Plymouth Tribune, Volume 9, Number 2, Plymouth, Marshall County, 14 October 1909 — Page 7
THE TAFT PROGRAM.
IL
We know of no other medicine which has been so successful in relieving the suffering of women, or secured so many genuine testimonials, as has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. In almost every community you will find women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Almost every woman you meet has either been benefited by it, or knows some one who has. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., are files containing over one million one hundred thousand letters from women seeking health, in which many openly state over their own signatures that they have regained their health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has saved many women from surgical operations. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is made exclusively from roots and herbs, and is perfectly harmless. The reason why it is so successful is because it contains ingredients which act directly upon the female organism, restoring it to healthy and normal activity. Thousands of unsolicited and genuine testimonials such as the following prove the efficiency of this simple remedy. Minneapolis, 31 inn.: "I was a great sufferer from female troubles which caused a weakness and broken down condition of the system. I read so much of what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound had done for other suffering women, I felt gure it would help me, and I must say it did help me wonderfully. Within three months I was a perfectly well woman. 44 1 want this letter made public to show the benefits to be derived from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Mrs.JobnG.Moldan,2115 Second St.Xorth, Minneapolis, Minn. Women who are ! uffenng from those distressing ills peculiar to their sex should hot lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to restore their health.
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RECEIVED
ED THE ONLY
(HIGHEST AWARDS) At the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition AGAINST ALL COMPETITORS ON PICKLES OLIVES CONDIMENTS CALIFORNIA ASPARACUS-PRESERVES JELLIESSALAD DRESSING CONDENSED MILK EVAPORATED MILK CALIFORNIA FRUITS CANNED MEATS CORNED BEEF SLICED DRIED BEEF-OX TONCUE VEAL LOAF HAM LOAF VIENNA SAUF ACE WHERE QUALITY 'COUNTS WE LEAD Your Grocer Has Them Insist on Getting Libby's lib'by. mcne:iii & lib by
Opening of Cheyenne liver Indian Reservation in South Dakota
Registration Dates, Oct. 4 to 23, inclusive The General Land Office at Washington has designated Le Beau and Aberdeen, So. Dak., on the Minneap lis fit St. Louis R. R. as registration points. Le Beau, which is the Missouri River terminus of the Minneapolis ft S(. Lonls R. B., is located on the Missouri F Liver, opposite the Reservation, and is the nearest railroad station to three-fifths of 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 13 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. Lignite coal is found over a great part of the reservation. Wko May Secure a Homestead -Under tha homestead laws of tha United States, any person, rr.a'a or female whs Is not the owner cf more than 1 10 acres of land In any state or territory, who is a riativo born citizen cf th United States, or has been naturalized, or declared his Intention to teccme a naturalized citizen of the United States i.e., one who has taken out hlsflrst papers of cltlzershlp), who ts over the ace cf 2 1 years cr the head of a family, may malcd a hemeread entry of not exceeding 1 60 acres of any of the unoccupied lands of the United States. Additional Information free on request. A. B. CUTTS, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Minneapolis, Minn.
Insure Your Fuitare Money invested in the profit-paying" farm land of the west is safer than in a savings bank. It earns big dividends on steady rising value alone. In Butte Valley California prices are moderate. And the soil is the richest climate the finest railroad facilities the best that can be found in the United States. Round-Trip Homeseekers' Fares are on sale the first and third Tuesdays of every ionth to October 31, via Union PacificSouthern Pacific "The Safe Road to Travel" Electric block signals dustless roadbed. For liter ature and information call on or address E. L. LOMAX, G. P. A. Omaha, Nebraska
WANTED Lady or gentlemen of fair education to travel for firm of large capital. Salary f 1.072 pr year, payable weekly. ExKnsei advanced. Address Gorge G. Clows, -pt. A., Philadelphia, Pa.
Food
Products
TUBERCULOSIS conquered. Write for testimonials of prominent people and booklet why NATURE'S CREATION cures consumptives. E. D. Morgan. Suite 510. Uippodrom Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio.
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xtz. kttjawv FlKhtlnK the Itat Plagrae. One way of combating the rat plague Is the devising of some ecinomical and convenient way of disposing of domestic garbage to prevent its accumulation in or about the house. The She Gnat a a Milker. The milk goat, like all goats, can make a living on brushy and hilly land, where most other animals would starve. They are very beneficial to land in cleaning it of weeds, sprouts and brush. They cannot endure low, wet land, but thrive perfectly on rough, hilly land. Those giving milk should be fed on good grass, hay fodder, and wheat bran, but no grain of any kind. The cost of maintaining a goat In milk is about 3 cents a day, and she will give from one to two quarts of milk a day. Scaly Ips In Poultry. The first thing to do for scaly leg is to get every bird troubled that way out of the flock by itself. Then the rocsts and all the woodwork of the houses should be thoroughly washed with kerosene. Boiling wcter or whitewash with a few drops of carbolic acid will also do the work. Do anything to kill the parasites, which make their home in every crack and crevice. When the houses are clean, keep them so. This is your only salvation. To relieve the hens which are suffering take sulphur and lard, mix them and rub the mixture on the legs once a week till cured. Some good poultrymen use simply gas tär rubbed on well. E. L. Vincent in Farm and Fireside. Hnron IIor. The bacon type of hog has been developed under different conditions and In sections where corn is not the main farm crop. These breeds of hogs come from parts where clover, peas, barley, oats, wheat products and milk all of which contain a relatively lower per cent of fat forming elements than corn. According to the view generally accepted by physiologists, the fat which Is stored in the body may have its origin 1: the digestion of all three classes of nutrients proteids. carbohydrates and fats of the food. The two latter, however, form the main source of heat and fat storage in all ordinary rations. Continued feeding through many generations on highly carbonaceous food naturally mlght(be expected to beget a greater aptitude for the digestion of such food, and, consequently, a greater tendency to fat storage In the body. It is reasonable to believe that any of the bacon breed of hogs would lose their present characteristics if for a sufficient number of generations they were confined in the corn belt, i Eventually ,they would develop the fat-producing tendencies of the lard type. That is a conclusion that one would naturally come to. When to Set Grapes. Spring setting of grapes Is usually advised for the amateur. While this may be true in north central latitudes, good results may be obtained by setting, any time when the soil is in proper condition and the vines are dormant. Fall planting has the advantage that It can be done at a time when there Is not a rush of work on the farm, and the job will b? more carefully done. It also gives tae soil time to settle, so vthat the plants will not suffer from a lack of moisture, as they are liable to dd" if planted in the spring. The mistake of setting the plants too early in the fall should not be made. We know of several growers who. do not set them till the leaves have been killed by frost. At least it is certain that they should not be set till all danger of excessively hot weather is past. 'One of the best methods is to dig a hole 2 or 3 feet square and from a foot to 18 inches deep. In the bottom of this hole throw a q?;art of beef bones which have been pounded Into a powder, and about twice as much hardwood ashes. Then fill in with good mellow, rich soil for 4 or 5 Inches, plant and spread cut Its roots the way they would naturally lie and fill in on these with mel.ow dirt till level with the ground. If the setting !s done in the fall the ground around the plant should be covered with a mulch of some kind of ßtraw to prevent heaving of the ground by freezing and thawing. Inter Ocean. To Keep Eff Frenh. Fresh eggs in cold storage at S4 degrees Fahrenheit undergo littlo if any change, for this temperature is sufficient to limit the activities and prevent the growth of the more common bacteria. The problem of preserving eggs by excluding air has brought forth numerous methods. A series of tests was recently made keeping the eggs for about eight montlV in some twenty different ways. Immersed in brine all were unfit for use. Wrapped in paper 80 per cent were bad. Tacked in bran or coated with paraffin 70 per cent spoiled. Immersed in a solution of salicylic acid 50 per cent oniy were fit to use. Coated with shellac or collodion, 40 per cent were bad. Packed in wood ashes 20 per cent spoiled. Coated with vaseline or immersed in a solution of water glass or lime water all were good. From these experiments, as well as many others, it has been found that a solution of water glass offers about the best method of preserving eggs aside from cold storage. Water glass is the common name for potassium or sodium silicate and is obtained in the sheps in the form of thick liquid something like glyerin. One part of this to nine of sterile water Eiake3 a preserving fluid of the proper strength. The eggs shou.'d be packed in a cler.n, sweet vessel and the solution poured over them until they a.e well covered. Preserved in this way in a cool place, they will keep for months and often cannot be distinguished in appearance from the fresh article. It Is genercUy conceded that they lack the flavo of new-laid eggs, but are in no way inferior in nutritive value. Field and Farm. Corn Cob an Fertilizer. Corn cobs are rated by farmers about like sawdust and broom corn
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seed, in point of fertility; and all three are thrown away or burned as worthless matter. In fact, at seme e'evators, where corn is shelled by hurrireds of wagon loads, a furnace is provided and the cobs are dumped Into from tho sheller, to go up in smoke. This is a great waste, fully as great as burning the strawstack, as a contributor to the Indiana Farmer says. The cob is especially rich in soil food. The large residue in the way of ashes indicates potash. The fierce heat of the cob fire indicates much carbon, and a chemical analysis will show the presence of phosphorus and lime in ro mean quantity. In fact, there 13 no waste material in the cob. It is only a little difficult to make available, because slow to rot. But there are two ways in which this may be overcome. First, a farmer who had a corn crusher can run a load of cobs through it In a few minutes, and thus render them available to oxygen. Second, they may be plowed under, more easily than any other form of raw unrotted material except sawdust; and here their slow process of disintegration will be the very thing desired. Nothing can be better under the surface of meadow land or more useful as a feeder for tho roots of the trees in an orchard. I know this by experience. I plowed and tended my present litle orchard for eight years. Before the last breaking I covered the surface all over with half-decayed cobs from our elevator (which fortunately has ho incinerator) and, with a one-horse barshoel plow, I turned them under 4 to 6 Inches deep. It is now the third summer since this was done, and anyone can notice the effect on the trees. They are thrifty and their fruit is large and well shaped. The slow decay is just what proves best for the supply of potash and phosphorus and lime for the trees. Incidentally, I noticed there has not been a mole In the orchard since the cobs were plowed under; and as they are quite active outside, I suppose my cobs act as a hindrance. The crushed cobs, when partially rotted, can be used anywhere, as they will thus not be in the way of the plow or the hoe. And after one year underground the uncrushed cob will be sufficiently rotted to be free from that objection. As the meadow is allowed to run two to five years, they will be entirely unobjectionable as an under feed there. I notice in my orchard now that when I put the spade down for any purpose it brings up a splendid soil well mixed with humus. Oldent Land n the World. Stretching across Canada, north- of the St. Lawrence, and ending in the regions about the source of the Mississippi, lsa range of low granite hills called the Laurentian Highlands, says Charles D. Stewart in the Atlantic. These hills are really mountains that are almost worn out, for they are the oldest land in America, and, according to Agassiz, the oldest In the world. In the days ,when there was nothing but water on the face of the globe, these mountains came up a long island of primitive rock with universal ocean chafing against its shores. None of the other continents had put in their appearance at the time America was thus looking up. The United States began to come to light by the gradual uplifting of this land to the north and the appearance of the tops of the Alleghenies, which were the next in order. Later the Rockies started up. The United States grew southward from Wisconsin and westward from the Blue Ridge. An early view of the country would have shown a large island which is now northern Wisconsin, and a long, thin tongue of this primitive rock sticking down from Canada into Minnesota, and these two growing states looking out over the waters at the mere beginnings of mountain ranges east and west. They were waiting for the rest of the United States to appear. x Toad and the Snake. The following snake story was told some years ago by a reputable citizen of Anson County, the Charlotteville Observer says. Driving along a public road one day he saw a toad frog crossing the road at top speed hitting only the high places and few of them. As the frog disappeared in the bosky underbrush on one side a black snake in hot pursuit made its appearance on the other. The story teller followed the two into the bushes to see what the result would be. He had proceded only a short distance when he found the frog at bay, facing the snako and with the latter circling about in the effort to make an attack from the rear. His frogship kept turning all the time, always facing the enemy. Th reason of this maneuver on the snake's part was that the frog had in its mouth, held crosswise and about the middle, a stick about the size and length of a lead pencil. Th frog knew the snake could not swallow him so long as he presented such a front. The man watched the performance for seme time and when he left the snake was still circling the frog and the latter facing its enemy on every turn. Worth Readlaar. Five and a quarter million people are employed in the world's mines. Damascus has an electric railway, the daily receipts of which average $17G. The Marconi system has been Installed on more than 200 mercantile vessels. Sketching in public places is prohibited by the police regulations of London. The first pocket timepieces were called "Nuremberg eggs," after the city of the'.r origin. Recent additions to the French army's field equipment were several automobile refrigerators to transport fresh meat. France has followed tfce lead of the United States in the establishment of a laboratory for the investigation of mine accidents. It has been placed at L'evin. The system of building embankments by running trains of loaded car3 on rails hung from a suspension cable above the line of embankment is being used with great success.
Trenlilent TaVIiiff l'eojtle Into Iii Confidence on Important Matter. It is the purpose of President Taft, in the addresses he is delivering to the country during his toui, to take the people into his confidence regarding the various important matters which he is to recommend to Congress in his annual message, in December. He has chosen the places where these speeches are to be made with some care. As Boston, which financially is an outpost of New York, he talked financial legislation, the reform of the currency laws and hinted that he might be found favorins a central bank of issue. At Chicago, where union labor is enthroned, he talked unionism and the law's delays, pledging himself to do all that he could to bring about such a reform in the administration of the law as to glv the poor man an equal chance in tAe courts with the rich man. At Milwaukee, in the heart of the section where postal savings banks aro in favor, he discussed that subject. At Winona, in the heart of the insurgent territory, he uttered his defense of the Payne tariff law. ' At Des Moines, where the question of the better control by the general government of the railroads has for years been a leading public question, he outlined his policy of further legislative action on this great question, not only meeting the requirements of the Roosevelt policy In this regard, but going farther and indorsing nearly fill of the proposed reiorms with which the Central West is familiar through the attitude of Senator Cummins. At Spokane In a few days he is to discuss the policy of conserving the natural resources of the country. All these questions, and others which the President will doubtless discuss in ihe course of h'.s trip, are of the highest Importance to all the people. All of th: m are to be b"ought to the fore i.ext winter in Congress, and It is the
President's belle' that they are to be written into the law of the land in his administration. The tariff is only one of these questions, not greater fundamentally than the others, although seeming to be so because It has been taken up for set tlement by Itself. If is the belief of the President that when the tariff can be seen in its proper relationship to the numerous other great questions which he will brln to the attention of Congress in the December message, the country as a whole will be measurably satisfied with what was done at the special session of the present year. Meanwhile, it. Is his desire, through the speeches he is now making, to call attention to the fact that these other questions are to come up, and to invite the country to make such a pre liminary study of them as will help insure the enactment of legislation by Congress. In short, the President, unlike any particular section of the country taken by itself, sees a great legislative pro gram spreading Itself out for the in spection of all the people. The tariff is but a single feature of that pro gram. He is able to take a national instead of a sectional view of this pro gram, and to realize that If he can secure at the hands of Congress things for which he will ask, all sections will appreciate that genuine' progress has been made. What the Central Wst failed to get in the new tariff law, for instance, he sees it will get In further railroad regulation, or in some one or more of the other bills which he hopes to have Congress pass. The presidential speeches of the present tour are for the purpose of acquainting the people with what Is coming, and to invite their support of a truly broad and ambltIou3 legislative program. Minneapolis Journal. When the People Sleep. The belief that American municipalities have been largely cleansed by the crusades against corruption will be severely shaken by the revelations in Chicago. The looting of public funds, the protection of vice, even the purchase of judges, are crimes of mildness in comparison with that of jury-fixing. It appears that not merely were jurymen approached and bribed according to the charges but also a regular system was In vogue, arrangements being made In the offices of the jury commissioners. When it is recalled that only recently Tammany. was brought Into the liaiellght again upon accusations of grafting, that a former mayor of Boston still rests under the shadow of charges, It Is seen what a. little distance the country has gone (n the business of freeing its cities of evil politics. These three cities, Chicago, New York and Boston, possess In the highest degree the benefits of publicity. The newspapers are watchful for every sign of wrongdoing, almost gleeful in the manner with which they publish such evidence. They are supplemented by reform associations, by expert sociologists, by prosecutors ambitious to gain the popular approval. Publicity, it must be apparent, cannot perform all the duties of housecleaning. It no more than points out the dirt and dust and urges the energetic nse of the broom. But if the people of the big cities will not use the broom the exposure of abuses are only vain shoutings. Toledo Blade. Get Moat of the I'rofltn. There is no way known under heaven and among men whereby American worklngmen can continue to receive present American wages save by using rome part of those wages to pay the -st of the system by which they profit. "ie net profits of the transaction are nearly all distributed among the "poor men." It is but a very Email part of the net profits which, concentrated in a few hinds, contribute to the spectacular fortunes which are the stock in trade of demagogues. The American worklngman and farmer get most of the profits and must bear of the burden because they only are able to bear It. San Francisco Chronicle. Aefdfd KvanKollilnff. Uncle Charle3 And are you goins 'o buy me anything for my birthday. ;:iie? .Millie Yeth. Uncle Please may I know? Millie Yeth. I'm going to buy my dear Uncle Charles a missionary. Uncle But I'm no cannibal. Millie No, but grandma said you were a puffect heathen. Her Discovery. Husband Think of It! Here Is a hairpin I have found in the soup! Wife Yes? Now I know where our things have gone. A shoe horn disappeared, too! Harper'a Bazaar.
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. AVcgetabPi-cparalionlorAs-similar fccFootTariilRcgLda ting Lie Stomcbs amlßcwcistf Promotes Digeslionhe erfuirtr:: nnrl Rrct Prmt.ilnnpi!h,T OpiuiIorphißß norMiacrai. XT . ft Ui' S Ait l U TI U. .a W 2sa ".If' JbtMUSdts-ivrrmmf- . ClatTied Slttt Apcrfcct Remedy for CbnsilpaI ion , Sour Stonach.Dtarrtaa YYcrros ,t onvuisions.i :evuu C3 aT)-racSL-ufle Stature of NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper, U'JJFUM 1 .-"VS& TOTAL LOSS OF HAIR Srrmrd Imminent Scalp Wa Very Scaly and Hnl, Cam Oat hy llandfalK Scalp Xon Clear and Xeit Hair Grown by Cutlcnra. "About two years ago I was troubled .vth my bead belus scaly. Shortly after that I had. an attack of typhoid fever and I was out of the hospital possibly two months when I first noticed the loss of hair, my scalp being still scaly. I started to use dandruff cures to do L'ffett whatever. I had actually . lost hope of saving any hair at all. I could brush It off my coat by the handful. I was afraid to comb it. ttut after usins two cakes of Cuticura Soap and nearly a box of Cuticura Ointment, the change was surprising. My scalp is now clear and heaJthy as could be and my hair thicker than ever, whereas I "had my mind made up to be bald. W. F. Stecse. M12 Broad St. Tittsburg, Pa, May 7 and 21. 1908." Totter Drug & Chem. Corp.. Sole Frops. of Cuticura Remedies. Boston. Some SatUfactlon. Safe in his mountain retreat, the train robber opened the bag of coin he had secured at the cost of so much trouble and danger. It contained nothing but Lincoln pennies. "Well, he said, as he took one of them between his thumb and finger and prazed at the rugged proriie on the coin, "I never voted fur "im, an" I'm durned glad of it now!" State or Ohio, Citt or Toledo, l Ll'CAS COl'XTT. I Krank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is en!or partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co.. doins business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will nay the sum of ONE IIUNIKKD DOI.LAKS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot he cured hr the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FKANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to More me and subscribed In my presence, this Cth day of December, A. I). (Seal) A. W. GLEASOX, XOTABY I'CBLIC Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHEXEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all PruxKists. 75c. Take Hall's Family Tills for constipation. Neerity f llmuty. Schiller in his esthetical and philosophical essays wrote that "Beauty alone confers happiness on all," that under its influence men forget their limitations. Happiness Is our being's end and aim. And without beauty even happiness in Its perfect flowering is impossible. Good RoaickreptM Use tk Best. That's why they use Ited Cross Ball Blue. At leading grocers. Ö cents. Something New. "Yes he is established in Washlcs:on now at the head of a flourishing irrangement bureau." "What sort of a bureau?" "Why, it's something entirely nevr. It take3 charge of the cases of ' disnissed West Pointers and arranges for heir reinstatement." Cleveland Plain Dealer. nriU4 fttH
NSo Guaranteed under the oi
1 1 ii3 qpnu'u'vu' for an ear of Corn
Made by Tiffany. Nearly 3 ft. high in solid gold and silver. Actual contract price $1,000. To be awarded at the National Corn Exposition. Omaha te0V8 gJJ to the man, woman or child producing the best ear of corn grown this year in the United States. Open to everybody belonging: 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 corn used in making Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes. Many people think the perfection of corn flavor has been reached in Toasted Com Flakes. Perhaps it has. If you don't know how good Kellogg's the genuine Toasted Cora Flakes is, try it. Then you'll see how hard a task we are giving ourselves to improve it, and the only way we can improve it is by the betterment of the corn itself. Professor Holden, of the Iowa State College, the greatest authority on corn in the world, will award the prize at the National Corn Exposition, to be held at Omaha, Neb., Dec. Cth 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 9! the National Corn Association full particulars regarding which can be had by writing to National Corn
imposition, Umaba, Neb. Tie a tag
the KeJogg Trophy Contest," and write 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 open to every state in the Union. Professor Holden will judge the corn particularly on the basis of quality. The growing of more corn
per aero is one object of the award, but the main purpose of the founder of the trophv is for improving the quality or corn used in making KELLOGG'S TOASTED CORN FLAKES. If you haven't tried this delicious cereal, begin your education in "good things to eat" today. All grocers have it.
KELLOGG TOASTED CORN
The Kind You Have Always
in use lor over ov years,
and has been made under his perjFfy J', fional supervision sinee its infancy. f-6CCAXß A llnw nil on n in rl prvlvA vnn In this.
All Counterfeits. Imitations andTust-as-rood,,are but Experiments that triflo with and endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTOR! A Castoria is a harmless Substitut for Castor OH, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups, It is Pleasant, It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotlo substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms . and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears tho
The M You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years tmc eiKTu eoi. tt mui twict. nt row cmfc
FASHION HINTS This coat gives a good idea of the season's tendency toward the Moyen.Age style low waist line and pleated skirt. A dark blue diagonal cloth is used here, matching the one-piece dress worn with it. Dlatinction. "Col. who? I don't think I ever heard of the man. What is there so remarkable about him?" "By George, tir, he's got the longest beard In the S ate of Oklahoma, and that's saying a heap, let me tell you! i Arnatenr va. ESTpert. "Some wimmen spend about half their time tryin to make themselves ook somewhere near as good as a photographer can." Los Angeles Express. In case of pain on the lungs Ilamlins Wizard Oil acts like a mustard plaster, except that it is more effective and is so much nicer and cleaner to use. The Beat Alarm Clock. Husband Why don't you have Bridget shut the kitchen door? One can small the breakfast cooking all over the house. Wife We leave it open on purpose. The emell is all that gets the family up. Judge. The U. S. Government has bought 25 Gross (3,600 boxes) of Rough on Rats to send to the Panama Canal Zone, because it does the work. The old reliable, that never fails. The unbeatable exterminator. 25c. 75c. The occupant of a top-floor office In No. .13 Park Row, New York, estimates that in going to and from his office he travels 129 miles each year by elevator. AAAOO securely to your specimen and word it, FLAKE CO., Battle CreeR, Mich.
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Bought, and Tvhich lists been nas Domo tno signature 01 Signature of try; ,s TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breith, teeth, mouth and body ntiseptically clean aud free from unhealthy germ-life end disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. . germicidal, disinfecting a deodorizing toilet requisite of exceptional excellence and economy.' Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and rJasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample WITH HCSITM AND BCAWTT BOOK ! NT MIC THE PAXTON TOILET CO BostcuMass. Callous the bowels with harsh cathartics, and you'll need physic always. Help them gently, with candy Cascarets, and you'll need them rarely. Once learn the difference and you'll never take a harsher laxative than these. 83 Vest-pocket box. 10 cents at drnr-stores. Each tablet of the e-ermin I marked C C C f Children Like It is so pleasant to take stops cough so quickly. Absolutely safe too and contains no opiates. AH Drocawtm. 25 cmU. AG C N T St I T I KNEW YOUR NAME, 1 oii I J send you oar fcut sample outfit f rr thli vary tnlnuU. Let ro rUrt you In a, profitable buklom. Tn to not need ODiit of cspttal. Eiprnm nurtrf. fcO per rent profit. Cnwltt Wen. frmnino. Freight paid. Chane to via in (old extra. Every too ml woman hon Id write me for free outfit. Jar UlaeL. 'rra.. 7 Urverly Btreet. Uoot.n. Maes. PILES n PAY IF CURED 97 pe'oee mm ! ut.i kk caooa nio o4 nnU rnro. REA CO.. DEFT. 15, MlHUf Olli, C133. IMPROVED Combination Dipper. 9 useful articles in one. Fruit Jar filler, brass trMner, bottle filler, perforated strainer and four more articles combined. Postpaid for 25c. Illustrated catalogue KUEÜ. The Ledger Company, Houston, Penn. F. W. N. U. - - - No. 421909 Whra writing to Advertlaera pleaa may jou asm the Adr. la taia paper. tfi n
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