Plymouth Tribune, Volume 8, Number 8, Plymouth, Marshall County, 26 November 1908 — Page 7

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Trziib and Quality tppcd to t!i2 "WrlHnforrr.cJ in every walk of lac axvl aro c?entiul to permanent euccess arI creditable standing. Accoringly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Vigg and Elixir of. Senna h the only remedy of known value, but one; of many reasons why it is the best of personal and family laxatives is the fact that it cleanse?, weetens and relieves tho internal organs cn which it acts without any debilitating after effects and without having to increase the quantity from time to time. It acts pleasantly and naturally ami truly as a laxative, and its component parts are known to and approved by physicians, as it is free from all objectionable substances. To get its beneficial effects always purchase the genuinemanufactured by the California Fig Syrup -Co., only, and fcr sale by all leading druggists.

f. 1 Kemp's Msm Will stop any cough that can he stopped ' by any medicine and cure coughs that cannot be cured by any other medicine. It fs alwavs the best onnnTi Vnn (siniinl J allord to take chances on any oilier kind. KET.IP'S BALSAM cures coughs, colds, bronchitis, grip, asthma and consumption in first stages. It does not contain alcohol, opium, morphine, or any other narcotic, poisonous or harmlul drug. niT nnnn i nnrr ini " Ulm UUUU bllUUIltU PATS NO P4EED TO HSVE AN UGLY NOSE rvtBTSOOT CA GET BIO Of THAT COMMONriACt LOOK SIMPLY BT BAVINS TBC FEATLBCS MA3E 10 BABMONIZC Br. Seesters says asy face caa e Bade ft Isstiia aea attractive. lr. Saunders is a specialist in plasty surprry and dermatology and is considered as capable as any in this or any other country. H a methods fir the correction of UnrtaTe!y Nor. O-ifKtandinr Ears. Large Lips. Sunk, n Cheeks or Weak Chin are the most scientific and successful of any in the world. Dr. Saunders has originated and JeTi'd more successful surgical operations lor beautifying tte lace than any other surgeon known. Iiis results are the most wonderful and ilra!n th-5 humaa mind can imagine. Thousands of , grateful patients attest to this fact. i Dr. Sa under can 11 out and obliterate lines ! and wrinkles in one visit. He clears the face of Pimples. Scars. Moles. Birth Marks, etc, without leaving a trace r.f mark or blemish. Dr. Sa anders has well equipped offices located at US State Slreel, Cbicaga. and is recommended to any one needing ad rice or treatment of Facial Blemishes. You are invited to write for cost urio. All replies io plain, scaled envelope. ! The cleanest. liahlesr. and most comfortable SLICKER ex the same time cheapest in the end because it wears longest 3QP Everywhere Every garment guarenfeed wearproof Catalog free wmiE Posltirelr cured by these Little fills. They also relieve Dis tress frcra Dyspepsia, In digestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect remedy for Dizzlnes. Natnea, DrowElaesa, Bad Takta la tio llonth. Coated Tongue. Pain In the Side. TORPID IlYEIw Taey regulate tio Ecweli Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL LOSE. SMALL PRICE. CARTERS t Gecuina Must Bear 1 FaSirnÜ3 Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. )! IVER mi t t 1 "1 off?r1 with pH for hlrty-nf yr. One jr-a.-tf 1k April I be ran takln 'acaria for eonttlpution. In tb eour.a of w?;a 1 antic tilt Miea began to dipper ami at th end of (Ix eit they tli-l not trouble me at all. Caaeareta hare done wondera forma. I am entirely enrei ani (Ml 1U a new luau." Gorc try dar. Kapoiaou. O. Best For The Bowels Flcu3t. Palatabl. Potent. Tt 04. Pno, JtewSleken. Wicen or Gripe.. Ifle. K. 0e. Neter ol4 in balk. Tb canain tablet tarn pel COL. Guaranteed to ear or yoar money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 503 AliKÜÄL SÄLE, TEH WLLIOH BOXES nii Dr. Mariel's Preparation lYUtMEn The Ftaadara Reaedy. (it Prgi.i) hrkesk "HelU-ffer Weaken." I-BEXCM UULO CO.. O W. 84 ., N. T. City The Financial "Remedy" atnmc"wHliia Nil rrah 'j .ry h.n k dpoitor. J ttrr p or tooklet tree. Jf AaK C I .VIS, 1M Broay, OakUod, tal enn cue AT avctio-h f.r. im iu. win rUll OALC bold V t... hifhw Wid.le-. Dm. 17. VrtU far aart iara. lUinata Trut A hifaatotaut U .lonii, bkia nafüicfetf with Eore Ejcs. ose

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CHRONIC CHEST COMPLAINTS cl the most tetious character have been permanently cured with Piso's Cure. Cough, colds, hoarseness, bronchitis and asthma quickly respond to its healing influence. If you have a cough or cold, if you are hoarse or have diffcculrr with your breathmg, get a bottle o! Piao'a Cure. Immediate benefit follows the first dose. Continued use generally brings complete relief. For nearly half a century Piso's Cure ha been demonstrating that tLe most advanced forms of cougns, colds end chronic chest complaints CAN DC CURED

5 o cress la a Creative Froccaa. No human heins ever yet made a success trying to to somelotly rise, even if that person was a success. Suecers cannot bo eopic! cannot be suecrssfully imitated. It is au original force a crvntive j roccss. Every uian will !io a fail uro just in proportion as lie pets ;iv;iy frm hiniSi-If .-mil tries to lo sonic! khIv elso, ami to express someKxly else instoid of himself. Power c:n;es from within or from nowliero. lio yourself. Listen t the vow-e within. There is room for improvement in every profession, iu every trade, and in every business. The world wants men who can do things in new and better ways. Don't think, because your plan or idea has no 'precedent, or becauseyou are young and inexporinced. that you will not get a hearing. Tho nan who has anything new ar.d valuable to pive tithe world will be listened to and will be followed. The man of strong individuality, who dares to think his own thought and originate L!s own method, and who is not afraid to Lc himself, not a copy of someone pise, quickly pets recognition. Nothing else will attract the attention of your en:ployer or the rest of the world so quickly as originality and unique ways of doing things, especially if they are effective. Orison Swett Marden, In Success Magazine. A ataral l-ult. Willowby had a good shoemaker, TIIram Tool by name. NoUdy knew the trade of making, mending and tapping, resoling and patching shoes better than he. His conversation took on local color from his shop, no matter what the subject might oe. One evening an astronomer, sojourning In Willowby, gave a "talk" at the town hall, and Hiram went to hear him. "What did you make of all he said about the cause o wet weather, when heM spoken so light of the moon having all to do with it?" somebody asked Iiiram the next day. Mr. Tool held up the boot he was mending and squinted at the sole of It "His talk needed waxing," said the shoem iker, dryly, when his Inspection of the boot was finished. 'T.ut what I made out of it was that he considered the wet weather usu'lly comes when the clouds are so old and rotten they won't hold the patches." AVbere It Fall. "Well, what do you think of indoor basehall ?" "It will do well enough as a rastime, but it isn't a garm. It'll never develop any national heroes." j There Is more Catarrh In this section of the rout,trj than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was sypjoed to be Incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced It a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by coastantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced It incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio, Is the only conotitutional cure on the market. It Is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teappoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to ure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address: F. J. CIIEXKY & CO., Toledo, O. S-!rt by Pnijrulst. 7.1e. Take Hall's Family rills for constipation Giving Them Their Choice. "Maria, where do you and the girls want to pend the winter?" "We have been thinking we should like

to go to the lierrnudas, John." "Well, you can have your choice between the Bermudas and the farm out on the Fox river; but I may as well tell you that there won't be any money to pay for a trip to the Bermudas." Chicago Tribune. "W a y i 1 e ('ommnnlng. Adam Zawfox What'd you do if you had a million plunks? Job, Sturky Th' fust thing I'd do would1 be to prescribe a Turkish bath f'r you. an' if you didn't take it, by jings, I'd kill ye! , PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 PAYS PAZO OINTMENT Is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching. Itlind. Bleeding or Protruding l'Lcs la 0 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. TT Plnc tor That. A floorwalker in a department store faw a man walking to him, who said: "My wife .bought these underclothes here yesterday. Where can I change ! them?" Hie fioorwalkpr Just said: "You will have to go home to do that, Eir." Judge's Library. SMrel on Ulm. X!r. Tytc-rhist Talk about women having any capacity for dealing with financial questions! Have yoü any idea, for instance, how much raor.ey is in circu tat ion in this country? Mrs. Tyte-I'hist I presume it's all In circulation except what you happen to ! gtl hold of. If you ue ball bine, get Red Cross Pa!l ft: ue, the best ball blue. Larre 2oz. packi t.'e, 3 rents. Iloprle-aaly Oat of Style. Teter," said Mrs. Pneuritch, "I want ; you to hare that roof taken off our garage I an.l one of a different kind put on." "What for?" demanded Mr. Pneuritch. "What's the matter with itV "I heard an architect say the other day that it's a hip roof. Everybody knows that hips are out of style now." Five women were chosen as county treasurers in Idaho at rhe recent election end seventeen women as county supcrinUndents of schools. MAKING OVER HUMAN FACES As a New Art Remodeling the Human Nose. A number of years njro a physician of VIr.na bit upon the ftchi-m of ustnp h paraff.ne Injection under the tkin for filling up i hollow nose. The Idea was greeted wltn joy by the medical profession, as such a MiNstanco had len sorely needed. However It was noon found that paraftine wa not th ripht thin.';. It was too hard, and had a tendeney to form into a lump and cause Irritation to the Hurronndinj; tissues. The idt-a was rlht but the suustunre was wrong, so said the physicians. It remained for American Inpenulty and t'hleapo enterprise to develop the German idea. Ir. II. J. Saunders, a specialist In the treatment of Irregular features, has solved the difficulty. The doctor Is a practical clicmUt and of a very sclenfinc turn of mind. He sv the necessity for some preparation of this sort and that it must be a MiiUstanre that would not readily alsorb"l. and yet would be non-lrritatln. The result of his study and investigation Is what he rails a "protoplasmic material." This h makes by using: eyeral of the heavy and bland oils In such proportion as to give them the desired properties. This material readily keeps Its place In the tissues, and by the stimulating and healthful action of the oils Is soon entirely encapsulated by a sheath of fibrous tissue. The doctor In an address before a medica: society In Chicago not long ago, gave his experience with some forty cases where he had used this protoplasmic Injection. All of these had been eminently mtccessful. In these rases frowns and wrinkles had been completely eradicated, the skin restored to Its former smoothness, sunken cheeks had been filled out to harmonize with the rest of the face.

A cock is a decided nuisance n the flock after the breeding season is over. Teed the soil and it will feed you. Starve the soil and it will starve you. To get the best flavored milk the cow should be fed nothing until after milking. The man who relies on luck for the main part of his crop will have an easy time harvesting. It may be wise to encourage the sheep to eat freely to add a little grain in the form of oats. The incubator never "flies the coop" and never changes its mind. It is on the job all the time. Not so the cranky hen. x We must not lose sight of the fact that a cow must earn her board for the entire year before she can begin to show profit. The horse that is "all legs" is not the one you want. Try to get those that are well set, neither too long legs nor too long bodies. It is easy to hang up your harness if you once get into the habit of it. How many farmers do you know that drop them on the floor? Prayer may bring rain, but the lively cultivator and the persistent hoe will make a dust mulch that will keep the moisture in the ground. More than 1,000 acres of watermelons were planted last spring between rcnsacola and River Junction, Fla., a distance of only a few miles. The fowl that begins to molt during August or September has a much better chance to survive the winter than the one that begins in the late fall. Wood ashes may In? applied at the rate of L'o to bushels to the acre. One ton of good wood ashes will contain about Y10 pounds of phosphoric acid. All dairy products are intended for human food and it is only justice to our fellow beings that we do our part to insure a clean and wholesome article cf diet. i Use well-rotted manure on the garden plot, If you have not done so lefore, working it well into the surface ( r 1 inches of the soil. Do not delay this matter any logger. In feeding ensilage it is essential that the silos be far enough from the stable to eliminate al. danger of the milk absorbing the odor of the ensilage when ic is thrown out of the silo. It has been found that fowls with deep, angular breast bores have to be fed longer to make' thorn look well, and they consume considerably nioro feed than those having uniform breast bones. To build and maintain a dairy farm would seem to tw? an easy task, jet there Is niooe in the man than the surroundings. There are but a few firstclass dairymen and they have dairies corresponding. A "good front" counts in business and a well-dressed, clean and prosperous-appearing fanner can get a better bargain than the man who looks hko l tramp and shows he has no acquaintance with the bathtub. Some ieor!e who refuse to pay $2 a sitting for fertile eggs from pure-blood-h stock, and take their chances of jetting them at the grvery store, lometimes get t eggs that won't hatch. The breeder know why. A Kansas man recently sold forfy head of Hereford yearling heifers at $40.70. They yielded a net profit of ?20 per head. They were bought as weanlings, roughed until last July, then fed for about ten months on alfalfa and corn, V . What we need In producing good dairy products i economy, vigilance and common sense whether the product Pi.3 being sold to the city trade, made Into butter on Ahe farm, sohl to the creamery, condensary or the cheese factory. If the dropimips of the fowls are not In normal condition jrive a teaspoonful of soda water (bicarbonate) to each afflicted bird. In making the water use three heaping teaspoonfuls of soda to a pint of water. Follow with a 1-srain quinine pill each night for three nights In succession. In keeping track of the famiiy xpenses It is well to have all Itcns of merchandise charged, with payments monthly or quarterly, or pay ca:;h for all Items as soon as ordered. Where a mixed system of payment 4s followed there are likely to be confusion and more or less misunderstanding as between patron and merchant. Wn!le the clearing up of the patches jf small trees and brush along the roadsides and fence; rows and In the pastures may tend to improve the landscape from the aesthetic point of view. It moans the destruction of just so many places of shelter for.the bird llf of the locality, which is an even more Important consideration than the Improving of the landscape. The graie fruit, which Is of the color f a lemon and of the shape of an orange, though considerably larger, ;:ets its name from the fact that the fruit as borne on the trees Is clustered much as are graes on their stem. This fruit Is not at Its best until thfc'Ftvond yar after picking, when It is really too rlie for Khipmenr, which jceounts for the fact that relatively so little of it Is shipped to eastern markets and for the further fact that so little of that which is shipped Is in prime con.i'tlon. being picked from the trees before it is really fit. TralnltiK the Colt. No man Is fit to handle colts or norses unless he has perfect control of his temper. Any one can do much more with coaxing than with harsh treatment, for when an animal becomes

afraid of its trainer it losi-s confidence and will n't improve in that man's hands. This applies to aged horses as well as colts. For a stimulant to give a horse 11 (Jeers formerly used cherry wine, whisky, brandy. ot.. but discarded all of these years 'ago. because t'.ie after effect is so bad. It has the same effect on a horse as on a man. first stimulating, then depressing. When any stimulation is necessary, use a homeopathic preparation a few drops on the tongue and the effect is not only immediate but permanent, and is beneficial with no bad effect afterward. This has. won many a long and hard race. Field and Farm.

To Stop Ciullyina;. Gullying Is a method of land washing that will ruin land quicker than any other form. Owners of hilly or very rolling land must be continually on the lookout for little gullies and take means to prevent their enlargement. In dealing with this subject the Illinois station says the common practice is to scatter straw In the draws or hulld dams across them at frequent intervals. A coarser material used with the straw gives better results. A better plan Is to keep the draws in sod even when the rest of the fields are cultivated. Almost any grass that forms a tough sod will answer th purpose, timothy and redtop being uXitc satisfactory. Sweet Corn Seed. It is claimed by seedsmen that the ears of sweet corn, the kernels of which are a deep amber color and more or less transparent, are much sweeter than those in which the kernels are opaque and white. The kernels having a fine wrinkle are supposed to be sweeter than those with a coarse wrinkle. The Maryland station made a test of these methods of selection and It was found that practically the same sugar content was contained in kernels of different colors, but there appeared a relation between the wrinkle of the kernel and the sugar, content. The lowest percentage of sugar In fine wrinkled kernels was above the average icrirntago In the coarse wrinkled and the highest percentage of sugar In the individual ears having a coarse wrinkle was much less than the average in the fine vrinkled ones. Green Foraue for Iloen. A bulletin has .been issued from the Missouri Experiment Station by Dean II. J. Waters, giving the results of some experiments to determine the value of different forage crops for hogs. Thirty-six pigs weighing about fifty pounds each were fed m lots on different forage crops In connection with corn until they were ready for market, accurate account being kept of the cost of gratis made. In cheapness of grains the feeds used ranked as follows: Corn and skim milk, cheapest; corn and alfalfa, second; corn and red clover, third; corn and bluegrass, fourth ; corn and rape, fth; corn and shipstuff, sixth. A saving of about 73 cents a hundred In the cost gain was effected by using green clover instead of fresh bluegrass. A saving of $1 a hundred was effected by using alfalfa instead of bluegress. When it Is realized that alfalfa comes on early and when properly clipped stays green all summer and tmtil the very hard freezes of early winter, its Importance as a hog pasture is apparent Clover yields more forage per acr than bluegrass, and as shown by these exierliiients, has a much higher foedini value. It is of the utmost importance therefore, to provide this sort of pas; ture for hogs rather than to requlri them to run on a bluegrass or a timothy pasture, or even far worse thai this, to confine them In a dry lot Is the summer time. This bulk-tin ree ommends a succession of crop ?or prof itable hog pasture. Getting rrotlt from Poultry. Poultry men estimate that it costs 1 cent apiece to produce an egg. Th estimate is based on the fact that tlu hen lays 1-0 eggs in the year. It other words, where the fowls are confined to runs, and the feed must be purchased. It costs 10 cents per month or $1.10 per year, to maintain a hen If the hen is an Indifferent layer, and gives but sixty eggs In a year, hi eggs cost the poultrymau II cents eacli It is argued by some farmers thai their hens cost them practically nothing, as they have free range and cue gather all the food they need. There Is some truth in that, and there also Is some truth in the fact that farmers' flocks seldom yield a profit at least compared with stock in the hands of a regular poultrymau. There are almost as many eggs lost on the average farm as are gathered. Hens hide their nests, and what eggs are not stolen by animals are subsequently found by tho farmer, generally after having become stale or bad. It h a mistake to ajllow laying sto;k the freedom of the farm. Large nn and comfortable houses and proper eggproducing food would soon be a revelation to the farmer. An experiment conducted by the Crrrnell Experiment Station in 1902 showed that the averago cost of feed per dozen eggs was 0.2 cents, or abont three-quarters of a cent per egg. The cost per hen for the year was OD.'i cents. At that time wheat was sold at $1.-15 per 100 pounds, while at present it is $2; bran sold at $1.35 per 100 pounds, and now Is $l.SO; and meat scraps cost $2.1." per 10) pounds, and now we pay $2.40. So at the presert Increased price of feed the cost of feeding the hen Is easily 20 cents per year more than it was In 1902. To make poultry profitable on the farm It Is necessary to breed for better laying. This is done by Installing trap nests In the henhouses, and each year picking out the best layers and breeding only from such. The farmer must grade up his stock ; he must get rid of the mongrel birds; he must drive out the drones, and must encourage tho workers. Tbc farm must produce octter poultry and more of it. There are advantages on the farm for poultry raising that the poultryman docs not have. n.:d if the hit. "er. in many ways handicapjed. can make poultry keeping a successful business, the farmer should at least make the w;-rk a valuable adjunct to his income. Properly managed poultry can Ik made the most profitable crop on the farm Investment, expense and labor considered.

LO, THE POOR INDIAN. Once Mne Ited Man Get the Ilettet oC Foolish I'alefaee. They were Indians. Ileal Indians. And they were garbed in the brilliant regalia cf the plains. Ited and yellow blankets, eagle feathers, trinkets of pold and silver and bright metals, fringed buckskin leggins all. In fact, that make the pictures given away with a pound of tea attractive decorations for the "den." were to be found on these specimens of the fast-dying native Americans, says the Washington Star. And. of course, they attracted great attention. There were probably fifteen or twenty of them, silent and severe, standing on the portico of the Interior Department So picturesque was the;: outfit that even the blase department clerks, who see Iudiaus every day or so, were drawn from their arduous duties to watch them. A fringe of curious men and women were gathered around the group and their comments, were extremely personal and In no low tones. "Dcn't he look too sweet for any use?" queried a $C0 stenographer in a silk waist, broadcloth skirt and patent leather boots to a $4S0 "laborer" equally well togged. "There is something so noble In his face," the other replied. The object of their attentions was standing about four feet away, his face turned half away, and his countenance betraying that nearness to absolutely nothing that only the Indians can show. lie was picturesque, He was one of the few who wore no hat. His hair was braided and hung over his shoulders and silver bands were about his forearms. He wore a soft white shirt of civilization, clasped above the elbo)s with red silk elastic sleeve holders. Beyond these two trifles, however, he was all Indian, from the eagle feather that hung from the scalp lock to his beaded moccasins. He looked younger than the others of his company and attracted the most attention. People gathered near him, surveyed him from Dead to foot and made audible comments on his appearance and cracked some of those weak jokes about Man - Afraid - of - Hls-Mothcr-in-Law, etc., that so many well-meaning citizens think they are called upon to rejteat when an Indian happens to be 3 round. This Indian.' must have heard these things. He was never more than three r four feet away from the speakers, ind they did not pretend to lower their voices, relying on his lack of knowledge of English. The ubiquitous amateur photographer was there witty his camera. This time the young man be

hind the bulb was the rankest sort of J nn amateur. The crowd watched his efforts to snapshot the Indian with considerable interest. After making one or two Ineffectual attempts to get the right focus, the young man exclaimed impatiently against his luck. "This is a new lens and a new box, and I don't know the proper combination," he said to a friend standing near. Then Mr. Indian turned his head and looked toward the camera. Wlth a smile that illumined his whole face, he bowed courteously to the photographer, and In the purest and most cultivated English said: "If I might be pardoned for making a suggestion, I am somewhat familiar with that make of instrument. Use the 04 slop, and with half a second exposure you ought to get a good negative, in tbis light. Oh, not at all, not at all." Aud the smile wore off his features ns the Indian resumed his attitude of stolid indifference. Legal Information The Kentucky court of opieals in Illinois Cent. II. Co. v. Buchanan, 103 Southwestern Reporter, 272, holds that S railroad company which reserves' to Itself the right to appoint the directors f a hospital, otherwise maintained as in Independent organization for the eneflt of its employes. Is liable to Its mployes for. unskillful and improper .Teatmcnt received In the hospital. The petitioner in Re Wehrli. 1ÖT Fedrral Reporter, 9T.S, filed a declaration 5f Intention to become a citlzep In ISUS. but failed to complete ttia naturallz:Tlion proceedings before congress, in 1900, passed an act providing thai; an ilicn may file n petition to be naturalized not less than two nor more than seven years after declaration of intention. Itywas claimed that his right was barred, but the United States district 'court held that the statute, being one of limitation, should not be given u retrospective effect, and the act would not bar the right until seven years after Its passage. The right of a State to Impose a license tax on the business of selling intoxicating liquors within the State by traveling salesmen, who solicit ordere for wholesale houses In their State, is upheld by the United States supreme -ourr. In Dalamater v. South Dakota, 27 Supreme Court Ileporter, 447. The regulation by a State of the business carried on within Its borders to solicit proposals to sell Intoxicating liquors, even though such liquors are sttuated in other States, cannot be held to be repugnant to the commerce clause of the Constitution because directly or Indirectly burdening the right to sell In the State a right which by virtue of the Wilson Act does dot exist. A case forcibly Illustrating the legislative department's reluctance to remedy defects in the law disclosed by Judicial decision Is that of Tepple t. Tomplins, 79 Northeastern Reporter, C2. In this case the court of appeals of New York reaffirms the doctrine of McCord v. Teople, 4G New York, 470. that a prosecution for larceny by false pretenses cannot be sustained where the person parting with his property or money does so for any legal purposes. The court admits that the weight of authority is to the contrary, but feels bound to follow the doctrine as settled by the earlier decision, the duty of making a change resting with the Legislature, and says that to change the existing rule would, In effect, be enacting an expost facto law. 7 ; Th Wedding. Dny. "So she was led to the altar at last?" remarked the girl in blue. "Led!" repeated the bride's clearest friend "led! I fancy you didn't see her. She didn't have to be led. When she started down the aisle you couldn't have driven her off with a regiment of cavalry!" Tit-Bits. When there has been a death In a family, none of the members act quite serious enough to please the neighbor.

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Don' IIa Afra lit of Originality. Do not be afraid of being original, even eccentric. Ho nn independent, selfreliant, new man. not just one more Individual in the world. Do not be a copy of your grandfather, of ycur father, or of your neighbor. That is as foolish as for a violet to try to be like a rose, or fcr a daisy to ape a sunllower. Nature has given each a peculiar equipment for its purpose. Every man is bora to do a certain work In an original way. If he tries to copy some other man. or to do some other man's work, he will be au abortion, a misfit, a failure. Do not imitate even your heroes. Scores of young clergymen attempted to make their reputations by imitating Beecher. They copied his voice and conversation, and imitated his gestures and his habits, but they fell as far short of the great man's power as the ehromo falls short of the masterpiece. Where are those b sad reds of imitators now? Not one of them has ever made any stir in the world. Orison Swett Marden in Success Magazine.

BED-BOUND FOB MONTHS. Hope Abandoned After Physician Continuation. Mrs. Knos Shearer, Yew and Washington Sts., Centralia, Wash., says: "For years I was weak and run down, could not sleep, my limbs swelled and the secretions were troublesome ; pains were Intense. I was fast in bed for four months. Three doctors said there was no cure for me and I was given up to die. Being urged, I used Doan's Kidney nils. Soon I was better and In a few weeks was about the house, well and strong again." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Feste rMllburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. Conflicting Evidence. A learned judge was explaining the Intricacies of evidence to a young friend, says the Washington Star, and gave the following story In regard to conflicting evidence. Usually, he said, one statement is far more probable than the other, so that we can decide easily which to bel l ve. It is like the boy and the house-hunter. The house-hunter, getting off a train at a suburban station, paid to a boy: "My lad, I am looking for Mr. Smithson's new block of semi-detached houses. How far are they from here?" "About twenty minutes walk,'' the boy replied. "Twenty minutes!" exclaimed the house-hunter. "Xonsense I The advertisement says five.',' "Well," said the boy, "you can believe mje or you ran believe the advertisement, but I ain't tryin' to make a sale." TO CURE A COLD IX ONE DAY Take LAXATIVE BKOMO Quinine Tablets Driucjjlsts refund money If it falls to cure. D. w. GROVE'S signature Uoneach box. 23c. The llorirmrn. A veterinary surgeon pronounced a hunter to be afflicted with an incurable disease. ."What had I better do?" queried the owner to his groom. "Well, sir," was the reply, "conscientiously speaking. I should part with him to another gentleman." TitBits. Tba Inflaenc of Environment. j Club Man What do you think is the matter with me. doc? Thyslclan (who runs an automobile) I should say that your carbureter is getting too rich a mixture. Harvard Lampoon. Yeljow Clothe Are Unsishtljr. Keep them white with Red Cross Bail Blue. AU grocers sell large '2o. package, 6 cents. Lightning Photographs it Victim. Walter M. Grubbs, editor of the Deratur (Ala.) News, has in his posseslion a curiosity in the form of a winiow pane. A few weeks ago lightning itruck the home of S. W. Goree and killed him instantly. His wife was itunned. Strangely' enough the fatal itroke of lightning photographed the scene on the glass of the front door. In the picture Mr. Goree is seen smoking a pipe, as if he were watching the rloud. Mrs. Goree's mouth is slightly open as if. in the act of speaking. Her teeth show plainly in the picture. Bushes In the yard, the front fence and two telephone poles are plainly seen In the picture, as are also a house and i Pkirt of woods fully a quarter of a mile away. Strange to say, the flash of lightning which killed Mr. Goree and made the picture is itself photographed on the glas. E3w to

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Ask about the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition at Seattle, Wash., 1909 Sid trip, during season, to Yellowstone Park, at low ratt on all through ticktts. Write for Booklet E. L. Lomax, General Passenger Agent, Omaha, Neb.

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For Six 3Ionth Baby Wa Expected o Die with Eczema ow Well Doctor Sold to Ue Cut leu ra. "Six months after birth my little girl broke out with eczema and I had two doctors in attendance. There was not a particle of skin left on her body, the ' blood oozed out just anywhere, and we had to wrap her in silk and carry her on a pillow for ten weeks. She was the most terrible sight I ever saw, and for six months I looked for her to die. I used evtTy known remedy to alleviate her suffering, for It was terrible to u itness. Dr. C gave her up. Dr. B recommended the Cuticura Remedies. She will soon be three years old and has never had a sign of the dread trouble since. We used about eight cakes of Cuticura Soap nd three boxes of Cuticura Ointment. James J. Smith, Durmid, Va Oct. 14 and 22. 1900. DOWN MISSOURI WAY. Canada' It en pect for Law and Order . the Subject for Favorable Comment. Those who have visited Canada are . always Impressed with the strict ob-1 servance that Is given to the laws of j the country, and the order that Is , ; preserved everywhere. The editor of tho Gazette of Fulton, Nev., recently paid a visit to western Canada, lie was so impressed with the conditions that he saw everywhere that on his return home he was Inspired to write as follows: j "Reverence and respect for law Is a dominant characteristic of the Canadian ieople. Wherever one goes In ; Canada, whether east or west, the law , Is supreme. The law is obeyed because it is law, seemingly, and not because j violation carries a penalty. Canada enforces the law ind makes every law ! effective. No country is more free j than Canada. In name Canada is a : dependency of the British crown. In fact, It is almost a ,thlrd republic. All its taxes are voted,' collected and exI ponded by the Dominion and the proj vinces. The nominal head of the government Is the governor general, anpointed by the English crown. Practically his only authority is to veto '. the nets cf parliament, which h scaree- ' ly ever exercises. Canada gives nothing i to the support of the English government or the English king. She gives ' England the advantage In trade regu- ! lations and tariff laws, and in return receives the protection of the British army and navy. Canada enjoys the protection without sharing in the expense. The sale of liquor Is strictly regulated. None but hotel keepers may obtain license to vend the stuff, and before a license can be secured an applicant.' must prove good charactci and provide 20 rooms in his tavern for the accommodation of guests. The bar f rooms close at 7 o'clock Saturday evening and remain closed until Monday morning. The schools and churches In western Canada excite admiration. Though new, western Canada Is not Godless. The finest buildings in every town are the churches. Next come the school houses." Twining" to the wheat lloldi of wertern Canada, the editor, of tlie Laurel (Neb.) Advocate of Sept. 17; says: "I have often thought that the reason that the characters of Charles Dickens are so Impressed ujon the minds of his readers , Is because he dwells upon thein so long and describes them so minutely that by the time one has waded through " his long drawn -''out stories they are so burned Into his brain that he can never forget them. It tva-s this way with the Canadian wheat fields. Had we only seen a few the memory of them might have worn away in time, but a long drawn out experience such as we had Is sure to leave an Ineffaceable Impression. Never while we live shall we forget j the Canadian wheat fields. They crll I it the granary of the British Empirs and we don't blame em. Nobody who has seen their wheat fields can wonder at their enthusiasm." It is worth while to record that these fields have now been harvested, and in many cases yields as high as forty and fifty bushels per acre have been marketed, while the general average has been away above twenty bushels per acre.. Oats and barlev j have also done well, and the profits, ! the prices of grains being high, have paid the entire cost of the farms of many a farmer. There is now 1X) acres of land given away, in addition to the 1G0 acres that the homesteader may purchase at $3.00 an acre. . Particulars of this as well as the lowest railway 'rates will be given by the Canadian government agent. Mrs. Wlnslow'tf Soothing Sjrap for Children teething; softens tlie gums, reduces inuaairaation. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 tits a bottle. Excursion Rates to Chicago via Nickel Plate Road. November 29th to December 4th Inclusive, account Fat Stock Show. Ask the Agent. (50) The German Lraperor will drink no sthcr coffee than that grown in Mexico. (-;nrp farm u'ar Ypsilantl, Mich. Fair buildings, good nandr loaui soil. Kood fonos and neighborhood, nlar trolley line, 90 acros under cultivation, balance pasture with trou; strr:im. at $45 p-r acre to close estate. T. C Wi.sUTman, II. A, Continental, Ohio.

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This woman says she was saved from an operation by Lydia Ii Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Lena V. Henry, of NorrLstown, Gil, writes to Mrs. l'mkliam : ' I suffered untold misery from female troubles. My doctor 6aid an opera- , tion was the only chance I had, and I dreaded it almost as much as death. 44 One day I read bow other women had been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I decided to try iL Before I had taken the firs bottle I was better, and now I am entirely cured, 44 Every woman suffering with any female trouble should take Lydia & Pinkiiim's Vegetable Compound." FACTS FOR SICK WOMFH. For tjiirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been tha standard remedy for female ill& and has positively cured thousands of women w ho have been troubled with displacedients, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities; periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigest ion, dizziness or nerv ous prostration. Why don't you try it? Mrs. Pinkham invites ' all sick WGmen to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. WESTERN CANADA Mere raliflS'd I Big Crops MVtifiM In 1908 Another 60,000 Söders from the LuIlcJ Si ales 9 NEW DISTRICTS OPENED FOR SETTLEMENT 320 Acres .1 Laii I EACH SETTLES 160 Era aesteaa 160 al $3.-00 Per Acre. i "A vast, rich com n try and m contimlej. preperva pcopU. ' ' Extract irwn compound, rnce of a National Editor, whose visit to Wester Canada in AurtiU 18. an inspiration. Many hare paid the entire ont of their lartrr and had a balance of trom $10 00 to $2J.O0 per acra as a result ri ne c-op. Spring Wheat. Winter Wheat. Oats. Harle, flax and Peas arc the principal crre, while tba i!d irras'ea brina" tj perfection the brt Cattla that hareevtr been ld on the Chicago market. Spl. nd id C.imate. Schoo! and Church's in all localities, railways tovuh mmt of the tt;.l districts, and prices for p'-oduce are always rood. Lands, may al-o be purchased from Kaiiw.tr an4 Land Companies. For pamphlets, maps and information regarding low railroad rates a?i y Xm YY. D. Scott. Superintendent of IccmirTatkra. Ottawa, Canada, or YV. H. Rogers, A Floor Traction-Terminal Building, Indianapolis, Ind.. and II. M. William. Hoom ao. Law Bui'dinj Toledo, Ohio, Anthorized Government Agents. I'loaM say her joo taw thia advertisement. TOILET AHTISEPT13 Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body cntisepticaliy clean and free from us healthy germ-life and disagreeeMe odors which water, soap and tooth preparation clone cannot do. a germicidal, disin fecting tJvi deodorizing toilet requisite of exceptional excellence and economy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, SO cents, or by mail postpaid. Urge Trial Sappls WITH "HtSLTH AN O HCAUTY" BOOK SC NT PRtt THE PAXTON TOiLET CO., Brj.ca. Mass. Get yoar Letter Paper and Envelopes printed t this office, im tu Vf can give yon the EAGLE LINEN PAPER and ENVELOPES It It fine and will tult you. Try -. W. N. U. No. 431908 Üben writing; to Advertlaera pie tay un www tbe Ads, la tbla paper.

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