Plymouth Tribune, Volume 9, Number 12, Plymouth, Marshall County, 23 December 1909 — Page 7

VY5CC iCUrfc LsJvW tj UwHUVrv Cccoascs System Bispds ccl&s awd Headaches ä&o CowsWpoXxow; Acs TvaVwvaW', acAsXwty as aLaxavc. tux Jbuxx gta& (M. To Cz Ws bGtc5"ccx e$$ccs, always buy Ihe Ggwuxyac, manufactured by tKe CALIFORNIA Fic Syrup Co. SOLD BY ALL LEADING DrUJuCiSIS cne size only, regular pnee 50 per bottle. What Prof. Shaw, the VI!-Known Aericuiturisi. Says About It: "I wocld sooner t&iaa cnttle in Wc tern Canada than in the rem In-lt of the Unitfrt States. I crd Ii-t cutapor And ruinute letter lor the rnrptv-c. Voar piarket will in. Frove i.iftfr thnn yovr armors will produce t:o supplio. Wh st orn b grown tip to thefth rs tllol ( miles north -the Intimation! boun r 1. Voar vacant la will be taken at a r beyond r-rrtt conception. We- hnve enontli people in th Unitol Statt- nlone who want Lomes to ta53 up tills land." Kar!; 70,000 Americans wil I outer and make thflr homes tu Western Canitda yer. lllOt proalueeU another Inrsre crop of wheat, oat anl barley. In uiMUlon to which the entile tiports wi an Immense Item. Cattle misine. dninin, mix". 1 farming and grain growing- in t', e provlm-e of M.mlioba, Saskatchewan ami Allx-ila. I ree hoiueateart und pre-emption nrpaa. a we 1 us lands l.ei l by railway and lan leompnnie. will XroTlle horucs for million. Adaptable n-.ll. healthful climate, splendid M-tiool autl chun-he. and rood railways. For ettlers rates, descriptive literature "Last Best Vv"et," how to reach the country and other particulars, write to tsup't of Immicration. Ottawa. Canada, or to the follwtnj Canadian Gort Arentst W. n. Köpern. M Floor Traction-Terminal Huikllnz. IndtanapoH". In.L. and H. M. William. Koorn SO. law Building. Toledo, ubio. (Use address nearert you). Flcase say where you saw this artVf rtifement. tJT'ort Warna List mil immmz Positively cured hf these little Pills. They lso relieve Distress trora Dyspepsia, ladigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness. Bad Taste in the Houth. Coated Tonjjue. Pain In the Bide, TORPID LTVEE. TLey rtgnlaSa the Bowels. Purely Yeg-etable. SKILL FILL SMALL DOSE. SHALL PRICE. CARTERS Genuir.3 Must Bear FaSimfle Signature rilTTLE II I IVER Pias. J REFUSE SUBSTITUTES A DOSE OF is zs safe as it is effective. Guar anteed to contain no opiates. It is very palatable too children like it ConstipationNearly Every One GetS It The bowels show first sign of things going wrong. A Cascarel taken every night as needed keeps the bowels working naturally without grip, gripe and that upset sick feeling. Ten cent box. week's treatment. Ali dru? störe. Big-zest seller in thewor'.d na iliioa boxes a month. i J fmr your offlcm stationery. You can gt th paper and mnomlopmt to match. If U rmml tklnM. Tmkm mm er.,. USE PIUCE lO CENTS. PILES PAY IF CURED rKEC ks cios rii aaa riatsla Car. RE A CO.. DIPT. W, MII1EAP3L1S, Ulli. Bdonchial Troches Aa absolutely harmless remedy for Sore Throat, Hoarseness and Coughs. Civs faunsaUat rciUi ta Bronchial and Lung Affections. fifty years' reputation, rice, 25 cents. SO cents and $1.00 per box. Sample sent on request. JOHN t. PPOTN fc SON. rWon, M.

11

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CARTER'S I f IVER PILLS.

i CURE

Lotus do your - Printtr using - c i EagleLinen j

A Poor Weak Woman

As she is termed, will endure bravely and patiently agonies which a strong man would give way under. The fact is women are more patient than they ought to he under such troubles. Every woman ought to know that die may obtain the most experienced medical advice free of charge find in absolute confidence and privacy by writing to the World's Dispensary Medical Association, R. V. Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierco lias been chief consulting physician of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y., for many years and has had a wider practical experience

in the treatment of women's diseases than any other physician in this country. Ilia medicines are world-famous for their astonishing efficacy. The most perfect remedy ever devis:d for weak and deli cats women is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG, SICK WOMEN WELL. The many and varied symptoms of woman's peculiar ailments are fully set forth in Plain English in the People's Medical Adviser (IWM pages), a newly revised and up-to-date Edition of which, cloth-hound, will be mailed free on receipt of 31 one-cent stamps to pay cost of mailing only. Address as above.

SILHOUETTES OF WESTERN CANADA.

The man from Iowa began to talk land before the train was well out of the C. X. R. depot in Winnipeg. The talk began In rather wide circles. Tho rush to the land, the bumper crop, the system of summer fallowing pursued in the semi-arid districts, were all discussed, and then, with a sort of apologetic smile, the Iowa man said: 'I'm a bit interested In this country myself. Some of the men down hjme got a few sections up here along this line, and I'm going to have a look at i them. Xever been up in Canada be fore" (it is. curious how these midWestern Americans pronounce the name of the Dominion as if It was Can'dy"), "but If it looks good we will be up to stay next fall." "You see, its like this," said the man from Iowa, quite manifestly continuing an argument that had been j going on in his mind for some time, i "Back in our State land has become ! dear. Anybody wanting to sell can ; get $70 or $S0 an acre for it, and ev;ery farm that's offered is snapped up. In Saskatchewan we have just as good land that cost us $11 and $12, so that a man can take up five or six times as much there as in Iowa on the same In vestment of money. "It isn't the money, though, that brings most of us up from Iowa. I'm not sure that money would be enough. The 'invasion is a family affair. We have no chance of keeping our tons round us back home. They have to leave the farm and go into the big cities of the neighboring States to get ; work. To keep them on the farm and in touch with us. we come up hero and make little colonies with '.he children around us, on homesteads oc bought land. This makes it easier for the farmers back there la Ior.a to get land for the stay-at-homes. The families that come td Canada are kept together and the families that buy thy farms they leave are kept together, too. There won't be any slackening of the rush, either, for they still raisa big families back in Iowa," One could almost see the mental process of this typical American farmer in defending a step that meant a I new flag, a new allegiance, a new land, and new associates. To abandon "Old Glory" and the Declaration of Inde pendence for a good thing in cheap land would hardly be playing the game, but to go out Into Saskatchewan to "keep the family together" was another and a quite higher motive. Why seek too closely to analyze the reasons for the greatest land trek in the history of America? It is enough to know what the sons of the frontiersmen of Iowa, and Kansas, and Minnesota the best blood of the mid-West are pouring ino the Canadian West In an ever-increasing stream, and are 'earning that "God Save the King" and ,' My Country. 'Tis of Thee," are sung jto the same tune. Toronto (Ontario) J Globe. Sense and Senatblllt y. For some days the dining room had been disturbed by the invasion of the new boarder. She. was fat, fifty, and very sentimental, and her tender nature led her to whisper so many rapturous confidences in htr neighbor's ear that all the rest at the table felt uncomfortable, so uncomfortable, that one day after a harassed breakfast, the neighbor determined to make a struggle for liberty and general conversation. Her opportunity came that night at dinner. "Sweet Cowers of spring!" murmured the sentimentalist, apostrophizing the nodding daffodil centerpiece. "Aren't they dear? So full of poesy! And don't you think that we ought always to call them daffadowndillies Instead of daffodils?" she whispered. "Xo, I don't," answered the neighbor, uncompromisingly, and quite out loud. "Just think how awkward it would have been for Wordsworth if he'd had to write: And then my heart with pleasure fillies, And dances with the daffadowndillies." For once the sentimentalist was silenced. Don't Spoil Toor Clothes. Use Red Cross Ball Diu and keep tbera trhltt na snow. All grocers, 3 cents a pack--az. The Sate Course. Mrs. Wilson's husband was often obliged to travel on business, and frequently did not reach home till after j midnight. His .wife had been in the I habit of sleeping peacefully at these times, says a writer In the SpokesmanReview, but a number of burglaries in the neighborhood during one of Mr. Wilson's trlp3 had disturbed her calm. On one night of his return Mr. Wil- : son was stealing carefully up the front I stairs, so that his wife would not be awakened, when he heard her voice, high and strained. "I don't know whether you are my husband or a burglar," came the excited tones, "but I am going to be on the safe side and shoot, so if you are Henry you'd better get out of the way A LINEN'S LCM1 It A T.SAM nas been osed surreMfnlly for years frdeep-eated rough, colds and bronchitis. Krerybody should know about it. It is simple, safe and sure. A Joke of 31 ark Twain'). Probably few people are aware that the theatrical godfather of that famous actor, William Gillette, was Mark Twain, who was a fellow townsman and a friend of his father. Mark Twain, In referring to the matter, said that when he used his influence to get young Gillette on the stage he thought he wa3 playing a great Joke on the management, for he did not think Gillette had the slightest aptitude for acting. But it turned out to be no joke after all. "I don't know," said Mark Twain, "which I like better having Gillette make a tremendous success or seeing one of my jokes go wrong." 1:1 aTJ.-jCrti.Wa..

A I an tucft of n Silo. Silos have become one of the fixed appointments of successful dairy and stock farms where economy In feed is necessary to achieve profitable results. The expense of a silo often prevents its use by farmers who feel that they cannot spare the morsey for such an equipment. The intelligent feeder who has carefully investigated the advantages of a silo is the man loudest in its praise. It has become recognized that high class results in feeding live stock car.not be consummated without feeding silage. Deleterious results seldom follow feeding ensilage. If such results do follow it comes from either overfeeding or from spoiled silage. Silage Is recognized as of great economic value in feeding dairy cows. Where dairy farming U made a specialty but few dairies are operated without the use of silage. It is equally valuable as a ration for young cattle and ha3 decided merits when fed to steers being fattened for market. Sheep and swine thrive on milage. As a part of the ration of roughage it could te generally utilized for all classes of live stock. The daiiy cow could be fed forty pounds of silage daily, while thirty pounds would be a ration for a beef animal. A silo enables the farcner to economize In space in the storage of feed. It requires double the space to store the same feed nutriments in dry roughage as in silage. The silo can be constructed of re-enforced cement and become a permanent improvement that will cost nothing for maintenance. A silo enables the farmer to save his feed with the minimum loss of nutrients. Fed cured in the open air suffers a loss of about 25 per cent of nutriments, while ensilage lose3 about 10 per cent of nutriment. Silage has been comprehensively tested at nearly all the agricultural experiment stations with uniform favorable results. It insures . to the dairyman succulent feed at all times ati Important condition in milk production, as succulent feed is best for dairy cows. Goodall's Farmer. Fnrr.iliif? aw sv Dnalne. Science has shown that where there is a farm that does not pay, the faul: lies not in the land, but in the man who is in charge. Good or bad farming results from definite reasonä. Success results fro-m painstaking, reasonable operations; the application of practical knowledge which has been gained by studying the ' requirements which are known will bring success, j Lack of ambition results In indifferent work on the farm. Taking full advantage of the resources or any farm, and following intelligent, up-to-date methods of farming will in due time mean steady and often very ia;.id .improvement in yield of crops. In a sens-?, the resources of a farm Yary with locality; but in the main there are many identical conditions on very many farais. The farmer wh.i works to establish a well-set meadow, alms to get the hilly, washable, waste lands set in grass; utilizes the rocky rough land3 by setting cut fruit trees; ditches the low lands and reclaims the swamps; improves the stony fields by picking off the surface stoneä so that crops will take the places the stones occupied, uses some of the ways of taking advantage of the resources of a farm. The farmer who owns a big farm in very many instances doee not eure crops that average as well as the farmer whose farm rarely exceeds sixty or seventy acres. The reason Is the large farmer cannot, with the force he usually keeps, properly look after everything, seeing that seasonable work is done and that each farming operation is well attended to. Each of these Is a great success factor in farming. Hasty work means, invariably, some neglect or work indifferently done. Waste of Feeil. Wherever cattle or hogs are fed there is a great waste in valuable feed resulting from the feeding of too much corn, or feeding corn out of balance and proportion to protein or nitrogenous food. The tkne has come in the high price of corn to call a halt to this wasteful method of feeding. To fully utilize feed proper digestion must go on, and when corn is- fed out of balance with nitrogenous foods it Is not all digested and assimilated, i These are very Important facts, now that corn Is high in price and is likely to stay so. Wrhat, then. Is the food that must take the place of part of the corn fed In making pork? That is the question that should be carefully studied and heeded by farmers. Cheaper production through more economical use of our feeds Is an important matter and must be so recognized sooner or later by our farmers. Kansas Farmer. I'"oola of Rata. The brown rat is practically omnivorous. Its bill of fare includes seeds and grains of all kinds, flour, meal and food products made from them; fruits and garden vegetables, mushrooms, bark of growing trees, bulbs, roots, stems, leaves, and flowers of herbaceous plants, eggs, chicks, ducklings, young pigeons, young rabbits, milk, butter, cheese, fresh meat, carrion, .mice, fish, frogs and mussels. This great variety of food explains the case with which rats adapt themselves to almost any environment. Suvlnu; Halt the (''.terete. A farmer of Morgan County, 111., found that he could save more than half the usual amount of concrete in paving the lot around his horse barn, by uslns defective vitrified brick which he bought at tha factory at " cents per load. Laying the brick on edge, as for a pavement, and leaving large cracks between, the concrete was used simply to fill these cracks and all uneven places and make a level surface. The surface was left rough and this pavement has proven satisfactory after much wear. Ilrccil mill I'tMtl. To cheapen the cost of production is to increase the price of dairy products; and the only way to lower tho cost is to feed and reed Intelligently. The scrub bull Is the bane and curse of the dairy industry in Missouri and the Southwest, as it is everywhara

else. And It should also be remembered that the best cow in the world may be ruined as a milk producer by improper feeding. If you do not own a thoroughbred bull with good aiilk stock In his pedigree, buy one at once. Ciet out of the old rut, and start right. 'o to work now and build up your herd. The chances are that 50 per cent of those who read this paragraph have a lot of cows that are hardly paying for their keep. But, by breeding to the right sort of a sire, and keeping the heifer calves from only the best milkers, and feeding intelligently, any man who reads this can have a l?rd of S00-pound producing cows in five years. Missouri Dairyman.

The Profitable Dairy Cow. Some people seem to keep and milk cows simply because others keep them, without any regard to whether the cows are paying a profit. For a cowto be worth keeping she must pay a profit on tho feed and care given her. For her to be really worth while, she should produce 100 per cent more milk than her feed costs, including pasture, of course. It dees not cnatter so muh what breed a cow belong to. Simply because she is of Jersey or Holstein blood, is not positive proof that she 13 more than paying her way. A common cow may be doing better than she. The only way to find out what she is doing i.s to weigh and test her milk at regular and frequent intervals. Let her stand on her merits and not on her ancestry. One reason why some cows do not pay greater profit U that they are no! fed all the nutritious feed they will eat. This is especially the case with many farmers In winter, when pastures are dead. Many of them keep '.heir producing cows on half feed when they are not on pasture, and still expect the cows to make up the loss. If a cow is worth keeping at all she 13 worth feeding all she can be induced to eat. If it is not found profitable to purchase extra feeds so that the cows may have Ul that they will consume, then It Is best to keep only aa many cows as feed can be provided for on the farm. Make the cow produce all the mill? she can by good care and feed, and do not let her go dry until the time she is ready to turn dry. Keep the best heifers from the best cows. Journal of Agriculture. Corn II reedjnjf. The Illinois experiment station has just published the results of its efforts to breed corn for high and low protein content and for , high and low oil content. Ten generations of corn have t.een bred for these different purposes by selection of seed having the desired qualities. In the effort to increase the protein content the average has been changed from 10.V2 per cent to 14.26 per cent In the effort to decrease it from 10.92 per cent to 8.64 per cent. Individual ears have been found which contain as high as 17.79 per cent of protein and as low as 6.13 per cent, as high as 8.53 per cent of oil and as low as 1.60 per cent. But the high protein corn has been In every case less productive than any of the other three and in some cases decidedly so. It has also been less productive as a rule than corn grown for no particular purpose just corn. The conclusion is reached from some plots that, while this continued selection for a single purpose to the neglect of all other considerations has resulted in lower yields, yet this Is not a necessary result. In some cases high protein corn has yielded well as compared with standard varieties bred for no particular rurpose. Orchard Cultivation. Hoe the weeds and grass away from the trees in the orchard, and while you are hoeing the grass and weeds away, dig down into It and stir the soil for 2 or 3 feet around the base of each tree. Keeping the grass and weeds away will destroy nesting places for cnice and prevent them from girdling the trees. Digging into and turnlug up some of the surface soil will bring some Insect pests to light to be destroyed, and the stirring of the soil around the base of the tree will dc some good in the way of cultivation. A tew minutes thus spent to each tree may be the means of Its bearing an extra bushel of fruit this coming year. The more the orchard is cultivated and worked with the . more It will bear. Intensive orchard cultivation is imperative for the best results. Journal of Agriculture. reaches ami Their Qualities. Hale, the well known peach expert, says the white-fleshed peach Is coming to be in great demand wherever quality is sought for, and, as it Is more hardy than the yellow fleshed, it Is better for the grower in a cold climate He further says the Greensboro It the earliest good peach; Waddell re quires rich feeding and severe thinning; champion, the most deliciousflavored peach we have, requires severe thinning; belle of Georgia, good quality, handsome; Elberta, handsome, of inferior quality, but the best seller and a sure money-maker; Crosby, yellow-fleshed but hardy, can get goodsized fruit by high feeding and excessive thinning, has extra small pit, fine flavored flesh; Hill's Chili, late, but a fine keeper, needs excessive feeding and good thinning. Poultry 'otea. Fowls love to thrash out a bundle of wheat or oats, and It does one good to step around to the door of the poultry bouse and listen to the merry chatter while the fowls are digging In the straw. Some farmers neglect the 23 to 50 cents that the battening of cracks In the coop would cost, and each month feed a dollar's worth of extra corn la order to supply the animal heat needed. The answer to the question. Does winter poultry pay? depends in a large measure upon where your hens are roosting. If on the bare branches of a tree, on the northeast corner of tho barn, there can be no doubt about it. Scatter a little grain a-mong litter at noon, and give a full feed at night. What is meant by a full feed of grain is about a good handful for each fowi in the pen. A mixture of corn, wheat, oats and barley, equal parts by measurement, makes an excellent mixture for winter. Raise your chickens outdoors at all seasons of the year, give them every opportunity to get fresh air and sunshine. Keep them in small flocks until they roost regularly. Keep the roofs of all brooders and coops water tight; dampness Is fatal to chickens, old or young. If coops leak, cover with tar roofing or canvas painted with several coats of white lead. Farm Journal.

''Jt) I II l it

Raitiii Holl Cnke. Beat one cupful of sugar with the yolks of three eggs. Sift one cupful of flour with three level teaspoonfuls of baking powder and add to the sugar and egg, then fold in J.he stiffly beaten whites of the three eggs. Add a teaspoonful of lemon flavoring, and, last, three tablespoonfuls of boiling water. Beat well and pour Into a long shallow pan. Bake in a moderate oven. Turn on to a cake rack and spread at once with a mixture n ndofrom the whites of two eg.s beaten with one cupful of powdered sugar and one cupful of chopped raisin . Ml ii cp Pit. ' Take five pounds of beef, boil, chop fine with three pound? of suet; seed four pounds of raisins, wash lour pounds of currants, blue a pound of citron, chop four quarts of apple:-?. Put in a saucepan with cinnamon, cloves, ginger, nutmeg, the juice of two lemons, one teaspoon of popp? and two pounds of sugar. Four over all a quart of cider, one pint of molasses and a teacup of melted butter. Bake In a rich crust without tops, then bake a crust of puff paste and lay on. Ileef Oll res. Cut a veryhai flank or round steak into strips two Inches wide and four inches long. Add to one cupful of bread crumbs a teaspoonful cf sali, a tablespoonful of chopped parsley, a tallespoonful of chopped onions, a saltspoonful of pepper and a tablespoonful of melted butter. Spread this over the strips of beef, roll ant tie them tightly. Brown them in suet and make a sauce precisely the same as for a brown stew. Cook them slowly for one hour and a half. Cnnnelon of Reef. Two pound3 of round or flank steak put through a meat mincer; then add to it one-third cup soft bread crumb.-, one tablespoonful minced parsley, one level teaspoonful salt, one teaspoonful pepper, on 3 beaten egg; mix well, then shape into a roll; lay in pan and bake forty minutes; basts frequently with hot water and salt pork drippings. Serve on hot dish with tomato or mushroom sauce. Garnish with latticed cucumbers, lemons and parsley. Svveeilirend Croquette. Parboil the sweetbreads and mince them very ft no, season with popper and salt, adding some powdered mace or cayenne, a grat'ag of nutmeg and a little lemon juice. Mix With finely grated bread crumbs, moisten with cream, and shape them Into small cones. Dip into beaten egg. to.-3 in bread crunibä and fry until of a golden brown in deep boiling fat. Garnish with parsley and slices of lemon. Panipkln Pie. Pare and stew pumpkin until dry. Sift through a colander, and to one cup of . pumpkin add one egg. three tablespoons of molasses, a pinch of salt, one rounding tablespoon of sugar, one level teaspoon of ginger or cinnamon, and two cup3 of milk. Line a pie plate with crust and make a rim. Fill with the pumpkin and bake slowly. Cream of Potato Soup. Cut Into small pieces five or six potatoes and boil until tender In salted water. Mash through a sieve, and add the pulp to three pints of hot milk slightly thickened with flour. and butier, and nicely seasoned with white pepper and salt. A little chopped parsley may be sprinkled upon each plate before serving. Chicken Soup with. Rice. The chicken should bo boiled until tender and then taken out, boned and cooled, after which tbe meat may be cut into dice and cooked in the stock again, with the addition of rice. The rice should be carefully prepared in order that the grains appear whole and separate. Household Hints. If the lid Is left off cabbage when cooking it will keev its color better. When boiling fresh potatoes or pea3 try a sprig of min; in the water. It gives a delicious flavor. Boiled suet puddings will have an added nutriment If they are mixed with milk, or milk and water. Try adding a leaf of spinach to tho water in which peas are boiled if you wish them to keep a good color. If a turkey or chicken is rubbed Inside and out with lemon it will make the meat white, juicy and tender. A pinch of soda in the water in which green vegetables, peas, string beans and cabbage are boiled will keep the color. Do not put salt in the water In which peas are cooked, as it causes the outer skin to crack. Leave lid o3 saucepan. A pinch of soda added to the boiling water in which cabbage or cauliflower is cooked improves the flavor of the vegetable. Xever soak rice or macaroni before cooking. Well wash the former, but not the latter, and place both in boiling water to cook. To keep silver from tarnishing unpacked away make small cotton Lu . and fill with camphor gum. Place them among the silver. Soak all cooking utensils in warm water before you sit down to dinner and you will be surprised how much easier they will wash. In preparing cabbage wash it well In salted water, cold, then cook in boiling water to which a tablespoonful of salt to the half gallon has been added. Milk may be kept from scorching, pay a gocd cook, if the pan in wh!c!i it u: to bo cooked is rinsed thorough i in cold water before the milk is poured in. It is a good plan to always save tumblers which have contained sliced bacon or dried beef. They take up little space in the refrigerator and are nice to keep left-overs in. Wash your cut glass, dry with a towel, place the piece on a 'loth and cover with whiting and ammonia. made into a liquid polish. Allow it to äry, then rub the cut work vigorously with a soft bristle brush. This cleans cwry crevice and imparts a beautiful luster to dull-looking cut glass.

PROF. MUNYON'S PIIILAN THROP Y

G3vnir to the ntion a Prise Thfct Money Cannot Iluy. would rather preserve the health of nation than to be its ruler." liunyon. This motto, written by Prof. Munyon about sixteen years ago, was the real cornerstone of his medicine business. He felt that the people of the nation were neglecting their health owing to lack of money. With the one thought in view of helping humanity, he started in the medicine business, paying large sums of money to eminent specialists for known and tried formulas that were known to have been successful in curing diseases. After carefully compounding these formulas and putting them up in a marketable condition, he offered them to the public for a few pennies, easily within the reach of the poorest family. He hired eminent specialists at large salaries and offered their services absolutely free to the public to diagnose their cases and advise them what remedies to take. After giving the public all these benefits he was still unsatisfied and offered -further to those who were not in reach of the offices which he established throughout the 'country; he advertised, asking them to write to his specialists i'or free medical, examination, and to-day Prof. Munyon is still following out this policy, and whenever he hears of a new drug or a new formula that is more effective than those that he is at the time compounding, he purchases them regardless of cost. Prof. Munyon puts up a separate cure for almost every ill. and these remedies can be had at all druggists, mostly 25 cents a bottle. In taking these remedies, you are taking what might be called a sure thing, for he guarantees them to produce satisfactory results or he will refund your money. This is a remarkable man and a remarkable institution, manifestly fair to all, and a firm that we do not hesitate to recommend to our readers. Prof. Munyon's faldress is 52d and Jefferson streets, Philadelphia, Pa. ENGLISH HALF-PENNY PAPEU. , Dritlak Writer Object to a Silly anil Flippant Pre. They are so silly, so flippant without being funny, so solemn without teing serious, and withal so dull, eays Edwin Pugh In London T. P.'s Weekly. The special articles by ac credited experts, which they are in, the habit of publishing occasionally, are always too short to deal adequate ly with their subject, while the clever writers of the lighter articles seem always to be too heavily obsessed by the feeling that they mu?t be topical at any cost to do themselves justice, And this rage for topicality is yet an other irritating fault in itself. I know that the staple of a newspaper's contents should be news; neverthei less, I cannot see why one particular event even if It be the birth of a for eign princess should crowd out o? whittle down all other items of news; and this not always for a day or twot but sometimes for weeks on end. 1 can Imagine that it is not easy ta edit a newspaper, and I suppose that is why they arc not edited, but in their general policy left to drift before the cross-winds of their readers fickle favor. At the same time, I remember that the English press was ence the most potent force in our national life, that it Is to-day more powerful than it has ever been and I am sorry for the nation if it has got the press It deserves. Clip This) Ont. At tbe first sign of rheumatic pains or backache, or a feeling of being generally run down and weakened, the following simple prescription should be used: "One ounce compound syrup Sarsaparilla; one ounce Torls compound; half pint high grade whiskey. Mix them and lake a tablespoohfai before each meal and at bed time. The bottle must be well shaken each time. Any druggist has these ingredient3 or he will get them from his wholesale house. A Houseful ot Reasons. Bishop Mallalieu, ot the Methodl3t Episcopal Church, always stood as a strong opponent to the inconsiderable, and often inconsistent salaries that are paid the pastor by some congregations amply able to pay more liberally. He told the following personal reminiscence at a recent conference: "I once knew an excellent young man who married shortly after he entered the ministry. He was on a small salary, but he seemed contented and happy. "Some twelve or fifteen years went by after I last met him, and I had rather lost sight of him forgotten him, as we will do sometimes when, unexpectedly, I met him in Boston, well dressed, but not at all clerically. "We shook hands. He said he was doing excellently. '"What church?' I asked. " 'Oh said he, 'no church the wholesale hat business.' 1 "'But why did you leave the church?' I inquired, solicitously. " 'For seven reasons, he replied. "'And what were they?' said I. "'A wife, he answered, and( six children.' " Success Magazine. It You Are a Trifle Sensltlr. about the size of your shoes, many people wear smaller shoes y using Allen's FootEase, the Antiseptic Powder to hake into the shoes. It cures Tired, Swollen, Aching Feet and gives rest and comfort. Just the thing for patent leather shoes. Sold everywhere, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted Le Roy, N. Y. A Sybarite. In the gray light of early morning the traveler in Scotland faced the night clerk resolutely. "You give me the worst bed in the inn!" he began, indignation in his voice and eyes. "If you don't change me before to-night, I shall look up other lodgings." "There is no difference In the beds, sir," the clerk replied, respectfully. The traveler smiled ironically. "If that is so," he said, "perhaps you wouldn't mind giving me the room on the left of mine." "It is occupied, sir." "I know it is. By a man who snored all night, and was still at it ten minutes ago. His bed must bo better than mine, or he couldn't sleep at a maximum capacity of sound eight hours cn a stretch." "The beds are all alike sir. That man has been here before, and he always sleeps on the floor, sir." A Trep Ahead. They were about to open the Panama canal in due form. "What aro we waiting for?" asked the man who was to deliver the oration. "We are waiting," answered the master of ceremonies in a husky whisper, "to see if we can't scare up a few American built ships to go through first!" Chicago Tribune. PUTNAM

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OLD AXXE EOYALL. She Was Once One of the Qnalftt Characters of Washlugtoa. Old, queer, sharp-tongued Anne Royall, traveler, editress and Interviewer, was for many years a familiar Ugure In the streets of Washington, trotting Indomitably about her business, very poor, very persistent, often troublesome, often rebuffed, but with qualities of honesty and courage to be respected. There is given in the story of her life by Sarah Harvey Porter a delightful glimpse of her visit to ex-President Madison and his wife. The contrast between the gracious mature beauty of charming Dolly Madison, elegant in her rustling black silk, and the funny little limping, shabby figure in antiquated skirts and ridiculous wadded bonnet, could scarcely have been enhanced. ' As usual, old Anne Royall had tramped to save carriage hire ; as usual, her errand, probably none too welcome to her hosts, was to secure an interview and use a descriptive background. But Dolly Madison saw in the absurd, inquisitive, bespattered person before her neither the reporter nor the guy r only an rged and weary woman who was her guest. She hurried, to bring her a glass of water, then quite simply, stooped and retied her loosened shoe laces and wiped the Virginia mud from the tired old feet. It is small wonder that Mrs. Royall's clothes were queer. She was scarcely of a bent of mind frivolously to pursue the fashions had she had the time and money, but she had neither. Her paper, the Huntress, of which she was owner, editor and chief reporter, once published conspicuously on the editorial page a notice which is perhaps unique in Journalism: "Xo paper will be issued from this office this week. We really mast take one week once In ten years to fix up our wardrobe, which is getting shabby. Our next issue will welcome Congress." lira. WlQslow's Soothlaa; Syrsp for Children teething; 60ftens the gums, reduces Inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic IS cents a bottle. En Familie. Willie, a little country boy, 5 years of age, was taken one Sunday night to a large city church, where he saw for the first time a vested choir. To his mother's surprise and gratification, he not only kept wide awake, but seemed greatly Interested in every part of the service. At its close he turned to her and said, "I like this church, it is so nice to watch tha preacher when he comes out witn all his wives in their nightgowns." Har per's Magazine. St. Elmo's Fire. St. Elmo's fire is a peculiar condi tion of low cleitric intensity In the atmosphere, such as often occurs in fair weather, when by supposed in- j duction and Insulation, pointed objects ! projecting high above surrounding objects become surcharged with the electric fluid and a brush discharge takes place, without audible noise, but wiiii a feeble luminous glow. It has teen observed on spires, on the masts and spars of ships.

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11 Set SeusILIe Fashion. Queen Alexandra of England Is cred ited with having been the means of emancipating English and American children from cnany foolish and uncomfortable fashions. At the time cf her marriage to the heir of the Fngllsh throne children in fashionable families were rarely seen outside of their nurseries, but when the yoang Danish princess began to keep her children about her and to have her picture taken holding thc-m in her arms the fashion changed and devoted , motherhood became the hallmark of American and English smartnesä. She also had her sons clothed in comfortable sailor suits and her two daughters, the present Queon of Norway and the Princess Victoria, were allowed to wear the loose woolen jerseys which are now so much worn by Echoolglrls. Good Housekeepers TJse the Det. That's why ther nte Red Cross Bail Blue. At leading" grocers. S cents. IVo Trouble Otbervrlse. Professor (ot English literature) At times you find it difflci It, I dare say, to comprehend the involved style of Mr. James. Miss de Muir O. no, professor; I never have any difficulty In understanding him. The only trouble I have Is to find out what he is driving at FASHION HINTS J S.mrt little frocks for semi-dressy oc casions are numerous and the ve'y pcpulat top coat inakrs it possible to wear thera tight along through the winter. Homespun is a tood material for the more tailored dresses, but silky crepes ind satins are adorable for the much kilted ones, and Irith or cluoy lace makes a charming neck finish. F. W. N. U. No. 52 19C3 Wbem sarltlstu to Advertisers pleaae say rsi mtt the Adv. ta tats paper.

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