Plymouth Tribune, Volume 8, Number 41, Plymouth, Marshall County, 15 July 1909 — Page 7

For Liver, Bladder, Kidney and Siomach Troubles TAKE Gold Medal Haarlem Oil (Capsules "Odorless and Tasteless."

Yon w-Jl find that relief follows the use of the first capsule. This time-honored and effective "home remedy" has a reputation of over 200 tears back of it. GOLD MEDAL HAARLEM OIL is the ONLY genuine. Heiland Medicine Co., Scranton, Pa. Dear Sirs: I must say that your Gold Medal Haarlem Oil is the greatest medicine in the world. Mt back was in a bad fix for six weeks, and 1 have been taking your Haarlem Oil two nights, and the pain is all gone. I Tfcill do all I can lor you. Wishing you good uck, I remain Your friend, ANTHONY C. MORAN, Hastings-on-Iludson. P. O. Box 201. Feb. 19, 1909. New York Capfules ?5 crd 50 cents. Bottles 13c and 35c, at all druggists. HOLLAND MEDICINE CO.. Sole Importers Scranton, Pa. If your Druggist cannot supply you, write us direct. FASHION HINTS Something practical for tennis and all uting wear is shown in this little model, carried out in viyella flannel, which washes like a linen but does not shrink. It would be very nJ.t. A button hole finish it Vied. DeTelopInjr ToaRhl-ForcM. There 13 nothing truer than that "we can make ourselves over by using and developing, the right kind of thought forces. Net long since a young mm whom I had not seen for several years called on me, and Iwas amascd at the tremendous changa in him. When I had last seen him he was pessimistic, discouraged, almost despairing: he had soured on life, lost confidence In human nature and In himself. During the interval he had completely changed. Tbe sullen, bitter expression that used to characterize hia face was replaced by one of joy and gladness! He was radiant, cheerful, happy, hopeful. The young man had married a cheerful, optimistic wife, who had the happy faculty of laughing him out of his "blues" and melancholy, changing the tenor of his thoughts, cheering him up. and making him put a higher estimate on himself. His removal from an unhappy environment, together with his wife's helpful Influence and his own determination to make good, had all worked together to bring about a revolution in his mental make-up. The love-principle and the use of the right thought-force had verily made a new man of him. He Is a fortunate man who early learns the secret of scientific brainbuilding, and who acquires the Inestimable art of holding the right suggestion in hU mind, so that he can trfumph over the dominant note in hi3 environment when it is unfriendly to his highest good. Orison Swett Marden, in Success Magazine. Several Thousand Mllea Removed. Iiuffon Wratz What is a wart hog? Saymold Storey It's a distant relation of the groundmole. A Okln of Beauty Is a Joy Forever. I Tm v 9 1 w c va aw i vi vai j Cream or Magical oautifier. BemoTi Tan, FiInt, Krecklei, ilutt 1'atchen, ! Rih, so J fckin 1'imi-!, and every titm:?a nn beauty, and defies detection. It , has stood Its teat of tt jem, and ; is so b armlets we taste It tobesureit ; is pre per:? ma... I Accept do counterfeit cf imtia rur.e. Dr. L. A. 8vr said to a : Sa ( : ptie.7t:! lady of the hautw i tÄ harm" rÄ"'s r-tawsa! sTa-awMtn H ft urn ttrrjiiraiionj. J Goods JJ Urs In the t w sa wm f m - ; .. . . anon. r '.r saw oy ail cniMiMS sua r secyr ' mi v v j " ' United State, Canada and i-urop. fl.ji... hj Br..L fEP.D. T.KCFKIMS, Pr:;.. 37 Grot Janes Sires. KrTa:k, orms "CasearrM sre certainly ne I gare a friend aue when the doctor was treating him for cancer Of the stomach. The next morning he passed lour ptecesof a tape worm. He theu got a box and in three days he passed a taps-worm 45 fest loa- 11 was ,r- att Freck, of Millersbursf. lauphia Co.. Pa. I am quite a worker for Cacafets I use them mvself and find them beneficial for most any diaease caused by impute blood." Chas. E- Condon. Lewuton, Fa., (11 Ltd; a Co.) Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Tast Good. )o Good. Never Sicken. Weaken or Gripe. 0c. 25c. 50c. Never sold In bulk. The teuuIno tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. 821

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fj) ITMI OH. THAT PINCTRATESj r-rA'li

INDIAN RESERVATIONS OPEN.

Reint ration, July 15 to August G Drnning:, Aiiru! 9, l!Ot. Registration for 160-acre farms in the Flathead Reservation (400,000 acres), at Missoula, Mont.; C:;cur d'Alene Reservation (200,000 acres , at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho; Spokane Reservation (50,000 acres), at Spokane, Wash. Any qualified applicant can register for i 160-acre farm on all three of thc3i reservations. You therefore have thre chances to win a farm. It costs nothing to register. The cost of taking up the prize 160-acre tracts is from $1.23 to $7 an acre. Low fares by the Chicago. Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway $30 from Chicago to Missoula and return. $39 to Kalispell and return. $55.10 to Coeur d'Alene and return. $ä7.50 to Spokane and return. July 20. Low fares from other points and on other dates. F. A. Miller, General Tassenger Agent, Chicago. Strategy That Failed. A lumberman living in Minneapolis was rtputed to be the wealthiest man living west of the Mississippi River He had been poor in his youth, however, and had never overcome the economic habits that he had formed in his days of poverty and in the build lug of the foundation of his colossal fortune. His two sons, however, were differently trained, and when they returned1 from Yale they were seized with a desire, born no doubt of filial love, to fix the old man up. They knew that it was vain to attempt to induce him tc buy clothes other than the shabby and threadbare garments he had worn for years and they resorted to strategy. They went to a tailor and told him to make a $73 coat for their father, but to tell him that the price was $15 The loving sons promised to pay the difference from the amounts they drew from their father's bank account. The old man finally consented, after much arguing, to buy a $15 coat, and the coat was made. The old man paid over the $13. and before he had gone more than two blocks he was met by an acquaintance, who was astounded to see the multi-millionaire in the uncustomary garment. He commented on the quality of the coat and. his forefathers having been Englishmeu, he asked how much it cost. '-Fifteen dollars." Fifteen dollars? I'll give you 5-0!" "It's yours!" Ltxhtnlng Condnetor on Slilp. In spite cf the popular impression to the contrary ships remote from the land are seldom damaged by lightning, although some of the most awe-in?pir-ing displays of atmospheric electricity are frequently witnessed by those oa board them. Standing rigging and even parts of the running gear are now made of steel wire, and this substitute for the old fashioned hemp serves the purpose of lightning conductor when the ship is not fitted with such an aid to safety. The electric current is conveyed down the wire rigging and reaches the sea through the" vessel's metal hull. Damage occurs only if the current bj Interrupted on its way to earth. In a comparatively large proportion of instances the foreroyal truck is struck by lightning, that of the main less frequently and the mizzen least of the three. Very serious casualties under this head occurred to warships and merchant vessels In the days of wooden hull and hempen rigging. Many vessels are now fitted with lightning conductors of approved types, lest the wire rigging should fail to carry off the electric current. Do Your Clothe Look Yellow T If to, me Red Cross Call Blue. It will makt them whit at snow. Large 2oi. package & ctata The Woman Not to Marry. The woman who proudly declare? that she cannot hem a pocket handkerchief, never made up a bed in hei life, and add3 with a simper that she has "been in society ever since she was 13." The woman who would rather nurse a pug dog than a baby. The woman who thinks that men are angels. The woman who would rather die than wear a hat two seasons old. The woman who thinks that the cook and nurse can keep house. The woman who expects a declaration of love three times a day. The woman who buys ornaments for the drawing-room and borrows kitchen utensils from her neighbors; and who thinks table decorations are ! of more importance than good food. The woman who. wants things just because "other women" have them. Why Scotsmen Wear Kilts. A. J. Drexel brings from his Scottish estate a story of a Highlander. "There was a well known American writer," he said at a dinner, "who automobiled through Scotland, and at a hotel in the Highlands was treated with the greatest incivility. "Accordingly he complained to the manager. " 'And I complain in particular he said, 'about my waiter In the dining room. The inattention and insolence Of thi3 man are insupportable. "The manager sought out the waitr, a raw-boned Highlander. "'Dugald,' he said, 'the American risltor accuses you of inattention and Insolence. What have you to say?' "Dugald snorted and hotly replied: "It's no' to be expeckit that a selfrespectin' Sect could wait on him wl riveelity. Wasna it he that said we ! rnnk to the kilt because our reel were too large to get through trousers?" Iluy Miiwlelan'a Illrthplace. The city of Vienna has purchased th hniHR In which Franz Schubert was bcrn. in 17'j7, for $22,000. The house i3 of the old-fashioned, cne-tcry type of building which is i'sst disappearing from modern Vienna. The' front is devoid of any at tractive features, but the little court behind, with wooden galleries and a ! Karden on the cteep hrllside, have i . certain piciuresnueiivsa, and few mu i iti lain k y lui v J'juin i im .ithniit nnl- ' s'.c-lovers go to ienna without mak m r; a place. pilgrimage to Schuberts birth The III froren or. "There's BInks, who is always making his friends say his own witty i ilih;gs when he repeats them, and yet j nearly every one seems to prefer his stupid, rich cousin, who can only give 5ood dinners." "Yes. I'm afraid the majority prefer the good things which the cousin puts in their mouths." Baltimore American. Mrs. WInslow's äoothien- Syrup for C&Il dren te-thirg; softens the gums, rodui.vs ia uaainiatlon. allays pain, cures wind colic 25 eata a frntile.

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Too heavy feeding sometimes causes paralysis in young p!g3. The best results from the farm can only be obtained as the farmer studies the individual characteristics of dach field which he is cultivating. The Michigan State Agricultural School has added a course of Instruc tion in the use of automobiles, and it is said that Iowa and Kansas will follow suit. Make every square rod on your irm yield Its quota of profit. Soma uso can be found for even the poor strips. Study out bow you can best us all your land. Large quantities of alfalfa eeS are shipped every year to Belgium and other countries of Europe to be Kat.de Into dye. This is a beautiful .lüde, which can be obtained from no bter source. Pigs are more apt to be "rooter la spring, when the ground 13 soft, than they are at any other time of the year. Much or tni3 can ue yievitwu by feeding regularly with coal, char coal, ashes or other mineral matter. Ringing the hogs should be resorted to in extreme cases. A farmer troubled with thistles, tried digging up and salting their rootu to no avail. He then plowed the field eight Inches deep in June. Again, la August he plowed six inches deep, again in October, then in March the following year, and finally again in May, and then he planted to corn, and reports that he got rid of the thistles. Horns are going out of style, decid edly. Horned cattle and horned sneep are rapidly disappearing. Many of the cattle bred and fed in the corn belt are hornless. Breeds of this kind are growing in popularity. In tha mountainou3 countries and on the plains wild cattle needed long horns for the protection of themselves and their young. Now, however, with the plains country thickly settled and with few wild animals the cattle do not need horns. Among the hornless breeds are the Galloway, Angus, Red roll and Polled Shorthorn. Polled Jersey and Polled Hereford are also coming into favor. By the application of caustic potash the growth of the horn is prevented in the young calf. Inserts and Insecticide. The following are cheap insecticides and come highly recommended: Dissolve two chunks of common whitewash lime for each pail of water used, and add a small teaspoonful of copperas in powdered form. Sprinkle this mlxtur? freely on growing plants and on the ground around them, and it will kill all kinds of plant lice and insects except cabbage worms, striped beetles, white grubs and potato bugs. A handful of fine dust from the middle of the street sprinkled on the cabbage settles the worms. Boiling water into which Is placed scraped soap and a little kero4ne, when applied around squash or cucjmber vines never fail to kill the yellow striped bug. London purple Is cheaper than parls green, and does the same work In killing potato bugs. Lime and ashes, mixed with wjter and poured on the ground, causes the white grub to curl up for the last time. Poured on manure piles, it k'lls fly eggs and many embryo Insects. Fly Itepellant. Here is a recipe for a fly repellent which is said to be gulte effective: Resin, one and one-half pounds; Inundry soap, two cakes; fish oil, onvtftlf pint; enough water to make thwe gallons. Dissolve the resin in a aolutlon of soap and water by heating, add the fish oil and the rest of the water. Apply with a brush. If to be used as a spray, add one-half pint of krosene. This mixture will cost you ff cm 7 to 8 cents per gallon, and may be used on cows and calves. One-half pint of this mixture is considered enough for one application for a ccw; a clf, of course, would require considerably less. It will be more economical to apply, this only to the parts of the animal not reached by the tail. At first it will be necessary to give two or three applications per wk, until the outer ends of the hair become coated with resin. After th..t, retouch those parts where the roaln Is rubbed off. This formula has been used by the Kansas Agricultural College successfully. Kansas Farmer. Making l'otatoea Pay. A well-drained clam loam i3 considered best for potato growing. Alluvial soil is also good. The production per acre will be in proportion to Ihe amount of available plant food vad moisture In the soil. Select a three-1 year rotation, for the scab germ lattai but two years. I use fertilizer with 10 per cent actual potash. This 'e havH applied as high as 1,500 pounjs per acre, but usually use 500 to &00 pounds, and never drill more than 500 pounds directly into the row. le Green Mountain variety seems to ie best with us. Select your seed potatoes ln the fell and keep over winter at a temperature of 3S degrees, as thl3 will retad sprouting in the spring. Plow 7 to 19 inches deep and cultivate once a weekDo not roll. Plant as son as iossit.Ie after April 15, in rows 3 feet apart. Spray one to five times with a mixture of Vi pounds of Paris grcjn and fifty gallons of water. For fife years the cost per acre of growing t.ie potato has been $15 to $50 with us. Summary of po!nt3 necessary tr success: (i) Good soed. (2) Clay loa.-n, well drained and of good fcrtili.y. (3) Break land early and deep, hut do not pack. (4) Store crop in ccol, dark place. (5) Do everything c-a tin.,?. (',) Square dealing. Agricultural Epltomiat. (iapeuut'inn. Gapeworma are small worms ü-at lodge In the wlndidpes of chicks &nd In time choke them to death. It has never been definitely settled wt.re they coma from. When they first enter the windpipe they are so sniall that they can hardly be seen with the naked eye, but unless destroyed they grow until they fill the windpipe.

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causing the chick to gape for breath, hence the name. There are a number of ways of treating gapeworma in chicks. One of the best is to place the chicks in a tight box covered over the top with cheesecloth and dust airslacked lime through the cloth. This will cause them to sneeze violently, and the worms will be expelled from the throat. Be careful not to overdo the thing and choke the chicks to death. The worms can also be removed by Inserting a couple of looped and twisted horse hairs into the windpipe, giving a few turns and withdrawing, but it is a tedious job. Assafoetida in the drinking water ot a little turpentine added to soft feed are also said to be effective remedies. If the houses and runs are rprinkled occasionally with air-slacked lime It will go a long way toward eliminating the trouble. Poop Cow Stablea. The subject of cow stalls Is cne of the most Important dairy studies. As cows are ordinarily stabled, their condition is anything but what it should be. Poor, miserable ttables, cold and damp and badly ventilated, prevail. There must be a low order of intelligence amongst the poorer dairymen to permit such conditions. It 13 common to see cows standing on a dilapidated old floor, without bedding enough to make a decent hen'j nett, and their hind feet half an inch deep In filth. How any man can expect to produce clean, sanitary milk under such conditions is a mystery. The probabilities are that a good many so-called dairymen don't expect to do so. They don't care so long a3 they get their money for the product, and the trouble is we haven't inspectors with honesty enough or backbono enough to show up conditions as they actually exist. Wo have a few very good dairymen, men who are straightforward and who turn out a good product, but their good work is discounted by the miserable fellows who conduct their business in such a slovenly manner as to bring discredit upon the whole dairy fraternity. It may be a little easier to use some old contraption of a stably that some Ignorant farmer built twenty or thirty years ago than it is to get at It and tear the bottom out and build something right and decent, but a dairyman worthy of the name will manage In some way to keep his cows in a cleanly sanitary condition. Agricultural Epitomlst. Tare II red Cot a Pay. The Missouri experiment station sent out a lot of sarxpe3 of pure bred corn to farmers Its. eighty counties. This corn was planted in the fields and tended as wav tae common corn. Reports from tht.se farmers showed that the "pedigried" corn brought a yield of ten brjshels per acre more than the other klnd3 with which it wa3 compared. Thl3 wa3 not up to the possibilities bj any means, but furnishes abundant food for thought. Now suppoie a cfse. In Kansas last year there were 7,057,535 acres planted to corn from which the farmer3 harvested a total rf 150,640,516 bushels, or an average (f about 21 busheU per acre. Suppose they had used pure bred seed with the results as good as those obtained by the Missouri farmers. This would have increased the average yield to more than 31 bushels of corn per acre, or a total yield for the state of more than 225,000,000 bushels. The value of the t-arn crop thus Increased would have put nearly $10,0tt),000 more cash In the pockets of ov?r farmers than they did get and wo3ld have raised 4he average yield to the verge of respectability. Now let us suppose that this extra $40,000.000 which the farmers would have had If the;- ( had planted pure seed corn were Invested at 5 per cent Interest. The annual returns would endow the Agricultural College and Experiment Station with a greater fund than they have ever had, but only with what they are entitled to and should have. Kansas Farmer. Feed for Work Horses. Farm animals should be fed according to their needs. Their needs depend, of course, upon the product that they yield. Work horses are kept for applying energy, and should be supplied with feeds that will furnish the required energy at the least possible cost, all things considered. There is a wide difference in . the efficiency of hors? in utilizing feed. There is aa "Individuality" In the work horses, as well as In other farm animals. Uorsen that are notably hard to keep In pood condition should be replaced by ones that may be maintained at lees cost. The data presented do not prove that, for use wich pure timothy hay, ear corn i3 as efficient, pound fur pound, as oats. Neither Is any evi dence at hand to indicate that a grain I . m s rauon "aae up exclusively oi corn is suitable for brood-mares with foal or ln mIlk or ,or Jouns SrowlnS horses. When the weights of the horses for the year previous to the experiment are compared with the weights secured during the experiment, it 13 seen that the exclusive use of either corn or oat3 has not had any bad effect upon the horses. There Is not positive proof, however, that a mixed ration would not be more efficient than one made up exclusively of corn or oats. This experiment doe3 show, nevertheless, that corn is a valuable feed for work horses and should be given a large place in their rations, whenever market conditions warrant its use. It Is obvious that feeds for work horses should be palatable, efficient and economical. As far as palatableness 13 concerned, torn seems, according to tiuse experiments, to have a slight advantage over oat', although this will depend to a ccnsMc-.iM-, extent upon the inJivKlual appetite. The results obtained thus far In tlie experiment reported that j-orn Is an efficient feed for work hortes. The bulk of iin amount of ear corn equal in feeding value to the uual amount of oats ii small so small that a casual observation might lead cne to believe that too little corn was beins used. .As regards economy, ear corn .s usually cheaper per pound than cats, while this experiment indicates that ear corn and cat3 are worth approximately tho sjune per pound for feeding under tha conditiona staiei previously.

FACTS IN TABLOID FORM.

South America hi.d newspapers as long ago as 1504. The city death rate is generally greater In winter than in summer. Australia has more unemployed area In proportion to population than any other country. Rhode Island received its name from what was supposed to be a resemplance In contour to the Island of Rhodes in the Mediterranean. Mrs. Charlotte Perkins Gllman will start next November a magazine called the Forerunner, of which she will write the whole contents each month. The only ostrich farm ln Europe is at Nice. It ia said to be profitable. Incubators have to be used to hatch the eggs, the sun in the Riviera not being hot enough to do this work, as it does In Africa. Mrs. Isabella McCosh, wife of the late president of Princeton University, has just celebrated her ninetysecond birthday. J. W. Alexander ha3 just finished a portrait of Mrs. McCosh, which he has given to the university. Among the 6,000,000 working women In thi3 country there are nearly a million widows are nearly 800,000 married women whose husbands have failed to provide for them. Nearly 100.000 divorced women are among the wage earners. Mrs. Sarah Piatt Decker and the newly formed Public Service League of Women, have made a successful fight against the ordinance which had been "sneaked through" the Denver board of aldermen to permit tho feeding of brewery swill to milch cows. Mrs. Chapman-Catt prdicted In St James' Hall on Monday that Woman's suffrage would come "as surely as the sun would rise on the morrow." It is only fair to explain that Mrs. Chapman Catt Is from the United States, and has had no experience of our English sunrises. London Globe. The Prussian government Is to Issue a loan, the proceeds of which are to be used for the construction and equip ment of new branch line railroads. One line of the road is to have electric traction, for which $476,000 is set aside. The total amount to be expend ed under this loan bill is $55,753,000. Beans, bean cake and bean oil are the principal products of Manchuiia. The prices of these during the last season have been higher than ever before, but how much of this is due to the ability of Japan, a gold standard country, to pay more In silver, because silver has been cheap, can not be positively stated. The Korean grass used In the manufacture of grass cloth Is grown very thickly and Is usually cut the second or third year after planting the roots. The grass reaches a height of four to five feet, and with a proper start and under favorable conditions yields, it is roughly estimated, about 3,000 pounds to an acre. Hitherto skulls of prehistoric men have been said to resemble those of great apes, but now comes a distinguished French anthropologist and declares that one which has recently been discovered is almost an exact replica of that oi Bismarck. Does this mean that prehistoric men had superb cranial development, or It is a Gaelic fling at "M. le Bismarck?" New York Tribune. Mother Francis Xavler Cabrlnl, superior-general of the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart, has just returned to this country from Brazil, where she recently opened a college for the higher education of women. This is the fifty-eighth Institution established by the order ln twenty-seven years. The institutions Include colleges, schools, hospitals and orphan asylums. An electrically wired tablecloth, upon which ornamental electric light fixtures diffuse illumination the moment they are set down, is one of the latest and most interesting Illuminating devices designed in England, says Popular Mechanics. To the uninitiated the ability to get a light by simply placing a filxture on the table is nothing less than extraordinary, but thl explanation is simple. Recent exploration of the . Athabasca-Mackenzie region shows that it contains many valuable fur-bearing animals, and it appears also to be the home of the last wild remnant of the American bison family. The herds of bison are not numerous, and tuey are being rapidly exterminated by wolves. The Canadian musk ox also inhabits this region, and ln the spring, when the rivers and springs escape from the frost, great flocks of birds, Including most of the migratory game birds of America, resort thither to breed. What might be called a tabloid watch has Just been made by a watchmaker of Locle, Switzerland, says the London Globe. , The thickness la said to be only three millimeters, so, a meter being only thirty-nine inches, one can estimate the thickness of the watch. Taking the case and a glass it is found the works occupy a space 1.9 millimeters. The spring Is half a millimeter. What makes this achievement of the Locle watchmaker more extraordinary is that it Is asserted that the watch keeps time, varying only five seconds In twenty-four hours, The Philadelphia Press has won the first round in its fight to abolish toll road3 and toll gates in Pennsylvania. A legislative commission has been appointed to Investigate the whole subject and report to the next legislature on the best means of getting rid of what the press call3 a nuisance and a check on commercial progress of the State. "There is much information to be gathered in regard to these roads, for though they have existed since the early days of our history they have not been tho subejet of official reports and great ignorance prevails in regard to them." says the Press. The recent death of Friedrich von Holstein, long ln the service of the German foreign office, was barely mentioned in the cable dispatches to this country, but in Germany, as well as in France and England, tha significance of his career was understood. He was one of the men who greatly serve the state without public recog nition. The Frankfurter Zeitung goes so far as to say that Herr von Holstein, after Bismarck's retirement, was really "the director (Leiter) of our foreign policy." Yet he was not even an uuder-socretary! His place was, by preference. In the background. Personally he was the most retiring and publicity-hating of mortals. New York Evening Post. Don't abuse your friends and expect them to consider It criticism.

DREADFUL DANDRUFF.

Girl's Head Encrusted Feared Loa of All Her Hair Ilaby Had Milk Crust Missionary's AVifa SInde Perfeet Carei by Cutleura. "For several years my husband was a missionary in the Southwest. Every one In that high and dry atmosphere has more or less trouble with dandruff and my daughter's scalp became so encrusted with it that I was alarmed for fear she would lose nil her hair. After trying various remedies, in declaration I bought a cake of Cutleura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment. They left the scalp beautifully clean and free from dandruff and I am happy to say that the Cutleura Remedies were a complete success. I have also used successfully the Cuticura Remedies for so-called 'milk-crust' on baby's head. Cuticura is a blessing. Mrs. J. A. Darling, 310 Fifth St., Carthage, Ohio, Jan. 20. IOCS." Potter Drus & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston. Jap Government Hard Up. The Japanase government's financial policy, recently decided upon bjT the cabinet, involves the curtailment of ex penditures of $100,000,000, of which SO per cent will be taken from the army budget and 10 per cent from that of the navy. The postponement of the international exposition. Premier Katsura says, is not purely due to financial reasons, but it 13 owing to the fact that the work of preparation has been insufficient. As the necessary appropriation will be inconsistent with the economical plans of the cabinet for the next five years it is wiser for the government to admit that fact than to fail In making a complete success of the exposition, which, it has been decided will be held in 1917, the anlversary of tho accession of the Emperor. TIRED ALL THE TIME. ' Languor, listlessness and dullness of spirits are often due to kidney disorders. Pain and weakness In the bac'.c, sides and hips, headaches, dizziness, urinary disorders are sure signs that the kidneys need immediate attention. De lay is dangerous. Mrs. John F. Riley, 520 Walnut St.. Hamilton, Ohio, says: "Backache, headache and dizzy spells were the burden of my life for years. Housework was drudgery, and I was tired and worn out all the time, due to kidney disease. Doan's Kidney Pills brought prompt .relief and soon I was entirely cured." Remember the name Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo: N. Y. Dr. Graham Hell' Seeret. The success of Dr. Alexander Graham Bell in aviation recalled to a reporter at the Pen and Pencil Club in Philadelphia an interview with the Inventor. "It was," said the reporter, "at the time when the first news of Dr. Bell's aeronautical achievements had begun to leak out. "'With the aeroplane, I said to him, you bid fair, sir, to accomplish as much as jou have done with the telephone. What is. the secret of your success?" "Dr. Bell smiled. ".'The secret of success, he said, 'Is Bimple. It is to live like a hermit and work like a horse." " A Rare Good Thing;. "Am usInK ALLEN'S FOOT-EASC and can truly say I would not have been without It so long, had I known the relief It would Rive my aching feet. I think It a rare good thing for anyone having sore or tired feet Mrs. Matilda Holtwert, Providence, P. I." Sold by all Druggists, 25c Ask to-dar. Reelpe for PolltlenI Campaign. Take the roots of several ripe questions and cover them well with equal parts of fudge and dead beets. Add one modicum of sense and a number of great scoops of nonsense. Some of the more fastidious often add a pinch of progress, but this Is not absolutely necessary. Stir in some carefully, selected verbiage strained through a rhetorical colander. Beat vigorously until the enthusiasm rises to the top, and then drop in a handful of candydates. It is then ready for the griddle, which is best made in the shape of a platform constructed from well-worn planks. Now let the whole thing boil and bubble for several months. If it should not rise well, add newspapers. When it is at white heat, garnish liberally with long green. Now let the steam off and set aside to cool. Preserve in alcohol for future use. A political campaign should be served in gum shoes, and should also be Uiken with a grain of salt. Success Magazlne. The Russians as a nation probably fire more attention to the subject of lancing than any other.

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Kellogg s Toasted Corn Flakes is the "Big: Thing" in two-thirds of American Homes. We will have the other third in a very short time. It only requires one taste to make permanent Corn Flake eaters. Its delicious flavor can't be described. You must try the genuine Kellogg's to fully know its goodness. Ask your grocer. $1,000 Solid Gold and Silver Award for the Best Ear of Corn To be known as the W. K. Kellogg National Corn Trophy To be Awarded at the NATIONAL CORN EXPOSITION, OMAHA, SWä kasBsSasHHi Jftf Itf . J

Look for This Signature

KELLOGG TOASTED CORN FLAKE CO., Dattlc Creek. Mlcb.

CROWN OF NATION'S CAPITOL.

Statue of Liberty, Too High for Close Stud)-, Symbolic of the fiilon. "Armed Liberty," the magnificent ttatue that crowns the dome of the Capitol, is by far the most symbolic of all the statues in Washington. Beautiful and reposeful, yet with an air of vigilance, it is perhaps the least appreciated of the city's statues, possibly because of its being placed at such an altitude that It cannot easily be studied. The original plans of the Capitol called for a statue to surmount the dome, but no title was then given it, and although more than half a century has elapsed since its erection, comparatively few people know its real name. The statue Tas modeled by Thomas Crawford, father of h novelist, the late F. Marion Crawtrod. it was ist at a Maryland fouudrj. Jefferson Davis was Secretary of War nen the model was first presented at the War Department. The statue then wore a liberty cap and carried a bundle of rods. Davis objected to the liberty cap as being emblematic of emancipated slaves, while Americans were free born. He also thought the bundle of rods, suggesting the functions of the Roman lictor, had lost its symbolic character. Because of these criticisms of Secretary Davis the model was changed and the "Armed Lady" was evolved. The statue Is nine feet six inches tall and weighs 14,985 pounds. It was put in place Dec. 2, 1S63. The head I3 thrown back and adorned with eagle's beak and plumes. The right hand rests on a sword and the left hold3 an olive branch and a shield. The mantle Is gracetullv draped and is held by a brooch besmne 'U. S." on, its face. The helmet is encircled with stars. The supporting glooa beers the legend, "E Pinn bus Unum" San Francisco Argonaut All Alike. said a Washington diplomat, "had a trenchant, outspoken way with him, Once, at a reception, I heard an inven tor describing in his presence a new kind of warship. " 'This ship of mine the Inventor said, 'is modeled on the duck. "'It flies, eh?' said Mr. Hitchcock. "Xo, no; of course it doesn't fly,' said the inventor, Impatiently. 'It isn't an aeroplane. It's a ship. But it gets over the water like a duck.' "'Suppose an enemy fires at It?' said Mr. Hitchcock. " 'Then it dives like a duck, replied the Inventor. "Right out of sight?" said Mr. Hitchcock. " 'Right down to the bottom, said the Inventor, proudly. " 'Humph,' said Mr. Hitchcock 'Seems a good deal like those we have already, doesn't It?" " ICvery Woman Will lie Interested. There has recently been discovered en aromatic, pleasant herb cure fot woman's Ills, called Mother Gray' Al'STHALlAX-I.KAF. It is the only certain regulator. Cures female weaknesse and Backache. Kidney. Bladder and Urinary troubles. At all Druggists or hy mall 50 cts. Sample FREE. Address. The Mother Gray Co- Leltoy, N. Y. Pet Doir Carrlen Woman's Train. Clipped and blanketed dogs, Frencl poodles, pugs and such excite the con tempt of the average person who likes dogs of a more vigorous sort. Thesit folks also have a dislike for the small dog that is trained to carry packagei or what not. Those who do not like this use of a really very fine animal should have seen an exhibition on a street one wet afternoon recently. ' A woman was about to cross th street, followed by a small and mean looking pet dog. The pavement wai wet. She called to the dog and the do; trotted obediently up and took th hem of her skirt In his teeth. Then staying just far enough behind to keet all the skirt clear of the 6treet, thi dog followed her across. Some other woman, going along said: "Isn't that cute?" A man, whe saw the performance, remarked, "Pooi beast." A Crowded Vnlvere. In New Haven the committee of a graduating class once went to a local Jeweler with a commission for a class badge. They had in view a design representing a youthful graduate surveying the universe. "About how large would you like the figure?" the jeweler asked. "Well," said the spokesman, "we thought the graduate ought to cover about three-quarters of the badge, and the universe the rest" Success Magacine. CASTOR I A For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always BctigM Bears the Signatur HOtsf ctww? wrvovT rm swanif i TOASTE) C08H rXAKX.CO. Ami CKtXK. MICH.' waten uns paper ior luruicr particulars.

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$est fitting for Brealdmsti

mm PlfflAI CUES

Added to the Lone List due to This Famous Remedy. Camden, NUT. "It is with pleasure that I add my testimonial to your already long list horinpr that it may induce omers 10 avail tnemserves or this valuable medicine, LydiaE. Pinkham's Ye getabl e Compound. I suffered from terrible headaches, pain in my back and right side, was tired and nervous, and so weaklcould hardly vjinKnam s v egetable Compound restored me to health and made me feel like a new person, and it shall always have my praise," Mrs. W. P. Valkktixe, 802 Lincoln Avenue, Camden, H. J. Gardiner. Ma. I was a frreat suf ferer from a female disease. The doc tor said I would have to go to the hospital for an operation, but L.ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound completely cured me in three months." Mrs. fc. A. Williams, JL F. IX Xo. 14, Box 89, Gardiner Me, Because your case is a difficult one. doctors having1 done you no pood, do not continue to suffer without giving Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial. 1 1 surely ha s cured many cases of female ills, such as inflammation, ulceration, displacements, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, indigestion, dizziness, and nervous prostration. It costs but a trifle to try it, and the result is worth millions to many suffering women, Every Smooth Shave Requires Perfect Stropping The shave without a scrape is yours every time with the PERFECTION Automatic Razor Strop Tbl remtrktble InTentlon 1 tb only 3tmtle mrc-hanli-al der Ice hl-h perfectly dpU tlie trber ' Ikfin-lc in tbe Deruliar twlatof the wntM he draws the blade, not flat, tat diaronl!y.am t'.ie strop. It f te a lx-rf wt. eay shaving edceto your rnur blade la a few socoml. With the old style ordinary or any safety mior blade It nukmabavlnt i dtMf lit. It your bardwara dealer or drat cist raadM supply yon. write for oar 1 day Free Trial oil'?-. II aatety razor, name matt. Perfection Razrr Strop Company Dept. 1-11' 5 Deirtera Street, Chicar. IIL Interesting proposition to dealers oral mis. TOILET ANTISEPTI8 Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body anttsepticaliy clean and free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin- JtWfecting ad deodorizing toilet requit ite of exceptional excellence and economy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, SO cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Simple Wll THE PAXTOH TOILET CO., BostcflsMss for your office stationery. You can get the paper and envelopes to match. I tkm real catnjr. Ta- mm tae.. F. W. N. U. - - No. 291909 When writ rüg to Advertlaer pleaae tar roo aav tbe Adv. la this paper.

Erery jl "T turn But T'L- "A' of the don't j i if crank class it ."HJt-- .m?'iff y gives With 14-! i yl fell any V r"'il, perfect ot her. t s j lVl l ropThfre is ""-.J pimrs nothing jTjts to each lika it. side of 'It's ell in the Edge" I blade.

I J Let us do your Printing ' ; I ' using i j EaglcLinen :

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