Plymouth Tribune, Volume 8, Number 43, Plymouth, Marshall County, 29 July 1909 — Page 7
WANTS HER
LETTER
PUBLMEl For Benefit of Women who Suffer from Female Ills Minneapolis, Minn. "I was a preat sufferer from female trouble3 which I caused a weakness and broken down condition of the system. I read so much of what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound had done for other suffering women I felt sure it would help me, and I must say it did help me wonderfully. ilv pains all kit me, 1 f ew stronger, and within three months was a perfectly well woman. "I want this letter made public to show the benefit women may derive from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. John G. Moldan, 2115 Second St., Xorth, Minneapolis, Minn. Thousands of unsolicited and genuine testimonials like the above prove the efficiency of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which is made exclusively from loots and herbs. Women who suffer from those distressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to restore their health. If you -want special advice -write to 3Irs. Pinkbam, at Lynn, 3Iass. She will treatyoiirletterasstrictly confidential. For 20 years she lias been helpinpr sick women in this ivay, free of charge. Don't hesitate write at once The Snobs Rebuked. Mrs. William Ellis Corey was describing, at a luncheon at the Plaza, the Paris school where, with the help of Isadora Duncan and Jean de Reszke, she trains little children for the stage. "I think such work," said MrCorey, "Is better than a life of mere social frivolity. American society, you know, even the best of it, is so apt to be snobbish. So often, after listening to the twaddle at a tea or a reception, I feel like getting up to go with old Omar Fitzgerald's remark. "Fitzgerald, the translator of the Rubaiyat, called one night at a house where a very snobbish conversation was going on. lie sat an hour in an uncomfortable silence. He wanted to talk about poetry and musk, plays and pictures, but Instead he had to listen ito snobbish boasting about what the duke had said, and the baron had answered, and how gracious the princess had been. ( Finally he rose to go. He shook hands with hi3 hostess, and then he turned to the assembled guests and said sadly, shaking his head: ' 'I once knew a lord, too; tut he's dead.' " If you us ball bine, fit Red Cross Ball Blue, the best ball blue. Large 2oz. package, 8 cent. Am nalna: the Baby. A simple device for keeping baby amused and happy 13 to fasten at intervals upon a broad bright ribbon the little toys of which he Is most fond, suspending the ribbon above the bed upon which he lies, Tvltiiia reach of his little hands, by securing one end to the head of the bed and the other to the foot. He will then entertain himself by the hour pushing the toy3 back and forth and watcting them swing above him. Harper's Bazar. There is only one GENUINE RuxUa 03 (Sold Medal Maarlem Oil Now pat up ia Odorless tad Tasteless CAPSULES This is the best of 11 Home remedies. Dlscovered A. D. 1696. by Claes Tilly, it has, in the past 200 years, relieved thousands and thousands of sufferers from LIVER, MDBEY, GLADDER and STOMACH TROUDLES Holland Medicine Co., Scranton, Pa. In reply to letter, I. received a free box of your Haarleir Oil, and I found thera very good, and I got one box myself. They havt relieved me quite some. I have tried almost everything, and went to two doctors; I tried Swamp Root; I have tried everything I was told, and your pills seem to have been the best. I will recommend them. Vours truly, MRS. S. NEWTON, 331 Pearl St. Brooklyn, N. Y., April 3. 1909. Take Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules today. You will feel relieved tomorrow. Bottles IS and 3S cents. Capsules 25 and 50 cents. At all druggists. HOLLAND MEDICINE CO.. Sols Importers Scranton, Pa. Ii your Druggist cannot supply you, write us (Li ecu TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and fre from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. v germicidal, disinfecting auu 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 Samp!; WITH "HCALTH NO ltUTT" f OOK SENT fRIC THE PAXTON TOiLET CO., BostomMass. A Skin of Deauty Is a Joy Forever. D R. T. Felix Oouraud's Oriental Croim or Magical Boautlfler. KtmoTfi Tmj, Pimples, freckles. Pitches, Rsah. sad bkia iMnr&rea, ana every D.en,i5n 00 besuty. sq4 ließet detection. It has too4 ttie test et M yean, bjiJ to to trmle we tiitelt tobesurtlt properly msds. Accept do counterfeit of siOillsr ut. Dr. L. A. 8r said to ( J of tb haut, ten (a patiect): "As you ladies will usa thrm. 1 reeemmend 'ClmmmnA, rreim' aa tba least harmful ef all the skin preparattoot." For saie by ail dnigiU and Fancy. (roocs Ceaiers in tb United States, Canada and Europe. FEBIT.HCPUS, Pr:, 37 Brut Jcnss Slrwl MswTorL LAND IRRIGATED LAND Irp'tual water right ; Luc water; productlre soil ; crop failures unknown ; jo bushels wheat por acre: 3 1-2 to 5 tons alfalfa; fcealthful climate; free timber; easy terms; write now. 1. In woo J Land Company, Heck 8yrlDj3, Wyoming.
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Was So Sore, Irritating and Painful that LIttl Sufferer Coaltl Not Sleep Scratched Constantly Cutlrura'i Effleacy Proven. "When about two and a half years old my daughter broke out on her hips and the upper parts of her legs with a very Irritating and painful eruption. It began In October; the first I noticed was a little red surface and a consfant desire on her part to scratch her limbs. She could not sleep and the eruptions got sore, and yellow water came out of them. I had two doctors treat her, but she grew worse under their treatment Then I bought the Cuticura Remedies and only used them two weeks when she was entirely well. This was In February. She has never had another rough place on her skin, and she Is now fourteen years old. Mrs. R. R. Whltaker, Winchester, Tenn.. Sept. 22. 190S." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp.. Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston. Jarob Kijed Her Team Away. It's a - boy can't kiss away hl3 swecth.?a.-. tears without a big, unsympathetic policeman taking both to the children's court, the New York Evening Telegram says. Any fellow would have acted just as Jacob KInsler did, especially If he was as fond of his sweetheart as Jacob la of Susie Stahl. Jacob Is a manly little chap of 13, and Susie, two years h's junior. Is one of the prettiest little girls on the East Side. "We wasn't regular kissing," explained Jacob. "I'll tell you how it was. A boy nearly twice as big as I am came along and slapped Susie and she began to cry.' "Why didn't you tackle him?" asked the court. "He wa3 too big for me to lick, and I let him go. But I did the next best thins. Susie was crying somepln fierce, and I just grabbed her and wa3 kissing away her tears when the cop came along and said I was violating the law. I didn't know what he meant, and as Susie kept on crying I kept on kissing. Then the cop stopped us." "You and Susie may go now," said the court to Jacob. 'The next time she cries give her your handkerchief when you see a cop coming." Ask Your Druggist For Allen's Foot-e. "I tried ALLEX'S FOOT-EASE recently, and have Just bought another supply. It has cured my corns, and the hot, burning and itching sensation in my feet which was almost unbearable, and I would not be without it now. Mrs. W. J. Walker. Carndcu, N. J." Sold by all Druggists. 25c. A Jnt Itehuke. "I am," he said, "deformed. Pad hide It. Still, deformed I am, and I want to know why writers always make deformed persons villains? Take Quasimodo In i Victor Hugo's 'Xotro Dame.' Why, Quasimodo was little better than a wild gorilla, swinging from the great bell and hurling the priest down from the high tower. Take the housemaid's clubfoot father In Ibsen's 'Ghosts.' There was a nasty old man for j'ou a nasty, perverse, evil-minded old rooster, eh? Take Dick Crookback In the immortal William's play. Take Nosey the Dwarf in Hauffs classic 'airy tale. Take the villains In all fairy tales, for that matter. They are a one-eyed, lame, hunchbacked, clubfooted lot, "It makes us deformed folks red-hot, this literary Imputation of villainy. It causes people to think we really are villains. Where's the child, after a course of fairy tales, that can be persuaded a hunchback's soul doesn't match his body?" Cincinnati Enquirer, A Well-Knowa Type of Oratory. At a luncheon In Boston, Leonora ORellly, who 13 perhaps the most powerful orator among the American suffragists, was complimented on her eloluence. "It Is my splendid subject," said Miss O'Reilly, modestly, "that makes oae seem to speak well. My subject affords me many telling things to say. and I say them simply. That Is all." She smiled. "I try to avoid, she resumed, "the sort of oratory that marks the averige political campaign. That Is frightful. One night on the East Side I saw worklngman I knew lounging In the doorway of a public hall, and from Inside came a continuous and earnest bellowing. " 'Do you know who's speaking? I asked my friend. 'Or haven't you been in?' " 'Oh. yes, I've been in said he. 'Assemblyman Blagg Is speaking.' "'What about?' I Inquired. "My friend sighed and shook his head. " 'He didn't say.' he answered. It Is estimated that the Kaffirs In the diamond mines at Kimberley, South Africa, steal $1,250,000 worth of diamonds in a year. SURPRISED HIM. Doctor's Teat of Food. A doctor In Kansas experimented with his boy in a test of food and gives the particulars. He says: "I naturally watch the effect of different foods on patients. My own little 'son, a lad of four, had been ill with pneumonia and during his convalescence did not seem to care for any kind of food. "I knew something of Grape-Nuts and its rather fascinating flavour and particularly of Its nourishing and nerve-building powers, bo I startedyth'j boy on Grape-Nuts and found from the first dish that he liked it. "His mother gave it to him steadily and he began to Improve at once. In less than a month he had gained about eight pounds and soon became so well and strong we had no further anxiety about him. "An old patient of mine, 73 years old, came down with serious stomach trouble and before I was called had got so weak he could eat almost nothing, and was in a serious condition. He had tried almost every kind of food for the sick without avail. "I immediately put him on GrapeNuts with good, rich mirk and just a little pinch of sugar. He exclaimed when I came next day, 'Why, doctor, I never ate anything so good or that made me feel so much stronger. "I am pleased to say that he got well on Grape-Nuts, but he had to stick to it for two or three weeks, then he began to branch o.it a little with rice or an egg or two. He got entirely well In spite of his almost hopeles3 condition. He gained 22 pounds in two months, which at his age ia remarkable. "I could quote a list of cases where Grape-Nuts has worked wonders." "There's a Reason." Read "The Road to Wellvllle," in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest.
Cultivate the spirit and feeling of partnership between the boys and yourself and there will not be so much langer of their becoming dissatisfied md leaving the farm. There Is nothing like plenty of ?ood, fresh air In living and sleeping rooms, whether the rooms be for the occupancy of man or other animals. ThU holds good for both winter and summer. Exchange. Scientific research has done great things for agruculture. A striking Illustration of this is found in the äugar beet, whose sugar content has rvithln a remarkably brief period of time been Increased from 13.3 per cent to 15.35 per cent. The cement flooring with movable slat platforms makes the H?al form !or the hog house.- The cemenl floor ilone Is too cold and damp for tue iiogs, but with the slatted flooring on top which can be taken up to clean Dut the place there Is nothing wfclch Is better. It Is always best to feed the calres by hand because one knows just what Ihey are getting and how much. It ts really not such a terribie task to feed i dozen calves, but It is quite a nuisance to go through the motion Jrjst for one or two. Perhaps a great ma?j dairymen who object to raising calces for their own herds would change their minds if they should practice It In a wholesale way. It Is a great mistake to sell whole nilk off the farm, for where the skim aiilk Is not kept to feed to the stock sne of the richest elements for manure making ia lost. Keep the milk home by means of a separator. Sell the cream, feed the skim milk to the alves, hogs and hens. If corn Is very we57 or if theie comes a heavy rain It rays to cultivate after It Is laid by. I have cultivated when corn was In tassel and think It paid me well. I cultivated part of a field one year with one horae, and when husking time came it took two rows less (40 rods long) to make a load than on the land which had not received the extra cultivation. I use a five-shovel adjustable cultivator and plow as shallow as I can. I blieve in level cultivation. Most people in this country plant corn too thick. Sixteen to twenty inches ia my way, then cultivate at least foil times over. E. J. Hotchkiss in Fanners' Mail and Breeze. Most of us try to raise more chloV ens than we can handle properly. 1 have come to the conclusion after ta years' work raising fancy bred fowls. If one can house only fifty, that is all he should raise. Feed and house thani well and the egg3 will come. Dou't raise chickens to sell. If you do you are giving dollars for cents. I have never been able to get 30 cents per pound for fries, and 6 to 8 cents is all one can get in the fall. Keep Jut enough hens and fries to pick up thj waste around the place. And don't let the little chickens take care of themselves while you are watching the incubator. It's not how many you can hatch, but how many )-ou cam raise, that counts. Keep a box of 50 to 100 pounds of lime in the henhous the year round. G. L. B. in Farmers' Mall and Breeze. Under our present methods there it entirely too much waste and carelessness in the handling of wool clips. In the first place much wool Is shorn In a reckless manner. The shearers' entire endeavor 13 to fleece the wool and leave from one to two pounds on the sheep's back, thereby unconsciously depreciating the value of the fleece. In the second place the wool Is collected, tied In bundles and placed in bags regardless of grade, texture or general character. A little attention to thl3 particular feature of our Industry would have a tendency to Increase the value of the fleeces. If wool Is badly tangled with burs about the only way to get the real value of the fleeces Is to send them to a scouring, mill. If marketed while still filled with burs the loss Is from 3 to 4 cents a pound. A scouring mill will take out all of these burs by the carbonizing process, which costs 2 cents a pound and 1 cent for finishing. After the process the fleeces are put upon the market as scoured wool and bring good prices. Denver Field and Farm. Wholesale and retail prices of Jressed meats have gone up from perfectly natural causes. For reasons well known to the trade the supply has been very materially curtailed this year as compared with previous years, and there is no abatement In the demai:i. especially for the better :uts. With the usual June raise la light, due to the scarcity of prime ftuff and the added demand for it From summer resorts and transportation lines, a very high price for meats luring the summer Is in prospect, lays the National Provisioner. It is tot probable that the demand will fall )ff very much, despite the business lepresslon, because there is plenty of money In the country held back waiting for investment, and It Is not likely that the purchase of foodstuffs will be reduced because of any lack of money with which to buy them. Paclrers, however, will have a difficult time In supplying their trade even at high prices, owing to tho scarcity of desirable r.tock, and It Is entirely prob able that sensational newspapers wlli try to stir up another "fuss" before the summer is over. Farmers and Drovers' Journal. Amrrlran l'liirir le. The phosphate lands recently withdrawn from entry for settlement by the national government constitute, li is said, the greatest known phosphate deposit in the world. These lands comprise nearly the whole of Uinta County, in Wyoming, and portions of Morgan, Rich and Cache Counties, in Utah, and of Bear Lake, Bannock, Bingham and Fremont Counties, In Idaho, making in all about 7,500 square miles of territory which is more or less underlain by t,hosphate rock. Besides these vast natural deposits It is pointed out that the gases from the smelters at Butte and Anaconda, which are very
Injurious to vegetation, may be made to yield sulphuric acid for the manufa.ure of superphosphate fertilizers. Shoulder of the Horse. A good horse collar is the chief part of the harness, and it should be of the very best kind and fit the animal's neck perfectly. It should be kept clean at all times, and the horse's shoulders well washed and brushed each day. Much dirt and dust arise in the fields and on the roads at this season, and these are caught and held on the moist and sweaty shoulders and collar, there to form hard lump3 and ridges. Every time the collar is put on the horse it should be examined for these lumps and ridges. If any are found they should be carefully brushed and rubbed away. After each day's work bathe and clean the shoulders with a mixture of warm water, salt and soda. Hot water Is one of the best known natural agents for telleving soreness in horses due to sprains, bruises and excessive pressure on the animal's body. Salt and soda are healing and disinfecting agents. A little alum and tannic arid, the Juice from the bark or leaves of oak or willow trees will heal and toughen the skin and should be applied with warm water. Grape Culture. Vineyards may be started either by planting cuttings or one-year-old rooted plants. If the rooted plants can be secured it Is bast to use them, as in this way a more uniform stand may be had. On the other hand. If one i3 unable to get the rooted vines good healthy cuttings can be planted in the spring In the field In the place where the vines are to grow. To insure a better stand plant two cuttings in a place. By proper care of these cuttings a very large per cent of them will giow and In two or three years the vines will be as large as those started from one-year-old rooted plants. Cuttings from the European grapes may be from 20 to 21 Inches la length. Plant them so that two or three buds may remain above the ground. The European grapo doe3 better !n a light and deep soil. A heavy adobe soil tends to produce too large cane growth and delays the ripening of the berries. The most common distance at which to set out a vineyard is eight feet between the plants. In this way 680 vines can be planted in an acre of ground. Stock Sogar Deeta. It has been clearly demonstrated by many practical and scientific experiments that green feeds are very valuable for all live stock, furnishing actual food values, aiding digestion, toning the system and promoting general health. Chickens lay more eggs, plga grow faster and cows give more milk in summer than at any other season, mainly because they have access to green feeds. Green feeds are an aid to perfect digestion and assimilation. They contain a high water content and vegetable Juices which not only help to dissolve heavier, concentrated foodj but also act as carriers in the animal system. On every diversified farm where poultry, pigs, cows and other animals are kept, from half an acre to an acre or more of stock sugar beets, mangel wurtzels, carrots and like green roots should be given for winter feeds. They are comparatively easy grown in nearly all sections of tae country and yield high many tons to the acre. They can be stored in the cellar or pit or even kept covered with straw or hay In a warm barn. The feeding of stock sugar beets in winter, when all other green feeds ire gone, makes almost summer conditions with the' animals to which they are fed. Poultry, pigs, horses and sheen relish them and thrive when they constitute even only a small part of thd regular rations. Where no silage is used they are one of the very best light, supplementary feeds that can be given to dairy cows during the period when they are off pasture. They are a splendid feed for maintaining and increasing the quantity of milk yield, and tend to ghe cream and butter thd color and aroua of summer. I1mt to Milk. A cow may have all the qualities for a good milker, and still be spoiled Id milking. More depends upon the way milking is done than most people think. A cow can easily be ruined for life by a few weeks of careless milking. First of all, the milker should be kind to and in full sympathy with the cow he handles. The flow of milk ia determined largely by the nervous condition of the cow. If her nerves are quiet and normal, milk will form in the glands and flow under the pressure of the hand of the milker. It the nerves are disturbed and the cow becomes excited or restless the milk glands will refuse to perform their normal function and the cow will refuse to "give down her milk." When a cow does not readily yield her usual flow ci milk the milker often loses temper and forthwith begins to beat the cow with the milk stool or otherwlso increase her nervous excitement. The good milker ill always be kind and gentle to his cow, striving to make her feel at ease and win her confidence. Instead of caressing her with the milk stool, he will stroke her gently with the hand and speak softly. When milk refuses to come upon trial gently stroking and kneeding the udder will stimulate the nerves and glands to normal activity. If there Is no immediate response, have patience and give the cow time to become quiet In mind. Give her something to eat or otherwlso absorb her attrition. Help her to forget her trouble, fear, anxiety or whatever rau.-e.i tli.- ntivous fc.xt Itement. Milk the cow absolutely k ri. It requires a little longer earh tih:e to do this, yet it pays big in the cnJ. The last milk is the richest milk, and where butter fat is desired this little extra makes much difference- in the value of product. Also, if the cow is not milked very clean each time she will gradually decrease in milk flow and go dry much hooncr than she otherwise would. Often carelessness In stripping the cow will i;?ue hfudder to spoil and damage her to such an extent that she can no longer be kept at at profit.
TO AVOID DROWNING.
Wbnt in Do If You Fall in Water and C'untiot Swim, There are chronicled every summer a long list of fatal drowning accidents which plunge thousands into mourn ing, and the pity of it Is that a little knowledge of watermanship and ordinary care might have prevented most of them. To Ignorance or carelessness in entering and leaving a boat or while In it; to venturing In open water unprepared, and to negiert of the rudimentary principles of watermanship can be traced half the recorded fatalities. No one should ever take out rowing persons who do not know how to swim without drst ascertaining that the boat is safe and seaworthy and provided with the necessary paraphernalia for eventualities. It Is when one least expects it that accidents occur, writes L. de B. Handley in the special vacation number of Recreation, and the only way to avoid them is to be prepared at all times. A stout bowline, enough life preservers to go around, an anchor, something to bale with and an extra pair of oars should be carried on principle. You may not nee! them ninety-nine times out of a hundred, but on that hundredth time they may mean life or death. In getting Into a boat one should try to step right into the bottom over the keel, or if this is too great a reach, on to the middle of the seat and then clown. Stepping on the gunwale has t een responsible for numberless capsizings and it Is a good idea when inexperienced people are embarking to take hold of the boat and steady It. Enter if possible where you Intend to sit and In such a manner that you will not have to turn afterwards. The weight should be distributed as evenly as possible, in a small boat, with slight preference to the stern. If the bow Is burled the least head-swell will flood the boat and if the stern Is too deep a following sea may swamp it. In making a landing one should approach at an angle, shipping the inward oar a few yards away and rounding up by backing with the outward one. It Is dangerous to stretch out over the gunwale to reach for float or pier. In landing the person In the bow should be first, taking the bow-line with him end steadying the boat for the others. I will not insult the intelligence of the reader by advising against rocking the boat or Indulging in like idiotic skylarking. One must be decidedly lacking in gray matter to choose such pastimes. There are certain rules about one's behavior In a small craft, however, which should be kept constantly in mind. For Instance, should It be necessary for two people to change places they should keep weli over the keel until ready to pass each other and then standing face to face move to either side simultaneously that the boat may net lose Its balance. Also, whether In picking up anything from the water or In helping a swimmer it is advisable to use the stern and not the side. When a boat is capsized do not try to climb into it again. It will sustain you easily If you Just lean on it, as will any fair-sized piece of wreckage like an oar, a spar, or a board, but attempt to climb over them and they will surely sink with you. And speakin;; about this, when you are being helped or towed do not hang onto your rescuer or boat with bent arms, as this draws the body up and offers great resistance. Outstretched arms will Increase your chances of getting ashore. I Wit of the Youngsters Teacher Harry, what did you m ike a face nt me for? Harry Please, ma'am, because I didn't know you were Tookln. Helen Tommy, why doesn't the sea run over if all the big rivers flow Into It? Tommy 'Cause the sea is full of sponges, that's why. Sunday School Superintendent Elsie, can you tell me anything about the epistles? Little Elle I Kuess they were the wives of the apostles, "Why, Ethel, what's the matter?" asked her mother, as the little one almost choked at the dinner table. "I got a piece of bread head first down my cough pipe," explained Ethel Sunday School Teacher What do we learn from the story of the man who was told to take up his bed and walk? Small Sammle We learn that they had folding beds in ancient times. Humor In Advertising. It Is agreed on all sides that as a rule humorous advertisements are to be avoided. Business is business, and the businesslike ad. is the one that counts. Nevertheless it is Interesting to come upon an odd, amusing or out of the ordinary specimen for instance, that of the photographer who made a specialty of baby photographa His advertisement read: "Bring your dear little babie3. If they don't sit still I won't get cross. I was a baby once myself." What Is especially rare is to find an advertiser who will exhibit any candor about the negative qualities of his goods. It is all the more refreshing, then, to peruse the announcement of an Innkeeper In one of the smaller States who was evidently burning with a desire to tell the exact truth about his establishment: "Not the largest hotel in the town, not newly furnished throughout, no free bus to train, not the best grub the market affords, but simply clean beds and good food, 25 cents to sleep, 23 cents to eat. Toothpicks and Ice water thrown in. Try us. Pay up. And if not satisfied keep mum!" London Answers. Plea for Open Fireplace. "If people would only learn to have open fires In their rooms, instead of converting them into hot-air boxes by means of furnaces, there would be fewer colds," said a physician. "Fireplaces and their chimneys are ventilators. To me the beauty of an opeu fire makes It worth having, but when you consider that It's a sanitary officer, constantly changing the air and driving out germs, It is hard to see how any one can prefer a furnace." A Previous Specimen. He If I'd known how sarcastic you were I never she have married you. ghe You had a chance to notice it. Didn't I say, "This Is so sudden," when you proposed to me after four years' courtship? Boston Transcript. People would be less suspicious of others if they didn't know themselves so vvelL
Adventure vrlth the Knhlnnor. The Lawrence brothers, Henry and John, who occupied important posts in the government of India, and who were men of resource and integrity, had at one time the custody of one of the most famous diamonds in the world. In "The Lawrences of the Punjab," F. P. Gibbon gives the story as evidence of the simplicity of the brothers in affairs which, by many, would be considered matters of the highest importance. Among the state jewels of the Sikh court was the famous "Mountain of Light," which, after passing from the Mogul to the Persian court, and thence to the Afghan, from whom it was wrested by Ranjit Singh, was now to be presented to Queen Victoria. The diamond was placed in charge of Sir Henry Lawrence, who deeming hi3 brother the stronger and more practical guardian, entrusted it to John, who pocketed the little bcx and straightway forgot it. Some weeks later came an official letter from Lord Dauhousie, ordering that the diamond be sent at once to her Majesty. The president received the message during a meeting of the board, and John advised him to send it off promptly. "Why, you've got it!" said the senior member. John's clear intellect took In the full horror of the situation, and he feared he was a ruined man, for the gem had never been seen by him since the day it had been given into his keeping. Crimes without number had been committed for jewels not a quarter its value, and who would believe his story that he had forgotten its existence and flung it aside, in the pocket of an old waistcoat? Of what avail to rely upon his known Integrity? His story might be officially believed, but he knew that men would shake their heads and regard him askance. Yet without a sign of perturbation, he casually replied: "Oh, yes, of course! I forgot all about it," and calmly proceeded to discuss the business before the meeting with all his usual alertness and without a sign of preoccupation. But one can guess how he longed for the end, how he hurried in search of his servant, who chanced to remember taking a small box from his master's discarded clothes. He explained where he had put the worthless box containing the bit of glass, and tho Kohlnoor was safe.
IJverjr Woman WIM De Interested. liiere has recently been discovered an aromatic, pleasant herb cure for woman's Ills, called Mother Gray'a Al STltAMA-n:AF. It is the only certain regulator. Cures female weaknesses and Backache. Kidney, Bladder and .Urinary troubles. At all Druggists or by mail 50 cts. Sample FREE. Address. The Mother Gray Co.. LeRoy. N. Y. Autos Might De Cheaper. A suit that may result in sensational disclosures has been brought against three members of the Association of Licensed Automobile Manufacturers. The defendants are the Locomobile Company of America, the George N. Pierce Company, of Buffalo, and the II. H. Franklin Manufacturing Company, of Syracuse. They are accused by the Flint Automobile Company of Flint, Mich., of compelling the latter to go out of business by threatening suits against its customers for alleged infringement of a patent. This action is brought under the Sherman antitrust law, and it Is charged that the auto companies formed an association in 1903 including 70 per cent of the persons or firms in the automobile trade "to raise and maintain artificial ly the price of gasoline automobiles, and to regulate and restrict artificially the output of such automobiles and the trade and commerce therein." The Flint company declares that it was not infringing on any patent, and that the threats against it were made solely to drive it out of business. The outcome of the case is being watched with great interest, Leslie's Weekly asserts, and it is said that it the alleged combination Is broken up the prices of automobiles will be reduced. Trouble of Author. Thackeray, with a few rapid strokes of his pen, had just killed Col. Newcome. "At last." he said, "I've got even with mankind for having to go through life with a broken nose!" Even then, as he further reflected. It wasn't half as bad as Barrie making Sentimental Tommy hang himself on somebody's fence. lira. Wlosiow sSootaina; Syrup for Children teething ; softens the gums, reduces Inuammation, allays pain, cures wind colic 'JA cent a hot lie. Testing the Idea. "Johnny, you bad boy, what have you been doing with this thermometer?"It's been in the Ice box, maw. You eald I only imagined I was sufferin with the heat 'cause the thermometer was sUuidin' at 85. I wanted to see If it would make any difference when I run It down to 45. It don't." Look $1,000 Gold and Silver TROPHY for the Best Ear of Corn To ha known n Ihn W KeUogg National Corn Trophy To be Awarded at the NATIONAL CORN FXP0SITI0N OMAHA, December 6 to 18, 1909. Watdi tola paper for further particulars,
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ALCOHOL 3 PER rrv-p Acge(abu?PrcparionrorAs-similaimthcFoodanaRcgu!i-üng (Jtc Stomachs arLBcmxs of Promolcs Di estionhf erfidncss and Restontns ncittur Opiimi-Morphine narjfiacrai Not Narcotic. to-i Bacpkia Seti" Mx-Srnna JbJlrffe SaltsAiiseStti PtpptrmintItilartonakSiU Harm Srd -Clanfxd Sipr hiuttrften Hart. Anprfort Rpmedv forCansftxa hiHon , Sour Stoiiudi.Dlarriioca . Worms jCoirvulsions J-evensn ncss and Loss of Sleep. Pac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. MS? Exact Copy of Wrapper, While Ilonse Get' frMJli.iore China. Interesting pieces of ;hlna, once owned by President l'ilimore, wer placed in the White House cabinets the other day. They were obtained through the efforts of Mrs. Abby G. Baker, who has charge of the White House collection, under the direction of Mrs. Taft. She learned that much of the Fillmore china could be found in Buffalo, the former President's old home. There she found that two sisters, Mrs. B. Terry and Miss Cornelia Burtis, had bought the old Fillmore mansion with almost all the furniture and china. They were delighted tc add something to 'the White House collection and gave an old Stafford shire platter, a willow pattern plate and other dishes. From other persons in Buffalo it is expected to get more Interesting articles owned by Fillmore. A feeling of security anI freedom from nnxiety pervades the home in which Hamlins Wizard Oil is kept constantly on hand. Mothers know it can always be depended upon in time of need. A la Stanley. Climbing out of his airship, the explorer who had gone In search of the north pole approached the man who was already there. "Commander Peary, I presume?" he sa,id, raising his fur cap. "Yes," answered the other explorer. "This, I presume. Is Mr. Wellman." "The same." "Well. I'm glad to see you. Walt Iet me offer you a cup of train oil. You I will find it nutritious and satisfying. Ooogloo. bring the gentleman one of our fattest and largest tallow candles." Chicago Tribune. VelloYY Clothes Are Unsfa-htlr. Keep them white with Red Cross Ball Blue. Ail grocers sell Urge Sot. packags, 6 etat. Afterward. Mr. Gayman was limping Into the clubroom with one eye in deep mourning, patches of court plaster on his face, his nose skinned, a small part of his left ear gone, and his right arm m a sling. "Great Peter!" exclaimed Oldboy. "What's the matter, Gayman? Have you been getting In the wray of a bomb?" "No," answered Mr. Gayman; "Joy riding." Intellect Ruled bjr Superstition. A man more absolutely governed by pure reason than Lord Macaulay could not well be found, but In his diary he refers to an after-dinner talk about the feeling which Johnson had of thinking one's self bound to touch a particular rail or post and to tread In the middle of a paving stone, and he adds: "I certainly have this very strongly. Something Doing. Stranger Is there any hope of catching the fellows who are doing all this dynamiting? I Native Yes, sir; there is now. The plate glass insurance men are going to get busy. Chicago Tribune.
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