Plymouth Tribune, Volume 8, Number 29, Plymouth, Marshall County, 22 April 1909 — Page 7

AN INDIGESTION REMEDY FREE Msny people who arc otherwise healthy suffer from Indigestion, or d.vspepsia. When you eons: ler that the stomach and allied digestive organs re the most irnjiortant organs of tha body, it would seem that a disorder there is to be taken very seriously. ysieptics cannot eat the things thv like; fwnl sours In the stomach, then chronic constipation begins, or, as i? often the case, you have been constipated all along, and the stools are forevd and irregular. But there is no use Mtln? Indigestion go ontil it lweomes chronic and undermines your health. It i3 good advice to suggest to you that you go to your drucfint and pet a bottle of Ir. Caldwell's tyrup Pepsin. the wonderful cure for stomach, liver and bowel tronMes. That is what C. Fow!tr, of Carson City, Mich., did and he I weil to-day. Others who did the same and are cured are Ida A. Fortune, of Grand Junction. Tenn. ; B. F. Thompson, of Shenandoah. Ia.. who actually considers that It saved his life. You can obtain a fo-eent or SI tattle of the druggist, and. taken according to directions, it will probahly be all you need. It is a liquid, acts gently, never gripes, and besides the laxative effect, contain exceptional tonic properties which tone the stomach, and that is what Is especially needed in indigestion. All sufferers from indigestion who have never ns-d Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin ean obtain a free test bottle by, writing the doctor. It will be sent direct' to your home without any charge. In this way thousands have provrn to their own satisfaction Dr. CaJdwe."s Syrup Pepsin Is the very remedy they needed to cure indigestion. When once you use this grand

rtiueoy you win throw violent cathartics, ia Diets, salts, etc., away. If there is anything about your ailment that you don't understand, or If you want any riedical advice, write to the doctor, and he will answer you fully. There is T 'S The address Is Dr. W. B. i ' Caldwell. 202 Caldwell bldg., Montlcello, I1L Cnp 0 AI C PA CK AitD Oil CI AX good as rUn OMLL new, 11 stops, knee swells, etc. Walnut rase. Original price $90.00. Clearance sale price cash or payments $15.00. The above is a sample barprain from our 190 cie-.rance Sale list of exchanged, rebuilt and slightly used Organs. The list contains instruments from the world's best makers, including Packard. Kstey, Mason & Hamlin. Sterling. Farrand & Votey, Kimball and many others. Prices range from $10.00 upward and in every case are less than one-half actual value. Don't buy an organ without consulting this bargain list. You will probably rind exactly what you want at less than half what you expected to pay. prnn To everyone sending for our barIICC gain list of Organs we will send absolutely free of charge Book of Music containing 60 of the world's best songs. "Write at once to .PACKARD MUSIC HOUSE, Fort Wayne, Ind. FASHION HINTS Shed Water Pongee is used in thii costume. It is spot-proof, and a joy forever. The unexpected summer shower has no terrors for the wearer of this silk. Dark blue Is the color used here. The skirt shows the partial return of the kilt, but modified by a deep yoke. The trimming is "effectively done in a wide soutache, a shade lighter than the silk. Applying a. Sure Teat. Young Wife John, how does my new hat strike you? Husband I'm delighted with it, Arabella ; it's neat, sensible, and Young Wife I knew it! I told that milliner I didn't believe it would uit me, and I'm going to take it right back ! Don't Spoil Too r Clothes. Use Red Cross Ball Blue and keep them white ns snow. All grocers, 5 cen a packaat. ODD BITS OF FACT. The United States consumes 80,000,000 rounds of tea annually. A man can insure against loss in lotteries with a company at The Hague. Thero are more doctors per capita In New York city than anywhere else In this country. Sealing wax contains no wax. The Dutch throne has forty-one possible claimants. Potatoes steeped in sulphuric acid cud subjected to pressure make an excellent substitute for ivrry in the manufacture of billiard balls. TOILET ANTISEPTIC NOTHING LIKE IT FOR ' T&T TSTU P30"1 "eels any dentifrice sit I Lb I Is in cleansing, whitening and removing tartar from the teeth, besides destroying all germs of decay and disease which ordinary tooth preparations cannot do. TU 7 rnSITU Ptine used as a mouthIflL iiiUUIn wash disxfecU the mouth and threat, purifies the breath, and kills the germs which collect in the mouth, causing sore throat, bad teeth, bad breath, grippe, and much sickness. yijpi sTVITQ wen i&lhtmei tired, ache I si Et EL I H w and burn, may be instantly relieved and strengthened by Paxuae, Pax tine will destroy the germs UM I Annfl that cause catarrh, heal the in. Bammation and stop the diicharge. It is a sure remedy for uterine catarrh. Paxtine Is a harmless yet powerful (eraicide,disinfectant and deodorizer. Jsed in bathing it destroys odors and leave the tody antiseptically clean. FOR SALE AT DRUG 3TCRCS.50C. OR POSTPAID BY MAIL. LARGE SAMPLE FREE! h$jS THE PAXTOJ? TOILET CO., BOSTON. MA8.

Throat Troubles Weaken toe System. A serious Illness is often brought on by a neglected sore throat. All throat troubles invariably weaken the system and should not l allowed to go unchecked. A gargle made with twelve drops of Sloan's Liniment in half a glass of water will break up a sore throat. Sloan's Liniment is an excellent remedy for tonsilitis, croup, asthma and bronchitis. Applied freely to the outside of th? throat and chest it draws out the inflammation, reduces the swelling and relieves any soreness. Twelve drops of this Liniment in half a glass of water makes a splendid antiseptic gargle. Mr. Albert W. Trice of Fredonia. Kaus;, writes: "We have used Sloan's Liniment in the family for about a year, and find it an excellent relief for eolils and hay fever attacks. Two drops of the Liniment in a teaspoonful of water will stop coughing and sneezing instantly." Mr. L. T. Hurst of Coatesville, Ind.. K. R. No. 1. writes : "I find your Liniment the best remedy I have ever tried for sore throat, either for horse or man. I once cured a case of sore throat on myself the second day and almost the first night, which had continued for over throe weeks, under constant treatment of three physicians (I was traveling) and It was getting worse.'

Jliiondrrilood Sympathy. Taul Morton, at a banquet of insuronce men. said of a rival company: "They had our sympathy in their bad l'jck. but they took our sympathy in II part. It was like the widow who called on us the other day. This widow came to collect a small policy due her on her husband's death. Our clerk, as he counted out her money, tald sympathet ically : 'I am very sorry to hear of your sad misfortune, ma'am.' "Well, that's just like you men," snapped the widow. 'You're all the same always sorry when a poor wenan gets a chance at a little money. " 3eware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the tns of smell and completely derange the whole' system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do Is ten-fold to the good toii can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo. O.. contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buy ine Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken Internally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney h Co. Testimonials free. . Sold by Druggists. Trice. "Sc. per bottle. Tale Hall's Family Tills for constipation. On m Finch. "For the prespnt," said the political agnate. "you will have to be satisfied with filling some temporary vacancy fron time to time." "I'll be more than satisfied." falterej the despairing office-seeker, "with any thing that will fill the vacancy in my stomach from time to time!" Don't CodrIi, bat Live Lonff. If every coilrgh were cured before It got a strong hold, human life would be lengthened by many years. If every coughing sufferer knew that Kemp's 1-alsam would stop the cough In a few minute, he would be glad to escape the s. 'us consequences. If any medicine cure a cough. Kemp's Balsa m will a It. At druggists' and dealers', 23c. IIIh Specialty. William Jackson I hear you engaged a deaf and dumb man yesterday. Troprietor of Quick LunchroomYes. "Going to make a waiter of him?" "No; he's going to make signs." Aak Your Dealer for Allen's Fool-Eate A powder to shake Into your shoes. It rests the feet. Cures Corns. Bunion. Swollen. Sore, Hot. Callous, Achln?. Sweating feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease makes new or tight ahoes easy. Sold by all Druggists and Shoe Stores. 25c Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Koy, X. T. Got It at a, flarsaln. "O, what a nice little piano! May I ask how much you paid for it?" "Certainly ; we got it for $25." "Impossible !" "Not at all. That's exactly what we paid for it at the time. That was three years ago. We're er still paying for it. What a dreary day this is, isn't it? Think it's joins to rain?" Pile Cure Fbee: Wonderful Tile Remedy sent free to sufferers by addressing Itea Company, Dept. B5, Minneapolis, Minn. The great Lick telescope will pick out a star so small that it would require SO.OW of them put together to be visible to the naked eye. Do not force yourself to take offensive fand harmful) drugs take Garfield Tea, Nature's Herb laxative ; it corrects constipation, purifies the blood, brings Health ! Made Theft. Commissioner Ilingham of New Fork, at a recent dinner, described in t most interesting manner the methods If the skilled pickpocket. "He is so very clever at his besi," roncluded the commissioner, "that one might almost believe him capable of the feat attributed to a Western stevedore. A group of stevedores were irnehing In a sheltered nook of a rharf. One of them went across the reel for a plug of chewing tobacco, "rd in his absence another substituted '.r his tin of pale coffee and milk a is own tin of milkless black coffee. IVhen the first stevedore, plug in hand, returned, he could hardly believe his lyes. "Well,' he said. I've heard of clever thieves, but to swipe the milk out of a feller's coffee beats the band!'" Tht I'nited tates government is the largest individual purchaser of electric lamps in this country. It buji txX),00D annually. j Red, Weak, Werry, Watery Eye iteiievea vj .Murine t.je itemed r. Compounded by Experienced Physicians. Conforms to I'ure Food and Drug I .a vs. Murine DoesjTt Smart; Soothes Eye Tain. Try Murina ia Your Eyes. Ask Your DrugsUt. Where It Landed Ulm. With a dazed look in his bloodshot eyes the man who had been on a j;ig for a week or more and had wandered over the cocntry in a half delirious condition witbotat knewing where he was going came to himself. . He was in a strange city. Everything around him looked unfamiliar. "Officer," he said, stopping a policeman, "what town is this?" "Anaconda," answered the policeman. "Then I've got 'em again!" he groaned. Chicago Tribune. CASTOR I A For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Hays Always BcugU Bears tto Signatur of

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The sheep need plerty of yard room Into which theycan be turned on pleasant days. fetter prices do not make better butter, but better butler will always tend to toost prices. Try it. fluess-work methods tr the greatest curse to the farm, ard explain nore failures than any one thing. Remember, the best peed is none too good. It Is a losing game to labor over seed of low germinating power. The farmer Is not looking for protection or charity, but he does want his rights, and he has a right to expect that he will get them. Every time cream is added to the cream Jar stir the whole contents, so that It will be well mixed and promote even ripening of the cream. While sheep, are growing wool and making mutton for you they are cleaning the fields of weeds and spreading ralmblo manure over the land. There will be much cleaner milk If the udder Is wiped off with a damp cloth, and the long h.iir clipped off of the udder and flanks and ta$l tefore milking. "Stretches" in sheep are cused by too much dry feed.' When tte sheep are seen to spread their legs out and ptretch give a bran mash and an ounce of raw linseed oil. it xer pays to nceome so h.ti-m-A i i 4 i mgiy stuck on any mane oi maennnthat Ave can not see the good points about any other similar machine nor the weak points of our particular favorite. Some of the dairymen were disposed to resent the hue and cry raised about dirty dairying, thinking that the makers of substitutes for dniry products w?re at the bottom of it all. If prices are an Indication of the demand for dairy products the dairj'mcn has no cause to worry. The milk goat industry is occupying considerable attention in the Kast. Sev-ent3"-seven goats have been accepted for registration by the American Milch Goat Association during the year. One hundred and eighty-seven are now on record. Any goat yielding one quart or more of milk a day Is eligible. The Japanese are a progressive race. They are adopting methods and ways from all the civilized countries. A consular report says they are devoting careful attention to the improvement of their poultry. Experiments have shown that Minorcas and Anduluslans tire the best breeds suited to their purpose so birds from England as well as America have been selected and shirred to Tokio. While environment often contributes to success or failure in life, the determining causes in nine cases out of ten lie In the man himself. There are men who are bound to rise regardless of obstacles that they may find In their way. while aiother class could not Im? lifted out of the rut in which they move with anything short of blck and tackle. While traits of push or Inertia may be in a measure Inherited, it Is well to remember that both maj' bo measurably increased or diminished by persistent attention or by indifference end neglect. Ohio has a stringent law in refT ence to the sale of milk products. It prohibits the sale of milk under the following conditions: 1. From oov. fed on unhealthy feed. 2. From cows fed on wet distillery or starch waste. 3. From diseased or sick cows. 4. From cows kept in a place that Is unclean or In an Insanitary condition. 5. From cows kept In a cramped or unhealthy condition. (',. When water or other foreign substance has been added. 7. When It Is tin t clean. Impure, unhealthy or unwhole i some. Fowls Take Cold Easily. On cold nights the fowls roost closely together and in this way keep i warm. Should they crowd on the roost they are apt to sweat and in the morning when they get down on the floor of the pen are apt to feel chilly on account of the difference in temierature. If, however, there Is litter on the floor and the night before grain was thrown among the litter it will not tak the biddies long to understand that by scratching thoy will no! only keep warmer, but there is a strong possibility of finding something to eat. Hens are not as dumb as they look. The Home Will Star. The horse was going to be driven o'.it of existence by the locomotive, but lastend thereof he multiplied exceedingly and increased in value, although h!s Iron sulstitute was tearing all ovr the country In every direction. Thi he was to be reduced to Innocuous desuetude by the trolley car, and nftr that by the automobile. Hut the Tcpartment of Agriculture reports that In eleven years the numler of horse. In this country has Increased from under fourteen to more than twenty inlljinja, the aggregate farm value of them has advanced from less than half a billion to very nearly two billions, and the average value of the animal has advanced nearly three-fold, from $3-1.2; in 1S0H to $X,.(Vt In 1f00. Perhaps sme of our timid manufacturers who are In a panic lest they should be crushed if they were exposed to a little compel it ion may take encouragement from the prosperity of the horse. Exchange. t'nre of I'onltry. The fanner must keep his oultry under the same conditions the poultryman does his. If he wishes to profit by the work and build up a reputation for reliable goods. Instead of the fowls having unlimited range, they should lo confined to generous-sized runs 10) feet In length and as brof d ns the width of the house and these pens "must not bo overerowded. The farmer should build houses that will enable him to readily ventilate (like, for Instance, the scratching shed house) and the manure should be gathered at least once a veek. Nothing but the

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purest grains and meat srraps ami green stuff should b? fed. TIi' eggs should be g;ttlicrl one or more tini.s a day. according to the condition f the weather. And no eggs should ho held longer than one week ; the enterprising poultrymau ships twice a vcef;. An cg should never be sent to market unlrvs Its condition and age are known to the shipper and can be guaranteed. Under no cii-eumstanof-s should esss found in the "hidden nest" be allowed t- bo palnv-d off on the innocPit buyer. In market lan?.uajsr "fancy"' eggs are guaranteed fresh -not over three days o'd. 'Tri me" ezn are those where the asre Is not knocrn, they being from one to three weks of age, in cool weather. rresu case" eggs are a 'class out of which it ifl possible at times to secure six good ones, three fair one?. and three that r.re demoralized, out of a dozen. First .VIJd Horse. The first hors?s of the western plain? probably were brought there by the Spaniards. In 151.", more than fifty years before Jamestown was settled, Coronado. the Spanish captain, was roaniiu? about the plains of New Mexico, and ho tolls of the dogs used by the Indians to haul their plunder on lodge poles, indicating that they had no hcjses at that date, says the St. Louis rosMMsiiatch. In J 710 the Spanish again worked their way eastward across the plains and Oelr letters tell of the astonish ment of the Indians at seeing the horse they h&d with them. The ex peditlon was ustantly losing horse and there is lirtle doubt that the first drovfg of western horses originated from these strays. In tha earir dava nnon t!i nlnins tl frore flS t a travelers " - i - as thy are to-day. Woe be unto the luckless camper i who allowed a band of wjd horses to get close enough' to his gentle horses, turned out foT the night, to sweep them off. It was almost useless to follow, for the call of the ?.-i!d comes to the gentlest of horspj? when he is thrown with a band of tfcls kind that have been bom and raised free of all restraint. It is well known fact that the hardest one to "out out," the leader of them all in a mad race across the prairie, "is the old, gentle, well broken saddle or wor!; horg?, once he gets a taste of such freedom. 1 1 or to Treat the Work Team. Horses employed for farm work should not be pampered but should be fed generously so as to sustain vigor and good spirits. A team ill fed and coin.equently in poor condition and feeble win not accomplish much real work and It Is a waste of time to hire an exinslvv hand to drive such a team. The work .horses should be fed early In the morning ami they should have a liberal feeding. The comfort and res, of the team will be vastly promoted if the harness Is entirely removed at noon while they are feeding. Allow them plenty of time for a good meal and partitl digestion before they are put to work for the afternoon. It Is poor policy to put them to work right after eating a hearty meal or upon a ful! stomach. If we would allow the teams more rt at noon we would accomplish more nrk than when they are only allowed tJme to swallow their food. At evening let them be well groomed and their lf gs. bellies and feet relieved from all rajd and filth. The practice of many farmers of (itirlng a team through cold water' to liash the filth off their feet and legs is dingerous, as it causes many diseases that they are subject to. A warm or overheated team should .:ot be put in a cold, airy place, but ?.rst exercised and then blanketed and 7.11t in a warm stable, and after the vlanketS'are removed they should be xlped dry with straw or cloths. When a team has been exposed to ilns they'ihoald not be left to become; dry, but should be rubbed dry, as chll!?. Jevem and other ailments often result rom allowing them to dry by the evaporation of the moisture from their bodies, Host Lire. A good preparation for killing hog fice is made by melting three pints of l&n d mnS " ,wIth ODe lnt , mill Uli. x lif luiu uiu.v in: iuikiu. Even meat frying will do, the salt being no objection. When the grease has been melted, mix the coal oil well with it and apply with a rag or brush while warm, but not hot, to the backs and behind the ears of the animals. Rub the mixture well Into the hair. Since hogs will not readily stand while the application is being made, give them an appetizing slop In a trough and apply while the animals are drinking. In this way one person can, by rapid manipulation grease twenty to thirty hogs In about five minutes. The benefit of putting the grease on the backs and behind the ears Ik that it will spread by gravity and finally cover all of the hog'a body. There Is no objection, however, to greasing the animal all over, for the more grease put on the more lice will be killed. It is preferable to make the application In the evening, at feeding time, so that one hog will grease another in rubbing against each other in the bed. Refore the application is made, or immediately afterward, clean out and remove all bedding material and disinfect the hog house with coal oil and cnrlolle acid, or coal oil alone, for killing all lice that may lc harboring there. Kepeat the hog greasing once or twice at Intervals of about a week apart, spraying their sleeping quarters at the same time, and the lice will disrppoar. In summer we kill lice on hogs by digging a wallow hole about two feet deep In their lot or pasture, tilling it i bout half full of water, and pouring u gallon of coal oil on the water. When the weather is warm the hogs will wallow in the water covering themselves with mud at the same time, and the lice are killed through having to touch the animals. Oil and water will not mix, hence the pure coal oil conies in contact with the hide of the hogs, which is supposed to cause blistering or removing of hair, but in no case, with many experiments, have any such results followed from the use of pure coal oil. It is likely that wallowing In the muddj water tempers the action of the oil.

LOST E0TII WAYS.

A Ton of a Coin with an Unexpected Itesnlt. A. New York traveling mm was tell bs stories of "Toothpick Torn." a fa mous Dowery character, who lived by his wits as a gambler. Tom was known far and wide not only because of this gambling mania, which was insatir.ble, but because of his quaint wit and originality. He was an illiterate and could neither read nor write, but in the course of his career he handled perhaps a little more than the average gambler's share of coin raked in across the green cloth. "One afternoon Tom woke up with a healthy appetite for breakfast," said the New Yorker. "He found on investigating his pockets that he had a five dollar gold piece, and he set out for the nearest cafe to appease his hunger, r.ut just as he was about to enter the restaurant he suddenly recognized the entrance to the next place as the one leading to a gambling house which he had not visited for some time. Tom paused. He felt himself torn between two emotions, hunger and the spirit of gambling. "Should he risk his gold piece on the faro table or the roulette or should he eat? That was the question. He might make a 'killing,' In which event, of course, he would eat sumptuously. Then, again, he might lose and face starvation. The natural thing for Tom to do was leave It to chance. "'Heads up, I eat breakfast; tails, I rlaj,' said Tom and flipped the coin. It was heads up, and Tom scratched his head thoughtfully and said : "'Well, we'll make it two out of three. "Again he tossed up. but this time the gold piece struck a crevice in the sidewalk and disappeared. Tom looked at the crack and philosophically remarked : " 'Whlpsawed both ways.' "Milwaukee Free Press. The much-debated question of the existence of water vapor In the atmosphere of Mars appears to have been settled In the affirmative by the observations of V. M. Shipher, corroborated by those of Dr. F. W. Very, who estimates that Mars has In its atmosphere about 75 per cent more water vapor than exists In the air over Flagstaff, Arizona, In the month of January. Mr. Slipher concludes that these observations favor the view that the white caps about Mars' poles are composed of snow rather than of hoar frost. The prevalent conditions on Mars, says Dr. Very, are tiiose of a mild but desert climate, such as Trof. Percival Lowell has asserted exists there. Among the interesting observations, made by the Danish Northeast Greenland Expedition Is one on the summed oncoming of Ummer in that land of ice and fiords. The change is described as sudden. Gradually the temperature of the snow had risen to the freezing-point, and then in one day it all melted. "Ttie rivers were rushing along, flowers were budding forth, and in the air the butterflies were fluttering." The birds. came nearly all on the same day, and most of them even at the same hour. One day there were only the ordinary ptarmigan and the raven; the next there were the sanderling, the ring-plover, the goose, the eider-duck, and many others. How much remains to be done bofore we shall have a complete knowledge of the inhabitants of our little planet is indicated by the failure of Alanson Skinner of the American Museum of Natural History to get into communication with the Naskapl Indians of Labrador. He had supposed that they could be reached by way of the west coast of Labrador, but found it to be impossible. When driven by starvation in winter, they go to Nltchequon, in the interior, fifty-five days' Journey by canoe from Rupert's House on East Slain Itlver. Otherwise they are confined to the interior of Labrador proper, "held back on the east and north by the Eskimo, on the west by the Northern Cree, and on the south by the Montagnals." In the subterranean chamber of the Messina observatory a seismograph made a most Interesting record of the 'great earthquake, which indicates the possibility of warning being given by such instruments several minutes before the disastrous shock arrives. The great movement, according to this record, began with a very slight shock, which was repeated. For ten seconds it increased in violence, and for another ten seconds decreased. Ten miniates next passed without disturbance. Then came a second shock of great Intensity, accompanied with a loud subterranean rumbling, and this was the fhock that caused the calamity. One cannot help thinking how many thousands of lives might have been made tafe in those precious ten minutes if the first warning had been communicated to the public. Only Foollnjc. It was said of a certain village "innocent" or fool in Scotland that if he were offered a silver sixpence or copper penny, he would invariably choose the larger coin of smaller value. One day a stranger asked him : "Why do you always take the penny? Don't you know the difference in value?" "Aye, answered the fooi, "I ken the difference in value. But If I took the ßaxpence they would never try me again." Everybody's Magazine. Ilia Trade to De. "The woman who was here to see you was complaining so of her husband. She says he is very hard to please." "What Is her husband?" "He cleans stoves and chimneys." "Dear me! Then I should think he would be very easily sooted." Haitimore American. Special Itenaon. When the clergyman asked what name they had chosen, the happy father replied, "Octopus, sir!" "What!" ejaculated the astonished divine; "but you cannot call a child by so extraordinary a name." "Yes, sir, if you please," was the reply; "you see. It's our eighth child, and we want it called 'Octopus.' " Casscll's Magazine. There is one thing the fathers of today can't do ns well as the fathers of thirty years ago : They can't spanlc

BABY'S WATERY ECZEMA

Itehed and Serntehcd Until niood Ran $50 Spent on Useless Treat ment a Disease Seemed Incurable Cured by C'ntic-ura for $1.50. "When my little boy was two and a half months old he broke out on both cheeks with eczema. It was the itchy, watery kind and we had to keep his little hands wrapped up all the time, and if he would happen to get them uncovered he would claw his face till the blood streamed down on his clothing. We called in a physician at once, but he gave an ointment which was so severe that my babe would scream S hen it was put on. We changed doctors and medicines until we had spent fifty dollars or more and baby was getting worse. I was so worn out watching and caring for him night and day that I almost felt sure the disease was incurable. But finally reading of the good results of the Cuticura Remedies, I determined to try them. I can truthfully say I was more than surprised, for I bought only a dollar and a half's wcrth of the Cuticura Remedies (Cuticura Soap. Ointment and Pil. and they did more good than all my doctors' medicines I had tried, and in fact entirely cured him. His face is perfectly clear of the least spot or scar of anything. Mrs. W. M. Comerer, Burnt Cabins, Ta., Sept. 15, IOCS." Totter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Trops. of Cuticura Remedies. Boston. Mr. ItooMCvelt's Xfirest G.orrm Mrs. Roosevelt wore a gown at an official levee in Washington the other night which was the most elaborate she ever has donned for a White House affair, not even excepting such occasions as her daughter's debut and her step-d a lighter's wedding. It was of copper-eolored satin of the twilled variety, and so heavy that it looked like velvet. The bodice showed a return to the Bo-Peep style, which has been predicted all winter. The panier effect was Incrustcd in gold embroidery, and a deep hem of the same was outlined on the skirt. The bodice was trimmed in insets of gold embroidery back and front, and the yoke was soft. yellow lace studded in gold beads. The sleeves were long and tight nnt hid rows of gold beads cutlined against them as if to stimula e tucks. With this Mrs. Roosevelt wore a chaplet of gold leaves in her lndr and a chain of dull gold about her throat. The whole creation was the work of an artist, and in the entire seven years of her stay in the White House the President's wife never has appeared in any other costume so well adapted to her fragile appearance. The Ancient Stone Slinjrers. It has been said that Asiatic nations excelled others in the use of the sling, and the sllngers of an ancient army used their little weapons with terrible effect. "These natives have such skill," says one old historian, "that it very rarely happens that they miss their aim. What makes them so great iu the use of the sling is the training given them from their earliest years by their mothers, who set up a piece of bread hung at the end of a rod for a target and let their children remain without food until they have hit it, when the child who is the victor receives the bread as fflb reward of his skill and patience." Satisfactory-. Smith I used to have a great deal if trouble with my teeth, so I finally had them all extracted and an artlIclal set put In. Jones And are they satisfactory? Smith You bet they are! Why, I tan almost eat with them. Kvery Woman Will Be Interested. There has recently been discovered an aromatic, pleasant herb cure for woman's ills, called Mother Gray's -ALSTUAMAN-MJAF. It Is the only certain regulator. Cure female weaknesses and Uackache. Kidney, Bladder and Urinary troubles. At all Druggists or by mail 50 cts. Sample FRKEL" Address. The Mother Gray Co.. LeKoy. N. Y. Dresr the Line. Baron Munchausen had just told one if his stories, and somebody in the crowd lad questioned the t;uth of it. "That's all right," said the baron; "I tnow I'm a liar. But I lie merely for fun. I don t lie either for spite or for brofit. I'm not a memoer of any Ananias hub." Thus, while contributing to the inctiibula of unveracity, he escaped the imputation conveyed by the short and ugly word. Mrs. Wlnsiow's Soothing Syrup for ;hll Uren teething ; softens toe sums, reduces In-r-.mmatlon. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. Built early in the eleventh century there are great cracks appearing in thi north and south transepts of the catht dial of Southwell Minster. England.

I T vEEY ff MI !

as with joyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play when in health and how conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and . the wholesome diet of which they should partake. How tenderly their health should be preserved, not by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injurious or objectionable nature, and if at any time a remedial agnt is required, to assist nature, only those of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna has come into general favor in many millions of well informed families, whose estimate of its quality and excellence is based upon personal knowledge and use. Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna has also met with the approval cf physicians generally, because they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. Ve inform all reputable physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, obtained by an original method, from certain plants known to them to act most beneficially, and presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Californian blue figs are used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret remedy, and hence ve are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do not approve of patent medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication. Please to remember and teach your children a'.so that the genuine Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna always has the full name of the Company California Fig Syrup Co. plainly printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in bottles of one size only. If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size, or having printed thereon the name of any other company, do not accept it. If you fail to get the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family

snouia always have a bottle on hand, as It Is equally beneficial for the parents and

the children, whenever a

A woman who is sick and suffering, and won't at least try a medicine which has the record of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, is to blame for her own wretched condition. There are literally hundreds of thousands of women in the United States who have been benefited by this famous old remedy, which was produced from roots and herbs over thirty years ago by a woman to relieve woman's suffering. Read what these women say : Camden, N". J. It is with pleasure that I send my testimonial for Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, hoping it may induce other suffering women to avail themselves of the benefit of this valuable remedy. I suffered from pains in my back and side, sick headaches, no appetite, was tired and nervous all the time, and so weak I could hardly stand. Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound mado me a well woman and this valuable medicine Miall always have my praise." Mrs. "V. P. Valentine, 9012 Lincoln Ave., Camden, X. J. Erie, Pa.-" I suffered for five years from female troubles, and at last was almost helpless. I tried three doctors but they did me no good. My sister advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it has made me well and strong. I hope all suffering women will just give Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial, for it is worth its weight in gold." Mrs. J. P. Endlich, IL F.D. 7, Erie, Pa. t Since we guarantee that all testimonials which we publish are genuine, is it not fair to suppose that if Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound had the virtue to help these women it will help any other woman who is suffering from the same trouble.

For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable . Compound has been the standard remedy for female ills. No sick woman does justice to herself who will not try this famous medicine. Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and has thousands of cures to its credit. I - If the slightest trouble appears which Lr- you do not understand, write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for her ad fice it is free and always helpful.

.-ff.'r

l V ' J TMt Ott THAT PtNCTRATCSl

TOWER'S F15H BRAND WATERPROOF OILED CLOTHING will give you full value for every dollar spent and keep you dry in the wettest weather. suns 322 SLICKERS 322 POMMEL SLICKERS 3 so SOLD EVERYWHCH -CATALOG FP AJ.TOWER CO. BOSTON. USA. Tower Canadian CauMrrto Toronto. Cah. Nothing Like them in the world. CASCARETS the biggest seller why? Because it's the best medicine for the Üver and bowels. It's what they will do for you not what we say they will do that makes CASCARETS famous. Millions use CASCARETS and it is all the medicine that they ever need to take. 904 CASCARETS ioc a box for a wwk'i treatment, all druggists. Biggest seller ia the world. MUUtfn boxes a month. FOR SAIE-Midrgin Fines; All sizes. Southern and Central Michigan. Write for list aud terms. Lido Murray &. Co., Charlotte. Mich., w. w. ir, b 9 I .V.J. , Cataloeue tree. Punctcrk Froof Sfi f Hkai ino Tirf-s $i.8o to 52.5a. ! BROSIL'S BR0SILS. Ft. Wayne. Ind. Dirvri re o Tiore rw F. W. N. U. No. 171909 When writing to Advertisers please aay yn mw the Adv. lat this paper. laxative remedy is required.

Off. M.SA, 1

mm

owl. JUST D0U1BLE 320 ACRES Instead o! 160 ACRES Aa further inducement to settlement of tha Wheat Raising- lands of Western Canada, the Canadian Gorersmr-nt baa inc. eased the area that may be taken by a homesteader to 320 acres 100 free and 160 to be purchased at J3.00 per acre. These lands are in the grain-raisini area, her nixed (arming is also carried on with unqualified success. A railway will shortly be buL't to Hudson Ray, bringing the world's markets a thousand miles nearer these wheat fields, where 'nchouls and churches are convenient, climate exc ! lent, railways close to ull settlements and local markets g-ood. "It tcoald takm (im to !milat ihm rmomlationt that a vi tit to tho great npir lying to tho North of mt unfolded mit ovory tarn. "Correspondence of a National Editor, who visited Western Canada in August. 1908. Lands may also be purchad fmm Rai! war and Land Companies at LOW PRICES AND ON EASY TERMS. For pamphlets, map and information as to low Raiiway Kates app y to . D. Scott. Superintendents of Immigratiott, Ottawa, Canada, or W. II. Rogers, vJ Floor Traction-Terminal Building, Indianapolis, lnd.f and H. M. Williams. Room ao. Law building, Toledo, Ohio, Authorized Government Agents. I'lai.M Miy whsrs ou u this a-1vrrt-itinDt. Let us do your Printing using ' Linen for your office stationery. You can get the paper, and envelopes to match. ( I the rgmt thine. Take mm at.. e