Plymouth Tribune, Volume 8, Number 2, Plymouth, Marshall County, 15 October 1908 — Page 7
A SUDDEN COLD.
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31 Is 3 Helen Sanerfc ler, of 815 Main SL, St. Joseph, Hiclu, writes an interesting letter on the subject of catcbins cold, 'which cannot fail to to of value ta all women who eaten cold easily. SODDEN MS. It Should te Taken According to Direttio is cn the Bottle, at the First Appearance of the Cold. St. Joseph. Mich., Sept., 1901. 11 st winter I caught a sudden cold which developed into an unpleasant ca t&rrh of the head and throat, depriving xne of ray appetite and usual good spirits. A friend who had been cured by Peruna advised m? to try it and I sent for a bottle at once, and I am glad to say that in three days the phlegm had loosened, and I felt better, my appetite returned and within nine days I was in my usual eood health. Miss Helen Sauerbier. Peruna is an old and well tried remedy for colds. No woman should be without it. SIOK MO Positively cured hy these Little Pills. They also relieve DI tress from Dyspepsia. Indlgestton and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect remedy tor Dizziness. Kausen, Drowsiness. Bad Taste La tie Month, Coaiod Tongas, Pain In the Side, TORPID LIVER. They regulate de Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SHALL PILL SMALL DOSL SUALL PRICE. Gentrina Must Bear Fas-Simila Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. IF YOU YE NEVER WORN SUCKER you've yet foUrntM hödifv comrortitgivein the wettest weather MADtrOff AMD GUARANTEED WATE R PR OOF 322 AT AUCOQO MORES CATALOG r E "HarlBf ttkoo jonr wonderful "CaiearaU" foi k months and Wof entirely cored of stomacd lrrb od dyipenala, I think word of prktae 1 ato"C'MrrU'7orthlrwoadarfaleoaptltion. I taken inmaroai olhr ao-lld ramedla ka witboa arcil aud I And that Caa caret raHar aor io a dar than ail Iba otliara 1 Itava takaa Won Id In a year." Jamaa McOuna. IM Uarear 81.. JtTfj City. K. J. Maaat. Palatabla. Potent. Tut Oood.D fjool, Paver bioken. Weakaa or Ortp. 10. tSe, tOe. N oM U bulk. Tlio tnnU tablet atampod OOO, Woaxaotaed to car or yon ciooay back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 59 ftHNUAL SALE, TEH MILLION BOXES Get yoar Letter Paper and Envelopes printed al this office, m m We can give yoa the EAGLE LINEN PAPER and ENVELOPES It 10 flnm mmd will suit you. Try It. The Cream For Sale b the "Sh Jaw Water Bait" juawbaiow the Panhandle. Pur amUr at fr-aa M i) .ael A country that affara to InvoWn ! bomeMckera and aa opportun! aual a tli't oP..d by Clim.i, and la ,a far'.f yeara ago. boil.f an,orp ,Mt richneaa, ralafallabnnJant. climate aalubriova. The Uudaf rora. eottna, wheal, eaia. a.f.lfa and f raita and Teaetablae of all kind. The aeradiaent hof and cuttle reierre trite n. a for partirnWra, aloLAKDrnninranrfartheGOVrit.:C!(T IRRKUTIoN ,re -in rich Harth M-iUe Valley of N -braaka. Cba.p now bet 111 be worth an arre n ye reihen water I ready aaraaav Wriu a. UUBEKT J t't AS. Iowa lit, lat Low Rates ' f?3vJreon,fc aamrgion, IdaKo. Utah. Colorado. Montana. Wyoming and otStr Wsatsrn Scales, on SHIPMENTS OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS AND EMIGRANT MOVABLES. Addre TBE AiMEBICA EOQWAiaiNS C0 IBS Miditaa St Ctiraga. IIL. ar 3SS Cl'.kail Saaare. Bafi.!. N.Y FOR SALE Fin tract of 1.640 acres. IpvcI laiul, Peres in Ut ivat ion. soil, fertile loam, living wotcr, 1" niHc Itt woven wire fencing. fml'. foiir hotis, lnrt; aciple outbH!ding.'. wlii'Iuii!!.. farr. tools, near school and railrcnd. yojr &iortunity. pt hay, raln. ptock ftnil pncral pnrjoe firra in Mlehlrnn at .vüciü'.co. p:irt. traJc l'aul J. Arerhlll, (JranJ Kapid. Mich. AOi:NTH : Wanted to handle a line of post cards, splendid money ninkin; proposition. 500 cards free for samples. The Ilillon Co.. 110 Broad St., Boston. Flour Mill, 45-bbl. roller procw. good condition ; r,n location ; pric- l'arnis. stores, dwellins-i, hotels for s;ile. Write your wants. Farm Krchane, Fayetterille, o. 12.? ceres rich, smooth level land. 3.O00 hearing apple trees, jo per acre. Near Kosers, Dentoa County, Ark. William Tearce, owner. f nXC CI nC Reaaedy" anil ether lne-tmer.la anaLanOUU 3 1m1, oitwtad. ' boiled down ';2c itaaiy or Ktbklatfre. UlkK L. DAVIS, l.x Bruadwiy, OaiUud, CJ ÄThompson's Eye Water
PERU:;- ADVISED FOR
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Grant'.-! Farewell to II In Arnile. Soldiers of the Armies of tho United States--By your patriotic devotion to your country In the hour of danger and alarm, your magnificent fighting, bravery and endurance, you have maintained the supremacy of the iKiion and tho constitution', overthrown nil armed opposition to the enforeeimnt of the laws and of the proclamation forever abolishing slavery the cause and pretext of the rebellion pnd opened tho way to the rightful authorities to restore order and inaujcurate ivace on a permanent and trduring basis cn every foot of American soil. Your marches, sieges and fcattk?, in distance, duration, resolution and brilliancy of results, dim the lustre jo the world's past military acLitvements, and will be the patriot's prt cedent to defense of lilerty and right in all time to come. In obedience to your country's call you left your homos and families and volunteered in Its defense. Victory has crowned your valor, and secured the purpose of your patriotic hearts; find with th" gratitude of your countrymen and the highest honors a great md free nation can accord, you will R.wu !,e jiermltted to return to your h-.Uies and families, conscious of having discharged the highest duty of American citizens. To achieve these glorious triumphs and secure to yourselves, yor fellow-countrymen, and ' posterity the blessings of free institu- , tions, tens of thousands of your gal- . lant comrades have fallen and sealed ; the priceless leg:y with their lives. The graves of these a grateful nation. bedews with tears, honors their memoi hit, and will ever cherish and sup- ' port their stricken families. "I do not txlieve we did the fair thing by the army wagon," said the Doctor. "No vehicles since the time of the flood had harder service than the wagons of the Union army during the civil war. Yet I never was present when one broke down. They must have been well constructed, because much of czy. V. S. CKAT. . the campaigning in Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia and Alabama was in a rough, mountainous country, and long trains, taking In the aggregate hundreds of wagons, were moved over mountain trails that were little better than bridle paths. I have seen fifty tm'n pulling at n rope attached to a wagon drawn by six mules; mules and men tugging at their best to get the wagon ui some mountain ro.id. "When it was up the trouble really began, because the sliding down the other side was harder on the wheels and frame than going up. The same method was employed in getting artillery over the mountains. A stout rope would be attached to a gun carriage, fifty or more men would take hold of it, and, with "the mettlesome horses under the whip and the men at a run. up the cannon would go. People at home used to wonder why an army was held no long at a difficult pass. They did not know that while it was com- ! parativtly easy for the Infantry and cavalry to scurry over the mountains, It was slow work to get the artillery and wagon trains over. So it was the custom for the advance brigades to move through the pass and camp, and the rear brigades to camp on the other Bide for two -or three days to get artillery and trains over, then the division or corps was ready for business. 'Teamsters and wagon masters had nil sorts of adventures. On one occasion a six-mule team with loaded wagon attached was rattling along a ! narrow mountain road. In front of me, j the teamster whipping and swearing J when the wagon and mules and teamftcr disappeared. The whole outfit had lolled down the precipitous mountain fide. I rode up and looked over, fearing the worst. The wagon had turned ' half over and was resting on the branches of a tree about twenty feet below. The six mules were dangling in various positions from the branches of the tame tree, some head down and Bouie head up. but all kicking. The teamster and a dozen cracker boxes were on the ground, and bo far as I could discover, the teamster had never fctoplH'd swearing. "It looked like a bad case, but army teamsters were resourceful fellows. This particular teamster proceeded to g t Ms mules to the ground, then he githeitd ul, and repaired the harness. This done, he called for assistance, and fifty or a hundred laughing, shouting soidiers came back with ropes, and In half an hour the wagon was on the road below, tlie boxes of hardtack had leen gathered ni. and the teamster proI ceeded on his way as though nothing had hapicned. It was very rarely that a teamster lelt his wagon or his team. He was generally an enlisted man, and carried ids ri ile in his wagon, and very rarely foiot that he was a soldier, as well as a leaisier." "I have a case in mind," said the Major, "that Illustrates that quality. After the battle of Chickama'iga, Longstreet pasted his sharpshooters along the south bank of the Tennessee river from Lookout mountain to Kliellmound. with intent to control the river road on the north bank to Uridgeport. For a day r two the teamsters ran the gantlet, going past the pmts commanded by the sharohln;oters at a full run. lint Longatrei't's men soon got the range, and nt-ado the road impracticable. They would Maze away, and sometimes kiil every mule attached to a wagon, if the.v clid not kill the teamster. When It came to this the wagons were ordered eff to the longer road and over tha
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mountains and down the Sequatchie j
valley. "The day before this order was given I ;i a Ilogan was at the tall end of a prexess'ion of wagons running the gantlet. At this time the road was sirewn, en the river side, with dead ir.u'.s and deserted wagnis. Dan started on a run to make the pass, when the rlilenien cn the other side brought down his leaders. This threw everything into a snarl. The other mules plunged forward onto the dead ones that had dropped in their tracks, the wagon came forward onto them, and Dan was precipitated forward onto the struggling mass, while the rebels yelled with delight. "Dan got out his own rifle, and, taking position behind a rock, blazed away at the crowd of sharpshooters laughing at him on the other side. He made It decidedly uncomfortable, and. while they hooted at him at first, they made It a serious business for him a little later. After a time Dan discovered two or three mules wandering about a side gorge. He ca tight them, took tho harness off the tlead mules, put It on the captured ones, unhitched his team from the wagon, and with it pulled the dead mules out of the road, then hitched again to the wnjjon. and, while the Confederates were wondering what he would do next, suddenly started off at a full run, and, with a yell like that of an Indian, went rattling out of range. lie expected a fusillade, but instead of that came a wild cheer from the men who had been shooting at him. His patience and pluck had won over the sharpshooters." "There was another thing people did not understand,' put In the Doctor. "They did not know how much we were embarrassed in the first year of tho war by orders against confiscating rebel property. When the Union army passed through districts In Missouri and Kentucky no soldier must take a chicken or turkey or pig. When the rebel army passed through the same districts the soldiers simply lived off the country. This iKdicy led to all sorts of deception on the part o." the soldiers aud to tiie winking at offenses by the olliccrs. "At that time, too, Union soldiers were expected to return nil slaves that came into camp. On one occasion In Missouri 11 coloi.'d man. rushed Into my tent, asking me to save him from his master, who was coming with the provost guard to take him back to the plantation. . There was with me a soldier who had been with John Brown, who acted on Impulse and concealed the fellow under my bunk. Just then the planter put his head in at the tent, asking for his escaped slave, adding that he knew he was in the tent, because he saw him come In. My soldier friend invited the planter to come in and look for himself, but added if he did he would go out with a broken head. Thereupon the planter beat a quick retreat to consult with the ofTicer in command, and the soldier lifted up the tent at the rear and the-slave escaped." Chicago Inter Ocean. Iovra Soldier' Record. Volume one of the "Host er and S'ervieo Ilecord of the Iowa Soldiers in the War of the Rebellion" has leen printed in Des Moines. The work will consist f eight volumes and will contain also historical sketches of volunteer organizations. The volume now all but completed covers the first eght regiments of the evil war of the Infantry. The copv has been prepared by the roster com-mK-fion for the regiments down to and including the Twenty-fourth. At the reunion of Crocker regiment at Dubuque recently resolutions approving the work thus far done were passed ami urging the legislature to contlmv the appropriations for the completion of the work. There were forty-seven regiments of Iowa infantry in the civil war and four in the Spnnish-Anierican war, besides some regiments of cavalry and batteries. It Is estimated that the entire work will amount to. eight volumes. The one completed consists of pages and will le of the size and thick ness ef the Iowa documents. The appropriation for the work has not spread tut quite as far toward doing the work is had been expect od though It was never intended that the initia, appropriation would do more than to start the woik. With the start that has ben made the work will be completed on a less proportionate scale. The historical department has received from Gen. Granville M. IXxlge another shipment of his letters and papers to be kept at the historical building for the use of the future hlstor" ia. Curator Harlan has not examined the papers carefully, but the nine envelopes In which they are contained arc labeled : ("rant Banquet, April 27, Grant Banquet Association. 1S93. Sherman statue papers. Army of Tennessee, 1802 3-4-5-0-7-8. G. M. Banquet, etc., 1P0. ("rant Banquet, 1902. Sherman Statue. Norwich University, 100O-1WT. Sherman Statue letters. The understanding that Is had with all the great men of Iowa who deposit their letters and papers with the historical depart'MfDt is that such papers and letters are not to be made publ'c property till after the death of the owner and w III then become the property of the State. Until that time the public does not have access to the letters, for the evident reason that the men and the issues are still alive and the publication of the material would lead to endless controversies and discissions. When the material becomes history It will be accessible to the historians. Intereatlne Dita. Argentine Imports 2.2."r0,000 tons of coal a year from Great Britain. In ltx)7 the world produced S.RSS.000.0C0 million gallons of petroleum. A gallon cf properly mixed paint wi!j cover about CC:o square feet of surface. There arc more than IL'0 India rubber manufacturers In the United Slates, employing more than 10,0f!0 operatives The estimated world's production of lead in i:i7 vas tn 1.010 metric tuns, as compared with 0''.S,17l tons In IW A hen attains her best laying capacity i;i her third year. She will lay in an average lifetime from CC0 to 5t. eggs. The first Ungli.-h regatta took place upon the Thames', between London Bridge and Miübaiik, on Friday, June j:;. 177.-. Harlan I. Smith, attestant curator or anthropology of the American Museum of Natural History, has discovered la northeastern Wyoming remains of a prehistoric race of people hcretofor believed to have been confined to tin southern edge of the United State.
The first requisite of success in breeding is the love of an animal. Burn the potato vines and all trash in the fields to prevent rot An honest nurseryman Is a rare prize hat should be tightly cluag to. A heavy rain coat is cheaper than Joctor's bills. So is a hired girl for :he wife. The man who has learned enough to attend to his own business has a pretty vjootl education. A good deed and a pleasant manner vill do more with your neighbor than i lawsuit. A breaehy cow, a sheei-killing dog and a lazy and careless hired man are the three greatest nuisances on the farm. Men are the vainest e'reatures In the vorld, yet they are always making fun f women for studying the looking rlass. Itape grown during a wet season is much more succulent and has a tendency to cause bloat quicker than when crown during a dry season. Some of our highest producing dairy .vnvs have been developed along milkproducing lines until they are In reality an unnatural deformity. It Is a good plan to market off the ."a Ives as soon as tiny are of a marketable size and age. The milk Is worth more than tho calf after that. California fruit growers recently lent a tralnload of oranges for distribution among the" people of Iowa In order to educate them up to the advantages of eating more of this fruit.. liens that have to dodge for their .Ives every time the men folks come near, and that are compelled to sklrtnlsh for a living, are not the ones that are paying off the farm debt. There is more danger from pasturing rape during a wet season than a dry one. Not only on account of the condition of the plant, from the standpoint of pasture, but the effects of same when taken Into the stomach. What has become of the good old :Ider apple butter that mother used to make? The government experts show that 90 per cent f the stuff now sold for apple butter is so badly adulterated as to make it unfit for food. It takes courage to keep on raising sheep or hogs or anything else when prices show a weak backbone for a rouple of years iu succession. But the man who has the grit to stick to his business will win in the long run. The Stock Breeders' Association of Grangevllle, Wash., paid $10,000 for a Percheron stallion. He Is dark brown, Ö years old, weighs 2.300 pounds and stands 18 hands inches. The association is composed of ten farmers. Unler no circumstances should the jnsophlstleated country girl go to a large city on a tempting offer of high wages unless the position she has In rlew has been certified to by a person Df her acquaintance In whom she has absolute confidence. In all too nianjrases girls are wont to view these offers 83 bona fide only to find by bitter jxperience that they were traps set by jnprlnclpled or Immoral schemers to lure them to the city. For years past fumes of tobacco .lave been used for the runkse of fumigratlon In green and hot houses. But, due to the, fact that this Is not always effective with all kinds of insects, other Insecticides Uave been experimented with, and bylroeyanle acid ?as has been found tc h? very effective. One of the draw, acks with this is that In addition to exterminating in?oct life It will also inflict Injury on the plants if allowed to remain In the inclosure too long. It U likewise a Jeadly poison, ami great care has to be ?xerclsed In the use of it. A Dil)' Ilorae la Seldom Stck. Mauy farmers have a great amount of work fbr their horses during the busy season, but not much for them to do in the winter. As a consequence the horses come through the winter looking well, but are weak and easily tired with the burden of heavy spring work. The lack of regular exercl.se for several months has reduced their general vitality and muscular powers. It Is better for horses to have some regular daily work in winter in order o keep their muscles hard and strong, even if it is but a few hours in the harness at a time. Then they will not be weak and flabby when spring work ipens. When it is impossible to furnish them work let them out in the lot or field where they caii browse a little and kick up their heels. Th Frnlt (iardrii. Pick the pears two weeks before they would become soft and store them In a cool dark place to ripen. Peaches picked for shipping should be removed from the trees while still 'tard, but with good color. For home use, however, let them remain on the trees until they are ripe enough to fall. Tree's can bo set out for a new orchard In September and Oct otter. If the trees are received with the leaves still on, strip them off at once. (Jet your orders In early, so that the plants will le received early. Currants and gooseberries can be planted to much belter advantage now than in the spring. It is also the time to Increase your stock of a favorite variety of these fruits. Cut tho tips of the stems into pieces 3 or 4 inches long aud tbi them in bundles. Store in damp sand, In a cool place uutil spring. Surburban Life. Alfalfn Dont'i. In "The Book of Alfalfa," by Secretary F. D. Coburn of Kansas, the following list of don't is given: Don't sow my mir?e crop. Don't 4ow on freshly plowed land, no malte how carefully prepared. Don't let weeds or grass grow over six Inches
nigh mow without clipping, when wet with Don't clip or rain or dew. Don't let alfalfa stand; If turning yellow, cut it. Don't sow old seeel. Don't sow lest? than twenty-five pounds per Kcre. one-half each way. iKm't sowon land that will not raise 2Ö0 bushels of potatoes per acre. Don't sow twenty-five acres at first; sow five. Don't pasture it. Don't put any of the rotten manure anywhere but on your alfalfa plot. Don't depend on "culture cakes" or soil from some distant field. Don't let water stand on It. Don't let it go if a thin stand, but disk In more seed; don't be afraid you will kill It. Don't replow the land; disk it. Don't wait for it to stool ; It never docs. Don't try to cut for hay until the alfalfa takes the field. Don't sow on any land not well under drained. Don't leave your land rough ; use a roller or a plank float to level and smooth it. Don't give it up. ZVatlonnl Ilesonrcrn mid Wante. Conservation of natural resources and prevention of waste are two subjects that go together. Conservation of forests, for example, means that they should not be cut faster than needed. The stoppage of waste is a corollary to the main proposition. The waste In the manufacture of lumber Is something enormous. The old-fashlonoJ sawmill, when It made an arch board, also made a quarter of an inch of sawdust. This waste lias been reduced by band saws and scientific sawing, but there is still enough sawdust made to build cities if it could be utilized. The National Conservation Commission Is trying to find out what uses can Ik1 made of sawdust beyond Its meager use as fuel. It is estimated that, tinder present methods of mining coal, more than a ton Is wasted for every ton that is gotten to market. Caved-ln mines, which cannot profitably be reopened, contain more coal than has leen taken out of all the mines. It Is lost forever. The commission wants to know whether everything possible has been done to lessen the loss while the mine is in oieration. These are big practical questions Handled In a big, practical way they m.m great saving to the people, a saving added to the national wealth. Minneapolis Journal. How Many Ekk Will n lien Lnyt Here Is what Professor (Jrahani said about ep? production recently to the students of the Ontario Agricultural College at (Puelph: "I rind it a very dillicult matter to get an accurate Idea of tho,numler of eggs that the average hen in the Province of Ontario produces in a year. I am very much inclined to believe that the averr.ge hen does not produce eighty eggs In twelve months. I believe that the average hen at the average experiment station does not produce 110 eggs per year. One would expect that at the various experiment stations and colleges which are scattered over the United States and Canada They would probably get as gool an average production as on the poultry farm. They have many conditions present which are not present on the average farm, and they have other coifSitions that are prolubly more favorable. Considering all things, we should get somewhere near the average production at the ex.tcriment station. "I have come to the conclusion that the average production is somewhere alwmt 1(H) ejrrt?. At the Maine station they had a production of 120 eggs ier hen on .m average. They have been working on the trap nest system for a number of years, and. as far as I know, their record last year was 1,11 eggs per hen, which means that they had a gain of about fourteen eggs per hen over earlier records. 1 think that you can produce a wonderful improvement by selection In the first one or two years, and after that progress becomes slow. You must have a great many conditions favorable to make advancement. From what Professor Gowell has told me, they had not used any males In their breeding pens that have not been produced from hens that produce 200 egjrs per lien per year. All the hens in their breeding pens have been bred from hens that laid 1ÖO egjrs per year, so they might be termed strong producers. No hen is used for breeding purposes until after her egg record has been kept for twelve months.'' Securing Fertile Fffgs. Officials of the Department of Agriculture have been collecting data recarding the factors which affect the fertility of eggs, the question having been carefully studied at a number of experiment stations in the United States and elsewhere. Too warm quarters for laying stock and overfeeding are commonly believed to exercise an unfavorable Influence on egg fertility, as well as does a cold season. The way eggs are handled oi stored Is also believed to affect the proportion which will hatch as will alsc the conditions under which Incubation occurs. The vigor and character of the par ent stock and the length of time tht male bird has been with the flock are also Important questions with respect to egg fertility. At the outset it should be pointed out that fertility and "hatch ability" are not necessarily Identical. An egg may be fertile and still th germ does not have sufficient vitality tc produce a healthy chick under the or diuary conditions of Incubation. Iu a series of Incubator experiments at tht Khode Island station of S077 eggs test ed, S3 per cent were found to be fertile while only 40 per cent of the fertile eggs, or P.8.C per cent of the total mini kt of eggs, hatehed under the condi tir.ns of the tests. The various observations made, whih not entirely conclusive, Iii'limte that Ir order to secure fertile eggs which will luteh, the laying stock nurst not be kel in vciy warm quarters or overfed; th males must be kept with the hens con tinuously and that only eggs should Ix used which arc produced after the male has b en with the liens several days. Only few fowls from very vigorous i-.ireut stock and tho?e known to pro dace n high percentage of fertile eggs (nors vary widely In this respect) should be used; the hens should be al I')v.t-i a rest after each laying period while the eggs should be handled care j fully, not subjected to extremes of tern j perature in storing and used only when I comparatively fresh. Pralri Farmer
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PUTNAM FADELESS DYES CtUr more o.ii brighter as. lasier cUrs f.aa aar oft fye. Oaa 10c lactate caters an likers. Tfcay tyt la tawiw kenr thia "Tarrfye. Tai i caa 4jt a&y luvest wU.oalr1iaaaaarl. Write lor tree boahlet-Bsw I Dye. Bleach ait Mil Calars. MOJVROE BXVCCOh Qnincr IUin
GIRL "WAS DELIRIOUS With Fearful Eczema Pain, Heat, and Tliißllnsr Were Cxcrnclhtlnc Catlcura Acted Like Maiflc. "An eruption broke out on my daughter's chest. I took her to a doctor, and he pronounced it to be eczema of a very bad form. He treated her, but the disease spread to her back, and then the whole of her head was affected," and all her hair had to be cut off. The pain she suffered was excruciat- J hig, and with that and the heat and j tingling her life was almost unbearable, j Occasionally she was delirious and she did not have a proier hour's s'leep for many nights. The second doctor we tried afforded her just as little relief as ( the first. Then I purchased Cuticura j Soap, Ointment and Pills, and befor j the Ointment was three-quarters fin- j Ished every trace of the disease was ! gone. It really seemed like magic. Mrs. T. W. Hyde, Brentwood, Essex, Eng-, land. Mar. 8. 1907." BIRDS' TONGUES. Why the Parrot la Able to Imitate Human Speech. One of the government naturalists at Washington has recently gathered some fresh Information concerning the tongues of birds. Many people suppose that woodpeckers use their sharp-pointed tongues as darts with which to transfix their prey. It Is true that the woodpecker, like the humming bird, can dart out its tongue with astonishing rapidity and that its mouth is furnished with an elaborate mechanism for this purpose, yet, according to the authority mentioned, investigation shows tin t the object of this swift motion is only to catch the prey, not to pierce It. For the puropse j of holding the captured victim the : woodpecker's tongue is furnished with a sticky secretion. Considering its powers of imitating speech. It Is not surprising to learn that the parrot's tongue resembles that of man more closely than any other bird's. It is not because the parrot Is hiore Intelligent than the other birds, but because Its tongue is better suited for articulation than theirs, that it is able to amuse us with its mimicry. The humming bird's tongue is in . some respects the most remarkable of all. It is double nearly from end to end, so that the little bird is able to grasp its insect prey with. Its tongue much as if its mouth was furnished with a pair of fingers. Chicago IiecordHerald. , Too Much Opposition. "Pimmie, does your mother still objeci to my coming to see you?" "Yes, dear; she does." "Good 1 So does mine. She says thai if I marry you she'll cut me off with t sidling." "O, but that's altogether different! Perhaps, Jack in view of everything and because and we're both so young well, don't you see?" Chicago Tribune. Too Attractive. Mrs. Jenner Lee Ond?go Getting ready to move again? Why, you told me when you rented these apartments that they were the most desirable you had ever occupied. Mrs. Selhlom-Holme Yes; they are altogether too desirable. They have been entered by burglars five times since we movd into them. WANTED TO KNOW The Trntb About CrapcXnta Food. It doesn't matter so much what j'ou hear about a thing, it's what you know that counts. - And correct knowledge is most likely to come from personal experience. "About a year ago," writes a X. Y. man, "I was bothered by Indigestion, especially during the forenoon. I tried cveral remedies without any permanent improvement. "My breakfast usually consisted of oatmeal, steak or chops, bread, coffee and some fruit. "Hearing so much about Grape-Nuts, I concluded to give It a trial and lind out if all I had heard of It was true. "So I began with Grape-Nuts and cream, 2 soft boiled eggs, toast, a cup of Tostum and some fruit. liefere the end of the first week I was rid of the acidity of the stomach and felt much relieved. "liy the end of the second week all traces of indigestion had disappeared and I was in first rate health once more, lief ore beginning this course of diet, I never had any appetite for lunch, but now I can enjoy a hearty meal at noon time." "There's a lieason." Name given by Poslum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Kead, "The Koad 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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All Counterfeits, Imitations and'eJnst-as-firood"aro bat Experiments that trifle with and endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience arainst Experiment What is CASTOR. A Castoria Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Fevcrishnes3. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic It relieves Teething: Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regelates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving" healthy and natural sleep. -The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
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Sterilizes Clothing. Is Antiseptic and All dealers, taxnplo, BouUat aji4 I'avrlor Card Garn The Perfumed tClond. The dentist's sleeve wcs smeared with a pale dust. He beat it with his palm, and a perfumed cloud arose. "Makeup," he said, laughing, "the day's unusual harvest of makeup. Why the deuce, to front the fierce white light of a dental chair, will women come to me with makeup plastered thick on their pretty faces? They all, or nearly all, do it Their lips are reddeDed, their brows penciled, their cheeks rouged, and in a few cases the tiny network of veins In the temples is outlined In blue. Pegging away at their teeth, I mop up all that makeup on my coat sleeve. I smear red over white noses, black over pink cheeks. Phew! Look out !" And, brusb'ng his cuff again, he leaped back to escape the sweet smelling cloud that filled the air. Exchange. Fame. Troud Father My daughter, I nuppose, is getting along famously with her dramatic studies. Principal (of the school of dramatic art) Er yes; indeed she is. On ar amateurs night at one of the theaters recently the audience fairly went wild with enthusiasm when she starred in a little comedy called "Getting tha Hook." Chicago Tribune. The average elevator in a large office building travels about 20 miles an hour. J r it. Your Vye Use Pettlt Kye Rai ve. for inflammation, stys, itching lids eye aches, defects of vision and sensitive to strong lights. All druggists or Howard Uros. - THE VOICE THAT WAS. Thoughtless Girl Find n Traced y la Iter Own House. 'That's the most pathetic thing I ever read," said Frances Cowan, laying down her book and lifting' her eyes, full of tears, to her father. "It's about a man that wrote a wonderful txtok. and lost his power to write any more. Oh, he could write, but not In the same way. The divine fire had gone out, and he got so that he couldn't enjoy anything not a beautiful sunset, even, because of a yearning sadness that he wasn't able to make it his own, as he had done in the past, to give it to others in his own words, on his own pages. It drove him to melancholy. 1 don't know when I've cried over a book, but this has just mcde my heart ache." "Yet you laughed last night because Aunt Millie's voice cracked when you asked her to ihow you how that little song went." "Hut, papa, that's so different! A cracked -oice Is funny. "Frances, at your age your Aunt Mildred was a beauty popular, admired, sought after. She had a voice I've never heard one like It. Its sweetness thrilled your heart, and singing was the joy of her life. Then ill-health came a throat trouble years of invalldslm. She lost the power to sing. You never hear her speak of it, but I know, child, that she never listens to a beautiful voice nor reads the music of an exquisite song without that same yearning sadness your writer felt when he looked on the sunset and knew that he had lost his divine gift. ".She never murmurs; she lives here In my home; to my children she is a delicate, elderly aunt beloved, to be sure, but one who upends herself freely for their comfort and happiness, day after day, as a matter of course. "Frances, you needn't go to that hook for a heartache. Your Aunt Mildred can remember how people used to hold their breath and listen In ecstasy when ßhe sang, and now her younger brother's children ask her to help them recall a forgotten air, and when she hums It for them her voice cracks and they laugh." "O, father, father!" said Frances, roftly. "They never will again. I didn't dream it was like that." Youth's Companion. r--- -:t t'.jd' s -; i O" r-w- e .- mi Throat and Lungs Deed ji:t tha protection againit cold and diaraao that ia obtained (rom IWi Cure, if you hare a cough Of coll, alight or irrioui, begin taking Piao'a Cure today and coiitrau until jroa are wclL Cure the cough tortile it ia fresh, whea a few doara cf Piao'i Cure may be all t!.at you will nerd. Faanoue fat half a century. Pleaaant to taste. Free from opiate and harmful inertdiniU. At 11 druf eUU', 25 eta. r
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been made under his pcrSignature of " - prevents Odor from Perspiration. "WlilZ," 13c. racifle Coast Borax tt- Chicago, IU. Airy Peraiaasje. Mrs. Cuppotee How could a woman ever bring herself to marry an aeronaut? He's bo flighty. ; Mrs. Waypher Yes. and too often It lacks ballast. Mrs. Marmalayde Then, too; he lookt down on ordinary people.. Mrs. Chillicon-Kearney And again he moves in the higher circles, and you don't. -! Chicago Tribune. a eaaaaaaaa aaa eaaaa eanaaaaeaeaaaaaBaW ! A Roaadaboal Reply. I "Darling." said a young husband, what would you do If I should die? Tell me!" "Please don't suggest such a thlnf, was the reply. "I can't bear the thought of a stepfather for our little boy!' AH Up-to-Date Hooaekeepera Use Red Cross Call Blue. It makes Oit clothes clean and sweet as when new. All Grocers. THE AKT EATES. A Harmless Animal that Will Fight Hard When at Day. A peculiar-looking animal Is the ant eater, which is closely allied to the 6loth family. Its head is drawn out Into a long, tubular muzzle, at the end of which is a tiny mouth Just big enough to permit the exit of its long, wormlike tongue, which is covered with a sticky saliva. Th's tongue is thrust among the hosts of ants with great rapidity, coming back laden with the tiny Insects. To obtain its prey the ant-eater breaks open the ant hills, when all the active inhabitants swarm to the breach and are Instantaneously swept away by Un remorseless tongue. The jaws of the ant eater are entirely without teeth, and the eyes aud ears are very small. There are several species of ant eater, the largest kind being about four feet long and having a tail covered with very Ion; hair, forming a huge trush. The claw on the third toe of each fore limb Is of great size and Is used for breaking ojen ants' and other insects' nests. Generally speaking, the ant eater Is a harmless animal, but at times when at bay it will fight with great courage, sitting up on its hind legs and hugging Its foe with Its powerful arms. London express. mu iKOffliaiiYji TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body ntiseptically clean and free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin- ' Jt tecting J deodor izing toilet requisite YtorM-te-KAj) V . 1 - -' ' : ' vi CÄi;c-piiunai excellence and economy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, SO cents, or by mad postpaid. I UlhU I HCl WiliLIJ I üün I 1 1 1 ! WITH "HEALTH ANO BCAUTV" BOOK BCNT MCC THE PAXTON TOILET CO.. Bostcn, Mass. F. W. K. U. No. 42 19C3 When writing to Adtertiaera pleae ay you aaw the Adr. t tbla yaacse
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