Plymouth Tribune, Volume 8, Number 42, Plymouth, Marshall County, 22 July 1909 — Page 7
MUNYON'S Eminent Doctors at Your Service Free Not a Penny to Pay for the Fullest .Aletlical examination.
If you are in doubt as to the cau of your disease, mail us a postal : e- j questing a melical examination blank j which you will fill out and return to . us. Our doctors will carefully diag- j nose your case, and if you can be i cured you will be told so; if you cannot be cured you will be told so. You are not obligated to us in any way, for this advice is absolutely free. You are j at liberty to take our advice or not, as you see fit. Send to-dav for a medi cal examination blank, fill out and re- J turn to us. and our eminent doctors ! "will diagnose your case thoroughly, absolutely free. Munyon's. S3d and Jefferson streets. Philadelphia, Pa. vjL ! Food Products Libby9 s Cooked Corned Beef There's a marked distino t i o n between Ubby's O o o It o d G o r n o d Beef and even the best that's sold in bulk. Evenly and mildly cared and scientifically cooked in Ubby's Great White Kitchen, all the natural flavor of the fresh, prime beef is retained. It is pure wholesome, delicious and ready to serve at meal time, Saves work and worry in summer. Other Libby 4 Healthful" Meal-Time-Hints, all ready to serve, are: Peer loss Dried Dec f Vienna Sausage Veal Loaf Evaporated Milk Dakcd Beans Chow Chow Mixed Pickles "Purity goes hand in hand with Products of the Libby brand". Write for free Booklet, "How to make Good Things to Eat". Insist Ubby's o n at your grocers. Libby, McNeill 1 Libby Chicago Many a man goes broke in Ilealtl then wealth. Blames his mind. says it don't work right; but all the time it's Ais bouels. They don't work liver dead and the whole system gets elojrged with poison. Nothing kills good, clean-cut brain action like constipation. CA SC A RETS will relieve and cure. Try it now. gjs CASCARETS 10c a box for week's treatment. All drug-gists. Bissest seller In the world. Million boxes a month. DAISY FLY KILLER plr4 iifiibfn, Iraeu 4 kill, all Sir. clen, wrr &aiunll, efint.iii nt, chp. La.u all hihr, Canuotii! or tip ov.r, will but oil or Injur mny. thifif. CurantMl ffvttiv of all -l-it er Mut r.it f-:0ru HaROLB BiflEKS liODslt A", Braa&lja, X. T. TTT. TT TT It? O PAY IF CURED IT 11 IL 1CC3 rnK 7STc& - n1 riia aal Fitlnla Lara BU CO 0t, DS. MlaoeaDolla, Mloa. LAND IRRIGATED LAND I'erpetual water ri'ht ; ftne water; productive soil ; crop failures '.nWnown ; Jo Ixishels wheat p-r acre; 2 1-2 to 5 tons alfalfa; healthful climate; free timber; easy terms; write now. Lin wood Ijind Company, Kock Springs. Wyoming. t or V . .
If ffrAs
MM MW i MI J MJ W 1
am mm l m m lma'
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i o be Known as the M.4iiXJtyj. National CornTrophy
7
National Corn 0rr one hundred thousand million a bilüon dollars were paid for them.
P I it 1
larmcrt lur uuru iiiia jear luau int-y received lur mo previous year a crop. Tlie reason for this may a fouryl in the fact that the people cf the United States are betinaing to learn how delicious corn is and to realize its full food value. Kellygz'a Toasted Corn Flakes has plac -d com amonir the Indispensable items of daily fare. The makers, therefore, are interested ia the development of the King of Cereals, and have decided to award a beautiful trophy fur the man. woman or child who caa produce the best ear vt corn ia twodiilcreut sea.-som. ProtVaaor Molden, of the Iowa State Coll-re. the ereate-t authority on eorn in the world, will award tho pri7e at the National Coru Ex position, to be held at Uniaha. Neb.. Leoember6th to PUh. l'H.!. Two Pinn! rul will irovrn the plan, and they are: that you "end your best ear of corn to the National Corn Ks Position. Omaha. Neb.. IWoru November 27. I.Kj!;: and that you are a member of the National Cora Association. Full particulars regarding which can he had by writing to National Corn Exposition. Omaha. Neb. Tin a tair securely to your f pec i men and word it "For the Kellowif Trophy Content." and write your name and address plainly. If your is judged the be.t. you will get the trophy for 1S10. If you pucceed again next year or the year following, the truuhy will become your property for all time. In other words, you must produce the best ear of corn two diaerent years. There will b no restriction?. Any min. womaa prchiM beloneine to the Ajsociatioa can rnt'r. It will be open
io evcrj aiaia m tne union, rroieaaor
oi more coro per acre is one oujeca oi tue nwu, uui, me unkia purpoau oi ilo Increasing the Quality of Corn Used in Making
TOASTED CORN FLAKES
Many people think we
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TV. UKßwt I v. i criiay no note, J ' u' vw ivu in, uviiu uur tu uvjaiiuu ,-. eat today. All erocers Lave it.
Thek Genuine Cornflakes has ihis Signature
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F COSTLY PRIZE OFrEHEX? TOR ! THE BEST GROWER OF COIiTI
' VV. Iv. KcIIokk f Iis I If C-rM-U, j Mich., t.ivr a SI.IHU Trophy tu He 'oinflfd fur lv tlio l'limicr. I ltittl "n-t'Ii. Muh. For tin- it;r- : y.oiv of .tiinuhitini: ti.e im r st i;' tin far:n-rs of tlif c.u:itry m th un';iov1 I. a nt of tho sraiif f corn ai:.l in s i turinij a greater vie!-'. W. K. Kt il ; ; of this city hau oftVreil a s:M mid sil- ' v. r trophy to l.o i'nmni eil f.r at t;'third annual national corn - poi t i' :i to In hf Iii at (maha. .N't k. 1 )..-. to IS of this year. Tho trophy will l.o known us the W. K. Kollos Xatinnal Zorn Exposition trophy, will cost 1,000. a a 1 will become the personal property . any exhibitor winning it twice. trophy will le in the shapo of n r sivf vase, and will probably be dos.--1 and built by either Gorham or Tiffany. 7Ir. Kellopp; hns just returned from Chicago where he held a conference with' Professor P. O. Holden of thi Iowa ttate Agricultural College at Amt s, and Stanley Clafru?, head of a lare Chieacro advertising agency. Professor Holden, is known as the foremost authority of the country on corn cTowinjr. and Mr. Kellner, who is a larsre manufacturer of food products made from corn, is keenly Interested in all movements tending to improve the quality of the cereal. This year he hes donated 11.00 to be divided in ers of Iowa, and at Professor Hnlilen's rU4JS si it'll, lie uiTiiini io uuoi mo rvoilo.ns troj.hy to be competed for by the corn growers of the nation. "Com s the greatest crop of the country," said Mr. K lox to-day, "and the bister the yield of corn the greater the country's prosperity. Srl j s lection and Improved methods of I cultivation will not only greatly increase the yield per acre. Put will ai?o inerease the protein in the corn and th State. Tlie National Com Kxpositiftn is doim? a prreat work in ed'uat-ir.q-tli" farmers, and I am Riad to help the work alonir." Occntlorinl Flower. There la a singular lioral freak jailed the "occasional' flower, for the reason that it has no particular tirao to hloom. It is said t:iat when closed the occasional flower is in color and form something liko ripe poppy head, but with the stem attached. Submerged in a fowl of water for a rev minutes and then taken out and placed by its stem in an empty bot tle, the outer petals begin in several
; thus enhance us nmnnous qualities, troubled with displacements, inflamIf the yuld per acre, for instance can mation ulceration, fibroid tumors, iro? XeiS alone it win regularities, lriodic pains, backache. : A.-.ft ... Vi.- ..,..1.1, r f,r,n that bearins-tlown feehnjr. flatulency.
I .....F .1. II V U ' UUI HU ...III.' 1
minutes to open out. This process is . pors0nal experier.ee in this to the conslow but distinctly .noticeable. Tha ; trary notwithstandimr. The failure to petals continue to rise and to expand : aRsravate an existing trouble by bind until they gradually recede. Wheu ! inR a molst application over an inLhi3 action is completed it resembles I flainC(1 eJC wh5ch application is sui in appearance the sunflower. Ths oc- I(0setl to rtniajn for an entire niirht.
casional flower remains thus open for i few hours, during which time, tho state of humidity lessening by degrees, the libre begins to shrink and the petals close up gradually in the sama way that they opened until tho flower resumes its former position. It is said that, properly nourished, with regard to temperature and air, and carefully handled, tho occasional (lower never decays nor degenerates in its radiance and splendor. New York Tribune. The I'ink of Proprio j". "When the stringed band, hidden be nind the rose and carnation screen in Mrs. Poole's dining-room, began to play an air from one of Meyerbeer's speras, the daughter of the house turned hopefully to the young and apparently dumb stranger who had been told off to take her in. Here was a promising opening for conversation. "Do you like Meyerbeer?" she asked. "I never drank a glass of one of tho?e lagers in my life," the young man replied, coldly. It is a mother' duty to Wp ronstantly on hand some reliable remedy lor use in ease of sudden accident or mishap to th3 children. Hamlins Wizard Oil can b depended upon for just such emergencies. One Thl UK Ueyontl Any lovn-r. Tip knows other places where traveling i3 of the agony brand. After waiting for nearly four hours In Shannonville, Canada, between Toronto and
Montreal, for a "mixed" 17 freight . master of Eastbourne College, Engcars and one coach I asked an impa- land, the three pages in the bridal protient clergyman if he had been able cession were garbed as scholars in to learn when the train would arrive. black satin kme breeches, buckled He eyed me up and down with pity. ;hoes, scarlet silk gowns, with white "Sir," he said, "that Is theonly thing shirt fronts. Each carried a mortarthat the Almighty doe3 not know." j board hat and a scarlet-bound prayet New York Press. I book. lllotor.v Itewrllten. An OM Tpnt,. With much reluctance King G-orge ; ?kiggs ran away w'.th Skeggs' wife, III. had decided to let his American T ft nr address behind :
colonies go. "Mark my words, though," he paid, "they'll be governed some day by a monarch ten times as absolute and despotic as I am!" If any doubt exists that his Itritannic majesty had the spirit of prophecy upon him. look at Mr. Aldrieh. Chicago Tribune. Heard la be Foyer. "Well, how did you like the play?" "There's one thing about It I liked exceedingly; the star didn't come on until the middle of the third act." - a.
I;"- r41 h& VM ':ytv
in wesi tap 01 uorn
ly ,S ,S a ...
To be Awarded rvt the Exposition . Omaha. 6 to IsTtiflC
a .
(100.000.000.000) car of com were grown in the United States last year. Ov More than a million and a ju rter extra dollars went into tho lockets of
nomcn nu juutre me corn parucuiai ly on itie have reached the joint of perfection In Toasted
KELLOGG TOASTED CORN FLAKE CO., Battle Creek, Mich.
Cured by Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound Baltimore, Md. "For four years my life was a misery to nie. I suffered lrregulari mm ness, and that all fono feeling in xny Momacii. l had given up hope of ever leing v.ell when I bepran to take Lydia E. Pink. ham's Vegetable Compound. Then X I felt as though new life had been piven me, and I am recommending it to all my menus. Mrs. Vv . fc. oi:p, Lansdowne St., Baltimore. Md. Tho most successful remedy in this country lor the cure or all lorms ol female complaints is Lydia E. I'ink ham's Vegetable Compound. It has Stood the test 01 years and to-day is more widely and successfully used than any other female remedy. It has cured thousands ff women who have been indigestion, and nervous prostration, Ca. . . 11 .11. . i l i I 1 uiier uu oiner means iuui iaieu. If ycuare suffering from aLy of these ailments, don't give up hope until you have given Jjvdia h. rmlüia s V ege table Compound a trial. It you would like special advice writo to Mrs. Piukham, Iynnt Mass., for it. She lias sruided thousands to cliarjco. Ivcaltli, free of j Du nurr in IZye I'oiiltlrc. i Do not poultice an eye in any :!r cmnstances whatever. Ilinding a we: ; application over tho eye for several I hours nirst damage that eye, the as- , sertions of those professing to have can only be explained by the supposition that a guardir m angel has watched over that misgi ided case and has displaced the poultice before It had got in is fine v.orl.. All oculists condemn the poultice absolutely, in every shape and in every form. Tea leaves, bread and milk, raw oysters, scraped beef, scrape draw turnip or raw potato and the medley of other similar remedies popularly recommended are one and all capable cf producing irreparable damage to the intercity of the tissues of the visual organ. Family Doctor. Herr Ii Itrllef for Women. If you liave pains In the back. Urinary, liladiler or Kidney trouble, and want a certain, pleasant herb cure for woman's ills, try Mother Gray's Aimtra linn-1. ruf. It is a safe and liever-faillni? regulator. At Drulstf or by innil 50 cts. Sample iakae FltKE. Address. The Mother Gray Co.. Leitoy, N. Y. Hoyhootl of (irt-nt len. .o. XXI. Tapa." said little Kddie. "I potta have another pair o" oliocs. These is all wore out." "That m'kes seven jviirs this yearl groaned the unhappy parent. This incident took place more than sixty years ago. an old man. Hi That I oy has become name is IMward I 'ayson Weston, and he wears out hhoes fast er than ever. Chicago Tribune. Red Croat: Hall Hin Should be la every horn. Ask your frotr for IL iArze 2oz. package, 5 cents. Ilrcel n Scholar. At the wedding lately of the head I.ijt very soon Skiggs envied Skeggs And had a change of mind. Skexirs advertised. Skiggs sent her back. Herein the moral lies: Skiggs now believes not o with Skeggs It pays to advertise. I'.oston Herald. I - , ' yore of Miaut. "Hertha, where is my hat? I laid It down here a little while ago." "Sure, missus, Fido's takin' a nap in it. Don't talk so loud, or ye'll wake tba little darlint." L j . ver the oasis or rjuality. The growing louuuer Ol tue troi'oy 13 lor Kellogg's Corn Flakes a it m KOOU tU.JifS WJ
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'.vr.r.'w, .,i afi Plum trees make a good protection for the poultry. Tho trees thrlva In their runs and provide ehade for the thickens. Alfalfa makes good food and nesting for field mice. Thla Is no reason rrhy you should not ralso alfalfa, but 13 a hint for you to ho on guard against the mice. A study of the root growth of corn shows that the lateral roots run about four Inches below the surface of the soil between the rows. This shows that the cultivation should not be deep ifterthoy have made good growth. The average dally ration fed 1-year-aid heifers at Storr's Experiment Station during the winter of 1903 was as tallows: Hay, 8 pounds; silage, 20 pounds; grain, l1 pounds. The grain mixture wa3 made up of 200 pound3 of bran, 100 pounds of corn meal and 100 pounds of linseed meal. How many farmers go to the expense of setting out an orchard, taking vp valuable land by bo doing and who then expect that the orchard is going to run Itself without further :are or attention from him. What folly, riant trees and then cultivate them as. you do your other crops. Here are a few essentialities of lummer dairying: Keeping flies from the milk; never allowing raw water to come In contact with the milk rans; boiling water and cans for twenty-five minutes; seeing that no nanure can ceep into the wells; screening barns and outhouses from the flie3 and that the milkers' hand ind the cows' udders are clean before ind during tha milking operations. At the Mlvsorirl Station, four pounds jf shelled corn, when combined with timothy hay, rrado an average gain of ibout two-third3 of a pound daily per iteer, while the same amount of corn, when combined with cow y - hay, produced more than one .nrd one-half pounds dally. Tho combination of cowpea hay and shelled corn was more than twice as efficient as was the combination of timothy hay and corn. The silo has passed tho stage where its value can bo questioned. Such feed in combination with alfalfa or :lover with a mixture o? corn or barley for grain, silage furnishes an especially good ration, all grown on the farm and cheaper than mill feeds. Tha Importance of palatability cannot be jverestlmated, as it increases the imount of feed eaten and when properly assimilated the more the animal eats the larger product It will return. The twelve months' egg-laying competition conducted by the state at Rosewortby Agricultural College, South Australia, has ended. It was iivided into two sections for light and heavy- breeds, six hens to lay in each lection. The first prize (according to Feathered I,ife) was won by the Ontario farm, with leghorns, which laid 1,417 eggs. Mrs. A. K. Kinnear, who tvon last year's competition, this time secured the fourth place, 1,207 eggs. Mrs. Kinnear's record of 1,207 for thy hens is a world's record. In heavy breed3 Kappler Bros. silver Wyandottes, with 1.2G2 eggs, won the first prize. Horses and cows aro In the stable it night for rest. When the weather Is warm tho atmosphere In close confinement becomes very warm and oppressive, so much so that the animals become very uncomfortable, and hence rail to get proper rest. The horse that floes not get proper rest is not in a pood condition for heavy work the following day and tho cow that does not sleep In a cool, restful place la hot weather will not give a full flow 5f milk. The temperature of the work ing or producing animal must be kept normal to give the best results. If thre aro no windows In your stables cut out a number now and let the light and freah air come for the health and comfort of the animals. For collar bolls the first thing nec essary Is absolute rest. The trouble cannot be successfully treated wheu the horse has to work even part of tho time. Wash tho sore with warm water once each day. These washings should not be too long, just enough to renove the pus which may have formed since the former washing, but not hard enough to remove the healthy scab which may be forming. In case pus forms under tbe scab, or a layer of the skin, the formation should be lanced to allow it to escape. This sore should be kept open and allowed to j heal from the bottom. After the af fected part Jias been washed out put ane ounce of sulphate of zinc and three drams of tannic acid in a quart of water and apply to the sore. Field and Farm. If fowls are healthy, the premises kept clean and a dust bath of ashes provided, lice rarely get the upper hand, it beinc; through the brood hens transmitting them to the chickens that morit barm ensues. A hen with many or few lice on her when sitting transmits them to tho chickens Im mediately when they are hatched. They are to be found stationary on the chicken's head, above the beak and eyes, and in a few days when they get more plentiful are to be found behind and on top of head and throat. A simple and effective treatment adopted by the government sta tion in New South Wales Ia to place a email quantity of olive oil In a saucer and the day after hatching dip the finger In the oil and thoroughly rul) It Into the fluff of tho chicken's head and tinder the throat. This will kill the lice if present and If repeated the second or third day them will be little fear of any escaping. When a week or ten days old the chickens should be examined again and if any of the vermin are found at this age a little kerosene can be added to the olive oil. It Is best to anoint all chickens with the oil immediately after they are hatched, such being a sure preventive of the scourge. Water for C hicken. Take an ordinary baking pan and have the tinsmith rivet on an "car" on ono Bldo for nailing to a tree. Have him also make a hole In the
bottom In ono corner, that tho water can be let out every day and tho pan bo kept clean. Nail the pan to a tree about twelve Inches from the ground, so the chicks can drink without getting Into It with their feet. The birds will soon discover that it la a fine place from which to get a drink on hot days. Sometimes they find, too, that It is a convenient place for a bath, and thla of course makes the water dirty. But it is not much trouble to reüll the pan with clean water, and this should be done two or three times a day. Chickens and blrd3 require a great deal of water, and they often suffer from lack of It. .Dcn't neglect them. Ground Bone for 1Mb. Experiment conducted at the Nebraska experiment station show a very marked increase In the strength of bone when tankage or ground bone Is fed to pigs In addition to corn. In determining the strength of bones the two principal bones In each leg of each animal were removed and broken In a machine. There were four pigs fed In each lot, making the figures given the average of tho breaking of thirty-two bones in each lot. The average breaking strength per hundred pounds, live weight, of hogs after twenty-two weeks' feeding was as follows: Lot 1, corn. 325 pounds; lot 2. corn and shorts, S96 pounds; lot 3, corn and skimmilk. 500 pounds; lot 4, corn and tankage, ÖS0 pounds; lot IÄ corn and ground bone, 6S1 pounds. A Hint to I.irultnlnr I'wcrn. On farms tie hen that "steals her nest" usually comes out with a uniform lot of strong, healthy chicks. The reason lies in the fact that tho eggs axe uniform, being all her own. There is a little litter between the eggs and the ground, furnishing proper moisture for the eggs. If the incubator user would have the same success he should see that the eggs aro all uniform and the machine is properly ventilated and tho eggs receive the proper amount of moisture. The breeding pen should bo a good one. It should have a shady run and a sunny side as well. "Preferably it should have some green growing grass or shrubbery. Hens that are expected to produce hatchable eps should be well cared for. They should be made comfortable and should be given plenty of healthful exercise in the open air. An egg that Is strongly fertilized will hatch a strong chick that will be more apt to be raised to maturity. Good hatches begin with proper condition of the hens In the breeding pen before the egg. are laid. Ex. Sweet Corn. There are fw better vegetables grown for home use or for market than sugar corn. A succession of plantings of it should be In every farm garden. Our personal preference is for medium sized to large varieties, says the Weekly Inter-Ocean and Farmer. For rapid growth, and early maturity the soil for sweet corn should be mellow and very rich. It Is Impossible to get the soil too rich, and tho greater variety of fertilizers that can b u?ed tho better. To an abundance of stable manure should be added a liberal amount of poultry droppings, wood as.hes and bone meal. Harrow, disk and cultivate all of the fertilizers well into the soil so that the soil and fertilizers will be In even and fine mixture. After the, sweet corn is up, stable manure may be sprinkled on the surface between the rows and lightly cultivated for a surface mulch. In dry weather this surface manure will act as a mulch to hold moisture and in rainy times Its richness will be' dis solved out and carried to tho roots of the growing corn as a liquid fertilizer. Mako the first planting of sweet corn in the very warmest of the garden soli, as the seeds will quickly rot in cold soil. However, If the first planting rots, replanting can easily be done. Begin cultivation Just as soon as the corn appears above the ground or give It a harrowing before it Is up. Let the shovels of the cultivator run deep for the first time until the plants aro about a foot high, after which cultivate only two or three inches deep. Do not be afraid of cultivating too often, for stirring and mixing the soil and keeping down weeds are the making of a good crop. Migration io the Country. The loss of employment through the contraction in Industrial output as an incident of the dull times of the past two years has led thousands of workmen to listen to the call of the soil, To be a high salaried employe when business is booming is one picture and to walk the earth seeking employment and finding none is quite another side of a mechanic's condition. While mlnand manufacture have been great'v reduced in the magnitude of operations, there has been no cessation of activities on the farm. Everywhere in the past two seasons farmers have not only produced bountiful harvests, but all the products of the farm have sold nt good prices. The movement of population to the farms Is reported to have been of extraordinary proportions during the past twelve months. Several govennient reservations have been opened for settlement and In some Instances the commonwealths have extended payments of land over a period of forty years. West, south and southwest there has been an extraordinary movement from congested cities to rural districts in answer to the call of the soil. Probably CO per cent of the people who are making new homes In the country are unfamiliar with agriculture, but they possess tlie courage to try to become successful farmers. Others have migrated to the country, where no man U compelled lo stand idle In the . market place because no one gives him employmnt. Agriculture is now recognized r.s the ration's leading Industry, as the annual output of the farms has attained a value of $8.000.000,000. The majority of the exodus from cities to localities west of the Mississippi will devote their energies to agriculture. While the government practically has no more land to give to settlers, there are plenty of large unimproved agricultural districts to supply urgent demand for small farms. With prices at their present high level agriculture has become the most stable and profitable of all the professions. The rapid increase cf the nonagricultural population Is one of the primary causes of present high prices for farm product.
HFMT M0ETALITY is something frightful. We can hardly reaiiso that of all tho children born in civilized countries, twentyxwo per cent,, or nearly one-quarter, die beforo they reach one year; thirtyseven per cent, or mora
than one-third, before they are ive, and one-half before they are fifteen ! We do not hesitate to say that a timely use of Castoria would save a majority of these precious lives. Neither do we hesitate to say that many of these infantile deaths are occasioned by the use of narcotic preparations. Dropsj tinctures and soothing syrups sold for children's complaints contain more or less opium, or morphine. They are, in considerable quantities, deadly poisons, In any quantity they stupefy, retard circulation and lead to congestions, sickness, death. Castoria operates exactly the reverse, but yon must see that it bears the signature of Ohas H. Fletcher. Castoria causes the. blood. to circulate properly, opens tho pores of the skin and allays fever.
: SI g 'J. : ALCOHOL 3 PER hpst
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT AgelauIePrcpanKionfarAssiraüalm tficFootfaniJRcufa ling the Stomachs aadijcmclsof Promotes DirfestionfkcrTul-; ness and PsLContoins nciilicr Opiu.Morp!iinc norMacraL Not Narc otic. jtLx.Sr.inti jZiiseSetd irpptrmmtltiCar!aackSida ti'xmSed' Ctanfkd Sujyr liutojten t'liTT. Ancrfect Remedy forCtarsfira tion . Sour Stomach.Dtarrhoca "Worms .ComTilsiensroiTish ncs3 end Loss or Sleep. racSIniÜc SiJnamre of NEW YORK. 5 tunranteed undcrthe to0Lj Exact Copy cf Wrapper. TOLD TO USE CUTICURA Aftfi SpeelnllM Failed In Cur Her Intenae Itching I'er.eina Ilutl Itoen Torlnrei! and Dl nrn red bat Soon Cured of Dreadful Humor. "1 contracted eczema and suffered Intensely for about ten months. At times I thought I would scratch myself to pieces. My face and nnus .vere "overed with large red patches, so that I 'vas ashamed to go out. I was advised to go to a doctor who was a specialist in skin diseases, but I received very little relief. I tried every known remedy, with the same results. I thought I would never get better until a friend of mine tohl me to try the Cuticura Remedies. So I trted them, and after four or fire applications of Cuticura Ointment I was relieved of my unbearable Itching. I used tv.-o sets of the Cuticura Remedies, and I am completely cured. Miss Iiarbara Krai, Ilighlandtown, Mil., Jan. 9, 1008." Totter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Frups. of Cuticura Remedies, Boston. A VtKoruui Critic. Ruskin was always hot on the trail of immature critics, but he seems to have gone beyond himself on a certain occasion, which Chambers' Journal records, when he threw a large quarto at A. Stodart Walker's head because he had dared question the artistic excellence, in the matter of proportion, of Michelangelo's "Moses" in Rome. After the throwing was over, Ruskin asked: "How often have you seen it?" "Oh, half a dozen times," Stodart Walker answered, confidently. 'Good heavens!" Ruskin cried. "Sq man should dare to give an opinion oq any work of art unless he has seen It every day for srx months;" adding, after a pause, "and even then he should hold his tongue if he has used his eyes as you stem to have used them.Mrs. Wlnsiow ooiuiue Srruu for CDUdreu teething: softens the cuius, reduces Inuajimation, allays puin, cures wind colic 2i vent a Imtil. The Tolnt of View. "This man is not insane," said the lawyer, "and never has been. To keep him in an asylum Is a blow, sir, directed against human rights, an assaultupon the sacred Institution of liberty, an " "Rut did you not prove last week, when he was on trial for murder, that he had been from birth a raving maniac?" interposed the court. The lawyer smiled in a superior way. "Surely," he said, "your honor wouM not have it believed that this com'- is on the intellectual plane of that jury." Philadelphia Ledger. I'l'ohalily "Won't. Yon think yon'vo nt a stunning gown Ami st iiiniin but tli'-n Tin tilings that stun your husband may Not sum the other men. Houston 1'ost. iVOF'TIIÄ 0K J,
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VOir CAN KAMI.YOWN A III A MONK Oll W ATCll, or present one as a rl to nomelnT! one. Send fop ourbeauttfulde--cTirtivciUlnr. Whatever yon wli-rt tberrfrom we send on approT.I. If you like It. pay one-
mm Mm. MRl gjt n on delivery, naiance in equal mommy iiavmeDtM. 1 our rreti t li rood. Our prlresar. HCbE Tb 1 vGL l'"- A" '" Investment nothing In itafer tlian a blimmnl. It ln'reaa In value ! IlUn B IÄtJ I"1, "' HII.URI.K RI.INI. I. I to per cent. ananallT. Write today for leacrlptlve catZm oattn MNU M RllilTIIOlhK t alog. i-untainln 1M9 llliiftrationa it 1 free. Dalian. U-3.ii vSiti C9 lt'Pt tt V " US blato BU, Calcago, llL-Br.atatti I'UUbarc, Pa. aaa bU Leala,
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Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. Ii. Fletcher Dr. A. F. Teelcr, of St. Louis, Mo., says: "I have prescribed your Castoria In many cases r.nd havo always found it an efficient and speedy remedy." Dr. E. Down, of Philadelphia, Pa, Bays: "I have prescribed your Cas toria la my practice for many years T.rith, great satisfaction to myself and "benefit to my patients." Dr. Edward Tarrish, of Brooklyn, N. says: "l havo used your Castoria la my own household "with good results, and havo advised several patient3 to use it for Its mild laxative effect and freedom, from harm.' Dr. J. B. Elliott, cf New York City, says: "Having during the past sir years prescribed your Castoria for Infantile stomach disorders, I most heartily commend its use. The formula contains nothing deleterious to tho most delicate cf children." Dr. C. G. Sprague, cf Omaha, Neb., says: "Your Castoria Is an Ideal medicine for children, and I frequently prescribe it "While I do not advocate the Indiscriminate use of proprietary medicines, yet Castoria la an. exception for conditions which arise ia the care of children." Dr. J. A. Tarker, of Kansas City, Mo., says: 'Tour Castoria holds tha esteem cf the medical professioa ia a manner held by no other proprietary preparation. It Is a sure and reliable medicine for infants and children. Ia fact, it 13 the universal household remedy for Infantile ailments Dr. H. F. llerrill, of Augusta, ile., says: "Castoria Is one of the very Unest and most remarkable remedies for infants and children. Ia my opinion your Castoria has saved thousands from an early grave. I caa furnish hundreds of testimonials from this locality as to Its cSdency and merits." Dr. Norman 3.L Ceer, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: "During tho last twelve years I have frequently recommended your Castoria as one of the best preparations of the kind, being safe ia the hands of parents and very effective In relieving children's disorders, while the ease with which sucli a pleasant preparation can be administered is a great advantage" GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Seats tho
He M You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years.
TMC CCNTftUN COMPANY, TT QUEER VISÄGED OWL. Great tirny Itird vrilh Klat Face I.llte a Dahoou, Killed lu TVeat. Tho third great gray owl that has been killed in the state of Washington, so lar as known, was bagged by Frank Keppa, of Wilkeson, while hunting in the woods near that place. Fred Edwards, a taxidermist, says it I. the second one of the birds he knows of having been shot, the ether bung killed about fifteen years ago. J. 11. Bowles, an ornithologist, who for the last seven years has been mik ing a study of tho birds of the no.vhwest, and especially of the Puget souni regio.';, knows of only three that nave been killed. One of these was shot by a hunter near UeUingham, and the other two are the present one and the one killed fifteen years ago. Instanced by Edwards. jThe owls have their habitat north of the arctic line. They are very scarce even in that region. In addition to being one or the rarest of the owl family, they are also the most peculiar. Notwithstanding that they measure from beak to tail from 2 feet to 30 inches, the body of the bird is not larger than that of a pigeon, so small, in fact, as to occasion wonder when Its enormous spread of feathers is considered. These give an impression of a bird as large as an eagle. Instead of large eyes as other owls the great gray has small eyes and also small, dainty feet, in contradiction to the muscular talons of other varieties of owls. The bird has a flat face, which, with an enormous wheel-like radiation of feathers from its eyes, gives it a comic, baboon look. Both Bowles and Edwards say the bird killed by Keppa was driven south by the hard winter In the northland. "Not that the bird ever feels the cold," said Bowles, "for Its coat of feathers is so deep and perfect that it probably would not feel the frost at 100 degrees below zero, if such a temperature can be imagined. But at the approach of a cold winter the game that this bird lives on moves south and the owl follows. After once headed this way the bird keeps feeding and flying on simply by habit, even after it has reached a land where game is plentiful. It 13 & very rare bird." Metal IIa ' Propertie. When 70 per cent of cerium Is aloyed with 30 per cent of iron the netal thus produced possesses tb renarkable property of giving off a shower of sparks when struck lightly 3y a steel wheel. This substance has seen employed for making auto ignit?rs for gas burners, miners' acetylene amps and cigar lighters. Recently it ias been proposed to utilize it for igliting motor headlights, and even as a substitute for electric ignition in the lylindera. 1 ntoiiendoa of Power. Power will intoxicate the best j hearts, as wine the strongest heads. No man is wise enough nor good enough to be trusted with unlimited power; for, whatever qualifications he may have evinced to entitle him to the posses ion of so dangerous a privilege, yet. when possessed, others can no longer answer for him, because he can no longer answer for himself. Colton. 12-DAY EXCURSION TO NIAGARA ROAD. 2th Annual Special Train leaves Aug. Vril. for booklet containing all information. Mr. F. P. Parnin, T. P. A., Ft. Wayne, Ind. (03-2G) SYSTEM l.niw'' inoinniy imtmenli. 1 our cretit in rood. Ourprlreai Leal
E3
Signature of
MURRAY ITKCT. CCW VORN CITY. FASHION HINTS Bands of material ire put on in Jackel tyle here, giving quite a novel effect. The low-cut vest is of embroidered net, and above is the chemisette of the same net tucked. The girdle is of black satin and the buttons are covered with the same. Raphfi.el considered that a meat diet was rot pood for a painter, a.nd therefore lived principally on dried fruit, such as figs and raisins, with bread. TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. . germicidal, disinfecting au deodorizing toilet requisite of exceptional excellence and economy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample WITH HEALTH AND 8CAUTV SOOR (INT MIC THE PAXTOH TOILET CO., BostciMass. Positively cured hf these Little Pills. . Tliey also reUeve "Distress froa Dyspepsia. I digestion and Too Hearty Eating, a perfect renv eiy for Dizziness. Kausea, Droirs&ess. Bad Tasta la tt9 Mouta, Coated Tonpu'5, rain la tho g'.Je, TORPID LIVER. They
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CARTER'S CITTLE iflVER p PILLS.
refirul&te tie Bowels, purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SHALL FRICL CARTERS Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature rilTTLE IflVER REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. F. W. N. U. No. 30 19C9 AVhen writing to Advertiarra pleaae ay you taw (be Adv. la tbla paper. II afflicted with Sore Eyes, use
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