Plymouth Tribune, Volume 9, Number 5, Plymouth, Marshall County, 4 November 1909 — Page 7
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FROM AN E By Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Louisville, Ky. "Lydia E. Rnkham's Vegetable Compound has cer- - A lain iv aone me a worla of co od and I cannot praise it enough. I suffered fromirregularities, dizziness, nervousness, and a severe female trouble. J,ydiaE.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has restored me to perfect health and kept me from the ore ratine it 7 , ' .V-V.'. J 1 :; table. I will never be without this medicine in the house. 3Irs. Sam l T.T--F, 3523 Fourth St, Louisville, Ky. Another Operation Ayoidcd. Adrian, Ga. "I suffered untold misery from female troubles, and my doctor said an operation was my only chance,, and I dreaded it almost as much as death. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound completely cured me without an operation. Lzxa V. Henp.y, K. F. IX 3. Thirty years of unparalleled success confirms the power of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to cure female diseases. The gTeat volume of unsolicited testimony constantly pouring in proves conclusively that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a remarkable remedy for those distressing feminine ills from Trhich Bo many women suffer. TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body ntUeptically clean aud free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. m. germicidal, disinfecting a-u 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. Large Trial Samcls WITH "HCAITH AND aCUTV IOOK CHT MCC THE PAXTON TOILET CO., BostocMrSS. On Rainy Days A Fish Brand Slicker will Reep you dry And giva you foil value- ia comfort and long wear $?3.00 60A3AHTE13 WATERPROOF 8ald,y fint-ckss EeUilers tie country over. Send for oar Ftm Catalogue A. J. TOWER CO. nWFDv. Boston. U. S.A. TO WIE CiSADIA CO.. Ltd. : Toronto. Camaoa 2jw2MO SO Don't Cough!-Use PI CURE Will instantly relieve your aching throat. There ia nothing like it for Asthma, Bronchitis and lung troubles. Contains no opiates. Very pleasant to take. All Druggists. 25 cants. The Natural Laxative acts on the bowels just as some foods act. Ca scar et a thus aid the bowels just as Nature would. Harsh cathartics act like pepper in the nostrils. Soon the bowels grow so calloused that one must multiply the dose. 873 Vest-pocket box. 10 cents at dnigr-store. Each tablet of the genuine Is marked C C C Let us do your Printing using - Linen for your office stationery. You can get the paper and envelopes to match. it U the rmt thlnm. Takm mm tr. USE PRICE lO CENTS. Paper-Hangers fi Painters Ton can Mtlr Incrru roar bainaa with no in vet mens by telling Alfred frmtm' Prlie Vallprtper. We want od auod worker in each Tiein, tv. and to tno ßnt worthy applicant will end FKKK. by prepall rtprtM, fl larcw aanapla Book ihowiug a S450.000.00 Wallpaper iok for customer to ;Jct from. Wo offr lit eral profit tooor repr-ntativ. Aner quickly that yon may t th uti'ncf in your vl.-in.it for 191'J. Alfred 1'eata Co i-lt Hubuib Aye.. Chicago. AGENTS, men or women, to handle our household u;eHaltl. Iii seller. Write tofiay. Hurdle Specialty Company. Iept, C. r.inglsaoiton, N. Y. Omlitlnni of Illstorr. ' Archimedes had Just announced that he had a lever lonK enough and a fulcrum on which to rest it he could Hove the earth. "If you can't move the tarth," hrieked a suffragette, "turn th Job ver to us! We'll do it!" But the journalists and historians of Shat day, being men exclusively, meanV tluo penciled that part ( Oia atorjr.
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Kor Cream Teat Ilalance. A simple and sensitive weighing-Instrument to be known as the Wisconsin hydrostatic cream balance has been devised at the agricultural experiment station of the University of Wisconsin. This instrument meets the long recognized need for a simple and accurate methof weighing cream in the Babcock test bottle for testing. The ordinary cheap scales are Inaccurate, and the more delicate balances are too expensive for general use by farmers. The new invention consists of a specially devised bras3 float, similar to a dydrometer, which Is placed In a cylinder of water. The instru-. ment floats steadily in a vertical position, and supports a platform on which a cream bottle and a ninegram weight are are placed. Small, one - tenth gram weights are placed on the platform until the float sinks to a line cream balance, marked on the spindle. The nine-gram weight is then put into the bottle with a pipette in a sufficient amount to again sink the float to a line of the spindle. This gives the weight accurately and the devl3e is so sensitive that It Is offected by a sngle drop of cream. The weighing can be done rapidly, however. Ulm Milk. At the West Virginia experiment station It has been found that skim milk for feeding laying hens is worth from 12 to 2 cents a quart. Other experiments have fully proved that it has equally as great value for feeding pigs. Figuring at this rate, the milkman who sells whole milk Is selling from 60 to SO cents worth of skim milk to each can, and the general market prices of a can of milk is close around $1.23. Now, this can of milk contains enough! cream to make four pounds of butter, which Is worth about $1, leaving only about 25 cents for the skira milk sold, or a loss of from 33 to 53 cents on each can over making the cream Into butter and feeding the skim milk. Also, when the milk Is fed on the farm more fertilizer is made, which makes the difference still greater In favor of keeping and feeding the skim milk. Where Ine can secure select trade for whole milk at extra price It will pay to sell the whole milk and buy extra feeds and fertilizers, but sellI ing whole milk at less than $1 for a 40-quart can is not profitable when one considers the future of the land on which he Is dairying. Corn Feedlnjr. Not all farmers appreciate the value of feeding new corn. When handled properly more good result3 can be obtained frcm it than from any other crop grown. When fed in the green stage, from the time when grains are in the mill: till they become hard and the blades dry up, horses and cattle will eat almost. If not all, of the entire plant, and sheep and hogs will eat much of it, utilizing to advantage r.ll there is In the crop. Xew corn just after it has passed the roasting ear stage, 13 one or tne best feeds for poultry, both young and old, and hens will lay egga much better than on olrt corn. There Is no feed much better for fattening hordes and colts, as well ps cattle, than new corn. We always plant some very earl)-, medium and the patches of corn to be cut and fed whole in late summer and fall. In this way we have the best Of feed for the stock in Ausrust. Senlember and October, one-fourth of the year. While the new corn la being fed non of the stock reauires much other feed, and the grain In the bin and the hay In the mow arc saved. Keeping Street Potatoes. There are several different methods for storing and keeping sweet potatoes which have prove successful. Po tatoes, when nrst dug, have a large amount of moisture in them, which must evaporate. When the weather Is rood they should be left out in the field until this evaporation Is complete; otherwise the moisture and the intense heat generated by their drying in a hill will cause rot. When this is not possible they should be piled loose ly In a dry house for a week or two They may then be stored in the loft of a building or in a room, where the temperature will be such that they do not freeze. Fall flowing;. Whether It Is profitable to plow In fall or not depends on the soil and climate. If the soil Is of a firm tex ture fall planting will do it good where the winter Is severe enough to keep the ground frozen until spring, It separates the soil and make3 It friable. But where the soil is of a tough clay texture and the winters are mild, not freezing the ground solid for a foot or more In depth, the plowed ground will freeze and thaw and run together again and he as firm In the spring as though not plowed. If any good comes from such fall plowing it must be weed destruction. Water and Air In Soil. There must be a proper balance of air and water to have the soil work go on. Exclude either and there 13 failure. Soil work is stopped when the soil becomes so dry that the water film3 around the soil particles are destroyed. Then is when the plant food ceases to be elaborated, and what plant food there is in the soil is no longer carried to the roots of the plants. Great losses in crop3 are annually
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recorded because these slmplo fundamental facts are not fully understood. There must be a balance. Drainago will often do much to bring about a
ood condition of aeration of soil; but in some soils something else is needed. Thus a sandy soil that is so light that the moisture film soon disappears to a depth of a foot or more will pro duce nothing. In such a case other things must be incorporated with the sand of the soil, such as muck, lkne. humus, fertilizer, to give it the power to retain the moisture film. Dairying in "Winter. There are many advantages in hav ing cows come fresh in winter, when all dairy products sell at a high price. In many places the price of butter is from 23 to 50 per cent higher in winter than In summer. When the cows calve in the spring they generally milk well until the pas tures dry up, when the flov of milk quickly falls off, so that by the time stable feeds begin the cows are almost dried up. Now, If the cows come fresh in the fall, they produce a good flow of milk during the winter months, and In the spring, when they are turned on the grass, this acts as a second freshening and thus lengthens the period of milk production. Another distinct advantage In win ter dairying Is that during this season the farmer Is not so busy with other work, consequently he can give more time to the care of the cows, the milk and the cream than Is possible during the busy season of the year. When winter dairying becomes more generally practiced, the subject of winter feed3 will be given more attention. Of these silage is one of the most important, since one acre of good silage material will yield as much feed as three acres of pasture. Wasteful Economy. The number of people is small, we believe, who, knowing that through their fault some mistake of an injurious nature has been made, would want only to attach the blame to Innocent parties. This is generally done thoughtlessly and Ignorantly, albeit In good faith. The idea is to examine ourselves and methods before condemn ing another. A patron of a Wisconsin creamery recently sent In some vigorous protesta against its products. It transpired that the creamery was not In the wrong, except so far as the management put faith in a few of the patrons of the creamery. Several of them had thoughtlessly turned their herds Into cabbage, rape and turnip patches Immediately after the first heavy frosts, and the milk thus tainted was sent In. with the result of causing inferiority in the creamery'3 output. Aside from the fact that we should not judge too hastily or be too ready to charge moral turpitude, the discerning farmer will understand from the case in point that feeding the stock any old thing to prevent waste may be the means of producing greater destruction. Forma of Combs. No matter how poultry may excel In shape, color, and size, a malformed comb and bad lobes will detract from the chances of success, especially in the non-sitting or Mediterranean breeds, where the ornamental headgear, or comb, is bo conspicuously attractive. There are many kinds of combs, as will be seen In the accompanying illustrations, which are deserving of notice, chief of which are Con as iHufi UCHCftV the single serrated comb, as seen in such breeds as Minorcas, Leghorns, Orpingtons, Plymouth Rocks, Langshans, Dorking, in different sizes; the rose-comb, beautifully worked or corrugated, and full of small points, as seen chiefly in the Redcap, Hamburg, and Wyandotte family. Then there is the pea comb, or trinle comb, that is, three parallel ridges (or very small combs), as seen in the Brahman' or the Indian Game. Get Illil of Dartlock. Any of the field3 full of burdock? If this iest has a good start it will spread all over the farm by the end of another sea-son. Easy to klll it. The burdock only lives a couple of years if frequently mowed off close to the ground, but the best way is to take an iron bar, drive it down deep'y by the side of the root and pry the whole miserable thing out and burn it, root and branch. Every plant thus treated is dead and done for. Food for Young 11 era. Do not make the food too sloppy for young pigs. Keep plenty of charcoal In the pen. Put a packet of Epsom salts In the food occasionally. Castrate pigs at three weeks, not later. Observe regularity in feeding, and let them out for a run occasionally. As the young pigs come In (!o not allow them to lose their baby fat, but keep them in good condition right from the time they are weaned. Farm Notes, Get busy with the wobbly colt and teach him that you are his friend and master. It will be easy. The average ewe requires fron 3 to 5 pounds of salt a year, the variatbn depending largely upon the amount of natural salts contained in the pastures. Cut out and burn all dead and diseased branches of fruit trees and bushes as soon as they are detected. Often the removal of a diseased branch will save the whole tree and save others from becoming infected. It is a mark of poor farm management to allow any animals to become infected with lice. Hogs can not thrive when their vitality Is sucked away by these insects. There are several good dips od the market, and kerosene and grease, mixed warm, is a good common remedy. The bees should have plenty of water. They consume a great deal, and will travel a long distance to get it. Should there be no running strea.ni or lake of pure water near, It I?, well to place a pall of fresh water near the apiary every day. Water Is used by the bees to dilute the heavy, thick honey left over from winter to make it suitable for the young larvae and Uo to make the cell wax pliable.
Handy Chopping Knife. No, this is not a bird cage in the Ulustration. It Is a chopping knife designed by a Colorado man and a strong and effective implement it is. The blades, as will be observed, are circular, and are attached to the handle by heavy arms. When this tool is brought don on a piece of meat or a head of cabbage it speedily converts the objects Into shreds. In ciioii'i.u k.n ike. most cases chopping Knives are made with single, or at lest, double blades. It will be readily eeen that a circular blade will do much more work than one or two straight ones. Another use for this cutter is In cutting the dough for doughnuts, cookies or other circular cakes, thoush In ordinary round cakes the Inside ring will form the cake while the hoop of dough that is left can either be baked into a hoop of cake or the leftover dough can be rolled again and the cutting continued till all Is used up, as Is usually done. Apple Snow. Peel and grate two large apples and put them aside Whip stiff the whites of two eggs with a pinch of salt, then add gradually elx tablespoonsful of sugar, beating it well into the egg, alternating with a tablespoonful of the apple till all the sugar and apple are used. Continue to whip until the snow has arisen to some height If pre--jrred the pulp of cooked apples may be used, and the snow oaay be quickly and lightly browned. Almond Cheese Cakes. One-quarter pound sweet almonds, 6 bitter almonds, one-quarter pound loaf sugar, 1 tablespoonful of cream, whites of 2 eggs, puff paste. Blanch and pound the sweet and bitter almonds with a tablespoon of water, then add the sugar, cream and whites of egg3. Mix as quickly as possible. Tut in very small patty pans lined with puff paste. Dake in warm oven twenty minutes. Apple Cheese. Apple cheese makes a good tart or cake filling. Peel, core and quarter half of a pound of apples and grate the rind of a medium-sized lemon. Place a pound of sugar In an earthenT.are pan with a quarter of a pint of water, and add the apples and lemon. Simmer this for about an hour, then add the juice of two lemons and let Jt boil for ten minutes, stirring continually. Stewed I'rnnn. Wash the prunes well, put in a kettle, just cover with cold water and let stand all night In the morning put on the stove In the same water. Let simmer gently until tender. Do not stir or cnash them. Cook on the back of the stove until the juice is a thick sirup and very little of it. When cold eat with cream. Caramel Cnke. Cream a half-cup of butter with one and one-half cups of powdered sugar. When this mixture is light, add threequarters of a cup of milk, and when this is well beaten in, fold in the stiffened whites of three eggs alternately, with enough prepared flour to make good batter. Dake in layers. Apples with Ilreatl and 3111k. A delicious luncheon dish is made by slicing perfectly ripe mellow sweet apples into a bowl of rich milk and bread. The more common way Is to bake the apples, unpeeled, in a sVw oven till tender, then slicing Into the bread and milk; but many on trial prefer the uncooked fruit. Onions anil Apples. Put one tablespoonful of butter In a frying pan, and when melted put In three sliced onions and three sliced apples; let fry slowly until browned, season with salt and pepper and serve on toast. Onions In Potato Cradles. Left-over potatoes of uniform size may be cut In half lengthwise, the centers scooped out, leaving a shell. This should be browned In butter, then filled with fried onions. Hot butter peas may substitute for onions, Short Suggestion. Allow mush to bake In the pot In which it Is made, then scrape th rough edges out. Cream cheese mixed with canned currants or jellied cranberries make1 a good sandwich filling. Coal soot is easily removed from tin articles or porcelain if they are first coated with kerosene. You will find a clean paint brush valuable in cleaning sandy drlec peaches. Wa3h them several times. A few drop3 of alcohol rubbed oi the lr.jide of lamp chimneys will re move all trace of greasy smoke when water alone is of no avail. An ordinary polish for silverware lj made of alcohol and whiting. It wllj also serve excellently for polishing plate glas3 and mirrors. Small cold cream jars and the liky, if scalded, make excellent containers for jelly which at some time or othei you will desire to place In a luncb basket. A neglected grate or one which has been red hot should be rubbed ovei with a cut raw potato before it 1 blackleaded. The result will be a brilliant polish. Do not scrape cooking utensils ol any kind. Clean them cut as much as possible, fill with water and washirg soda, cover and allow them to steam They will then clean easily. In serving a number of persons a' tea or reception silver and dislies oft en need to be washed. The hostess should see to it that there is a big supply of dish towels, otherwise she will be mortified by damp spoons and plates. Mend leaky enameled ware witt white lead. Cover the small holes with white lead on the outside of the ves. sei; for larger holes cut a piece of white lawn or muslin a little larger than the hole and pull through on the inside of vessel and apply the while lead on the outside. Place lu the sua or near the stove to dry.
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DOWN WIiH COOKS.
Slogan of Upton Sinclair's Campaign for (lie l ue f Itnw I'oixh. "After the fire at Helicon Hall and the strain and worry caused by seriou3 financial losses." writes Upton Sinclair in the Independent, "I was in very bad health, and my wife in even worse. So for the first time in my life I began to pay serious attention to the question of diet. "A good many of the members of the colony had been vegetarians before they came there, but we had served meat for the meat eaters, and the result was that all the vegetarians had fallen from grace. "Now, however, I became a vegetarian 'for keeps,' living for the most part on the 'germ proof food preparations of a well known manufacturer of that sort of thing. That helped me some, but very little. "Last fall I found myself in such condition of nervous exhaustion that I went away by myself to California, vowing that I would not come back to my family and my friends until I had made myself a well man. "I got a little bungalow, and because I did not want to have to bother with a servant and wanted to be alone at meal times I took to eating foods that did not have to be cooked. I could not get the prepared stuff I had been eating, but I was in a land of fruits and fresh vegetables, and so I lived on the?e. "In this blind way and quite without guidance I stumbled on what I now know to be the greatest discovery of my life; the deadly nature of the cooking process, which destroys the health-giving properties of foods, incites to gluttony and Is the cause of 03 per cent of the diseases of the human race. "I used a kind of whole hard wheat cracker, but for this I ate no cooked food for five months. I lived on nuts, ripe olives, salad, vegetables and a variety of 'the kindly fruits of the earth,' both fresh and dried. I wa? indoors most of the time, for the climate was vile it rained nearly every day all winter through. "I worked harder than I had ever worked in my life before, and yet my troubles fell from me like a cast-off garment. My stomach ceased from growling, my sluggish lntestine3 awoke, my nerves became calm and my headaches were forgotten. I was a picture of radiant and rejoicing health." I IN A PYTHON'S COIL. j ' The attendants in zoological gardens are exposed to dangers of various sorts. The superintendent of the Cincinnati animal park once had an adventure with a python which came near costing him his life. It became necessary to make some changes in the snake house, and the superintendent, Mr. Stephens, was in 'to cage of pythons, anticipating ra danger, when to his dismay he saw Hie largest snake coming toward him, hissing and darting its tongue angrily. Instantly he realized his danger. The superintendent quickly grasped the huge reptile just back of the neck with his right hand, and with the left clutched the creature two feet lower down, where tin greatest muscular power of the python is located. He tried to thrust the writhing mass into a waiting box, but the python colled its twelve feet of length round the man's leg, and began to con strict, carrying its tightening coils higher and higher. Struggle as he might, Mr. Stephens seccned helpless in the serpent's grasp. His hand3 wero so moist that the scaly body twisted in them. Perspira tlon streamed from his face. The python had worked its head free and was darting its horrid tongue almost in its victim's face. The man threw up his hand instinc tlvely to shield his face, and at tha same moment the snake seized and began swallowing it. By this time the attendants had rushed into the cage, and they began beating the python. Not liking this treatment, the big snake relaxed its coils. Mr. Stephens jerked his hand free, and broke off one of the python's fangs in his thumb In so doing. 'If I had not held on to its heaviest muscle," said the superintendent, "I have no doubt it might have strangled me. As long as I kept my grip there I felt confident, but I was pretty weak after the adventure." ot Much Drains Required. A novelist who lives near Indianap olis once engaged an individual who claimed to be a gardener. That this claim was without basis of fact was soon made evident to the employer, for the man proved well nigh useless so useless, in fact, that it becama necessary to discharge hLm. The man look his dismissal with such jaunty indifference that the novelist was somewhat nettled. "You seem rather pleased than otherwise, said he to the man. "Oh, I ain't worryin'," was the prompt response. "Indeed! Perhaps you won't do so well as you think. May I venture to Inquire what you have in view?" "Well," answered the gardener, "If the worst comes to the worst, I may take up wrltln books. Sence I've been here I've found out it don't take such an awfully brlgh man as I used to think it did." The aUed Truth. There is an ancient fable which tell us that on a summer afternoon Truth and Falsehood set out to bathe together. They found a crystal spring. They bathed in the cool, fresh water, and Falsehood, emerging first, clothed herself in the garments of Truth and went her way. But Truth, unwilling to put on the garb of Falsehood, departed naked. And to this day Falsehood wears Truth's fair white robes, so that many persons mistake her for Truth's very self, but poor Truth still goes naked. Con victed. "Mr. Klmley, you drink entirely too much." "Why, doctor, I haven't taken one since since; " "Too much coffee. I was going to say. But what wa3 it you were going to say?" Chicago Tribune. A man buys an automobile, and spend3 m ist of his time thereafter in advertising it. Why not give the newspapers a chance at the advertising? Many people who have no time to play are always clamoring for something to play Wit
It ASH ALL OVER BOD!.
Avrfnl, Crusted, "Weeping Eczema on l,UUe Sufferer A Score of Treatment Prove Dismal Failure Cur Achieved hy Cutlenrn. "My little boy had an awful rash all ver his body and the doctor said it was eczema. It was terrible and used to water awfully. Any place the water went It would form another sore and It would become crusted. A score or more physicians failed utterly and dismally In their efforts to remove the troubb Then I was told to use the Cutfeuri Remedies. I got a cake of Cuticura Soap, a box of Cuticura Ointment and a bottle of Cuticura Resolvent, and before we bad used half the Kesolvent I could see a change in him. In about two mouths he was entirely well. George L. Lambert, 130 West Centre St., Mahanoy City, Pa., Sept. 2G and Nov. 4, 1007." Potter Drug & Cheni. Corp., Sole Trops. of Cuticura Remedies. Boston. A 1'eetifth I'luint. The learned writers for the press Are very, very pood At proving how we waste on dress Or furbelows or food. Each writer new who makes his bow With other sages vies To show unhappy mortals how They may economize. They tell us of the thrifty French, Who all excesses shun. But I'm not anxious to retrench; It Isn't any fnu. I'm weary of this endless song; I wish some seer wise Would show us how to get along And not economize. Louisville Courier-Journal. Fine Recipe for Colds. Any druggist can. supply these ingredients, or he will get them frcm his wholesale house. "Mix half pint of good whiskey; two ounces of glycerine; half ounce of Concentrated pine compound. Shake the bottle well each time and use in doses of a teaspooaful to a tablespoonful four times a day." This prescription is said to work wonders. The Concentrated pine is a special pine product and comes only in half ounce bottles,- each enclosed in an airtight Ncase, but be sure it is labeled "Concentrated" in order to get the genuine article. Ill Slick Scheme. "That fellow Smoothlelgh 13 one of the slickest chaps I ever saw. Why, he can make the public believe anything. What do you suppose he is do ing now?'' "Give it up." "Running a correspondence school that teaches you how to play baseball in four easy lessons." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Servitut Ilia Sentence. "I ain't seen de boss man fer dt longest. Whar you reckon he gone ter?" "I thought you knrnved whar he gone. He went roun' de country talk in ever day an' Sunday, an' de fust thing he knowed dey give him fifty days in de legislatur an' he won't be back 'twel he sarves his time out." - Atlanta Constitution. IDt. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constipation. Constipation Is the cause of many diseases. Cure the cause and you cure the disease. Easy to t&lre. ; A Dreary Land. The country from Jerusalem to tfcü Jordan valley is as dreary and deso late as could be imagined. The hills look like great banks ol rock and sand. Not even the Sahara itself looks more forbidding. It 1? the "country not inhabited," the wilderness Into .which the scapegoat was driven. We are all glad we went, bul none of us could be induced to go again. ZIon's Herald. Some people would drown with a life preserver at bund. They are the kind that fuifTor from Rheumatism and Neuralgia when they can get Haralina Wizard Oil, the best of all pain remedies. Refore 1SS0 most English railway carriages had only four wheels, and weighed ten tons. From IS80 to 1890 they had six wheels, and weighed fifteen or sixteen tons; from 1830 to 1800 they had eight wheels, and weighed twenty-four tons; and since 1900 the fashion is twelve wheels for dining and sleeping cars, and the weight 1 thirty-five to forty-two tons. Red Cross Ball Bin Should be In every home. Ask your froMr for lt. Larve 2oz. pscksce, S cents. The Professor. The Doctor Some creatures, you mow, are exceedingly sensitive to mulical sounds. You may not believe It, ut it's a well authenticated fact that .wo song sparrows once flew into a oom where a grand opera singer was ;ehearsing an aria, listened a few molents, and dropped dead. The Professor I don't doubt It I aave heard before of killing two birds irith one's tone. Chicago Tribune. What has become of the old-fashioned woman who rolled her work apron in a bundle, and went over to a neighbor's to spend the day? Log!: A. AAA Gold and Silver TROPHY for ths Best Ear of Cora an I a . " AvITM io be Known as tns w. J. " 7-v y m , . Ke llog-jr National Corn Trophy v. " To be Awarded at the NATIONAL CORN FXPOSITION OMAHA, December te 18, 1909. Watch this pajer or farther arUcalarn,
A Clean Man
Outside cleanliness is less than half the battled" A man may scrub hinsclf a dozen times a day, and still be unclean. Good health means cleanliness not only outside, but inside. It means a clean stomach, clean bowels, clean blood, a clean liver, and new, clean, healthy tissues. The man who is clean in this way w ill look it and act it. He will work with energy and think clean, clear, healthy thoughts. He will never be troubled with liver, Iun;J, stomach or blood disorders. Dyspepsia end indigestion originate in unclean stom Mchs. Blood diseases are found where there is unclean blood.
Consumption and bronchitis mean unclean lungs. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery prevents these diseases. It makes a man insides clean and healthy. It cleans the digestive organs, makes pure dean blood, and clean, healthy flesh. It restores tone to the nervous system, and cures nervous exhaustion amS prostration. It contains no alcohol or habit-forming drugs. Constipetion is the most unclean uncleanliness. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pel lets cure it. They never gripe. Easy to take as candy.
iaislBgTemperatoire
depends upon the heater how constructed whether it gets all the fuel-energy or only some of it. If the heater is a PERFECTOM Oil Heattep (Equipped with Smokeless Device) the raising of the temperature Is certain. Turn the wick as high or low as it will go there's no danger, no smoke, no smell just an emphatic raising of temperature. The
Automatic Smokeless Device is a permanent check upon carelessness, making the heater safe in the hands of a child. Burns nine hours with one filling, heats all parts of a room quickly. Oil indicator tells amount of oil in the all-brass font. Damper top. Cool handle. Aluminum window frame. Cleaned in a minute. Finished in Nickel or Japan. Various styles and finishes. Every Dealer Everywhere. If Kot st Yours. Write for Descriptive Circular to the Nearest Agency of the STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Incorporated)
Taet. I am sorry to have to tell you so, 5oys," said th( pleasant looking visitor who was addressing: the Sunday school, 'but there Is not one chance in a thousandthat any one of you ever will be President of the United States." Still he failed to secure their undivided attention. "But if you live up to your opportuaitles," he went on, eyeing them keeny, "some bright boy In' this audience siay become a great baseball pitcher sr the world's champion batsman." Instantly every boy sat up straight nd began to listen. Chicago Tribune. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children toe thing; softens the gums, reduces lncammatlon, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. Ileadqaarters for the Juice. Once upon a time a child who was asked upon an examination papei to define a mountain range replied, "A large sized cook stove." The same method of reasoning seems to go with older growth. A recent examination paper at the Sheffield Scientific School at Yale contained the question, "What Is the office of the gastric juice?" And the answer on one paper said, "The 6tomach." Cleveland Leader.
NEEDLESSLY ALARMED BRICHT'S DISEASE OF THE KIDNEYS, concerning wHch so ranch ken been written. Is s Terr rsre dise.se. In not one esse out of twenty of so-called " idney Disease" does tbe tronblc retlly lie with tbe kidneys. It Is practically all BLADDER TROUBLE. GOLD UEDAL IIAARLEU OIL CAPSULES Is the most efficient tnd reliable BLADDER MEDICINE known to the medical world. Tbovunds of people throughout the country will testify to the quick end sure relief obtained from its use. It baa bees in constant use throughout the civilized world for over 200 years and is probably better known than any other remedy discovered by man. ,
Is often s painful anVl annoying ailment. Frequently moat distressing symroms result from s slllhtly affected bladder. Taken regularly Qold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules will remove all traces of such trouble in a few days. It is not strange that this valuable preparation should enioy such an extended use and enormous aale. Gold Medal Haarlem Oil ia put op in two forma, in CAPSULES and BOTTLES. Capsules 25c. and 50c. per box. Bottles 15c and 35c, at all Druggists. Be sure von obtain tbe Gold Medal Tilly brand. HOLLAND MEDICINE COMPANY, SCRANTON, PA.
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SPOHN MEDIO AL CO..
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for Breakfast, Dinner, Supper, Luncheon whenever you want something different and better whether yoa eat it dry from the package) or with mlli, cream or fruit juices this delightful food ne-er disappoints. It's all in the flavor. After you ence try it you'll wonder why breakfast foods weren't made as good before. Get a package today from your grocer and
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irJELI-0GG TOASTED CORN FLAKE CO. fj ; r W, ' 'Wew R tsHIsm r-.tr Mitt. nT
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A Skin cf Deauty la a Joy Forever. DR. T. Felix Oourtud's Oriental Craam or Magloal Baairtlflsr. Tu, Pimply Moth F.tdj FrtcUM. Bsett, sod bkla Dstruti, sea Ttry lie tute om twenty, and d1m d.iactloa. It SM stood Ut Utt of SO yean, sad la m fcan&lM Uottt to be nrett U properly mad. Aectpt no count' felt of .'SiUsr earn. Dr. L. A., fearro aald to a lady of tb baS ton (s paUeot)t M At yon lad las will om tbrm, 1 racosiBicBS (.ouraad's Cream' at tba !at harmful of all U klu preparation.' For sal by all dragxirta I a&cy. Gooci Dealers In tbe United Siatea, Canada and I uro pa. FER1T.RQPK1XS. Fro?, 37 Grul Jones Strut IewTa.1 linilCC Th. rwtit eTrtenwInn of th. N. C O. 1 1 1 1T1 I K. R. brings tbouMnd. of wfd of flao government land along tht lino om the market Splendid oll. climate, water, timber and range; alfalfa, bMt. etock, fruit. gralA and Tegetaltiea. Oood railroad facin tie. and markets. Croiurt without Irrigation. COM K NOW and geta home for nothing, hutead of paying high piicea elMwhcre. If you bavo Md yoarhoniextead right, yon can take S acre ander tbe Üeftert Lnd Act. Some stock raocheaacd deeded land for aale by owner. Kin opcnln lor landmen. Addnwa II. IWWF. LA.I 'OM.. keraUa, CaUXomi. Oregon Ky.. UCJiO, VAiA F. W. N. U. No. 451909 When writing; to Advertisers pleas ay you saw the Adv. la this paper.
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