Plymouth Tribune, Volume 8, Number 45, Plymouth, Marshall County, 12 August 1909 — Page 7
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OVER, BLADDER KIDNEY AND STOMACH TROUBLES TAKE Gold Medal Haarlem Oil IN CAPSULES. "OdorleM and Tasteless."
COLD MEDAL HAARLEM OIL is tba ONLY genuine Haarlem OiL Made from the ftrifinal Tilly Formula, first discovered A. D. 1696. Holland Medicine Co., Scranton, Pa. Dear Sirs: 1 sent for a free box of TOUT Haarlem Oil Capsules as advertised in the "Krcord." I have taken your oil, and 1 are one-half bottle now on hand. It is certa nly a fine medicine for bladder trouble. I hive recommended it to a good many people, nd it proved to be all right. Would not be w:hut it in the house. Yours faithfully, JAMES BEECH. 13.10 Buttoawood St. Reading. Fa.. March 23, 1909. Capsules and bottles are sold at all dnr tore. Capsules, 25 and 50 cents; bottles. i and 35 cents. HOLLAND MEDICINE CO.. loie Importers Scranton, Pa If your Drufrsrist cannot supply you, write us direct. Food Products Libby's Cooked Corned Beef There's a marked distinct i o n between Libby's Oookod Corned Docf and even ;the best that's sold in bulk. Evenly and mildly cured and scientifically cooked in libby's Croat Whlto 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 "Healthful" Eleal-Time-Hints, all ready to serve, are: Peerless Dried Deo f Vienna Sausago Veal Loaf Evaporated Milk Daked Deans Chow Chow Mixed Pickles "Purity goes hand in hand with Products of the Libby brand". Write for free Booklet, "How to mako Good Things to Eat". insist o n Libby's at your grocers. Libby, UcNelll L Libby Ohlomgo WEARS "5300 SHOES $350 W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES art Better aa Value for the Price Than Ever Before. The quality, workmMihlp and styl cannot be excelled. A trial I alt Ibaf la rwlert io ecnTinre an Ton that W. L. Ionfrlaa shoe hold th-ir sfiape. tt tetter and wear longer than othr make. W. L. Iw-.uirl renntation forthe ht thna that can t produced tor the prt'-e In worldwi1(. He atanda back of r-rerj pair and rnantntret fall Tain to the wearer. CAUTlOIC. that W. T. T)oairI nama an4 tba rl fra f vrnrnT m th. bottom. TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. 11 SI 0 aaa II I taow laoaa ft 0 So S3 M Shtf for Every Member of the Family, Men. Roy. Women, MUaea and Children. WhereTer yxi r.re. W. L. Imntrlat ahnea are within Ionr iach. If wnnt 1-W rannoi fit yon. write for Lad Order Catalog, W.L.1XJVGLAS, Brockton, Mm. TOILET ANTISEPTIO 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 Saiccle with "mcaitm and acauTV" book sc NT race THE PAXTON TOILET CO.. BostonMass. A 8kln of Beauty Is a Joy Forever. R. T. Felix Oouraud's Oriental Cream or Magical Beatrtifler. Removes Tan. Pl.nplaa, f reelle. Jloth TaicLe. Rmo, and tain Diara-va. ana every b.eriilfb od teauty, and deBee detect Ion. It baa tood IL teit cf ft) years, and It so harmien wi fast It t besurtlt 'fioirmd'a Crewro aa tha 1-ast tnr:ful of a 1 tt.a skia rrejiarvionv" fr-r sals by all Jruits snd fancyGood Dealers in tho Utit J Sttta, Caiida aad Europe. raiLKSfSaS, Fr:p., 37 Gfsat Janes S'':rf. He.r;:k Nothing Too Good for you. That's why we want you to take CASCARETS for liver and bowels. It's not advertising talk but merit the great, wonderful. lastingmerit of CASCARliTS that we want you to know by trial. Then you'll have faith and join the millions who keep well by CASCARETS alone. CASCARETS ioc a box for a week's treatment, all druzrista. Biggest seller la the world. MUiioo boxes a montfe.
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Tot Gnlltr. Martin Closfords hens received fo much blame to which they were justly entitled that when their owner couM prove them guiltless of depredations he hastened t their defense. "My flower beds are in a terrible condition, Mr. Cosford." said ene of his summer neighbors one day. "I know they be. I know they be." groaned Martin, "but my hens didn't do it this time. Mis' Gage!" "Are you sure?" asked the lady in a tone of chill doubt. "Yes. ma'am, I am," said Martin, with emphasis. "There was only one chicken. Mis' Gage, and it hadn't but just went into the front bed when I sot my dog after It. and he chased that chicken through every last one o them flower beds till he got it headed for home, an there want nary another chicken nor hen dast go nigh 'em." lie Had Heard of It. The teacher was trying to explain the word "transfiguration." "Don't you remember the transfiguration on the mount?" she said. "Who was it who wa3 transfigured and changed in appearar.ee on that occasion?" she asked hopefully. After a moment cf thoughtful silence Darker hesitatingly raised his hand. "I can't just remember his name," te said, "but he was up there hunting at 1 he went to sleep and sl?t twenty jt;ara." A Dainty Toilet Article. Every lady who desires to keep up her attractive appearance, while at the Theater, attending Receptions, when shopping, while traveling and on all occasions should carry In her purse a booklet of Gouraud's Oriental Deauty Leaves. This is a dainty little booklet of exquisitely perfumed powdered leaves which are easily removed and & plied to the skin. It is invaluable when the face becomes moist and flushed and is far superior to a powder puff as it does not spill and soil the clothes. It removes dirt, soot and grease from the face, imparting a cool, delicate bloom to the complexion. Sent anywhere on receipt of Five Cents in stamps or coin. r. T. Hopkins, 37 Great Jones street,
N ?w York. A Ieconnninnee. Mr. Rawson's mule had strayed away, and Pomp had been sent to find It. -Instead of running along the road in the direction in which the mule had been last seen, Fomp scrambled up Prospect Hill as far as he could go, and surveyed the countryside. When he returned in triumph wih the mule an hour later, Mr. Rawson inquired why he had wasted time climbing the hill. '"Twa'n' no waste ob time!" said Pomp, indignantly. "Don't you know, Mr. Rawson, sah, dat a mewel is one ob dose animals you is get t' 'proach from de front end feh yo' own safety? An' how could I 'proach dat mewel from de front end till I knowed whar he was?" A Rare (iood Thing-. "Am uslnp ALLEN'S FOOT-EASC, and ran truly say I would not have been without It bo Ions, had I known the relief It would pive my aching feet. I think It a rare good thing for anyone having sore or tired feet. Mrs. Matilda lloltwert, Irovidence. K. I." Sold by ail DrustiUts, 25c Ask to-day. AVoninn'a Vocntlona. Though a blacksmith's work 13 somewhat out of the regular order of woman's vocations, there are a number of women engaged in that work in the United States. In a suburb of Lincoln, Neb., lives Mrs. Wilcox, who for five years was a school teacher. For some time, however, she has been following the vocation of a blacksmith. She Is said to do all branches cf tin work, forging iron, repairing wagon3, and shoeing horees. She has three daughters who are going to school and taking music lessons and who also assist in the shop work. There are 193 women blacksmiths in the United States, according to the latest census, 571 machinists, 83 bootblacks, 3 raining engineers, 897 watchmen, policemen and detectives. 1,320 hunters, 11 surveyors, 248 chemists, 41 mechanics, 545 carpenters, 84 civil engineers, 78 longshoremen, 113 wood choppers, 906 draymen. 440 bartenders, 2 motormen, 13 car conductors, 7 steam car conductors, 2 roofers, 126 plumbers, 45 plasterers, 1G7 brick and stone masons, 241 papei hangers, 233 bankers, 43 brokers, 1,271 officers of banks, 2.S83 manufacturers and officials of companies, 133 builders -and contractors, 261 wholesale dealers. Rut the most popular of feminine occupations Is domestic service. There are 2,099.193 domestics in Uncle Sam's domains. Aa "We ProaVi" "That Is a tender old poem. "Is. eh?" "But what did the poet mean here where he speaks of the children'a hour?" "Why, I 8'pose under the terms of the divorce decree each parent was entitled to have the children at certain hours. The Judges don't usually draw it so fine, though." Kansas City Journal. ON I'OOd The IUsht Fuanlatlon of Food. Proper food is the foundation of health. People can eat improper fod for a time until there is a sudden collapse of the digestive organs, then all kinds of trouble follows. The proper way out of the difficulty is to shift to the pure, scientific food, Urape Nuts, for it rebuilds from the foundation up. A New Hampshire woman says: "Last summer I was suddenly taken with indigestion and severo stomach trouble and could not eat food without great pain, my stomach was so sore I could hardly move about. This kept up until I was so miserable life was not worth living. "Then a friend finally, after much argument, induced me to quit my former diet and try Grape-Nuts. "Although I had but little faith I commenced to use it and great was ray surprise to find that I could eat it without the usual pain and distress in
a pmprny ma,a. strrmrh Acctpt no counter- j Bioraicn. Ii-Vla! j "So 1 keIt on usinS n rape-Nuts and Barr aajd to a soon a marked Improvement was ladjr or tte bautton (a patiect): shown, for my stomach was performwia ace tnero, ing its regular work in a normal way I recommend .;m,.
j "Very soon the yellow coating disappeared from my tongue, the dull, luavy feeling in my head didupp-.ureJ ;;.id my mind felt li&Iit and char; the . L.nguid. tired filling left, and altoi gether I felt as if I had ben rebuilt, j Strength and weight came back rapidly and I went back to my work with renewed ambition. 'To-day I am a new woman In mind as well as body and I owe it all to this natural food, Grape-Nuts." "There's a Keason." Look in pkgs. for the famous little book, "The Itoad to Wellville." Ever read the above letter? A I new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and fulJ of "jman interest.
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The well matched work team should not only be about equal in weight, but should be about the same size and have similar dispositions. A herd of goats will clear the underbrush from a farm in a very short time. For the last five years a herd or 40 goats has been eating and working cn different farms. In that lime the animals have changed owners 10 time?. In breeding profitable hor?es care should be taken to select animals known to possess desirable quantities. Vicious mares should not be bred. Every year bad-dispositioned horses send quite a number of persons to premature graves and cripple others, while the material damage they do is quite considerable. Never let the sod get thin on the pasture land, for this always means the decrease of the root systems of the plants and a decrease in their ability to penetrate the soil in 3carch of plant food. When sod becomes so thin that the hoof of the animal will break through it In wet weather, it has reached a state of exhaustion that requires attention. In a Wisconsin experiment twentyOne pigs fed on rape for eight weeks gained 37 pounds more weight than the same number fed on clover for the same time. But rape alone does not make an ideal food for gain. Some grain must bo fed. Generally the most profitable hog Is the one that farrows early in the spring, and sent to market the latter part of the same year. A hog less than a year old that can be made to weigh 200 to 230 pounds will be profitable. It seldom pays to keep a hog over winter unless the conditions are favorable. Summer (are of Iloraen. A great many horses are laid up every summer with soro shoulders. This can be remedied in a very Jarge measuro with senso and care. A good horse collar is the main part of the harness, and it should be of tho very best kind and fit th animal's neck perfectly. The collar should be kept clean at all times and the horse's shoulders well washed and brushed daily. .Much dust and dirt arisa in the fields and on the roads during tho warm season, and this is caught and held on the moist and sweaty 6houlders and collar, there to form hard lumps and ridges. Every time the collar Is put on the horse it should be examined for those lumps and ridges. If any are found, they should be carefully brushed and rubbed away. After each day's work, especially In warm weather, 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 relieving soreness due to sprains, bruises and excessive pressure of the animal body. Salt and soda are healing and disinfecting agent?. A little alum and tannic ac'.d. 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. Farmers' and Drovers' Journal. The I'onltry Yard. The louse is a night hawk. Rush the broilers along. The quicker you can pet them on the market the better for you. What Is prettier than a bunch of thrifty chicks, all of one color and breed, and as much alike as so many peas? As every chick hatched carries the blood of the male, it 13 important that FTeat care be taken in selecting the head of the flock. Hens feel the warm weather as much a3 other folks. Give them a shady place to sit down once In a while and rest. They will do all the better for it. Some folks think that hens do not need oyster shells when they can run out. Ju?t try giving them some and see how that Is. You will be wiser after that. One method of keeping lice from troubling the poultry at night is to suspend the roosting poles by wires from the rafters of the house. If the poles are smooth the lice will not remain on them if they are there at all. Turkey hens are profitable until 5 years old. but 11 is a good plan to change the gobblers every year. It requires twenty-eight days to hatch a turkey eg. and seven eggs are considered a setting. The nestr should bo on the ground. Some Alf.ilfa Pointer. Alfalfa grows best'on a deep, sandy loam, underlaid by a loose and permeable subsoil. It will not grow if there Is an excess of water In the soil. The land must be well drained. Plow the land deeply alfalfa is a deep feeder. Sow alone and screen Seed before using to separate the dodder and other weed seeds. Dodder is the worst enemy of alfalfa. For a hay crop fow 20 to 30 pound.? of seed per acre. For a crop of seed sow 14 to IS pounds por acre. Alfalfa does not attain maturity until the third or fourth year, fo do not sow it expecting to get the best results in less time. Kcop the weeds mowed and raked off the first season, or they will choke out the crop. Cut tho hay when the first flowers pnj.mr. If cut in full bloom the hjy wlll be woody. For seed cut when the middle clusters of the seed pods are dark brown. Whether or not alfalfa is a hardy, profitable crop in the Northern States ha-? not yet been fully demonstrated, but in some instances it has been grown successfully even in Canada. Farmers and Drovers' Journal. Live Stock ItnlMliiK. When one has young pigs and breeding stock to care for he must think further than merely what food will fatten most. Feeding without care Is useless.
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Give the cow sunlight; it has its placj in the economic production of mirj just as well as good food. A successful dairyman feeds his cows this excellently balanced ration Clover hay and corn fodder, all thj cows will eat up clean, for roughage ;i for grains, peas and oats, ground fine, and bran In equal parts by weight, and feed one pound of grain to three, or four pounds of milk, with sixteen rounds of sugar beets a day. For generations English farmers have made extensive use of dwarf Essex rape as a stock food. This plant may be described as a rutabaga run to head. The seed Is sown like rjtabaga turnips and cultivated without thinning. Sow two or three pounds in drills, or four or five broadcast, and plt.nt in early spring. The seed is not expensive and the crop is easy to raise. Experiments prove that a heifer U easier to fatten than a steer. If you have a hog pasture It will pay to fence off a corner of the clover meadow for them. The hogs will get more value for you cut of the clover than it would be worth in the form of hay, and save you the harvesting of it. If whole oats are scattered very thinly on a floor and the brood sow 13 allowed to feed on them she will get enough to keep thrifty, while not getting enough to grow fat. This alsu keeps her busy and contented. Inlan-1 Fanner. Farmer Mnj- Make Ciunrw. At Intervals after the cigar leaf tobacco crop has been harvested Inquiries are received concerning the right of the farmer to manufacture cigars for home use or to sell the tobacco to a person other than an authorized dealer or manufacturer. lr the information of all such persons jn explanation of the laws and regulations of the Treasury Department has been obtained from the office of the commissioner of internal revenue. "Under existing laws," writes the commissioner, "a farmer or gror.er of tobacco has a right to sell leaf tobacco of his own growth and raising to any person in any quantity which may be desired, provided the condition of such leaf tobacco has not ben changed In any manner from that In which It was cured on the farm. Yhe manufacture of cigars irr a small way by any person for his own use and consumption is permissible when the cigars are manufactured solely for the use of the person making them and are not removed from the place of manufacture for consumption or sale. No taxes are required to qualify as a manufacturer or make any reports. "Un!css the person intending to manufacture cigars as above dewlred should be a farmer or shall svure his stock of tobacco directly from the farmer, all other sources of sunply woull be closed to him by the requirement of the law, which provides hat dealers in leaf tobacco shall sell only to other dealers and to manufactu;ers of tobacco or cigars or to such persons as are known to be purchittws." Can lleava He Cured f Sowse good horsemen say heave can not fco cured permanently. Howaver, the trouble Ys constantly and rapidly Increasing.' If the case is a mild one and of recent origin it may often be cured entirely by turning the horse out to pasture for two or three months. If it is necessary, however, to work a horse affected with his trouble, he can be relieved greatl. by feeding no hay except at night, and then only a very small amount of clean and bright hay, entirely ree from dust. If there is any dange of dust It is well to dampen it, but enly bright hay should be given. Rots will be found helpful; beets, turulps, potatoes or anything of that sort Ihat the horse will eat. The amount of water should be limited as much as possible, and no horse with he?.ves should be given water for two or three hours previous to going to work. Dr. I.aw recommends arsenic in ö-graln doses daily and continued for a month or two months as especially valuable, and says that the bowels must be kept easy by laxative, if necessary. By treatment of this tort a horse with heaves can be greatly relieved. When the disease first comes on It will pay to turn the horse to grass, with the hope of effecting a cure at once and before the disease progresses to the extent where It becomes Incurable. Farmers and Drovers Journal. Wheat Joint Worm. The fly which produces the whrnt joint worm will issue from strsw stacks and old stubble fields. Warm weather will hurry them out. Farmers j-hould make an immediate examination of their unused straw and old stubble fields and ascertain if the- Insects are present in the hardened lortions of the straw and if they are alout to emerge. When present in any numbers worth considering it is recommended by the Ohio experiment station that the infested straw be burned at once and that wherever possible old stubble fields be burned over. Where clover interferes with burning stubble, loosen as much of the stubble as possible with a hayrake or harrow and drag th borders of the field and burn, or burn in windrows in the field, even if it be certain that some clover will be killed. At the present outlook many locali?!vs in the central states are liable to suffer more from this pest this snm"er than they did last year. Wnnilne t I'm It (innrer. Crown gall is a term applied lo certain warty outgrowths or excrescent s upon the apple, pear, peach, raspberry, etc., forming chiefly on the parts below ground. On the apple t-i.se growths are most apt to occur on grafted trees at the union of 'he rjot and the cion. but they may lorn, at any place where the roots have boon injured in transplanting, etc. Experiments by the department o!' agriculture show that crown gal; ii caused by specific parasite. Every orchardist should carefully inspect all stock which lie purchases for scttiiig. All trees showing evidence of crovn gall should bo either returned to tho shipper or burned, and future orders placed with nurserymen who can und will furnish trees free from disease. Under no condition should trees be planted which show growths of this kind upon the roots, for not only will it result in an unthrifty and unprofitable tree, but it will also endangci other planls.
WILD CATS OF GERMAN PRIITÜS
VtiuiiK Hermann of Suir-Wrlmar It Now Henning the Ilnrvent. The meteoric career of Prince Herman of Saxe-Weimar, heir apparent t t the ducal throne of Saxe-Weimar and Eisenach, has met with a temporary check. No one in Paris in the last few months has led a wilder life tllan the prince. His horses, gaming, entertainments; his truly royal gifts to Mdlle. Wanda; his debts and money shifts were the talk of the town, says a Paris correspondent. - Trince Herman is in his twenty-second year. He was placed in the Prussian guards with the rank of lieutenant and his family gave him an allowance of $10,000 a year. On that Income the prince tried to keep up a racing stable, with the result than within a year his family, his mother and Grand Duke Ernest, had to pay debts amounting to $200,000. Prince Herman was then sent in disgrace to a small country garrison, where his rank enabled him to borrow money from all the poor officers in the regiment. These debts are still unpaid and have been the cause of many hardships. The prince soon became bored with the provincial life. He obtained aa eighteen-month leave of absence. Then began his career in Paris and Vienna, which startled even the most reckless of royal spendthrifts and profligates. His debts piled up and he borrowed money right and left. In Pari alone, according to tie solicitors, his debts amount to $900,000. About half the total amount is owed to money lenders and tradesmen, but the ether half was borrowed from friends. His last exploit in Paris brought him perilously near prison. He took his mother's pearls, heirlooms of great historic value. He said his mother gave them to him to pawn. What he did was to sell them outright to an American iu Paris. With the proceeds he made ofle last splurge in Paris, trailing with him the beautiful Wanda, who once was the favorite of the duke of Westminster. By this time the grand ducal family decided to put a stop to his extrava gance and had him declared bankrupt, though no publicity was given the proceedings. Then Prince Herman de parted for London. His one possession was a letter from the grand duke of Saxe-Weimar promising to pay him $10,000. Oct. 4, 1000. By showing this he induced several persons to back his paper on which he borrowed money. His family learned he had even dupli cated the duke's guaranty in order to have copies to show possible lenders. In this way Prince Herman run up his total indebtedness to $12.",00'.). Just In time the family intervened. through the German embassy, and had him seized and taken out of the coun try. Ten minutes after he was taken from his rooms in London the police arrived to arrest him. The family next had him declared insane and he now is confined in a sanatarium near Frankfort. His friends deny he is insane and it Is be lieved he is confined only to save him from the consequences of his actions ,n London and Paris. He proba'oly "ill be kept in the sanatarium unti1 the scandal has blown over or some ar rangement has been made to pay his debts. J (i a ill T" TtTf ttt r n a -t"t-i a The gray timber wolf Is a powerful and savage beast, not pleasant to meet In the wilds when one is unarmed In "Wild Life on the Rockies" E. A Mills tells of an encounter with a pair of these beasts, when he had nothing but a light ax and a camera for de lenses. He had come upon the two wolve3 unexpectedly; in fact, they had been asleep in the sun when he dis turbed them. "I realized the danger, and was alarmed, of course; but my faculties were under control, were stimulated, Indeed, to unusual alertness, and kept a bold front and faced them with out flinching. "Their expression was one of min gled surprise and anger, together with the apparent determination to sell their lives as dearly as possible. gave them all the attention which their appearance and their reputation demanded. Not once did I take my eyes off them. I held them at bay by looking at them. I still have a vivid picture of terribly gleaming teeth. bristling bajcks and bulging muscles in savage readiness. "They made no move to attack. was tfrald to attack, and dared not run away. I recalled that some trees I could reach behind me had limbs that stretched out toward me, yet I felt that to wheel, spring and swing up beyond their reach could not be done quickly enough to escape those fierce jaws. "Both sides were of the same mind, ready to fight, but not at all eager to do so. Under these conditions our nearness was embarrassing. My mind worked like lightning, and I thought of several possible ways of escaping. I considered each at length, found it faulty and dismissed it. Something had to be done. "Slowly I worked the small folding ax from its sheath, and with the slowest of movements placed it In my right-hand coat pocket with the handle up. ready for instant use. I kept on staring. Then, looking the nearer of the two wolves squarely" In the eye. I said to him: 'Well, why don't you move?' as if we were playing checkers instead of the game of life. "He made no reply, but the spell was broken. I believe that both sides were bluffing. In attempting to use my camera while continuing the bluff I brought matters to a focus literally. "'What a picture you fellows will make!' I said aloud, as my right hand slowly worked the camera out of the case which hung under my left arm. Still keeping up a steady fire of looks. I brought the camera in front cf m? and tbn touched the spring that released the folding front. "When the camera, mysteriously, suddenly opened before the wolves, they fled for their lives. In an Instant they had cleared the grassy space and vanished into the woods. I did not get their picture." II CCklcftM. "Dear me, here's another British nobleman marrying an American i bonis girl!" "Another painful example of the desperate chances the reckless American chorus girl is willing to take." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Every man who has a twinge of dyspepsia thinks he knows all ahout what that Spartan boy went through, with a fox gnawing at his Lreust.
CHILD HAS SDLT5T BOILS
And Snffert-tl Annually vrHh n lied Scalil-I.lke Humor on Her Head Trouble Cared by Cutleurn. "When my little Vivian was about Fix months old her head broke out in boils. She had about sixty in all and I used Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment, which cured her entirely. Some time later a humor broke out behird her ears and spread up on to her head until it was nearly half cov ered. The humor looked like a scald. very red with a sticky, clear fluid com ing from it. This occurred every spring. I always used Cuticura Soap and Ointment, which never failed to heal it up. The last time it broke out it became so bad that I was discour aged. But I continued the use of Cuti cura Soap, Ointment and Resolvent un til she was well and has never been troubled in the last two years. Mrs. M. A. Schwerin, 674 Spring Wells Ave., Detroit. Mich., Feb. 24, 1903." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston. Jflm'm Verael ty. Hogs, as Is well known, are remarkably sagacious animals, quick to detect human peculiarities, especially when they affect their own interests, and especially their food supply. A writer in the Kansas City Star tell3 of a discussion at a village grocery store which brought in this interesting fact. The veracity of old Jim Perkins was under discussion. Presently Uncle Bill Abbott ambled In. "What do you think about it. Uncle Bill?" they asked him. "Would you call Jim a liar?" "Well." answered Uncle Bill, slowly, a3 he thoughtfully studied the ceiling, "I don't know as I'd go as far a3 to call him a liar exactly, but I do know that when feeding time comes, in" order to get the hogs to come, he has to have somebody else call 'em for him." AN EASY WAY. How to Core Kidney Trouble Caally and Quickly. It is needless to suffer the tortures of in aching back, the misery of headaches, rheumatic pains, urinary disorders or risk the danger of ' diabetes or Brighfc's disease. The cure Is easy. Treat the cause the kidneys with Doan's Kidney Pills. P. W. Champion, Salem St., Marlon, Ky., says: "I did not expect ever to be well again. Deranged kidneys caused me untold sufferings. Stones in the kidneys seemed to be tearing me apart and the secretions were seriously disordered. Doan's Kidney Pills righted this trouble and removed all pains and aches and dissolved the stones. I am completely cured." Remember the name Doan's. Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Fos-ter-Milburn Co, Buffalo, N. Y. Oetopu Lnm Don't "Worry. New York now has an octopus, not the kind represented by a great Industrial combination, such as has been pictured by cartoonists, but a real, live sea monster, the New York Herald says. The specimen, which Is said to be the only one in America, was captured in Bermudan waters and arrived here a few days ago. It wag placed on exhibition yesterday in the New York aquarium and attracted much attention. For years, Charles II. Townsend, director of the aquarium, has mads every effort to obtain a specimen of the octopod, but has found difficulty In devising a way of caring for th animal during transit to this city. The rare creature of the sea was captured by natives of the coast of Bermuda through the use of a large crate which was baited and dropped intc the ocean off the coral reefs. L. W. Mowbry, director of the Ber muda Natural History Society aquar ium, acted for the valuable specimen which is said to be the most perfect one ever held In captivity. A largt tug, specially devised for the purpose was used to bring it from Bermuda tc New York and during the forty-eight hour trip a seaman was kept busy pumping water into the tank. Mr Townsend had a glas3 cage ready tc receive the octopus upon Its arrival here. Too Uncertain. The traveling salesman had looked at Mrs. Dolan's--iird-floor-back, and found it neat and attractive. "I'll take it for two months," he said, "and I always pay as I go. I suppose that will suit you?" "It will not," said Mrs. Dolan, firmly. "There's times I'm not in the house whin folks goes; they're liable to be called off suddent, whin I'm out o the way. My boarders rays whin they come or else they don't come." mm mm -'--fV" ? 7," 1 ü.
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STORY OF A niSSOURI HOUSE. It Secret I'ndersrronnd Pmsnjje YVahiriston Irvine a Vlallor. A few mile3 south of the Missouri River at the point where it begins tha great curv around Saline County, and not far from the little villages of Malta Bend and Grand Pass stands a remarkable old house. It is weatherbeaten and low, with dormer windows pushing out of its gently sloping roofs. It stands on the "Petitessauts" plains (named by early French settlers), a region through which passed the first explorers and traders bound for the far west. 1 In 1830 William H. Lewis, a Virginia planter, with his family and a number of negro slaves emigrated to Saline County. A year or two later he erected the house, constructing it of hewn logs from the nearby woods. At first It was merely a large log structur-i with four rooms, but later, when machine sawed lumber was to be ob
tained, it was "weatherboarded," and other rooms were added. In those days it was the "quality" house in its part of the country, and many were the neighbors and strangers who enjoyed the hospitality of its kind owner and his family. During the Civil War the occupant of the house for some reason did not take part in the great struggle. Consequently he was much , harassed by "bushwhackers" and by straggling bands from either side. In order to insure his safety he dug a rassage from the cellar under the house to an old hollow tree some thirty feet away. When sought for by enemies he betook himself to this clever hiding place. The entrance to the passage was so constructed that when closed by a rock it was not easily discovered. From the house access to the cellar was obtained by a flight of steps leading down from a hall closet. A few years ago some traces of tha passage and the dilapidated remains of the steps might still be seen, but later owners of the place, with no taste for the romantic, have filled up the cellar and obliterated nearly all sign-? of the refuge. To the students of literature and lovers of the great the old house possesses mother Interest. The pioneer of American literature, Washington Irving, when on his tour west in 1S32 stayed over night within Its walls. I! the house could talk it could no dou'it give us an Interesting description oi the gentlemanly author and of the French count and Gov. Ellsworth of Connecticut and others of the band which accompanied them. Kansas City Star. Supported by Scriptare. The story goes that a certain college president In Indiana, a clergyman, was addressing his students at the beginning of the college year. He observed to them that it wasa 'matter of congratulation to all the friends of the college that the year aad opened with the largest freshman :lass in its history." Then, without a pause, says Lippin:ott's Magazine, the good man turned to the lesson for the day, the Third Psalm, and began to read in a loud voice: "Lord, how are tLey Increased that trouble me!" If yoa wish beautiful, clear, wHltt elotbe, ose Red Croat Ball Blue. Large 2oz. package, S cent A Clear Coast. Irving was playing "Macbeth," so runs the story in "Impressions of Henry Irving, and he had reached the place where Macbeth orders Banquo's ghost to leave the banquet board. "Hence, horrible shadow unreal mockery, hence!" said Irving, in his most tragic tones, and with a convulsive shudder he sank to the ground, drawing his robe about his face. On Banquo withdrawing, a voice came from high up in the gallery: "It's all right now, 'Enery; 'e'f gone." Same Thins There. Traveler (Inspecting the village from the car window) Seems to me the streets of your little town are awfully dirty. Uncle Welby G05h (on the station platform) I know it, mister, but we're bo blamed busy making plans fur a Drearyhurst Beautiful that we hain't got no time to clean 'em. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bough) Bears the yTT" Signature oi (Lz&Uc&U i M A'; mm .v.-0;v
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Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes has won the Nation's favor by its flavor. "Delicious" doesn't do justice to its goodness, because that word has been used by every other breakfast food. It's so unlike anything you ever tasted so much better. You may have eaten "corn flakes," but unless you have tried Kellogg's the original and genuine you have $1,000 GOLD AND SILVER TROPHY For the Best Ear oi Corn To Be Known as fiie W, K. Kellogg National Corn Trophy To Bo Awarded at the NATIONAL CORN EXPOSITION. OMAHA. December 6 to 18, 1S09 For the purpose of cneouraclnz the better breeding In corn for lmnrorfn tt.
beaattrul solid told and silver trophy to tbe person rrowlrthe be.t Va? of corn lntwoo.fferentsoasons. tbe first season's specimen to beaent The National Corn Exposition. Omaha. Neb., befon Nov nfh Tw
idged bj the leading corn authority of theworlipSL Holden. Watca this paper for furtner particulars.
KELLOGG TOASTED COBN FLAUE Battle Creek, Mich.
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TO Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Vienna, W. Va. "I feel that I owe the last ten years of my life to Lydia j. rinkham s vegetable Compound. Eleven years ago I was a walking shadow. I had been under the doctor's carebut got no relief. My husband persuaded me to try Lydia R Pinkham's Vegetable ComEound and itworked ke a charm. It relieved all my pains and misery. I advise all suffering women to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Müs. Ejlma "Wheatov, Vienna, "V. Va. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotics or harmful drugs, and to-day holds the record for the largest number of actual cures of female diseases of any similar medicine in tho country, and thousands of voluntary testimonials are on file in the Pinkham laboratory at Lynn, Mass., from women who have been cured from almost every form of female complaints, inflammation, ulceration,displccements,fibroid tumors, t irregularities, periodic pains, backache, indigestion and nervous prostration. Every such suffering woman owes it to herself to give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial. . If you would like special advice about your case write a confidential letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free, and always helpful. FASHION HINTS To have a one piece semi-fitted linen dreis is to know solid comfort. Make it of a dark shade, .and guiltless of frills. The Irish lace or batiste collars so popular now, are a good neck' finish. The sketch shows one of these useful warm weather morning dresses. for your office stationery. You can get the paper and envelopes to match. H ( f real tkUf. Takm mm ta California :i.F-SUI VOKTINO UOMES. Perfect health. Purest water. Moderate auromer. Oranges ripen la winter. 114 refined families 4 miles added to colony. Fruit center. Poultry profitable. D. Masks, Box A. Gait, California. F. W. N. U. No. 331909 When wrltlnar to Advertiser pie ay you law the Adr. la this paper. Taste This Signature Is Your Protection CO.
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