Plymouth Tribune, Volume 9, Number 19, Plymouth, Marshall County, 10 February 1910 — Page 7
If you had positive proof that a certain remedy for female ills had made many remarkable cures, would you not feel like trying it? If during the last thirty years we have not succeeded in convincing every fair-minded woman that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has cured thousands and thousands of women of the ills peculiar to their sex, then we long for an opportunity to do so by direct correspondence. Meanwhile read the following letters which we guarantee to be genuine and truthful. Hudson, Ohio. " J suffered for ä loiijr time from a weakness, inflammation,. dreadful pains each month and suppression. I liatl been doctoring .and receiving only temporary relief, when a friend advised me to take Lydia IL linkliams Vegetable Compound. I did so, and Vixote to you for advice. I have faithfully followed your directions and now. after taking only live bottles of the Vegetable Compound. I have every reason to believe I am a well woman. I pivo you full permission to use my testimonial." Mrs. Lena Carniocino, Hudson, Ohio. lt. F. 1. No. 7.
St. Kesris Falls, X. Y. "Two years a?o I was so had that I had to take to my bed every month, and it would last from two to three weeks. I wrote to you forndvieeand took Lydia LMMukliam's Vegetable Compound in dry form. I am happy to say that I am cured, thanks to your medicine and food advice. You may use my letter for the jrootl of others." 31rs. J. II. Iircycre, St. lJcjris Falls Y. There is absolutely no doubt about the
ability of this I the roots and female diseases. We possess enough to convince the most
Iti . ILL)
For SO years Lydia Tl. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for female ills. No sick woman docs justice to herself who will not try this famous medicine. Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and has thousands of cures to its credit. p 3 Irs. Pinkham invites all sick women I r to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health free of charge. Address Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, 3Iass.
FASHION HINTS Lor.glins and extreme simplicity make this charming gown of chiffon velvet. A heavy silk mesh insertion four inches wide, is the only trimming used. An Eirbange of Courtesies. A couple of men Rot into a warm arejement and finally came to blows. Hfter the fracas a spectator remarked: "A soft answer turneth away wrath, and vice versa. "We should all keep pclite tongues In our heads. Only last night I heard a very fat man say with A loud laugh to a bow-legged friend: "Jim, old man, you look as if you'd been riding a barrel!' "'And you,' snapped Jim sourly, look as if you'd swallowed one.' " A good honet remedy for Rheumatism, Neuralgia and Sere Hiroat U Hamlini Wizard Oil. Nothing will so quickly drive out all pain and inflammation. Seed Planted In Iffshells. Fill half aa eggshell with good rich earth, stick ia a seed or two, stand the shell up in a box. of earth, keep it warm and moist,. and then, when you think you can trust the weather out of doors and the seeds have sprouted, you knock the shell off and put the little ball of earth into Mother Earth, and there you are. Not a root has been disturbed, and If you choose a favorable time for transplanting there will not be a wilted leaf to retard the growing- cf the plant. Ao Apologie to Offer. Stranger (in Drearyhurst) You people here don't clean the snow off your sidewalks very well, do you? Uncle Welby Gosh No, sir. It fcivethe sidewalks an' we b'lleve in conaervin our resources. See anything else you don't like, mister? Do You Enjoy
If you do, we have nothing to say, but if you are afflicted with any of the diseases of women, and want relief, write us for a sample of PISO'S TABLETS. They are an ideal home treatment, clean and easy to use, and being applied directly to the diseased surface, the beneficial results are immediately felt. We will send you a week's treatment free,, if you will write-at once.
For sale by all druggists. Trial package and a treatise entitled "Causes of Diseases in Women" sent free on receipt of accompanying coupon. Write your name and address plainly and address THE PISO COMPANY, DEPT. B., WARREN. PA.
Cl IDCC CONSTIPATION, BILIOUSNESS. RHEUM
GET A 25c BOX ALL
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grand old remedy, made from
herbs of our fields, to cure volumes of proof of this fact, skeptical. Skeleton In the Closet. The original of the singular saying 'A skeleton ia tho closet." which is found in almost every language in Europe, is found in one of those curious ;ollections of stories that have come 3cvn from the middle ages. In one of these collections, compiled by an unknown hand about the middle of the tenth century, there is a story of a wealthy lady who, having a secret ?rief, confided it to a friend who was apparently a perfectly happy woman. She was the wife of a nobleman who :ived in his castle in the south of France. She and her husband were jutwardly on the möst loving terms. S'ot a care cloud seemed to cast a ihadow on her path. After hearing the story of her aflicted friend the noble lady took her ?y the hand and led her to a secret hamber adjoining her bedroom, there pened the door of a closet and exrosed a skeleton. "Know, my friend." ike said, "no one is happy. , Every lay I am forced by my husband to liss this grinning death head, which s that of a gentleman who was my lusband's rival and whom I would aave married had r not my parents Killed otherwise." PILKS CIRCO IX TO 14 IJ.YS. PAZO OINTMENT is eniaranteed to cure any rase of Itching. Llind. lileeding- or Protruding Tiles in 6 to 14 dus or money refunded. ' 50c It Save Them. The American has the saving grace of humor. Seldom in the real pinch does it fail to come to the uppermost and ta gets a good laugh out of what men born under other skies would construe as nothing else than a fight. The "head, gent" of a t. t. ( t. show playing at Holten recently handed out a warm one to the audience. There was so much going on in Ilolton that night that the theatrical business suffered, but the aforesaid "gent" seemed to think that the people did not appreciate the high-class histrionic art served up by the company. He frankly stated in a curtain speech that la his opinion, the plays presented were too refined for Holton. "nut." he added, "we will try to get down to your level by presenting 'The Whole Dam Family which does not contain a sensible line. I think this play will appeal to you." "The audience," says Frank Jarrell, In telling the matter, "instead of getting mad and lynching the actor, saw the funny side of the case and laughed long and loud at him. He didn't say any rnore." Kansas City Journal. WHEN YOUR JOINTS ARE STIFF and in dm-leu sore from cold, rheumatism or nrnrsl1; wtien yon klip. Mratn or bruise yourvlf lit rrrrv Dar is Patnkilli r. The home remedy 70 year. Let lllm Oat. Mrs. Nagger Oh, James, how p.wkward! Mr. Smith has come, and now we shall be thirteen at table. Mr. Nagger What then? Mrs. Nagger '(with a shriek) Why, one of us will die before the year is out! Mr. Nagger (brutally) Never mind; I'm tough. London Pick-Me-Up. Poor Health?
Name Post Office
ATI SM, STOMACH and LIVER COMPLAINT
EASYSURE TO ACT PILLS FOR LIVER ILLS MCDIflNC CO.. ST. LOUIS, MO.
VraV-
To Mnke l'nrnt inokrhonf. What I have found to be a good smokehouse for curing 7." to 100 hams should be about 12x14 feet. Build a good, strong frame and fill the space between tbo siding and ceiling with soft brick, writes A. C. Wharton in American Agriculturist. This will make your house cooler in summer and will keep the temperature more even In winter. Cover with shingles. A good solid clay Moor will do very frb box i I CONCRETE FLOOR ooor if.OOR CK SMOKFirOfSK. well, but a tisht riank fl nor is better, but best of all Is a good roilcrete floor. In the center of the floor there should be a firebox built of brick; this is about 12xlS inches inside measurement and 12 inches deep. When curing buWd your fire in this and cover with a piece of perforated sheet iron. The house should be eight feet high at the corners and left open to the comb, the inside of the rafters preferably ceiled. Place 2xS joists two feet apart on the plates, and 2 feet above these put In another set of joists on the rafters; these can be 2x6. and In both sets of joists which will be used to hang your hams place iron meat hooks two feet apart and two inches from the lower part of the joists. These hooks can be made of one-quarter inch rod iron and should be long enough to let. the meat hang clear of the joists. A window should be made in one end of the house to give light when 1BO.NT VIEW. needed, and this fitted with a tight shutter, as we do not want much air and sunshine to strike meat before or after curing. Culture of the Orchard. Cultivation of the orchard is mainly fcr conserving soil moisture. If cultivation is begun early in the season and continued until midsummer, growth of wood will be stimulated andv1 fruit developed. Less moisture in late summer and early fall is desired, so that wood will properly develop and harden to be able to stand the cold of the folowlng winter. Arrange to cultivate the orchard early in the summer and have the soil in good fix for sowing to rye or other cover crop toward the last of summer. The cover crop will afford some good winter pasture and will keep hilly land from washing away. Juriirlncr AVorth of Farm. The best time of the year to look over a farm for the purpose of buying is in the summer. Just before the binders get to worc. The good and poor places will show up then as at no other time, and. If the season prior to that time has been an average one, the crop will be a fair Index of the value of the land. The common practice of going farm hunting just after the spring's work is over has little to commend it. save the Inconsiderable, matter of time saved. The poorest time In the whole year to pick out a farm is when it Is covered with drifts of snow. Control of an Joe Sonle. Although the San Jose scale is a thing to be avoided, it Is not dreaded so much as it used to be. The lime sulphur wash will prevent the disease from spreading. It Is a cheap wash for small trees, but quite expensive for large trees, but it pays. Spraying, cultivation, pruning and care of any crop, if properly done, are to a certain extent expensive and troublesome, but they pay in the end in the quantity and perfectness of the fruit. Filling: ""ashy IMnee. If there is no other trash on the farm for filling washy places In the field3 straw manure from the statles is excellent. The straw will fill Lie places and catch and hold all of the soil that washes Into them. The manure In the straw will help to make the ground more productive when it 13 again cultivated. Never plow In a gully with fresh dirt without some trashy and brushy filling to hold it and catch more. Cur runt and Gooseberries. Gooseberries and currants ara planted about three feet apart. They should be cultivated and must be kept free from weeds. Currant worms, if they make their appearance, can be kept down by spraying or sprinkling a solution of one ounce of white hellebore to three gallons of water. The plants should be sprinkled two or three times in the spring. Thin Sol in Fail ure. Never let the sod get thin on the pasture land, for this always means the decrease of the root systems of the plant3 and a decrease in their ability to penetrate the soil in search of plant food. When .cod becomes so thin that the hoof of the animal will break through it in wet weather, it baa reached a state of exhaustion that requires attention. lrcnrln Corn Srnl Beil. It is a good rule in plowing never to leave the corn fiele cither at noor or at night without first harroviü the ground that has ieen plowed. t
Ar JOIST AND MOCK8 fl J J J J Tlf I I 1 00 I DOOR
Spring plowing Is often abused by turning the clods up to the sun a.nd dry wind to Lake and dry. and depending upon a shower to mellow the ground before planting:. No ground is really properly prepared as a seed bed for corn without the use of the disc. A poorly prepared seed bed means a poor stand and an uneven growth. Such corn suffers from drought and infects.
Corn C'nt for SllajiC Corn of any variety is at its best for feeding or silage as it comes from the field when about half of the ears are just past the age for table use commonly called roasting ear stage and the lower leaves on the 6talk are beginning to dry out. says Hoard's Dairyman. For soiling purposes, it is impracticable to have the crop at its very best for any considerable time. Commence to cut a few days before it reaches its maximum value and continue after this stage is passed. Experiments appear to have demonstrated that for fodder the largest amount oi' nutriment per acre is obtained by planting in continuous rows and so thick that the tendency to form ears will be much lessened. The yield per aero depends so much upon the variety and the soil and care In planting and cultivating that no satisTactory estimate of the average can b? given. There is almost no limit to the amount that may be fed. provided one commences with a limited amount and increases gradually up to the limit of each cow's appetite, but probably thirty to forty pounds a day is about as much as It would usually be profitable to feed. Sltff 'I'oriKiir for Sl-1. This is a very great improvement over the old way of having the tongue mortised into a roller which would turn and when the team would try to hold back going down hill the tongue would fly up, sometimes clear over their heads, and prove to be of very little account. Many people, says a writer, do not know of any better way yet, so I will try to show you a better way, a way that takes the weight off the horses' necks and at the same time holds the tongue rigid when going down hill. First get a nice straight locust sapling for a tongue, one having a natural fork at the end for the neck yoke, as shown. Have your blacksmith make two loops from an old wagon tire as seen at A, with half Inch holes and bolts to attach them to tho two forward cross-pieces of sled, holes being bored in the cross-pieces to match holes in irons. The tongue is then notched a little to receive the cross-pieces. How Often to 3111k. Most farmers and dairymen milk their cows only twice a day, and that la right. Sometimes a fresh cow needs to have an excess of milk drawn between times in order to prevent congestion and fever, but not for a long period. Some cows again have leaking teats, which waste the milk if not relieved three or four times a day, but such cows are a nuisance and should be disposed of. To milk twice a day Is enough as a general rule. To milk three times a day does not seem to bring more milk, though some people have thought so and acted on that supposition. Keeping Cellars In Order. Very frequently the cellar is lacking In conveniences. This should not be so; there ought to he a cement floor, bins for potatoes n m 111-t-jÄ' cles. Here Is a good fS rack. Take a post 6 inches square; on this nail cleats, 1 Inch tMi-V an1 11' hCfS inches wide, In pairs, mat is, one on the north side, one on economizes space the south side exactly even, and just above these one on east and one on west, leaving 4 inches between each two pairs, and have them long enough to hold milk pans at each end. To use for p'ates, cans, etc., fasten some boards on for shelves. Cor. Farm and Home. t ('renin Heat Cooled at Once. To cool the cream quickly and thoroughly just as soon as the separating Is finished Is of more Importance than anything else at that particular time. The pigs and calves can wait for their skim milk, but bacteria in the cream wait for nothing until the temperature favorable to their growth is reduced. Tlle-Ilralned Soll. Tile-drained soil is more profitable, being more quickly gotten Into condition for crops and Insuring a better condition all through the growing season. It Is also true that crops In drained soil do not suffer as much from drought as do crops in undrained soil. Iolntr In Farm Management. The wise farmer wants assurance on the soil of any land that he may contemplate buying. Clover alone can not Indefinitely maintain the land. A rotation will not enable us to maintain the fertility of the soil. Acidity may be overcome by applying from 500 to 1,000 pounds of lime per acre, or by the use of floats or grounds shells. There Is much of value written these days about work on the farm which will never benefit some farmers, because they have the notion that they are too busy to read. No other people set so high a value on good soli as the Hollanders, and we are learning that not many acres, but rich ones, make the profitable farm. The roots of the cowpea ponetrat rather deeply Into the pubsoll and enable the plant to feed upon the mineral food that Is not readily extracted by other crops. Do not sow alfalfa on a foul field; money Is lost, time and patience worn out and the crop of alfalfa will be disappointing. Alfalfa should be sown on land thoroughly prepared for It and lu a clean seed bed. It Is the wise farmer who feeds all he raises and then buys some from his neighbors to faed. The farmer ho carries such an amount of llv ock will be constantly Improving hi. and and making it more productive.
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mam l.c:non Crura rd Tie. Two eggs, one cup of granulated sugar, one cup of water, one tablespoonful of butter, one tablespoonful of cornstarch dissolved in water, one lemon. Grate the rind, then peel off the thick, white skin and grate the rest of the lemon, being careful to remove ; the seeds. Save out one of the whites and beat to a stiff froth with a tablespoonful of sugar; put this on the top after it is baked and return to the oven until it is a delicate brown. Cranberry Sherbet. Wash a quart of cranberries and put them, still wet, into a double boiler. Add no water, but cover closely and steam until tender and broken to pieces. Take from the fire and press out all the juice by putting the berries into a vegetable press. Add to the juice an equal amount of cold water and stir in enough sugar to make as sweet as desired. Flavor with the juice of a lemon, pour through a sieve and freeze. Lajer I'm it Cake. One cup sugar, half cup . butter creamed, yoke of two eggs, two cup? prepared fiour, one and one-half cups milk, flavor with orange extract and bake in three layers; make a fruit filling of the whites of two eggs, one cup of chopped and seeded raisins, two chopped figs, half a cup of walnut meats, six chopped dates and one cup confectioners" sugar, mix and spread between the plain layers. French Holl. Sift one pound of flower and ru into it to ounces of butter. Beat three eggs very light; add a tablespoonful of strong yeast and an even teaspoonful of salt. Cover the dough and set It near the fire to rise. It should bs light In an 'lour. Put it on a paste board and divide into small rolls o: found cakes. Iay them in a bakingpan and bake in a quick oven. Oyster Fritters. To make oyster fritters, beat twe eggs very light and stir into their a cupful of milk, two cupfuls of flou: and salt to taste. When the mixture is perfectly smooth, add two dozen oysters and half a teaspoonful of baking powder. Drop the batter by the table spoonful into hot fat in a frying pan turn when browned on one side and brown, on the other. Serve very hot. Ilaeon vrith Scrambled Illee. Fry as much bacon as needed, so it will be crisp and attractive; be careful not to scorch it. Arrange the slices around the edge of a platter. Leave half of the fat in the frying pan ami add two cupfuls of cold boiled rice Into which three eggs have been stirred. Stir the rice until it becomes hot, then heap It in the center of the platter. Spleed Crnbapple Jelly. With crabapples still on hand a nice spiced jelly can be made to serve with meats. Cook the apples without peeling until tender. Strain through a jelly bag, add vinegar to taste with clove3 and cinnamon. Cook twenty minutes, add an equal quantity of sugar that has been heated in the oven, boil five minutes, skim and turn In glasses. Sour 3111k HUcnlt. Sift a quart of flour with a teaspoonful of salt and a teaspoonful of baking soda. Chop Into this dry mixture a piece of Dutter or lard the size of a walnut, add enough sour or buttermilk to make a dough of the consistency of pastry. Do not handle, but roll out quickly and lightly; cut Into rounds and bake in a quick oven. Mutton II roth. When carefully, prepared this in a very good and nourishing soup. Tho stock is made with neck, breasl or shoulder pieces. When the broth is ready the mutton Is boned and tho meat cut into dice. Additional flavor is given to the broth by srcall cubes of carrots and turnips, some barley, celery, leeks and parsley. French Muatr.rd. Put into a small bowl three heaping teaspoonfuls of ground mustard, two teaspoonfuls of fiour, one-half teaspoonful each of sugar and salt, a small pinch of cayenne pepper and enough boiling water to make a very thick paste. When cool, thin to suit tha taste with vinegar. 3luenronl and 31 ushroonm. Break the contents of a small box of macaroni into pieces and boil until soft. Have 'ready a enp of stewed mushrooms and a cup of grated cheese. Put macaroni, cheese and mushrooms in layers in a buttered baking dist and bake until brown. Cream of Tomato Soup. Stew gently for about five minuto the contents of one can of tomatoea. Press through a fine sieve and adc, one quart of hot milk flavored with a few whole cloves. Season with salt and pepper and serve hot with cube of toasted bread. , Hints About the House. Honey should be kept in the dark of it will granulate. Cream cheese mixed with canned currants or jellied cranberries makes a good sandwich filling. Japanned trays should be cleaned with a little sweet oil and then polished with a spft cloth. Thin brown bread and butter sandwiches are the most appetizing accompaniment for fish salad of any sort. A spoonful of oxgall to a gallon of water will set the colors of almost any good3 soaked in it previous ' to washing. To clean old glass pour strong ammonia on it, scrub well with a brush and rinse in clean water. Dry and polish and it will then appear as new. Small cold cream jars and the like. scalded, make excellent contalntis .or jelly which at some time or other you will desire to place in a lunch basket. If you are beginning to have trouble with your feet, bathe them often, powder them freely, rub alcohol on them occasionally give them careful attention until you discover the sort of treatment they respond to. Ink stains may be soaked out in rome milk. If any trace of the stain -hould still be left, rinse the garments ia a weak solution of chloride of lime, !vays supposing that the garment i white, for the lime is a bleaching äsen
rime
Rair nezema On ITn:?c. "1 had eczema on my hands fcr ten years. I had three good doctors but none of them did any good. I then as?d one box of Culicura Ointment vnd three bottles of Cuticura Resolvent and was completely cured. My hands were raw all ever, inside and out, and ihe eczema was spreading all over my body and limbs. Before I had used one bottle, together with the Cuticura Ointment, ray sores were nearlyhealed over, and by the time I had used the third bottle, I was entirely ft ell. To any one who has any skin or blood disease I would honestly advise them to fool with nothing else, but to get Cuticura and get well. My hands have never given me the least bit of trouble up to now. "My daughter's hands this summer became perfectly raw with eczema. She could get nothing that would do them any good until she tried Cuticura. She used Cuticura Resolvent and Cuticura Ointment and in two weeks ' they were entirely cured. I have used Cuticura for other members of my family and ifalways proved successful. Mrs. M. E. Falin. Speers Ferry, Va, Oct. 19, 1900."
Student of Miakenpeare. The oflice boy sat in the corner, busily engaged in reading a book. Strange to say, it was not "The Adventures of Bunco Jim," "Daisy Dean, the Demon Detective," nor even a thrilling narrative of more or less correct life on the plains. He was reading Shakespeare. An expression of peace and joy was on his face that caused those who knew him to wonder if he had at last experienced a change of heart. His eyes sparkled and his w hole expression w?s one of happiness. Finally he turned to a worker at another desk. "Say, Jim," he said, '"I've got a question for you. Did you ever read Shakespeare?" "Yep," was the reply. "And d'yer know what he talks about?" "Yep." "Den maybe you can help me." "What is it?" "Well, I want to know which was de man, Romeo or Juliet?" $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will I pleased to learn that there 1 at loast on' dreailed disease that srlence has lwen able to cure In all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive euro now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh btln? a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly nixjti the blood and mucous surfaces of Ihe F.vstem, thereby dstro.vlns the foundation of the disease, and givias; the patient trenaia by building up the. constitution and assisting nature in doinpr its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative lowers that they offer One Hundred lo!!ars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. N Adöres3 F. J. CIIh'XEY A CO., Tolcäo, O. i-'old bv all Druggists,' 73c. I Take Hail's Family Pills for constipation. Importance of the Cache. Men whose business takes them into the wilds have to be very careful about their supplies. It is of vital secessity that they should be able to obtain provisions when required, and that these shouldn ot be too far away. The Canadian Dominion government surveyors, who were running the fourteenth base line, located a "cache" on the McLean river, a tributary of the Athabasca. The supplies were taken in during the winter, when the swamps were frozen, and placed on a platform solidly built of logs, about ten' feet above the ground, so as to be out of the reach of bears and other animate. The depredations of hungry animals who have destroyed "caches" which their unfortunate makers thought secure have resulted in more than one terrible tragedy by starvation in these trackless wilds. The Wide World. Hod Doble, The greatest of all horsemen, says: "n my 40 .years experience with horses I have found Spohn's Distemper Cure the most successful of all remedies for the horses. It is the greatest blood purifier." Bottle, 50c and $1.00. Druggists can supply you, or manufacturers. Agents wanted. Send for Free Book. Spohn Medical Co., Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind. TCaaytto Uc Calm. It certainly does make a difference "whose ox is gored." Among the patients in the private ward of a Philadelphia hospital, according to a writer in Llppincott's Magazine, there was once a testy old millionaire of that city, whose case gave his physician considerable difficulty at first. "Well," asked the crusty patient one morningi "how do you find me now, eh?" "You're getting on well," responded the doctor, rubbing his hands with an air of satisfaction. "Your legs are still swollen, but-that doesn't trouble me." "Of course it doesn't," said the old man. "If your legs were swollen, it wouldn't trouble me!" Children Wtio Are Mckly. Mothers FhouM never be without a box of Mother tJray's S-iweet Powders for Children. They break up colds Jn 24 hours, cure Feverlshncss, Constipation, Headache, Teething Disorders and Stomach Troubles. Over 10,000 testimonials. At all DruKSists, 25c. Ask to-day. Sample mailed FRKE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted. Le Itoy. X Y. Tho Falling U ranch. In the grounds of Dalhousle castle, Scotland, Is said to be a famous example of the sympathy of the vegetable world with human death. It was anciently believed in the neighborhood that a branch always fell from this oak when a member of the family died. Apparently the fall of the original tree early in the eighteenth century did not break the sympathy, for a new one sprang from the old root, and it is upon record that as lately as 1874 an old forester, seeing a branch fall from this on a still day, cried, "The laird's deed noo!" News of the eleventh Earl of Dalhousle's death soon followed. Do Year Clothe Look Yellow? t If ao, use Red Cross Ball Blue. It will mak them wblt as snow. Largs 2oz. parkasa 5 cwttta Natnral Selection. The cat had eaten the canary. "One of us had to go," she said, "and the bird can be spared better than I can." Even in the evolution of music, as we see. the tendency is inexorably toi ward the survival of the Free to Onr Headers. Write Murine Eye Remedy Co.. Chicago for 4S-page illustrated Eye Hook Free. Write all about Your Eye Trouble and they will advise as to the Proper Application of the Murine Eye Kemedio in Your Special Case. Your Drusgtst wJI tell you that Murine Kclkvcs- Sure Kve---, Strengthens Weak Eyes, Doesn't Smart, Soothes Eye Pain, and sells lur ftv. Try It in Your Eves und In Halv"s i:v.s fur '; Jicaly Eyelids and Granulation.
IPUTNAM FADELESS DYES i Ctltr mere ot4 briqhler and lasier colors isaa any ether dye. One 10c package cslsrs all filers Tsct are Is cold water setierfkaa air stker aye. Tasciasva j aa7l"aUEl.ilkoainpai8iaa,ut. Write lor Uta kaiklet-Hi Is Bye, Oleatk sad NU Celera. MOJI'ROL DU V C CO.. Qnincy. l:iini4
ALCOHOL 3 PF.H nvvi AVcgelablelVcparaiionrorJU-similatingihcFoodantlRcgiii-ting the Stomachs anißaftrjsaf VC?' K 7 4 m Promotes Digcslionkerfulncss and Rest-Contains nciücr Opiuni.Morphinc norMiocraL Not Nah c otic. E2o ; 85' XochrUeUkAiistSetd iUCarbaakbia Sutpr hMojTtn fbmr. ADerfect Remedy for ConsfiDa t ion . Sour Stomach.Dlani.oca Worms ,CoirTilsions.feT:rislincss and Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Si$namre oT NEW YOHK. .. Guaranteed, under the Fo2i Exact Copy of Wrapper. LT THE KENTUCKIATI WAS PLEASED. He Secured a Good Half-Section in Central Canada. It is not only from Kentucky, but from thirty-five to forty different states that there comes the expression of satisfaction from those who have taktn up lands in Central Canada as a free homestead or have purchased lands. Mr. E. K. Bell, of Frankfort, Kentucky, writes to a Canad'.in government official, and says: "I have just returned from Alberta, overjoyed with my trip. Your literature was very flattering, but not half what I found it. I bought a half section between Calgary and Edmonton, one mile from railroad, near a good town. This is the best country I ever saw or ever expect to see. I will go in the spring and get to work on my place. I think it Is the coming country of the world." Some of the papers describe the set- ! tling of the Canadian West as "becom ing a fever with a great many people. The lure of its golden promises Is creeping Into their hearts and many are they who are answering the call of that unsettled territory." This paper editorially cautions Us readers to exercise care and thought before moving to a distant country. This would be a wise precaution, and is exactly what the Canadian officials ask. The success of the settler who has made Canada his home for years is the best evidence that can be offered. And of the large number of . Americans who have made their homes in Canada, very few have returned. All are satisfied. Was Heady to Make Good. Some time ago a crowd of Bowery sports went over to Philadelphia to see a prize fight, says Everybody's. One "wise guy" ' who, .among other things, is something of a pickpocket, was so sure of the result that he was willing to bet on it. "The Kid's goin' f win. It's a pipe," he told a friend. The friend expressed doubts. "Sure he'll win," the pickpocket persisted. Til bet you a gold watch he wins." Still the friend doubted. ' "Why," exclaimed the pickpocket, "I'm willin' to bet you a good gold watch be wins! Y know what I'll do? Come through the train with me now, an' y' can pick out any old watch y like." Dr. Pierce's Pellets, small, sugarcoated, easy to take as candy, regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Do not gripe. How He Got ETfB. A traveling man who stutters spent all afternoon in trying to sell a grouchy business man a biil of goods, and was not very successful. As the salesman was locking up his grip the grouch was polite enough to observe in the presence of his clerks: "You must find that impediment, in your speech very Inconvenient." "Oh, n-no," replied the salesman. "Every one has his p-peculiarity. S-stammering is mine. What's y-yours?" "I'm not aware that I have any," replied the merchant. "D-do 30U stir y-your coffee with your r-right hand?" asked the salesman. "Why, yes, of course," replied the merchant. "W-well," went on the salesman, "t-that's your p-peculiarWy. Most people use a t-teaspoon " Success Magazine. " lira. Wlnslow'a Sootalaa: Syrup for Children teetblag; softens the gums, reduces Inflammation, allays pain, euren wind colic, zi cents a bottle. No fewer than 8,282 medical students attend lectures at the universities of Germany this winter.
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self regardless of digestion and nutrition. He might almost as well cat shavings for all the good he gets out of Jiis food. - The result is that the storaach grows "weak" the action of the organs of digestion and nutrition are impaired end the man suffers the miseries of dyspepsia and tho agonies of nervousness. To strengthen the stomach, restore the activity ct the orr Haas of digestion and nutrition and brace op t be nerves, vse Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It is an an tailing remedy, and has the confidence ot physicians as , well as the praise ot thousands healed by Its use. In the strictest sense 'GoIden Medical Discovery" is a temperance medicine. It contains neither intoxicants nor narcotics, end is as free from alcohol cs from opium, cocaine and other dangerous drugs. All ingredients printed on its outside wrapper. Don't let a dealer delude you for his own profit. There is no medicine for stomach, liver and blood "just as good" as "Golden Medical Discovery."
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For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Jr' Signature Ä For Over Thirty Years IB) m nil ccntaur co.mhv. new vown cmr. 17ESYEQEJ mSM What Governor Deneen, ef Illinois. mm says mooui n: rtawernor Denocn.of Illinola. own ion ol land ia haskktctH-wna. t Anarta. lie haa aaid u an interview: "A aa American I aa deichte I to the rmarkaUe propres et Western fttna-la. Our people app flocking ar ro munity in t h MidJ'e or WaeUM-n Stntm thnt tiaa not a representative ia MaxuDoa, baiucatchewan or Alberta." 125 Millicn Dushch Vbest ta 1C3 WMfrB Canada field cmpm tar I9u9 will fflHtlvvioM tothffarm. er ft 1 7 0,000,6ÖO. K) t n rx,4i . Tree Homestead of loo arm. and pre-euiptiona of lUOarrra aatXOO an arr. Railwnr and ljani Compaaiea have land for Mtla at rcaannnhle price, klany farm er have paid for their land out if tlio nrtN-mlt of one crop8plnlli rllmate, aroo1 whooin, excclleut railway fiM-tlltitfOow 1 relrbt rate, wood, water and lumber eut(y obtained, lor pamphlet "Last Hort Wept." particulara aa to raitabla locAtica and low ofHUpiV rata. bdi.It to ,ati du pi or, immigration, uttava, Can., or to ttia foilowina t'nmlian Oo t Arrntf V. H. Kojrcrs, Sd Floor Traotion-Termlnal Builtiiuf . lndianapotiti. Iirl..andH.M. WUHanm. ttoom 0. law Building. Toledo, OUlu. (la addraa neartstrou.1 rieaaa say vbere yarn aaw this adTertlwtoait. 1am ft Ajilw lAfci DzBUMHART$WOM)E&FUL CfFW Days' Ireatment If you are suffering: with any of the followlne, symptoms: pains in side, bck. under shoulder blades, sick sour bloated stomach, headache, constipation, catarrh, lirer snd kidney disease, rheumatism, neuralgia, palpitation of heart, bad blood, go to to 'pour drug store and pet a 30 days tratmtnt 0! Or. Burkhart't VegttatXt Coapound and bs cured. Yoih CaiaB4 Cure CottstipaftloEa' with a whip. Barth cathartics, through irritation, bardea the bowel lining. They cause tba trouble which yon seek to care. CASCARETS act like tome foods. The? restore a right condition. Vast-pocket box. 10 ceats at orvt-tttorea. People now asa a smiliioa boxes atoataly- KP using - Linen fmr ymur offlcm tatlonmry. You can gmt thm paper and mnvtlopet to match. It to tk raaf lAtaj. Takt mm at.. VETERINARY COURSE AT HOME t ty f f 7ar and upward caa ba mad taking ear IUU V atari Ii ry Courve at homo durinf air tlrao: tantMinalmirict Kmlh: Diploma (rajitod. portlniuobtaliMMl for suvwwf nl tudenta : coat within rara of all; aatlBfartloa (uaranteod: partirtitars froo. Oatarta TaWriaary trmMton r ' -t, Bpt. 10, ,ag, fa Ft Ml KALK Well improved Southeast Missouri corn farm : Him acre. lri-c f jo A. Will accept $15.0(t. other iropertv a part payment. Address W. K. Iavis, It. IVsv ant. Mo. 1.ANI - -Kqual of any: low price, long terms; hat. corn, nlfn'fa. ctton. fruit ; larp creamery here. Oianitx'r of I'ommorrr, tjuannh. Texa. TVHNTFn ,-4' watleaiaa of fair cdnea, e.l U tlontotraTdforflrniof lares capl. taU Salary l.S7tteryfiar.paT"h:a weekly. KitirawU wanowd. AddraaoCwa. Clwwa. I'hlla4elrkla, fa., I.pc PATENTS Watsoa K.roIema,Wahl.igton. Il.C. Itookitrre. Iltraeal references. Beat raaulta, F. W. N. U. No. 71910 When writing to Advertlnera please ay you aaw the Adv. la this paper.
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The Tenderfoot Farmer It was one of these experimental farmers, who put green spectacles on his cow and fed her shavings. His theory was that it didn't matter what the cow ate so long as sho was fed. The questions of digestion and nourishment had not entered into his calculations. It'i only a ' tenderfoot" farmer that would try such an experiment with a cow. But many u fanner feeds him'
