Plymouth Tribune, Volume 9, Number 24, Plymouth, Marshall County, 17 March 1910 — Page 7
When a woman
silent secret suffering she trusts you. Millions have bestowed tais nark cf confidence on Dr. R. V. Tierce, of Butfalo, N. Y. Evenwhere there are women who bear witness to the wonderworking, curing-power of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription which saves the suffering sex from Pain, and successfully grapples with woman's weaknesses and stubborn His.
I IT MAKES IT HAKES Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets Induce mild FASHION HINTS "Something Russian and something r.ew," has a queer button and chain effect on each side of the coat. It isn't dinky and prison-like, but very dashy. The hat shown here is of the extreme rolled type, a winter straw and rose creaticn for the South. Reuatifal Wall Coallnsi for Honte. In line with the progress of all other thlnss In these modern days is the beautiful, perfect and sanitary wall coatings for our homes. Alabastine is the name of a rich, soft and velvety preparation for the decoration of walls and ceilings. It adheres to the walls of its own adhesive qualities. It is inexpensive, clean, artistic and so easily put n that, any one can follow the printed directions on every package. Any shade or tint 13 easily produced. Alabastine is proof against insects or disease germs' so prevalent in wall paper. It does not rub off and flake liks kalsomine. A complete color plan for the wall3 of the home and stencil3 to help make the home beautiful, together with a book about home decorations and samples of co?or effects will all be sent free by the Alabastine Company, 482 Grandville avenue. Grand Rapids, Mich. The liberal offers of this company to home decorators in our advertising columns elsewhere in this papar deserve careful perusal. Good Luck of an Old G. A. R. Veteran. Ü. W. Rumble, 1144 Eddy St., San Francisco, an old G. A. It. veteran, Is now enjoying life at his California home, havins; made enough locating gold mines with a device of his own, which works on a new principle in harmony with nature's vibratory laws. He offers to tell others about it as he thinks the knowledge should not be buried. - ' Vbbllns. "They don't give me' a fair show," complained the ambitious younj Congressman. "The speaker hardly ever recognizes me and if I make a motion it either isn't seconded or fails to carry." "That's the whole trouble with you." answered the influential constituent. There's too must lost motion in your statesmanship." Chicago Tribune. One C.larlnfir Exception. "Is there anything the people of this country cannot do," vociferated the orator, "if they unitedly say it shall be? done?" "Yes," spoke up the fussy old person in the audience; "there's one thinpr they can't do." , "What i3 it. eir?" ; ' "They can't get the battleship Maine raised." Chicago Tribune. Trial Bottle Free By Mail If jom Buffer frota Epilepty. Fit, Fallinc Steinen, Bpaamg. or baTe children that do to, my Jiaw Ducotery will relieve them, and all you are asked to do 1 to tend for a Fre Trial ti Bottle of Dr.AUj'g Ef3llt'fclold Outrm It baa ecred thousand where eTerjthing elaa failed. Gnarantred by May Medical Laboratory Under Pare Food and Drug Act, Jnoe 30th, I9C Guaranty Ho. 1971. Plag writ for Special Praa 2 Bottle and fire AGE and eompleta addreaa M. W. H. MAY, 548 Pearl Strut. New York. The Army of Constipation I Growing Smaller Every Day. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are fapoojible iKey i only give reljetI10&5 U3 them (or Bili Ost ac, Inilr esh'oa, Sici IleaiacLe, Sallow Stia. CJALL PILL, SMALL DCSE, SHALL PRIC2 Genuine am bear Signature Lot us do your Printing using fmr yur offlcm statlonmry. You , can gtt thm paper and envelopes to match. It U thm rmmi thing. BBOWN'S Bqonchial Troches o abaotutctr harmJe remedy for S Throat, Hoarscnm and Ought. Civ bu&ciute rlki in BrondiUl and Lung Affcctioaa. rtitr yurwf reputation. Price, 25 ctnU, 50 cnt ai 1.00 fXf box. Sample lent on rtquMU JOHN ML BffOWNSOTT, Boefon. M.
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Honored by Worn
spenks of her v-v : , '."V WEAK VVOflEN STRONQ 5ICK WOMEN WELL.
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No woman's appeal was ever misdirected or her con" fidence misplaced when she wrote for advice, to' the World's Dispensary Medical Association, Dr,' R. V. Pierce, President, Buffalo, N. Y.
natural bowel movement one m day. Tiny Itaby'ft Pitiful fase. "Our baby when two months old was suffering with terrible eczema from head to foot, all over her body. Th-i baby looked just like a skinned ratbit. We were unable to put clothes on her. At first it seemed to be a few mattered pimples. They would break the skin and peel off, leaving the unUrneath skin red-as though it were scalds. Then a few more pimples would appear and spread all over tho body, leaving the baby all raw without skin from head to foot. On top of her head there appeared a heavy scab .i quarter of an inch thick. It was awful to see so small a aby look as she did. Imagine! The doctor was afraid to put his hand to the child. We tried several doctors" remedies but all failed. "Then we decided to try Cutic-ura. Ily using the Cuticura Ointment we softened the scab and it came off. Under this, where the real matter was, by washing with the Cuticura Soap and applying the Cuticura Ointment, a new skin soon appeared. We also gave baby four drops of the Cuticura Resolvent three times daily. After three days "you could ?ee the baby gaining a little skin which would peel off and heal underneath. Now the baby is four months old. She is a fine picture of a fat little baby and all is well. We only used one cake of Cuticura Soap, two boxes of Cuticura Ointment and one bottle of Cuticura Resolvent. If people would know what Cuticura is there would be few suffering with eczema. Mrs. Joseph, Ko?smann, 7 St. John's Place, RidgewooJ Heights, L. I., X. Y.. Apr. 20 and May 4, 1909." The Pope a Xewapajier Header. There Is no place where the scissors are employed more methodically and to more scientific purpose on newspepers than at the Vatican. A regular press clipping bureau is now in full activity at that great ecclesiastical center. All the Italian newspapers are gone through by a skilled Italian newspaper man, who cuts out everything he thinks the Pojc ought to see. . These cuttings go to Cardinal Merry del Val, who reduces the batch of selections by marking with blue pencil the really Important ones. These latter, only, the Pope reads. Then, four clerks, who are acquainted with the languages of France, Germany, England and Spain, perform similar work with the leading newspapers of those countries. After that the extracts are translated into Latin before perusal by Plus X. The bishops of every Roman Catholic diocese are also said to forward clippings from papers published within their jurisdiction likely to interest the holy father. All this mass of newspaper material Is pasted in volumes, bound separately, according to subject matter andj carefully indexed. The President's Speech. The president of the Hewitt Uro.s. Soap .Company, Dayton. Ohio, says: Buy two cakes of Easy Task Soap for ten cents; use one bar and if it isn't i.Vu what we say it is. you get your dime back in a jiffy." It is a strong claim to say that Easy Task soap cuts the work of washday in half, but the fact can be proven by the evidence of thousands of delighted women. Harem Cheaper than Wife. A few months ago King Edward announced' that the distinctive feature of an American woman was her back He could tell at a glance from the rear whether a woman hailed from thf country by the way in which she wa gowned. This is all right so far aa it goes, but It is a very slight instance. There are a good many other distinction which go to make up the American women, notably her general outlook on "ife, which is that man was made fo jer amusenent and her support. Our men do not dispute the fact. They are never permitted to talk back, so they simply prub a little harder to pay th ever-increasing pile of bills which come lr. It is estimated that a man In Persia or Tuvkey can maintain a first-class harem on half the sum that a single American wife costs a man of equal standing with the oriental. We give this for what it is worth, not that It bears upon the matter In hand. Amer icans are Immune from polygamy, even ,-f there were' no other factor than the )?t. Philadelphia Inquirer. All Old Folks. That tak NATI'ltK'S IJKMKPV (NU tablets) tonight will feel better In the morning. It sweetens the Ftoma-li. cor-r.-ta the liver, bowels and 'iblneyft, pri-vents bilionsries and eliminates the rheumatism, lwter than J'illa for I-i.rr ills, because it's different it's thorough. -asy sure to act. Oet a 2re A 11 druparists. The A. II. Lewis Meilietr.H st. Louis, Mo. In and Oar. Young Professor's Wife Lysander, you have explained to me several times low the overproduction of gold causes hish prices, but somehow I can't get 'it through my head. Your.g- Professor O, yes. you can; the passage from one ear to the other seems to be entirely unobstructed. Only One "BltOMO QUIME" That U LAXATIVE ISROMO OtTIXINB. Look for the signature of E. W. r.ROVE. Used the world over to Cure a Cold in One Dar. 25c TheT.razilian povornment has granted a franchise for the establishment ot a coastwise cal le service- from th mouth of the Amazon to the southerr boundary of the country. IIFAI. IM CK AM) I.ECS At Hi:? Arlif allovcr? Throat Mrv ":ih chills? That Is La tripiH-. i'rrrv lift' I'.i'i.l.U ' r wiil hrr-ilc it up if Unto promptly. All di-alcrs, Z.c, ami butties. Ami ClarK-J for Accordingly-. The steeplejack was climbing the flagstaff surmounting the clock tower. "This is what I call working over time," he chuckled. r your clothe look yellow? If so use Knss Mo.irhin l.lue. It will make them wliiti- an snow. All jirKers VU: A geological survey expert has perfected a pocket oxygen apparatus Ly which a person may maintain life for several hours If imprisoned in smoke or noxious rases. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teethiiiK: softens the guut, reduces Inflammation, allavs pain, curts wind colic 25 cents a bottle.
Trolley Mall Knx. Many patrons of rural routes live a considerable distance rom the highway, and a device which would carry the mail between the iouse and the road would be a great onvenience. A Kansas subscriber whose house ish 00 rods from the rural route and who has a straight !ine of telephone poles to the road, nsks if an endless wire cable could be arranged in some way to carry a small box. A Xo. 10 wire ran be attached to MITtoa two vew M -TAILS OK I.O M JT.OI.I.KY. brackets fastened to the polos at such a height as not to interfere with teams, etc. A small box ai l carrier v-an be run over this between the heusc and the road. The bo?c (an be sent down and brought bark from the house by the use of a cord or lic;lit twisted wire cable. Attach it to the box and pass it through a pulley on a pest at tho road and around a drum or through another pulley at the house. The trolley wire should be soldered to the brackets so the carrier may run MAIL IHX TKOI.LEY LIM!. over it without trouble. With a littlo Yankee ingenuity anyone can rig up a device of this kind. Farm and Home. l'ovl Ileitiire Snlt. Fowls require salt In their ration in order to thrive best, the same as do all other animals. The mineral elements in the salt are desired by the fowls, and their systems crave them. But only a little salt is needed not more than a handful a week to the average-sized farm flock. Too much may be more harmful than too little. And since fowls often do not know whn they have had enough of it, v.e dare not place the salt befor tnem, and let tnem eat all they war.t, as can Le done with most other fariu animals. So the best way is to mix a handful occasionally with the soft food or mash. This seasons the food and gives It a palatable taste, as well as proving a benefit to the fowls. Agriculture Epitomist. Superior to the Male. The greatest hybrid that the world has ever known is the mule. This is a cross between the horse and the ass. The resultant mule was, however, Darren, and the possibility of developing a more perfect type through select io'i did not exist. The mule had to b taken as he was and made the most of. At that he has borne the brunt o cornfield labor at home and tugged the nation's cannon into the ever-advancing frontier, lie has surpassed both th? horse and the ass that bred him in many ways. The zebra Is evidently a creature superior in every way to the mule, and it is believed, with selector and scientific breeding, it will take a place in the world that will tend to retire the latter, and, possibly, the horse, from the field of action. Value of Ilnmus In Soli. . The value of humus In the soil is not only that it supplies an element of p!ant food, but that it absorbs moisture and is an obstacle to evaporation, pays tho Rural Californbn. It also prevents soil erosion and waste. The most successful farmer is the one who takes the most pains to utilize every element of his farm products that contributes humus to the soil. This Is especially important in localities where the surface Is uneven or broken, and the earth is not firm, or. in other words, is easily eroded by rainfall. HnailaKe and Alfalfa lel. The scientific ration for a cow giving twenty pounds of milk with 4 per cent of butter fat a good average dairy cow is forty-five pounds of ensilage .ind ten pounds of alfalfa hay a day. Ensilage costs about $2 a ton and airalfa about $10 a ton. Thus the cow feed cost of 9'i cents a day, nrhich is more than a third cheaper than could be sustained on an ordinary cora ration. Protect the Grindstone. A grindstone should never be left exposed to the sun. The weight of ni'j handle will always cause one portion of the stone to remain uppermost, and this from exposure will reach a different degree of hardness from the underside, so that after a while the stone will be ground out of circle. If the stone has to stand in the open a flat box can easily be obtained to serve . a cover. Doctorlnc Soils. Just as, wh.?n his horse is ailing, the cwner calls in a veterinarian, so in these days do the farmers of the country consult a "soil doctor" when their lands prove less fruitful than they deem they should. Much of this work Is the result of experiments conducted by the federal Department of Agricul ture, and the work thus far accom plished has been most satisfactory. High Locution fo? Orchard. Apples do not do well on poorly drained soil where the water 13 liable to stand on the surface or about te roots of the trees. For thi3 reason the higher parts of the farm are usually better for orchards. On hilly land It Is not necessary that the trees be on the very tops of the hills. Wheat for I.njinK Hens. Many farmers grow and fell wheat. but they do not feed any of It to the'r chickens. Wheat Is one of the best egg-producing feeds, and it will pay to feed It" to the hens at all season 3,
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I even when it is above a dollar a bushdelivery j el. Wheat is similar in rnmnrnitinn M
milk and eggs; it contains nearly ill the elements in right proportion foxperfect animal growth and maintenance. A little of it will go a long way in feeding. The Furnier' Automobile. While automobiles are expensive vehicles, in a sense, they are daily becoming less so. Improvements in methods, materials and knowledge have made a cheaper car possible and the fact that the purchasers of fancy cars are already supplied has caused manufacturers to devote their energies to turning out a ear that U medium priced and of high quality. A new field for the marketing of the product oi meir lactones was necessary and this field was found among the farmer. High-priced, fancy cars would not go with them, but quality would, and those manufacturers who were shrewd enough to make a car of high qual ity at a reasonable price have found ready customers among the farmers. It is estimated that there are now inai.se about 100,000 automobiles among the farmers of this country and some thing like .",000 of these are In Kan sas. They are great favorites among the dairy farmers as time savers in the delivery of milk, but they ire no less so among other farmers, ho find In them a means of rapid transit without disturbing the farm team3. The new farm automobile Kansas Farmer. is here to stay. I'olnt In I'm it In;. Do not choose the dormant season to cut back trees that are growing too fast to be fruitful; it will only make them grow the faster In the spring wait till thejj are iu full flush of growth in May or June if you want to drive their surplus energies Into fruit buds. Re sure to carry, a paint pot along with the pruners, and whenever a limb as much as an Inch in diame ter is cut off, cover the wound with oil and white lead to keep out dampness and the entrance of fungi spores that will produce rot. In the spring this cover is not so necessary, for as soon as growth begins the tree will begin to cover it.-t wounds with new wood that will creep over it from all sides. Rural World. Certified 3111k Vayn De-t. Certified milk sells In all large cities for about twice the price of other milk. It U absolutely clean, n6 impurities being allowed to get- Into the milk. A layer of fine cheesecloth is stretched ov?r the milk pail, a layer of absorbent cotton is placed upon that, then another piece of cheesecloth. There is no sediment In the bottom of the milk vessels of milk treated in thi3 way. It's not expensive, either. A Merciless Parasite. The ficus macrophylia, commonly called the Moreton Bay fig, is a merci less Australian parasitical growth, says a writer in the Wide World magazine. It takes root in the forks of Its host tree (which In this case is a Queens land bloodwood) and ultimately smoth ers the latter and usurps its place as an independent tree. Many valuable trees. In the scrubs of Queensland are destroyed in this manner. 3Ient Darrel Cover. This sketch shows a meat barrel cover that can't be beat. Get a barrel that has top and bottom and saw It through in the middle, making two tubs. Use these tub3 for covers on meat barrels by turning them over the barrels as shown in the sketch and they will assuredly keep out the dust and moisture.
Tei'.ins Eks In Incubator. Durlag incubation, eggs should be tested on the seventh and fourteenth days. At the first test the air cell should measure about a quarter of an inch; on the tenth day, one-half Inch; on the fifteenth day, five-eighths of an Inch; nineteenth day, three-quarters of an inch. The measurement should be taken from the middle of the large end. Cure of Homes' Teeth. Horses seldom suffer from decayed teeth, but because of the upper teeth closing on the lower ones a little on the outside points are sometimes found which lacerate the cheek or penetrate the gums, creating a tendtrness that prevents the proper mastication of food, annoying the horse so much that he falls away very rapidly. fixture for Pnstare. Minnesota farmers have, found six pounds of timothy, five pounds of white clover, three pounds of Kentucky blue grass, and one pound of red top seed per acre, to be an excellent mixture for pastures. If the ground is inclined to be wet, the red top will take the place of the timothy. Air Shaft Costs I.Itfle. An air shaft can be built in the dairy barn at very little cost, that will ventilate the stable perfectly and do away with the dampness and heavy air so noticeable on winter mornings. One man installed two ventilators which ran from nar the floor to we'l above the roof for $30. Linie fur Iou!try. Ry experiment it has been computed that 100 grains of lime are needed tc make one strong egg shell. Two hundred pounds of wheat are required tc furnish sufficient lime for a dozen egg shells. It Is easy to see why oyster .shells and other similar ingredients should form a part of the ration. Heat to liny Silo. Do not undertake to build your otto silo. Nine times out of ten you will be tho loser. When the lumber, time and the durability of the .struct ure arc all taken into consideration, you will lind you are coming out at the small end of the horn. I'arm Sehoola. At the twenty-fourth session of the fourth course in agriculture at the Wisconsin College 401 farmers and their boys were in attendance. Near ly every county in the State was represented. Producing Prom Maker. The breeding of a bull whose dam anu granuam were great producers to a cow known to ta . ZTZ ! with Hi,. .. " "'"j us iJ i c 1 1 j aui vj produce a profit maker.
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limit Sniitlwlchen. Th(v secret of the delicious ham sandwiches served at an afternoon tea last week was in the cooking of the ham and the abundance of .mayonnaise used in mixing the meat The ham had been broiled until It was brown and then ground very fine and mixed plentifully with mayonnaise. The meat may be cooked in the oven, a thin slice being allowed to bake until it is well browned, or the meat may be fried. There Is a more definite flavor about ham cooked in aiy of these ways than there is if it is boiled. For Tentler Steak. A round steak may be .made tender by soaking it over night . in buttermilk. If there is no time to do tins pound the steak thoroughly and as it fries add a little water and cover it well to create steam. This makes the toughest meat tender. Although it is better to broil steak than to fry it, if the latter process is used butter gives a better flavor than lard. A round steak is nie stuffed with bread dress ing and baked. It must be cooked slowly and basted often with the liquor. ltlce a In Creole. Chcp one largo onion and a small slice of cooked ham fine; put in a saucepan with one tablespoonful of butter; add one cup of cooked rice, also one small can of tomatoes or a dozen fresh ones, one teaspoonful of salt and a little paprika. Mix well together and heat thoroughly. Then put in baking dish, cover with bread crumbs and put in' the oven for fifteen minutes. The tomatoes should be stewod until thick before serving. Soft fünfter CnUes. One cup of lard and butter, one cup of molasses (Orleans), one cup of sugar, one tablespoonful of soda, one cup of boiling water, salt, two eggs, five scant cups of flour, two tablespoonfuls of cinnamon and two of ginger. This batter can be kept for a fortnight and baked in gecn pans at the shortest notice, even after the company are oa the porch. Have used it for over thir ty years. Italsln Pie. Covfr one-half cup of seeded raisins with a cup of water and let them stand for two hours. Beat an egg'until light. add a cup of sugar, the juice and grated rind of a lemon, and stir in a table spoonful of flour. Add the raisins and the water in which they have soaked and cook in a saucepan until tue mixture thickens. Bake with an upper and lower crust. Lemon "Wafers. One-half cupful butter, one-half cup ful sugar, yolks oi two eggs, the grat ed rind of a lemon, one cupful of flour, one teaspoonful of baking powder. Spread thin on iron sheets, sprinklo with chopped almonds, bake and cut into squares while hot White Cookies. One heaping cup of sugar, one heaping cup of butter creamed with sugar, one egg well beaten, half a cup of sour milk, a small half teaspoonful of saleratus, flour to make a dough that can be rolled. -Roll thin and cut into cookies. Dropped Dumplinsa. Beat an egg light, add a cup of sweet milk, a pinch of salt and enough Hour sifted with a teaspoonful of baning powder to make a good batter. Drop with a spoon into boiling gravy. Cook until done and serve immediate ly. Mnflln. Jour eggs, two tablespoonfuls of sugar, two tablespconfuls of butter, one cup of milk, one heaping, cup .f flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking pow der. Mix and bake in deep muffin tlni. Hint About tiie House. It makes fish soft to cover the paa la which It is being cooked. In dry cake flavors try mixing mond and rose together as a flavor for "gel food cake. It is delicious. When hot dishes have made marks on your polished dining table rub wiui spirits of camphor. It will remove them. Window glass, lamps ai.d.lanip glass es, marble and stone vases or mantel3, granite sills, etc.. If rubbed with salt are quickly cleansed, A new flavor can be given to cooked prunes by adding a few'sllces of lem on. Another method is to cook them with a bag of spices, Soap well applied to drawer slides will keep the drawers In furniture and closets from sticking. It is also ef fective for doors that stick. For a fancy salad cut red peppers into shreds and sprinkle over the cnojrped lettuce and garnisa with sliced ol ives, curled parsley and celery tips. Always keep the Inside of your co!reo pot bright to insure good coffee. Boil it out occasionally with soap, water and wood ashes and scour thoroughly. Xeufchatel cheese or the old-fash ioned home-made schmiercase, may colored a delicate green with pistachij. It is used in making salads and is very pretty when formed into nests, filled with vegetable salad. Tea balls, stitched Into small i"t bags, are appreciated by the invalid, who can drop one Into a cup of boiling water and have a cup of fresh tea ut any time. After use the bag can be thrown into the scrap box. The juice of half a lemon with a little of the grated peel is a great iddition to the apple pie. Not every womaii puts butter Into the apple pi9 before the top crust goes on, but every one would find it an improvement. To prevent clothes freezing to the lines in frosty weather, add a handful of salt to the last rinsing water. When making candy, if the hands rre coated with powdered sugar tr Lütter, the fondant will not stick, to them. When cookiiij milk or soups of any kind always use a wooden spoon fo. ptirring. Never take a tin spoon or this purpose, especially if the soup rontains any acid like tomatoes, is this united with the tin and forms a poisonous compound. When cooking spareribs first uoil AUm rrmnvn fV,- ,-, 1 1 n ti A w r n n ni?. V' 2 . . , 1 T. UlTi ,n a "a1?'uJL 1 "1. . . . . . . EOt o thm too much Always ecrve pork with liakcl apples, apu'a eauce or a good vegetable salad.
ONE JOY IN A MEXICAN JAIL. I'ood nnd TteildiiiK Scanty, but There's .Money for Cigarette. "Beating one's way through Mexiro." said tho man who had been there, lit cording to the Detroit Free Press, "is a snap compared with the same unconventional method of traveling in the United States. Tne engineers and brakemen on the freight trains are 'nearly all Americans, and they rather
welcome a fellow from home. "There's one drawback, though. Th authorities are tickled to death to catch an American breaking the law in that way. It means a jail sentence every time, with hard labor, and it Is hard labor and no mistake about it. "At a watering tank near HermosilIo, in the State of Sonora, I braced the engineer of a freight train for a ride. He was a gruff sort of chap and seemed to have a bad grouch on that day. " 'I don't give a curse what you do,' he said, 'but I won't have you in my cab, and all the cars are sealed. Hide on the cowcatcher, if you like.' "I was foolish enough to follow his suggestion, and4 had a great time for an hour or so. But I wasn't familiar with the country, and we were sneak ing into Hermosillo before I realized that it was time to remove myself. A policeman caught sight of me and waved his arms frantically. As soon as the train slowed down a bit I made a jump for it, but the Mexican cop was right there. Before I know where I . nras I found myself sentenced to twenty days or a $20 fine. "They shoved me into a cell already occupied by six Mexicans. They seemed to be half starved, but I was surprised to notice that they were all smoking cigarettes. . "For supper they served us red beans frljoles is the native name boiled in plain water, No meat or bread and only a limited supply of salt. A ragged quilt was given me as my only" covering, and I was supposed to sleep on the floor among my Mexi can companions. "The next morning I understood the cigarette game As they marched us to work the commandante handed each man a 10-cent plecer 'For cigarettes,' be said, with an amiable wave of his hand. Later on I discovered that the custom is universal. "I saved up my cigarette money for a few days and paid a boy to take a message to a gringo friend who lived In Hermosillo. He paid the balance of my fine and took me home to a good dinner." SHOUT 2IETEB SERMONS. Some of the best friends God ever had In this world were rich men. Rev." S. D. Dexter, Episcopalian, Aurora, 111. In nine cases out of ten It takes more heroism not to fight than it does to fight. Rev. C. II. Parkhurst, New York City. We see sin every dajf; we see it under all circumstances and among all classes of people.---Itev. Dr. Broughton, Congregationalist, Atlanta. ' This is a world in which work Is to be done, and by doing it we grow In strength and power. Rev. M. Boynton, Congregationalist, New York City. The socials, fairs, lectures and fine musical programs of many of our biggest churches are a caricature upon real religion. Rev. L. Brown, Baptist, Cleveland. , There is a seeming wealth beneath which lies great poverty, and there is a seeming poverty beneath, which lies real wealth. Rev. J. L. ' Blanchard, Congregationalist, Denver. Our civilized society is the product of centuries of struggle; it cannot be violently cast aside or destroyed with I out confusion and lasting chaos Bishop J. A. McFaul. Roman Catholic, Trenton You are not to cloak your idleness under the color of content. You are not parasites." You are clean-limbed and full-blooded, and you must go out and forage for yourself. Rev. C. F. Aked, Baptist, New York City. Mere education has failed to meet In any satisfactory way the great vices and problems of the age. It Is doing much to make life more efficient, but t is not in meeting problems. Rev. A. X. Berle, Congregationalist, Boston. The church 'institutions are seeking lo become Cie door of the church because it is only through the church lhat men gain the measure of the stat ure ' of the fullness of Christ. Rev. IV. II. Day, Congregationalist, Los An fcles. There is a large place In the world for the man who goe3 about doing fxod. The man who knows the good ind does it not commits a sin against fociety and Imperils his own life. ftev. W. II. Pound, Congregationalist, Chicago. We live in a day when men pay the highest respect to great and good men, ne spirit or our age is sucn mat a Juan dares to rise above the petty prejudices that once bound him to real in dependent manhood. Rev. W. A. jnes, Presbyterian, Pittsburg. Every man must first submit in or der to reign and no human life can be lived in its highest, fullest and best tense until it has discovered a supe rior throne U) which it yields abso lute and implicit obedience. Rev. G. C. Morgan, Evangelist, Hartford. Hour "War a Can He Stopped. Lord Charles Beresford. head of the English navy, says his Idea of putting an end to wars can be carried out wnen this haDnens: When the Rnellsh-snenkinir nations consolidate there will be an end to the great devastating wars, and what a simple matter it would be for all of us to unite, and what great benefit to humanity, and what great happiness it would mean to millions of people! One Redeeming; Feature. "Seems to me you utilize a good many old witticisms." "That may be," admitted the press humorist, "but I try to confine my automobile jokes to 1910 models." Louisville Courier Journal. (Inking; Him Comfortable. "But why do you put your friend's things in the dinin.j-room?" "Oh, he is so used to restaurants that he won't enjoy his dinner unless he can watch his hat and coat." Kalr Olli e Kxchange. Stenog Oh, Frank, will you please Bharpen my pencil? Clerk Yes, If you'll please sew on this button Boston Herald. Satan smiles whenever a minister begins to congratulate himself on the beauty and eloquence of his prayers. Sometimes fate sets a man up on a high pedestal for the purpose of giving him a hard fall
Kansas Takes 1 000 . Overland Cars
9 Our agents In Kansas have ordered for Oils season 1.000 Overland automobiles. 1 sm TÄSXVth.oJ;,i? a AexaI 1.&00. Thus lias the Overland after one ESS exprlenceKÄred Urmins It has captured the cities, too. New Tork City takes 1.000 Overlands this year, Boston takes 500 San Francisco 800 Washington 500 Philadelphia 450. . . . M Our agents have contracted for 20.000 Overlands for $24.000.000 worth of Overl2?d!,!rto suPrly the demand for this year. That s a larger sale than any other car commands. Yet. two years ago few had ever heard of an Overland. This sensational success is due to the creation of a remarkable car. The Simple Car
genius has In two ynvrs reached the topThe success of the Overland Is mainly most place in this fielt. And It tells all due to Its amazin? simplicity. A 10-year- about the car. .Send us this coupon toold child can master the car In five min- day for this book.
Utes. Push a pedal forward to go ahead, and backward to reverse. Push another pedal for hiKh speed. There Is nothing else to do but steer. Any man with the simpler instructions, can run an Overland a thousand miles and back. There was never a car so easy to care for so easy to keep In order.
CanSA a-"- jf Price. $1.000.
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We will send you free of cost, a complete color plan for the walls of your home. We will furnish free stencils to help you make your home beautif uL
TheamtaryvM-Coatüijj
comes in all sorts of rich, soft shades of color that enal ie you to decorate your walla in th same style as the handsome city houses. Alabastine is a powder made from pure native alabaster, you mix it with clear cold water and apply it with a flat wall brush. Simple directions printed on every package. Anyone can ao iu inen wnen you wane to redecorate, just put the new coat over the old.
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Our Free Offer
Send ui the coupon a pottal card) and we mail FREE book about oa s cop oi
decoration, and teu you about our offer of Ire color plana, and free stencils to help yon make
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AlabastiaeCo., .
Attn j rn. te. UTUIflf UiC braad The Yonnsnt Admiral. Captain David Beatty will shortly have the distinction of being th youngest rear-admiral in the British navy. His forthcoming promotion at the early age of thirty-eight ha3 been the subject of a special Order, in Council. - To qualify for promotion under the regulations a captain must have served during peace time for a total period pf six years. The Admiralty petition fet3 forth that, owing to the abnormal fhortening of the time on the capJains' list, it is anticipated that Captain Beatty will reach his turn for promotion before he completes the full period of six years. It Is also pointed out that he was severely wounded in action in China, and was consequently prevented from receiving an appointment for a conilderable period. In these circumstances the Order directs that Captain Beatty shall ho promoted to flag rank in his turn, notwithstanding the regulations. Captain Beatty 13 an Irishman. Ills wife is a daughter of an American millionaire, the late Marshall Field, founder of the great dry goods store in Chicago. Nelson was promoted to the rank rear-admiral In his thirty-ninth ye It. MAUTKIi'S FKMALE FILXSJ Seventeen Yeara the Standard. Prescribed and rwommendfd for women's ailments a scientifically prepared remedy of proven worth. The result from thir use is quick and permanent. For sal at all druz stores. "Kalalns the Hand." The raising of the hand which replaces the kissing of the Book in the path which witnesses In England will benceforth take was In origin a pointing toward heaven. The oath taker extended his hand toward the Being whom he invoked a pagan, for instance, touching the foot or knee of his god's statue. "I have lifted up mine hand untp the Lord." says Abraham. Our Germanic ancestors raised their spears toward high heaven. A quaint case is that of the Shrewsbury parliament of 1S93, when the lord3 took a solemn oath by the cross of Canterbury, while the commons no doubt to mark the distinction between the two orders swore simply by liftIne their hands. London Chronicle.
20 Per Cent Reduction
Th. Overland' success is also due to it- nrlce. Xo other maker ever irave near9EttteS. Yet we have cut our costs this year ftbout 20 per cent through enormous lncrease In production. Tne Overland we sell for $1.000 thl year tetter than the $1.250 Overland last year. It Is a 25 II. P. car with s speed of 50 miles an hour. So with the $1.250. $1.400 and $1.30 Overlands. Each offer a fifth more than ever befors tor the money, All prices Include Magneto and full lamp uipment A 1 C L. Ca. ASK for tne Ot01y - The Overland story is one ot the createst business stories ever told. .It tells hovr this car the creation of a. mnphantml C42, The Willyt-OTerland Co. Toledo, Ohio LtfDHvd under Helden Patent. Please mail me the book. 25 h. p.-102-inch rbeel two rumble seat er Tor t mail additional price. These Free That saves a lot of work, trouble and money. Feople do not like kalsomine, as all kalsomine is mixed with glue to make it stick. The glue rots and the kalsomine comes off on your clothes and on the floor. Alabastine. adheres to the wall of its own cementing qualities. It requires no dirty glue, nor paste, as with kalso mine or wall paper, inese always attract insects and disease germs. (or ' " f ' l r- HHMJ will p - - - ----- - - - - - - home our AlU..: r tot r jn. a r JB..:L Vl IS WIHTUII AI, W4N 1U WM At no coat to rrtf-, ploase aend your g AUbastin book ana tell m about your . free oilers. J A'ain. a P n ATC. .... .t. .........
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Ravrfa. a
County , J Risit UESTERf Ciml What Prof. Shaw, lha Wall-Known A?t cujtunst, says About Its ' MtM ttl If. IVA. than ia th c-m beit of i tbe lniud rtua. I r-i f is cheaper and rlimat , better lor the rrpco. I Yoar market will im. prove farter than your l larmfrt will produce the J roppliea. Wheat ran l frown tip tntheC'th tr- I alle! I0 tnllt-a north of I the Iut'-rnational hcMind- I arl. Yoar vac-ant land 1 will be taken at a rat I b?jrond j'rent eonc-ep. tioa.4 We hava rnnni-h peoi'la in the Ubiml 1 btaU alon who want ' bomaa to tales op Una land." Kealr ' 70,000 flmcric&ns j m-lllcnterandmakethetrhomea J in Western Canada t Ma year. ' 190i produced another lArre I erop of wheat, oata and barley, I In mldltlou to Wj Meli tlie enttl I export nai an lutmenac Item. ) t-Httle raitUnc. dairriBg, tcixtvl i farming and grnln ttrowioR i t tl. I rro tnoea of M mil folia, tuukm. diewan ant Alberta. i ree nomeateart and pre-emption areas, ai well as land Le. t by railway and land com panioa. will provide nomea for million. Adaptable anil, healthful tlltnaU, aplendM aehoola aud Cliurchea, ana rood railway. or aeulrrV ratea. dmrnptlra literature "Laut Beet Wert." how to reach the country and other particwlara. write to Sop't t Immigration. Ottawa. CWada. or ta the following Canadian Goy't A reo tu: W. H. Kocer. d I'loor Tract lon-Tenu Inal Bulidlnr. Indianapolis Ind.. and H. U. William. Room to. Law IlnUalBf Toledo. Ohio. (Uh addreaa neareotr on). Plaaae T where yon m tb la adTertlaeroent. in on Wurna Litt 5(fü 0 j ' Is the word to remember when you need a remedy f&rC0UCH36C0LDS If you but knew what harsh cathartics do. you'd always use Cascarets, Candy tablets, vegetable and mild. Yet just as effective as salts and calomel. Take one when you need it Stop the trouble promptly. Never wait till night. K2 Vett-pocket box. 10 cents at drce-tore. Each tablet of the trenuica ia marked C C C. VETERINARY COURSE AT HOME a O r O TMr Dd npardaeaa b mad taking our D I .J J Veterinary Cour at bom during apart t'ra: tangMInalmpleft I'nrllab: Diploma granted, po. 1tlenobUlnetl foraucreaaf nlntudanta: ort Itbln reach of all; at1afactton guaranteed: particular free, almrte tatrrlaary tarrMaaad Mwl, BVpt. 10, Laadaa, Caaada nnTrPITO Vatn.CelemaB,WahrlllPlJIX i'lCton. DC IWk- f ree. 1110-a-I Itm a I ?9eal relereocea. .Beat raaull. MM'TIIWKVT AlllvASAS Alfalfa and timber lands, fruit and truck farms. a n v Fix-. Pri-e list free. . ti It KK N' Jt tilti:i:., HOl'K. A KK ANS AS. F. W. N. U. No, 121910 When wrltlBRT to Advertlaera pleaaa jou tatv the Adv. la tbla paper.
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