Plymouth Tribune, Volume 8, Number 51, Plymouth, Marshall County, 23 September 1909 — Page 7
weakest organ. If there is weakness of 6tomach, liver or lungs, there is a weak link in the chain of life which may snap at any time. Often this so-called weakness" is caused by lack of nutrition, the result of weakness or disease of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. Diseases and weaknesses of the stomach and its allied organs are cured by the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. TV'hcn the weak or diseased stomach is cured, diseases of other organs which seem remote from the stomach but which.
fcave their origin in a diseased condition of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition, arc cured also. The strong man has a strong stomach. Take the above recommended "Discov cry" and yon may have a strong atom ach and a strong body. Given Away. Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser, new revised Edition, is sent free on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stamps for the book in paper covers, or 31 stamps for the cloth-bound volnine. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
for ITMTTVTTTy PUNIC
Cares the sick and acts as a preventive for others. Liquid given on the tonyue. Safe for brood mares and all others. Best kidney remedy. 50 cents a bottle. tö.OO the dozen, tl.00 and 110.00 the dozen. Sold by all drusgists and turf goods houses, or sent, express paid, by the manufacturers. SPOHN MEDICAL COMPANY, Chemists, Goshen, Ind.
FA5HION HINTS "Motora" is the material used for this "coaty" black siile walking suit. In cut it is strictly for the street, no half way suggestion that it might also be for the house. A panel, similar to the one in be ?, f'oes almost to the hem in front, and like t, finished with the black jet buttons. - - London Strt Deft-gars. That the skilled beggar can maki a larser sum a week than the averag Industrious wor,kIngman was one ol the opinions advanced by the chair man (Robert pierpont) at the annual meeting of the London Mendicant So dety, says a writer In Reynolds News paper. It was probable, he said, that In th streets of London alone something like 100,000 a year was given away is causnal charity by persons who kne nothing about the conditions and circumstances of those to whom the Tave. The total number of begging letters received by the society during 1905 was 1,3öS, which, with those alreauj In their, possession, made a total ol to fwer than 238,938. He pointed ouf that about 28 per cent of begging letter writers were utter Impostors and only about 13 per cent were deserving cf help. Mr. Pierpont reminded those presenl that the society was originally formed by the first Duke of Wellington, owing to the number of beggars who, professing to have served under him at Waterloo and in the peninsular wars continually accosted him in the street for alms. - Convincing Proof. "Good gracious, Jane, my hand Is always in my pocket." "Xo, It Isn't, John, or you would feel that letter there I gave you to mail two weeks a pro. Baltimore American. (Gold Medal Haarlem (Dil Capsules "Odorless and Tasteless. QUICKLY AND SURELY RELIEVE ALL FORMS OP RIDHEY, BLADDER, STOUACil and LIVER TROUBLES Begin taking these Gold Medal Haarten Oil Captules today. You will find relief tocnorTnsist on the COLD MEDAL BRAND. No other Haarlem Oil it genuine. Holland Medicine Co.. Scranton, Pa. Gentlemen: After giving your Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsule a thorough trial, I find them to be the best kidney and liver remedy I hare ever bad the good fortune to take, and they are truly a blessing to mankind. I heartily recommend them to all sufferers of weak kidneys and brer as the superlative remedy. Sincerely, . W. II. WARREN, 160 Blceckcr St New York, March 25. 1909. Capsules 25 and 50 cents per box. Bottles ISc and 35c, at all druggists. HOLLAND MEDICINE COSole Importers Scranton, Pa, If your Drupgist cannot supply you, write us direct. Let us do your Printing using - Linen for your office stationery. You can gst the paper and envelopes to match. Is the reel AM. Take mm .. Send Fifty Cent to the "Gate Way" for Elve, reliable inform at loa. mar and at the last biff opening of fertile land, tan Information Bureau, ilobridjt. South Dakota.
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Each of the chief or- ' gans of the body is a link in the Chain of Life. A chain is no stronger than its weakest link, the bod 7 no stronger than its
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BTttr DISTEMPER. CATARRHAL EYE FEVER. AND ALL KOSE AND THROAT DISEASES Match Fact. John Walker, an English chemist, was experimenting In 1827 with an inflammable mixture for use on shiphoard. One day he happened to rub a stick dipped In this mixture across a table. There was a report; the stick took fire, and, because John Walker was no fool, the match was born. John Walker, the match's inventor, put his wonderful invention on the market in April, 1S27. The Walker match wa3 as big as a lead pencil, and it cost a shilling a box. Because It could only be lighted by drawing it through a piece of sandpaper folded ia two, the Holden match supplanted it in 1S33. The Holden wa3 a lucifer; It ignited more easily than the Walker; so it put the Walker out of business. Sweden is to-day the home of the match industry, and exports annually about 2,000,000,000 boxes of incomparable matches. Sninbarne's Idea of Cleopatra. 'Cleopatra," which Is to be sold with other Swinburne rarities at Sotheby's, was described by the poet in a letter to T. J. Wise, as a "trumpery ephemeral," and he added, "George Meredith, I remember, strongly (and no doubt justly) ! remonstrated with me for producing such a farrago of the most obvious commonplaces of my ordinary style as it was In '66, or thereabouts. The verses were never Intended for reproduction or for preservation, but simply scribbled off a3 fast as might be to oblige a friend whose work I admired." Mr. Wise, however, was quite content to pay 15 guineas for a coup of the poew, on which Swinburne remarked: "If I were not a bit of a bibliomaniac myself, I should be shocked to think of your waiting good money on it." London Chronicle. Oo Your Clothe Look Yellow r If so, use Red Cross Ball Blue. It will tntkt thtm white as snow. Large 2oz. pactage. 5 ceata. ROBERT A TIA "MV He Created a Xetr Era 1st English Architecture. Robert Adam (1728-92) was to Eejr llsh architecture what Benvenuto Cellini was to that of Italy. He 'was ar chitect to the King, beloved at court, a member of Parliament, and It wa said of him that he "could not hela adorning all that he touched." Thosa of the English people who dwell la Adam houses prize them as rare Jew ela. I AUiiit'. luu uuuieu iulu ru&uau ar chitecture a lightness, delicacy of touch and charm of proportion which It had never before possessed and which gave his name to that splendid period of architecture the style of which lasted over a century. Everything in a house, from the panel in a ceiling to the vases and gilt wood tripods and branches for lights, from hangings at the windows to a woman's hairpin holder, Adam designed himself. Adam got his rich, beautiful and distinctive style from the ruins of the Emperor Diocletian, at Spalato. As a finish to interiors he conceived the idea of using figures In relief upon walls, colored and adorned according to Raphael's Stanze painted flat upon the walls of the Vatican. His Idea was as bold as Its result was beautiful. He also adopted Pompeiian styles for decoration. "Adam was artist as well as architect, and his walls, ceilings and interior adornments are marveh of harmonious colors," says an architect. "He employed no less personages than Angelica Kaufman and Zucchl to paint many of the panels and medallions let Into his ceillng3, and it was his habit to have carpets woven to match the rattern overhead and harmonlzo with the color there employed. The keyrote of Adam's style is 'movement. combined with perfect artistic fitness, and It Is peculiar for its grace and statellness." NVw York Tribune. THE DOCTOR'S WIFE Aerees with Him About Food. A trained nurse says: "In the practice of my profession I have found so many points in favor of Grape-Nuts food that I unhesitatingly recommend it to all my patients. "It is delicate and pleasing to the palate (an essential in food for the sick) and can be adapted to all age3, being softened with milk or cream for babies or the aged when deficiency of teeth renders mastication Impossible. For fever patients or those on liquid diet I find Grape-Xut3 and albumen water very nourishing and refreshing.' "This recipe is my own idea and is made a3 follows: Soak a teaspoon ful of Grape-Nuts in a glass of water for an hour, strain and serve with the beaten white of an egg and a spoonful of fruit juice for flavouring. This affords a great deal of nourishment that even the weakest stomachs can assimilate without any distress. "My husband Is a physician and he uses Grape-Nuts himself and orders it , many times for his patients. "Personally I regard a dish of Grapenuts with fresh or stewed fruit as the Ideal breakfast for anyone well or sick." In any case of stomach trouble, nervous prostration or brain fag a 10-. day trial of Grape-Nuts will work won-: ders toward nourishing and rebuilding, and in this way ending the trouble. "There's a Reason," and trial proves., Look in pkgs. for the famous little book, "The Road to Wellville." Ever read tho above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They re genuine, trüe, and full of I human Interest.
. law"-- . Gas from Crude OH. A Swiss experiment for the transformation of crude oil into liquid gas is reported by the American consul at Zurich to have met with great success. The product is a transportable liquid, which Is simply evaporated as used, and can be used for lighting, heating, cooking, soldering and welding purposes. The gas is nonpolsonou, while It3 installation cost Is said to be low, and manipulation simple and without danger. The new gas is competing successfully with coal gas and electricity. i AVlre Worm In lie Corn. A Michigan man writes that he cleared his ground of wire worms after he, as well as several of his farmer neighbors, had lost their planted seed entirely and had to replant two or three times on account of the pests. He never tad any more trouble with them. His method requires hard work and time, but tatter leave the ground idle than plant garden crops to feed to the wire worms and grubs. As soon as a crop is removed from the ground cultivate immediately by spadlng, or plowing If the tract is a large one. Roll, drag and roll again to hold the moisture, so all weeds will at ouce start to grow. In September give It another very thorough working, which destroys all the weed3 that might grow In the next spring. Wire worms thrive In weedy, dirty soil, but after following the above plan one may plant anything and have no fear of the worms getting the crop. Farmers and Drovers' Journal. lint Eat I'p 9100,000,000 Yearly. One of the most serious problems the Department of Agriculture has had to meet Is the ridding the country of the millions of rats with which It Is Infested, and which are especially the foesof the farmer. It is estimated that the rat pest costs the United States $100,000,000 yearly in grain destroyed alone. The rat also pollutes a great quantity of food products which it does not eat, does great damage by digging under buildings and embankments, gnawing wood, cutting up goods and papers to cnake nests, killing poultry and stealing eggs. The most destructive species, says Leslie's Weekly, Is the Norway rat, which has been carried to all parts of the world on ships. It is calculated that a single pair of rat3 would, In three years, under favoring circumstances, increase to 20,000,000. The Department of Agriculture has planned a vigorous crusade against the vermin, and it recommends rat-proof construction In buildings, better protection of food supplies, and the use of various poisons in localities haunted by rats. Oats om n Poultry Food. Oats make an excellent food for the poultry, providing they are of the right kind. The long, slim oat. with plenty of husk or hull Is poor, feed for anything, but the plump, meaty oat Is a good feed for all stock, including poultry. Hulled oats for young chickens after they are three or four weeks old will help thecn to make bone and muscle faster than any other one feed, and this Is the most desirable element at this period of growth. For grown or feeding fowls we have at most seasons of the year fed one feed of oats dally with most satisfactory results. We have fed some, oats after boiling them for fall and winter feeding, but they were -if poor quality. nd the boiling was to soften the hulls rather than because the boiling added any other value o the oata feed Itself. Boiling is not necessary with good oats except by way of variety in feeding. The best way is to feed them in the litter, scattered well and deeply so the fowl3 will nave to do considerable scratching. Agricultural Epltomlst. The Man and the Cow. No matter if it 13 to be sold for cream or butter, milk should be cooled as soon as it Is drawn from the cows. To make $10 clear from a cow every year you must get at least $45 out of her. No ot&er branch of live stock keejA Ing can compare with the dairy business for enriching the farm. Overripe cream means strong butter; overchurned and overworked cream means soft butter. By actual chemical analysis a quart of milk Is said to possess as much nutritive value as a pound of beefsteak. Wbt is the use of weighing the milk of each cow? Not much, only to show exactly which of your cows are paying their board. Isn't that enough? Kep the cows clean and allow them only pure water to drink and you will have little trouble with f.trlngy milk. A kicking cow has boen known to kick the boys clear off the farm and into the city. If you have one, sell her to the butcher. Tho frequent application of elbow greats Insures clean milk, clean ßeparaturs, clean butter, and generally a clean reputation. Lexington Herald. The Old lien. The ordinary laying hen seldom pays her keep after the second or third year, and to say the lea3t old hens are not as profitable as young ones. Now 13 the time to weed out undesirable specimens. Beginning shortly now. for several months the molt will practically stop egg production, and so, of course, the birds will return rm profit. Consequently It 13 better to Fell the dead weights at once than to hold them for the rent or two advance In price they will obtain In the fall or winter. Old hens can not. In the very nature of thing.?, be expected to return a very fancy price-on the market. Still, if they are properly fattened, they will bring from 50 to 80 cents each, according to the market, and that Is an amount that certainly can not be despised If one ha3 enough of them to sell. Even though they bring les3 than the figures mentioned, it 13 still advisable to let them go at once, for the room they occupy Is needed by
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ÖX!yf the growing stock, and your time can be spent to much better advantage on the youngsters than on the old "hasbeens." Besides, there Is always a small and sometimes a rather large percentage of loss among old fowls during hot weather. Agricultural Epltomlst. Farmer a llorrower. "Not In many years has there been so light a demand from the farming communities for loans as now," said a banker from the Interior to a New York Post correrpondent. "The country banker has long depended on the farmer as a bororwer, and has received no small part of his dividend earnings from this source. a It was a steady and profitable one. With the high prices of grain and stock and the gaining of the farmer in wealth, thla demand has fallen off steadily until today the country bank has fewer loans of this sort than ever in Its LIstory. In its p!a?e has come the new form c! handling products of a perishable nature. TJ.e creamery industry, which formerly had little to do with the banks, has become Important, and the butter shipments are enormous. The egg shipments, which, when there wer no cold-storage facilities in the country to-ns, had no meanlrg for the Panics, now are important. In my town, for Instance, a little city of 5.00P. 200 miles west of Kansas City, they Is one firm with forty carload3 of ej-gs In the local cold-storago house. Other firms have been as large buyers and the dealings of a firm In another smaller town of the county will reach larger proportions, both of eggs and of poultry." Feeding firnln to Cow. Tfcere Is a wonderful sight of speculation as to whether or not It pays to fjed grain to cows out on grass. Manj of the states have thought It worth while to conduct experiments for the purpose of settling the question. The national government has brought the results of these trials together and published them In a bulletin ve may any of U3 get. The gist of It 13 that It does not pay to spend money for feed to uss while cows are out on pasture unless prices are high for Gutter 'and cheese. Jit while this Is so I know of some farriers who do feed gralii right along through the summer months and find it rtofitable. These farners buy the grata feed and pay a big price for It, too. One farmer I know of, and a wofiian, too, has for years kept up that practice. I have talked with her rr.of than once about it, and she is sure It does pay. She gets her money bacJ and more, too. j TK point seems to be with those who follow this practice that if they can eep their cows from falling off in rillk and can hold them in good flesh they are on the winning side. I bölleve there is something in that. Where we rais3 It is In letting our cowt get thin, so that they fall orf botfi In quantity and quality of milk. GraS.A prevents thl3, and In that way brings In & profit. The best way to settle this question is for all ip do a little investigating on Oxr own account and keep careful reccifls of everything done cost of feed, money taken In and all about It. That "Mil b$ something we can depend upoi, no matter what others may thlni. Agjlcultural Epltomlst. Healthr Hos. In host sections hogs have been generally healthy for the past two year. DurlDg thlj time corn has been very high in price and farmers have been caretdl In feeding It. -We have not sees many places where whole wagon load of corn have been dumped in the feed "t ox pasture for the anfcnals to eat At will. Cc.rn In Itself Is not an impure feed, and thero Is no conclusive evidence thai it will directly bring on disease. However it is well known that hogs fed on an exclusive corn diet are not as hfald. as those fed on a mixed diet. Tho reason is that corn is not a balanced ration, and the animal takaer on more fat during the early period ol growth than the , frame can well 6up;ort. Consequently the system ecoiCes weakened and the animal Is not sp resistant to disease. The pttvailing high price of corn Is compelling stock growers to rely more upoa. pasture and supplementary feeds for royltig their hogs. This Is almost bum to have a general beneficial effect ic the physical powers and resisting ouMities of hogs. Pigs in pasturf not only secure a variety of easily dlgEftib le food, but the exercise in securing their food develops strong heal1; and lung power, making them less euiceptible to the attacks of disease Alw pasturing leads the animals oyer wider and cleaner grounds, henre they escape the baneful effects of avercrowded and more or less filthy quarters where dlseaao is likely to breyl. T!e man who studies the question of swLo feeding will find that hog3 will eat ird thrive on a wider range of con-aiwn farm crops thau is usually glvru them. They will eat clover and alfalfa, either green or dry; they will eat ud thrive on a variety of grasses un weed3 of pastures; pumpkins and mort root crops are consumed with a relHi; and slops, milk of all kinds, an waste fruits of the garden and orcenrd are eaten by them as readily, if ie jt more so. than high priced graliis. With right management, pork can e produced as cheaply as It ever coul, the hogs remain healthy, and cor-4 be fed only for finishing for rrarket. Worth Ileadlns. P-e milk, when frozen, preserves Its viglnal properties unchanged for week. XH'iamraed was so abstemious that a r'i.dful of dates and a mouthful of wa'e was all he required after a day of u'rd riding. S: thousand feet balcw the level of t-s ocean the water Is of a unlfona temperature, just above the freezing point, irrespective of the latitude.. Thr Inventor of melinite has offered the French ministry of war a new; high explosive, which he claims is qially as powerful and safer to händig. Pungent and acid tastes are perceired by the tip of the tongue; the middle portion tastes sweets and. bittern, while the back and lower part Is fitted to taste fatty substances butter and the like.
SOME PARIS STAGE HORRORS.
IU-alUm at the (irnnd Gaixnol Theater That I Uncanny. The Grand Guignol, the temple of melodrama in Paris, has been continuing its choice line of thrillers of late, a writer in a London newspaper says. One of the plays recently produced there was Le Delegue de la Troisteine Section, a really choice little horror. Here was apparently a gathering of Russian revolutionists of the middle class assembled for a little academic discussion at the house of one of the members a quiet bourgeois parlor, with a simple lamp burning on the table, the light from which was just sufficient to keep the room in semidarkness. The members greet each other, as they enter the room, with simple formality pleased to see each other again, and all that kind of thing. They sit down, and there is a dramatic pause. Then, quite unexpected ly, one of the members, sitting quietly back in his chair, says they must be careful what they discuss as there is a traitor in their midst. In a moment the delegates are on their feet. No noise, no raised voices merely a quiet demand that the accuser shall substantiate his charge, and the accuser points out his man. The accused ridicules the idea af first, but proof after proof is quietly laid before the meeting, and, at a signal from the chairman, the traitor Is suddenly seized from behind and bound. It is all done so quickly, and yet so quietly, that the horror of the thing becomes very impressive. For the meed of the traitor is death. And he is given five minutes in which to prepare himself there in that quiet parlor, in the house of a member whose wife is in the adjoining kitchen calmly preparing supper for the delegates as soon as their business shall be ended. The traitor then says he has an accomplice. He will give the name on condition that his life is spared. The reply comes that his life J3 forfeit. If he will not give the other name of his own accord well, like the gay English monarch, he will be an unconscionable time dying. They twist a black kerchief around his neck and half-throttle him; but still he will say nothing. Then one of the delegates stands over him with a knife, and says that. If he will not speak, his cheeks shall be sliced off, one after the otherj This is really quite a nice bit of ' sensation. Just a3 the knife has got through the rt cheek: however, the victim has the bad taste to spoil all the fun. He rolls out of the chair with a beautiful gurgle, and the delegates gather round him with the astonished remark, "Crist! II est mort!" Only fancy! In the second act the delegates are busy Inquiring among themselves as to the Identity of the other traitor, and suspicion falls on their host, who should know by this time what treatment to expect. Suddenly his wife, who has been listening at the door, burst into the room and says it Is she who Is the traitor she sold the other delegates to save her husband real love, and all that kind of thing. The loving husband's reply is to throw his wife into the arms of his fellow delegates and to tell them they may treat her a3 they think 'fit. He has another engagement. And, picking up a revolver from the table, blows out his brains and falls on the hearth rug, while his wife obliges with a scream that you could hear the whole length of Regent street. That 13 all. But the quiet, deliberate manner in v hich the death penalty was Inflicted in that semidarkened room where the voices were most of the time hushed for fear of eavesdroppers was wildly uncanny. The dialogue had all the commonplace style, of intense realism and the acting wait remarkable. After seeing a play of that kind you want to look under your bed on retiring to make sure that nobody with a black kerchief Is hiding there in wait for you. , Sand Dane Along Lake Michigan. Along the bordes of Lake Michigan shifting sand, dunes are causing much trouble. The dunes are formed by the on-shore winds, which sweep the beach sand beyond the reach of the waves. The sand accumulates In low mounds about any obstructions, such as stones or bushes; thus started the dune ig sufficient cause for its own growth. The wind keeps piling the sand up from behind, the dune grows, and the sand on its crest is blown over to the leeward side of the mound, so that the dunes gradually march Inland. On the east side of Lake Michigan the dry west winds have heaped up numbers of dunes, ranging in height up to 200 feet. In Indiana the dunes hove moved Inland across a forested area, burying and killing trees, leaving the dead trunks as skeletons behind them in their march onward. A famous instance of dune migration is that of the Kurische Nehrung, a long sand bar off the coast of Germany, where a dune ridge marched over a church, burying it for thirty' years, at the end of which time It was gradually uncovered by the progress of the dune. There Is a 17-year-old girl in Atchison who feel3 so good that $he almost screams with joy. In! a few years when we meet that girl pushing a baby buggy and looking as cross as It is possible for a married woman to look we are sure we shall laugh. Atchison Globe. IIa lalon for LangnaKri,' Friedrich Thell, a peasant of Rauda, in Saxony, whose leisure hours have been devoted to the study of Greek, Latin, Hebrew, Sanskrit, Arabic and Gaelic, is 75 years old. He is begin nlng to study the English languag?. Thell is in correspondence with soma of the leading philologists of the' day. A Savage Spell. A damsel named Susan Van Deuzen For a husband a red man was choosln'. She wedded a full Kin to old Sitting Bull, And thereafter spelled her name Siouxsan. Boston Courier. Ennlly Done. Beggar (Insinuatingly) "I say, mister, have yer got any suggestions to make to a feller what ain't able to raise a penny to git shaved with?" Old Gentlemen (passing on) Yes; grow a beard. Tit-Blt3. I'ncle Allen. "I suppose a man never begins to feel really old," said Uncle Alien Sparks, "until he happens to catch his boy la the act of shaving hlnisell." hope is believing that some stranger will saw your wood while ou sit in the shade. A woman comes pretty near being an ideal wife if her dry goods bills are never as large as the bill3 for eating.
COVERED "WITH HIVES.
Child n 31a ot Dreadful Sore, Itehinur, Irritating llninor for Two Month Llttlo Suirerer In Terrible Plight Cured by Cutlcnra. "My six year old daughter had the dreadful disease called hives for two months. She became affected by playing with children who had it By scratching she caused large sores which were irritating. Her body was a complete sore, but it was worse on her anus and back. We employed a physician who left medicine, but It did not help her and I tried several remedies, but without avail. Seeing the Cuticura Remedies advertised, I thought I would try them. I gave her a hot bath dally with Cuticura Soap and anointed her body with Cuticura Ointment. The first treatment relieved the itching and in a short time the disease disappeared. Mrs. G. L. Fridhoff, Warren, Mich., June SO nnd July 13, '03." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Trops. of Cuticura Remedies. Boston. TRIAL MARRIAGES. Land "Where Thl Custom IIa Been Practiced for Ages. Sociologists who view with alarm th growing interest In trial marriage as an Institution and conservatives whe condemn Its advocates for having toe advanced ideas, due to twentieth century freedom of thought and speech, should go to the Philippines, where mating on the Installment plan lias been practiced for ages among the primitive tribes, such as the Igorrotes The Igorrotes live on the sides ol almost perpendicular mountains, and the rice fields are built with stone wall3 dug from the hlghty hills and dirt hauled from afar. The one pur suit i3 raising rice, and in its weeding and gathering children are most useful, therefore the wo.man who bears children is respected. Motherhood is glorified. The woman who bears nc children is an object of pity. If not ol scorn. The Igorrotes marry at an age when white children are scarcely ready tc leave the grade schools. The wooing is simple and direct. If a child promises to bless the union within a year this is taken as a sign of compatibil lty and future domestic happiness, and the permanent marriage follows. Ii within a year no promise of motherhood is given, tho couple are summoned before the village council, and the man Is given his choice: Either he may leave the woman and seek a bride elsewhere, or he may take chances on a childless marriage. But once a trial marriage Is made permanent, the idea of another love affair never enters the Igorrote's head. Not only does he take It as a sign from heaven that this woman Is to become the mother of hit children, but he knows that any outside entanglements with the fair sei will end his career, matrimonially and physically. In that land they have trial mar riages, but no divorces. The seventh commandment Is seldom fractured There is no kindly jury to listen tc the falr.wlfe's tale of how she needed human sympathy and companionship; no skilled attorneys to paint with lurid word3 the sufferings of the injured husband. Collusion is unknown. There Is only one verdict against the offender death. An Offended Artlat. "There's no use o talkln'," ald Farmer Corntossel, as he sat down on the horse trough. "I can't git along with some o' these here summer guests." "What's the trouble?" "I have jes been lectured by that good-lookin young woman with glasses fur sp'ilin the color scheme of the garden by puttln' parls green on the vegetables." Wash! gton Star. "Friend t O, Xo! SIother-In-LaiT." "Are you a friend of the prisoner?" Magistrate O'Connor asked a buxom woman witness in the Central street police station court yesterday. "No, I'm his mother-in-law," replied the woman, without any particular show of feeling. New York World. Hamlin Wizard Oil is over fifty year old and, like an old friend, it can be de pended upon just as surely as the family doctor who may be miles away. We Touch One Another on All Sldei. No individual can be happy unless the circumstances of those around him be so adjusted as to conspire with his Interest. For, in human society, no happiness or misery stands unconnected and independent Our fortunes are Interwoven by threads Innumerable. We touch one 'another on all sides. One man's misfortune or success, his wisdom or his folly, often by its consequences reaches through multitudes. Blair. Gold and Silver Trophy For the Best Ear of Corn To be known at the W. K. KELLOGG National Corn Trophy Tobe Giren at the National Corn exposition, But is December agreed with 6 to 18, 1909. ups. All are ae comes around. flavor that has made found only in Kellogg having. Your grocer
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Alcohol a pf rrvr. Acge(ableIVcparabnfarASsimilar feFtwdantfltegufr ItngUicSiomaclisaMBoMsof rreni,jLvj.,.i.,u Promotes DiestionJCkcrfi ncss and RestjContains nciiim OpiimuMorphine norIinnL Not Narcotic. Fttmfiia Sttim JbiScma jUCukmakSm Suqnr . rttftoyreo ftanr. MMssBjBiasBass Aperfcct Remedy for CoitsfipaU011 , sour Moraacn.uiarr.Ma AYorras,CoiT'ulsioiisfcTris!incssandLoss of Sleep. Facsimile Signatur oT W cfai NEW YORK. BEAUTIFUL MANCnURlAW CITY. DaJny'a Streets, In the Administration Section, Like Those of Tarla. If you could lift up 112 of the finest villas on the outskirts of a Europeai city, gardens and all, and drop them down on the slope of a hill overlooking a beautiful harbor you would have one section of Dalny, writes Frank G. Carpenter. This famous city of the Czar, built by the Russians at the southern end of the Transslberlan system, is more like Europe than Asia. The administration section, devoted to the railway officials, is made up ol magnificent dwellings of brick and stone, running along wide streets, each surrounded by a beautiful garden. There is no Asiatic architecture in this part of the city, and as one drives through it he cannot realize that he is in the wilds of Manchuria. The streets are as clean as the boulevards of Paris, they are lighted by electricity, and the houses are all large and made after a uniform style. Taere is an administration building, with scores of offices; a Greek church, which will accommodate more than 1,000, and a big hotel, which is one of the best in the far east Dalny I3 becoming a new city under thft rule of the Mikado. The Russians spent something like $20,000,000 In dredging the harbor, in erecting hugt granite docks and In putting up magnificent buildings for their offices and homes. When the war closed a large part of the city had been burned. The roofs were off many of the houses. The Chinese had carried away -the doors and windows and had even tried to steal the Russian stoves. In the residence section the most 0! these damages have since been repaired and a new town is rising between that place and the harbor. There are 15 brickyards now making building material, and hundreds of Manlhurian masons and carpenters are working away. Outside of a population of 58,003 of the Mongolian race there are in Dalny just 56 Europeans and Americans, composed chiefly of consuls and their employes, and a very few traders. Younueat ireai-UraiidmoIhrr, Mme. Edna Bertonelle, a seamstress In tho Quartler Montmartre, Paris, is held to be the youngest greatgrandmother In the world. She was married at the age of 14, and her first child, a girl, married at the same early age. "VVhea Edna was 31 she was a grandmother. Her grandson married at 17 a young woman a few days his junior. On her forty-eighth birthday Mme. Bertonelle was a great-grandmother. Have to Tie it 3 own it any wonder? There never was a
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food
that so pleased the tastes of the little ones or
them. And the same is true with ready and anxious lor more Detore the .
It's all in the flavor the delightful, different
a nation of Corn Flake eaters. But s, the kind that you should ask has it or can get it for you.
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For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have . Always Bought Bears the Signature of For Over Thirty Years Knew It All the Time. Cocaine is pronounced ko-kah-la, accent on the first syllable; not kokain, accent cn the last syllable. Paresis Is pronounced pa-re-sis, short a, accent on the first syllable; not par-e-sis, long e, accent on second syllable. And. by the way, why do people say tre-men-jus Instead of tre-men-dus? St Paul (Minn.) Dispatch. Character Indispensable. Talent hlps a man to obtain suecess, but it i3 character which se cures It for him. A man will succeed with character and very little talent, and will never succeed without character, whatever talent he may have at his disposal. Max O'Rell. Dr. Pierce's Pellets, small, sugarcoated, easy to ltke as candy, regulate and Invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Do not gripe. Spoiled In Transmission. "Algy, here's a good story," said Percy. "A man named Swords had been arrested for assault with a deadly weapon, and h?s case was on trial " 'Mr. Swords asked the Judse, hor will you be tried?' "And Mr. Swords said he wanted to be tried by a Jury of his spears. See?" "Sure," answered Algy. 1 "That's a, good one." Later in the day Algy tried it on the boarders at Mrs. Irons hashery. "I heard a good etory this morning," he said. "A man named Swords had been arrested for assault with a deadly weapon, and his case was on trial. The judge asked him how he wanted to be tried. " 'I want to be tried, your honor," said Mr. Swords, by a jury of my peers.' See? But the boarders gave him the stony stare, and Alj?y doesn't know even yet what ailed his story. Chicago Tribune. F. W. N. U. --- - No. 391909 When writing to Advertisers pleasa ay yea saw the Adr. la this paper.
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For the purpose of encoaraging the better breeding ia corn for improving the quality, W. K. Kellof j, the President of the Toasted Corn Flake Co., offers a
$1000.00 beautiful solid gold and silver trophy to the person growing the best ear of corn ia two different seasons, the first season's
specimen to be seat to the Nations! Corn Exposition, Omaha, Neb., before November, 27th, 1909. Thie offer is open to every man, womia tod child in the United States. It will be judged by the le&ding corn authority of the world, Prof. so well grownP. G. Holden. m next meal Wttchthispa lr for further par ticulars. this flavor is for and insist on Crceli, Midi.
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