Plymouth Tribune, Volume 9, Number 1, Plymouth, Marshall County, 7 October 1909 — Page 7

y yccx as&s s& Y& asssUwcto Hakte uhaiuo letter nec&eäLas i&ksl cj tok&3cs ax&casss tuMy urwYiTcpcr Tcitsvxastv, proper cgoxls.aad rVmJ aia CALIFORNIA Fig Syrup Co. SOLO BY ALL LEADING DRUOOISTS CNf. Si iE ONLY- RIGULAR PRICE 50 PEB BOTTLE NEW TELEGRAPH COMPANY Pushing Lines cf Wires Across Missouri, Illinois and Indiana. The quiet contest for a place in the telegraph business which has been in progress for some time ' in Missouri, Illinois and Indiana, has resulted in a complete victory for the new independent company, the Telepost. Wherever its lines have been established it has put into effect its universal schedule of flat rates, vrhich' mean a reduction of telegraph charges such as only this new company can give without loss of money through the use of the inventions of Patrick B. Delaney, by which remarkable automatic machines do the work of the old hand method of transmission. The Telepost Company is bringing competition into the heart of the zones of the greatest volume of telegraph business, viz.: New England, the North Mississippi Valley region, and the Washington, Philadelphia, New York belt. The lines are established and thriving in New England, work is going ahead with all possible speed in and around New York, and now in the North Central district, in which the main centers are Chicago, St. Louis, Springfield, Indianapolis and Kansas City, another victory has been gained by recuring extensions into Indianapolis for the line now operating from St. Louis to Terre Haute. In a few weeks' time Indianapolis and St. Louis and Indianapolis and Chicago will be connected. Westward the work is pushing on beyond Sedalia, Mo. The effect of a sharp competition and reduced rates, as evidenced in New England, has been to stimulate business, and justifies the conclusion that experts are correct In their opinion that with the rates cut in half the telegraph business will be trebled in volume, which has been the general experience in England, France and other countries where the telegraphs have been put on a basi3 of modern efficiency and reasonable charges. Qualifying? for the Service. In his ".Memoirs of Eighty Years," Dr. Gordon Hake, who was a nephew of Gen. Charles Gordon. tell3 hov. he won tha approbation of his uncle, later celebrated a3 the hero of Khartum. It wa3 by a boyish feat which he learned In his school days. Most boy3 feel a vaulting ambition at that age, but too few of them In later year3 fulfil! Its alm3. I may mention here. In t-king leave of my boyhood, that there was a bath at Islington called Peerless Pool, to which in summer the boys of the school were sent to bathe. It was a large mass of water, oblong In shape, with a wide promenade. There we rvould spend a whole afternoon, sent there by the authorities when the half-holiday wa3 at hand. There, to excite the wonder and applause of the other boys, I punished myself by taking the longest run to the water's edge that wa3 obtainable within the enclosure, and by leaping eomersault-fashion into the air to a great height and reaching the water In a seated posture. In doing this I inflicted on myself a punishment equal to that of being flogged. Eelng somewhat sheepish at the age of fifteen, I did not stand very high In the 3iimition of my uiele. General Gordon, while staying with him at Woolwich: but one day he took ma down to the Thames to hathe. There wa3 a platform, probably for the soldiers to jump from into the water. This afforded me a long run, and I resolved on performing my feat. My nncle was perfectly surprised at It, and often alluded to it with surprise in later years. After thl3 display of my pluck, he wa3 much in favor of my goins into the army. Mr. Winslow' Soolhlnx Sjrip for Children Tfrtuns: soften the gums, roducos Inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 23 Waste of Material. In process of time it was observed that the multimillionaire philanthropist had ceased gi'.ing costly library buildings to towns and cities. "Why 13 this. Mr. Canagrsy?" the reporters asked him. "Young men." he said, "what is the use of build!ns great houses for libraries when all a man needs for an education Is five feet of books?" Whereat they marveled, but they could not answer him. Chicago Tribune. QUICK RELIEF TAKE Gold Medal Haarlem Oil 23 0 " Odorless and Tasteless Tour pains and aohps from KIDXEY. LIVER. BLADDER OH STOMACH TROUBLE will bejrin to disappear the first lny you tak COiD MEDAL HAARLEM OIL CAPSULES. "Aftw flTlnt yonr nM Merfal Rar1rm Oil Cprale thoronrh trial. I And ttirm to b the bot kt'lnt-e and liver remedy I have ever had the gnott fortune to take, an! they are mly a llc-Ong to mankind. I heartily recommend tttem to all n.ilTrrert of weak kldneja and liver a tbe auperlstlve remetl v." W. H. WABKET. 10 Bleecker St. ITew York, llarch , 109. Haarlem Oil Capsules 25 and 50 rents per box, liottles 15c and 35c, at all dru?Ki-'ts. Seid lar free rail Size 25c Bex it Capsales Tf you are suffering from any kind of LIVE It. STOMACH r BLADDER trouble, fill out and mail this coupon now to Holland Medicine Co., Scranton. Pa., and receive a free box of Capsules for trial.

nolland Med lot d Co.. Reranton. Pa. : l'leaa send roe at onre. free, full ! tSe bos GolJ Medal Uaarleia OU Capsule. Same Street ...................... . ...... ............ Towil. ............... ............ State WEITE PLAINLY V

COLORAI0. fholce land. $10. Ample rainfall. Wheat 30 bu. t'ern 55 bu. Free homesteads. Cook & Co., 1. O. Box Z'Zi, Dvnrer, Colorado.

I REVIEW OF INDIANA I a. I a

Fred Heck, ag-d 5," years, a wealthy merchant of Jackson, Tcnn., and Mrs. Mary Kelley, aod 53, of Connelton, who were sweethearts yenrs ago, were married In Evansville recently. Judse Allen Zollars, of Fort Wayne, one of the most eminent jurists ia Northern Indiana, recently underwent his third operation for kidney trouble. The physicians hold out hopes of recovery. Burglars entered the study of the M. E. church at Shoals and robbed the birthday box of the infant class of $2 In pennies. The box was being filled with pennies representing the ages of the children of the church. Burglars entered the oOce of the Richmond Dairy Company, and after forcing open a safe got away with $100. The police believe the work was that of boys that have been causing much trouble recently. Several arrests have been made. The Continental National Bank, of Indianapolis, has been appointed a reserve agent for the First National Bank, of PlainSeld, by the Controller of the currency. The Controller also announces the election of H. M. Showalter as vice president la place of F. L. Farnsworth, of the First National Bank, of Butler. Henry Polin, living northwest of Crawfordsville, a wealthy farmer and breeder of race stock, lost twenty-one head of fine horses last week by being killed and maimed by a Clover Leaf passenger train. Many of them were colts of the noted sire Billy Walters, 2:064. They had wandered from the pasture onto the railroad's right-of-way. George W. McAninck, a Putnam County farmer, whose neck was broken several weeks ago, died at St. Vincent's Hospital in Indianapolis. McAninck had a habit for years of ducking his head whenever he drove into his barn. He had successfully dodged a heavy beam above the door hundreds of times. On the last trip he failed to duck far enough, and the beam pushed his head back so far that his spine snapped. He was 47 years old. The three brothers, Louis, Harry and Julius Johnson, of Terre Haute, who have built record-making motor boats on the Wabash, are building a monoplane airship in secret and will soon TT.-- n SCcret trial of Its sailing quail,.- ihe engine is patterned on the one used in their motor boats, with two cylinders at right angles and with fifty horse power. It is said the engine will weigh but ISO pounds. The brothers have built boats whose speed was phenomenal, and if run on waters where more publicity would result they would have attracted wide attention. Scott County can not boast of a tree on It3 courthouse roof, but it can well be proud of something infinitely better. At the south entrance of the county bullding in Scottsburg some one dropped a watermelon seed in the grass last fall, and this spring a thriving melon vine was the result. The vine at this time contains eleven green watermelons and is rich In blossoms. Some of the melons are of good Bize, and the main vine is more than twenty feet lung. The numerous branches of the vine almost fill up the twelve foot space between the building and the walk for quite a distance. Fire of incendiary origin at North Manchester wrecked the Hoosier skirt factory. The loss Is estimated at $8,000, covered by insurance. The building wa3 not badly damaged. A pile of partly burned kindling placed in the engine room of the plant plainly Indicated where the flames started. From the pile of kindilng roll3 of paper were laid about the room and oiled, thui? communicating fire over the entire building. A valuable stock of silk in a vault was saved. The loss is mostly on finished goods. Petticoats, ready for shipment, valued from $3 to 12 apiece, were consumed. The heroic work of volunteer firemen saved the machines from damage. The stockholders are at a loss to account for the motive in statring the blaze. At the home of Oscar Von Hatzfeld, who says he is & descendant of the royal Von Hatzfelds of the Kaiser's court, who lives in Evansville, can be found running about each day three snakes, one rattlesnake and two deadly copperheads. "Afraid of them?" Queried Von Hatzfeld. -Why, no. And I have not even extracted their poiBonous fangs, either. They run about the house and nobody fears them. I feed them every day on rats and they like the diet. They are also fond of young pigeons. I have liked 'snakes ever since I was 6 years old. I played with them when I came across them during my ramblings through the wood3 over in Germany." Von Hatzfeld says he always had a peculiar power over snakes. He wlnd3 them around his arms and body a3 if they were ribbons. The barking of the faithful watchdog saved the lives of Mrs. Maude Wilson and family at Evansville, who were awakened in time to rush from the burning building. The fire is believed to have been caused by an incendiary. Strolling from the barn lot and wandering Into the woods a mile away, a calf belonging to Austin Everhart, of Sullivan, starved to death. The animal became entangled in the brush by a ring in its nose, and was found dead five days later. Milton Cook, a farmer northwest of Newcastle, is feeding the largest number of 2-year-old steers ever fed at one time by a Henry County farmer. There are 111, valued at $10,000. He expects to feed them until February and then place them on the market. A Shetland pony and trap, in which were three small children, belonging to C. II. Graver, a grocer of Cambridge City, was struck by an interurban car. The pony was cut and the trap was torn to splinters. Except for cuts and severe bruises the children escaped inJury. The Oxford Improvement Company was organized at Oxford last week. It will be Incorporated at once with a capital stock of $10,000. The object is the location of one or more factories. Mooresville now boasts of one of the finest and best equipped postoffice buildings of any town of it3 size In Indiana. The building ha3 just been erected and new and jp-to-date fixtures Installed by J. L. Matthews. The amount of business of this office has doubled in the last few years. Frank Sheets is Postmaster and Ralph Treslar and Edgar Shiveley deputies.

Melvin Goddard, of Manila, was seriously injured by being thrown from a cart while breaking a colt to drive. O. P. Bowman, of Grayvil'e, is building a corn crib on the Wabash river, six hundred feet long, with a capacity of eighty thousand bushels. John Turner, aged 21 years, whose home was in Bloomington, was drowned at Macon, Mo., where he had just arrived to teach French in the Blees Military Acadenp'. The public sale of the estate of William Lambert, near Poneto, Wells County, was opened with prayer and song service, led by Rev. Cams and Rev. Hornady, of Poneto. The 200 men employed in Dering Mine No. S, at Clinton, who quit because they thought the cage unsafe, returned to work after repairs had been made on the tipple braces. Containing a quotation that men can always take care of themselves, but tnat women have not an equal chance, the will of Frederick W. Kell, of Fort Wayne, provides that all his large estate be given to his three sisters. The acreage planted in sorghum cane in the vicinity of Lyons was large, and the manufacture of molasses has been going on for some time. Two cents a gallon is the price paid to the mills by the growers. The finished product sells for 60 cents a gallon. A runaway team at Auburn crashed into the rear of a carriage in which Mrs. Charles Cook and her little child were driving, and in the collision the buggy top was crushed down over Mrs. Cook and the babe, making them prisoners. Mrs. Cook was painfully injured, but the child escaped. The Peru Canning Company, of Peru, is almost begging for help in order to save the tomato crop which is a large one. The factory is working tr.'entyfour hours a day and has seven hundred men and women peeling tomatoes. The company has appealed to the missionary societies of the various churches for assistance. The Reliable Dry Goods Store at Michigan City was entered by burglars and robbed of silks valued at $1,000. The thieves, who are supposed to be members of a band of professional silk thieves who have been operating in that locality for some time, gained entrance to the store by way

of the basement. The same store was robbed two months ago. Ten milk cows owned by J. R. Gray, of the Orange neighborhood near Rushvllle, are supiosed to have been poisoned. The cows were sick when Mr. Gray went out in the morning to milk, and it is thought that one, a fine Jersey, will die. The cattle wero in the pasture and the only possible explanation of the sudden sickness of so many of the herd is that they were poisoned. .By a vote of 59 to 43, it was decided by the National Association of Rural Free Delivery Carriers, in session at Rochier, N. Y., to continue the per capita ta as now at $1. These officers were elected: President, Elias Frey, Pendleton, Ind.; vice president, L. d. Songer, Trenton, Mo.; secretary, P. E. Cull, Concord, Mass.; treasurer, J. D. Williams, Renfrew, Pa. The next convention will be held in Little Rock. Ark. As a result of brutal hazing by four schoolmates, Albert Whitticker, aged 11, of South Bend, is in a serious condition. Whitticker was stripped of his clothing, tied to a tree and so terribly beaten with clubs that he fainted. When the hazer3 realized what they had done they ran in fear, but later one of the boy3 returned and released the victim. Young Whitticker says he refused to keep off forbidden "nutting ground" and was punished. Fire of uncertain origin destroyed a barn and contents belonging to Dr. R. n. Willan at Trafalgar. The loss is estimated at $7,000, partially covered by insurance. A quantity of feed, one hundred tons of hay and eleven horses were housed in the structure, and added fuel to the flames. The blaze was discovered bya traveling salesman In a nearby hotel, and before he could sound an alarm the fire had gained great headway. Volunteer firemen confined their efforts to saving adjoining proierty. Milward Adams, manager of the Auditorium Theater at Chicago, and who spent a number of his younger years in Danville, this State, has been honored by the King of Greece with the decoration of knight of the golden cross in the Royal Order of Our Savior. He is acting consul for Greece and isalso the Siamese consul. He directed the dedication services of the world's Columbian Exposition in 1892 Adams was born in Lexington, Ky., in 1837, and when a small boy came to Danville with his parents, where he attended the old Danville Academy for several years. The 2-months-old baby of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Girton was found dead in bed at their home in Harmony. The child's face was found buried in the bed clothes, and death was caused from suffocation. For the seventh time Mrs. Malinda Fronefield, at Decatur, has filed suit for divorce from William C. Fronefield. They Jjave been twice divorce! and three times married to each olher, and the remaining times the suits were dismissed before,coming to trial. Joseph L. Gruber and James B. Harper, of Fort Wayne, have been elected to the thirty-third degree of Scottish Rite Masonry. Wright Rockhill, also a Fort Wayne Mason, had the thirtythird degree conferred upon him la3t week by the Supreme Council. Benjamin M. Spinner, who was recently elected president of the Twentysecond Indiana Regimental Association, claims the distinction of being tha youngest living veteran of the Civil War. Spinner enlisted in the Twentysecond Indiana, at Columbus, on February 23, 1864, at the age of 14 years. The house of Lake Modisett, in Brazil, was destroyed by fire. Mrs. Modisett got up to warm the baby's milk and dropped a lighted match to some inlammable material on the floor. The loss Is $1,500; insurance, $800. Cards have been circulated about the city of Indianapolis, soliciting attendance at the Sunday morning meetings of a men's Bible class at the First Presbyterian church, Delaware and Sixteenth streets, which is to bo instructed by Governor Marshall, who undertook the work at the request of the pastor, the Rev. II. L Haines.

Itnuplierrjr CaHme. It Is best to cultivate the raspberry plants before fruiting time. The old stalks which grew last summer will all die by the close of summer this year. The cane3 which will produce next year's ?rop of fruit will be those which come up as little sprouts this coming spring. It will be well, when those new shoots get to be 20 inches high, to pinch them back, so as to induce branching from the ground up. These will be the canes for next year's crop. Those which bear fruit this season can be cut any time after the fruit .crop is harvested up to the beginning of growth next spring. Dr. Whitten, Missouri Agricultural" College. An Imttflntnnrnuit Cure. During the cattle plague in 1S66 in England a farmer who had lost a number of his cows grew so depressed that he fully persuaded himself he had also contracted the disease. The medical man whom he contulted tried in vain to laugh him out of his fears, but subsequently, being fond of a joke, pretended to agree with the patient's Views and solemnly told him if he would attend to his instructions he would be cured. He then gave the farmer a prescription, which he directed should be taken to a neighboring druggist, but when the latter opened tho envelope and read the contents he was as much startled a3 the farmer. For the prescription was as follows: "This man ha3 the cattle plague. Take him into the backj'ard and shoot hfm, according to act of Parliament." Needless to say the cure wa3 instantaneous. Shipping: Kkro for Hatching Another instance of the fact that eggs for hatching purpose3 can be sent a long distance with good results can be seen in the case of Mr. W. B. Borders of Wichita, Kan. Mr. Borders Is a breeder of buff orpingtons, and sent to England, the original home of the orpingtons, for 30 eggs. They arrived In ffcod condition and he hatched 26 chicks. Two or three of them were killed by accident, but he has now over 20 of those chicks and they are the finest lot of buff orpingtons he ever saw. It is not so much the long distances that egg3 are shipped that causes poor hatches as it is the rough handling that they frequently get from express agents and others. If handled with proper care eggs can bo shipped 10.000 miles away and still hatch a good percentage of the fertile eggs. Kansas Farmer. AVeeI In Feed MUtnrea. Large quantities of seeds of pestilent weeds of which a considerable portion are alive and will under proper conditions grow, are sold In feed mixtures. These weed seeds are not always quickly detected, because of being mixed with chaff, oat hulls, linseed, barley and corn products, and sometimes with molasses. 'Ground weed seed may have 'a food value, but it is very doubtful if small whole seeds are broken and digested by the animal. A sample of barley sprouts was sent to the Connecticut station for examination. The sample contained: Birley sprouts, 70.5 per cent; corn cockle, 14 per cent; wild oats, 10 per cent; bindweed, 2.8 per cent; four other species of weeds. 2.7 per cent; total, 100 per cent. These facts are naturally not mentioned in the statements of composition, yet they are more important to the buyer than the chemical analysis. ItlncUhend. Blackhead was first noticed in New England, where It caused great loss to turkey raisers. It i3 described as a disease which first attacks the cecum, situated between the large and small Intestines. It may also attack the liver, which becomes very much enlarged. While the disease i3 generally attributed to microbes. It Is believed to be very much aggravated where Inbreeding is too much resorted to. Diarrhea is a common symptom. The disease takes its name from a peculiar disco'oratlon of the head. Birds of depleted vitality are the ones generally attacked, so that addition of new, strong- and healthy stock Is recommended. Some have tried introducing wild blood into their flocks. Treatment of sick birds ha3 not proven very successful. Among the remedies most recommended are sulphur, sulphate of iron and quinine. Sulphur may be iven,five to ten grains being combined with one grain of sulphate of Iron, and sulphate of quinine one grain. It Is necessary that such treatment be repeated two or three times a day and continued for considerable time to secure results. Inter Ocean. Topping Corn for l-"oller. One of the most desirable kinds of roughage to be found is that obtained by going through tae cornfield about fodder-cutting time and cutting the stalks off just about where the shank joins them, bunching and tying ta "ether the tops thus secured, the same in ordinary shocking. Thi3 method not only affords the tenrest and very choicest of the pli ;r fodder, but also leave3 the e:uplainly exposed to view, where they may be easily reached and promptly husked without the husker being bothered by the blades and tops of the corn. Then, too, there will be no husking out to be done before the fodder la ready to be fed. Another commendable feature of thl3 plan 13 the great amount of labor raved by not carrying the ears of corn and the long, heavy stalks nothing being touched except tho light tops. vh!ch are easy to cut and carry, quIcV 'v and easily thrown out when fr p.d attended by a smaller per c. of waste than fodder obtained In a ., other manner. Why not try handling a patch this way? M. Albertus Coverflell In Twentieth Century Farmer. MrlnKbnlt Treatment. Stringhalt, a spasmodic contraction of the voluntary muscles of the leg, usually occurs in animals of a highly nervous disposition. One of the most frequent forms of stringhalt is a Jerking up of the hind leg as the horse travels, In many cases only when the horse first starts. Thla is often most severe la col'

weather and gradually increases as the animal grows older, but It does not seem to cause any suffering nor interfere with the general health of the animal. In most cases of chorea (stringhalt) medical treatment does not give benefit, but gaod results follow careful feeding and tonics. The food should be nutritious, easily digested, of good variety and abundant. A mixture of oats, oil meal and bran iy. good. Three times a week give the following: Salt, 4 ounces; sulphuf, 2 cunces; hardwood ashes, 2 ounces a table?poonful in the feed. Also give bowler's solution of arsenic, beginning ith one-half ounce doses in the feed once daily, and gradually increasing i.y one-fourth ounce at a time until 1 ounce is given at a dose.in the morning and at night. This should be given for two weeks, then withhold two weeks and then repeat. Exchange. How to Care for the Home. A hat is a great protection to a horso's brain in hot weather. They can be bought at any store for 23 cents. Sore shoulders are caused by illfitting collars, and nothing else. A man who will work a horse with a sore shoulder and make no attempt to cure it, or change the collar, ought to b3 compelled to wear ill-fitting shces that would raise a new crop of blisters every week. If the horses are taken off dry feed, allowed to run to gras3 and worked hard on hot days, look out for colic. Work teams ought to be allowed to run in the pasture at night. It Is cruelty to confine ihem in hot stalls. The horse that sweats freely is in good condition. During he heavy work in hot weather horses ought to be watered between the regular resting periods. It does not make much difference' whether horses are watered before or after eating. It Is largely a matter of habit, and experiments show that one time is about as good as another. A horse that bolts hi3 food cannot have perfect digestion any more than a man who eats in the same way. Try cutting the bedding straw for your horses into inch lengths. It makes fine bedding, absorbs liquid readily, 13 easy to handle In cleaning the stables, and also In the manure carrier and spreader. Farmers' and Drovers Journal. Cnn Women Succeed with Tonltryf This Is the heading cf a recent article in a prominent poultry Journal. It makes a woman smile to read it. Can women succeed? Did you ever stop to think that the moment anything In the live stock line begins to pay or in most other lines, the men steii in and take command at the helm then? In the poultry business It i3 more conspicuous than in others, I do think. The bulk of the poultry and egg3 sold In the United States are produced by women and children. Then ask if a woman can succeed in poultry. When It comes to selling fancy fowls, shipping theso, or any kind, to shows, and Judging, men certainly have taken the lead. A woman is just as womanly shipping fowls for exhibition and judging them at shows and fairs as ntaylng at home cleaning after and earing for them, and I am glad to see that some women are pushing into the public part of the business. All but Jud;ring. I know of no women judges. And why, I'd like to know. Thtre 1 a field for woman right here If s&e will only push into It. 7her& isn't one phase of the poultry businiss r.dopted by men that a woman could not d- better if she would. Any Intelligent woman Is capable of starting poultry place and taking care of 1,C00 fowl3 a day as well as any man--if she wants to and has a moderate degree of strength. If she hasii'l thb last she is net fit for any kind of wiJrk requiring the amount of muscle a woman should aspire to. The work is healthy, if carried on with Jiy8ten, and women are, as a rule, neatei anfi more cleanly about work than men Ida M. Shepler In Twentieth CJentnry Farmer. Worth Itcadlnn-. Sixty-nine entirely new varieties of roses were rhown at a recent French exhibition. An average orange tree produces 20,000 oranges and an average lemon tree 8000 lTnons. Russia Is ihe largest producer of barley; Germany is second and the United States a cin,e third. The luclfsr match was Invented la 1S29 t.fter aiany years of experimenting by several scientists. The tungsten Incandescent lamp h the first artificial light by which all colors can be distinguished. American plows and cultivators are turning up the soil In more than seventy countries and colonies. Tho rr.r.in doors in a leading New York hotel ere operated by an electrle motor, controlled by a push button iu the hunds of a doorman. North Daltota is to establish a biological Elation on tho shore of Devil's Lake, a large body of brackish water w itlt apparently no outlet. The country's slate production lust year amounted In value to $6,316,817, n Increase over the previous year of 97,597 despite the business depression. Mr. Keith Spalding, of Chicago, has just given $18.000 and forty acre3 of land to be used in establishing a tuberculosis sanatorium at Napervllle, 111. Turkish farmers never use fertilizers, nor do they practice rotation of crop3. The same crops are planted year after year until the soil is exhausted. One of the last official acts of the '-posed Sultan of Turkey, Abdul 11al. was to revoke an order made half century ago forbidding balloon .enslons in the vicinity of Constantinople. The Brazilian ministry cf puljLj works ha3 decided that its ntw drydock, which will be big enough to accommodate the largest vessels a:!:al, shall be of the floating tyya i:i;..ca.J of the fixed. A New York undertaker c!a'.r.i3 to have discovered a new method of embalming by which the tissues are preserved by outward applications of certain chemicals without the necessity any incision.

CHILD ATE CUTICUEA.

fprenil Whole Ilox of It on Cracker Not the Least Injury Kesnlled Tliua I'roTCD Pars and Sweet. A New York friend of Cuticura writes: "My three year old son and heir, after being put to bed on a trip across theAtlautlc, investigated the stateroom and located a box of graham crackers and a box of Cuticura Ointment. When a search was made for the box, it was found empty and tbe kid admitted that he had eaten the contents of the entire box spread on the crackers. It cured him of a bad cold and I don't know what else." No more conclusive evidence could be offered that every Ingredient of Cuticura Ointment Is absolutely pure, sweet and harmless. If it may be safely eaten by a young child, none but the most beneflclal results can be expected to attend its application to even the tenderest skin or youngeet Infant Potter Drug & Chem. Corp.. Sole rrops. of Cuticura Remedies. Boston. The Tllaapneftrliifr Wife. A woman in Silesia has been haled Into court by her husband because she persisted In growing thin In opposition to his wishes. In his petition for a divorce the Silesian gentleman declared that the lady obtained her husband under false pretenses, for when he married her she was full sized and of ample and generous proportions and he had every reason to believe that she would remain so.. When sllmness became the fashion, however, she suddenly began fading away in order to wear the latest style of empire gown. She rode horseback three hours each morning, played tennis two hours, and then took long, fat-reducing walks. Complainant fur'her aver3 that she ate like a bird. How successful was this strenuous pursuit of slenderness may be judged from the fact that in three months tkne she had lost thirty-one pounds and a portly husband. For the hard-hearted Silesian judge granted the captious husband's plea for a divorce and delivered a fiery attack upon the prevailing styles in feminine architecture. He laid down the princople that no lady has a right to fade away without her husband's consent, and he completely disallowed defendant's plea that half a wife is better than none. The wife is left free to continue her disappearing process a3 long as she likes. It i3 hoped that her frugal habits of living will prove useful to her, now that she is deprived of a husband's support. Success Magazine. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets first put up 40 years ago. They regulate and invigorate, stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated tiny granules. Sold Them Shoes Instead of Boose. Two years passed during "which, for Bixteen months, there had been no saloons In Mayfield. Isador Bruner bent over the balance-sheet of his year's business. A smile of satisfaction widened upon his countenance. Turning to that saddest of all sad items, "Outstanding Accounts," he saw that It was less than it had been for many years. His eye ran down the long list of negroes who had paid, and the short list of delinquents. Among those who had paid in full were .many who had habitually fallen behind in previous j years. He had always had to foreclose their accounts, sell out, and start them over again. Bruner began to understand the causes too much time in the barrooms and too little time In the fields. This year these negroes did not have the customary charges against them "Order to Jerry Sims, $5" amounting to fifty or seventy-five dollars. Instead of paying thi3 money to Jerry, Bruner sold shoes and hats to the negroes. Success Magazine. No matter how long your neck may be or how sore your throat, Ilamlins Wizard Oil will cure it surely and quickly. It drives out all soreness and inflammation. An Honest Iloy Rewarde. Honesty is appreciated even among politicians. During a recent political convention In North Carolina a newsboy named Cicero Alexander sold a paper to a delegate who gave him a dollar and was to wait for his change. Th boy on returning, could not find his customer and began to cry. The chairman of the convention, impressed by his honesty, announced the matter before the whole assemblage the resuit belns not only that the man who had the change coming to him let the boy have It, but a collection of $19.35 was taken up for him by the delegates. Some one shouted that thi youngster should be made State treasurer, and by unanimous vote the convention recommended him for chief page In the legislature. Vellovr Clothes Are Unsightly. Kcfp them white with Red Cross Ball Blue. All grocers sell large 2os. package, 5 cents. Whea Von Have Found Your Place. You will le happy in it contented, joyous, cheerful, energetic. The days will be all too short for you. Dinner tim and closing time will come before your realize it. All your faculties will give their consent to your work; will say "Amen" to your occupation. You will not feel humiliated because you are a farmer, or a blacksmith, or a shoemaker; because, whatever your occupation or profession, j-ou will be an artist instead of an artisan. You will not apologize because you are not this or that, because you will have found your place and will be satisfied. You will feel yourself growing In your work, and your life broadening and deepening. Your work will be a perpetual tonic to ycu. There will be no drudgery in it. You will go to 'your task with delight and leave it with regret. Lifo v III be a g'ory. not a grind. Orison Swett Marden in Success Magazine.

PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Celtr anre brltfafer tad faster ciltrs than asy eltrr dye. Oae 10c aackiiecalars all libera. Tkaj ire la ctli water better (baa air alber dye. Taa raa yt aar laraieal wltbaal riiai aaarU Write lar ires besblcl -Mast la DycDUacb sad Nit Calars. MO4HOE, T'R V C CO.. Quincy. Uitncij

Afraid of Gkosts

Many people are afraid of ghosts. Ttvr people ere afraid of germs. Yet the ghost is a fancy and the germ is a fact. If the gerra could be magnified to a size equal to ts terrors it would eppear more terrible than cny "fire-breathing dragon. Germs can't be avoided. They are in the air vre breathe, tbe water we drink. The germ can only prosper when the condition of the system gives it free scope to establish itself and develop. When there is a deficiency of

vital force, languor, restlessness, a

a hollow eye, when the appetite is poor and the sleep is broken, it is time to guard against the germ. You can fortify the body against all germs by the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It increases the vital power, cleanses the system of clogging impurities, enriches the blood, puts the stomach and organs of digestion and nutrition in working condition, so that the germ finds no weak or tainted spot in which to breed. "Golden Medical Discovery" contains no alcohol, whisky or habit-forming drugs. All its ingredients printed on its outside wrapper. It is not a secret nostrum but a medicine of known composition and with a record of 10 years cures. Accept no substitute there is nothing "just as good." Ask your neighbors.

Opening of Cheyenn

Indian Keservafion South Dakota

Registration Dales, Oct. 4 to 23, inclusive. The General Land Office at Washington has designated Le Beau ani Aberdeen, So. Dak., on the Minneapolis Sc St. Louis R. R. as registration points. Le Beau, which is the Missouri River terminus of the Minneapolis 4 Si. Louis R. R., is located on the Missouri River, opposite the Reservation, and is the nearest railroad station to three-fifths cf the land. Aberdeen, the other registration point, Is the chief city in northern South Dakota. These points are reached best by the Iowa Central and Minneapolis &. St. Louis R. R. lines. There will be about 14,000 quarter sections allotted to settlers. The land lays well for farming over most of the reservation. The soil is a light loam and Is very fertile. It is similar to that in the counties east of the River, where the land sells from $25.00 to $30.00 per acre. Ugrite coal is found over a great part of the reservation. Who May Secure a Homestead -"-dsr tha homestead kvscf ths United States, any person, mala or fema'.a rho is not th owner r.or than 1 60 acres of land In ny iu: or territory, who Is a natty born citizan of tha UnitsJ Slates, or has teen rataia!i;ed. cr declared his intention to become a naturalized citizen of the United States (l.e-.orw who has taken out hlsfirct papers cf citizenship), who Is over the are cf 2 1 years or the head of a faml!y, nay make a horsestead entry of not exceeding 160 acres of any of the uxioncupled tends of th United States. Additional information free on request. A. D. CUTTS, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Minneapolis, Minn.

. PEIXCE WORKED IN SLUMS. "Father Max" Gare Up Royal Lax nry to Live Among the Poor. It will be sad news to many a poor nan and woman In London to hear that "Father Max," as he waä affeclionately known by them, or. to give aid his full name. Prince Maximilian )f Saxcay, ha3 developed consumption md, in order to save his life, ha3 been ordered by the doctors to leave his work and take the open air cure, a London newspaper says. For four Fears he worked devotedly in one of '.he poorest parishes of London, this being the scene of his labors after his ordination. In violent contrast to this were the arliest years of his life. He is av brother of the present King of Saxony and began his career as a lieutenant Df the Saxon guards. But court life was thoroughly distasteful to him, being always a serious-minded man and Inclined rather to study and meditation than the activities or worse, the idleness of mock sobering. He inherited a deep reMgious feeling from his mother, the Archduchess Louise Antoinette of Tuscany, and when he turned to the church much was happening at the court of Saxony to disgust and depress him. His brother. Eving Frederick Augustus, married the anfortunate Archduche.is Louise of Austria, whose divorce and subsequent matrimonial affairs occasioned so much scandal, and one can guess how glad the young prince would be to cut hlmäelf loose from such surroundings. He, therefore, threw up his commission in the guards and began his studies with a view to entering the Roman Catholic church under Bishop Von Leonard of Bavaria, and was ordained In 1S96. When he took up his work In London the late Queen Victoria, although a strong Evangelical, showed her' approbation of the life he had chosen by presenting him with a gorgeous set of priestly robes. This Is the more remarkable as he was an extremist In hl3 religious views. In 1901 he was called to the chair of theology in the University of Fribourg. Switzerland, where he has lectured on this subject until this late sad development has put a sudden stop to bis work. In 1903 he was made archbishop of Olmutz. Prince Max is still on the gunny ?lde of 40: he is tall and has an earnest face and a strong, resonant voice which lent much charm to his preaching. Kew Gardens. London, possesses the largest collection of palms In the world, nearly five hundred special btlne represented. FASHION HINTS Something that's just housey, and ye rot belonging to the wrapper family, is a little hard to find. The house gown shown here is a pretty solution of the problem. Inexpensively developed in silk muslin, it is charming. If a warmer gown is desired, it would be very pretty ia one of the fancy challies.

Off I IS Wim Min

sallow cheek, i Hiver in O TOILET flUTISEPTIB Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body ntiseptically clean aud free from on healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, 'soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. germicidal, disinfecting aju 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 Trill Szniple W.TM "MtalTM AN O BtaUTY" BOOR CBT PftCS THE PAXTON TOILET CO.. BDStoaJJiss. SLICKERS wear well and they keep yau dry while you are wearing them $300 EVERYWH ERE Oiwunzn) wajb?proqtX CATALOG fREE AJ.TbwER Ca Boston. IISaT Tower Canadian Ca umitco. toomto. Cm. A Skin of Beauty Is a Joy Forever. T. Felix Gourtud't Orlantel Cream or Magical Beatrtltlar. Remove Ta, plmplaa. Freckiaa. Mutk Patcbaa, Kaaa, asd baia Dwraiwa. a3f . Si! sua tTtrf s.cmua on bftutr. and da. At dictlom. It baa atoo4 tba last of ytars, a4 U 19 Itro'Mi taatcit tobtturatt la properly asada. Vrcept bo aovnta fett Of aioUisr c&ac. Dr. L. A. Sarra eald to ladf of la saoa. tos (s patient "At tou taiita 1 1 1 . . 1 wui w uia. I recotBBCBl 2airmaaVa rmn' aa tba Iraat harmful of aU laa kin preparation. For aal by aU srutt and fancy. Oooda 0alers Is tha United Suut, Ca&dt od Europa, rEfllT.KSPLMS, Pro. 37 Eml Jones Strttj lewtaik QUICKEST WITH SAFETY For the baby often means rest for both mother and child. Little ones like it too tt so palatable to take. Free from opiates. AU Drvft-iaU. 25 ceats. Walk ten miles daily and you won't need laxatives, out indoor people all need candy Cascarets. They exercise the bowels in a gentle, nstural waynot like harsh cathartics. Havo them always with you take one when you need it Veal-packet box. 10 ceate-st oral -stars. Psople sow sss a milltos boxes aosstU. Cf Let us do your Printing using - Linen for your office stationery. You can gtt th z paper and onutlopts to match. tt U thm rout thing. Takm F. W. N. U. No. 41 19C9 Wbrn writ I ok to Advertisers p!eae say you saw tbe Adv. la this paper.

fmk

II J r

T3

1 1