Plymouth Tribune, Volume 9, Number 6, Plymouth, Marshall County, 11 November 1909 — Page 7
from woman's ailments are invited to Tvrite to the names and addresses here given, for positive proof that Lydia E. lliikliam's
V egetable Corapound docs cure leinala ills.
Tumor Rfmnyed. Chicane in.-llr8. Alvena Sperling, 11 Langdon Street. Llndley, Ind. Mrs. May Fry. Kinnley, KaJi.Mr. Stella IHTord Beaman. Pcott, N.Y. Mrs. S. J. Barber. Cornwallville, N.Y. Mrs. Wm. Bonirbton. Cirinnti,0.Mr.W.K.Housh.7Ea3tvi?wAT Milwaukee, Wig. Mrs. Einma lmse, &S3 1st St.. German. Chane of TJfe. Sonth BeM. Ind.-Mra. Fred Certia, 1014 8. L&farette Street. Noah, Kentn.-ay. Mrs. UzrAo Holland. Brkj1eld. M t.sMrs. Sarah Luusiguont, 207 S. Market St. Patern, N-J. Mrs. Wra. Somerrille, 103 Harr.bnrjh Ayeaiie. pbjl.iehhia. Pa. Mrs. K. E. Garrett, 2407 North Garnet Street. Kewaakum, Wis. Mrs. Carl TaMfce. Maternity Tmahle. Worcester, M;t9. Mrs. Dosylva Cote, 117 Southnte Street. Indian.! p- riu. Ind. Mrs. A. P. Anderson, 1207 E. Pratt Street. Big Ran, Pa.Mrs. W. E. Pooler. At water Station, O. Mr. Anton Mtielhaupt. CiuHnnati, Ohio. Mrs. E. II. M ddock, 2133 Gilbers Avenue. Mogüdore, Ohio. Mrs. Lee Manxes, Box 131. IVwittTill, N.Y.Mrs. A. A. tiile. Johnstown. N. Y. Mrs. Homer Seaman, 103 E. Main Street. Bortonrie r, I1L Mrs. Peter Langenhahn. AtoM Operation. Hampstead, Md. Mrs. Jos. II. Dandy. Adrian, Ga. Lena V. Henry, Route No. 3. Indianapolis. Ind. Bsia V. Piper, 29 South Ad-llson Street. LouisTille. Ky. Mrs. S-raLee,3E23 Fourth St. South West Harbor, Maine. Mrs. Lillian Bobbins, Mt. Desert Light Station. Detroit, Mich. m Mr a. Frieda Rosenau, &44 Meldrum Ayenao, German. Orrinlo Displacement. Moiier, Ills.-Mrs. Miry BU. Uonier, Intl. Mrs. F.liiaW vyJ.R.F.D.No.4. Melbourne, Iowa. Mrs. Clara Witeriaann, K. F. 1. No. 1. Bardshown, Ky. Mr. Joseph Hall. Lewiston, Maine. Mrs. Henry Cloutier, 56 Oxford Street. Minneapolis. Minn. Mrs. John G. MolJan, 2115 Second Street, N. Saarn rock. Mo. Josio Ham, R.F.D. No. 1; Box 22. Marlton. X J. Mrs. Geo. Jordy, Konto No. 3, Box 40. Chester, Ark. Mrs. Ella Wood. Ocilia, Ga. Mrs. T. A. Cribh. Pendleton. Ind. Mrs. May Marshall, R-R. 44. Cambridge, eb. Airs. Nellie Moslander. These women are only a few of
the power of Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to cure female diseases. Not one of these women ever received compensation in any form for the use of their names in this advertisement hut are willing that we should refer to them because of the good they may do other suffering women to prove that Lydia & Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a reliable and honest medicine, and that the statements made in our advertisements regarding its merit are the truth and nothing but the truth.
Difference Minutes Make From 35 degrees to 70 degrees from an unbearable cold to a glowing heat that contributes the cheery comfort you want in your home is the difference that can be made in 10 minutes when you have the fr A. M mi (Equipped with Smokeless Device); to do your heating. It is unrivaled for quick work and effective, cleanly work.
PERFECTION
Impossible to turn the wick too high or too low impossible to make it smoke or emit disagreeable odor the self-locking Automatic Smokeless Device absolutely prevents smoke. Lighted in a second cleaned in a minute V. . . r ; TT.., Tit- cM r- . 1 r
UU1H3 iiuuis wuu uiic uiung. i.usness Drass iont. Automatic smokehss device instantly removed for cleaning. Hiittefficiency in heating power Beautifully finished in Japan or Xickel an ornament anywhere a necessity everywhere. Variety of styles. Every Dealer Everywhere. If Not At Yours, Write for Descriptive Circular to the Nearest Agency cf the STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Incorporated)
11 liiere s a
In Farming For the man who owns even a few acres in the fast growing Pacific Northwest!: Hundreds of thousands of acres may still be had at a reasonable price along the line of the
TT T 0 TTB
"The Safe Road
Dustless, perfect track electric block signals. For land literature and information, call on or address E. L. LOMAX. C. P. A., Omaha, Neb.
aap..-.."M? ,iv -f'i . :. fc-rieäri; Contains no Acefanlid THE fmr your officm statlontry. You can get the paper and envelopes to match. Is ihm rml thlnm. Takm otn. 11 ainicled wiih
Let us do your Printing ' using - EagleVp Linen i
Sire Ecs, ise I liUiii
Painful Terloda.
Oohen, Al. Mrs.W. T. Ialton, PouteXo.3. Chicago, 111. Mr Wm. Tully, 4 OKden At. Paw Paw, Mich. Mrs. F.mina Ir tjer. Flushing, Mich.-Mrs. Hurt Iy,d, R.F.D. No. 3 : care of I . A. Sanborn. CofTeeTille, Mips. Mrs. S. J. Jones. Cincinnati, Ohio.-Mrs. Flora Ahr, 13C2 Ernst Street. CleTeland. Ohio Miss Lizzie Stelger, K10 Flet Avenue, S.E. Vesleyville, Pa. Mrs. MapgieEter,R.F.D.l. iyersburg,Teiin Mrs. Lue llilliard, llayfleld, Va.-Mrs. Mayme Windlo. Irregularity. Herrin, HI. -Mrs. Ch.t. Folkel. Winchester, lud. Mrs. May Deal. Dyer, Ind. Mrs. Wm. Oberh.h. K. F.P.No.l. DÄHiiuore, Md.Mrs. W. S. Ford, 193 Lanadowne Street, lioxbttry, Masa. Mrs. Francis Merkle,13 Field Street. Clarisd K Mo. Miss Anna Wallace. ;uvaville. Ohio.-Mrs. Ella Michael. R.F.D.3. Dayton, Ohio. Mrs. Ida Hale, Box 25, National Military Home. Lebanon, Pa.-Mr's. Harry L. Kittle, 233 Lehman Street. Sykes. Term. Minnie Hall. lKtroitklich. Mrs. Louine Jung,332Chcstnut Ovarian Tronlilo. Vineennes. Ind. Mrs. Syl. B. Jerauld, 503 X. Tenth Street. Gardiner, Maine. Mrs. S. A. Williams, K- F. I). No. 14 ; Box S9. Philadelphia. Pa. Mrs. Chas. Boell, 2107 N. Garnet Street. Plattgburg.Mijs.-MissVernaWilkes.R.FJ).!. Femule Weakness. Willimantlc, Conu.Mrs. Etta Donovan, Box 2t9. WoMlsid, Idaho. Mrs. Rachel Johnson. Kockland, Maine. Mrs. Will Young, 6 Columbia A venue. Seottvllle. Mich.Mrs.J.G.Johnson, R.F.D.3. Iayton, Obi-. Mrs. F. R. Smith, 4M Elm St. Erie, Pa.-Mrs. J. P. Endlich, lt. F. I). No. 7. Beaver Falls. Pa. -Mrs. W. P. Boyd, 210 Seventh Avenue. Fairchance, Pa. Mrs. I. A.Dunham. Box 152. Fort Hunter, Fa.Mrs. Mary Jane Shatto. Eait Earl. Pa, Mrs. Augusta Lyon, K.FJJ.Z. Vienna, W. Ya. Mrs. Emma Whcaton. Nervous Prostration. Oronogo, Mo. Mrs. Mae Me Knight. Camden, N.J. Mrs. Tiiiie Waters, 451 Liberty Street. Joseph, Oregon. Mrs. Alice Huffman. Philadelphia. Ta. Mrs. John Johnston, 210 Siegel Street. Christiana. Tenn. Mrs. Mary Wood, R.F.D. No. 3. Pecos, T?x. Mrs. Ada Yonnir Egeleston. Graniteviilo, Vt. Mrs. Chas. Barclay, R.F.D. thousands of living witnesses of That PIN em I r ratine 0f0 MC to Travel" (1S2)
FOR AO YEARS An absolutely sale and dependable remedy fsr all Headaches and Neuralgia Pains Its basic prlaclpal endorsed ky eminent phystclaas At Drugicts Trial Package. lCc
SAFETY REMEDY CO., CANTON, O. A million boxes now used every month. No other laxative ever won f.uch favor as have candy Cascarets. Natural, gentle, prompt. A single tablet, taken when one needs it, alters everything that' wron2- Think of the good they do. Vest-pocltet box, 10 cents at drosr-store. 8G9 Each tablat of the grenuiae is marked C C C MAN WANTED Jn ach county to sell wire fish-traps oq balvcs. W furoisb traps.
j- p
. f IA i ' SQ f - . 1
3Ioilrrn l'nrm Harn. Tho barn herewith illustrated will be found suitable for a medium-sized farm on which eight or ten milk cows are kepi. It has a floor space of 3S by 54 feet, exclusive of the milk room. The studs should be 12 to 14 feet longThe interior is divided as shown on the floor plan. The silo is 12x3S feet, with a 5-foot pit which may be of stone or cement. The silo as shown Is connected to the feed room by a EXTERIOR VIEW OF I?ARX. 4x4-foot chute. This should extend the entire length of silo and have small windows both at the top and bottom. The hay chute is 5x3 feet square and has door at the floor line for forking out hay. The chute is of sufficient size for feeding stock if barn Is full. The silo and hay chute aro boarded up tight to prevent dust, dirt or odors from entering tbe cow barn. The loft floor should be made tight for the same reason, and if made double with tar paper between It will be better. The construction of the calf and bull pens, also the box stall, should be such that the animals may readily see tho other animals in the barn. They enjoy company as well as human beinf.s do, and many an otherwise goodtempered animal has been rendered unsafe-by being placed in solitary confinement. The milk room is handy to the cow stalls and has both an interior and exterior exit. The door leading Into the bam should be closed at all times. The interior arrangement is such that one attendant can feed and care for the stock, in a short time; a point not to be overlooked in this day of high-priced labor.' An 8 or 10-foot opening should be left in the loft floor over the driveway for passing up hay, etc. The grain and. bran bins are located over the feed room and the feed drawn through S-inch wood spcuts and mixed in the feed room. The driveway, also tbe space between the feed room and cow stalls, may be used a portion of the year for tools or a wagon. The floor above the driveway should be 11 or 12 feet high; the floors over the pens and cow stalls should be 7 feet high, and those over the box stall and horse stalls should be S feet high. This arrangement pro-
Jj : fa l Li
a ctr.Tr.
i 3 GBOUXD FLAN OF BAKX. vides ample storge room for hay, etc., In the loft. A good feature of this barn is that fadditions can be made without interfering with the general arrangement in nay way. J. E. Uridgman In Farm, Stock and Home. 1 1 ok and l'eiirr. Lean, lank hogs and poor fences will discourage almost any farmer who has Buch a combination. "With animals that will multiply as rapidly as pigs It seems almost a shame to see a man breeding old scrub sows to some boar that has no pride of ancestry or hope of posterity. Yet this is exactly the course that about half of the farmers aro following, and wondering why feeding bogs is not. paying substantial profits. Never get the idea In your heads that breeding from young and immature breeding stock encourages early maturity in the progeny. Good, strong, well-developed pigs from mature slre3 and dam3 will make better growth and more economical gains than the undersized runts that result from breeding immature sows to some C-months-old boar pig. IV-IliitC Ilorar. Prof. Coburn says that we Americans feed our horses entirely too much haj. It is common among horse owners to let horses stand to full mangers when not at work. But in London the cab horse, for example, is given hay but for two hours a day, !n the evening. At the end of two hours the mangers are cleared. Careful testing in decreasing the timothy hay ration one-half has not shown that the horses require any more grain than before to keep them In equally good condition. Dnlry Farmlngr. The man who Is carrying on diversified farming can not keep one cow for each acre of land he tills, but the dairyman can. and may do. They do not raise all the grain used, but are content to let their neighbor grain farmer raise the grain. They know that they can buy grain for one hundred cents on the dollar, and that their little dairy cows will return $2 In product for every dollar's worth of feed. They can better afford to spend their time In caring for the cow than In raising grain. An Oltl Ilunko fin me. A farmer near Rock Island, 111., was cleverly swindled out of $25 by a smooth stranger who claimed to be the game warden. The farmer was hunting on bis own farm when approached and asl:ed if he had a hunt ing liccn?e. IIo had not, and tho man said be was not excused by bein. on hi3 own farm, and that he would ar rest him. This did not please the farmer, anl he Anally gave the fellow $25 as bail. When ho appeared in court tho next morning ie mot tho real game warden, but not his money Poultry !ii.! I'rult (inmliiy:. A combination of fruit-growing and poultry raising is e.-jvciaüy rtcom mended In a bulletin from the? Penn sylvania I).!artment of Agriculture If possible, locate the poultry houses so that the runs will be in the or chard. The fowls will destroy thou
Binds of harmful Insects, thu3 greatlj ber.euting the trees and increasing th l prospects for fruit, and the fowls will at the same time gain great comfort and benefit by the protecting shade o the trees. Plum trees and cherry trees are especially benefited by the presence of fowls about their roots. Peach trees will grow most rapidly and soonest give an abundant shade. Feotllnjc Mlnprc Quite a number of practical feeders have adopted ihe silage method. One man In particular having a lar?;e stock farm In Ohio puts up annually between 2,r00 and 3,000 tons of corn an 1 cowpea silage, which he feeds to his beef cattle. A 1,000-pound steer will usually consume about r0 pounds cf silage per day. When fed a ration cf this kind, some nitrogenous food should be added, such as oil meal, cottonseed meal or other concentrated products found on the market. The feeder from Ohio referred to feeds on an average about 5 pounds of cottonseed meal per day to his steer3 and about 5 pounds of clover hay, in addition to the 50 pounds of silage. For beef cattle it Is usually considered advisable to allow the crop to mature before cutting, and also to plant it the same as one plants for grain production. The cattle feeder is not particularly anxious to obtain a large amount of forage, but he is more anxious to get as much corn as possible. A crop of corn that will produce about 50 bushels per acre will make from eight to nine tons of silage planted in the usual way and harvested when mature. It is stated by feeders who are using silage, and similar reports have come from stations, that cattle fed on this produce scour less than
when fed on corn and dry roughage. Sidrbone In Horse. The cut on the left shows a healthy foot bone. In some cases the cartil ages are large, extending for some dis tance, giving an appearance of sidebo?.e. If the same condition exists In other ft-rt, it may bo concluded that no sldebono exists. The picture on the right depicts a foot with growth of sidebone. The growth begins at lower edge of cartilage next to the foot bone and extends gradually upward. Wenlher Facta. The Farmers' Club of the American Institute has Issued the following rules for forecasting tbe weather: 1. The wind never blows unless rain or snow is falling within 100 miles of you. 2. When cirrus clouds are rapidly moving from the north or northeast there will be rain Inside of twentyfour hours, no matter how cold it is. 3. Cumulus cloud3 always move from a region of fair weather to a re gion where a storm is forming. 4. When the temperature suddenly falls there is a stoni forming south of you. 5. When the temperature suddenly rises there is a storm. forming north of you. 6. Cirrus clouds always move from a region where a storm i3 in progress to a region of fair weather. 7. When cirrus clouds are rapidly moving from the south or southeast there will be a cold rainstorm on the morrow, if it is In summer; If it Is in winter, there will be a snowstorm. 8. Whenever heavy, white frost oc curs a storm Is forming within 1,000 miles north or northeast of you. 9. The wind always blows In a cir cle around a storm, and when it blows from the north the heaviest rain is east of you; If It blows from the south the heaviest rain Is west of you; if it blows from the east the heaviest rain is south of you; If It blows from the west the heaviest rain is north of you. FarmlnR PnaalbtlltleK. At the average rate of twenty bush els of wheat per acre (which is much less than the average yield of either fiermanyor England), the State of Illi nois, with a few Indiana counties thrown in for good measure, cultivated exclusively to wheat, would produce annually more of this product than does the entire country. If Ohio and Iowa's 7G.7S4 square miles of improved land (census 1D00), with a 17.C58 square mile strip of Kansas, should he planted in corn, there would be harvested, with an acreage yield of fifty bushels, 3,022,144,000 bushels, an amount practically equal to the total 190G corn crop of the United States, Canada and Mexico. With the 10,615,044 acres of Georgia's improved land producing a bale of cotton per acre, the yield would amouut to nearly is much as the total annual cotton crop of the country; and yet a large paVt of the 15,776,413 acres of so-called "unimproved farm land" in Georgia can be made to produce as well as the best land in the State, with still a balance of 11,191,943 acres of unclassified land, of which a portion only Is Irreclaimable to agriculture. I) I Moaned HnfTage. It ha3 reached the point where seemingly there Is nothing but eternal warfare against fungus and bacterial diseases and insect pests. Preventive measures are better than curative, but with all possible care along these lines they still steal in upon us to our hurt. Rut doubtless the preventive efforts save much loss that otherwise would follow. The vine crop ruffage Is a special source of danger, and the only iafe plan is to dry and burn them just as soon as they cease to bear. If thrown on the compost heap their fertilizing value will be trifling compared to the risk of spreading the disease. When burned they are safely out of harm's way, and the ashes, as far as they go, will he of some value. Wherever club root is present In the cabbage, cauliflower or any member of the crucifera funnily, all diseased plants should be l.unied or boiled, root and branch, and under no cireiunstancc-'j should they be left to lie on tbe ground or be fed out. Tho compost heap Is a good thing In Its way; but without very much care as to what Is consigned to it, and the after treatment, it e-asily becomes a hotbed for the breeding of insects and fungus diseases. The Cornell Experiment Station found that two tons of horse manure in an exposed place in five months lost 5 per cent in rrs weight, C't per cent of its nitrogen, 47 per cent of its phosphoric uid 7G per cent of its potash. The total loss of ylant food was CI per cent.
ECZEMA COVERED HIM.
1 1 h I n k Tortnrs AVlts llrjoml Word Slept Only from Sheer Fabnunllon Hellrved In -4 Honr and Cured in a Month Uy Cutlenrn. "I am seventy-seven years old. and some years ago I was taken Lh eczema from head to foot. I was si"k for six months and what I sulered tongue could not tell. I could not sleep day or night because of that dreadful itching; when I did sleep it was from sheer exhaustion. I was one mass of irritation ; it was even in my scalp. Ihe doctor's medicine seemed to make me worse and I was almost out of my mind. I got a set of the Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Ilesolvent. I used them persistently for twenty-four hours. That night I slept like an Infant, the first solid night's sleep I had had for six months. In a month I was cured. W. Harrison Smith, ML Kisco, X. Y Feb. 3, l'JOS." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Irops. of Cuticura Remedies. Iioston. Mnn, the Aew Creator. What is Man? There is a word of prophecy con cerning him. If Niagara suggests the old gods, surly and mean to us-ward, steel-making utterly contemns them. Is the opinion of Eugene Wood in an article on steel-making in Success Magazine. Thor with his hammer, Jove with his thunderbolts, Hercule3 with the original Big Stick thy couldn't hold their job at steel-makin, "Go to the office and get your time," would be what the "pusher" would tell them. The only mythic figure that the steel industry suggests is that bold and resolute, that unconquered and unconquerable spirit, whom Milton's reluctant pen wa3 forced to make the hero of "Paradise Lost." The flame, the fervent heat, the rolling smoke remind us of him. But aiost of all the mighty works that are done therein recall that prophecy of his (if Eden'3 serpent be the allotrope of Lucifer): "Ye :hall be as gods" and more also. What Is Man? The New Creator. The'next time you feel that swallowing sensation, the sure sign of sore throat, garble Hamlins Wizard Oil immediately with three parts water. It will save you days and perhaps weeks of misery. "The Auld Ilrlx ' Doon.' Lord Roseberry has done well to protest against the proposed demolition of the Brig of Ayr. The town council of Ayr calls it rebuilding. But as Lord Roseberry says, the resources of engineering should be adequate to preserve a structure which is almoi sacred. Indeed, were there no sentiment left for Burns in the land he did so much to celebrate, the accustomed canuiness of the Scot should suffice to save a landmark that Is yearly coined into good money. How many travelers would care a rap for Ayr without the old bridge? Providence Journal. Constipation causes many serious diseases. It is thoroughly cured by Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. One a laxative, three for cathartic. Called. Jimmy Jenkins (to new boy in neighborhood) What's yer old man do? What's he work at? Harold Harrington (loftily) He's on the bench. JLmmy Jenkins Den he's wit some bush league, kid, fer dere ain't no sich player in de National er American? Puck! Yellow Clotbea Are Cnalffhtlr. Keep tbem white with K?d Cross Ball Blue. Ill grocer, sell larga 2ot packf ja, centa. There'a n Iteuaon. In a Sheffield school the children were asked to come prepared with the meaning of the word "bachelor" for tho next lesson. This was one little girl's confident definition: "A bachelor is a very happy man." The teacher wanted to know more. How did tho little girl know that? "Father told me so." Tid-Dits. I'KRRT DAT IS- PAINKIIXKR baa no substitute. No other rfnHtj It. no f (Tectlvo tor r ben mat ism, lumbago. Mlflnpss. renralijla or cold of any sort. I'ut up in 20c, 80canUi0c boiiles. Mahogany Tie, 31ar!le Ilr-ldee. The rails cf the Mexican Gulf rail, road ate laid on mahogany sleeper and the bridges arj built of white man ble. In west Mexico is a line with ebony sleepers and ballast of silver or drawn from the mines beside the track, The engineers constructing these rail ways had no other material on th route and found it cheaper to usi these seeming extravagances than tq import tho ordinary material. Mrs. Wlnslöw's Soothing Sjrup for Children teething: softens the guias, reduces Inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic 15 cents a bottle.
f$l,000 Gold and Silver Awar. v ZZ J For the best Ear cf Corn
mown
Tobe A-r-Jitlhe HiiMUimL tUAH LAr UCl 1 kJiit ULMiHUi., IJwU. U
Wo o;fcr n ,(.0:.i t --au iful f.uMI fo!:l and F.ilvr trophy for the persin prnwjeyr the h"t oar cf com in two di:Tt rent noHson.'. 'J..- ;'i3. Fi'U.-' ;i'n f ; f viinen to be ient try th National (Vrn Isxj'-itioa Omah. N.'ti., bcf'irc Nov. 27th WK). Thin v'.'t ii r-en to r-very r.i in. wonn or child in the Unitorl States. It will be jadyJ by thj luiüu.jf cra autLority cf tha worlJ. l'rof. 1'. C. Holden. Wulch this paper for f urther puilicalira. KELLOGG TOASTED COHN FLAUE CO., Baltic Creek. MI cd.
PUTNAM C.l.r aiore goods brhhler lasier color lhao any i.y urseEl iihoulr.;Uo siarU Wrile Itr Iret
F.rrm-tSt-A...
Physicians Recommend Castorla. CASTOSIA Las met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharmaceutical societies and medical authorities. It is used by physicians with results most gratifying. The extended use of Oastoria is unquestionably tha result of three facts: The indisputable evidence that it is harmless! Second That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimilates the food : WrrfIt is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor Oil It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotio and does not stupefy. It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman's Drops, Godfrey Cordial, etc. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say Our duty, however, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by regulating the system not by stupefying it and our readers are entitled to the ihfonnation. iTaZZ's Journal of McaltJu
!W . (mill ; e$.l ! "'
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. AVcgc(abIcPreparaibnIflrAS-i similar (teFocdaiKjRegdaluiguiciiomaQs Prcno(csDicstionIierfur rtess and restrontains neißar T.ZZQ. :. OpiuaiIorphiiie norJliocrd NOT NARCOTIC. Hcupka Sxdm ßsthttleSJtxAiktStti ftynfrmint -JkCarioaafcSm ft'trmSftd' Clc-ifMd mr ntitBjirta Flimr. V .fit Aperfcct Remedy for ttmsfipation . Sour Storoadi.Dlarrtm 1:3 Yorras,romiilsioiisJ:cTnsir ncss arulLoss orStEEP. racSimile Signature of ; NEW YORK. .."GEES Guaranteed under the i-oo'l Exact Copy of Wrapper. Fnlton Wat 'ot an Inventor. It must be understood that In all this work neither Fulton nor Livingston claimed to be the "inventor" of a steamboat. John Fitch's grant was for "the steamboat lately by him invented." This was extended to Livingston, says John L. Mathews in Success Magazine, because he "claimed to be possessed of a mode of propelling boats by steam," though, as a matter of fact, Morey had refused to sell him that mode. Later Fulton claimed to have invented a method of computing the relation between displacement, horsepower, and speed, but he wa3 never able to make this table work. He himself denied his claim to "invention," but the waxing power of the monopoly, and the spectacular fortune making, combined vith legislative favor, so enlarged the two promoters in the public eye that the title, "Inventor of the steamboat,", became attached to Fulton in the minds of the uninformed, and through that has persisted until to-day. Children's Coughs Onea Much Uaaeceaaary Suffering Give instant relief soothe and heal the little throaü and prevents more aeriou ülneat. Children like i! too to pleaaant to take and doe not tifxet the Momach. All Drugguta, 25 centa. 4 as
W -L i , II ' ' 1
y Uimu
mm
! IP CTJiS S
t l
i
Ivc-Horr? Nitionr.I Corn Trophy
FADELESS DYES
other ve. Ooe 10c package colors all liken, Tkeat klri-Eaw U Dje. Bleach ass Mix Csiara.
Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher.
Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chicago, Ills., says: "l have prescribed your Castoria often for Infants during my practice, and find It very satisfactory." Dr. William Belmont, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: "Tour Castoria stands first In its class. In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have found anything that so filled the place." Dr. J. IL Taft, of Brooklyn, N. T., says: I have used your Castoria and found It an excellent remedy in my household and private practice for many years. The formula is excellent" Dr. It. J. Ilamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says: "I prescribe your Castoria extensively, as I have never found anything to equal it for children's troubles. I am aware that there are imitations in tho field, but I always see that my patients get Fletcher's." Dr. "Wm. J McCrann, of Omaha, Neb., says: "As the father of thirteen children I certainly know something about your great medicine, and aside from my own family experience I have in my years of practice founi Castoria a popular and efficient remedy In almost every home," Dr. J. JL Clausen, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: "The name that your Castoria has made for itself in the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorsement of the medical profession, but I, for one, most heartily endorse it and Relieve it an excellent remedy." Dr. R. M. "Ward, of Kansas City, Mo.; says: Thysicians generally do not prescribe proprietary preparations, but in the case of Castoria my experience, like that of many other physicians, ha3 taught me to make an exception. I prescribe your Castoria in my practice because I have found It to be a thoroughly reliable remedy for children's complaints. Any physician who has raised a family, as I have, will join me In heartiest recommendation cf Castoria," Genuine GASTOtDA always
Bears the
In Use For Over 30 Years. tmc ccNTAua eonnutv, rr awaaav mtr, nrw vork emr.
lloir Papa Encouraged. "What did papa say, George?" He paid it was too hot to talk nonsense." 'But did he know that you wanted to marry me?" "I I think he did." "And didn't' he encourage you to proceed?" "Yes, he held the door open for me." CI evcland Plain Dealer. One Distinction. Irate Caller Your paper accused me this morning of running over a man jivith my motorcycle. It isn't true. It Jivas an automobile. Editor Well, what's the difference? Irate Caller The difference? About $850!" DOVT JTECLECT THAT COrC.n It certainly racks your system and may run Into ixiu-thirir serious. Allen's Luna Balsam willcbi; it quickly and permanently. For aale at all druggists. Says Facta AV1U Aot 1.1. Sir Henry Hawkins, a brilliant advocate and one of England's greatest criminal judges, etpresses the following opinion in his recently published "Reminiscences:" "Let me say a word about circumstantial evidence. Some writers have spoken of it as a kind of 'dangerous Innovation' in our criminal procedure. It Is almost the only evidence that Is obtainable In all great crimes, and it 13 the best and most reliable. I have witnessed many great trials for murder, but do not remember one where there was an eyewitness to the deed. How is it possible, then, to bring home the charge to the culprit unless you rely on circumstantial evidence? "Circumstantial evidence is the evidence of circumstances facts that speak for themselves and that can not be contradicted. Circumstances have no motive to deceive, while human testimony Is too often the product of every kind of motive." lO 1Ü, llJJJ. la cold wofer kefler Ikaa a.y olker are. Yoacao fly. OMlO DVCCO., Qmincy. Illinois
Ihm
d V T
1
Signature of
lways Bought m MDW! Positively curd bf CARTER'S Tbey also reHeve Dl KITTLE tress trora Dyspepta. ! digestion and Too Deirtj Eating. A pertact reap edy lor Dimness, Nause. IVER PILLS. Drowsiness. Bad Tasta in the MotxUL Coated Tocgne, rain In tbe Bids TORPID LIVZIL Tao regulato de Bowels. lurely Vegetable. SHALL FILL SUJILLDOSL S LULL PRICE. CARTERS! &ffe.??L??L V?ITTLE I flVER Pias. ro-oinuio ui&r4.uuv REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. SUCKERS wear well and they keep you dry while you are wearing them 300 EVERYWHERE AJ.TOWCP Ca BOSTON. USA." TOWER CANADIAN Ca umpixo. Towohto. Cam. TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body ntiseptically clean aud free from unhealthy germ-life end disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations lone cannot do. a. germicidal, disin fecting a -a deodorizing toilet requisite of exceptional ex cellence and economy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At druf and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Largt- Trh! Simple WITH "HCaiTM (NO BCUTT" BOOK SCNT Mtt THE PAXTON TOILET CO.. Bostel Miss. Or. MclNTOSH celebrate Natural Uterine Supporter CItm ImniMIH, relief. Fold lijr kl ur 5l-i Instrument dta1ra ao4 le1iri( nifflM la I'mtPd Miw and anar. fatal. . prtne 11 ist aad particular niallod oa appiicat'n. THE HASTINGS A MclNTOSH TRUSS CO. IS Watnt SU, PHILADELPHIA, FA., tnanufartiTfrt ot tm and aota makvra of tha ivniitn ttinp4 Melntoah" Supporter. Paper-IIangcrs Puinters Tea can BTtly Incre yonr rmIr. rith o ei. ten titTextmeBt by trll.ug Alfri-ri IVata l'rli VaIlpapr. VVe mit in cikmI i i t in ruth TlcimtT, and to th flrt wortiiy applicant will 4 J-'IC I ll. by prej-wl 1 riptv, flf lane muH book ahowlnr a $ 'iSO. -KMM W al'.jjuprr M. la for -u.tonjer to aelwot tt ia. We C-r I iiwral r::ia to our representative-.. A"itr cju vV Ijr thbtjuik -et tt:e aeenc in yrnr virini'v fi r 11 1 I. IX rex! Tea ta Co., l-14ti abaah Ave., CliluJfO. ii recent 'rtro'.lon cf tli X. . O. P. Iffi:- Ktt.oi-'fu il"' la'Tf . una on..Ti:!'c!it lai.il i".it 11'' li.iptn tba'tnarkpt. PjiIt iM ..!. U. :e. r. t:: b r tad rants; !fa'il"a. :;ent. six '-. fn.it. -run ari ' v .!'.. Uoort railroad I a-mi i ('' d -I In. t'r i- r . ,-o f out lrrlpatl"H. t.':.I!-. N' ''.! cualiotri ' r : . :.M-4 'I of i.ayt'.jt I -.0. t!M"i"M i. yit i nstnl v.iiirl; iii '.fii'1 n, "1. yr.i '-.. nee ."..Oi.'-r. r the LVrert ltUil Act. r..t-vj ti--'i rur.e!:--. u1 1 Uil la:ij f.r eale ly ("vt-rv. I .n .ici.lrr lr I'vo la;.d MC. Ad.lr.-S3 II. '. HlflVV !.ll keraOu. CuUlori!. O.-eeon Ujr.. lit.NO, Ai'A FILES PÜY IF fU3Fj 4Vaa4 i.1u!a I !. RCA CO.. CEPT. B5 M1MKEAPCLIS. til '-2. LAImDS.- 1 !.! . 11 " v. ; 1 .':.: s ii.i-ii-rii.l f.ii iil-ln '1 : Ii 'livji-ivitm. r:ttti :n r.tnl p:;rticii !.!: !'. Mrs. Mannin;, ÖS Ü. Sol-v Ave. 'liii'iico. 111. ACKNT8. iiuu or women, to hari'IIe oir hoiisoliolj ertrialiit lUp a-llorh. Write loilay. llurJic Sfcialty Couipany. l'iU C. r.ini;liaiiiton. N. Y. F. W. N. U. No. 46 I9C9 When ssrltlnK to Adertlr pleaaa jou aavr tke Adr. Im this paper.
H I
glgjjj
