Plymouth Tribune, Volume 8, Number 46, Plymouth, Marshall County, 19 August 1909 — Page 7
ma e.eadaghe
Positively cured bf these Little nils. They also relieve D'. I tress from Dyspepsia. In digestion and Too Hearty Eating; A perfect reo edy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bail Taste in tho Mouth. Coated Tongue. Pain In the Side. TORPID UVZR. Tliey regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. Genuina Must Bear FaSimiIs Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body ntiseptically clean and free from un healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. germicidal, disinfecting tit 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. Largs Trial Sample WITH "mILTH AND BEAUTY BOOK SENT FRCC THE PAXTON TOILET CO. Boston. Mass, DYSPEPSIA "Having taken your wonderful 'Cascarets' for three months and being entirely cured of stomach catarrh and dyspepsia, I x think a word of praise is due to Cascarets for their wonderful composition. I have taken numerous other socalled remedies but without avail, and I find that Cascarets relieve more in a day than all the others X have taken would in a year." James McGune, 10S Mercer St., Jersey City, N. J. Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c. Never sold in balk. The genome tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to cor or your money back. 919 for your offlco stationary. You can get the paper and envelopes to match. If Is the reel thing. Take me etme. DAISY FLY KILL En laaaS uvkm, atracu aa4 kill ail Im. Xaatclaan, aritatnU, aoaiani ant, chaaa. Ihu ail mm. Cannot p ill ar tap avar, will not a - ' . I -V isl oil or injur anything GuvtRW-d ffartir. Of nil ! ava or aani prepaid far M eta. Hi BOLD OIIKS.1&0D!! In., Braaalja,!. Y. piles m PAY IF CURED par aaaf tmni EE HO CHoa. rue aaa rtavaia lira. EX CO.. Dept. OS, Miaaeapella, Mian. The Law's Delays. "I understand that you called on the plaintiff, Mr. Barnes. Is that so?" questioned Lawyer Fuller, now Chief Justice. "Yes," answered the witness. "What did he say?" next demanded Fuller. The attorney for the defense Jumped to his feet and objected that the conversation could not be admitted in the evidence. A half-hour's argument followed, and the judges retired to their private room to consider the point. An hour later the Judges filed into the court-room and announced that Mr. Fuller might put his question. "Well, what did the plaintiff say, Mr. Barnes?" "He weren't at home, sir," came the answer without a tremor. From Success Magazine. Proof Po! five. A western newspaper man visited Washington recently and told the following story on former Representative Amos J. Cummlngs of New York, who was once city editor of the Sun. One Saturday night It was announced that all the saloons were to he closed next day. Cummir.gs called his star reporter, Murray. "Tom, he said, "go out to-morrow and find out if the saloons were selling liquor." It was Thursday when Tom again appeared at the city desk. "They were," he reported. Success Magazine. Ready
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Made by POSTUM CEREAL CO., LIMITED. BATTLE CREEK, MICHIGAN
TS AGONY WITH ECZEMA.
Whole Body n 31a of Haw, lUeedInjr, Turinrinß llamnr llnlr All Kol I Oat Hoped Dealh Would End Fearful Suffering In Despair Cured by Cntioura. "Words cannot describe the terrible eczema I suffered with. It broke our on my Load and kept spreading until It covered by whole body. I was al most a solid mass of sores from head to foot, I looked more like a piece of raw beef than a human being. The pain and agony I eudured seemed more than I could bear. Blood and pus oozed from the great sore on my scalp. from under my finger nails, and near ly all over my body. My ears were so crusted and swollen I was afraid they would break off. Every hair in my head fell out. I could not sit down, for my clothes would stick to the raw and bleeding Cesh. making me cry out from the pain. My family doctor did all he could, but I got worse and worse. My condition was awful. C did not think I could live, and wanted death to come and end my frightful sufferings. In this condition my mother-in-law begged me to try the Cuticura Remedies. I said I would, but had no hope of recovery. Iut oh. what blessed relief I experienced after applying Cuti cura Ointment It cooled the bleeding and itching flesh and brought me the first real sleep I had had In weeks. It wis as grateful as Ice to a burning tongue. I would bathe with warm water and Cuticura Soap, then apply the Ointment freely. I also took Cuticura Resolvent for the blood. In a short time the sores stopped running, the flesh began to heal, and I knew I was to get well again. Then the hair on my head began to grow, and In a short time I was completely cured. I wish I could tell everybody who h.T9 czema to use Cuticura. Mrs. Win. Hunt, 135 Thomas St., Newark, N. J, Sept. 2S, IOCS." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp.. Sole Frops. of Cuticura Remedies. Boston. Availability. A nobleman was once showing a friend a rare collection of precious stones which he had gathered at a great expense and enormous amount of labor. "And yet," he said, "they yield me no income." His friend replied: "Come with me, and I will show you two stones which cost me but five pounds each, yet they yield me a considerable income." Ho took the owner of the gems to his grist mill and pointed to two gray mill stones, which were alwajs busy grinding out grist. Success Magazine. Don't dope jdurself for every little pain. 1$ only hurts your stomach. Such pain comes usually from local inflammation. A little rubbing with Hamlins Wizard Oil will stop it immediately. "Wanted Endeavor. "Well, Uncle Zeb," said his neighbor, "your boy's come back from college, and I reckon he's got a good ejjication." "No," groaned Uncle Zeb. "Them four years is plumb wasted. I tried 'im on a railroad guide the other day, an he couldn't make head ner tall of it, any more'n the rest of us could!" Chicago Tribune. Happy Day. "Well, Johnny, do you wish you were a grown-up man?" "You bet I do." "But why?" "So people wouldn't ask me such fool questions." Cleveland Leader. Clear, white clothes are a sign that tt housekeeper uses Red Cross Ball Blue. Large 2oz. package, ctate. Catch Your City Yoang. This is the advice of Franklin Clarkln, writing in Success Magazine. Three or four Iosvans settled on a sandy beach in Texas to experiment ith a city, without taxes. As others joined them, the settlement formed a legal corporation quite as the undent Romans in Britain did for the purpose of regulating domestic policy and administering powers of government; and as a means of checking up government by public opinion, the initiative and referendum was instituted. After fourteen years Falrhope is thriving happily. Land 13 owned by the corporation, which la the community, and Is leased to individuals for ninety-nine years. When one has paid into the communal treasury tha annual ground rent of, say, $25 for his leasehold, $50 down, for Installing a telephone (if he wants one) that Is all the government exacts. And in return for it there are three free schools; a water system without rates; a public dock; a library that is free without a Carnegie foundation; a telephone system with absolutely no charges within the county. All these were established out of the surplus from ground rent, after paying the State and county taxes, and the cost of administration and Improvements. You see, according to this, there would be really nothing supernatural or miraculous about dividend-paying cities. Only an extreme sort of practicality. The main.desideratum would seem to be that you must catch your city young, and thereafter protect it from private exploitation.
Ce .3 5 Ml Itncteria in Ekri, It is necessary to test eggs out of the incubator hatchings and for nearly the same reason it is necessary to get the Infertile or rotting eggs from under the setting hens. There would be fewer sick chicks and losses in the hen-hatched chicks did we look closely to this last. First, for the incubator, and least, to lay the thermometer on a dead egg in the Incubator runs down its record. But this might not do a great amount of harm. It Is the dead egg itself that does harm. Every egg, no difference how good, contains bacteria. The amount of harm it do?3 depends on its growth. At 34 degrees Fahrenheit this bacteria will not multiply. Eggs kept at a low temperature, as low as this given, will not decompose. Kept at a temperature 03 high as 9S they multiply rapidly and In a rotting egg pass quickly through the shells of other eggs bedded with them. You see what a rotting egg teeming with hurtful bacteria can do to the living chick in the Bhell next it? Test out the bad eggs. Twentieth Century Farmer. The Farmen a Dnalnens Man. The old-fashioned farmer used to leave a large part of his business to chance. His selection of crops was mostly guesswork, for he knew nothing of the chemical properties of his Inrd. He invited bankruptcy by depending upon one or two things, and he allowed other parties to market his produce, taking what they were willing to give him. Through the agricultural schools the farmer has been taught how to utilize his resources to the fullest extent and how to curtail waste, turning by products to account. He learns what his soil will grow best, and In getting seed he takes advantage of the improvements on nature. He hastens his harvesting with labor-saving machinery. It has just been showa that the farmers of a community may combine to purchase" a still for denatured alcohol and make a good profit from their corn husks and garbage. The Department of Agriculture has been experimenting to this end. and it is announced that a still of suMent capacity to serve a rural neighborhood may be Installed for a little over $2,000. The fanners of France have made this enterprise pay well. SpokesmanReview. Duron Floor. The United States Department of Agriculture gave the durum flour a good test a few months ago, when it caused to be baked 40 loaves of bread, 200 from durum wheat flour and 200 from Minneapolis spring wheat. The loaves were sent broadcast to people who could Intelligently compare them and of the replies received 74 per cent gave the irrfm to the durum loaves. Although this durum or macaroni flour, as it Is often called, is of comparatively recent introduction into country, the growing demand far exceeds the supply. It Is made from the wheat supply grown in the semiarid regions and contains the highest quantity of expansive gluten. It Is a trifle sweeter than the ordinary flour and furnishes a rich brown crusty loaf that netalns Its moisture longer than any other loaf. It is the same flour from which the Frenchman makes his delightful crusty, nutty flavored French loaf and the Italian uses in making his incomparable macaroni. Thus far the farmers in this country have only been able to produce a 60.000.000-bushel crop, when one of 200,000,000 or 300,000,000 is demanded. Last year from 10,000,000 to 30,000,000 bushels of durum flour was used in Minneapolis alone to mix with weaker flours, building them up In that most necessary requisite of the muscle-making principle, gluten. Ex change. Snrface Cultivation. The first cultivation of any crop may be moderately deep, while the root3 of the plants are small and oc cupy very little son space. Some farmers, however, cultivate deep at all periods, during the growing season. when the roots of the plants are long and fill nearly all of the soil between rows. They have a notion that the object of cultivation is to tear the soil up as far as the plow went, and they take small thought of the danger they are doing to the roots of the growing crop. After the soil has been plowed and properly harrowed and otherwise worked down the lower part Is in a good condition for the growth and spread of growing roots. There Is no need of tearing it up again during the season, in fact loosening It up to more than two or three Inches will do more harm than good. The past summer the writer grew corn on ground that had been firmly packed and beaten down with heavy spring rains and corn on either side of the strip, where the soil was restirred after it had be come packed by the early rains. All of the field was given very 'light sur face cultivation, and the strip that wa3 packed the hardest grew the best corn. The best cultivator Is the one that has the most small shovels. We never cultivate deeply at any time, never more than two 'aches, or just deep enough to kill the weedi and secure better results than from deep cultivation. Keeping the soil loose on top and packed beneath, and the grow ing roots untouched, wi'l give best results. Now Rival of the Potato. Efforts are being made to introduce In the Southern States certain useful vegetables hitherto unknown to this country, whic.'i are known in tropical regions as the yautla, the dasheen and the taro. The last named Is already familiar as an ornamental plant, under the name of caladium, or "elephant's ear." All three are nearly related, and their starchy, edible roots are hlgh'y prized In warm latitudes. These roots, Indeed, resemble the common potato in composition and in flavor. That of the yautla, for exam ple, when properly cooked, 13 not easily distinguished from the "Irish" tuber. It is sometimes white, sometimes red and sometimes yellow, ac
i
Tl.
cording to variety. So rich is it in starch that it yields nearly one-third of its weight in flour, and its leaves are prepared for the table after the manner of spinach. One reason why it is deemed desir able to introduce these plants Is that they flourish in land that is too wet for ordinary crops. It has been as certalned that they will grow well in this country as far north as the Caro Unas. Not only are they useful by reason of their edible qualities, but tneir nign yieia or srarcn affords a prospect of great usefulness for them as stock food or in the production of alcohol. The yautla seems to have been originally native of the West Indies. It was cultivated by the aborigines in those parts centuries before Columbus discovered America. Even to the present day its roots, which look somewhat like sweet potatoes, are raised on the Islands of that archi pelago in great quanities, -the produc tion often reaching ten tons to the acre. Did the white potato not exist they would take the place of it admir ably. Exchange. Motor Track on Farm. A three-ton gasoline motor truck as a farm vehicle in place of the ordi nary horse wagon is unusual, to say least. It 13 a fact, however, and shows that the rapid substitution of the commercial motor vehicle for horsedrawn conveyance is not any means limited to our large cities. One good example of the practical use of the motor truck in farming is afforded at Cons'ers Manor, at Greenwich, Con nectlcut. Conyers Manor is one of the most notable estates in the East, which is not merely ornamental, but a great farm, operated on a commercial basis It represents 1,300 acres of reclaimed land, and is the home of E. C. Con verse. Aside from being a beautiful estate, it is typical of the great ad vancement which has been made in modern farming, and especially in the way of applying scientific and com mercial methods to agriculture. Mo tor cars are common at Conyers Man or. Not only is there a large and well-equipped private garage for the several pleasure cars, but there Is a separate garage for the commercial vehicles, which it 13 proposed to use extensively. The basis of work In the commercial vehicle line, now on the farm, is a Packard three-ton truck. Convers Manor Is about nine miles outside of Greenwich. The principal work of the Packard truck Is in run ning back and forth between the farra and town. Its regular platform body has a special grain body inserted in side the regular stakes. By removing this Inside body when it Is not desired to haul grain to Greenwich, the truck with its regular body is ready for use in ether work of carrying fertilizer, coal, machinery and general supplies. Mr. Converse is an enthusiastic advocate of motor vehicles for hauling, and makes no distinction between hauling in the city and in the country. He argues that, with suitable roads, such vehicles as the Packard three-ton truck are particularly well adapted to farm hauling. Their greatest efficiency is in the carrying of approximately full loads for long distances, with infrequent stops. Agricultural hauling meets these requirements exactly. The special mo tor truck garage which has been erect ed at Conyers Manor has room for the accommodation of four three-ton trucks, it being intended that eventu ally at least three or four trucks will be in regular service. Farm Automobiles. Improvements In road machines have brought them to a degree cf usefulness that is interesting to farmers. Formerly automobiles were so heavy and the power so uncertain that farmers preferred horses. During the past year great improvements have been brought about in safety, in easy riding, in the application of power to the best advantage, and with all the improvements the price has been lowered until It Is considered a ood proposition to Invest In an automobile and to save the horses. A business farmer has a great deal of running about to do, in spite of telephones and other modern improvements, and it seems to be a question between keeping driving horses and an automobile. There are men rho prefer horses because of their association with live things. There are others who have less sympathy with animals, and those mon often get along better with a machine They can drive it as hard as they want to, so long as they do no damage, and it is nobody's business. There are so many styles and varieties of automobiles on the market this year, and so many good ones among them, that It is very difficult to point out any particular machine, but on general principles an automobile, to be serviceable, must have abundance of power, and It must be comparatively low down. It is said .thai the cost of keeping a good automobile Is less than the cost of keeping one horse, and that the care, when figured In time, is not much different. The horse mu.it be fed the same, whether he works or not; at least, there is very little difference in the cost of feed or time In feeding. But 'the expense of a machine stops as soon is it comes. to rest that is, all the expense except in terest and depreciation. Business farmers, of course, take all these things Into account,. Economy does not consist in saving all the dollars possible, but Investing them In such way as to get the best possible returns. Improved roads have done a great deal to introduce automobiles into the country. Of course, we have a great many improvements yet to make, but In most places the principal roads are In good condition during the summer and early fall. Some people don't care to ride in an automobile In cold weather, anyway, but it is a great satisfaction to know that the machine may be put inside and left for the day or month, and that there are no extra grain or hay grinding teeth and Jaws working night and day in our stable. Agricultural Epitomlst. According to government statistics, the estimated coal supply of the United States is put dwn at 3,135,708.000,000 tons, while the output from the mines of the United States in 1907, tte year of the largest production, was 429,000,000 tons.
OLD AGE AND EMPLOYMENT.
fnmethtnjr About a Serious Condition Ulfllcnlt to Itemed-. Writing in protest against the general reluctance to take on as new members of a working staff men of p.ore than middle age, a correspondent wanted to know yesterday why it would not be just as fair for the public to refuse its patronage to business houses the heads of which are inore than 50 years old, on the ground that their wares were Ukely to ba Inferior to those produced under the management of men in their prime, the New York Times says. The question was Ingenious, but the analogy owed its plausibility to a false assumption or on several of them. As a matter of fact, the goods made or sold by a long-established firm are apt of course, with any exceptions to be superior to those guaranteed by one of less experience and reputation. This is the lesson of common observation. Equally well known Is It that men of advanced years, while often highly competent in such positions as those which they world naturally occupy In a house which they had long served, lack the ready adaptability to changing circumstances and custom . which young men show, and they are likely to be quite unfitted for the subordinate places which alone can be given them by a new employer. Were the hiring of an old man a mere matter of paying him for what ho can do and of discharging him when he ceased to be useful or sufficiently useful to be profitable, he would find little or no difficulty in getting employment. But what employers dread and avoid 13 the assumption of responsibilities sure to come soon in the case of the old or elderly man. He cannot be turned out to starvo when the fast approaching end of hi3 working days arrives cannot, that Is, without more or less disturbance of conscience and loss of respect, self and other and the prospect of paying a pension of some sort or form to a man most of whose services have been rendered to another employer Is out of harmony with economic Instincts, Of 'course, all responsibility is not avoided by the refusal to employ worthy men whose only fault Is their age, but it is then a divided, vague and unidentified responsibility, resting on the community at large, and, therefore easy to bear much easier, at all events, than is the responsibility of him who has at once granted the old man's application for work. So the world ia made. There is something cruelly wrong about the situation, but its remedy is more than difficult. BED FOR HOSPITALS. Can Be Adjusted to Give Patient Chan are of Ponltloa. A boon to the bed-ridden and to thousands of hospital patients throughout the country Is the invention of a Kentucky man. This Is a bed which can be raised or lowered at the head to any position comfortTUSN CRAXK AXD BED MOVES. able to the patient and having a rest for the legs in addition. A pair of standards with a crossbar, looking like a horizontal bar on rollers, hoids AI 1 - . . l 1 1 ' . me upper euu ui iu ueu suspeuueu. i At one side of the standards is a wheel and gear by which the head of the bed may be raised or lowered to chance the position of the person oc cupying it. Running up from the foot of the bed is a T-shaped bar to be placed under the legs of the patient. so that when the bed Is tilted at a steep angle he is. kept from sliding downward, the bar beneath his legs giving him the feeling of being in a reclining chair. Any person who has been forced to lie abed for any length of time, unable to change his position, will appreciate the relief such a bed will afford. ' Sweets Are Great Daby Savers. The young, unspoiled human animal has a liking for sugar Just as it has for sunlight, for fresh air, for play, for paddling in the surf and plunging in the stream, or for food when It if hungry and sleep when It is tired; and, subject of course to reasonable limitations, as wholesome as any 'of the others. This Is precisely what our specialists in children's diseases, and broad-minded family physicians have been urging for decades past, and it would be safe to say that next to the banishment of starchy foods, gruels, and paps from the nursery and the substitution of pure, sweet milk, few things have done more to increase the vigor and happiness of modern children and to cut down our disgraceful Infant mortality, than the free and Intelligent use in the nursery of sweet fruits, preserves, sugar, taffy and butterscotch. Woods Hutchinson in Suc cess Magazine. Either Way. Mr. Wllkins had been sitting quietly on a nail keg, perusing a paper which he had found on the counter. The date of it he had not noticed. Finally he looked up with a puuzzled expression. "What's this wireless telegraph signal, this C. O. D.' they're talking uo much about?" he asked. "I guess it's C. Q. D., ain't it?" suggested Holbrook, the grocer. "Any. way. It's a signal of distress," ha added, moodily. lloraemanshl p In Heaven. Little Kenneth and his mother wers about to go for a drive. "Who was God's father V asked tha boy. "He had no father," replied tha mother. 'Then," persists Kenneth, thought fully, "who hitched up the horse for God's mother?" Success Magazine. Going Out. Mr. D. There, I've let my cigar co out. Do you know that It spoils a cigar, no matter how good it is, if you allow it to go out? Mrs. B. Yes; a cigar Is a good deal
like a man In that respect.
.ALCOHOL 3 PER CKNT
Acgc(abkrVcparationrorAssimilating thcFoodandRcgiia ling ü ic S lomachs andDcnrcls af Promofes DteestionfJicaf Jrtcss and Restontalnsncilto OpiuTu.Morhiric rtorMacraL NOT NARCOTIC. USSSBSSMSSnatMSBI SBaBSSSSSBMUnOBn stlistSttd Jpptfflint DtCaiiaoükim Sutpr hvtofrrmi rtanr. ESS Ks.?Ancrfect Remedy forOonsflpa tion , Sour Storaach.Dlarrhoca AYorros,Com-u!sionsfeTrisk-rtess andLoss OF Sleep. aBaBBaaaBanasBB S SSSOBSSOaoasa Tac Simile Signature oT tie NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper. Three Dr. CI I fiords. An amusing adventure happened on one occasion to Dr. Clifford when he was conducting a series of services In Birmingham. Arriving a few minutes before the commencement, the doctor was refused admission by the policeman at the door. "I want to go In." said Dr. Clifford. "Are you a seat holder?" asked the official. "Xo, I am not." "Then you can't go in." "I think," remarked the famous passive resister, " that there will be room for me in the pulpit" "I am not so sure of it." retorted the other. "Cut I am Dr. Clifford and I am due to preach in another minute and a half." "O, are you?" said the incredulous policeman. "I have let in two Dr. Cliffords already." Woman's Life. nere Is Relief for Women. If you have pains In the back. Urinary, Bladder or Kidney trouble, and want a certain, pleasant herb cure for woman's Ills, try Mother Gray's Anntrn-lian-Leaf. It is a safe and never-falling regulator. At Druggists or by mall 60 cts. Sample package FREE. Address. The Mother Gray Co. LeRoy. N. Y. Iteadlujr for the Yoonc Small Girl (of twelve) Is this a library? Librarian Yes. Small Girl I want something wicked, and excltln' and bad. Librarian I couldn't let you hav any book like that, little girL Small Girl It isn't for me. I've read 'em. It'3 for my younger sister. Life. Do Yonr Clothes Look Yellow r If so. use Red Cross Ball Blue. It will tnak them waits as mow. Largs 2oz. packass 5 csatsV A Lttle Sermon to Girls. Each one of us, then, must do these two things: Understand ourselves and understand others. It is not enough to claim the right of the individual to "grow" as he sees fit. It 13 Impertinent to announce that "my mother Is behind the times." None of us can grow rightly if we grow rudely, defiantly, wounding unnecessarily, failing in kindness and consideration. We may sometimes have to give pain, as when one changes a church, and so. offends a parental prejudice. But if conviction be strong, one cannot be irritable, the crisis is too vital, and it Is just because we do lack real conviction in any stand wc take that we grow irritable in little things. Conviction makes us serious. It Is when we have only half thought out some subject for ourselves that we grow irritable and prove unequal to the task of either enlightening those we pain cr of steering the bark of our cherished purposes through distracting shoals. Harper's Bazaar. Wlint'a the Answer. Plumpish maidens seek the seashore, slim ones seek the mountains high. If you think you know the answer, why, why. why? Washington Herald.
(vSpuiriteetl under the
SOLID GOLD SILVER
9
For To be Known as National Corn Orrr linn hnnrirad thousand million
a billion dollars were paid for them. More than a million and a quarter extra dollars went into the pockets of the farmers for corn this year than they received for the previous year's crop. The reason for thin mar be found la the fact that the people of the United States are becinainc to learn how delicious corn Is and to realize its full food value. Kelbfff's Toasted Corn Flakes has placed corn amonr the indispensable items of dally fare. The makers, therefore, are interested In the development of the Kinr of Cereals, and have decided to award a beautiful trovhy for the man. woman or child who can produce the best ear of corn in two different seasons. Prcfeaaer Holden, of the Iowa State Colleee. the rreateet authority on corn in the world, will award therrlre at the Ns.tlonal Corn Exposition, to be held at Omaha. Neb.. December 6th to 18th. 1Ö09. Two single rules will rovein the plan, and thejr are: tüat you send your best ear of corn to the National Corn Exposition. Omaha. Neb., before November 27. 1900: and that you are a member of the National Corn Association. Full particulars regarding which can be had by writing to National Corn Exposition. Omaha. Neb. Tie a tag securely to your specimen and word it. "For tha Kellogg Trophy Content." and write your name and address plainly. If yours is Judged the best, yra will ret the trophy for 1310. If you succeed again next year or the year following, the trophy will become your property for
all time, in other woras. you must
There will be no r'.-ftrtctions. Any mm. woman or child belonging to the Association can enter. It will be cpea to every state In tho Union. Profewor Holden will Judge the corn particularly on the basin of quality. The growing of more corn per acre is one object of the award, but the main purpose of the founder of the trophy is for
ITia
TOASTED CORN FLAKES'
Many people think we now is. remaps we Tis Wf5
eat" today. All grocers have it
Genuine Corn Hakes haß ihis Signature
ifr n ncdn nr n A 4.
i
" a hi WW u) MU
ri i i i i ""fc. i I i t ii v i i l
Tho Kind You Havo Always in uso for oyer 30 years, and
J' 60na supervision since its infancy. Cuc(A Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and" Just-as-groodare but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health ot Infants and Cliildr en Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute ' for Castor Oil, Paro-") goric, Drops and Soothing Syrops It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotio substance Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
S9
Bears the
The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years TMC CCMTAUIt COMPANY. TT MVftRAV TRKCT. MM TOM CfTY.
FASHION HINTS '.."he natural colored linen is of a most up-to-date cut. showing the bolero, and the long waist. Ecru all-over embroidery is used for the bolero, and tucked net for the yoke. The way the long black silk tie is brought in, with its braided ends, is effective. "Then You'll Keinember Sie!" George W. Coleman, the noted sociologist, discussed, during the recent sociological conference at Sagamore Beach, tips and tipping. "I have a friend" so Mr. Coleman concluded "who belongs to an antitipplng association. My friend, in obeying the rules of his society, has many quaint experiences. He went traveling In the west in the spring. He dined one night in a fashionable western restaurant and after paying his bill he gathered up the change that had been brought upon a silver plate, and dropped It Into his waistcoat pocket. As he rose to depart the waiter said in a low, appealing voice: " 'Surely, you won't forget me, sir? '"No, no,' said my friend. TU write to you." ' J "Xever Can Understand." Still, a woman can't understand why an eighteen inning base ball game should interest her husband more than a good hot supper. Detroit Fte Press. Mrs. Wlnsiow s soetaias; Syrup tor CtUl dren teething ; softens the gums, reduces Inuaznmstlon, allajrs pain, cures wind colic. 25 -eat a hntUe. Tha output of cast iron sash weight! in the United States has reached 15.000 tons a year in recent years.
a jJ J vJyx.
the Best Ear of Corn
the tVtiy National CornTrophy
To be Awarded nt the
Exposition. Omaha,
(100.000.000.000) ears of ojrii were rrown In produce the DeM ear oi corn two ainereni OunT
have reached the point of perfection In Toasted Corn Flakes as it
nave, ii you haven t triea it. ougin your eaucauon
KELLOGG TOASTED CORN FLAKE CO- Battle Creek. Mich. S
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Bought, and which ha3 been has borne the signature of
has been made under his per-
Signature of Carrying Dandles. . Everybody carries bundles, and everyhody, according to a West Sld philosopher who spends half his time In deducing traits of character from deeds performed and the manner of their; performance, carries them in his, own way. "A man of cautious disposition," he said, "carries a bundle clutched tlghtjy in his left hand. If it Is too large-to be carried that way he doesn't carry It at all, but has it sent homa in the delivery wagon. Such a man is not only cautious, he is stubborn, and painfully slow of speech and thought; but he is home-abiding and of unquestionable probity. The man who carries a bundle in his right hand has all those qualities, but in a modified degree. "A'man who stumbles up the stain of the elevated station with a package ucked under his arm inclining backward and downward at a decidedangle Is good natured, but rather pessimistic, and he might. If things wentj 'against him too hard, take refuge in drink. If the bundle tilt up he-takes a more optimistic view of lifje and likes to tell stories. "The man who carries a bundle hugged up close to his coat front li jealous and inclined to be stingy. Still, he can be managed, and if hit wife has the knack of winding him around her finger she can easily be the best dressed woman in the block, because he has the money to do it with. "The man who tie? the bundle he has to take home with a heavy string and goes along swinging it by the loop made for that purpose Is the most lovable chap of all, but he is also the most unreliable, because he is a spendthrift, and Is so prodigal of his affections that the many women whom he Is sure to make love to are apt to pass through some mighty uncomfortable days and nights before they find out where they are at" moK)HV w F. W. N. U. No. 34 19C3 When Mrrttlas; to Advertisers please sar you saw the Adv. la this psper. lle'tlidedwili Sore Eyes, use II AWARD December 6 to 18, 1909. the United States last rear. Over years. in good things to j?
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