Plymouth Tribune, Volume 9, Number 20, Plymouth, Marshall County, 17 February 1910 — Page 7

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OPERATION ByLydiaE.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound De Forest, Wis. "After an operation four years ago 1 had pains downward in both side3. backache, and a weakness. The doctor wanted me to have another operation. 1 took Lvdia Pmkham's epetable Compound and I am entirely cured of my troubles." Mrs. ArorsTE VrsrEiauLxx, De Forest. "Wisconsin. - Another Operation Avouier? v Orleans, La. "For years I suf- I feml from severe female trouble?, j Finally I was coiiimeu to my bra arid the doctor said an operation was necessary. 1 pave Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial lirst, and was saved from an operation." Mrs. Lily I'lyhoux, 1111 KerlerecSt, New Orleans, Ia. Thirty years of unparalleled succcfs confirms the power of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vepetable Compound to cure female diseases. The great volume of unsolicited testimony constantly pourinpin proves conclusively that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a remarkable remedy for those distressing feminine ills from which so many women suffer. If you want special sftl vice about your rase write to 31 rs. linkliam, at Lvnn, 31 ass. Her advice is m m i -m fr', and always lie J pi UL. WESTERT. CANADA What Prof. Shaw, the Weil-Known Agri cutiurlst. Says About It: I woe I I sooner rais cattle In Western luBuiia than in the corn bf !t of the Ccitc'l State, ieed is cheaper und r'imnto l-etur for the puriioi-e. Your market in rrovo fau r tlip.n 7rur farmers will pro-luof the suriie. Whi-iit rn he grown no totnc(tn parallel !" tl mile rorth of 3 the Isf 'Tnalioniil IxigwIar!. tour Tr.carti jna f?3 beyond yri'ent eonrerlion. 1 w xi PT':ri roor! in the 1,'mul Statra al-'ne -ho want vf bones to take up this land." Setu-iy 70,000 Americans willi'iitrrRcrlmuket hlr Iiomc in wiiTii Catimla tiiU -ir. li'Otl proilntMl another l.irce rrp " f vltr.it, o.tt ami harlrr, iit a.lilitlnn to which tlio catlio fjfMirii an J nimruM) ltom. t'.utio raii.p, dnirjinrf. miici farminir or.d priin Krowin in the Iroii ! .f M iniioba, boakat-tlK-wun and Allxrl;i. i"n hoiurxlmil and prf-frap-tlitu :rta, awnl a.-t lac-Is heit l"-y rai iwar ni lunl comrnnie,wiii pmvlil liorii- for tnir!on. Al.iituble noil, lifalinful rtlr.i.ue. ppirndkl kcIumiH auj ch-.irthp. and enol rallwaj. Kor iH-ttlfT' rtP9. Heorii)tivo I'.Uratnre 'Last li.-wt AVet." how to reach the conntrr and other particulars, write to Sup't f Imrriprat ion. Ottawa. Cannla. or to the hi!;--, a filowlnr fanadlan OoT't AlnM: V. V. Roger. M Hxr TiTM-Tion-Teniilnal Uutidtns, iDdmnaimltii. In !., an) H. il. William. Room 20. Law Uulliling. Tüledo.Ohlo. (Ue iwidress nearest ou). rinw ry where yon saw this adTprtlwment. Mfi'ort Way do List Trial Bottle Free By Mail If yoo Buffer from Epilepsy. Fl?, Fallit Sickness. 8paam. or have ebiMrrn that f o so, my iew cotety will irliere them, and tJl yoa arakedto do is to tiid fur a Free Trial ti BolUe of Dr.il.j s Cplloptlolde Owai-w It has cered thoagatsd xihert Terythlng eis failed. Guaranteed by Mar Medical Laboratoiy t ndrr Pure Food and Drugs Act, Jane SOtb, uracty o lTL Please write for Special Fre t'i BoiUo aud rive AOE and complete address ,DÜ W. H. WAY. 548 Pairl Strett. Net Ycrt TheArmyof Constipation I Crowing SnuJIer Every Day CARTER'; UVER PI tespoaibIe ccly pro re they permanent! cans Coniti, tiea. MJlbnj ate tLemfor EorsMst, Iaüjf Ui, Sick Headacbe, Sallow Skia. SHALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE Geil'jillS mo U Signature VRBURKHAFTSWOXDERrUL CffW 30 Bays' Treatment. ' penrs. MGETME mwautw. If you are iufferinfc with any of the following aymptoms: pains in side. back, under shoulder blades, sick sour bloated stomach, headache, constipation, catarrh, liver and kidney disease, rheumatism, neuralgia, palpitation of heart, bad btood. no to to your drue store and jret a 30 days treatmsnt of Dr. Burkhart'a VejeUbla Com pound and be cured. Lmt us do your Printing using - Linen It ymur offlcm stationery. You can gt thm paper and envelopes to match. Dr, MarieFs Female Pills SEVENTEEN YEARS THE STANDARD Prescribed and recomnunded for women's ailment. a scientifically prepared remedy a', proven worth. The result from their use Is quick and permanent. For aale I all crua stores. GENERAL AGENTS WANTED for Insurance and Investments. Several tine mo iey-makinj proposals for bright nen and women on Gilt Edged matters. Address Standard Finance Company 103 Tark ATenue, New York City PATENTS Wntvoa E. Coir mnn, Washington. L.C. Hooker-. IIikUeet references. Beat result. Bbonchial Troches An immediate rclid for Hoarxcncaa, Couvha. Sora Throat, Bronchial and Athmtic TroubU. Ao article of superior merit, aheotutcly fr from aay harmful ingredient. Price. 25 cents, 50 cents aad $1.00 far box. Sample mailed an request. JOHN T. BffOWrJ fc SON, Boeton. Mm.

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Knee to AnLI n of Ilnmor. "About seven years ago a small al.Tusioa appeared on my rij;ht le i 'st above my ankle. It irritated uic so that I hog in to scratch It and it began to spread until my leg from my ankle to the knee was one solid ccale like a scab. The irritation was always wers-e at night and would not allow me to sleep, or my wife either, and it was completely undermining our health. I lost fifty pounds in weight and was almost out of my mind with pain and chagrin as no matter whera the irritation ca-ne, at work, on the street or in the presence of company, I would have to scratch it until I had the blood running down into my shoe. I simply cannot describe my suffering during those seven years. The rain, mortification, loss of sleep, both to myself and wife is simply indescribable on paper and one has to experience it to know what it is. "I tried all kinds of doctors and remedies but I might as well have thrown my money down a sewer. They would dry up for a little while and fill me with hope only to break out again just r.s bad if not worse. I had given up hope cf ever being cured when I was induced by my wife to give the Cuticura Remedies a trial. After taking the Cuticura Remedies for a little

while I began to see a change, and af - .er taking a dozen bottles of Cuiifura Resolvent, in conjunction with the Cuticura Soan and Cuticura Ointment, the trouble had entirely disappeared and my leg was as line as the day I was born. Now after a lapse of six months with no signs of a recurrence I feel perfectly safe in extending to you my heartfelt thanks for the rood the Cuticura Remedies have done for me. 1 shall always recommend them to my friends. V. II. White, Z12 K. Cabot St., Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 4 and Apr. 13, 1909." Arw l'.ni;lnl I'le. cme poor dweller in the benighted beyond of Chicago asks what a real ! New Ensrhnd pie is like. It probably will not help hi.m to be told, but if h? j means ai-ple it is like an essay by Kmerson liquefied v.ith the music of MasFanet and spiced with the cynicism of Sha-v. If he means pumpkin it is like some of Gounod's music heard in a landscape al! sun and flowers, and if hr means mince pie, why, it is like an increase in salary and a present from Vome arriving cn the day when one's conscience was behaving itself. Dosten Globe. Only One BltOMO QI IM.E" Th.Tt w LAXATIV?; r.KOMO Ol'ININE. !cr thi- sinatur ot K. ". CRPVL ITsi-d th wtrM over to Care a Cold in One Day. -Ire. X ConipulAiou. "Why do I have to. pay such enormous prices for round steak?" grumbled the customer. "You don't," said thf butcher. -IIcreV a perfectly good shark you can buy for a Kood deal 1 ss money." Chicago Tribune. ii ave vor a ort; Ii, m com If . iuk at oncx Allen Lu"tf Jliinnm and watch r-s iit. hiintl". safe. effprtiTe. All dValcrs. IVysar price? 2Lc,5Cc.atd 11 IC bottles. Drflnllina of I ntt rat 1 1 ude. Ingratitude," said Uncle Eben, "is a word mos' frequently used by folks dat has had mo' dan deir share of favors an' had deir expectations onreasonably stimulated." Washington Post. Reel Croaa Boll Bin Should be la every home. Ask your fror for It. Ir?e 2oi. package. 5 caota, Couldn't Stand Satire. A burglar while attempting to rob a bloated bondholder of Maryville by mistake got into the humble residenee cf an editor next door. After unsuceessfully fumbling about for suitable ansets for some time he vs disgusted to observe the tenant of t house sitting up in bed and laughing at him. "Aren't you old Skindersen, the capitalist?" inquired the housebreaker. "Nary time," chuckled t"he journalist. "I'm the editor of the Screaming Eagle." -Jerusalem'." said the burglar, looking at his stemwinder. "And here I've been wasting four preeious hours on this branch almshouse. I say, old quill driver, you never poke fun at your subscribers, do you?' "Not the cash ones." "Exactly," said the burglar, taking out his wallet. "Here's six months subseription to call this thing square. If there's one thing on earth I can't stand, it's satire." London Tit-Bits. At the Itldlnic School. "Mount your horse on the left side.'' "Why? What difference can that make?" "It's the rule." "But why should it be the rule?" "Because in the past horsemen wore swords. They wore theen on the left hip; hence had they mounted on the right side the sword would have got in the way. So they mounted on the left, and we still mount on the left. Horses are accustomed to It, and if you try to get up from the right you are liable to be kicked." Philadelphia Bulletin. CLEAR-HEADED. Head Bookkeeper Munt De Reliable. The chief bookkeeper In a large business house In one of our great "Western cities speaks of the harm coffee did for him: "My wife and I drank our first cup of Postum a little over two years ago, and we have used it ever since, to the entire exclusion of tea and coffee. It happened in this way: "About three and a' half years ago I had an attack of pneumonia, which left a memento in the shape of dyspepsia, or rather, to speak more correctly, neuralgia of the stomach. My 'cup of cheer' had always been coffee or tea, but I became convinced, after a time, that they aggravated my stomach trouble. I happened to mention the matter to my grocer one day and he supRested that I give Postum a trial. "Xext day It came, but the cook made the mistake of not boiling it sufficiently, and we did not like It much. This was, however, soon remedied, and now we like It so much that we will never change hack. Postum, being a food bverag. instead of a drug, has been the means of curing my stomach trouble, I verily believe, for I am a well man today and have used no other remedy. "My work as? chief bookkeeper In cur Co.'s branch house here is of very confining nature. During my coffee-drinking days I was subject to nervousness and 'the blues' in addition to my sick spells. These have left me since I began using Postum and I can con?clcntiously recommend it to those whose work confines them to long hours of severe mental exertion." "There's a Reason." Look in pkgs. for the little book, 'The Road to Wellville." Ever read the above 'letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest.

r review of Indiana"! ?j .

Rushville schools fhow tho highest enrollment in their history. That of the Hteh School alone is 22S. The senior class this year has twenty-live members. Dr. August A. Fahnestock, a wellknown Indiana physician and surgeon, fell down a stairway at Laporto and was kiliod. He was horn in Haitimore in 1S;2. Ho was a thirty-second degree Mason. Coventor Marshall has accepted an invitation to deliver an address at the laying of the corner stone of the new public library at Auburn in May. The building is the gflt of Charles Eekhart to the city of Auburn. "William Duncan, aged SO, died on the same farm, two mifes southwest of Washington, where he was born. With the exception of a trip to California during the gold discoveries of '49, he bad never been away irom the farm. The Kiks' new home in Mt. Vernon was dedicated recently and two hundred Evans villc Elks assisted in the service. Speeches were nade by Judge Herdis, F. Clements and others. A banquet was served in the new home. Another step toward the extinction of the natural cement trade in Clark County, which ten years ago amounted to a production of two million barrels annually, has been taken by the decision of the Delknaps, who own one of the oldest established nrlte. to discontinue their mill half a mile south of Senersburg. The tenth annual breeders' sale of thoroughbred draft, driving and saddle horses which had been in progress at 15Iooiniagtou for a week, closed after animals to the value of $200,000 had been disposed of. buyer? coming from many States. Prominent Chicago buyers included George. Ames and C. X. Jones. County Superintendent Frank Larabee, of Greenfield, had the largest class of beginners at the teachers' examination since he has been in office. He hopes to be able to supply the schools of the county with local teachers within a few years. At present it is necessary to engage many teachers from other counties. Mrs. Lizzie Feldman, nf Evansvillc, tried for the scvuuh time to commit suicide by leaping into tho Ohio river. A stranger who was standing on the river bunk saw the woman leap into the water, and he brought her to shore. The woman said that her husband did not love her any longer and that she wished to die. The Rev. W. J. Vigus, aged 71, field secretary of the Winona Assembly, a1. Winona Lake, i dead at Wabash. lie w;is chaplain during the Civil and the Spanish-American War. Dr. Vigus was twice a presiding cider of the Xorthcru Indiana Conference districts and was a candidate for ihe Republican nomination for Mayor of Wabash at the primary last September. Mark Rurson and L. G. Burson, brothers, each an engineer employed by the Chicago, Indiana & Southern Railroad Company, met in a head-on collision when the freight trains they were piloting crashed together near Schneider, in Lake County. A heavy fog was responsible for the wreck. None was hurt and the locomotives were not irreparably damaged. John E. A. Stephens, of Vanllurcn Township, claims the distinction of being the only man living in Grant County who attended the Chicago convention when Abraham Lincoln was nominated for the presidency in 18C0. He has lived In Grant County since 1SCS and is now 73 years old. Stephens Is a veteran of the Civil War and was shot in the arm at Stone river. The Farmers' Xational Dank and the business men of Wilkinson held a corn show recently. There were fiftyseven entries. Six different premiums were offered on yellow corn and six on white com. T. A. Coleman, of Rushville, was scorer. Elmer Jones, of Charlottesville, won the' first premium on yellow corn, and Porter Copeland, of Warrington, first on white corn. The best oil well in the history of the local' field was drilled in recently by Michael Murphy & Co., on the John Clifford farm near Oakland City. The well has over sixty feet of sand, fiftytwo of .which is oil-bearing and the other gas. The well is estimated to make a daily production of more than five hundred barrels. It makes ;large block of land valuable from tho producer's standpoint. Acid and cereals caused a threatening blaze, damaging a freight car on the Indiana Union Tractian line after the car was wrecked "hcn brakes failed to work in the North Main street grade in Anderson. The freight car, heavily loaded, toppled over on a Kharp curve, overturning several carboys of acid and eases of cereals. The wreckage then caught fire. None was iured. The loss is estimated at .000. The Delaware County Corn Club will be organized at a meeting of farmers in Muncie, tho organization to be effected under direction of Cary Sunderland, former instructor in the agricultural school at Purdue University. Richard Cunningham, of Harrison County, is regarded as a busy man. He is managing a farm and looks after a good deal of live i.lrck. He is trustee of Washington Township and teaches school in an adjoining township. The handsome dwelling owned by J. llalbert and occupied by Charles Webster, in North Meridian street, llrazil, caught fire from a defective lluo and was badly damaged. The loss amounts to over $2,000, covered by insurance. The lloosier State Poultry Association has elected James McLaughlin president; John Lamber, vice-president; Peter Fetter, treasurer, and Walter T. Smith secretary. The next annual exhibition will be held in New Albany January V, to 17, 1911, with S. U. Lane, of Ohio, as judge. The blazing paper with which she vas attempting to light her pipe falling from her fingers, Mrs. Minerva Wharton, aged 82, living near Warren, was burned to death before help could reach her. Logansport merchants hope to make the business part of their city the best illuminated of any city In Indiana. Plans are now being made to light the business district with a system of Tungsten electric lights. Iron poles will be set forty feet apart and there will be a cluster of live 80-candle power Tungsten lights on each pole.

Measles have become epidemic in four townships of Rush County and the disease is still spreading. II. Frank Work, of New Washington, made a shipment of twenty turkeys which sold for $120, an average of $6 each. A petition asking Governor Marshall to pardon John Cox, serving a life sentence for the murder of John Prazellc, is being circulated in Sullivan County. Due to the prevalence of diphtheria, the public schools have been ordered closed at Decker. One death resulted from the disease and four new cases have developed. The examination for a postmaster to fill the vacancy cauesd by the death of Samuel Goodnight, at Kempton. will be held on February 19. There arc twenty-four applicants. A mass meeting of women was held at the Central school building at Sullivan to organize a civic improvement association, looking toward improvement in the appearance of the city. The City Council of Goshen has adopted resolutions for the paving of twenty-four blocks in the residence district of Goshen during the coming summer. Prick or asphalt composition will bo laid. Despondent because of ill health and' unprofitable employment, Simeon Hosier, aged 4t, committed suicide by shooting himself in the temple at the home of hjs sister, Mrs. John Whitehead, at rcrkinsville. Dr. J. E. McFaiiand. of Millgrove, has been appointed guardian of the two small sons of Daniel Linder, the Muncie & Portland traction conductor, who was murdered last summer by Dr. Nelson Ross, of Muncie. While carrying a mattress from a house in Seymour formerly occupied by the late Mrs. Jennie Doughman, who was supposed to be penniless at the time of her. death, a roll of bills amounting to $300 was found. Phi'ip Pcttiford, a grocer at Washington and Twenty-seventh streets. Marion, was held up and robbed at the point of revolvers in the hands of two unknown boy bandits. Pcttiford surrendered a canvas sacjc containing $30 that he carried in his iocket. John E. Robbins, a stock buyer, was injured by being gored by an infuriated bull, which he was trying to drive to Thorntown. When the animal attacked him Robbins attempted to escape, but before he could save himself the bull crushed him about the lower limbs. His condition is serious. A large pool of oil in South Fork creek, near Oakland City, was set on lire. Tho oil was from overflowing tanks in the field and was held in the creek in large quantities by drift. The smcke from tho burning cil resembled a heavy thunder cloud and attracted attention rom all over Southwestern Indiana. The Logansport Fanciers' Association re-elected the old officers and made preliminary plans for the poultry show which will be givca next year. Reports of the show held recently were made and they showed that the affair was not only a success from the fanciers' standpoint but it was d financial success. Following its custom of giving special merit awards twice yearly to trainmen who have the best records for efficiency and courtesy, the Ft. Wayne & Wabash Valley Traction Company has just announced cash awards for the final six months of 1909 as follows: Fort Wayne city division, motonnan E. Densil $25, conductor D. Keener $23; interurban division, rantorman C. A. Williams $23, conductor Roy Detrick $23; Lafayette city division, motorman E. Powell $12.30, motorman C. O. Tobinson $12.30, conductor M. M. Smock $23; Logansport city division, motorman J. M. Stauffer $23, conductor J. E. Crawford $23.

Dumb animals and birds especially dogs and chickens have an admirer in Mrs. J. E. Walcott, of Angola, an extensive poultry raiser and breeder of white collies. As an evidence of the success that Mrs. Walcott has enjoyed since she has operated her enterprise on her farm near Angola, the thrifty woman has shipped twenty-one birds and collies to foreign countries, has paid off two mortgages on her property from money she has realized in the sale of blooded chickens and dogs, and has purchased two fine farms and other property. From time to time Mrs. Walcott has written articles authoritatively on the rcientific and practical phases of her work for technical journals. Her collies are of the best blood in America Champion Hanover Monarch 399S1, Champion Ellwyn Astrologer, Champion Old Hall Moon and Champion Wushaw Clinker. Mrs. Walcott's fancy white Plymouth Rock chickens have made her widely known. Mrs. Walcott believes women are peculiarly adapted to raising chickens successfully and profitably. Tirod of a life which she believeu held nothing but toil and suffering for her, Mrs. Charles Revers is dead at Winthrop as a result of swallowing Paris green with suicidal intent. The town of Spiceland seems to be a haven for unmarried women. In a population of only eight hundred there are forty-three widows and eighteen spinsters. To offset this large ruimber of unmarried women there are only five widowers and five bachelors. Will Rhoadarner, of Greenfield, is a rm believed that thirteen is a lucky number in the poultry business. He had thirteen hens in his pen that laid thirteen eggs each day during the month of January. He received, 40 cents a dozen for most of the eggs. D. F. Robinson & Co., commission merchants of Jeffersonville, have received a hen which they think is valuable as a freak. The hen has no bill and drinks the same as a four-footed beast, not raising its head to swallow. The hen is normal except for the head. "The eyes are like a hawk's. Vorn Disbro, age 21, a coal driver, was instantly killed by a Grand Rapids & Indiana freight train at a grade crossing in LaGrange. He is survived by a widow and two small children. Apprehension Is felt by the farmers of Elkhart and adjoining counties over the condition of the wheat crop. Ice one to five Inches thick covers the fields and tho wheat is frozen in it. It is feared the roots will be forced to the surface, where the dry winds of March and April will complete the damage. Many are planning to Rurplant the crop with oats in the spring.

The Week in Congress

In the Senate Friday Mr. McCumbcr of North Dakota delivered a prepared argument to prove that the farmer does not obtain his due share of the prices paid for food products. Mr. Heyburn of Idaho concluded his speech in opposition to the postal savings bank bill. On account of the death of Representative Lovering of Massachusetts the Senate adjourned earlier than usual and for the first time this session failed to adjourn over Saturday. Practically no business was transacted in the House and an early adjournment was taken because of the death of Mr. Lovering. The Senate gave the greater part of the day Saturday to the question of constitutionality of the extradition of criminals from one State to another in cases in which the prosecution is according to the process of "information. " No action was taken. The postal savings bank bill was also up for a time. The only important action taken was on ? bill opening to settlement the unallotted lands in the Pine Ridge Indian reservation in South Dakota. Early in the day Senator Aldrich reported from the Committee on Public Expenditures a bill creating a permanent commission for the regulation of methods of government ex pendittirc. He failed to obtain the unanimous consent asked to have tho. measure acted upon. Senator Elklns objecting. The House was not in Fession. In the Sonate Monday Senator Heyburn bitterly opposed a loan of tents by the government for use at the annual encampment of confederate veterans at Mobile, Ala., next April and strongly condemned the icceptance by Congress of a statue of Robert E. Lee as a contribution from Virginia to Statuary Hall in the capiiol. The bill was passed unanimously except for .Air. Heyburn's vote. Mr. Rayner in a speech attacked the constitutionality of the proposed postal savings banks law. The Senate passed a dozen bills for the establishment of fish hatchery stations in various parts of the country. The President's federal incorporation bill was introduced in the House and was opposed by Representative Garrett, of Tennessee, on the ground of unconstitutionality. Tho House devoted two and a half hours to a discussion of one of its rules recently adopted for the purpose of facilitating business. The posta savings bank bill and the 'bureau of forestry were under discussion in the Senate Tuesday. The public expenditures committee was also taken up in debate, some Senators seeing a possible interference with the regular committees because of the comprehensive powers given the public expenditures committee. "Joy rides," wine and other personal extravagances of living were charged against the immigration committee in the House by Mr. Macon, of Arkansas, in discussing the expenses contracted by the commission on its trip to Europe last summer. Tariff and high prices were dehated by Mr. Henry, of Texas, and Mr. Routell. of Illinois. An investigation of the causes of the high prices of the necessaries of life was provided Wednesday by the passage of a resolution for that purpose by the Senate. The Senate also passed a bill conferring the rank of rear admiral upon Commander Peary and retiring him with the highest salary paid a rear admiral. This was "calendar day" in the House, and several bill were passed, including one for the creation of ar art commission to pass upon various vorks of art erected by Congress in the District or Columbia. The Senate acted promptly Thursday on the summons of the District Court for the joint committee on printing to appear in the paper award proceedings brought by the Valley Paper Company, by instructing the Senate members of the committee to ignore the summons. The Senate denied the right of the courts to interfere with its legislative function. Senator Borah in a speech on the income tax asserted that the fears of Governor Hughes that the constitutional amendment would make possible the taxing of state and municipal securities were groundless. The House spent the entire day in debating whether the House members of the joint printing committee should obey the court summons to appear In the Valley Paper Company's case. The majority of the judiciary committee favored compliance, but three members, including Chairman Parker, brought in a minority report, taking the view adopted by the Senate. A night session was held and the majority report finally adopted. ALL AROUND THE GLOBE. Dr. James T?. Anteil of the University of Michigan has gone to Florida because of bronchial trouble. Judge, A. C ("oxe, of the New York Circuit Court of Appeals, has declined the appointment of presiding Justice of tho new Customs Court tendered ly Frcsidcnt Taft. Ab the result of the explosion In rittslnirg of a kerosene lamp and consequent lire, Andrew Pacie and Wigand child were so seriously burned tin t they are not expected to live. Much machinery was ruined when the Windsor luick Coinp.iny's jflant at Akron, Ohio, burned, causing $30,000 loss, mostly insured. Commander Robert E. Peary proposes a south pole expedition, starting next fall, hacked by the Peary Arctic Club and the Xational Oeographio Society, but says he is physically unablo to head it. De Witt Hillegas. of Philadelphia, was sentenced to five years' imprisonment for aiding in niisapprop'ia tinn funds of the Farmers Xational Pank of Poyertovn, appealed, and was released in $.",000 bail. Fourteen members of the irew of the sand boat Diamond narrowly escape i Oca tli when the crait sank in the Ohio River near La t ies Head, Ohio. Charlie Taft has been remembered by a Brooklyn aeronautic enthusiast, who took to the White House and gave to the President a model of an aeroplane, on a scab- of one inch to the foot. In making a deposition in Kansip City for use in the Swope trial S. W. Spangh r, formerly an ollice partner of Colonel Swope, said he bad seen him refuse broth brought by an unidentified woman and also that he took medicine with strychnine in iL

THE WONDERBERRY OR SUNBERRY

Ifaa rrovril r-:i t SniTP Thon anuilM Nhj II Jhe n-t Thin a They IJter drew, The Wonderbcrry or Sunberry, the marvelous garden fruit originated by Luther Iiurbank. and introduced by John Lewis Childs, the well-known seedsman of Floral Park. N. Y., has proved a great success all over the country. Thousands of people say it is the best thing they ever grew. Mr. John Rurroughs, the well-known iiithor, Naturalist and bosom-friend of Theodore Roosevelt, says it is the most delicious pie berry he ever tasted, and a marvelous cropper. A Director of the New York Agri cultural Experiment Station says it j fruits abundantly even in pure sand. In the short season of Northwestern ( Canada it is a godsend, and fruits long j after frost has killed most garden truck. D. S. Hill, Wichita, Kan., says thirty people grew it there last season with perfect satisfaction. K. S. Enochs, Hammond, La., says it yields $230 worth of fruit per acre with him. Mrs. J. H. Powers, 4732 Kenwood avenue, Chicago, raised enough berries on a space 4x10 feet to supply herself and friends. J. P. Swallow, Kenton. Ohio, says its equal for all purposes does not exist. Rev. H. P. Sheldon. Pacific Grove, Cal., says he likes the berried served in any and every way. W. T. Davis. Enon, Va., fays It is true to description in every way. and fruits in three months from seed. Judge Morrow, of U. S. Circuit Court, says the Wonderberry is simply delicious raw or cooked. Mr. Childs exhibited one plant five months old bearing 10,373 berries which measured about eight quarts. Mrs. Hattie Vincent, Hayden, New Mexico, says it stands long, hard droughts of that climate and fruits abundantly all summer. It is certainly the most satisfactory garden fruit and the greatest Novelty ever introduced. .n Obedient I Ins:. Schnapps is a dachshund, and the people who know all about the breed i ,.11 II.. 1 1.1 .. ! 1 1, , ,1 i can iiiv queer iuumuk i uiiji.ii iw.iiusome. In the house in New York where he is the pet he is credited with more than ordinary dog sense and with understanding every word said to him in English or German. In order to demonstrate his sagacity his master said to him a few evenings ago: 'Schnapps, the young people have been here leb enough. Go clown and tell the boys to go home." Downstairs he waddled and. standing 'before the visiting youths, barked and howled, then ran to the front door and back again and kept up the performance until, as his proud master explained, "the young men beard and saw the point. Pretty smart for a dachs, eh?" How's This? We offer Odo Hundred Dollars Reward lor ny case of Catarrh that cannot be cured ly Hall's C'atann Cur. 1 J. ClinXEY & CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known I'. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and h-? I love him perfectly honorable In all business transactions and fluaurlaily able to carry out any obligation made by his firm. ' Wai.mn;, Kin max & Marvin, Wholesale l'riisglst!, Toledo, O. Hairs Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ins directly upon the, Mood and mucous Mirf-ces of tiie uystem. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all Prupsists. Take Hall s FamilyPi!l for constipation. rnrlhfr l'nrt ieiil.tr. The man who was fioir.K to St. Ives had just met the seven wives. Their combined luggage, as has been narrated, consisted of forty-nine sacks containing in the aggregate 343 cats and 2,401 kittens. "Ah," said he, pleasantly, "what havo we here? A traveling cat show?" "No, sir," they explained; "we are answering a want ad." Thus, one by one, does scientific research continue to solve the mysteries of the ages.

Woman s Power Over Man Woman's roost glorious endowment is the power to awaken and hold the pure and honest love of a worthy man. When she loses it and still loves on, no one in the wide world can know th: heart agony she endures. The woman who suffers from weakness and derangement of her special womanly organism soon loses the power to sway the heart of a man. Her general health suffers and she loses tier good looks, her attractiveness, her amiability

end her power and prestige as a woman. Dr. R.V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N.Y., with the assistance of his staff of able physicians, has prescribed for and cured many thousands of women. He has devised a successful remedy for woman's ailments. It is known as Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It is a positive specific for the weaknesses and disorders peculiar to women. It purifies, regulates, strengthens and heals. Medicine dealers sell it. No honest dealer will advise you to accept a substitute in order to make a little larger profit. IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG, SICK WOMEN WELL. Dr. Piene' Pleasant Ptllets rtpilate mad Btreagtbea Stomach, Lh-er aad Bowela.

Tor PENK hllMRPRDYUNB

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LUTHER BURBANK'S GREATEST CREATION. A Luscious Berry Ripening lu Three Months From Seed SEED 20 CTS. PER PACKET. 3 PACKETS FOR SO CTS. POSTPAID This is positively the (J RE ATEST new Fruit and the best NOVELTY of modern times. These are facts which no one can Bet away from. The proofs are overwhelming- in number and conclusive in character. Growr last year by &4.M0 people.

Frultblue-black like an enormous rich blueberry In look sand taste. TTnaurpasM-d for eatin? raw, rooked, canned or preserved iu any form. This great garden fruit is equally valuable in hot, dry, cold or wet climates. Kasiest plant in the world to prow, succeeding anywhere and yielding preat masses of rich fruit all Bummer and fall. The greatest boon to the family garden ever kuown. Leaves and branches are also used for greens and are auperb. Everybody can and will grow it. Luther liurhank, of California, the world famous plant wizard.orIginated the Wonderberry and turned it over to me to introduce. He aays of it : "This absolutely new berry plant is of great Interest and value as it bears the most delicious, wholesome and healthful berries In utmost profusion and always comes true from seed." READ MY CATALOGUE. pares 2 and 3, for full description, culture, uses, etc. (Also Colored Plate.) With scores of testimonials from well-known and reputable people all over the country. AloO

ue "Wime ol the v onderberry." Address JOHN This offer will not appear again.

Why Do You Suffer?

from woman's peculiar ills, when we are ready and willing to send you a week s treatment of PISO'S TABLETS entirely free? Their use is the most modern and scientific way of treating the diseases of women, because they are applied directly to the diseased surface, and at once begin their work of healing. They are small, effective, clean and easy to use, and cannot fail to benefit those who use them. They are an ideal home treatment. A woman writes, "It is a wonder working Tablet."

For sale by all druggists. For samples and a treatise entitled "Causes of Diseases in Women" address us on the accompanying coupon. Write your name and ade'ress tlainlv and address THE PISO COMPANY, DEPT. C, WARREN, PA. FASHION HINTS A late model in a simple erening coit has a queer little cape-hood arrangement, that would be nice for the girl of slender lines. Fur collar, cuffs and tie ends, make a rich trimming, but heavy lace, or something Persian in effect, would be equally good for finishing the neck and sleeves. When the post otjice was first opened at Kai Feng, China, the clerks had a fight with some men who bought stamps and refused to go away until the stamps were licked and stuck on their envelopes for them. The foreign post offices in Talestine are usually convulsed by a spirit of keen competition. If a parcel exceeding the regulation weight or size is taken to an office and refused the traveler in the majority of cases has only to threaten to take it to a rivr.l office, and It is straightway received without a murmur. So keen Is the rivalry between fomo of these otVces that residents in Talestine possess a free post within certain districts. Uetween Jaffa and the surrounding colonies and also within Jerusalem the German and Austrian offices make no charge for the delivery of local , lettersJ Chicago News. When Itabbrra Become NefMnary And your shoes pinch, shake into your -hoes Allen' Foot-Kasc, the antiseptic powder for the feet. Cures tired, aching feet and takes the stln? out of Corns and I?union. Always use it for Breaking In New shoe and for dancinj? parties. Sold everywhere 2"c. Sample mailed FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted. Le Koy, N. Y. TboiiKht lie Had. Speaking of the boycott of beef have you ever tried horse meat?" "O, yes, I presume so, and goat meat, too. I dare say. I've eaten in all sorts of restaurants." EYE DISTEMPER CATARRHAL FEVER AND ALL NOSE AND THROAT DISEASES

J

Cures the sick and acts as a preventive for others. Liquid airen on tho tongue. Safe for brood mares and all others. ru-t.t kidney remedy; 50c and $1 a bottle; $5 and $10 the dozen. Sold by all druggists and horse roods houses, or sent, ei press paid, by the manufacturers. SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. Chemists, GOSHEN. INDIANA

V

Y The Improved Wonderberry

LEWIS CHILDS. Floral Pork, N. Y-

Write foi Sunberry seed and Catalogue

Name Post Office Stxte

RHEUMATISM IS CURABLE. NAT I "UK'S i:i:.Mi:iV NU tabl.ts) l!t cure khcuniatUm and do It quickly. It so thoroughly chanses and regulates the kidneys, liver und digest ire system hat Its eures K'-in almost nmtocdl. IU-sull guaranteed. Take one to-night, yo'i'll feel bttr in the niorn'm. üet a 25c Iioi. All Inif it. Th. A. II. Ix-wis Medicine t'o. Sc. 1 .ouis. Mo. . The Man-of-War Dirtl. The frigate pelican, or man-of-war bird, is usually met with by travelers in the tropics. Although when stripped of its feathers it is hardly larger than a pigeon, yet no man can touch at the same time the tips of its extended winss. The long wing bones are exceedingly light, and the whole appi ratus of air cells Is extremely developed, f.o that its real weight is very trifling. It flies at a great height above the water, and from that elevation j pounces down cn fish, especially pre ferring the poor, persecuted flying nsn for its prey. According to some authors, the name of man-of-war bird was given to it because its appearance was taid to foretell the coming of a ship, probably because the frigate pellCan and real frigates are equally adverse to storms, and both like to com into harbor If the weather threatens. Sticky Sweating Palms after taking salts or cathartic waters did you ever notice that weary all gone feeling the palms of your handa sweat and rotten taste in your mouth Cathartics only move by sweating your bowels Do a lot of hurt Try a CASCARET and, see how much easier the job is done how much better jou feel set CASCARETS ioc a bo for wffk'i treatment, 11 druttjtistt. Biggest seller in the world. Million boxe a month. Best for Children 9 m bist wimn m (5Mwa6w Gives instant relief when little throats If are irritated and sore. Contains no otates and is as pleasant to take as it is effective LOCATING GOLD MINES I will furnUh devic and instruct,' i. Vi. Itl'MP.Li:. 1144 Hddy St., San Francisco, CaL rnviii Tfr fat if cuwed ItJILJlS wnvsn&s mA ril far. RE A CO.. CEPT. B3. MllkEAPOUS. Mill. Fol: SAI.i: Well improved Soiithnst Missouri -orn farm; lJfo eres. Frlt A. Will ac'it flö.ouo, othr property an part payment. Address W. F. lavis. Ft. Fleant. Mi. WAXTi:i Honest, onerpetlc CoTlerlor In your locality. Steady employment. kxk1 pav for hustlers, lifetime lol. J. llrown Monroe St., Chicago, III. I.AXI Kiual of any; low price, Ion term; wheat, corn, alfalfa, cotton, fruit; larpe creamery here. Chamber of Commerce guana 1). Texas. FOU FKF.K FACTS from fertile Florid farm ask Hampton-Watson Co.. Gainesville. Fla. liar pains In una 11 t nuking farms. WTTWTFn 6t1ea of fair wteav 11 A 1 I ttoa to travel fur Itrm of lu-ceafW taJ. fiaUn ll.;ttMrlrw.IThl.wnklT. tiom mjcoö. Addraas Clawa, l'ailaaclala, i'a Ifepc a F. W. N. U. No. 81910 When wtitlac to Advertisers pleaae 7 yon un the Adr. Im tbla paper. OUVSMOKTHSFROMSEtD

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1 CURE

THE SUNBERRY is an Improved form of tn Wonderberry which I introduced exclusively last y-ar and which proved ao satisfactory. It is greatly superior to the original type, and I alone have genuine seed. - 8IED20O par pkt.i 3 pkta.for SOct 7 for $1.00. With every packet of aeed I aend a booklet glvirg IOO Reclpaa for using the fruit, raw, rooked, canned, preserved. Jellied, epleed, pirkled. Jam, syrup, wine, greens, etc. It is superior for any of these Ufea. Also a copy of my 1!2 pape Catalotrue with every order which tells all about my 12.000 IN CASH PRIZES AND OFFERS. AGENTS WANTED. MY GREAT CATALOGUE of Flowers and Vepetable beed. Bulbs, rianti, and Rare and New Fruits FREI to all who apply. 15 pa pea, WO Illustration and colored plate. I have been in tbe bnaiueaa 35 years and have half a million cutomera all over the country. Complete satisfaction guaranteed to everyone. 1X not fail to ee th manv great Novelties I am offering thia year ol which the 8UN BERRY i the greatest ever known.

at once. Do ot neglect or delay.