Plymouth Tribune, Volume 8, Number 7, Plymouth, Marshall County, 19 November 1908 — Page 7
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The General Demand of the Well-Informed of the World has always been for a simple, pleasant and efficient liquid laxative remedy of known value; a laxative which physicians could sanction for family use because its component parts -ti-c known to them to ba wholesome and truly bcncGcial in effect, acceptable to the system and gentle, yet prompt, in action. In supplying that demand with it3 excellent combi;iation of Syrup of J'ig3 and Elixir of Senna, the California Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies on the merits of the laxative for its remarkable SUCCCS3. That is enc of many reasons why Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given the preference by the "Well-Informed. Ti get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine manufactured by the Cali fornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggistj. Trice fifty cents per bottle. WESTERN CANADA THE PENNANT WINNER "The Lasf Best Wesl." Ths Government M Car ada now bitc to errry Actual Settr 1 bO r es ol wheat-growing land free and an.' actional VJJ acres at $3.1.0 a a acre. i The SßO.fVO cont-ntd America Setter matin their r-orr.es in Weilern Canada L the fct evidence ct the superiority of that country. Trey are bccominir rich, growing from 25 to 53 bushel wheat io the acre; 6 to 110 bushels oats arid45t'tJbusheUbarl. y, besides having splen did her.: a of catt e raise! on the prairie crass. Dairy inar is an im per-ant industry. ! '1 he er p of 18 stiil kee?s Western Canada in the lt-nri. The world wi t sojn look t it ati its fuod-prrwlti er. "The thing- which most impressrd k wa the ci 8T.itu te of the country that is a Tai able for agricultural rurpo-e.'" J'atiooa Kdit rial Corre-p ndeuce. 19 8. Low Railway Rates sr od scio Is and chutrhes, mark .s convenient. Pi ices the Ilights, climate peifc. Lans.trefrsa"eby Riilway and Land Comtm es. DcscriptiTe pamrhU-t'and maps sent free. For R til way R.txrsand other inform at ion apply to W. D. Sr<. Sujerint,?ndent of Immißration, Ottawa, CanaJa. or W. H. Rogers, J Floor Traction-Termiral Buiiding, Intiiatpohs, Ind., and H. VI. Williams. Koorn 20. Law building, Toledo, Ohio, Authorized (iovcrnment Agents. , 1'leuse J where joa saw this adrt isement. TV. I Dooglaa ntkH und sells mora men's S3.0O and SV3.50 shoes than any other raannf aetnrer In the world, bö aus they hold their shape, fit better, and wear longer than any other make Shoes at Ä.T Prices, for Every Hsmbsr of H family, Men, Boy, woman, Miswsi Children W.C.IkjrUj $ 09 ud f 0 OUt tig eaaaot fca soaaliaa at ay Brie. W. L. Dnlw Sl.tl 14 S2.S0 ikoe ar ta bast la to wart Karl Colo FyrtMm Vrnod Z relation v. jr'l'ake X Kahetitute. W. L. Douglas wnw an4 pnr la stamped on bottom. Sold f Trry Shoes roai!ed from tcUrj to any part ot the world. Cat aJoue free. W. L DOUGLAS. 157 Saara St.. Brscttss. Mus. TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body entiseptically clean and free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, vrhich water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. x germicidal, disinfecting t -0 deodorizing toilet requisite of exceptional excellence and economy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drag and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Samp! WITH HCALTH AND GCAUTV" IOOX SENT fRtC THE PAXTOK TOILET CO., Boston, Mass. "HsTlnj taken your wonderfnl "Ca.a.rt' for three inouth and bains' entirely -nrel i,t stomach starrt and trpenia. I think a word of irai ia 4 W" I aaeaiet''f.irtUeirwni)ltrfu! composition. I bae taen i nmemm other so-called reaiMies tut without avail aud I JJtmI tust Oasraret r-MT more ia a day tnaa all tue oiiiers 1 have taken Would m yar " James ilcOuue. 108 Mercer St.. Jsrssr City, S. J. Best Ter The bowels Fleaaafl, PalntabJ. Potnt.TatQood. Do OoM, Fevt-r Sicken, V. .-aknn or Oripe. ICe, tic, SOc. AeTer J . hi In bnli. Tlia gennlna table tarr.pod CCC. waaxiiutcel to cur or your money buck. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.7. 59a AHiiUALSALE, TEN M1LLI0H BOXES IFYOUVE NEVER WORN SLICKER you've yet to learn the bodify comfort it aives in the wettest weather MATE rOT Hard äeRce AMP cuARANrr.ro TV AT t R PR OC W 3OO ATAUGOQOSTOVtS CATALOG KHZ FARM WANTED CAHII rOH VOIR FA KM lilt BC IS K8S Xi Bi'tLef wher It !a Ixak4. Send full dtfcrtption itarra. hUi lowest price. j a ;u h eeaalolci te pay. II want to buy property of any kind, anywhere, write for em free li,tef ber(,ine for eele tf'-ect by earnere wHh nt 'orer Buyers Co-Operativc Co., S"KmjS HELP IMT OX I1ATINC rvnltcu artel's Prcparfiflo n VYOMlIi Tka taa4ar4 Uemtij. UlDr. g!ita) real ferkeek "Keller Tor Haeaca M ruxscu mstcu co. so w. at., . i .city
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SOME REMARKS FROM SOTA EDITORS.
MINNEWhat They Think ol Western ( tinnda. A party of editors froii a nmnb.T tf cities and towns of Minnesota ltoontly ni;ide a tour of Western Canada, nnd bavin;; returned to their homos lluv are now tIlins in their respective nev,-paiers of what they saw on their Canadian trip. The West St. l'aul Times recalls the eeursi n of the Minnesota editors from Winnipeg to the la ifie Coast ten years a?o. Kcferrii:? to .-hat has happened in the interval t'ie wr.'ttT says: "Thonsaid1? of in'nes of ihv railway lines have been built, and the development of tbc country ha made marvelous strides. Millions of acres, then lying in their wild and untouched state, have since been transferred into grain fields. Towns have t-prut g up as if by the wand of a magician, and their development is now in full progress. It is a revelation, a record of conquest by i-ettlemcnt that i remarkable." The Hutchinson Leader characterizes Western Canada as "a great country undeveloped. The summer outing,'' it says, "was nn eye-opener to every member of the party, even tlioso who were on the excursion through Western Canada ten years ago, over considerable of the territory covered this year, being amazed at the progress and advancement made In that short spice of time. The time w ill come when Western Canada will be the bread-basket of the world. It was a delightful outing through a great country of wonderful possibilities and resources." Since the visit of these editors tb government has revised its laud regulations and it is now possible to secure 100 acres of wheat land at $3 an acre in addition to the 1C0 acres that may te homesteaded. The crops of IOCS have 4een spb-n did, and reports from the various districts show good yields, which at present prices will give excellent profits to the farmers. From Milest one, Saskatchewan, there are reported yields of thirty bushels of spring wheat to the acre, while the average is about twenty bushels. The quantity of grain to be shipped from this point will be about OjO.OOO bushels. Information regarding free lands and transjKrtation will be freely given by the Canadian government agents. Unherolc. Le.inder hnd swum the IIellspoNt. "Couldn't yoa have hired a skiff?" asked Hero. With chattering teeth LearÄler answered her, still more coldly, to the effect that the next time he did it, by George, he would apply for a Carnegie medal. Chicago Tribune. Ulufttrloaa Ansler. "I'm not much of a fisherman myself," Mr. Wiped '.inks was remarking, "but I have always been interested in reading the quaint sayings of that grand old angler, Six Ixaak Walr-cle." Oiily One "DROHO QUININE" That la LAXATIVE 15ROMO QUININK. Look for the sljnature of K. W. OUOVK. l'sel the World over to Cure a Cold In One lay. 3o. CLOTH MADE FE0M "WOODS. Factories for New Ici'uatry Ftnbllahed In Ssrcral Plr res Abroad. United States Consu. Atwell write from Itoubaix, France, to the State Department: "Justin Miller read a paper recently before the industrial Society of Mulhouse on certain printed goxls, the warp of which is composed of col ton and the woof of a thread made from wood pulp. These goods were introduced almost four years ago. At the outset sheets of wood pulp paper wer cut into finest shreds and twisted into thread by machines made for the purpose. Lately the paper process ha lrn abandoned and the wood pulp if passed directly over grooved metal sheets, forming very thin ribbons, which pass in turn over n machine that twists them Into a regular thread of any dcKirel length. 'These threads of wood fiber art known as xyloline, silvaline and llcelht, id are numbered like many others. The dynamo-metric resistance of thl - thread in a dry state, taking 100 as the resistance of juto threads, is equal to about T5; that of cotton thread in a dry state Is 1C3. The difference Is widely in favor of Jute and cotton, but It is thought that improvements may increase- the resistance of the wood pulp thread. As It is to be used only in mixed goods, great resistance 13 not of essential importance. "Dishcloths are made of this threat In connection with hemp nnd the mixture Is washed, dyed nnd printed. While wet the wood pulp softens, but recovers its resistance in drying. There ore already manufactories for the production cf wood fiber thread In (Jermany, Spain fend Netherlands, and France will shortly have a factory. It is thought that this thread mny be used advantageously in the manufacture of passementerie, nnd that It may replace jute and cotton iu the eomposl tiun of many articles." UPVAUD START Afte Changing from Co flea to ronlain. Many a talented person is kept back because of the Interference of coffee with the nourishment of the body. This is especially so with those whose nerves are very sensitive, as Is often the case with talented persons. There Is n simple, easy way to get rid of coffee evils and a Tenn. lady's experience along these lmes In woftb. considering. She says: "Almost from the beginning of the use of coffee it hurt my stomach. By the time I was fifteen I was almost a nervous wreck, nerves all unstrung, no strength to endure the most trivial thing, either work or fun. "There was scarcely anything I could eat that would agree with me. The little I did eat seemed to give me more trouble than it was worth. I finally quit coffee and drank hot water, but there was so little food I could digest, I was literally starving; was so weak I could not sit up long at a time. "It was then a friend brought me a hot cup of Postum. I drank part of it and after an hour I felt as though I had had something to eat felt strengthened. That was about five years ago and, after continuing Postum in place of coffee and gradually getting stronger, to-day I can eat and digest anything I want, walk as much as I want. My nerves are steady. "I believe the first thing that did me any good and gave me an upward start, was Postum, and 1 use it altogether now Instead of toffee.'1. "There'i a Ilea son." Name given by Tostum Co., Battle Creek. Mich. Head 'The Itoad to Wellville," in pkgs. Ever read (he above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They arc genuine, true, and full of human interest.
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Kemember the iniportaiujeof th iitchen garden. The dairy without the BabcoclJ test?r is ILLe the eugtne without go?rnor. Tine tar generously applied to the noses of the sheep at shearing time tvill prevent grub In the head. Little things done in season will 'ighten the big tasks and make farming more pleasant and profitable. Preaching economy doesn't amount to much. You must practice It, but there is such a thing as being too K'onouiical. Dairying is a ready money busiues-s md no other branch of live stock keeping can compare with it for enriching Jie faru. Three common faults in butter making are overripe cream, overchuruing md .overworking. The Grst means strong butter, the second and third soft tmtter. The man who starts in the dairy business with the idea that be is going U make a success simply because he as some particular breed, is ou the tvrong road. Many lovers of riiie horses are ambitious to breed their own driving Qprses, breeding high clss trotting bred mares to Hackney or Coach stallions Tor beaut v and action. Do not buy a horse with a narrow ar shallow chest, or whose forelegs are Dh.se together. He has but sufficient room for a rest of strong lungs and rv ill not le long winded. A two-inch hole bored a foot doe$ into the stump and tilled with saltpeter to which water is added, and left to stand a couple of months will halen the burning of the stump. One farmer recommends as a pre rentive of ravages on the sheep flock by dogs that the sheep owner place tvlth bis flock n billy goat that will get tlong very well with the sheep and de fend them from the dogs. A Mississippi steamboat which carried away a cow's calf was followed thirty miles by the bereaved animal, swimming all the time. When the cow tvas u.bout to be drowned from exhaustion she was rescued by fishcraien. The onion crop of Texas is beaming an important factor in the large astern markets. Texas onions are Crowding out Bermudas and prices cf the latter are steadily falling. It is laid that the quality of the Texas nion is almost if not equal to that of the famous Bermudas. Be careful to furnish n good dust bath for fowls, for It Is the only natural mean- the bird has of ridding itself of II. v and mites. Provide a 'louse free from vermin, then provide the birds with a good dust bath, and the question of lice and mites will bo reduced to a minimum. It Is estimated that the fa' mors cf !olor:ido finished more than a million ;hcep and lambs last year, mainly on llfalfa. It was a bad year for tho fheep bus!ness, and it is said that the oss will 1? about $1 per head. However, i ) credit Is given for the great imount of fertility returned to the and. A fanner of Nadoway county, Mis sourl, missed several choice pigs recent !y and began to susm-ct his neighbor? until lie discovered that the yoir.is animals were? being pecked to de.it! by a Hock of crows. A flock of 20" Df these black pirates actually killed a pig nod stripped Its bones clean In less. thou thirty minutes. More I.orses are injured by enforced Idleness than by work. Days that horses are not at work they should run in a box stall or yard. Their hair may not lie quite as close nnd even be ! little longer, but thej will keep healthier and be In much better shape for next season's work for having theli regular exercise every day, either U A the harness or out in the yard. Ther? were fifty-six calls upon the. U'iseoiirin dairy school last ;ear foi r.en t. fill good positions in clioe factories, and fifty-three butter-mak trs wo.'P wanted. In addition to these there ivcre numerous requests for men skilled In the operation of creameries Tho. i allege was nable to supply all the demands, and yet some farm boys prefei to sell neckties In a city stois Dn a salary of S per wool; rather than to take a course at the agricultural rolIe?'. An Fnglish stock Journal tells of a faniO'-S veterinary surgeon who was once called on to rbride a questici of blindness" In a borse, concerning wlilc? two London vets differed. lit pnteiod the yard where the horse stood and, without examining the animal's eyes, ordered a halter to be put on him and .in empty bucket to be placed In the middle of the yard. Thentakln? the halter he led the horse in a direct line for the bucket. The horse went forward and blundered over It wltl; his foreleg. "Blind, without a doubt was the verdict. Uinta to Muokroom (.rover. In turning up a portion of a bod maggots may be discovered in tho nianure. A few may do no perceptible harij, but a large numlcr will eat ut the p.iwn, leaving not even a thread to develop a single mushroom. Many kind.i of insects are apt to swarm in warti cellars, together with the egg lay!?;g varieties which cause the maggots, regardless of foul air which may öfter, accumulate and which is an injury ro the mushrooms. In each succeeding bed In large cellars Insects follow 4p the new beds and become more viperous. A high temperature such as we hnd last fall Is conducive to their continued existance in summer garb. A good crop, however, can be secured In spite of them when the houses are kept .it-all times cool. When mushrooms are grown in glafM houses the return pipes are best run under the walks. In the usual way
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of heating, where the pipes run under the benches, paper placed over the bods will be found beneficial as a pn.tector from excessive heat and drying. With good, vigorous spawn, properly prepared compost and care about the requirements of hea and moisture, a good crop is a positive certainty. l'roir pt I'euitut Fnrnilni;. Seven years ago Mrs. Jennie II. Cass found herself confronted with the problem of bringing up and educating six children on fifty acres of poor land in North Carolina. Besides her land and little house she possessed an aged horse and a mule, one cow, twenty-two chickens and three razor-back hogs. She decide! to raise peanuts and began reading everything on the subject she could procure. She was wise enough to kt.-ow her soil was poor and rhe began a Ljstem of rotation a crops, gradually increasing her acreage of peanuts. Now she has twenty-five devoted to them. During tie seven years she has not only succeeded In keeping her children In school, but now she lias flv blooded horses, a herd of registered exuvs and a small flock of well-bred sheop. On th little farm she raises all t'ie bacon, butter, ogg, poultry, breadstuff", corn and forage which her family or her etock require. She is in goad circumstances and people regard hf r as an expert. An Utpcrt Furnier. An exchange says a young mail asks. "What would you advise a young man .raised on a farm who cannot stand the dust of haying nnd thrashing and is nost tco light to do beaty farm work to doV Gardening, floriculture, poultry raising, clvfl engineering all are good, if he is built for an expert, there are hindscaiK? gardening, inside decorating :nd a number of other good occupations cjkmi to him. The young man who Is built for an vpert that Is, one T.ho Is naturally bright, careful and painstaking will succeed in any of th3 above or in altiost any other occupation. He will tave to learn the business he selects. He cannot learn any of tLem from n 'correspondence school." He needs 3 practical Instructor who can show him. and the way to become nn expert is to begin at the bottom and work up, thor ojighlj learning aJ the details as one goes along. Tue expert Is always In demand, and Lo commands the top wages. Whatever vocation a young man goes Kto, he should be thorough as he goes along. Always keeping his eyes open fir better ways of doing the work hLas in hand. All vocations are crowded with ordinary workers, but there's still lot of reborn In the upper ranks. The Da'.ry Cmv' Product. The products of the dairy cow are fourfold. Ti first and chief product ir?, naturally, the milk which she eevetes, and hich is used as milk, or for butter o cheese making. The secend prtHluct is calves which she bears, a. nd which nay be of more or loss alue. Third the carcass of beef which sjie will yUid when she is no longer useful for the production of milk should be biXen into account. lastly. tje manure she produces is of considerable vnluQ. We may a 11 the milk the main prodUt amlth.u cakes, lef and manure lire by-prod jets of the dairy eow. It l.as bfeu asvrtttl that the milk product il the only thing that should be taken i.ito considi ration in estimating the talue of th? dairy cow, and that the ilvcs and Dcef nhould lr entirely iglorcd by a successful dairyman, but !n these d&s of strong competition it o not posivjble to Ignore the by-prod-uts, and i; any scheme of successful jairylug t. calves and beef at leat s-i '-oukl be taken into consideration. This does not mean that in any caso i.i'.k producing qualities are to be sacrificed for the eake of the by-products. It simp?. means that of two animal or equal value for the production 'of milk the 'ine that will give the greater leturn in production of calves and value of carcass Is more profitable. Agricultuiul 1'pitontlsr. Unit Alfalfa. Th, hay crop is one of the principal products of the farm. In llHhj there were raUcd 57,110.050 tous of hay, valued nt $002,.kJO.(T71, while tho wheat crop the panic year had a value of ?iüö,n."2,700. Hay enters largely into the live fitock industry and Is a lead ing commercial product In supplying the consumption of horses in cities. Hay maintains a parity of value with corn and oats for feeding operations and Is usually fed in the proportions of one and a half to two pounds to i hundred pounds live weight of animals Hay Is regarded as roughage and lb necessary In animal husbandry to equalize the concentrated nutriments of grain. Alfalfa is one of the richest legume and is economical for its large yield." and feeding qualities. The cultlvati i of alfalfa marks a new era in agriculture. It leads clover In the yield per acre and also In Its nutrient properlies. It yields two to four crops psr season and should 1 more extensively cultivated In sections devoted to animal industry. It loves sunshine aial takes vast quantities of nitrogen from the atmosphere and deposits It In the soil to fertilize future crops. Alfalfa Is rich In protein, which makes heavy ione pnd strong musehf It Is relished alike by horses, cattU. sheep, bogs and poultry, and when f-i to st(ck in the fov-d lots reduces the grain ration and tho expense of finishing feeders for market. It Is particularly adapted to fattening sheep ahd growing wool. Hogs thrive on alfalfa nnd it enters largely into the problem of producing cheap meat. Alfalfa renovates nnd rejuvenates a run-down farm. It grows stalwart roots that create humus In the sot!. Tho strong roots strike deep into tKe soil, making It porous and immune from droughts. It is admirably adapted to the bee industry, as alfalfa honey is equal to the nectar gathered fro;n the llowers of the linden tree. Alfalfa is a general utility legume adapted to all kinds of live stock, poultry and the honey indestry. The cultivation of alfalfa should be extended, as soil not Indigenous to It can be inoculated with alfalfa bacteria. Its Introduction will Increase the fertility of the land and aid In the solution of cheap meat production. Goodall's Farmer.
MEXICO'S SIGH LANGUAGE.
CJeMnre vrith n Meaning Understood by livery Tribe. Mexico is a land of many tongues, but above the Indian dialects and Spanish there is one universal language, the language of signs. It is the most expressive of all. The Mexican eye and band are eloquent members. It is capable of infinite variation. Its shadings and suggestions are beyond all translation. But there are certain gestures that have a fixed meaning, u signification well understood by every nation and every tribe from Guatemala to Texas. A general upward movement of the body, shoulders shrugged, eyebrows raised, lips pouted and palms outspread varies in meaning from "I don't I now and I don't care" to a most respectful "Bealiy, sir, I do not understand you." The Index finger moved rapidly from right to left generally before the face nutans o more" or simply "No." To move the right hand palm outwvrd from the body- toward another person means "Just wait; I'll be even with you yet." f The index finger on tlie temple moved with a burins twist means "He's drunk." Tiro right hand held to the lips, three fingers doubled, thumb and little linger erect, varies from "He drinks" to "Have one with me." To move the open hand over the rheck in Imitation of a razor has ref-tre-nce to the b'iom "playing the barter" nnd means "to flatter." All four fingers and the thumb held joints together and moved toward th Liouth means "to eat." The right hand held before the face, he two middle fingers moving rapidly, fi a familiar salutation. "Modern Mexico." Legal Information g A trained nurse performing her usual lutlcs, and exercising the skill which h :he result of training In her profesdon, docs not, according to the decb lion of the United States Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island, 'n Parkes v. Seasongood, 152 Federal Reporter, bX. come within the definition )f a "servant," but rather Is one whe renders personal services to an employr In an Independent calling. The St. Louis Court of Appeals in ihe case of Iu re Clark, 10,'t Southwestrrn Reporter, llOo, holds that the abKMice of an attorney from the court In rvhlch he has business, and when hp ihould be there to attend to It, and ivhen his absence. delays or Impedes the rourt's business, constitutes a contempt f court. An attorney at law Is an officer of the court, and It is as such lummbent on him to attend the. sittings Df the court when a ease In whlch'he Is :f counsel is on trial, and which trial rannot proceed In his absence, as it Is for the sheriff or the clerk of the court to be present. As the Democratic State Committee Df New York Is, under the laws of that State, elected by delegates from the respective senatorial districts, and has no constitution or by-laws regulating its actions, the Supremo Court of New York. In Cummlngs v. Bailey, 104 NewYork Supplement. 2S3, holds that a rra Jorlty of the State committee cannot expel the representatives of a county therein, and that an attempted expul slon will be enjoined. The court Is of the opinion that no such extreme arbi trary power as to expel members of the commit tee and elect others In their places shall be asserted without express authority. A nice point as to the admissibility of evidence is -decided by the Texas Court of Criminal ApK?als In Busby v tato, 10.T Southwestern Reporter. fiT.S This was a prosecution for embezzlement of State funds by an employe of the State. Trior to the trial of th criminal case, the State had obtained a Judgment in a civil action by it agalns aeeu.se! and bis bondsmen. This Ju'g ment was admitted in evidence against a censed In the criminal case. On the ordinal hearing the court held that the judgment was admissible, but on rehearing It arrives at a different conclu slon ; Judge Brooks, however, dissent Ing. As principal authorities for tindecision on .rehearing, the court cites Queen v. Moreau, 11 A. & K. 123; Brit ton v. State, 77 Ala. 202 - Concerning a Certain Senator. Chauucey M. Depcw, too, an old hand at the game, knows the value of proper posing; it Is probable that this has come about from his large exierienoe Jn such matters, for he holds the dis Unction of having posed for more pic tu res than any other man who ivei occupied the White House. He, like Sir Thomas LIpton, knows the value of being in the sunlight when the camera is around; he is always a willing vie tim, and in convention photographs you will note that in some mysterious fash leu the Junior senator from the Empire State is always prominent. There is a saying in Journalistic clr: clcs that it pays to photograph Senator I)ep?w; whenever a cut of him appears in a newspaper he buys enough copies of that issue to amply reimburse the publishers for their half-ton-Ing expense. These copies he carefully distributes around among his friends and constituents, generally marking with blue pencil some Item. In the vicinity of his likeness. Inadvertently, of course, the errant blue iencll gets awaj from the Item and leads the eye to tho smiling features of the friend of insurance, reproduced near by on the same page. It Is a clever trick. Success Magazine. Alwarn Compensation. "What time this morning did you get In?'' she asked, sharply. "As I got In the hall, the day broke," he answered humbly. "Well, you don't seem able to com! in without breaking something," slid said, reprovingly, "but I am glad it was the day that broke and not mj handsome new lamp." Baltimore American. til n Modern tienlna. "Going to compile his life and let iCTS ; "There were no letters. I'm going to compile his life and post cards." Washington Herald. Every other effort having failed td .nake two women friendly, let them occupy the same room at night: When each one sees that the other also hai false hair, they will at once becomJ chummy and confidential. If tho present sentiment continued growing. In the future mothers will not let their children ploy with the children of bank receiver.
The CampalgTQ Dack Home. Tou remember, though, that whtm the whole long line of torches got into Main street you wondered why it didn't make everything as bright as day. They must have bad a thicker kind of darkness at night in those times. It s jaked up more light! You would't believe it it was only when they got right close to you that you could see the tin cans of the torches wabbling in the crctches of the staves, and the redand white and blue oilcloth caps of the different companies ; and only when they were right iu front of Richardson's could you recognize the boys you knew walking along with their pas, holding hands with them, or else clinging to their capo-corners. Other bys' ps let them march; it was a funny
thing you couldn't ever get to go. Mud up to your knee? nothing I You'd looü where you were going. But even if we could not march anQ go help our side win. we could cheer nr.d wave our handkerchiefs and ho"pc our side, would win. It almost always did. It could all the time, but it got to be s:ch a sure thing that sometimes the Republicans would say, "Oh, 1 g .ess I'll stay home and clean out the f.:rnae. Th?y don't need my rote," and that time the Democrats would win. Eugene Wood, in Success Magazine. Inducement for Home Seekers. That part of the State of Arkansas along the line of the Missouri Pacific railroad offers great inducement for settlers. The land is rich and for raising all kinds of crops has no equal anywhere. Book, map, list of land3 for sale, and other -valuable information furnished free by B. H. Payne, Gen. Pass. & Ticket Agent. Room 1554, Missouri Pacific Building, St. Louis, Mo. Thejr Wanted Wages, . The conductor of an orchestra who wanted to engage his soloists last year with as little expense as possible, finds that It has not been as easy, to make this se:ison the same satisfactory arrangement. He offered the artists as a fee a certain share of the gross receipts. When the soloists accepted this arrangement they did not know the Email size of the receipts usually. When one popular player got $40 as his e'aare, however, the bubble burst. "It was not my fault that you received so little," said the conductor. "If there had been more people anxious to hear you there would have been a larger audience and your share would have been more. So long as you did not draw the money, I don't see why I should be called on to pay you any more." This artist, discomfited, as he was, at the time, felt that he must have a very strong hold on. the public heart when he heard of another soloist who received less than $23 as his fee. TO Cl'RK A COLD IX OXE DAY Take LAXATIVE BUOMO Quinine Tabletiy UruysjisH refund money Jf It fails to cure. E.W.OKOVK'S signature isoneach box. 25c. Sngrar a D!atnreeaut. In many parts of Europe it Is customary among the people, especially the ioorer classes, to burn sugar in sick rooms as a means of purifying the air. Physicians, however, have held j that this was simply an Innocent su-1 perstition, declaring that It was neither beneficial or harmful. Prof. Trilbert of the Pasteur Institute at Paris, however, has recently demonstrated that burning sugar develops formic , acgtylene-hydrogen, one of the most powerful antiseptic gases known to medical science. In his experiment seventy-seven grains of sugar were burned under a glass bell of ten quarts capacity. After the vapor had cooled bacilli of typhus, tuberculosis, cholera, smallpox, etc., were placed In the bell in open glass tubes, and within half ar. hour all the microbes were dead. If sugar is burned In a closed vessel containing put rifled meat, or the contents of rotten eggs' the offensive odor disappears at once. Mrs. Winslow's Snottiing Syrup tor Chll dren tcrthlng; softe ns tho cuiiiÄ. reduces Inunaiuiatiou, aliays pain, cures wind colic 25 cuts a buttle. Drotherly Admiration. Spectator (at roller skating rink) Little boy, do you know who that handsome young lady is that skated past us just now? Urchin Yes, sir; that's my big sister. She's the whole smear, ain't she?" Chicago Tribune. Red Crom nail Bin Should be in every borne. Ask your grorer for It. Large -oz. pack ace. 5 cent. Side L.ljtlit on lllxtory. Cotton Mather was persecuting the New Salem witches. "I'm going to make it still hotter for 'em!" he exclaimed, vindictively. Misunderstanding this remark, pome of the best citizens of the community, as we have every reason to believe, went ahead and built the fires. CASTOR 1Ä For Infanta and Children. The Kind Ycu Have Always BougM Bears the Signature of
km
llifi!EH
Ask about the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition at Seattle, Wash., 1905 Sid trip, daring season, to YmUowston Park, at low rate on aO through ticket. Writm for Booklets E. L. Lomax, General Passenger Agent, Omaha, Neb.
PUTNAM
Csltr sisre sds irlshler lister ctlsrs this ssy after sye. Ose 1 lc ssclsss esters all libera, Tstj lay ftraul wlisosl rlpiliisiirt. Writs lr Ire sssklel-Bsw U lre,tleci 111 Mix CsUre.
An aching back is instantly relieved by an application of Sloan's Liniment This liniment takes the place of massage and is better than sticky plasters. It penetrates without rubbing through the skin and muscular tissue right to the bone, quickens the blood, relieves congestion, and gives permanent as well asemporary relief.
Liniment
has no equal as a remedy for Rheumatism, Neuralgia, or any pain or stiffness in the muscles or joints. Price 25c.t oOc, and $1.00. Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass., U S. A. feloan's book on horses, cattle, sheep and poultry sent f re.
R) 0iv?tae faikitojiii t'T tffM fr., wijf; . VW liß will 1,
m
Theüallroad Company desires enly to see yn plesssntly located in this prosperous State. It makes no difference
from whom yon buy your land, bat for your Information, attention Is called to the fact that the Missouri PaciOcIron Mountain has 730,000 acres of the best farm and frail land that It will sell yon on easy tenus.
TOE HOE11EBU1LDER M ARKANSAS - Thousands of acres of unoccupied land await ths pettier la Arkanaasat prices iMet terms which make it possible for any man. who baa the will, to buiid a home and e.-cre tiuiefendence upon the rich soli of oneoftae greatest reneral fanning an J fruit rrowiDe titatci of he mid-continent. These lands are now ma.leavailsbl by thecuttinr op Into small tracts cf the laree farms und plantations and tbe raoid clearing of timhrrrd lauda. rtiversined methods are auoceeding- tle one-crop sylem and room is twin made fur the new cootr. YOU WILL FEEL AT HOME IN ARKANSAS. The same crops are grown In f hi. Rtateand the same methods of cultlvati in are nned n In Illinois, or Iowa, Indiana, Ohio or Michigan. You can raise corn, wheat and clover, breed yonr thoroughbrc a cattle, hops ant horses, bat more thai that. Ton can raise two crops cf potatoes, five crops of alfalfa, and crow sort-hum. Ilcrmuda (trans . fru i ts and vepetahleA, wbiob are not on the I'.ot of the northern farmer. Von have the advamace cf a lonir gracing; eeaaon. a mild winter and the best of markets. Arkansas is in t he heart of the rich ilJt-Mlt'l Vaiicj; Its neiehbors are Missouri. Kentucky, Tennessee and Kansis. The coupon below with tou r name written in. will Sri .,c-too onr handsome fii-nace Look.
0. H. PAYNE, Csra-ral Passenger and Ticket Agent, Roam 1554 Missouri Pacific Building, ST. LOUIS. MO. Send me Arkansas book, map, list of lands for sale and Information regarding cost of trip.
Homescekers' Rates Twice Each Month Name Address. King Edward wins a lot of fam Because he likes croquet ; No matter how he plays the gaunt They let him hare his way. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Th other day a Ixmdon food inspw tr-took a sample of margarine from a grocer's shop and, on examin'iij It, found it to be imre butter. Tn Qtrrwlon cnm rf the station nrnitin a u f . . u v-... v. m rooms are provided with couches for passenders, and porters call the travelers tea minutes before the arrival of train".
CEnii?rtsiMe Way
And the straight way. Daily service via Union Pacific from Chicago to Portland. Electric Block Signal Protection the safe road to travel Pullman Drawing Room Sleeping Cars, Pullman Tourist Sleeping Cars, Free Reclining Chair Cars, Coaches and Dining Cars. Let me send you books fully describing Portland, the Northwest and the train service via
FADELESS DYES
ja NYixuji) wr: f -ir ' i i;;rt,v, vn,? yj faWsiMX9& " New York is seldom thoujht f as a manufacturing city, but it bat G0.812 manufacturing establishments. The favoring of kid gloves by fa&hiot has resulted in ad .nein the prices ol kid and lamb skins .V) per cent. Out of nearly 220,000 ailes of railways In the United States only 4,OX) mile art equipped with block signals. F. W. N. U No. 471908 lien trrltlBo; to Adtertlaera p leave ay jou sn the Adr. la tb'.a paper. la csls wsicr settsr Iss s st asTscr fya. Th fr MOfROL DU VC CO.. Qmtner. Mhiu
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