Plymouth Tribune, Volume 8, Number 38, Plymouth, Marshall County, 24 June 1909 — Page 7

THIRD

OPERATION

PREVENTED By Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound Chicago, HL "I rant to tell yotj chat Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound did for me. I was so sick that two of the best doctors in Chicago paid I would die if I did not have an operation. I had already had two operations, and they wanted me to go through a third one. I suffered day and night from inflammation and a small tumor, and never thought of seeing a well day again. A friend told me how Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound had helped her, and I tried it, and after the third bottle was cured." ilrs. Alvex a Sterling, II Langdon Street, Chicago, 111. If you are ill do not drag along at home or in your place of employment until an operation is necessary, but build up the feminine system, and remove the cause of those distressing aches and pains by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, mada from roots and herbs. I or thirtv years it has been the standard remeJy for female ills, and has positively restored the health of thout andsöf wo men who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, bearing-dowik feeling, flatulency, indigestion, dizziness, or nervous prostration. Why don't you try it? i Food Products Are Bed For Your Table Because they are made of the choicest materials and guaranteed to be absolutely pure. Libby's Veal Loaf makes a delightful dish for Luncheon and you will find, Libby's Vienna Sausage Corned Beef Pork and Beans Evapcrated Milk equally tempting for any meal. Have a supply of Libby's in the house and you will always be prepared for an extra guest. You can buy Libby's at all grocers. Ubby, McNeill & Ubby Chicago Bun mil HEADACHE Positively cure cS by these Little Pills. Thej also reUero Distress from Dyspepsia. Ia&esüon and Too Hearty Eatg. A perfect rem edy for Dizziness. Sause, Drowsiness, Bad Taste tn ti.9 HouXX Coated Tonyue. Pain In the Silo. TORPID LIVER. Ther rcy-Lile tia Bowels. Purely Vegetafcie. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SHALL PRICE. Genulns Must Bear Fao-Simils Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. n UiHill "I hare been using Ca secret for In omnia, with which I hare been afflicted for twenty years, and I can say that Catcarets hare given me more relief than any other remedy I have erer tried. I shall certainly recommend them to my fnenda aa being ail that tney are represented." Thos. Gillard, Elgin, 111. Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Io Good. Never Slcken.IWeaken or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c. Never told in bulk. The guanine tablet stamped C C C Guaranteed to cure or your money back. 924 Let us do your Printing using " for your office stationery. You can get the paper and envelopes to match. It is th fa.1 thine. Take otn.. DAISY FLY KILLER Imlup-Wr,,.!. Iruu lU kill all IIm. N.ai, cjho, raviul, eonv.Dl tat, ehr Lact, all Ma Ma. CanoottpiQ or bp r, will not on or In jar. ut Ininf. fraarantnd SectiT. Ot all r off Hoi pre pud tor 10 eia. HAKOLB BOIERS ISODrKale Ate., Sreaalja,!.!, PILES PAY IF CURED wa pa pf aad and FKRE SED CROSS rUe aad Fiattila Cara. KCA CO, Dapt, B5. Mlaaeape.il. Mlaa. Hainicledwilh ten Eyes, use

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To nn Old Battle Flac O Flag of olden glory, with your strikes all battle-marred; All ragged with the conflict, cd your staff so bullet-scarred. And spotted by the manly hands, that carried you ahead, That comrades brave might follow on where'er their banner led! Unfold to me the story ; tell me of the battle's crush; A treat advancing multitude, the ardor and the flush Of bravery uion the cheek, the wildness of the eye, Of noble ones 90 strong of heart, who never feared to die. I gaze at you ia wonder, and I ponder o'er the past. I hear the din of voices, anJ I see the boys enmassed; The fife and drum are playing, as they grandly march away, Utile mothers weep, and children cheer them onward to the fray. I hear the blare of bugles, and the thun der f the guns; The rattle of the musketry ; I see the fal len ones The thinning of the ranks of blue, and you still flying on Amid the night of battle, as triumphant aa the dawn. And now you seem to drop from sight; your bearer fell to die; But comrades in defiance spring and fling you toward the sky ; Again your tattered form is there the same Red, White and Blue! While eager soldiers cheer you on and follow after you. O the screaming of the shot and shell ! the wounded eick with pain ! And little rivulets of blood that flow like summer rain ; The rushing of the cavalry ; the smoke above the fray, That almost hides your glory from the brightness of the day ! But now encased in glass you stand, where ne'er a breath may touch Tour sacred folds of memory ; nor yet a hand may clutch T staff that heroes carried in the days of battle strife, Of plunder, hate and courage, when man gave life for life. Old Flag, amid the silence, the battles all are o'er; Of them I dream, though peace supreme prevails from shore to shore ; And softly through the marbled halls, the sons of men come down. And bare their heads to you, old flag, to honor your renown. For Time has turned the crimson page and laid the sabers by ; The nation grows in peace, and foes are friends beyond the sky ; A tide of blood has ceased to flow; & flood of tears to fall ; One hope, one Fl.icr, one country and God watchinz o'er it all ! George It. Harrison, Valparaiso, Ind., in Indianapolis News. The Story of a Fin?. Judge Garnett Andrews of Washington, Ga., was stoutly opposed to secession, but made no objection to his sons point: into the Confederate army. In "The War-Time Journal of a Georgia Girl" his daughter, Miss Elija F. Andrews, describes the nlht when the news came that Goorpia had seceded. "While the people of the village were ce'ebratlns the event with bonfires ami bell ringing and speech maklnjr," writes Miss Andrews, "my father shut himself up In his house, darkened the windows, and paced up and down the room in the greatest agitation. "Now and then. when, the noice of the shouting would penetrate to our enrs throuiii thA closed doors and windows, he would pause and exclaim, Toor foo!s! Tiey mny rins their fe!!s now. but they wring their hands, yos. their hearts, too, before they are done with lt. "This scene made a deep Impression nn my mind. My sister Metta and I were pontine in a corner because he would not allow ns to go and see the fun. My two brothers. Henry and Garrett, were taking an active part In the celebration, and I myself had helped to make the fing that was waving In honor of the event. "My brother Henry, who was about as hot-headed a fire-eater as could be found In the South, had brought the material to his young wife, Cora, and we made It on the sly, well knowing that our 'Bonnie Blue Flag' would soon become a 'conquered banner, or rather a confiscated one. If father shouM get wind of what we were about. It consisted of a large five-point ed star, the emblem of state rights, nnd was made of white domestic, on a field of blue. The star was afterward ripped off In the strenuous days when our boys were following the 'Stars and Bars and the blue field field was used" to line the blanket of a Confederate soldier. What was left of It when he came back Is still preserved !n the family." In Miss Andrews' Journal another entry contains a reference to her father's loyalty. "Washington is now a thoroughfare for both armies," she writes. "About noon to-day a body of Yankees went by, going east. There were several companies of negroes among them, and their hateful flag floating In triumph over their head. "1 was so enransed that I said I wished the wind would tear It to pieces. Then father took me by the thoulder and said that if I didn't change my way of thinking about the Sag of my country he would send me to tny room and keep me there a week. We had never known anything but peace and security and protection unser that flag, he said, as long as we remained true to It. It made me think Df that night when Georgia seceded. "What would father hav done If he lad known that that secession flag was made in his house? It pinches my conscience, sometimes, when I think about It"

lie Ii new the Count erulK". The colored brother has a wonderful capacity for adapting a word to his senses. "During the war," relates a well-known veteran, "we often had trouble in getting up a list of countersigns. I had the matter in charge, and took a lis, of European battles. It was a colored regiment. The countersign for the night was 'Austerlitz. In the evening I tried to get Into the lines and was halted. I gave the countersign, 'Austerlitz.' "'Dat ain't right, sah," said the darky, and he called the provost, who was also colored. When that ofScer came I complained that the sentry didn't know the countersign. '"What 13 it, sah?' asked the provost of me. " 'Austerlitz,' I answered. Tou are wrong, sah said he.

"I Tvas put under arrest, and It took the colonel to get me out. "What do you suppose the darkleo had made out of tho original coumersign? 'Oyster shells.' "

General Grant nnd III Son. General Frederick Dent Grant, eldest son of the great Civil War commander, recently described to a reporter of the Philadelphia Record his own "first battle." He had left Memphis, where his mother and the children were to join his father. I left her, and found father on a gunboat in the Mississippi river. We slept on the deck. One morning he was missing and General Lorenzc Thomas told me he had gone to Port Gibson. I was to remain where I was until he came back. General Thomas was pale and looked worried. Every little while we would hear the firing of cannon. Some tioops were being formed on the bank to march away to battle, and a rabbit ran along the lino between them and the river. I asked General Thomas to let me go ashore and catci the rabbit. The rabbit had disappeared, of course; but I got on land. Disobeying orders, I started for Port Gibson, some seventeen miles distant. Having no horse, I walked. I the afternoon I met a battery that was getting ready to go Into action. 1 stopped for a while, but artillery fire didn't interest me very much. Several regiments of Infantry were fighting In the low ground below, howevir, and I went to them. Presently the climax of the battle occurred I saw our tnnps rush forward and I knew the enemy had given way. Night came on and I walked among our men In the moonlight. I followed four soldiers who were carrying a dead man In a blanket. Soon I was at a little schooluouse that had been turned into e hospital. Surgeons were tossing amputated arms and legs out of the windows. The yard of the schcolhouse was filled with wounded and groaning men, who were waiting for the surgeons. I picked my way among them to the side ol the road and sat on the roots of a tree. I was hungry, thirsty and worn out, and worse than all, I didn't know whether my father were living or dead. No boy 'was ever more utterlj wretched. I had seen my first battle. Then an orderly, who had been carry-, ing messages, for my father, rode up. He took off his saddle, gave It to me for a pillow and covered me with hl saddle cloth. In a short time he returned and took me to father, whom 1 found sitting on a camp stool back ol the schoolhouse, drinking a tin cur of hot coffee. I expected to get 8 sharp reproof for my disobedience. "How did you get here?" he asked "I walked." He looked at me for a moment and then said, "I guess you will do." And there was no anger In his face. Maybe, I was mistaken, but I half-believed he was not sorry that I left the gunboat The next day I was given "an enor mous horse, grown white from age," as my father says in his memoirs, and rode back to the gunboat. Charles A. Dana, then an officer of the war department, and afterward editor of the New York Sun, riding a raw-boned mate of my horse, went along with me. ' The "Lot Cane." It Is Interesting to trace the origin and hear the story of some phrase that has become most popular, though those who use it may not have even a remote idea of how It originated. Take, for Instance, "The Lost Cause," now most familiar and used as-'well by the people of the South as well as of the North. It originated in this way: The late Edward A. Pollard one of Virginia's prominent literary menafter the war wrote a history of it, of course from the Southern standpoint. He wrote before his death. In an article in Appleton's Magazine that he offered his pro posed history to a New York publisher who thought well of It, but objected to the title, "History of the War," etc. The work thus entitled might be confounded with some other inferior memories of the war which the writer had already composed, mere annals "First year of the War," etc. "Could not some title be found more unique and captivating, and not quite so heavy?" The writer promised to think of such a title. The next day he presented himself to the publisher and said: "I have thought of a name for the work I design; it Is 'The Lost Cause.' You see, the bulk of the people in the South vere persuaded that we really contended for something that had the dignity and Importance of a cause the cause of constitutional liberty. I think there is something of proper dignity In the word 'Cause;' then 'The Lost Cause' Is an advertisement of something valuable that la gone; besides, the associations of the title are tender and reverential there Is a strain of mourning In it. How do yoa like it?" "Excellently well," replied the publisher; it is just the thing." The title proved an Instant success, and the phrase has since become na tional. Odd and Eudi. The men of Australia outnumber the women by 247,000. The actual cost of the Suez canal was $100,000,000. Spain produces over 3,000,000,000 corks every year. One-third of Britain's telegraph operators are women. The linen Industry of Ireland employs 70,000 persons. Great Britain's golfers use half a million balls each week. Steel pens were made in Binning ham, England, first In 1805. The largest monastery In the world is the Franciscan, at Quito, Ecuador. Copper and wire sheets are now pro duced direct from the crude metal by one process. The world's postal business is in creasing at the rate of 7 per cent per annum. If a human being continued to grow at the same rate as he does in his first year he would be sixty-eight feet tall at the age of 10. At the desire of the President, Mrs. Taft refrains from driving a gasoline automobile and operates an electric vo hide over the streets of Washington. The United States annually export?, more cottonseed oil than all the other countries In the world combined 42,000,000 out of 52,000,000 gallons. It is stated that the late Duke oi Pless left personal property to th value of 4,150,000. In his will he left nothing to his servants, with the single exception of his valet, in whose arms he died.

Can of Llmbernrrk. Llmberneck with chickens is caused by the birds eating decaying flesh or filth containing maggots. The maggots lodge In the throat of the bird, rausing paralysis of the muscles of the neck and consequently inability to 3wallow food. When affected the zhieken remains inactive in one place for days at a time without control of Its neck to take food or drink, it gradually dies of starvation and, perhaps, slow poisoning. Very fe that become afflicted ever recover. Not much can be done with a chicken suffering with llmberneck. Soft bread 6oaked with turpentine or kerosene Is said to be effective in removing the cause, if the case 13 taken in time. Grinding Corn for Hofra. Authorities disagree as to the advisability of grinding ' the corn for hogs, some feeders claiming that it does not pay for the cost and troub of grinding, while others think that it does pay well. My experience is that some hogs will chew corn well, while others will not break half the grains. Usually a young hog will chew its food better than an old one. I fattened a hog last year on dry corn, but not cne-half of the grains were broken. Where a hog will not chew its feed well I think it will pay to grind its feed. Hogs will not chew wheat well, and no hog will chew buckwheat well, so these grains should always be ground before feeding to hogs. If corn is shelled and scattered on a floor or on the ground, so that the hogs will have to pick up one grain at a time, they will chew it better than when whole ears are thrown to them. A. J. Legg. Some Alfalfa Pointer. Alfalfa grows best on a deep, sandy loam, underlaid by a loose and perme able subsoil. It will not grow If there Is an excess of water In the soil. The land must be well drained. Plow the land deeply alfalfa is a deep feeder. Sow alone nnd screen seed before using to separate the dodder and other weed seeds. Dodder is the worst enemy of alfalfa. For a hay crop sow 20 to 30 pounds of seed per acre. For a crop of seed sow 14 to IS pounds per acre. Alfalfa does not attain maturity until the third or fourth year, so do not sow it expecting to get the best results In less time. Keep the weeds mowed and raked off the first season, or they will choke out the crop. Cut the hay when the first flowers appear. If cut in full bloom the hay will be woody. For seed cut when the middle clusters of the seed pods are dark brown. Whether or not alfalfa is a hardy, profitable crop In the Northern States has not been fully demonstrated, but in some instances it has been grown successfully even in Canada. Lexington (Ky.) Herald. Cement Kloor for (rranarj-. There has been a good deal of discussion of the utility of cement floors for granaries and cribs. A correspondent of the Famers' Tribune contributes the following favorable experience: "I have a cement floor in my granary and corn crib, and It is an absolute success. I aid not build till late in the fall. I made a grout floor six Inches In thickness right down on the giound, for which I used five parts sand and gravel and one part Universal cement; then I set up my building on this floor. I fastened the sills by mean3 of big bolts set In the cemeat. Grain was moved Into the new bins from the old granary and the grain is Just as bright next to the cement as it is in the middle of the bin. All winter long when there were thaws the water stood on the north and west sides of the granary to the depth of three to four Inches and the cement on the Inside was seemingly perfectly dry all the time. There is one thing certain, the mice and rats have no harbors under the floor, and there are no cracks to batten to keep the grain from running through. It is a nice floor to shovel from, there being no nail heads to bother. Everything is clean." Detro!nK Qnark (irom. I often see directions given for killing out quack grass, but I think they are all Inferior to the method that I employ. I would never try to drag out the roots with harrow or rake, because not all of the roots will be gathered and those left will soon fill the soil again. The pest can most easily be killed right where It is, the roots furnishing an abundance of plant food, by using a double-acticm cutaway harrow. Now please don't think that any kind of a harrow vl!l do, because it will not. If you re.v on any except the one I have mentioned you will be disappointed. I have used one to destroy what I am writing. If you plow before quack grass many times and am sure of using the harrow, run the plow shallow just deep enough to turn over the quack roots, bottom side up; let lay thus for a week and then go over the field with the double-action cutaway harrow; then after a few days repeat the harrowing and keep at it, going over the field at intervals of a few days until the pest is all destroyed. It is no use to think that the field be gone over perhaps a dozen times in one day, the quack will be killed, for the sun, as well as the harrow, must get In its work. The way to do j is to go over the field once, then wait ' r. 9 ra A XT f rt W n A r-fc? r A a rt , a 1C u. ,v, , uW auu repeat the operation. By being thorough in this the grass can be destroj' - ed and a crop grown the same year If commenced early in the spring. Agricultural Epltomist. Plnrlne: Iloya on Farm, Bert Hall, who has been the chief truant officer of Milwaukee several years, has inaugurated a system which promises to go far toward solving one of the most bothersome problems which perplex the schoo' and police authorities of nearly every city. A year ago Milwaukee was full oi'J

boys who were chronically inclined to nn: away from school. Mr. Hall set his brain to work to devise some method to remedy an evil which the courts could not stop. Early last spring he found places for a few of these truant-inclined boys upon Wisconsin farms, with wages from $5 to $20 a month and board, and the plan worked so well that the system already seems to be a pronounced success, over 200 boys being located during the summer. Fully SO per cent of these citywrecked lads have made good In every way, and their letters telling of the joys of country life, air, food, scenery, new associations and the good sleep and appetite Induced by regular work have created a desire for farm life among hundreds of their old asso ciates. Work of Enrthnorma. It Is said that Darwin spent thirty years of his life in studying the earthworm. He found it blind, deaf and dumb. He discovered that while it lives in the cold, dark earth it knows how, better than man, to plow the ground so that all the green things can grow. It helps huge trees by plowing the ground, turning it over and loosening it up so that light and air and sunshine and rain can get into it. These earthworms cast up piles of earth, and the longer they work the thicker the layers grow, until they form a vegetable mold. Nearly every bit of this vegetable mold has been through the bodies of these worms, and the soil where this mold is found is finer, darker and richer. It is finer because it has been ground up by the little stones in the worm's gizzard. It is darker and richer for having been mixed with juices and dead leaves in the worm's body. When to Prone. With most orchardists and gardeners pruning can be be done during the winter or early spring months, and where the object is the removal of small branches this season is undoubtedly quite as satisfactory as any others. In fact, pruning during late spring, about the time or just previous to the beginning of growth, is particularly advantageous with the peach, because at that season, as a rule, all injury to the anual growth from winter killing will be apparent and the pruner can take advantage of this to remove all 'dead or Injured branches and at the same time modify his plan so as to leave a maximum quantity of wood In order to secure a profitable crop of fruit, which might not be possible were the usual practice of removing one-half the annual growth followed in such seasons. With the apple and pear, which suffer less from winter killing, the annual pruning can as well be done in February or March, in the North, as at any other season. With the grape, however, which is likely to produce a heavy flow of sap if the pruning is delayed until late in the season. It is undoubtedly best to do the pruning during the late fall and early winter months. Any sub stance which is not corrosive or detrimental to growth which will protect the heartwood from the attacks of rot spores will prove a satisfactory covering for a cut surface. Among such substancts may be mentioned white lead, yellow ochre, coal tar and grafting wax. Corbett, United States Department of Agriculture. Km It Tree Hörer. The adult of this insect is a beetle. It lays eggs, probably mostly in April and May, in crevices in the bark of fuitabb trees, usually cn the southwest side. The eggs hatch in a few days, and the young grubs eat theii way through the hark and burrow in the wood, sometimes completely girdling the tree. By next spring the grub has grown to full size. It then bores outward nearly through the bark of the tree, and then undergoes transformation Into a pupal stage, corresponding to the chrysalis of a butterfly. After about three weeks In this condition, the adult beetle emerges from the skin or case of the pupa, cuts a hole through the bark, and comes out prepared to do its part in the work of laying more eggs. Several methods are used to check the work of the borers. The presence of the borers in the trees may be detected by cliscoloratlons of the bark, by the exudation of sap or gum, or by the presence of castings beneath the burrow. In such cases, if the burrows be not too deep or too long, the borers may be killed with a pointed wire. Otherwise thty may be destroyed by cutting them cut with a knife, or by pouring kerosene or hot water into the holes. The best way to combat the borers is by preventing the laying of eggs on the bark of the tree trunks. Wrapping the trunk with newspiper or wrapping paper is one of the easiest and best methods of securing this result, and it has the advantage that besides keeping the female beetles from the bark, the paper protects the bark from the Injurious effect of the heat of the sun. Paper used for this purpose should cover the tree trunk completely, and be held In place by twine not strong enough to injure the growing treo. Soil should be drawn up an inch or two around the paper at the foot ol the tree, to prevent the female beetles from getting inside the paper from below, and the top tof the paper should be made to fit the bark closely. A band of cotton lint just inside the top of the raper will serve to keep the females out from above. Various washes have been used to prevent the insects from laying their eggs on the bark or to kill the newly hatched grubs before they make their way into the bark, but it is not certain that the use of these will always be found profitable. Even more important than protect Ing the bark of the trees from the j .--gg-laying female beetles is the mat j ; f ke . the trees jn v t ! lCnilitlon by pr0per cultivation of th j pol, Grasg and weeds Bhould not 1 . A tn t?c ,j allowed to take the moisture needed by the trees. After rains the crust of the soil should be broken into a fine mulch to reduce the rate of evapora tion from the soil. It is also recom mended that trees be headed low, so that the leaves may shade the trunk from the hot midday sun. The total number of Immigrants cotniag into the United States slnca 1S20, the year of earliest record, exceeds 26,000,000.

J WW. " I SM P r t 07.1' ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. ANcöetabkPrcparallonErAssimilaiing thcFoodanuTfrgiia ling tlic S tomaclis auißovrcls if ITtM-daTMMK. PromofcsDicstionfliami ncss and RcstontaIns nciifer Opiimülorphinc norfcaL IN ot Narcotic. MMBüaHHMtllMiMaiaM fbrpf.jr $dm jtlxSeana JbcMeSJts ytiiseSftd ftfizrmint Iu usrtoacks3a harmSetd' J'cnßtä SuijmtuHnma fbmr. Vi Sow V Apsrfecl Remedy for Cbrtsfipation , Sour StonÄDiarrtaa Vorras,CoiTvdsims Jeverisuncss andLoss or Sleep, j asHiBBMMtaaaaaiaaav racSimHe Signatare of j Bös NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper. SORB EYES CUBED. Eye-ball nnd Lid rtream Terribly Inflamed Wn Unabl to Go About All Treatments Failed. Catlcura Proved Suceeawful. "About two years ago my eyes got in such a condition that I was unable to go about. They were terribly inflamed, both" the balls and lids. I tried home remedies without relief. Then I decided to go to our family physiciau. Mit he didn't help them. Then I tried two more of our most prominent physicians, but my eyes grew continually worse. At this t;me a friend of mine advised me to try Cuticura Ointment, and after using !t about one week my eyes were considerably improved and In two weens they were almost welL They have never given me any trouble since and I am now sixty-five years old. I shall never fail to praise Cuticura. ' G. B. Halsey, Mouth of YIlson, Va., April 4, IOCS." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp.. Sole Trops. of Cuticrira Remedies. Boston. Our KaflrondB. Now here!' We might as well speak plainly about this matter. Some people of late seem to have acquired the Incendiary opinion that our railroad3 exist for the purpose of serving the public. Accordingly the legislators 6eek to regulate passenger rates. Accordingly, also, when the railroads attempt to raise freight rates they are met with violent objections cn the part of the shippers. Accordingly, also further, when the railroads propose to lower wages they are met with stern refusals from selfish employes. Xow all this antagonism comes, as indicated above, from an erroneous conception as to the proper function of a railroad. The proper function of a railroad la to pay dividends, not to speak of salaries and interest on bonds. Can it be claimed for a moment that the sacred right of eminent domain, sc extensively employed in providing valuable rights of way, would ' have been exercised for a purpose any less noble than dividends? Some people seem to have lost all sense of proportion amid our modern strenuosities. Let It be understood, once and for all, that if we cannot run our railroads so that some one can make money on them, we shall simply have to get along without them altogether. Ellis O. Jones in Success Magazine. Grant and Sumner. Concerning the reliability of things In print, it is recalled that Charles Sumner criticised General Grant savagely, and some time after some one was talking to Grant about atheism in New England and remarked, "Even Sumner does not believe in the Bible." "Why should he?" quietly replied Grant. "He didn't write it." There Are Others. "Bings is afraid that he may be prosecuted for polygamy." '"Why, he is married to only one person, ain't he!" "That is what he thought for a while, but now it appears that he married her whole family, and there are seven of them." California Weekly. WON'T Mix Dad rood and Good Health Won't Mix. The human stomach stands much abase, but it won't return good health if you give it bad food. If you feed right you will feel right, for proper food and a good mind is the sure road to health. "A year ago I became much alarmed about my health, for I began to sufTer after each meal no matter how little I ate," says a Denver woman. "I lost my appetite and the very thought of food grew distasteful, with the result that I was not nourished and got weak and thin. "My home cares were very heavy, for beside a large family of my own I have also to look out for an aged mother. . There was no one to shoulder my household burdens, and come what might I must bear them, and this thought nearly drove me frantic when I realized that my health was breaking down. "I read an article in the paper about some one with trouble Just like mine being cured on Grape-Nuts food and acting on this suggestion I gave Grape-Nuts a trial. The first dish of this delicious food proved that I had 6truck the right thiag. "My uncomfortable feelings in stomach and brain disappeared as if by magic and in aa incredibly short space of time I was again myself. Since then I have gained 12 pounds in weight through a summer of hard work and realize I am a very different woman, all due to the splendid food, Grape-Nuts." "There's a Reason." Trial will prove. Read the famous little book, "The Road to Wellville." in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears i'rom time to time. They ore genuine, true, and full of human interest.

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Dos Pays Ovrn. I-teenae. Max, a black-and-tan dog owned by Charles C. Fitzhugh, a Flint pharmacist, has come through with a dollar to pay his annual license and thus in sure safety from the cty dog catcher for another year. And Max earned all this money himself. In the rear of the store where his owner work3 Max, who is a trick dog, has a box half filled with excelsior, in which he hides pennies and nickels earned by doing tricks. When a customer comes into the store the dog siarts his repertory of stunts, plays dead, walks lame, says his prayers, "talks" to the best of his ability, walks erect on his front legs and then on his hind legs, sits up and does numerous other tricks for the entertainment of visitors. The majority of the patrons of the store know the dog and always when he has finished his act he is given a penny or a 5-cenC piece, which he hides in his box. When the animal's owner decided that the license should be paid he sent the dog back to the box time after time until the canine had brought to him a dollar in pennies and nickel3, and, placing the cash in an envelope, the owner started for the office of the city clerk, the dog carrying the envelope in his mouth. Whenever the dog wants a piece of candy from the showcase he gets the money from his box, tramps up to where his master 13 and exchanges it for chocolates. ' Yellow Clothe Are luil.bltr. Kmp them white with It Cross Hall B'.ut. Ail grocer tell laigc 2oc pa.cag, & cent. An Obllgrln Caller. When M. Clernenceau was In th& French chamber of deputies he became for some reason the idol of tte workingman, but his. popularity, according to the course of nature, brought ita penalties. lie was besieged by all sorta of people, who came merely to ask questions, and sometimes they were questions of the most trivial scrt. He was originally a doctor and used to give advice for nothing at certain hours of the day. . One morning a workingman entered his room, and Clemenceau said without looking up from his w riling: "Take off your coat and shirt. I'll attend to you directly." Three minutes later he found the man had stripped to the waist "There is nothing the matter with you," said the doctor when he had made an examination. "I know there isn't," returned the man. "Then what did you come for?" "To consult you on a political question." "But what did you strip for?" "I thought you wanted an illustration of the emaciated body of the man who lives by the sweat of his brow." The political question remained unanswered. M. Clemenceau was too exasperated to do more than tell the man to dress and go home. Unable to Kneel. One fancies that few types of men can, from time to time, have afforded royalty more amusement of a quiet sort than provincial mayors of England. "From the Foreland to Penzance," by Clive Holland, contains the story of a mayor of Weymouth who, during one of the visits of King George to the town, was destined to afford "comic relief" to a ceremony of some Importance. The occasion was the presentation of an address of welcome to the king, and we are told that the mayor, on approaching to present it, to the astonishment and dismay of all, Instead of kneeling, as he had been told to do, seized the queen's hand to shake It as he might that of any other lady. Colonel Gwynne, the master of the ceremonies, hurriedly told him of the faux pas, saying, "You should have kneeled, sir." "Sir, I cannot,'' was the reply. "Everyboiy does, sir," hotly asserted the colonel. The mayor grew red, and evidently much upset, exclaimed, "Confound it, sir, but I've got a wooden leg!" History records that "a smile suffused the face of her majesty, and the King laughed outright." I'ncle Allen. "It's curious," moralized Uncle Allen Sparks, "that they call ibis new system of running the city the 'commission plan.' As I understand the plan, nobody can m&nape to ret a commission on anything." Chicngo Tribune. Chautauqua & Lily Dale, N. Y. Special Low Excursion Rates Via Nickel Plate Road. July 2 and 23. Good 30 days. F. P. Parnin, T. P. A., Ft Wayne, Ind. (09-20) tO FT IS

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Bought, and which has been , has home the signature of been made under his per Signature of FASHION HINTS Organdies and lawns are shown in such pretty robe designs, both simple and elaborate. The one sketched here is qulu plain, and just the thing for morning wear. Belt and sash are of the material. Th waist is finished with " German Val"t oi a good strong pattern that stands tubbin j" well., "Sot Travelina; Ineoc 'TIi, there!" said the park policeman. "Kvp o!T the grass!" The weary wayfarer who w& lying, in the shade of a bus oak tree turned his aoad languidly and looked at the sparrow cop. "If you'r? talkin to mo, awSccr," he saiJ. "me name ain't Keojmff V Grasse. I ain't no nobleman in rejooceJ ruvumst'nces. I'm a independent AniTican citizen, nn me name's Wnreham Ins." Holling a little farther away from the encroaching sunshine, h closed his eyei and went to sleep again. Chicago Tribune. For I sample. "Woman may be uc.i.r:ain and coy," remarked the loanlm; house philosopher, "but she ia't hard to i.lease. That'e where the jot is wro::g." , "What new li.iht have you had on that subject, Mr. McGinuisY" asked the landlady. "She'll put up with almost any kind of stick for a hu! and end wear any old thing on her head for a hat." TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body ntiseptically clean and free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. . germicidal, disinfecting ea deodorizing toilet requisite of exceptional excellence and economy. Invaluable for inP-imed eyes, throat d nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample WITH MtLTM AND BCAUTT SOOK SENT mil THE PAXTON TOILET CO., BostonMass. - LAND -- IRRIGATED LAND Perpetual water rlpht ; fine water; productive soil ; crop failures unknown ; 50 bushels wbeat p-r acre; 3 1-2 to 6 toas alfalfa; healthful climate; free limler; easy terms; write now. Lin wood Land Company, Hock Spring. Wyoming. C9finlnr L0 !n-t1 In nur Tol ipmJJ IUI &JJ now mil bort I r l ort I JO. hrrt b-Dlt tWerpm-en. Safe a (ioern tent bund. W1II10-1 f toon of coal. Awarded t pn far quality. Luonuou demand. Iiumrnw prllt. W rlt ImmrdKH'r fur uarUculara. Knttn laal-iak ta, SUaaeapalta, HJaa F. W. N. U. No. 26 1909 Wben writing to Advertlaera plea ay you taiv tbe Adv. la this paper. SYÄT vv montbly pafmeDtA lour credit la food. Ourpnontr notbtnc la aafer tban a Irtaraond. It Inrrea wU Talue It I to 4 per cent, a aua'.ly . Write today for deacrlntlveeat-

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