Plymouth Tribune, Volume 8, Number 21, Plymouth, Marshall County, 25 February 1909 — Page 7
' V '"Pl '"t Vi ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. ANcgetablePrcparationftrAssimilatin iteFarfantf Raubling Üic Sioncchs andßovicls cf Promotes Ditionflic M ncss and Rest.Contams mtfii OpiimiIorphinc iwrMiacraL Not Narcotic. Rimpkia Seed" livvetmatWraSeei' htJirrfeeatTarT. aasa w m Apcrfect Remedy for ConsRpation , Sour Stomach.Dlaritcn "Ycrms,ConvulsionsJcTrishncss andLOSS OF SEEER FacSrilc Si$umre cf e3 r a.?C. NEW YOKK. Eoanteed under the Footfi Exact Copy of Wrapper, TFT FASHION HINTS This deslzn xronld be very good for nnc cf tle roujh weaves of silk something with, body enough for a street suit. The yoke and sWvea may be of net or cfciffon. preferably In a shade to match tte silk. The arnall flower-tat Is tr be one of the early favorites this spring. $33.00 Personally Conducted Exen ralona. Colonists one-way tickets, Ct'cagoto the Pacific const via the thienso, Lnion Pacißc and North western Line, ere on sale daily during March and April at the rate of $33.00. Correspond ingly low rates from all points. Double: berth In tourist sleeping car only $7.00, through without change to San Franclwj, Los Angeles and Portland. No extra charge on our personally con ducted tours. Write for itinerary and full particulars to S. A. Hutchison, Manager Tourist Departmcat, 212 Clark street, Chicago, 111. Inside Information. Did you notice that handsome lady "rho Just went out?" queried the bookseller. "Yes." replied the man in front of the counter. "What about her?" "She has a very Interesting history,' Raid the literary salesman. How do you know?" asked the other. -Because I sold it to her a few minutes before you came in," replied the other, as he Indulged in an open-faced grin. Every Woman Will lie latereated. There has recently been discovered an aromatic, pleasant herb cure for woman's Ills, called Mother Gray' AISTKAMA.N-MOAF. It is the only certain regulator. Cures female weaknesses and Backache, Kidney, Bladder and Urinary troubles. At all Druggists or bv mail SO cts. Sample FRKK. Address. The Mother Pray Co.. LeKoy. N. Y. Appreciative. A Scottish parson, still on the under 6ide of 40, was driving home from an outlying hamlet when he overtook a young woman. lie recogr'zed her as the maid of all work at a iarm which he would pass, so he pulled up and offered her a lift. Mary gladly accepted bis offer and then chatted pleasantly all the way to the farm gate. "Thank you, sir," she said as she gui flown. "Don't mention It, Mary. Don't mention it." he told her, politely. MXo. I won't," Mary obligingly aafured him. ; No harmful drujs in GarfieK Tea. Nature's laxative it is composer wholly of cUan. sweet, health-giving Herbs! For constipation, liver and kidne troubles. Wanted a Rent. Wife Would it please you, dear. If I learned another language? Husband Yes, it would delight me Infinitely. Wife Well, which one shall I studyl Husband The sla language. i'mart Set. Only One "BROMO QUIMNE" fhat ts LAXATIVE BROMO QUINTXS. Lool for the signature of E. W. GROVE. Used tht World oc to Curs a Cold In Ops Day. llZc Explanatory. The great ocean liner was limping into port. Yoa see. lamely explained the captain, "the injury is in the ship's forefoot. It got on the wrong tack." Scowling at the reporters who had come on board frm the tug, he nervously paced the bridge, after the manner of all great captains. Chicago Tribune. Clear, white clothes are a sign that the housekeeper uses Red Cross Ball Blue. Largs 2ox. package R cents. Facial Concavity. "Who is that dish-faced man?" "He's the father of eleven children. Xoifd be dish-faced, too, if you had jour lost to the grindstone u long as ht has."
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For Infant3 and Children. The Kind You Have Always ikugfc!,. Bears the Signature of For Over Thirty Years TUT CI TT Od CONFaHV. RCW TONS CITY. EE3 t An Obedient Tlser. "How entire," remarks the London Globe, "is the confidence of the native East Indian In the government may be gathered from the following anecdote, which conies from Lahore: "A tiger had escaped from the zoological gardens, and its keeper, hoping to lure It back, followed it. When all other Inducements had failed, he lifted up his voice and solemnly adjured it in the name of the British government, to which it belonged, to come back to its cage. The tiger. It 13 needless to add, obeyed at once." MUST BELIEVE IT. Every Reader Will Concede the Truth of This Statement. One who suffers with backache or any form of kidney trouble wants a lasting cure, not merely a temporary benefit. Profit by the example of Rev. J. M. Suffield, of 2179 S." Sth St., Lincoln,7 Nebr., who confirms a report of his cure after several years. "I told in a statement made for publication in 1900 how Doan's Kidney Pills had relieved me after other remedies had failed," said Rev. Suffield. "I have no hesitation in confirming that statement now. I have used Doan's Kidney Pills at various times and they have never failed me." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-ililbura Co.. Buffalo. N. Y. SpanRh'a Spoken. Dr. A. W. Parsons, the okh-st American physician, in point of practice, in the City of Mexico, tells a good story of his experience in that country. As a young man he had been knocking about Western mining camps in the days when gun plays were common. He had just landed at oneoi' the gulf ports of Mexico, and was eating 11 o'clock breakf.ist at the only hotel in town. , He was seated at the table with several other Americans, all rough railroad construction men. Their knowledge of Spanish was rather limited, and their pronunciation atrocious. At the meal one of the men said to the waiter angrily: "Dame la mantequilla" (Give me the butter). In good Castilian it would st und thus: "Da me la man-te-keel-ya," with broad a's and long e's. Pronounced by the American it sounded, "Damme la man-te-kill-ye." The young medico promptly stiffened his legs and slid under the table. His astonished table mates looked at each other and then peered beneath the board to see what ailed him. "Is the trouble over?" he asked one of them. "Trouble? What trouble?" "Why, whatever it was." "You must be daft. There Is no trouble, and there ha3 been none." Keassured, the doctor crawled out rather sheepishly. "The drinks are on mo," he said. "I understood the man J licxt to me to say to that waiter, "I n ye, I'm go'n' t' kill yel' and I didn't intend to stop any stray bullets." PRIZE FOOD. Pnl.ifahlf, Kcononilral, ZVonrlahlnsr. A Xeb. woman has outlined the prire food in a few words, and that from personal experience, She writes: "After our long experience with Grape-Nuts, I cannot say enough in Its favor. We have used this food almost : continually for seven years. "We sometimes tried other advertised breakfast foods, but .we invariably returned to Grape-Nuts as the most palatable, economical ana nourishing of all. "When I quit tea and coffee and began to use Postum and Grape-Nuts, I was a nervous wreck. I was so irritable I could not sleep nights, had no interest in life. "After using Grape-Nuts a short time I began to Improve and all these ailments have disapieared and now I am a well woman. My two children have been almost raised on Grape-Nuts, which they eat three times a day. "They are pictures of health and have never had the least symptom of stomach trouble.even through the most; severe siege of whooping cough, they could retein Grape-Nuts when all else failed. "Grape-Nuts food has saved doctor bills, and has been, therefore, a most economical food for us." Name given by Postum Co., Hattle Creek, Mich. Read 'The Road to Wellvllle," In pkgs. "There's a Heason." Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true and full of human interest.
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The nieaciiing; of Floor. The bleaching of Hour by the us? of litn-us acid is now being investigated y Dr. Wiley, chief of the chemical livision of the Federal Agricultural Department, and there is every reason :o believe that his finding will be in .('()ril:imc with truth and justice. The nillers who have been in the habit )f bleaching inferior grades of flour ire particularly excited, but the housevife who has learned that the ahsorpive and expansive powers of the gluten re decreased, the bread makes a smaller loaf after Itoing bleached and that ho presence of nitrous acid in the Hour iot only gives the bread a decided odor ind taste, but makes it harmful physioogieally, will uphold the investigation. This bleaching process came in the 3rst place, it i stated, because houseinpers demanded a dead white in )l;ic of a creamy white Hour and loaf. N'ow it has been proved that it takes he life from the Hour, and that the n!y one who reaps any benefit from he process is the merry miller. State Drainage Work. 'Ilie University of Wisconsin department of soils has recently been asslstng In the organization of drainage dis:ricts at a number of points in the State, including Itlack Creek and Shioc:on, west of Green P.ay in Outagamie bounty, where from 3.000 to 3.Ö0O it-res can be drained by the stralghtenng and deepening of lilack Creek. This ivill also give the City of Seymour an utlet for sewage purposes, if the city leems it advisable to enter the district. I'rofessor A. It. Whitson, In charge of :he plan, in reviewing the work. ioints Jut the fact that this !nd is largely alluvial soil, and thus will bo much aiore fertile than the average marsh Joil. If drained, it will Is adapted to xrn and hay, esrn-clally to alsike .and timothy, and the better portions will raiso grain. Another district in which much Interest Is shown is in Southeastern Wiscon sin along the Koshkonong River, where Thousands of acres are uudrained be cause of the sluggishness of Koshkoior. Creek. This will probably lnchuh :he drainage of Goose Lake and Mud Creek, and the reclamation of from 1.000 to G.000 acres. The Rattlesnake llstrlct Is also in process of organhsa lion, to drain an additional 3,Wa or 1,000 ncres by a main canal entering the Koshkonong at the point where rhe other canal logins. Rctween Edgi-r ton and Stoughton a similar district Is being organized. "It is encouraging to see the inter?st that is being taken very recently in tne drainage of these lands, nays Professor Whitson. "We have approx imately two-thirds of a million acres Df them in the southern part of the State. Drainage is not limited to that ection, however. During the past im mer the department of soils found a considerable tract of land in Pierce County seriously in need of drainage, vhich need had not been recognized. Co-operation ior drainage purposes Is absolutely necessary, and it is al ways a serious matter to get all tfiat ire included in a region needing drain ige interested In the organization of a listrict. The legal processes involved ire also rather long. The department 3ids as much as possible in this work jy n a'iing preliminary surveys and pre paring plans fo. drainage with eutl aiates of jHissible cost and of the u cessment of benefits on the ditfer-nt farms, so that each farmer may kn;v,v very closely what it will cost him 11 district Is. actually organized." Early Vegetables. The right time to sow seeds In h hotbed deiends largely on the Hon, the kind of plants and the wjy in which tue plants are to be handled, Sowing the svd too early is very apt to cause a loss. A successful tomato grower says he conomlzes hot-bed space and laljar by growing his early plants, ready or the field, right where the seed if sown, 500 plants to the sash. He utally sows his seed about the mldIe of March, and the plants pet in tli field from the 1st to the 10th of Mai and about the 10th of July the fim fruits are sent into market, selling a from 10 to 15 cents per berry baskit. retail; or from $1.50 to $2 per busbt crate, wholesale. He sows the seed l.i drills eigh inches apart, or five ro'vs to the sast, using a liberal amount of need. Whfli well started the plants are thinned ?j about 100 per row. The bed Is carefully ventilated without severe drafj during the day, and at night covers with straw mats. For the first three or four weeLf the growth Is very rapid; as th; weather becomes milder the plants are more and more exposed to the open air, and as the time for tran planting draws near water Is With held, so that on sunny afternoons tte plants have quite a wilted look. Hi; the result is a fine lot of plants, mea tiring from eight Inches to a foot In height, with hard, woody stems, bios soni buds showing, and tough leaves that will withstand a light frost. should one come. In setting these plants In the field they are laid in shallow furrows, topa jway from the prevailing winds; little soil Is drawn over ti roots, a foot pressed on the spot, while the rest of the stem is covered, all but three or four inches of the top, which la turned unward. The footprint ?s left open to receive a pint of water which later is covered to prevei t evaporation. Thus treated they scarce ly droop and soon the whole stem underground, Is covered with rootlets. resulting in a vigorous growth. Nothing, nowever, would bo gained by betiding or sowing sweet jiotatoes rgg-plant or even poppers, before the 1st of April. Neither is anythii-g gained by planting these in the open ground much before June. IMs-I'cedlnjc Experiments. The Montana Experiment Station Is sues bulletin No. 73, under the above title. The summary of the work re ported, is as follows : Peas make a more efficient hog fe( than does barley, but lecause of the greater cost of the peas the barley makes a more economical ration, ration of grain, with skim milk as
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mental food, when fed to hogs First, the most rapid gains, and. hvihI. the most economical gains, but ook second place to tankage as an 'indent ration. A ration of grain witii ankage as a supplemental food -amo second in rate of gain, but first in iliciency of ration. Because of ths ligh cost of the tankage, it makes an expensive ration when fed in the pro portions given in these tests. Roots as i supplemental food also make a valuible addition to the ration, coming next . S A. 1m value to sKim iuiik ami lauwage. Clover or alfalfa fed as hogs will eat t, together with a grain ration, imrovcs materially tne rapiuny oi me gain and the economy of the feeding. In these tests the hogs fed .grain alone, made economic gains, but tne owest daily gains and on the average he most expensive gains were made on such a ration. Dogs fed a half grain ration on clover and alfalfa pasture nuuK in proportion to the grain fed.. much faster gains and more economic gains than those fed a full grain ration. The central thought in these tests i$ that some supplemental food is. neces sary in feeding a grain ration io nous f the most rapid and economic gains ire to le had. For conditions in Mon tana the value of the supplemental food is: First, skim milk; second, roots; third, tankage; fourth, pasture; fifth, clover and alfalfa. 9 Deep or Shallow l'loulng. In regard to the question of deep ot shallow plowing, according to W. R. Cilbert, of a Canadian exiorinient sta tion, it is essential to discriminate clearly between deep plowing and deep stirring. There is a vital difference between the two; so much so that, whereas perhaps not one farmer In a hundred could from his practical ex perience urge the adoption of the former, there must be very few who could not conscientiously speak favorably of the beneficial influences of the latter. Much, of course, depends upon the nature of the land, and particularly of the subsoil, but the stirring of ttie lat ter to a depth of even two Inches or three Inches below the ordinary furrow can scarcely fail to have a useful effect in promoting the prosperity of the succeeding crops, for the reason that the plant roots to extend over a large area require less exertion In search of nutriment and moisture. Obviously It must be a very friable subsoil that would not derive benefit from deep stirring at occasional in tervals. The objection to deep plowing, on the other hand, is that instead of loosen ing the subsoil and leaving it where it was it brings it to the surface and involves the burying of the more fer tile top soil to a depth at which the nutriment it contains is available to the plants only after they may be said to have emerged from the delicate and precarious stages of development. The new soil that is brought to the top would, in the course of time, nc doubt, become as mellow in texture and as rich in elements of plant food as that which it has displaced, but a cer tain period must elapse before this can be accomplished. In the meapiime, the farmer brings this hungry soil to the surface and Incurs the risk of reaping inferior crops until by heavy expenditure in tillage and liberal manuring he has enriched and refined the new surface soil. Deep plowing, therefore1, is in aver age eases to be avoided for the two fold reason that it involves diminished yields ami increased expenditure tc the farmer for at least one rotation. Scientific-ally as well as practically the bringing up of the subsoil to the surface is disadvantageous. As is now generally known, the fertility and yield ing properties of a soil are largely regulated by the action of useful bac teria therein. Rut for the presence and aclivitj of the various micro-organisms In the land crop production would be unproflt able, If not impossible, and consequent ly bacterial life may be said to con stitute the very essence of fertility Having regard to this fact, it is neces sary to consider the conditions thai are most conducive to bacterial activity. Numerous searching investigation! have shown that the fertilizing bacterll are much more plentiful in the eurfae of the regularly cultivated soil than ir the lower strata. Therefore, the im portance of retaining the soil that teems with bacterial life on the sur face is evident and Indisputable. If this soil, in which the beneficial micro-organisms are constantly fulfill ing their indispensable functions, Ii buried below soil in which bacterls are comparatively scarce It Is deal that unfortunate consequences must re suit. On the whole, deep plowing is un profitable and highly inadvisable or ordinary soils, but on the other hand subsoil stirring may be of great benefit under normal conditions. Things Yo-i Ought to Know. The primary object of cultivatin crops Is to keep the soil in good con dition, but if it were not for th weeds lots of farmers would neglec this importan. work. Sometimes oui blessings com-j in disguise. Expecting the hens to turn ou many and good eggs without shell! and grit is just like asking the millei to grind good grist without sharj stones. Keep the mill wheels of youi hens' gizzards freshly sharpened. Many a man who boasts that hi Is self-made would be a pretty itooi job if it had not been for the shap ing ids wife gave him. The soil is the most humanizing thing in the world. No man cr woman who really has t passion for the soil can ever go verj far wrong. Ihe silo Is the sure signboard o: prosperity. Nature does not easily give up hei secrets, but when we discover then she unerringly produces the resulti we seek. The amount digested and not th amount eaten gives the horse strength Among the little things profitabh but neglected on the farm is tht Shetland iony. He grows Into monoj almost as rapidly as a pig. Neither nutos nor flying machine will ever entirely displace the horse There i3 only one horseless city it the world Venice, whose streets ar canals and that 13 In decay.
JZXIIY LIITD AT OXFOKD.
Her Marvelon Voice Converts a 'oiiUr:nMl Mus.fi- Unter. "When Music, heavenly maid, was roung in t no lost century sue ap parently had few votaries in academic Oxford, to judge from "Reminiscences rf Oxford." by the Rev. W. Tuckerell. who declares that to bo musi.-al was considered bad form, and for a man to be able to play upon the piano w:?s ook od upon almost as a vice. The professional musician was hK.ued upon as an inferior, to be paid for Iiis services, but to Isr kept socially at a distance; and not until Jenny Lind came, in 1S45. was there anj- real mu sical awakening. On the day after the concert she came, veiled and incognito, to New Col lege Chaptl; but the subwarde-n. Stacp.Mile. near whose stall she sat. dotet ed her. It happened that the hall was lighted and its piano open for the Thursday glee-club practice. Stacp-nle. ;,ftr showing her tht chapel, cunningly brought her on to s'e the hall, by this time filled with me:i. and unceremoniously asked if she would sing. She looked surprised, but unaffectedly consented, bade the ladj with her accompany, and sang to us n cavatina from "Dor Freischuetz." She told us that A. P. Stanley, wh had no ear and hated music, or, at least, was 1 Hired by it. usually left the room when she warbled. Rut hearing bei one day sing "I know that my He deemer liveth," he told her that she had given him an idea of what people mean by music. Only once before, he said, the same feeling had (time ovei him. when, in front of the palace at Vienna, he had heard a tattoo per formed by four hundred drummers. Miss Mary Kingslcy, who mad many journeys In the wilds of Africa used to relate how once, finding it necessary to cleanse a much soiled anc stained blouse, she carried it to a neigh boring spring, where an interestet group of native women watched hei wash it. They were much impressed by the way in which the sjtots disap peared, and It emerged as good as new. The next morning, when it came tim to break camp. Miss Kingsley miss-c her Foap a precious commodity in (lie wilderness. Suspicion soon pointed tc a certain woman, who, on beding ae cusod, confessed boldlj- that she hat taken it and cast it into the spring that its extraordinary powers of re newlng old garments might be permanently imparted to the waters. Sh was deeply mortified to learn that her effort had been in vain. The Rev. Peter McQueen of Charles town, Mass., who recently returned from Africa, tells a kindred story. His soap, however, was not lost, although misused. He still had it with him. "I .told our native servants to In? sun and lay In a supply of clean watet when we crossed the Taru desert, n scorched belt of sand stretching sonit seventy-six miles," he relates. 'Tidings had reached us that an English ex plorer who had attempted to cross that desert shortly before us had perished from thirst, so we wanted to be careful. "You can imagine my surprise when upon taking my first draught of water. I discovered that it tastet! strongly of soap. All the casks were similarly tainteil, and we rounded up the natives and held a hasty court-martial. "It was a tough predicament, but 1 couldn't refrain from smiling within when the leader of them meekly con fessed that as the master had instructed him to lay in a supply of clean water, he had seen to it that bars of soar were added, for soap, he said, was used to clean things." They did not perish of thirst; but after sixteen dajs of drinking soapsuds, which agreed with neither palatf nor stomach, no native of that particular gang was again likely to try to purify water with soap. A DvB'Uone Shame. Frederick W. Dunton, a nephew ol the late Austin Corbin, recently owned a coach dog of high degree, but otherwise of such a low condition that when be disappeared from Mr. Dun ton's home at Hollis, Queens Rorough, Mr. Dunton in his Joy invited friends to dinner to celebrate. Rut Mrs. Dunton mourned. A few days later Alfred .1. Eno, a friend of the Duntons, saw the missing dog in Jamaica. lie reeogni.ed it and telephoned to Mrs. Dunton to Inquire if she wanted the dog returned. Of course she did, and would gladly pay a boy half a dollar to fetch the dog to her. Eno told a newsboy to take the dog to Mrs. Dunton In Hollis and col lect 50 cents. On the way the boy met Mr. Dunton. "Here, boy; wlere are you taking that dog?" asked Dunton, suspiciously, 'To his home, sir," said the boy. "No you don't," asserted Dunton, cm phatically. "I'm to collect 50 cents from Mrs Dunton," said the boy. "Forget it and take this," said Dun ton, diving down Into his pocket, "pjy the way, you want a fine loo Ing dog like this, don't you? Well, he's yours. Now run away home and lose yourself.'1 Dunton plans to tell his wife about the dog next Christmas. "vnat l rear, sam uunron to a friend, "is that that boy will meet me on the street some day and return both my money and the dog." The Horse Did Not Match. A Kansas City young man called tc take his sweetheart out driving, says a writer in the Kansas City Journal. When the fashionably dressed young woman caught sight of the turnout her admirer hired for the occasion she refused to go. "Why didn't j-ou go with him?" asked the astonished mother. "Well, mamma." was the reply, -i think that's a very foolish qwstion. How could I go when the horse? he mis driving didn't match a single thing I had to wear?" . A w Tet. "Was your speecla success?" "No." answered the gloomy statesman. 'It made no impression whatever." "What makes you think so?" "Everybody kept quiet. There wasn'i a single attempt to shut me up or keep my remarks out of the Record." Washington Star. Itnre Sinn. . "Not much vain glcry about him." "No. Indeed. Why, I don't lieUeve he'd 1 vain even alout the accuracy of hlg watch." Kansas City Timet.
TOO CLEAN.
Veld uy tlie TTnnda. A writer in an English weck'-y de f!ares that if we want to know what the other person is thinking we must look at his or her hands. Fvcn mi practiced lips can lie, as pvcry-i.ic knows. Long practice in c'fco;lrcI will enable one to keep oie's vok.-? sweetly cordial when there is nothing but indifference or cold dislike behind it. The eyes can be made to shoot glances which are net at all a icgisL'r for the emotions. But the naids. P i.j
asserted, are utterly beyond the con' vol j if these to whom taey belong. Lvc-n people who hardly gesticulate at a'! and to keep the hands still Is coiii-hlor-rd by the Anglo-Saxons a moi-t essential part of good breeding even tmv-3 people are, it seems, constantly revealing themselves In little mmements of the hands. The immortal Mulvancy has put it on record that a woman's truth or untruth can be discerned by the action of her hands. Of course, it takes a practiced reade rio interpret what the hands are saying. It is not a case of "he who runs may read." When Von Tnt on Heavy Stockings do your shoes p!nch. and your fet swell and perspire? Sprinkle Allen's Foot-Kae Into vour shoes, and get Instant relief. liest thing to use when wearing rubbers. Try it ! for Oancine Parties and Breaking In New 8hoes. Sold Everywhere. I'.'c. Sample j FKEE. Ad.lress. Allen S. Olmsted, Le Koy, N. Y. Accept no substitute. Tlorror-i of Minstrelsy. Rones Mistah Walk.ih, kin jo tell m Ir'y a waud caucus am like a valise? Interlocutor No, George; that's a hard one. Why is a ward caucus like a valise? Rones 'Cause yo most jia'ly packs it afo yo' carries it. Interlocutor Ladies and gentlemen, Sig. Jarr de Roofoff, the eminent and popular basso, will now sing the touching ballad, "Think of the Microbes on a Street Car Strap !" Chicago Tribune. For Irritation of the Th -oat. Coughs jr Hoarseness, Rrown's Rronchial Troches are exceedingly beneficial. In boxes 2Ö rents. Samples mailed free. Joan 1. Erown & Son, Boston, Mass. Making; It Pleasant for Him. "Gentlemen," said the toasimaster at the kmque-t, "we have listened to soni excel lent orators this evening and I am sure we have enjoyed their efforts very much. I have purposely kept one of our best speakers for the last, and after you hart heard him I know you will be glad to go home. Gentlemen, I have the honor to present Mr. Ketchum A. Curamin. who sill now address you."-7-Chicago Tribune. Stiff neck! Doesn't amount to much, but mighty disagreeable. You've no idea how quickly a little Ilamlins Wizard Oil will lubricate the cords and make you comfortable again. GronlnK Suspicious. "You should remember that a public official Is but a servant of his country "Yes," answered young Mrs. Torkins, "but aren't a few of them a little like j the servant we used to have who went home every night with a market basket on her arm?" Washington Star. FILES CURED IN 0 TO 14 DAYS PAZO OINTMENT Is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or ProtrudInr PUea In 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 60c All She ruid For. On her way home from morning service, says a writer in the New York Tress, Mrs. Scott complained to the friend who had joined her of the exceeding dullness of the sermon. "Yes, mamma, but it was very cheap," little Jimmy hastcneil to say. "You only paid a dime for it." Do Your Clothe Look Yellow r If so. use Red Cross Call Blue. It will male them white as snow. Largt 2oz. pack.se, & ceata. Tactless. "He's not what you call strictly handsome,' said the major, beaming through his glasses on an utterly hideous baby as it lay howling In its mother's arms, "but it's the kind of face that grows on you." "It's not the kind of face that ever grew on you," was the unexpected reply of the indignant mother; "you'd be much better locking If it had!" Detroit News-Tribune. rtcd. Weak, Werry, Waterr Eye Relieved by Murine Eye Remedy. Compounded by Kxperlerccd Physicians. Conforms to Pure Food und Dru Ijiws. Murin? Doesn't Smart; Soothes Eye Pa!n. Try Murine in or Kyes. Ask Your LruglstIt oiuciliue ilttiipeua. "He swore that life with Lor would be all sunshine." "And shortly after they were married?" "He prave a correct Imitation of a nan looking for a storm cellar." Blrainsham Age-Herald. Mrs. Wlnslow'a toothing Syrup for ChllIren teething ; softens tne gums, reduce Inflammation, allays pain, cured wind colic rents a bottle 'ill". Personal knowledge
this competitive age and when of ample character it places possessor in the front ranks cf The Well Informed of the World.
A vast fund of personal knowledge is really essential to the achievement of the highest excellence in any field of human effort A Knowledge of Forms, Knowledge of Functions and Knowledge of Products are all of the utmost value and h questions of life and health when a true and wholesome remedy is desired it should be remembered that Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., is an ethical product which has met with the approval of the most eminent physicians and gives universal satisfaction, because it is a remedy of
Known Quality, Known Excellence and Known Component J? d s i l .1 . f :n: f .t,- yii fr c .U-
A a 1 19 oliu lias wuu uic aiuduic j-iau t-uiayc ui uuuiuiis vi uic v u aiuuiiiicu vi iiic world, who know of their own personal knowledge and from actual use thaf it is the first
and best of family laxatives, for
This valuable remedy has been long and favorably known under the name of Syrup of Figs and has attained to worldwide acceptance as the most excellent family laxative. As its pure
laxative principles, obtained from
and the Well Informed of the world to be the best we have adopted the more elaborate name of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna as more fully descriptive of the remedy, l... a J-..t-,l U . !! -I I 11 1 f- 1. . .1 1 i
sy xw. du i uuuuucu it Yviu
rfX "aiIlc ül -7 up oi rigs anu io gei its ucnciiciai effects, always note, when purchasing, the full
ADO"EES LOUISVILLE, KY.
We know of no other medicine which has been so successful in relieving the suffering of women, cr secured so many genuine testimonials, as has Lydia E. Pinkhcin'j Vegetable Compound. In almost every community you will find women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Almost every woman you meet hzi either been benefited by it, or knows some one who has. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., are filc-i containing over one million one hundred thousand letters frcm women seeking health, in which many openly state ever their own signatures that they have regained their health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has zz'zl many women from surgical operations. Lydia E. Pinldiam's Vegetable Compound is mace exclusively from roots and herbs, and is perfectly harmle. The reason why it is so successful is because it contains ingredients which act directly upon the female organism, restoring it to healthy and normal activity. Thousands of unsolicited and genuine testimonials such as the following prove the efficiency of thio simple remedy. Minneapolis, Minn.: "I was a great sufferer from fenialo troubles which caused a weakness nd broken down cc.nlition of tho system. I read so much of what Lydia E, I'mlitzjua'g Vegetable Compound had done for other suf terinpr woraci?, I i'elfc sure it would help me, and I mas. say it did help me wonder fully. "Within three months I was a perfectly well woman. "I want this letter made public to show the benefits o 1;o derived from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. John U. Moldan 21 IG Second St.North,MinncaiJolis,Ilii. Women who are suffering from those distressing iita peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these fact3 or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to restore their health.
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CCRMANY, errantry mailer tbsn Texs. ropapnttvgetber. V. hj I She ba no betver ull bis Tlaldlnc varieties
EMPEROR WILLIAM 0AT8. Some yfrs ago when In Gornmny .we picked a p tc i rrmrkAt oat In rieb sldersney r f tb Rhin. Thousand ot American türmen triad It iaat jcar and are loud and rat it In C praUa Irial packaga C. REJUVENATED WHITE BONANZA OATS. Bat i Wtlte Bonanza Oat. 1 year ae. took the world's price of .' 'J.OOln rolj tor tha baaTteet yleld-nc oat variety. (Cnrcatalog telle the lntetwtinf etoryO rVe bare rcUTCcatud tbls oat and oiler ItajaLn ae aometnlng quits abore the ordinary. HEADQUARTERS POH AGRICULTURAL. COLLBCK EEO Blrh as Utnneaota ho. and No. M Oata. Wisconsin Swedieh Oats. tHierbrccker (W .IT. CS). Idinne-ota ho. and So, lue Darier, aUoneeoUk 0. O and ftorta bakota Xu. Hit t Lul. Corn, W&eat, etceta, VW hav by alt e'de tho largtet SZED POTATO trad In tho aor14 an of cur oell-ra aloaa botela 0,OO0 baehaie I BIO SEE3, PLANT AND TOOL. BOOK PR 'E. Wo TWbllga ti moct original teed catalog In Ama-tra, It brtetirs with, arod IhnrrVt. Or, If you remit töo la pottere we wll. aend yoa a remarkable lot ot (ana teed rain:.. t vtndlnc Eillloa Lollar tiraee. that X ton Hay Wonder. Spalts. t be (Oa.rrml and Bay prudicy. fcilT.r king Har ley, yielding 173 tm. per acre, together with doTer, timotiy, graeees. ev. ata-, worth 10.00 of any man's rconey to get a ttart therewith. Or rexUt 1 4e and we will add a package ot a New farm Seed KoTelrj atrtt before seen by yoa.
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DISTEMPER
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All on Arroant of lila tarnte. Upsardson How did Sniiley'n breach-of-promise suit against that rich widow come out? Atom Thry lau.hed him out of court. There is a daily average or one and one-half drtiths in New York City chargeable to injuries inflicted by other persons.
TlH& VhlAJJE,
Personal Knowledge
b the winning factor in the culminating which no extravagant or unreasonable claims Senna, are well known to physicians always uc tiuu lur u. uic suuiicr
name of the Company California rig Syrup Co. printed on the front of every package, whether you call for Syrup of Figs
or by the full name Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. 2äi
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL.,
lonoonjmgund
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frow mors osts thsn fiatrly tie whole ot fn Uia&fenjtMXl else, but sows alj pedicrow 7 Plak Eye. Epizootic. Ohlppla Fever aad Catarrhal fever
Sum cure and positive preventite, no matter how horses at any ajre are infected or "expostd." Liquid, triven on the tongue, acts on the Lkod and Glands; cvpc! the poisonous rerms lrom the body. Cures Distemper in Uos and Mieep and Cholera in Poultry. Largest selling live ctock remedy. Cures La Grippe among- human beings and is a rue Kidney remedy. 50c and (1 a bottle; 55 and 110 a dozen. Cut this out. Keep it. Show to your druppist, who will get it tor you. .t ree Booklet, "Distemper, Causes ai-d Cures," Special agents wanted. Spohn Medical Co. tti Goshen. led., U.S.A.
tilUARD AIRSHIP nUI-I.ETIX S-nd for copy. Tolls tho tory of most fascinxtins nterprise ever undertaken In this age of dartllng achievements. Don't miss It. Pox Z. Glrard. Kaos. F. W. N. U. No. 9 19C9 AVben wrttlBK Advert iarra plena aay yoa aatr the Adv. In tbia paper. contests of its fortunate are made. INCORPORATED NEWYORK.N.Y
