Plymouth Tribune, Volume 8, Number 6, Plymouth, Marshall County, 12 November 1908 — Page 7

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FOUR OILS

Restored to Health by Lytlia K. I'iiikbam's Vegetable Compound. Read What They Say, M i S3 Lill ian Ross. 5."J Fast Ith Street, New York, writes : "Lvdh E. l'inkham's Vef.e table Compound overcame irrepilarities, periotlic suffering, and nervous headaches, after everything else had failed to help me, and I feel it a duty to let others know of it." Jv:itlKttineCrai;:,S353 Lafayette St., Denver, Col., writes: "Thanks to Lydia E. Pinkhatn's Vegetable Compound I amwell.aftersutTering for months from nervous prostration." Miss Marie Btoltzman, of Laurel, la., writes: "Iwasinarundowncondition and suffered fromsuppression, indigestion, and poor circulation. Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound mado me well and strong." Miss Ellen M.01?on, of417EastSt., Kewanec, 111., says: " Lydia E.rinkhaui'sVegetablo Compound cured me of backache, side ache, and established my. periods, after the best loral doctors had failed to help nie." FACTS FC 12 SICK YVGIYIEN. For thirty years Lydia E. linkham,s Veg-etoMe Compound, made from roots auft herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thou.sandoi - womenwho liave been troubbd with displacement s, iu flammation, w) ecration, fibroid tumors, irreffulurities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling-, llatulehcy,indiestion,dizziness,ornervous prostration. Why don't you try it ? 3Irs. Pinkhaul invites all sick vixmien to write her for advice. She has .gnided thousands to Healtlu Address Lynn, Mass. Will stop any conrh that can be stopped by any medicine and cure cou flits that -cannot be cured by any other medicine. It Is always the best cough cure. You cannot allord to take chances on any other kind. KEMP'S BALSAM cures coughs, colds, bronchitis, grip, asthma and consumption in iirst stages. It does not contain alcohol, opium, morphine, or any other narcotic, poison ous or harmlul drug. 45 to 50 Bushels of Wheal per Acre have been grown on Farm Litis in WESTERN CANADA Much less would be satisfactory.. The general average is above 20 bushe'a "AM are loud in their praHes of the prent cro-s and that wonderful cr.untrv." Kxtract lrom correspondence National ZJ.torial Association of August, 190$. It is now possible to secure a Homer tend of 160 acres live a;.d another 160 acres at f3.c0j.er acre. Hundreds have paid the cost of the r farms ,'if purchased) an 1 r;eri had a balance ot tro:i ;u.co to f 12.00 ier acre irom o.ie crop. Wheat. nar'eY.O.it, Flax all do well. Mixed rarrr.inar is a great success an J Dairying is highly yroäiable. Excellent Climate, splendid Schools and Ctinrcfics. Kaihvavs bring niost evey district within cas'y reach ot market. Kaiuvay an 1 Lsnd Companies hive lands for ia!e at low j)r;ces an J on eay terms. "Last Best West" Pamphlets nd map? jnt free. For t'le snd information is to Low to secure lowest Ka;l .vay Rates arj.ly to W. D. rou. n;.crinf nd. nt cd Ii.irr ira'tcn, Ottaua. Canada. r V. 11. Ko-crs, ;d 11. or Tracticn-Termir.al LiuiM:, Ind:an.ir-ohs. Ind., nd 11. M. Williams. Koout 20.' Law lluiiditig. Toledo, Ohio, Authcrred (uvernment Agents. J Ujsa saj trters joa m llu Jtrtierae:it. TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teett, mouth and body antiseptically clean cid free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations aloce cannot do. . germicidal, disinfecting t -a deodorizing toilet requisite of exceptional excellence and economy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterire catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Largs Trial Simpfs it'?. WITH "HEALTH !)D aCAUTT BOO K SCNT fXl THE PAXTOH TOILET C(L Boston. Mass. A LIVE REPHESEHTATIYE WANTED im lu.DlH,tu h'nili. Mr llr-li Tela, fa II.imII. Lan'l Prv01 m ii-al Hnmiwioa. Inni in taft for th. mn-7. Hif rrofX. atmodant ri till.llnl rlimnM H.feTeriM tan4re1 T t fill -arlicuUra writ. I.M' ATOIt ( Vroot Ponlilve. Tom Skinner is an oM hypocrite. Jack Why do you think so? Torn The other day he told me that I young man should never pass up an opportunity to tmtrace a good thing. Jack Well? Torn Wheif ho ra tight me embracing bis daughter last night he kicked me flown the front steps. l'rndrnl. Lite. Chronic Litigant That suit of mine is Still pending, isn't it? The Lawyer No; it's depending on Tour couching up that retaining fee. Beware of the Cough that bangs on persistently, breaking your night's rest und exhausting yoo witli the violence 1 ct the paroxvims. A few doses I ml I i r: - ' - Is 1 01 ratß a wie win reiicre ww derfully any cough, no matter how far advanced or serious. It sootlies and heals the irritated surfaces, clears the clogged air passages and the cough disappears. . At all drag rists', 25 cts.

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BOY KEPT SCRATCHING.

Ecienin I.nntctl 7 Years Fare TV All Kan Skin Sp"tlnliitn Inlled, lint Ciitiriini KITfi-trtl Cnro. "W!un my little loy was six works oUl .111 eruption broke out on his face. I took Ii i 111 to a doctor. lut his fart Kept on getting worse until It pt so b;itl th:it no 0110 roultl look at Mm. His whole fate was one crust ami must have been very painful. He seratdietr day and nilit until his fare was raw. Then I took him to ail the best sieeiallsts in skin diseases, but they couM not do niii h for him. The eczema pot on hN arms and legs and we could not ir t a night's sleep In months. I got a set of Cuticura Remedies ami ho felt relieved the first time I used them, i gave the Cuticura, Cemedies a good trial and gradually the eczema healed nil up. He is now seven years old and I think the trouble will never return. Mrs. John (J. Klumpp. 0 Masrara St.. Newark, N. J.. Oct. 17 and 22. Kt7." EXCELLENT WEATHER AND HAGNIF1CENT CR0T3. lleportü from Wrtrrn Cnnnda Are Aery Encouraging. A correspondent writes the Winnipeg (Man.) Tree Press: "The Pincher Creek I strict (Southern Alberta), the original home of fall wheat, where It has' been grown without failure, dry seasons and wet. for about years, is excelling itself this year. The yield and quality are "both phenomenal, as has been the weather for its harvesting. Forty bushels is a common yield, and many fields 0 up to GO, GO and over, and most of it No. 1 Northern. Even last year, which was less favorable, similar yields were In some cases obtained, but owing to the season the quality was not so good. It is probably safe to say that the average yield from the Old Man's Iliver to the boundary wilt be 47 or 4S bushels per acre, and mostly No. 1 Northern. One man has just made a net profit from his crop of $10.55 per acre, or little less than the selling price of land. Land here is too cheap at presort, when a crop or two will pay for It, and a failure almost unknown. Nor is the tlist.dtt dependent on wheat, all other crops do well, also stock ami dairying, and there Is a large market at the doors In the mining tmvi.s up the Crow's Nest Pass, and in llriti-di Columbia, for the abundant hay of tiio district, and poultry, pork and garden truck. Coal is near and cheap. Jhn Hill has an eye on Its advantages, and has invested here, and Is bringing the Croat Northern Kailroad soon, when other lines will-follow." The wheat, oat and barley crop ,in other parts of Western Canada -show splendid yields and will make the farmers of that country (and many of them are Americans) rich. The Canadian Government Agent for this district advises us that he will be pleased to give information to all who desire it about the new land regulations by which a settler may now secure 1G0 acres in addition to his 1G0 homestead acres, at $3.00 an acre, and also Low to reach these lands into which railways are being extended. It might be interesting to read what is said of that country by the editor of the Marshall (Minn.) News-Messenger, who made a trip through portions of It in July, U)OS. "Passing through more than three thousand miles of Western Canada's agricultural lands, touring the northern and southern farming belts of the Provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, with numerous drives through the great grain fields, we were made to realize not only the magnificence of the crops, but the magnitude. In measures, of the vast territory opening, and to be opened, to farming Immigration. Ther are hundreds f thousands of farmers there, ijid millions of acres under cultivation, but there Is room for millions more, and other millions of acreage available. We could see In Western Canada in soil, prod net, topography or climate, little that i3 different from Minnesota, and with meeting at every p'iitit many business men and farmers who went there from this state, it was ditli'ult to realize one was beyond the boundary of the country." rihiu'. Hiding across the country one day, Ir. I'lank noticed an old negro who hadta'tn for quite a while perched motionless upon a little bridge, fishing silently from the stream beneath. Tor some time he watched him from a distance, but finally, overcome by the old fellow's unmoved patience, he rode up and accosted him. "Hello, Wash: What are you doing up there?" "Fishin', sah." came the reply. "Not getting many, are you?"' "No. sah." "Well, It seems to me you'd get tired fishing so long without a bite." "I doesn't want no bite, cap'n." "We'd, that's funny. Why don't you want bite. Wash?" "Hits this-a-way. cap'n: when I cits a lots o bites, hit takes nil meh time to get the fish off'n meh line, an' I doesn't have no time foh flshlu'." Success Magazine. t'p-t-I)n(c. The smooth-tongued book agent was Felling the old farmer a huge dictionary. "Hut, look here, young man," protested the farmer, "there don't seem to bo any appendix In this here dictionary. All the dictionaries I ever saw bad an appendix." The wily look agent thought a mlnDte aud then said : "Why, my dear sir, this Is the latest dictionary. Every late dictionary has the a pi end I. removed." And the old farmer was satisfied and bought the big book at once. Clear, white clothe are a sign that th housekeeper uses l:?J Cross Dall Blue. Large -fox. psekagev eent?. Thm llaby 11 ee tie's Cradle. If, at almost any time of the year, we walk through the woods where the red, scarlet, black or pin oaks are growingthat is,' where, we find those that riiKii their acorns Iu two seasons and therefore belong in th rln oak group says St. Nicholas, we shall probabi? find on the ground fallen branches that vary In size from 'that of a lead-pencE to that of one's thumb or even larger These ,t the broken end appear as If cut away within the wood, so. that only a thin portion Is left under the bark. Within the rather uneven cut, generally near the center of th growth, is t small hole tightly plugged by the "powder post" of a beetle larva. Split open the branch or twig, when a burrow will be seen, and the little, white, soft, hardJawed larva that made It will be found or pernaps the Inactive pupa. Stale. Stubb That old Senator is always telling ancient jokes and boasting of his family tree. Penn H'm. I think his family tret nust have been a rhestnnt

It is impossible utensils too clean. to keep the milk Cream that is ripe for churning presents a smooth, satiny appearance when stirred. The well-worn hoe is a good testimonial for the farmer. The rusty hoe tells another tale. When mustard is a serious iKst the fields are sprayed with a solution that kills the weed, but dos no harxa the crop. The best lice killer we ever tried is plenty of line allies in 'the chicken house. The birds stir up a mighty dust often and no louse can live In it. Iu Holland they rotate the fertilb tors as well as the crops. Each crop has its particular coaxer. IVrhnps that Is why they farm successfully on land worth ?1,;X per acre. Over five million bushels of potatoes were grown on Long Island last year, but on account of the loose- marketing methods of the growers very ?:nall profits wore realized Troiii the work. .'-iff a quart of line slaked lime into a barrel with a cover, stir up a big dust ar.d drop the gappy chickens into it. Full thorn out after yoit have counted tiftfcn and they will sneeze the worms ii.tij the hereafter. A slick swindler is swindling southiTii fanners by offering big ;renilums with pureh.ises of soap. He collects tin; money in advance and then forgets to send the premiums or the soap. postoH'ice detectives are on his trail. Cream that has loen allowed to stand too long will break or become wattry and will not make the best flavored butter. The secret of pKd butter making is knowing just when the cream has reached the right stage of acidity. Farmers of New Jersey are for a law t aaoiish all siirir. isking s!io tlug of game birds and to stop s!n tiiig of, woodeo- ks in July. the The woodcock shooters tramp over meadows before the grass is cut ;iuse groat loss. the and Do you know how to ground your fence wires to prevent lightning; doing ''damage to stock? Simply thrust a length of heavy wire several feet into the ground down the side of m--caslonal posts, ami staple to the fence wires where they cross. The loard silo can be given a cement lining by clcatin? with lath and applying the" cement. Silos thus lined should lc thoroughly cleaned each year and then washed with thin cement to till the cracks which may have formed in the thin lining. In Sullivan County, New Hampshire, last year only sixty-eight sheep were raised. Just ttofore the war the sheep Industry was the principal one Iu tins and adjoining counties, hut the general depression of farming and the ravages of dogs and wild animals destroyed the industry.. For the fa finer who still uses blinders upon his horses and a tight chetkrein, a humane stoekraiser suggests the experiment of tying his head back as far as possible and then putting a black piece of cloth one inch in front of his eyes. He wouldn't like It, to be sure. Neither does the horse. Dirty eggs are usually hard to clean. Vinegar is used by some and some use brick dust as a scouring material. Soap and water seldom give satisfaction. The use of alkali on the egg removes the mucilaginous substance and this reduces t ho power of the egg to keep. This mucilaginous material tills the pores and so kitps out the air. California oiangos are now washed, brushed, dried and Ice cooled before being placed in refrigerator cars for shipment to the east. These now methods are proving big money savers to tin? growers. Some of the big packing houses in the fruit bolt turn out from ten to fifteen carloads In a day and they arrive in Chicago and New York in fine condition. The horse with a long-established case of worms should be given a purgative before any tonic treatment Is begun. Administer four drams of aloes before breakfast or on a empty stomach. Also give a wvrui enema of four quarts of strong soapsuds. Follow this with a course of-tonics. Sulphate of iron, two drachms; gentian, four drams, and columbo, two drams; twice dally, for a week or two. Give at the same time sound, nourishing diet and gentle regular exercise. Carrots are good feed for dairy cows, as well as other stock. When not fed in too large .quantities they provide the best winter food for the milk cows. The carrot is always greedily oaten by stock, as it has iu it a considerable quantity of sugar and no element of bitterness. Carrots are also supiosed to help color the milk in the direction desired, but it would take a good many carrots to accomplish much in this regard. The effect of feeding carrots Is very good on the digestive system. lck For Is. Colds among chickens result from many causes, usually exposure during damp weather, and may be indicated in different ways, such as by coughing or sneezing, by r.welied faces, watery eyes and nostrils, and sometimes, as canker in the mouth, in which case there may be roup. A simple cold can bo easily managed and aired in a few days by keeping the fowls warm and dry. Castor oil, Ir small doses of one teaspoonful. Is particularly good when poured down the throat. In cases of cankers, which Is the worst form of cold or roup, more care Is necessary. The sick fowls mufit be immediately removed from the healthy ones, and pure wate provided for them in clean dishes, in which a few drops of a solution cf copperas may be added occasionally. Feed no more hard grain, mix the lough with hot milk, feeding It spar-

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The difficulty Is the labor of handlin; the sick birds. Kansas Farmer. Origin of Fruits. The strawberry, says a Furopoan authority, comes from a cross between the native strawberry of Virginia and that of Chili. The raspberry is native in temperate Europe ar.d in Asia. The apricot originated in China. The peach was originally a Chinese fruit. The cherry originated round the Caspian Sea. The plum comes from Ihe. C.-TU-easus and Turkey. The pear is native in temperate Europe and Western Asia. The quince comes front Southeastern Europe, the Caucasus and the Caspir.n region. The apple is native all c tr Europe, iu the Caucasus, round the Itlack Sea and in Persia. The almond conies from trans-('aaea: ia, Mesopotamia, Persia, Turkestan and Algeria. The fig seems to have originated round the Mediterranean, particularly in Syria. The grape is native in Southern Europe. Algeria. Morocco and Western Asia. The red currant grows wild all over Europe, in the Caucasus, the Him alajas, Manchuria, Japan and Arctic: America. The walnut comes from the Caucasus. Persia and Northern India. ! The sweet orange originated in South-, ern China and Co hin China. The clt ron is of Indian origin. Shoddlnt: U'uul, There are many things which may cause sheep to shod their wool iu winter or spring without their being afflicted by scab, if they have short pasturage in the fall and eoiue to Mio bnrn thin in ilosh, ami are then fed well they are apt toJet;in to shod wool in j winter, wnuo it winter lorage is poor or scanty and spring pasturage go,ul, shedding Is likely to begin Itefore shearing time. Keep them in a good, thrifty condition at all so: oi.s. even if it is necessary to feed grain to do si. Another cause may bo overcrowding In the shed, . keeping them too warm at night. Allow at least ten square, feet of shot) room to each sheep of small breeds, and from twelve to fifteen for the l.-irger breeds. Even more frequently the cause may !e the manure under them fermenting and heating .as it i. liable to do if it is allowed to get wet. It would be Moll to clean out the shod late in the fall.' again at midwinter, and early In the spring, and between these times keep plenty oi clean, dry, bedding under them. Thb will increase the value of the manure oven untie than it dens the bulk as the liquid manure is rich and needs an absorb. u. American Cultivator. KoMiIiik tJie Soil. Uullctiii X. 12Ö of the Urbana, Station, recently from the press, con-' tains some of the most remarkable i proofs ever shown in this country that! "nibbing the land" Is ruin by the .swift-: est route, and that wis-e conservatism j and replenishments of plant food will pay princely dividends. The contents of that bulletin should bo learned by every farmer, especially bv every far - iner who intends to star hi the bus. - ness and make it pay a decent return .... !..! ..xf..ttA..nn" I'll 111C V.ipillli 111COO.W. .MUlllll HUliVV Is r4s vital. In farming as it Is in rail roading, perhaps more imperative.-' The theory that the soil contains plant food ample for an indefinite succession of profitable crop, assuming only enough rain and some sort of arbitrary rotation was completely dispersed by the -farm bookkeeping" tt Prof. Davenport and the chemical analyses of Doctor Hopkins. The bulletin shows that the happy-go-lucky style of farming once in vogu-? has resulted in reducing the average yield of com on one field from seventy brshels per acre average In to euty-seven bushels per acre average in 1VH7. Iy way of contrast seientiJe farming during the same thirty-year period lias increased the average yield from seventy to ninety-si?: bushels. These results, striking as they are on their face, become vastly more significant when It is added that in one case the soil has undergone steady lmpfivcrishuwnt and progressive reduction of earning capacity; whereas In the other case, notwithstanding steadily Increasing yields, the soil actually contains more available plant food now than it did aCthe beginning of the test, and Is In all ways a better productive investment than it was thirty years ago. A (ircnt "Wheal Crop. ISy tiie edge of a sun-baked Indian wheat field two men are squatting over the Hindu farmers' midday meal of rice and buttermilk, alternately sopping up bits of gravy with broken pieces of bread as they tllscuss thJ weather, the prosiecls of the crop and the homely affairs of current Interest. When they have finished one of them rises and walks along the field examining the heads of wheat and pulling a stalk here and there, then bids adieu to his host and trudges on his waj Jle Is a crop reporter, and the lnforntatlon he gains in his day's visits w ill be flashed under seas by cable and will 1k posted to-morrow morning on the Chicago Hoard of Trade and reproduced in newspapers throughout the grain bolt of the United States. Similarly, if one could drop Into a village of the Caucasus he would find a bearded man, In peasant garb, chatting with the farmers as to the probable yield of their fields, shelling out the kernels of wheat and running them through ids fingers, visiting scores of villages and hundreds of farms in his quest. Far away on the other side of the world other men are riding from one lonely station to another in thj great Australian interior, from ranch to ranch across the Argentine plaius, and In dust-covered buggies along kota roads. All those and hundreds of others like them who are making thorough study of all the great wheat fields of the globe are part of tne vast mechanism employed iu the yearly handling of the world's cereal crops. They are the scoti'w and skirmishers whose task is the important one of determining the size of the crop and Its condition. From the time when the seed goes into the ground they are at work observing and reporting every factor that Influences the yield or the quality of the world's great staple. In this they are playing are Important part in the great work of handling the year's crop, for volume and quantity, regulating price, determine the flow marketward, both as to the speed and as to the direction from which the supply must be drawn. Appleton's Magailne.

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Patlern Department L'P-TO-DATE DESIGNS FOR THE HOME DRESSMAKER v v Dlrectolro Coat. Many variations of tUe D i recto! re oont have appeared, but none that is bettor or more generally becoming -than this one. It imlmus all the essential Vaturesil is smart, yet simple withal, ind it is equally well adapted to the ostir.ne and to the separate coat, in 'he illustration broadcloth is finished I'ATTI UX NO. t'.125. with stitching and trimmed with Liberty satin, but coats of satin and of Ottoman silk in combination with cloth skirts and worn over entire gowns of thinner materials will be much worn this season, and the design suits these (piite as well as it dtos the entire costume. The above pattern will Ik mailed to jour address on nveipt of lo cents. Send all r.rdors to the Pattern Department of this paiter. Ite sure to give both the number and size of tattern wanted, atid write very da inly, l'oi convenience, writ' your order on tlu ! fol'.imlns coupon: Order Coupon No. 512.". ;izi; nami: J , AIWKKSS ; 1 ! t, s,,,a ! I.ti-..at "ith "'.urate adInstable flounces are among the latest fads of the hour and they serve many practical ends. This one is made with a five-gored upper portion and allows .1 choice of llouneos of two widths. In the illustration batiste and embroider1 ATI I.KX ed fiounciiig are the materials used but one of the great advantages of the separate tlomioe is the ability to use several with nie foundation, and also to use a somewhat more sturdy ma terial for the lower ort ion of the skirt. while the upper part is of somethinj thinner and clos-1ittIng. The above pattern wi'l be mailed ti your address on receipt of 10 cents Send all orders to the Pattern Depart incut tf this paper. Order Coupon. No. o,io.". SIZE NAME ... ADDUESS LITTLE ABOUT EVERYTHING. Florida product's the finest load ik'U oil cellar In the world. , The atmosphere is free of microbes at an elevation of 2,000 feet. The Dominion of Canada contains nearly ,'1,7 Pl.t .o square mih'S. The number f sugar factories in operation last year in Itussia was 27S. Perhaps the most curious of polishing wheels is that made of eirn husks for finishing shell or bone combs. The use of muslin instead of glass In dairy windows is said to lessen the danger from tuberculosis germs. One ton of mechanical or half a ton of chemical pulp is obtained on an average, from each cord of wol. Not every one is aware that Mizar, tilt second star injlhe big dipper, is a double star. To observe this doublet on a clear night requires good vision. Colorado holds the record among the states of having 401 mountain Ioaks exceeding 10,0)0 feet; thirtythree of these are 14,000 feet and over. After working on his theory for ten years, Gen. Goulaeff, a member of the Institution of Naval Architects, lias announced that he can render ships bott unsinkable and uncapsizable. Using extremely delicate instruments the FreneH Academy of Science is ex perhnenting with an unknown force, supposed to be electrical in nature, given off by the human body. lty curling or waving human hall with a hot iron, a Russian scientist claims to prevent it becoming gray. His theory is that grayness is caused bj microbes, which the heat kills.

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Physicians Recommend Castoria jHASTOBIA has met vrftli pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharmaM.ccntical societies and medical authorities. It is used by physicians 7ith: results most gratifying. The extended us3 of Castoria is nnruestionahly thai result of three facts: fisr-The indisputable evidence that it is harmless! second That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets tho nerves, hut assimilates the food : Thfrd b is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor' OIL It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotio and docs not stupefy. It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman's Drops, Godfrey's, Cordial, etc. ' This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, however, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day for poisoning innocent children through greed cr ignorance ought to enrl To our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by regulating tho systemnot by stupefying it and cur readers are entitled to, the information.--iraZc5 Journal of Health.

ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. AVgctable rrcporatlonlbrAs sunilalin fccFootfantf RegulalLL'u!Stonmc!isandI)ovrJscf PromofcsDcsticnn-xfrni rtcss and ReshContains mittet OpiuTdIorphuic ncrMiscraL Not Narcotic. ; IteapsMJkSmumm ' jl(x.Stjna Krm SffdChnhdSLijy' Apcrfect Remedy for Gonsitpaticii , Sour Stoiuacii.Dlarrhoa AYorrajs,CoaXi!sroiis.FcTrisii' r.ess cidLoss or Sleep. VBMBMBBSSSBBa S SWMaSSSSBSIBV RcSitnilß Signals of ?.fcOV NOV YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper.

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Ask about the Alaska -Yiikcn-PaciHc Exposition at Seattle. Wash., 1909. Sid trip, daring season, to Yellowstone Park, at low rate on vü through ticket. Write for Booklet E. L. Lcmax, General Passenger Agent, Omaha, Neb.

Log ion I Deduction. Hylccr My father was drowned when I was a boy. Pykcr A..cn you should avoid water. Ilykcr How did your father die? Pyker In bod. Ilykcr Then you should sit upall the rest of your lifo. One Woman's Wlmlom. Brld-i:ieet Mamma insists on our having a stylish church wedilin?. ; room -Elect I wonder why? P.ride-Elect She says it will probably be the last time I'll ever have a 'chance to show ofT In good clothes. Mnkfa One Cicrplian. "You're always kicking about our having too many laws. I suppose yon would repeal tli law of gravitation if you could.'1 "Xoi that's always rigidly euforced. It's only the dead letter laws I'm after." l!owrsT.ils? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure 1 J. t'UKXEY & CO., Toledo. O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. WILDING, KtXXAN & MARVI3C, Wholesale Drugjlsts, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, actlnjr directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Trice, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druegists. .... Take Hall's Family Till, for constipation. Sh Wnsrt't Skrptiral. Young Lady The last bread I got of you was so hard I couldn't eat it. Baker (indignantly) Young Iadj I want you to know that I made bread before you were born. Young Lady Oh, I don't doubt it. I think that was some of it you sold tue. Iteassnring Ulm. "Madam," said the guard on the South Eide elevated, "this is the smoking car." "That's all right, conductor, said the self-possessed matron, taking a seat. "Don't apologize. I know it's dirty, but one can't expect a smoking car to be a front parlor." Chicago Tribune. EllaliilnK It. The tortoise had won the race. "I didn't half try," said the hare, with a yawn. "What's the use? We're not allowed to bet on races now, anyway." From which it is apparent that the real facts in the case were suppressed. Chicago Tribune. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething; softens the gums, reduces Inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 etat a bottle.

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Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher,

Dr. B. Ilalstead Scott, of Chicago. Ills"., says: "I have prescriled yotrf Castoria often for infants during; my practice, cud find It very satisfactory." Dr. William Belmont, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: "Your Castoria stand first In Its class. In my thirty years of practice I aa cay I never hart found anything that so filled the place.' Dr. J. II. Taft, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: I have used your Castoria an4 found It an excellent remedy In my household and private practice for. many years. . The formula is excellent" Br. TL J. Hamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says: "l presCTibe your Castoria extensively, as I have never found anything to equal It for children'! troubles. I am aware that there are imitations in the field, but I always see that my patients get Fletcher's." . , Dr.Wm. j McCrann, cf Omaha, Neb., says: "As the father of tllrteci children I certainly know something about your great medicine, and aslda from ry own family experience I have in my years of practice found Cas-T toria popular and efficient remedy In almost every home." Dr. J. It. Clausen, cf Philadelphia, Ta., says: "The name that your Cas- . toria has made for itself In the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by tho sndorso ment o! the medical profession, but I, for one, nost heartily endcrso it and believe it an excellent remedy." Dr. IL M. Ward, of Kansas City, Ho., says: "Physicians generally do nc? prescribe proprietary preparations, Lut in the care of Castoria ny experience, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to ma!id an exception; I prescribe your Castoria In my practice because I have found It to be a thoroughly reliable remedy for children's complaints. Any physician who ha3 raised a family, as I have, rlll join mo la heartiest reccmmcnJation cf Castoria."

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Tolnt of VlevT. "What is the use," remarktnl the philosophical boarder, "of speculating concerning immortality?" "What's t lie use," broke in the sportive boarder with the turned collar, "of specu- j latin in anything? You lose '?very time.! That's my experience." The ise of colored papers for house decoration, which was scarcely known in China until quite recently, is now becoming general. Oo Your Clothes Look Yellow? If so. use Red Cross Dall D!ue. It will make them white as snow. Large l'oi. package, 5 ceuta. A Mlebtr Voice. A new method of sending a mighty voice across the sea involves the use of a diaphragh which is made to vibrate by electricity. To this are attached two huge megaphones which emit a deafening roar that can be hoard for many miles. The machine goes by clockwork, and when wound up attends to business for weeks without requiring further attention. A dynamo furnishes the requisite current. The terrible blast that bursts from the gaping mouths of the twin horns, each of which is fifteen feet long, can be heard above the noise of the fiercest gale. It literally shatters the air. Once started, this voeifertrus guardian does duty night and day, and never goes to sleep. It Is designed specially for use on points of rocks where bell buoys and whistling ! ( buoy are inadequate by reason of the I fact that vthe noises thev make sire ' drowned by the roar of the surf. Statistics). In all probability the first administrative act of th first regular government was to number Its fighting men. and to ascertain as nearly as was possible what amount of taxation could be levied on the rest of the community. As human society grew more highly organized there can be no.doubt that a very considerable body of official statistics must havQcome Into existence. We know that such was the case In (J recce, Home and Egypt, but It was not uutil within the last two or three centuries that systematic use of the Information available began for purposes of investigation rather than mere administration. New York American. Teachers salaries in the New York public schools vary from the minimum of annually to the maximum of f2.100.

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i Parallel Case. "My observation," said the ttage, "I;tJ me to the conclusion that the mors) wealth one gives away the more vealtJn one has." "It's just exactly the same f ay wills, kisses," whispered one of his listeners, a demure little miss who was sitting bj big maa with a beard. Knows Detter Non. "If you wish to have everybody fosf your friend," counseled her elderly nil viser, "don't be a talker; be a listener." It was not until after she had 6 ecu re I a Job as telephone girl in the central officts that she found out what a mistake sli had made in taking the advice literally. . Collateral Evidence. His indulgent grandmother had firesi him a half of a custard pie. "You seem to like it. Tommy," sflie said. "Like it!" exclaimed Tommy, taking it away from his face for a moment, "jesee how I'm mussin' up my ears!" CLi cago Tribune. nadir Rattled. The timid young woman, who had M ters of introduction to the great nouu had ventured to call. "You are so busy. Judge," she said, that I I hesitated about disturbing you. How many cr days'ln tbe work do you week?" III Motives Mlannderstood. "Our pastor it such a thoughtful man,' said Mrs. Jenner Lee Ondego. "Wheal he is going to preach a missionary ner mon and take up a collection for tb heathen he always announces it two gt three Sundays beforehand." ttlißl' ,f Q F. W. N. U. - . . - NO. 45 UC3 When sriitlBK tt) Adrei-tlae ra rl

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