at the end of that time every drop of honey has been extracted and the combs are returned to the bees, who fill tbem again in a few days. One advantage of running bees for extracted honey over that of comb honey is that it docs not lead to swarming; but as this ierfectly natural process comes from lack of space in which to store the honey that is at times coming very freely from the fields. It can be controlled by giving more boxes to be filled, and by clipping the wings of the queen, in which case every swarm can be hived.

SUFFERED TWENTY-FIVE YEARS

With Eczema Her Limb reeled and Foot Was Ran TboDRht Amputation Won Accessary Believes Life Saved by Cuticnra. "I have been treated by doctors for twenty-five years for a bad case of eczema on my leg. They did their best, but failed to cure it. My doctor had advised me to have my leg cut off. At this time my leg was iecled from the knee, my foot was like a piece of raw flesh, and I had to walk on crutches. I bought a set of Cuticura Remedies. After the first two treatments .the swelling went down, and in two months my leg was cured and the new skin came on. The doctor was surprised and said that he would ue Cuticura for his own patients. I have now been cured over seven years, and but for the Cuticura Remedies I might have lost my life. Mrs. J. B. Renaud, 277 Mentana St, Montreal, Que., Feb. 20, 1907." SPEAKING PLAINLY. The Jndge's Request and the Counsel' Prompt Response. A young and afterward distinguished attorney from an up country district of New York State was arguing his first appeal In the old general term of the Supreme Court He had been in many egal scrimmages In justices' courts At home, but had never stood In th awesome presence of five sedate and learned Judges of the Supreme Court In general term assembled. His embarrassment was great He repeated himself and misplaced his words so often that it was quite evident that he must soon be routed by his own confusion unless something should occur to break the spell. Finally, and Just as he was floundering the deepest In a chaotic jumble of language and ideas, the presiding judge interrupted with the following remark : -Mr. Smithers, I believe It will be a great relief to yourself and to the court if you will address us in tbe same free and informal way that you doubtless use In addressing your local justice of the peace." -Well, then," replied Smithers, "I wish that while I am busy alleviating your honor's dense Ignorance of the law you would keep your confounded mouth shut!" The court laughed heartily and waved for him to proceed. He grew eloquent and won his case in the midst of hearty applause. Bohemian Magazine. CASTOR I A For Irants and Children. The Kind Yea liars Always Bcsghi Bears the Bigu-tura Irrigation is enlarging the oases' of the Sahara desert, Red Cross Rail . Bin Should be la Tery borne. Ask your toetr for iL Large 2or. package, 5 cents. Why He Slaved. Senator Johnston of Alabama owns a beautiful home surrounded by several acres In Birmingham, and takes gTeat delight in donning a pair of overalls and a split hickory hat and working In the garden. OneJ day a fashionably dressed woman, who had resided in Birmingham only a short time and had never seen Johnston, called on his wife. No one answered the bell, so she walked out among the flower beds, where the ex-Governor was hoeing some geraniums. He bowed and sJie asked him how long he had worked for the Johnstons. "A good many years, madam." be replied. "Do they pay you well?" "Atxwt all I get out of it Is my clothes ind keep." "Why, come and work for me," she said. "I'll do that and pay you so much a month besides." "I thank you, madam," he replied, bowing very low, "but I signed up with Mrs. Johnston for life." "Why, no such contract Is binding. That is ieoiiage." "Sonic may call it that, but I have always called It marriage." Chicago News. r Nothing Too Good For the American People (

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rate of OVER A MILLION BOXES A MONTH, proving: that the American people recognize, that what is BEST FOR THEM is none too grood. Why this enormous patronage ? The answer is simple: Cascarets are pure, clean, sweet; mild, fragrant, harmless but effective little tablets for the treatment and cure of Constipation and all Bowel Troubles. They are put up in neat little enamel boxes, easy to buy, easy to carry (in vest-pocket or purse), easy to take and easy of action. always reliable, always the same, they "work while you sleep" and wake you up feeling: fine in the morning. They not only regulate tne movement and stimulate the nusc-Itx walls cl the bowels, but they keep the ENTIRE CANAL CLEAN and antiseptic, forrJ-? out and destroying all disease terms that breed in the accumulated filth unless promptly and regularly discharged. Therefore, they are a greit prerentiTe cf disease, and may be taken continuously as a precautionary measure. The new Pure Drugs Act, adopted by Congress on June 30, 1905, and ix effect January 1, 1907, is a GOOD LAW and means better and PUREtt drugs for the American People. We endorse it and will live up to it i SPIRIT and LETTER, an easy task, as we have always been actuated by the same principles and no changes are required in our formula or package. We adopted OUR OWN PURE DRUG LAW in 1895 when the first box of Casca- ? cane on the mar!t and have lived and worked and produced under is ever since. To-day,after a record cf nearly 100,000,000 boxes sold, Cascarets STAND the greater in PURITY. QUALITY and MEDICINAL MERIT than tzrr other preparation for Bowel tiouble in all the world. ,T(Jh:s should be a great argument for -any one, to try Cancarets AT ONCE, and be healthier and happier for it. Some people have CHRONIC P.?.SJIPATI0N with a11 honors derived from it; others have HAB. ITUAL CONSTIPATION from carelessness and Aeglect, but nearir EVERYBODY has OCCASIONAL CONSTIPATION, which, promptly taken care of is liable to result in its degeneration into the worsa forms and cause great suffering and perhaps death. Cascarets, if taken patiently and regularly, will remedy all of theae awful troubles, but if taken piomptly at the very first sign of an irregularity of the Bowels, will act as the FINEST PREVENTIVE ever cUixoTeri and will keep all the machinery running in good order. e We advise you to get t little 10c box of Cascarets TO-DAY and csrist in your purse or vest pocket. Take one when you feel anything unnsnI abOUt VOUr bowels. Your ntarn ntffm'.f Ml 11 l .

ÜUAKANT Y of stisfcuon or money

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um LYDIA E. PINKHAM Xo other medicine has been k successful in relieving the suffering of women or received so many genuine testimonials as has Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable CompoundIn every community you vä)l fhl women who have been restored la health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Almost cverj. one you meet has either been bentv fitcd by it, or has friends who haveIn the Pinkham Laboratory at LynmMass., anywomanany day m ay see the files containincr over one mü- ! lion one hundred thousand Ictttm from women seeking health, and here are the letters in which they openly state over their own signatures that they "were cured by Lydia E. PinkhanVs Vegetable CbmpoimcL Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has saved many wornea from surgical operations. Lydia E. Pinkham's VegctaW Compound is made from roots arxi herbs, without drugs, and is whekv some and harmless. The reason why Lydia E. PintLam's Vegetable Compound is t successful is because it contains ingredients which act directly upoa j the feminine organism, restoring it i to a healthy normal concUion. H ernien who are suffering fror those distressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of thess facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, to restore their health. TOILET ANTlSEPuO Keeps the breith, teeth, mouth aad boy anrtseptically clean and free from oahealthy erm-life and disagreeable odorm, w hich water, soap and tooth preprtfJc3 alone cannot dp. A germicidal, disinfecting and deodorizing toilet requisite of exceptional excellence and econ-' omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores. 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Urge Trill lizp with "mkslth and scauTT- Doo sc TT rare THE PAXTOn TOILET CO., EostsiJ) DAISY FLY KILLER inzttZSZ Man, ar m Br-allri Let us do your Printing using Poriln Linen for your office stationery. You can get the paper and envelopes to match. It U the real thTng. Tak a etar. r WIDOWS'"0" N CW LAW ototslaag nvvcrnvc tJ John w. morrcv , ril.3lUi9 Washington. -U. U , F. W. N. U. - No. 27 TTd When vrrltla)- t o Advertiser wra say you saw tbe Adv. la this paper. There is NOTHING TOO GOOD for the American people that's why we started to make Cascarets Candy Cathartic. The first box made its appearance in 1896, and the enthusiastic endorsement cf the people has been bestowed l.iiDon Cascarets ever since The sale todav is at the refunded. All drugixtj, 10c, 2Sc, JCs.

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