Plymouth Tribune, Volume 8, Number 48, Plymouth, Marshall County, 2 September 1909 — Page 7
III BEST REMEDY
For Women-Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Xoah, Ky. " I was passing through the Change of Life and suffered from headaches, nervous Erostration, and emorrhages. "Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Co m pound made me well and strong, so that I can do all my housework, and attend to the store and post-office, and I feel rauchyounger than I really am. "Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the most successful rencedy for all kinds of female troubles, and I feel that 1 can never praise it enough.' Mes. Ltzzik Holland, Xoah, Ky. The Changeof Life is themostcritical period of a woman's existence, and neglect of health at this time invites disease and pain. Womene verywhere shouldremember that there is no other remedy known to medicine that will so successfully carry women through this tTying period as Lydia H Pinkham's Vegetable ComEound, made from native roots and erbs. For SO yearj it has been curing women from the v. orst forms of female ills inflammation, ulceration, dis placements, fibroid tumors, irregulari ties, periodic pains, backache, ana nervous prostration. If you tvould like special advice about tout case write a confiden tial letter to Mrs. Pinkbam, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice ia free and always IicLpf uL, Harrr Iaoder'a I'-aff. !a nretty-"Vce of "bluff" s attrlhnted to TfS VjAuder, the variety entertainer' ;'g his first V$J& New Yoc -ms Accused c-rlns. had sevü;:y commented on an. &ctT in Vilich JfäFCS -me I rings NcitYong ikterward this iaan ! tC;ed him for an Interview. Lauder e him an address and told him to come at io o'clock the following night In the meantime the comedian rented a wretched room In the slum quarter of the city. When the caller came he was ushered into this garret. There cat Lauder,. blue with cold, by the i light of a single candle. "Arre ye goin to put down what I say?" Lauder asked- The reporter assured him with pride that he never made notes during an Interview. "My memory is excellent." he boasted. "Weel, then," aaid Lauder, "we'll aye save the light!" And he blew out the candle. Very Low One 4Way Colonist Rates Via Nickel Plate Road To points West, Northwest and Southwest. Tickets on sale daily Sept. 13 to Oct. 13 inclusive. Special arrangements for stop-overs and side-trips. See Agent or write F. P. Parnin, T. P. A., Fort Wayne, Ind. (03-33) Cond Not Tell Sooner. "What. Suzanne, going to leave me?" exclaimed the lady to her French maid, wto was "invaluable." ''Going to get xriJrried? This is most unexpected." - "Oul. madame, but eet ees not my rault." resDonded the maid. aiolos:etl- ' tally. "Eet was only last night zat your son proposed to me!" Philadelphia Inquirer. Ob Thine that Will Live Forever, rETTITS EYE SALVE, first box sold in 1S07, over 100 years ago. sales increase yearly. All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. Asking; Too Mach. Letter Carrier Rainy weather, farmer. Farmer Tes; our boarders are all klckin. L. C. They can't blame you for the weather. F. Can't, eh? Gosh, some of 'em eem to think J ought to furnish moonlight nights. Boston Transcript. Do your feet ever feel tired, achy and pore at niirht? Rub them with a little Hamlins Wizard Oil. They'll be glad in the morning, and so will you. Fair Warning. Young Golightly (to pretty girl) Is the seat next to you engaged, miss? Miss No; but I am! And he's going to get In at the next station! Comic Cubs. Yellow Clothe Aro T7mala?htljr. Keep them white with Rtd Cross Ball Blue. All grocers tell large 2oc package, ft ceata. Got ay to Headqsmrtere. "And that young man kissed you on the llp? Why didn't you offer him your hand?" said the father. "O, I didn't have to, papa," said the girl; "he's going to ask you for that!" Tonkers Statesman. lira. Wlasiowa Soetaiaar mm tot Callereu teetblnjc : softens toe gums, reduce lawajQtjatlon, allays pain, eure wind colic 23 venu hot Je. A Thins of the Paet. Leonora O'Reilly, the vice president of the Women's Trade Union League, was praising this organization's work In New York. "And it has a great future before it," she said. "I hare rc doubt that a century hence the members of the .eague will regard the woman of today as we now regard the farmer' wlfa of the early '40's. A Maine deacon of the early '40's' was talking to the minister. He sniffled and whined: "'Oh, yes. Job suffered some. I ain't denying htat, parson. But Job never knowed what It was to have his team run off and kill his wife right in the harvest season, with hired girls wantin' 2 and $2.50 a week.'" PILES BS PAY IF CURED an 4 Mil CEost nie via riftwi .rtj. EX CO Dept. BS, Mlaaaaralle. Mian.
tUUUcled wllh Sore Eres, ue
THE HIGHER
He sends no burdens we may not endure. And after labor there is sweet release; The midnight billows v.e may sail secure, Certain of refuge and a port of peaca. For comfort call to "Him who sitting in The circle of the heaven" heard the cry Of those weak voices over all the din, And fed the ravens. He is ever nigh. And when the shadows gather like a pall. The more implicitly we trust in the Lord; When perils threaten us, we should recall Our part Is to obey; God's to reward. "Commit thy ways unto the Lord," and thou Triumphant into port shall ride at last, Sweet comfort in thy heart and on thy brow
The sunshine speaking Alonzo Rice.
ON BOTH SIDES.
"When the Orchard Hill Blllingslys came to town and walked down the sunny side of Main street doing their Saturday shopping it was certain, that the Billlnsslys of Crimp Heights Would confine themselves strictly to those shops on the shady side of the street. As will be seen at once, this caused grumbling among the merchants of Hunterton, for the Blllingslys and their relations by marriage represented a considerable proportion of all those who did their trading In that town. Questioning any resident of Hunterton as to the reason for the feud was likely to result in straining the imagination of the person seeking to give II formation, for so long had the breach lasted and so deeply burled was its origin under a mass of later accusations and counter-accusations and general gossip that no human being, to be strictly honest, really knew what was the original cause. Hunterton children were born In the knowledge that the Orchard Hill Blllingslys must not be asked to the same tea parties with their"! kinsmen from Crimp Heights. They accepted the fact as they accepted twenty-four hours In the day and winter flannels on Oct. 15 without curiosity. The present generation of Blllingslys had inherited the quarrel. All these things being so. It was natural that business on Main street should stop on the day that Leonora Jones did what she did. Lenora Jones was a gfrl from a town eighty miles to the east, who .was visiting Cassie Billlngsly. The two had driven in from Orchard Hill In a light cart. As they turned from the curbing on one 6lde of Main street Leonora suddenly beamed and cried: "Wait a minute!" Then she grabbed the lines from Cassie's hands and drove directly to where a young man painfully hesitated on the walk. OPENED HER EYES He was Arthur Billlngsly and he lived on Crimp Heights. The almost frozen terror of Cassie's face we reflected in the embarrassment of his. Lenora reached out a welcoming hand."" "I'm glad to see you again!" she cried. "Aren't you ever going to visit In my town any more? I've been here a week and you've never come near! I asked Cassie why, because of course I knew you and she must be related, the name being the same, and she said you were out of town! But now " "I read It In the paper," Cassie broke in defiantly, her face crimson. That a Crimp Heights Billlngsly and this particularly good-looking one, a cousin four times removed, should think she took even the slightest interest in his comings and goings was Intolerable. The young man regarded Cassie somewhat whimsically. She was decidedly pretty, a fact he had been traitor enough to his clan to recognize long ago even across Main street. Hl3 lurking i mile further crimsoned Cassie's cheeks. With an Inarticulate word she grasped the1 lines and drove away quickly. Leonora's indignant, "Why, Cassie Billlngsly! You didn't let me say good-by and you never spoke to him yourself! Whr.t has he ever done to you? floated Lack to the youns man as he walked slowly away. That was It what had he ever done to her or she to hlai? Yet they were required to flee the sight of each other. "You don't understand." Cassie told Leonora. Thereupon she endeavored to make Leonora understand until her breath gave out. "Of all JLhe nonsense!" declared Leonora flippantly at the end. "I never heard the like! Why, Arthur Billlngsly is splendid. He visited a college friend In my town! You're a goose he looked at you all the time! It's easy to see that he's dying to know you!" "I don't care to know him!". said Cassie, stiffly. The memory of his eyes Etlll ' made her feel bewildered, yet furious. "H'm!" commended Leonora. "I'd like to smash a few of your gilt-edged family prejudices! Of all Idiotic things!" Cassia had the lines the day she and i Leonora were driving over to a neighboring village, so the latter cannot be accused of being entirely responsible for what happened. But the fact remains that Leonora saw who the man was approaching on foot with gun and dogs and Cassie didn't, and when the pony shied at a scurrying rabbit Leonora took occasion to scream and clutch at the driver's arm. There was a swerve and then a crash and the two girls were thrown out, while the frightened horse galloped off.
FAITH.
of the tempest past! Leonora sat up with a confident laugh and put her hair straight. Down tte road the man cane running, as she had expected. Then as she turned triumphantly toward her companion she grew suddently white and shaken. For Cassie was neither laughing nor frowning at the misadventure. She lay still and the sharp stone beneath her head was stained crimson. Arthur Billlngsly raised her up and the fright In his eye met the fright in Leonora's. "Through those fields," he ordered. "To the Beckets house!" Leocorti ran for help. She had Indeed thrown Arthur and Cassie together, but at what a price! Back in the road Cassie opened her eyes once and smiled unknowingly at Arthur. It was the first time in years that the lips of an Orchard Hill Billlngsly had curled up inttead of down at a Crimp Heights Billlngsly and even this smile was a bit delirious. But it was a smile! When Arthur Billlngsly had brought Cassie home and actually "entered the house nobody thought much about it In the excitement. When he called the following day to Inquire about her it was too late to do anything but let him in. "Anyhow," said Cassie's helpless and bewildered family, "Arthur seems to be an exception!" When Leonora finally went home she laughed in Cassie's face. "What do you think of me as a dove of peace, anyhow?" she demanded "I'll come back and be maid of honor whenever you say, Cassie!" And several months later she did. Nowadays you will find the Orchard Hill Blllingslys and the Crimp Heights Blllingslys shopping peacefully on both sides of Main street, thus restoring the financial eaulllbrlum of Hunt ONCE AND SMILED. erton. So everybody is satisfied. Chicago Dally News. CATS AND CHINA, They Do Not Fit Together In the Same House. "Aunt Eunlce," said young Mrs. Billings, putting down her pen and pushing back the pile of scrlbbling-pa per In front of her, "Aunt Eunice, why does a woman who loves china want to marry a man who adores cats?" Aunt Eunice went on with her pla cid knitting, and deftly avoided a dl rect answer. "Is that a conundrum?" she asked, "I never guessed one In my life. And If It's the theme of a problem novel, Nan, you needn't tell me, because I don't like them." Mrs. Billings laughod. "No, it Isn't a conundrum," she said. "It's a catas trophe almost, and It looks as if It might resolve itself Into a problem novel at any moment. I'm the woman I love china; Ned's the man he adores cats; and the result is that three of my best soup-plates and four of my cherished oatmeal-saucers have been smashed to atoms !n th last ortnight. You know, Hllma feeds the cats, but Ned Is always sure that she never gives them enough, and so, as soon as he gets back from his recita tions, he feeds them again. In the shed, of course, and with my best china, and then Hilma comes along ou her earnest SwedUh feet and does the rest. I'm getting discouraged ' Here the library door opened and Professor Billings stood on the threshold, a broken plate in his hand. his manner wavering between non chalance and anticipation. "Another victim. Nannie," he tried to say, cheerfully. "Hllma walked heavily again. Fortunately it'B an old" But Mr3. Billings had flown to his side and was examining the frag' ments. "Old! I should say it was! That's just the trouble!" she cried, with trag edy. "It's my best, my only piece of real pink luster. O Ned, how could you take It?" There were tears In her voice and In her eyes. too. "Nan, I'm awfully sorry!" said her abject husband. "I promise I'll never take anything but a tin dipper after this," and his air of sudbued and sin cere melancholy was so genuine that Mrs. Billings smiled In spUe of her grievance. "Very well," she scolded, "but don't ever let ma hear you say again that 'The Ring and the Book' is your fa vorite poem, because It Isn't. It's love little pussy! "Youth's Compan Ion. We have always thought we would hAte to sleep In a bed that had to be undressed before we could get Into it Many a so-called orator Is merely a human phonograph.
a
It takes thirty-one days to hatch oose eggs, ten days longer than with those of the hen. The best results from the farm can only be obtained as the farmer studies the individual characteristics of eaca fierd which he Is cultivating. A successful stockman in six weeks cured hoofs so brittle that they could not hold a shoe, by using two parts of oil and tar with one part balsam fix , mixed and applied every other night to the extreme top of th9 hoof. Sweet, potatoes should be harvested before the frost3 injure the vines. Cut off tops close to the ground and carefully raise with a fork. Leae tubers exposed for a few hours to dry, then store In a dry place with a temperature at about 55 degrees F. If the white or gray horse should get stained from damp bedding, rub the spot when perfectly dry with a piece of chalk !:ept for the purpose. This will remove e- ery bit of stain. The stain can then be washed out with clean, clear water. when arj, scour wlU chalk. Never use soap In toe water, a3 it sets the stain. Preparation of the soil is the first step towards the raising of a good crop, but it is of no avail unless you plant good, plump. heal'Jiy seeds that possess a strong vitality and are free from all hereditary diseases. All small grain seed, such as oats, bar ley, rye and wheat, should be run through a fanning mill and all weak and light seeds and rßl dirt and weed seed separated. F. D. Corbin, secretary of the Kansas State Board of Agriculture, in a rei i i cent address says: "ooi is looseu upon as a most Important commodity, but the United States census showed Its value less than one-third that of the poultry and eggs produced on our American farms. Oats is a crop appreciated by stockmen, and the potatoes are everywhere staple, but the combined value of these two crops in 1907 was not greater than the. income from the fowls." Gooseberry Cutting. Both the gooseberry and the currant aro easily propagated from cuttings. These are made in the fall from well-rlpene-1 wood of the current seasons, growth. Select good strong shoot3 and cut them into pieces about six Inches lone. These may ' be tied in bunches ani burled with the top end down until spring when the ends will be callous and ready to take root, or they may be placed immediately Into a trench five or six Inches apart. The trench is then filled, care being taken to firm the soil well around the base of the cuttings. They should then be covered with a mulch of coarse litter during the next summer, and they will be ready to transplant Into the permanent 'location. Farmlnjc In Italy. Prof. G. C. Creelman, who recently Inspected agriculture as it is carried on In Italy, says: "In looking about to find out how the fertility of the soil was maintained In districts where live stock was not common, and hence farm manure was far from plentiful, I noticed that everywhere leguminous crops (or pulse) were the rule. I also discovered that In some form It was eaten every day by rich and poor alike. All the time I was in Italy I never once sat down to a dinner without being served with peas, or beans, or lentils, or some other variety of leguminous annual. I found also that the poorer classes consumed large quantities of pu!se. it being used to a large extent as a substitute for meat. Where the Irish peasant finds his balanced ration In potatoes and pork, the Englishman in bread and cheese, the Scotchman In oatmeal and milk, so the Italian rests content with macaroni and pulse, and the land gets the benefit In restored fertility." Weicht of Tarkeya. A correspondent of the Farmers' Home Journal writes: "I want to ask turkey breeders, through your columns, whether they consider 10 and liy2 pound pullets and 19 pound toms as fit for breeding purposes. And also what ought to be done with a breeder who writes that his turkeys are 'fine, large ones.' and then for $23 ships Ave turkeys that weigh 63 pounds in the aggregate." To this the edlfor replies: "Our correspondent does not state what breed of turkeys he refers to, but the weights mentioned are below the weight require! for the standard for any of the breeds. For bronze turkeys the standard requires the following weights: Adult cock, 36 pounds; yearling cock. 33 pounds: cockerel. 2." pounds; hen, 20 pounds; pullet, 16 pounds. The weight for the other breeds vary from 30 pounds to 26 pounds for eocki, 20 to 18 pounds for cockerels, 10 to 16 pounds for hens and 12 pounds for pullets." Thl3 matter of giving satisfaction to the buyer is a delicate one, but If the seller Is perfectly honest In hl3 representations and furnishes what he has agreed to do there can be no cause for dissatisfaction. In the case cited above the purchaser had very good reason to feel he had been "done." It is sucn transactions mat nurt con scientious sellers, at least till they have established a reputation for square and honest dealing. For Ciood natter Making. Work the salt into the butter thoroughly, but do not work It long enough to break the grain and make the butter salvy. An English authority on butter mak ing claims that adding one pound of salt to every gallon of cream Immediately after it Is taken off the milk aids in ripening the cream and give3 from 15 to 20 per cent more butter than from cream that had no salt in it The buttermilk Is. of course, useless, as It cannot be fed to stock when It contains so much salt, but its loss Is more than made up by the large quantity and better quality of butter, It Is claimed. Has anybody tried It oer here? To prevent the taste of turnips in the butter from cows fed on them a
western creamery practices the following method: Put the cream into a vessel and place in hot water at 20Ö degrees. When the cream reaches a temperature of 145 or 150 degrees set the cream dish in cold water to cool It . Experiments seem to show that the longer the interval between milking the poorer the milk. The nllk is impoverished by the absorption of the fats after it is secreted. Butter unfit for table use can hardly be regarded as fit for cooking. If milk which ha3 been set for some time and on which the cream has partly raised Is stirred the cream never raises again fully, so there Is a considerable loss of butter from itFarmers and Drovers' Journal. Making Timothy liar. Timothy may be cut In the morn ing and put In the mow in the afternoon if you know how to do it. Start the mowing machine as soon as the dew is off in the morning, then fol low the machine with the tedder and follow the tedder with the side-delivery rake. If the day is a drying one the hay may. be made in perfect con dition for moving away before night. and the hay made In this way will come out a nice green color In the winter time and the stock will go for It like cornstalks In summer. A little clover sprinkled through the timothy will cure all right, but If there Is too much clover It may. lead to trouble. Timothy Is easily handled If there Is no dew on tt or no rain. The juice In the stalks will be absorbed and will not work Injury, but rain or dew' seems to have a different effect. There Is a fungu3 growth induced by water on green clover that grows and develops In the mow and causes heating. This fungus is responsible for the dust in cured hay. It Is the one thing to avoid. One great trouble In making hay is tha farmers are liable to cut down too much. It is better to cut an acre or two, cure It properly and mow it away than It Is to cut down more and take chances. This Is a case where it Is better to be safe than sorry. Agricultural Epltomlst. Grain Sraufa. A dangerous parasite of many of the cereal plants is the fungus that produces in the gr.'.in or head what is known as smut. There are several well known kinds of smut, each of which Is caused by a distinct species of the fungu3. The greatest loss from smuts In this country is from the stinking tvnut of wheat and the loose smut of oats. A considerable loss is also due to th loose smuts of barley and wheat.whlch are more difficult to control and prevent. They ars widely distributed, and, though they occur usually In small quantities, the damage in the Aggregate Is large. They often ar entirely unnoticed on account of their earllness and the absence of any conspicuous sign of them at harvest time. The stinking smut of wheat transforms only the kernels Into smut balls, which do not break until the wheat is threshed and often remain Intact in the threshed grain. The loose smuts of barley on the other hand, early discharge their spores, which are blown off by the wind as soon as the smutted head comes out of the leaf sheath; they infect the plant in tha flowering stage and enter the embryo inside the ovary before the latter rlpen3 Into seed. An infected seed develops a smutted plant the following year. The most successful method thus far found for preventing these smuts 13 a hot water treatment of the seed. This treatment Is described In Bureau of Plant Industry Bulletin 152, entitled "The Loose Smuts of Barley and Wheat," recently issued by the-United States Department of Agriculture. The bulletin is a report of recent researches into the life histories of these smuts and the determination of methods for their prevention, and Is Intended for seed growers and scientific fanners. firovrlnjr Alfalfa. A fertile soil Is required for a good stand and growth; and, for enriching the soil for this crop, stable manure stanks in the front rank. But when used It must be applied In such manner that any weed seed in It will not spring up and choke out the alfalfa. The manure may be plowed under deeply, or It may be spread on the surface immediately preceding seeding. The best possible soil is one that has been manured the year before, and the weed3 destroyed by cultivation. A great aid to the soil Is humus, and where sufficient stable manure 13 not available for supplying this needed humus, growing and plowing under crops of field peas, soybeans, rye and such crops, will materially help in bringing the soil to the proper humus state. Phosphoric acid and potash are necessary plant elements for the crop, and should these not be present in the soil in sufficient quantities, they must be supplied as commercial fertilizers. Being tender and sensitive, young alfalfa plants can not stand being crowded by weedi or other plants. Should a rank growth of weeds start with the young alfalfa, the latter is pretty sure to be crowded out and killed. In order to prevent weeds from accomplishing this destruction, the ground should be broken In the spring, and several crops of young weeds allowed to come up to be destroyed by surface cultivation so as to reduce the number of weed seed In the soil before the alfalfa is sown. In this way, alfalfa eed can be sown the Latter part of July without any danger of destruction by weeds. Like most leguminous plants, alfalfa does best In soil In which there are many nitrifying bacteria. . For the best results the soil should bo Inoculated with the proper bacter'.a by securing some of the soli from an old alfalfa fiekl and sowing It on the proposed new field at about 200 pounds to the acre. A3 soon as the Infected soli Is sown on the new field it must be harrowed In or otherwise covered to prevent sunlight from destroying the nitrifying bacteria. Midsummer is the proper time foi seeding alfalfa, and only the best seei should be used. From 5 to 25 pounds of seed have proved successful, but about 15 pounds to the acre Is the right amount. Should the soil be entirely free from weeds, 10 pounds ol seed to the acre would be sufficient The seeding and covering may be don with grain drill.
TT ATI WEEPING ECZEMA,
Far and Neck Were Raw Terrible Itching, Inflammation and Sorencaa All Treatments Failed Catlenra a Great Saceeaa. "Eczema began over the top of my ear. It cracked and then began to spread. I had three different doctors and tried several things, but they did me no good. At last one side of my face and my neck were raw. The water ran out of It so that I had to wear medicated cotton, and it was so Inflamed and sore that I had to put a piece of cloth over my pillow to keep the water from it and It would stain the cloth a sort of yellow. The eczema itched so that it seemed as though I could tear my face all to pieces. Then I "began to use the Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and It was not more than three months before It was all healed up. Miss Ann Tearsons, Northfleld, Vt, Dec. 19, 1907." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies. Boston. A Royal Aetrea. England boasts many titled ladies who once knew the glories of the etage, but Germany claims the only actress v ho ever became the wife of a ruling prince. She is the Baroness von Heldburg, morganatic wife of the reigning Duke George II. of SaxeMelnlngen, and the people of the Duchy have recently been showering her with affectionate congratulations on her seventieth birthday. Baroness von Holdburg was a mem ber of the celebrated Saxe-Meiningen Court Theater Company when Duke George II., after losing his second wife, Princess Feodora of HohenloheLangenburg, fell in love with her and married her. She was a famous beauty, and was celebrated at the t!me for her Juliet. Her maiden name was Ellen Franz. She received the title of Baroness von Heldburg on her mar riage day. WISHED TOIL DEATH. SafTerlnsa from Kidney Trouble Were So Aeute. Mrs. Josephine Jeffery, 24th and Washington Sts., Marion, Ind. says: "To look back upon what I have gone through, it seems a miracle that I live, and I feel that I owe it to Doau's Kidney rills. My case developed gradually. First, backache, floating spots before my eyes, weakness and exhaustion, then a terrible steady pain over the kidneys and an extreme nervousness, Doctors finally said there was no hope for me, but I began using Doan's Kidney Pills and gradually recovered my health." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. Duke of Norfolk's Simple Life. The Duke of Norfolk seems at present to be bent on getting rid of some of his great possessions. Earl Marshal and premier peer of the realm since he was thirteen years old, the Duke might reasonably be expected to have developed into something of an autocrat, but he is regarded with admiring devotion by his tenantry. His carelessness in matters of dress and deportment have given rise to many amusing incidents. On one occasion he was ordered off his own grass by an angry member of an excursion party which was being shown the beauties of Arundel. "Come off that, can't yer?" she shouted at the shabby figure crossing one of the lawns. "It's such like as you gets us decent folk into trouble." The Duke married his cousin, the Hon. Beatrice Maxwell, and when kneeling at the altar during the wedding ceremony displayed on the soles of his boots the price mark and the silk hat he wore was, as his are Invariably, brushed the wrong way. Ilere la Relief for Womea. If you have pains In the back, Urin ary. Bladder or Kidney trouble, and want a certain, pleasant herb cure for woman's Ills, try Mother Gray' Anatra-Han-Leaf. It is a safe and never-falling regulator. At Druggists or by mall 60 rts. Sample package FREE. Address. The Mother Gray Co- LeRoy. N. Y. War the Boat Upset. Helen Of course he clasped you In his arms when the boat upset? Hazel No; Just the opposite. Helen Just the opposite? What do you mean? Hazel Why, the boat upset when he clasped me In his arms. Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. If you nst ball blue, gtt Red Cross Ball Blue, tbc beat ball blue. Largs 2o. package, ft cents. Just an Argument. "Good gracious, ion't that your husband across the street there quarreling with the man on! the opposite porch?" "O, they're not really quarreling. They dispute that way every night. George is a monoplanist and Mr. Stlggins is a blplanlsf ' Cleveland Plain Dealer. for of an
w1
Corn
Made by Tiffany. Nearly3 ft.high in solid gold and silver. Actual contract price $1,000. To be awarded at the a
National Corn Exposition, Omaha
to the man, woman or child producing the best ear of corn grown this year in the United States. Open to everybody belonins to the Association Nothing to buy or sell. The purpose of the donor of this trophy W. K. Kellogg is to improve the quality of the millions of bushels of cora used in making Kellogg'i Toasted Corn Flakes. Many people think the perfection of corn flavor has been reached in Toasted Cora Flakes. Perhaps it hs. If you don't know how good Kellofcg's the genuin Toasted Corn Flakes is, try it. Then you'll see how hard a task we are giving ourselves to improve it, and the only way wa can improve it is by the betterment of tho corn itself. Professor Holden, of the Iowa State College, the greatest anthority on corn in the world, will award the prize at the National Corn Exposition, 'to be held at Omaha, Neb., Dec. 6th to 18th, 1909. Two simple rules will govern the plan, and they are that you send your best ear of corn to the National Corn Exposition. Omaha, Neb. before November 27, 1909 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 the Kellogg Trophy Contest," and wriie your name and address plainly. If yours is judged the best, you will get the trophy for 1910. If you succeed again next year or the year following, the trophy will become your property for all time. The contest will be n?en to every state in the Union. Professor Holden will judge the corn particularly on the basis of aualitv. Th
per acre is one object of the award, but the main purpose of the founder of the trophy is for improving the quality of xorn used ia makinj KELLOGG'S TOASTED CORN FLAKES. If you haven't tried this delicious cereal, begin yonr education in "good things to eat" today. All grocers have it.
KELLOGG TOASTED CORN
WOMEN OF THE cntcus.
Tney Are Careful Livers and Very Feminine In Their Tastes. The woman of the circus leads a much more careful life than her sister of the stage, says an exchange. Of her diet she must be critically careful, for in performance a mistake of .an inch means death, and to be In the best physical condition she must pay the price in a life almost ascetic. The girl who spends the working hours of her life flying through the air thirty feet above the hard tanbark cannot take any chances. They are genuine women, too. For instance, it is told of one remarkable trapeze .. artist that she is always afraid when the is on a railroad journey and that this Is the one feature of the life of the circus that she fears. Another who is a notable tightrope artist, and capers and dances on the slender surface of a thin wire twenty-five feet above the ground is afraid to cross the streets In a crowded city. They know the danger of their calling, i Accidents happen right along, but, they are not published to the world, for the circus .must ever carry a message of cheerfulness. But insurance companies, though they will grant Insurance to a locomotive engineer, will never do so to a circus acrobat. Even on the road there is plenty of domestic life to be found among these women. Many of them are great readers. The foreign performers spend a large part of their time learning the language of this country. Some have sons or brothers at college. , r An Interesting point about the life of the circus that would commend it to almost any woman is the fact that It seems to be a sort of panacea of old age. The open air life, the "constant exercise and the careful regimen have their reward. Most performers of any merit are well paid, and the life on the road is sufficiently economical to enable them to save a considerable proportion of this salary. This money is largely put into handsome homes where during the off season the woman of the circus can be for the time actually the woman of the home, her dearest ambition. Don't Do An Imitator. Tha imitator, says Orl3on Swetl Marden In Success Magazine, ruins his capacity for originality; for inltla tive; he loses his creative power; his inventiveness and resourcefulness are never developed. In fact, his executive ability the ability to originate, to do things is seriously crippled, if not utterly destroyed by his efforts to iml täte some one else. No human being ever yet made a success trying to be somebody else, no matter how great or successful that person might be. Success cannot be successfully copied; it is orig inal; it is self-expression. A man Is a failure just in proportion as he gets away from himself. When Henry Ward Beecher and Phillips Brooks were at the height of their fame, hundreds of young clergymen tried to copy their style, their mannerisms, their mode of expression, gestures, habits, but they fell as far short of the power of either of these giants as the common chromo falls short of the masterpiece. Not one of these imitators ever amounted to anything until he stopped copying, imitating, and began to build on his own foundations. A great many clergymen to-day merely echo other preachers' sermons which they have read and absorbed. The majority of the books published are imitations of previous books, echoes of the authors whose style and plots the writers have copied. But these copied sermons and books lack vitality, force, naturalness. They do not stir the blood or touch the heart of the hearer or reader. They are cold, lifeless. Domestic. President Edward O'Nell, of the Master Butchers' Association of New York, was discussing the advance in meat prices due to the wheat corner. "And these wheat cornerers," said Mr. O'Nell, "call themselves patriots, eh? They're In the Washington and Lincoln class. They only cornered the wheat to prevent Europe from taking it away from us and leaving us to starve. Patriots!" He laughed harshly. "It reminds me," he said, "of John Stockton, who was renowned for his domesticity. Two women were talking about Stockton. The first said: '"He has very domestic tastes, hasn't her "'Oh, very,' the other woman replied. 'He flirts with every cook they have.' " The Horseshoers Union of Denver has started a school of farriery.
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ear De camber 6 to 18,1909 3 FLAKE CO., Battle Creeh, Mich,
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